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Show DAILY G DECURES IT IS NATIONAL A STATE JOURNAL, OCZ3C DC TUESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1904 oc DC DC GQf I OGDEN FURNITURE AND CARPET COS. IS INTERNATIONAL SCANDAL ADMINISTRATION'S PANAMA POLICY IS UNLAWFUL. UTAH AMERICAN BELLE WEDS AN ENGLISH CAPTAIN. Vigorous Comment and Criticism Made Ceremony Was Performed in Grace Episcopal Church by Bishby Senator Morgan of Alabama. op Potter. MONTGOMERY, Ala., Jan. 5. Sena- tor John.T. Morgan, in a letter to the New York Journal, scores the president for the position he has taken with reference to the Panama canal. The sen- ator says: "The annexation of Panama ia provided for, aa a necessary result in the Hay-Variltreaty and that fact will lead to war with Colombia. It may slumber a while under the anodynes wt will administer Reyes from the treasury of the United States. Continuing, the senator said: "I will not, either from fear or In the hope of favors or advantage, come to vote to sustain a policy that all men know to be unlawful and that in what all southern men will do when they vote for the la Hay-Varil- treaty. la "The president deliberately refused to obey the requirements of the Spooner law. Not only so, but with waiting fleets he stood by from the 22d of September until the 3d of November waiting for the blow, prepared by seven conspirators, that would forever make it Impossible for Colombia to make any canal concessions in the department of Panama. I do not wish to voice the indignation of all right thinking people at this strange and frantic usurpation, nor do I wish to criticise the south whose fears of Republican perfidy in their refusal to apply the money voted by congress to any canal, are leading them to support this conduct qf the president. It is a national The senator says: scandal that would disgrace Turkey. A NATION OF HURRY. One Hundred Letters a Day Are Put in Mails Without Any Addresses at All. We are so much in a hurry, or so careless, that we don't even address our letters properly. The postofllce department at Washington says so officially once more, this Year, in the an- nual report of the superintendent of office, and cites a fearful array of facts and figures to prove it. Also we are getting worse. A comparison of reports for a series of years, says the superintendent "shows a continuous increase from year to year. the dead letter More thHn 10,000,000 pieces of mail matter gone astray 10,153,528, to be exact passed through the dead letter office last year. This was an increase of 850,000 over the number In the year before. Of these 10.000,000. 7.000,000 were letters and packages which have never 9 per cent more found their owners than In the previous year. More than a quarter of a million came back from foreign countries, an increase of dou-b- el what the previous year showed. No less than 48,000 letters and 41,000 packages were found In the mails without addresses at all. The superintendent says that at least 100 letters are mailed so every day in the week. The department has to open and read them to send them back to the original senders. Sometimes it can't do even that, because the contents give no clue to his or very often her address. But out of all the 10,000,000 pieces of mail matter that passed throught the office, only 1,250.000 pieces could be returned to their owners even after experts who ran solve almost any old sort of postal riddle had opened them and studied their contents. How much of a hurry we are in, or how careless we are. is shown in the fact that of the letters opened in the dead letter office 51,400 contained money. Altogether the office took out 349,-00- 0 in currency, and besides this 52,000 more letters contained bunk checks, money orders, drafts and other forms of money till altogether there was Some of this money wan in blank envelopes, with not n trace of either sender or intended recipient. More than 313,000 couldn't be returned, so it was turned in to the government treasury and benefited everybody In the aggregate to a minute fraction of a mill apiece. More than 50,000 persons sent their photographs in wrappers so blindly or so imperfectly addressed that nobody could tell for whom the pictures were intended. The postofllce could have a fine gallery cf family portraits if it had room, but it hasn't, so they are destroyed. Resides photographs and currency, 249,000 letters contained postage stamps. Uncle Bam was the gainer of 35,000 from that source alone. NEW YORK, Jan. 5. The ranks of the British aristocracy secured another fair American recruit today when Miss Edith Poor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Poor, and a belle of Gotham's most fashionable and .exclusive society, became the bride of Captain James E. Cochrane of the British army. The ceremony was performed in Grace Episcopal church, which .was thronged with prominent society peoBishop Couch Covers Carpets In odd anil drop patterns at factory prices. Tapestry in assorted colors, $2 and up. Carpet remnants in rug sizes, 50c and 75c. All Wool Ingrains for small rooms 63c Potter officiated. The brides attendants were Miss Violet Cruger, Miss Muriel Robbins, Miss Helen Cutting and Miss Janet Fish. The best man was the cousin of the n. bridegroom. Sir R Following the ceremony at the ple. 4 COMMENCES JANUARY Drapery Goods Curtain Lawns at 15c per yard. Tapestry for upholstering, 30c and up. per yard. Portieres Stewart-Richard-so- Table Covers church there was an elaborate recepRope Portieres, assorted colors, $1 and up. tion at the home of the bride's parents $2 up. Tapestry Portieres, In Gramercy park. two made her debut Miss Poor, who seasons ago, met Captain Cochrane last summer at Murray Bay, and they became engaged In August It was not up. Nottinghams in all sizes, 40c Intended to announce the engagement Robbinetsin all and $1 sizes, up. until after the holidays, and the wedding was scheduled for Easter. A change In plans was necessitated aa Captain Cochrane has been ordered to South Africa, and the young couple will probably sail within a few weeks to England en route to Pretoria. Captain Cochrane, who is an orphan, did special work in South Africa for three years. He accompanied the expedition, and at its conclusion was selected by Sir Frederick Lugard to remain and organise a set- OCZDC DC tled form of government This was In 1901. At the successful conclusion of terror when he turned hie piercing eyes this enterprise, he was chosen as BritBRONCHO JOHN upon him. ish commissioner to go to the interior See, I am unarmed, he said to the and to survey and map out Lake Chard man. If you have the nerve to shoot, the first time it had been done and coun-rttake y that gun and get to work. You to take over that section of the the look of a murderer, but not have to determine from the natives and one who does his work In the open. to order establish the boundaries, and Broncho John Dailey has cashed in. Take that gun, you coward,' hls voice there. HU name doean't appear in any of the rising. NoT I thought so. I knew it school histories, but that ia the fault wasn't in 8TOCKMEN PREPARE TO you.' FIGHT BEEF TRUST of the men who write them, not of "Dailey knew his man and the felJohn, says a Lincoln (Neb.) dispatch low fell bnck In the crowd, never once According to John W. Springer, pres- to the New York Sun. In the days huvlng moved to draw hie gun or take ident of the National Livestock asso- when the frontiersmen were biasing the that thrown upon the bar by Dailey. ciation, who Is on his way to Portland, trail from Juleaburg, In Colorado, to After that Dailey was the king pin of Oregon, to attend the annual convenVirginia City, In Nevada, Dailey woe the town. tion, one of the principal matters which known far and wide aa the quickest But he wasn't taking any chances will come up for consideration Is the man on the draw In the whole region. when he tossed hls shooter on the counfight between the stockmen and the This did not even except Wild BUI ter. In his waistcoat pocket he had beef trust The subject is one which Hickok, who had a better press agent two derringers, with which he would will be considered with great earnestDailey died in destitute circumhave killed his man upon the first sign ness. Besides this there are the ques- stances In the wilda near Juleaburg, that the latter meant to do business. tions of railroads and the packing in- where he first made himself known. He terests which are sure to come up. was always a mystery. KILLED BY LOT. Reports are that the attendance at He started from Missouri with the According to a dispatch published the convention will be the largest ever party of men who broke out the trail lately by the Berlin Tageblatt, a Rusknown. to the big gold camps, and he first at- sian soldier, while drilling with hls tracted attention by hie book knowlat Wilna, stepped out of the NO LAW TO PREVENT After the crowd got a little far- ranks and killed hls colonel with a edge. HOLDING TWO POSITIONS ther along toward the west his ability bayonet thrust The act was greeted line earned for him with cheers by the regiment. There is no rule to prevent an em- In the a book learning had that his respect outployee of the government filling an Investigation revealed that a connot awakened. side position in hours oft duty, providspiracy was formed among the men, Some of the boys, said Harris who decided to kill the colonel, and seed the work does not Interfere with reChat field, a New Mexico cattleman, lected the murderer of the is and government, quirements by lot The colowho waa one of the party that accom- nel was hated not of a questionable character. owing to hls severity. This announcement is the result of panied Dailey to the gold camps, made The Russian minister of war has disthe Investigation made by the depart- an nttempt to find out where he came patched a commission from St Petersment of commerce and labor into the from, but they were blocked In every burg to make further Inquiry itno the assertions of several telegraphers that attempt. He had an air of distinction circumstances of this extraordinary afgovernment employees are filling pri- about him that waa Btrnnge in our fair. vate positions at night, to the exclu- crowd, and It waa not until we aaw him handle hie gun that we aaw what sion of men who are In need of work. INCREASE IN RECEIPT8. As to the matter of government em- an expert he was. It waa a treat to The' monthly internal revenue stateployees. the rule In all of the depart- see that man's hand go to his belt and ment shows that in November the total ments almost from the time of the es- flash back again with the drop on a receipts were 320,847.834, an increase tablishment of the government has fellow. for the month of 31,532,534. For the One of our men found to his sorrow been to allow employees to make use first five months of the fiscal year the of their talents for private emolument that It hud a magic quickness. He was receipts exceed those for the correafter the hours of labor In the depart- left handed and nearly always got his sponding period last year by 32.720,127. ments have ended. In fact it is said nun In the region of the heart Tie that there Is no law or rule to prevent never wounded. He always killed. ATTENTION. NO. 361 I remember an incident that hapit. All members of Junction City Lodge pened after we got to Virginia City. No. 36, 1. O. O. F., are requested to meet MUST CARRY POWER HOUSES. Dailey and I took n stroll up the valat Odd Fellows' hall Tuesday evening, Perhaps the most scientific study ley to see what the country looked like. that has yet been made of the laws After a short walk we came upon a January 5th, at 7:30 o'clock. GEO. B. SMYTH JR., X. G. which govern the application of the saloon and Dailey Invited me In to have B. BALCII, Secretary. L. automobile to war purposes has been a drink with him. There were many made by Captain Douhet of the Italian bad ones around the hang-out- a those End of a Bitter Fight. Hrmy. and the result of his work was days and when we went In we were Two physicians hnd a long and asscrutinised by more than a dosen of published by the sociation of Turin nearly two years bad lookers. Dailey gazed about him stubborn fight with an abscess on my ago. After examining every solution In his rather austere manner and with right lung, writes J. F. Hughes of of the question of tractors, steam, air, his usual dignity. He was always the of DuPont, Ga., and gave me up. gasoline, storage batteries, engines gentleman, no matter where he was. Everybody thought my time had come. with trains and self propelling lorries, Somehow he did not take with the As a last resort I tried Dr. Kings New Captain Douhet arrives at what seems bunch and one of them walked up to Discovery for Consumption. The benefit I received was striking and I was at first sight the remarkable conclu- him. on sion that the most efficient, if not the my feet In a few days. Now I've "Your kind don't go here, said the regained my health. It cononly, system of automobile transport chap, who was evidently seeking n for military purposes will consist of fight. quers all Coughs, Colds and Thront troubles. Guaranteed by tractors, each propelled by an electric "Dnilcy looked at the man with nn and Lung Driver's J. Jesse drug store. Price 50c. motor, but deriving their current from expression of contempt He pulled out a traveling dynamo mounted on a truck n gun that reached nearly to his knees and 31.00. Trial bottle free. In other and laid It on the bar. With a quick propelled by electricity. MASK BALL. words he advocates for this particular movement of his hand he sent it spinwork the hauling of supplies in war, ning around on the surface of the rude At F. XL band hall next Thursday a trolley line carrying Its own power counter and then made the soul of the night. Fifty cents per couple, extra house along with it. Outing. braggart frontiersman feel the taste of lady 25 cents. Dance until 1 a. m. Tapestry) Cheneille, and Lace'jCurtains 4-- 4, G-- 4-- 4, 8-- 4, 4, G-- 4 and 10-- 4 and 10-- 4, 1-- 3 12-- 4, 1- -3 off. off. Pictures and Prices reduced like snow in the summer sunshine. n CORRESPONDING VALUES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES Bida-Kontago- ra 0 DC "CASHES IN" reg-mle- nt gun-fanni- Electro-Technic- al ng OC DC TABASCO SAUCE AND ITS ORIGIN I . Captain John A. Mcllhepny is In the city from Avery island, lioking very much as if he had been ora a long military campaign. Judging from the rugged, sunburned appearance. He is now paying very close attention to his tabasco sauce manufacturing business and at the present time a large new factory Is going up. We are more than pleased with the growth that this business has undergone during the past few years, said the captain at the St. Charles hotel. The expansion of tabasco manufac- turing has been beyond our most sanguine expectations. All of the manufacturing la done on Avery island, and all of the peppers used are grown on the Island. We raise them on our own plantation under our own supervision. "Tabasco sauce was first made on the Island by my father in 1868, who thought he could make a sauce from the peppers which grew there equal to the Maunsel White. At that time there was no postofllce at Avery Island, and the label was made with New Iberia on it, which has been allowed to remain ever since. There hHS been a great deal written about tabasco sauce ever since I can remember. In fact, I think the subject is one that has been overdone from the newspaper standpoint, and the only new thing there is about tabasco Is the factory. Of course, this was made necessary by the great increase in the business, and it will not be possible for us to make enough to supply the demand. Avery Island is perhaps the most delightful spot In the state, high, dry and healthful during all seasons of the year. As Captain Mcllhenny states, tabasco has been regarded and written about as one of the distinct products of Louisiana for more than half a century. It la almost Impossible to get Into hotel or restaurant anyany where In the United states without finding among the condiments tabasco sauce. It la not, however, a sauce that can be used In large quantities. It ia put up In very small bottles and a single drop on an oyster Is all that one can relish. Many funny stories are told of the people who enter the New Orleans restaurants and try tabasco on raw' oysters for the first time. They will Insist on putting about a teaspoonful on an oyster and gulping It down, and then the fireworks begin. Buch a dose causes the eater to see all the stars In the firmament A teaspoonful of tabasco would be enough for a dosen of the largest oysters that ever came out of Bayou creek. Much to the surprise of those who have so long been familiar with tabasco sauce, all of the supply of the world's market is raised on about 100 acres of land. , But the manufactured product first-cla- ss I 309 DC of this acres Is perhaps the most valuable of any of a like area of land In the United States If not in tlx world. It has been said by those who ought to know that the annual net revenues from tabasco manufacturing were not less than 3150,000. During the past few years there have been all sorts of Imitations of tabasco put on the market, but regardless of that fact, those who really know the nerlts of tabasco always try to get the genuine Mcllhenny brand. Such a reputation has this sauce that It Is now sent to Europe and enters Into competition with Maunsel White all over England and European countries. Therefore, despite all of the essays ever written on tabasco sauce and on Avery Island and on the Mcllhenny It will always remain a fact that the manufacture of tabasco will be of interest because of the uniqueness of the Industry, because of the romantic and historical interest attaching to Avery island, and because every Loulsianan points with' pride to Captain John A Mcllhenny as the best example of what the real southern gentleman to the manner born really Is and really ought to be. New Orleans States. 100 NEW INCORPORATIONS. . The Minneapolis Steel & Machinery company of Minneapolis, Minn., which intends to open a branch establishment in Salt Luke, George W. Pope act as resident agent filed it articles of incorporation yesterday with Secretary of State James T. Hammond. The of company will manufacture all kinds of machinery. It has a capital stock 3500.000. divided Into 350.000 preferred and 3450,000 common. The officers are James L Record, president and treasurer; Otis L. Record, resRalph P. Gillette, secretary, all idents of Minneapolis. The officers of the South Slaterville WeIrrigation company of Slaterville, o ber county, also filed their articles 11 incorporation with the secretary. has a capital stock of 324.00 divided 32 into 1.200 shares at a par value of Alvin each. Fred L. Foy Is president: BenJ. Hudman, first second jamin Chadwick Jr., vice-preside- W. H. Manning, secretary an treasurer. Just Ons Minute. r ne Minute Cough Cure gives the kills It me minute, because e which tickles the mucous n atm le. causing the cough, and e time clears the phlegm, the Inflammation and hea hes the affected parts. One the gh Cure strengthens a barWJJ Is and ds off pneumonia never falling cure In .1 curJ CroP-ut!S of Coughs, Colds and is pleasant Cure Cough nleas and good alike for slwr' Bold by Gea F. Cave. g Co., and Wm. Biddings. e jod solicitors wanted for h Stats JournaL ApplT 01 j |