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Show s' irotj enuniv MDDmir. TJV A MTVPP AYTr.TTQT1 10 AC 1 For the first eighteen correct or nearest correct answers In the EXAMINERS 0 I , S (b I To It Costs You Absolutely Nothing to Try for a Prize, Except a Little Effort and the Ex the Public: The Examiners Knowledge Contest X description of the majority of the leading 'business firms in Ogden, with their special lines, will be published in the Examiner in enigma. The Examiner will pay $100.00 in gold to the first 18 persons sending in a correct answer to each description. - Watch the Exaniaer Further Particulars. Latest-Lab- Interesting 1 for , and Cboase Complete end Authorized to Be Published Exdurirely in die Morning Examiner Secretary McNamara of the International Association of Bridge and Struc- Tho Kalloul Ctrlo Federation, on Toque ot Its department of economics and trada agreements, baa appointed a commission to Biako an Investigation In tbta country and Europe of national and municipal owner ship sad operation of public utilitle - (he Nearly all the flint (leu factories of the country naumed operations re- cently, after the neual sammer shutdown. affording employment to 20,000 men. Tbla year's shutdown lasted only three waeke, the shortest in the history of the American Flint Glaea Workers' Talon. The British Columbia Electric Rail-roa- d company Introduced profit sharing three years ago and it la now announced that the experiment baa been eminently satisfactory, says the U. & cra.nl at Halifax. N. a During 1904 over 1125,000 was recovered by the Dock. Wharf, River-Idand General Workers Union of Great Britain and Ireland, aa compensation for member who have been Injured while at work. s The Chicago convention, the first annual convention of the "Industrial Workers of tbs World, recenty nabbed Its work and adjourned. Premier Seddon of New Zealand has s of that promised the city to introduce legislation to rented-th- e delays thst take place In dealing with Industrial disputes. trade-unionist- A resolution recently moved by a la the Parliament of Holland, calling for a maximum eight-hou- r workday for miners, was defeated by memb-- r 66 to 28 votes. Cornelius P. Shea of Chicago was president of the International Brotherhood of Teamster, by a vote of 129 to 121, defeating Daniel Furman of Chicago. The Scottish Clerks' Association Is receiving applications fur membership . and efterest, fective. It indelibly impresses upon the minds of the public the names and specialties of each firm represented in the contest. ii Intense dtaaatlafaotira exist among s Now Booth Waleo and fair employers, owing to the government allowing tho Arbitration Court business to he hong up. u SUBMARINE GIVEN A TEST. Increase of employes to above ths basis on their Oyster Bay, L. I., Aug. 25. PresiAugust wages. The wage rate of last dent and Mrs. Roosevelt, with a month was 1 per eent above the bul party of rienda sad relatives, today The Lake Beamon's Union has IT witnessed a tret of the submarine torpedo boat. Plunger, from tha deck of branches ta this country. tho yacht Sylph. An weather was quite different In San Francisco a cooperative shoe o from that of yesterday when the Presibusiness Is being conducted by young and practical shoemakers dent himself made a dive la the Plunger and watched at clone range, even and shoe clerks. participating in. the maneuvers of the Hebrew bakers la Philadelphia tiny vessel forty feet below the surface of Long Island Sound. A stiff null on trike. northeastern wind yet was blowbut the rain had censed and the The strike of the Manchester, Eng- ing sun soon burned away the early mornland, spinners has been averted, owing hue. Tbe teat of, the Plunger ing to the agreement of the conference took place In the waters of the Bound, committee that on the first pay day a short distance outside the entrance In September a bonne of 5 per cent of their wagee to to be paid to all work- to Oyster Bay. The boat operated In seven fathoms of water. ers and this payment to to be kept about Boon after the President and bln up for 12 weeks, when It shall cease. party boarded the Sylph. the Plunger under way. At the request of the The strike of the telegraphers on got the little vessel performed Provident, ofNorthern Pacific the railroad was some of her feet within the waters of Per-haoff declared ficially by President Bay. While the President was of the Order of Railway Teleg- Oyster on board the vessel yesterday, no attSL in Ptul. raphers empt wan made to discharge a torpedo. As he was anxious to witness Ths convention of the International that experiment, it was arranged that Typographical union decided to meet Lieut Nelson, the commander of the In Colorado Springs (which recently vessel, and his men would launch one met In Toronto, Canada,) next year. of the projectile within the bay. The eight-hou- r committee presented Accompanied by Lieut Frank its report, which Indorses tha eight-ho- Evans, commander of the Bylph, and campaign now being waged, and the President's cousin, W. Emirn recommends a strike on January Roosevelt, the President went to the 1906, against employers who. do not bridge of the Bylph to witness the accept the new hours kid down by experiment After maneuvering a few tha union. minutes, making In tbe meantime several dives, the Auger came to the Quebec teacher are pensioned by surface and discharged n torpedo. The the government. bow of the vessel rose n few feet out of The Bricklayers' and Masons' Inter- of the water; there was a gash sad the national Union of America Joined over foam several fathoms aheadsnrfnce of torpedo skimmed along ths 12,000 members the past year. the hay for perhaps 200 yards. The One hundred of the principal trades prajectlle was picked np by ou of the unions have funds in hand of over 922,-00- Syluhs launches. On account of the pressure of busi-nThere are nearly 2,000,000 memin connection with the peace nebers of trades unions In Great Britain. tala of tha 2 per cent twsn-ty-tw- trade-unionist- in The Brewery Workmen are pushing The Federal Government will at the rate at tarty per week. At thlc the action of tbe Jqpuere officer! rate, the whale of the 50,000 retail their organisation and label in tha who raoentiy determined thot Panama clerks fa Baotlnad will sow he mem- northwest, wu not lit lor Japanese Uornt b y bers of the union. brains adverttoeraeata tu laboron to Is the brightest advertising idea of the twentieth century; is of peculiar in- THUS A MERCHANT IN THIS CONTEST WILL IS THAT THI EXAMINER WANTS TO TEACH ITS READRES TO READ ADVERTISEMENTS. SAY WHO THE ADVERTISER IS. TO READER IS AND THE ADVERTISE HIS MOST POPULAR GOODS, OMITTING HIS NAME, NO. 11 IS THE SAME FOR A KNOX SUPPOSE ADVERTISEMENT NO. 10 IS A BIG BOOST POR A STETSON HAT, AND ADVERTISEMENT A SPECIALTY OF ONE AND MAKES M. NYE FRED THAT KNOWS HAT, THE READER IS TO SAY WHO SELLS THEM, AS EVERYBODY CLAUD D. IVES OF THE OTHER; THE KEY TO THE FIRM'S NAME IS PLAIN TO ALU THUS M ADVERTISEMENTS WILL BE PRESENTED WILL POINT AND THE EXAMINER SUBSCRIBERS WILL STATE WHO THE ADVERTISERS ARE; SOMETHING IN EACH ADVERTISEMENT AND THE FIRST PERSON WHO GUESSES THE NEAREST THE TO SOME POPULAR (fcODS AS A GUIDE TO WHO THE ADVERTISER GREATEST NUMBER OF ADVERTISERS WILL RECEIVE 950 IN GOLD AND THE 17 NEXT NEAREST WILL. EACH RECEIVE A PART OF THE J OTHER 50 IN GOLD. IN A WAY THAT NO OF COURSE THE MERCHANT WHO ADVERTISES IN THIS CONTEST WILL GET HIS GOODS ADVERTISED OTHER SCHEME COULD PRESENT IT. AFTER THE PEOPLE 'GUESS AT HIS AD FOR A WEEK HIS NAME IS PUBLISHED WITH THE ADVERTISEMENT, THUS EVERY PERSON GUESSING AT THE RIGHT NAMES WILL KNOW THE POPULAR GOODS HANDLED BY EACH MERCHANT ADVERTISING. THE PRICE FOR THE ADVERTISING WILL BE SO SMALL THAT THE ADVERTISER WONDERS HOW IT CAN THAT IS WHERE OUR BE DONE. THE SECRET IS IT PAYS THE EXAMINER TO TEACH THE PEOPLE TO READ ADVERTISEMENTS. MONEY IS MADE, NOT IN THIS PROPOSED CONTEST. WATCH THIS PAPER FOR MORE INFORMATION. j Ths West Australian minora unions have refused to accept a reduction In wages and other alterationa In their conditions, as proposed by the mining tural Iron Workers states that there ts ao change la tbs status of the strike companies. of his organisation, which want Into effeot recently against ths American New Zealand UUorsssss complain of the Importation of coo tract girl labor Bridge company. from Australia. , During 1964 there were 1590 sugar The Illinois free state employment growera la Queensland, Australia, employing White labor only, as sgalnst offices have filled over 50,000 positions during their seven years' existence. 1,040 la ths previous year. The first International report ot the Ths Philadelphia mint has temunion movement In Europe givporarily suspended operations, laying trad facts and figures to the dose of ing off 000 employe!. the year 1903 has been Issued. The Largs numbers of white men are following countries reported their England, 922.700; Dengathering la the Claranee River dis- memberships:' trict of New South Wales. In antici- mark, 86.828; Sweden, 80.000; Norway, 1 pation of scouring work during ths 10.996; Germany, .270,1131; Austria, 177,592; Hungary, 41,128; Senrla, coming sugar season. Tha total number of women orIn tbe foregoing countries Is Belgian female workers oa hand- ganised made lace earn but from 25 to 20 cents 84,721. per day of It to 15 hoars' work. In The conciliation board agreement Eastern Flanders the wages are still now wages la the South lower, ranging from 16 to 20 cents per Walesregulating coal field expiree at the end dsy. of this year. Patrick Dolan, president of tha New Haven. Conn., street car men Pittsburg district of ths United Mine strike for higher wages. Workers, predicts that ths coal oper- may ators of that locality will present a About ore person in 30 In a member new wage scale oa January L which some trade union In the United will call for a reduction. He predicta of State a strike If such action Is taken. It has been reliably stated tbst apIt is reported that orders have been 2.000.000 children, ranging issued by the Italian minister of for- proximately in age from 5 to 10 yearn of age. are to affairs Italian the eign embassador ns workers In the United at Washington. D. C-- and to an Italian employed Pistes, a large pgr cent of these beconsuls la the United States to dising under 12 yearn of age. courage as much as possible Italian laborers from accepting employment All existing trade union in Hunon Panama canal works. themselves for afgary have declared filiation with- the Hungarian Trade A strike of section hands oa the Union councIL Denver A Rio Grande railroad, who are of the International As early as 1641 there were onion Tirol herb ood of Maintenance of Way printers In Francs. Employee. was inaugurated1 recently. Circulars have been sent out by The nnlonlrm among tbe Jewish Charles P. Neill of Washington. D. C, workers In Great Britain Is beginning ffsttotirlan of tbe anthracite strike to have a revival commission, stating that the average selling price of hard cnsl at tidewater r.ctiles the "gonr-ra- l committee of points during tbe month of Julr was trade unions," there are three other B4.C4. This advance will entitle cer0. - ur I 0. reward of the Arbitration court. Germany to Introducing Chinese bor in Samoa. la- In Wisconsin the eight-hoday Is prescribed in manufacturing and mechanical establishments unless otherwise agreed upon. ur In Hamburg. Germany, there Is school for training servants. a The project of establishing state schools for mechanical Instruction In European countries for chauffeurs is being favorably received. Planters in Mexico claim that ported Chinese labor to very Im- ng . 'Watch the Examiner for j, Farther Particulars. ing held by the state. Horace Boyd, a prison officer, testified regarding the alleged conduct of Mr Mary M. Roger a Bennington woman, who wan convicted of the murder of her husband, Marcua Roger In August, 1902, but not hanged. Boyd 'declared that Vernon Rogers, a convict, who to serving a aentence of 16 years, bed told him that he (Rogers) had access to Mr Rogers' cell by meani of a key which he had made In the shoe Shop of the Institution. The convict ta not Officer a relative of Mr Roger Boyd farther stated that Rogers and the condemned murderess had not com ducted themselves properly. After Boyd had been dismissed from the witness stand the state made public certain evidence which had been taken in executive seas ion by. the special committee appointed by the legislature to Investigate public lnsti- - Crop advices war of a favorable tenor and railroad re turns satisfactory. The penes negotiations at Portsmouth were partly factor, though some disappointment wu expraeaed at the lack of progress reported... varied Industrie , BWEDEN NORWAY. AND Comm Iasi on la Appointed to ArrangW for Dissolution. - tUtlODIv E. W. Oakes, former superintendent of Gw prison, testified at that session that Rogers had informed him that last March Fred Morse, another prisoner, had given him (Rogers) a key which fitted Mary Rogers' eel). Oakes also said Rogers had told him that the latter's key opened toe outside door ot the cell but would not unlock the inside door. The second door, the superintendent testified, was opened, according to the story, by Mr Rogers henelf, who removed the screws In the lock by means of a pair of scissors.. Oakes further testified that during ths time of toe alleged occurrence he wu ill and that the prison was In charge of a warden. When the superintendent heard of three irregularities, he said, he discharged toe warden. At yesterday's hearing the state officials also mads public a statement made by Mr Rogers In writing, to In the Matron Durkee of toe prim statement Mr Rogers said she had seen Vernon Rogers frequently in the The woman's statement corridor. then told of frequent meetings which the and Rogers had in her cell. The statement corroborated other teati-man- y was gotiations, President Roosevelt given concerning Rogers at the obliged to return to Sagamore Hill aa to toe means employed to hearing, hto' rate Before leaving he expressed cell door the open tofaetkm with the maneuvering of the vessel and the notable skill of the men who handled her. He had learned, he STOCK MARKET FOR THE WEEK. said, that the officers and men on the boat were receiving for the services New York, Aug. 26. The week in they are now rendering only shore the stock market wu notable for tbe pay, although It was manifest that at establishment of new high records in no time would their services be more a number of Important stocks and for hazardous than It to at present and a sensational upward movement in the President his directed that here- Reading. The steady rise of the last after they shall receive sen pay for three months continued with slight inTheir sea pay terruption, but wu checked by the their present duties. wUl begin next Monday. movement, which excited Reeding fears of a corner In that stock and OF MISCONDUCT Trading produced general decline week prison Inmates. duriffg the greater part of toe broadenvolume a in with wu large Bellows Falls, Vt, Aug. 28. Sensrv ing tendency, but became featureless ticnal testimony concerning affairs at end dull at the end. The Improved the state prison at Windsor was given tone of the steel and iron, coal and at yesterdays hearing of the Investi- copper stocks reflected ths uniformly gation of public institutions now be excellent conditions reported in these et In New Zealand the right to fair play to enforced by direct provisions of tow fixing minimum wages, and by the ..... i far-reachi- central organisations pf workers in Germany, namely, the Christian trade trade sounions, tha Hlrsch-Dunckcieties and the purely local societies. The onions affiliated with the general committee have a membership of near ly half a million. 0 knowledge Contest Of THE PLAN THE SECRET Examiners The ercise of Your Intelligence........ News From All Parts of the World or To the Business Men: Stockholm, August 26. The com mission appointed to negotiate with re-- t gard to toe dissolution of Sweden follows: were announced For Sweden Christian Lundeberfc ths premier; Count A. F. WachtmelXL ter, minister of foreign affairs; Staaf. member ot toe cabinet without minportfolio, and M. Hammarskjold. af- u ister ot education ud eccleslutlcal fairs. For Norway Premier Mfchrlsro, Minister Loveland, C. (L Foreign Berne president ot too storthing. and M. Vogt, former minister of ths to tailor. The commissioners will hold their first meeting at Carlsbad, August 3L WRECKING ' OF A VESSEL Aug. 26. Zvidenc the founding of the schooner Frew at last been discovered. ooner John F. Miller, which Ived here from ths north, hngs. news of the finding of wrecks' . schooner on the norm t reef of Cnton island, which March, r Sauk. Since an Francisco, ' lut supposed that the Psri seta plying in three wnton h it a sharp lookout for wreckage. to a month ago nothing wss pff1. he schooner Pearl toft inthis the cod fishing grounds foilAiw t March. She carried a a number of fishermen, v to tw nber on board being thur-Ai ' DIED OF CANCER. Ter Eduardo vena, August 28. lMtroctkm itary of public Senor Tero. toda m for four years to ch. on ths foce- - H J,Jus d the in Ktroluttonary and an capncitlr n of the republic was tary of the interior. ling hto malady ing disfigurement one of the most energetic Jcconj. two m-i- a government w York, Aug- FYench engineer rmnent to act sppd' 1 In connection with arrived h 1 commlelson, ner La Toursne from ,dTtorr pinOTis , |