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Show -I- - Thna the ranHitiuna ii'riailin;. of coal la the 1'u.ted Statcj Ui year aas 30421.311 lone, comiiar rd with 3UI.5U0.I39 tuna fur Id2. an in ton. or 1 Pr rcaae of 57.H30.II73 PuMlahed day la the year by t equal to lb- -j being inneaae the cent., the Standard Publishing Ca the count ry of total coal pradwtlcm ' e year ago. j for 178. or only twenty-fivwith Continuing ibeae relative flgurea WM. GLASMANN, Manigir. iron atid ateel there la a marked variance. Iron and ateel barely held In of the prrvluua 1903 to the tonnage which repreaenta the nal, yet year, Delivered by Carrier, Including all manufacture, fuel la practically Baa day Moraine Examiner, bealdea doni ratio i oiimu nipt ion. 'Jumpe-da nearly 20 per tent. A part of the per aosG In the coal production la dun to Sets tatle copfee tha protracted anthracite coal atrike la 102, but a part reprraenta a normal SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Exiterta increase In the cunauniplion. By mall on month (Including In the mal trade have already become Sunday) outatda of Ogdaa ....SB da busy with the probable coal output for Telephone No. H. pro-djtrl- THE EXAMINER tmj l . so to the Democratic Stale Tillman 1). Jnhnwin la a ktadly soul, convention should understand that Mr. Roylaiu-e'roniinlstiou business Intile hi art heals m for the unfortun- cludes only the handling of farm proate. Thu milk nf human kindness new- ducts and nothing In tbe poUtkal er curdlt-- In his breast. And some-lime- flSiU. bin fi'Mierous, symtiaihulic na1m liarcly possible that Judge W. ture mi warms up and pusaesaes him II.It will not submit to having King Hint he ran even Rive a civil retort his Interviews prepared for him by to John Beaman at a Democratic prim- the Tribune bureau. In, past years Mr. ary. Naiurally his sentiments throw King baa given evidence of being a pretty good talker himself and the his sympathy to the under dug In po- Tribune may realise that soon. lite parlance, the unfortunate class Motor omnibuses manufactured In and so he Is devoting his time and In aid Illy iijiun which no onu shuuld Edinburg have been Introduced some cities and towns of Knglaud and an to value place liiadcipialu forming Scotland experimentally fur street a guardianship society for the Demo- passenger I raffle, but a anfllclent time crats. In this tie Is alily assisted by. has uot claimed to make It rl.-a- r whether or not they are fully adapted Ravhiw Wilson, counly tuipcrinieudnnt to Ihla purpose. Mr. VVIIhou's dullos call of schoolH. hint to the various rnuniy proclncla some of the It rather nilxed-u- p any way and it corns him nothing ex- Democrats at the primaries last night tra to uo a lit lie work for the Demo- In Mime districts there was only one present and he had lo organize hie cratic party. Resides he Is used to in-s- i district, ail aa chairman and secretary, meting children and la his opinion elect himself delegate to Ihe State and the way tu handle a Democrat Is "to delegate to tbe Judicial conventions lead him as a child." Tho Tart that aud anmnin.-- tbe result, of the contest with hlniMdf in the ward prlmarioa. In Mr. Wilson expects to he a candidate brief such a delegate waa IT. fnr a staio once on the Democratic DIseusHliig the controversy in which ticket has nothing to with his 1b-- t Kuioul crest In this work. Not by any means, tbe public acts of Senator Reed Candibeen pnbllcy criticised. bare lie is actuated by the same kindliness date John C. Cutler is quoted by a of heart that seems to Im the weakness local paper aa saying, Senator Smoot will never Helen to anything like a of Mr. Johnson. compromise. That la not hla nature. la const!! ill lug Ihcui selves the guar He will meet the alluatlou squarely Weber County Democ and will light It through to the finish. Tribune. Compromise? What la racy these fatherly gentlemen do not meant by that? Do they mean that to for purpose apply papers In regular the difference ran !e adjusted by Senaform 1mm Judge Kolapp. Instead to they tor Smoot giving Kearns export each Democrat to make appli- the Senate? That won't do, dont you cation to them to art as guardians. know; because the senatorshlp Is to coma to a Weber County man this This departure from regular court pro- time. cedure must be a severs strain on AtThe Bvangellcal Church Council of torney Johnson's regard lor tha ethics Hungary haa given taxpaying women of his profession. the right to vote. The name of the applicant is then recorded In a large book, with address, Tom Watson's opinion In brief Is height, weight, age, whether married that the world would be alright if every person was a populist or- not and how much, previous condition of servitude and scars for Identlfi-caiioA street down In Spilngvllle la When these formal ties have named after Mayor Koylanre of Provo. boon observed tho applicant will be And thus will hla fame live forever. subjected to a strict surveillance and There ia no need of explaining thi if be departs from any course becoming res sun for the advance In price of wina Democrat (and obviously unbecom- dow glass Most people can see through It. ing to any one else) such departure will be duly recorded against him for Those Democrats who are Induced to furore use, should ihe said applicant sign those application blanks should get some one to read to them what derelop political aspirations. This record book has not been named. But It is tmderatood It will be the "Weber County Democratic Pedigree Book," and pedigrees of Democrats will he furnished to those on thr inside of the ring free, to others at the same price as usually Is charged A TRADITION PUNCTURED BY AN fur a thoroughbred Jersey. SORT IN For Presidential Electors. s C. W. WADE. H. P. MYTON. JAMES A. MINER. , For Congress. .JOSEPH HOWELL. For Govsmor of Utah, JOHN C. CUTLER. For Secretary of State, CHARLES S.TINGEV. For Justice Supreme Court, DANIEL N. STRAUP. For Attormy General, M. A. BREEDEN. For Stato Treasurer, JAMES CHRISTENSEN. For State Auditor, J. A. EDWARDS. Stale For Supt of Sehoole, A. C. NELSON. ttPlwlnil HU REGISTERED. Delegates SUlt Wffl TICKET SECOND DISTRICT. For Dietrict Judge, JAMES ALBERT HOWELL. s d-- J For Dialrlct Attorney, GEORGE HALVERSON j CROP MOVING LOANS WILL BB LIGHT. 'n According to a leading New York banker there will not be a heavy by tbe Interior banka fur money to moVH tho crops, says tbe New York Financier. This year there Is a striking uniformity abotft the reports of conditions, which can be summed up In the atatement that the borrowing demand will be comparatively light, many sections being able, to handle their cropa with their own money; that the demand for money rangea from light to good, a majority of the olwcrvers reporting it light; and that I he couutry aa a whole Is well supplied with currency, although many slates iuticlpalo calling for a moderate supply of currency during the height of the crop moving season. With the exception of Texas and North Dakota, tbe west Is not In need of money at this lime, hut Unit of those slates report that they will borrow of the cast to cuite the crops, while the remainder of (he west doci not expert ta do so. In the opinion of tbe bankers reporting. Illinois. Minnesota and Kentucky will borrow to some extent, but In no other mate ia it admitted that borrowing will be necessary. As to tbe supply of curA MALIGNANT ORGAN. rency, there Is a conflict of opinion tn Kentucky, where oue observer says Folios Ing its usual course of malignadequate, another not large and the ing the people of the domlnaut church third abundant. There ia also some In Clah. the Tribune publishes a purdifference of opinion In Iowa and at ported letter prepared by Itself and supKansas City it Is slated that the de- posed to he from a promineul Mur mo it mand is limited. Kansas bankers re- defending John C. Cutler. Kens I or port that tbe supply or currency Is Smoot and the use of church Influence short. In Nebraska It Is said to tie in Utah. Instead of a defense, howample and in other sections the sup- ever. the letter ie published with tbe evident Intention that it be copied ply ia good to abundant. Tbe highest interest rates are report- broadcast over the country and again ed from Missouri and Texas, whera arouse tha basclcsa agitation against money is worth tip to I per rent, la Clah and her people. The malignant general rales range fiom t 3 to I character of tbe Tribune publication is jvr cent., au-- t a uumlier of hankers re- obvious aud la Inspired by tha soul who port that the ra'e I I per cent lower slips s the bitterness of a tnrtpi de- M-IP0'lr than last year The fact is interesting u'lcr w of the high money rales that Absome years agi. ! ,or lh fuPle of I'tah. prevailed In ihe ator Brooot stand ta ned of a chins-rlcn- . and while It ie doub'lers dup In som Both have proves thamselvea treasure to the lark of demand this of canny for themselves. capable No Is it also regarded by bankers year, as a further Indication that the period ena know that fact better than does of abnormally high Interest rates is the proprietor of the Salt Lake tribune. Tbe Incident but exhibits a piece of past despicable work of which no other paper in the state than tbe Tribune would EXPANSION OF COAL INDUSTRY. he guilty. It la tha contlnuam aolT&'eir The Iron and Machinery World policy to gradually Increase the circle that It la well known that the of comment, to publish articles aura curves representing production from j of being copied in the cssi. and mis-yeto year are not tbe same for the leading the people there, and thua vrrloua departments of Iron and steel, a routing the old agitation. They hope aud much less do the lines harmonize t injure Senator 8iu.hu thereby. It is as the character of products widen Iminaierlal to them what it coat the from .each other. Bu there ie a genelate or the people or Utah. Tha eral resemblance, for all Industry is Tribune either wants to be Ihe whole Influenced Uy the douiMet business thiug in Utah politic!, or it will at- d - 1-- wt ar i thought so, too. Thus it was arraag-r- d very amicably. "The young rnaa took tha train for New York as soon as ha had things shaped up so com fori ably. Two hours after he arrived la New York ho waa in private conference with a weU know n New York gambling house proprietor, n man whose establishment haa gone on doing bualnaae here, ao they tell me, when moat of the other plants have been closed or subject to Incessant raids. "The young Krw Yorker spread out hia goods before the gambler, who Instantly fancied them. of the profits' 'Well, three-fifth- s will be yours.' said tha young man, arriving quickly at the point. The people Im doing business with get their one-fiftI having declared them in tof that tune for the concession. Mine la oaa-fiftof the net, leaving you the three-fifthThat all right? Couldn't be better, waa the 'a reply. 'And Ita a good thing nil around. I'm dead glad to break into the place on thove term, and I congratulate you on your head work In getting the thing frand up the way you've gut It.' Bo the thing was going right along on greased skids, as you'll see. Tha young New Yorker, aa soon as he had made hla deal with the gambler returned to Florida and took a eta months lease at a fine old unoccupied mansion on the out skirt a. of the winter reaoit. Two week later the decorators and furniture people took posses-aki- n of the mansion, having been sent down from New York by the gambler, and before the winter season had well began the old mansion was fitted up like a palace. "The gambler arrived at the resort with hla manager and a picked staff early In December, when the moneyed once from up norih began to arrive in droves, and tha game waa on. "The game was a big winner from Ine very outset. By the beginning of the new year ft waa evident that the game was going to be the moat pniflt-atilone in the aouth. The people from whom the young Manhattanite had obtained tbe con- - David !U HiU'a declaration that he will retire from politics on January I will be heartily endorsed by a generous vote of the people on November 8. OF THE PITH I ENTITLED . Robertson of Teller county, Colorado, who was forced to resign his office on threat of death, has brought suit to oust hla successor and for damages. He la entitled to both, aud If he does not get them It will one-fift- Butte and Balt Lake, the towna a rert month. "One dsv, when a batch of New reached him. Yofk the young Muiihuttaniie fell to thinking while resiling some accounts of the raids which your Mr. Jemma was than making upon some of tha noted gambling establishments nf New York. newt-paper- "That afternoon e he foregathered with some of his friends among thr town officials, anil submitted a few casual inquiries to them. "Was there any kind nf a game going ai the resort during the winter season? No, there wasn't any kind of a Well, amid the New Orleans gam- bler, you know those gentlemen plungers who came down and put the game on the fritz, wiping out the profits In two nights whanging at the bint? They werent gentlemen plunger, sag. They were bum faro bank drtlen dressed up in evening clot hex They (Continued on Page ooOoocoocooQoooooo3oeoooo3booeooooog3 that Ibn-tH- e, semi-amate- THE BETTER WAY. Charles W. Spaulding, jhe Chicago hankwrecker, who lavished something like half a million dollars of other people's money upon a gay typewriter. haa been let out of the reel lentlary at Joliet on a technicality. If technlcalltlea served to keep such men In prison, lustead of out of prison, they would be held la greater esteem. Oakland Herald. A NOTABLE EXCEPTION. In honor of the birth of a son and htdr, tl.e Cxar has forgiven all his enemies except the Jape. Vallejo Chroulrle. There is just enough time left to fit the Boys and Girls out with Suits, Waists. Dresses. Underwear. Shoes. Hats. Caps. Hosiery. tc. At Clarks you can get a good selection of any of these goods at prices that cant help but please you. NO VICTORY LOST. No victory for right, however fruit-lefor the moment, Ie wasted. When Bam Parks was arrested for extortion la New York Ida unions atood by him and marched behind him while he waa out of tbe penitentiary on ball. It For The. Boys es took many months of struggle to convince the union men that It waa their business to condemn men and repudiate a wrong, even If committed by thtrir own leader ta their own Interest. But they learned tha lesson. Anally and now, when Philip Welnselmer, President of the Building Trades' Alliance, sought to follow In tha footsteps of Parka, the unions refused to follow after and yesterday Welnselmer resigned. Fresno Republican. EXPERIENCE AT and atylea for cchool, Suits. w....$1.25 Dark Stripe School Suit $2.90 Fancy Cheviot School 8utt TO 18. NORFOLK STYLES SIZES Dark Faney Cheviot, white.. .. .$3.00 i. stripe .. $1.50 Navy Blue School Suit CADET STYLES, SIZES S TO 7. $1.16 Strjpe mixed School Suit $2.75 Brown, mixed School Suit Rtriped School Suit $1-5- 0 ............. Pants. Boy' coruroy panta, beat kind for to $1.00 Boys' Cheviot School Pants SO to 90 cants. A WINTER RE- - game, be was luld. There had. in former years, been some proposition made as to ihe starting of a game while the season was on. but the propositions had been made by obviously rheap people who seemed to be look lnp fur all the iieat of It, aud so none oi them had bicn let In. then Well, how aVoiil a game. conducted i a high class plant and b.v the people at that sort of thing? That was the second thing that the young fellow from New York cautiously feeling hia way, wanted to find ont. Well, tho people whit whom he talk cd sort of met hint half way trom the out sot. Fact was, they had been thinking for some time that, a good tnp-ijiu- Inrtitutiint of hazard, properly conduct e.l on the quiet so aa not to give of fense to the conservative people who annuallv visited the resort, wouldn't be stn h a had thing. "It hen he had got thus Csr he put himself next to the right people and led up to a i'ralgfct. businesslike proposition. Ia general term, the proposition was that had go up to New York and get the proper son of square gambler to open up a high grade game at tbe resort by the lime the winter season began. He'd guarantee that the games would all be on the level and that they'd be run Just as much sub roa as possible. He only wanted tha straight word of the people he wae talking with that the concession for the game would belong to him, and to nobody rise. They cave him that word without any hesitation. "Then he talked to them about their end. He figured that about a fifth of the net profits ought to be about right as a payment hr the concession. They Good Heavy Colt Skin Shoes, Good ns Gold, brand: $1.50 .. 9 to 12. . ., ... ...... .$1.75 12 12 to 2. a .. .. a 2 1-- 2 to 5.... Oak Brand" Shlrta for school, 45 and 50 canto. Dark Waists for school wear, with Mother's Friend band. 25 and 35 cants. Boys' Felt Hata, for school, 50c, 75c, $1.25. different colon for Winter, ..a .. . . . . . . .$1.90 Kangaroo Call School Shoe, seamless, quilted, heavy sole: 8 to 12 13 to 2 S to 6- , .$2.00 tY!cI Kid, with heavy cole for school wear: 8 to 12.... ..........$1-512 2 to $1.75 2 to 6 2 0 $1-5- 1 2..-....- 1-- $1-9- Underwear Extra heavy fleeced Union Suita warm ones, 80s Suit. Extra heavy wool fleeced, 2 piece Suita, $1.25 Suit Boys' Sweaters for school, all sizes and colon, from 60c to $1.50. r For The Girls Box calf, patent tip, lace, 2 Shoes school ahoe made. Kid. patent tip, heavy or thin sole: to 8 H 8 1-- 2 1-- 2 to to ..... .$1-2- 9 ........ .$1.50 2,.... ...... ....... .$1.75 11..... TJttle Giant. kid, patent kid, to 2. Rturher, extension aole, 11 2 $2.25. weather: ...... .61.25 5 to 8 8 12 to U $1.50 11 to 2 Little Giant, Congo calf school shoe, patent tip, all solid leather: . 5 to $ $125 ......... $1-9- ........ $1-8- Little Giant," box calf, high top, Juat tha thing for winter: . ....... .$1.78 8 12 to 11 11 $2.25 to 2 Other grades for school, good qualifies: ..... ........ 90s 6 to 8 to 11 $100 11 12 to 2....... ..............$125 Kangaroo, calf lace, 2 2 to I, $1.50 1-- 3 .......... 2 I. L 5, years, braid trimmed and white atitrh around collar, $445. All Wool 8klrts for school wear. Grey. Blue, Brown, Green. Tan and mixed, from 10 to 18 years, $245 to $540. - Hose Rough Rider." all sizes, 25 to 35c. Kauunag" Stainless dye, two threads. The most substantial and serviceable hose ever offered ar the price IS cents. Underwear 0 .......,..$1.90 ........... to Percale Sailor Suita for girls. Red Blue, Pink and Black, trimmed with tumid. 8 to 14 yean, $1.25. 'Blue flannel Box Jackets, 6 to 10 Little Giant." box calf, school shoes, patent t'p, heavy cole, good for wet 5 1-- 3 to 11 11 12 to 2. 1-- 2 $1.75. "Uitle Giant, the very best 5 0 $1-7- 0 1-- Waists and Shirts Cape to 75 ccntc Shoes i 1-- 2 Boya' FLORIDA. 25 . 5 school wear, S5e $1j00, ac-un- h National made the league a Unsocial failure lids year, talk about getting Into bigger leagues next year. Aa a matter of fact they are out of their class la anything or larger than an Inter-statleague of some kind. If both had done aa well in attending games a Rpukane and Hoi sc the FaclAo National would hare paid dividends ihla year. Boise News. have ' 'Squareness among gamblers' and thieves' there's a brace 'honor g of phrases that we ofien hear; but 1 don't believe that many of tin ever sac a them actually exemplified." said Florida merchant now on hla annual buying mission iu Near York. You've only koi to read tbe daily papers to note how frequently ;he 'honor atun.ig As f.ir thieves' myth Is exploded. 'squareness among fumbles I saw il punctured, for uure anyhow, in a mighty singular sort or way down In my country winter before last. The store had Us hcgl.ining and its end at our- - of the noted Florida winter resorts, a p;aec Ilia is greatly fanned Im srslll.y New Yorkera. To thiit a tear ago before Ihe openlast tVinlier, and ing Of lb'' Mot I U ti lSO.I, a tulleg Nw lorker v h'W roli' sl man had chafed him south for his health. He was a bright, rletei .voting rhsp. and became acqualited wi'h most of the tos-offlcijiis. im lttding the mayor They liked him because he was a good tior'y teller and a finished sort of a felHe was an low. and no buttinski. pretty rhumr.v terms with all of them before he had been In the place a The boxes wera turned os them thaa The dub dosed ita on,-two Jays before It was due ha Well we got walloped, and good Mid ihe New York gambler to tha young man who had started him going la Florida when the latter called, fie hla settlement on the basis of $5ti,0ua Tboea gentlemen plungers uwoopel i down oa us aad cleaned us out tha profits gone la two nights sal $a0.000 of the bank roll that ftartc.j in with down here. I'm sorry, xns Just aa sorry tor You as I am for myself. Better luck next time. The young New Yorker acratchef hla chin and felt badly over it. Tha possibility that he had been chiselled by a man whom he had always heard spoken of as one of the aqua eat gamblers. In New York never eu. tered his head. The New York gambler dismissed hia staff, closed up tbe dub and hiked back to New York. Then the quiet New Orleans gambler wjio had been acting aa lookout fur the town folks took the young New Yorker off Into n corner. 'Bon,' he said to him, 'it wasnt my butt In, and I wasn't around the works, as I understood my to watch out for the interests of anybody except the people who engaged ma 1 got everything that was coming io them, right along, as you know. But they made you the Patsy 1 dont sap. pose you know that?' "The astonished young New Yurrer desired to be put wine as to bow tha thing had been done. 000 more. SAME OIJ) GAG. GAMBLERS. . tables They seemed to be swell players and they took flOO.OuO out of the ia two nights' play. The next sight they rapped the deb for nearly j .. be another reproach npim the name of Colorado. Deseret News. SQUARENESS AMONG jisIS dozen strangers, all toggy men avening clothes, appeared at tbe iiJU la a bunch and began to bat the Imiw PRESS BOTH. TO a getting of tneira la a thorougly businesslike way. They put Into the rehabilitated old mansion, as tha representative of their interest, a quiet but watrhful gambler from Newo Orleaas. At midnight on Saturday, every two weeks, tha New York gambler naaded him aa amount representing exactly one-fift- h of the profits for the fortnight. Bo tha town folks of the Florida resort had no trouble about their collections, and the rake dowu for them was something tidy. "But the young man who had set acted aa hla tha whole game own representative. to I'll Just permit my be said stay along with the bank-roll- ,' to tha New York gambler, unX-4liend of tho season, when you ran figure out the grand total of the net profits of tha season and hand me mine. I'd rather do It that way than take what's coming to me in orraaional bits or small lota That satisfactory T "It waa more than satisfactory to the New York gambler running the game. The young man's idem waa to get bis portion In one nice tidy aum, sad then with bis recovered health. In tha spring, to go to New York and ataft a legitimate business that he baa In mind. Bo. during all of tho season, ha accumulate In tho let his one-fift-h gambler's hands only drawing on the gambler to the tune of $800 or $1,000 for current expenses. He kept in touch with the people from whom he had acquired the gambling privilege, and at the end of the season, when the gambling club waa about ready to dose, they told him that their fifth had amounted to somethe thing like $50,000. indicating that net profits had been $250,000 so that there was $50,000, mlnua what he had drawn in advanre, coming to him the day the club waa scheduled to close, leaving the New York gambler the nice thing of $150,000 for his all of It rank velvet as 'good as presented to him by the young man who had dug him up and offered him this good thing. Four days before the gambling club was hooked to close the doors for the aeaaon something happened. Half cetslom went about the gam-bler- 1. KN8LICM 3, 1901. h tha year 104. and th figures they have given out show a alight gala -over 103. This Is somewhat remarkSubacrlben will confer a fever by able, considering that Iron and steel are expected to eiiow for the year a li forming thin offlea of fallura to Tha Ecamiaar before thatr decline la p rod union as compared with 1903. The tenacious growth of the hive! fut. fuel Industry no doubt represents a la the steady urn s of coal sud Mtrhaii some rxpau-eln- n REPUBLICAN TICKET In the product inn of isiwer, used for all puriKjstts. The extent to which The lKiuk How did 1 gel attached to that clam? FOR PRESIDENT dial la inlued la Illustrated by the statement that the entire coal product Theodore Roosevelt of the couutry laai year, loaded on troll to ruin the state. Moat of the they are signing and be on tbe safe of New York. cars, would extend a I suit three and a people prefer that It put forth Ita aide. Tho malicious efforts to the uttermost. third liiuca round the world. It has been discovered that the rearOR trains w loaded would cover more son tue K era merer train robbers dt-- i than one third the entire railroad not take the imckagu uf 113.000 la that Chas. W. Fairbanks they were superstitious aud considers.! of the failed Slates. ! EDITORIAL trackage j! COMMENT Indiana. of the number of thousands unlucky. W1IJ. SEPTEMBER SATURDAY MOUSING, 0GPE3F. UTAII, T1IE Fleeced Suha, 25 to 50c. Natural Wool, Suita, $143 Suit "Klondike," extra Union Suit, 63 cents heavy. Fleeced Caps White, Red and Blue Auto Cape, for rchool. SO and 0 canto. Tamu'ahanten, all colors, 60 to 80a CLARK & SONS CO. oooooooooooooGooooSSiSeoeoeuaooseoooooo |