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Show T t- - UORNLNO THE EXAMINER Published every day in the year hy C& the Standard Publishing WM. GLASMANN, Manager. Delivered by Carrier, Including Sunday Morning Exmsilaer, per month Slagle copies lim-ludin- 56. Subarrlbera will con ter a favor bye Informing thla office of failure totheir The breakfast Kiamlner before CRIMINALS. INDEPENDENCE The arrest of Pearl Skelton at iih having caused the charged miners death of founren at Independence on the morning of June 6ih by exploding dynamite beneath the depot platform while the men were awaiting the train which waa to take them borne from work, indicatea that the auihorities are actively engaged In ferreting oul the criminals and hat e followed the clews obtained at the time to some purpo!. Of course it emy possible that Skelton is not guilty of the crime ami that he esn prove an alibi, and in endeavoring to prove this, he should be accorded such aid as would be given any other accused man. The authorities can not afford to make any mistake in this matter and when any ona is punished for lha atrocious act it must be certain that it is one against whom sufficient creditable aud credible evidence has been brought - to niakt it evident that he committed the ?rime. Any one who la accused of tuch a dastardly crimq Mould have every opportunity to prove an glib! if they can honestly do so aud be given n fair trial for to bo found guilly of such an atrocious act will cover the memory of the criminal with ns obloquy as black ns the shadows of hades, and all that will remain of him la a memory. The authorities cannot afford to make any aiistako. Already some acta have been reported as committed hy the militia and certain members of the Citizens' AUlanco, which In their aefa as hava way art as been committed by any of the Union men outride of actual crime Itsolf. It la 'Just as Aiprchenaiblo for thoao vest, cd In a little brief authority to defy tha law as it la for tho union men to violate II as it reported Ihoy have done. Tu-rtjl- o non-unio- n li high-hande- d WAR ItRFORTR. According lo tho dispatches it seems the little brown men from the Orien- tal empire in the Islands of Ihe Far East have been exaggerating the accounts which they have been sending out in regard to the victories they claim lo have had over the Russians. The great batlla at the taking of Kai Chon has resolved itself into a series of skirmishes during which (ho Russian lues waa leas than the Japanese. Tha Russians retreated following their policy of averling a general engagement at thla season hut the Japanese were unable to follow. Th Japanese, however, celebrated the affair as a great victory and in view of thla it would bo better perhaps for those interested in the war pews to take the reports from Toklo with a grain of allowance. The many reports of Japanese victories were accepted notwithstanding that no cor respondents have been allowed near the sceae of such victories and tho definite accounts have hten given out only torn Bt. Petersburg and Tokio. Mow, as the corresponded Is obtain better treatment In obtaining news thesa reported victories and important engagements are dissolving and fading way. The Japanese probably had a pur pose in thus distorting the news but the course will probably react against them if it Is discovered that this purpose waa in tho hope that foreign liowcrs would intervene and the Japanese would obtain better terms It it was thought they were holding their own or a litUe better In the war. FINANCIAL Real Estate and Chattel Loans. Servle quick, confidential and private. No commission. WESTERN BROKERAGE CO. 223 Bedes Bldg Those 634-x- . ratification and those of thou id have ticca the gut-sthonor at tho banquet board. Irobalily they will anyway get In at the pie counter later on, if there Is any pie counter for the Democrats. The Dcinmrslx should take a lesson in eating crow from Senator Clark ol Montana. Yesterday's dispatches siklo that the Senator says the allver issue has been settled by the unusual production of gold, lluw many remember tha argument of the Hryanltcs that tho pnsiueiiua of gold or sliver had noth' ing to do with the financial question or the circulating medium. "It was tha stamp of the government on the metal that pate the people confidence In It!" they exclaimed, "The inherent value of the metal bad nothing to do with It!" What a change now! But then, there is no use criticising the Democrats too severely. They are only eight years behind the Kcpitbll-ian- s now; they um4 to lie a couple of decades in tha rear! Some of their leaders should have credit given iheni consistent with the character of Ike men, who, having gone astray, have the ability to discover the road which lead back to honest polities; hut the little donkey which they behtrida can not take them far on that road. old-tim- e eta et RATES. SUBSCRIPTION By mail one month Sunday) outside of Ogden ....59 Telephone 5o. MONEY LOANED SALARIED PEOPLE TALK. Thcie western Dcm.-cralare evolving home strange arguments of laic. But then they are furred to i. by tbe Inconsistent platform wMch ihry arc endorsing as the juoduit of the Bt. Ixjiis convention and also bcrmiat or the fact that the ivnicrti'i- - party if today are presenting diumetri. ally opposite views to those for wlii h they fought during the. past two campaigns. Especially have their views changed on the financial question and now they are practically endorsing the platform on whlrh the go!d Democrats stood when to be a gold Democrat was thought in Utah to he the depth of des gradation. And by the way how much liken row. ing that little coterie of gold Democrats must feel in Balt Jake. There were six votes w believe cast for Palmer and Bur kner In that city and the men who cast three votes ahould be ferreted out and hoisted into the leadership of the Jiartj. Every Democrat, who made a Spaeth I that campaign or made any poi!U-a- l utterance, owes each of that DEMOCRATS AND POLYGAMY. The Democratic leaders la Utah recognized at once the vulnerability of the plank In the Democratic national platform. They knew that It presented to the Republicans of Ulah an opportunity to show the bitter anlmita cherished by moat of tha leaders of their party against the people of Utah. They were aware that the plauk waa Inserted for the purpose of seeping alive the agitation against this slate and it, citizens, an agitation which la renewed through tha efforts of Dubois and kindred spirits every time they wish political preferment and think they can obtain the anpport of the Mormon people by threatening them with another campaign against tlie church and (he people. There la not a prominent Democrat In Utah but what, ad mils the fact that the plank la inserted for the purpose of catching the vote of the radical agitators of tha eaat who are nnt rognlxant of the, real conditions here and that it is directed esof this pecially against tha people state, the omission of the word Utah, heralded as a compromise move, being simply done for Ihe purpose of deluding tho people of thla stale. Knowing all this, and that Ihe Republicans would explain It tfflhe padple of this stats to the disadvantage of the Iiemorrala. the speakers at the Democratic ratification meeting In Balt lake City Rsl unlay evening took measures to forestall the Republicans and they made an effort lo explain away the stigma (hat has been cast, on the elate and the burden that has been laid oil anti-polyga- JULY 12, 1901. UTAH, TUESDAY MOBXISO, OGDEN, EXAMINER, of polygamy anl,he serration of Ihe church and state" will have no effect in Utah, lie ss)s thst those questions Have been settled in Uish. Why, then, I did all but. one of the Ulah delegation ' favor, either openly or sub io Et. rt.sa. the Dubois plank? Why was it that Judge King and other prominent I ie nine rats or Sail Lake kept the wires hot in an effort to have the plank eliminated from the platform? Judge King says, "The plank is mean-inglras applied to any stats; R shouts over our heads. It has no application to us. Why. then, should Judge King and B. If. Roherts apoiogixe for lie presence in the platform? If their platiorm builders and the convention thsi endorsed thst platform do not mean what they say In one plank, do they mean what they say In any oi the others? B. H. Roberts says that the plank was put In by friends of Dubois liecauM of senatorial "courtesy." Will be not within a month he trying to tell the people of this state that the Democrat ie platform waa formulated for the. benefit of the people and ibat it shows no favors to any class or man? The Democrats of Utah are indejd in an emlwrrasslng position. Tho animus that inspired the plank Ir well known. Senator Dubois believes that the Mormon people disapprove of him as senator from Idaho and ho believes they have worked for hli defeat. In order to force them Into line and at (he same time keep alive the agitation in the east, he ha.1 this plank inserted. It is a kind of bluff upon the people of Idaho ana Utah. Coming from Duhoia, it ia that the plauk is only directed at tha voters of two stales and at one church organization. The quibbling of Roberta and King cannot rontravert those facts. They may deplore the matter aa much as they wish, but it remains nevertheless true that tha constant agitation against the Mormon church and the people of (he states of Idaho and Utah has received the endorsement of the national Democratic convention and will bo mule a part of Ihe Democratic campaign in tha east as nt But "Bam" will he heard from, and the dispatches to (sub. Bo it naturally those fellows who think there la not a can follows that what the Examiner political fight left in Brother King may its morn- be sadly disappointed. Balt Lake Triao in the way of the Standard fa ing able to accomplish in forestalling the evening papers. As there la no other newspaper In Ogden cxrept Ihe Standard and Examiner, we are forced to, not exactly quarrel with ourselves on this proposition, but to ask that rqtixl credit bo given. While the Examiner is entitled to commendation for it a notable "acoop. the Rtandltrd should have credit for publishing tbs Ekaminer. EDITORIAL COMMENT j bune. REMINISCENCE. A In view of the norainatiffn at Bt Louis, it is rather n striking coincl-aenthat just twenty years ago today, Grover Cleveland waa nominated for president by tha Democracy assembled of at Chicago. After that number years, Mr. Cleveland still barely esbeing a candidate. Deseret caped re News. BTRANGE SILENCE. The platform ia strangely silent on the question whether Spotted Fever in Montana la attributable to tha wood o tick or to the polka dot waist. Butte Miner. peek-a-bo- Thera la more prospect of the Republicans carrying Missouri than there is of their losing New York. HIGHLY APPRECIATED. The speech of Hon. William mayor of Ogden, at the TaberB. 11. Roberta seems remarkably fond nacle at the Fourth of July celebration, of refriring lo his brief congressional was very highly appreciated by the career aa a "ieaaon taught by experi- people. It waa a splendid oration fillence. ed with noble thoughts and patriotism. We regret that wa are unable to pubparty lish it at thia time. Box Eider ReWhat a fix the Democratic would be in if its leaders followed tho port. Japanese plan of commuting suicide NOW AND THEN. when they make mistakes. Glaa-man- n, A little while ago Mr. Bryan had it "How far away are the stars?' oaks a magazine writer. We do not know all his own way. censuring Judge beexactly, but they are not ao far away Parker for hia alienee. Now ha la as a Democratic victory in the nation. ing told things that he aald last year, and indeed almost every year- since he Major Bam King begins to realise had hia mouth open, and the reprisal that ail bis effort against the Dubois Is not welcome. Dayton Journal. plank waa needless, since listening to GOOD DIE YOUNG. Judge Wm. King's ratification speech Saturday night at Sail Lake. The convention hall at 8L Louis is The St. Louis convention being over, decorated with the portraits of no livthe people of thla country can grateful- ing Democrats. The only good Democrat nowadays aeema to be tha dead ly resign them selves to a peaceful and one. Toledo Blade. connldention of tha uninterrupted - Russo-Japanes- war. e WILL LAST. Spain and Argentina should receive close attention from our railway conA Socialist insinuatingly asks how tractors and electrical worke, wko long thla republic will lait if tha prescounent administration continues in power. ought to send experts Jo these tries. Just what hia idea ia we can't say, but we do know that after every tha Socialist haa gone to long Bi. Fa ill and Minneapolis are hia happy huntlargest frog markets in the world. The ing ground, w here he cant kick and total receipts for the last year from rail against a free governatent, (he the frogcatchers of the state exceeded Republic will live and prosper, and 500,000 dozen, requiring the slaughter the Socialist won't be missed at all of no leas than 5.000.000 frogs. either. Park City Record. Democrats declare they want to clean out tho Augean stables. The appear- WHY DO FLEEING ance of the men selected for the task it The Herald and Tribune of Balt Lake causes a natural suspicion that CRIMINALS lock wisdom the of be would lo which over part still quarreling City are fork. the up of one published tlie announcement TURN SOUTHWARD Parker's nomination first. As a matUncle Joe" Cannon declares that ter of fact neither one published tho 'We Move On" la tha Republican A Mysterious Influence Again Seen In We Want On" la about the newa until the Morning Examiner was motto. tho Casa of tho Italian Bandits upon which tha In Ulster County. received in Balt lake, and then the Balt the only proposition wrangling factions of Democracy can lake papers published extra editions unite. In other words, as a political Kingston, July 6. The capture of containing ihe news, but none of their changeling from Ogden has said, "We the four Italian brigands who robbed are RoosevelUsin." agin' subscribers in Ogden received copies Paymaster Longyear of $2,800 on June 22 aa he waa on Ma way to the quarof these editions, so Ihe Ogden subThe Balt Lake llurald claims that scribers were obliged to get the Ex- the Tribune la from three lo four ries at Jockey Hill, Ulster county, of the Hudson River Blueotone Comaminer In order to read the newa The days behind in Its news, We are bepany, again attracted attention to that ia true. This a fact baa noticed in unnumbered cases In quarrel of the Herald and Tribune Is a ginning to believe near Tribune the publishes morning virtusl admission that neither one was the bottom of the seventh column on which criminals have tried to escape enough to prepare for the the seventh page a dispatch announchad reception and publication of the most ing that Rtahop Potter's wife important news that could come from been robbed of 5n.000 worth of jewthe The Standard published the convention, altlusigh the Tribune els. same dispatch on the front page of ita on Itself publishing, st length, Issue of last Friday evening and the plumes dry speeches which had been ant up Examiner had the same dispatch tha days in advance and of which nearly next morning. every patter In the country published THE PRESS of ao contamination when you give so mu h as would be of interest to Iheir PITH subscribers. ua your meat orders, you are aura TROUBLES OF THE KINGS. Is of getting good, wholesome meat, The Morning Examinor-whi- ch not an ounce of doubtful "part and parent of ourselves-- ' ia also The knowing otics in I ho Democratic ever enters our provision felicitating itself on the great, "scoop" party are saying quietly that "Brother and the commendable enterprise with Bam King" will he at the end of hia pomarket. It la your Interest as wall aa ours to remember thia. Inveswhich it was accomplished. The litical rope when he returns from Rt. which is Issued from the same IzjuIs. It la naid that it. waa only by tigate our 5 per cent rebate a good deal of persuasion on the part office as fhe Standard states that. It of the heavy weights" from thla has the moat complete tolegraphlu ser- county, that ho wa allowed to go; but 2455 Waahtnaton Its. OGDEN. vice of any paper In tho slate. That ia it waa thought heat to agree, that. It ha mean the him of might, standone "shelving" Inio with exception. The his ard has Just as good a one. In fact for unmet hing else ho might haveanxon, Rydalrh especially being eye E. WEATHERBY. the aamn wire Ihe direct one from ious to have him laid on the shelf, ao New York to Ban Francisco supplies the roast woulJ be made clear for him. ABOUT THAT BOOOP. The from the officers of the law. Italians were captured while they ware fleeing to tha southward, aud the influquestion is again asked; What ence leads fleeing criminals always to turn toward the south? In the case here referred to the four Italians first went due north and hid the horses and buggies of the men they had robbed. Then they doubled and fled through the woods due south. Had they gone north they would have had landmark to guide fiwst and in two hours would have reached tha Hudson river. They thus could have been out of danger of capture practically before tha alarm was given. North of where the robbery was eommlttad rises the great horn of Mount Marlon practically from s level plain, and at the foot of this mountain run tha State road to Saugerties. Had the highwaymen taken thia route to escape they need only have kept Mount Marion la sight and hy 8 o'clock in tho evening they could hava caught a West Shore train In Saugerties and got away. They would also have passed through a region which through tha whole excitement of the pursuit was uncovered by tha Sheriff's pout.. Instead of taking this route they, with a fatuity that aeema to follow criminals, turned toward the south, drawn, ax it were, by some mysterious power. They plunged into what seemed to them to be tba impenetrable forests and swamps, but after travelling in a semicircle about four miles came out into the smiling Valley of the Esopus at Old Hurley. They realised that they were lost Terror of capture overcame them and they began to burry through tha conn-tr- y at ns great speed as their legs could carry them. The countryside through which they were traveling had not yat been alarmed and people remarked the strange sight of two Italians hurrying along the country roads as if pursued by wolves. Later in the day two more Italians followed in the track of the first two, and by that time the alarm had been gfven and hundreds of Sheriff's deputies were guarding every country road and outlet In the country south of Kingston. The first two Italians, describing a wide arc of a circle, kept bending toward the couth until, on tha afternoon of June 23, they were 'captured in Marbletown. In the meantime as wall as their tracks could be followed they bad made two complete loops, coming back over the Hurley mountain! and swampa to West Hurley; then again turning to the south and being seen at Blnnewater and being Anally captured at Marbletown. The second pair of bandits seam to have described several smaller loops, but ever kept toward tha south each loop carrying them further in that direction. When they were captured at Browns station on the Ulster and Delaware railroad they had travelled round and round In small loops in tha woods. They realized that they were lost and that their capture was only a questloq of time, and when they struck the railroad where they were caught they gave sighs of relief and threw themselves on the station platform. Covered with the guns of the deputies they fell sound asleep and slept until the train came which brought them into Kingston. When the alarm waa first given on the morning of the robbery, before any -- oc SURE. OF i.. SUIT SALE flesh-foo- d aye-ter- at lack In this stale, why ahould they apolnglxe for it at the ratification meeting before any Republican had said a word against It? R. LI. Robert states that tho statement In the plank for exiernif nation 8, 1 0, 1 2, 1 3.50 $1 5 Suits at $7.95 A. c With Corresponding Cut in Every Line Throughout Store yyyyAeeaanAaaAnny G. o A, House You Don't Caro Where Goods Aro Bought. THE SELLING PRICE IS WHAT YOU WANT. Table Linens Towels els. 10c, each. Mercerized German good patterns. 85c. 80c. large Damask. ?.; Bleached, heavy all linen k, 2 yards wide, 00c jdi 1. Heavy red and grcn nnrel i Sl. Me cloths. 2x2 yards. 17 each Da-ma- r unbleached Turkish tow Heavy IV.rachcd ail linen table Damask. 45c, 50c, fiuc, 6oC, 75c, 85c, 12 1 LV. 15c, 17 c, 20c. 25c, Bleached Turkish towels, extra and heavy, Sis- - each. Glass toweling in small checks, linen. 10c, 12 1 2c, 15e. Ladies Muslin Underwear Corset Covers etrlex, high, square and V shaped necks. J.sce and ssv broidery trimmed in (Inc bleach muslins and cambrics. Twenty-fiv- Iriccs: Crashes Undershirts e 15c. 25c, b"r. 75c and to 25c. 4m-- . 45c, $1 ,'f each. 17 inch heavy unbleached, nil linen mash, si vard. lc all Jjnrn Night Gowns Large variety of styles, 70a to so. Sea them. linen bleached r.'ic to Drawer a $t on. range from S.rc to $3.00. Daintily trimmed, and new arrivals. Mercerized Suitings for shirratus'p and suits, 15c yard. shirtwaist Dotted Swisses Good Embroidered quality l;.e. Swiss reduced t 27c. The Importance of Finding Nam on the Bclrsge. I. L Superior qualities. 10x12 the This is both the name and the nature of the lining most in this season. It certainly haa d W JM V4U0 VWF I fl C333335Sm9 Settles the Nerves Your ready favorite beverage will be improved by addin; c, Special 15c, 17 8 Makes everything: good. At Bars and Fountains. c F. J. KIESCL 25c and S5c per yard. Q1 CO. Distributors. New Mercerized Wash shirtwaist belts, nest, solid buckle, nickel or gilt, entirely new CLARK & SONS CO. b tv fZa B. Hiliiard- G - C. Rflbcrj. I CENTRAL HOTEL AND BAR re - V vh- - P WEB !T Ol 1 the light weight, tha luster and the "cry of taffeta, with the softness of that silk In its latest development. demanded by the reigning vogue, and la therefore the nearest to allk of any fabric ever produced. Like all articles of especial merit. Free de Bole haa its tmitatora. It Is important, therefore, for purchasers to secure tha correct fab-riwhich has all the merit claimed for it, and not a spurious article (hit will certainly fall to give the satisfaction promised. The genuine Pres de Bote haa the name on the selvage. Be sure that you bee it and get the correct fabric; accept no substitutes. YOURS FOR MORE BUSINESS noble little band of six an apology. Tj,e Democrats should have gotten up I a we fr.i down In Zion instead of a 2345 Washington Avenue India Llnons Pres De Soie mAnaaAAAAAaAAAAAAa Putnam Clothing Stands for IK Inch heavy ail crash. 12r and 15e. DOC ARE William li. King had net recognized that this plank la especially ffipen to IS mrh tintdrsrhijl. crash, 12 12c tnrd. none-nixe- d YOU Utah Democracy hy the at St. IjMiiIh. If B. LI. Roberta and Jndge Ur bleached table Dsma.-x-, inch's, special 25c yard. dogs had been secured to track th. bandits, it seemed as if by a mon Impulse every deputy ,7" Sheriffs posse rushed toward south. Thia aecsxa to hare been s--T intuitively and the Sheriff and men have no explanation to mafe ! to why they did It. except to tirth it seeraed to be the right dlrertiox a which to search for the highwaym The whole northern part (,r (7 country waa left unguarded and not alarmed until late in the day the robbery occurred, and there ish, doubt that the robbers would reached a place of safety had ha, tho gone north Instead of south the northern towns we're notified the robbery the people- - seemed to v, entirely indifferaent about raichiM the bandits. Those who did join i, the search turned toward the south In the history of escaped crimii.,1, in Ulster county their line of flM. has almost always been toward th, south. London, the murderer of Wa er Kelland, fled toward the soy,. Two years ago some trusties took French leave of the Napanoch Reft matory. They were tracked to it, south and caught Alf Carnick, who came from Glor amville, escaped from the officers Kingston and voluntarily went som Instead of north, thoygh hia interest lay in fleeing toward hia old home k the north. Years ago Casey, tba press office robber, in fleeing from tb officers at Kingston, went south iau Pennsylvania, where he waa captum Robert Batting, who killed a min a New Palatx, fled south la the Walltat Valley. Willia, the murderer, spent forty years In priaou, killed i woman in Kerhonkaon and went tea miles south to Ellenvllle and gsvi himself up, though an associate Ju. lice of tha County Court lived within a quarter of a mile of hia home. Among the petty criminals in lilsitr county there are hundreds of cases is which, after the commission of crime, they have run for tha south Immediately. Hardly a case la knovs where they have turned to Mn northward. It might be urged that the WallVIll and Readout valleys, running due north and south In Ulster county, offer avenues of escape to criminals, hot this Is hardly a tenable argument is the case of strangers like the Italisnc now In Jail In Kingston. Besides thst the valleys of tha Wallkill river snl that of Readout Creek are dense) populated, each being covered hy i railroad, with trains constantly mo ing each way nearly every hour ol the day. In the opinion of many people, then la some psychical reason why a flea ing criminal turn Immediately la hk flight to the south. Were it not trm that criminals at point south of Nos York city also turn toward tho sow) when trying to escape from Jnstieg the city of New York might be as the great magnet that dnvi them toward the south Trom psliti north of New York. The esses of innumerable erimiuii fleeing to Canada aeema to contradict the theory that criminals Intutltlvelr flee toward the eouth, but it win bt found that the class of criminals who flee to Canada are, aa a rule men of education, who have plotted their crime and the means of escape in advance and that they are also maa sl positive temperaments, whose fights havq been deliberate. Under New MinajemenL i ' 'Phone 135- - i iJ a 1' t irn . i wed ittt ci gtoi V i W) 1101 COI I ofl at tod ihi HI. tin rei Wi bn Its be it lib nrh iff Cc a to in si to eo 1 r Vf I th Pi h d si |