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Show IDE "How about this, Standard !hey end Examiner?" Our opinion la that the Fait Lake papers' are simply guessing as to what la to be done, and tbe eorreetneas of our poaliina will soon bo shown a-- k: a THE EXAMINER LAMONT'S WEALTH. RATESi SUBSCRIPTION by Carrier la Ogden Cl ty. Including Sunday Homing The Sea Francisco Examiner.- - the lead log Democratic paper of the Pa elite Coast, has not a high opinion of tha hauest y of Grover Cleveland, or of tbe number, he drew around him In his day of power. Commenting on the wralib left by Daniel Lamont, the Examiner aara: A few years ago ha had nothing. Mr. Cleveland made him his .private secretary when he was first elected Preeldeet. Ha afterward made him Secretary nf War. When Hr. lamont left the Cabinet there were big, ru-- men, owners of railroad, very anxious to utilize his extraordinary abilities, which they had fall-- d to discover until Mr. had an opportunity of displayHAVING ing them as A PERSON GREAT 1NFLVENCU I'XDER G ROVER CLEVELAND. Mr. latmout dies, and tha world learns that as the result of a very few years' accumulation he leaves behind him. , It is not a great deal, perhaps, in these quirk days. But it la a large enough sum to eootala aoma Interest- fieUrwti rf per month. 8iSl Tlcti lt copiM BY MAIL, IN ADVANCE. The Fkamlner is seat by mall outalda of Ogden. '' per year At lext quarterly, la ad VtBCI . FEARLESS AND INDEPENDENT; Tba Examiner Is a strictly Independent newspaper. It gives all rides an equal show. Tba Examiner has aa lien and no anemias to parish. It vlll gKa tba aeera nablaead aid anprehidlcMd MtsiB ViU M Mitred on all subjects presented In respectful language from La-mo- haova Individuals, but tba tout same must be published la fulL All fctxara and eommnricadoaa signed by com da plumes, or assumed names, will be thrown la tba waste basket. The brave man nevyr bides behind aa aw Dont ask the eumed name. Editor to bo responsible for what job are ashamed of. ing sugge-lion- s. If the private secretary of Press dent Cleveland could accumulate over three millions la a short time, In whose Interest do you think puhlie affairs were run during Cleveland' administration? Mr. Laaioat helped to engineer that Interesting hand deal, through which some favored gentlemen weia enabled to buy United State Government wtU eoafor a Buhseribsra favor by Informing this office of failure to reoelre The Examiner before lbair breakfast. EXAMINER bonds at g shamefully low prlca. Of course HE va not the respon- TELEPHONES EDITORIAL ROOMS Independent Phono. Sell Rhone, . BUSINESS OFFICE ...Na. SI . .Ne. M ........ Independent Phone..,, N a. ISO Bell Phene No. bd WM. CLAS MANN Independent Phsne. . . . No. 130 fell Phone Na, 120 Np. 12 of both telephone aya-tam- e closed after 1p.m. IN FEMININE EDUCATION UNITED STATES. THE Lord Kelvin has aaid: The end of aduration Is, first, to a men to earn a living, and then to make hie Ufa worth living." A generation ago, esys Stella Reid Cmwthers in the lUgrim Mans tine, any career for a woman outside the domestic circle was considered, especially la the Now, however, eqnth, uninmnnly. nearly every southern state haa at r leant on Institution where women aa education aa a stepping stone to the acttvUlea of life; and throughout tbe country, schools end colleges are providing education for women In siirh branches aa will enable them to earn their livelihood. Coeducational Institutes are IncreasIn 1X94 there were ing in number. but 231, while In 19M then were In the tnited States 271 uni vend ties, ml leges and 'Institutions of higher education which are prartjrally colleges. The need of economy Is In- many the determining factor In attendance upon a coeducational Institution, since colleges and universities receiving federal and state aid are able to offer cheap, end In many eases, free tuition to students. The first woman's college la the world to have a women for Its president wss Wellesley, and tbe women upon whom tbe honor fell .wee Mies Ada Lydia Howard, a native of New Hampshire. Miss Howard served from 1X75 to 1KX2 and wear her distinction with a simplicity end reserve that ere rare among persons of note. Yet with all her modesty It le got possible for her to disclaim Wellesley's founder's choice, for though many fine women have since been made college presidents not one can share Miss Howard's honor. Even before her sppolntment to the presidency Miss Howard was extremely delicate in health, and on that account resigned her position after frequent pnstponmeml of the final day. The women educators of America are women of liberal culture and ex-- t naive Information, combining force and dignity with great exentiivo ability. They have admirable poise of mind, serious aims, snd the Influence of their strong, charming personality upon the untried college girl mark them as women of nnnsual Interest The best Ideals are constantly presented, and every Influence isrd to the derelop. pient of higher Ideals and that cutter which Is the mastery of tbe e self, at Its beet. h-l- p sible person. Aa President of the Tolled Slates Cleveland was the responsible msa. Did Mr. La moot, by any chance, give his friend, Grover Cleveland, his recipe few making a big fortune quickly? If he did, what a lot of money Mr. Cleveland ought to be able lo make for the poller holders nf tha Equitable If Mr. Ryan will give him the chance! We are not criticising Mr. Laiuont lie was just a fair samespecially, ple of the energetic American, fillet llgent enough to realize that It la better to have ONE TRUST than all the people for .your friend. Mr, Lamont,' from a strictly selfish "point of view, did not ows tha PEOPLE anything. THEY never elected s him: they never Imposed any lh him; hid fortune came from the trust, through Cltrreland. What would be the comfort, the prosperity of the people of tbe Tailed Hi tea, if they amid keep for themselves gt least a reaonahle part of that enormous national wealih which ran give three, or five or ten, or fifty millions to as innutnarabla Hat at parasites and financial jackals? eonfl-dene- INFLUENCE no-cu- - ra SHIPPING ahnut fTS.Ono. 1900 1901 1903 1902 sre-lion- - Acres. ,,(, 8,453,899 9.182,413 .1 3,463,XR7 1 6.562,796 . .........,19,488,635 .22.G30.9Z8 'Doubt loss Congress will consent In amend the land laws by the repeal of those employed now solely to Increase the holdings of the dishonest man and to give rlt to such scandals aa hare lately thrown shame upon the American name; hut If the future la to he Judged by the past, this access of wisdom and of honesty will com only when there la no longer any land left that la desired by tha lumber king or tha rattle baron. It la, therefor, One-thir- of d . o-.- l. - wl-- the iranSrcr of terminal ground In Salt Lake for the Western Tactic." Then Portland , Ora, Aug. 24. After two to deliberating In tl-National Irrigation congress assembled la general session today for the second sad last time. Before the consideration of the business of the congress, the submission of reports, elect ion of officers and selec-tun of next years meeting place, Wm. E. Curtis oif Chicago made an address on tha subject of "Irrigation in India." Mr. Curtis' paper was a description of tha Irrigation projects Instituted by the British govurn incut. Mr. Curtl paper waa followed by the reading of a letter to tho congress from President James J. Hill of the Great Northern railway aud the submitting of commlus reporra. Mr. Hill's letter to tha congress was read by E. B. EberHn of Ban Francisco, who was Introduotd by Got. Pardee of California, to tha congress. Gov. Pardee said that Mr. Hill was unable to appear before the congress In person, owing lo the serious illness of Mrs. Hill. Mr. llilla letter was In part as follows: "How this campaign waa begua, many of ua allll remember, and it la right that the people sliuuld not now forget. The first work la spying out the land for irrigation, la Investigating It possibilities, and above all In getting Its merits before tha people waa don by the railroad companies. At first three, and a little later five, of the great system of the west united and furnished each 95.000 a year aa a working fund to make the necessary inquiries and to spread the farts abroad. It waa by tbe provMon of these corporations, studying tha interest and welters of tha West, searching lot means to Increase tha tillable area, tha wealth, tha Uoa and the prosperity of the country tributary to them, that Irrigation first passed from Its sphere of tha bookman to that of tha men of affairs; that It rose from tha rank of n theory and an Idealist's dream to that of a national policy undertaken la pursuance of and fortified by a national law. It would be strange If they had not now the Inten seat Interest In the working out oil the magnificent scheme at whose birth they presided and whose infancy was nurtured by their care. For by It ths boun'darlea of man's her Itage are to ba enlarged, the volume of the food supply, man's first necessity. may ba almost Indefinitely expanded, and the total sum of the world's available wealth and of common comfort may ba expanded, and at the saute time tha conditions of ths Individual laborer, of the family, of the home, may be so bettered aa to counteract those tendencies that are commonly admitted to ba threatening In the development of the race and the rearing of a higher civilisation, "The need of this new area for home building la immediate and pressing. Thera Ilea tha great source of wealth which alone may and mut ba drawn upon without Intermission for man's need. Ths forest falls, the mine la depleted of Its pracloua contents, even the seas might if aearrhed too severely, cease to give tribute, but tho soil h tho last unfailing resource. ' play games as wa may with adorned with other picture card uamea, the man at tha bottom, tha man with hi foot upon a plot of ground, tha maa who la drawing from tha earth food for himself and others i the foundation of all advancement a well as of all prosperity. Make way for him; for where ha Is decaying the pillars of tha a tat a are weakening, and all the more Impressive forma of weal are trembling Award the dust "The need of more land spaces for the home builders 1 created by tha rapid settlement of the country and precipitated and aggravated by tha Insane policy of land laws which tend toward tha exhaustion of thb public domain by tha land monopolist and peculator. Except la a few selected spot where the Influence of the railroad companies aa colonizers has been exercised to secure actual settlement on their lands, the Influx of actual cultivators la so small aa scarcely to be reckoned with. Those whe go upon government land In our day for the purpose of making homes are a handful. In contrast with this- tha following table giving the Increase In area of public land passing Into privets ownership etch year, shows how rapidly our patrimony la passing away: days devoted land-hunge- r, offic-ln- coiin--:!- -n CIABEEIS tbe utmost moment that these lands rapable of reclamation, which It waa as not la ih past to their Interest to acand which are at Ireat partially e quire, KIESEL OBJECTS and In a lame teahlon aafeguarded by the law of 1902, should be prepared aa To the Naming of Masson aa Sao- a patrimony for the days when the af Congress. that la aa old and as Inrctery destructible aa ntan, shall find no food Portland, August 24. Chairman for it reasonable satisfaction. George- - K. Peratow presented the "There K Indeed, a magnificent area report of tha nominating commit- available for this purpose. tee of ths Irrigation congress, of tho entire land area of the Tnlti-recommending the following olH- State outside of Alaska and our other errs fur the ensuing year: outlying possessions. Is still recant. Governor Georg C. Pardee, Cal- Ths great hulk of thla la Inculded withIfdrnia, president. in the regions known aa arid and Ij. W. Shurtllff, Ttah, first vice In the alxten divisions, thirteen president. . states and three territories, to which J. It. Stephen, Texas, second the reclamation act la applicable, there vice pr:eldi-ntare 536.48X.pnn acres vacant out of L. Faith, Oregon. third vice a tola I of 972.777.flOU acr.--s. What porpresident. tion nf this can ultimately he made fit H. U. elaxscu. Nevada, were- for the habitation of man we are un. a able at the present moment to detan-Issue wng made tbe selec- clare. Tndnubtedly. for reasons to he tiun of Mnxnn as secretary by stated hereafter, it will kb largely In F. J. Kiewd of Ogd'in on personal excess of current estimate. And it I grounds and the congress referred confidently stared hr good authorities the report back to the committee. that about 8ft.nP0.nti0 acre are capable with Instruction that It endenr of supporting a aettled population on to agree on a nomination for sc- tho basis of irrigating enterprises now re;nry. regarded as feasible. A great porton of Whrn the matter of selecting a ihla area, msny time aa valuable for morning place for the next session production aa the same quantity of came before the congress. Invtta- land would he upon the rirhest prairie Hons were tendered by Chicago, or in the timbered dUtricta, Is IncludN. D.. Denver Bismarck. . Fpoed within tha state and territories and ksnr. Wash., Poise, Idaho. carved out of the mighty acquisition was Invitation secnot which is celebrated by the msgr.lfl.-n- t Chicago's ended and both Dlsmack and here before our ev,.. Th exposition were In withdrawn favor Fpoknne ceiis- - f irrigation is, indi-cin a of Ikdee. After over an kruir of the cause of the country Hpcr'.ni Denver inrhiili-withdraw and In the Lonislan oratory, pun huso, Poise, alone In the field, was ing after ths lapse of a vu:urr itemed na the convention city fur c'.resinsiinhip wh!rh And again the Suit Lake papers are building the Western Parlfle out of Fait take City. This purer, some time ngo, said the first work oa the road was to lie confined to the territory west of the Sierra Nevada mountains. Only a few da remain to determine which source of Information is to he relied upon. If work commences at the Fr.lt Ijke terminal, then we will admit our nilejuilgmcnt. hut will our S.ilt Ijike contemporaries be equally free to confess error? This paper has been twitted several time of bta by the Se.lt Lake writers on railroad affsrs. our neighbor, with the arrival of every high l of the Denver A Rio Grande In Salt announcing that "The Iacifie in to be built from Salt Uke. Mr, Ridgeway arrives and Inspect a the ite for the terminal." or "Mr. Valie pnssi-through Inday and Innkml over in REDWOOD EAST. Fan Francisco, Aug. 24. An Important deal hat Just been rinsed here, contracts having been signed for the shipment of l.tiift.nuo feet nf redwood to New York City. It Is the largest single shipment of redwood ever made direct to New York and the first to gu by (bo water route. I'mlnr :he contract the cargo is to he losrtod at Eureka by the middle of November and delivered lu New York in April. The value of the cargo la WESTERN PACIFIC GUESSES. lijal FOR PEACE. 19'6. . as, OTAR, I'DIDAY MODNINQ, IRON TRADE BOOMING. COWS LANS Ths Walt 'Street Journal gives an Idea of haw pence ii often forced, not by statesmen, but by hankers. That paper taya; Million for peace, but not one rent tor war. . That ought to ha tha ultimatum of the international bankers who may ha railed Into conference by the commission ra in negotiation at this time representing Russia and Japan. Modem war Is a matter of flnanca even more than that of men and anna. Tha responsibility for war rente primarily with the banker who provide the immense sum of money needed to defray tha expense of war. Theirs la a fear ful responsibility, and if they permit their greed for commissions to tempt them to pneoursgn a conflict between two nations tha blond of unaeeounted thousands Is on their heads. Worse evn than a monarch who for ambition and greed of glory plungea his country Into n war of conquest la a hanker who gives encouragement to thn making of war because of hla greed for gain. All doubt as lo tha outcome of tha negotiations at Portsmouth would ha removed If our great hankers would make It known to the opposing parties that whila they are ready to provide the money needed to secure paae. Year. they would not advance a single cent 1898 1899 for the carrying on of further war. rn-'tlr- t!i ill . Published Every Day Year by Tbs Standard Publish mg Co. EXAMINED; OODEX. J10EXING for wa nto hrHIl.inr than those who conceived and r j;,.a t ivuU possibly hare im.iginej " Demand for Material Mills. a ARE UNDER 55, 1905. IS CHIP'S CHOICE la Taxing ths Cleveland. Ohio. Aug. 24 The Iron Trade Review wy: Although' tha volume of new buoi-nraentered during the pact week hms not been na large a In some previous week, condition continue sound and mills are taxed to their utmost capacity, especially on building materials and rail. The most interesting development of the pig iron market waa ihe holding of informal conference by representative, at the Bessemer association with Tutted biotas Siael Corporation officials concerning tha purchase of beaemer irna for September delivery. The corporation la now using iis surplus Iron at the rat of 2, IMO tons per day and officiate agree that it will soon be aeorbsary to make a purchase. It la understood that there la a alight difference of opinion oa the part of torporaitaa official and makers of Bessemer as to the price which should be paid, but it Is not thought ihat there will be any serious difficulty in reaching an agreement, and it is probable that the purchase of about 40,000 ions will be announced before the first of September. The market for Bessemer aud basic Is showing greater strength shtch sellers believe will he maintained even if tha corporation does not make the expected purchase. Baste is especially strong aa Indicated by reports from numerous manufacturing centers. The usual quota i Ion for basic. Bessemer and No. 2 foundry is 114.10 at Ohio furnaces. In addition to lh orders placed teat week for a large car ferry and two large steel freighters it la expected that within a few days contracts will be let for the construction at fir more huge freighters. Tha principal ales of steel rails for the week were as- - follows: Harriman lines, 75,000 tons; 8anta Fa, 12.U0O; Detroit, Toledo A fronton, lO.toO; BL Paul, 2.000; Great Northern, 6.000; Indianapolis and Cincinnati Traction, 6,000; miscellaneous. 25,000 tans; total, 126,000 tons. Tha Harriman Unas only recent ly had purchased 90.000 ton. INVADERS .U'GlST ARREST. Are Guarded By Officers In Mexican Couitry. H BATTLE 1111 Removal Notice Bill! Augast 29 -- Now that thi Britt- - XeUoo match ha finally bees consummated, interest la the contest will overshadow anything els doing ia the fight game until the bat;l3 has been fought The difficulty in getting the men together haa contributed not a little te bring the affair prominently Into public notice, snd for this due credit must ba given the enterprising Britt family, who ba played a shrewd, waiting game from tha very outset, and whan they saw (hat the time waa rips ellnrhed the match, after forelug Neloa and hla manager to to conditions hitherto unheard of ia tha prize ring. However, these conditions are so manifestly unjust and avor so strongly of Shykicktem, of tha worst type, that apondom generally. even Including most of the California branch of tha fraternity, will pull harder than aver for Nelson to The Singer Store, formerly located at 2572 Wash mg. Chicago, ton avenue, has been removed to 2338 where our patrons will receive careful attention. Whether you propose the purchase of a machine or net there is much to interest most women at any Singer Stored and all are cordially invited By this sign you may know s win the fight. It any one of any prominence In the pugilistic world thinks Britt haa more than an outalda chanca to win. he haa so ter not been heard from. Britt himself, of course, talks very confidently, but the chancre art that way down in hla heart be feels differently. He probably realised when ha made the match that h would get. win or low, a biff piece of money (probably more than tha published amount, 26 per cent to the loser; , besides 86.000 for hla share of the picture privilege!, and that a lucky punch would bring horns th largest pure ever fought for hr lightI'ndar the ctrcum-atanceweights 130,000. he waa making n brilliant hla stock, even In Calimatch, and fornia, was rapidly declining by reason evasion of Nelson, of hla h did n very wise thing in coming to terms, especially aa the Utter wen of hla own cut-iro- n framing. Th general opinion seems to b that ths long routs over which tha boys an scheduled to travel (fifty rounds) will auit Mr. Nelson to a nicety, and this conclusion la baaed on the boys previous meeting, when Britt was declared to hare tha better of the twenty-roun- d a d go. The universal dppe" on the fight la sum24. Tha Tucson, Aria, Aug. that Nelson, even If he cannot reach of B. F. Graham Britt mary proceedings the first ten or flrteea and party In regard to tha Tiger mines roundsduring with aay great affeettvenres, below Douglas appear to have failed will eventually tire out hla clever anof suocros. Graham, hla main fight- tagonist and wear him down, gradually ing man, John Broaka and hla super- but aurely to the vanishing point. Nelintendent, Wylie, hive been arrested. son haa demonstrated on many occaThey are not In eniflnement. but are sions that he hu something that Britt kept 'guarded by Mexican constabu- does not possess the knock-ou- t punch, lary. The control, of. the mine has and, at th urn time, he can go along been taken from ths sew corporation, and absorb all that Jimmy can hud the Ensenada Mining company, and him until the Californian I too ter returned to the Tiger Mining com- gone to be considered any longer a pany, the Kansu City corporation factor. that claims to have paid over to ths Of Britt's training for the ocGraham faction every cent it wu ob- casioncourse, will be devoted principally to ligated to pay and to have made Its strengthening bte wind and to developpayments at tha proper time and man- ing the hardest possible blow he in caner. and It may bn that pable of One of tha moat material features he will producing, spring n surprise at the proper nf the case from a Mexican stand- time. point, I the fact that Graham led into Aulysing the two men as fighters, Mexico an armed party of Americana, it really seems to the writer ona of them Rronka who baa resigned however, Britt la not and never hu been In hla place aa lieutenant of the Arisons that Nelson's class. All Britt'a victories Rangers, that he might go. Rspraaan-t- a have been won at home, under oondi-- ' fives of ths Kansu City corpora- tloni that are two well known to need tion are on the ground, but will derepetition, and In no case has ba won lay taking postakalon till adjudica- with n knock-ou- t. On two occasions tion has been trade In the Mexican that ha from ths utlve city ha courts of tha anuunt of damage dona lost ona strayed and drew In another. On and have determined upon tha Mil for th otherfight haa campaigned coat a that they will present against nil over hand, Nelson not ona instance tha West In the other aide. tha amallest "ahads. Ha haa It would appear that the era of having won all hla flgnta py good, clean force ha passed in the mining busi- knock-outa-nearly , and had Britt traveled over ness of Nonhem Sonora, though for the same rout the result would hare a while violence was successfully rebeen far different sorted to In maintaining the posae-slo- undoubtedly Willie after telling to maof the Canute mines, with W. C. terialise Fltigerald, at Grand Rapids for n reguOreene. battla with Jack larly scheduled OKeefe, haa started Tor Los Angeles, NAN PATTERSON TO MARRY. where he hu agreed to fight Eddie Hanlon on August 29. There la no Fatter-on- , New York, Auguat 24-doubt that Eddie, on tha xurface, looks on from her release the to ba a much taalcr proposition who, for tba Caecharge of murdering her lover. unreliable Brooklylte, thu OKeefe, would announced sar Young, lead and this probably explains hla aetion she a quiet life and he very good, keeps In the O'Keet affair. Hanlon and Fits before the public In a way to eacite will meet at 131 pounds ringside, and If of actress a Broadway with th tetter can make tha weight he tbe envy an industrious press agent. It was should win. he aeema to have it on learned that Miss Patterson and bar Eddie In every possible way. Rather g accomlater. Mr. J. Morgan Smith, queer proposition, though, Fitzgerpanied by two men, went yesterday ald's weight with O'Kerfa would have for a little outing at Old Point Com- been, ringside, at least ten pounds port and were refused scoommodatlona heavier. at two hotels there. One of the men Mika Schrack bn Issued another la said to have been J. Morgan Smith thla tlm to Ous Ruhlin, who, challenge, and the other Henry Laudsburg of la greatly elated over his reports uy, D. who la known to (L, Washington, Jim Mcfome a the man who submitted to victory with the and thinks Cormick, who, accordingly, to reduce the size h scan lick tba whole world. Mike several operations haa of hla nos. added Ruhlin to hla llat, which now InMias Patterson announced yesterday besides hia latest acquteltlon, that ah waa soon to he married. Bha cludes, Jack Root, Boh Fltulm-mona- , said: "I'm going to remarry my for- Marvin Hart,Wills Jack (with whom Bchreek mer husband la September, hut dont aoma mysterious let this be known. It's a dead secret." failed to connect,notfor his teult). Jeffries though John G. Jcmt. tha Tomba caterer, reason, la left out only, probably because ha te announced that he had retained aa at- no longer In the ring. Mike la certainly torney to aus Mta Patterson for the amMtloua, and, at any rate, wants to return of a nhhlt'a foot he lent her while ahe waa on trial. The rabbit's get action of some .kind without any font waa given to Jones by a man who further delay. Jeffries, for a retired champion, conwaa acquitted of murder, and Jones has hern lending R to hla homicidal tinue to beep hla name quits prominently before tha public. Indeed, there customers in th Tomba Roland M Unrux parried It taro years. Jones haa seems to he a lurking suspicion manifellow haa only tempromised It to Bertha Clalc-he- , who fest that tha big porarily quit the ring and will return killed Emil Gerdron. if a man should suddenly appear who would accomplish anything that would TO BTOP THE BOYCOTT. make It worth while for tha retired o Kan WASHINGTON AVENUE These Machines are never cold to dealers I ; and will find r Singer Stores Only from maker ' '.Everywhere to user . These machines are now sold at lower prices, quality considered, than' any other Needles and Repairs for All Makes of Sewing Machines SEWING MACHINES RENTED AND EXCHANGED Singer Sewing Machine 1 Co. Agricultural College of Utah T T I Utahs Scientific, Technical Provides Liberal, Thorough And Practical Edu- Institution of Higher Learning. cation. THE COLLEGE Tha School of Agriculture. Tha School ef Domestic Sciatica COMPRISES: Tha School of ' and Aria. Mechanic Engineering The School of General Science. Tha School of Commerce. . Tha Tha School of Music. Agricultural Experiment Station. Twenty buildings, provided with tha beat modem equipment, afford exceptional facilities for thorough and efficient work. A strong faculty, representing tha beat institutions of America and Europe, are in charge of tha work of Instruction and experimentation. No tuition ia charged. Registration fee, (6. College mens September 1 9th. Write for Illustrated catalogue. Agricultural College. - - Logan, UtahL OGDEN LIVERY --AND- BOARDING STABLES Finest Turnouts in the Gty BOARDING OF HORSES A SPECIALTY Telephones Blackliam Balk, fill K. & Ernst, Prompt and Fire! Claaa Livery Twenty-Fift- h 239 JUST ONE AND ONE-HAL- Ind. 716. Service at Props. Reasonable p riots. St.' Ogden, Utah BLOCKS FROM UNION DEPOT. . F u Fhanghal, August 24 The senior consul here ha interviewed ths Tao-tawho stated that It waa hla Intention to issue s proclamation ordering Chinese merchant to resume thalr for-mtrading in American good, but, apparently, ths inral officiate are somewhat In the matter. d THE- - BREAKERS HOTEL The Leading Pacific Coast Resort of the Pacific Northwest champion to meet him. l, DRUNKENNESS Cigarette and Tobacco Habita Cured by TRIE half-hearte- Cleveland, Ohm, : today leader August 24. The George H. Knrham, of Toledo, the breeder, owner and trainer of the worlds champion trotting stallion. Crescent. 2:9! has decided to dispose of that famous hors and has arranged to have him sold to tbe highest bidder at the Faslg-Tlpto-n companys auction sale to he held at Madison Square Garden, New York, in November. J. U Stone, of the Portland Club, Portland. Ora., writes: My son took "TRIB" about IS months ago, and has been a sober and industrious man since. He ban taken the rare, hut commenced drinking again anon after. It coat him $169.00 to taka the cure; and 612.50 to take "TRIB." He aaya TRIB" la by tar the heat cure nf the two. He has sold many treatments for "TRIB since he wa cured. Sold by us on an absolute guarantee to cure or no pay. Price, 612 50. Geo. F. Care, sole agent, 2301 Wash. Are., Ogden, Utah. Ft. Paul. Aug. 24. President George E. Lennon, of the St. Pan! baseball club, todav confirmed the report that Manager M. J. Kelly. Walter Stagle. Jack Sullivan and Charlie Hemphill had hern sold to the St. Louis American league trem. Mf. Lennon also CALIFORNIA added tlmr Pete O'Brlee had been of to the him club. The moat beautiful residential city In tha United Elates. A place to spend few weeks of your vacation. Only a few miles to tha aeaahof Loa Angeles PARDEE ELECTED PRESIDENT hy electric cars. PASADENA d i Portland, Ore, Aur. 24. Gov. (feorge C. Tardee of California wa. elert-- d pTsldent of the Na- tlonal Jrrlgattun Congress. La Casa Grande Hotel The Elite Hotel of Psmdesn offers special summer rate fid per week, transient ELMER $1 per day. F. WOODBURY. Manager. and Arts. u much-bboate- , NEW AND MODERN. OVERLOOKING AND WITHIN A TONES THROW OF THE OCEAN. HOT AND COLD SALT WATER IN EVERY SATH TUB. TENNIS, GOLF.1 BOWLING, BILLIARDS, POOL, SALT AND FRESH WATER RIDING HORSEBACK FISHING, BOATING, BATHING, BEST MUSIC LARGS DRIVING AND AUTOMOBILING. DANCE HALL. SOCIAL CENTER'OF THE SUMMER SEA ON. AMERICAN PLAN. - Rates $U, $16 and $18 Per Week ft1 Special Rates for Socities, Large Parties, Families BUY YOUR TICKET TOR BREAKERS STATION For Further Particulars Address The Breakers Hotel Loos Beach, Pacific County, Washington |