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Show THE MORNING EXAMISEB PAPES, have bwj t ro a foreign country, ,and carry pajieia in your pocket vhii-bif fuiiLd ou you, woui.i obtain for you twenty Lard labor free of (liarge. n jg uifc.-iilto keep perfectly ai case when miking to a high police officer or military official. In the end, however, you get used to it uui tan-liss- , till you are caug ii. The main u penis of Russia and France are lduies, while Germany pie-fmen to du Britain. The triumph of tin- - French jioliry of female enipln)ing spies was celebrated in Italy, when a lady of the Kremb imtia-s- y managed to get tlie lialb.n mlniner into her toil. U was at the t!iut 1aly to occupy Tunis and to a protectorate there. The Italian fleet waa preparing at Falernio. THE USE OF THE PRESS. In only twv more day it would sail, and Tuuia would belong to Italy, when during one of the lovers meetings tbe Italian minister let the secret out. Tbe real belongs 10 history. Francs arrived first and Tunis. line is another fact which may appear hardly credible, but is absolutely true. At the beginning of lbs South African war I had to consult with the intelligence department of a targe German gun firm, and tor fun the rhief of the department showed me tbe record of armaments of the Boers. Well, this record was (rue to the last line, while the report of the British Intelligence department contained not even the list of guns sold to the Boers by British firms previous to the war. Great Britain haa an wxcelleut but small secret seryioe. We pry less, perhaps, than any other Power, but no Important subject is left uncovered. Wo against 50 spend, perhaps, 6 pounds pounds by our continental neighbors, but much of our intelligence coats nothhonorary ing. being accepted from sources. For this reason It is frequently valueless. In the South African war many mistakes were made through inaccurate news and the employment of people who would go to any length to for the time justify their employment 1 yi-- BEPARTSfNT LAKE LTAR MONDAY e.-u- r' i By Our Special Correspondent. sllovril only two hits seven men. 'ore hirst, game: Beattie bun Francisco HOLDS UP er and struck out R.U.E. Hall and Wheeler and Gorton. SiH-ou- Score ; 3 4 well-kno- 8 K nnk-enshir- .; ini-nd- ed game: R. H. E. 0 2 1 , ,a , San Framisio (M 1 4 0 Batteries Williams acd Leahy; Corbett and Wilson, empire Mi Donald. GETS $50 A3 REWARD FOR THE CRIME. U)S ANGELES 8. 7: PORTLAND, 4 StPgU.iJA.1 xNDIT 2, of Destitution Plthetic CiM &tata CapiuL New of What's tli mutter? driver for Auerbach 4 .' had a big gun o'clock. Saturday about r?.ht w he SM attempt mg to drive In hie delivery wagon. l rj. rtabiier then proteedad to aide,k ir Crow up against hi horse's hia pock el a. HU lgu through VJT funda waa rewarded better than ha had expects!. jp In InmilchanRC and Mila being aerured. ! to he police Crow'a a ury uai night ia aa follows: been delivering C. O. D. park-c- m .I ia tla eastern part of the city ad bad Just left a house near Eight h streets. Aa I guuth and Kiuth East attempted to drive away, a man whom had noticed standing near the horae'a real-Ir- a head, jerked on the bit. I didnt then what waa np and hollered out What'a the matter T The next minute tbe ,fellow at nek fiu-eand com-pana big revolver in my a. ma to get down from the When I jumped to tbe ground he harked me up against the horse, and He got through my pockets. about $50. Tlie man waa nearly six a feet tall and heavy eet. lie had hindkcrchtaf about his face, but it did aot conceal a beard. Aa aoan aa he had robbed me he started off up the Ta the query V Crew wa-10- about 12 yean of age. ran to a vto witnessed the liokl-u- p, neerJiy grocery store and notified poI finished the work lks headquarters. bad on hand before reporting the A HNta hoy, has bent working for Auer-harfur several month a He la 21 feats old and resides at 42 Tenth East. Crow ha MISERY IN A HOVEL, I Artec In a shack in the rear of 213 Fast First South street the wifa of Joha Carter, a colored man, and his granddaughter, Mary, were Saturday night by Dr. C. M. Jtoiwbet in a destitute condition. The wifa la dying from a stroke of apoplexy.. Mra Carter la a white woman sad married Carter about twenty years death, igo after he flnt husband's filer Da Booed Lot waa called to allied Mra. Carter and found rhtnga In pick a deplorable condition he called Ike attention of the police to the case, tad every means will be taken to remora the child to a belter home and give Mrs, Carter eotne assistance. Car itr is xu old man and ia unable to support his wife. He le badly crippled kith rheumatism and baa been unable to work for noma time. Mary's mother vu a daughter of the first husband, and after her motlWs death her father, Kyle Bywater, aent her to live with her grandmother. When the police investigated the ease they found Kate Fisher, a sister of Mra. Carter, In a drunken condition la the shanty, and she waa arrested by Offlrer Furwtcr. She haa been arrested several timua before and the officials sill have the child taken to a better home and cared tor. wife's (bund IS PREVALENT. DIPHTHERIA The diphtheria epidemic In the country district southwest of the city haa caused considerable of a scare. One h maty school, thw Twenty-eixth,soXirray, ia now closed on account of the prevalence of the disease, and an-thschool, the Draper, haa been dosed and opened again two or three toes because of the epidemic. The tips Is a malignant one and it la said tat persons have not been taking suf-kkcare to keep from exposing themselves to the disease. The country in tbe vicinity of the Dnper school has the most cases. One Pupil of that school waa. taken down vlih the disease In the class room list week and bad to be conveyed sr nt TYPHOID The is DECREASING. report of the board of health iw the week shows a total of thirty. births, of which fifteen were and seventeen were females. 5ii The death record for the same period twenty, of which thirteen were les and erven females. io the week there were five diphtheria, seven cases of "MIlpox. three cases of typhoid fe-T- r nd two cases of chickenpux. During OF THE WORLD KING WINS THE ORACE COURSING CUP. gS! raBPl. Nov Torn R V?55 ,V ay 13.- - Tha John Tt,u4 jy H. Waddtngtona bW J H HnteP' p- - n! Jrt! W-- waa won by Agile cnwtori 0od brUw-b- 01 RmwV Actress, hen of Fresno. M" wn P Tk. Dili's &T, d Boy, who beat known Montana dog, injured withdrawn tw, k,aselL j1 ASEDALL ?AV rRAXfJ3C0 4. 1; rt CJ'. 1- - Nov- - M.-- The 1 La Angeles lnabil-n.-- T hit would have cauae of the ,h ' w ,h northern tram to- "e XiUrnoon game Corbett 8 2 7 2 Portland ti 2 Butteries: Jones. and Spies Chance; Siarkellu and Keilaccy. Second game: Loa Angeles 7 7 3 Portland 4 9 3 Batteries: Mason and Cnance; Simons and Kellacey. Umpire TACOMA, 4; OAKLAND, 1. Fresno, Nov. 13. This waa Over-all'- g day. Fifteen hundred people, including an excursion load from Visalia, his home town, saw him pitch one of the beat games he ever twirled. Fifteen commuters struca out off him. Score: R. H. E. Tacoma ... ,., ... 4 8 1 Oakland 1 4 2 Batteries: Overall and Hogan; Buchanan and Stark. Umpire Brown. THE SECRET SERVICE How Women Spies, Deserters, and the Press Divulge Secrets. (By one who haa served.) When people read or bear of a secret service agent, tlie picture of a man, arm'd to the teeth with revolvers and stilettoes, a mixture of a Sherlock Holmes and a Bill Sikes rises before him eves. Now, as a matter of fact, the beHt secret service agent in the world and the one moat generally relied upon by the nations ia the editor of the local paper. Lot us call the town Greenbeach, and assume that the government haa decided to build a hidden battery close by. The editor of tbe Oreenbcach Gazelle" will announce in his columns that Inspector or Captain has arrived at the local hotel to superintend some work fur the government. Next week tenders will be invited tor bricks, cement and blags. Tbe foreign Intelligence man, reading this nawa in Paris, Berlin, or St. Petersburg, begins to chuckle, Tills is going to be interesting.' A few months pass, while foreign eyes daily scan the paper for uews of the battery. At last the editor gravely Informs hia .readers that new guns for the battery now building have arrived. "Aha, aaya the intelligence man, our agent in London mnst have a look day a at that. And accordingly one Green-beacpleaanst foreigner arrives at starts painting the cliffs, chats in the evening with the local topers at the bar, and Is a good listener when yarns about the new battery are told. Finally, he departs and sends his report to his chief, who bands It on to bis expert branch for close Investigation. GETTING AT THE TRUTH. Humdrum work it seetus, but it is that roreally enly on rare occasions mance enters the life of the Intelligence man. Every government has lta press department and Us intelligence department. The press department reads thousands of papers, and Imparts tbe gist of them to the iutelli gence service. Often the military attache alone can tend to this. Ifcir example, let uu assume that a new gun has been issued to the troops. Military as wellhod-sk-asa non-Hilary papers la our days of and a free press will compete in Uvnlging facts about the guns. Compare all these data, and the truth probably Ilea in those points on which ail papers agree, so that slowly from alt these different items a picture of the gun may be built up. Not oaly governments, hut also private firms Interested in the manufacture of big guns, even bsnks and commercial houses, use their local repreInsentatives tor keeping themselvescomof their formed of the enterprises Lyon-nil- s petitors. Banks like the Credit to employ private press agenw build up a history of every bank and' large concern in existence.of the secret As regards the spies Intelligence service, it is interesting exto know that the supply largely ceeds tbe demand. For anyone who it haa not been in the Sffvice himself, of seems ihcredible what numbers scoundrels, young and old, are to be found In most armies and navies who secwill willingly sell their country s rets to the highest bidder, agents are me main retailers of mill These and a few specially appointed the detary secrets. There are farther serters. who. arriving in a strange country, generally without money, turn durtha knowledge they have acquired service Iqto money by of time their ing eecretn selling their country'scourse. Pf1" On this account, of Sieved. not so high as Is generallywould rareFor example, a government several thousand pounds tor ly pa book. Was the purchase of signal field guns not (he secret of thd French five thoui-franc- a for to 18M Germany in sold (200 pounds), and such a hundredfold the value of a , being. The compilation of facts Is fairly easy In British pnswMtons. Foreign officers ran always secure admission to factories and dockyards, and the openness of their treatment is not equalled in any other country. London Express. CAMEL HUNT Topeka, Kau., Nov. IN ARIZONA. 10. bars begun for a Preparations camel hunt In the Southwest. The hunt ia scheduled to occur In November and will be under the direction of Willie Sella, the Kan-sa- a showman, a son of W. Allen Sells, who was In charge of the first successful hunt for wild camels in the United States. The elder Sells captured nine- teen wild camels in 'the deserts of can remain a king time without h, mi. wa- - llT. 'On tiic Mm(hauw Pli'ea. bunt we lm iat;B A meerschaum pipe that would have wat.-an.1 Uxid alnr.i: ;. m:ow t l, ten yeans i.go wooklnt brought cail into theirthree il.e. s' T!n--. from! bring more than $10 new." said a toi(&:ai!i two or MeerM-hauu- i water longer than r lirmisiiuu bacconist. p'ix- used to be f.isiicnahle sud popular in America, would ptruiiL oi our ii iu aiiln ami that made It wry iliftru i i0 reac-t- i but they ere not much sought for tothem. IVe are going tit s tun., w.th day. a full knowledge of !. It isn't strange tliat the Lklng tor wis and is not tiKi severe for It:.- - ai.iu.al." them should hits waned. Tbe meer"1 lidii-vwe shall ? siiv, siuul on schaum Is an iiiiMtisfttcfiiry pipe at this hunt. If we are n. . wiil get! the best. Drop It and it is Irretrievably our luv: tor camels the ..iiug titn broken. Try to color it, and for a from herds already in i!; country, month it taste like sp. r T::c lani-or will import them. piau It isn't the meersctiauin la one of i.it as will be tru'd last, one of the these pipes that color anyway. It is most difficult thing to fr..vi a mixture of beeswax and oil tlwt tlie a showforeign countries. It t.i-i- s man more now to get a iauid tuan carver rub iulo the block before they carve it. You could snmke n pipe of an elephant. It is for this reason that 1 have pure meerschaum all your life, and at decided to latest sonto money in a your death K would he aa white as it More circuses are had been at your birth. It t the oil breeding farm. beginning business exety year, and all and beeswax only that which colors." of the owners of show s arc deiirous of Wakhiuglou Pust. . The enlarging their camel will be .sandy valley of the Arha,., Paalta la Caaveraatlea. a good place for camel raising, and Dean Swift once auid: There are the climate In that pan of the state two faults lu conversation which ap. the best methods of finding pear very dltTcreuL yet arise from than me root and are equally blamabie. A HailraaA f Cwevra. I menu an Impatience to Interrupt othThe first railroad west of the ers and the uneasiness of being Inwas built from Islington to Tbe two chief terrupted ourvclvew. Frankfort, Ky In 1831. The road was ends of conversation are to entertain laid out with as many curve t possi- and improve those we are among or tu ble. the engineers declaring that this receive those bcuefits onraclvi-- , which was an advantage. The car were In whoever will consider cannot possibly two stories, the lower fur wunu-- and run into eith-- r uf those tore errors, children, the upper for men, tour perwhen any man aprakrtb in comsons being Rested la each compartment pany it ta to be supiioMd be doth H for iiraw-The cars were at first by mules, hia bearers' sake and uot hia own. au but after a time a locomotive waa made that comueu discretion wlU teach u Tbe tender not to force their alleuttou if by a Lexington they waa a big box for wood, and a hogs- are not willing to lead it, nor, on the head was provided tor Water which oilier aids, to Interrnpt him who la waa drawn la buckets from convenient In powesaioti, because that 1a In th: wells. Ia place of a there grossest manner to give tbe preference were two polos la front fitted with tu our own oj 1 sense. hickory brooms for aweeidng the track. OUt OFFICIALS Carpentering, So'ldln and Romedollng of Hotisaa Promptly attended ta AD work Guaranteed. Enquire of r - Ota ilu-m- N York. Nov. 12. At the meeting of fhn directors of the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad, be:J hnre today, President Mellec, and the other old official of the road, were 829-- y. vS jfy Will EXCURSION RATES. VIA LMKiN t AUJrlC. t J you want Eastern Corn-F- f your linen - J, M WE DO NOT uca Uijurieua claanclng agents. WE DO NOT crack the Beef ei col-tar- e. WE DO NOT tear out buttonholes. WE DO wish colored goods end woolens In Dlctillod wa- 24tn Street. ter. n X Interest The high grad machinery, and modern methods of thi Ogden Steam Laundry wi I add from 2S par cant to M par cant to the hta of your linan. Phone No. flf. A bill youT go to Ballard & Rinckers DM .50 Per Cent At If a Saving 25 to Louis ana return $42.M In'.e Mcaga and return I4T.M Louta Chicago and return vis 8t. BL Louis and return via Chicago $48.7$ Tickets limited to Dee. 15th. Transit limit 10 days each direction. Pullman ska pore through to SLLouls withxut ebaugou Tickets on Bale Tuesdays sad Fridays each wsek. Stop overs a I lowed. A. B. MOSELEY, Trav. Paa St Alta-ghan- a Hta atreot 648 Nelson, Telephone 1 Are wo laundering your lin- en f If not yon are losing men- - nib EIGHTH GRADE GRADUATE w.M reooivo 50 par cant oa all pictures takes wlihia the 20 days at OASBEUG'i STUDIO. 27 25th UUNDRY Eaat of tha Rood Hotel. Both Phonos 174. wet-baiii- Wst Ose Brea Its Mat Bee. Suppose that our eyes were attuned to the vibrations revealed to us by tbe WINES Instead of awing tbe atnra that we now one we should perceive those whose light has km: been extinguished, whose existence tha method of modern physics have enabled us to provo. Tbo sun would appear surroundH. Pattlaon. ed by lta coroa. changing In form and B. M. Laedom position every Instant, and we Mbould no longer be obliged to wait for total eclipses to study this pbrtiuuieuou. Currents of but air would lieeeme risible like snow squalls, and tbe science of 7428 Washington Avenue. beat wouM have no more secret. (Phona S28X) bolometer. LIQUORS Fiinr oie Arlxona In 1882, and some of them are yet alive and on exhibition in travelling menageries. The present bunt will cover much the aarne territory aa that traversed by the hunters of twenty-tw- o years ago, but the younger Sella expects to push hta search into the deaerta of northern Mexico if he fails to find the animals In their former haunts. An investigation made a few weeks ago at the instance of Mr. Sells showed that wild camels still exist In Arizona and Mexico, but their numbers cannot be estimated. The only camel breeding farm in America la to be established in Kaunas, with the captured Arlxona animals as a nucleus of tlie herd. For two yean Mr. Sells has been looking for a suitable place in which to establish a camel and ostrich breeding farm. He now. has selected a tract of 2,140 acres along the aouth aide of the Arkansas river in Kearney county in western Kansas. The rout of the camel hunt has been agreed upon. The hunters who will accompany the showman will leave the Southern Pacific Railroad at Glia Bend in Maricopa county, Arlx. This la the place the elder Sella left the railroad twenty-tw- o years ago. The hunters, under the guidance of Thomas McClusky, who guided the other party, will go north and west acioas the Gila river Into McMnllena Valley and the cactus plains. The other camels were found In the cactni 1a plains, but Mr. Sells of the opinion that, tbe animals have moved southward in the score of years since an organized effort haa been made to capture them. If hia search In McMullens Valley and tbs cactus plains ta without reward, he will again cross the Glia and search south of the Mai Pale Mountains. It waa in this neighborhood that aome of the animals were seen recently. A member of a surveying party working 100 ml lea south of the Mexico line also reported to the show-ma- n that one of hta horse herders saw several of the animals about sunset one day during the last summer. .There has been no organised effort made to find these animals, said Mr. Sella today, since my father captured a part of the herd twenty yean ago. He brought nineteen o the antm.t. bfe and kept them on hia farm east of Topeka. My father experimented for a time before he found out how to long capture the animals. He tried having the Indians of Arisons rope them, but a native horse would not go within 800 yards of the wild 'cameis, and that plan was given np. .. My father then returned to his winter quarters here and shipped back to Arisons a carload of horses accustomed to the sight of camels. The s on these horses were to rope nineteen of the herd. I able am going to take my own horses with me. I do not know how many of the camels there are in Arizona now, twt I have heard that there were nearly 1,000 head. I do not believe bat I do believe they exist there this, in suffl-cienumbers to make it much leas expensive to capture them there than to send to Asia for them. Tha wild camels there are the descendants of those turned loos by the government thirty years ago. The government brought the animals into the country to use them across the deserts. They were unfitted tor the work of climbing the mountains. A Frenchman then brought In a bunch of the camels and used them with aome degree of eucreaa on the Tama desert. Hta business fell away when the railroad came and he turned hta animals adrift. From these two bands the herd has For years nobody uio.es ted grown. them. Indians occasionally shot them, but they were almost too wary for the ordinary hunter. Their cense of smell ia highly developed, and they caa noe Bii AluwSr. the lire of the secret scr an enemy a great distance. He One of the greatest obstacles to be msn U not dev oid of lntereet lets hardened to the btisinea. ud If overcome In hunting the camels Is & were not for the existing fact that that caused by lack of food for man deal ta and beast and the entire abaence of where other people ustinna, R watsr in the neighborhood of thefr ojia of lives the dals in hs'iui. The camel can travel a great when distance without food nr water, ami Sf on the first ta.lons hut SEATTLE, I, 0- - 'itomlui:' 11.-T- shov-jKtafc- ra 1 Tins Angeles. Nov. he Angela took bulk games from I'orrlaud toit six out of tbe series day, making of seven games. The only enlivening feature of the hrtt game was an exchange of compliments between Flood and tbe umpire, for which Flood was put out of the game, and a home run by Cravath over the left Held. In the second game the Angels scored enough runs in the second tuning to win the game. Only aix innings wore played, the game being railed on account vi darkness. Score, first game: oo-uide- NOVEMREH U, MOKXIXO, Reward. Warning, A REWARD OF FIFTY DOLLARS A reward of Ftftjr Unbare (IM.OO), win ba paid by tha Utah UffH A Power Co. tor the arrest of party or parti oa who oa tha ovaalng of April ttth, 1P0S, caused a abort atreuir oa Ma olactrio trauamtiaaioa Baa, through latarf arose la aom maaiar with said ooospaay'a Unas at a point about ou mils aouth from tha power houso, knows as p$. eater Btatloa. soar tha mouth of Ogdaa Caayoa. ' Poraona are warned not ta latarfsra la any wtas with aald Bate R la safa to tha pubHo K unmolested, but serious results to prepaw ty and possible fatal results to persona caa ba cauaed through tbs breaking of Inanlntera, or the throwing at wires, limbs af trees, ar similar obatractioa arm tha wires of eompaaya aald electric traaa mtaaiea Baa, UTAH LIGHT 01 POWER CO.. By R S Campbellp Mg CARPETS xtra Special Sale Having selected a large assortment of 61 rolls of the highest grade Carpeting, consisting of Bigelow Axminster, Saxonier, Velvets, Tapestries and Ingrains, we offer them to the people of Ogden at Greatly Reduced Prices. The sale commencing Monday, and will last one week. As there is always a choice of patterns, those coming first will have the larger variety to select from. The prices given include laying, sewing, and carpet paper, and is without doubt the greatest caipet offering of the year. A glance at the prices will be convincing: 95c Tapestries for $225 Axminster for $1.40 $1.05 Velvets for $1.20 half-bree- d $1.60 Velvets for $1.15 half-breed- $1.50 Velvets for 75c SOc Tapestries for 60c $130 Tapestries IO wire for 99c nt 99c $1.65 Axminsters $1.10 95c Best Wool Ingrains for 75c All prices include lining and laying. sewing, BOYLE FURNITURE CO. U t |