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Show DAILY UTAH PAGE TWO the workingmen should form unions, but we are also willing that they ' should stay out of unions If they pre- OGDEN. UTAH. faklifbcrt. fer to. We do not regard the union Joarul PaHuhiif Csnpuy, label as a more sacred thing than the (Incorporated.) Publiaaed every evening except 6 unday Stars and Stripes, and as between the walking delegate and the policeman we Telephone. usually stand by the policeman. We Bualneea Office ....Bell. 614 1 ring do not propose to stand for lawless1ml., 614 1 ring ness and disorder, and we do not Editorial Room ....Bell, 614 2 ring to allow the wheels of progress lnd- - 064 I rings and prosperity to be checked by labor trouble that ought to be settled In a TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. fair and orderly inarmer by the em- M ployt-and the workingmen. By Mail One Tear I.M By Mail Six Mouth We euinmeud to the good people of 1.60 By Mail Three Month a' 54 San Kram leeo In their present crisis By Mall One Munth 64 study of how- they do things In Los By t'arrier one Month To Carriers. No Angeles and other cities of soullierii Monoy Pay California matter at Entered ae second-clas- s GAYNOk'j POINTED VIEWS. the pustufflce at Ogden, Utah, under STATE JOURNAL, MONDAY, MAY 2 7, 1907. ths mala It has hard to believe that member is human when seen with hla makeup. And It Is hard to believe that Wal Stair Journal pro-H- Se I I r - Act of Congress of March S, 1871. Jusllee W. J. Gay nor of the appelGenL Manager late division of the supreme court of B. A. BOWMAN New York, In a recent address In Kansas City, Mo, as reported by a association, made John D. Rockefeller tile object of an attack his w'ithoul siecitirally mentioning called attention Hu name. jioinlrdiy to his l32.ouU.tKiu gift and tuld how the great fortune had been built up through rebates and discriminations by railroad. He characterised these as the greatest crime of the century. He also criticised Judges wlio had used passes. Turning to the railroad situation, he declared that government ownership was not such a long step, citing that under the law the railroads were public highways. He said: "If, thrn, certain individuals In a short lifetime become possessed of so much property that they can make abnormal glfla to charity; if one man can get so much out of the division of the total products of prosperity while others are getting so little, that he can give away, for Instance, the vast suin of 132,000,000 without feeling It or missing It, so colossal la hla wealth, any more than you would miss 15, we make a fatal mistake if we ascribe such Rather a condition to prosperity. let us pause and inquire whether such colosaal fortunes could be acquired In a state of prosperity, which rests on a Just division of the product of pros- NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS. You should teceiv your paper not luter than 1:16 p. in. If not received at that hour call lliuns 684 and it will be sent you by special messenger. Pay Ns Money to Carriers or other collectors unlooo thoy present credentials from the undersigned. Under no circumstances will carrier or collectors bo allowed to toko Stops. All notices of thia kind must bo given to this office direct or by letter, or in person, or phono 664, one ring. JOURNAL PUBLISHING CO, By B. A Bowman, General Manager. news-gatheri- LABELS OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE COUNTY AH, SWEET IS TIPPERARY! Ah. sweet Is Tipperary In the Kpring-1- 1 me of the year, When the hawthorn's whiter than the snow; When the feathered folk assemble and the air la all ng With the4r singing and their winging ' to and fro. When the queenly Hllevenamon puts her verdant vesture on, And einllea to hear the news the perity. breesea bring; "If we And the public highways of When the sun begin to glance on the the country, the railroads of the counrivulets that dance to acAh, sweet Is Tipperary In the Spring! try, being used to allow a few of such at fortunes the expense quire Ah, aweet la Tipperary In the Spring their fellow-metheir freights carried time of the year, at a lower rats than others have to When the inlata are rising from the pay, and so much lower that they are lea; to undersell and destroy their I enabled with Vale When the Qnlden 'smiling a beauty all beguiling. rivals in business and thereby create And the Hulr goes crooning to the inonoiKilies In themselves, our condisea; When the shadows and the shower tion is nut only not one of prosperity, but it is dangerous to the perpetuity only multiply the flowers That the lavish hand of May will of our free government. fling; "Just think for a moment of these When, in unfrequented ways, fairy public highway's tiring used to enable music softly play Ah, sweet is Tipperary in the Bpring! a few men to destroy their business rivals, by means of favoritism In Ah, sweet Is Tipperary In the Spring- freight rates. It is the basest crime of time of the year, our generation. When life, hke the year, la young; "All of our legislature! and public When the soul Is just awaking like a Illy blossom breaking. officials, from constable and assessor And love words linger on the tongue; up, whose aid and good will were serWhen the blue of Irish skies In the hue viceable to those who controlled the of Irish eyes. And love dreams eluster an- - cling railroads, and who would accept 'Round the heart and 'round the brain, passes, were given them for themselves half of pleasure, half of pain and friends and corrupted by them. Ah, sweet Is Tipperary In the Spring! And even some of our Judges 'tell It Denis A. McCarty In the Christian In not Gath; publish It not In the Register. streets of Askalon' had their passes or rode in private cars." SHOOTING AT KNOT HOLES. n. The following, from the Riverside (Cal.) Press, Is commended by that newspaper to the goad people of San Francisco In their present crisis for study of how they do things In Los Angeles and other cities of southern California. The advice is good, and if taken In the right spirit will check tur bulance, bring peace and quiet and put the anarchists out of business In the sorely afflicted city by the Golden Gate. The Press says: A few years ago they had a teamsters' strike In San Francisco. It lusted for a long time and was attended front beginning to end by disorder and violence. HuhIik-swas seriously Interfered with and human life was constantly In Jeopardy. Non-unio- n teamsters were dragged off the wagons right under the eyes of the police and beaten and maimed in tile most brutal manner. Worse than that, strikebreakers were murdered aa a part of the campaign to win the striae. That was in San Francisco. Here Is a different picture. The teamsters of Los Angiles struck a few .days ago, and there was a great flourish of trumpets about tlelng up the city' "sympathetic strikes, etc. But none of these things materialised. Thera was no very serious inconvenience because of the strike except for a couple of days. There was no violence, no rioting, no disturbances of any sort And within less than ten days the strike was all over. The men accepted an advance In wages, one-ha- lf of what they had asked, and vent quietly back to work. That was Los Angeles. What makes the difference? Simply that down here In southern California we still retain some of the American respect for law and order. We are quite willing that s ed ADVICE FROM THE SOUTH. "A man In South Carolina a few days ago, says the Boise Capital News, "saw a knothole m the side of a shed. lie had a gun In his pocket that he didn't have sense enough to know what to do with, so he pulled It out and began shooting to see If he could hit It. He did. But there was a lot of dynamite In the barn, and he hit that alao. His body hasn't been found and his soul la located in one of two other places. "There are lota of iieople who are . fond of shooting at knotholes. "Some man. quietly lnirauing hie way through life, accidentally displays a weak spot in his character. There are a dozen men ready to take a shut at. the knothole thus appearing. They forget that there are blemishes In their own armor and that the shot Is bound to react. "A man walked into a restaurant in Kansas City the other day. He espied a man. the proprietor of the place, who had once been a fellow-conviof his in a prison. Forgetting that he himself had worn the stripes which had never been released from his citizenship. he thought of the big reward offered for the man who had escaped from the prison and reported the whereabouts of his associate, who had married, had lived an upright, honorable life, and was a model citizen, who delighted in the little family that he was rearing and In the honorable business that he had built up. "The Informant was shooting at a knothole. The explosion came when he learned that, having been a convict and never having been pardoned, he had no rights of citizenship and could not claim the reward. He went his a despised, disdained convict. , way, ct YOU WORK HARD uch tricks of Juggling as he does can a human. This team Jug-gl- -s small articles such aa marbles, balls, dishes and hats, but they do not appear to care bow many they have la the air at one time. Particularly clever is the bounding ball act done by the lady. At times she has from three to six balls working at once. It was mated last night that she is ths only lady on the stage who can successfully do this trick. The act is closed with of a wash day para t he Juggling phernalia. tub, washboard, brooms and dirty linen. May Evans appears In a very , entertaining whistling act. Particularly sweet is the sound when she sccom-l- a nies the orchestra to popular music . f the day. Her imitations of birds of me forest is well rendered. The ONeil brothers, thers are thro of them, put on a original minstrel iformance, and It doubtful if a siml-- ii act has ever been snown to the public. On the rise of the curtain, one a full-sizminstrel company be done by We have just received a line of new and exclusive ideas in mens leather belts to be worn with peg top trousers. Belts in plain or pebbled leather and in black, brown and a shade of gray that will be just the thing to match up with your new gray summer suit. We have them iu all sizes and prices from 25c to $1 C. D. IVES Broom Hotel Corner. - ed but when you get It how much attention do vou , care of It? It la the proper care of your income tha-'for future prosperity. Do you realise how nicely a checking account wilt v , atise your financial affairs? How much less trouble have s check account than to keep books? What it " to you to be able to look over your expense account l Just where your money goes? Do you know how soon and xu have to pay an account the second time because you zai.rd a receipt? No trouble about these things when you use t with us; you will find It a convenience as wel1 " chocks-accoun- helpful. de-ton- lng relates to his department and that Is helpful to the farmers. Lately he has Co. been explaining the possibilities of al- Ogden Rapid cohol. He points out that the end of TIME CAM the wood supply aa fuel la more than In sight and the end of the coal supply does not need an opera glass to distinTHROUGH CARS. guish it. But alcohol, he holus, can and will be produced by the farmer First Wash. A vs. car leaves from his surplus crops and from crops North end Wash. ava.... 6:16 a. raised especially for the purpose. He and it min. thereafter till 11:10 p. ths says that without Impoverishing First Wash. Ava car leaves farms, fur alcohol Is not a fertilizer, South end Wash. ava.... 6:11 a. the farmer can produce enough alcohol and IB min. thereafter till 11:89 p. to ward off cold and starvation from 26th Street ear leaves . First an Indefinite for the country period. East end 26th Street I: IE a. All of this Is cheering news fur the funner and equally good for the people and 16 min. thereafter till 11. 26 p. First 26th Street car leaves at large. , West end 26th Street... . 6:14 a. and It min. thereafter till 11:41 p. Boise Statesman: Henry Meldrum, for Oregon, First 22nd Street car leaves former surveyor-generEast and 22nd Street... . 6:47 a. has been taken to the government prison on McNeils Island, where he and 16 min. thereafter tin 11:22 p. will serve a sentence of three years on First 22nd Street var leaves conviction of forging applications for . 6:22 a, Depot publle Isnd surveys. He will also be and II min. thereafter tin 11:17 p: obliged to pay a fine of 5.2uu. His rase la another of those In which men Through Cars Leaving Corner 25th and Washington Ava have gone wrong because It seemed easy to make money in Illegal ways. First Wash. Ave. car going He had a good record up to the time North leaves corner 6:21 a. l, of his becoming but and 16 min. thereafter tin 11x40 p. at last he became demoralised and Lint Wash. Ava car going plunged into devious ways, which finBooth corner 6:06 a. ally led him Into the penitentiary. One and 16 leaves min. thereafter tin 11:66 p. of the chief causes of his downfall was drink. He Imbibed to excess constant- First 26th Street car going East leaves corner 0:C6 a. ly and his downfall with respect to and 16 min. thereafter tin 11:66 p. m other standards followed. Had he kept sober, It Is possible he would never First 26th Street oar going have Uken the step which has preWest leaves coiner 8:21 a. and 16 min. thereafter tin 11:46 p, cipitated him Into the pit. First 22nd Street car going THEATERS. East leaves corner 6.26 a. The record of attendance at the and IS min. thereafter till p. Utahns Theatre was smashed all to First 22nd Street car going last and pieces night Saturday night. to Depot leaves comer.. 6:20 Three performances were given to and IS min. thereafter tin licit p. packed houses last night and for a Canyon Cara. time It looked as though s fourth show would be necessary. Manager Grant First car 'leaves depot at 6:16 a Sanitarium on stated after the last performance that leaving Inst trip at nil previous records of the popular 6:46 p. theatre hade been broken, and that this Second car leaves depot at 12:45 p. same company had packed the Lyric Sanitarium on leaving theatre In Salt Lake City with bigger 1:15 p. last trip at crowds than any time in the history of the house. The entire bill Is made np This gives 10 minute service from of first class, genuine vaudeville acts. James Francis Sullivan and his com- 12:15 p. m. to 1:15 p. m. On Sundays and holidays there will pany are the headliners on the hill and have put together s bunch of laugh be a 20 minute service In the morning, provokers and labeled the mixture and a IS minute service In ths after"The craslest get in vaudeville. and noon. Notice. when one has witnessed the performance he can readily see that it Is a Can Washington Ava termost appropriate name. Sullivan Is minals leaving at 11:46 and II pi m, go to one of the greatest comedians of the the Power House. day and creates a laugh with every Cars leaving East end of 15th at move. He la supported by O. Johnson, IX p. m- - go to Power House. as a broken-dow- n actor and tie walker, 11:46 and Cars leaving East end of 22nd Street and Miss Anns Duran. There Is not a dull moment while the company has at 11:21 p. m- - and at 11:62 p. into Power House. R. A. MOTES, I The UTAH NATIONAL the stage. to i"T h of Canyon at The Osars are billed as comedy and Lest car leaves burlesque Jugglers, but unless this 6:46 p. m. name le meant to apply to the man'e q minute service Seven and makeup It Is a misnomer, for the work on 16th Street between Washington of this team la exceptionally clever. Ava and Depot oiw-bs- ' A. Cvh. BANK Interest Paid on Savinas Accounts and Time Deposits Grand Opera House Direct Isa Northwesters Theatrical Aaeociattoa R. A. GRANT, Res Ideal Mesoftr MONDAY NIGHT. MAY 27 Liebler & Co.'s Latest Triumph Mr. Uollior Uhiteside THE MOST REMARKABLE IN PLAY OF THE SEASON The Magic Melody CAST OF SUPERLATIVE EXCELLENCE INCLUDES BUCKLEY MR. HOWARD GOULD MISS OLIVE WENDHAM MR. HENRY BERGMAN MISS MARTHA GEORGE MR. LESLIE KENYON . MISS MAY Seat Sale Saturday, 10 a. m. Prices 25c to $1.50 UTAHN A THEATRE Direction SULLIVAN A CON30MNB R. A. GRANT, Oesersl Manager Week Commencing Saturday Matinee, May 25 Evenings, Twe Complete Parformancoa, 730 and 6:15. at 8:30. Ns Matinee Sunday. Matinee Daily OVERTURE. THE OZAVS Comedy and Burlesque Jugglers MOREY LONG Rendering "No One Knows How Much 1 Miss You," with beautiful Illustrations. MAY .EVANS, Whistler, A Novelty In Vaudeville. O'NEILL'S MAJESTIC MINSTRELS Original Reproductions of Modern and Old Time Minstrelsy Interlocutor, Fred O'Neill. Tambo, John O'Neill. Bones, Joe CNellL Dont forget Society Night Friday A Special Bill for that Evening. MITCHELL AND LOVE Character Comedians, presenting their own comedy, The Home Special Added Attraction Coming" JAMES FRANCIS SULLIVAN A CO. Me, Him and I Co., "The Tramp." "The Prince of Pllaen, etc- - Assisted by Wra. O. Johnson and Anna Late Star of surveyor-genera- 11.-4- 0 J. ; RALPH E. HOAd, Cashier. A. V. MclNTOSM, Asst. Cashier Transit al - OF OGDEN, UYAN A. P. BIGELOW. Cashier H. C. BIGELOW, President, J. M. BROWNING, Vice Proa around a handsome stage setting. A second look reveals tne fact hat all but three of the mlnstrolmen are dummy. And then tne fun be7. E. POOLY, President. gins. The boys have a number of good j.ikes and some catchy songs, which a JOSEPH S. PEERY, Vice-Pr- es i,re rendered with pleasing voices. Mitchell and Love have at present a littie playlet entitled The Home ComThere Is enough seriousness In ing. the piece to balance the comedy of the te 1 THE OGDEN STATE BANK ed The Home Coming shows as act. k ell as anything could. Just what a man will do fur the lady on the dollar. The Illustrated song, No One Knows How Much I Love You Is rendered by Morey Long and is beautifully illustrated. tme of the events of the season is the picture shown by the Utahnasoopa this week. "The Unwritten Law deals case In New Kith the Thaw-WnlYork and the picture will be s big (irawlng card for the house. It shows the Ufa of Evelyn Neebit inaw. i .rai she la seen aa an artist's model, then ax s pupil In a dancing school, where site Is preparing for the stage. After her lesson she meets Stanford White and takes lunch with him at a fashionable cafe. Hero White has his face slapped by an outsider for trying to. force the girl to drink. Another scans shows Evelyn dining with a party, and in this scene the audience gets a very good picture of the girL The picture effects of that explosion, reactthen shows home of Whits, ths ing upon himself. swing and the room with the thousand "It is dangerous to shoot at knotholes mirrors. In these latter scenes the unless you know you can suffer the audience cannot help but think of a snake when they see White. Other consequences." pictures show Evelyn's home after her v the party on their marriage to Tha Wonders never way to the roof Logan Journal: In this scene garden. Is cease and "It the unexpected that White Is seen to come In and taka his happens The good name of William eat. Evelyn sees him and Writes someGlasmann, former mayor and present thing on a card, handing It to Thaw. postmaster of Ogden, and, moreover, The party noon get up and an Thaw proprietory of two of the newspapers passes hack of White he pulls out his published in that city. Is worth twen- revolver and empties It into ths archity thousand good cold rolled Iron dol- tect's body. The arrest follows, and lars. He says so himself In a suit hs the next picture ahows' Thaw in the has entered against District Attorney , Tombs prison. Others deal with the Halverson and, of course, that is the visits of his attorneys, wife and mothfinal word. A reputation of that value er and friends. The picture of the should be kept locked up in s safety trial shows the great legal array, the deposit vault Jury, Judge and principals. This picture tells more in the twenty-fiv-e minEmery County (Utah) Progress: The utes that It runs than one could learn secretary of agriculture, Wilson, is an by reading every paper In the country. enthusiast concerning anything that while the man with the knotholes has been pardoned and restored to citizenship by ths president of the United States. "A young man, or even a young woman, may have done some thoughtless, careless deed. Native sense and good Judgment assert themselves in time and a disaster is averted. But some busybody learns of the incident and years afterwards, when they are leading upright, honorable and honored lives, a whisper Is dropped; It follows as slung a live fuse and there la an explosion of a helpless character. "That busybody has bwq shooting at a knothole, behind which there Is potent dynamite concealed, and some day. In son or daughter or other loved one, there will come to him the FOR YOUR MONEY . Duran, Presenting The Craziest Act in Vaudeville." A number of professional volunteers for Society Night. THE UNWRITTEN LAW" A Thrilling Drama by the Utahnascope, Based on the Thaw Caw, New York City. HERE TO STAY! Five years untarnished reputation has made us the moat popular Dental Company in the West, and our prices are within reach of everyone. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR OPENING PRICES Set of Teeth (best red rubber). $7.06 $1.50 to $3.00 Porcelain Crowns A Good Set for $1.00 and up $.01 Gold Fillings Gold Crowns, 22k. $1.60 to $6.00 Silver and Amalgam Filling... Bridge Work, best Cement Filling $1.60 to $5.00 Twelve Years Protective Guarantee. Teeth Extracted Positively Without Pain by our Scientific Methods suffocating gan or torturing needles) Free with Plates Honest Work and Fair Dealings make our sue- v cess continuous UTAH DENTAL COMPANY I. M. Zimsxbkak, Mgr. lady Attendant 2457 WASHINGTON AVE. Oflloe: 1 I J"1 Lofm lrovo, Parktlty Hckdat. Ores Dzitv Tiu.8 do 10 to 2 A Journal Want A 4 Will Sell, Rent or Buy Anytkii |