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Show MONDAY, APRIL IS, DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, PAGE FOUR BEYOND THE DREAMS OF Slir Daily lltalj Stair Jnuntal HIS AVARICE- - OGDEN, UTAH PUBLISHERS COMPANY PUBLISHING JOURNAL (Incorporated.) Published Every Evening Except Sunday. T staggers the imagination to consider the extent I 1 Samuel Newhousea mining enterprise In l.'tah. T j estimate the value of the ore in sight in his mines is liekiy to subject one to ridicule. Te'epkonea. Take these figures from late reports for Instance. Bell Ml I ring. Ind. 644 1 ring. Buxines Office Bell C84 2 rings. Ind. frit 2 rings. porperty of the Boston Consolidated Mining oomtiany Editorial Booms xt Bingham. 211 miles from Salt Lake City, includes TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. and porphyry mining ground. In 31.04 184 acres of sulphide Bjr mail one year.... 3.44 addition to this it includes 1.004 acres of land st Gar. By mail six 1.54 field. 14 miles from Salt Lake City, with a conoerntraim? By mail three months .54 month one 2 004 tons of ore daily. It also By mail AS plant capable of handling one month..... By carrier on land of acres l.Ouo the west aids of Great 6alt owns no money to Carriers. . Bay Entered ss second-cla- ss matter at the postofflee nt S. Ogden. Utah. under Act of Congress of March M. F. B. A. CUNNINGHAM BOWMAN llit. Managing Editer Buainasa Managsr NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. You ehould receive your paper net later than 1:45 p. m. If not received at that hour call Phone IH and it will b delivered you by apecial messenger. Pay lie money to carriers or ether collector! unless they present credentials from the undersigned. Under no circumstances will carriers or collectors be allowed to take Stops. All notices cf this kind must be or given te this office direct or by letter, or in person, phene S64, one ring. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO. THE OFFICIAL PAPER OF WEBER COUNTY. ARBOR day plans the BUtr Journal of Saturday evening It waa an--1 nuunced that the hoys of the public . schools were cleaning yards, both frout and Lark, and that their work would b Inspected by leaders designated for the prnpoee. This la a good move. It la worth much to any bv to he taught to be neat and orderly. It Is an esaenfel part at his education, and the schools that teach such lessons are aliva to their duties and opportunities This work of the boys la but preliminary to the work mapped out for Arbor Day. The plan W to have 2.000 rose bushes painted in the city by the children of the public school. This la a commendable move and should and become a fixed custom. meet with hearty Beauty has a value In life never overlooked by the wise. Ogdon should this year he made to bloom Ilka a garden of rases In addition to the above J. C. Nys the president of the Oily Improvement League, calls upon all member of the organisation, and upon citlaena generally, to Join In the celebration of Arbor Day. The Plan la to meet at the ICty Hall at 10:41 In the morning anl go from then to Lester Park to participate in the tree planting and appropriate exercises Tlie hoard of Park Commissioners is wot king n perfect harmony with all this It has trees and shrubs In abundance ready for planting, and It la luslitlug on a proper ottaervance of all reasonable rules ux to beauti-fylnthe city. Arbor Day this year bids fair to be a great day for Ogden, promising much for ills future beauty of the community. N g CHARLES E. HUGHES In thla country are safe so long of the caliber and character of Charles E. Hughes, the present governor of New York, are produced. Aa a result of the Republican convention held In New Turk on Saturday Governor Hughes will receive the solid vole of the state In thfe Republican national convention to he held In Chicago June 14. Even with the unanimous support of his own state, and that the greatest state in the union. In point of numbers. Governor Hughes may no be nominated for In fact It seems at this distance to be a president. foregone conclusion that he will not be nominated, that the honor will go to William II. Taft; but should he fail that failure will detract nothing from the claims-lin-n In which he Is held by the people of the country, regardless of party. Governor Hughes was a great man long before he became governor of New York. He honors the position more than the position honors him. New York governors have been made sometimes of poor stuff, but Hughes la not one of this class. His Inveslgathm of the life Insurance frauds revealed the else and quality of the man, and hia course as governor since his election has added to his reputation. It Is not necessary for hlin to run for the presidency to be considered a big man. Backbone and common sense are the qualities that elevate this man above the heads of ordinary politics ns and public office holders. Common sense Is the best port of statesmanship at all times, and when It Is backed by moral courage such aa Charles E. Hughes displayed a combination Is presented certain to win victories In pubic life and trying official positions Charles R Hughes would make a rerat president of the United States a valuable president In these days of corruption. institutions FREEmen TURN ON THE LIGHT ft ONE measure ss which th Democrats and many well, are contending In Congress Just now is that providing for publicity In the matter of campaign contributions Recent exposures, especially In the life Insurance Investigations In New York, revealed the fact that In past contests corporations have contributed great sums of money to the support of candidates for office. It goes without raying that these corporations looked at the matter from a purely business standpoint: that they expected value received for the money advanced, and this means nothing more nor leu than political corruption . Measures Introduced and now pending In Congress provide that political parties and candidates shall publish statements of contributions made hy corporations for their support. The Idea la of course to eliminate the use of great corporation funds In the election of men to office. The more U altogether good and the measure ehould come a law. The preservation of political freedom demands IL The public will rlght'y look with suspicion up or any official or any party that opposes a measure that has for Its object cleaner politics, and the elimination of corruption and coercion. . Why go to Italy for a climate when such days as this come right to your door? Why go to Bwltsertand for scenery while snow covered peaks stand like guardian angels over your home? 190. OF THE m MY BY D1Y aRe ol Pretty NEW YORK, April II Among the Important news events scheduled for thla week are the following: Monday Birthday of Thomas Jefferson will be celebrated by National Democratic Club in New York and by other Demo Colored Waists cratic organisations throughout the country. j Republicans of Hawaii will hold Lake. convention In Honolulu, to Territorial ! turn The sulphide mine at Bingham Is equlpl! to national convenelect delegatee out 1.004 tons of ore dally. This ore runs from : id ii tion. per cent copper. In the fully developed portion of the William Jennings Bryan will begin mine there Is 750.004 tons of ore blocked out that , will tour of East In New Jersey. Trial at Hearst mayoralty ballot average 1.1 per cent In copper, or 21.004 tons of cogpcr. i is of case will begin In New York. the mine there box In the partially developed portions ' Tuesday estimat'd to be 275 004 tons of ore that will run Democrat of New York will bold per cent copper or 4.000 tone of the rad metaL , convention In New York City, State aa-nowned the by Now consider the porphyry mine to elect delegates to the Denver concompany In Bingham. It includes 154 acres of ground in vention. which there l 25.004 feet of tunnels. The pay ore in Delaware Deomcrats will bold State the mine is from 104 to 404 feet thick. This body will convention and will probably Indorse yield. It Is estimated, 51.581.004 tons of ore running l.M per Judge George Gray tor the presi?ent cupper. In addition to this there la estimated to dency. be 111.405.(100 tons of ors In the partially developed Battleship fleet la expected to ar1 cent about run will rive at Ban Dhia CaL, where It will per portions of the mine that remain during the balance of the copper. week. cop4.400.000.000 of of pounds Is then. Here, upward Great mass convention of labor of per which, at IS cents per pound, represents a value bodies will convene In Fort Worth 000,000.000. Tex, to discuss wage quest ions This porphyry ore la handled by steam shovel from Baseball season of major leagues the surface, not from shafts or tunnels. The present will open. ' Wednesday equipment enables the company to handle 15,000 tons a State comMichigan Democratic day. The average cost of producing this copper la fix meet time and place will to mittee 7 cents a ubuut pound. . This but the beglnnig of the story. The Cactus for the State convention. Sheriff cases against Contempt In all parmine In Beaver county, thoroughly equipped Shipp, of Chattanooga, Tenn, and ticulars, promises to excel In value even the Bingham nineteen of hia deputies, resulting property. Last spring the Cactus waa exported by rep- from a lynching, will bo beard by resentatives of the New York Exchange at the time the United States supreme court. stock waa listed. These experts reported 2,284,417 tons Thursday will conif ore In sight that would average 2.1 per cent In copMinnesota Republicans a delewith of to to means select copper This vene 114,221.850, pounds Minneapolis per. value, at 15 rents a pound, of 517,1(1,277.50. The devel. gatee to the national convention. of Cotton National Association opment work going forward In this mine Is' expected to convene to annual will Manufacurara In ore of bodies of copper the greatest incuver some session at Boston. the known world. Large bodies of Eastern Commercial Taacherff Asorc la thla mine runs from 20 to SO per cent sociation wl" n annual convenn copper. The company handling the Cactus property of tion to I Philadelphia. which Mr. Newhouee Is the head Is capitalised for 55, Friday 000,000. The American Pathological AssocWith electricity taking the place of steam through- iation will begin its annaul meeting out the country, and with the other tremendous demands at Ana Harbor, Mich. Governor Patterson and for copper In other llnea of manufacturing and Industry, -e gi'hernFt'roial (hero is no limit to the wealth to be accumulated from Csimev will to meet candidates, joint debate copper mines so long aa they can be operated at the st Chstanooga. In these out the figures given margin of profit evident by Saturday two companies. Taft will deliver an adSecretary And on the heels of all thla comes the announcement dress at tbs banquet of the Sphinx that Mr. Newhouae has become heavily interested In Club to Now York. Nevada within recent weeks, that he will develop great properties In that state. As aide Issues he Is plunging ICE HAD PRESERVED MAMMOTH. In Balt Lake City real estate and erecting sky scrappers 'n that city; and scattering money in charity right and Remarkable Discovery Made in Froxen Siberian Bog. left. Tomorrow morning we put on the bargain tables about 40 dozen high class colored waists. The materials are fine ginghams and other 5 high-gran- de dial-copyr- long wearing materials. The colors are pink, bine, lavender, etc., the patterns neat stripes, dainty checks and Scotch plaids. Every waist Is warranted to fit perfectly, to wear well and give satisfaction. 11.65 2.00 styles $L10 - $5.00 1J5 $2JS0 lte styles $2,00 IS5 styles $1.65 125 - le-nee- THE BATTLESHIP UTAH the Information comes from Washington ONCE again Utah la to be honored by having one of the new named after her. Thla time the Information cornea In the form of a special dispatch to the effect that President Roosevelt has given assurance to Senator Smoot that one of the two battleships provided for In the naval appropriation bill now before Congress will be named after thla state. That would be gratifying to evry cltlsen of the state. Other states have battleships named after them and there Is no good reason why Utah should not be honored In like manner. This is especially true to view of' the fact that there are now but few of the states that have not namesakes to the fleet. The Utah should be one of the best of Uncle Sams sea fighters.- Her career would be watched with deep Interest by every, resident of the battleships - state. WHEN IS NEWS NEWS? ' 7. the State Journal printed an story about President Roosevelts plans to tour the world on the completion of his term aa president The Information came direct from the White House. It waa an Item of. such Interest that the Slate Journal made editorial comment on it the following day. This morning the ume Information la hurled into the faces of the public by the blanket sheets under glaring headlines. Thla la worthy of notice only as It raises the LAST Tuesday. April Sixty-on- e years ago a young Russian engineer, Benkendorf, saw the River Lena to Siberia release a dead mammoth froxen ages ago In the bog. There had been exceptionally warm weather In the north of Siberia, and the river, swollen by melting onow and Ice and torrential warm ralna, wept out of lta old channel and carved a new one, carrying to the sea vast quantities of its former banks and farover rowing np the thawing bogs which it raced. As be made hia way la the sidewalks The police department la making every effort to If" In jail, and It Is likely that examples will be made, by Inflicting the toll penalty on the wild riders the offenders It L Co.1 Newspaper Takes Whirl at AROUND THE TOWN Dig Metropolis. Blindfold a Londoner of the 444 cen- ter, put him down In the Caledonian toad or on Brook Green or at Hern Hill, then take off the bandage and ask him where he is. The chances are ten to one he will have no notion at all. They might Just as well be in the provinces. Practically they are in the provinces. They are not inhabited by Londoners in the true sense, bnt by people whom accident or necessity has brought within the metropolitan area and who would be just as happy 200 miles away. Their atmosphere is not metropolitan. They are not of the center. They are on the fringe. That is why London baa so Uttle local pride. It la not n community, it is a congeries of suburbs, each with Its separate narrow interest!, grouped around a little city whose . dtlsens have so wide a horison that they eat pare next to no attention for local sffalra. How can civic patriotism bo expected from a man who spends all Us week-end- s at a house la the conn-try- . the spring on tho Riviera, the utnmn in Scotland or tho Mediterranean? London is to him only an with boundaries probably mailer even than these which I have The store of W. J. Parker of Bor waa entered by thieves on SaturUy night and about 9(04.44 worth of (oodi carried away. The goods stolen consisted of everything usually found in country atop. Mr. Parker believes that the burglary waa committed by some hoboea who have been loitering around the atom for some days. When yen eat, oat at (he Vienna Dr. W. J. Browning, office. HU Wash, ave., over Paint. Oil A Glam C those who an food. Be sun B. A G. Slatervllle Butter for Happy children are fed on to get them. pun wholesome . It will pay yen te see the Elsctns Cash Register at The Crystal, VH Washington Avenue. Where the sen atop Pansy Plants 25c down st Floral Co., 413 34th. Odd Scrapbook. Probably tho oddest scrapbook h T. Now England is that of William , u'gested. la It Ms The real Londoners are those who rernald, of Old Orchard, tbs would not consider life worth living Mg book, devoted exclusively to newslore pertaining of anywhere else. The real London la preservation the small apace wherein. an' to bo appendicitis. Every perron, great found tho Interests which HIT their small, who has bad an attack of sp aotto Uvea. Hundreds of thousands of sub- cendicltls and a newspaper Fernald scqnW Mr. of urbans have never seen a picture In within range hook. M London, never been to the opera or a apace of record in his noted. are case the of the play, could not tell 8L Pauls from phases the Abbey or distinguish between 8L James' and Groevenor Square. Per Tho Weather and Rsllgiracontra, few ,eal Londoners know anywant "I have hardly thing about the regions on the fringe. chnrch when it is too wet tor golf Tho immensity of London la the motoring," complained a clergy" constant subject of bewildered com- according to the Dally Telegraph ment It la the littleness of London aoroe one once raid. Some peoP" as sa which astonishes me. London World. religion aa a cloak, others brails.--L- oo don Punch. For envelopes, letterheads, business cards, dodgers, etc, call np Tbs Journal Journal want ads dslivsr tho I10 Job rooms. Both phoneo 444. ' Sylvan Free Park Wed. April 5th Refreshments CUT nt It Will Happen Arbor Day at Is terrible to contemplate such calamities as that which fell upon Chelea yesterday; but there Is a bright side even In such sad events The promptitude with which humanity responds In such emergencies furnishes the bright side of the picture. It also reveals the better slde of human nature. Sons 9 British Alligators in Ecuador. A new minor Industry that Is develquestion,' When Is news news?" oping to Ecuador Is the killing and skinning of alligators. This Industry THIS IS AN EVIL was launched In 1903 bj an American, who went to Guayaquil for the pur-pci- e of hunting down the myriads of VERT day or two narrow escapes art reported aa which abound In the River alligators rtsult of careless bicycle riding." A few days since a little girl waa knocked to the ground, to front of h.r Guayas and its tributaries. He waa successful. The business home, 281 ( Washington avenue by one of the violators, markedly was temporarily Interrupted In the not only of the city ordinance, but of the laws of comearly part of 1905 by the untimely mon sense and humanity. death of the American, who hd startThe little girl fortunately waa riot seriously In- ed the fun. but It has recently been jured, but sustained a severe shock and was knocked resumed. The total valne of the allisenseless by the careless wheelman, who regardless of gator skins exported dur'ng the years the fact that the roads at thla place were to good con- 1903, 1904, 1905 and lkOO was 135,000. dition for riding a bicycle, took to the sidewalk, where The skins shipped from Ecuador to this country last year weighed 57.000 he could spin along at a rate of speed. pounds, and were valued at 94,873. Following the usual custom, the wheelman, rode on N. O. and his name could not be learned. Such events are of frequent occurrence. accidents are becoming more and more numerous and with the spring season, the blcycllats tolr.y swarm along the sidewalks at certain hours, usually at the time pedestrians most require the use of Tlmee-Demoera- & LONDON HAB NO LOCAL PRIDE. a rteam cutter against the current Benkendorf saw the bead of a mammoth appear above the flood. Rush upon rush of water more and more released the body. Its hind legs were ltlll imbedded when he taw IL but 24 hours liberated these. The mammoth had sunk, feet first, Into a bog. The ooie had froxen over it; auccea live tides had heaped soil and vege tatlon upon It. Bone and flesh and hair were perfect They secured It; they cut off Its tusks; they dissected It and foud In Its stomach the last meal it had eaten, young ahoots of the fir and pine and masticated flr cones. They were still at work when the river spreading farther, engulfed them. The men escaped, but the Testers surged over the mammoth and carried It for carrion to the sea. p W. H. Wright Grand Ball in the Evening Free. . Couples 50 cents Dancing begins at 8a Extra Lady 25 cents |