| OCR Text |
Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN Published Every Morning that | of by attract being only because they give REPUBLICAN. SALT LAKE Salt promise | some Lake. | dealers effective. a In order thousand to CITY, UTAH, meet miles the away, MONDAY, competition certain rates of| have to! Because it seems just that a Salt] There is a sense of fair play down deep in the | be enjoyed here. en oe heart. It is not fair to give tho franchise Lake dealer should not be disciiminated against in to every male over twenty-one, and deny it to the favor of that dealer In the distance, it is not interIentered as second class matter Feb, 906, 06, at | women who have done a little more than half in esting to hear stories of the less happy past; the the postoffice at Salt iA ike City, under the Act of time when | making the nation. England doesn't lke changes investors lost money in the railroad Congress March 3. 87 eee It is the great land for convention. But it seems business. Only Lake Salt in City, Utu Repub lican Daily Newspaper likely they will have to give women the franchise, And even railroads that have Seen built by milor descend to such barbarous treatment as will make lionaires should understand that they are amenable SUBSCRIPTION RATES, | the British masculine rather the most brutal voter | to the laws of the land, and subject to the arguPotd in Advnace, | in Christendom. | ments of reason. Every one wants the railroads One month, Daily and Sund Three Months, Daily and Some years ago Rudyard Kipling and Wolcott| to make money. But no one wants them to destroy 1:80 00 || Six Months, Dailyand and Su One Year, Daily Sunda ‘09 | Ballestier: wrote a novel which they . called "The | the community while doing it. No one wants them Sunday only, One Year .........eecceseee 50 | Naulaka." It had to do with the inertia of India. to postpone the advance of Salt Lake for the sudden enichment of security holders. -- | An American woman went there to uplift her sex c Not Paid In Advance. A Western man went there to arouse the natives RAILROAD MEN ARE BUSINESS MEN. sO wre Month, Daily and Sunday .....seere-e08: $ .75| Thr ee Months, Daily and Sunday .......se-++ 2 00 to some of the financial opportunities of their placid ARE MERCHANTS, BOTH ARB INTERESTED | 'x Months, Dally and Sunday .......seceses-* 4.00) ,. j = 5 * = IN SALT LAKE. LET THEM GET TOGETHER. One Year, Daily and Sunday' . ou T emacs arc ie s.oo| land. And after some years of effort to overcom¢ Sunday only, One Year , ......-.,s-sceeeeees! 2.006) that inertia, to make some headway against non__Inter-Mountain Official Organ of Republican the Company. ‘ab Nepublicenc Subscribers will please give Party in explicit notice Present address when ordering eee Order to idle cont aa oaour will w en subscription {s PAID IN F 11; to| resistance, the two married, and Mved happy ever| ous nly change be honored EASTERN Office, persistent posite Waldorf-Astoria; of Rocky Building; the J Mc Cambridge Chicago ee sole Building. .Office, 311 re ovagentattyh Boyce aunt | It CITY, MONDAY, People of Salt Lake, it is The lighting your battle for you. facturers, truth is that there and mine is only against controversy ‘The operators so far one the as that newspapers dare of rates, And stand that as they always "Comrades, do. comrades, They that and plain concerned, interest; the present newspaper are working illustrate ever since is manu- the your in one Inter-Mountain Republican, The Herald and the Tribune gether, are for railroads East is not solely a question of value to called the upon community and justice. to take that up his He will not ask more the It is a doesn't has so community quarrel, than 10-| the they is oid were In the bond election, when the Tribune needed the Herald, that paper turned a flip-flop, and joined the Tribune gang, and worked for its masters ‘o the very end In the campaign of 1908, the Herald and Tribune didn't oppose each other a whit. What one wanted the other conceded. The Tribune tried for the county, and the Herald got out of its way. The Herald made a play for the state, and the Tribune kept off the track In the recent school election the Tribune waited till it needed help, and then it summoned the Herald to its side, and that paper made its fight for precisely the same things the Tribune hoped to achleve -and was trying to achiev The Tribune wanted to beat two nominees, and against those two the Herald unlimbered its guns. Because there was no chance to beat Thomas or Moyle the Herald assumed a virtue though it had it not, and left them unattacked. Here is the railroad rates question. And there is the Herald openly and absolutely fighting every business man in the city, every local interest of the state. tion find to over ing they the petitors a them. and give sist the of rates service. miles all are find their chief profit for the out They away but they demand that they have you of to a betterment be given fair the com- are be- railroads states defend are themselves of condition. rates. propor that advantage products benefit started of find given They They declare in they will not be discriminated against. And they have the weapons with which to make their effectve to a necessity for new departures, the method town can prevention help of in the crusade tuberculosis by nearly for buying It of with is undoubted the owners' that a money, railroad independent may of be any built public aid beyond those franchise grants which corporations require, and that general recognition of public power under which even railroads are organized And yet it would hardly be fair to say that a railroad so any rates sary constructed its When should owners to glve them railroads have might the decide sale, beginning from ease the sale In Utah, Medical of it can And be men seriousness agree today. will all spent the the little new the right to charge upon as neces- people The greater part of the stock will be Half Price, and there will be many suits at less than Half Price. Great price reductions in every section of our Suit and Cloak Dept. peril derived} in combatting everywhere the of be successfully the recognize this dread fought. This Morning. 25% to 50% REDUCTIONS ‘4 healing money Suit Sale Commences red stamps commemorating the holidays of 1908, and issued by the National Red Cross society. Every department store in Salt Lake has the stamps for dic-! both the malady; Their and) methods) VU decided upon. They decided upon. They do not dispute pute asas toto the}the| 7% These Silks have been delayed. Fortunately for you they arrived Their only difficulty is the lack of funds} eS NS r fh 7 with which to save the nation and the race the| 2ass just when you were thinking of Christmas Gift purchases. e sen treatment. Rg suffering and tuberculosis. These . death little hurrying stamps cost fast but a Ne in te the few wake pennies. pay best by BLACK on the finances of any one And yet: every to report, were a little later, greater than land. And that in any every one the town who sales in this 2,000 buys the WHY IS We the THE TRIBUNE don't should just charge that OFFENDED? understand so angrily deny and has been it why so the Tribune strenuously resent selling its sentiment, and defended slanderous charge. believing that a paper ple would object to the paper What serving that reason that would a had is made there defame mail campaign was that the Utah order for one who finds {it board working house in was or DON'T any good FORGET Remember reason THE that for for its out-of-state anger MONEY. the commission on going to Des Moines will have to be paid for. The expenses of the men will have to be met. Three men are going in the interest of the community. They are charging nothing for their time, and for their services-yet these are valuable, and worth money to them. The people should-and we believe will-gladly and promptly pay their expenses. Send your money to M. H. Walker, at his bank. INSURANCE TAXATION. Weekly Underwriter: step which should merit the Se of all insurance interests was taken recentlywhen the association of life insurance presidents wneued an invitation to the -execu tive officers of all get companies of the U nited "taxation conference to be held with the annual meeting of the association action in Naw Zork city of the association on December "4 in taking this matter at the present time praiseworthy in view of the fact of taxation doubtedly forthy-three the of imsurance have peta serious coming m The and the 5. intiative The In is all the more that the subject companies attention eae paid will to un- it by the made by the that will be in session compilations committee on feencod ot the Board of Casualty and Surety Underwriters, and -. at the recent meeting of the association, show t x on insurance companies is about $12,000,000 annually, while the expenses eral purpose incident to state supervision, the gen for which the tax is supposed to be levied, barely exceed $2,000,000 plus of a direct. privilege $10,000 000 is annually. and This tax forced upon the policy hold on sur- thrift of ank, Black social and religions advancement they increase the value of products; aneye benefit product of our ccratee avenues of h swell in everywhere, distributing the fore forests and factories. ghways the y benefits by all, and they are needed by all; all, and all should contribute to them. THE GATHERING - of our felis, are the com- their and are they PLACE. Life changes all our our thoughts of heaven; At first we think of streets of gold, things all strange to pervet sight, t in the afterward of y A home unburt by sighs or tears, Where waiteth many a well known face. With passing months {t comes more near, It grows more real day by day Not strange nor cold, but very dear- e glad homeland not far away, Where none are sick, or poor, or lone, The place where we shall find our own, earts desire home, Messalines, Main With all the strife and trouble o'er -Robert Browning, h the Walsts | ot 65c Ses ANSt Fab ALL to as rene strate pe me | tho "upon hat d MEN 6 Creamery te A Do Company He "i r A. J. Shores. | Offers to Pay Expense of the Investigation, Dr. MEN-A at BN x hrouit SPECIAL DEPARTMENT leocele, Prostate troub es, Pois Blood Specific of necessity fe of Manhood _- and Weakness 7 aoe Be ero is oe eae & onest assu t with come tho tn ex ¥ the Jpresence. fs a rance ae, o the yr Shores with Cat: irrhal al Sha det ph yiseases of the Stomach, and all Curable owels Bl: lder and and Private diseg uses of both to Governor John C, Cut-| night mailed Is which letter, open ler the robomine self-expla 5 rr gov -}| John C, Cutler, ae Honorable To of consult paipieoes stan Drs. Shores maintain a Special Private Department for the Done fit of me emt ho through misfortune, indiscretions or excesses neec es of ABS view Shores offer thelr one mbar 5" s tree THIS MONTH pe concerning/ Se In aan agitation . naarte pibabrena hy a Shore ei peta AT ONCH-Drs, in Jensen fac t‘that ye wir uit edict ; a CATARRHA orde r Food Trust. BE BUSINESS ra A MONTH, Learn Whether There ls MUST ie Street TARA OY NOE Kidneys, Nervous, FoR-MEN the high of living company in Salt Lake,| (py RELIABLE. Jensencost Creamery. last/ G[ALISTS. W ¢ all AND forme-ofEXPERIENCED Contcakted disordera: the a We fferst call pose Pekar herein esid coin ou. on| city for the pure ) Institutes, fake Medical here. cheap hired Compar ee doctols named. uacks eee the Rese and: rob) the he attiicted for ag ani e ro rea Inasmuch as some of the public prints worthles 17 aTy % . Dee eanoves tac vecay > known as of this ere city is have: rep charged > LISTS. \TI ney do busi,d ) ~h-| | STRICTLY R E L AJABLE SPECIALI ca BREE! Ae ern or of ena {ness under their own a imes, and ‘offer You their bxterms-either own our practi on services tormed| pert have that products added fie ekly or ei ei 1yme nts a8 the cure progresses an unlawful trust and combination, in| ea WHEN we Ctl JRED. rde ‘ ex; orbitant pri and DRS. SHORES' PROSTATIC TREATMENT % or you A REAL can 34 more arrange to DISCOVERY. other necessary arti und further iat there Is oper: ating in this city @) butter or creamery trust PoBe is also} tevin the price of itter: and/ Drs. Shores long since discovered that nearly all cases of so-called "Weakness" in men was due to puree ment or inflammation of the prostate gland, prs. Shore treatment for th pel a. is ate rinal and exclusive-it is a LOCAL treatment-and cures where the ods entirely fall. u can ae a that they are paying unjust prices tor their meats zroce re butter and other} food products, and are being robbed by dishonest ‘putchers, grocers) anne Advice free and confide ntis 1 ne all dis ses. Call or Home Treatme ne Cures. Vrite for F ree By OFFIC iB Hog! th 9 a.m. to 5 p. m. Evenings, 10 a. m. to 12: Couaultation and examination free. lairy products, and th at by ‘euch pubpractical demonstration lications, people - te the city belleve) self HOW it cures, and ercanen a of this wonpertih: treatment FREE and see for yor why other tre en s can not cure. Consultation and Write. All (adlcines Free, <3 st if you in not call 8 Sundays and holidays, vcs DRS. SHORES & SHORES, Exvert Spectators 249 SO. MAIN 8ST. SALT LAKE cry Porn enton a nree. members of the Commereta s city, to investigate her food trust in the | also to | if the charges here on food preducts are higher than other Western towns| similarly situated report on) to ie stigate and all their findings upon this que estion. | For the purpose of assisting in paying | the expenses 0 a commission we offer $300. hereby also call to your attention that aoe WwW the fifth day of this month there ap-/| peared in the editorial columns of the | Salt Lake elegram the following statements, taken from an editorial, the ‘following to-w ] 1e day be fore The ee igh farmers brought into Uintah station, | above Ogden a ae of noute ride | from Sere oo fine wu young, on and a they n cents a pou : Formed rhic tne" Ir $ Ue on tine >» ana eos feet 4 THE to some charitable factory proof commission that n this editorial Here's f not Infamous an at te « 20 are used mings HOUSE OF UTAH, opportunity to get high made-to-order clothe grade of ready-to-wear experts. Our shops are clean ana > sanitary. d Trimworkmanship. m rate first fit and perfe a be had to best Suits-$18 to $30-Less Trousers-$4 to $12-Less 10% 197% MEN'S AND YOUTHS' WHITE BURIAL SUITS lies MADE 7, 1908. | ple | hi ive ae || nig - OF street 2M a s Ww BITE BROADC to classify the . on LO - TH. ae ORDERS . FILLED nee Tem- | past, will artleala s they | initt ition made for the bazaar. ul election will be held . S GOODS : St. are . guarantee (It is now time for the Ananias who} VERY SHORT NOTICE. wrote this editorial to come forward! with his proo We respectfully beg to ask for an} {uo early consideration and acce pone ot | on a our offer fours very tr aa tar . JENSEN CREAMERY C OMPANY, | Di 1gmar N, Lund, 646 West North Salt Lake City, December Main prices Our- tailors . rg and as KNIT Ten Per Cent Discount On Tailor-Made Clothes clothes to be given institution, for satisfurnished to this the statements ade are ORIGINAL ae 86 that the trust ee aeond oe At o butter, and Fong rate over third epuid | CUTLER BROS CO. be will held ON ~sraconecad next ---- Tu be followed esday. The emi- | ing by ‘a banquet °{ in the even"Tue -sday | Lake Saif , | S x camp's hall in lanier onor ¢een } members, A ball with prizes eH ee macaeaiae | Siven in the Odeon hall Ww 29 _F raternal Union of Amerten, | night. ednesday ergreéen lodge requests all the | members of the degree team to be! 2 peer at Noe vee asane will be v ashakle tribe No - Ked Men. ielk Jecember " s dora White, :. ye aNO will ele ' G. A: R. 59 South Second West d Mrs. Sarah eine onfer the "way triors" teasesae i } Ecrch ards, Brownest Brown Brothers," is e a 5S. hospital, have yet recov r from their illustrated lec ture | and would sok ai I ject of be glad to receive theanaes memLoyal Americans Rey. Chaplain: Clemens 0 the 7 e a of n of ene thebe ie iE ifte enth infantry of Fort' Donglas, | be een wwe ae to visit t Lake ussembi Siar Republic. ecret wij] deliver. at the I. O. he lecture ocieties | to. the Sons of: Veterans | tional glory will. visit th, his tradi- an open masquerad ANO. 320 will sive O. Fy hall next Friday night.| tree social for the children If (oe | LY 0d -a program "i prize card par‘consists of the legends. | +oom the night c Das ren-In:the lodge | block: nex Pur a in. the Jennings Sere a ieee or: Weapons the. Moros,0 ahdw 18 illustratec clothes, household utensils and music al nstruments. Chaplain Clemens has been In the Philippines twice and has spent much time In the study.of the} will be « atdy, ts ana & , od ore. be: served aud eos 2 Pro~ | Soa be compulsé : fier chitaren: inbe rs are urged to bring| | members of All trends, : temernifies, are ans aes Royal Neighbors. people and natural geography. Hej Auxilary camp No. 4986 has four Philippine boys who will annual election, tonight. der native voca and instrumenta) | | will ren- a year. 4, FAD Colored an ular suitable for, full gownsSilk, Sells regularly at 85c a yard net Store is at 112-114 South Asked to:Have Committee' to S mon Taffeta XS GOOD ROADS. _ Enquirer: Good roads are the best proof of catatiaana: whole MESSALINES, 6: Black Much has been written an ‘said upon this subject apparently to no purpose, due undoubtedly to lack of concerted action. Spasmodiec efforts seldom accomplish anything. We believe that the association of life insurance pret in calling together those who are deeply interested in the matter have in view to first secure, as near as possible, uniform fauation in all the states. If it is admitted that ali insurance corporations should a tax, then the amount of the tax should be just and equitable, and not burdensome. How the tax shall be assessed, the per cent and other Satie are subjects for future deliberations. The association has begun at the right end. Let it be followed by publicity with the Showto each one the amount of his premium each year goes for unjust taxation and the effect will soon be felt in the legislatures, Provo progress, the An giviug interests, and against the interests of Utah? We don't just see the logic of the Tribune's position, of POPULAR LETTER peo- situations to Utah teachers. Its most angry demand was for the election of board members who would go out of Utah for all the teachers. What is there in the record of the Tribune to surprise BR) ;va Chicago against the interests of the local dealer? In the recent school election the most con stantly reiterated charge of that entire shameful Tribune values subscription lists to the mail order houses in Chicago. Year after year that paper has been printing ugly charges against Utah people. When the New York Times declared "Utah is a community of} eriminals,' the Salt Lake Tribune indorsed the the Be = wil! silk SILK, Snish,Sellsworeregularly ae paar wide. Special 75¢ Our Drug city stamps yards eeent. of the size in all the have the comfortable consciousness of knowing that he did something for the help of his fellow man. TAPPETA ise A SAND. = stamp munchaved ‘cba bett toni: oO ase e ette r health a : some, | i entire escape from dread disease for others. Never has there been a better opportunity to do a great service with so small a sacrifice. It will be in keeping with the spirit of Salt Lak« biz rates, and get indifferent service. If the founders lose, it is not the fault of the people through whose towns and lands the new line passes. It will hardly be fair, therefore, for later owners of the line ‘o charge those same people, their successors and assigns, rates sufficient to recoup for the builders' losses-especially as the builders who lost are never found again. They never receive the later gleanings, This raiload business Is a good deal like some others. It becomes necessary on occasion to judge things as we find them, without being haunted with stories of the past. Here are certain conditions partaining ‘to the merchants and manufacturers of A nM They are offered at a price which can not possibly be a| SC drain dividends are Annual every the defense. They deserve to win, because they are right and have the manhood to take their own part; to defend themselves. The railroad companies have not been fair to Utah. They have made the burdens of these Salt Lake manufacturers and merchants, these miners and farmers, heavier than equity will warrant. They have given other communities better conditions. They have helped other cities and other states at the expense of Salt Lake and of Utah Give this city the same rates that are enjoyed in competing communities. and it will rise swiftly and in splendor to the unchallenged dominance of the region-forever It will be easy for the railroad companies-all of them-to do fairly by Salt Lake, It will be well for them to consider that this community can defend itself. And it will be wise for them to take notice that the community is minded to do that very thing. A disposition to be entirely fair right NOW will be the best preventive of trouble that mortal man can imagine. W. A. Clark can have the Tribune whenever he wants it. He holds the whip hand over Tom Kearns,| OPIE READ'S ESTIMATE OF SALT LAKE. There is probably no shrewder judge of a comand whenever he needs the Tribune buncombe, he will get it. And he {s going to need it pretty soon.| munity than is Opie Read who addressed the people They stand absolutely and forever together. They| from the stage of the Salt Lake theater last Friday are one in interest, and they will continue to re-/ night. In the first place, he is a man of broad mind. he has travelled much, and has I n the second, main 50, The business men of the city, of the state, de- studied men and conditions wherever he has been He found his audience very appreciative Read mand just concessions from the railroad companies. There is enough philosophy and The Republican has the courage to voice their de- speaks rapidly. mands, publish their arguments. The Herald is out poetry and pathos and fun in his hour and a half and open against the demands of its own best talk to furnish forth a whole regiment of lecturers. One can scarcely get the good of a passage until friends. The Tribune will get Into line, ‘he only newspaper in this town that dares work another gem flashes from the lips of the speaker, And yet he found his Salt Lake patrons instant for the people is The Republican. This is the only paper published in Salt Lake in grasping the point of a story, the pith of a jest, or the meat of an argument which has no strings on it. Mark that! That sort of thing piques the curiosity of the To the lasting shame of others let it be said He naturally wants to know if this ready they dare not fight in defense of the men whose lecturer. money they take every day-the business men and appreciation is typical of the town. And Mr. Read finds it ts. the people of Utah. After his lecture he was entertained for an hour The most righteous war that has ever been waged in the state is in progress. And The Republican alone or so by the Press club. And such men as Willard is fighting for the people. And those papers, with Weihe, J. J. McClellan, Mr. Brines and Mr. Clarke unmeasured obligations upon them because of the played and sang for him-and the other guests asbenefits they have recelved from the people, are sembled. Mr. Read believes there is not a town Jn recreant to their trust, supposedly subservient to the the nation of three hundred thousand people where demands of concerns hostile to the interests of thelr so excellent a program could have been provided, own subscribers. : without any preparation. And there was no effort They stand together. And they stand together in this case. Officers of the club simply told some agalost their friends. of the artists that Read would be in the rooms after the lecture, and they came, WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN ENGLAND. He saw some of H. L. A. Culmer's pictures in After awhile all the excitement oceasioned by the afternoon; and they but add to his estimate of the suffragette demonstrations in England will have Salt Lake's talent. subsided. The reform will have been granted, and It is worth while to have a man of judgment voting by women there will be an accepted his- speaking well of the city wherever he goes. And torical fact. that is what Mr. Read will do. But it is even more In that later time people will look back to the to the point that Salt Lake possesses the men and| present marvels of disorder much as they do on the women of ability that are here, the riots which caused a repeal of the corn laws. Englishmen may now geneally regard these women SPEAKING OF RAILROAD RATES. clamoring for the suffrage as enemies of the comUndoubtedly it is true that some railroads have monweal. But they will later come to regard them been destructive of the fortunes of the men who simply as heroic souls, adopting a course by no built them, and have later become money earners. Ineans congenial, and solely for the reason that less But it is not of record that those who reaped the drastic measures failed of any result, harvest ever gave to the losers the fortune expended It it were not so difficult to arouse Englishmen in the seeding time. the women would not be so spectacular. It would be more in conformity with the nature of the women themselves, For these are not rowdles, fishwomen, harridans. They are women of good homes, of culture, of refinement. They do not like to make a spectacle of themselves in the street. They do not enjoy the publicity of a police court trial when they are arrested. They don't like to go to prison. But they firmly belleve women should be permitted to yote. For many years they have held to that opinion, and they have advanced excellent argument along that line. They have not been answered. Men in position to effect the reform have conceded that the women are right-but have not made a move to give them the franchise. After some decades of that sort of campaign, the women have come to the conclusion they will have to arouse the attention of the English public. Since they believe they are right, siuce their arguments are conceded true by every party leader, and since they can get no farther than ineffective and evasive agreement-without the ghost of a promise to bestow the ballot-they havé taken to measures in Great! MoOY Ge L. are is worth justice, find that railroad losses in other up by exactions on the Utah men. And | They charged of They stripped hey made are value thousand HELP WITH LITTLE EFFORT. every man and every woman and child Indian. what he probably can not keep. But the man who will defend himself They BIG so THEY Republican farmers, the Englishmen 1908| can't safely give him less. These business men of Utah find they are being discriminated against by the railroad companics. 7, SINCE Merchants and interests over DEC. EVER not of hile. LAKE of of defending. is little him "COMRADES, COMRADES, WERE BOYS." that inertia | question of needless labor. The man who | possess the character to defend himself is SALT as the - | deserve Dr Mountaina. believed THE MAN WHO WILL NOT DEFEND HIMSELF. The man who will not defend himself doesn't | OFFICES: 604 not | gat Of flees-Dooly Block, 208 South West Temple street. Phones-Business and editorial de peat nts, Bell, Ex xchange 25; Independent, 3190. Editorial department only, Inde pendent N is 7, 1908. Ce CR Utah. the Circulation Department DIRECT, and not to after con-| """~*" matters on all solicitors,Please collectors of or pauper. carriers, ne delivery give former co! It DECEMBER music | "The Ladies of Reynolds circle No. 1! Sn Ot OR RRS will hold its ithe-l regular ©: ‘meeting, Tuesday ay +oh.S |.» 0°,care1ouowing are the new On hal ade ae par . Pare Lake Welling; hold os itu officers! wut especially invite Maccabees |)..4 invited {and F to ret ¢ societies No. 1: @ hief rangateiabs ey sub chief ranger, | form aril {; In the will, ‘frat be seicay that ausple Orenien of Salt W pee tent No. city Lake. tent 12 in the emb 0. » Speeches SH are night' under No. 2 L 0.0 nd-shaking and fancy uniSatsewMad WWnaderat': te ee: havien. Whites' Onanctal sec- | ever 8 wil the order of th ve @ e re The three circles. of Salt Lake will} Fe ary, Car) Peterson: treasuren pa ne rs fraternally, J. . Mill hold @ ralyl next Belda'y in: 3. O-°0: | Clough; lecturer, w. Hi Walicer: Gein = rman of the committee. er §r., hall. AF neighbors are requested to woodward, G. Tu WHE aaa" ia he embers of the t Maccabee lod ar¢ ¢ vooc bring thelr) All the working the sale will, be ora frie | ¥ ca Grimm: ann or beadle, Wf, Por Da nish . Sisterhood. * 'ilam Mar The next sant readie, Wilis meetin members of lodge No. 69 are | held Decemb & will be ard s ke the bazaar for| eee of Christ tmas presents, Modern Woodmen of Amerten. 1 tn Be 3 3.0.0 . F. he 1 next af ihe afr 2, bunch: 438 initiation, for ing club will meet this afternoon with | Lake have hee. ae visiting ode : be present to ge 58 500d "time. | } The ENVIABLE REPUTATION, | basa: reputation orate Printing T work will be fir | pq ; forenof Sult | met. mé iin a Co, This once competition quality, y has no competition ese THE (NTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN. as SUL 4 |