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Show DAILY 0 II. $. UTAH STATE JOURNAL, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1903, 17, ITS SENATOR ALL IN THE PUSH TVS T he I Home Bakery CHARGED AND WITH BRIBERY CONSPIRACY. DORA FOX TELLS OF HER CAREER. Dietrich of Nebraska Alleged to Have Captured After a Chaee Which .Haa Covered Many Used Hie Office for Grafting Years. Purposes. The federal true returned last night grand Jury Senator United States hills agiUnat Charles H. Dietrich and rostmuster Jacob Fleher of Hastings, Neb., charging them with conspiracy and bribery In connection with the appotnintent of Fisher to the position of postmaster. The Indictments were brought Into the United States district court at 6 o'clock. Judge Hunger presiding, and were placed on file. The court merely accepted the report of the grand Jury, making no remarks on its contents beyond making an order to the clerk for filing of the bills. The Indictment against Senator Dietrich charges that he accepted money and property in consideration of hla recommending Fisher for appointment as postmaster at Hastings. That against Postmaster Fisher charges him with makfhg an agreement with Senator Dietrich by which the former was to pay in property and money $1,800 for securing to Fisher the appointment Evidence was presented to the grand Jury to show that Fisher had bought postofllce fixtures from the Grand Army post at Hastings of the value of $500, and later turned the property over to Senator Dietrich, to whose building It was removed, and to .whom was paid a rental by the government In addition toturnlng over this property, it is charged that Fisher paid to the senator $800 In cash. It is stated that the grand Jury has been Investigating the Hastings case for nearly three weeks, and that a number of witnesses were present from Hastings and other points In the state. OMAHA, Neb., Nov. 17. post-offi- NEW MINING ce COMPANY . i Prominent Ogdenites Are ths Incorpo-rstorArticles Hsvs Bsen s Filed. Articles of incorporation of the Gold Standard Mining company were filed in the office of the county clerk yesterday. The Incorporators are William A. Richardson, Frank Moore, William Craig. George B. Barber and George Halverson. The principal office of the company will be in Ogden and the business of the company will be to mine in the states of Utah and Idaho. The capital stock of the company Is $30,000. There are 600.000 shares of the par value of five cents a share and 200,000 shares of the stock remain In the treasury for Frank Moore development purposes. Is president, William Craig, and George Hulverson secretary vice-preside- nt and treasurer. NEW HOME DEDICATED Laying of ths Cornerstone of the Now York Historical Societys Building. NEW YORK. Nov. 17. Next year Is to be the centennial of the New York Historical society and the society expects to celebrate the occasion by taking possession of its handsome new home to be erected at Seventy-sixt- h street and Central Park West The cornerstone of the new building was laid today with interesting ceremony. Mayor Low officiated and the address of the day was delivered by Hamilton W. Mulile. The new building will be put up in three sections. The central section will be finished, it is expected, within a year, at a cost of $40,000. BOSTON TERRIER SHOW. Dora Fox, the qunen of the outlaws of Oklahoma, haa been caught. No woman ever led a stranger life than has Dora Fox. She is only 23 yeara old but for eight years the slim, bronze-face- d girl, with a mouth and features that not even her life In outlaw camps has relieved of their beauty has been the leader of an outlaw band. She haa escaped from Jail under the eyes of her guards; she has led her band through a dozen fights with sheriffs; she has disguised herself and visited towns where the officers who were after her were resting, and now at last she has been captured after a chase of years, which extended across three States and has been participated in by a dozen determined sheriff a The story of this remarkable girl, told by herself, Is as follows: "My parents died when I was very little. They left me nothing. I had lived all my life on the plains. I knew horses and cattle, and I knew nothing else. Naturally I turned to the cattle camps to earn a living. That was when I was fourteen. I cooked and sometimes helped the cowboys, A year after this I commenced the life I was that has brought me here. working on a range in eastern Texas. There was a pretty hard crowd of boys on the ranch and at last I overheard a conversation which showed me that three of the men on the ranch were Martin, Jack Simmons and Bert Casey, all notorious outlaws. They were planning a . raid one evening when I overheard the whole thing. In my excitement I made a little noise and they discovered me. I was seised and in half an hour I was galloping over the range In the direction of the rendezvous with my arms bound behind me. When we reached the place Simmons told me on account of what I had overheard I would have to remain a prisoner In the camp or become one of the gang. 'Take your choice, little girl, he said, I know you well enough to know that if you take an oath to stand with us you'll do It like a man. Don't do it, though unless you want to.' At first it seemed an awful thing for me to do, hut I had no other friends so I swore to be true to them. I had not been with the gang two weeks when they were surrounded by a posse and we had to fight our way out I had committed no crime, but I was pointed out as the most desperate woman on the range. There were stirring years after that We were In old Mexico and all through the southern states. Half of the time posses were on our trail, but we fooled them time after time. Once we were cornered and had to fight again. Three of the boys were captured, but Simmons and I escaped. For years I was compelled to wear men's clothing as a disguise. After the fight we were pretty well broken up and I went to work on a cattle ranch as a cowboy. Some one recognised me and I was captured. They say I am an outlaw. They say I am a thief, a leader of train robbers. horse thieves and murderers. Well I don't care about that. They say I am crueL They say I have no womnnly instincts. That Is a lie. I am not cruel, nnd even though I have lived my life on the prairie and In hard camps I have a woman's heart. Journal. Kansas City ILLINOIS ODD FELLOWS. SPRINGFIELD, 111., Nov. 17. This Is Odd Fellows' week in Springfield and nearly 2,000 members of the order are gathered from all parts of the state to celebrate the occasion. Meetings will le held by all three branches of the order, the grand lodge meeting In the state capitol this afternoon and evening. and the grand encampment convening at the same place tomorrow. The Order of Rebekah will also hold its annual meeting and all three bodies will choose officers for the coming year. Chicago. Peoria, Rockford. Freeport, Jacksonville and other cities of the state are represented among the visi- BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 17. The diminutive and sporty specimens of the canine race, the Boston terrier, reached Its apotheosis today in Horticultural hall, where a bench show for his special exhibition was ojiened under the auspices of the Boston Terrier club. It is the biggest collection of famous little animals ever brought together, and the competition promises to be extors. ceedingly keen. The champions Roxle, Bonnie. Lord Derby and Chnuncy are for the and GRAND MUSICALE ARRANGED. competltlng a number of other special prices dogs are benched. Society is taking a lively Interest in the affair and the exhibition promises to be a huge success from every point of view. price-winni- ng The real issue between the' Demo- cratlc party and the Republican party is whether the government shall be based ujion the doctrine that all men are created equal and so administered as to recognize the rights of man, or built upon an aristocratic foundation and administered in behalf of the few at the expense of the many. In all the Republican policies you will find that what are called "property rights and the phrase simply means superior consideration for those who own property ere paramount. On the tariff question the manufacturers are singled out for benefits at the expense of the consumers; on the money question the financiers are singled out and their interests advanced at the expense of the producers of wealth; on the trust question the comparatively few who are endeavoring to monopolise the industries of the country are singled out and protected as against the many who must buy of them; end on the question of Imperialism the syndicates organized to exploit the Islands are given greater consideration than the taxpayers of this country or the victims of our benevolent assimilation. You ask whether the candidate in 1904 should be a compromise between the gold and silver Democrats, a silver This Democrat or a gold Democrat depends entirely upon what the Demo cratlc party wanta to do. If It wants to bid for the support of the plutocratic element it will nominate a gold Democrat; If it wants to bid for the support of the masses, it will nominate a silver Democrat; If It does not want any support at all and does not cars to take part In the contest between man and Mammon, It will find a man who lacks either the brains or the heart to take a There is no possibility of position. compromise; if the party is to be an effective force in politics it must go In one direction or the other, and the dl- rectlon cunnot long be concealed. The difference upon the money question, among those who understand it, was not so much a difference of opln-ol- n as a difference in sympathies, and tliut difference exists today as it did then. A man whose sympathies are with organized wealth has no claim to leadership in the Democratic party un-Ie- ss intends to become the I and Grocery. dollar. l RAGYGLE . is 30 per cent less pressure on bearings. ; ; GET IN THE BAND WAGON I kinds of baktry Untids, i and Fancy Groceries! 4 2334 Jeff.rwm Avenue. 4 J. C. SCHWARTZ, Prop. $ Staple SCHWARTZ BROS. 3 Bakery and Restaurant. j J. J. Schwartz - F. A. Schwartz AND IIAVE THE BEST. is 306 25th Street. 2 A AAAAA.11A H j j Than that via ths I Ogden Milling la Elevator Companys & Prom Kansas City, Saint Louis and to points in the South, Southeast and Southwest ia Memphis FLOUR 2 Proprietors. Wash. Ave. 3 2313 Theres oo Better Service THE 2 2 j 1 9JLAAAAA HUTCHISON & CO., is the best. The Southeastern Limited Leaving Kansas City at 6:30 P. M. daily, will take you to Springfield, Mem- Ask for 6 Ogdens Best phis, Birmingham, Atlanta, Jacksonville and all points in the Southeast 99 For detailed information apply to eeeOFeee m : Phoenix High Patent. FOR SALE G. W. MARTIN GENERAL WESTERN AGENT 1106, 17th St. DENVER, COLO. THE MARVEL OF EVERYWHERE. The bride was born in New York HWV9WW99WWWW9W999Wm City, and was educated at the Pick- Several Local Investors Are (inter- ney Institute. Maryland. Her mother ested ,in the Propwas one of the Virginia Herndons, -- The Flou-terty. whose father, William Lewis Herndon, WINES : : LIQUORS was a distinguished officer in the navy. t An effort Is being made In Salt Lake Since the death of her father. Miss CIGARS by some eastern capitalists to acquire Arthur has lived with her aunt, Mrs. the Kilmarnock company's mining McElroy. in this city. property east of Centerville. T. C. M. R. BEARER, T. P. LEWIS, Foley, T. H. Kertz and other loProp. Manager. cal Investors are interested In this 326 25th St., OGDEN, UTAH. property, but they are not informed as to the negotiations that are being con- BIG MINING DEAL . Pushes a full quarter easier than any other Bicycle, because the Sprockets turn between bearings and there the-part- exponent of organized wealth. The money question is not a matter of gold or silver; It is whether there shall be a sufficient volume of money or an Insufficient volume of money. Gold and silver together furnish more money than gold alone, and the same reasons that led some to favor the gold standard as against the double standard will lead the same persons to favor limitations upon gold coinage If the quantity of gold ever becomes sufficient to maintain the level of prices. In 1891 Mr. McKinley denounced Grover Cleveland and declared that during his first administration he was discriminating against one of the money metals of the country trying to make money scarcer and, therefore, dearer money the master, and all things else the servant. No one has ever stated the Issue more clearly than Mr. McKinley did in thore words, and no one ever brought a more severe arraignment against a public man than Mr. McKinley brought against Mr. Cleveland. The issue etlll exists, and It makes a great deal of difference to the Democratic party whether its candidate wants to make "money the master and all things else the servant" or desires rather to make man the master and all things else the servant. It makes a great deal of difference to the people of the country, too, whether It has a president who recognises the true relation which should exist between the man and the f For sll We mean that the THE 20th CENTURY Silver Club Saloon VICTOR . TALKING MACHINE $15 $50 WEAR THE For Light Power and Let the Utah ducted. Referring to the matter the Salt Lake Herald says: "An offer for 300,000 of the 500,000 shares of the company has been tendered and local shareholders are contributing from their holdings a sufficient number of shares to round out the treasury stock to the amount demanded by the purchasers. The figure offered for the stock was not made public, but one of the heaviest stockholders stated that the closing of the transaction would give the company a splendid working capital. The man representing the purchasing crowd is a Utah operator, and the fact that he has consented to round up the proposition for his eastern friends in evidence that he believes the property to be one of more than ordinary merit The company owns eighteen claims through which runs a ore, that has conledge of copper-gol- d centrated about seven tons into one and given returns of over $40 gold, 11 per cent copper and a heavy percentage of Iron as well. When opened, on the surface the vein is understood to have shown a width of eight feet and over, while a tunnel Is under construction which, when It has been run something like 100 feet further, will cut the vein at a vertical depth of something like 250 feet and provide a large area of stoping ground. "The property Is only ten or twelve miles from this city and within a couple of miles of the railroads running between here and Ogden. With money for systematic development, a few months' work ought to convert it Into a producer of merit. Because the deal has not yet been completed names of the principals in the transaction are omitted. Light and union Power Co. figure with you. An investigation will con- A Koyal Entertainer and vince you that you cannot afford to burn coal oil. If an Entertainer of Royalty you need power there is no Msgs Everything Play Everything kind that will prove as sat- Why ast ini a Victor asi lave a Heater ii isfactory for the money. your dwi Ism. ,. E. W. WADE, Manager for Ogden. Catalogs Sent on Application. mi CLOTHING. Write for Prices to well-kno- well-defin- ed ARTHUR'S DAUGHTER WEDDED. ALBANY, N. Y, Nov. 17. A large and fashionable wedding In Albony today was that of Miss Ellen Herndon Arthur, daughter of the late President Chester A. Arthur, to Mr. Charles Pinkerton of New York City. Bt Peter's church was the scene of the ceremony, which was performed shortly after noon, and the officiating clergyman was Bishop Potter, who was assisted by the rector of the church, Rev. Dr. Walton W. BattershulL Miss Arthur was given away by her brother, Cheater Alan Arthur, and her only attendant was her cousin, Miss Elisabeth M. Arrangements have Just been completed by the Y. M. M. L A. of the city for a grand musicale on comprehensive scale under its auspices at the tabernacle on Tuesday evening. December 1st Charles Kent, tbe GRAND BALL. splendid baritone, assisted by some of tbe other noted artists of the Woodmen of the World will give a state, will participate and a male grand ball at Dlgnan'a new hall on chorus of 125 voices will be a distinct Wednesday evening, November 18th. feature of the program. A feature of the evening will be an exhibition drill by a team from Camp SPECIAL SALE Ogden Furniture 63, Salt Lake City. 4' Carpet Co., Wednesday, Thursday, Extra Lady, 25c. Friday and Saturday. Ticketsi 50c. Couple Masten of New York City. DENVER MUSIC CO. DENVER, COLO. PERFECTLY TIMED, A Weak Stomach CORRECT IN FIT, s HEADACHE. not ua M well as they should. Other see well, hut their cyan xo.ui hemme tired. Still nth- fin suffer with constant hewdwrhes, which mrdieine doe not relieve, because headache conic from eye train and the only remedy in a pair of good glssmn properly fit- ted. If lor any resnn ynnr night in not good, rail on me. 1 have the appliances. nkill, nn.i ezperi- encc to fit any eye that glasses will help. Examination Frek. Many I ovn Mads In their I SANITARY SHOPS. WE SELL IT. Union Made Suits Union Made Over- coats I I Indigestion Is often caused by overaaya eating. An' eminent authority from the harm done thus exceeds that (To C. P. UTTER, 0. I J j D. The Eye Specialist, to Prof. M Thomas) Keeles 310 Building, Ogdon. (Successor Union Made Hats Union Made Shoes Union Made Shirts Union Made Overalls 60 YEARS EXPERIENCE Union Made Gloves Trade Marks Designs 'FfTV Copyrights Ac. a sketch end desrrtnttnn PUTNAM CLOTHING HOUSE. 2345 WASHINGTON AVENIE. An rnn sending star gulcklv ascertain cur opinion free whether an Invention la prahshly patentable. Cunnunlf, UonaairMlycmiPdenlhiL II and book on laleuu tent free. Oldest agency fur securing patents. PateuM taken Uimush Munn A Co. receive not lea, without charge, In this Ipo-l- Scientific American. Itlnatnitcd weekly, lamet ftp. culalkin uf any sctantlfla Journal. Terms, R a yeart four months, fL Bold by an newadcelsm. A handsomely MUNN & Co New York Bruch ones. OS T BL. Washington. D.U the excessive use of tlcohoL Eat all the good food you want but don'tovar load the stomach. A weak stomach eat. may refuse to digest what you Then you need a good dlgestanfe like Kodol, which digests your food without the stomachs aid. This rest ana the wholesome tonics Kodol contains soon restore health. Dieting unnece sary. Kodol quickly relieves the feel from lng of fulness and bloating meals. which some people suffer after Absolutely cures indigestion. Kodol Nature Tonic. Prepared only by K. CL DbWrt A Oa.Ohleai EnMLboufacontoliislXtlmsgthafiOn sisa 8old in Ogden by Geo. P. Cse, Wallace Drug Co., Wm. Giduing. |