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Show tiie aoitxixn 4 examinee-- to control his passion, have been such as to Justify or ex- I m,y t unable aome mental defect wen reaand though If. or to redeee by cuse his act, to yieid to pasliable mure him son of provocation, to masblaughier; mages aouuii. were be if than mentally sion a lire and if a person a by however, of such condition, Fiuof pistol at another, an intention to kil deliberaof elements the Mid excluding tt la concisely Putlimt Every Day In tlw Vw - ! presumtd. Aa tion and premeditation. If tbe evidence In tbe Cyclopedia of Law and Procedfey The tuiwirl PuOll.hlng shows that it dM so, but not other. intenure. malice is implied in every to if wise, will reduce the homicide fcomiride, tional and premeditated - BLB6CRIPTI0N lATEfe second the in ! murder degree. there are Bo eircum.taures aerving Delivered by Curfer ta Oil Perhape there may be aurh a thing mitigate. eacue. or Justify the act. City. iMlrihi fluaday as geaulae Insanity produced by anNew York statute, assumli KlAUUMr, ptf BOAiki W faderthattheThaw jealousy or reienge, and if there was ger, his killirg sane, ing 8Ut t0ftai of fact to be of Wbirq was murder la the first de- is. which la a queetioa then U from the determined exevidence, or was Justifiable gree, unless It V MAIL IN ADVANCE. as Inextent earns to tbe cusable. if It was committed either (1J la a defense -- fe mi fey atfeU Th other cause, by any d sanity produced from a deliberate and premeditated auUido ef Ogdon. V but It must be genuine insanity aa At liiA lliArttfJjfj IB AdltftMa W alga to kill, or (2) by at act of pasdangeroua to others, and evinc- distinguished from turbulence for desire a sion revenge.' of by produced ing a depraved mind, regardless FEARLE6B sad INDEPENDENT. and it must, as is expresaly required human life, although without a JW ! 4 TB section tl of the Penal Code, have death by design to effect tbe peasant newspaper- The killing wax been such aa to render the accused Inof any Individual. OB SgUoi Am si lifiHiH murder la the second degree if it wav capable of knowing the nature ani afei m ff mmAL it Vtit committed with a design to effect quality of hie act or of knowing that 1V li MVI or pre- it waa wrong. 'Tbe beat of passion without deliberation but death, . praMdioad. meditation. While it la necessary lo and feeling produced by motives of anCUUlUiCUlflBI Will fefe 001 WMW M fell fedfejMU f murder la tha flrat degree, uuder the ger, hatred, or revenge la not Insanfeoii laovi ipwilui atatute, that there shall be both de- ity and affords no ground of exempbut U wife BSBI BUM h nad liberation tottora ant premeditation. In addt tion from responsibility. AU falL pfeUnd ife In some states a phase of Insanity Hon to the fnlent to kill, all that the wl! ar n aid aa insano Irresistible Impulse, shall known the law that is killing plus., requires The bLfet throw la in from mental defect or disof Inatvut result resulting not be Impulse, bBliimd the bb hid bias bum 1 la KOI aome UB BBk ease, If there recognised as a ground of exand it la sufficient toSUIUWd MSkB Don't tur to be respoaatfele lor what you responsibility for a thought and reflection on the act, and emption from ara ashamed U. a choice and deiermlnatkm aa the re- crime committed under its Influence; It being held In these states that if an sult of menial action. Subscribers win confer a Coder the auppoaed- farts and dr Insane Impulse ao overmasters the' tbla Mm l failun fey runudanrea of the killing It seems will of a person aa to irrealatilty imTk baialBr feetoro M leosiv? clear that there ran bo no question ha pel him to the com ml talon of a homitheir braohfosL to manslaughter. At common law, a cide, be la not responsible, although b Im Examiner Tfea Morals homicide, if It Is committed In the he may know the nature and quality of found oa aala by Ifea independent beat of passion caused by adequate hla act and may know that it la wrong. Salt Lake City. Niwa provocation; but pasalon, however In other states, however, this doctrine Oa all through trams leaving oa great, la not sufficient to reduce tbe is not recognised, and It has no place Ogda Tfea Boulters FaclAo Railway. killing to manslaughter, If the prove In the law iff New York. In New York Tfea Ualoa Pactfis Railway, tad cation la not in Us nature adequate In tale It 1$ expreaaly provided by statTfea Orel a Short Una Hallway. tbe eye of the law, or If there has ute that a person la not excused from Examiner palroni will ooalar a been fey time after the provocation was criminal liability aa an Insane perfavor on tfea management to tfeia ottiea whaaotrar ihay for the passion of a resaonabl son except upon proof that, at tbe given fail to find th papara at tfea deeig-aalaman to cool, whether it does In fart time of committing the alleged crimfdaara cool or not, nine tbe safety of tha inal act, he was laboring under such a community requires that persons alisll defect of reason as either, (1) not to a control their pasnloni. And. know the nature and quality of the act reasonably CASE. LAW IN THE THAW although there baa been some tenden- he waa doing; or (f) not to know that of the cy to leave tha question In aurh casea the act waa wrong; and further, that la view of tfea trial of Ilarry K. Thaw for tha kill-l- to the Jury, the law has long been a morbid propensity to commit proof Stanford While ud tha great nettled, that mere suspicion, or eve.i hibited acta, existing In the mind of t It eseliei, throughout tkr actual knowledge, on the part of a hus- a person who la not shown to have t even band of past or even continuing Illicit been Incapable of knowing the wrong-fulnea and abroad, country, In or relations between hla wife and anutba of aurh acta, form no defense or the law by which the guilt derebe In man aa not will tnuat to such a accused of the provocation prosecution therefor. imrenre In tho Carpenter esse (102 N. Y. termined will be U Interest not only to duce hla killing of the man from murLiwyera who make no apeclal atudy of der to mansls tighter. A fortiori, sus- 2381, where the defendant had killed the criminal law, but to laymen aa picion, or even knowledge, on1 the pari hla wife by repeatedly stabldng her well. A eta lenient of the law on the of a man that hla wife la being pur- with a knife. In the presence of eubjert baa been procured from Mr. sued or annoyed by enother wouU not number of people, In the open street, William I Clark, reviewing editor of be mich provocation as 9 reduce a and In broad daylight, the court of Furtherthe Cyclopedia r.f law and Procedure, homicide to manilaughtrr. appeal' held that the trial court did and the author of well known work! more, under the, present statute In not err In refusing the defendant! on the criminal law. Por the benefit New York, a homicide cannot be rlaca-e- request to charge the Jury that Tf aa manslaughter, except when some controlling disease waa In truth of our reader who may be In tbe caee and wlah to follow the there was no design to effect death; the acting power within him (the pristeatlmnny ai It la pulillahed from day when that purimae Is present the oner) which he muld not resist, or if crime la murder In one of It degreea, be bad not sufficient use of bla reato day we here reproduce hla at unless it la eaeareble or Justifiable. son to control the pasalon which Jte says: "Nor was thrb9mlrl(le excusable or prompted the act. he waa not responIt would be both Improper fend unfair to tbe defendant to eapraaa any Justifiable either at common law or sible. Chief Justice Ruger, writing opinion aa to hla guilt at tbla time. under the New York statute, for, to be the opinion of the court, said that the Whether he le guilty or Innocent mut excusable, it must have been commit- prlurlplo of tbla request la not only fee determined, not on the facta which ted by an acrldcnt In doing a lawful Impliedly Condemned by aegUona 21 have been publlahed In the newapap-era- , arl, and to be Justifiable, It must and 23 of the Penal Code, hut baa but oa the facta aa they appear have hern In the lawful defense of been held to bo untenable by the exfrom the evidence which may be given Thaw fir hla wife, when there was rea- press decision of tbla court, citing fet the trial, fend the question will ba sonable ground to apprehend a design the Flanagan Caae, 62 N. Y. 4G3, and decided by the Jury on tbla evidence on tho part of the person slain to quoting the following lahgutge of nador the court' Inalrucliona an to the commit, a felony, or to do aome grea; Judge Andrew therein, namely: law. They cannot convict unless they personal Injury, etc., and when there In evil pus a Ion a weakens tha ere convinced of the defendant'! guilt waa imminent danger of such design restraining power of the will and conbeing accomplished. beyond a rraswisbl doubt, and a science. and the rnle suggested would "With respect to the defense of dottbt aa to hla mnity at the be the cover for the commission of If Thaw was Insane when h time of the killing will require an accrime and Ita Justification. Tha dockilled White, he not only cannot be trine that a criminal act may bo exquittal. t With reapect to the law there can punished, but he waa guilty of aa cused upon the notion of xn irresistibe little qneatlon. In the find place It crime, and (hla la true although he ble) Impulse to commit It, when the la perfectly clear that the may have been sane before he com- offender has the ability to discover hie 'unwritten' or 'higher' law. In the aenae mitted the act- and may be aaue imw. legal and moral duty In respect to It, to which tbe term have been uaed In Whether or net be waa Insane Is of bae no place In tbe law. connection with this ceee, has no course n qneatlon of fart which inuat "Till view has been adhered to In place la the law of New Yorfe. The be determined by law In New York the later casea, aa In People v FerInnocence or guilt of one who kill state, aa elsewhere, for determination raro and People v Silverman. In the another depends entirely upon the of tho question whether. If he waa to latter case a conviction of murder In application to tbe fart of the law estab- some extent tnaane, hie Insanity waa the flrat degree was sustained, allished by the atatute and Judicial aufllrtent to exempt him from respon- though the evidence ahnwed that the of the stale. Of course It 1j sibility. defendant had been eccentric, morose, In the flrat place it is everywhere possible for a Jury to disregard the and of had temper, and had been treatlew e laid down for their guidance the settled law. In New York by ed In a eanltarlutn a little more than to the charge of the court, and thin statutory provision, that If a year before the homicide, and alla gll there la to the Idea Involved In Thaw, at tbe time he killed White, though aome physician testified that this ue of the term unwritten law'; waa so Insane that he did not know he waa Insane. The court, in an opinbut In thin elate Juror are not the the nature and quality or his act, or ion by Judge Cnllen, held that whatJudges of the law, hut of the facts that he did not know the act was ever may he the opinions of medlral only, and under their oatha they are wrong, he U not responsible, end must as to the Insanity of a person experts required to decide according to the be acquitted. charged with crime, hut one test of law aa given them by the court. If la the second place. It la equally la known to the law, the law l harsh aa applied to the ferta well settled that mere moral or enne responsibility that found In the Penal Code namely, of any particular case then the rem- Hniia! Insanity, or freniy produced by quoted, which 1 but a statutory decedy la by application for executive auger, jealonay, nr other like passion, laration of the law as It had long prela not such Insanity aa will exempt clemency. vailed, and that when the evidence "Independently of statutory provi- from responsibility, where the person affords no reason for doubt that the sion. It a sene man Intentionally kills knew the nature and quality of his defendant knew both the nature and another be I guilty of munlnr, un- act, and (hat it waa wrong; and IhU quality of the act done by him and less the circumstances are proven to is true, it hss been held, all hough he that the act waa wrong, he la justly held by the Jury to be responsible for his crime, whatever may have been his eccentricity of conduct, or however abnormal his disposition. Tbe learned Judge suggested that while the defendant's previous malyou tire easily, have a poor appetite ady and Infirmities of temper were cant sleep, feel nerrous, you are to affect hi legal responsinot welL Ordinary food does not bility. they might warrant a mitigation of his punishment and hlx relief nourish you. from suffering the supreme penalty of the law. tmum i lit Cons-p"y- U-tr- immi-aentl- y t1' uuii ft in C. , ss atati-men- 1 d IqA-rent- ate-men- e - a a 9 IF Take a , 9 9' 2, i a r Emutjfon . It is CHANGING food. It will revive your strength, improve your appetite, induce natural sleep and strengthen your nerves. It will make you well. ' , Scott . pre-digeste- d Scott j Erhuljton gives the system strength to throw off colds, coughs, catarrh and rheumatism. Noth- ing better for weak lungs. - AU MUQCttTSi ISc. AND 110. 4 4 4 9 J 999999909949999990999944 CLIMATE, The heavv storms of the winter, almost unprecedented ln the amount of moisture precipt'ated, have reused many persona to oak If rtsh'a climate Is changing and one answer from a noted st'ideut of meteorology. Is In the affirmative. severe winter, or a number if winters of heavv snow stouts, while tending to prove that a r linage m rlimste is occurring, does ttiu for storm periods are known to follow in eyries. Thors s:i a summer In Europe during i which manv of the largcgt rivers he. I came dry, but there was a return to f ah, tees day, February normal conditions the following year. r drouth Australia suffered a ti.at killed 75 per cent of the sheep and bankrupted nearly all the farmers, but since tbeq there haa beea tha average precipitation received prior to the drouth. Next summer might he extremely warm and the following year might see the beginning of drouth conditions la Utah. But there la one theory la explanation of thia excretive precipitation that Is worthy of note. The Colorado Rlvsr, through a break la lti banka, has formed an inland sen in the hot desert region of southern California. Where burning sands existed twe years ago, there la now a vast body ef water. Evaporation la rapid and the vapors are carried by tho prevailing air current lx the direction of Itsh. There Is a desert stretch, uninterrupted by high mountain ranges, extending from the 8alion flea to tha Salt lAke basin, and the first high mountains to catch the molature-ladene- d clouds and bring dowa their contents make up tha Wasatch range. The blgh winds that sweep over this region once n year and that periodically become something mors than ephyra, are supposed, to originate In the Balton Sea region aa hot air currents that corns up through tha low pass way and are deflected by contact with tha sold air currents of the mountains ta the east of Ogden. If the wind theory la correct, then there la reason to believe tho present heavy storms are but the natural result of a heretofore desert region, over which the air currents mova, becoming laden ed with the evaporated waters of the flalton 8ea. Utah's climate would be greatly Improved for farming purposes, particularly dry farming, were this condition to become permanent, but such a change might Increase the alae of Great Salt Lake to proportions for beyond Its present shore lines and endanger the permanency of such struccut-ofture aa the Ogden-Lucl- 1607 ten-yea- n AMERICAN Imp-irtanr- Inti-ree- oodex, f. RAILROADS Railroad of America ara for superior to the railroads in Chile and the reason la that the railroads of the fluuth American rountry are owned fey the state and the railroads In America are owned hr private corporations," says Pablo Maaenlll, former commissioner of Chilean railroad and governor of the province of AntofagasChile. Mr. Maaenlll la making a tour of America. In 1886 he flrat visited the ta, United Staten under commission from the Chilean government to Investigate railways and their methods of doing business. At that time the people were all ao hospitable to me that I made two resolves, one to treat every American, no matter where I should meet him, Just aa well as It waa In my power to treat him, and Jhe other to come back to.thls country tor a pleasure trip Just as soon as possible. At that time I learned a( good deal about your railroads, but of oours there have been great changes since then. In Chile all the railroad! hut one ar owned by the state, and I must confess it Is a bad plan. It la private enterprise that builds a country up and keeps that country growing. In private enterprise there are no politics and try as you may you cannot keep polltlre out of the management pf a railway or other utility needed for public use. In Chile this tate ownership of railroads has retarded the development of the country more than anything else. The municipal ownership of tramways and water and gas ay terns would not be tolerated In Santiago. In Santiago all then thlnga ara under private control and wa are continually thanking heaven that It la aa We have had the experience with railroads and I think that before long there will have to bo a change. There la one wonderful little railroad that la privately owned. It la transcontinental and Is 600 miles ling. It runs from the interior of Bolivia to Arlra and the track! are only thirty Inches wide. There la a splendid servlet and a great quantity of freight la hauled over the road. ln Santiago we have a tramway which la a splendid contrast to the rnllwsy under state control. The electric tramway la owned and operated by a private company and the service Is excellent. Mr. Maaenlll left Chile In June and went to Japan. He traveled from one end of that country to the other, telling the people of nitrate of soda found In auch great quantlttea ln the deserta-n- f Chile and now being Introduced Into various parts of the world aa an aid to agriculture. "Nitrate Is the greatest blessing agriculture haa ever known and I believe that ln Japan, where the soil la so poor, it will be the greatest boon to the people." he said. Japan la ao thickly populated that It takes a great deni to supply .the needs of the people. They are a frugal people, but it take ground in grow even the few things they nerd to eat and 1 think before long they will he nslng nitrate in great quantities O O O o OOOOOOOO 0 0 0 0o O SNOW AND COLD WEATHER o O Omaha, Feb. 4. The flrat O res) .now of the season la foil- O lng over Nebraska winter V wheat fields. The temperature O wns 4 below cere last night O O Topeka, Kan., Feb. 4. Tbla O la the coldest weather this O section of Kansas haa exper- O fenced since February 12. 1805, O At 6 o'clock tbla morning the O temperature waa 2 below aero. O 4. FVb. O Superior, Wl.. O Thermometers registered 4i O below zero this morning. O O o O O O O O O O O G 0 0 O O O 0 0 O ooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooO O O O O O O O O O O BIG FIRE IN LONDON. 0 o Fire broke O London, Feb. out ihta evening In a block O f buildings near Cheapside, O and vlihln a abort distance of O the general poatofflee. The 0 whole city la lit up with the O 4. glare nf the Itaines. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO q THEATERS TOMORROW NIGHT AT GRAND. Messrs. Klaw A Erlanger announce in this city under their direction to nerrow night tbe new music play. Forty-ri- v Minutes From Broadway by George M. Cuban, author ef Little Johnny Jonas. The Governor's Son. Ceorge Washington. Jr., etc. it aa a great novelty, conipria-incomedy drama, burlesque, melodrama and musical comedy, all cleverly interwoven into moat Interesting story possessed of an unusual degree of novelty. In the conception at the tale, selection of characters and originality of situations. Mr. Cohan haa shown the same remarkable genius for getting together novelties and surprises' that waa noticeable la hla The popular Uttle Johnny Junes. entire hook end lyrics are his own. as well as the music, and in addition he la said to have cast the piece and rehearsed the company personally. The story la told In three scene, the locale of which la New Rochelle, a subminurb of New York. Just forty-fiv- e ute from Broadway by rail hence the title. The scenes represent the exterior of the Castleton mansion ln the morning; the drawing room of tho same la tha evening and the railroad station next morning. Corinne plays the role of Plain Mary, a servant In the Castleton household, fe character unique In Ita conception, giving to Corinne excellent opportunities for the display of her versatility, as there are several situations In which aha Is reported to have shown considerable emotional power. Revolving around Mary ln tha development of the story are a young millionaire, a soabretto Flora Dora Dean, with n mercenary mama, a young district attorney, several local celebrities sad Kid Bums," a young man who haa long basked ta the whit lights of Broadway and who finally cornea to New Rochelle aa the private secretary of the newly budded millionaire. Tbla work la regarded by all who have aeen It as Mr. Cohans beat play. "THE VIRGINIAN." The Klrke La Shelle production of "The Virginian," aa dramatised from Owen Winter's fascinating story of the West, will com to the Grand Thursday, Feb. 7, Dustin Farnum continuing In the name part, supported by a carefully chosen company. "The Virginian la a piny of the West, when men were men simply for the sake of being manly and when life oa tho range meant a clear eye, a steady nerve and a conscience that was never bothered fey the ethical niceties of civilisation, but which always knew a duty and how to fulfill It. Tha hero of Owen Winter's novel has the essential qualities of a real man of tho West, a cowpunrher aa they were before the barbed wire ten res came Into tiae In the cattle country. "Nsbrnaky," Honey" Wig-gin- , Baldy," "Dollar BilL" Steve and Tramps are taken from life without Ideallsntfon, and are transplanted from the book to the stage la n charming manner. Perfect types of the plains are the ranch owners, who take part In the episodes surrounding the affair of the Virginian, while a charming contrast la Molly Wood, the gallant little representative of Grandmother Btark, who eventually strikes her colon, her Vermont narrowness expanding under the unahlne of Wyoming and tbe manly wooing of her hero, The Virginian" haa been frequenta ly called a man's play, principally It la a genuine Illumination of the untrammeled man and tha chle. actors are men, but It la more than a man's play and therefore worthy of the attention of all who are It tores.-e- d In tho affairs, of humanity. It la a play thet give to Ita auditors a iBltc-fu- l picture of what haa passed from the life nf the Wort, for Owen Winter knowe that country and has given a moat truthful version of some features of itc life In "The Virginian." Tha attrrinc episodes of tbe story have been transferred to the stage with the utmost fidelity, ao that from the laughter of the christening to the treble Incident at Horse Thief Pass and tha final scene, where strict Justice L meted out to Tramps by tho Virnl-lan- , tho Interest Is continually maintained end the dramatic action la kept up to the high tension so notes-arto tho success of a play of thlL kind. Duetln Farnum will atain he seen la the title role aa originated by him with much euceeM. Among tho supporting company will be Frank Cam-pes- o In hla original conception of the rascally Trampaa, Bonnet Mueeon, Frank Nelson. J. R. Furlong. Harry Holliday, Frank Vail, Craig Mnlr, C. Wilton and Lillian Corbin. THE HERO The Conquest of Canaan P. MAJOR HOOPER s BY BOOTH Anther of The etc. TARK1NGTON Indiana," "The Two Vanrevels," Berger and copyrighted. from Gent'-ema-n Illustrated for IN THIS PAPER - The story of sn outcast who returned to the town which had despised and rejected him in his youth. , How he lived down his past, conquered his enemies, became s successful lawyer and a leading citizen, with a circumstantial account of his love affair, will, be found in thia a . piper. PRAISED BY THE PRESS - ul Stimia iMitoa 11 law ef Mr pUy. rxmnnow chartotte, jr. ft Intcnsttaf ta vcry cfeaplw sad cnaolotiv la to iraaoMc fan. Raw Tons avswwa Paw. Tfea grcatMl pictara f raised, typical Amorima lUX that Ifr. Taife fagtoa fen yet wriixoa. acwsar Oasaranaw. It will oat oaly tilr tfea pokes of thaaramda of tcatas feat will iotisiy tfectr feasria as wclL aocsviu.B (lad. J Bawmijcaa. A Wnag, ferilliaat aad perfectly taM tara atary. j Wew Tee Ossbbvm. A Oar; tkat atirs poor be-ou- y IN Arrive, 10:46 a a.; depart, 4:10 p. a Huntsville, Eden ft Liberty Arriva :00 p. aa: depart, 0:00 a bl Arrival and drpsitare of malls at R, Fs D. Weber County Arrive, i:N Ogden postotfloe: . m.: densrt. 8:80 a m. O. L. Northwest North and 8. Ry. Arrive, 7:10 a. m, l:M p. m.; depart . Poetae Ur. 12:55 a. m., 11:50 a m. an U. P Ry, Arrive, East, points, Drat use harsh physios. Th iM 4:80 a. m 8:15 p. m.; depart, 7:18 t. action weakens the bowela leads mH 8:85 p. m., 1:60 fl. m. chronic constipation. Get Dosa's South east, R. 0. W. operate easily, tone tk 1:00 e. m., 11:41 a. m., 8:50 p.m.; de- uleto. They stomach, cure constipation. part, 7:00 a. m., 6:10 p. m. West, all points fl. P. Ry, 7:80 a. ! DAME ON THE DESERT. m 8:60 p. m, 7:00 p. m.; depart, S:8o a. m, 8:45 p. m. and .of Five Thousand AntsUpt Southern California and Nevada, S. Growing Fit P. L. A. ft 8. L. Ry. Arrive, 8:80 s. 7:80 p. m.; depart, 1:45 p. m, 6:80 Ptnedsle, Wyoming, Rouadnp: A p. m. Southern Utah, O. 8. L. Ry. Arrive; alstsnt Game Wsrdna Jo Boulter 8:80 a. m., 7:80 p. m.; depart, 8:80 whs In tows on Thursday last sad re a. m., 8:45 p. m. ports gam conditions oa th desert s Booth srn Utah, R. O. W. Ry. Ar- good. On a recent ride la the vtcistty rive, 1:00 a. mH 8:50 p. m 7:00 p. m.; of Bablett meadows ha reports baring depart, t:S0 a. m, 7:00 a. m 8:80 seen five or six thousand antelope. That seems to he their gathsrtai p. a. Balt Lake City, 0. 1. L Ry Arrive, point, and there Is good feed for then. 1:00 a. m., 8:80 a. a., 18:00 8:60 The tittle fellows were looking An, p. a., 7:80 p. a.; depart, 8:80 a. a., sad no sign of loss. He also report and thri 10:10 a aa, 8:41 p. 7:80 a. many elk out in that country, 6:80 p. m. many of them have gone onth slmari Balt Lake City, R, O. W. Arrira, to the railroad. On the mesa west 1:00 a m 8:60 p. a.; depart, 7:00 a Plnedsle, many elk have been rustling D and have worked down as for a., 6:80 p. m. Geche Valley Pslita, O. g. L. Ry. month of Kewfork. OCDEJIMAILS Ry-Arr- bf ivs, a, IN OCOEN He Is a Genius In the Art ef Adver- tising. Major 8. K. Hooper, general freight and ticket agent of the Denver ft Rio Grande rallroaJ system,, and I. A. Benton, general passenger agent In Utah for the same road, were In Ogden this forenoon. Major Hooper haa been with the road 27 years and la famed for the attractiveness of the advertising matter that tells of the scenic beauty ef the country through which the Rk Grande trains pass. He is said to have originated much of the present day method of present-lathe advantage that a Journey over a railroad offers, and hla originality accounts for the heavy tourist paw aenger traffic that each year goes to make dtvldanda for the stockholders of tbe Gould road. One of tbe flint pamphlets entitled Rhymee of the Rockies," was distributed throughout the world. 660,000 copies having beea printed. Later hla Tourist's Handbook, reached a dr eolation of 600,000. When naked how ho traced results, he said that often the tilling of mail orders for the pamphlets required aa express wagon to rart the mailed packages to the express office. When the old Rio Grande was convened from a narrow to a standard gauge on Nov. 16. 1880. he sent ont posters entitled Won at Last A Battle With the Mountains. Yesterday he received one of the poetere token from the walls of a railroad office In Virginia City, Nevada. It goes to prove the vitality of advertising matter and recalls an' Important event la the building of the railroads of the West. Major Hooper la an entertaining d talker and one of the railroad men In the Intermountain country. a, a. g best-like- Th. Paata Fe railroad ha Inaugurated a pension system beginning January 1, 1807. Health is the Main Thing Therefore Get Health r - positively agree; to affect a permanent cure in cases of Nervous and Blood Com- DISEASES, Rheumatism, Stomach, UNTIL Kidney and Liver Trestles. DONT WAIT YOUR TROUBLE BECOMES AGONIZING. Get well plaints, HENS now. ; " ,r (SL Norris, Drs, Elliott SPECIALISTS 25 Year. 2361 WASHINGTON Yearg AVE. |