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Show DAILY 6 DOESN'T LIKE PROFANITY. JAPAN CERTAIN TO BE THE VICTOR CHINA MISSIONARY TALKS THE WAR. OF Russia's Contempt of Japan la Char aetariaed aa Coloaaal Piece of Conceit. "Japan la bound to win her war with Russia and within the next twenty-flv- e years there will be greater made Id China than there has been up to date In Japan. This remurk waa made yeHterday by pro-gre- xx Moulding, a prominent missionary and divine, who for several years has been stationed at the head of a big mission in Tal Sling Fu, an Important city of North China, aaya the Atlanta Constitution. Mr. Moulding is In Atlanta fur the purpose of speaking on missions at the Baptist Rev. Horace tabernacle. Me has made a profound study of the Chinese iieople and of the situation in the Far East and has pronounced views upon both these subjects. "The greatness of the Chinese empire is a matter of tomorrow," he The young men of that counsaid. try are waking up. They are merely waiting for the dowager empress to die and then one might as well try to stem a torrent as to crush the growth of the Chinese empire. The Japanese are the French of the Orient They move quickly and act quickly. The Chinese, on the of other- hand, are the Asia. They move more slowly but they build on solid foundations. "It Is only the conceit of Americans and Europeans that has made It possible for anyone to believe In the Inferiority of the Chinese race. It was a moat colossal piece of conceit on the part of Russia to treat Japan with that cool contempt when the Japanese were trying imtlently and assiduously to avoid war. "The Chinamen who come to this country ore from the Canton districts and are the pygmies of the Chinese people. In other parts of the empire the physique of the people Is marMen six feet high or more velous. are common and men nearly seven feet tall are frequently seen and excite no comment. Just aa an Illustration of the powers of endurance in their bodies let me tell you of our couriers who brought mall front the coast to the Interior. It was a common thing In good weather and at a certain part of the journey for them 'to cover fifty miles In a day carrying. a load of sixty pounds welghL That is something for a man to acAnglo-Saxo- ns Otto Floto Discourses Intelligently garding Equine Instructions. FflEHCH VIEW JOURNAL, Otto Kioto, organiser of the great Kioto shows, which will exhibit In Ogden on June 6, has always been known us a careful man with his hurses und devotes his personal attention to the stable of thoroughbreds with the show. Me has has made a rule that he will who have no man In his employ shouts or talks in a disrespectful way to a horse, or uses profane language within the hearing of any horse In the stable. His Idea is that a horse Is more observing and understands more than the average horseman gives him credit for, and that bad manners within the sight or hearing of an animal of ordinary Intelligence Is likely to make him bud mannered and ugly tempered, while swearing In the presence of most horses is sure to make them bad tempered and disreputable. For that reason any man In his employ heard to use bad language within hearing of any horse in his stable will be Immediately discharged. "I have seen horses, said Floto the other day, and so have you, probably, that would lay back their ears and show every Inclination to fight on hearing someone near their stalls commence to use profane language. You will find that a majority of the and dangerous horses are those that have been raised In an atmosphere of profanity and I one owned a horse that was as gentle as a lamb on the road, unless the person driving him should let out a cuss word, and then he would become almost unmanageable. He knew just as well as I did when anyone was swearing. Why this Is, some wiser person than I am will have to explain. All I know about it Is that It Is true. I believe horses know as well as you or I do when they are sworn at, and they do not like it any more than we do. That is why I have mude it a rule not to allow any man employed by me to use bad language before the horses. I huve never seen a good mannered horse thnt was being sworn at all the time. It hurts the feelings of a sensitive horse, and Ill keep my word good to discharge any man In my employ If I catch him swearing within the hearing of any horse In my THE PROPER FOOT TO FIT. "The question of which foot to fit is an Important one to us, said the salesman In a fashionable shoe store as he laced a stylish pair of patent leathers. It may seem strange to you, but It Is rarely thut we do not experience some trouble In fitting one foot, while the other Is easily covered. A popular belief obtains that the left foot of every person Is the hardest to fit, and, consequently, many people try a shoe on that foot first It is not true, however, according to my observation, that there Is any Inflexible rule as to which foot to try first. "It is true, nevertheless, that In a majority of cases If you succeed In fitting the left foot you will have no trouble with the right. My practice Is to try both feet before I pronounce a pair of shoes a perfect fit. Then I am sure of avoiding any mistake growing out of peculiarities of foot formation. No two people have feet formed exactly alike, and the shopkeeper who thinks so and Is governed accordingly, will meet with many complaints. For some time I have puzzled over the problem of fitting shoes to feet, and especially as to why the left foot should he considered the stnndard by which COSSACK ARMY INTERESTIN DESCRIPTION RETIRED OFFICER. JUNE THURSDAY, A SLAVERS OF Re- complish, isnt it? "And the mental calibre of this people la on a par with their physique. They are extremely couteous and kind when one la courteous and kind to them. They are, I believe, actually on a higher moral plane than our own people here at home. And ' this vast nation of more than souls Is waking up, I tell you, waking up to a future that will be great and splendid. This war Is snaking history. Pap-a- n will either win or it will be wiped oft the face of the earth. Japan, however, la united and Russbi disunited. In Japan there Is not one discordant voice In the general patriotism. Japan will win the war. "Russia Is great In extent, but Is She Is a suffering disintegration. mass of corruption. Why the officials to be governed. regard themselves as entitled to a "The only rational theory I have squeexe of SO per cent of all the ever been able to evolve Is a very simfunds they hnndle and they take ple one when you come to consider everything more than this customary it. Nine out of ten people you meet 80 per cent that they possibly can. are right handed, as we say. About one "You speak of the yellow peril. Let person In ten uses his left hand. If me tell you there is a Russian peril you will observe a person who uses his greater still. It will be for the good right hand when standing and talking, of the world that Japan should tri- you will find he Invariably rests his umph over tricky, faithless Russia. I weight on the left foot. And vice verhave faith In any people who are help- sa. a left hnnded person will rest his ed In the right way. I trust the Jap- or her weight on the right foot. The anese and the Chinese far more than result is that with right handed peothe Russians. ple the left foot Is probably a frac"In China no people are treated tion larger than the right foot, and with as much consideration ns Amer- the bootmaker must Inevitably find out icans. The reason la not far to this to be a fact sooner or later. seek. Aemrlcans are noted for their That, in my opinion, is the explanand and of the common belief that the ation personally, honesty Integrity their government Is known as the only left foot Is the standard to go by In great power that never came over and the fitting of shoes. Rut, as I have altried to carve out a slice of Chinn. ready said, there Is no rule that Is abThere awaits this country a splen- solutely safe to follow, and my plan did opportunity if the same line of Is to fit both feet before I let a cusconduct that has marked the past Is tomer leave the shop. persevered in. The opportunity Is a commercial one. trade with a friendHava You a Cough? ly people, and then there would come A dose of Ballard's Horehound Syall the other advantages embodied In rup will relieve it. Have you a cold? standing In with such a great, glorious A dose of Herblne at bedtime and frenation as China will be In the next quent small doses of Horehound Syhalf century." rup during the day will remove It. Try It for whooping cough, for asthCONFERENCE RATES. ma, for consumption, for bronchitis. Suit Lake City, Rio Grande Railroad. Mrs. Joe McGrath. 887 East First Y. M. M. I. A. and Y. L. M. L A. and street, Hutchinson, Kan., writes: I Primary association, June 5. I and 7. have used Ballard's Horehound Syrup Fare 81.60 round trip. Tickets on sale In my family for 5 years, and find It June 4, 6 and 6, return limit June 8th. the best and most palatable medicine Train leaves Ogden 8:10 a. m., Salt I ever used. 25c, 58c and 81. Sold Lake returning 8:10 and 11:55 p. m. by Geo. F. Cave, druggist. 00 UTAH STATE MANSION 10 GO. Historic Old House That Tom Brown Built to Bo Torn Down. The Gautier mansion, one of the oldest Revolutionary landmarks in the Greenville section of Jersey City, will BY A be torn down in a few weeks to make room for the great freight station which the Pennsylvania railroad Is to How the Mounted Men of the Czars erect there. It has been occupied by Army are Mobilized and the Greenville Yacht club. Drilled. The house was built 144 years ago. It has a history, and many of the that it The latest and probably the most Greenville residents regret must go. Tom Brown, captain of a accurate description of the Cossacks privateer and a slave trader to boot, has been published recently In Paris built It In 1780. The slaves had failed by Colonel de la Panouze, who Is now to sell when he arrived In port so he retired from active service, after a put chains In the cellar of the Gautier brilliant career as a French officer mansion until he could sell them. Until a few years ago, they say In of cavalry and military attache to French embassies In some European Greenville, the chains and rings to countries, says the Hartford Times. which the slaves were fastened could be seen In the cellar rafters. Among other things he says: In 1847 Brown married the daughter "The small forces of cavalry which Japan would land would be employed of Lawrence Von Busklrk. The maronly for the service of outposts, and riage brought him Into possession of could not combat the superior forces the property on which the Gautier of Russian cavalry assembled In Man- mansion now stands. It was all farm churia. That cavalry, composed of land then, and In 1760 he built the Cossacks amounts to such a figure mansion, which was then known as that the total of the Japanese cavalry, Retirement HalL The couple had one child, Mary were It possible to disembark It In In 1772 she married Andrew Brown. be would out still of proManchuria, a wealthy Greenville famiof Gautier, of portion to the Cossack cavalry Asia. ly and a student at Kings college, "In Europe the Cossacks operate now Columbia university. Brown, conjointly with the ordinary cavalry, when he died, left the estate to his but In 1904. WHEELWRIGHT BROS ' Special Overstock Salej. DISH PANS, 17 qte, retinned .Regular price 50c FLOUR TIN and SIFTER Combined. ..Regular price 52.;; Regular price 1.33 BOILER, No 8, with copper rim 1 Regular price 85c STEAMERS, No. TIN BUCKET, 6 qt, with cover Regular price Sue 13c PUDDING PANS, 3 qt Regular price lOc CHAMBER PAILS, galvanized, 14 qto.. Regular price g;c 5 BURLINE KETTLES, 4 qte, granite.... Regular price 45c 3 Come early, aa our proeont overstock limts the time of the sal. WHEELWRIGHT BRQg Satisfactory Tailoring at Satisfactory Prim 1 That is ozsctly whr wo dolht Tailoring Baiiaess of Ofdea. Anderson I j 282 Twenty VtaH. 7 n TIMES TWO GOOD FOR YOU The GauAsia they are the only mounted daughter and tiers had two children and up to 1829 descendant! of that family lived In the mansion. George Vreeland, a neighbor, bought the estate In that year, and the last of the Gautiers left there and moved to Fordham. Vreeland lived In the mansion up to 1874. The Pennsylvania railroad bought the estate In 1899, and the Greenville Yacht club took a conditional lease of the property. The Pennsylvania has ordered the club to vacate tomorrow, but as the company will not need the property Immediately it has decided to allow the club to remain for a short time.' The club Is now seeking new quarters a short distance north of Its present location. son-in-la- w. troops of the Muscovite empire. In exchange for a homestead and other privileges, the Cossacks are bound to military service and to furnish their horses and equipment, uniforms, etc. There are, according to the official statistics published In 1900 by the Imperial commission, 150 regiments of mounted Cossacks, three divisions, fifty-thrsotnlns or squadrons, eighteen battalions of Infantry and forty-fobatteries of light artillery; In all 190,000 soldiers and officers. The mobilisation of the Cossack forces Is rapidly made, without great expense of Ink and paper. The military posts In the immense steppes, not being connected by telegraph lines, are served by "gonzy" or couriers, having the best of horses, and who ee 2, A good time to leave Salt Lake City for SL Louis 8:15 p. m, when the Burlington route's dally through sleeper leaves No hasty breakfasting; no hurried packing; no running to catch early morning cars. Is at A good time to arrive In SL Louis is at 7:19 a. m, when the Burlington routes dally through sleeper gets there. Streets not so congested; hotels not so full; places not so hard to find. ur stay prominently near the province governors In order to carry their orders to the log dwellings of the Cossacks. When the mobilisation order reaches the central military administration of the province each gonets starts, carrying In his right hand small red flag in daytime and a red lantern at night crying: "The Czar In a mocalls you! Mobilisation! ment all the village is up. On the high pole In front of the municipal building a red flag In daytime and a red lantern at night is hoisted. All the men, accompanied by the women and children, start for the rallying place. All the men are clothed in their finest is caftans of all colors. Nobody reto even men sick refuse missing: main behind. Those who would voluntarily remain behind would not dare to return to the village; their mothers, wives or sisters would gouge out their eyes, ns has happened several times. The whole Russian Asiatic region, from the Ural mountains to Vladivostok. is colonised by these Cossacks, to whom could be joined the thousands of converted Mongols living along the frontier of Mongolia and Manchuria. Innumerable reinforcements In cavalry can be drawn from Russia to push toward the east. It calculated that there are 80,000 horsemen along the railroad lines of There would be great danger for Japan If there was truth In the theory, advanced by General Frjevalsky that Twenty-fiv- e thousand Cossacks would be sufficient, if need be, to conquer the Chinese DEMOCRATICSTATE g. It Is Up to the Doctor. A lady wrote us from Winchester, Ya thnt she had been under a doctors care for four years for dyspepsia. The pain, which appeared to center under the left shoulder blade, was so severe at times that she could neither eat nor sleep. She had lost faith in her home doctor and asked us to send her a sample of Dr. Gunn's Improved liver pills, which had been recommended to her. We sent her two pills: In n few dnys she sent for a box. Now she writes thnt the pain under her shoulder has left her entirely, she enjoys her meals and she never sleeps less than eight hours every night and this has all come about In two weeks, and cost her 50 cents for two boxes of pills. She says the doctor charged her 850, and that she told him he had better take the 850 and Invest It all In Dr. Gunn's Improved Liver Pills and build up his practice. Sold by druggists for 25c per box. Anyone having dyspepsia, bilious spells or sick headache can get a speedy cure by the use of these pills. For snle by the Wallace Drug company. Drop me a postal and write you all about 1L Ticket I will Office, 79 W. Second R. F. 8outh SL NESLEN, General Agent, 8alt Lska City. DC CONVENTION A DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVEN-tlo- n at the Salt Lake theater, Salt Lake City. Utah, on Thursday, June 9, 1904, at 10:80 o'clock a. m., for the purpose ot electing six delegates and six alternates to the national Democratic convention and for the transaction of such other business as may come before the convention. The chairmen of the several counties are hereby requested to make the necessary arrangements for the election' of delegates to tne state convention In their respective districts and to forward at aa early a date as pos elble to the secretary of the state committee a list of the delegates elected to the state convention. The apportionment to the several counties Is as follows: Beaver 10 Box Elder 18 Is hereby called to meet Cache Carbon PATRONS Or THE that all human Union Pacific Ralroad are assured ingenuity has been adopted to protect them against lions of dolacddenL MU- - jAnswaS'k lars have been Union of .' IjaglSUxLliU the Ej fc equip II and. ' iTSUyyaJg mporovement menL This 1 ed for Its fast trains ' 'V O ' their arrival on time, and the general superiority of Its service. Union Faoiflo RUNS Three trains dally to the East, the fastest trains arriving many hours ahead of all competitors. FuU Information cheerfully furnished on application to 19 10 8 Grand Iron Juab Kane Millard Its spent by the Railroad Com- . Pacific in pany 8 Garfield - The Overland Route 87 Davis Emery Is Mukden-Newchwan- ' 8 G. H. CORSE. 9 20 8 12 Morgan 6 Piute Rich Salt Lake San Juan San Pete Sevier Summit 4 .' 5 124 2 80 1. IS 18 12 7 04 Tooele Uintah Utah Wasatch Washington Wayne Weber Going East? TT WILL PAY YOU TO SECURE COMPLETE INFORMATION ABOUT THE NEW 8ERVICE 11 18 4 00 524 Total The committee has arranged for a rate on all railroads of one fare for the round trip, tickets on sale June 8th, good returning June 11, 1904. By order of the Democratic State committee. FRANK J. CANNON. Chairman. P. J. DALY, Secretary. Salt Lake City, Utah, April SO. 1904 TEACHER'S 8PECIAL RATES INFORMATION IN REGARD TO RATES, STOP-OVER- ETC, WILL BE GLADLY FURNI8HED. VIA 106 R. G. W. Chicago and return Union Pacific and Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Line .. C. S. WILLIAMS, Commercial Agent, West Second South St., Salt Lake City, Utah 847.50 42.50 St. Louis and return SL Paul and return 42.10 Omaha, SL Joseph, Kansas City. 85.00 Tickets on sale May 80th and 81st If you want steel or wood filing and June 8th and 9th; good returning cases, loose leaf ledgers or card Index until September 15th. Stopovers alsystems drop a card to C. S. Pulver, lowed; transit limit ten days in each By Carrier, One Month, 60c direction. Ogden or Bait Lake City. Sfce JOURNAL 50c By Mail, One Month, |