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Show THE MOKOSa SUMMONED SUDDENLY tXAMLNETtUPhONES EDITORIAL ROOM- BImtopswdsnt Beil pien. tw rings BUSINESS OFFICE Ni I u Nn. BY DEATH .....Nn N&H SS independent PIwm Ball PMM, ene rim., PROPRIETOR OP CENTRAL HOTEL DIE OP HEART FAILURE. . Mr, Llttto Knew an Old and Raaident of tha State. Waa Wll Gnnl Manager Bancroft earn up from Balt Luke ywterdey aforaow. la his privtit car ISA Yesterday Bio Grand train Koa. 1 aad I vara annulled. The wrack la to rauae. Colorado w Joseph H. Taunt, one tlm nupertn-teadraf the Or non Short Lino, but now superintendent of the Colorado Bouthero, waa la 0deu yesterday, ahakiat kanda with old frleuda. h la the cue of Hugh T. Dyer Amalgaaiated Sugar company, tka daleadnata kava filed anawar to tka complaint, demurring every allegation, setting forth that the plaintiff had Iwaa paid the notary due him. Eight wall built aihlete. repreeel tka Olympic club of Saa Kiaariaco passed through Ogdea lata yaaterday aftaraaoa ea their way to Jaumtowa, to Uka part la tha great track meet aooa to uka place at the exposition. Lata yaaterday afternoon tha counUreases to ty clerk Uauad marriage Jivaeph H. MrCowea aud Joaepkina T. Br am wall, both of lawful age and both of Ogden, and Adrtanua Bnkker, aged 1, SS and Patroaelia Ru inner, aged kutb of Ogden. The funeral of Mrs. Ann Elisabeth Williams will be held Thursday, after-aooat S o'clock, la the Third ward be meeting kouaa, and latermeat will remade la tha City cemetery. Tka main may be viewed at No. 191 Washington avenue today, between tka kora of I aad 6 p. m, aad tomorrow katweea 10 and 1 o'clock. Tho fannral services of Mra. Mae' Bunk were held in tha Fifth ward meeting huuae yentarday after caret noon, at 1 o'clock p. m. 1. A. Bbreevo had ckargo of the aenrlcea. The speak-er- a wero I. W. F. Voiker, Ernest Nenteboom, P. J. lammera. Albert Bell, Harman Van Brack and T, A. Bhreeve. Interment took place In tha Ogden City cemetery. Tho myaterlona disappearance of Chaiioa If. Calland, claim ndjunler for the Hnrrimnn llnea nt tbln point, la Tho firing bib friend much concern. laat aoea of him here wan about a week ago, when ha waa noon by aever-a- l acquaintances oa tba street. It la alleged that with him has alao a eonalderabia sum of tho corapany'e fun da, but at this time there appears no real grounds for apprehension la thin particular, and bln friend are Inclined to halters ka ban beea foully dealt with, Thomas Carney waa brought la from Clearfield yeaterday oa Oregon Short Lino No. I aBd removed to tba Ho la suffering from a broken leg and crushed foot. Tha accident boe-piu- L occurred while attending to hla duties on tho local freight, which was bound for Bdlt Lake. Ho was la tbe act of stepping oa tha pilot when tha train started with tha abort results. While tha accident la a bad one. It la thought that hla foot and leg on both be eared. Jack Wood, tho aodallutin speaker from London, and who deUrerad some addresses on socialism In this city and county a few weeks afo, hss been addressing audiences In Salt Lake, Toole, Eureka, Pap sun. Mount Pleasant, Provo, Lrhl, Bingham Junction. Murray and Park City. I llr. Wood reports great actlrlty in the Western Federation of Miners' circles at. Bingham Canyon. Last Saturday Bight HO new members joined tha association and there are proa pert a for twice that Number to Join this week. Mr. Wood Bays: Kverywhers the miner are Jubilant with too expects' lion that their Secretary William D. Harwood may be put la the field as tha Socialist candidate for president f the Vailed Stales.' SCARCITY OF LABOR. EXAMINER: be said, "rest with the oounty attorney. but 1 have the power to begin to dissolve the articles of incorporations, aad I shall begin auch action tbe minute I secure evidence enough on which to proceed." Attorney General Breeden then proceeded to issue a general invitation to all butchers who have ever been refused meat because of cutting tbe price and to all butchers aad grocers who have ever been boycotted or tiuveteued la any way by tho unde combination, forcing them to charge the present price scale, to come to his office ln tho D. F. Walker building and talk over their experiences with him. Ho iaa'ies a further appeal to all persona who hare definite knowledge and erideuco of the existence of any combinations ln restraint of trade, to bring this evidence to him, ao that it may be used aa a basis for legal proceedings. When Informed of this rrquoat Judge E. F. Colburn said that while he did not wish to bo quoted aa a member of the Real Estate auocla-tloa- , and while he especially did not want to say a word about tha butchers matter before It had and grocers baca considered In tba meeting, still ba kuew of about 50 suits tha attorney general could pleat, nrlth good evidence to back up each null, against tha partlsa manipulating prices after stopping up all leaks through competition or otherwise. When Mked aa to hla opinion oa general commercial conditions la th city. Judge Colburn said that If prices warranted each action, all booster advertising oa Utah condlii'ms would comment about eon tala fnrorabla prices and tba coat of living, but these warn omitted through force of necessity. "The people are not going to bo starved out of this city, he eald. or locked out. through prohibitive prices, and It matters little who alerts the fight, or who carries It oa. The present rumbling is Just a beginning to what can bo expected If things get much worse, and Interest In th matter will not be confined to any one Tbe class or any one orgsnliatlun. Real Estate association- baa never once appealed fur public support la Ite present move, and has absolutely no quarrel to make at present with the butchers aud grocers. Our only contention Is to talk over with other partners In tho Board of Trade, the proposed bringing In of a fourth, by one of these." A grand Jury la another way that la mentioned today, and Attorney General Breeden says that he favora this It will then create an offmove, icial body, empowered to summon witnesses and collect evidence, a thing be considers to bo necessary before tbe state can perfect a case In many Inslaucee. over-suppl- y It it well understood bjr reliable dealer! that - - 55$ Extracts . i . as have constituted for years past the standard flavors in all the markets of this country. If the opinion of the beat data of consumer is at ail worthy of acceptance, they arc the purest, strongest, aad finest favrittfc outracta in the world. 1807. 28, th finish'd product. Th principal raw material used la the pope- - Industry are wood, usually spruce or poplar, rags (used for fine paper), old waste paper, mauila stock. Jute bagging, rope, eiraw, sulphur, clay, etc. The moat important of all the, measured by quantity and coat, la wood, la the paper and wood pulp Industry, over thru million cords ff woud, having a total value of over $30.000.0v0, were used in th year covered by the census of 1905. Th consumption of rags la this industry waa. lu tonnage, 14.992, and la value, 88,864.607. Of old or waste paper, 688,643 tons were need with a reported cost of $7,430,335. The sain of sulphur end other chemicals used In the Industry represents a total of $9,333,389. Th item of fuel waa PAPERAND INDUSTRY Interesting Official Statistics Jnst Issued by U.S. Census Experts and Imports. Bureau. $. Washington, Aug. 27. Bulletin 80, baa Juat been issued by the census bureau and was prepared under tho supervision of Mr. William M. Fteuart, chief statistician for manufactures, presents statistics relating to tha manufacture of paper end wood At the census of manufacture pulp. taken In 19u( th reported value of the products of this Industry wee Tba Industry gave em$188,718,189. ployment to 68,964 wagaaaruera, and tha capital Invested la It was reported as $277,444,471, At tha census of 1900 the value of products waa $127,126-182- ; , ; tha number of and tha investment iff capital. r, $167,897,713. Going bark tea years wa find that these items, aa reported at th census of 1890, weere as fullowa: Value of products, $78 937,184; number of capital, $89,821,51. . fur-the- 81,-05- 0; wage-earner- s, af tha Industry. This comparison shows that tha growth of tho Industry In tha Sv years between 1900 sad 1905 surpassed the growth In tha preceding ten years. Thus th value of products, which Increased by $48,388,978 between 1890 and 1905, Increased by $61,389,-03- 7 between 1900 and 1905; the capl-ts- l employed, which Increased by $77r period preced678, 165 In tb ten-yeing 19U0, increased by $109,936,756 ln tha next five years. The Increase la s wee, howtha number of ever, not quite me. great In the latter and shorter period as la th earlier and longer, being 16,311 between 1900 and 1906 aa compared with an lnrease of 18,596 between 1890 and 1900. When tbe Increases era computed on a percentage basis tbe results nr aa follows: Tha Increase ln value of products wee 61.1 per cent for the period 1890 to 1900; and 48.3 for the period 19U0 to 1906; th increase In the s was 59.9 per number of cent for tho earlier period and 33.9 per cent for the later; end tha increase in capital waa 86.5 per cent and 66.6 per cent, respectively. .Taking Into consideration tha fact i that the latter aa long aa period waa only ona-hal-f tha earlier, these percentages Indicate a greatly increased rata iff growth la the five years following 1900 aa compared with th preceding tea years. Probably, however, the actual increments given la the prevloaa paragraph are more significant aa a measure of growth than the percentages. The figures presented .la this bulletin go beck to the census of H50, when the product of this Industry was only s. $10,187,177; the number cf 1835; and the capital Invested. $r20,864. The number of establishments reported for tbe Industry waa slightly mailer la 1906 than It waa In 1900, being 761 In tho later year end 763 In the other year. It Je evident, there fore, that tha growth of tb Industry represents .production - oa a larger cate, or concent ration In larga plants. This movement . Is more clearly shown by tha average product per In 1880 It wee only establishment $32,996: ln 1890 it waa $121,639; ln wage-earner- wage-earner- Fair-mou- ed the imports by (1, 614, 450, or 46.5 per eeuL Up to 1897 tho Importation of paper exceeded la value the export, but sines that year the balance has beea tha other way. Tha exports as well ae the Import of paper-lthe year 1905 were greater than la any preceding year ta which figures are presented, la 1905, 167,604 tone of wood pulp were Imported, having a value of 94.500,958. This represented about of tho total quantity of wood pulp end fiber purchased for use la this industry. one-fift- h IRISH LEADER WONT DISCUSS. 49,-646- wage-earuera- Growth A Day, Which to Buouoar. ta Nat 6a Bad, but tha Night la Awful. Hie expur.e of paper aad manufactures of paper in 1905 is reported as $8,238,081; tha imports, aa $5,623,-63Accordingly th exports exceed- which London, Aug. 27. The c&lef secre- tary for Ireland, Mr. Birrell, enounced ia the house of commons this afternoon, (hat the government wee prepared to accept some, hut nut all, the amendments of tha house of lords to tho Irish evicted tenants Mil where- upon John Redmond, chairman of tho Irish parliamentary party, said he declined to take any further part la the discussion of the measure. Mr. Redmond accused tha government of failure to carry out its promises to th Irish people and said the for the bill ex It now stood, provided ' compulsory removal of tenants who had taken forms from evicted persons. It, therefore, waa a victory for Lord Clxnlcards, whoa evicted tenants had for twenty years been waiting at the roadside for an opportunity to eater their homes, but who would nut be able to do Bo nnder tho MU as amended by tha house of lords. It waa evident, continued he, that the Irish must close their ranks and ce n strong, menacing agitation aa the only means of eecuring proper lend left station. The Irish nationalists then left tha house tn a body and another committee was appointed to confer with the house tff lords, to see whet could be saved of the mutilated measure. ooooooooooooooooo o FOUR BURNED TO DEATH In Fire in a Building In homa City. . Okla- Oklahoma City, Aug. 27. Walter and Badle Ward, Lillian Rays and Vcigl Wallace were burned to death In a fire that destroyed a building cn east Oread Avenue. Th fire Is believed to have been lnccn-diary. wage-earner- $1,200. Carrie C. Sttlwell and hnaband to ..Via Colorado Midland Railway, Sept Anna S. Johnson, lot 11 and part of 4th and (th; greatly reduced rateo to lot 13. block 2, Valley View addition, Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Loula, Den$500. ver and Intermediate points. Write Asa W. Draney and wife to HuMa 1 II. llardlBE, Balt Lake for partlea-lara- , Johnson, lot 20, part of kit 21, block Toura truly, 6, Central Park addition, $825. U H. HARD1NO, State of ruh to Vnlted States of General Agent America, lota I and 10, block 33, Plat A. SOUTHERN PACIFIC EXCURSION Patrick Healy and wife to Majrton to Lake Taboo, Wednesday, Aug. 28; Ilesly, lot 16, block 7, Lake View ad- $23.00 round trip. Ticket good to re1900, 1166,976; and la 1905, $247,988. dition. turn until Bept. 10th. of a million. Tha or nearly Anna M. Dalton to Carl C. RasmusCON-greand 10, block 8, sen. lot IRRIGATION NATIONAL average Investment of capital per i for tbe earns period inaddition, 650. Sacramento, Cal., excuraloo via Southern Pacific, Aug. 29, SO, II, creased from $16,390 In 1850 to $138.-41- 3 la 1100, and la 1890, $219,53$ $37.(( round trip. Tickets good to reBUSINESS SCHOOL OPENED $364,579 ln 1905. turn until October SleL Principal Producing Itatee. Ml Helen M. Corbin, a rradnata The leading etata la this industry EXCURSION TO LOS ANGELES, of tba East Denver High school. Prof. on way via Saa Francisco, $4U.9(K ia New York, for which the reported Dlx Normal school and the Wood' Tickets on axle Aug. Slit and Sept product at tha census of 1905 was worth Rrtiool of Typewriting and IsL Final limit of ticket, 30 daya $37,750,605. Tb state which ranks next In value of product la Massachu-(- . Shorthand, baa opened a School of In- from data of sale. for which the return was struction on the fifth Boor of tho Maine cornea next, with n IjCwIi block. Sha cornea from DenWANTED ver ably recommended. Is a thorough value iff prodnrt reported at $22,961-12student of bualne Then come, In tha order named. methods, aa apTwenty-fiv- e yming men to study Wisconsin ($17344,174), Pennsylvania plied through shorthand sod typewrit- shorthand. Poaitlona guaranteed. If ($15,411,032). and Ohio ($10,961,527). ing. and baa succeeded In forming e they complete the course, or tuition These six etetee produced In the agclue of prospective office boys and refunded. to the value of girls. Two front rooms have been WANTED Homes for young men gregate products 73.0 per cent of fitted up nicely by Mira Corbin, on representing to be used as a typewriting room and and young women while attending the total production of tho United the other aa a shorthand room. The school Are willing te do light work 8tatea. Graham system le taught at the new for board, or will pay money. Products, WANTED Good boarding places Of tbe total value of the product bualne school, and Mlu Corbin will teachfur conveniences modern with conduct classes dolly. ($189,715,189), new paper represented ers. $35,006,480; book paper, $37,403,801; WANTED-Twe- nty teachers to fill line paper. $22,241,170; wrapping paand for work calls graded ungraded STOCKHOLDERS $30,438,892; boards, $10,959,857. In schools outside of Ogden. Wages per. Tha aggregate value of tissue papers waa $5,086,428; of blotting paper, Stockholder of the fntcrmonnlnin good. WAN! ED Every young man or Fair association, whose stock was of building, roof, asbestos $1,046,790; to woman read in Ogdea my end sheathing papers, 64J45.628: and old for assessment, hove the privilege young of redeeming their stock any time be- catalogue. Address J. A. 8MITH. of banging, or wall, paper, $3,013,464. fore September 1. 1907, by surrenderIn tba Interval between 1900 aad College Court, Ogdea, Utah. 1905, the production of arwa paper Ining old certificate and paying the Ind. Fhone, 944; Bell 11H-Y- , phone, costs up to date. This privilege waa creased la value $15,814,586, or 78.7 per cent; the production of book par granted at the request of a number POUR MORE BATTLESHIPE TO of stockholders, who forgot to pay or 60.4 per cent; STRENGTHEN AMERICAN NAVV. per by $13,832,500. and that of fine paper, consisting their assessment. Aa the association la well on the road to success, the New York. A if. 27. Congressman mainly of writing paper, by 66.353.196, or A0 per cent. At the census of 1908, opportunity afforded will be welcome Roberta of Massachusetts who, with were reto absent-mindemembers. other members uf the naval commit- 913.822 teas of news paper ported; 515.517 tons of book paper, tee, Investigated tha needs of Brook- and 131.934 tens iff writing paper. HICH PRICES lyn navy yard, eald that the trip of Turk leads In the production the battleships via the stralta of Ma- of New news paper, reporting a product iff reasons for tactical is alone. Attorney General leeues an Invitation gellan $13,468,098, which waa rather more Said he: to Butchers to Testify. d of the total product of "We all believe the Sues route than tbe United Mates, in the production but easier and rheaper. by going by The fornnl purpose of a meeting of hook paper, Massachusetts Is the last night In tbe Balt Lake Chamber tbe harder rente we will determine leading state, the reported product of of Commerce was tn investigate the some of our need In the Pacific, parsta- this state being $7,616,048, which was matter of the la coaling ticularly of the Butchera' allowing advisability almost of the total product and mainland. and Grocers' association to become a tions of the United States. In the producdoubt. "1 not have the bat slightest member cf tbe Board of Trade, shara million dollars will be need np tion ff fine paper. Massachusetts la of the that ing tbe present headquarter in the Pacific route, bet If naval tac- by far the most important state, reManufacturers and Merchants' assowish to determine certain porting 66 per cent of the total quanticians ciation, and affiliating with It la a contity of fine paper produced, and 67.3 now la the time." things, solidation of office force. per cent of the total value. chairman of Foes, Kepreeeetetive Tha Real ftate association called Materials. said the committee tbe cemmittee, the meeting and dr minded the inves- would The total cost of materials used ln ask congress to autigation on the charge that the butch- thorise probably this Industry In 1996 waa returned as four more battleships. ers and grocers are not really carryWe may aa well make np our $111,251,478. Of this total, $37,633,164 tho out of their organing purposes to represented the cost of wood pilp end minds now that It is isation, ae announced, but are carry- maintain a large fleet lnnecessary fiber purchased. Wood palp appears the Pacific,' a on In of combination restraint ing ns a product of the Industry aa well said Pm. trade that Ignores the general welon that as a material Considering the In"Our Interest Is ton fare in looking out fur the welfare of coast to do otherwise." great dustry as a whole, wood pulp la essenIts members. tially a partially finished product. Its were When the charges first made prominence Is a material la th pubtrade-unio- n of The garment workers, lished statistics depends upon the ex they fen like a bombshell upon the trade-uniopublic, as a boost Just made la butter end the mesters employing tant to which the paper mlls purlabor, in England.bave favor- chased wood pulp and coal prices bad already stirred and fibre from ably considered the suggestion to other mills opinion to an aggressive state. for aale. Of It making Attorney General M. A. Breeden fight the sweating system by a union the total wood pulp produced. 10.6 per said that he was wateblng the out- label tn be affixed to all garments cent was made fur sale. Ia 190 the come of the meeting with the keenest blade under fair conditions. corresponding proportion wa 65.2 per Ini event. cent. This indicates a growing tenOho criminal features f tho case, WANT AM BRING BUI RESULTS, dency to combine the manufacture of one-quart- er Wood-niami- 7. d one-thir- one-fourt- h Understood AUGUST WEDNESDAY, $136,-930,79- 9, Washington. IX C., Aug. 27. Tho Vnlted Stales la not the only country where scarcity of labor has lieeoms a cause of serious study. Consular advices from Germane Indicate of the labor mar-he- t Hint th has disappeared entirely and that a scarcity has set la. Such a condition has not existed within the kaiser's domains since 1900. Only In tha year 3999 waa the scarcity of help felt more than now. la tbe Iron Industry the business for the month of June was heavier than for May aud nearly all reImportant Iron Industrial center port a acarrtty of labor. Apparently the only line of work that suffered a relapse In this regard waa tbe building trades, which la mainly dnp to Inclement weather, tightness la the money market and the many strikes In that branch. The mining business has Improved to such an extent that although many men from tho building branch were employed la the mines, the dernsnd for skilled labor could nowhere be sufficiently supplied. The lack of tailors alao la much complained of, while tbe scarcity of female servants is greater than ever before. Flavoring UTAH. wood pulr and William H. Little, proprietor of (ha street, Central hotel oa Twenty-fift- h waa suddenly summoned by death at tea minutes to four o'clock yesterday afternoon. With hla wife and her slater, whose home la in Logan, but who has bean trialling with tha Ltttiaa for a few days, ha had Juat partaken of a late lunch in their private apartments, and la a vary happy stood, paaaed Into tho office of tbe hotel. Before Mra. Little had commenced to clear tha table, on of tho patrona conveyed to her tho message that a man had fainted la the office, tlho was aooa at hla aide and succeeded la bringing her husband hack to consciousness. Ho aakod h r not to have him taken upstairs, as ha waa no sick ho feared It would kill him. He then aakod for a drink of cold water, and la a few moments after drinking it, expired. Medical aid had beea summoned, but the end cams so suddenly that ho waa doad before the doctor arrived. William H. little was born near Augusta, Georgia, October 4. 1840. Af this place ho and hla family Joined tha Latter! tay Bnlnta church and rams to Ogdea about 19 years ago. In May, HMiS, he went oa a mission to tb Southern elates, aad labored ia Atlanta and Augusta the greater portion of the time. Before hla release bo waa given permission to visit among some of tha old Confederate soldiers, many of whom wero hla In the four yearn struggle of civil strife. After completing an honorable and faithful mission ho returned to hla mountain home hut September, and immediately assumed the management of the Central hotel. Since hla return from tho south, Mr. Uttle'a health baa not been good, but ao hint carnc to him that hla condition was serious. At tha time of hla death he waa la hla Tth year, and la survived by SPECIAL PACIFIC UNION two wives and eleven children, all of east, Bept. 4th, fith. Ogden to whom are la Utah, except a daughter, Omaha and Mr. Halley who ' Uvea la Georgia. Denver and return, $19.75; Members of the family have been Kansas City, $38.00; Bt. Louis, $39.60; ooiumnn!ratr-- with, and moat of them Chicago, $44.50. Return, limit, OcL am expected to arrive la the city by list Stopovers allowed. tonight, when the funeral arrangeOREGON SHORT LINE EXCURB-lo- n ments will be decided upon. to Powell, Idaho, daily Bept 1st to 4th. Account Big Hist River land Co. open for entry 30,000 acre land WARRANTY DEEDS under tbe Carry Act $8.20 round William I, Brown and wire to tho trip. Tickets good to return until Oregon Short Una, lota 14 and 16, In Bept 16th. block d, lota T and I, In block 7, Park addition, $80. FRUIT GROWERS . John G. I .arson and wife to Elisabeth K. Barrows, lot 18, block 8, We want peaches and apples. Woodmanace Mala Street addition, Call and getyour boxes to pack them la. $8,(00, THE H. U GRIFFIN CO. Augusta C. LlndblaJ to Peter J. , Flab-AErickson, part of lot 9. block $6, SEPTEMBER EXCURSIONS. com-panlu- POPE. n oooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooo o o o o O FANIC ON A STREET CAR. La Crosse, Wi., Aug. 27 ' A fast passenger train on the Bt Paul railroad atruck n street car filled with pas- aengera at a crossing and one mn waa seriously injured. A greet panic ensued among tho other sixty pauengsrs hut none suffered more, than O scratches. O O O O O O O O O o O O O O O O O O O O O o OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO " THE LORDS PRAYER. Shewing the Bueossslve Changes In the English Language. - Few scholars area are aware of the greet changes through which the English language haa passed In successive centuries. Following are peel mens of the Lord's Prayer as used at various periods In English history: e A. D. 1188 Fader ur beune, belth thl neune, cumin thl kuneriche, thy wUl booth ldon in beune and In erthe. The euryeu dawv hclend, gif ous thUk daws. And vorxlf uer detters as vi younrifen ure dettoure And lene ns nougkt into temtatioa, hot delyvor eus of evtl. Amen. A. D. 1300 Fader ure la heaven, halewya be thl name, thl kingdom coma, they wills be done ae In hevene and earths. Oua ortho days bred give us to day. And forgive euro detee as we (forgive out detteuree. And lead ns nor la temptation, bote us of yvU. Amas. A. D. 1370 Oara fodlr that art la bounce, hsllowld be thl asms, thl kingdom some to, ba thl wills done In ln henna, gave te na this on re aarthe breed oure other aubateace forgone to we fergeuen to cure pee oure dettis detonris. led us net into .temptation, but delyeur oa yveL Amen. A. D. 1634- -0 oure father which arte In heves, hallowed by thy name. Let thy king dam come. They wyell be fulfilled ae wall Is earth as It Is In heaven. Give na this days sure dsyly breda. And forgive us our trseperee even as we forgive ear traepacere And lead us not Into temptation, but Setyvsr us from evalL Fyr thyae is the kladome and tho power and the glexya for ever. Amen. A. D. 1561 Our father which ere la heeuen, Beatified by thy name. Let thy kingdom come. Thy will ho dans, ae la heeuen, tat sarth ala. GK no today ear sspentaetM bread. And forgive as our defies as we forgive our detters. And lead us not Into temptation. But delivers us from evil hale-weld- ur Amen. A. D. 1711 Our father which are to he oen, hallowed by thy seme. Thy kingdom come. Thy wUl he don In earth aa It le la bee nan. Give ns this day our dsyley bread. And faigtve ns . enr debts ws forgive anr debtor. And lead ns nat Into temptation, but dallver us from evil. For thyne to the klndome, end tbe power, and the glory forever. Amen WANT Bib! RBOZ BM- - RESULTS. During e polar winter the avenge thickness ef ice ea tb ocean whan ne atonus or strong tides interfere reaebse six fact or more. There to really ao warm areaun. Evas during tha tong eemmar daya enow atiil fall frequently. Clear spells are relatively warm, but, especially la tb antarctic, toga and clouds are frequauL white winds bring tow temperaturea. Kerertbeleae the summer near the urglue af the arctic aoa to described la tho Journal ef Geography as berlug clean, pur, crisp air. free from dust and with little precipitation. Tb monotony and derkasee of th polar night to dorreseed a good deal by tba tong twilight, da to tbe high degree of refraction at lew temperatures. Tha eua artaaHy appears and disappears same days before and after which are geometrically eat the tn for tho ebango. Light from nfoea and stars and from tha aurora also relteva the daifcaeoe. Optical phenomena of greet variety, beauty and complexity are common. Botor and lunar haloes end corona and mock suns and mao as are often aaen. Aarssaa seem to ba tore common end less brilliant ln tbe antarctic than ta the arctic. Buneet and sunrise colors within tba polar aonea are described ae beiag extraordinarily Militant and Impressive. Tbu the aerth pelar eumekar. In eplte of its drawbacks, to In sees respects a pleaaaat and ksaltkflil seasaa. Bet the polar night to monotonous, depressing, as everlastingly uniform repelling, anew covert ug. rigidity. Ufetaeaoeee, except for tbe bowl of th gal or til cracking of tb ice. BmaU wonder that the polar sight man's anbalanred sometimes haa minds. Th first effects are often n strong desire for sleep end Indiffers ence. Later effects bare beea and aerveuenaee, tending la extrema cases to Insanity, anaemia, digestive trouble. Extraordinarily low winter temperatures are easily borne if tbe air is dry and still. Nausea notes "net very cold" at n temperature of 23 degrees when the air wee still. Another arctic explorer at degrees says, "It to too warm te kata Zara weather seeme pleasantly refreshing If clear aad calm. But high relative humidity aud wind, even a light breesa, give th same degree of cold a penetrating feeling of chill which may be unbearable. Thus tb damper air of spring and rammer usually sea in much colder than tbe drier air of winter, although the temperatures may b the asm. When exposed directly to tb sir, tb akin burns and blisters, tha lips swell and crack. Thirst hss been much complained of by polar explorers and to asraly due to tho active evaporation from the warm body Into tbe dry, relatively cold air. Threw to ao doubt that polar air to insularly free from micro organ Ism a, n fact which to duo chiefly ta lack of communication with other parte of th world; hence diseases which ere common b temperate son, colds nmoug them, are rare. slesp-toeadee- Gull as LKa fiavera. wouldn't no more kill a gull than 1 would a baby said the sailor. "Why notr ."Why not? Been see gulls has saved my Ef A thats why net Gwlls to life avers. Theyve saved the llvee of thonseads of aeamen. They ought to all wear round their sleek white necks a pink silk ribbon with cue oftbem there Andy Carnegie medals tied te It Wunet, elf tbe Orkneys, la a tog, wa lost nor bearin', and we'd ha na aground and drowned euro If tbe loud creamin' ef the guile ea tha cliffs hadnt give na timely warnin'.' Be 1$ goes. Time after time la black, stormy Bights, in mists and fogs, gulls' cries, as good aa any tog bora, warns sailors wbxt baa lost their way off deadly coasts. 1 Epicurean Fiaeeaa. Two Mamelllatoee were dtnev using the . best method of eating gam. "Well," said cue, If it ta a woodcock, I bang it np on a null by the beak and fasten soma larks onto Ms daws. After n week I throw away tbe woodcock and set tho larks, which by that time have absorbed nil the flavor of the woodcock. "I do the same." replied th other, net to be outdone, except that I throw away tba larks as wall as tb woodcocx, and eat tha nail. Boa Ylvaat A Ooed Beginning. "My beau, raid little Elsie, "to going to he an admiral." "Indeed!" replied the visitor. A cadet at tbe Navel academy now, I sop- pouf ho' hant got that for yet, bat .Oh, Mi had aa anchor tattooed oa bis arm. Catholic Ftgpdard qad Timas. Superstition and tha Wadding Ring. When a wedding ring baa warn aa this aa to break, the tapers tltloua believe that either the busband or the wife will eooa die. TMe may be reaa obvtera superstition and garded perhaps aceeunte far the fact that wedding rlxgsar now made so much thicker aad . heavier than formerly. Graud Magaslna. ' Prodda Fsar. They pees plate of cakes te Freddy at dceesrt He pata out his baud, hesitates, then draws it back aad begins foery- - "What are you crying fori" asks hta "Because you are going te eeold mo whoa I cheese th biggest see." Origin ef Well Kastra, having called at the bone of tb poet Kanina, and tka maidservant having toM him. ea hie inquiring at tho door, that Banins wee not at tome, saw that ahe had said ao by hm mister's order aad that be was really wttMn, aad when few days afterward Ennius called at Nesica's house and Inquired for Mm at the gate Naalca cried out that ha was set at heme. "WbatF ay Eanlas. "Do I not kaow your voice?" "You are ea impudent follow rejoined Keeka. "Whoa I Inquired far you, I halier ed year servant when she Said me that you were aot at home, and will act yw baUev me whan I tel yen that I am net at bamer Ucero'a "V Oratera. i HEW CLASS - Rais la Wages Brought Ua- sapactad Results. Mrs. Baker, a waU do Ud to Maggie- u ef the suburbs of a Urge ea.tere waa ? fortunate lu bavin an exedufl errant Maggie was capabieT and good uatured. Most of the Ua, , wtfm Um fortuome- -i t few cf them were wtthuiu their trial. At aU the faahtaiubo dwtiM toga the eeavanwtteu turned, . aeudl to tha pole, straight to tbe asm Ject f servants. Mra. Baker said very Ihu. for eha bad often noticed that an aauomiZ meat of perfect wtiafactijn la the d. mastic Ilea was frequently falkored later oa by a second auaouaMmam ta t th effort that tha maid had baas offered higher wages by Mra. fi ead-eaad had gone to get them. Therefore Mra Baker followed Rabbit's tactics uf "toyin' low." Br, . Mare than this, ah decided te bo very diplomatic. Bhe would offer Mag. fi more wages herself and thus serum bar before any one else had a She waa pleased with her plan. pei-foc- o Now, Maggie, ah said tha next morning, "youre bean very faithful and cheerful during ftita hat ssmimr and through Dorothy's r. and I Uka your work so well that Im going v rale your wages from $5 to 86." Maggie thauked her. aad Mra Bail smiled at tha thought of her ewe to. tuteoees. On Monday morning, few days ut. r, ahe had occasion te visit her m-f- c ea after breakfast Instead af taring tbe usual small ef suds and team, she found Maggie aeatod at tha table. "Why, wheres th washing?" Shed. "Whats th nutter? Are roe uir Oh, nn mem. replied Maggie airily, sick. Bat non of tbe girls as "I aint gets $6 does any washing. The six dollar glrta bee It done for ma, yon know." Mra Baker hss act triad any more diplomatic plans. Tenth's Coopanko. HUMOR OF LONDON CABBIES. Boom ef Thsir Remarks Whoe the Tip I Not Perihsemiag. Borne of tbe hansom fraternity sf London have no sens of bum or. but tbe majority are decidedly facetious, Here are soma aye London Tit-Bit- examples cf witty and sarcastic a. T appreciate them properly It mnst be understood that tbe fore his offered n single hilling ln iyment far e ride Just within th two mile limit "Are you quite euro you eau ware thief" remarks tbe cabby with a bump ef humor. D'ye think youll be able to rub along on the ether nineteen till next Friday? It'a goto' the pace, you'll take my tip, gnrtoor, rasa another form ef gentle reproach. Trail go and see an oculist. Ton toiled Ibis Mm by mistake. Ton wauls a rod or green or yellow hue. Block aint ta oar line nt nil." "Thank yar, govnor," says snottor cnbby, with apparent emotion; thank per, kindly. Yer offer Is well maast but I couldnt g for te do It" Bsylxg which ho makes a pretense of haadlsg tbe shilling back hi tbe aatouisM fore. "But I can't sail him, gurtoor, and tint's fact Yer tondsoms buffer'd make me rich for Mfe, bat I Ml per I rest sell Mm. One cabby, who woe an excrtlest so tor, w receiving his shilling bunt bits tears and between hie loud sobs Jetted out: I'm sorry yen force It ra na guv nor, I am really. The hlnconw tax peoplell be down on me now. An excellent cabbylsm" was lu tbe suburbs rae nlgfat A tbe fore tot himself Into tbe kens hs was regaled somewhat as Mlossi "Go in quietly, sir, ln rase tb M woman wakes up end cere me drtrtff way. She might stop tbe rest of yer pocket money ter this extravagance. perps-tinte- d A Bit of BuperetRisa Superstition to by ao mesas dead, even in nitre civilised England, mjs London Answare. One Bonday.t few months ego. an Interesting proof of this foct was seen ln the purlsh church ef Bntcnmbe, in north Devon. A woman who suffered from epilepsy ! tn tba porch ns tbe congregation can out from morning service, and thirty married men, who at her request hid attended church, passed her era hr one. Ae they passed each dropp'd penny lu her Up. The thirtieth to a tb pennies and gevw tb wonos half crown, which was to be msdrWe n ring tor her te wear. Tela sop Yet anotbrt tion,' you exclaim. women, sloe n martyr te epileptic Mg who wait through the ram ceremoey nt the name place nineteen yram f 'has never wtoro suffered. A Vsyaa ef Dooth. m In the Bee of Okbotak the ralmoe titeteei ud om ef the moat stxniuf example ef the spendthrift nature may bt found in th that run into thin ran. Wbea A old th anhnoB begin n death. Asoridlng the river of tbr fancy they net In nrantlcra theraw patrona until lack of food rne of elbow reran kill them off. A mw however traveler declares that ail Hone of salmon may river, net one ever luseiee tie again elive. What become riven ef dead selmoa? The wheel down open upen their eyre, raenilag dntnty. Been, wotvee. comfort ledge dogs nre medo - ; r r the yenr. to " J Jjjjfjj " ) Easily Rep'erad-- Mr. Festrat (with to tional elopement! tTell. whet think ef ffimt? Yeuag 'JZ off with hie fhtherto sltoF1 Mra Fnrtrat Heavens! YTbjr. brook the poor old mento hrart Fastest Oh. I Cent knew. Ttej Just as pretty wtenogrsyherewars ployment agency as ovsr Pack "T- 1 A Weigh went to get n pair ef marked (ho eustomeeumtavoafe awtef - - |