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Show THE SOCIALIST DEPARTMENT OE THE MORNING EXAMINER Editorial Committee: Any question concerning Socialism answered. Address all communications to K. E Hilliard, 647 Twantyeixth Street who would i KATE S. HILLIARD A A. BATTELL and M. MORAN of ita own simile, the Poet is of the opinion that, as the iarulling tide rolls back sad out again, so will the flood of Socialism. The Post, one time a valiant preacher against Socialism, haa evidently discovered that tee waves are deaf to Ita --wisdom; that gather teutons! be hindered by the Mm of goodne.i, but must explore if it be goodness. Emerson. palms must cot Edited by tbe Marxian students of Soelsllszn. Ka: B. Hilliard, E. A. Battell, Roy K. Suuthwuk. Address all conimunleaii.ma to Kate atreat. & Hilliard, LC7 Twenty-alxt- it la not quite sure about tbe quality of the Socialist wave" to recede as unbidden as it pours in is squally evident from the Foal's effort to lock h up Its simile with something more SOCIALISM OR THE SOCIALIST PARTIES. to the flat where the S&sawe family resided. After nuny unsuccessful efforts voting man made his way through d or, which he had forced, into e au apartment, where he found lying on a bed, bleeding from many wounds. Bagawv'r wife and four children were rushing about thn room, shrieking and crying out that tbe wounded man was possessed by devils. The room looked as if it had been wrecked by an rartnquake, fur the frenzied woman and her children had broken Into fragments every stick of furniture except the bed, and torn the pictures from the wall and daslu-them to the ground, or had hurled them, together with silken blouse and other garments, into the lighted stove. When the police arrived the woman grew calmer for A moment, but soon afterwards exclaiming. It Is finished." she endeavored to leap through tha window to tee pavement below, where, however, the firemen had already strotched a blanket to catch her. Inquiries Ilk official quarters revealed the fact that Sagawe's ebreme fllueaa had preyed upon the woman's mind, and that, affected by continual anxiety, she became attracted by the f propaganda which some were conducting In the nelghboi-hooUltimately she attended the meetings of the sect regularly, taking with her her four children, whose ages ranged fro IS to 24 yean. Influenced by the enthusiasm of Sag-aw- Conducted by the Socialist Party of Ogden Ha OGDEN, ITAIL JTIIE MORNING EXAMINER, 12 thaa a figure of speech. That oa whloh the Poet pins Its faith is what A common mistake mads by most It calls "the old Sphinx question" people in regard to Socialism la In "Why will pay the billa of Socialism It la tee fate of these capitalists, thinking that ths tSorlaliat movement whom terror has deprived of reason, in confined to either one or the other of the Socialist political parties; this to drop one broken rued only to pick mistake is made by members of tea out another, still more broken, to lean party who re no further thaa their upon. Who will pay the bills of Socialism? own narrow horizon. A greater error the woman at it would ba hard to find; the Sorialirt Why, the identical class that now pays her first tried to cure her husband by uovemeut ia as broad aa the universe; the killa of capitalism tbe workers. . the rapid repetition of prayers. These, Socialism la an inIt is CAPITAL AND LABOR. however, gradually began to develop evitable as life Itself; it will be the r prayer-heat-erf- fellow-convert- SUNDAY, AlTilL 7, 1907. OGDEN BUSINESS DIRECTORY Music Architects and Instructors P. A Orchard Ava 2S32 A. GRAVEL RUTH e. FROUT feaeher f Vielia and Planes 45 Vaa Suren Ava, MR. BaU litical party, pure aid simple, and ays to the working riant, This la the party whirh la working for ynir Interest Cbme join ns," but It doe not teach economic solidarity; it doss not teach them to organise and centralise their forces or strength. Centralisation la better than competition, and the Socialist forces must bo tw centralized that when the crisis comes they will act as one. Today the Socialist party la la sections, and one section baa no idea what the other section la dnlg. In one state they arc going Into "politics to win, sad believe la tbe step as k time process; in another they advocate patching up the old system by working along reform lines; in another they ihay be revolutionary, and again Christian So dallste; la another standing for Industrial unionism. How can such a party hops to lead the people from the "land of bondage?" The whole tenet of Socialism should be economic and political solidarity, and they should never waver from the line of demanding the whole thing;" the reformers will do ths patching. Third The Socialist party baa ne means of communication with Its members, while It boasts of some dozen papers az ita ''press it does not own or control even one paper. They are all privately owned, and they put In or keep out what they choose, regardless of the party mem-her- The claim of capitalists that their management" is a wealth producer, and the main factor, at that, in wealth production, ia a myth. What capitalism manage" to do today la not promote but check production nearly 4100,000 tons of Maine Ice left to rot a in the Interest iff the ice trust; untold kept under lock and key, aa recently revealed In the suit of Ike Eastern Paper Bag company. In tbe internet of high prices; vast areas of the nation's territory, vast enough to eupport the hulk aff our present population, left te He fallow In tee interest iff monopoly; a volume of unemployed equivalent to not lees than f.ooo.Onil potential wealth producers kept In enforced idleness In the interest of capitalist eoonomto rule; these and thousands of other instances tell the tale that the tale of capitalist manage-juent'- s being a factor in production Is a tale for the marines." The claim that tbe capitalist "directs and thereby makes production possible la a nursery tale. The capi'direct" talists conspiracies only against one another. The celebrated decision of Judge Van Brunt aome fifteen years ago, aoqulttlng the direct-orof the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad of crime on the occasion of a disastrous wreck In the tunnel, was to the point The directors were set free on tbe ground that there can he no crime without laThe Socialist Labor party owns and tent ne intent without knowledge. The controls Us own press, aud publishes a directors bad no knowledge oft how weekly and dally la the English lan- the trains were being run. Hence they guage, and four in foreign languages, were quilUeas: the only guilty one and news from every local In the were the workingmen. They had United Stales U published. A paper knowledge because they ran and opto be of any value tmnit.be a free erated the trains from top to bottom, medium of exchange, and tela cannot from ehd to end. he true of a paper that la controlled DOOLEY ON OPPORTUNITY. by a cllqub. These facta revolutionary Socialists have tried to bring before the Socialist party In their locals, Most people ire familiar with the but it has been found that gag rule late John J. Ingalls' classic on Opreigns, and any different opinion from portunity." Mr, Ingalla wrote: tbe above as criticism of the Social- Master of bnman destinies am 1! ist party la cried down, free speech Fame, love and fortune on my footla at a discount and aa only through steps wait. Intelligent discussion can we learn and Cities and fields I walk; I penetrate progress, when that la shut off called Deserts and seas remote, and passing wrangling it la time for Intelligent hr people toTeave the party. Hovel and mart and palace, soon or PROFIT IN CHARITY, pkt-ent- a late once at .every gate! If sleeping, .wake; if feasting, rise before I turn away. It Is the hour of fate! And they who follow me reurh every state Mortals desire, and conquer every foe Save death; but those who doubt or hesitate Condemned to failure, penury and , I knock unbidden Philanthropy at four per cent has long been a favorite maxim with tee smug respectables, headed by Professor Gould, who turn human dlstriess into good dividends, besides providing themselves with warm berthn at fat salaries. But. in General Booth, who arrived in this country on the 6th . nit, religion at six per cent appear-,In a letter to the Buffalo Evening News of November 2. 1204, A Buffalo Business Man writes: Aa a business man among business men. I nm Interested In seeing the great Salvation army movement worn out the problem of clearing ths city of Its human waste. It is doing it with great rapidity and effectiveness. Shall we help? The Institution wants immediately in Buffalo 160,000. It dues not ask for It as a gift or charity, but upon purely business principles, it will pay 6 per cent Interest scml-nDually through a Buffalo bank ami do It as promptly as the government. The The security la beyond question. army Institution now owns real estate to the value of f1.800.CKtn in the United States alone, while Its grois income has reached the enormous figure of 12,000.000 annually." This combination of religion, property and ' dividends will account tor the cordial welcome by the Iiepews that the general receives whenever he visits these shores. Birds of a feather flock togeiher. Into fanatical Imprecations, and who suffered much from wan: of proper attention during these spasmodic incantations, protested with Increasing vehemence against his wife's conduct. The neighbors were frequently disturbed by the noise of quarreling In Sagawe's fiat. Ou Friday night matters reached climax. The woman and her children, finding that th ordinary metwere usehods of the prayer-healerless, concluded either that the tnan himself must be possessed by devil or that the flat was infested by evil pirlts. Accordingly' they began to break up the furniture and to make on fanatic attacks with chair-lespirtta which they believed that the Mr. Finally they saw floating fell upon the Invalid himself, and and beating him with the rhalr-IegIdea of picture frames, they Implored him to pray vehemently for his llfo because he waa bewitched and impenitent It appears to he probable that the Interruption of the neigh-bor- a took place only Just in time In Save the man from death at tha haaJa of his frenited family. Bagawe haa been removed to a hospital, where he lice in a rrUlcal condition. The woman and the children have been conveyed to an asylum for Inquiry into the state of their mind. London Tribune. Builders Teacher at Guitar and Mandolla iMoravlan iyatem). Ala Piana Audi U4I Qulacy Awes - s g in-th- e a Contractor and Builder. DENT M9WERY Piano Theory. Studio p hen's, lad. 750; Beil 1144. Residence Phene, Bell Ilia BROWN IRON A BRASS WORK. " HI Avenue, waatengtan MR MARY L. fiHIPP, Teacher ef fruiter and Masdella. Romance 464 Aid BL led Pneae IhL BIO. e dstuff. To appreciate the picturesque qualities of this immense emporium, says Harris Merton Lyon, in the April number of Broadway Magazine, one must go there, say, at two o'clock of a Sab urday morning, as the merchant aie getting things in readiness for the last day of the week. Then the wagons that bring In the truck from Long Island hare already foregathered in the open area on the cobble atone and each Individual farmer, aleepy-eycand yawning, la busy stacking hli freshly-scrubbevegetables la tall piles ready for display. There are carrots, perhaps, dean as a whistle and of the color of orange; dark red beets, brittle lettnee, slim, succulent white onlona (this Is In August or lata July), com, and radishes, and cauli- 0;teii .ADA C. BARRATT Tcachci of piane end vecal eu6 turn Studio, Ogecn (Wednesday and Thursday,) 2645 Lincoln ava Studio, Belt Lake City (Monday, Friday and Saturday,) 21 KtndaU Squara Boil phono tit. - CALVIN STEWART. Contractor and builder. Neat late model reside nee; paatrv . nwA wlAai BnSd nn nriw pm pw r B Ava. Bell Phone 272 X. pii ' W. A STOWELL Teacher of Guitar, Mandolin and Violin, 644 27th SL Ind phone II7G W. E. NEWMAN Tin Were, Galvanised Iron cn niece. Heating and Ventilating. 2641 Washington ova. Both a hones. IDA M. CAIBIN - Instructor af Plana. Btudle 2640 Uncela Ava CALVERT A LEEK Contractor and Builders, Briek Lima Mfra 214 Eocleo Bldg. Phono BOGY. J. A M. PANTONE. and Bdi far celebrated agent .Factory Baldwin A Kurtaman and Elligton plane. 414 Twenty-fift- h at R J. A DIME Inatruetor on PARRY, Twenty-thir- BL d CAR'. SAMUELSON, General Guilder and Contraries 127 26th BL Boll phono HENRY BLAIR Plana Tenor and repairer. tana and action regulating. Wash. Ava, Ball 7644b Ute , 2467 PITER MISS OLGA WEHRENDt Traelior of Binging. 00$ Adame ava. BaU phana UNANDER. General Centraetor and bulldan kSff Sth Bt Boll kono 676 47S-V- . FRED HOWARD, ALMA BAUER Taasbar af Plano, Laachetnky Method, Btudle 2401 Adam Ava MIBB Centraetor and Builder. Phono 617Z. P. O. Bn ART. laotemi lit and swinging under tha in amid the wheals, If wagon-bedyou ask a driver, he will tell you they have been on the road nine or ten hours, coming from far away down on the island, and that he will have to stay at the Wallabout until nearly noon of the new day. These wagona bring In the hulk of the offerings st this market, and they are built far the purpose, too. Big, staunch vans. all. ash and iron clamped sturdily logefner to withstand tbo nil I if aud bumping of tbe macadam nisil- a- though Long Island highways are famous for their excellent condition-tops all covered with thick can vas to keep out the weather, and bearing the their thick nanu-of thrir Dutch owners, th "vans" and "van dem." the ooa" and in spirit at the uya," descendant Utreicht-er- a d leant of the of three centuries ago. LI CROSBIE. Roofing, guttering and tin of all klnda. 2241 Wash. Ava. Piano, Organ and Lcaaena Taught by Guitar, Vocal Note. Studio, 261 d flower, A drowsy Mr of thriving hangs about the old walla. The great wagons, hooded Uke prairie schooners, come lurching down the road, their A HUMPHRIES Builder and Contractor. Shop and Off tea. 202 21ot Phono 260-Balk d MRS. 284. Masonry and Cement Contractors s, HERRICK. J. U Lessens In china painting. Firing a Complete Unc of white specialty. china and materials Studio 2760 Wash. ava. WHEELWRIGHT ca CONSTRUCT. AN kinds of cement mason wh, excavating and pips laying, aaweee and water ayitema. Ogden, Utah Attorneys JOSEPH CHEZ, Attorney and Counselor at Law, 40 and 41 First National Bank Bldg, NoOgden. Utah. Beth phonos. tary In office. FRED A , LUNa Oonorol Centraetor in brick and tone. ITS Siri SL Boll 'phono 446 L. A BUCHER a VOLNEY GUNNELL A Brick Contractor. Mantle Grata and Tiling. All kinds of eammt werk. Cor. 26th and QranL Bed phono 2S74C Attcroey-at-La- tout-hearte- Office 2374 MOST IN NEED. Washington Ave. T. R. OCONN ILLY. Historians Head List of Royal Literary Fund Grants. n m-e- d Attorney-ot-Law- 164 JACKSON A LEVEDAHL Brick Contractors, Prose Briek a apeolalty, Ind. 'pnonee 6M and Hi . St, avar h Twenty-fourt- Richard-on'- s - K Grocery. Ind. phone JOS. MacLAUCHLAN, A P. O'NEILL CONSTRUCTION and Builders e to era. Cement Walks, Street Paring and Gravel Reefing. 422 26th at Auditor and Accountant, Notary and Conveyancer. Office Room 42. Flrat National Bank building. Ind. Phone 470. GEO. H. QREENWELL A M'CRACKEN, 53, 64 end 65 Count First National Bank Bldg. Phene, Bell 802, Ind. SO. AGEE Brick and atone contractor and earn moo and proaoed brick tfl 22nd 8L Bell 'phene 817 mfgr lore-at-La- Ogden City Dentists E. T. HULANISKI Attomy-at-Law- . , ilo-jhi- room 21-2- FAITH-HEALER- 4 First Nat Bank Bldg. a, d ts ip-m : -- l GLMSTEAD. -- . Ft-o- t . Contractor ami builder. Office and shop at residence, 600 24th St-- We MIBB CLARA WARNER, Laachstrzky Method, Plane Teacher, 4M Twenty third Btraat Situated just back of the Navy Yard, In Brooklyn, tke Walla bout market covers over fifteen acres of land, easily reached by boat, wagon and railroad service, and offers A trading-placnot only for both Manhattan an 1 Long Island, but fur the Jersey shore acroaa the water. It alone handles twenty per cent of New York's foo- AUTHORS ite. 461-y- JOHN T. NEWTON Centraetor aad Builder. Office residence, 181 27th. Phene 176 In? Shop roar of Wright A Ben' Ca MR. L E. REDFiELB Teams r Plane tudlet "Rifiir Wealu Ava. Sail railing 'phono Her-man- THE WALLABOUT MARKET PLACE There waa an Interesting sidelight woe. thrown upon the relative prosperity Seen me in rain and uselessly Imol various branches of authorship, yesplore. terday. at the annual meeting of the . I ansewr not. and I return no more! Literary Fund. j Mr. Dooley, known In polite society Royal The names of the actual reripien as P. F. Dunne, has written a compan-- : of financial help are nlwan kept ion for the Ingalls classic. The strictly secret. The proportion, howfollows: ever, In which the money at th" Opporchunlty knock at ivery man's fund's disposal had been distributed dure wanat. On some men's durea it during the past year were tua.lc hammers till it. breaks down'th dure known. an' thin it goes In an' afterward It Thus 11 was to be n jved that of all wurrks fr him aa a night watchman, rlar-iof literary nun. h:toriun and ha-On other men' durea it tyiocks an been mor--t in of bloeraphi-ri runs away, an' on th' durea iv some assistance. Indeed, the nine crania i men it knocks an win they come out made to deserving chronicler throughit hits thim over th head with an ax. out the yer nmomited to l,e56 But lvlry wan baa an opporchunlty. the sum repound - nearly ceived by any other class. INSANE Then came the novelist-- , ten of whom had hern given fl25 pounds in . thi-nWife Attack and Children Brutal all: by curl'v.eiy enough, the poets, on an Invalid. rare, but precious, of whom onlv w- were indebted to the fund, dividing no An outbreak of religious mania, less than :!."() pounds between them. which haa had few parallel In the Philosophers and scientists pairct social history of Berlin, occurred in with the educationalist, each class the southeast quarter of the city on proTidlug a couple of representatives, "THE OLD SPHINX QUESTION." Saturday. Toward 2 o'clock In the who shar.-- 140 pour. is; four archao-ringleThe New York Evening Post, the morning the neighbors end a numart received and writers organ of the Wall it reel gamblers, ber of those who happened in he IP" nu:iils. I J'erury work shrewdly surmises that tbe lectures or passing by heard ahniii and screams appar to have been s. popular that the distinguished English writer on coming, from a houe la which dwelt only one neresafully appealed to the Mallock. an invalided paymaster name.) sac-aw- fund, nod was accorded 5ii pounds. social economic subjects. are not likely to hold back the Inrush of the Third C.nurK It m i bo iiddr-there seie of the flood of RorlallMn, any more crowd quickly gather,! in spile f the also five n'lsrelianeniia" wrlt.rs. wh thsn lectures rould hold back the hour, and some of the neigh j parly drew 2rt pmin.le etoe-tht-r- . in all, tide. Gathering comfort out hors endeavored to force au enhance 29'l had been grimed to thirty-fivbuM-nea- ERNEST M. W. JONES. Plane, Cabinet, Organ and Studio W4) Wash. Ave. -- Busy Doings at ths Historic Old Spot at Two Oclock of Saturday Morning. I P. A. ISAKSON . Sag-aw- Phono 885K. Contractors and p. HUNTER R. world-aide- next condition of society. The politThe claim that the capitalist ical parties further edoeatlon, and furnish tee means fo rpropagnnda, and works la a fish story." Work is are used to organize and solidity tea only that human effort that produces salth where none was. The effort working class, and not only hasten the day for the Socialist regime, but to of the pickpocket, intense, mental, usher it in In sn orderly, harmonious and artistic though it in, la not work.'n way. The difference between the two It produces nothing. It only trans-ferwealth, already in existence in panics viz.: the Socisllst Labor party and the Socialist party may be con- one pocket, into someone else' pockcisely stated under three headings; et. The Post's Wall street gambling First, the Socialist party clatter to he clientele ever talks of how much They "make a working class organization, yet it money they "make. teaches its members that political no- not only copper. What they do la to tion alone is of the most vital Impor- transfer wealth from other people's tance, and considers ths Industrial or- pockets Into their own. The fish story ganization of secondary value; while ' about how much the capitalist works the Socialist Labor party teacbea that will never cause the inruahlng flood political solidarity leads to confusion of Socialism to recede. K la labor that today "pay the with the economic or Industrial solidIdleness can produce nothing, arity at ita back. Thn Socialist part? Mils points to its largs vote as a sign of hence can pay nothing. Tbs labor that strength and growth, when anyone of today paya the billa of capitalism, ordinary Intelligence known that votes having, under Socialism, blotted out are fluctuating and unless the voter the bills, together with the thing itunderstands what Socialism means, self, will have its funds multiplied n when he caste his vote. It is worse thousandfold, at its owtf disposal, than useless, for la a crisis the Ig- wherewith to pay 1U own bills, it norant voter cannot be depended on. will then no longer be n case of payPolitical action Is ths beat medium, ing tbe bills for feasts that others enthrough which to educate the work- joy, hut for feasts that labor Itself ers tor their own Interests, and also will revel in. The answer to the old Kphlnx quesserves an a critic iff the system which tion" is aa aid as the silly old questhe Socialists seek to overthrow. Second, the Socialist party in neu- tion itself. tral, or claims to be, oa the labor DESTRUCTION FOR FROFIT. union question, and poses as a po- ca Architects. 16 A 67 Firm Natl Bank Bldg. Beth Phenea JOSEPH BALLANTYNA Dir otar Ogden Tabervtel Chela Veic Building a Specialty. Fidii WOODS A r , e R. Attomey-at-Law- 214 applicant FELGMAWff 8. FARNSWORTH than the amount laat year. Ah usual, tbe meeting Itaelf was Sir Alfred Bateman purely formal. wa in the chair. Mr. Sidney Lee to a vacancy a one of th three registrars. In aucccMliin to Sir Themlore Martin, who rvrignril. eictd PARLOBE Over ffparga'o 2481 Wash. Ave. 'Phono Tfek, BI6 and 416 Eeelca Building. zlighUy more DENTAL Book . w. though remaining on the coinniii'er, Jr. Duller. uin:er of Trinity cvlU-gr. Cambridge, was elected a vice-prec- b dent in succesilon to the' lota Duke of Rutland, and Lieutenant General wished, owing to lack of resource. The next annual dinner was fixed for May 1, th BUhop of Rlpoa having prom iced to take the chair. London Chronicle. thr Ian Hamilton took the place on the council of ter late Lard Ooschea. it wa mentioned that the fund, ao f:ir from being rich as vsa supposed, Professional Humor. bad not been able to assist dlsrrrrsoi We fear there la a tendency si time i; n thorn during the year nearly to the for certain members ef the (pedicel) extent that the committee would hove prefeoblen to take a moUcIAm pleas ure In making the lay A t'1 British Medical JournsL Man's Meet Amaxlng Look around at one is struck by the fact that te amaxlng thing that civilized rer invented li civilized Ladys Pictorial. , |