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Show ve. alt. Lz a er in Daily Newspaper film !n City SUBSCRIPTION RATES. $ ; Not Paid in Advance, One month ‘ Thre months . As month. ar wae Bacdahe only, one veur Order -$ 75 . 2.00 4.00 8.00 2.00 to discon- s paper subscription will be honored only Is PAID IN FULL MALCOLM MeALLISTER, Gen'l. when help Mer. him and OFFICES: the are OF THE 1908. gear. We to the his will normal title-by Lake as houses quitting tain make get' Here is night. bere is a waylay his master, organized The victory well of these the the things shown. at vivid One posings novel it People the very that will and But favor. pected cer- lieved re- is that plays some be hit of the week It strong seen of the it impressive. yet siyle has want is ex- dramatic here this sea- son. But for the present, there has been little to attract the interest or furnish food for thought and Absolutely money it not work Salt pulling performance, more are gave the company te the reffecting Wherefore, back Tenderfoot a every Friday to the with to who They rescue-all wonderfully popular yet adjusted. things out of have degrees. theater full all is fight. the entertainment. WEEK. The world is hardly The holiday week threw in- were required; at the cost of them, the ingenuity and the enterprise disSome company is organized played. to get all these various scenes, and make the films and to rent them to showmen in many cities And PLAYS another week gack pursuit amazed Ke 5, runs the Mexicans, teres Bum JAN. the revenge in and chase, OPEL CITY, through escapes New York e fot Cambridge Building, npee ‘Ite Waldorf-Astoria, Chicago Office, 311 Boyce I uilding J P. MeKinney. sole representative east of the Rocky Mountains LAKE was is the coach in which the Mexican sending his wife and child on a journey A dog riding with the woman 208 South Wes Offices-Dooly Block, Temple = St Phones-BeBe aI, Sxehi See 26; Inde pe ndent, 31s SALT It peated the stirring lines mutely, thrilling the while with the fervor of it, as pleture repeateé the splendor of ancient story. One is better tor} this closer glimpse of Paul Revere. And there was another film™ef quite; a different character at the Majestic theater, in First South sireet. lt y¥epresented scenes in which Indians and Mexieans figured. An Indian is cap tured by the Mexicans, and is whipped of that race, He returns by a leader and rallies his fellows to to his tribe 50 1 50 2.00 6.00 1.50 Subseribers will please give explicit notice to the Cireulation Soneeuent DIRECT, and not carriers, collectors or rs 8 concerning dehes gxive former as ade ire ss w hen ordering DES helpful. audience Pald in Advance. ds month eee Three months Six "Months One ye sie ee ae Sunday only, one year EASTERN was fluence along the line of "George Washington jr" Of course every one has read the Paul Revere poem; and were scores of people in the there than to be most likely to put money into the general pocket; to most ben efit the people of the United States. That is the meaning of politics. The parties divide on that issue. Hach is looking for what he believes will be best for bimself and his fellow citizens. They differ because they don't | agree on what certainly will -and in will put every be best; money other way HAD "Philips A Church we and ceived it receive Salt and willorever right to and the have re- ot continue her 0 churches; so many as has handséwe Salt Laké& church can In the It is his' boy any move: ing to sirty-fiv year-and all the and yet they make three hun- | of July that ee aiof thing. conversion of the man touch Loo. by of more complying state that is always father, strictly peor ding to law, thelr suite an orderly way courts, pottne judgment, and way boy. And and by a pretty knows course: and more is than more A | court his suit noble, in splendid. So that when he reforms his father, and fixes ings so the curtain can go down in the last ‘act without a cringing and defeated villain, with nothing but he roes and heroines from the footlights to the back drop-that is the desirable thing. And wescan all sing "Grand Old Flag' with feeling because that is the key to which the play as a whole is written-when you come to look at it from a distance. George Cohan has ‘done a good work in "George Washington jr." The Grand has presented rather a food thing in "The Girl and the Stampede." The book is far better than the average of melodramas, It reads well. Evidently the conception of the author was right. It seems to have suffered a little in the staging. The people have been better than the scheme-the star in particular being an exceedingly pretty and effective actor. There is no reason why "The Girl and the Stampede" should not become one of the plays that will last It would hardly be fair to class a chureh with the theater; and yet the public pay entertainment of the week. that made-appeal:to *he best culture of the city' was that at the First Methodist echurch-the music of Jan Kubelik and his company. It is gratifying to know that the church was filled. If ever Kubelik comes again to Salt Lake, that auditorium wil) not contain his hearers. The man's methois are entirely his own. There is nothing just like that approach to the grotesques of violin playing. and yet the clear avoidance of it. Just a step farther, and Kubelik would be classed with the charlatans of the fid dle, How he avoids it while reveal ing so curiously that perfect mastery of strings and bow is a mystery Willard Weithe was asked, at the Kubelik concert: "Is he artist, or-' "Oh, artist-artist!" exclaimed tbe big-souled director and violinist. Films can hardly be reckoned wity the The been the nation. nation farmers violation for | and in with of saving And of characterized the done Yet their by their nothing their farms the of highest sustained have law ge ees statutes the has oes suits have} paper of Keith and Kearns as a "raid" on the industries of the valley Many Park City people depended entirely on their work in the Silver King mine for a living. They have been working faithfully there for years. They have had faith in the stability of employment there, and fave established homes. They have their families. And in a day, without notice, without a chance to look about for something else without warning of disaster, the mines are closed If Tom Kearns and David Keiih had been the publie-spirited people they proclaim themselves to be in their own paper, they would have run the Silver King mine another month, even if they had lost a dollar. Those men up there in Summit county have served them very ‘Waithfully. Most of the interests of Park City depend on the mine. There was the finest chanee in the world for "great citizens" to prove their greatness. They could havg kept the mine running for another month, till the tightest stress of the money pinch passes; till the men could have devised some means of relief among themselves. But Keith and Kearns are not the publie-spirited men they coufess themselves to be. They are selfish, coldblooded, heariless. They care not a cent for the interests of their men. After all their bragging about their limitless wealth, they are scared blue at the prospect of a little loss, and shut down their mine as suddenly as it an explosion had destroyed it. These are the latest style of "great citizen,' and this is the new fashion ot "raiding." not protect here stay. path the and right For once of vet recovered any a recent part McWhirter Y. M. evening Mr. addressed C. A., and ua its of is not anether Catholic cathédral in the class with that on Brigham &treet They brave are enough class members at the are the fell down hardest get And things THAT that in They up the is We don't take a one head in than those church ; And it is not | means--but the seemly more the of Dr. sur- Short's buildings, ence of Pee Scanlan? And #o all er a ae? religious WERK MO. Mormon. of These societies purity. mén are organized They are for helping by any =. all (the nda ay the peace to fe an and make the worW a little better. They have with few exceptions held to the lofty course through the year. And they have the blessed comfort here at the roundup of the year to know that their labors have been blest It has been a good year with the churehes of Salt Lake. May the new year be even better! "RAID" ON SMELTERS. Who is making a "raid on smelters'? The Tribune is constantly attacking the farmers of the southern part of the county with the accusation that they are guilty of making "raids" on the smelters. In every issue of that strange paper one finds charges against the farmers But not a farmer has received a dollar from the smelters-nor judgment for a dollar-but after a fair and honest trial of his case. Never a "raid" unless the verdict of a jury and the judgment of a court may be called a raid. The law has been complied with in every respect by the farmers who felt they had been damaged by the smelter people. Furthermore, the matters went betore Judge Marshall of the federal court, a jurist who was publicly praised for his learning and fairness, who was urged for a place on the, supreme beneh of the nation, while the suit of the Magnolia company against Keith and Kearns was pending | before hin. Does the Tribune mean to eal! his rulings "raids"? | Or has the Tribune come to the conclusion that Judge Marshall, since THE he did not save the day Silver King in of declare ‘them the and of of white men tha Japs the fighting bad were the} only, Ladies'* eaeh keen three Japs; that and Knives; furiously for all eaped three of the that twenty firemen es alive. That is all right as a story, but either Those Japs were not so wel armed us they nave been represented, or they didn't fight as hard as the firemen think they did-or the correspondents have lied Just now, when the battleships are coming into the Pacific, all news about race Wars are certain to attract atten tion. If the correspondent can make the matter big enough, maybe he can get a battleship right up to his dock. And that will make him a hero for seyeral days., But no man with stories of twenty mad Japs, armedto the tooth fighting twenty iainutes with three white firemen to and not become the killing any center of one, an can hope internation- al war, THE COMPANY COULD Ti es Ties, in all the OF each-| Cu tuiate condition where those schooling warrant people who the only, at, each- price Neck Ruching, in all the latest 25c and 35c lime 1 shapes call BUCKLES AND 10c ELASTIC ea NECcsSA HAY yy HAY Vials (CE BELTING EZ a San ME) 4) should ior an bring with of training higher But the far they nol are educated Own know aution, the to be country wait for the generation. is upon our ped than upor 1 the history of their) Have they the foundations | as to political action? Are of the fundamentals of} fovernment? yoters. They Pica leas founda- come trom foreign counour own people as wel they should be? Do our as people of judgment they aware at going to impressively who Are country? na this to obligation more people tries. the other the for Pak li it IS White Light re that them nation ple DO. from much value will have grade second very the insisting here the the education. Otherwise, ol for beet fact ‘They are should American citizens be In tor themselves but -the natives and sons of natives-as| well edueated as they should GET aRaM NOW, foita has elSCARED! nhac a AKGs one in discovered of cece egation after the Sutherland's That is hardly oa expiration as of the Mormon church, is) succeed him Actually, the Tribune crowd has | been circulating that story and assur-! ing listeners that it is true But you need not be seared it you lee anything better to occupy hour an should be more room an thin Hundreds to that show GAS GAS kuow to pleases, wp their be the cop read- : ‘ gives but costs and inakes true colors \ LAMPS ARCRC! are, electrie a S actualls trifle over of thousands of these Gas ares are being used of the country and they ave already becom- in other ing popular in Salt Lake. parts } Ask ertul us all about results them, and let us we are accomplishing for show you what wond your neighbors. ! Utah Gas @ Coke Co. 61-65 MAIN STREET. PHONES 4321 your! for Better Than Spanking Spanking mers, vis-)< nd does not eure ehildren Grant coool Box. W,, Notre. Damie,-dnd., will free to apy mother her success- QO} It wouldmen beto aapprise Uttle thing for the] ir powertuliy at the Y. fineM. C.income A. gymmasium.| {j)lome, yeatmenc. with full instruc. | the ‘street car A is being| today ie ie chil dren gee gon in to the probable time of their arrival in Salt Lake; the number of Salt Lake passengers they have and the depot at which they will arrive. If, to that message the street car people would respond with cars, so that the people could be earried up town, there would be a profusion of| blessings where now one may _ hear expressions quite the reverse overlooked mere People want to see | hance are it ean rt: ee Slieee a acuen ‘the | Be" rites lea ‘with eee a game itke either of those with the or nig am Alaskans would draw money hand- | = = somely. ne ir i. urthen diet) ‘ This Hight ities ees soot best a e there was going to be a panic. WHAT DOES POLITICS MEAN? One of the speakers at the teachers' convention in Provo made this funny Statement on Thursday: "I can see no difference between the act of a Chicago banker who voted the gold standard ticket because it put mouey into his pocket, and the theatricals, either. And yet the elecea who sold his vote for five doltric show has so taken possession of the McWhirter case is the good record ars | matter how much money they have. | managers of the "American party in|@@ the country that one may not escape| Well, he should be able to see the oe ae ae in Salt Lake.| An educated and healthy man Orlthe city offices. Anything to benefit B its influence, or the message of its difference, for there is one. And the feat fae es ae Heen glad Mt woman isa diatinet gain to the United | the general public characteristics. Films are new things. man who doesn't know it, and goes on , y forever. They have] States, no matter where he or she They come in with the recent years; teaching children without trying to simply made settlement in this city, may come from. An ignorant man or One of the city officials has dis: but they are here And thousands of ;learn it, is lacking in some elements have engaged in business, asking no} woman is very likely to be a burden. covered that the city owns over a mil-| people In Salt Lake every week at-|that would be valuable to bim, and tend the shows where films compose | helpful to those about him. the footing of merit, falling if they|for education. Children of foreigners now they wish that land was money! the whole of the entertainment. And Without at all debating the question' have none, And they have not fallen.|.are receiving the benefits of it-and : my they get their money's worth, too. of gold standard and free ‘silyer-or Here are two men-or three-who| that is an excellent thing, for they are Our monster price wrecking sale For example, there was the "Paul any other-let us say that a man votes have been successful in business inj} in that manuer redeenuvug the less for-] Commences Monday, January 6 ady. on outside page, third section. See|@gate lots ent or one aere of good Sood. right; in part of city. water on 12th street; lot 7, bleck h 3, on Park avenue, Ogden, Utah. Address Pusquate bueceillo, box 174, Willows, Cal. | also Read The Republican. All the News for 50c Month. One of the lessons of the hard times| is that brought up from the Cactus | mine. One man in December made |® more production than two did in November In November the men oe know at burn | maaan Toe niin therete There who hight goods HUMPHRE IPHREY hieht to have by men mellow makes @ the] other mare's nest the Tribune imaginers have discovered. This is to the effect that Reed Smoot is going to retire from the senate at the end of his! present term, and Joseph r Smith, president and 7h » cents of Sen-| interesting brilliant Miore grane- term. as a T Yine telegrams that there is going to| be no Gentile in the congressional del- | ator it is considered ing a pleasure, =a might. be? its fact rect light froin the scieutifie standpoint. It is not a harsh, , glaring light. so dim and yellow that it ruins people's eyes, and prepared voters | railroad as Asa = prices, parents have gives here come beginning tion their may yery the free 1S public tions of parents But Were people t ‘ Fk ! ma A= NS ~ day colors, | Barvettes, a splendid 25c | and sizes. from We Pw NEED EDUCATED VOTERS. In December they did know it And| that million dollar suit, is himself the Governor Warfield of Maryland ‘they seem to have worked accordingly author of "raids''? wants the citizenship laws amended so For not a final step has been taken as to require a better educational test The Duchess of Yarmouth is askin those smelter cases except on the for yoters, And he is right. In his i ng for a divorce because the duke/| approval of Judge Marshall. State there are many negroes of the has disgraced her family. Considering | It would seem 5 that he looks like @ illiterate class: but he is not directing that her maiden name was Thaw it is| "raider" to the Tribune since he could his crusade against them alone. He not: easy. to. see how.the duke could not be handled by Keith and Kearns. | believes that immigrants should be re- disesedit: the ‘same: eee ceived if they have education, no mat= | MAKING A GOOD RECORD, ter whether or not they have money- Certainly the coniity: officials wit = After all, perhaps the big thing in|and kept out if they be illiterate, no help with advice those very helpless,bcd Odds of any one, Standing squarely on): at, colors, ||| Faney av BELT are some people geiting off these Og-| the Every Millinery at these | time. The Tribune will provide new| seares aS soon as its readers forget} what baseless things its last bugaboos not of prices Monday. only, in all popu When trains from Ogden are late, the railroad men could telegraph or telephone to the street car people in Salt Lake, stating the number of passengers for this city, and giving the street car company a chance to hayé cars at the station for the handling of the passengers That the is what railroad company men could do It wquld be a very great accommodation to the people of this city. Time after time an Ogden train will come in in the night, delivering a hundred or more passengers, and no street car provision for their handling. In these times, when the police department is helpless and when highway robberies are of nightly occurrence, people don't like to walk to their homes, especially as some people live quite a distance from the depots Of course there is the alternative of hiring a carriage, and people who do hire them find they are very comfortable and entirely safe. But there den trains who have a carriage ride, Only | 75c || | colors, a yard NET GNE (Gory Cae Are WHAT Ee One lot of Hats Mon- | One lot of Hats Mon- each---- | day 4 FINE LIN illiterate yet t all minutes. And at, Handkerehietf Windsor from stocl but the unarmed, long, lasted were of the | | 10c WAR. deal there twenty oe they to do RACE great ¢ cet are where world VANCOUVER prejudice his bows will be sold at unheard One lot of Hats Mon- : Alexander genuine. to you Millinery Sale woman in Salt Lake can afford to purchase their No Presbyterian church has a hand- in that Vancouver race war. ‘Three somer temple than has the First firemen of the city are declared to chureh in Salt Lake No Congrega- have accidentally broken the front tionalist in any city of half a milliow Window of a Japs store, and the Japs people worships in a better house than ‘punished them. The "victims" of race in First South street. No Methodist roundings Hats better for what he told them. Those brothers are giving evidence of possessing the qualities which our city needs. ZCML_ Street Where business ten thousand dollars. Jt 15 not very creditable to Salt Lake that the money is retained from them. On = | For MONDAY ap- There . people who meet in KEARNS AND KEITH, RAIDERS. buildings: the people whose Kearns and Keith are the owners of| | those stop before Saturday night. You can also| | work helps their brothers and sisters The y the Salt Lake Tribune. prove that no company will do that themselves. are the chief owners of the Silver} -and But they did. | Besides the houses and the members For months| | is || King mine, at Park City. And as to that company: There they bave been alleging that the farim- | of congregation, there are the pastors. no cousistency, no continuity apparent | | Do you suppose there is in any city ers of this county "raided" the smelin the play. And yet, when all thez zip | men of greater ability than and compelled the managers of | any where, and swing and mental acrobatics are ters that enterprise to shut down, and quit | these preachers here in Salt Lake? over, one comes to see that George Where are you going to hear sounder And yet they have shut Cohan really meant something. It is| business. down their mine at Park City, withb- } truths more splendidly uttered than a patriotic play-a spur to the sentiWhere are many | in Dr. Goshen's church? ment of nationalism. If you will re- out a day's notice, throwing scholarly out of employment-a_ lockout ‘you going to find a more member, the wicked senator is in the men address than that of Dr, Paden? first act getting ready to quit the withoul notice! Where will the influence of a good And in midwinter! country. He is aimost boastfully un life and the impetus of a wise counIsn't that a raid on the men? American. And by the end of the play Here are the farmers, proceeding sel more move you than in the preshe is intensely patriotic; so much so they to Main Extraordinary taken would And it is vastly and common sense they to their credit thal had the strength of character to make of thempart of the city selves a permanent it, they we understand have AS never Good 2-114 pealed to the county authorities, and one of the thieves has been convicted settled the P MeWhirters propose a right to bem, We do not city from here=to Chicago has buildings proud the departed . is And have YEAR. they it Lake and has know a which bekeve thieves. was police preferred they headlines ‘tate the truth It is true of all the elrehes in Salt Lake. We do not beliew& there is an exception All the church®s have earned a blessing the game dollars The but They a Year," declare the headlines; thousand them. them; here GOOD Had ten from help yambling they advance Has of a known. It was wholly for habit or the inelination| and yet they bet money- Then they were arrested officer, and the remainder most interests of the nation And it isn't at all like selling a vote, emther ALL» HAVE into pockets what into inveigled pretty well elgn to the of the men. and last by a bogus TSA FG CG / Entered ond class matter Feb 10, 1906, at "the "postoffice at Salt Lake City unde r the t of Congress March 3, 1879 Cee 7 Republican 1 908. 5, Ie > IBIS ' the JANUARY SWAP re ms GAS NAG 7a Ee RA GREE") PATE Our Drug Store ¢ rh of LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, i -- SALT their native Scottisn city They have! ax been careful, and prudent. They acat cumulated money, and ‘for the first time in their Hves two of them we ah out into the world. How they wereEt Ce G Official Party in Ut REPUBLICAN, 4 Inter-Mountain Republican Co. INTER-MOUNTAIN for that policy which he believes will put money into his pocket. He doesn't vole for that policy which he believes will take money out of his pocket. The Provo speaker should know that He isn't alone, that voter isn't. He is one of the twelve million yoters all the United States who are castover ing their ballots at each election for the polley and for the candidates be Revere" succession of pictures at the which the Herald so justly Orpheum li amplimented. It was done in an editorial; too, and was such an improve ment on the political editorials of that paper, Resides, the message of that By i rb Moruing Sf Every ~ THE Published t 4 | CUTLERS' | 36 MAIN ST. Extra Price Inducements for this Week Some specials not often eucounte ‘red anywhere 40c BOYS' SWEATERS 40c All75¢ and $1.00 Sweaters from our reeular stock go at this great reduction. : . You'll have to speak Our Bi Cl 8 othing Sale Starts Feb, y Our: country 1s paying a lot‘of money '| siGn dollars' worth of real state, Lota'| of C SS |: ae | Ong. Binit Gloves 40c emule 0c. and.-.75¢ values, ‘in'. Knit this weeks ‘dns seit the on eace tet OR for it et won't ao, oo 1 OUrrs ou're Waiting Th quickly-they ae ' ne ee AR Sar gee 30¢-Corduroy Pants 30: 300 more oe POFCUray knee pants ar ered: UNE are 60c-Cardigan Jackets fc Ww of these knit jackets are60cleft Sb S Original Knit IED Fan ae Cae BD Pa CS Pheasant week at@halt-pricg ct 7 Sf DieSaacpint "aaaedre wa Sep a ee ea Goods House BQe of Utah, |