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FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDA MARCH 13, 1904. ADmTIBEuN’I& BY SMOOT Former Federal Attorney Mnney Savmg Specials in New Spring Goods ive items from three depart- on Mormonism and t ; et ’rcpt: s we are offering in new 1 e | WASHINGTON, March 12.—That DRESS GOODS SPECIALS | Reed Smoot could not have been | elected to the United States Senate 75‘: Chlnon VOIICS Soc Yfil'd. = SRS | without having first been chosen as of street and evening el st Fymery an apostle of the Mormon church and | that after he was so chosen he would have been defeated was asserted by Judge Ogden Hiles, Assistant United States Attorney from 1886 to 1890 and later a Judge of the District Court of Utah, who was a witness to-day in the Smoot case before the Committee on Privileges and Elections, An kind. 50c (\7,-\”\' thread ul.t s. all the new $1.00 of ‘pure mohsir | interesting feature of Judge Colkimcw Hiles' testimony was. his declaration that Former Un d States Senator | Rawlins was still a Mormon, even | though he stood out against the = k stripe g | church in the matter of interference | in politics. | witn to t Attorney Vancott took the for the statement and SILK SDECIALS. ;!he col ”Ill\i‘x;r:':“.l".nod the close of ‘ ‘man Burrows adjourned the subject to call. It is will be a number of within a week or ten 65c Pongce Silks 39c Yard. | those wanted are . | Apostles Merrill d Teasdale and ‘ his wch.h ,\, | Apostles Merri ' 39(: | John Henry Smith, whose alleged | plur: ges already have been s were asked for to-day in » church interfered in busi- ness matters the last five rs and Critchlow mentioned the location of tation in Salt Lake, the gham City, in which the "Sc Qomb)x Tafielns 55¢ Yard a union GARMENT SDECIALS $25.00 Suil $IZS0. E hall, a case before > high council of the church, in which the parties were Jensen vs. | Dietrich Land and Livestock Com- and certain water litigation be- Salt Lake and the West Jordan itchlow’s information on was indefinite and h i eotis IaH nusement ; "I*nv\\ce.\ $l750 S: 50 White Indm silk qusls 53 75 50c Lacc Collrs ZSc Ez}c\h’ said stimony MORMO? The witne WHO DICTATED. 5 W ked concerning a SENATORS ARE STARTLED ANEW the Committee at Washington and Sheds Light ADVERTISEMENTS. CASE REVELATlONSf in Utah Testifies Before| he Practices of Adherents manifesto of 1890 he added many &n-} teresting details. He sald there was a disposition not to prosecute cases | when the law generally was observed, | but that after the manifesto it was seen that the Mormons had returned | to their old practice. He said this was | evident from the new “crops of chil- | dren” from polygamous families which | continued to spring up. | In the cross-examination Van-| cott brought out a great deal of tes- | {timony regarding church influence | for the election of Reed Smoot for the | Senate and Judge Hiles stated pos-| itively Smoot could not have been elected to the United States Senate if his candidacy had not been approved by the Mormon church. “Do you mean that if Mr. Smoot { had been a lay member of the church | that he would not have been elected, or that if he had been an apostle and | had not tl.e indorsement of his quo- rum he could not have been elected?” “Mr. Smoot could not have been | elected without having been an apos- 3 CARDETS OF UNUSUAL BEAUT {tle and without the consent of the The colors are mh and varied. The patterns are woven with min ccu — P d | church.” coarse_pat th colors running together. . | “When it was announced first that ou oiten hu‘n told that such patterns are to be found only in body candidate hé he was a was not an | C | apostle,” remarked Vancott. } Fl rl ‘ l Close]y Woven arpets “Oh, well, his candidacy was not p R R S - 2 ar—na | i whtioty: ton: bt Afien K closer the weave, the finer the designs and the longer they we. | candidacy was announced after it was | known that he was to ‘be an apostle | Carpets That Will Wear Well it was certain that he would be hem for many rs and have made friends by them. | electe : | “Will you tell us why you say he! Patterns Suitable for Any Room could not have been elected w hen his | Canfifdcy Wi fivst v dining-room, bedroom. hall or stair. it because ‘he had no <mnd|ng in the A full new nough of a pattern to carpet your entire house if neces party?” asked Sentor Hopkins. “He had mo standing that would | OTH ER pRlCE ARGUMENTS entitle him to such a promotion. and he was not seriously thought of,” an- Lots of odds and ends that can be bought at prices actually less than man cturers’ cost. swered the witness. BORDERED CARPET RUGS—Made of Whittall's best ALL-WOOL SMYRNA RUGS. of body Bruss: 9x12 feet. “Were there any other Republicans | mentioned for the Senatorship before grade . $21.00 eau and doorways— he most wear. Rugs for the front of t places where the carpets r the selection of Smoot as an apostie ?” 18.00 1 ' = hic . >r scher % Governor Wells was men- | 2 I e o tioned and Governor Thomas and 30“’5"21’ ournr "’5",;““"’ °f $23.00 b 95¢ some others.” | statement in former testimony that a | SMOOT ALWAYS SILENT. 3 50¢ 5;-‘«-‘ n':: :’11;“1 | Mormon committee dictated legisla-| 1, angyer to other questions Judge T s et ”"”"““‘ colors that $2.00 iy oo peancch - | tion in the first t‘“s}nn»wf the Lngu-AH”” Seid S ha: hellavad’ Sapobar: will not run . oax.‘_ r . n ~ - — lature. He named as this committee | - R st ; % N S il S e ot e ala PARISIAN AUTO DOGS 1 COUNT LEO TOLSTOY C. W. Penrose, W. W. Rite, James |\ d:zdh:tdkb!;{_dn““ml‘; “_x{;‘hrl”l‘v; r;;el_ No mail or n[(‘['llflvh orders will be accepted for any of the abo MUST HAVE GOGGLES PLEASED WITH BRYAN | Sharp, William H. King, F. S. Ruh-‘[puhhum e e e b ards : James M. Tanner. I{u_harrh | heard of Smoot having made an ad- iy g ARG RS A P a1 3 ALY UL SR 2 N French Motormen Dress Canines in He Thinks Nebraskan the Most In- | was in attendance at the hearing as rdress R g SR g “ ¥ it 3 Costumes to Protect The! teresting Man He Ever adviser for Mormon witnesses. Vancoit calad the - roitiee ke g‘ : ke _—_" Van Colt-anked the iyl (nex yiat In- [ he accounted, in view of the testi- & 3 ¥ R o St T T formation he had as to the existence |, ., he had given, for the Mormons ; latest book of such a committee, and said he Knew | ¢opqing non-Mormons to the Senate. ; : . from adn ms made by George Q.| .gow about Joseph L. Rawlins?” 2 s : and. it Cannon and Heber J. Grant and cer- | po acked. “He Lot & MdERan : 4 : Count’s fam- | tain members of the Legislature in in- | .jocert 1. Rawlins? Oh, yes, he that it will not be published in April, 1896. He d he had received a letter from | he s eph Munscn, a member from Cache | T st A g = Count | Valley, giving information as to oc- | . currences between Muns: n op | for his ort « b vm hale | CUrrences betw Munson and Bishop which Stevens said it had | by the church authori Ste be n n cided 4 ies that inasmuch as the Legislature | ¢ - visit of Color was inexperienced it was best to have | a committee of the priesthood to pass on legislation as to whether it was | Lake, As- ney in Utah | in Y\rpfd ing his testi- ) 1889, nch rmRa bieay: said he had drawn more in- - le for radica nts and prosecuted more cases | is Postofice ha habitation under the Ed- | t1 ct than any other offi- | r the first two years aid, refused to obey the ite the fact that oppertunity en offenders to escape punish- verin t wi s ‘;d leared the la if they promised not to violate -four hours at .the|in. jaws in regard to cohabitation. vo hour anc fifty minutes The the witne 1 Th !h_ r}, ti Satd’ thiev sonink 4),93. the law of God " S [@NCE | ather than the law of man. They | g in Italy and med to think it an act of apostasy to the church rules, even S = to go counter Secret o Sor s More Money for British Exhibit. :,hr l::l\sl|(:1r"v!lh<:yx}rrl‘:.c1|—l;:;' e “’ " s . LONDON, March An addi- | oonie began to obey the law, for they . L Yoo $9.080; 0ox. ‘the were poor and could not pay the fines, o I consequently it became generally il v reported that the practice of polyga- mou cohabitation was breaking up.” unced d navy m(.,l- 000,000, it ap-| timates will fiho\\ “CROTPS OF CHILDRI The witness covered much of ground gone over in the testimon: 5 | Critchlow, but in regard to the c tion prosecutions until after the of ADVEBTFEHEN’I& We Will Buy It to You to Try.|, by a process reqering §m- S g Discases ysentery— ' S e 5 the body with apparatus and 14 days’ time, | panarur Dropey . Stomach Tis, es are made part of the liquid Dysp iroat Troubles “Tuberculosis umors—Ulcers Variococele Women's Diseases s that begin with fever—all in- product. 1e result is a product that does t oxygen does; and oxygen is the source of vitality, the most es- can compare very s 3 all catarrh—all contagious dis- I 3e i Amésion akd aniis }wma. element of life. The effects of - he results of impure or pofsonous who need it & know of it. For | Liguozone are exhilarating, vitalizing, | "'90% .. sebisty Liquo that reason we ¢ this remarkable rmru\mgh Yet it b"‘ 11 gcrmmdeb 50 | vitalizer, nccnmml-h?;\g ‘.“;‘m’“.,'lfa;'\?‘;i can a0 offer. We will buy the first bot- | certain that we publish on every bot- Oc Bo ree. e and give it to you if you need it. ‘k”( an offer of $iovo for a discase i ws‘ d Ltfle F We i this gladly to let the | germ that it cannot kill. 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Any please accept it to-day, for it places you under no obligation whatever. Liquozone costs soc and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON These are the known germ diseases. All that medicine can do for these troubles is to help Nature overcome the germs, and such results are indi- drug that kills germs 1s a poison, and | 7¢<t and uncertain. Liquozone kills Sor bl 3 catmat s tihas mterna‘!’]y Every i r:e germ‘s, wherever they are, and || out the ;fi’,fk:":;q"z:..:hf‘L,'fr::"qua' physician knows that medicine is ai- | Loc_TFesuits are inevitable. By de- Oxcne Ca., S9.500 Walaik:dvis Chlengs. stroying the cause of the trouble it My disease is invariably ends the disease, and for- 1 have never tri most helpless in any germ disease. quozone, but if you Not Medicine, ver will supply me a S0c. bottle free T will edicine. Asthma, Hay Fever—Influenza o S Liguozone is the result of a pro- fi,‘,’:’;;fi,‘"'m“ ,’g Gm‘g"‘"“ cess which for more than 20 years has | Bioed Poison Leucorrhea. been the constant subject of scientific | Brisht's Disease Liver Troubles || *'"'"" g ARty Bowel Troubles Malaria—Neuralgia research. Its virtues | Coughs—Colds € Many Heart Troubles are derived solely from gas, made in | Consumption e large part from the best oxygen pro- | Constipatiy e l'%mucn::;r“r;;n s R SN | Mormon parentage.” | in regard to the remainder of his trs-J_ | timony The witness said his basis for be- | lieving that polygamy was more fla- | grant since Utah was admitted as a| is 4 Mormon. “What—Rawlins “He was born into § 039 MAR ET. OPPOSITE MAI.LIS'I'EI! Mormon?” the church, of “But, surely, you do not mean to say | that because a man is born of Mormun ]l\\\. AS NEWSPAPER LIBEL o the question that pat - :pnre'fl.’.\ge he is always a Mormon? 4“1 humanity are incom ¥ | LAW 1S UNCONSTITUTIONAT “Pretty close to it.’ g i THINGS YOU WILL ALL | Vancott mentioned the faet that .. . ..g» oulede. “But, for | | TALK ABOUT. | Court Decides That It Is in Cong former Senator Rawlins stood out| pyy part, the first man I “all call THE SCRAPBOOK PAGE. | With a Section of the Bill against the church in regard to its prother must be a Frenchman.’ —— — > o of Rigl principles and worked against it. Judge | Lombroso and Max Nordau agree NEXT SUNDAY CALL. e aroae fu'hij' R A Hiles corrected the statement by say-|in the assertion that love of humanity | 4. 3 | ot e f“hd‘-‘— | ing “certain principles,” and then said ' tends to elevate and purify the senti- | newspaper libel law enacted by that with the qualification he had made | ment called patriotism, and that fra- | the Carusvalet Museum of Paris by a | Kansas Legislature in 1901 was to-day he regarded Rawlins as a Mormon. | ternity between natior~ is now essen- | sturdy octogenarian ‘ramed Paques. | declared lm‘CGT‘hl utional by the Vancott attempted to take Judge| tial to the good of each. { During the life of the writer Paques|preme Court. The court says that th Hiles to task for his statement that| Charles Richet, Fourniere, the social- | Was his barber and with an amount of | 1aw 1s in conflict with section 18 of ti e PR B T R e ke : Urbain Gohier and Anatole France | Sentiment not ordinarily credited to the | bill of rigt n that it de as a matter of fact, his entire testi-|; even frrther, declaring without re- | wielder of scissors and razor he p"'l in’ certain to one injured in his mony was not just as reliable as his ! serv. that a European federation is the | served the locks clipped from the dis- | reputation to have remedy therefor | statement in regard to Rawlins. The |ideal at which civilization must aim. | !m:wsh_&d head. These fle wrought Into‘m due cou urse of law. The decision | witness stood his ground in regard to e R | a hair picture representing the room at | was rendered in a case brought by J. Rawlins, and said that he knew what Kept Customer’s Locks. | St. Malo in Brittany where the novelist \ F. Hanson, a _L wdsborg attorney, he was talking about, and that with the| - AR farch 12. — An odd relic of | was born. On view in the museum this | against W. J. Krebheil, attorney of qualificati he hads made Rawlins| Chateaub:iand has been bestowed upcn | has excited no little interest. the McPherson Republican. !was a Mormon. He added with em- phasis that there were no qualifications Anvzxnsm Danderine GREW THIS HAIR. te was that more polygamous chil- dren were being born and that poly-| gamists drove through the streets more | openly than hefore. Senator Hopkins | | asked a number of questions to find | out if Judge Hiles knew whether there | | had been any polygamous marriages | since the manifesto, and he said he did not. Witness said he believed that such marriages had taken place. One case | he had in mind was that of a personal | friend, and he thought the plural wife| had been taken since the manifesto on | account of the youth of the woman. Tayler said they had a great deal of evidence to offer that plural marriages:| had taken place since the manifesto. | There being no other witnesses, to ex-| amine the committee adjourned, sub-| ject to the call of the chairman. | e DECLARES PATRIOTISM IS A HARMFUL IDEA Macterlinck Says n Is a Barrier to| Freedom and Should Not Be Promoted. | PARIS, March 12.—To the quesuun,; “Is patriotism incompatible with love | of humanity?” Maurice Maeterlinck, the mystic, replies: “The ideas that guide humanity ought to be respected only in propor- tion to the amount of good they do. “The idea of a fatherland was long necessary. It is not yet completely useless. That fact indicates that the hour approaches when it will become harmful. “It is the duty, then, of those who | walk in advance of \the unthinking *a3j}jog OGZ & ym papels Ape syl ‘aiss Sarah MacComb, whose hair The of Miss Frances Marie Miss May Densmore, sow the longess Z:‘“":!u::y E:":flk ‘::: :;i:e;?:":o; couches the flo})rwhm she stands erect, hair jos o vt ot "‘,‘"d' pro. Dbaired lady in the world, say=. “T have nsed find the sentiment enfeebled enough to| 5ays: “My Hair would not reach below P ph ot ,,.a‘- yous Danderine two years, and sy bair has be overthrown upon the day when men my waist when I commenced using shove :—:flu‘ax E ‘_""l"" - ht: mn""’-"‘. shall realize that it stands seriously in Danderine, and it is now over five feet = Jongeat sad mos since I commenced its use. It surely con- the way of man's evolution. in lengt 4 (Look st her beautiful ‘,‘,:mrrd"‘ A“"::‘; tains most remarkably invigorating quali- “It is important to destroy, little by ton, the .lnu-n:‘ Garfield boul., tes” (Miss Densmore writes us under ree little, everything which tends to| bairand judge for yourself whether or Choaga. The doctor says wht ber e comisuel cent dafe that Danderine had mads her haie i hamper the liberty of man, as if all rot she got the worth of her money.) s v e 1] '.-'.‘......:.‘: grow three Ret longer than it was naturally, men really deserved to be free. One the time she is four years eld. knows, however, that they will not | merit the freedom Jor several centuries will be given 3, RETTY SUBSTANTIAL after their deliverance. The harmonious | ot n::’.::.: use of liberty can only be learned s 4 through long abuse of its benefits.” s S Se- moF 0F “Em l Maeterlinck’s singular opinjons are ._:' .‘w only a step in advance of others given, 3 ls lT NOT ? with his; to a Paris review by eminent contributors. To show how ?nlclty Even Paul Deroulede, hot-headed et 40 the! w‘d Nationalist that he is, assents in some ks 0 bav oo e o '"’"" degree to the succestion involved in