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Show V TDE MOUSING EXAM1XKB QGPEX, UTAII, THE EXAMINER Published Every Day la ths Vaar by Tha Standard Publishing Ce. SUBSCRIPTION v 5 RATES. Delivered by Cmrier la 0daa Mora-ta- g City. including Sunday niontb Examiner, par Siagla copies i ' ri BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. Tha Examiner la aent by mall Mitaide of OgJea. par year... At laaat quarterly, la adrnce. . - TEARLESS AND .9w l.W INDEPENDENT Tha Eiamlacr la a atrtetly ladapead rat newspaper. It glvaa all aidea aa . equal ahow. Tha Examiner has no (aforltaa. and lk Si will ao enemies to puaiah. It aablaaad aad unprejudiced. Mi Commualcatloae will bo raoalwad of pleadmg w'fth the leadtug Mormon this city to do aomeihing to aid m continuing ita precarious existence. Ogden business Interests and uur u people generally, whom It is sought draw lu'o this vicious Kcarnsd'annon ha in our quarrel, have a right to demaad coming an important industry asla it those of stone., name who, persona country. Jewelry anJ precious other than d.amonrts, on the other serted, have declared that the Morare to boycott the Journal-Ou- r hand, h.ive fallen off from a total Im- mon in 1896 to J 89.202 or is it la nothing hut a It". opinion portation decrees in 19il. That t.ii nasty effort to arouse a bitterness in this community that does not now exin the Importation of foreign manuforma and other ist and cannot be developed only by facture of jewelry sod i.f gold and sitter does not represent umefuied falsehood In behalf of the decent peoany reduction in home demand for such luxuries is show hy reterence ple of this ciiy, we call upon Cannon and hla had in Ogden to loth cen.un figures. The capital employed In (he I'uited Staten In the dare name their inlormani. manufacture of Jewelry has increased JULES VERNE DEAD. from 11 million dollars In IhttU to 22 in 21 million millions in i$W and Jules Verne U dead. He waa a lov9Mi; and the value of the product able man. Few of us ever met him, from 22 million dollar In 1H8U to 34 but we all knew him, and many of u million millions in 169u aud 46 kept company with him when In our in INHt, practically all of which is youth he took ua around the world la consumed in ibe home market. eighty day, and then conveyed us anutber form Silk manufactures iho ocean 2'1,'Hhi down in deep clan of liixurie whose Import at ions league under the sea. lie was a hate decreased during the last fifteen Frenchman by birth, hut an American years, la 1890 the value of silk manu- In sentiment, ills ship that facture Imported into the failed the heaven and. returning, dropped States wan I4I.U85.990, while In the into the ocean, came to the surfaco calendar year which ended wits flying an American Hag. disclosing tbo last their value was but author's admiration for "Old Glory" Though France Mill leada la and what it stood for. the share which .he supplies of this Jules Verne's death is a loss to tho miltotal, having contributed 13 world. lion dollars value In 1904. it Is tw Tklafc. to observe that Japan now He DM The amount of energy people nom holds practically equal rank with Each of these countries sup- Bmo expend in making n bad matter Worse in Illustrated by the story of a plied about 5.4 million dollars' worth chance encounter iu a street car told of silk manufacture for the markets to tbe World by a New York piaa. of the tailed States; but Germany' waa on a Broadway cur, and there It share fell off 14 million dollars a were few passenger. A mau boarded compared with 1903, while Japau the car and sat down by niy side. His made a gain of 1.9 million dollars in clothing waa muddy and torn, and he lha same perlud. American silk man- bad a handkerchief wrapped round me ufacturers are principally engaged In band. 1 am the biggest fool In I gne supplying' the home market, as their town," he remarked. I looked interest-ad- , eari-ehalf a hut slightly eipnrtgtiqn and he continued: lulllioa dollars annually. That their "Rce that car four blocks ahead 1 evidencone is tndiiairy t. a growing Well I rnu a block to overtake 11 and ed, howeyer, by, Ibe fact that in 1870 gsva the conductor a dime. He handed there were but 80 establishments de- me g nickel, which fell from iny hand voted to the manufacture of silk, their to the street. I yelled fitr him to stop produA wpa valued at but 12 million the rar. He did not do It, ami I Jumpdollars and the amount paid for ed off and lauded all spraddled out like clothes! Well, wages wan leas than 2 million dollars. an old raddle. See my the Jump did it. In 1880 tbe number of establishment I asked the man If he found the was JII2, the value of the product wan nickel. amount 41 million dollars, and the "Oh. yes. I found tbe nickel, but paid In wages wa 9 millions. From whnt good did It do me? I could not 1S9U to 1900 the growth In number of overtake the car from which 1 had ealabliahmenia waa small - 472 In J8iH) Jumped, aud ao I boarded this car and gave the nickel to the conductor. Pn and 483 in 19W- )- reflecting In noma de1 skinned iny hand, spoiled my clothe gree the1 tendency toward mineral raand risked my neck Just to find that Indu-trievalue of of lint the tion five rent piece and give It to the street the product larrenned from $97,298.-45- ' railway." or f I SO.MM for each establishI AU Ibe Transfer Ur Had. ' ment In 1S9I, to 9107.256.25$. nr 9224.-00- 0 A fur each establishment. In 1904; Irnvy of lauahlng girl rose to whiie the continued development since get off a street ear the other day at n point where tntnKfera are given they 19U0. I indicated by the large increase followed by a demure young woin Importation of raw atlk for use were man who had lieeu almortieU In a novel. In manufacturing, la INK) the ImpoJust before she alighted she asked the rtations Of raw silk amounted to 1,209, conductor for a transfer, and be. think790.5-11, valued at $3 1, 919 pounds, ing all the girl were nf one party, gave while the quantity imported in 1904 her six, which site took without noticwas It, 579, 05 .pounds, valued at 954, ing and held In her band as aba stood on the corner walling for her ear, flu $79,276; the lniportatlons having thus doubled in quantity In the short period other gl.ia having gone on walking. Wheu the reader got her ear six took from 19u0 to 1904. sent and was soon I oat agalu Iu her Another claw of Itiaurlea whose Imnovel. Then the condihior came np. subto increase portations bhve failed and she held out tbe alipa. He took stantially during the last fifteen yeara them, counted them and then looked la .wine. Including champagne and around with a puxxled expression. Where are tbe other?" be aaked. still wines. In '1290 winea showed n Ob, replied the young woman, looktotal Importation of 10 million dollars ing up a moment from her hook. "Hint's and ihl figure ,1a but slightly exceedme.- "- Philadelphia Record. ed by the total for 19U4, when the gli lie gave value nf the Import was 9103124,432. Th first rbwwaaraph. Production nf wine In tbe I'uited The Ural word reproduced and Ufrom meantime 2! Staten Increased ttered by a phonograph are naturally million gallons la 189u to 38 mntter of historical Interest. When 1901. Edison was nt work on hie first phonograph many weeks were consumed la THAT BOYCOTT AGAIN. It le said that when the experiment. machine wne first discovered It talking (bice more the Tribune's editor ha was as much a surprise in Its Inventor discovered ' a sensation. This time It to the world. The Wizard waa is a threat to boycott hla paper In Ogworking on some telephone ' receiver den. Mow aniall a man of big pretenand waa led to put piece of tinfoil on n cylinder. It sound, and Edsions ran make himself by p ret endison wn convinced that the human ing to accept as truth surh transparw!. could Is1 recorded and produced. ent. falsehoods! Hypocrisy and deWhen the time caine to make an ariual ception are written into every line of tent Edison, will) hla mind on nuvhan-ica- l the Tribunell 'present hatred, and the details, absentniiudedly tested his author la belittling himself beyond contrivance with the familiar phrase, uiearnre. He cares not a thought to "Mary had a III tie lamb." The versa wa the flrl record taken by the mawhat extent hi Vented spite docs Inchine. jury to ihla Rial, his whole ambition being centered in a desire to gratify a NtreaglheHlwa (be Nerve, hatred of lopg standing, nut there U Keif control or nerve fon-la tha a be when will time an great lessen of health and therefore of there coming unmasking and then he will slink out. life itself. To understand how to rel lax la to how to strengthen of sight. ' nerves. Hearty liiughicr la a apurce of man ran Any designing newspaper relaxation, a ore also all high thought, proclaim hiiuaclf the object of a as those of Iiiik, lieauty, trust or love. hut the 'pulillr will ask for someRelaxation I found in diversion. An thing more definite than the o'.itlug or holiday I neees-aary- . of one who frequentA there .are conscious niql to anonymous comnmnlra-tfonly rcrort thought, there are consclou aud nerve tension. Womand is known to Im unscrupuen when shopping do not know the very lous.' tight, grip they give their parivl until, Murk our words, (here w III be no on reuitdng home, t heir hands fall rewho threatflames given of those have laxed In their lap, and they say they ened a boycott. The whole canilgn Sr so tired.- Health Culture. la one of vllPicatlon under the rover nf ilsrknesp. and the charge made Tbe Kmerald. An emerald that ha no flaw in It la will not lic:-iclose scrutiny. Why the t Mormon people or Ogdon typical of the purest lave. Some peoshould taksn conrcrie'l anion ple say that, as few ntirb tones can be lomnl. purest love la necessarily against Frank Cannon's Ogden paper, rare. An emerald w a always thought known as (be I'tah State Journal, is to jsw.iws the power of discovering not made plain. The paper has no treachery in the shape nf. alleged The emerald I exceeding'? standing In ibe community, it has no frlen-linfluence lo be feared, and. therefore, popular 'n courtship aud In marriages. After marriage It I supposed to bring there would be no motive in proceedinto the household and to ing against It. From Its inception It barmory further domestic joy a In every possihas failed to receive sufficient support ble way. To Ipse an emerald Is said to nia on itn own merit Riock bolder to bring busbies misfortunes and dishave been squeezed for the last doaster. llar that could be etlractcd. Then A lletplraa Wsnis. Snyder of Ibe American party in My wife's the moat liclp'es ere, Salt lake was appealed to. and he. in tnre." growled t'ady : "simply can't do Kearns' agltatlnn-fnnd- . disbursing anything without bothering me to help saw fit to contribute a certain amount her." of money in the past six month, yet "Yes?", t "Yes. Only lust night 1 hud to reach during all that period the paper has ben denying I' connection wlih the flp and get n caudle off the shelf of the pantry for her down g,. American parly money bag and collrr end bring i:p a scuttle of c.'al." have t earful! v riuhidclpk.j I'; css. in 1691. the cailie.1 year for whirh figures are million in 194. available, to 23 Of th la ter sum 1 million dollars' value wbm imported in the uncut state. Indicating that diamond rut ling is bein jibes dollars in value mlsrepre-bcn.tatiuti- 4 ill aubjecta preaantad lo napoetful anguage from known individual. bat o true nama must be published la full All letters and eommunlcationa aigaad by nom da plumaa, or aaaumad aamaa, will bo thrown In the waste basket. Tha brawa man aasar hide behind an aaaumad name. Don't oak tba Editor to bo responsible for what yog ara aehamed of. Subscribers will eonrer a nwor by Informing tbla olllea of failure to to caiwa The Examiner bafora tbalr Breakfast. EXAMINER TELEPHONES er 2. lu tier-man- EDITORIAL ROOMS Independent Phone. ....... ..No, Soil Phono. , . . . . , . iim.No BUSINESS OFFICE No. Independent Phono Sell Phono MfM. QLA8MANN .....No. SI bd ISO SS No. IIS Independent Phono.. No. ISO Bell Phono. No. 120 of both telephone ayetomo cloaad attar B p. in. AB TO BLOCK SIGNALS. According lo atailnttra published in Tbo Hallway Axe. only 44,61(6 of the total of 204.0(H) mltca of railway In tbo IbHag Btatna ara provided with tha block Jgnal ylem. For 19u6 I ha railway have provided for iho instal 1187 lation of the aymem on only mile, si againxt 6.937 milea In 1904. Of tbo 44.610 miles of railway now i ' aquiped with bkek signals, taa ayaiem on 12,000 mile, is used only in time of fog and only for passenger trains. Many yeara ago In tbo earlier days of railroading freight trains were not considered In be of aufficleat dignity, in Ibe aristocracy of traffic, In have headlight placed In front of their locomotive. It was not until a frightful acridi-n- l on the Camden S Amboy, eating by collision between a headlight less freight and a paasenger train carrying many hundreds of exmalon- lata;- that It1 dawned on tha mind of the railway maxnaiea of the day that train safely required that a pasn-nge- r ehouty npt only hue a light wherewith to see, but that freight trains should base ligbta wherswith they , could bo seen. ,TJie .use of the bhipk signal system only fur passenger trains Is a relic of the day when beadllghta on freight were nut deemeij nereaasry. At touch damage could lie dune by a rcl'lakra between n freight and a liaeticueer train within a railway blork aa wMi ruined by the collision on the old Cantden A Amboy. Mut the la la the delay In calab-Indu- s a ay item which, when used for II (lasses of I rains goes very far lo the 'avoidance of accidents and (he consequent safely of the traveling public ; The Interstate Commerce Cmnniia-alu- a has lirged the enactment or n law Bulking the establishment of the block tyslrm bbllgatnry am nil roads. Con-- , gifev compelled rsllwa; cnxaxed in in'exuiie traffic to provide automatic coupler for the greater safety of the and the alowncts which the .CMpoyees. ' ni;ls-uyexhibit In establishing tha bha-system ought to commend the matter te the attention of the legiala-lii- e 'l'ody of the L'nlled Stales. a Ll'JURIKS FROM ABROAD. The occupation of the homo market by American manufacturers is illustrated by acme figures recently Issued by the Department of Commerce and Labor through lie Cures u of Statistics, showing' the importations inio th? Lulled State of luxuries and oihi-artlrlea of uiluntary use during the paat fifteen year. Statistics just compiled ahow that the impurtatluns of luxuries and other articles of otiiniary use amounted tu 137 million dollar, in the calendar year 19m, an Increa. or less ihxu I uillluna ocr the iniporui-tion- s of l:iit. lniKirtulion under the group 'Manufactures ready for amounted in 1!m( to i;x r - i I I 1 i millions. a iigninst i:,.t milliona In an inrrPasu or hut 8 million dollar. while manufacturers' materials. including both raw and partially manufactured. incroncd from 28'. millions in lh9o to 478 millions in I9i4. a growth tif practically 2mi million dollars. Kuiid.tulT show no substantial change in fhe value of imiairtations at the two periods named, being 2G1 million tollars in lS9'i and 262 millions in 1904. From the above figures It will be rPfn that th class of goods required by American mvnufartiircrs is the only group which has shown any marked during the past fifteen years. Diamonds form a notable exception to the genera' ml- - that Importations of luxuries Into the l'nlled States have remained practically itationary Inee 18W. During the putt decade over 129 million dollar.' worih of diamond! tikie been Imported Into the Country, hiving Increased from I 1H9H, 3-- . 2 -t , s; -- la iit'ilci-Mnm- hoi-mt- f, - . . MARCH 25, 1905. OdO!CdO:'S404HOiOHHKKHOfH0(007KOKKHO2 3QC A COLORADO EXPERIMENT IN LIMITED MARRIAGE A Story )Xith 38CM Why Use Coal Oil? s Moral by Ada Bache Cone. 'Id04!H0d4HKOHiCdO444404HK4HHHH0 One In n Colorado there passed "It Jack Jellac!" He bounded. Isn't possible!" "He bad tbe air of being very much at hum with Madam." "Yea, certainly. You may go. Mary ; here's a dollar; ijon't mention this conversation." Mary tu herself, opening Hie door, I'll go t might and tell the whole buaiLi-rto William." Mr. Weld-waa fixed oa hi successor. And how could he jelp himself? A far a hla wife was concerned, be could only upbraid her for shocking immorality, and this he did. Miily came home. Rhe said casually Why, Clarence, you here at this hour! Haa anything happened? i suppose 1 may come home la tho afternoon if 1 like." "Oh. certalaly. Rhe ran her hands over ber blonde haid and shook a little dust from tbe edge of her kirt. Th-skirt waa of pleated brown cloth, bfce wore a brown velvet ligaro over a pale silk blouse, and it made her ax she waist seem very slender, moved both dimpled hands round her belt lu adjustment. Then she looked t Mr. Welden and xid nothing. Rite had the manners of a winning biliy. These manners were her fight-ierrra, and succeeded where can-no- .i Rhe Illustrated the would fail. ssjlnff of Tolstoy, that those who fulfill the law of dominate in the end. She also had the mind of an Infant, with some surprising lapses into common sense and intelligence. Clarence, with the air of a Russian proer.p wielding a nounced. Your conduct is scandalous! You have engaged yourself to another inxu while you are still my wife. Mllly did not resist. An Inspiration came to her that she must keep on (he ground of economies, and she sank oh to the chair behind her, and folding her little hands comfortably, responded: "Dont be unreasonable, Clarence. I haven't a cent in the world. "You should go to your parents." My parents! They got rid of me when they married me to you. and thry ilon't expect me back again. "Y'ou should go out and earn your ted marriage coutracrs for limited terms of not lest than three years or more than ten, and it stipulated that a second contract between the aame couple must be made for the. and not for another limited term. It was in The women of the state fought the bill, and some years later got tbe bill repealed. They foresaw, with reason, that it would make things bad tor their sex. Nut they blundered In their object of attack, tor the law wan simply a vehicle which drew Into the light some old abuse wnich had come to be reversed. They mistook a mean for rauae. in this matter the 4'olorado mind showed itself original lint without logic. 1 am of the upinlon that this law should have rendered valuable service. It waa an Indicator. An lllun-- t rat ton will ahow what 1 mean. Mr. and Mrs. Welden, of Denver, were married under tbe three years' contract, which in the beginning they had anticipated renewing for life. But at the expiration of the term they both looked forward to freedom. Khe considered him a brute, and he rharg-eher with frivolity. Neither had any philosophy. Mrs. Welden had no money and no knowledge for making money; her made her bringing up, moreover, averse to economical effort. In the days of divorce she could have claimed alimony, but under an expiring contract what waa Mrs. Welden to do? The answer appear mechanlral; she was to make another eontract. But the rub is just here; for she could do Ibis only by looking for a second husband while she was still a wife. Which was logical but Immoral. The vice In the situation resulted from a prior immorality habitual in America, that of providing daughters neither dowry nor economic profession. but of fattening iem for iho & di dt oi lights tg I Save all the trouble of filling lamps with oil and mak it easy for the women at home by using electric light . UTAH LIGHT g marriage market, and washing their hands of them there. Mllly Weldea, taking things ns they were and accepting the logical view, looked for a new husband before the Ural contract expired, and being agreeable and young, easily found an living. Bui I can't earn my living. I belong to n good family aad was brought up for n wife it's specialty, you know, in good families, and there's Jt'tbing else for me to do. I begin to are that the Limited Marriage law la indecent. ' Well. I'm not a lawyer, I hul I think see it that I not the limited eontract that is to blame, but a situation made tu wtmu.i, to which we are ao accustomed we thing it Is natural. Tho I'nilted contract doesn't affect your aituutlrn. you observe. It merely wounds your vanity." "To have received n prospective husband in my house, it's the limit!" Why, Clarence, I have not dime affinity. Bho was aa circumspect ns tha conditions would allow; she met the young man in places wuere she would not Im remarked, surh ns empty lie-te- n each for additional . d pa. lights for $1.50 per month for the first light and $1.00 n 1905. churches and cemeteries, and took precautions against publicity, to safeWhat guard her husband's name. more could a poor woman do? On the day tbe contract expired, Mllly and her affinity sought each other In the shadow of a great pillar in the Roman Catholic church. Though broad day outside, it was dusky here, save where the stained windows threw prismatic beams. Two or ihree persona scaled far up, staring hypnotically nt the red light glowing bet ore the high altar like a star in the gloom, The were loet in mediation or self. lovers were Intent on earh other. They were arranging in conscientiousfuture which haa an ly language imminent crisis to "Today at fire." said the affinity, "I shall be free to tell you whether J love you or not. Today at five I shell be able U without being falee to my mar ralge vows." "At five I shall be at the gate with a rah. "After five I shall consider your proposition, and if I decide to go with you I shall be waiting outside. let it be the little garden gate hidden from the house in the bushes, and don't he late." He stooped and looked into her eyea: "If any day after today I should wish to say to you at parting: 'Sweetheart, adieu,' no one shall deny me the privilege." "If after five o'clock today I should choose to shelter myself In your arms and my. Dear heart, don't leave me again, ihere will be no legal or moral reason to forbid. Now go: I shall stay here long enough to pray for yon." She watched him pass through the When you can have electric -- bill which became known as the Townsend Limited Marriage law. Il permit- that!" j "I have information that you have.' "It i'. a mistake; I have been forced Into an equivocal position, but I have taken great care. that you should not bo compromised." Thetecai-'o-niae-lail- a "You lie! 1 came down hard. Fhe did not realat with a kind of Jin jiisu she made use of his pose, She saw Jack .lellac coming up (he garden walk, and she exclaimed, with an accent of pronounced coquetry, Why, there' Jack!" and rose and went over to tbe mirror and arranged her hair, with one eye on her hus- band. Jack stopped short on entering; fared him. a Russian cop nlioiii to pounce on an anarchist. "Good day, said Clarence, stiffly. the visitor, Tc you, responded awkwardly. "Were you looking for me? "Er why no; I came to speak of a matter to Mra. Welden. "My wife haa no secrets from me" (with sarcasm). Of course not. I "But I sometimes have one from her, and I want to you Mllly, go and leave u. please." M!Hy had been walking round the room, trying to find a pretext for going out. and this dismissal suited her will. Rhe made sign tu Jark behind to him, stain the windows cast her husband, and went,1 saying sec polychrome shall aloud. Mr. Lawyer, you upon the air, aud when she Judged him far up the street, she, too, went sway. pga.:n." Yon Invade my premises to steal I think It cannot lie denied that in in wife. the circumstances this conversation Jack stared. was very nice. marriage to her while the is But there was also 81 r. Weldon, the "Propose still in my house." It was the pivot of the situation. "I have have not propa-emarriage ethics of the matter which were likely to Iter." to impress him. since thereby he had I both.' worse for roil "Ro much he nothing to lone. An ordinary man, "The injury falls harmless on me; what could he be expected to do? I note it to the address uf Mra. Wcl The most commonplace thing possiden. for possible future act t lenient. ble. "You have begun to protect her hr He returned to hla home In the midwith a sneer. dle uf the afternoon, hounded by n I have, and .hall see that a far hi wounded whirh vanity. as the law permits she is nut tra simpleton His wife was mil. Rhe waa bolding the tluccn." " paragramniatlr conversation at the My wife church. He threw himself down In looking at hla watch, I hog Jtllsc, the parlor, which looked pardon, she is no longer your wife. out on to ibe street he was the only "Rhe la not yours yot, and black spot In li except the picture "Xo nor is likely to be. Come to frame, and defined hla position thus: the window. Ree that carriage? It holds your recent wife and the man it's plain, glaring, palpable, as a theorem In geometry, be is going to marry. 1 am here at Mllly la alwuit to leave me: which Is to !inr attorney, and having verified tbe say ktsc her source of maintenance, hour and enterlatticd you while ahe and illy show perfect tranquillity. got away, 1 have no rore to do. Good Then Millv ha found another support i!ny." The people of Colorado repealed this to begin wl'hmit interim: which la to rfii limner see the engaged herself to another law. and now they asy. It man while she is still my wife. And tenon iilatrii It dragged into tho light. they pretend this i a moral commu-ni'v!- " Clareuee m i POWER R. S. CAMPBELL, Manager BtEF TRUST TURKEY INVESTIGATION. Important Evidence Has Been duced in New York. zoom 96SE 2Enas Ad- New York, March 24. Important evidence is said lo have been adduced In the beef trust investigation now in progress here, in conjunction with' that before the federal grand Jury In Chicago. Rix witnesnea were examined at one sitting, five of whum were, it is understood, former employes of thr j IS INDIGNANT. Germany's Note Forbidding Buying Arms From Franco Is Cause. Pails, March 28. The Temp a dispatch of iod from t onxtgii. nople announcing that the Cerm:i:i a mbs Motor has presented a unie to Ibe Porle which la said 10 he a vr-upon Turkey placing eventual order for arm in France, alth nienari of serious consequences if the note I disregarded. The Ottoman cabinet, it la added, la seriously embarrassed and parking companies. It would be unlawful and highly indignant at the dieta'ortHl conduct of Germany. The French ambaxxader Improper for me to describe any of the the negotiation to hccuru details of the Investigation. said' Joel. continues a large arms order for France. M. Marx, who is associated with District Attorney Burnett in the Invesljondou, March 24. The rurrespoti-den- t tigation in Chicago, "but I am free to at of ihe Dnftv aay Lie resulia of Thursday's work TelegraphConstantinople says the council of miniswere exceedingly satisfactory." ters is deliberating on the German Although tbe grand Jury haa been note with thread, the purexcused until next week, tne Inquiry chase vetoing of war material In France. The baa not been concluded. How many greatest Indignation la expressed at other witnesses will be summoned Germany's highhanded net Ion. could not be 'learned, but it is probable the hearing will be continued for A household necessity Dr. Thomas' at least another week, and perhaps OIL Heals burn, cuts, longer. District Attorney Burnett is Kclectric in frequent communication with the wounds of any sort; cures aoro thnnt, authorities in Chicago, and is acting croup, catarrh, asthma; never fails. id accord with tbe investigation being conducted there. Within n short time (temperate Tea Drlnklag, il la ald he will forward n stateIn this ngn of menial teuxlou, high ment of the evidence obtained here to tbe Chicago authorities for comparison pressure and overstrain ten la felt ti be doing much to overwork our Ini-ti- c with that obtained there. asylums. There enn be little rioulit that tea drinking is a form of Intern, Chicago, March 24. Specific Information regarding shipping, marketing pornnre In these days, a national ilI and prices of cattle waa nought today female intoxication second only to that by the special grand jury wbicb is of strong drink nnd in some respect, Investigating the alleged combination perhaps even more Injurious Family of packers. Miehael Murphy, general Doctor. manager of the Cudaby Packing comCuirrltri. pany at South Omaha, Sioux City and Kansas City, waa before the inquisiLyle Did you ever com across a tors and shed some light upon the sub- more conceited fellow Hun Bulger? jects under consideration. They say he is an at helot, and I beThey asked me first about the lieve lie Is. Bonter I wouldn't like tu MurMr. in business packing general. ha I "Then they took up the go so far ss that, but know that suphy said. a of existence the doesn't recognise of subject, marketing and asked all tbe details of It. They Inquired Into perior being. Town nnd Country. the shipping of cattle and beef. Their A Hfia questions did not point to an Investilasanllu. Kreech after You know," aald MI gation relative to railroads. Then they went into the subject of prices. her solo. "I Intend to go abroad to fiAsked whether the questions were nish my musical education. surh aa would indicate a desire for not finish It right now." sugWhy general information rather for use in Mis t'adley, and save the expossible Indictments, Mr. Murphy said gested that uie Information was evidently pense? Philadelphia ledger. what the inquisitor! were after. Far laalaarr, Henry K. Wilkins.- - manager of the beef department of the Cudahy Pack. Lucy. asked the teacher, ing company at Omaha, was question- the meaning of succinct?' ed on the subject of handling beef, but It means short, ma'am. he declined to discuss his testimony, A rabbit hns a succinct tnil." Chl'nlled States District Attorney Irving Baxter, of Omaha, arrived in Chicago icago Tribune. today and will assist in the InvestigaNo road ta too long to the man who tion. He has been otiW of the chief agents in preparing testimony and advances deliberately nnd without c many of the western witnesses were 7 lie baste. Bruyere. summoned by him. ! d n moss-gree- Excepting Only The Standard The bonafide paying subscribers of tha Morning Examiner in Weber Utah County exceeds that of any Daily or Weekly paper publiahed In (Excepting only the Standard). 1 He lirtiMl a hook and .slung it viciously into a far corner. It lav there When I find with the cover broken. out Who It t I'll shoot him for trespass. I suppose he hasn't bad the audacity to enter the house." He call In tlu maid. "ibis then- - bee.i a gentleman here cr asking for Indy in m rr ah-uc- 'Only the gentleman to ee Jlatlam." "O.i. there has hern a gentleman for M. dniit " "Ann be doesn't sk for you." "Of rourwe. I I new; a childhood ."1 Wll-llar- :i g.lTPRDAY UOUXIXO, i think it's a contract." IAsicii.1 Aloud. i devil fine looking "The A think?" "No. he' tun dark." be did. man. don't dark, t Aloud. I Ys. but Util, and " Ymt rou'.d pul him in a pint "So h. trp" "v he talked SAVAGE ENGLISH GRAND OPERA COMPANY IN LOWENGRIN. Monday Night. March 27th, Laka City. S at Balt Special train leaves Ogden at 1:45, Far $13)0 returning after theatre. for tba round trip. 6trast cars will run direct from the depot to the theatre, and will also meat train on arrival in Ogden. Reserved scats on aale at Rosa Book Store. THUMB PRINT IDENTIFICATION. 24. The Chicago Chicago. MHrch Bureau of Identification haa adopted the thumb print, method of Identifying criminals a an adjunct to tbe measurement system. Bertil-lo- n HANGED IN NEW ORLEANS. be talking of differeu New Orleans. Marob 21. Lewi name? did was hanged here today for the gi,. you hi him some-l.-.r- a No. Imi Madam called murder of Former Dixtrlrt Attorney J. Ward Gnrley in 19t'3. 'ike Jew hacker." .;rr-.,.n- : niui WIND IS CHEAP BUT MONEY CALLS ALL BLUPFS The Morning Examiner will give to the Ogden Crittenden Home for unfortunate girls the sum of 9100 for the proof that any daily, weekor monthly pxpar has a LARGER number of ACTUAL ly, in Weber County than BONAFIDE CABH PAYING SUBSCRIBERS Examiner. has tha Morning Who is the first to call this bluff? Shew up your subscription in on lists. The Examiner receives more telegraphic dispatch How week. night than does any other paper in Weber County in e it that for high? Why, it takes low, jack and the game, toe. 0 receives a car load of paper every 40 to The SUnderd-Examine- r a days; no other paper in Ogden receives a car load in year-Do No, we print nwePP,ri To do ie business. to tho Business on them and aell them people. business do bueiness with the newspapers that do business. but if Advertise in tha Standard for the best advertising medium, In advertise you don't want to do ell of the bueiness in sight, then The Examiner It takee in fell the Standard missel. wo burn theaa car loads of paper?. I |