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Show DAILY PAGE TWO. UTAH STATE JOURNAL, MONDAY, APRIL 3, 1905. $25.00 PRINCE ALBERT COATS AND VESTS FOR $6.98 $15.00 FROCK COATS AND VESTS FOR $2.98 $1.50 DOZ. LADIES FINE FAST BLACK HOSE FOR 89c at Putnams At the Chicago Salvage Companys Sale SALOONS TO ALONG Your Old Front Door UCW to a should and the change, ao you T AGAINST SATAN HELP SHOW GIRL call see Door, Just received, as well as a large line of 14J 'r1' Fr' Utah 01 Oregon Lumber Co.' 8T. TWENTY-FOURT- H 'phone sn PATTERSON SAVE NAN FROM THE ELECTRIC CHAIR. MAY FOR EVANGELICAL PREPARING CAMPAIGN IN NEW YORK. 30. ANALOGY THAT WENT WRONG. Street Department. alogy. But Just at this point the man with the bristling hair remembered he had an engagement to fill, and he waa gone. Seattle SUBURBANITE'S DAY AFTER." Once upon a time It was fun to go to New York. One felt behind the times tot to go. Now the only enjoyable moment while there la to board the train to come home. Instead of feeling bukind the times not to go, it Is getting far ahead of them to go. It la as much as one can do to keep abreast with the age of Hartford, without the additional burden of New York. The hurrying throngs of peo pie, the chaos of department stores, mounted policemen defending the crossings, standing police with uplift ed hand stopping processions of ve hides, the other bearing you under the horses noses, tooting automobiles and ringing trolleys, the elevated thundering above, the subway rumbling beneath. traffic rolling between, skyscrapers overlooking the tumult, and the whole pervaded with an atmos phere of greed, recklessness and danger. make New York a modern tnferno. Hartford Tlmea " NEW YoRK, April 3. Seth Low, assisted by a small army of ministers of the gospel, is preparing to carry on in New York this summer an evangelistic campaign which will aim to reach the bnckellders of every part of the city. Ten tents, with a greater aggregate area of canvas than was ever carried by the "largest show" on record, will be planted In Manhattan, and several side tents will be conducted in Brooklyn and Bronx. Low exports to raise more than 350.000 before the doors open In June. One of the features of the movement la to be the absence of the contribution plan during services. The aim la to reach the street children and idle crowds of men and women who lounge around the tenement districts In warm The tenta In Manhattan evenlnga will open by June 1. and nightly meetings will continue for about six weeks. In the afternoons special meetings for hildren will be held with music. There will he a musical director In each tent ind particular attention will be paid to the musical part of the work. , LOST HIS BET, OF COURSE. DICS MOINES, la., April 3 Former Mayor James Brenton began work as a day la borer under the board of public works in the city sidewalk department. He said: "1 have cut out politics for good. I am going to redeem the lost esteem of the public of Dea Moines. The politicians who took a hand in driving me to a point where I had to accept a position as barkeeper to keep my wife from starvation and save my home from a sehrifTs sale, have circulated many reports painting me blacker than I have ever been. "A big 310,000 lawsuit which hung over my head compelled me to accept the 3135 per month the saloon managers offered me. Now my home is safe and I am going to work to earn our living by tbe sweat of my face in the streets. It will be pretty hard for a corpulent man like me I weigh 800 pounds to go In the streets and do manual labor, but I'll do it for nothing more than to show the Des Moines people that I am not afraid to work hard to redeem my reputation. WHEN EASTER COMES. Jerry Porter of Clinton, Ky., who Is The average person waits to be Inmore or less famous for his humor and rewho was a prominent figure In the formed each year when Easter is to cent state meeting of the T. P. A. here. come, entirely befogged aa to how it ia Is the author of a poem, which tells The rules determining the following story In verse, says the determined. were formulated by the the festival l: Loulsvlle "A Kentucky colonel, who bragged Council of Klcaea in the year 325 A. D., thnt he could tell all about whisky by and are as follows: merely tasting It, offered one day to First That the Slstday of March make a bet that he could tell the brand should be accounted the vernal blindeven If of md age any whisky, f folded at the time. A number of his equinox. friends thought he was bluffing, and "Second That the full moon hapdecided to take the bet. So the colonel pening upon, or next after. March 21, was blindfolded and given a drink. He should be taken for the full moon of give the name and age with perfect Kiaan that la. the ecclesiastical moon. ease. Three tlmea more they tried him "Third That the Sunday pext foland each time he carried out tils side lowing should be Eaater Sunday. of the contract. It had been agreed Fourth If the full moon happen on that only five tests should be made, a Sunday, Easter day should be the ind they began to think thnt they had Sunday afterward.. lost, when one of them had a bright Thla year the actual full moon, after Idea. He filled a glass with clear wa-- which Easter comes, is on April 30. and handed it to the colonel. The full moon next preceding came on ."As he touched It to his lips an ex- March 21. or what Is by the rules acpression of surprise passed over the counted the vernal equinox. olonel's countenance, and as he swalSome change In calendars necessary lowed the water the expression changed in Gregory's time makes a strict folnto one of displeasure. He screwed up lowing of the letter of these rules Imhis mouth like a man who had bitten a practicable, and hence Easter does not green persimmon, and said: this year come on the Sunday follow"Well. boys, you got me. I never ing March 21, but April 23. tasted that before: It must be Like Finding Money. Finding health la like finding' money so think those who are sick. When yon have a cough, cold, sore, throat, or chest Irritation, better act promptly like W. C. Barber, of Sandy Level. Valle says: I had a terrible chest trou ble, caused by smoke and coal dust on my lungs: but. after finding no relief In other remedies. 1 was cured by Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Coughs and Colds. Greatest sale of any cough or lung medicine In the world. At Ogden druggists; 50c and $1.00; guaranteed. Trial bottle free. HAS COMPLETED TASK. er " WOMAN DE8IGNER He may well think, he has got off heap. who. after having contracted constipation or Indigestion, la still able to perfectly restore his health. Nothing win do this but Dr. King's New Life Pills. A quick, pleasant and certain cure for headache, constipation, etc. 75c at Ogden druggists; guaranteed. REPORT Made to the Secretary of State of the State of Utah, of the condition of the Ogden Savings Batik, located at Ogden. In the County of WVber, State of Utah, at the close of business on the 14th day of March, 1905: Resources. and Discounts .....3514,035.97 Bonds. Stocks. Certificates. etc 113.597.41 Real Estate 85.739.30 Due from National Banks .. 308.143.08 Current Expenses and Taxes 837.35 paid I .nan 8931,343.01 Liabilities. Capital Stock paid Undivided Profits Dividends Unpaid Savings Dep. Int. vent In 3 75.000.00 86,832.83 58.00 iff 4 per 809,451.18 Total 3921,843.01 State of Utah, County of Weber. John Plngree being first duly sworn according to law deposes and says that he is cashier of the above named bank; that the above and foregoing re port contains :t full, true and correct statement or the condition of the said bank at the close of business on the 14th day of March, 1905. JOHN PINGREE. Subscribed and sworn to before me 27lh day of March. 1905. this A Somerville man has completed the F. K. HIGGINBOTHAM, task of putting his cellar in apple-pi- e Notary Public. order. Ills wife did the work. Somer State of Utah, Office of Secretary of ville Journal. State. I. C. S, Tingey. Secretary of State of r the State of Utah, do hereby certify that the foregoing Is a full, true nnd All sorts of tea grow on correct copy of the statement of the above named company, now on file the tea bush; all sorts on In my office this 28th day of March lmr.. the same tea bush. C. R. TINGEY, Secretary of State. TEA OF Got Off Cheap. Total The Nevada. Courier-Journa- In a drinking resort on First avenue last night two fellows were having a high old time. conversing on every topic that happened to strike their straw cast lea of .fancy. 'T tell you, said the fellow with the bristling hair, the man who says we ought to live to be 100 years old la right Look at the horse. It takes a horse four years to get its growth and it lives to be twenty. It takes a man twenty years to get his growth, and by the same ratio we ought to live to be 100. There are lota of things we can learn from analogy. I don't know but what you're right,1 aid his companion, aa he toyed with the spoon In his glass. "For instance, there is the- flea. It Jumps thirteen hundred times its own length. There is no reason, therefore, why a man six feet high should not be able to Jump let me see 7.800 feet, or a mile and a half, at one leap. Yes, we can learn a great many curloue things from an- RECEIVE DEATH BLOW AT THE HAND8 OF. GOVERNMENT. Was Ones Chief Executive of Dei Action Called Forth by the Deplorable Conditions Existing in Moines, but is Now Employe of Will Try to Find Man Who Saw Saeaar Seth Low and a Small Army of Ministers Will Aim to Roach Young Attempt to Commit SuiBackslidora. cide at Loe Angelee. A. Wahl-gree- n, DENVER. April secretary of lh Denver Over-- I unci Raring association, will make another effort to And the inyaterloue who known that Caeaar horseman once Young attempted to ronmilte suicide at IjOb Angeled because of hie love for Ntn Patterson, and thin time Mr. Wahls? reen believed he id on the right track, lie is of the opinion that the for whom Ticket Broker. hnraeman Salt Lake wrote a letter of Bcheuman to Kan Patterdon Hbout the affair ia one of the thirty California bookmen who were at the Inst Overland racing meeting, and last night he looked up many of the addresses of these men aa were available, and will write to them all until he finda the right man. It may go far toward aavlng the pretty chorua girl from the electric chair if the man who saw Caeaar Young attempt aulclde on her account can be found. Mr. Wahlgreen'a attention waa flrat called to the matter on March 17, In a letter received from W. 8. Leake, a well known newapaper man of the coaat. Mr. Leake atated that Mr. Scheumun could not remember the name of the horaeman, although he had written Mias Patterson a letter for the horaeman. which he feared that unhappy young lady had never received. TRYING TO REGAIN THE ESTEEM OF THE PUBLIC. RENO, Nev., April 3. A death blow at the saloons which have been thriving along the irrigation canals has been struck by the United States government. The registers anc receivers of the United States land offices In Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada. New Mexico, North Dakota, Utah, Washington and Wyoming today were instructed by the cominislaoner of the general land office to notify all persons who have heretofore entered, or who may hereafter enter, any of the lands which hare been segregated under the provisions of the Reclamation act of June 17, 1903, that the leasing of said lands or portions thereof to other persons who have been and are conducting the business of selling alcoholic liquors on said lands, principally to the employes on the government works, will be sufficient cause for the cancellation of the entries of the lands so used or occupied. The officers of the land offices are further directed to give the widest possible publicity to the fact that such use of lands withdrawn under this act, whether such lands have been entered or are unoccupied, 'Will' be prevented by legal actions In ejectment. bY Injunction or otherwise. These Instructions have been called forth by the deplorable conditions existing In Nevada, where riot, robbery and murder have followed the prosecution of the government Irrigation work. Homesteaders have leased a portion of their lands to persons engaged in the liquor business, and the most fearful rrimes have been the consequence. The commissioner's decision Is likely to correct these conditions and will undoubtedly prevent their occurrence In other sections wherein the government la about to engage upon similar work. AN ITEMIZED BILL. Did you ever hear the atory of the artist who was employed to retouch a Reason Why our work superior t, we employ none tut thf operators and j.jiy the salaries in spin neither tin e in- ex ix nse to - the reqnircuv. laundering. FREE One Hum ,lf propft( Silk every nek to one customers. Each p'tcksge oflfc and each pn k;ige of 25c. tlonal entitle tlie holder u t chance on this umbrella Troy Laundry Bell 'Phone, 107-- ini, MAKERS yourself a treat. Youll get it If you send four shirta collars and cuffs to be laundered hen There's satisfaction la vetrlai i shirt or collur that Is smooth atom! the edges It Is also mighty how much we try to advance the busito have them returned from the ness Interest! of our customers In evlaundry Just like jew. ery legitimate wa. In ao doing our For this kind of work send ye motives may be tinctured with selfish- bundle here. ness, for upon the prosperity of our patrons lies the success of thla bank. OGDEN Jn every department you will find us prepared to serve you In a satisfactory manner. LAUNDRT large painting In an old Belgium church?" asked a guest at the Galt house last night, says the Louisville l, and as no one recognised the story by that Introduction he continued: When the work was done the painter presented a bill for 367.30. The church trustees, however, required an itemised bill, and the painter handed In this account, which was duly audited and paid: Correcting the Ten Commandments 3 5.12 Renewing heaven, adjusting the stars 7.14 OGDEN BANK Touching up purgatory and relost 3.06 souls storing H. C. Bigelow, President. Brightening up the flumes of J. M. Browning, hell, putting new tail on the A. P. Bigelow,' Cashier. devil, and doing several odd 7.17 R. A. Moyes, Asistant Cashier. jobs for the damned Putting new stone In David's sling, enlarging the head of Goliath 6.18 Mending the shirt of the prodl- gal son and cleaning his ear.. 3.39 Embellishing (Pontius Pilate and , putting new ribbon on his bon- - rl Courier-Journa- lt Peery Bros. Milling Company One of the big things 4n the Wall street section pointed out to a Chicagoan visiting New York Is the Broad Exchange building. It la twenty-eigstories high and houaea 8.000 brokers, bankers and corporation officers. Tf has Just conte to light that the designer of every Inch of the structural steel work from the foundation to the roof was a woman Miss Marlon S) Parker, a civil engineer. In addition to this she has designed the steel work of the Astoria half of the Waldorf hotel. The Whitehall net 8.02 building Is another giant of lower IS AS IMPORTANT AS GLASSBroadway, and a score more of other Putting new tail on the rooster of St. Peter and mending his big structures she has designed. She FITTING. SOME calls herself a specialising architect." comb .. . 3. 20 OPTICIANS ARE NOT PARShe Is a native of Detroit and a grad- Repluming and reglldlng left TICULAR ABOUT THIS AND uate of Ann Arbor. Chicago Tribune. 5.18 wing of guardian angel the or servant THEREFORE HAVE TROUthe Washing high NO EXCE8S FARE CHARGES ON priest and putting carmine on BLE. FOR A PERFECT FIT NICKEL PLATE ROAD. hla neck 5.02 IN FRAME AND GLASSES Taking the spots off the son of YOU MUST CONSULT Its trains are composed of the best Tobias 10.30 equipment, consisting of through vestl-bule- d Putting earrings In Sarah's ears. 5.26 sleeping cars. In both directions, Decorating Noah's ark and put4.31 ting head on Shem between Chicago, Cleveland, Buffalo. New York. Boston, -- nd intermediate Total 367.30 points, with unexcelled Dining oar Manufacturing Optician Service, meals being served In Nickel THE EARTH'S FUTURE. Plate dining cars on the American Club Meal Plan, ranging in price frera The Increasing pressure of popula85 cents to 31.00; mid-da- y luncheon, tion upon the earth's capacity for sup50 cents. porting It Is discussed In the InternaTrain No. 2, leaving Chicago at 10.35 tional quarterly by Prof. X. S. Shaler. a. m., dally, has through vesttbuled who occupies the chair of geology In sleepers for Boston, via Nickel Plate, Harvard university. The present numWest Shore and Boston A Maine roads, ber of the earth's Inhabitants is comand through vesttbuled sleepers to puted at 1.600.000,000, and it Is likely New York and Intermediate points, vis to Increase hereafter, owing to the Nickel Plate and both the Lacknwanna elimination of pestilence and chronic and West Shore roads. war. at a rate considerably greater Train No. 4, leaving Chicago at 3:30 than the average rate at which It has p. m dally, has through vestlbuled Increased during the last three censleeping cars for Buffalo, New Yotk turies. It is certain, on the other hand, Price aad Intermediate points. the quantity of tillable soil upon & $1.00 Train No. 6, leaving Chicago at 9:11 thnt 60c ns well as the stock of other the earth, Free Trial. P- m., dally, has through vestibule! things necessary for man. such ns Iron, sleeping cars for Ft. Wayne. Cleveland, coal, petroleum, copper nnd other metSurest and Quickest Cure for all Erie, Buffalo, New York and Intermedials or minerals. Is far from boundless. THROAT and LUNG TROUBate points, arriving at New York City When will the demand threaten to exLES, or MONEY BACK. early the second morning. ceed the supply? Professor Shaler. Rates always the lowest. Write, calculates thnt. as regards the earth's phone ot call on nearest ticket agent! agricultural resources, the soil which, or Chaa E. Johnson, District Passenwithout nny considerable engineering ger Agent, Nickel Plate road, 305 Cen- work, could now be put under the plow JOURNAL ADS. BRING RESULT3. tury building, Denver, Colo. Chicago would support In tolerable comfort JOURNAL ADS. BRING RESULTS depot, La Salle and Van Buren streets. about 4.000.000.000 human beings. JOURNAL ADS BRING RESULTS STATE ht - wttifce-tor- STEAM 'Phone 174. ..... ........a...... J. T. RUSHMEit KILLthi COUCH f4rQ -- 225,HlA First National Bank OGDEN, UTAH DAVID ECCLE8, President THOMAS D. DEE, JOHN PINGREE Cashier. JAB F. BURTON. Assistant ft DIRECTORS: Thorns D. D David Eeelss Bernard WhK Geo. H. Trib Watson John W. W. Ritsr PaM"" Adam Joseph Clark M. 8. Browning. Vlce-PreeU- e. Respectfully solicit th ccunV and hsnks, mercantile firms viduals. W pay Interest on time depw courteous Ample resources, servicement. superior I CURE the LUNCS Dr. ICings New Discovery 437 T wenty fifth Ihd Capital and Surplus Vice-Preside- nt. FRAME FITTING y I I Parker Goal Go. I BOTH 'PHONES. ..213-- Z Bell Telephone l lS I |