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Show 7 . THE MONDAY OGDEN. UTAH, EXAMINER: MORNING OCTOBER IS, MORNING, 1908. SALT LAKE AND STATE NEWS From Correspondents and State Exchanges tonwtmd BULLION HAS MANY PRODUCERS. Eleven Different Properties Are Note Classed in Category of Mines. Kvuii, Ort. proper; ie are now cluHd among the producers in the Bullion mining The Gold Quarts 1 sacking ore for The shipment from that property. The last shipment sent out a tear weeks ago netted the company 51U6.6S per ton. The present shipment will run, acrordirg to careful .sampling by Supi. Anderson, better than 4110 per ton. all in gold. The I'tah, the property of Laklu k Colburn, Is sending out it' second which. It Is kipineni to Salt in expected, will net better than load and sliver. BulThe Dutchman, owned bj the lion Venture company, a Colorado Spring corporation, has several ears sacked ready for shipment, which will be tent out In a few dajs. New and Important strikes are repotted almost daily. The lateal 1 on the Moose, under lease and optl.iu to Marrin Ixh of Uoldlleld. Probably the richest gold ore yet found in the wae recently discovered by Sewell k Austin on tbe nurJt slope of Bald ntuuntaln. In Corrsl canyon. The ore is alive with free guld, much of It laying In elaba in the chavnges of the rock. There eeems to bn a large body of It. but development Is required to determine Its extent. Building is going ahead at a lively rate In both Lander and Tenabo, the two towns of the district. Thn population is now several hundred. The stagne from Bejwawe are loaded every day. while many are coming ir from the eouth by private conveyance Recent development have demon REPUBLICANS Duty.) OF BOX ELDER. Bringham City, Oct. 14. The Republicans of Box Elder couuty at their convention here Sutnrday, nominated an exceptionally strong ticket was tbe program and harmony hroughout, with the exception of a iircnuous fight on the clerkship. H. e M. Holler of Tremont and X. J. of Brigham City were the opponents in this race, tha latter win-:in- g out. The ponventlon was held it the opera house, and was well attended. E. R. Sherman of Tremont was chairman, nnd John Zundle uf Willard, secretary. Because of the past attitude of the paper, the Box Elder Reporter war read out of the Republican party. B. H. Jones, its editor, is said to lie an Amerlkearna party man and for that reason and the general policy f the paper, which played favorites before ihe convention, the delegates took a tall dislike to the sheet. A strong plank was inserted In the platform, showing the attitude of tha Republicans of Box Elder on the consolidation of the Agrlsultural college and the Vnlveralty of Utah. The plank is aa follows; "We declare ourselves opposed to Ihe union of the Agricultural college hud the University of Utah; we favor, however, a better, adjustment of studies that they may. nut be duplicated unnecessarily." The ticket ia aa fellows: For representative Willard Han-eoYul-niin- RATON. t DEPOSIT. Discovery by Nevada Man Rremiaaa to Make Him Millionaire. Fielding. For county commissioner (four-yea- r term) A. W. Valentine. For county rununiasloner (two-yea- r term) D. E. Adams, Point Lookout. For sheriff Joaeph Jwepbeuu, Plymouth. For assessor Elias Jensen, Brigham Cliy. For clerk X. J. Valentine, Brigham City. For recorder Christina Mad-eWillard. For treasurer S.M: Cole, Corrlne. For attorney R. C. Call, BrignHin n, City. For superintendent of schools Jensen, Mameau For surveyor Mejvin Xelieker, lard. A. E. INJURED IN A STAGOMIA LOUISIANA. t The oulyr mosquito carrying yellw fever germs is the Bugnuia.-D- r. this city. Funeral service of Mrs. Darla will lie held Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Eighth ward meeting house. Balt Inks, Oct. 14. Gov. John C. Cutler, having a keen Interest in affairs pertaining to education, has taken u aland against athletics to the extent of voicing his disapproval of them when, for the purple of excelling la sport alone, the education of tha youth la sacrificed. He commends the stand taken by Principal George A. Eaton of the Balt Lake high school In thl matter na Is shown by the following letter: October 6, 18'K3. rrof. George A. Eaton. Principal uf the High School, Balt Uke City: My Dear Sir 1 see by the morning paper that when the list of football players fur the present school year was prevented to you for your approval, you took off the name of those who were delinquent In iheir scholastic work, with the statement that until tlielr back work was made up, they would not be permitted to ploy on the team. If you are quoted correctly, you are to be moat earnestly commended fur the stand you ara taking. For too long a lime the Impression has been allowed to prevail ihal athletic ability is given a higher value in our educational luatliutiima Jhan acholsnhip; and that of Ihe schools are willing to wink at failure in stud leu. If the pupil Je able to do good work on tbe athletic teams. Out of this notion, no matter how much or how little auppoi-U'by tbs actual facta, hare grown many of the abuses of school athletics. 1 am greatly pleased that the idea la being developed that thorough preparation In scholastic work alts 11 lie made a requialu for recognition In school athletics. 1 wish to congratu-lat- a you on what you are doing to forward ihla win thy movement; and In this expression of cumiunndatlon I am sura 1 shall be upheld hr the petrous and supporters of our educational Institution. You ara at Illierty to make any use of this letter you wish, With kindest personal regards, I remain, yours very truly, JOHN C. Cl'TLER, Governor, GREAT CEMENT of Jr., e airated the richness and permanence of the ore bodies, and the Hullin', district may be regarded as one of lb moat promising in the state. The mineral area la quite extrusive, amt there still remains good territory open to exploration a ad location. Approves Stand Ttakqn In Ragard High School Athletic Sipp. u ills-Hi- COMMENDS B. Suit Lake, Oct. 14.-- ilr. Elisabeth flavin, widow the late Jchn S. Da-v- l. nnd mother of Mrs. Joseph L. Kawlius. died nt her home early Saturday morning. The uearh was sudden, aud wa probably due to infirmities el uld age, Mrs. Davis having passed the three ecure and ten mark by almost thliteen years. Aside from a slight cold, she had not complained of being ill of late. Rir attempted to rise at the usual hour but wa seised with a fainting or Milking speil, aud psxsed sway without regaining consciousness. Death came shortly artier 7 o'clock. Mrs. Davis was a native of Wales, a here she was born eiglity-threyears ago this coming month. Willi her husband she came to I'tah In 1854, crossing the plains situ an ox team, and has made her home in Balt Lake City ever since. Her husband died in IMS, leaving his wife and only daughter, now Mra. Joseph 1. Raw Una of div-Arl- GOVERNOR M. AGED WOMAN'S LIFE ENDS. diffeu-u- r ven and Urantavilie, weie aiiiduicmeii and Wil- RUNAWAY. Silt Luke. Oil. 14. Mrs. Carrie Webb and her son of KaysvlUe were thrown from a wagon Saturday afternoon and narrow ly escaped serious In. jury. They cstne to the city in the of fruit and were morning with a returning home when the mck yoke on one id the horse broke. This frightened the horses, and they started in run. As they neared Sixth North street on Second We- -t Mrs. Webb was thrown out and rendered unconscious foi a ahurt time. Police Officer Golding, who happened to he there, Jumped Into the wagon and tried 'to slop the horses, but they were going o fast be could' do nothing with them, so he jumped out. The hurace then mu into a telegraph pole and wore caught Mrs. Webb was taken to the niire crgeant'a house aud her Injuries attended to. Her husband wan notified of '.he accident and rime to Bait Tjikc on an evening train While Mrs. M ebb's injuries arc not serjou-- , she was unable to resume her Journey home Iasi uiglii. That gold, silver and copper are not the only sources uf mineral weabh in Nevada Is lndlraied by the report that J. II. Rap ul Virginia City lias located an Immense deposit of Portland cement which pnmiw to make hint ia about millionaire. The dcpr-t-t three mile fiom Dayton, In ljnn county. UNSKILLED LABOR. Pmf. F. K. Fielding, who inspected the deposit, say there are over two Edwrd Moffett, the labor editor who million tons id the composition and the quantity la sppnnnlly has gone with Chairman Shouts to IVrM.-tnunlimited. cement ia worth Panama, was talking one day last about $:l per barrel uf 4m laiuml month to a reporter. Good labor, skilled lalsa." he said, In carload lna hi It", pi, ton. and the demand fur that prudurt fur ex- "will always command a high wag-- . ceed the present supply for cininvie It is In good, skilled labor's Interest 1 ( Tile tel'iiildln:,' of that ant going to Panama, equally building purpiiM-anii-i- i I 'mil- the camil rniumDslon and to the Ban Fraticl-c- n aimic will lions of tohe. Acre in the quarry rop resent . 'The mm I represcni." said Mr. for tnnepariailjii uf the product to "arc skilled men. They an- - not Day'on for shipment In rail entail no MufMl. difficulties In roit I making and will like the young Iqrijr typewriter whom a Ciimdeu poPtician hired. he down grade the entire way. "This polilli iMq was preparing to u r a four hour speiych on municipal PARTNER HAS DISAPPEARED. or some such tuple. rm riiii s week In getting his notes Salt Lake. ltd. 14. George W. Rii'l up articles. Thli. Den ii of Gutflicld. w hn h.is been asa-ione af'eriii'oii, he sat down with the in lintel tbe ria'ed nnd restaurant young lady typewriter, and began to fll.-hilKiurxs wi:ii II. P Fnsti-r- , ;l reel off the as he'was to sieak in petrion banknipirr. both fur the it at the mee'l.ig, firm an-.- l ns an Individual, in tin- "She dliln't take abort Iihiii notes, Blairs euur' Saturday . According to. Instead, he said lu- didn't . to ho Maieincnt uf Inis she took tindirect on the speech disappeared. leaving Denn wiMimit As noii na the tKilltlcInn would mean to liquidate theli indebtedue. ffeish dictating she said, there would on i side of money ibie on open be the nil typewritten liefore The debi uf the Aim amount hltn. as speech nrn; ,is newspaper pnge. 174 57 to I?. SB. and :he s.e-"Bo cm and on he spoke, fingering his consisting of opn accounts notes fully, snd dackety 'lablil li amount to fVt.44 clack clack went peicnal the typewriter, an-h. ': n of rn1tlna up with hint braveiv. keeping htnisrholi and ('mined to "The sun rolled westward aud sank, be exemp-a red wafer amid golden flame, aa this Several ninters in bankruptcy ceme lengthy speech ended. fiw F. J. McNeil. Edup disposition. "Then the politician sighed with rewin !!. ury and Xel- - Si. Jnhnsuu. lief. got. up sinl lit a cigar. He was of S.ili ail Lake, were discharged in glad to be thneigh. aa were Georqe H. This bankruptcy, "But the young lady typewriter said J The Jerseytteld myopia Who digs his cornucopia Into your cring.ng cuticle In hypodermic romps, Though pesky, insectivorous. and carnivorous. Is not at ail cuntagbma to yellow fever swamps. Mosquito ordinariua. Who plants his bill in various Extremes of you anatomy and makea you slap and squirm. Conducive to profanity, insomnia, lnaanltv He cannot be Infected by the y ellow-feve. ' germ. Hut ah,.wfaat'a this comes winging With s and a tinging Past the docks of Ellis Island and a doxen quarantines? It la the small augoinia. The hungry-eyestagoml. Who brings the yellow feter from the bugs of Xew Orleans! . If an ordinary sVeeter On your nose should chance to teeter. Don't addres the pretty creature a harsh or chiding tune: , Comfort him with words forgiving As he earns an honest living For perhaps he, too, is married and has rhildren of his own. Bul if ta your parlor homy a Mosquito marked "Bugomin' Descends upon you suddenly and bites you cm the back. Dont remain supine and flaccid Drink n quart of nitric acid And report to Dr. Doty that youve gut the "Yellow Jack." Bump-raisin- g r d Globe. PILES CURED IN TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 5 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. ASTOR IN HIS TUDOR HOME. The strangest "move" in history ia now in active progress st Hover, In Kent. In this ancient village, to which King Henry VIII so often traveled to woo the Anne Boleyn, the spectacle may be witnessed of tbe William Waldorf Aaior, superintending the Installation of bla twentieth century belongings In historic Haver castle, and the brand new Tudor village he has built In his private grounds about It. It Is only a millionaire who can thus turn back the pages of history at wfl, and Mr. Aator has succeeded in accomplishing a design that has, so far as effect goes, defied time. KVr three y ears more than a thousand workmen hare tolled to push back 'the centuries, and now that the castle and tbe Tudor village are ready for modern use, Mr. Astur Is moving . ll.Van loads of furniture,1 supplied by the most up to date flrma. are being unloaded by the drawbridge, and the latest resources of civilisation. Straight from Regent street and Bond street, are being liorne through the ancient portcullis into the echoing lulls of the old castle. Mr. Astor, who la keenly Interested in every detail of the renovation and removal, has visited (its Tudor village every week, and baa personally, supervised the work. When hi furnfiure la all lu he will make it his permanent home. Although Mr. Astor and his workmen have been so successful in transforming the He ter district so that villager who have lived there all their Urea hardly recognise it, he does not desire praise or publicity. All the work has. been carried out with the utmost secrecy, and parralsslon to view the "historic estate" la sternly refused to all. At present glimpses of tbe famous castle and the quaintly gabled village may be caught Dorn the road, but It Is belle red that a high brick wall, similar to that at Cliveden Mr. s late home on the Thames will soon shut off even that view. Notice boards proclaiming "No admission" and "Trespassers will be prosecuted" may be- seen everywhere, while at Hever railway station a picture of tbe castle once open to the public Is hidden uuder a printed paper announcing: The castle la no longer open." Aa-tor'- - A newspaper representative was al- lowed to see some of the marvels that have been worked by Mr. Astor's millions. The full scheme la not yet complete, and the magnificent grounds planned by tbe millionaire are not fully laid out. Bo vast are the landscape improvements suggested, including, ns they do, the divergence of a river. the laying out of forest and a deer park, and the planting of old world gardens, that s fe wmore months will still be necessary before the Hever calendar is finally put bark 4mi years. The castle which Mr. Astor has bought for bis new home stands In a hollow, and all round are Tpdnr build Inga, to construct which the stork of sixteenth century relics has been greatly depleted. These buildings arc not for the villager, who are casting envious eyes on them, but are connected with the renovated castle, and are Intended as receition rooms, bil. show places and homes liard of the household servants, twenty of whom nre expected to arrive soon to prepare for the "castle warming' . ro-ms- ile-1- 1 An entirely new "old bridge" ha been hnlli over the rher that winds part the castle to fill the mnat and hike which has just hern made. It U not on Mr. Asior's grounds, as the piihltc road rws there, but Mr. Astor has it included in the general scheme st liis own exptnse to cent plete the realism. The stonework and sides hate been so constructed as to appear centuries old. and artificial rocks have been Introduced to set off the river bed at that point. Up to the present Mr. Astor has invited very tew tven of his personal friends to inspect his Tudor village, which he inieuds shall be a complete surprise to them when they see it all finished for ihe first time. . There is no njo.lem note struck throughout tnc scattered hamlet of Hever. The church on the hill at the comer of thi Astor estate Is Sort year old. and the village Inn. Lite King f Erda and George F. Hecksteail of In a calm voice: Henry VIII. and everything else In The caea of William Fay Riverton "Would you mind repeating that sight are all in perfect keeping with of .Hlt Lake City, C. H. Bradley i.f pet-cover again? ' I forgot in pm it. Pay son, Dnvbl Ferguson of Big Cat- - any paper In the machine lr. A -- i or. who Is no w familiar figure at Hever. always drives behind ' L Always Remember ihs Fall horses, "s in the days of old. He axative will have uotsy modern motor car 09 svery to Qnmi&e hi the from frighten ghosts iy 25a r.cw old London Express. . tbt-larg- l'n--e- - m-e- d Fu-ti-- rs s s l as-c- a B. PENKERS, All Kinds ef Jab Printing Neatly dene. (Union Shop.) 23491-Wash Ave. Ind. 'phene 211. 2 INDUSTRIAL PUBLISHING CO. F. Thomas, Manager. All kinds of Book and Job PrintAvs ing. Easement 2405 Wash. B. Bell phone. - A. L. SCOVILLE PRESS. Printers, Embosser and itxtle ara. Opposita Postofflc. phone. J. O. WOODY PRINTING CO. Printing that Attracts. Bm binding, all sty la. 2375 Waah. Avw Both 'phone. A. T. HESTMARK, Printer and bookmaker. Special Punchea for loose leaf ledgers. 2405 Wash. Ave. Bell Phone 542-f- c, . h j jjromo Jins Cin4iCgUbOMDlO$taihyi - JS Sfi'jCpr tab I A Directory of Photographers L. WF3ER, Photographer. Every variety of photo a.t wort. 1439 Vah. avs. Both phonos. J. C. GASBERG, Photcgrapner Outdoor views made promptly, 275 25ih st Both phones KODAK of Ojden Gty FINISHING. made for residence and view work. 1425 Grant avaBell 'phone I7ML il ear postofflc Engagements |