OCR Text |
Show TITE MOltXIXO EXAMINES, THE EXAMINER Lyceum Family Theatre ;r.C. Published every 'lay ia 'he ruMk'jed by the Standard Puli. WM. GLASMAlVN, Manager. by farrier, Im'liiling Examiner, Morning Delivered Sunday ler month fts The Mau In ADMISSION Ail Postmasters and Rural Delivery Carrier are authorized to receive subwill ronfer a favor by office of failure to rethis informing coil a The Examiner before their breakfast. MYERS the Five Million 10 CENYB War Says Carnegie, Ihe Greatest MONEY a make Charity Giver of the Age. salary loan on your personal note. Don't iHiiher your friends or overdraw with your employer. It looks you latest benefaction Mr. Carnegie has rad apart ys.imn to reward In his D. D. DRAKE The Working Mans Friend. t 4 ltl-- II Eeclea lfldg. 4 UNTRUE TO OGDEN. OGDEN the Still Lakt' iiiipers priiit eilitut mis x plaining and then there were now while ti;it ! -- i in i!m eni off, the great untler-- i m an asisitred tueees? The day :,r Iliirriman va in Salt i!k id was a complete clianee of frunt it, thu ailiiitiie of the paisT. Were a number of the prominent in.-- of ihst city Informed ilml a eontinuanee if the iturrietiillliiess exhihiled for the liarritiiau Inlorcxts would reaiilt In headquarter? Ogden gelling - the There are tiioso who anawer yes. While Salt lathe in antagonizing the llanlmnn mart. Ogden can more firmly establish its railroad aiiiirem-peand tho way lo accomplish ho au end is lo work in harmony the advanand cnorgiiilrally prcM-n- t tages of this place. Hut hern in an unarcoiiniable thing lo poii'lcr over -Salt. Lake papers are nMeinpls In Injure Ogden, .vet, they artk Ogden to support Sail ljtke papera and ihua help ihent build up lo be the better able to tear down. Htuiness nten admit that if it were possible to seriously cripple Ogden's Interests by winning over the railroad liindnpiui, the whole power of the Salt palters would be directed against tills city, hi 111 the same Ogden I tea conilnue to pslmuic and thus strengthen their newsinipcr foes, even to the detriment of homo newspapers. Ogden cannot resell It a great eat development while this apathy or absence of community Interests prevails. Vl,y did y FIGHTING ON. THE YALU. The Jsps crossed (lie Vain and are moving westward from WIJu toward the brand, of the Siberian rallrnail that runs south from Harbin to Port Arthur. Fifteen thotpiahd Jaim are reported tn have decisively defeated Russians. A victory of that kind would mean the early terminal ion rtf the war for If entrenched Cossacks, outnumbering the little brown men two to one, rannot maintain their position, then the Russian la iter old of military ability and wholly inrapahln of resisting the Invading armies. Hut there are a number of reasons for doubling the accuracy of such wur unws. Une la the Russians are not In fnreo along the Ya-l-u. but are eoneentraled at Teugwang-cbenfifty miles west of where the Japs are said to have crossed tne river. The fighting since April 2SHi baa been nothing more than that of Russian scout impeding and harassing the advance of the Japs. lieiieial Ktirqiislkln's plnn of esems to contemplate diawlng ibe Invading force well In to Manchuria. making difficult the keeping up of supplies and preparing a trap Into which the Japs will fall if they are defeated. A retreat would endanger tint loss of the entire army of iuvaders. Hitt the Japs have so far displayed quite as much strategy and cunning as tho Russians, in fact at hpb they have i.ad the best of tho eonlliit. and they can be expo led to guard against surprises that Kumpatkin, no doubt has planned. 30.-C- H g, esm-I'Sig- KNIFE RI.ADE THIRTY UiNG. FEET ' KsSrfiivsvsassYS MOSEY LOANED SALARIED PEOPLE Real Estate and (battel Loans. Service quick, confidential and private. No commission. BROKERAGE WESTERN 'Phone 534-- 233-- CO. Eccles Bldg. ' of the cutler h art. elaborately carved and It would imllshed. take a verliable giant lo wield a knite like this. The blade is altogether of Anteriian manufacture, and It la expected to allow lor the first limn that American cutlery has now reached a IKiinl of iierfeeiion whete ft fears no rivalry. The giant carving knife coal Hcvetal thousand dollars, and Sieelal mai hlnery had to lie made liefore ils construction could begin. No such knife was evec tofere nisnufacMtred. American Inventor. FREE GOLD ORE. Three-Fon- t Vein Opened in McKinley Property In Beaver County. J. W. Metealf of Scofield, who has been working the McKinley group. In I he Granite range, eame to towu last with soute rich samples from Sunday on a vein that has Jitat been that pniier(y. says the Milford Times. Tho group consists o' nine claims, located al the head of Ranch canyon. Mr. Metcalf ami his associates, A. 11. and H. H. Earl of Scofield, have owned the ground for five yesrs, lint the claim upon which the strike was made wax located Urn January. They started lo sink on tile vein, but It plnehetl a few feet Ixtiw the surface. Now, al a depth of 30 feel, li has mine in guod and strong and there are lb row. feet of fine quarts, sotiie of which allows free gold, anil, which asKays J:K) lu gold, 13 sr cent copper, 3u ounces silver and !i ar rent rent lead. The vein is a coni set lie! ween granite and lime and can bo traced for a long distance. Mr. MctciBlf. left for his home at Scofield, wliere he will make arrangements for the further development of iho proHTly. It is the luientlon to install a wliitn atnl sink an Incline on the voin. The Ueaciin Is being put in shape for Ihe extraction of ore and some fine copper has already been taken out Air shipment. It la thu I it I en Mon to sink the shaft anil extend the workings tn a point underneath this ore body, so that the work ran be carried on more expeditiously. D. 8. Taggart of Ihe Oregon Short Line freight department, catne tlown last Saturday to visit the Black Rock mine. In which he Is interested. Ho found conditions most encouraging and It is likely that some imimrtant development work will lie done on this property during ihe present season. Foreman Hell of the Henrlrhann property, neat Cnpiier Gtilph, passed through Snnday night on his way to Rnlt lak. lie mates that, a lot of fine ore lisa been out from the repent strike, hut it will not he shipped until Ihe railroad oxlenslou is completed around to Newhattse. The ora is mostly galena, some of It parrying 75 per cent lead. If J. D. McAnlay and T. T. Martin get much ore of the same grade as tiist recently taken from their Flue Grove mine and prut tn Salt Lake lo be tested, their fortunes are made. This sample showed ihe presence of I.Ritt ounces of silver to (he Ion. Ore of thisVwle is scattered through the vein in kidneys, the balance of the vein being of a profitable There is every indication thatgrade. this mine will lie a winner. oiw-ne- d CALIFORNIA LAW UPHELD. The biggest arving knite ever may be seen at tho worU s County Clerk of ltenn has put air. This monster blade Is thirty feet an end to the Fogg traffic in Reno. marriage lu length and! lias an edge as sharp as A few dnys ago he refused a license A razor, it in made nut of tho finest, to John W. Gavigan of Truck ee, who fccel, and tlie handle is a msfderpicte has ben granted an inipi'loctilory decree or divorce In Nevada county. California. last April. Die heart, for the wifely romiiaiilonship yearned or Mrs. Jose Conner of the sente place, by whom he was aemmimnicri to Ihe metropolis. The clerk refused lo issue the necessary papers on the ground that the one year which the California law mukes it necessary to spend In single blessedness before the matrimonial yoke may !.e resumed, had not elapsed. Ry refusing the license Clerk Fogg has put an end lo a profitable source of Income enjoyed bv one or two ministers of that city. The Gretna Green of Nevada Is now a thing of the past. A FACT. CTh CRAW FORD is admitted to he the mow artistic shoe conception ever (whrti CRAW FORD style are custom styles r of r vr J0$ fier i( tart. inr.AL ACBNrr. Fred M. Kys No War Heroes Need Peace has its Heroes as Well as It Is foolish for you to worry OGDEN, UTAH, MAY 1, 1004. to Reward Those Who Perform Heroic Deeds in Civil Life stout I wili Dollars Life-Boat.- " had. ' . NO scription. Subscribers L Suubrettes. Baritone. EDISONS PICTrRKS SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall one month (including Sunday! Telephone No. 5!. nt WEEK APRIL 25. ASHTON ft KAKI.K Whirling Micks, THE MISTERS FAT Single v and Dancing. THE LATEST MAIX'OHM JUGGLER. SAWTEI.DE ft SEARS CHAS. Editing a paper is a nice thing. If Hie editor publishes Jokes. enple say he is If he puhlislies rattle-braine- original matter thev say he doesn't If he give them enough select ions gives iheni select nns. they sav he is too 1ay to write. If he doesnt go to rhur' h he Is a heathen, if he does he Is a hypocrite: If be remains in the office he ought to go out and hustle for totals: If be foes out, then he Is not attending to business; If he wears good clothes they any be has a pull; ir be wears old clothes, they laugh st him. Now wbSL Is lie to do? Just as likely as not someone will say he stole this item from one of his exchanges and so i did. oughbred, and excel id amth sion of Rose, the Ralt Iftke wife murJOCKEY AMES COMES HOME. ing and races over a derer. It Is scarcely possible for him w to have committed the crimes he conTelia of Hie Riding in Australia and ground, mare. aud i to fessed and escape undetected. That Austrrshx Philippines. Sceptre is to Eng.4 u'(1'I he was a degenerate of the worst type to America. Wakeful la evident, and practically his last art can - - M Three years ago Edie Ames, a Cali- distance from five furlong was an attempt lo blacken tne charac' ter of ths woman he so foully mur- fornia Jockey, left the State to try his miles. I saw her clip a off Carbine's phenutnec, ?1 luck in several foreign countries. He second dered. That he had the will to commit any and all of the crimes he relumed home yesterday with laurels mi, record, and she .grneu T? 121 rial mod tn have committed is probable, earned In Australia. Manila and In- pounds. " bnt that he had the serve to do ft or dia. besldesahfg bankaccount. Ames Fiemlngton. the race track the Intelligence to escape detection looks to he heavier than when last Melbourne, Is one of the grsndeT he world. There I. sMra,e Is not at all likely. His ronfosalos Is seen here, but he says he ran make more like the ravinga of a dope lead lo8 pounds.Ing track of one mile and three One of the greet events won hy This will give jou'sn'iTe or dreams of a brain disordered hy w it covers. reading yellow covered novels than a Ames was the Coronation Cup at Calcutta. He had the amount on statement of facts. DeLamar Lode. "The Australian have s. yet mastered the American "When I sailed for Australia on the riding, although many ride wts " REFRESHMENTS IN THEATERS. Sonoma In 1901, 1 tipped the scales at er s'irrups since the a.lvgent otL 128 pounds," said Arnes yesterday. 1 ankee rider. Amee returned to America l,v New york. May 1. Charles Proh-ma- a, won my first race at Itoeehill on Portwho probably controls more land Light. I rode as a free lane, of France. He met Eddie Ro la which the to make only way money Turner. Henry Shields. theaters than any other man In the man. Winnie O'Connor andPtsy country, has. after a careful study of In Australia. Le TmT "It Is hard to comparethe horses er at Paris. Shields is riding the refreshment saloon annex to the Imdon theaters, decided that a similar of different countries, but the Aus- of winuors, and Eddie Ron ,s tralian horses are bigger-bonethan managing sixty-fiv- e horses for K,igr. system would be popular in this country. He has announced that as soon as either the English or American thor Leih. the licvlathun American train he returns here he will begin agitating tor a special form of license which will permit of the sale of liquors and solid refreshments in the theaters In this city. Although Mr. Frohmana Idea will probably be opposed by church people. Just as every scheme that makes the consumption of liquor more convenient for the consumer. It is a fact that In London the system has prevailed for many years, and haa been one of the chief attraction of the English theaters and concert halls. $1 Mr. Frohman says that he would be of man sale to the advocate last the old t liquor In theaters If he believed would tend to promote vicieusneea or disorder. . i'.:r Sawyer & Young Props, c'1 Single ropiw MAX' 2, 190f. OflDEX, t'TAIJ, MONPAT MOUSING, had there been one then. The men had gone down Into the tunnel Just after midnight, when one of the them discovered water pouring through a leak in the trim roof plates. There was an alrlork at Hie landward end of the tunnel, a rectangular chamber, fifteen feet long end six feet In diameter, with both of its iron doors opening toward the tunuei. When the men went out ordinarily, they opened the first pair of doors, stepped into the luck, and then waited until the air pressure was decreased to that of the outside atmosphere. Then, and not till then, could they open the outer doors. MORE Whennegie commission intended. ever heroism Is displayed by man or woman In saving hitman life," said Mr. Carnegie in his letter concerning the The project, the fund sppllea, sen is the scene of heroic acts, and no ankin Is more heroic than that of doctors and nurses volunteering their services In the rase of epidemics. Railroad employes are remarkable for herAll these and similar cases oism. are embraced." In the records of the Royal Humane Society of England the Carnegie commission ntay obtain some Idea of what the scope of its work will lie. No similar record Is kepi In this country. This society furnishes medals only to those who have rescued persons from drowning and aufTorallnu. yet in one year U honored 756 British subjects. Home lime ago this society conferred medals upon two young men who risked their lives lo save a couple of black Kalfir boys from a lie Beers diamond mine In South Africa. Otto of the youths, by the name of Brown, hud been a bad hall player liefore he became a miner, and Brand, the other. was a member of the Diamond Fields Horse, of Rottlh Africa. Both were employed In a mine near Kimlier-1- . Cn-llk- ' 40 INDIANS FALL IN Means $12.00 for $20.00 Suits, 1.50 kinds for $6.90, etc We have some stock Short Jackets not much out of style which we are making a price for quick selling of $7.50 for the $12 50 to $20.00 kinds and $3.90 for the $7.50 to $9.00 kinds A BATTLE. Hermoslllo. Mexico, May 1 Four the Eleventh Battalion and fifty mounted rurales, commanded hy General Luis Torres In person, overwhelmed the Stiff Yaquls who came down the Son Miguel river to meet them as they advanced upon Rayon, the town seized by Ihe Yaquls on their recent raid. a, The opposing forces met at La Justnorth of the town of San Miguel, and tlie Yaqule were driven back with the first onslaught of the hirales, who rode right in the midst of them la the tare of a hot lira Backed It the Infantry, they succeeded in routing the Indiana who fled along the river, leaving ten deed on the field and many wounded. Eight Indians captured In the fight were hanged to the near-se- t trees About fifteen of the Mexicans were wounded, the majority of them being rurales, who fell at the first charge. The mounted troops followed close upon the heels of the fleeing Yaqnla for some distance, but later fell back with the Infantry, which, under ' General Torres, continued Its advance upon (hundred men of A new line of Black Silk and Pongee Coats for Misses and Ladies; $8.50 to $16.50. Not like any others in town ae and no two alike. L L. CLARK & SONS CO. Rayon. Goods Well Known SPECIAL We off e r. on 80 Monday Are Half Sold dor. Val. Laces WE WANT You to read our ads; we think it will help us both in a business way. ARRIVED JUST Car-tonsr- 1 regular 5c grade per yd. Thus selling is made easier for the clerks, 2a for in other words business is facilitated. Thats why we are talking to you about DRY GOODS We are all working together in this busy world, each trying to get the best results. Let us try and catch the spirit of the times and enter into the broadest helpful relationship that is possible. Our aim is to look well after your DRY GOODS interand are earnestly seeking your confiests. We desire your dence, as well as your patronage- - Our Prices Are An Open Book. Read Them. ld -- s ml re. y - 6.. !" It ehaneed that Brown and Brand were atom to go Into the mine one day when they heard screams, and were suddenly knocked down by a swarm of Kalfirs, who came tumbling and sprawling out of the pit. "Mud rush! kind rush! yelled one ho could speed English somewhat better than tho rest of his blark companions. Both Brown and Brand had been long enough in the diamond mines to know what a mud rush was. Nothing causes such horror among the e hlacks as this kind of disaster. explosion or flood, the mad rush gives no warning to its rldlms. Without a sound the blark slime swells up from the floor of the mine, and. catching tlie miner in Its miry grasp, It crawls up his chest, so slowly that he may live hours before deal n finally buries him head and all. Fortunately a Kaffir had seen the Aral bubble of this mud rush ami had spread a general alarm. After a hasiy count of those who had escaped, however. II was discovered that there were two Kaffir boys employed as helpers missing. For several hours no plan of rescue was possible, because tho mild (sized out of the mouth of Ihe mine like mucilage out a tot tie's month. At the first sign of Its subsidence, a gang was pul to work digging out the ntire, and when an afternoon, a night and a morning had passed the surface of the mud lay stout a foot below Ihe roof of (he mine. "No use In trying to save the Kaffir kids." said a veteran mlnrr. "If they Wen caucht theyre dead." "lint there Is one nlsce where the roof is extra high. said Ilrnwn. "Per-hapthey have hid there, where they thi? could keep their heads above "Theyre dead all rlgltl.' never you fear." said (he superinieudenl. "I'm going In to find out, anyway." aid brand, and the words were hiirrt-lspoken hetorc Brown clasped his hand, and the two plunged Into the black river of ooze. Too thin to support them, yet loo thick to swim In. the young men rould only force their way ahead by scooping mil the tnitd with their hands and walking tin tiptoe. It was Impossible to carry a light, so that they rould only feel their way In the Inky darkness. Now and then the rtxif would descend so far as almost to reach the attrrare of the ntttd. and here they were only able lo prevent snIT oration by blowing the mud sway front their noses. At another time the mud suddenly began to rise, and they were horrified with the fear they were about lo he engulfed in another rush. There was nn answer to their shouts until they reached a place where the nsif began to slope upward, the place where the toys wen If they were still alive. Then low moans ntet thrir ears. A moment later and the Kaffir hoys were in their srtna Thry had onlv esrspoij death hv clinging to eras, and thus keeping their heads above the river of slime Yet with the subsidence of the stream they hud no means of knowing If it had sunk enough to permit them to wade out. Thcy were still blinded by an tiller darkness. But Brown and Brand led them hack to daylight and safety. When the work was begun on the Norih river tunnel. on tube of a hicli wa completed only the other day. a aorkiiiaii saved even out of thirty- ..6 ..6 At the alarm Peter Woodland, 4 Dane, and the foreman of the yelled to his fellows: "Get Into the lock, boys, and get along lively! To help them he ran back and pttuheJ them one hy one toward the lock. As the eighth man passed him, however, he fell across the threshold of the Inner doors. As he did so the roof began to rave In. Peterson by this time was up lo his neck in the foul, slimy water, which had leaked down from the river bottom. The doors of the lock would not shut because of the prostrate body. "Rip off your clothes and shove them In between the doors. shouted the foreman. Never mind me. 1 can't get Into the lock now." In mad haste the men stripped and stuffed their clothes In the crack. Still the water leaked In. There was a glass bulla-ry- e in the outer door, which. If fijroken In an emergency, permitted the compressed sir of the lock to rush out, and thus permit the opening of the lock's outer doors. Knock out the buU's-eyeyelled In Petersou, who now stood the mire. Well he knew that hla order meant his own death. As soon as the compressed air was released, the roof of the tunnel would rave In eomplete-l- y. Some one crashed the glare, and the doors swung beck. At the same instant the river poured down into the tunnel, drowning all those twenty-eig- ht nten like so many rats in a hole. According to the English societies which seek to honor the heroes of peace, there are ns many women as nten who defy death in a supreme At the time of the queen s emergency. Jubilee, the W'nmen's Roll of Honor, Mackenzie, compiled by F. Donald showed a list of 518 heroines who had achieved deeds conspicuously brave In the Victorian era. One case, for example, was that of Mrs. Dorothy D. Pumphrey, of C row borough. Sussex Mrs. afternoon county. On a May Pumphrey was In her house, sweeping when her boy dashed In with the news hat a neighbor's child had fallen down an old well. By the time she reached the scene (here were several women around the well, from which rould be heard intermittently the pitiful crles'of a little girl. Though of slight physique and nervous disposition, Mrs. Pumphrey told the other housewives to grasp the roie, and therewith she stepped into the rlrkety bucket, which had stood out In the sun until It had nearly fallen to pieces. They lowered her to the bottom, where she found the child hanging to a ledge. The little one was an weak that her rescuer Just, reached her in lime to prevent her from slipHolding both ping Into the watnr. herself and the little girl above the water, she ordered the bucket raised, son might go ihst her twelve-yesr-ocome down after the child. The son performed Ihe task successfully, and, nn the bucket being let down again, the mother was half way up, when she fainted and fell to the bottom. Revived by this second Immersion, the plucky little woman took hold of the bucket again and was hauled up safely. Another woman who has obtained medals for heroism from the governments of France. Germany and Belgium, Is Plgot. During the the Prussian war she arcompanied Germany army as n nurse, and after surviving a score of battles and being arrested as a spy, establishing a hospital In a factory, where she cared for forty wounded nten unaided, she abandoned ihe army only when threatened with blood poisoning. As soon as she recovered her health, however, she went. hark, following one army and thpn the other Into the thick of the bat lie. A hero of peace in American waters who won the recognition of the governments of hut li England and the I'nlted States was a negro. Wilson one of ih crew of the schooner Itolphln. wrecked by a hurricane off Ihe Cayman Km ks of Nicaragua. The toot turned tounm up, and after had dragged five of his comrades refnut of the sea oil to this rafl-lik- e uge a knot king was heard against the timbers as of some one that had been Imprisoned In the overturned rabln. MeFlcld dive I down with a rope in his subteeth, and, groping shout the merged deik. tound'a hatchway, aud ascended until his head popped out of the water sn.l wreck heavily against a post. The blow stunned him for a lime, hut. recovering bis wits, he crawled toward the caiun. There he found two of the crew. .Mallitz. a young rubber cutter, and Obit p. do. a halfhreed stevedore. i tinging io a splinter of wood. Fastening tlie pipe around the waist of MaUlt. Vrh'idd signalled to haul him in. null li" guided Ihe youth through Hie hoh. out from tinder the the oiitside deck, and up through water. Afer a short rest he rescued the hairbrepi in the same way. duotned In oblivion. Only for Ihe heroes aud heroines of peare are the guerdons of ihe Car- s d five men by an act which would have been honored by a hero commission heroes. A permanent com mission has been established which Is to give money and medals whenever It believes an set of heroism Justifies such a gift. Should a mau or woman die In the performance of a courage hius deed, those left wit bout supimrt are to receive assistance. Orphaned children are to be educated. Should the hero survive he is to be honored with a purse or ntedal, as the commission shall decide. The world recognizes two kinds of heroes, each the antithesis,. the negative, the paradox even of the other. 3hc one risks his life to kill, the other to rescue his fellow men. In the battlefield the soldier and the nurse brave shot ami Rhell side by side, both of them consecrated to purposes callc heroic, btti as far apart as hell and heaven. Tin? general who overwhelms a hundred armies Is extolled as the hero of his usiion and made the subject of orations, paintings and statues. The mother who dies In rescuing the child from a blazing tenement house, leaves a memory to few, and Is soon Up-guar-d 7. ' Mr-Fie- ld, Mr-Fle- ld CONFESSIONS. its ate bivoming very common of late and in some ran they look more like Ian attempt to glorify crime and boast j ef the degeneracy of the confessor f!ian : a gui'Pv conscience or serve to Take the conies- ;any good p'.u I ! ee The Emphasis is SUIT SALE! on SKIRTS Pure Silk Gloves It makes lots of difference where you put the emphasis. With TIPPED FINGERS We recommend them. Just now. SEE THE POINT? In short we are LONG ON SUITS rSo Black, White, and Grey, 60c per pair Blade, White and Pongee, 75c per pair Black and Pongee, per , yl00 pair ....a.. now its 33 1- -3 Off You should walk off with one on! -- WE SELL Roberts Scissors Small and Large Others CUT NO ICE WITH THESE 5 Oc, 75c, and $1.00 WE ARE on Hosiery Strong In other words wears it 15 c, well 25c and 50c Remnants of Embroid- ery, very cheap; look on table WAIST SETS 20c to 75e Your waist fine when wear them. sets you Paine & Hurst DRY GOODS t G. D. JUSTRITE CORSETS 60c and better |