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Show Monument To Advertising The nickel gave us the Wool-worth Wool-worth building, one of the seven wonders of the twentieth century. Now it has given us the Wrigglcy building, Chicago's Chi-cago's most lofty office structure struc-ture Spearm;nt, Doublemint anT4Ticy Fruit frnrup this nlagnicent skyscraper. The building is not only a credit to Mr. Wrigley, but it is AISO A MONUMENT TO ADVERTISING. It is ad vertising that gives the nickel its fortune-making potency. It opens up the pursestrings of the masses for the product that sells for only a few cents- The i vast majority of our 110,000,-000 110,000,-000 population are prospects for a five-cent package of gum, a package of Uneeda biscut, lor a roll of Life-Savers. How the demure nickel plus advertising multiplies markets ds well illustrated in the case of (Hie astounding success of the five-cent package of raisins, jrecently put out by the California Cali-fornia Associated Raisin com-'pany. com-'pany. The nickel unit wrought it his business miracle, just as ,it has done before in so many yases. Printer's Ink. i ' ft I Our No. 2211 Blue Serge Suit I . at $45.oo I IS .Some Value i ! ! We say the cheadist Suit it Town I C. M. PETERSEN i Your Tailor . j I? ' 8 ! $ V fj ..- .'-.--;- :::.:: : : -xaac :; ..-xec:-ww The Public Is Interested rpHERE are many problems affecting 1 telephone service in the solution of which the public is directly concerned Telephone service is an intimate, vital , factor in the commercial, industrial, professional pro-fessional and domestic life of the people. The telephone has infinitely extended human efficiency. What were formerly the accomplishments of a lifetime are now completed in less than a decade through the aid of the telephone. The demand for telephone service is continually increasing. To keep pace with this demand new plant must constantly con-stantly be added new equipment installed. in-stalled. - In other words, there must be a continual con-tinual flow of capital into the telephone business if it is to fully meet the requirements require-ments of the public. . " The general attitude of the public toward the Telephone Company will determine de-termine the attitude of capital toward such an investment. The public is vitally interested. We Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co. j MONUMENTS I and j HEADSTONES j Rfflerz & Co. ! I - Mount Pleasant, Utah. OF PRESIDENT L1NCL0N I In the film scene showing tlj assassination of President Lin? i coin, one sees not only the com ;plete stage of Ford's Theativ i in April, 1865,but also the audi torium of the theatre, the audi-,ence audi-,ence and the historical figure ' i in the boxes. - Laura Keene is playing "Qw .American Cousin," assisted bv ,E. A. Southern m.the role of Lord Dundrearj-. They arc startled out of their mimic1 .parts by the shot that 'Wilkes-1 (Booth fired. The audience has risen to its feet as the shot ,js heard and cranes forward f ,in a semi-panic to gaze at the' 'great statesman whose head Jias fallen back in the stage box and at the assassin Booth ! .who is leaping from the box' to the stage and whose spur catches in the box drapery as1 he jumps, causing him to breal: his leg. This sort of historical .realism has never been achiev ! ed before. Spectators gaze at the scene with fascinated horror. It is too terrible, too awesome for applause, yet not a spectator but feels that in this impress-; ive rendition Mr. Griffith has surpassed the greatest previ-' .his art achievements of. the film drama. Advt. , i m i THE KU KLUX KLAN The period of the' 'reconstruction,' 'recon-struction,' so vividly brought back to the memory of those j who may have gone through j it and reproduced afresh for! .those newer generations who! now view it for the first time. ni Griffith's Birth of a Nation, j 1 .shows the time of Johnson's j ; .administration and he, as the J , nation's executive, iu the j ; hands of a ring of politicians i and power seekers, who are : manipulting the affairs of uVj South to suit their own ends. ! Women are menaced by the black minions of the northern whites, or are attacked, whites , . are driven from the streets. menaced by the colored troops. I or assaulted. Homes are m- vaded. Justice is a forgotten;-thing. forgotten;-thing. The land knows uo;. ' law but that conceived by uVj 1 race then in control. Then-; ' ,the chivalrv of the whites lfjj uivon new life. The Ku Uuv-Klan Uuv-Klan is formed. These ndeiv) of the night, in ghostly vliuYs.ji rallv bv dozens, by score, j and hundreds and thousands. , ' ,Thev ride like the' wind. TUey ( strike without even the wani-ij ! jing the rattlesnake gives, butj , are far more deadly. , ; This all-wonderful, soul stiMj ring, breath-taking as it 1J j but another of the innumerable; ; 'dramas within dramas' 01 j , which The Birth of a Natwn.j , consists. Advt. j' KNOW YOUR OWN ! COMMUNITY! 1 Teople who know j iievor liavo to wonder i who or why. r You get. cveryihin wortiv knowinR Ht j year's subscription i to the PYRAMID. j ' Married folks danco at j Armory Hall next WcdnW I sui.Hi-i-ii... n- for :n' r.wii'""1 t |