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Show llORXINd EXAMINER: THE OtJDEN, I TA1I, (SUNDAY OCTOBEU MOI!NIN(J, l&OS. 13, JMMMM V m WWV V V m WWW m WWW vwwwv wwwwww The Store They Talk About $4 rTHEi Ogden Furniture & Carpet Company BO INTERESTED HAVE PEOPLE BECOME OVER THEIR IMMENSE TIVE STOCK THAT ONE FRIEND TELLS ANOTHER ABOUT THEIR ELEGANT LINE. Carpets, Draperies, Furniture, Wall Paper S THERE IS NO END TO THE GOOD THINGS THEY AND THOSE BUCK S HOT BLAST HEATERS, WELL, ONE FRIEND TELLS ANOTHER HOW COZY AND WARM THE HOUSE IS KEPT; SAY ABOUT THEM. GIVING AS MUCH HOW IT BURNS THE CHEAPEE8T HEAT IP AS SLACK, HIGH GRADE COAL IS USED. HOW IT WILL HOLD FIRE FOR 3t HOURS. IF DESIRED. HOW THROUGH THE PRINCIPLE IT DRAWS THE COLD AND IMPURE AIR FROM THE FLOOR AND REMODERN HOT BLAST PLACES IT WITH PURIFIED AND HEATED AIR, AND HOW .HANDSOME, HOW COMPLETELY AND DURABLY MADE. HOW ECONOMICAL THE PRICES ARE. Buds IRan&s Those Buck Ranges, the King of Ranges THE LADIES ARE SO ENTHUSIASTIC OVER THEM THAT ONE LADY TELLS ANOTHER HOW PERFECTLY THAT WHITE ENAMELEDVEN; HOW JUICY SHE CAN ROAST, ETC ON ALL SIDES WITHOUT HAVING TO TURN THEM IN THE OVEN; HOW JUCY SHE CAN ROAST HER MEAT WITHOUT HAVING TO ROAST WILL ONLY LOSE 1 POUND IN BAKING, WHILE IN MOST BASTE IT. AND HOW A OVENS IT WOULD SHRINK I POUNDS; AND LAST, BUT NOT LEAST, HOW LITTLE COAL IT TAKES TO DO TNE WORK. THE PRICES ARE FROM S30 TO 72, AND THE TERMS ARE EASY. BSSEllSfeoJ 5$ A Handsome Heavy Nickel-Plate- d Tea Pot or Coffee Pot 45c Y ) TNE EXAMINER PbWWmS Every Day In She Faar fey The Standard Psklish-N-f C. SUBSCRIPTION RATES, Mh-ara- d 7 Carrier la Of Jan Qty, including Bond? Mon lag Examiner, per Moth.... Tied. "Sl I eta. oopiea Y MAIL IN ADVANCE. PS bmH SeK'jm outside la seat by Of OfdW, E0S At lraa- - Martariy, la m..,,,,,,....,, IJI FEARLESS ANO INDEPENDENT. Tb Examiner la a strictly Independent newspaper. It fine all aldec aa oquai show. Tho Examiner baa no favor-Sn- , and no onamloa to punish. It will alo tbo nova nnblaaod sid anprrjndleod. Communications will be re rriad on all aubjacts yreamtod In respectful language from known Individual!, but tba true name muat be publlahtd In fall. All letter and rnmmunlcmtUMis tiinM by nom da plume, or esMiiuied namea, will bo thrown the watte basket. 111 brave never b.de behind aa a 'imd name. Don't aak the Editor to bo roapeaalblo for hat vru are ashamed of. In man Subscribers will confer a favor by informing thin olllro of to receive The Examiner before their breakfaaL la.-lu-r EXAMINER TELEPHONES tCITOr.lAL ROOMS Independent Phone Bell Phone TUSINE8S OFFICE Independent Phone. Cell Phone WM .. .No. 120 Ne. 66 GL ASM ANN Indepenri.rleil Phone Mo. Ne. SI No. M - No. 120 No. 120 1?;J of fcctn e'eter after DO-'."- '?, telephone eys--- 8 p. m. CONROY. Democratic convention you auiil, "Why in the palmiaat day of Boaa Tweed It waa nothing t the condition of affair la Ogden City. What did you mean by that? You well know that Don Tweed wae the greatest political bnodlnr and grafter the world baa ever known and that he stole right and left lu New York amounted to City. Hie pilfering million of duller. Yet you say tbl stealing uf Dos Tweed was noth lug compared with the condition In Ognor den tndsy. You are neither an a fool, bunco wp must conclude, that you are the most deliberate maligner That live in Ogdon today. Do you think you can fool the people of Ogden into believing that It even possible to steal more money tn Ogden than in New York City? Do you nut know that you show yourself up In the moat ridiculous light in making sueh an assertion? Hut let ui waive the millions Doss Tweed boodlcd from New York City nnd conclude that If one dollar t boodlcd in Ogden City it I wurseihau Itiis Tv cnt stealing the million Thereto. r, w rliallenge you. stole. Doctor Conroy, to show thxt one ln. tar ha bun p.iid out by Ogden t'l'.y during the pnM three your and nine! month f-- which fill) value bn not V been given challenge you, IKic-ti- r to bring your proof that Conroy, curiilitiniis arc wuii-- r In Ogden than iiiuler ltui-- s Tu.i-dSurely no man inwho a honorable a you profrv to bo. would make such a chnr.- unlc lit had the evidence tn To make It prove los Imctor Conroy, nnd to show the imiIiIk: that you are overruled unit bomb.iptic I hereby offer lo eve to the Carnegie Free Library the uf 5u0 If you ran show that the present mayor of Ogden, during the past two years, received, tool; or ; j I ! j to lie about your neighbor. Do you think a mudslinger of that caliber 1 a decent msn? Do you think you can Ue your way into the office oL mayor or Ogden City? If you do think bo, you will be a distressed and much fooled man the day after election, j U you prefiv, l shall he glad to! discuss this wholn subject with you on the platfiirm and discuss your shortcomings ut the same time, the man who falls In lii proof to pay for the Opera Hoiu-e- . tSiguedt WIUJAM GLASMANN. aa CONROY CALLED DOWN. H"u. KiwUiipb Kuehlcr desires this paper tu stair that the reference Doctor Conroy made to him yesterday before the Demoeratir convention, charging Mr. Kuehler with buying the vote of delegates. absolutely false. Mr. Kucbler stairs that be challenges Doctor Conn-to ahow that lie even Isuieht one vote. 1 . FOREST RESERVES. - bniibwi-- or d President Rnosevi-l- t Hgnr-sn order creating Hie D xl- - Forest Reserve in Ttali. Ity this setPm trnrt of htilf u million uere. in Washington and eoi;nii. j, at.le Kecen-.l- t tni-n:- Ci 1:1!! mi Sin-i- J proof ni . or gl like a man. y(iii he Im-tu- litrary Con for the perpe-uaurn of It extend we;wjrd from the Fir-Valley mountain, a high, narro-rnnpe. msny poin's of which rxrec,i ten thoii'ind feet clcva1!.-:The chief o!iJict in : t tlie water is pi ;.e Rush I.akr va't'-etn tb nor-h- - :!..- ' - , of i he H.in'.v t'latti vtiiir;. 'o with other In nil of tlirii; i vnlley. Liive it! favor uf t!i- - reFurhermore. the iim!-er- , whleh. inferior qmr.i'.v. i the ohl avail- v.il-- ne.ir-l-able in i js rs. n.t-iv- . i j . , I ! a nthr-rwlx- C'i'y single. cent or mure fnv.i (lc-leor any oflir'.ul or eontricti-r50 per a rsbiry. or that be or kii-.- im'r nirhnr'..-pertniiti-deonsf-nii-'- l lo any l,.!.cr oi party rvrivu u:;v 11:111. v 'rout dm Tor which i:o v.imihIioii wsi The sentlal to mining development. total area of the forest reserves In the Tolled Stales, Alaska, and Porto Rico 1 tbua inerraaed to over 60,000,-00acre. With proper Intelligence and energy tin management ahould show, flrat, a greater prevention of Area; second, a more wholesome cutting; and, third, a larger profit to the Government from the sale of lumber. In this connection It can hardly be repeated too often that these forest reserve are not for the benefit of the Government at Waahlngton, but of the cumiiiunltie in their neighborhood. The reserve are established for the express purpose of preserving a anupply of timber for home inthe destrucdustries, for tion of Lite forest eorer which regulates the flow of streams, and for protecting local resident a from unfair competition in the use of foists and ranges. The revenue derived from the administration of the reserve maintains the force of men organise to prewrve thuse do- WAVE RCLLED GYER STEAMER CAMPANIA 0 New York, Oct. 14. Fire live are known to have been lost and more than thirty persons injured, some of them seriously, on the Cunard Line steamer Campania, last Wednesday, when a gigantic wavs rolled over the steamer and swept across a deck think with steerage passengers. So sudden was the coining of the disaster and so great the confusion which attended and followed it, that even the officer of the steamer themselves were unahlo today, npon the vessels arrival here, to estimate the full extent of the tragedy. It la possible that the five persons known to he missing from the steerago may not constitute the full number of deed. When the Campania reached quarantine today ten of the Injured passengers were still in the ship's hospital, some of them main. seriously hurt and a acora of others were nursing minor injuries, John Graham, of Milwaukee, was PACIFIC RAILROAD. one of the passengers washed overboard and lost. 11c was traveling In Seattle, Oct. : '..Articles of the steerage. The others who are of tin- 'aclflc railroad were known to have lost their lives were f the count y auditor two filed in the offl. a Danish boy and a Irish here today, luw r and clerka being man whosegirl, nationality ha not been inc"! orators. The road named a ascertained. with it caplMli mn of SK.tion.nno, I The Campania was ploughing along i to Wallula. under pnijecidl full last Wednesday Sltr.iiltiineoiislv h the tiling of these afternoon headway A heavy quartering sea (irtieles the Haver of all tide land but the weather condiwag here In the name of tions miming ueqnir--were far from unpleasant and the resident of the to the rail rim d big host's decks were crowded with The steerage deck was passpngots. The till- - land covered with merrymaker and there located I rt ween the wa to indicate the approachthem Iaciflc mid ing nothing when disaster, -auddenly tbo big t'otiimbia ar.! ct Round ratlronds. steamer lurchud to port and scooped The purchiise;the BeaMlo tide up an cnorntouB sea. The wave lands in Mr Iward's nnme boarded about after the vim-. - i President Farting, on the the steamer port side and swept clear of the ('hicH-rom. Paul and Milwau- acros the steerage deck, completely - nnd have been kee two j tti the space between that deck ed to lie in the iteivsT of road filling and the drk above and carrying evTlie projection the Pacific rallresd, erything with it. Tba steamer's aide according to th.- vrtlcles of Incorpora- was buried anl on the tion. in a so:vsterly direction to deck above the passengers steerage were In Walla Walla the CVIumbt.i ; to their waists as the would lv oward Cowlitz pass, volume of water rolled aft and o Tacoma townrd which Eastern forward. and tbo newly sanlzed north Coast A!1 the cabin ' passengers on the up:irc Hng. The three per deck succeeded In clinging to are npp;i:-y links in a chain whiio the waters surged around t.i cps t hi m, ..'from Seattle and tltMii and were saved, but the unfor Tacoma. tup.ues in the steerage deck found thcinsHve utterly helpless. The Ir. Charles S. of Evansville. Ind., rush of waters, sweeping a coiIahur.v!f j Ziegwill h Fiala of the the forward part of the carin preparing ried everything before it. ship, poiur Nettings, i 5 a history o( the .rip. Ha year heury railings nnd other obstructions of HS-- . which had hvn arranged near the per-jietu- g ineor-pnralto- n Huu-Yor- k - gi-- Are yu a fit mi . lv mayor or Ogden? i. ro you a tr; ?: r :l man? In vimr speech yesterday u ilia roy! If the ataiemeat you made waa a slip uf the tongue, withdraw it like a man; If it waa not a slip of the tongue, then you mum furnish the proof or aland convicted before , all , the pcoplo of Ogden aa one ready o! resort to bearing false witness jf by so doing you can advanro your poltti-- : cal cause. Which shall it. be? Doctor Conroy, I see by your speech that you tuy sonic claim tu respectability. Do you mink it respectable it-,- - . j ; .m-t- wr-st- . tiiL-.-'h- . -' v ti - mid-ship- s t- e- th' r.- vr sub-mcrt.- ., cm-.tit- . a sup-ihT- .s railings to prevent passenger being washed overboard, served their purpose only in part go great was the volume and force of the rushing waters that a door In the rail was smashed and through this opening five of the helpless ones, who had been caught by the wave, were swept to their death. Others dashed against the rails and other like obstructions and escaped death, but many of them received severe Injuries. One young woman had both legs broken at the thigh, and neveral persons suffered broken arms and ribs, while more than a score were braised and battered. W. A. COPP, FORMERLY OF UTAH WON. Chicago, Oct. 14. The silver loving cup. the emblem of the newspapermen's golf championship of Illinois, was won st Onwensla by W. A. CopP of the Press, who defeated J. C. of tba, Chicago Tribune. Besid tbe championship cup. four other prises were offered for competition be twees the 23 players. All these prises were captured by Mr. Copp with the exception of one for the runner up of Ds-vl- s the tournament. When the wave cleared the vessel, the forward part of the deck wae strewn with Injured, and for houra Dr. Yarden, the ship's aurgson, aided by a number of physician among the cabin passengers, was busy In attend- ing to their hurt. In the meantime an inspection of the steerage waa made by the ahip's officers and it waa learned that five of the passengers were missing. No further confirmation regarding the inspection was given out. From first steerage passenger It was learned that the lives of several children wen saved by a stewardess, Mias Cotes, and a deck steward. The little ones were playing about the deck when they were caught In the swirl of water and carried aft with the others. On the return rush of the wave tho children were being carried directly toward the open door through which the five who lost their lives had been carried when Miss Cotes and the steward rushed to their rescue and dragged them back to si frtj. Wednesday's disaster marks the first time In the Cunard line's history of more than sixty ycara that a passenger has been lost from ono of Its steamers by accident. Although some of tho passengers thought that the Campania should hare stopped in an attempt to save those who were washed overboard, the officers say that this was practically an impossibility. Doth passenger nay that the wave in Wednesday afternoon's gale were the highest they ever have een. At times they broke as high as the top of the smoko sucks. An hour before the aceldeni a second officer on the bridge wig struck by tbe descending crest of r. wive, knocked down and rendered unconscious. Many steerage passengers, upon landing today, fell upon their kneet; and offered prayers of thanksgiving over their safe arrival. In addition to the name of John Graham. the Cunard line offlelale today gave out the following names 6f steer-agpassengers who were washed over board: Margaret Cleary. Mary Cosgrove Niels Ekberg and Elisabeth e rvnit irs-K- tk Overcoats Overcoats are just evenyou need for the cold a large line ings. We have of the very latest styles, from are $5.00 lo $27.50. They all made with the K. B. shouh der and permanent front. The Berkeley and Cambridge Overcoats illustrated here are genteel and dressy garments. Qualify and price right ClarKs Stores |