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Deseret evening news. [volume] (Great Salt Lake City [Utah]) 1867-1920, February 22, 1910, Last Edition, Image 4

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I tJI a DESERET EVENING NEWS TUESDAY FEBRUARY 22 1910
JJH iH DESEHETEVENINGNEWS
I Corner at l3Juth Temple nnd Ellllt Tern
plo StretR Snit I1ko city Ut4h
I I I lJornco O WhItney fluOflCt iIn nnger
I I SUBSCRIPTION PRICES
I In Adv nec M
I By Mnll per year
lm Carriers per year 00
SccIWecIly
per year 200
i Saturday Ncws per year
I I Corrcnponcjence nnd other readfl mat
ter tor iuhllettOn ehould bo nddrossed
> to tho EDITOR
V
I i Addreh all buIn I eommunlentlon
I i 1 and oil mlltanrI
i1 TIm DTSRET NEWS
I I Si1tLako Cty Utah
I Eastern RPrcfnt hcsNcw York
lrnnklln 7 Alrorn FIIt Iron Dulldlnll
I Chicano A W Wolf SecuritY Building
Entrpd at the ntorncn of Snit Lake
t Clt t 1 secon1 dt Imtter ReOrdlnl
to Act of Constrs l1nrch 2 itT
I
SALT LAKE CITY FEB 22 1910
1
i CONFERENCE POSTPONED
1 The Salt Lake stake conference itd
f ertled to be held March G has been
postponed to March 20
I
JOSDPH F SMITH
0
I
L t TIlE WORK OP GOJ >
I
s the lIfe
10 ono npllreclnte mOle
I work oC George Washington than do
the Lntterdn Saints for they be
In
lr IIcve that he was nn Instrument
the handfl oC the Ahnht ciioen ant
the father of a
S t Inspired 10 bCCiJme
j Jfeat nation the prune factOr In the
1 stirring cents b which the ConStItution
II ramell as
countr wa
tlon oC a free
n prepnlntlon for the IInnl establish
oC tho Son of God
J k Incur of the klndoll1
In nil the world Vith such views they 1
c I i cannot but revere the memorY of such
men as Washington Jefrerson Samuel
Franklin
i and John Adams Thnjamln
I 1 ned nil the other 11trlo18 who labored
I for thc CttUCO oC humanlt They can
0 not but ho loyal to their country For
j loyalty with them Is based upon tho
I NtrOngest or all foundationsrell
them an Integral part of
I j religIon It II with
of
I 11 Is evhlcnt that the discovery
15th
il the estern continents In the
centun was providential Else what
tI 11 Ioer prompted Columbus to attempt
I i Ii to reach Ash on n westward course
at a time when tho kings oC Europo
1 1 j I declined to support the seemingly nb
I surd enterprise What power Inspired
i I Isabella to furnish money for un ex
I I Ilcdltlon of so doubtful merit Who
tho safely
J 1 led Columbus across deep
L 1 until kind wl q discovered as an
1 unforeseen IncIdent In tho voyage oC
one of the most extraordinary men In
1 history Columbus to his death
supposed that he had landed on the
tj coast of AsIa and not In nn entirely
v new world But one answer Is possl
i ble It was God
I i
1 The same conclusion must bo
I 1 reached when tho further history of
discoveries Is contemplated Leif Erik
I I I son undoubtedly reached North Amor
i tea moro than four hundred years be
fore Columbus but nothing came oC
r his explorations oC conscQuenco to tho
i rest of time world It was different
L 1 with the achievement of Columbus Ho
i i i was only the forerunner of an army
1 of explorers In hIs wake followed
I i time Cabots and Ve8Pucius Balboa Ma
f I JCllan Cortez Pizarro crtler and a
I host ot other explorers and time West
I r el Hemisphere omered from obscur
r Ity
I
i f i I About the same time time great move
ment known as the Reformation took
r place In Europe By that moral and
centulold walls
of L religious upheaval
l i tumbled Into ruins and men and women
I
l were set free from the shackles of ig
4 j noranco and superstitIon Many of
them fet the need oC a new world In
1 i t whIch to breathe the nil oC liberty and
1 I j to develop without let and hindrance
t j English Puritans found n refuge In
ii i I Holland but theY soon became con
J vinced that they needed another piece
r and so they turned toward the Now
1 World God hud prepared for thom a
I
l4 1 place oC refuge whoro they could Mt
> up nn almost Independent republic
i 1th n represenIative assembly and
l It freedom oC the church from state Inter
1 ference thus sowing the germs oC the
I I I J IJrlnelpleA embodied In the Conb1ltu
jJ I tlon The hand of God Is plainly vie
t I T Ible In this
t I
k I i And then later when the colonies
1 I
1 J of the New World were called upon to
defend with arms their rIght to rep
i I reeentaUon It Is clear that they were
I I under divine ooro and guidance Fen
If nllY realized mvlmen the embattlcd
I
I farmers stood and fired the shot beard
round the world at the bridge near
j t Concord that a great nation was abotfl
1 to be born But that was the mean
Ing or the dll8 or sorrow und pain
4J that followed time flrst defeat oC the
t I British troops The patriots were
seemingly badly equipped for n con
J
I filet with a great nation they had
I neither mono nor ammunition nor
training but they had patriotism the1
i loved liberty more thnll life and they
I had among other great leaders George
Washington
II
r The Lerd had raised up this man for
this particular crisIs In the
I i worlds
history Hl became the leader both In
I I I war and peace He was 11 man of ex
trwrdlnary Industry and mastery oC
I dtrnlls In the field he hecame In
j Inclble because ho was taught by his
defeats how to conquer HIs was a
i I rugged manliness that Inspired conll
I denee by both friends and enemlell In
the public assemblies lie manlfCsted I
4 wIsdom und Jlatlence mind he exercised
nn Inlluence over men that made hIm
i their leader He was well trained In tho
r I IIchool ot life for the part he had to plat
God raIsed him UP Just aM he called
and trained Moses oC old to become
j the father ot a nation
i The government of the United States
being established the lesson of tolor I
H once and rellglou liberty ruuJ to bo
learned The Church of England was
the official church or Vlrllnlu the Car
ii ollnllH and New York TJ1t Congre
gational church was supported by
public taxation In New Hampshire
MasSachusetts including Memo and
Plymouth and Connecticut In Rhodo
island the Jerseys Pennsylvania
Maryland mind Delaware there was no
Ptoto church Side b side with these
Ij
churches there were BaptIsts In Rhode
I Waad PtutCd EwlWl a 1
j
7
Scotch In the middle and southern
colonies n few Jews In Rhode Island
Georgia and Pennsylvania the Dutch
Reformed church In Now York
Lutherans Moravlnns Mennonites In
Pcnnnsunln Catholics In Urn Car
ollnus and Maryland and Quakers In
almost every colon Later wo find
Metlwdlst Shakers Dunkanl Unl
orslIllsts United Brethren und many
others The nation was taught rellg
Iou liberty by the very fact that the
members ot all theso churches neces
snrlly had to respect each other CUI
cItizens oC the same great Republic
For UIO first tlmo In the history oC
mankInd full religious ilbertiP trims ea
tabllshed under the protectlnC folds oC
the hag oC a jreut nation
Future historians who must den with
tho establlshnent and development of
tho Church of Jesus Chllst of Latter
day Saints fronl a purely historical
point of view will trace the connection
between the rise of the American Ro
public und the rIco oC that Church
There was no other place On earth
where time Church could have been es I
labllshed nt that time for time rest of I
the civilized world had not learned the
lesson ot religIous tolerance Some of
the people here mad but learned It Im
perfectly and on that account a con
filet ensued that COt some oC the best
blood of Amerleu But the prInciple
wa recognized In time government and
It 15 becoming better understood over
day among true Americans
Yo thank God for George Washing
ton and the American Republic Here
time children or men of all parts of the
earth have found a home and a refuge
Hero they have learned slowly the
great principles of human freedom
From thlM country all the world hns
received light The little stone has
grown and become n mountain All
honor to time men who were chosen
Instrulllents to establIsh timis Republic
dnd glory to the Giver of this great gift
to lhu J1Ulnan family
SlEECIl PROM PIlE ThRONE
Tho speech or KIng Edward at the
opening oC time Parliament outlines
tho polley or tho government with re
spect to the House oC Lords Pro
p < > sals will be laM before you he saId
to detlne the relatIons between lila
houses or parliament o IlS to secure
the ulllllvided authority oC the 1101110
or Commons over flnnnce and Its pre
dominance In legislation The nature
of theo proposals wa further Intl
matld by the ICIng when he saId that
In the opinion oC his advIsers time
House should be so constituted amid
empowered all to exercIse In regard to
proposed legislation the functions of
Initiation revision and subject 10
proper rotuards delay
Thero Is oC course no Intimation In
this oC any purpose to propose the ter
mination oC the existence of the House
of Lords but If measures are adopted
empowering the Commons to exercise
solo control over tho finnnces and glv
lug It predomlnnnco In legislation by
time exorcise of the functions or Initia
tive revision and delay It Is difficult
to see what really useful purpose the
Houo oC Lords can serve It mIght us
well adjourn for evor
And there Is perhaps no good reason
why that holly should exist England
hC18 In tact a democratic form of gov
ernment National and local affairs aro
under time contlOl ot the wholo body of
tIlO people The minIsters carry on time
government In accordance wIth the
wishes oC tho majority In the House ot
Commons and If they arc outvoted on
any Important measure they resign anJ
the king generally calls II cabinet oC
the opposIng party There Is really
no place In II popular form oC govern
mont form body that 16 not electro hut
hereditary and which Is a survIval
from past times of absolutism There
may bo good reasons why a parliament
should have two divisIons each en
dowed with Its peculiar functIons but
In 8 democracy there should 00 110
upper house That Is contrary to
modern Ideas or popular representation
The House oC Inrds 118 nQW cool1
tutOO 18 really an nnllChlOruem
UNCLE srs IJAND
ThJ r country III not yet In need oC
colonies for its ovelopment nq la Ger
many for Instance When the 000011
acres ot forest rCMrvoo are distributed
among homeseokere other millions oC
acres remain to be opened up In duo
time There are more than 200000000
acres surveyod but not yet homp
8tooded wect oC tho Mississippi OC
thee there ace nearlY 3000000 acres
In Nevada about 2000000 acres In
North Dakota over 22000000 IlCros In
Colorado about 21000000 acres In Call
fornla and 20000000 acres In Montana
Some of these areas are Irrcdeemublo
bad lands but a considerable per
centage oC the yet unoccupIed lands
will eventULllly be put to productive
uses
There are alBa Immense land tracts
not Included In the special reservations
which have not yet been SUrOoo
Leaving Alaska out of the count time
greatest unsuMeed area Is In ArIzona
amid aggregates abont 21620000 acres
There are yet nearly 27000000 acres oC
uimsurveyed lund In Noada and moro
than 24000000 acres ot thlM emits III
Utah During the fiSClll year whloh
closed with last Juno the receipts oC
time UCJlolul land office from the die
P09n1 of pUblic lands was 935OO
and from Indian lands 2333000
mnYAN AND TIlE SALOON
According to pUblished reports from
Lincoln Nob Mr Bryan has taken
up the temperance question and de
dared that domocracy must divorce
itself from the liquor interests for all
limo to come Mr Bryan comes out In
favor oC count option In Nebraska
contendIng that the people have the
undenlablo right to say when and how
license shall be administored This 11
regarded IlB time IloUtical sensation of
time day HIs attitude on this ques
tltln It 18 8unnlllml will deprive hIm ot
time Icadershlp of hili party In bin on
state Mr Bryan In his statement n
pUblished III the New York Herald
says In part
The rIght ot the government to reg
ulnte the rtIe of liquor cannot bo qUQ3
tloned mind the right to regulate III
lhl right to prohibIt the open saloon
The IIquol question hums been mad
acute In Nebraska by the unscrupu
lousness ot the Hltuol Interest In
stead of the saloon of former days
Dwnad by 11 nJoI1dont und emazuam1 to
0
some extent nt least to the sentiment
oC the community we have the branch
Ulloon owned and operated by n pro
ducer or liquor ThIs system adds the
ovllll of the trnat system to the evils
oC time saloon ItsolC Whenever n com
munity attempts to deal with the
saloon question instead oC having 10
deal with one of Its own citizens It
finds Itself In a struggle with great
corporations which operate over a large
area and huvo a pecunIary Interest In
cultivating tho appetite for drink
Tho taloonnot eon one but a1
A rulaIs In alllaneo with vice It Is
constantly used to debauch politics
The IIquOl interests interfere In all
matters that may even remotely affect
theIr Intorest They made themselves
Ollloull at the last session of the Ne
braska Legislature The Democrats
had a mnjorlt In both branches for
the Ilrlit tlmo In tho States hIstory
and the splendid record of the Legis
aturo hail but ono blot on It and that
blot was put there by the liquor Inter
ests They controlled enough Senators
to present the submission of the Initia
tive and referendum
Motto for the PlaYSTound 1U80da
tlon Play liS you go
The hilmIout of Providence arc limo
best and time commonest
I
To ent down tho cost of livIng take
the least expensive emits
Ieno Mene tokel uplmrsln Is
partIcularly applicable to Mndrlz
It doesnt tnJcc two to mnko n tam
gaIn whero tho trust are concerned
What a sensation It must bo to have
your picture taken In your own owned
autol
Nowadays pcoplQ have to count he
cost first and then see If they can find
the price
If thorl Is not conseraUon oC the
forests there will be no pleasure In the
pathless wood
Pork going up two and a half cents a
jump and the jump being dall isno
pIg In the poke for tile poor man
Some thlnlc It queer that Dr Cook
should refuse to talk Not at all Ho
doesnt got pn for talking now
Wheim a man gets too old to do
anything worth doing he tries to turn
philosopher and Impress people with
his wisdom
Rev IlIrr says he thlnlts It would bo
a good thing to place nn Egyptian don
key nt the head oC Main street How
would a statue ot himself d01 The
nationality should cut no fIgure
SInce Dr Eliot has revived the word
ugilfy It 18 pertinent to point out
that time local nntllIormon sheet 1M
time champion ugllflor of the world
Two St LouIs girls have caught the
leprosy from wenrlnA rats It haR
han understood that ralll carried time
bubonic plague ThIs now discovery
will milke them ten times moro ter
rIble
Colonel Roosevelt will bo the speaker
at the Salbonne the University of Her
IIn and Oxford and It It not beyond the
range of poslblllt that he may be the
speaker of tho House
PresIdent Tart has cut down to four
time number oC ndmlnlstmtlon measures
tltat he demands Congress shall act
upon at the present session
Smeo tile lion Judson Harmon has
been mentioned as 11 possible presiden
tial candidate he 1rlS become very reti
cent and reserved DIgnity In a has
beenmentioned candidate Is a very
proper timing but too much of It has a
baleful effect
POl of Engolnnds kings h1ve left be
hind them any saying that has become
fllmous but King Edward In the claus
In the sleeeh from the throncIn tIme
opinion of my ulvlsershas coned a
phraso that is bound to become popular
In hIs own lifetime and most probably
famoims after hIs death It Is the kings
English
10 tho local muck rakers who spend
all theIr tlmo tryIng to rake up some
thIng to the detrlmenl or the Mormon
Church the comment oC Archbishop
Irelnlld on time Fairbanks Incident
when a reporter remInded him that
Rome people did not regard It as dead
thollSh he did Some people like to
111ny wIth corpses I dont Is recom
mended for careful study and reflection
Representative Scott of Kansas ob
jecL to the govcnm1ent loaning the
use oC tents to the Confederato veter
an for their coming encampment
Such an act would tend to cover the
ehwm that ol1eo divided the country
and anythIng that will soften bitter
memories and make tIme sorrows of the
past forgotten In the blessings ot the
present should 00 encouraged
I NEW NEWS OF YESTERDAY I
A STORY FROM GEORGE WASHINGTONS DAY
Dr J E Edwards
This daily series at nnecdotCB and Incidents that throw new Interesting
and frequently dramatic light on famous events and porsonnllt1es oC tho past
have been collected by Edwards durIng nearly forty years of moro or las Inti
mate ncqualnance with many of the countrs leaders sInce the CIvil war Each
anecdote or Incident Is fresh from Mr EdwaTl1ss notebook and either In whole
or In part It cOnstitute New News ot Yesterday garnered from the men who
rondo time nevstho hlRtoryor trom equally authoritative sources As Im
portlUlt contributions ot the human Interest sort to AmerIcan history these
articles MV II distinctive value all their OWl
In the seventies Learned HIbbard I
for many years judge probate was
one oC the leading mlnprobubl time
leading roan ot the little Connecticut
town of Lebanon which hIlS given tire
Nutme state five governors and was
the birthplace oC the parents of a noted
New York governor SUT1uel J TIIIen
The first oC the gubernatorial quintet
was that sterlIng Revolutlonnn war
character who hull como to bo known
to us aq Brother Jonathan Trum
bun Jonathan Trumbull his Bon was
the second governor and Joseph Trum
bull a grandson ww the third It wall
oC the estate oC thIs grandson that
Judge IIlbbnrd was executor and be
cause of this fact I nm able to ten
toM thlll little story from George
WaRhlngtons own day
Yonder across the common which
fronts my house RaId Judge Hibbard
to mo one day a year or two before
hi death Ie the IIttlo war office whIch
served time first Governor Tnlmbull
as his official headquarters duritmg time
Revolution I suppose thAt In no other
buildIng excepting of course those In
which he made hIs heidquarlers on his I
campaigns was flea George Washing
ton moro cquenU entertained or I
more cordially received during t110
Revolution That I learned to bo the
fact whllo I was administering the
estate of the orIgInal Governor Trum
bulls grandson nimO also WM governor
Indeed as admInistrator learned
much of the Inner life oC the Trum
bull tamIl and receIved a great deal
of valuable information respecting
somo of VaAhlngtons visits to the
officIal homo of Brothor Jonathan I
BUt to my mind the moet Intorest
Ing thing I unearthed In that connec I
tion Is centered about thlll chaIr the I
simplest ono that was In the Trumbull I
homo when 1 was put In charge of the
estate and Judo HlbbaTlI IndIcate
n ery plain chaIr oC colonial pattern
placed close at hnnd
That chair Is from the room In
which Brother Jonathan was nccus
tollled to receive hIs good friend Gen
George Washington and In It Wmash
Inton nl1nort invarIably mt when
talking lvor matters with tllfI goemmot
There John Trumbull son oC the gay
ernor and nt the beginning of the
Revolution an aldodocamp on Wash
Ington staff used occasionally to se
WashIngton There ho unconselouJ
studied ruhlnton In hIs varIous
pests ho associated the Father oC His
Country with that simple bit oC furni
ture and when years later John
Trumbull noted American pahttor dc
clded to execute a portrait of Wash
Ington the pIcture painted years be
fore In his memory ot Washington
sIttIng In that chair In hIs fathers wr
office materially enabled the Bon to
she to the world time first of the ra
mous portraits oC George ashlngton
and to this day one of time bet For
you know John Trumbull while the
Reolllllon was still beIng fought went
nbroad to study art became A pupil
Under BenjamIn Vest and returned to
his native llId time first and still one oC
the greatest or American historical
painters
Judge HIbbard was fondling the
chair I did not have to buy It ho
said though I confess that when I
knew for a surety Its history I was
moIt covetous ot IL It was presented
to mo In part payment of my servIces
as administrator and to mo It would
have been amplo payment for all that
I dId It 18 my proullC possecslomm
my most valued trfaSUrefor around
It chuster l1lSoclntlons of time Fathom oC
His Country the man from whom the
country got its first popular nkllunu
anti tho man who became time countrys
father oC historIcal painting
r From a Farmers Point ofVew I
IUII1 Utah Feb 2G 1910
EdItor Desert Nuw8Ma I take up
II few moments of your time In Iognrds
Induslr In this State
to the poultry
from the tanners point oC slew IIIId
oC fond
In regard to that compnrlron
stuffs In your issue ot Fob H between
Salt Lake City and the 01lJt
You will note on turning to the Jensen
ndvortllcmont the b03t
sen Creamery
freSh eggs obtnlnablc are only 25 centf
per dozen with a
paid to the farmer
bushel
cold wInter wheat 105 per
grainand bran hIgh It hould
and all gTnln
be plain to anyone why the farmers
do not JO Into the egg Industry mor
and why the state Imports RO much
SNOW AND GE1ABIJlrs
I I
Phllaelphla Record
One thIng that the snow has nCCDm
pllhcd by blanketing the earth for
lie lonln time If probablY overlooked
by you people III the cIty amid II scIon
tlllc nm1or but It affects OU just as
nearly ns It docs time country lloople
For 50010 reason simon acts as a sweet
ener and revlvilier of soils and the
market and truak gardoner near citIes
and vlllagell will buys bIgger and bet
ter vegetables for saio next spring and
Iummol lhe market gardener always
uses a great deal of manuro instead oC
the commercial tertlllzlII and there
fore lies to make heavy applications
of limo to his 8011 to sweeten It In tho
fall If ho knows his ibulnC6s hll hand
II cleared ot all waste and troth
plonjhod up and left In ridges The
snow crust will not only holp to sweet
011 thIs earth but 11 make It moro
friable 80 that when time thaws como
In the sprIng It can nil ho moro easily
worked and planting as far as time
condItion or the soil help will be tbat
much garlior this OST >
l D2 tJ L 1
If we shared In the high price the con
sumer pay you would 10011 see the
farnlOrs brIngIng In eggs galore
Some people think wo should lIrho
111 and peddle eggs to tho consumer
That Is inconsistent wIth farming as
wo have too much to attend to If wo
are fanning rightly I have called your
attention to this subject whlll the
Iron IR hot The figures are In your
IS8le Of Feb H and It would be fillu
If this subject could be clinched an1 I
something done whereby the tarmer
could got their Share ot oven a IITIllllI
profit and thereby boimefit the State
by producing a1 ot the homo article
Yours respectfully
A H LEE
I TILE WIIJOWS OP VETERANS
11
New York TImes
III spite oC time enonnous lIum ot I
mono3 oxponded annually by time ted
eral government III pensions to veter
nns of the Civil war the Iooslbilitlelf
of Increasing the amount are ever kept
In view hy all array of alert agents llId
politicians For Iwenty ears efforts
have been lnllle to amend the pension
Law so ns 10 Include among the pen
llonel8 widow of vctIJnlll who were
married slnco ISW WIdows of men who
sersod some little tIme In the nOIthorn
army and married during the first fif
teen years after tho close ot tho war
have found the p018ellS1ul1 of n pension
a great holp In securing n second hams
band Naturally time IndIes who havo
marrIed WILt veterans sInce 3800 and are
now widow feel lIotnewhat out of time
game It Is Bald that tile caUlO of mora
than 20000 of theo hall been so warm
Iy olpouged by polltielunR that the Hen
rite commlttoe 011 pensions Is unable to
stand the pressure The house com
mltteo too 111 reported to have been
badgered Into n mood oC I1CQulOolconce
Thus nearly OOOooo Is likely to bo
added to the Ienslon lists thIs session
A alU wbA zmxurhscl Iao Slat
swan nl lately as 1906 Is to be permit
ted to claim a pOllslon for his services
In the war The bIll provides that she
must have lived with her husband at
least three years
I JUST FOR FUN I
JUSTICE AT ANY COST
George W Martin secretary of the
Kansas State HIstorical Society tell
II story about nn ellly day xtLImss
Justice of the Peace who will be
nameless hero
ThIs J P said Mr Martin
would marry a couple ono day ns
Justice of the PeRco and dIvorce the III
time next as nollIY public
Ono time as the story ran a man
surrendered hlmlelf to thIs J P
An phats tho matter asked
the judge
I killed C1 man out here on the
prairie In a light was the reply I
want 10 give myself up
You Old kill hIm SOl asked the
J p
pYeii
Yes sir was the reply
Yho saw you asked the J r
Nobody
An nobody saw you kill Im
No elm just wo two were thele
An youre shuro nobody saw you
reIterated time J P
Of course Im sure was the reply
ThIn youre dlscharlcd said the
J p bringing his list down on the
table Youru dlschargell You cant
crlmlnnlo yourself Fifty dollar
pleaseKnnIs City Journal
THE WHOLE OIlTYSEVEN
I lunchod with Winston Churchill
in London saId a journalIst dtr
Ing imis renmarkablo campaign Tills
brilliant youimg Cabinet Minister with
his American blood through hIs mother
and his ducal blood through hl8 father
praised American Journalists
Ho gave me nn example oC our per
Qvernncc Not less that 47 Amerlcnn
correspondents had rolled on him nt
the Board of Trade offices for an 111
lervlew ono week on the American
tariff and IS none oC them had sum
iClcntl good credential ho refused
to see them
FInally a correspondent came with
n letter fmom Mi IloIIGeorge and
him Mr Churchill saw gladly
Do you know he said to the young
man lhat I have refused to see 47 oC
your compatriots on this very subject
1 ought to know It thu corle
spondont answered for Im the whole
47 Philadelllhia BulletIn
11lnJiCs anti Muzzles
A nOWIpU11el mny make a mistake
occasIonally but this IR nO cause for
usIng muzzles upon the pressBaIU
moro AmerIcan
S lt lake Theatre
GEO D PYPER Mgr
Hack to Regular Prices and a Heart
Laugh
rNIINEE TODAY 21
TONIGHT cdncsdny Tllursdn
W 1 Cullen effete the New All
Laughter Musical Comedy
THE ALASKAN
With
Hlehnrd F Corral Gus Weinlmmrg
and tho DaInty Saucy Pretty Chorus
oC Clrly GIrl See the Eskimo doss
A Rctuur Snowball Hattie
PrIcesEve z to ti m Matinee 25c
to S100
m
THEATRE
ADVANCED VAUDEVILLE
MatInee DRily 315
Every Evening nt 815
Franklin Undorwood and Frances
Sl08eon
Bnsquo Grain Opera QUllrtctto
Four Readings Doll DavIs
Julia Fmr Abel and Irwin
Fox and Foxlos Circus
Matinee Prlces15e Ie toe
NIght PriceslIe roc TOe
VThe 11D PopularPriced Playhouse PCOIles a
lad Phone 3i37 Doll Phol1ll 557
Salt Lake Amusement As6n Prop
A B Jensen Resident 1tnl11IOI
TONIGHT
lm THEODORE LORCH
And excellent Rupporthl eompnn In
eluding 3lhss Cecil Fay will present
atc fii
the greatest western milItary rimnina
THE I1EUIE ANT AND TiLE
COWBOY
A play made fanmous by Er Lorcim
AYIl seats have been reserved mind
selling at mOe Be He tdc
are nOW
Matinees cdmmcsday and Saturday
A special matinee of St Elmo
WUhlngtons Birtimday Tuesday
Prices for all matInees lower fleer
any eat you reserve Sc balconies
iOn roc
IMPERIAL VAUDEVIJillE
VClhc COllllnellcln Thursday
Intllleo Fob 11
Matinees over aternoon at 230
Two Slimss Evonlngs7 30 and 915
L JImun Grand Opera Trio
gr gd opertcrl
Far Imizarro Co Lee Jundts
Lolo Ybelrl Louise Taylor
Leon Rogoe JImmy Vail
Mission Orchestra Now Mom Pictures
Matinee prIces 10 and 20 cents
Night prices 10 T and 24 cents Not
how cheap bllt how good
Matinee Today 215
TONIGHT
wtLIARD tACKltAUDE LEONE
And AssocIate Players Present Whl
lInm Oillotlos greatest come y
Because She Loved Him So
Evening PricesTOe tOe lIe He
MfltiiieeiTOC lIe
Next Week
ALL OJ A SUDDEN lEGGY
Citizens
Coal Coo
strc can deliver the follow
ing kinds of coal promptly
Aberdeen Diamond
Hiwatha Clear Creek
Castle GntcRock Springs
Doth Phones JO 153 Mom St
35c Irish Poplins
28c
Rich haildSOlfle fabrics in all colors Has the I
luxtrous textllle and richness of silk taffeta yet
is more dluable and costs less Launders splen I
didlyfast colors Is especially desirable for
spring suits waists etc Regular 28c
35c a yard special
Hair Switches and i
Turbans I
The turban style of hair dressing is now
quite popularcach day it is becoming more so L
in fact a woman cannot have her hair dressed
stylishly without the use of a turban or switch
l
TURBAN CAPS 350 to 1
SWITCHES 1 to 20 t
BRAIDS from 2 up I
I
F OUR DRUG STORE IS AT
l 1I1IJ SOUTH MAIN ST i J
Call at
Randa 11 Dodd
Auto CoLtd
Booth Noo 7
Auto Show
Watch the signs across from
I main entrance I I
I
1
1i
We toll you to put on a Pioneer Eoof and forgot it Needs no
paint or repairs Sun proof and rain proof Not affected by oxtremes
ot heat or cold Suitable for all kinds of buildingspitched 01 fiat J
rOOfS Comes in handy rolls Easy to layanybody can do itno
special tools needed JI
Now thenLet us end you sample n cnpyof our i j
JZpagc Roolln Booklet and name of our nearest agent I
PIONEER ROLL PAPER COMPANY
DEPARTMENT 1 LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA
Furnllhcd Lnlcl and Guaranteed
LA3IBERT PAPER CO DIstributors Snit Lake City
mr 5tt
1810 A Century of Service 1910 r
DarUord Fire Insurance Co
I
Vlth the coming of 1910 the Hartford Fire Insurance Company
has rounded out n century oC business history That means somethIng
In tho hazardous busIness oC fire Insurance for tour out oC every
fie companies organIzed In thIs country have either Called or retired
It means unshaken stnhlllt The smoke of evory great American con
fingratlon has darkened time sky over the Hartfords head In San
FrancIsco aone It paid ten millions But emergIng triumphant from
tho ordeals oC 100 years It enters Its second century stronger than
ever
Unshaken stabllll for a century Is no mean heritage but ago 13
venerable onl whon adorned with honor Honor Implies more than
honesty It Ie the quality whIch Impels nn Institution to meet evary
obligation not only wIth promptness and exactness but with falm65
and a spirIt of equity That Is the HartCords record In the past Its
elm today and Its Ideal for time future Its policies afford unsurpused i
Indemnity and by cooperating wIth Its patrons to lesson fire dllngeN
It offers continuous service Its business scattered among more than 1
15000 communitIes throughout this great lund Is the largest of anY
OOI Jlt uf 101
fire insurance comnpany in America Ji
Insure In The Hartford 1
Heber J Grant Company Agents
22 So Main Street Salt Lake City Utah
01
=
READ TIlE The Anderson Piano
I THEATRE MAGAZINE With Its slngln soul
New York and Western
FOR THEATRICAL NEWS Piano Co
AND STAG PICTURE 522 Conetltutlon Bids
CIAL TIME
CO At
jUROWAGlllPAWr 1
GOOlI Taste lIfnkciI Cheap Tlmlimgs
Look Expellshc Do not let your supply
We have the run too low
Taste PEACOCK
Yhllo none or our Iood are 3
cheal In qualIty the nrc certaInly R c I Springs
not expensive and OUI guarantees
make them worth n lIttle bit more 4
Wo GIVE you the guaranteo IS TILL LEADER
p 0 BOX Central Coal Coke eo J
Vi Be Ihont J 82 l
5iroZnd Phone io Vcst 211tl Smuh SI
1W IID
SALt LASt CITY UTAH liolmes Bcli Ex 35 ml 1
I
il
LU Xk

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