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Show THE MORNING SALTLAKE AWP FROM AND THOMAS HR! flSZHtrr. ..T7T At ! 11 rt?i "i Ljr Fer ' of tU fUl.ton, Cache county, rfaa i great future 0M of the Mormon who ke tk c,a?tJ!lf th fc uffrt d,JTprophet Joaeph Smith, rtoai'ly Mcrri0Bi who TreaTieaident of Kaye- lW IhThome arhUe flailing M 5 iWr Nre. Van Oidra- lit. for two poor heal ha kw uiut two week, ego 'Smdioe considered eerloua. ii bora Jan. 88, 124. Fwnaylvaata. and Jmbio it Mormon church h SmJh brother of the i 'tr fMSt V WiUm 1S41 Thn, yean tat- - OGDEN, news St . lnfonna-STmoNTe- d. n d rail-road- -- Four-YearOl- gilt-edg- an-m- four-year-ol- - . wlld-cata- gold-bearin- g ' MORNING, a Mil of-splendid fer many aurt.li: ii t.r lie prospector aud lnveau-- r Ou'.iilr ..f a few iiiiiiv duals, there are h'U m.'iny who kn.-of and ap!i'':iti.- ilio opjion um-tithere awaiting oxieful exploration and I he expen.i.-urof a limited amount money. M E Joci-- H. E. iu an article deaertprne of the Henry mountains, aaya: There la no pert of Utah which iti the averaae man so far away ss the Henry mouu:am. The reason ia that this sect ion is off from all ibe route of travel both by rail and agnn. Until wlih-- a tew years it wax reached only by trail, of late years, however, the demands of the stockmen for a short cut into southeastern Utah have led to the building of two roads. One of these start from Green River, on the R. G- W. railroad and passes over a deert of clay and sand for many miles, whet there ia hut little water, and the watering place are far apart. 'Ihu road goe to Hankaville. on the Fremont river, and fojlow around ud through the clay hills to the Henry mountain, and to what 1 called Iktndt iToktng. on the Colorado river. From Dandy Croring there is a fair wagon road over to Hlnff made with City, where connection different routes to Ar:aona. New Mexico and Colorado. This road ia considered the beat iu the winter time, o because there nre no mountain cross, and bocaure 'lie suud is more easily traveraed and there is no trouble from the heat. There is no place In Utah which afford! an opportunity of knowing better what a real i like than that which la found aloug the road from Iras to the Henry mountains. The air la as pure aa ctystal. very dry and is beautiful bracing and tho as well aa strange. Here the magic rain sculpture on the soft hilla has changed thorn Into the mow peculiar and remarkable shapes. The different layers of rock and clay are beautifully colored In baud of blue, piuk, yellow, green, gray and black. Tbe clay underlying these beds of rock being worn away eo rapidly tlut most of the hilla In face tha rivers aud stream precipices. Hera tho geologist, traveling along, can read ilia story of the rocka In tha dlfleraai layers of strata as easily aa be oould turn the pages of book. - e a ed policemen. They with the search- - j era already on the ground examined j every hill and ravine for rnauy mile. round. The child's name was lourtiv j called at abort intervals, and the utir. 1 over the hillechoed and sides, but the voice of little Patay gave no answer. It was about 10 o'clock Sunday that Sergeant Robert, and Officer Carlton Joined in the search. They went over i he divide into Bountiful canyon, ant after traveling about four mile, a faint voice at length responded to Uie oft repeated shout of Patty:" The child waa tangled in the bushes, and could not extricate himself, so wean had ho become from exrnion and privation. added to the cold, ill hitie rap. filled with the floaer he bad gathered, was tucked under hia overalls. and he wore no coal. At. the tank house the child v-placed in a carriage and wa rapidly driven to the parental home, where the mother waa found almost in a state of collapse. Her Joy at once more beholding her darling child alive and well can better be imagined than Jmowdto Nauvoo and became with Joaeph waualnted died and Jtmie McPeraon Dimon .t! married a 'f45 'iiV The young couple had and them, they Ot M TtlV Pioneer hand who crowed ""Strata 1M7. and remained for It is estimated by the searchers that SPRING MOVEMENT ON. Council Bluff., finally jI the little fellow traveled several miles " la hia wanderings, and young an he Is. Utah in October. 1851. They of Cattle Opena tha Ball he telle with considerable deeWtaMdlately o KayariUe and Big Shipment for Utah This Reason. tails of the fearful night's exiierienees. 2,lS?VuJen home. Mr. Me The family ar very grateful for the Salt Lake, April 16. The News '"TiSJSSwX. U. aid extended to them in the kindly Barne. says: The spring movement of live trying hour by th officers and by J2XmM. Joba O. M.E. Lny stock on the Utah railroads has set in friends it general. It ta confidently MTand Mra. Jacob with a vim this week and from this expected that the lad will not suffer Illwiicreraon of Uyton. Tlwoth- - time on all tha available motive power tab of bad results , from the ordeal I varieue parte fliwide la and double deck care la the territory any through which ho passed. will on be move hoof the until the last received from Downey. haa been transferred either to market DON MAGUIRE BOOSTS FOR UTAH. uT at thatplace or to the summer why of the .death range. 1 nmarday morning of Thomaa A big consignment waa moved out Calls Attention to Mining Regions of of the early realdenta of of the union stockyards at North Salt Wonderful Poaalbllltloe In 5k. According to the Lake yesterday, which ia going east Our Own State. Mr. Bennett went to over the Rio Grande, Colorado Midland uaual Yadneaday evening in hie and Union Pacific to and Burlington H wahh and at 4 oeloek the next Omaha. Tha eoneignment, which took Salt Lake, April 16. Tha Newt he died of heart failure, two to move, constated of 1,500 ays: Dor Maguire, the woU known mining waa 47 year, of gf. head dan of jMNitd cattle yearlings, twos and man of Ogden, believes In boosting for jh.11. who la a daughter of the threes. This valuable represtate. Ho believes, too, that Z Mra, BUabeth Criddle of Kaye-Z- , sents a sale made by shipment M. K. Parsons hit home mineral are there regions ia this comnrrlrw him, aa do alaoelght unto is A Beggs, and it Ballantyna and rtiUiM all of whom are married. Mr. derstood umt tha prices paid ranged monwealth, whero the prospeotor hia burro have never trod, in which mett aad bu family lived In Kaye-ip- i from 16 to I4. as .ntil aboii t fifteen 3 ears ago, Next week the Salt Lake Route will poeaibilltlea nra equallyto he great some In found been Idaho. have te moved they commence to move about 600 carloads rin they of sheep which will be loaded as soon portions of Nevada. Mr. Maguire 1u a contribution to the LOOT ROY Ifi FOUND. as sheared and sent to Wyoming. The Oregon 8hort Line already hat Mining Review, taya that tt la passing Mt Lake, April Id. Snagged In a some kOO carloads booked for shipment strange how many people will follow are the crowd" and lotto their money cheermah patch, .mothered In enow, Pat-- to Idaho, and aa a big portion wild-oa- t ear-olaon of ewes the increase will s fully In enterprises when they gviHvan, the four y the give u. Sullivan, living at 466 South about 1,006 carloads to move out could withdraw to some new and virgin field, but little known, and acquire Sttk Wett atreet, waa found about In the fall. .rday by n rescuing party These, however, are but a drop In something of permanent worth and imp Back moun-u-!l the bucket to what will be mored dur- value. iw the lummit of Hog This statement la true, and indicates about Are and a half mile east ing the latter part of the month. All indications point to Idaho being the that men who ,,follow the crowd" are g Bountiful, hr taenty hour, the lad had been favored state of the sheep men thia only bent upon speculation, and are back and forth aummerx not actuated by the idea of safe and tel Wandering Krai ravine., ictracing hie track., profitable Investment; for It la safe to CHILD ALIVE AND UNINJURED. (KnbiBt Irdgeu of rocka and wading ay that the pwjority of those who lant have a penchant for new boom camps it tbwgh now drifts, Patcy take through the cruatad enow where Little Patay Sullivan and who invest in mining propositions W pot langled in an oak bru.h patch. Lost In the Canyon. concerning which they know practicalTim he lay. unable to move, when ly nothing, will lose out in the long Salt Lake, April 16. --The New. run, or elea they will .make a quick tit leaning party came upon him. Hie (Mbit mo. anawrred the re. ruing call uys: Members of the family of John turn and get wut, aa but comparatively Not until Ser-fau- t Sullivan, who resides at 466 South few dan hope to become interested in a tip ud time iguln. e Job. J. Robert! arrived to with Ninth We.t street.' were made exceed- raally mine, for the reason r b fitr jird. of the lad wag hia ingly glad yesterday afternoon when that the number of really meritorious wa proposition a can easily ha enumerated, krai.- Sergeant Roberta called Patsy,- - a little " and brought safely to hia home, after It Mb mrIi and at last located him. while the number of ' in the hills for more than really value lees prospects are legion. hia hands and fact GM1M through, That the child is alive purple frm cold, the thinly clad child twenty hours. While Nevada haa the call at the vii draggM out of the snow and bru.h. and uninjured la almost a miracle, ax present time, in the matter of poputhe little fellow waa not only exposed larity, and Justly aov there are many He wai emptied in a blanket end lata to hia borne. There he rested hia to the chilly mountain wlnda, but all other portions of this western country rich (trend etaeki on hia mother's aohlng night had tramped through drifta, and .which, doubtless, are equally tart and waa lovingly klined by hie when finally discovered waa lying tan- and prolific in their deposits of tha gled In (ha brush in the mldat of deep precious metals brathera and sinter. are the bonanaa state la the Battle Born fmp of hunger pierced him and he now. districts cried for Sergeant John J. Roberta .waa the which are now the observed of all ota comething to eat. He waa M mu hot food and milk. After person who found Patay, and the big servers" and 4t la aafe to aay that If mine hie eyelid dropped and anon ha officer quickly and tenderly placed the certain localities in Utah, Idaho, MonM lira a hravy ileep, which showed benumbed and exhausted child In hia tana, Arisons and Colorado were given own great coat and lost no time In Act nhiu.tion had almost overtaken due consideration by the prospector, placing him In tha care of the almost tha mining man and the Investor, tai HI. deep wa. sound but natural frenaled mother. nd k la believed that he will, not attf-h- r nqw camps of acknowledged If waa late on Saturday afternoon many peniaarat Injury from the' effects merit would soon bo found outside of hia from wandered that Patay away k hia terrible experience. sons. elder brother, the two of them being at theThiacharmed" Nr. Bulllvan 1 true of Utah, and la employed at the high the time In especially City Creek canyon, whara were an army ta leak in City Creek canyon. Patay pt prospectors to swarm vmt vlth hia father and older broth-- . the father of the boya la employed by over the mountains and through the In the capacity of a tankman. John, to the tank Saturday after-wu- . the city canyons of thia stats .In a manner hia duties waa Sullivan Mr. performing He wau going In search iff wild it bout the waterworks In the canyon, atmtlar fo the a tamped to Nevada, vwe. Patay and hia brother gath-t- a would not belong before new and themselves busied and lada the gatherin armful of buttercupa and vio- would ing wild flowers. Soon the 'younger wonderful mineral discoveries child became separated from the other, be heralded from one end of the conand It was some time before the par- tinent to the other. IURGLARR INVADE HOME. In Utah there are many localities ent became aware that his children He Immediately which have been barely prospected, aa were not together. fclt lake, April 16. Three burg-t- a search for Patay. but could yet Regions which are rich in their iitered the house of Miss Smith, began a find no trace of him. Other men at mineral wealth and which offer splen3 Kendall terrace, between 8 Joined In the hunt, did inducements to the prospector eqd ia oclock last evening, and after work no the canyon with better success. Finally when miner, to the Investor and capitalist. ""bly ransacking everything In darkness had come, lanterns were proOne inch locality la to ba found in hmiM c.lirly walked out of the cured, and tha hill were scoured ia Garfield conqty, in southeastern Utah, ben Miss Smith returned ry?00,r quest of the lost child. This continued where In the White Canyon district tn found them In the house. the Henry mountains, there ia much to the night. Nl Smith left the house at I through At an early hour on Sunday morn- attract the attention of the seeker after tawkand went to call on a friend nones and that would Ining officers from police headquarters " away in the terrace. Sha went up the canyon in the patrol wag- vite exhaustive and extensive Investitamel tt I oclock and when ahe on, and they were reinforced by mount gation. The Henry mountain ia ta, TUESDAY e STATE EXCHANGED unlocked the front door the men were atanding in the upper hall. She called to the neighbors and told them that there were burglars in the house and then turned and asked the men what they wanted in the bouse. They came down the stairs and one of them brushed Mia. Smith aside as he pa seed, and said, Oh. go on; we were Ju.t up there to see George.' They then pawel out of the front door and aa the gentlemen in the neighborhood had heard tha call sad arrived at about the lime the men were passing out the robber nut aa fast they . could go. They had turned everything In the house upside down In their search for valuable. The only article that Mias Smith noticed m mining waa a revolver, which she had on the top of the folding bed. Nile Smith m.v. that the men were a'l young and of a very tough appearance. The police were notified and Cspt. Burbidge and two officers made a quick run to the place in the patrol, but were unable to find aay trace of the men. UTAH. i rejsiou .if state and EXAMINER: r - dt-er- ; Itching, torturing akin erupt Iona, dlaflguna, annoy, drive ore wild. Dnan'e Ointment brings quick relief and lasting turaa. Fifty cents at any drug tore. GORKY NOT WANTED IN NEW YORK HOTELS The Tribune todaji aaya; Maxim Gorky and hln woman com panlon Were not found by newspaper men in this city yesterday. Their baggage, it waa ascertained, waa shipped to Chicago on a morning train, and there waa tome ret eon to believe they had gone on the tame train with the baggage, together with Nikolay Gorkys adopted eon. After being turned away from the La Fayette-Bre-ver- t hotel on Saturday evening, they went (o a Socialist meeting at the Grand Central pa la re with the understanding that they were to hava rooms at the Rhinelander. When they got to the Rhinelander an hour before mid night, however, they were told by Frank Geraty, the manager, that they could not stay there and that their baggage must b removed Immediately. Gorky and the woman who has been traveling with him an hia wife, went to No. S, Fifth avenue, la company with Mr. and Mra. Leroy M. Snort, while the baggage waa sent to the Victoria hotel in charge of Gorkys adopted son. An attempt lo get room at the. Victoria failed and the baggage was taken to tha Grand Central station and left in tha baggage room over night. At the Grand Central station yesterday It waa aid that the baggage had been ship pad to Chicago, hut nobody would aay positively whether or not Gorky and bin oompanloos were on the train aa passengers. II. Gaylord Wiltshire, who wa for the appearance of the Bald Gorkys at the hotel last night that he did not know what bad become of them. He waa unable to communicate with the Rcotts or the New York, April 16. Ple-rhof- f, Belle-Clalr- Gorkye. I wanted Gorky to come to my I told him that he house," be said. would not be able to get room In any hotel in the city with hit conventional real wife, when It waa known that wife and children were In Russia, and 1 think the trouble he In encountering will teach him a lesson. He will find cannot out that he accomplish anything in this country except with the aid of the Socialist. Abraham Caban, editor of the Jewish Dally Forward. said lat night that Gorky had arranged to go out of the keep out of dty for a fen day and sight in a quiet place, where he could n write In peace. In that way, Mr. said, the Runaiaa author and revolutionist could get ready tome !i Ca-ha- w. The late Spring and quiet business makes it necessary to unload our immense stock, so for ten days we make you this great opportunity. A TRIE $15-3- 9 $12.39 $7.39 Boys and Children's Suits cut in the same proportion. These are all the latest styles and best makes. New and fresh, just from the factory. - m PIT ONE-PRIC- E lfWL speeches he lc:e&d o deliver in thia! ruuuiry end in tic lr.tnu'inie the trou-tie over hi ccmipaut.Hi would abate. I Immigration i'ou.Ui:.umer Robert I Warbern. when wren at the Hotel. Chelate yeaterdwy. id the caae was no longer in the liana of the local imIt wa up to migration bureau. Me;ralf of far Iiepartmeni of Commerce and Labor at Washington, he itald. "If Gorky i. as be eayt, married to the an re and at the tame time ia not legally epara:ed from his wife in Ruiia. then he ta liable to deaid the commission. For portation, both bigamy and polygamy are under of the ban the immlgiwtloa law a. As the cwe now siands. however, we have no evldeuoe againt Gorky and the woman who came her a Miue. Gorky." wa Word received yesterday through the Central committee of the Bund of this city that Mamma, who waa the leader during the retoluiion in the Baltic provincte. aud hrad of the federal committee durir.g the three week of the republican government, would be la New York m a few days. Hi niikinn to thia country is similar to that of Gorky. He will make a teur of the Unitrd State, making speeches and lecturing. AN ELECTRIC LINE BETWEEN NEW YORK AND CHICAGO. IN ONE ETATE It NOT EFFECTIVE IN ANOTHER. 16.-- In Re to it that jour clothes are made at home, P. Anderson & Co. Have always from 10 to 15 workmen emplojed In their and earned shop by them la spent in Ogden. money Ilence get your clothes made by legitimate Taiktrs who understand their business. They guarantee all 282 unwilling participant In the ceremony. He any in hia answer to the woman's complaint that he left her Immediately after the marriage ritei were performed and, during all the time that haa Intervened, ban seen her only three times. In 1881 he secured a divorce In the tats of Connecticut, where he then resided, and In 1888 waa married there to another woman. The New York supreme court held the Connecticut marriage to be illegal, decreed the first wife to ba atlll the legal wife and directed Haddock to pay her an annuity of 780. That finding wu sustained by today's decision, which held that Mra. Haddock was without the Jurisdiction of the Connecticut court. Juatice White, in deciding the rase, laid down the general principle that a state in which only one party to a haa no divorce proceeding retddea, right to dissolve a marriage which ail other ttalea mut respect. Justices Harlan, llrewer and Brown which united in dissenting opinions were delivered by Justice Brown. They took the position that the Connecticut divorce proceeding was regular and Is in other entitled lo due credence states. Justice Iirown declared, in hit opinion, that the court had taken a backward step in this direction. Justice Holmes also disented from the decision of the court, hut delivered an independent optnlon. He said the result of the decision would be fa! many rhlldren, hut added that he would not go o far as to predict that ririltsstion would come to en end, whatever the conclusion in the caae. OF April 16. John E. Faith-orpresident of the Chicago Terminal Transfer company which operates a belt line around Chicago, waa today appointed receiver of the company. The appointment of the receiver was not contested end comet aa as Indirect result of a suit brought some time ago by holders of against the corporation become necessome of Its bonds. It haa tta to elevate for the company sary tracks and to erect aew building! and it wan believed Umt this wld not readily be done under a receivership. IS NOT MADE IN A' THE FIRST WHITE SEWING MACHINE WAR PLACED ON THE MARKET IN 1IFB. WE HAVE MANUFACTURED AND SOLD OVER 1,600,000 MACHINES. OUR PRER. MANY IMHAVING ENT MODEL IR THA BERT, PROVEMENTS WHICH STAND FOR PERFECTION. CALL AND EXAMINE. WHITE SEWING MACHINE CO. UTAH. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK, OGDEN, UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY Zhc mtab Jgneatv.ini.a a. Wf. CM HALWM a. IRational $3anh ot V. 'laa a. MAAS. C v. iiaKirraeii. Arr INTEREST PAID ON SAVINGS AND TIME DEPOSITS flq&cn. THE BEST MAGAZINES See This Combination and Send in Your Orders....... The Woman's Home Companion- - for one year The Illustrated American, formerly Leslie's Popular Monthly, for one year The American Queen for one year. The Standard or Examiner for one month 2 AU for the Sum of.. You .25 Cant Beat it in (he Whole Country SEE SAMPLES AT THE STANDARD OFFICE ORDER NOW BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. n, They Fearthe Light WHO DO THE WRONG Turn on the Light Fan Francisco, Cal., April 16. After holding a revolver to tha stomach of Conductor Mauel Vallejo of car number 1, on the South City line, on Saturday night, about 11:10 o'clock, nd robbing (be hclples man of tli. ionn highwayman added a touch of grim humor to the eplMrie. aa he lighted from the car with his booty, by saying to the oonduetor: I'm sorry, pal, but I need the money. Jest tell th boys bat you Ml In with Red Shirt Gordon." BARTER PARSED QUIETLY. St. Peiereburg, April 16. 1:18 P- - m. Go far aa known at this hour, East- er pasted quietly throughout the Ne dispatches chronicling disorders were recaived ONE GREAT ADVANTAGE OF OVER LIGHTS ELECTRIC ALL OTHERS. 11 Lilt & em- anit-emiti- c. dur-I- BURG- LARS, SNEAK THIEVES AND THAT LIKE. Than Joked About the Method Pursued. the nishL ARTICLE DAY ROBBED A CONDUCTOR. pire. AN NAMED. Chicago. And Street Twenty-fift- h THE TT TO DATE TAILOR STORE. opin- ion by Juatice White, ibe supreme court of the United Htatnn today decided the ease of Joha W. Haddock va. Harriet Haddock, a divorce proceeding Instituted In the courts of New York (Tty, in favor of the woman. The Haddocks were married in 1868 and the husband claimed to have been an RECEIVER Good Dressers be- DIVORCE Washington, April Tenons gelling clothes who hare them made in Eastern sweat ghopa are not supporting our merchants at home, who pay the taxes and build up our community. they make. Then hours Chicago. April tween Chicago and New Torlt on trains operated by electricity and making au miles an average spaed of aevvnty-flv- e hour ia the pln cl lucurporatora of the Chicago A New York Electric Air Line railroad. Tha schema appears to be far in lit. future, however, it la aaaerted that "some of the right way haa been secured, hut the projectors decline to aay how much. They hope to have the road in operatLm la flva years. Aa the name implies, the proposed road wlU sacrifice everything for speed nd diatanca. According to tlia atate-rneof Joaotb.au D. Price, president of the Construction company, ja hlch was organised to build the road, the line wll be 741 miles long, or ZU0 miles shorter tksa any steam road now connecting the two dtiea. Part of tha lias already has been surveyed. Tue first aertlon of tho road to be built, according to tlio promote re. will be cut of Chicago, and the work on thia. one of the incorporators said last night, will begin soon. In nhooalng the roate ne attawtion paid to whether the lias rona through larga e'tlea or not--, Aa now surveyed the read will he right miles south of South Bend, lad., and at that point it ia proposed to build a station aud run a spur Into tha dty. Tho name plan will bo followed where tho road passes near any other oity. These spur 11 nee will be oonaeried with the street railway systems la each Iowa ami it la proposed to run freight trains at night. The det He te the kind of cars to bo used liavo not traen thoroughly worked out, according to F. H. Wood, a lawyer living at Oak Park, Hi., who ia one of lbs incorporators. Ho suggested, , however, that lira Germans have attained great success la building third-rai- l roads, suoh aa tt ia proposed thia one will be, and he mentioned the fact that on a peoially const runted roadbed elwotrle trains there have been operated at 111 miles an hour. 16 T CLOTHING HOUSE SUPPORT HOME LABOR 8ec-jetar- -- $18, $20, $22, $25 and $27 Suits for only $12.50, $13.50, 14.50, $15.50 and $16 Suits for $7.50, $8.50, $9.50, $10.50 and $11.50 Suits for............ 17. R- - . CAMPBELL, General Manager. Ml El. E. W. WADE, Agent n ffiMHBHHSRaiBSn i J |