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Show lliJS J1UH.M3U EiAAJllEin UUUA, BICFBOSPECTIkC OUIFII FOR COLDFIELD Ogden People Are Getting Heavily in the Bonanaa Field of Nevada. The gden-Xeva- 1 MUKflWUi 1AU, BATTLE HEAVY WITH HOLIDAY yesterday shipped to Battle Mountain a car containing a very complete outfit which will make the overland trip from Battle Mountain by way of Austin, Clovrrdale, San Antonia, to Tcnopali and Goldfield and later will find its way to Gold Crater. Bull Frog, Tuie Canon and Amargoaa City. About fifty Southern Pacific employes and a eoore of Ogdea reaidruts ere interested in the venture. It is probably the beat equipped prospecting party that has ever outfitted here. It carries an assaying outfit prepared to assay, and analyse any ordinary mineral or rock also instruments fur surveying and leveling. There are twu wagons and two teams s. and full equipment of saddles, tents and ramp furniture and supplies fur a four months campaign. In fact it will ba possible, if fsund desirable, to divide the outfit so aa to furnish eqtiipmeift for two psrlies. Mr. I,. R. Heffner, a well knosa Southern Pacific engiueer. nho spent some time this summer at Goldfield and was among the first to vl.it the Bull Frog district, has been mo--l active in promoting the plan and will be in charge of the expedition. lie will join the party next Tuesday at Battle Mountain. Mr. C. F. Garr. sin a Southern Puerile trainman is another member of the party. His former experience as a prospector in Nevada and Idaho will be of muck service to the'eompany. Mr. Harry R. Potts, formerly ef Rose-lan- d, B. C..' in the as sever of the party, and comes well recommended by the Mine and Smelter Supply Co. The other members of the party will ba engaged in Nevada. Articles of Incorporation will be filed nun. The capitalization of the company will be 200 shares of 100 each. The first block of 50 shares to be anid la quoted at $60. The direct ora of the company are: L. R. Heffner, president: R, P. Hunter, Fred Frollch, and John Furlong, of Ogden and J. E. Toombee. of Carlin. Kavada. 0. A. Kennedy is the secretary and treasurer. The plan of the compapy is to prospect for desirable mining property and, if the party is so furtuuaie aa to open up an entirety new dietrict, to secure ail the benefit! to be derived from town site, water rights and other perquisites enjoyed bv the fliat settler. The company already owns a group of claims near Dlamondfleld in the Guldfleld district on which a fair surface showing has been found an l development work will 'begin on this property at once TRADE pru-perii- Holiday Presents What are you going to get him ? Nearly everybody has a him or two to buy for. We cater only to" hims. Perhaps our suggestions will aid you to get him just what he needs and just what will please him. If you cant find something suitable for his Holiday Gifts here, where in the world would you expect to find it? Sugfefcstions. ' Cap Smoking Jackcta OMKOltl Night Robea Hosiery Suspendcra Bath Robea Neckwoar Suits Dross Vssts Rain Coata Hata UmbreHas Shiita Mufflers Shirt Protectors Collars Cuffs Underwear Gloves Pajamas Sc, tc. Go Sb, NO FANCY EVERY ARTICLE FAIRLY AND RIGHTLY PRICED. FIGURES. WELL PUT ASIDE ANYTHING YOU SELECT A KEEP PERFECTLY MUM ABOUT IT. FRED THE CLOTHIER, HATTER.AND HABERDASHER. moots of the eeawn. The boys are enjoying a luxurious smoke and rruim-berin- g the donors with gratitude. EXAMINER TELEPHONES EDITORIAL ROOMS Independent Phone BUSINESS OFFICE Independent Phone.: No. SI the churches of Ogden celebrated the birth of Christ yesterday No. 120 with appropriate srrvlces. In every cane the choir services were approNo. 120 priately conformed to the theme as were the speeches. WM. GLASMANN Independent Phons... EDITORIAL ROOM Boll i Phono............ .....No. All 60 BnM Phono............ .....No. 66 WM. GLASMANN ... ............ No. 120 . Phono. No. 120 of both telephone oyitemo clooad after 8 p. m. BoH 12-2- 3. SAMOANJIRL el Pneumonia. TOLLER'S ACADEMY AFTERNOON 4 TO 6:30 P. M. MATINEE! Undertaker Larkin was railed to THIS Utah, yesterday aftsraoon to C. D. Moore la in the city on a abort embalm and prepars for burial a young Samoan girl, aged sixteen years, visit from Welle, Nev. who died there Saturday evening hum of pneumania The young Uagbert Anderson is the recipient an auark of a Christmas present from hia fel- Is.ly came to Utah only a few months ago. emigrating from hsr native land d low employes In the shape of a with Elder George A. Goats, a umbrella. Saint missionary,, converted to his A. J. Hoffman is up from Zion today faith. Sbs was a very bright young lady and and will spend a few days In Ogden. through her sweet, ways liad won E. J. 8pront. A. J. Sweneon and John many friends, who are grieved to learn Stewart of 8alt Lake City spent Christ- of her audden and untimely death. She vlsilfd in Ogden fur several days while mas day in Ogsien. en route to Leld. from Samoa. The Dance, Second. Ward Iantituie, Mon- funeral nervier over her remains will day evening, Dec. 261 h. Hearty wel- be held at Lelii tills afternoon. come extended to alL Per couple 60c. Extra lady 23c. LODGE TOjjEMVIVED gold-hande- Louis Peterson, of Ftasno, California, Is In the citv taking in the sights, which at psesent are something dif- The Order of Redmon Will bo I zed Next Meeting. IK The Festive Christmas Drunk la spicuous by Hie Absence. Con- The feetlve Christmas drunk was not ,n the past two year. During the entire day yesterday there ware but seven prisoners taken Into rustody and they were booked on the charge of drunken ces and vagrancy. There wps a noticeable lack of brawls and unsavory scrapes of any nature. During the Cutt-of-f boom times in the holiday season last year and the year before there wen busy times In police circles and the officers were kept very i practibusy. Now that the Cut-ocally completed the crowd of construct Inn work followers has hied itself to other fields of labor. Of the fact that Christmas proper caste on Sunday this year bad much to do with the decrease in the number of arrests so much in cvideeca u ff made. COOD SNOWFALL Re-org- landscape. CIRCLES Report Come From the Mountains ef Heavy Deposit. ef a The Order of Redmen, which some years ago lapsed In Ogden, will In all well D. E. known in Hansen, Mm likelihood be revived. Several meetthe business circle of Ogden, died at ings have been held looking to reorher residence. 10:4a Saturday night, at and preparations have al461 Twentv-eijat- h street, at (he age of ganization been made to initiate a number ready 81. Funeral win take place Tuesday at of applicants at members. The plan 2 p. m. from the Second Ward meetla to. have the old charter restored. Yesterday's snowfall according to relinble reports left a very substantial deposit, practically the first of the year on the mount aina In the higher altitudes, it ia said, two and three feet of snow fell. The fall in the valier was sufficient to make sleighing practicable. completed next meeting. The lodge In existence here several years ago was called the lliawaths San Pedro! Los Angeles Special Holiday Rate. , ing house. It is planned that the will b The Young Ladies' of the Y. L. M. 1. A. of the Third Ward will give a dance in the Amusement hail next December 28th. Wednesday Admission 60 cents per couple. Extra ladies 25c. Lodge. ew-nin- One fare for round trip. Tickets on sale Iec. 23. 24, 25, 31 and January SPECIAL HOLIDAY RATES VIA RIO 1st. Linffted to return Jan. 3, 05. GRANDE WESTERN RAILWAY. BRITISH BONDHOLDERS DEBT Myrum Ptagreo. manager of the Ogden For the holidays the Rio Grande will STILL UNPAID. Furniture ooraiwray, received as a Christmas present from his employes make a rate of one fare for the round Mexico City, Dec. 23. News from Selling an elegant gold watch. trip between ail stations. shows that there is much dales for Colorado Dec. 22nd and 23rd. Guatemala the on part of the British resfeeling riie Standard and Examiner enl- for Utah, Dec. 23rd, 24th. 25th, 31st idents regarding the nun payment of iven are the reciiricnts of a flue box and Jan. 1st; final limit Colorado the debt due to British bondholders Columbia Club Pcrfetln. a present tickets Jan. Cih: Utah tickets Jan. and it ia aaserted that the British lem Baumeister Bros., with the compli- - 3rd. gation will be removed from Guatemala City to either Nharagua or Salvador. There seems to be no prospect of the Guatemalan government complying with ihc obligations, of foreign creditors. The beat peopie in Guatemala deTO THA YOU plore the attitude of the government and its disregard of its. obligations. ONE AND ALU Much Interest is shown by railway companies In oil now flowing at near Tampico, aa there la a pro-Ic- ct For tho most liberal patronage bestowed upon ua and of securing cheap and abundant promise to recipr ocate in some manner with extraorfuel. , WE DESIRE NR El-ba- no dinary bargains In the near future. STOCKHOLDERS MEETING. - Notice la hereby given that the meeting of the stockholders of the Standard Publishing company wiil he held at the office of tbe company, an-nu- nl J. S. Lewis & Co. Ji No. 36f Tret We attd Cure Iw ui r Diw. CATAKKH imfMM. Throat Hrm-rMBait t-Tnivhw. aaS Lna Tieat'.m. Asthma, eiomarh. I.It-a- r n KSncr Fail. Won iJhwa Bimdaer Tnublm. Weakbut If tot AisoiMCb from ror Treatment (Hum. Writ a for Stu. traa wmpton. I at If ym ran not rail. Manilulim UORML W!en of Ua wmk by tvmtninnii, ufms f r RK THK ImLT FCHSOW or aAc4 A VJB Prwa. Whenfhn Cured! Pay tat a Wenim ffs IIAWHI- fiisi and Yoaoanda- AUbU FKE whr n yim arc fii.iMj uDf..i ntir vkM. ThoiiRfinda of patlna ui. KOW WKWAVniUlHI (has (iiRltarr undtraiaadio TiI'lH a KKB anil curb woa. fiPttiEB'J 8is ribisbit o!,:nuij' tMfJiaiaiGis from homo poopiR. jrivlBS Dienni. (o LnM MaamMid. 8aoiiaa Wmi- "'b ttrierwoirbnov Ckwmrrlwasi, ftrpfciiia, i.iiv I'lrauve Lalmtel 'g. VariCf'CRiT IrlUfctTTf OI K WE ( AVT SM Stra nutum Loiim. I t'nirawad DlHfcASKK Jtiuod fill! ATE I'omm, and aU 6it!iitiouN pip.. in. nina. it wcA bFiniT erwriMeive. if Irwris OVFU'K Horn1 ba. m.; KtpbIiii bBTBUllbfYyVROOrBII lffi Illi fiUUt tit tiUll- b:M ih onuibpr wav. Tbia is out plan; f Url. Hui44l,auJ iujdina.tap ilan.loU Wash i'42 Ave. DBS. SHORES & SHORES, Expert Spesiaiisfs, Ogden, Utah. lO T4W TO Wi.nhare our tkilllb pniTun th fiiiot CHRONIC street, Ogden, GIRL MURDER NOT CLEARED. . Omapiain-Ailiitm Wmmm at and Chllama, Bavf IXkbm. Maroon. ISamaao. Choa. M VHm Uansai, lli- Trout. Shin own SirrUltr, Ulekoia. IS.. m 1a. Srlatlaa and MaaaatUaB. af ua Buoaia Pitas. lima and n. Troaktm. Ual'n. ior hl mu, S'tKd Tam Wma. bay Ktmr liyoMia aU Inaotaalm.atc.. anil Xcrroua, Iptapay.aad Cluvaia Pln-.w- . frina IlkA.1. Twenty-fourt- h Utah. Monday, Jsn. 9, 1905. at 2 p. m for the purpose of electing officers for the ensuing year and transacting such other business as may come before the meeting. D. T. TRACY, Soc'y. Ogden, l.'iah, Dec. 10th, 1904. li:, Yor i)i ri . Colorado Springs. Colo., Dec. 25. Although Chief Reynolds wired the rhif-- f of police al Syracuse, N. Y.. last evening for a complete description of fhe mining Miss Kemper, whose parent- claim she Is the victim of ths Mount Culler murder, no word was rereived today. The positive way in whieh the telegram was worded, that the description tallied with that of Mis Kemper, a to dental work, height and rulor of hair, hs mired thn hope of the officers that the wilt now have nmet bine tangible to work upon. A ir gram fiout the manager of the Glittering Gloria company was to the t fleet that none of his company was left in Colorado, but the manager of thi- Sambo Girls company wired Gist he left a girl In Denver, ntjd a mer-s- g ssKing for a description of ihc g'.rl has been sent out. - Fifty-nint- r 3 I HOLIDAY 1 GIFTS For Young and Old h mo-torm- SAID TO BE THREE TIMES AS HEAVY AS THAT OF PREVIOUS YEARS. Special Mail Train From Chicago to th Coast to Bo Put on Soon. The holiday liuuj westward this year is about three time as heavy as tbe mail of previous years. The very fact Gist with an increase of eight xail clerks on the Ogden 8aa Francisco run the mail is sill! "stuck up at Reno shows that there ia something doing in railway mail circles. This condition of affairs is not due so much to a lack of men as to a lack of enough car space for proper working roou.. the People generally throughout country are sending more Christmas presents by mail than formerly. It ia said that about 1,5(NMKI0 mail parcels were sent out of Chicago during the past few days and iv is safe to say that 600,000 of this number came westward. It can be seen from this that the work of the mail clerk has been an arduous one. Thera has been a remarkablfi increase in the amount of mail going to California points due no doubt to the phenoutenal increase In the population of that atate during the past year. Thursday aud Friday before Christmas the mail was so great that it could not possibly be handled by the working force of derke with the limited car apace. On Thursday the westr bound trains carried about 600 sacks of mail for western points and only about half of this number were worked by the time Reno was reached with the result that the boys went "stuck up about 8U0 sacks of mail. Tbia stuck up mail had to be car ried to Oakland pier and then sent back again and distributed over tha In country, causing disappointment many houses on account of expected Christmas presents not arriving when they should hare arrived. It la a rule with the mail clerks to work the letter first and because of tbe exceptionally heavy letter mail it baa taken must of their time os the run to work the letters. On westbound passenger No. 1 there are two working mail can and one storage car, and on No. 3 there la one mall car and one storage car. All of these care during the present rush have .been so crowded with mail that could hardly get around to work. What is necessary evidently Is another car to be added to each train and then the boys would have plenty of working space. Should the proposed special mail train materialise then the present troubles would take wings and fly away. It seems there are pretty fair grounds for believing that the "Whit Flyer will be a reality in the west. The special mall, train is called the "White Flyer, because all the cars are painted white and also because of the remarkable average speed which it will make from Chicago to the Coist. Out of Ogden it will consist of three care and ope storage car and an aver-ag-a miles per hour speed of fifty-twfrom Chicago to the coast will be attained. The great speed of this train will be better appreciated when it Is taken into consideration that No. 1 on the Southern Pacific makes an miles an average speed ot.tblrty-fiv- e hour, only. The 'advent of the fast mall train into the west will be an event that will cause great' joy in the hearts of railway postal clersa who are now working under difficulties. The foreign mail to western points during the past week ia the largest ihat has ever been handled by clerks on the Ogden San Francisco run. tha-boy- JOLICE DIES Girl Who Came From Samoa to Lahi a Faw Months Ago Victim ferent to pack-saddle- Retween 26th street and !8th street and Adams avenue or on 28th St. ltweon Adama and Washington Ave., three pocket hundkerehlefs with hand made lace. Finder return to Mr. Jos. Srrowrruft,- - Lane lies ter House, 26th St. QUIET TIMES LOST BUSINESS OFFICE NEGROES Mining company da rails and continued along down tha grade toward Third avenue. In the car were ala or seven passengers. None had jumped, and the conductor seemed trying to stop the car by working the brake on the rear platform. His efforts were fruitless, however. The car kept on wiL Policeman Knocked Down by Gang of increasing speod. It passed over Negroes Two Officers Fatally Third avenue safely, no cars passing Hurt. at that moment. car street A west bound New York. Dec. 25. Two policemen was ahead, and its conductor and injured a third badly hurt and fatally saw the runaway car coming. four ngrta locked up is the remit of They kept their car under half speed a battle that took place early today in and permitrd the runaway to crash North Plainfield. N. J. bet seen firsmou, o Thursday it Is estimated that there were about 12,000 let ten from foreign countries to California pninta 'lbe outlandish nsi:a.-- and addresses on some of them were almost enough to cause the wrinkles that wont come off. And of course all of these had to be worked before Christmas packages and papers could be handled witn the result that the latter named mail was "stuck up at Reno and had to be carried to Oakland. At present there are about twenty-seve- n mail clerks on the Ogden San Francisco run. and they are a bright set of boys. Formerly green" men were sent on this run to aid during tbe' Christina holidays, but the great increaHc in the mails during the past few years has necessitated the retaining of men who were thoroughly acquainted with the business. There is no telling how much mall would be "stuck up" were green men to be put on the run out of Ogden. s CAR RUNS AWAY, HITS Into It. but not with much force. The front car was brought to a stop with the runaway car behind and all the latter' passenger! sa fe. A policeman who had seen the passengers of the Second avenue car thrown about sent an ambulance call to the Flo er Hospital. l)r. Dominick found several of tbe passengers cut by broken glass and bruised. Michael Kelly and his wife, a middle-agecouple, of No. 24 West 101st street, were the most seriounly hurt. They had been thrown from tbe easterly to the opposite side of the car. Kelly bruising and cutting his bark and his wife sustaining cuts on the head and face. Dr. Dominick dressed their injuries, but they would not go to the hospital. The rear platform of the Second avenue car was demolished. Within minutes the car had been twenty-fiv- e placed on the track by a wrecking crew. Meanwhile northbound- - traffic on the line was blocked. aud citizens on one aide and a gang of negroes uu the other. Mar-slJoseph Flack and Special Police man Wm. Klein are dying ia Muhlenberg Hospital, the former with a deep knife thrust below tho right shoulder and the latter with razor cuts over his entire body, sixty atltches having been r quired to close the wounds. A third policeman Waiter O. Smalley, Is at his home, his face battered and bruised. The prisoners are Samuel Hunt, Walter Terns, Albert. Tunsutil and Jeu. Henderson, all residents of Plainfield. The negroes had been standing In tha at reel cornet yelling "Merry Christmas" at everyone who passed and demanding money to buy drinks. Two policemen attempted to arrest thn gang and were kuuckad down and beaten. They did not shoot for frar of bitting onlookers. Ths firemen and citizens joined In the battle which waa waged nearly half an hour. When the negroes were about to be taken to jail there were rries of Bring a rope and "Lynch them. Policemen warned the hot headed to keep away but members of the crowd got close enough to strike the negroes. A crowd hung aoout the jail for hour and ail through tbe day in both Plainfield and North Plainfield were frequent tllu etwrn whltemen and negroes. YOUNG GIRL ACCUSED OF MURDER Clara Adlar on Trial 8laying Her Baby. Charged Thlrtean-Day-Ol- . With CRASH d OF ICE New York. Dec. 2G. Her hair hanging down her back In a long braid, her skirt reaching only a little below her shoe tops, Clara Adler looked much younger than her eighteen years when placed on trial yesterday before Judge New burger In General Sessions Court, charged with the murder of her baby thirteen days old. Ignorant of the waya of the country, unable to understand the language thoroughly, her plight and her forlorn appearance elicited the sympathy of all who saw her. After giving birth to her child in Bellevue Hospital aha waa discharged on August 9 last. Afraid to return to her home, having no other place to go, she went with her cousin. Rebecca Hellwell, who lived In the house with her parents. No. 196 Orchard street, to Crouma Park. Thera, shortly before dusk. It Is charged she gave hen-sin- e to the baby and then abandoned it in clump of bushes. She was arrested before she left the park. Mias Hellwell and William C. Pin-chia clerk in the Finance Department, who was in the park and caw tjie woman after the baby had been abandoned, testified, as did Dr. a Coroner's physician in the Bronx. The trial will be continued today. The girl is defended by Frank Moss. BOATS Syracuse, N. Y. Dec. 25. Three men were killed and three more seriously hurt iu a crash of two ire boats speeding before a gale of wind at the rate of 50 miles an hour on Onondaga Lake this afternoon. Tbe dead are Jsmea Jackson, Charles Markham and Geo. Todd( all of this city. The ardent occurred after the first of the season's regattas of the Onondaga Lake Yacht dub which brought 1,500 persons to the lake. Over its glaring surface a fierce gale drove the fleet of ire yachts at express train speed. Toward the close of the afternoon the Warner Brothers, with Fred Warner at the tiller bore up tbe lake with the wind abaft, the Blits, with Caleb Joss steeling. approaching in the opposite direction.. Each craft carried five persona As the yachts neared each oLner both tried to avoid rollisioni but both turned in the same direction. AWAIT ROBBERS RANSACK STORE Proprietor Attacked With Clubs Safa Blown Open and Money Taken Up. Chicago. Dec. 25. Beaten into insensibility by four masked robbers who entered the drygoods store of O. L 1 .argon A company early today, A. G. Krogsted, partner in the firm, waa compelled to lie with bis bands and feet 1 ted while a aafa on an upper floor was blow n open and $1,800 in money taken up. After dismissing the employes Saturday' night, Krogsted fearing that robbers 'might be attracted to the store because of the heavy Christmas business transacted in the place during tbe day, decided to remain in the store all night and guard the money. While dozing in the office at daybreak four men broke into i lie place and attacked Krogsted with clubs. He was soon unconscious from the blows and the men ransiicki-the store. THF. BEYOND COURTS JURISDICTION. San Francisco. Dec. 25. Geo. E. Letcher of San Jose, who Is wanted by the Ohio authorities m the charge of arson, committed in that state 25 yean ago. and who has been residing by legal expedients extradition, has been kidnaped by .let ive and taken in a launch to Martinez, where the eastern overland train wus boarded. I .etcher is now out of the jurisdiction uf the courts of this siaie. OVERCOME BY SMOKE. New York, Dec. 25. h h Mirrors See yourself as others see you. Ebony and oak styles Purses Ladies' aud Gents. The finest selection In the city. 0 T. H. CARR, Druggist. L Lgmma G3?J B GRAND R. ALEXANDER GRANT, Mgr, MONDAY XMAS DAY Matinee and Night and GOULD FREED Present Their Novelty Big Melodramatic NETTIE THE A Splendid Company, Headed by Miss Wanda Ludlow and Lem B. A.E.Weatherby The Utah National Bank ONLY ONE. Tha Record in Ogden la On. y, reia-brati- nn h Handsome and useful. Manicure sets. All appro--priale gifts. Pittsburg, Dec. 25. Pittsburg HarParker . bor was a lively place today. River Scenic Investiture Unsurpassed. men, in anticipation of a sufficient Every Act Carried in lie Entirety. rise In the rivers by tomorrow to take a heavy coal shipment to southern POPULAR PRICES: 25c, 60e Matinee points, have been busily preparing for 25c, 50c, 75c it. Forecaster Ridgway ia not overly Night sanguine, but the coal companies, encouraged by the continued mild weather and favorable reports from up river points have had gtparn up all day In every towboat in the harbor and making ready for the down river trip. If the expected rise materialises it will be the first since early in July and at least five million bushel Of coal will be. shipped before Sundown tomorrow. There are about 15,000,000 bushels In the Pittsburg and Monon-gahel- a pools ready for shipment and as fast as barges and boats can tie rushed to this point, they will be loaded and returned aouth. At 10 o'clock tonight the Ohio registered six feet and rising slowly at Davis Island dam. Both the Monon-gahel- a and Allegheny at this hour are makChristmas is almost here. In rising steadily. not overlo ing your holiday purchases lin MOSCOW'S MAYOR HONORED. look our special inducement- - Our tender of of Turkeys are as fine s lot 1 Moscow. Dec. 25. Members of the birds as we have ever seen. It tocouncil assembled at the city hall o at them; a pleasure day for the purpose of thsnitiug treat to 'look ' Prince Galitxan, Mayor of Moscow, for buy. . his attitude In favor of reforms. Prince trervendous a who received Galftzin ovation said he bad only dune his duty as a Russian citizen and that he was persuaded he was standing on firm 2438 WASH. AVE. ,; ground in supporting the reforms sugof the action council gested by th which would meet with Ihe approval of the Russian people. He concluded by urging the members uf the council to stand together, saying that by unity alone could they hope to secure reforms. Two woman Inst overcome by smoke in a fire in Allen street early today. The dead are: Mrs. Fountain, 50 years old, and Miss Skel-laged 40. In a hospital in a 'serious condition are Owen McKrath and his Derails tha First and is Stopped Only wife who were overcome by smoke and were taken out of the building unconWhen it Rams at Reduced Speed scious by firemen. Into tha Second. The flia followed a Christmas and wa caused by the overNew York, Dec. 26. In charge of a street turning of a lamp. new motorman, a Fifty-nint- h car, west tmiind. ran away last night when just west of First avenue, ANNUAL MEETING POSTPONED struck and derailed a north bound Chicago, l)cc. 25. The annual meetSecond avenue car at Second avenue aud was stopped by running at re- ing of Ihe American Baseball Associaduced speed into a car ahead in Fifly-nim- h tion announced to be held this week lias been postponed until January 15 street, near Lexington avenue. Passengers in the Second svrnue The cause of postponement is a decar were bruised and shaken, and two sire to wait until after the National were attended by an ambulance sur- Commission Jan. 9 when the minors are going to make a strong plea to geon aud then went to their homes. The car got beyond the control of win over tits American League repreCharles Kron. the inntorman, just alter sentatives to the plan for draftidg play crossing First avenue. Finding he era already favored by the Nationals. could not act tbe brake, Kron clanged New Ybrk. Dec. 25. The Hamburg-Americahis bell vigorously. Later it could not Line steamer Patricia which be learned why lie did nut reverse the controller, but at all events he did not arrived today from Hamburg, brought street car 131 cabin and 2.435 steerage passzn do bo. As the Fifty-nintapproached Second avenue s ear was gers. The greater number of these in the stcerspe were from Russia going north and on the Fifty-nintand rami- - born to escape conscription Btreet t rarks. Kron shouted and 'kept his gong The cabin passengers were treated going, but tin- - motorman of the Second tonight t'i a Christmas tree and a avenue car had only a moment's warn- dinner. ing, and did what seemed to be the beat thing. He turned on the power HOLIDAY EXCURSION RATES. for full sp;ed ahead and succeeded In OREGON SHORT LINE R. 1L getting the body of hia car out of the T UNION PACIFIC R. R. way. but its rear platform was struck. Tickets nn sale Dee. 23rd, 24th. 25th The force of the blow knocked th Second aenue rar from the rails anir 31st and January, 1st. Limited to Jan. to a poln Jusi north of the crossing. 3rd. Ask agents for particulars. street car kept the The Fifiy-niut- Am- Toilet Cases THE RISING OF OHIO RIVER. their lives and two other persons were TWOOTHERS French, English and erican Odors. Festival of Yacht Club Ends in the Death of Three Meiv - Boats Crash Before a Gal ef Wind. Rel-gernu-n, TAKEN Perfumes polici-mc- Unique If the reader has a bad back" or anv kidney ill and ia looking for relief aud cure, better depend on the only remedy endorsed by people you Doan's Kidney Pills relieve know. Ogden permanently. quickly cuncitizens testify to this. Here ja a case of It: Geo. P. Wright, driver of the mail wagon from the depot to the post office, If hanliving at 375 23rd St., says: dling heavy sacks of mail anil exposure to all kinds of weather while following my occupation was not the primary cause of kidney complaint and backache it certainly aggravated the attacks when they occurred. For years when the dull, grinding pain which existed almost continually ever let up it changed to sharp shooting twinges which radiated to the sliould-er- s So that I never knew really when one attack left to be followed up by a successor. A sure Indication of either weakened or overexcited kidneys wa6 the action and condition of the kidney secretions. When the spells were in the acute stage I must have tried a hundred different remedies seeking relief until 1 became discouraged.' A ' friend of mine who had procured a Ihx of Ikwn's Kidney Pills at. S. W. Badcons drug store on Washington Ave.. pave it to me and I commenced the treatment. I bought a second box and took it and the attack disappeared." For sale by ail dealers. Price 60c. Foater-MllburCo., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the United States. ReniemU-the name i loan's and n r OF OGDCN United Stales Depositoiy deposits Pays Interest on time pMcUante E. Dooly Horace E. Peery Ralph E. Hoag. . A. V. J. . "agtm cashier 'csMiKf $11.45 SPECIAL $11.45 for 9ndoinely dinner set Ot and up. $4.00 for of Chin-anline the We have Silverware for & presents. 100-pie- ce d Wheelwright Bros, 2476 WASH. AVE. rHQN NOTICE TO CREDITORS |