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T 1 ! " THE QGDEN STANDARD. OGDEN, UTAH. FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1914. 9 KSI (I 'Bbig' ; CHERRIES A delicious black variety of immense 1 size. Send a box to the y j folks and open their eyes I as to what Utah can do. ; There cherries measure it more than an inch across and one makes a mouth ful. Mantua ji STRAWBERRIES are in can't be excelled in quality even by the Ore- ; gon variety. Get some to put up. THESE ARE JUST I SAMPLES OF THE MANY GOOD THINGS TO EAT TO BE FOUND HERE. HARRIS GROCERY 0 338 25th St. Phones 2215 and 2216. MANY KILLED IN AN EARTHQUAKE Bat&vla, Java. June 26. .Many Were killed or injured today in a violent earthquake which caused widespread damage in southern Su matra The offices of the Dutch resident and many othor buildings collapsed at Benknppi. the capital, and tele w graph and cable communication Wit IH Jt Interrupted HUH IN NEVADA IS BUILT OF BEER BOTTLES An Ogdenite, who has just return ed from Deeth, Nevada, says 138 cars ot cattle have been shipped from Mind, Utah, in the past week ' train loadsg olng to Los Angeles and to Colorado. Montana, Idaho, and Ne vada. R. ". Anderson and W. H Smiley of Deeth. Neada. receiving seven cars of two-year steers, and thp Neada Land and Livestock companv 1400 cows, besides a lot of steers pre I vlously. I On account of heavy fruit ship- ments from California, the tide of j traffic is at present eastward. An eastbound fruit train of 56 cars pa;s- Inp through Deeth required two en ! glnes; a west bound train was pulled j by one. t In Deeth an unusual number o houses and barns are built of remov , ed railroad ties These are laid in single tiers, often with clay daub lng. and are made fast by nails "toed" through the corner of the one laid just above into the tie below In the cuse of houses these are cov ered with siding Chauncey Grlswold of Griswold & Henderson of Elko, reports over 100 per cent of lambs for their 12.S00 ewes, and that both ewes and lambs are in better condition than he has seen them in a long time. The3e sheep range In the Ruby forest. From Wells to Deeth. the Overland auto trail skirts the foothills of the Ruby mountains At Deeth It cross es both Western Pacific and South ern Pacific tracks, and continues to Elko on the north side. It is a good road Practically all of the big stockmen of Elko county have their automo biles, and the roads are in the main pretty good. One of the ways In which the roads in the northern part of the eount are kept In repair is through the consideration of the auto owners in giving their friends occa sional rides to town. 80 miles, the latter In turn putting in consider able time, when other duties are not urgent, in working on the roads. Emmett Bachman, proprietor of the Elko-Tuscvarorp staie line, makes all his own wagons In a shop at Tusrarora He is experimenting on a 400-acre ranch at the "Sixteen-Mile" station out from Elko in the grow ing of 10 acres each of wheat, rye, oats and barley without irrigation, all of which is thriving This is at an altitude of about 6000 feet. Young men from Utah have been looking over the land north of Jack's station with a view to dry farming, and even farther north within the Hum boldt forest. The Jack Creek range of mountains extend in a general north and south direction. The north fork of the Humboldt drains their eastern slope, the fork of the Owyhee which rises near Tuscarora the western. In the spring the Owyhee is much the larger of the two streams, but by midsummer you can step across It, while the North Fork flows eonstant lv a cood stream throughout the sea son. This illustrate how much warmer is the afternoon than the forenoon, sun, both streams depend-, al i iTf IS THE SUN MADE I Jj OF ICE? ers r&CW A man who works n the 3000- p S V ' m&m ' W. foot ievel in a mine says It is 1 3 ' WBte-4. A He puts 11 thl way; 3ooo feet f,. I jgg feet below the surface of the mfy?&ULJB ji .vV eartn n ' warm, but climb th0 fyl -Ttf 41 ' UJ mountains and the closer you jS!qL:IB&& et t0 the sun the coder l y$- njrK ' Not a vCry 900d sr9ument. but I i mfWfnmmnlr ' rea"' does not mattr as long 96. aSSBMrnBL a8 yu can 100 PER CENT fl I PURE ICE HERE IN OGDEN. WE GUARANTEE OUR ICE TO STAND EVERY PURITY ICS j TEST. Note the low cash prices we make: 1,000-lb book, $5 15; 500-lb. book, $2.70 S T4L OGDEN CITY ICE COMPANY 2379 Hudson Ave. Samuel Thomas, Prop. ing largely on melting snow. Shearing in northern Elko countv is practically completed, one of the last to finish, the W. W. Williams estate, having sacked the last at the Holland ranch on North Fork last week. In this region the "lambing" is largely in charge of Basques, In diana occasionally joining in this im portant work. Just before lambing, the ewes are separated in small bunches, and the tendency in many cases, especially with young ewes, is to hurry off to join the other ewes, forgetful of the motherly duty to the young lamb. It is sometimes an effort to induce the ewe to own Its offspring, being occasionally neces sary to tie the mother by the front leg to a bunch of sagebrush Pasture fences In the North Fork alley are built of red cedar posts, hauled 75 miles from the Ruby moun tains The posts of the large barn at Parks stage station are of cedar, and will probably outlast any other part of the building. The doubU wall of the storage room for the sa loon at North Fork is built of 6000 beer bottles, laid horizontally in mor tar. Eight miles of barb wire fence Is being built on the Idaho-Nevada state line, running east from the "hundred-mile post" (the northeast corner of the Duck Valley Indian reserva tion) on the north boundary of the Humboldt forest Four wires are strung on aspen posts, charred, and small gates are placed at intersecting trails, with larger ones at roads. It is anticipated that this fence will save considerable time of the ranger In patrolling this part of the forest William B. Rice and hia assistants, Marshall S Wright of Salmon, Ida . and Joseph W. Bailey of Fallon, Nev., have completed twelve patent surveys of homesteads In the Humboldt for est, mainly in the vicinity of Moun tain City, and Rice and Wright have proceeded to the Toiyabe forest at Austin, Nev , for similar surveys. oo THE WORLD'S MARKET NEWS WALL STREET. New York. June 26. The market today showed a tendency to break away from the depressing Influence engendered by the Claflln failure and. save for a brief Interval, showed a j firm undertone. The closing was strong. Stocks were strong in today's early dealings, advances extending to a point or more in the Harrimans, New York Central, Reading. Canadian Pa cific, United States Steel and Amal gamated, while May Department Stores rose 1 5-8 Elsewhere gains, while fractional were more or less general. The only marked exceptions to this tendency were American Ex press and Westlnghouso the latter, howexer, soon recovering. London where our issues were at a higher level, was helpful In the rise. Chicago Livestock. Chicago. June 26 Hogs Receipts 15,000; market strong to 5c higher. Bulk, $8.25 8.40; light $8.10 8.40; mixed, $8 115 S. 45, heavy. $7 05 8 40; rough, $7.958.10; pigs. $7..?)'?i S.15. Cattle Receipts 2500; market steady to strong Beeves, $7.50(3 9 40; steers. $6 908 20; stockers and feeders. $6.15(38.15; cows and heif ers. $3 708 85; calves. $6 7511 9 85. Sheep Receipts 6000; market steady to 10c higher Sheep, $5.40 6 40; yearlings $6. 40 7.60; lambs, $6.50(58 30; springs, $6.759 35. Kansas City Livestock. Kansas City, June 26 - Hogs Re ceipts 2000; market strong to 5c high er. Bulk, I8JB508.35; hea, $8,850 8 40; packers and butchers. $8 25 8 40; light, $8.1508.35, pigs, $7.60 800 Cattle Receipts 400; market steads to strong Prime fed steers. S8 75(T 9 25; dressed beef steers. $7 6n ft 8.60, western. $6 25ft8.75; southern steers. $5 758.25; cows 34.25 7.25; heifers, $6.509.00; stockers and feeders, $6 50ft 7.60, bulls, $5 5007.00; calves. $6. 50ft 10 00 Sheep Receipts 500; market, strong Lambs, $8 5nft 9 25 ; yearlings: $6 20ft'7.0O; wethers, ?4-75ft6.00; ewes. $4 25(5 5 00; stockers and feed ers, ?3. 0007. 00. South Omaha Livestock. South Omaha. Juno 26 Hogs Re ceipts 9600; market 6c higher. Heavy, $8 15ft 8 25, light, $8 15ft'8 25; pigs. $7.60 8.50; bulk of sales, $8 0508 20. Cattle Receipts 500; market steady Native steers, $7 5009 15; cows and heifers, ?5. 75ft 8.25; west em steers. $71508 00; calves, $7.50 10 50. Bulls, stags, etc., $5.6507 C5. Sheep Receipts 6200; market steady. Yearlings, $6 7507 10; weth ers, $5 756.00; lambs, $8 S509.4O. Sugar. New York, June 26. Sugar Raw, quiet; molasses, $2.67; centrifugal. $3.32; refined, steady. Lead. New York. June 26 Lead Dull, $3 850 3.95. London, 19 pounds, 7s 6d. Spelter Dull, $5 000)5.10. London, 21 pounds, 58. Metals. New York. June 26 Copper Dull. Spot and August, $13 50 offered; elec trolytic, $13 50013.75, lake, nominal; castings $13.50. Tin Steady. Spot, $29 87ft 30 00; August, $30 12 1-2030 25. Antimony Dull. Cookson's, $7.250 7 35. Iron Quiet, unchanged CHICAGO GRAIN Chicago, June 26 Bears today re captured control of wheat In ,a gen eral rush of selling., prices went still lower than on any occasion since the recent sensational declines began. Ideal weather In the harvest region had much to do with the fresh set back and so also did a sharp break In values at Liverpool. The open ing, which was 3-8 to lc under last night, was followed by an additional I san. Corn dropped with wheat and as a result of predicted showers where needed. There were reports also that Argentine shipments were im proving In grade and were, proving! larger than expected After opening j unchanged to 12c lower, the market continued to descend. Oats had no substantial support. 1 Most of the commission houBe were on the selling side. Packers unloaded provisions. First transactions ranged from 2 1-2 to 10c down and there was further weakness later on Reports of wonderful wheat thresh-1 Ing returns In Kansas and Oklahoma and assertions that the Dakotas and Minnesota, taken as a whole, have been helped rather than harmed by recent rains, were influential against the bulls. The close was steady at 1 1-8 to 1 3-8c net lower Lack of shipping call tended to keep the corn market depressed. The close was unsettled 1-4 to 5-8c under last night. VJU SUNDAY SCHOOLS TO TEACH SEX HYGIENE Chicago, June 26. The teaching of sex hygiene In Sunday schools was approved today In the report to the, convention of International Sunday School association by K K Mohr, su- i perlntendent of the purity depart rnent. "Sex knowledge will be taught.' I said Mr. Mohr. "If not in the home I and the Sunday school, it will be taught in the street Silence is criminal. We cannot remain in ac tive We must teach these facts and teach them right so that knowl edge may lead to purity and right j eousness " The convention adopted the report of the executive committee making its meeting quadrennial instead of tri- ennial and formerly approved the se- lection of New York as the next j meeting place In 1918, not only for the sake of the convention, but "be cause Sundav Bchool work In New York is at its lowest ebb " In the opinion of the members, New Yorx was in serious need of the "uplift, which the convention could bring." rtr . Lord Wlmborne, financial sponsor of the successful British polo team, ( Is said to have won $17,000 in wagers, i I See page 6. There you'll learn about the Hart Schaffner & Marx high val ues at unusually low prices. Wrights' j WASH FABRICS THAT WILL MAKE I MOST DELIGHTFUL SUMMER GOWNS I COOL, ! l it is time for cool frocks of gingham, batistes, lawns, fl crgandies and crepes. Whether you want a simple morning gown for house wear of a more elaborate frock for afternoon dress you 7".,! can find a most wonderfully attractive choice to select p. 'S from now in this big collection of wash fabrics. ! ? j It is an easy matter for you to find scores of dainty desirable fabrics that will, with little work, make delightful gowns. I And they are priced very reasonably, too. I I 40-inch plain wash voiles. Black, navy blue, copen blue, IQf I tan, brown. Regular 25c. Special 40-inch plain voiles. Regular 35c and 40c 29C I Special 27-inch wash voiles in black and white check, blue and white, 9Qp pink and white. Regular 35c and 50c quality. Special twv 27-inch imported French dimity, a complete assortment of IQp printed flowers, patterns. Regular 35c. Special At' j 32-inch imported printed organdies. Regular 35c and 9 50c quality. Special 27-inch plain and printed lawn batiste for street dresses and 1 fl I slips. Regular 15c and 20c. Special VV 40-inch wash plain crepe, blue, pink, lavender, tan, white ICp and black. Regular 40c. Special WC 27-inch Yama wash crepe in stripes only. Ol - I Regular 25c. Special j 30-inch Windsor costume crepe in plain and printed Ol patterns. Regular 25c. Special LIL 27-inch Egyptian wash crepe in hair line stripes O'io 1 only. Regular 30c. Special W 27-inch silk stripe nuweve in black, blue, cardinal, tan; for I'ln cool afternoon dresses. Regular 40c. Special Wv 27-inch embroidered lorraine tissue. 'iQn 1 Regular 50c. Special W 2 7 -inch lorraine tissue in stripe, checks and 1Q plaids. Regular 35c. Special 27-inch plain wash poplin. 91 p Regular 25c. Special 27-inch radium ratine. Qp Regular 45c. Special 30-inch pam soiesette. 9 Regular 25c. Special 30-inch French gingham. In plain, stripe, checks and 9f plaids. Regular 25c and 30c. Special 27-inch Bates' gingham. 19 Regular 1 5c. Special , . . "8' 27-inch AFC gingham. Regu- 1fl lar 2y2e. Special BURTS I . k Drive Up, Men, With a Dray You Can Afford a Wagon-Load I 3 of Top-Quality Clothes at Buchmillcr & Flowers' Moving-Day Prices I It's Seldom a Quality Store Like This Makes Such a Sacrifice Pick While the Picking is Good IN THAT I ARf E NO MERCY HAS BEEN ixwui ctadc For Three Days, Joyful Men Have Been Buying Suits Here To our immense stock of mid- NfcW jlUlXL The cJassy( day-after-tomorrow stylishness, the durability, the individuality, the fit, the workmanship, the all-around worth-the-while- !,U"imer delightfuls for men. formerly the Falstaff, ness of Society Brand and Stratford System clothes our brands have helped to endear Buchmiller & Flowers' store to the hearts of all Nitty, no y, new s raws are j . y Ogdcn men who care about their personal appearance. purchasable here at $1 15 if we will have an entirely new, ; they re worth $1.50; $2 25 it , "At regular prices, every one of these suits is full value. When we cut the price to the depth we have for this occasion, it's small won- they re worth $3.00, and so spick-and-span stock. We can t er tat nuncJreds of men have been suit-hunting (and suit-finding) here since Monday. There is still an amazing selection of fine suits on- Shirts, hundreds of them, do that and take any thing with awaiting you, but you ought to get yours on your back, or at least laid away, Saturday. We have suits ordinarily priced at $ 1 5.00 to $35.00 worth $1.25 to $2.00, now , . j K! i selling now for only 95c us. World-renowned Nettle- crk fel f f-f rrrT. I "T'l ton, Florsheim and Bostonian ;. Oxfords, therefore, are sacri- -tfjftfl f ficed For instance: wLW B MM M II BfiiSHflL . I Duchmiller & Flowers yffi I I $6.00 Oxfords at $4.85 mTT mT Tmi HtHJSSGfS Ol PlPvlA Everything else in stock, not $5.oo oxford8 at $3.85 SALE NOW ON IN , U1 1 iei v SALE NOW ON IN prohlb"ed by makcrs' TT $Get?rwday--$2-85 FULL BLAST 2401 WASHINGTON AVENUE FULL BLAST 'Tltly j HIM WWMMHMHMWHBBHBVHVWPIHHlHMHRM M