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Show THE wt-rengaged at work coa; ing the roof of t ho warehouse with tar. when suddenly the heat from a small stove, which had been used fur melting the tar. caused an ignitiou of the tar all over the roof. e coe- lf building itliiMng bnildina :ii in the real F f?of ken. ll! Ijj-yurx- . tost- I Kmmeit's blacksmith shop, wagon and carriage work, horne shoeing and general repairing. R. V. Km men, proprietor, 2247 Washington Ave. for The Democratic county committee St. held it k meeting Saturday evening in the office uf T. D. Johnson. County Lake Sail me Chairman T. D. Dee presiding. The K,m of 8l-in yreieniny couimiii.ee provided for the election Mc-- r Jerry , n aii'li Iwiween of the ltfiy delegates to tbe slate con . The fltsbt veniion by issuing a call for primart'1-'- ' off in Ojmoii before the ies in each ward and county precinct rfwir cliib ot Uden. Man- - on ibe evening of June 3. Kach of the ha.- fuJ charge of fifty iifecincts of the county is to send fr Sir. Kelly also one .,,.h 'if arranged. delegate. over the min a pee.a! V.an in a' all r REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. man , , & Jyja E1 Market ,K. AriLor .Meal I'tmne 16. 333 !5lh yUr,-i:an- 'i, - Mclarihy'ioff l'i'-- u The following real estate transfers were recorded wish county recorder JiVui Aihleuc c:ni riHiins Kills: W. J. Culver to Jane M.'Guiver, lota umeiita. 32 and .33. block 1. Central Park AdDMrhell Bn. 1 003 -v dition. $450. (i. G. Wright and wife to 'I.kiss, vaults or Daniel Farulund. part of kit a 2 and 3, ('all and 'ke ebolce. block 47. plat A.. 1530. L. B. Dure e. and wife to O. M. Runyon, part of see WedelL u job want a hou.-Southwest quarter, secton 35, township ti, north rauge, 2 west. $250. the Allison. .f city sawrin'Mi'l'''" Eh. aiak tl.:s aialenie.it with re-- 'j Henry R. Fuller to Caroline Bneed, "f blub part of southwest quarter, section 3. the 'il k ni'i township 6, north range, wesl, $125. nty last ilieSainr- - John it Sail Ptncnrk to Wealthy Plucock, Balt Is made in J., No nicin the lot 23 to 3ti, block I. South Park. $14. hd cian-heu ISL'wm. Mr. Callahan, the Salt H. J. Kl.ler and wife to K. W. Ilota-llnFirst part of lot 2, block S, It to.reh. Is tiieiitini'.e.l Imjueully. pit Mr. Cran- - B., $75o. rtTiinSialily an oversight. lias had Jj! of (he liigh Zm of this amk for Ogden and to 5, alone la ihn red It due fur the made.'' THdid rtoaing in rfl-f- f ,r;n MI t "r ",e1fsht e. UORSIKQ EXAMINER. time before this deposited under the name of Burgwln. Tbe uiau did not look like a forger of the saiooiher ilk and they soon came to the coui l union that he was demented. The police station was notified aud Sergeant Chambers went over and placed the man under arrest. When questioned at the Klice station he seemed to labor under tbe impression that he was very rhh. lie staled that he was from the Ban Juan mining country and owned a number of mines down there. He waa asked why he went under two different, names and said: "Sometimes I go by one name anJ sometimes by the other." He claimed that the money which he had attempted to draw out waa deposited there to his credit a number of years ago by different people around town. He seemed to think he had a perfect right to draw money from any of the banka and be labored under the hallucination that he was a stockholder in all of them. The ntan is evidently a monomaniac on the subject of money. and yel talks quite sensibly about other subjects. The city police officers turned him over to the sheriff and he is now lodged in the county jail. PROMOTION -- flu -- Bale at Bmnnap as tiirmil In yesterday fiw alarm Isiv No. 13. The fire du- oufiing (nun arriv-iKa- i Urtiwai responded, but upon the scour of ilm tire, iu a ware-rear of the Cnnaollilated Uie O. U. W. mmhera of Fidelity Lodge No. and Protection Lodge No. 24 are to he present at the meeting 1904. gtlnrday evening. May 14th, Pouch, clean and a general good time All in-til- Committee. brothers Invited. nported. AD visiting best-kno- Dental Co. Chicago 24th Street. 347 .Uhi-cag- Kandy-company'- Won 5 Machine Co., the blaze had The Are was cau-i- d lf Milnipiiahed. tnrpot. , Men by an overhealed A. Mr. Allen, assistant superintendent o of the Pullman company, is In on business. At present the Bout hern Pacific is rushed to handle the heavy orango shipments. Another of the Kulitz excursions was run from Balt Lake City to Ogden yesterday. A trainload of went marines to through Ogden today en route Mare Island, near Ban Francisco.' George H. Cunningham, tbe popular general yanimaster, is suffering from an attack of grippe and will lay off for a few daya. Chicago, May 16. I. N. Barr, assistant to tbe president of I he Chicago. Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad, Is dead at his home in 111., of heart disease. He waa 32 years old. Mr. Barr was one of the railroad mechanical men In the country. He started early In life as a railroad employe, occupied various positions and was appointed superintendent of motive power on the St. Paul railroad. In Nov. 1899 he was given the place of mechanical auiierintendent of the Baltimore and Ohio. Not long after that he arrepted the same position with tbe Brie. He returned to the Bl. Paul road and began ns general superintendent and In April of last year was named as assistant of the president. Many devices used now in railroad shops and in connection with rolling slock are the products of Mr. liarr'a Inventive genius. IBooa to the idtizenn of Ogden and gttcr County. After the 16th or Alay n poposa to give tbe people of Og-diia- d unrounding county, the high-a- ( pula of material In the very best Md teeth that money and skill ran petee at 8.00 per aeL We have Mb ana price to all. Tth extracted absolutely without Mil aid perfect safely by the use of ttiHatf Air. Cmra and Briilge work is one of atratii iperlaJMea at nominal prices. We call iparlal attention to our new froem of Inserting the ordinary seta d tKtk without a roof which there-Io- n will not Interfere with the nat-a- ANEW tuta Xs charge la made for extracting kN teeth are ordered. AU work la to date and strictly tip not Any work pmnteed. aatisfac-tor- y returned to ua within 30 days after leaving our once, will be reme M without additional charge. Call and examine our work, get our prices before going elesewhere. Dental ;Co. Utah Ogden 24lh Street. Chicago 347 WORLD'S FAIR RATES, TO ST. LOWS Via UNION PACIFIC. BANK APPLICATION FOR PINGREE TIONAL WITH $175,000 CAPITAL. NA- n Business Signers Ara All Men ef This City. Well-know- Elective May 3rd the following It's will be made to 8L Louis and Mure: te It Louis and return (direct ) $42.50 it Chicago and return (direct 47.50 .route) it Chicago and return (one way Via St Louis; or te BL Louie ind return, one way via Chi- 50.00 Ticket on sale every Tuesday and Friday of each week May to November laelutlve. Transit limit of ten 7i la each direct inn will be allowed im1 limit sixty days from date of hut In no case later than her lath, 1304. la addition to tlip above rate, there are also on tale round trip tickets, to 8i. lamia and return, at $50 (wb are on tale daily to November V inclusive, limited sixty days from toe of tale. De-M- FRANK H. A. B. Moseley Appointed Traveling Freight and Passenger Agent for The Junction City. Announcement will lie made from the of lice of General Traffic Manager T. hi. Schumacher from Ball iJikeCity wiilt-i- n the next few daya of several changes In the Ira flic department of the Oregon Short Line. Among those decided upon and effective this week will lie the appointment, of F. H. Plain led as district freight and passenger agent for Idaho with headquarter at Boise. G. H. Corse, agent for the Union Pacific at Ogden, resigns and A. R. Moseley, traveling freight and passenger agent at liutte cornea to Ogden with the same tide, succeeded T. W. Coiling, who waa traveling passenger agent for the Union Pacific prior to the recent changes in the Short Line territory. No one will succeed Mr. Moseley at Butte. Mr. Cook remains In Ogden aa heretofore. The promotion ot Mr. Plglated from Balt. Lake to Boise will be decidedly popular among the Idahoans who look upon Frank H. as being the acme among freight men. For months past he haa made Boise practically his headquarters, consequently his promotion does not come aa a great surprise. He will tie greatly missed, however. In local railroad circles. ACTION TO RECOVER ON POLICY Case ef Mary E. Ferris Against Modern Woodmen of America on Trial. WILDCAT ELECTROCUTION An application has been made to ibe Animal Climbing an Elactrle Light Pole Causing an Accident and comptroller of the currency at Washfor a charter for the Death. ington. D. Pingree National Bank of Ogden. Utah. The institution Is to bare a capita:! There was a peculiar accident yesterstock ot $175,000. The signers of the day to I lie wires of the Light A Railbusiway company near Ogden, unparalleled application are all well-knoness men of Ogden. They are Job Pta-gre- e, in this part of the country. A wild cat James Pingree. Joseph 8cowcroft, climbed a pole near the Weber river, Hober Bcowcroft, Albert Scowcroft, ostensibly to attempt the tight rope art James Mack. J. M. Browning. M. S. on the wires. The feline, chanced to Browning. Furniture for the new bank etrike the two wires of one circuit, and as well as safes, safety deposit boxes, its spirit deiwrted this life. The vault fixtures, have been ordered and force at the 28.000 volts that passed shipped. It has been common talk for through It. was too much for the wild some weeks that a new bank waa to oc- cats anatomy. The contact burned the wire through, so that the cat and the cupy the Broom hotel corner at Twenty-fifth aud Washington, but It waa not Balt Lake end of the wire fell to the known that the institution was to he ground, leaving the Ogden end of the a national bank until tbe application wire swinging clear. This enabled the for charter went In. Senators Kearns Ogden power bouse to pick up the load and Buioot indorsed the application for so that there waa no Interruption to a charter early In the week and It was traffic. The source of trouble waa discovered at once forwarded to the comptroller. at 10 o'clock, lying very much deceased, on the ground, with his whiskers all burned off, and his remains otherwise scorched. The wild rat was taken to Balt Lake City yesterday, and will be DEMENTED gtuffed. A somewhat MAN UNDER .Well ARREST as price , m buying MEAT TRY8 A' SvQQl f Least, Crisp, Thin Slice He Thinks That He la a Stockholder In All the Banks of Oqden. c a Bssh prr to Boat U7J Z: F.' rnrk Oiir ' fr' .'r1".1 Iar- '- for .' ' 1"' " VV pf ..,., li.rir r J Tl 11 r"'1 llh nn-- a few lb. pails ,u t' dltce our f'T spot cash. i 10 are the very 0ii(, Wont herby 2458 Wahms Avc, Wealthy English Countess Beoeetly Weds Her Coachman. tbe name of S. O. Burgwln was arrested this morning for presenting a check of $200 for payment under the name of Geo. Washington. at the Ogden State bank wben there were no funds there to his credA demented man by to a turn. naS"1-wafe- aimllar accident occurred a year ago between the Niagara Falla power house and Buffalo, where a cat climbed up on to the great feed wires and made a short circuit. For tnree hours the street cars remained Inactive In Buffalo, until the linemen discovered the cause of the etoppago. lying across the wires and burned to a crisp. SENSATIONAL MESALLIANCE TO DRAW MONEY FROM BANK UNDER ASSUMED NAME. 16. Georgians, New York, May Dowager Counters of Ravensworth. haa startled society by marrying her coachman. James Wadsworth, says a dispatch fiom London to the Ameriit. can. The bride Is nearly 60 yeara of Some few weeks ago Burgwln depos, ited about $50 at the Inin, but the last age, a grandee dam-1- a loader of One of this was drawn out about two weeks of the moet exclusive scls and regarded as one of tbe srauurhost defenders ago. This money was deposited under of tb position." She ia a daughter of O. 8. Today name of the Burgwln. same fellow went Into the bank and the Right Hon. Richard Denman and married in 1872 Major Oawin C. Raker-presented a check male payable to res swell, and, secondly, in 1892. the by George Washington, and signed Earl of Raveusworth. who died lu 1903 George Washington. The bank official on leaving the widow au estate anion knew there wsa no au:b depositor rel-lto nearly one millinu dollar. Lit-il- e their I nxiks. They recognised the is known of the fnrtiinatp eoach-nmwho now called himself Wash-inxtf'He-ithe son of a real estate a, the fellow who had emiie til-lu- g o. - UTAII, TUESDAY MORNING, Rev. Dr. George f. lorimer' sermon at the Madison Square Baptist church diiipmed ihe idea that tbe number ui men attending church ai the pm-tn- l time is smaller than in tbe as(-rt.he said, that ihe number of tr.i-- at lending church today ia proportiuuaieiy larger than at any other time in the history of Christianity. The intelligence of the men attending church also will compare most favorably with those who do not.'' RACES St. Louis, May 16. Delmar results: Phil furlongs: King won; Braden, second; Laurel L., third. Time. :54. Second Six furlongs, selling: Velasquez won; Bid Silver, second; Blue Blazes, third. Time, l:2Uf. Third Five and a half hurlongs, selling: Pilgrim Girl won: Sadie Burch, second; Aggie Lewis, third. Time, 1:16. Fourth Mile and seventy yards, handicap: Jack Young won; Ch'arffe Thompson, second; Jordan, third. Time, 2:00. Fifth Four and a half furlongs: Cameron won: Renaissance, second; A. Lady, third. Time, 1:03. Sixth Mile, selling: Never Such won; John Doyle, second; Lynch, third. Time, 1:53. First rare Four Ui-ii- 16. Men's al church services and the supposed reasons therefor, have been discussed by tbe clergymen iu many New York pulpits. They ascribed Ihe absence of men from the church to lack of religious sentiment and a disbelief in the orthodox religion of aalvailon. the Rev. Dr. Minot J. Savage at Church of the Messiah said: There are probably some people in the world who do not go to church because they are bad. but (here are more persona in whom there ia no development of religious sentiment, nothing to which a religious service appeals, just as there are persona with little art 1st' 3 or musical appreciation. A change haa come over the people and It seem that the whole orthodox plan of salvation la now discredited. When making excuse about going to church people always have one point In view: 'What shall I get? What shall I enjoy? Shall I be pleased with the music? Shall I be thrilled with tbe eloquence? Remember that it ia more blessed to give than to receive and that the altitude of a beggar all through life ia not the noblest that a man ran take. Rev. Dr. I. M. Heldeman, In the First Baptist church, said: a The rialng generation la not church-goinone. This may lie accounted for by the fart that this generation la more Intellectual than the Is previous one. but intellectuality not and ought not to be a bar against Ihe church. Men do not believe in the Bible. They say ibe book contains uncertain ties. A long as they will have those unnatural sentiments the church by the male sex will always continue to lag." t Dr. N. D. HUH. Plymouth rhurrh, Brooklyn, scathingly rebuked he tendency of the times o place material development and the posses sion of knowledge above morals and the ohedienoe oi laws It Is always a sign of the decay of the power of a nation," he said, wben we lose all Interest In our sages, seers and poets who stand forthwith with orders of warning. In 1849 Carlyle hurled thunderbolt! at Englands economic system. England scoffed at him- - He said England was making Industrial machines of her men. In the very countries where Carlyle delivered Ms warning the men have deteriorated to the point deems where the war department them unfit for military service. Dr. Hillls then alluded to conditions in America and pointed out what he called the purely material character uf the exposition at St. Louis. No provision hail been made there, he de dared, for I lie encouragement of ihe geniiix or anything more than York, g May New York. May 16. Morris park: First race Six and one-ha- lf furlongs. Rapid Water won: Roblnhood, second; Trimble, third. Time. 1:32. Second Four and one-ha- lf furlongs, aelllng: Blandy won; Bridshelr, sec1-- as Salonika. May 16. The British officers appointed to act with the Macedonian gendarmerie arrived here today four tall guardsmen, with aa Infantry major in command. The hall of s, their hotel waa blocked with fishing-rod- s, and saddles, aud there waa an Indescribable air of British aloofness and about the new self-relian- ce arrival. The force which It is their task lo reorganize with tbe help of their Austrian. Italian. French and Russian comrades consists chiefly of old soldier from the TurkUh army, who have obtained their appointments la moat cases through interest. Drafted from the rank yeara ago. and stationed ia vlllagea.i many of the offlrera and men have gradually sunk Into aenlle decay, and are physically lung past active service. A their pay undergoes a shrinking process at the hands of the officials through which it passes, they naturally supplement It by demanding money or food from the villages. Were it not for the orerwhelmlng force of Turkish troop iu Macedonia, the gendarmerie would lie very soon ilia posed of by the turbulent population. It la a significant fact that, the treaty notwithstanding, all traveller from the north tell of the troop trains they paeaed. hurrying Turkish regiments on to the frontier. Indeed, the general Impression of all travelers from Vienna to Salonika are that matters are rapidly coming to a head. On the Servian railway tha station buffet contractors are laying in large supplies of food, as they anticipate a movement of Austrian troops across Servla. Tbe Servians have erected earthworks and redoubts on their aide, clearly showing that they regard some such event aa possible. On the Turkish aide of the frontier fewer preparations are visible to the railway traveler, but the closely guarded line, with Its sentry on every culvert and its detached post on every bridge, as well as tbe harrying troop trains, all tell the same story. ay o. MARKETS of !,?.. " a lady's couch wa mbroid eivd v:'h (he flutters, so were th iaiiiptk ',:,c picture frames, aud the mir l iereer one looknl there were. ror', thousand of them in ail. l.:i. ile modes: little lady w whom recognized, smiled a she iiMtnat. i.i ye expressions of unsi luted oi shat waa one of the mon f- K:e iiiri.ms .i.i lions" wiiuessed in lou-dou- . t revealed An ex ho was preci!t the seerc- oi l.ucile's greatness. she s,.. possesses to a marvelous degree ...fi area lest laleut of all. ihe hwci (, ,j jnie the personality of her wearer ihe dress she designs, to tit an o. with fabrics, speak only the dou..i.iiit emotion of the hour and help to Kiv'.uce the effect desired by the wiu;tie is an ariist. who is at once a ptx' and a high priestess of the lies util u." Women as u !iie. lids authority deplored. "hare iu. i yet milurd the psy-ih- ic hsi!-.;.- i , f a gown. Every woiuau, howc.ir, desires admiration front one iiim: ..i many men. ami sha dressew or r ig hhfr to for the purpose of exciiii,ii i admiral ion. But the trouble is .i.ai. with most women, their gowim (heir desires they are noi vciv .icfniie. Woman )ihk nias had many aria, but only one w...,iu, fascinate. Why. then, does site ii.t originate garments full uf tluHiiiht uiui emotion, and of such perfect Lai ,:umy and fitness as shall shadow fciili lu'iself in her ha. biliments bevon i n,c sihility of adverse criticism it ,d (r ihe bewltdere aieut of men aud ii, grief of - "Lu-cilc- ," - i.;,, . -- HELD FK Prague, Monday 1NUY1R1K3. May 17 An ac lion brought by liic tuwi nf Deutsch-Lundalicagainst the Bu hemian provincial am li or Hie reveal4 the astonishing fact t Lai a tramp nani bad Iwu kept li ed Waanlowakk-the local priaxi for ihr. years whll inquiries aa l his hi. utiiy were lie ing made. In this country the pariah authorl lies of the place wbei,. a nuu is bnri are responsible for i' cosi nf par ochial relief or iiniinsomueut Mi where else. Waselowshy presumably found ti prison at. Deutsrti laudsbcrg to bo taste, refused all infoi mation aa to hia origin, and was detained by the parochial auttiomiea for inqmiss three whole year without, any nentt. They now riaimed. but unsuccwfal-l- y. the coat of his keep front the provincial authorities. Hohi-mia- i y OMAHA STOCK. POETRY OF DRESS. 2.600. Mgr-ke- t ltle, Omaha. May steady. 5010c lower. Native steers, $4.005.0'; cows cad heifers. $3.2504.40; fanners, $1.7603.00: Stockers and feeders. $3,00 4.S3; calves, $3.2505.25: bulls,' 14.000 4.80. Hogs -- 40.000. Market iCc lower; mixed, $4.Gnft heavy. $4.62 piga. $4.00 4.65; light. $4.6004.62 04.50; bulk of Bales. $4.6504.65. Sheep 6.600. Market active and strong; western yearlings, shorn. $4.754 06.30; wethers, $4.6006.25; ewes. 04.90; common and stockere, $3,000 6.00; lamba, $5.75 06.76. 16.-('a- The Paychelogy of the .Modern .Coa-tum- Kansas City, May 16. Cattle 5.000. Steady; strong. Native a leers, $4.00 05.25; native cows and heifer. $2.00 04.80; atockera and feeders. $3,250 8.70; bulla, $2,600 IA0; calves. $2.75 06.00; western steers, $4.0004.76; rows. $2.0004.25. Hogs 7.000. Market 5r lower, bulk $4.6004.76: heavy. $4.7004.80; pack era. $4.6504.75; pigs and lights, $4.00 04.65. muttons. Sheep- - 5.000. Steady; $4.5004.25: lambs. $3.000 6.66: range wethers, $4.760 5.25: ewes. $4.250 5.00. CHICAGO 8TOCK. Chicago. May 16. Cattle Receipts. 2.700; aieady to easy. Good to prime sieere. $5.100 5.65; poor to medium. stockers and feeders, $4.1004.9(1; $3.100 4.40; cows, $1,750 4.36: belfora. 04.60; canners. $1.7502.75; bulls. $2.0004.00: calves. $2.5005.25. Hogs Receipts, today 40.0(H), jouiur-ro35.000 : 5010c lower. Mixed and butebers. $4.6004.80; good io choice heavy. $4.7504.85; rough heavy. $4.60 04.70; light. $4.6004.76; hulk of ales. $4.6604.76. Sheep Rcelpta.l3.600;steady. Good to choice wethers. $4X505.50; fair to choice mixed. $2.7504.60; wsutem sheep. $4.5005.60: native lambs. $4.51 06.00; clipped westers lambs, $4,750 $2.25 6.10. CLOSING OF QUOTATIONS YORK STOCKS. NEW 3-3-- 3-- 1- -8 8-- 1- -8 1- -8 1- -2 7-- 1- -2 1- -4 3-- 1- -8 5-- 1- -2 -8 5-- 3-- ........ 5-- 3-- 3-- S 5- Fur-nihe- k ed 1-- 3-- . 3-- Daly-Waa- ta I 8t. Petersburg. May 16.' Hie follow lag dispatch from Major General pflug dated May 15tb, has been rereived at the war ministry: According lo information revived up to May 13th. the emsny'a advance from Peng Wang Cheng toward Djao Yang la charartrrtxaJ by indeefaioa. It la lo be euppowd that the objective of ihe principal Japan re forrea ( a point beyond Hal Cheng re Haitjoou (Kai Chau.) Another important group uf them force is concentrating in the district northwest of Taku Khau. "Several akirmiahw have ocmrred with Chinese bandits, in which three Couaanks were hilled and four art re-- f, ported missing. "In the maritime province 111. ' quiet." A mi range, fasLondon, May 17. pc.r'orniauri cinating. bewildering; If one may so describe It wa .proa dre vided yesterday by Lucile. maker, who haa been acclaimed ihe Poet Laureate" of dresa. an apo tile of the cult of curvea. end "a high ' priertCBS of the beautiful. Lucile haa lately houaed benrelf in an old maniun in . llanover-aquarewhich used to be so aociated with the Church. There afternoon the artlat invited her friend to a private view of her gal lery of exquisite creations, and for nearly two hours a large and fanhion able audience beheld an elaborate poetic apotheosis of dress. At one end of an Adams room there waa a stage draped in French grey SILVER KING SALOON green. To the dreamy strains of Raint-Saefrom aa invisible band tbe curtain roe on what waa called MURPHY A GIBLIN, Prepb Suggestion T. Morning Confidence revealing a group of beautiful glrfo Pint Claaa Wine. Llquers and Cigars wearing gown symbolic of the early Your Patreraga Mlaltad. day. Then tbe curtqin rose again, the band crashed out a few staves of . 0L Twenty-Fift- h 912 Wagner, and the girls glided from the stage and up tbe room with a beautiful swaying, sinuous step, which Lucile regard a tbe embodiment (if grace. Opera House It wa "Suggestion II.." and iITk girls were supposed io be on their way to Jos. Clark, Mjr. Hyde Park. More followed .in Hiiggeallona" ouick succession, the subject in theso move isblesnx-vlvant- '' wearing run-- l utne that provoked sigh or envy from the ladies and murmur of from the men. But 11)1 mure elaborate were to route, and in three each drees wa given a name. fan. agile !j many vases but descriptive in a poetical. impression in t smse. And in future these masterpiece of Luclir'a art vi) be known by tbe names then bestowed upon. them. ONE WEEK. Starting There wa. for instance, a dm called Thoughts of Strange Thing." Monday May 16. A tall, statuesque girl floated through At first she imperceptible curtain. LION'S HEART! Monday seemed to be wearing a costume of brown, bill as she neared delicate AN shades and ini ei shade of green inserted themselves, blending into greys KIDNAfiMBF. Wadnaaday and glimmerings of gold. Then came a a dress called The Excuse " and ihe men prearnl caught their breath aa a Thursday THE ENIION." mm perfect type of English beauty glided into tbe room. A great brown hat Friday WOMANS' SACRIFICE, her shimmering hair, a very CINDERELLA light grey dress draped her perfect Sat. Matin figure, and a long veil reached from the head to the feet. Sat. Night NEW YORN'DAY 0Y Still Lingering Memories" and DAY." Waters Run Deep" were thelitl of A other dresses in this "sensation." mide by Santa on Sale at Box Office, N'Jl tremendous snwiiiou wa 9 a. m. Our Priest: 1Se 29e' 35e The Sighiug Hound of Amorous 1 ip." The ladies applauded, rapt uromly, ilie NO HIGHER. men rose aa if paying tribute at the shrine nf beauty. Then for a timvbe aiage was ocr.np'ed by a single flgiiie.Nepenthe." Clothed in some filmy. i;ldescent. Intangible fabric, a girl floated across tbe stage seemingly on clouds nf gauze, her steps falling to ihe nieasmi of plaintive Gounod mimic from the orchestra. Tbace ia more danger to we I wonder how ramh thw rire3 matter-of-faman. la glaleew bought Jto cost?" asked a "I will inquire.'' replied a lady who peddler or faemaprieet oiMaa accompanied him. then to use bo gle Pleane do noi trouble." le responded To Mere your eye P hastily. Venomous I'lowei" Red MouUiof Important, to Lave them eev1). ws the un uteri! erl title of fned by an enperireced th mystifying gown of rhfO er--that educated opTicfaa W Jon t pV every movement broke into v hita to run ricks with the 7"-I- f black of which were referred hv mo r your eyes ted Jewel. 'The Dirge Oer the Deat'i of 1scn a diaphaaoir Pleasure" followed tel! mo blurred let chiffon of rose colrr that waa rip ble. No charge. for of a noe regret to strike posed for lost skies and blue love and bopea Jm To RUSHMER, ever. waClear" Life Is of The Meaning Expert Mawfg. Opi'clan. ' "dream" In bine; The Night Ha ' 2472 Wash- Thousand Erea" waa a dress of blad B jg Ilk" chiffon, wherein Jewel sparkled The Tangible Now" t myriad stare; velvet laden with wrg;i r.f peach-colorI diamonds. 5c A sensational creation waa The SlMMiIder Steak. 3 Vampire." worn by a girl of surpassing Fresh select Balt" Ojretw beauty In whose veiled eyee and red. sardonic. Up three lingered a suggesan hand every df- tion of cruelty and of renMinieleuaeas Ttean.No.127 tbe and that made the ladies ehudder , men applaud. BALLARD. Finally, aa a fitting ranrjiiaion. the visiter war ia feed weed to The Room -- yea-terd- KANSAS CITY 8TOCK. 30 Colorado Fuel and Iron 49 8 Copper 67 4 Atchison common Atchison preferred ,...81 82 Smelter common ,..49 95 Smelter preferred ...; Alton common ......37 4 77 Baltimore and Ohio 44 Brooklyn 116 Canadian Pacific 110 Metropolitan Traction 29 Chesapeake and Ohio Denver and Rio Grande com.... 19 206 8 Consolidated Gaa 94 Peoples Gaa 22 Erie 128 Illlnoia Central 142 4 Manhattan 24 2 Kansas and Texas 106 4 Lewisville and Nashville 89 Missouri Pacific il14 New Yorh Central 55 8 Nor. and Went 20 OnL and West 113 Pennsylvania Railway 41 Reeding 20 8 Rock Island rommon 45 Southern Pacific 19 4 Southern Railway common St. Paul .. ..... ...... ....... 189 BLACK WHITE MAN. ...... ....... . . .12 8 Sugar 20 4 Texas HoaThe Strange Cate at a London 32 5- Tennessee Cost and Tmn , pital. 81 Ueitni Pacific couwaon 8n-Steel common London Steel The trngei case in th 8? 3 C preferred $7 hospital at present la that of tbe whit Western Tnion man. Thomas Goss, who Is gradually Wtbash preferred 38 turning black He waa taken there recently from ALT LAKE MINING STOCKS. the Poplar and Stepney flick asylum, where he ba been an inmate for the Utralng Quotations on tha Salt Laked past three yeara. Stock and Mining Kxenangs. He now lies at the end of a row of by Ogden Brokerage Co aa old, Bedford Wart. the in patients 8483 Wth. Ava. Pboa 215. worn with alxty-a-l, of mas decrepit fare and emaciated hands, hia akin of Alico, bid 13. hue. looking like that of a grey-blacaskd 15. Ajax, bid 13 a negro slightly bleached. His asked 18. Ben Butler, bid 12 hair It white. nd be hu BalUoa-Beek- , bid 1.00, asked thin beard. HU voice 1 very weak, asked 8. Caries, bid 6 and be i partly deaf. Century, bid 75, asked 80. Thomas Cos was born In BedfordCon. Maraar, bid 29, asked S3 shire. and about thirty year ago h Daly, bid 3.00, naked 8.20. came to London to work a a laborer. t. bid 23.35, asked 23.76. "1 am very comfortable hero. he said to a press representative, who visited Daly Judga. bid 4.60. ashed 4.60. mao. '1 Eagle and Bins Bell, hid 65, diked the bedRldeiof the bltrk-whihave pain In my leg, and it aema l.e. to .Mrb me here." he added, pluck BaMrald, naked 3 close-crepp- td nt gun-case- New 1 ai-k- g Ministers Discuss tha Reason for Tiiat Fact. tii . 4. GOERS a-- n- nt 4. H his hand on hia side, "but I am able to Grand Central, liiii 1 55. get about a bit. Ouly I feel pretty 4.:j 12. weak. Horn Silver. Md Asked when hia skin began to turu asked 7 S ingot, bid color, he said. "!r.'s more than three Joe Boners, bid L. Mammoth, bid 17. ssiMXi . years ago. I was working at Mitlwall Docks When the other men began to La Heine, asked 5 4. tell me about my skin I came to the l i :: v Little Thief, biu 1 t. London hospital aa au a M. Washington, bid 1. Mammoth. liked l."n long aa I could. Then I got weak, and had to go Into the Sick Asylum, where 4 5s May Day. bi 4 I 7. Montana-TonopaiiIni 1 they did everything for me. but they couldn't find out what was tbe matter. ed 1.65. New York, bid !. asked in. "Any number of donors used to coma there and see me. but they never could Ontario, bid 5.25. find out what was wrong. Now I've IVtro. aked 7. come here, and I hope they will find I. Richmond Aus. out. It's the right place to come to for Sacramento, bill 14 7 S. t d i;, that. he said, his eyes brightening at 55 i." Silver King, the thought that the skill of the LonSilver Shield bid i. - .5 S. don hospital doctors would cure him if South Sasnrea l;.i ud.ed lu anything could. Kiar Con., bid 12 1 J. What ia the matter with Goss the Sunshine, asked 8 London hospital doctors have not yet Swansea, bid 17 found out. It may take aeveial days Tetro. bid 27. akd :i i. to discover, even if they succeed In ash:.l 18 1 8. Uncle Sam certaining. Meanwhile the staff are re- 18 3 4. ticent, for they do not wish it to be UnlteJ States vi.uiup. bid lp.75. understood that they have a case of Utah, bid 40. skkciI 55. . In before hand exceptional character Victor G. and S M.. asked 1. it. they have thoroughly Investigated Thkee. bid 32. asked 34. But I do not mind saying that I behave never seen a man this romr A SEVERED HEAD. never MYSTERY Os fore, said one of the doctors: anything like it. Cases of pigmentation Fata of a Famous Bt'gand in Doubt. are not very rare, and arise from various disease. But I have never seen a man whose akin waa so colored. Rome. Saturday. May 17. From Goes haa rapidly become an object of comes a glumly aiory yewuiuis-ceSicily great curiosity among the Urge hosof th Mid lie Ages. staff. pital Ijiat Thursday morning a nun; cause of pigmentaOne well-knohead in an adtanrod staie of derem-- p It disease. tion U Addison's Although tail ion waa found on a inmi has been known since 1855, no cure lias outside the walls uf impaled Anar lied Palermo. 11. runs It generally yet been found for to the was a isrl liearing the post for about two years, and ends in tbe word. This bead ia the head of the death of the patient, after gradual ema- in famous brigand Varsalona." ciation. Tbe patient's skin becomes This curious diarevrrr waa made on bronze colored: in fact, tbe disease ia the property of a certain Bason Auicl-lbronzed skin." alternately known as took a prominent .part in tbe But whether Owes I Buffering from trialwho of the notorious VarKaUma two bronaed skin 1 not yet known. The months ago for murder, and offered a disease Is described aa being rare, and characterized by progressive debility large reward for hta eapiure. ; When the'daughters of ihe brigand and emaciation, with Increased pigmen- were confronted with ihe head, mu' detation of the akin." clared it waa that of her father, lint (lie other denied it. The lirigHiid' sweetheart, however, recognized ibe head by the filling In a front tooth. Great excitement prevails in Sicily aa th result of this el range occurrence. ( Continued from page 6) The Inhabitants In the nighborhno 1 are divided into parties, one believing in Ihe deaih of th famous hnndii and SUGAR ADVANCES. the other declaring Ihe event to h New York. My 16. AU grades of merely another trick to make the police believe that he ia dead in order refined sugar were advanced 3c a hunthat he may continue to roll undisdred pounda today. turbed. 1 ''1 GoliH-howsk- NON-CHURC- 17, 1901. 1 past. ond; Amber Jack, third. Time, : 54 Third Selling, seven furlongs: Tot-newon; Dark planet, second; Tol third. Time, 1:30' i- Austrian Minister Says Thera is a San. Fourth Claremont handicap, Inal Guarantee of Peace Bqtwesa 6 ',4 furlongs: Wltheramlte Hurst Park won: Lux Casta, second; Gay Boy, Austria and Italy. third. Time, 1:22. Fifth Throe and one-ha- lf furlong: Budapest, May 1G. At today's sitRunnel won; Red second; ting of the budget committee of the Florham, third. Time,Knight, :42. Austrian delegation. Former Minister Sixth Mile sad a furlong, handicap: i made a speech in which Orsnian won; City Bank, second: Mahe' lengthily reviewed thu internationjor Daingerfleld; third. Time, 1:55 4. al situation. The moat interesting portion was a Igtufaville, Ky., May 16. Churchill reference to the gloomy situation in Down attmmary: the Far East. First rare, soiling, four aud a half 'There," said County Goluchowuki. furlongs: ttseca won; Rnssrssa. sec"far reaching antagonistic interests ond; Wootli'Mm. third. Time. :66 have brought about a struggle which, Second race. 6 furlong: Alpha won; owing to the Impossibility of gauging Mis Crawford, second ; Nannie Hodges I its duration, and on account of he third. Time, 1:15. general economic depression it may Third rare, handicap: Autollght entail, threatens to make Itself felt won; Merry Pioneer, second; Coruseven by those not directly concerned. cate, third. Time, 1:15. Besides the general state of insecurity F Fourth race, the Juvenile slakes, 5 attendant on Rttch a long conflict, furlongs: The Pat won; Magic, second; to Interare be considered the there Double, third. Time. 1:03 ruption sf the free intercourse of trade Fifth rare seven furlongs, aelllng: and the unusually wide interpretation Rachel Ward won: Armua. second; given by belligerents nowadays to the Mlram W., third. Time. 1:30. contraband of war.' Sixth race, mile and 50 yards: The "This wide Interpretation exercises Guardsman won: Rosamund, second; such a effect on inter- Mandamus, third. Time, 1:46 2. national trade that It appears justifiable to Inquire whether it would not ANSWER FILED IN MINING SUIT. be advisable through a mutual agreement of thb powers to check that much Trenton, N. J., May 16. The old felt evil In ihe future by tbe introducDominion rep per Mining and Smelttion of certain restrictive regulaing company filed in tbe court of chan tions. today an answer to tbe suit of The speaker expressed satisfaction eery P. Willis James and others. The combeat the cordial, relations" existing that by tbe purtween Austria and Italy anil especial- plainants had charged chase of the Globe Mine In Arizona ly in regard to the Balkans which conconsolidation of tbe two stituted a guarantee of peace which apil by the the value of tbe Globe companies, should not be underestimated." had depreciated and that convention The Anglo-Frenche company considered to be another link in the there had been fraud In the trss Intended to action. chain of Arrangement weld more firmly the peaceful union SENILE POLICE FORCE. of the European powers. Unanviabla Task for British Office ra. MENARE MAY a.-k-'.i mere straw of a national life. h rict court yesterday afternoon and will probably occupy some days. The action la brought to recover $2.imh) due on an insurance ptfllcy. held with the defendant aaaoclathm by the late P. T. Ferris, husband of the plaintiff in this action. The company la resist ing the payment of the policy on the grounds that the deceased la alleged to have falsified about his age. stating in hia application for the insurance that he was born in 1857 and the lodge people claim he was born In 1H60. A. G. Horn is the attorney for the plaintiff and Maglunia A Stout for defendant. NATIONAL et UNION OF POWERS The trial of the rase of Mrs. Mary K. Ferris vs Modern Woodmen of America waa commenced in the dist- nl debtor, handsome and only 28 years . of e. Wadsworth had been in the service of the countess four mouths when they were married. The wedding was a sec-tone. celebrated at St. Georges. Hanover Square. A curare officiated and only two witnesses wen- present. For a week after the wedding he lived In the stables behind the countess' mansion in Grusvenur street, performing his duties as though nothing had occurred .to change his position in the world. None of the establishments in Gros-veno-r knew the of Square wedding, and when they visited the countess to investigate it was found that the jieople had gone into the country, and now are spending their honeymoon on the Haven wort h estate where they are closely guarded by retainers and where all callers are denied. It haa licen learned thnt on the dny of the wedding the counteKB waa driven away with Wadsworth on the Ikjx and it waa believed that ahn had merely gone out upon some of her general duties. She wag driven to Groavenor Square where ahe was left while Wadsworth went to change his clothea, returning in n short time in n carriage with n friend. After the wedding he changed hia clothes and drove the countess back to her town house, taking the carriage back to the coach house and placing the horses in the stable, where be continued to live for n week. LINE PEACEFUL PLAISTED GOES TO BOISE AS DISTRICT FREIGHT AGENT FOR IDAHO. 219 Washington. rard 1ariy May 19. Grand prized See prize in wdruahnient-s- . tiMk'a a inflow. ON SHORT OGDEN, n Grand The ELLEFORD CO. Tueaday-SHENANDO- ' The Dagger Line u -- r ed JAMtS J & .l |