OCR Text |
Show i'ue Morning examinlr: STORY HIS BEST THIS PAPER Of.DEN, I'lUlUY UTAH, OTTOROI MORNING, 1WG. 3 in :hc iioxi phu-- ivci tlu-- ' dll ill,' gl':ll IMI'lKiiali.lia li.i-cil or imiii.T! I .jo uu' t.iiaiii1!- -, whaier-r--Hii.- l thi ' uiiir-- t ail f iii' eur-- u.itii'ii. itOik wlii.'ii ROOSEVELTS SPEECH AT THE H p-- l You can get ! iiiviu-i- TO BE PRINTED IN e Mi-- Z. C. M. I. il'I.S, Home Made Shoes ihe l,ii ft-- teal' ii.e guieriiiiieui ha taken very long Ti.ii'iug fif DEDICATION THE CAPITOL in tlu.' ilirocitim of eXrit'fHiug i:ri.li an. I aeeiiring (hit- - adequate i.. tin ol oiar il:e grear cur)oraiiiuia. ami il w under (he leadership of ouo of the m. mi honored puhlic men in our coun-t-i .. one of 1eiina. IvauiaV inui sons the present senator, and then Atti.rnev General Kim that ill new uevarture was (wgim. Eveiits Ulie hate moved faei iluiing last fiv It is eurinu tu liaii, and at the extreme hiiteiutwhieh not merely the spukesmeu and repifM-iitu-iiruf orgauiseil wealtli. luu many most eXi'.dielii isHiserv.ilive people i hiu a ui the ai'tioii of All. Knox and of the ariniiniiratini. of "Many of the greatest fiiiaueiei this country were certain tlut Air. Ku.ix's Northern Securities suit, if won. would pluuge us Into the woist panic we had ever seen. They a luetlement Io anarchy, aa an aptdogv for sueialiant. the advocacy of po liclcs iliac cither have now law or arc In fairway of liecuni-in- g las: and yet these same policies, so far from representing eitliei anarchy or sociaiiam. were in reality the autid.ucs to anarchy, the siiliikilea to s.icla!ini. To exercise a cmiataully uud constantly more stijiervlslun anil control over ihe great common carrlei of the country 11 lu'ressliv for serkNisty prevent eoiisiileiing such a iivijcct as llio ownership of railroads a pel' icy whicli would lie evil in it result from every standpoint. aiiuikar exienaion of the national correct IHtwer 1 overace and in the mauageiucnt uf all great rarporat ions engaged in interstate business will in similar fashion rend or far more atahls the present system by doing away with those grave Mimses which are nut only evil In theuiaclve. hut are also evil because they furuiah tug peoplu against uli forma of property, snd to commit the country to scheme of wild, would be remedy wlilih would work infinitely more harm than the disease itself. The gmaniiuent ought not to eon duet the hiistnesa of the cnuniry; but it ought to regulate it so that it shall ho cou- j-- c emi-I'.e- President Warns hearers Against the Legal His Advisers of the u for ms.t, beya, miasea and chil dren again in Ogden. They are the old reliables, every pair guaranteed, as well as the LADIES PILLOW SHOES . holders of Corporate Wealth Pennsylvanias Capitol Building Cost $13,500,00 and has Furnished a Political Scandal tion of the law, iu m - ":,i ihvy liairisbuig. Pa.. Oct. 4. In the wor may be left " of (he largct crowd Dial has ihi tli Ir u r. bridled will on .,nr ever gathered in Itn'iisliiirg. ihe new capftoi uf lYuusiliauia rival, or on those who la. in- t.r them, ill Hi or nil general pulili. (. was dedicated tivlny. with brief cereof their profei.,,i aii.t in the monies. in which President Roosevelt i i heir elient of ueiulc look an uc.tive part. inaejg.-o- f Crowds began to guiln-- r al.mt the iasviTH strive io preveti1 i i llicit in laws and sriiimmense graud stand, uf the West Slate si: eel entiauce to the vapiiol judti'ii'i iteicrniliiations of '.,::ioc tlia them. pass niiich shall eaiuv. grounds, at .lay hi rah and when io The thienerriscw In gun the plare one in nrderdo nut invokethe d i'..iiiiiuiiiu , 'ci'i aiu-io compel maws of humanity. s Rrf.ire the liy rich and tm" h great were maned lain began falling of law alike oil the rout. " 'hey are and Miiuli. and cou'inne.l throughout tin ceremo. cr criisch-nsl- t out (in the wai ii nies Thousand stood in the d:riie!i-lu- g '11111 But ion is 'I'dii'cil whendial the dnw upour. lacing the president' ever an effort is made t. innke ihe siand. which was tilled, notwithstandnid of the national giveim.m. whething the raiu. Most of tbe llckei hold era were men few women l liming out er fur the efficient regi;!ai..ii of rail road, for the efficient i:iiri'liiioii of on account oJ the weather. sefor President Rouaercli arrived at the greut eoriNirailona, orawl1 etfineiiily a law u- - tin Penns Ivmiia railroad stiiticm at 11 ''2 curing obedience to law nd similar national eight-houa. m. and was met In the capllol 'la iair statutes.' to the committee and escorted 'The iloeirine they p; iih would-makcupitol lit- die governor's troop the Cimatliution intiely the lined staroute (he I'mxds from the shield of incompetence ur.il the excuse In tion the capltot and the president for government paralysis: they tvent was glteu a cordial greeting At rlie i atit a. a justification for ri'u-in- g Uo-- . waa mot the by capitol president tempt. the remedy of tril. instead of formal and. after the Iennypacker as the of vital poser necessary , the governor and Mayor fur i he source existence of 0 mighty and Gross of Harrisburg presented the nation. president with gold medals a gifts of "Strong nationalist lhiig!i 1 ain, the state and city, respectively. ami firm 1 belief ia that then President Roosevelt wss given sn must lie hough my a wide extension of the powenthusiastic i crept tou when he of the national government io deal on the grandstand at 11:43 er with of this kind, I freely o'clock. All branches of the state gov- adnili questions matters ernment waa represented in the crowd of first-rat- that aa regards many importance we must rely on the plHtform and considerable apace belief-mewas given to specially invited guests. purely upon ihe state for Ihe of conditions. The sevFollowing the reading of a portion of en! statepresent must do their duty or our the scripture from a historic Bible can never he pin on a by John H, Dllingham, a member of cidxcntliip plane. Therefore mow hearttbe Society of Friends In Philadelphia, proper ily congratulate the people of the fmmer Gov. William A. Stone, pres- state of Pennsylvania on what Ita legident of the capitol building commitupon what Its government, tee. lu a brief addreas turned the islature, has during this present building over to the governor, at tbe year.accomplished It ia a remark aide record of same time handing him a gold key. arhfriemenl. Gov. Pennyjiarker accepted the build"Through your legislature you have ing on beiiulf of the people in a brief speech. When lie concluded-- the gov- abolished passes: you bate placed thn ernor introduced President. Roosevelt, offices of the secretary of the coiiimon- faith and the Insurance commissionwho delivered the prlnrlpal address of er I he day. The president spoke as fol- of upon an houorable ami honest basis salary only by abolishing the fee lows: It ia a very real pleasure for me ay stem; you have passed a law compellto attend rhess eeremoules at the cap- ing the officer and employes of great ital of your great state. In every great rltiea to attend to the duties for which rribis of our government the attiiudc they are paid by all the taxpayers, ami of Penuaylvaniahusheenof crucial im- to refrain from using 'the power conferred by their offices to influence portance. as the affectionate nickname campaigns; you have prohibited of Keystone' aiguilles. Pennsylvania assessments by city employes; you has always looked warily liefore aha have diy law protected the state treaa-ur- y leaped, and h was well that she should from depredation and conserved do so. Hut tuning finally made up public ninneya for use only in her mind. In each great crista of our the the public Interest; you have by a national history, her weight haa been law for the protection of the .elective Cast unhesitatingly upon the right able franchise made tampering with the and has been found irresistible. Thi ballot boxes end the easting of illegal was true alike at the time of the Declaration of Independence, at the time votes ao dlfllcull as In all probability to be unprofitable; you have providof the adoption of the Constitution, and during the terrible years when ed. a primary election law which the issue waa the preservation of the guarantees to 'he voters free expression in the select of candidates for Union. , you hare by law regulated Pennsylvania's soil is historic. It ofllre; s waa within Pennsylvania's hordeis trad improved tbe civil service of your greatest eitlea; and, that the contest opened which waa to decide whether the valiant soldiers of you have passed g law containFrance would lie able to bar this con- ing a provision which I most earntinent against tbe domination of the estly hope will in aubatance be cololikewise in a law by the emipeople of the English-speakinnies. It was on Pennsylvania's null gres at the coining session- - a provisthat the Declaration of Independence ion prohibiting the officer of any corwaa signed and tbe constitutional conporation from making a contribution vention held. It waa In Pennsylvania of the money of dial corporation to any that Washington wintered at Valley candidate or any political committee Forge, and by keeping his army to- for the payment of any election whatever. gether during that winter definitely turned the scales In our favor In tbe Is surely not tno much to say h contest for Independence. It waa again that this body or substantive legislaon Pennsylvania's soil, at Gettysburg, tion marks an epoch In the history of that the tide turned in the civil war. the practical betterment of political In the composition of her people, moreconditions, not merely for your state, over, Pennsylvania baa epitomised the bnt for all our stales. I do not recall composition of our Union; for here any other state which, In many Old World races have- mingled a similar length legislature of time, has to lie their blood to make that new- type, the credit, such a body of admirable legAmerican. Finally. In all branches of islature. Let me, however, most earnthe public service, in peace and in estly urge thst your legislature conwar, the native nr adopted citlaens of tinue this record of publc service by Pennsylvania have attained the highentering one or two additional laws. est eminence, I do not, however, come here today One subject which every good cltlsen to apeak only of tke past, and still should have at heart- above almost leas to appeal merely to state 'pride. all others is the matter of child Everywhere the great growth of We can show that the past la with ua a living force only by the way In modern industrialism ha been scrum-panteby abuses in connection with which we handle curaelvea In the presof labor which have ent, and earh of na can beat, show hie the employineni devotion to h!a own state by making necessitated a complete change in the evident his paramount devotion In that attitude of the stale toward labor. shove all true la connecThis Union which Includes all the slates. The study of the great deed of the tion with the employment of child past is of chief avail In so far aa it labor. In Penns lania you hare msd incites us to grapple resolutely and ef- a beginning, hut nly a beginning. In fectively with the problems of the proper legisia'fiiii and administration W are not tow menaced on this subject ; the law must If necespresent. by foreign war. Our I .lon la firmly sary he si rengih' iied, and it must, be l The established. But earh generation han rigorously onfbned. Its special' and aelroua difficulties; and government ran to but little, in the we of this generation have to struggle matter of child lehor, though I earnestwith evils springing from the very ly hope that that little will he permaterial success of which we are ho mitted to be done by congress. The proud, from the very growth and prosgreat hulk of the work, however, must perity of which 'with justice, we boast. be left to the state legislatures: and The extraordinary industrial changes If our state legislatures would act of the last half century have produced aa drstlcaily snd yet as wisely on a totally new set of conditions, under thi subject of child labor as Pennwhich rew evils flourish: and for these I sylvania has seted whhJn the present new evils new remedies must be de- 1 year as regards the subjects I have vised. enumerated shine, the gin would be Some of these evils can he grapliterally incalculable; and one of the pled with by private effort only: for most vita nerd- - of modern American can we never afford to forget Hist in lift-- won id si last he adequately met. the last analysis the chief factor in So much flic state. Now for personal success, and indeed In na- the nation; snd here I cannot do bettional greatness, must be the sturdy, ter than base my theory of governcharacter of the individand ual cltlsen. But many of these evils mental action iinn the words are of such a nature that no private deeds of one of Pennsylvania's grrai-es- t sons. Justice Jamea Wilson. Wileffort can avail against them. Theae has been singularly evils, therefore, must be grappled with son's career for many years, hut I teller by governmental action. In some canes that more and more it I now- being this governmental action must be exadequately appreciated; and 1 congratercised by tbe several states Indivu-uallIn yet 'others it hsa become ulate your stare upon the fart that increasingly evident that no efficient Wilsons body is to be taken sway state action io possible, and that we from where it. :r.w rest and brought need through executive action, through back to lie, a it should. In Pennsylvania soil. He was a signer of Ihe legislation and through judicial interuf Independence. Hp waa pretation and construction of law, to Declaration Increase the power of tbe federal gov- one of the men who saw that the revolution, in which he had served as a ernment. would he utterly fruitless unif we fail thus to increase it, we soldier, less it was followed by a close and show our impotence and leave ourselves at the mercy of thoe Ingenious permanent. unUn of the states; and legal adviser of the holders of Tast In the constitutional convention, and in securing the adoption of the concorporate wealth, who. In the performit ance of what they regard aa their stitution and expounding what duty, and to servo the ends of their meant, he rendered services even clients. Invoke the law at one time for greater than he rendered as a memthe confounding of their rivals, and ber of the continental, congress, which fur it tvs at another tiiaoatiive for the nullifica deilared our pic.-cno- c 'i'-'- : matf-uifiiv- I (u HAMLIN GARLAND Most of our readers trill recognize in this portrait the author who liver, his stories, making them highly realistic pictures of the west. We have secured for our columns gnw-lings- ever-growi- ways the best thlag Mr. Garland has ever Independent, New York: A thrilling romance worthy of . the author's reputation Buffalo Commercial: Beat constructed and moat raalla tic and Intaaae story that ha haa writtea. Outlook, New York: Mr. Garland io at hie best showing ns the miner and the cowboy os they are, without the glamour of romance. Look e m 1 lor HESPEfi by HAMLIN GARLAND In This Paper. To Begin in an Early Issue WILL BEGIN SUNDAY Wanted exii-ctsc- d best story. nay done. c rtedt-eutiii- n one of his best which we shall begin to print in a few day3. In selecting Hesper we have been guided not only by our own judgment but by the opinions of competent reviewers who agree that it is the author's 5t. Paul Dispatch: la - 50000 more men to smoke Weslers Best CIGARS Strictly Union Made aya-tem- flu-all- y, By special request we make "Weslcrs Best" at 375 Twenty-thir- d Street, Ogden, Utah, g COUNT WITTE IN PARIS. Ha Continues to Bs Peuimiatic as to Russia. Paris, Oet. 4. Count and Countess Witte arrived yesterday from Herman r. The count, who has considerably' improved In health, attended a theater last night, his presence attracting much attention. He said he had absolutely no connertlon with the direction of affairs In Hiissla. hut was following the developments with the keenest Interest. 'The empire." he said. "Is passing through a great crisis, hut although I am a pessimist at present, I have not of seeing eventually Tl a string around your finger so abandoned hope evolved a parliamentary snd mnnarrh-is- l ik to remember to favor us with your regime nulled to the needs of the country." Yon work. I i.at order for .sundry Count Witte added that he did not 'annul Tory well do without the desire to reply to the attacks or criticism! of the enemies of KtisaU, wc render. Our aim Is to satisespecially when thev come front men fy our t'liiiioiners, for. by so doing of the stamp of 11. Bchwanelmrh, tbo their continued patronage is assured. controller of the empire." - r. ser-vir'f- n Ogden Steam Laundry Phones 174. " 437 25th St. 1 FACTORY IS DESTROYED. uatl-jna- Three Acres of Buildings Consumed by Fire. Xew York. Oct. 4. The dismantle plant of the National Starch company took fire late Inst night, at Glen and was totally destroyed. The building covrred a space of three acres on the ffais hack of Hempstead harlior. The Hen Cove starch plant was formerly owned hr the Duryea Starch dd out to the Nacompany, which tional Starch company live roars ago. The building, with Its machinery, was the most complete starch manufsctorr In the world, and was valued ot sl.nnfi.. UtK). The National dismantled the plan. fve r FRAUDS IN FRANCE. Embtaalements Amounting to Investigated. $2,100,-00- 0 over-talke- Paris. Oct. 4. A preliminary Investigation lasting two years an a half of omheizlements amounting to $2.10h,0mi The fraud haa fust been completed. were perpetrated h.v means of the formation of fraudulent Industrial comA financier named tapare. panies. who cannot be found, is to be tried hr default. Seven other men will be tried on charge of complicity. , 1 - y. FIRE ON A TRANSPORT. Ocr. 4. Qimrterm.ister Washington. General Humphrey haa received a raid-gradated at Manila today, from Chief Quartermaster Patton, staling that the fire which Innke out on the transport Thomas yesterday is now under control an.:, the damage will not he iery serious. m, d illC oll.Vi-St- . of lb,' anil llliii.i-I- - ft-- pro-i'r- v - ni u i: mi which our ill'll pclulrllt'r. 'Hr iu ihe t...i!,. wiin .lie fsi h '.f AlirHlium .l.iiu-idii- ; and coupled with his faith iu ihe people lie had - hum uf ihe nun who wh- 111 hi people ittd ium that ilu coinage n recognize the tael t ita, l.iitli in ihe pen-ph- aiu.iiin'i-;o inch in,: im'.i-rcl The r ldeil in the u.i-- i u.nl govern nicii: wcie giicu full uiui power to work on l.eh.iir of f In- III i lie Ki'lu-ra'I.i- haw-- : -. e inrn-axlb- loKi-ihc- lie ile I'liqkeil eicu lulisuhiu-i- ) lufijie ,Uihal1 ihe not ei.M'cna iiit'ii-!- . in the efficiency Imi ni ihe ieicuce of this mu huh ih.ii an inlicr-creeled in the ualnm. outside ol the euuniciaied power con ferr.-upon it by' the conaiiir.nun. in nil cusp where the object Involved sru heumd the power of the diH-rii- U' a mm-ur-e 1 aev-i-r- and was a power ordinai-i- l exercised hy sovereign naliuns. "lu h remarkable letter In which lie advocated setting forth In early and clear iashiun the powers of ihe . tiaiiuiiul he laid down the propnsiilun that It should be made clear that there were neither vacancies nor intertcrenccs between the limit ' ( ' Fifth Ward Store 2644 MADISON AVE. BELL PHONE 513' X. Catalog and Samples. ' T. A. SHREEVE Well Mounted ir well-men- u giivei-niuent- stale and national jurisdiction, and that iMtli jui'Udlcii'ui together only one uniform and compre-Leu-ir- e system of government and laws: I list is. wheneier the slate can not iiel, because the need to be uiet is not one of a single then the national government, reje should have resuming all the complete power in act It was in the spirit of Wilson lhai Washington, and Washington's lieutenant, Hamilton, acted; and it waa in the same spirit that Marshall construed the law. "It Is only by acting in thla spiiit that the national judges, legislators, and executlvM ran give a aatisfar-torsolution of the great, question uf the present day the question of providing on behalf of the sovereign jmo-pl- e ihe meant which will enable the people in effective form to assert their sovereignty over the immense corporations of the day. Ortaln judicial duclhluns have done Just what ilson fcured; they have, aa a matter of fact, left vacancies, left, blanks between tbe limits of possible state JurMIntion and ihe limit of actual national jurisdiction over the control of the great corporatloni-- . It ia the narrow construction of ihe powers of the national government which In our 'democracy has proved Ihe chief means of limiting the national power to cut out abuses, and which ia now Ihe chief bulwark of those great moneyed which oppose and dread any com-MiM-- d (Contlnucd SPORTS pe-jpl- Is every piece of harness that leave our a ora. Each piece la taahtunod from the brat leather and moat aeirei metals, and the workmanship throughIn every respect. Our out ia saddlee are the talk of all hone-bacfiral-claa- a k rldere for comfort and ease, and they are scrupulously made and finished by experienced eperatora. Give in a call when you next seed oraelhlng la our link on Page Beveu) nu-iel- J.C. Plait Saddlery Co. 2281 Washington Ava. 278 23d Bt, NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn Takea Two Gamas. Buaion. Oct.. .4. A double-heade- r brought tbe local National league aea-u- u to a close loday. Brook!) n taking both game, 3 to I and 2 to 1 retqiee-tivrlThe double victory gave Brooklyn fifth place in the league standing. r. Moores: First game: Brooklyn Boston Oil) THE PLACE TO Is THE K. ltll. 3 k 1 All titui om: IJndaman and Brown. Second game: RIGHT Buy Your Meat 4 dll (mhi Htrlrklelt and Killer; But ter tea: H. II. E. 12 Wright 1 B U Brooklyn HM IU 1 3 0 Boston Bait erica: Kasim and Hitler; Yuung and Brown: Chicago Shut Out Pittsburg. champion Pittsburg, Oet. Chicago abut out the Plttstmrg tie day, 4 to 1. The play er of the home tram reached third base only once. to place them under efficient Alt hough the champion had patched governmental control. up In and outfield, ITctaler wa given "Many legislative adi jua and mituy errorless anpiHirt. which f a in confijudicial decision R.H.K. Score: dent lime will show to have been er41 Him) Dini out) ? 3 roneous and a damage to the country Pittsburg 1 ouo -4 g q (in; jo Chicago If our avoided woiud have been legisHalt erica: taitleld, Plielpa and lators and jurists had approached the Kllng and Moran. fells; Pfclstcr, matter of enacting and construing the in law of the land the spirit of your Now York, 7; Philadelphia, t. great Pennaylvanlan, Justice Wilson New York. Oct. 4. The New York In the spirit of Marshs jl and (it d titrated Philadelphia today, 7 to A, Hnch deci-lopm us mainly owing to Strang's halting. Ho Washington. In i the battle made a home run and three safe at a pres disadvantage for industrial order aa againat the hunts. Boors: R.H.K. we pre-n- t industrial chaos. If Inter, Philadelphia ....Win Ol Aim 6 in o l narrow In instead New York pn-the constitution OUO 001 tifix 7 in 1 of broad fashion. If we forsake the n Batterlra: Kparks and Duotn; principles of Washington, Marshal), and Bmlth. Wilson and Hamilton, we as a people will render ourselves Impotent io deal AMERICAN LEAGUE with any abuses which may he committed by the men who bNve accumulated the enormous furtunes of toChieago, 1; Cleveland, 1. day, and who use these fortunes in Chicago, Oct. 4. Tbe new chamIn aim vaster corporate form pions cf the American league celebrated their return home today by The legislative or judicial actions winning. 3 to 1, in the opening game and daclstuns of which I complain, be uf the final aoriui with Cleveland. But it remembered, do not really leave three regulars appeared In Chleagn'g to the states power to deal with cor- lineup, the rest of the team taking a R. H. K. porate wealth in business. Actual much needed rest. Before: 000 (Mil 20x 8 4 2 cxiierlence ha shown that the states Chicago 001 000 UOo 1 4 0 are wholly powerless to deal with thla Cleveland Batteries; Felne and Ruth; Joss subject; and any action or decision that deprives tlie nation of Ihe power and Hcml. to deal with it. simply results in leavabsolutely tree ing the corpniati-rnLOUISVILLE RESULTS to vork without any effective super-vlakwhatever: and such a course Is B. Ky.. Oet. 4. Jockey fraiijhl with untold danger to the future of our whole system of governMiller, who had the mount on Dresden ment. slid. Indeed, to our whole civil- in the second race, fell today and several horses ran orer him. HI skull isation. All honest men must abhor and was crushed anti he cut hi txmgue In in a local hospital In a repribate any effort to excite hnsiil-it- half. He is dangerous condition. It was bis first to men of wealth as itirli. W should do all ve ran to encourage mount since he waa suspended at Results: thrift and Inmincsa energy, to put a Douglas park. five First race, furlong -- 1 .aura K. conduct the up.ni of the man who honestly esrns his live. won. Ndra second. John Kaufman Time. 1:00 Ithnod and more then his livelihood, third. Second race, six fnrlmjgs - French he and who honestly uses the has earned. Rut it is our clear duty Nun won. Pot It Due aecond, Nu.i's to sie. In the interest of Ihe poople. Veiling third. Time. 1:14 Third race, six furlongs Chirli that there Is adequate fnipervtKion and control over Ihe business use of swol- Rant man won, Martha Gormau second, len fortunes of today, and also wisely Hector third. Time, 1:13 Fourth rare, elepplechahe. handicap, to deteinilne the conditions upon full course, about two mi Ira Little which these fortune are to he transmitted snd Hip percentage that they Wally won, Lady Jocelyn second. Big. 4:02 (hall pay to the government whose mund third. Time. fire and a half furlongs Fifth race, arm alone them to enables pniteetlug exist. Only the nation rsn do this Elector! lie won. Neiletta second, Alisa work. To relegate it to the stales la Lida third. Time. 1:07 Sixth race, one mile Golden Minfarce, an-- l la simply anothar way of second. The Only Way saying that It dial! not he done at all. eral won Brait 1:11. g Inter- third. Time, Tnder a slee and pretation of the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution. I maintain GRAVESEND RESUL1S. that the national government should with all have complete power to New York, Oct. 4. Results: of thla wealth which In any way goes Eldorado First, race, six furlong Into the commerce between the states - end practically all of It that la emwon, lMa Buhre second, Yankee Girl does third. Time. 1:13 ployed in the great corporation Second race, steeplechase, shout i so llni go in. The national legislator should most scrupulously avoid any miles Boundbronk won. Caller scrdemagogic legislation about the buel-net- s oti il. Garter Knot third. Time. 4:1!. Third race, mile and a sixteenth use of this wealth, and should won. Oarsman second, Bali realize ihat it would be better to have Ed no legislation at all than legislation Dnetachland third. Time. 1:40. Fourth race, nno mile Fnuntain-blu- n courhea either In a vindictive spirit won, Montgomery second. Prluc of hatred toward men of wealth or else drawn with the recklessness of Hampton tlilrd. Time. 1:40 Fifth race, mile and a half Angler impramlnable visionaries. But, on the won, McKlttredgc second. Miss Craw-Tor- d other bond, it shall and must ultimateUnited third. Time. 2:34 ly be understood that, the Sixth rare, six furlongs Jacobite Ftaies government, on behalf of the people of the (.'tilted Riftte. haa and is won, UambriniiH second. Pish Hawk to exercise the power of supervision third. Time. 1:22 Seventh race, aix furlongs -- Sly Bni snd control over the huslneas use of this wealth In the first place, over all won. Baylor aecond. SlfeUaway third. the work of the common car rl era of the Time, 1:13 Meat Market 2369 WASHINGTON AVENUE ts Phones 246 Ind. 814 Bell ns Math-ewao- btiM-nes- a. la the character of the transfer service ire eupply our patrons Prompt, reliable and at low ooet, any time you aay wall be on your job and handle It expeditiously end welL ALLEN a TRANSFER CO. Phone 22 for yours. v The Oaly DeaMe-Trac-k RxRwiy betweee flM Missouri River aed Chkaft. 2-- The Overland Limited d-- -- The Mail Laser leui Trail lu the Werid Compartment and drawing -- mom I sleeping cars, observation cars, din-- I 0 41 I , 4 and library cars, with barber, hath and Book- -j lovers Library; entile train electric lighted, through to Chicago without Direct connection for charge. big cars, j I 1 buffet-smoki- St Pad and Minneapolis 2-- I ? at the nt siatt-- if il for Tender Feetj The Shoe Tkkttf. rvMtrvatlnn. tni full ran N oMam4 fnn C. A. Wilm-f- , s Chicago & 06 GcMral Korth-Weste- ApaL For. m Mata Street Mil Utali. Lake v at City, |