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Show -- IHE iiUISMXU EXAMINES OGDEN, UTAH, fit! DAY MOflNING, MARCH 4 THE EXAMINER "published Every DV The Standard PublmSiH th Cm T1" b RATES. SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by Carrier la c City, including BuxdayMorn-la- iilt M Examiner, per month.... copies Y MAIL IN ADVANCE. Tba Examiner la aeet by matt caUld of Ogden, par yaar....l W At lea at viartarly, la advisee.. l.M INPEFENPENT AND FEARLESS mun church, who will nut froth 'ad-IDEA VIEWS OH that bndurss contact and social intertab I in mingling of the two element baa been gradually eliminating ail liml How Noted Men Retard Baltiwas objectionable in the past. Undispratlcal wisdum. turbed by the hired agitator ami the more Doctora Age Theories. eouuneivialw' THE GOVERNMENT millionaire, splenetic AND IIwmwO MEN. would have wiped out the last vtwlig1' llDICULED BY AGED STATESRZX. accelerated the industrial of anJ distrust President Roosevelt is still hunting uf life of all Utah, but the vengeance fur Ma Sloo.0.0 maa to to take charge has dictated Carle Je Caaaaa sal Saearal tea-ata- ri of the con.trucliou of the Panama disgruntled politicians vilification and of Wk Hava rasaaA tha Ckla flamboyant campaign been baa Taft canal. Secretary of War Parlad Bellara Haa Htaralai calumny In the hope that by Stirling up But connection. in this uf thought rea at a egad ve Wplalaaa national hatred a and stimulating Yaaag Lis In Slit, present Secretary Tall is needed be. hailed at Baak PvaaMaaia sat lufeatlata. office. President Roosevelt kimaelf has ligious warfare they may civil purity. been named sa Just the man for the defender of morality and Senator and coagowsmen were I A winning their laurel they will car' ba Roosevelt President Interviewed ea tha statement Job. But little how much harm ia done vr bow made by Dr. William Osier of Johns signed np on sn even more Important much aonow la created or how great aa Uupkln university that men above conengagement under A. the people forty years of life are comparatively y tract. Mr. Ellhu Root, former aecreta-r- Injustice is Inflicted upon s and tbs suggestion that men at of Utah. Slate They are entire the of la of war, la a third who recognised should either le retired from acthem sixty msrksd have careers aa big enaugb lo do the work and earn men whose or Tbs followlife chloroformed. tive at tua aalary. But Secretary Roof baa aa selfish In the extreme and ready replies ware rsrrivad by tbs Now ing advanown tu their all times to turn down. York Herald's Washington rsprasenta-tlve- : turned the proposil-iuthrir tage the misfortune of evt-Mr. Rout was President Roosevelt's closest friends and ssociats. Uncle Jos t'aunoo. speaker of tbs fin-- t choice for the place, and he client bouse, remarked: the evening of last Wednesday at tne score yean and I have reached White Ilou-- e diacusaing the proa and over and am still frisky. If something rone of Ilia matter. The President Dr. Osier requires unanimous consent urged the former head of the War to put bis re markable theory Into acDepartment to accept the Chairmantive operation, I object A min is as Id as he feels, and 1 am thirty-seveship of the Canal Commission, which, and frisky a vary day of tha year. under ibe aw arrangement, will come Representative Groavenor of Ohio pret.y nearly being Ihe whole comExElevated and Employee aid: Bubway lie allowed mission. The PreaMent peck Other Unions to Jem A witness to b reliable on aucb aa seed of securing a man who could With Them. Important question ought to be entirely enter-pilataka absolute mastery of Ihe disinterested and unprejudiced and not the lu New March an York, of such In the bands that surrounded by circumstance which uf Bubway and elevated railexecutive will be placed ample power; strike now renters in the pro- would or might warp hla Judgment I way employes that Mr. Root was one of the few men poned effort to cause a sympathetic am pant seventy-on- e years; therefor I of engineers and firemen at am Incompetent to teatlft, bnt I shall of the counify In whose Integrity and walk-ou- t executive powers I he people have that all the power houses iu this clt no decllue to uphold or subscribe to tbs a tu paralyse all iratne. Leadura of method of ire from thia lift confidence that would lead them to the strike against the Interborough whh h accord depart with Dr. Osier's views. Justify Iba paymeut to him of a salary company have previously made no efSenator Iettns of Alabama, eighty-fou- r approachlug the amount he would earn fort to shut off the (tower on those withyears old, aald: I know Dr. Osier win could lines, believing they at hla profession upwards uf $100,000 well, and I cannot believs bs very out such steps. a year; and, finally, the President would give utterance to such sentidwelt upon the monument which the ments. I would have to hear them SPECIAL COIHC NORTH . canal will be to the executive head from hla own Ups or have them vouch-s- d for by at least two competent that directs Ha construction. lie may have been indulging Mr. Root was not to be moved, Had on' Beard Distinguished Railroad Officials. la a little playfulness under the Inspilie felt himself too old to give up the ration iff the surrounding, bnt I very prarflce of law to become the digger A special train, consisting ut private much doubt If ha would subscribe to the canal even of a canal, cars No. 4." San though and 1$03. chloroform theory of putting an came in from Balt Lake C'Hy yesterday the ware the biggest engineering undertaka lot of youngsters Ilk myself. to and To forenoon aud proceeded north over ing iu the history tif the race, Why, bless your soul, the best work the Short here Lina, Oregon leaving build the canal," Mr. Hoot Is reported at about 11; IS - o'clock. The I ever did In my life was after I was to have said, "la a great work indeed, entire personnel of the party Is not flfty years of age. 1 did not know all of tba law, but I managed to know aa and I can wall aoe how H might ap- known, but In addition to Bancroft of the Short Line, Chief mnch as the other fellows who opposed peal to the ambition of a younger man. Engineer William ilnod of the Soul Ime, and I do not regard myself as InBut Dr. Osier has knocked a good tem Pacific and other officials of the capacitat'd for further active servlet dial of the spirit out Of me. The fif- Harriman lines, aro In the party. The because of my age. teenth of last mouth I was 0 years siieclul Is bound for tb Malad branch Secretary of the Treasury Bbsw, uf tlie Oregon Short Line and It le old." years old, said: I have ho deofficials that the probable tire making Hitch was Ibe reply of one of the few tlie trip to uut Hus the work for the sire to discuss Dr. Osier's statements believed to be compe- new bllnlduka branch. men Perhaps be is like a man seriously. ' we had out In ltnga once who was All those who went north today artent to govern the caual's conai ruction. $100,001) men In rived at Salt Lake It la nut because wrillugto tbs newspapers City In a special Ran Pedro road yesterday. The about tbe usefulness and tbe uselessrare as white black- over the was America are made up of the cars of ness of men at various ages. I rememspecial birds that the President Is experieu-cin- g Vice President Cornish, ber be was very strong In bis statement difficulty In picking one fur the Bancroft of the Short Line, that a man when he readied tbe age Clark of the Sail Route, Gencannl Job, for there are probably more of sixty should be put out of tbe way men lu America competent to under- eral Manager Well. Chief Counsel T. and subjected to some painless death E. Gibbon of that line Chief Entake ibis work than In any other gineer William Hood ofand the Southern for tbe benefit iff tbe, entire community. He preached this gospel among his But Iba nra globe. country oil Purlflc. they The special used the Salt Luke Route friends so persistently that he became loo valuable to lie left lying about loose for a lagging government to rec- to Riverside, the Southern Pnrlflc Joint a nuisance to bis fellow men. One day track between Riverside and San Bera neighbor who hnd heard his painless ognise their ability and secure their nardino, tlie Santa Fo Joint track be- death theory advanced on many occaservices. Great private enterprises are tween Kan Bernardino and Daggett sions aald to hits: on the lookout for Juat such men. and and the new railroad from Daggett to Look here, my friend, I have read snap them tip as women map up rib- Salt Lake. several of your piece suggested that bon at a bargain counter on dearanew a man should he Jrat to death when bs DISCRIMINATION DISCOVERED. la sixty years old. The more I see of sale day. If $100,000 won't get them. you tbe more I boar of your peculiar $200,000 will, and does. They are How Railroads Favored the tig Oil views and tlw more I am Impressed building and managing railroads, diCompany. that yon are right about that sixty recting enormous manufacturing and Topeka. Kao., March fl. Evidence year business.' commercial enterprises,, conducting was brought out in testimony of W. J. Ellla H. Huberts, United Wales treasupon which hinge the dispo- Hotly, auditor of the freight receipts urer, seventy-eigh- t years old, said: "Tbs sition of milllone. They are not in of the Santa Fe, In the ion suit, which Indicates one form view of Dr. Osier are curious rather the Government employ. But Ihe Gov- of discrimination which the railroads tban scientific. He might have exernment needs the service of Juat Impose upon competitors . of the plained that Tbienuproaldent of France, such men; needs them, not to build the Standard Oil company. The following when he was uear bis eightieth year Panama canal alone, but needs them paragraph from a circular letter of prevented Germany from stripping Us the Freight Bureau, country of more tban iff his in her Cougreaa, In her army and her containing rules regulating freight territory and how he achieved Us navy. In the counsel of her statesmen. traffic on the linn within the Jurisdicover Bismarck. tion of the bureau, explains tbe dis- great diplomaticbe victory It would also Interesting how Pops UTAHS GOOD NAME. crimination: llercafler the shipment! of petrol- Leo XIII. really won bii immortality, eum of petroleum In which all concede to him, after be bad and the T he editor of the Balt Lake Tribune, lank car willproaucia be received when passed righty-thre- e years, and bs lived only mider salary from a mine owner w ith a destined to who have to bs ninety-threconsignee for the grudge to satisfy. Is debasing himself toraga tanka or facilities Representative Payne, New York, Without entering prompt releasing and unloading of the sixty two yean old, aald: I ran hardly beyond measure. tank rare." concur with Dr. Osier's statement that Into the question of whether hie tons Can you tell me why the rule pro a man Is not worth much after he is Is right or wrong, let na consider what hlblting the aeorptance of nil con- flirty. I weald suggest that President (hla Mormon apostate la doing in the signed to the parties who have no . Is still tanka wan adopted? asked Roosevelt, who is forty-sixway of writing hlmnelf down aa the low storage liable worth deal a to conand great Mr. Munctt of llealy. product of past conditions In Utah. To provide against the detention tinue to be a factor for some yearn to Yesterday be gave space to statements of the tank ear aa a storage (auk at come. that the leaders of the Mormon church Its ilewtltiatlon." Renntor J. C. Burrows of Michigan, Would private tauk mre owned by alxty-elgh- t had been assassins or had sanctioned old, said: I do not Webster's refinery at llnmlinifH, or know tbe year who made the assassination. Ilia father was the any Important refiner, be accepted statement, geuth.nau but I think any one who moving spirit In the Church during that lor shipment, if consigned to a destiays a man should bs chloroformed period, therefore hi father was an nation where there was no storage when be Is sixty has reached to tanks point Iona? receive the assassin, and the editor of the Tribune No, the consignee must hare ra- where he should be chloroformed himis the son uf aa aaeaHaln. Outsiders pacity to take rare of the load in or- self, and that wit hunt deity. have eo re wroed. but they look upon der uut tu notsln tho equipment. Senator Falrhnnka of Indiana, who Is e the course of tho examinaDuring (lie author of such years old. Mid: 1 am hardly tion il was brought out that the roads abl to a merely an embarrassed promoter regard the statement aa one refused tn accept demurrage charge made aerinualy. it sounds tu ms Ilka willing to brand himself with Infamy on tank cars, which arc not unloaded a Juke. I am within seven yean of the wit bill a specified time. It was also for a frw paltry dollars. His prayer chloroforming stupe myself, but I must should be, were he telling the truth, brought out that deinurrago charges were collected on cars containing oth- admit that I feel aa thnuplt I could be that he he given a draught from the er eomnmdltjrs which were nut un- in ni'tfnn for considerably longer than river Lethe. loaded by any rnnignct' at uny that." He could gu on stigmatizing himself point. Senator William B. Bate of Tennessee. seventy-ninand all hla kin without any protest If years old. said: Well, OIL FIGHT IN KAN8AS. If Ir. Osier's Idiwa had been adopted I hi coarse Invectives and ucvufeUIOus would ha vo been dead a long while did not work lurpttrable Injury to the Uliaiiutr. Kan., March Older sen. I think hi slut fluent a very foolwelfare of every rltisen, Gentile as well of the 1iairl. Oil and (Ins company to ish one. I think It Is necessary only as Mormon, in this Bute. Strangers run no more oil below yo degree, to point to the United Ft a to senate a are given to understand that the people wliirh (irar means a renewal of A complete ref elation of Ida Ideas." the boycott of the Kansas Held, wit!. of Utah are steeped In iniquity and Senator Uliauncey M. Pcier said: It is result dls.ndruusiv to Tlie greatest achievement of tbe lo vulgar pi active and de- those believed, Individual and companies hii h. praved thought a They am. In effect, figuring pii a return of Bill buying and world Imve been accomplished by men more than forty year of age. and In warned to diun the Inhabitants of this better operat ion, has reumd opera-llnnmany instances men raov than three-the as section clean uf body would ward core and three-scor- e and ten have E. C. Martin, one of the largest prooff the leper of Molokl. Against these startled tbe wo-l-d. Bismarck crested ducers in the field, said: false representations aud damagiug atIt ts another act of defiance. It is tbe Gemnn empire aftrr be was seven--' tacks ou our business Interests this another effort to crowd the Kansas pro- ty: Glmlstoaie bis grftit and put bit party In paper will labor with all Ha ability. ducer to Ihe wall. It will bring Indecampaign refineries here and make a What laxity In morals or disregard of pendent Power at tbs axe of eighty; Commodore uiaiket for fuel oil. high principles affecting the affairs of W. E. Connelly, member of the ad. andtrbilt ro:ile fMatkiUOu alter he visor board of the Kansas Oil Proddc-rr- s slate may rxlst In Utah can be correctns seventy-fiv- e years old; the majorassociation, said the wider wa. oulc ity of the lucuiiiera of tlu senate are ed by the be- -t diluent of Utah without Sittii-rtard more than sixty isara; tbe controllers an appeal tn the outside: what abuse of a movement on the pan of tbe to ahow 1;s cuulempt the of the leading Kniziug and other Unsobe discovered ran be Kansu operators. authority may Institution In our country aro John OTtricu. assistant nitipaper ot cial corrected, without A'tcmpting to arcuae more than fifty pad ronny pst sixty. a tin long) crusade ihst. ewn w ere It tli rratne company, tn statemec:. li.ve lived oWnre lo the aid it was imps-lbl- e m ompy won Many justified, would prove loo drastic a the laws d by the Kansas iegish.-lur- e World ncill liny were past the ogc of as all bste In which croud remedy, and tor-- occasion t r ay there la forty an. I ihei, cade a uame in tlir religion prejudice and fanstl.-luor more world. I have hr 'ten have no ronitei tton beiwen tne Pa'irie cotn-paand i he Siand:tid Oil i minatiy. u.'1'ii ilov.-i- i enieied. re under rtie ugc of vlj'i The Pratiie oil and Gi m doing ttilnx There i not a fair-ncompjn. forty and at Kt-ietilled pc-in would, lie said, selmm- - die iniic,, hi Hun j . we j gee me would break down , .i i hr ,,r I ?. 'I I. teacher ought properly to be limited to Ihe provision uf methods and to the general carrying out of plana and ideas developed through a large and Ut nSLER'S four-yea- a strletly ladepaaA ,,d cat acarapapar. It girt . equal ahow. Tba Examiner la fr1ta. Tba Examiner baa to no enemlea to paaiab. It will sirs tba aewa aablaaaC cad uaprejndlead. Com maiiical Iona will ba looslvod oa an anbjeeta presented It reapeetful from know a tadleMuaU, bnt tba trna aama anat ba published la fun. All Id tare and aowmnnieetiona aicaad by aom da pluses, or aaaumad aamaa, wUl bo throws la tba wuta bosket. Tba brave aaaa aavar bldoa behind on cammed aama. Dont aak the Editor la bo nmpoaJhla for what yea are aehaaod of. Eaboerlbera wni confer a favor lafonatac tbla office of failure to calva The broakfaaL before Examiear by m their EXAMINER TELEPHONES EDITORIAL ROOMS NO. Indapandant Fhaaa.. Ball Phana ((..I1A BUSINESS OFFICE SI bd No. ISO M Indapandant Fhaaa ........ . .....Nai Ball Ffiona. WM. OLASMANN Na 120 Indapandant Phone, Sail Fbana. ............... .Nm 120 No. 120 of balk talophana systems claaod after 0 p.m. SOME FIGURE AKD A MOftAU cites stsllsttes wblcb ahow that ebfle approximately fty per rent of (be youth of tba I'nlted State at lend the public schools, only tbreo per' emt enter rnllcge and that a conahtorahlr part uf thin laat aimed rlaeo fall nut after the flrat or ecoDii yrar. I'poti the luial of thia atatem.nl the Enquirer srguro that thera U need uf radical reform la a eeema to be urganlxed limited number av dlatinrt frum ih uianv. The point la wa ll taken. The public chord era Lean nnriht tu bn nrgsulzcd In Ita conraea ami mrthnris with leapcrt uf tlinm who partake to the of of Ita adratitagea. Iba tu the system ought In ronunmi reut In tba grambo with tba flfty mar schools, rather tban with the three par rent, which go on to the univermatter of fart we do Juat sities, Aa yatem which IntrrM of the mHy sin-ngt- pr Wr arrange the Sys-leIt to be arranged upon A theory whhh runteinplalre the orderly prweiahia of erery child entering tho primary department through to unlvereity gradual lua. This aya-trla out of accord with the facie, therefore. Illogical and unroason-Ablaid, the other thing. m or-pe- rmit ni e. We aeeui to hare all but luat uua rnaea la our educational policy. With respect to all other great IntarwU the American people ear pratlcal to the laat degree. But In the matter of education, more Important Ibaa all othe Wa throw ct annum tenia to the Winds and give acnffment, tlieory and whtmeey a free band. Instead of a gyetem with reaimct to tba thing, practical requirement of our youth, Instead of teaching our boya and our glria what they need to know for thrir comfort and advantage In life. Instead of making our edmwUnnal system mulch and support our InduntrUl aeceealtiee. we prorerl upon the utter ly Indefrnaible notion that profound arbnlaraliip and elegant accompllali-men- t are the need of our youth. Wa let the ednraiore" the pmfeesional school area and women whoee Inter ate naturally are with the system, make And enforce the general Ucbeine of educe Uh Instead of arranging It upon the haels uf experience and common arnae, and la the Interest of the pratlcal welfare of our children and of the country. Under tlie hand of the educators we are pcreistenHy leading our youth away from the Meals and ambitions of Industry to the lilraU aud aiiiblttons of Intellectual and social elegance. Instead of making our achocds n and a recruiting ground for the Industrial life of the country, we are making them contribute to the ranks of persona already who despise the real work of life and erk to live by tbelr accotnplieli-menta- . It is an Injustice to the young s, and ii le an inpeople t justice to the country . Some day we shall grow wiser, no doubt, but tn tba meantime we are filing ihe country with practically incompetent persona, whose Uvea muit ba marred by because of the failure of thrir training. From the etart tba aim of the public school fyitem should lie to prepare those who enter It not for college, but for life. Forty-ninout of fifty of those who eater the winds must devote thair lives to Witn Industrial oc cupation. therefore, they ought to taught the raeihoila or industry hero-elve- e respect and ambition fur Indiu This is common sense and everyl understand It excepting the torn: an yet It is td this class w the sc practically tnm steietu. nut only with respect to tusking f them. Fader a taUonal lice Ihe making ut the ediMiil pollcle of a country the husiaet the ,r 'r 1 stainnli!n; the SYMPATHETIC STRIKE IS PROPOSED n wit-Maur-a. "tN Oakltfi.l Enquirer In t he BM-k-- fMn-it.- ,n Jo. fifty-- seven nt nt . law-suit- e, Trana-Mlaaou- rl one-thir- d -- t fifty-thro- e a. ite-pi- fr ppie -- px-se- ny il A Mld-lothl- ua 10, 1903. A Bn tuber of men of prominence 1b various walk of lifa la New York were asked Ly the Now York World for their opinions of Dr. Osler'o view. Edmund C. Coo verse, president of the Bankers' Trust company, president f tha Liberty Nations bank sad director of about twenty other Important Corporations. Hid: I certainly do not agree with Osier la hla contention that a man above forty years Is comparatively naeleaa and that a man of sixty yean ia worthless. For long and eon tinned mental and physical strain ia tht prog-Ns- a of large affairs I consider flfty about the limit, bnt for rananltatlons and the application of long oxperionro I corralder rising flfty absolutely oecea-aar- y for tho conduct of any largo enter- t 3C KWhy Use 3 Coal Oil? Prs-flosa- When you can have lights for $1.50 per month for the first light and $1.00 each for additional lights prise." 1J6 Gakletgh Thorne, president of tho North America Trust company, aald: "Granted that tha flrat forty yean of a man's Ilfs have been devoted foundation of .chffractef, physical, mental and moral, I believe that each succeeding year should prove more valuable owing to experience and development until such time aa nature tuna the scales. William Bherer, former ma eager of tho clearing house and flrat vice president of the Bankers' Life Insurance company. Mid: I do not agree with Professor Osier. I ran do better work at sixty tbaa I canid at forty. I ran do better work at my bust ores than be could do at it. 'Much learning hath made him mad.' rrofeaaor A. ti. Compton, Col leg of tho City of New York, aald: "On two paints I agree with Dr. Osier. It la true that as units ws are of very slight value In the world. I also think it la good for us to change around. Aa for the aga part of hla speech, I think bs Is all wrong. Men from forty to sixty nra at their beat, matured, a toady and sober. Moat men are not at their heat far beyond sixty or sixty five, but that fa all n matter of Individuality. I am one of the oldest professor la tho college, hut until I fail to take Interest In new tilings each year and do not advance In my work I shall not consider myself In Dr. Osier's class. Professor K. A. Nellson, Columbia university, said: "Really, Dr. Osier was not talking seriously when ha made that speech. I think ba must have been Joking. If a man Is In good health he la at hla very beat at forty. If be takes rare of himself he should he pretty good man at sixty. Most scholars do not begin until they are forty. It takes that long for a bub to ripen. Bom of our ablest professors and scholars are around tbs sixty mark, mad many of them are over It Professor W. Burg ester, Colombia university, said: "It la according to tbe nun. Borne ore old at forty; others an but youngsters at that age. Dr. Osier surely does not Intend na to take him seriously. Tbla nation without Ita men of sixty would not bo what It is today." o Police Commissioner William sold, "The statement by Dr. Osier that n nun at forty baa readied hla brat for any work, public or private, and that from that lime on he Is deteriorating la In my Judgment not war ranted by tbe actual facts presented by tha doily lives of tba menaround no. I 06 j Save all the trouble of filling lamps with oil and make it easy for the women athome by using electric light LIGHT AND POWER CO., R. S. CAMPBELL, Manager eafj an Good Resolutions -- are now In order. A good on la 1st us nupply yon with anything yon may need la our llan. Ws buvg.tbs stock and can fill orders prompt, THE Eccles Lumber Hc-Ado- Company . The following views on Dr. Osier's age theories mode by prominent men In New York 'are taken from the New York Auericon: Henry Clews, the banker, said: "It eeema to me that eomethlng should be done to a maa like Dr. Osier. Evident Ay he doe not know what he Is talking about No man is fit for tho great work of tho world until after he is forty. Everything that goes before that to mere preliminary training. Leaden of tho financial world today m well the great statesmen are all well put flfty. Look at Morgan and John Hay. Both of them are well post sixty, and yet nobody doubts their great vigor and Influence in the affaire of tho world. Jacob Bchlff Is flfty aeren, and It would bs easy to point oat n boat of others In tho clau that I have mentioned. Men lead better lives than they did. take more exercise and seek more recreation, consequently they are better able to stand tho strain, and the fact that they live longer than they used to proves that they carry years welL" Dr. Nlcbolu Murray Butler, president of Columbia unlvereity, aald: "Dr. Osier himself is much beyond forty, mud hla work today la mnch batter tban It ever was before. That would seem to confute bis own theory. --THE-- MORNING EXAMINER -- CHItlvr. ( i to-th- e WoshlniVoaloo electric Gives the Night Dispatches Hot from the Wire. If you like that i In unboxing and erecting tbe of Miss Prances E. Willard in ary ball at the capita! the other became necessary to more the statue fltatm day It statue of George Washington several fret, ays the Washington Post Thus a place was made for tho flrat statne of Get woman In that balL A bystander lamented ouch an Invasion one of the Inevitable results when woman's rights have away. TnL tut! exclaimed Represents-tl- v William Alden Rmlth of Michigan, who was piMlng. "It only illustrates the great courtesy of the father at hla country. It domlnstea even In out by the lire In tbs stave, the top of which wst blown off. Ths stove was marble. bolted to the floor, which prevented a lire to add to tha horror of tha scene. Giwwim Stritlif Party. "The first though of everyone was Mrs. Albert K reins of Appleton, Wie., birth- to escape, and there ws a rush for tn olwervanre of tlie twenty-sixt- h the door and for ths windows, which day of her dear! daughter, Mrs. Krriss-Fpeed- r, had been blown out by the force of the hod a large company of friends driven to the cemetery recently, nays a explosion. "When st last everyone was outside dlsiiatch from Appleton. After they a hush fell over the crowd. Everybody had decorated the grave with flowers was , and we didn't they returned to the Krriss home, know what to do. Several persons where refroehnienls were served. At came running from nearby house with the bead of the supper table was placed lamps and lanterns, and wre entered the vacant ebair. wuich was draped In meeting house. We found Miss Mackey red, white and blue. A birthday raka under the organ, and removed her and n which twenty-sicandles were burn- those who were most severely Injured to the home of Joseph Fairborn, Just ing was placed ia front iff tho chair. across tbe road from tbe meeting bouse. I could not find my boy, Edward, and immediately went In search of him. I GRANGER, UTAH, DISASTER. found him on the outside, uninjured. Miss Mncksy wu breathing when Eye Witness Tells of ths Acetylene wc removed her to Mr. Falrbourn'a. bnt Gas Explosion. two minutes after we laid A. J. Hill. Who was t the Granger died within meeting, described th explosion and her on tho bed. the ne which followed. The only warning given was a flash Granger is eight and a half miles of light, rah a sometimes made bv southwest of Salt Like City, and Is In a Street car. which was preceded br it Granite stake. Tbe settlement it Jitilimnet of the gas Mid. tered qvt considerable territory, and light." Then came the explosion. I was lifted has a population of about 400 person. entir.lv from my eeti and tbe first Tbe meeting house is built about the sound which greeted my ears was the middle of tlie town on the principal moans am'. ries of those Injured. The street, which run elst from the Redinterior of the meeting houee in wood road. The church wu bull shout .... re., .qrf hre .AND. Fresh News for Breakfast horror-stricken- x 1 5..9S..4X?' by sll the association to their hold regular meetings in. mart-InTuesday night was tbe regular Youaf of the Young Men's and Ladles' Mutual Improvement aesocU tions. The Janitor, Lambert Bsdefc arrived there early and loaded tho w ltk carbide from which tho occtyW o'clock to gas Is generated. About 7:20 about fi and lighted four of the Jets teen minutes later the meeting to order. i program for tbs evening off and during the flrat ns several person came In. about 100 persons in the ths explosion occurred, and er were in the vestibule. 8ew ns were within s block el the ing when they heard out aw bine flames Us re s-- The window glsss snddoon blown into the street snd psri I, turner fell tu the bitched horse tied vsgons wars standing tram.bro sibling. Two or three and hocam tangled up. g to oft s. dubt btfDTf ny djnus houw Interior of the mreUng room i. In the center of the floor. tore, at ill bolted to the . n. J |