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Show TOC 4 MORNING EXAMINER: mow. in that tear- jhjimM stir near Oeien. declare they died amid Kust-iaLad the atfuct tul winter uf 112-1know reducing the (tauire oI Frenchmen khail'a decision modified. They for thiriv (year. Wtat will be the the man on the bench, his firm and affect on Italy if 4'to.w1 uf her people eon si.-- ten i cteitr discouraging any anefforr that might be me Ip in have him the alnngrft Publiaited Every Day in the Veer reverie himself, therefre they are nually? by The gtaitearg Publishing Cha proceeding with a resolve tn obey P"y. ELECTRIC LIGHT FOR MAIL CARS he injunction aud. in their d- URSCRiFTION be no small deButte Intermountain : The represen- parMire, there sill the part of thr on of satisfaction Dili vered by Carrier la Ogdea ts Lives of the labor organizations, and gree City, including Sunday hlora-- ' that those in knowing smelter people especially of the postal clerks, are leg Siammer, par moath.. Tie them bitterly neve who fought proposing to put UP a fight to carry flag! flopiee for bumble most the petitioners ate through congress the reeulutiun introth. of recall injunction. duced by Senator LaFollette providing BY MAIL IN ADVANCE. There is one disadvantage in locatfor the equipment of rails ay poeul Thai Vac mm. ism. la ak( h BU that care with electric lights within one ing the suvritera near Ogden end outside of Ogden, per )ar..g6-0increased transportation (he is 1 As measure. f At 1mm guaruriy, la advaaee. the yeer efter the passage will place It la said by those who have luvesU- - chargee the longer haul but the big ores, ' Bingham against gated 'the subject that mall tu the FEARLESS and INDEPENDENT. if they build at Little companies, dollars thousand! of value of tens of ig lie itricuy inde for custom ores, L U ia annually destroy ej through the use Mountain, will provide pendent aapapr. from for bidders as shipments sioee aa'equa 1 aaow. and, and of nil and gaa ae a lighting agent, Aim m liftvtfitiii country, intermountain JbiMUiuji of the all point that' many clerks are burned alive aad ao eaemiee id paaiaA. - U ertii they will thereby enjoy a deckled adrailroad cause la same the front aad aewa uaumsed dm give - . wrecks. - The railwey mail clerks fav- vantage over tbelr present location, the ore; receives be wh. .tJ"PHlVdidittffS or tbs resolution and at their last an- being nearer the source of extenmore and W 4 subject preeeutstL la reenjoying shipments nual convention unanimously indorse spectful igmgt trout know a indifoci title. This is suprailroad sive he provisions, viduals, but Urn true nanis must be cst tura aad .... The COM of .equipping mail cars w ith posed to overbalance the added PWUMK4. JULJWI J01 ores of the of copper AJT BO (It MBU&IUUC4UOU gf transporting small. elect ry lights is comparatively pismae, ev asnumsd anaies, will he most of the nit.dern locomo- Biugham. Uruea id iAa.Veeiq basket The Already Ia. water supply and in immunity are tives m behind fcifba area never equiptied with electric headSne from damage suits, there is ho coma EJi ask tut The Is aved earns, Jjoni rumoit generated by lights. wbat you tor te be respeaatpia lay miniature dynamo attached to one f parison to be drawn. The advantage re eehemed eL the axles of the engine. It Is also is overwhelmingly in favor of Ogden. s of claimed that when a rar Is built new These fact all argue in favor ' Sabacithere viR omtler a Uvet the representations attending the mi of toeullauua of electric by informing this eSoe of laiiur made by the Weber Club. The Examiner belore lighting equipment is very little less wIscelT their breskfaet. than the' cost of oil or gas equipCONGRESSMAN HOWELL. ' of the more progressive ment. b cea The bidding Kaamiucr long ffgo equipped entire traina Republican: It is rather a gratify toaad oa sale by ue indtpendeni as a lighting agent. with j electricity! Newt Co, ball Labe City. ing thing to know that Congressman The claim 1 made tliat the govern- HoweU has been selected a one of the Oa aU through tram leaving ment pays hight-- r rate fur mall cars ten members of the national legislaOgden oa The Southern Paciffe Railway, than any other users of care in the ture to visit and inspect the Panama The Union reeitte luilwgr, aad Untied giates, tliat the rats h pays canal, and the Una bhort Railway progress of work there. Oregu ip miner will confer a for the transportation of fixe mull is The selection 'Ex patron expresses both the esfavor pa the management by re higher than Is paid for a similar class teem in which Cengreesnian Howell 1 office whenever (hey porting to thit of transportation, and that the railheld at Washington, aud the reason laU to Bad Mo papers at the deelg roads ought to be cum polled to fur- for It. He is known as a man of sound sated places, .. nish' th fleet and safest equipment.- Judgment, to l Appreciated. His lueihod are approved by the leading COMING OF THE SMELTERS. men of the nation. And the nation aN IMPUDENT OFFICER. -- Bali "Lake papers are giving much wanU, on this moat important of matSheriff Behring has Just cause for attention1 to the movement, now well ters, the Judgment of that sort of men. There are all manner of meg 1b pomflaint egalasC the nlRot-- In Hel- under way, to dismantle the smelters lu Lake them rebuild whs Suit allowed the and fugitive per, Utah, valley congress. Bouw of them' have cultifront Ogden U escape. Th pyuatable to the west of Ogden. Tits cont- vated a reputation for eloquence. They a qtato inents disclose much uneasine.sjl. Thi have made of themselves something ia Iq the oqtyu ltnhuiwn a He Salt Lake Herdlff'Tinder the heading the nature nf elocuiluifary firework a warden, fflUrr, serving is ggtne has proved to he, jto thorough J) he Chosen," says: No matter what the time and no mat"Ogden Mkely-'ta qn officer of any kind ae to Officials sf (he Utah Consolidated ter what th theme, they can be deWining company have been limiting pended on to ride in any company aud drsenfe a rypjrtmami end severe Sheriff Pflvlnf should bring over the situation at Ogden fur some deliver a speech that will be enjoyed. dsya pant, and while nothing of an nf conaction fo have blot gfinqigmUttsHt and, If officii! Bature has out, They have a fortunate faculty t besn-glvepossible, to tuakq hltn suffer, at the it ia geaurally felt that Ihn company cealing the narrow limits of their inluuid ol the law (ii aiding, jfertiu-foa- l wilt evenutiiUL-defildIn favor of the formation. They re ornamental, but JutiL-Un' ' City. fo'psuap not especially useful. . r ; st It Is- - wUewlmwk-tha- t several sites There ehovld.h no, half hearted Buth fellows are sensible Then there dousiileraf ion, but the printton, put, g rigorous jtroswution, ao cipal one Is situstrd about' who think, who have opinions and the will bn rt In yf Julies west of.Ogdoii on the .sltores of reason for them. They are recognised Dll feellng the halter draw,-oveIheagh the (Treat aU lake, near tb rightuif-w- as the solid, substantial members of of the Southern Pacific company ' have no la one of them. they good opinion of the Uiein cut-ofThe water supply Is the house. Mr. Howell i uld to lie ample and lu other ways Perfectly reliable of expressing himHut alUUdhiKajuma. many advantages. self in lucid English, he never has preA repel ltiou ol the smoke Iru.inltw tended to the gifts of sophomore oraEMIGRATION FROM ITALY. WfHjJd be Imposalbla at this point, a But it 1 that sort of; map to practlraf'giiaruniee of Immunity from tory. Sait LakO Trlegrem; The whom the aouutry is Indebted for the litigation along, these jlmw having useful laws that have been enacted. bepn given, fo the United 8lai,H Ag matters aland now, the next Reason controls thenu Oratory does upgbl tq'grpw' ieea.The gnvernmeut move l io the smellers. Judge " v If becotnlog' alarmed, at the , great Marshall'sup derision . makes It impos-lld- e wit. ,r drain of tlm people to.; tbtM country The canal Is the biggest enterprise for them to continue to do buei-n'reand Uq cffeptsupoo he bouw coun- at tbelr present local Ions, and that has been undertaken by man. the smelting of ore has become so More important results fiepepd on Its trr.ji Import silt a part of tha state' IndusjTkeflrsf comers id!, .the United try that a move to Home other ocation proper const ruction than on any other Ntatea made jwmey returned, lurnght Is the only solution of the diff- enterprise in which the people of America arc engaged today. Tt mean ifttly tract yf land and increased the iculty. Manager Chinning of the Utah more for the present honor and for Wagr jot laborers, Others could not declines to say definitely advance yva gesso the laborer iyit and that the future interests of the United the Ogden site will be the fuvur-e1 i whole province the work In the mure impreeaive as an one, but those familiar with al) State. It fields wee left to the women and ehir-d- the clrrumstaucea believe it will be addition to the equipment of the world. Italians . in this country who the eventual choice. And it la an honor to the whole state The Tribune records the effort! of of Utah tq know that our congressIdnot return cent money for op the busiwas nen- of Murrey to atop man has been one of those selected to do emigrate on.:. This has the exodua. It Mia: 10 'millions annusllr an Inspect the work and report to the j At the regular meeting nf the direc- people of the Union what the United Slates ha inthey have tors of the Manufacturers A found. creased from 100,000 in 1876 to 730,000 aasorlstltm next Monday night ia 1805. representatives nf the commercial inTREAT THEM WELL. Still Hr. Louis Cohn, who made a terests in Murray will be present In an careful 'study ,nf conditions in Italy in effort to secure the endorsemtnt of Here la a good suggestion In rtgard Marshall's decision against the hie recent visit, says tt is about the Judge at ' Murray. The regular to the Teachers' convention: smelter most prosperous land oa the continent. meeting of the executive committee Editor HiamUrd: I have a little f the Balt. Lake Valley Farmers' asHer manufacturers have about reachaiiRgcMtlon to make. It is entirely Imh will week sociation held from a ed perfection and her trado Is imand 1 think will not require a Saturday, at which time a represen- personal mense. signature. It ie simply this: Every will probtative of the merchant Her cities are being improved by ably be present to ask them to modi- person entertaining one or mote of the teachers should reallae that the the erection of great, and apiendlJ fy their demands. of ihe city for hospitality of the association end the reputation bands Agents structure. Her revenue from tour- merchants' and act accordingly. is his in association of Murray are ists Ia increasing and working like heavers against annually each MONGOLIANS tffllTED. amounts now to tens of millions of other among the farmers of th- - valdollars annually and everything of ley In connection with the Murray smelter fight. John ( Mnckay. on the Deseret News: Interesting disclo itsliaa art is being bought. one side, declares that the farmers And yet she cannot keep her peore st irking to their original position sures as to the part played by the ple, Up to date for thirty years past that the harmful smelters at Murray l.'hinexc in Miiuchuria In the late war the , wave of emigration has been must go In accordance with the In- between Jumtn and Kusala, prove that Issued bv Judge Marshall, were recri-tlaiding the Japanswelling and every effort thus f;ir tn junction while J. P. Cahcnn. on the other side, they allth-'tigthe country wut deoheck It has been as valq as have said last night that many names tire ese, been the efforte to keep the Colorado being added to the petition for a ri clared neutral. The facts are stated In a report liy tVil. Walter S. Fchtiy-h-- r sea. opeuing of the case. river from flowing Into the Salt-oto the war d partment. The strength 'of the nation Is being RfpresentstlYes of the smelting The Colonel sayK it was difficult ( drained. The I'M), 000 Frenchmen who companies who have visited the pro- determine the true attitude of the Chineae. although they professed friendliness for the Russians, when speaking to (hem. It lieeaino known, however, to ihe Hussiau conimamler-In-ehle- f tliiil the Chinese geiii-rsd- . Mn, catarrh bronchitis, cold, lmd at ranged In utiurk ihe Russi.ins COUGHS, with a f rev of Sii.iiiin Cliin.- -c soldier five common winter lu the vfeiuiiy (.f Mukden, and the ailments which are the result of Hus? hitis, in nuiking plans for adrun-dow- n health five ailments therevance, had to consider this threat. The Chin-tifore which will generally were amid oiMlaws (if tln-iown nee. who of cure. t'iok iidvatit.nip (hr chaos caused by tin war Tiny knew that whenever they were lift iitiirorort d they your health is impaired, if you wmld hs unmercifully robbed by their catch cold easily, have stubborn own people, and It was tcpeM?,; m cough, are annoyed with catarrh, feel good authority H l.inoyang that in an.twinges of rheumatism, are subject to ticipation of (!e withdrawal of the e Kurrinn, the nri:niii7e.J bands i.f .; attacks of bronchitis, build up your gen- li.'iJ made c'.nbortte for pl.it3 eral health with the InMing of the city. ' . Many Chinese served as spit , hut It is the most strengthening of known t!ie crninandt in. the report - foods. say, were frequently misled by their own s were evidently rUs ' spies, who All. DRUGGISTS t BO AND 1100. prompted by the .T.ipane-- q to mnke cer aln reports. On one occasion the ' i officer iu rharge wee hurried I - 3 THE EXAMINER at . giv, lii ' pd -- o - ' puu-llbim- u ' e ere-unde- r y uir? euiigrs-tintfn.JtA- ly e d ' - iwl-tir- - Mr-chan- ts ..... 9 Scott x Emulsion 'If s Hun-huz- Scott's mujon. Rn-si- -- A . . Iliii-hliu- RIDAY MORNING,. by 'a Herns of contradictory reports advance, the regarding the Jarne-information coming iron i he Chinese spies, who had evidently been care fully coached for rtie purpose of provoking the Russian commander by keeping him up to unnecessary alertness, and so contributing to the fatigue and discouragement of his forces. More than his, Jbe Rur shins discovered that their screened position were revealed to the Japanese by the Chinese spies, and ft was a report that the Chineses, apparently working in the fields. Indicated to the Japanese the pwition of the Russian troops, and In this way aided the Japan esq guuners. tTber? was." adds Co. Schuyler, at least one authentic rase in which this was true, and 1 have a copy of a picture made from an actual photograph of the Chinese caught In the act of signaling with a flag to the Japanese .batteries. The fact is Interesting, as proving that Japaneae and the Chines, notwithstanding the war ia which the latter were so badly beaten, stand together against a western foe. Japan supported by China ia in a position to become one of the strongest nations of the earth, from a military point of view, but la she also equipped, intellectually or morally, for leadership? te PLEASANTRIES. Tim Enough for Ethical Action, . Young man, there are two questions In life: Will ft pay?' and la it right? Which shall you choose? "Both. I'll use the first up to 50 and then I can probably afford to adopt the second. u Perhaps Not Quite the Same. According to President Roosevelt 30 cent lunch in a Panama restaurant is good enough for anybody. It Is Just poawlble, though, that the lunch set the President didn't look as much like 80 cents as the one served to the average patron. -- bet-tor- . Some statistical sharp baa figured out that at the present rate of Immigration there will be one Jap for every 500 citizens la this country luO year from now. Even at that they will hot be as numerous or as dangerous ai the office holders and office eeekera who now hold about that ratio. DR. ADELAIDE A WALLER8TEIN Woman Whose Tenement Clinic I the Right Sort of Altruism. . . In a city g full of charity and beneficent work as Is this city of New York, It Is no rare thing to find a true Itrurian. New York periodical ere constantly recording the names of them. Sometimes it lx a man of wealth like J. G. Phelps-Stokesometimes It Is a young, poor girl, like Elisabeth Flynn; and sometime it happens to be a woman of wealth and social prominence like Dr. Adelaide Wallerstein. After all, it la this class of tenement workers amt helper of the subwlue work realmerged three-fourtly counts. The man or woman who sits in a chair and sign away checks to au organized charity may be doing some good, but this 1 a cuid. mechanical process compared with the lahor of the one who gels right in among bis people, rube elbows with tbeuL'and makes them feel that they are not simply a distant, visionary object, but that association wttli them la actually worth while and a pleasure. The case of Dr. Wallentieln i an Instance. Although a woman surrounded by ease and money, she deliberately took up the study of medicine a study which requires bralim ami palua and at least six years before it places the student In any poHitiun of authority pursued it thoroughly, graduated from the New York Medical College and Hospital for Women, and after receivthe Srat ing her certificate from Board at Albany, settled down to make her dream Cutne true. That dream wa a clinic for the women and children of tbe ptx'r, and It is now located at No. 24G East 83rd street. In New York City, with Dr. Wallerstein in charge. Here tenement folk are nursed, inexpensively and charitably In a quiet way. This Is tbe sort of first-han- d that comes Tram the heart out," as Jamee Whitcomb Riley sa.vs, and It i the sort In which probfindsso ably pone of her patients much comfort a Dr. Walleraiein herself. She still maintain, however, her social Interest la affairs; she is president of tbe Rubinstein Club; she is an expert in legal matters; an accomplished translator of French. German end Spanish; ami a prominent member of a score nf clubs. From the January Broadway. s; plusli-botiome- d . SUES W. C. GREENE. El Paso. Texas. Dec. 27. J. P. Dieter, a prominent inixiness man of this place, has entered suit against W. C. Greene, of the Uaiiaiiea Copper to recover lan.iiuO' which he alleges I due him as hi share nr the price paid by the El Paw Elect rlo Railway company fur a street railway franchise which Dieter had secured front tho city. Dieter alleges that after the const ruction of portions f the railway under franchise Gre-ngold the frunrhiae tor IJn.iim) and the plaintiff sues t:T damage. onm-patt- WELL DESERVED Praise That Comes from Thankful Ogden People. One kidney remedy ne. .ver fail. Ogden people reiv' upon It. That remeilj is Doan's Kidney Pin. Ogden tchiimnnr proves it alwavs reliable. R. II. Carter of 24.H Monroe ave., To say that Ogden. Utah, ays: I Han's Kidr.ey rills' are a wonderful curative remedy is mildly expresalng what I thir.k of them. If anybody ever got prompt relit f from l tinbieo and an the kidneya I Mid annoyance of Doan Kiiliiev Uidx, with the which I procured at 8. W. Bad con 'a drug Stt:e. They are the heat ki.iuer 1 eiei ured. I advised an old friend of mine to try them, as he was troubled like myself and they worked like a charm in hi case. You may le sure thee are two grateful people in Ogden who nppreciatc Doan's Kidney Pills." TVr sale by all dealer. Price, 50 cents. .Foaier-MtiburCo.. Bualo, New i for the United York, sole Sts tea. Remember 'he name Doan's and take no other. -- am-iil- 2S, The inventory of the three of our young men will attain the degree they atcigiir. We say "gloomily makes" nl not "the pedic-Giin- " mjth intent ion, tor e do not 1 th.r.k that even if the prtdtori-fulfilled it will be any great calamity. Dr. Uafer is s iiu!e ton prompt , it kceni tn us, in that because these students .find tbeiuhelves but i;l prepart d for winning degrees a; Oxford, the school. ug tuey hui received at home must Lav been s'tperr'.cial, imperfect and injudicious Our method are none too good, certainly, but it is far from bnul condemnation of Them that they do nut give a buy the highly specialised training Le need if he Is tu whine at cue of England's two great uni ver!: ie. Thoee universities are, indeed, venerable instil uttons. and what they give is highly admirable for those who want Just that thing; but a goad deal of doubt has been exprskoed tn England itself as to whether tbe (thing ia better than nay thlug else or even if ii 1 a desirable a several other things.. Of course, Cecil Rhode exwa tremely well inientiourd when he instituted his scholarships, but he was very far from helng an educational authority, and the circumstances of his life were such ae to give him an notion as to the intrinsic worth of the benefits be was confer-.rinou young Americans, colonials, and other outer barbarians whuin, for Great Britain's advantage, he wanted to subject to the dvllieing and mollifying influences of the Oxford of his own hnmesick .illusions, it L natural enough that our schools do not provide the means for winning prizes there. Neither do many English schools, not held least useful to the Empire by those who pay more attention to today and tomorrow than to fil.'-uii- in'ef-est-s possessed by Germany in her colonies, a- - presented in recent Parliamentary reports, has turned out to lie sui prisingiy favorable, and It is the strongest possible refutation of tbe widely spread prejudice, that in th colonial territories wastes of and and marsh are the prevailing fetu:e. According to these statistic tbs total of German capital employed in the colonies is 370.V'6.(Mxi marks. Out of this, SaO.t'OO.OoO marks are already pat lug dividends, lO.Onu.wt) are in process of favtiMble development, 12,tKM),Ut'd pay no dividend at all. while tbe Roman Catholic and Protestant mlsi-lon- s have invested k.uuO.uOO for purely religious purposes. The purely business companies number 174 and are represented by a capital of 142.700.tKld marks, of which 35 per seat ie already paying dividends, 60 per cent promise a certain return in the near future end 5 per cent has no prospect at all. The Ger-ma- s colonists, planters, dealers and independent tradesmen have Invested their capital to tbe extent of 76,000,000 marks, of which 76 per cent is already yielding a return. During the last teg years th economic progree. made in the colonies la especially sat isfactor , whereas during the previous period. 1882-86the initial difficulties encountered nt first in all colonial enterprises made themselves plainly felt. Along with the productive power of the Invented German capital was also to be appraised the mss of raw materials already delivered for export, and la addition te this the productive power uf the soil and miners not yet touched by Invested capital had to be reckoned. At the same time, the product which do not renew themselves with automatic regularity, such as ivory, sklne, kopal and curiosities, were entirely deducted, and wood and India rubber to half the amount. The remainder constating of natural productive powers of a lasting character. Is demonstrated to he worth upward of Whether ' these 616,800, OtKJ marks. natural productive powers may be com eidered as Independent of German capital forms still a controversial point which will be dealt with la the comment which the newspapers will make on the first Parliamentary paper. In any case, however, the work already dona, and there retrains a large reserve, le a very important factor Iq economic life, In these natural resource of the German colonial territories disclosed by the colonial pub ; ,. Icy. The second Parliamentary paper deala with tha question whether the costa of administration in the German colonies have developed satisfactorily or not. In treating tills question the military expenditure necessary for th acquirement of the colrnlal territories le not taken Iffto acoount. .The steady rise-Ithe revenue belonging to tbe various eoloniea le well worthy of notice. Theae have increased from to 12,300,600 marks In the period These figure relate only to the results of administration; they leave aside the revenues drawn from capital Investment hearing interest, such as railways, harbors, water . service. In the case of several as Cameroon; Togo and East Africa, the revenues for several year past have exceeded tbe expenditure. Reckoning all the' colonies together, their own revenuM, it la true, do not amount to more than 61 per rent of the costs of administration.. . However, it Is possible to foresee iht In ten years' rime the hsflafle will be reached everywhere. A comparison is drawn with the' financial, development of the French colony, Algiers, ,fer which th items of revenue and coots of administration hare been published during seventy-siyearn According to theae, the total expenditure of the mother country for Algiers stands at eight and one-hamilliard francs (excluding military expenses), while the revenue d of the colony amounts to two and milliards, 4b that France has spent during seventy-si- x year six and one-sixt.uitlliurda francs In this colalone. Contony on administration inental Correspondence. -- , . -- 1896-180- col-onifi- x lf one-thir- h SO MANY FINE PEOPLE. writer In the American Magazine for January clooqa an article called "An Adventure ip Contentment by saying bow nutty fine people there are In this world, If you could only scratch 'em deep- - enough." This conclusion was reached after the writer had come in contact with a subscription book agent wno had attempted to sell him a set of books, and had turned the conversation from busjneae to poetry and through poetry to life. U was while the two were on the surface of things that there was friction and discord. The deeper became tbe soundings in the ocean of life tbe less the two men found of alnd and waves, currents and eddies that act the surface in commotion, ll was gruff old Thomas Carlysle, himself living in constant warfare with hi own environment, who declared. think deeply- enough, and you think musically. And so It might be declared of human nature that sounding deep enough In Us waters, harmony is certain to be found. Ae ia deep sea oundings tbe waters are found to be at peace, bo down at tbs bedrock of reality to human nature there i harmony, or. In tbe language of the writer quoted, "how many fine people there are in this world, If you only scratch 'em deep enough. I not the keynote of most of the disagreements, dislikes, prejudices and which general unaimfortablenessea ail-- c from human association to be found here? Either no opportunity I given or none Is sough? or taken advantage of when offiered for scratching deep enough., Have not all had experiences similar to this? It was aniaiing. once one begah talking, not of books, built of life, how really eloquent and human he became. Frojq being a distant and uncomfortable person, he became at once like a near neighbor and friend. 1 It ws strange to me-- as have thought since bow he conveyed in a few words tbe eosentlal emotional note of hie life. It wsa no violin tone, beautifully complex with harmonies, but the clear, simple voice of the flute. I, spoke of his wire, his baby girl and his home. It was beantiful to see commonplace facts grow phospores-cen- t In the heat of true feeling." .. Will ihe time ever come when men and women will no linger be content with striking only the discordant notes found alone on the surface of human association, instead of endeavoring to scratch deep enough tor tbe certain underlying harmony? A - For Money Received From a Street Franchise. ie PE EM nilll THINKS COLONIES PROFITABLE. GERMANY e suo-ees- ' I UTAH. OUDEX, -- g . yesterday. We never quite ay what a young American, if at all typical of hie country and generation, wanted of what he could get at Oxford, and we can hear with entire composure that those who went there are both disappointed and Tha trouble ia that disappointments. they were nut well, selected. This country is qui. large enough to supply annually a delegation of boys who will like Oxford and whom Oxford will like. But they wont be, as these mostly were, typical Americana. Tbe latter have, most of them, a due appreciation for Latin, Greek and pure mathematic, but they have heard of divers mare directly useful studies and ascribe more Importance to them than Oxford does. The matter will straighten Itself out in a few y ears, and then perhaps our Dr. OsleA will be content to leave to our Dr. Munsterberga the task of proclaiming the superiority of Europe to America. New York Time. , OUR SUPPLY OF COAL. . Officers of (be Geological Survey de- clare that the present generation, the generation to follow and still other generations need lot wonw about ihe coal supply In the United Slates. It Is impossible to make any t accurate prophecy, it I Mfe to My that the supply In the United States will last for 4,0tiu to S.OtiO years. Some statistics of the production and consumption of coal in the United State have been prepared by the Mir vey. Up to the ekiae of the year 1865 the total production had amounted To 284,880,055 tons. In the followlrig- decade it had Increase,) to 419,425,1 04 tuns, making the total production up to that, time more than T'lU.OOO.OOu tuna. The grand total of coal produced In this country up. to 19u5 was short tons. Ths great increase In the production of coal, when considered with the increase in report, population,", says a survey furnishes tome interesting comparisons. Going back for a period of a little over fifty years, or to the middle of the last century, god comparing the statistics of coal production with the increased population, it is found that in 1850 the production of coal amotmt-e- d to 23.191,876' persons. The per production of coal (n that year capita 1 .278 of A thus seen to have bf-eton. In I860, or ten yean later, the population was 1.448,321 persons, and the cool production amounted to tons, or as average of ,514 of a ton per capita. The per capita consumption bat Jumped by leaps and bounds ahead of the Increase In population. While the population from 1850 to 1900 has shown an lncrdase of 230 per cent, the production of coal increase,) 4084 per cent. n SHAKESPEARE NO GREAT SHAKES d - wn iu i's J" , ,v Vi--!- , - Among piat-r- he would probably !ik i.j t Mau and Suprrniiii Candida, Caesar and Cleopatra " ; Ca ne's attention can be hi zeal t good hope that the Ribl- tew year h.r.ger; but if ' n., ? . I m.,', V bo-i,- t sliuu'.d combine geuileno-- 'ring the battery of their '' telligeuce simultaneously the Bible, the consequences a;e ' ful to cootempU-te- . Nothing be c rtain in thi day excij.1 ' Mr. Caine and Mr, Shaw w: low any pOMible occasion f 0li:riw. log theroeelvea on public aMeipum The Outlook. p.iv,er';ij -,, ,v MODERN CIVILIZATION A FAILURE "A second test Is suggestive whteh may perhaps he mere readily put inn, pfaetire thaq thisvne. If, u we Lave contended, the lest of equivalent of pleasure and pain is preference, a, ,1. rermlred fty memory rather than an ticipatioB, then the test of wbe:,r given period has resulted in a surplus of pain or pleasure to an individual (s best ascertained by whether that individual would pief over that living again period, or one containing exactly the route quantities ot pleasure and pain, ta nut uiiu u over again. Let thi test be applied to th average citizen of New York fur n average ny or an average year not to an exceptional citizen for n exceptional day or an exceptional vexr Th average man in New York Is a laborer ha can avail himself of no more, dpi generally- of less, labor than that which he himself supplies. The average woman in New York is a laborer qlso. though not necessarily wage laborer, let Inquiry be made of the average adult dweller in New York t" the close of an average day whether he or she le glad or sorry that the day ti done whether be or she would prefe-llrinit over again to not living it qver again, just ae It wag. Can there be any doubt of the result of surh Inquiry? From such premises the oonclmdoa le "that the city of New York, th crowning achievement of the modern competitive system In the westers world, yields a less output of happiper acre per day or year than ng when Hendrick Hudson discovered it site that It wa more useful a en undiscovered wilderness than ti is today and contributed inorq to that output which it la the only useful object of society to produce happiness. What then shall w think of all the lucubration about pro peril., and - nationil greatness so frequently heard? Whst. relation, if any, have there things to utility? It would seem to be the height of presumption for any nation, or any representative of a nation, to boast of tie success when universal annihilation would result In etlll greater success at least a greater euceera In the production of anything which ti Is worth while to produce." Crtriciam of Janies Mackaya's "The Economy uf Happiness, in The Arena. dett-rmlnl- MASSACRED BY INDIANS. Loa' Angeles, Cal., Dec. 27. Col. H. B. Maxson, who returned from Sunora, Mexico, reports the maraacre near Sancho, of eight Americans and Mexicans by Yaqui Indians. o0(00000000000000 a O SM00T CASE. ... o' O Action O - . . , : Against Utah Senator - Has Been Abandoned. Ralt Lake, Dec. 26. The fol- O O lowing peclal dispatch has O been received from Washing- O ton; O .Your correspondent was In-O formed on perfectly reliable au- O tborlty that there will be no O vote on the case of Senator O Smoot In this session. The case will not be colled O O up, end will remain as unfinish- O ed brnrinere to the eqd of the O session, when It will die. Those who pretest against O O Senator Smoot realise they eon O not hope to secure a majority O of tha senate to either exclude O or expel him, and (hey 'will not O permit a Vote to be takdn. The O committee on privileges and O election cquld readily secure a O vote if they desired, but Sen- O ator Smoot's enemies certainly O will not ' force an Irena since O tbev are assured the result O would bo tiie defeat of tbe mo- O tloa to unseat him. Last Thursday Senators Du- O O bole and Burrows held an im- O portant meeting with the Demo- O c retie members of the senate, O and both urged tbe Democrats O to make a party msMure of tbe O 8moot case. They were oppoa- O ed by s number of the most In- O furnlial members of that party, O and in spite of their motO urgent arguments, the Demorefused to place a party 9 crats O Indorsement on the effort to on- O seat the senator from Utah. O it is believed that the fail- O , ure to control hie own party O has led Senator Dubois to sonumber O cure fromthe O of Me fellow senator O pledge to prevent a vote. It I O stated on the best uf authority O that the metier will remain O ' "on th table" to the end of , ' O the session. . - Shakespeare hei fallen upon parlous times. Last week The Outlook reported tbe discovery by a German scholar that tbe playe which, since the publication of the early quartos at the close of the sixteenth century, have been attributed to William Shakespeard of Stratford, were written by tbe Earl of Rutland; and now cornea 11x11 Caine and declares with great solemnity that It does not make much difference who wrote the plays, for only about six of them are worth reading, and he leads hie traders to infer that there la much more profit In contemporary writing. Modesty probably forbids him to specify fiction. George BernajaPhaw, who. with ' Thomas Lawson, divides the primacy among tbe has for a number cf years spoken very slightingly of Shakespeare's work, ard has more than once intimated that much greater work ha been done under his own name. But Mr. Shaw ha lately been diverted from tbe congenial taek of demolishing Shakespeare to ihe still more congenial task of pulling down the Blhla He takes a very low view of tbe Bible O both as literature and revelation, t , O o O 0 0 O O O 0 O O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O O O O O 0 O O 0 D 0 0 O O O O 0 O O O O O O 0 0 O 0 00009000000004 MiiTflEees - MAKES THICKS LOW XOW WE ARE MAKINfi KltaClALK OX MANY HOOD 4JOODS WHICH WE MlST IMM'OSE OK nEFORE4XYEXTORY. YOU WILL, FIND uAUGAIXtf IN EVERY DETART- ' MEXT. THE RHODES SCHOLARSHIPS. I)r. Osier confirms tbe recently report that the Rhodes pupils lrt iu 'hi country are doing very well us scholars tn Oxford, and be gloomily make the prediction that In the next four years not store than two or and is diatinniy of opinimtime ha ccir.e ro put it a.UH iiitute other and nu.iv . Clarks |