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Show THE MOBXiyQ SALT LAKE EXAMINER: DEPARTMENT Of THE STANDARD-EXAMINE- WILL R Five. Ogden Graduate Taka Part Exarciaes. In h ON THE EXCHANGE. 100 at $2.05. UTAH COPPER MINE. c. : n 1300-foo- o $10-00- Agent ,, Cor.Grant 8 and 24th St. c tL 1 validity of the action of the administration In authorising and ing $1,000,000 of water and sewer nsIon bonds Is to be tested in the fu-- , ) supreme court in the near regardless of the injunction suit in In the district court by J. W. ston on behalf of the Real Estate ciation. te Issues have been Joined in a wherein Dr. George E. Eller bock gliter, or plaintiff, and Salt lake , Mayor H. P-- Morris and other officials are defendants, and the erne court has issued Its writ of porary Injunction, returnable June be ' 1 . Utah TO Tankeo Con. was the big feature on 'Change yesterday. There was nothing sensational in the trading. Yrfnkre held its own. while others slid. Mammoth sold 100 at $1.15. Uncle Sam Con. made one transfer at S7 amt Martha Washington sold 2.000 at at a cent. Yankee Con. sold close to 40 in small lots and waa In good demand at the closfli Ajax sold 1,000 at 16 on open board: May Day slid to 13, and New York was battered down to 54 Victor sold A. Chester Beatty has completed his Investigations in the Utah copper mine and will make his report to the Eastern interests on the basis of samples he hae taken. He left last night, after Chamber. a conference with. Manager Jackllng, Four-Yea- r Normal Myrtle Eve Gib- R. J. Bolles, Treasurer Spencer Penson, Evelyn I. Turned, Marion John- rose, end President C. M. McNeill, to son, Sarah Grace Wilson. report in person to the Gnggenheims. Upon this report will hingo the fate of several big deals. If it Is favorable WILL GET CHEAPER COAL. It will bring a great deal of capital to It li believed that as the result of Utah for investment and development the war between Harriman and Gould, work. Denver and Balt Lake and the tribuPAYMASTER MINE BOOMING. tary country will get cheaper coal. The Paymaster mine at West St. The Victor Fuel company and the Colorado Fuel and Iron company, and George is booming. A small furnace the Utah Fuel company will oppose was erected recently for experimental purposes. After blowing It in and runHarriman. Harriman Is buying coal lands In ning It continuously for three twelve-hou- r shifts, nine tons of rock were Utah and Colorado to compete with Gould. This, it is though t, will cer- reduced to 3,200 pounds of fins coptainly reduce the price of coaL Har- per bullion. riman Is said to have secured an opORE SHIPMENTS. tion on P. J. Quealys coal lands In Wyoming and the Victor Fuel comThe ore shipments reported yesterpany properties. day were as follows: Pioneer sampler, three cars from ELKS TO ENTERTAIN ANGELS. Bingham, one from Stockton, one from Nevada and one from Tlnlic. The Elks will entertain the Los Taylor and Brunton reported four Angeles delegation next Wednesday care from Nevada and six from Tin-tinight at the club rooms. The entertainment will be lavish but informal. NUGGETS. The club will keep open house during the entire atay of the delegation. The The Taylor-Bruntosampler revisitors will be admitted to all of the one car of ore from Mercur, privilege! of the club on their badges. ported At the Informal entertainment some two from Bingham, three from Neof the best local entertainers will ap- vada, five from Tlntlc and one from The Pioneer pear and a royal good time la assured. Deep Creektwoyesterday. cars from Alta, two A committee of one hundred energetic reported hustlers has been appointed to pre- from Tlntlc and two from Bingham. pare this entertainment and to care Manager John Deni of the Lower for the comfort of the guests. Mammoth has decided to drop the lev 6 shaft 100 feet from the 1400-fo"EEL" HELD FOR BURGLARY. as quickly na the retimbering from t level can be completed. the gun Grice, known to the police as In the answer "the eel," ws held to M. Johnson has returned from District court yesterday by Judge hisM.eastern trip and will immediately Diehl in (500 bonds, on a burglary take up the work of developing the charge. properties, recently; Grice was arrested s' few days ago North Bingham Mr. New house. 00 a charge of having broken into a acquired by fruit storo and saloon, where a large Samples of ore brought In from the quantity of cigarettes and plug chewCarrie Mack property shows values of ing tobacco was stolen. At his preliminary hearing it was as high aa $130 per ton. and an active shown that the store and the saloon campaign la contemplated at the mine had been broken Into and the tobao-c- aa a result stolen. The owner of the tobao-cIdentified It, and the bartender In . W. B. Richards has returned from a saloon told that Grice had left the the Clifton region of the Deep Creek tobacco and cigarettes there for a section and reports increased activity few minutes while he went, as he In the diggings since the construction said, to breakfast Grice was are of the new railroad ha been assured. rested when he returned to the saloon where he had attempted to sell Articles of Incorporation have been the goods. filed by the Mountain View Mining and Milling company, with a capitalisation of $150,000, In shares of $1 NO INQUEST OVER CRAIG. each. Timothy D. Sullivan, Patrick ' Coroner Smith has decided that no Shea and James T. Drlacol of Eureka Inquest will be held over the body of and Fred T. McGurrin and Patrick William Craig who committed suicide Ryan of this city are the Incorporators. Thursday by taking carbolic add. W. H. Tibbals made the final payCraig was weak , mentally and went to a lonely spot In Emigration canyon ment on the Nighthawk group, located was a He himself. where he killed near Bullfrog, for Cincinnati parties, brother of James R. Craig and John Thursday, which Involved about A. Craig. and the first payment for the Ohio Girl mine at Goldfield has been reTEMPORARY WRIT SERVED. ceived from New York. RUNABOUT Superintendent Frank P. Swindler La Mar propof the Bamberger-D- e erties says that tbe Installing of the 600-to- n tailings plant Is progressing very satisfactorily. A dividend of 1 rent a share, or $5,000, waa declared. late Thursday afternoon by the Uncle Bam Consolidated Mining company. This Is the eighth dividend declared by the company. The working force of the mine Is to be largely Increased in the near future. At S oclock this afternoon tbe directors of the Star Con. will levy an la said that, If necessary. In ore assessment of probably 3 cents a first assessment to prevent long drawn out litlgur share. Thison Is thestock. , The money this in the district court, the supreme ever levied will be used may be asked to issued a writ raised by the assessment tinhibition directed to Houston and for exploratory work. attorney against proceeding withe r suit until such time as the MBS. B.H.TBDEX DEAD court has passed on the points Dr. Ellerbeck. ed in the suit of Mrs. B. H. Truer, of this city, died irder to do this, it la said. It will unly necessary to allege that the at 3:45 o'clock yesterday afternoon, at d e state of facts is about to be the family residence, 509 Third street1 Into in both cases. The immediate cause of death was tuberculosis. The deceased came to Utah with her BALT LAKE NOTES. ' husband lesa than a year ago from Colorado, with the hope that she Bullock who was . recuperate her health, but her might of being a on charge rsday night was such that she never condition He $5 yesterday. ik, wan fined and shout two weeks strength gained arrested. $102.15 when ago she was compelled to take to her bed. She is survived by her husband, he Commercial club 1 taking on three children and also several brothThe club rooms are ers t appearance. and sisters and her parents. The the for ig beautifully decorated time and place of funeral will be anLos Angeles of the visit lng nounced later. flags are being used. Bego lilies and Call-I- n In COOD BCADS DELEGATES poppies are to be mingled Robert used lavishly. end. athes, "ampbell has tendered free transO. B. Gilson, president of the Weber ition on all street cars for the Club,, has made the following appointhere. their stay ton during ment! ns delegates to the National Roads convention, which conreal estate men's outing will he Good venes at Portland: A. L. Brewer, V. Si will 28th. It June en Ws year in Saltair. The record attendance H. Williams. and O. J. Stllwell. will be Judge Thomas D. Dee, as president L848 of last year. It is aid if the Weber County Good Roads of romUtre The ten this year. also made the following apIs made up of B. E. ncWneuta A. P. BigeA. C. Sadler, pointments ss delegates: ling. E. F. Hubbard. low. Judge E. B. Kirk, and Mrs. E. J. re Colburn, A. Rlcbter and O. F. Stilwell. These appoinllnenta were made only new Utah after the appointees had agreed to it Morris signed the attend the convention. A Railway franchise yesterday positively Whitewash was dealt out In grand style at the Association alleys last evening, when the Z. C. M. I. chant- down to defeat at the Sloni went of The Toggery team and the Kushmer Optical team were s by the crack aggregation. Three to nothing was the score In each case. As usual the best games of the week were those that wound up the week's play, although the result in the former game was a great surprise. The Toggery boys started in to win from tbe Jump, but all three gamea were close, especially the second, in which two pins decided the winner. Therst was won by 43a margin of 16 nd the last by points. The pin teau-- 'j of the evening was easily tbe all around playing of Lund and his split was of the hair raising kind. It took this young man to land both high total honors by rolling out 625 in the three games played for an average of 175. Next to Lund came the work of Fleshner who was In his usual good form and scored 209 in the second for the high single game Individual honor and a total of 623 for second place on the total list The only other player to pass the 500 mark was T re seder of the Champions, who rolled out a total of 502, AU la all it wai one of the beet games seen this season In which the team that did the best all around work won out. l'hf score follows: vati-quieh- Shupe-Willlam- 3 Z. C. M. I. Carlson Drlggs Kalsted ...176 121 144 149 180 176 157 145 158466 164602 128479 188411 138427 .i.767 807 711 2285 148 162468 .....169 Flygare 168 .... Totals Toggery. 158 M. FretweU Brown Van Dreck Lund Fleshner .....169 165 169 M.149 .... . .... ,...800 .... 437 144 183 209 18544 828 173526 165523 JT v 17 771 2397 51 17 ....783 809 754 2346 Totals Handicap Totals 142' 136 J . mmmmmam Just to the Candy-make- rs adopted the tactics of the Toggery and delivered a coat of whitewash ofxtbe same variety to the Opticians. . A coincidence was found In the fad that the Opticians scored the same grand total aa the piercantilo boys and both went down to the ume sort of a defeat. The first game was a dose one being won by 7 pins by the In tbe second they took a big Jump to the good and came out with a socra of 833 against 793 made by thrir opponents In the third the Candy men continued to Improve, but tho pace was too hot for the Rnshmerite and while the bnys scored 840 the best the Ops could do wee 751. Heu on the defeated wee high man on the total list with 616 and Camp who landed the single game Individual honors with 205 wss also second on the total list with 50. These two players were the only two to get by the 500 mark, but tlie other members s team rolled la of the the 480 class and it was this that told tho final story. 8. Wherry was the man who made the weakest showing and was the only one to remain below the 400 mark, something that Is getting to be quite rare In the Commercial league these days The score follows: Rushmer Optical Co, ....... .. 174 174 168516 Hess. 153 131394 S. Wherry Ill 157 145 127429 C. Wherry 148 155 155 468 Kansler 146 162 165473 Rushmer. . Candy-maker- s. B-- Candy-maker- 736 Totals Added 5 788 5 746 2270 5 15 totals.... 741 793 751 2285 157 2DS 166 159 180 163485 156488 174486 149480 average.... Grand Shupe-Wlltiam- Camp. .. P. Herrick Shanks. . Baker. .. Wilkins. s. ........ 147 157 ........ 167 . ..132 Bflf 152 179 755 7 840 7 847 2442 7 21 totals.... 78 832 840 2421 au-n- Send for Catalogue . a J1ed boost-Amerlc- Paciflc ibolntlr pun.lt you t.Thejr 1 Uriah tc -- FR1ZZ1NI BROS 00 l Twenty-fift- UNOAY , haw Street- h - EXCURSION. " 11th. f?0,,,p ""rad trip Tim O' Totals Tandlcap Grand in-e- : 3 1905, Champions Ga Down to Defoat in Splto of Rolling a Good Game. ' STANDARD 10. SHUTOUT SALT LAKE MIKINC HEWS. The annual commencement exec the Unlveraiiy of Utah wen held laat night in the 8alb Lake theater. Theta exercises marked the don of the thirty-fiftand the beginning of the thlrty-eixtyear of the institution. Betides a large army of graduates, then' were present the relatives and friends of the successful students, filling the vast auditorium and occupying all the available space on the stage. The balcony railings, boxes and sides of the stage wen tastefully draped with flags and hunting. large proportion of the graduates wen young women, end they won the regulation graduation while costume, except those who wen to receive the These degree of bachelor of arts. wen attlnd in black gowns and mortarboards. The following graduates wen from Ogden: Mining Engineering Alma Holyroyd JFXE ARE afternoon. The company has sixty WHITEWASH IS DEALT OUT days in which to accept ihe franchise. GOOD TEAMS. Clare of MORNING, AND EYEMEN From Our Special Correspondent U. OP U. COMMENCEMENT. UTAn, BATPBDAY OGDEN. THBEE MEN NE1D DP HOBO CAHG Watches and Money Are Taken Highwayman Are Still at Largs. Wesslcr Cigar Co OPERATIONS OF A BIG BANANA MONOPOLY. "One of the big monopolies which has escaped newspaper and official no- - t 375 23rd Street, Ogden, Utah tire thus far Is the banana trust," remarked a local fruit dealer the other day. "It I, however, one of the most grasping in existence, ha added. Its headquarters are at New Orleans. It has a capitalisation of $25,000,000 and poorsaes a king list of fine swift steam ships, which run between West Indian ports and New Orleans, New York and English porta. It seems Incredible, hut It Is nevertheless a fact, that Its proflt4 last year amounted to $20,000,000. It controls the bsnsna market throughout the United States and England. in this In every distributing center country it has a resident agent, to whom it dictates by telegraph every Monday morning tho market quotation for tha week, it has successfully stilled competition everywhere by systematic discrimination. For example, If a rival company Is orgsnlxed and ships a carload of bananas to San Francisco, It sends two or Hires carloads after It Immediately to the same destination, and It Instructs Its agent here to cut the rate below coal, which compels the rival to sell at a loa. The same thing la done wherever a rival ships. It meets. Hawaiian competition the same way. That policy soon drives unless ths competitor out of posMitscd of unlimited capital, when the trust finds It cheaper to buy out ths rival at the Utter's own price. Tfce trust works on the principle that it can afford to suffer a big loss In 10 per cent of tbe trade If a can retain the monopoly of the remaining 90 per cent. West Indian and Honduras bananas delivered la New Orleans do not cost ths trust more than 25 cents per bunch. The rata In San Francisco and other American cities Is from The freight to $2.50 to $3 to dealers. this city does not exceed $300 per carload, on which the trust gel a 25 per ccn rebate. Any competitor 1 however, charged the full rate. Moreover, tho shipment of the trust Is rushed through, so ss to overtake that of tha rival on tha way, or reach Its destination simultaneously. The trust has systematized tbe business so that a confidential employe In the service of a rival starting in tha business is paid a higher monthly wage than he. gels from his legitimate employer, to notify it surreptitiously of every shipment mude. A mesage to the effect that We ship a carload today for San Francisco results in the prompt dispatch by the truat of a sufficient number of carloads to follow it to swamp the market and cut prices below cost and thus nip competition In the bad. The marvel of it all is that this banana monopoly has grown out of nothing, for the men who control It hadn't a dollar when they organised IL" MAKING ESTIMATES ON PRODUCTION. SUGAR and Three men held up a gang of hoboes at the Short Line water tank about 10 o'clock last evening, and at tbe point of a gun demanded their valuable. It Is supposed that were some of their own the hold-up- s kind who had the knowledge that some of them had watches and money on th'jir perrons. Some cash and several watches were taken by the highwaymen, after which tbe crowd was told to "hit the train," which they did and reported the matter to the police. Officers were dispatched to the scene end several suspects were arrested but no definite clue as to the miscreants was secured. ,6 Independent Phone 619, For Quick Delhrery Statistics relating to the world's sugar production, printed in tbe May 5 Issue of Sugar Gazette, have caused considerable comment in sugar circles, of a also some criticisms, mostly friendly nature. It was stated at the outset of the article In question that the figures given were taken from the LonlKiana Sugar Report, edited by Alcee Bouchereau. Of the various communications one, by Mr. Edward C. Post, M. E, of Dundee, Mich., Is very much to the point. Mr. Post, In footing up the 1902-0crop, finds that the total Is 6.407.226 tons and not 9,099,226, a small difference of 2,692,000 tons, sn-he argues: "Evidently tbe man who computed the table for the Louisiana Sugar Report has a bit too much cane sugar' on bia mind. Mr. Pot also compares the figures of the report just named and those of Willett A Gray, and he finds discrepancies of a minus of 2,552,024 tons for 1904-05- ; a minus of 2,297,517 tons for 3 a minus of 4,980,699 Iona for and a plus of 290,799 tons la favor of the New York report.- A verification of lha figures shows that Mr. Puai la certainly correct, but it should he said in all charity to compilers for publications In tha sugar Interest that 11 estimates of. this character are of necessity guess work, la part, at least Nobody hut the editor of a sugar Journal can possibly know the difflnul-tle- s which beset the compiler of such statistics. The most urgent requests to sugar men throughout the country for Information frequently are either flatly refused or anewered In a manner which, on the face of the reply, is far from authentic. It might 1e said that under such circumstance it might be better to omit estimates altogether, but here again wit! coma the very returns and critics of "unreliable" clamor for "something on the situation. This "something Is then gathered at an amount of work and patience on the part of the editor which a place la heaven, ought to pre-emno matter what hla eondact otherwise may have been. Seriously spanking, the estimates in question are the bat 1903-04- ; 19024)3, - BATTLING NELSON MAKES GOOD. New Tork, May 26. For the first time Eastern fight followers hare had a chance to aim up Battling Nelson, g the little Dane, and hs has mads a good Impression. A line on the descendant of the Vikings In action will be possible Monday, when Na goes six rounds with Willie Lewis, ll Is hard to also up a d man aorurately in a bout, but Lewis Is a hard nut for any man of his weight, and If tha Dane makes a good showing with him he will carry a good wad of Eastern money when he fights Britt next month. He takes on two other men before he goes hack to the coast to get ready for Britt. That other British fighter, Jahes White, has also won golden opinions while here. He Is now on his way Imme. Tbe manner in' which he took hia defeat by Britt has convinced New York sports that ha la a thoroughbred, lie remarked before he Bailed: "I lost to Britt fair and square, .but still tblnk I can beat him. To prove It I Intend to return ' to America next September and, after a few months In San Francisco, will fight the winner n of the fight I hops that Britt will win, as I want to show that hard-hittin- Britt-Nclso- what I say about being able to beak him la true. I have bees treated excellently. In America by everyone with whom I came la Contact." GueRuhlla wants to hoolc up with Marvin Hart Inasmuch aa both claim to have got the heat of their- last ran In, there seems to bo.jio reason why a match should not ha made. Thera may be truth in the' declaration by Jim Jaffrlea that he Is out of the fighting - game .for good, for the very excellent reason that there la nobody for him to fight. If any good men should develop within the west year nr ao, it 1 dollsra to doughnuts that tha big fallow could be induced to come out of hie hole just once more. Jeff, In announcing hla retirement, doclares, with Bokxnan, that "All la vanity and vexation" la a port, that ha baa gotten no happiness out of the, champlonshlp-o- nly money. There are those who consider a sufficiency of the long green aa a very good substitute for happiness, but Jeff evidently looks for something higher than mere mszuma. Maybe this Is the effect of his art. It Is noticeable that, while Mrs. James Jrftrles has Induced her husband to retire from tha ring; Mrs. Willie Fitzgerald Is Maiming her husband to train for a fight. George Hackenachmidt win not In the wrestling ring In America gain until he returns to this country at some future date. His illness has mada It necessary for him to cancel all engagements. The physicians say that tiui illness Is not so serious M wss at first thought, and that there is little danger of typhoid. Tha trouble n la a system that needs a long rest. Alex Swanson is still the welterweight champion of the wrestlers. Jake Schmidt, a local wrestler, tried to win ths laurels Monday night but it require mined n few seconds over twenty-onutes for Swanson to show Schmidt that he wss wrong la hla calculations. - ap-pe- ar run-dow- - e THE OLD NEGRO'S CHOICE. "Thera Is an old negro down in ray town, said John Sharp Williams, the Democratic leader of the House, "who did me a service. I wanted to reward Uncle, which shall I him. so I said: give yon a ton of coal or a bottle of whisky? Foh de Lawd, Masse John,' hs reI burn plied, vou all ahorely knows ' wood.' Washington Poet. Ogden Livery & Boarding Stables j FINEST TURNOUTS BOARDING OF IN THE CITY A HORSES - SPECIALTY - Telephones Bell, 611 K. BLACKHAM & TAYLOR, I I V Ind. 715. Proprietors Prompt and First Gass Livery Service at Reasonable Prices. 239 STREET TWENTY-FIFT- H JUST ONE AND ONE-HAL- F BLOCKS OGDEN UTAH FROM UNION DEPOT. ' |