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The Salt Lake Tribune from Salt Lake City, Utah • Page 2

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Salt Lake City, Utah
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TUB SALT LAKE TKIBFXE, SATURDAY ttOMBNG, PEmiBEK 16, 1905. I flUMAN MAKES I CANAL mm Raises the Question of Chairman Railroad Connection. EMPLOYMENT OF PRESS AGENT IS DENOUNCED Hale Joins in Contention This Is a Reflection on Con- gjess. WASHINGTON. Dec.

16. The Panama canal was ngahi nder consideration by the Benate todav, and Mr. Tillman occu- pled the executive, time (riven to that sub ject, exr-ept that he (rave way to que9-I tlons from or Interruption! by other Sen ator? I If did not Indicate any intention of opposition to the passage of the appropriation bill, but he criticised th methods of the "'anal commission in I mr.ny of its transactions. Question About Shonts He raised the question as to whether President Shonts is still In the employ of the Clover Leaf railroad, and said that the ruJlwav register still carried his nam" 1 as the head of that road He also sharply criticised the employment of Secretary Bishop as a press representative, and Mr Halo Joined In this ensure, saying that Mr. Bishop's In that capacity 1b a reflection not only on Congress, 1 but on tho press.

Touches Santo Domingo I A pait of Mi Tillman's remarks was devoted to i i-mi'-ism of the President's poller Smto Dcmlngo, urn! Mr Bpoom defended tho president's course. When the Senate adjourned the bill was still II pending, but thero was an agreement for a vote; tomorrow. Wants Mail Information. Before the Panama bill was taken up the Senate adopted a resolution calling upon the Postmaster-General for Information as to whethei there Is discrimination between college pub' lea 1 ions In tho mat-tr of admission to the mails as sceond-class matter. When the Benate convened today Mr Galling, r.

tho Committee on Commerce, reported the merchant marine bin and stated that Mr Mallory probably would present a minority report at a later day. Bacon Has Amendment. The Panama canal bill was laid tho Senate and Mr Bacon presented an amendment requiring quarterly reports, giving lists of officers and employees of the Canal commission above the grade of laborer and tin- salaries paid them Mr Tillman took the floor. Calls Spooner an Acrobat Mr Spooner declared that the President has not done anvthii.ir to carry the unratified treats Into effect and Insisted upon Mr. Tillman specifying, in reply Mr.

Tillman reiterated that our fleet was kept in Dominican waters. He said thai Mr. Spooner was supple robat In the use Of words, "is not our present attitude the same as It would be if the treaty had been ratified''' asked Mr. Tillman, and Mr Spooner plied "Not at all." adding that if the treaty had been ratified the united States would iiave its own revenue agents In San Do mingo, whereas the ndessnt were there as the result of an appointment by President Morales Calls It Trickery. "Who suggested their appointment?" Mr.

Tillman asked, and Mr. Spooner rc-plied that the President of the United States hiid done so. Mr. Tillman Cen tended that thin admission Justified all that be said. "It Is beattng about the bush; the accomplishment of what Is by trickery, it is play on words to justify the usurpation." he said.

Mr. thai there had been no trickery and defended the action of the President. Trickery was not a nice thins to Impute, he said, and Mr. Tillman Interrupted to say that "When a man ac- compushad unlassful methods what he cannot oherwlse accomplish; I i all it trickery." Term Is Undignified. Mr.

Spooner responded thai the term was "nasty and Undignified and should not be used In speaking of the head of a co-ordinate branch of the Government." Mr the Senator suggest a better, then." Mr. Spooner "The Senator's whole idea Is so wrong that It cannot be made right Tillman then asked what il. President had for not entirely withdrawing from San Dotnlngb and leaving the situation alone and Mr. Spooner replied that the Senate should not have adjourned without acting on the treaty as lo ratifying or rejecting it, as the failure had had the effort of leaving the President in a position ol embarrassment, Dominpo Hard Position. It was the duty of San Domingo to maintain the statu-; quo to the end of her revenues This was not easy for that public to do in view of the prei sun from European nations, emphasized In one case by the prepuce of a warship.

In the face of this condition President Morales i had, he said e. ppe.il. .1 to President Roose- I velt and asked him in his own belpleSS- I ness, requesting esp-eaiiy that lv sur- gest some honest American ior the eol- lection of These agents, while Americans, had been appointed by the San Domingo Government. Appointed by Morales. I "Thej wire appointed by President Morales aed can be dismissed hv him." I he nald.

"and the President of the United States has dono no more than it was his duty to do." I Mr. Money spoke disparagingly of the I President's disposition to participate in the affairs of San Domingo without the consent of Congress He expressed apprs-I henslon that the end of such a tendency might be disastrous In view of (he Presl- dent's threat to use the "big stick." I Big Stick Policy. I "'Speak Softly, carry a big Stick' and JJli y(Vi 0l.f K-VH he President." nl5 fr- Money, nnd i interpret this eX-pies-, on to mean that the Pnrldeni menns to upeak softly In dealing with tho big fjajSH rations and to use a big stick In dealing JgagH with the weak when be Prs aside the nwH of the land and substitutes for his KgOH own Judgment." jHtt Mr. Tillman reiterate-! his deeinratir.n UH that the pres-nc of United States au-Iborltles In Santo Domingo was the result SNBH of a trick JjH Has Shonts Resigned jJBH Speaking of Mr. Shonts, Mr.

Tillman HKH said he nad understood that Mr. Shonts vas to reeign as president of the clover IjH T.faf road. Did any one know whether he had resigned? He aopealed to Mr Alll- fOBM cn' but tnat Senator said he did not UH know Mr. Tillman said that he had found OHB Mr Shonts'a name In the Railway Rejr- OEfl ister as still president of the road SH Mr Hale spoke In very complimentary terms of Mr. Shonta, expressing tho opln- Jll 'on that his selection was a wise one He 91 TUJ certain that, whether or not he had iH resigned from the railroad, he had given aflH, "is entire time to the canal enterprise.

mm Mr- Tillman said that was not "guti- "Ing" for Mr. Shonts nor for anv par- rH tlcular man; He had, as he understood BH bean on the Isthmus but twice, and then a at a tuns, since his an- pointment. 1 Considere Bishop Superfluous. LHH Tillman then took up the question of Secretary Bishop's connection with the ccmmlseion. Ho said that Mr.

Blahop Htf Now Is I Quarter Teaspoonfu1ff Jj 1 ArxTiourls Extract of nL If jf 1 statty makes a cup ot ti eUcious Beef Tea a EJf Perfect StimuJanf Ma fr Pick Me Up" Lf For all cooting purposes, as well as for Beef Tea, it is a great economy and convenience to have a jar of Armour's Extract of Beef in the house. It pives that rich beefy flavor to soups, sauces and re-cooked meats. The flavor of meats is mostly in its juice, so when the juice is cooked out, some kind of seasoning is necessary to make meat palatable when served a second time Armour' restores that delicious beefy flavor to meats when warmed over. Armour's Extract of Beef is the real essence of prime beef, i It is always ready for use and will keep in any climate. For sale by all druggists and grocers.

had never gono to the isthmus and that any J2no IMOO clerk could perform his services; that would be ample pay even for a flrst-clsss newspaper man for servloe He characterized Mr. Bishops Trk as "a process of hypnotizing pub-lie opinion. and expressed the opinion that 'people entirely innocent would ned no defense mid "wld not bo so worried a a $10,000 man to defend them." Giants Would Disappear. The press representatives in Washington may be dirty and disposed to lie, he said, and It might her a fact that there had been an "rc-mlzed crusade against the canal, hut, even If true. he.

did not It. -ve that the method Of defense aoopted could bf justified, and ho ex-pressed confidence thai if other methods Were adopted all the gnats and mosquitoes that beclouded the situation would disappear, Mr. Hale tok occasion to voice his own dU approval of the eommlsslon's employ-m nt of a press agent, and to say that was confident that the entire committee on appropriations felt as he did on this subject. He believed that If Mr Shonts or Secretary Taft had been responsible for Mr. Bishop's employment he had made a mistake.

"Journalism," he went on. "Is a great estate At times the prr SB Is cruelly unjust, but as a rule Its purpose is high and i Scant If th- Government or any pert of it established a press agency, the result would be a prejudiced and a self, jted pre.s and. in case, of a corrupt administration, a hireling press." Mr. Tillman wltti Mr Hale the commission must rely on the purltt of its administration to secure the good will of the public rather than upon paying' for tho luxury. Proposes an Araendment.

Mr. Culberson proposed Rn amendment to the bill providing that no part of the money appropriated shall lv used to pay the expenses of a literary bureau, or for the salary of any person employed t. crests popular sentiment In favor of the canal. A resolution b. Mr armack, instructing the Benate Committee Naval Affairs to Inquire Into reports of brutal It prai tlced by hasers upon students at the Naval academy of Annapolis, with a view to putting a stop to such practices, was adopted Proceeding to discuss the adverse crltl-elsm of the Panama railroad management Mr Tiiimun provoked protests from Mr tialllncer and Mr.

Allison, the former calling attention to preparations to double track the railroad to relieve the blockade and the latter saying that more than half of the money to be appropriated in the pending bill Is to be used for Improvements to the railroad and wharves. Declares Bonds Illegal. Mr Tillman asserted that the Issuance of bonds by the Panama railroad is Illegal, declaring It amounted to an Issue of bonds by the Panama Canal commission. He declared that the whole thing WSS a "hocus-pocus." and that the and Panama Canal commission are one and the same so far as the actual conditions are concerned. Mr.

Allison said the railroad claims the right to issue bonds by virtue of the fact that It a separate oorponajUon 6 under the charter laws of N-w York. Mipfht End Anomaly. It would be ea-y enorgh for us to legislate so that this- anomaly would end, said Mr Hale, "but certainly we. cannot blame The railroad directors for exercising the authority that Is given th by their charter "But they are executive agents, mere Instruments In the hands of the President and the commission. Who elected them?" shouted Mr.

Tillman "The stockholders," said Mr. Allison. "But the I'nlted States Is the only stockholder. The whole thing amounts to nothlnp more nor less than Increasing the public debt of the United States in a way you all know" II. re Mr.

AllLson Interrupted: "That may be, though technical! Calls Taft King. "Technically, repeated Mr Tillman. "Oh, yes, technically I suppose the right. Technically Taft wn a king In the Philippines, but we are degenerating far away from a self-governing pen-id. in our management of these affairs I think shall us- former phrase of mine that KaJssr-like methods nave been Imported from the Philippines Of course Taft has b--n used to having his un way." Mr.

Tlllnum argued finallv that Con-gress should say whether tills debt should be crested. He thought the money was needed, but said he did not like th. way It was being obtained. He protested against what he called a Dominican or Morales way of doing buslnus, declaring No Appetite Means loss of vitality, vigoi or tone, and is often a precursor of prostrating sickness. This is why it is serious.

The best, thing you can do is to take the great, alterative and tonic Hood's Sarsaparilia Which has cured thousands. the whole procedure to have been an trpatlon of Importation of Women. Mr Tlllmr.n had rend newspaper publication alleging importation into the canal zone of women from Martinique for Immoral purposes, that a Government ship had been ueed, and that canal officials In the zone had sunctloned the transaction Mr. Lodge Interrupted to say that he had considered the charge that a Government vessel i1u been used in a "matter so monstrous," tnat he hail talked over the telephone wltli the Secretary of War and that official had authorized him to bay that "the cnargc was a Me." Should Be Investigated. Mr Tillman replied that ho would be willing to accept the Secretary's statement concerning a matter In regard to whlcn he has personal Information, but that as he baa not such information in this case, he thought there should be an investigation.

The Senate then agreed to a request preferred by Mr. Allison that the bill should be voted upon before adjournment tomorrow At p. m. the Senate went Into executive session, adjourning at G.oj p. m.

TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Qulnln. Tablets. DrUBClms refund money If It falls to E. GROVE'S signature Is cn each WATER SCHEME APPROVED Gov. Cutler Notified of Hitchcock's Action by Senator Smoot.

Oov r-ailer received tho following telegram from STtor Sniool Friday afternoon "Washington. L. Dee. Uj, isofi. Gov John C.

fuller Secretary Hltrhmok hat approved Oil Straw l-nr rail ay project today. Action mean greater and richer Utah, farm for Utah county, water s.ilt Ljtk- REED SMOOT." The praJsOt, alout whleh has been aid, eontemplates the dlvrrvlon tvatan of the Btrawbarry all. and bringing ihem through tfa In ordor that lands on this nlde rniiy be Irrigated. A long tunntl Is a part of Him eonteniplated work. Christmas Shoppers, Attention! We make up to order on three hours' notice any kind of burnt leather novelties, pillows, hand-painted cards, calendars, etc.

Specialist In ail kinds of The Booklover, S. L. Mayer, 49 West Second South. FOR DIVORCE CONGRESS Gov. Cutler Appoints Utah Representatives on Pennypacker's Request.

Acting upon a request fr.un Qov Pennypuck-er of Pennsylvania, Gov. Cutler ha appointed the following dclegaton to attend tho Divorce congTesis to bo held in Washington. D. C. February 19, l'X; Senator Reed Smoot.

Senator George Sutherland, Ipreentatlvu Howell, Mi. Mlnnl-- IivHarid Mr RhcIij.1 f-'lgel. Mr. Rose L-. Sutherland.

Uniform laws for tho various States of the Union will bo the matter discussed. ARTICLES WERE FORGOTTEN Company Incorporated Fourteen Years Ago Forgot to File Papers. Articles of Ineorporsitlon of the North Cnt-tonwood Irrigation and Water company of FarmlnKton Wen filed In the otllco of the Secretary of State Friday. The company was Incorporated fourteen feStl acu. but the matter of Ming the articles with the Secretary of state was overlooked.

Th. companj li i i- tallre.1 for 130.000. Qted by I The offlrM aro Jacob Ulller, president; Coombs, let--president iVlward B. Clark, HCretary and treasurer Will Miue in Nevada. The Goldflrld BUrekS Mining company filed articles Incorporation in the onVe tho SeercUixy of Stale Frldny.

Tli. company, whleh In formed at Oifden. Is capitalize foi 1.000.n.), divided Into tl ihares ofTicrs aro Tarty, president --cur vlce-preaidenti Huasey, "f-reiary and troaiurer The company owns a group of six claims in the Goldfleld i ol Kevade Applicants Examined. Scott Iynn. Mervln Bennlon, H.

C. Adams nnd I-land Irvln. urn being examined bj committee, comprising Richard Lyman. State Superintendent Noleon nnd i lord Toung. as applicants for admission to the val Bcademi at The examlnntlon v.111 he concluded todii' rjno cadet and threv fllternatys will be named.

Canadians Form Club. The Canadian association Mod articles of ln-oorpo ration in the oflloe ot the Count Clerk Friday Tho object of the association la to promote tho social. Intellectu.il, physical and moral condition of Its Tho officer! are: C. H. Tyrrell, president: n.

N. Strickland, -vice-president B. Scott, secretary and treasurer Petition for Letters. Sam Raney has epplled for letter of administration upon tho estate of his deceased brother. Henry Clay Raney.

who dlod at Fulrfleld In leaving property In this valued at MW. The petition vrai Qled in the probat division of tho Third District rouit Friday. Cruelty Is Charged. MRXgareita Ih.iI nl nn nctloii for .11 vorce against Deal In the Thlr.i i p. (,:.

court, on the ground of cruelty. The pa i were married at Furmlngton In Murch 190 and since that time Mr. Deal says h-r husband him treated h'-r with extreme cruelt to the extent of causing her great budlly Injury. mmn takes TiUEJF HOUSE Lively Deb.ito on Possibilities of Controlling Big Companies. COCKRAX SCATHINGLY DEXOIXCES FIXAXCIERS Calls Leading Ones Criminals and Ridicules Reorganization Methods.

WASHINGTON. Dec. 15. The Hojsc tocla devoteil four and three-quarters houn In lively debute on tho possibilities of controlling Insurance companies. Two set speeches were the features Ono by Mr.

Sherley of Kentucky boro on the doctrine of States' rights and the other by Mr. Cockran of New York related to the exactions of the officers who manage, tho big tire Insurance companies of his State, Mr. Cockran proposing that iiRrev.H ihp'iifrl, it." t.ivme: power should confine all Insurance companies In the State hlch they are organized. Mann Has a Remedy. Mr.

Mann, of Illinois, outlined a pro-pesed means of control he will later present In the form of a bill, leaving it to the Insurance companies voluntarily to submit to Fedcml examination nnd approval. Mr Williams, the minority leader, concluded the debate. hol.litiK that control was polbl. but not through the taxing power. Returns Senator's Bill.

Discussions were Indulged In, first to send mes-sago to (he Senate returning Its bill regarding canal bonds as an usurpation of the constitutional rights of the Rouse to originate revenue legislation, and again to dtacuss hazing at Annapolis. No conclusion was reached on the committee of the Insurance feature of the President's message, which Is the matter under consideration and tho debate will proceed tomorrow. Requests for Time. An effort was made when the House met today to limit farther debate on the question of committee reference of the President's message. So many requests were made for time that the attempt to sot a tlmo to voto was abandoned.

"This la ns good a tlm as any to get theso speeches off," suggested rhamp Clark Representative Sherley (Ky.) began the discussion on the refcrenco of the Insurance recommendation to the Ways and committee. He had hardly begun when a message from the Senate was te-celved announcing that tho Senate had pr.rsed a Senate bill removing disabilities from the caniU bonds. Mr. Payne Inteirupts Mr Payne Interrupted the proceedinRs to offer a. resolution regarding the bill, stating that "the bill.

the opinion of tho House, contravenes the first clause of the seventh section of the first article of the Constitution and is an Infringement of the prerogatives of the House, and that the Senate bill be taken from the Speaker's table and be respectfully returned to the Senate with a message communicating this resolution Vote Is Unanimous. A rising was had and, As every ono stood up In favor of the resolution, tbo Speaker announced, while the House burst Into laughter, members havo ted In the affirmative1'' There were no opposing votes. The digression occupied less than ten minutes, when Mr. Sherley resumed. He eppoard a reference of the sub.lect either to the Ways and Means or Interstate and Foreign Commerce committees.

Cockran Defends Position. Mr. Cockran iN. Y. maintained that the powsi Of tax ition was a legitimate weapon for the control of privileges of commerce.

The reason the Senate wa-s steadily increasing In power, he said, was because It constantly exercised every vestige Of Its power Emphasizing the relations Of the Houses, he asserted that powers I .1 would decay, and that the House now possessed all the power necessary to establish its predominance. Mr. Cockran said: Says System Is All Wrong. "Within my memory the three large companies havo accumulated a billion and a quarter of dollars, nnd It will nut bo a gent ration before this sum will he five or six billions The utter vlclousness of this condition is that these funds are under the control of men who havo no personal interest in them. This money Is a trust fund, and yet the persons who are the bencfh lari.

ilie trust cannot have a word to say regarding them. This system must be wholly uproot.il to effect a cure." Mr Cockran's remedy was to confine the Insurance companies to the Slate in which they were organized, the same as savings are confined. Big- Salary Unnecessary. "Believe me." he declared, "there Is not the need of paying a salary of $150,000 a year by any Insurance company to protect Its policy-holders, but It Is necessary to get a man to swindle them It was an awful spectacle, he said, to see these men mount the witness stand and boldly their misuse of the people's funds There Is now the spectacle In New York. said, of the District Attorney working day and night to prosecute thOSS guilty of violating the purity of the ballot box, which was Commendable But at the same, tlmo the Insurance officers did hat go to Jail, but back to their offices, after their confessions.

Deplorable Confession. said it was a deplorable confession to make, but he would assert that it would be absolutely Impossible to put the of Si tfi in Jail in this country. Mr. Cot i 1 1 1 described the method of stock gambling practiced by Insurance companies and said that the thousands of successful Instances left no record behind. It was only the few failures where the companies were required to make good that a record was made.

As a proof that no special skill Is necessary for Insurance purposes Mr ''nckran said: "We have but to Innk at the method by which these three companies have un- ASvvays Remember the Full 1 axatave jjroroo Qmnina Ceres a Cold in One Day, Grit, in 2 Dayt ODD AND END Specials Tor Saturday Only! All Day Saturday Freod's will place on sale Seven Specials very low prices. Remember, we have only Twenty-five of each article advertised. gEyQ Bath Room Rack, 65c Crumb Tray and i Scraper, Towel Holder, I 30c 45c I I Twenty-five Weathered Oak Tabourettes, 55 CewF Twenty-five Weathered Oak Clocks, Twenty-five Solid Oak Easels, Your sW Yot I Credit MW I Cred I isGood llif URNITURE CARPET CO. sGJ I ElP3lfl to40 East Third South Street "i i i ken to reorganize themselves What Is the first thing they have done' Do they go Oi( and look for Insurance Not by ary means. The first thing they did was to send them all a way Ridiculous Reorganization.

"Tho Equitable company has been organized on a somewhat peculiar basis A very ri gentleman whom we all have the right. I suppese. to call a philanthropist lor he hlrnself has ald It. and It Is greatly to his Credit (Laughter) purchased the control of this company, giving 12,500,000 for stuff that can p3v him but $3500 a rear That Is to sy through his philanthropy he has given an earning power Of Simoon for SSGOO. He Is too good a business man to have done thai matter of course.

There is no explanation for It Ci pt philanthropy (Laughter i Financial Vigilantes. "Now, In order to appease the popular mind on the philanthropic enterprise, what has he done? Has ho gone to the Insurance world to find this talent that i worth UoD.ihjO a c-ar or $75,000 a year? My no means He hits gone outside and appointed a kind of financial vigilance committee, and not one of the vigilantes ev. had anything to do with an Insurance company, except that possibly one of them may have bonowed money from It. A ver eminent statesman, one of the most illustrious of our time, has I- en called from the classic shades of Princeton, where he has been spending the decline of an illustrious ltf (n composing philosophical contributions to the thought of the country, and placed In the chair of an insurance company with which, so far as I know, he has never had the lightest acquaintance whatever, May Have Borrowed Money. "Another gentleman, who may have borrowed money from an Insurance company, but certainly never had anything to do with the administration of one himself, a financier of no mean distinction, Is associated with him And the third is a Judge, an eminent Judge, a Judge whose motives nobody will ever question but who In inklr.p this peculiar function of a vigilante has b.

en compelled to disqualify himself from sitting In a great number of cases which the State uf New York had OXpi Cted Iilm to adjudli ate Sarcasm for Morton. "And In order to make effective this reform a gentleman Is selected who may ive, been a good railroad man I believe he was and we have the authority of the President for it that he was an ex-COllent ''abinel officer, too good, in fact, to remain (laughter), and this gentie- hi. who In the walks of life where he nn en his efficiency. I do not beliee could command over 186,000 or 130.000 a year, gets P.o.ooo in a calling for which he has had no qualification or preparation Now that Is reform as the Insurance companies concede i Reserves One for Lawson. "In the Mutual we have the very board of trustees who had themselves either been active agents of business frauds been privy to them, choosing a new head, and thai selection Is generally attributed to the Influence of a gentleman who had leaped Into a peculiar fame through magazine articles, and which seem to describe him as the triumphant and successful hero of a hundred larcenies tlaughter).

Efficiency in Plunder. "In the New York Life, the third, we find the vice-president, after avowal of crime, after swearing on his own oath lhat he had purchased bonds one day and fold them the next day to the same company at an advance of 2 per cent, driven out by the Indignation of the community llnds himself followed by the adulatln'n Of this board, and complimentary resolutionscomplimentary to his efficiency In plunder have been spread through the public press as advertisements paid OUt of the funds of the poll. -hold rs whom he robbed Mr. Cockran paid his respects to Mr Terklns and Mr McCurdy. saying they Showed liinl $300,001 We collected $300 for Dr.

Henrd of San Francisco, CaL, a man in Missouri. We had to "show him." We can collect some moneyf" you if you turn in your hadB A little Christmas money sfcs come iu handy right now. Turn in your claims and Sj MERCHANTS PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATE Scientific Collectors of Bad Debts, Bank Salt Lake City, Utah. Fifth floor of the Com'l Natfl FRANCIS G. LUKE, Gen'l Mp.

"Some People Dcn't Like doubtless were surprised at their own modesty. Monuments to Crime. "Rockefeller's fortune Is a monument to crime. declared Mr Cockran. "and he docs not deny It.

"It Is time we should consider the awful effect of criminals still holding offices they havo abused. Mr. Cockran added Mr. Cockran, In conclusion, declared Congress was bound to take action After some general debate, In which Adams of Pennsylvania. Mr Williams, the minority leader, and Mr Burke of Pennsylvania took part, the House adjourned HALF HATES For Christmas Holidays Via Oregon Short Line.

Tickets on sale December 23. 24, 25. 30 and 31. 1905, and January 1. 1906, tinal return limit January 4.

See any Oregon Short Lino aent for further particulars. Clt Ticket Of- i flee 201 Main st. MISS BALDWIN TO TALK She Will Di9cuss Physical Education Before Teachers at Provo. Miss Flora E. Baldwin, teacher of oratory and physical education, formerly of Boston, will address the L'tah County Teachers association at Provo today, her subject being "Physical Education In the Public Schools and Its Relation to Reading Miss Baldwin Is conected with the schools of Salt Lake nnd his hod large experience In her profession For the past three years she has been BUpenvleor of physical education at Helena and holds the highest recommendations from the superintendent of schools of that city, is from other eminent educators of the East.

Gov. Cutler Will Help. Gov. Cutler tins aldremerl mmmunl a to Henry MacVsrlsnd, chairman of the National Committee on Proposed Of Inauguration Da from Mnrch to tho last 'l liurjelay In i.rll sjlnR lint he will u- Influence to gel the l'tah delegation In con-greu to vote for the propoje.1 chance This letter Is In reply to one recently reculveil by th Governor from Mr. MaxFarlaaO.

Nelson Going- to Ptate Superintendent Nelson ham City today for tho purpo otM an oddrcsa to the school boards ofj ggBE3ffiBBSSBBS3BB3aY2U0nSSST3SSSBSSI Men, Boys and Gjfe Are all promised that thsv colvo actual full value "Vjy, goods or in work done at WSM JEWELRY STORE AND MBt J. F. BOES 259 SO MAIN 3T. Nine full regulation Crown Bowling PC 32 W. Third So.

Ind. FpnfM1! Private alleys for clubs. Ladles' patronage 5 solicited Biji SALT LfiXI TUSF EXuHsK 08 MAIN ST. fcj California nd Eastern imL ore far ail rporung vesttst. NOTICE I tu's I rec.lved a slock2f; supplier and will i'o work asm, orders at rlrrh: prices Ji W.

L. WETHERK Phone 22S2 Ind. 415 Wjjj.

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