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Show : Coming to SALT LAKE CITY. meat when desired. According to his method of treat-ment he does not operate for chronic apsendloltls , gall stones, ulcers of stomach, tonsils or adeaolds. He has to his credit wonderful re-sults in disease of the stomach, llrer, bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kldaey, bladder, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rectal ailments. If you bare been ailing for any length ef time and do net get any better do ot fall to call, as Impro-per measures rather than disease are very eftea the cause of your long staaclag trouble. Remember above date, that consul, tatlo ea this trip wlH be free and that Us sreatnent Is different. Married woeaea must be accompan-ied by their husbands. Address: S24 Bradbury BIdg. Los Aagelea, California. OIL MELLENTHIN 8 GO.'S SPECIALISl In Internal Medicine for the ease fifteen yean DOE8 NOT OPERATE Will be at OULLEN HOTEL SAT. SUNDAY V MON. FEB. 1, 17 18. Office Hours! 10 ft. m. to 4 p. an. ' THREE DATS ONLY. No Charge for ConsuItatUs Tb specialist of Dr. Melleathla Co. la a regular graduate la medicine aad surgery and is licensed by the tats of Utah. Ha visits professionally the more Important towns and cities aad offers to all who call on this trip free e, except the expense of treat Wefo&wsi&y II4I9 9 Thursday, Friday and Saturday Our Big Ammal SrTseed 1 U3 To brine to the lowest point before stock-takin- g prices have been drastically J t& r,rZ;B ruced Sousands of dollar' worth of Sta?fc Dm Home & N Xrtll - Qfl drle8, etc Liberal buying for future needs is urged at these econormcal pnees. Buy now gsifesgj 5 &mm4 4W 25C 1 "' i 1 : igsfS: JSST! 3 bars 25c igWSSpW SPECIAL 4 fVW & ' Vm$f rurnZ L., 28CWJ I FREE OFFER J sSSSSS.MV? fo( V V mlJ, wiunmav Mr 5' cream f WttjlXi"" : ' k"" white kino 1 73C ' ' ' 65cDRYCO r An G5gS2 aw.?. bars Z5C f .. WAihbB mcunR I so. Ix.iiact' op-- OT DRY MILK "mu tH4 Pi kss-ja- y fountain PCe witch mazjcu vmt 5iW M!Jl J ' $2.50DRYCO 9 OQ jgS!? O30c UPTON'S 01 ti.,.. b mi..i. hosbwateb, ...... DRY MILK i03 lTEA;pound......lC s. .- -k ; 4761 S Vi "S'Snr.C 35c TREE TEA; JA ..'........ISS ?g A Vi.n"u?uT??l$Q ?2Z$&r $1.25 Bhd Life .97 1 K&k&i -- - 1 SS t & A.Hr special h 6 mP P ' eyiDT Mentholatum ...r.....si ........34, U FREE OFFER f i S Wfl ZZ&ZJte r WtlfeS0aP 1 Petrolasar ...... ..?1.19 fWM f 50c bottle Hillroce W h IIJ,i1J5wkMnsf-- I .. 3 for 21c i 25c Synol Soap ; 1 9J V. ?p U Almond and Benzoin i Li 7gf and 7c Can i 30e Synol Soap 38 W ' 'M ' Lotion FREE with MuitZ'&ril toCk 25Lysol 19' Ijj ' Purchaf-- of $1.00 g iid pit rl V . J en. t -- ; t Jar Hillrpse Vel- - 4 --'FREE. --ol ......984 --- co ....37CV vet Cream AWk : rr1-.-. tom JM CA ' -- 19C m nSSr. W.00Tanlac....794. fT 35e SMJft4 .38e $1.00 Rinex .... 9B$WS!mteaSi x TO? KNSSir1 aTmw chmah ' B hffl Wf J tooth paste O tOT 5rl Mil 5 r rvfvs iM tor rrCN f Fiancce Face; vi ABra "" A Igrf ' mMtjF-- t I 2 tTswt I and $1.00 Bottle ? ''ooth paste t ; : 6 CTTl. die ? I Fiancee Perfume if 27C ' .x A-- ivS chbah HSS ; rDrr n tooth pastb IUg2 GEM COf. ' ..HAYl-OCIUiAM- C W I TOOTH PASTB 3C ffifaS " BLADES, Ite .0, -j-,37- C I ? ...43C Ilf S.:; , v, M J . , l B Z. it K.rwa Perfume atbicai. crkam. ih."" B;,,, .; JV" I . FREE j .X&nYZ. mm J - 79c s. Mlmsgm jjy 60Lky Tiger.... 984 nUmtl ... .....,a3C R v MM.. -- IK kotbxi m i 35C f 'jf; x"..' WJ sie.se stah-bit- k ki.kctuic wasvlh .V r..p-:-.-- " $e.9s Hmm ... ............ !32r "pfA 1 "" VV X staiuritb 1 -- w- A f faiEr lAOBTuma H U'ft" ' i.ee pHOPBTMCTfto fifi 1 . HAIH BRVSBI WifelSr-J- S TOABTKR .'"X S KSHV 1 J? C ., fZ&'SigSL 9bm star-hit- s istjsc T oE2U r v : .watkrii;ry TnRiPT SinB. I'VrnK trso hkatixo pad. fcjrj yf Kj - 1 X, ', i ALARM CLOCK ............'"' SVVJ Thm-hm- t. Donbl. Thera- - m'ClI ft tTTTtW ' MiWk hEMSmSmSSSHJLk and Loose Powder J SAn, C74 'SSS 2 $2-9- 3 Si5fptcket Comb. In Viis Krtcawf 1.49 PSik,, star-rit- b r. electric 7 '"A V j ySSs&' Mil i YttiiMBysT it"3 cxmuna irow ooC Bee Playing Cards 43f iXyfAA 50c Jayne't Twaic Vermiliife. . . .37c j 7. w."f! "".,73c tasmgm ? f , 1 SASrm Awm ... 75c 5TJDsiS,?.37c f IjFR R , r $3.25 waterbury I 69C ..4 pkg8. 25C I FIA At I Superior Alarm Clock 25c Aspirin Tablets, 2 dozen . . 18 bkooratkd lustrk wark vy ! . Il J crai. H.U. ..i. 1T 69c Aspiria Tablet 100s 49 ftTi ."J'SS, .'..SI .49 1 L fjlM H V' I S2.S9 ' Si-e- e PARitsu davis 70 - --Jrte sioe home-- s best hot wa- - ftPJ&W fl I Wnfprharv so. stedmaws tekthikq 4 5'" 1ia"rt "u V'' s ,4 54.3 J ISC 4 I' mvi).u N I - K.ra home's best fous. Clock i U ' f w .skwmoki . Sf X f ' bToii 40c Castoria 274. i . J m dial i SI .79 cra.n piat-- a ! A Vk. 5.-hS- J sV 3 Jf Miry f lavoris i lavoris r i ,ff 1T J natios wiwaiii hvkisok HJHtPoKKB 7f ?S si.ee piwai rvs 79li viS' JN V "ot water bottle, chips. e.om.s v Y- - EAD B QIII"K taL' X. .f u.irlal nf s.ne COOPER'S SAWN O I A Eij!&WW ' BOTTLE. H. S mtmm 5'B V Att.km..t. I .JO AL DOUt llK H j r Do It Now. Rer. D. Lee, Portsmouth, N. It, says, "Come or write to 101 Crescent Way, and I will tell you bow In a abort time the bladder irritation w relieved by Llthlated Buchu (Keller Formula.) My case was of loof standisg and painful. Was bothered I to 6 times each night" It acts ou bladder as epsom salts do on bowels. DfrWes out foreign deposits and less-ens excessive acidity. This relieves the Irritation that causes getting The tablets coat So each at all drug stores. Keller Laboratory, Mechanlcsburg. Ohio, or locally at Bingham Drug Co. IOUCATION OBTAINABLE ON IN-STALLMENT PLAN. Education hn fallen in line with most of the other necessities and luxune. of life and is now largely obtainable on the Installment plan, according to a state-ment Issued by the Department of the Interior. Students who desire to finance their college education on that plan have many opportunities to borrow money, go to college, graduate, and afterwards re-pay their loans In a business-lik- e manner. Ambitious students are assisted In fin-ancing their education by the colleges and universities themselves, and by many Independent organizations. ' In 282 colleges and universities,' funds totaling nearly $4,000,000 are loaned an-nually to students of character and abili-ty for the purpose of competing ihelr college educations. Although these funds are administered by the several In-stitutions, there Is no uniformity as to the manner in which they are handled. Repayment generally begins at a stated period after graduation. As soon as a student needing this educational help de-cides upon the Institution to be attended, he should then find oct by correspondence what loan funds and scholorshlps are Available and what self-hel- p opportuni-ties may later be open to him. Thousands Cannot Take Aspirin The discovery a few year, ago of a pain relief which exhaustive tests by thousands of physicians, dentists and nurses proved It to be truly wonderful, was indeed a great blessing to sufferers ot head-aches neuralgia, rheumatism, neu-ritis, ' period pains. During the great flu epidemic It was conclus-ively found thousands could not take aspirin, acetanllid or compounds con-taining these. The remarkable new dscovery ailed does not contain aspirin, acetanllid or any heart depressants. It is absolutely harmless to young or old. It stops pain In five minutes and Instead of leaving you feeling loggy, it actually peps you up. If you have severe headache, pains of any kind, try this remarkable new scientific discovery. A tube of twelve tablets at your druggists costs but a few cents. Just ask for you will be delighted. KIRKHAM'S ADDRESS Continued But this is only one answer to the question whether we should continue to increase our expenditures for the public schools. The world in which we live is rapidly changing;.. Wealth is increasing at a tremendous rate. America was a debtor nation to the world ten years ago, today the world owes her 12 to 15 billions of dol-lars in excess of war claims. ...... Each year we send abroad about two billions of dollars and each year we send abroad a billion dollars for travel and at least two billions of dollars is placed in Savings Banks. The per capita increase of wealth in ten years has more nearly quadrupled than doubled. Through machinery one man uses the combined strength of thirty, and our production of the things we need is so accelerat-ed that we cannot consume, even with wasteful meethods, the tremendous increase of production. As a further indication of our wealth, enormous sums of money are spent in America for travel, automobiles, cosmetics, tobacco and amusements. Mr. Earl L. Fisher, Tax Commissioner for the State of Oregon, at our recent convention, stated that the yearly depreciation on automobiles in the United States was in excess of the cost of public school education; that our tobacco bill was more than twice the money we spent on our children in the public schools, and that although we wasted in various forms nearly 15 of our total annual income, that we spent only 1 Vfc of ' it for public schools. Let us pause to ask for what purpose is this accumulation of wealth if it be not to increase the power of man to understand, to enjoy, and to live. Woe to the nation which neglects ideals and character. We shudder when we turn to history to note the fate of ancient civih- - " zation and compare the causes of their decline with similar indica-tions in our country today. ' May we suggest that it is not a question of whether we can afford to spend more money for the preservation of our ideals, but whether we can afford not to spend more money. May we not, 8 , therefore, with candor appeal to the wealthy of our nation to more adequately support the free public school It was the selfishness 4 of the aristocracy and the illiteracy of the peasant that made ' Russia communistic ' ' public school money should t expended, however, with great care, economy, and efficiency. It is a jrreat public trust imposed in us, and it is our responsibility to accomplish the purpose , for , which it is furnished. ' 3. By what rneans are public schools now supported?: The public schools of Utah are supported almost wholly by the general property tax, 1-- 3 of which is raised by a state levy, and 2--3 by a local levy. Due to the fact that tl e per capita wealth of school children varies from $140 in Washington county to $9404 in Jor-- ; dari District, great inequalities exist is the educational opportun-- 1 ities for children throughout the state. The Superintendent of Public Instruction has recently summarized these inequalities to ' be variation in the length of the school year, in the salary sched-ule of teachers, in equipment, in housing, in supervision, in text-books, in libraries, and in other teaching material . The general property tax is universally condemned today be--' cause of the change of economic conditions which have occurred since it was adopted. Once the amount of property owned was a i. ' fair index of ability to pay, and one practically all the property of a person was available for the tax assessment roll. Today so--' called intangible wealth is not taxed for the reason that a rate of - taxation applicable to tangible property is confiscatory to intan-- gible property. - - For at least 15 years every governor of the state of Utah at each session of the legislature has called attention to the need of ' genuine tax reform in the state. Two special tax commissioners have made reports after careful investigation, each covering' two ' years of time. ' - Patience is no longer a virtue in this matter, and it is no. won der that motives of selfishness are claimed to be the basis of the refusal on the part of certain large taxpayers to consider methods of genuine tax reform in the State of Utah. The claim that tax administration should be improved is fundamentally correct but ' this problem of administration will be with us as long as the gov-- ernment collects taxes. However, one of the greatest calamities ' - i to this state today would be the strict administration of our tax laws which require all property of the state tangible and intang-ible, stocks, bonds, money, franchises, etc. to be taxed at full " cash value and at a uniform rate. 5. What changes in the method of support for public school , administration, if any, are necessary at-thi- s time?: Those who , have attempted to answer this question i for Utah are unanimous '' that other means than the general property tax should be found ' : for an increase for the support of public schools, A tax which, in its administration, promotes injustice and inequality should not 4 1 be extended for the .very reason that its promotion will increase , injustice and inequality. For example, according to investigations conducted by the State Board of Equalization, the Union Pacific Railroad, and others, property in this state is assessed from 40 to . 65 of its full cash value. If state aid be increased for the public - schools by an increased rate on this property, the support will not .... be proportional to the value of property, but will be proportional to its assessed value. - . On the other hand, all students of the problem advocate ' . greater state aid for schools for the reason that the state should ' assume responsibility to give all the children of the state ad near-l-y as possible an equal chance for success in life. - Many states have conserved great natural resources for this purpose, such as Michigan, where the public schools are supported from a severance tax on iron ore; and the State of Wyoming, where large funds are availabel from oil weHs. - Whenever a proposal is made that the natural resources of this state be taxed! the counterargument is raised that the" state is young, and needs to encourage the development of these re-sources by relief from the so-call-ed tax burden. There seems to be only one alternative: A tax according to ability, and this ability is best measured by income. . - It is impossible to expect an ideal tax system. There will al- -' ways be some injustice and some inequality. A tax which ia fun- - ' damentally sound in theory maybe difficult of adminsttation This is true of the income tax. A tax law will always be i com-- V ' ' promise. 6. Are present school funds adequate? ' The Utah survey shows that the district average expenditure for instruction And all v other current school costs per pupil in average daily attendance in 1925 ranged from $45.01 to $105.41. The median cost was $64.69 and the average cost would be considerable higher as all large districts '' are listed above the me-- dian cost The cost of Salt Lake City was $76.90. Teachers'; salar-ies for women ranged from $450.00 to $2,000.00, the median; being about $850.00, and a slightly higher figuer for men. The paradox concerning teacher's salaries is that teachers are willing to teach for less money in the more populous centers where the ability to finance schools is higher than in the rural parts of the stata A further paradox in this situation is the fact that the poorest districts are permitted by the state to bssess ' themselves at a higher rate than the richer districts. v Notwithstanding' these very low salaries, the state's stand-ards for school certification is consistently high. Comparing the cost of education in Utah with other states, we again rank relatively low. California leads the list with a cost ful-ly three times as great as ours, and the Southern States,) which ; have always been low are now rapidly overtaking us in the relative amount of money spent for public schools. Educational opportunities in Utah are not only unequal, but they are also inadequate. Utah must provide a plan to offset . these inequalities and to increase school revenues. It is generally conceded that the method would be greater state aid, and a state equalizing fund. - There is growing in tb?s state at the present time a very strong sentiment in favor of a state convention to amend the con- - stitution and to undertake a firm and honest attempt to equalize tax payments among the citizens of the state. Such a procedure seems inevitable. In the meantime, there have been presented to the legislature a number of tax measures, concerning which the speaker desires to answer questions rather than make a formal defence or statement. Great Breeding Ground Chesapeuke buy Is said to produce more oysters than any other body of water in the world ; it has an annual output of nenrlv (t.ftno.OOO bushels. Food for Thought We often wonder what a centers population that hasn't any collate president emeritus residing to Its midst does when It needs a chair-man of the committee engaged In the promotion of any given worthy cause. Ohio State Journal. Success at Failing Don't call a mun a failure unless you know what be was trying to do. Maybe his ambition was to get by without working. Sun Francisco Chronicle. Bratt an Alloy Brass Is not found native. It is an ulloy of copper, xlnc, etc. |