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Show 1- - T11K THE EXAMINER Fnffllshad tiulirt Hi Nrr T lUw IW WM. GLASMANM, W Os Publish 1b Manage by Carrlar. laeluJ'ng yxamlBar, Punas r Morula IWSvored eta ywwuth tkifis eoplss.. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Bf nail ous boats (IneluAlai eta Donday) outside of Ogdaa ....as Telopbone No. It ttubaalbors will ooarar a tavor by tutor mine this ofSoa ol IMIaro to rotvo tha Etuuoinor Mare thou breakfast. i EXAMINER TELEPHONES EDITORIAL ROOMS Indspsndent Phone.. BUSINESS OFFICE Independent Phon ' No. SI ....No. lzo WM. CLASMANN No. 1Z0 Independent Phono EDITORIAL ROOM No. 58 Bell Phono BUSINESS OFFICE No. 58 Bell Phone WM. CLASMANN No. 120 Bell Phone No. ISO of both telephone systems closed sftsr 1p.m. FOR SHORTER SERVICE IN PHILIPPINES. Brigadier General Randall, cuin mantling the Department of Luxou, Philip-pia- e la bis annual report to the war department, says that the general With of the troops Is excellent, tlie disappearance of cholera having removed one of the greatest sources of anxiety. The improved health conditions are said to be due to the construction of new poets, the absence qf bard Sold Service, the drinking of distilled water and enforced abstinenco from native and uncooked vegetables. It Is recommended that continuous service In the Philippines be limited to two years in order to avert neurasthenia, nr nervous breakdown, which is said to be common among the white troops in the islands. the unGeneral Randall attributes fortunate record" of a great number of court-marti- al to the lack of amusement for troops in garrisons, snd the consequent resort by the men to saloons and 1 questionable resorts. He says it is toped that the introduction of athletic training and post competitions will offset, in some degree, the outside temptations, but he believes an amusement hall or exchange building should be provided at every station. General Randall says (he native acout companies are efficient and he recommends their transfer to and maintenance by the civil govern- ment BIO GAIN IN BANK CLEARINGS. members to represent its branch or interest on the Central Committee. By this method each branch of the industry will nave a General Committee and one representative on t tie Central Committee. The General Committee has only authority as regards its own branch, and speaks to the oilier branches through its members of the Central Committee. Delegate conventions are dispen-c- d with, and in place there will be annual meetings, at which ail the General Committees meet in Joint session to hear reports of officers and make suggestions and recommendations to the Central Committee. On all ordinary nutters a majority vote of (he Central Committee will pie-vabut in matlere affecting policy or rommercial interest, any branch shall have the right to protest. Is which ease the matter must be referred to the Gencial Committee of the interests affected, and provisions arjj made to enable these General Committees to meet in confereuce in disou-- s such matter. This practically means thal iu matters of vital importance there must be unanimous consent. oil (lie part of the Central Committee to secure action. The object of tide last provision is to guarantee absolute independence to each branch or interest, as it would be to unjust and impracticable to attempt a to provision force any branch to agree which it might regard as sgainst its best interests. The plsn provides an opportunity, liowever, for such matters to be dihcussed, and in most caws such matters can be adjusted through conferences bet w een the interests directly ilOlIXIXil KXAMIMIIiOUDEX, UTAH, a memorandum to ibe meiube-Institution tailing attention t'J the statistics ol the serious nature miners phthisis, urginc the immediate adoption of vffecilru methods of p. aud requesting the coiluciiou of further informal ion s to the, prevalence of the (iiMiai-- and lira conditions which give ric to it- The opinion is thal the until! cause of the is lira breathing of air containing issued of the 20, 1901. TO FIND OUT IF T Overcoat II e Protection - e dust. of your diamonds, or stoi..' which you purchasing it it not. iiucess-arto submit them to a.i expert by btitiiyiug the follow ii.g e thuds of ui-iiiyour those geiub you may uwu expert. Fur ilio first l. ksxii, take a real diamond aud uu iuuUiiua. Drop tlieui iu glut-seof water. The imuatiou wid blend with the wt;r aud become almost invisible, shining out whiielv ti lough the liquid. Dry aud clean the two stones, and un the fiat side of each put a tiny drop of water. Oil Uie real the drop will hold its globular form, aud tan be led about with a piu poiut. The drop ou ihe glass one wiu spread. Study the two stones with a magul-fyltiglass. Tho facets of the false oius are oven and tegular. Ou the oilier they are of varjing sizes. Thu reason of this is lhai n diamond cutter with a good gem w ill sacrifice symmetry to weight, preferring to leave some slight irregularities in the planes and edge than to reduce the stone's valuo. The material in a fnise stone being of little value, the cutter makes as fiuisli-ci- l a job as ha can of It. the appearance counting for more than tho stone itself. If a real diamuinl bo used aa a miniature reading glass aided by a larger magnifying glass, a tiny dot on paicr appears clear aud ele.m. Substitute the false atone, aud several points, or one badly broken one, will be seen, ow ing to unequal r fraction. Then you can try the familiar of scratching n sheet of glass. Uocause y,iur stone will scratch uot prove its genuineness, how-voTry to break the glass evenly on .ic scratch. No other stone can eut iTo.igh the outer sin of a sheet of ;Uss and givq ccnaiuty of an wen fracture like the diuraond. If you can get a hue, hard jeweller's flh, and do not value your false stone, ry cutting your siiecimens. Your true liamond is proof against the Hardest tile, hut that instrument will easily crutch any Imitation that has ever - if PRESS OF THE JINGLE WOMAN. I From Ouliuls.) The low casle Siauue of lira jungle have few sum, aud Inc Lira animals, eating chii tty wild Jiuiu and rice, whicu they raine iu biualt, cleared ihcv liapi-,- i 'o temspins, wherever porarily soul-- . Like Iht! Karons, the Juaglu people of Htirnnih, thy are always on the wive, aud in comnrni with all iow caste Kiaiuene are petty thieves of an Incurable propem-nyan ibed! nt -- servile t Yet they sr unpleasant decree for white blood. They iiitiutifaciuw limbing save crudest ilnuu-s- i ic household nece.ssnu-end personal or.iani.'M troiu bamboo. Clothes are of slight consequence, tin the jungle edge Ihi--i go uncovered, men and women, uiiove the waist, the paiiuug reaching wiiliin four iuches oi the knoc; but deep in the jungle they are practically naked. Their single implement is a long bladed, used, as path i:..ik.-r- , iis weapuu (together with a wood siwsr) and industrially in fashioning out of tbs ubiquitous bamiioo their ornaments, ilu-ibuciiets, tlieir rope, their siring, lliei" houses aud the food receptacles which take the place of pots aud pans and plates. Nearly all of the Jungle folk on liotb bides of the Siam Utirinah line taKoo the thigh, souteiinirs from kure to hip, more often front j ho 'Knee i. on? six inches above. Tlfe design may b? a turtle, or the much dreaded tiger dune elaborately, but the one affected. frequently seen, ami the simplest, is fc sort f a lace or triugo pattern in the THE WOOL, MARKET. middle of the thigh, or Just below ti c The women do knee, ilka a garii-rThere is still no diminution iu Ibe not in tattoo, believing beauty unaa strength of the wool situation, dorned. as can be ascenainud, although .he BREEDING CHICKENS AND PIGdemand ia docldeclly quieter than It EONS AT SEA. was, the past week's business, in fact, severbeing the smallest recorded for It is not every man who goes to al months. aea that cun order freshly laid ggs a i busiof The present quiet condition companion to Ids lireaafast bacon, ness, however, is not at all unnatural, but Capt. Thaprich of the German oil tank aieainer Petersen, says the American Wuol and Cotton in port, haa by a careful study of th a Reporter. In the first place, this is genus-poultrbeen aide to do so. On period with board he has a flock of chickens ilia holiday and etoca-taklnthe mills; secondly, during the past receive much of his attention, and as a his kimluess they average six months the big consumers havj reward one dozen eggs a day from November so freedouf unusual purchased with to May. that they are unusually well euppded Capt. Tlmprich's fads are the ureeu with raw material for this time of the Ing of- chickens and hon.Gig pigeons. The are careful!' pigeons year! and thirdly, stocks of wool In the raisedhoming the from i.i egg all so cleaned well are seaboard markets board, with the exception of two pair to difficult lie would . very that it up to start the family, having aupply any large demand, even if it hatched on the ship. An incident o hould exist. The trade, therefore, the Instinct of the bonilug pigeon w welcome the present quietness, pend- developed ou board the Burgermeis ter Petersen on tier present trip in ing the arrival of foreign wools, larye Baltimore. Last Friday, when tho v' s quantilels of which are on the way set was off Hog Island, making hei to America. When iheae wools reach way to the capes, Ibe pigeons took an here a larger busiueaa will uadoubtek exercise fly, and all but one returned Capt. J. K. Thompson, Jr.. Joined the Jy be under way, as the wools are ship st tlie rapes to pilot her to Ballikely to be ' readily taken, in view timore. At 3:30 p. m.. after the ship of the decided scarcity of domestic had steamed seventy miles from the stock and with indications of a strong time the bird was missed, it came ou board. was then in thr and active grants market, which cabin Capt. Thaprich his afternoon tea. ile taking oi was the first one to know foreshadows a large consumption that his wool during the next few months. pet had returned. At the ship had made almost two While there will be wool enough to sides of a rlghtangled triangle from no ia as there such ia, it around, go tlie position where the bird was lost, question that the wool trade will enter ft was assumed that it had flown upon the new clip with stocks excep serous the land, cutting off the ship tionally small. Probably never before and Joining it when thirty miles inside of the capes. Having left when has the wool trade entered upon a now the steamer was fully forty miles up raw material of season with supplies the coast. From the Baltimore Sun. so reduced as will be found to be the case next spring, when the new domesGOOD MEN NEEDED. . tic clip begins to move; and it is As James Madison, John Quincy s not surprising that further contracting for the 1905 clip has been going re t snd Hamilton Fish were each K ceary of State for eight years, the on during the past two or three promise of Mr. Hays rcteulhm in ofweeks, iu which at least three fice until March 4. 19H9, is a return to Boston concerns have taaen the maid old principle of keeping part, and that the rank aud tile of the statesmen at the head of the slate deA .sn in office is trade, aa well an the majority of man- apartment. good thing, lint It. is often hard to to forward are the convince ufacturers, hxiking people who is a first-clascontinuance of a firm wool market for man. Santa Cruz Sentinel. some time to come. il, . s luiu-her-nif- r f . ir liurgi-rnn-iste- y g fr - be-n- The total clearings at ninety-tw- o cities for the month of November aggregate tli.434.T17, 028. a gain over the next largest aggregate, this year, that of October, of 8.1 per cent., an Increase over November, IMS, of S3 pef cent,1 and an Increase over the largest November total hitherto recorded, that of November, 1902, of 24 per cent The decrease from the reached in record monthly total 2 per cent. May, 1901,' is only The at New York clearings City in November were the third largest ever recorded at the metropolis, aggregating 18,337,053,971. a gain of 11 per cent, over October, of SO per cent, over November a year ago, and a decrease f 10 per cent, from May, 1901, total. Bank clearings at ninety-on- e cities outside of New York aggregate (4,097,063,058, a gain of 3.6 per cenL over October, to this extent the largest over recorded, and a gain of EDITORIAL COMMENT 17 per rent, over November, 1903. For the eleven months of the calendar year the clearings at ninety-tw- o cities The Democrats might have elected aggregate (99,021, 2GC, 729, a decrease Parker if they had secured Mrs. Chadof toss than half of 1 per cenL from wick to finance tha campaign. last year, but a decrease of 10 per eenL from the record year 1902, That Ruaalau who claims be carries seventeen Japanese bullets in his anPROPOSED PLAN OP atomy could be weighed and not fouud REORGANIZATION. wanting. The committee appointed by PresiThe question of wator is as troui dent Hagen barth, of the National Live in Balt Lake as it was to the Stock Association, to prepare details of Amalgamated Copper Co. fellows when a plan for a reorganization of the as- Lawson gul after their block. sociation at the Denver meeting, week The Sohettlcr bank affairs in Salt of January 9, have developed a plan, Laze City, according to reports Irani w'iiirh will be presented to the conventhat city, will have a tendency to give tion. It provides for a radical change the depositors a realization of frenzfrom the present organization. ied finance. As it Is desirable thit the new orIlia wanderings of Tom Fitch are ganisation should be actually and lit- furnishing serial story matter for the erally national In scope, it is proposed Herald. A few years ago Tom's orathe Herald an equal to base the organization upon the vari- tory caur-eous branches or interests of the in- amount of worry. mm dustry, regarding each branch as a The Minestcre dps Finances at Athunit, and the representation of each ens, Greece, will receive proposals for branch will be regarded as representing furnishing a yearly supply of cigarette paper to the governmental monop the whole of that branch or interest. DECEMBER TUESDAY MOIJXIXG, Ad-sm- well-know- n first-clas- s s or metal, alter Laving been subjected to the raya of the electric arc.' becomes phosphorescent in the dark: this cannot be said or any of the imitations. If the stone to wood ytiu doubt the genuinoxb y g e g r. lav- niale. 4aving scratched your pretty bit of lues till it is worihiess, drop it and .lie diamond into liydroflouric achL Hi'foiv long the Rls-rwill be dissolved, bur tho liimoud will suffer not at ail. Then there is still another experiment. Take a bit of stuff with rod i:id white markings, pass the stone to tested over it, and closely observe lie result. If the slime lie an imitation colors will be distinguished ihro-v,'- .i It ; if it be a diamond no differ-Muf color will bJ appreciable. A geuulne diamond, rubbed upon et pro-tluus- ly lie tried be covered with borax paste, and after being well treated in thu alcohol llainr, dropped into a glass of water, the proof will be iustantaqeous. Tho gloss imitation will fly into hits, while the genuine stone will not be affected. Fiually, try to crush between to hard plates a diamond and an end learn the difference. After the diamond, the sapphire ia the hardest stone; with her mure beautiful sister she possesses also the quality of resisting the attack of the tire, hut she is, however, cloudy in appearance and of a milky hue. The topaz la slightly yellowish and surrenders to tlie rutting teeth of Lh? file. There ura a great number of white diamonds but a pure, clear, transparent atone without n shade of color is more rare luan is often supposed. Besides white diamonds there are some which exhibit the shades of red, blue, green, yellow, brown and pink. Heat sometime rouses a diamond to change ts color, and after a time the color Hum acquired becomes permanent. Yellow diamond, or those commonly denominated off color, furnish tha greatest variety of nhadea. and some of them exceed In beauty all other atones of that color. diamonSpecimens of canary-colore- d ds are by no means rare. They may almost be said to be common. A pink or diamond ia of great value, and the red diamond, surpassing the ruby In its magnificent, coloring, is considered the most beautiful of all the precious stones, being exceedingly rare. The one bought by Paul, Czar of Russia, weighed ten carats and coat him two and one-hamolllon franca A perfectly black diamond ia almost as rare as a red one. For btauty the blue atones come directly after the red diamonds. Those the deep blue, and in this respect resembling the saphlre. are ' indeed moat beautiful grata differing front tho apphlre only in quality and by tho magnificent fiery colon pteu-li- ar to the diamond. The only true blue diamonds coin? from tlie mipaeinlndia. The varieties of grecu are not so rare aa tlie blues, reds, blacks, ami piuks, but those of grew green hun like the beautiful emerald are seUlom found. 'Where they do exist, however they surpass in brilliancy tlie finest emerald, In place of the Brazllan diamond, j which of late' years hai become quite arc, Capa diamonds of much Inferior value and brilliancy are often sold. To be able to distinguish between these gems is an aocomphshmtnt possessed by the few. rain and wind, and cold. Wc i. Your i'iic primal representation of each branch will be through s committee to be selected by thosa Interested in that branch. This committee will be known as the General Committee" of the branch selecting it. It will be selected and organized as those interested may determine. Each of three General Committees will hare full authority to represent the branch or interest appointing it, but its evecutive authority will lm cnntlnM to matters relating to its own branch of the industry. Hie sole executive authority of the National Association will bo confined in an Executive Committee consisting r.f one uisn from each branch of the This committee will be known as the Central Committee," and each General Committee will select one of iu Protect Person and Each Overcoat we ieD is a lasting advertuement for us. Any man who has hia eye out or Winter Overcoas, and isn't blind to his best interests, should not miss seeing our new styles. Long or medium lengths, and a size to fit every shape. Every good fabric is represented in our lines. Overcontd at $IO.OOf $12.50, $15.00 $18.00 way up to $2500. Come here for a look. Coats will do that The Fred M. Nye The Clothier. lf po:fng ! ; on rrose-exami- : ed over rs the matter for of an hour. She could say that reference was mads to the letter intercepted by Mrs. Young, In answer to another line of questions Miss Patterson maintained that she toM neither Young nor McKean that she sag in a delicate condition. She said she never had seen any letter from Mrs. Young to Young and did not know that' any such letter existed until It wa produced in tourt today. The letter written to Young by her sister, Mrs. Smith, in which Mrs. 'Smith said sha would not be responsible for what might happen, the wltnesa sai.l, waa ent without her knowledge or consent. Later on the asms evening she had met Young and McKean in the Eighth avenue restaurant, the three went to Harlem. There it waa decided that Miss Patterson should go to Europe and McKean promised to get the steamship ticket for her. After that she remained several days at a hotel and Young called on her frequently until he went down to Sheepshead Bay to live. Then she did not see him for nine days. On June 8, Young called her by telephone and asked her to go to tho races. She went down with her brother-in-laJ. Morgan Smith, reaching the Gravesend track about 2 o'clock. There they met Yonng and aho put some beta on the first race, with money 1 oung gave her. Smith waa acting as commissioner for Young that afternoon. Aa they aat in the grsqd stand Young told Mlsa Patterson that he was going away and that ha wanted to tell her all about It that night. She promised to remain at home that evening. Misa Patterson sgld she remained at the track until after the end of tho sixth race. She placed a bet cm Cricket in the final race to win at Young's suggestion and won. Smith cashed the bet for her. They returned to the city by train, reaching the New York ferry honae at 8:15 p. m. m This testimony won Imitortsnt it was alleged by the prosecution that it was at about the same hour at which the sixth race was ran that was Uie revolver with which Young shot was sold by Pawnbroker Stern. The prosecution sought to show that the revolver was purchased by J. Morgan Smith. From the ferry houee they went direct to their hotel by street car. In an- -. three-quarte- - be-rsu- wer to a question Mia Psttsreoa nli that she never purchased a rtrotrtr, that she never went to Stern's pm! shop with J. Morgan 8mith, and fist aho never saw Stern until after ihs U been arrested. She was sue, too, tUt Smith did not go to the shop fitbr alone or with any one alia that day, because he went ell the way home will her. They reached tha hotel ajtost I oclock. DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HIDE. A modern case of Dr, JekyQ ud Mr. Hyde, wherein It is developed fiat a prominent. business man of Chicato la an angel by day and a thief hr night baa juat been brought to ttfiu. During the daylight he wu the of a big printing esitblifr ment and whoa the stars btgu to twinkle ho waa a hlgbwaymia B played tho varied role for s year successfully, before being cauiht-Ti-laTimes, re , ; . OUR PRESIDENTS, gti Of the twenty-fiv- e presidents, have sprang from the boom of the farm or plantations, two van its sons of a lawyer or jurist, three hit fathers who were merchants, two we sons of clergyman, one (Jbhwi tho son of a sexton, two had hikn who were manufacturers ud om (tbs first Harrison) waa the sot cf a savin Pasadena News. lev-tee- n ji. terror if yetfn Thomas' Bclsctric Oil in tha house. Instant relief is cun of hunts, cuts, sprains, accidents d Bodily pan loses its a bottle of Dr. - any sort. The Sufferer Wow! Ta oin to dentist and have thie tooth ML Scientist Your tooth .Christian doen't ftcheu You oaly iMfiM , ! dOffe The Sufferer Then 111 have ilet extract my imagination. Newa the toChmfl "Dont you 'sometime! thtak IW J1 are ted much attached to money" No." answered Mr. Duetia Btsi n. pry you knew all the schemes tothat Ra loose from it youd realize to bo closely atttched."-Wz- hB Star. itioli The Big Reliable Store Offers You the Best Goods at the lowest possible Prices and Guarantees Satisfaction A 8WELL LINE OF HOLIDAY SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, WORTH 75c $13)0 FOR 5oc ALSO AN EXTRA FINE LINE OF HOLIDAY SILK HANDKERCHIEFS, WORTH 75C FOR d m from heat Your Purse ruae-color- questions Miss Patterson said she nad been married to a man named Martin WILLTELL HER STORY and had been divorced from him. She went to California in 1902. On hJt (Continued From Page 2.) way to Lob Angeles she met Cae&at Young. In answer to a question aa to lap. and she placed her hands ou tup whether she knew that Young was a uf hia head." married man Miss Patterson replieJ, Mr. Iluzcltun said there waa a maa 1 hebrd him speak of hia wife." wiih him who rIho saw the shooting. I After securing a divorce she said It was this stranger film had called hia her relations with attention to Hie cab. Who the stranger she continued race was lie had not the slightest idea. lie Young and frequently visited the track with him. In March of this free-Muwaa knew that the a stranger lily she can.e back east and lived because he had given a Masunic year Halutatiuii and had said that he wwa with her slater, Mrs. Smith. After that she went to her parents from the Rocky mountains. He had the man hince they stood home in Washington and later went never when Young together on West Broadway. Witness back to LosforAngeles, her to meet him thers. i by Mr. telegraphed insiated when Baud that he had a clear view of the Again she left for the east when cabj mid although he ia an old man, liis Young went back to Ban Francisco. -' eyesight is very guud. He had hesi- She and Young agreed to meet at Ckitated before making known what he rqgo and did so. When they were sephad seen, hut two weeks after the trag- arated they corresponded, exchangUg edy derided that he could not in fairness letters and telegrams almost daily. May 2 to himself or the other in the case Then she came to New York stay in the background. When it be- and the next day Young called on her came known that Mias Patterson waa at the hotel. They had. no quarrel. to take the hi and. great crowrda gather- She said the first proposition made ed around the court anil attempted to to her that she should leave Young gain admittance. Finally the crowd wh made by Young's brother-in-labecame so great tlrat police reserves McKean, who aaid that Mrs. Young had io bu summoned to hold it in wanted Miss Patterson to go away and lcjfve Young. , check. Miss Patterson said the conversation Nan lat I orson took the stand in with McKean took plire in a restauher own defeuxo this afternoon. In answer to tho usual prelinuuary rant. Young waa present and they talk .JAN PATTERSON Overcoat protection i, one kind of protect believe in. We furnishS to our customers. Wc prot:ct you from MUFFLER8 FROM 50C TO $2.50, BE8T SILK. 8U8PENDER8 NEW SMOKING JACKETS, WATCH FOBS AND CUFF BUTTONS. AND NECKTIE8, PUT UP IN NEAT XMAS BOXES SOC, 75C AND (UXL WE HAVE THE LARGEST AND MOST DAINTILY DECORATED LINE OF CHRISTMAS CHINA IN CHOCOLATE SETS. DINNER SETS. TEA EXTRA CUPS AND SAUCERS, AND PITCHERS. 8. A. WELLERS NEW LOUWELSA WARE, IN VASES, PITCHERS AND NOVELTIES. oly administration. BETS Five pensioners are on the roll on account of the Revolution, 1,116 on account or the war of 1(12, 4,734 on account of the, Indian wars and 13,874 on account of the Mexican war. N0VELTIE8, GENTS HOLIDAY SLIPPERS. ALBUMS, BOOKS AND XMAS BOXES; SILK SHAWLS, UMBRELLAS AND GLOVES. LADIES AND An English sergeant, lately returned from South Africa, committed sul clde because a wound had so disilg ured his face that his friends hardly knew him. and people who met him in the street looked" at him. The construction of the following railway lines Is projected In Japna: From Okavama to 1'im Bay, eighteen . miles in length; from Gtfu to Niga-samiles. Electric and eleforty-threvated railroads are' also being built in e Japes. The Connell, of the Institution or Mining anl Metallurgy in Eugiand has 3 |