OCR Text |
Show 5, 1906. DECEMBER SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, WEDNESDAY, REPUBLICAN, THE INTER-MOUNTAIN 8 | of the other constiae upward of ren 000 adult female ee that none particular utional officers would consent to | se alg had been kille 1, and over fi ly in driving the eorporation or indi-| disaster. : carry on the, government, and that he | Soamhag young se ain if starMlgiered = ey to some other locality] The mere statement of these facts | was powetless to maintain order. ft vation as the result revolting ¢ The rational govern-| shows that our present system A rerievident ihat chaos was Impendbarbarity. of sueh a as well a lwas of nee is There defective hehe banal Its chief jing, and there was every probability |as the .wasteful destruction whieh it derived mg | ment nha GRESS om a Tottal orts and from| change that if steps were not immeditately | involves, needs no - demonstration, and MESSAGE 1 CON he i a I a ec ae tae It adai-| f aaeita si Pe islet ante DR }taken by this government to try to}is ils-own condemnation, ‘ > aces here « over reason ean He wane whieh SCs Vis c restore ordér, the representatives of} The regulations have proved plainly tsi U ee conside ration your taxa. | Feeeive ‘of ay tem he sé our ‘ on | te 7 lyarious European nations in the Is- | inadequate to accomplish the object of ee ani the national govern-|peatedly brought oh oo | tion js revised, land would apply to thelr respective | protection and preservation of the fur (Continved from page one.) Have aeati tee one e hich Sear in-| fe gradu: ited a impose should ---- | ment¢ | governments for armed Jnterventlon| seals, and for along time this governa -- -_ , 7 ~ t -* * ‘ ‘ prurminent many. by anproved. in order to protect the lives. and| ment has been trying in vain to" sea grad-| heen if possi bit tax, ¢ nd, number | heritance the limiting bill the passing ener es On HIRES eH revision of gre Be eee nia man Britain such re tax Great from income cure } to) railroad Thanks otf eltizens. their employment of of hours of banks should | property ing to-thid plan national obligation tall peculiar the preparedness of our navy, I was;and modification of the regulations as owes uth ery a measure he employes. proto issue a specified permitted ‘ Ibe ; derive he | able {mmedintely to send enough ships| were contemplated and provided, for becaust stale of conceive "an. and one moderate nee ito Cuba in notes capftal their of ABC | portion exis m to prevent the situation from | by the award of the Tribunal of. Paris, | the from niage so Indeed, to it..; no serjots objection. at taxed he to Issue the becoming hopeless; and IT furthermore | Shedd Hague .Contebence: kind, he) civen should only Not overnment it, should power, our is in it. as far notes i dispatched the as to drive to Cuba thé secretary of a rate hich ¥ aye 3 the in obligation this senize the reduce to steadily» alm our be and the ‘assistant secretary of In omy message I advised you) number of hours of labor, with as a ads his daily life and in the way lback when not «wanted in legitimate lwar in order that they might gré lene the E mpe ror of re ussia had taken goal the general introduction. of an} he earns and spends his money, but} irade, This plan would not permit the }state, cater Hannah ne Deo neat they by recognized be | ple with the situation on the ground.) the initiative in bringing about a sece also should industries | jt are There day. eight- -hour efforts to secure an agreement ‘by | tin peace conference at The Hague, in which it is not possible that the) way in which he pays for the re one | onal profits, but to meet the emeér-| All hours' of labor should ‘be reduced: | tion the state gives him One thie One i presénted by times of: string-| tween contending factions, | Under the guidance of Russia the arwhieh they should themselves come lo} rangement of the preliminaries. for \ just as there are communities not far) pand, it is desirable that he shoul heat y right the is this that say not do 1 of| an amicable understanding and set-| such a conference has been progressshare proper and full ae assume move-} a such for advanced enough eina cAwancaniiaia! tai? eran ee other! j tle upon some modus vivendi--some jing during the past year, Progress ha on of taxation: burden iN | the if or, good, their for be to ment for | provis sjonal is: need there that. bellef my In} sige that sary government of thelr own | necessarily been slow, owing to. the ne as quite ia it pana, 18) there that so situated tropics, the which |}-failed, system. some. of Finally the president of the | great number of countries to be Tle adoption men | the the ae of taxation lenis kind and needs thelr between analogy no resigned. . quorum = of-|sulted upon every question that has ourg in this matter. On the Isthmus) yo yote the tax pay but little of it, | shall be automatic and open to all ae a iiit failed by deliber|arisen. It is a matter of satisfaction of Panama, for instance, the condl- | there should he clear recognition .of} sound banks, so aS to avoid. all possi- | car iietblee assembled so that!/that all of the American republics tions are in every way so different) tne danger of inaugurating an; justice] ueh | fen bility of discrimination and favorit- late purpose of its members, pirit of entire ina there was no power to act on his re sighave now, for the first time, heen. in-)} an] o cron; save that here are they: what from nation, and the government came to a i vited to join in the proposed conferejght-hour day would be absurd land noderatton, Every effort should} mn law shouldbe amended so funis the halt. In actordance wae the so-called lence that to provide this subject, | specifically with in dealing line made Children, and Labor of Women Platt amendment which was. em- | Peace and Rienteousness. may ibe duties customs from derived con-| proper the of subject the with as con-/} the that urge again me Let bodied in the constitution of Cuba, I f of the treasxy the secretary government: over] treated national the by investi-| trol for a thorough ess provide proclaimed a provisional | It must ever be kep in mind that under |} thereupon obtained as he treats funds in tnter-|ury wealth imthe use of correrate but. child Jabor| of justifiable,. s 1 merely is not | war a secrethe island, the for There government laws revenue internal legislation | the devise to the at ate "pusiness, in eee upon erTheot horrors men, or honorable upon gov- | perative, United ae States. incident) which without such action hall ae eee be ' considerable eae: ltary of war acting as Enea can pe ace where nation, hotarebls jan by replaced be could he until erpnor eae poe ee small Mr. Magoon the late anictigthr to.) only be obtained by the sacrifice of to the employment of young children} tain the desired end; but if this fails,| mbills noes of should F i anKs, be given no alte rnative| be will ultimately | there are anywhere Panama and governor of the canal! conscientious convic tion or of nariavel jn factories or at work . Neon settled under eessary amendment to a constitutional It is true} our civilization on a blot zone on the isthmus; troops were sent | welfare Peac is normally a gr arger ; circulation their snouid | retire we se possible In every t~ ultimately must state to support them and to relieve the | good, and nothsnlly it coincides with each that month. a millions three than Sohail : | with toils who wageworke the but} help way; its own in lavy, the expedition being handled | righteousness; but it is. righteousness tle the question a thorough $fticial inve etigation of ha his bands and who mae (we hope n a} Philippine Tariff. vith most satisfactory speed and ef-|) and not peace which arta bind the the results published! eonstantly Imcrensing measure) also ficiency. The insurgent chiefs Immeonseienece of a nation as it / should | the rit ae hope earnestly T most | bratbn. individual; | Gith, his a of an toward conscience greatly ‘elo the tinafenst, ‘would that their troops should | bind diately agreed arousing the public conscience and se- | . a : an to provide a lower tariff for, or else ay down their arms and disband; and jand neither a nation nor an individus il iy its oe as iin gcse ret Maes Agriculture. Concerning _ | the in action the agreement was carried out. he |} can surrender conscience to another's state euring unity of provisional government has left the |! keeping. Neither can a nation, w hich No harm products will become a law. welwhase persons other only The a | s} Sela ne cn om a sib industry; personnel of the old government and | is an entity and which does not dik | oS merican to any come eA of the welfare to the vital js as fare is| there a a aadiaiely, ak a a the old so far as might be, un-|as individuals die, refrain from. tak-| there will, Deel cee pe while and country as is the welfare of the} the} of in refer- | whole interest: the investiganion for an thought oo Seed ‘for ing | the administer thus will and | changed, for a few months until ‘tran- | generations that are to come, no less ence thereto, and the f une to.enact;) wagreworkers are the tillers of the soil, Ane cee ee i banaitt will come | island it is Gleete -ditable to, the national SOV-| the farmers. ‘It is a mere trulsm to y aro my ie - ic as to our purquillity can be restored, a new election | than for the interest of 1 generaheld, and a new. govern- | Uon of today; and no public men have ernmé A drastic and t roroughgolng | say that no growth of cities, no growth eee ee Nt ordi une for their | | properly innugurated, Peace has come! a right, whether from» shortsightedehild- labor law should be enacted for) 4 wealth, no industrial development pee ue peasPe aeELaPa ction a in justi. the ment aad Paenince the in off falling any for atone ter-| | in the and District of Columbia lin the island; and. the harvesting of | ness, from selfish Indifference, or from, the inritories. wa -viith the | chi iracter und sianding of the farm fied, not mainly and Indeed not pri-| to saeritice national sentimentality, crop great the crop, cane sugnr the Among ‘the exce ra ai easton wast ing population. During the last few aatli*. haGanenwetathe: added. dtentty lof the island, is about to proceed, terests which a one in ch ui ue e Fe A } sary: . tug Ja war is in the Jong run far better ete by nation us as a given has 7 Pie iralarl sg eee ease a was | oe t iabtile y ha Ww . Eoceervation of; Justice. ' or a nation's soul than the most prosernplave: - in {ng that we are c apable honorably anc to realize that| When the election has been held He rous peace' obtained: by acquiescence ti E th cagwer | ‘to. get the step, in advance state * marked a of r ¢ ‘amp ADIOS bogies. ‘ecognitl recognition the. Statute Se cs aee iesener: law, nor, Federal Onin ar mere- become a ear be properly Settled: only by same other facts life. legis-| of' chance to American a liability ae international the bear of mighty people iG rh <DeGATINEE GE snould jand Of Sth Gl to the come Islands: &.In introduca greater ever have than aR ae thelr CU people civ Eh eecineds tithe We have provided an: efficient have islands put down laof Coal Lands. _ the of Leyte Tt is;;‘not wise that the nation Several factors must co-operate In|} and Samar is the authority of our govthis by wild resisted, and coal/tphe improvement of the farmer's con-| ernment remaining its alienate should, lands. l°have temporarily, withdrawn | qitjon. He must have the chance tO} mountain tribes under. the superfrom ‘settlement all the Jands which|pe educated in the widest possible | stitious inspiration of fakirs and the geological. survey has indicated 4S] ¢-),se-in the sense which keeps evet | pseudo-religious leaders Ve are conyiew the intimate relationship be-| stantly increasing the measure of libcon-|in containing, or in all probability, taining, coal. The question, however, [twee n the theory of education and the|eriy accorded the islanders, and next can hav the ‘| | yelop as to hich ‘fi degree farmer TI type. severely repr ents practical a peculiarly Sieh type of arin: American citizenship, and he must | tice iire Jade 1| should, of cont course, ' Ova oot in'havy yards, arsenals. an incur we are steadily islands ath liberty and order, to hese ing tre ee the most and mere iy sientifie but oF te ‘anieal theoretical ror ire | not fea-| to that has bene fitPhilippine | immense peop le of. the here chance tha the means' an means sineianiis aed neon ‘ Préfession. in-|| }must be open This to must | are Line certain branches, technical and sclentinie On did che he : eee Withdrawal results |e farming, ea at least theADINty law ce ability ¢ ‘ Hep ae fon ar eos th question of bo pmployers eral aw EE employes too-often In all rise and have.|qronism. depolice foree,Onlyandin citizens education we spring, if conditions warrant, we shall lation, which, In my judement, shoul: els should widen our aims provide for -the withdrawal. of these loreover, while in the lands from sale or from entry, save | volunt ivy eftort will prove in_certain especial circumstances,in The | the ownership.would then remain United States, which should not, how=| take a great stride forward in testing long run/{heir capacity for self-government by more ef-|summoning the first Filipino legisla-| ricacious than government assistance, | tive assembly: and the way in which tie the. farmers ‘must ‘primarily do|they. stand this test will largely demost for themselves, yet the govern-| termine whether the self-government Depart-| (hus granted will be increased or dealso do much.has The can but per-|ment to work them, ever, attempt to-be worked by private in-)} ment of Agriculture broken new creased; for if we have erred aball in Binrendar artovalty syaterp,. the ground in many directions, and\vear | the Philippines it has been pros LESS, Irrigation ar soi wae aa ee aera con t.extend. @ éommon Much to} states. carriers, great of ceeding too rapidly in the granting a large measure and is now the. Porest being. Rocky plains-through Reserves. done the Porto for the| mountains development Rican ,£he onthe harbor of Ss of nJuan Porto in Rico. Porto BAS ° new |keeping government and orderly order. in' the. treatdd as preserved; which would inure to the benefit ] the public as a whole. As to Corporations. the forests, should of in the congress, »y the national the property disposal should be tonal TcUarhient engaged' in over interstate d the enormous can. to corpora-| asserted that it did the 4 Var not go estimate for an of the , all. to" I far|it is enough and would accomplish notha Du ring ae last five months the ralijroads have shown increased earnings and some of them unusual divi- nt am to well pass and ar of enable Divorce, aware of how a constitutional difficult amend- Nevarthelens, ie nla questio mores. a ay = aictiey aoe bbe relegated to the Th rh dends; while during the rabla period change would be d eyery the mere taking effect of the law has eae hata , ee ee isiiee it AY tee 4 produced an unprecedented. a hitherto |p. good ecause it. would confer on unheard of, number of voluntary re- | ¢, ongress the power at once to deal Bree freights and fares by the radically and efficiently with polymate nee thehas founding of the | gamy; and this should be done whethcommission there never been aj ¢) 6r not marriage and divorce are thing like so many reduced tariffs have |e, With, been. put into instance, went two days RAG ug. 27, for the new law before effect, Jt fe neither safe nor proper to leave the question of polygammy to be dealt with by the several states. Power to dear with it should be conferred on the national govern- represented sted ain from previous, rates. It must not be supposed, however, that with the passage of these laws it will bé possible to stop progress along the line of increasing the power of the ae government over the use of capital in interstate commerce. For example, there will ultimately be need of enlarging the powers of the Inter- a oe American Shipping. Let me once again call the attention of the congress. to two subjects concerning which T have freqdently befor communicated with them.. One is the question of developing American t shi ain 1 trust that a law embodyate mid og the views; or-a ehh jor part. of the. views, expressed in state Commerce commission along sev- | the report on this subject laid before eral . different lines, coe so as to give it 4a ithe house at its. last session will be the aire more efficient control over passed. It will, of course, benefit. priP marily our seaboard. states, such .as dana wee method, whether by 4 na-'| Maine, Louisiana; and Washington: ie oe Jaw or in other fashion, exercise, and that at an early date,must a far more complete than ‘at present over these Caecontrol . OYrpe ae control that will among other things prevent the oe Oe eutzation, wa ne the disclosure ate Serene: a to owned or directly on evils by ec of but | ex- What pe the benefits end part benefits of all: our just peo- as government aid to irrigation and 1° forfor. |estry in the West Is really of benefi not only. to the Rocky Mountain ores but to all our country ral prove and that impracticable to enact a law for the each big | ene ouragement of shipping cenureltis) and of jthen at least provision be ign made for better communication with BiMilated corporations. sh subsidiary | South America, notably for fast mail ' lines to. the chief South American Inheritance gnd Income Tax. Doris; CULy discreditable to us that The question of taxation is difficult out business people, for lack of direct communication in the shape of lines in any country, but it is especially difof eamers with South America, ficult in ours with its Federal system should in that great sister continent. of government. Some taxes should © at a disadvantage compared to the on every ground be: levied in a yd business people of Europe, district.for use in that district. Thu the taxation of*real estate is peciiinr. Currency Reform. ly one for the 5 immédiate locality in I especially call your attention to oe tne real estate is found. Again, } tno second subject, the eonditisn of e s*no more legitimate tax Yl our: currency laws. Th national oa tate than a tax on the franchises bank act has wet served a ae ‘at purte! erred Bonisn cs Which by that and operate State wholly upon stréet corporations within the state boundaries, sometimes. in sometimes in several municioahes 0or other minor divisions of the state. Ahere are many kinds of taxes which c = ~ into effect. can only ‘be the attempt levied by the Government so as to produce the best results, bechuse, among other réasorts, to impose them in. one pose in aiding the enormous business development of ine country; and within ten years there has been an increase in circulation per capita from $21.41 $22.08, For several years evidence fas been accumulating that| additional legislation is needed. T recurrence each crop season be possessions, insular other directed ‘under, one executive |4epartment; by preference the De par |™Ment of State or the Department 0 action Secretary : appropriation Marriage that it of those not vigorous him to begin the preliminary work for the construction of a memorial amphitheatre at Arlington. The Grand Army of the Republi¢ in its national encampment has urged the erection of such an amphitheatre as neecssary for the proper observance of Memorfal day, and as a fitting monument to the soldier and sailor dead buried there In this IT heartily coneur and co e matter to the favorable consideration of the congress. business- majority of corpora- both of those who asserted would ruin the railroads and secure governmen Amphitheatre at Arlington. T invite the attention of the congress Moab of any size are engaged in interstate ness. The passage of railway rate bill, and only to a less desree the passage of the pure food bill, and the provision for increasing and rendering more effective national conindustry, in the proper direction. The interstate tommerce Jaw, for instance, ‘ has rather amusingly falsified the predictions, Who they the public, and jis|less the people of the states in which be under conditions| they lie, through their representatives e present congress has taken long strides in the direction ‘of securing ‘ roper supervision and control by the rae and be|?U" also. should regions Appalachian coal,| em- phasizes the defects of the present Jaws. There must soon be a revision of them, because to leave them as they Reorganization for Alaska, been partially Alaska's needs have be a complete met, but there must e governmental reorganization of before indicated to system, as LI have you. I ask your especial attention to i Our fellow citizens who dweJl on the shores of Puget.Sound with characteristic energy are arranging to hold in Seattle the Alaska Yukon Paelfle exposition. Its special aims include the upblilding of Alaska and the development of merican ecommeree on the Pacific ocean. This exposition, in its purposes should appeal not only to people of the Pacific. slope, but to the Dp » of the United States at large. Alaska since.it was bought has yielded to the government eleven millions of dollars of revenue, and has produced nearly three hundred millions of dol- "~~ the) island. wrong or. cup of Good for his Nothing. in gold, theleSs,Alt furs Is mast and fish. discreditable to Relations With Cuba. the then vene, Cuban and that finally his vernment uae Was toa inter- the races. evants, H. a P. y weve COUNT Clark; ‘ashier. WITH aoe P. Noble. Daly, Vi ce Presiden Peaboay; eet: Cashier. WS - E The only Fresh Roasted Coffee on this market. Deseret t National Rank Salt L ake City, Utah. DRUNKENNESS CURED. . $500,000.00 $250,000.00 Capital Snrpltus positive Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent manent Grane! A ‘ House, Dwi; shit a Correspondence con- t Te S: Bee. oso. F Fretsos President Moses Thatcher ....+> Vice-President Aden biel.KRELE ELEY INSTITUTE, s 4-W.S.'rem. Sc. Salt Lake City, fr: §. -Woung 2.5. ees cme Utah. Edgar S.Hill . 2.0.5 ys a Asst. . Cashier Cashier IF YOU ARE NOT AN EXPERT | N JEWELRY MATTERS YOU SHOULD EXERCISE ALL YOUR JUDGMENT IN SELECTING A RELIAOUR BLE HOUSE WITH WHICH TO DEAL. REPUTATION OF SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS AND UNIMPEACHABLE GUARANTEES FOR OVER ONE-THIRD OF. A CENTURY IN THIS CITY OUGHT TO COMMEND OUR STORE TO YOU. would| The Army and "a United States toward oS otee teachings of history in this matter could be farther|of 1812, as it is told, for instance, United States and government and Mexico that enabled this} ing it, resulted merely in Mexico to/in effect a drawn battle, REASONABLE PRICES. by what while $346, 00. e collected $346 for Dr, Castle of Pocatello, Ida, from 12 accounts turned in for collection, Didn't cost him.any commission. He had a membership contract, We can collect some for you if you turn them.in. Red streaks ¢ was tne| supersedes the previous convention of 1880, which was also signed both the United States and a majority of the European powers. treepy confers commercial rights with all and does not entail a ee obliges tion of any kind on nd possible encouragement to the enlisted men should be given, in pay and! otherwise everything practicable | done to render the service attractive| fled. performance of far more than duty, | if it conduces to the honor and the | earnestly hope it may be speentily rati-| | < to men of the right type. They Should be held to the strictest discharge of their duty, and in them a spirit should be encouraged which demands not the mere performance of duty, but the| Pur Seals Question. The destruction ofthe Pribilof islands fur seals by pelagic maine still) interest of the American nation; and |i return the amplest consideration | Should be theirs. continues, The herd which, aceording to the surveys made in 1874 by direction of the congress, numbered 4,700,000, and which, according to the The congress has most vided for a national board to about 180600. |Tegular army Vor Rifle Practice. wisely for the Excellent re-| from this law,| enou Ou brought about other sealing have and This result has been to. in trust such event these volunteers should already| male seals while in the water during know how to shoot; for if a soldier! their annual pilarimae Ao. and from has the fighting edge, and. ability the south,-or in search.¢ 00d, = AS. a take care of himself in the open, his rule the female seal Si Beg killed is > efficiency on the line of battle is on arecthet and also has an unweaned most «directly proportionate to excelpup on land, so*that, for each skin lence. in marksmanship. Ve shold taken by pelagic sealing,.as a rule, establish shooting galleries in all the) three lives are destroyed-the mother, the unborn offspring, and the nursing large public and military schools, | pup, which is left to starve to death. | should maintain ational target rangNo dama whatever is done to es in different farts of the country, , on by the Saas land; ustom ing is solely present from ahaa of pelagic eee acto evil, the pee and is ton nd economic dead from. islands. that since seal- |@04 should he-formation for all of the | Out all in every parts of of rifle the way clubs land: SCIENTIFIC young. seals | cllizen starvation 1897 pelagic on it was sealing The soldie House, 3, 1906. ROOSEVELT. "*¥ ee aod COLLECTORS Commercial National G. "SOME PEOPLE OF Bank LUKE, IONES Bldg., ST Salt DEBT Lake o City, Utah. General DON'T Ma nager. LIKE Us." FREE EXAMINATION WEEK, Test Drs, Shores' Skill at Drs. Shores' Expense. Drs. Shores and Shores' Speet: u Offer of Free Exam| ination and Free Diagnosis of T Jisease, 3 those Afflic =e wit th Catarrh umd all Chronie Private Diseuses y in persc om at their Offices this neans exactly wha tits 1lys Drs. Shores. Skill and Ixnowledge as sea se Experts, an to DR A I SHORES. prove tothe afflicted the true method of cure, Thousands who suffer from Chronie afly nents tre at spend maney ar after year " ithout any definite know as to the ne wars and * cause' of their sicknes years ha tre ed over 100,000 a's "best Medic at Colleges, and Specia being eaaoreea by 6 the best people all over the West, and thay understand Chronic Diseases. BRING MONEY! Free Isxpert Examination is absolutely Free to all who apply this Stop experimenting-come to Dra. Shores and lea the exuet cause y sickness and whether or not you can be at red, Drs. Shores will > Spots, You will not be ur ged to ake treatment or Pay 2 been. examined FRE ithe mn it 's. Shores prices and terms are within he poor as wel the sho h. $l a trannmaen t or al diseases incluc ling De: ifness, Asthma, May medicines By cso CAT * Jasting benedit. at the hands ort haga, Me ister SpecShores New tréatment for Catarrh al dise na8e S cures in a very few tre: (tme nts where the old' me thods ‘required wasks "his § your opportunity-apply any day this we "ek IPCC LIVE. AWAY FROM THE Crry WRITE for Free - xamination Blanks and be examined and adv ised Free by. mail. DRS. SHORES é SHORES, Expert little } THEODORE White December every FRANCIS through- Tiouston indefensible | republic of Switzerland offers us an); excellent example in all matters con-) standpoint an y. aa nected with pane up an. efficient. humanity." In Floor, encourage | ~The in | Merchants Protective Association Fifth alike ees the standpoint of n ; er 16,000 896 estimated killing body, This #8 so small that in any we should volunteers; of honesty exist DON'T propro-| survey of both American and Canad-|™moUon of rifle practice, jan atte si 1891, amounted | Sults have already come to 1,000,000, -~has now been reduced | but it does not go far by Canadian and some|sreat. war vessels killing the fe-|™Mainly to LAKE CITY, SALT Yet that impression|Captain Mahan. There was only one| a serious barrier to| way in which that war could have good understanding, to friendly inter-| been avoided, If, during the preced|,course, to © introduction of Ameri-!ing twelve years a navy relatively as | lean capital and the extension of|strong as that which this country | | American trade. The impression was|now has had been built up, and an! ls0 widespread that aparently it could |army provided relatively as good as} jnot be reached by any ordinary means. |that which the country now has,| | It was part of Secretary Root's|there never would have been the} ‘mission to dispel this unfounded im- | slightest necessity of fighting the war; , ! pression, and there is just cause tol|and if the necessity had arisen, the} |belleve that he has succeeded. war would, under such circumstances, | Ye + have ended with our speedy and over-} | Central America. whelming triumph. But our people| Last June trouble which had ex-|during those twelve years refused to| Isted for some time between the re-| make any preparations whatever, republics of Salvador, Guatemala and garding either the army or the navy. |! Honduras culminated in war-a war) They saved ~ million or two dollars; which threatened to be ruinous to the} by so doing 17 mere money pald| countries involved, and very destruc-|a Handpadtala for each million they) tive to the commercial interests of | thus saved during the three years o Americans, Mexicans, and other for-| war which followed-a war which) ‘eigners who are taking an important} brought untold suffering upon our | part in the development of these counpeople, eae. at one time threatened | tries he thoroughly good under- | the national disaster and | standing which exists between the| which, in noite of the necessity of wag- were irrevoc- eYF. Eestere sporting Commerc ia! National Bank. American FSpublics. . An idea hadb A Strong and wise people will study its come prevalent: th our aiertion of lown' failures no less s triumphs, the Monroe Aartriod implied, or cCar-)for there is wisdom to be Taunned from ried with it, an assumption of super-|the study of both, of the mistake as\ jority, and of a right to exercise some | well as of the success. For this pur- | j Ieindl of protectorate over the coun-| pose nothing could be more instruc-| | tries to whose territory that doctrine |tive than a rational study of the wai herd notified decision wire all proper isis the surThe United. States navy which nany sagka of South America}est guarantor of peace this | there Tas been much misunderstané- | country possesses. It is earnestly to be ing of the attitude and purposes of| wished that we would profit by the the Pribilof resign; Oireet Roasted for and us Last August an insurrection broke out Cuba which it speedily grew evident that the existing Cuban government was powerless to quell. This government was rent asked by MAIN avd Cailfornta york When as a people, and may be fraught with the gravest consequences to the nation. ‘The friendship between the United. States : Sphinudaa since half century ago, Commodore Poet, by his expedition to Japan, first Tone the islands to western Riitee: tion. Since then the growth of Japan has been lilerally astounding. There is not only nothing to parailel it. but nothing to approach it in the history of civilized mankind Japan has a glorious and ancient Our nation erate on the Pacific, aE as it fronts on the Atlantic. We hope to play a constantly growing an in the great ocean of the Orient. We wish, as we ought to wish, for a great commercial development in our ings with Asia; and it is out. of the question that we should permanently have such development unless we freely aud gladly extend to other nations e same measure of justice and gaod treatment which we expect to receive in return I ask. fair treatment for the Japanese as I would ask fair treatment for Germans or . Englishmen, Frenchmen, Russians or Italians. {ask jt as due to humanity as are zation. I ask it as due to rselve ecause we mus act Siaviaie awed all men Fresh a EB eh ba Preside OPEN AN Peace. fellows. 28 with COFFEE. unite in effective mediation between! balance of defeat and triumph was the warring republics; which media-; almost even 1 properly developed it will beconte in tion resulted, not without long-conmane Ac . <p / large degree a land of hom | tinted and patient effort, in bringing Doesn't Ask for Increase. must we treat aid nations t only about a meeting of the representatives I do not ask that we continue to yy, but we must treat with justice of the hostile powers on board #|!inerease our navy. ask merely that and good will all immigrants who United States warship as neutral ter-|it be maintained at i present come here under the law, ther ritory, and peace was there conclud-| strength; and this can be done only they are Catholic or Protestant, Jew ed; a peace which resulted in the sav-/if we replace the obsolete and out- | or Gentile; whether they come from ing of thousands of lives and in the} wern ships by new and good ones, | Isngland or Germany, Russia, Japan prevention of an incalculable amount} the equals of any afloat in any navy or Italy, mat pare nothing. <All we have of misery and the destruction of prop-|'To stop building ships for one yea a right to q aestion is the man's conerty and of the means of livelihood. means that for that year the navy duct and upright In r" he Is honest goes back instead of forward. Trip to Panama. his dealings with his neighbor and In both the army and the navy there with the state, then he is entitled to is urgent need that everything possible | I have just returned from a trip to and good treatment. Panama and shall report to you at|Shonld be done to maintain the highdo we eed to length later on the whole subject of | est standard for the personnel, alike duty to the stranger within our gates, the Panama cana as regards the officers and the enlistam prompted to say this by the at7 : ed men. IL do not believe that In any titude of hostility here and there asAlgeciras Convention, service there is a finer body of en | sumed toward the anese in this The Algeciras convention, which was listed men and of junior officers than| country. This hostility is sporadic and signed by the United States as well|We have in both the army and the| Is iaited to a very few places. Neveras by most of the powers of Europe, |4vy, including the marine corps. All| lars icy mornings injustice. Work 'The| wrong = like Phe settlement. ordinary in fashion ernment was managed in such orderly fashion as cS. secure the Safety of life| ie, niet "0 anal in ay ‘favor}of the national polley of irrigation and |[Sheuld be dredged and improved. The one competitar at. the expense of an-|forest preservation; ne government | &XPenses of the federal court.of Sarat other. The withdrawal of these coal! policy for the betterment of our in- | ico.should. be met' from the federal Jands © wou constitu a2 > policy} ternal conditions has been more fruit-)'teasury the administration of the japplies. . Nothing analagous to that which tk ‘been fol=tfulof good than this. The' forests of | @fairs of Porto itico together. bleh from the truth lowed in withdrawing the Peet lands| the White mountains' and ‘southern | those of theFE pp. ee vet shououldNd || continued to be from inaugurated! SALT LAKE TURE EXCHANGE UP ju nited States wishes nothing of Cuba | more promote iniquity, nothing would except that it shall. prosper morally | further defer the feign upon earth of jand materially, and wishes Ee of | peace and righteousness, than for the the Cubans save that they all be! free and enlightened peoples" which, able to preserve order ARAL DES there though with much stumbling and |selves and therefore to preserye their | many shortcomings, nevertheless independence. the elections be- | strive toward justice, deliberately to lcome a farce, and if the insurrection-|render themselves powerless .. while jary habit becomes confirmed. in the}! leaving every despotism and barbarism island, it is absolutely out of the ques- | armed and able to work their wicked| ition that the island should continue! will, The chance for the settlement independent; and the United States, | of disputes peacefully, by arbitration, which has assumed the sponsorship! now depends mainly upon the possesbefore the clvilized world for Cuba's;sion by nations that mean to do career as a nation, would again have!right of sufficient pe he a prenert to} to intervene and to see that the gov- | make their purpose effe Affairs. Sr the peaceful These provisional government will come to lan end [ this opportunity of We should as a nation do eve rvthng ‘expressing upon behalf of the Ameri-|in our powet for the cause of honorcan people, with all. possible solem- | able peace. It is morally as sade: nity, our most earnest hope that the |fensible for a nation to commit a |} people of Cuba will realize the im-).wrong -upon another nation, strong | perative need of preserving justice and or weak, as for an indilvdual thus. to direction of of self-gov- American citigenship should be con- and|ferred jin WARM _ | - Office | i 10 to 219 SALT LAKE Hours: 12 & Specialists, Block, South Matin 9 a, m. to 5 p. m.; Sundays : and Street, CITY, UTAIL Holidays. 7 to 8 erenings; 5 Dr. G. ae W. SHORES. : |