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Show HE i U0RN1X0 EXAMINER, LTAR. Till USDAY MORNING, OGDEN, MAY ;!, 1004 5 . Jl GRAND ARMY ARRANGE iu OWM- - un of Balt A. Rogers. Uke City, MAKING PREPARATIONS FOR THE STATE ENCAMPMENT AT ARK CITY. U Expect to Provide the Finest Excursion of tha Season. cut-oKnary Is la. from the . Ogden. m ! - local committee of the G. A. R.. with John V. Kelson a chairman aud S. L. Ives an.l W. L. Russell as members. are energetii-aliat work In the interest of getting as large a crowd as passible to go from Ogden to Attend the state encampment of the organization which ia to be held in Park Oily on June 21. The committee believe that they will be able to gain an attendance of 250 from this city alone and probably a number at Morgan, where the train will nop. Thecommlitee have succeeded In getting a rata over the Union Pacific from Ogden and a aiiecial train will be run for theacrommodatlon of the excursionists on that date. The train will leave Ogden at 7:30 and :wlll reach Park City at 10:30. after first stopping at Morgan City to take on such excursionists as board the train there. Tha train will remain on. the aide track at Park City during the day and will furnish a place for the excursionists to rest If desired. At Park City the mines will be thrown open for the inspection by the visitors Altogether It will he a delightful affair. At that time of the year the hills will be covered with wild flowers and be green with verdure and will present an attrai'tlve appearance. The Ogden committee have made arrangements whereby they obtain a t.50 round trip rate by selling 125 tickets. The fare la the same from A ff bm day Roberts and wife, of Balt Lake two la Ogden yesterday. 0. GeU, of Reno, Nevi an A. g, r. black amlth sttl ahop, wagon ahoe... and rrisie work, hoc R- - W. Emmett, Washington Are. repairing2247 pro- - - party will be given next night, in Lester Park pavilion. kanor of Alfred Nelson, principal We-S- tr Z ib business department of the Mr. Nelaoa leaves Stake farewell mot L Tjem ftr a minion to Scandinavia, m (amity and etudenta of the acad-- a ire giving the dance in apprerla-sf Ua loyalty te the Jnatltuilon. A enjoyable time la anticipated. m fy souvenir edition of the Claftai-th- e high school paper, ia out. It k s neat and well gotten up number at tke typographical work is excel-ks- t The pages abound in brilliant ptitlte sod nine clever cartoons by o The publication Ht students. one hundred pages and is a cred- the school and the city. Tke con-ksis- pens 8wlft was examined as to his tally late yesterday afternoon, and . Morgan. M pronounced insane and ordered naaitud to fhe invine aaylum at fim to which place he wae taken If Sheriff Bailey. The reuse of Swift's taken down mental condition la te have been due to the excea-h-e use f liquor, principally alcohol. Usipavsaflve children, the oldest beat eleven years of age. He was a arrive painter and has followed that Meupaiioa In Ogden for several years. A little over a week ago he was pick-up by the police, while suffering with a violent case of delirium trern- - Jumos the Track at HaflviUe Wyo., and One Car Turns Completely Over. 25. Union Pacific Rawlins, May No. 1, known aa the Overland flyer, in rharge of Conductor Kerrigan and Engineer Robinson, was wrecked today near Hallville. The entire train left the ralla, one car turning completely over. All of the passengers were badly shaken up, hut none waa seriously Injured. A broken rail caused the wreck... a" .."w train u. X er their heros grave. EDEN A y Ptical JokeroCarry Their Fun a tle Too Far. He Lit- e sud picnic given kr. and Sirs. Hetaer McBride was bred by as many Meads as the Mri4alhwould wall accommodate. AtfoPlwof the young ladles of Eden rod a Joke a little too liar one even-- f this week sad the reault waa, a Away team,and a pretty 'badly dam-- N vagen. Beause be would not treat jjeflrirto candy sad soda water they iVleoed toMHi team looem and wtlelng, them the horses took. d got beyond their control. The tamers are wearing a pleasant Be since the rain. farewell-danc- w WjRt-an- BCUIhcrERMITS ISoUcO BY EICIKEER IUHBER OF SMALL BUILDINGS ARE TO BE ERECTED AT ONCE. ""nt in Building of Hornet Still Continues in Ogden. permits have been issued to Bkjhkng ns fallowing named persona: J. L. for a y frame dwelling Parry's new street, coat GM; aw Hotalliiig for a brick dwelling nne-ttnr- Madison avenue between Twei,y-ievent- Twenty-- d streets, coat h James Oweaa tor a briok ad-t- o dwelling on Cross street, coat pmli! 7,0p1 - Stevena for a ica dwelling on Waakingtoa avenue nl , y fir"t trt- - coat V00; W. far theatrical buildings oa street between Wanhing- eae-ator- d "Wmg y Adam a com $1,200; W. O. far one and a half aiory brick ov Twenty-fift- street h sad Quincy, coat 11,800. XtH UNION railway and de-fo- company. r Stockholders Meeting. t hereby given 5 KOREA'S CAPITAL. a walled city of nearly k Quarter of a million Inhabitants, about a third of whom live in extensive extra mural suburbs. The .wall Is pierced by elffht gateway! of mejwtve stone, each with a psgoda-ahape- d tower of one or two staries above It. The nearest of these to the railway - station ia the went gate, The Gate of Bright Amiability, and it la by this portal that almost every visitor enters the capital of the hermit kingdom. The name of ' the city, by the way, la pronounced precisely aa we would pronounce the female pig with an 1 added that Is, SowL 1 have never , heard a Korean pronounce the name in any other way. The word means capital, nothing more; Butrif there ia small beauty or origtaaMry-abou- t the name of'the city, there certainly in about its' location, for anything more strikingly plctur usque than the site of the Korean metropolis would indeed be difficult to find. The city stands In a little valley almost surrounded by nigged, corrugated peaks. . High along the top of this mountain ridge runs the city walL Deep Into the gullies it dips, rising now and again to scale the steepest slopes and crown the summits at the loftiest pinnacles. Inclosed within thin snake-Uk- e barrier is such a strange contrast between wretched hovels and splendid palaces, purposeless loafers and hurrying crowds, broad streets and labyrinthine alleys, spotless cleanliness and unspeakable filth, aa I doubt could be equaled elsewhere on earth. Aleng several of the main street are trolley lines, and every few minutes a modern American electric car whirls past us well patronised with Koreans, both men and women. Seoul of the past tefhsUbenomiog extinct. A modern red brick building, headquarters of tbs American Electric company, rises in tke center of the town, and from its tower stately, can be churches and lagatlen-bufldlngseen towering above the squat houses of the natives. Harper's Weekly. Seoul DANCE GIVEN TO MARRIED COUPLE. that the r toekht Okdebi Coton Railway i wtu bo held at he Shpetifftendent of j6Sy t RAILROAD NOTES. W. E. Marsh, assistant chief engineer of the Soul hern Pacific and engineer In Cut-of- f, is rharge of the Ogden-Luci- in the city. H. V. Hilllker. assistant di vltin superintendent of the Oregon Shoi-- t Line Railroad, is out on the road on a trip of inspection. A Mrs. iJimbert and party came In this morning In a Kanfrom sas City Southern special car and continued on east over the Union Pa- ht ms. Lieut George Harris, a Cubs patriot who waa killed during the Cakes rebellion. Voung Harris was iiiiunrh defender of the Cuban cause, id (alined to light agalnatSpaalah-op-pwdoHe was offered a lieutenancy d vis one of the bravest dlghtera b tke army of Gen. Gomez. During a eirntsh be waa wounded sad captur-his captors beating him usraercl-Mjovtbs bead, the wounds reeult-bl- a his death, v.H waa buHad at Mm, and now hla aged father and Her are to make the Journey to (MEWELL the local from Representatives unions of the boilermakers, the blacksmiths. the machinists, machinists' helpena and V. U of R. E. have held a meeting with the reault that It has been decided to hold a general outing for all friends of union labor and especially are the members of the various labor organizations invited to join. The following general committee was chosen to make necessary arrangements: Boilermakers John Kennedy, John Berlin. Charles Forbes. Machinists A. 8. Teague, George Cole and Lou Rath. Blacksmiths J. Perry. U. B. of R. E. IV. 8. Guernsey, B. F. Stevena and George D. Williamson. Mr. Guernsey was chosen aa chairman for this committee and it will meet in the near future and arrange for a date when It will be convenient bulb for the railroad companies and union labor organizations to give a day to recreation. The location for the outing ia still to lie decided upon. officers and two hundred and eighty-eigprivates of the 29fh IT. 8. Infantry came In from the their ITEMS FROM General Committee Has Been Appointed to Prepare for the EvenL Twenty-seve- n Nr. aid Mrs. E. J. Harris will leave viikla the next two weeks for Cuba, vkrre they go to visit the grave of ' la ' west last evening in a special train and continued on to Fort Douglas, where they will be stationed. On and after June 1, Pullman crews now running from Chicago to California will lay over at Ogden, except on the Overland Limited. This means a dozen men laying over In Ogden all the time, In addition to thoee who re main in this city on present rims. For years past the traveler from east or west, has had to change hla timepiece at Ogden owing to the hour's difference In time. The local llnea and the Union Pacific, have been operated on mountain time, while the Southern Pacific has used Pacific time. Now this in to be abolished, for Bancroft haa adjusted the dock, and hereafter one standard will be observed. This ia accomplished by extending mountain time to Reno, Nev. No watches will have to be changed an hour at Ogden, and any Confusion resulting thereby will be a matter of history after June 1. New York. May 25. The embargo on the southbound freight at tbe Mott Haven yards of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad resulting from the strike of firemen on the river transfer boats yesterday, waa being gradually lifted today, and the officers of the company announced that they expected anon to have trafllc moving Seventy-fiv- e without Interrupton. non-unifreight handlers who had been engaged to take the places of the talkers, had worked throughout night, and by today, it waa said, had desome succeeded in bringing about gree of order, although the congestion by no means had been entirely relieved. Vice-Preside- nt on HIAWATHA ON GARDENING. (Milwaukee Sentinel.) Rake and hoe" said Hiawatha, Rake and hoe yon hustling husbands In the gay suburban districts. Fix your little beds of lettuce, Cultivate tbs spicy raddlsh. the onion. Plant the perfume-kis- s, And the tender little beanleL By the way my little chlldrrn. Have you ever made a garden: Have you ever hoed and spaded Till your backs were nearly broken? There la ecstacy in digging. There ia rapture in upturning All the fertile sand and gravel Out behind the summer kitchen. There ia joy in planting fodder tbe Per the First you dicker with the grocer For the cunning little aeedlets. And the grocer cannot fool you. For tha catalogues you've studied Ever since the first of April. Then you sneak behind the woodshed cut-wor- With the first gray flush of morning. Peel your coat and seize a shovel, Make a bed eighteen by twenty, Or, ptrhapa, a little longer. s will be mads to 8L Louis and Mix a little fertilizer (Note my diction fertilizer) rn: With the sand, to make it mellow. It Leuls and return (direct Then mark off some tiny trenches. ute) Not too fkr apart, remember Chicago and return (direct .....1730 And deposit in the trenches ute) . All the seed.taud close them over ihicage, and return (one way With the sand and fertilizer. St LuiV-o- r y te SL Louie Now that you have made your garden via Chl-g- e d return, one-wato watch the surface ,50.00 ckets ea sale every Tbesriay and For the first green shoot to struggle Nevem-indastvThrough the gravel, and you wau-- it ay of each week. May to Transit limit df ten For perhaps a weary fortnight 1111 at last. the little raindrops la rack dtrmtlon will beUowed Ana a spoil of sunny weather of date from days Hjpit sixty bdt ia no case later than De-be-r Bring the garden sues" to greet yon BuL alas, the early radish. I5th,'l4. addition to the above rate, there Nine string beans and hardy lettuce alio en rale round trip tickets, Never live to tell the story m to SL Louie and return, qt $50 Of their childhood recoPections. First, old chilly thing, tbe north wind ji ire on sale daily to MMalar brings the frost, my dearies. inclusive, limited sixty days from Conies and Nipping nil the vegetation ef sale. That ia really worth the nipping. Then the the cut worm. EACHERS' RATES EAST VIA Chuckles down beneath the surface UNION PACIFIC, 31st, and Jnne 8 th Sharpens ap his little molars. ir 30Ch andPacific wiUeell tickets Calls a bunch of friends to help him. tih, Union Saying, We an Jn the garden. at GfiiE PARE plus $5 Jfi r Therefore, let nsa.11 go to ,lt! d trip from Opfvn fo IMkoia Let aa gacafiie-th- e lettuce!" eaefof We Use fo ThffhQTwhF'Nnever dally CWmge Wttlf Cbe'ttndleXhor sad.shovel; TMdlUbMRiriH TbfojrlUHlacan't Jielp laughing WjeeAl .Vermy'nexiwroor neighbor ttaorkttiovertiine o fashion r aarmitMrseNi oa P- - A. Inkks' parti uuJiUJergardrn RATES, TO ST. LOUIS Via UNION PACIFIC, recti ve May 3rd the following 0RLD8 FAIR .... ... You-begi- -- e. ; --wMMBUBBHHHii SSRI ,ml delivers .TtJXklsa caa do It I gna wa start and have tb r 1 to, tceUjg Ct.c of inatn eyfa. N Mm WHILE INTOXICATES RAILROAD ORGANIZATIONS ARE ARRANGING FOR OUTING. cific. H IEWS CAUGHT LABOR the-wes- t el-Is- d fkba Wrights May Sale lie values orteretl here this week in tilings artistic for women to wear nail for home use, will demonstrate more forcefully than ever before these two points; First that we possess positive advantages in placing before the 1 Armor Meat Phone IS. 333 u at the , wT- Bawflna - THf1"1- I AN OUTING burning eon- is the real THIEF DAY FOR af uuhM8 IM Hr:vTFD 5-a- I PETTY GALA tfothwchfllyithlng. the north wind. the cutMrnrm. HE STEALS A FAIR OF TROUSERS. Wnen Arrested Ho 1 VV About to Mrs. Rosen, Wife of tho Proprietor of the Paie. Strike Jerome Bacon, an piano tuner, was arraigned i.i i!; Municipal court yesterday. n the charge of disturbing the peace. The complaining witness waa the barteniii i at tiie Headquarters saloon. He shM iiim i'hp defendant caused a fraeax in i he saloon this morning but from Ins own evidence it waa apparent that he had made complaint becauM he mot angry at the defendant and ini bemuse he disturbed anybodys pca. c. The defendant waa discharged. Dick Sullivan arraigtu J nn a charge of drunkenness pleaiinl guilty and was fined $10 or ten duy.v John Sullivan charged wnli mendicancy pleaded guilty uml was fined $15 or fifteen day a Ray Winthrop and l ewis McMahoue were arraigned on tbe rharge of vagrancy. Winthrop waa before the court several days ago on a like charge and at that time promised in leave for Boise. Idaho, imniediarely. He didn't fulfill his promise, eo got ten days on the municipal rock pile. McMahons waa allowed to go. James Baker was arraigned on the charge of petit larceny, but. as be waa under tbe influence of liquor when he came into court he will he arraigned again Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. It is alleged that Baker went into Rosstreet early en's store on Twenty-fift- y thla morning and examined several articles aa if with the intention of purchasing same. He made no purchases, hut as he went out he s!lped a pair of pants, from off the rouuier, under his arm and was making a hurried exit when grabbed by Mrs. Rosen who called for assistance. Baker waa Just In the act of striking at Mrs. Rosen when Officer Vance arrived on the scene and placed Mm under arrest. Will Reeves, charged with violating the bfrycle ordinance by riding on tue sidewalk on Washington avenue pleaded guilty to tbe charge and waa fined $200 James Lynch apiiearcd for arntem-thla morning on the rharge to vagrancy and selling "phony jewelry. He was given thirty days on the municipsl rock pile. George Kastrantoa. was arraigned on the charge of erecting a wooden building within the fire limits ronlrsry to ordinance. He pleaded guilty to the rharge. By interpreter he was informed thst Friday he would be but in tbe meanwhile If the city ordinance were complied with by building a four inch wall on both sides oi the lumber work and an eight inch wall at the rear of tbe building It would have mi toil to do with the sentence. He promised to comply with the provisions of the ordinance. i".L,-is- LUCKY BAGGAGE PURCHASE. OGDENS BEST STORE Wo point with pride to our eilk depart ment. Not only H la the largest In the city, but bcriuae ft has grown by leaps and buunda to that portion by reason of the unequalled valuea wo hare been able to offar from time 16 tinu-- . Here are pol uts to clinch the argument: Fancy McaMline silks, for shirt wain a and suits, luaimus, figured and durable, entire assortment, for-- 1 merly foe the yard; during the May Hale. 15c. y 35c. Plain corded silks, 7 shades, a long wearing qtiallly, worth 75, S5oj Black and colored pomceea. popular and scarce, foe. black guaranteed taffeta. 80c. Taffeta, worth $1.35, 05c. $1.50 hlark taffeta, 30 inches wide, $1.05, Finest $1.75 quality, $1.20. bet-aua- 24-in- $1.25, $1.50, $2 and $3 BLACK DRESS GOODS ia an instance of money saving Voile and Etamlna. at the May Bale. A 90c bona fide cloning out price ea these pieces el Mistral BLACK HOPSACING Canvas. Melrose and fancy gTantiea, strictly all wool, light weight for aummor skirls etc., worth $L2S and $1.50, 75c. CH ALLIS that beautiful French material, pers and children's things, worth old yet new, 80c, la all the 1804 shadings just the thing for klmoaoo, wrap- 35c. THURSDAY $2. 0 1 . M. i for your pick of the metal chain pnruea worth $4. $5, each Jay until sold. Friday's price. $1.80 If they last. : $8 and $7, placed In window Monday at $3 leas fifcr GLOVE SPECIAL 19c 19 dozen women's lisle gloves la gray, tan. hlark and mode, worth 25c. This ia one of the values offered since our great glove sale last summer, SALE EXTRAORDINARY OF STOCK COLLAR FOUNDATIONS greatest 5c .... at a ridiculously low prica enables na to Never have you bought these under lu to 15c, but a pun-baa, put these on sale tomorrow and while they last at 3 and 5c. At 5c thry are perfect. The 2c 1st are somewhat damaged, but will do for foundations to ribbon collars. All aizei. black and white, straight and pointed. s May 25. Five $1,000 have been found In an coat purchased by Elold moth-eate- n mer Eckeraon of Bogota. N. J.. at an auction sale of unclaimed baggage In New York. treasury notes a railway station. Neither the trunk nor the coat public of Ogden correct merchandise, and second, that the values ofiered are muef1 greater than can be obtained elsewhere. Fix in your mind if jou please any article sold in these four stores at a giren price. Then make careful investigation of what we show at that price in the article selected. Compare it with what can be found elsewhere at t he same price and you will understand why it is that this is known everywhere as It contained bore any marks of Uentifl-catioEckeraon was about to throw tbe garment away when he discovered Ohio, we wsnt Ihe united efforts of tbe treasure carefully wrapped in oiled Johnson, MiTxaa. Unix. Kilbotime Ilk. The lucky buyer la 63 years old and tha grant Democratic party to Join and will at once fake a vacation In In one gigantic effort to turn back tha Europe. flood of Republican, corruption that threat ena to overwhelm the late. Democrats, cease your envying and contention and aland shoulder to shoulder In our common cense agalnet this fearful, stupendous and appalling tala of public debauchery and corruption. Democrats. let us here highly resolve that by the aid of Cleveland, Bryan, HID, Gorman. Parker, Hearat, Johnson and Mcl.ean.wlthoul. reference to previous conditions of political belief financial doctrines or tariff dogma. Remisrule shall cease and that Stormy Time in Ohio State publican the rascals in high and low places shall be turned out and that a governConvention. ment. of, for and by the people, be restored. The first demonstration of the convention waa In tbe mention of Hearst'a name. Then followed outlmrsta aa the Columbus, Ov May 25. Previous to names of other national and state leadthe assembling of the Democratic state ers were mentioned by Mr. Starr. for convention today, tbe conservatives There waa a notable demonstration the McClellan aa the speaker eulogized had won in tbe preliminary meetings. mayor of New York, at the close at All the 208 contested scats were given his speech. R. B. Anderson, of Waptkoneta, preto the conservatives. Tbe radicals Insisted that they would present minori- sented the majority report on credenconty reports and if defeated in the con- tials. sealing the 20818conservative of tbe 21 memvention today they would carry the testants. signed by contests to 8t. Louis. When tbe con- bers of the committee. V. V. laa, of Delaware, presented a vention was called to order. Chairman memFinlay, of the state rentral commit- minority report, signed by three tee, introduced R. I Starr, who in bers of the committee seating the 35 radical delegates from Franklin coun part said: We are met here, not to destroy by personal bickerings, but to preserve thu harmony of our bert judgment." He arraigned Republican rule in Ohio, and the nation, and held that It was tolerated by "the spirit of dlsaensioD in the Democratic n. starWadvice TO DEMOCRATS ty instead of the conservatives. Former Congressman John J. Lents apoks in favor of tha minority, while Col. W. A. Taylor apoke for the majority. When Col. Taylor ronrluded there was a disturbance on tbe platform. Mr. Lentz took exceptions to what Col. Taylor had said and naked to aee papers Col. Taylor had in hia band, laitz took them. Taylor grabbed them In bark and n personal encounter words followed until both men were put down. Lents and Taylor both passed the lie repeatedly. The minority report covered only the contest in Franklin county and tha roll waa called on substituting tba minority for the majority report. It waa lost, 307 to 388. The majority report of tbe conservatives on credentials waa then adopted and the temporary organization made permanent. The platform waa then preaented. The Democratic party of Ohio, while firmly adhering to all living Democratic principles, aa time and again declared by Democratic conventions, recommend that the formal annunciation of purely national questions be referred to the national convention anon to convene at 8L Louis. In tha state tho Democratic party of Ohio offers tho people relief from the political trust which ba long controlled every department of the state government. It promisee, if entrusted with authority, to reduce public expenses and taxation, to save tba property of the state and restore government by the people as designed by the founder. KSSF" BOYS unre-conrilab- le party." Where ia the Democrat whose cheek haa not burned with anger or whose head haa not hung in shame, as he reads or listens to words ofvltupera-tiv- e vinification, M! and slander bandied between warring factions, whether they be of Hearat, Parker. Cleveland, Bryan nr others? Ia the mere preference of a nun a crime? is it a greater crime for a Democrat to have a preference for Parker, for Hearat, for Cleveland, for Bryan, than it ia for United Staten aenaora to sell tbe influence of their office for gain or for the administration to suppress the investigation of postofflee scandals lest It should Injure the party, or for the President of the United States to disrupt tho republic of Colombia In tba iotarests of the Panama Canal graft- The suit for the boy is a suit that will wash-we- ar -- and be cool for summer good ' i you if you will come in We want the yeoman service of in Abe dash of lleant. condng'batOe; wa wmMhseiatiiiypf Bryan and Qnckraa, sod. thniusu, and tbe nmtuire Judgment or ClevelendMn the Impending otniggle. A common danger and calamity, a common sufrtt and patriotic duty should make brothers of us ail, and hers in , We have ah extra good line we will show ers! Parker and hia friends in tho coming oampalgn; we want tho energy and The Ohio delegation la directed to cast Its entire 46 votes in the national convention aa the majority at those present end voting thall decide, when auch majority shall determine that course to be advisable. IjOuIi D. Johnson, of Urbana, (L, offered the following minority report signed by five members of tho committee on resolution: We recommend that the part of tho platform providing that tho delegates from Ohio a ball vote aa a unit when in the wisdom of n majority of said delegation such coarse may seem proper or In substance, no above stated, ho omitted and struck out of said platform. W. D. Excell, of Cleveland, off ere 8 a supplemental resolution for n two-ce- nt railway fare. A debate ensued in which Mayor Johnson received nn ovation In apeaktng of the two rent railway fare resolution. The vote on substituting Johnson's resol nl Ion to strike the modified rule out of the platform, was lost The platform Including tho two-re- rl fore rasoliUlnns waa then adopted. Tho following tickets were nominated: Secretary of state, A. P. Sandies, of Ottawa. Judge of the supremo conrt, Phillp J. Renner, of Cincinnati. Clerk of the supreme court. Perry M. Mehaffey. Cambridge. State dairy and fond commissioner, Quentin M. Gravant, Wooster. Member of the hoard of pnhllo works, William H. Ferguson of Spring-fiel- d. H Z. G |