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Show THE MOESISO EXAMINES OnriEX. CTAU, WEDNESDAY MORN IXO, MAtlCH NOW IS THE TIME spring medicine. ibt for red Wood COMPOIND EXTRACT for gK try our SARSA- PARILLA. K PUNISHED, uoai-lusiu- TRIAL OF APPEAL TO KING J. FRANK CANNON arlva y Full Doee $1.00. 1.00 hasty consultation by his companions that the brought about the mounted policeman had gone two of the party atarted in pursuit of him. Ihe race was kept up for more than an hour, when they found the exhaust-e- d man at the tout of a tree, wliii-Former Britiah Captain and Vice Contried in rain to Though sul Complain pf Their Treatment winded. Corporal Field put apparently by Magistrate Pool. waa overup a terrible fight before be powered and tied. Hr waa taken bark New York March Luk-rn- s to camp. The following morning be Davis, a former captain in a Britwaa strapped to his own sleigh ami , ish lancer regiuu-ntarrested on the two of the trappers returned witn Lim complaint of the manager of the Gil-to Edmonton. Here he was placed council of the stake houe. was held In jloo bail yetu in charge of an attendant of the high MET THIS AFTERNOON. day to keep the peace for one month Brandon Insane Asylum. After tieing by Magistrate Pool, la the Jvffi-rsoadiudged insane he was taken fifin-Answer by a Special Market court. All this was done after hundred miles to Brandon, wheie he ar- Accused 8cnt His Messenger and Did Net Attend the magistrate haj kept Clive Bar- rived yesterday. In Person. ley. British vice consul, waiting for two. and a half hours to. answer a The trial of Frank Canuoa, before the subpoena, although distinct denials high cuuuvil of the make for apostasy, bad been made In court that Captain was commenced at two oclock yesDavis had failed to pay any bills at terday afternoon in the Second ward the Hotel Walcott or had defrauded the meeting house. British consul general, Sir Percy Mr. Cannon was mi present in perout of $.'i. son, but nt a special messenger with Not. alone, it was declared, will aphis answer to the iharge which were peal be taken from the decision of the New York, March 14. Tu the fact placed before the high council during maglMratr. but there were strong bints it meeting. that the attention of the federal gqv. that three policemen were in thr The high council i computed of the of his home, al No 81 Amity Btreet ernment. will be called to the treatBrooklyn, last night. John Soeia. eigh- preideut of the stake, hia rjiiusrllurs, ment of the captain and of Mr. Bav-lety yearn old and bedridden, owes his and Clerk John V. Rlinh. together with dignitaries: JoMr. Moore, who made the complaint, life.' An ezploding oil lamp iu the the following swore 1 list at noon Wednesday he had front room of the apartment set fire seph lialL Joseph Parry, Kphruim D. C. Critehluw, C. C. Brawn, the building, and through the smoke akrd Captain Davis to comply wlih to the Gllsey rules and either pay his bill filled hallways two of the policemen Aftun C. Brown, 'lbuinas S. Browning. brought to the alreet not only the in A. T. Wright, Joseph riiaufurd, James or give a deposit on account. The answer was a condemnation of hi hotel valid, but also his wife, Barbara, sev- Burch. K. W. Wade, James 31. Brown enty year old, who, nearly dumb with and the following four alternate: Wilrules, a well aa the hotel itself. fright, would not leave her husband to liam Moves, Marcus Farr, John Mr. Bay ley allowed a auhpeona which and H. C. Jambs. had born made out to The Britiah perish alone. The aged couple lived with their If the charges agaiut Mr. Cannon are Consul, 17 State street," with interlineations and erasure. Mr. Bayley daughter Barbara, iblrty years old. and aualaiiinl, he will bo from the church. been helpsaid he appeared In court at nine far a year the old man has less and confined to bis lied in a rear oclock in the morning and that no at. room. After Barbara found she could tent ion was paid to him until nearly not put out the increasing flame she noon. PoThe Ides! said Mr. Bayley, who ran into the street crying for help. It will doubt prove agreeable waa very indignant over such a thing licemen Cunningham, Cooney and J.lovd new that Margaret Auglin is to prestation, a block aa a subpoena being went to an au- of the Amity streetnear at the time in sently appear at ihe Grand Opera away, were passing thorised representative of a foreign citlzcna' of duty for House in a new play nf powerful emotour their clothes, subto have the government I Intend ran the to the ax tional quality. Miss Anglin has conand done, day they poena framed.' woman. tributed so many fine crest Ions to thu re of the young Both the vice consul and DavU lawfew years of her aiage career lias reached the the time house, By they yer protested against the decision of the front room where the fire started shown such consistent and splendid adthe magistrate. When Mr. Bayley was all in flames, and Cooney went mi vance Ik her art that the New York the ta0 ball ihe court clerk was the run to the station to summon ihe public as well as the abler metropoliloth to accept it, and it waa only after fire department. Cunningham aud tan reviewers arc la- -t converging iu Mr. Bayley bad been vouched for and she the foremost acled by ihe young woman, who the opinion had ahown bis credentials that the Lloyd was frantically appealing to them to tress of the. day In this country. was money accepted. In this period of her significant trisave her went into the house. After the hearing Captain Davia an- The dense iwrenta, smoke drove back the daugh umphs t lierefore of her indeieiident nounced that he wuuld bring suit for te. who told the , bravely and brilliantly won pollcrmeu to search damages for false arrest against the thr back rooms, and they soon emerged it should pique interest to learn that well as hotel manager, as appeal to bis each bearing one of the old couple in ntf previous role, not even her lloxeno government for redress. his arms. By this time a crowd had as- In Cyrano do Bergerac with Richard sembled in front of the house, and a Mansfield; her Camille lo the Armand cheer went up as the men and their Duval of Henry Ml (ler, nor the of metropolitan hits achieved burden came out. The firemen had lits tle work to do, the damage beiug con(while leading woman of Charles fined to the front room alone. Empire Theatre Stock Company! which concluded with her signal triumph a Mrs. Dane in Mrs. Danes Defence," afforded half the opportunity for virtuosity provided by her new role of Zira" In thr forthcoming play of Winnipeg, Man., March 14 Corporal that name, by Henry Miller and J. Field, of the Canadian royal mounted Hartley Manners. police is a raving maniac. It was he, who as described in last Sundays Herald made a journey of 2,400 miles COMPANY TO BUY LAND with an Insane Presbyterian mis14. March Managua, Nicaragun, sionary, the Hev. Mr. Burkman, whom Quiescent for tJis last twenty-fir- s years, Ogden Men Incorporate Trust and lie escorted from the Arctic wilds by the great Nicaraguan Development Concern. dog eled to the nearest station, Ed- Momotombo, again become active. On monton, on the Canadian Pacific rail- volcano has Articles nf Incorporation were filed January 17 a sudden eruption took road. ( late yesterday afternoon In ihe county at half-paeleven, in the mornCorporal Field waa made 'insane by placewith a discharge of lava, rocks and clerks office by ihe Ogden Trust aud ing this most remarkable feat of endurance volcanic ashes. The ashes were carried Development company with a capital and is now confined in a cell adjoin, distance of one hundred and fifty stock of $10,004). ing thst ln which the' maniac missio- amiles and severe earthquake, shocks The otock isdivided info 100 ibareh 0 On last January nary'll placed. were felt in Costa Rica and Honduras. of the par value of $100 each and the Corporal Field arrived at Edmonton, A great amount of live stock of the names of I ho innonMiratora are Fred riara travel by dog after thirty-fou- r was killed, but J. Kiesel, Julio Christ in Klesel, surrounding aled. With him, strapped to the. tobob-ga- uu human haciendas Pauline Klesel. Theodore lives were . lost so far as waa the insane missionary who Sr.hansenbach and George 'McCormick, was turned over to the sayluin au- known. all of Ogden. thorities and waa taken to the provinThe paper filet) yesterday show ibat FINDS LONG LOST CHILD. cial asylum at. Brandon. (he lime and duration of this corporaexso was Field himself Corporal tion shall lie ninety year and the purhausted tnat four weeks treatment in From Whom Ho Had Been suit and business shall lie that of buySeparated waa restore to the hospital necessary for Fifteen Years. ing. holding, exchanging, renting and hia strength and vigor. He finally startleasing any lands or Improvements to his ills Arctic post with ed back theredu. on Februdog team. He left Edmonton The place of general business of the Parsons, Kan.. March 14. E. F. ary 13 against the advice of his super- Woodworth, a Denver banker, found company and its general offices will be disstitious acquaintances. For quite a daughter, of whom he has had no In Ogden and its business may extend tance he was to accompany a party of his trace for fifteen years. Woodworth and into any other part of Utah and other fur hunters who wen to journey in hia separated fifteen years ago, of the United Staten. the asms direction. All went well until and wife These papers also show the amount the child was given to the mother the afternoon of the fourth day, when of stock subscribed by the restiective by the courts. viobecame Field suddenly Corporal Last January J. W. Longdon, who memlier of the company is aa follows: lently insane, imagining himself to be ran a mattress factory in this city, de- Fred J. Klesel baa subscribed in laud the missionary. of a wife, and improvement, a certain tract of bis family, const-tin- g He brake away from his companions serted two children anil a stepdaughter 18 land in Ogden iu Ixit 4, Block 25. of realized the before they scarcely change Iiat. A. the fair cash value of which of age. that hail come over him and struck off years is $10,000 efalch has been transferred the desertion After stepLongilon's A across the prairie toward the west. daughter commenced to make iuqulrlee to the comjiany for 95 shares of the regarding her father, whom she had Mock. Tho other members of the corporanot seen since she was 3 years of age, tion have each purchased one share of when her father and mother were sepslock each for cash. arated in Leavenworth. The officers for the first year are: She saw the name of F. B. Esterly in Fred J. Kleel, president; Julie Chrisa Denver paper, and wrote to him, asktine Klesel, first vice president; ing Ida aid. in locating her father, givPaulina Kiesel, second ing his name aa E. F. Woodworth. ; George McCormick, secretaEsterly was at that time in Montana, ry, and Theodore Schansrnlach, treasbut on his return ho gsve Ihe letter to urer. The next annual meeting of the Woodworth, and the latter immediately came to Parsons, and today located hia stockholder will be held on the first March, 1906, and annually long-lo- st daughter In a laundry, where Tuesday in she had found work to support her thereafter. From one of ihe officers nf the commother and herself after the desertion pany it was lesrned that the romiiany of her stepfather. valusble land in Oregon, IdaWoodworth is a millionaire, and hsa will take ho, Wyoming, Nevada and Utah for the 1 00,(108 hia for search In the spent became wealthy. He purpose of holding and concentrating daughter since from the handling of much is a member of the banking house of them aside of local the property that is now held enIs A and Woodworth C. H. Son, by the different member! of the comgaged In mining. addition to other land and Like hia former wife, he also married pany in property that they may acquire from gsln, hut he hat offered his daughter, time to time. whom he had not seen for fifteen years They will purchase outright much until today, n home with hia family in land in Ihe different states named Denver. above which will be held until such time aa it may he deemed to tbeir best COOS COUNTY SELECTS SITE. Interests for lie disposal. In thi connect tun by way of illusland will be purchased at tration. 14. Coos March county, points where towns afe most Pori land. liable to some time announced Oregon, which and it will lie rut up into up spring erect a seiarata pago that it would building lota which will naturally give vilion at the Iwi and Clark Exposithem a handsome profit on their intion. has made good its announcement vent menl. bv selecting a slie for Ihe structure, lite pavilion will stand a short disFresno. Calif-- . March 14. In a listtance from the Colonnade entrance, a devoid of features, the little to the west of the Administration less game, Chicago National club defeated Tacoma building. 6 to 2 scorn. Mike hr Cooa county building will I 50x60 here today three pitchers in the boa, feet In size, and will be constructed en- Fisher had two of them being youngster experitirely of Coos county materials. Coos ments that be has taken on. One wa will the workmen labor, perform ruunty and the other Brown. and a Coos county man will oversee the Hastings, was effective. Neither man The two job. fifteen allowed hits. Thomas Coos county timber resources will be of them went in for three innings, but did very exploited In a most practical way in the construction of the building, which poor work. will be finished la natural woods inside New York, March 14. A man who and out. For the Interior the decorations will be in panel work, the differ- registered at G Grand Union hotel ent valuable woods being used to ad- last night a- - Ilcnrr R. Reed, of Boston, Monuments and Headstones, Two In tbie way. Among the woods and engaged a suite of three rooms, vantage In car loads stogk. A o used will be the myrtle, maple, alder, was found dead In his bed today. white and yellow firs, white cedar. Port bottle containing a white powder waa Orf:rd cedar, red cedar ami oak. The found in the rnm and the police are block myrtle of Cons county, the couninvestigating. t worth $300 try's mot famous wood. per thousand feet. B. M. Berlin, March 14. The approprlal itt Construction work on the building committee of l he rrirhatag flnaliv ssssssiwvw mjmnnfyn will be begun in a few days and Ibn agreed to the government, plan to building will be completed and fitted the cavalry, but only in 1918. 2003 JEFFERSON with exhibits several weeks before the the house virtually postponing the In' The building will cost troducing of n furt her- army opening day. - Cemetery Coping and Vaults. measures until 19PJ. about f IG.MuO. arv shipment of Snsnfrns Bark, just in 35c per lb. -- t ifcSilv San-derao- WM. DRIVERS THE DRUGGIST. POLICE SAVE AGED COUPLE . y. AMUSEMENTS h--s Attention! Attention! It is a risky piece of business for you to trust your colored skirts to the ordinary sort of laundry. Distilled water, pure soap and expert help protect you against fading IBI tearing when we do the work. Map we have the privilege of doing up jour next bundle? sir-ta- of-far-ed tlt 1 star-ship- Steam Laundry Ogden Phone. St. 137 Twenty-fift- h 174. CORPORAL MADE MAD THE ITALIAN CASTS OFF SLUMBER COLONY m the Pacific coast niae the finest pipes on the Pacino coasCTheir wines m absolutely pure. If you wish to n good cheer for the helidnys wlw some of their wine from dla-ya- f RIZZINI BROS. eeef ihi eeee m SSth Street Tom Watsons t Magazine The Magazine That Has An Idea Back of It." Have you beard that Hoa. Thos. E. Watson of Georgia has begun the publication of a magaxine? Tou know who Ur. Watson is? Hes toe man who wrote The Story of Life of Napoleon, Prance, and The Life and limes of Thomas Jefferson. He waa the Peoples Party candidate for President last rear. Tint number of Tom Watsons Magazine will be published Feb. 26. POr s sale at all price 10c. By mail 11.00 per year. You win miss the most interesting magaxina in America if you fail to get this number. Ask your newsdealer for Tom Watsons Magaxina -- or, better still, send a dollar for a years subscription to news-stand- 128-pa- TOU WATSONS Frtm-man- BYJOURNEY MOMOTOMBO SWISS .MO sue-cessi-on MAGAZINE. West 42nd Street, new York City, N. 121 Y. ne WHERETO EAT BOSTON CAFE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. Everything here the best. Short erdere at all hours. All kinds of gama and flab 1 eeaoi Extra fine dinner unday, fn 12 to 2 p. m, 25c. Fine lunch fn to 4 and to I p. m. JIM A YOUNG ,11 224 Twenty-fift- The ..... Street ft, Owl Saloon ONsill Bros, Props. Now Dealers In first class SU 86th St liquors of all ms, wines and brandy. All goods do-to any part M city ovary twdsy. Whisky 76 eta to quart. per dnrt. quarts, 9L 91-7- w.35 ? S4fo $5l QU,rt 6 Whl,ier O'NEILL BROS, PROPS, 1352. toue FURNITURE VAN STORAGE Heavy Drayin Allen Transfer Co. tones: Bell 22; Independent 22. 412 25th St money loanei SALARIED P Real Estate and Cl Smvice quick, oonl Mo eommli WESTERN BROKI TheaeSId-22M E nt fUT 13, 1003. CM DEIIS FALLING INSTEPS rV..m nine i,i,mc1i,..ii11i the high heelc.1 .iue has btvu i,f absorbing not iiiily iu the who wear it inn to time wiiu tin not. and cvcit ;ihjvt. i revived and made the tuple f he.itcd JiieiiKion. When a woman about lu going absurdly point, .J felloe, with ex- , aggciateiily high there are uo end of aeusible people who point the Auger of at her. But lim Ini are loudest in their praises of flu and low heel have 1 w-e- liei-la- ant taken into ratiun the fact that the American foot 1 nut flat aud that every effort to make It so throw It out of shape and livings a strain uani the lion uf the iniep and the tendons at the bark of the leg. Falling insteps t are fur more now that they were; In fad it is quite a common form of suffering, but It I oaly recently that pliyMeiuii and ui genus have been frank in their comments a to the cauie. If the human fiame H thrown out of place by the font being posed un an abnormally high heel and the toe iquiexPil into the pointed vamp which makes the foot look smaller it is certainly a malformation none the less when it is thrown out nf place and out of shape by in one of thr being eura-common seue shoe large enough to be ure, to accommodate the foot, but without any siipiwirt under the lntep and heel, throwing Ihe whole weight of the body on the heel. A11 report to thr unit vary, the weight does not. ret as it is Intended to on the bull of the fool, so that thr search for a hygienic shoe goes oil with Interest and thr shoemaker who will invent tomethlng that hliall price hutisfadory to all has a fortune within liia grasp. The American foot for hat been noted fur Its arched lniep, the absolutely flat foot being almost. unknown, and even when the natural beauty of the foot has been destroyed by wearing a bad shoe, too small or too large a the caee may be It is still almost ImpoHSlble to find nn Instants where the sole of the foot to the sola of mod uf the common sense shoe. The first symptom of the falling Instep are In moat instance the pain through the back of the lege and even In the knee, for oddly enough the themselves give very little warning of what i the trouble. Upon Investigating by an expert the bones of the instep will be found to have fallen, while the arch 1 there to all appearance, slid any such attempt to walk except in a slice that will properly eupport the foot I absolute torture. Many phydclans and surgeon say the disease I Incurable; other advocate the uae uf a hoe that In many of the milder ca-will in time obviate the difficulty, but thi shoe uniat be worn all the lime, slippers nut being al- This Announcement Comes con-i- d, un-bitt- First As Usual From Us WE WANT THIS YEAR, TO IMPRESS YOU MORE THAN EVER WITH THE OF THIS FIRM. UP-TO-DATEN- Wc want you to know, and without boasting, that wc stand alone in this city in the clothing business We have this year succeeded in securing a new line of clothing that has no peer in the clothing world. We want you to see it and have set apart two days to receive you here and show you what we have gotten together for your inspection. ea lowed even In tbe bedroom. Thi whoe 1 built on a combination of sensible and fashionable lines. There is n Meet spring in that part of It which eupport tho arch of tha foot, and while the soles are broad and the heel are broad also, the font seen In profile ha a neat appraraure, with a mot decided curved instep, end a a rule the alines are faerd so aa to give WE WILE NOT ASK A SINGLE CUSTOMER TO BUY We will have extra help to accommodate each customer and we want you to feel that you are perfectly welcome to come and lode and try on" to your heart's content. . The New Line ofSuits and We Call The Toggery Special, Top-Coa- ts And for fit and finish our customers all agree that they have never seen anything like it. Well show you and be glad of the chance. Remember, we do not ask you to buy. fust look, try on, and investigate our statements. WeU expect you and especially invite the ladies to come, too. THE TOGGERY 2449 Washington Avenue SUIT. quarrel that resulted In n split of the flrat partnemhip and of afterwards aoelng Burns and Doyle working toCouncil Bluffs, Iowa, March 14. O'Hara K&iit that the Bobgether. John D. O'Hara, of Colorado Spring, tail No. 9 and Devils Own rlslms were was on the wltnem stand today at. tho located by Burns, Doyle and ODriacoll trial of tbe Portland Mining suit. together, and it waa ihe understanding additional support. O'Hara waa a parlnnr with Unrns and that .Doyle had an equal Interact with It has been quite a fad to have a third man, in January, 1892. before Burn. : AVItuciis "said Doyle's name children wear shoe without heel the the alleged partnership between Doyle evidently hail been in tho location lfe told of the J stake, but hsa bceji juhbccl oft spring hoe!, they are called, be- aud Burn befLah. ing supposed to bn quite the beat. Thi and fad, like all others can b generally I carried quite too far, for the American child' foot attains Its growth by the time tbe child 1 twelve years of age at the lateet. The flat heels or the lack of heel develops a tendency to throw the body backward, It. on the ball of tbe fool, not to poise as It rrqtileril by all physical culture Ioann, and also by the Amcrlrau font Itself, and there la a marked difference In the carriage of the girl who wears the spring heel and sh who ha lied on her shoes. t The erase for outdoor sport demand sole and reasonable thick shoes, heavy low iieel, but at the same time the common ene shoe is snythlng but common sense if It attempts too much and ha too much given up to the broad sole and flat heel. In truth, there I nothing in which good senm ran be bet ter displayed than in choosing a cop rect style of footwear. The exaggeratedly large shoe are just aa bad fur small the ieet a tbe exaggeratedly are now In ordsr. A good on la let ones, and the best shod woman of lodny is she whose shoe are choaeti in vs supply you with anything you may, reference to her Individual feet, the need in our lint. Wa have the stock thereof tne mid arch the aliape else, and caa fill order prompt . t rather Ilian because fashion demands are heels no or heels that the high correct. There i an epidemic in the wearing of spats or gaiter at present. These spats are in brown, light tin and later w ill be seen In white. They are decided e ly mannish In appearance and are nip posed to look most attractive when worn with a decidedly feminine appearing shoe, with exaggeratedly high heels. PORTLAND MINING Good Resolutions , THE Eccles Lumber Company CANAL CONTRACT AWARDED. 1 MITCHELL BROS. MONUMENTS - , ci case j Friday and Saturday We Will Call Our Show Days grii-erat.i- corc-apon- ESS Salt River Valley Project Will Rfr in one of Largest Dams in World. suit Washington, March 11. Secretary Hiichinck ha awarded the contract for Salt River Valiev. Arizona, of wliat when completed will be one of the largest dam in the world. Tha project will be built In accordance with the terms of the irrigation act. It. will cost $i.l00.08. awl Hie work will lie done Galvcs-taby t he J. M. O'Rourke Co., of t rC Why Use Coal Oil? n, When you can have electric Texas. o In addition to overflowing aliout acnsi of land, thr dam will supply of places waterpower for hundred 350.-on- lights for $1.50 per month for the first light and $1.00 each for additional lights throughout the territory. Tbe (lam which will be known as the dam. will be 225 feet high it and at its base will have a thickness of about 200 feel, or the length of an orwork must, he dinary city block. The completed within two years, according The comto the terms of the contract. ws lively, 21 oontrart the fur ition pel bids having been submitted to the secretary. Itao-cve- - March 14. The Thi II exhibit at St. Louis cost the Ph -ond a naif lippin commlMlon a million from frandollars, while the returns eourec chises, admission and other were not over $700,000. The commission feels amply repaid s!im-til- u for the expenditure, by the great given tho iiifere-- t of American ieple in the irlsnd. London. March 14.-Iii- Greii-i- t, an American, and well known aa a trainer at Now Market for Lord Carnarvon. Richard Croker and others, died in Switzerland today of 38 - e$& $6 Save all the trouble of filling lamps with oil and make it easy for the women at home by using electric light CHARGE IT TO ADVERTISING. Washington, OiEES m EL LIGHT m POWER CO R. S CAMPBELL, Manager f isJ |