OCR Text |
Show the Examiner Telephone Number: 1b tha day time rail up !MX or call at No. 07 24ih street. . call np No. sight, after 7 p. 16 Standard Building. it IS DiCHEY ASSAULT BY utah. Monday Monyreo, ogpe-n- , uonxnro r.xAinstAi, mabcp AT C0NGRECAT1QN4L METB09JSTUII SERVICESAT HEBE t,iooi. A well filled house last night ened to the excellent program dered at the sacred concert given by the choir of the First Methodist church. As usual, the program was of a high order, especially o were the selections of Blanche Webster, Mr. Rush-meHarry Hanson, Mrs. Hess and listren- BASEBALL TEAM r, ial! up Exi cLinr jirinia mix, rarii'ia ILl'St. Discourses by VarLillie Hancock is Attacked George Wcsscr Selected As Rumor of a Change to be Eloquent Msikrf. I'lK. tor ious Clergymen. and home dteHl Made in an Industry. When Going Home. Captain and Manager. Mr. (Smith. wnifii up in i t If and 1'hfnui, E. If yon buy a $2u mi it a Thr Toggery ,on Monday or Tuesday you will r. ei ivc !ii Ulue Trading tStauii . -- l;0 an licfori-- nl Her Crica for Halp Brought George Hill to Her Aaaiatanco No clut to Perpetrator. l.nl.t1 Iriif. Thomas has gone to gal n.iy vin'al eultuie under Eiii-- 10 Kt-U- . Concert at Ihin'i furart the ftie Fir.--t Slethodlrt rhiirrh Sunday i vetting. Violin and voxel wilua, anhrais free. and i hniii-ex- . them she program in church Come early. Lot icis. Sai-rr- jve Ilrdman does not believe In on him,. lie tried II yesterday ami row has a limJy damaged fme. Hi wheel went down inn a hole in the etreet in front liavitia on Tweniy-tifi- h of the eiiy had. lint Ieie tonlinued Ins flight uiiiii alopped hy bis none Mowing the axphklKini. m fin Monday and Tuesday of next week The Topuery will givo TIIIIKK THAI UNCI STAMPS loti raxh pitrrhMxei-- j liixUaii of one foe ea"h lie purehu.se. auinhiT of flpden ladies departed A for California peatenlay to enjoy the They eiphta. were Mrs. George l, An-pel- Mrs. Ken Kurd, Mrs. Kr'il Romi mid Al Us May llrewer. They will la- guna six weeks. 8wer Iaut evening about 9:13 o'etork fiend in the disguise of a maa attempted a dastardly dead upon an unprotected young lady, Tillin Hancock waa assaulted ly an unknown man ou avenue hetween Twenty-fift- h streets while she was and Twenty-sixt- h home fiuin ono of the on her wa Ward meet Inga. The man must hava tiehiod a tree or some Imrn ronrreU-other olijcet. V Miss Hamotk did not see him until he waa almost upon her. Ho then grabbed her and a a- - itffle but finally Mlsa Hancock was thrown to tho ground and ihe man i lien clutched her throat to keep her from screaming, at the same time attempting to aecompIlKh hia dastardly her with death put'iMise. lie tlirrali-ueif she screamed again and then abked her if she had any money. Although Misa ihuroik. atatea that she thought sure she would be killed and thought of her mother, yet ahe screamed again the second time adn this lime hT outcry waa heard. George Hill, who worka for the Ogden Furniture and (.'arH-- t company, heard her on cry as he was entering hia bonne asFowb-- avenue and rushed to her sistance. When within 100 feel the man, who waa then sitting on Misa Ham-nck'Isidy. jumped up and ran away, going south and eaai. Mr. Hlll'n first attention waa directed to Misa Hancoi k, whom he recognised, and the man got away. The police and the sheriff'a office were notified and have been on a hunt for the perpetrator of the deed ever since, hut hail not made any arreats up to going to press. Captain Brown got as good a description of. Uie man aa Miss Hancock could give.. She says man, dark that hs waa a niodlum-slue- d complexloned and worn a dark suit of It waa a clothes and a moustache. dark place where he assaulted her, ao site could not discern hia feature very well, (tome Greek! who live In a house m ar there were at first auapected and taken there to are Misa Hancock If ahe could identify any of them, but nhe then remembered that thin fellow npoke good Engllah and probably was an American. Kite says that when she screamed the second lime the man forced some dirt Into her mouth and she bit hia fingers, hut ahe doe not think he will lie marked tnnen by Ihe biting. Her throat showa the Imprint of hia fingrra and waa swollen considerable from the effects of the choking. Misa Hancock la Ogden's most talented ranlralto singnr. (the sings In the Tabernacle choir and la a impulse young lady with a large circle of frlemla. At present she la employed aa stenographer at Heowcroft & Sons' Co. at the hrud of the Ogden Sewer Pipe and flay company, arrived from Kansas Cu) it is rumored that tli'1 object of his visit Ik to consider a preposition to move the plant to Sslf Like City, but inasmuch as there h1- ic lay lied near Htai place and iGi l.ako is not SV The Wesaler baseball team held a meeting yesterday afternno which was well attended and ru'huidaxiic. Those present pledged themselves 10 work for a good amateur baseball team in thia city fur ihe coming season. considerable number Tim city has of gntid players and several last outsider will hsatn In the city in ihe event ihsl a team can he brought to- Ja'-ksn- At the Churrh of the Good Shepherd last evening Rev. Alfred Brown .S. Dickey, . yccd-rday- p retched a sermon on tlie following text: Honor thy father and thy mother, that thy days may be long In the land which the Lord, thy God. giveth thee. Exodus xx., 12. The first moral relationship man owe to hia fellows la the primal duty of the child to the parent. fit. Taul, In writing to a Gentile church fifteen hundred years after the giving of the law upon Mt. Sinai, says in hia Epistle to the Gallatian that his I the first commandment with a promise. The second commandment contains a threat, the third a warning, the fourth has a word about remembering our ancient and sacred tradition ot rest, but this fifth commandment, aa it looks, la not Godward. but manward In its outline of moral duties, haa a definite and distinct promise attached fo It: That thy day may be long in the land which the Lord, thy Cod, glv-et- b thee.' What, then, do these words mean? Is thia promise solely for the chosen nation of the Jew, or la It a general principle which is herein laid down for the family of mankind at large? The Bible say a that the land of Palestine had been given by the Lord uod to other race before It waa given to the Jewish rate, and that these rare did not continue In it; they committed evil which made them a curse to the land and a rune to themselves. The Israelites were told that if they committed the like evils they should perish from off the good land to which they were going. Foremost among those evils thia commandment places the loss of honor for the father and mother. ' If you lose that," it says, "your rase will be like that of the ;ieo-p- le who will be driven out from before you. If you keep the honor of the father and mother your days will be The prophet aslong In that land. sures ua that the sentence was fulfilled strictly to the people of Israel. I think also it has been fulfilled strictly to every nation of the Old World; that God gave Persians. Greek and Roman their land as He gave the Jew their land; that he haa given Britons. Saxons, Americans, the lands in which they dwell, and that every race has hoiden or holds of Him tinder and the tenure of honoring father mothers; the days of no race haa been long in the land when the honor of fathers and mothers has ceased in that race; that the days of no race will be long In any land when the honor of fat ner and mother shall cease in that that Ogthe railroad distributive den Ik, the piuxMvib a!1. the lay works will remain here. gether. Mr. Hickey jg nt thr load of 'he bigselecteu W was easier George again tile and sewer pipe works in the gest I cam The as raptain and manager. States. In fart, he represents I'nited will be called out for practice as suou the that of late l.a embraced all trust aa the weather will liermit and the the large plants of the kind. chanrea are that another state league will lie formed. The "Silver Hpera ramrany It ha also been rumored that some passed throughSlipper early yesterday Ogden m hand lend will a of the older fans morning in a special train, coming the game and strive to form a league fiorn Sail l.ake and gomK west on the with EvatiHton. Hock Spring and a Southern Pacific. Salt Lake team. d .d WHEN CUT-OF- AERAID OE THE F r s Sunday morning, the nth. thr Br. Mr. Halley of Sail lake will d liver a aermou at the First Methodist rhiirrh. . In tlm There will lie kihuIaI miisli-rvenlng the rholr. under the leadership of Mrs. K. X. Hess, will give a aaered concert. Tlieae eoneerts never fail to rrnwd I he house. Seals free. Come early. Services begin at 7:30 p. ni. The praise serviee held ill the Presdebyterian churi h last evening Is serving of special mention as helms one Those taking of exceptional merit. and part are worthy of specialaremention to he ron-grthe Presbyterian people ilia ted on having Mr. Ltindey, Miss Mitchell and Mrs. Kagrn among their number. a! The for Blue Trading Stamp offer holds good only on Monday and Tuesday of next week, nt The Tog1 3 gery. For sale, a good family milch raw. Call at 234S Jackson avenue. ' Rev. lllair will return to this rlty after an extended visit In the east on tlm Saturday before Faster. He delivered a sermon yesterday at the Grace church of Harrisburg, la. Rev. R. R. or will occupy the pulpit (llM-of the FI rat Metbodiat church next Sunday. 3 fur 1 on cash purchases at The Toggery on Monilay and Tuesday (Blue Trading Stamps.) Monday and Tuesday we will give 3 Blue Traillug Stamps for 1 with every cash purchase. Remember It'a only two days you get 3 for L E. A. Olsen, Grocer. . Lewis has hardwood for flat irons. Phone 149. Roht. B. Wanted, a reliable girl at roe rhar-ela- In Business OLD RESIDENT avenue. Richardson Passed Away This Morning:. Watch for the Earner sale the Hickey and Monroa Threatened to Fix Him for Turning otatea Evidence. Borrowed Engineers Front Coast Division Will Bo Returned Growth deatToFan Stephen Pals There. Will Be Set Back tu . States Witness May Join His Young Engineers Twenty-fiv- e l 2239 Mon- Con- gregational ladies are preparing for Saturday. April 2. It will be a means of helping you with your spring sewStephen Richardson, an old and reing. spected resident, died at hia home at 1133 Twenty-firstreet thin morning The funeral services over the re- at 2:20 o'clock. Mr. Richardson wnn taken sh'k.noniethtug over a week ago mains of Charles Keller were held afternoon at the family with pneumonia, wlih later complicaForty veieran firemen at- tions of typhoid fever. For two days tended In a body, besides a large con- his life hung In the balance and this course of friends. There were many morning he quietly panned away. He was born In Newllamitshire In the beautiful floral trlhuies. evidencing the eAier-t in which the deceaw-t- l was held year 1836 and leaves a wife and (our his relatives and frienda. children, two of whom are living In Ogden. E. T. Richardson of the firm of Richardson Sc Grant, and K. C. SANDY BOTTOM. who haa hem working with John Crittenden Webb's master-flec- his father tn the roniract buxines. Sandy Bottom.' replete with Funeral arrangements will he announced later. interest, mirth ami pathos, will lie at the Grand opera house on no lovor of llu- - drama Marelt 1Uh,-uiiBLUE TRAJHNC STAMPS should fa if to attend the perrorntanre. so But few traveling cotnpunies carry The public will notice hy thr half mui h and tdalmrute scenery. No expense has been spared In the efforts to page advertisements in the last two make this performance in every way issue of this w per the change of One brent lies the location of Ihe Ogden Blue Trading artistically reali-ti- e. atmosphere of the simple farm life, Stamp company from their former and one's heart ihrolis with the suf- headquarters In ilurt Bros.' store. fer in cs of plain rauntry folks who en- Burt liras.' have ton ihe managers gage the attention with their homely here fur some time. The blur stamp ways and simple nature. The people business hits now grown to such that the managers find it of this town and virinity will have the opisirtunity next Thursday, necojiry lo oiien an exclusive slora hlsrch 10th. to laugh away their cares. room at No. 2343 IVaxiiinftton avenue. in The Ilmitrd spae No one will regret the time sis-n- t in Burt Webb's beautiful Hrus.' store for the proper display of witnessing John of "Sandy Bottom. premiums hits been outgrown . Burl Bros.' growing Imxiness ram pel lea FOB OLD TIME'S SAKE. them to use the ia e men pied by the trading stamp department. There will Counof The F.rsndinavlan be an opening and reception at the ty will hold an iniiriiHtinuai re union new stamp company store on Monar.d hill; ill Southwell's lia'I ai Five day and Tuesday. Man h 7 and R. IVinls on Mouduy evening, March 7th, The completion of the Cutoff will result In lirenty-flv- e young engineers being set back to firemen on thia division of the Southern Pacific unless me trainmen now running between Reno and Wadsworth are kept on the Sacramento division to the west of Reno, although an increase In business would reduce the number to lie lowered in rank. Soon the engineers borrowed from Ihe coast division to help out during Ihe Cutoff work will be ordered ha k to Uielr old runa out of Sacramento. The outlook la not entirely discouraging for the young engineers. They ran look forward to aa annual increase of about 20 per rentaln the fruit t raffle an Increase which 'means the services of many engineers. There is also good proapecta of a large growth In the regular business. Freight will be sent over the central route that could not be taken care of in the itst. The Cutoff will make ronaldetahle difference In running of train. Passenger trains will make the run from Ogden to Umbria Junction in two and one-hal- f to three hour. The schedule time at present la five hour for all ewcept tne limited. Freight will rover the distance In six to seven hours. They now require twelve to (oui.ecn hours. There will be not only an economy in time, but freight engines that pull 1.100 to 1.200 tons will be loaded down with 1.RO0 to 2.000 Iona Eight helper crews between Ogden and Montello will he done away with. A. E. AVynberg and William Gay, the two men who were arrested Saturday evening on. the charge of being implicated In the theft of a camera, are now mixed up in the i heft and pawnbut just to ing of two overcoats. It say that William Gay. so far as known, had nothing to do with the theft ot any of the goods. All he la charged with 1 the disposal of thrm for Wyn-lier- g and it may be that he did not know that they were stolen. The evidence Is pretty clear against Wynlierg, however, that he took the stuff, although be deulca it. Net he staled yesterday that If the charge waa petit larceny he would plead guilty. He was told not to do so unices he was guilty and waa informed that all (hat was wanted of him was to tell the truth and that no promises would be made him whatever if he He haa not yet confessed except to Kay that he would plead guilty 1 to the leaser charge. ' Wynberg want to keep out of the penitentiary tor two reaming. First, for the reason that all persona want to keep out. so as to hare their liberty, and, second, because Hickey and Monroe are there. These are the men convicted on Wynberg's testimony for the Zang saloon hold-uThey have made threat that they would fix Wynlierg aa soon aa they got Hence Wynberg's fear of a cham-r- . the penitentiary. p. 8. K P. Woman His Companion. Also a Foundry to Supply Car Wheels. Money Lavishly Spent and a Journey to Colorado Suddenly Enda in Salt Lake. e On il Thousand Men to bo Employed When Shops Are Completed. Tie xro searching for former In mate of Elrrtrir Al She left lY.lcn aiurriay after Icy. a one armed noon with Frank . work mu it I r cu tin Tlu couple were Imuml fur mand Junction. Col or.ulo, but sKippc.i over ill Salt Lake TW j wine rooms of r.mt city and who . rpiug rami- - t'.:i- two wore sadly in need ot a guM'.im l.amLThcy managed tu reached ib' St. Klino ronming house where sbvp w.i to them tu i ludlllirliim. their nnrnii-Twenty niai,' af1ir rn:rin(; some cxcii-- c to in ise and depart and i ii Keen xiuv she Iiiik tint by her j qunndom The sudden sc par-- i part a: ion was doubly painful to Mr. Ilnyne police "Ltt-cilc- ," a rut-off- Southern rarlfic cars will he done, The build iug I to be 230 feet by 122 fret and wrlll he erected to the cast of the new machine whop, llow simiii ground will be broken la not definitely fixed, but ail the plans have been dc- elded upon. When built and In active use. tin-- , j i J - j re-fo- ",' .... .Y ligion. First he used a an cxau,h,; , The program waa rendered as fo- showed the many T J tempi llow: to circumvent aud how h.- i i Selected obtained Voluntary '''l libeny from M Mrs. Rushmer. how the Excell Damascus impact aowhich h n.a Wake the (Song ruad woud. rfubv Choir. him his liberty, win, it , !r giving Pra er. , . , , . . tainrd only through great p,;. , Rev. I R. Bailey. showed how ,irt, ,,M . f' speaker Selected France and America Violin Solo . paid N, Blanche Webster. their libeny with life, Somew here . , 8 Mr. Fred Hess, Mrs. Laura Helsner, hardship. In short, he took up the foi n.- 0 i,hl Jay Smith, Harry Hanson. erty in general and deniousria-r,- : 1.j Be Telling of His Salvation Budley no true liberty ran be obtain-- d i i.,,!. Choir. ror great price. He tou.nd , ,a Offertory and Free Will Offering.. some problems of ij', ,,v Jerome reach personal "Thy Will Be Done of everyone If they i Mra. Fred X. Hess. Jay Smith. to pay for it. Brackett Tho Vesper Prayer "Liberty is instructive in i Harry Hanen. life except tn a few person ti. animal "Lead Mo Gently Home" tu be slaves." said he. Mrs. Fred N. Hess. Mra. Laura Helsner Jay Smith, Harry Hansen. . Home rendered lard. 3 lta. "The Choir lloy'a Message r 60c; 10 lbs.. 1.15. lb., MaSmith. Jay rket, 2311 Washington avenue "Are Maria from Cavalleria Rua- 171K. ticana Mascagni Fralse Wait el h for Thee ....Excell , n-r ment he . a u'!i iiiiion and some l2"ii. lui-'in- - - 1 , . N-r- rr att'-ndsne- lo.-- the fraternal Instinct afterwards, and the lack of the fraternal implies the lack of the marital, the paternal, the social and the patriotic. It la the great moral blight or defect of the nature, showing itself early In the development of the nature, and prophesying the sure moral evil which Is to come afterwards: The child I father of the man." This la the secret of the moral turpitude in the character, of Tito as described in George Eliot's greatest study, Romola. All the bareness and hollowness and emptiness of the nature ran he traced back to the beautiful Greek's unconcern for hia stolen parent. a captive slave, while the son played lightly and rareleiusly and with perfect unconcern upon the flute. False in one, false In all; false at the start, false throughout the journey, A 'to every seed its own body. moral defect In the nature Is the greatest blight the nature ran have. Where there is no moral life there can be no permanent national or political life, and so the days of a people cannot be long In the land which is given them hy Gndr not for their own sclflHh ends, lint for the welfare of the entire race of man. The story hooks and children's histories are right sod true when they trace the greatness and round ness of Washington's character hack to tne days nr his boyhood. When he brought his chcKt hsik from the vessel lying at anchor in the Potomac, because It grieved his moiher to have him go away on a voyage so young, and to the hackneyed and yet eternally true moral quality which would not let him lie to his father. And thia Is what honoring our parents does not necesaar-i- l yfor them, hut for ns. It starts the moral nature in the right direction by cultivating the filial Instinct and tne filial duty. A second great thought on this sub-jis ihe great truth that, the home life is. after all. the true unit of the na Inn. The hearth Is the ronr stone Xo nation can of ilic last which has not a moral life, and a home life, and has not a sense of honor eml reverence for those who are In lir.'.hority and art hy law. And thia vhv. ax a fs't. i;Ik divine explain le of moral cnniinuani-is put lr:o he promise of ibis fifth lie declares lo- was niblu-d- . but the to the police a''c liic!:u--money wa uppiotiriated wiihoul pro- tesi. Frank Daytn- ii .aid (o lx- a married - a man. lie .fe and four children in Grand but and thorofor-Tl-liMle frympaiby is extended to him over his loss j mic-t- l While in on Saturday U- -t he i:i:.tM-' J c.r s - oMicaiinn ranks all ether to cu- - te!jo-s- . In classic the re::! of Vireils d a ip.f-:',cd chei-for fT'u' j , p i;-- ; Thai won J'1 in one of th" ganiniug j tn t - 0, tron Tvo.v. while -i J c;F hiuisi . net-!f r arquii-i-y. A'.ani.; r.d the : I' Id MlC.l'-- r wife, he did t foir--- i to bear r "roiVr'i.v-""'.o 'Hi the re.!::. 1c father. st he nl.i M i : net of-- ' '.readf-.- i the fn'min- of the Am I.!.-- . One. - .. red Alley I',,- - ever witnessed in sqi fp ov.--or more on of the . (! her the Rio the beautiful rity of Washington was Lueil ihe sjiectaile of the man who had in youth been a mule driver on a iiiual. on the day of hi Inauguration m ihe I'li i. - Slate, a on the concl'iid-of iliat I sj.iit Lain.iter paryuls iive. cnemouy, to Li his moiher. aid v tl-- e r-'- l!-.- - i nt-.- In-giif-- on: fra . n- r r: , - au-Fu- I l-,- , .r,-.-- ti Choir. Autombile Praise God From Whom Ail Blessings Flow . . . Congregation and the Choir The Rev. L. R. Bailey of Salt Lake, preached at the morning service. PARCEL DELIVERY CO. WM. R. MILLER, Office, 366 AI Twenty-fift- Telephone PRESBYTERIAN The praise service of the Woman's Missionary society of the Presbyterian church was most successful. Not only was the musiral program one of classic merit, but it was given with great credit to those taking part. The following numbers were given: Duet "Forever Soprano 8oIo, With the Lord Homer N. Bartlett Misa Mitchell Mrs. Eagan. Soprano Solo "There 1 a Green Gounod Hill Far Away Misa Mitchell. Violin Offertory "A ve Maria Manager. Street. h ... . No. 3a. ARMOR MEAT MARKET UNDER NEWMANAGEMENT. Our Meats are the beat and equal treatment Is accorded all customers Our Specialties: HOME RENDERED b b. LARD cans for . cant for .35c 60s HOME CURED BACON 12 a Pound. 334.Twonty-fift- Telephono h Street 16-- Schubert Mf. Linsley. Soprano. Alto Duet The Lord Is Smart My Shepherd Misa Mitchell, Mrs. Eagan. In the ratine of hia addreaa Rev. Carver aaid in part; We should be most active in missionary work, because our race is one that owe so much to the cause of mission. No matter from what nations we may have come, we are the rhildren of those to whom the foreign missionary has some time borne the message of Christ. No more inspiring page In history than that which tells of the conversion of the early Pagan The peoples to the cause of Christ. British Isles, Germany, Scandinavia, these are lands that have once been lathe scenes of Just such bor and just such persecution for Chriat on behalf of missionaries from ies today are showing. We owe our civilization to those who brought the gospel to our early people and he who knows the early history of the Anglo-Saxo- n or Celtic or Gaelic races knows full well the debt we owe to other races. As we have received, so let ua self-denyi- give. cl iii-- to be in the Southern I'acific yard at this point. A foundry is required and ihe opinion prevails that one capable of supplying car whe"-- : 1V-4for the liarriman roads ecutnrinj; lo re There will lie prizes awarded to the FOSTERS BAM UNIONIZED will be established wfihin eight eldest, eimplo and most, popular lady At present there tw not h months. an-gentleman. Waiiziht prlyr for . New Local Organization of Musicians railroad foundry on the liarriman sysail. Walt'nt eoniet hetw-retem west of Omahaor rast of SacraSwedish and Banish. Guo.! weplans. Formed Last Night mento, although the Soti'hern Fm-itieomie rmier,, An; angers epakei. hand was uniouizrq Foster's Military shops tn Ogibjn put in 4w pair of will gl.o lie jn Ford's irnnth. Six years rii orchestra will furnish C.n- - m'isie. A- last night hr ihn organization of local wheels each Xn. 47 of the American Labor L'nion record wra.--- not more than 3'i dmission 30 rents per couple, extra pairs iT lady of Musician, 23 rents, (special car after dance. having received a charter wheel in a month. from the national body of that order. The new machine shops are not fury were duly equipped, the greater part of officer GALLACHERS TRUNK FACTORY. The following elected: President. C. M. llristatid; having failed t arrive. When vice president, J. P. Payne; recording installed and In operation 33t m-- :t wiil 322 25th Street. G. S. and correxHinding secretary, lie required io manipulate nia- flnam ial secretary anil treasurrhine. The full force In lie mpuv-- d Mannfartuir-rof Trunks and Bag er. K. I. Lundy; sergf ant ai i.ims. GooiK Itipairliig at reason Fred Aeailili-iuau- ; guide, liuud t'i,ii-picprlci n. on short r.nlice. Call ami W. guard. Will Nwy; trus-.m.M" us and we run save von 23 pc W. Boyle, Karin Fay tic. nml t'haiiiWilliams. WAS Married Man Makes a Lewd Kicb-arrisn- n. 0AVID I. GALLACHER. I CLAIMS SOBBED UF SOU yes-teul- Wi-he- race. We must then conserve the filial spirit. because this Is the beginning of all our moral relationships. The lack of the filial instinct implies, the lack of d. st CtuL a - tf Viw Sermons at Methodist Presbyteriai Baptist, Episcopal and Other Houses of Worship, Pipe nd Works Going to SM Lake. Talk of Ogden Talk of Forming Stats Leagut of Amateurs With Evanston and Rotk Springs Included of Sa:t i.yf.r the pulpit at ih church last night amt it.,, large audience. He p,,ke Ill; ject, "Price of Liberty.1' He cited several exampl. of libeny. in politic, u. - If you want your turple and family ifiisr and Mti Sir. l.rij f the iifih ward. Rev. I. L, Goshen CKLRCH We should be interested In minions of what they are doing for others. An able writer, W. E. Curia, has given us hia Impression of the work done among the Egyptians by the missionaries there. Japan la telling us dally what minions have done there as we read of schools and institution there founded to advance their race by Christian Japanese. Central Africa is being made brighter aa the seed sown by Livingston and McKay Is bearing fruit. No one who is conversant with the various fields of mission labor can fall to be moat eager In thia cause. We should be Interested in missions because of the influence upon our life. A broadening and deepened spirit in home work ever follows an Interest in the cause of others. That one moat active In the course of missions is most active in the course of the home church. Christ claims the world. Let us hasten by oijr labors, prayers an-- ! means to make it all his own. because springy.' Your apirito rise; the temperature rises; everyth ing rises but our prices. Calls for things All Wide Awake the merit AT BAPTIST CHURCH Baptist church was filled last by a good audience whlrh listo a sermon on "God's Solicihy Rev. O. C. Wright. Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If any man hear my voire and oprn the door I will come in to him and will enp with him and he with me. Through all time God ha sought out the wandering child. Jacob. overtaken hy night away' from home and away from God, dreamed of angels and saw heaven opened and heard God's voir? calling to him. In the story of the lot sheep we read of the ninety and nine that were left safely in the fold and of the good shepherd going out into the wilderness until he found the lost one. Supremely glorious is the thought of God's seeking the one sinner, though heaven may be filled with angel hosts. And with what pz Genre iloea he knock at the door! His head wet with the dewi'ot the morning and eyelids heavy with weariness, he stands and with infinite patience seeks entrance into the life. But when Ihe door is opened there Oowre a hnt of rich benedictions int.- the life. Pat don and the shattering of a thousand inters that bound while noble aspirations, holy thoughts and joy unspeakable floods the soul. Tonight we are to sec upon canvass the song vfci'fc sets forth beautifully this thoucht of Christ's seeking the lost. It was written in 1S6R, hut remained unknown until Mr. Ira D. Banker found it in a newspaper. One night at a meeting in whiib Dwight Yoo-lI preaihe-- the poem aerated appropriate, though until that time no music had been wrlttn for it Bui going to his ill tie organ Mr. Sankey improvised the music that now in known throughout the world and which has made the words Immortal Mr. Fkeen sang luamifully tlie song, d with the splenwhich was did ku rcoiuic'ju views. The night tened tude'' know full well the of th clothing wo sell- - Good dresser To Be Dressed Right Means that you should buy the new, stylish, down to tho present creations. We Make Claim To bo looks the one house In Ogden that after your wants and take the greatest pride In fixing you up In the most approved manner. Our Suits . Are simply the apex of artist' skill and are made from the Great Poole's Patterns.. The concave shoulder, the high mug fitting collar in our coats are the wonder of our customers and Our pride. Our Top Coats Have attracted more tailor made'' buyers this springy weather than ws anticipated.. The first shipment is entirely gone and the second going rapidly.. You will hava to see these coats to apprec'ato their beauty. Prices on Saits and Top Coats, $15.03 to 339.C0. r y illir-trate- SPECIAL NOTICE la called to the fact that on Monday and Tuesday we will give 3 for 1 Blue Trading Stamps on cash purchases- |