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Show gOSTON Brown Bread FLOUR EXAMINEE: MOUSING TOE TTAII, THURSDAY OGDEN, MOUSING, For Brown Bread Ask Your Grocer lor U ALLEN'S B. B. B. FLOUR CO. Pacific Coast Factory, Ban Joso, California. RUSSIAN ROADS ARE COMPLETELY TIED UP Goodale Grocery Co. welcome, and we not only indicate it personally, but our goods form a tempting item in hospitality. The welcome first the fare follows. Our prices and goods ought to offer a relish to your appe- tite. WE ARE MEETING YOU HALF WAY That's Our Way THE BEST SITE for your coal Is sntlirarlie and plenty of It. Now Is the time in lsy in a 'Stock, of good, clean, coni for the lifer mouths. d to Travel by Rail and the Minister of Railroads Had to Act as His St. Petersburg, Oct. 23. Over half of European Russia is in the grip of j the striking railroad mi-- and the I strike continues to spread rapidly In all directions. The rosds in the Volga region are at a standstill and today a general strike was proclaimed on the two remaining lines running out of St. Petersburg. Before tomorrow the capital Is expected to be cut off from the outside world by way of the con tinenL Tbis will also involve the sus pension of puatal communication. The League of Leagues has seized the opportunity to come to the supixnt pi the railroad men and has adopted a resolution in favor of a general strike of all professions. The telegraph operators are Joining in the movement uud the suspension of railroad traffic, it la feared, will be followed by a complete beobliteration pi communication tween Interior points. The situation is critical and pregnant of all sorts of dirts possibilities. The factories la the affected district have been forced to shut down for lack of fuel and Moscow especially faces not only a food but a water famine. Fortunately BL Petersburg will bare communication open through Finland. The British ambassador. Sir Charles Hardiage, who bade farewell to Emperor. Nicholas yesterday, previous to leaving Bt. Petersburg on a mission In connection with the proposed understanding, was unable to start for Englaad tbis morning because no trains were running. He will leave the capital on the first available steamer. Telegraphic communicating between St. Petersburg and Kharkoff is broken. The workmen of the Put lloff Alexandravla and Nevsky works si nick this morning. The Social Democrats believe they have the government at thrtr mercy since, writ h the railroads stopped, the authorities are powerless to transport trooiia. This is alt the more se rious as bloody collision, already have been reported at various places and a dangerous agrarian movement h again broken out in the government of Samara. The strength displayed by the Bocial Democrats baa amased the authorities who were taken quite as much by at the evidence of their power as they were t the time of the Capon n Kol-Join- o. rebellion. The distress in the central provinces is greatly increased by the enforced suspension of the famine relief work. Prince Hilkoff, the minister of railroads, whose appeals to the strikers at Moscow were so unavailing that he couldn't get an engineer to bring him to Bt. Petersburg, but who. with a Bremen stoking, drove hie own engine, arriving bere black and Is not blamable fur the failure bf the government to keep its promises made lit the spring to Increase the wages of the railroad men. That responsibility rests on the minister of flnanee. Prince Hilkoff expects to meet the railroad delegatee here, but apparently they bare already burned their bridges at meetings held last night and which continued until dawn this morning. A dozen of those of the moat enthusiastic character were held. The largest, which was hsld in the university, was attended by about 19.000 persons, including students who are making common cau 9 with the workmen and whose leaders art making speechee in favor of a resolution of atudents to strike until they are allowed lo discuss political questions. The students Joined the railroad men in pasaing a resolution In favor ol the immediate convocation of s constituent assembly from universal suffrage and demanding that the lews governing labor be sanctioned by the representatives and the immediate grant of political freedom, and declaring that thus only can an armed revolution be averted. These revolutions were adopted after a deputation which called ou Count Witte had reported. The count received the deputation as a private Individual. He spoke to them with his usual bluutness and told them plainly that some of their demands would bp granted, white the granting of others was Impossible, fount Witte Informed hhi visitor, that a law permitting greater freedom of meetings than allowed by Ibe laws of Italy and Austria-Hungarand providing for freedom of the press had already been elaborated. Martial law on the railroads, he eai.1, was an anachronism which should be abolished. The demand for a constituent assembly, the count rffid, could not le realized nor could universal suffrage be admitted, as all the people were not prepared to exercise the rigat of franchise. In this connection the count spoke of the paw er wielded by capital in America, where universal suffrage existed. He thought it possible to meet the demands for an eight hour day. espsclal-for outdoor workers, and warmly favored the genra! measures advocated with the view to Improving the condition of the working men, especially in Hi' way of schools, hospitals, etc. Count Witte warned the depuiation that, a C'in iiluaiion t.f the strike could in bloodshed either by comonly pelling the interference of the military or by the famine stricken populace cf the cities tinning upon the s'rtkers. 'Rem ember," he nuid. the government may fall, bat it you will perish also by playing into the ban" ts of the bourgoise you are lighting. In conclusion Count Witte advised the men to return to work, but his advice was howled down and the resolution to strike was adopted. Prince Hilkoff believes that the sttiite cannot bo prolonged ns ibe wpu are without funds. H slil-this lie dfi lures It Is impossible for the rc.tli.e their dream of tying up ail . 1 in j.0 ijji a well as price Better strike a few loads t O'v In Tore ihe other "strike" set. in We Fl,.ar.:uv'e full weight and no in ;M wh ii! nr:. SHURTUEP COAL CO. Be;t 'Phone, 18-- Ind, 450. PASADENA CALIFORNIA The most beautiful residential dty la (lie Culled States. A place to spend a few werks of your vacation. Only a few miles to the seashore Los Angeles by electric cars. La Casa Grande Hotel ELMER F. WOODBCRY. Manager. The Elite Hotel of Pasadena offers special cummer rate $10 per week, transient $2 per day. a LPYFip. OF , Proves Remedy Tor Mothers and Children. wh today at all the railroad stations. Not a train departed. The railroad battul- ions were railed out and an attempt will be made to man a train to Moscow and the frontier tomorrow. Collisions are feared. Great crowds assembled at the Moscow station and gend'armea Interfered twice to restore order, but there was no bloodshed. The leaders of the strikers on tits Moscow and Warsaw lines after n consultation have planned n big meeting for October 27. There are about 400,000 railway employee in tbs empire and their average wage la $140 per annum. The minister of railroads baa ordered that an allowance of $1 per day for food be made In the rase of firsL class passengers who are detained en route and that 59 cents be allowed to second class and 25 cents to third class passengers. 'This afternoon's reports show su enormous extension of the strike. All the Poland lines are tied up and s strike has begun on the great Southwestern system covering the territory southward from Kleff. toward Odessa. Tbe German Red Cross, which ha arrived here from the front, is unable to leave St. Petersburg. Trains in the Baltic provinces are not running and the situation la reported very bad at Riga and Libau. Tbe railroad stations hers ana guarded by police and troops, tbs soldiers in barracks art kept under arms and squads of cossacks are in evidence in the streets, which ars filled with Idle Kraucisco to see the girl he had hoped to marry, tried to kill hintse:! yesterday by Jumping from Williams burg bridge in the East river. A policeman reached him in lime to prevent a auiclde. Decardo auid that on hla arrival here Sunday he had found that the girl he had luved had returned to Italy n few day before. He was without funds or frlenda and that night the police fuuud him naleep by n bonfire near tbe bridge. He waa removed to Bellevue hnanlial. as physician anld be was suffering from hunger, but wss later discharged. He could give no intelligible account of hla action yesterday and waa held for examination today. committee to act the results of social Investigation before the public. The working plan of the committee Includes the undertaking of important aortal Investigations, the issuing of special numbers on some special social problem, the extension of or- ganized philanthropy, the correlation and the publication of the reaulis of different investigations and a general change of education. The membera of the committee Include Mias Jane of Hullhouse, Chicago, author of "Democracy and 8ori.il Ethics, Margaret Drier Robinsou of Chicago, a member of the Women's Trades Union 1 rap ur and S. W. Woodward, president of the Msaocliiti d charities of Washington. RACE HORSE MEN race-trac- SELECTED BY HER MOSCOW IN DISTRESS. A Girl Moscow. Oct. 25. This city today resembles a ataia of siege. The price of meat has trebled and there la great diatresa among the poor. Many people living in neightioring provinces and who cama to Moscow are camping In the streets and 2,000 persons are living In cars. On the Kasan Una the stations are In the hands of the troops. The post and telegraph offices are strongly guarded by Cossacks. The populace is becoming panicky. A young girl employed at a railroad station fell on her knees before the strikers and pleaded with theai not to surrender, declaring that they should continue the struggle not for material reaaona. but for the achievement of human liberty. The crowd responded with singing the "Marseillaise." Made Careful Preparations for Her Funeral A GENERAL STRIKE. Odessa. Oct. 25. A general strike on all the southwest railways is announced for tomorrow. Trains are now and only running between Odessa Kleff. DEMONSTRA- - TION. The whole of the Black 8ea fleet, with the exception of the battleship Pstelelmon, formerly the Knlaz Potemklne has left Sebastopol under the command of Blrilrff and Chonknln. It is urmised here that possibly the government Is preparing for a naval demonstration In the event of the powers deciding that such a step is necessary in connection with their demands for the financial reform of Oct. 25. l Macedonia. MEETING OF MINISTERS. New York, Oct. 25. That Mias Anna E. Bcott, the girl who hilled herself In Atlautir. city, Saturday, because of grier over her Hanes's sudden death, had, with careful deliberation, arranged for her funeral, even to the point of choosing her coffin, became known, when a friend of the suicide called at Aldreds' undertaking shop. Telling John Aldred, Jr., that she expected a friend to die within two days, she discussed calmly the best method of disposing of her own body, and informed the undertaker that she would notify hun when he was needed. She said that her friend's name was Anna Smith. "She doesn't ant to be buried," said Mias Bcott. "bin has told me she prefers cremation " She asked Aldred how much it would cost to cremate the body, and on being tolu the terms, said they were satisfactory. "Now I'd like to see a coffin." she said. Aldred led ihe way to the rear or the shop and showed her several can kets. "A plain one will do." she said, and it was agreed that a pine board with no embellishments would e used. "I m going away tomorrow." Mild Mias Bcott, 'iiml you'll probably from mu on Saturday. Now don't forget, I worn the body cremated, and I'll sce that j ini get the money." The suicide t a message summon- rr to lake lng the of - charge ,h(. body f a Kni,lhi- ou n STRIKE AT FOLTAVA. Poltava, Oci. 24. hns broken out here. closed and no toniorrow. fril.n, services Ml, of eiced. n- - n an- - par A ceu'.a. Boy Plunged fell TO HIS DEATH. Down Eleven Stories Bsnk Building. rn a A general striks The schools .ire will appear 1 tel. T w,.. -- lama new- woman sirne - Pi taking Panina. My friend. ay. -- n.. look!" and 1 tell tin m nt qon-JYJ- well, sc some of my to try it it,- -. C;( are Kula. frn-nii.- Mother and children tike the na remedy. Certainly this is uue of tin- Lett Me omiuundu that Feruna run lists. There are many Uiu.li. m 11 pun of the country w ho use l'eruua, fit tbe oldest to the youagt- -i member d the family. The reason for this is that estirrh a some form or phase afflicts the old people as well as the young. r Union Labor! AT day- light a store, wlthlu a stone's throw of Broadway's most frequented district, waa robbed by five men who held up the proprietor and his rlerka at the points of pistol. In a subsequent pursuit of the robbers a panic was caused among a matinee crowd. William Beckett la one of tbe alle;-e- d robbers. lit accomplices escaped. They are. thought to be membera of a western band, who, the police say, j have come to tht city within the last few days. Five men, some of them w earing black masks, catered the clothing store of Abraham Fox In Seventh avenue, and, covering Fox and hia employes with revolvers, threatened them with death if they resisted. At i their lelstfre tho robbers gathered up all the clothing they could carry and backed out of tha store. Al they re-treated Fux mada a lunge at Beckett ia an attempt to grasp his pistol. Beck-e- it thwarted him, struck him In the face and, with hla companions, dashed j out of tha door. Tha men in their flight dropped most of their plunder. Four of the men mingled with the matinee crowds from tha theatres in th vicinity anJ were lost. Beckett, followed by Fqx, Jumped upon a swiftly passing car. Beckett drew hts revolver and. ualng it as a club, tried to beat Fox into letting go hla hold of the rail. Tho men clinched on the steps and Fox was getting the worst of it when a policeman climbed oa the car and dubbed the rubber into submission. PUTNAMS You will find Clothing, Mats, Shoes, Overdothes, etc, wRh the UNION LABELS ! and at prices lo suit. Cal and examine and y ou wil be satisfied that Putnams is the only place to trade. Putnams Clothing House RAILROAD IN BOLIVIA. New York. Oct. 23. A cable patch from Buenos Ayres says: Argentine capitalists have obtained from the Bolivian government a con-- ' cession for a railway from Santa Cruz, Bolivia, to the Paraguay river, a distance of 250 miles. The company will ' build docks and wharves on the river and ran steamboats direct to Buenos Ayres down the Paraguay and Parana rivers. , The region that will be crossed la of the richest character. It contains abundance of rubber, timber, cotton, coffee, cocua and rice and has enor-- ! mouH pasturage. TbF climate la j' healthy and tbe country is rich In gold, silver, tin. coal and petroleum. The enterprise promises to be one of the biggest. In 8ou:h America. OGDEN LIVERY --AND- BOARDING STABLES I ECHO OE Finest Turnouts in the City BOARDING OF HORSES A SPECIALTY IHE Telephones Bell, fill K. Intf. 715. Blackham & Ernst, Props. at pries. Prompt and First Class Livery h 239 Twenty-FiftONE AND JUST ONE-HAL- Service Ogden, Utah St. F RaaaenaMl BLOCKS FROM UNION DEPOT. FOSTER & HOBSON Miners Refused to Join the Mine Owners PAINTERS Association. Writers Paper Hangers, Decorators, Sign When the great strike in this district was called off about a Aar ago by the Western Federation of Miners, the Mine Owners' association made a rale that all men working In the mines and mills must Jain their association. For time this rule was enforced, but of late ha been allowed to become Inn' Recently the owners of the Alta properties gave notice Lo tbe leasers that they must hire only such men nwere sanctioned by the membership In the Mine Owners' association. The attempt to carry out this order caused he Alta men to strike. 23. Dunging down Chicagi', feleven sun - in a ventilating shaft in the Kirs' Ninonat bank building yesterday. 1! " :ao A. Hachr met a MAGAZINES TO COMBINE. The fall was from the tragic dc.-t'fifteenth tin, ,f the building. New ork. Oct. 2.Y n ,110011110-- , Through n,: lokliy or mislake, th mmt made yesterday end of boy npcneil a leading from a lavarailroads simultaneous!-W:ii thp;nrs to those interested in social ser- tory to the valor shaft. He took 9 of the railroad ba.taiiuns vice wa that, af'er Nov. 1. th two step in the !..iknca. and then, realizSUGAR AND COFFEE. some trains, the prince says, mil he magazines. "hari,.'.s." ir ihi rlry, ing his peri! grasped frantically upborne of the revolutionary lead- and "Tli Commons." of Chicago,' ward and Ca.iirht tne key in thn lock New York. Oct. 23. Sugar Raw ers here declare the present strike is are tq be merged into on-- - publication! of the door. To this he clung desper- quiet: fair refining ?15-ir,- ; centrifugal a a of as test simply prelude to lie strenglt weekly under ih- - till molnssrs sugar 211-lt- ; ately nti-,- (ii'fcired for a brief instant Pi! if: to n complete strike of a'.l the social of "Charities and the Comments." the fstal plurgc. refined quiet; crushed 3.4M; powdered i groups. ih f!r This Soon losing his hold on this frail 4 P: granulated 4 7t w.rk of the ',, new:There was consid, ruble cxoAcn.-rniVwr-iai-rs LaS . h- -v Telhtridc. Colo., .Ocl. 25. Eighty nedy In the world that miners employed nt the Alta mines "P itcltiness of the k'n and mill utrurk last night when noof the hKly. tires were posted requiring all emDoan memberiuy drug atnn-- , 50 ployesIn to tk-Mineout cards of Owners association. the ship n;v otic at Ointment. ,. whlch mon(1J. for !n eu-i- any trouble. hi-s- r nti.Ii-Mk- bt Petersburg. Oct 20.- -A special meeting of the committee of ministers, took plarn !ate till under Witte lo con the presidency of aider the strike situation. M. Manuk- hin. minister of Justtee. who went to! PeVrhof this morning to report to thni Emperor, could not return by train and drove buck In a carriage In a drenching rain to le present at the meeting of the ministers. The Emperor is cut off from railroad rummnr,-icatlowith the rnpital. In broad T " Robbery of a C'oth.'ng Store in Broad Daylight. 23c J am now . would nut be without rerun ii .J house. When I ee tr.y childr-- n are n t Mi lng well and have a l,u hi, Uios. them and glv Icruns, mey hnu t does them gm- -i take ft k New York, Ocl. -. I REINSTATED. - a. i L cannot escape the elusion that Pcruna U a cure-al- l, that la to say, that it, is a remedy for many kind of dLeaae. This la nut true, however. The true explanation la that catarrhal dUeaea are numerous. That catarrh leave no portion of the body untouched. That it simulates in its ravage zaazij different diseases. ' Peruua Is the universally recognised rwmwdr fur catarrh. one-thir- d Odes-- "For two year. 1 baa V'ry 'UVWh' L and backache. At i i.n, hardly able to be about, and weak and worn-ou- t . Tl JTANY people New York, Oct. 25- .- The first move by the Western Turf congress against the American Turf association, preliminary to Ihe expected fight in New Orleaus the coming winter, waa announced at the Jamaica race course yesterday by George G. Bennett of the Turf congress, who ,, dJ Ad-da- stated that the congress had a number of the prominent men who last winter were outlawed by that body for engaging in racing on tue City Park track at New Orleans, cun trolled by tbs American Turf association and racing in opposition to the Fair Ground meeting under the control of the Turf congress. Among the men reinstated are P. H. McCarren, M. 1. Hayman, T, D. Sulmen. In addition to the etrike of the work- livan, W. H. Snyder, James Arthur men of tbe Obukhoff. Putiloff, Nevsky, and Charles Ellison. Alexandroviki and Kolpioo works, nil the empkiyea of the factoriea on the THEY HAVE TWENTY CHILDREN. Schlusselburg Chauasee walked out toOwoissn, Mich., Oct. 25 Strenuous day In sympaLby with the railroad strikers. opponents of race suicide are Mr. and whose twentieth Bloody conflicts have occurred at Mm. Fred Heiac. Ekaterinoslav. child wss born yesterday. All the The price of food Is Increasing. Kent score of youngsters, from Fred, Jr., in the markets Is higher than who is 21, and the oldest, down to the yesterday. Tbe people are becoming last little gtrl, who has Just opened alarmed. her eyes to the world, are healthy and The pnstofflees refuse to accept reg- happy. istered letters, parcels or money for lletse has the contract for coaling transmission abroad. Grand- Trank engines here and i a Tbe radical papers are in open sym- respected German citizen. pathy with the strikers. The Nssha Sbisn has been confiscated. The Flora, liberal, condems tbe strike ns n colossal blunder. "Hitherto,' the paper says, "tbe struggle has been against the bureaucracy. The present movement Injuns tbe whole nation, impoverishing tho people and driving them to excesses to get food. It will play Into tho hands of the reactionaries, ns it will arouse against the strikers everybody in need of bread, whether cab driver or peasant." Hospital trains having on board 600 sick and wounded soldiers from Manchuria are held up near Moscow. Tbe condition of tbe turn is said to be pile table. NAVAL Mrs. J. 1'. R shut. ;:i w, j. Chicago, lil.,wn;e.-- : I am snx.uuit lo Luw b.v what lyruna ha, 0uli, hop- - this wiil reach the ou.an who La, .u(f..ri a,'! New York, Oct. 25. Alfred Decard.-- , who walked jo New York from Ban Own Engineer in Leaving Moscow. y I'OPtrl Pe-run- Italian Walked Across the Continent to Meet Hie Love. Even the Czar is Unable gur-pri- We believe in a GRATEFUL MOTHER HIS GIRL HAD GONE. Anglo-Ruaaia- You don't know that Ogden Brothers have changed hands. This is the 100'. tfce Overt black stones of the shaft I and hsif an hour afterward hi. body was picked up at the bottom, which i. on the fourth fluor. In the course of his fall the bov'a water pipe at the thirbody struck teenth floor, breaking the connection and allowing the water to flood the shaft. This leakage started an instigation and resulted in the discovery of the body. For Pancakes For Muffins OCTOBEE TO THE PUBLIC: Will do well to call on Foster & Hobson wnen need of any painting or papering. In - s . . nit-1- ' - - Publication "'ippor, !i:r:cd ihr,,j q;. ,y 7 t;;n a l All Orders Receive Prompt Attention Phone Bell 673 Y. " Indepcodint 231 277 TwentyFourth Street , |