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Show WEDNESDAY MORSIM), THE JlORXIXIi KXAJIIXER OGIIKX, CTAD. a! wmn Puk)jM tmrj uy ia the RATES. SUBSCRIPTION Celto-Slavon- buci-aes- Delivered by Carrier In City. Including Sunday lng Examiner. per Single copies muin. ... J if tim in currence cU' h ,UJ I outside of Ogden, per At tenet quarterly, in ed fence.. 1.S0 Emin ymr....W INDEPENDENT AND FEARLESS Thn Fxnmlaer n strictly 1 tedepend-in- t nn It Xvr nil sides newspaper. , tqual show. The ExaaJncr has no festwltes, nea w ill give the jo tnemiM to punish. It ewe unbiased nad unprejudiced. Combiuniceiioni will be received on ill subject pn Hunted In respectful Indiividuale, but sngtiagn from known ilia mi" name juuet be published la full. All letters and ccanamalcsUonB sard by uois ds plume. or asouoied 7 sue, will La furown In the wenle Mkei. The brace man ne'er bidra -- I0' ark jhlaj an nsaiited new ,e EJItor lo be respotoiMe for what hamed of. py are Subscribers will ennh.'r a favor Informing thin office of failure to The breakfast. Kx ly re-mi- T their miser EXAMINER TELEPHONES EDITORIAL ROOMS Independent Phone Bell Phone. si BUSINESS OFFICE Independent Phene Bell Phone. ..Ne. -- . SI .Nfc M ...No. 120 it.Na WM. CLASMANN OS exaggmteJ. tba mass la is uf Ike Huau Csr. Hug - c THE WOOL INDUSTRY. lu spile of hoiho disadvantage not xpurlcnced by other elates the out loos of the sheep Industry in Ilali la Home parts very good indeed. In central part tin of the ' state, for iustiuico, the slurp men havo Ui trail their slieep lung from the summer to the winter range, which Is somewhat of a hard Thia eystem does not exist to aldp. such an extent either in the northern The' or southern parts of the elate. scab and other Infectious sheep diseased hard been apparently been well cleaned up by the persistent work of the federal aud state officers. Ia a abort time It la probable that tho quarantine will be raised la Utah. We have another dlaudvantago, tba wild ahlmala that destroy a great many This is a matter sheep and lambs. that should bo looked after, for In aplta of our largo bounty payments, I bo coyotes are growing worse evory year. They seem to Increase rather thaa deerca in spite of all efforts to destroy them. We have in Utah about 2,100,000 sheep end tho wool dipt in the northern and Central parte of the slate are mostly conA quantity in tract od for already. the southern part it not. The wool dip so contracted was at very good At the lima of such configures. tracts the sheep men fell good over it. Whether they will fed so good next spring alien they shear the sheep, in Th Industry In Utah hard to say. ia fa good condition. Loud in being bought up by the sheep men and it Is only a matter of time when sheep men who do not own their own limit will have to retire from the business. Transient men through the travelling feed wherever ronnlry and getting they can will have In abandon that din-tan- business. The trouble between the rattle and heep men In our stale la nearly at an little friction. end. There is now run both of them cattle and Many sheep and are I icing united aud getting down lo business in harmony. OF THE CASE There are two aides lo every story, ilille wholesale revolution has been nmiuinminni NO UNEMPLOYED Teeaiy-fisi- this pro-pert- g ARE MORMONS PKON8? Editor Frank J. Cannon of I he Halt Lake Tribune seams to have lost self respect and ooaidertkm for his own people when. In this mornings issue Of the Tribune, he declares the Mormons have become peon through the operation of lh tithing system of th church, lie done an editorial, headed "Church Peons," with these wind: That the Mormon now I carrying all the burdens that his back will bear, and has already entered lutn an era of luilesa decay , unless he shall be r cued. What a niunstroii- - thing it that, this church, using I he name of Jesuit Christ, should make peons of as people unJer tbs Hug of this Repubis a Rpaiiudi wind used In South American countries to designate e form of slavery or serfdom which ex isted to a considerable extent tip to few year ago. A pro I mure creature than was the chattel lave of Southern mastery. He Is not i iulhed and i ared ter. but is held in burning- - at a wage that barely admits of existence and from his scanty alio' a nee ho pays the debt due hi creditor. mis-eiah- Hunter jWhiskey Every Sideboard Needs It Every Buyer Likes It Every User b Satisfied To liken tin Mmmon jieople lhrul upon him. If (he Moruiuns are peons, then our townsman of suit words, smirks aud a product of that smiles, made sleek and remfertebl- - by money sweated from his ieople. How ran a man of coiumoti rea-- e n tiionmcbly heiuul hi own enilostirr and yet proles to have l.iik f him rn. i virn a m Vtabl'M. The passenger engines ere expected in this week, and the engineers who ara in Balt Lake City superintending the work say they will have them all out on t he line In about ten Jays. The engineers are Charles K. Cramer. W. H, Wrigut, Ueu. llloomlngilale and W. E. Gauslhie. CLARK ROAD IS FINISHED, A special lo the Salt Lnke Herali front lot Angeles announces that at Hiding No. 31. in the desert twenty miles north of the UsIifOrnia-Nevadstale line, the spike in tbe San Pedro. Lo Angeles A Salt Lake railroad was drive at 3:15 oclock yesterday afteniMKi. Chief Kngiueer Tilton wa present in person to superintend the laving vf the last rail, but hail not been for the wife of General Man agnr Welle the affair would have been without ceremony of any kind. 81m had sent down a tiny golden spike from Salt a lat lake fo the rlitef engineer. This Tilton fished out of bin vet pocket after a burly Greak 1m borer had rent the last Iron spike home, end with n lac hammer he sank it into tho wood of the Inst tie that liad been put in plat, and then motioned to the construction (raiu to pass over it. Aa it did no the Greeks and Austriaiia on the Nevada end snt up n cheer, answered by a whoop from tbe Mexicana who built tbe Californi; end iff the road. The little golden spike wa Iheu taken tip to he returned te Mr Welts ee a souvenir. The divikm completed yesterday consist of 299 mile of new construction between the towns of Csllvnte, Nev snd Dsggett. a station on tha Sants Fe In tbs heart of the Mojave desert la California. For eight tnoutha thia construct ion work was pustuvl from both ends, and it was only machine today that the trechleytng which wer employed came together. There are a few short sections of the new track which wiU bava to he rebuilt before the road will be opened to traffle, bnt it It believed in a very short time good time brtweea Salt snd Los Angeles ran be made. Much remains to be done, however, in tbe way of providing watering facilities in the desert through which the road runs for o many miles, and affording protection to the track from cloud burst ami sandstorms common Vo t ti i region. From Daggett to Riverside the 8alt Lake trains will run over the Bants F tracks. I rum Riverside to ljo Angeles and Ban TiMro harbor the Salt Lake comiwny already has a fine train service In operation over its own excellently built and well equipped road. Already a Urge amount or freight is awaiting transportation via the Salt lake route, and tremendous energy is being manifested in developing the mineral and agricultural resources of th country tlnuugh which the new road runs. All indication point to hcavv traffic oi er the line from the start. The ft no through train from Suit lake to lam Angeles ia exiected to nr. Tive come t iiue next week, when J. Rom Clark. NNitn l vice president of the road, will make flip initial journey over tha entire rente. EXTENDS. A special lo the Sait Lake Tribune that Hie Denver 4 lnlermou.i-tei- u railway j In be extended to M. hn Spring-- , u distance of between twenty and thirty niilee, according to the present plans of Samuel Newhonse, own- -r of the road. The levels have been run. snd all that remains t for cni-- i ruction gangs )o get to Grading. it L declared, will rg-- earIn ly ibe spring. The reason for the t:ite exten-i-- or m I the dlscorefr of body tn the Xewlmuve Idaho Spring. a rich Minnel at od . Charleston. M. Va.. bouses of the AYest V i I'E :M today adopted rvul!ii,-iis Tri.sidepl RiNwevrir isialhm to control rai'-ma- l noth legist. iture endorsing s f(,r )rs. r.ites. TO LOVERS OF GOOD CIGARS i- WHAT SPANISH sfll-dati- HEAD WORK IS I OPEN It mease that the cigars made this way can be smoked even though tho wrapper gets broken by carrying them in your pocket. The filler of an open head mads cigar are worked In wKh tho top or point of tho loaves to the sad which you light, thus giving the smoker the beet results as the point of the loaves are the best part of the tobacco. la making cigars the cld way should th wrapper get broken you cannot amoka tho cigar, aa the Binder will unrole and leave you trying to omoko when there Is nothing to hold tho cigar together. Tho fipaniah open head woy of making cigars does away with that cause as the cigar la nude Just the opposite. ( There is one cigar factory ia Ogdon who have their clgara made thia l way.. That la The Wessler Cigar Co, who improve with tho timea. We have adopted this way of making our Wessler Best" Cigar, for tho above reason. Knowing our many patrona and customers will find our Weialera Beat better in every respect by being made Spanish open head, we are HUSBAND NAMES cigars Charges of adultery are made s gainst Mrs. BmIum A. Weuuvstruin by Harold 8. Weiinratrom, her husband. These ere la answer to a couiplaiut for vorce filed last wrek by Mrs. Yours for Union Made I Cigar, di- WESSLER CIGAR CO. OGDEN UTAH Wn-aestro- She charged him with Baring that he had falorly accused her of adultery. He denies any cruelty. But he ears that Mrs. WeniMStrom was criminally Intimate with one Neils Anderson at Bandy aad in other places within Salt Lake countyMr. Wen nest roiu had kued for alimony and Die custody of the children. The husband denies having the amount of property attributed to him by hi wife, lie ask that slie take nothing by her complaint, and that lie be awarded the custody of tbe children. He denlen that he deserted her or refused to euHtsln marital relation and racognlxe her an hie wife. But he suya that since he knew of her relatione with the Anderson, he has refused to sustain marital relatione with Mrs. Wennentrom. tint she raised an axe in defense of her spouse is not true. She says she simply requested that her huiiband he left ith her. Ainswortu was committed to the elate mental hospital a few days ago. The local weather bureau has Issued data compiled from weather records of Balt Lake covering a period of thirty years. According to the data on hand, the normal temperature for the month of February during that apace of time was 33 degrees. The warmest February was that of 1886. with an average of 41 degrees; the coldest that of 1884, with an average of 20 degreea. The highest temperature was 68 degrees. on Feb. 27. 1879; the lowest, 11 below aero, on Feb. 13, 1884. Tin greatest amount of snowfall recorded In hour any ronsecutlve twenty-fou- r 11 Inches, cm Feb. 4, 1881. The rrenrJ must not be construed as a forecast of the weather conditions for the ronung si, month. UTAHNA PARK CLOSED. Utahn Park dancing pavilion was closed Monday night by order of Chief of Follre Lynch. W. R. Gourley, manager of the recreation halt, when noti tied early in the evening thiat his place must be closed, vowed that it could not be dona by th authorities according to law, and Insisted that he would run it in defiance of any orders. When OlHcer Henry. Johnston and Sergeant J. O. Roberta' arrived at the gate at bare tbe 8:45 oclock, however, across the entrance were drawn and a "spieler" nlond upon the sidewalk announcing: "There will be no dance tonight; the musicians are sick." The chief aid he took the action In the Interest of morality. and to protect ninny young girls from temptation toward ruin. For soma time pa-R- t FREE TO EXAMINER SUBSCRIBERS FOUR HUNDRED PICTURES OF PLACES CHRIST PROVE THE BIBLE BY SCENES OF TODAY. t TO THE MORNING EXAMINER, 4 GENTLEMEN: hereby subscribe for the MORNING EXAMINER for 12 months and agree to pay the sum of 71 caste per month promptly at the end of each month en eeadtttei that I racetee free of ell charge that 400 page bock sailed Th Earthly Footsteps of the Maa of Gallia," by paying ia advenes when I receive Urn book the sum of 75 cents, which chall be applied oa the 12th monos subecriptlea. Should I leave the City permanently at anytime withla 12 mentba thea the 75 cents shall be forfeited and I keep the book. V NAME ; ADDRESS ......... ......... . . ...... ...,. , .... ...... ...... .......... COUPON FOR MADAME GENTLEMEN. rig months at the postpaid every i NAME... a TO THE MORNING EXAMINER, TB I hereby subscribe for the MORNING EXAMINER fee regular rates en condition that you send me MADAME itieaeMeta Bead iaie loeiiMSMiieb iititistee 1 lltMaiMtMlii i - MAIL SUBSCRIBERS : AVells-Kata- EARTH COUPON FOR EARTHLY FOOTSTEPS ADDRESS. SIO.-Ut- ON Given away frea to every EXAMINER SUBSCRIBER who signs the annexed coupon and pays 75 cents in advance for the 12Ui months subscription to the Morning Examiner. The price of the book is $4.00 and can be seen at the Examiner Office 360 24th Street No Trouble to Show IL This Offer Good Only as Long as Books Last SALT LAKE NOTES. r WHEN THE MOST WONDERFUL BOOK OF THE CENTURY ed Melvin D. Cook be been appuluted regular and Willard L. Conk substitute rural carrier, at Lake. At a meeting of the Xatiunal Hank of the llepublii- crurday tbe fallowing oflirere were Iiom-uW. R. Kail. !. A. Kvan. cashiers: ft, G. Rmltli, man- of the savingx department. agi-Articles of Incoiporation were filed of the county yesterday in the clerk by the Tooele Mercantile company. which has a spiral stack of divided into 2,ci share of the par value i'f $' each. Tt.e Incorporator are Julin A. Liudberg. John A. Gillett, Effie 8. Liudberg and Mary A. Gillett. Deputy Sheriff viidrew Smith, .lr returned ester-lafrom Anarond.1, Mont. .with Peter agaim-- t whom there, ie a charge uf emher.zling funds o from the Lx pres comcame without pany pending. awaiting the ari.va', of the requisition papers that were to have been sent ra in tbe event of hi Deputy Rhcrilf refusal to return t. salt Lake-MiClint of 389 F street dentes that she to lntimidme the county who took her Ini fe: hi e,iiinatfin fnr sankind ity. Mrs. A.nenmih says t he statement VISITED Pictures of scenes as they appear today. Where Christ was Bom, Brought up, Baptized, Tempted, Transfigured, and Crucified, together with scenes as they appear today of His Prayers, Tears, Miracles and Sermons. thn police havo been waiting for a chance to put stop to the. regular evening dancing which has been going on at this place. Tlielr chance came yesterday, when they learned that Manager Gunriey had not obtained a license this year lo ran. a the ordinances of the city require. The mayor wa ronu!ted, and under hi advice the chief of police instructed Sergeant Roberta to go to tho halt In the evening and arrest anyIn carrying on the one who pcr-lstdance. Manager Uonrlcy received notification of whet was to be done end immediately went to the atatkin to set- - if thing could not he fixed np so that no interruption In thn regular evening' pleasure mlgbt take place. A healed debate occurred between Mr. Gourley inhim and the chief. sisted that he be arrested snd allowed to give bell end that the dance hail bo opened last night. "Tba case ia one to be fought out In I bo court. he said, and he was willing to abide by Iho court's decision in the matter. Until that time be wanted his hall to run. The chief replied that he did not intend to arrest anyone unless they lnLted on carrying the affair to the extrema. Then he wxiuld have t take Into custody every man who cold a ticket or called out the number of a dance within the place, a well aa the manager himaelf. "Thera I no half way busines bout this matter. asserted the chief. "Tbt dance hall must and will be closed tonight." Mr. Gourley left the chief's office snylug that he did not believe the ordinance referred to by the rhirf wee applicable, and (list he would con-u- it hi lawyer and fight the rase. Ser- geant Roberts and Officer Johnton went immediately to the park, but it wa closed when they got there. ; to go by maioutsldcof dgd i COUPON FOR EARTHLY FOOTSTEPS TO THE MORNING EXAMINER I hereby subscribe for the MORNING GENTLEMEN: EXAMINER for 12 months and agree to pay the sum of 50 cents per month, la advaoco or 11.50 quarterly in advance for the term of one year en oendition that I recetva free of all charge that 400 page bosk called The Earthly Footsteps of th Man of Galilee," by paying In advanen when I receive the book the sum of 75 crate, which chall be applied en the 12th months subscription. Should I leave the City permanently at any time within 12 months thea the 75 cents shall be forfeited sad I keep the book r k ::t rrrr1 against Charles Juuus, tec iuih.y hunter who is charged wlih perpetrating extensive bounty fraud. The expectation is that the cases of Junes aud D. Ik Davies, the clerk charged with complicity iu the fraud in Salt Lake county, will be heard In Judge Dtehla court BaLurday next. Boren X. Chrisienacn, attorney for Junes, L not worried over the outloos. On tba cunirary Jim - confident (if clearing hi client. My client admits making the required for the collection of three bounties oa the wild animal skin, he said In discussing the matlie will make so deter yesterday, nial of thia when the cane counts to trial. At the -- aura time he maintains that every affidavit wa aa honest one, aud that every cent of bounty collected by him was on genuine peiia a required by the law." The question naturally follows ee to what position Da visa will take in this natter. Thn officers for the state are not blind to the fact that should Daw-te- a take a position similar to the one outlined for Junes that is, if he should maintain that every certificate by ldia was for genuine hides, and thai after the certificates were the hides were taken out and destroyed there would be serious difficulty In proving the contrary. Davies, still maintains silence In the matter. to Ogden. RAILROAD TRIALS. FRAUD by no ui&4 ivrlsia that Ike will be able to make n rae Ii U siaic l- -ft to the crushed and pron i an initiate's bate affront to a people who pandered this eon of Zion in his infancy. flattered him lu hi youth, exalted him in hie manhood, and lifts. him in lux of ambit ion to su. li dituy he glit that be lost hi head aud prove unworthy of. baring honor 1 r e flfty-srve- lic t n for the San Pedro, Los Angeles A Salt Lake railroad passed through Ogden within the last two days, and they are uow being overhauled aad put in running order by four sp'ho engineers. As suon as each one arrived at Salt City the engineers took it In hand and made L necessary co section in the rnnning gear, preparatory tu -- ending it down tbe line. Four of the oil burners were shipped lo Isis Angeles last night where plenty of oil can bo obtained for a trial run. These engines have been on the rued for more than a month end were manufactured by the Hold in works at Philadelphia. Must of the engine are of the 600 close and are to he used in hauling freight. Those now in use uu the rued are paeuger locomotive. These engines weigh 118 Ion each and have a Inch wheel. The cylinder Inches aud the pisbora is twcuty-tw- o ton rod has a stroke of thirty inches. Kuril engine is provided with the latest improved Vanderbilt tender, and tbe water tank has a capacity of 7.1)00 gallons. The water test a"th boilers it 287 pounds tbe steam test 225 pounds, and the work pressure on an average is 200 pounds. Five locomotives Came in last night. Three of them are -- witch engines aud they are of larger type than the freight engine. The oil burners are of the 600 type end they have a rapacity of 2.940 gallons of oil and carry a 7, water tank. These are the most powerful engines that have ever been shipped west, and the passenger engines, it is said, will be able to run eighty miles an hour on echeduWd time. Mure than n month ago the first en the factory nt Piiiladelphia, gines coupled In ns deadheads with heavy freight, and each engine was in charge of n machinist. Sometimes as many an ft vs and six locomotives came in in one train, bnt never more (hen fifteen miles tier hour was averaged on the route. The route taken was from Philadelphia to Buffalo, and then over the Grand Trunk system lo Chicago. Through Canada the traini became snowbound and the etigfuea had to ba sidetracked until they could bn picked up by special trains, lliey came over Ilia Northwest era from Chicago to Omaha and thence over the Union Pacific fifty-on- . country continues nu unprecedented activity that is briugiug prosperity to all classes. What a contrast Is presented In the IS, U00 unemployed of (Assgow, Scot laud, and the almost unlimited field of employment in all the big cltlea of this country. For a number of years America has been a country so Ijvlllng that millions of Blave and Italians aud Creek have poured In to find uiat remunerallve work in the railroad extenshius and Improvements that have laced the went with ribbons of steel. Some have feared the .iiillux was lu such vast numbers that a glut of tbe labor market would rmnlt with the first etepa toward retrenchment, but the time of a reactionary movemant' seems far removed fur the ablest financial writers agree that the outlook at present for is highly continued industrial For luslance, Henry ly encouraging. Clews says: Largo railroad earnings and bank clear lug both testify to the heavy volume of business In progress. Farmers North. South, East and West are unusually prosperous. Mann facturare are generally well employed, and tbe great iron Industry ahowa au altogether unexpected degree of having booked activity at this sea-o-n, orders la advance that will keep furnaces sail mills busy fur several months to eonie. There Is, consequent ly, no diminution of earuiug capacity in eight tat either railroads or industrials. The only drawbacks are that dividend-payinstocks seom ex good reediugly high and the investment demand Is abating, although desirable bonds still find ready buyers. 8uch conditions divert altealioa from established dividend payers to those which have recently entered the dividend list, or le those which have a good chance of so doing if present prosperity continues. Speculation has, consequently. been most active in these two classes of storks, and operations were thus confined lo s few specialties manipulated by their respective cliques. Money rates continue easy and gold Shipments had littla or no influence. Peonage cult of huge engine r of t aliipioi-u- HERE. Wiiitu Europe is in dullness FOR SAX PEUU'l. LOCOiWTlVKd lar Ne. 123 120 JtoL'NTY e level of peons. grfsty For ceuiurlea the Russians have Wu aii iisiomed to the rule of an Emperor, and If a lonsiitulion were given them they would vpet the country and the old regime it possible. The old regime made the greatness of Russia in the past aud is live sole hope for the future. for the is only anxious The is not alhe but good of the jienple ways Infoi nirtl of the sets of officials. 1b Kuaeisa revoluliuaists are not a numerous body, and they are also uisgnliled in trying to follow the revolutionist, uidhiHls of foreign wlilrii are entirety without application lo Ru-sl-s. If the autocratic government were overthrown would mean not only the U of lit Integrity and greatness of Him country hut the loss of Its ally. Frame. has The revolutionary movement of the sentiment In the no place really ori(tvunlry and Is entirely of foreign gin. eugeudeied by outside enemies of the country. In tim recent bloodshed Ins traces I lie hand of England, which Is spreading revolutionary ductrinea with the hope f heuelUting her ally, Japan. Noihiug will civme of l ho movement. Hkiud will hr alird, but the reforms will not be granted. Such Is the opinion of a man on the .........Ne. SIIM-- : Ru-a- SlMlt Independent Phene.. Bell Phone. Ne. 120 of both telephone eyetema cleeed after S p. m. OTHER In people being devoted to the BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. The B&Sti re-- i. anything but n wspid Live for the freely predtr icd as the mome of base nt in ms ul St. Peters but g. turns penny that moves Lis pea to an wnh make which an mny reasons II as Mormon, rer-Cent lies, a Outcome Ullitki'ilV in this, their home, that the the of head charges J'cherep gjnridoviich. t hi y league, in a Inter to thn great majority, wl'h shorn and social their some have and outlined World mingle bu the Nw York isiercnurar, are drgralc-- l to lh rtf them. Ha esys that the importance THE EXAMINER fEBRCABY 1,1908. th nffli-er- NAME. ADDRESS. 00 mieietiii 4 |