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-MB THE OGDEN STANDARD. OGDEN. UTAH. MONDAY, DECEMBER 8, 191 J. 5 I COMPARABLE DIsKciION Not less lemarkable than its variety is the range in prices afforded by our holiday I I gifts. For masterpieces in Silver Sets and elaborately designed Jewelry suitable for lm I portant gifts to an almost Limitless Choice of useful and inexpensive articles. COMPARISON OF "SMALLEY'S" VALUES WITH THOSE FOUND ELSE WHERE IS CONCLUSIVE EVIDENCE OF SMALLEY'S LOW PRICES AND HIGH QUALITY. I SUGGESTIONS I FOR HER FOR HIM Diamond, Necklace, Shopping Bag, Seal Ring, Cigar Case. Match Box. Bracelet, Brooch. Silverware. Watch, Watch Fob. Watch, Cuff Buttons, Cigar- I Rmg, Umbrella. ette Case, Stick Pin Sets. Sterling Silver Articles in Great Variety. I See the Prizes in Our Window to I Be Given Away New Year's Eve : KMIil I FY'S t?fi 2tth Sit I sJiWIrilJiLsiJ 1 O jewelers Lle SERVILITY. SUBJECT! OF A SERMON BY I m. m Speakiug upon the "Sius of Today; 1 Mfrhat Crucified tbe Christ." Rev. Car Ker spoke briefly laQl niht upon the REsln oi "Si i & in Prl ' ' "Aud Pilate wllliug to conlent the " people delivered Jesus, when he had scoui-Red him. to be crucified." That Is the story oi a m in nut being Ql -own master. I'llate confessed thai be did not find thr- Christ worth of criminal death aud yet he was not a free man to carry out his own con victions. He was bound by tenden cies, habits and desires for what he considered the poal of life till he would deliver an Innocent man to an awful death This servility that so m cbarai'erlzt-ii him was one ol the sins that crucified the Christ l'llate H was one who was supposed to be j B master and vet he was servile to the H clamor of a multitude R Economists tell us that slavery was V a great step In the progress of hu B manity for it marks the time when B ihe worth of a man was realized as H an economic asset and captives that B had formerly been killed were kept B f as slaves. We have long passed B that and now we know that slaves B are not an economic asset. We de B mand free men. The same Is true oi B , the deeper life. No city or state Is FREE A Lady's Hat with every lady's suit. Hats which sold I" from $5.00 to $12.50 are in the assortment. Unequaled values for your money at the 1 I leased when masses are voted as a boss dictates We demand free men in political life We also realize the me truth in worth of men as men and before God In olden time slaves were made by conquest or capture, by purchase, or by being born in bondage The same is true today. Men surrender inde p ndence because enraptured of some j desire or seemine pleasure. Tempta lion conquers them and they become habit bound They give up God for lower standards. Asaln. they sell themselves to factions society, or trends of life for worldly recompence Or they are born in an environment that they never have power or desire to be freed from. The result In all j eases Is the same. It Is the servility that aided in crucifying the Christ. But why not serve God? The gen-1 eral answer cither denies God's pow er to enable them to do so. or Im I !ics a fear that the Lord will be a hard master seperating them from all that is desirable Servility to self or evil grows so ' gradually and easily that It is un-1 noticed. Like the other three trends ' It creeps our ruin until Its very weakness is our culding factor No criminal over became one at one bound. The talent, toll and training the risk of death These are powers that could win In lawful means The ! ease of yielding to a desire to 111 I gotten reward through surrender to I wrong tells the antidote that Is need ed It Is a desire and faith a goal and conviction of right that will as sert tbe right In no half hearted way. oo PROF. E. G. THUS' THIRD LECTURE With ihe lecture room at the Ok den high school crowded with inter ested listeners. Professor K. G Titus, I Saturday evening, gave his third lec I ture on Genetics and Eugenics " Preceding the lecture, John M i Mills, superintendent of city schools. ! announced that arrangements had been made to have a direct current ! of electricity connected w Ith the high I school, so that, In the future, sterop I tican lectures could be given without ! the trouble that had confronted the ' committee durlug the present series lie also said that a stereoptican had her n -'1' U-d and would soon be own ed by the board nnd that the school ould not need to borrow- one. as bad been done In the present in stance. While the stereoptican was beme Connected. Professor Titus g:ie a I ery Interesting talk about the earli est experiments of the scientist "Men I dell." in the hybldliatiou of plants, j With drawings on the blackboard, be explained bow the process of graft lug was done and what results were evolved. When the lantern was ready, the Itcturer bad the pictures of tbe great We treat each customer as though he was our only Customer. I GROUT'S GRAIN STORE For Good Hay and Grain. : Phone "1229" 332 24th St. scientists and philosophers, of whom he spoke In the ' previous lectures, shown and reviewed the rcut re searches and discoveries they had made. He also told ot the bearing these discoveries bad on the develop ment of the science ol eugenics at the present day Among the men whose pictures were shown were. Vesalius. the first man to carefully study the human body. Harvey, who discovered tho circulation of ihe blood, and Fabrl- ii-. his teacher Aristotle, thr creat es! of Ihe Greek philosophers, and Galena, the first man to study com parative anatomy, were also among Ihe scientists of the early centuries spoken of. The next lecture will be on the Mendel Law Governing Heredity." UTAH PRODUCTS OK TO BE OBSERVED BT HUNTS On Wednesday next. "Utah Pro ducts Day" will be celebrated throughout the btate and the mer chants are. one and all, preparing to make displays of Utah made goods lhat will give a splendid Idea of the manufacturing resources of the state. Committees are working hard to make the coming 'I'tah Products day " the biggest one in the history of the state and they ask the people to co-operate with them b making : calls of the merchants for ' home I made" goods of every kind. The mer chants are also being urged to put these products in plain view of their customers. A list of Utah made products has been printed and every Ogden merchant will have a copy for eery person who Is Interested I enough in Utah to ask for one. While the merchants arc display I log the goods, essays will be w rit ten on the subject of "Why Utah products shoudld be used " with a ! lew to adding to the spirit of boost I log for the home-manufactured goods. HO RATTLESNAKES OR TYPHOID FEVER H TETON COBM H. B. Marls, wife nnd Infanl son and Mrs. Barbara Kelly are lu Ogden for the winter from Jackson, Wyo. and will reside at 1029 Capital ave nue. Mr. Marls Is the forest assist ant for ihv Teton National forest, pi which Robert B. Miller Is supervisor This forest embraces nearly two mil lion acres, an area more than flft square miles, and is the largest in the Ogden district h the canyons and passes by which travel Is possi ble. Supervisor Miller can not get from one side of his forest to the other with less than one bundreo miles' tnncl Teton Celebrities. The Teion forest contains the high cut point In this district, th (iraiu Teton. 13,747 feet altitude, which has perhaps been .iIhi! only once b th Bishop Spalding party. This can I I be nrrn from the mountains alotiRl ! Grsy's river 70 miles Houth. rising distinctly above Intervening ranges, from the northeast comer of Yellow I I stone park, and from Baldy, beyono j Dillon, Mont , 150 miles away. N'h rattlesnake or other poisonous .reptile has ever been seen in th' reton country, and typhoid fever Is I unknown I If at no other time In his life, a 1 stranger may temporarily become a j dude w hile sojourning in Jackson's I hole In the heart of the Teton for est; Indeed, be ran not avoid dolnR I so, for every tourist is here a "dude, every canyon rondhousc Is a 'dude ranch." and every guide and packi i I is a dude wrangler." The old timers of Jackson's Hob ! maintain well storked wood piles, or wood sheds, and when the supply be eins to wane, the Iodk -lepccd fron tier man (citizens of Jacksons Hole I arc lons-lcgged for convenience) limbs the butte back of the house j I and heaves over the cliff another win ter's supply This slight exercise not be done before breakfast I hO'eer The UoiiRlas fir saws i splits and burnv admirably, and there is enough dead and dry lodgepoie for kindling The other essential for hot breakfast biscuits Rood flour must as yet be brought "over tin hill." although wheat Is grown ahtmd antly In the upper valley and nlon?. the Grovont Nowhere else are elk so numerous and gentle, spring and fall they gaze ( 1 1 1 at the tourist from over the rim of a butte. in mid-summer all but those not In captivity hike bark to the hills, hut in the deep snow of winter they are too tame necessl tatlng the strongest fences to pro Net the rancher's hayslacks from the tarvlng herds. The characteristic pile of elk antlers In nearly every rird though attractive, Is a pathetic reminder Balsam Park Beetle In his examinations this summer Mr Marls found that over an area if six or seven thousand acre-i on Grovont river three-fourths of thp balsam has been killed in the las; three years by a bark beetle Denu ty Supervisor Stewart states thai he encountered th's beetle on the Ia Sal lu southeastern Utah, In 1910 it t was In 1911 that the work of this! beetle was fir't observed on the Tc ton Since there is much lodgepoie tlm ber on the Teton It is fortunate that the pine bark beetle that has killed' so much of this timber In the region j between Uriggs. Idaho, and Butte Mont, has not crossed the Teton' range. oo - THE WORLD'S MARKET NEWS WALL STREET New York. Dec. 8. Sentiment In ; the street was mye cheerful today The change in feeling was attributed I chiefly to improved conditions In ! the money market on Wall Street's I estimate of the probable attitude of the Washington administration to ward corporations. Emphasis was placed on a statement attributed to the attorney general that enforce- I ment of the anti trust law would be undertaken, wherever possible, with out recourse to the courts. The strong showing of the banks , lu Saturday a statement was follow- J .: by an easing off of money rates. call funds renewing today at five per cent. New Haven was weak throughout the morning on Its showing of a linkage Id October net or 5883.000. It fell 2 5-8 to within a fraction of j its recent low record. Sugar drop ped three points to 103. the lowest i since 1908. Tcbacco .-hares were bid up vigorously. Bonds were Irregular South Omaha Livestock. South Omaha. Pec S Hogs Re ceipts -'500. Market higher Heavy, 17.60 G 7.75; lights $7.2508.65; pigs. Vo 'bi ti.75. bulk of sales. $7.15'!' 7.70. Cattle- Receipts 2G00. Market higher Native steers, $6.2609.2$; I cows and heifers. $5 857.50. west ern steers, $6 00(S 7.R.; Texas steers. ?5. 75fi 7.00; range cows and heifers, $5.6097.00; calves, $6.2509.75. Sheep Receipts 4800 Market i higher. Yearlings. $5.7596.60; weth ers. $4.505.40; lamb-i. $7.0037.75. Kansas City Livestock. Kansas City. Dec. X Hogs Re- , etipts 9000. Market 10 cents high er. Bulk. 17;4D07.75; heavy $7.60 C 7.80, packers and butchers, $7.5nvi 7 73; lights. $7.4O&7.70, pigs. $5.60fe I 7.00. Cattle Receipts 14.000 Market steady. Prime fed steers. $8.25 (S ! 9.26; dressed beef steers $7.0008.16; I western steers. $6.00fl7 7". southern steers, $5.5017 7.25: cows, $4.2Gff 7 25: heifers. $6.00Oft00 ', stockers and feeders. $5.5007.50: bulls, $4,750 I 7 00; calves. $6 50 10.60. Sh0PpHerc1pts 10.00(1. Market I steadq. Lambs, $7.60 07.70; yearl I logs, $5.50 ft 75: wethers, $4.50-9 ! 6.50, ewes, 54.00(8 4 75. Sugar New York. Dec. S Sugar Raw. ! nominal; muscovado. S3. 04. centrifu gal, $3.54; molasses. $2.79; refined, quiet; cut loaf. $5 30: crushed, $5.20; mould A. $4.85: cubes. ?4.6n XXXX powdered. $4 50; powdered. $4.45; fine granulated. $4.35; diamond A, , 16; confectioners A. $4 25; No. 1. j $4.25. Lead St. Louis. Dec. 8. Lead firmer. '3 80. spelter, firme- 4.nj4.15. Chicago Produce Chicago, Dec 8- Butter unchang ed. Kpgs higher; receipts 3138 cas es; at mark, cases included, 23c Ordinary firsts 2830c. r7itsts 32c Potatoes Receipts 50 cars; un changed; Poultry, alive lower Springs 12C fowls 13':c turkeys 15c. CHICAGO GRAIN Chicago, Dec. 8 Wheat prices turned upward today in response to reports that rain was again Interior rlnK with the Argentine harvest. Tbe market opened 1-8 to J-8(J 1-Jc higher nnd subsequently made ;l lurtber us cent Cold weather tended to hasten re ceipts, gave a setback to tho corn bulls ' Prices opened unchanged to l-8c lower and displayed no sign of JEWELRY -fgy j Our selection of Jewelry for Christmas Gifts is the best in the city. Nowhere can you find a better selected stock of new, clean and up-to-date Jewelry at prices that we can sell you. Being just one door off the high rents and expenses we are able to save you II 20 to 50 per cent on all your Christmas purchases. We would like to have you come in and look our Jewelry over. We feel sure that ! you will be well pleased with your visit. Here Are a Few Suggestions for Gifts: III I F0R THE LADIES FOR THE FOR THE HOME: TOILET SETS GENTLEMEN: CUT GLASS I JEWEL CASES CIGARETTE CASE CLOCKS 1 I LOCKETS PIPES SILVERWARE j j CHAINS LIGHTERS CHINA j LA VALLNERES WATCHES PERCOLATORS I ' BROOCHES CHAINS FOR THE CHILDREN: i BRACELETS FOBS CUPS BAR PINS RINGS RINGS EARRINGS EMBLEM JEWELRY BABY RINGS WATCHES CUFF BUTTONS BIB HOLDERS UMBRELLAS TIE PINS CHILD SETS I BRACELET. TIE CLASPS LOCKETS j WATCHES FOUNTAIN PENS BRACELETS Come in any day this week and we will lay away any article until Christmas on a small deposit. OPEN EVENINGS TILL CHRISTMAS. i! j ALL ENGRAVINGS FREE. n HARRY DAVIS The Popular Priced Jeweler I J The Store With the Guarantee j i- SSB 5 any Important rally Oats held steady. Wheat strength seemed to neutralize the effect of the corn weakness. First sales of provisions varied from Saturday'.- level to 1C higher, but afterward reacted under the in- fluence of corn. Close wheat was steady, unchang- I e? to 1-8 up. Closing corn prices were at a de cllne of l-2fio-8e to 1 Mc net Cash. ("orn. all new- No. 2 72 l-2c; No. t yellow 73j No. I, 67fa70c; No. I, H White, t5n.71c: No. 3. yellow. 70 3 4 670c. H Ry No 2, 12c; Barley, 63fc " Timothy $4.'i"fi 5 2.". , rloer 107 91.40; pork. 21.25; lard. 510 62 1-2; ribs, ir.QSfj 1 12 1-2 HI ; Holidays ROUND TRIP FARES I To all stations on Oregon Short Line, and to points on CflHfOriliB Salt Lake Route in Utah, also to points on 0 -W. R & N. AN1) R R Pacific Northwest Dates of Sale- Tickets on Sale Dec 19, 20. 21, 22. 23. 24. 25, Der OQ and no 31. and Jan. 1, 1914. fetim Limit-Feb. 28. 1914. Final Return Limit Tickets on Sale Dec. 29 Jan. 5, 1914. Return Limit Mar. 7, 1914. For detailed information concerning rates and reservations, call at jj or phone City Ticket Office 2514 Washington Ave. W. H. CHEVERS, PAUL L. BEEMER. I