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Show THE MOlTyTN'G EXAMINER, 6 W Utah National Bank. UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY. OGDEN, UTAH. PreeUent Joha E. Dooly Vice President Cashier Horace E. Feery Ralph E. Uosg i London Market Prices Show draft Bella Recovery. FOREIGN and on all points. PAYS INTER E8T ON TIME POSITS. Jan. 4. The condition of atoik the exchange for the pant week bcems to Indlmta the potwibilify of a boom should the Far Eastern crisis all be settled - peacefully. Almost prices showed recovery, although business waa very moderate. One of the chief features of the week was the strength of the American market both for bonds and shares, which writ bought largely from the United Htatca and Germany. Berlin operators are mill highly optimistic regarding iwe between Rusxin and Jaimn. but the confidence in American securities appears to be based iimiq the I lief that a locoll&d war would greatly benefit the trade in the United Stales and British railways. Foreign securities, Deluding Japanese, t'hlneee and Russian! all partb'iiiaied in the recovery. The only exception was the Kaffir market, where there was complete stagnation. London, Son. Franrlnro. Jan. 53. In the presence of one of the largest crowds of the season Dainty won the Llssak handicap from a high class field at Oakland today. The Jennings filly and Shotgun, her stable companion, were favorites throughout the betting, while several of the other candidates were well thought of. After a delay of about five minutes the field waa sent away to a fair break. Burns took Jockey Club to the front and hn maintained his lead until well In tha stretch, when he faltered. Claude and Fossil were In clone aUewlanue. The lost furlong tlliphant brought Dainty up and she won cleverly from Claude, while Fossil heat the tiring Jockey Club for third place. Shotgun wan away poorly and cut little figure. The race wad worth 93,890, of which the winner! rhoro was $3,330. Favorites took three of the rmeee and two of the other winners were well supported. Bear Gsfober again rewarded hla backers by loading all the way In the three year old event. Twenty-nig- ht books drew in mid licit Ing waa lively. Ibi liman will lie allowed to resume Monday. Itemilts: First race. Futurity conns, selling: second; Matt Saintly won; Hogan third. Time, 1:09 Maraud roc, four furlongs: Gloomy 3--4. Corn Vice second; Time, :49. Kdlth third. Third race, six and a half furlongs, Morarllo won; Storming eelliug: Towers aecoud; Bay Wonder third. Time, 1:30. Fourth race, I.lsssk handicap, one wile: Dainty won; Claude second; Fossil third. Time, 1:39 Fifth m-e- , one mile and shirking, selling: Key Dare won: Cblcakadee The Fretter third. Time, BloMiom 4. DE- .THIRD FIRE IN TWO WEEKS. Chicago, Jan. 23. For the third time In two weeks fire visited the Grand lalare hotel. North Clark and Indiana streets. Investigation la being made to learn, if possible, the source of the fire. One of the strange features noted In each Instance in that the flames were discovered before they bad made much headway, and that all of the Bros occurred about the same hour. The lira was discovered today by Edward Bartlett, a guest who notified the clerk. Together they went to each room and notified the occupants. There were Kill imrsou in the hotel at the time and but few of them showed signs after having of fright. The clerk, mado a tour qf the building and findawake to their ing every iieraon threatened pdrtl, took charge of the the elevator and continued taking guests to the first floor until all were safe. The property damage by today's Are was inransequentak STUDENTS Ous won; DOMESTIC SUSPENDED. stu- 23. Elgbty-Ov- e Chicago, Jan. deula of Armour Institute, comprising the entire senior class, have been suspended until they a po logins to a tic actual ler at the Twenty-six- th street station of the Alley L." rood. A majority, It la said, have agreed to apologise. The students, who were on their way down town to have a class picture taken, broke down a turn stile at the station, formed a flying wedge and charged up the stairs and later created a riotous disturbance on an elevated train. CONGRESSMAN RENOMINATED. Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 23. Congressmen W. P. Brownluw, (Republican) waa renominated today. ENGINEER AND FIREMAN KILLED PM DEBATE Prefer an Open Discussion of Question. Washington. Jan. 21. The Senate boa no program for the week beyond a continuation of the debate on the Panama queaiion. The fact that the Gorman resolution oflncjuiry was disponed of last week dues not change the situation except that It makes necessary a new basis for speeches. This wilt be oupplied la the resolution of Inquiry to be Introduced tomorrow as the result of yesterday's conference of Democratic senators. A number of addresses are still to be mode on both sides of the controversy and it is quite certain the debate will continue for several days. It 1 well understood on both sides of the chamber that In reality the treaty and not any psrtkular resolution is being discussed, the reason being that the treaty itself could not be discussed In open Senate, whereas the resolution could be. The Democrats who prefer an oiien discussion in the Interest of the expedition of the vote on the treaty, have not objected. When it becomes apparent that the discussion in open session is exhausted, executive sessions will be ordered and i he debate will proceed behind closed doors. It Is quite well understood that the amendments to the treaty reported by the committee on foreign relations will be withdrawn before final action la token. Democrats to ne e. s. Army and Urgent Deficiency Called Up In tha House. Washington, Jan. 24. The Bills House will devote practically the entire week to consideration of the army and urgent deficiency appropriation bills. The former is now before 1 he House, and Chairman Hemenway, of the committee on appropriations, has given notice that the latter measure will be railed immediately ou the disposal of the former. Friday will be private calendar day. Opportunity will be given each day. Immediately on convening or Just before adjournment to secure action upon minor measures, hut any bill which Is likely to precipitate debate wll not lie permitted to come before the House during the. pendancy of the appropriations bill mentioned. Unless some of the paragrphe of the army bill become subjects of extensive discussion, the matter will he disposed of shortly. case. 23.' The . United fmlianapollik Jan. Mtun Workers of America today se- WANTS STRAIGHT DEMOCRATS. lected President Mitrhell and Secretary New York. Jan. 23. Wllllsm J. Bryrittaburg district, os delegates to the International mining con- an in an Interview, made tha followgress at Paris In May. ing statement as to the nomination for President: No man who voted for PalTIME EXTENDED. mer and Buckner will be nominated.' Dodd of the New York. Jan. S3. The reorganization committee of the Colorado Fuel and Iron company baa extended the 1:49 time for depaaltlng debenture , bonds Bear under Its proposed plan to Feb. 4. Up Sixth race, six furlongs: Catcher won; Formas ter aecoud; Judge to this time out of n total of 914.Otl9.OUO third. Time, 1:13. bonds to the amount of $11,527,000 have been dr pi silted. 13. n was Jan. There lxie Angeles, urdle nue at Ascot today that fini00M PAUL' KRUGER DYING. shed n surprise to the bottom and a thrilling to tha feminine portion of the London, Jan. 50. It la said that crowd. I'htl Archibald at 10 to 1 proved Oom Pour Kruger la dying at thn the winner and By Ion fell at the third Hague. At eighty faia memory 4e not Jump, throwing and severely bruising clear, and he continue to grieve over Peter, the Jockey. Another feature of the fall of the Tranevaal. the bnrdle rare was the poor riding of H is believed that the old man who MrMahon on Pourlanda and his eubse-qurhmt at n price which staggered humansuspension for an Indefinite ity has hut a short time to live and The Coronado Beach selling that soon he will go the way of hla tieriod. stakes with $1,250 added money, was fellow patriots and his wife. a good race, llsvlland was favorite Collapse began about n week sgn. Ho from the first and a world of money la In a stale of the deepest peturimtsm went In on him. He won easily from as ha realises that his land has passed Gretna., The Gotdflnd-- r n rinse third. from the control of hie people, and in The time was the I test for the distance his ronversallona reverts constantly to for the mile their unhappy estate. on this truck, l:4i and a sixteenth. Weather fine; track FIGHTING COTTON BOLL WEEVIL good. Results: First race, Hlanson course, selling: Beautiful and Rest won; Oohuithiin Washington. Jan. 54. The secretary reeond; Landseer third. Time, 1:11-1-- 5. of Agrtrolture has approved the plana fur tha cotton boll weevil InvestigaSecond race, throe and a half fur- tion tn the southwest, for which an longs: lady Laiu-- won; Pinkerton approimiatinn of 9250,000 has been mode available. Secretary Wilson besecond: Airship third. Time, : 42. Third race, hurdle handicap, one lieves that the beet methods for meetmile and a quarter: I'hll Anhbald ing the ravages canned by the boll will to put Into be won; Foorlauds second; tlelr Apparent weevil adust practice the facto which think Time, 5:19. accumulate d hy tie: Fourth race, the Coronado Beach have been nelllnv stake, mile and a sixteenth; depart meat during the post yearn In llaviland won: Ondna second: The the matter of improving agricultural conditions, the planting of early Gnldfloder third. Time. 1:46 4. Fifth race, mile and a furlong: For- - maturing varieties of cotton, substituiunatus won; Dupont second; C, & tion of other i ropa, etc. Campbell third. Time, 1:54. Sixth no, seven furlongs, selling: PHILIPPINE TRADE STATISTICS Burcdeuth won: Bailie Goodwin snWashington. Jan. 24. The Philipood; DolUe Wcilhoff third third. Time, pine trade wtatiHticB of the Insular 1:39. Bureau of of the war department show New Orleans. La.. Jan. 25. Results: that tbs Imports during the eight First race, selling, one mile: I.ingo months ended August 1905. aggregated won; Barilla aonrad; Exapo third. 9J2.2M.5M, and exports $.,i).Se7.313. These flguros are exclusive of coin and Time. 1:42 Second race, thn-- and a half fur government supplies. The aggregate Inrurs: Vtponne won: Pikie second; of exports end Imports Is an increase of of almait $0,000,000. over four-fiftFair Una third. Time. 0:43 Third race, five furlongs. Scorpio which may be credited to shipments woo; Aeceusinn second : Big Ibia third. from the arrhipatogo. the hemp and copra output being especially large. Time, 1 torarUi race, cninn selling, mile: SHERIFF COMMITS SUICIDE. Port Royal won; la Ites.ke second; K 1:40 third. Floyd Time, Tillamook. Ore.. Jon. 24. llenry AlFifth rare, mile and seventy yards: sheriff of Tillamook county, derman. wonHands Across Ethics second; shot aad instantly killed himself early The Meeeengw third. Time. 1:45 seriously Sixlh rare., mile and a half: Stone- today. The sheriff had beenand In adwall won; Major Monslr second; Lou ill for more than a month, dition to his physical troubles he has Woods third. Time. 2:25 2 5. become Involved in a dispute with acJEWELERY STOLEN. countants over an alleged discrepancy In the county's hooks, and which led being Issued loot night Ban Franci.-uo- , Jan. 23. The Jewelry to a warrant his arrest. In his weakened state, stolen from the Baroness Von Horst for work evidently unseitled Mr. Alcl the Colonial hole! in this city on the mind temimrily. Sheriff derman's Jan. 7ih. consisted of Jewel and rains. Alderman leaves a large estate besides v.'U.ie of them being family heirlooms. life tnsuraure. a heavy Thmost VHluat'le were a diamond -J end pearl pendant . a crescent brooch HIGH WIND IN PORTO RICO. lUurd pin. gold marqiiie ring, gold fean luan. P. R.. Jun. 24. For the tjiqnolse ring, diamond ring, and foreign coins valued at 9150. past five days a high east-r- lv gale has been blowing over Porto Rico, and the CRUISER LAUNCHED. record of 13 years for a continued blow, has been broken. The wind naa Va. 23. News. Jan. , The done much damage to the young near Newport was rmiae Charleston suiceufully se. The crew of rbv schooner sMio laimod at the yord of the Newport and part of her carg j wk ,.! ih,t News Sidpbaiidiug and Dry Do. U ioin-inn- v be boat lwl. The high wind lias V Rim. t.alay. M's Heton Intel ruined KiOiiniibi. si inn bv wirele.--k Iwich'- -r of Mover HIiih of Chari, ti iegmulijr lniween Suu JtiMM an I rhrtMeaisI the t'ul' iiia. 4, at 1-- 4. m RADIUM New York. Jan. 24. Stephen P. Lockwood, a Princeton graduate, sen: some ore from Utah to Profeasor W. F Nagle of Princeton, with the request that It be tested to ascertain If It possessed radio active properties. Professor Magie tested the ore with an electroscope. He tells of the result in these words: It took me only about ten minutes to determine that It possessed great The demonstrations were very marked, and I turned It over to Professor Alexander Hamilton Phillips In order that be might extract the radium from It. Professor Phillips did all the hard work. A reported saw Professor Phillips In his laboratory at Frinreton today. Tile specimen waa between twenty-fiv- e and fifty pounds in weight said he. It waa not the pitchblende used by the Curtis In tha manufacture of the French radium. It waa carnotlte, an ore of a canary rolor. containing, as I found, after experimenting with it. oxide or uranium and- - vanadium combined with other oxides that produce radium. la my opinion, radium will soon be so plentiful that it will he within easy reach of all branches of science. The Increased production will naturally decrease its emit and there need be no fear of exhausting the American aouree of snpply, for I am Informed It Is practically limitless. radio-activit- povtuttw Colon. Jan. 24. The United Stairs steamship Mayflower, Captain Albert Cleaves, left here for Norfolk, Vo.. mi LOSS 5250.000. New York. Jan. ?4. The buildings at Broadway, owned lir 449-44- 4 Mori-muer- well-washe- 1-- moil SM TO two-penc- e SHARMANS a . DESOLATION. But whether or not the lost state of Japan be worse than her first, let us proceed to Darkest Tokio. We will visit the' Shilaya quarter, which is close by the beautiful Vyeno Park. Tokio is so vast; It Is such an immense sea of Ebeds, that from the highest point on the clearest day one can aee but a fraction of Its area but here are fifteen districts of mean streets. The crazy structures called houses, which are lit reality sheds, are strung along is a aeries of' dilapidated and filthy compartments. To folk as poor os those who live here, cleanliness, no dear to the average Japanese that It la above godliness, ia out of the question. The walla art decayed and full of crevices and crocks, the roof leaks, and there la moss and broken tiles, the shojl are full of holes or patched with newspapers, the mats are ragged, ia foul dirty, and mouldy. There water In the streets, and a still fouler atench In the air, whom source la often visible to the eye. Frequently, one sees dead tats in the roadway, but for fear of the' plague they are quickly made away with.- After coming from the daintiness and delightful o Tokio. Shttaya artistry of is the abomination .of . these The mrat tumble-dow- n abodes may he ' rented for from 40 to 50 cents per month, but there are houses so fine .that, they cost as high aa 6 cento a day. To afford one of these expensive residences several families club together,, not alone for economy, but also for warmth, in winter all handa crowding together cm the mats. Charcoal 1 not always to be afforded, and heat Is a great luxury these cold days. A whole block will sometimes take Juffis la warming handa at a hibachL wherein a few chunks of charcoal smoulder in a bed of ashes. HOW TEN CENTS GOES. haa had a SuppoM a good day, and returns to his homo with say 10 cents, lie will expend this In farthing purchases of miso, a kind of soup stock, oil. fuel, tobacco, and perhaps a little fish, whlrh, if he feels reckless, he will eat raw with horseradish. He buys In driblets and like the very poor in all the cities of the world, pays enormous prices. This has been a very good day, and perhaps be will peep In at one of the tempting cake shop, which smell so fragrantly to the weary and hopeleaa.How-ever- , he will be. In all likelihood, broke by this time, and will content himself with listening to a story-telle- r relating the ancient glories of Dal Nippon. Had our plpcleaner returned he would have hurried to the pawnbroker, alwaya near at hand, and raised a few farthings on his precious brara pipe, hla hibachl, or his few poor garments not in actual use. With the money he would have purchased fish entrails or the offal from . -- With His Clothes ' TO THE Ogden Steam Laundry a s . pipe-clean- empty-ha- nded REED HOTEL OGDEN, UTAH. PLAN. Proprietor. ... East x J I The Pasteur Dairy Company . v H . -- -. v:-- . -- v- --w-. -- -. v. o C Bolt Lake Chj. A. HENRY, Heket Agent Omka ft k. GILSON, Agent. Ogda . 4 . Two cars Just reeelvsd. HAY Ws are prepared to fill largo or small orden promptly. POULTRY SUPPLIES No better or larger assortment, la ' tha city. POP CORN THAT POPS TIME CARD. SKEEN & CO. . . Phone 344k. . 352 24th BL TIME TABLE Effective Nov. 32, 1901 DEPART. No. Mail and Express ....7:11 No. 3 Overland Limited foi Connell Blaffi Omaha, Denver, Kansas Ctty aad San Pedro, Los Angeles and R R Go. , DcpoL Thlrd, West and South Temple Salt Lake A - east daily 8:43 No. 4 Atlantic Expreeo for Denvar, Onaha, Cornell Bli-ffKansas (Sty aad oB points east, No. 8 Paelfla daUy,..." tilt jv m rom SxproM , Gonad! Knife, Omaha, (to. Salt Laka City. Denver, Kansas (Sty aad DEPART. 8,19 to to aaat, doily .. ,, For Provo, Lehl, Fairfield No I Overload limited and Mcrcur, connecting from Condi Omaha, at Kephl for Monti and Bluffs, Kansas City, DraIntermediate points on vaand all pouts east, Sanpete Valley Ry.... 730 a m 3:30 p to dolly .... 2:40 p to No. 101 Fait Mail For Garfield Beach, TooCL A. HENRY, . ele, Stockton, Mam- Ticket AgwL moth, Eureka and SilE. CORSE, ver City (via Learning-to) P.aodF. A. , .. a.,,-- , . g.QQ J Q T. W. COLLIN 8. T. P. JL For Provo, American Fork. Lehi. Juab. Mil ford, Frisco. C alien to and Intermediate points p jq ARRIVE. From Provo, American Fork, Lehl, Juab, Milford, Frisco, Callentee and intermediate points 9.35 g qj From Provo, Lehl. Fair-fiele Mercnr and THE OREGON bnum: jaKI ID Valley Ry. points. 5.35 p CARD. From Silver City, Mam(Nor. 22, 1901) moth, Eureka, Stockton, Tooele and Garfield DEPART. Beach 3:35 p m No. 7 Butte and Portbuid..ll:58ato ALL TRAINS DAILY. No. 9 Pocatello, Montpelier Dally Pullman Buffet Sleeping Car and Butts ....... ......... 1:35am Service between Salt Lake, Milford, No. 11 Caeho Valley 7:15pm Modena and Callentes. Direct stage No. 12 Salt Laka and Untie 10:45 am connections for all mining districts In No. 8 Salt Lake aad southern Utah and Nevada. points ............ 7 :30 a a No. 3 bolt Lake, Provo, and all points Milford City Ticket Office, 291 ' Main Street TeL.250. south 3.05pm For particulars, coll on or address No. 10 Balt Lake tad inter5:55 pm. Bolt mediate points Lake Route, or J. L agents. 3:10am No. 4 MOORE, COMMERCIAL AGENT. E. W. GILLETT. Gen. Pass. Agt ARRIVE Salt Lake City, Utah. No. 1 Salt Laka ............ 8:00pm No. 9 Butte and Pocatello . .............. a n cut-off- d, Sen-pet- iaUr-media- ts .................... ............ 13:45 am Express No. ll Salt Lake and Tintie 0:55 p m No. 7. Salt Lake and Mil11:80 a ford No. 3 Salt Lake and inter7:00 am mediate points No. g Portland and Butte.. 7:00 am No. 10 Butte nd Pocatello 5:30 pm 10:30am No. 12 Cache Valley a ...................... I The Only DeaMe-Trac- k Rafiway between the Mteoari Rim aed Chkaga. Tic Most Lanrieas Trail latbcWarM Compartment and drawing -- mom sleeping cars, observation cars, dinand library ing cars, rs cars, with barber, bath and Library; entire train electric lighted, through to (Chicago without charge. Direct connection for Trains south of Juab Sunday. sot r Ticket AgnL C. A. HENRY, I. do Ogden, Utah A T. Am Salt Lake CKy. buffet-smoki- ng Caok-love- Teton. ? m u CORN ?t.Psal and Minneapolis $ D. AKRIVR DAILY. Overland Limited BJ d Ka B, Pacific Mail. 8alt Lake 11: 15 a a. and all points East Kol 1, Chicago and BL Louis limited !:4g No. 41, Local from Park City and San Pete Valley .. 7:00 am. Paeific Kxpra- -j from oil Se .. .- 13:19 am Sate East Sleeptofc ears to Omaha, and BC Louis, New York as4 to ton. Free radioing chair can. A . fact dining ear eerviee oa ail (kraut trains. L A. HINTON, dea. Agt Ptgr. Dt Pasa k Ft. Agt., i liat-ito- ...... ..... .$ilg , a .. D. E. BURLEY, G. You are invited ....9:11am Atlantis Express, all 7:00 points East Ns. G. H. CORSE, HUE am 7 : 15 No. 13, Balt Laka local No, 2. Chicago, BL Louis - . well-to-d- l.-- 1 . . b. J from Special rates to and ; all lines. via Europe ' Highest price paid for tin- used tickets, mileage, etc. . H. C. BIGELOW, long-gon- . Here He Goes r, a The footlights possess an unfailing fascina'lon and giamour for thousands, and there are no chapters in the history of the stage, or indeed of human vii issitudes. whb b appeal more strongly th Imagination than those which tell us of ai trasses spirited away from the theatre to weir the coronets of a or duchess. Many of these dramatic transitions from part of the story of the liritir'. Peerage, and some of our greatest nobles trare their descent from actresses who delighted e frequenters of the London theatres. When Gay wrote bis andising BeggaFt Opera. he little knew tha It was derjud to add a (lilt (oubtes. and a barou-- i to our Pera;,. and yi throe Killy IMM buni the fntl:xlit to wear 1 orouet and lin'ivc cbs'clsiiics of Shi-tay- mid-winte- r, Brothers, .ii'sucne goods; K. R. Bonar A Co., hair, and Cranford & Quigley. Kowcnwa'p Brothers, and Kink leatrin A Magrl. clnlhiug, waa Euli destroyed by Are early today. mated loss 9250.090. 5-- horses used for food, and perhaps a handful of scraps from a garbage bar rel. With these he would pray that Providence would give him s better day tomorrow, so that be might reclaim his goods. Thn pawnbrokers batten off these wretches as In no other laud. It is impossible hi escape them and they that cost never relent. Anything above fivepenre can be pawned. POVERTY'S LAST WORD. Until this time of the year, or even a one ran exist in until without bed clothing, but when the nights get raid. with the fearful piercing frost of a Japanese winter, some covering must he bod. Now appears another plunderer of the poor In the guise of the capitalist, who rents quilts by the night. He charges, and Invariably collects from one farthing for a shred of dirty, patched old rag for a to a penny or even foul but heavy covering. Then, too. there are frayed silk quilts for bridal couples but these are too costly to be Phone 171 437 15 rented by many bridegroome. Rent must be paid In advance and before the family goes to sleep the collector romes and gets cither the money or the quilt With a refinement of cruelty he dues not appear until the lessee haa turned in, and the loss of his covering will be doubly felt. There are heartrending scenes when penniless mothers "strive to hold the quilt to protect their babes from the chill and B. W. TMI CARD U EFKn damp. Like the pawnbroker and the JULY 27TH. 1903. is flinty the quilt-lendmoney-lendeDEPART DAILY. hearted. So. 4, A tlsaiie Mail aU patois life's unknown quantity. Slumming in Tokio is for the regulation traveller the same as If in lam-do- n he went to Hobo without exploring the East. None but regions of comparative prosperity are' shown, because the Japanese are proud of their universal reputation for cleanliness, for artistic surroundings, and for a poverty that is always smiling, and safely removed from actual want SOCIAL PURGATORIES. Nevertheless. Tokio and other cities have their social purgatories, their Sargasso seas of living, breathing wreck and drift. In Tokio not fewer than 200,000 people seldom, if ever, know of a certainty where the necessities of the next day will dome from, and throughout the land the great majority are too poor to eat rice. The high grade rice grown in the island is exported, almost to the last sack, and Inferior rice imported for those who can afford it. Rice is not in every bowl, aa the tourists fondly imagine. 1 have spent days and nights In the midst of this inexpressible residue of Japan in company with a brilliant native oncilologUt, who, like scores of his follow students of men and things, believes that Japan has left its good days of general happiness and general comfort for ever behind, and ia entering upon a sordid and merciless age of industrialism, in whlrh its people are not fitted by temperament to compete, and whose proletariat is more-- ' over, far too Intelligent and too proud to be exploited by capital. He Is crying out a warning to Japan tbit her seat at the council table of the powers is being paid for in the blood of her citizens, not expended as they CUT RATE TICKET OFFICE would pour It forth cheerfully in war, B. ENGLEHART, Manager. but. in factory and on farm, in shop and tn office., 103 25th 8L, Healy House. Phone I61Z. Think for a moment, he cried last week as we looked at a JapanOnly member of. the American ese battleship in the offing, what a Ticket Broken Aaen.ln Ogden, which multitude of our tiny rice fields it means to the traveling public low takes to support such a monster, and rates and safety. perfect then remember that dur people can't afford to eat rice! AMERICAN morning. The flagship Olympia and the torpedo best destroyer Trillion are at present the only American warships in the hchor. 3-- ' will the guide or friend conduct the visitor io the quarters where Joy Is Hates: $2 to $3 per day. All modern improvements. Din Ing room on fifth floor, giving gram view of lake, mountain and valley commercial men's headquarter! Street car service every five min ntes. Three blockn east of Unloi Depot. Uiia 5-- -- y. Deeper than ever plummet sounded in the ocean of poverty and human In here woe have I descended the metropolis of the Far East, and found the world's poorest imor. Beside these starved subjects of the Son of Heaven, who cower outside hla palace walla, the submerged tenth of London are bona vivanto, and the groveling Russians of Gorky's night refug the spoiled children of fortune. What 1 have seen I doubt If any Occidental haa seen before me. for the existence of such absolute wretchedness is not revealed to the tourist, and tho ordinary resident suspects It not FLEET AT CANARYS. at .all. If bs has heard some whisper of the dolorous regions near at hand, Las ralmas, Canary Islands.' Jan. it la not regarded as politic tn be too 7. The United Sues cruiser Buffalo inquiring. Not by anyosih1o chance and tho torpedo lost destroyers Decatur. Balnhrldgr, Barry, Chsuncey and Dale, under command of Lieutenant Lloyd H. Chall.nder, which arrived here January th. will sail for Glha-raltMonday morning. 3-- . IN UTAH. I 23, 1901 JANUARY, MONDAY MORNING, La-vin- on APPtoptun - JDTAD, great ancestral houses. The creator of Fully in Gay'a famous burlesque of Italian opera waa Lavinia Fenton, the vivacious and charming daughter of a poor naval lieutenant; and it waa not long before she sang her way into the affect tons of a score of high-bor- n lovers, one of whom was none other than the third Duka of Bolton. The dukes first wife had been an carl's daughter, but so fascinated ia was be hy the witchery of pretty Fenton that he made a duchess of her. With such a precedent it to little wonder that later Tollies strutted the stage with a coronet before their eyes, but it was something like eighty years later when another of them realized her ambition. This time it was Mary Katherine Bolton, the tfin-sordaughter of a Londoa attorney, who captirated the second Lord Thur-lot- r, nephew of the grrat Chancellor of that name, and became a baroness and ancestress of a line of barons. Just a quarter of a century later the third of this lucky trinity of Polly Feachuma qualified as baroness, viscountess. and countess hy marrying the fifth Earl of Essex, then an old man of eighty-onThis lime it was Catherine Stephens, a beautiful and clever who found her way to the London stage from Oxford. A more brilliant match perhaps than any of these woe that which made Lizzie Farren wife of the twelfth Earl of Derby and anrestmia of two of the greatest statesmen tf but century. Lizzie Farren, Countess of Derby, it will he mailed, was one of the most charming of all the Impersonator of Lady Teazle in The School for Sdan-da- l, and was, indeed, appearing tq this character up to the ere of her splendid marrlagm Nor among our stage countesses must we overtook Miss Anastasia Robinson. one of the must beautiful women who ever trod the stage in the eighteenth century, and whose charm inspired the muse of the Pope himself. Anastasia won the heart of that famous soldier, the third Earl of Peterborough and first Karl of Monmouth, in Spain who fought so brilliantly against the French. The gallant earl was not the only man of high rank who sought the hand of that peerless beauty. Miss Robinson, whom he married In 1735, only to have her a widow a few months later in the year. Then there waa Louisa . Brunton, daughter of a humble man of Norfolk, who, two yean after Trafalgar became Countess and Baroness of Craven and Viscountess Ufllington, enjoying her titles and proud position for no less than fifty-nin- e yean, and whose descendants, apart from the Ear la of Craven, allied themselves with the noble houses of Hardwicke, Ayleabnry, Coventry, Cadogan, and many others. But perhaps the moat notable of all the women who have won high rank from the footlights waa Miss Harriett Mellon, who. for ten yean waa Duchess of Rt. Albans. Her career was one of rare romnmH-- ; for the day after she made her final curtsy in. As You Like It at Drury lame she became known as the yfe of the errentrlc millionaire. Thomas Ooutto, a man halt a century older than herself: and when he died and left her sole mlutressof his vast fortune she was woed and won hy the ninth Duke of St. Albans. She was alwaya loyal, however, to the old map who had raised hey to wealth; and aa she lay dying It IS said she railed toft the pillow on which Thomas Contta had breathed his, last, and on It aha finally closed her eyes on the world. Among many other actresses of other days those of our own time are too well known for mention Eliza O'Neill, who. in her childish days waa a barefooted Irish peasant girl, was known In later life as lady Bee taw; and lamina Nlsbett, sixty years ago became the ninth wife of Blr William Boothby. baronet. But Louisa's lot was. a aad one, for her first husband, a captain in the Life Card, waa tragically killed by a fall from a horse during their honeymoon; and when, after two years of married life. Sir William Boothby, her second husband, died, she fell on evil days and spent her later years in great poverty. Vancouver, B. C., Jan. 53. LocomoREPORT FAVORS DREYFUS. tive Engineer ladner and Fireman Elmsley, both of Revelstork, were Paris, Jan. 24. There la good reason killed last night on the Canadian Paci- to believe that the report of Attorney-Gener- al fic railway Just west of Field. The Baudoin. beside favoring locomotive got beyond the control of Dreyfus. will recommend a further Inran the engineer and the train away. vestigation of the criminal section of the court of (ossatlon before the united ELECTED TO MINING 60NGRRESS. sections of the court pass upon the siH-on- rrt fill OGDEN, reifn-sUoni- . an ful' i- - ATCHISON, TOPEKA 'bants &SA4TIF: li Houta- - Line from Utah to fit. Jeaeph. Cbicaso VMion. U iwao eeJ the Minin el New Mexico and Arizona Diree: Eecses City '"! THREE TRAINS DAILY Fee part tenters ehent REDCCSn RATES EAST thU sunna apply t 411 C t. WARREN. Gent Ageot. Iota City. Utah. y nock. Kelt D |