OCR Text |
Show TUB 4 Publishers' on the j ground ami on.- of the big magazine A sia'enient j is probing for the truth. is to hr given out Saturday aud the indications are there will be a disastrous tumult- - in Nevada stocks. Many Ogilrniies have Invested In Nevada mining slocks and to dale the balance la in tueir favor, but we advise cur readers to be cautious and to lie prepared to mm a heavy slump In the stock market. Nut one mine m twenty of those listed hare actual merit, and. L the 'prospects" are to have "fraud orders" issued against them by the powtuffice department, they will become almost worthless. A property such as the Mohawk at GoldDelg and the Tonopsh Nevada. Beluuul and Midway at Tonopah. and the Nevada Consolidated and Giroux at Ely hava merit, but there are ten enlisted stocks to earh one of those that are without disclosed value. People should he msde to realise thai If they boy stock in sa undeveloped property, they are taking a chance that is a pure gamble, and those who dabble in these storks must know that eventually there will come a crash that will wipe out millions of lnvi-atewealth and cause no end of was so with the Comstock It grief. stocks. The dealing in the shares of those bonanza mines Impoverished the entire pacific Coast In the late seventies aad unscrupulous manipulators, aided by a corrupt press, rubbed the people of their savings with systematic regularity. The special dispatch referred to says some of the leading newspapers of the Easl have reernity refused to accept advertising from certain Nevada 4Jrilng promoters until farts and figures are established, and it Is for this purp'we that the Newspaper Publishers association, of which the Standard is a member, la aeuding its representative Into the Seld. A representative of one of the prominent magastues of tho country has been in Goldfield for some time past Investigating the status of certain promotion companies and their promotions. His report of conditions will be given tp the world on Saturday of this week, and it la understood that It will make racy reading. So great has been the unrest cauat-- by the actions of some of the promotion companies that ihe promoters of legitimate slocks and securities have threatened several tlmea to publicly denounce their methods. Fear that such action would causa immeasurable injury to the legitimate companies has restrained them from taking the action, but such a meeting will probably be called before the close of the present week. Knowledge of the fact that at least e one of the principal prominent will go under before another wudj has caused a general depression In nil Nevada securities and the trading on the Goldfield exchange Wednesday waa the dullest sinre the sen-se- t Inna I advances following Uie rich strike In the Mchswk, and investors and brokers declare that the end Is not yet. Xevn-pwpc- IAaterican Las a EXAMNER THE Day ia tha Vwr Eny Puolishing C Phtlnu by Tna SUnaard pay. , tATEi. Cutmt ta Ogdea SUBSCRIPTION Delivered by Cay, including tioacUy bum-la- c Bsamiawr, par moa'-h- .. oupiaa (PMNMMHP IV MAIL IN ADVANCE. ua ...... ... Tha ExamiiiM la aaat by awll oauua uf Ogaea. per year. At quarterly, la aivauca.. ju aaS FEARLESS Tha -- m aa ta Law INDEPENDENT. u nswspuixu:. aqul TS a aUmUy imU- U $ aw. baa ao favaritsu. l if cuauBtt aad ao rawaiara Cive la punish U wu the lacwa liainascfl aad wu. bo recolrau ait alt subject preaeatad la refrntn kttOWB iDlllspectful vtduaH bui toa true a am muM to pubuaked ia Ini- - All laUara and eaatatuatcaiiuua aigsad by an de naniae, win ! yliuwa, or inruwa la iba vaaia baakoL The bias auta Barer hldsa bahlad aa boom. Dua l ask Iba 111 wr to be iwspoaatbia for what you ar ashamad oC. - wibN Subaeriban will by iirnrMB to receive cooler a for iit aOoa d tell urc Tha Exainiasf belora their breakfast. Tba bloralac Eaaauaar caa be louad aa aal by Uw tadtpsndanl Nawa Ca, Sait Laka City. Oa ail through traina learlcc Ofidea oa Tba Sou&crn Pacific Ballway, Tba UaSoa ndAt Rail ay, aad Tba Oragia Short Una Hallway. Examlnar patroaa will coolar a favor tn tbo Biaaaceaieat by re portlos to thla office wbcaarar thay tail to Dad tbo papers at tba dasig-aataplaces. RAILROAOiNQ NO SINECURE. Them are dial resains daya for tho Tho public la derailroad people. are manding coal and complaint reaching headquarters from every Tity and hamlet; buniuess men are demanding fratcht and t rarer are being aent on countlcaa shipment; freight agenta art asked a hundred tlmea a day, "When will my guuda arrive!"; yard mea are struggling against blockades; euglnoers anJ Bremen nr being worked at a killing pace; eondectore are urged to make a better abowing;, master mechanics are Instructed to keep up the motive power; aad superintendent are held responsible Dor concerted traffic. From the head of a road to the clerk who makes ent tracers, there is grief unalloyed. At present w prefer the Mirrowa ef the newspaper business to the heartbreaking eiperlenoes of the railroad man. The boys on the road and the men In thn offices have our sympathy. LEGISLATING ON CONSUMPTION. i repre-niaiii- d com-panle- Denver News: Tho American AFTER THE ELECTION. league, In Us arealim at Atlanta, determined to start n camRepublican: After the county elec paign for uniform treatment of tuber- tion It Is found that real estate incular patients throughout the United vestments in Balt Lake, exceeding any States. A committee la devising a sys- that have ever gone before in the histem of bwa, to tie Introduced in all tory of Balt Lake, confirm the confithe legislatures of the country, pro- dence of buslnesa men In the solidity viding for the car of the indigent of alfepubllrau control of county and sufferers from consumption, and for atalc affairs. We ware told before the election the proper segregation of all eases of that If the Amcrlrane did not win thla disease. In many respects, this Is well. The there would he an instant and ter sooner tuberculosis la known nnd rlble slump In business here. Men treated aa an Infectious disease, not would not Invest In Balt lake, we only by physicians but by laymen, the wero assured by the Tribune, unless belter for all concerned. The loss of they could read in the election relife from thla disease in America la turns the rertalnty that the American spalling; all the more ao when we party was the dominant force In the consider that in one sense It la wholly city. Dark pictures were painted by cerunnecessary, A generation of careful work would make tnberculnaia almost tain rest estate agents of the disasaa rare aa typhus; and of thla disease, trous results that would follow the once the scourge of cold climates, defeat of the American candidates. there are probably now not n doaen Greek fire was burned to shew cases la North America. Consumpwould he the advancement If tion kills twenty times aa many as the people learned of the American typhus ever did, and It weakens m party victory. cripples more than It kllla. No vigiIt was an American victory. But lance can be too great, no premutiun It was not a victory for the political, too expensive, if It will help to lessen piratical party that had stolen thn the toll which we pay to the White name of American." the cloak of Plague. holiness is which to serve the Devil. It was an American victory, hut it MINING STOCKS. sent the arrogant protenders to a A special dispatch from monopoly of righteousness and purity Nevada, ta to the effect that the pos- and luuriotlant to the shades of a tal authorities have sent agents to stinging and thoroughly well merited that camp to Investigate tlie merits defeat. It was a straight Republican vicf the mines lhat are bring boomed by the promoters of the district. The tory. And here before the end of the EXAMINER MORNING OGDEN, was In which tbsr election there is a volume of real estate investment amounting to millions In actual cash outlay, and Insuring the expenditure ot many mlUtons more la building improvements which shall make Balt Lake the greatest of the western cities. ln'l it about time to drop this stuff sn.l min souse about the Great American" party? Isnt it about time to get sensible about the real conditions that exist here in Balt Laka and in A Boston schoolboy was tall weak and sickly. His arms were soft and flabby. He diu lt have a string muscle in bis entire body. o o p Utah? people Incest money because they believe the investment good. They kuow Salt Lake and Utah deserve the confidence that sagacious men Can give. They see n great future for the city and for the it ate, and are doing their best for the advancement of both. They evidently are not being governed In their splendid outlays by confidence In the success of what is falsely called the American party. They are tired of all that rot with which the Tribune fills Its foolish columns day after day. They know the people are better than the Tribune says they are. They know the future of city and state is safe la Ihe hands of the people. They know quarrels and slander do no good for the city, for the state, or for any one else blit the fomenters of strife and the breeders of trouble and do much barm for every oue else. But if there were any political significance In recent Investment, it Is that mea waited until they saw the Republican party would not be dluturbed by the pestilential knavea of the aocalled American party, and then expressed themselves In mllllon-doila- r A Lon dun Journalist, whose wife threw ink on hla unfinished book, la sulug for a divorce, not knowing that she did the public a great service. Socialism Is classed as the philosophy of failure by a Chicago professor who forgot that out of ever mistake there arises a lesson which in Itself la Ihe true success. PLEASANTRIES. Scolfj Emulsion. NOW To fed that boys arm you would think he was apprenticed to a blacksmith. How do you check your wife's pensive tastes?" "Just draw em blank to her order her fill 'em in." Boston Transcript. The Cook (selecting her employer) Well, Ol kilke the looks o' yea. But phwat diferlncea bov yea from the gir-r- l that hod yea last? Puck. and let Yeast Who Is your wife's favorite author? Crintaonbeak I am. She aays I make np some of the moat wonderful stories she ever heard. Yonkera Btatesman. said Sometimes, Uncle Eben, when a man spreads hlaae'f in a love letter, he 'maglnes he's wrl'ln real poetry when he aln' doin nullin' hut pilin' up evidence." Washington Star. I want It understood , said Urn. that I am a woman of fsw Gabfest, words." Yes. I know." replied Mr. Gsbfasi. hill don't you think you are overworking them a trifle?" Milwaukee Sen- tinel. Mrs. Jenner Lee Ondego .Have you ever tried to establish friendly eolations with those pale, overworked salekglrla In the Idg stores? Mrs. Belldora-HolinOh, yes; especially the girls at the bargain counters. I've tried to get close to them many and many a time, but the crush la always too great for a little woman like ine. Chiriago Tribune. e Mrs. Jones Whatever we got ter be thankful fer. Silas? Mr. Jouea Wa-al- , th' mortgage hex bln foreclosed on th' farm, so we haln't got ter par no more tntereai an' taxes; th automobile's bin attached fer debt, so we haint got ter worry shout that no more; Johnny Smith hex thrown over our daughter Sal, ao we won't have him ter support Great Scott, Maria! we've got everything ter be thankful fer. Judge. Chnlly Johnny, like frogs legs? Johnny Nope; does your slater lobsters' arras. New York Bun. Always th Sama. Tailor's Little Boy (walking with his father, sees a street roller) What'a that, papa? Tailor The street's being ironed and pressed. Figaro. DANIEL ALL DRUGGISTS: SOc. AND $1.00. newly WEBSTER. As a graduate of the same college with Daniel Webster, and a memlwr with hint of the Boston bar. we have s sissy felt a deep interest In the of this eminent rnnn In congress and elsewhere. We attended hla funeral at Marsh-fiel- d sue-rex- .under the great oaks near his man-skiand saw the cattle which Just before his death he had driven to hla ulndnw that he might see them for Ihe last time, calling each by name. Rut the most striking exemplification of Ids power that we have ever aeen was at the trial of a grant wharf case in our Supreme Judicial court at Boston. Several of the most eminent lawyer of onr elt.v were employed In :hat case, and Daniel Webster and Rufus Choate were associated together, either for plaintiff or defeni' tjf i. we do A- not reniembur which. J gentleman whose evidence wa A great wr put on the stand a a witness In opposition to the aide rop-- i by Webster and Choate. Choate with hi wonderful ability pnv caeded to while Web-xtseated in bis groat sea (na il alm.-s- t Choate, after ssleeji. making every effort tr his poSer to sekure the answer wanted, totally fail-eand sat down apparently with the belief that it was impossible to obtain from the witness what was wanted. Then WeliMei waked up. and rising sijiwlv to his full height, fixed his era on the witness an. I with a p single question hi might rrom the old man precise!? wh.it Choate had failed to get. and then sat down as slowly a lie had risen and up parent lv as sleepy 'is he was hefoie Whether he hypno-rir.rthe old man or magnetized' him we ranuot say. tint ft was one of the n.ost wonderful exhibition of the pow. of over matter that we k,yc ever witnessed. UEO. T. AX G ELL. n, r, d d By KATHERINE Author of Capyrisht. Ill, CECIL THURSTON. The Circle.". Etc. b by Harper SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER I la xa impeaetvabla London fog John Cbilcote, a prominent aad rapidly rising member of the opposition in parliament, unexpectedly encounters John Loder, a parar writer, who la bis exact double. At the moment the aggression cl Russia iu Persia ia the all engrossing topic. CHAPTER II Russia Is reported to be supporting the rebels In their fight against the authority of tha shah of Persia, thus distinctly menacing England's Influence In the easL CHAPTER III Cbilcote, who la a slave to morphia, hears of a noval in which two area exenanged idsatiliea. visCHAPTERS IV aud its Loder la the letter's humble quarters and proposes that I Oder shall Impersonate him when Chilcote la overcome by the craving for morph!a and wishes to get out 4 the world for tha time being. CHAPTER VI Loder accepts Is compelled CHAPTER YU-Lto wear rings on one of hla fingers In order to otaceal a scar made In Italy by a pet dog belonging to aa Englishwoman whom he had mot there and had become very friendly with. CHAPTER VIII Loder, representing Chilcote, goes to the latter's home. Chilcote'! wife does not tect the deception. Loder la greatly Impressed by Mrs. Chilcotea beauty and manner. CHAPTER IX Loder lunches with Fralde, tha great leader of the opposition in parliament He seems to win tha astute statesman completely. Fralde, by the way, ia the fodfather of Mrs. Chilcote, CHAPTER X Loder has tea with Mrs. Chilcote. He receives a tele gram from Chilcote summoning him to return so that they may reauma their proper stations In life. a CHAPTERS XI AND XII craving soon overcomes him, and ha returns to Luder's quarter, and once more Loder becomes Chll-ootCHAPTERS XIII AND attends a "swell reception. CHAPTERS XV and XVI At the reception Lady Astbupp is presiding at the fortune telling booth. Loder visits It, and aha requires him to remove hla rings. Bha la startled upon seeing the scar on hla band. Srpthsr I wonder If of?" he asked at teat you could learn to lire In the present?" He lifted hie bead slowly and met her This is an an experiment," he eyes. went on. And, Itks all experiments. It has good phases aud had. When the bad phases come round I I want oder Chll-oote'- CHAPTERsXVII der Concluded. I "A'o, Hasn't pot (ha right." you to tell yourself that you. are not altogether alone In your unhapplnsss that I am Buffering too in another way." There was silence when he had spoken, and for a apace It seemed that Eve would make no respouee. Then Die last surprise In a day of surprise came to him. With a alight stir, a light quick rustle of akirta, aha stepped forward and laid her hand In bin The gesture waa simple and vary sweet Her eyea were soft and full of light aa she raised her fare to hla, her 11 pa parted In unronerloua appeal. Thera la no surrender so seductive as a the surrender of a proud woman. blood stirred, toe undeniable suggest Ian of the moment thrilled nnd disconcerted him In n tumult of thought. Honor, duty, principle, rose In a trip la barrier; bnt honor, duty and principle are bnt words to n headstrong man. Tha fall significance of hla position rams to him aa It bad never come before, nia hand closed on hera; he bant toward her, hla pulses beating Lo-deF- In the that Loder lived throngh a century of suggestion' and Indecision. Ilia first feeling wu for himself, but hla first clear thought was for Cbilcote and their compart lie stood, metaphorically, on n stone In tbo middle of n stream, balancing on one foot than on tho other; looking to the right hank, then to tba left At last, as It always did, inspiration came to him slowly. lie realised that by one pluiiae ha might uvo both Chib cote and himself. alienee followed Ue crossed quickly to the fireplace and stood by Ere. You were right In your belief," lie said. "For all that time, from the night you apoka to me of Fralde to the day you hid -- tea In this room, I never touched n drug." She moved suddenly, and he saw her fare. "John," she said unsteadily, "you I I hare knows yon to lie to me almut other thing." With n hasty movement ho averted hla head. The donht, the appeal in her words, shocked him. The whole Isolation of her life seemed summed up In the one abort sentence. For tbo Instant he forgot Chikxite. With a reaction of feeling be turned te her again. Look at me!" he aald brusquely. Bbe raised her ere. Do you lieliera I'm apeaklng tha truthr She aes rohed hla eyes intently, the doubt and hesitancy still struggling In her face. But tha last three weeks?" she aald How caa yon ask me to reluctantly. believe?" He had expected thla aad he met it Nevertheless his steadily enough. courage faltered. To deceive thla woman, area te Justify himself, had In the last half hour become something sarrlfoglous. The last three weeks must be No man burled." he said hurriedly. could free himself suddenly from from a vice." He broke off aliruptly. He hated Chilcote; he haled himself. Then Eve's face, raised la distressed all arm pies. appeal, overshadowed You have tiren silent and patient for years," he said suddenly. "Can yon tie patient and alieut a little longer?" He spoke wltbunt consideration. He was couadons of no selfishness beneath his words. In the first exercise of conscious strength the primitive desire to reduce all elements to his own sovereignty auhinei fed every other 1 emotion. can't enter Into the thing. he said; like you, I give no explanations. I ran only tell you that oa th" day we talked together in thla room I was atyself la the full possession of iny reason, the full knowledge of my own capacities. The man yon have kuowa in the last three weeks, the nian you have Imagined la the last four yean, ia b shadow, an unreality a wevkuees in human form. There is a new tlilhwte If you will only see him." Eve was Iremiiliug aa be ceased; her face was flushed; there waa a strange brightness la her eyes. She waa moved Wyond bchrlt. "But the other you the old you?" You uiei he jiatieut." He looked d'.wn into the fire. Times Ike the last three weeks will come again must came again; they are Inevitabio. When they 6 come; you must shut must blind yourself. your eyes-yTon must lgn,r them and me Ia It a compact V lie still avoided her eye. Bhr turued tn him quietly. "Yos-- if you wish It. said, below her breaih. He was oone.'ious of bar glance, hut he dared Dot meet It Ue felt tick at the part he playing, yet he held to it tenaciously. 1 wonle.1 if you could do what few meu and fvwr women are capable nu than an Inevitable link Joining the future to the past, that this dtMant. debatable laud stands out iu In true political significance. To tho average reader of uewa the statement of Russia's ' more seemed scarcely mure important than had the first report of toe border risings in January, but te the men who had watched the growth of the disturbance It came charged with portentous meaning. Through the enure ranks of tbo opposition, from Fralde himself downward. it reused a thrill of expectation that peculiar prophetic sensation that Tary politician haa cxperlancad at soma moment of hla career. In no member of hla party did thla feeling etrike deeper root than In Isdrr. Imbued with n lifelong Interest In the esatcra question, sped ally equipped by personal knowledge to held and proclaim aa opinion upon rerelaa affairs, ha read the signs and portents with Instinctive Insight Boated at Cbilcote' a table, surrounded by Chlleota a letters and papers, he forgot tba breakfast that was slowly growing cold, forgot tha Interests and dangers, personal or pleasurable, ef tha night before, while hla mental eyre persteteatly conjured np the map of reraia. traveling with steady deliberation from Merv to Me-bfrom Mashed to Herat, from Herat to tho empire of India! For it waa not tbo tact that the Haaaras had risen against the ebah that occupied the thinking mind, nor waa it the fact that Russian and not Persian troops were destined to subdue them, but the deep ly Important consideration that aa armed R oasis n farce had crossed tha frontier aud waa encamped within twenty miles of Meshed Meabed, upon which covetous Russian eyea have rested ever since tha daya of Fetor the Great. Bo I Oders thoughts ran aa be reed and reread the news from toe varying political standpoint!, and ao they continued to ran when, some hours later, an urgent telephone message from the BL George's Gasette naked him to call t Lakeley's office. The message was Interesting aa well aa Imperative, and he made an Instant response. The thought of Lakeley's keen eyre and shrewd enthusiasms always possessed strong attractions for hla own slower temperament, but even had thla Impetus been lacking, the knowledge that at the Ht Gedfai'a offices, If anywhere, the true feelings of the party were Invariably voiced would have drawn him without hesitation. It waa scarcely 12 oclock when he turned the comer of the tall building, bnt already the keen spirit that Lakeley everywhere diffused waa making Itself felt. Leder allied to himself aa hla eyea tall on the days placards with their uncompromising headings aad passed onward from the string of gay-l- y painted carta drawn np to receive their first consignment of the paper to the troop of eager newsboys passing la and out of the big awing doors with their piled up bundles of the early edition, and with n renewed thrill of anticipation and energy ha passed through the doorway and ran upstairs. Passing unchallenged through the long corridor that led to Lakeley's office, he caught a fresh Impreeslon of action and vitality from the click of the tape' machines in toe subeditors office, and a glimpse through the open door of tha subeditors themselves, each occupied with bis particular task; then without time for further observation he found himself at lakeleys door. Without waiting to knock, as he had felt compelled to do on the one or two previous occasions that business had brought him there, he Immediately turned tha handle and entered the room. Editors' officers differ but little la general effect. Lakeley's surroundings were rather more elaborate than Is usual, as became the dignity of the oldest Tory evening paper, but the atmosphere was unmistakable. Aa Loder entered be glanced up from the desk at which be waa sitting, but luatantly returned to hla task of looking through and making a pile of early evening editions tost were spread, around him. Hla coat waa off and hung on tha chair behind him, and he pulled vigorously on n long riyar. Hello! Tha fa right, be esld laconically. "Maks yourself comfortable half a second, while I skim the St. Stephen's. Ilia salutation pleased Loder. With n nod of acquiescence he crossed the office to tha brisk fire that burned In the grate. For a minute or two lakeley worked steadily, nccationslly breaking the quiet by an unintelligible remark or n vigorous stroke of hla pencil. At last ha dropped the pPv with a restore of satisfaction and, leaned back !n bla chair. "Well. he aald, what Oou think of tbla? Hows tlda for. a complication? Loder turned round. "I tkiak," he aid qnletir, "that we can't overestimate It" Lakeley toughed and teak a long pull at hla cigar. "And we mustn't ho afraid to let the Sefboronirh crowd know It, ehf He waved hla hand to tbo poster ef the first edition that hong before hla desk. Loder, following hla glance, smiled. ed, -- XIV--Lo- ex- arm-chai- to 1Ml THE o. en-me- o 4 0 o DEC EMRBi: Gf t ,ross-axamin- The physician who had attended the family for thirty years prescribed MORN1 I'RI'DAY month. d o DTAII, y. it the sound of "Eve!" he said. Then hla voice ha suddenly hesitated. It waa the voice of n man who haa forgotten everything but bia own existence. For aa Instant be stayed motionless Then y quietly be drew away from her, releasing her hands. "No," he said. No, I haven't got the right" CHAPTER XVIIL HAT night for almost the first time since be had adopted hla dnal role loder slept 111. He waa not n man over whom Imagination held any powerful away. Hla doubts and misgivings seldom ran to lieculatlon upon future possibilities. Nevertheless, the fact that conscious-or uuconaclouHly, he had adopted a mw attitude toward Eva came boms to him with unpleasant force during the hours of darkness, and long before tho first hint of daylight bad slipped through the heavy window curtains ha had arranged n plan of sctlou a plan wherein, by the simple method of altogether avoiding her, he might aootho his own conscience and safeguard domestic Interests. It waa n satisfactory if n nomewhat negative Arrangement, and he rose next morning with n feeling that things had begun to shape themselves. Rut chanca sometimes has a disconcerting kock of forests ling even our best planned schemes. He dressed slowly and descended to hla solitary breakfast with the pleasant sensation of having put last nlgbt out of consideration by tha turning over of a new leaf, hut scarcely bad be opened Chi I rote's letters, scarcely liud be taken a cursory gin nee at the mornings newspaper than It waa borne In upon him that not only a new leaf, hat a whole sheaf of new leaves, had been turned lu hla prospects by a hand Infinitely more powerful aud arbitrary than his own. He realised within the pace of a few momenta that the leisure Eve might have claimed, the M-ahe might have been tempted to dee voir to her, waa no longer his to of, being already demanded of hliu from a quarter that allowed of so y Chll-oota- 'a 1 re refusal.- - For the first rambling of the political earthquake that was ta shake the conn-tr- y made Itself audible beyond denial on that morning of March 27 when toe news spread through England that, la view of the disorganised state of the Ierslsn army and the abah'a consequent inability to suppress the open Insurrection ef the border tribes la the northeastern districts of Meshed, Russia. wvh a groat shew of magnanimity, had come to the rescue by dispatching a large armed force from her military station at Uerv across the Fenlaa frontier to the seat ef tha disturbance. To tunny hundreds of Englishmen who read their papers on that morning this announcement conveyed bnt little. That there Is such a country ns Penis we all know, that English Interests In the south and Russian Interests In the uortli he have all superficially understood from childhood, but lu tola knowledge, coupled with the fact that Persia is comfortably tar awty, we are apt to rest content It It only to the eyes that set tlir.wigti long distance glasses, the minds that regard the present as nothing mors or Ires Old Time Theory That It Wu e Only in Hot Daya Refutse, The theorj that beer i hot weather drink la Iolr L moat as last as the prejudice beer aa an alcoholic drink coming more nnd more an around drink. It is, truth to w1?1, becoming our national bevertae with lta largely incroc sed cuniri?4 tins we are gitd to nor a ateira crease la intemperance Rtrn 'k some Pa bat Blue Rlblton. wn'h S 2 per V? eeyt alcohol, aati.fi.- ural craving of a strenuous JiT without the uf J alcoholic beverages ar without shattering of nervea psglucvd by excessive use of tea ot its refreshing lest It etoo ewri. , rich, wholesome food value that it a commendable drink. The major consumption of beer iu to be In the hot mouths, then tor came on the use of it would tall very considerably, giving iy 7 trang drinks, and hot drinks. Dash will tell you that tho call tor fc drinks is not by any manner ol nwza o large aa In past years, and they wm also tell you that beer to fast becouiat ir popular cold weather beverage. With this increased consumptU gt beer the public la becoming uiure u more distfriminaUng. k demands beer that plonaex lta taste. agniu with its stomach and carries with a richness and wboleeomencas that makes it a sustaining aa well freshing bevergga. Pnbat Blue Rlbha meets the approval of all the peopi It ia the cleanest beer brewed the Pabst process eliminates all put alble chance of contamination. Uwii from Pnbat exclusive mait, it Is tho richest beer without being hoary Made with choicest Imported hiqo t ia n superior tonic without objection, able bitterness. It agrees with tht stomach because It la thoroughly agtj and mellow. Physicians recommend k and most ppople drink.it beeausa it li perfect In age, purity and strength. Owing to tho nnuriahment In Rabat beer the body la better prepared to to ail-tn- 2 ui 1st cold. F. J. KISSEL las Beth FhsmsH St CO, Twatr-fswxt- Stmt h Pabat Bios Ribbon Beer WHEN ORDERING fun AIK FOR PATRICK HAS WEAKENED. Haa Drawn Up an Appeal to the cm or for Pardon. Gey. New York, Dec. 6. It waa natal hera last night that Albert T. Patrick who la under sentence of death ia Bing Bing prison for the murder at William M. Rice, the Teue capitallat, had secretly prepared an appUciUos to Governor Higgins for a pardoa. Ao cording to reports, Patrick tunti from hla attitude of resolute rrfiuii to seek mercy only after pleading by hla wife and other relatives. Patrick himself Is aald to hdve dran np tha application which analyses his satlra case. CAPITALISTS IN MEXICO. . Mexico City, Dec. 5r The party ( capitalists led by A. E. Btllwell, prre idrnt of Kanana City. Mexico A Orient railroad were received by PreKdent DUx In the national palace today. The party will leave for home tomorrow night. HERE YOU ARE BOYS Roller Skates RolierSkates Winslows Celebrated Line-Pr- ices From 50c to $5.00 Come QuicK T. S. HUTCHISON No. 306 (Continued Tomorrow.) dls-pis- Drink Beer in Cool Weather Street Twenty-Fift- h YOU CAN GET Z. C. M. I. Home Made tShoes For men, boys, misses and children again In Ogden. They are the old reliables, every pair guaranteed, aa well as the . . Ladies Pillow Shoes TOE SIIOE FOR TENDER FEET, - ' the Fifth Ward Shoe Store 2546 MADISON AYE. BELL PHONE 513-X- . Catalog and Samples. T.A. SHREEVE |