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Show The expeiience of western science. iu handling und caring for men young livr mock is excellent preparation and where awociared with the scientific knowlcup.' and technical skill 10 be acquired iu good reieriuaiy college. ve;vrinrian of ibv highest order The live Hock -- houlil Ik ihe ilu-usnr wiih-ou- i stales of iso interval. We sometimes wonder proieciion. tuiiv hi unich money why aten und cattle shea in pito bred horis-we consider ihi- faciliiies they have lor ihee high bred anifor mal-. We know of no mure honorable work ihun that of alleviating the pain of poo;, dumb creature, and which rnim-- from and "he to ihc young of work kind 'lib doing man who loves dumreiie annual is as THE EXAMINER Published Vwr by Th ing Ca. D,i"..th Standard Publish- - Emit il. subscription rates. Delivered by Carrier in Ofdea City, including Sunday blunting per month. ... c;-- i Single copies is. s CL8-- BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. The Examiner in aent by util outaide of Ogden, per year At leant Quarterly, vaac FEARLESS di-t- in 1 a AND INDEPENDENT. great and satisfying as that exptrionr-cby olher men in their profe-io- ual work. Wc know a young man vrho recently finished u course in oue of the be- -t veterinary colleges of ihe eal. who. in less than six mouth. has a remunerative practice in There one of our untsido counties. ia a call for young men of training aloug this line in every' county in the state m well as in Idaho, and we urge young men who are looking about in search of a life' woik to not overlook the advantage and opportunities of this profession d The Examiner ia a strictly In dependent newspaper. It given all aides an equal show. The Examiner hue ad favorites, and no enemies to punish. It will give the news unbiased and unprejudiced. will he reCommunications ceived on all subjects presented In respectful language from known individuals, but tha true name must be published la fulL aii utters and communications signed by nmn de plumes, or assumed names, will be thrown In the waste basket. The brave man never hides behind an assumed name. Don't ask the Editor to be responsible for what you are ashamed of. A CITY'S WASTE. Waste, converted Subscribers will confer a favor by informing this offlce of failure u receive The Examiner before their breakfast. to useful pur- of the large citlc of the country much money. New York lights the Brooklyn bridge the by dynamo driven by engine commade by steam for which ia bustible garbage of the streets. The statement is mad.: that the newspa- pose. is saving many The Morning Examiner can he lound on sale by the Independent News Co Salt Lake City. On all through trains leaving Ogden on The Southern Pacific Hallway, I The Union Pacific Railway, and The Oregon Short Urn Bali-wa- r. streets per read sad discarded la the of this waste material. Paper boxes, cardboard, old scraps barrel, boxe and lumber fir ,h rve from new building boiler generating the ieaiu for the electric light plants. seemingly These little economies, means of the be to prove unprofitable, enriching a city, and they demonstrate enhow advantageous it often is to deavor to utilise wasi material. nuk. up a big fraction Examiner pa Irons win confer n favor oa the management by reporting to iu uuic , ...ci they fall to find the papers at the designated places. THE TIME NOT OPPORTUNE. TRADE WITH ASIA. poris to China, ihe iolai for the ten uiontb- - of tit,- present j eji lining pound, ugalnat 36.719 .n th Niiiir month of last year. The most important single i ni of inn ease uf export to Japan i aw of which the exporta in 1905 cuii-u- . wen 'Ji 521 .tils pound,, against only 23.499, r; pounds iu the same nionth of 9i'4 and 32.951.175 pound in ihe same iiion li uf 1903. The value of to Japan in the tea the coi :un month- - ending wiih October. 1905, is 13.7S4.:9. aguintoi $2,716.52 in the ante months of 1904 and $3,214,427 in the same mouths of 103. the United Colton exports fruui States to Japan fluctuate greatly and ate determined laigely by the matter American cotton I impu-la- r uf price- -. with tbs Japanese spinner becaube has n long staple and is more for their purposes; but the cotton grown in India and China.which has a shurier staple, - considerably lr in price, und in ihe years of high prices of cuitou lu the United State-Jappurchases 11 tile cotton in this oouutry. but draws largely upon ludla lu years of oompuraiively and Chinalow prices in the United States Japan's purchases in the United Slate are largi', a compared with those of ths year of high price-- , la 1904. for example. when price of cotton in th United States were high. Japans purchases in this country were very small and her imports from India and Chius years large. It is only In more that Japan has drawn upon her near neighbor, China, for cotton in any quaniiliea; and. Indeed. China rehs not been, until withlu cent year, nn exporter of raw eottou. but in 1904 Japan imported more cotton from China than from any other country of the world. Chiuu ha been for many years a considerable producer of raw cotton, but it Its bern by her owu oimliiiiou. moat of It being spun by hand, and the yarn so spun has been for the most part woven by hand Into ritugh cotton cloth for the use of Iter own people. In recent years, however, noue part of the donir-ii- c rotiou crop of Chinn have been pun by cotton mlllk erected in that country wllh European or Japan-e- e capital, hut considerable quaull-ti- e of yarn are still made by hand from domestic cotton, and large quantities of rloth are made by hand in yarn and In part front this hand-mad- e part from yarn made either in tha mills of China or imported front India and Japan. The value of coLton yarn Imported into China In nearly as great as the value of finished cloth, and this Importation of con ou yarn la divided two briween India and Japan, llte-- r countries having practically driven the European yarn oul of the market), of Chinn In recent years. - I i- an - vi-r- con-aunn- niht REED HOTEL one-hal- yr imnu-dlaiel- The following are Ihe arrivals at hours: the pari twenty-fou- r John Groohony, Clly: Edna Kiev rna, City: Mlrtlc Btevens,' City: W. J MacDonald. Portland. Me.; C. M. Marriott, City; H. W. t'Rniw, lot- - Angelo; Geo. Btenger. Portland. Ore.; O. Fair Lake: W. K. Halnbridge. Cripple Crerit: W. (1. Patrick. Salt lake; I,. S.. Simon, Ran Prnncl-co- ; A. C. Rumo-UTunnpah, Nev.; 8. C'. Punch, 8L Louis: C. (. Adney Ihe Heed Cor-Inu- Haywood, Sun co: 8. E. Talley. City. If. ary MEDICINE., Scott's Emulsion is not a patent medicine." It has no secret ingredients. Your doctor can. no doubt, tell you as much about it as we could. We esn-t-age- cXM-ripm- DEt'EMBETI IT, t lf NEARING H.CWARDLEIGM ELY THBMUSIC DEALER - bt-c- h ' TVER IN HANDS OF REVOLU- TIONISTS. Peris. Doc. 27. The 8t. Petersburg oorrespondriit of the Petit Pariaien reports that Tver, one of the principal stations betwvra Moscow and 8t. Angeles, Calif., Deo, 28. Three Indians. locally known a Jess, Jack nd Mary, the last two being man and wife, celebrated Christ mas by drinking and thin morning Jack's body was found on th trail to the Rancheria with the head and trunk split open by an axe. Indian Mary was at Ihe rancheria with several wounds and Jess la in jail charged with the murder. Mary waa also lakrn to jail as a witness. Petersburg, has fallen into the hands of the revolutionism. The St. Ietenburg correspondent of the Matin says that a French engineer who has arrived from Ilfku after traversing moat of central and southern Russia, declares that, tha whole KILLED BY FIRE population is in revolt, and lhai starv- RAN DOWN AND ENGINE. ing peasants are seizing trainloads of flour. Dec. 20. Prof. Gustav Bt. Louis, 11a in bach, instructor of geology and TO DIBCUSS MUNICIPAL METHODS zoology at Washington university, and one of the most eminent geologist In 26.-Sir Dr. Edwin Corn- tha United Slates, was run down by a wall, chairman of the London county fire engine at a downtown street crosscouncil, today Limed to the proa a lag tonight and seriously Injured. His proposal for an International rongres skull was fractured, hi left leg broken of repreaentaiivr of capitals haring in addition to a scalp wound there over 500.006 population to meet annual- and were Internal Injuries. ly for the discuHttiun of municipal Prof. Hambach la 74 years of age. methods. Sir Edwin . ho L encouraged to make this euggerihm by LETTERS EXPLODE. the good results following the recent of amenities between the exchange London, Dec. 27. The St. Pet-eLondon counrtl and the Paris council. In conjunction with thin cougreia he burg correspondent of the Daily Telealso propose, an exchange of pupils be- graph says that letter! addressed In tween the school controlled' by the the same handwriting to Count Witte,o Gen. Trepoff end Interior Minister municipalities holding membership In exploded while being carefully the congress. opened in the general poatofflee. The same correspondent aay that VICE FREBIDENT WILL AWAIT In financial circle it ia considered that LOVE FEAST. the new issue of treasury bonds is an excellent device to retain gold in the 1 Indianapolis, Ind., Dec. 26. Vice country- President Fairbanks arrived hore today and will remain In Indianapolis PRESIDENT AND FAMILY AT until after the Republican "kwe feast COUNTRY PLACE. returning to Washington Thursday or Friday. He i Ncemopanind by Mr. Washington, Dec. 26. President and Fairbanks, and during their stay here they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs Mr. Roosevelt, accompanied by a era) of their children, will leave J. N. Carey. Washington tomorrow morning tor visit to their country place, Plain OPEN TO TRADE. Dealing, Va. The president and the members at Loudon. Dec. 2d. -- The Shanghai corhis family will return to Washington of the Daily Telegraph ays respondent that the Chinoriapaneae treaty open Sunday night. .the following town to trade: Feng JEFFERSON COUNTY COURT Wang Cheng, Uho Yang. Htnmlntin. HOUSE. Tiehllng, Tunehungtse, Changtu. Fako-uien- , Chung Chun. Htrin. Harbin, Hun-chnSanain, Taitribar, Hailar, Rlgun Louisville, Ky., Dec. 26. The Jefferand Monjuria. son county court house In this city, .an old but picturesque structure, conCONSERVATIVE BUYS PACIFIC taining all records and the famous Henry Clcy statue, ia on fire. MUTUAL. . lain Angeles. i'll- .- Ii ia announced here tonight, that Col. Wilbur Tnppw, president, and George I. Cock ran. vice president of ihe Conservative Idle insurance company of thin city, on behalf of themselves and their associates. have secured control of the Mutual Life Insurance company of San Francisco, and ihst the two companies are shortly to be amalgamated under the name of Paciflc-Coservative Life Insuranee company. l).-r- Pa-clfl- n making Scott's l!mulion a little better than any other coil liver oil preno paration. There's sepatent" and the only cret is the secret of knowing how, with the per- . -- fected met hail ieal means et at hand to do it. - - Scott's J .111(1 - OU pCftCf t 0111111011. CTCfltPst thilli? ill - "Ct the 2 . it thl W s tllC Ofld - for I'CgAIDing Slretlglil .ind flush 1o- -t through u k SOU'M. Irk ng. 1 re-- . e Will dose out his entire stock of Musical Instruments and other merchandise at greatly reduced prices. if Pianos, Organs, Violins, Guitars, Mandolins, Banjos, Music Rolls, etc 2378 WASHINGTON PAINTERS Paper Dangers, Decorators, Sign Writers TO THE PUBLIC: WiH do well to call an Foster & Hobson when In need of any painting; or papering. AU Orders Receive Prompt Attention Phone Bell 673 V. ITS UP TO YOU! It's Free Till January 1st PUTNAM CLOTHING HOUSE t Will give to each purchaser of $25.00 worth of goods a $72.00 Talking and Singing Machine FLASHES FROM IHE WIRE Vancouver, B. C, Dec. 26. R. M. 8. Empress of India sailed today for Yokohama. Bullivan, lud., Dec. 26. John Gordon, son of U. S. Gordon, died today from injuries sustained 4n a football game ten days ago. ain-- NOBODY LIKES THE DARK. HAVE PLENTY OF LIGHT INYOUR SIDE AND OUTSIDE " PROVB WILL 4T STORE 1 lice j,. raiu-t-i- !:- - l r- :i- BEST ADVERTISE ATMENT. CANDLE THE LIKE TRACTS DOES THE MOTH. RADIANCE -- Much excitement - by the daring of 'liieve. who cmu u h ve been organ-i7P-- i ' oaical the -t Last i :gi!' ihe.' nia.li i holn in a wall of - anrint bo- nDan(. front which gun Bies:. France. Dec. 26.-iJi-teceede.i 'wrn ira off several boar Uuas'.ni sailed at 4 o'clock this uf the poi (More leaving the afternoon "on a confidential mission.' hievts wnwe o;i mie n ihe wail: the Cassini " 'You Flori:-iar.idiors. You Commander Schwerer of will not be orders which li'i- - saleable Vue and don'! know bas sealed opened uniil the vessel is twenty mllos si sea. ut-e. .i- , YOUR Putin ilic. Pa., pec. 26. Despondent over the recent death of his daughter, George Auman, 56 years of age, threw hlmsrlf upon her grave today and then exploded a stick of dynamite on bis rhest. The dynamite blew him lato pieces. RELIC THIEVES. been Independent 231 277 Twenty Fourth Street -- l'liu AVENUE FOSTER & HOBSON - iia Sheet Music, The Time to Buy is Now While Bargains Last Birmingham. Ala.. Dec. 26. Major C. Laoete, a Confederate veteran, who took a prominent part in the Art WilsoiiVilh. Dec. 26. The ing of the first guns ai Fort. Sumpter, business pan oi Herndon, Ka.t was died here today, aged 65 years. destroyed bv fl..- today. Two drug stores, a meat bank and litre Washington, Dec. 26. The navy degeneral tores, in ludiug stocks and partment ha- - hei-Informed of ths buildings, were lined, together with death of William Herschell Allen, U. smaller cniiceiii, hardware store S. N., si ihe naval home, Philadeland general ,, .done are left. No phia. today. Recently he haw been eMiiu.ue has Wn made of ihe los. in charge of rhe naval magazine. Fort There is liitle Mifflin. Ps. HERNDON. KAS.. BURNED. coffee better than another so wc have succeeded in - 1U0S. RETIRING FROM BUSINESS ON ACCOUNT OF HEALTH What the Cinciuna'.i Enquirer says of Dora Thorns": -- A large au lienor gav- - Its aeal of applauding approval to this bit of stage literature last night. Judging from the applause the production is just whs i the thenier-guer- s want. 'Dor Thorne,' as a story, la too well known for comment, but it BUT NEVADA NORTHERN TRACK must be admitted chit the playwright has improved upon the plot to such an LAYERS LAG BEHIND. extent that the play ia far more interest mg than the book. Dramatic license Is somewhat elastic at times, to Steel for New Railroad Arrived Slowaay the least, and ia the play the most ly and Work May Be Stopped dramatic and exciting point of the Until Spring. book ar brought out with decisive action and clearness. Nor la th? comedy found wanting; much htuuor ia To dale there hsv,but seven- Intermingled with the episodes of the teen miles of track und lu7 miles ot drama, making as a whole a play novel grading cn the new Nevada Northern, and Interesting in the extreme. At there being about ninety miles more the Grand Friday night. of grading than track constructed. it was elated last night by on of ACCUSED OF FGBCEBY the contractor on the work that unless supplies arrived in the camps A dearripUon was received from che along the route with more dispatch it would be necessary to abandon the Salt Lake police at 11 o'clock last work until spring, a contingency that evening that a colored man whose dehad not been expected, an when the scription they gave was wanted ia that ountract was let U was expected that city for forgery. Soon after midnight Officer Hadlurk the work would progress without any located the man wanted on Wall aveespecial hindrance. Twenty-fourtand In ihe yards at Omar there is any nue, between streets. lie took the man quantity of material piled up, designed Twenty-fiftlor the construction of the road and to the station, where he gave the name for buildings at Ely, but the lack of of T. C. Douglas, and from the examfacilities tor transporting the ma- ination made ihe police do not doubt terial handicaps the work to such a but that they have the right man. He will he taken to SalL Lake today. degree as to be serious. It had been figured that the steel MANNER OF DEATH UNKNOWN. gang on tire road could keep within ten niMva of the grading gangs, but the arrival of the steel has been slow Philadelphia, Dec. 86.' The coroner's and gradually the grading has pushed jury today rendered a verdict In the ahead of the steel work until it is now case ot Mrs. Margaret Todd, the ninety mile in advance. wealthy New York widow, whose body This means that the aupplies tor th waa found on the tracks of the Readgrading camp must be pecked that ing railroad in Fairmount park, this distance, wiih nil of ihe added expense city, October last. The verdict states and delay, to say nothing of the hard- that tha woman came to her death In ship to both man and beast la tha a manner unknown to the jury. No new evidence was developed at today's transportation. It 1 understood hai the grading seealon. work will be tUaoontinued until the early spring in order to give the steel FORGERY CHARGED. gang an opportunity to catch up with th work, for if th grading progressed St. Louis, Dec. 86. A young mag, at the f resent rate Ely would be reach- giving the name of Theodore D. G raed witnln a abort time, and consider il ley, who claims to be the scion of a ing the weather condition in that part eastern family, was arrested of the country, it might be usoeaaary prominent while dining with friends in tha to go over a large part of the work tonight Planters' Hotel cafe, on a telegraphio again in the spring. request from Memphis. It is chargWhen once the weather opens up in ed that ha forged two checks, aggrethe spring the work uf completing the gating $450. Hs agreed to return to road will be pushed, and it is expected Memphis without a requisition. that late In tha spring tha Nevada Northern will be la toll operation. INDIAN KILLED. have merely perfected the method of blending the Norwegian cod liver oil, hvpophosphites of lime and soda and glycerine. As one grocer will blend -- - S. NOT A - PATENT ihi-i-i- - e Francis- L. Chicago, Dec. 2ti. John 11. Adam wax nominated today at a caucus for president of tha board of trade. It ia expected that an opposition caucus to be held later will nominate Waller Fits. The election will lie held Janu loco-Uioilv- - MOUSING, Dur-nov- po-ih- et WEDNESDAY GRADERS -- The effort to entrap the president Nu feature uf tha saport trade of into promise of tariff revision in who n a bis forthcoming massage was not a tha Unitad Btau In 19u$ has irads the of that than colossal auccaaa, says the Baltimore larger growth lea The time la not op- with China and Japan. In th American. to October exports with portune for tariff reform, and months ending dollars million 60 than more ar of Chins those who are loudest in favor in the 80 millions It have the least reason for being so. In value, in 13 millions and 104 of The New England coterie bases lu de- nms months mand chiefly on reciprocity with Can- tha cot responding months of 196$; and T! million, ada. Ia advocating anything of the thoes lo Jspan hr 22 millions than less littlm sort the losses must be computed a against n well as the galas. Were tariff revision for the earn period In 1W4 and 10 luoiilh undertaken by congress everyone millions in ihe corresponding would be entitled to n hearing, end of 1M- - This, in the esse of Jspsn there would bo more than one anx- exports have more thsn doubled ns ious for Ihe kind of revision that compared wllh 1W4 and practically would work serious Injury to the New trebled a compared wllh 1963, while England industries fostered by the tsir-lf-f In the case of Chins exports are two f time a nu b s In 1904 policy of thb Republican party. and If the wildest dreams of the New and have practically quadrupled since Englanders concerning Canadian trade 1903. No other countries or thu world could be realised they would not be- to which our exports sic wnt show gin to meet the tosses that might be gains approximating those of Chin incurred by rash attacks on the tariff. and Japhn. To Cubs there is an inBat there does not seem to be any crease of approximately 4ti per cent reason for supposing that New Eng- and to Argentina about 33 per cent, bui land or any other part of thu country Chin and Jspnn nre (he only countries would benefit, materially by offering in- in the long list of those to which our ducements to Canada. The Dumlniua export nre sent which show a gain of would, probably accept any favota that lbO p cent or more. Should Ihe rate might bo sx tended, but It is doubtful If of growth continue uutil tlm close of any would be given in return. The the year, ihe total exports from the temper of public opinion and official United Stales to Jajian In Ihe calendar opinion In Hist country is nut particuwill be practically ten limes as larly favorable to the United Staten, much a a decade ago, in 1K96, and and Canada, having already etabllHhel those io China fourteen time much a policy unfavorable to this country, as in 181)6. This upward movement would probably continue it. The Can- in the figures of exporu to China adians look upon lb.gr country as and Japan began to be apparent, in serious rival to the United States, and 1904, the exports to China from the kO long as that sentiment is unchecked United Slatea In that year bring practheir demand will continue arbitrar; tically 88 million dollars, again.t 15 if not preposterous. million-- . In the immediately preceding But the strongest objection to tariff year, and thoe to Japan 31 milrevision is to be found in the condition lions, against a little less than 21 milof trade. When Ihe present tariff law lions in the preceding was passed business was in a state of year, but the growth In each case in collapse. The effect of the law was 1905 has been even more striking than prompt and gratifying. Trade revived that of 104. under it and the count ry became pin The Increase tu exports from ihe iiMnenally prosperous. There has been United State to each of these eoun-trlno break in this prospciiiy to tlte pro.-coccur., lu a large proportion of moment.. There are. doubt less, in the srticles ol export to dial pari of In the working of the tar'll the world. To Chius l hr growth I a arc apt to Is- - discovered In any law especially marked In copper, coitus after it has been in operation some rhiihs, floui, sewing machines, lu correct year. If it were b pupil', canm-- hcri. manufacill 06c inequalities without impairing ture of tobacco, and lumber, though the system It would be proper to do so eolion cloth and roppri are by far the or if these inequalities were such as t most important of Items. To Jami revision oul pan the growth occurs iu floui, jeopardise tho be judicious, hut nud oilier vehicle. raw cotton, tiiat when once tariff legislation is tin electrical uiactiiu-iy- . owing machine., dcrUkon it ia Imposeible for ihe wisest locomotive-:- , leather, paper, canned to say where if will end beef, luhacro and lumber. In all exon husiner-- ia generali. i:n The to liuth Ubitui and Japan the port mediate and altoci-iheharmful, ih value of mineral oil is less lhau that inequalities of ihe present, tariff have of lwi-- year, though to China ihe tint caused in all these veins during quantity is greater than that of the which ll has been n forced one-li.ipreceding year. the injury that, would be dun.- to tit LocoinotivoK .how a largr pet rentage business of the country by one month of gain in the shipments to China durof tariff agitation in coupiv. ing the year, tltou tilt the total value lime to revise ih- lariff la when is no; large, bring, for the ten months bush as iu too depre.-.-- 'i that it cun ending with October. $166,075. against. no be adversely influ. n d h the pm. I3U.756 in ibe same month of lust ces-.the ten year, the number en ill months of 1905 being U), against 3 in A PROFESSION FOR YOUNG MEN the sunte months of la- -t year. Mn eral oil, as already Indicated, ahows a Hundreds uf voting mm from Utah slight reduction in the vltte of ami Idaho have, ays 'into China, the total fur the ten Farmer, during ren-ndevoted month y,;u. eliding with October. 1905. be- of siudy and of .nm"la.rikS.iHiii. yaiing againt $6.17$.ti69 in tli mon.-y- , ir. -- a:nr lor the tnouths of la- -t year, a decren-o- f higher profession, law and neatly oue million dollars in valtt'until thru proforions are fairly well while ihe quantity exported ahuws ai. filled wrh repreoeniauve and tapa-bliuerrs-- e of about four million iiniion?, young men. It re- nia to us. hnw-vebeing, in the ten momh ending w1h that there ha- - be-- our prof.v-to- October. W.696.719 Bilun. overlook'd and tha a mo:, against, r.1 . 430.2.34 gallons in ihe worthy and iKuiorubi' one. loo. We mon:hs of ltiu jeur Iaiim-beef refer to i ho pwife.nion uf veicrin;fhi.w a malarial in. reu-- c in On- ix- - LI AH, EXAMINEE: OGL1EX, THE UOEXIXG WE SUPPLY THE ELECTRICITY ; The TO HIM A SON 18 BORN. C. A nn Xlarbingion. horn in Herviary and Mrs. lieb H-- c. 26. Louis N. a well known newspaper man and writer, died today ar bia home In Narberth. near here, of pneumonia. He wa 5" yeare ol age. Philadelphia. Dec. - R. S. CAMPBELL. Oanl Manager E. W. WADE. Agent, |