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Show 1 1 i I MORNING EXAMINER, THE EXAMINER PaUbM (my day la tkt year by Cw tha Standard Publishing CHURCH INFLUENCE. Hon. Brigham H. Roberts is bis speech at tbe Opera House, in a fruitless effort to Intimidate the voters of tha state, .raid, that if the Republican party won in this state, not with standing the defection of the Kearns that tha case of the protectants against Senator Reed 8 a toot would be made out, that the senatorial committee would (figuratively speaking) rend their cloches and say,. "What need we of any further testimony?" etc. Of course. Brother Roberts was sincere, and will, no doubt, be willing to appear before the Smoot committee and point out the dire effects of this terrible "influence" in his home state and demand that Senator Smoot should have a touch from the same Jhioi that accelerated his own homeward journey from Washington. The Salt Lake Tribune of ibis morning, with tbe fires of its hate still smoldering not quite extinguished by tbe great Republican landslide publishes the letter with which Charley Jackson announces his accession to the party and then proceMis to tell of numerous and nameless Democrats who privately voice the sentiments of Mr. Jackson's ual-Icletter. Tbe Tribune's and impotent rage are worth as much as, and no mure than tha bluster of Brother Roberts. Utah did just exactly the same, no better, than the rest of tbe United States. Coming back, however, to Brother Roberts, we must admit that the state has gone Republican. "Ergo (sara Brother Roberts) church influence ia accountable for it. "We told you so, squawks the Tribune. And so they rest the rase. Let us investigate the matter mure closely, This paper plants itself squarely upon tha declaration of tba constitution of the United Stales that "Congress shall make no law respecting au establishment of religion, or prohibiting tbe free exercise thereof. Our stale constitution has reaffiruu-this; we believe in It; we are willing to fight with voice and pen any party, or nutn or set of men who attempt any innovation against this principle. This, of course, Includes all forms of "church influence, and all other methods of coercing and persuading voters outside of tha usual method! ot political argument and persuasion. But, ss we scan the election returns, the wonder to ua ia that Brother Roberts and tbe mighty Tribune are content to wreak their vengeance upon little Utah alone when poor there is such broad a field In tbe great United States for the exercise of their undaunted courage and much admired talents. Judged by tbe test which they hava laid down, wa tbink there la conclusive proof of church Influence all over the United States. In the name of American manhood and to tba sad that our great and glorious country be liberated from the baleful effects of an ecclesiastical hierarchy, we shall file a protest against the tasting of the electoral votes of the several states for Theodore Roosevelt until suck time aa It la shown that tho Mormon priesthood did not eorrn and Intimidate the voters of the country with their whisperings and secret instructions. Think what "EVIDENCE" (according to Roberts and (ha Tribune) aa hava of tbls in that election baleful influence returns Look at Pennsylvania, Ohio, Now York, Iowa, Minnesota, California and Nebraska. In fact, all over the country in every state, in every county, in every product, tbe evidence multinot down. plies, accumulates and Even old rock-ribbMissouri, a state that expelled tbe Saints, and Illinois whose people, like those of Jeniaslam of old, atoned tbe prop I ml and killed those that were sent, etc., have at ' last fallen under the sway of, and yielded to this terribly corrupting aad We have, much dreaded influence. heretofore, opposed the party because it fed on hate, because It was in no sense a national party, because its voters could not express their sentiments on national Issues without (he aid or asatHtanc of some other party, hut now that the Democratic party Is dead we see a groat Utah opauing for this organisation. It might sutraed to the assets of tbe Democratic party ia the natkio, (which consist of a crippled donkey, several barrels of red fire powder and some campaign debts). In order to get the fire and ardor to sue cum in a na tional way. It might became advisable to scud out niiseiOBartsa from Utah wbo thoroughly understand this Influence'' and who con explain to the daaed and baffled Democrats In (he east, w hat is the matter with Billy Paurrsja, and the Democratic donkey? Judge Powers could be baptised Into tha party and then sent to bis old home in Mtrhlgan, where voire and soothing sea-te- n bla flute-lik- e ere would stampede the people into the new party fold. Frank J. Cannon, bold aa a lion, eloquent as Pemosihnae, and magnetic aa Blaine, wouM (probably) ask to be sent to Pennsylvania where he would run the Republican (church) elephant to the jungles. Geo. L. Nye, with his splendid pres rnre and his fluent speei-ii- , would be just the man to put in the Held in Ohio. Mr. P. J. Daly would probably artonisli tha Suckers and then corrall them by droves if he were sent to Illinois. We want Willard Synder to go to Indiana because the Democrats hare been complaining very persistently about the 'mid wave that follows Senator Fairbanks and it Is generally conceded that Willard la a warm cla-que- WM. GLASMANN, Manager. Delivered by Carrier. I acini' Morning Exaialast, Giwday pay bqbG Cagle !:! SUBSCRIPTION ft U RATISL sail oe month (lKludln gniiy) outside of Often ..SO ctn Telephone Nol Cl Subscribers will confer n hwr By informing this ottos of failure to i batata their eafvo Tha breakfast. e, TUB DEMAND FOR WOOL. Tbs drciaod for wool continues active, but tbs volums of butanes transacted is not as large as It was a few luoalba ago, for tlie reason '.hat there is not aa large a Block of wool to do with as there was then. Supplies of medium wools especially have been to reduced that It ie difficult to find many says desirable aad sizable selorti-ms- , the American Wool and Cotton Report er. The finer grades, though not relatively aa active aa the loser grades, have been In decidedly better request than they ware a year ago, and tba supply of this class of wool is not burdensome by any means, for wools bare been moved so very freely In original clips this year that stocks of fine and fins medium wools which would ordinarily Mist at lhe seaboard marketa today, hava disappeared. Not for many years. If ever, baa tne demand for wool continued so active for suck a length of time. Ordinarily there would be, perhaps, three or four ' weeks of pmaouneed activity, followed by a dull period; but this year, throughout the greater part of the summer and during the fall, thus far, the demand has eoaflaued active, with scarcely any let-uThis haa resulted, of course, in placing wool in a statistically strong position, and the strength of the situation seems to be intennillrd as time passes. Prices, therefore, are fully aa high as they have ben at any time, and In view of the diminishing supplies of wool it la not surprising that dealers In wool, whose aioeka hava become substantially exhausted, should now be . purchasers of desirable and sizable clips, whenever they can obtain them at a reasonable price. The events of the past few months indicate pretty exclusively that stocks of the raw malarial in tha hands of the manufacture res must have been at a pretty low level when the season for the new wools started In. Since the beginning of June there have been sold In the Boston market more than 140,000.-00- 0 pounds of wool, an amount never equalled before In the same period In any previous yean The great bulk of this wool has not been purchased for e peculation; It haa ben bought for and those in touch with the mans feet ring situation have no doubt that It will all be needed. p. I. Hr - PLANS FOR IRRIGATING 9,000, 000-AC- TRACT. , 'An Irrigation project whloh, If car-rie- d out. will reclaim more than 9.000.-00- 0 acres along the Missouri river In North Dakota and will add approximately 1350.000,040 to the real eeULs valuation of the State, la under cntitMar-ntlo- n by the officials of North Dakota and the Department of the Interior at Washington. Chief Newell, of the United Btatos Bureau at Geological Survey, and a liartyof government official passed through St. Paul ou the way to North Dakota, where they will inspect the land along the Mlssenri river aad determine to what extent ir-.rlgation is feasible. It is rrixMted that the innetlgatlon l being made with the approval and sanction of President Roosevelt, who is especially Interested in reutalnilng the semlarid lands of the North wesi through Irrigation. The president once bad a ranch in North Dakota and at that time discovered the possibilities of irrigation, lie rilncnvired that the soil la among the most fertile in the world; that the Missouri river furnishes ample water fur irrigation; that there are abundant quantities of lignite coal along the river to furnish 1 power tar pumping water into reservoirs, and that owing to the natural resources of the caunlry It is peculiarly adapted to irrigation. The tract which it is proposed to irrigate is fifty miles wide and extend 300 miles from the Montana line al.jni the river. The soil i aa fertile as in any section of the United States, and it la eatftnafet! that land which is now worth only from 5tt.nO to 3f.no per aero will M worth from f 10 to $50 when The soil is unusually well adapted to (he raising or cereals, all hinds of vegetables and sugar beets, a according to the analysis of experts it contains 22 per cent saccharins mutter, Potatoes raised on similar soil are mealy and dry. and wheal and other grains are famous the world over for their good qua) tiles. ! ed ""her. CWDEN, UTAH. FRIDA T MORNING, Charley Jackson, the newest and probably the most sealoua of the new party chiefs, could go to old Missouri and make the hit of his life "showing the Missourians bow it hapiwntd. Senator Dubois, no doubt, will have enough to do dividing his time between n bis Idaho constituents and the f the case igilut Senator Smoot. We do nol think Senator Kearns need do any more than simply sit In bis seat and smile, (and draw chec ks) while the good work goes forward. Brother B. H. Roberts could act as general superintendent of missions and go wherever there is demand for his attractive presence: Whenever a Macedonian cry was sent up from any of the missionaries. Brother Roberts' word aa to "how" and "why it happened would put a quietus to discussion and silence cavil. whole election Wa want this thoroughly Investigated because If the Mormon chun-- brought about the ia Utah, it becomes, apparent that the same organization was working all over tbe country, and if a president of the United States has been of a elected through the influence time is that it high church, single broa-this all over pat roils rallied be should land forever under a banner which will destroy ecclesiastical Influence in political affairs. We rannot but think It strange that no one of the great Democratic leaders has been sufficiently upon this subject to lay the facts before the public. Judge Parker in bis statement seems to have overlooked this most potent factur in hla own defeat and undoing. In a lengthy address, which seems to have been carefully prepared, the distinguished jurist goes over tbe whole situation wit 'tout a single reference to the actual cause of the great landslide which carried him down. Mr. Bryan, unquestionably the greatest Democrat in the country, haa been beard from at considerable length and he, too. overlooks this mast powerful evlL This must be most exasperating to tbe patriots of Utah who have pledged "their lives, their property and their sacred honor to tbe great cause of human liberty. and who alone of all the defeated Wa call can tell "bow it happened. awake! to Utah upon tha patriots Bound the tocsin of libertyl Let tha eagle'a scream from the lofty peaks of the Wasatch reverberate over a continent! Let tha eloquent Cannon, the powerful Roberts, the seductive Powers (if they ean get him), all raise their voices in unison. Let a new national party be formed tbit will have for ita corner stone opposition to the Mormon hierarchy, and let ua all declare that we will suppress and overthrow this outlandish church Influence, not alone in Utah, but In New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Michigan, Iowa, in fact, in every state in tha whole United Btatea as welL Frank Cannon, B. H. Roberts, Thomas Kearns and other nation. owe to tha patriots Let them perform It well and acquit themselvee like men. Let thalr watchword be Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death," and let them reflect that while it may not bo possible for this (mat party of tbeir'a to succeed in a national way in tha next five hundred yearn, yet eventually the people may be brought to understand tha purity of their motives, the loftiness of their 'convict ions, the dauntlcssnese of their courage and the value and character of the work they have performed in calling attention to the actual cause of the great Republican landslide of 1904. NOYEMCEB 11, 1901. FLOWER POTS, VASES and Jardinere Shapes aad Decorations that will please to suit your purses. prose-t-uriu- you end COME IN AND WE WILL BE GLAD TO SHOW THEM To You. Wheelwright Bros. CROCKERY AYE. STORE 2478 WASHINGTON BOTH PHONES. BOTTLED HEALTH Natures delicious sparkling Nectar. It create that exahed perfect health by etmmstng the system ef all impurities. t well-inform- ed . EDIOMAL COIHENT The correspondent at Cbefoo will again strike an attitude in the center of the stage. And Judge Parker, of course, insists that be cannot agree with the people's verdict; but there is no appeal. William J. Bryan has been vindicated for once so far sa hla Chicago aieech ou Parker in concerned. Now that tbe American elections are over Oyama and KuropalMn can again resume the settlement of their little differences. The people have also endorsed David Bennett Hlll'e announcement that he 1 will mlra on January 1: they advanced the date for hie retirement two months. PITH OF THE PRESS WHO? Who were the emissaries ot the chuich that fixed things Mormon In West Virginia and Indiana? Dreer-e- t News. WELL, WHAT'S THE MAT- TER WITH WEBER. Utah county redeemed Its pledges to rest, of the state with t wo or three hundred more majority thrown in for good measure. At the next Republican Stale convention. Utah county will hare the largest delegation. Provo Enquirer. RUSSIA GROWING CIVILIZED. tbe WMW Ere long a Jew who was born In Russia will be permitted to return to that country on a visit without being put into prison. American citizenship was no protection to the Jew. but Russia has been compelled to recognize the passports issued at Washington. Thin is something which should have been required of Russia long before. Gram Volley Union. COMING INTO TlIEIR duct as to quality, but there has been a marked Improvement in the California lemon within tha past few years, an improvement that the trade has come to recognize, and1 now the lemon from the California orchard is found superior In many respects to that from Sicily. Santa Cruz Sentinel. WILL GET ANOTHER ADVISER. It was Alexieff who before the beginning of the war Informed the Csar that the Japs couMnt fight and might easily be t leaned out by a few regiNicholas ments of Russiapa Before goes to war again he may have the guod sense toy look the other fellows over first h iaise If. San Jose Neva. A PROBABLE SOLUTION. The Chicago The California Winn Is coming to asHiinie its proper place. Until recently It was thought that It could nrt compete successfully with the Sicily pro- - Babylonian expedition a statue of King Daddu. They report that tha face looks like that of Senator Depew. King Daddu has excavated lived C.049 At First class Bare, Cafes, Clubs and Drug Stores. years ago, which la about FRED. J. KIESEL, the vintage ot some of Mr. De pews jokes. Perhaps they are family heirlooms. a Chico Record. (Bjr Stephen Chalmers.) Tha death of Edward Drencher at Caldwell, Tex., a few day ago, after ha had baon found on tbe pnbiio highway covered with red ants, by which ha had been bitten to Insensibility, recall! a strange tale headed down by the Spaniards with regard to the mysterious depopulation of Sevilla Nue-va- , or Sevilla d'Oro, the first civilised city of the western hemisphere. Bayard Edwards In his History of the West Indies, says that Sevilla dOro was destroyed by an .earthquake, a far mine, a corsair rind, a native insure reetkm or an ant pest" This la quaintly uncertain aad widely comprehensive, but the fact that other historians sgrea that the city was destroyed in one night would point tha finger of responsibility to tha ant pest or something equally mysterious, particularly when all tha olrcu instances of tbe mat ter are known, so far aa it ia possible for any one to know them. Twenty years after tha discovery of tha New World by Christopher Columbus, the West Indies boasted two cities. One was Hispaniola, now Santo Domingo, the other was Sevilla Nneva, or Sevilla d'Oro, the ruins of which may be viewed today on a sugar estate which still bears the name Seville. situated about one mile to the west of St. Ann's Bay on the north coast of the Island of Jamaica. This Island was then known as Xaymaca and St. Ann's Bay as Bantu Gloria, which was the chief port of the Golden Seville. This city, according to historians, was built by wealthy Spaniards who had gone to the Indies attracted by the wealth and beauty of the region as described by Columbus to Queen Isabella. The Golden Seville in the year 1509 waa possessed of a cathe-a dral. a monastery, a theater and pavement extending over one mile." After the death of Columbus and Queen Isabella, Diego Columbus, the son at the discoverer, was at law with Ferdinand of Arregon over the vice Ferdinand, regal rights of who wished to have full control of the rich iffiaaAa, ignored Diego Columbus and his claims, and appointed m governor of Xaymaca Don Juan Esquivel. Esquivel lived and held magnificent d'Oro, court. It 'Is said, at Seville whore were gathered all the riohee, beauty and blood of Castile, Arregon and the Indies. Several times tha doubt has been raised that the city could have existed in such splendor at such an early date after tbe discovery, but the Golden Seville's existence land magma cence does not seem so improbable when it is remembered that the Spaniards bad all tbe wealth they wanted, culled not only from tbe rich Island In which they placed their capital, but from tbe surrounding seas, which they were constantly raiding. The city was also the rendezvous of all the Spanish, French and English corsairs who at that time infested the main. The fact that gold will not obtain a fo-in a place where gold la of little value ia scarcely an argument against the existence of Seville d'Oro, when it is agreed by all historians that the indolent Spaniards made slaves of the aborigines, Carib and Arawak Indiana and com pel led them by violence to bring from the forests of (h Interior all that waa required by the city in tbs way of food, drink and labor. It Seville d'Oro was a fact and there seems little reavm to doultt it the cltv owed Its mushroom growth and splendor to thousands of Indian slaves, who were coerced into building It for the conquerors. The sudden disaster which befell city in !'") is said by righteous Ije b'Morlans to bare been a visitation of God upon the wickedness of tbs Spaniards. Th story is, briefly, as follows: About- tbe yar 1309 Don Juan Esquivel. th- - governor, fitted out a number of caravels and galloons and started upon an expedition to Fanula, on the Spanish Main. He appointed to govern Seville d'Oro in his absence pa-ve- un (Sarny. CO.v . nuMh..iqri Backus I suppose your wife Is still very dear to you old chap? Cyrus Dearer. She haa running accounts In three ot the biggest department stores Boston Transcript. Yw need Fad Sun Md fir yesreetf and bay. Putno haa them la great abundance aaf "You reckon you'll com out purty good on yer crap this year? asked the BHlvllle citizen of his neighbor. "I reckon eo, was the reply. The Sheriff is whangin' 'round, an pears to feel couSdent" Atlanta Constitution. gt the RIGHT PRICE. Puri toll In call and leak gvsr before yen bup Mr. said Bklnnay, Ugh!" wbo was uncomfortably being the crowded jolly by kmking fat man. these ears should charge by weight. Think so? replied the fat man; why, they'd hardly think it worth while to stop for you. Philadelphia Ledger. Mun The Putnam by Washington Irving as having bean a faithful retainer of Columbus in bis voyages el discovery, a man who for bis services to Spain waa appointed to a position of power in the new world. Up to th year 1509 Da Garay bad not had full control of affairs in any part of tha Indies, and on finding himself supreme administrator at tba beautiful city of Seville d'Oro he gave way to his own conceit and misruled tha Uttl kingdom. It is handed down that the Golden Seville, during the absence of Esquivel, waa tbe scene of unbridled vice and ribaldry that would have put even Nero and bla Rome to shams. Arawak Indians were slaughtered aa a form of entertainment, while in ths streets there rang day and night the sounds of strife, for the corsairs, finding the city in a state of ehaoe and misrule, took advantage of the moment to loot what aad where they could. This reign of terror culminated at tha beginning of tha second reins, ' whtch eoonr in tba month of October. To those who have never lived in tbe tropics the Men of aa Invasion of rad ants so thick that everything la covered as with a pall may be inerodible. Trtia tt ta that in recent years nothing so terrible has oecaared in tha Went Indies, bat It Is a meat familiar aigbt just before the stifling rain cloads burst In their season" to see tha floore of a bungalow infested with red rata. There ants measure half an Inch long, and their bite will raise a bump the sise of e ptgeoa's egg. It la recorded that during tha night previous to ths breaking of the semiannual deluge, and while the oourt of Don Pranelseo de Garay waa holding a last festival b of ere ths reins," out at the Jungle which surrounded the city on three sides came this livwave, ing, moving, hissing, blood-re- d which drove every other living thing before It. There la something morbidly fascinating about that picture of the men and women running through the quaint streets of this strange city trying to escape tbls trickling blood-lik-e stream. It ia said that very few escaped the poet which seethed through every crevice and cranny of the city, destroy-- 1 ing, as it passed, all that was organic. Borne are bettered to have escap-- 1 ed in boats, tbe most of wbiob, how-- , ' ever, were swamped in the launching. Others who did not give way to sup-- I erstition and the terror of the moment, followed the example of the Arawak slaves, who knew exactly what the red wave was and how to deal with it. They did not run from the ants, but dashed right through them and gained the jungle, which the pest Invariably forsakes during the wet season. Those who were fortunate enough to escape from the Golden Seville cut a way through tha. labyrinthine forest and founded a small settlement on the south side of the island. The town of St. Jago de la Vega, or Spaoinh-towia still In existence, and fhe trail of the fugitive Spaniards from Seville d'Oro to 8L Jago is still kept open by the British government, because ft is the beat possible route between the two placet. Tbe most dramatic part of the story of the oertlle is that told of the return of Don Juan Esquivel. The governor came hack from Pannla laden wfth treasures only to find the city standing white, gaunt and dead in the tropic sunshine. On landing. Esquivel and his men found swords, guns and pieces of raiment which had been cast aside by tne fugitives aa encumbrances to their flight but there wee no sign of life save tbe buzzards tbat yawned on tbe deserted street a over pile of white hone. Once the monastery bell boomed, but It was no ploti monk who tolled It. The melancholy note was but the ironr of the fickle wind. It is said that the booming of that monastery bell so worked upon tbe superstitious fears of tbe Spaniards that they sailed ewsy into the night toward Hispaniola, leaving the Golden iih mod Don Frsnrisco ile Seville to enic.ble to the rains In which This De Garay is meaiinnod It now lies. . n (EL . Legend of the Red Ants - OWN. JJxxt&p ENCORE FOB THE STARS. Uncle Bam 2345 Washington Avenue CIST Of Mil March - SALE 1 at 9 Will be remembered by the thousands ef buyers who bought during that famous sal We will give another Coot Mark n everyth tug In steak and will Inchlte ali Fall Geo da arriving daring Safe, DomaaCle auMnga and an - Cotton Ooods bnught sine drop In prices of there geode are Included. ' No article In oat forge stack will be' reserved. The uumner la which New March-andtWin be aaorfficad wMI be food for close, carettt buyers. e V The Terms of Sale Are Positively C A ' S Reese Howell n, m-fst- ypii 4 H Sons I |