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Show eta n. Tnn 'morning examiner. ogpen, w Estes Doctor Specialist 1 Cvrw w4tep ilMn faiL Modsrn methods. Fm eeeeuiUtlen for any Chranlc Disease af any nama ar eature. lurry caaa guarantaatL. 1 Partial List of Diseases Corel OUlirk. Bwum Kingiag la the Kara. XHaaaaaa af the Head. Throat. Kmm, JCya or Ear. All Dls-- i f tha Lungs, Bronchial Tahaa aal ChaaL Liver. Kidneys aad Bladder. Haart Ptoses. . Manana Troubles, Dt Vllua Danes. Fisas. TVeeble. Taya Wane, Bioed fotauuiai from say la Wastes. AMY FUYATB DUSEAM OK yr.Hmr ' to ear 4. Mr too aad advise la FREE Come a eaaa Call ar writ. ESTES, DR. SPECIALIST a m. to p. m. Ofltaa fcoaral Bloek). Ogden. tftoh. Entrunee Boom Wl Washington (l It. Eooirajbar thaita number employed at he. United states mint in Tlntlc district. A Funeral servlcps over Ihe remains will be held tf Hr. Ellon A. at 12 o'clock, at the Wilson ward meeting house. Wed-Bftiy- telegram waa received hy the Brokerage Co., from Ely. tbat the churn drills for the "Giroux Ely Extension" had arrived and work would he pushed with all possible speed to prove the large ore bodies, which are known to exist within this company's properties, adjoining the 'Giroux Consolidated. Funeral service over the remains of Percy Wheeler will be held Thursward day, at'S p. m., at the Lynne meeting house. Remains may be view'd at So. 100. Second street.10ontothe1 day of the funeral, from o'clock. The wreckage of No. 4 was ditched at paaienger which baa been Kev., Monday, Biown. cleared away and traffic ia resumed. east-boun- lira. Wm. J. Hnoley killed lier hus- band at their home in Salt t 7:45 Monday morning. Lake Cite, They hud quaraM and the hnahand waa about to ute the telephone, when Ilia wife hot him. The woman ia supposed to be laeane. The dead man bad been There are about GO shares of stock In the Weber County Fair Association that have not been exchanged for t stock in the aln Fair Association. The holders of thoae shares Inter-Moun- wih lose all right unless the exchange This la the last notice cnlllng attention to thin matter. Those who hold receipts for raah and hae not received their stork must make written application to the Board of Directors, explaining why they have not received their slock from the parties to whom the cash waa paid. By order of the Board of Directors. ia made immediately. WILLIAM GLA8MANN, Secretary. IIAVE THEM AND TUE REST National and Hudson and we do machine shop ia complete and ALL KINDS OF KEPAIU WORK. Full line of Bicycle Huppliea and Cutlery. Bee us before you buy or hare your repair work done. Our np-to-da- Hansen 2528 Washington Ha Ga Avo. OPPOSITE CITY IIALL. Special Candy Sale i i Next Saturday, April 13, from 2 to 6 p. m.. our PURE STICK CANDY, ass't flavors. Only 1 5c Per Pound Regular Price 25c Ogden Candy Kitchen 370 25lh St, Broom Hotel Building Ind. Phone 326 1 E. F. BRATZ Real Estate Bargains e In any part of the City and County. Loans on Improved L'ity and Farm Property Promptly Negotiated. Fire, Tornado and Plate Glass Insurance ritlen in Strong and Safe Companies at Lowest Kates. I 3 25th Street Opposite Reed Ilotel PHONES: 420 AND 420Z. all through life lie .Wl . it ixiinued Fivm rsjre 0:,e i I 'i :hi- lha. iijit of It in wrick N- to'-- of rifuacd to see h:tu a'.: he 1 i i folowi-her home troiu Erdjx Iwia-w"nf the dreadful tli'l.." tr:m.!a 4,f sianfrd White oid hT a him liiui. Evelyn told him whut had heeii reiuipd to regariia,' the i'uuii.s of a kill in a hath'uh ni;1 tiiir.lii hoi water on her. mm iin Fir! io htdpoeis and benling iiieiu ' 11001; aude-"Thaw." M,-- IVliii hi h, al ta(il) and reM: 'Pool' Eve -- l J l.i r lyn Mr. IVlinaj read alia) of the girl telling Thaw that Stanford White had taken her to See Hummel. What the condition of his mind was at that time is shown to you. gentlemen, by documenta of ioabtt-ihlThe letters Thaw genuineness. wrote lo Attorney Longfellow picture the aad epoch in his life they voice the wail from a suffering soul such as have never been voiced by a dramatist from the days of the Creeks down to ihe present time." Mr. Delmas read many of the letter a to which he had referred, commenting upon them as he real. In one of these letter. Thaw speaking of himself in the third person, said: "He would have dona anythin, for you, but now you must get stronger without him. Poor little Evelyn, yon have fallen hark int j the baud of the man who poisoned your life and who Is now poisoning your mind- - But I have no reproaches to heap upon yon hut, oh. the sadness of It all you have driven me from your aide and now yon muat fight the battle of life alone without me." e White." exclaimed Mr. Delmas, had the man kept out. of the way with his smooth tongue, profess ion a tricks and devices, poor little Evelyn would not have turned from her the man she loved, at the hehest of those ved. professions! decei- :! t :...ni-.'- . wl.. -- to call 1.- She' hurried . '!" ;. i, . a.-- ar,.i ;. ., luT hut'baud !:.v u...; 1..,,, told biu He became tertuu- - .1' : and made the wife pnin,..--, ;,i ., u.et to tell him the Blackguard.' "Sga'di In Nrw Yi'k tii, gii;. tin- cut trg .tuwu Fifth aver.'c iiei ... t..-u- . lie i,re.l a! her. t liiriu-.- i e irito a ride wiur, WM:. t s gjlug to see a pin . tMli a:o turtifd and followed Attain oil. related the litri-i-n- t to b. ; - 11 !,ut-baii- i'1 "Now. gentlemen. Mji. bort month Uf.ue Si.nferd White' career on tlt: earth i, end, Harry Thaw beard lilts story: Mackenzie bad Erei.n that White bad eonie to -e her at the hos., 10 pital. When May him that Harry and Kxelyu et uioi to he ai fond of each oti.ir. S: unfold White ald 1 do nt belli ve It.' May MacKenzle said: 'lh. yes. it is mi. 1 know it myself, ard think It i so nice.' 'Well.' said S'snfurd White, it will not last long. I will ,t get her hack.' Harry Thaw had cause to become excited. He bad caiise to lu.-- his reason. He imagined attempt were being made to take the girl away from him the girl who wn his lawMay s- t- - 1 e ful wife. Bui armed with liis nght aud inredeem the spired by his God pledge made at the altar, he detrrnim-e- j it should not be "She was his wlfr." Delmas continued with renewed force, hi honored wife, and when be hrai.l that this man had said lie would get her back, be already saw her polluted by hia touch. He already fancitd the crime committed, fur he reuiemLered that it la written in the word of God, Whosoever lonketh upon a woman with luat In hla eyes hath already committed adultery.' And from that time, gentlemen, the haunting thought waa that he might lose her. anil that Stanford White was a constant menace to hla home. Horror never left him. Evelyn, In her testimony, says that Mr. Thaw 'would wake In the middle of the night and I found him He sobbing and biting hia nail was constantly asking tna quosttnna, and thta happened sometimes sever nl times In the night.' "You must remember that one by one Harry Thaw had learned specific stories of other victims of thla man. Bhe had told him the story White had told her aliotn The girl In the pie.' Delmaa read Evelyn's testimony re taring to the pie incident aud what Thaw told her about 11, as well as what she told him about It. He also read the testimony regarding what Thaw told her of tha other girls who, ha said, were the victims of White. Thaw had told her that White ought to be in the penitentiary aa he waa a dangerous man and was doing untold harm in (he community. In support of big contention that Thaw took a sincere interest In the welfare of the girls wlaim he believed to have been wronged by White, Mr. Delmaa produced the aodlcil In which Thaw set aside thousands of dollars "to vindicate and redeem and rescue from a life of Infamy the various victims of Stanford Wlta." Waving the document dramatically before the Jury, Delmaa pictured the drafting of It upon the very night when Thaw found all hia hopes realized in the ceremony which made Evelyn hla wife. On that same night, Mr. Delmaa argued, Thaw's thoughts drifted back to the time when hla wife was wronged by Stanford White, and, thinking of the other girls ruined and degmded by the eeme person, be eat down and added the codicil to hla will. "And Stanford White thought he would play with this child, now tbe wife of Mr. Tbaw, in the same manner, end In tbe end cast her off like n dirty rag to float her way down life's sewers Into a pauper's grave. These were the thoughts that came over him and never left him. We admire the chivalry of the knlgbta of the middle agea who went about redressing wrongs and rescuing maidens in distress. Why should we withhold our sympathy from this bravt man who was anxious io take a part in the rescue of young girls in this dly? "The efforts of Harry Thaw to protect the community against tbe pollution of Rianford White did not end even with the provisions of the will end codicil. Bo deep wae the impression on his mlndl so overwhelming wae the Impulse, that he had, in the early part f 19uG, written a letter to Anthony Comstock, under whose special charge be believed the morals of this community hd been placed, telling of Stanford White and his band and of their dens shere they enticed young girls and ruined them. Hu called upon the district attorney, the same man who Is here trying to take this man's life, demanding that he cleanse the rlty of this leprous tore. He Went to the principal detective agency that they might ferret out the facts, that this man might be sent to prison where he belonged, but again be was baffled. He did not lose courage. He battled on. And when he told hit little ulfe about Me efforts, she. better Informed than be, wss a to the power of these people, told him that they were too rich and powerful for him and that b would never succeed; that they ha-. "Tf you dont believe In me as a gentleman,' wrote Harry Thaw, there is nothing to do, Being honest and faithful has finished me. The pages neither of poetry nor of oratory contain a simpler, sadder story of desolation than that which came as a desert waste upon the mind of this young man when he saw tha girl he loved go back to the man from whose clutches he had rescued her. In this condition of mind Harry Thaw left New York, and went to his mother's home In Pittsburg. I'p to this time Harry bad been a num of cheer fill temperament, but the mother'! eye saw how the change had come.' Mr. Delmaa then read from Mrs. William Thkwa testimony regarding the actions of her ana at that time. "He struck the chorda of the piano." went on Mr. Delmaa, "until they resounded like a wail, until they ebitd-derelike a groan of n eoul In agony, until the storm passed from him and the mualc grew softer and finally died away. The loving mother heard hla on ha, ahe saw him awake until tha gray of dawn. He told that mother that the story was one he could not repeat to her, but soon, by a mother's art. ahe won her way info her son's soul and little by little he told the lory. Than, gentlemen, you remember that awful scene In the church. You remember the organ was rolling and the voices were appealing to the Lord God of Howls, the Ood of armies aad of navies, be with us yet leat we for get, lest we forget.' 'Forget! the voices rang; forget,1 the poet had written; but in Harry Thaws heart rang a voice You can never forget, yon can never forget that that Innocent little one is gone from you forever and his returned to the clutches of those who mined her. This, then, was Harry Thaw 'a mental eondltion. Must he grve her up? Ha eould not, he would not. Brave, courageous, Indomitable man (hat he waa, be conceived that he bad a m lesion to perform. The thought of little Evelyn In thoae hands was more than the tortures of bell to him. He came back to New York to try once more to save her." Mr. Delmaa read from Evelyn's testimony regarding meeting with Thaw at this time, how she refused for a time to see him, but finally how they met and ahe learned the stories she had heard ware not true. "When Harry Thaw convinced Evelyn that these stories were not true, hope began to daws agsin tn nls heart. The barriers which had been set up between the two young people were falling Into rnlns one by one. The two hearts that God had intended Should be one were approaching near er and nearer until that blessed night of December 24th, 1903. It waa a night which might havs meant a new chapter in the misery of this child, but fate decreed otherwise. Stanford White, in a room in the lofty tower he had bullded, had spread1 a banquet In honor of the birthday of hia child victim. It was his hope, amid the surroundings of grandeur and treasures of an he had gathered Into hie apartments, to lure the girl back again and resume the foul work he hod done. On that night the brave man who had devoted his life to the interests of this girl, snatched her from the Jaws of death, snatched her from the Jaws of disgrace, snatched her from the man who had been a curse to her anil a curse to himself, snatched her from the old letcher who saw In ber hut the toy to gratify the moment's luat and then be cast aside to go her way down the path of fallen women." ' Mr. Delmaa' oratory held the rapt REACHING THE 8POT. attention of the Jury, end court room. After Thaw had rescued Evelyn Nea-bl- t Se Seoree of Ogden from White, in 1908. he feared It Can Be Dona, Citizens Say. thenceforth tbat the architect had design npon hla life and that, once he waa removed, the girl would "be left To cure an aching hack. of rheumatism. unprotected at the mercy of her nr-lshe-r. The palm feeling. The tlred-ou- t Mr. Delmaa turned to the events You must reach be spot get at the cause. late in 1904. In 1904 we find a second capital In moat Vases 'tin ihe kidneys. Pills are for the kid operation was performed upon thla Doan's Kidney neys. When she was convalesyoung girl. Mrs. H. Pignon. of 220 West Patcent. the man who for two years had Utah, says: "I aought her hand and who four years terson street. Ozden,sufferer from kidhad loved ber, the man who had told have been a greatat one time the docthe girl's aad story to his mother, the ney disease, and it Bright's disease man whom she bad refused because tors prono-:noof that, and she felt their union would tear him It had all the symptom of rheufrom his family and social relations, more, too. for I bad attacks urged me to try that man. such waa the constancy ms t ism. A friend PH', and I procured a and burden of hla love persuaded his Doan's Kidney at. 8. W. Bd cons drug store, apply her and band who four year sought 'hem. Relief cam come to New York and see the girl, and began taking and there has been a firs from the whose sad story she already knew! ever nd she, in her womanly heart having gradual, steady Improvement confident that had but pity, came to the little girl since. I am ahsolnely Doan's Kidney Pills are the greatest and besought ber band for her eon. oriA for kidney comThe little girl who bad withstood remedy intn theform." any the pleadings of the son, could not plaint For sale by all dealers. Price 60c. resist the pleadings of the mother. Fnster-MilburCo., Buffalo, New And so. on April 5. 1905. their par for tbe United sole agent York, and met ents consented they: at the States. altar and were united. The man rdedgi Remember tha name Doan's and cd to the woman before Almighty God take no other. n he llm-'' .. s..n in Lie iiih-itv- l , d t if: I i! Ur Auierit-aa: I 1. 11;; .,..:t,. and hafrt-atiu w.v l (i, u, tbat Thaw n,-- !tt5:,.rd White m n. .! ,, Mo-Kcr- 1007. i , u ;U :n :i ' " j wuiau. W--,i- '.I ; Stanford the a.i.iavity w. w'.-t.- Xvw Yuli,, til, Wti'-t!., lima star I a'. I e a1.: LMiiiiig i hdu! U'.,uM v iv..-.-- . "Oh, Stanford LASTJJALL BIG VISILES .WE f DELMAS concludes h s ELOQUENT PLEA FOR THE LIFE OF THAW. .riiii, . i:: uin-- tin- - ut l'Law and a friend i 1:1 a box and S'an.f-'r.laun mi., a Imx When H.irrt l.vned int.i tlloc rs which I1.1J up u the itiaugivd fii ii: nl tin- - woman , li::n, those uno whn-'0 1. to'1' had a 'li.-went n to ruiu. hi fare aw he with lu In wife w iht-av- ! And Mas Them Good I mi'i-lvn- t lion H.irr t op-.l.i- n dt-.i- l sl "She ing up Putnam Has Them sa. an.-- : tier tone. in an , We sere e e " Tin Children's Suits go- hansom and Mr Thaw mid.i.-ii- i tw Sianford I White. iiiin tii- had a Ii risbi there' lie sobbed. hu naiiw and earned on l:h tha: tor fifim-- minute. He ti. oarc.l. eletii'ticd hi hands, but hi tn hia wgitaiuiu allowed moti Hit-ad- Men's Suits Boys Suits olis-ii--ic enndit-onTleln.it attributed, to "The many infamies" which Thaw lieiii-tei- l White waa raring In hi den of iuiyuiij. Mr lead tha part of Ee-l.- i ll a Ii alimony where ahe a'ated lliat Thaw wa cun at nit Si unfold While and hut 11 hi fm-tu- l the same Mens iShoes Boys (Shoes Childrens Shoes . pi-r;i- The Price and Quality Are Always Right In-i- opinion. " tu-- l it waa true. The man wlu had 1111 thi ubjtvi for three years' who rad picture of dreadful horrors ha. mi lug him by day aud night, could mu hr human 10 retain the calniues f liU reuaou place yoiiiM'lvea iu his place; picture' to r.i'welvs the horror ho went PUTNAM CLOTHING HOUSE 2345 Washington Avenue Ttuw" It waa 12:30 o'clock aud Mr. Delnid announced that ti would be tuipoaaible for him to conclude by the uaual time, and asked Uim a rerca be taken until 2 o'clock. Following the recess Mr. Delmaa brought the narrative of Ms arguments down to the events of the night of the tragedy, how Stanford White came into the room of tile cafe where the Thaws were diulng, bow Mr. Thaw wrote a note to ber iiuatmiid was here a mo eying: "Tbe B ment but went out again, and how Thaw aud hla party then went to the roof garden, picking up op the way another friend who occupied one of the eeata, louring Mr. Thaw without a seat, and how he found one beside Mr. Smith, brother-in-laof White. "He wae not agitated, Ma cwnver-a- t Ion wont on in its usual tcmir, and he did not include Smith in the aver-ak-n he felt for White. Then be returned to his party, talked about the play, and its hick of interest. Remember at this period, gentlemen, the unbroken testimony of all the witneases Is to the effect that the demeanor of Thaw was perfectly calm aud composed and tbat he walked quietly down the stale. When he reached the point of exit, he saw to his right the form or Stanford Whit a, looking al the stage. Mr. Thaw then turned, walked a lowly and quietly towards him, fared him and fired three shot a which rauM-hla death. He then turned to the slowly and deliberaU-laudience, spread out hia arms in Ihe shape of a cross and stood comp-wethere a clrr.ummaw which lies not been dwelt upon by tbe learned experts called ms witnesses by the stale, but which oVnolea the ehsracter of the execution that took plane. "Mr. Tbaw stood a a priest might have Mood after some caranxmjr of sacrificial offering, saying 'All la over,' and dismissing the congregation. He turned. hla pistol barrel down to lndl-eato tbe audlenre that there waa no danger to them. Ha then walked slowly to where hla wife stood and when ahe said: Oh. Harry, what have you don?' he replied, 'It t all right, dearie. I have probably raved your life.' and aa he said this he stooped and kissed her. When be was dlaarmed, he said, He has rulut-,- my When the policeman came be wife. said: He has ruined my wife.' "I have dwelt iipcn these Incident, gentlemen, to rail your attention to the fact that tbe safety nf hla wife, whose menace was implied by the very preaeuce of this man, was upper-moa- t To hint this man, In his mind. who had met tha young wife uHn the street, who had followed her in tbe dortora, who had alo followed hi-to the cafe, and to the roof g.irden, thla was the man who had boasted he would get the young wife away from her husband. Si it wa that after he had shot, tbe first great thought that welled up In the Florin and strew of the moment, waa that At lari, my wife I safe, I have saved her life.' And then when he answered the officer and sidd, Ha has rulued my wife, what was the condition of hla. mind? What aa It whena he waa quietly and peaceably walking down the aisle, he turned and saw tbe hideous form of the man trim had ben the cause of so much suffering. If you have ever been Id moments of peril, you knohr that men's ndnda go back over the past and Illuminate it aa lightning at night illumes the storm In that flash Harry Thaw clouds. aw what had ruined hla whole life. He saw that man aa he had been; saw him as he became a friend of that poverty-strickefamily; sw hint poa-inas Ihe protector and friend of that beautiful child, whose beauty had attracted him; saw: him paring money to the mother to leave the city while he carried out his fiendish plans; saw him lure that child to bis vile den: re-er- a d ts the promise that those who alf 'tried the fat her leas, those would He Finite aud kill with the sword, destroy their make their wives widows aud I heir rhlhlrau fatherless. What waa the condition of Thaw's mind at thla lime? Men, Judge your follow men as ye would be Judged, and tu order to Judge him rightly, plac yourself iu the spot when he stood and surround yourseiva with the which surrounded him. Its this and you will be able to do him the Justice that you promised you would do to him." . Mr. Delmas quoted from the record District Attorney Jemma's promise ta call Dr. Allen llclauia Hamilton as a witness. This promise was not fulfilled. The kiarned district attorney's official Dr. pledge waa not redeemed and Hamilton was not called by him. said Mr. Deltnas. "You have a right to infer why he was not called ami you have the right to bolster up yvur In- ference by the fact that when wa called Dr. Hamtliou the district attorney objected to hla testifying. What Is the Inference that he would have testified that when ha visited Mr. Thaw two (laya after tbe tragedy he wa Insane and knew not what he had done. "A tn tbe alieniets who were callej by the elate, he did not r roe examine them. Why? Because they did not testify (hat Mr. Thaw was Insane. Mr. Jerome knew foil well If ha had naked that question what their aniwer would have been." "I mut objert to Ibis, Interrupted -- Assistant District Attorney Gnrvam "Tbe Jury," said Justice Fitzgerald, "cannot speculate aa to what answer might have beea given." "lam well within my rights and the Jury has the right to draw Infee ence Dm-your honor rare for argu ment? "1 Jury again Interrupted Mr. Garvaa. do not," said Ihe Judge. "The cauniit speculate on anything outside the evidence. will address myself to you, gem said Dolmas turning from tleinen, tha bench to tha Jury, "nod, If I am wrong, 1 will tale a ruling on It. "I "Tho learned district attorney did in any case ask tf Thaw was krd only If Thaw wa insane; lio laboring under such and such a defect of reuiutn. Aa 10 Dr. Hamilton, yon havo a right lo Infer that the district reason for nut railing Dr. attorney Hamilton waa because that alienist would have to Ihe reverse of what the district wanted. 8lx of ihe rzperta called by the people aatd Harry Thaw waa not suffering from ouch unsound-aes- a of mind that he did not know tho nature aud quality of the act and knew it waa wrong. Against there tlz we placed upon the stand nine alienists, among the gi'eatatd. If nnt tbe greateat, In the world. They say that Harry Thaw waa beyond doubt Imuine upoq the night uf June 21. Were it a question of aero dollars and cent, a quMtUm of tho ownership of property, tho outart would Instruct you that yu miat decide to tha pre poml or a no ot evidence. Would tlicra be any question of a decision between aiz wl aezaea nd nine? If it were still a preponderance of evidence that waa to decide till dreadful matter of life sad death, the preponderance would nttll be with u; but die lea rood justice sill Instruct you that thla le a nutter which require evidence beyond I reuumahle doubt. Gentlemen, take your minds Inch to the day you were examined, when the leerm-justice said to yon Are you reedy to gtrn this defendant tho benefit of every not dlstla-gulhbe- ed (Continued on Pag Four) INSURANCE Tin KjiringlieM Fin And Marine The .MuiichenJor of England Thv nennin Alliance Ahhii. of New York The New Zealand Tbe New York Underwriters. Klevntor .Automobile r l'Mate filaHR Tbe Maryland Casualty Co. of Baltimore Health Arrident II Hilary 11 Inability Hi earn The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company lowest Rats and Complete Protectian J. Uniler 7 Hnrrty Pondn Curtlkndn . I tank IfundR Fraternal Honda llurgjary Inmranre Forestall, Agt. . Rabt 0. Agee, Mgr. 55 raw Phoned M 809 flffaoj NAT. BANK 11. Ilionesjfnd. 80 UIICl g saw him ply her with wiue and saw him administer the fatal drug; saw him dishonor the Child; saw him kneeling at ber feet and kissing the hem of her garment and telling her that all women were bad ; he saw ber, as he himaelf had oen her. 111 GompaHssm at school. He heard again the terribli story as she told it tn him In Paris: heard iove; again his proposals of hp-lehe saw himself walking the floir and saw ne exclaiming. 'Oh. God, oh. God'; this child about to .fall again Into the hand of the man from whom he ha.) rescued her; he taw himself w hi leading her lo the altar; he months of happiness with her, be heard the word?, I will get her back again. He saw and heard all thla the and he at ruck: atruck aa hy of her home; In the protection tigress atruck for the home; truck for American womanhood; struck for humanity. and this man foil. "If Harry Thaw believed he wuc tha instrument of Providence. wh will mistaken? Against the say he great wrongs that, had ha--been da! and appealed to night perpetrated, he Mr. Comstock, (agent of the s'lrlety for tbe prevention of rice), to (he dis- Four limes the light s l trict attorney and to the detectives and on that night he raised hi eys to God. and God at last answend the cry of the poor, fatherless child, aa He had promised to do th'jtiaar.ds of years ago to tbe children of Isratl. He promised that He would hear and answer their cries, and God redeemed at half the coat TliatH whnt electric lightinp doe. If yon question it, u h. We're only too glad lo give information and good nervice along the lighting line. That's why wc Arc qm-Ktio- n Those Lite Mon EVERYTHING ELECT II ICAL AT Commercial Electric Company 2279 WASH. AVE. Mi,jniiOT.iiixiid-BBCBsaaswMi- lUONE 3C2. d |