OCR Text |
Show UTAH HEWS. average of four imunds of sivuun-whole wheat per day, and made an average gain of one pound inch per day; during tile ast ilujs they have eaten live pounds of wheal per day, which had previously soaked for twelve hours, and they have r day, gained nearly two jhiUiiiN tsi their average weight now I pounds. 'Hie soaked wheal ilioJe) feed will ta mutiuued this wheu a change to chopped wheat anil barley, mixed half and half, wdl Is d for an electric light lxxsn grunted. Coalville will wain have tcleuhone connections with the outside world. Coal of an excellent quality has been found near Ht. Pleasant, In a vein eight feet thick. since her Bingham has great Ore of two months ago, and hut few traces of which are now visible. additional Indictments Twenty-tw- o have been returned against alleged lxxxUen in Malt Lake county affairs. Coughlin and George are on trial at Ogdon for the murder of Constable Thomas Stagg near Evanston in August. Charles Means was convicted at Ogden of counterfeiting und given the light sentence of eighteen months in the pen. The Union Pacific and Rio Grande Western have settled their little differences, and old rates have been restored. An ordinance has been introduced in the Balt Lake City council requiring all electric wires to he placed underground. Squire Coop of Ogden will drill JOO voices to assist in a concert to Ins given by Sousas Marine hand in Ogden next winter. Mrs. W. L. Burton of Balt Lake, who was so badly injured at a railway crusring the night of ihe mth, when her husband was killed, is recovering. MraJEuieline R. Wells has withdrawn from the Republican legislative ticket of Salt Lake county, to avoid the possibility of legal complications. Experiments with Utah guano have been so satisfactory lu tire districts that large quantics will be used next season, for which orders are now being placed The E. P. and Louise lode mining claims in Big Cottonwood have been attached by Ihu Utah Rational hunk to satisfy a judgment against their owners for 115,802.50. Geo. II. Eldredgc of the Gcologicul survey of the United Stales is making a rcconoisance of the Uintah and reservations, investigating their mineral deposits. Mining men anticipate a boom in mining next year. Capital is becoming interested in that direction, many new prospects are being developed and abandoned mines being worked again. Two Ogden women, while returning home from the theatre the night of the 21st, were held up by three men. The ladies exercised their prerogative to scream and frightened tne hold-up- s away before securing any valuables. W. D. Mabnr, the Salt Lake minister who gained some uudcaired notoriety last spring, has endeavored tc bury the scandal by withdrawing from the church and ministry. So far as the church organization is concerned, the case is settled. J. It. Rawlins, mine Inspector, Morrison coal mine at Manti so badly flooded that it was impossible for him to make a thorough inspection of it. The company, however, is negotiating fur suitable pumps, with a view of remedying the trouble. George C. Kidder of Salt Lake City, superintendent of the Comet Gold Mining company at Soldier, Idaho, was struck In the abdomen with terrible force by a board which came in contact with a circular saw in full motion, receiving a dangerous wound. 'Jim Woods, a Balt Lake hackmun, assaulted Ed. Sanberg, another hack-ma- n at the corner of the White Reuse, Saturday morning ntl;3o, inflicting three ugly wounds with a pocket knife. White tried to escape, nut was apprehended and jailed a lew hours later. The attack was unproA franchise plant at Bingham has beet-grow-i- . ta voked. A baby of Gunner Gunncraon of Chester, in Ban Pete county, which was just beginning to creep, crawled in behind the counter and in some manner got hold of strychnine which it ate, dying in a few minutes in horrible agony. This is the fifth fatality among children lrum poisoning in the locality of Chester within the past few years. James Kelsey of Salt Lake who has visions of the pen staring him in the face by reason of his refusing to pay 10 per month alimony to his divorced wife as ordered by Chief Justice Merritt, Is out on bonds pending heabcas corpus proceedings. Mr. Kelsey claims his means are exhausted. In April he qualified in the sum of $7u,ooo on the bond of a star route contractor of Chicago. Secretary Smith has handed down a decision adverse to the Central Pacific Railway company in the controversy over a suction of land in the La Plata mining district. The railway company had it entered as agricultural land but the authorities ruled against it. This removes a cloud from the district, and several claims there will be worked through the coming winter. The lawyer, Brassey, who was arrested In Salt Lake City for raising money In a shady way. operated in Ogden last week under the name of E. Miller. He is said to have raised a number of small amounts there on the sympathy racket, lKwirtra securing some little favors at the 1acltto hotel. Reclaimed to be a San Francisco lawyer In hard luck, and several Ogden lawyers donated. Chauncy G. Webb, an old and respected resident of Balt Lake has gone on a visit to his son at Bt. Louis, Mo. Mr. Webb, who is 83 years of age, has resided In Utah since 1S48, and has the distinction of being the father of Ann Eliza Young, the nineteenth wife of President Brigham Noting. He was a delegate to the convent ion In 1840 that nominated William Henry Harrison for the Presidency, ami in lMO made hay upon the ground where Omaha now stands. An interesting experiment in hog feeding Is In progress at the Union stockyards at Salt Lake with wheat as the diet, the result of whieh will be given to the interested pnblie from time to time. About thirty days ago lot of pigs were pnt on full feed, weighing at the time 71 pounds. For the first twenty-thredays they ate an e wi-e- made. Samuel Marshal of Kamas, Summit county, has made payment fu full In the land oillce on a mineral claim ih an unorganized district in that county. The entry conflicts with Several homestead entries which have i running for years. Mr. Marshall the filing last attempted to make ollb-refused unspring, but the laud less it was mails subject to protests of the homestead entries which has been done. The gentleman says he lias relocated some ancient mines by means of hieroglyphics on surrounding rocks which were worked about the year l3ou. No openings have been found, and the locator acknowledges he dims not know wiiat kind of ore exists but is sanguine that he has a deposit of value, in any event. Marshall is a Pier anil is conversant with mining in all its phases. Imn-i- e & Petty Ilerkelraths employment agency, 65 E. Third Huut.h, Salt Lake City, Utah (tel, 404) a thoroughly reliable agency where all kinds of help anil situations can be obtained. Uu-te-l, mining and house help a specialty. Enclose stamp fnrreply when writing. a wlii-lie "cold deck" in IiIh to the pluycd wllti John Hull, lie ncci-U-- il JirliiHh ultimatum. which v.un Hid removal of a viceroy from olllue, lint It nee ins that the Viceroy lind ulreudy been removed and aiHnied to uiiuiiut aim the prolmlily higher ollicc. Conn qmnllyluck-Imi eel on the fanuuea wui expected ellYork I'omnier-ila- l Advertiser New New York's Thomas fuiirf-u- s who lins rcim-iiullccriian. In-- wan not ullowril to l on his beat, whs on the do aa he fun-for twi-nlyears. I in retiring lie suplsT and Kave Ids friends a clminimKiic he niuiln this slalcnn-ii- t of Ills rum : "Dururn-sleI liuve i)l crimmy ing inals and made a fortune of bMiil Now bulldliiK m In life 1 uin isuinK to devote houses and bringing iuwrilits UKailial Itoosevell. Theodore George Knlntsbiiry Is the first Englishman niiptilhted to Ihe --cliulr of Kiighsli 111 Edinburgh a cliulr I In 17V2. "niiffloiiHlre" III a hull AND CIVILIZATION INFERIOR RACES. A lively anil Interesting discussion on efthe tiurslinn of the wisdom of the Inforts of civilised peoples to elevate recent the ferior races took place ut meeting of the lirltlsh 1 loyal Association for the Advancement of Silence. None but scientists and men of experience were allowed to enter the lists, and the conclusions reached by the debaters have been characterized as are startling and revolutionary. They said to indicate a signal change in the opinions entertained by scientific men with reference to the proier treatinent of uncivilized peoples. The discussion was oiiened by Prof. F. Petrie, the distinguished Egyptologist, and he took tile ground that all attempts to impose our own standards on Inferior races are absolutely fatalr to them. They absorb the vices ratln-- thnn the virtues of civilization, and I nth moral and pliysl-cdecay inevitably follow. Prof, rtt-rl- e is reiHirted to have said: "We may desiKitirally force a bald and senseless imitation of our ways on another people, but we shall only destroy tlielr life without Implanting any vitality In Its place. No change Is legitimate or lieneflcial to the real character of a people except what flows from conviction and natural growtn of mind, and If the Imposition of a foreign system Is injurious, how misenblc fat the forcing of a system such as ours, Which is the most complex, unnatural and artificial that has been known; a System develulied In a cold country, amid one of the hardest, least symand calculapathetic. moat the world. ting of all the iieoplea of of such i Buell a system, the iiroduet we conditions, attempt to force on the races, and expect from them Implicit subservience to our Illogical law ami our Inconsistent morality. The result la death. We and call It civilisamake a death-hous- e tion. Scarcely a single race can bear the burden, and tlien we talk complacently alMiut the mysterious decay of savages liefure white men. Prof. Petrie ridiculed our blind worship of the "three It's," which tie deemed the hauls of all culture. Whatever they may be to ua. they are not at all necessary to other races, he su'd. "The exquisite art and noble architecture of Mycenae, the undying song of Homer, the extensive trade of the bronse age, all belonged to- people who never read or wrote. Bonn- of my best friends in Egypt are hnppliy Ignorant of sueh aecoiiipliHhineiitN." The true essentials of character, continued the professor, am moderation. Justice, and these may be acquired without books, as inay also be the qualities of qnlck observation und a keen sense of things of the uses and prniierth-urouiid ut The speakers who followed Prof, ret-rl- e concurred in Ills leading ideas. A summary et the delmte is given In an editorial In the New York Hun, and we reproduce it below: "Lord Htanmore, better known as Hlr Arthur Gordon, a colonial administrator of vast experience, expressed a that as niueh wrong has been Inflicted by a desire to carry out civilas by violence. It was a Ideas izing mistake, ho said, to regard the races as Immoral; their moral sense Is very unlike our own, but It is none the less real. As to the attitude to be assumed toward the social usages and peculiar habits of the natives of a Lord Rtanmorr. of given country. course, conceded that ccrtuln customs, as cannibalism, infanticide, such g and the wholesale plundering of Inferiors by local chiefs must be put an end to at once nml firmly. But It would be well, he thought, to permit the continuance of many usages repugnant and even repulsive to European Ideas. In such matters he would trust to the transforming influence cf time. Herein he cordially agreed with Prof. Petrie, who had reniindid 1 is hearers that Paul of Tarsus did r.ot deem It needful, any more than old Epictetus, to iirnhiblt slavery, polygamy, or even gladiatorial shows. The elimination of siu-evils was left to be brought about, aa tt wns brought about, by the growing enlightenment and energy of the public conscience. "To much the sumo puriHiac spoke Dr. Gust, long connected with the Indian civil service, lie denounced the continual attempts of Euroiwans to uproot ancient civilisations not Inferior In some ways to their own. and to destroy customs which are nut contrary to moral law. lie Implored inirsluiinrlea to lie more tolerant towanl native Ideas and usages and to do Christian things In a Christian way. A long cxpfrin.c in India had convinced i)r. Cust thn; al self-denyi- syin-jmlh- y, cun-vlctl- semi-civiliz- widow-burnin- h lu the wisest plan Is not to things that are not uiiluwful, und not to try to Anglicise the people ut that country, lie considered it altsurd for missionaries to want to alter the nmr-riiicustoms of a people which i nly tolerates divorce in the case of Kuu-lieanand to dictate to natives naturally sober, fHr more teniieratc, indeed, thun Englishmen, us to wiiat tltey should eat and drink. Hu would even go so fur as to protect the people of India, China and Japan from profilers wliu intrude where they are not wanted. He mentioned the lnsutiice ot a missionary lu China who erected a liib-rfcr- s, which building uiulcr clrcuniHtanccs made the act a desecration, and lu view of men performances he was not surprised tliat from lime to lime the Chinese rose against the 'foreign devils.' In closing. Dr. Cust referred to the sacrilegious act committed in India oy a Wesleyan, by whom u chapel was milt on the edge of a sacred tank, but who won forced by Lord Canning in rase the structure to the ground. "Dr. 11. Cl. Forbes and Prof. Hnddon, both of whom had lived lu Near Guinea, went further, and objected to the methoda followed by most missionaries in dealing even with savage tribes. Dr. Forlies thought the iVpu-an- s should be left alone to adopt civilisation In their own time, lie said that, so far us his observation of missionary work went, the actual religious change that took place in a converted s native was extremely small, and disadvantageous, as natives v ho went to cliapei thought themselves letter than otliers, and became lnsulHinli-nat- c. Prof, lladdon said that the desire of the missionaries seemed to l to crush the natives In a Procrustean bed; civilithe they forgot that only lusting sation is that which springs fruin below. lie added that not a few good people confuse clothing with morality, and that If the purpose was to extend the market for cotton goods. It nhoidd be carried out openly and honestly, not under the pretense of iromnt!ng religion. Englishmen, the professor wild In ccnirlusluii, do not, theoretically, wish to exterminate native races, but as a matter of fact they do so, and wiiat hus happened In Tasmania, where not a single native survives, is likely to hapjien elsewhere in the Islands of the Hnuth Sea." Moral Sterility of Russian Religion. H is a strange and oppressive picture of religious life In Hussia that conies to us from a talpsic l taper. This l upper, Christllrhe Welt (No. 32) draws the picture lurgely from information gathered from Itussisn sources. W'e condense its descrljitlon somewhat, as follows: In a Russian court In the city of Odessa some years ago there wax a triul lietween two iieasants, one of whom had bodily maltreuted the other. The examination revealed the fact that tile injured imrty had claimed that Almighty God was suiierior to Bt. Nicholas. The oilier, in the interest of his luitron saint, resented this and abused Ills neighbor. This is a specimen of ItuMKinn religiousness. Koni years ago, when the compulsory conversion in mass of Protestant peasants in Livonia to the State church of Russia wus ill process a Greek Catholic suiierior jHipe expresed his surprise thut Prolestunts were opposed to this change of base. There was no ground for this rqqiosilion. he thought; for had not Luther st one time been the court preacher of (jucen Catherine of Russia? This Is a siieclmen of the theological training in Russia. At Warsaw the Einticror Nicholas was taking part in a religious service in which, according to custom, the worshiper wus to kiss the hand of the priest. The latter, in his confusion ut the presence of the visible head of the statu church, failed to offer his hand. TliereuiHin the Kmia-ro- r cried nit: "Uive mi! your hand, you dog; I want to kiss it." This is a characteristic trait in Russian church life. The religiousness of the Russian church is an odd combination of elements. dllllcult to understand even for him who has come in constant contact with ft, and even more dllllcult to make clear to others. In it are remnants and remains of the oldest times of Christianity, a certain barbarian naivete, a lifeless formality from the times of Kyzuntinc sterility, and a wilderness of confused Ideas. The Russian will not lutes by a begger without having either given him aims or having excused himself for not doing so. Tlie duly of charity lias found an entrance into his very marrow und bones. in his eyes Is no The Christian. Yet this same man will go to kla huuse, cross himself in front of the Ikon, or saint's image. In the right corner of hla room, liung a piece of cloth before it. so thnt his patron saint cun not see wbnt he la doing, and then enter upon a carousal that would disgrace a beast Again, this typical Russian will on another day go to his church, strike the flor fifty times with bis forelicud. and 200 times repeat the O Lord, have mercy on me; words: and then depart and ns a wiluess take a fair oath before the courts because his friend the day before bud secured his premise to do so for a drink of voskn. and considers himself satisfactorily Justified when he tells the Judge that "even God himself will accept a bribe," meaning by tills his accepting so and so many wax candles and paternosters fur certain sins. What can of such a view ut matters? The le saidhimself is not conscious of hla man and it would be useless to try to demonstrate this to him. Ilia conduct Is typical of the religiousness ut the uvernge peasant In Russia. This Is one of the unique features of tills people and church. Another is that this religiousness, an indeed the whole genius and charneter of liuslnn life, la steeped in passivity. It is charactei Ised by n flight to escape the struggle of existence, a fatalistic stnndiHiint, which accepts everything, whether the result ef one's own doings or not, with the words: "It is God's will." Neither in Roman Catholicism nor in Protestantism have we a basis from which we can thoroughly understand the soul of the Russian Hoplc. It enn be understood outy from its origin, precedents, and historical development. The curse which, from the time that Russia was Christianized down to our own day and generation, hill rested upon the Russian rhurch. Is Its moral sterility; the fact that Its religion has no regenerative nnd productive power. Probably the most independent thinker Russia has produced within the last whose fifty years was TaehaadnJew, "Memolres" were published in Paris in the French language. and He takes sulwtnntlnlly the same position. and laments thnt of thnt spiritual life which the other religious confessions produce, his own church exhibits nothing. He sums up his Judgment In these words: "We nre railed Christians, but the fruits of Christianity did not ripen for us. Again he says: "And 1 acknowledge with unutterable sadness that religion In Russia is absolutely without fruit or results. It is lifeless and dead." The Inability ef the orthodox churrh spiritually to regenerate the cople has been charnclciistic of It from the beginning. And now, since Russia puts forth the claim of representing a certain typo of culture and civilization, It Is well to take note of this historical and present fact. A prominent Russian official some time ego smke of himself ns an orthodox atheist, nnd this was no less n person than Prince Tchcr-knssThe possibility of surh a position Is I'oeply suggestive. Translated and condensed for the Literary Digest. nuine-tiine- hard-heart- y. CANNIBALISM IN AFRICA. A correspondent of the Faturdny Rens view writes EWLETT BIDS. Nw Hl(h-JnS- s Tkite-Crs- Bskbi Ptafsr is Iks follows concerning The cannibalism of the block secret soeiety known ns the Human Ixop-nrilin the country near Elvira I .cone, disclosed by tile recent trial, brings forcibly before ns the difference between the East African nnd tile West African habits of eating human firah. the Mlirrbro e.innlbals waylaid and killed their viellma nnd afterward feasted on their flesh. The cannibalism uf Ilia Must const Is a very different kind. Thu flesh of the old people the grandfather huiI grandmother of a faintly Is dried and mixed with condiments; anil n portion of this is offered, with a dim sort of sacramental EYEBY CAN. meaning, to travelers who become strsnit inf rHt Wiit. m In Africa: s. BLUE DIAMOND UBEL ON guests of the family. To refuse it would lie a deadly insult To accept it is a wiKsoit to the pm il god puHiilun of n friend of ihu house. Many ul our travelers in East Africa have eaten thus saeruineiitully of the aiiccsturs of d some potentate. The cannibalism of the West coast is. bh has just lieeli seen, of a mure esse hoi rib.-- ; kind. The Mei ms to be coiineclod witli feliehism, 4 he worst development of which an IHculiar to that country; hut there Is a liidinuKly genuine appetite for fresh human flesh still exuding among the or West Afilcs. Tills canninegi-oebalism munlfeslH itself ill a refinement of gluttony which lias its mild analogy in the tastes of Europeans. Young buys are bought from the dark interior, kept in pens, fatten) d upon bulimias, anil finally killed and baked. To these Thyestuun feasts come not only the also, savage ciiiefs of tlis Interior, but from it is whispered. Muck merchants l In- - I'lsisl. Men who apieur at their places of business in English territory in broadcloth and tall luits. who bin the manners of their white musters, are said to disapiH-uannually into the interior, where, we are told, they might Ik seen. In naked savagery, taking on plump boys, in lart in the iKinqutls He tills us It may. which they delight. somehow the native of the West coast und its Hinterland is unlike the Eust g or South African native in the savagery and the extraordinary facility for returning to it which are his leading and very unpleasant charThe subject claims the acteristics. of the anthropologist, and certainly suggests a curious the rereason fur questioning the lationship ot the black man and race a tie or the gorilla, seeing that the of monkeys seems to Is! singularly free from anything like eniinllmllsm." dark-skinne- s r deep-lyin- ulli-iillo- Why Turks and Christiana Quarrel. I do not see why you Christians and Moslems cannot live peaceably together. was the remark mnde by the capwhile tain of an English the fleet lay recently in the harbor at lielrut. The inference was thut we Christians ere about ua much to blame ns the Moslems. The captain was either Ignorant uf or wholly unmindful ut some sum facts which cannot be too often mentioned, or Phi strongly emphasised at this critical time in tlie struggle between the Cross and the Crescent. Flint, the Turkish Empire Is an empire of Christian ruins, and this gulls every living Christian within Its borders. Thu hand of Islam has touched and killed churches, sects, cities and civilizations. And the same evil Hiwer Is still at work pushing the Christian to the wait Kccuud, the present ottoman Gorernmena exists only on sufferance, .not uf any right or iiower within it; and this galls the proud and Insolent Moslem. Were It nut fur Protestant England there would lie no ' i rkey on the maps uf IMA. Nothing hut her solemn promises of reform man-of-w- ar have wived hpr from dismemberment. Third, Turkey, though a Mohammeilun Stale, wus admitted to the privileges ami enjoyments of international law, that llnrat fruit of t'lirlsliiiiilty. Rut her barliarous treatment of Christians has long ago forfeited her right P be any longer reckoned as an independent nation in this brotherhood of humanity. Fourth, she neither rules fair administers Justice within her own territory. She has a good code, but no one regards it. Justice and Injustice are Fifth, bought and sold for a bribe. Turkey's proved insincerity In making trenths, her Oriental duplicity in evading them, her flagrant violations of them where she could nut evade, is a history ut shame uniwralleled since the bnrlwrous ages. Blxth. the Sultan has abolished in name only the death penalty for apostasy from Mohammedanism. No Moslem dares to profess Empire. On Christianity within the the other hand, there are many recent cases of Christiana The being forced to profess Islam. for some sentiin searching Sultan, ment with which to bind together his discordant subjects, has found nothing so successful as to appeal to Moslem bigotry and hatred of the Christian. Hcventh, It was an axiom 30 years ago that tlie Turkish Government was beEach passing deyond reformation. cade has added some hideous exemplification to this truth, and tlie Government will never learn. And now. in tlie closing days of tills century, comes the story uf Armenia. Eighth, during the forty yearn which since the Crimean war, hare elapsed the Turks have, by wicked, wily iolicy, filched away almost every right the Christiana possessed. The treaties gave Christians the right to build churches, oiien schiMils, print and circulate books, lint toduy no church can be built, no little oiiened, without exNo press permission from the Sultan. now be printed hook can Christian without being first sent to Constantinople for examination and mutilation. Years ago ail preaching in the open uir or public places was forbidden. even between Then all controversy Christiana was stifled. These are a few i t the reasons why we Christians find It so hard "to live A with the Moslems. peaceably Turkish Christian," in the Independent ). New York. Condensed for Public Opinion. blood-curdli- day-scho- ol (Non-Scc.- LAYING" THE DINNER TABLE. Tobacco Cure plate for sueh relishes us sailed nuts, olives und tin like. These and similar upiM'tixiTH ale usually passed from one M an.. I lier at u table arranged for the service of one waiter. the coils uf tlio carving eluth In Is a Wonderful 'Thing. front off the host's place lay the fish a knife for and knife, a isiliited poulty, . curving knif'-- together with a carving and a fish fork, Hiinilarly, on tlie clutli I T HAS NO RIVAL in its successful ihe hostess, arrange a soup ladle. a salad fork and sissm (If sins Is to Work. Road tho TESTIMONIALS the salmi) and whatever impli-nie- iit Is necessary fur helping to the of wel known men. Wo:l:s no INdessert. A carafe nearly full of iee water should Ik set ul the right of the JURIES on the system, but improves h st and one, Hsu. ot the right of the inistre.-s- . At the left uf each, set a a box a salt cup. your HEALTH. plate bonring of white or black pepper, and another TARS IT and in fi SAYS you of red pepper. The table su'iccs, cheese, butter, wail will bo CURED of thu TOBACCO and fers nnd ihe like, are put on the When grated until required. h raw oyswith CIGARETTE HABIT and your days Is offered ters or dams, it is brought to Hie taon earth will be lengthened. ble In a pretty cup with a Simon laid across tin- and Is usually ascd from one person to another. The oyster fork is upon the plate Send (5 for one bottle to with the shell fish, or Is laid when they are served. If the luttcr. It la placed at the right side of each plate with its prongs resting upon the .dgo lit the crossing and restplate nnd 11s handle ing upon the knives. This fork Is re& K. Cor. Snoul South and West Temple Streets, Belt Lsks moved with the oyster plates. flood City. Housekeeping. Agents Wantod Everywhere. WOMANS WAYS. Before buying see that tlio liotiles are sealed with the signature, Dkak Lkx Dais None geuuluo without ibissual or wln-- seal Is broken. flhe made herself a lovely gown Ami thought It wus so nice. Kite went and luniglit anollier At a most enormous price. pciiKc, the phonograph wus resul ted to. o The manager spuke into the reeel Vcr, A woman named Hu tier Is the first deserihlng the symptom uf the uliliig of her sex to vote at a general ilietioii pump, ami further to Indleate the eiise, In England. Her name was put by he placed the receiver to thut tlie pulsPAINTS, OILS, ETC. mistake on th voting list ut Harrow, ations of tlie pump would he recorded SAMII-KRAILED TO and the presiding officer at tlie polls on tin roll. AXY AUIIKKSRL Into held that lie had no authority "Just us a physician listens tu thu sex name wus when the her into action of the henrt or lungs lu the quire once on the list. body liy means of a stethoscope, H K Klri W.niih mlt Ijukctlity so the pump-doctlistened by mean unmarried no Is wonder the It daugh- of u phonograph to the tlirulm mid AGENTS WANTED ters ut the Prince uf Wales envy their pulsations of the pump thousands of yrur lnoitl'tv l ImidU1 our good. sinter, the Duchess of Fife, who Is now miles away, and wus enabled by thut ta Idriy. rfeml for IIoMav free to live after the manner of any incHiis to diagnose the disease. d New York Tribune tells how a woman, to go and come at The will, and to invito lu-- r friends to her retKirter listened to the strange i'rmtsni Buppiuw, Wrapping p at the New York office ot taLle, for they, poor girls, are obliged e. ilngg TwIuim, Kla. the Knowles comiMtny. The yoke of PIPER! pur, tu dine in their own apartments LA klli.KT COl.SsH Lsks when thi-i- r mother is not at home the Californian Is heard first, giving in tu watch over them. After all, who a clear, precise anil illslinet way Ihe would a princess be? Happy the girl symptoms of the pump, ami then lie Watchmaker, Jeweler & Optician who is lsirn under the fitars und Ktriies asks the listener to ay ultciitlon to of Indulgent American purents! Mu; Is tho pump'H action. Then one hour ALFX. I. WYATT. UK? IfslBlRnwt of the the sort of royalty to be envied, nut the d wheexing rank, every pump I nnd an occasional these scions of sou in which might In; made by esen steam. ASTONISHING RESULTS "The engineer to whom the phon'i-grap- li The woman who travels nowadays was submitted .. .. Pima Ths said that (lie would with her whut formerly was so perfect ami the have been regarded its a tolerable out- whole record EAGLE so f LIQUOR CURE It lie that tcmpti-plain fit for a surgeon. She has a mut linen speaking to intcrrunl ami ask addiwhere bottles sometimes or leather medicine-cas- e, MOST SAFtfeT. tional questions. SUOCKSSKJU AND MOST mny be placed beneath elastic bands The experiment proved iiliKdiildy 1KUMAN KVF RKMKDY YET DI&OOVKBKD. nnd kept fruin breaking. A tiny flask successful, nml means roll of tin ly containing brandy, anulher full of 1 wns diagnosed. Tile proper ! heretofore bow cured aid and some lavender water form the disease wns suggi slid, nid tin pump brmiiilst lu dowiumi ofhomiest, liio nod bBtulau. a very good liquid outflt fur tlu; trav- remedy UKAU THB TESTIMONIAL of is once more new.' us pby running good eler, anl one whieh provides her with 'letftfl OttCP KknptlCltl OB Jhjftor but BOW ft all the liquid necessities ut life except ibta to convert fro littluustw Kftjrw lUiuwJy, THE DOCTOR'S COLUMN. uthdsrruria nml victim uf Uib Limbi Nucor water. utiould not dcUy. Hcsldea these, a tiny envelope ot L A 11. Detroit. I weigh 200 pwuil a: d H rihs fur further iftnlott2ftr or eftU at I hiii nil tie Him. V.liilrsnl court plaster, a pair of selsnors, a tUJiP?urimiiiy stouter threnili-- needle, some twine and a soft Til iff Thymidine, extract tf flu 1M1AIJMACY, Fate linen cloth should ls carried. 0. K. iter. U So. ssd W, Tempi SU. tins,'.- -, cannot harm her who giss thus pro- Thyroid Gland, in threi!-dni- i Salt Lsk tatr.Utah Shu is ready three times daily, on tin; tongue. vided for emergencies. alike for ripped gowns and railroad Ktp the isiwels regular with Nalro-llllii- c wrecks. Saits. b noil L. (. R. Kmw York. Wlmt cmi I lak fur MiT "Women have as little Idea of busi- bronchitis TKKIII ness ns cats, observed a baggage-smashTake luimnline, accord io" to mood the in nn expansive Ions. His an exceilen I remedy. other day. hoy come down here and William F., New York Allriii.tir NO they rxicct us to tend to them anil Cerebri in, extract of the brain, hIHi UKTTKK their trunks right off, no matter how Test i lie, ill llve-dron He MAIIK, doses, many people are a trend of em. An' tongue, three timra daily ror it week. they can't see why we won't do tt, Take saline our sea sail: luitlis, tising neither. One of 'em came down here the other day and says to me: 'I want siecp in a cool dkihi, ami uvoi.l aide tobacco nnd hoi, off. Have you a check spices. my trunk right for it. ma'am T says I. 'Of course not,' Henry, N'. Y. Answered :in aisive. DENTAL PARLORS mh1 i!. il. IL New York. IM'Yiin giY uie she says, I want you to check tt for me.' How can you Identify it, ma'am? ft'Mtdy forcliMu:n c.turrb. for if taken Calarrhlne, failiiluily says I. 'You have to have a check of some sort to make sure that the trans- a month, will cure you. (kiino iii llir Hiormux aiul weft? your iww 1m 0. Kali no Brown, A. M., M. D., fer company's brought the right huiuv ftlftiftut. Oil. lien. Co.. Wx.hingiun, 11. C, trunk.' 'Well, I guess I ought to know DpL, Ail ul inquiry Mumi-u-foe my own trunk,' she says. It's sure to THE ANIMAL EXTRACTS. he the biggest one in the place, and It FREE C0INA6E RESTAURANT Frost Ih Brzin. MEDUI.INE, Fims has A. Ik C. on one end and N. Y. ('. CEREBRINE.Cord. CAHDiKE. Fran tha Heart. on the other, and it's look isn't a bit Ida IpisalOVARINE. TKYHUIDINE. M We.t geroud South St., Salt Lake N4TH0LITHIC City. like most trunk locks, and' l)o you SALTS. Kur L'outiislieii. CASIRiNE. Fur Uis-see your trunk anywhere round here, pal ion. CATARRHINE. ECZENiCUKE, and ullc Best and cheapest House Eating ma'am? I asked. 'No, I don't,' she er .pieixllieii uf thu in Utah, COLUMBIA CHEMICAL CO. says. The fact 1s, It Isnt down here Seistl for Llwratire Call nnd lieContinesd. yet, but I want you to send it after Kuwftl all DmisirUt. Sold hy ions me, you knuw. And, If you'll believe Mercantile AsSID HATTON Proprietor. woman couldn't understand sociation, Salt Lake City. it, that do it. She stood I wouldn't there why are argued the thing with me for nearly half an hour, keiplng a lot of other WOOL MARKET REVIEW. folks waiting." From which it would SALT LA KK CITY, UTAH. appear that, like most everything else, Smell Lot of Idaho Wool Sent to baggage-smashin- g has Its other side. Market. I'muus, Omsu, sli k'sdi J Boston, Musa, Oct. Iv The Itust-iMusical Sheet Musia ami Msslo Thomas Carlyle, In one of hla strong- Commercial will ray tumorruw ul linu.j. Ii.strbn-ntbulletin snil llauliines sold os est essays, says that the unconscious the wool murket: Tlie sales show u re.y payment. Kcml fur uur lUe list uf lint Is alone complete, and nn one In atrailing off from the mviit large Innlnm luuaK h,l(Jl copies. tendance upon the school exhibitions This Is partly due to (In fuel that the worsted mills have already Ihiu;;Ii1 at this time is without npiMirtunilies big wool In nime cases Hint will not In; used of ohservlng the lack of unconscious- until February. The small v.uolra. as ness In child life. The beauty, the from the big anrsted freshness and the Joy of it nre so cap- distinguished mills, arc not well supplied with order.. this cheek in the demand lias come tivating that people will go a great To further dumper of a liglil reaction ia way to see It, and yet It Is a quality the Itendnn nnd the opening of tlie Australian that ought not to be rare. It is rare clip l i . cent uliure Inst year's tu find a bright child who has not been but at 17 per per cent below rectal London sales. made conscious of his gifts by parents The trecent rales ef Alumaiia wool fur t and teachers, and who has not learned have nut I Ken sldpiifd. Anollier blit to place a false estimate uisin himself smaller lot of llT.tMl pound uf tine mein comparison with others. The world dium Idaho was, linwevir. shipp'd to AIISOLUTELY THE 1IKHT The price wus Is full of people who were spoiled when Knglnnd last Saturday. low, lQl&c, to cost Sic clean. they were children by the foolishness PAINLESS DENTAL WORN ! of their parents and teachers. Ihlla-delpli- A Full String Band in Ono InstruAmerican. ment, in the water lowest eastern I'HIL'KM. All played at the sumo time and 1y Raspberry and Cocoanut Creams. Here are two recipes for delicious can- one poratin. Thn greatest invention TRY, AND BE CONVINCED. tt I'hlou lllurk, Main ML, Opp. Walker 1'sua. dies that you will like to make, but of thu nineteenth rimtury is tin: they will require, as many candies do, piano with tho nhrlra phone, nr confectioner'! sugar for kneading pur- tatter known as tlie iiuiiidoliu, lianjx poses. A pound of this will be enough and guitar attachment, used only In E. BilNSCOMR, !,!. D. to buy nt first. Add to a of raspberry Jam enough confec- the famous Kverett, tlu; must durable University ot Kaw York, U6L tioner's sugar to make a paste. If the and only complete piano manufacSPECIALIST flavor is not acid enough, add a tiny tured. It is sold at exceedingly low oi.xxwoen sraisns, couiuaa bit of tartaric acid, crushed very tine. prices and nn very eoy terms. A IW.lioe bullion tu L'AXUKUS, TUMOltS, and Roll the sugar and Jam into small halls large and well selected slock of these GOlTICfi. with the pulma of your hands. Then elegant pianos always kept in stock RADICAL miK TUKATMXNT WITHOUT take some of the hardest fondant that at K. N. Jenkins new Temple of MuK.V1KX Oil CAUHTir. you have and inell it In a cup of boil- sic, 238 South Main street. Send for ing water. Just as you did In making Tolt city We are also S Gri Ff chocolate creams. Add a drop or two catalogues und prices. of cochineal coloring to make it a pule agents for Chickering & Sons anil novelty wuKKsRepairs everything sell luaku rubber Kienin.nnHan III' pink. Now dip your balls In this ex- Harvard liunos. rtcurlk WrU 4 23d St. the actly an In the chocolate creams. If Portuguese King's Dilemma. little balls are not smoothly or neatRome, Or.t. 21. Ah nn outcome of tho ly coated they can be dipped twice, altelllurnla ColUt his MONEY LOANED lowing time enough for the first coat to King nt Dortugnl's postponing Uauk.214 Mala, to ised Rome on two creams uecuiint of Malt visit cocoanut take Lake. Laiit prom harden. For of grated cocoa-n- the IHqe'B opposition. It In rc;rlcd ard most rstjulile piece lu (lie and dry in a cool oven, or you can that Italy has diplomatic M U. Bsdt Lak City, 81-8use desiccated coacoanut instead. relations with 1urlugul. The l'ue's V.'ork the coacoanut well Into half as iqqmsitinn tn the visit is due to the murh fondant candy, and then shaie difficulty the Catholic monarch would Iv opli have womlered how Ifueen into bolls, using confectioner's sugar bo under in revolved by Isilh the uiumigi'il to k p truck uf all tint blrl Inlays. At lust tin S4crtt is uut. to stiffen the mass sufficiently for (Jiilrlnal andtalng royal the Vatican. A seerelury ul I ends tu nil sueh nuttier. handling. Melt some fondant, flavor It flic suit of Mrs. lainglry fur tho vulun with vanilla, nnd dip the balls In it. as uf her Jewel taken un n forged order Sugar Tnizt. directed In the other recipes. Dipping from 20. A Ihe Isuik where they liud liecn Oct. Vienna ilisiuteh the candles twice will probably In the toLondon, lur rafe the Chronicle says n sugar trust, prniiiiws tu be a ruk. as they will rarely luook smooth rnmprising eelidin. Tlie higgit eiiuie nil but two of the lawyers In Imre the on cllhiT enough oftcr the first coating. Harkingdom refiners, lias formed to limit per's Round Table. the yearly output uf sugnr fur two slile. Ruhiiiu ileruld. years to a quarter of a million totiR. fine of the Inrgest dulry eoncorna ot A New Use for tbs Phonojpraph. In'lla ix In Allnlinlmil, mul in Nirtliv(t A Duel with Razors. iwiii-ami n.iiiuigcd by Miss Frances Here is a novel account of the way the daughter ut a n In which the phonograph recently enDnvrr. Oct. 21. Charles Rose la Arab chief. abled a Western Ann to secure the dend nnd James GImrd dying nt At lust nrenunts tlie William exNew a of York Rinperor serviera twenty-on- e miles east of Denver, wns with imirorms. two pert without paying a rent for car ns the result of a duel with rnxors. tuil.irstriivilhig ninl uur prinM-to kwq them in fare. Altogether It looks very rnurli as Roth men wen employed as section order. if Ellison's iugenlus Instrument were hands un thn Union Faellle. There hud destined to much more serious use been n fued of lung t Branding The trnlsy aiqKiinled Welwter than serving ns thu Wa.ki.is .liasler ut rnsHdent, CuL mechanism of talking-dollWe quote them. from tlie Scientific American (SeptemTha Xeeloy Institute, ber 2Mhl: "It nppears that the Knowles pump t. Louis, tk-t- . 18. Tlie Jury ir a direct antlicrlznd branch of tho parent works put up one of their inrge punis triul uf Muud IaiwIs for the muni honse Bt nwlgbt. III., has boon opened for the Ricks Water company at Elk State Hcnntor ivti-Murrissey Ir 1 (jti W. Soeoni at River pumping station In California. house of Korth, Salt LakoUlty lust roll The pump was in constant use fur a verdict this morning Mny. on tho lino of Utn street railway ruunlnx ur muni some ye ars .and the makers heard nn the second degree and mote used arm Springs. to until n few weeks ago, punishment at llfUHii years in the eotnplnlnt For Hie iroatinont of the llqnnr and when they received n novel communiopium habit, with Lesley E. Kooler cation from 11. I- - Hicks, tin inunngcr llcntlary. John Dilhin. the Company dooblo chloride of sold ram Irish of the pumplng-atatiiimemlM-of Inrllumeiit rir Fu- -t edlo. "There wns nn doubt In the minds snil will lie Mayo, married of hi (lie of those at the station, who were licet to a daughter of J unlive Mut- acquainted with the mechanism, that wns with the wrong pump, something taon at work with and In tho oinp but they were unnlile to tlx oil the dethe' Lesley 1 Kculoy Company f fect. and aa the dismemberment of the The Ireatmon past four year pump would Involve much loss of time, puicil to he Ills homeliest man Ir and as a visit by an expert from tho and to havs tho moat beautirul mcanagcuiont or patlnuts will be Ent would menn a considerable ex- - for a wife In that country. ally the tame m at Dwight. Eagle r pi'.-U- elue-luwr- horse-radis- tp. Eagle Pharmacy, Wall Paper ),u-m- C rKtC' C. W. Midgley, 7 Kjblury-M- well-bre- tete-a-tet- custo-boun- eai-rii- s EAGLE $5 di-n- er Dr. J. B. Keysor, Mt-- Co-o- Y oung Bro's Co. paVDOHLSTIC SB? s U Before spreading the linen cloth, place a "silence cloth evenly upon the table. This cloth !a best made from the double-widt- h white and double-face- d cotton flannel, sometimes known as cotton fcIL It should wholly cover the table. Us punmse being to make the linen cloth uppt-a- r much richer in texture. and also to keep the pulished surface of the table lrum being blistered Next, kiy the linen by hot dishes: cloth, taking care thnt It hangs gracefully and evenly at the sides and ends. To hang well, this cloth should lie two feet wider and two feet longer than the table, and it should be without any perceptible folds or creases. To accomplish the latter the cloth, as soon as it Is Ironed, should be rolled at once upon a long, round piece of wood, like a Smaller rods, or stiff pasteboard tulu h, such ns arc used for mailing flexible pictures, will answer fur rolling the carving rloths and center doilies when taken from the ironing-boar- d or the dlning-tnbiPlace the carving cloths at each end of the table, one dlrcrtly In front of the host cm and one in front of the host. I.ay nn embroidered centerpiece In the middle of the table n dainty napkin, or a square or oval of heavy Suee will answer. I'pon this place a pretty basket of fruit, a handsome plant (but not so high aa to oirntruct the view of the entire table) or a low dish of cat pansies or violets. Lay a plate fur each person at the beginning to reodve the siaip pinto, or the plate containing appetisers. These should lie placed at the right distance from each other and within not more than a couple of Inches of the edge ef the Inldc. These under plates are n removed with the soup them. Init arc not carriedplates off with the pin tea for oysters or other odd unless there is no soup to fol-- n l,nj' r:u they are always plli-ia ii iidim ss to lie Inter on. in rront uf the person placed, either the host or tin who dresses or serves the salnd. llu f each plnte lay a Inrge l'n: " r nir. anil at the right 2?iitin;n km place a soup spoon (back downward; nml in front of each place lay n dew rt spoon. At the left arrange thr. forks close together, but not reaching each other placing the largest fork next tlie The knife and fork should neverplate. be returned to the cloth, but after being used fur the lust time are lulil umn the plate to lie removed when the course is flnlahed. Tlie sharp edges of the knives may be turned either to or from the plates, but nil the kiilvra on the table, the carving, fish and dessertincluding knives, arranged q the same way. Tlie tal'lc napkins should match the pnt turn of the cloth, anil be large and T'lace a napkin folded and square. ironed square nl the left of the forks. Ihe dinner roll, or a piece ot bread about two inches thick and the same or a little more in width, should be luld upon the napkin; or. If desired, a corner of the same may Is well turned over it. but the brand should not be wholly concealed. Fronting tho plates nnd slightly to their left place tiny e. ui-o- ap-tlzi- hin-tes- s 11 s cx-r- ia at Kv-cni- desscrl-sixiun-f- ul J 1 nk ut ls Kuiqx-ndc- Vle-toi- m Austro-Hungari- Austro-Hungari- n. Wnt-kln- s. 1 r g s. n r -- |