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Show HI- ssss i iipi imiim iis ! iim R9 jT & y ARROW COLLAR B m 21-ZSdi. Q.,, rM, S Co , Uc. If FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF C3DEN, UTAH I U. 6. OtPOSITARY i Capital t i&o.ooood I Undivided profits and surplus 850,000 00 H Deposits a,5OO,OO0.O0 ij. V ! M. S. Qrownlng, Pres.; t R. fri I Eccles, Vies Prss., Q. H. I HI Tribe, Vlce-Pres., John Wat- j i son, Vlce-Pres.; John Plngrse, H Csshler; J. F. Burton, AsL I .fflEXCURSIONS oo : J1 From H Ogden and Salt Lake City To $m East and Return Kansas City, Mo $40 00 181 St Louis, Mo 52 00 jr.) Chicago, III. 56.50 iVi St- Paul or Minneapolis. 55 70 fllL&J Standard Differ- ' Lines. entlal K!fa Lines New York $86.60 $83.60 Jffitli Boston 86 50 82.50 raKSf Buffalo ... 71.10 71.10 'isT Montreal 76.50 76.50 Proportionately Low Rates to EjStffi many other points. ivl Dates I August 1, 9, 10, 11, 16, WS&' of i 22. 28 7$f Sale I September 10th and 11th , : Tickets to points east of Chicago, !jf; limited to elxty days from date of ' . ' sale. Other tickets limited to Oc- I I; tober 31, 1913. por further Information address E. R. LEIS, H General Agent bo A- T- 4 8- F' Ry-. Bffl-l 233 Judge Building, S&JV' Salt Lake City, Utah. ffiM I - i ifl i CHEER UP! : WjM Let the TROY do your Wet I BMgfrf Wash 3c per pound. fSgi Phone 2074. J Announcement W restling M a t c h at ( Glenwood Ball Grounds 4:30 p. m. Friday, August 8, instead of 3 p. m., Aug. 9th. AMERICAN NOVELISTS j No. 4. JAMES LANE ALLEN "Learn One Thing Every Day" fn Copyright, 1913, by The Associated Newspaper School, Inc. A historical novelist worthy to rank with Nathaniel Hawthorne, James Lane Mien has teen called. Both have given us pictures of the lives of our forefathers but, while Hawthorne has shown us New Eng land Alln draws the Blue Grass region re-gion of jventucky and its peopl It may be due to the fact that James Lane Allen was a seventh child that he has achieved such rennrkable success in literature He was born in Fayette countv near Lexington. Kentucky, n 1X49. the youngest child of Richard and Helen Allen. He can number among his paternal ancestors some of the first settlers of Virginia One of these ancestor?. Richard Allen, Al-len, moved to Kentuckv, where he lived 'ho oas . hospltsMe life of a gentleman farmer on his large estate Mr Allen s mother was a descend ant of the Pennsylvania Scotch-Irish and the Brooks family ,.f Virginia A native of Mississippi she was a lover of nature and literature She inspired inspir-ed in her son a love for reading old romances, poetry, and history Although Allen was only twelve vears old w hen the st. i ni of Civil war broke over our country he was old enough to realize its horrors and the suffering that it brought to the people of the South lust before the liopiniung of the war his father lost hi? fortune; so the formal education that Allen received was small, but under his mother's guidance he pursued pur-sued his studies at home Ixing walks' In the fields and forests about his home gave him a keen Insight into nature He was graduated from Transvlva-nia Transvlva-nia unhersit- n Lexington, Kentucky, Ken-tucky, In 172. and three years later' received a degree of A. M. from there. A little before this his father died, and James had to begin teach-! ing in order to meet expenses H" spent a year as master in a country -chool, walking six mileg to and from the scho.,1 every day. For two years he taught in Missouri, Mis-souri, and then came back to Kentucky Ken-tucky as a private tutor He was railed rail-ed to hU alma mater to teach and two years later Bethanv college g West Vlrcinla. offered him tht- .-hair jf Latin and higher English. He planned to go to Onrm.mv f..r a ' L time; but gave this up whin the ideal of becoming a doctor of medli at at- I tracted him. This was when he waaj m doing graduate work at lohns llop-j 18 kins In Baltimore Bu- his low I I literature 'ed him to fake up writing E and in IsM he moved to N'ew VorB II He arrived there unknown and witij no letters of introdiict.on but lis took up his hud.' ip .1 ,1 rei and Qj started out in a ver humble way.l at He sent letters to the v. , i;ve. nlng Post, poems to Harper's ,ind the Atlantic Monthly, and rss.r , 10 the j Critic and Forum . iiilti-m of Henry James' "Portrait ol ;i l.ady" ;a first attracted attention to the young k author, and soon the.-r w - h tr--iig 5 demand for his sketches of Kentucky life The Blue (irass R. -ion of j Kentucky" was the title 2i. ,-n to ths -collected volume of the-o ; etches, I Mr. Allen then moved to Cincin- j a jnatl; but later moved agr.ln to Wash- J Incton, believing that tiip capital of " the country would be tho future homsl Hj of literature and ar' in nicrica fa j Washington, ho.v. w i he f-nmd 100 B) nine h soclnl an, offi.ial d ! -1 ractloa; Vc so he returned to New York. u Tie Kentuckv Cardinal, p'lblislh-a h) ed in ivc, u ,, nr Mr ai'.mi'r best lab, hooks. It is a sort of pastoral poem in prose, showing tlie strusgle be-J E tween nature an 1 hue The- choir ( Invisible" shows the noMo love of a married woman for a nnn is not ggt her husband James Lane llen is host known as it a writer of fiction, but he in? alto, published m;nv r 1 ' 1 r-0 1 irti. and much vers-e He is rec.-iv.zrd as onei 7r of the most poeMc and dr.ima'ic of k , American novelists. Erery day a different humaa latiiyj est story will ppear in the Sttndsrtf. You can get a beautiful Intsglio rsBl. production of the above picture witkS five others, equally a:Tctive. 7x5 M r-Sl Inches in size, with this week's Mea- W tor In "The Mentor a well knows 1L authority covers the subject of tU Ttsl pictures and stories of the weoli Res Kf ers of the Stjndard and the Mentor will know art, llteratur, history, set JPJ nee, and travel, and own xqulllti pictures. On sale at Spargo s Bosk a Tz my We are ready for the Sage Hens, Are You? Ammunition Guns Coats, Etc. frf H. C. HANSEN & CO. K Kg i THE REAPING TIME H COmea w.th pleasure and delight, csnc-nallv if g Bg tnere is an abundant harvest V O gg Those u ho make regular depoiats m the I ' J gj ' National liank cimv the Inuts ,),,,,- : .' V, H hi bur. bj Have you an account with uaf f n : I t? 9 stnrt one now h 4 Per cant Interest Paid 02 Savins Accounts I UTAH NATIONAL BANK l jfe S8 Ogden, Utah. X.; L saw . fljaasi sis |