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Show THE 2 or fciieech which might tause irritation io ri htr Jaimn or Ku:a bus produced WILL a great lnipresBiun here. The newh-pspthis morning print prominent articles, commending tlie substance and in the bigb-i.- ,i of the FALL BACK spiritTerm. proclamation The (initial Gazette accepts it as a c(uuplee answer to ibe clmrj. cs that tbe American government ie hostile io R.icsia and dot lares that heiciij'ier despite any seemingly ard incident wliiih may arise, it Will Mobilize 300,000 Troops will lie considered settled oiii and for With Which to Assault all, "that ihe American government I ns taken a friendly attitude toward out aims and ki1ic1i in the Far Kat. Japanese Land Forces. adding: "This undoubtedly msrks a cbaiige in American sentiment, the realizing the danger of people ihi-rs'lppuMiug Jupati.". .. Kin Fliow, Mar.!. 3 1. T!.C liiKfust The Kovnsii hails the suspicious ii Riwscvclt In the of I.Ms iau Mi.L.i-;ikii Fortl.ii-'- Arthur i interest of universal peace and g'snl In lai the i'.i-iur.d! tlie iinvl.il: lioii of "w.iiiiu telaiiiinsliip hcrvvei'n Jiussia and tbs Ini'cd Situ, raying: a.rtiiilSing iro.ys i(ir In- pu: iisc of a:nl unlimited pI'uliS- "lie wields Hhi! :i.:, i:i, J..;iill",M with ri:;S'ct to the foreign pol-- i( lii' f him.I:'' . liiiij .'i in Mill IreTl- y of Hie count ry. Secretary Hay (..lilil to the vv.ll of thn President. ii Aiiii.ira1 .HiLi.iirnT will The llnxs welcumes the pnsluma-tio- u i i'll m'li ilm i uemy iti i: i, riiiiik'i'. io ss com'iniug evidence of a mors :iiv ii,. ;. ncil nr.iSc ihe nn i.irii,,i f f'.i lii' Jii' Uasl f ui-bteeling on the pan of Amerti a lli'.'t triendiy hea Bjhir Itiixein. !ii U si'i'i h:;!'y i."'iii)i r i.it y Tin- - Si. IVteri.liitrp Zcitting usmtIs i!n mu! him iiy I'tilliiiLd. C.dPA i!i .1 Hint the piiwlaiualion . leaves no f'tr-- , i.ii.l 35. i i ,:iu Miii- ll it is ailr.nl iH ,er iln'.ilii that the I'lined States lias a viM.iii f1. ki it tiilly nf tit in iiiirinioii to uliHTVe si riit nett IM.r. ill.:. lit: Ill n III uf nut li liears ihe stamp tniiity ami adds: l!:r r.iui'rsa ol I in: n ilcmi' of a niml i'.ik k in wliiih in I'ciwir Him of a el rung and nuKi Uislinguislird .au. naval cximiU pciauauliiy." I .'Jiri'viirli ami Jli-i'I'Jli1 Alexander comniittee announces fiilottf a eur i'ur ill aor. i list in addition to the n gulsr army of pensions, a supplementary of Hi Seoul, Man'll J4 Thi. fnm-ra;r, a yiar will be given to tbe widows r Mini iliitl in January. (Jiu'i'ii Itutts-and orphans of the J'hi1 liirr wa Max lii'ld Iirro unlay. l to Those nf soldiers and .!a.'iil on a catafalque at. I hi' ac-i- r Rain onicers and lu rt I'niMil siMii'x Minix-l- ir sailor killed in Hie tar of ihe enemy. nf ilit All. n ami oilier diplomat gaiheriil .at r, : nlIiM k itiiK morning. II. mnk . TliiiUhUiiila a uiuarkalilo of lauimi bearer, uolilipra hip! in dresses Supreme Court Declares Combination Millie the popular .gathered . around a Iwtn lire unof Northern Pacific and Great The Emperor. attired in lit day Northern Unconstitutional. i raw colored iiiIh'K ami head drchf lurk and i.rfoi'med his arrived at (i FOl II DISSENTED. devotion over the hmly nititin a run-va- n The pnavsttlnn then imvilion. Started lit the timili. right liiilea outWashington. March 11. The side of the rity. the land playing funmerger decision w as concurred Ineral dirges. The pnairxion wa eevrr-r- l by Justices Urowu. Brewer, MeKcuiia ami Day, while the chief mile king and full of color. It vua hrad'Ut liy police, followed by lantern justice ami Justices While, lcck- -atam and Iloluieif dissented. Jusin fantastic bearer and aitoariuen lice llrcwvr In concurring did so tire, carrying banner and huge hpearK. for dlffiTcnt reasons than those uf Then came taw blew. gorKuoindy colthe majority, however,. ored and Riinnouiiied by dragons' beads. They were borne on Die shoulders of a hundred men. there being IBIS U'l-iii- I're-iUe- ut pisi-ticall- 111 : !. . - . m-i;i l GWRM TO (in-Hk- jiall Liearers. The liiera Mere by eunfi h and luurt funrt binaries. The firm bier was empty, being 1'iHl ed Washington, March 14. The opinion of tlie supremo court of the l.'nited States in the case of the Northern (securities company . intended to cheat the devil. The populace crammed the recta and covered ihe naif to witness the jiageant. Afterr the viarr of the received the foreign the Kmix-roand the Japanese mlnisl er, diplomat being senior member, presented the condolences of the diplomats. 1 v. Tukiu, March 14. Men vorkiug on found the Yariag at Chemulpo bodies of two Russian sailor. They were taken ashore and the captains ol the Hatose and Asam conducted burial the Tokio, Monday, March 14. A supplementary ickii I 'loin Vice Admlisl Togo, concemiug the effort made by the trews of the Jivmese toriiedo Ism' Iorl Arthur r.rdioyers ft actioi. on im l!):.i instant. io :escii. tbe rtih 'he ilmaMcd HILL DECLINES TO TALK. 1 tusli.p Is c' destroyer. tva.i'u! hep: today. Cn: 'run Hlicj :is Acii, the New York. March It. J. J. lilll,, president of the Northern Securities rompauy, received news of the decision at thecompany'sof- lire hi thi city. Mr. Hill declines to dlKCties tlie matter, except to say: "There is nothing to bp raid 'in futilu of that the M.itcs loat to-pe- do Jnpare-- . detoycit, would fate b'f tt aide to rescue nmuy more or the (ii my but. for the ihviclv tire of ti.c slio'i batteries sal tte'ibise apppuiiM tf t 'ie Russia t explaitir v.ere not pirt I ! this lime, Tbe properties of the Northern Securities company are still there. They arc as good as cter. Mt vik. The o d four men of the crew of the ihi tvs-eue- Stcreguschtehl as originally reiKrled. 'Vhen the Ji.paneso rfciicrs rtacutd the SteregUM-litcIi- i ouly tlie dead retrained ou board atul it Is believed ti.r.l the living numlrs r.f llm crew piuiixi! (irprltiMPl nnd perished in the mm. Tiireo of the rescued Russ'-an.Kn mgims'in und the fourth is si torpedo operator. Two of the captives mh ii slightly wounded. They wvf ail on Vuuird uf a Japum-ephnr-.- l and were given food and mede Washington, March 14. 1 Iresident ltersliiHg, Roosrv.'lfs proclamation regarding the ohscrvuiioM of neutralit) liyall iHi. i.!b; r.nd lua alislinenrc from citlicr net inn March 11. v xjv ' vVj' if: The merger has attracted greater attention than any oilier suit before the ruiur rime the first Insular rones were dti ided and ha been regarded by und bur as equal In luminance with those cases and wl'h the income lax case. It was argued in Deeembfvr last fur two days and attracted general attention al that, tlmeasit did previously when tbe (Ireialon was rendered by Ibn tit flit court for tho District of tase la:-t'erli- tp 7i 0 y:nn'-3niH- . 'Inn action was brought in the - . f - b cir- - st j t the Pacific. One of the gale attained n hurricane velocity on October Vth and luth, in tbe course of which nineteen sails were blown away. s. After attempting to make the Captain Thompson finally decided after the vessel had been badly damaged and considerable water had worked tu way into the hold, to square away for the Eastern passage around the Cape of Good Hope. On January 1st. T'oveaux Island, off the south of New Zealand was reached aud there a top waa made for provisions nnd water, the supply of which was running abort At Foveaux eight men of the crew, tired out with battling the elements refused duty, but with the exception of the ringleader, they turned to work after the captain and his mates were foreed to forcible measures with adopt them. The ringleader wa ironed and confined for 38 days. Tlie vessel after leaving Foveaux made the run across the Pacific without any unusual event in the way at mishaps or in point of time. The trouble with the men quieted down nnd all hands were on duty when the anchor was dropped here. The condition of the cargo is not yet known, but it. is feared that some damage may have resulted from water during the wild weather experienced in the unsuccessful attempt to beat to the westward off tbe Horn. fur tbe control of large corporation, as is, generally contended. Indeed the law had not I wen understood a applying to railroad until so construed by the supreme court. The act, he contended, applies only to contracts and combinations in restraint of trade, and makes no reference to competition. logically coDnlrued, Justice Holmes said, today's decision should b followed by the criminal prosecution of the parties at interest iu this case. Speaking of the general impression that the Sherman law applies only to large corporations the justice mid lhat this impression was breathed from every pore of the statute, hut that its language did not bear out the conclusion. He thought thia Inference due to the size of railroad corporations. He took the position that there had been no attempt to monoxilize lu this combination uf the railroad-- , and Mid that there could be no mare objections to the purchase of the stock of the Northern Pacific, and the Great Northern roads by the Securities company than if bought by Mr. Margnn ilflDll EXECUTED V.KJf. PEOPLE WHO APPEAR OLD. Have Kalk-land- com-lianie- ers lor the purpose of dissolving the merger of the two roads which the Foiled States declared bad been created by the creation of a holding company, the securities company. The ousoiidation was claimed to be iu violation of the Sherman anti-trulaw. It wss claimed on behalf of tbs government that this consolidation was in effect a kmi1 created io promote the interests, not of one system at the expenses uf the other, but of both al the expense of the public. The railroads claimed that the transfer of the stock of tbe two coMianiM to the securities comiwiiy was In the nature of a sale perfectly legitimate. The contentions of 4be securities comiMiiy were reviewed by Jusih-Harlan who said they had received full attention. He quirted the various opinions involving the trust question, allying that from them it in to be gathered that, all contracts in restraint of trsde are prohibited by the Rherman law, and that Congress has the power to establish such relations as are laid down in that law. Congress bad i lower to enact the statute. "In our Judgment, said Justice Harlan. (In; evidence fully austalnd the material allegations qf the bill and shows a violation of the act of congress, in so far as ii declares illegal every combination or conspiracy in restraint of commerce among the several slates and with foreign nations, ami forbids attempts to monopolize the sueh commerce. Laying aside many things of a moral character and summarizing the principal farts. It is indisputable, upon thia record, that under Ihe leadership of the defendants, lilll and Morgan, the stockholders of the great Northern and Northern Pacific railway corporations having competing and substantially parallel lines from tho Great Lakes and the Mississippi river to the Pacific ocean, at Puget Bound, combined and conceived the scheme of organizing a corporation under ihe laws of New Jersey which should consist of stock of the constituent companies." Continuing, Justice llarlan said that "this combination is withlu the meaning of the act a trust, but la a combination in restraint of interstate and of international commerce, and that is rnough to bring ll under the condemns! ion of the fact. He held that if such a combination were not destroyed "all the advantage to the that would naturally cotrn public under the operation of tho laws of competition a between the Great Northern and Northern Pacific Railway companies would lie lost and the entire commerce of the Immense territory In the northern part of the I.nit-e- d States between the Great Lakes and gf Pacific al Puget Bound would be altllie mercy of a single corporation, Jrgantzed in a state distant burn the territory. On points made by the securities company, Judge Harlan said the contention that the law ia Interference with the rlghta of the int Ividual states by which the companies are Incorporated was not well founded. In such cases, he said, the authority of Congress Is supreme. He also declared It to lie unnecessary to determine the right of owners of railroad stock to sell the property, nor was It true that the right of the securities To own and hold railroads, is the only question involved. Such contentions are wide of the mark mere men of straw. All that the government complains of Is the existence of a corporation to repress commerce and is not concerned with the other points. a Justice Harlan said that In this day there should be no doubt of the power of Congress to control interstate commerce, although meana might be resorted to for that purpose. All the prior trust cases were In support of that contention. Whether free and unrestrained combination was wise, he said, was an economic question with which j the court need not. concern itself. He asserted the power of Congress over Inters! it commerce to be ae complete as the power of a atate over domestic commerce. Coming to the pica of the railroads that tbe anti-trulaws should be declared unconstitutional, he said the court could uot see its wrajr to that cud. "if. he went on. "Ihe securities company's contentious are sound, why may not all the railroads of the United States enter into a combination and by the device of a holding ctmipany corporation control rates throughout the country? Juki Ice Harlan also took occasion to say that theFe had been nothing In the securities company's certificates of incorporation to indiiute its purjiose to destroy commerce and he therefore exonerated the state of Nw Jersey from any charge of kiu-I- i knowledge in advance. It might be true that a federal court held no power to dissolve a coriioration of a atate. but this circumstance could not be an Indication of powerlcssnesK to enforce the law, than which no corporation is stronger. No device could suffice to prevent this enforcement of the national statutes. The courts had indeed consistently held to the supremacy of the national laws in case of conflict between those laws and the laws of the states. Bo lung a Congress confined Itself to its preMTilied functions, he said, there could be no danger. At any rate the error. If any, was with Congress, and U was for Congress io supply the remedy nnd not. for the courts. Justin tlnrlan declared tbRt the only object of the merger whs to prevent coiniierltlon. and he sad that If no one else knew this to ho the caw-- . J. Iirr-poMorgan, one m the defendants, knew that to have been the esse. Extract front Morgan's testimony were quoted in support of thi statement. Th decree of tho circuit, court, he said, could not have been of rmalier scope and it had in no war exceeded Its authority. Th law must not be narrowly construed, but reasonably construed. The defendants could not complain of the finding of the circuit court and Justice Harlan in conclusion announced the confirmation of that decision saving: "The Judgment, of ibis court is that the decree below of the circuit court Is and hereby 1 affirmed, with liberty to the tici ttit court to protect! in the excititfiin nf the decree as Ihe cirtim- iiffllli-ftnar Piiftiiirii " MARHT 1J, Cape and into die-seut- nt IL UTAH, TUESDAY MORNING, i and by the law of February Day. while the chief justice and JusItsij. which was for the purpose of tice White, Peckhaiu and Holmes Jufetice Harlan was followed xpcdiliug the cane and was heard by by Justice Brewer, who while concurihe four circuit court judges uf the cuit. They united in a decision favor- -' ring In the judgment, did not accept able to the I'nlted States and opposed all ut the language of tbe opinion. s. Justice Holmes read the dissenting to the lontentious of the railroad The suit was instituted by the opinion. He construed the anti-tru- st Failed Slates against tbe Northern Se- law as a criminal statute and declared curities company and the two railroad that there was nothing in It to indicate that it had been enacted merely companies and their leading stockhold- st ic Inc. St. band- - the contention that the Sherman auti trust law applies to railroad combinations of the character In quest Inn. Justice Harlan said that in the merger of the two roads the stockholders disappeared and re appeared In tlie securities company, the two thus becoming In a consolidated practically ' holding company. the priu- being to lire- ripal object vent competition. "No scheme or device could certainly more come within the effectively law prohibition of the anti-trus- t mid bn within the meaning of ih word trust. services today. Tbe Jaimnese consul was present. Right uf the 23 wounded Russians who were taken to the Matsuyama Red Cross hospital are In a serious condition. Three, of them had both legs amputated by a French surgeon, but la now necesrary. One Russian has IMS wound front steel splinters scattered over his body. Japanese surgeons are locating them with Roentgen rays, and extracting them. of the Great Northern, was cil down today and was in favor of the government. The opinion was read by Justice Harlan. The opinion of the circuit court fur the district, of Minnesota was af--' firmed. Tlie effort. Is to sustain OGDEN' 11 nnre-erveo- iy ml.-Jin- EXAMINER, cait-oiir- er un-to- w MOUSING IhP Ther Mar IVfirm tha Fveahaeaa at l'aafb. er People u( who appear neat MARKET old must expect If you want eastern corned beef to be considered au, and. If they apply to Ballard's. for paitlnns with every appearance 'Phono 127K. 331 24th Sire that senility has struck them and that they have gone to seed, iliey cannot expect favorable consideration. If gray haired applicants for positions would only appreciate the value of appearances and would "brace up when (hey seek situation go well groomed and well dressed, with elastic sti-pshowing that they still possess tire, force and enthusiasm they would eliminate an obstacle greater than their gray hairs. We thiuk ourselves Into Incapacity by looking for signs of age and dwelling ou them, and the body follows the thought We bhould, therefore, avoid the appearance of age in every possible way by dress, carriage, conversation and especially by onr attitude toward people and things. It ia nut dllfi-culto preserve the buoyancy and freshness of youth, but it must be done by constant effort and practice. A musician who expects to make only one or two Important appearances a year must keep up bis practice. Yonthful-nee- s cannot be pul on for a day if old age has bad a grip on you for months. It ia Important to preserve tbe fire of youth as long as possible, to carry freshness and vigor into old age by keeping up n hearty interest in everything that Interests yonth. Many of na seem to think that youthful sports and pastimes are foolish, and before we know it we get entirely out of sympathy with all young life, and consequently really old. whatever our yearn We must think youthful thoughts, associate with young people and interest them. When s person ceases to Interest the young he may be sure that lie Is showing signs of old a gee Success. fl SILVER KING SALOON MURPHY ft GIBLIN, Pr.p.fc Flret Clan Wines, Liquors and Cigar Your Patronage Solirited. Twenty-Fift- h ftt a typewriter that la out of repair, n Gees to Chair With Prayer on Hie Lipa pays to keep a good machine, ami that is the kind that we are selling, vt's Which Hia Mother Taught Him. will sell you n new one or an old or. fixed up to do the work like new. if Ossining. X. Y., March It. Thomas Tobin was put to death today in thq yon do not want to buy, we will rent electric chair, at Sing Sing for tha you one. We will keep it in repair a. murder of Captain James B. Craft. He long aa yon want it walked to the chair uttering a prayer Perhaps yon would like to trade the typewriter yon now have for one that that his mother bad taught him when ia in tetter order or for some different n child. Three shocks were given bestyle. If so, let us know and we ii fore he waa pronounced dead. call and see what we can do for tou. was employ! Tobin, an In a Tenderloin saloon In September, Diet end Aleekel. 1903, when Captain Craft, a wealthy COR. 24TH AND GRANT. Careful observations hare shown Islander visited the place. The long is an Intithere and that again again captain displayed some money nnd a mate relation between diet and alcodrug waa put into his liquor. The vicisomfii tim falling to recover consciousness holism, especially that tea, coffee and Tobin dragged him to the furnace condiments lead to the use of alcohol. demonstrated that room, cut off hia head with a cleaver It has also been flesh eating creates n thirst for alcoand threw it into the furnai-e- . holic beverages and an appetite for tobacco, tbe use of which almost InvariNATIONAL POLITICS. ably leads, sooner or later, to the use Washington. March 14. President Will Roosevelt Share the Fata of Chea- of alcohol fn on form or another. Roosevelt received the news of the ter A. Arthur. OF merger decision from ihe Associated IrMKVtUl. hisatisfaction He Press. but little when expressed can M. Harvey, in the YVorld ToOne accomplish (Charles that the court had sustained the connil Is said, for, make no mistake about day for March.) he tentions of the government. There are some striking resemblanIt, however much we pose and strut In m a $ will express his personal congratulaces between the itolitical situation In the world, in the solitude of our own tions to the attorney general. the opening months of 1904 and that studies there are few of ns but know of the same time In 1884, which was al- how the faults and blemishes of our SL Paul. March 14. Governor Van-sa- so a presidential election year. A prescraft stand out and stare na In the when told of tbe merger decisn Republican and an Ohio man face to remind us that we are small ident, said: He elated. ion was highly In each case, had been assassinated a enough and baiting enough to be "I am much gratified with the re- few years before (Garfield in 1881 and In my opinion learning, never quite gloriously sult of the decision, for McKinley In 1901), nnd had been suc- achieving. peothe decision mean more to the event All Our Salesmen Have ceeded by a New York man In the ple of our country than any In vice earlier the presidency (Arthur Aeehered. Been Instructed as since Ihe civil war. It will for nil time Instance and Roosevelt In the later A little chop four years of age met prevent the formation of illegal trusts one). In each case there had been Follows with tbe misfortune to have hia hat .4 and unlawful combinations. wrangling among the Republican leadInto tbe river. When he reached blown ers new state office in the (In At the 14. presidents New York. March home hia father said to him: SELL EVERYTHING of J. P. Morgan ft Co., no expression which Conkling and Platt figured on It's a wonder you didn't blow overone In side Arthur's and the be could period (decision the merger regarding Platt has been antagonized by Odell board too. obtained. "I couldn't' waa the quick response. Iq the Roosevelt case). Arthur soon From the Cost Mark. Ool. w. P. Clough, fourth I was fastened to my feet!' Presbyhe known It be the that let presof counsel sought director and general terian. In 1884, as Roosethe neuurltlee company, who ia alleged idential candidacy This means everything of 1904. to have taken an active part In draw- velt has done regarding that Praise undeserved is satire in AliIn the presitomachine The Republican wa Washington in in it our stoc- kcharter, ing dent's state waa favorable to his can- gn lie. Urondhurst day. The stock market waa not gener- didacy then, na It la now. ally affected by the decision. The genGroceries Included Here are further similarities between some ImproveBaslaen Principles. eral list, whicl ma-tbe most the case of Roosevelt and that of Ar? Dolly Bo Simpkins, the cashier o ment before noon. re'. thur: Earh waa called upon early In tbe br.sk. proposed to you last night came. The greatest opportunity part when news of the vision his service to deal with crookedness Yes; and I promised to niarr Polly In the postal department (the that the people of Ogden star CALIFORNIAN SUICIDES. route frauds In the earlier ease and him. be ask your fathers perwt "Did and Weber County will with which the the otonF Haywards, Cal., March IS. With no nameirregularities others of Machea and have for some time. We other known reason for taking hi life have been Tyner, "Yes: he raid he would ask nans coupled now). Just before but the fact that his wife was lying each of these tuna. my will also include in this promissory presidents entered office ill In a Ban Francisco hospital. Mi- a of Industrial long period stagnation of Sale an wealthy rancher chael Hartery. In the one In(the panic of 1873-7Castro valley, near this place, took a stance 1893-9othIn of nnd that the Autombile draft of poison last night nnd died had been succeeded by n restoraGoods aomw time before midnight. He was er) confidence nnd tion of advance in found dead In his bed at IS o'clock with DEUVERY CO. PARCEL commodities nnd wages (due In an empty glass beside him which in stocks, the earlier period to the establishment WM. R. MILLER, Managar. supposed to have contained strychnine of specie payments under the act of Street 368 Twenty-fift- h nnd whiskey. Arriving during sale, purOffice, went in which Into 1879, 1875, operation Hartery was a pioneer of Southern and in the recent period to the RepubTelephone No. chased before the rise in Oregon. He settled in that country lican victory of 1896, on a gold standextensivemany years ago and engaged prices in cotton fabrics. ard platform, followed by the enactly in the cattle business He came ment of the Dingley law of 1897 that, SILVER PARLOR RESTAURANT ben about one year ago. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT in addition to providing greater protecExtra fine dinner on Sunday nnd tion for home industry, abolished the from 12 to I p. m, 25 treasury deficits. The advance In Wednesday, FL09HM STORM stocks met n chock early in Arthur's cents. Wo give nice lunch all day. Short orders at all hours, fresh oysservice, and also early In Roosevelt's, Weather Caprices and Results In Var- which was succeeded In each case by n ters, game and fish In season. abort recovery, followed by n greater Charley & Hong, Props. ious Part of Country. m m m the consequence being that the fail, Na 318 25th BL 14. Pa.. Effort March Wilkesbarre. was of shares line much lower to start tbe big uc gonie in the Sus- general In the opening days of 384 and 1904 quehanna river sliove tbe city were than they were 12 or 15 months beBy March 1st to enable made today by dynamiting fore. wages. In some cases, participatus to Rcbui'd our Store Tlie railroad eumpaniiw fcavo bunin the shrinkage. dled of men at work clewing the ing Room. Terms Cash. railroad tracks snd cuttiiu roadway which iu many through the hravy ire ICeS'lj Wholesale Harness and Saddler When Colonel Robert (1. Ingirsc' p):vs Is 15 fee!, iliiek. We call your attention to waa living in Pcortg be was cal! i' Iks Moines. Iowa. March 14. Four upon one day by General John A. Lo b Something; New Inches of -- now fell in nnd one-ha- lf 11m New York Times. Iowa Sunday an l LiK right and snow gan, rays WARMER AFOOT was npsL:lrs at the time, an-- : ia Ktiii falling. Ccme and Try One General Ixijan was ushered Into tl. re a ou were table where It 14. library, Snow 111.. Free of Charge. March Rock Island. lift been falling continuously for 24 volumes of Voltaire's works, an editioj hours and is now a foot deep on de luxe reprfueiitlng all that was beat the level. All t raffle is badly crip- In tlie bookbinder's art. General Iv gnn picked them up one at a tinieab-.Hirbepled. In his admiration of their lieau-tli- . blizzard Milwaukee. March 14. A While o engaged Colonel Ingcr-so'.- l f slatted About midnight and - still ragmitered the room. Beginning Saturday, March 12. we will place on sale 250 suits ing. The weather is ihe worst of the Felon: 1." mid the gouerai. hold'ng underwear. Thia underwear Is what we call seconds, as it is the goods season. one of the volumes in hi hands, "this on which our new bands are taught to knit. For this reason we are 1 have I volume the niost magnificent closing them out at what tbe labor cost us to have them made. The CRIME IS DENIED. We 1 do not want to seem ever quality is of tbe highest. but the finish Is not up to our standard. Com Mercerized. v. Worsted. and Wool. them Colton on in Id yf-have 'ttL lint 8nxony, rind relllug Colorado Soring- -. Col.. March 14. A what tbese books co.it ynur early and get your pick. Be sure you come to the right place, a there special io ihe I'.:.., tie from Camp Goldare two factories in town. Our factory is lietween 22nd and 23rd streets, "Those 1'onkK, befan the colonel, the field mate ihal uo such crime a Gusfirst door north of Corsolldated Wagon and Machine company. !n bin twinkle at grov.-'neye brigluer tav Marx, the Chicago bandit., scribes iu hi confession, has been ca-t- i word, cost llo the governorship in the Crippl Creek dis- of lilino:.-:- . trict within the past year. All crime From the I ather hide. committed In that district, have been run to earth ami fastened on some per-uBrnutor Graphter Well, din Sterling Neither ihe police uor the miliay he'd Tote for our bill? tia know of any such crime with Senator Maicehrntz No; he said bt whi'h Marx umid have been conouldn't imagine a bill of a more crook nected. d aud odious character. Senator Graphter-D- ii! you tell him 1 HAD 8T0RMY PASSAGE. vnv fathering the n:raw;irT For Courteous Treatment Stop at j Q Senator klalnchn::tu and ho Strenuous Voyage of British Bark aiM be fnr.cl-.'the Mil's chrmeteri-'ic- s Causes Mutiny. inheii'.cd - Philadelphia bad Dew-DroFan Franrisco. March 13. The Britnress. ish hark Falls of Hall&dale Trae Ihllaaegher. hR just arrived. 2:1.1 clays out from LivWeil, air. ilghtniu' mt his house (EL erpool. Auer leaving that port on July afire, a airtbquuke swallowed half LL ZJth last.evny thing went well until the land, an' then the rRer riz an over' viiiniiy nf Cap- - Horn wa nahed on Betted the whola A8K YOUR FRIENDS AS TO WH5RE THEY HAVE BEEN WELL buiue!" 2.1. There a siicceeeion of September lie a . doin' whai's now .. Well, 3' of 1am I. A AH ...I AA ..ul.. .(kdll.i TREATED. "Thankin' the IaihI (hut be Lin 1 swim:" Atlanta 'mialituiiou. ill m seif. Referring to the point of pcntunal rcsKnsi1iility Mr. Holmes said: "1 do not expect to hear ll maintained that Mr. Morgan could be sent to prison for buying a many shares as he liked of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific, even if he lwught both at Ihe same time and got more Chan half ihe stock of each road. Justice White als read a dissenting opinion, taking up especially the power of congrasa to control commerce. Beginning with an argument in support of dissenting opinions hr outlined the point involved. He referred to its importance, and called aueution to the fact that only four members of the court, one less than n majority, had united In the opinion of Ihe court. He then said lhat such principle as are laid down in Chat opinion are "destructive of every principle upon which organised society depends. L. H. BECRAFT THE SALE SUES AT HOWELL'S nt - j . r fr 8 8 Spring Pi t We Must Sell This Stock J. G. REED & BROS. Reese Nowell &Sons. d . . . Underwear THE OGDEN Sale . . . n-- v 2274 Wash. Avc. u. T. four-mast- The CLEARY A KNITTING WORKS Ogden. p Inn KINNEY. Props. -- iCESSssaoexsiesaacEasmes |