OCR Text |
Show A ft r- it - HORNING WM. GLASMANN, by Manager. M01EY LOANED SALARIED PEOPLE . Real Estate aad Chattel bout Service quick, confidential aad private. No sommiaaloa. WESTERN BROKERAGE CO. 223-Thono 634-Ecctea Bldg. Dockerys Fathers KBimmiBaaBataasBiw Carrier; lncluilng Examiner. "Morning month per Slagle copies SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By msll one month (including Sunday) outside ot Os den ...-6Telephone No. n - &y it cl1 cts 0 Subscribers will cooler a favor by reInforming this office of failure totheir ceive The Examiner before breakfast DECREASED EXPORTS OP WHEAT EXPLAINED. Tbe disclosures which were maJe in the statement of the Bureau of Statistics for eleven months of the current fiscal year of n large decrease in tbe reexports of whaat seem to hare been being it concern, some garded with assumed that the diminished export demand reflected the diversion of Euroothpean consumption requirements to er wheat producing countries, and that should such diversion continue it would be likely to result la the permanent toes to thin country of the greeter part of the foreign wheat trade. Te some extent the diminished exports of wheat in the current year have been due to the fact that the European importing wheat countries have obtained large supplies from countries other than our own; Great Britain for example. Importing nearly five million hundred weight of wheat more than in the previous year, the greater part of which Increase was due to from Argentina. India and Russia. The reason for the diversion this year to markets other than our own of Europes wheat requirements seems to be easily explained according lo the New York Financier. "When the Motion's export movement of winter wheet was nlmoet at its height, and Spring sown grain was beginning to move freely, sneculatlve manipulation of cotton attracted attention s brood. Influenced In a greAt part by the rise In this staple, waeat also advanced, and almost concurrently the price of With wheat and notion rose under which seemed to foreshadow no great an advance in the former an to make contract for future delivery undesirable. European manufacturer! were re-Strict sd to our market for euppllee of cotton and they were forced to pro- cure It notwithstanding the high prices but foreign Importers of wheat were not so dreumstaacsil, for the supplies epLihe cereal wfirs abundant elsewhere UW fiien abandoned th American market' and resorted to Argentina, Russia and other localities for the gradne of wheat there protore!) la and equally suitable for their purpose as the American grain. They thus were measurably Independent of tmr markets, and they appear to have so continued during the remainder of Ike active export season. con-lltlo- ns t I I ' JT- - andOrfi BUMMER RESORT WEATHER. After a long, dismal, variable and altogether exasperating spring H seem, rather singular to hear people inveigh-In- g against the weather because, forsooth, the genial rays of the ,su reflect too much heat, especially from Ihe soon hours onward, during these lays. But most people are prone to think on their present discomforts Slone rather than to seek consolation In the thought that comparatively the Season Is much more agreeable than a short time back. " la older times when the world was more poetical or loss practical than it U now. various fire ceremonies were tonnected with tbe observance of what was afterwards called midsummer, or lit. John's day. Their origin cannot ta dearly traced, but they are supposed to have some connection with the helronomical fact of the summer turning of the sun. However thte may be as to the pest, it wouldnppear that this year it spent Its whole time preparing a lot of superheated atmosphere, which it is dealing out to the sweltering la large quantities. It does not call for a high degree of meteorological science to feel at dawn some of them days that the weather business ! going to be lively in heat specialties. There seems to be nothing coed r deliberate in the upward movement of the thermometer. There have been some very warm days already the present month but they will have to look to their laurels, for there is promise of dates in the future that will wither and scorch them. But there iu no need for the people of Ogden to inveigh against the vest her man. What if the days are warm, have we not the shady recesses of the adjacent canyons to which we can retire and seek tbe comfort that comes with the canyon brnesen and the mitigation Of the heat from tbe intensity that Is to be found in the city. The people of ether cities are less foiluaate. Ogden-its- s should commiserate with them instead of bewailing the fact that some midsummer comforts are lacking here. n ' 1 ; clt-Ixe- na ' i t ?. 1 i WHAT LAWSON WILL TELL. Thomas W. Lawson, widely known aa the copper millionaire, of Boston, begins la the July issue of a current magazine what may be regarded aa his personal confession to tbe American pnbllo la such a way as to expose the men and methods connected with the Copper Trust and other huge combinations ef latter-da- y finance. He de- - JUNE SO, 1901. old man didn't get all of bia dowa at S to L but pretty soar it. and whea he How the Bad Ben Taught His Father trudged to the grandstand to watch the race be stood to via something like to Play th Races and What Be(20.000. came of the Father's Algol came home oa the uliln-strsFortune. and Pat collected. Then he went outside tha track, shook his fist at the I Washington Star.) a In all this talk now going un Washington park buildings, hopped took off his street car for the throughout the country about the evil coat and began togroggery, tend bar, and he has results that inevitably fall upon and never seen the Inside of a rate track crush the victim of the from day to this. He qnlt (lfl00 habit," said one of the Chicago corre- or so that tho to good, but he had got his spondents, the assumption seema to be and he couldn't see any more of it. that the young fellows only are the And the ease of Pat Is only one. sufferers through the maintenance ef a whole lot of other elderly tbe big horse racing game in thia coun- I've knownsome of them of far men, and try. This is the moat inexact assump- intellect to Pat's, who got thesuperior racing tion Imaginable. The horse bug grips men at all stages of life, and, from fever late la life and permitted the them over the observation of a number of esses, 1 am brink thing to carry No man ia immune inclined to believe that when it takes from of the abyss. the mag net ic contamination of hold of a man whose youth ia past, horse the racing game until the pansies such a man will go in fur the shriveling fiver him." are growing thing more desperately than the youug follow who takes an early start at It. 'Take tbe case of old Pat Lary of BEST BELLING BOOK IN THE WORLD. Pat waa an old fashioned, Chicago. ruught-necke- d 'harp,' and he kept a The Bible Is the best selling book ia 'longshoremen's mighty profitable g toggery on River street in Chicago. the world. It leads, and by a long inHe had a eon who plkefi along terval, all other publications la copies with the horses and never worked, and purchased la the ordinary channels of cue day Pat threw him into tha outer trade, without regard to what may be called the official distribution. air and told him to stay away. The old man had no sooner done Every book store which undertakes carry a full line of stock sells the this, than he became sore oa himself, to and,' urged on by the boy's mother, he Bible. Several Important corporations made up his mind to give the young coniine themselves to the manufacture follow another show for hie shiny mar- and sale of Bibles, and others find la ble. He knew that hla eon could be ths Bible their leading feature. Of no found at the Washington Park track, other book can this be said. Speaking where tfie racing was then oa this waa some time ago of the Insatiable defive or six years ago aud so he diked mand for the Bible aa aa article of Mmself out ia his broadcloth clothes merchandise, an officer ot the Methoof the centennial vintage, and went dist Book Concern, which till recently Issued cheap editions of the Bible, said: out to the track to hunt the boy up. He had never seen a race track in 'Like all publishers, we have to keep hla life before except tbe outside bne watch' of the sale of books in general, but he had a whole lot of dormant even the most popular, so aa not to overstocked But this never occurs sporting blood, and the running thing get in printing the Bible. We Just keep made a bit with him from tbe f. He found his son, made it up with him the presses steadily at work, aad if we and started in to making some inquir- happen to find that we have 40,000 or ies about the way the races were run. 60,000 copies oa hand it gives us no The hoy knew it all, of course, and uneasiness. We are sure to sell them, started in to put the old gentleman and we go straight ahead printing." wise. He touted hie dad Into a SO to 1 Century. hot in tha third race, and the old man shredded a ten-spfrom his roll and OBJECT LE880N FOR FOOLISH WOMEN. sent it along on the youngster's selection. The horse won. A young lady,' inspired by arcadian That came very near driving Pat hack to the pick that he had dropped simplicity, accepted the other day the of a man she never had years before, that 800 win.. He sent hospitality met before and probably will never of remainder tbe the money along for the afternoon oa hit tough eons picks, meet again. Her trusting confidence led her to a drinking resort, where off the day he wss nd at the wlnd-n- p be was robbed: She has braved nor.esrly $1,000 to the good. He took Ihe to seek redress and la doing boy home with him, and they spent toriety so has performed a public service. half the night over the dope charts. Out to the track Pat and hla son She has given the young women of went together the next day, and Pat Ban Francisco a splendid object leswon tidily again. From that time on son of everything they should not be Pal's head barkeep began to gorge on or do. She even may profit by her the big graft. The old man got too experience. San Francisco Call. busy for the saloon business. He became thicker than thieves with the youngster whom be had given the swift s, We wire houses and wire and Uss for fooling with the pent his afternoons' at the trarka them fine ound Chicago. With the best of material Hla beginner's streak lasted for a couple of months, and then all of a in the Electrical line. sudden he ran Into a sandbar. The (13,000 that had simply drifted into his DONT FORGET THE PLACE rluthee during the two months began to drift out again, end in aide of a month he was not only all of the winnings to the worse, but be waa drawing checks on his savings bank. But there wasn't nay quit la Pat. COMMERCIAL ELECTRIC CO. He bad the Instinct, that the time to peel Ihe coat and get into the shirt sleeves is when the rough house la MANAGER. under way, ahd all hough he was getting mighty sick of the uphill game he 2279 Wash, avenue.. Feughne, 614 x. trudged along. He had (6,009 in the savings bank, nd that went. Then he was all in except the saloon. He tackled his wife un the propoeitlon of putting her name ALL EIGHTH alongside his to a mortgage of (8,000 GRADUATES on the saloon property, and she came 60 per cent on receive will po rinse to batting Pat's head off, that all pictures taken within the there wasn't any fun in it The sight nest 80 days at GARBERG' of her man's head lu bandages softSTUDIO, 276 25th 8b ened her, and after three days the mortgage was fixed up and her name on It. The (8,000 was paid over to Pat, and he went out to the track with the whole bundle. His head wss still so swathed up that he looked like the fag end of a Swede riot, but there werent any bandages on his nerve. He was out at Washington park to get back ths (8,000 pavings that he had lost, and he wasn't Invest In a piece of unimproved land? cut there to do any piking, either. In Weber Countyf The horse Algol, a Chicago cracker-joc- k Adjoining Improved farmer at that time, was carded for the Half mils from R. R. Station? first race, and Pat announced to his Right next te Irrigation Canal? son. who was with him. that.lhe whole Providing you un buy en monthly (8.000 wad wss going on Algol, payments? son a The to tried fight plek aualght. Bay (10 or $15 ar $20 per month? with him so that they would both be Or quarterly? a --rented before the race. The son Or annual payments?. couldn't see Algol win, and he thought And no Interest? that the old man was twiriy, anyhow, And no taxes? for wanting to soak the mortgage price The owner to pay taxes and conof one of the best waterfront saloons lu Chicago on the outcome of one race. tinue to un the land until It ia fully Maybe the son wss right, but thats not paid fort the end of the story I'm taking. The son didn't get away with his attempt to mix Ms dad up In a mussy scene, and the old man ploughed down to the ring with the (8.000 and scattered it around on Algol at 3 to 1. at (1,000 bill at clip vith the different books. Said piece ef land will coat yau $20 "When be gut through that round par acre. was at 8 to 6. and the holiday peo$400 for 20 acres. $600 for 40 acree. ple, thinking that the plungers In tbe $1,200 for 60 acrea. ring had battered tbe price, went to the Algol horse for tens of thousands Address or Call on They had no means of knowing that the ratting of the 8 to 1 price had been c mined broad-I'oth HUNTER by the old 'harp in the & KENNEDY rlothes and the bandaged head, who was due to hustle for a Job on the Room 6, First National Bank drainage canal if Algol didn't happen to feel like running that afternoon. The Building, Utah. Ogden, clares that he will give la a series of articles the actual facts, naming men He and dates connected with them. been tbe made he has unwittingly geys instrument by which thousands of inand vestors hare been plundered, wants them to acquit him of iatention-s- l wrongdoing, and later ou aid him la compelling restitution, ills narrative will deal largely with AddU-ka- , Rogers, Rockefeller, Helns and Keene, and he proposes to publish the complete list of 4,648 Investors in Amalgamated Copper. lie declares that the blame rests on the financial system, rather than on tbe individuals who have profited by it The history of the manipulation of the copper stock, properties and comimnies, has a peculiar interest to Ihe people of Ihe mining states, still Lawson's confessions will do no good to the people who have for years been mulcted by the manipulators, unless a few investors may gain the wisdom which will prsvail on them to so conduct their transactions in the future that they will not be caught in tbe mselMiiom of litigation which generally rads in the ruin of the stockholders and the enrichment of the promolors. A FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEM. George R. Stetson points out ia Public Opinion some of the factors neglected by President Eliot la his recent address on the labor problem. Mr. theoretical Stetson, while admitting truth of the Eliot propositions that labor should hare free of play thought, variety, the sense of rhythm, and artistic method, insists that the pursuit of happiness in industrlsl employments as at present organized is futile, la the dally round of nine or ten hours of mechanical employment ot hundreds of thousands In mines, factories, etc., he perceives only nieutel, moral and physical degeneration. Men are no longer working independently, but as privates in the ranks with social degradation, resulting from tbs multiplication of machinery, A tacit recognition of the danger involved in our industrial system is observed la the extreme activity of private aad corporate philanthropy to to minimise the direful results and alter the conditions of a problem which at tbe moment they are powerless to solve." When these theorists cease to formulate statements of their Idea of what the mental powers and future hopes of laboring men are and study the industrial conditions from a r loser vantage point, they will begin to realise that the beet Informed on the Industrial problem of today are tbe laboring men themselves. They take a practical view of the situation based on personal and they bring their reading of theories aad principles to a practical application oa the questions which are agitating the labor world: If some impartial board could be found to consider the differences between the employers and employes, eliminating the fallacies la the theories ot employers and the radicalism from the practical ideas of the laborers, tbe adjustment oT tbe troubles would be solved. But the difficulty In the way is the obstinacy of both classes and the tenacity of each class to cling to their own Ideas la toto. BURIED THREE DAYS IN A WOLF DEN. (From the Kansas City Journal.) An Oklahoman named Lawson had an unpleasant experience while visMilo Blodgett, iting his brother-in-lawho lives near Adobe Walls in the Texas Panhandle. Lawson went wolf hunting alone. Next day his horse was found saddled, but. without a bridle. Blodgett summoned about thirty neighbors and began searching for Lawsuu, who was located after nearly a day's bunt. His feet were sticking from the top of a wolf den and about three feet of dirt on his body. Lawson was so fastened that he could not extricate himself. He had dug down in the wolf den about five feet on a slant in a manner something like the entrance to a dug out, then lay down In the trench to reach In after some coyote pups. He caught one and threw it out. end It b supposed that this frightened hit horse, which was tied to a bunch oi bear grass near tho hole. The horse making a lunge osuhh1 the bank to cave, the dirt falling or the prostrate body of the limn. entering his body and bend. Thd dirt caught him with his arms stretched out in front so he could nut use then to much advantage, hut he maaagse. to work bis hands and shove the dirt down the bole until his head waa un covered and he could get air from tbr top. He lay in this position from f o'clock Thursday afternoon till 11 o'clock Snnday morning. SANITARY p, Mule Story 4 Delivered Sunday UTAH, TFITRSDAY MORNING, OGDEN, NO MAN IB IMMUNE. THE EXAMINER Published every day la the year the Standard Publishlsg Co. EXAMINER, Moment in tha reer ef the Governor of Missouri. An Embarasainp Ca- are carefully selected oa the hoof, skillfully handled at our abattoii and critically examined before they enter our market. Every thing b clean; when you get of ua it is right Macon. Mo., Juno SO. The average Missourian expects a wonderful memory in his statesman. They will tell you that the late Charley Mansur of the Second district never, forgot a baby that he was once introduced to, much less a man; that Champ Clark can repeat the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution of Missouri, and the Presidents last message almost word for word; and that Senator William J. Stone can quote more history and poetry than any other living man. Among the homespun country folk the ability to recognize readily every Tom, Dick and Harry in the districts is regarded as a qualification concurrent with statecraft. Those chosen to serve at Washington cheerfully bow to the wisdom of the rule and do their level beat to deliver the goods. Before being elected to the executive chair Gov. Dockery represented the Third district in Congress. While making his campaign for Governor In 1900 he visited this town, and having been educated at the Macon Academy, he naturally ran across msny warm friends, among them being Dr. A. B. Miller, a practising physician here. Dr. Miller tells this story: Quite s number of Congressman Dockery's friends met him in the offleo of Railway Commissioner W . E. just previous to bis speech at the court house. Among those who crowded around to shake his hand was Mrs. Milton Houston, an old lady who had been well acquainted with and was a warm admirer of Mr. Dockery's father. From this vantage ground she rather looked down on the small fry friends who had no prior acquaintance with the great mans family. She was determined to demonstrate her position to the crowd, and she led off by asking: You are Congressman Dockery, from the Third district, now, I believer Tbe statesman, with a courtly liow, admitted the charge. 'And your father Is a Methodist parson? Again the rhcvallerllke token of assent. "Well, do you remember, alimit nine years ago, whoa you were quite a chunk of a boy Mr. Dorkery gently protected that he was doing him a great injustice. 'Well, it was a good long while ago, anyhow,' the lady continued. T want to see if you remember this: I went to a meeting down near Gallatin, where ycur father waa doing the presetting, and he told me one of the most ridiculous stories about a mule that you ' "Why, certainly. broke In the son of the minister, affably; 'I remember U aa dearly as if it were yesterday. It ran about this way: 'The mule was hitched to one of those old two wheeled carts like they used to take garden truck to town in. Jim, the nigger, was driving him and he went to sleep In the cart, and the nuile wandered off the road to the cemetery, where a grave had been ' dug, and when the nigger woke up "No. said the lady, very much disappointed. That was not It at all. "The crowd began to titter. The Representative put on a bold front and started in again: Want it? Well. I guess It must have been the other one. 1 presume I got them mixed. Oh, yes; I shall recall it now vividly. "It was that Joke about the old yellow donkey that got Us left ear cut off in a threshing machine, or a corn shelter, or something, and he went kinder on account of It. They used to overload Ihe sacks on the other side to make him walk level. 'That was a good one-- ha, ha. ha! And the old gentleman used to tell it fine wish I could tell It as well. "'The owner of the mule went to mill one day with two sacks of rye on board, sthng across the mule's back, and there was a hole In the sack that wss on the side where the ear got cut off In the saw mill "'Mr. Dockery. 'Yes, ma'am. T don't believe you renumber the mule story I am talking about at ail.' ' "Oh, madam, I assure you "'And you a congressman too' with 'nfinlte disgust. A Member of Cong- ess from Missouri and forgot a thing Use that,!' "After the lady had gone Mr. McCul-l- y took Mr. Dockery on one side aud Mo-Cull- y fifty-- lop-side- d and' iiid: 'Bee her Dockery, now let ive this thing straight. Do you y remember whether vour father id a blamed word about a mule In ils sermon that day ?' The congressman took orf his hat i1 . feplfl n Mq hro1 4i 16 was going to speak from the depths of his innermost conscience: To be honest, Bill, he said, 'I e act-lall- in.ii' dont." CRUISERS ARRIVE FROM GIER. Mympla and Cleveland at Gibralter Trom Tangier. Tbe Baltimore, to-Is- y the iher veol of the European squadron. aleo at Gibraltar, whence the entire quart mn will rail In a few days to tin the hattlrahtp squadron command I by Rear Admiral Barker In thq for Australia. The Pacific squadron. constating of he New York. Marblehead, Concord nd Bennington arrived at Bremmsr-yesterday from a entire to Klska laud, one of the Aleutian group, a (stance of nearly nine thousand miles, v way of Panama and Honolulu, he squadron is on its way to San Rear Admiral Glass, who now in command of the station, will relieved by Rear Admiral Goodrich, ' ccntly stationed at Portsmouth N. '. The main object of the vlelt to the ut!an Islands wax to inspect the 'w coaling eta Ion established at KIs-m x. Washington Ave. . Policeman Whar. tbe use vour gong after you have man? Chauffeur I wasn't ringing tinging him up on my Chicago News. 's' OGDEN. ' 'a no-go- of ringrun over mv gong regUler. At $1.00 each than you could less buy the percale In them. Sheet and Pillow Case Offer Monarch Sheet Linen Fcuret Sheet Defender Sheet Defender 81x90 40 c 50 c 81x90 81x90 81x90 Pillow Cases from 8c to 25c . & Sons Howell Reese 62ic 75 c hem-stitche- d. go-of- The Weather Bad Has shown the importance of having GOOD SIDEWALKS ot B CEMENT WALKB MADE WITH. Alsen German Cement are guaranteed by ua. This le tho best brand on the market. .You un get It by calling en or phoning The Eccles. Limber Co While preparing for spring and summer ask to be shewn the screen win- at dows and deem Just received gee-gee- Eccles Lumber Telephone 121 154 Twenty-fourt- Co. Street h THOSE LITE MEN STAN. S. STEVENS r. DOC - 1 fl ncsjj IC WILL YOU If So SUIT SALE 8,10,12,13.50 $15 Suits at $7.95 With Corresponding Cut in Every Line Throughout Store Putnam Clothing House WWMAAAAAAA 2345 Washington Avenue Al-gi-- ld TAN- Washington. June 39 The Navy Department la Informed of the arrival of .id, j.ujiihUt jew.ii with the A. E. WEATHERBY. 245 ers us -- MEATS BOUGHT OF US Ladies Percale pony-playi- Med-'errane- Insure protection to our customers We. Offer Black Linder Skirt The Duplex Adjustable Yoke Materials FINE MERCERIZED and MOREEN Will you need one In the NEAR FUTURE? If so NOW is the time to buy. The price before the reduction was low Notice the Deep Cut $5.00 now $3.90 $4.90 now $3.90 3.25 now 2.75 3.00 now 2.55 $2.50 now $1.98 Cheaper Ones Without the Yoke. CLARKS itWrilBH ,8 LIW aoe 366 Settles the Nerves j Your favorite beverage will bs greatly improved by adding |