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Show TIIE MOUSING Dll Published Every by Tl Standard fair br Carrier ta Clt;. including " Homing Sunday mouth.... aminsr. par n ML IN ADVANCE. Exan'uer ia aaat by nil ojblda of Ogden. per yjar At lea iuarterly, la ad- i.M vance . INDEPEND-ENT- AND la a atrictly Iti Examiner aewapaper. It given EXAMINER TELEPHONE EDITOr.lAL ROOM Independent Phone. ...Neb Phone. ...... II H .... .Neb BUSINESS OFFICE Independent Phono.... No 120 Bell Phone Na Ed WM. GLASMANN Independent Phene.... No. 120 Neb 120 bell Phone No. 120 of both telephone closet1 after I p. m. nnn-mbe- ASTONISHING MENT. g ENDORSE- The paper published by the company of which Ch&rlen Smurthwalte ia president, la its issue of last evening condemns in vulgar terms the tend of tha present Republican city administration and then proceeds to endorse Rudolph Knehlcr. The position taken ia one of extreme contradictions and hns caused no end of conjecture within political circles. Thla further comment paper withholds until more facts ore obtained, and then a full review will be given. Mayor Glaamaan started for Chicago yesterday, and, therefore, he could not he reached In order to obtain an expression aa to hi! views. IRVING SHOULD LIE IN ABBEY. It is to be hoped that sueci-swill crown the efforts of his admirers to have the lute Sir Henry Irving Interred In Westminster Abbey, Many lie there whose work, for art or for humanity, was leas, and leas fruitful thsn bis. Irving was not ouly a great actor and a dramatic reformer, a great scholar and a great critic, hut he was a man whoae genial and kindly personality formed a perpetual background to hla Intellectual genius. Irving was one of those men who carry with them aa atmosphere of and because ot thla he will lie remembered with affection aa well a with admiration and respect. Irving stamped his impress upon a dramatic age. When, by sbuer weight of ability, be forced himself lo the front, the drama. If not debased. Was at least a negative factor In hus him-fce- Aii-tiu- Injury. Mr. slid Mrs. E. 1). Harris of Csrda-toCanada, sra hire visiting relatives. The class which will graduate from the Eighth grade of the public schools in January has elected the following class officers; President, Vivian Snow; Beuiah Giles: secretary, s p,i--- l'i.-T- po.,-es!u- 1 1- t ( e siii-lv- .'.lii-iTi- ! i nl j . i I ; : I" I- : : .a I ' !i . " i - i f 1 p;- Ibr-v- l sn c' it'- - Ir - h-- i - i 1 -- .! !(! , r ic...P- W iti sr,', 's d C 4 Wa!: of ba-.t- the hand ..:i.o I'Cloi me. ien set ;- f'-- i 'v.,-.,-p- - " f 2356-58-606- r. : . to. , - .: I : r;:urher hns- 'MS S'l- - j r.te j and I VENTURESOME AMERICANS. Washington Avc. 2 We have just received a large shipment of Good as Gold School Shoes for the boys. These shoes are We have sold them for all solid and are guaranteed. 1 0 years and have seen how well they stand Ihe hard knocks. Hundreds of men and women know the value of these shoes and will have nothing else. These shoes sell for 1! 0 ntal o (. ' Via UmtiU I Tlckd e'ii;u''t,i . goo-.- ;i a 12 to 2 . 3. :.cneral Improvements in fid i Ions continue. t. Cist. r. $73."d round trip. ettirn until Ibc. Jlrl. I 0 ' state ItMMMMMMf ir:f . . $1.50 $1.75 $1.90 . . to 5 1 - 2 121-- 2 pred'c"!o"' a ely ile a ' er.J o. vc r vk Bud mere Will he let go to i. Ylure will then be 4cu men work, against 1,278 w short ilsne turc;e. CITY OF MEXICO CXCURSiCN 8 to 12 There ; J Vr-o- . r- - eh riff ; K err- - - .Nov w n r. Mr-- - i l c wcr-fou- -u Clarks Stores i a t'Mcrr fP t f--1 ic- - i" ;0 (? 3, Fffifi'Ty. I'.f .. I?' v To Fcv Iry o wrarto vr. ji,2 yti krov J .. .Owr tf. cj '".i.ifc wit on.) csl a vtfy die But its cm , true, genuine economy W : hort lin:e. every one having boys :o buy Good as Gold 5hoe T" j The principal bill of complaint besides alleging the prlncebs' micoi-duc- i with the AiiKUiciii lbuucnait, Keglevltch Slattasicb, with whom () eloped, says that although the prates received 12li,u"u crown pm mm-(eai!y, she had cuutr.i-ii.- ii in 1S95 uiuuunted n ;:.7"l.tr,u crowns, of which the prince had h :,i In her wardrobe 1,090,000. 75 pairs of silk shoes. pai: of other shoes, sixty parasols an 100 hats. about d 1 - c i lelaliniiB were lequcstcti. Eson n r srshij). 'v'ih r ich an a l l" pel adn-'ra- ! wcau h'S auditors from th'i.gs, sit J to set a s'eadard that will prs.st ur.t-It is surx.asied. Uadfr the drama became one cf the e.i nr forcer of the fl.ij rn-- on i;f un Har-var- d . - of KaxcCciiuti: two-face- d - t. - i-- Gotha, Duchy y cl-a- r fn-- I WAS EXTRAVAGANT. n R. .. to- New York, Oct. 1. Ill spile nf formal warnings lf- - the Amerirau and Moorish authorities, John Larkin a New York lawyer, and hia Wire resolved lo fuce the dangers of sn uti ITALY'S POSITION trip from Teruuu lo Tangier In Caae of War Would Be With Triple through the Anghera mountains, sn.' a cable despatch to the New Yorn Alliance. Herald from Tangier. After a troublesome journey, 'he New York, Oct. 16. A cable dispatch from Rome to the New York Herald travelers arrived here safely Sara;-daevening, accompanied by the says: Shererf Waxzan. The Agenca Offleieuse, In replying to They report having mot bands of question! from newspapers as to wbat attitude Italy would really lake in the armed men who offered no resistance event of a conflict between Great Brit- lo their advance through the Anghetu ain and Germany, aaya that Italy Is territory, th rouds leading io which bound by an alliance, whose termina- were in a deplorable condition. Mr. tion is still far off: that the Fortia cab. Larkin waa disguised In Moorinh dress, while Mr. Larkin wus liken polinet Is not engaged In a icy, htlt observes correctly and strictly for a native woman. which the part of the Triple-alliancSOCKER FOOTBALL. is a guarantee of peace and an elimination of danger; but, that, in case It would Cambridge, Mas. Oci. 16. The Pinot be possible to alter this object, player scie Italy would fulfill her duty with thi lgrim Association football Eliot of same flrmnrs with which site defended the guests of President yesterday and explained io himII. the peace of Europe up to the present tn detail the game of Bockcr" foot In time. which they are to play today with tla team In Boston. CONGRESSMAN HERMANN NEXT. Captain Fred L. M tinea of the PiPortland, Ore.. Oct. 16. District At- lgrims. who has been in communication torney Francis J- - Henry, accompanied with President - Roosevelt concerning tomorrow hy his secretary, left last night for I the game, will leave Boston Woodward. Tucson, Arizona, where he goes to in company with Vivian playargue a civil suit. From there he I the English champion n will return to Snn Francisco, and then er, to visit the President and try in the attempt go to Washington, D. C. During his enlist his absence the land fraud cases which to make socker' a universal game i he has been prosecuting with such the American colleges. .1 l 1 11 SHE places the Taggart children under the guardianship iff their father. Major Taggart may find It difficult to gt Culver into hi poceesslon without actually going to Mrs. Taggarts house and tearing the boy away from hla mother. Mrs. Taggart will prepare Culver to accompany his father, but to force hint to leave her la an act she ia not equal to. Culver seem determined to relst the major' authority. attorney. E. S. Major Taggarts Wertz, said last night If Mr. Taggart with Major Tagchose to gart In managing the children, shu evenrually will have them almost entirely with her. : nr . !u-i- be taken up first. Judge Hunt will leave for Butte day. . great says: Although the decree of Judge w-- to - iilff.-renr- t. m.-i- : s r -- multi-millionai- rc.-iv'- l '!-- i Tormey - n-- a- e eon-pirac- future of tho Gotha. Oct. 16. The auir bniUKlit t camps. Prince Philip of Suxc rubnig ji.li Gotha fur a beparatiou from lo wife, THE TAGGART CASE. Princess Louise, and an utijuni : of tjielr joint property miucxi;-- . Llttla Ones Will Net Lcava Their hero today before the iikiiu! court Mothtr. lor the trial of divorce cukcs. The contestants being Cut hullc. i Chicago, Oct. 16. A dispatch to the divorce was not asked for, bin a sepl Chicago Tribune from Wooster, O., aration and settlement of their try and the was not giving hia moral support to the convent. Recently a movement was begun to se- that Father . , t- - One hun- t . 111- Oct. 16. vigor will be at a tandatill. n(. Wil return to Portlanu late in Xovendx-' Th time for the trial of the U.X! u: fraud caae will depend upon tbo fu. ture plans of Judge Hunt, i; is ... pected that the next case to w inattention win be that ot Keure.en:-tivBlnger Hermann, who i uml indictment for Th. re talk of Representative Hermann heiu-- I tried In .Yaablngtou, D. w ," ia under another Indictment, bn; it u understood that the Oregon cum; will - Com-mer.'- ' Mo., 1 l - Brookfield, of the Catholic dred members of church this city chartered went to and a special train ChlUicothe, thirty miles away, to hold services yesterday because of contentions which have existed for more than three months between Rev. Father Walter Tormey, the pariah priest, and his followers. Father Tormey first disapproved of tha Society of Father Mathew in this cliy, which was organised three years ago. The breach widened when the sisters of St. Mary's convent charged h- - t ta Maas. elghl-resr-ol- s eni-lr- Go 36 Milas 301 els G. Niwitndi three years hence. Mr. Schwab, howrver, dues not take kindly to the rumor. There Is absolutely no truth In the story that I intend to acquire a residence in Nevada," he said at the Hotel St. Francis last evening, or that I am aiming to win a seat in the senate. will never me Into politics. They get My piace of residence la on the other edge of the continent, and It will remain there. So far aa Nevada ia concerned, 1 think It is a wonderful mineral country, and I am very much Interested In iL I have Just come from Tonopah aud Goldfield, where I have been looking over various properties In which I am interested, and I am greatly with the richness of the coun- CATHOLICS AT OUTS. cure an assistant for Father Tormey, which suggestion he has opposed zealously. A committee was sent to Washington to consult with the Right Hannah Johnson; treasurer, latter Rev. D. Falconlo, the American Apos, 8tephenon. tolic delegate from the Pope, who took this matter under advisement. It is UNION LABOR BANK. understood that the congregation intends to continue the Sunday church Chicago Federation of Labor lo Op- excuralons until It la granted another at home. posed to Same. preacher for its church been here 27 Father Tormey haa Chicago. Oct. It!. The Union Labor years and haa done much to build up hank. In Chicago was sacrificed bn the the church here. altar of frenzied finance at s meeting TEMPORARILY INSANE. of the Chicago Federation of Labor yesterday. By an overwhelming vote the delegates laid on the table a re- Member of a Honc'ulu Family Disrobes Himself. port submitted by a banking committee In favor of establishing and sup. New York, Oct 16. Temporarily porting such an institution. Before the proposition was smoth- bereft of his sense, following severe ered It wis raked tore and aft by a mental strain. Dr. Arthur St. Clair galling fire from many speakers, finan- Knudsou. a well known physician and cial schemes w. re linked with graft clubman, disrobed In the New York and hanking ws declared entirely out- Central freight yard in thia city early side the sphere of organised labor. The yesterday and. climbing upon a freight banking scheme was brought to the train, rode aa far as Yonkers before attention of the delegates In a report his plight wa discovered by trainfrom a coramltKv, recommending that men. He suffered greatly from exthe proposed bank he given the moral posure, but will recover. When he resupport of the federation and that a ceived medical attention. Mr. Knudson committee of three be appointed to Mtd : see the plan through. "I started away from the club SaturThe report announced that a corpora- day night. I wa afraid I don't know tion known as the Commonwealth why. 1 walked up the avenue and Turn A Saving bank already bad then I ran. It ws not fast enough ao been organised with a capital stock of I took a cab for Hlghbridge. I got out into shares of the of the cab and started to run again. 12,000,000, dtvkii-1 took My clothes were too heavy so par value of 3 each. The chief aim In organising the bank, It was an- them off. I remember climbing upon nounced, was to make the trades a freight train, 1 think. I dont rememunions of Chicago the controlling fac- ber anything more." tor in the management of the InstituDr. Knudson is a native of Honolulu, tion. and with i hia object In view, the member of an Old pioneer family there s bank'e provide that organised and a world traveler. He waa gradlabor at all times shall have a majority uated from Harvard in 1896 and took on the board fl director. hia medical degree in 1900. He haa been traveling over the world sinco CHARLES AHLE FORFEITS BAIL. his graduation. New Yolk. fct. 15. Charles Able, KILLED BY AN AUTOMOBILE. who was Indicted last Friday on a In an Little Girl Struck and Fatally Incharge of attempted extortion alleged si tempt last summer to sell jured in Chicago. a subscription of America1 Smart Set for. 3tiU. to Ed u in M. Post, failed to Chicago. Oct. 16. With iter head appear Iu the court oT general Ses- resting on a bank of flowers. Intended sion today and his ball was declared for the funeral of another child, forfeited. Able lawyer told Judge Isabelle Walker was CHrried McMahon tlinl - did not know where last night by the automobile which Ahle wa. The lawyer was given until Ind struck and fataUy Injured her to the office of a physician, where she Wednesday to fin t Ahle. America's Bnun-- Bet. a publication died on the pillow of white rose. containing skoirhe of the live of a The girl was fatally Injured while few rich Americans, was to have been Ashland boulevard. L. I . cmtlng Ihe on- Issue aid the subscription I Ft even, driver of the machine, was were offered ui high price. Able arrested. Mr. Stevens, with hla brothalleged to hate iffered s place In 1: er, Thomas A. Stevens, waa hurrying to Mr. Post, a . w York broker. Mr. to' the home of a friend, and hla '.!e of ariempring to brother held In hi arms a huge floral Post accuael on him hy pillow for the funeral of the friend's force this sub rlp'lon of piiiili" ng articles about the little daughter. broker tn a No-.- York society publicaSCHWAB NOT CANDIDATE. tion. Ahle w:t 'u consequence arre!-con the brill. cotuplfllnl. San Francisco. Oct. 16. The report CALLED BV INSPIRATION. has come out of Goldfield that Charles shipM. 8chwab. New York. Hi 16. Rev. J. H. Van builder and steel magnate, has aspiraKirk of Youiir- i'wn, Ohio, reached tion to alt in the United 8lates sennn a lour ate. and is planning to arqulre a resit week Vomit Vrrro see my brethren" dence In Nevada with a view to encnsind the M im hr desr-'h- r unique utiilertak-inn- . tering the fight against Senator Franlb. He I. V cuest "f a of the First Metho-di--t Rarholow. church. lit a clrcni.r. Mr. Van Kirk that on nr 22, 1XS9. in the Unle-- s 1C. New Orleans. Oct. rpv of Caiitiu:. 'bio. on what Is now . federal authorities are to be s ' ind avenue, he reul forcible impre- ceived :i atlv disappointed, the week be- toil:iv will msrk practical- icn"' "o h!.1tour of th world. ininp ' e xy. ha pcrslted T'i!h ir rrf end of the yellow fever the It is idxteen in c'i- I'.eiion. The remarkable show- ui new cases in : of orly c'cht severest te- -t of crit- "ea:.. i n . I rer3',,"d ct Iirv- -. a'i i pt- M'kivd'nr .r " -. u pnKS-Mn- 252 K 13.-M- rge K.ipei-vlsin- hf-.- VARNISH fi. BECRAFT Phone 24th Street Charter a Special and Provo. Oct. Murray, aged ati, and Mr. E. E. While, aged Xti, both of Provo, hv received a marriage license. L. Holbrook, Is back from a trip to Bullfrog, where he bs been looking Into some mining primowltkii In which he is inte vslod. Oscar Wilkins, Jr., has returned from Nevsd. where he has a railroad contract, with sn Injured foot. The Injury wss caused by the member being crushed by s ruck, it Is expected Mr. will soon recover from the Wilkin lf man life. Ir amuhcd, but It educated mind nor morals. He might have floated with the stream and hi genius a an ImprreonMor would hare arried him to a sucre, of a kind. But he was not that manner of man. He had seen vision and dreamed i of what th-- ; drainu ought to be, and no far from allowing hluiHoit to lie governed ly popular taste ho resolutely act lo work'tu create a new demand for xumethlng higher and better, and lo satisfy that demand. He recognised that the dram was one of the greatest of all potential forces for human good, a also for human evil. In antiquity it been one or the ineatis of government, an Instrument of virtue and of good efttzen-ihip- . It had fallen from that high l,ut It could lie replaced, and he lias li so far rs so groat a work be by one life very fitll of st remit ne. manful effort, viiM-- d v a high ideal. si in Mnv. Tin- of Irving's success va The llplutn :ic mil portam-ean artor. cilrc!v hi- genius rvlee a h and of Von:i-(- h over pain. Bunn, cnN Or'" me- - have had genius, but some Ins: an. relieif. Dr ha Itee uni- m iina'c rl 'bruins. 'Iiips. ' t!mr-- . have HiirreMed In no'hing. Thiuu.i' I i rlt Oil. At any drug hnn-'iirin-in - Ci.e JcnillS W3 rev-Tn .ill(iwi"l store. - f..rnn.i-riri to 'iiltt The plap of n conscientious n'd-tbeen inr,- Pvt--.- i l(.(ii hi' CHILDREN ARE MEASURED. a perfection of perform(horoiighm,-- . place :i' ibn iiesd nr ihe s"i!i do. a was ance that never ".:arrrd by luck New York. Oct. ve m:i-- i he Swiss Rill, the ;i to a organizing npami-browleilpc cr tv. ; Honking clerks have just luvn wtiicli Mr. Root run I with t mach'n.s for have : !!nw.-i(leiail. Me of war. Thai Irtiv1ili dir'.diii'd a ihe lu ight of children trac'lne over an-tl.e ludf of lie .ice ill mialll fl. tl.eir road, and have been in!.) thi: ni! oiioii! Ms singe cii.l day u 'Ip- dn ad children over thro, ct tail mul Ifossililc id li.- 'move! e. have been fl:iihi;.pay fall sa;s the Time. In tltr summer month Bwxrtand as such thiues are sici.'nii-'e.It i full of .Vnorirsn who are often nr-woul'l hadhnii o :n ceil iis.nutpan'el hy tnl" rl:!'.tvn who U"v: r.o i T' thi. bi'Cnii.-mi ' pear :o be over V1 n- of iv.. I fclmla'-ihi- p n"! have lm r. the Pw!. v. i : t f. - hi-- ' ha lei n n . Ti t But lo c'- v '" IV i eel itn hie't ' relthcr NEWS. PROVO LOCAL r t STENCIL Repair hop is the Best Phone Calls Answered Promptly Estimates on Work Furnished Free All Work Guaranteed Satisfactory My dx-roo- Anu-r-ien- eye--e- typewriter oil INKS REPAIR lj hi-r- ........... AN The funeral serEureka, Oct. vices over the ran.-uof Mrs. Timothy Downey, who died lust Saturday morning, will take place tomorrow afternoon from Bt. PutraV church. The interment will be m Eureka City cemetery. Mrs. low no. whose demise 1 very sad, bate s husband and four children. The Eureka public reboots being so board rethe overcrowded, ceived permission from the city authorities to use the h.:ge court room of the city hall on Ma'n street. Here the scholars of the l'irst grade are temporarily In taught, the clas charge of Mia Ethel Icev. It is the Intention of tha school trustees next school spring to erect s re in building, modern and every way, and, as thi town Is growing steadily, s building ' even (hut size will in a short time r:irrrly be large enough. . will confer a Subscribers favor by Informing thla oBoe of failure to receive Tbo Examiner before ihelr breakfast HECTOGRAPHS NEOSTYLES DUPLICATORS PENCILS ERASERS PAPER FASTENERS SCHOOLS ARE CROWDED. Atr.i-riea- . English-speakin- CARBONS MIMEOGRAPH 0E.;ks AND SWINGING ST.NDS h l all (idea aa equal show. , The Examiner haa aa favor-heand no enemlee to pualab. it will give the new aablaaed aid anprejndiood. will M iw Comniuuicftuoo reived cn all euhjects preaented In respectful language Iron knows Individual, but tba true name muat be published ia fulL All letter and communication signed by aoia do pluatea or assumed iiamea, vlll be throw Tbo bravo In the wait baakoL man never h.doa behind aa no Don't aak the eumad name. Editor to ho reapoaalble tor wbat you are ashamed of. TYPEWRITER RIBBCNS MANUSCRIPT COVERS w.-i- d Miim-iitiiL- UN PAPER . Eng-lic.- The FEARfiS Pocatello, Ida.. Oc 13. -- While trying tu cross the i..ilrod track at Blackfoot. Ida., thi. morning at 10:43, William Boxweli, : Tti years old, was run down by a morning freight train and both feet crushed. The conductor and brek.man did oil that could bo dona to awri the accident, and endangered thr.r lives lo save the old gentkman, who - very deaf and could not hear the cue of those near who tried to rescue him. He was placed on train No. Iu and brought to this city hy Dr. Pa : ie and Mitchell, who took him io the McMillan hospital. where sn opi v'.ion was performed by siaputar.nt; bo'-- fret. Little hope le entertk.iu d of recovery, owing to hie age. Tl.b-i- 7 1&03. 17. lisa yjssImwetisi RUN DOWN BY A FREIGHT. - Singi Bt OCTOBER MOUSING, THE STATE ! Og-ie- Bell That the people ihemselvea are to blame for bad government. Is the keynote of the reform efforts of Joseph Y. Borne ui Folk, governor ol Missouri. hie pertinent utterances are: If tho people want good government they cuu have it. but they must want it with au active desire and they must insist upon having it. The Indifference ol voters is the greatest menace to o republican form of government.' Most poop! are honest, but they are Inactively so, while the vicious majority are perniciously active. It is not enough to be merely honest. We need more fighters In the army of peace. Aggressive methods only will stamp out graft sad corruption. There are no "necessary evils' in government. It is the abuse of government about which all good citizen have s right lo complain. If the honvoice other than harsh wln-est voters would assert themselves, tones modulated v. i'h the exiiiiisin'.y local and of his great nuiu mpwane. But hr however, they could have which national of they had Me government l what others did not have. could be proud. the power and the ffeterntlnailnn to Good men will observe even bod iuielli-ciuallaturaic himself with the and bad men will break even laws, un-ibal the of of and the age spirit All iueu, good and bad, law. good workho represented. That wa the should be compelled to obey every as recreate to of ideal his out ing low. good and bad, because it is o law. well as to impersonate. reDisregard of one law breeds disrela will death peculiarly Irving's spect of al law. Amerlie lil.ed gretted In Many pernou thrill with patrihim. liked American and icans always fervor at the thought of risking otic rro.-sed the Atlantic Whenever bo thi-there wa never any doubt about his their lives on the battlefield, but The Ion elec: on vote lo day. forget in the reception, and nowhi-rpatriot inn) of pescs is us necessary as world was hi g.nius so the patriotism of war. The man who recognised as hero. National sentiment runs high in Anicr.ca, as It will live every day for hi city and slate is needed more by 'he governought to do, hut thi has never yet ment than is tbo mau willing to die enthusitha the recognition, prevented for his euuutry. astic rorocnition. that Mure is no The best citizen seldom goes to no frontier v to genius und to vote linos. Genius belongs to the whole the priutaric uuil often falls two duties that the bad citizen nicworld. It is eternal because It is diAi d when bud men elect at least there is no own- er vine, and had man to office tln-- support him a and except iio personal rights, ership d irs. That is to take t heart's content. In ibis loyally '.n the evil he of corruption iu caue chief the been recoghas way genius always municipalities." nised in America, and now that the Let him w'uo, without good cause, curtain hus fallen and the foot light avoiiis hi simple duly of easting s have gone out It is some natlsractlon bullui, be barrel by law from all ihe lavish the that lo tif America did very much to give lo privileges that, How from citizenship. Iho actor who t dead the leisure and Men appreciate something that they the freedom front the lower forms of arc iu danger of losing. in u word, we need the honest care that made his succers so uveal votes of htinest iueu. When these and hla influemv so good unite ntul stay united, demanding honREFORMS IN THE STATE DE esty in the conduct of public affairs, PARTMENT. ihi-grafi will become unknown. of the federal Then is no hram-AN INDIVIDUALIST. l In greater which srand need of thorough reorganization than Professor Hi.o R. Meyrr, of the the diplomatic and consular service. It of Chicago, author of tho University Is archaic and ineffective. It should timely book, (knornmeut Rate Regubo put on belter basis. lation of Railways" Is an example of Tho diplomatic and consular service, Mr. Meyer thi Socialist converted. sinco tho early hlxtroy of the governliad planned career fur business ment, has been filled chiefly with men and was a clerk in a Denver bunk, to their political owing appointment when. In 1KS8, bis inturest In political considerations anil not to any special and socialism lod lo hla enClue for their duties. Its personnel economy with the class of '93. Harvard tering has usually been largely or almost enThe next four years after graduating new administirely changed by every he spent in tho Harvard graduate tration. It members have been worse in government school, specializing similar the representatives paid than of railroads. of any other groat power. Inefficiency ownership Professor Meyer's exhaustive study Ifot-consea ofluu has nucesxary of the quest ion of freight rates came quence. No business, public or pri- about In o curious way. In hia investiwill was or ever ever be well vate, of government gations ownership, done by men who do not owe their which dealt laiycly with the Austln-ifor places tu their qualifications tralian railroad, he wa Impressed whose tenure of office usual)-- is too with the utter failure of s government to them for abort acquire (hose quali- in conducting inch s practical busifications even if they are disposed to ness as transportation In o businessdo ao, and who know they will bo unlike way, on llnrs of common sense derpaid whether they do well or 111. and Judgment, rather than those of rerecent conimerrial Until years the and political expediency. lations of the United Sates with for- theory that perhaps the conditions Thinking were American simple. eign nations be found In Australia were due to lowere to occupied with the development cal influence he turned to the Euof domestic resources and the domestic ropean countries which either owned market that they liad no time or en- their railroads outright or exercled a commercial conquests. strict ergy for foreign over them. There supervision Our foreign political relations were the result was the same. The student was No taken Inieresl equally simple. discovered Hint state regulation not in European talk about the balance of the railroads, but by ao of asked Americans All for only cramped power. stunted Ihe commercial and Indoing elgn nations was to give them their dustrial growth of the territory in good will, remember Hie Monroe doc- which and resulted In they operated, trine, and let them alono wlillu they sectional favoritism in a degree. high H made salvation. worked out tlieir Moreover. Professor Meyer was aslittle difference then if tho iiiaiinera of tonished to And In the reports nf the American foreign minister were un- Interstate Commerce Commission evicouth and prude and If lira entire dip- dence thul the iu the Unitorvlen wa lomatic and consular ed Btntes, when it tindcrtiiok to equalrather to afford soft hen h ize mnlni. trade opimrtunltles. wax scarcely than to protonic naiion-;i- l more for poli'li-laiiinnlligcn.ly exercised than the imeresi Abroad, Condition have absolute rest riel liins Imposed aliroml. csii-IsIiAmerican in lute ehanued years. The young student by this time had merchants and mnnufscinrcr become n firm In the docliiivo !'-seeking mil finding inici trine of individualism. or incut it ml markets in evt-- y part AHrr compii'ling his work in the iho world. The Untied Htsle has oraduuie c!iccii Mr. Mever became an in iln- ls exlens've Inetr'ictn'' of reonomlcs In Harvard, ctl'c. ClrcuntKlnnrei and Hie altered rn l irt .1 he was made nn (P.itaiy, Ipn irmpiT of people and governin' nt have Assistant :it the University mnd.s :hr narion lea.ljng of Ciiii.'iKi). uddciily lie pursued Ins work world power. Im Pirrigii Marions qu'.-Hunlil le ti stifled lielnrc the lin-md political, hive in-cnmnn-iS.uM'e ronim:"ee on Intprst.i',; vs1 r; in ipj. W11-Mi- n SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Delivered UTAH, TUESDAY - Puklim-m- C. ay OGDEX, PUBLIC TO BLAME. the greet moral form. By the weight of hi genius he showed the world wind the (Irani must one day universally Krow il'.e purely dramatic point of vie- - soitii- of Irving" contemporaries as he was. as were peth-iHarr. in England, Booth in America. ur- hardly any point open to cri'.ieisci iu the exqm.iie purity ol i belt acting, in the masterly preseuta-uoof pan. Km Irving uwr all oilier, aud he did ny of dtfii-- i that In this iu teller itiuu v.ouM lie faial. Hi wa deplored rveu by audiences, while iu America it for an txugger-uieum-was were affectation. Mi iii.inui-rii.miitliu painful lo witness. while hi beuppearsuce. allhough II never fell was not comparable low distinction, with the physical roaipleutte. of either Booth or Barrett, nor was Ui THE EXAMINER EXAMINER: : P ' . j .1 i : : for $1 .50, SI .75 and SI .90. Good as Gold Shoes.' Be sure and call for Ui |