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Show DAILY Utahna Theater YVETTE LIVELY TIMES RAILROAD Company ill Fill AI Zinna Famous ANSWERS GO TO CHURCH 6 1 and Wodnosday H. Rogers and James Rev. Elmer in The resolution of the Salt Lake City council lust week calling upon Rev. Elmer I. Goshen to make good his charges of graft against city officials has been readily accepted by the pastor of the First Congregational church. He was on hand at the council meeti i i ONE WE DELIVER BAG OF GRAIN Don't a readily aa wo dolivor a ton. Imitate if your ardors arc small. CHAS. F. GROUT in Ssods, Hay, Grain, Stock Salt. and phur SS2 24th St Dsalsr Sul- Standard and Rag. 44,345 By Direct 2:05 1-- alro of 29 In 2:15, 1 41 m :2t and 70 In 1:25. His dam la mars Francesca, by sha having produced I DiSable Frances 2:17 tho Great brood Almont rect 2:11 1-- 2, Eminent 2:27 1-- 2:22, 4, Guyelaca 2:2l,8telnmont and Earl- - Medium, airs of May Kanawha Star 2:14 4 etc. I Direct will 2:14 Martin Tom make the season of 1902 at the Fair Grounds in Ogden, Utah. Bird 2:12 1-- 4, 4. 1-- TERMS: 025.00 for tho season, Get sure return. in- extended pedigree F. W. HORTON, Keeper. Or A. G. FELL, Owner, Ogden, . Utah. CITCHELL BROTHERS for UonsBMts COPINGS, HEADSTONES, ETC See your home people. Dont pay big commissions to agents. Ysrd opposite City Cemetery. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY. MANAGEMENT NEW UNDER i i DIRECT 2:12i Buck-waite-r, ed TURF 326 i i EXCHANGE Street. Twenty-fift- h IL PATTISON, Prop. Choicest Wines, Liquors, Etc. Look at Our New Cigar Stand. Best of Import- ed, Key West and Domestic Cigars " California and Eaatam races. Di et wiro far all aporting events. Allen Transfer Co. Albern Allen, Mgr. st "YINDICATED Edler. TOO What ths Tribune Bays The Tribune saya: The vote cast, according to Republiexcans, exceeded the most, sanguine pectations, every polling place sending in large returns. The primaries were brightened ln several districts by spirited fights. In which the Insurgents wera the aggressors. Both In the city and county districts the contests were especially jHvely, one or two being 412 Util StrttL Ogden Milling Elevator Company Smoot-crow- Cow-bu- - m, reduced that and Dr. SILK SALE iS STILL ON and the lowest prices to be found in Ogden are at city council Gentlemen: I liave before me your resolution of April 27, 1908, ask- Ing that I present to you any facta that I may poxsess that tend to how tho unfaithfulness of any city official or officials. You have expressed your desire to deal faithfully and earnestly with ouch facts and I shall therefore present them to you with tho corroborating evidence that la la my possession. Inasmuch aa my initial statement, to which you refer In your resolution of April 27, waa made before a public gathering, I have concluded that it ia but fair that I make my additional rtatementa before the aame body. This I will do in the auditorium of tho First church on Sunday Congregational morning. May 10, at 11 o'clock. "If your body ao desire and will so advise me I will have aeate reserved for your accommodation. "ELMER I. GOSIIEN." (Signed) On motion of Councilman T. R. Black it waa voted to attend services at Mr. Goshen's church in a body next Sunday morning. URT 1 Oft H99999994494l4-H994l994i99999999949449999- STILL BOLDER While Mira L. E. McAdams, a young woman occupying room No. 89 at the Mctropoie hotel In Salt Lake City, was kneeling in devotions st St Mary's church evening, early Monday r, who had stola en In with tho worshippers and purse-snatche- knelt as if in prayer, grabbed her purse, containing 84 in money and a check for 17.50, from tho seat by her side and made his escape undetected. Tho purse-snatch- er occupied a seat l-Mira McAdams and attracted her attention by his restlessness When she knelt this particular time she observed that he did not kneel, but paid llttln attention to the circumstance. Before she snore he got up and left tho church, making his exit so clumsily that he drew her attention and that of several others to him. Her devotions finished, Miss McAdams reached for her purse, but found It gone. STRIKE RESULTS 9 9 LOYAL LITTLE PACER VICTIM OF PNEUMONIA Polly Garr Is dead. This beautiful little animal, known to every man, woman and child in Ogden practically; this little pacer that brought and won laurels for Ogden on every race track In the country ia no more. She fell a victim to pneumonia growing out of influenza. She died at the home of her owner, Dr. E. M. Conroy, in this city yesterday morning. It la needless to aay that the death of Polly Garr waa a sad blow to Dr. Conroy's family. The little mare waa uch a pet In the family, they had watched her career with auch deep interest, and withal her disposition was such that the strongest bonds of affection jezlstcd between her and each Dr. Conroy member of the family. would jicwr place a price on the mare she was not for sale and that waa all there waa to It Polly Garr spent the winter In California In the care of Riley Kent of Logan, her trainer. She returned home Friday, April 24, and waa ill on her Inter-mounta- in arrival. She received the best of care and medical treatment, and for a time it was thought ahe would recover. She died yesterday at the age of thirteen. In California at a matinee meet The Polly paced a mile In 2:15 last half of this mile wa J paced ln 1-- 4. 1:04 2, and ahe showed signs of doing far better work than she hod ever done before. ' Polly waa a great favorite among horsemen throughout Utah. She had the reputation of being true to the core and never lie.. any demand made upon her. She waa bred by Hen Garr here in Ogden. She was sired by Wasatch. When she waa five eara old and wholly undeveloped she wae purchased by Dr. Conroy and remained bla sole property to tho end. She leaves a colt, ninteen months old, aired by Star Pointed, from which great things are anticipated. Polly She Garr'a official time was 2:19 waa expected 0 lower this to 2:10 thia year. - 2. NEW JERSEY FOR TAFT ed in ths special work, and he has already received a reply from President TRENTON, N. J, May 5. Nearly Kingsbury of the University who has announced hia Intention of taking the 1,000 delegates assembled here today in matter up. Replies from, the heads of the New Jersey Bute eRpubllcan conthe other institutions are atm expected. vention, which will elect four delegatee at large and ratify the election of twenty district delegates to the ChiBIG IRRIGATION SCHEME. cago convention. Governor Fort will doubtless be chosen aa one of the delegates at large, .other candidates for The Braver Irrigation Land ft Pow- places among the big four being forer company asks the state land board mer governor Murphy, Senator Briggs, (o withdraw 42,009 acres of state land, Senator Kean, John W. Griggs and David Baird. A movement to Instruct under the Carey act, for the establishfor Taft baa been started ment of a reservoir between Mlnefs-vlll- e the delegates event the delegation from ln and any and Milford and the proposition New Jersey will doubtless favor hie will be brought up for action at the candidacy. meeting of the board today. The company has for some time been considHe Ought te Know. ering the construction of a reservoir and now makes formal application to At one of the b'g reception given the state board. ort New Just preby the fleet at V The proposed reservoir will Irrigate vious to its deii.-r- e for the Pacific a large tract of arid land. son of a noted geolothe gist waa among those present" As the youngster reached Admiral Evans, GDI. CUTLER WILL URGE at the head of the receiving line, the who has a warm spot in hia UTAH'S NEEDS IN WASHINGTON admiral, heart for small boys, picked the little fellow up, perched him on his shoulder, and remarked: "Now, little lad, what Governor John C. Cutler is home have you got to aay for yourself?" Not a whit abashed by hie exalted from an Inspection of the Strawberry valley irrigation project which is aimed position or the distinguished company around him, the small boy looted the to reclaim 941,009 acres of land in commander straight ln the face and Utah county. The reservoir, the gover- demanded, Why does a wabblt wiggle nor says, will cover 1,000 acres, the hia nose?" tunnel through the mountains will be Aa nature study la not aa yet re19,000 feet long and the cost will be quired for the navy, the admiral waa 12,000,000; 1,600 feet otuie tunnel work ln beyond hia depth. He parried tho la done; the canal and power plant in question by asking another Why do Spanish Fork canyon will be completed you ask me, little man?" October 1. Governor Cutler will leave Because," answered the youthful for Washington later in the week to dentist, "because I think you look as if you ought to know." urge the Importance of the work. t -- Aa a result of the refusal of the various blacksmith and carriage, wagon and automobile repairing firms of Balt Lake City to meet the demand of their employes, who are members of tho Carriage. Wagon and Automobile Workers' union, for higher wages, tho majority of them, aggregating about eighty men, laid down their tools and walked out shortly after I o'clock Monday morning. A strike of this character has been expected for nearly a month past and moat of the employers were prepared to meet the situation with but little Inconvenience. The trouble began about three weeks at which time a. proposed agreement to be signed by the employers waa sent to the firms by Secretary John Copp of the C W. ft A. union, which Increased the wages of the men 50 cents a day. The agreement also waa declared to be in force after May 4, 1109. The employers refused to sign the agreement, thereby causing Mom day morning's walk-oago, ut tea-ar- Rivordalo Flour Prices will be Greatly a PROBES BANK George A. Sheets of Salt Lake City, has been vindicated too. The former chief was appointed a "special" detective by Chief Tom D. Pitt and the A woman who keeps her house council confirmed bis appointment last clean from top to bottom wants evening. to know that the flour oho This means 2125 a month for Sheets. buys li clean. . Detectives draw 2100, but they have Cleanliness is only another not the distinction of being "special," warm. in1 of Baying Stanford, A. 8. they are regular. In district four, H. TanN. When Chief Pitts nomination went defeated by was surgent, four of the council. Chairman 8 t before narrow margin ner, by the easof the police committee moved that it votes. Mr. Stanford would have Stannot be confirmed and that Sheets should had ily beaten hia opponent with hold hia office "at the pleasure of the lot hia cast Gentile, a Made by ley Price, The motion waa second by Tanner. In many precincts the polls council. and Reedall Ferry and the vote taken the with & were packed that without any attempt at speechmaking. and it waa a foregone conclusion members voted for "American" All the completely be would the Insurgents and also confirmation, Sheets routed In these districts. from the Third ward. sucDemocrat a were especially .The Insurgents O.- H. For the past two months, in fact cessful In district eight, electing to the since Sheets acquittal, there has ever Hewlett and C. A. Erickson OGDEN CANTON SANITARIUM an effort on the part of the Jr., been U. Eldredge, J. state convention. members of the council to Ju"American" on the and I. B. Ball were elected Inthe former chief. It was for a Job find the Fifteenth the dicial ticket In to give him a special decided leaves depot 10:11 a. m, surgents, led by Parley V. Christensen, finally be analogous to chief to bathe supposed office, to carry WJng Sundays, 9:16 a. m. Last made a heroic effort and the matter waa preroves Sanitarium 10:15 defeated by the Smoot Of detectives, p. m. Cara llot but were and carried. last sented evening Sr. Buckle. "T 0 minutes. bunch, led by George tattH ing last night with a letter staling be would tell facts next Sunday invited the council to be present. Goslu-n'letter reads: "Mayor and members of the GRAND JURY . OGDEN the law Makers. j Inter-Mounta- I. Goshen Turns Tables on Salt Lake City i In Many handsome tailored suits were sold Saturday. It is not hard to be suited where the stock is kept right up to the latest point of style. Tailoring which is perfect workmanship. Materials only to be found here, and in many instances one suit of a style. For this week the COUNCIL WILE Stillman answers in the governbig Get Insurgent" Republicans ment merger suit which was recently filed in the clerk's office of the United Worst of It In Selection of State District court in Salt Lake city Convention Delegates. against E. H. Harriiuan and hia associated and the various railroads which they control. The answers of Otto and Jacob Schlff are still duo. The answers of Mr. Rogers and Mr. Stillman were prepared by Shearman A Sterling. They are almost identical, leadership. The regulars seem to have often a whole paragraph of one answer got much the best of the contest, many being used in the other, Both men asked to be dismissed on of the leading lnaurger.ts' (wing de- feated and shut out from the state ,he ground that they never were The says: j dents of Utah, and that for this reason Fall by ths Wayside thy ape not wllh,n th Jurisdiction of the United States Dluu.t court of In one of the hottest primary elec- tlons ever held in Salt Lake county, j d that they WPre ever mem- thezo-cuUe- d Insurgent. were routed or party whoM alm of any cU ' with a capital R last night when dele- In th , tQ tninllporUtiolI B to the Republican ln Thelr gtatta purpow) in " ? stock has been for the pure TH1 buying re-Salt Lake Thursday and Saturday, 1 gain which might be derived from the spectively. same as an investment. ... the directorate Regarding of the various roads, and the fact that well attended, the keen rivalry between the dliectora of several roads are pften the two factious bringing out larg-- ! the same, Mr. Rogers suggests In his crowda answer that the dim tore of tho variHere are some Insurgents whose ous railroads are evidently satisfacnames do not appear in the list dele to the stockholders, else the directory N. H. Love, George gates: Stephen tors would be removed, for more stock enner X. Smith, A. B. Ir- is held Lawrence, by common stockholders than is vine, Stephen A. Stanford, C. 8. Harriman ontrolled by the George Wilson, Don C. Rob- Interests. bins, John Q. Critchlow. The charge that the transactions of Others who have made a fight against the Oregon Short Line in Southern the party organisation were left out Pacific stock ia admitted, and the enand in some districts where the light tire transaction ia explained, but alwas the thickest, soma of ths Insurways in the "no Intention to form a gents were given berths on the Judicial merger" style. Aa a result of theae delegation but were prevented from go- dealings, the Oregon Short IJne now ing to the state convention. controls 1,242,000 shares of a total Steve Love Beaten Badly 2,739,498 shares of stock in the SouthOut ln Forest Dale, in district 99, ern Pacific. where Stephen H. Love lives, the Republicans overwhelmed him. There was a large turnout and early in the primary Mr. Love decided that he didn't want to go to either convention after all. He was outvote., two to one. Daniel Harrington won out In hia district, being placed on both delegations. In district 72, Draper, D. O. Rideout was elected at a warm primary at which there was a record at- -, The federal grand Jury in Salt Lake tendance. In the Forty-firdistrict, George City resumed ita investigation MonLawrence was outclassed. day afternoon of the alleged theft of One of the hottest fights was in the 810(,3o6 from the vaulte of the Utah Fourth district between Steve StanNational bank on January 4. The Jury ford and N. H. Tanner. Stanford was did not meet during the morning, but finally beaten and Tanner was sent to to make up for last time, held a proboth conventions. In the Fifteenth. Parley P. Christen- tracted afternoon session. Instead of sen was defeated by a dose vote. beginning at 2 oclock, the Jury began What the Herald Saya at 1 o'clock and continued until about The struggle at the primaries began 5:20. at 9 o'clock last night, and was soon But four witnessea were examined.-Thesover. There were many surprises Parwere W. J. Bateman, W. D. ley P. Christensen, who has congres- Fitzgerald, George Sheets and Frank sional aspirations, and who is said to I. Sefrit. Mr. Bateman baa already be cecrttly In sympathy with the ''inbefore the Jury during ita in ' In Fif- appeared the waa defeated surgents," vestigation of the bank robbery. He la teenth district for delegate to the state one of the expert accountants emThis litUe Waterloo for ployed at the beginning of the investiconvention. Mr. Christensen, It waa whispered, was gation. Mr. Bateman was called bedue to the activities in the Fifteenth fore the Jury three times during the of the friends of Congressman Joseph afternoon, being excused, first, that the Howell. Mr. Christensen, in his dejury might hear what Mr. Fltsgerald feat, had the satisfaction of knowing had to aay and later what Mr. Sheets that, ha had lost by only three votes. had to say. Mr. Fltsgerald la conStrewn upon the field of battle with nected with the Jordan bank of BingMr. Christensen were other men of ham Junction. Hia father la a direcequal prominence in the Republican tor In the Utah National bank. Mr tanks, who had been looked upon as Sheets waa formerly chief of police. stalwart figures among the insur- Hia examination lasted about ten mingents." Among these were John Q. utes. Critchlow, 8. H. Love, George N. LawThe examihatlon of Mr. Sefrit, genrence, George Wllaon, A. B. Irvine and eral manager of The Tribune, began Steve Stanford. at. 4 o'clock. The Jury adjourned at There waa a somewhat longer list of 5:29. Mr. Sefrit waa before the Jury "insurgent leaders who were able to again today. fight their way to victory. In this list were John M. Hayes, D. O. Rideout, James Devine, O. H. Hewlett, John James, J. A. Houghton, C. A. Erickson. GEORGE SHEETS James Ingvbretson, Edward R. MorA. B. gan, George C. Burke, Jr., and 11. i Girls ncbg Matincao I PAGE THREBi -30 Including 16-Da- TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1901 JOURNAL, or inn Musical Comedy 30-Pooplo- STATE Days Doings In Utah S surting Sunday Night, May UTAH Will STUDY CONSURNPHJN. Three state Institutions the University of Utah, the Agricultural colA Happy Father lege and the state School for tho Deaf and Blind will devote some time each la soon turned to a aad one if he has year to the study of tho causes and to walk the floor every night with a the means of prevention of tuberculo- crying baby. McGee's Baby Exlir will sis, following recommendations made make the child well, soothe its nerves by Governor Cutler, who waa recently induce healthy, normal slumber. Beat of the society for disordered bowels and aour stomelected for the study anr prevention of ach all teething babies need It Pleasant to take, sure, and safe, contains In a letter to the heads of these no harmful drugs. Price 25 and 59 cents a bottle. Sold institutions, Governor Cutler has recommended that the study be includ by Geo. F. Cava vice-preside- nt tuber-culos- ia slx-yeo- li Puzzla for Children. A man has two hobbies. On one he spends $2,000 annually and the other costa him $600 each year.' One is air cooled and the other is naturally cool. He takes one out nights and the other goes out alone. One has but one sparker and tho other has several. He cranks ande and the other in Both are Inconsistent and exceedingly unreliable. Which of the two hobbies Is the man's wife and which ia hia automobile? 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