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I THE STAHTDAllD OGDEN UTAH MONDAY APRIL 12 190t I SCDROEDEREDITOR OF LUCIFERS LANTERN Visits Ogden and Expresses Himself on Prohibition Womans Suffrage and Other Subjects What Cannot Be Cured by Lsw Virtues That Must Come by Education I Utah Women Not Emancipated I S I Theodore Schrocdcr editor of Luci I foi b i is visiting In Utnn and Is enjoying Ogdens Eastertide has pronounced views on runny sub- jects ¬ Including prohibition and wom ¬ ans suffrage and in an Interview I accorded a representative of this pa ¬ per declared UJmself as follows I notice during my present visit In Utah that the dominant subjpct of political discussion has been changed- to the prohibition question Here as In most other matters I entertain opinions which are not discredited by having achieved any great popular ap- proval ¬ and may be I can best entertain YOur readers by expressing some opin ¬ ions revived by my recent observations- here iTo begin with I should say that for I have not smoked over twenty years five times during most of the same period I have been a total abstainer from alcoholic beverages anti during nil of It I have not averaged five oc- casions ¬ per annum when I hav r in ¬ dulged In intoxicants I attended churches Just about the same number ot times that I have gone to saloons and derived from each abQut the same amount of good to wit none at all In theo particulars therefore I es- teem myself an Ideal temperance man though I am not now nor have I ever been a prohibitionist The only thins which makes me suspicious of the cor ¬ rectness of my opinions in this latter matter is time report that I am in seem- ing ¬ harmonyVlth Senator Smoot and Joseph F Smith Perhaps the har- mony Is only in time seeming and will disappear when I come to consider tho incidentals and the reasons for bur re spective convictions- In my view drunkenness is a mere symptom of social or personal disease and you Ijayent cured the disease when you suppress the manifestation- of some particular symptom Bad nerves and wrong social and economic conditions will manifest themselves In disorder as a matter of immutable natural law and In spile of manmade regulations Moralization by force has a been tried for thousands of years and Its friends by constantly complaining- that the humanity is getting worse and that always more and more laws arc necessary unconsciously but elo- quently ¬ admit the failure of tills meth- od ¬ of reform I believe that humanity- II growing slowly better not by tho passage of penal statutes but by virtue- of I the slow process of intellectual evo- lution ¬ which usually operates against and In spite of law and religion Ex ¬ cept in the matter of morals the theo- logian ¬ has been vanquished In every encounter with the naturalist Ethics- Is one of the last subjects to become a matter for the application of the scientific method The conflict between science and religious morality is a matter of the near future Thou moral I sentimentalism will have to give way to a conception of moral natural law Just as the Garden of Eden was abolish- ed ¬ b the discovery of the law of eol- ullon ¬ Conduct will then be judged not according to the all9ged mandates T f any holy spooks or prophets seers or revelators but according to ascer- tained ¬ and material consequences The ibsolute morality of an enlightened jelflnterest the theologasters will have no occupation except to en terjaln and restrain by spooktales- those unfortunate imbeciles who can- not ¬ I achieve the scientists conception I of morals The hospital will supplant I the Jail and moralization by force will lie the shame of the past when the physician and surgeon replace the Jail- or ¬ I Furthermore I am unable to see I anything Immoral in drinking or smok- ing ¬ as such and even though it be in- dulged ¬ in by women I have many valued women friends who do both Personally I find more pleasure in spending my time and money In other ways but I cannot and would not If I could use the coercion of the law to I make thee appetites of all people like my own This leads mo to comment on the fact that must people with I whom I converse seem to think there s borne great and mysterious virtue in I including women from saloonsri can agree to this Every woman has the same right to go to a saloon that I have and It seems to me that only moral sentimentalizing and a stupid cowardice would Induce a denial of that equality of right Good and bad women and good and bad men are per- mitted ¬ I to breathe tho same air enjoy the same sunshine listen to the same 11111 sermons and receive therefrom I the same Intellectual stupefaction I j think they should also be accorded an I equal right to paralyze their brain by booze as well as by spooks fo deny an equality of right to sane adult hu- mans ¬ and tn admit the cxistance of a power that can destroy such equality vf right merely on account of sex Is I Itself greater wrong and social dan- ger ¬ than any It can correct In New I York the courts have declared uncon- stitutional ¬ a law which sought to estab I IIsh arbitrary discriminations accord ¬ f ing to sex- When I remember that this Is an I equal suffrage state It is a little ills appointing that no woman has arisen I with the clarity of vision and moral I courage to Insist upon the legal equal ¬ I ity of the sexes even In the matter of going wrong The absence of such a protest amounts to a demonstration that even with womans suffrage no one believes In equality under the law- is a matter of principle but on the DIl PIHCE I WHEAT FLAKE OEL- ERTFOOD I fc a perfect food as it contains the I most essential elements to ply energy for the performance1- tof the various body functions Its daily use tends to strengthen and regulate the bowels II I fir gate by all Groorn- r4 ioc i h contrary that nearly every one Is dominated by an unreasoning moral sentImentalIsm and oven voting women willingly submit to tho legal establishment of a dual code of morals I I the heritage of our past female slave j virtues originating under a code es- tablished ¬ oor 500 years ago when Christian asceticism had reduced the wife to a chattel slave who could be mortgaged and beaten like any other of her husbands cattle Equality of political opportunity does not seem to have emancipated Utah women from willing submission to a malemade unequal moral code There Is the snme old submission to the slavevir ¬ tao established solely for her by the male who furnishes the mealticket It I takes more than mere votlngto estab- lish ¬ female equality either before the law or In Social life The slave mind I cannot bo made to think as a master I merely by passing a suffrage law As a human thlnketh so it is for that hu- man ¬ I A slavemind cannot produce I Independent equality In conduct- I There will be no emancipated woman or emancipated humans so long as we adhere to the little 2x4 virtues based upon tho circumscribed view of a serf who knows little or nothing of his re lations to the outside of the little fence that bounds the acreage of his servitude or so long as we are doml j nated by tho morality of diseased nerves and class distinctions and gov- erned ¬ b the paternal legislation or- hsterleS and office seeking scrubs But some day we will have a scientific Ethics based upon a worldview of hu- man ¬ relations and Interdepelence and then we will also have liberty OIl know full well that these last generalizations will mean little to the unenlightened mob but to adequately iljucidate them will take more space than is here available However I am hoping that some of those who do not understand may be induced to go in quest for light To such let mo say you will not got this kind of light In popular magazines or churches The intellectual foodsupply therein offered for sale Is adjusted to the greatest ad- vertisers ¬ market demand That Is It Is prepared to meet the mental require ¬ ments of the least enlightened minds that buy printed matter at all Pic- tures ¬ headlines fiction and twaddle that stir tho emotions and moral sen- timentalism of the mob are the only matters that popular periodicals are able to dispense profitably If you get the tm light at all yoithave got to work for it among the materials found mainly in he scientific and radical that Is unpopular publications MARXIAN CLUB SOCIALISTS f Continued from Page Two lldly fulfill its educational purposes with a small membership Its vitality does not depend upon numbers but rests upon the soundness of Its mem- bership ¬ Herein lies the secret so In ¬ comprehensible to many peopleof the extraordinary vitality of the Socialist Labor Party in spite of the smallness of its P01fUcalsocletr preBupposes even If It does not wholly guarantee to Its citizens tho right to agitate for changes within Itself Yes even by the precedent of the Declaration of Independence and the American Rev- olution ¬ to agitate for its overthrow It is by political agitation therefore that we must and can reach the masses But that Socialist party doqs not deserve the name that carries on this agitation with sensational and bombastic phraseology and that de ¬ pends on this to arouse momentary en- thusiasm ¬ to catch voters only That it Is poor stuff even to catch voters with was certainly proven at the last elec- tion ¬ But in stages of extremity in a country It may arouse popular anger and outbreaks rebellion but such movements are not revolutionary and if they ever become so it is only after years of protracted and disastrous struggle The Paris Commune and the rebellions in various parts of Russia of late are examples of such outbreak of spontaneous auger without the knowledge or power to carry them to a successful Issue The true revolu- tionist ¬ of today must be a political agi ¬ tator But every effort in his political agitation must be In the direction of educating the workers to come togeth- er ¬ In an economic Industrial organiza- tion ¬ through which they can take and hold the means of production The da that enough workers have mowledgo- enough to form and maintain such an organization they will not waste their time debating question whothter the strike and boycott are the proper weapons by which to get something now They will make but one strike the strike atthie polls that abolishes capitalism and only one boycott the boycott of the capitalists profits Tho masses must incline towards Socialism before It is possible to ac- complish ¬ the revolution but he who Is not stand with an in slgnlflciint minority almost to Its lay of triumph may as woll at once aban ¬ don the Standard The champions of truth and justice have over been in the small minority Of all the people that fas ¬ ten upon the movement the most com ¬ ical are they who attempt with mathe ¬ matical precision to figure out the day of the advent of the Cooperative Commonwealth Say they There are as many Socialists next year four times day There are so ninny people Ev ¬ cry Socialist surely can make a So ¬ cialist a year That will make twlco a many Socialists next year four times asmany the following year and eight times as many tho year after etc At this ratio all the people will be Social ¬ ists in the year nineteen hundred and so and so To convert one Socialist a year might seem rcasonablv small enough as the result of any Socialists efforts but no revolutionary move ¬ ment ever progresses according to such mathematical rules It Is ever a fact that only a fov people at any time can see much furtherthan the entire mass Theo will have to stand prac Ucally alone us teachers and agitators till tim day the mass Is ready to move They are the laborers on the revolu Held The Socialist agitator has to hold up to the masses the mir ¬ ror of ther own Ignorance slavlshncss i misery and lack of class conscious ness to show the abuses of the capi talist system aud the uselessness of the capitalist class That Is the manner In which the revolutionary Heldis plowi cd and harrowed end prepared Then l scatters his seed That Is done by means constructive speeches and literature that teaches the Socialist and points out the mothods of classconscious organization These seeds have to take root and grow and ripen They do so not a few at the tIme or hy mathematical ration But during a long season of dark anti dreary days they lie entIrely hidden In the As Ii takes rain and sun- shine for seed to sprout so It Is only the workings of the capitalist system that demonstrate times out of number tho truth of the Socialists teachings thnt will make the revolutionary seed sprout In the workers minds When It has grown and ripened and if the Socialist educator has done his work well and allowed no weeds to strike root the harvest will be glorious anti the fruit will be the Socialist Repub- lic ¬ I Wo have addressed those lines to all American revolutionists because we recognize that will all the odds that are against the Socialist movement this time lit Is necessary for all true revolutionists to make attempts to recognize each other to reach a better understanding and to draw closer to- gether ¬ We recognize too that no party bonds confine the revolutionists at this time Attempts have been made towards unity But no number of reso- lutions ¬ is going to draw those together whom principles and tactics separate Conversely do we hold that no party names or stupid prejudices are going- In the long run to keep those apart whom principles and tactics and knowl ¬ edge unite If the revolutionists fairly and face the present situa ¬ tion without Indulging in false hopes or dreaming of victories that cannot- be accomplished they will far sooner learn to understand themselves and the movement They will then learn as easily to recognize each other as to scent the foe that fastens upon the movement It Is the supreme duty of the revolutionists In this hour to recog¬ nize each other and draw their forces Into close contact We hope that you will give these lines your most serious consideration- We hope you will realize that at this stage of the movement It is as crim- inal ¬ to become a laggard as to remain- an uninformed sentimentalist We hope you will weigh and consider the merits of the movement and realize that It Is worth the best that is in you and that the best is none too good for the greatest movement of all ages We remain yours for a speedy vic- tory of the American Socialist Revo- lution ¬ C A JOHNSON OLIVE M JOHNSON Frultvale Califor- niaPINGREEKLLER MEATS AND GROCERIES Cheap seedsNow Is your time to get them Stratagem peas S cts per lb Alaska peas S cts Wo trade you seeds for farm prqducts Bring In your eggs butter potatoes wheat chickens etc JOB PINGREE Mgr 2616 Washington avenue BOYS EXASPERATE CHINESE GARDENER Ah Wing a Chinese gardner of Thir- tieth ¬ St and Grant Ave made things rather lively for a crowd of boys who the Chinaman claims have been both ¬ ering him a good deal of late Tho Celestial according to his statement made up his mind last evening that ho would give the lads a good scare so securing a revolver which by the way was not loaded he presented himself to the lads in a fierce and fighting at- titude ¬ It had the desired effect the boys becameJverj much frightened and ran away in a very great hurry The re- sult ¬ of the escapade was that Wing was arrested exhibiting a deadly weapon It Is surmised however that as soon as the fads are known the man of the Orient will not be prosecut- ed ¬ A Simple Prescription For the Hair- In the good old days our mqthora used to tell us to use garden sage for dandruff and falling hair A sim- ple ¬ infusion was made of the common garden sago and applied to the roots of the hair This old time remedy Is still used in many sections of tho coun- try ¬ to this day It has also been dis- covered that the Indians ot the north- west ¬ used to make a brew or tea ol tho wild sage sage brush and ap- ply It for all scalp affections White people also used this sage Brush tea with good results A careful study has been made of tho different kin Is- ot sage and It has been found that the wild sage or sage brush contains much more of this certain curative property than does the tamo sage The reason lor this Is apparent Time wild sage growing as It doer In a soil rich in sulphur and volcanic ash nat- urally ¬ contains much more medicinal matter One of the main objections to tne use of these crute preparations es- pecially ¬ so of tho wild sage was tli disagreeable odor of tho brush This objection has been overcome after three years of careful experimenting m a laboratory especially fitted for tho purpose so that you can now pro- cure a preparation free from all the disagreeable odors but still containing all the active principles of the wild sage This preparation Is guaranteed to cure dandruff and stop falling hair and will do so If directions are care fully followed Ask for Sage Brush Hair Tonic For rnlc at all the leading Drug Stores and Barber Shops In this city PATROL SERGEANT MAKES 258 ARRESTS IN ONE YEAR Chicago April 12Two hundred and fiftyeight arrests in one year dur ¬ ing which fines amounting to 019 were Imposed Is the record made by Patrol Sergeant James McCann Pour of those whom he took into custody were charged with murder two with burglary five assault with deadly weapons and the remainder with violations of city ordinances Property recovered by McCann amount ¬ ed to SG3S iP HEADQUARTERS j FOR SPRING SUITS CHURCHES OF OfiBEN e OBSERVE EASTER Special Services in Tabernacle and Various Wards Masonic Temple Catholic Episcopal and all Other Churches Largely Attended In Spite of Inclement Weather Elaborate Programs Greatly Appreciated by Great Audiences Through ¬ out the City I Easter Sunday was duly observed by all the churches of the city in the rca dftlon of appropriate and Interesting programs Special services were hold in all the wards of the three stakes of the Latter Da Saints church special musical programs being the distin- guishing ¬ features While the weather was inclement the attendance at the I various meetings was unusually largo and the people were amply entertained- and instructed In religious matters The general meeting at the Mormon church which was held at the Ogden tabernacle was largely attended tho speakers at the services being Apostle Heber J Grant who confined his re- marks ¬ to doctrinal affairs and In the exhortation of the saints to follow tho teachings of the Bible and the Book of Mormon regarding the things of life He urged the people to become more exemplary In their daily walks of life urging diligence in the exercise of their duties along moral lines Apostle Grant calle attention to the fact that the missionaries called to preach tho gospel invariably return home with stronger testimonies than they had had when they left home and that the work of the ministry abroad has a ten dency to broaden them and cultivate- in them the spirit of the gospel The tabernacle choir rendered a beautiful Easter program- At tho Farr West ward reorganiza- tion ¬ services were held at which Apos ties Hyrum M Smith and George F Richards together with the North We- ber ¬ stake presidency wqre In atten- dance ¬ and conducted the meeting rhe old bishopric consisting of DIsh on James Martin and Counsellors Jacob Thomas and Joseph Stophenson was honorably released from duty and the following persons were chosen to fill the vacancy Moroni ChugS bishop Joseph Stephenson first counsellor and H D Brown sec- ond ¬ counsellor The meeting was well attended and the ward choir furnished MANY WERE A EATER r SERVICEBEA- UTIFUL MUSIC AT PRESBYTE- RIAN ¬ CHURCH p J4 Decorations a Delightful FeatureIn ¬ clement WeatherKept but Few From Hearing the Message- The Easter services In the First Presl > 3terlan church were marked by the high standard ofthe musical nuin hers given Each oner of those taking part were at their best and as time selections given were from the works of the standard composers the services will be remembered aS among the very best ever given In Ogden at any relig ¬ lOllS service The attendance was in spite of the Inclement weather very large at each service Too much credit cannot be given to Miss Ger- trude ¬ E BIddle who by her sympa- thetic ¬ work as accompanist at these services aided greatly In the Inter- pretation ¬ of the uumbersnnd as soloist did work of great merltA Much credit also Is due to Miss Mitchell whose skill at each service In leading the hymns and responses ad- ded ¬ much to time three services Miss Mitchell also ably rendered Gounods Oh Divine Redeemer at the morning service and Chouchiss Golgotha at the evening service both roost difficult which drew many words of warm I praise Mr Saunders was at his best In the three tenor solos Johnsons Just for Today Graniers Hosan nah and Ambroses One Sweetly Solemn Thought This latter number especially called forth much commen ¬ dation He not only has a voice of much sweetness aud sympathy but also uses It In a truly artistic manner Mrs Stevenson who has a rich mezzo soprano voice sang most beautifully Parkers Jerusalem Miss Belnap I had a song perfectly adapted to her lyric soprano voice in Jocobys Oh I Lamb of God and sang it with tell- ing ¬ effect Miss HoLberg who Is a new singer In Ogdens musical circles sang Allitjsens The Lord is My Light Miss Holberg has a well trained voice of much richness Miss Mae Conroy is wok known as an Og den singer and in interpreting Topllffs Consider the Lilies did it excellently- Miss Geddes who has hi tho past few months made an enviable place in Ogden musical circles sang Callest Thou Thus Oh Masterby Mctzke with much feeling and power Mr Anderson sang Mozarts Who Treads the Path of Duty which Is BO well suited to his voice Much Is al- ways ¬ expected of him and today he was at his best Mrs Clark and Mrs found in Mendelssohns Oh Risen Christ a duet perfectly adapt- ed ¬ to bring out the rich power and feel- Ing of their voices Especial mention should be made of the work of the mixed quartette composed of Miss Mitchell Mrs Stevens Mr Saunders Mr Anderson which added much to the services Mrs Stevens and Miss Mitchell rendered Smarts duet The Lord Is My Shepherd It was one of tIme best numbora on the program Mr Dent Mower greatly enriched the afternoon services b a cello solo Brogas Angels Serenade Mr Zie mer and Miss Hamlll each rendered a violin solo at the evening service In an artistic manner Seldom if ever have so many of the loading musicians of Ogden been drawn together In a religious program TIme church was profusely decorated with llllfs carnations and daffodils- Rev Carvor gave an Easter message at each service YOUNG WOMAN IS BITTEN- BY FEROCIOUS BULLDOG 2 Now York ApriIl2Miss Gabriel de LattHignaut will go to the Pasteur some fine musical numbers The Ogden stake priesthood conven- ed ¬ In the Weber Stake academy and attended to the educational work at hand a like meeting of the Weber Stake priesthood being held in tho second ward meeting house Both meetings were well attended I The Methodist church was filled I with people at the Easter services given there luring the morning and evening Special music was given by the regular choir under the direction of Chorister H J Ware The church was beautifully decorated with potted plants and cut flowers un der the direction of Miss Florence fetnnett of tho school for the blind The subject of discourse by the Rev G W McCrecry at the morning serA vice was Practical Bearings of the Resurrection- The evening service was brief but a splendid musical program was given The congregation was one of the largest ever assembled In the church under the present pastorate- The Knights Templar services at the Masonic Temple were very beautiful and Impressive and they were largely attended h members of the order and time general public The services I were those given by the El Monte I Commandery No2 and were hold at 3 oclock p m At 2ao oclock the Sir Knights marched in a body in full Tem- plar ¬ uniform from the Masonic Tem- ple ¬ along Washington avenue to Twen ¬ tythird street countermarching from there along Washington avenu to Twentysixth street to the home of J H Epperson the representative of the grand master e was escorted to the Temple building and Into the asylum where the arrang- ed ¬ program was rendered The Rev W W Fleetwood of the Episcopal church delivered the address and the musical numbers given under the direction of Mrs F N Hess were a most beautiful feature of the service Institute for treatment today after having been badly bitten list night by a ferocious bulldog She was walk- Ing along the street leading a spaniel when the bulldog dashed at her The animal knocked her down and she lost consciousness Willie prostrate the dog siiod her hand in Its teeth and se- verely ¬ lacerated it then tried to reach her throat An examination of time animal by a physician of tIm board of health showed no signs of rabies but as a precaution the victim decided to undergo the Pasteur treatment Hair Removers Are Dang rous II MIN NG NEWS I TELLS OF NEW I HUMBOLDT CAMP Reno Man Has Praise For Happy Creek District I Happy Creek district in the Jackson mountains Humboldt county is one of the latest sections to attract attention in a mining way Time route is via Winnemucca and lies about 75 miles north by tIme olel QuInn river road s The new gold camp Is in the vicin- ity ¬ of Bluff pealc a wellknown land- mark ¬ Time discoveries were made late last fall and already are developing splendidly Judge Callahan who just returned from the district states that there is an extensive mineralized zone upon which some good values have been obtained from widely separated points The two principal groups are owned by the United Exploration company of Oakland and a Mr Bead- le representing Chicago capitalists A new townsite called Jackson will- I shortly bo started As yet there has I been no rush to the new diggings but I it is expected that as soon as the word of the excellent prospects gets noised about there will be an ok time advance of the old guard of pros- pectors I The values are all gold In quartz veins arid all pan well There are in the higher buttes of the Jackson range several outcropplngs showing good values In copper These veins however have not been opened up sufficiently to determine their extent of performance Reno Gazette MAKING BIG MINE ON KRAMER HILL Salt Lake Man Opens 20 Feet of Mill Ore at Depth I Kramer hill which is only two miles south of the depot at Golconda Nev- is a busy part of the Golconda district according to Attorney J A Langwith with the promise that large mines of gold milling ore will be opened there A P S Mac Qucstcn of Salt Lake has a large force of men at work pen- etrating the hill with tunnels and a deep shaft said Mr Langwith A ledge 20 feet wide was struck a few days ago In tho long tunnel and time ore in this big vein will all pay to mill time values being mostly in gold The tunnel was started at the foot of tho mountain and the finding of I this large body of ore proves that the mmense structure that was cut by leasers on top of the hill goes to great depth The ml has been operated steadily ever Mr MacQuostcn acquired control of time property several months ago and regular shipments of bullion have been made to the mint The first lot of ore milled comprised GOO tons taken out by leasers from shafts sunk- on the vein Since work was started ore has been encountered In the two tunnels which are being driven into the lull from points 1000 feet apart besides which arc the large ore reserves dis ¬ closed In the two shafts The hoist has been started on the deeper shaf which is being pushed connect with tunIlI When this connection is ore will I b all taken out from tho tunnel lew1 In the Adelaide portion of trict In what is commonly known as Gold Run basin much activity Is shown A Slescnop who has been do- Ing extensive development on his Gor- truile I claim has a big showing of ga I leua ore I Is cetimatoi hat 20000 of ore Is in sight and tho greater I part of It IB of shipping grade Tho Nevada Central company has a large i force of minors and has just shipped I two carloads of to a Salt Lake smelter 019 I The Chagnon Case property at Stono Corral ten miles south of Gel I conda which created considerable ex- citement ¬ at the time of its dl3coverv- Jl proving valuable A uhaff Iowa 4S feet shows the ledge to be of good size and apparently permanent The ore is rich In gold and silver it is not uncommon to ace on tho dump chunks that show free gold TIme property Is about to be sold to Gold field people Leases on the ground have been applied lot but on account- of the prospective none has been granted I Torturing eczeI1 spreads Us burn- Ing area Doans Ointment quickly stops Its spreading instantly relieves the Itching cures It per- manently ¬ At any drug store JOSEPH JONES CLOSE FRIEND- OF LINCOLN AND GRANT Chicago April l2Thc death of Jo- seph Russell Jones pioneer tIctiJ magnate and diplomat anecdotes Illustrating his confidential relations with Lincoln andGrant who held him In high esteem When General Qrant was first talk- ed ¬ of for the presidency Lincoln tele- graphed ¬ to Mr Jones asking If he could tell him whether Grant wanted- to bo president Certainly not said Mr Jones who at once reported to Lincoln He would not take the office If It were offered him So far from being a candidate himself I know him to be earnestly In favor of your reelection Mr Lincolns countenance relaxed and he said My friend you dont know how gratifying that Is to me No man can over tell how deep that presidential grub grows till he has had it him- self One of the things I remember- said Robert T Lincoln that nlwavs struck me as a splendid example of Mr Jones simplicity was the fact after he became bald he wore a UIat which as he used to explain was not for the purpose of ampllfyln Ills personal beauty but to keep the flies off his head It Is a little thing and seems oven trivial perhaps nov that he is dead but his frank delight at circumventing the plague of Hies with- a false head of hair illustrates as well afe anything 1 know how unaffected and lovable he was His eUlI wit always marIe him a favorite wherever he was known said General Frederick D Grant I re ¬ member that once when he and my father were driving behind a very fast team was overturned Next tbchuggc Mr Jones came down i to breakfast ho was so lame ho could hardly move When we asked if ho was hurt he said with a twinkling eve that was belled by his painwreathe features Well you know when the whole I of 115 poundsfalls a bucy go Ing thirty miles an hour aui hits on the ground something is apt to give way MURDER AND SUICIDE I RESULT OF GAME OF CARDS I Chicago April 12 Joseph Heels a i roomer for 20 years at the home of H Hesterman was shot to death early this morning by Hesterman who a I moment latol committed suicide The men were the best of friends j had been playing cards and the quar1- iol arose It is supposed over the game j Hesterman who was Cl years old se I cured a revolver and fired a shot j penetrated Hecks heart He then sent a bullet crashing into his own brain causing instant death Peter Hesterman son of tho sui- cide ¬ was awakened by theshots and running to time room found both men dead The cards were scattered about time table The young man declared lie heard no argument WEDDING GIFT TO DAUGHTER- IS 1000000 MANSION I Pittsburg Pa Apri l LWilam N Frew the i sentative of Andrew Carnegie In PiUs burg is building a mansion as a wed ¬ ding present to his laughter Vir- ginia ¬ I Frew whose engagement to Thurston Wright a young bank clerk I announced formerly orSl Louis has just been Tho house will cost II Is estimated about 1000000 This brings about the report that wealthy Pittsburg res- idents ¬ having noted that a number of rich young people have deserted this city to live In New York have enter I eu into sonic sort of an agreement to I erect houses for their children as they marry also offering thorn other Induce i meats to remain in Pittsburg One of tho first to take up this Idea was I I I The beauty of the colorings1 variety in designs and diversity of fabr in mens suits in ou th Spring it easy for our seen to please customers- If you want a striking pat tern to wear occasionally or a I quiet suit for daily use or an expensive outfit for special oc- casions ¬ or a lowprcd dur ¬ able hard its here prices from 10 to 40 I Tell Everybody N I KUHN Modern Clothe I SHOP Washington Avenuo at 2365 c O 20 PER CENT REOUCT10N Monuments and Hocdstonea f MITCHELL BROS- dont pay commIssIons to agent but nee ua Yard opposite City Cemetery Mrs Harry Darlington Another big house has been constructed for Mrs Hubert Laughlin who was Miss Mar- jorie Rea of Pittsburg CHAPLAIN DENOUNCES MORALS IN THE ARMY Walla Walla Wash April 12In a philippic delivered to members of the fourteenth United States cavalrv Chaplain Joyce denounced the morals existing in the armj and CUlled for legislative action by the national go- cmment making religious Instruction compulsory among soldiers and fix Ing sonic means whereby credit for attendance on divine service would lie given The philippic has created a great sensation among soldiers at Fort Walla Walla Chaplain Joyce charged that with no regulations to force the soldier to attend divine service athlesm scepti ¬ cism and agnosticism through- out ¬ the frank and tHe Continuing ho saidI speak in appeal for the dignity of the trumpet blast that sounds time for- lorn ¬ church calls In appeal for somo legislation whoso Inducements may lead the enlisted man towards God Would that our legislators couM realize that present conditions take off the tarif In hell upon a soldiers soul God that every man In this army could keep In his mind a pic- ture of the apostate Julian who whey dying upon the field of battle a handful of his blood towards heaven and uttered the famous blasphemy Thou hast conquered 0 Gallllean the sort of death that every regular I should lament because he wears a uni ¬ form made sacred by the genius tho patriotism the faith of Washington IMPROVEMENTS ON THE- WIRELESS TELEPHONE- Paris I r April 12Navnl Lieutenants f Golan and Jeance the inventors oft l wireless telephone apparatus with which succeeded last fall In com municating with Dieppe from Pars I have a new and improved Conversations were exchanged wih- Ielun thirty miles away and I sun is declared to be a vast Improv- ement on that attained by the ordinary telephone The sound was clearer and t purer I W c= L i I I I A Modernists b From Ocean Park tf UE Father who art in e tt m Heaven hallowed be Thy f Name Thy Kingdom 4 come Will be done II 1 in earth a in Heaven Give us day by k1 day our daily bread like unto the tf q Ripples Lead U not into tempta ¬ r 4 tion or deep water far from shore De ¬ 4 liver us from evil practices and prac i ticioners forgive us we f ou debt a t pray for our creditors we fail iA in life wilt Thou restore them twofold for Thine it is t exalt unto glory do- minion ¬ tt and power whomsoever Thou 4- t wilt in Thy kingdom forevermore Amen tf t Wej 1 4a1 Cl

The Ogden Standard. (Ogden, Utah) 1909-04-12 [p 8].€¦ · I THE STAHTDAllD OGDEN UTAH MONDAY APRIL 12 190t I SCDROEDEREDITOR OF LUCIFERS LANTERN Visits Ogden and Expresses Himself

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Page 1: The Ogden Standard. (Ogden, Utah) 1909-04-12 [p 8].€¦ · I THE STAHTDAllD OGDEN UTAH MONDAY APRIL 12 190t I SCDROEDEREDITOR OF LUCIFERS LANTERN Visits Ogden and Expresses Himself

I

THE STAHTDAllD OGDEN UTAH MONDAY APRIL 12 190tI

SCDROEDEREDITOR

OF LUCIFERS LANTERN

Visits Ogden and Expresses Himself on Prohibition WomansSuffrage and Other Subjects What Cannot Be Cured by

Lsw Virtues That Must Come by EducationI Utah Women Not Emancipated

IS

I

Theodore Schrocdcr editor of LuciIfoi b i is visiting In Utnn

and Is enjoying Ogdens Eastertidehas pronounced views on runny sub-

jects

¬

Including prohibition and wom ¬

ans suffrage and in an InterviewI accorded a representative of this pa ¬

per declared UJmself as followsI notice during my present visit In

Utah that the dominant subjpct of

political discussion has been changed-

to the prohibition question Here asIn most other matters I entertainopinions which are not discredited by

having achieved any great popular ap-

proval

¬

and may be I can best entertainYOur readers by expressing some opin ¬

ions revived by my recent observations-here

iTo begin with I should say that forI have not smokedover twenty years

five times during most of the sameperiod I have been a total abstainerfrom alcoholic beverages anti duringnil of It I have not averaged five oc-

casions

¬

per annum when I hav r in ¬

dulged In intoxicants I attendedchurches Just about the same numberot times that I have gone to saloonsand derived from each abQut the sameamount of good to wit none at allIn theo particulars therefore I es-

teem myself an Ideal temperance manthough I am not now nor have I everbeen a prohibitionist The only thinswhich makes me suspicious of the cor ¬

rectness of my opinions in this lattermatter is time report that I am in seem-

ing¬

harmonyVlth Senator Smoot andJoseph F Smith Perhaps the har-

mony Is only in time seeming and willdisappear when I come to consider thoincidentals and the reasons for bur respective convictions-

In my view drunkenness is a meresymptom of social or personal diseaseand you Ijayent cured the diseasewhen you suppress the manifestation-of some particular symptom Badnerves and wrong social and economicconditions will manifest themselvesIn disorder as a matter of immutablenatural law and In spile of manmaderegulations Moralization by force has

a been tried for thousands of years andIts friends by constantly complaining-that the humanity is getting worseand that always more and more lawsarc necessary unconsciously but elo-

quently¬

admit the failure of tills meth-od

¬

of reform I believe that humanity-II growing slowly better not by thopassage of penal statutes but by virtue-of

I

the slow process of intellectual evo-

lution¬

which usually operates againstand In spite of law and religion Ex ¬

cept in the matter of morals the theo-logian

¬

has been vanquished In everyencounter with the naturalist Ethics-Is one of the last subjects to becomea matter for the application of thescientific method The conflict betweenscience and religious morality is amatter of the near future Thou moral I

sentimentalism will have to give wayto a conception of moral natural lawJust as the Garden of Eden was abolish-ed

¬

b the discovery of the law of eol-ullon

¬

Conduct will then be judgednot according to the all9ged mandatesT f any holy spooks or prophets seersor revelators but according to ascer-tained

¬

and material consequences Theibsolute morality of an enlightenedjelflnterest the theologasterswill have no occupation except to enterjaln and restrain by spooktales-those unfortunate imbeciles who can-not

¬I

achieve the scientists conception I

of morals The hospital will supplant I

the Jail and moralization by force willlie the shame of the past when thephysician and surgeon replace the Jail-or

¬I

Furthermore I am unable to seeIanything Immoral in drinking or smok-

ing¬

as such and even though it be in-

dulged¬

in by women I have manyvalued women friends who do bothPersonally I find more pleasure inspending my time and money In otherways but I cannot and would not IfI could use the coercion of the law to I

make thee appetites of all people likemy own This leads mo to commenton the fact that must people with

I

whom I converse seem to think theres borne great and mysterious virtue in I

including women from saloonsri canagree to this Every woman has

the same right to go to a saloon thatI have and It seems to me that onlymoral sentimentalizing and a stupidcowardice would Induce a denial ofthat equality of right Good and badwomen and good and bad men are per-mitted

¬I

to breathe tho same air enjoythe same sunshine listen to the same11111 sermons and receive therefrom I

the same Intellectual stupefaction I j

think they should also be accorded an I

equal right to paralyze their brain bybooze as well as by spooks fo denyan equality of right to sane adult hu-mans

¬

and tn admit the cxistance of apower that can destroy such equalityvf right merely on account of sex Is

I

Itself greater wrong and social dan-ger

¬

than any It can correct In New I

York the courts have declared uncon-stitutional

¬

a law which sought to estabI

IIsh arbitrary discriminations accord ¬ f

ing to sex-When I remember that this Is an

I

equal suffrage state It is a little illsappointing that no woman has arisen I

with the clarity of vision and moral I

courage to Insist upon the legal equal ¬I

ity of the sexes even In the matter ofgoing wrong The absence of such aprotest amounts to a demonstrationthat even with womans suffrage noone believes In equality under the law-is a matter of principle but on the

DIl PIHCE I

WHEAT FLAKE OEL-ERTFOOD

I

fc a perfect food as it contains theI

most essential elements toply energy for the performance1-tof the various body functionsIts daily use tends to strengthenand regulate the bowels

III

fir gate by all Groorn-

r4ioc

i

hcontrary that nearly every one Isdominated by an unreasoning moralsentImentalIsm and oven votingwomen willingly submit to tho legalestablishment of a dual code of morals

I

I the heritage of our past female slavej virtues originating under a code es-

tablished¬

oor 500 years ago whenChristian asceticism had reduced thewife to a chattel slave who could bemortgaged and beaten like any otherof her husbands cattle Equality ofpolitical opportunity does not seemto have emancipated Utah women fromwilling submission to a malemadeunequal moral code There Is thesnme old submission to the slavevir¬

tao established solely for her by themale who furnishes the mealticket It

I takes more than mere votlngto estab-lish

¬

female equality either before thelaw or In Social life The slave mind

I cannot bo made to think as a masterI

merely by passing a suffrage law Asa human thlnketh so it is for that hu-

man¬

I

A slavemind cannot produceI

Independent equality In conduct-I There will be no emancipated woman

or emancipated humans so long as weadhere to the little 2x4 virtues basedupon tho circumscribed view of a serfwho knows little or nothing of his relations to the outside of the littlefence that bounds the acreage of hisservitude or so long as we are doml

j nated by tho morality of diseasednerves and class distinctions and gov-

erned¬

b the paternal legislation or-

hsterleS and office seeking scrubsBut some day we will have a scientificEthics based upon a worldview of hu-

man¬

relations and Interdepelenceand then we will also have liberty

OIl know full well that these lastgeneralizations will mean little to theunenlightened mob but to adequatelyiljucidate them will take more spacethan is here available However I amhoping that some of those who do notunderstand may be induced to go inquest for light To such let mo sayyou will not got this kind of light Inpopular magazines or churches Theintellectual foodsupply therein offeredfor sale Is adjusted to the greatest ad-

vertisers¬

market demand That Is ItIs prepared to meet the mental require ¬

ments of the least enlightened mindsthat buy printed matter at all Pic-tures

¬

headlines fiction and twaddlethat stir tho emotions and moral sen-timentalism of the mob are the onlymatters that popular periodicals areable to dispense profitably If you getthe tm light at all yoithave got towork for it among the materials foundmainly in he scientific and radicalthat Is unpopular publications

MARXIAN CLUB SOCIALISTSf

Continued from Page Two

lldly fulfill its educational purposeswith a small membership Its vitalitydoes not depend upon numbers butrests upon the soundness of Its mem-bership

¬

Herein lies the secret so In ¬

comprehensible to many peopleof theextraordinary vitality of the SocialistLabor Party in spite of the smallnessof its

P01fUcalsocletr preBupposes evenIf It does not wholly guarantee to Itscitizens tho right to agitate forchanges within Itself Yes even bythe precedent of the Declaration ofIndependence and the American Rev-olution

¬

to agitate for its overthrow Itis by political agitation therefore thatwe must and can reach the massesBut that Socialist party doqs notdeserve the name that carrieson this agitation with sensational andbombastic phraseology and that de ¬

pends on this to arouse momentary en-thusiasm

¬

to catch voters only That itIs poor stuff even to catch voters withwas certainly proven at the last elec-tion

¬

But in stages of extremity in acountry It may arouse popular angerand outbreaks rebellion but suchmovements are not revolutionary andif they ever become so it is only afteryears of protracted and disastrousstruggle The Paris Commune and therebellions in various parts of Russiaof late are examples of such outbreakof spontaneous auger without theknowledge or power to carry them toa successful Issue The true revolu-tionist

¬

of today must be a political agi ¬

tator But every effort in his politicalagitation must be In the direction ofeducating the workers to come togeth-er

¬

In an economic Industrial organiza-tion

¬

through which they can take andhold the means of production The dathat enough workers have mowledgo-enough to form and maintain such anorganization they will not waste theirtime debating question whothterthe strike and boycott are the properweapons by which to get somethingnow They will make but one strikethe strike atthie polls that abolishescapitalism and only one boycott theboycott of the capitalists profits

Tho masses must incline towardsSocialism before It is possible to ac-complish

¬

the revolution but he whoIs not stand with an inslgnlflciint minority almost to Its layof triumph may as woll at once aban ¬

don the Standard The champions oftruth and justice have over been inthe small minority

Of all the people that fas ¬

ten upon the movement the most com ¬

ical are they who attempt with mathe ¬

matical precision to figure out theday of the advent of the CooperativeCommonwealth Say they There areas many Socialists next year four timesday There are so ninny people Ev ¬

cry Socialist surely can make a So¬cialist a year That will make twlcoa many Socialists next year four timesasmany the following year and eighttimes as many tho year after etc Atthis ratio all the people will be Social ¬ists in the year nineteen hundred andso and so To convert one Socialista year might seem rcasonablv smallenough as the result of any Socialistsefforts but no revolutionary move ¬

ment ever progresses according tosuch mathematical rules It Is ever afact that only a fov people at any timecan see much furtherthan the entiremass Theo will have to stand pracUcally alone us teachers and agitatorstill tim day the mass Is ready to moveThey are the laborers on the revoluHeld The Socialist agitatorhas to hold up to the masses the mir¬ror of ther own Ignorance slavlshncss imisery and lack of class consciousness to show the abuses of the capitalist system aud the uselessness of the

capitalist class That Is the mannerIn which the revolutionary Heldis plowicd and harrowed end prepared Thenl scatters his seed That Is done bymeans constructive speeches andliterature that teaches the Socialist

and points out the mothodsof classconscious organization Theseseeds have to take root and grow andripen They do so not a few at thetIme or hy mathematical ration Butduring a long season of dark antidreary days they lie entIrely hidden Inthe As Ii takes rain and sun-

shine for seed to sprout so It Is onlythe workings of the capitalist systemthat demonstrate times out of numbertho truth of the Socialists teachingsthnt will make the revolutionary seedsprout In the workers minds WhenIt has grown and ripened and if theSocialist educator has done his workwell and allowed no weeds to strikeroot the harvest will be glorious antithe fruit will be the Socialist Repub-lic

¬

I

Wo have addressed those lines to allAmerican revolutionists because werecognize that will all the odds thatare against the Socialist movementthis time lit Is necessary for all truerevolutionists to make attempts torecognize each other to reach a betterunderstanding and to draw closer to-

gether¬

We recognize too that noparty bonds confine the revolutionistsat this time Attempts have been madetowards unity But no number of reso-lutions

¬

is going to draw those togetherwhom principles and tactics separateConversely do we hold that no partynames or stupid prejudices are going-In the long run to keep those apartwhom principles and tactics and knowl ¬

edge unite If the revolutionists fairlyand face the present situa ¬

tion without Indulging in false hopesor dreaming of victories that cannot-be accomplished they will far soonerlearn to understand themselves andthe movement They will then learnas easily to recognize each other as toscent the foe that fastens upon themovement It Is the supreme duty ofthe revolutionists In this hour to recog¬

nize each other and draw their forcesInto close contact

We hope that you will give theselines your most serious consideration-We hope you will realize that at thisstage of the movement It is as crim-inal

¬to become a laggard as to remain-

an uninformed sentimentalist Wehope you will weigh and consider themerits of the movement and realizethat It Is worth the best that is in youand that the best is none too good forthe greatest movement of all ages

We remain yours for a speedy vic-

tory of the American Socialist Revo-lution

¬

C A JOHNSONOLIVE M JOHNSON

Frultvale Califor-

niaPINGREEKLLER

MEATS AND GROCERIES

Cheap seedsNow Is your time toget them Stratagem peas S cts perlb Alaska peas S cts Wo trade youseeds for farm prqducts Bring Inyour eggs butter potatoes wheatchickens etc

JOB PINGREE Mgr2616 Washington avenue

BOYS EXASPERATE

CHINESE GARDENER

Ah Wing a Chinese gardner of Thir-tieth

¬

St and Grant Ave made thingsrather lively for a crowd of boys whothe Chinaman claims have been both ¬

ering him a good deal of late ThoCelestial according to his statementmade up his mind last evening that howould give the lads a good scare sosecuring a revolver which by the waywas not loaded he presented himselfto the lads in a fierce and fighting at-

titude¬

It had the desired effect the boysbecameJverj much frightened and ranaway in a very great hurry The re-

sult¬

of the escapade was that Wingwas arrested exhibiting a deadlyweapon It Is surmised however thatas soon as the fads are known theman of the Orient will not be prosecut-ed

¬

A Simple Prescription For theHair-

In the good old days our mqthoraused to tell us to use garden sagefor dandruff and falling hair A sim-ple

¬

infusion was made of the commongarden sago and applied to the rootsof the hair This old time remedy Isstill used in many sections of tho coun-try

¬

to this day It has also been dis-covered that the Indians ot the north-west

¬

used to make a brew or teaol tho wild sage sage brush and ap-ply It for all scalp affections Whitepeople also used this sage Brush teawith good results A careful studyhas been made of tho different kin Is-ot sage and It has been found thatthe wild sage or sage brush containsmuch more of this certain curativeproperty than does the tamo sageThe reason lor this Is apparent Timewild sage growing as It doer In a soilrich in sulphur and volcanic ash nat-urally

¬

contains much more medicinalmatter

One of the main objections to tneuse of these crute preparations es-pecially

¬

so of tho wild sage was tlidisagreeable odor of tho brush Thisobjection has been overcome afterthree years of careful experimentingm a laboratory especially fitted fortho purpose so that you can now pro-cure a preparation free from all thedisagreeable odors but still containingall the active principles of the wildsage This preparation Is guaranteedto cure dandruff and stop falling hairand will do so If directions are carefully followed

Ask for Sage Brush Hair Tonic Forrnlc at all the leading Drug Storesand Barber Shops In this city

PATROL SERGEANT MAKES258 ARRESTS IN ONE YEAR

Chicago April 12Two hundredand fiftyeight arrests in one year dur¬

ing which fines amounting to 019were Imposed Is the record made byPatrol Sergeant James McCann

Pour of those whom he took intocustody were charged with murdertwo with burglary five assault withdeadly weapons and the remainderwith violations of city ordinancesProperty recovered by McCann amount ¬

ed to SG3S

iPHEADQUARTERS jFOR SPRING SUITS

CHURCHES OF OfiBEN

e

OBSERVE EASTER

Special Services in Tabernacle and Various Wards Masonic TempleCatholic Episcopal and all Other Churches Largely Attended

In Spite of Inclement Weather Elaborate ProgramsGreatly Appreciated by Great Audiences Through ¬

out the CityI

Easter Sunday was duly observed byall the churches of the city in the rcadftlon of appropriate and Interestingprograms Special services were holdin all the wards of the three stakes ofthe Latter Da Saints church specialmusical programs being the distin-guishing

¬

features While the weatherwas inclement the attendance at the

I various meetings was unusually largoand the people were amply entertained-and instructed In religious matters

The general meeting at the Mormonchurch which was held at the Ogdentabernacle was largely attended thospeakers at the services being ApostleHeber J Grant who confined his re-

marks¬

to doctrinal affairs and In theexhortation of the saints to follow thoteachings of the Bible and the Book ofMormon regarding the things of lifeHe urged the people to become moreexemplary In their daily walks of lifeurging diligence in the exercise oftheir duties along moral lines ApostleGrant calle attention to the fact thatthe missionaries called to preach thogospel invariably return home withstronger testimonies than they had hadwhen they left home and that thework of the ministry abroad has a tendency to broaden them and cultivate-in them the spirit of the gospel Thetabernacle choir rendered a beautifulEaster program-

At tho Farr West ward reorganiza-tion

¬

services were held at which Aposties Hyrum M Smith and George FRichards together with the North We-ber

¬

stake presidency wqre In atten-dance

¬

and conducted the meetingrhe old bishopric consisting of DIshon James Martin and CounsellorsJacob Thomas and Joseph Stophensonwas honorably released from dutyand the following persons werechosen to fill the vacancy MoroniChugS bishop Joseph Stephensonfirst counsellor and H D Brown sec-ond

¬

counsellor The meeting was wellattended and the ward choir furnished

MANY WERE

AEATERr

SERVICEBEA-

UTIFUL MUSIC AT PRESBYTE-RIAN

¬

CHURCH

p J4Decorations a Delightful FeatureIn ¬

clement WeatherKept but FewFrom Hearing the Message-

The Easter services In the FirstPresl >3terlan church were marked bythe high standard ofthe musical nuinhers given Each onerof those takingpart were at their best and as timeselections given were from the worksof the standard composers the serviceswill be remembered aS among the verybest ever given In Ogden at any relig ¬

lOllS service The attendance was inspite of the Inclement weather verylarge at each service Too muchcredit cannot be given to Miss Ger-trude

¬

E BIddle who by her sympa-thetic

¬

work as accompanist at theseservices aided greatly In the Inter-pretation

¬

of the uumbersnndas soloist did work of great merltA

Much credit also Is due to MissMitchell whose skill at each service Inleading the hymns and responses ad-ded

¬

much to time three services MissMitchell also ably rendered Gounods

Oh Divine Redeemer at the morningservice and Chouchiss Golgotha atthe evening service both roost difficultwhich drew many words of warm I

praise Mr Saunders was at his bestIn the three tenor solos JohnsonsJust for Today Graniers Hosan

nah and Ambroses One SweetlySolemn Thought This latter numberespecially called forth much commen ¬

dation He not only has a voice ofmuch sweetness aud sympathy butalso uses It In a truly artistic mannerMrs Stevenson who has a rich mezzosoprano voice sang most beautifullyParkers Jerusalem Miss Belnap I

had a song perfectly adapted to herlyric soprano voice in Jocobys Oh I

Lamb of God and sang it with tell-ing

¬

effect Miss HoLberg who Is anew singer In Ogdens musical circlessang Allitjsens The Lord is MyLight Miss Holberg has a welltrained voice of much richness MissMae Conroy is wok known as an Ogden singer and in interpreting TopllffsConsider the Lilies did it excellently-

Miss Geddes who has hi tho past fewmonths made an enviable place inOgden musical circles sang CallestThou Thus Oh Masterby Mctzkewith much feeling and power

Mr Anderson sang Mozarts WhoTreads the Path of Duty which Is BO

well suited to his voice Much Is al-

ways¬

expected of him and today hewas at his best Mrs Clark and Mrs

found in Mendelssohns OhRisen Christ a duet perfectly adapt-ed

¬

to bring out the rich power and feel-

Ing of their voices Especial mentionshould be made of the work of themixed quartette composed of MissMitchell Mrs Stevens Mr SaundersMr Anderson which added much to theservices Mrs Stevens and MissMitchell rendered Smarts duet TheLord Is My Shepherd It was one oftIme best numbora on the program

Mr Dent Mower greatly enrichedthe afternoon services b a cello soloBrogas Angels Serenade Mr Ziemer and Miss Hamlll each rendered aviolin solo at the evening service In anartistic manner

Seldom if ever have so many of theloading musicians of Ogden beendrawn together In a religious program

TIme church was profusely decoratedwith llllfs carnations and daffodils-Rev Carvor gave an Easter messageat each service

YOUNG WOMAN IS BITTEN-BY FEROCIOUS BULLDOG

2

Now York ApriIl2Miss Gabrielde LattHignaut will go to the Pasteur

some fine musical numbersThe Ogden stake priesthood conven-

ed¬

In the Weber Stake academy andattended to the educational work athand a like meeting of the WeberStake priesthood being held in thosecond ward meeting house Bothmeetings were well attended

I The Methodist church was filledI

with people at the Easter servicesgiven there luring the morning andevening Special music wasgiven by the regular choir under thedirection of Chorister H J WareThe church was beautifully decoratedwith potted plants and cut flowers under the direction of Miss Florencefetnnett of tho school for the blindThe subject of discourse by the RevG W McCrecry at the morning serAvice was Practical Bearings of theResurrection-

The evening service was brief buta splendid musical program was givenThe congregation was one of thelargest ever assembled In the churchunder the present pastorate-

The Knights Templar services at theMasonic Temple were very beautifuland Impressive and they were largelyattended h members of the orderand time general public The services I

were those given by the El Monte I

Commandery No2 and were hold at3 oclock p m At 2ao oclock the SirKnights marched in a body in full Tem-plar

¬

uniform from the Masonic Tem-ple

¬

along Washington avenue to Twen ¬

tythird street countermarching fromthere along Washington avenu toTwentysixth street to the home of JH Epperson the representative ofthe grand master ewas escorted to the Temple buildingand Into the asylum where the arrang-ed

¬

program was rendered The Rev WW Fleetwood of the Episcopal churchdelivered the address and the musicalnumbers given under the direction ofMrs F N Hess were a most beautifulfeature of the service

Institute for treatment today afterhaving been badly bitten list nightby a ferocious bulldog She was walk-Ing along the street leading a spanielwhen the bulldog dashed at her Theanimal knocked her down and she lostconsciousness Willie prostrate the dogsiiod her hand in Its teeth and se-verely

¬

lacerated it then tried to reachher throat An examination of timeanimal by a physician of tIm board ofhealth showed no signs of rabies butas a precaution the victim decided toundergo the Pasteur treatmentHair Removers Are Dang rous

II MIN NG NEWS I

TELLS OF NEWI HUMBOLDT CAMP

Reno Man Has Praise For HappyCreek District

I

Happy Creek district in the Jacksonmountains Humboldt county is one ofthe latest sections to attract attentionin a mining way Time route is viaWinnemucca and lies about 75 milesnorth by tIme olel QuInn river road

s The new gold camp Is in the vicin-ity

¬

of Bluff pealc a wellknown land-mark

¬

Time discoveries were made latelast fall and already are developingsplendidly Judge Callahan who justreturned from the district states thatthere is an extensive mineralized zoneupon which some good values havebeen obtained from widely separatedpoints The two principal groups areowned by the United Explorationcompany of Oakland and a Mr Bead-le representing Chicago capitalists

A new townsite called Jackson will-

Ishortly bo started As yet there has

Ibeen no rush to the new diggings but

I it is expected that as soon as theword of the excellent prospects getsnoised about there will be an oktime advance of the old guard of pros-pectorsI

The values are all gold In quartzveins arid all pan well There arein the higher buttes of the Jacksonrange several outcropplngs showinggood values In copper These veinshowever have not been opened upsufficiently to determine their extentof performance Reno Gazette

MAKING BIG MINEON KRAMER HILL

Salt Lake Man Opens 20 Feet of MillOre at Depth

I Kramer hill which is only two milessouth of the depot at Golconda Nev-is a busy part of the Golconda districtaccording to Attorney J A Langwithwith the promise that large mines ofgold milling ore will be opened there

A P S Mac Qucstcn of Salt Lakehas a large force of men at work pen-etrating the hill with tunnels and adeep shaft said Mr Langwith Aledge 20 feet wide was struck a fewdays ago In tho long tunnel and timeore in this big vein will all pay tomill time values being mostly in gold

The tunnel was started at the footof tho mountain and the finding of I

this large body of ore proves that themmense structure that was cut byleasers on top of the hill goes togreat depth

The ml has been operated steadilyever Mr MacQuostcn acquiredcontrol of time property several monthsago and regular shipments of bullionhave been made to the mint The firstlot of ore milled comprised GOO tonstaken out by leasers from shafts sunk-on the vein

Since work was started ore hasbeen encountered In the two tunnelswhich are being driven into the lullfrom points 1000 feet apart besideswhich arc the large ore reserves dis ¬

closed In the two shafts The hoisthas been started on the deeper shafwhich is being pushedconnect with tunIlI Whenthis connection is ore will I

ball taken out from tho tunnel lew1In the Adelaide portion oftrict In what is commonly known asGold Run basin much activity Isshown A Slescnop who has been do-Ing extensive development on his Gor-

truileI

claim has a big showing of ga I

leua ore I Is cetimatoi hat 20000

of ore Is in sight and tho greater I

part of It IB of shipping grade ThoNevada Central company has a large i

force of minors and has just shipped I

two carloads of to a Salt Lakesmelter 019 I

The Chagnon Case property atStono Corral ten miles south of Gel I

conda which created considerable ex-

citement¬

at the time of its dl3coverv-Jl proving valuable A uhaff Iowa 4Sfeet shows the ledge to be of goodsize and apparently permanent Theore is rich In gold and silver it isnot uncommon to ace on tho dumpchunks that show free gold TImeproperty Is about to be sold to Goldfield people Leases on the groundhave been applied lot but on account-of the prospective none has beengranted

I

Torturing eczeI1 spreads Us burn-Ing area Doans Ointmentquickly stops Its spreading instantlyrelieves the Itching cures It per-manently

¬

At any drug store

JOSEPH JONES CLOSE FRIEND-OF LINCOLN AND GRANT

Chicago April l2Thc death of Jo-

seph Russell Jones pioneer tIctiJmagnate and diplomatanecdotes Illustrating his confidentialrelations with Lincoln andGrant whoheld him In high esteem

When General Qrant was first talk-ed

¬

of for the presidency Lincoln tele-graphed

¬

to Mr Jones asking If hecould tell him whether Grant wanted-to bo presidentCertainly not said Mr Jones who

at once reported to Lincoln He wouldnot take the office If It were offeredhim So far from being a candidatehimself I know him to be earnestly Infavor of your reelection

Mr Lincolns countenance relaxedand he said

My friend you dont know howgratifying that Is to me No man canover tell how deep that presidentialgrub grows till he has had it him-self

One of the things I remember-said Robert T Lincoln that nlwavsstruck me as a splendid example ofMr Jones simplicity was the fact

after he became bald he wore aUIatwhich as he used to explain wasnot for the purpose of ampllfyln Illspersonal beauty but to keep the fliesoff his head It Is a little thing andseems oven trivial perhaps nov thathe is dead but his frank delight atcircumventing the plague of Hies with-a false head of hair illustrates as wellafe anything 1 know how unaffectedand lovable he was

His eUlI wit always marIe him afavorite wherever he was known saidGeneral Frederick D Grant I re ¬

member that once when he and myfather were driving behind a very fastteam was overturned Nexttbchuggc

Mr Jones came down i

to breakfast ho was so lame ho couldhardly move When we asked if howas hurt he said with a twinkling evethat was belled by his painwreathefeatures

Well you know when the whole I

of 115 poundsfalls a bucy goIng thirty miles an hour aui hits onthe ground something is apt to giveway

MURDER AND SUICIDE I

RESULT OF GAME OF CARDS I

Chicago April 12 Joseph Heels a i

roomer for 20 years at the home of HHesterman was shot to death earlythis morning by Hesterman who a I

moment latol committed suicide Themen were the best of friends j

had been playing cards and the quar1-iol arose It is supposed over the game j

Hesterman who was Cl years old seI

cured a revolver and fired a shot j

penetrated Hecks heart Hethen sent a bullet crashing into hisown brain causing instant death

Peter Hesterman son of tho sui-

cide¬

was awakened by theshots andrunning to time room found both mendead The cards were scattered abouttime table The young man declaredlie heard no argument

WEDDING GIFT TO DAUGHTER-IS 1000000 MANSION

I

Pittsburg Pa Apri l LWilamN Frew the i

sentative of Andrew Carnegie In PiUsburg is building a mansion as a wed ¬

ding present to his laughter Vir-ginia

¬I

Frew whose engagement toThurston Wright a young bank clerk I

announcedformerly orSl Louis has just been

Tho house will cost II Is estimatedabout 1000000 This brings aboutthe report that wealthy Pittsburg res-idents

¬

having noted that a number ofrich young people have deserted thiscity to live In New York have enter I

eu into sonic sort of an agreement toIerect houses for their children as they

marry also offering thorn other Induce i

meats to remain in Pittsburg One oftho first to take up this Idea was I

I

IThe beauty of the colorings1variety in designs and diversityof fabr in mens suits in ou

thSpring iteasy for our seen to pleasecustomers-

If you want a striking pattern to wear occasionally or a

I quiet suit for daily use or anexpensive outfit for special oc-

casions¬

or a lowprcd dur ¬

able hard itshere

prices from 10 to 40

I

Tell Everybody N

I KUHNModern Clothe

I SHOPWashington Avenuo

at 2365

c

O20 PER CENT REOUCT10N

Monuments and Hocdstonea fMITCHELL BROS-

dont pay commIssIons to agentbut nee ua Yard opposite CityCemetery

Mrs Harry Darlington Another bighouse has been constructed for MrsHubert Laughlin who was Miss Mar-jorie Rea of Pittsburg

CHAPLAIN DENOUNCESMORALS IN THE ARMY

Walla Walla Wash April 12In aphilippic delivered to members of thefourteenth United States cavalrvChaplain Joyce denounced the moralsexisting in the armj and CUlled forlegislative action by the national go-cmment making religious Instructioncompulsory among soldiers and fixIng sonic means whereby credit forattendance on divine service would liegiven The philippic has created agreat sensation among soldiers at FortWalla Walla

Chaplain Joyce charged that withno regulations to force the soldier toattend divine service athlesm scepti ¬

cism and agnosticism through-out

¬

the frank and tHe Continuing hosaidI speak in appeal for the dignity ofthe trumpet blast that sounds time for-lorn

¬

church calls In appeal for somolegislation whoso Inducements maylead the enlisted man towards God

Would that our legislators couMrealize that present conditions take offthe tarif In hell upon a soldiers soul

God that every man In thisarmy could keep In his mind a pic-

ture of the apostate Julian who wheydying upon the field of battle ahandful of his blood towards heavenand uttered the famous blasphemyThou hast conquered 0 Galllleanthe sort of death that every regular Ishould lament because he wears a uni ¬

form made sacred by the genius thopatriotism the faith of Washington

IMPROVEMENTS ON THE-WIRELESS TELEPHONE-

ParisI r

April 12Navnl Lieutenants f

Golan and Jeance the inventors oft l

wireless telephone apparatus withwhich succeeded last fall In communicating with Dieppe from Pars I

have a new and improvedConversations were exchanged wih-

Ielun thirty miles away and Isun is declared to be a vast Improv-ement on that attained by the ordinarytelephone The sound was clearer and tpurer I

Wc= L i I

II

A Modernistsb

From Ocean Park

tfUE Father who art in e

tt m Heaven hallowed be Thy fName Thy Kingdom

4 come Will be done II

1 in earth ain Heaven Give us day byk1 day our daily bread like unto the tf

q Ripples Lead Unot into tempta ¬ r4 tion or deep water far from shore De ¬

4 liver us from evil practices and prac i

ticioners forgive us wef oudebta tpray for our creditors we fail

iA in life wilt Thou restore them twofoldfor Thine it is t exalt unto glory do-

minion¬ ttand power whomsoever Thou

4-

twilt in Thy kingdom forevermore

Amen

tft

Wej 1 4a1Cl