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Show DAILY PAGE SIX. UTAH STATE JOURNAL, COLD DAEDGIHG Fifty Years the Standard 14, 1905. FRIDAY, APRIL THE LAST ON LARGE SCALE RESIDES IN A HAMLET. IN NOW SCHEME BEING DEVELOPED NORTHWEST TERRITORIES. Thro Service via the Scenic Lines and Denver VERMONT Modern Appilancoo Successful in tha Cousin of Chariot Sumnor Has Subsisted Fifty Yean on Forty Cents Places That Were Hitherto a Day Pension is Increased. Unprofitable. Manitoba, April 14. A scheme, probably the largest on record, is now being developed on the banks of the Saskatchewan river, three miles below Prince Albert, In ' the northwest territories. For years gold has been found In various parts of Canada, and it has been mined with Indifferent success owing to the small quantity of the metal to be obtained from a large quantity of sand and quartz, but the Improved methods now in use enable the operators to profitably work the gravel, even though the returns are not more than an ounce or two of gold to the Dr. Roughaldea la one of the ton. prime movers In the operations, and he la supported by the Hon. Charles Ramsey, son of the twelfth earl of Dalhousle and uncle to the present earl. A dredge Is being built at the camp on the banks of the river, which will be 110 feet long and 5 feet deep when The ladder head being ompleted. made for It is 24 feet above the deck and will dig 27 feet below the water level. It will be fitted with 80 buckets, each weighing 500 pounds, and each one will have a capacity of 5H cubic feet of earth. The total cost of this first dredge will be 314,000. The gold In the banks of the river The results from glacial deposits. river has been doing the mining ever since It flowed that way. It has cut Its way through the soil, washing away portions of the banka every year and depositing the gold aust ror centuries at the bottom of the river. The ost of mining by this process of dredging is Insignificant compared with the crushing of quarts or the ordinary washing process, and a lhr larger quantity of gravel can be handled. The machinery digs out the ore and gravel and raises It to the head of the ladder, where It la dumped into a hopper, and from there passes Into a receiving screen 20 feet long by 16 wide. After the gold has been extracted the debris Is carried by conveyers and dumped thirty feet at the rear of the dredge. The dredge now being built will handle 8,000 tons of gravel every hours. day of twenty-fou- r The people who are associated" with Dr. Roughaldea are preparing to build twenty other and larger dredges If the initial one turns out satisfactorily. It la proposed to run these dredges by electricity, which will be generated at power stations along the banka of WINNIPEG, gold-dredgi- ng Made from pure cream of tartar derived from grapes. PRICE BAKING POWDER CO.. CHICAGO. 4 444444444f44-f-f-M"f4- j 444-f4-f49-4-M4M44444-M-- f WITH THE it SPORTSl There wan nothing to It at the Association alleys hist evening except and the manner In which that team put it all over the Toggery aggregation was a shame to behold. Three straight games for the boys tells the story. Camp, for the winners, bowled a splendid game, securing the high Individual score, 220, as well as the high individual average for the three games, IBS pins. Fleahner followed a clow second In both respects, getting for1 his high single score 20S and for his average 177 pins. The score: Shupe-lYlllla- Shupe-Willia- ms SHUPE-WILLIAM- S. Fret well 171 Blakeslee 11 167 131 108 157 142 128 127439 ICO ond base, Ferris; shortstop, Raymond; third base, Swayne; left Held, Marti like; center field, Baxter; right field, Flodie; catchers, Lewis and Stanley. The Northern Pacific league, of which Salt Lake City la a member, is involved In all kinds of worry. It will play as an outlaw league this year because It cannot receive protection from the national commission. It looks as If the commission had made a mistake and would do well to consider Its decision, as baseball In the west Is on a perilous footing, and some of the teams In this league may be able to take players from the Pacific league. Which Is protected. Chicago Record-Heral- d. 181 Hanlon Is hot on the trail of Wfctklns 157471 Eddie Corbett. The favorite son of 167 140429 Young Baker Run Frani-lncwants another fight 239-- 559 201 Camp with the former champion, and If such 80S S76 813 2291 is possible wants tho mill to take place Totals In Philadelphia or the present abode of the Denverite sleepy Baltimore. On the river. TOGGERY. A1 152 174 205531 Monday night Hanlon accosted Fleshmer ' His Views for Sale. 125 94 166385 Herford and asked the manager of Brown Corbett If he would not consent to The 89H 114 127 story Is told by President Had157 Stephens ..140 142 99381 meeting between the pair. ley of Yale university, who enjoys a Lindsay 192 124 146462 M. Pretwel! good story none the less If he himIt Is estimated that at least seventy-fiv- e self be the victim. Mr. Hadley was fight fans from this city will ac766 661 730 217 Totals in Yellowstone park when traveling when he Gardner company George he chanced upon a young man whom Buck Weaver, the veteran tmll play- goes to Balt Lake next Monday for the from hla appearance he judged to be Mike with Schreck. has fight George er, has been signed for Vancouver. won a host of friends in Ogden a student Weaver has played with Pittsburg, "This Is a wonderful scene, Isnt his conduct and through gentlemanly Milwaukee, Loulsvlle, Philadelphia, business-lik- e said the professor. It?" methods of about going , Syracuse, Butte and Boise. The stranger smiled, nodded to his things. He Is in the pink of condition, will certainly make Schreck go questioner and turned without speakConstant Reader Would Gans and and some or beat him to a standstill. not ing to look at the view. Turner have done better had they Do you think," asked President been matched to go for fifteen rounds "There are two classes of men In Hadley, now confirmed in his Idea In Baltimore shortly? Answer Does every trade or profession, the gentle' that he was talking to a student, a Rockefeller pass up easy money? men and the blackguards, and there are as many blackguards among the "that thia chasm was caused by some of Utah the high University Swapp. or the bankers aa there great upheaval of nature, or Is It the jumper, broke the state record In prac- stockbrokers ," are the among 5 says Ja-b- result of erosion or glacial action? tice yesterday afternoon. He did feet the 'White, English lightweight What are your views 9 Inches, which is one inch better than said the stranger "My views, the state record made by Adams of who is matched to fight Britt. a on in is "It not walk life in the quickly, opening bag he carried conmeet last year. Provo at the state which a man finds himself that a man taining photographs, are only $2 a Notice that Kid McCoy has been refinement depends; the gentleman dozen and are cheap at the price. I,et dubbed the Beau Brummel of pugilists. will remain even if he has found his me show you some samples. There was once the Tallyrand of trot living as a prizefighter, while the brute ting-hordrivers and the Napoleon will still he a brute even If he be Astonishing Incident. billiirds. of Talleyrand might have clergyman or an editor. InThere It was, to all her friends, an astonbrutal sacrinothing essentially prise ishing incident, that Mrs. I. B. Hunt driven a trotting horse without fice of dignity, while Napoleon might fighting. he Bald quietly, is one of of Lime Ridge, Wis., was cured of her have, and probably did. piay billiards, the Roxlng." "Doctors.' she most of arts. Of course dreadful sickness. valuable Beau Brum but imagine, if you can, "had given nie up; friends were writes, Is In It a useful know fight; anyone mel fighting Sharkey. to bid me the last farewell; that, but it Is more useful still as a ready clouds of despair darkened my horizon for the man character. training Any seek further to now Hart Is going and I was a wreck on the shores ot fame by tackling Jeffries. After that may have to defend himself on occa- despondency, when I began to take I sions. have noticed that those hut battle he Is likely to find another Electric Bitters, for my stomcrowd walling for hint at the Louisville who know best how to do It are those ach and liver complaint.frightful asTo the who most need their rarely knowledge. tonishment of station, nnd another ride In prospect There Is an all, I wns Benefited at air of about once but tills time he wont mind if the a man and am now completely and who can put up ,a good fight carriage Jolts and the band plays out when restored to health." At miraculously to It more caroften that un pushed of tune. He may even get flowers, Ogden druggists; price 56c ; more ries with it than any blow less the heirs think It wise to Include he can weight In exstrike. ton my years' a omit Please notice proviso, In the perience I have never once needed my Matt Stanley, mu linger of the Spo- knowledge of fighting except in the frame; that It creates and develops kane Indians, is already working out ring. and quickness; suppleness that, "However, the purely with pugnacious his team for the opening game of boxing is less valuable to a practiced In youth. It Imparts a Salt Lake April 26. Stanley Is trying side than the psychological. Consider freedom and grace of motion absoluteout Pitchers Mrlnnla. Kllnkhammmer- man a for moment the effects of teaching a ly unattainable by other means; that secand Simons; first base, Nehrlng; It Is not a violent exercise. In so far as boy to box well. poise, injury by strain Is Involved, and, fin are health good among the qualities that its perils are comparatively which he necessarily acquires. The ally, few. At remote Intervals one hears ability to strike a hard and blow is worth much, but the of n fatal Injury resulting, nlmnst Inability to take such a blow without variablyor from a cheap or damaged from the foolhardy practice wincing is worth far more. No matter mask, what a man's profession may be. he of exercising without the usual head has to t ik many hard knocks', and he or chest covering, or with an 111 butwho is trained to receive severe physi- toned fnii. The pmiKtrtlon of mishaps cal blows with equanimity is the man to the number of fencers, however, Is who enn best receive blows of a moral Infinitesimal. or financial nature nnd rally from Son Lost Mother, them unscathed. es prise-fighters- se self-relian- ce It la yours If you uae the Burlington Route to Chicago. Sleeping car. leave Salt Lake City every afternoon, reaching Denver the next afternoon, a here passengers are given time for a trip over the city if they wish it. The same sleeping cars then K0 on thro to Chicago and Intermediate points. Other Standard Bleeping cars are Included In the Burlington's test trains from Denver to Omaha, Kansas City, St Joseph, St. Louis and other Southeastern points. UNION, Vt, April 14. Journey from the railroad lives the last widow of the war of the Revolution, Esther Sumner Damon, cousin of Charles Sumner. For half a century she has subsisted on 40 events a day, but under the provisions of a special act approved February 28, she will receive $24 a month. Esther Sumner was born In Bridge-wate- r, Vt.. August 1. 1814. When she was eight years old her father met with a fatal accident leaving the famEsther, by ily without resources. working hard during the summers, saved a few dollars, which enabled her to attend the' village school during the winter. At the age of 17 she taught a little school on the mountain In Plymouth Union, She continued to direct her little flock until Noah Damon, an aged solcame to dier of the Revolution, Plymouth Union on a visit and fell in love with her. Two weeks later, In 134, they were married. PLYMOUTH A half-day- 's Immediately after the wedding it a garden mornings A tin in hand is worth two at the store. Order'll today. Aroma-tig- ht tins. Never cold in bulk. Folder (& Co. J. A. EiUblishsd la 150 San Franciico I lESLEN, General Agent. WE8T SECOND SOUTH STREET, 79 BALT LAKE CITY. de- Frisco System CHICAGO A EA8TERN ILLINOIS R. R. Double Daily Trains and BETWEEN evenings, she kept the wolf from the door. At the end of three years the young wife wearied of the struggle and sug gested to her husband, who had become helpless, that he go to hla daugh ter by a former wife, living In New St. Louis and Chicago MORNING AND EVENING 9:50 a. m. from LaSalle 8treet Station, Chicago 8ta. (Merchants Bdg) 8t Louie, 9:30 a: m. Morning or evening connection at both termini with lines Equipment entirely new and modern throughout From Union Hampshire. The veteran agreed to the proposition and left hla wife without He lived any show of resentment. only two years after that, nut during this time hla wife bought hla clothes out of her earnings and sent them to A DOUBLE-TRAC- 9:10 p. 0:48 p. diverging. RAILWAY. K Equipped with practical and approved safety appliances. Substantially constructed. him. Concerning her husband, who has years, Mrs. Dabeen flead sixty-si- x mon can give little information. He was born In 1795, and at the age of 16 enlisted In a Massachusetts regiment He particiand served five years. pated In the battle of Long Island and Next Time other Important engagements. Mrs. Damon, a few years after the death of Mr. Damon, was granted tiension of 680 a year, and this amount a score of years ago was Increased to 812 a month. During her early widowhood Mrs. Damon had several offers of marriage, but she refused all proposals. Mrs. Damon la well preserved, al though more than 90 years old. She Is erect In carriage, with a strong, Intellectual face. She enjoys fair health, You Go East BE SURE AND USE THE Union Pacific TEA and Every woman knows how to brew tea her own way and she likes to have her own Chicago, ITilwaukee & St. Paul Line. - way. THE ROUTE OF THE He Overland Limited la a Girl. tired mother with two children, a baby of 2 yean that sat on her lap and a bright-eyeboy of perhaps 4, who sat beside her, were trying to enjoy a little luncheon in a restaurant In the business section of the city. Two young ladies entered snd sat down at the same table. Seeing the difficulty the woman had In eating lunch and holding her younger chug at the same time, one of the young ladles leaned over and said In a proWhat a sweet little pitiating tone: boy! Wont you let me hold him until you finish lunch?" The mother gladly granted the request 'and was transfer-inher charge Into the arms of the younger woman, when the little boy, with never a smile, raised his voice He aint a boy; hes and exclaimed: a little girl!" Philadelphia Press. A THROUGH d CARS TO CHICAGO. CLAUDE S. WILLIAMS, Commercial Agent 106 WEST 2ND 80UTH ST. 8ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. g UNION PACIFIC Man's Unraaaonablaness Is often ns great aa woman's. But Thos. 8. Austin,' mgr. of the "Republican," of Leavenworth, Ind., was not unreasonable when he refused to allow the doctors to operate on hla wife for female trouble. Instead, he says, we concluded to try Electric Bittern. My wife was then so sick she could hardly leave her bed, and five (5) physicians had failed to relieve her. After taking Electric Bitters she was perfectly cured, and can now perform all her household duties. Guaranteed by Ogden druggists; price 50c. Three Trains Daily VI A,. Capital and Surplus, CHICAGO OMAHA ST. LOUIS KANSAS CITY and all Principal Eastirn Points other line Many hours quicker than any $225,000.00. First National Bank No Change of Cara, THE OVERLAND all the way. ROUTE OGDEN, UTAH DAVID ECCLE8, President. THOMAS D. DEE, JOHN PINGREE, Cashier. JA8. F. BURTON, Aeelatant Cashier DIRECTORS! David Eeoles Themaa D. Dee Gee. H. Tribe Bernard White W. W. Riter John Wataon Joseph Clark Adam Patterson M. S. Browning. Respectfully solicits the accounts of banks, mercantile firms and Indi- Elietrie-Llghti- Vice-Preside- f'niisumptlon runs In our family, and through It I lost my mother." writes E. It. Reid of Harmony, Mo, For the past five years, however, on the slightest sign of a cough or cold, have taken Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, which has saved me from serious lung trouble." Ills mothers death was a sad loss for Mr. Reid, but he learned that lung trouble must not lie neglected, and how to cure It viduals. Quickest relief and cure for coughs We pay Interest on time deposits. ainl colds. Price 50c and 31.00; guar Ample resources, courteous treatanterd at Ogden druggists. Trial hot ment. superior service. lie free. TO TO well-direct- ed The eiionnitiiN value of continual practice with tlie foils as a means of securing and preserving good health la. In my humble opinion, the main renson for the steady hold of fencing upon public favor In Italy and France. It Is only of Lite years that the attention bestowed by medical men upon physical exercise In France, at least, where Dr, Lagrange's treatises have become classli'iil hns alien prominence to the worth of fencing ns a health factor. Every one knows or rather every one should know that fencing presses Into service every muscle of the human F. R- - veloped that Mr. Damon, Instead of possessing funds or property, could figure up only about 316.50. The bride, by rigid economy, had saved a small sum from her pay for teaching, hut this did not last long. Mr. Damon was unable to work, and fell upon the task of bread-winnin- g By the shoulders of the girl bride. accepting any kind of employment and cultivating " I wy Trilns running d day. to gull Information fnmUhed on nppUenlkm A. B. MOSELEY Traveling Pesaenger Agent, OGDEN, UTAH, a TH By E JOURNAL Carrier, Ont Month, 60c. By Mill. 0 M"nth' S |