OCR Text |
Show TU12 S!0?!1XO OGDEN. EXAMINER: I'TAIl. TlTshAY, AVGUST G, uiii..x.iou CIRCUS A LINEMAN THREE BURGLARIES WERE l!io7. DAY,1 ba every city of IW3 BAS MED State, but l iter form of amusement of Them Cleverly Escapes From U much tujoied and so little known One An Officer. 'ii iu detailed' working. 1: i that 3.uuu,hiu people witness Of two had tuta with big guns. Thai the Kingliug pemirmunce every seato operate in the yard 1 t audkn.-son. This umde un commenced Delaney, wa f every nationality known to modem Sunday, urn. Edward Officers Baker by Company civilisation, for the circus is a lan- arrested but' tbe other, by a and guage untierat.iod by all and It talks cleerMorganaon, bis liberty. Tike dodge, wi-with a multitude of tougnes. men were not actually apprehended In It is said that Rtngliug Brothers act of holding up any person but hare a fixed daily expense of $7,000. tbe There are in its army over 1.000 peo- tbe officers have no doubt a to their inientiiin. ple, the lowest salaried man of which Officer Shoemaker, while making bi receive $5u per month. In the comIn tbe Southern Pacific yards, rounds missary department there are a chef, west of the depot, came upon maa Na 7 assistants, 43 waiters and 19 water 1 a he squared himself and swung It takas 8(1 care to hold the hla hoys. hand to his pocket. The officer circus, divided Into $ traina that run waa quicker, however, and the strangon their own schedule. er's hand shot upward, it waa a The many detail of tbe perform-ancease of one robber thinking that anare looked after by the five other of hla kind had turned a trick Rlngllng brothers whose experience but, as he explained In a friendly with the handling of a circus dates hla business. Shoemaker Introbark twenty year. The order and tone, duced himself as an officer much is all that throughout prevail system his and discomfiture. He mode departments is marvelous and to tha the disgust boost that he would have shot the a into the glimpse average layman officer had his first impresehie not machinery of the big entertainment would he like a rerelatkia from an- failed him. Shoemaker started a march between other world. two fines of box cars te (lie pofiee to went the rfreus From Ogden Just as a freight man starred Balt lAke. thence to Logan, Butte, station. narrow defile with hia glartha down over to IX Hon, pack to Boise, and then In the strangon to the coast. After playing the ing gaa lamp turned full er's face. It blinded him for aa Inprincipal cities of the seaboard it stant, but In that instant he had will double hack for a stand la the formed aa Idea worthy of a better east before going into winter quar- cause. He concluded that (he officer ter at UuruUxk Wl. lo waa blinded by the Hght, and he darted under the string of care and made his escape. Rhoempker was HYDRANT FOUNTAIN afraid to fire in fear of hitting tha freight Inspector. A broken ataud hydrant on lower A swttchuiau, whom It ta believed Twenty-fourtstreet waa tha cause of the ialr miller attempted te hold up, a beautiful but temporary fountain fought them off by a display of pure It appear tbar soou unadulterated nerve. Aa they cam yesterday. after the sprinkling wagon left the toward him he backed to e freight hydrant some auiU boys began to car, whipped out hla pipe, leveled make an Investigation as to bow tbe et tha hold-up- s and ordered them te The youngsters counter march. The resemblance ef worked. hydrant could nut reach the top valve eo they the pipe te a gun and tha friendtv derided to turn the tower one. Tbe dark nr oa enabled the switchmen te hydrant Is L shaped with two valves, auccessfully carry out hla blaff. They one at tbe baa of the pipe and the disappeared and did not bother him other at one end of tbe short arm. any more during tha night. Moon after tbe water waa turned oa leak was noticed In the lower end of SAILED FOR CA8A BLANCA. the pipe and Inasmuch as tbe upper valve was cheed, the great fores of Gibraltar, Aug. 5. Tbe British armwater turned kmae by opening tho ored cruiser Antrim sailed for lower islre and held bark by the up- Blanca today to watch over the Britper valve bring closed, the hole sues ish interests at that port became larger. In order to atop the leak tha buys attempted to pull the LITHOGRAPHERS' STRIKE ENDED pipe toward them, but It was eaten through with rust and ao snapped off. New York, Aug. S.-- Tbe struggle of A sheet of water shot fifteen feet in the engraver lithographic artist, threatmomenta the air and for a few designers league, with the nationened the surroundings with a minia- and association employing lithographer, ture deluge. Tha water, however, waa al which la August. 1906, baa beea turned off before any damage waa ended began a result of the abandondone. In tha meantime the neighbor ment of tha the fight by the union. The or from waa the freer hood presence , trouble had its origin in the pnetlng small buys than it had been for some of opeuebop notice by the eraptoyera. time. The men refused to quit the suioa and were locked out in St. Luuls and EXCURSION TO BUTTE. oiber elite. The workers are now seeking their old position. August 7th. uu, Mx iu jpi'ulubly uu vitdu-- ile iuiu-- u eqli-luj.e- d Ogden. JJ'atSundyiii He. - t t. oT Hewlett Bm. returned front Tili!t toesup front Salt Lake j trUI- - n. Itf- eir annual nualcUH hv next Wadare- tee canyon on 1 - the caae of S. V. Gaaton v. P. P. lias ordered the SSAdl.., Burktef Sunerintendcnt CROWDS DEATH COMPANION SAVES HIM FROM ING ELECTROCUTED, BE- Edward Harris Receives 2.300 Volta of Electricity and la Seriously Burned. ham arrived oar By forming with bin body a circuit Ugbt lbewert on Southern Paclfie No. with two live wires un the Utah Twenty-fA Railway company's pole, at morning. gUU irst street and Grant avenue, Ed, reservices will be held for ward Harris, a company Unemaa, Barclay, at Richey's ceived the full shock of 2.300 volts of ESTthU afternoon. August 6th. at electricity. T he timely interference of ?u Rev Alfred Brown, officiating, Fred Bwearinger, up the pole with waa rnent in Mountain View cemetery. him, saved bis life, but he burned before be could he takn barber en from the wires. a Kelly the With the repair gang Harris started to railroading again. Ev to work yesterday on Twenty-firs- t Lp P street putting up wires and mending "ob will be his headquarters. He waa with 8wearlug-e- r conpertfcwu. and climbed up tbe Graut avenue of Cox Imperial, B. M. un took his pueltloa on the crossIs the guest of Mr. and Mrs. pole, bar and commenced In scrape the InMr. and Co Young Mrs. young. but hnd nev-Ht- sulation from a wire for a conaectlon. L, childhood friends,until His back several times came dangerSunday. for many years near a wire above, but before ously court held .vested Judge Howell could warn him to be care-fu-l In Swearinger was time spent The entire iar lie tha circuit formed had . Utah of a Jury for Bute u With a bias the current flashed case. Up to the noon reoeiw him rigid. IfuU Jury had not been impanelled. through bis body and held Unhesitatingly Swearinger grabbed hie companion's clothes and pulled him u officially given out that the flat on the crossbar and broke the railroad company Une current. )gon Short purchased Louis at St Harris aaaerta that lie could hear iu recently o new motor cars, and although It bis comrades speak as they worked to an decided definitely anna to start respiration, but he i sot as yet cars are to he used, still bis rhere these ao dased and helpless that he was t is Intimated that the Cache valley Finone and the could neither apeak nor move. The , ranch line la to have sat then he moved np. and ally kibe line la to have the other. prompt measnrea taken by hla fellow linemen undoubtedly saved bis life, was as the same voltage haa killed A numRlh Jepson of Brigham City trraigned In police court yesterday ber of men not ao fortunately placed m a charge of vagrancy, to which as to assistance. w pleaded not guilty.' Ills bond was Dr. Gordon dressed Harris burn, lied at $390 and hb trial was ordered which consist of deep holes in hla wt for Tuesday morning. Jepson la hands and a long furrow across hla of back where the wire hurled itself In ittemptlng to Induce a number he hla flesh. His clothe were in part prominent business men. whom reknows, to furnish him with the burned from hla body. Unless complications set In, he haa tired security. a fair chance for recovery, b the matter of the estate of Richael Sullivan, the administrator, CARD OF THANKS . J. H. McCllntack, through hb attor-eythe haa petitioned J. H. Devine, We wish to extend our sincere district court for an order to dispose ao that a final tbanka to the many friends who so f certain real eatata eblement may he made of all claims kindly assisted ua during the sickness son and tha eatata The only heir la W. and death of our Imlpved nH. Sullivan. May our Jr., of Galesburg. UUnola brother, John C. Gilmore. bless and d Heavenly Father always Tha report of the eatate la abo comfort those who assist others In to tha court their hour of trial and afflictions. Mrs, Mary A. Gilmore end Family. comand The hunting fishing party posed of Depot Master Cunningham, Soothes Itching skin. Heals cuts Train Agent Young and J. A. McKln-- a burns without a scar. Cures piles, or Sunday from the eczema, salt rheum, and Itching. try , returned north. Tha fishermen came back sells not because they could not Doans Ointment Your druggist catch the fish, but because there were It sot any to catch, it waa whispered AUTO TRIP ABANDONED ao about that Mr. McKlnstry waa Kansas City, Aug. 6 J. P. Cudahy afraid of snakes, thnt after the train Kan-- , arrived at Marysvale, he retused to and Charles F. Ettwein, who left autoIn an get out At any rate all report a saa City Saturday night mobile In an attempt to make a recgood time. ord run to Denver, were forced this tha EXCURSION NORTH,. OREGON morning to temporarily abandon Short Line, Saturday, Aug. 10th. Cheap trip at Wamego, Kas., because of the had roads. Wamego la 1U0 miles round trip rates. Long limits returniwest of Kansas City. ng. Ask Agents for particulars. . ITS AND COMMITTED SUNDAY ESCAPE trainmaster at E v Goldfield special .rn well-know- ''' scr-loucl-y Call-unti- ft No Hnd to Reign of Crime-li- as Caused Chief Browning to Call a Conference to Rid the Gty of Thugs Men in Their Rooms Robbed At the Point of a Gun. They prowl la the night, waylay the lone pedestrian and steal tha roomer money and clothes whila be sleeps. It behooves tha people to be careful unless they find themaelvee the losers re awakening in the morn- h ing. Sunday, between midfcight aid the early morning hours, three house were entered. One stranger, believed to be oue of the robbers, was arrested this morning by Sergeant Chambers and Deputy Wilson as he saunstreet. Ilia tered down Twenty-fift- h name la George Brooke and in hla pockets were discovered a raaor, a hone, a pocket book, several item books and articles of clothes stolen during the night from the Beehive rooming house He has been arrested twice before once for attempting to smuggle tobacco Into hla pala in the city Jail and again for vagrancy. Daring hla aeonnd Incarceration he asand attempted to saulted Guard make bia escape. At the residence of George Biddle No. 228 Twenty-thir- d street, a gang of three went through the rooms about 2:30 yesterday. They entered the room occupied by Mr. Orth, ransacked the dresser and took from the pockets of his trousers $1.50. Crossing over to tbe nest "room occupied by H. Evans, they secured f2S, a coat and a pair of troipers, while the owner alept soundly. Entrance waa affected through the front door. It is believed by means of a skeleton key. Mrs. Annie Cremy'a residence Is next Joor to llis Biddies. Tha trio empty-han- ded, Ringlmg Breen With a Circus Un equaled. Exhibited os Tabernacle Square. gained the irterior either by 'climbing the porch to the story aoove or by opening a lower do;r and ascending the stairway. They enured John Morgan's room, but were artled sad temporarily put to route by the sud-de- n awakening of Morgan. But before he could fully regain his senses and grasp the situation, he was looking into the ntuaile of a revolver, while two of tbe robbers were going through the room. They failed to find anything of value and, after warning Morgan not to move, haxtilv deserted the house. Morgans wau-- ticked, underneath his pillow whllo the thieves were operating. The police were early made acquainted with the night's work but were unable to apprehend the robbers. A consultation waa calk'd by t'hlef Browning, however, and plans to drive the undesirable element out of tbe elty were discussed. Extreme measures will be resorted to in order to safeguard property and reduce the menace to life. Every boarding bouse, saloon, byway and highway In the city will be searched and all siupfb-oulooking men. will be apprehended and lodged In the city and county Jails. By bringing charges of vagrancy against them, the police hope to make it so risky lor the robbers that they will deiart of their own accord. The oldest officers on the force declare that never before In the history of Ogden has the city been so infested with men expert in their line of crime. For three weeks robberies have been reported nightly, while holdup are of frequent occurrence. Where ao many bad tuen come from la a mystery. The theory la entertained that the Western Parlflc, in transporting men from Chicago and other eastern cities, free of charge, is responsible for the Indus of crim-in-s la. It la alao believed, by the authorities that tha houaecleanlng In San Francisco haa been the mesna of of the coast to ending the riff-raf- f smaller eitlos eastward as far aa Ogden and beyond. is a robbers prey at present. The police say so, and the police are In a position to know. The gentry operate singly. in pairs, and iu gangs. There is a working relation bet were them all and, despite the fact that both the city and county lulls are full of bad men. there remain at large thieves of all kinds who manage la some manner to communicate with their less fortunate fellows In crime. Bolts and hare offer them little Ogden aub-nitta- THOUSANDS SAW A MAGNIFICENT PARADE YE8TERDAY. a WARRANTY DEEDS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Joseph Williams, et al to William E. Newman, part of lot 1, block 12, plat A $1700. Oscar B. Madaon to Carl C. Rasmussen. part of lot 3, block 4, South Ogden survey 3400. John E. Bolatad to Margaret Atkinson, part of kit I, block 54, plat A a abort session yesterday. No reports cams from Commisslonera McKay and Moore, aa their work waa reported last week. Commissioner Madaon reported that three wella had been sunk In the Wll-uo- n district, and that tbe matter of receiving hie attention drainage waa at present - Ha alao reported that he had Inspected the work done on MU and other wurk in that district, and that everything done waa very commendable. County Attorney K. J. Harris asked for thirty days leave of absence. Granted. AdjourneJ for onp week. The county commlsalonera held $1350. Joseph B. Xlvord to David W. Hancock, part of section 8, township 8, Rlv-erda- j I range 3 wet--fI5Caleb Parry and wife to Charlea Owen, part of section 31, township 7, range 2 west $2600. George H. Jonne and wife to C. C. Wangagaard, kit 1, block 2, plat A, Huntsville aurvey $325. Harry W. Thomas And wife to Ore-goShort Une. lute 6 and 8. block 8, Falrmount Park addiUon $40. . a FRUIT GROWERS OREGON SHORT LINE EXCUR-io- n la Balt .Lake, Wednesday, Aug. Wa want your peaches and apples. Call and get boxea to pack them la. THE H. L. GRIFFIN CO. 7th ; $L0Q round trip; all trains. The latest estimate of the population of Ogden U 30,000, the sudden increase being due 4ely to the presence of the Singling circus, which arrived Sunday and yesterday.- - After 13 oclock lart night the surplus populace hied Itself back to the farms In Weber. Davis and Box Elder counties and the citys population will siaud aa Hated in tha new directory. By 10 ockick the elreeis were literally blockaded by a mass id anticiwere Comer pating humanity. rouuded off by summer frills and frail sun alludes. Where tbe shude of building overlapped the walk, there the people crowded, JuMled. and craned their necks good naturcdly; small children clapped their hands gleefully; window overhead aud fire escape from t ho ground up ru the top stories were alive wl h venturesome and all kinked forward youngster to tbe clrcu parade with the same fondness and enthusiasm. Toy balloons bobbed np here and there aluhg the walke, ribbon fluttered a the more excited of tbe spectators ran hither and thither unable to remain for more (ban a few aeetmty in one place and the loud cries of tha trinket hawker nounded above the general din. A dog, unused to euch an unusual occurrence, howled mournfully and the uninitiated of the how 'attempted to view the panorama while oa their hindquarters. Then the first bespangled trumpeter turned the corner at Twenty-fift- h street and Washington avenue and with toe simultaneous movement hundreds of na lookers tipped forward and fixed their eyes on tha approaching parade. Blocks of beautiful wag-onbedecked with gaily dressed pas aengera, heavy draught horse, with Jingling bar ease, uniformed band, prancing Shetland ponies, and cavortcatnel ing hunters. solemn-lookinand rumberaoine. swinging elephants all filed pi at In one long pageant. From their seats, on high vehicles, downs winked at the crowds, flourish- Cd their eapa and sent forth discordant Masta from unwilling Inatrumenta. The lady In a cage of snakes looked through her glass eaclusure unconcerned, as a huge serpent stealthily coiled Its length around the legs of the chair on which aha aaL . A Hon with bristling niane and twitching muscle, emitted subdued roars as he looked out upon the throng, but the bears that: followed after gaaed with a pleased qutaalcal expression, and seemed not to mind the people at all. At last, after a half hour of aulld sightseeing, tbe steam piano screeched forth lt song and the parade came to an end. It waa a gorgeous exhibition one that, no other clrcu on the road can duplicate, Tbe afternoon performance drew an Immense crowd and In the evening, at 8 o'clock, at Tabernacle square, there g audience. waa a For years tha name nf Rlngllng line of a circus. Tha mammoth or record-breakin- 1 e e t Ca Round trip from Ogden, $18. Tickgood for return to August 1 7th. ets Five hundred fast horses shipped from California for tbs races, bow taking plara at Butte. For further particuhi agents jnr write D. E. Burley, lar O. F. A., O. B. L. R. IL Co., Belt Lake City, Utah. ooooooooooooooooo o o o MOTHER'S TERRIBLE CRIME o o o o Btranglad Two of Her Children o o ta Death. o o o o Daltlraore, Md., Aug.1 5. o o During a recurrence of Insanity o o which has reused her to he o JULY EXCURSIONS. o thrice confined t an Insane o Christine Nona o - Via Colorado Midland too asylum, Mrs. dell, aged 26 yearn, the wife of o To Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha. o Joseph Nenaden, today stran- o Kansas City and Intermediate point; o gled bar two young children, o alao Colorado points. One, fare plus o aged two years and eae year o two dollars for the round trip. Return o and three months respective- o limit October list. On am la July 18th o ly. Tbe woman la nader arrest o o nd 15th. Writs U If. Harding, gait o OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO LAke for full particulars - QUILTS OF U. S. REPRESENT $675,000,000 LABOR HOME-MAD- E Mn Girls o! Today Ejschew Bee Old-Fashion- Quilting Patterns ed Are Still in Vogue. 00 la tbe JKOtOttHKDMOBiOMOttttllto2i country. Jack. MKOMOMOMMOKOWOWMOMOMO Whan I waa a lad I started out boraaa to trad. I married a girt. Jack. Bedding she brought; And a quilt that her grandmother made. Mrlkat would Z gtvs for tha old times back! With horse la plenty to trade; Te sleep neath tho quilt the glrlle-gtbrought; Neath the quilt that her grandmother made! 9 rl Dont ak me!!" OMOtgOtgO)gOtlfOtlfQ)lfON(OigOtFO)80ffi DEO OMOMOKQMOffOMOMOffiOMQMOJBOM OKO JKtMOMOJBOMOMOMOAQMOMO ; NTflnifO0)KOlirOOtMHgftVO!BOON(9 SAC'S FB0BLEH. ' 108 working days one year. H hours sawing each day. 15 cents per hour, overtime wages. 1 - AH8WES. Mother's labor on quilt, THE BIO .STAR. QUILT D. de lf quilt-makin- g, - a day, Tha Ml quilt the prohlAA teoomaa Mexican woman of tha peon elaaa InwreatlDg. e "The $8,000,000 80 canto. A capable hired girl qellto In the United States gets $0 canto a that 'hie mother end 'her mother day; whila a qualified aeamatraaa dm 'made, according to my figures, repremanda and receives pay at tha rata sent $075,000,000 worth of overtime. of $1,00 a day. Than, why shouldnt "It la a generally ooneadod fast, the domeatia American mother! spare that b rich mana fortune dwindles he worth g d dcr the hsnaar. Sub time spent In a little moref It la! for the reason Jsetod to $ oempulaory turning Into that spare time la prariona tone soak, John D, neckafeller' billion overtime And the seme should be dollar would umuma tha proportions according of IMMM.OO O.M l, which would rated no to pay for the labor te the pay ef the BMmetreaa, nt be sufficient on the homo-ma-d "Bay, then, she spend qullte of eapended e n day sewing qullt tha United fltatea, even at a rummage k nf a every and thnt It tak one year te make lu the Orient la 10 canto ea home-mad- cae-thlr- quilt-makin- THE $.I0. BOX. QUILT.. ONO CW00000tlfl CO4O!B9NftXDgfDlgQ4QNfpigO0Nf ROCKEFELLER! have little spare time; tar, they are wealth couldn't buy all the of the Industrious ort, and are only home-mad- e quilts ef the able to alt down to piece and patch and sew at those rare interval when United State." itetlstiaal Sam. having craved the all tha rest of tha household duties i Indulgence of the hitchea cabinet, have been attended to, "It takas a years spare time to 'oatlanod: make a home-ma"There are at least two home-mad- e quilt. Leaving three Sundays and holiday guilts to aacb ef the 11,000,000 fami- out possible lies of this eonatry; on that 'her hundred Is the nnmber of one-haquilting days, Allowing' mothaC mods, and one that 'hia moth hour sack day "for one or mad, . hundred and fifty hours are devoted "Home-ma- d qutlre are made la to tbe completion ef one quilt, Qnlll-aukia- g "The average price ef female labor women para tin r08N ' lf, ur home-mad- nan-jac- true American would be there with The 'crasy quilt haa no definite pattbe Individual, redeem. tern. It to n bettermase sort ef nn aa e Sort; though, withal. It la often lng price to mvo hla coushighly prised aa Its quilt. One of the meat popular ef grand in, 'log cabin.' e "Mere love, life and labor la wrapmother' patterns for her e to tho quilt than quilt vu. and la still, known as the ped up favorite may at first be imagined. Tear rib-of all alar.' Another which has need the teat of time la saving of nscktlao, hat arowna, tho 'bog' qnlU, ao designed that any bons and bits of silk are required to way you look Bt It you res eubas. prevlda tho bare material for lto pat. Four hundred and a!yhtraiu diamond lore. And the mother, or wife, who of ten shaped plaeea are required to makq makes It can to slat cases out plana and toll the rcffulctiou star for tha 'big star eall each particular be and whence what ft need to quilt, Tha 'box quilt, alao fashioned voucame. of diamonds, may contain aa many It pleat aa mats the faaey of Iu canker. over-biddin- g, home-mad- high-ton- home-mad- home-mad- old-ti- ed ' greatly given to quilting aa were ouf mother and thwlr mat asm. Tha do manda of present fry society and tho allurements at oceUngent amusements forbid. Vfatn we were chilwas dren, however, the qulltlng-be- e' on of tha ehlefeet mild amnsamanto to which the women folk flocked. -, "The Intrinsic value of tha home- I made quilt may not ha fully set down In dollars and cants. There la sentl- -l meat connected with It that money! couldn't bay. Here's to tho homemade quilt!" STATISTICAL- - BAM WITH NE INFORMATION NEXT WEEK.lV |