OCR Text |
Show 2 THE "OUING UP id YoM.G.A, SLOGAN® 0:80 IIs Who in statement In An ae a America' "Of all th none have gavé out ecessful come from INTER-MOUNTAIN this men | the | Trust great many A REPUBLICAN, SALT to Nature. Americans, both men boys who had no education Put on | and women, are thin, pale and puny, with » mé an matical basis his conclusions | poor circulation, because they have Sliboy with no edueatton has | treated their stomachs by hasty eating great success . boy | or too much eating, by consuming alco- chool edu ition has] holfe be sverages, or by too close confinechange in 9,000 of great suece ment to home, office or factory, and in boy ith a high school education consequence the stomach must be treated | mf one change in 400: a young man with} In a natural way before they co rectify | i education, one caganee th 10. | their earlier mistakes. The muscles in| LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1906 THERE ARE A THOUSAND REASONS one ation t\ ing, Local Business Give Men Are Students Engaged therefore, ry to issociation on erace vyorth "Going M. cover Cc. up?" for designed and A. is the by slogan about to the inter evening this 1906-7 the of ¢ be t Issue of t The the tudent about $6 Working institule Cartoonist illustrates worth $22,000, That realizing 4 the i Dox iving, "The eleva ner cent collegs to to tain | These our land are is education which sho Ww earn their own ft | in the state universities: « | Minnesots New Hampshire, "| 70 per cent and in: a. fe NN 3 cent In one _ | third of ae olleges the m their own way rate ers in scholarship | | || | | sett Y. M. Cc. = for is bankrupt exhaustion, Section of Night obliged to ane anid a month or more on preliminary work, the connection 6f which to what they are after they do not see, they wiil not attend. The Young Men's Christian association. evening classes mect this special demand bettér than the evenng schools at present do. I feel auite sure that even if the publHe schools were made ideal, there would be a very considerable demand for instruction under the conditions under which it is given in the Young Men's Christian association classes. believe that the Young Men's Christian' association will be oneof the permanent agencles to méet this need (the education of skilled workmen), and that it will always be a very important supplement system of public evening schools." Value United States after making a of Edueation. Commissioner Harris, close study of "Who the vitality -such bad nutrition-and_ body acquires vigor and thin the all the tissues feel the this sovereign remedy. aware medicinal Although of some the high mentioned physicians plants, yet have value few been of the have pure glycerine as a solvent and usually the doctors' prese riptions called or the ingredients in varying amounts, ey aleohol The "Golden Medical Discovery" {s scientific preparation compounded of the glyceric extracts of the above mentioned rani table ingredients and contains ny CUT You Evening Institute. THOSE take day after day in and EXTRA STEPS Gives Pointers Her Opportunity for to the kitchen. "ELWELL" Tt around Get one of our Cabinets and you will find a place for everything. There are many compartments, each one especially designed for the thing for which it was intended. Everything used in cooking and baking at your fingers' ends hot Decides to Stay With White Hat Until It Makes Her Shiver. | OUT alcobol or harmful habit- avieming drugs. : IN FALL TOGGERY A 1| |re ae Or, See | QUALITY ON A KITCHEN CABINET STANDS FOR Gather Reconstructing Everything for the House Wardrobe. Our stock is complete in every detail and we can supply your wants, no matter whether your The Girl with the White Hat wore it downtown yesterday, possibly for } the last time, she told herself as she Started for the car, but when ghe had waited on she corner where z did not stop for a full half "a certain. party" who never engagement on time, she had changed her mind again and decided to stay | With that hat as long as it did not |} make her shiver to look at herself jin the big mirror over the soda foun| tain. She thought of one thing, how} eve that might change her resolution. This was the time took a hat that he never did like and industriously cut it to ribbons and used them to start the fire hours before she sleepily crawled down to breakfast. { was a long time until she could » father for that act, but thought of it before for months. She would not have thought of it yesterday if she had not seen a hat pes like the ill-fated one. Wh a ew years did cake She would not think of wearing a bonnet like ‘cross lots to sister's after Things had seemed just a bit dull since the resorts closed, and The Girl had spent more hours with her books in the last two weeks than during the whole summer. This might have "been the reason that the famillar faces on] - the street seemed to have changed in]in her new plum colored suit if she t he short time since she used to see} had not remembered that she wore them nearly every day. Then, again, it | last season-with the trimming might be that some of the girls were differently. Her ranged "springing'' new fall dresses or hats.| with her, as usual, Surely, some of them oo or else | blue fall suit that made her they were getting . few weeks' wear! mu¢ th larger out of their r. toggery | Tea sing Hair that one before coming out van their new cold | how they could have managed to exweather sults eha nge suits a few Weeks ago and | ie hay each look ;as though it was | Sees An Old Friend. abc je for the wearer-and well-made There was The Girl with the Auto-| too. Of course, the girls were the mobile Veil; only the veil was missing. | san 1e, what a difference but Inly a few weeks before, she had] seen ned to be between them as theyi ieoe d lightly down the street, dress- | wer e yesterday and as they were durall in white, with a touch of color | ing the summer Heavy clothes alrere and Starting from the] way s did make one look more digni-| ground, re Was a dainty pink bow fied, and one could not imagine those on each slipper that made them every | siste rs then walking sedately down| bit as pretty as they were conspicuous. | the street capable of riding on the There was the pretty white skirt with | mer ry-go-round at Saltair while inverted box plaits and embroidered | ate ice cream cones and, between insertions. Her pink ribbon belt made } bite s tried to whisthe an accomher look extremely girlish, but a cer-] pan iment to the outrageous sounds tain dignity of bearing tended to over- | (ssu ing from the organ come this impression. The there There was one feature that The a were bows of pink at her elbows that} noti ced that helped to make her feel added another touch of color This good-nalured, anc that was was completed by a pretty bow of many of the other gifls she saw were the same shade in the lingerie hat, | wea ring the short-sleeved while a string of large, green beads] ets that were quite the proper made a pleas Ing contrast Will used | last spring. The Girl with the to call thorve "lingering'' hats, and] Hat had hung hers in the far corner The Girl wondered then, whether he of the closet at the head of the stairs meant that they. sometimes lingered | awa y behind her old tan cravanette after other summery things were laid | that e never would wear away for the missionary box-or next | agai n Nov Vv, She resolved to get that year's wear jack et and try the effect of a yard o1 What a change even twenty-four] two or pretty braid, and she hours could make! There was The] was sure no one Girl with the Automobile Veil dressed as the one she wore last season Lut, ha pretty brown street costume that | then she happened to Was not to be compared with the} wou ldn't know how to trim the jacket Institute, Y. M.C, A. white tub suit she wore the day beherself, and she didn't like to sew, . remembered that anyway. brown sult well for she was sure it one case jot pulmonary tuberculosis. Scheme for New Jacket. was the same one she used to see One case of scarlet fever and two time she came downIf she could not get the seamstress eases of diphtheria. remain in guarjust winter: It » \was for at least™a half-day, she would antine the jacket and new trimmings i wearer seemed to} take --- <2 know jt was becoming. May be she| dow nto sister's. She had helped The hated to give it up as much as some- |} Girl so many times before, and would Weather Daily teport. one else not a thousand miles awny to show just how the jacket be glad should be trimmed by doing it all herdisliked to give up a certain whit Yesterday's record at the local office hat that she insisted was becoming | selt. Then, there was the glove of the weather bureau for the twentywould be terribly whether any one else thought so or four hours ending at 6 p wear, and wholly out not cold Maximum temperature, 58 degrees; It seemed as though question in a few weeks, but some people | of the minimum temperature, 44 degrees; who never were on time for an en-|long, black kid gloves would go all mean temperature, 61 degrees, which gament ought to have a special place | right By the time The. Girl had is 15 degrees below normal. hereafter, and The Girl with the | counted six of the short-sleeved jackAccumulated defleleney of temperasassing the door of the drug store, White Hat knew she could offer some jets 7 ture since the drst of the month, 17 appropriate suggestions for its furn-}| she had decided not to wait another csr ; ishings the "certain : minute for atin d liched deficiency eo temperaneve r was known to be Anger Forgotten, Momentary she started down the ture since Jan. 1;°238 degrees Total precipitation rape b p.m. to another pair of black kid gloves. | Her momentary anger at some one p. m,, .06 inch for not being on time was forgotten All this time while The Girl with Accumulated excess of ee Pen She turned to watch. for more|the White Hat was planning her winfamiliar faces in the stream of pass-;ter wardrobe, an making mental since the first of the month. ne Accumulated excess of eae ita ersby on the busy corner. There was|comments on those she "saw, @ "‘cerwas waiting patiently for | since Jan. 1,.6.52 inches. The Girl with the Teasing Hair who; tain at the drug store a block away, Relative humidity, 64 al wore that pretty plaid skirt te Salt-| her at the very place where The Girl ask-! Weather Geren econatt y rae and air aimost every day summer, The Girl would hardly recognize her ed him to meet her, 77 warmer, because of the needs of the many that the association evening institute exists, The local school has drranged jts courses of study and engraced its specialist Instructors ity these men in. view Preference ha been given to teachers who are ai ling in every-day business the principles which they teach at night. Among the men of our own, city who hav employed men and agreed to teach coming winter are: boys oe the Sha manager of the {ft poMunny, for telegraphy; Te legraph professor of art at the Edwin Evans, formerly with | University of Utah, and freehand drawing; Herald, . for | the | Murray Sullivan, chief draughtsman of architectural and methe' @.:S; .L.;for Coombs, prin)chaniecal drawing; J. H chanics who mz Ly, perhaps, have some |. cipal Lafayette school, for arithmetic; Fowle of Remington TypeWillis. HH: reputation in their trade and who wish in certain tech< }writer company, for stenography and Anderson, former | typewriter ; J. Fred Lake Breeze school, and C. with boys of that age; they feel th at | prine ipal ngell jr., formerly of the manual such boys, having come recently from | E | {1 aiiifue dep: irtme nt of pubUe instructhe public sehools, are likely to answer | tion, for employed boys' school; Prof some questions better than they can L.- W.Hartman, G. "Ww 3ailey, George themseéives; they may be able to use Fnglish better and appear to better | A. Hedger, William Blum and R. W. | Hartley of the University of Utah, for advantage chemistry and "Second: Some men who-hold fair- | electricity, Finglish, higher mathematics, respectively; and ly good positions as skilled workmen, ie J. Wowarth for commercial card writprefer not to have it known among ing These men will, assemble their their fellow workmen that they. are | classes "forthe first instruction on obliged to attend eve ue school to fit themselves more perfect!y for their | a. work In the Young Me n's Christian | -<-_-___4-. 4. often association classes, they - are Weekly Tlealth Report. treated almost as private students, and | are given a degree of individual help, Thirty-nine births were reported to which it is impossible to give in the the city board of health during the evening | week, large classes of the public fourteen males and. twenty-five schools, conducted at public expense | ii male te twenty-six deaths were reported, fourteen. males and. two. fe: Have Practical Aims. tales; two were shipped here for "Third The public evening schools burial usually aim at teaching a subject quite There were reported twenty cases systematically and modeled (possibly } of contagious and infectious diseases, too much) after the day schools. Men consisting of eighteen cases of typhoid have intensely practical aims when fever, one case of whooping cough, they come to an evening school, and! m are unwilling to study systematically an entire subject. They demand that the instruction shall lead directly to the specific things which they invigorating nerves, blood and favorable effect of A | Bue Work and GIRL SEES FRIENDS 1 t , I cla of 190 were ceipt last year the association considers its educational department a self-supporting, but .to these came paying inves "2 nt; it has.made men- fifteen out of the nineteen highest apnot money his is quite in keeping Len= |p omntments eee opie with the general But i matter of fact only one boy chools of deney of the Y. IM A North America through college; only one Phe 376 assock itions | in 1.500 goes which conducted a vent school year| boy in 120 gos through high sehool report an expt iditure of $352,287 and|while only one pupil in eight finishe tuition receipts of $ I ti th g mat rac Only one-half son these schools e1 6,826 menjof the bo 2 years old are in eas and boy -three-fourths as many stu-/in the U: Ltes Where dents ‘as are enrolled in all the public| boys making up the other half Ww ork anllered ‘and universities, of the United | ing Yet these o really States. Nineteen cities report an en-|schooling more than do those whose rollment of 500. or over. Salt Lake] parents send them to school. Only City comes in close behind this figure | one-te nth: of the boys 16 years of age b with an enrollment of 423, last season. |are in, school. Yet these are to the younger business men of our cities They Fill a Gap. in less than five years, at which time they. take their place as voters, That these schools fill.a. gap in the educational system of our country is admirably demonstr: aba oy the story of Dr. Thomas M.. Ballie ex-superintendent of public Seah of Springfi Some years ago he was. much puzzled to find that in spite of all his efforts improve the free public' evening schools of his progressive city, a good number of men instead of acepting this free tuition of the city wouk to the Young Men's Christian assoge tion classes and pay for their instruction. After considerable investigation eoncluhe arrived at the following sions, which will be of special] interest to educators and students alike, in Salt Lake City: First: Instruction in evening schools usually draws a ares number of peotively young, boy Mo. rs old and up. to be safe and yet cer- cleansing native roots when extracted with glyeerine as a solvent make the most reliable above School, found their and efficient stomach tonie and liver incena when combined in just the Tight proportions, as in Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. blood, | | Peusiness are in Is the Best on the Market. We Have Not the Space to Enumerate Them all Here, But if You Will Cali in Our Store We Will Be Pleased to SHOW YOU | pene apn the stomach, liver and blood. | The | Che erry bark, University 60} || h | . ie Sana principles re saintiie in these way throug , Kansa ind ahead of the supply. To insure perfect health every tissue, bone, nerve and| muscle should take from the blood certain materials and return to it certain Others t is necessary eae the Stomach for the work of taking up from | be pay the ELWELL KITCHEN CABINEL As a resalt |} | | tl College young men of tne value of Roe tak the tor to promotion 1s tue | stairs." The stairs represent somé employed men subjects taught to looking for promotion y he a clation evening institute In spite of the fact that this inst ‘= ibove tuition retution spent $3,000 (his Through prospectu Ormand ime basis, ‘ imated difficulty. the food what is necessary to make good, rich, red blood. We must go to Nature the remedy. There were certain roots known to tl Indians of this country before the advent of the whites which later Boer to the know the settlers and which are now growing rapidly in professional favor for the cure of obstinate stomach und liver troubles, Practical fustruction. bit of advertising from th pres in | 0, a 0 --«| ae jj. | ij. | «¢ great tastes call. are/ extravagant or otherwise. Give us a f EASY TERMS Co-Op urniture Co. 31=33-35-37 So. Main St. ESTATE STOVES AND a le, en edu with ore ort an Why such people, In fact inreveiey weary, nae thin-bloodea verson, do their ieledp eomes early, is extreme and laste long The demand for nutritive aid {s| haa ee of earnings eapa many thin Work RANGES ane 1 value recely es | In for ty | avera -e | 150 a The ] BC LS,O00 ¢ Ge i the | acquita 1.50 a ta ea iuals A CHANCE ducated man 1000 a year £406.000 rhe ot en h laborer ac GIVES EMPLOYED flan car fay eT : |« cotlee The average How Association's Evening School Fills Gap in Educational System. M. DANIELS IS Now ready to show you the largest and most varied assortment of high grade woolen fabrics to be seen anywhere in the city, which has just been bought in Eastern markets at prices that will enable him to make them up and save you from 25 to 50 per cent on the figures quoted by other tailors. All-wool Suits and Overcoats, worth from $25.00 to $50.00, made to measure and to fit, from $20.00 up. All-wool Pants, worth from $8.00 to $12.00, Made to measure and to fit, from $5.00 up. When buying a Suit or Overcoat at this establishment you may rest assured that it is cut and made up in latest and most up-to-date Eastern style, as the head of the firm goes twice each year to study the changes of fashion and so be able to guarantee his customers that they are dressed absolutely correct. SEE QUR WINDOW AND BE CONVINCED We have a few uncalled-for garments which we will offer to our patrons at a sacrifice. In the lot there are several full dress and Tuxedo suits, Paddock overcoats and frock coat suits. Some of them silk lined. These uncalled-for suits and overcoats will be disposed of at prices ranging from $12.00 up. _ DANIELS, THE TAILOR Of 57 West Second South Street Romamher Our Motto, Perfect Fit or 10 no Sale |