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I Sit itandari I Hj (ESTABLISHED 1S70) H An I .iticpendcnt Newnpnper. published I I cvtrv pnlnp except Sunday, vlthout u I Ht TDUzte or ;l club. I ! TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: H lall Qfden City, per month f TO I ! Dai I in ,'don Cft, per year. . . 9.00 I i Dally rvuijlOo of Ogicn. per ear . OC I l :lly o'jtshlf of Offlon. .' months. I W H baturdny i-cui only, per yen I No Biionymoui cornmunJi iti 01 i pab- I :isheJ. wiisum OlMmann, Publisher. I A CRISIS IN TWO UTAH INDUSTRIES. Two rt.ih Industries ar? feeling the effects of Democratic free trade One is the Knight Woolen Mllli at Provo and the other the beet sugar indus try in Ogden and elsewhere through out the state. A dispatch from Provo all the employes oi the woolen mills have been notified that in ordcr to prevent the laying off entirely ot I a large number or the closing of the mllle indefinitely, they would be put on :i -thort shift, five days n week. I which means a reduction In weekly earnings of 36 per cent. The reduction follows the receipt! ot word ironi the eastern BelMtogl pgertP cf the company to the effect tbet because of the influx of English I mi'dr goods. thre Ik no marl.et for ; Ihe product of the Provo woolen mills ' In tending this word S M. Miller A Co., selling agents for the Proo com pany, say that hereafter they will have to refuse to handle the account cf the Provo mllK Several months 1 I ago the woolen mill;? company in I Provo underwent a partial reorganlsa 1 tion and increased its capital stock in anticipation of meeting the depres sion that would follow the enactment I j of the new Democratic tariff law.1 J Since that time the mill has been I"-" ""6 -ju i muBi economical basis and expenses have been cut at ever; I possible point. Some of the men eni I ployed have been working for $35 to $40 a month and it was only after representatives of the state depart ment of labor had spent considerable time here that they were able to com I pel the mills to obey the state mini if. mum wage law. 1 lie first severe blow to the Provo i' company following the enactment of ' the Underwood tariff law was the falling off in the demand for Macki I naw woolens, for which there was formerly a demand amounting to $20. 000 to $30,000 a year from the north ern states. This business has now i faiien to $3000 to $4000 a year and the! 1 reason given is that because of the I enormous infiux of English woolens, the woolen mills of the east have taken to the manufacture of the goods, of which Provo formerly made a profitable specialty. The gravity of the situation is keen- I! Coffee With a record of 40 years . I in the Mississippi Valley is the H. and K. Coffee. H Don't take a H substitute ; j Try H. & K. Coffee and H I taste the real coffee and "i you will never want any :'v?)l? other brand. I I I For sale by all live ' fo grocers. In Ogden by: tf-i Tribe & Joneo. 2216 Wash. Ave. Mrs. A. T. Hestmark. 475 22nd St 'jj-' 'i Pickett Grocery. 2340 Wash Ave $ f I 1 J S. Carver & Bona, 23M Wash. Ave ,,"3 Av E- Hart. 1800 Wash. Ave. J',' C. R. 8henrer. Uh 2Tth 8t. HI Jos. Bingham, 2857 Grant Ave. 'rL .4 Peterson Bros, Huntsville, Wilcox Grocen . 2462 Waih. Av. vfe1 Marshall Grocery, North Ogden. .j&S&'A Boyle Grocery, S40 2Sth St. rTi&'O Wilson Bros., 2Sth and Wall Ava 'kfc A- Ohristenscn, 3154 Pacific Ave iif R Marra, 278C Wash. Ave. v3 FtcA Foulger & Sons, 740 24th St, SPwWfir i P A Gamer. 620 24th St. frSlk';B Tom Kardames, Cor. 24th and Jeff VSSr wn. Weaver. 314 Wash. Ave JjTVL Mrs. L. M Barnes. 227 21st St. A;yt F. J. Ross. Cor. 22nd and Grant Ave - r"rr'urd. 2161 Lincoln Ave S&i&Sgal Domestic Science Bakery, 2268 Grant I WE SERVE Ira Nothing that we would not Sgg eat ourselves. $11 Ours is really the place to eat. THE PALACE CAFE mm 1 76 25th St. ! 'j ft It in Provo and it is generally believed that unless the demand for I American woolens picks up ex I 1 jnrly well the Trovo woolen mills will I be. obliged to shut down entirely or I elfat reduce the force of employes to 1 hah' ot' the number now employed at reduced earnings. White the woolen mills industry is I crippled) the beet sugar business Is fating ruination dispatch from Washington declares all hope of i partial restoration of the duty on n. w sugar has been abandoned by the beet sugnr interests as a conse quence of official declarations made bj Secretary Redfield of the depart ment of commerce and labor, and Oscar Underwood, chairman of the v raj a i:nd means committee of the bouse of representatives. Both have stated that no change In the tariff law Mould be matin during the incumb encj of President Wilson Both of these leaders of the ad ministration forces made these state monte after discussing the subject with the President, and both asserted that he would veto any attempt to revise the laws. The government fe?.rs to reopen the tnrl'f question 'n ahj of its phaeK because its leaders ,ir iiware that the general dissati? faction with some of the provisions of the law would merely lead to a protracted attack on the measure In Its entirety. The failure of the in ctme tax law and the other fiduciary measures of the Wilson administra tion to provide revenue sufficient to meet government expenditures, and thu utter demoralization of trade whic.i ha? followed their enactment are ignored by Washington, which as sumes to believe that ultimately they frill work out to advantage Secretary Redfield is quoted as say j i"g: I consider that the press will be doing a public service by letting the public know that there is absolutely no chance for anybody to get through any legislation looking to a change In the fugar tariff. There seems to be an organized bureau at work here in Washington propagating reports for stock jobbing purposes. To the ef fect that such legislation is in pros pect I have received a great number of inquiries based on the assumed .significance of the department in quiry I have referred to I talked with the President today and you can rest assured that he will veto any measure looking to any sort of change in the tariff as it stands.' Representative Underwood was f ul ly us explicit in detail of a change of attitude of the administration He declared that there would be no de ficit in the revenues when the income t&x tor next year is collected, and that the hopes of the beet sugar growers might as well be abandoned now, because he had been assured by President Wilson that no legislation would be tolerated that sought to amend the tariff act in any of its par ticulars. This is the most serious blow that has been struck at agriculture in We ber county and other parts of the state where the beet industry occu pies a very large percentage of all the cultivated land. This year there are 7500 acres of beets in the dis trict tributary to the Ogden factory, with a prospective average yield of fourteen tons to the acre, or a total of 105,000 tons, worth $5 a ton, or j $5J5,000. If the administration in sists on placing thi6 industry on the free trade basis provided for in the present tariff law then hereafter all that great revenue to the farmers will be lost' until they can find some other crop to supplant, the sugar beet, and, in audition, the factory will close and as much more money be lost to local people in the form of payrolls to era ployes and dividends to stockholders. oo ONE OF THE CHAUTAUQUA LECTURES. Count Alexander M. Loohwitzky. 1 one of the speakers at the local Chau j tauqua, has a lecture on Russia, his i native land, which, if it is not tho extreme of exaggeration, calls for an international protest against the Czar and his government. We are not to a position to contra dict Count Lochwitzky but it does not seem possible that any great num ber of people, calling themselves civ ilized, would submit to the treach ery, distrust and brutalities described by this Russian. We know the Jews hae been harshly treated because of racial and religious differences and that the plots of Nihilist and anarchist have brought into existence a vast secret service and sweeping espionage, but that the whole of Russia should be given over to intrigue and murder Is almost beyond belief. UTAH POLITICS ARE CLEAN. Sometimes we are inclined to 6peak harshly of politics In Utah and to denounce our officials for failing in gome particulars to meet our fondest expectations, but when we turn from home affairs to inquire as to the po litical welfare of other common wealths, there is a sense of satisfac tion in knowing that Utah Is a com paratively clean and pure state, po litically and otherwise. We have been reading a quotation from the Star of San Francisco, which Is a review of the politics of that city, accompanied by congratulatory statements on the improvements being made. The Star tells of the time when every depart ment of the city government was in 0 I PACKER'S SON NEW ENVOY TO SWEDEN Ira Nelson Morris, Ira Nelson Morris, the new Ameri can minister to Sweden, is n son of the late Nelson Morris of Chicago, and is th'-fty Mine years of age. He is a praduate of Phillips' academy, Andover, and of the Sheffield scien tific school of Yale. Since his gradu ation from Yale in 1898 he has spent eicrht years in business and several years traveling, wrriting, and also hai devoted himself to philanthropic work. the hands of the criminal element, of high and low degree; when the wa ter company controlled the Board of Supervisors and kept most of them on its pay-roll, when "the courts reeked with rottenness" ; when Judges, with a few honorable excep tions, were chosen to do the bidding of their political masters, and deci sions "were notoriously bought and sold." Not even the scurvy Sehmitz Ruef Supervisors. Bays the editor, dreamed of doing such things as their predecessors had done the Buckley "Solid Nine," for example No part of Utah ever had a condi tion of demoralization in any degree approaching the above description of San Francisco's past and yet at times we think our politics bad and our public service poor! B comparison, we are a people of purity, whose rec titude in politics is worthy of emulation AN OLD AND A NEW PRAYER. The Christian Herald has given io us a new prayer through a contributor who says "Recently when riding with a gen tleman in the seventies, he told me he never went to bed at night with out adding to his prayers the prayer familiar to most of us in childhood. Now I lay me down to sleep.' The thought came to me, Why not have a morning prayer? They are certainly Christian helps, when coming with the heart's accord A few mornings afterward these lines came to mv mind: " 'Now I wake me from my s'eep, Help me, Lord, thy will to keep. Make me nobic good and strong. And protect me from all wrong.' " Of all the prayers, the most help ful, the most powerful for good is that child's prayer, "Now 1 lay me down to sleep ' More young mind. have been impressed with moral re sponsibility and religious sentiment through the nightly recital of this appeal than by any one other prayer. It is a prayer that stays with one even long after the period of child hood has passed, and it brings back to older people the memories of the days when the world contained so much of m story and when mother's counsel was accepted as above question o o Two big Indian photo-plays are at the Isis tonight and the excellent music. A dime show for a dime. Advertisement. oo BOY MGEBRETSEM STABBED IN BACK Roy IngebretSen; a well-known local painter and paperhanger. was 6tabbed in the back last night with a paring knife and dangerously wounded The stabbing is alleged to have been donp by E J. Spivey, who is now being held in the citv jail, awaiting an investiga tion. According to the storv of the affair, as told to 'he police, Ingebretsen was standing in front of the Llttlo Queen saloon, on Washington avenue near Twenty-third street, talking to John Syphers. Spivey had entered a store nearby while they were talking and, as stated by persons In the store, had a parinjz knife jn his hand He was asked what he was goinp to do with it and replied he was "going to get" someone with it. He came out of the store and, going behind Ingebretsen, stabbed him be tween the shoulders. He then ran south on the avenue and was followed by Peter Lever, who saw the trouble. He went to the Tavern cafe, with Lev er following, and the latter telephoned for the police, from the Marshall drug Btore. Sergeant C. K. Layne respond ed and arrested Spivey in the cafe In the meantime, Ingebretsen asked Syphers to pull the knife from his back and Syphers did so, using both hends and pulling with considerable strength. The blade was about three inches long. The wounded man was then taken to the Cave Drug store and after being examined by Dr. CrawBhaw, was removed to his home. In Moffltt Lane Read the Classified Ads, CLEAN M CONTEST NOW ON IN TOE STATE OF UTAH City Sanltnry Insoector George Shorten luis received a copy of th following letter, which contains sug gestions to Ui" authorities of the dif ferent cities and towns Jn the "Clean Town" contest, as to how their work should be conducted in order to meci with success from the Utah Develop ment league: "The most Important thing in con nection with the clean town contest Is to have everyone interested in it To do this public meetings should be held. Ask the ministers and bish ops of tho different i hurches to set .opart i) certnln day to be devoted to fh? subject of clr;inlir.es A large committee should assist in the work selected from the various organiza tions, societies, clubs, etc.. which will mean the co-operation of all these for ces. "With a sentiment created in fa vor of (he contest and a committee organized, best results will be obtain ed by retting apart certain days or a certain week to do certain things. Ljocal conditions might have copsid cr.bp bearing upon which part of the work shall be done first. 'Official scoring will commence the week of August 17 This will give you six weeks to clean your town commencing with July 5. "Streets, sidewalks and alleys should be one of the flr?t because in a great many places there are so caany weeds Destroying them at this time means doing away with mil lions of seeds A week may be ?et apart for coirnls and yards, one for outbuildings nnd vacant lots A re pair week to wiiich may be added the fence6, and a paint-up week allow ing the sixth week for all unfinished w ork. "In some places a suh-oommittee has been selected to take care of the thirteen different, point-: from which the scoring will be made. "In other places the towns have been divided with a captain over each block or sub-dlvislon. These captains have done effectual work by i siting those in their district and In a pleasant way showing them the ad vantage of cleaning up their place. In othpr towns cottage meetings have been held when all in a certain dis trii t have been Invited to a neigh bor's home and they have discussed the cleanup. "See that the newspapers are kept posted as to what you are doing. They can be a big ho1p in the work. "If you desire we will send some one who will make a scoring of your town This will help you to prepare for the official scoring "We will try to furnish you with public speakers if you so desire committee of two or three including the health officer could help very ma terially in scoring the different pla ces in your town. You have a copy of the points from which the official scoring will be made. If not we will send you another You can do a real service to your town in this work and we want to help you." oo F0S1ISTS ARE TO DIVIDE OFFICERS IN WEBER CQUWTY Democratic and Progressive com mittees met last night and decided to enter into a fusion campaign this fall and divide the nominations for the re spective office on the basis of eight for the progressives and seven for the Democrats, Thp Progressives will nominate for the olfices of three representatives in the state legislature, county clerk, treasurer, recorder, surveyor and four-year term commissioner, and the Democrats will name the state sen.i tor, one representative, sheriff, as sessor, attorney, two-year term coin missioner, and Ogden precinct con stable, all of whom shall be placed on both tickets. It was also determined that the two conventions shall be held simul taneously on August 8. OO : PROCEEDINGS OF THE CBMMISS10NERS OF THE CITY The contract for repairing defective electric wiring in the city hall build ing was awarded to the Modern Elec tric company of this city last evening by thr- city board of commissioners at $9, the lowest bid The petition of property owners for an arc lifht on Thirtieth street and Childs avenue was granted on the recommendation of Chris Flygare, su perintendent of streets. The petition for correcting unsani tary conditions on Twentieth street Exceptional Values we are v'n n our CB) July Clearance V SALE tWFtm has increased the buying power of your money. ONE-THIRD OFF' SS?' JS ONE -THIRD OFF I On all Spring and Sum- size; re8u,ar $6 00 and On All Straws and Pana- rl . t ma $6-50 values mas mer Clotfcing for Men This includes aH the new j and Young Men. "IO styles of the season. FAMOUS HOLE PROOF HOSIERY FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN. NO HOLES FOR 6 MONTHS OR NEW HOSE FREE N. O. OGDEN CO- 236 TWENTY-FIFTH STREET. and Quincy avenue, caused by low ground on which accumulates stag nant water and decaying vegetation was referred to the superintendent of streets for consideration. The petition for water main exten sion of about 550 feet east on Thirty first street, was referred to the super intendent of waterworks The following payrolls were allow ei and the auditor Instructed to draw warrants for the several amounts: Street department 91102.12) Public affairs and finance... 313.60 Public safety 282.98 Waterworks 118.50 Total $1,817.20 Of) James Morrison, Dorothy Kelly, Mark McDermott and Sophie are at the Oracle today. Advertisement. DURING THE FRENCH ELECTIONS Y--, I lunched with the Conserva tive candidate, had dinner with the Radical, and coffee and liquor with the Socialist." ' And then how did you vote?" "My dear sir, how can you ask' Of course, the most simple regard for delicacy kept me from the polls alto gether. L'H lust ration. uu Read the Classified ds. I UTAH LID ID LIKE STOCK COMPANY IS IS FORMED The Utah Land v Livestock com pany has filed articles of incorpora tion with tho county clerk with a capital of 25,000, divided into shares of the par value of $1 each. The in corporators all are residents of Og den and part of the capital stock has been paid in by a lease on 35 acres of land, and stock and farm implements valued at $3050. Following are the incorporators and officers for the first year James B. Dickson, president; Le right Hauklne, vice president; John I Van De Graaf, secretary and treas urer, who, with W P. Simons and W H. Galden, form the directorate. The objert of the company as sta ter! in tho articles of incorporation i to conduct a ranching and livestock business deal in real estate and dc( I a commission business in the hand- ling of cattle, horses, hogs and other j Jive stock. OO INNTELLIGENT MAID. Mistress Why have vou put two botwater bottles in my bed? Bridget Sure, mum. wan of thim a was leaklu, and I didn't know which, u so I put both in to make sure. ir Punch. on t IF YCU CAN'T SAY IT, SING IT. If a Hottentot taught a Hottentot tot js To talk ere the tot could totter, j? Ought the Hottenot tot . To be taught to say "aught" Or "nausht," or what ought to be taught her? J '" 1 If t-i hoot and toot a Hottentot tot Be taught by a Hottentot tooter, d Should the tooter get hot if the Hot tl tentot tot S( Hoot and toot at the Hottentot U tooter? Current Opinion. , nr WITH OR WITHOUT. ai Old Lady (irritably) Here, boy, I've jn Keen waiting some time to be waited on. Druggist's Boy Yes, ma'am, what can I do for you'' Old Lady I want a two-cent stamp. to Druggists Boy Yes, ma'am. Will c you have it licked or unlicked? Los m Angeles Express. j I oo I Pr Read the Classified Ads. I c( - I rM'X Q To New York x - GRATTD r, : vXf and Boston D?vi) the best and most convenient service is the peerless CFN lpAI 20th Century Y W;m Limited x -.v The World's Most Famous Train I Rlfif-V, ' ' - : ' ;W Leaves Chicago, 12:40 noon J ' j !v''F Arrives New York, 9:40 a. m. j llH WW"- ' Arrives Boston, 11:55 a. m. i" - .k j j Ten Other Fast Trains j - i5vr iSlS aEt y $XJ? ' between Chicago and the cast, completing a . '"-i f" ' ' I Hr. service unrivalled in excellence. fi ' 7 ? I ' $ ' I (:Hf?rS!si4y fi Hill! I 'i Pr r n tifii)ir i MV'TSSmK IFri' All trains arrive in New York at Grand Central p 2 Zjjjj V Fti -?hf Terminal. H e world's greatest railway terminal, n 5 , J::U'-v the heart of New York, and the only terminal ""2?l& on all lines of local transportation. The surface v -r-u cars, subway and elevated service, are all at j , fmMtell IfaMfMialljnes j I iwi'-fir Shre Ry"The Wator-Livel Route ' Jctttfj! App,s to your ''J03' aRem for fits and sleeping car d'our'"3' r comPlete information, call on or ad- Crty Transportation Service-to and from Grand Central Terminal 1 CHAUTAUQUA See Daily Program I GLEN WOOD PARK - m Column of July 11th to 19th I This Paper I $