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Show at s ' THE MORNING EXAMINEE: OGIMMUTAII. Salt Lake, State and grand jO-NIG- HT frMBt th Gran4 Manage Busley Jessie JN i Mis Ik h Crriije with the rams win be seen here mum Cmf th,t gur and the when It wee 1 P1 jSeced thie play eeeeoe. here ht On Seat Sale Now PIW lUOi TSe H-0- end 60c. Gallery 25c. UTAHNA theater .l.. af Bill Every Saturday Evening. eviNINGB Twe 7:10 and Performance UL I6 PRICES PROGRAMME EO 60e AT THE Nickelodeon ILLUSTRATED SONG, The Laet Rcea of Summon Tha IwHtHt Flower of All. Beetle. Horriblo Adventure, Modem Diogenes Fngraxime change every ether fef. Ladiea and children will find Golden tfei room cool and comfortable. Electric Theatre Ned the Reed Hotel. 25th St ILLUSTRATED SONGl IN THE VILLAGE BY THE SEA. DE CAZAVILLE. MINES AND FORGE. STRUGGLE FOR LIFE. .....6 Admission wrap peri on your Ggart break in your pocket? Try one at DO the Ufie DEN THEY DONT BREAK HOUR, HAY, GRAIN And Plenty of It StockRemedies and Poultry SUPPLIES Try T. B. THE BEST Them Heller SI Son Old Washington Avenue. Seth Phoneib Domoto & Co. 55 TWENTY-FIFT- H ST. Intermountain News wears one of these ribbons on hie coat today. They promise to keep them Bo Say Mayor Branoford and Chief of there until the strike 1 finally settled, and settled in their favor. Police McKensie. A little dodger wee also gotten out Salt Lake. Aug. 23. News: A and distributed In the business disIt hide for public support in change la already noticeable In the trict. Mail your police wing of the city administration. the following language: own telegrams! The Western Union While How Honest George Sheet wee chief of police the Hand Organ and Pusul Telegraph companies are reiterated over and over again that no taking your money for telegraph service end using the United States gambling ws going on In this city. deliver same. Why should It naked. If then to. when is it?" mall to 80 cents to $1.?5 for service But if the police wouldnt, how wan you pay an ordinary citizen to know? But that yuur Uncle Samuel will render then's a change being eSeotrd now. for 8 cents? If you doubt this stateThe new maor end chief of polios an ment, file your telegram with either not asking the cltiaea to locate gam- company and at the same time null a card. Results will show. The bling hole for them. The hides an postal Union of being uncovered. And the patrolmen Commercial Telegraphers' Local No. 30. an Instructed to bring the gamblers America, President Palm declared today that to the station; not anything different. Salt Lake can at last feel really the eleven days of the strike have refor the assured that the mayor and chief of sulted la nothing but progress police mean business and Intend to do strikers, and that they are strong the right thing all the time. In apito enough to hold out indefinitely so far as flnnneee go. of outalde meddling and would-b-e An odd instance of sympathy comes oonchera. Balt Lake has the word of n staunch American for It; he la no from a local pawn shop, which has no other than Judae Whl. who said this hung out a sign announcing thatteleThen 1 n disposition un- interest will he charged striking morning: der the new administration, that ia graphers for money loaned to them. ere still Mayor Brantford and Chief McKenzie, Committees iff the uniontickets for to put a eton to rambling of any busily engaged in selling their Methodist church benefit, and kind. The police court announces further they report that the crowd will paok Ha Intention of holding up its end of the building to ita capacity. At the Western Union and Postal the good (and new) work by Imposing In still being accepted, heavy sentence upon those convicted officesthework officials are still manning and of gambling. n The cases brought before the court the keys, with, the force of thin, morning were those of the city men, which has been gathered tovs. A. W. McNIchol, charged with gether. v keeping a gambling house, and W. W. HOBOES CAMPED IN RESIDENCE. Morrison, H. 8. Barton, Lee Fields and n Jap named Yoahanato, charged Robert Andereon, of Provo, Returning with gambling. The defendants were Home, Finds His House Occupied. represented by Attorney - 8oren X. Christen se a. He entered pies of Provo, Aug. 22. At 11 oclock today guilty in each cnee, but suggested that when Robert Anderson, former county nil the defendants, with the exception returned to hie home la the of McNIchol, be discharged. Judge attorney, eastern portion of the city, he found Diehl eald: who hoboes, "There 1 n disposition under the the place occupied by of edibles. Aa new administration, that la, Mayor were evidently la quest turned the key In the dining room Brantford and Chief McKenzie, to put he nude a hasty exit n stop to gambling of any kind. Here- door the burglars door. Mr. Anderson front tofore I have Imposed Jell sentence! througha the for and having rush made them, In the hope that it would put n stop bicycle, aoon overtook them. They reto tuch Infractions of the law. If fused to return with him to the ehei these gamblers think they can run office, and ns he had nothing with their games in defiance of law, they life them to change their are greatly mistaken. I propose to do him to persuade had to let them go while he nil In my power to assist the authori- minds, for the officer. The burglars ties In maintaining order and punish- phoned made a run, and eo far have not been who and those violate the law, ing apprehended. Two of their confedafter this I shall certainly impose a erates are under arrest, and have conare sentence who nil Jail upon been Identified by Mr. Andereon ne me I of gambling. shall men who were on the outside of thn victed before not do so In this case. The defend- house when he approached the place. ants, except the one, will be dis- The men were arrested by Deputy charged, but the sentence of thia Sheriff George T. Judd, who' relieved court la that McNIchol pay n fine of them of a few eggs after a spirited $50. chase. The officers think they have Thla meana that gamblers will be the other lads cornered between Prowatched, anj when caught will be vo and Bprlngvllle, and are confident If any are convicted, of gathering In another lot of eggs prosecuted. they may expect to serve n long when the man are landed. Mrs. Anterm In the city JalL There will be derson has been away from home for no more fines, according to Judge a few days and tha place baa not been DlrhL They will have to serve, out occupied except at night. Mr. Andertheir time behind prison bars. , son has. not examined the house to see If anything else has been taken, BUTTE OF NEVADA. but thlnkg the men were frightened before the work was completed. Balt Lake Achltect Predict Great TWO BOYS DROWNED, Things for Ely. GAMBLERS DRIVEN OUT. r non-unio- Salt Architect Fred Hale returned this morning from Ely, Nevada, where he la doing considerable professional work. He eaye Ely le destined to be the Butte of Nevada, but an Improvement on the Montana city. The growth ie solid and etendy. The railroad builders are pushing their work along with remarkable speed. There are 140 miles of track laid on n perfectly flat country without n culvert, n feature that can hardly be paralleled elsewhere In tha country. Mr. Hale says that, while Ely may he rather quiet at present, the "quiet that obtains there would be brisk times for some towns. Laka, Aug., 23. TELEGRAPHONE FACTORY. Salt lake, Aug. 23. Western agers of the American Telephone pany were in conference last night hotel, at which meeting the matter of establishing n factory In Balt Lake for the manufacture of telegrnphonei wee considered. Overtures have been made to the company by Salt Take commercial organizations, with a view of having this city chosen as the site of a factory and aa a distributing point. Charles K. Fankhauaer la fiscal agent for the large company that controls the American rights for the manufacture of the machines, which up to this time have been made principally in Denmark. But this country from now on will turn out the wonin large numbers, derful Invention the company Indicated having orders on hand for 10,000 machines. One factory, located at Wheeling, West Virginia, turns out 1,000 telegraphones a month, and a number of branch concerns era to be opened across the country. The telegrsphone Is one of the most marvelous Inventions of the age, and la destined to do away In targe measure .with stenography. It Is a perfect recorder of the voice, and the possibilities of the instrument are alThe machines will most boundless. be leased, rather than he sold, although It Is probable that ere long thle state of affaire will change and the device become the personal property of purchaser. at the Knutaford SMOKE CONDENSING Men's Furnishing Goods Notions of all trfnrlf Fancy Cash Groceries Wines and Liquors mancom- Provo, Aug. 3. CO. The Utah Smoke and Fume Condensing company has filed articles of incorporation with the county clerk. The company is organized to conduct a business In inventing, patenting, manufacturing and selling machinery for the purpose of condensing fumes and smoko. The headquarters of the company la American Fork. The capital stock is $50,-00In shares of 5 cents each. The company owns a patent application made by J. T. Tates and others for a smoke end fume condenser, which Is valued at $50,000. The directors and officers ere: . J. T. Yates, president; John Devey, vice president; Walter A. Devey. secretary; William B. Richan, treasurer; El H. Boley. 0, RIBBONS BY TELEGRAPHERS. They Bear the Legend "Stick, and Ate Warn By All Strikers. Young Sene of William Wall Washed Away While Bathing Richfield, Aug. 21. Two small boy, aged six and eight years respectively, sons of William Wall, took It Into their henda to have swim in the Sevier river. The river was low but on account of high water last spring treacherous places have been made and the ages of the heya added to the dangers. They went to the river in company with another boy named Btevena, bnt before going In bathing the tatter went home. The Wall tads went Into the stream, It appears, and were walked down. At any rate, they didnt come home for dinner and the sisters of the boys became alarmed and got out a party to search for the mlaslng children. Their clothes were In eight. About dark the older boy was found some four miles down the stream, but no traoe of the other little fellow could he seen. The party kept np their search and enlisted the services of men from Venice, Blgurd and about Vermillion, and Wednesday noon one of the searching party started down the river toward Ballna, where he expected to take dinner, and In riding along the hank saw the boys hands and arms protruding from the water, where the body bad lodged on a aand bar. The net of the party was Immediately notified and the hoy taken from the river, between 13 and 1 oclock. The distance was about eight miles below the place, of drowning. The funeral was neld at 1 oclock p. m. today. The mother of the children la dead and the father and two daughters will have to bear the grief alone. - ' . , TELLURIDE MEETS WATERLOO. Bountiful, Aug. 23. The bunch that blew In from Tsllurlde last week and made John Dubeis hopefuls feel like sick lemons met their defeat Thursday afternoon at the handa of the Bountiful pumpkin rollers. It happened In thia way: ; The Coloradoans expected to find an easy thing, ns 'they had heard that the tailor1 men knew how to send the Bountiful team Into the tall timber, hence aa easy game for them. The wonderful twirling of Grant and the support of hie men was foo much for the, visitors, however, and they simply faded like green doth. The Teliurlde aggregation stepped np to the bet full of expectancy, and were made to walk put into the field without ecorlng a hit. Bountiful did no better when Ite men atepped np with the big stick. Then things looked much better for the miners from the Rockies, who sowed four run In the next three innings. This, however, was merely n way the farmers had of coaxing them on, for they made no more. Hall, the spheroid t wirier from Colorado, lost heart and the green grocers had everything coming. It was nothing but a case of assault and battery from then on. The introduction of Harley, soother t wirier from the mountains, did nothing to allay the distress. The farmers kept on adding to their laurels until the last Inning. The seme stood at the end 9 to 4 In favor of the Bountiful with one Inning coming. HIGH ALTITUDE AFFECTS ELER. TRAV- One hundred rib Deseret News: Salt Lake. Aug. 23. Mrs. M. A. Irbons, each hearing the word Stick were printed yesterday for the Com- win of San - Francisco was brought to mercial Telegrephere. who ere on the police station early Thursday suffering with strike In Belt Lake, and each striker evening apparently SATURDAY, ArorCT sums form of menial trouble. She was found by Marshal Jed Wolli-y- , of Bountiful wandering around the town. He persuaded her to acconipauv him to the ci;y on a Belt Lake und Ogden train. The unfortunate woman could not give a very coherent account of herself when she reached the police station, but from her remark It was gathered that she had a friend In the city. Mrs. J. M. Butler. wh lives at 2131-- 2 State street. Mr Butler accompanied by her husband, arrlied at the police station aa soon as they could be communicated with, and escorted the woman to their home. Mrs. Irwin formerly lived in this city. She married several yean ago and Is now living in Sun Francisco. Her husband in a construction engineer for some railroad company at that place. It seems that she had an attack of nervous prostration several yean ago, and after the earthquake, her mind seaming to he affected by the nervous excitement, her husband decided to send her to Chicago for treatment She had been receiving medical attention at Chicago for some time, and several days ago wrote Mrs. Butler that she would slop over for a few days with her on her way back home. It la believed by some that the sudden change in altitude and the long hours of trayellug caused a men- 24, 1901 The lights flicker and there 1 steady Unlit. The offer of the Utah Light and Railway company- to Install an auxiliary system here Is m tacit admission that the present system 1 inadequate for street lighting purposes, that arc tampe, perched away up in the air ere not the proper thing for residential districts. When we figured that we would a tamp per year, we give a rate of knew- - we Would lse money for the first three yearn It will oust us $50 a tamp to install them, $14 a year for gaa, for we will bum about 15,0v0 feet of gaa a year at each lamp. That makes $93. counting $43 for the tamps fur three years. We will get in that time 4k 6, and the gas companv must have money for Its fueL It will oust us $1.35 per tamp fur superintendent, etc., and summing up the total expense, it will mean $119 per tamp to use for three years. We are. therefore, losing $23. It will ue different after three years, because we expect to Increase the number of lamps. George Snow of the VA Gas and Coke company, with whom the Welsbach company has made a special arrangement, said that the talk of candle power by the electric company waa mere buncombe. If the city settles for the actual tal break-dowamount of candlepower used in street lighting. It will pay over 30 per cent MINING ENGINEER DEAD. of its present bills. Besides, Salt Laka Had Attempted a Trip to the Edge of Isnt contemptatlug lighting the highways fur g system of aerial navigaDeath Valley. tion. The arc tamps are perched high heavens and nhord a poor Goldfield, Aug. 22. Tom Cornish, la the one of the best known mining engi- light. neers In the country, and formerly superintendent of the Stratton IndepenHARRIMAN MACHINISTS dence mine in Cripple Creek, died at Stenikns ranch, cm the edge of Death A meeting which baa an Important Valley, yesterday, of pneumonia. Mr. Cornish sinned for the Funeral range bearing upon the relations between the of mountains several days ago, la machinists of the Harrimaa railroads company with a party of eastern capi- and the railroad coin panics, la now la talists, for an Inspection of the Lost Beealoa ia Los Angeles. It waa called Burro group of claims. When near to consider tha formulation of a new Stenikne ranch, Cornish, who was a wage and hour schedule to take tha aick man when he left Goldfield, be- place of the present schedule, adopted came eo III that bin companion were September 11, 1906. A possible result of the meeting will compelled to leave him at the ranch day. In while they returned to this city end be a demand for a nine-hou- r sent a phyalclan to attend him. News the meeting are officers, delegates and business agents of district No. 11 of iff Mr. Cornish's death was received in Goldfield end an automobile wae the International Association of Maat once sent to the. ranch to bring la chinists. Other districts may be effected. ' the body. . The officers and representatives of Bilious? Feel heavy after dinner? the diatrlct .will also consider other Tongue coated? Bitter taste? Com- matters bearing directly on the Implexion sallow. Liver need waking provements of conditions affecting the up. Doans Reguleta cure bilious at- railroad machinists. little business was transacted at the tacks. 25 cents at any drug sturt. opening session beyond routine matters end reports of committee. At CAS SHEET LAMPS the meeting were E. I Reguln, president district No. 11, Ban Francisco; Salt Lake City About to Make G. E. Norman, district vice president, Lighting Experiment. representing the machinists of the Union Pacific, Omaha; A. C. Fries, 23 Salt Lake, Aug. Republican: district vice president Oregon Short After abusive attache on the Utah Line, Pocatello, Ida.; N. La Resume, Southern PaLight and Railway company, coupled district vies president. cific, Tucson, Aria.; A. Gclllot, district with ebullient encomiums of gas street vice president, Galveston, Harrisburg lighting, the city council, sitting ns a A Ban Antonio railway, Algiers, La,; committee of the whole Thursday 8. H. Grace, business agent, Omaha, business agent, Ian night, agreed to redummend the no Neb.; C. F.R.Prow, B. Felton, secretary disAngeles; cep tones at 500 gne street lamps, fur- trict No. 11. Oakland: Delegates C. B. nished by the Weis bach Strfeet Light- Yeager, Kern City lodge. No. I; 11. O. ing company. Tha city council will Fanis, Sacramento lodge, No. 83; J. be naked to enter into a contract for P. Reynolds, Sparks, Nev., lodge, No. 6o0 street lamps to be used 20 days, 76; B. 8. Anakln. Callouts, Nev, end at the end of which time. If they ere J. A. Reel, San Francisco lodge. No. found successful, the city will install 61. 400 more and enter Into a contract for President E. I Reguln said: three years at $32 a light per year. "We do not expect any radical When the committee gathered to changes to be made ns a result of the settle tha street lighting problem, the session. The relations with the various Utah Light and Railway company fur- ronde are voqt amicable. There will nished a surprise bv sending in a prop- probably be some action taken la reosition to Install incandescent lamps gard to closer affiliation with the othon the streets, ns ea auxiliary to the er roads of the southwestern district, present arc lamps, for $30 a light per especially with the Salt Lake railyear. Thia offer came after the council road. had dickered three weeks with the While the representative of the m Welabach people for light. The com- chlnlsla are inclined to be somewhat pany's offer attacked the proposition reticent about proposed changes in the of the gas company as m vague and un schedule that may be brought about certain affair, and there followed a by the present executive session, othlively debate upon the relative values ers believe that the session, which of electric end gas street lighting. will last four or six days, will mult Many officials of the Utah Light and In a demand upon the various Harrl-ma-a lines for a nine-hou- r day. The Hallway company, the Utah Gas and Coke company and a representative of machinist! claim that they ere In the Welsbach company were present much better ihape to nek for a better The street lighting proposition came wage schedule and that the railroads up with the reeding of tha Welabach will he more lihely to grant their deoffer to Install street lamps at $31 a mands at this time. tamp per year for three years. The figThe committee representing the ure Is baied on 957 tamps, which would Northern Pacific machinists U alio In displace $60 arc tamps now used. The session at this time making preparaare tamps cost the city $73 a year, tions for a nine-hou- r day and an Inhence, there would be hn additional ex- crease in wages, and their action le expense of $5,000 by the installation of pected to have some effect on the gas street lamps, but advocates of the meeting of the Harrimaa machinists system claim e greater efficiency for la Los Angeles. it The supplemental proposition was to renew the contract with the city for $30 per tamp a year at the end pf the EXTREME DESTITUTION first three-yea- r period. Another statement by the Welsbach Mother and Tvee Children Need a company promises to paint the paste Helping Hand.. each year, to keep them dean and la good repair, to furnish the beet grade A ceae of extreme destitution has of boulevard glass for the damps and Just come to the notice of thia paper. to maintain a high standard of efficienA family, emulating of a woman and cy.. lea cents per night In the penal- three VBhlldrrn, living at 2364 Grant ty for outage for each light. avenue, are fighting for an existence. The Utah Light and Railway com- The husband and father wee a notary pany, In a voluminous proposition, to public and an Jtmlaa Interpreter end, which was attached a number of by acting ns spokesman for hie councharged the Welabach proposal trymen, earned a livelihood. He travwith being Indefinite aa to the amount eled here end there, the last time to of candlepower furnished by the gaa Casals county, Idaho, to take part la lamps, end too vague for the company a murder triaL Returning to Ogden Howto make a Vlrglllo Mesoero contracted a fever ever, the company proposes to install and boos died. Just nine months ago. General Electric or the so the wife stated, the remains were either fhe Kernat system of Incandescent light- taken to Pocatello and were there ing. The first embraces posts and buried. After e short stay In that brackets of standard make, with com- city with her sister, Mrs. Masoero replete tamp equipment, furnishing a turned to Ogden where she has since light of not leas than $0 candlepower. resided. From that time on the woThe company offered to Install them, man has had a struggle to get along. keep them la repair, guarantee satis- She takre in dressmaking ns e means factory service, for $30 a lamp the first of support, but even then her Income three years and $28 a lamp for the le very meager. Some washing la next three years. No displacement of done alio. arc lamps is contemplated. The proThe woman has three children, the posed system la merely In addition to oldest a girl, being about 13 yean that already in vogue. The Nernst of age. She is totally blind and the system contemplates a little different mother la bending every energy to fit tamp and bracket, with a guarantee the girl out eo that she may attend of 0 candlepower per lamp. the State School for the Blind. The The company offers to Install either other two hare the appearance of roas a teat bust health, comthe Welsbach H. B. Lewis of A visit to the house gives every inpany became sarcastic in hie refer- dication of poverty. The rooms have ence to the Utah Light and Railway carpets on the floor, few chairs company. are to be found, the wells am barren, "They thank the council for the priv- and the children, as well ne the moO-e-r, he said, ilege or making an offer, are poorly clad. "when they could have made the same An appeal has been made to the offer years ago. They have waited unfor help and til time for action hr the council and county commissioners of some coal wee given. have sent In this offer to confuse the the promise minds of the council, and for no other The case Is to oome up again, eo the eald. purpose. They say our proposal is lady matter le one that deserves inThe on the vague candlepower proposition. In our contract with the city we will vestigation and, If the conditions warIt, the family should be helped. guarantee 60 candle power, nd under rant conditions he a teat of If outward 10. 80 between and pressure it will go the present case is cerones poverty, 455 been giving They say they have watts. Hnw do you know it? 1 came to tainly a desperate one. 8alt Lake three or four weeks ago, PORTLAND BANK FAILURE. got off where the Oregon Short Line depot need to be end took a stranger's word for It that this was really Salt Portland, Aug 23. The outspoken Lake. The town was la darkness. Indignation of many of the 14,906 deStreet ears were tint running. 1 didnt positors of the Oregon True Savings ee 455 wafts. 1 have eat out In the bank, the doors of which were closed residence district of 8alt Lake many Wednesday, caused the circulation of repsr; yesterday that warrants wore time, and I havent eaeu 455 trails counter-propositio- - Issued for the banks officers. It developed, however, no warrants were d and that the net results of the numerous demands for arrests by certain depositor were preparations made to swear out complaints by ths district attorney. A meeting of depositors was called to devise mean for protecting their interests. Friends of Cashier Mortis warmly defended him against critJ-risfrom the directors. Receiver Devlin expressed the belief the depositors would be paid in fulL DONT Smalley! STYLE OF DOING COKSCIENCE SHUCKED A Wayfarer Bend Back Seventy Cenfo He Borrowed. BUSINESS IS SQUARE ALL It has been laid time and again that every man haa hi repentant momenta, and that, no matter how deep ia crime a man 4a b rawed, those momenta show themselves sometime, somehow, somewhere. The following letter, addressed to a James Brooks, speaks for iteelf. Apparently the repentance weut deep enough to take hold of little thlnge: Seattle, Wash., Aug. IS, 07. Dear Sir: Were you working In the Green Light house on Commercial street, Salt Lake City, la the year 1900? The reason I ask yon is W-ausI was working there at the same time aa 1 understand yon were. 1 burrowed 75 ceuta from e man of the house, and 1 never paid It hark. But now 1 belong to a church and have quit all my sinful habits, and I want to pay that 75 cents bark. Are you the man 1 borrowed it of?. I am not sure who I borrowed 4t from, but 1 rather think It was from you. Please let me know. Yours truly, Signed) S. IL MATIHOT. YOU AROUND THAT KNOW e DAN PATCH Setter PACES FAST MILE. t Girl Beaten by Watson Peughkeepaie Meeting. the Dan Patch, the famous pacer, ape pears to possess all hie speed. One day last week at Galea burg, 111., aided by two runners and a wind shield, he paced a mile in 1 : 54 He negotiated the first quarter la 29 tha eeeonda, the half in 66 threequarters !i 1:271-- and the mile in 1:66 It will be seen that Dan Patch atepped a very even mile, tha fastest quarter being 29 eeoonda and the slowest 291-seconds. On tha sms day Straight Advice won the 2:1 pace after a hard struggle with Dana Patch. Straight Advice look the first, second and fifth beets ia 2:06 12, 2:07 and 2:09. Dana Patch took the second and third heats In 3:08 4 and old-tim- FRESH UTAH TOMATOES Green Cora Vegetables 1--4. 2 1-- 2 2-- 2 T. B. EVANS & CO. CROOK BOTH FNONCfi 236. 2364 Washington Avenue 1-- 2:061-4- . Ethel R. captured the 2:16 trot, wlu nlng the first, third and fifth heals la 2:121-2- . 2:12 and 2:141-4-. lXrectnaas, a bay horse by the California bred teUlon Directum Kelly, took the second and fourth heals la 2:111-- 4 and 2:12. At the second day of the Poughkeepsie meeting tha sensational feature waa the defeat of Sonoma Girl in the Oakland Baron auka for 2:10 troll era. 8he was e pronounced favorite In the betting, aelllng for $50, Watean $7 and the field $40. Soqomn Girl waa flighty la the first heat and finished last, Watson took the heat In 2:08. Sonoma Girl annexed the second beat In 2:061-4- . the fastest of the run. The Banin Roan mnra was a hit unsteady at the start of tha third and broke when Watson cut serose and took tha pole. MOVED GEIFFIN FAINT COl From GIVE BABY AWAY. Denver. Aug. 22. It la not at all un likely that Calvla Carlton, who deserted hie wife in this city, la In Balt Lake. It la practically known he started west and ha la either In Salt Lake or out on the coast. Tha story of the desertion la one of the most pathetio ever told the local police, male so by the utter helplessness of th broken-hearte- d little mother and abandoned wife. Mis. Carlton dose not grieve over tha disappearance of her husband. He struck her before he left, and her love for him died with the pain of tha blow. It la because she cannot provide for her baby and haa been driven to the last atop mother takes she must give him away, so he may have food, drink end clothes. The husband has never area hia baby. He ran away over eight months ago. One evening, while the couple were walking thmngb the business portion of Denver, Mrs. Carlton topped to look In e window filled with little Infants clothes, rattles, cut little bonnets, etc. The husband noticed, aaked questions, waa answered, and losing hie temper, suddenly struck hls wife, end, cursing, left the heme. Since then nothing has been beard from him. The mother worked as a waitress for a while, but fouad ehe could not support herself and provide the baby with necessities, too. She was an orphan and has no relatives living to whom he can look far assistance. At last, desperate, she called at the police station, told her story and naked that he he helped ia her search for a home for her baby hoy. 8be want the child to be legally adopted. SAN JOBE WOMAN to 2310 Washington ARE NOW BETTER WE SEEKS TO 1211 PRE- TO SHOW YOU WALL PARED AND SEE CALL PAPER, ETC. US. a Bush Oshs Plane bras. Newman a. Organ WARDLEM C. FIANOS .. OMAN'S AND MUSICAL IIKEIMISE Cottar Aeeurdoea jo String Violin Ban- r Latest Publications ef Sheet Mnal Ben the Wonderlnl Pipe Orga 1171 Washington Avenuu OGDEN, UATHL DIES. Ban Jose, Ang fl. Mrs. L11II Curran, a woman of tha under world, died aa the result of a terrific beating administered by an unidentified man. The police bnve arreeted Rialto Eric, a bartender with whom the woman had been living. In aa antemortem statement the woman exonerated Eric from Complicity la the crime, hut Chief Carroll aid that there were witaessee to prove that Eric did bent the woman several day before her death. Eric claimed that he returned home Sunday morning to find the doore lucked and a commotion going on Inside. He called to the women and threatened to break down the door unless he opened IL When thle bed been done, Eric any he found the woman badly intoxicated and battered almost beyond recognition. WIND AIDED FIREMEN. Cincinnati, Aug. 23. A shift in the wind aided the firemen In overcoming a fire which etorted la the Whit Lead plant yesterday night Ike flames were controlled after burning five hours, destroying $750,006 worth of property and nearly everything In the circular block hounded by Broadway. Ceurt end Hunt etreeta. alio the Norfolk Western Railway tracks were destroyed. The largest loss wae to the Croger Grocery company warehouse from where the companys eighty stores were served. The companys loss le $350,000. Other lessee vary from a hundred thousand dollars to minor losses of groceries and SPI BITUAL CLAI EVO YANT MENTAL BEALES Names given and the Identical Prof. things you wish to knew. eeer. Flags I le the worlds greatee He gives you power to win and merry the site you love. Te succeed in huelnea Tr recever leet nr stolen proper-ty- . ' - , Te guard against fraud and deception. Te locate the treaautee ef heaven and earth. the separated. Te Te eettle quarrels and dispute : Te win at J law. Frsa lecture and teste at City Hall, Sunday night, at i. p. m. Reading given dally at Elder House, 304 25th St - CHICHEBJLLS 50LD BY DRUGGISTS EKKVHMOtE |