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Show EXAMINER: THE HORSING THE Day in PkkMMl Evt'y cy Th thi Vw SUnoard Publishing Com- pany- SUBSCRIPTION IATES. Delivered by Carrier m Ogden City, including dundoy MornI5c ing Examiner, per moa'-h.- . . So niLgip fluMn BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. Tbe Eunun; in neat tty m11 ouuid of Ogoen. per year, .gfi.uu At quaruxty, in advance. Leu ii ana INDEPENDENT. iue naauuiwr in pendent newspaper. Men nn equal enow. ami BO UvoriUi, and no enenilen to punish. It wUi BBU IUI BnV tU U1A iirjudiowL f tfjii bo roooivu on nil subject prennatad In respectful inn known Individual. bu tbe true name ante! bn published U lull All letters and ile aftniMuRiPR inRE signed by no il! be r'.-- i . or qruud names, thrown In the waste bneneL The brave man never bldee beklnd nn Dont ask Ure Kdl assumed tor to be iwponmble tot wbat you arc ashamed of. ulh. fr has been widely commented upon throughout the' west on the supposition that It declared Illegal tbe regulation of graxing on forcer reserve aud the system of charging fur grating permits. As a matter of fart, the decla-lowhich was hantjwd down by Judge Whitson, of the United States District court for eastern- Washington, in the case of tbe United States vs. Matthews, ha no besting whoever upon ths legality of the gracing regulations or of gracing fees, which stand The legal quesprecisely sc tion involved was simply this: Does the law authorising tbe secretary of agriculture to Issue regulations make ths breach of those regulations a crime? Judge Whltaon'a decision merely answered this question No. It was In substance that the objection to tbe Indictment sgutnut Wlltcr Matthews was the absence of a law defining the act therein charged as a criminal offense. Upon that ground thn court held that the demurrer must be sustained and the defendant discharged. Though the point was simple enough, It was eatlrely misconstrued In the press reports of the decision and hi editorial comments upon It.; For Instance, la the Wyoming Tribune of Tuesday, November I, newa of Judge Whitsons action was given tinder ths headlines: Gracing Fire IlDecides Federal Judge, and the legal lartlcle declares that A a result of the decision, Matthews, who entered the Mount llainer Ftorest Reserve without the permit required by the secretary, 1 still, using the reserve aad is not paying tbe fee Imposed by As a matter of fact, the secretary. Mr, Matthews heep were Immediately removed upon notice by the forest officers and bare not since entered the t BITS OF LONDON. FAMOUS . estab- e . Fal-taf- WEALTH AND DEMOCRACY. k The Woman' National Dally sayt: ten years the United States census office estimates the national wealth of the country in the dollars of ths day, Including in such estimates the lands, buildings, furniture, machinery, storks uf merchandise, bullion, beside the lhllways, rolling stork, hips, steamers, vehicles,. In short, every kind of material wealth, whether taxable or not. According to these estimate the wealth of the country (omitting the value of alavea In the cettsuae of I860 and I860) was a follows, in the year named, the aunts 18!i), being In millions of dollars: 7,133; I860, 1(1,159; 1070. 30,068; 1880, 42, 642; lSSu, (.5,027; 1900. 88,000. and In 1904 (the year before last), 106,881, or nearly 107 billions. ,The mind Is aghast at the Immensity of these figures and at tberr rapid across,. Between I960 and 1904, an Interval Irf only ftiur year, the Increase waa from 88 to nearly 107 billons, an augmentation of nearly II per cent, or fully I per rent per annum, burapounded. Who owns these billions; and even after this question Is answered, who controls them; who manages them, and to what end are acwe drifting in this tremendous cumulation of wealth? Will It permit us to. retain our democratic form of government, which now for more than a century has stood 'virtually unimpaired; and which through Its proud example, ha exerted such a beneficial Influence upon not only our own people, but 13 upon the peoples of other and far distant land? Will great wealth and democracy continue to live together? Is the concentration of national wealth and democracy compatible; for it can not but be perceived that the contra and management of this colossal wealth, if not also Its ownership. Is parsing into fewer and fewer hands. These are I he supreme questions of the moment; and it Is time that our people should give up Idle reading and Idle talking in order to study them gnd be prepared to frame their practical course in reference to them. Every - e. .- -- r B It la A decision fraught with Im said: portance to Wyoming stockmen Is that appearing In this Issue, wherein It U held by the United States District court that the- - collerttna of fees for grazing live stock Is Illegal. Hince Its Imposition this fee has been regarded as illegal and arbitrary by many Wyoming people, and the views expressed by the court In this decision meet with general approval here. The litigant is still running hie Reserve without stieep on the Rainer " paying the fee. Decisions like Jietge Whitson's had before been made by the federal courts In three other districts, one of them els years ago, hut none of theee interferes In the slightest with the right of the United States to Institute civil action aglnst trespa-se- r violating the gracing regulations, or with charging grazing fee. d c neither Overcrowded London ha the space nor the sentiment to preserve inviolable the houses In which its classic writers passed the beat part of their lives or Invested with imaginative interest. The metropolis, always congesting, ever destroying and reconstructing, is a stratum of literary assoelations age by age; the homes Of the great litterateurs of one century disappearing. before the coming of their aucrt-ctorTwo bocka published yesterday help to preM-rvcompact form the mem-urie- a f these vanished or bidden associations. Today hardly a vestige ran be Been of the particular bits of London which The, Shakespeare marie Interesting. Apothecaries' hiffi stands upon the site of a Theater which he helped Burhagv to manage. The immortal dramatist's more famous playhouse, the Globe In Blnckfriars, ha In these day given apaee to one of the most noted of London breweries. The haunt of the celebrated Boar's Head tavern at the junction of Kastchesp and Oraeechnrch streets, is replaced today by a statue of King William IV. These disappearance need not be surprising, for even tbe London of Charles Dickens has become a considerable extent only a memory. Dickens has left ua many glimpses of the metropolis from the middle uf the nineteenth century. His life was parceled out between mean s treat and fine maiialona. All hi earlier residence are depicted I nhia novels.- Mr. Mica wlw he located at 141 Hayham street, Camden Town. The novelist's top floor roomii In 15 Buckingofn ham street, fit rand, are immortalised The Gower In David Copperfleld. street house where Dickens lived in the 1820's was required for an extension of Maple's, and destroyed ten or twelve years ago. Modern Improvements have altered considerably No. 1 Devonshire terrace, Ynrkgate, where Dickens lived for twelve years (18:19-185- 1 1, and wrote David Coperfleld," "IVmibey The Old Curiosity Shop, and Son, and Ham a by Budge. The man dun to whk-l-i Dickons next moved, Tavistock house, at the corner of Tavistock square, and which was his home In the fifties, has diaapeared. Here he produced Bleak House,' Little Dor-rit,- " A Tale of Two Cities, and gave bia private theatricals. Our Mutual Friend" was written at 57 Gloucester terrace, Hyde park, Dickens fast lam-do- n residence was No. 5 Hyde park place, and there he was writing Edwin Driwid" until death left that mystery unsolved, The highest end moet sumptuous London mansion of the reign of Edward VI whs in Crotftiy place. Therein lodged Hlehsrd. Duke of Gloucester, afterward King Richard lit. The substantial remains of it are now a public dining room. In the Cocoa Tree, at 64 St. James' street, the richest and most fashionable men of the latter half of the eighteenth century met, supped and drank. Lord Byron and Ms friend ra roused there at many all night sittings. Their "Regency punrh was a compound of Madeira, brandy and green lea. The house in which Byron aVokd one morning to find hlnutelf famous, of "Cliilde Harold, bj the publication will eland-- . No. 8 at. Jumes street, after a century, though much altered. A place full of literary memories which attll remains is the Albany, off Piccadilly. In one of these suites of chambers Macaulay, wrote Ms. Hlv It comprised an tory of England. bedentrance hall, two sitting-roomsroom, kitchen, cellurs and oervant quarters. Rent has risen since thuas days (184il. Macaulay paid only 90 RU-nar- George Rutherford.- The White Pin News la one of the landmarks In the Nevada newspaper field, and Its rejuvenation ia a source of cougi alula; ton. After the first of he year it la to be a daily. This paper wishes the New prosperity. FEES. Wyo., Font WHITE. PINE NEWS. 1 The White Pine News lished by W. J. Forties, one of Nevada's cleverest writers. His humor d was often vulgar, hut be waa of much ability. Our recollection ia that he was burned to death la Battle Mountain, Nevada, where he At published ''Measure for Measure. tbe time he was associated with recent derision of a federal Juiigt revrve. Is the Sheridan,, the Chirugn, of the United of two John C. Calhoun and State M. Johnu.- - Calhoun was thj seventh of the United States, a hen John Quincy Adams occupied the prebidential chair. He was on? of the triumvirate of ' statesmen Clay, Webster and Calhoun wha guarded the nation when It was yet in twaddling clothe. Richard M. Johnson, Mis Calhoun's maternal grandfather, wa when Marlin Van Buren was the Kentucky nation's thler executive. wa his native stele, and he wa nominated in 1827. Richard Johntwn was a fighter as well a a statesman, and it wa his boast that he had made a good Indian of the famous Indian chief, Teeumbeh. A relic which the descendants of Johnson display with great, pride i a gold sword presented to him by congress "for deeds of valor and service to the state,'' and in inscribed. Ueuerul John Calhoun of New York. Miss Calhoun's father, if a promiueut attorney, but has retired from active work in hi profession and is 'tvlng quietly with his family In New York City. Miss Calhoun U hi only daughter. but there are three sons who bear the honored name of Calhoun. vada. Tbe Horning Esamlaer can be found on sale by lbs independent News Ce, Salt Lake City. On nil tkrougb trains lasvlsg Ogden on ilu Southern Fnclfle Railway, Tbs Union radflc Usllwny, and Tbs Oregm Short line Hallway. Ezsmlbsr patrons will confer s fnvor on tbe msnsgemeat by reporting to this office whenever they fail to find the papers at tbe deair natcd places. and-clea- days the model school kitchen she learns, first of all, cleanline, for while the cooking leaoou la In progress perfect order of the surroundings is insisted upon. The school pots and pans have to be kept bright and the school dishcloth sweet. Sadie derides that the family possessions would be belter that way. ton, and site goes home to scrub aud sweep out dark corner that, perhaps, her weary mother never reached. She also brings the otrange new Irlea that It is neither healthful nor economical to feed the family from the delicatessen shop, as Is ths s of the tenement custom of children tell their until population, them better. She herself, with ber school recipes, concocts the palatable dishes which at half the expense proHer vide twice the nourishment. father js pleased and her mother gradually adopts the new wav. Sadie also introduces the family to the use of a tablecloth aad to table manners, for at school they tench her not only how to cook a meal but how toerve tt and how le eat It properly. The While Vine Newa Christmas edition of forty puges Is highly illustrated and contains a good history of Ely, the great copper camp of Ne- confer a Urot Subscribers by informing Uus uffic of failure to receive Tbs Examiner before their breskfnsL A rei-cutl- Berlin and other cities of the empire. prafeues to he from the peu of a prominent politician. who calls him-sei- f Pessimist." One of the moat amusing chapters describes tbe ksiser'a method of dispatching tiresome ministers who boro him with pedantic reports. During these long winded diaccurse the emperor is said to have a habit of leaning unconcernedly against the wail and playing with his dachshund, if thtse maneuvers fail to impress the bore the kaiser sends the dog scampering around the room and executing gymnastics between the minister's leg. This Invariably makes the dull minister so nervous that he promptly breaks off and quit the kaiser's presence with e.me good uatured imperial bon mot, which relieve him of any mspiclon that the kaiser is respouaiblo tor his discomfiture. Another interesting chapter describes bow Prince Buelow avoids the risk ol norlng the emperor by invariably runtriilug to make his reports on important affaire In a converautional the ka'.aer' manner, which elicit view and decision. The chancellor la said to have mastered to perfection the art ot sifting from the day's events those which require to lie brought to hi majesty's attentsm, and then of reviewing them in the course of a walk, drive or chat The author gtuiks the kaiser tor his obsequiou atientioa to American millionaire, who are allowed to call him a "good fellow, and iap him Jovially upon the back, while he holds hie ova subject at an awe iuspirlag d THE MARRYING guinea. GRIDIRON CLUB Following is a list of public well-know- n London Mall. JE6TS. - familiar and the aatoul riling unfamiliar1' quotations that appeared or on the menu rard of the Griliron remark that he judged that ut thereabouts, a woman gave up all idea It waa almost lanta-ninuto saying that at 30 a woman must bp considered too old to wed, w;iieh is fur from being the truth. A generation ago. when 18 wa not far from the average marrying arc. a woman may have been considered a splnter at :iu. Hitherto, however, the tendency' has been to marry late rather than early in life, ami the sensible woninn 'who at 3(1 finds herself still unwed, by no moans despairs of being led lo the altar. As s matter of fact, the majority of men only conalilar a woman old when she la in the 4Us. and even then th-often find attractive qualities In her which younger women lack. (lone have been the days when a man regarded youth and beauty as essential to the happiness of married life. He has looked for a inn Mired, steady and practical mind, usually found In the Woman of 30 or 35. and has fnrgi-tteher age. Where women make the greatest in trying apmistake, however, pear younger than they are. thus placfnlwo a pmuiiou :nut ing themselves in utterly destroing whutpv-- r they m.iv possess. No sifter her unit, likes to adverts h. r imi t age, and ah' owe it to add to the same by or . hand. tires,, lir liiatain-e- On the t.i It Is ridiculous Tor her i,, . cover the tel-tt,- . :ipj. uu, m .... powder r. through s.u-- artifice m, of marriage. THE NEW EDUCATION. 'The "Broadway" claims that because of the int ruction thv received In the public schools the girl of the Ea' Side, New York, employed in hop and factory and office arc making their own clothe at home. The majority of them fit a -- hlrtwaist or hang a dres skirt as skilfully as the ordinary dressmaker, which, as every an Immense saving woman knows. for a limited income. Even more Im porta nt in Its bearing on the. home life of the present as well h the Is the domestic science frill, which Includes instruction in the art t housewifery, cooking and nursing. Though Sadie preside temporarily In an office, most Sadies find their ultimate plare in presiding over hour, where they neod to know ou of these thine. But Sadie does not wotntin w It ror .hat home of the ftp me in fre'.iri 1 e. 1 club's recent dinner: iHtn'i monkey with the trust law. O immunity, what fines are remitted in thy mime To the K's with Carnegie. Trusts laugh at Necessity is ths mother of Intervention. but what relation Is Taft? ' Fine feather dusters make fins governota. Graft and the world jumps on you. A Roosevelt by any other name would sH'll as nest. If at first ydt don't succeed, try government nwneratrp. One touch of Carnegie make the whole world grin. A Vote deferred bringeth the Rig stick. .Ml work and n't play is a violation of the eight-houlaw. Where there's a will there'a an Inheritance tax A ditch In lime saves niue trips to Knox-Hmlth- Abstinence makes the thirst (.row stranger. He laughs best, who spends otiiv 8i.;v A prac'ice.i ii ,:i- ;l -. -i lemon s a '.angeimi thins. i ho hen,) that wears a s ip. iro,:t M: lo-r- wl- -i bu'de'-il- li';o Weart s '! m flotu ht:le fsiklllgs u:nw fur Woody a job t . r. TALES OF THE KAtSER. :tr ti K.sev !s iVnpV i Truililt'.'' i he it!. ,:f a h:i-1. orli-i?- r liiw hrncliiii'p In i lie ilnmMiil in t h- -. streets of ii 1 f h 1906. PROMISE AS A CECIL THURSTON. Author ot The Circle.' Etc. Ceprrlgbt, IPOt, hr Uar.w (or ward again. "Yea. E,e 1 do understand. she wild slowly. Her .voice was controlled, her manner eouviuced. bhe was no longer the girl conquered by strength greater than her owu. She waa tbe woman strenuously demanding her fight to Individual happiness. 1 understand tt all, she repeated. I understand every point It wae not chaure that made you change your Identity, that made yon care for me, that brought about hia death. I dout believe' it area chance. I believe it was something much higher. You are not meant to go away. Aa Loder watched her tbe remembrance of hia brat day a Chi loot rote again, vhe remembrance of how he had been dimly filled with the belief that below her self possession lay a strength a depth uncommon In woman. A he studied her now th instinctive belief Jlamrd into conviction. "Eve! be said involuntarily. " With a quit gesture eh raised ber heed. Nor she exclaimed. No; dont any anything, ton are going to eae things as I ace them yon most do so yon hare no choice. No reel man ever casts away the substance for tbe shadow. Her eyea ahoue the color, the glow, the vitality, rnabad back into her face. John," ah said softly, I love yon. aud I deed yon, but there ja something with a greater claim a greater need than mine. Dont you know whet It To cure habitual drunkenness, put the victims on their honor to reform rather than send them to prlaoc. s, oo-cak- HAVING FUN WITH BONI. Not the least aevere of the penalties haa been Ann Goulda called, and la being called, upon to pay for hla pitiably despicable career aa a married man, are found In the ridicule heaped upon, him. The Count is made to figure in all aorta of rldl-- : minus situation re report had him parliamentary secretary to a political adversary. This lq disproved by the fact that Bnnt, Iq notoriously Incapable of compiling even the Isst Inspiring speech or presenting an even mildly He himself convincing argument. paid the biggest aiuua ever known to a whole bureau of newspaper men to compose hla speeches and prito articles for him on foreign politic!. A second rumor credits him with supplying acanradous revelations In high life to a sensational jonrttal tor are an enormous salary. His tid-btsaid to be spiced with alt manner of alurq on the American element. But perhaps the moat probable end conthe moat enjoyed of the oh-dcerning the httle Count la that he ia taking eommlsatona on mens clothes. Bonl wa always an arbiter of masculine modes. Hla waistcoats have been the envy of those who paid the debt of flattery, In Immediate Imitation. His jewelry was also copied and he made the reputation of hie furnishers Pale among the gildof th Rue de-led youth. ' Now he will wear their creations for other than personal satisfaction. and while pirouetting about in bU gray plummage will pocket a handsome percentage. ur . I" j The murderer of Dr. Clauasen. the dentist, who waa robbed and killed In a suburban train here in a three-minutinterval between aUtkma.wa captured at 2 o'clock this morning aa he lay In bed at hla lodgings In Alton. He is a Hnheminn gardner named Thomas Ruerker. The Kaiser has caked for a detailed account of the crime, and the Prussian railway administration la said to be acting on hia Majesty's suggestion in considering Important changes in the passenger carriage equipment and tbe possible abolition of the compartment. system. Rueckr at first denied hla guilt when the police dragged him out of lHd. but later made a full confession saying that poyerty and Inability to find work made him desperate. He said that he foil? wed Dr. Clausaen Into n sccond-claa- s compartment he was dressed like a person with money, and took hla seat opposite the demist. As soon aa the latter was absorbed in a book. Ruerker. drew a hatchet, which he had emcvalej in his bell, and stunned him by a blow on the forehead with the blunt end. When his victim had talln to the floor unconscious the murderer prooeded to strike him again ami again, because, an he confessed, the sight of blood m.le him furious. d Ruecker told the stalncd money j polii-that the stolen from his victim had caused that he him sech mental atisn'sh dared not spen.l a fart hi n? of tt, ard threw It all Into tte Elbe. The prisoner Is unable to account, however, for h's victim's gold watch and other valuables.- - Mail. Tom (proudly) Mias rinkleigh has prairlsed to be tnv wlte. Im-(c.niol!n-- l l - Oh. dont let thM worry you. Women freqnently break their promise. A'hit'apo Daily' News. Pickett Grocery Here Is the Place h rell-ane- w, ges- 1 You do not find anyone wearing ovecoata la Alaska, even in xha winter, said Major F. M. M. Beall, who ia at the New Howard, after having reoently returned from that territory. The principal thing to he careful about is keeping the head, hands and fact warm, la that part of where I have been the only land transportation la by dog sleds and to follow them on has to drop into a dog trot beside the eled. Aa ordinary, ault ia plenty thick enough to keep you warm and an overcoat la dangerous in that temperature. Trotting alongside a sled wearing an overooot would make you perspire and the bitter cold would freexe the perspiration. The men there wear a fur cap that covers every part of the head and face except the eyes and there la only a little peep-hol- e for them. Wool-line- d mitts are worn cm the hands and moccaalna. with woolen stockings ua the feet. Major Beall haa been three years In Alaska, commanding Fort Gibbon, the karri son consisting of two companies of the Third United States Infantry. He la now on leave of ate aenca. "Fort Gibbon is 900 miles up the Yukon river sn.l seventy-fiv- e miles south of the arctic circle,- - be aald, aud the river la frosen up must of thb year. In that time dog sleds are naedbut when the river xipena steamers eomd np frequently. .Sometimes the rough characters traveling around the country, take possession of a river steamer and its part, of our work Tolce to restore order and recapture tbe "Yea, at the right time. Bnt le this steamer. the right time? Ia It Over right to "The chief work of the soldiers at Fort 'Glbben ls to keep the telegraph throw away the substance for the shadlines going. Baltimore Sun. ow? Yon aay that I dont understand dont realise.... I realize morp. tonight READING NOT ALWAYS BENE- than I have realized In all my life. I . FICIAL. T. B. Evans & Co. GROCERS 2364 WASHINGTON . AVE. ui.a -- 1 ul MURDER. bl-o- Hood , a TRAIN II said nothing. Ho made no Register Brochure Your Account Cannot Go of warm light poured out reassuringly, j Into the darkneee. Wrong. We Use -I thought It was your cth, air," this System. Crap ha m exclaimed deferentially as Fralde "klr. balL the into passed they MNCOC haa been waiting to see you thi half hour. 1 showed him into tbe study.1 He closed the door softly and retired. Co. Than in the warm light, amid the gravely dignified surroundings that had BOTH PHONES 177 marked hla first entry lat this hasard-ou- s 2344 Washington Avenue. second existence. Eve tamed to Loder for tha verdict upon which the future hung. At she turned hie face was still hidden from hex, and hla attitude betrayed nothing, "John, aha aald slowly, Yon know wbj k is here. Yon knew that he has 'l!( come to personally offer yoa this place; to personally receive your refusal or consent Bbo ceased to speak, there waa a moment of suspense, then Loder turned. His face waa still pale and grave with the gravity of a man who has but recently been close to death; bnt beneath the gravity waa another look, the old expression of etrengtn and self tempered, raised aad dignified by a new humility. Moving forward, ha held out hia hands. ' My consent or refusal, he aald very where you get Just what' you want In the Grocery Line. We have requietly, lies with my wife. ceived a shipment ot the best grade af nn inn. Holland Herring In small keg and also the kind that sells loose. We also NO OVERCOATS IN ALASKA have elect White Flah, Finnan Huddles, Kippered and Smoked Salmon Army Officer Bays It ia Not Safa to and Salt Mackerel. Wear Them Thera. BOTH PHONES 23. .. , It is the parly the Country. You may put love aside, hut duty ia different. Yon have pledged yourself. Yon are not meant to draw bark." Lodora lips parted. "Dont" she said again. "Dont say anything. I know all that ia in your mind. Hat when we sift .tillage right through It lent my. love or our happiness tbata really In the balance. It Js your future. Her voloa thrilled. "Yen are going te lid a great man, and n great man la th proiierty of hi conn-try- . He haa no right to Individual action." ; Again Loder made an effort to speak, hot again she checked film. ,. rwaitr. aim exclaimed. .Wait! Yon believe yon have artad wrongly, and yon ate desperately afraid of acting wrongly again. Bnt la tt really truor, more loyal for ua to work out a long probation In grooves that are already overfilled Jban to marry qnletly abroad and fill the place that have need of That la tha question I want yon to answer. Ia It really truer and nobler? Oh. I aee the doubt that la la your Blind! Yon think It finer to go away a new life than to live the i, and make life that la waiting you becanae one la independent and the other meana the j no of another man's name and another man's nurnay that le the thought In your mind. Bnt wbat la it that prompts that thought 1 Again her votes caught, I will bnt her eyea did not falter. tell you. It la not self sacrifice, bnt j pride." Rhe aald the word fcarieaaly.' A fluib crossed Loder's face. "A man requires pride! he said in 'a low lt E . Ce th hall door was opened aud a ture! a THREE-MINUT- McCasky Accounting By KATHERINE CURE. This precept haa been adopted with auccesa in the case of Mrs. Eliza Nich-olla married woman of Bt. Mary's terrace, St. Pancraa. On October 23 Mrs. Nicholls wa charged before Mr. Plowden at the Marylebone police court with drunkenness. She previously had served sentences of from fourteen days to a month on conviction for the same offense. On' the last the woman begged to be given another chance. "Yes. said Mr. Ptowdeu, ?you shall have a ather chance. If yoa will give me a promise that you will abstain from drink for three month 1 will let you go for that time. You mtiu report yourself once a fortnight to the missionary uf this court. It la an experiment I 'am trying, and I have reason to think it wjll succeed la certain cases. Up to the present Mrs. Nioholle aa.a she has kept her promise, 1 am now I a teetotaler, she said recently. have nut touched a drop of drink aince and I do not Intend to. The mlwlou officer )iaa como to sue me often, and The I always give a good report. principal cause of my drinking was domeatic trouble. Now I find J have less trouble. 1 shall (be glad if by tbe success of my example others will be given the same chance. Mr. Plowdena experiment is the result of a plan promoted by the Notional Independeat temperance party. It is called the Pollard plan, after Judge Pollard --of 8t. Louis, Mo., who announced that he Intended to make M court a tribunal of reformation rather than a court of punishment." London Mail. Do Your Trading Where Thty Employ THE..... THE MaiL on , AGE. Not long ago a man gave utterance to f, 26, It distance.--Lond- wU'. CRAZING hce home i Mis Julia Calhoun. ill New York, but uho ha been visiting In Denver. Colo., aud in nine-tenth- autunuy indeIt giicn L OF DISTINGUISHED MEN. DESCENDANT which to apply her newly acquire.! k no ledge. Sue takes it directly to the fiat in the ninth layer of that East where her mother' Si.ie tenement are apeut over the washtuh. In DECEMBER MORNING, CTAII, WEDNESDAY OGDEN, j eoarmanK GETTING DOWN TO FACTS, patronise ua Why do the well-todmoat? In tbe right answer to this la the key to anooeas. Think twice and o answer at the JUMBLE, Hello 1144. Rooms, Stofee, Storage, Stoves, Snaps. Buah 41 Qarfa Plane. Nawman Brea. Organa . . C. H. WARDLBGH ; i PIANOS ORGANS AND MUSICAL The surest way of haring no thoughts of our own Is to take np book every time we have nothing to . MERCHANDISE : do, lays Schopenhauer. That la not t the popular Idea, for reading la gen' tt aa of a generator erally regarded Violins, Gnitars, Aocordeona, Ban thought and character. Bnt It Is not o of Itself. One mut do something , Jo, Strings, beside read. He must, digest what Latest PnblleaUoaa of Sheet llnaia he reads. He must Increase the range of hla perceptive powers, atari up n the Wonderful Pip Organ. new eat. of relatione and draw some fresh conclusions. There qr people who can read a great deal more than ' 2271 Washington Avenue. other people, hut know a great deal less. They juat read to read to put OGDEN, UATH. in time; for a pleasurable sensation In one a or hammock that gets lying drinking n glass of oda. There la no digestive force that builds up brain fiber. It Is n sort of reading that sustains Insipid talk aad makes one, In a little social 'circle, turn away In disThe "JUMBLE buya, sails arj a gust when a 101100 subject la referredi any aid thing" ("blues to. The fact la the only kind of read- changes 'and moat new ones 2300 Is worth time the that ing employed 1144 la that which arouse reflection and Waah. Hall, A man or woman NEVADA huiMa up Meals. SECOND-HANSTORE. can jidi put In all spore time reading. - Wa und soil all kinds at naw buy' They miint have time to think, comgeode. Call at pharta and qacend-han- d "My eofteewt or refusal 14m vtA my pare, Idealise, pply. Inquire of their Weekar A Haynaa, Prep 10 25th St, own conscience and conadouanesa If Phono, Ini Uk V." know that you have an opiiortunity what they read la true, pure and upv. PAUL ZICQENHIRT, reading that can never come again and that its lifting. If we had tht sort ofkind ' ' Beoend-HanStore. rihe the thought Inspiring to let It psllterribly possible country would be 100 per cent better If you have anything to aril ar buy Kbe paused. Loder, hia bands rett' off. V all at phana 1170 to 1070 Wash, Avi ing on the closed doors of the cab, tat Ball UB-k- . Ind. 575. very silent, with averted aye and bent WELL DESERVED head. .B. A. DENKBRB "Only tonight, aha went en. "you The Praise That Cornea frsm Thankful Will pay tha highest prise for secondhand furniture and sail to the public told me that everything waa crying to Ogden People. lha cheapest.. 24H Grant Ave. Ball' yon to take the easy, pleasant way. I . Phene M7-k- . Ind. Hi Then it was strong to torn aside, bnt One kidney remedy fail. now it is not strong. It Is far nobler to Ogden people rely upon It. J. HERRICK A CO f fill an empty niche than to carve one ' That remedy la Doan's Kidney Pills'. Bucceseera to H. U Whits, ... John she - suddenly for yourself. Ogden testimony proves It always Bring your goods here If you want . . , leaned fora ard. laying her hands over reliable. to aril them. Call here If yew wont R. H. Carter of 2434 Monroe ave. hla Mr. Fralde told me tonight that buy.. ; 2342 Woah Ava, : Bali Phone To . llt-yUtah, Ogden, aay that taya: flnd. 407. v .it ' ji rj.it In hi nsw ministry my my husband Doan's Kidney Pills are a wonderful waa to be undersecretary for foreign curative remedy Is mildly expressing affair. wbat 1 think of them. If anybody, aver so The words fell softly, Softly that got prompt relief from lumbago and nn to ears leas comprabending than Lo- annoyance from the kidneys I Idld der's their slgnifieaace might have with the use of Doans Kidney Pill, been lust, aa bia rigid attitude and un-r- e which 1 procured at 8. W. Rod con's po hairs manner might have con- drug store. They are the beet kidnev 1 advised an old veyed lack of understanding to any remedy I ever used. of mine to trr them, as he waa friend Eve's. less otiserrant than ye like myself and they worked if amdtfaa tttfatmL Fur a tong space there waa ho word troubled an hfitegionat Nadaa Udwhdp like n charm In hi case. Yon may Nwt Wrtt ar tmm to m a spoken. At last, with a very gentle be sure there are two grateful people over ber hia pressure, fingers tightened In Ogden who appreciate Doan's Kid' bauds. ney Pilla." John." the began gently, but the Fjt sale by all dealers. Price, I 60 word died away. She drew beck Into cents Foeter-MllbnrCo., Bualo. New York, sole agents for the United is tbe cab atoppad before ht i ' . ' ; -- lit Second Hand Stores - . d i' V -- 4 - ae-.v- h . n ?t Chil-cote- 'e State. house. gimultMueojIy aa they descended . , Remember the name lab no other. Dunn's t and 1 |