m carpet clearance salechroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058406/1910-08... · him protection and...

1
r M = 1 j THE DAILY STANDARD OGDEN UTAH SUNDAY AUGUST 21 1910 4 II f 06DEN MORNING STANDARD PupHKed every day In the Y carby W4h GLASMI NN j rl TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION iNDVANCE r Dolly and Sunday ono month r 376- Daily rG6 Dally and Sunday plx months 700 and Sunday one year r 200 Sunday Standard ono year f lb Dally three months by wall eo t e Subscribers wishing address of paper changed must give former as well as address Subscrlptlonsin nil cases ore payable In advance FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS SERVICESEVEN DAYS A WEEK WEATHER FORECAST UTAH Partly cloudy Sunday local thunder storms and cooler- at night or Monday MAKING AMENDS Fifty years ago last July Charles Goodyear discoverer of the process for vulcanizing rubber died in the City of New York Al ¬ though he bequeathed to the world one of the greatest secrets of the age to which it is indebted todayfor one of its most profitable indus ¬ tries so far as personal emoluments are concerned he left it poorer than the day he entered it Of all that contemporaneous group which included Professor Samuel F B Morse inventor of the tele- graph ¬ Elias Howo inventor of the sewing machine and Cyrus Mc- Cormick inventor of the reaper his was a singularly adverse career even to the end While potentates vied with one another to do him honor unlike the others notably Elias Howe whose income for a time was estimated at 4000 a day Goodyear derived comparatively- no material benefit from his great discovery and died heavily in debt Robbed of the benefits of his discovery by manufacturing pirates who refused to pay him a royalty for the use of his process which most of the governments of the earth encouraged by declining to afford him protection and defrauded by business associates who took ad ¬ vantage of his confiding credulenoc nature his lot was a peculiarly unfortunate one There is a strong inclictment of the past ingratitude- of his fellow countrymen in the announcemont just made in New York that after half a century of silence it is now proposed in recog ¬ nition of his service to humanity to perpetuate his memory by the erection of a memorial commensurate with the importance of his achievement as a tribute from the generations he has benefitted No more pathetic narrative can be found in the history of mod- ern ¬ inventors than the life story of Goodyear Thrust into jail time and again for debt often with nothing to eat his sickly wife and five little children threatened with eviction a dead child on his hand and no money to pay for its burial the butt and ridicule of his fellows and with every human face averted from him his steadfast devotion- to the problem ho had set out to solve in the face of the most insu ¬ perable obstacles was inspring Nothing discouraged him In the solitude of his prison cell Philadelphia into which he had been thrown as a bankrupt he worked on undaunted with the enthusiasm- that only a genius can bring to his support in trouble with a determi nation that would never recognize defeat His position in these times- Is tritely described by one of his friends who said of him If you see a man with an Indiarubber coat on Indianrubber shoes and In ¬ diarubber cap and in his pocket an Indiarubber purse with not a cent in it that is Goodyear ASSISTANCE OF AMERICAN CONSULS Consul Isaac A Manning of La Guaira Venezuela writes in Trade and Consular Reports follows concerning an article recently pub r Jlshedinjin Amc Sloan trade journal criticising the consular service of the sited States The article under consideration complained that a representative- of an American manufacturing concern had called on a consul to obtain the address of a firm in the city where the consul was sta- tioned and also to obtain information as to the firms financial stand ¬ ing The representative states that the consul did not know of the firm and that leis answers were unsatisfactory and incomplete One firm or even many more in a port might be unknown to a consular officer and the financial standing of a firm might legitimately be be ¬ yond his knowledge Collecting such information is more legitimately the work of commercial agencies and banks If consuls are able to give American merchants in a general way such information as will call their attention to the trade opportunities and requirements of a district give a list of houses of generally good reputation with whom business may possibly be done and gather such details of trade as are to be had commercial interests should not complain if a consular officer does not enter into the exact financial standing and commer ¬ cial history of each particular firm in the city where he is located The consular regulation covering the situation is as follows Consular officers are forbidden to allow the use of their names- as references for business or other enterprises and they are not aut- horized to report to private inquiries concerning the financial stand ¬ ing or commercial repute of business men or houses in their districts They may however refer such inquiries to banks or other business agencies if any that can answer them or they may quote the ratings- of local business agencies- As another reason of complaint the article stated that certain foreign consuls have better general information in regard to firms in their districts than Amerioan consuls have Such information is obtained largely through the merchants and shippers of the foreign consuls own country resident in his district who are constantly in touch with the consuls and have valuable information In many foreign cities there are no American merchants and shippers and the American consuls must depend for knowledge on local banks and agenoies It is unfair to select one case whether the consul is right- or wrong and draw the conclusion that the consular service is at fault The American consuls are glad to receive calls from com- mercial ¬ travelers and to be of every possible assistance indeed one complaint which consuls make from time to time is that many Amer ¬ ican commercial travelers do not avail themselves of what assist ¬ ance the consul can give them and is eager to give BULL FIGHTS Travelers come home with conflicting views on many questions- but nowhere is there a more curious divergence of opinion than on the bull fights says Colliers Weekly Here is the opinion of the pastime given by a leading fighter of his day The love of bulls is inherent in man especially in the Spaniard among which glorious people there have been bull fights ever since bulls wero because the Spanish men are as much more brave than all other men as tho Spanish bull is more savage and valiant than all other bulls As a matter of truth the physical courage required of a bull- fighter is certainly not more than that with which a fireman bicycle f policeman or railway engineer should be equipped and the danger l is less than that faced quietly by millions of obscure men and women inquiet and necessary occupations of ordinary life No shallow open I r mnidedncr can disguise the fact that it is a mean and brutal sport- As John Hay wrote in his exquisitely intelligent f Castilian Days t the sere reason tho bull shows the more the Spaniard hates the nicc A 1C C3t the cruelest death shall be inflicted It is hard to believe that these American newspaper writers who L 1 T r f 1 Carpet Clearance Sale = > Carpe Values that Cannot Be DuplicatedO- ur j I I Carpet Sale will draw the greatest most enthusiastic crowds of shrewd and careful buyers ever brought together by a merchandising event in this community I Our prices for this sale will set the town atalking for the goods we offer in this bargain carpet event are strictly highgrade fresh stock and we have relentlessly reduced prices Q regardless of cost with a determination of making values so great that our shelves will- be cleaned with a rush In this sale our great ani ony consideration has been to make room for new goods We must have the room hence the tremendous values you will find plainly marked in our busy store The quotations given here prove our claims Read them carefully Come to our store Our prices will make you money We have cut prices regardless of cost or profit to a point where it will force quick sales Begins Monday al8 a m < Q A ep S Ogdene Furniture m Carpet Co k nre uhc t + 45 1 The Place to Buy Furniture and Buy It Right wKa = 0 sometimes glibly express their hostility to prize fighting or to the I rougher sides of football by likening these pursuits to the bull ring can have any understanding whatever of the human traits that make the national pastime of the Spaniards deleterious and reminiscent of a history which consisted largely of bigotry and cruelty through so many centuries that steps ahead even today are gained against the resisting force of evil traditions which are ages old tis a signifi- cant ¬ detail of fact that the Spanish Minister Calomarde who closed universities and declared education to be a curse also established a I great school of bull fighting in Seville THE GOSPEL OF WORK Work has a moral as well as an economic value idleness cor ¬ rodes the character When one is doing nothing the consciousness- of the fact annoys him and he endeavors to find some excuse and- as there is no reasonable excuse his vision becomes distorted by the effort to find even a plausible explanation of his refusal to render service to society Carl Hilty the Swiss author says that happiness is only possible when one is engaged in some regular work which occupies his time employs his mind and satisfies his conscience and no one can doubt the truth of the statement God never intended- man to be a drone and man can not expect to enjoy life or the respect of those whose respect is worth having if he is not able to show that his existence adds something to the worlds activities to the worlds wealth and the worlds welfare ATTACKS CONSERVATION POLICY t The Sacramento Union uses the example of Minnesota and its freedom from state taxation due to the income received from the rent of natural resources as material for an attack on tho policy of conservation This curious inversion of logic is accomplished by a flat misrepresentation of the policy initiated by Roosevelt and Gif- ford I Pinchot Such misrepresentation is habitual with the organs- of the interests which make a practice of pretending that the pur ¬ pose of the Roosevelt policy is to lock up forover these resources and keep them unused Then the Union launches out like this Minnesota has used her natural resources so as to give the t state a continual income California has done that in the matter of her schools and as a result we spend on our schools many times what we raise for them by taxation Why not continue the same policy in other matters If the public lands in this state were the property of the state as they should be and if they are utilized for California and not along the plan of Pinchot for the reforesta- tion of the eastern mountains then there is no reason why the day may pot be at hand when there will be no state taxes in California- The water power of the state belongs to the statethat has been decided by the supremo court and Pinchot and his friends can not take it from us fortunately but the former forester purposes to I tax the land that is needed for power sites along the streams for the benefit of his eastern bureau Of course water power confined- to the bed of a stream with no right to erect any building on the adjoining land is useless and we must have control of the land as well as the water- If the water powers in the reservations were turned over to the states tomorrow they would be at once grabbed in many cases with ¬ out suitable compensation for public property- By and by when the states have provided legislation to regulate such grants and official machinery for the collection of a reasonable revenue therefrom the federal government may safely make the transfer In the meantime they are safe and they are not locked up from use but can be applied for industrial purposes INSIDE HISTORY Some interesting political history concerning the purpose of the suit abruptly filed during the session of congress by Attorney Gen- eral ¬ Wickersham to enjoin the proposed advances in rates by the railroads is given by the Chicago Tribune According to the story this suit was not aimed at the railroads but was instituted for its indirect effect on the insurgents in congress and to spike their guns The railroad people had gone ahead in their own fashion to announce a general advance of rates on their well worn assumption that they had the right to run their business in their own way free from interference or regulation by the govern men The story proceeds- At that time the progressive Republicans in the senate under I the lead of Mr Cummins of Iowa and Mr Bristow of Kansas had succeeded in forcing a number of amendments upon the Aldrich sen ¬ ators They had struck fear into tho hearts of the regulars and L i C > r iJSLx there was danger they would be able to make still more radictu changes in the rate bill as framed by the attorney general- The panic stricken reactionaries were convinced that the slight- est ¬ public revolt against the railroads would precipitate a crisis in the senate and that as a result the insurgents and democrats would sweep the regulars from the decks and pass a radical bill It was feared that the freight rate advances filed would enragt the shippers arouse the public generally and produce the crisis fear ¬ ed in the senate But the attorney general promptly filed his in ¬ junction suit and immediately thereafter the railroad officials went- to Washington to confer with Mr Taft As soon as they reached the capital the railwaymen were in¬ formed by the senate leaders of the conditions which made the in ¬ junction suit necessary They were told that if they wished to have a railroad bill passed not wholly unfavorable to their interests they must acquiesce in the action taken by the attorney general The railroaders were convinced and immediately promised the presi ¬ dent to withdraw the rate advances Whether the story is well founded or not it appears to explain most of the known facts SONG FOR ROOSEVELT- When Colonel Theodore Roosevelt arrives in Denver on the 29th of this month he will be the guest of the Denver Press Club at a cow¬ boy dinner While this dinners is in progress a quartette of cowboys- will sing a song the chorus of which goes like this Teddy were glad youre here we love you so The nations pride and joy everywhere you go Cut out this strenuous life in the far East we pray and be happy now with those who lovo you In the glorious U S CREATED A- ROUGH HOUSE A Bastrom was fined 10 yester- day ¬ for attempting to collect a bill with his fists and loud and tumultu- ous ¬ noises The complaint alleged that he disturbed the peace of August Nelson by his peculiar method of set ¬ tling accounts Tho testimony given before Judge Murphy was to the effect that Dos trom while doing some carpenter work for Jensen suddenly concluded that he would gle up the Job Ho did so and demanded his wages be paid Im- mediately ¬ Mr Jensen told him ho would settle with him as soon as he could see the bookkeeper and have- a check written This would not do fpr Bastrom and ho proceeded to create a rough house From Bulkiness to Beauty- A Priceless Prescription- To be growing fatter every day without discovering anything will diminish the humiliating growth is a- very dlatresslng experience especially for a woman of refinement and taste Dieting appears to be of no avail ex- ercising ¬ Is generally an added danger And after all the truo remedy is a- very simple and Inexpensive affair and Involves no sacrifices of any sort The fame of the remedy of which wo now give the exact recipe Is be ¬ coming worldwide and no stout per ¬ son should neglect It a moment dong- er The prccrlptlon Is Indeed a price- less ¬ ono to thoso who have groaned for years under the burden of exces- sive stoutness 12 oz Marmola 12 oz Fluid Extract Cascara Aromatic- and 3 12 or Peppermint water The regular dose Is one teaspoonful after each meal and at bedtime Any drug ¬ gist will fill this prescription com- plete ¬ or your can obtain the Ingredi- ents ¬ separately and mix yourself change which this treatment brings is little short of marvelous Thore Is no necessity to worry about food Appetite and digestion are greatly stimulated and to good feed- ing ¬ tho recovery of strength and vital fly may be In a groat measure attrib uted In tho severer cases of exces- sive ¬ stoutness the person under treat- ment ¬ will lose pounds of superfluous fat In a week The blood Is purified and tho skin and complexion are freed from Impurities and sallownoss It Is altogether a rejuvenating treatment and dons lasting good in every way TV V FINAL MATCH Denver Colo Aug 20An onor mous gallery followed the final match- of the TransMississippi golf tourna- ment when Harry G Legs of MInlkah da and William Sheehan of Des Moines drove from the first toe The I championship match was followed by W J Foye of Omaha and Harold A Fisher of Denver who will play 36 j holes for the consolation cup Tho professionals started the sec- ond round of medal play with tho scores much lower than yesterday when 76 was tho best round made WITH SHEARS LAND PASTE Wanted That Stylish Sound Somo persons like one sort of shoe and some another but the kind which was desired by Pierre the French Canadian mlllhand has never enjoy- ed ¬ a wide popularity Shoes for Sunday Plorro stated to the young man who advanced to meet him as he entered the salesroom- of the big shoo factory- He then sat heavily down on one of the red plush seats and allowed tho salesman to Insert his feet In a pair of bright yellow shoes When they were fairly on Pierre stood moved his feet this way and that took a tow steps and shaking his head sat down I again What the matter asked the clerk Do they hurt you Are they too tight Pierre shook his head violently- She no tight he said but also she no talk Shoes for Sunday must talk talk all the way up In church for Companion to bun styllbh seeYouths Fathers Little Joke- A Baltimore man recently called- at a friends house where the stork Shad recently arrived Hello Tom was the effusive greeting of the caller What la It Boy or girl- Guess said the father Boy ventured the caller With a sad smile the now parent add- ed Old man youre only half right Harpors Magazine She Was Wrong Thero was an oppressive silence In the parlor At last tho desperate young lady broke out George asked she why dont I you propose Somehow Bomohow I cant bring myself to do It Myrtle blurted tho young man Its only a short sentence George Its a sentence for llfeiJudge Guessing Ahead Dot aged 6Mamma If I got mar ¬ ried will I have a husband like papa- MammaYes And If I dont get married will I- bo an old maid like Aunt Martha t Yes Mamma Its a tough world for us women Isnt itLondon Spare Mo moots Unwitting Slander A Western bookseller wrote to a house In Chicago asking that a dozen copies of Canon Fatrars SeoloraI After God be shipped to oncoWithin two days ho received this reply by telegraph- No seekers utter God In Chicago or New York try Philadelphia Ev ¬ erybodys Restrictions- This said tho enthusiastic pat- riot Is the land of liberty where each may pursue happiness = Excuse me Interrupted Mr Sirius Barker but did you ever read the paper they make you sign tooforo they will rent you a flat Washington Star Hard to Convince Little Tommy eldest of tho family at dinner Mamma why dont you help me before Ethel Mama Ladlee must always como firstTommy triumphantly Then why was I born before Ethel TitBits Had No Kick Catch any fish 1 Nope Better luck next timer Im satisfied I dont caro to have cheap flab biting these expensive illeGKnnsns City Journal- A Passing Parody He drove a gold ball through the air It fell to earth ho knew not where Until ho hoard tho luckless yell Of him upon whose head It fell Washington Star Gnyly Voracious Each year tho moth comes forth to view To fill us with misgiving r An ultimate consumer who Fears not tho cost of IIvln- Wnshlngton Star SUITS COMMENCED IN MUNICiPAL COURT I In the civil division of the municipal- court yesterday Charles Muhs commenced suit against Albert Darby I tn recover 70 alleged to ho duo on a certain contract Mrs R E Hufstettler is flulng Wil liam Beach and others for 3710 claimed to be duo on an open ac ¬ count Oscar Benson has begun an action against W J Moran to recover dam ages for an alleged personal injury In the sum of 299 Tho Success Meat market is suing D C Dora and wife for 63 CO claimed to be due on butcher shop bill JUDGE HElD A- SHORTSSSON There was little to bo done by Judge Murphy In the police court yesterday because ho had few subjects to pass Judgment on J Davis stated that he was guilty- of having bean unlawfully drunk August 19th Ho was sentenced to pay a fine of S 5 or serve flvo days la- the city Jail at hard labor William Preston denied that ho was a vag and he was given a hearing j Officer Kelliher stated that the nua had been loafing around town for a number of days and that he had to means of support He also stated that the follow undertook to formulate a plan operation by which be could rob a man by the name of Irish of 40 and that ho suggested to a ba- rtender that if he would aid him In turning the trick ho would split the money with him Judgo Murphy suggested to the fe- llow that it would be well for him to leave tho city Instanter and seek i work In his home town Salt Lake The man left the court room with an expression of joy on his face saying that ho would shake Ogden dust from his feet and make Salt Lake in a hurry The court further advised Preston that if be was picked up In Ogden again he would In force a 90 days suspended sentence Grace Roy a colored woman failed to appear and answer the charge of vagrancy Her bond In the sum of 10 was declared forfeited Gus Bennes a Greek charged with i riding a bicycle on ono of the sid- ewalks of the city did not answer the call of his name and his ball was fo- rfeited MELD ANNUAL BANQET TODAY i The Ogden Manufacturing and Job r brag Association hold Its annual ban- quet at the Livingston Cafeteria ye- sterday It was a purely social function hut during the evening a business meeting will be held at i which matters of Interestp to tho a- ssociation will be discussed This association designates Itself as the Ogdeh Boosters Club havlt j for Its purpose the upbuilding of tht city and the advancement of the coy inertial Interests Much good Is be i J Ing accomplished through tho organl j j allon and Its members have cooper 1 atcd In many public enterprises and i efforts to get better railroad faclllU and rates and for the protection of the wholesale and Jobbing here t REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS- Lars C Jensen and wIre to Walltr L Underwood for 6200 part of tM northwest and southwest quarters d section IS township 0 north range I west of Salt Lake meridian Adol hens R Rcnslroin and WL band to Peter Ispen for 1100 p of southwest quarter of section 17 township 6 north of range 1 west Salt Lake meridian TheToggerys Quarters- Wo Are Located Temporarily in the Orpbeum Building First Door South of Entrance All Office Work j j Attended to at j THE ROYCROFT STORE 308 26th Street S H BROWNE CO r 1 t r n p a 0I Iij t E J = I o I ° F a e + t C r JJ t bc r n L f ttrr Iffc arCt fr- t tC m lit lo lb 1C 10 J we oa 7sJa pad eltl wh prl dre Ib brlr A yen vial

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Page 1: M Carpet Clearance Salechroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058406/1910-08... · him protection and defrauded by business associates who took ad ¬ vantage of his confiding credulenoc

rM = 1

jTHE DAILY STANDARD OGDEN UTAH SUNDAY AUGUST 21 1910

4 II f

06DEN MORNING STANDARDPupHKed every day In the Y carby W4h GLASMI NN

j rlTERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION iNDVANCE r

Dolly and Sunday ono month r

376-

Daily

rG6

Dally and Sunday plx months 700and Sunday one year r 200Sunday Standard ono year f lbDally three months by wall eo t e

Subscribers wishing address of paper changed must give formeras well as address Subscrlptlonsin nil cases ore payable

In advance

FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS SERVICESEVEN DAYS A WEEK

WEATHER FORECAST

UTAH Partly cloudy Sunday local thunder storms and cooler-

at night or Monday

MAKING AMENDS

Fifty years ago last July Charles Goodyear discoverer of the

process for vulcanizing rubber died in the City of New York Al ¬

though he bequeathed to the world one of the greatest secrets of the

age to which it is indebted todayfor one of its most profitable indus ¬

tries so far as personal emoluments are concerned he left it poorer

than the day he entered it Of all that contemporaneous group

which included Professor Samuel F B Morse inventor of the tele-

graph

¬

Elias Howo inventor of the sewing machine and Cyrus Mc-

Cormick inventor of the reaper his was a singularly adverse career

even to the end While potentates vied with one another to do him

honor unlike the others notably Elias Howe whose income for a

time was estimated at 4000 a day Goodyear derived comparatively-no material benefit from his great discovery and died heavily in debtRobbed of the benefits of his discovery by manufacturing pirates who

refused to pay him a royalty for the use of his process which most

of the governments of the earth encouraged by declining to affordhim protection and defrauded by business associates who took ad¬

vantage of his confiding credulenoc nature his lot was a peculiarlyunfortunate one There is a strong inclictment of the past ingratitude-of his fellow countrymen in the announcemont just made in NewYork that after half a century of silence it is now proposed in recog ¬

nition of his service to humanity to perpetuate his memory by theerection of a memorial commensurate with the importance of hisachievement as a tribute from the generations he has benefitted

No more pathetic narrative can be found in the history of mod-

ern¬

inventors than the life story of Goodyear Thrust into jail timeand again for debt often with nothing to eat his sickly wife and five

little children threatened with eviction a dead child on his hand andno money to pay for its burial the butt and ridicule of his fellowsand with every human face averted from him his steadfast devotion-

to the problem ho had set out to solve in the face of the most insu ¬

perable obstacles was inspring Nothing discouraged him In thesolitude of his prison cell Philadelphia into which he had beenthrown as a bankrupt he worked on undaunted with the enthusiasm-

that only a genius can bring to his support in trouble with a determination that would never recognize defeat His position in these times-Is tritely described by one of his friends who said of him If yousee a man with an Indiarubber coat on Indianrubber shoes and In¬

diarubber cap and in his pocket an Indiarubber purse with not acent in it that is Goodyear

ASSISTANCE OF AMERICAN CONSULS

Consul Isaac A Manning of La Guaira Venezuela writes in Tradeand Consular Reports follows concerning an article recently pub

r Jlshedinjin AmcSloan trade journal criticising the consular service ofthe sited States

The article under consideration complained that a representative-of an American manufacturing concern had called on a consul toobtain the address of a firm in the city where the consul was sta-

tioned and also to obtain information as to the firms financial stand¬

ing The representative states that the consul did not know of thefirm and that leis answers were unsatisfactory and incomplete One

firm or even many more in a port might be unknown to a consularofficer and the financial standing of a firm might legitimately be be ¬

yond his knowledge Collecting such information is more legitimatelythe work of commercial agencies and banks If consuls are able togive American merchants in a general way such information as willcall their attention to the trade opportunities and requirements of adistrict give a list of houses of generally good reputation with whombusiness may possibly be done and gather such details of trade asare to be had commercial interests should not complain if a consularofficer does not enter into the exact financial standing and commer ¬

cial history of each particular firm in the city where he is locatedThe consular regulation covering the situation is as follows

Consular officers are forbidden to allow the use of their names-

as references for business or other enterprises and they are not aut-

horized to report to private inquiries concerning the financial stand ¬

ing or commercial repute of business men or houses in their districtsThey may however refer such inquiries to banks or other businessagencies if any that can answer them or they may quote the ratings-of local business agencies-

As another reason of complaint the article stated that certainforeign consuls have better general information in regard to firmsin their districts than Amerioan consuls have Such information isobtained largely through the merchants and shippers of the foreignconsuls own country resident in his district who are constantly intouch with the consuls and have valuable information In manyforeign cities there are no American merchants and shippers and theAmerican consuls must depend for knowledge on local banks andagenoies It is unfair to select one case whether the consul is right-or wrong and draw the conclusion that the consular service is atfault The American consuls are glad to receive calls from com-mercial

¬

travelers and to be of every possible assistance indeed onecomplaint which consuls make from time to time is that many Amer ¬

ican commercial travelers do not avail themselves of what assist ¬

ance the consul can give them and is eager to give

BULL FIGHTS

Travelers come home with conflicting views on many questions-but nowhere is there a more curious divergence of opinion than onthe bull fights says Colliers Weekly Here is the opinion of thepastime given by a leading fighter of his day

The love of bulls is inherent in man especially in the Spaniardamong which glorious people there have been bull fights ever sincebulls wero because the Spanish men are as much more brave thanall other men as tho Spanish bull is more savage and valiant thanall other bulls

As a matter of truth the physical courage required of a bull-fighter is certainly not more than that with which a fireman bicycle

f policeman or railway engineer should be equipped and the dangerl is less than that faced quietly by millions of obscure men and women

inquiet and necessary occupations of ordinary life No shallow openI

r mnidedncr can disguise the fact that it is a mean and brutal sport-

As John Hay wrote in his exquisitely intelligent f Castilian Dayst

the sere reason tho bull shows the more the Spaniard hates

the niccA 1C C3t the cruelest death shall be inflicted

It is hard to believe that these American newspaper writers who

L 1

T

r f1

Carpet Clearance Sale= > Carpe Values that Cannot Be DuplicatedO-

ur

j

I

I

Carpet Sale will draw the greatest most enthusiastic crowds of shrewd and carefulbuyers ever brought together by a merchandising event in this community

I Our prices for this sale will set the town atalking for the goods we offer in this bargaincarpet event are strictly highgrade fresh stock and we have relentlessly reduced prices Q

regardless of cost with a determination of making values so great that our shelves will-be cleaned with a rush In this sale our great ani ony consideration has been to make room for new goods Wemust have the room hence the tremendous values you will find plainly marked in our busy storeThe quotations given here prove our claims Read them carefully Come to our store Our prices will make youmoney We have cut prices regardless of cost or profit to a point where it will force quick sales

Begins Monday al8 a m <Q

A ep

S OgdeneFurniture m Carpet Co k nre uhc

t

+ 451

The Place to Buy Furniture and Buy It Right

wKa =0

sometimes glibly express their hostility to prize fighting or to the I

rougher sides of football by likening these pursuits to the bull ringcan have any understanding whatever of the human traits that makethe national pastime of the Spaniards deleterious and reminiscent ofa history which consisted largely of bigotry and cruelty through somany centuries that steps ahead even today are gained against theresisting force of evil traditions which are ages old tis a signifi-cant

¬

detail of fact that the Spanish Minister Calomarde who closeduniversities and declared education to be a curse also established a I

great school of bull fighting in Seville

THE GOSPEL OF WORK

Work has a moral as well as an economic value idleness cor ¬

rodes the character When one is doing nothing the consciousness-of the fact annoys him and he endeavors to find some excuse and-as there is no reasonable excuse his vision becomes distorted by theeffort to find even a plausible explanation of his refusal to renderservice to society Carl Hilty the Swiss author says that happinessis only possible when one is engaged in some regular work whichoccupies his time employs his mind and satisfies his conscience andno one can doubt the truth of the statement God never intended-man to be a drone and man can not expect to enjoy life or therespect of those whose respect is worth having if he is not able toshow that his existence adds something to the worlds activities tothe worlds wealth and the worlds welfare

ATTACKS CONSERVATION POLICYt

The Sacramento Union uses the example of Minnesota and itsfreedom from state taxation due to the income received from therent of natural resources as material for an attack on tho policy ofconservation This curious inversion of logic is accomplished by aflat misrepresentation of the policy initiated by Roosevelt and Gif-fordI Pinchot Such misrepresentation is habitual with the organs-of the interests which make a practice of pretending that the pur ¬

pose of the Roosevelt policy is to lock up forover these resourcesand keep them unused Then the Union launches out like this

Minnesota has used her natural resources so as to give the tstate a continual income California has done that in the matter ofher schools and as a result we spend on our schools many timeswhat we raise for them by taxation Why not continue the samepolicy in other matters If the public lands in this state were theproperty of the state as they should be and if they are utilizedfor California and not along the plan of Pinchot for the reforesta-tion of the eastern mountains then there is no reason why the daymay pot be at hand when there will be no state taxes in California-The water power of the state belongs to the statethat has beendecided by the supremo court and Pinchot and his friends can nottake it from us fortunately but the former forester purposes to I

tax the land that is needed for power sites along the streams forthe benefit of his eastern bureau Of course water power confined-to the bed of a stream with no right to erect any building on theadjoining land is useless and we must have control of the land aswell as the water-

If the water powers in the reservations were turned over to thestates tomorrow they would be at once grabbed in many cases with ¬

out suitable compensation for public property-By and by when the states have provided legislation to regulate

such grants and official machinery for the collection of a reasonablerevenue therefrom the federal government may safely make thetransfer In the meantime they are safe and they are not locked upfrom use but can be applied for industrial purposes

INSIDE HISTORY

Some interesting political history concerning the purpose of thesuit abruptly filed during the session of congress by Attorney Gen-eral

¬

Wickersham to enjoin the proposed advances in rates by therailroads is given by the Chicago Tribune According to the storythis suit was not aimed at the railroads but was instituted for itsindirect effect on the insurgents in congress and to spike their gunsThe railroad people had gone ahead in their ownfashion to announce a general advance of rates on their wellworn assumption that they had the right to run their business intheir own way free from interference or regulation by the governmen The story proceeds-

At that time the progressive Republicans in the senate underI the lead of Mr Cummins of Iowa and Mr Bristow of Kansas had

succeeded in forcing a number of amendments upon the Aldrich sen ¬

ators They had struck fear into tho hearts of the regulars and

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there was danger they would be able to make still more radictuchanges in the rate bill as framed by the attorney general-

The panic stricken reactionaries were convinced that the slight-est

¬

public revolt against the railroads would precipitate a crisis inthe senate and that as a result the insurgents and democrats wouldsweep the regulars from the decks and pass a radical bill

It was feared that the freight rate advances filed would enragtthe shippers arouse the public generally and produce the crisis fear ¬

ed in the senate But the attorney general promptly filed his in¬

junction suit and immediately thereafter the railroad officials went-to Washington to confer with Mr Taft

As soon as they reached the capital the railwaymen were in¬

formed by the senate leaders of the conditions which made the in ¬

junction suit necessary They were told that if they wished to havea railroad bill passed not wholly unfavorable to their interests theymust acquiesce in the action taken by the attorney general Therailroaders were convinced and immediately promised the presi ¬

dent to withdraw the rate advancesWhether the story is well founded or not it appears to explain

most of the known facts

SONG FOR ROOSEVELT-

When Colonel Theodore Roosevelt arrives in Denver on the 29thof this month he will be the guest of the Denver Press Club at a cow¬

boy dinner While this dinners is in progress a quartette of cowboys-will sing a song the chorus of which goes like this

Teddy were glad youre here we love you soThe nations pride and joy everywhere you goCut out this strenuous life in the far East we pray

and be happy now with those who lovo youIn the glorious U S

CREATED A-

ROUGH HOUSE

A Bastrom was fined 10 yester-day

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for attempting to collect a billwith his fists and loud and tumultu-ous

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noises The complaint allegedthat he disturbed the peace of AugustNelson by his peculiar method of set¬

tling accountsTho testimony given before Judge

Murphy was to the effect that Dostrom while doing some carpenter workfor Jensen suddenly concluded thathe would gle up the Job Ho did soand demanded his wages be paid Im-

mediately¬

Mr Jensen told him howould settle with him as soon as hecould see the bookkeeper and have-a check written This would not dofpr Bastrom and ho proceeded tocreate a rough house

From Bulkiness to Beauty-A Priceless Prescription-

To be growing fatter every daywithout discovering anything willdiminish the humiliating growth is a-

very dlatresslng experience especiallyfor a woman of refinement and tasteDieting appears to be of no avail ex-ercising

¬

Is generally an added dangerAnd after all the truo remedy is a-

very simple and Inexpensive affairand Involves no sacrifices of any sort

The fame of the remedy of whichwo now give the exact recipe Is be ¬

coming worldwide and no stout per ¬

son should neglect It a moment dong-er The prccrlptlon Is Indeed a price-less

¬

ono to thoso who have groanedfor years under the burden of exces-sive stoutness 12 oz Marmola 12oz Fluid Extract Cascara Aromatic-and 3 12 or Peppermint water Theregular dose Is one teaspoonful aftereach meal and at bedtime Any drug ¬

gist will fill this prescription com-plete

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or your can obtain the Ingredi-ents

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separately and mix yourselfchange which this treatment

brings is little short of marvelousThore Is no necessity to worry aboutfood Appetite and digestion aregreatly stimulated and to good feed-ing

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tho recovery of strength and vitalfly may be In a groat measure attributed In tho severer cases of exces-sive

¬

stoutness the person under treat-ment

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will lose pounds of superfluousfat In a week The blood Is purifiedand tho skin and complexion are freedfrom Impurities and sallownoss It Isaltogether a rejuvenating treatmentand dons lasting good in every way

TV V

FINAL MATCH

Denver Colo Aug 20An onormous gallery followed the final match-of the TransMississippi golf tourna-ment when Harry G Legs of MInlkahda and William Sheehan of DesMoines drove from the first toe The

I championship match was followed byW J Foye of Omaha and Harold AFisher of Denver who will play 36

j holes for the consolation cupTho professionals started the sec-

ond round of medal play with thoscores much lower than yesterdaywhen 76 was tho best round made

WITH SHEARS

LAND PASTEWanted That Stylish Sound

Somo persons like one sort of shoeand some another but the kind whichwas desired by Pierre the FrenchCanadian mlllhand has never enjoy-ed

¬

a wide popularityShoes for Sunday Plorro stated

to the young man who advanced tomeet him as he entered the salesroom-of the big shoo factory-

He then sat heavily down on oneof the red plush seats and allowed thosalesman to Insert his feet In a pairof bright yellow shoes When theywere fairly on Pierre stood moved hisfeet this way and that took a towsteps and shaking his head sat down

I againWhat the matter asked the

clerk Do they hurt you Are theytoo tight

Pierre shook his head violently-She no tight he said but also

she no talk Shoes for Sunday musttalk talk all the way up In churchforCompanion

to bun styllbh seeYouths

Fathers Little Joke-A Baltimore man recently called-

at a friends house where the storkShad recently arrived

Hello Tom was the effusivegreeting of the caller What la ItBoy or girl-

Guess said the fatherBoy ventured the caller

With a sad smile the now parent add-ed Old man youre only half right

Harpors Magazine

She Was WrongThero was an oppressive silence In

the parlor At last tho desperateyoung lady broke out

George asked she why dont I

you proposeSomehow Bomohow I cant bring

myself to do It Myrtle blurted thoyoung man

Its only a short sentence GeorgeIts a sentence for llfeiJudge

Guessing AheadDot aged 6Mamma If I got mar ¬

ried will I have a husband like papa-MammaYesAnd If I dont get married will I-

bo an old maid like Aunt Martha tYesMamma Its a tough world for us

women Isnt itLondon Spare Momoots

Unwitting SlanderA Western bookseller wrote to a

house In Chicago asking that a dozencopies of Canon Fatrars SeoloraIAfter God be shipped to

oncoWithin two days ho received thisreply by telegraph-

No seekers utter God In Chicagoor New York try Philadelphia Ev ¬

erybodys

Restrictions-This said tho enthusiastic pat-

riot Is the land of liberty whereeach may pursue happiness =

Excuse me Interrupted Mr SiriusBarker but did you ever read thepaper they make you sign tooforothey will rent you a flat WashingtonStar

Hard to ConvinceLittle Tommy eldest of tho family

at dinner Mamma why dont youhelp me before Ethel

Mama Ladlee must always como

firstTommy triumphantly Then whywas I born before Ethel TitBits

Had No KickCatch any fish 1

NopeBetter luck next timerIm satisfied I dont caro to have

cheap flab biting these expensiveilleGKnnsns City Journal-

A Passing ParodyHe drove a gold ball through the air

It fell to earth ho knew not whereUntil ho hoard tho luckless yell

Of him upon whose head It fellWashington Star

Gnyly VoraciousEach year tho moth comes forth to

viewTo fill us with misgiving

r An ultimate consumer whoFears not tho cost of IIvln-

Wnshlngton Star

SUITS COMMENCED

IN MUNICiPAL COURT

IIn the civil division of the municipal-

court yesterday Charles Muhscommenced suit against Albert Darby

I tn recover 70 alleged to ho duo on acertain contract

Mrs R E Hufstettler is flulng William Beach and others for 3710claimed to be duo on an open ac ¬

countOscar Benson has begun an action

against W J Moran to recover damages for an alleged personal injury Inthe sum of 299

Tho Success Meat market is suingD C Dora and wife for 63 CO

claimed to be due on butcher shopbill

JUDGE HElD A-

SHORTSSSON

There was little to bo done by JudgeMurphy In the police court yesterdaybecause ho had few subjects to passJudgment on

J Davis stated that he was guilty-

of having bean unlawfully drunkAugust 19th Ho was sentenced to

pay a fine of S 5 or serve flvo days la-

the city Jail at hard laborWilliam Preston denied that ho was

a vag and he was given a hearing jOfficer Kelliher stated that the nuahad been loafing around town for a

number of days and that he had tomeans of support He also stated thatthe follow undertook to formulate a

plan operation by which be could

rob a man by the name of Irish of

40 and that ho suggested to a ba-rtender that if he would aid him In

turning the trick ho would splitthe money with him

Judgo Murphy suggested to the fe-

llow that it would be well for him to

leave tho city Instanter and seek i

work In his home town Salt LakeThe man left the court room with an

expression of joy on his face sayingthat ho would shake Ogden dust from

his feet and make Salt Lake in a

hurry The court further advised

Preston that if be was picked up In

Ogden again he would In force a 90

days suspended sentenceGrace Roy a colored woman failed

to appear and answer the charge of

vagrancy Her bond In the sum of

10 was declared forfeitedGus Bennes a Greek charged with i

riding a bicycle on ono of the sid-ewalks of the city did not answer the

call of his name and his ball was fo-

rfeited

MELD ANNUAL

BANQET TODAY

i

The Ogden Manufacturing and Job r

brag Association hold Its annual ban-

quet at the Livingston Cafeteria ye-

sterday It was a purely social

function hut during the evening a

business meeting will be held ati

which matters of Interestp to tho a-

ssociation will be discussedThis association designates Itself as

the Ogdeh Boosters Club havltj

for Its purpose the upbuilding of tht

city and the advancement of the coy

inertial Interests Much good Is be i J

Ing accomplished through tho organl j j

allon and Its members have cooper1

atcd In many public enterprises and i

efforts to get better railroad faclllUand rates and for the protection of

the wholesale and Jobbinghere t

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS-

Lars C Jensen and wIre to WalltrL Underwood for 6200 part of tM

northwest and southwest quarters dsection IS township 0 north range I

west of Salt Lake meridianAdol hens R Rcnslroin and WL

band to Peter Ispen for 1100 p

of southwest quarter of section 17

township 6 north of range 1 westSalt Lake meridian

TheToggerysQuarters-

Wo Are Located Temporarily in the

Orpbeum BuildingFirst Door South of Entrance All Office Work j

j

Attended to at j

THE ROYCROFT STORE308 26th Street S H BROWNE CO

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