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Show PAGE EIGHT. MONDAY, OCTOBER PETTY THIEVES FOR $8,000 DEPORT GIRL REPORT SNOW 50 Battenberg FROM COUNTRY BOSYJN OGDEH LOST LIMB 3 Goes Back to Inspector Gets Verdict Saloons, Rooming Houses, Stores Points East and West of Ogden French Prostitute Feel Storm But Suffer No Gay Paree From Ogden-Viol- ated and Private Dwellings are Against Railroad for Big Air Brake Robbed. In district court this afternoon a Jury brought in a verdict for I ,000 damage, in favor of 8. F. Geiger, who waa complainant in an action against the Kouther Pacific Railway company and the Ogden Unlun Railway and Depot company as Joint, defendanta While performing hla duties as an employ, of the railroad in th, local yards on April 1st, last, a train of can waa bumped Into the plaintiff and he sustained severe Injuries, losing a limb. Burglars of (fe, petty sort have opened operations again hi Ogden and their vandaltstlc depredations resulted lu an almost continuous ringing of the police station telephones Saturday night and Sunday. Both Friday and Saturday nights, th Eldora rooming house, on Twenty-fift- h afreet was robbed, the offenders In each Instance stealing wearing apparel and similar articles of small value. Last night two rooms, occupied by employees of the Reims Carnival company, were entered and articles of value were stolen, enable to stand the dry Sunday, thieves stole severs bottles of beer from the Milwaukee saloon on lower SOLE LAKE POOR POINT Superity of Ogden for Freight Div- storm at Ogdm During the And this pert of Utah severe have been reported all along the line of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific railroads At Reno, New., the city Is completely mantled with the downy substance, aa well as other parts of Nevada. All over the mountainous districts the peaks are t over, d with snow, in fliany cases the ravines being completely filled. No damage to railroad property bas been reported, although In places the tracks have been covered. The Southern and Union Pacific railroads are well preigired fur storms, adequate Twenty-fift- h street last night, after drainage systems carrying water from forcing an entrance to the saloon truck foundations It is a rare occathrough a rear window. This Is the sec- sion when a washout is reported, exond time the Milwaukee has been burg- cept, probably, at tunnela or narrow-rutlarised In the last ten days. where drainage ia difficult. The constiWet weather wearaiilea water ia taken off by conduits tuted the loot of another ofa light fender who stole overcoat and two valuable umbrellas from the residence of J. F. Larson, S785 Grant avenue, Sunday afternoon. The thief boldly entered the residence, while the family was in the rear rouma of the house. To hie own use he appropriated the articles, which are valued at $12.50. from the front hall. Thla morning It waa discovered that the window of the Great American Tea street Frank company's store on Twenty-fift- h Myers, Who Kept Books for had been broken during the night and cheap watches and knlvs. valued at Salt Lake Christian Home, about ten dollars, had been taken. The report of a theft at the Ogden Packing Jailed for Begging. company's place of bumlneaa waa also made and a stolen suitcase, which had been partially dealroyed, was also found In the yard of the Eccles LumDeclaring that he had been bookkeepber cnmjiany. In none of the cases did er for the Toung Men's Christian ascluea. the robbers leave any sociation In Salt Lak City nearly a nar. that h had been employed as timekeeper glnca that time by the Uiuh Construction company, and that he had been held up at one of the camps and robbed of all his inonty, although he hud more coming from a lawyer In Halt Lake, Frank Myers entered a plea of not guilty to g charge of begging on the streets, when arraigned thla morning before Judge Murphy. Myere was arrested by Guard Tommy thla officials to local Dispatches Lever, Saturday. He told one of the PaciUnion that morning say regular most original stories which has been fic No. a will be Indefinitely delayed related In a local court for many moons r.n account of a derailment at Castle and Insisted that drink waa the cause Rock. No Information aa to the nafals downfall, although he had onee ture of the accident has been secured, of to take the cure In Ogden. attempted a la freight In order to Investigate further Judge thought that although It train went off the track. The line at Murphy continued the hearing. that point Is moat dangerous, necessitating extreme caution. The cause has been laid to the weak condition of the embankment as a result of the recent storm. This morning a special train departed west as No. I on the Southern Pa rifle railroad from Ogden, and when the regular train arrives passengers will he compelled to await connections with another train, aa ached ules of the tardy passenger have been discontinued for today. m-en- t sonw-stur- Extremely heavy traffic on the Denver A Rio Grande railroad waa responsible for an unusual occurrence yesterday. For the first time In many niontha through freight arrived In Ogden Instead of remaining at the freight terminal. Halt lake City. Four heavily loaded trains for transference to the Houthern Pacific and Oregon Short lJne railroad was the result. Congestion In the Inadequate Balt lake City freight yanla made It for the tralna to remain at the division point. Ordinarily, through freight la a rare thing with the Kio Grande, as that road handles chiefly local coal buslnesa. Most of the freight which It carries besides the coal la In the nature of fruit ahlpmenta, hut tlie regular yards are located at Balt Lake City. Another thing which the Inadequacy iff the Balt Lake City yarda Impresses upon the minds of the officials of the road, la that more advantages can be had at Ogden than at the capital city for the storage of freight. There la unlimited sitace at this city, and by rhangtng the division point to this place, local ofllrials"thls morning aald, there would be no possibility of a congestion, which la the case at Balt Lake City at this time. SOLDIERS GOING s IS ARRESTED m picnic his WHMIIES car-ricn.- " ing la the eaat What? A rebellion la Persia?" cried bit Interested guest tbt un. Parry Monuments of Cartful selection stock high-grad- e workmen) studious regard for ths location and surroundings of the family plot) thorough carrying out of yeur order in every detail, to the final erection of the memorial, arc points that distinguish cur montcriale and Inaura A No. 1 satisfaction Jos. Parry & Sons Co. 2253 WASHINGTON AVE. Uncle flam's Fast Warship. In the scout cruiser Salem the United States possesses the fastest warship afloat. In the recent government standardization trial over the measured mile course off Rockland, Me., thla handsome vessel was driven at a maximum speed of 26.SS knots and at an avenge speed for live runs over the mile course of 25.95 knots. The Salem Is equipped with Cnrtls turbines, a type which has been developed In thla country. The Chester, a ANOTHER PARADOX. sister ship. Is conceded to be the secThat man Roblnsky Is the most ond fastest wanhtp afloat Reports from across ths ocean that the Brit- worthless fellow I ever had the misforish Indomitable reached faster speeds tune to meet. That's strange. I happen to know than these an said to he lacking la that his life Is Insured for 120,000. verification. GLASSES FOR EVERY AGE ' are procurable here. For the youngster who Is a little weak la vision, for the parents whoag eyeo need help, for the old folks whoa sight begins to show the effect of advancing years Come or bring the member whose eye need assistance. There'll be no mistake In ths glasses we supply, because we examine tifically all eTes before ing tbs lenses J. 8. LEWIS A CO Jewelers and Opticians OVER TED 100 scienchoos- FITPERSONS AUGUST. DURING Shoppsr Got ths Best. Not all young matrons are so unsophisticated as Is the customary Mrs. of the newspaper funny Newlywed man. One striking exception reeldea In Harlem. Entering 1 butcher chop on the eve of large bouse party to be given at her home, abe aaw dlaplayed a doxen chickens. Please pick me out a half dosen chickens that are tough?" she aald. I have a special reason. Tha butcher put aside seven. Are these mil?" she added. Tea, ma'am, was the reply. These are all tough ones. Then and the other five to my house at once, said the yuung matron. The butcher Is guessing stllL This week we continue the sale on and squares Battenberg Scarfs - those which have been shown in our window. Pure Linen Centers with hand-maBattenberg de Lace wide the Scarfs are 54 inches long by 18 inches the scarfs which are of the same patterns are about 20 inches square. as these goods make ideal Christmas gifts we consider this a good time to provide them for that time. col-or- td Many equada of United Btatee Midlers are paslng through Ogden, thirty to fifty fighters going through at a time. They are destined for the PhilKnew Meat from Carrion, ippine islands, 'where the government Is Increasing the ranks. About 160 Tennessee bred two groat orators In recruits are constantly being added to the olden days Andrew Johnson, a each regiment In the far eastern sta- Democrat, ones president of the tions. United States, and Gustavus A. Henry, Ttils is necessitated pertly on aca Whig, known as the eagle orator exterms whose count of the numbers of the Booth. pire, and the vast body of American They ran against each other for soldiers who get an eternal furlough weaeg tBWMa, on acount of the ravages of disease. governor and when a long aeries of MAKES A DIFFERENCE. Many others are found delinquent, Joint debates hsd reached Us close Johnson addressed the Whigs In ths some of failure to do their duties, othRerryl Ien't a lavish display of diaers because of becoming deficient audience: 1 have spoken with the monds vulgar? Sibyl Very, If they don't happen to from various causes. Many hundreds boasted eagle orator from the Missisof recruits will pass through Ogden sippi river to the Unaka mountains, be glittering on you! for the Philippines In the next few and as yet I see no flesh In hla talons weeks. or blood on his beak. Quick as a flash Henry was on his A UmiiI Occurrence. feet, saying: Tbs American eagle Is 1 tee," aald Waggsby, behind hit a proud bird and feeds not on Nashville Danner. morning paper, there la a great upris- No; only Accompanied by a matron and Detective James F. Prnder. of the Ogdrn police force, Alice Duval, a French woman, left Ogden today for New Tork City, from which point she will be deported to FYance. The woman Is one of a number of foreigners arrested in a recent raid on Electric alley here. Investigation of their records by the federal authorities followed. Two other women are being held at the county Jail, while their papers of admission to this country arc being examined. The deportation of the Duval woman ia a part of a great crusade against the wholesale Importation of fallen women for immoral purposes to this country, which the government is LAND PROJECT y. Point Is ision Scarfs for 9bc Immigration Laws. Damage. Damages. W. H. WRIGHT & SONS XO Wenger and Ros ton, Ogden realty men, have become agents . of Ogden, Northern Utah and Idaho, for the Ore-gu- n Valley Land company, which has recently opened the Goose Valley tracts . to the public. Mr. Boston is one of the genial managers of the Dee Drug company. He says he has a good opportunity for Ogdenltes to secure valuable land in Oregon. Farms are being suld to the public for $200 each, with which goes a free lot in Lake view, a prospering little city of the state ol forests. This tract ia tha same which the government released to the state of Oregon In 184 for the purpose of a Rev. Bradford Leavitt Delivers Abie military road and is said to be the most fertile which can be found any place Sermon at First Unitarian rum words ON THE TIMES In .. the state. AND IT WAS SO VERY great wealth, and the that an awakHm-l r pivot-he- moral snw tie Question the nation Is putting Is It a good thing that rich men exat? What do they represent In ami for thi community? What hoe do they bring? What peril do they Involve?" The nation In civil war time vote In millions of acres of hind t0 inea as condition that - they build nllrosdl across the continent. Am a rvsult, rut tracts of forests, of mining and oil property were placed in the hands of a few. The results are ubvlous to any one, and one of the most serious pro- of our people is, how honestly to get back this heritage of all the people from the possession of those she blems Church. CLEVER. of Horace Walpole Figures In a Curloua A good congregation gathered In K. Caae of Mistaken Idontity. of hall, the meeting place of the First Unitarian church last night, to I beard u very funny atory the hear Rev. Bradford Leavitt, minister other night about Horace Walpole, of the First Unitarian church of San aid Mrs. Blake. T wish I could re- Francisco. Evidently, the people had member who told It Henry, can you come with the expectation of hearing a good discourse and they were not remember? Waa it Mr. Sellero? No!" gold Blake, gtiifly, It waant disappointed. Mr. Leavitt la a man In the prime of Sellers. life, possessed of a very pleasing presI wonder if It could have been Mr. ence and an excellent delivery. Born Windsor? in Boston and educated at Harvard, No, repeated Blake. Tt waaut hla career thua far In the ministry has Windsor. been a brilliant one. From his first Before Mr. Blake had n chance tc charge In Brattle boro', he was called to express an affirmative or negative Washington, D. C., when he preached opinion of that haxard an to the source for four years to a congregation which of the Walpole anecdote, Mr. Barton Included some of the most distincame in. Mro. Blake, being by that guished men In national affair cabtime sure of berself, tried on him her inet minsters, congressmen, senators, Is recipe for winning universal affeo Ac. His church In Ban Francisco of churches of the three one leading tlon. the Pacific coast The Woman's AlOh, Mr. Barton," ohe aald, I am liance has 280 members. The Ownvery glad to see you. I have hardly ing Auxiliary, another woman's organtopped laughing since I aaw you the isation, 450 members, and the Unlast time. itarian dub, a men's society, 200 memMr. Barton, a cadaverouo man with bers and a long waiting list Including solemn eyes, looked rather foolish. the best citlsens of Saq Francisco and vicinity. Mr. Leavitt's two Immediate Love and Moonlight predecessors In the pulpit were easily But by no means least amusing are the foremost religious teachers of the ths sweet young things who, under the state, Btarr King and Horatio Btebblna Mr. Leavitt spoke on The Signs of pell of the sea, have found their afattenfinities. It nukes the old young, and the Times, holding the close his audience from ths first tion of the young very, very old the oceword to the last Taking as his text, an d, nnleaa one is girl proof, love the words of Jesus, Ye know how to proof or nA tried, there la no telling discern the face of the heavens; how what may happen between port and Is It that ye cannot discern the signs port There was onee n Benedict who of the times?'' Mr. Leavitt rapidly waa wont to fervently exelalm: "Oh, reviewed some of the more salient theres no place like home and thank facta of the religious, political and God there isn't; but It la perfectly social life of our modern world. Hr safe to say that he didn't fall In love called attention to the obvious fact with her on the billowy ocean, where .that the mass of churches are not pace with the Intellectual proonly affinities meet Why, the veryi keeping of the world, that hundreds of gress letters, H. A. P. A. G., which appear ministers ar,e every Sunday, teaching on the house flags and menu cards of In their pulpits things which are disthe Hamburg-Americaline, have credited by all the secular teaching of Here Are the schools. He noted the fact that the been interpreted to mean: And any vast majority of ministers In orthodox Pretty American Girls American girl will tell yon that the pulpits today, after most solemnly man who can't be Induced to propose promising In their ordination vows to when the moon Is shining o'er the sil- defend and teach the doctrines of their very sen Is too much of a stick to bo creeds, or confessions, or disciplines, worth bothering about If you dont never refer to them In their preaching, their places In the respect of g believe mo, ask any girl holding the liberal their congregations who bao crossed, and then ask any character of their only by Mr. preaching. man. Bohemian. Leavitt challenges such a course on the ground of common honesty. Another sign of the times which he inmentioned, was the domination-o- f We say that we dustrial Interests. sre governed by law. As a matter of fact, we are governed by newspapers. The large employers are large advertisers, and the editorial columns of the dally papers reflect ths opinions and desires of their advertisers and owners. De Toquerille, one of the earliest writers In America, noted the fact, that lawyers were the most trusted and here. trustworthy of the professions James Bryce, writing his American Commonwealth yean later, notea a distinct decline In the moral standing of lawyers, and If he were freely to express his opinion today, he would say they had fallen much lower. Once lawyers had clients, but now the large corporations have lawyers. Once, the client went to the lawyer with a sense of awe. Now, the lawyer goes to the PAVE POP AWAT. Willie M r. Koyne, what baseball office of the big corporation with meekness and complaisance. Where Is team do you play on? Mr. Koyne I never played ball In the lawyer who says to the big corporation: 'What you propone Is an evamy life. Willie That's strange. I beard pop sion, not a compliance, with the law. ay last night to sister that you were I cannot accept your case. a great catch. Another sign of the times is ths man h n good-lookin- 1 now monopolise it. One thing has already been decided, no new forest land, nor new oil or mineral lands shall be given to any one. One of the most hopeful signs of the times Is the moral tone to he found In the utterances of all those who in recognised as our political leaden. Mr. Roosevelt, Mr. Taft, Mr. Bryss and Mr. Debs are all making their to the people on marsl appeal grounds. Indeed, all our recognised political leaden today am retllf preachers, moral leaders. We are face to face today with Imcss pending changes, and only theyIntebuild the new age who possess llectual honesty and profound moixl principle. HERE'S REBUKE FOR PESIIMI8T. la Proof That Sams, at Least.Deeln Trsad Path sf Righteous. touching Instance of and penitence, which recently s curred In the dty of Worcester, Mus, A should encourage even the dyed-latwool pessimist to hope for the future, say the Woman's Hot Companion. In the morning mall of ths dty treasurer appeared a small. Htht-Mlx k" envelope, correctly addressed too Immature an pencil, evidently by lnine hand... Inside were a wen flvs-cepiecs and ths following 8ir--I hare took aa apple land and et it and 1 want tha 's cos-try- s r nt r dty for 1L" hat was alL Thera was no addreie no signature to tho labored un" wive so eloquent of self cos I the desire to tread In ths pst$ righteous. The flvecent pises in added to the city's con?1! to d and the letter remains offldA itody of the to I -- kind-hearte- o would gladly TO GET EVEN Insurance Agent d present COMPANY. WITH Had Peculiar Rsa for Importunity. An Insurance agent was tryln dues a hard man to deal out a policy on his house. hou , tenlng to him for aa colors tbt vivid In painted danger of Are eon,u,n,I . .j. the hard man to deal M Do you really think tt Jj down my house will burn jg. J . policy will time that the Certainly. Have I not been trying to convince yon that hard Then," n,hltM Id. with, to bet why money that it an8 - wi not- ThentwMrilentndttOT dre for a moment; then he unfrequented an apart Into ear: whispered in his win My friend. I dark secret Years mo bstor. I1 P" -- g comP Weetbert-disgrace- j d |