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1 . 2 THE OGDEN STANDARD, OGDEN, UTAH, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1913. I Your scrubbing is done in half the I j time, with half the work, with w I GOLD DUST I Washes dishes, pots, pans, windows I I ; and cleans everything in a jiffy. I 5c and larger packages j I lB EHFAlRBANKsaS g I j 1 Pf 'Ae GO.0 0Sr TWINS I L io yoir work" Iju If WOLGAST DEFEATS I BATTLING NELSON Milwaukee. Or" U. Ad- W'olgast. of Cadillac. Mich., detested Batillnc ! Nelson of Hegcswirh. Ill . in a ion- round no-declslon boxing (oulcni it the EImo arena here last night Wal gnst had t lie better of eight of the ten rounds while two ere oven The contest was one of the hardest and fastest ever seen here. W'olgast fought a clean, swift uat tle and three times had the Dane groggy. He used his left to the chin and right to the face with great force but the Battler alwavB came back hard, j Nelson bored in continually and at I ARROW II COLLAR Cloctt. Pmbodr & Co.. Inc. Miktn ! 1 L. Su Woo Herb Co. Consultation Absolutely Free. i Our wonderful I BKMJBBF. nerb fHE wiii I 'f-- .. H cure diseases of hkli the H7flBB liver, WmjL. jH stomach, kid Hpwflff I pneumonia, cod- ' constipation, dy sentery, weakness, nervousness, dlzzl neBs, neuralgia, headache, iumhago, appendicitis, rheumatism, malaria bladder troubles and diabetes, blader troubles and diabetes, 2461 Grant Ave. OGDEN. UTAH. linis showed flashes of his old lime I form, but his blows lacked force Both tired toward the end of the i contest, but Wolgast was far the fresh er at the close. Blood was flowing from the Dan" s . nose, car and lips from the hard blows of the Cadillac boxer Charlie White of Chicago chailcng ed the winner before the end of the ! bout and Jimmy Brltt was introduced to the big crowd of spectators In a preliminary Jimmy Duttcn m Liverpool. England, was outpointed In six rounds by Freddie Andrews of Milwaukee. DENIES PANIC ON BOARD VOLTURNO London, Oct. 14. -,n a long 6torv contributed to the Daily Mail, c r Hart of the Associated Newspapers, a passenger on the Ca-mania. denies i emphatically that theic was panic on I the Yoluirno. but addr.: "1 hop- I never ma again witness such a seer.c of abject despair as was depicted on the faces of the poo pie huddled on the Yolturno's stern when they realized that we were jkjw erless to help them " He attributes failure of the passen grs to jump into the 6ea when the Carmanla s as near enough to save them, to fright or lack of understand ing of the language. Rescue Amanng. Describing how the sur Ivors finally were taken off. he says, it was amaz j ing how (uiekly they were lowered! j over the side and tho honts sent away. It looked like an exhibition ; drill The captain of the s'eanu-r. Devo ; nlan. in a wireless dispn cfa the fire in the Yolturno broke out in tfa : baggage room forward He adds: "One of our lifeboats which tried in ; vain to reach the Volturno, was .- in vhlla being hoisted aboard, but the ere were saved." Three of Crew Burn nother wireless dispatch from the I operator aboard the Czar sas thai Ithtee of the Volturno s crew were burner! to death in the forecastle The Yolturno s wlrelcs apparatus was kept in action by bracing the tot tering foremast and lasted until the operator was forced to leave his cab In One of the czar's boats rescued 5S women and children. Th latter wrere hoisted from the boats In mattress, covers. "The Yolturno." adds the dispatch, "lasted well. The helm kept her stem to the wind. Her plates became red hot and buckled. Hissing clouds f steain rose from the water line, while the burned rigging swung from tho foremast One woman was being low ered from the vessel and fell and struck the boat's gunwme and was killed " MAJOR HUGHES IS COURTMARTIALED San Francisco. Oct 14. -Court mar tial proceedings against Major James B. Hughes, first cavalry, L" S. A., ended hero yesterday The verdict was not made public. Major Hughes is believed to have been tried for violation of tho sixty second article of war, known in the service as a 'blanket article," cov ering general offenses. Interaper ance is alleged to have been one of the charges against him. An excel lent record as a field officer was urged in his behalf The findings of the court will be re lowed b officers or the western division and will not have to' go to Washington Ou BELIEVES THERE IS NO NEW CONTINENT Juneau, Alaska. Oct 14 Captain Otto Sverdrup. who was master of Nanf-en's ship Fram. on Nnnsen's po lar expedition In 1S93. believes the existence of a new continent north of Asia is impossible "Nanscn drifted over the area and found nothing but water," said Cap tain Sverdrup. who now is at the heart of a whaling com pan rating in the North Pacific "While if Is possi ble the Russian explorers found a small Island or two. any extensile lands would have been known lone ago." CHILD LABOR 1$ CAUSE OF CRIME: I I Irregular Meals, Exposure and Sickness Leads to Viola tion of Law. Indianapolis Ind . Oct. 14 Child labor with its accompanying poverty is one of the chief causes of adul: as well as juvenile crime, Dr A J McKelway f Atlanta. Ga.. declared lasl nlghi in an iiddress before the Smerlcau Prison association In see slon here Governor Kupene N Foss lot Massachusetts spoke on The Ideal I Prison System for a State, and w l.l Manna, provincial secretary of (in jtario on "What Ontario Is Doing With Her Prisons and Prisoners." The Irregular meals, the exposure ami alcknesa to which the child who works Is subject. Is the cause of much Clime, lr McKelway asserted anil tin urged that the most effective way to stop law violation was to en force antl- hlld labor laws. Penal System a Failure. Governor Foss declared that the penal system of the United States a .1 m hole had failed more complete!) than any other department of gov eminent large pan of the failure, he said, was due to the evil of polit cal Influence He condemned i In ssiern that permit! the sale of en vict labor "The fate of the small offender." he said, "too often depends upon the temperament of his particular judge Governor Foss said that it had been found that sending a man Jail would noi i ure him of using IntOXl cams and that lie hoped his state soon would save established colonies foi i he treatment Of drunkards. AMERICAN FORCED INTO MEXICAN ARMY Mexico City. Oct 1 4 Representa tions have been mad' by the Ameri can embass to the .Mexican foreign! office that it lias come to the knowl- dec of the embassy that an morl .an. (' Rousettl. has been arrested and forced to enter the army, now on the way to yuintana Roo. The for eign minister has marie an investiga tion and if is understood bas sent In structlons that he be returned to the eapitol. Consul Philip C Hanna. at Monte rey. has wired that he is unable to communicate with the American refit gees marooned between Ifonterej and Laredo. A special train from Tor reon. with other merlcan. German. English and Mexican refugees is re ported to have arrhed at Hlpollto and is expected to reach Monterex todav A member of the party of which General Felix Diaz Is leader, is authority for t he statement that Ceper.il Diaz Intends to remain at lit vana for a time. He regards it is futile to continue on to Mexico for th- purposes of pushing his campaicn Frederlco Gamboa and Manual Calero are busy preparing for the elections nfl RAPID INCREASE IN EXPORTS PREDICTED Washington. Oct. 14 Substantia! increase In exports from the United States to the west coast of South American countries In the first sev en months of the current year lead trade experts at the stale depart m M toda U) predict that this increase will be much more rapid as soon as the Panama canal Is In operation. The value of exports from th'- United Stat.-s in these count ric-s during the first seven months of 1912 and I'M. respectively was as follows: Peru. $4 ."ai.'.i :v : n:.SM . $9,129,794 $8834977; Ecuador. $1,468, 806, $1,1)19,902. oo DEMOCRATS WILL NOT TAKE OVER TELEGRAM OPTION Salt Lake. Oct. 14 With the fail ure of the Democratic committee In charge of the negotiations for the darting or the acquiring of a news paper, to take action last night it became ussured that toe Democrats would not become interested In the option secured by George K. Hale on I ' he Kvening Telegram When the Democratic state com mittee met a week aso It appointed a special committee to devise ways and means of establishing a part organ In Salt Lake. Mr. Hale was Invited to present his proposition and a subcommittee was appointed to consider the offer among other things. It Is said that the offer of Mr Hale required the ruislnc of $40. ni ip by yesterday. Inasmuch as this wai not in sight at the expiration of the offer last night, the Democrats ;re sad to have definitely lost Iden Miy with the Telegram deal. While reports were current yes terday that Mr Hale had closed ins option on tho Telegram, the report w.i. denied by Mr. Halo la-st night. Mr Hale denied that ho had bad any idea that the Democrats would ccme through with anv monev for the Telegram by la6t night. "Thej may have understood among themaelvee," ho saJii, that the ne gotiations did not definitely expire until last night, but 1 had ionc ago given up any idea that, they would cccpi the terms of the proposition I had made to them Fames II. Moyle, chairman of the rub-committee which has the matter Of establishing a party organ in charge, said last night that nothing f.iriher was under consideration with reference to tho Telegram deal at this Mme, and denied that tho sub commlttee was to moot last night to discuss the proposition for the last time, and to decide definitely to ac cent or to reject it. oo SUPREME COURT TO DECIDE TEST CASE Washington, Oct. 14. Assistant Attorney General Dentson will file in the supreme court today the gov ernment's brief In the case of Chino Lee against tho United States, in ohiug tbe constitutionality of a Philippine law which make s the more possession of opium for prlate use a crime, Iee contends that such a Statute illegally restricts his person al liberty. The government s brief argne thai the Btate was within tho explicit scope of the power given to the co l men) of the islands by congress, that the act was constitutional, and that the conviction of Lee was valid. Th. government the brief admls. I nipped the Chinaman but declares the crime was originated and exe- uic d by Leo himself. W . Read tho Classified Ads. CHAMP CLARK TO STAV AT CAPITALj Cannot Neglect Duties at Washington to Speak in California. San ITanclsco, Oct 1 i Champ Clark, speaker of the house of re pre sentativoB, will not tome to CallfOl ; nia to fulfill lecture engagements next month as he had planned It a h-iier received yesterday by Presi 1 dent Allen L. ChlCkering of the San Francisco Commercial club, the speak er expresses his determination not to i leave Washington during the present session. "It is not right as I see it, for a man to take the government's mones for discharging the duties of an of ! fire atid then neglect the duties of that office," states Mr. Clark in his letter "Twice the Democrats of the House have bestowed upon me the I gheSI honor In their gift and 1 don'' propose to neglect the duties of Mint office to go on the lecture platform and lecture for mono, it does not seem fair to them or to the count r " DREADNOUGHTTEXAS NEARS COMPLETION Washington, Oct, 14. The dread nought Texas, building at Newport News, Va.. Is 96.2 completed, and heads the list of battleships now un der construction, the New York be ing built at New York navy yard, it a tiding seeood. having advanced to S3 ft per c ent towards completion. Buy Now and enjoy tbe full Benefit of the entire season. That suit, coat or dress you want is here. Open a Charge Account with us. The Destroyer Alwin, at 77 per mn towards completion, heads that c)ag of craft now building, with the Park- j I er a lose second Tiie submarines I H-l and H-2 tie in the race for com pletlon in their lass each standing ft! 'i7 7 per cent finished. Of the " o submarine tenders being built the Fulton is ix. completed and the Bushnell was started during ihe I month of October. The gunboats Mo nanacy and Palos. both building nt the Mare Island navy yard, stands tin 83.9 completed The figures were made public today by the nav bureau of construction and repair. no Read the Classified Ad. II 1 SMOKING TOBACCO 1 than any ready-made cigarettes money can buy. (Enough for Forty Hand-made Cigarettes in Each 5-cent Sack) j "Bull" Durham hand-made cigarettes have a fresh fragrance and satisfying flavor not pos- ! sible in ready-made cigarettes. Their natural ! mildness, delightful smoothness and pleasing coolness afford complete enjoyment and lasting I ! a book of 'paper sS&sL Get a sack at the nearest dealer's j '" today "roll your own" and en- j -jj' i'M "Bull" Durham is smoked ll B ky more millions of men j lj Ll: wf than all other high-grade jj J I tobaccos combined! II " ' ' IS NOT PLA ANY LO SH m