Newspaper Page Text
I OGDEN STANDARD, OGDEN, UTAH, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1913. - jj 1
f. Continued Prosperity for 1913-50,000 Population for 1920 I I
Ogden is a growing city, is proud of many industries, and offers large inducements to the Homeseeker and Investor Boost for Ogden, it means permanent prosperity. I
Factories of Utah Must Be Built Up I
It State Is to Progress as it Should I
"5 i
,
mu in
I Be sure to use The Housewife's
II Friend I
z "OphMw" j m c daic
if FLAVORING I HH !
S Extracts pate
They give BESTjFl0Ur
results. I
Mfg. by 3 Sold by all leading dealers
I PHARMACAL OGDEN MILLING
lJ I CO. & ELEVATOR CO. I
3 Ogden, Utah 0gden' Utah-
1, BUY THE CEMENTI WR
JI THAT IS BEST BY !
I TEST T m &1
VTT Vl'-- Order !
j Trade Mark J llSffgf j:ou
'.'fsj Ogden I
Ogden Portland I ! :Sgil??i
i Cement Co. , -Lzjfe:" m
Ogden Utah ITS HERE
: lWMI1"mill win mi ' iiiiihihw ' "I' wmhit
BY FROST NOR FIRE NOR EVEN I
TIME ARE WELL BURNED CLAYS 1
DESTROYED
I
When you plan that new home or business block, bear in
mind that the only part of the Sanitarium that was left after
I the fire was the brick walls.
, Remember, Mr. Booster, that for every extra 100,000 brick g
j that are manufactured in Ogden you add one more family ta I
our population. I
Also that the only home industry in the building material
line in Ogden is the c
Leek Brick Company
! UTAH-NA
CAMON COUNTY CH0C0LATES
FAIR, Witt Win
this week, at PRICE, the Girl
mi UTAH, the best loaf
H of bread exhibited,
1 winning First Prize and lake a box along
Gold Medal, was made onisht
from - & i
f OPTIMO FLOUR "IT
n I
1 I'aWmner. j 0?den, - Utah
THE MANUFACTURERS' ROLE IN
A GREAT DRAMA.
(A E Eberhardt )
There was once a man who fonne-'J
the habit of doing things in such a.
iarge and generous waj that he
achieved one of the most marvelous
commercial successes in modern
times.
Assuredly, the role of the manufac
turer in this great drama of the west
will not be a minor one Something
more Is necessary than mere natural
location, fertile valleys and fields, ex
tensive grazing grounds for sheep and
cattle, and mountains of coal, Iron,
lead, copper and precious metals, val
liable and blessed as these great nat
ural resources are The captains of
! tinance. of transportation, the real
estate merchant, the farmer, the stock
grower, the miner and smelterman
and the army of distributors who
serve fne needs of all each of these
has his part marked out for him.
Every one of them, however. Is de
pendent, very largely, upon the man
ufacturei, not only for the Instru
ments and means with which to pros
ecute the tasks in their several fleldb
to adantage. but also for a market
for their products
First and foremost must the build
ers of great cities look to the manu
facturers to provide the payrolls nec
essary to support the masses of clti
zens who make their homes within
the city s borders
The farmer brings the products of
his fields to the miller and the food
manufacturer, to the canner or may
hap direct to the consumers whose
names are to be found on the manu
facturers' payrolls.
The sheep and cattle man brines
the surplus of his herds and flocks to
the packer to be properly prepared
tor food. His wool clip goes to the
woolen mill where it Is convened inio
Moth. His hides and pelts find their
way to the tanner, under whose efcill
they are made imo leather for shoes,
harness, automobiles, etc.
The products of the mlneR are but
of little value until they have been
converted by the processes of manu
faUure and the inventor's genius into
articles of everydav use
Thus it Is seen that the products 3t
factories form tae very woof of the
fabric of our present day civilization
But what has all this to do with the
immediate subject In hand? Simply
to reveal the real possibilities that
yet lie belore the manufacturers of
I'tah. Our duty will not have been
fully met. nor should we be extent
until we can furnish a market for all
the latent resources that lie dormant
and undeveloped all around us and
SStil every need of the great termor
we serve is furnished from local fac
torie6 wherever it is possible to pro
duce such articles here with economy
and profit.
Lt us be alive to every opportun
Its thai presents itself for the exten
slon and improvement of our line of
products and for their wider distrl
bution among those whom we should
serve.
Let U6 not forget that in unity
there is strength and that we are
each dependenr upon the other for
our largest ultimate success Let us,
therefore, put into practice as never
before the slogan of our state organi
zatlon. "Help your fellow member."
Help him by words of encourage
ment Help hlrn solve some of his
problems b telling him how you have
solved similar ones of your own. Help
him by buying home products firBt.
Ia6t and all the time
Make it a rule In your own factory
that every' Item In the line shall be
the very best that can be given for
the money. Let It be known to all
the world that Utah made goods are
pre-eminently QUALITY GOODS.
If any local manufacturer is "falling
down" in the quality of his products,
help him by telling him about it (not
everybody else), and show him his
error In thus standing In the way of
every other manufacturer
As a student of English history, you
will remember this incident which oc
curred at the famous naval battle of
Trafalgar. Lord Nelson ran up this
signal on his flagship at the begin
nlng of the engagement: "England ex
peetfl every man to do his duty."
Let every manufacturer of Utah do
his full duty to himself, his employes,
his customers, and his state, and the
victory' of commercial supremacy wTir
be ours.
CANNING FACTORIES
Wasatch Orchard company, River
dale Canning company. Star Canning
company. Hooper Canning company.
B,n:ner Canning company. Ogden;
Kaysvllle canning company; Davis
County Canning company Woods
Cross Canning company, Utah Can
niug company, Ogden; North Ogden
Canning company. Salt Lake Valley
Cunning company, William Craig &
Sons. Roy. Utah; Brigham City Can
ning company. Sprlngvllie Canning
company. Spanish Fork Canning com
pary. Wright-Whktier Canning com
pany, Roy and Ogden; Knight In
vest mont company, Provo. Utah;
Tremonton Canning company. Mor
gan Canning company. Uintah Can
ning company
UTAH KNITTING FACTORIES
How many among the thousand?
of citizens of Utah have any ade
quate conception of what the knit
ting Industry means to the state'
Sc quietly and unobtrusively has the
Industry been built up tnrough the
pacing years that few individuals
outside of the men and women en
gaged in the immediate work of
manufacture and exploitation of the
goods have any acquaintance what
ever with the extent of tno work.
And yet It Is !n Ulan only that
the Utah knitting Industry rails to
be understood or appreciated. In
consistent in the extreme as this
statement may seem, the fact never
theless, remains that throughout
the entire intprmountain country and
Into many of the states farther east,
Utah has attained considerable fame
as a knitting center. Out In the
timber camp6 of Idaho, Oregon and
V. ashlngton. up among tne mines of
Montana and Colorado, and among
the railway men making up a great
army of employes, that extend from
the Canadian line on the north to
Texas on the south, the name and
standing of the various Utah facto
ries is becoming such that it is a
household word among the people
living in this vast area of country
The majority of the Utah houses
market their products on the Mill
to Man system, that Is, representa
tives of the house push out Into the
immediate working environment or
the people early in the spring and
continue to labor throughout the en
tire summer, taking orders ror fall
delivery' of the goods. The repre
sentative enters the timber camp, for
Instance, late in the evening when
the men have suspended operations
for the day. He sets down his lit
tle black grip, takes out a black
union suit, hands a leg to eacn of the
two biggest men in the camp and In
vl s them to pull the suit apart.
Needless to say the most strenuous
exercise of these "giants of the
woods" proves absolutely futile, and
iho demonstration serves at once to
draw the attention of the entire force
to the quality of these remarkable
uoods which the agent is presenting.
The bulk of the products of these
houses Is made to the measure of the
Individual and so satisfactory have
thty proven in the past eighteen or
twenty years in which the Industry
has been growing, that today they
stand absolutely master of the field,
houses of the east being absolutely
uuable to compete with the Utah
house in this line
At the present time thre are four
houses located at Logan, the order
of their seniority being as lollov. B
The Cache Knitting Works was es
tablished In 1890, being tne pioneer
house of the state This house has
the unique distinction of being the
or'ginator of the now famous union
garment and w-as the tirst In the
United States to manufacture the so
called "tailless shirrs. and having
thereby given rl6e to the phrase "no
more shirt tale6." They were also
the originators of the ladles' and
gents' sweater coats. Subsequently
the Iyogan Knitting Works, the Un
ion Knitting Mills, and the Fonnes
beck Mills c;ime Into pxlstencf nt Lo
gan. The Utah Knitting company at
Ogden, and the .Tosslco Mills, con
ducted by Scowcroft at Ogden, and
the Salt Lake Knitting Works, the
Llojd Knitting Mills, and the Model
Knitting Works of Salt Lake.
MACHINE-MADE CEMENT SEWER
PIPE.
tNephi L. Morris.)
For more than twenty years the
making of sewer, drain and irrigation
pipe of concrete has been going on
throughout all the European coun
tries. During that Bame period of
time the manufacture of Portland
cement in different parts of the
United States has given n tremend
ous impetus to the cement products
industries here In every' stato of
the union, and in nearly every city
of considerable size, cement tile and
other concrete products are being
iuade more or less extensively.
Our investigation Into this subject,
vhich runs through many years (for
we were associated with the making
of concrete pipe thirty years ago
In Utah,) has led us to the happy
discovery of a machine the owner
ship of which we, with our asso
ciates, control, that can turn out
$200,000 w-orth of perfect concrete
pipe per year. Additional units could
be added to Increase the output ad
M'finltum This Is the Atlas concrete
pipe machine. We have installed It
In our Salt Lake plant within the
last six months.
The machine was designed by Mr.
A. C. Tuniaon, formerly of Illinois,
now a resident of this state. It Is
Mrongly built with great capacity
and has four powerful steel tampers
which travel around the forming con
crete pipe, delivering 720 blows per
minute, which so perfectly ram the
concrete between the core and the
jacket that It produces as perfect
concrete as has ever been made.
Thre Is used a clean, disintegrated
granite-sand with specially selected
pea gravel, ftandaxdlsed Portland ce
ment, pure' city water ana a mixture
of 1 part of cement to 2 1-2 parts
of sand and gravel.
Products made of such materials,
!n such proportions as the Atlau
machine makes them, will build up
a reputation for the manufacturer
which will survive him and his de
scendants to the last generation be
cause such concrete products are ab
solutely everlasting. They will with
stand the attacks of alleged injurious
chfmlcals that may be found in sew
uge. In seepage water or in alkali
soili- with absolute defiance They
will, with equal triumph, survive the
attacks of unscrupulous competitors
of every kind
IRON DEPOSITS OF UTAH
Do You "Know Utah"?
lo what classes do the iron ores
ot Utah belong?
Hematite and magnetite
What would be a conservative es
timate of the tonnage of iron ore in
Utah?
Six hundred million tons.
How many tons of pig iron would
that make'
It would make 340,200,000 tons.
How long could Utah supply the
Lnited States with Iron ore at the
r resent rate of consumption?
Twelve years.
Where in Utah is Bessemer Iron
ore found0
In Cache county.
What would be the value of Utah's
iron ore after reduction to pig iron?
About $4,786 614,000.
How many tons of unmlned coal
ere there for every man. woman and
ch!ld In the state0
About 526 tons.
Where are the new markets for
Utah coal?
The Pacific coast and the Orient,
through the opening of the Panama
canal.
What two Utah counties nave more
than ninety per cent of Utah s avail
able coal"
Carbon and Emery counties.
How may Coking coal be distin
guished from Non-Coking coal?
Only by actual test.
How many commercial coal min
ing enterprises are there !n Utah0
Twentj -five.
About how many brlok are made
in I'tah annually?
One hundred million.
oo
BERLIN'S GREAT AQUARIUM.
The visitor to the ground floor of
the Aquarium find6 himself within
the domains of a truly falrv like and
fantastic kingdom; here. In some fit
ty great glass tanks, thousands of
denizens of both salt and fresh water
disport themselves Ruskin once said
that clouds and feathers revealed
better than anything else in the
world the wonderful color effects of
which Nature is capable. But when
he made this assertion we see that
he must have entirely forgotten the
dwellers In the deep it Is doubtful
whether there is anything else in
nature to compare with the shimmer
ing mother-of-pearl and brilliant
bronze effects produced by a collec
tion of marine animals of this kind
And how fantastic are many of tho
forms thus revealed' Like swaying
ells of some strange new fashion,
the sea anemones and kindred
growths display their beauties of form
and color to the astonished eye. In
truth one might think one was look
ing at some strangely beautiful ns
artifice of gleaming wax 11 the
tanks are so constructed and ar
ranged that every fish is seen amid
the surroundings In which It actually
lives In a state of nature- the plants,
the rocks with which they are sur
rounded all are there In perfection.
Brittany, l4aly and even Heligoland
have been robbed of their rocky stra
ta for this purpose On mounting
to the first floor we find ourselves
in a totally different world ; here w-.-find
the great collection of serpents,
which can even boast of a monster
pthon more thau eight meters lone
This section Is arranged in the form
of a wonderful tropical scene; here
we have a torpid stream, palms 'n
profusion creeping plants of every va
riety, a bamboo bridge a primitive
native hut and a tropical tempera
ture; on the rocky bank bask croco
diles, whereas giant tortoises crawl
about In the mud of tho creek. Con
tlnental Correspondence.
oo
The "latest thing" In window deel- !
orations is a very sheer material to
hang next the glass, Just to add color
and decoration to the room, and to .
soften the line of glass and wood. ,
For over-hangings, cotton repp or
RCrim curtains, either figured or
plain, 'Ith figured or stenciled bord
ers, made sill length, hung on brass
rods to be pushed clear back to the I
casing, obscuring the outlook as
little as possible. Even the sheer
curtains may be draped back, or
pushed to the ed.?e of the window ;
casing to toftly outline the casing
Cretonne may be used for the living
room for overhang! ngs. Tbe stiff
Oe curtaJns with the accompanying I
heavy hangings are out of date.
oo
International Transport Workers
Federation now has a membership of
approximately 825,ft00
I
Mail Orders steam Hcat Eiect us, II
Baths Hot and Cold Water
Ji liled in aI1 rooms Reduced rates
by week or month. Rooms
A complete mail order depart- '5e. $100, $1.50. The only
ment is maintained at this store. Tireproof hotel in the city. 1
A number of clerks give their en i1
tire time to shopping for those "l?lT17ITrrT7'
! who send their orders here by, IKjCjJrKCMJr
I man SPELLS SAFETY"
i The girl who fills your mall or-'
der will do so as i carefully as TTOT I171X
though she were shopping for her- :j Tj I 1 1 j WW
self. Catalogues are sent out ev- j
spring and falL If you live RDIU lljf
utside of Ogden, ic us put your ORIJlXxlfl
name on the list. "
THEO. GORIE, Proprietor.
W. H. Wright &
Sons Company Wal1 Av5Due and 24th street
j " I De klock from 'O1011 Depot i
! Gold Leaf CeTheTThe:i-tands I
Brand Lard DWi I
Is a Utah Made Kvll I
Product n
Devil I
Each ran is inspected by a A A B
trierument official the onlv mL r i a
B lard put up under govern -Le Kock dement
inspection in the state. De
mand it from your dealer. Sold by every dealer
Jin Ogden
jr ' T 4-1 1 j
PROVISION CO. Unl?n Portland
salt Lake Cement Company
San Francisco 0en' 0ffice : Ogden, Ut
A good time in the kitchen ith the rtound Oak Iron Chief jj
For Sale by MR
GEO. A. LOWE CO.
2326 to 2328 Washington Ave.
wiiiiiini irwi i " " " ' ' "
Are you comfortably fixed? jBiL(jlS P'
You CAN be if you BANK
your money NOW of every description.
Even man looks forward t bp
I Ing comfortably fixed some da . i
but whatever any man looks for- Oat, Barley and '
ward to cannot be acquired over- 7 I
, night ir you want to be comfort
ably fixed SOME DAY, ou must TV lOtrdl,
becln by starting a bank account
NOW Your money Is safe In th f,
bank, and your keen lntort In r , nrJ k
' seeing your balance in the bank liCW 4.1IU fcCCUnu 11
prow is the thing that will make Iiand. 1 1
it grow
OGDEN SAVINGS Get our prices. g
BANK I'll
R I
M. S Browning, Pres. IThos.Farr&Co. I
L. R. Eccles, Vice Pres. 997ft Wash A VP 1
John Watson, Vice Pre. VVasn. AVC I
Chas. Barton, Cashier. j
; mi, i iw 1 1 i I rt?
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