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Show THE IKE EXAMINER Put Hunt4 Every Day in 1M Year iUMird MliiMag bjr TM pMiy. C IATEX SUBSCRIPTION a Drilverod by Carrier Ogden City, tfecladtag BiuuUj Harm-li-l Biii butair, a mib.. s TBc BY MAIL IN ADVANCE Ta BlAU ElAHUif j BSftl eauids at Ogaea. par yfe. At iaa4 qurur!y, la advance. . MMkMf Mas a yiia saA give as ll i flUMbil tt fet' a.ppr. . equal paaSaat $ MS 1NDCPENBENT. FEARLEBfl Tftft It aU Am bo tuvonUi) tta was la puiuab. U am imamaed aad aobjaci vu, ba receivedpreeeuied is re- U parti ill tannage kn ud Xro nduelfe but ihe true mom anal ba publltbaS 1 lulL All laUara MaMiiMjiiM elgaed bp warn Sa will ba nlumue. sa acumd throws 1 ib1 ihe waala btokeL au tnarDst Tbs bablad bid brave aali tbs 11 assumed ! ur to Its iMponsibl tat wbt pw in aibamed el. taar ubeeribere wilt ocular tbis atttoe of failure bp t receive Tha Baemlaer balor nnriu their braaklaat. ca Ik Tba Morning Bfefemiuw gonad os asla bp tba independent Nawa Ca. Salt Lake City. Os 11 through tnia leaving OfideB OS Tha Southcrs FaciAo Rail wap. Tba Untoa raclOa luUwsp, sad Tba Orem Short Line lUllwajr. putrosi will eoofar a Cnslur laaor as tha Basasaisaat bp re partins to Ibis otto whenever (hep fall to Sad tba pa pen at tha deaig PRIMARY ELECTION LAWS. The Calirurnla legislature haa taken up the quezilon of a better primary las. Aa tba proposed It gialalion U at in- terest Is thla atata, where Ihere la so primary law worthy tha sane, the main feature of what la knows a the Sietaoa bill are reviewed: Thla bill propone to leava (be present primary election law practically sa k atanda, and to eatend Itn opera-tlon- a to all counties ami communities in tha state. This law now provide for the election of delegatea directly to atata, district and other convention, all parties holding their primaries ou the same day and at tha same polling place, but using different ballot on different colored paper, with fetich party designation printed at the head. These ballots are to ha known a delegate ballot." The StetHos bill provides that (hare hall alo ha printed and distributed Is Hha quantities aa the "delegate" ballot, "candldatea1 " ballot for each political party. Then ballots are to oontaln the names whom the rot era of each political party wlh lo nominate for the varinns offices to he fllleil at the seat election, Including the office of Vnlted State Senator. In order to become a candidate for a state office one has only to file with the Secretary of Mtate, forty days before the primary, a petition signed by 1.000 qualified voters; for n district office (nob aa Congressman or member of the state board of equalisation!. n petition containing 2 per cent nf the voter In hi party In hi district: for other thau stale or district officers, also S per real of the votem of the party In the district or county, city or town. These latter are to he filed with the couuty clerk Instead of with the Herretary of Mi ate. The officer to conduct the primary eieclloa are styled "election com- but they are mlhslonvra, usually hoard of aiiperilsom or bosrda of city truKier, and these officer are to prepare tha ballots, send them out, appoint the election officers and fls the precinct. Just a they now du for general elections, and the rust I to be a public charge. Maniple ballots are to be rent out In voters and list of candidate for nomination are to be published In the newspaper. There are to be two ballot-bon- e at each pull lag place, one for the delegate' " ballots and one for the ''candidate' nominaimu of ruch candidate a the ballot Mail show t candtcaiea" have received eltaer a mayority of ihe party vote Hi the disirlrt from ubich the delegatea are elected, or a plurality of such vote if aurk plurality equals IS per cent of the party vote cut. If h does sot equal 35 per cut, then the delegate go uuin.tr-ict-ed-. A lra vote than 2a per cent in favor uf any candidate for office may properly be accepted n conducive of no popular preference for any ptiuoa for such office. byThe pledging of ibe delegate who law to support the candidate were successful in the primary contest eatend we long a the came of surh candidate are before the con ten (ton, but theae names are to be eliminated fiom the lists of candidate for nomination before the contentious in the following manner: All ballot la the convention are to be by ayes and nnea. and are to be recorded, and nt Ihe dose of each ballot the candidates who received the lowest numlier of votes cast at the primary election shall he di upped front the convention voting list, and so on, ballot after ballot, setting free from Instruction delegation after delegation until some candidate due receive n majority vute of tho delegate In that convention. Thla system will gle Ihe people an opportunity to espies their preference when they have preferences, and to make those preferences effective, bui when they have no positive preferences to espteas the selection of parly candldatea becomes a representative fund Ion, with trading reduced to n minimum. The only trading that can be douc la with the minimum rule let loose M earh ballot, and that roust be only a to the minimum vote to be let loose aa other candldatea down the line of office to be filled btay be dropped 'ballot by ballot. Thera jnav atilt be some trading under thi system, where popular prefer eneea are not pronounced, bul In no case ran a popular preference be defeated, aa now no often happeua. HOPKINS, SMOOT AND DUBOIS. The many references of Hje Balt Lake Tribune to tho speech uf Senator Hopkins nf Illlnola In detente i.f Monitor Reed Minoot, always In a belittling vein, baa led ua to look tip the remark ol the Illlnola senator for the purpoae of determining what he said that so hurt the Tribune aa to provoke Its endless slurring. When Ihe Tribune, steels aa unanswerable argument, it reaorta to abuse, and, therefore, the abuse heaped upon Benaior Hopkins points to a speech nf merit. It will be recalled that tha Tribune, the day after the speech was delivered In Congress, said that Menatnr DulmU drove tb Illinois, Meqator Into a corner and then wads him cry for merry. This la what the Congressional Ker oid says lung place: Mr. Dubnla - I Will ssk Ihe Renat'ir from Illinois, If he will allow me, If Ihe Mormon Church hss undertaken tu punish any pf these polygamists for entering Into this adulterous relation? Mr. Hoj)kinl will answer my friend front Idaho by Mtylng that the other day 1 read In a newspaper that a iiieinher of a religion organisation In one of the Western Mtatea had committed the rrlme uf bigamy. I aak Ihe Menstor If he knows phelher the member of his chinch have prosecuted that man? (trie quest Ion la as fair as Ihe other. It Is not necessary In order to clear the sklria of Reed In Hniout, or any lay Mormon Ihe rhnrrh, that he should prosecute a per von for committing s rrlme. The obligation la npna the Menator himself with the same degree of responsibility aa It la upon any member of the riinrrh. If he knows that a man haa violated the law It la his duty, according to his own mde of ethic, to present that evidence to n grand Juryt to have them Indict him. lUa he gone and presented these charges to the grand jury In the State of ITah r In Malt lake City? Mr. IhihoU - I myself have not. Mr. Hopkins Thai is all 1 want to know. There U nothing In the above going tn prove that Menstor Dubois did anything but quleth take his neat after g must chagrining defeat In debate. Senator Hopkins, earlier In hla speech, differentiated between what n wan believes, and what he does. lie said: MORNING EXAMINER: ft oin Co'4i tMr. Raroul and other are honoral-- l Senlousy, Hat ibr-rsors upon this flour who a l.rn.ly tUi the Confederate States bad hgrtl right tu secede and form a separate and lndep,-ndeu- t government a did thn leaders of that gieni movement who put iheir belief into artiou and organized the Civil war. They, hnweier. like the Mormon of today, have accepted the results of the war and have come back into the Union and taken their share of the burdens of a reunited Republic. anil benefit Their belief regarding Ihe rigbleoua-ne- a uf fneir cause, wit many of them. I as Ann today a it was in the bloody days from Cl to '65. That belief. however, doe not make them to their country, and the belief of aar number of the member of the Mormon Church that polygamy Is aa a priuriple of divine origin, aa they d' out preach it as a part of the doctrine of tha church, can bring no more punishment than can a Menator upon thi floor be punished for euter-lainiathe principles of constitutional law that led the brilliant leader from the South to wganiae armed oppoai-uo- a to the General Government. tisi'-or- t g FORAKER OR ROOSEVELT. Sacramento Colon: The dispalchaa bring advices of a sharp dash of wits and personalities between Theodora Roosevelt and Joseph Benson Koraker which took place at s Washington club. The measuring of swords was the iu the seclusion of dining-room- , club having a restricted membership and s code of ethics which preclude publicity, but that there was a'flve wring of aworde cannot be denied. That there via Is also profoundly signifies nl. Everybody knows what Theodore Kopsevclt stands for. It Is for the square deal, with special privileges to none. Everybody should know what Joseph Benson Rtrakri stands for, for' next to Theodore Roosevelt, he Is destined to become the most couaplcuou public character connected with the affairs of this nation. Both are typical Americans; the one typical of an aroused American conscience, the other typical of organised American Incorporated plutocracies. Tha one stands with the mass at his bark the fickle, swaying, ebbing, flowing, and therefore luconstant, common people. The other stands with the organised, constant, never-tirinorganisations of political plutocratle forces at his bark. He has been chosen as their champion with n deliberate purpose and because he Is the fittest man iu the nation to anbserve their purpoae. It would be a mistake to underrate the powers and resources of Joseph Benson Koraker. He la s consummate politic!. Ills persoual political machine la not only the finest nnqhsulsm of the kind In the country, but bis adherents are bound to him by ilea of personal lenity that aavor of the worshipful He la a man of great ability, great magnetism, and b I every inch a fighter. It is the theory uf Theodgre Ruoee-ve- il that If the common man can be helped to prosper be will take care of the weak, and the more powerful ean take care of themselves. It la the theory of Joivcph Henson Foraker that If the rich and powerful ran he fostered, the middle and Inwer classes will anmehow be taken earn nf aa a provldentiHl Incident to n specialized prosperity. Hla prayer le, "God prosper the rich, the poor can beg. The mints uf view of the two men are antipodal, and they foreshadow Ihe line at cleavage between the Roosevelt and the Koraker RepubRepublican licans, and It la not Impossible that this cleavage will run from stem to tern and top and bottom of the party, and that the fault line will dlarloae It presence with so much forre as to make ua feel that the readjustment of April IK. 1110(1, wna Inconsequent Ini. Foraker Is a fighter. He was the youngest soldier from Ohio to fight through the Civil War. enlisting at 16 and fighting through to the finish, finally becoming an aid to General Riorum. He wan brave la battle, and hr has been equally brave In polities; not, to he euro, In standing for undying principles, hut rsther In standing for an organization." a "machine" to whlrh he at find gave allegiance, and. nuw that he ie stronger, whlrh give allegUnrp to him as devotedly a he gave It. It a not certain that Senator will strive fur the presidential nomination a year hence, a It certain that Theodore Roosevelt will not. The haltlc will be fought over the Issue a to which of thene men, and these faction, shall name the Kor-nk- 1 Now. that some of tha member of the organisation Mill Indulge In polyg. antuus cohabitation and In their hears believe that the doctrine nf polygamy la of divine origin doe not make the organisation a criminal organisation. The apostles, inre the manifesto of HUM, according to the testimony of all of (ha witnesses who have given evidence upon that aubjert. do not preach the doctrine of polygamy nr enconragc polygamous cohabitation. It is not what a man believe, mo what lie fines, that makes him a rrlmlnal. Mr. President, we have had an exhibition here today that furnishes s Splendid Illustration of the poIH-the primary election are by law pledg- which I have Jiiet now taken. We all ed to support In the convention the know, aa w expressed by the Senator ballot. The party test and qualification for voter are the same a In the present primary law. The test of party fealty I. a bona fide present Intention to support the nominees of the party which shall be nominated by the delegates elected at the primary. Vndcr the provisions uf the Stetson ' bill the party delcMie elected at pneumonia the convalescent nourishing food to build up the disease-racke- d body. But great cere must be exercised so as not to overtax the feeble digestion. Emuljfon has cod lirer oil to make blood and healthy flesh, and hypophosphites to strengthen nerves. It is The best food in the world for a convalescent AFTER Scolt'j pre-digest- ed. ALL DnUGCUTIi M AND l.0. candidate for the presidency, or. rather, under which banner that r.imlhl:ue will march. The Issue aa to men may be between Taft and Fair-hanElihti Hoot and Mpnoner, or ome other equally aafe" person I fy. President Roosevelt ha no no organization" hack of him. HI wr of beating the machine" Is to appeal to Caesar in the person of the American people. Furaker'a way of beating the American people Is to appeal to the marhine." The issue Is defined, the battle I on. Under which king. Rczonlsn?" ma-rbln- e I'TAII, OGDEN, FRIDAY, which vltal'v nwern not only me and mine bur it may he otnera aa well. Ijlvi evening guout 7:Jh. when nnr stated aruu&J the table, family we were suddeulv treated to a ahoaer of luud auowtal! thrown repeatedly against the wiudew on the east end of the bouse, and. but for n tree protecting the window, there is no vhuibt some glass would hae been broken. We observed two youths, slum 14 or 15 year of age, make good their escape In the rear of an al'ey way leading through to the north end of the house. Shortly aftei there were chunks of ice thrown against the iqe FEIIRI-AR- 1907. 1, 0fF o i) Partners $ St of 0000 000 000 flrpTIcjo JOSEPH c. uncoln. shanty and likewise against the front door, Mr. Editor, to say that this la n disgrace on either the part cf large boys, or small boys. Is but porting tt mildly. We have had sickness to contend with and whv It Is that we should be with iu such a manner is something that 1 fail to comprehend. Shortly after V a young man. In comwe pany with another, the former know well, took the liberty to throw rhunka of ice against our front door, dial ur bin g the rest of our rhildrea who were aaleep at the time. The mother of the young man In question, feeling anxious after his welfare, called him Into the house. It la only n matter of time when, under such disgraceful rowdyism, forbearance will have Its limits and, either the Juvenile court or some other courta will have lo deal with toys of this kind. Very respectfully ( signed 1, B. CRAIG, Fifth Ward, OgWll-UA- den. CCDEN MAILS . Arrival and departure of main at Ogden poa toffies: North and Northwest, O. 8. L. Hy. Arrivs, T:20 a. m., :30 p. m.; depart, 12:55 a. m- - 11:5(1 a. m. East, all points, U. P Ry. Arrive, 4:30 a. m., 2:11 p. m: depart, 7:50 a. 2:25 p. m., fi:50 p. m. G. W. Ry. Arrivs, 1:00 a. m., 11:45 a m, 1:50 p. m.; dem.a :20 p. m. part, 7:0u m, Southeast, R. a P. Ry. 7:10 8. West, all points, a m., 2:50 p. m, 7:00 p. m.; depart, 1:10 a. m., 2:45 p. m. Southern California and Nevada, B. Ry. Arrivs, fi:30 a F.LA.H.Ldepart, 2:45 p. m., 6:20 m., 7:30 p. bl; p. m. Southern Vtah, O. 8. Arrive, 7:20 pr m.; depart. 2:20 Ry. X 2:20 a. m.a a. m 2:45 p. m. G. W. Ry. Ar2:5u p. m, 7:00 p. m.; jlepnrt, 1:20 a. m., 7:00 a. m., 6:20 p. m. Malt Lake City, 0. 8. L. Ry Arrive, 1:00 m., 1:30 a. m., 12:00 m., 2:50 p. m., 7:20 p. m ; depart, 5:80 a. 7:20 a. 10:10a. m., 2:45 p. m, 6:50 p. m. Malt Lake Pity, R. G. W. Arrive, 1:00 a. m 2:50 p. m ; depart, 7:00 a m., 6:30 p. m. Cache Valley Points. O. 8. U m.; depart, 4:50 p. m. Arrive, 10:45 Southern Utah, R. rive, 1:00 a m., a a Huntsville, Eden R. A IJberty Arrive, 5:00 p. m.; depart. 0:00 a. m. R. F. D. Weber County Arrive, 5:00 p. m.; depart, 2:30 a m. WM. GLASMANN, ' Postmaster. GLASS FACTORIES TO CLOSE. Claim Made That There le an Over Production. Pittsburg, Jam'31- - At a meeting held here of the Nstkmal Brokerage company, representing all the winded glass manufacturers o. the country yesterday. It was unanimously agreed to curtail the producinde-IH-ndc- tion. Innumerable employes who expected steady work nntll late In Juqe, will be laid off at vzrloun periods between early next month and the two month following and will not again return to work until September, the time for the fall reopening of fartoriea. Their claim la that Ihe market It overstocked and that mme curtail ment la necessary if present selling prices are tu be maintained. JAPANESE whispers people were other how tong it wotJdasking Iasi. When Hsmuiobil ; peered then? was greet commotion, kuew who it was But vlu-- hT the raiL with the fire behmeT a dozen bullied bis name. Tltcomb skjuted it and swore 7 went later rauie the explowiou. Fifty men oraned for the wharf, but the cfeptalu we far In ih T' He leaped tote a dory and puuq?J Tha harbor wa almost as light n Z In the center of the light the tu7l ura in the water were eptasbu. Ul-o- 0 0 0 0 0 0 (Concluded.) The crackle of burning timber wa plain aa be scrambled over the Diving Belle's raiL The flames ware pouring np from under the covering of the main batch, and the sin oka was rolling thick from the eabia companion. He would have given anything for an ax, hut the on'.y gat ou board was hy the wood box iu the giiley below, lie caiSbt up the bust book that was In Its rsck by the bulwark aud ran to the batch. Ue put the point of the book under the heavy cover tmJ began prying the Utter loose. It gave a little, slipped beck and then pulled over the cleat With the book be got a firm grip upon Its edge end turned R ever with a clatter. The smoke belched up In tt cleared lie fell upon bis cloud, hut knees end peered below. The fire was almost amidships, among some loose planks end an empty tar barrel. Theae were burning fiercely, end the beanie of the deck were biasing above them. But the dynamite chest was farther forward, beyond the bulkhead, which was only beginning te burn, and be could aw there was Just a chance of reaching It If be wa quick. With the dynamite once out of the way help from the shore might save the schooner. He draw a long breath and put bis bands on tha edges of the batch. Then he beard a faint voice calling for help. He tliought for a moment that he must be going crazy, but the vain called again. Help!" It walled. Somebody help!" Bradley Jumped to bis feet and ran aft. The door at the head of the cabin stain had been left open when the partners went home the previous night, but Bradley bad palled the sliding hatch aliut Now the hatch was pushed bath as far aa It would go, and the door wee abut tight Who la Itr shouted Bradley, stoop, tag to the opening between tta.- top of the door and the hatch. The dense moke In hie face made him cough. Help!" the voice came up through IF me Hammond P the smoke. The Junior partner started back. Ham-monHammond?" be repeated. And then In a changed voice, Wbat are yon doing aboard here?" I came after my things. 1 forgot about the spring lock. Quick! Oh, quirk!" "Came after your things! You lie! You came to. set thla flro! Thera was no reply for a moment, only a gn siting, choking sound In the moke. Then the voice began again. I'm dyl,et me out!" It screamed. ing! Brad Nickerson, you want to murder me! Durn yob, let me out! Oh, please. Brad! For Gods aaka, please!" Bradley stood upright and looked about him. His beloved schooner or - QUESTION. San Franciaco School Board Will Go to Waohlnqton. Men Francisco, Cal., Jan. 11. It Is more than probable that all the members of the Man Francisco hoard of education will go to Washington In re- . houettseL 00000000000000000000r0$00 CHAPTER XIV. Aad suddenly the captain, frantically, waa aware that ..nutlJ Boat waa uearer the echoouer fi..n , owa. A small skiff, rowed by a tol! headed girt, had coqie from betiim j" polut aud was speediug with long strokes toward the awl aimers. Hammond saw it Help! he few ed. waving this arm. Help; Save me!" -The skiff was almost upon him. g, raached out to grasp its aide. tn, rower, though she turned and Imw directly Into hie face, did not Bhe kept straight on, past him. Aad Captain Tltcomb as he flam Hammond hy tha coat collar it Gua Baker lean from her skiff to Its low gunwale the belpfe. drag form of Bradley Nickerson. Then, with a hiss aud wrai-peIn great white rota of eteam, the Diviur Belle dived to the bottom of the tar- shook and pounded him savagely. After a bit the follow opened hie eyes and gasped. Then Bradley left him and ran le the main hatch. One glance showed him that the schooner waa doomed sad that the dynamite might explode at any mutuant. The thla bulkhead waa a waU of flame aad was shaking like a sheet of paper la the fierce draft. Black smoke, powdered with sparks, was vomiting from the fo'caatle. The Diving Belle was on Are from atom to stern. llammoud yelled wildly from the after rail. The dory's goue! he shouted. My dory's gone! Wheres yours?" Bradley had not stopped te fasten the dory when be boarded the srhouo-e- r, aud the boat had drifted away. Hammond, half drunk when hq left the wharf, had tangled the knot with which hla dory waa fastened, and that, too, waa gone. WeH have to swim! cried Bradley. Jump quick! She's going to blow up!" Bam aobtwd In sheer terror. 1 can't make Itr' he screamed. Im too weak. I'll drown." "Youve gut to make It Jump! m keep clnee behind you." Hammond caught at a shroud, stepped upon tlie bulwark and stood there, white face Brat toward the turning shore and then back at hla companion. There waa a muffled rumble from the hold. The bulkhead had fallen. Jump!" shouted Bradley. "Jump!1? Mam threw up hla arms and leaped from the stem. .Bradley cast one glance over the poor Diving Belle, ran to the rail by the foremast aud dived Into the water. At that moment, before his heed appeared above the surface, there came dull roer from the schooner's hold. Bhe rocked like a rowboat among breaker. A flame burst from her batches and focaatle and streamed to the top of her foremast, every rope of which caught flro. Her eutlro bow waa a greet torch that dipped now this way, now that Hammond, swimming for hla Ilfe yelled with fright Bradley, caught In the waves made by the rocking of the Diving Belle, was for a moment unable to make any headway. Vaguely he wondered why he had not been killed. And then the foremast swung above bis head and the noisy hoisting block in tbs forerigging snapped from Its burning tackle shot out into tba air and fell, striking him on the fore-bra- the smoke. Then he ' d tar. (Continued Tomorrow.) FUNERAL OF VICTIMS. Basrbniecken, Rheniah Prussia. The funeral services over the victims of the recent mine dlMstr-wer- e held yesterday. Ona hundred inj j-- 31. coffins were Isid in long row in the hall aducent to the shaft Prince Frederick Leopold made forty-tw- o short address in which he expresses the sympathy of hla majesty, the emperor, with the bereaved relatives ot tha dead men. A total of 146 bodies have been recovered. anj of theae 110 have been recognized. There are still nine bodies below, buried under wreckage. There was much excitement around the mines because of a rumor that there were still live men under ground. People said they had heard toppings on tha drainage pipes, bin tavqstlgation proved this to be untrue. Of the wounded men, 22 are pronounced out of danger. . . ' EXECUTE BANDIT. Warsaw, Russian Poland, Jan. 31. Socialists carried out the execution nf a bandit who made an unsuccessful attempt to secure 1500 from the Com mereial Bank of War-aTlie man entered the bank this, afternoon and flaked the director to give him $500. when his request was refused, he announced hla Intention of remaining nnt.il he received- the mon ey. The bank officials feared to ail: the police for heip end allowed him tu at ay. A Socialist member of tits bank's staff, however, telephoned eiellst headquarters and explained IN situatloa. Two men at once went to I He remembered almost nothing of the bank. They approached the wt I frpm behind, threw . a sack over kit what happened after that nothing head and then blew out hla briin fighting to keep afloat and the In- with a revolver. tense cold of tho water. The police have not Interfered with e e e e the men who did the killing. Captain Tltcomb on the bill had fought and struggled and pleaded to DELEGATES TO GET THEIR FAY. be allowed to go to his partner' aid. Guthrie. Okla., Jani 31. The deleBut Captain Taylor said, Better ona than two,- aud moat of the other gates to the constitutional convention Bailee ler Wixou received from the territorial secretary agreed with him. wee going through the crowd, telling tha final amount of tha official salargovernment all who would llHten that If ba bad ies paid by the federal At the same time ther not bad some fellows at hie house "set-tin-' yesterday. were glfen checks for return mileage np- playing cards the flro would to their homee. For their further sernot bare been discovered. Aa the vices In making a constitution the del1 blase grew brighter end Bradley could egatee Rinat look to the state for paybe seen ruuulng about the schooners ment. If the constitution should he deck, Alvin Beane volunteered to go rejected and statehood tail It la hardly with hla skipper and attempt a rescue, believed that congress would make any tat they would not let him try. In deficiency appropriation. w. - 8-- d. . eg-ra- pt sponse to the Invitation sent through the California congressional delegation that one or more representatives of the department should go there to confer on the Japanese school question. The hoard met this morning and It was practically agreed that the fonr directors, the superintendent and the secretary should make the trip. Health is the Main Thing Therefore Get Health AMERICAN CABLE LINE. positively agree to affect a permanent core in cases of Nervons and Blood Complaints, MENS DISEASES, Rheumatism, Stomach, Kidney and Liver Troubles. DONT WAIT UNTIL Wsshlngti n, Jan. 21. Attorney General Bonaparte, Secretary Taft and Gen. Allen, chief signal officer of tho bora to sirtmf Jump quick" the sneaking enemy who had net her army, cinfi-rreyesterday with at- on fire and who was responsible for Amtorneys for 'he Central A Ronth which? To force that all hla trouble erican Telegraph company In regard cabin door meant that the flames In to the laving nf a cable from Mandy Honk to Guantanamo and thence to the bold would have time to bum He Colon anil across the Isthmus to Pan- through the bulkhead and then ama, connecting with the Pacific cable heaved a long sigh, and with that sigh line. The purpose sf ihe government he said goodby to the Diving Belle. is to secure a cable, the terminal of He turned and rushed to the main which hall he under the control of hatch. the I nite. Stales. It Is said that an The prisoner in the cabin heard him agreement wa reached which will ho go and screamed choking curses after In the form of a contract. It la also him. But Bradley had gone only to understood that the conditions are the boat hook. He came back with get same with as those substanlally the tt and liepan the attack upon the door. the Pacific CalM. company. That door was built of tough wood, almost new, aud the raptaln'a lock was IN A BAD WAY. new also. The host hoiok only tore off Many an Ogden Reader Will Feel splinters and chips. Finally the hook Grateful for Thie Information. broke Just where the Iron Joined the When your back gtvei out ; Become lame, weak or aching; When urinary troubles set in. Your kidneys are tu a had wav, Doana Kidney Pill will cure you. Here la local evidence to prove It. Thus. W. Wooton. living at 732 Bar-loOgden, Utah, sav Kidney trouble has bee a source of great annoyance to nte for a year or more. The soreness and pain In my hack IRRIGATION MAP. just over the kidney has often proved too much me. and I could not The 1'nlon Pacific ha Is- straighten t.p from a stooped position sued s map showing the lands covered and I had a hard time In getting up In the morning Acute twinges would by the government irrigation project. catch me even when I made a motion The sestern half of the Fnited Mtatea In turning over In bed. I decided t. Is patched with red. the color that try noun's Kidney Pills and procured he irrigated tica. One of them at Badeon's drug :or. and they are the onli medicine that haa even the maps, a handy reference In a study proved fffretive in treating the trouof arid reclamation, presented hjr the ble. The and aching did not Iocs passenger agent of ih? comps ny, last long sf I recrmniend their use. T gladly recommend Doan's Kidadorns the wall of this office ney Pills to every sufferer with kldnev complaint." ROWDYISM OF BOYS. For sale by all dealers. Price 5t cent. FosterMlIharn Co.. Buffalo, Editor Standard' To a citizen of New To-sole agents for the T'nlted Ogden w.ll you klndv allow a space State. In your valuable paper in order to utRcntrmber the name-Doa- n's and ter a rotet in relation to a matter take no other. f,-- r den-ietiat- sa k. "M'KU handle. r YOUR TROUBLE lbiinntiind was lying unconscious at their foot. The JnnioF partner dragged him to the deck and away from Get well Drs. Elliott .& Norris, 25 Year. SPECIALISTS 25 Year. 2361 WASHINGTON AVE. YOU CAN GET Mam board. It wa so clumsy that he could scarcely carry It, but be stepped back by tbs wheel to get a start and, ruuulng forward, threw It against the door. The double oak panel cracked lengthwise. Three timee he hurled the bettering ram. with ble owa weight behind It At the fourth attempt the door burst Inward and be fell on hla face. Mam!" be shouted. "Sam, come our But Hammond did not answer. Shutting hi eyes and bolding hla breath, Bradley descended the rebin stain, BECOMES AGONIZING. now. . had ceased to yell and beg hla rescuer to burry. His cries changed to Then coughs and strangling moans. he waa silent altogether. Bradley, desperate. threw down the broken boat hook and ran about the deck hunting, by the light of the fire, for something heavy, something that would break that lock. He picked up the stout with Iron, that they beam, lung over the vessel's fora quarter when they hoisted heavy chains on i j Z. C. M. I. . V Home Made tSIioes For men, boys, miae and children again in Ogden. They re the old reliable, every pair guaranteed, aa well ai the i a . r Ladies Pillow Shoes, 6 THE SHOE FOR TENDER FEET, at the Fifth Ward Shoe Store 2546 MADISON AVE. BELL PHONE Catalog and Samplea 513-X- . . T. A. SH REEVE |