OCR Text |
Show THE THE EXAMINER. Lyceum Family Theatre Published every day in the year. Sawyer & Young Props, Business Office. 407 24th Street PRANK FRANCIS. Editor end Mgr. DELL AND FONDA, Club Swingere. Delivered by Carrier, Including Sunday Morning Examiner, 7b eta per w1 Single coplN...a.,i..a' SUBSCRIPTION THE HIRSCHHORNS, . Musicals Seta FREEZE BROTHERS, Tambourines. RATES. By mail one month (Including Sunday) Snbaerlbera will confer a favor by e informing this olllca of failure to The Examiner before their breakfast. 410-1- 1 OGDEN, UTAH, APRIL 16 1904. EGCUiS BLCQ. MONEY THE REPUBLICS ENEMIES. post-offi- On Your Personal Noto.. Call and I will tall you how. While bribetakers have lately been arrested and punished, while lobbying baa been unveiled and while the news, papers of the country have acorel the Government for Its failure to deal with and abuse of exIllegal ecutive office, the biggest factor perhaps In making the whole ayntem of government Corrupt ban been over shadowed. This factor la the bribegiver the business man who wants things hla own way. Mr. Lincoln Sleffins tries to go to tha root of this matter In the current number of McClures Magazine, For many months be baa been investigating the liolillcal machines in the principal rifles of the United States, aud hla articles bava won national attention. In n paper entitled The Enemies of the Republic, he sums up the results of trie painstaking and Intelligent observations. What does he find? Thlsr My groplngs Into the jnisgovnrn-pie- nt of cltieo have drawn me everywhere out of politics Into business, Not the political ring, but the big bnslness that la the crux of the situation. OurpoliUcal corruption iaasystem, n regularly established custom of the eounlry, by whirb our political Isadora are hired, by bribery, by the license to loot and by quite moral support, to conduct tha government of city. State and nation not for tho common good, but for thn apodal interests of privets business. Not tba politician then, not tho bribe-take- r, hot the bribe-give- r, tha man we are so proud of, our succeeaful business man ha is tha source and sustenanra of our bad government. The captain of Industry la the man to catch. Hla la the trail to follow. The trail leads straight to Washington. In that capital, the chief desire of the small reformer, that buafneaa methods be applied to politics, baa been realized. ' Tha Roman plutocrat, the "captain of industry in bis tima was the true aucealor of the Morgana and Rockefellers and Belmonts of our era. Ho grabbed pabllo lands, used hla money and influence to rob politics and government and resented any attacks upon hla privileges and methods aa an assault open the very foundation of disorderly society. Had tbs Roman ptutocrat lived In this day, instead of getting himself appointed governor of a province and coming bach with hla loot to buy estates, ho would have devised a trust. Issued lying prospectuses and raked in hundreds of mil Ilona by organising Industry and working off watered stock upon tha THE DRAKE WORKING MANS FRIEND" I (12-een- trust-buildi- SfS&SSZ MONEY LOADED k SALARIED PEOPLE Real Estate and Chattel Loans, v' fl Service quick, confidential and private. No commission. WESTERN BROKERAGE CO. S 'Phone 634-x- . 22 4 Rcclea Bldg. leges. excel-tlonall- dr to pay dividends and fought tha workingmen who fnr formed themselves Into trades unions Ho would have been in the coni trust, the meat trust, tho steel truat, tho oil trust He woull have had secret rebates from the railroads. Ho would bnvo crushed competition by every menu, legal or criminal He would have had newspaper organa to defend hla buainesa Interests, though those interests Included the purchase of legislation and tho carrying of elections by bribery and frau.L He would have denounced as socialistic visnil efforts ionary and to prevent him from buying public franchises and with them a license to tax the public for hia private profit. Mr. Btefflna la right. Behind every political machine which deals In special privileges, selling them to the unscrupulous rich, there ia the big business machine. Behind the Quay machine in Pennsylvania, for example. Is the confederated wealth of the Btate. At Washington the plutocracy, fully as greedy as that of Rome, ia behind the party in power. Bills for the relief of the people from extortionate prices for the necessaries of life annot got through Congress, To this party, thn political SRcnt of the plutocracy, the tariff. which 1'inglcy enables the trusts ip hecorae mononv lis and n sell rhesper abroad than at Pome, is hatred. The language of lofry patriotism is habitually employed in defending a perfected and gigantic scheme of continuous robbery under cover of law. In behalf of the trusts, wfcirh are ranged behind the Republl-- ; esn party, the Republican Attorney-- General proclaims that ha will not rue xTsdenii statutes antr the Republican President upholds him In bis on one-thir- nx er aa-rttr- course. I mean that this system 1 have been describing,' says Mr. Rteffins. ls a furiu ii! government. It IS the government. We must not lie cunfus-s- l tiv con s;1t w ion and charters. A levolu- tfi.ii hit-- i iMiiiH ned." y APRIL SNOW. ANOTHER Milwaukee, 15. April Wisconsin and upper Michigan had quite a heavy snow storm for April after midnight. The greatest fall, according to the five waa weather bureau reports. inches at Greenbay. ATTEMPT TO WRECK TRAINS. Ottawa. Kan., Apri1 15. An attempt was made to wreck a local passenger train on the Burlington branch of the Santa Fe road near VTIliiamabyrg. where ties had been fastened to the track. The crew saw the obstruction in lime. IRON WORKS TO RESUME OPERATIONS. prepPhiladelphia. April arations are in progress for the resumption of work at the Pencoyd Iron works In this city. The extensive plant Is controlled by the United States Steel cnriKiration amt has I teen practically idle for several weeks. traus-Mnatio- n - m-c- 1 THE THING FOR HER. as much time as that on it myself. I was looking at apring bonnet, toWhat In the world is it? Yonker s Statesman. day. said Miss Passay, but I coulJnt find anything to suit me. Of course, 1 "I hear Smith has gone to New York didn't want anything giddy, but I do want to wear something that won't for good. "Well, possibly for good, but you make me look old. never ran tell about New York. THE FANTA6 Why look at bonnets? replied Miss 8 nappe. You want to look at masks." Princeton Tiger. Comedy Sketch Ani.ii. Philadelphia Lelger. MISS LEONA LOVE Tom Are you ou the water-wago- n Electric Novelty. ' now? NOT DISABLED. Theo. THE RANDOLPHS-C- err Dirk No: but my milkman is. Knockabout s. Conu.r,, Town Topics. Clara Didn't your best fellow lose Grotesque and Burlesque Trap. an arm in the Spanish war? TED McKENNA, Now do your worst 1 the hero cried Maud Ye. But ha atlll haa enough And Hie 5J)00 Dog Unto the villain bold. to go round. Life. , Beat Trained Dog In the They saw him art, and then they sighRAYMOND AND CLARg CASE OF VERY BAD LUCK. ed, He lid as he was told. Rapid Five Couversatiubsi-w- i Did you ever ask your husband not Washington Star. MOVING PICTURES. to bet on the races? the Great Tram K..i,h. Portraying In five minutes a woman can clean On re." answered Mrs. Torkins. T Effects by Stage Mai,aWl Didn't It do any good?" up a mans room in such a way that It A handsome was will take him live weeks to And out I should say it didn't. That gi.; iIfk where she put things. New Yorker. the only day he ever got a tip on a given away at Saturday matin'. Mias Addle Lowe, of 2C4S Wall horse that actually won. Washington Crook (genially) By Jove! Im glad Star. nue, won the watch last Sa:iirda, to see you, neighbor! How are you, and how are all the folks? Ho- wFarmer Broadhead (grimly) Wa-a- l, CLASSIFIED ABVEIT1SESSENTS. young man, whata your little game We have, thia day, purduuoff fro green-gooor runnln for office? L. H. Murdock the Imperial Restaur Puck. LAW. ATTORNEYS-Aant. on Twenty-fiftstreet, s Mamma Stop that, Willie! Do you Jos. Cbes 1st Natl Bank Bill. will run a restaurant. p.' five me to to Eocles Bldg. ffonage solicited. you every expect W. I. Maglrnls speak minutes about that? We are also proprietors of tb, Bo Willie Oh. no! Youll git tired aftWANTED. tun Calc, open dar and nighv. er awhile. Philadelphia Ledger. WONG CHIN. WANTED-- A young, middle-age- d of the some knowledge man, having cere of fruit trees can find steady em- GUARDIANSHIP AUD ployment In city by addressing P. O. Box 288, Ogden. Utah. PR08ATE mutts , NOTICE. h first-clas- MAGNY TO SEC YOU WANTS MFU 246 IlLYY Pesant Chicago, April was hanged here today fur the murder of Mrs. Mary Bpllka during a robbery. He entered the woman's home while she waa alone and struck hot on the bead with a club. Then he car ried her into the gat ret. where he kicked and pounded her to death. 15.-Le- wis - 25th St - CR AT THE Famous Grill 14 JSth Street WANTED Girl tor general houseReferences. 2533 Adams Ave. Consult County Clerk or ths respae-tivsigners for further information In tho District Court fur Weber WANTED Four lady agent a. Call at Hotel Lincoln, $ to 10 a.m., 4 to County, SUtc of UUh. Estate of Hew ry Stunebreaker, deceased. 6 p. m. Creditors will preseut claims wits at Guw WANTED: Young man to repre-tt-ii- l vouchers to the undersigned Law Office, No. 2408 Washing a Urge Tailoring House. Small. nail's ton Avenua stairs) In Ogdon Cl,, japlta: required. Excellent opportun-t- Utah, on or(up before the third day 27th 545 E. 1L of Plake, Inquire ALMA ALLEN. July, 1901. Street work. AT THE Waffle House HANGED. MURDERER OGDEN, UTAH. c FIRST-CLAS- TORPEDO FLOTILLA READY FOR SERVICE. 15. Admiral April Washington, Cooper, commanding the Asiatic fleet, cabled the navy department today from Cavite that Lieut. Chandler, commanding the torpedo boat flotilla which arrived at thn port yesterday, after a run of about 15JXH) miles from Hampton Kosds, reports flotilla ready for service. This news Is very gratifying to the officials of tho navy department, and speaks well fur the seaworthiness of the torpedo boat flotilla and the line seamanship of the officers and men who had them In charge. TRIBUTE TO PATROLMAN, Benefit Fund of $15,000 Raised for Family of Policeman Who Lest Hia Life in Pursuit of Hia Duty. New York. April 15- .- The tragic ending of Patrolman Hugh J. Enright, who was shot In a battle with a burglar recently, has caused the death of hla father-in-law- , John Moran, 70 years old. Blnce the hour when Enright fell before the burglar's pistol the old men haa grieved constantly. Just aa be was about to take the two little grandchildren for a walk he cried to hie daughter: Hugh la calling me; I am going to meet him, and fell dead. The doctors say his heart was broken. An extraordinary tribute to the bravery of Enright hue been the raising of a benefit fund for hie family, amounting to $15,000. It baa been pieced In Na Crisp, uch thing? New, These clothes are of the highest quality In shape, finish. fabric and style, and all bear this label. St 371 22nd Date of first publication of this nnUa March 3rd. 19CL FOR RENT. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. cottage RENT A four-roowith celUr, closets, electric lights. Estate of Dan Nlncovlch. EnNotice is hereby given by the undePartly furnished for houaekeeping. rsigned administrator of estate of Dsn quire 2423 Aidams. Nlneovk'h. to the creditors of and all FOR RENT 4 nr.furr.Ish1 rooms persons having claims against said de SOtSC Adams ceased to exhibit them with the y ground floor, no children, vouchers, within four mouths afAvi. ter the tint publication or this noth-- , 0 P to said administrator at the First NTWO FURNISHED bed rooms at C13 ational hank In Ogden. Utah. 24th St. Modern conveniences. Dated April 121h. 1904. JOHN PINGREE. Adminintntor. MONEY TO LOAN. Henderson k Macmillan. Aunrntyi MONEY TO LOAN On city or form for administrator. property. Hunter A Kennery, Room 6, CAFF First National Bank Building, Ogden, : OPED AIL Utah. Flu dinner on' Sunday from 11trowk 4 p. m, 25 cents Lunch served HOTELS. 11 to 4, only 26 cents. Short orders at all hours, fiat THE HOTEL LINCOLN Oyster In any style. Gama and Fisk W. H. Lim.lt Proprietor. in season. Permanent dr Transient. FOR neem-var- ISO Men of distinction and taste wear them, and their cost ways meets you half way. al- IB SL OGDEN, UTAH. d Twenty-thi-- REAL ESTATE 222 Twenty-fiftPANSON BROS, Proprietors. h - FOR SALE. brick residence, with Four-roo$1100. barn lot 50x133, grad location, Wash. 13rd and CTauncey Parry, Cor. It Ross Book Store. Ave. NEW SHIRTS. NEW GLOVES. NEW HATS. NEW SHOES. NEW VESTS. NEW HOSIERY. NEW NECKWEAR. NEW CANES, and UMBRELLAS. FURNISHED ROOMS. - Furnlehed room and board. 3G5 FOR SALE. LEWIS & BLACKWELL Two barber chairs, seconfor sale, cheap. At 2470 d-hand, Grant avenue, barber ahop. FOR SALE Consistency, thou art a FOR SALE taurant, cheap. EXPRESS and BAGGAGE of ths Transferred to Confectionery and resAll new. Call 2207 any pvt PRICES REASONABLE. Washington ave. 449 WASHINGTON AVENUE.. FOR BALE Household furniture for ale at 2647 Orchard Ave. Call morn- All SILK TAFF-- A T A 5 yard Wide mercerized ruffle, dust priced at $5.00; no other skirt like it at the price. It ALBERT F. ' RICHEY. FOR SALE Farm 45 acres, good soil, fruit, shade, lucerne, good water seven right, house, large barn, only miles from Ogden. Cheap at $2,500. Hunter k Kennedy. UNDERTAKER satisfactory prices on Flour. call on W. T. As til I, Hay and Grain3311 Washington ave. Phone 3Z0y. brick residence, FOR SALE 21-acres land, 126 good bam, mile from 8. P. trees, Chauncey Parry, cor. $2,600. sbops; 23rd cod Washington ave. FOR 'Phone 150. 2372 Washington fruit-bearin- g 2 city. 233 25th Phene 131a. ings. sweep Books, Stationery and Office Suppfies. 28th st. Logan Journal. The An 1st I spent several weeks on that picture. The Critic Well, I've spent nearly Administrator. for said Volney C. Gunnell, attorney girl at administrator. dining room S (ra WELL. WELL! And now Tommy Kearns, whom It used to be "eld swore by the heard of the prophet like a true atm of the faithful, having, found the Smoot faction too strong for blm in the recent Republican state convention, la chargHath not he. ing church Influence. himself, protested that there is no jewel? Fresh, Long Lines of Smart Clothes WholeFrom the Stein-Bloc- h sale Shop, where the hands at the Craftsmen are guided by the force of brains made clear and sharp by Forty Years of Knowing How. trust. hot-tie- hare-braine- ; ly Thera must be no more AtUnmeye-Genelike Knox, no more us pension of the statutes hi return for political support, but enforcement of tha laws wa have and the enactment of other laws which shall restore tha peopla to their own and make them, instead of the traits, supreme at Washington. And there must be steady. Intelligent environprogress toward n ment in which the fittest to survive, the fittest to succeed, shall be honest men, and not able rogues. RUSSIAN NAVAL AND MILITARY PLANS. There must be public ownership of public franchisee, public utilities, if an (San Francisco Chronicle.! end la to be put to traffic In those franA 8t. Petersburg dispatch outlines chisee traffic from which the the Ruaaian campaign plans in the ua on greater part of our political corruption Orient baaed. It assures reliable information." if the comes. story la not a fake, it may he said that Were is'not that the people of New the Russians are either underrating the York, to Illustrate, had permitted their foe or are overconfident of their own Inwe to be in such n state that it is powers and resources and will surely fall. These Russian plans, ax outpractically legal to ateal the enormouslined contemplate the slow mobilizaly valuable subways of the metropolis, tion of 6OO.OU0 armed troops in Man we could not have the spectacle of the churin during the summer, and the public will being overridden in the union of the Baltic. Port Arthur and that ia, Vladivostok fleets In Legislature of that Btate ta the interest three months hence. August, Such n proof the Belmont syndicate. gramme seems to be baaed on JapanAnd If tha people did not tolerate ese Inactivity or the Inability to do legislation by Congress In behalf of more damage than has already been by them to the naval and milspecial Interests at the common cost done forces of Russia, which is in Ititary actthere would be no political party self an absurd assumption. The war has been in active proing for the plutocracy, and while rendering this sordid service, actually gress fur two mouths. In that time fleet has partially de claiming superior conservatism" and the Japanese the Port Arthur division of strayed respectability. d the Russian navy and practically It is bad enough that the country up the remainder, reducing the should be afflicted with noe such party. fortress to a state of siego and obtainBut what shall we say of the efforts ing absolute dominion over the Yellow sea. The Vladivostok squadron making to capture the party of the peo- has been blockaded, the fortress Itself ple for the plutocracy also? Isolated, and the sea of Japan brought The men engaged hi that sinister en- under Japanese control. Meantime a terprise are the must dangerous ene- large Japanese army has been landed which mies the American Republic has at in Korea, the Russian forces had occupied the northern part of ihe thia time. Kingdom having been driven across Tha hope of the nation ia In n return the Yalu river and complete mastery to Democracy. Only by that return can secured of this Important stream. The we free ourselves tram the evils that Baltic fleet rannot. therefore, enter Oriental waters wilhotil being 'inter arv upon ua and which claim all uprepled and running the risk of bring right and patriotic men. destroyed by a superior naval force Government by a plutocracy means All Japans naval work has been done Jeath to republican institutions. Rome without the loss of a war vessel, great or small. It is ridiculous to assume, la dead, but her lesson Is living. moreover, that the Japanese fleet will remain Idle during the next three EDITORIAL OPINION months. Possibly long before lhat time there will be no Vladnvostok fleet afloat and what remains unimpaired of SERVING THE PUBLIC. the Port Arthur fleet will be sealed in that harbor, if the stronghold and (Denver News.) all that it contains are not then in The gradual extension of postal act- actual Japanese possession. The Hussian outlook 011 the land lx ivity in this country la Instructive, more esiecially so in view of the senot one whit more promising, if Rusvere criticism to which the department sia had an army of &OO.OOU in Man was subjected in recent debates in both churls today she would Ik-- no better d hoiiscii of congres. The poetofllce ap- off than she is wfih. say. propriation for ths coining fiscal year, the number. Russias problem is not now under consideration in the United one of men so much as of Mipplh's. States senate, contain ibis danse th Cut off from the sra and campaigning reference to the recent established In a country practically incapable of rural fre delivery service: producing anything save grass for the That state irriers may carry reeicli-andis- e cavalry mounts, her armv is depenfor hire and receive subscrip- dent for food and war munitions upon tions tor and deliver newspapers. a single line at railroad, nearly six mspxziDM and ether periodicals for and thousand miles long, built through a upon the request of patrons residing sparsely settled and barren country, upon their respective routes whenever and poorly equipped with rolling the same shall not Interfere with the stock. The larger the army In ths field proper discharge of their official duties, the graver the problem. Britain's exand undrr such regnaUons as the post-snst- periences In the Boer war were Insiggeneral may prescribe, and not nificant compared with those which otherwise: and. provided further, that the Russian! must confront with an no carrier shall refuse to deliver or urmy of 500.000 In Manchuria, and yet lake orders or subscriptions for merch- no war was waged In the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in which the andise. newspaper or iterlodiral, by any patron of his route, submagnitude of the difficulties of were at all comparable with ject io the law of the 1ulted States 111 a ami the regulation of the post mas! r hi ending the supporting of a liriiit.li army of "uo.uoo men In SuulIi geueral. lu support or the eulargeineiit of al Africa, whose remotest divisions sere activity the experience of (Jrei only 1d"d ntlles from the sealicird at Hritalin may lie nimied wilh elferl. sny time diiring the conflict. law-creat- ed lie would have reduced wages In or ' proitor-tionate- ftj What he asserts as to one Btate la trua of every Btate ia which buainesa Interests of the kind represented by the criminal trusts, the predatory rich am dominant. It ia true of the national government, because tha Republican party, which la in power, la owned by tha trusts. If the American Republic ia not lo go tha way of the Roman Republic. If tha poople are not lo throw up their hands and settle down helplessly to acceptance at the rule of the plutocracy, GAL TWO PITORIA L then must be a counter revolution, a revolution which shall eject the party of the truata and bring the country under government on the Democratic principle of equal rights and no privi- publla , 1 a leu3iea8es)eas8Siiuka(k)SS!k3MB ship-buildi- ng Meantime the Rusniau generals must cope with an army better organized. better equipped, much stronger aud more mobile u,gn a ere the Boers, and possessed of n knowledge of the art of modern warfare equal If not superior to any European army capable of taking the field. The Japanese generals are not going to wait until August or September for the development of the Russian plan of campaign. There will be stirring limes on land long before then and many changes in the military aituation for which the Russians are not apparently prepared. If there is any significance in their forced retirement already before the Japanese advance and the evidence of military weakness which they betray. e THE KID, Specialties. MOVING PICTURES. Ail Foetmaaten and Rural Delivery Ca.Tiera are authorized to leodre hearing in mind two factors. The first of these Is an area for England of square miles half the size of Colorado with a population of 30,040,00(1. This eliminate long distances and makes economies possible for which greater America, with Its extended area and scattered population, is not yet prepared. The second point In ffev-of England is lu established civil service, which has eliminated from postal affairs all semblance of graft. The sentence of a United States senator to six months in Jail for conduct in the nature of graft" Indicates a gradual approach to better condltloua Great Briuin has made the postofflee pay. In the revenue accounts for the past fiscal period, which show a general loss of $50,000,000 In receipt, the postoffli-earnings display 4 decided gain, being $3,500,000 in excess of ths sum reported for the previous fiscal year. The reason for this steady increase alike In good and in indifferent time is not far to seek, says the Boston TransrrlpL It lies In the fail that each year the British postofflee la beiug brought increasingly into touch with the people, and is continually becoming a larger factor in business and social life. In this country the services of the postofflee are confined pretty exclusively to handling correaixiudence ce and newspapers, in England the handles thU matter and In addition does an enormous business in tho carriage of parcels, and also has the exclusive handling of the telegraph business. The postofflee has the monopoly of the telegraph lines But It can hardly be described aa a monopoly in the ordinary sense of the term. It has no competitors, but people who ll are accutomed to slxiienny telegrams are not disposed to regard themselves as badly treated, fur they know they would certainly have to wait a long time before n stock company was ready to do the business more efficiently or at a cheaper rale. In this country business telegrams are more numeroue than In England. It is doubtful, however, whether telegrams have as free a use in Burial service here as they have in England. The slxiienny rate has popularized the telegram, and each year seea an enormous Increase in lie use. The accounts of the three departments of service poslufflce, parcels pout and telegraphs, are separately kepi, and the telegraph department would long ago have shown good profits had it not been for the notoriously bad bargain whieb was made when the old telegraph companies were bought out Bo well satisfied Is England with its experience that It is now stated officially that the Great National Telephone company will be purchased under a clause in Its charter conceding that right at the end of the present fiscal year. The action of the government In establishing n service of telephones under the management of the postofflee was the first step in break ing down the monopoly which hue hackled and curbed the development of telephones In the United Kingdom. Their present resolve to take over that monopoly gives promise that In the near future the telephones may he organised and managed on the principle of providing tha best service at the cheapest rate and In the most convenient manner to the public. With low chargee end enterprise continental towns enjoy the benefit of telephones to n degree undreamed of In England. In Guernsey there la n telephone for every thirty Inhabitants. In Sweden the proportion ie nearly as great. Throughout Germany even email shops and saloons are all furnished with instruments, while In every street are public call offices at which the charge is one penny. ur WALDO AND OEVERE, Comedy Sketch. OQ1EK, OIAU, KATl'ISUAY SIOHXIXG, APItlL Us 1M. UX4UINEB, Sit.-(H- Week of April Hth Published by the Union Printing Ca UORNINQ Ave. 1-- 2 brick residence, FOR SALE with small expense can make 7 rooms, good barn: one block from car line; Chauncey Parry, 23rd and $1,000. Wash. ave. frame residence FOR SALE and summer kitchen, 4x10 rods of land, on 21st, bcL Grant and Lincoln: $1,750. Chauncey Parry, 23rd and Wash. ave. frame resiFOR BALE dence; lot 66x200 feet; S blocks from center of city, on Washington ave.; Chauncey Parry, 23rd and $2,700. Wash. ave. 4 acre land la berries mile from and fruit, of all kinds; center of oHj. 1- - block from car line; a model place for a home; $850. Chaun-cey Parry, 23rd and Wash. ava. FOR SALE MAREEN This Skirt, B 3 3 ' 1 yards sweep, only $1.50 Next is the $250 ITALIAN skirt 8-- which cloth you should see SPECIALS- never seen in this market until now. PALMISTRY AND CARD READING. FORTUNES at Na 2356 to 2362 Wash. Ave. 60c. and gentlemen ; CLAIRVOYANTS. Mrs. lager k Son. clairvoyants and medium. We tell your nans and all about1 your business affairs, whether they will be successful. Information regarding marriages, divorcee, sickness, love affaire and posit Iona. No quest ions asked. What we tall comes "49 I. L. Clark S Sons Co. Told by band or card 280 24th street. Ladies 25c trua 429 25th street. ..in IBM Carpentering, Building, Repairing and Remodeling of Houtea Promptly attended to.' All work Guaranteed. Enquire cf Ole Nelson, Telephone 329-y- . 545 16th street Eat a Whale Said the doctor to a pa tient who was cultivating brain power. We say, feed the body and the brain will ta e care of itself. You want Good Red Me At least once a day to start thit fresh energy and keep ths fire intellect o: I ycU are on a meat diet, you can't do better than to g ve us your orders. We'll take good care o them. "T?: A. E. Weatherby MONK 7$ mtm A S459 Washr |