OCR Text |
Show Mptfl fHE SUNDAY 12 EXAMINER, OGDEN SUNDAY, UTAH, JANUARY CAPTAIN ) Conducted by the Socialist Party of Ogden. S. HILLIARD KATE E. A BATTELL and M. mORAN. Bu: still. aowrhow, the round U spiral. and the race's feet haia cover hiutself with, not even letting him know he wanted it." under them which they have irud. W. D. Howells. An Ideal of Paac. An Ideal haa dwelt In tha human brain fur thousand of years; It la not an ideal of "justice,' but an jdeal of pear and happiness: an Ideal of a society share there should ha neither mlna nor thine; where all should be for all. where equality and fraternity should be the ouly bonds uniting mankind. In the troubled epochs of his- found The path rl- - HISTORY OF SLAVERY. Materialism vs. Idealism. Humanity la guided by the necei-tie- a uf pruduclloa and nut by ideas of Justice, conscious or unconscious; and ' as a denumira(luu or this 1 know of nothing more convincing than the history of slavery. Slavery, according to the Idealists, must both have been Introduced by philanthropy and also abolished by philanthropy. Man must have ceased to eat hi own kind from the time in whlrh hia heart began to glow with In love of Mafello w creature. reality the cessation of cannibal feasts ran only be attributed to economic rauaes. At first all the tribe children. women and men took part In the repos' a: they ate their old relation-to spare them the cares of age and cf the savage life, au painful fur tlftise who have lost the vigor and But elasticity of their member-when a sojourn lu countries abounding In gatue and fish, the breeding of rattle, and the culture of the earth, made the maintenance of the old possible, they were left to die their beautiful death. But the bodies of the enemiea killed on the field 9 battle, and also the prisoners of war. were still eaten. . . . ... Christianity and Slavery. The clergy, who have learned the art of lying from the study of theulogy, persistently repeat that Christianity abolished slaver)', whilst It waa Christianity whlrh Introduced it into America and which preserved It in the ancient world. Ht. Paul sent bark the fugitive Christian slave to their masters, and. like Bt. Peter, Bt. Augustine and the whole sequence of saint a of the flrat centuries, he instructed alnvea to obey and faithfully aerve their earthly' masters, to deserve the favors of the celestial master, the prntertor of slaves and of despots. Real Estate Agents ih Clalfl4 In Ogdaa and autaida prapama Mr bargain ! column- - WM. A. HlCKENLOOPER. ( RMl MUM, WwrinM M keels Building, w manta. aaaaar to N. H. H. N. GODDARD, Batata, Laana, Inauranca, eommaralal Stock 10 EaJo fMdg. JAB. E. SALLANTVNE. Itoal Batata, Insurance and Bealaa OfHaa J. J, BRUMMITT Laana, Inauranca, Raal Batata. 1401 Waahlrgton Ava. Both shOMA I" ' lu ill Real Bldg-'Maa- A M. PORRISTALU Surety Banda, Raal Bauta Inauranaa, Bid Baalaa Bldg B. F. SRATZ. Fire inauranca. Real Eatot 8Mh BL Bath Laana, Notary. 'phencA and 4i W. N. PEIRCE. Raal Batata, Notary, Flra and Ufa taauranaa 411 14th 9L Bata phencA KELLY A HERRICK. General Inauranaa, Laana and Rental Raal EaUta InvaatmontA A. A. WENGER, Raal four-foote- Cauto, Fira Insurance, Laana. U Flrat Natl Mart-gag- a REAL ESTATE A IN VESTMENT CO. Raal EaUta, ti.au 'anca and 210A20 Ecelaa Bldg, OGDEN Banh ind. Fhana 72L Bldp B. L. IVEB eth phenaA Raal Batata, Loan, inauranca. Bauta, CeiioctionA Notary Publlo. A C. NYE, B. H. GODDARD, Real Estate, Flra and Ufa Incur Notary Public. 419 Baalaa Bldg. BaN Fhana 6S4Z. . Estate, Laana and Inaur anea. Natary Fublic, 2411 WashingRaal iim ton W. B. WEDELL Raal Eata.0, Laana, Inauranaa nd Rantala. 94M Washington ava. Bayla black. Bath phanaA A A SMITH Mina and Realty Broker. NaUry Public. Ream bl, Flrat NaL Bank, InA ghana 657. B. S. ROLAFF. . Batata lit InauraneA Real V11 Annua, A A SIMMONS. Raal aeUte dealer In Five Point Rental grapartlaa and farm land arc partita handled. 220 Wash. Ava, Ball 'ghana Oiii-y- . Natary FaklB Bldg Rantala, 404 ficclaa Funa ft; Ind, 32. Llatcn to ma, dear, Which will be beat; Ta etruggle with tent, dear. Or ahall we invest! Anewar by mala ar femala ta tha JUMBLE. 2300, Wash. Halle, FARRY CHAUNCY EaUta, Flra Inauranca and laana. Comer 22d and Wash, Baa. Raal manL 1144. Attorneys M. D. LEMENQEH JOSEPH CHEZ. AtUfnay and Counselor at Law, 40 and 41 Flrat National Bank Bldg. NoOgden, Utah. Both ghanas. tary In office. VOLNEV A Attunay-at-Law-. Ecclaa Building. B. FARNSWORTH . and SIS Ecclrc Building. Attorney-at-Law- Ream 21-2- 2 . First Nat Bank Bldg. T. R. OXONNELLY. j Attomay-et-Lawj 144 Twenty-fourt- . B. VAN OER SCHUIT. 740 Twenty-eight- at. h tory generous thinkers, such as Plato, More, Campanella. have pictured this Ideal society in enchanting Utopias, and heroes have ariaeu and sacrificed themselves fur Its establishment. This ideal la no wpontineoua production of th human brain; it la a reminiscence of that golden age, that of which religions earthly paradise, souvenir of tha' tell us; It la a far-of- f communistic epoch through which mankind passed before the In trod uf private property. If the plebeians and the poor of the Greek cities failed in their numerous revolts agaln-- t the patricians and the rich, to reintroduce the community of goods; If the popular heretical sect of the middle ages failed In tltelr reequalpeated attempts to It was beity and fraternity on earth, cause In the time of the Graeco-Lati- n decadence, as In the last centuries ot tha middle ages the economic phenomena were against a return to the community of goods; Instead of aiding such a return, they destroyed the last remnants of communism and developed tha elements of bourgeois private property. uc-tk- m ever Richard- son's Grocery. Ind. phono 44. VARNEY FLORAL CO. - puffy-necke- d hotel-dwellin- g h two-hntto- THE PORTER FLORAL CO. Choice cut flower always an hand. Floral designs a specialty. Graenhevoe car. Jefferson ava. and Twentictn at. W. L. Porter, Mgr. Pbones Bell 2699; InA 291. 1 OGOEN FLORAL CO. Floral Artists. Store 413 Twenty-fourt- aL Qreenhouaa opoosiU Gitnweed park. Phones, Ball S3An. InA 193. VARNEY FLORAL CO. Tha choice carnations, reaco and ether ftowtra, with appropriate green. Prices moderate. 142 Thlr-f- t . at. Be 'I B1S-K- . -t fr V'l-sia- . nt Ogden City Dentists FELIHAW'S OENTAL PARLORS, Over Bparga'o Beak Store , ?4(9 Wash. Ava, Phone BeiL 79-k- ! n 8ioux savage". Comanche waa proband ably left for dead, but he escaped, wanwaa found after that dreadful day, dering on the prairie near the battlefield by a trooper of the Seventh, who bad been sent to Major Reno by General Custer the day before the fight. "He waa ao badly hurt that It waa thought beat to kill blm to end hla misery, but when It was found that be waa the only living thing that had survived the fight it waa resolved to save hla life If possible. He waa cared for bv Reno's men as If ha were human, and when he had recovered sufficiently he waa sent to Lincoln, Neb, from which place he waa transferred to Fort Meade, looter he waa transferred to Fort Riley. Kan., where be passed the remainder of hla life in Idleness at the expense of the government. He was fifteen yearn old nt the time id the battle, and died At the ripe Captain Keogh waa age of thirty-twthe last man who ever rode The dignity of a government order was Invoked to save the old horse from further labor, and at the end of hit life, by a government older, I U Dyche, profeaaor of systematic xootogy of the University of Kansas, mounted hla akin. "Comanche wan Just a plain Texas range hone, where he wan picked up by a government. agent. Long before he the battle of the Uttle Big HsrnTersaw service In Texas and Indian writ h the ritory, and after a battle waa named In honor of Comanche the event. Being with the army on the frontier during all of kin netlve service he probably never knew the luxury of onto until he wan put In thhe big box stall at Fort Riley, where died aa a pensioner of tha United Status. But for all that he was a tough beast, aa he proved by hla recovery from wound that would have settled the fate of a Whole troop of less hardy horses. When Profeaaor Dyche dissected hla carraas he found where he bad been shot twice in the the hips, once in the lungs, once In can shoulder and once In th neck. He ried parts of two bullets In hla body to the end of hia life. On Comanche's bark as he stands In the museum, la the regulation cavthe inalry saddle with the figure a7, worked Seventh of the cavalry, signia But neliher the sadIn the cloth. dle nnr the bridle arf originals, as everything that came from the field waa badly hocked by the Indiana aa to be unfit for use." Com-manch- - a25 A.FlratGRAVES. Nat! Bank Ball Phone 985K. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Masonry and Cement Contractors Painter & Paperhangers Directory Contracting Plumbers n THEY ALL SHED TEARS. OGDEN PLUMBING CO. ua before cent you to iractlng. Prompt attention to ell kleda of plumbing. E92g Mediae THE it will pay When Yale's Japanese students assembled this week to celebrate the President's eulogy uf their nation and their race one misguide)! member of the little group proceeded to read to them the message In Japanese, translating a he went along. Now, of all peoples, probably, the Japanese moat prida themselves upon the suppression of evidences of emo thin other than those of a gentle and respectful joy. Yet the reading of tha message had not gone far before every one of the student wan weeping copiously, and though; the account of the episode do not say ao, it 1 probable that the tears continued to fall from every eye until the translator had completed hla colossal teak. Well they might. It must have been a pretty grim experience to stand by, or ever alt, while the linked preaching of that message, so long drawn out, was transmuted into a language ao remote from the original as Japanese. Oh. yes. the students liked It. At least they said o. when their sobs permitted. and they had the strength to make and the endurance to hear speeches of their own, enthusiastically appreciative of the President's enthusiastic appreciation of Japanese virtue. They did not deny the aeeuracy of his praise. Thev admitted ft. frankly. even warmly. But they did weep! li I said that Japanese courtesy demands smiles from those who have been bereft cf their nearest relatives demand that private nrrow whall not be allowed to trouble friends or relative. But. though these were the very elite of Japanese youth, their composure broke down under the constant dropping of 30.(100 words. They will hare the active sympathy of eterv proofreader In the country, and of. probably, 400 or 509 other white end freed American citizens. The real uf our population, not having read more than few thousand words here and (here in the message, sill not understand a well the pain of the Japanese students, and hope that the authorities at home may not treat too severely their fnllure'to live up to Japanese Mandard of polite Impossibility. New York Times. s ir-- Architect arc familiar with th story of the massacre. Kve.fi the horoea of the troopers were ruthlessly put to death by tha Eli-r-p- Floral designs of every description ta order. Delivery promptly made. Order by phona. Ball B13-K- . Greenhouse, 142 Thirtieth at Natl "it is commonly supposed that one of Custer's soldiers, desperately wounded and left for dead on the field, survived the battle a few days, but this la denied by army officers who William Allen White, the famous Kansas editor and novelist, writes of New Yurk City and Emporia (hla home town) In the January number of The American Magmitne. Following la Mr. White's account of the saddest thing ha area In New York: Country dwelling American men and most of the women are instinctively demorcatle. And being democratic the cities sadden us country people. For the dty and New York la typical of urban Americs-fosU- rk too much of the ahem relation between men that one finds where class lines are set. The eternal presence of n sirring class, whose manner may some day petrify Into serrlUty, the ontinual discovery that the man who brings the food, or sweeps tha street, or drives the cap, consider whole-som- e conversation with him from hla patrons as a sign of low breeding, the presence of the man who fawns fur a make the rou" 'requarter, ally he me man In New York desire to rush and organise a Bitting Bull Lodge of Ancient and Amiable Anarchists! "it la nut the extravagances of the rich, but. the limber kneea of too many of the poor that disgust the countryman in New York. The saddest thing in that great city, .to one who cornea clean, from the frank, wholesome, happy faces of the country, Is not thr painted lady's fare, with its glassy figeyes, not the overfed, g ures of the Isay, i respectable women, who gi t no more exercise than Bluffed geese, not the besotted faces of the men about tha barrel houses though a merclffirf God knows they are sad enough; hut sadder than they are the loathsome wooden faces of the men who stand decked out like human manikins in of purpUs and greens and what-no- t modish silliness and, for a price, surrender themselves to be made part of the landscape. Fur years Mickle the painter was the lowest form of humanity we hil in Emporia. He was the town drunkard and once they fined him for beating hla wife; drink made him a loafer and a bmte. But some way one felt down in Mickle there waa the sou! of a man: some way one knew that he would not do ervtaln things for money; some war one always understood that Mickle could till look into depths cf personal degradation below him, and tell whoever templed him there to go to hell! But, on the other hand, some way the flunkey 1a just a flunkey, and he seems to have given up the right to resent personal insult when he assumes the miserable part. And for a man to commercialise bis American birthright seems a tragedy. heart-br'akln- P. C, WOODS A COt, Architects. 64 A 67 First Bank Bldg, Both Phono life. THE BADDEBT FACT ABOUT NEW YORK. one-fift- BL. City Florists Funeral dccignc of all kindc; cut flowcrc and getted plants. All orders promptly filled. Phone 904-Z- . Jes of the Com-maneb- e' Slavery of Civilisation tha Worst Slavery as painted for u In Ibo Odyssey, although still establishing friendly master and slave, has already lost Its primitive humane character; and in proportion as civilisation as philosophy enlightens mankind, as Justice regulates the rights of free eitlaena, and as morality adorns their vice with precept, slavery be. conies move and more Inhuman. In the must gtoriuna time of Athens and of Koine It was Intolerable. Nevertheless, this Inhuman and Intolerable slavery waa accepted by the most idealistic philosopher. Plato Introduced slave Into hla Utopian republic. and Aristotle thought that nature marked out certain men for serand vitude; the find of .the Christiana assigned the race uf Hum to furnish slaves. But the Crock thinker, unlike Jehovah, had a faint GLOVE MAKING IN EUROPE. foresight of the abolition of slavery w hen machinery should have begun to Consul-GenerRtdgely of Barcelona, move and to accomplish of Itself (he aiaies that about persons are emsacred labor, like the tripod of Vul- ployed In the' Spanish glove Industry. can. The cost of cutting gloves varies between 5 cents and 2.90 per dozen, according to size and qitalty. while Profit Produced Slavery. the co"t of making up la 50 cents to when was Introduced only Slavery f l.2fi per dozen. Spanish-madgloves agricultural and Industrial production are being exportt'i! to Cuba. France. was so far developed that one man's labor could produce sufficient for his Argentina, England and Turkey. The own maintenance and something over only g lores Impured by Spain are and Paris, and sold which could lie taken Kwses(on of by made in only by s few of Hie best Spanish ouannther Individual. tfitter. The duty is 20 peseta f B.RGI Savage and barbarian tribe-- , wheu kilogram per (two and they were decimated by internal struggles. adopted their prlsotte-- s of war to pounds). Consul J. K. Punning, reporting fill up the gaps made! n the ranks of their warriors; they adopted them, front Milan, savs that women and girls do most the on of Italian work gloves. therefore, to turn them Into workei. Th- girls are paid from 20 to 40 rent This sdoptlon of the slave was pre40 and the from to 60 served even among clvlllxed peoples: per day in received rent" relatively hieh wage the tirecka and Homan Men are enipN-yeto do the cur their -- laves as memner of the famllv aficr a religious ivrrinniiv which took fng of the skins and the cutting, this exper: exceedingly place before the family altar. The last demanding to the family, labor, the wages fu;- which run as high slave gave hi" since the word "family" Is derived as S francs l $1,5.. jn-- r day). An expert front the word "fanu-- l " which inettnK Italian miter inri over a little less slat cry. The ps'r:.ar',l.al famili. In than three dozen small or feet, is asd on the slavery of wom- gloves, or about etif dozen long gloves, en. j The men are few in number, and n of the uncommonly high wage - hccinniiiii -- iavery i mild: In are exceedingly the slate - a rnmp.-mionaimot a scale allowed Th-them, Milan makers reeli-ofriend .Vrata. sho hslived Independent. e the coi of preparing the gloves nio-'ban ten jra.is among the savage 'rihe uf Brazil and Paraguay. for market, afve, he cutting is paid to $2.31 per dozen as aide tu uiiserve slavery tn iis for. a from 41 for. short gloves and from $2. In to budding form "The Che nms. warlike I2.W per dozen f vr long stock. f I.imJuav I employ." he writes. he ilit.t-as to seive them anil to MISTOOK THE SOUND. f iii i he:i lands. It - true that - a veiy m:hl kltld of slnverv; tlii- Its too bad vo : didn't send in an t Ke i sulnnlt t.i it rluTt'arrr. ;:i alarm. You he id the burglar, did . The give few otd-iand you? tniperlmi- - nr command liner n,, Oh. ye. dietin' !'v. He made quite i. it,- - They sh.tre evHrvtmng with s racket " " knd l'eti laves even n ramp I p'ets-jti-e- . you were m..( frightened'" I have sei-a M'iit "Not a hit. I shivering it was my hus'with cold alhvw Ills riuar.Miv t.i ke.ep band coming b "me.' -- Chicago the mver'et wh- I. he had taken In s, ARCHITECTS Directory "While at Lwwiwsce, Kan., a few luuit'hs ago." said J. F. Kelly of Miles City, who is visiting Butie, "1 had the oppjrt unity to si6 all that remains of what waa 'said to hare been the only survivor of the Custer massacre. 1 refer to 'Comanche.' a horaa foiiner-lridden by Captain Keogh, killed la that famous battle of the Lillie Big Horn and after whom Fort Keogh at Miles waa named. It la said that a' certain Indian scout survived the Mr acre, but as a matter of fact 1 am Inclined to believe that history found band' before he had left the the fighting began. At any rate the Kansas City Star la authority for the statement that the horse Comanche' waa tha only living thing of Custer', command that survived the fight. It was la that paper that I read of and it was after 1 had left Lawrence." The story referred to by Mr. Kelly follows: "In the basement of the natural history building of the University of Kansas at Lawrence stands a light bay horse, saddled and bridled and looking mildly through hla glass eyes. It is Comanche, the only living thing horse or man of General C liter's troops, that Is positively known to have escaped the massacre of the Lib tie Big Horn, June 25. 1876. He was ridden by Captain Keogh, who fought ao well by the aide of hia chief and whoa picture is given prominence In Mulvaney's portrayal of the battle. Comanche also appears In the picture, and Is the only thing that, after the battle, could have been drawn from d e A T. HULANISKI Ava. Attemey-at-Law- 114 Attomay-at-La- SOS GUNNELL Office 2401 Washington A Chattel Slavery, Slavery, which neither philosophy nor Christianity ever thought of combating, and still less of suppressing, disappeared from (he time the means of product Inn liecame sufficiently developed to make It a prerartou and expensive mod of exploiting men. Compare the wages system with slavery. The slave nwner must buy the slave and sustain the losses springing from accident or from death: be la forced to feed hla slave even when he falls 111 or cesses to work, and to support him in hla old age, since he cannot kill him off like a dog. The capitalist la freed from these cares; without unfastening hi purse he can procure a many worker as he wishes, and the wages he gives them for the working day corresponds almost exactly to the sum the slave owner has tn expend on the nourishment of hla heaate of burden. The omnlbu companies of Paria spend more on the maintenance of a horse than on the wages of a conductor, and they make d slaves work much their less than their free wage worker. It la by economic reasons and not by sentimental and Idealistic fantasies that It ran be explained why capitalists. w ho exploit free men and women ao ferociously, are anrh ardent abolitionists of slavery. . . . A y Editeral Committee: Any question concerning Socialism answered.. Address all communication to K. S. HiUiaiA Street. 557 Twenty-sevent- h KEOGH'S HORSE Tha Only Thing That Survived th Cuatar Massacre. THE SOCIALIST DEPARTMENT OF THE MORNING EXAMINER Music & Art Instructors 1907 6, A most effective fomentation is msde of drlj poppy heads. Take four ounces, break into little. bits, remove Hie seed and put them Into ftmr pints nf water and boil for flften minutes. Strain and keep the water for use in making the hot fomentation,- Cleveland Leader. Gall 'phene 913-Z- . HALVERSON L. ZITZMAN. Plumbing and heating. Pump work. 229g Wash. Ava. Bell 'Phene 5544. Readence 119-y- . A. W. MEEK. BROS, Estimate m General Plumbing. application, I410Y5 Wash, basement. Ball phana Plumbing and Heating. Removed from the 26th BL shop to 9541 Wash. Ave. Ind. 'phana. W. J. DALLMORE, Licensed Sanitary Plumber. Wash ava. Ball phona I1B-X- . JOHN KRUMPERMAN, Plumbing: Estimates Furnished m application. 322 24th BL Ball 'phene 304-- 622-- y. BIB. 2352 InA Z. Plasterers Contracting Local Union No. 252 Directory of tn JOB PI1NTEIS of Ogden City |