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Show MORXIXO THE EXAMINER htBiM tnrr taflatt yw by tt Standard Publishing Ok WM. OLASMANN, Biffed Managan by Curler, teclad'ag Muralng Inalwr, lutay laanett Ihih eaglee. TI eta I wt UMCRIPTION RATE A. I(r aafl eae math (Including today) Mtalde at Ocdea ....M eta Xaieghoaa Ho ML paid adventurer Into EXAM1XE1! O'JDEX. CTA11. SATuUDAY MORNING, ed a hnr hr ad falters ta i hafore WOMEN in inm;strt depended. Marion F. Wanlibura, in tbe North Americas Review, affirms that la the Industry of the future men and womea are to work aide to aid with equal pyorbutty aad credit, according to aeUawcmaat. The writer baaurda the goose that all occupation have their maecnllne and feminine sides, aod that no activity can be at lta beat imtil It la canted on by both ueaeu. Since the contortion that woman's work la In the home aad nun's outaide of It rata nm the assumption that we kaow what bekwga to woman and what to mad, and aiace thla la n falaa assumption. Mias Washburn aaka why not eiperhaant?" She reminds ua that throoghout the countleaa agee women dtd all the Indaalrlal work, auch aa Winning, cowing, cooking, tilling, etc., which ebe la now criticised for attempting; and without lone of womanliness. Man la wantad to help eolve the eerveat girl and other doota-tl- o problems, aad It ia thought poaalble that mana peculiar epbere might like wlee he Buffering for lack of woman'a cooperation. dish-waebtn-g, ARE CHURCHES LOSING GROUND! The Chicago Standard, ona of the lending BnpUet 'weeklies, aaya that paetora and Christian workers la all parte of the country tell the aame story of decline In church attendance. It declares that while we talk about revivals and hold eoufar-moto promote revivals, the church la being depleted by desertions." It refer not only to those names which are reported an dropped from churrh membership, but to the large Hat of thoee who eeeae to attend aervleea, though ptlll retaining nominal membership, Ihe conclusion la reached It la Impoaaibln to build op a Jtrong. stable Christian character by hppaala to the emot lone only. a teaching ministry must be yvolved, deeply oonacioue of the principles of Ohristlaalty IrUdi mu applicable to the every-da)datloi of Ufa. The Standard Pertinently if thare la too mndh centering at interest In the institution and ho tittle in the cause for which the Imputation stands, and If the loea la due o thn failare of the Church to take Into her, Ufa the wide human intercats which called out the activity of aa , tal y eonao-quotu- lOMM. EDTOKIAL THE "KNOCKER." Now that the election la over, we poghg nil to settle down to pence end good-wi-ll toward tka prog mm of our great stnta. Tha phantom of church taterferenee In tha political affairs of our dlizme has been thoroughly dispelled by the fact that the people of this elate In common with tha people of the entire union were similarly aroused to the name necaadty, that of maintaining tha eupramacy and prosperity of our nation by heaping In power the Republican party, which ia always tha of each prosperity. And this peoomtty waa emphasised by the people la this dale by their sliest ballots; that which waa supposed to be apathy, waa simply the determined undercurrent which made everybody. Mormon pad Gentile alike, stand aside, and recognised only those, who represent od .the piugifie, principles for which the Republicans had always and everywhere stood sponsor. Never before la the hletory of the union or of this state wee there auch a pronounced victory for good government and the heat Interests of the entire people. True, here end there within the party was amne dlaaemdon. but It was not regarded seriously liy the mass of the people. Thue In Utah the opposition, originated by disgruntled office eeeheie, backed by riche and supported by appeal to religious differences of the past, wholly failed in tusking any serious Impression upon even the portion of our community. But now that the struggle has ended, theee differences ought to be forgotten in the desire to build up our great commonwealth. While we think the leaders of this movement were swayed by liereonal desires, grievances cr prejudices, yet we think most of the adherents are true and loyal men, who have the beat Interest of this elate at heart, although they hare been temporarily led asrray by the oratory of pro-prat- non-factio- COMMENT And the Prohibition tsis sing "When th Swallows homeward fly." The patriotic ardor of the ter. should keep them warm this win- , All ia over and Parker can go back to the Joya of form life, but Oyams is till leading Kuropatkin tha strenuous Ufa. That cold wave which the Democrats claim Fairbanks brought to Utah with him seems to have frosted the Utah Democracy. The Kepebllcane cae return thanks because they gained a victory and prosperity wlU continue, end the Democrats can be thankful that them wars enough Republicans to do it. Tacoma stevedores, who believe they made record time, loaded the ship Peru laal week with 134 437 bushels of wheat in seventeen hours, an average of 7444 bushels an hour. To curb hie wile extravagant propensities a citizen of Budapest is in the habit of keeping her locked up in a room of their house except on Sunday, when tha shops are shut. hi bees a considerable in both imports and exports Thera In- crease of Belgium in the lest year. The Imports to f512.6U.aot, In IMS amounted egeinet 9459.476,100 in IMS, an increase erf 9&S, 075,000, or ll.g per cent. According to a report of the Swiss consul general In Yokohama, no one would hare dared ten years ego to predict Japan's wonderful development. In 1893 tte forrign trade wee about In 101. 1305,600.000. The bank deposits of Tokyo in 1896 amounted to less than I1S.500.M0; in 1908 they had risen to 8M 00.000: those of Osaka amounted to 85.0fl0.000 In 1893 and to 838.500,000 in 1903. PITH OF JHE PRESS CUT LITTLE FIGURE. After all ie done and aaid, the syndicated prase of the defeated senior senator did not cut much figure with the votera of the state. The American party yoc VJhcclirright Bros, CROCKERY 2476 WASHINGTON STORE AZ BOTH PI10NE3. Repreaentative Baker, of New York, a total abstainer and does not hesitate to aay a. word for temperance whenever occasion offers. A newspaper friend of the gentleman told him that he could write better stuff if be placed a couple or three Joe Kickeya under hla vest. Thats all rot," answered Represen iatlva Baker. Its all imagination. You put rum among your ideas ami the way they hurry out la like mad hornets with their neats afire, and It will kill all the ideas in time If yon keep it up. These little mental children wont stand liquor long, and you may depend on that. After a few mental sprees they sicken, droop and die, and aa for trying to restore them to their former freshness, life and vigor by enlarging the drinks, you might as well try to resuscitate the dead languages with a bottle of smelling ealts." ia "Blffton didnt know when ha waa a deserving and early death, in tha light of the true Americana that Is woll off." "He didn't? "No; hie with the threw lilm yesterday and the shining In Utah in unlenn Clevegreat Republican light throughout the fall knotted him senseless will die se country. BOTTLED HEALTH Nature's delicious sparkling Nectar. It creates tfiat exalted feelln perfect health by clausing the system of ell impurities. THE NOT THE WAY TO PROTEST. Sympathetic Boy (to man far behind) Burk up mister. Youll win yet. It is all right fur the students at Disgusted Competitor Go away! 1 Berkeley to object to being treated like don't belong to that lot In front. Im mall boys, but they should nut make the first man fit another lot behind. their protests like hoodlums Riotous Punch. demonstrations will not convince the public that a grievance la justifiable. Mr. Skinflint The paper naye skirt Oakland Tribuue. are to be worn longer than ever. Mrs Skinflint Well, you neednt be STOESSEL THE HERO. flggerin on me w earin' mine any longer. cornin' We are told that this time Port Ar- I all. I've worn It five years this Bazar. Harpers will the have thur surely fall, that Jqpe It in their power and ars only waiting Agent I would like a few words to get rented before making tbe final attack. It may be so, but all of ua with your wife, If you please, air. Men of the House fio should I, my whichever way our sympathies may He In the great war. will accord to General man, occasionally, but I have never Stoersel all that rightfully belongs to been able to hold her down to Ism than him of praise and admiration for his about two hundred a minute. New heroic defense of the fortress Ha ia Orleans one in many thousands Tulare Regis"A man takes a great deal of risk ter. when he goes in politics, doesnt he? answered Senator Sorghum. "Yes, SUGGESTIVE NAME. "It's very much Ilka going over NiagaMIm Pauline Aator, daughter of Wil- ra Falls You don't want to attempt liam Waldorf Astor, of w hom England It unless you have a good, stout bara rel." Washington Star. relieved this country, has married man named Spender Clay. Yet it some"Don't you sometimes feel distimes Is asserted that there ie nothing couraged about our political system? In a name! Oakland Herald. "No, answered Farmer Coratoseel: "I The Pessimist It costs a great deal kind & like It. Its a great relief to more to live nowadays then It used to. have a man coma around ahakln' your hand an' tellln' yon stories without The Optlnflst Well, it's worth It. try In to soil you books or Ilghtnln' Puck. rods Washington Star. Chauffeur Ie there an ordinance lady (after doing a littls canvasslimiting the speed of autoa in this ing) You know yon are entitled to a town? Native No; they can't get. through vole. Are you on the register? Yokel Im euro I don't know, miss too quickly to suit us Brooklyn Life. Lady Well, have you ever given "He ie rnmddered a clever financier, your name in? Yokel No, miss. I ain't never give Ie lie not?" Why, where did you get that idea? He never beat anybody out I my name to no one, 'eept to school-muttime o the coronation feed. of anything In hie life." Cleveland J Punch. Leader. Timee-Demour- - er Where Boswell Lived FRED. J. KIESEL Cl CO., i.mDlatributors BISHOP WAS BITTER. The history of Dr. Hay mans 111 tarred reign at Rugby recalls a pun- gent saying of Dr. Wilberforee. Some one who waa chiefly concerned for the peace of the school suggested that the beet way out of tbo difficulty would bs for Hay man to resign, but the Bishop scouted the suggestion. "Dr. Haymaa la too good end too great a man to retire from a difficult post at the Instigation of his predecessor." "Hie predecessor. Bishop? Do you mean Dr. Temple?" "No," replied the Bishop. 1 mean tbe man who was made a dean because he waa a bad school master, was made a Bishop ha was a worse dean, and wee made Archbishop of Canterbury because he wee the worst Bishop on the bench." N. B. Dr. Tait, formerly bent master of Rugby, had reoently attained the primacy which Wilberforee eo earnestly and J.:sLly desired. Guardian. "Her complexion la very dear," said the casual acquaintance. Yes, Indeed," her dearest friend agreed; anybody can see through Leader, need a Fall SuN and " ,,g for yewraaff and boya Putnaafo has them In great abundance mf gt tho RIOMT PRICtfo Yaw Dent fall to call and jtor nd ing places of tha time. With much regret, the present County .Council decided it must go when the whole neighborhood came down to make way for a wide street northward from the Strand, and Americana may consider It fortunate indeed that the houm la street wee discovered beGreet fore a similar fate overtook It. n Clothing House FAVORITE OF TWO POPES. Cardinal Merry del Val, the Popes Secretary of 8tato, who looms largely In tha public ey at present, wee ambitious to become an Arnold Toynbee In early manhood. That ia to aay, he wanted to Join the Jesuits, and labor, like Father Bernard Vaughan, 8. the poor of tbe East End of London. Hla deatlny, however, waa diverted Into diplomatic channels by the late Pope Leo XIII., with whom he became a great favorite. Pope Leo sent him on missions to England, Austria and Canada, and appointed him secretary of the special commission of Inquiry into the validity of Anglican orders. He la very popular with the boya in the poor districts of Rome, and has been active In establishing clubs for (heir benefit. 2345 Washington Avenue WHY THE JAP IS STRONG. The Japanese are allowed to fie among tbe very strongest people on earth. They are strung mentally and physically, and yet practically they set no meat at all. The dirt which enables them to develop such hard frames and and keen brains suck oonsiets almost wholly of rice, steamed add to or boiled, while tbe better-to-d- o this Spartan fare fish, eggs, vegetables and fruit For beverages they use weak tea without sugar or milk and pore water, alcoholic etlmnlants being but rarely Indulged in. Water is Imbibed In what wt should consider prodigious quantities to an Englishmen, Indeed, the drinking of so much water would be regarded as madness. The average ia Domestic, 9303,462476; foreign 837.876,265. Total amount of money orders paid. Domestic, fS8S,100,t)20; foreign. 96,714,-84- 6. Tbe deficit in the postal revenues, therefore wu 96479,492. . , JAPS THINK LOAN RATE IS HIGH. u The Terms of Sale Are Positively C u A u 8 Reese Howell u H- L i i NOTICE By calling Tomorrow (Saturday) you have first choice from a big lot of Boys School Pants made of Cheviot, Cashm:re or Ccrduroy, at 50c Per Pair Box Ca f. Vici-Ki-d and Patent Leather extra value for boys. Were $2.50 o 53. now. ... $1 .65 Wc have a few pa rs of Lad es Paent Colt and Pa ent Kid $4, $3 and $6 Shxs which wre advertised last Sa.u day at $3.50 Cal! And 8j Investigate These Specials L. CLARK & SONS CO. DCS Oc 3C 30 u Our mill te running full time, but wc still have time to take cere of a few nice Jobe of Interior finish and mill work of all kinds. . Our Lumber 8ash Door and other building material la 8trictly First-clas- s and you make ne mistake when piecing your order with ua Eccles Lumber Co. 156-16- 8 24lh sL - Sons 6.Ts7RCrr&.,Jt,l SPECIALS W e well-balanc- ed Toklo, Nov. 11. 10 p. m. A majority of the newspapers of Toklo sharply criticise the terms under which the new Japanese loan bu been placed in London and New York. They pronounce the rate being too high, considering that the amount of the loan is a comparatively small one. The Asahl Shlmbun expresses the opinion that It wee unwise to place the loan before the fail of Fort Arthur. 1st Will be ramambarsd by tha thousands of buyers whs bought during that famous sale. We will give another Cow Mark bate en everything In stack end will Include el. Pali Goode arriving Our. Ing Sale. Domestic avltlng and all Cotton Gooda bought alnca drop In prices of theee geode era Included, he article In cwr large stock will be reserved. Tho manner In which Now Merwh-endlewill be sacrificed will be food for clos careful buyers. service. Total amount of money orders March Of 1162,862,118. sued: SilEJ I 9143,-682.62- 4. Expenditures of the postal few Putnam Man-cheat- er DEPARTMENT REPORTS. Washington, Nov. 11. The annual report of tho auditor for tha poetofflee department allows tho fiscal business transacted through tha postal and mon of the department ey order branch for tha year were: Revenues of the postal service, took before yaw bujh Hie POSTOFFICE London, Nor. 12. While exploring the quaint old courts and alleys off Fleet street, which Dr. Samuel Johnson, Oliver Goldsmith and other geniuses of their time made famous by living In, many an American has looked In vain for some bouse authentically associated with the immortal Boswell. Thanks to tha perseverance of several Loudon County Council members with a true sense of historical value, those who come here next summer may see In much of Us original state the house at No. 68 Green Queen street, which waa occupied by Johnson's biographer during a part of hla career la London. Within a few weeks the London County Council will have placed on the building one of Its memorial tablet, and in spite of the change bound to take place in the neighborhood on account of the great Subway, now under construction no close by. It Is probable that the'okl house will be unmolested.' It was only recently that tha Country Council's committee discovered tha Identity of thla house in Great Queen street. Imt May the Council gave permission to mark a building in Great Portland street, which Hands on tha site of the house la which Boawell died. but this committee managed to postpone piecing tbe tablet until It could find out whether there still remained a house In which Boswell had lived, and which might, therefore, more fittingly be associated with hla memory. Even before Boswell's residence in London. Great Queen street was the center of things. Drury lane, with its famous theater, was a short stunt's throw away, while Bow street, which at that time was to London's elite what Piccadilly is today, wu in the height of lta popularity. Sir Oodfrey Kneller lived In Great Queen street late In tha seventeenth century, end la Boswells time Richard Sheridan bad a house in the same thoroughfare. Dr. Johnson first met this Scotchman, who was to become his greatest admirer. In the back parlor of a Uttle hop In Rueeell street, Jurt around the corner from Great Queen street. Afterward, when Johnson lived In Gough quare. Boswell no doubt found the Great Quota street residence more con veaient to reach after tha old coffeehouse eamdone, memorable for th4r brilliant conversation and severe demands on the tavern lsr. have swept away Improvement practically all tha buildings -- with these gatherings and the men composing them, except thla house of Boswell and Johnson's home in Gough square, which also bears the County Council's tablet Where Goldsmith lived. In Wine Offloe court, a row of modern building now stands, and ell through the tortuous little passages back of Fleet street tell buildings hare sprung up In the last fifty years. Up nearer Boswell's bonne one of the last to disappear wu Hutton's coffee house, on uf the most popular gather at At First class Bare, Cafes, Clubs and Drug Stores. land Plain Dealer. Provo Enquirer. Hoibom-to-lhe-Stra- i and Jardlnera Shapes and Decorations that will please you an 3 Pric, to suit your purses. COME IN AND WE WILL BE GLAD TO 8H0W THEM Tu OPPOSED TO LIQUOR. lntor-mountal- ed FLOWER POTS, VASES nature. herd-worki- ihr IWt 12, Japanese individual swallows about a gallon daily In divided doses The Japanese recognise the beneficial effect of flushing the system through the medium of the kidneys, end they also cleanse the exterior of their bodies to an extent undreamed of in Europe or America. Another and perhapa this is the usage on which the Japanese lay the greatest stress la that deep, habitual, forcible Inhalstfim of fresh air ia aa essential for tha acquisition of strength and thla method la sedulously practiced until it becomes part of their n belief that those Interests could be beet subserved by again dividing the people of this state along tha itnee of religious differences and controversies. To theee men, the rank and flls of "American" party, and the to nil other good ettisrse of thla state, we now appeal to disregard schemes for personal political advancement, and to Join ia a persistent and supreme effort to bring peace and prosperity to Ttah. But peace la not produced by talking discard, or by alanderiug the individual or collective citizens of this state either privately or publicly. The "knocker" ought to be squelched. The man who beers false witness against hie neighbor la as criminal and now aa he was In the days of Moses. We regret to aay that now and then soma few at our people, who have made Utah their adopted home, after the pioneers had made It a place of profit end comfort, are prone to make false aaeertioae to strangers concerning' the people and conditions of thla state, which statements have a tendency not only to lower our people in tha esteem of prospective Investors, but also to prevent such strangers from rarrylng Into effect their pertly formed decision to make Utah the place of their future home end Investments. We recently heard of a rase in point. A prominent reel estate dealer of this dty, while returning from the east, got Into conversation with an enquiring stranger upon the train. The conversation waa had in tha presence of another eltlaeu of our loan, whom the reel estate man did not know. During tha conversation the InUcr told the et ranger that Utah waa no place In whl( to raise a family, that It was a constant embarrassment to nur citizens whan trnvaling to admit being resident of thla state, that the Mormon people were not sincere, and that the church waa simply a money-makin- g scheme, and that no Investments could become pro 11 table unless the Investor was either n member of the dominant church or had its avowed approval. Ha told of 'tho fortune made by one of tbo richest men of thla stats, who la one of his neighbors, aad boldly asserted that the only way In which this man liad acquired hit means was by tha aid of tha church, that la of theee conditions no stranger, unwilling to associate himself with the oh arch or became one of lie protected benefldariea, could hope to become financially successful and that tbeee condition! kept tha country bark and discouraged immigration. Clearly inch misstatements are of aertoda eonaaqueare to the pears and prosperity of our Biala. They ought to ha stopped. They are not true, and do not benefit the party making them, but Injure all the people of the state. Such k corkers are a detriment to their own interests and to thoae of their neighbors; and If auch "knocking" la persisted In, It will prevent Utah from reaching Its apparent destiny, to which it la by nature entitled, that of becoming the meat influential, richest and moat densely n state. populated Don't bear false witness against your own slat or your own people. Let ua nil stop being "knocker, end Join in a united effort to place the bean ties and advantages of Utah before that amlgratlag boat; which Is fast leaving tha too densely-populateast, and seeking new homes and new fluids of Investment among tha inviting resources of the great west. NOVEMBER Beth Phones 128 |