OCR Text |
Show MORNING THE EXAMINER the Published every day Jis Standard Publishing Co. EJ. ,(r by - - WM. GLASMANN, Manager. toilwed by Carrier, laclutfng Suaday Morning Examinee, eta gar wsitb 8 Ct f OEyMif.iaasiaafiMMia SUBSCRIPTION RATES. V. nail oh month (Including of bntay) oataUo No. Telagtwe r SSL Oita ...M eta bnr of (all ora to sill router a SuLeeilhan tfjnulng Ula otfleo biT The grammar before RETTBLICAN by I fbau TICKET PRESIDENT FOR Roosevelt Theodore of Nov York. . " PQR i I VICE-PRESIDE- FairbanKai ChasW.e( Indiana. ' eefeeucaiTsuie 1 iicset Par Presidential Elector E. W. WADE. H. P. MYTON. JAMES A. MINER. C Par Congre JOSEPH NOWEi. Per Governor af Utah, JOHN & CUTLER. Par Secretary of Itith CHARLES S.TINGEY. Par Juatico Supremo CourL : DANIEL N. STRAUP, I A Par Attorney General, BREEDEN. Par State Treasurer, JAMES CHRISTENSEN, , Per State Auditor, r M. A. J. A. EDWARDS. Par State SupL af aUiaalR ; . I A. C. NELSON. lEPUBLICAH - TICKET JCICIM SECOND DISTRICT. For District Judge JAMES ALBERT HOWuLU Far District Attorney, GEORGE HALVERSON STATE SENATOR, Charles fL Holltogswortlw REPRE8ETATIVE8 : Rudolph Kuchlar, T, C. Pancak Wm. L. Steward Geo. 8. Doan. COMMISSIONERS, Four pear term Jceeph Stanford. Two year termOacar B. M adeem CLERK, David Mattson. Alma C. Chamber RECORDER, Oaniel W. Elll ; SHERIFF, Joaeph W. Bailey. ATTORNEY, , E. T. HulanlakL SURVEYOR, H. J. Craven. SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOL Wm. N. Patterson. CONSTABLE FOR OGDEN CITY( Henry E. Stasias Headquarters Republican Committee, Parry Hall, Corner 23rd 8t and Wash. Ave.. Phone, Bell, 837, Independent 369. E. T. HULANISKI, Chairman. JOHN V. BLUTH, Secretary, YOUNli VOTERS poll of the first voters of Indiana that more than three thousand young men whose fathers were Democrats baas announced their intention of Toting the Republican ticket this fall. These young men have been studying American history, and find that there la not a single important statute on the books or a single administrative act of general benefit to the American people io tha credit of tho Democratic party within tha last half century. They find, aa any young man tan find by looking over the history of tbe country or the history of the Democratic party that it has not a single act of either legislation or administration now under discussion to which it can lay any claim whatever. The Democratic party has been only the brake on the wheel of progress. It has not advocated a single policy iu the last half century that has been adopted by the people, and there la auly aoe Republican policy that has .bean enacted Into law which the Dentociatic party ha; not Dually approved after it demonstrated its sue-c- s. The one Republican policy which still meets with Democratic disapproval is that of protection to American Industries. Individual Democrats of the North may approve this Republican policy whb li has divcrsiiji d industry and added to ike wealth and pro- A Shows On November X. Lm ltJ The Utah butters strain the attract niienthm because tln-get it any ulur way. Sum 1 ou can count the voles tor yourself. inn It to PiTH OF TilE PRESS cannot, A PERTINENT (JlXSTlON. But I bon the voters uf Utah may nut, Cod never went buck on people that waul to be dictated to by the senior dared tu tell tbe plain truth, says a senator aud tbe diangcful modern moralist, The Spanish government has Just grained it couccssic.u for tbe buil'iing uf three lines of narrow-gaug- e railway. Austria-Hungar- y during tbe first si months of this year eiu: led goods to the value of t210,iiim.e(H; the imporla amounted to lit.inio.iiuu. The directors of the Agricultural Bauk of Bulgaria will soon decide upon the quantity of agricultural machine and Implements which it will be y to purchase for use next year. noe,.-sar- When a man gets defeated In the satisfying of his pulVeal ambitions in. Utah he makes it right with himself by claiming be was opitoscd by "tlis church." Yet many of them really dt.i uot expect to be successful. The Minister of the Interior at Santiago, Chile, baa granted a concession for extending the Cordilleras to railroad acruss the Mendoza, Argentina. Chile guarantee! the interest payment of 5 per rent on tbe construction capital of I7.&0U.0U0. lint that doesnt I'Xp.am what will happen to the Idaho slump speakers. Boise News. cuico iias"thb goods. The writer approached to within some 6 feci or 7 feet aud stood in a fiery shaft of light. The heat was terrific. "Come a little closer, air," said a smiling stoker, standing at the mouth of the furnace; "you'll be able to see tbe size of the fire. 'The writer took a step forw srd. A BLAST Or SCORCHING AIK MET HIM. and he felt his face redden and burs. Its looked in at the door. Tbe furnace was probably 13 feet square, and as far as the eye could see was a mass of c loud-lik- e flame, roaring with fierce iuieuaiiy, vivid little forke of fire shooting here and there. With s of relief tbe unfortunate journalist stepped into tbe cool outer aii, uud me flames were imprisoned behind their steel door. Those are the hollers above, said tbe engineer. They were like iteel houses, eel atiove the furnauee, built first of brick and lined and encased with steel. Koch held s thousand gallant, and at times of pi ess. re, in winter or on dark days, with two score ut furnaces going, there would be enough boiling water to supply an army with lea at a minute's notice. "Where does the water come from? queried the writer. "Hero," replied the engineer, leading the way into a machinery hall, pleasant and cool after the furnaces, with its glazed walla and high roof. 'These aie the pumps, he continued, indicatpiston-ro- d ing a vast machine, its working silently and rhythmically, "and they bring up tbs water from the wells 400 feet below. Bo we dont go to the river or say artifical source, but Uud our own water In tbe bowels uf the earth. Presently we were In a great wide chamber, close upon a hundred yards mug with the sound of huge machinery whirring in our ears. 'These are the machines which do the art ual work of said the generating the electricity, engineer, quietly, leading the way to where a tremendous engine and dynamo of some 8.000 horse-powwas working almost noiselessly. It was one of several such, but was Itself a baby beside the leviathan of 6.UQ0 horse-powIn course of erection against the coming winter. He stopped before It and began in easy, untechuical language to explain i he meaning of the Innumerable cogi, shafts, and valves. The whole machine was encased in a steel shield. He slipped a button and, moving back tbe casing, disclosed the vital! of the A vast crank shaft monster. aud forwards slipped backwards with a soft drone, lapping the oil In which it ran, for every part of the machinery is automatically lubricated and works In oil. "This Is the engine, be continued, "driven by tbe steam from tho boilers, and in its turn drives this dynamo fcnd you see here. Tbs wheel coa-cerates the forte, supplied first by the coal, then by the Keam, and then by thla engine, and In Us revolutions transmits the whole of this power Into the copper wires lining tha cylinder ia which it revolves, and ao electricity la generated. The turning of that wheel, as you see It now, is supplying the electric current being consumed in various parts of the city at thla mtn- - Amid lire burry and worry, the push aud pull of this campaign ii must lint lie toi gotten that Chico ia strictly "Jr." Visitors here rrom tho best cities the staie candidly admit that such progress is not round elsewhere as ticri-- . And the redeeming feature of I he siiuatiuu la thsL the growth In all lines is steady, constant, peaceful and without flourish of trumpets. Chico Enterprise. f MAINTAIN TIIB A company, composed principally of British and Gernmu capitalists, has been formed for the purpose of working a recently discovered coal field nea OLD POLICIES. There are indications in some quar- ters that the voters are manifesting a lack of Interest in the Congressional campaign on the ground that no issues are presented this y car. Never was there a more ntislak-c- n idea, if such an impression prevails. definTbe issues are pronounced, ite und exceedingly ltu;iortant. They are imports nt not alone to the politician, nut concern still more vitally tiro business man, the professional man. the farmer and the laborer. It is esseuiial that a Republican House should be elected this fail. Truckce Republican. it Sabinas, in the stale of Coahuiia, Mexico. T he principal vein is from seven tu eight f ct wide and underlies an area of 15.U0O acres. Total foreign trade of Germany iu 1903 reached a magnitude never beforo Republicans will have a clear majorattained year. The valui ity In Weber county of not leas than of the in any single imports was H.5U4.4S2, 233, and dissatisfacone thousand. There la no of the exports f1.321.0H4.280. an Increase tion with any candidate on the RepubIn imports of ft23.707.CC4. and in exlican ticket sufficient to endanger hla ports of f 7 3.693,04 1 over those of 1902. chances of auccesa at the polls. The county committee has done splendid For tbe first time this year Gerwork In the matter of organization. many's foreign trade for May showed a Our candidates are all clean and decrease in both Imports aud export, imports amounted tu 4.026.400 tons, or capable. AU we need is a united, 111.680 tons less than fur May, 1903, and cITuri from now ex porta were 3.010,300 strong, tons, being a to insure every drop of 203,600 tons. until the polls close man on the ticket a majority almost So equal to that given the president. out and "Gel we say lo tbe candidates, get to work In dead earnest! Aid the committee In Its labors! Bee lhat every candidate has an equal show with yourselves; bang together; pull together, and you will make sure of a sweeping Republican victory all along tho Hue! A Few people probably have any idea as ihi.i walk iliiougti London's bru liauily lit streets at mght, where ill:, uf aruhcml light come. In Idaho, last years wools were vast amount Iroin, or how it is produced, ia ever. the this But year heavy, as a whole. great city the: la electric light, aiu. indeed, that 999 out of every 1,(WU people lake i. clip Is light, ao much so, a number of the Idaho slips, as com- as a natural uud very right thin, are hard- that it should lie so. The thousandth pare.) with t hoes of last year, are better person wonders what gigantic forte wools The ly recognisable. our must he everlastingly at work supply in stated grown and, us we have ing light duriug the hours uf darkness I'ntU a day or so ago the write, market reports, manufacturers have was one uf those who look Lo the says eagerly, very them taken light as an entire matter ut American Cotton and WmI Rcjmrter. course, but alter a visit to tmo tu ih, the rr.Iaiivel), contended that, it is great power staums, from which (he more Idaho wools should have netted Metropolitan supply uf electricity emmoney to the grower this year than anates, lie is lucllned to reg.tru an next year, they arc lump with couaidcruliic reierence. they actually did. But, bad It typifies the fnimt'nriiy sifil powet may be as good, or they may bean of uuderu Invention and'maeii.a. ry. were last year, then they or even worst' Iu the east cud of London, some were miles beyond tlie cosmopolitan hum oi last year tbe Montana wools shortWhitechapel, a narrow bide street runs very heavy und In some sections close by a lillie are northward, creek, this your they but er than usual; which endless imams ut of much lighter shrinkage and better through barges pass night anj day. Curving grown, and better looking and more rouud, this hue leads lo a wide field, desirable In every way; In fact, the beyond which a railway runs to the state never produced a better clip. The sea. Through the railings which surbe a great same Is true of Oregon, but whether round this liclu ranwith aseen line of high brick rid budding, these states will produce equally as windows, and r by a row of huge good clip, or sail brtter. or worse funnels rising from the carm. The dips lu 1103 than they have this year, whole stands isolated a hundred yards it Is absolutely impossible at ibis or more from the nearest house. It is hero that a great part of London s time to say. dally supply of electricity is pror'vel. The engineer iu charge of i !u station. met the writer wuhiu lh- - iron galea, which bar intruder and Il'.iiiC ! EB1T01UL C0511ENT j whose business is not concoiiid with c:ui-rrt- r He was a lyyic-tl-f-- rril electricity. ngup fei-- sv4rv.'d sp.viktng only of the dn:m;a of his huge engine, The American party orators see s of for passing over bis own in u glues darkly. ever guiding and v.ttu'!:.;;; over liicir . giant mo verm'ii1-'"We had he Be sure to register Tuesday or "elan from lit- Jed the way Wednesday. If you do uot you cannot tbe very across tit a field t where a line of vote. coal tmekw e.ii-vjand a fny lltt'a nwai:v3 erden. By cosine Eight more days and the melancholy mean rof;l"?.'1y f tVi-- and he canal days will have come for the Demo- he foM'nnnd, "we ge our coal, there,' a mats crats. er of ci,,np'i or ti'VuOl) ions at a time, .'lc first and in mu sense the m'iBt The it .'mr'itn! part in the genera' ion of parly pvrvni.vi'r-ihroU'ai-.kinds of duct iu the t..-.- ; lamJ'n would have no IeliviriciM.. but for coal, and in ihs of their followci. idoiT.-urilliel- al m-a- - ! bti-on- - - TO BUST COMPANY. secret of how "jon know thewith titctric supplied St. Lot'ie, Oct. 31. Eugene H. t, attorney for August, i.. rf:,.,., Tit Bin- light- cxahier uf lue Manchester bank, todaj filed papers in a suit iu the ciriU,i court against nineteen director l,h of the Title Guaranty Trua Wellington. Kan., Oil. 31. Thomas promoters seeking to compel the ryl Richardson, of Portland. Ore., chairman company, of the meut into tbs company's treasury oi of the executive committee Tha is company named as 4hS,6w). congress, who wee oh The Title Guaranty comthe Missouri Pacific express wrecked at at 2,600,(iu0, wa pany, capitalized practiTipton Mo., has arrived hers. He controls the Title Inveatigautg not injured but bad s very narrow es- cally buxines of this city. cape, the whole car being crushed to The object of the suit la to splinters, while he was thrown to the the defendants to turn into the rumpi treastop of the debris. ury of the Title Guaranty Trust the amount the plaintiff OP CHURCH CONTROL WANT was acquired by the defendant at ; t, PROPERTY". time of the organization of the company in February, 1901. the amount church31. free The Oct. Edinburgh. being profits on tbe transfer cf the "wee the railed es, nos- commonly stock of the concerns merged. of tirkara, owing to thidr paucity In nembtre. have taken steps to put Hones iperntion the decision of the of tbs tt Lords giving them control serv-ties church property. They have the general trustees of the Unied Yes church with n notice to quit and land over all the church property cni'e-e- a. assembly ball, tbree ;! and Aberdeen; famous sunny brook rye; it Edinburgh, Glasgow delivered to any pari of the city i Aa-ger- Trsne-UissiastP- Pi r(in-pa- dur Frcm Btcffilcr to You ;! ! 51.00 Telephones for Residences ,! for $3.50 per gallon : BISMARCK $?.50 Telephones I2S 25th for Business COCKY K01NU1N BELL TtLtPil3NE Ask tha Street WINES COMPANY j LIQUOR'S Office foe Particular "WHATS THE CIRCULATION!" THAT'S THE VITAL POINT! 1SHSF H. Pattlaom M. Leedom 0. imUT er wm. , CilE Avenue 2425 Washington rttJTS (Phone 228X) WANTED MEN 1,000 schonwa M tha a tke Bear ball. It is tha place to sat tbe longest Rest, the biggest and eoldsst act of beer In town tor five esatA Chopm whiskies brandies and win j a all kinds M soft drinks. FlnsAj ie of clgara la town. Call In vary-- , !dy aa you pass by and sample our, When Peterson A Co. will build yon or n modern house for I 3 stories J. 6 nun. 11800. If you Inlead to bay or build, 12,300. d in cash we will and have furnish the balance and you can pay It back In SMALL monthly payments. Plans furnished free of charge. Call on ut el . ' Call up tha 1-- t. one-thir- PETERSON t CO- xtda. Comer 25th and Uitohi avenue. ). W. CATTiS - ut. KNOCKER. One W. 8. Wilson of Illinois Is trying to bead oR tbe Panama Canal, putting his individual judgment against that of all the reel uf the United Slates. Old King Canute tried to sweep back the waters of tbe sea. Wilson is not King Canute or hr would have learned by experience. Tbe sea baa been tamed, but an invincible popular demand Is Irt. resistible. Nevada Miner-Transcrip- DEMOCRATIC ARGUMENT. Tiie gold standard telag fixed by the Republicans iu tplta of Democratic opposition. the hitter now ask to be given a vote of confidence upon promise of not trying to unfix II. In other words, their argument is, the Republicans deserve no credit for what they have done, hut we are worthy for promising to do nothing. Redding Free Free Press. The great wheel, 24 feet In diameter, with it axle as big as the largest guu in use on a Japanese battleship, is in reality a huge revolving magnet. A, it revolves silently it has the accumulated power of S,o0 hones, which, in its turn, is transmitted to the copper uoils and becomes Immediately tbs greatest force in the world electricity. Could that electricity, generated nt a pressure of 10,000 volts, be loosed It would kill Instantly by Its fearlul potency an army, of 90,000 men, extended along a cable of fifty miles. Aa one stands In that quiet hall with tbe placid, monotonous droning of the monaier machines on every aide, it la difficult to realize the extreme danger which is never absent. Everything that modern science ran do ia here to minimize thia danger. The wires, with their awful vitality, are Immediately sunk deep into the . earth and taken outside the tm beyond tbe natural fire zone, before even they are brougut unucr mo irol of the switchboard In the gallery of the station. The engineer stood by the side of his machines explaining the reason for this lever and that, showing how each scaliest whirring piece played lta Important part In the gigantic whole. "There are In London, he said, something like 3,000 miles of cables, supplying current to close upon lamps, at a cost per annum approximating lU.OuO.bl'U pounds. In every public building surh as theatres and concert halls there 1b a duplicate source of current, so that In the event of one stalking falling another can immediately take its place and continue the supply. "The wires here, he explained, "go outside the building for safetys sake, as I told ou, and then are brought back to the gallery. There we have tbe switches which control the outgo-- ; Ing power operating generating motors in four in various parte of the city. These in their turn transmit the current direct to the streets Without the building and houses. were the huge funnel-lik- e apparitions rising 40 feet or 50 feet into the air. Standing lirneaih them the engineer explained how the steam, which has j been employed all ovrr the station, Is condensed, pumped up to tbe tup of these filter, or sieves, diffused into other channels, and so ready for use again. A great deal of water la needed, in addition to its ordinary nses, for cooling purposes, keeping the temperature low and obviating danger. Leaving the solitary building and its wonder-workinmachine we journeyed to the city and In due tirta cents Hers waa to one of the the business of transmission. In one great chamber were stored hundreds of ceils of accumulated power, so that, should accident occur, or a sudden fog turn day into night, there would be no chance of London being without light. In another lofty glazed hall were immense switch boards, with their endless levers, taps and Indicators. Districts and streets were marked above, no that by one movement of a handle a whole quarter of the city could be plunged into sudden darkness in case of any great fire through fusion of wires. Motor generators were at work here also. Like a battleship, rach of the leviathan at the chief station haa Its complement of smaller generators at the rub-- 8 tv ions. To every 3.000 horsepower engine there ire fire of 400 4 these were busily horsepower. hemming In the generation of the current whiqh would light lxmdo&'s tt recta and theatres and residences tbat evening. So now." raid the engineer, with a smile, as we shook hands at the You need a Fall 8uM and Dveeoert far yourself and boya, Putnam's haa them la great abundance anj the RIGHT PRICEB. Dent tall to call and leek thuq ver before yea bu& 81 v The Putnam' i"-i- -- How London is Supplied With Electric Light IDAHO AND MONTANA WOOLS. doorway, London er m it again." - NOVEMBER 31, 1004, gp REPUBLICANS GET TO WORK! There ia one quality In which Democrats excel and that la, the quality of No matter how large the hoiiefulnesa. Republican majority, no matter I tow Indefensible the Democratic position, some hopeful ruse in the Democratic ranks Is wining to take a nomination from his party and to work, talk and act as though victory Is certain and lo hold out in cheek and bravado until tbe vnLea are counted and then with a conrplacrucy, worthy a martyr in a really good cause, he says, "Well, its all right this lime, hut you cant do UTAH. MONDAY MORNING, doors. well-direct- 'TREASURER, ASSESSOR, Edwin Dlx. pcriiy of the country, but the Democratic party as an organization coniin-ue- a to oppose it as unconstiiuiiunal a mum and as robbery, a ad nlvo-aito the old Democratic doctrine of free trade. The Sonth dictates flip policy of t he Deniucruitc party now as it did before the war when It bad slave labor tu the compete with the free lalmr of North. The South still has (heap labor and child labor. The poll t Ida us of the South have innated that this ijuca-rto- n of child labor is a purely local question, Juki as they hare insisted that the race question Is purely local. They demand that the South shall he left aloue In working out its industrial and economic, questions, but at the Mine time they control the Democratic party in Congress, and there they dictate a policy that would take from American labor the protection given by the tariff, to place this lalmr on the eame footing with the cheap labor of Europe. They do thia because the South has liule to lose by free trade. It haa cheap labor in the milllona of negroee kept in igunrance and In white child labor which is prohibited by law in every Northern Slate. It la not surprising that the young men of Indiana whose fathers were Democrats, are turning to Knoaevelt and the Republican Party. Tlie young men of tills country are studying history and learning burincs methods. They hate an ambition to do something. They are not willing to go to the jmlls only to protest against doing something, or to surrender their business Judgment to the men of the South who still study the writings of political economists of nearly a hundred years ago to form their economic policies for today. The young men of today want to be associated with those who are doing something, and something that will aland the test of their own Judgment and experience in business affairs. They know that a Democratic Congress would be controlled by the innii from the South, and not by Democrats from tha North. They know that these Sou i hern wen have no consideration for the man who earns Ins living by manual labor, hut at HI try to continue the old policy of cheap labor even at the aarrlflce of the little children. 01 DEN. EXAMINER, upply of the whole city, derived from mriecu companies, probably 2, DUO jus are burned a day during tbe sum-.te- r montha. and perhaps h.uOu or 10,-o-u tons duriug tha darker days uf rintor." We followed the rails until they led icneatb tbe roof of the generating t hi Ion itself. A truck uf coal was to o diocharged. A lever of a mighty ratie above was pulled and one end of the truck rose slowly into the air, ito while the baik slid iuio the uaiit-ics- s of a gaping vault. "Before we see the boilers and said tho engineer as we inured iv. ay. if you don't mind climbing a rw stairs. I'll show you where the ual goes aud hi:'.v wo provide against .my Kuddeu Ehormgr) In the eveut uf a oal sinks or a ,ne such happening. lie led the wny up innumerable steel .lira The stmiu.phere grew warmer is we mounted to the lop of the. great Hiking. F.uaiiy we reached a gallery ending through the ccntie of what denied like Vie steel hold of an ship. At one side of tills gal-cr- y ran a deep gutter, along which 1 chain with a steel rugged a t eim.-- vi ie at. each cjuple of feet. "These are the bunkers." lie said, indicating the vast eompaitincnts beneath. "and wo are Just loading up for win'ir's reserve stock. The coal is brought up from lelww by s chain end Inn ho: contrivance, shot iuto the gutter. aad ptuhed along by the muring spades until over the bunker which is being filled. A trapdoor in tho gutter shoots it down. We have room f'r ten thousand Ions of coal hero, so tiiat II a strike should cur we can go on for several weeks b .i plying electricity for Londun's uses. At the bottom of each bir.ihpr there L another sliding door sill'll lets the coal down as it is required in tin furnaces. Then down at din with slow, cautious strps until solid ground was reached. Passing through a little door we cime out into the gloctra of tha boiler anl lurnaco chamber, ffere end there a glare fhoae out, thi oaring the figures of the busy stoker Into dancing shadows as a furnnee-dnwhs opened for more coal for the iusatiaiile fires within. "tkniie and eee a furnace." said the rnguir-ci'-, iudicaii.it; one of the open fur-larc- 1m-re- re or Clothing House 2345 Washington! a A Avenue ; sub-atail- 0GZCE5ZZZS 0 C0C2ZSZ23C30 0 OVERCOATS MADE BY KOflN BROS. rV ji . 1 - biwj T t m ' g i i are made with the aarne great aults- - Every detail cara la given the closest attention, the $10.00 Coat will fit aa well sub-elatio- aa the $35.00 Coat on this ae count, ao you are aura of a good fit aa well aa having one of the cry lateet atylee. coat thia season will be the Nimrod, a A very nobly double-breaste- . ; h d, CoaL belted back, cut with long lapel, fancy horn buttons, made from fancy plaid and nobby Scotch Tweeds. aniitaianix .L. Clark & Sons GICS5GSS2ZZ3 oo Co |