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Show UORXIXG THE EXAMINER, OGDEN, UTAn, ?rOND"AT MOUNTS?, a hope bo, and on the road to be a Examiner Telephone Number: la the day time call up 2S4X r call at No. 107 4th street. At night, after 7 p. m- - call up Na 15 Standard Building. BURGLARS homeiio. PLANS AT OPERA HOUSE ME FRUSTRATED Woman Poisons Her Husband Enter Store of John A. Bcltzcr Lectured rto Large Audience Last Evening;. and Meet Officers. and Kills Herself. Dout overlook the rani imriy an J dar.ro by Order of Washington. A. O. I'. W. hall. TueaiUy cveuiuB, April 19th. Miss Josephine Thatcher of Logan visited with friend in town yexu-r-ti ay. IN BEITMAN ROOMING HOUSE, Information Given to tho Poliea of tha Proposed Burglary and They Take a Hand, Call up Excelsior Maiket, 171K. for prime cuts, eastern and home dressed meat. ' Mra. Clarence J. Stone Placed Laudanum in the Bear and After One of the largest trains of oranges ever shipped through Ogdon came in yesterday. It consisted of 27 cars of oranges alone. Killing Her Husband Wrote a Latter. Itoht B. Lewis naa hardwood charcoal fur flat Irons, rhone 149. A double tragedy occurred last eveHereafter all east hound fruit rare ning in the Heilman rooming house at on the I'n ion Pacific arc in tie dead at the corner uf Twcn'y-Meinn- d street and Washington avenue, when Mrs. Clar Evanston instead of at, tills place. em-J. Stone gave her husliaud a dose Just see those 17 sweet girls in their of morphine, snd sfter waiting to asdrill Tuesday evening. April 19th, at certain that he waa dea.l, took a dose A. O. U. W. hal!. My, but they are of the deadly drug herself aud ended her own life. lovely. Better coine. Blone aud his wife hare been stopC. C. Baxter leave today for Evan-aton- , ping at the Beitman house, which ia to take charge of the huslnesa of tun by a Mra. Meyers for about a week. the Fruit Crow era Express at that They had orruplej a aida room, but Mrs. Slone had signified to the landplace. lady her Intention of taking a large FOR SALE First rlasa pool table. front room and having n piano moved Into it, that they might be more comCheap. Inquire at 169 25th street. fortable than they had been. The Sabliath was broken early yes- 111 Mrs. Stone had complained of fueling in the early part of yesterday and terday morning by the usual drunk asked Mra. Meyer to send for her whom the and vaga. police picked up. who had gone out. Mr. During the afternoon and evening the husband, came at om-and went out to following were booked: Andy Prignan, Stone Tat Filgprald, I 'at. Driscoll and Chan. get some medicine for his wife and returned in a few minutea, going to the Jlruuc. menBrown, vagrancy; room and remaining there. About 3 dicant; John Gleason and Johu llurk-haii- s, o'clock In the afternoon a drunks. couple of im-went to the Heilman house mid wanted to rent the front room that IXJST A boys wheel, numbered C Mrs. had said she wauled to 6816. Finder please return to 2357 move Stone into. The landlady went to the Adama avenue. mom to ask Mrs. Stone If she still wanted to take the front room, and next Commenring Sunday evening If slie nil the churches in the city will begin Slone did not she would rant It. Mrs. replied that she wanted the the service at 9 o'clock instead of at riaim, and would move Into It stain. At 7:30 o'clock. the time Mra. Meyera was In th room Mr. Slone lay on the Iswlth his face Cards, dancing, drill, good music, and turned away and was as if refreshments, A. O. U. W. hall, Tues- in pain, hut she tnok nostruggling notice of It at day eventng, April 19th; 25c admits to the time. About 9 o'clock In the eve1L ning Mra. Meyera, having noticed that no sounds came from the Slones' room, Loni Bouscher was arrested this went to the door and knocked several 1 looked Offlrer Vance and morning by hut received no respatiHe. She a a vag. He has recently returned times, lieeame alarmed and being afraid to from the ien, where he did six months enter the room, telephoned to the pofor forgery. lice station. Policemun Charles Lane. In answertoa ml light call, went lo the WANTED Girl for general houas Beitman house, and when he received Work. Reference, 2633 Adama A ve. no reply to hia knocks on the door, took the landlady's pasa key and David C. Kceles haa just returned entered the room. The room waa In frum BL Anthony, where he secured a darkness but when the light waa turned on it revealed the bodiee of Mr. aud contract for the Eerie Lumlier Company to supply doors, windows and Mra. Slone lying cm the bed. A hasty frames fur the Idaho State Industrial examination showed that Mrs. Stone waa atlll alive, though her husband had School. been dead for several hours and his FOR SALE Restaurant and short body was cold and at iff. order. Centrally located. Established iniciors Dickson and Powers were business. 205 25th srreet. at ones summoned and arrived a few minutea later and used every possible Dan Shupe, of the Bhupe Wllllama means to save the woman's life, but Candy company, has returned from a without success, and she died at about 9:45.- three week visit to California. In the room were found two letters Buy an incubator and make the poulwritten by Mrs. Stone on seraieh patry bualneaa pay. Skeen 4k Co.. 353 per, one to a sister, and the other waa 24th 8b addressed: "To Whom It May Concern. John Scoweroft A Bona Co. haa just From the latter It would seem that received n carload of Jaitanese peanut a, ahe waa Jealous over the attentions bethe first ahtpped Into the lntermounlaln ing paid by Slone to another girl. She said that no one could separate them country. (meaning Stone and herself) now aa Onion seta are going fast Don't they would go together. From the put off buying too long. Bkeea & Co fact that Stones body waa cold It la evident ahe had waited aeveral hours, 353 21th 8b or from some time between 2 and 3 In David Eeeles Is expected hack from the afternoon, when ahe gave 8tone the dose, until about 7 oclock, before ehe Washington thia morning. He attended a meeting of beet sugar manufac- tnok her own dose. The letter waa turers and railroad officials, held foe ended very abruptly, Indicating that sat down to write after ahe had the purpose of fixing new schedules on she taken the laudanum, and had begun to augar. lose rimaelouaness and had been compelled to stop writing. FOR BALE A new piano In use only How she Induced Stone to take the two months. Will be sold at a bargain. laudanum probably will never lie Call at Examiner o files. known, but It la thought that they might have had some beer and that she Wm. II. Ransom, formerly Ogden put the laudanum In the glaxa aud that circulator for tho Balt Joke Herald, Stone drank It and lost consciousness and now connected with the Balt Lake without any Intimation tlial anything was wrong. Tribune spent Sunday In town. Mrs. Stone waa formerly rat fence Ia All Oregon Short Line passengers for ('suite, a stenographer for a Denver Fort land are now being sent over the judge, aud met Stone In that last Southern Pacific. owing to the washsummer. She followed him here In the outs on tho O. R. A N. In the lliirut fall and they were married, and hHve river district 12 mile west, of llunt-l'urtn- lived together, apparently, very happily All of the bridge in tliKt loever since. Mrs. Slone owned considcality arr endangered ail I the ,icw siccl erable ranch property in Texas and bridge near lliiiiiingion lian been Oklahoma, when her parent live, and washed away. Saiurday evitiing a a hotel In Oklahoma t'lty. She had came in front Huiitiiiguui carrytold her lnndlnly yesterday morning ing the pnascngerK who hud Irlt. here ilia) I binge were not going right and two days previously for Iortlsud, anil would have io he changed: that she they were routed over tile 8. P. If la hud giving Stone a great deal of Ihnught that II. will not la isissililc to money laieiy and that he had hern before Tuesday it by gambling. She had alan told get the roaJ Mra. Meyera that she was of Indian night. e A rnuple of crafty burglars turned a trick loot night and were raptured about five minutea later and are now behind the bars. At about 9 o'clock last night Joe Murphy and William Moore and a confederate effected an entrance to the store of John A. Beltxer, the watch repairer, on Grant avenue, three doors south of the postoftice. No sooner had they effected an entrance than they took a burlap sack and filled it with clock, notions, such s are carried In the store. When the burglars gained the street they rad Sheriff Itailpy, Captain llrown. Detective Pender and Deputy Sheriff Seabring. who were in that neigh borhood looking for them. The two men were taken in charge and tha third one. who waa a fNv steps behiud the others, escaped, hut will probably he arrested today, as they have a good description of him and ail the trains were guarded last night The burglary waa planned by the robliers In a saloon and was overheard and told to the officers, who also planned the capture. Mr. Beltxer pros Informed by the officers that his place of huslnesa was going to be robbed and that they would want a key to hia front door. Altout 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon a couple of men. who were dressed the same as Murphy ami Moore, entered the store and 5 cents worth of writing material and naked where the postofiice was. so they could go there and write a letter. After they had left hia store Mr. Beltxer walked to the postoffice but the men were not there, so he those were the men who were going to rob him, and ha went home. In these day of rriminal operation in Ogden and Weber county the crooka will have to get up early" to beat the police and Sheriff's departments, which have worked together like the wheels of a clock. All the officers and men of both departments have proven them-selvto lie efficient and nlert. When the burglars operations are known to the K)llce almost aa aoou as they plan them, It reminds one of Sherlock pur-ruas- con-elud- ee Holmes. IN IOWA Tennessee pm Gambler Says Sh epherd Did Two Years. J. J. Shepherd's past is becoming thoroughly known to tha officer of this city. Every day aomathlng new materialises In bin case. The latest la the following letter which waa received Sunday afternoon: Memphis, Tenn, April 12, 1904. "Chief of Police, Ogden, Utah: Dear Sir Seeing one of Mr. J. J. Shepherds dodgera of the 6th which he has gall enough to call the Dally News; I aw In hia Daily News where he classes Ogden gamblers as bunco men, while he haa been a bunco man all of sixteen years to my knowledge: you will find also where ha served two years in the Iowa State prison from 1893 to 1(95, from Counril Bluffs, la. He la also "nut s peeler," which he calls throwing tha hulls. He ts minus a finger on oua hand, which he lost In Cape Nome while trying to get in n man's pocket. You can find out more about this man J. J. Shepherd if you can trace his record. Yours resiiectfully, "THE GAMBLER. "Publish this If you wish. The above letter left Memphis, Tenn., on April 15th at 12 in. and reached this city yesterday. The fact that he had one finger shot off in Alaska wan known to the officer The index finger on Shepherd' right hand Is off. Illr Iowa record, aa the writer In the leiii-- mentions. lias not been invest iga led by the police of this city. Other stories of his past life in California have also been unfolded to the police of till city, If Judge Hurt of I swan or some other District Judge ran he brought to the elty tomorrow. M. D. Iswsenger. attorney for Shepherd, will take up the matter of the writ, for hsheas corpus . The petition was filed proceeding. Slone had lived moat of Ills lift In with the cottrL on Thursday afternoju WANTED flood gill for general just prior to the adjournment of court, Ogden and had lieen married previoushousework, 2971 Washington avenue. hus not ly. hi lirst wife clyi.ig in 1901. He had liis paper, the Daily News, lieen issued since his arrest, hut he ha two hi children first hut wife, liy they Laura M. Meighan. ere Cbas. Meighan. living wilh his people, and it is written a groat amount of copy since THE MEIGHAN nid that he would never consent to the his confinement. ABSTRACT COMPANY. second wife taking care of them, . 2108 Wash. Avc. Telephone though It was her to wish to do so. VEIERTHMEN livHis mother. Mrs. Sarah Stone. 1324 at and he avenue, ing Washington ha several brothers. Bernard. Louie to tha Days of snd Friend Stone, all of whom are well They Take One Back loa-in- ricM-rnt- 6G2-Y- 1 c. II. known here. Stone was about 21 years of age. and hia wife about 27. Judge Howell hastily empaneled a Jury, consisting of IV. S. Donaldson. T. S. Matthew and 1. C. Jensen. They viewed the remains snd the impicsi was set for this morning t. in o'i fork The remains were taken in i hal gc by HANSEN WILL To bis new MOVE qiiarpR, lrgton avenue 25. (adjoining I'ndertakcr iatrkin. Commander's lecture Iu the 0iera house and then discovered that a part of the apparatus for ths fixing up of the light had been left in Salt Lake and nothing like It could be secured in had to he Ogden, hence that Riven up aud an impromptu program wax given. All formality was dispensed with and although tlie audience was somewhat diKapiKiiutcd, they took tho situation and gave the party a cordial welcome. Culunel Scott opened the meeting and led the audience in singing "Rock of Ages, after which he introduced Captain Dorothy Graham. who sang "Climbing Upward. the music, of which was composed by Commander Booth-Tuckaud the words were written by his sainted wife, r. Consul Colonel French was then introduced by Colonel Scott, who in turn Introduced the Commander In a short, happy siieech. The Commander said: "The very klud reception accorded me by Ihe Irrigation Cungreaa held here last summer makes it a special pleasure to come hack and address you again, although in a different eaiwrity. On account of the acciricut at Boise and I lie consequent delay, our party went, to Salt Lake this morning where we held a meeting this afternoon. By some oversight, we left some of our paraphernalia which cannot be replaced, and we are compelled to give up the set lecture, and no doubt disappoint you. But we are madder at ourselves than you are with us. so I'll make a little speech and Turkey Point Billy Smith and Mrs. Turkey Point Billy Smith will talk to you. BlUy Smith la ar reformed prlxe fighter and now he is fighting in the liattlea for tha Lord. While in Ban Francisco he had a chance to go back in the ring and make big money but he ia fighting the devil and will knock him out every round.; Billy Smith then gave a short account of hia career as a pugilist and hia conversion. He has fought 108 prise lights aud won nearly all of them, made lots of money but never saved any of It. He married an actress, who was converted tat a Salvation Army meeting and then brought her husband the negt night. The audience waa then favored by another song by Captain Dorothy Graham. entitled Going Down With Gladness. which was also composed snd written by the Commander snd his wife. The Commander announced the song this time and said that Colonel Scott had not half Introduced the singer, as she was the Salvation Army nightingale, her sweet, clear voire soon convincing the hearers that the Commanders was right. After the song, the Commander gave a talk on the work of the Salvation Army aa folgood-uaturod- iy er Booth-Tucke- They say that one day when a lady waa talking to John Wesley abo'jf the defects in his church orgil7lon he remarked that if there ever waa a perfect organisation it would cease when he and the lady became members of it. We do not profess n perfect organization, hut we are doing the beat wa ran, and we are glad that we can do good, go down into sin and uncleanllnesa and raise men up. Our organisation ia growing and we have more barracks snd more officers than ever liefore. We have 260 Institution for taking care of the poor. Last year $3,000,000 were furnished for the needy classes and $800,000 aiient in various charitable enterprise, and this' money was largely given by the parties who have been heliicd. There are four great evils of the day that appear prominently to me. They are: Churohlessnesa, Workleasnesa, Helplessness and Homelessness. Our organisation waa founded In 1865 by William Booth for the working clauses. 90 per rent of whom (lid not attend church. So Booth said. If the mountain will not come to Mahomet, then Mahomet will go to the mountain, and he organise the Salvation Army to take the church to the people. Now, by this agency alone. 250.000 souls are bring saved each year. Pentecost, lisa 1 Iwv-- h BICYCLES Alton! 12 olnrk last, night Officer Vance arre-'u-- d Bnnsclier. an ex- rrrmvict. who v ceiiijy discharged from the Uiah penitentiary. He haa lieeu ill Ogden fur lie past four dav and lias spcui ihe fin he received when relersed from aim pauiii-- i n.--i suit he was given an I ihm-ieia sun of and has been xluriuii-i- y full nil the i:ijc In-- ;;vs been here. - j I i l nv.-ml- We now have forty-nin- e by onttirntei-oHlr- s new pente-ros- l. While at first we were opposed in many phnmi they soon learned that, ae were really a help to good citizenship. In Germany, where we were badly treated ai first, the police finally became our allies and made nut lists of drunkards and degraded men and turnel them over to us to handle. The next, quest tun i what to do with the workless people. There are many difficulties in the way of the solution of this problem hut most men will work If they have a fair and square chance, jet there are some men who won't The work under any circumstances. beat solution we have found la the workhouse. We do not. however, call them workhouse. We give them names so the men will think they are at actual hotels and not cli aril able Institution. Long Ago. "In New York. once. I dresseJ myself up as a hullo and went, out among The Veteran Firemen give a grand classes that I might the better hall and social in the City Hall, Tucs-rix- y these observe ihe condition of the poor. I night. Invitations are out signed went into the cheap lodging houses by TroMdcut Joseph Paine snd Sivri;-Urwhere they have what they call loser Joseph K Wright. A number of kers and . iiupor deckers, and the ihe Veierans from Salt 1 she are cx-- (In fitils an! itraf.s and (he unmentionaTied lo he present. ble i ream res that, inhabit these pi Ik 1 he Veters II Firemen's - and I to get out of tbr afin JK71. when Ogden was was ter a night g in Ittng So 1 went around not much "f a town w m I'hirago have now eighty of Before the advent of the lectin; these hotels. In New were aroused by A ork we have a alarm, the inhabitants building with the clanging of bells and the blowing eleetrle and eold hot heat, light, of whistles. It wc then that the firehatlis, etc., where for 15 cents a water, man was an envied gnardhin of the man can have s lied for the night, or If home. On stale eveuts lie led the pa- he ha hut 10 rents. Jnst aroun.t the rade with his red shirt, and on all other corner is anoiher hotel where he will occasions wa marked for distinguished lie acrnmnioiiatrd. But what shall we honors. d.i for the man who signs himself, D. It is little wonder that ih boys It . j tii. li mean dead broke. To meet at which this craciKPUi y we hit upon the plan of delight in their reunion time tliev resale each other with recolestablishing the industrial lodging lections of the obi hose cart davs house. Hero the worst, and dirtiest They were hoys then they still are tipeclinons of humanity will lie taken buy. (ditiDiivh a mu to a fire imljv iu. given a bath, u closu suit of rlutbes iiiiglu siirfeii every joint. aiil a luiiinT with a few finishing Obi tigdeuiies join with tin- - Ycii-iuj touches will make a new man out of Firemen iu lecsiiing ihe past. him. From a hobo he ia turned into high-soundi- ng v pi fine music for of these Industrial houses and forty-fiv- e stores with honea and wagona collecting old clothes and waste thing to give these men. Then we send this fellow to some employer of labor an J say, Give him a chance. If he does nut suit, send him back, but dont put him adrift on the world again. One poor fellow was sent back seven timea and despaired himself of ever getting a plat's that he could hold, but our Captain cbeere.i him up aud sent him out again. The eighth time he found just the niche he was capable of filling. Theae men in the Industrial houses have turned out fur ua $350,000. We have In Buffalo fifteen converted drunkards, whose combined sentence amounts! to fifty-on- e years in prison and cost the city We have made $49,000 lo pronecute. good rltisens of them and I think Buffalo owes ua that $49,000, and I trust she will pay it soon and we w ill make good ue of it. The most perplexing problem Is with the married man. No one wants him. Employers prefer single men. and it la a hard task to take care of hia family until he la started somewhere. But we have hit upon the plan of placing aa many of them as we can out m farms. We now have farms in California. Colorado and Ohio. In Colorado last year each family made an average of $650 cash for the year. When hi Ogden before at the Irrigation Congress I simke on Colonisation and Irrigation. 1 then advocated that Congress should take bold of this matter and provide homes for those who desired help In getting started. Later I drafted a bill and took it to some of the Congressmen, and especially Interested Senator Hannna, Just liefore hie fatal llllaess. Senator Hoar then took up the bill where he left It and lately introduced It into Congress. The hill provides for a colonization bureau, with a colonization officer. Collection by the bureau of information and the publication of the same and a loan by tha government of $50,000,000 at 3 per cent gold bonds, which shall lie loaned to thorn locating on the farm. While 'I hardly exict that this will he taken up nt this session of Congress, yet after the election ia over, we hope to take it up and push ft through. "Five per rent of our population to the submerged classes, absolutely without mesne or means of helping themselves That means 5,000.000 men, and they are not nil men, either, but women and children. W'e cannot leave them to be destroyed. In the name of humanity, and patriotism, and Christianity, let us rise up and help these people, and Ogden needs to do her share. Colonel French then said a few words regarding tha proposed building for Ogden, thanking the officials and the ci(x for their kindness In granting a building site. He said he hoped the time ia not far distant when Ogden shall have a good Industrial home for these unfortunate classes. On the part of the Western division he pledged the first $100 toward the building. The Commander arose, and as he cFild not now be first, pledged the second $100 on the part of tha national headquarters. Captain Crispin, the local commander of the Army, waa then brought r, forward by Commander and he spoke for him a klpd reception on the part of Ogden people. He needed no Introduction such an audience, aa he Is well known and highly esteemed for hia character and good works. The Commander then presented a resolution to be presented to Congress petitioning for the passage of the bill above referred to and ujion a vlve vote vote it was unanimously carried. After another song, "She Died at Her Post, by Captain Graham, the Commander dismissed the large assemblage with aa earnest prayer. lie-lo- Booth-Tucke- " lows: ten-sto- ry For shove occasion Oreeon Short Line will mak a rate of one and one-fiftfare (ll.sni for the round trip on the certificate plan. Ogdon to Salt Lake and rot urn. With a Complete Line of Kinds. Repairing a Specialty. aud a washout the railroad. Commander Booth -Tucker and his party arrived in Ogden at 7 o'clock yesterday morning. However, they did not snip here hut went through to Salt Imke. where the commander gave bis groat lei lure on "Love and Sorrow iu the afternoon, and the party returned to Ogden, arriving at 7 p. m. Hero they made the usual preparations for the giving of the flood gi.-p- t GRAND LODGE I. O. O. F.. SALT LAKE CITY. APRIL 15 And Sporting; Goods of all h-- After being delayed a day In Boise reason of the ly on nrc-mixe- ash Opera V. Hcu&e block sonthi shout APRIL XFKIL15, 190 One of the Winnemucca Gang; Tells Story in State Prison. Was One of the Most Dastardly Crimea In Nevadas History Part of the Zang Gang of Ogden. One of the murderers of Patrick Welch haa confessed to the state prison authorities of Nevada, of one of tiie wont crimes committed In that state fur a number of years. The following is taken from the Wtnnemucca Silver State. Linderman. one of the four murder era of Patrick Welch, has confessed. He acknowledge the crime was committed liy the aroused, but maintains that the actual killing was done by J. LinP. Sevner and 1'. F. Gorman. derman, alias Williams, made hia confession to the officials of the prison The most dastardly murder of the state is thus to he avenged. The appeal taken by the attorneys for the supreme court, hut with this new evidence of guilt will amount to naught. The accused are T. F. Gorman, Fred Roberta, J. P. Sevner and Frank. Williams. All ore under sentence of death. The story of this crime Is still fresh in the minds of the public In this city, for the four murderers were supposed to be members of the same gang that Monroe. Hickey, Furay and Quinn were. They had been committing numerous depredation along the line of the Southern Pacific company in Nevada and Utah until their arrest for the murder of Welch. Welch, an old man. who had been in the employ of a grading camp in Nevada, was on a west hound ridiug in a box-ca- r freight train, this side of Wlnneromra. The four robbers entered and held him up. and upon bis resistance be was shot and was compelled to get out of the ear and told to leave the train. Welch, in a half djuig condition managed to gain tha top of the car. H started to climb down the ladder of the car of the swiftly moving train. When part way down one of the robbers Jumped on his fingers, which were clasping the Iron rounds of the ladder, and broke them and Welch fell to the ground, almost falling under the wheels, lie laid by the t track ail night, partly in a semi conscious condition. In the night he tried to signal a passing train by burning up n time check and using It na a torch. The next morning he waa taken to Winne-uince- a aud before he died from his wouud. iKisiijrely Identified hi aaas-ins- . The1 Ulal and cuuvletiou the paa- - few yesterdays music waa of a The following selection As the Dew 4 or. T.bernac"n,;V",:l!l!' Chorus "Praise the M.ph-- ,, Choir with Solo ir y PJ Bradford Duet and Chorus "S. . B a:i, shine ...' Misses Bessie Blair' t'.T,;, Hancock and Cbo r ' . e The service in the Presbyterian church were full of imprest yesterday, the choir rendered special music at. each service. In the morning Rev. Carver spoke from the text. "My soul wait thou upon God. for my exiectailon 1 from llim. Rev. Carver said in part: We can hut notice the prominence which the psalmist here give to the soul. It is characteristic not only of him but of all the Biblical writers aa welL It la the spiritual side of life, the aaul life that they ever treat aa being the most real, the most important and the most needful of rare sad thought. Wa today emphasize the other kinds of life to the exclusion of the spiritual, and here we have greatly erred, for the basis of all life la the soul life. We elevate the mental life Into a high place and well we should. Reason should ever be eupreme. We spend the first years of life developing it and too often also with these come years uf progress in mental life. There Is a marked deterioration in spiritual life and in a low character all the mental power and prestige is Inst.. We give prominence to the physical life. Our hodtea are trained with care, and oftimes aa they are being developed a course of unsplriutal life la developed with them which tears down all the strength which the spiritual life builds up. A Ufa devoid of the soul life, the character life, no matter how great It a means of power, no matter how great Its physical perfection, and also no matter how great lta heart and social life. Is a life dismantled, a life ruined, and the greatness uf Its bllttles only makes lta ruin all the greater. The psalmist calls upon hia soul "to wait" on God. This I a busy age and in it we seem to have no time to develop our soul life. It la burry, hurry, all the way. and yet God will have ue tarry with Him if we are to know Him and partake of Ills power. We must give Him the lime that ie Hia due or we will miss all that God means to ua. Ifwehurry through our devotional life, if we slight It altogether, we will be compelled to go without even knowing the highest, richest, most blessed plane of life. Oh. foolish ones who tarry not for God. What shall a man give In exchange for hia soul? What will equal it? In being too busy to develop and enrich our spiritual life and giving all our time to our other naturae that are temporal we are easting away pearls snd acquiring that which tomorrow must lose Its value. The psalmlat speaks of his soul as thou." He gives it personality, and It la the real personality. Back of mind and body lies the soul, the real I. It is ourself, and it will abide when all elsq Is weakness. He says further "wait only upon Him for my expectation ie Him here refers to God. from Him. We do wait for Him In temporal ways for we have to. we watt for His seasons. His health. His time of life fulfillment But do we wait for His spiritual gifts? For whom else should we wait? Hath He not made us? Does He not keep us? Will we not go to Him? Make Him your companion in thought; make Him your help In trouble; let your desire be toward Him. Make this text your personal resolve and maxim this morning. Sig'your soul. My soul wait thou upon God, for Seek my expectation Is from Him. Him; trust Him; give your heart unto llim and you will find that In all the world none are so trustworthy, as tender, as enriching, as He, and no home so bleesed aa the home you give unto Baritone !'- - . 8.do.."jl.ru!,.ll'Mr. Harry HukLv " rrr Chorus Hark, What M.-a- Holy VoUesM Tabernacle Ch-nr- . tk. " Suiii BAPTIST. The Baptist church a the doom last night, the au UwV tenlng with interest to Mr -sermon. Christ's Appeal Men. The rich young md.i. man came to Christ asking the nsl life la a tyini of . t.,,1' "T manhuud who have high a.iu-l;- ' To these Christ appeal. Tn-- v not by way of debasing sins, u u clinsiloa to noble deeds, an l.ji t m the heroic life of the OiriMian if inspiration. They learn to sen fully snd consider it GinI'b ....i.iim!!? to be forced into helpful Hnl ir,i vice. They are greateri be, ,T BH7 serve host. The artist puts Into ha . color none could imitai u nlr, ii(.n . died oilier artiMa examined ip. to find the secret, hut. in n, lni..., there wa nothing new. wp,, .r breast was uncovered there u1(s &JJJ, over hie heart a wound. Ti,.-knew the secret. From his iiran had drawn the inimitable uil.tr gn " life. Young men pul in the u your heart's blood and it mil 1R, i' 1; ' fade. The songs "Jesus. I.nvr of ur and "The Holy City. wer j; lustrated with beautiful si. ruiptii Soul view. Next Sunday Rev. Wright j oan. rlude his services wilh the Ogden B. tist church. The hymns "The Nineir ll and Nine anJ "God He Will. be illustrated. "The Making nl a Life will be the subject of the you-wi- mou. VOICES OF THE SPRING A Sermon by Rev. Brown of the Epi. copal Church. Thou ren Jest the face of the Earth -- Pa civ. 30. I. The first voice we have smwki directly for God for the divine rxistm. and preoenre with ua in His works The fool hath said In hia heart, Then ) no God.' Nature says In her heart and in every color and feature of her fiuh ing face, "Thera la a God, aud He is here! If anyone shall say that all the beauty and abundance uf the natnnl world la no proof to him that ther it a God and that a whole earth awakn-ini- g into new life 1 just as little proof aa the earth lying dead In winter, thu in either case you have only and that his mind cannot riw above phenomena, or look In any m beyond them, I do not think that pw ran reason to much effect wilh inch i man. Nearly all you can aay U Jut this, "My mind Is not constitute! a your miud. 1 must believe that that grand effects have a still graadrr cause; I must believe that a living spring Is a voice from the living God.'' II. The spring has not. only this loud and general voice as to God'i existence and jireaence with us. It offrn something more exact and definite u to Hia attributes and ways. Does it not, for insiance, sing a clear song u the Divine faithfulness? All who know God know that Hit covenant of providence as well u at grace atandeth aura. If the provideHim. ntial covenant were broken, the grariuiu one could not be fulfilled. But there CONGREGATIONAL. ia no sign of any break anywhere. is Hia faithfulness." Ths At the Congregational church special Great In tomorrow's issue.) Continued services by musical waa given at both full choir under the direction of Prof. ORDER YOUR ICE. Le Compe. Services largely attended both morning and evening. Citizens' lea The sermon in the evening was from For the Season from the Company. the Acta I., Timothy 4:10. For to the end we labor I atrive, because we have Company la successor In ths our hope aet on the living God. Rev- IceThis business lo erend Ridings said in part. "In our Farr Bros. Coal and Ire Co. study of the lives of the great men of M. L Jones Coal and Ire Ca our of lives or contemporthe history John Farr Coal and Ice Ca aries. we sometimes discover momenta Mountain Ice Co. seem let to of action or thought that office la in the basement of ths The the light iu upon the hidden mysteries Reed Hotel. Phone, 71 Y. This Cosee the of the whole life, enabling ua to mpany has the largest plant, best wp deep and hidden motions and purposes vice, purest Ice and lowest lirire, snd that give direction and color to the guarrantee their customers k entire existence. Every life, to be truly the entire season. great, must have such a purpose behin-- l throughout it, for events do not happen in any life, but flow from the fundamental aim or motion, which actuate the conscious activity uf the man and in the words written to Timothy. Paul reveals the purpose which lay behind hi life, the secret spring of action that gave signiOne way la to claim eficance to all he did and waa. to make a sale verything Paul dcHght to call the Christian The other way is to tell lira a warfare, a race, a strife, and surb the start from the truth terms were often on his lips and overand either make or k flowed from his pen. He fought the an order on tha merits at good fight, ho endured hardships and rase. If you requlr the privation. Iiersnne he was a man with we sell you Ju glasses a said that been has It great hope. need. Free examwhat you ia like a without great hope "religion ination. The flame." a an altar without religion that made a Paul of Saul of Tarsus, Jm Tm n waa one with great hope, and thereExpert Manfg. Optician acfore the life of Paul was a life of 2412 Wash. Av. complishment., because he labored, and strove In the light of nis hope. And the student of the life of Paul must look for a center of hia life adequate to explain such a result, and this we find H It waa Paul's conIn the "living God. ception of the Living God in the lives and nffairs of men that made him what SL 276 Twenty-Fifthe was; It waa this virion that nerved 15 per cent discount, on I him to nctlon. inspired him for the conJewelry This Week. flict. endowed him with enduring and tndomtnable energy for hia efforts to bring in the Kingdom of light and love into the dark world la which he lived. ," Rushmsr, jSS3! Gasbcrg Photographer J h less TABERNOCLE. DIGNANS The services at the Tabernacle afternoon were full of interest and the addresses were of exceptional character, liyrum Belknap, Bishop Robert McQuarne. and Charles Wright made the addresses. REGULAR DANCE EVERY HONDA The choir, under the direction of AND SATURDAY EVENING Mr. Ballantyne. have been giving very yei-terda- y Dancing Academy The World's Fair St. Louis 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition cup an Indestructible souvenir o ,W world's fair. It has the colored photograph of Napoleon and JeeneB' the" Louisiana purchase In 1803, the colored map of the United J 1903 and Ad bridge at St. Louis on it. Price 20c. We will give one ft every $3.00 purchase in our crockery department this week. WHEELWRIGHT CROCKERY STORE, BROS.. 2476 Wash. Avc |