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Show vflE MORNING EXAMINEE: OGDEN. UTAH. THURSDAY T If compared with Russia, alone. It must be admitted that the spiritual strength of the Japanese has proven vastly superior. This fact has made a deep impression on the Chinese and Hindus, as we know from the exultant tone of their comments on the result, and even upon the.. Filipinos It has not been lost. The recent collapse of the Federal party In Luzon and the present wave of sentiment tor that is sweeping over the less barbarous portions of the Archipelago may he attributed very largely to renewed confidence in the belief that Oriental peoples manage their own affairs successfully, an outgrowth of the Japanese success. That this will have a reflex effect missionary work In upon Christian China, Japan and India can not well be doubted. .This effort through the centuries has been slow enough and uncertain enough in results to have discouraged less consecrated enthusiasts than the missionaries have been, It la not unlikely that for some the work of obtaining years to converts will prove ever slower and more uncertain. THE EXAMINER Published Every Day In the Vear by The Standard Publishing Caw ROMANCE AND TRAGEDY OF ENOCH ARDEN'S LOVE REPEATED IN REAL LIFE RATES. l n one-thir- ........... d one-thir- ........... two-third- ........... eye-tetn- - . STATE NEWS unteered with s California regiment and found his sons on the battlefield. First Husband Returns. The senior Sterling immediately secured a furlough and started for Indiana to reclaim his wife. He found her at Milton, the wife of another. His was a strange story of perfidy and falsehood. Meeting with disappointment in tbe gold fields. Sterling told Mrs. Cahoun. and being unable to find the gold be had longed for, he bad despaired of returning to his family and again assuming tbe responsibilities of caring for his children. Aa chance would have it, a fellow miner waa just at that time about to start back to ilia home in Kentucky. Between the two gold seekers it was planned to deceive Mrs. Sterling Into believing that her husband was dead. For a stipulated sum, the returning miner promised to visit Mrs,. Sterling and apprise her of her widowhood. The watch and Bible and lock of hair were sent to corroborate the story. Sterling begged his wife to leave Calhoun and return to him. But this she refused to da On the contrary, she secured a divorce from Sterling and then remained Calhoun In ordei to make her marriage to him legal. Sterling went back to the war and at Its close he returned with his hoys Charles and Cyrus to Milton. Strangely enough he waa a frequent visitor at the Calhoun home. Hla wife freely forgave him for the treachery he had practiced and enjoyed entertaining him at her new home. Later he and or.r of hi saona returned to the old home In Eminence, Ky., and engaged in the tailoring business. which he had given up. he thought, forever, when he struck out for the California gold fields. He and the son married sisters in the Kentucky town. John Calhoun died in 1882, leaving considerable property. Seven years later hla widow married Squire Joseph Weaver of Dlllahoro. He had. some property and an even dosen of children. The Squires family did not take kindly to the new member of the household and when the Squire died some three years after his marriage to Mrs. Calhoun they claimed the right, to bury him on their lot. For the fourteen or fifteen years prior to her death, Mrs. Weaver lived quietly alone. She waa liked by everyone in thv neighborhood and was known as "Mother" Weaver for miles around. When she died general sorrow waa felt by all save the children of her former husbanda. Then it waa that the quarrel waa precipitated. The Weaver children forbade the Sterlings the privilege of burying the old woman at Squire Weavers aide, and the Calhouns not to be outdone in paternal loyally, ordered the sexton to allow no grave to he dug on their lot Therefore, the old woman lies buried alone on the grassy bank in the Oakdale cemetery. The property left by Mrs. Weaver was claimed hy the Sterlings, the Calhouns and the Weavers. Each faction has had a different, administrator appointed and the trouble promises to find its way Into the courta. - n s brk. old-tim- e - rough-lookin- g grief-stricke- TRADE AND INDUSTRIES OF MOROCCO. In the Review of Reviews IL I N. Johnston writi-that the empire of Morocco possesses a soil which for the variety of its products ia, perhaps, without a rival. On the great plaint and undulating champaigns of 81i&wja, Abda and Duka la oue may travel for days through unhedged fields of wheat, barley, beans and maize. Hemp and coriander seed, and nearly all the fruits and flowera of the Mediterranean littoral flourish In profusion. From the Atlas spurs and the province of Soos one port alone hat Shipped $1,000,000 worth of almonds in a year. The same port, Mogador, sends annually $600,-00worth of morocco leather, in the shape of goatskins, to London and Hamburg, the bulk of which U transhipped to the United States of America. In a year of normal fertility this same port furnishes $500,0110 worth of olive oil, a total which a really good" year doubles and trebles. In the same list of exports we find precious gums of the Soudan to the value of J.'iOO.OOO, the resin of the arar now acre else tree, ssndarao-gro- wn but In Morocco eggs (mainly for London), ostrich feathers, argan oil, garlauizos and a host of minor Items, ail of which point to a productive power far exceeding that of any of the oountrlea on the southern shore of the Mediterranean aea. Yet the total trade of Morocco, approaching $20,000,0011 annually, gives no idea of what it will be tinder other condiMoorish tions. Tho agriculturist guide a plow which might have been used in the days of Abraham. Mach iner;.. outside the treaty porta, la ahaoltiiely unknown. The unmuzzled bullock. Is still the only means of threshing corn. Anything like a aisle or other encouragement to plant, tree and breed fine faille ia undreamed of. Taxes blight (lie country. Add lo these the total a1cnre of canal, of roads fit for wheeled traffic, of rlvera navigable (though to make them ao would be a simple task), and of any general system of irrtgniion. We see the amazing spectacle of) a government taxing its own exporta, $20 a ton on oil, nearly (2 a quarter on maizn and lieanx, and treating most: nr tbe other kindly fmitB of the earth In like fashion. s UNITARIANS CONFER. . . he-lic- seif-sacrifl- 1905.. 29, DIES FROM INJURIES. Through the perfidy of man there has been enacted in southern Indiana a real Enoch Arden romance, embodyDelivered by Carrier la ing all the pathos, the suffering of Ogden City, Including heart snd anguish of TennySunday Morning Exson's love poem. The story with all fleii aminer, per month.. its tragedy and sunshine was revealed Beta. Single copiee at the death of Mrs. Caroline Weaver of Milton, Ind., or "Mother Weaver, as BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. she was affectionately known and called throughout tbe rouniry side. The Examiner is cent by Mrs. Weaver now lies burled on a mail outside of Ogden, little grassy slope In Oakdale remetery $8.09 per year No other grave dots st Dillsbnro. At least quarterly. In ad- the bank of green. Tragic fare decreed 180 VUC lltllliSIMIMM that 'Mother" Weaver, trice legally married and wedded once unlawfully, AND INDEPENDFEARLESS should lie buried alone, far removed ENT. from those whom she loved and one time called her own. The Examiner la a strictly InThe death of the old woman, whozs It gives newspaper. dependent life story rends like a romance gleaned all sides an equal show. from ths pages of fiction, has precipThe Examiner has no favoritated a trifamily quarrel among the to enemies no punish. ites, and relatives of her husbands. Desire to unbiased news the will t It give posses the meager estate which I aid unprejudiced. Mother" Weaver left behind her has Communications will be realienated affect lous, destroyed bonds ceived on all subjects presented of friendship and created enmity where la respectful language from love one time existed. known individuals, but the true THE CITIZENS WATER CO. Mourned a Living Husband. name must be published in full. Like the wife of Enoch Arden, Mrs. All letters and communications M'e regret to see the city council Weaver mourned a living husband as signed by aom de plumes, or f hesitate In granting the water fran- dead and then married another, only to assumed names, will be thrown chise to the new company. The new find that she had been betrayed into In the waste basket. The brave that death had made her a man never hides behind an ascompany, through Councilman David- believing widow. But unlike the faithful wifv Don't ask the sumed name. to reduce the pres- of has son, promised the love poem, she was not spared Editor to be responsible for one-thirThis the grief of learning that perfidy had ent water rates over what you are ashamed of. Is such a big reduction that no clti-se- robbed her of her husband, hut wav would hesitate to approve a fran- forced to endure the shame and anguish Subscribers will confer a and favor by Informing this office of chise for such n good thing and there tic heartburn which rame with domesexposure. failure to receive The Examiner is no reason why the city council But to understand the romantic life before their breakfast. should. story of the motherly old woman, ? The new company would kill the old whose death has produced a family EXAMINER TELEPHONES which promises to assume ths company the first year, because a re- quarrel almost of a fued. It la necEDITORIAL ROOMS of the present proportions duction of essary to revert to yeara long ago 81 No. Phene.... Independent rates would at least reduce the re- passed by. No. 88 Bell Phene. Back In the early 3ns a wedding waa d ceipt of the present company BUSINESS OFFICE solemnized in Eminence, Ky., which busi120 of No. force them out and would that Independent Phone.... made man and wife Mias Caroline No. 68 Bell Phone. a l ness at they require more than Johnson, the belle of the village, snd WM. GLA8MANN to Abraham Sterling, Ita handsomest and whole of the present receipts 120 Independent Phene.... No. pay Interest on bonds, taxes and other most dashing youth. Sterling was IS No. 120 Bell Phone. years old and hla bride waa two yeara a fixed charges. No. 120 of both telephone hla Junior. cleaed after 8 p.m. The new pompany will be a splendid For a number of yeara happiness Investment If the plana of Ita pro- marked their little household, and before eltV-- husband or wife had passed moter can hold water. out of their twenties six small children . three boys and three glria had coma .YOUTH AND WORK. BEN RICH ON ICE. to bring sunshine to tho home. Sterling was a tailor and made a comfortable reWe reproduce the following President Roosevelt does not always for hla rapidly enlarging family. living Hon. to Ben E. marks mode Rich, by advance new ideas In his public But In the course of time, reverses of the which editor Frank Cannon, Is aura were encountered. Business dropped off speeches, but what he does say and it was with difficulty that money to be expressed in a way so plain and Tribune, objects: "If the Mormons should retire to waa secured to feed the little hungry forcible that his words command ab-mouths. Being of a changeable temtentkm where another speaker ad-- 1 the Arctic ocean ( mean shouR remove to the Arctic regions and perament, Sterling began to ahow signs they might camp upon a big cake of le no of depression. vsneing the same sentiment His responsibilities at make little Impression. In a little talk sooner would they begin to get It times seemed more than he waa able made from the end of a train at North warm than some of these damned to bear. The burden of providing for lighting the hla large family continued more and Adams,' Mass., the other day, ha took scoundrels who art He became come along and want more to weigh him down. church would occasion to rebuke the tendency of tha ice. downcast, disheartened, afraid. . many parents to allow their children Leaves for Gold Fields. Yes, Ben, you are right Only to grow up In Idleness. He quoted the Just about this time gold was disCannon though would endeavor covered In California. Rumors of untold common saying: "I have had to work font to shove the other fellow off the cake wealth, which could be had for the hard all my life and my children ahall of Ice la order to gain an eminence mere trouble of picking It up reached' have an easier time," and using it as the Hit1 Kentucky town. Sterling took a text preached a very effective ser- where he could pose. the fever. He would go West and return in a year or two a rich man. Then mon on the folly of such a course. HI8 OWN. BU8INE8B. . MINDING he could care for hla family and the ' It was a timely sermon, too, for the trouble! of life would be over forever leisure class, so far as It is composed - Wallace Cummings used to drive the with Mrs. Sterling remonstrated ran BriJg-towhich between old stage of young people. Is growing rapidly. him, beginning that he remain and conOne Portland. Wallace and day at hla trade. She feared disapGirls who toil not nor spin and who had out of Portland a tinue as a and sho could not bear to pointment have been allowed to grow up with- young citypassenger or dude, as Wallace chap of her husband going so far away out learning to do any useful thing) called him. The scenery along the think from home to a strange land and are very numerous, but hardly more so stage route waa both beautiful and di- among people. But Sterling was obinIn these days than hoys of the same versified; the young man waa much durate, and one flue morning when all terested .and as he sat on tlie box, or nature around the little Kentucky home class. drift about their and take They ( post of honor, beside Wallace literally seemed to be In tune, be bade hit wifo pleasure; they have a "good time. plied, him with questions aa to what and little orn-- an affectionate goodEventually the young man will engage mountain that was and what river thin bye and started on hla long Journey. wrote to hla wife For a time in some sort of business that seems was, eta The old driver, who detested this with marked Sterling regularity. He aent her to Involve the smallest degree of ex- sort of interrogation, stood It as long accounts of the new country ertion;- bat heesuee they have not aa he could. Finally he blurted out: glowing and promised to return Just as soon if mind you'll your as he could get a fortune together. He 'formed the habit of doing with nil "Say, stranger, 111 mind mine. aent hla love to the children and told 'their might what they have to do, be- business Thus snubbed, the young man re- in passages blotted with tears that cause tiny have been taught to regard Into silence. lapsed after hla return he would never again ( work as thing to be avoided, they are They had driven about tea miles separte himself from his family. likely to fan la their undertakings further when they came to a long hill, Then hla letter! commenced to fall where the driver was obliged to apply off. The Intervals between them grew and eventually to flud life a burden. As he ehoved his foot tothe longer and longer. It waa easy, too, to Aa for the girls, they will marry, ward 11 he immediately noticed that notice a change In the tenor of the and though the most of them will tho mail bag. which alwsys lay there, The writer ceased to apeak epistles. marry poor men they will be unfitted was gone. Evblently It had dropped off of returning. He told of disappointfor their duties and besides being a along the rosJ. ments and danger, of hard luck and Wallace his horses; stopped then, hard work. affection The drag on their husbanda will be them-- , breaking tbe long silence, he said: the letters, when they selves unhappy and discontented with- "Say, stranger, did you sea that mail waa lacking and caused more of grief were received, out realizing the cause. A goodly bag slide off? than happiness In the little Kentucky ten I some miles did; "Yes, back, household. Finally, the letters ceased centage of divorces Is undoubtedly due remarked the young man. and the young to come to the fact that so many young wives calmly in thunder Well, why didnt you mother wasaltogether, forced to reconcile herself have no habits of industry, and carry tell me? gasped tha astonished with the thought that her children, at a tense of injury If any serious lahora driver. rate, were left to bless her. dude looked him squarely in any and responsibilities devolve Some time afterward a strange man upon theThe for a moment, and then he appeared at the Sterling cotage. He eye them. It la pleasant, of course, to see drawled. Imitating Wallace's 'tone: aid he waa a miner, that he had young people enjoy themselves, and "Say. driver, you mind your business known Abraham Sterling In the Calisince youth cornea but once it la easy and 111 mind mine. fornia gold fields. The rest of the Journey wns driven to understand why parents may wish "I come to tell you," he said in his in cold silence. Boston Herald. to see their children make the most of brusque way," ihnt your husband Is no more. He died many months ago. Ilia It; but. after all, the best even of SUFFOCATED TO DEATH. last request waa that 1 break the new fa not in all lte A youth pleasures. to you and give you these tokens. Willi these words, the goodly share of it is in work and the Women at the Fair Left Gas Jet Burn-instranger produced Sterling's watch, accomplishment of nseful things, and his pocket book, a lock of hair and a the children who are left in Idleness Portland. Ore., June 28. The bodies Bible which Mrs. Sterling had given are often themselves the ones in later of Mrs. R. F. Meyers and Mrs. William her husband the morning lie left bis Jones, who came to this city to visit Kentucky home. Mrs. Sterling was yeara to regret with bitterness the hut she rejoiced in her indulgence of their parents. In the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exfrom Jefferson, Oregon, were sorrow to know that her liueban.d position to of tradition the the npite contrary, found dead in their apartmentn at 250 after all, had not forsaken and forgotAdam was blessed Instead of cursed Eleventh street today, ft Is supposed ten her. when he was turned out of the garden that the women retired for the nglht, For several years thereafter Mrs. leaving a small jet of gas burning and Sterling remulnpd Li Kentucky, then and made to work. that a rush of air extinguished the she moved to Indisna, locating at Milflame, releasing the deadly gat which ton, a 111 tic village four niiies south MISSIONS IN JAPAN. suffocated them. of DllLhoro. Tuere her boys grew to manhood, and from there two of One of the moat Interesting quesTO STUDY SPAWNING. her sons Cyrus snd L'hsrlcs entions growing out the war In the listed with an Indiana regiment when Stanford University, Cal., June 27. the Civil war broke out. Fast is the effect It is likely to have Jamas Burrham, a graduate student With her hoy nway to the war and on missionary work In Japan, China of Stanford, left the university inday her husband mutinied as dead for more and India. It Is n trifle early to judge en mute for southeastern Alaska, than a decade, Mrs. Sieiling became the United die wifn of John Cslhoun, s widower this, but every Indication at present where he ia to assist States fish commission In the estab- with two children. seemed then goes to show that the natives through- lishment of salmon to her thnt her da.va of ' trial and out the Orient are quick to seise upon hatchery on athe government shore of Yes hav. tribulations were over. But it wa the Japanese victory as a vindication Bttrcham will also carry on a scien- not o. Fete continued to persecute of Oriental superiority in mentality tific investigation of the spawning her In s strange way, a will he seen and In all things spiritual. From the grounds snd the natural environment hy an incident which occurred on the the species ot salmon found in the oatilefluM. where the Sterling hoys Oriental viewpoint, Japan has demon- of waters of southeastern Alaska. were fighting for their country. strated the power of the East to borOne dHy diaries Sterling was arHAY In a row from the West IMPOVED. very few years rested in camp ly a soldier who ariccd then th whole fund of Occidental knowlname, Sterling his Newbury. N. H.. June 28. From the where he lived and hi age. and finally edge of material, science and easily bedside of Secretary of State Hav. at what his mother's name was. win in the supreme test of war. his summer home, The Fells, it was When S'eillng answerel At the bottom of the Oriental announced today that the secretary C aliolinc, young the man exclaimed heart is a supreme contempt for the passed a very comfortable night. Ho much stronger this after"Why, yontigeler. I'm your daddy." newer, and cruder, more material appeared noon and waa in excellent spirits. The hoy Sterling was 'loath to civilisation of the West. ' The Budthe stranger and summoned his dhistic philosophy of DISTURBED RUSSIA. brother Cyrus. Thou the three sat in India becomes and down and conferred. The man related Vuzovka. Russia. June 28. The hits of family history which none but In Japan a spirit of for workmen in the Karpoff mine have the senior Sterling could know. His patriotism that has started the world. gone out on a strike. Identity was established, lie had vol SUBSCRIPTION JUNE MORNING, l'orlland. Ore., June 28. Thetwen-ti-flis- t annual i'aeific Coast confer-cur- e of the UniiHrinn rhurrh met In a two days' session. Ilinlaiid today Irominenl Unliariana' from 'California, I'lah. Idaho, Montana, Washington and Oregon are jn attendance. A brief this afternoon at sesion was which a. lionima'lng committee waa apiminted. co, :iiinB of R. ('., Ship-pe;- i of Seattle. Mrs. C. H. of Portland, and Rev. C. C. Smoot of San Francisco. This committee will tomorrow. Reports were received from all the rhurrh ?a on the rrifle roast, showing the good work of the rhiire!1. The session was with devotional exercises. There wa r afternoon ssion. the time of th- delegates being spent at the c.xeisiilon. lr l re-po-it d - Pari-- . June 28. The committee of the French Automobile club baa decided that Franca will nut participate In the rn.e In lPnfi for the James Gordon Bennett International motor no mat'rr what the result of cup, this year's conical may be. Vernal, June 24. Warren Johnson, aged 35, the oldest son of Mr. and Mra. Lycurgua Johnaon, died yesterreday from the effects of injuries ceived by a horse falling upon him last Tuesday. Ths accident occurred in Vernal, near the Colhurp residence, on the east side of town, while Johnson was attempting to stop a horse that had broken loose from a hitching post In town. When near the Colharp residence he leaned far over in hit saddle to grasp the bridle of the runaway home, when his own animal headlong, throwing suddenly fell Johnson violently to the ground, the The on over him. horse passing young man's father, Lycurgua Johndirection son, was driving In the where tho accident occurred in a buggy, and saw the whole affair. He rushed to the scene, to find hla son lying face downward and apparently dead, lie hurried to a near-b- y ditch and filled hla hat with water, with which he bathed tha unconscious hoy a fare. This seemed to revive him somewhat, and ha began to breathe faintly. By this time Dr. Fraser, who was nearby when the accident occurred, was at hand. The injured man was taken to the Johnson home, where everything that could ha devised waa done to e him to consciousness, but without avail, and he died, aa stated, after lying in an unconscious slate for over forty hours. C. B. Linnen, an inspector from the general land office at Washington, is now in Vernal for tbe purpose of deciding upon a location for the new land office. He ia to meet with the .county commissioners tomorrow in regard to securing permanent quarters in the county court house. Another place under consideration ia the secMock. Mr. Linond floor of the Co-onen la of the opinion that the methods followed at the Rosebud reservation opening will be duplicated here. He state that there will be several points of registration, of which probably Salt Lake will be one. He anticipates a very heavy registration, and ays there will be thirty extra clerk sent out from Washington to attend to the bualneai at the various registration points. He expects the president's proclamation will issue about July 1, and the registration offices will be open two weeks later. MID-SUMM- ER SALE! Includes Everything in Stock Hats,Shoes, Clothing, Furnishings, Trunks, Etc. Step in and examine prices and qual- - I ity and you will find that Putnam is B '.. never undersold. re-or- R PUTNAM CLOTHING HOUSE B 2345 Washington Avenue p MEETS FATAL ACCIDENT. Richfield, June 25. Yesterday about at Central, William G. Ence of that place met with a horrible and fatal accident while engaged in hauling bay. He waa breaking a colt, and aa he waa ready to leave the field with a load of hay, the animal became unmanageable. Mr. Ence went to ita head and seized it by the hit to try to control It. The horse continued to plunge and rear, and Mr. Ence waa thrown off hia feet in such a manner that hia head waa caught by the front wheel of the wagon. Before he could help hlmaelf both wheels of the wagon, which waa d a low rig, passed over the upper portion of hla head, completely crushing his skull. A portion of the unfortunate man's brains and one eye were forced out Death was undoubtedly Instantaneous. A lad who was assisting Mr. Ence went to hla assistance aa soon aa be discovered the horrible affair, but found that Mr. Ence waa beyond human assistance. He covered the man's head and hastened to inform hia family of the terrible affair. A crowd soon collected at the scene of the accident and the body was removed to hla home. Mra. Ence waa p rostra: SI hy the sudden and horrible affair, it la but a few weeks since she lost her father, the late Bishop B. H. Greenwood of Central. noon, We make a specialty of Stock Saddles. iron-wheele- ' Saddles and Blankets. Harness High Grade Harness and 2279 Washington Avc.. ns U. P. MAY BE IN DEAL. and several bridges were built, wbefi n Laramie, Wyo., June 26. A mining man, who Is operating in the Douglas Creek and Gold Hill diitrictu, la authority for the statement that work will shortly be resumed on the construction of the LaraPacific railroad, mie, Hahn's Peak which has been graded from Laramie to Centennial, thirty milcx, and which ha been surveyed to Grand Encampment This company lata steel In Its well-know- t tbe work was suddenly stopped. It Is said that the Union Pacific lias formed. 4 traffic agreement '..with the new line and will also give it financial assistance. How aoon construction of the track to Continental will be commenced is not known. Only one remedy In the world that will at cnce atop itchiness of the skin In any part of the body; Doana Ointment. At any drug store,. CO cents, yards in Laramie over a year ago, : PRELIMINARY HEARING. Kayaville, June 26. The preliminary hearing of John King, charged with assaulting Mra. Agnes Dodge, waa announced before Precinct Justice Sheffield today. In order to give more time for gathering evidence, the case was continued until Thursday at 2:30 p. m. The quarterly conference of Davia take was held at Syracuse yesterday, President Anthon H. Lnnd and Apostle John Henry Smith being present The attendance was large. Owing to (he busy season, the conference was not continued today aa ia usual, but adjourned last night. Mr. and Mra. Mark Wilkinson, Misses Ethel gndaxel Wilkinson of Salt Lake spent yesterday In Kays-vlll- e visiting with Mr, and Mrs. Levi Taylor. . Miss Louise Barnes returned to her homo in Salt. Lake last night, after a pleasant visit here. Ogden Lively & Boarding Stables FINEST TURNOUTS IN THE CITY BOARDING SPECIALTY A HORSES r Telephones Ind. 715. Bell, 611K. BLACKHAM & TAYLOR, . Proprietors Prompt and First Class Livery Service at Reasonable Prices. THEIR PROTEST VAIN. Now that six million acres of public lands are about, to be placed on the market, Texas rattle kings are predictintering disaster to the ests of their slate. The lands about to be sold have been under lease to cattlemen for many yeara. It Is announced by the Texas authorities that the state lands on September 15 jiext. will he sold to actual aettlera in traeta of from one to eight aectiona. The price la to he $1 an acre, payahla in forty annual Installmenta. with three per cent Inter est. On such favorable terms, it I expected that practically all of the lands will he sold. From the days when the public range began to he contracted through the encroachment of actual aettlera, stockmen have fought unsuccessfully the advance of the men who have relied mainly on the law and the barbed wire fence for the protection of their interest, Long ago In Texas the men who grazed tens of thousands of csttle on the government's broad acres with, out cost for land were forced out of business. These men accepted the inevitable only with protest. Gradually they abandoned their fight, and then followed a long period In which the hig stockmen bent all their energies toward securing land privileges that would ensure range for their rattle. In time they did secure through laase vast tracts of grazing lands, and under the former policy of the state, these v ere not open to the settler. Now Texas has awakened to its own interests and taken the first steps toward opening tho puhllc lands to settlement. The state In the future will encourage the small farmer and will vastly increase Ita resources. stock-growin- OF g New A ork. Jpue "8. An attorney cnnniTled with Thomas F. Ryn y ilemeil the repoit that J. F. Wallace had resigned ss chief engineer of the ransom canal, to become head of th- - Metropolitan company 'a posed new system of subways. to-da- 239 JUST ONE AND OGDEN UTAH STREET TWENTY-FIFT- H ONE-HAL- F . BLOCKS FROM UNION DEPOT. RADIUM RESULTS Prove of little practical benefit to us ordinary mortals, partly because of great cost. Better sticK to electricity for light and power. We Supply the Power Utah Light E. W. WADE, Agent . Railway Co. R- - S. CAMPBELL. GsnX Mgr. |