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Show II EXAMINER Pubiianeg Every Day m tha Year by Tha SUaaarfi Publishing Ca-aa- SUBSCRIPTION DtUvared by Carriar ia Ctqr, including Sunday bora TM fi yaaiiaP pgf BOfilkt 0M Pi4!t copies Y MAIL IN ADVANCE. -- ' fcr l EASTERN OPINION. FEARLESS aaS INDEPENDENT. rtitfUy uw1 yin all 11 Irir aeFWrwa aa equal aaow. Uta U Will d ua- - ua uabia wiu ba received praaantsd la a all aubjscis iuuti ina kaava tall but ibe tfua aaaia awl b pubUaAed ia full. AU tottare sad caunuaieaUoaa sigtjsd If mb da ba plums. ay ucuail uaaMs, willTba Urawm ia M waata kalaL bmvs maa saver hides babiad aa aaaia DmI aak tba III Mir to ba laajoaalhla tor wbat you are aahaaied at nlialL unaii lor Subscribers will aaafer a Utwakii Ibis oAae at failure Tba Bxamiaar baler la iwaaiv tbalr bran feet by Tba Manias aa eale kul Nawa Ca. Salt F'"1- - aaa be by Ibe indapsndanl Labs City. aJ tbraasb trala tearing Tba Boutban Fadfla RaUway, Tba Baton FUoifts Hallway, aad Tba Oregon Sbort Ida RaUway. patrons will coaler a tba MaaasaaMBt by favor to' tbia oflloa whenever they (all to Had Ua payer at ibe daolg-aateplaoab d PROSECUTION IS WEAK. Tba proaeeuttom in tbo Haywood trial at Bo la closed its case without proving conclusively that Haywood bad any part la tba aa Basal nation uf former Governor Steunenberg. ' V may say that in our opinion Harry Orchard told tha truth, but, under the law uf evidence, which require something more than tba pointing of suspicion nt an accused parson and demands something mors than tba statement of a murderer and liar to convict, w fa.ll to find sufficient cause to declare Haywood guilty. There la a possibility that Orchard .eommtttad tha murders ha confessed and he may have received money, when he aaya he did, from tb loader! of the miners, and yet ha could have been tha sola author of those murdi-r- s who, when caught; nought to save hi own nock by involving liaywuod, Moyer and Petti bon In the crimen Thera was an all Impelling motive self preservation to explain why Orchard, the murderer, having bean trapped, t j should attempt to odvo himself ; furthermore, there I ream for the Min Owner Aaaoclation preferring to ac- -. eept Orchard's implication of others rather than to attribute thp author-ahlp of the crimes to Orchard only. The case Is one no pmentej by tbo prosecution that doe not conclusively prove anything unless it ba tha degenerate nature of the boastful witness who swears lie killed nineteen men tor money. Aa we have aaid, we lean to the be. . . Collier's Weekly, ably edited. Is now added to the list of papers that have sounded a warning note to the American people to he prepared for a aeri-ou- a misunderstanding with Japan. A week ago we said that war with Japan can be provoked by n single rowdy in Baa Franclsn. Collier's holds te much the same view In this advice that tb beet security of peace la two chips to Japan's one on the Pacific ocean: The Japanese nr a sensitive, proud, Look crossand warlike people. an nt thlm, theyrs Into yeer eyed hair, remark Mr. Dooley. Their natural dispukitiiiB to feel insult keenly and resent It quickly la increased by the consciousness of recent victory ovor the Caucasian race of five feet ten. If w avoid war with them for the neat tea years, it will bo because w have treated them with an excess of studied courtesy never practiced toward any other nation, or hav maintained a navy so obviously superior that they fear to fight ua. Are wo Ukely to escape by the former method? la the Ban Francisco stevedore, on a Saturday night spree, collectively so potential of International insult, likely to learn the discriminating wisdom Ye of the Sage of Archey Road: can bump anny foreigner ya meet but a Jap; don't touch him; he's a live wire. Will drunken Dennis Kearney, lurching down Mission street pay-danight, check a belligerent list to save his gray hairs for Mr. Root? Hardly. Whatever respect may ba practiced by tha mor enlightened and responsible, the feeling of the street crowd which makes international complications will be that id the Philippine army port, when Governor Taft was preaching consideration and duty ."our little brown brother: y "He may be a brother of William H. Taft, But ha aig't no1 brother of mine." A Japanese general, wearing all the medals that he so rightly won at Mukden, carrying a Yale diploma ia one hand and a Harvard degree In the other, would continue to he, to the at the beat, American truck-drive- r, an amusing little brown man. This ia, of course, utterly wrong, and disillusionment would partake of th nature of retribution; but for Japan's interest and opr own, so king aa this' prejudice continue, with its big possibilities fur caaue belli, the beat iniula tor for liv wires on the Pacific ocean ia two ships to Japan's one. . UTAH, - A BATTLESHIP, . . Dont worry about whst ' The battleship Kansas, launched a few days ago. placed the American navy In second place with the navies of tho world. For a number of yean France, Russia and Italy outranked us, and for a time even Japan gave promise of waging ahead, but with tha completion of a number of battleships and cruisers in tho last few years, the United State has moved up next to Great Britain. The Kansas la of 18,000 tons displacement and onq of tha finest fighting machines afloat, but the warships of the Dread naught type, to be built by the United States, will out-clathe Kansas In tonnage and armament, in fact, the new battleships will outclass any ships in the world. They will have thicker armor and more gun powder snd be more destructive than tho Dreadnought of England, and when completed will make our position moat secure as next to Great Britain in naval strength. By the way. President Rooarveit and Secretary Moody addressed u.Og-deaudience on City Hall square in 1903, Secretory Moody advocated the building o( more warships and he then promised that one of the new defenders would be named Utah. The President approved of tho sentiment, but the chances are the promise haa been forgotten. This ia n good time JAPS bit buy Grain, Hay and Supplies at Foul-tr- y GROUTS 852 Twenty-fourt- h Street. n .SATURDAY, PRESENT VERY New York Evening Post: Many causes aeem lately to have been operative in making democracies man tolerant of the exaltation of the executive, or even eagerly welcoming It Mr. Bryce referred to one of them in hie remark nt Chicago oa democratic tendencies. People are more end more coming to look to leaden. This does not necessarily mean the abdication of Individual Judgment Least of all doc it signify n hankering for a dictator or deapoL Befura tha elections of 1849 ia France, an intelligent Frenchman told Nassau Senior that many tinun and peasants, not especially women, were sayWe are tired of these naaem-bHeing: II aona tout an maltre. It was n clear alga that Louis Napoleon wa coming. But it la in nothing of that spirit of abasement that modrra democracies are craving strong leadership. They do not want n master; they are seeking, rather, a powerful servant. What they desire la the ' emergence of some mam who will both interpret and guide the popular will, and by use of the powers of Influential office get that will written Into law, or translated into action. It does not matter greater what the office The desired happens to ba called. leader may show himself as mayor or district attornry, as governor or president; lei often, aa Representative or senator. The essential thing la that once the commanding, quality 'la shown, and the great public worr going, the peopl are certain to rise to the leadership. a. : A GRAVE SHALL PACIFIC STATES BE BY OVER-RU- N edy in America for 28 HIGH PRICE OF FOR AT ib In- - A despatch to Chicago, June the Chicago Tribuno from Washington, D. C., aaya: In the opinion of Secretary of Agri- TRACK THERE WERE 740 CARS AT THE Thay Coat Nearly Four Million llars and 510 Were American. Machines. 21 culture Wilson, the recent Increase in the price uf meats la entirely natural and even a further advenes in prices may ho expected. That tho coot of meats 1 greater today than ever before to conceded, hut Secretory Wilson believes that American prosperity ia nt the bottom of the situation. The people are eating more meat and the farmers are not raising aa many cattle aa formerly. There la also an enormous export trade which cuts a great bole In the supply. year we sent abroad mors than 1323,000,000 worth 'of animals, meats and animal products. It waa suggested to Mr Wilson that the price of meats waa duo chiefly to the determination of th meat packers of Chicago to ao far Increase prices aa to make up for tha losses Buffered by the packers as a result of the meat i inspection tow. j ' 1 dont think there la anything In i that, said the secretory, aa a matter of fact Chicago does not fix tha price of cattle. New York and the eaat have their buyers at Chicago, and they compete too sharply tor Chicago alone to fix tha prices LARGE PIPE CONTRACT. J mm m if r, am Calling for 130 Miles of Pipe 10 Inches In Diameter, te 20 New York, June 21. One of the awarded In some time haa been made by the Columbia Gas ft Electric company for IStf miles of pipe, involving the urge sum of 15,000,000. The company will construct a pip line from West Virginia to Kentacky and Ohio. It will range In diameter from 10 to 20 Inches. The National Tuba company will furnish moat of the material. It la tatod that the concern haa acquired about 250,000 acres of gaa producing territory in West Virginia. largest pipe contracts INJURED IN A FIGHT. New York, June 21. Following a boxing bout In which he participated at the Long Acre club last night, Gustave Inny of Boston waa removed to Bellevue hospital, where it waa aaid later that hia condition waa aerhraa and that he may die. He la suffering from contusions of the head and body. Lenny, according to the police, fought four fast rounds with Edward Smith of this city No great damage waa done, however, until the fourth RIVED Do- HORSE fCUHD CUILIY Of Assaulting Yeung Wengagaard ia Ogden Canyon. of The Jury in th case of the Utah va Charles Richards returned a verdict uf guilty at five o'clock yesterday afternuon. Judge Murphy set the time of pronouncing sentence this morning at 10 oclock. The jury was composed of T. A. F. Shepherd, C. J. Brown Whalen, and A. T. Heatmark. Judge Murphy sentenced Richards to six months In the county Jail. Richards haa the privilege uf paying hia sentence at the rate uf one dollar fur each day. The case against Rich&rda haa been one of ta hardest fought la years In the municipal court. The first trial came to naught as the jury failed to agree and the case waa dismissed. A!1 of Thursday waa oocupled la taking testimony and the Jury arrived at a decision only after a long session in the ballff's room. Aa am aa sentence waa pronounced the defendant filed his application for an appeal to the district court I wish to congratulate the jury, said Judge Murphy. Their decision, to me, is fair and baaed entirely on the evidence which was produced In thla court. There te no demand tar leniency The defendant la guilty at a brutal attack on a man who waa performing an act of humanity. Tba man waa ruthlessly knocked down, crippled and beat into Insensibility because he came to the rescue of a mere boy. There ia some ambiguity in the meaning of the .law, but 1 wilt give the defendant the severest sentence tbe statute allows, despite the practice of the pardoning power of releasing, after a few days in Jail, the worst offenders. S'-at-e a PECULIAR LOSS Foreigner Haa f57 Dieappsar as if by Magi. Frank Homan, a Bohemian working at the Union depot grounds haa been tbe victim of a peculiar bit at robbery. About 8 o'clock Thursday Homan drew hia pay aad immediately tpqk a stroll up town. He entered e saloon atreet run by San Bernardino, CaL, Juns 21. In on lower Twenty-fift- h accordance with an appointment previ- eome Italians and treated hia roomto a drink. In ously made with a young woman, Bert mate and tha bartender dollor, ho himself Taylor, a trusty at the county Jail, all he spent one two drinks. When he yesterday ordered a horse and buggy having had out Homan had 157 la hia by telephone, appropriated a revolver left the saloon suited out and ammunition from tho sheriff's of- brown leather purse. He the fice and drov to n aide street, where alone and when in tha middle of and Twenty-sihe met hia companion. Abandoning block, between Twenty-fiftstreets, on Wall avenue, he the rig in tha foothills, a short time xth ahead of a posse, which Immediately passed two men who, he supposed, touched him. When near Twenty-sibegan scouring tha country, Taylor never xth street, where he Uvea, he w befinally surprised and captured discovered that hi puree was gone. fore he could make any reilatcnce. know. It ie Taylor, who waa serving n term lor How it went he does not forgery, la n former resident of Den- supposed that the men whom he ver, aa to the woman who waa arrested and served a brief term on the asms charge. passed, brushed np against him tag picked his pocket. Homan t waa nut drunk and he aaya, funue;. hia more, that ha had puree and ii contents in hia pocket after he kit the saloon. Human declares that this ia the third time he haa been robbed. The first time he lost 966. the second time 46 and thie time 957. He asys n: that he consul keep anything . aij which ta hut car uKj home by the section hands. That which makes the case more unpleasant la the tact that his aavieg since last March, In addition to hia last month wage, have disappeared, leaving hiuq penniless for another month. UTAH LIGHT WILL NOT INSIST ON APPROPRIATING THE WATER! OF OGDEN RIVER. Listens to the Protests the People of Ogden and of Company Neighborhood. E. W. Wade, of the Utah Light ft Railway company, original applicant for th waters uf Ogden rim, the report yesterday that tha company haa decided not to renew its application, owing to the public protest immediately after the slate engineer received the application. The application waa returned by the state engineer owing to technical mistakes. Enough petitions to fill a book were also returned as they became useless when the application waa found to be Inoorrect and Ind valid. Mr Wade stated thla morning that the company did not need the water aa It would give no special service nor increase materially the volume of wa- ter la tbe pipe line. i TRAVEL TO EUROPE. Seven Thousand Passengers From New York. New York, June 21. Depart Six steamships sailed yesterday, each taking out their full quota of passengers. In all nearly 7,000 paw sengrra departed. The tide of outgoing travel has almost reached Its flood. A Urge crowd to hooked for tomorrow when a fleet of passenger carriers will start for tha other aide. trans-Atlanti- c HOME SEEKERS AT BILLINGS. .. Butta, Mon., June 21. A report from Billings states that are flocking Into Uut city in anticipation of the drawing fur land in th Huntley National Irrigation project, June 26th. Yesterday more than 1,000 homeaeekera arrived. The hotels and rooming houses are crowded to overflowing and the new comers are being forced to erect tents. Secretary of the Interior James R. Garfield will personally oversee the drawing. He will be accompanied to Billing by a number of bead officials from tbe reclamation service, the for eatry and land departments. home-seeker- s New Tork.flme 21. Excepting only at tha Vanderbilt cap race the gathering of automobiles at tha Skeepahead bay course on Suburban day waa the greatest ever Been on thla aide of the Atlantic. As nn outdoor show of motor vehicles U was the best on record. By actual eount 740 care were parked to the green beck of the grandstand, just about doubling the last previous record at a metropolitan race track. In this outdoor chow ware 230 automobile! of Ameriean construction, of a gross approximate value of $1,875, 000. Mor than fifty makes of AmeriENDED LIFES TROUBLES. can machine were represented, the total being 510 of n gross approximate vain of mor! than 12.000,000. Tha Tragic Death of Dr, McPherson of St. Anthony, Ida From Gungrand total in cost of all tha ears on tha green wag in excess of 13,875,000. shot Wound. VANDERBILTS They Are SCHEMING. to' Control tha Traffic of Chicago. Chicago, Juno 21. today oayo: Th Record-Heral- St. Anthony, Ida., June 20. One of moat mysterious fatalities in the history of 8L Anthony oocurred last night, in the tragic death of Dr. McPherson, who dropped dead on Main street about 9:10 o'clock. The doctors domestic affairs have been somewhat clouded of late, he having procured a divorce from hia wife not later than Saturday, while some other love affair proved moat disastrous to him a ahoii time ago. Yesterday afternoon he procured n rig at the livery barn and drove out to his ranch, returning about I o'clock. On driving up to the barn he asked If the proprietor waa in and asked about the price of the rig. Upon bring informed that the proprietor waa not ia ha aaid he would nettle later. The boy receiving the rig, upon letting the tongue of the buggy down, heard the doctor give a scream and Jump out of the buggy. The boy tried to run op to him and find out what the trouble , was, but upon reaching the buggy the doctor had ran around the back and out into the atreet, where he gave a scream and fell over, dead. The circumstances were so peculiar that a post mortem examination was commenced, which resulted In finding x bullet hole jnat below the heart rifle Upon Investigation a waa found In the bottom of tbe buggy, from which the bullet had been discharged. A Jury waa Impaneled and found that the victim came to hia death from the effects of a gunshot wound by hia own hand, but whether with suicidal Intent or not ia not known. From the fact that the doe-to- r made full preparation of hia papers and personal effect that day, and other circumstances, It to the general consensus at opinion that he committed suicide. the d -- i Final steps are being taken la New York to complete a 170,600,000 railway coup which the Vanderbilt hav en- gineered to secure tho lion's share of th tremendous traffic which originates In Chicago and the .surrounding territory, as well aa the great tonnage which passes through and around The culminating financial Chicago. transaction In thla great traffic deal, which H. W. Newman, president of all New York Central lines, haa been successfully playing la the Interests of the Vanderbilts, la the leasing, with right to purebase, of the outer belt line from the Chicago Junction Railway company. Supplementing thla to the leaaeing tar n term of 99 years of a part of the tracks of the Chicago Terminal Transfer Railway company, which forma the connecting link in the complete inner belt railway system which the Vanderbilts are securing. President John A. Spoor of the belt road yesterday, confirmed the lease and declared that before the end of the year the outer belt line, which hli company now owns and operates, would paae entirely into the possession of the New York Central lines. When tbese transactions shall have been completed the Vanderbilts will have two comprehensive belt line systems encircling Chicago, an Inner and nn outer belt, and both bisected by every line of railway that enters Chicago or can enter it In the future. The outer belt to the Indiana, Illinois Good tackle mart succetmful fisherman. to the appeal KODAK TIME 18 HERE. Our line of Eastman Kodaks and Premo Film Pack Camera ia complete. All supplies for the amateur. Thats oar claim, for the line we carry. . T. S. HUTCHISON 306 TWENTY-FIFT- H STREET. The Wonderful Success of Our Manufacturers Outlet Sale our greatest expectations and the tremendous saleagreatly depleted the original stocks, but through a happy and with our mill agent, a second shipment of Mill Ends was started early last week and has foresight just arrived in time to supply the frenzied demand. HurpasMtl nt OUR OUTLET SALE BE ON HAND TOMORROW MORE PRICE REDUCTIONS ELECTION. RICHARDS h MEAT. te Prosperity and creased Consumption. world. PRISIERlIlB BIG RACES. Dua in Part 1907. 22, Manila, June 21. Th registration President Benjamin Ids Wheeler of at Filipino voters began today. While University of California Makes complete returns are not available raa Statement. pe ru indicate that the total registration will ba heavy. No reports of disorder have been received. The AmerHe New York, June 21. "President Ben- ican candidate for the assembly.Amer-ioon Carl Heaa to the only jamin Ida Wheeler of tha University ing also. He the for candidate assembly. of California, who to ia town, believes from Manila. The that the conditions on the Pacific haa ben nominated will continue four day. coast, insofar a the Oriental peoples registration are concerned, are very grave aad present to the residents a question that will not be easily solved In an Interview Mr Wheeler said: It la not a question whether tho Chinese or Japanese shall go to the same schools as the white children, A neither Is it a question whether some of the Japanese have been assaulted or treated badly, but tha question is one much broader In its scope. It ia Imply whether the people uf the Pacific coast shall become Inosculated with tha Oriental Ideas and plana of procedure or whether they shall remain on a truly Occidental basis. TOOK THE SHERIFFS REVOLVER Shall or shall not the Pacific coast AND THEN DEPARTED. totoa suffer th same fata aa Hawaii. Shall the etatoa of the coast' be overrun with Japanese and finally feel tho effects of their presence aa It ia felt Met a Woman Companion on a Sid Street and Than Drove to th la the places where they are largely Hilla. ia evidence. lc years. th FILIPINO : A specific for pain Dr. Thomas Oil, strongest, cheapest liniment ever devised. A household rem- JUNE A Iowa, known as the Three I'a road. Another lntrgrel part of this great traffic coup, which tho Vanderbilts have been quieily perfecting fur th past five years, is the Chicago, Indiana A Soul here road, which they have built directly south from Chicago to Danville, where it connects with the Big Four road, it to a part uf th comprehensive traffic campaign which they have carefully planned and executed, to extend this system tiraignt south to the Gulf before the opening id tha Panama canal. Accordingly, when the canal to opened, tha New York Central lines, will through the expenditure of at least tl25.UOO.OUU and possibly 9150 000,000, have the whip hand over the greatest tonnage producing area to THEM. . - as UTAH, round, when --Lenny is aaid to havo been so aeriuusl) punished that he had to be helped from the ring. Smitn, the referee, and the seconds were lief that Orchards confusion la ia tu remind Pieaidcnt Roosevelt of that the truth, but on hi evipeach and to urge upon him the iret part te of one of the American There not could convict we christening dence Utah." no connecting up of the chain of evi- Dreadnaughta Utah gave to the nation Fighting dence leading to the door of Haywood and without those connecting link Bob Evans, and Utah, in the 8paniah-Amerlca- n war, demonstrated that la the cause of the prosecution must teiL courage and patriotism her cans were There ia one thing quite evident the equal of the bravest and the heat, Haywood, Moer and Pettibone have and, therefore, can plead that ia associated with the lowest of criminals worthiness there are none worthier and, even though they be freed from than the people of Utah to ba honored tb present charges sgalnat them, by tha naming of n battleship after they must remain under a cloud until their mate. they can explain much that at present POPULAR LEADERSHIP. cents inexplicable. Mlaids U 040. P year. .98.09 Ai toast quaruriy, la advaaca.. Lu Oa MORNIM) EXAMINER: OGPEX, TI1E 4 has called forth favorable comments from all sections and has won the appreciation of thousands. The mnltitudes who attended this na'e the past week received sensational values : and they profited greatly. SATURDAY, JUNE 22 More TREMENDOUS Values |