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Show 4 THE y they = in Published Every in Inter forning Morning . i Republ epu - Mountain wo b - ana ean Entered as second-class matter postoffice at Salt Lake City, under March The 3, local Branch or solicitors, a News ; an . Dally . [termes Department. Newspaper Pana > in Salt Lake City Office. Do should be > not give ee : notices to to and carriers ill | sents 6-05,.-- .Sunday Malcolm Only, McAllister, Offices - Dooly Block, Both Member Akr - : Af ‘a 2.00) 208 South y West Temple 2 Press a ~ WED . , -- 1907. home . an In the "Outlook" for simply We the in not paper; in state state. ten pages to of that that to Our is a widely very readers for paper is capably two look. A great bought und In one "There conftiict is many read of the Republican paper, and and that, of in The edited about not we to the state, of know that the we In Utah irrepressible place, there a days, and which is even an and find magazine this today inevitable. suggestion which in fact of was as ‘ . No state of epigram was "No which state can exist s in civil war. the that strong war half slave . & quoted sentence. It First, that the Mormons and means, statements That go it are not Americans, are made people at the more second, freely to array know many good good people here at the home, East, more hold to run to the many of the be the term i -| arrognate the NOT Ameri- luded of itself that in the strife are it of against to in the for it, will will t+ have have will course will be they not gear, will and we t er us. the the to of the would we That means regard may for his will Of conclusions. course, forced in ° a exodus simple of the the courts, the and evidence of they as take prescribed evidence other clothing ets, and oath their of Americans care of their their hands cuused a estimate Slantly one care twinkle of is of that suggest family, when there was of thelr the no mirth, legal home Gospel soil man the the reader Outlook Mormons has misplaced. prohibition will in in- against there utter of that lapse humane man, that con- sister wo- is going people polygamists in 1900. There are from employ non-Mormons as teachers, the Mormon other chureh-but the education everywhere Mormons employ the same sing the religion, lessons not at the ratio do the graves all any American rest of over as their us. the of They the nation. national help They emblem, elect the Pres- enlist in the army of the comes to war, and these Utah mourn their sons hillsides of Cuba, and in Phillppine Islands. We do not understand by what logic they excluded from share In the term "Americans." can be * " Tf it be'said ceremonies which authority of the * against the and on from rise the to be no Utah. And from the that they sets nation, government take an oath them apart which of the as pledges United In their rebels religious against them States, to with stand stripped aad drive of the her infant in trial and and fling may her of step a and to i a fling an place of Can into porch Mormon the you Eye bosom is and a meant-and ment that ‘ive the with one vaign » the only the of hate limitless tain it meant-in the as no is toward Mad is lead cruel anguish, is ultimate must bloodshed, school, Cruel tends. own dungeon to. is the they the picture, man and can less slaughter measureless. of Innocents is cambe than Follow that lead suffering, not it the must no what state- and which as more that ‘that. don't You aware of is want are conscious sins that none of stand holy-no, to are speaking these without copper some to one. is Keeper ah of the not is the cer- prapaved committed. forglying. And as You you for You are knew bend your tel people a A the : far not find good way is may get men people. and We women are who adwor- of Napoleon stage It beeause must have IIL of has the been the just been indecency very Corey the iron The man man Is names of almost are as bad to be trouble- hissed of by bloated off per- her Dinkey the Pittsburg mag- morals their A party tives. And ceding that should what be is its by judged called elected the elected its American oMeials are representa- party either is now con- incompetent both Cleveland's Mr. bad a cey Fairehild bankrupt Princeton has great not men one well seem to indictment, under lead looked after be going and think io all of to Josiah that the his FOR CANALS NATIONAL the Quin- Sage of friends DEFENSE. New York Tribune: In "The Popular Science Monthly" for December the possibility of utilizing interior waterways for the defense of cities on or near the Atlantic coast is discussed by William J. Roe, a retired officer of the United States army, now living at Newburg. tth to those natural channels which Mainé to Florida and to projects for would supplement existing marine avenues would strategic value Three excapossess varitions of the latter character, for instance, would facilitate a transfer of war vessels to Boston Bay from Long Island Sound Another piece of engineering which might prove advantageous to Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore under certain. circumstances is an artificial connection between the upper Chesapeake bay and Delaware bay If an enemy's fleet were to appear at the Virginia capes and threaten the centers of population and industry that lie along the Chesapeake and its estuarles, a quick concentration for defensive purposes could be effected if a route across northern Delaware and the adjacent territory of Marylan@ were avallable In like manner prompt relief could be offered to Philudelphia, Wilmington and other cities on the Delaware if the enemy were to enter the bay of that name The secret of success it defensive, as rapidity of miles long well as in movermént, might save offensive, military and a canal a detour ef operations only a dozen two or three is or fifteen hundred. Of all the propositions to construct ship canals foi the kind of service here considered the only one which has excited much Interest in congress Is the one Just mentioned A commission was apointed in 1894 to study the various routes. which had been suggested : That body made a choice, but no action was taken on its re port Another route has been commended by Genera William J. Craighill, formerly in command of the engtto u referred been since has question the and neer corps, second commission which now has it under consideration. The government is not yet fully committed to the enterprise, ing are perhaps because the advisability it has not been strongly enough presumably most interestec conceded that there of undertak- urged by those not be commerce would whe enough from the Delaware to the upper Chesapeake to render the canal particularly useful in time of peace, and for that reason the shippers of Philadelphia and Baltimore betray no desire to have a new route for ey eee anc opened. If, however. influential residents of those neighboring cities were convincedof the advantages which it would give them if the country should become involved in war with a maritime nation, they would probably ask congress to sanction the scheme. Possibly fresh agitation of the subject may inspire them to so. ; he article "The Science interest to Monthly" people the con- of York New considering not to is exposed thatIt believes attack, from secure special while writer, The city. Populas of assurance one tains in Its situation less danger than cities further east or south. of vessels a concentration at an angle in the coast makes for its protection comparatively easy. Sntirely aside from any fear of torpedoes or coast defense ordnance, that one fact alone would Boston and Portland, on and Charleston line. the tend to discourage an enemy the one hand, and Savannah other, would flanks the on lie out they because on be of more vulnerable, coast Atlantic the Ee eens 0 THE TRADE FOREIGN PROBLEM. tariff the with tinkering Any American Ballimore to the be unsettling of things, nature very in the must, schedules, bill Dingley the Under business country's ih States United 1897, the in operative beeame which the year just close and prosperity, a wonderful enjoyed In the full flow by any slackening marked has not been changing constantly the From tide. prosperity the of conditions and circumstances of international trade, how- no ever, will alone limit for the ad- time from ae no of the prevent very existing impending a like urgent crisis though rates, custom of anything dertaking be expertly period, of one situation existing the emergencies, - The all varying meet schedules to meet justed to be expected present general schedules, need for which congress and, any in fact, changes. Germany's maximum tent of imposing a American commodities extensively can comprehensive and declare rates upon taken in the there in- exoept certain Kaiser's ing of the tariff in important paris to be a readjustment devised specially some ts' to those who base their hope of heaven on the forgiveness of a merciful God, and who know they tell the truth when they bow the head and repeat the litany. For they have come far short of doing all the will of Him whose care they are. And to them we want to this? : say: . i When they make a business promise, you know they Get reason. Measure your petitions by the blessed will keep It, If they owe you money, you have contidence mercy of that Christ who could gather all men into the ade to Germany which x 9 ae for that or, Britain, to Great not apply will this with which France or Belgium, or any other country trade, If there country maintains an important reciprocal ticulars, or for there if meeting the unfriendly trade schedules of method must other nations, very clearly this retaliatory scheme It must not be a be one which can be used generally. ot with Germany for use exclusively plan constructed . x » sc 0f some scheme Whether other isolated nation ot branch reciprocity is adopted by which the executive will the government agreements," mercial maximum to enter be empowered general a whether or and minimum ¥ simply some 4 3erTassume a, can whether special thoughtful young man-in That's "cominto of system rates will best provide the equip- . the western country that and ' .Nordica Mrs. upon| George hostess at Grand . in this aie aa Ra eta aes Alice ease Neilsen tae title roles all the more . P. Holman a delightful ee al. was Sree the hints of roses, carnations and > sols i Mt » " o ine en -room Prizes et sain it seek eine eight rizes were given 3 | tables, to. the following faeetne ‘ ft W r Rice, Mrs p Russel : oodruli, WwW. tice, lates' @. Post. Mrs. U. Worthington Kes me E Mee ath. Mrs. Kriebel, Miss | ny; as Yh ao Mrs. eee bd s of Portand Thompson OL a young is to K go Mant 4ees 1 te oe te 1c Mis. and. ‘Mrs: John. C. Cutler, jr.. entertained at a prettily appointed oT Monday night for Governor : O) 1 ay. on dinner to) Why. grunt| and Mrs. John CG. ( uUler at their home disappointment BalhaeThe seal Cl ence to this || on ‘esent. jesides presen thing a to De Oe 7 NOT?. Mr. Rockefeller adds: k istak ; you make mistakes, remember is human-:to err, but: try again and ‘try. trying! Opera emergency the country... advice on e Carlos, given for rty decorations arene werea advice to new ;year sweat under a weary load : » Ine is of Ha soaq doubt, anay discontent when the o thing easy Keep San United States) terd: aafternoon, Y will). meet a all | terday her friends. The Wit WHY y MAN! My this E will be an opportunity There large|the Into competi-| far On rtthe re-| | fact fe ‘ : nationality UNG MAN! YOUNG : I we send to Great| will appear in the of Europe our raw! the announcement . tractive 2 ae st} | trae ee Se ney: readjustment, Lidianapolis News: at the opening of perhaps The for Mr. world to do ees a byby dinner was y Follow followed } 63," when the prizes were won by || 'Tavlor. Mrs Herbert E. Cutlerwere andattractive Joseph The rooms ecir teat Mnger eee | that it harder. Pay no | ei é Se Rockefeller himself of full so is today | | for opportunities A » has For you manufacture to : pas Pee npette keep Hoy at work to right Get delay. all the success you can ¢ , . aes . eee - prceperous, it 1019 home, their at * 2 club card new formed, been so full of prosperity and so full of authorita-| the first meeting to be held that It is actually bulging out around the} ternoon withs Miss Tinsman way to make a success of yourself is to suc- | apartments in the Emery flats Don't will need ‘ ‘cea Oat oa the} bad suceeeded those as any C e attention to those who knock because you fail, but try The litthe daughters of R. J. Hyatt, again! Don't weakly 5 giver up and live on 3your relatives}e5/) Mi Margaret, Louise unt & and Clara, entertainse F: "i eo x Weaalisa' ause you can't get just the kind of job you want Go) ed at luncheon yesterday for a numto work at something. You are bound to make money | ber of their friends, including several us find dominion has brought about. No tariff concession can be m on ‘ ind #24 awaiting upon with In and not feces stimulating com- ship the Father in the spirit of holiness; who have named the Name; who accept the gospel of that Prince of Peace who won a world without hating any one. We are urgthought every Mormon,| tn friends simply even f Buropean O en | gAnwmn™ of| is to ROR ‘The products which| the Salt Lake theatre in ae almost entirely com-| opera is something of Bove or upon an extensive scale, . the i must--provide.-n. measure that. th young men, tive advice edges, rhe legislature = . to markets. to us are Is, ™ shoulder|/£ You work and probably a good deal of it, If not for | teachers, as well, yourself, why, then for some well-managed corporation, | Ninth East street together, few-and Jew and realm, mighty street which S . Oo country| Pred a success for yourself and keep happy and comee those who depend on you.-John D tockakeriet Trhe ver"rvs implicity i , of this 6 program rind appeal; mustSh ceed, Wall nation PIAL spe- | sehedules tariff! our in other attitude. = this of struight ahead and do the best you can to make 8"! must . them the of not lis great popuconstitute it the chief forelen every exporting country on the Sechctraneneianeim man be-| Lawson. daughter Parisian formance. any COCEHI consclences| rentile, again, W or SUCCEED, ; goes them shall We will stand ople-Gentil our, hammer would Christian many must make it clear| ‘ on ; of -; pressure the that and some ‘ other emergencies, : ae state. We i aon t : our res oe We a | De | couutries- and manufactured wares which come our own manufactured roduets i Q I prod right) dictatorial S ‘ amity and e® must week, and the ae nS readjustment to aH Thomas of hate ° suggestions to injustice, Finisher of your faith you can to lay the ban of extermination try to find by another path their Throne. ° We are errors not knee to the Maker and not find it in your heart or exodus on those who way to the Great White dressing You that. 0 then the sequel. You ut more And do into not Americans, a scheme, le from . ; city and abroi ee a of building the for of all outside criticism. One a your posed of tion with : --____-_-_- unchallenged angry milder are separation such -and an Americans. and of campaign there nothing Mormons here 1gS brothers the face this of ; come pretend is no blessi things of Salt Lake : : -{ is not , divided, this people that : : . : hostile sentiment from without entirely daughters There ‘ders suT: yond the borders of t ourse send the truth ra ‘ v tna . a of . Sons cr can j men pass judgment on us. ‘ate And the obligation of peace to turn All-Seeing your the lingering you breast? the was from His Shall torch Can babe the Bible ask lighted vengeance yesterday you and in of the punishment? the reply that the Mormons themselves say they do not take such an oath. They say they have never assumed any obligation which makes them even by a mental reservatlon hostile to the national government. They say they love the flag, and revere the honor and respect the power of the United States. And if you reply that they lie about it, one must rejoin that these men are truthful about other affairs. Why should not they be believed about who Can to rageful expressed in hurrying presence of mercies Mormons"? the sleeping mother hugged the knife is chair the wowith known, daughters neighbor? own and own? chapter lay, put people boundless your of the Does it have our the a and Mormon your man which and by Mormon Mormon sanctuary vf of the associate? down the the safety revenge one of at anger read orisons as ways Does we snown sons all Does > every whom clean extermination smile anathema rash in homes? faith-these as you kneel those from cursing has the you religion? creatures? people are that Can the dwelling approve songs ident of the United States. They United States when the summons Mormon fathers and mothers of who jle buried in the sun-kissed sealtered in an of night, blessing on who bayonets you fellow Mormon God are hustling these lives on tabooed? many religion embraced patriotic the flag of the country as the favor with ofa little more than four to one, That is, somewhat more than eighty per cent of the teachers of Salt Lake are non-Mormons. As a general rule, they come from states farther east, from which they are persuaded with better salaries than the older communities are willing to pay. And they teach here as they teach everywhere in the nation-not with good elhureh so in look of the whose driving now, for these men are subject to death, the same as are other Americans. And the survivors are growing old They send their children to the public schools. These schools of lived, it, Christian the sacrament than polygamy, not the accept the exile have the you of child times when all the influence of the Mormon church ran unchallenged in this respect, not one-quarter of the men had plural wives. They marry, and usually they marry young. It is one of the tendencies of the cult. But each man, since the manifesto, is the husband of one wife and no more, In the whole state there were four hundred and thirty-four forced people Will whose more Even we if warrant shall r a all will a truth, Mormon ethies Peace and these have nay the of ! t bless the the seal of ane} build- of the That for in the is marry, But decision, realizing the style whom families." of jeer is . writers each the as samme They are t hat American the conquest 2 derisive Unat But have They to the . in precisely They families. turn take witnesses weighed everywhere. ° "They for is witnesses. "' Of mat- a skat- We are at a loss to understand why it should be said] ¥°! that is what some men in Utah are striving for. They that'‘a Mormon is not an American. ‘The very great ma-|™2y not willingly indorse the logical conclusion of the jority of those people are of American birth, and of| Ff reinise that Mormons are not Americans and that MorAmerican' parentage. They confess allegiance to the} mons and Americans can not live in peace. They may they| hesitate before admitting that in consequence the Morgovernment of the United States, they pay taxes, BUT THAT IS JUST WHAT IT DOES render obedience to the writs of federal and state courts, mons must move There is no halting ground on the hither side of MEAN they serve as jurors on the same panel with. Gentiles, they take Y fulflllmer 0 essing no blessing we to other general he p= od with of tradeone the particular situation fluctuation Any be idilarS all ecik verse of the mutual trade situation to-| Britain, Germany and other countries ae sstiny of if | Cotton and 3 chie a ; aes ais ee oak. fopeetp hae it of the » destiny . ill If bargains must | extent, relying upon our Huropean countries send au- Moroni an brother the to make sideration a womah has always given to her no matter wihtere she has found her. man these we ‘ t a j a aa In international Significance pepersy tereis.no blessing this. falr city shall "ot enjoy. In matters of conduct we may and should require an obedience to the laws. In matters of conscience ‘ . ener ; des neventan ; that judge-lest not must We Grover and of they that will a total erasure feel part drive states for them, man the their pretenders 9? consideration one possess. ; will up And the and Tabernacle. a peace of exodus Temple, pen-| vote in. : Americans, remain which forced the Take not not One out, Ameri of f capacity-in a from to They equals move. are can organization point come down ; ng rink of as hours 1907. trade plan-it unique in more than tion and vast wealth | market of pretty nearly from | globe horror savage saddest 9, driving the 4 limited }| a congress ‘s dishonest-or ) ‘They get longer property. away They and out. allowed own ' any up in to go them themselves have care? with get t hority be to enroll e do live to drive not allowed to They and to will be permitted not have regrettably of shall not nates We inflames| e e to because both * steel power. no in for wlever on been have community Mormons t which savage and have will | wh You would not gol you! Stop now. . and/is and| ICG ay the : ree Sincerity of; ment YORSCEa possess : not JANUARY | hand It Outlook would Mormons the state stat And Americans. fight the never the rest all the are Americans, ou know) know they ¢ beac <no ey areare good citizens } ide: es laid Brothers, we can gain nothing by the continuation arre |. Wefe areare certain certal se much i es t ar y to lose We CAN S#!n oy learning to temper the asperities of our relig¢ I ur relighige. eo ious zeal, and the rancor of our political hate. Working logether-all of us-there desirable thinine: Utah Tits 1 1 is nono desirabl 0 ral were which not have published that of do tl re from the them excluded member Mormons edict God were the . excluded » number-or ons You ESET } é we regrets, mendable Zé in . some of the rest of Us to decide that they are if of trength here in Utah, to ‘shoulder. ‘allo e that race ide the same} ‘ . WEDNESDAY, s who ‘ day f Americans all carpets Americans shall but of longest tl : implied UTAH, cing one gether-side by side-to Saale cht 8 iperia ‘st; ¢ " , dp on Americans s we some as CITY, kingdom, a Will bring you justification You know the Mormons are are oyrp } lave that) are large community-in anything: pre-| th:than no PEATE proceed against them mercilessly, conceding no rights to them, treating them as rebels and strangers fallen into an Lin- home c comfort so do a good honor authoritative, Where? half free." means a means What both We ta that therere Is ve i organ is not inculcates Mormon the the haye-even if by printed-be the we would like to] points in Its con- if they then, aceepted goods of But ; must exist logic, they must be driven out of Utah These we can . But in a spirit of perfect fairness, say that the Outlook writer makes two cluding and in decided have Peace community, slogan ery squalic Books-¢| : they His ig @¢e, religion we various non-| "ave untouched tobace class rf Of there rule are ; ‘ comforts : r What then?9 Having . enumeration-to be a proud This! And ] of of never el cessation which sur-| lid . : a = as rng ‘> "OND prouder than a king-what is the alternative? No. @yy exist in peace half Mormon and half American." * In a olds They are leading you too far' the extreme whither they take | to ordinary material Mormon religion why see not think cans. not ante-bellum and on hal the -fashioned old-fashioned Maybe houses. \ But supposing and the duty right "irrepressible useful n does the *he ° are statement: Greeley's so outlived closer.reminder coln-thai in one: is phrase We They articles Is conflict conflict," Out-] Utah those in peace half Mormon and half American." These sentences are rather cleverly made first their average of unquestionably can means reare against any COM-]| be productive Of} they copies very Utah editorial, harmful for a generally articles certainly know fact article articles y composition ere ' the Outlook] a the their abstinence mhne Y participation you of circulated these correspondence people . these oF of which that "American." . _ arti- the From of It need not be told here that a charge munity, printed if the Outlook, will harm. two demand. the a While nature effect find arket f at sor market for that sort and that the editors say Outlook paper the this o prints responded need excellent { the i % reputation the Outlook (eo as sre is ¢ we-'assume there is a in the Eastern press; {hal we reasons, writers ; assailing f that the spected 29 conthe on based Utah, to uncomplimentary ; viv ; } tock arguand fllustrated with the stock arg ho haye fallen into the fashion of cles very ¥ ventional ments of have December age the folds comp cessation of the mad crusade days and angry nights must lead to a in re c , well known . . piano or an furnishings. dissipated, of from ; to of on the parlor tabie plow and they sow, they buy and they sell-and| For they are industrious and frugal. They are _ : ‘ same} » : 5 relici Sr ; We eee "AMERICANS. : than s fewsrfectlyv perfectly in be as rest LAKE blessed smiting e | vie say writer plane The houses as ead eo cate *king in ordinary lack nacles and meeting ARE = ALL the honest] ea Mormons subscribe to. They lea ! eo wT 1 and coffee, ae They i may . be . intense in their religious fer-] | , LS aie Ag Bur ang vor. and they certainly do attend ae es a theli ae number WE are good ne at arninn . the lower SN Ee ae appearance garish anv St. | parely 9, a of habits ‘ JAN, ahs and It may ae : rather gazi They get gain. a Association. -EDNESDAY, UTAH, eee are books of a wide variely, ane Manager. 'Phones - 3190. -- OUT, CITY, o 2.00]ne year General Publishers' oO LAKE One so Q a generally very rather than to rugs, to rocking chairs rather than to - of of the house; usually} ali Roman benches. The daughter : . and pre is is no Il butlei le LR jut here [s}Is serves the - dinner, there there serves plenty to eat, and after the meal you may find good , Tate ;: re > and the , Outlool pay. among othe1yp] Advance. on ae © kept, founda. SI rie Editorial} 4 status e on REPUBLICAN, SALT very me ° Pe magazines ' are And yet it is that SUBSCRIPTION RATES: : One Month Scere . INE who ninan s Three Months......-Six_ Months . ses ne Year..... ~ are ® of like 0 is -n town scarcely _-_] the , certanily articles life roundings. ce || = eer ae «BOr wc cove, 1.50... 3.00....-6.00 160.5. to , oe reSSe addressed e aaran. _ ~are SALT "Home be aedre-| 4nd to subscription matters matters "yelating © i aie ,should or to to {Ti the Circulation 1e Department, DIRECT 2e carriers AN ported: the Republican certs certalnly They these of one In the Feb. 10, 1906, at eee the Act Of Congress | Western &879. Only ‘hey They ° ak: in Utah. Party INTER-MOUNTAIN , y eat Republican of the Organ Official pay. dealings. They certainly are cultivated as American people who live here by Compan p ican ee will thelr this at afher oe MI Beatrice O'Connor will enterr= Miss. Beatrice iat the: New Card2élub this evening , 70 S ess "may be, don ye afraid ort ont be | ar he . he iss Aex a Berk@traid of accumulation. The burdens of wealth. are m A x rea a Le pyrene " confidently believed by those who never bore them to be | 0" "? + see cag oa ie ° grossly exaggerated. Moreover, you can train un to A meeting of the reception committhem by degrees With the present cost of living <‘o } ) tee of the Nationul Wool Growers' ashelp keep them down, only a weakling would fear such sociation will be held this afternoon in a load. Vherefore young man, go right ahead and the parlors of the Commercial elub, succeed Why not? The world is before you, aud all to make arrangements for the recepyou have to do is to get ahead of it tion to be given the visiting women in the city at the time of,the fortyWHAT OF THE JURY SYSTEM? third annual convention, which will meet in Salt Lake January 17 Spokesman: One result of the reeent trial of Sidney " . . Sloane is a revival of interest in the question whether The Woman's Democratic club will the jury system has outgrown its usefulness, and if so, hold its regular meeting this afterwhether it would be better to abolish it or amend it noon at 2:30 with Mrs. H. J. Hayinto closer conformity with twentieth century requireward, 272 North Second West street. ments All members are requests to be presWhile the ablest jurists in this country and in Great ent . ' . sritain admit that trial by jury is often productive : absurdities and injustice, they are reluctant In the light The Orpheus elub resumed their of historic knowledge to abolish a great rient which stovd meetings last evening in thelr rooms so long as a bulwark between the people and tyrannical over the Godbe-Pitts drug stere, and kings and judges will, meet regularly to be in readilave we not, under changing conditions, perverted ness for a concert to be given latet. the trvu®> principles of the jury system? Under a long + ° . line of precedents the effect of our present-day system The Daughters of the Utah Pioneers of peremptory challenges and challenges for cause Is ofler will meet this afternoon at the Lion to sift out and reject those eltizens who are best qualified house, at 3 o'clock is earnestly by Intelligence, knowledge and a spirit of fairness to try requested that all who are eligible a case, We seem to have drifted far from the original will attend. This includes all descendintent and application of the system. Seven hundred ants of those who came before 1863 years ago, when the right of trial by jury was wrested and after, irrespective of creed or from King John, and for several centuries thereafter party. Arrangements will be made communities were bound together more closely than un- for an old-fashioned. mid-winter ball, when old-fashioned costumes will be der modern conditions. It was the lot of the average man to be born, to live and to die within a narrow precinct, Every man knew his neighbors, and usually from infancy. <A stranger was a sensation, a traveled man a wonder. Persons arraigned for crimes were trie by their neighbors, by twelve men who knew of the crime and had hear it discussed in all its phases. Necessarily knowledge of the crime could not then be held by the court to disqualify a Juries were readily chosen and generally were representative of the intelligence of the community. Thus, the average jury was capable from the beginning of weighing intelligently the credibility of witnesses and of passing upon the broad probability as to whether the prisoner committed the crime Under modern conditions the public seldom attends a. trial. Particularly in this western country is there such a shifting of population, such a ow of transients that juries, especially in cities, seldom have knowledge of the prisoner or the witnesses in the case. They are unable to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses. They arn with difficulty of the character of the lefendant The y are frequently influenced by manufactured evidence. They are too often swayed by the arguments of counsel Another influence which is bringing the jury system into disfavor is the unwillingness of busy men to engage in jury duty They are excused on one plea or another, and the inevitable tendency is to pass into the jury box the idlers of the community Of course, there are always exceptions of this tendency he average jury almost always includes at least one or move of the better citizens of the community, using the term in its best meaning, but the tendency is toward the sifting out of those citizens who are best qualified for jury duty and the of a tot of seem a fair degree of resolution , these evils could he corrected he remedy, iInded. Iles largely with the judges. If the courts generally would enforce a policy of helding citizens to jury duty and excusing no one except for the gravest cause, a long step would be taken toward the restoration of the Jury system to the confidence of the American people. MARRIED WOMEN LABOR IS constructing double SCARCE. tracks or making other improvements One western road has been so delayed by lack of labor that it has 10,000 loaded cars standing on sidetracks that it can not move because of. inadequate main track capacity. During the summer and early fall the railroads sent out large by of gangs of men that were promptly lured away the farmers into harvest fields. ut-even with the end harvest the railroads can not even get enough labor. sy have agents in all the clitles, scouring the market for unskilled labor, but are fast reaching the conclusion that there is not enough of this kind of labor in e is being prosperity, natural conelusion is that more and more depleted, by the occupations the labor market in these times of requiring moderate skill. The enormous growth of manufacturing industries keeps American labor in the cities and towns. Unskilled labor jis drawn almost wholly from the ranks of newly arrived immigrants. ae - ohare scarcity Yet even jis no surer int he this of index of American labor SIA unskill wear ed ey labor as for labor ten years &g9. source market. high as It that supply for is inade- prosperity than a wa © scale average skilled means be carried The date s Word comes from Washington that Mr and Mrs. Hoyt Sherman and Miss Laura Sherman are occupying aparl ments in the Portland. * oO formerly Mr. and Mrs bs. Cary, well Known residents cf Salt Lake, are pleasantly situated in Salida, Colo, for the winter. « ® " Mr: < i. Kimball) and daughter Darlene have returned from Omatta, where they spent the holidays. . * . Miss Blanche Wenner has returned from Seattle and the northwest, wher she spent the Christmas vacation with her mother and her brotner, and is igain at the Fifth East notel. > 7 Mr and Mrs. Dana T. Smith havo moved from the Fifth Fast hotel to the Kensington flats on North Main street, where they will oe at home to their friends i Mr. and Mrs. home at the at e D. C. Duntar'are Kenstingion flats. . > now ° HH: Pease wiil Mr. and Mrs. V the week for latter part of nex land, Seattle and down the San Francisco, where they main for the rest of the winter Marriage leave Port- Licenses. Sadia Isaac Chicago Journal: Railway construction work, especially in the west, Is being seriously retarded by a scarcity of common laborers. [t is estimated that at least 50,000 more men are needed, above the present supply, and this in spite of high wages and free trans-, portation, Almost every large rathway system is either building extensions, * EB. Stocking, Herriman; Bills, Riverton. White, Warren;.. y Wright, Pleasant FE Samuel B. Carson, Garrett, Marysville, Benjamin J. Wood, Cardston, ada; Emma' F. Bigele, Cardston, TEACHERS. Portland Journal: The first squad of the 500 Brilish teachers who are coming over to study the educational system of the United States arrived last week and are investigating schools of eastern citles. They are mostly women, as teachers in this country are, but a large proportion of them are married women, as would not be the case i lot of American teachers went to Engiand and Boston, and in some other American cities, the s a rule against married women teachers, put in London, if in other large British cities, married women are not only not barred but are welcomed as teachers. Half the women teachers of London, i* iS i said, are wives, a large proportion of whem are mothers who receive half pay for two months in a year if abseut on account of maternal duties In London teachers are not so plentiful as in our large cities, so that it does not necessarily follow that married women teachers are unobjectlonable, oui we think a rigid rule against them is neither necessary no} wise It depends on the woman, and her domestic circumstances, whether if married she should be atlowed to teach or not, While as 4 general rule it may be well to employ only single women, there are many excepLions, as is admitted and recognized in this city, and in many other American cities. If a woman can and will and does do good work, the fact as to her being marricd single should not be considered a matter of first importance, WHY worn, and all details are to out in the same manner. will be given later. Ivy ‘airfield; Ada C. o CanCan- ada Joseph Brachette, Mercur; Treasa Magnino, Mercvr. Frank L. Steward, Bluck Horse, NeElla E. Horrick, Black Horse, George S. Winn, Nephi; Lula L. Preston, Idaho. A. Christensen, Gunnison; Childs, Gunnison. homas Harris, Salt Luke City; Rose L. Healy, Salt Lake City. ---- +» + ___ -___ Loa A man of letters says: The editorials of The Republican ure gems of literature. Other features of the paper are equally strong. See the subseription rates. PACIFIC COAST EXCURSIONS Vin Oregon Short Line, January 19th and 21st, 1967, tickets good for thirty days. Following rates will prevail from Salt se: San Francisco or Portland and return a 0'0.3 me ite a hale pithee San Francisco and return, via Portland 22:25 5p ce he ROME -. $44.00 Los Angeles and return, via San F ; : 2d, alels eee Setanta Los. Angeles and return, via Fortland:'...:..:%.2 ji ete DD See agents for further particulars City Ticket Office, 201 Main stree ORUNKENNESS A positive manent an cure. i aoaeanese rug addictions. = Par Sud ouse, Dwicht, I, Correspondence condential CURED. perfor (| - mS perere dhe lee per Srore fu} ete Fl i ELBY INsTiru RH "4 W.S. KE Tem. St.. Salt Lake City, Utah. R. G. DUN & CO. GEORGE RUST, General Manager Utah, Idaho, Wyoming and Nevada. Offices in Progress Building, Salt Lake City. ~~ The Oldest and Larges ‘ Sars gun) pur |