OCR Text |
Show MURMSO EXAMINER. THE EXAMINER Published day la tha tha Standard piiblikbtrg Co. br Carrier, tndudtnr Delivered Moraine Bondar Examiner. ' cl gar month Mug OP MANILA CELEBRATED ct copies Id WEAK. The opinion 10001 to be groa'ing stronger caeh day with those cxiert 011 political forecasts that Parker a ill not anywhere near poll the vote of hi party. Ilia dissatisfaction U be ci suing more widespread la the ranks each day and is causing uf DessM-roeapprchem-loamong Ihe loader of the party In the nut. This, in connection with the apathy manifest In most section because of a hesitation u aid in bringing about a change, lie result of which cannot be foreseen, proves the hopelessness of thd Ddmorraiie asplranona this year. 'Many defections from the party have occurred and varied arc the reason .given for Ihe aame: Trubably the most concise statement, at one and the imo Kmc telling the true conditions and emphasising the weakness of Talker, la gives by Henry L. Slim-soa life long Democrat. a federal and office iolder under Cleveland prominent in political circles of New York state. He will Ihla year bolt the old ticket and vole to oontiuua the press-n- t adminlstralkni. la defining bis position he said to a New York Tribune reporter: On the quesilon of Imperialism, that la a bugaboo, for. If the Democrat bad the president, senate and hnuae of ropraMentstlve they would not dare to let go uf the Philippines. .In fact, I am an expansionist, and believe la holding what we have and in get ting a much wore aa we ran, even if we ha;ve to go to tha Jathmua of Panama. la reiaikua to the trusts, I think that the leae raid shout them by th I miter off Democrats-thithey vM be, Air the man "whn la practtcafle tha daddy of tho trust is Oinver Cleveland, aa bo made It possible for them to exist, and we have his argument thereon. The money 'finest Son haa been settled by the last two presidential and a t do not agree with Ihe Republican platform or with Mr. Parker on the Mingle standard. I will aay that I am wllliiiK to abide ly Ihe derision of the people, for the present at team, for what la good eiiuugh for them la good emwigh for me. I am in sympathy with the present administration on tha Panama Canal question, and think that. It will he built Just a well and eeonoavically by the Republicans a It In possible to build It. A the other qneatkins In the platforms are nearly alike, exeept Ihe race qtieetkm and tariff reform, I feel that U will he miirh Irolfer for all capeclally the workingmen, In rlaea, vote for ihe continuance of thing aa they are. aa I do not believe that they ran he bettered by Humocratle RATES, SUBSCRIPTION ft? mail ona nim.th (Including Suadar) ontatda o Of dan ....10 Telephone No. $6. rti tO. Veterans of the Spanish War Meet and Mina gle With Former Savage Enemies at St AS 10 NORTHERN 1'lAll S KLPlLY POINT. Tha Login Journal bait awakened to tha ract that more trade could be obtained by the Logan merchants and file several Instance. an epitome of It opinion being contained in th following editorial dipped from ita of August 13: 'Via Cache taller Is the naLural iuu outlet fur the of the mlnea it 1a I lata, whenever there ahali bu any products fur ahlpinent. Cache valley la alati the natural auurre of http plica for the La Plata e fuiintry, both liy reaaon of the and Uqrograpliy. The road, however, la In atieh condition that It la d fattier ftw tbo cam pa there to Im from Ogden, tbua entaliUhhiiig a had precedent and cuidoin kIhuiIiI the mlnea develop Into paying propoai. liona. Ai to the chaucca, they look no Rtod to a company of eaaiora who have Iteen quiotly prone-cu- t Inf development work, that they have spent furty-sevuthoiiaand dollar there and have gang of men working night and day to uncover tha rleh vein toward which the oompany' experts aay Inti leal kin point. One on the alttck haa been ci-b- a tinted, but the owners have money and faith In plenty, and are not piker. Ope of thee day Nhnrtly a strike Kwy he expected that will make Ia Plata famoua and bring men there by hundred!. It would be well for our e mtmntHsInnera to inveaitgale the and aaeerlaln the mat of pul ting thd road in food repair. 1a Plata I properly tributary to Cache Valley, and ehnuld he made no In fact aa well a tn theory." That it may be pnaalbla for to obtain more retail trade from the residents of the lortlln valley in which the College City la loraled, may be true, The merchants of the city should lake step in that direrikm and one of It llrt step should tie In the direct km of obtaining good road. of Cache munly a well an the merchanla uf Logan could do wnre than make the subject of road Imof their county provement an campaign thin fall. But we fear that our neighbors to the north are rather too preminiptloua 111 claiming that their city la the mip-plpoint for northern Utah. Ogden haa long ago reached that rosIHon and, out, la now crowding the wholesaler of Salt lAke City from the field of Central and Southern Utah. Ogden haa forestalled lxigan for the trade of the 1a Plata region and nf Rich enunly. One of the lieat wagon road of the stato will soon he completed, making aa artery of trade which will alwaya Im livened because of the wealth of the region through which It runs and the opimrt unities offered in Ihla city to expend that wealth to the host advantage. This la the state road from Ogden to Randolph. And with the coming of the new trolley line. Imgan will have all she wants to do to retain her retail trade; for cheap transportation might lure II to Ogden. With her lack of railway facilities, Logan can never hui to lie even a iusnor wholo-al- e center. jwimIiici dla-tanc- sup-plie- cap-lialia- proh-ahilltl- Clt-lte- lue g ENCOIRAGINU IU'81- NEKS - PROSPECTS. To the business man, the property owngr and the average clilxen of Ogden the i iron poet for the coming year re moil encouraging. A temporary lull In the conditions, made more noticeable by comparison with the preceding rush of work and railroad improvement which brought itintiNand of men to seiid thousand of dollars In wage In trade in thl city, at present ca"i:cs a Hectninsly more than average midsummer dullm-a- . Hut there I w reamm fur Oerirn buxines men to bccuL-t- diamiiragi-il- . The outlook Is bright. More railroad woik is to lie done with the coming year. More Imsinc is accruing o Ogilm Imcihikc of that which ha already been done. The great shops htre furnish ciin'innmi. work lor a continually eutaigina force cf men Trrioiv. itainratly tributary to Ogden, is l.'inR rapidly envelope, i into wealib or mining rouniry and is poured into ihi city ju PV change supplies. Jh imp tin year are above the average and Oaden Is the great shipping point. Ihmgs look good for Ogden. The crops are at the mint of maturity and. aa iriiKh of the prosperity of this section depends iiimn certain good crops, the bright statement con talned In the government crop report for Utah and published this week are mot encouraging. The banka are with money and Ioann are .fy on good security. Real rsts'c ni'n say the demand for mlt Hfilnr-- ; ih't-wealt- f-- . cam-paign- Once there was an ugly Jackdaw that decked out hi the fine feathers of beautiful bird and imagined that ho could fool people into thinking him fine looking. THE STATK CONVENTION. Amid the general rejoicing of the Kirn organ and people over their large sized majority In Ogden City primaries, for which we do not in the leant blame them, the delegate to the slats convention from Weber should not loss night of the fact that they owe a duty to the Republican voters of the at at a of Utah at the romlftg convention. The beet possible candidates should be selected, those who will secure the support. not only of factions, hut of tha entire Republican party. Weber onnty la enf Illed to representation upon tbe state ticket and tha delegates should see to It that suck representation la assured. We have our family rows here In W'cher. We scrap and fight and pull hair, and (at times) aay ugly things of each other, bnt whan wa go nut of the county and Into the Japan I a land of Hmall things, and this fact la Impressed on one aa he secs goes from city to city, where he lllNTINn Poll IKSUEfl. every family, however poor, occupying ita own house and enjoying an existTha New York Trlhnna la authority ence apart from every other household for the ataiement that Ihe Demorrat a state of thing wholly unknown to In Waahlhgtou are looking forward tn the overcrowded renter in the Unittha puhllratlou of their ram paign book, ed States and Europe. have tha Impression Most which la to be imt. In a ronple of weeks, that the strangers people of Japan and China are dtle tn deflna what they are expected to re- an crowded together In their have breathing nf Ihe scarcely Issues aa that the rampslgn. they gard room. That thl Is a mistake is disThey declare that they are now reon reaching Tokyo, which covered ceiving different Instructions each day. number half a million ! Inhabitant They were flrat Informed that tha per- than does New York, yet extends over One may sonality of the President was to be a hundred square miles. made the laaue. The ieerhe of Rep- start out In a Minima tn the early the greeter part of resentatives Klti'hln, Patterson and morning and ridethe reirtdenca portion the day through Fitzgerald were supplied to them, and of Ihe capital or Japan, broking out wooden Imltding. they were told tn study them for upon the all of a monotonous dun color, with epltheta and Opprobrious description without a of Mr. Roosevelt. This they did, hut their ilitla garden In front, Intervening height pointed steeple' loadthey 110 sooner found themselves between earth and sky to break tba ed with this wort of material than they count less gray ronfa that stretch away on troth aides farther than the eye ran were informed that Ihe personality Issue gave algns of proving a failure, scan. RIDINU IN KUKUMA. that Republican editors and speakers Tha street are not wide, It is true, Democrat were asking tha to prove and you jos along feeling a trifle In your covered Minima, which tlielr assertion that the President was can-la"unsafe," and that they were unable remind you of your baby as your sweating coolie pant days, to make good." with a shart grasped In each ' hand, Then Representative Haines went on' and goes forward with the pace of a second tha warpath and promised develop- good hore. Romctlmc from bekuruma the coolie pushes to ments with regard the Tobacco to lie In a great if hind. you hapiwn Trust which would rve aa destructive hurry to reach your destination. In ammunition everywhere. 1ml especially which eaxe fou pay him at the rate ol In (he Border Plate. I'nfortuusteljr. ten cents an hour or three cents a crowdJust a tha lvmurrallc editors and the mile. I have seen three leraonv and all urging the kuruma. Into ed a few speaker who have thus far taken overburdened puller into a trot wttli ! thf at iimp had mastered the detail of cries of Hayaku! Mr. Gaines allegal Ion. Information It I much cheaper to hire a coolit leaked out." from the Department of horse; 0 horses are a Justice which put the Tennesseean iu than to feed aResides tha coolies dart rare sight. a most unfortunate light, and Instrucinand out of the narrow streets, scraptions went out to drop the tobacco ing the wheels of your kuruma against those of another hurrying In an oppofor the present. without the least danger site Cochran, of New of direction, you as you recline comRepresentative upsetting CommitYork, induced the Congrex fortably on the seal In a half doze. tee 10 believe that hi iecrh on the The kuruma puller often speak tariff furnlMhed the keynote for nura-eio- ti many English words and makes thl known tn every Enganiiaigii addic se. and great accomplishment lish siieaUitiR person a soou as he grig quantities of copte of that apeeih down from his train on the station wcie promptly primed and distributed, platform. II Is a very welcome sound, which and the nearest puller with hla mouth eMHially in MaMsacbusmt. open shouting In English. Coine Representative Sullivan had described aide ir. I'll lake you to your this way. a on the eve of a free trade landslide, way. madam, for your hotel.'1 hut Senator Dorman learned of the disusually claims the traveler a hi own. tribution, ami laiixcd 1i to mine to a He 1 a shrewd aa any cabby who ha midden end. punt hating hi mm mm! a driven up and down Kifili avenue for th Iasi ten year, and will oven barge on l ie siihjwi wit n Mvne Kanihtic you Just Ihe same. If yon are green to men whose intelljgrnre was enough to permit it and it's ten to so diminutive that they were unable on that ymi are. You must have a number of ride to distinguish lid arm the tenor of ahom the city, and must he victimized Mr. Cm Iran' Tree trade VxirmTagamT quite as often a you have been In and the tanfr plank of the Maryland raid. You soon find, if you walk a little distance, that you are In danger plat font. of being overcome by th sun: 0 you Mr. ini man a i rm tt hs on the to scree u yourself from Ita of the nary and the increaed decide fierceness under one of the many mil.tary iHiwer of the nation were next that have been shadowing yon. trie I, but with eqnal'y prejudicial er It is nonsense te risk yourself in that fret. Democratic editor from all over blaze of light that pours down upon the country wrote to the committee, your head with sufficient force fo bake it. advising It that the more that was Formerly the coolie were allowed raid alfotit the iiphuiidiiig of the navy by the custom of the country to wear and the reorgsniwiion of the army no clothing, and thu they escaped In of the d ithe more Republican vote there would some measure the effect as they drew their loads heat mpressing be in their aection. The Henioiraiir from early morning until midnight faithful, t l.erefi'1 are In n quandary, about tbe hot streets of the city. Now and anxiously await thp ieuc of the they are compelled to wear a blue shirt which reek with peroplr-talo- n camiaign hook, honing that it will de- and iwjamaa. and dust and render the poor fine some ieu.s whiih wiM not piove rrsMirot miserable in the midst of l"n'fil I f I11 I'''"'. their thsnh'c UbfK1. one-elor- rldl-riik- m Hay-aku- 1 state convention, we ehould go aa a unit and back our home candidate without dissent and without cavil. We have no means of knowing how the delegation stands as between the two candidates mentioned for state office who reside in Weber county. In fact neither of them tell their troubles to ua. Vet we desire to point out to the Weber delegation that Weber county Republirana expect something from the atate convention and that it all de pends upon the wisdom and prudence exhibited by the delegation aa to whether these expectations shall be fulfilled. When we know the deair of the delegation with reference to the alate ticket and tbe representation upon the same, which of right belongs to the eonnty, we will render all the aid we ran to further that desire and advance Ihe common cause. Traveler in Japan Must Learn Quaint Customs ." la-s- War Taft RAILROADS NOT POPULAR. The foreigner who goes to Japan to see things avoids the railroad when abort Journeys or ha contemplate pleasure excursions Into the country. Railway travel Is cheaper in Japan than any other mode of traveling, but Ihe natives prefer to travel by water nr by kurumas if they are not going a great distance. You are surprised that. at. the intu everywhere yon eat In your own room, aa there ta no such thing as a separate dining room. When you arrive at an Inn they awlgn you a room In which you can sleep, eat and entertain your friends. All this la quite compatible with comfort, for at the clapping of your hand your dinner table glides In. guided by a pretty Japanese girl, who kneela and hows before you so often, aa she comes and goes; that you begin to wonder If yon are not M Prince Instead of an ordinary traveler seeing the eights of the Orient. The fine tablecloth le spread and the dlahee appear aa If by magic, one girl serving each guest. You alt on your mat with your rhln on a level with the china, tiny table and Its and all your wants are looked after without your having to utter a command. The vs ml sen played by nimble finger aids your digestion and supplies the finishing touch to the dinner. After the meal the girls remove the tables and all traces of the dinner, and the dining room becomes the reception room. The college professor may be one of the rurious callers, and aa Japanese etiquette permits a man to stretch out bis visit to any length from two hours to ten, you are the unwilling victim of the professor's Insatiable curiosity, which permits him to ask questions pertinent and impertinent. For instance, when you show him a pair nf very old and handsome bracelets, a brooch, and an amulet collected In a trip through the country, lie Insists on knowing the exact price of each. At bedtime the little girls came running In. their arms filled with quilts and white sheets, which they spread on the floor for beds. Then they bring the makura. or pillows, which are little wooden boxes with rocker bottoms, and the most uncomfortable Inventions that ever sprang from tbe brain of man. Armas the entire room they stretch a large mosquito net. Their duties at an end. they retire with many bows and leave you to woo sleep between the sheets on the hardest floors tn Christendom. JAPtt-ARGREAT DATHERS. In Japan one must spand at least half his time in the bathtub if he wants to he thought up to the customs of the country. Eminent doctors have agreed that the Japanese carries bU clrsiilincss ton and make too frequent use of the hath, which he alwaya take trolling ht. The hot bath Is ad-- v Isald in tide iimate. as every one soon learn hy experience, and the publicity of the bathtubs, which are In barely screened from the pansera-bthe street, is a revelation nf Japanese this nation modesty. For rentnrte haa had her public hatha, while we of the new world have brought them into our cities with the past generation. The Japanaae have s multitude of quaint customa, many of which have common sense as their hasla. When s guest haa outworn hla welcome the mistress of the house does not grow outwardly Impatient. In hla presence and throw nut little hints of will claim her attention soon, but she prepares the daintiest luncheon Imaginable and puta It Into the prettiest of boxes, which she wraps fn rice paper and tied with s ribbon. Then some morning, when no other member of the household are present, all having been warned to keep rail of the M). the pul I ho luncu box with the hand-painte- St. Louis, Aug. IS. The anniversary of Manila's foil was observed today, when for the first time distinguished American generals and veterans of the Philippine war met and mingled with their former enemies, tbe savage Moroe and Igorrotea. Among the distinguished gueata participating la tha exercise of the day were Secretary of War Taft, former civil governor of the Philippine; General Chaffee; General Merritt; General Funatoa, who captured Agulnaldo; General Charles King; General Bell; General Humphrey; General Bates; General Wheaton; General Summers; General Smith and General Metcalf. The program opened with a military parada which marched through the main avenue of the exposition led by Secretary Taft and General Chaffee, and concluded at the Philippine reservation after having been reviewed by the guests of the day. Brigadier General Irving Hail, on behalf of the army of the Philippines, President President and Francis, Thomas H. Carter of the National made speeches of welcome. Congressman Cooper, chairman of the committee on insular affaire ia the house, also spoke. He was followed by Hon. Benito Legardo, president of the board of Philippine commissioner. lion. William H. Taft was Ihe final speaker, Mr. Taft aald In part: It la a aouree of infinite Mtiafortkm for me to look about over the forty acres that embrare this Philippine exhibit, and to think of tha Immenaa good that it haa done and will do in making tbe people oT the United State acquainted with tbe Philippine Islands many fold to the benefit of tha Philipwith pines acquainted the United Stale. I feel that tha money which has here been expended will Insure many fold to the benefit of the hPillp-pln- e Islands In the Invitation which la here presented to American enterprise and Americana good will to aid tho Filipino people In their struggle onward and upward to a higher and a more progressive civilization and prosperity. Murh le now dependent upon legist 1 tion by con arena. We need the ectlve assistance of the Philippine government to secure the construction of the railroads that are sbaolntely necea-aan- r to tha elevation of the people and their education. It tbe experience of the other la tha world Jd railway ronstrue-tlo- n ran teach anything. It la that wa may not look' for tbe construction of eom-miaalo- except railways In (he Philippines through governmental construction or aid. The bill which passed tha house of representatives authorized the Philippine government, through the commission, to guarantee the Income, nut exceeding five per cent on tbe amount actually invented in aay railway, for thirty years, but alto stipulated that provision must he made in the contrail of guaranty by which these ahull be secured to the government ultimately the repayment of all the money paid under the guaranty. Should the Philippine Island be transferred to another government this obligation could, of course, by the terms of tha charter, be imposed on the new government and does not Impllcata or bind the United States In any way beyond the time when Ita relation to the Philippine government shall tease. Secondly, the Philippine islands need and will secure from congress legislation which sbsll bring the Philippine market within the tariff wall, sad enable the Philippine formers to Mil la the rich market of tha United States the product of their for dlstaat islands. Third, we need the authority to amend the tariff lawa now In force In the Philippine o that the lesson of experience In the actual operation of tha tariff may be taken advantage of, and tha changes made therein Rbich ahali admit to the islands without the burden of tariff those particular article needed, especially in bnlldlng up the country. fr 1 : ! w 'Vi Ice to India. Del lYe!'., a Loudon physician, lx 1813, In bis published essay oa dev, was the first to draw attention to tls carious production of 1. fc India. Shallow pin are dug. which art partially filled with perfectly 6y straw. On the straw breed, fiat pm containing water are exposed to clear aky. Tba water, beiiu a poww fn! radiant, tends off It beat aba, dandy Into apace. Tbe heat thus lost cannot be replaced from the earth, for this noon is excluded By the straw. Befon marine cake of hv Is formed hi tan vesael. Te produce this ice tn qua, titles dear nights are adrantn grout, and particularly these an which no dew falls Should the stnv get wet it become mere matted ud compact and consequently a better conductor of heat for the vapor the arts aa a screen ever the ptn. tba old and retard freesirg. pne-tical- iy c N Season Opens Fifteenth ml-onle- a Guns sweetest of amlle Info bin bands Before the lunch hour tha guest. If h be wise, hen vanished ' like a morning cloud, and no ona ran tell whither. Even the poorer people have the habit of going every morning, between the hours of I and 7. to the waters edge, carrying in their hands their toothbrushes, which they nae vigorously as soon aa they reach the stream, which ia not any loo clean because It flow from Ihe rice fields. For Rent You Furnish tho Girl We Witi Furnish the House A Snap d E pd rti" Delivers Address 1 Subscribers will rotifer a fOror br Informing Uila office of (ailnra to r reive Tha Rummer before thalr breakfast. of Louis--Secreta- ry -- n in i look good fur Ogdcu. Why' PARKER M stru In one important department. 1 molested by public critjm. th vertiaer have even now eiBi..,il tasurfulnew aa th underlyuw.esw-nmprinciple of their coiniiertiiun. xtj la In window dieaatu. vital pan The beautiful, -advertising. bizarre; the attractive rather than tU startling; the alluring and bxeneqb are now Bought In the wind-wof every shop, from the great dement tree to tbe little $udy kltclm-frothe basement hgto of a Corist to the long plate gt--i a shoe emporium. Kalaru of .several thousand dollars a year are h cities te (be jnou window dressing, and their tlona foe plants or nbbona-toia- iiy in relevant ss tbeas may be to the stma on aale and designed merely to ad to the beauty of tha window pietur-a- re honored ungrudgingly. In pgrt the merchant say. Give me a bei. tlful window. that people will top and look at. and that yet shall inffint generally the nrt of good I baitfl and I do not care what k coc," Charles II. Robinson iu Atlantic, I known. Manager. CLA8MANN, of and Weber ronniy i based, promise aUive the average succina this year. I he ImtI crop will lu: the heaviest ilmtg. indeed, WM. ' A0GCST14, 1004. no Incnnsidorablc port km uf the wealth upon which the prosperity of Ogden by twj Hit tree 'Ihe sugar imlustry. ih OGUEN, UTAH, SUNDAY AtOnmau, f? Bedroom Complete Fr $39.95 I Good Spring, Dresser, Prsnch bsvel mirror; 2 Sheete, Confer Table, large top; 1 Mattrai, 1 Quilt, 1 Cobbler Rocker, arm rodded; 1 1 Ladle 8ewlng Rocker, cans aaat; Pair Blankets, 1 Palp Grenadier Curtains, 2 Pillows, fi Large Pictur, 1 Pair Lace Curtains, feet by 10 2 feel. 2 Pillowcases, . Wash Stand, Art Square, 1 1 H: - vr J A a y ( :e our show windows. Cheii and rockers ta be Twelve hundrad and S dbejjfiy-flv- e diepoaed cbfct grcatJVysauced prices, They are first class goods, wall mads apn highly finished. ftJitsf For for. 2.60 kind for ,00 kind for 3.60 kind for 41.00 kind for And others ... .... 20 sffO 2.10 ?40 2.00 ... .20 too numerous to man- - tlon. See our windows. The refrigerator you peed, guarlee than any other, and tn give le anteed to use vnu perfect eatiafaction. We have a few of them toft and will rlm-them nut at a heavy reduction: $13.25; $23.75 kind for $16.$16.50 kind for $11X10: $175 kind for $13.25; $23.75 k d for $15.85; $28.50 kind for $11.40. ALASKA REFRIGERATOR one-quart- Baby Car- riages and at 33 -3 Go-Ca- rts -- 1- pot. oft. CASH OR CHEW what-dutie- OffN FURNITURE A CARPET CO. Complete House Furnishers. V |