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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, 6 NOVEMBER Probate and Guardianship Notice. thun a quarter of a century. When CnntuH Comity Clerk or the respective signer, the Republicans went out of power ill GET T U. S. SENATE IS farther information. In the house In 1S75 they had been NOTICK TO CREDITORS. for fourteen years. Since then no In the District Court of Weber County, State of ilab. IS HIS party has had more than six years of In the matter of the estate of Gustaf Anderpower, and the Republicans never more son, deceased. Creditors will present claims, with vouchers, thun two years at a time, until the to the tinderslKued, A. J. Anderson, at Hunts ville, Weber county, Utah, on or before March present period of preponderance. Mr. Pith, MW. A. J. ANDERSON, Administrator. Cannon's twenty-eigyears of conHulanisklA Every, Attorneys lor AdminisPETTUS NOW THE ONLY MEMBER gressional service have been equally JOHN 8. WILLIAMS, NEW DEMO- trator. Nov. 11th, 1903, date of first publication. CRATIC LEADER. nlltrfi. OVER 80. divided between Republicans and DemRoston ocratic congresses. 8UMMON8. Ho Is a Good Speaker, a Hard Worker, New Housa Contains a Larger con-tr- ol 25, 1903. i Mono WATER? ht Rapra-santatio- FISTED CROWD. The revocation of the power of attorney held by Mr. Herman Oelrichs on behalf of his wife, has caused considerable gossip in the newspapers. The Examiner ascribes the act of Mrs. to a growing coolness between the pair and adds that "their tempera are not compatible." It then goes on to say that Mr. Oelrichs is a man who is the soul of good humor and generous to a fault. If he is the least bit generous he Is hardly the man to get along with any. of the Fair people who are proverbially stlngey and grasping. They Inherit all the thrifty ways of the late senator and hold on to money like a drowning man clutching a life preserver. Mrs. Fair, who was a very generous woman in her lifetime left a legacy to Bishop Alamany, but the girls contested the will and broke It An effort was made to Induce the heirs of old Fair to make some provision for the widow of the murdered Fred Smith, but without avalL After Fair's death the heirs sent a detective over the country to buy up all the compromising papers signed by Fair. He secured several hundred letters, any one of which would have damaged his memory, and then attempted to beat the detective out of his fee. He had sense enough, however, to hold onto one particular letter and he declined to hand It over until they settled. They settled. Carson (Nev.) and Very Popu- A CLOSE In spite of all efforts to the contrary, the United States senate seems to be growing more youthful. Thirteen years ago a careful computation was made, from which it appeared the average age of its members was 60 years. There were then but eight who were less than 60 years old and one who wns less than 45. Today the average is 59 years and 4 months, and in a slightly larger senate there are fourteen men, instead of eight, who are less than 60, and of these eight are less than 45. This difference is doubtless due to the new states which have come Into the union since that time, whose political leaders are naturally younger, has men. The Delaware overturn given the senate two youthful members. It is almost a rule that the young states have young senators. Only one senator Is more than 80, Mr. Pettus, the junior senator from Alabama, who was born in 1821. Fourteen are are between 70 and 80, twenty-nin- e bebetween 60 and 70, and thirty-tw- o tween 60 and 60. The fifteen who have crossed the three score and ten line include both senators from Alabama and Connecticut, besides Messrs. Teller, Allison, Frye, Hoar, Gibson, Stewart, Proc- Oel-rlc- hs tor and Cullom. The constitution of the United States specifies 30 as the age requirement for Appeal. the senate, but by a safe margin of ten years all the states have made good BATHING IN MISSOURI. this condition. Only one man In the A traveling man alighted from a senate does not give his age, Mr. Burand, covered with the dirt and train, ton of Kansas, and for the purpose of of dust travel, made his way to the this computation he has been rated at hotel In a southwest Missouri town best 60 years. the other day. As he handed the porThe new house not only contains a ter his grips, he told him he wanted large representation of new men, but to take a bath. The negro boy hesitated are among them many young men who a moment, and then replied: Sorry, apparently beginning a political career we aint got no bath in this but Bah, of great promise. The general How do you people house. Is shown by the number of heah asked the bathe?" guest. Well, sah,' western states which are In considerin de summah the returned negro, able part repreesnted .by native sons. out to de East Fork we all time goes Francis M. Eddy, a member of the last de and In de wln-ta- h in ducks and creek, congress, was the first man Minnesota time we Jes wait fo de good ole had ever sent to congress who was time. summah Kansas City Star. state. This of the born within the limits time another of the nine representaMONTANAS PETRIFIED FORESTS. tives Is a native Minnesotan, having The curator of geology of the nabeen born there in 1860. Of the other museum at Washington, Dr. representatives two were born in Penn- tional sylvania, one each In Ontario, Illinois, MerrHl, has just returned from a tour Massachusetts, Sweden, Ohio and Wis- of Montana and the northwest where consin. One of the senators wns born he gathered one of the most Instructive collections that has reached the In Iowa and the other in Norway. In years. Nearly everyone museum' four California for the first time has of the petrified forests of heard has in the that state, representatives born aldest of whom Is not yet 44, while Arizona, but that In Montana, which the youngest Is 31. All the older men D. Merrill has been exploring, is of the delegation come from the east, hardly known, though it Is believed to one from Wisconsin, two from New be at least equal In extent The northYork and a fourth from Scotland. Sen- ern forests have, curiously enough, ator Perkins was born In Maine and turned to opal instead of agate by the Senator Bard In Pennsylvania. Of the action of the elements. two senators and three representaA BOY'S ESSAY ON HENS. tives from Colorado, which has been a A boy who was required to write an state since 1876, none was born there. were essay on hens produced the following: statesmen The three Idaho Hens is curious animals; they don't born in Illinois, Pennsylvania and Inhave no nose nor no teeth, nor no ears. diana respectively. It is a singular thing that. In so old They swallow their wittles whole and a community as Iowa, of the eleven chew it up In their crops inside of em. representatives and two senators but The outside of hens is generally put three were born in that state, and one into piilers and into feather dusters. of them, Mr. Hedge, of Burlington, The Inside of a hen is sometimes filled relates that he was born in the terri- with marbles and shirt buttons and tory of Iowa, June 24, 1844. Allison such. A hen is very much smaller came from Ohio and DoIUver from than a good many other animals, but West Virginia. Hull and Hepburn were they'll dig up more tomato plants than also Ohioans. The four representatives anything that ain't a hen. Hens is very and two senators of Maine were born useful to lay eggs for plum puddings. in that state. In fact. In most of the Hens have got wings and can fly when old states, native sons seem to be pre they get frightened. I once cut off i ferred. Roth Massachusetts senators hen's head with a hatchet and It fright and ten of the fourteen representatives ened her to death." were born In Massachusetts. NEW YORK VS. LONDON. Rut one representative in Nebraska was born in that state, Mr. Hitchcock During the nineteenth century Lonof Omoha, and he is but 44 years old. don grew from a city of 800,000 people The Nevudans all migrated there, and. to one of 6,500,000 that la. Increased New York increased from according to the census returns, they eight-folare among the very few who remain, 60.000 to 3.500.000 nearly sixty-folBoth North Dakota senators were born London is now increasing 1? tier cent in Illinois, and of the South Dakota inn decade and New York 35 per cent, senators one came from New York or twice as fiist. If this rate should ' and the other from New Hampshire. hold good for fifty years more New Texas exhibits among the southern York would have over 150,000,000 popustates the greatest evidence of being a lation and be 1.000,000 ahead of Lonnew community. Neither of its senators don. was born in the state, and but half of A Good Name. its representatives. The young state of From personal experience I testify Utah has a native son in the senate that DeWitts Little Risers are In the jierson of Reed Smoot. None unequalled as a liverEarly pHL They are of the representatives or senators of rightly named because they give strength and energy and do their work Wyoming or Washington was born In with ease. W. T. Easton, Boerne, Tex. This Thousands of people are using these the state he now represents. little pills In preference to all shows how much of the country Is still tiny others, because they are so pleasant and effectual They cure biliousness, new. Jaundice, sick headache, The house of representatives which torpid liver. etc. constipation, They do not purge has Just assembled is the fifth succes- and weaken, but cleanse and strengthF. Cave. Wallace sion that has been controlled by the en. Bold by Geo. Drug Co., and Wm. GIddings. a of party mastery Republicans, length Subscribe for The State Journal. that has not been equalled for more youth-fulne- This question may seem rather pertinent but water does not agree with everyone. n of Young Man. Platt of New York, Quay, Bute, drink! DO YOU ss d. d. lar. John Sharp Williams, the new Democratic leader in the house of representatives, has one distinction above his colleagues. He is the only member of congress who was a schoolmate of the German emperor. They were together at Heidelberg. Williams ia willing to forget It, but his friends will not, and he Is pointed out from the galleries with as much enthusiasm us If he were Fouitney Bigelow. Williams Is from Mississippi, a lawyer and cotton planter, and has been in congress for ten years. He ia highly educated, speaks several languages, la somewhat of a wit, a good deal of a r, and can make a humorous speech if the occasion demands. These attributes make him popular with his fellows, and added to them are a wide knowledge of legislative methods, a keen mind, and an Instant readiness In debate. He will be a good leader, for he keeps his temper. No assault can ruffle Williams. He Is calm and smiling through the bitterest passages with the Republicans. The leader who sputters and fumes is lost, for he can not get his own people to follow him, to say nothing of making an impression on the other side. Williams is a regular Democrat He has followed the party through every devious path. He was for Cleveland, Now he is and he was for Bryan. of preaching the doctrine His principal work In this congress will be to secure stronger Democrats on the big committees of the house. He argues, and Justly, that the Democrats have been handicapped since the Republicans have had control of congress by lack of application by the minority members of the committees. Williams believes In work. He wants men on committees who will be able to discuss measures when they come on the floor, and point out that of late years the Democrats in the house have not been as faithful In committees they should have been. He thinks the times are propitious for Democracy. Williams' most famous speech was in defense of Admiral Schley In the congress. He wrote a set of verses beginning: Oh, who is Crownlnshleld, papa? and read them In the course of hls speech. The verses had for their refrain the statement that Crownlnshleld, who was chief of the bureau of navigation of the navy department during the war with Spain, and one of the most active In the propaganda, was the greatest tar that ever stayed ashore. The house roared with laughter. Collier's Weekly. story-telle- er. IN THE MUNICIPAL COURT WITH-i- n and for the City of Ogden, County of Weber, State of Utah. Before Hon. J. A. Howell, Municipal Judge and Precinct Justice. Victor A. Engstrom, Plaintiff, va Wm. M. Campbell, Defendant The State of Utah to said defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entitled Court within ten (10) days after the service of this summons upon you. If served within the county In which this action is brought otherwise within twenty (20) days after this service, and defend the above entitled action; In case of your failure to do so, Judgment will be against you according to the demand of the complaint In said action, which was filed In said Court on the 26th duy of September, A. D. 1903. To the Sheriff or any Constable of Weber county, greeting: Make legal service and due return hereof. Witness, Hon. J. A. Howell, Judge of said Court, with the seal thereof, this 26th day of September, A. D. 1903. DAVID JENSEN, Clerk. Seal Rear-Admir- FRED, J. KIESEL, & CO., Agents. ed DELINQUENT We 6ive Thanks That we are nearly ready to move into our New Building. We are giving Extra Special Bargains on all Remnants and Odds and Ends. NOTICE. IDLE HOUR DUCK CLUB, location of principal place of business, Ogden Utah. There are delinquent upon the following described stock, on account of an assessment levied on the Sd day of September, 1903, the several amounts set opposite the names of the respective shareholders, as follows: No. of No. of 20 per cent., 25 per cent., 50 per cent., and some of them 75 per cent. off. Why not take advantage of these 'Discounts, and save your money? pv lv Dixll w Washington A T And In accordance with law, and in accordance with an order of the Board of Directors made, on the 3d day of September, 1903, and also in accordance with an order of the Board of Directors made on the 16th day of No vember, 1903, so many shares of each parcel of such stock as may be necessary will be sold at public auction at the office of the Secretary, No. 3425 M Washington Avenue, on Thursday, the 2d day of December, 1903, at the hour of two oclock p. m. of said day, to pay the delinquent assessment thereon, to gether with the cost of advertising and expense of sale. R. C. LUNDY, BROAD TO MEET TOMMY MO WATT Secretary, 2435V4 Washington Avenue, fifty-seven- niNERAL WATER is a refreshing exception. In its natural, sparkling, crystal purity, it is liked by all and ALL WHO DRINK IT ARE BENEFITED. Low in price within reach of ail. 2356-6- 2 Ave. th al anti-Schl- ey Ogden, Utah. I I m I BALLARD JAMES Oder Sscceusr Is lallard . t -- J CASH MEAT MARKET-- 1 Salt Meat and Lari a PpecUlty. Oynteni in Beanon. Cheapest Meat Market in town Plate Boiling Meat, per lb., 6c. Shoulder Steak, S Ibe. for fw 'Phone 127-- 331 26th SL A I J n!7-2- 6. NEW ORLEANS, La, Nov.' 25 'What Good solicitors wanted for the Dally promises to be the best boxing show off since the game Utah State JoumaL Apply to Horace pugilistic pulled was resumed In the Crescent City is S. Foster, city circulator. scheduled for tonight at the Southern Athletic club. The wind up Is to bring Kid Broad and Tommy together contest Mowatt for a twenty-roun- d beonce came two The together here fore and the splendid fight they put up on that occasion hus caused much interest to be manifested by fight followers In their meeting tonight. The city is crowded with sporting men here for the opening of the winter race meet tomorrow and the attendance at the ring side promises to be of record breaking proportions. TRY AN AD. IN THE JOURNAL - THANKSGIVING - PELL-CRAM- P Table WEDDING. Nov. 25. FashPHILADELPHIA, ionable society of Philadelphia turned out in full force today for the wedding of Miss Florence Cramp, daughter' of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin S. Cramp, and Mr. Theodore Roosevelt Pell, of New York. The ceremony was iierformed at noon In the Tenth Presbyterian church and was followed by a wedding breakfast and reception at the residence of the ILmeims IN PLENTY f AT THE Z. C. M. L bride's parents. to Fill out this Blank, cut it out and send it with the amount of Subscription Escaped an Awful Fate. Mrs. II. Hagglns of Melbourne. Fla., My doctor told me I had consumption and nothing could be done for me. I was given up to die. The offer of a free trial bottle of Dr. Kings New Discovery for Consumption Induced me to try it Results were startling. I am now on the road to recovery and owe all to Dr. King's New Discovery. It surely saved my life. This great cure Is guaranteed for all throat and lung diseases by Jesse J. writes: Driver, druggist. Price, Trial bottles free. 50c and $1. SPECIAL SALE Ogden Furniture A Carpet Co. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. H Sd i-- it ll Eg Js eJ ix -- o UTAH STATE JOURNAL, OGDEN, UTAH. subscriptin for Inclosed please find $ to the DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, beginning with No. 1903. or date Residence..! Name State City and County i |