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Show OCTOBER 24, 1904, TI1E MOItMNO EXAMINER OGDEN, L'TAII, MONDAY MORNING. 4 3UB OUR LEADER FOR THIS WEEK. This neat and substantial Iren bed In size end assorted eitiior full or color, for $2.75, this week. We hare nearly 100 ether kinds and prices, S6e APOLLO 8-- 4 a Stove o a Range If You Need We arc the HEATER people that sell them to you on easy payments Your Credit Is Good A ear of linoleum Just received. We have an elegant line to show yon In inlaid or printed, from 11.00 to 14.25 per yard. C9 JEWEL RANGE A present for our lady friends. We are giving a cook book or a souvenir thimble to each lady customer, S6e Malleable This range is the newest, most Improved and up to date In the malleable line. It1 la made of the beat malleable steel and contains all the latest Improvements. We sell It with a positive guarantee to give you perfect satisfaction. Money back If It dont do "THE ACORN RANGE" the range fire box. This Is the with a latest and greatest improvement in ranges made in many years. In this range tbe gas la consumed, which la a clear gain in heat and a saving In coal, making It tbe most economical range made. Tbe "ACORN" is the only range with a hot blast Bra box. We guarantee It to glva you perfect satisfaction and to save yon money on your coal bill. it hot-bla- x This old tellable, well known range has been a leader for half u century. Tour friend has one and will recommend It and we will guarantee It. Ltd us tell you about U. Remember You Can Buy On Easy Payments Your Credit Is Good This is a splendid heater In the direct draught style. We have them in all sixes, ranging from the amall bedroom also to large enough to heat a mm Published every day tat the year by the Standard Publishing Oa WM. Delivered by Carrier, Including Morning Examiner, Snmday peg month Bagla copies eta Me RATES. SUBSCRIPTION By mail one month (Including BO eta Sunday) outside of Ogden Telephone No. M. Subscriber will confer a favor by Informing this office of failure to receive The Ewminar before thou break feat. REPUBLICAN TICKET COMMISSIONERS, TREASURER, Alma C. Chamber, RECORDER, Daniel W. Ellla, Theodore Roosevelt SHERIFF, Joseph W. Bailey. ATTORNEV, E. T. HulanlekL SURVEYOR, H. J. Craven. SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS Wm. N. Pettareon. FOR OGDEN CITY, Henry E. Steele. New York. THEY ARE FOR ROOSEVELT. FOR CHas W. Fairbanks of Indiana. mmmu ran Par Presidential Elactora E. W, WADE. H. P. MVTON. JAMES A. MINER. Far Congress. JOSEPH HOWELL. Par Qovsreer of Utah, JOHN C. CUTLER. Per Secretary of Stsla, CHARLES S. TINQEV. Par Justice Supreme Court, DANIEL N. STRAUP. Per Attomry Oararal. M. A. BREEDEN. For State Treasurer, JAMES CHRISTENSCIi For State Auditor, A A. EDWARDS. For State Supt of Schoolg A. C. NELSON. ttPliBUM MM TICKET SECOND DISTRICT. For District Judge, JAMES ALBERT HOWELL. Per District Attorney, GEORGE HALVERSON cniniKT STATE SENATOR, Charles R. Hillings worth. the vain apiieala of ancient party prejudices are but as railings to the deaf. and old alike In Young, middle-age- d the great world of Industry and traffic, have made up their minds about the coming Flection: and when It cornea they are going to show tbe faith that la In them. t The American workingmen have no doubts about Theodore Roosevelt They know Just what to expect of him when he Is president and they mean to have It by electing him. BIO SHEEP SHIPMENTS. ASSESSOR, Edwin Dlx. CONSTABLE FOR PRESIDENT ei REPRE8ETATIVEB, Rudolph Kuchlar, T. C. Pancake, Wn. L. Steward Gee. 8. Dean. Four year term Joseph Stanford, Two year term- - Oscar B. Madsen. CLERK, David Mattson. Manager. QLASMANN, 9 Ogclea Ftssmatee & Carpet Company whole house. All doors and draughts are ground to Bt airtight to Insure perfect control of fire. THE EXAMINER This la truly a HOT THING. If yon have a grudge against Jack Frost, you can roast him good with this heat, er. You can also see the fire in this hot blast which adds to the cheerfulness of the room. You will like this stove. We guarantee, it. There la a magnetism In open, fearless manhood which attiracts the souls of men. The workingmen of the country recognise In President Roosevelt an active worker, a sincere, democratic, straightout brother man. There ie no discounting the unerring Instinct by which one sturdy man or claaa of men reaches awlft decision as to character. Perhaps the rank and file of the worker of the United States cannot give out long speeches as to why they in Roosevelt, but the tact Is they know him. That la enough. Pnt Theodore Roosevelt In a group of railway engineers and firemen, or on a ranch In Idaho: let him alt down to dinner with a doxen farmers at a country tavern, or ride In a car with a mining outfit, or a college foot hall team, or a delegation of atone masons, and Instantly he would be sired up, estimated and acknowledged by any and all of these representatives of American life aa a hearty, genial companion, and as a strong man and aa a strong leader of men. Evidences multiply, day by day, bowing in what high esteem President Roosevelt is held by the men who are doing the work of the country: the work which kecia life going, and makes "(be wheels go round." And these Intelligent, keen workers, locking with dear eyes niton the gregt fabrle of society that they are dally building, know how to pick a leader for them selves and their country. Nothing can make the virile young manhood of America turn its eyes away from Theodore Roosevelt. Nothing can destroy the confidence In him of the steady, hopeful tollers of middle age. And to the old and experienced be-lie- vs The shipment of sheep over tbe Union Pacific to market for the past few weeks la said to have broken nil records, more than 1.000 carloads of sheep having passed through Cheyenne en route to the eastern markets. This means a total of at least 250,000 sheep, an Influx never before known In the history of the road. Moat of these sheep are coming from Idaho and Montana, altliough heavy consignments have also been made by flock masters. Wyoming Following dose upon tlie settlement of the parking strike, the price of mutton began to Jump and tbe owners are taking advantage of these high prices and rushing sheep to market by the trainload. In spite of the enormous live stock receipts at the big market centers, the demand for sheep still continues aa great aa ever, and the price remain as high. It Is believed by those familiar with conditions that the prices will, remain practically unchanged for at least sixty days longer, and that the shipments of sheep will continue during that time as great aa at present. mgaaieMEE NOTES finest of wood pulp can be made from spruce logs, white paper would coat so much that newspapers and magaslnej and book would be much higher in price; and their circulation correspondEven the mails ingly restricted. would be lighter hy far but for tha spruce tree. Millinocket, seventy-fiv- e miles north of Bangor, on the west branch of the Penobscot, is spruce town. A few years ago Millinocket constated of a flag station and one Indian but The Indian murdered a Spaniard and was ent to State prison, and tha hut waa burned, leaving ouy tha. flag station and the man who tended it Then a big paper making corpora-tio- n looked tbe ground over, mlv ground over, saw a fine chancy to make pulp, and built an immense mill. Then came the town. It is called the magic city," because it came into existence so suddenly. The pulp and paer mill, which eat'a up about 100,000,000 feet of logs year, ly employs in one capacity or another about a thousand men, and there ara in the town 2,500 people... Where bears had moose roamed hall doxen year ago, there are now . streets lined wlLh stores, dwellings, school-house- s, hotels and churches, and lighted with electricity. When the original settler, the InMAGIC Of TOE dian, murdered his chance guest, the Spaniard, reporters who went up from IK Bangor to see about it had to make a meal on salted pigs shoulder and biscuit at the Lag station of the Bangor, Me., Oct 8. The swarms of railroad. Now they hetva one hotel vlcitoi'i who came to Marne in and the thousands of sportsmen wno at Millinocket where the English lancome In autumn bring a great deal of guage la considered inadequate to all the dishes on the dinnet money into the Biale, and soma statistician have declared that from bill. When, six years ago, men wanted these two classes la derived a greater revenue than from any one ot the to take a bath at Millinocket, he had State's great industries. But while tha bad to Jump into the west branch and summer visitors and the sportsmen take his chances; now they have porare a great financial help to Maine, celain tubs, with water at tempe'aturi their presence is of amall importance to suit. Today they have at Mlli.ock-e- t aoout everything in the way of compared with the spruce tree. that can ha found in any to 1865 about tha year the pine Up city, they are shipping 240 car tree was Maine's greatest source ot small wealth and importance. Pines as big loads of paper dally, the braaa band around as sugar barrels stood close to- plays almost every night, prohibition haa as hard luck as :t has an gether on thousands of axrtM which and the spruce trees did it all acres had fallen into a few hands at The beat of it la that there U a ridiculously, amall price, and the foundation was laid of most of the enough spruce in sine to last indefinowned by great great Maine fortunes of this day. itely, for it Is mostly But the pine waa waited, and finally corporations, and no" waste is allowed. there came the time when the lumbermen had to fall back on sprwv. San Francisco (Cal.) Pile Drivers', Fifty years ago the spruce began to loom up bigger in the lumber surveys Bridge and Structural Iron Workeis haa fixed a scale of $5 a day to than the pine and today of all tha union foremen and $4 a day for pile driver, 800.000,000 feet of logs cut annually and raftsmen. in the state more than 5 per cent, la spruce, while of the remainder a considerable part is hemlock, cedar In England the tin plate industry 1 and other w$nla than pine, the-las- t At the end of Auguat 379 improving. 20 25 to being no more than per cent, mills were working, aa compared with of the whole, and most of It second 654 at the end of and 245 a year July, growth at that. ago. At the 75 works open, 58 had While it was the pine that made pos- all their mills in operation, while tt sible the once prosperous West In- remaining 17 works bad 77 mills go dia trade and built up Maines ship- ing out of a total of 109. Tha estiping in thr days before the civil war, mated number of work people employit never In all the years of Its pre- ed at the 379 mills waa 19,000. eminence accomplished half so much for the land of its birth as the coarze The Adelaide (South Australia) Wograined spruce. For, while the pine built ships and Individual fortunes and men Workers' Trade Union ia endeavmade West Inria rum as cheap as oring to establish a Mending Bureau, cider all along the seaboard, the the member of which will go out to or spruce has built towns In the tnid't do a day's mending of clothes, etc., it This, them. vent to like articles Rnmford repair Falls of the wilderness, and Millinocket. brought outside mil- Is hoped, will prove a boon to many lions of capital to Maine, and giyen mother with a large family, and at the same time be the mesne of earning popular literature an amazing boom. livelihood for those not capable o Were it not for the fact that the competing for factory work. region. orship In are familiar Politicians generally manner In which their piane with the were foiled, benstor Kearns in order to provide a political berth for Mr. know it. the Ten years from now, no matter who Heach, asdduouaiy worked gainstwith election of Mr. bmoot, equipped la the expendgovernment President, W Bonington, The morning after election the Demowill be so great that present dis- veibu assistance front cratic machine la always found In tha itures seem small la com- even niter the originator of the Rebursements will venge Society and Mr. Smoot had repair shop awaiting numerous rectifi- parison. This Is a growing country. cations of defective parts. worked together in the Republican legislative conventions wlut a view to A little study of past history will The remain! of George H. T ernes ar- their Joint iusialimeut in tne United 4 convince the first voter that Republi- rived in Ogden yesterday at oclock b tales senate. Mr. Smoot s subsequent a. m. Funeral service win be held at eiecJon waa a staggering blow to this can spells Opportunity. SL Joseph church at 10 o'clock this political trust, and It was for this reasNo question, but Judge Parker la morning. Father Onahahan officiating. on tnat Mr. Kearna contributed finanlearning. By keeping silent he makes Interment In Mountain View cemetery cial sinews and worked with sued uneach faction of hia disrupted party Friends wishing to view the remains abated vigor for the unseating of Mr. will call at the family residence bmoot during the late senatorial inbelieve that he la with it. from 8 till 9:30 this morning, 2612 vestigation. Following this, beuaior The same Democratic doctors who Grant avenue. bmoot and the political opponent of the man who more than any other person debauched the state politically, definitely and overtly decieed that Mr. Kearna should not return to nis purchased seat In the United btales senate, and the bolt of Mr. Kearna ana ins Tribune from the Republican rang A POLYGAMIST ON THE "AMERIC AN PARTY" TICKET STATE POLI- waa the sequel to the ueieat of his poGoodwin s litical conspliacy. TICS IN GENERAL. - A sensational story relating to the ownership of tha Salt Lake Tribune has recently been ex plot led before the National Republican committee. Tbe matter la now under investigation by the committee aud if the report proves true, it will be demonstrated that tbe organ which la now in ojh en antagonism to the Republican ticket is in reality owned, not by Torn Kearns and bis bolting awNX'iates, but .the chief interest in the organ is to the National Republican committee. The story is (hat while he was chairman of ibe National Republican committee, the late Mark Hanna provided the funds which were used for the purchase of the Tribune, at the time when the paper ostensibly became the property of Mr. T. Kearns and his associates. The lnforatation comes from the CLEVELANDS hif,litt and most, trustworthy sourer, and if the investigation now going on . FAILURE. results as is confidently predicted. Mr. Kearns will lie exposed aa not only an Cleveland is an unim- Ingrate hut as the violator of the trust aginative man, aud for this and other of a man whose lipe are forever sealgood reasons his recent magazine sili- ed. The negotiations were conducted, accic, entitled. "Why a Young Man cording to the committee's informant, Should Vote the Democratic Ticket," U by that diplomatic old eychophant, Mr, . ho at the time was ou short, pointless and unconvincing. Ferry It takes a good deal of fervid feny, terms of the closest social and politiIntimacy with Mr. Mark Hanna. and a knack for Invention, to construct cal It was represented to the chairman of an argument upon a theme like that. the uaiiuiial committee that in order Mr. Cleveland was evidently ill at e.ie to maintain control in Utah and adwith hia subject. Probably few young joining states, lr was necessary for tbe men will read the argument, anyway, Republican party to control the Tribune, which was represented as the and no one will he influenced hy it. most powerful and influential paper in The young men of America live in the country. It Is statthe present and hope for the future. ed that the expressions of Ferry Heath were concurred In by Senator Mitchell They do not care to I ever holding or Oregon, Svraior Clark of Montana on dead Union, nor to and Senators Clark and Wnrrcn of Wyspend their days holding hark the oming. all of whom believed ibat. the Tribune would lie a tremendous aid to wheels of action and progress. The young men of the United Slates the Republican organization ia ail of tbciid Jlic pmiuisit ion was also are alive. And they will vote the Re- ably stall. advocated by Mr. Richard Kerens of Mi&ouri, a political and busipublican ticket this fell. ness at that time with Mr. Heath an-- ATt. Kcarni. There is a possibility that the strike With in forma1 Ion coming from such of the laundry workers at Toledo. O., a source, the aiirlrebility of the Repwill assume hig proportions, owing to ublican organiz-ulogaining control the inauguration of the open shop sys- of the Tribune was naturally a forcetem ly the employers. ful appeal to Mr. Hunns, who readily in'er-utounta- m s but also tha absolute political propriet- threw the country Into fits in 1892. Dr, tors Gorman and II111, are preparing another prescription, but It will be ImThe real Democratic party la a possible to make the voters believe thing of the past; it la not a thing of are 111 this year. the present, and men like W. J. Bryan they POLITICAL saw the advantage of a powerful Republican Journal In these it ate. Acting under their representations, ably presented by Kerens and Heath and endorsed by the senators of adjoining atatea, it la stated that the chairman of tha National Republican committee contributed $160,000 and that this was used as part of the purchase price of tbe Tribune, which was disposed of at a figure not much In excern of $200,000. This being true, the mount contributed by Mr. Kearns and his associates In the transaction could not have been muck more than from $50,000 to $60,000, and the organ was consequently pledged forever to the advocacy of Republican principles and the support of the nominees or the organisation. But notwithstanding the fact that the major portion of the purchase price was apparently contributed from that source, the Tribune became nominally the property of the great trust, who have since converted the Tribune into a most belligerent medium of antagonism toward the Republican president and the Republican party In this date. Had the paper consistently remained a Republican organ, the real tacts in the transfer would probably nrver have been divulged, but einoe the paper assumed its attitude of hostility toward tha electoral and state tickets, the committee Is determined to definitely determine whether or not Mr. Kearns la the real owner of the organ or whether the matter of dictating its policy Is a prerogative of the national rommfttee. If the fund waa not used by Kearna-Heatet al., for the purchase of the Tribune, the committee is determined to learn defilnlteiy what disposition was made of the amount. The committees Investigation will be thorough, and while it may be demonstrated that Mr. Kearns and associates were the bona fide purchasers of the paper. the Information in the committee's uossesslon would indicate that they hold hut a subsidiary interest. Most people who are eirare of the political misdoings , of the trust will not be at. all sceptical of the probably information which has been submitted to the committee. Their program not only Included the control of vast commercial concerns in Utah and adjoining states Kearna-Heath-Kere- as h, Kearns-Heath-Kere- na i nm Mulitf KM sal-erat- r |