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Show lorroftiAL ROOM independent PtMM Va!l 'Phan, two riiigi ff'JfllNEflfi NaM Than, aaa flag ......Ns. ATTRACTS M MANY BREVITIES NEW Th local police fore gut busy again yesterday and Bra aalooaa vara pulled lor violating tha Sunday rloalng ordinance. They vara tha Milwaukee. Royal Exchange, Pacific, St. Louia and Board at Trad a aalooaa. OGDEN TABERNACLE ORED BY PRESIDENCY. FAV- Praise far Acquiring New Organ and Congratulation fas Excellent Cenrittien ef Stake. team attached to one of the delivsecond counsellor Anton M ery wagons of Wright A Bona hacatna President Joseph P Smith. and Franatreet Twenty-fourtHie on frightened Twelve hill lata Saturday avanlng anl dashed cis M. Lew. president of tha who adwere thoae among U to Apatite. a a tha agon into pel. ainaahlng oceo. Tha hay driver in aonie ear dressed the regular.) quarterly of Weber Stake ef Zion at the oacaped injury There Ogden Tabernacle yesterday. edithe arssiema mere two and again craaaa milk and Planty of sweet to fice wholly inadequate proved P. Parry, ptaw alarayn an hand. T. the large gatherings It 111. wae probably this that enthused the la .Tha fuuaral of Harry G. Cooley, who speakera to announce themselves new tabernacle for this tbs died as a reault of injuries austalnad fkvor of a church In tha C.artnev, Nov., wrack, was bald largest stake in tha Martin new organ reoeutiy Installed ia from tha Lindquist undertaking par Tha wealth lorn yesterday afternoon. Thera waa the Tabernacle came In for n n large attendance of tha colored pop- of pralap at the hands of the spkere the great ulation and a number of floral offer aa well as those who heard first time Educalaatmmant the fer narvlrea Brief and lutpreaalve Inga, tha were held. Burial waa made la the tional matters sad the fact that of the church favor church presidency city eematery. school were among (he other ImportA. G. Hon haa removed hie law ant topic discussed from the speakacademy offices over Badcon'a Drug Store, er's stand. ! want ti see thenew taker flrat aad then a where ha la prepared to meat auy and computed with a seating capacity of all partlaa desiring the aarrloaa of an ancle waa the word of one of those attorney who addressed the meetings and through tha whole of the two aewaiuna FIRST LEAGUE CAME this expression seemed to meat with A t- h obu-fere- favor. Weber Stake Baaket Ball Tea ft atari at Prsvs Saturriay, Da- game of In' somewhat basket ball at the B. Y. IT. gymnasium at Provo Saturday fretting the Weber Slake academy team was defeated by the B. Y. I'. Iat year champions by a eons of ? to B. Commenting on the game the , correspondent, of ' n Salt Lake paper aaya: "The Weber Stake team is young, small and Inexperienced in the game, tbla being their flrnt year, hut with all this against them, they played a splendid game. The interference and guard plays were the feature of the contest tonight. Most of the hunch have the earmarks of coming stars In I ha game. tha Weber Blngbnm, Stake right forward, played a flna gams, and scored oae of tha hardest Held baskets of tha night. Ha also handled the hall well from the foul line. The B. Y. C hoys all played wall la thoir savers! positions, and a marhad Improvement mas aeen in thair team work. Chrlatensaa, thair canter, had tha beat of tha gams in the toaa-up- . sad put the ball In play s of the time. Rose about waa al over the floor, and landad Held goals at will. Chamberlain waa also in good form, nnd placed the ball in tha baakot from hard positions. Grsea-woonnd ferklna had their handa full watching their opponent n, but managed to land a number of baaket a. The lineup of the two tea mi fellows: B. T. D. W. B. A. . Left Forward. Chamberlain .Brown Right Forward. Rose Bingham one-side- nine-tenth- d iiMn,i..i Center.1 . Christen sen Greenwood Left Guard. Watson Greenwood Right Guard. Perkina Hancock Referee Metcalf. Umpire Teatscl Halve IQ minutes. Attendance MO. Bask eta from field Rom, Id; Chamberlain, $; parkins, S; Christen sen, ; Greenwood, 1; Bingham, 1. Free throw Rose, C; Bingham, S.1 Tha second league game fur the local team will be played at the new armory building next Friday evening, when their opponent will be the A. C. team from Lngan, The following even-luthe B. T. I', teams will try at Provo. g SAY ELY CROWS Results ef Development In Moat Cases Exceed Highest Expectations. Gael 8. Hoag, tresmirer of the leading entreat ment company of Kly. Nev.. la In Salt Lake City from the big copaaya that the deper camp. Mr. mand In tha EUat for Ely Investment ia as great as ever, notwithstanding the tlghincM of the money market, and that hla firm experiences no difficulty In financing worth) propositions. Not only baa the Ely district not been overestimated, Hid Mr. Hoag, "hut It la greater than the most uaguine have dared to describe It. Aetlvtiles in the way ef development already Inaugurated, with adverse rendition in the way of limited and difficulty )n labor, are simply wonderful. I was in Crip.u ple Creek when thar district the height of Ita bourn, and 1 cm ? candldlv that It. didn't rumpar- - virh wha Bfy la today In the of Hk sup-pIR- n-- tufty. with operationscarcely begun. One can hardly conceive whs it will be like next spring am) ltren on a ben things get a good stsn. "While It will be nearly a tear, perwill he haps. before actual begun. It I a fact 'ha: every doing development work to any extent Is ntee-lnith goo' results, better In the majority of cases than had bean eoun'cd upon, so that the district is proving :ell;- - bigger and hatter than ear one ha.l anticipated it would ha" - cr.m-psn- y g B. BERHARO S FUHEBAL Tha funeral f Bcln Bernards, the anu of J. D. Barnards of d city, waa bald at tha Fifth masting honse at 2 o'colck yesterday 13-- y ear-ol- d hi w-- afternoon and was largely attended, especially by the Holland speaking peopjv. The" aervtcea were presided over by Bishop John Watson. The ward choir rendered a number of selections nnd many beautiful floral of faring were laid upon the casket. There were a number f speaker who etiiogiaad the life of the ileeeased and encouraged the bereaved ones In the hope of a meeting in the hereafter. Interment was in the Ogden City cemetery. educa-liima- ! chi--Ire- .ipe-thir- H Nfc independent alcsg i:nr. la calling a'.ieution to be said me ertiiik'ion of the tfc&: there mere SI'S pupils enrcl.ed at the Weber Slake academy, wnh desk d That number. room fer about This, he asserted, showed the nece s'.ty for the aew addition now ander course of count rue: tom. The speaker who said that there were parents bet. thought that the academy was no held ter than other church schools. He that where this was true those that so held should assist in making it a He then rendered barter school brief report on the work done by the and In an appeal tor funds, pointed out tow tbs church bad promised and gate a dollar toward ike bulidiug iu each ease where a dollar waa subscribed by say oae else, la r this nav about M.MO bad been Tbs recent weather had mad b red. ii necessary to incur a amall debt ia order rhat the new building might ha prou-rieproperly from the elements, bui he hoped to wipe out this debt during the pretest weak.' At th of Mr. McKays address President Shurtllff took occasion to endorse hla remarks. Frerirteat Lund's afternoon address. lika that of Presl.lent Lyman, dwelt upon the beeping of tha laws and commandments, la carrying out this line of thought mod by way of illustration, he called attention to tha church once haring had the Kirtlaad stake and temple and that through the alaa and failure of the people to keep the laws and commandments the same waa taken from them and delivered into the hands of their enemies. President Lyman Hid there ,wu great need of keeping God'a command menu and held that the security of the church lien ia doing tbla. He uld he wanted to see a new tabernacle that would eeet 6,004 people. In adjourning the conference. President Shurtllff assured th audience that they would have the new structure and that one seating 6,040 would be none too large. Last evening the Y. M. M. I. A held a meeting in the Tabernacle. Hundred! that tried to gel within the edifice were compelled to turn away king before the hoar set for the opening of the meeting. Elder Junius F. Walls, who erected the Joeeph Joseph Smith memorial la Sharon county. New York. addressed the meeting and told of hla work. Prof. J. J. McClellan again presided at tha organ and aa elaborate program waa rendered by the choir and Prof CONFERENCEl Nn. W 0FICI 'Pmm lk a as principeIy Hie EXAMINER TELEPHONES Ball EXAMINEE: TIIE MOUSING 8 For a long time the need of a aw structure fur this stake haa been apparent. At a previous conference, at tended by President Smith, the head of the church spoke of Mitts great nead aad fur a time It lucked aa if thar would he a new building erected at oner. The center of the present tabernacle square was selected aa the site, but that waa as far as the mutter aver got. Obstacles unforeseen arcs and lb deal waa abandoned for tha present at least. Since (hat time a new $11.000 organ haa been Installed In the old structure and It 1 now up to the church to build n tabernacle to At with tha new musical Instrument. Tha morning session yesterday commenced at 10 o'clock. President U W. Shurtllff presided over both the forenoon and afternoon M.elons, Prof. J. J. McClellan, organtat for the Salt lake Tabernacle, presided at tha organ and rendered a number of selections from the muter. The Tabernacle ehoir also sang a number of hymn. President U W. Shurtllff rendered g report, showing the moat favorable conditions existing In the ward aad dwelt briefly upon the good work being accomplished nt tlie Weber Stake academy. The authorities ef tha stake were prevented and President Lund was then Introduced. The speaker, after expressing pleasure at being able to be present, congratulated th people of the stake on securing thg new organ, nnd said he felt that th next step would be to secure a larger tabernacle in order that all thou dealring to attend such nteet-btgHe might be accommodated. also expressed pleasure at the favor able report of the conditions of the ward aa they had bun set out In the report of President Shurtllff. President Lund then took up the question of ward teatdiing and encourag.-the peupl to raise tha quality of thU work. Ha pointed out at length Ms ideas of how this work could be dune and the beet result obtained. Ha said that the teacher should be encouraged n their work and not be permitted to feel that their- - was a email task, but lgstad one of the most Important of church work. Ha admon-lihethe bishop to encourage the trarher also, and then nok up matters of church schools. He maintained that the presidency of the church desired to encourage church school, and that during tha PMt year it had paid out more money for church school than at any future lima. Notwithstanding this fart, he Mid that there were si Hi m r call for funds for this great work. He tjiea dincuBsed the work of the religious classes which he also numbered auumg the Important departments ol church work. President Lyman waa then introduced. and a a prefix tn hia Interesting talk, said that it had been a number of year since he wa enabled to attend a Welter Wake conference. H excused himself from s lengthy address. on the ground that he had re eently suffered front an attack of La sua-talua- d d Grippe Hie Aral remarks were directed at the great Improvements that he had the Tabernacle and In the homes of the brethren in this city, and then offered congratulation upon the acquiring of the new oraan. was at this stage of the proceedings that the speaker referred to the fact that It would hi- a new tabernacle now to fit the choir. Following along the lines of bis predecessor, he also dwelt uon the duty of tha teachers. He held that .all within the were . teachers and said that there were none so small, none so great, that they were not entrusted with rite work of teaching the xospvl One thing the speaker said he noticed since a recent trin to Kngland. waa that there were toi tea partaking of the saciamem. He said thni the people should be prierlv Instructed In this ordinance and that the should partake oftati. often, he said meant once a week. He insisted tbs' the teacher ahou'd find oni what per enf of the penpir are attending 'o the family prater. H was the ftiher and husband's duty to Instruct thp wife and children In the religions work, but he thought that many par fr,s were dilatory In till, which intgbi also be applied to the teachers la speaking of the visit, of the tearii-e- r to the homes, the epeaker said tin: a social visit waa all right In ls not what a teacher place, but that goes Into the hornet for. President Ijrmaa said ba: 'hi ws an enormous stake, tha' u h'il-- l he three etake in order rhst the Of the church ehn-tihe rv i, successfully. "We are here.'1 h !tj ' 'to preach the gospel to ev.-- ere?, tur. Thl cover flics.. t':a e Bt.ar 'ts aa well as those ahroel lie f; lowed tbla up with the sa'i-men- t th. all mua ! that the ; pv. . Bntjre.1 lit 1 e-- roo-ciuat- McClellan. ETHERINGTON GOES TO REWARD PROMINENT BUSINESS MAN ANSWERS LAST CALL. A Due te Attack ef Cancer of Stomach After Several Manth'a Illness, ' Death Thomas Btherlagton, one of Weber county's oldest and best known pice near residents, died at hla home la West Weber ehonly before 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon from an attack of cancer of th stomach, with which he had been Buffering for Hveral months. He is survived by a wife. 12 children, 65 grand children and 10 great grand children, one of the largest families In the county. Mr. Etherlngton waa one of the early settlers la Weber county and waa a moat active worker both in the upbuilding of the county and tha otanrch of ahlch ha was a devout member. He baa been actively identified with business Interests of the county for years and waa rtg rted as a moat aocceaa-fu-l Investor. He waa moat prominently interested in the land, aheep and cattle business In all parts .of the state, in addition to this he wae president of I he Etherlngton Lire Stock A Commission company, incorporated but a short time ago, one of the largest stockholder in the Rlatervllle creamery and a director in the Fair association. Thomas Btherington waa born In England, Nov. 1, 1RS7. He became a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saint in hla native country tn 1HM and emigrated to America in 1566, coining direct tn Utah and settling in Slaterrille. Here he resided until 1Sd9. when he removed to West Weber, where he lived until death summoned Mm. For a number of years he waa a countable in West Weber and was also superintendent of the ward Sunday arhool. At the time Johnson's army Invaded Utah he was a member of the state militia He as at the time of Ms death a member of the high priests' the Weber fltake and naa (lnurnm roiiMldcred one of the most active sorters In the county. Funeral services wll be held oier the remain at the Ogden Tabernacle hi l o'clock Thursday afternoon. Inter-mountai- n f - 1 'i ri a-- Why are buni'irist always suvn ej clfer-ivelus. I feiiuwaV Most of ihem piece, live on what they are able to have to Ajee.it- u, ii make out of their burner.' fi"t spealtc: a: g ft, go-j,-- ,n-l- ,'h! :i whs enni'in PANIC NARROWLY AVERTED Loms Bunch ef Money, Recovers Naariy All. Woman But omen with $200 in shining tarn-tdollar gold pieces ram pretty close io causing a panic on Twenty-fifts'reet Saturday afternoon. Tbs: a jianlc did not remit Is probably due to the Fart that It takes more than tsen-tdollar gold piece to excite the a crags Ogden rltlien. However, thl soman who was careful tn withhold her name, had :hi money in ruic of her jacket pockets. Xow In ihat pocket waa a bo'e i hai was sufflcientlv large for the iwenile to pass through, one M a time, or uexrly so. In walk-nfrom liraut avn-i- r Twenty-fiftalong siren- - tn Hudson allev the whole amount slipped tb'ingh the hole anj on to the A r h h When h uico treat eve-- l sai.l she beat uns-i-i- a, a ho;, an. hanr re- hiii! aa'l'.e ed up Just $ig.i ', of the hca-it.ve.'.o the s'amji ot i one I'nc'e place she gather-e- l nge:!:er $4'l from beneath the fee-o- f i h SHson driver (hat was so huav ig ini-.-- hiiwhii: a i o.uld of tobacco nr.1 tho alHer question, wish d t:..v he failed tn notice the g,.:j ".'.lie hi neat It hi "kicks. xftor coMect'ne the $ln ho wo man rslle-- at the police sta-lonml i elvd her experience tnd asked the mine to searcu for (he additions! $4" They warcehd Ini', found na.ighi shown g r.tu-'.- lively ihat all the pe 'ri-u- n -- pic (W. In Ogden vsi-.- air do not their traseiee no'! high In iVr OODEN, TTAI1, MONDAY, JANUARY SI, 1907. free ministry r priesthood, and a free membership. A pneat free to tell hla people whi he thinks and n equally free to te'--l l's priest what it Gunks, nnd out of the con (rarities which must inevitably arise hall coma the truest and beat for priest and people. No men is free who i subject to the domination of ether men. be the) called prophet or priest or monarch, and no man 1a la bondage whose obedience is to law, to truth. Let each man himself ia this house tonight decide whether or not he is free. AND CROUP WAS DiPHTEHERIA "in springing his walls the archiWHOLE BETTLEMENT EXPOSED. tect mart plumb the stone in obedience to the law of gravity. In springing th arch, ha must brace It. obeythe lew of resistance. In lifting Somebody Erred in Diagneeing th ing hia tower he must relate it to the temCase and Epidemic Is New ple. obeying the law of proportion Feared aa Result and sympathy: and bn who disobeys one fundamental law will find great nature pulling hie towers down over The resident of Huntsville are hi head. For no architect builds na much alarmed over (be possibilities he pleases, but only na nature pleases, of aa epidemic of diphtheria resulting through laws of gravity, of etone and from th wrong diagnosis of a cut atael. of th dreaded disease Ihat appro red Obedience to man ia fallacious, danla that place about a week ago. Near- gerous, destructive. ly all the Inhabitants of the stUement .Obedience to tew io liberty nnd ulvn-tiohave hem exposed to the disease, although but two cue have developed Been use law 1 the essence of all yet. tha wisdom iff nil tha wise of all the Laos then two eerks ago the ages (and no one can contain it nil), daughter of Councilman P. M. the wisdom of tha law te greater than Jeueau died after a abort illness and the wisdom of any man, and the natthe cause of death was given aa croup. ural tews are the wisdom of God. A public funeral it ofheld and nearly the law of steam, man Oehiying the little city has an engine. Obeying the tew of the entire population turned out to paj their respect to fire, he haa warmth. Obeying the law the dead. It has si are turned out of speech, he haq eloquence. Obeying that a wrong diagnosis of th rase the law of sound he has leadmade and that inatead of being ership. Obeyingthinking, the law of Christ, mawaa moat It of a croup diphtheria he has character. The atone obeys lignant form. At tha present time one tew. gravity, and la without motwo other children in the Jensen fam- tion. Tha worm obeys five tews, nnd ily are stricken with the disease. haa movement. The bird obeys three "When-i- t erwaa discovered that an laws, and ran fly aa well as stand or ror had been made every precaution walk, and as maa increases the numwaa taken to prevent a spread of the ber of laws he obeya, he Increase in diseaeei It la fully expected that rlchasH of nature, in wealth. In there will be additional caaea devel- strength nnd influence. Nature loves oped and grave fears are entertained paradoxes, nd thin te her chief parathat an epidemic will reault. dox he stoops to wear thn yoka of tew, because a child of liberty, while he who will be free from God'a law, KUCHLERS NEW BILL wears a ball ad chain through all hia yearn." The wearing of the "ball and chain Previdca Severe Penalty fer Pailue by the lender of a great people, haa te Pay Alimony. always brought community dlatreu and community humiliation. Representative Rudolph Kuchler of Freedom la not conferred. Man la thla county will introduce in the house not free because the state or the today which provides that the failure church confer It Man crested both te pay alimony shall be construed aa church nnd state. The declaration contempt of court and will he punish- him years ago by th dominant able by a fin of from $100 to $300 or church authorities that its members by Imprisonment ef from one te three were free to vote as they chose, added months In the county Jail or both. except the proof that they had When Mr. Kuchler Introduce the nothing sot heretofore been free to so vote. measure today. It ia expected that hia It simply slated the facta that the libwith fiowars desk will be deluged erty of the people In the temporal husfrom women whose erstwhile called voting had been previousbands have failed to provide them thing ly abridged, unacknowledged, conwith the fund guaranteed them by trolled and how had thla been accomthe court. It ia also puHible that the plished 7 By the . teachings of the members of the "Alimony club will church leader from whleh I have feel like the repreat least handing quoted." Under the existing sentative a lemon. The of Utah had not enlaws a man who te derelict in hie ali- acted territory lavra preventing the free any of. mony dues can b adjudged guilty exercise of the elective franchise. On oontempt of court and sentenced to the contrary, the constitution of tha carve from two y three days in the Gnltad State and the statutory laws county Jail. , of Utah have always declared for thla Mr. Kuchler aaya that there is cry- free exeroias. And the mockery of it ing need for tha paauge of such a gone on since the organisation of measure and he will work for Fa adop- had the territory. Hie lark of civil T believe that In many caaea tion. in Utah therefore waa because of man court ordered '.has a where the church Had each person from whem hla wife has secured a been in despotism. actual possession of religious dedivorce to pay allnioay the fellow freedom, elvll liberty would have liberately chooeea to apend a day ia alongside of it, and no church Jail rather than spend money on th declaration would have been necesfamily from whom he haa been sep- sary that its members were free to arated by the law. In many Instance vote as they might choose. Religious a woman la left to take care of several always demands civil liberty. of tho liberty children and the Where civil liberty ia said to exist to them auuport money necessary without religious liberty, there te but. It the sends little tote to bed supports pretence of qjvll liberty. Each te to such caaea that the measure la member of the dominant church, like aieant to apply. ( believe if the pen- all others, la of courts pos' alty of contempt la these caaea is sessed of religious andInherently dvll liberty, made heavy enough it will persuade hut does not exardsa it. Each memthe offenders to pay up." ber of the church by the inevitable When asked if tha members of tha spirit of hiu religion acknowledges a "Alimony club" has a very strong rep- matter he ia neither Independent nor resentation in tha present legislature. no free; he possess Representative Kuchler laughed and power in hia church, nor fn the state : I aid not of that had uld thought If the church see fit to interpose, but of the question, but tt ia hardly to ha ia subject to the counsel, direction supposed that they constitute any- and domination of other hla file thing like a majority. leader, and while h ia thus hampered and hound in tha church, he can never Basse hla complete freedom In the MADE FREEJBYTHE TRUTH state. Bo long as a man ia compelled to acknowledge by the spirit of hla religion the right of another to dictate tContiaued from Page Five) to him tn spiritual things, so long mnst ha acknowledge tho right of the Indibe directed spiritually then It surely vidual to dictate in temporal things, must follow that I may be directed a truth to that even Jotemporally; and if a maa haa intelli- seph F. Smith, distinguished aa he in gence enough tn reaeon out. the truth, for hia general dullness in seeing the and get at the thing as it la. he must logic of things, made uaa of the utterconcede the second if he concedes the ance quoted a few momenta ago that first. But while we agree with Presithe man who aaya you can dictate to dent Smith on hla postulate, we re- me spiritually hut not temporally Ilea man can When a direct in the ply; ways you presence of God that is. if he me spiritually he Ilea la the presence has intelligence enough to know got If of God, that I. he ha intelligence what he la talking about And there eanugh and morality enough to know are scores of strong, brainy men in better. And when a religious leader the church upon whom has been beseta up the opposite assumption and stowed Important citric and religions conclusion he proves hla people to be who can hardly be charged In bondage and h himself to be a station, with Ignorance on to an important a dangerous leader No free people matter. would permit tm-l- i an utterance tn go All nature glvea the He to the claim man worthy of loading a free people of any man to dictate in spiritual would dare to utier it. A man may attempt to dicNo problem r'lgiou or civil can things. hut the intellect, the spirit, Intate, be worked out by a dee pot and a serrevolts.- - The dictation tray evitably AM vile people problems demand for aeera to succeed for n time hut really their solution an Independent and free it always fails. The eld church at people. tempted to dictate the intellects of And ye shall know the trnth aad Galilee and Bruno, but felled, though ihe troth shall make yon free." it appeared to succeed. As well might us c.,nsn'.t some definitions: man try to stop the progress of tha Truth, what a thing really la not tide as to atop the current of the init appearance. That which Is. What tellect, which Is the gift alone of the I. 'Things arc what they are. and Living Spirit proceeding directly from con the sequence of them will bt God. the spirituality of man. God what they will he: why, then, should haa bade the intellect and spirit of we desire to t deceived 7 man to go on. aad on, nnd on. Th The evidence which truth carries works that I do shall ye also do; and' with It is superior to all argument; It grmter work than than shall ya neither wants the support, dread do. It is Ged who bids the plants to the impost ion r the greatest abilibloasnm and they blossom; to but ties. and they bud; to hear fruit, and they Thcorre!ati,.n between truth and bear it; to ripen It. any they ripefi; Freedom Is simple The moment you aad bids them to drop their reach an understanding of the thing leave again and withdraw them unto themIt s is. all ilnu1)! disappears, and you selves t rest and wait. And these freedom is so irresistible that 'yon simply obey God'a laws. It I without iv ha-dcould compel yourself to" do the power of man to atop the bloomthe oppowiie. the ing. the budding, tha fruiting, Liberty : Tb state of being ex ripening, and the resting, a it is for empt from (be domination of others one plant to 11011 to aaother plant. Hwvi;-.Free: liberty to follow All that man may do te powtrleiu. and one's own Tie, desire, inclination, futile. He can neither compel nor or choice: I eased of permit rhe sunshine and th rain. And from arbithe power: hence, the dominant church la Utah, with trary doniinHT'iin or direction of othit teaching and dom'nancy of aber Tti best condition of a nation solutism. ita denial of individual free: It is when only independent but dom. lie demand for Implicit obedifree: That is. when It own no mH-- r ence. it claimed anthorlty to demand shroud, and when each inhabitant, the abandonment of nr thevk no led sc no master at home ex- ory. 1 the direction principle of president or cept the law. prophet, and tha acceptance of th Such Is the di'nitloa of the free in as laid down principle and t'omhe's Moral F.dloaophy: and such by him. will hetheory a as ia powarleae vmild he :he det'nltlon i would bor-fo- r man puny arm to atop the rays of the a free cnbrch "The best sun .vnj the of the cool reof chvch la when - la not freshing rains.falling on! free: ia. but tha: hat in.lcpiii History i In harmony with nature. it owe n.i master abroad, and It tPlIx u on ita every page 1'vben each acknowledges no that ,he attempted exerclv of dictaat boa. except the Tw. A tion in thing spiritual or temporal HUNTSVILLE ntem-hsrriit- p HAS BAD SCARE a. u ru lib-ret- y d .. self-evide- n-i- r y eii-m- 1 n-- con-'.Itl- I- i successfully brought in its wake tu distress, disaster, bloodshed, plague corruption; anj copu-,- , u evil because It h U(... "If yu wteh to be and sceurgiug. Freedom la not conferred, ns w a coarse that will S1..r.,. V- .V It fuse to learn anythu rin-said, but a rightful possession. ' cornea in this way. We have the im- not proclaim. j1 Refu,. v' mortal declaration that man was thing that implies ex.;.,,, created free nnd equal, thus, it it God's Re:a a the pewer of gift to man. and what God hath given, what other power m lllt' ... let bo man take away. When we came what you will, bu; Into this church, we had all equal Be shunned, be haied t rights; equally w conceded eoma ef neared, be ia doubt. those rights, and Therefore we have gagged "(Social and bunr.e,. r equally left equal rights. Te say then that oae man has the right to dictate look like advantage, and 111 . in either spiritual or temporal things If you want money. ' j.jV f moral Influence is to lie iu the very presence y,i tnsy that you have not God. It must be admitted that it ha been are (he pumem lth which the constant teaching ia Utah aad nubaidtean men to heepPf ,p s the unavoidable resultant rffect. that there te no subtle: - or on man tha president of the Church whiita you can get ihan. f has assumed the right to dictate, lag in niteuce. This U "to tell what shall be done, and when of humanity, thn; ha, r shall be done." The absolute right history began and will nelflahness and that men have in their own under1 standing and their instinctive percep- one thing. A fertile example ur iii tion of truth, upon which individual liberty te established, la here anni- of silence in d,ectomi by hilated. They have no opportunity to speech of Senator Hop, ins " know the truth, and, therefore, can in tha Inited State w.r.4l. .of Hon. Reed Smoot :0 tot be free, and th promise of Christ right that they should know the truth should Mr. Hopkins mated in ur,:an(e mske them free, is made void. It la Mr. Smoot represents the proc n proposition that if one ive younger element of :h., man has the right to dictate, to tell church in thin mate. ud doe what shall be done and when it shall Ueve in polygamy, and lu, PPJz be done, then the balance have no all hia life In fact sim-- lutaacv My personal opinion right left hut to submit to the dictatiui' tion, and to do what he shall he tuld Smoot doea not believe i polt itoj and when he shall be told. There I had occasion for the convirtitlT.',,' never haa been, there could not be. aide of Senator Hopkins' suremeat! set up n more complete tatement of Yet, Mr. Smoot has never been 1, absolutism than this.' by human ear to publicly luaer- - M. It ia hard for the pride of priest- conviction In the assembll of his hood to put ita ear to the ground nnd people. Knowing the consequence v listen to the common people; yet the n denunciation of that mcUI rTii people collectively are wiser than the grona crima. aa it la described in IT! moat gifted Individual for nil hla wis- Book of Mormon Mr. Smoot ha BI dom constitutes but n part of others ferred the selfishness of ibU It is when the multitude give eoun-ae- l place, emolument, and power m that the right purposes find safety; speech and concomitant Ins 5f theirs is the fixedness that cannot he Iv advantages. And the gtate of ruh shaken; theirs is the understanding la humiliated. But God know which succeeds in wisdom; their is Utah needs, and out of Reed Smoet'i the heart of which the largeaeM is aa elflehnee there will come golden free tha und on the seashore. speech, liberty and truth, itiielligtnrs Listen to what n few aeera And apos- and freedom, to this and future tles of freedom are saying to ua: "Freedom of mind and tit consciThe chief advantage of ence, freedom of the seas, freedom and enable man la hia )omh, industry, equality of franchise each in his own town, within the ndlua of comia truth hla first public interests, to fight tha great firmly grasped mulfor the and prehended, enforoed, important battle of hi life while kv Ia power ate at their strongest. titude i neither rash nor fickle. te leaa who fickle than thoae troth, it We have two conspicuous eumplm pretend to be ita guidro. in our community Jedediah D. Shseu, The government by the people is a young man, haa had the courage ts In very truth the strongest governout he what peak against regards as ment in the world. Discarding the wrongs In the civil community, aad, Implement of terror. It dares to rule win or loss, la the courts of the laid by moral force and has its citadel in hla influence for good will be felt is tha heart. this community for many ynart to "Individuals are but shadows, too come, though he might lay down the often engroHed by the pursuit of armor now. The other Instance Ii shadows, the race la Immortal; Indi- Frank J. Cannon, who la conducting viduate are of limited sagacity, the farfnte for freedom, that hoi ax i common mind Is infinite in its experi- been excelled in courage, ability, ini ence; individuals are often languid virtue in the annate of the struggles and blind, the many are ever wakeful; for liberty of conscience and liberty Individ na la ana corrupt, the raee haa of speech. Hia literary work of the been redeemed; individuate are time past two years, embracing two u six serving, th masses are fearless; in- articles evary day on the one dividuals may be false; the masses are topic of public tffaln ii Ingenuous and sincere; individuate Utah, constitute an unimpeachable claim the diTlne a auction of truth for record (or human uplift, a consuming the deceitful eonceptioa of their own consecrated purpose, a magnlflerat, fandei; the spirit of God breathes diversified, courageous pnsentant through the divine intelligence of the worthy of a Cicero or a Burke. people. Truth 1a not to b ascertained But we must not seek for protec by the impulM of an individual, tt tioa in thoae who are public teachen emerges from the contradictions el and leaden. W nil must fell om present opinions; it raises itself la ma- when. 'If we are nt liberty to spot jestic serenity above the surface of publicly or privately of lndlriJal parties and th conflicts of sects; it wrong doing, without its haring bM acknowledges neither the solitary mind adjudicated in n court of Justice, vs nor the separate faction aa ita oracle, wrong ourselves na well is the parsoa Lut owns aa Ita only faithful Interprennd hla femlly and friends and sorfety ter the dictates of pure reason itseH n. terga, because we curtail aad r proclaimed by (he general voice of hla usefulness. One bad set he mankind. Tha decrees of the univer- doesn't determine a man's bad chi sal conscience at the nearest apnor doe one good act determine proach to the pretence of God In th hla good character. If 1 the greatest soul of man. moral injustice to deny n man all claim "Do not seek to conciliate indi- to virtue nnd the right to teach, viduate, do not dread the frowns of n though he may be delinquent ia oh sect or a church, do not yield to the virtue. But thin must be the insvitr prescription of a party, hut pour out able reault of slander. And whew troth into the common mind. Let the ever a mnn is trying to do a great waters of intelligence like the rami of publlo work for human uplift, history heaven descend on the whole trutn, shows he te universally made tha tarnnd be not discouraged by the dread of get of the calumlnator, and the virtua Let the nnd effect of his work la sought to b encountering Ignorance young aspirant after glory scatter nullified by whiaperinga of personal seeds of truth broadcast on tha wide laxity, which of naceutty, If te th bosom of humanity, in the deep fertile slightest degree true, must be magnsoil of the public mind, there to ified as they are passed from mouth strike deep root nnd spring up and to mouth until the diatn nation bars hanr n hundredfold aad bloom for no relation to the single act which ages and ripen fruit through remote perhaps afforded the opportunity for generations." the slander. Even be who 1s the Way. "It 1s alona by infusing grant prin- the Light, and tha Troth, wu ebargJ and a comciples into the common mind that with being a revolutions la human society are panion of publicans and sinners. brought about. They never have Here la n motto which, In lllmiiiBSt-ehern, they never can he affected by suletters, finds an honored plac o perior individual excellence. the wall of my heat room, nnd which "The Irresistible tendency of .the ought to be engraved on every mlai: human race Is to advancement, fer In men whom men condemn as IB absolute power has never succeeded I find ao much of goodness still. and can never succeed in suppressing no true principle Ir men whom men pronounced dlvlw n single trnth I find o much ef ate and blot; once promulgated baa ever been forgotten. No Timely tramp of a des- I hesitate to draw a line Between th two when God has not. pot's foot ever trod out one idea. The world cannot retrograde; the dark If our sense of duty Impels ua te ages canmA return. Dynasties perish, aeads are buried, nations have been puhlllh what may injure a man. knowvictim to error, martyr for right; ing by hla teaching aad example ha humanity haa been always on tha ad- ii leading the unwary Into hi hi vance, gaining maturity, uitiveraaOty power, let an pnbllnh the facts of and power. Tea, trnth la Immortal deUnqnencies from Ihe housetop. U net resort to the wlilnperlngi of ths it eannot he destroyed ; it is Invincible, It cannot long be resisted. Not coward, vrho .te afraid to take the every great principle has yet been sequences of hia detraction; but generated, but when once proclaimed the widest publicity we ean te as and dlfuaed It llvea without and In peach and public writing; presents, aa No whenever opportunity the safe custody ef the race truth can perish, no truth ran pan do tt fearlessly. "You shall know th away; the flame 1a undying; though truth nad th truth shall make F1 Wherever disappear. generations Liatea to Archbishop Fanurrt moral truth has struck into being, humanity claim and gnnrda the great- apleadid words: "Whenever you est bequest. It la th nature of ty- u wrong deed and have the onnray ranny to He. Its very power aad ex- any, It la wrong, and I for istence depend upon lie. It remains have nettling to do with it;' whoever for enlightenment to bring truth." pou come iu contact with the &low r "The spread of enlightenment makes standard, or a It worthy habit, and are man eno tyranny afraid to lift its head. It. makes the tyrant see what tyranny first to refuse to succumb to is. Without th spread of enlightenthen to do your beet to overthrow ment among the common people, th you are a prophet and by acting the tyrant would never know what tyranny you can help to improvemoral atnn IN he would think tyranny right judgment and raise the world. You sounnes. may not reach the ard of the tyrant directly with th rnyn of rout light, but he can never get away from HEHBY COX fUHERAL the radiance of the light of them around him. We must apeak, speak, ke fueral if Hmnr peak! I at the Lindquist undrrta1 Speak, and the tyrrnay begins to at 12 o'clock noon F2r-W,Jtotter, and Its engines nr tamed upon you to get yon to stop. The outcry James Hunter presiding. n targe attendance iff against you te the pressure of your efcold look friends and many floral fectiveness. . . . are worne than Imprisonment If a speakers were Robert mnn can resist the Influences of hi I. Larkin nnd Bishop Hnntcr. towas-folk- , if he eaa out free from the lent waa in the city cemetery. tyranny of neighborhood gossip, the world has no terrors tor him. . . . . BAC'8 iUDlTOB lM The Injustice, cruelty. opprsHlim In the world are nil different forma of .ctor nlftt, Jm. ---1 the name that preJWDK-vents utterances, that stops messages that strike dumb the apenker and defend the listener. Ton will find H makes no difference whether the nonconductor he n selfish oligarchy, a milVH. r itary autocracy, or a commercial ring. The role of humanity la trifled by - biVeJJ .;cc r .,. g t 1 hla-Ja- rsc-te- r, wlne-bibbe- r, .... r 1' mj LI oJJ . N A YfSf " |