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Show DAILY JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE tu hold down only weakness Is at tha bat, and there are many below him in that department of the game. He has made good on the roast. . SPORTS ! WITH THE STATE UTAH be erinlyMcHale's ! A NEW UMPIRE. Satlsy Has Handsd in His Rssignation Will Go to Coast. TAKES FIFTEEN Ktli-kney- . r. f. empire William Betley of the Pacific National league announced yesterday that he had tendered hla resignation to the director of the league, to take effect Immediately, a he ha offer from the Pacific Coat and American Association leagues. ball Win Kerrln, the well-knoplayer, formerly of thie city, will handle the Indicator In the game at Balt Lake this afternoon, and should make good, us he has been mixed up In the business for years Carney, a. a. . IUrlen, 2b... Wright, 1 It. . . Reilly. I li- - ... Toaer. I. f. ... ( IHhy. Mead. f- - . . Thornton, p. .. ELDERS AND LOBSTERS PLAY GAME. Tula la Ogden Hit 01840011000000 2 I 12020021010010 2 13 0000000010001 2 4 .. .0 Solid Error For Nmi Neither Team Scop 0010041000000210 ..1 Lake Salt Eldor On to tho HAUSEN LET OUT. Inning lilt .. ..201 1005201 10102H Good in tho Lt. 1 I .00030001000001 .. Error Kane on ball, oft Cas- - Rtfuses te Play tha String Out and Summary: Gsts His Two-D- a . RECORD-BREAKIN- tleton. 7; off Thornton. hit. Clark. Caalleton. Herwig. Three-baa-2.e hlta, Oliniln, Ilreatno, Bllckney, w Double plnya, Brealno to Clark, Bara to ItreRino to Clark. lilt by pitcher, 21 Heine Paaaed balls, Mead. Leahy, O'Brien. Ogden 1 Mauaen. Wild pitch, Thornton, Caatle-to- n. Spokane 1 Sacrifice hit. Bare, Carney and Salt Luke O'Brien. Thornton. Stolen bane. Hastings. Htlckney. Wright, Toser, Mead 2. Left on buses, Ogden 12, Salt Lake 15. In a murd-b- i caking, Ctnplre, Bassett. Time of game, 2:30. of lifteen inning Salt Lake Attendance, 400, defeated Ogden yeatertlay by a score BOISE 3; SPOKANE 2. of 10 to 9. The game waa full of error mid full of remarkable play, and Indiana Hava Droppad Four Gamaa in 8uecaaion. the game tru one of the kind lhal give the fan a palpatatlon of the heart. By a ahade of auperlor playing at The wore In the aeventh atood 5 to Bpokane yeaterday Boise nosed SpoBalt Iake kane out for the fourth time this week. 2 in favor of the Lobsters. Both pitchers were In fine fettle, but tied the wore In the eighth and from McFkrlan kept the singles scattered, then on to the fifteenth no one aaw the while Boiae bunched hers on the Spoplate. Roy Caatleton wa in the box kane pitcher. Stelts started the scorfor the visitors in the fifth with a for Ogden and pitched good ball, but ing home run. In the aeventh hia teaiii-mat- e had too many coatly walked and Knox, Bteltx andMcIntyre Hanaon error behind him to make a good hit aafely, netting three runs. Bposhowing. Aa It waa the Elder never kane had the bases full in the ninth, found hint very eaay. Brlaeno again with one man out, but could score only one run. McFarlnn grew wild, bitting had on hla batting riot he, aa did alao Lewis with a pitched ball, walking llaatlnga and Clark. The batting of Stanley and Simons getting to first on of Ralt Lake wa a feature of an error. Hlinons was forced at second, and a few moments later Raymond the game. went out the same way. Score: The score: 0 Boise 0 1 3 Ogden. Spokane halr-ralai- Stli-kne- 0001030 03 0000100 Bumps Fltz-Bchre- ck ot What action would the Western Jockey club take if its Bat of outlaws should eventually Include every man and horse on the turf? Would it hang Itself on that sort of a rope? It Is n hard matter to solve how In the world Barney Mullln, who quit with Rufe Turner in this elty, could ever hand the sleep tablets to Jerry McCarthy. TEA The cost of the tea a'fam-Il- y drinks is so very little, one can afford good tea. In every ysluc f Sthillmi'i Bal T MaU Good Tat knotId: Hr In I a else help a pritty girl across the street. then when It is nite you walk along ! and try all the doaia on your beet, and if a burglar shoots you In the head when you ere trying the doab the paper will print your picture and say A noble hero who died doing hla duty. Sumtlmes you git a chance to arrest ;a man that has a Jag, and if he has 'any munny maybe he will give you a nine tip for taking calr of him, but of course you can't keep the tip, you give 11 back and say No. I ain mtarly doing my duty. when thare i a great crime and everybody want to find out about it tiiay look in the paper and see what the police are doing. The police don't always find the man. but thay offer a big prise and sum other people find the man. end then every one aye It pretty hard to fool the police. our cheef i the best policeman 1 know, he runs this town pritty slick, there la no crime here hardly A Just think how near Chicago la. too! 1 know pir cheef pritty well, & If I ever git in trubbel he wont arrest me, will you, cheef? The first policeman was Cain, he took his club & told Abel to move on, and Abel said When i git ready, 4 1 Cain cracked hia skull and said The law must be reapeckted. then Adam came and said Whure la Abel, and Cain said I doant know, and when he lied the Lord took away hla star and told him to move on himself, end Cain kept mlvtng on till he died. Milwaukee Sentinel. Serious Bill" Hausen broke his pick with Manager Gimlln yesterday when he refused to run out a hit to O'Brien In the eleventh inning, and waa told to take hla clothes and go by the main squeeze. BUI has been acting rather aulky for over a week, and when he played the baby act" yeaterday Glm told him that he could go somewhere else after the game. I can go now," said AH right, Hausen gruffly. OLE YOHNSON8 YOSHES. replied Glm; go now. Get in there and catch, Fulmer. And It waa all off with the Danver may haf auditorium built en Hausen bluff. It waa called. tern for reunion of Yeneral Bell's CripWalter Sea re, the favorite Balt Lake a catcher, who used to work with Park ple Creek solylera en nineteen iwenty-latex. old White the and Wings, City, ly with the O. 8. L. team, will do the Denver paper tell odder day bout sax-tee- n noo tooth pullers turned loose backstopping for the Lobsters in llit future. from college dental surgery. Noose paper nefer try to kep record of noo lez MISCELLANEOUS. puller turned loose en Danver. Now for the fish stories. Have you School kids en Danver found some heard any? yiant powder an caps odder day. Dey haf so muuch fun vit dese dat most It's too bad that the kid forgot efrytang day learn dat day, fight for July 3 has been declared off. an yut few of dem von't celebrate Fort a complete Yuly dese yar. It will give the Hart-Romonopoly on that day. Mayor of Danver goen to haf yeneral clencn oop an tank hue start en next Jimmy Britt 1 ambitious to retire Saturday mornen an get trough am without a defeat on hla record, but he night. Whole lot places down har Ay doesn't seem to realise the fatality that bat day cannaw clean en sax mont. lurks in hesitation. George M. Kimball in Golden (Colo.) The rrlsla la paaaed in the fight between Battling Nelson and Philadelphia. The "battler has decided to interne himself In Hagewishe until war breaks out elsewhere. be remembered as the fast youngster McClusky secured for Butte last year. He la one of tha oeac fielders In the business. He Is fust on his feet, has excellent judgment, and knows renter field as well as anyone In the league. has been playing with the Seattle club. In the Const league, and has been doing good work. Cody ha.s been after him for some time. He Is Just the man the Boise bunch needs to fill out the otiler garden, and he will 17, 1905. The cable dispatches say Willie Anderson and Alex Smith, the American golfers, are doing well in the English When they play In open tourney. America, Anderson and Smith are Scotsmen. E8SAY8 OF LITTLE BOBBIE POLICEMAN. Transcript. I. 0. O. F. ANNUAL EXCURSION. The annual excursion of the L O. be held this year at the Lagoon, near Farmington. Reduced rates have been secured on all railroads for the event, which la scheduled for June 21, and every person can take advantage of them whether Odd Fellows or not. Indications point to a vary large attendance. Sports and games of all sorts will be provided; there will be bathing and boating and prizes will be offered for the oldest Odd Fellow, the oldest Rebekah, the youngest Odd the Fellow, tbe youngest Rebekah, O. F. will prettiest baby (either sex), the largest family of Odd Fellows, and for other features. Trains on all roads win be run right through to the Lagoon, the Salt Lake 4k Ogden road having been equipped with new Iron of late, so this can be done. Everyone ! in? vlted. Trades and Labor Notes! j Contributed by the Ogden Trades and Labor Assembly. e third prize. Montana to Vancouv union affiliated wtthth- - Liana t Workers' organization. fch lr-- The Aim and Object of Labor. Organizsd The direct aim of organised labor is, and always has been, Since the early tlmee there have been two classes, the working class and the master class. The slaves used to be branded with a murk of ownership called the stigma. This Is no longei done, but the laborer bears a stigma whether we admit it or not. The first Important attempt at organization of labor waa made by Spartacua, about 71 B. C., when the white slaves of Italy rose In rebellion against their masters. They were unsuccessful because the master class had the power of the government and the military on their side. Other rebellions of the same nature took place from time to time, usually unsuccessful. If they did succeed the slaves would escape and go to the mountains and form tribes of their own. where tney soon became aa oppressive as their1 masters had been. As laborers became skilled in the trades, they banded themselves together In guild. The first account of guilds found in the tenth century. The meaning of the word organisation of tradesmen to carry on commerce or some other undertaking. There Is some trace of the ancient guilds In the trades unions of today. The Introduction of machinery wa taken as a menace to labor: The Installing of factories was the signal for riot. The result was thet orgenlsstion of labor was more necessary than be1 1 fore. In the United Slates the need for organisation was Increased after coal and Iron were discovered. The employers united in trusts, making it Impossible for the employes to have any Interest In their concerns. The owners wanted the laboring men to work ten or twelve hours a day, receive email wages and yet turn out the best of work. The true meaning of the word capital is the tools or other means which constitute our stock In trade. Each man should own these tools for himself. Capital and labor never should have been separated. It waa inevitable, as men grew greedy, that the laboring men had to unite against them, or be forceJ The endowment . Clerk' International hr,i(. unl r,f Ih Ik young women member housekeeping when they r,4 has caused a great de.,1 nf , "I" orc comment in labor circles J. G. Phelps Wti Stokes ih- - In ifi work in that city, ha been for honorary membership n national Clgarmakers' union of Miss Rose Pastor, whom he I. marry. Is already a member. !S J? Sixty strike-breake- rs imported Tacoma to work as wharf and longshoremen are musing erable trouble. None of the hotels will house the men. scabs are coating the tractors more than the moderate scale of the union men. c!? iU, shlp-loudin- J? ' Robeit Hunter, a New York osiu. throplst. recently declared that tSi are 5.000 persons In the Chicago mm yards on the verge of pauperism. average wage of men in the stork 85 a week, while some few !nJ laborer receive $17 and 118. TheiJ 1 ployes, many of them, are slavery. lr. pnettei The amount of money annually r. calved In Greece from Greek emlgnu, to the United States 1 assuming jr. portion that have attracted the itt tlon of the Greek government and public. Greek official that over 81,950.501.03 thus num Greece during 1901 In a speech made recently by Job Mitchell at Mooslc, Pa., he IntlnuM that he will soon give up hi pMttia as president of the United Mine a of America. There have been nxm for month that Mr. Mitchell hid bm offered various other positions but bt has either given them prompt dnU or refused to discus them. Wort-er- From a teaming point of view t city of Chicago take the leading pa tlon among the cities of the count: There are about 3,000 firms engaged the business of hauling goods ud under. aggregate number of horse owned The union itaelf la divided into two them is 30,000. parties. One believes in lockouts and Organisation of the women strikes, such as are now in force In of the country ha recriudi Chicago, and petitioning the legislature to pass laws for shorter hours, higher powerful stimulus from the connme wages, safety appliances, etc. Tht of the Woman's Trade Union Lew other party believes that labor should America, held in New York city eeriorganise a political party and nominate ly. The convention is significant at candidates for president, congress and Is the first ever held In this counuyh the senate, or, in other words, to com- discuss the problem of the Mittal bine at the ballot box and elect officers. women. Then, when a strike la declared the FRIGHTFUL MORTALITY. capitalists cannot call out the militia won. just as a strike la almostformed under Due to Bright's Diseaee Tho FwW Such a union la to be the name of the Industrial Union, Increase Shewn by the Con PARKER A CO. wlhch will hold Its first convention In When I git big I think I will be a Rock Springs, Castle Gate. Diamond in June. dot If are to all you have you and Cumberland Coal. 24th and WalL Chicago policeman, The time la coming when the cona policeman la to stnd on the corner or Both 'Phones servatives, or people who wish the present conditions to go on, will be In one party. The movements for the betterment of the laboring people will combine against them and these-wilwin. Then, when every man control hi own labor and no man can dictate when or where he shall use it, the ultimate object of organised labor will have been accomplished. l TRUTH." There are said to be In New York city, with ship of 250,000. 84 trade union a total member- II I BJ .DEATHS .DEATHS IMU .DEATHS W .DEATHS W1 .DEATHS SJ .DEATHS W .DEATHS .DEATHS M .DEATHS W .DEATHS ' DEATHS The census gives tbs flfUMJ 1890 and 1900. The lntervenln w how the Increase as versd 1B9S 1891 1893 1893 1894 1895 1898 1897 1898 1891 1900 year- - A horrifying nesrU picture dead within one year, and of several times that number recruits already primed with trouble for the call. What does It all mean? J that countless thousands InhT huao ney trouble, and not one a knows that It la Bright D1 nw that If It geto chronic (does well in two or three month) victim has been enrolled In this army of death and that th stana only one thing known that tween the patient and death, vUj, tons Renal Compound ftr 000 The Brotherhood of Railroad Freight orand Baggagemen have twenty-on- e ganisers in the field. Brockton (Mae.) boot and shoe worker are starting an agitation for a labor temple In that city. President Gloeklin of the Bookbinders' International union, ha been appointed labor commissioner of Canada. T . . More than 6.000 machinists in Pittsburg and vicinity have had their wage advanced 10 per cent, taking effect Disease. William Olddlngk druW June Is local agent for Fulton's Omm"? symptom The dangerous Every mother, every wife, every sis- weakness or loss of weight 9 ter. every daughter, every sweetheart, kies, hands or eyelids, kidney every cousin and aunt should be In- after the third month, Tallin structed In the uses of the union label. drowsiness. One or more of : : : : 1- - No label, no buy. nnd workwomen In Russian factories receive from 20 to 7S cents a day. The work Is said to be so hard that most of them are wrecks before they reach the age of 40. Workmen 2! On May 27th and 29th and trip . 3rd, 6th. 10th and 12th, round ets will be on sale from City. Utah, as foUows: fUg Chicago ar.d return gj 8t Louis and return fill The clgarmakers union was the first SL Paul & Minneapolis turn labor organisation to advocate an eight-hoday. This union succeeded Omaha, SL Joseph and gj in establishing it on May 1. 1886, and it City and return :Li"hiir rates low has been In force constantly ever since. Correspondingly y mediate points Electric locomotives may soon pull Through Pullman sleepln Chicago's suburban trains on the steam Chicago daily, without chanrroads. The Illinois Central already Through Pullman tourist figuring on the change. It Is a move times ,a week. gi for civic cleanliness and beauty. For further Information P ntgtgi F. R. on or write to Arrangements have been reached for Agent 73 West Second Sooth eecurtng families of Finns, who are Salt Lake City. Utah fleeing from Russian oppression, to settle in Labrador and begin work as NOTICE TO WATER CONSU" mill hands ur - Billy Stift George Gardiner 1 Men who will meet on Monday night. Uotli are lighters of the highest calibre and should furnish some for local light fans. The men have eased up in their training splendid sport and are in great shape for the mill. . Both Gardiner and Stlfl are in readiness awaiting the gong that will send conthem together for a twenty-tnun- d test at the Grand opera house In this city ,n Monday evening. They liuve abandoned all strenuous training methods and will content themselves with light workouts until Monday, when they will rest up and prepare to weigh In. ity to regain hla lost laurels Jimmie Gardiner haa been assisting George In hla boxing stunts, and it Is nothing to wonder at then that his friends say George la In better shape than ever before since his fight with Root in Salt Lake City. The mountain air and canyon surroundings have had an Invigorating effect upon the Lowell boy and he has taken to hla work like a duck to water. Killy Ktirt was out yesterday for an- Gardiner has been working like a other hard day's work. A fifteen mile run and plenty of stiff Imxltig at the beaver, and as said before, la In great gymnasium hud the big fellow down to He shape. realises that thla will be a weight and feeling like a e golilen. and perhaps the last, opportun winner. While having but little to say four-tim- regarding the coming mutch, he is confident already yet that he will carry off the big end if the money, in case he wine he intends to challenge Mike Schreck for another argument. At present hia wrestling partner Is an animal which Stiffs manager. Big Hart, calls Board Bill" a sort of a Joke on the husky German. Stift has been wrestling with him for the past two days, snd In every attempt has fulled to put hla opponent to the mat. The battles that twain have gone through would make a good map of the doing between the Japs and the Russians at Mukden, with Kig Hart acting a "outside man" and watching tor opportuni The Brotherhood of Locomotive Enties to Jump In. la agitating the abolition of nr gineers The coming fight has taken hold of a change tn the present system of mail the sports in Salt Luke city and a large cranes A number of engineers have number ore preparing to come to Og- been struck and killed recently by the den for the occasion. A special train device. will arrive from Salt I.aKe at about 8 o'clock bearing the delegation from A general defense fund of 1150.000 Is that city. They come, so it Is under- being raised by the Amalgamated Asstood, to hack Stift to a man. sociation of Street and Electric RailAs a preliminary to the main go Kd way Employes of America. Good JudgTerro. "The Terrible Fireman." who ment. why not In time prepare for knocked out Billy Arnold at Salt Lake of peace? on Monday evening, will meet Jim encounter. Th'a Cassidy In a An organizer of the United Mine ought to prove a lively go. as both are Workers of America ha Just formed a men on the order and know union In Nanaimo. B. C. It I the Innothing of tern Inn to organize all miner from r ten-rou- "blff-ban- g" love-ta- p. tbit Notice Is hereby glvsn grit V 1,rt' October to June 10th hours for sprinkling sre All consumers east pf nue. Including the ei to will sprinkle from from 5 to 8:80 p. m. ' "i.jjin? & fC west of Adams ave.i'i'- west side thereof. !; 8 to 10 a. tn. and from 1 On account of the !nb A mater during tVc . ... .mJ necessary that lbp ' iF be divided Into two consumers are request Hi t sprinkling of lawn wlur specified hours. rwsnux WAThRV (r iir lW - ' 41 I''' T |