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Show . - - Hi Denver & Rio Grande II Excursions I J Round Trip Fares I I CHICAGO ?56.50 ST. LOUIS 52.00 I I ST. PAUL 55.70 OMAHA 40.00 I KANSAS CITY 40.00 rJ DEXVER 22.50 :J Low rates to other points. 'hii Dates of sale July 19, 23, 31, Au- ::l J. gust 1, 9, 10, 11, 16, 22. 28, Septem- &S&f er lo and 11. Good returning to Oct. 31. Electric lighted sleepers to Chicago and St. Louis. H&J Dining Car Service paa Best Anywhere. $1 Sunday Excursions f To Salt Lake $1.10 j F. FOUTS, Agent, jHgH Reed Hotel Bldg IPI C. A. Henry, Tkt. Agt., .- Union Depot. I FIRST NATIONAL M BANK ijlta OP C o D EN, UTAH WM. U- DEPOSITARY Capital 150,000.00 P$4P ji ' Undivided proflU m and surplus (60,000.00 xjLiffl ! Deposits , a. 500,000. GO flSwCT i M- Browning, Prea.; c. It fSjBm Ecclaa, Vlca Pres.; Q. H BmSi Tribe. Vlca-Prea.; John Wat- fflE j aan. Vice Pres.; John Plngrea, HH! j Cashlar; Jaa. F. Burton, Asst. MB w-t Jar. AMERICAN NOVELISTS NO. 5. WINSTON CHURCHILL "Learn One Thing Every Day" Copyright. 1913, by The Associated Newapapcr School. Inc. Although he graduated from An-napolis An-napolis In lS'.'l, Winston Churchill never served in the nary. Instead, immediately after completing hi studies he began writing He had found out that he could write when he was still at Annapolis, and decided decid-ed that fiction rather than the nai J was his line of work. For this the young graduate had fnle equipment, j Annapolis gae him self-reliance and determination. Those graduates of I the Naval academy who have not i gone into the nivy hae usually been j successful In whateer they have I done. Thi? is particularly true In the case of Churchill Well educated I at tbe same time he is full of the jov of life Itself, and likes all sorts of outdoor sports. He is a faorite every ev-ery u here. Winston Churchill was horn in St Iritis, Mo., on November lit, 1S71. and Spent the firs' sixteen year? of his 1 life there. From a school in St I Ixuiis he went to Annapolis There 1 he became Btrongij Interested in American history and problems and made up his mind to devote his life and energies to these. In the brief intervals between studies and drills he gathered much of the materia! that he afterward used in his novels. While al nnapolie ho stood among the first five or six in his class. He also reorganized the crew and wa3 Captain tor a ear. He likewise played play-ed a good game of football. Fencing I tennis, and horseback riding arc bis favorite sports For awhile after graduation he worked on the Army and Navj Jour s nal. and then joined the staf- or thel Cosmopolitan magazine. During thin time he wrote a great deal, but dlfl not attempt to publish these first em pertinents in fiction lie married In 1S?5 and moved nofl long afterward to his home at Cow nish Nov. Hampshire, which is fl present the summer residence tfl President Wls-n Chun hill was vefM fortunate. He did not tunc- to eara.1 a living b doing hackwork, and.1 could take plenty of time with any thing that he wrote It is said that genius is the ca- j pacitv for taking groat pain. a-ston a-ston Churchill surely illustrates thla adage. Hard work, determination, and a keen sen.'e of values made hint the successful nocll-t that he . He was ambitious to write the .cry best he know how. Once, when living in j St Louis, he hired an office and wenfl down to It as regular!, as any other man of business His writing was business, and was treated as such. He rewrote "Richard C rvel" at least five times He worked from' breakfast until 1 o'c!.,, :.. ait. r lunch for two or three hours, and alter dinner often far int.. the night Thij, the first of three of Winston hnrcW ill's novels dealing with American I history, became the most popular book in the I nited States 'The I Crisis,'' the second of these historical histor-ical novels appeared a f. w -.ears ?.l-I ?.l-I fcr ' Hi. hard Can el 1 ,n 1:104 I The Crossing," the last of tue tril-ogy, tril-ogy, w;l-, published. The bad. ground for The Crisis' was the ( n ( sr and ' The Crossing ! ,h if, rb great western movement across tW country. Churchill has senod In the vw Hampshire l.-i -' : ,re, and also ran 1 for the governorship of tha' -tate.l "Conielon" wa- a direct outgrowth of his political associations The novel I Is a story of politics, with a chsrnuH love storv running through it. Dlnston ( hur. hill ,s 3t,;' - n.,n, man. and there is even reason to 1 believe that his best and bien work I Is still to come Frery day a different human later- 1 est story will appear In the Standard I ou can get a beautiful intaglio r I production of the above plctura. wlti 4 f!v- others equally attrarijTe TiJ .J inches in aize. with this week's "Mt f tor " In ' Tbo Mentor" a well known j authority covers the subject of tha f pictures and stories of tho wek Read 1 crs of the Str.ndard and the Mentor S will know art, literature, history, ael- I ence, and travel, and own exqtililta 1 pictures. On sale at Spargo'a Book I tore. We are ready for the Sage Hens, Are You? J? Ammunition Guns Coats, Etc. p H. C. HANSEN & CO. "I 1 v l 1 THE REAPING TIME 1 j Eg coma wil h pWe .nd delight, upccUUj if I U tnerj 11 u abundant harreat ?' m rw , ,,lk, regular ' nta in the I ' I $2 """""" l!a"k r. .r ,1! ."- j ,,r,'!r,;;ni',;;:' " ..... Jj! I 4 Per cent iDtert p3ji cu sgi 1 t UTAH NATIONAL BANK I Ogden, Utah. I " ' 1 BSSsl BSSSSSSl |