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Show HORSING THE EXAMINER: LTAl OGDEN, til of them. Hats! Its! Halts! PUTNAMS SAlf BKj HAT IE EE SEE Drs. Elliott & Norris Special ists -- ve vea" lb study sad treatment of Chronic dleeaaes of men, women and children. Laving devoted apeclal effort during our entire professional Ufa sad are now rewarded by the discovery of methods that give comDiseases, Catarrh, DeafoosA plete mastery of Nervous and Blood Rheumatism, Stomach, Kidney and Uver troubles. To MENS DISEASES Hoed Poison, Piles, Rupture, Varicocele Nerve Debility, Drug Hablta. Taken on a positive guarantee to cure FREE, PERSONALLY CONSULTATION OFFICE 391 WASH. AVE. When Writing, OR BY LETTER OPEN DAY AND EVENINGS. Address Drs. ELLIOTT & NORRIS, Ogden u PARDON GIVEN TO BOY. Salt Luke. March 1$. To John Kinsman, egad lb. who was svniriu-vlo 12M days lu tbe county jail by Cii Judge 3. 3. WhltaatT on January 1J for stealing a foy muff. wa granted a pardon by tbe elate board of pardoue messenger yesterday. Koojmaa boy, and the muff was entrusted to him to deliver. An application for a writ of habeas corpus for the yuuih is now pending in tbe district court, the contention being that the city court had no Jurledictiou. while tbe juvenile court is in exist cuce, to send him to jail. The pardon board denied tbe application of August A. Thiele, seivlug a jail sentence for simple assault committed in this county, for a iardon. Similar action was taken no the application of Henry Jacobs for a pardon. Jacobs is serving two year, in the penitentiary for an offense against moral Isas. Tbe application of James Whiting, serving two years in tbe penitentiary from Rich county for grand larceny, for a pardon was likewise denied. Dominick Manna, sent up front Weber county for two years for grand larceny. for a commutation of his sentence. was turned down. Nick Haworth, serving a life sentence from Davis county for murder, has petitioned for a pardon, and offers to Introduce evidence to establish bis, Innocence. HU petition was continued for ninety days. SLUGGED BY FATHER-IN-LA- 8alt Lake, March IS- - Saxon D. Williams, bicycle rider, end Judaon P. had Fowler, his former father-in-law- , a fist light in the corridor outside Judge Morse's court room yesterday afternoon. They pummelled each other severely before spectator! interfered, but neltber drew blood. Williams had been before Judge Morse on n charge of contempt of court for failure to pny alimony to bla divorced wife. He made a plea of poverty, and declared that $10 was all tbe money he had In the world. Judge Morse directed him to pay the 10 to his former wife, which he did, and then he was purged for the contempt charge. After court adjourned, the various parties went into the corridor. . Williams was observed to be talking to his former wife and her father, when, tbe latter suddenly gave bla erstwhile a push that nearly knocked him over. Williams came to quickly and tbe two clinched in what promand drag-ou- t ised to be a knock-dow- n affair. While they were hammering each other the tall form of County Fruit Inspector John P. Sorenson loomed up. He Jumped between the combatants and separated them. Hostilities were called off. Williams left the building by one door and his wife and her irate parent by another. Judge Morse was almost a witness to the light. It wan Just over when he left his court room to go up town. son-in-la- w M'PARLAND'B DETECTIVE WORK. James McParland at Denver is the greatest detective in America, says tbe Seattle Times. The Pinkertons ssy he Is the greatest In the world. His work Is of the Sherlock Holmes order. More tben e quarter of a century ago In tbe anthracite coal regions of Pennsylvania he ran down tbe Molly Maguires. He sent soroo to the gallowe, many more lo the penitentiary, some ocapdtt and fled to the west. McParland always declared he would die happy if he could see these fugitive Mollies in prison. Ills day of happiness hai come. Part of the Idaho band responsible for tbe of the late Governor are no other than the few Mollies that gave McParland the slip back' In the seventies. McParland Is the man who la given credit for their - Steu-nenher- arrest. Railiay Ci. 8. CAMPBELL, General Manager. E. W. WADE, Agent R- - A deeper motive than surface conditions Indicate lice behind the activity of Detective James McParland In securing the conviction of the murderers of Steunenberg of Idaho. With the punishment of these murderers and the Inevitable annihilation of the Inner circle, McParland will have destroyed the last root and branch of the Mollie Maguires his life's work, commenced a third of a century ago, accomplished. This opinion is expressed by 8. C. John, a Seattle resident, who personally saw McParland at work in the anthracite region of Pennsylvania, saw him scatter those he did not hang or imprison, and later felt the aid he rendered when Mr. John was assisting In the suppression of the Coeur dAlene dynamiting and murderous acts of the miners in 1893. In 1898 Mr. John, judge of the probate court at Halley, doffed bis and accompanied the regimbnt comprising the state militia, as ranking major, to the Couer d'Alene district. With the declaration of martial law, seeking a relief from the terrorising conditions and a punishment for the offenders, dynamiters and murderers, Judge John was assigned to Wardner, and, as assistant chief advocate general, sat in Judgment on 130 accused miners. The famous "Bull Pen" later held the majority of these men committed try Judge John. Among the inmates of that "Bull and Pen" and the host of hangers-on- . later, when as a county offlci&I, he waa thrown among these miners during their renewed activity In the late '90's, he met many miners whose names stood prominently In the doing! of ' Pennsylvania Mollie Magulre-Ism- , but who disappeared from their commenced haunts when McParland From the bench hia grand round-up- . and later la circulating among them, Judge John threw these words Into their teeth: 1 knew yon and your kind back east, and McParland knew you ' better. Youre still engaged iff your dirty work; and, let me tell yon, that McParland, whom yon knew as McKenna, will surely get you before thla la over." Hit words were prophetic. Although McParland was practically In hiding after his work was done In Pennsylvania, It la established that he came west with the avowed purpose of ridding the country of the last The trace of Mollie Maguirelem. west was the only haven for the like the bloodscattered Mollies, and,' hound, and with all Its tenacity of followed to make purpose, McParland bla life's work a fact for poatertiy to view. . Mr. John continued: " "I was hi my teens when the Mollies killed at the portals of my home town, and every act of that reign of terror Is a vivid memory, as axe the names of nearly er-jnl- AGAZINES See This Combination and Send in Your Orders The Woman's Home Companion for one year. The Illustrated American, formerly Leslie's . Popular Monthly, for one year. ' Ahe American Queen for one year. A he Standard or Examiner for one month AH for Sum Lou 1 the. of..;.. Cant Beat it in the Mole Country SEORnra STANDARD OFFICE BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE. mAT tecum. ii,sl numy by heir names, and u by their face amotig the fedem mi men during im i found that iUe:r tvsidi nee in methods were idm-icuin the use of for the dcurui-iioof Me and property a sere empio)ed in Pi nmsylvani in the The same cunning cruelty marked every s'ep of their bloody course, with but one diftluct d:ffrr me. They planned a of old. but .he innoiaut foreigners ere their tool m the execution. Around (be tiayrjy of poor McFarland has written the lat chapter in hie great work for humanity. The murder of the was but an opportunity. No sane mas would believe that McParland assembled all his farts with the celerity that has marked results la the rapidly moving incidents lu the apprehension of the murderer. The mine was sprang by the murder. McParland has been on' for wars. And now that McFarland baa all hia characters read), the stage set and the curtain about to go up In the Steunenberg tragedy, let me predict that there will be unfolded a story in which the dominant note of villainy will he sounded by Mollie the imird- -r but an incident, the main one, of course, with the climax, the triumph of the Jamea McParland. lyith the passage of the tragrdy from the boards public sentiment will sound the knell of the inner circle" and the power of ill of the transplanted Mollies will be gone forever. It may be that some of them will suffer for crimes that are forgotten by all but McParland. The work of McParland, detective, curried on across tbe American continent to a great success, stamps him In ail detective history as the greatest of bis kind. i His Methods Are Said to be of Sherlock Holmes Order. ill Lilli I MOiiXING, mu MARCH 19, 1906, Honrs bismss OUR BUTCHERSi1 U-ihi- to Putnams Clothing House is the place to buy your Hats. All the la est spring' styles are included in MOM) AY Steu-neuber- man-hunte- SPEAKS BISHOP ON SOCIALISM. Says System Is Defective Because It la Founded on Human 6alfiahneaa. Bishop F. 8. 8palding of the Episcopal church filled tbe Ulerary part of the program at the Ladles Literary club in Salt late with a dlscuslon pf the subject. "Christianity and Moclal-iam.- " Bishop Spalding interspersed his talk with many incidents to prove the truth of hia arguments. He tsaid In part: No discussion Is possible without careful definition of terms, and In a discussion of OhrUiianliy and Socialism such definition la particularly essential, because socialism 1 used to express almost everything from be good to kill the king and Christianity everything from an ecstatic emotionalism to system of cold national ethics. Such vagueness with reference to socialism Is no longer justified. The Marxian socialism has a right today lo the term, and whatever Christianity may be, it la not possible to couple it with Marxian socialism as In the old phrase popular with philanthropic 8 churchmen, Christian socialism. "The manifesto of the communist party by Marx and Engel In most vigorous terms repudiates tbe union. It cannot be disputed that every earnest person la dissatUfled with the present economic system. No man with his eyes open can be an optimist; no sane man can be a pessimist. We should ell like to be meilortata. To put It In the worda of Prof. Lester F. Ward, The optimist says to do nothing, because there is nothing to do; the peastmlat says to do nothing, because nothing cair'be done;1 the moliorlst says to do Something, because there Is much to do and It can bo done.' "And so we come to the socialists for their program. It U First Abolish capital and create n common ownership of the materials of prod union. " Second Create a common management of product Ion. 'Third Give everyone a share of the public dividend.' " 'Fourth As wealth Increases shorten days of labor and provide larger pleasures In leisure, hours.' "Most wonderfully attractive, hut la It possible? Tbe eorlallat replies that It la not only possible but inevitable, and It is just here that tbe spill cornea. It la stated In tbe preface to the manifesto, in rvery historical epoch the prevailing node of economic production and exchange, and the social organisation secessarlly following from It, form the basis on which is built, up and frost which alone can be explained, the political and Intellectual history of that epoch,' and In the words of the manifesto itself, What else does the history of idea prove than Intcllsctnal production changes Its character In proportion as material la changed.' production "In ' a single word, racialism la committed to the materialistic conception of history. Mr. Ghent prefers the economic Interpretation of history, but s he develops economic methods, it is a distinction with little difference. In the words of Professor Ely, Socialism Insists that it la the of economic society development which la producing the Ideas of our time. The ideas are effect end not Art, cause.' religion, philosophy, morals, are all matters of food supply. a Christians protest that We must thla la not complete philosophy. "It assumes that selfishness is the real motive power. The appeal today to the laboring classes to become sad with the sole motive of Ifaln their right, overlooks tne power of 'unselfishness, which a Christian cannot forget overlooks the "This conception value of religion In oplifting and inspiring mes. None of us can sit quiet and wait hr evolution to complete Its work. Religion furnishes tbe wise seal. Sodsllsm without Its restraining power P in danger of relying on anarchistic lawlessneri. "What then, la tbe proper attitude for a thoughtful person to bave? Positively refute to be partial; hold on to one's religion that it may elevate and ennoble the end which socialism desires; but Ft the elm of socialism put reality lr.to Christianity so that no man n sv that he loves God and hates his brother. In a word, let us not talk shoot Christian socialism, nor abont aodalism without Christianity, but rath let ua talk about socialism and CbrUlanlty." ' s self-intere- ATRAN8MIGRATOR. Black fcrah waa busily employed about our small northern kitchen when I bad occision to go out there, and, by way oT bdug pleasant, said, "Yon are from tiie South, are you not, Sarah? "Law, yes. Miss!" was tbe answer. "Born it tbe South? I continued. "Orlglnilly bswn in Richmond, Miss," wt the astonishing reply. Woman Home Companion. UP AGAINST IT. OTNMM ay he'd rather be alone than In snpleasant company." "But tie worst of his case is. he cant esespe even then! Detroit Free Frees. "Snobsen I sax glad when Miss Roosevelt got married. If it had gone on much longer 1 should really have stopped all my daily newspapers, have ordered the rack numbers of the Pigeon Fencers' Chronicle and Rabbit Hutch Gaxette, and then hare gone off to the Scllly isles and become a care dweller, and cu: myself off from all human affairs until I felt it was safe to rwemerge into the world and look at a daily paper again. For one couldn't escape the thing. Happily, jt stopped just In time for the kings speech and the opening of parliament which shows the ultimate tactfulness of the White house , But this continental I had almost said Incontinental -- curiosity in the matrimonial affairs of one young lady will have aerred some purpose if it leads u to think 00 the unwholesome habit of being Interested In other peo-pie s business. It la essentially a sign of weakness. The strong man is Interested chiefly la himself he is The Places To Buy the Choicest MEATS 1 The Market Affords and He is not always measuring himself by the standards of others, in behavior, in wealth, or in achievement, hut serenely goes his own way, living his own Hfe. Occasionally he takes a peep out on the world he Uvea in, but only to refresh his mind and soul, and not out of Idle curiosity. Idle curiosity perhaps wants defing t. ing, and as in its proper definition la Involved the whole question of legitimate Intfrest in the affairs of other people, the difficult task must be tackled. Well, it can best he defined In a negative way. If all bos millions of people who exjHHtrd to lie aked lo Mlsa Roosevelt's wedding, who lore ribbons from her dress as site walked In the street, who mobbed the shop doors whilst she went buying her trousseau, and plucked halrplna from her coiffure aa souvenirs, were simply moved b ya benevolent Interest that Is, a well wishing interest In Miss Roosevelt that la, in a total stranger to all but a few null a In the millions well, then, all my defining and philosophizing la vain. The theory of legitimate or Illegitimate curiosity breaks down, and there Is no curiosity that la not laudable. The Malice of It But I take leave lo doubt whether these mobbing millions really cared two straws for Mias Roosevelt, or even whether they cheated themselves Into the belief that they did, or stopped to think whether they did or not. Their curiosity waa on no higher plane (ban that which would take them to see a calf. But it wa not no harmless. There waa aupenadded to It a blaarre vanity a vanity that prang from some curious Idea that gratuitously lo thrust themselves Into tho personal affairs of the daughter of the preldent of the Malted States gave some sort of distinction to them, and made them partakers of the eveut. "Yon don't know ua," thev seemed to say, "but you've got to!" And there was more than a spice of malice In It, too. The passive drfence-leunca- s of Mias Roosevelt and all the armor of a maiden's modesty could not withstand tbe inconsiderate and aggregated s gg mil ve ness of a mob on which as the democratic United Slates baa no protocol there waa no precedent for turning the fire nose. Of benevolent Interest In her, of real concern and heartfelt good wishes for a young lady unfortunately and fortuitously singled out for exceptional attention there was not one per cent In tbla unanimous and hysterical concentration of Tbe definition, tben.ie easy enough, even positively; curiosity in other people's business Is almost at it waya reprehensible except when arises from s sympathetic interest That la the test. On Che vulgarity of curiosity there la no need to dilate all the more that censure la worse than useless aa n deterrent. You might na well try to deter tbe drunks en! by telling him that whisky alcohol aa try to deter the vulgarly curious by telling them that their curiosity la vulgar. U would positively encourage them. But though the tearing and rampaging mobbing of Miss Rooaevelt la a clear Instance of tbe Illegitimacy of curiosity, there are other exhibitions Just as Inexcusable, but at which it la not so easy to get Indigiunt. Rvery day 1 pass 8 1..Margaret's cbnrch at Westminster, and three days out of the week there la an awning over the porch and a strip of carpet across the pavement to the door, and a fringe of curious people round the carpet. What do they come out to see? A bride entering the church a flash of summer radiance across a muddy London pavement, and no more. I need not labor the demonstration that the people who fringe the carpet outside 8L Margaret's hare not much In common with tbe people who go to get married there. And so their patient curiosity In what will bring them no reward worth the waiting for Is perplexing. In one strict sense It Is reprehensible, for it teems to be such an abdication of one's self to wait In tbe mud to get a glimpse of people who care nothing for you and for whom you cinnot possibly care. What's Hecuba to them or Ibhy to Hecuba? But there la just this existing bond of afilnlty between them that of common humanity; and when I see In the crowd the ageing, wistful face of a woman in the critical thirties or the hopeless forties silently watching and waiting for just Un-a glimpse of the happlnesa of an known, and meekly, yet bravely, taking her own dead hopes to be stirred by anothers Joy, then I res Urn how complex a thing Is this curiosity In other peoples affairs, and how dangerous It Is to generalize and indiscriminately condemn. Curious of Crime. But the worst of It all la that we are all supposed, even expected, to be victims of 1L Some months ago I was driving through a Bloomsbury street when the cabmsn lifted his little trap door and broke In upon a congenial train of thought by tbe alien interjection, "There It Is, sir. Them's the railings wot e climbed over." And, down went tbe trap. I looked out, and on tbe pavement raw an imles crowd gazing at the naming blankness of a Bloomsbury house, and not until I reached Holborn did It occur to me that the cabman's Information and the crowds curiosity were connected with the tragedy of a foolish young man who bad blown out bla brains the day before In tbe boudoir of a popular a little tragedy which gave actress some halfpenny evening papers the opportunity to pay more compliments to tbe actress than tributes to the dead. When I got out of the rah, the cabman seemed to think it necessary to apologize for numbering me among tbe curious, 'its been like a first night at a theatre he said, "except that they havent brought mmp-stftol-s and sangwljes. Old ladles from Subhubs have come up' in 'buses and Asked to he put. down on the spot." Curious, this .Insatiable curiosity which gives so much satisfaction! Only the other day a young peer got three-heade- MEAT MARKET FOR YOUR CHOICE MEATS Wboleaalt and Retail Butchers WE HAVE THE. DEBT. . TRY US., For Fine Meats POULTRY AND FISH IN SEASON Phone Ball 39--z; Phone nd. 190. Twenty- - Fourth 355 St Bell 171-y- j Ind. 248 2321 Washington Avenue The London Meat Market the We Keep Best Meats A. WRIGHT, Prop, Money will buy; ne Inferior d meats handled at Fresh and Salt BALLARD & MEATS RINCKERS half-forme- d curl-onity- . TrIE CENTRAL Greenwell Bros. Gam and Fish In 8eaaon. We handle nothing but. prim steer Homelirf. Pporlaltlcau made lard and sausaga, AU In meals ar strictly flral-clas' every llue. Beth Phone 138. FRESH FISH ARRIVE EVERY DAY. a Beth phones 891. 331 Twenty-Fourt- h St. BIB a atrictly personal event of lllilo interest except to the small dr-clof relatives and friends of the two people principally conceraed. Bui the peer and his bride are driven from their honeymoon retreat, by interview-er- a (what on earth could they expect the poor peer tossy?): .thwTather and mother of the bride are interviewed: and tbe actorenanager who employed the bride la also invited to tell what be know and courageously tells It. 80 we learn that Mia Blank. Is by married u BT. TWENTY-FOURT- no means tbe first young lady who baa left me to marry desirable "partis, During the last three year, quite half' .diasen bave married extremely wealthy men." And along conies another equally obliging actor to impress us with tba ataicment that "some of the young ladle at ,tbe Jsle)y are proposed u: three timers a week, and proposals are even gent round from the front of (he bouse from men they have never seen," Prodigious! Harold Owen In London Tribune. Hi eon-tain- OF AN IB NOT ARTICLE MADE IN A DAY THE FIRST WHITE SEWING MACHINE WAS PLACED ON THE MARKET IN 1B79. WE HAVE MANUFACTUR- ED AND BOLD OVER 1,500,000 MACHINES. OUR PRES-- ' ENT MODEL IB THE BEBT, HAVING MANY IM- WHICH STAND FOR PERFECTION. PROVEMCNTB CALL AND EXAMINE. - , WHITE SEWING MACHINE CO. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK, OGDEN, UTAH. HOW TO ADVERTISE IN A SMALL WAY SUCCESSFULLY First, be sure that you have a good proposition something to sell at a fair pries that other people want to buy. Second, put your proposition attractively, temptingly. Tell, In ae few words a spossible, Just what you havo to rail and just why the reader ought to want It. Third, chooeo a medium that will reach tha greatest number of people or of tha aort whom your propoaition la moat likely to interest for tho least money. But the ability to decide upon the worth of a proposition, tho meet effective way to praaent it, and tha moat economical means of placing 18 before tha public comes onjy aa tha result of long experience. The beginner, therefore, with the three fundamental rules before him, has only one course to pursue Ha must look for success where ethers have found It. Thla does r.ot moan that he must Imitate blindly or appropriate ethers ideas. But he muat analyze each advertising aucetta as tt la pointed out for himself the principles and tha methods Involved. to him and advertiser dees this; it la the only assurance of advertia-InEvery successful success. ' It pays to advertise If you do It right. If you dont do it right you throw away your money. If you have only a small business dont try to run a big ad.' Stsrt'in a small way and feci tho public and your ability to ' write an advertisement Dent offer something cheap because it la out of season when nobody - g , wante It the valuo of advertising. The man whs knows how to advertise has a fortune In his ability. Dent advertise umbrellae or straw hate In January, no more than furs in July. ' If you cant get back every dollar you pay for advertising you have the wrong ad. Cut It out and try a new one. If you con make a (1 ad pay, than you can successfully try a larger ad. Start In a small way and learn how to advertise. But be sure you etudy ether peoples ad. It pay. Start in with tha Examiner and watch results. If you want to make money loam , f Our Classified Advertisements Have you a cow for sale? or a buggy or harness; nr tot' ora piano or or typewriter, or anything clef? try a classified or want ad. It will bring you a buyer. Our want column ads cost f cent per wonT for rack' insertion, but no first insertion can coat Ices than 25 cents.' Just try a want ad and aea results, tf you run a want ad for a month it win coat you 75 cent per lino per month. That la cheap enough to let everybody try a want ad. '- - ' bicycle, - |