OCR Text |
Show TOE MOUSING 4 IliE EXAMINER Vr C Publianed Ewety Cay to the by Tnc SUneard Punlishing py- - i tATES. SUBSCRIPTION Obeli teri by in Og4n Cam City, lacludims Sunday More-tuSuviaw. far aeoa'A.. W Slug CUflM g V MAIL IN ADVANCE. an Tba 1'iminr la by mau aiuaid U Ogden, per yd- At Imm quantity, Uaavanoe.. 65-uO i- - FEARLESS and INOEPEAEENT.- In fcJM4AiMUr 1 A UM;4J f iMUC- u sin pendant aroP- ula aa equal nanw. baa m favorite, Tba U wiu and m iMaia ta pu-a- give iba tuna uiuriarf- nad ta raocUau aa au suiueci praaaaiad la from known lndi-atuat ba tldaabb biu iba Uua puuuasad la lall. AU lauara and aibiad by bom da La plume, ar taaumad a a air, willTba ibraara la lb Waal bethel. biava maa never bid behind aa Don't ank tba KJi assumed responsible far wbat ou are aanamed id aai mum a. Subscriber! will ooalar a foror by interning tbia sbea of failure W receive Tba Eiaennor before Uiair breakfast. Tba Moraibg JCnamluer cna b found oa aala by lb mdcpieideni Nawa Ca Salt Laka City. Oa bl Unman train jpavlug Ogdai oa Tit Sjuthera PaciBa Railway, Tba tabia Pacific Railway, bad Tba Oregu Bliort Lin Railway. Examiner patrons will cosier a favor op tba manMmrat by to ibis ofUra wbenev.r tbey fail to Sad the papers at tba dastf satd piaoa THE SALT LAKE DIVISION. The Salt lake division of the Oregon Short Una, which Includes the main Una of the old Central Pacific railroad between Ogden and Sparks and n number of branch lines, covering 022 miles, perhaps Iba longest stretch of nad under any division superintendent In the 1'niieii Slates. teutarkable record. Ws Is making are relisbly Informed that few roads in tba country are able to ahuw a record equal to that of tbs Sail division in a comparative statement all esof revenue and eipnnea--thsential thing whan the efficiency of a road is being pasted upon by those who represent the controlling interests. We asked an Oregon Short Una official bow tMs excellent showing had bean made and ha evaded a direct reply Apparently preferring that we draw our own aonclualona, but ha did aay that one contributing causa waa an earnest effort on the part of all officials to enlist the hearty cooperation of subordinates, even the brakemen on trains and man In charge of section gangs being urged to labor for the good of the aarvlee, and tbia willingness lo do good work being rewarded by promotion when possible, the higher officials knowing no favorites. Not alnoe the Salt Lake division came into existence ha the roadbed, rolling Block and general equipment of the road been In belter condition, and not alnca there has been trains in end out of Ogden baa such a volume of business bean carried over any line, with such dlapateh, as now goes over the Southern Pacific from Ogden to Bparkn Great, powerful engines. In the highest stale of efficiency, are pulling trains of forty cars, where a few years ago the average train waa not ever 20 cars, each car of only balf the capacity of the car, of tody. The progress in this direction la illustrated by the shipping of five engines of about forty-toweight each, from the hope of tbia city to the Southern Pacific's Mexican line, the engines, at one time the heaviest motive power on the Salt Lake division, being too small for local service. The engines now pulling trains out of Ogden are hug machines of one hundred tons or over and overshadow tho old typo of engine. Not many years ago a pa fortifier train each way a day and a freight or two were thought lo he the limit of artirtty on the Central Tactile. One day last week there were forty trains, moving east and west, on the fourth district of the Salt division, which embraces the main line from Sparks to Winnem tiers, a distance of ISO miles, and almost an equal number on tli other districts. The most pleas'ng feature to this n Pure Flavorings tfESStss Lemon Orange Boon, tin hav"vl?cen given the preference and are now used and appreciated by millions ia they demonstrated that they had reduced the sit of war to sn exact deuce, that tbey could handle ship &s perfectly as any nation of (he earth, that they had a courage and accuracy which was never before seen in war, and more, they demonstrated that eveg the women of Japan have all that old terrible determination that caused ihat Spartan mother to tell her eon "io com bout with hi shield or upon it." When s ship load of soldiers drawn from the common people preferred to sink with their ship, rather thss to accept succor from the enemy, there was a revelation of n race that may be killed but cannot be subdued. This is what distinguishes th Japanese from all other peoples of tha earth, or nil th people that have existed oa the earth, since old Rome raised that elate of soldiers who preSHEETS CASE. ferred dying against "fearful odds, for ashes of their fathers end the Republican: Tba moat unfortunate the of their gods," rather than suraltars phase of the Sheets case now la the render. public allegation by lawyers for the defense that they ran never be forced to trial. Their public aiaiement la a reflection rn the integrity of th AMERICAN RULE IN courts of Vtah. And that would be a more unfortunate condition if It were existent than even the uupun-bhe- d CONoffenatfeif Sheets. Now the fact in this rase, sad in all the rases connected with it, are DEMNED very dear. ' They are not involved. They are not uncertain. They are nbt at ail difficult of proof. anew. The case must be started Counsel must be very careful to start WM, J. BRYAN YHK SPEAKER AT NORFOLK, VA. right We trust we may be pardoned if we say that some bungling aeeuie to have been done before the case has Compares the Action of the South notched the stag of court consideraWith American Colonial tion. There should ba no excuse for a Policy, repetition of lhat incident. There is a straight and narrow way Norfolk, Ya., May lO.The annk for the prosecution, rases of this sort are not so difficult that they need bo Ternary of the passage by tha Virginia lost on demurrer. Unfortunately the house of Burgeaaaa, on May SO, 1765, books are fairly full of reported trials. of Patrick Henry! famous resolution, It la no new thing. condemning rha Britluk stamp act, waa Begin this rase again, and be euro celebrated a Patrick Henry day at it Is started right. Ret to trial. Get tha Jamestown exposition today with pant techaicaUtles. Pmvo untrue that Wo. J. Bryan an th central figure of aiaiement of Sheet a party lead era that attraction, tha judges will throw the caea out Ms. Bryan delivered an address in of court, no matter what the chargee the convention ball upon the exposimay be, nor the form and manner of tion grounda before 2,000 people upon their drawing. That la not true. the theme "Taxation Without Representation la Tyranny." Tha exercises opened with singing IN SILENCE. of the "Star Spangled Banner" by a chorite of 150 school children, followDemist Ion Day la a reminder of ed by an address by President Tuckthe terrible conflirt that for a time er of tha exposition company, upon threatened to divide this country into the career of Patrick Henry. a North and a South. It la close on Following a reading of the original to half a century slue the boys In stamp act resolution, Dr. Phillip A. Fltahugh of New York, grant grandson Blue went out to battle against the of Patrick Henry, waa introduced. Tha Gray and yet there were thirty or audience arose and cheered Henry's more heroes of that war In the parade enerable descendant. The singing of "Yankee Doodle" by that moved along Washington avenue children waa followed by "Dixie," the stood corner We oa the yesterday. which brought forth great applause. of Twenty-fourtstreet and watched Mr. Bryan dwelt on Aemrlcan rule the old veterans go by. One or two in the Philippines, declaring that wf were on crutches end several carried are making laws for the government caues and all showed the marks of of the Flliplnoe under which wc.would not live oarselveo, and compand the time In the silver threads, but a numAmerican rule of the Filipinos to tha ber appeared vigorous. They were a British rule of tha American colonies sturdy band when tha call to arms prior to the revolutionary war. . He came from Lincoln la 18C1, other said that while he had frequently said la tha north that tha black man wise they could not have survived the waa taxed la tha South without repof tho and frightful struggle hardship resentation, he had likewise saU that the wear and tear of the long years the white men of the South are themselves living under the game lawe since then. which tbey made to affect the negro. They uisrchcd In alienee yesterday, except that n bugler now and then CHICAGO'S CEMETERIES. made martial notes, in themed ve a reminder of the pant There was no Flowers and Flags Placed Upon the band, no drum, no display, but somehow Graves, II all waa most Impreaalre to an unlock Chicago, May SO. Memorial cxr-daeer. In the vanguard waa youth and In honor of the nations dead the ambition, represented by High were held today at all the cemeteries School cadets, followed by the Span-fo- b War veterans and then came the around Chicago, at Fort Sheridan and Grand Army Heroes, carrying their at Lincoln Park, around the Lincoln monument Flowers and flags were flog, and in the rear of the . parade upon the graves of all the four were the women and children of the placed thousand aoldlera of the Union and auxiliaries to the G. A. R Had bands of those who fought for the Confedplayed sweet music and the people on eracy. From Rje Hill, where 950 the sidewalks made an uproar the aoldlera are burled, to the outlying cemeteries where but three or four occasion would have been robbed of re interred, hands of veterans and the solemnity which attended the ladles paid their annual tribute to tramp of the buy in Blue yester- tber dead aoldlera and listened to addresses extolling patriotism and exday. To ua it waa Inexpressibly sad, the memory of the dead. and reralled the "Burial of Sir John alting General Kurokl, the hero of the Moure" aa told by Charles Wolfe: Yalu, accompanied by nil the mem"Not a drum was heard, not a funeral bers of his party, took part in tha Memorial Day exercises and in view note thousands of spectators, placed a of we hurAa his corse to the rampart wreath upon the monument of Abraried; Nut a soldier discharged h farewell ham Iincoln In Lincoln park. Members of th United Confedershut O'er the grave where our hero waa ate veterans were in charge of services for dead Confederate aoldlera, burled. many of whom are buried at Oakwood down! and other cemeteries, and were aswe laid him ami Slowly sadly Krotn the field of hib fame fresh and sisted in paying their tributes to the memory of their comrade by the vetgory; We carved not a line, we raised not a erans In Blue. A parade of military, civic and fraatone Bui we toft him alone with his ternal organisation, in abich nearly 7.000 veterans of tho Civil war took glory," part, waa one of the features of tha day. THE JAPS AS A RACE. Tlie march of tha veterans was brief, a few squares up Michigan ave' Sun York New The Telegram: nue past the reviewing aland at Grant thinks that the rapid advance of Ja- park, where Goremor Deneen, with pan is not without precedent in Asia. bared head, reviewed the proceaaion. It cUee the cane of Cyrus the Great lint the state troops and other bodies part marched through the down emerging from bis highland principal- taking town et recta. ity of Persia proper (which, by the ESCORTED FROM TOWN. way, is a mistake, for Cyrus wns a Mode) and notes that in less than Park City Scene of Sensational Incififty years he, with hi son Cambyacs. dent In Preeent Telephone created n great monarchy that exTrout) lea. tended from Samarkand to Smyrna Tark City. May 29. There waa exand from the Caprian to the second cataract of the Nile; next the advance citement galore In thi town tonight the Dell Telephone company of the Parthian whlrh destroyed the Recently never men frrnn Provo to hvought Alexander had biiIMFil that up take the place of strikers, and yesempire and eiood off the Roman world for terday a committee ftom the Miners' centuries. It cites the swift vway of union railed upon the manager of the the Mohammedans and the ralahty company and protested against the employment of "scahs." The manconquests of Genghis Khan, and doe ager said the men were not "scaba." net think that the achievements of and ihere was no goal reason for Japan are unnatural. We think the their discharge. The union men threatened vengAll the logic is faulty. cnquets eance find tonight made good. About spoken of were due to the cenius of a 2'H1 nien and hoys, headed by the offfew men who wlii disciplined armies icers of the Miners' union, captured the niohe before Them. Fifty I. easel Dean and I. L. Muhlespeln, linemen, and years ten the Japanese had nothing two of the hut I he how and the spear. It is only eKcorted them to the. outskirts of the There they were told to hike forty years since they began to learn city. hark to Provo. And they hiked. The the fighting art of elviMzation on sea. men were not subjected to any phyat-ra- l and land, hn in their war with Hits- wonderful traffic, from a railroad man's sund point, 1 that, following the congestion of early spring, the trains are epee Uug on without delay and the thousands of cars that were strung along tba road, have been dispatched to their The Salt Lake division has gained an enviable record in the handling of an unprecedented rush of freight and passengers. It la a high compliment to W. H. Bancroft, at th brad of affairs, to E. Buckingham, general superintendent, and EL C, Hannon, division They were all under superintendent a heavy strain for months, but tbey proved equal to tba emergency and the clearing of tba wad la a triumph in which they can share. ISLANDS h a . 1 Vnnffla of housewives who have used them for half a century. EXAMINER. non-unio- n OGDES, FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1907. UTAH. SAN FRANCISCO IS INTERESTING A rheumatism is not wholly due 'pIAT 1 to the damp air and cold winds. MEET WAS A PLACE OF There's something wrong with your constitution. HELD MISERY Scotts Emulsion oil and hypophosphites IVX ments required to set your constitution T HORSE RACES AT FAIR GROUNDS DRAW LARGE CROWDS. WHERE 40,000 PERSONS ARE OUT OF WORK. Earthquake City Is Suffering Tlmee Strikes Ceuae Much Distress. Dull A Number of Local Horses Made Their Initial Appearance on the Fair Association's Track. About eight hundred people attended the first searon's horse races at the Intermountaln Fair association grounds, yesterday afternoon. Although no astonishing records were made, several of the trotters stepped Francisco aa the direct and indirect off a half mile In good time. trot and The first race, half-mil- e results of the existing labor troubles. two heats in three, waa won by pace, lawaa formerly aut Stafford, who Lillian B, who took two straight heats bor commissioner, has submitted the in 1:13 and 1:18. 'Riles waa second, following report to Governor ClUett: and Maggie H. third. "The San Francisco Mualclana' untrot and Second race, half-mil900. of At this pace, two in three. Brown Boy won ion has g membership time but 50 are working regularly. second and third bests in 1:21 and The majority of the members in the 1:19. Babs got second place, having union are taking turnabout for this won the first heat in 1:24. Baldy waa third, and Tonetta fourth. employment. "Of about 6,000 clerks and salestwo in throe, Third race, half-milare out of tor livery horses Coreys Trix won; men in retail store. employment and those that are work- Johnson Dees King, second; Lseh-u- e ing get two dsya off wtekly soma Gypaey, third. Time, 1:26 3 and with and some without pay. Them 1:38. are twelve thousand iron workers, 0 Fourth race, half mil dash Foresl carmen, 500 'telephone glrle and King, won; Lurlle, second. Time, :53 j 1,700 laundry workers out on strike. Fifth race, saddle horses, quarter j "Ten thousand men of the building mile doth Babe, won; Rosa Babe, trades are out of work through atrlkaa, second ; Stocking Leg, third. Time, j lauk of material and lack of money. :! drivThree hundred laundry wagon Sixth race, trot and pace, match ers are out of employment as a result half-mi- l best Beasla Emmett, won; of the laundry workers strike. Hattie J, second. Time, 1:34. Up to a month ago architects took draftsmen who could not apeak Eng- SERVICES AT NATIONAL CAPITAL lish, and were glad to get them. Now there are four or five applicants Impressive Ceremonies in Honor of in every office dally and no work to Grand Old Vet. be had. In The restaurant business la cut Washington, May 80. With solemn balf and the help diminished propor- and impressive ceremonies, memorial tionately. day was observed in the national cap"Four thousand laborers on street ital on a more elaborate scale than railroad work are laid off. They usual. Business waa suspended and walk tha streets in drovaa looking people of all clusss united la per for work and oongest tha employ- petusting the memory of the thousment offices." ands of heroic deed la tha eight national cemeteries in this vicinity. CASTING OF FLOWERS Soldiers monuments and statues reservation upon tha government on all the were flags ' ' Naval River Delaware Into tho by at half mast won public buildings Veterans. and ths national oolon, with the folds caught in bands of craps, wore Philadelphia, May SO One of the displayed from hundreds of private features of the Memorial day celebraresidences. tion in this city was the casting of Notwithstanding th absence of ths flowers into the Delaware river by the President, who has been n conspicunaval veterans la memory of their de- ous figure in several previous parted comrades. ; day exereihes, tha arrangePrior to the exercise n parade was ments at Arlington were elaborate. held which was participated ltf by n The days program included n parade battalion of marines and sailors. of the O. A. R. poets, the Old Guard, Tha Pennsylvania naval reserves, Spanish war veterans, other patrioveterans naval and tic organlintlona and tha militia of tho United States kindred associations also participated. tha District of Columbia, headed by The parade halted at Independence the United Btntee marine band; decSquare and the statu of Commodore oration of monuments and graves, end John Bvry was weeoroud wKh flow-er- addresses by men prominent In public blood-enrichi- ng flesh-buildin- g, ele- - right Needn't worry then about mp a if. ALL DRUGGUTSt M. AMD 11.00. Q San Francisco, May 30. According o tha figures baaed on an Inveatlg lion conducted by Harbor Commissioner V. V. Stafford, tbere are approximately 40,000 persona idle in Baa of cod liver contains the v F II. KEDDIXGTON CHA8. BEVERIDGE Ba Ba BdDa Printers', Bookbinders Manufacturing Stationers Office Supplies e, 1-- We handle the largest line of Loose Leaf Devices In Utah We employ only the bent workmen that money ran hire. We guarantee every job turned out of our office. 1-- Office and factory, Twenty-thir- Entrance Twenty-thir- and Washington avenue. atreet, Farry block. d up-stair- s, d Bstes Doctor Specialist methods Fra af any name Every ease guaranteed. A flag-drape- 6 Partial list of Diseases Cored QMnrth. R seism Ringing la the Sara, Diseases el the Heed, Threat, Meta, lye v Ear. AU Die ness 4 the Leant Braaratal Tnhee end Cheat the Mssnaefe, liven Kidneys and Bladder. Heart Dteeaax Hervoee Trenhloe, St. Vitas Danes, FUea, ru Rbeumatiaaa, ts la and nURertal Troahleq, Tap Verm, Blood PWmtagfinm aay AMY PRIVATB DISEASE OF aanaok Dias sea peeeHar In Women. MEN qnlckly emad ta emy eared. Remember the asamtaattoa sad advtee la PUE Corn at saw Tomorrow may be Ane Imr OaS gr wrttei Me-mort- DR. Oflfoe henraLlS a. Ogden. Utah. 'Block) a. ESTES, SPECIALIST at la 6 p. ML 3463 Washington Atsl fBoyl life. AFEX LAW. Minora Endeavoring to Have VIOLENT STORM IN TEXAS. tha Law Changed. Denver, May 30 To secure the repeal of the troublesome apex law, the source of nearly all tha litigation that hat harassed owners of mines, win be the aim of a committee appointed by President J. H. Richards of the American Mining Congress. This committee will draft a vertical side line law which will do away altogether with the extra lateral rights. of The committee ie composed Charles J. Hughes, Jr., of Denver, Cur-ti- e Llndley of San Francisco, James D. Hague, and John A. Church of New York City, end F. A. F. Penrose of Philadelphia. ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION. Lublin, Russia, May 30. An attempt was mads yesterday to assassinate Bishop Yatshevaky of the Catholic church. A man, who subsequently wee Identified as a Socialist agitator, who had twice been imprisoned, fired several shots from a revolver at the bishop while the latter waa walking through a street here and then attacked him with a dagger, slightly woundlag him. The blshope life was saved by a priest who sprang between him and the would-b-e assassin who was captured by the police. Houston, Tex., May 30. A aeries of violent storms, electrical and cyclonic in character, accompanied by successive loudburata, swept over Houston and vicinity during Inst night and this morning. The country for miles Is covered with water. Railroad traffic la almost completely suspended. Many houses have been wrecked or wished away by Buffalo Bayou, which has passed all previous high water records and la still rising. The rain continued until noon today. Incalculable damage has been dona In this vicinity and it is expected that reports from Texan riven, which are rising rapidly will show the worst flood conditions In the history of Texas. Bo far no death! from the story hnvn bean reported. TO GET AN INCREASE. Chicago, May 30. The Record-Heral- d today says: Before the end of the summer more then 300,000 unorganised laborer and eleika' employed by western railroads will receive voluntary Increases in wages which will average 10 per cent The aggregate Increase will be aevral millions of dollar, The movement to Increase the wages of clrrka end unorganized laborers began early la the year and has proceeded quietly until some of the big systems have completed their new PRESBYTERIANS SESSION. schedules. The increases are said to have Denver. May 30. The sessions of been apportioned In a manner IntendUnited of. the the general assembly ed to show that it la unnecessary for Presbyterian church, which opened la labor to organise to receive proper this city on the 22n were brought recognition. to a close today. After a warm discussion it was deBALLOON IS MISSING. cided of no use to rente the office of general treasurer of the church. London, May 30. A military balThis question Van come up regularly loon with six men In the car, which at each assembly for the past forty waa sent up from Alderabet Camp, years. A resolution looking to the May 28th, during the review in honor consolidation of the theological sem- of Prince Fuahlml of Japan, la missinaries at Allegheny and Xenia was ing and It is feared that It has been also defeated. The committee on blown out to sea. King Edward and Ssbbnth observance offered n resolu- Prince Fuahlml witnessed the aacent. tion which was agreed to for n more A strong wind was blowing at the strict enforcement of Sunday laws. time and the balloon wan noon carried out of sight SHIP S CARGO AFIRE. McDONNEL WILL NOT RETIRE. Hamilton. Bermuda. May 30. The London, May 80. Premier Campbell-BannermaBritish steamer Boniface, from Galannounced in 'the bouse loadveston. May 22nd, for Liverpool, Sir Antony McDonnell, unthat today cotton and carrying nine der secretary to the ford lleuteant ed with passengers, eight of them women, ar- of Ireland, was not retiring, and that rived at Bermuda today with her car- consequently McDonnell was not going go afire, burning furlonsly and her to India to occupy an Important posidecks about to crumble In. The flames as currenly reported. were discovered when the vessel waa tion, 700 nsllea from Bermuda. The hatches MILLERS IN SESSION. were battered down and the Boniface St. laouls. Mo., May 30. At the was headed for the Islands. final session here thia morning of the final mass meeting of the' Millers NaWAITE MONUMENT UNVEILED. tional Federation a discussion of the iff selling flour for future Aspen. Colo., May 30. A monument subject a spirited debate. erected here ly the miners la mem- Adelivery brought of the speakers favored majority wss Waite of H. Governor Davis ory unveiled today with appropriate cere- cash sales. monies. An oration waa delivered by CRUISER ASHORE.' John O'Neill of Denver, editor of the Shanghai. May SO. The French Miners Magaxlne. cruiser Cfaansey, which went ashore on one of the Saddle Islands, on May PRESERVING McKINLEY HOME. 20th, will proven total loss and has been abandoned? Canton. O.. May SO. Canton today discussed methods of preserving the McKinley home intact AMERICANIZATION OF CANADA. The Idea is to make n second Mount Sir Wilfred Laurier. premier of CanVernon, where the furniture and gifts ada. save he ha no fear that Canada and paintings and statuary of the will he Americanized. Hie remark has may be preserved. reference, n doubt, ta tko numbers of . n cltl-ren- a oooooooooooooooo o o O o SUSPENDS PUBLICATION. Chicago, May 31. Th O cage Chronicle this morning O announces that it will' cease O publication with thie issue ow- O Ins to fho fact that the paper O has been unprofitable for some O time, O Chi- - O O o O O O O O O O O OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO people from thla country who have durins the last few yearn takra up lands and mad their homes In the Canadian Northwest. Possibly he also had in mind tha American capital which has gon across the line for Investment In Indus trial enterprlsea under. American management In order to take better advantage of n market protected by high tariff restrictions. It le presumed that by "American-lie- d Premier Laurier meant the creation and growth of a political sentiment favorable to annexation of the Dominion to the United States, and on thie point he has probably little to fear. Nor la tbere any general desire In thie country that Canada should he Americanized in that manner. One selon dom hears talk of annexation either aid iff the line nowadays. In the course of time, when Canada shall have decided to break away from England, It will either be to become an independent nation or to cast in ita lots with the United 8tatee. But until that time eomee the question may be allowed to rest Commercially, however, Canada will Americanised. become gradually There are already evidences of change, end emigration from the United States Increases them. .This emigration, It la believed, has 'reached ita high water mark. The experience of those who have gone from here to that Canada has not demonstrated Canada ie "a better country," aa many of the migrating settlers wars led to believe by the active agents of the Dominion operating In various atatea. That experience has. in fact, convinced large numbers that they would have been better off had they remained here. Even If they do And prosperity end contentmenteoonin their new home they will not forget the land they left, and American sentiment will tehd to keep alive the friendship which should ever exist between the two oountriM. Premier Loarier has evidently recognised that the American Invasion of Canada will hereafter be much lees marked. The farmers in this country are learning that they will lose rather than gain by moving. Spokane Review. 9 A Surprise to Her. "So glad you've finally managed to ' iff visit ,im." said Mrs. Fane-FamilVirginia. "Come right into the picture gallery; I want to fhow you my " old maetera Gracious!" exclaimed Mrs. New-Ric- h of Chicago, "I didn't know you waa ever a slave." Philadelphia Preea. y Reason Enough. Clara No man will- - aver dare to triflle with my affections. I have five big brother. Loulae They'll trifle with yours sooner than they will wtih mine. I have five little brothers. Llpplncotta Magazine. MITCHELL BROS. FOR MONUMENTS. arrived 3 carloads of marble and granite to saleoi from. Don't buy from agents, aa they gat large com mission and you have ta pay them. Order at once for Decoratioa Day. YARD OPPOSITE CITY Just CEMETERY. The Packard Shoe For Men The Packarf j needs no brass band a- ccompaniment. It wins it's way on Merit alone, and is content to do so. The verdict of those that wear this Shoe is it's most valuable advertising asset GENUINE WORTH, LIKE TRUTH, IS A PERMANENT QUALITY. 13.50, 4.00 and f5.00 In all styles and leathers, both Shoes and Oxfords. CLARKS STORES |