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Show THE MOUSING I'TAII. EXAMINER: OGDEN. tntir 2. jily Monday, diKHa iyo7. to Ilri'.tsli aud AilHTic.ni Huinen alike. . . . The Greatest one could made wib ihai some effort might lie by Dritous iheuiselws to help . . . Horse and Stock Book Of s ! THE AGE- - ' , By ED. MAGNER SUMMER GOLD We collected for the following guod people .ever a I gobs of sunshine gulden dollars. We will collect some fur u If yuu turn lu your claims. You kuow some of these people? A. Swenson A Co., hlercur, Utah. Nstl. Tea Importing Co., cor. Srd 8a and Main. Salt Lake City. l)r. E. O. Joues, Murray. Utah. Tripp Bros., Murray, Utah. Timic Meat Co, Eureka. Utah. Tiuiic Merc. Co, Eureka, Utah. Union Meat Co., Eureka, Utah. llyrum Keilaoa. Holliday, Utah. ' H. P. Larsen. Ephraim, Utah. C. E. West, Ballna. Utah. Jas. Gilbert. Murray, Utah. C. W. Schuldt, Z17 W. Bth 60, 8nlt Lake City. Geo. Stringham, Thurbar, Uuh. Jas. A. Smith, Thurber, Uteh. Sorenson W. Sod So, Larsen, iIium-Britis- students who route over tu with Mean tu study, FarU not ntWMir: ly art, but mu.ir or French in all it. branc-hr- . at taught at the tHirbouue free of cos to for-eiguers a. well a. to Fn-uisubjects. Many a wonjtu rarnius her living by teaching in Kug'.aad would be only too willing to give up n wlier to a wore complete study of French tb.n the can get at home if the matter uf board and lodging were not auch a aeriou one. Studeut. of music atand even more In need of help In the aolutlon of thin problem, on account of their xpenaivo lessons and the necessity of the uae of n piano, and art nlao Buffer intellectually and physically from the enforced habit of eating in cheap rtataunnta and Bleeproom. Indeed, ing in what the woman art atudent will put In the way of material ap with while also la in Pari unbelievable; and undoubtedly her avowed love of it ia n poae which would aooa disappear before a hjglenlcally-fltteclub, where she could live cheaply and wholesomely, and attll keep the right to follow what rlaaaea ahe chose. ruder present rlrrum.tancea ahe paya fire franca a day for very poor board and lodging in inexpen.lvo quarter, while the Glrla' Krieudly Society member, pay three franc, la the beat part of the city and Uvea well. Or. a. ia more often the cbm, ahe lodges herself in an attic for thirty-fiv- e franc, and feeds at recognised student. re.tauranta, where the wine la blue" and the meat too tough to be other than swallowed in lumpa. She heats her bath water ever a spirit bmp, and goes to bed in Ilia evening, to save the expenee of a fire. If ahe get. in, xa she often does, her chance of having good medical attendance are poor unless she ia knows at Trinity !odge, the American home, and more often than not the ia left to the care of her kindly but casual fellow atudent., who look In" on their Buck way to and from tha studios. an existence is surely not likely to produce sound work any more than it ie likely to promote good health, and It b oertnin that a club house which oould supply the actual needs of these women would be not only s boon to them, but a financial success for Ua founders. 1. atu-den- ta AND TWELVE LEADING VETERINARY SURGEONS of Practical Reference A Complete Pictoral Encyclopedia for Horse and Stock Owners Mrs. F. Lewi. 678 No. 6th West, Salt John Anderson. 13J E. Tth So, Lake City. Salt Lake City. Gea Thomas, 740 W. 6th So, Salt Utah Knitting Wurhs, Logan, Lake City. Utah. John James, 63 W. Sad 8a, Balt Lake Bed streaks of honesty exist in City. everybody. at Merchants Protective Association d 1,181 Pages; 1,756 Pictures Embracing nones, Cattle, Sheep, and Swine, Including Department a on Poultry, IXtpt, Hern, the Growth and Cure of Fruit Trees, Insects Injurious to Fruits, Grafting, Bird and Their Value to the Farmer. Comprising all secrets of taming, controlling, and educating unbroken and vicious horses, with details of breaking up all habits to which horses are subject, the abuse of blinders, checking, etc., with chapters on feeding, stabling, the teeth, etc.; also Instructions on shoeing, embodying new and reliable cures for .contraction, weak feet, quarter cracks, corns, eta!.; also, the fullest treatment in sickness, injuries, and lameness, including many valuable recipes hitherto kept as great secrets. Including description and illustrations of the various breeds of CATTLE, and their Breeding, Feeding, Care and Management. DISEASES OF CATTLE, and their treatment. DAIRYING, BUTTER and CHEESE MAKSHEEP-RAISINING, MILK MABKETINO, etc. with Care and Management, and Treatment of Malignant Diseases, and new and interesting treatment on Par SWINE AND THEIR asites, very fully illustrated. with of the Various Breeds, and lllustratios DISEASES, fullest descriptions of their Diseases, and complete details of treatment, embodying all the latest remedies. THE POULTRY INTERESTS, with the Various Breeds, and Principles of Breeding by the most approved methods, with Treatment of Diseases. THE 1K)G AND niS AILMENTS. BEE CULTURE, embodying the most reliable instructions from authentic sources on the liest methods of the Growth of Bees and their profitable management. FRUIT CULTURE, Grafting, Insects Injur ious to Fruit, etc., and A PLEA FOR T1IE BIRDS. Book is 10x7 and 3 2 inches thick, 1,1 $1 pages, and 1,756 illustrations. Price in cloth, cash, (4.00; in half leather, f 1.50 extra. Too heavy to ship by mail; 50 cents extra for express charges. 1-- THIS BOOK FREE To any person who will sign a contract to take either the Daily Standrd or Examiner for one year and who pays the 11th and 12th months' subscription in advance; (1.00 LINCOLNS LEADING QUESTION. of the most interesting to tha history of politics in Col. this country wu the iddrwii Clark X Carr before the Illinois Bar association at Galesburg, Dealing only with the Titanic struggle between Lincoln and Douglas in their state, It illuminates that period of the history of s great revolution with n brighter tight than it la easy to find elsewhere, in any single- work or In a .small a cum pass. But It1 leaves unsettled a point heretofore generally regarded aa. well Milled, vlx, the meaning of tha cound Unooln interrogatory at Freeport. The story told of Lincoln's Insisting upon putting that Interrogatory to Douglas, after he had been warned for his friends that it would hurt hia prospects of election to the senate, and explidnlng hkr persistence with the uontri-butlo- On - . statement that be Intended it to make impossible any support of Douglas by the south for the presidency, ia not credited by Mr. Carr. He points out 'that tha southern Democracy was already so hopelessly alienated from Douglas that Mr. Lincoln oould not possibly have expected that section to give Douglas any support. And yet, with the fact aa, plain as it was then that tha question of territorial extension of slavery was to be the campaign, .with the new Republican party facing the Democratic party squarely upon It, Lincoln may have thought to make it impossible for the ou there Democrats te support Douglas at the polls, and to divide that party In all of the border slates, just M it was divided. That something beyond Illinois politics vu ia hia thought it ia natural to suppose. Asking Douglas if, nndeg the Dred Scott decision, the people of n territory could exclnde slavery, can hardly be explained,' as Colonel Carr explains It, aa being a question asked only for the purpose of completing a record. We can get a better view by considering the question as a part of the Uncoln-Dougla- s debates as a whole. Tha close students of that too rare volume have not failed to notice that; in every one of the debates Including end following the one at out the Freeport, Lincoln pointed weakneM of Douglas reply to that interrogatory. He never failed to get back to this, to dissect tha answer of Dnuglag with merciless logic, and to make it clear that the people of no territory, under the decision in the Bred Scott case, could exclude slavery, no matter bow public opinion In that territory might abhor it At Freeport, fl IIIIHMIIHIIIIIIIIIIII and at every subsequent joint meeting, he called attention to the fact that, before the decision In the Dred Scott cum, Dougina had steadily declared that whether slavery could or could not be excluded from the territories was a question for the supreme court to nettle. Now, said Lincoln, after the supreme court has given Its opinion, and Douglas sees the unpopularity of that opinion, he seeks to Invent n new situation under which to claim that slavery can be excluded from any territory. The effect of such a terrific arraignment ns this can be imagined. It must have been the chief contributor to that great change In party lines which gave Lincoln the popular majority at the election, though Douglu kept the senatorial seat under the legislative apportionment. But the effect of this apportionment had been so well understood in advance that Lincoln must have been looking far beyond state linen when he naked such a question. Students of the entire series of debates can see that this was the one question, the supreme question, upon which Lincoln had Douglas on the defensive from the day he asked it until the end of the Inst debate at Alton, on October 16, 1858. In that debate, aa In every one preceding, Lincoln condemned the decision of the supreme court In the Dred Scott cbm aa being out of line with the federal constitution. "I believe the decision was improperly made" he said at Alton, "and 1 go for reversing It. Judge Douglas la furious with those who go for reversing the decision. But he ssvs he Is for legislating It out of all force, while the law Itself stands. I repeat that there has never been so monstrous n doctrine uttered from the mouth of n respectable man." Such welghtv words as these meant more than state politics. The eastern and middle slates saw, as Lincoln must have meant them to see, the inherent weakness of Dougins' position as a leader offering hope or promise of rescuing his party from slave domination. We can readily believe Lincolns saying to his friends at MenfloU, who had warned him against the second Inhurtful to terrogatory at Freeport his senatorial prospects: "I am playHe was, and ing for bigger game. Colonel Carr rewith a master hand. sents the Mendota story as reflecting upon Lincoln's sincerity. , We can not, of course, vouch for the truth of the Mendota story, but it is not needed to show that the second Freeport Interrogatory was the point upon which Lincoln hung all of his hopes in that debate, aid that he was too good n u tM politician to have been hoping for hia election to the senate can go without the saying. WORK IN FRANCE. Many Institutions and Societies Have Bean Established by Americana The importance of the Anglo-Saxocolony ia Paris has gradually given growth to a number of public Institution founded by private societies or n Individuals which are nodr doing eon-- ' nlderable work amongst the poorer classes of both American and English people. The records of thla work, particularly those which deal with working women, make interesting reading at a moment when "Feminism is such a burning question. ' The two most important of these feminine aoclties are the British Girls Friendly Society" and the American "Young Women's Christian Association, though there are several smaller institutions which are doing good work according to their means. The Paris branch of the Girts Friendly Society has an unusually interesting history on account of Its singularly rapid growth and its wide field of usefulness. In the early daya, when Lady Dnfferin took auch an BCtlve Interest. In Ita welfare, an apartment of very moderate alxe In the Rue Je Provence w.n large enough for its needs: later it somed out into a bright little hnusa in the Avenue d'lena, with a fine reception hall and a pleasant garden'. Ita financial atattatlci, aa quoted by Lady Vincent, the president. In her address at the Avenue d'len.v a few weeks since, apeak well for feminine management, and the smooth way In which the wheel of Ita various Interest run prove that there Is that necessary unity of idea which makes for strength. During the last few years the remarkable increase In the free registry work done by the Society la worthy of special notice, as It has gone far to do away with that dangerous method, both to employers and employees, of engaging through advertisements. Even now, however, the lady superintendent Is frequently called upon to save some unfortunate girl from ruin, or to free some equally unfortunate French lady from the inof a competence- or mischief-makingoverness. The membership of the Girls Friendly Society ia different from that in England, as it draws' its subscriptions from all classes of women workers; governesses, typists, students, hospital nurses are inscribed on the list, and the only class to which g 1 Francis House Builders j Cm save money by seeing us before letting their contracts for HOUSE WIRING Estimates cheerfully given and work guaranteed WASHING Definitions, olnt a lecturer told of come woman who nk of her worse half as a model bunlMud." "Yea commented an okl Irishmen who knew the husband better than she dhl, be ia all uf that . But look at tha dictionary ami ace what a model menus. It ia defined aa a miniature it can be of little use la the art student, as tha "Lodgs la too far from the studio. To Ita membersaway the society offers, beyond the uae of the registry, protection and shelter while they are new to Paris, care for their health through a well organised sick fund, convalescence In country home of rest, lectures oa French subjects In French and English, which enables them to understand the people they have come to live amongst, and the um of a good library. The Americas 'Young Women's Christian Association deala with much the same kind of work for American women, luit la not so Independent of outside financial help as ia the Girl Friendly Society. Ita great supporter ia Mr. Hoff, who haa also (minded this year, on the left bank of thn Seine, a club for students, which ahe calls the Students' Hostel. This new Institution, on the Boulevard St. Michel, In the heart of the Latin quar ter, la a model of cheapness and hygienic comfort, and it la a boon to women of limited means who are studying In Paris. It la noticeable that America haa H all her own way where the students are concerned, for braldea the Hostel there are several smaller clubs for their benefit, among them the "American Girl Club in the Rue de Chevi-euse- , In. which Mrs. While-laReid lakes an active and practical Interest, and Holy Trinity near the Lion de Belfort, which ia supported by members of the American church In the Avenue de I'Alma and nf the mimlonary chapel In the "Quarter." The Trinity Lodga found-era- . like the Girls Friendly Society associates, aim at a wide sphere of usefulness, and. beyond organising art classes with flrt class profeausra and lectures on French subjects, they have arranged a small Infirmary, where students ran have the beat medical attendance and the benefit of a trained nurse for merely nominal fees. Amongst other efforts must be counted the students social evenings, held on Sundays in the VttU studio, In con n action with the American Presbyterian church la the Rue da Bern. The Rev. E. W. Shurtllff, who conducts tbeM, devotes all his time to working among the poorest of the etudenls, often coming across cases of starvation, madneM. and probable anlclde hidden a way up dark stairway, or through the wandering homeleaa streets Happily for English women, these American clubs are no respecters of nationality, with the exception of the one In the Rue de Chevreune, but open . 7lg. limHWIHWitGHW1! II II I IWHHtl'lHI H machine motors AND ELECTRIC FLAT IRONS Those Lite Men CommercialElectricCompany imitation of the real thing " The lecturer also told of the same Irishman's definition of the world repartee. Said be, "It lu the saying right off of what you think of the next day." The Contingent Fm. The follow lug imlniml note was written by Daniel Welmt'-- r in a newer to a request that he lake a certain ease for I do not desire era I contingent mat tern, alpkiynient la though I do uoiuetlimw eu;;age in them. But I never enrage nn contingencies merely, for that would make me a Biere juirty to a lawsuit." ft. profi-Hslun- Bet of Teeth ' (Beat 87 Rubber) A Good Bet for Bridge Work Beat 61.60 te 65 Gold Crowns, 2ZK 63.50 te 65 Johnny's Plot Foilod. alder liao been Johnny . Teachtook with the er- Thru you'd go home at mice, Johnny, ncl stay there till she gets well. Freddy ltrown Please, teacher, Johnny' sister la stopping with hi nut in Chlca!.--BostoTranscript Joiu-s-M- ...3 y tem-hnr- la-tt- St Gtsrfi and deaf." Tell her Its Do yon believe ahe is deaf enough be rafe?" Houston Foot. The poorer nf fortune la eon feased only by the ui!erable. for tho huppy Impute all t1te:r auecoa to pnulenro Ban-dona- ad merit Swift Lrpand of th Whit Bky Calf. The Kiowa Indian hare a queer story of the while nky calf." Accordthat portion of the ing to the Icg-nAmerican thvwrt wn formerly very fertile, supporting lorge herds of pure white buffaloes, each having a black tall. The creatures were held aarred by tho uvagea and aerer killed for ay purpoM. Finally aa old medk-invowed tbot lie man, would have a tepee built from the sacred white aklna The chiefs of the tribe tried, hard to dissuade him from the notion, but all to no purpose. He declared that he would commence to collect the aklna on the morrow. During the night a great whit light appeared In the sky and In Ita center a whit buffalo calf. The calf slowly descended to the earth, took charge of the herds, leading them northward, and from that day to this the Kiowia have aver seen a white huffnla e 1 1 1 Gump Position of Hearts. There la one curious fact which not everybody notice about the common, finger-longreen caterpillar of our larger mot ha Their heart, instead of being In front are at the bach of the body and estend along tha entire length of the animal. One can aae the heart distinctly through the thin akin and ran watch lie slow brat which starts at the tall and moves forward to tha bead. Heart of thl ort reaching from head to tall are not at all Uncommon in the simpler creature. Tha earthworm baa one, and so have moat worms, caterpillar and other crawling thlnga Hearts in the middle of the back also are quits aa frequent ae those in what aeema to ua to ba the natural place. Many aalmala the lobster for example, and the crayfish and the crab, which have abort hearts like thoM of the beasts and bird, never-thelehare them placed Jut under the shell la what la ourselves, would be the email of the tack. 81. Nichole. g, III LOOK AT THE LABEL AND INSIST ON OGDEN AND UTAH MADE GOODS unit k Dragon. Other uni Iona besides England have fought under th banner of BL George, and other knightly orders aa well aa that of Die Garter have been Instituted in hia honor. 11c was the guardian saint of Sicily, Aragon, Valencia, Genoa, Mal; ta and a Venetian order of St. George was created In USUL 5 Spanish In 1817, an Austrian in 1470, a Geuoeee la 1172 and a Roman In 1492. Mora modern orders bearing hia naiua an those of Bavaria (1729). Russia (1707) and Hanover (IKMh. 11m device of Ft George staying the dragon forma part of the anus of the exar and appears on several Russian coin. The conjecture that this was owing to tha presentation of tlm Garter by Elisabeth to Ivan Vanallievltch baa no foundation Iq fact for Uhanceler, the first outspoken Englishman to visit Russia speak of a dispatch aent la 15C4 from Ivan Vasaillevltrh to Qnecu Mary, tha seal of which "waa much ilka tha broad seal of England, baring on tha ona able tha Image of a maa on borne-bar-k in complete harneM fighting with a dragon." London Chronicle. getting fir that to 1 1 1 234 MAIN ST, BALT LAKE CITY Ogden 2457 Waah. lxigan, 47 N. Mata Park City IS! Main Provo, 83 Centra TEETH EXTRACTED WITHOUT FAIN; FREE WITH PLATES. No difference whs, you pay yea cannot get any better a. any price. Gold Filling $1 up Bluer aud Amalgam 75c Fillings BOe Cement Fillings Porcelain Filling .... 11-0- 0 GUARANTEE Free Examination and Advice Honest Work, Fair Dealings mike onr Success Continuous. Open till 5 p.m. Sundays 10 to 2. Lady Attendant. Guar-anteGood at any of our Five Offlcaa . Ririry. Doctor, my wife atva ahe la getting eld." 362. 12 YEARS PROTECTIVE n lieeauae aha la HI ONE 2279 WA6II. AVE. HOME MANUFACTURERS IllllllllHlimillTITf 66 and 100 Commercial National Sank Building, Salt Lake City 6. Luka, General Mgr. "Some People Dent Like Ua." B4, 87, 6 77, Ml la illustrating a cash down for county subscribers and (1.50 cash down fur city subscribers, gives this book to you and pays for two mont hs subscription. WOMEN'S Scientific Collectors of Honest Debts Tw I lit Salt Lake City. II HUM! parently prosperous person. It la needles to ny that he haa never been suspected of this small traffic. A wealthy relative died and left him InWhen same such maa dependent furnishes the clew to a delectable scandal he baa done a stroke of bust-nes- s that will keep him In small luxuries for months to come. Whitman Bennett In Bohemian. ( Net 8 Daft After All. Daft Tam. aa he was called, through the village one day, got severely bitten by tha village Ina dog. Proceed lag tp tha Jqa, ba showed the mistress wlwt b;r "ilaVx hod clonal Bhe waa much atoms! and, putting A half crown Into Tam's hand. uld;. "Awa tae tha doolor'noo an pay him wf the hanf crown." Tam eyed the coin, saying: I dlnna tliiuk Ill bother wt tha doctor, but Jlat keep the filler" For my take gang tna him, or rlaa i yell gang daft. Hoots, wnmman; yere Metherla, Daft folk ranna gang daft twice." Dundee Advertiser. H'-Great bailing, a good friend of youra, s her last . ; "Oh, only medium." What do you mean by medium?" Oh, he listens while 1 tell him alb of my troubles, but be also wants ma to listen while he tells ma all af bla." London Telegraph. A Qaed Dal Wirt. had to walk tha floor all sight with the baby. Can you think of anything went than that?" "Ym; ou might have married out la Greenland, when the Bight are six 1 - month long." There ia nothing commonplace which could not to made to appear humorous U quaintly expressed .Goethe. PERFECT CONFIDENCE. Rum Ogden People Have Good Complete Reliance. Do To To To you know, Far 1 find queck relief from backache; correct distressing urinary ilia; surely cur nick kidneys? just one way your neighbor know Hava used Doans Kidney Pills: Have proved their worth in. many teats. David JOhn. President Utah Stake. Brigham Young University, and residing at 287 South Academy arenuc, Utah, aaya: Doaa'a Kidney Pllla proved to be the best remedy I ever used, to keep me free from pain caused by tho kMueya not performing their work properly. I hare also found them very effective in warding off attack' of backache. I have used them tor year for occasional retention of the kidney secretions and at other Una a too frequent action. Whenever I fel attha a need of them I take two pHls relieve any pain which always lose, or depressed feeling. 1 can. rrtinr recommend Doana Kidney Pill in the highest term, hoping it will be the means of helping other aunerera. Plenty more proof like thl from Badcoa Drug Ogden people. Cali at 8 tore and ak what customer report. Remember the name DuanV-a- nd lako no ether. Vice-Preside- |