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Show THE MORNING EXAMINER OGDEN, UTAH, FBIDAY MORXIXG, ATTGrST 2 VICTIM OF THREE THIEVES iking Powder SONS OF PROMINENT FAMILIES STEAL CONTENTS OF BUGGIES. USE THE ISSST ECCSSUiCAL Greater inleaveningstrength, a spoonful raises more dough! or goes farther. Pil:3 Biking Pcwisr Co. CHICAGO, They AIm Stole Himm Trlmmlnee Plunder Divided Equally Between The Threo Purloiners. Depnty Sheriff Remap haa Just unearthed a case of robbery. Involving id three young men of Kauo.vlile, to belong to three of the moat prominent families in the toan. The young men. whose ages are 19. 31 and 34, rohlied a tiiigiry lieliinqiiig to a young couple from West Weber. ho were ar Friday night, at a dam-rtaking the content of the young ladys grip, a ladles toilet set, and stripping the harness of all portable and valuable trimmings. The young men divided the Issiiy, worth about , Kam-svill- equally ttMhveen them selves. Deputy Sheriff Brinap took up the matter Saturday of locating the rogues. Wednesday evidence was discovered, directing suspicion to the young men above mentioned, and Mr. Belnap succeeded In frightening tha lads Into a fll. A. X. of Columbus, Ohio, Visiting with friend in Ogdi-u- . g J. W. bacco 1 rurrfoy of a houtHj i Mg Denver toviefliiig Ogden. They brought back Ihelr Browne and wife are up from lastly and restored it to the ownera. Salt lake on a visit. Out of respect for the parents of the boys, Joseph B. Alvord of West WettBulletins on tlin Jrtfrirs-Munro- e man who waa er. father of tba fight will hi1 announced from tba of- mhhed, la desirousyoung of concealing tha fice of thla iwpcr. names and tdenrlty of tha thieves, whom seem, now that they are caught, Jrlfrlra-Munroe Program of tha to ba reiwntanL One of fight will La given by round from the thoroughly young men also confessed to havthis office tonight, ing been connected with tha stealing of a buggy not loug since. MIm Venire Hannon will entertain twelve little friends at her home today. J. M. Mr, Joa. Ballantyna baa rrdiimed from hl ninitner varalinn and will readme teaching at once. Rindio at 2533 Orchard avenue. 1'hnne 24k. ARIZONA STORM retd-drnc- e, SEVERE Indescribable Amount of Damage to More Rain Falling. Property REED HOTEL The following ere the arrivals at tba Reed hotel for the last twenty-fou- r hours: G. O. Bridgman, New York; II. B. Chamberlain, Huston; J. I). Ryder, New York; 11. D. Bingham. City; luvid J. Smith, New York; K. & N. Y.; J. W. Whit-eyGriffith, New Ycirk; Dr. and Mrs. K. W. ruin am, Binghamton, N. Y.; F, J. Da Vry. Denver; Mrs. Fannie K. Kwlng. 1m Angiitis, Cal.; A. ChrlHtrnaen. City; H. II. lteed anil wife, llroukviile, Kaunas; Mrs. I. Donnelly and daugh, ter, Kiireka; Mr. and Mra Hold. New York; Mra Jennie Mrlatrd and daughter; J. H. ('ohm, AtMelmw; Mira Eva Bril an. San Fra nr I wo; A. K. Xf wrouili. Chicago; K. C. Felton. B. O. Kiwtih. Win. E. Fhlinp, City; N. P. Parnell, Cut off. , WAITING , The principals, Kingman. Aria., Aug. 15. Mors than two inches of water fell yesterday in an incredible short space of ttm ar the great canon west of here, through which the Rants Fa railroad runs, was anon converted Into a marlug torrent. The water waa twenty feet deep. were swept away, Heavy grartea bridges torn from Ihrilr foundations and miles of track wrecked. In King-ma- n trees were broken down, streets lorn up, telephone lines entangled sad phones burned out. Tha ranch of J. H. Johnson suffered severe damage, debris from.tka nymn-laln- a . MAN ARRIVED RN THE CITY YESTERDAY WHO THINKS HE WILL BE FOULLY DEALT WITH. Delegate te Typographical Convention From tan Francisco on Return Trip Stops Here, Fearful of His Lifa. V. E. Fortson of the San Francisco Post, a delegate to the recent convention at Sl Louis of the tniernaiiooal Typographical union, where be served a a prominent meudwr of tha committee on laws, became the victim of a peculiar baJliencination while returning from the convention and entered town yesterday In abject terror of an who imaginary band of murderer weie houuding hitu to hia death. At 3 oclock p. m. he appeared at the sheriffs office in a state of extreme trepedatlon and wanted to know if bis name had been entered upon the booka and if he wan about to be He begged the protection of the of fleern alleging that about twelve murderers were following him closely with intent to end hia career. They had gotten off the train with him and had three followed him up the street, walking on one aide, foiir on the other and the rest pressing dowdy behind, of their foul inteutlona. talking IrcN-lMajor Littlefield appeared at the ofHe fice taler with the unfortunate. remembers him from an acquaintance dating hack many years ago. Doctor Dickson wan called up about 9 o'clock and rendered medical assistance calculated to quiet the man's nerves and Insure a night's rest. He appears to be perleclly sane on all subject a except hia one delusion, speaking enthusiastically and Intelligently of the work of the convention. On hit peculiar weakness he displayed extreme agitation, rising trequent ly to close the door to prevent hia imaginary persecutors from seeing him. Hia story is a Jumbled account of an Inquisition began against him over a trifling mistake at Grand Junction, over which a young lady Imagined he had Insulted her. In the distorted imagination of the man the troubles assumed alarming proportions. A band of thugs clubbed together and talked of "fixing" him. A bitter persecution waa begun. An opportunity waa looked fin- - to get him alone and nssawin-at- s him. All kinds of traps were set for him and tha trouble assumed such passengers proport Iona that all the took sidos for and against him. He wan detained last night at the county Jail. It In thought that hln condition in covering growing crop to the depth of several feet Thn Foetal tele- - the result of the high altitude end loss of sleep, combined perhaps with graph lien suffered serloua damage and tba Western Union llnea also a too free use of sUmulanlB. down In the floods. lu Cruder the worst storm of the Major L I Henman, U. 8. A., went season broke all records In the fall from here yesterday to the summit of water. Hundreds of men are now of a mountain on one of the chief Miao at work on the Ranta Fa road lied ami. Tau Inlands, 20 miles from Golden as attempt will he made to get trains Hill; near Fort Arthur. Through a 0IKIK8 CAB SMASHED Seaman through In two days. No material ran powerful telescope Major be gotten on account of the washouts could nee u groat deni of the const Oregon Short Lino Diner Collides east and west. Tha wagon road la of the Liao Tung peninsula. Ha heard With Switch Engina washed out and the Existence mines la heavy shots anl much small artilare closed down on account of the lery fire. Indicating that fighting had Oregon Short ldne dining car No. failure of tha teams to haul ore and subsided to n certain degree. Sf3, came In from the west yeeterday supplies. No tralna have reached here afternoon presenting a badly battered since Raturday.and the town la runUp aiiMarant-e- , raneed by being run PREVENT ENGLAND Inin by a switch engine at Belgrove. ning low on sup plies, A great, storm raged in tha mountains today. Bbuni 1W mile went of here. me tolllalon crushed In the front end and (Continued from Page One.) lore down the aide of the car fur about RUSSIAN SHIPS OUT OF COMMISSION. half it length. That the enoka and waiters who were In thn diner at the separately and In the light of different Shanghai, Aug. 35. The Rusrinn conditions. time of the accident, escaped without serious injury or without being killed rnitaor Askold and torpedo boat deIn tha first place, special difference was due to the fact that they were stroyer Groxovol have gone out of had arisen between Great Britain and but the work of repairing Utimda about the raptures made by the on the ride of the car opposite to that mmraiialnn, them u being continued. run Into. volunteer fleet steamers which had There waa no formal ceremony passed the Dardanelles in the characDining car No. 349 was In rharge or when tha veamda went out of com- ter ef vessels other than war vessels, Dlulng Car Conductor U. W. Anderson. At Belgrove there wea some mission. Their flags were not raised as all were aware. This led to an A simple announcement was acuta controversy and tha Russian switching done. The dining ear was today. placed on the main track June behind made by the commanders of the two government gava assurances, without, a tourist car. Then the awith engine warships that tha vessel would re making n statement on the question. ctf mala in port until the war M over. the ran back onto the side track and principle Involved that the vessels by of dismantling them will of this this time the train started nut. For Tha work fleet would not make further The Askold has begin on Friday. name reason the engineer of the switch 'raptures. Then, when the Smolensk been authorised to unin rentnla dock engine was unable to stop, although he stopped another BrltiHh vessel (the applied the air, with the result that til September llih In order to coni comedian), n painful Impression wm hur plcia repairs. the engine crashed Into (he diner at made The crews of the two vesxols, with created, and the aa government reuTl an angle, tearing out almost all of how this to urgent, inquiries the bra the of except neeeasnry guards, be reconciled with former assurflPres. one side of the car. At the time Mr. Anderson wan In one of the tourlet will be pa rolled and allowed to return "bloat assuredly, said tba premier, I to Russia. ran. the rooks and waiters were on "ahutild the volunteer fleet steamers atThe Shanghai newspapers unanithe opposite aide and thus all escaped tempt further raptures, which I do not mously regard the outonme of the re- think Injury. The front of the ewitch engina cent they will, no such capture situation as due in no small measwas quite bedly broken up and aalit would he recognised by ue or by tho ure to the and tact of John diplomacy now ts in the ahopa undergoing angina Russian government" Gtxiduow, ills American consul general Mr. Balfour rarefally reviewed the wj Till here. mil Knights Templar Special Passed Here En Route to the Park Before Going to Frisco. The fourth Knights Templar fal and the second to conns viaspec, the Oregon Short Line, parsed through 10 oTba-Ogden about lust night on the way to Yellowstone Park. After allowing its puHsengcra a visit at the national park it will return to Ogden and proceed to the coast via the Southern Iaciiic. It hails from Pa., and la made up of three standard and a baggage car. a SURE ENOUGH CONVERSION St. Paul, Minn.. Aiip. was 25.--- letter lod.iy at the office of Kilin't of the Northern Pacific from a won-vnisxlnnary in San 5 rs:iri: Pn lejllnc of Him conversion of a man formerly a i lion foreman on the Non ken Pac.fle nmd. and that he ronfe?ed to her that for several years ho regularly one more man th:-l. tad on his force. In his pay roll. Yh-the cheek arrived he i,e amount. The mfitainn-arsay the man' conversion le sn sincere that he wish to return the to observe money taken, but wit-hrthe old Moxfar law of paying additional in the form of smart money. The letter ask that the records be gone over and the amount determined. rcctivt-- THE JAPANESE BniMIII (fontinnad In-i'di-n- t y one--Sft.l- i Honolulu. Avg. 25. An autopsy on body y'a. Korean who wa a steer-ag- TEETH? from Page 1.) Pt. Petersburg, Aug. 25. Lieutenant General Rakharoff. couimander of the Eastern army, telegraphs that thn rains have ended and that One weather lias set in, but that the road are Mill Imprartlcahla. The ruewlve heat of midday haa raiimd a recurrence of dysentery. frequent, the general have been outpost mvouuiers south of Anshanshan and a ravalry engagement southeast of Skirmishing i say, and there The Fiw, Aug. 25.- -9 p. m. Golden Hill, White Marble mountain and Lla-ot- i mountain, according Former Section Hand Becomes Converted and Wants to Pay Hia Debts. to Chinese advice dated the night of August 22, are now the only main fort eenrely held by the Russian at Port Arthur. Other are occupied by them but thev re subject to an artillery fire which render their tenure uncertain. Fort nmdier 5 which ha been frequently reported taken by the Japanese and retaken by the Russian. ! again declared to be in the hand of the Japanese. A rumor, having some point Indicating authenticity. that the new European section of Tort Arthur la in flames. Owing to the mud and brick const roct ion of the hnddinca, however, and the Are is not general. It slated that the Japanese are nslng guns taken from the harbor defenses nf Kobe. Nagasaki and Yoko-hamThese gun, numbering three hundred, are nf heavy calibre. 1 Hi Fon. Ang. 25. Noun. A junk which left Port Arthur Aurust 22. re- ports that the Russian wounded at that date numbered five thousand and that paesergor on the Koptlc and who the Japanese orriinicd the height died aPer being landed at the quur-airir- e near f'hao rhanko. It further si here, tiiow that he that Imy are Ughiiug in the died from the plague. j Russian ranks now. the GONG. wo will engage In Grand Opera House, have finished their hard training. Just enough work will be done today o keep down to the required weight It la gala that both men will easily make 135 pound at 6 oclock, aa provided for In the anlclea. Turner is confident of winning; Mullin la also confident of winning, axd a good FANCY Itnt-Inr- YELLOWSTONE PARK, FIRST FOR THE the contest tonight w the CREAM II SPORTS o 1 fea hardly figures on tbe customs returns. 'i he Columbian exposition of 1593 inaugurated a schema of ex pioiia-tfo- n In- America and thin has been vigorously maintained ever since, the expenditure being maintained by a voluntary customs cess. The industry is almost exclusively in the hands iff Europeans. All the chief producers are represented at the exposition their interests forming the special province iff an assistant commia aioner. The produce of the cocoanut eovere the largest acreage of palm cultivated lend In the island, and the cultivation, which ia chiefly la the hands of Its natives, 1 fuiiy represented. The aut itself, the various fihres, matting, and ifipen mode from lu husk, the copra or dried kernel from which is extracted the oil now so largely used in thn manufacture of the best aoapn and hair oils, the deasicated or "shredded" cocoanut, the demand for which among confectioners is rapidly increasing, the cocoanut butter, an excellent emolient and substitute for lard, the arrack distilled from the toddy" extracted from the flower, a valuable liquor after a few yeara la cask the vinegar aud "Jaggery or molasses" down to the brooms made from the ekeln" or midribs of tho leaves, which might well replace those now in use in breweries all these are shown la their Infinite variety. Klee, the staple food ot the U represented in a few of country, jta 8o0 varieties, and lu spices by the finest cinnamon tha world produces, whether as bark or oil, cloves, nutmegs and mace, cardamons, pepper and vanilla, and the cltronella oil now ao much m use among scent manufacturers Cocoa and coffee, the finest rubber, and thn cinchona bark from which quinina Is prepared, croton need and annuo dye, may all be seen here. The fibres Include those of the Kitful and Palmyra Palma, and tha silky Nlyande (aaneevier aeylanica) for which great future ia predicted; nor Is the conical arecanut, the beat dent rifles, overlooked. This department is In charge of aa expert agent and is provided with a commercial sample room for tha use of those specially Interested in tbe various trade products. The Educational which exhibit, has been prepared under the direct supervision of the director of public instruction in Ceylon, illustrates the by the British procedure adopted government In dealing with races with an advanced HUrature of their own to whom n. certain knowledge of English ia at the same time a necessity; the present condition of education, elementary, advanced, scientific and technical, in well depicted here. Graphite, locally known as plumbago, the only commercial mineral of the country, may be seen In the palace of mines and metallurgy. More than 600,(100 cwta. of this valuable commodity were exported in 1899, the greatest demand being In tne United States, where tha article la employe In the manufacture of crucibles, for stove polish and for lubricating purposes. A few of the choice rubies and sapphires for which the Island le so fhmoua are on view In thn Ceylon - STRANGE YOUTHFUL nees LOCAL 1901. case of alleged differential treatment. He said there was no evidence yet that fair treatment would not be meted out to nil, and that In hia opinion the case cited hardly bore out the eerlotis contention of discrimination against British shipping, but should It, against Ms own sincere belief, appear that there really had been dlecrlmlna-tlo- n. the government would take disastevery step to sop any aiu-rous state of things, which he refused even to contemplate. The delegation must remember that the belligerent bad rights as well aa neutrals, and (he premier added: ''We ourselves may have to appeal to the law of nations to protect our rights as belligerents and In the interest of our own self preservation we may be obliged to ignore the Interests nf neutral, shli engaged In the 41 (mate operation of risky though carrying con' band of war." The prenil.r appealed to the deputation. in the lererest of themselves, snd of the world at large, to vtew both idea of the question and to approach It in a spirit of moderation. contest ought to be the result Several preliminary bouts bare been arranged and those who aneud will get their moneys worth In preliminaries alone. Willard Bean of gait Laka City will act aa referee In the Muliln-Turnfight The two principals agreed upon him immediately after he wm recommended as being one of tho beat referees in tha state. It wm understood that Tommy Markham, the clever Utah lightweight, will challenge tha winner at tha ring-aid- e. and It ia extremely probable that a match will be arranged between him and the one who wine tonight A large crowd of gait lake sports ere coming up In n eiierisl train to take In the bout. They will return a short time after tha DghL Reserved seats will he on sale this afternoon and evening. EXHIBITS SHOWN IN SIX OF THE GREAT PALACES. Tea Barved In "Ceylon Court, a Separate Building, by Singhalese Men Ancient and Modarn Displays of Curious Interest By Theodore Hardee, Assistant to the Secretary of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. NOTE Mr. Hardee has special charge of matters pertaining to Oriental He qualified for this exploitation. responsibility through accompanying Commissioner-General John Barrett, to Asia, on hia extensive exploitation tour of the Orient, which resulted in the magnificent showing of thoae countries at thn Worlds of 1904. The following article hae been road and comumndetf by tho Commission for Ceylon at BL Fair Louis: The far-of- f - Island of Ceylon was the first country In Asia to express n deaire to participate In the Louisians Purchase Exposition, ns she had already done in the Chicago Worlds Fair of 1893 and the Paris Exposition of 1900. The committee to whom arrangements for the proper representation ot the island wm Intrusted, received an appropriation of nearly $150,000 from the government, while tho various mercantile bodies lent their hearty support. Besides the exhibits displayed In Its the Island la also special pavilion, well represented In the Palarea of Agriculture, Forestry, Fish and Game, Court In liberal aria the government of Mines, Education, Fine Arts and LibCeylon thows the admirable work eral Arts. The Cerlon Court, as It la called, turned out by Ita printing office, and firms of printers and admirably situated on the edge ot various private am well represented. photographers, to United the lake the belonging artificial har8 talcs Life Raving Station, and facing The large model of the iff particular InIs Colombo of bor one la of the Clock. It Floral the most attractive spots In the fair terest m Illustrating tha position of city m the tenth port hi the world grounds, and Its popularity ia abund- the tonnage entering and clearing. antly testified to bv tbe crowds who for Thera ia also a good private collecthrong it dally, the building itaelf tion of coins found in Ceylon and la a rectangular structure, thou-- 1 120 feet long and 60 feet wide, de- covering a period of nearly two yearn. signed after tbe Singhalese fashion; nand In thn Palace of Forestry, the Cey-from the center springe an octagon exhibits the chief 75 feet high, copied from the build- Ion government wild animals of tbe timbers and trade used the where Kings Singhalese ing elaborate collecto show themselves to their subjects. country, while the biologist On the ground floor the moat de- tion prepared by itn marine with fishshows everything connected licious tea Is served by fish of the erode from trap the hair ing, and waiters with long Singhalese addition to our tortolse-ahel- l combs, . while above ia villager to the latest tha the greater portion of the Una Arte knowledge, regarding exhibit of Ceylon. The native artiet of the pearl oyster.1 of And finally, in tha department la aeon at his beat in the magnificent seen landmarks Jeweled caskets of carved Ivory, each anthropology, may nba people who wore history of a present for an emperor, and the ex- inIlkatheand in horse ehariots five drove In work repsilver, repousse quisite resenting an art which has been hand- hundred yeara before the birth of ed down from father to son for twenty-f- Christ WILL GET TWENTY MONTHS. toiek la. Victoria, B. C., Aug. 5. Wllaci Robinson, an Englishman, waa convicted today of passing four bogus checks for various amounts and wm sentenced to twenty months Imprisonment. Robinson has nerved terms in Ban Quentin prison, CaL, and also In prisons in the eastern states for similar offenses. Robinson people la white-clothe- d y centuries In the caste of silive versmiths. Side by side with these may be seen tho crude colon of frescoes painted by native artist on whom the European Ideal la barely dawning, and the majestic Images of the great teacher, Uualams Buddha. The department of manufactures la represented by massive furniture in Calamander, ebony and aatlnwood, carved with the moot elaborate devices, dainty lacea made by the nimble fingers of village women, beautiful productions la tortotae shell and gold, heavily embeorrdiSI 1RDI AIMS TSHRU heavily embroidered cloths of gold and n large collection of the various curios for which the east Is famous, besides n display of tanned hides of exceptional merit. But It is in the Palace of Agriculture thet the chief commercial exhibit of the country la te he found. First and foremost ranks the great industry of ten cultivation. Thirty years ago the island exported a million tons of coffee annually, and tea waa an unknown article; last year the quantity of the leaf which waa exported to all parts of the world, exceeded one- l.twecd and fifty mil- lion pounds (of which 18,000,000 waa Joha. she . been patting in comic papers Philadelphia hu been swindling many locality. It ia alleged, and this b,2 Examined Free Before school epene I want to. test tha eyes ef every ehlld In Ogden that haa d. festive eyesight Come morn. Inge if peuibla. Santa Crux, Cal., Aug. 25. The Republican state convention to choose nominees for presidential electors met today and elected Robert T. Devlin of ueunl Sacramento, chairman. The committees were appointed and n recess wan taken until tomorrow. J. T. RDSHMER, Expert Manfg. Optician, Wash. Ave. 2412 UNCLUBBED. "Are there clubs for women hi this town?" naked tho suffragist from the EmL Certainly not, replied the gallant We can handle women Westerner. without- - clubs (Chicago PonL) A French professor is the owner of a collection ef 928 bosun heads, repre- senting every knows the globe. OUR nee of MEATS GIVE LYCEUM WEEK AUGUST 22. satisfaction because it ia front fat, healthy stock, properly killed at our slaughter house, and Immediately hung In our large refrigerator, where it is thoroughly chilled before delivery to the market, thus enabling ue to serve you with refrigerated meat at all times. KIPPY, Comedy Juggler. WINTERS AND BUMMERS, Tbe Funny Deutscheen. DE ROLES BROTHERS, Gymnasts. MR. AND MRS. NEAL, IE Comedy Artiste. AHELOIDE POWERS, Soubrette. J. WEATHERBY Wholesale and Retail Butcher. 2459 Wash. Ave OGDEN. H. SHAW, Baritone. MOVING PICTURES The Chicago Dental Co. BostSei Tooth $8.00 Our "painless extracting" fey. cur new method an the following patients have testified In n pronounced mo-cas- e, v Chat. N. Glddlnga, Druggist Stirling ShurtllffL 7 Mn Thomaa Burdltt Mr. Wygand Smith. Mr. Albart Potoraorw Mlae Hnxal Hunt. Mine Mable Spencan Mra. Mentgomsry. Will Moran. Mr. E. HalL Mrs. Lucy Steven a. Mr, Harry Eddington Mr. Ellies (Standard adflea. Mr. John Sutler, Mr. Chaa. McCarthy. . . (' , 347 24th Street OGDEN - - - - UTAH , -- U not something lacking to clinch these stout words," and comments on the premier's eagerness to find excuses for Russia. The paper considers the employment of British cruisers a delicate and undesirable duty, not unlikely to prove troublesome. The Daily Graphic comments In a similar strain. It aays It considers the task which the government has undertaken a not one of conspicuous dignity, and complain of the cold comfort Mr. lJalfbur administered to the shipping community, whose St. Petersburg. Ang. 28. Prime Minnf differential treatment he ister nalfour's statement to a deputa- complaints met by what wad almost a hostile tion representing the Inmlon Chamcross examination. ber of Commerce regarding the Rns-rfaThe Standard says It ran find... no volunteer fleet vessels Smolensk fault with the prir.e ministers firm and Rt. Petersburg merely agrees rth and camions language, but cannot rethe prior Information received by tk frain from asklna how long tbe period AsKoclsipd Pres and conveyed In of grace and of siiKpcnsion of national these dispatches that Russia and Great Judgment is evpected to endnre. Britain are mutually en stone for an ljondon. Ang. 28. The RL Petersamicable cnncltudon of the career of burg correspondent of the Dsily Telthese vessel on the high seas. The egraph says he learns that the recentstatement, however, allays an apprely concluded Russo German commerhension that the overhauling of the cial treaty contains secret clauses of British steamer Comedian might a political nature enabling Russia cause from mmidlratlon. to draft all her troops In the western provinces to the sent of war, thus de' Aug. 26. Premier Balfour's nuding the frontier,. In a political alstatement to the deputation from the liance upon Emperor William' asIsutdim chamlMr of commerce regard- surance of friendship. The correing the Russian volunteer fleet cruis- spondent say also that large tariff ers Smolensk and St. Petersburg is concessions have been made to Rusrewarded by a majority of the Lmrion sia at Emperor Vi Ilium's suggestion wffiu entfv satmorning nnwspapet tbe nature of which, when published, isfaction. but meets with ndverse wi'il grievously disappoint the governvl the hand of others. The ment agrarians. Morning Post, for example asks wUcth- - ecut to tho United States), while cot- - CALL FOR A Copy of August Number of ,'l yn 4 if AT THE n erii-IHs- ni ?' EYES Ranta Crux, Cal., Aug. 25. Tha eighth congressional district Republican convention today nominated F. C. Smith of Bakersfield for 'congress- - t er "there M School Children's wm charged only with the principal offences. 1 1 Mr. Btnbbe Look hare. Man la our daughters head ao aena thee dajat Mra StubbJ-- STANDARD OFFICE -- 4 .V7 |