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Show 7 OGDEX DAILY COMMERC far m bsnediate cad, to t spokes, ami WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE. to be read. Ee burrowed buidly. e&ea adopting aotire paasegr fruta w other J,lr if tLey aavei aorek THE Of OBSCUTY PERSONAL TKE time or salted Lia coewciieace. NeverPOET CONSiDCREQ. theless, ha tAdiridsabsed everything, oad avcrytloisg Lia on. Nature pauav Li Hie XX iiij! throogh tha airtnbie ot Lia te&prra-aad beeusmsg imnriioi Art. Tha thooght of criticika never oc AfffMbUM (Mini curred to Lia ha wrote aa b frit: was eusBplrtely ntrammried. endisturbrd. h Ai KYo.-r- r of precedrota. bring a rr regard mart Ke Yoke, Oct. 18. Ona of tba To edaat aad a law to and for Liauft-lfexmoat the al.at tiling extraoriiaary Lava twea aatTibed the this William man. Kuikwpwire, traordinary ftill of aad glory of hia icM & u Uvxt, jnii-rfu-l grniat U, grandeur ai.J kind. of technical every fulu nearly ovwuhilowirg a Li reputation, we yet so frw-h-. so apt, so eloquent, eo origiknow aert to not Lin- - of Lit the nal a to be beyond cctcpare. Re ta at Wo are evt-insurant and inimitable. Study him coca data of hia birth; tut the traditi B as unique yoa will, you cannot reproduce Lia. is that be u bora on the day of the Labor at Lia secret aa yoa may. yoa month ua wLiel he died April S3 and never matter it, or even approach chail that it U tfcr hcviml and it. Among tha couutleea host of porta be Dot It ewut. that aiti woclj v yeara there is but one Shakespeare. Ue thine aoMnrgeif t'la pr--t hiJ faWof and ia tha center whkb o during hia Ufa. aaJ bu great-n- like tha sua. to others, about which others l two Ljr posterity. give light Any achoolboy may point out the first drama- revulva. Bat be wa Lia blemish; the sun Las ite sprta. but tist of his own tint, but by rritit alooo, still it ia tha sua. who are fprtendly a'jore their ronUsmpo-rahuI'aljke tnuat great authors, unlike who fitKked to but by th Homer or Dante or Holier, h ta not see and enjoy bin playa, si Ilia style ia a rich mosaic, made as;.la. Ni until nearly a century after hia npof precioas stones and rare fragments, death wa there any rjnUr eolhx-tioand from every land and crediting of hia worka; tut tinea thea gathered Lis infinite with by variety arranged ho baa Uea editd. corrxted and interowa incomiirehensible cunning. He is been. haa mortal erer no other a preted wizard of the world, the That there has beea Anything intelligi- tha intellectual of the sovereign enthought, magician ble Ift of him Lj th best evidence of hia marrelona power Mtd significance. chanter of expression. The fact that Shakeapeare Las taken Despite almost two hundred year of almost all hia plots from the sources investigation of everything even whence La got his plays La induced with connected the myshim, remotely believe him deficient ia conto , many a not ia tha man, tery of structive imagination. But this la aa whit abated. Not a line of bis disia extant beyond four of hia sign- unfair inference. He was evidently inclined to form a plot when he could are all of which ature, sacredly preferred just as he frein London, and which will be rein em-- find one ready made, bered by most Americana of cult are and quently adopted the exact phraseology hia travel. Even the epellingof Lis asms of other authors rather than frame Lia limitleas equipment line own from is in doubt his blind signature does not remove it but be himself, as well aa his lie did not care to taie any needless friend Ben Jonson, appears to have writ-te- trouble; he was, again let it be said, it Shakespeare when they printed it thoroughly and continually practical ia In bis day men wrote their names vari- spite of hisunreckoned wealth of poetry. To put it plainly, he was bent on makously. He sometimes wrote Lis surname money at the Dlackfriars. theatre, and his contemporaries ing on SbaVsppre, and making it in the easiest way. rpelled it in a dozen different ways. more concern for direct tecun-iar-y What claim to be portraits of him are lie felt aucceas than for any reputation familiar to everybody, but the bulk of are copies of the Chan due picture, which his writings might yield. Had wl ich has no relation to the original. ho required plots there is small doubt The only representations that can lay thst be could and would have drawn in abuudance from his inward Oft-aatl- Bot-c- . , jx-uliant- dk-tiua- prr-iici!- !. tt tw-ntj-i- x w L-- u nW a, i;le Shakea-peare- pt y ' a tle cUim to authenticity are the well known bnsB at Stratford and the Droeahout engraving. They are both very hard and Ftiff, not answering at all to our ideal of the poet, but they have a striking which justifies their claim. They 'who have studied Shakespeare have a ftoling and a half belief that he was e, JBlllUUHl IMUUniUiV BUI UUUUDUUIMI. If we could see him aa be was in the we 'should doubtless find that he looked very unlike the man ought to look who had created Hamlet, Othello, Lear. Eminent characters very seldom bear the appearance we ascribe to them. Alcibiudes, Aspasia, Julius Ctcear, Cleo patra must have been very different in form and feature from what we fancy ' thorn. p lie facto of Shakespeare's life are poor and, few that he was born at Stratford; married at IS. for urgent reasons, Anne Halhaway, eight years his senior; had three children, ono son and two tors; that ho went to London to better hia fortunes; became an actor and a dramatist; succeeded; returned to his native place: diod in a few years, and vv buried there. What a meager record this for tho mighty master, whose name is immortal, whose fame, beyond that of nil others, fills every part of civili-sationl As we detect almost nothing of liia personality in his plays in this he was supremely dramatic eo he managed to hide his personality from the world. lie tmifct have considered life a drama. lie certainly treated it object ively. All the indications are that he had no concern for his plays after they had served him in the theatre. There ia every reason ta believe that he had no hand in their publication ; that they often appeared without his consent, oven without his knowledge. Vet he does not appear to have been wholly indifferent to fame, for he seems to have looked afte the printing of "Venus and Adonis" and "Lucrooo," as well as his sonnets. Remarkable as these are, or would be wore they by anybody else, they are cheap and commonplace compared with his matchless dramas. Thto strange apparent wont of dis crimination, of literary judgment, has been accounted for by his editors and commentators on the ground that during the Sixteenth and early in the Seven tecnth century plays and players were held in no esteem, while poema proper were very differently regarded. But this fact hardly explains so incomprehensible neglect. Notwithstanding all that has been said to the contrary, genius is, and must be, self recognizing; and why should the greatest genius of all time fail to appreciate work that had never been equaled? Tho question is hard to answer. The necessary infer see ia that he was either consciously capable, or- believed himself capable, of bo much higher achievements that what he had achieved seemed of small conse quence. And this theory gives us a more exalted idea of his genius than do the imperishable monuments he has left us. It makes the mind giddy to contemplate the possibilities of his performance, if he felt that h could afford to forego the prodigious, deathless reputation which las dramas must certainly secure him, All that is known of Shakespeare's method of composition sustains this view. He seems to have been spontaneity itself, dashing off his marvelous lines at white heat of inspiration, which melted thought, imagination, learning and" ob servation into a stream of vital, pictur esque, pregnant, enduring language such .. as never before Bowed from human pen, He appears never to have altered, corrected, recast or reconsidered. His brain was a divine, exhaustless fountain, which ran with ink through his ever obedient hand into forms of poetry as alluriug as indestructible. He was wholly practical, writing sceues and acts I flush . S 1 tf. - . . ' 1 It idw Yi-a- tr ia B4 Shape fha tlarrk Itterfrreare. Ottw. Jeub Brad- u.e iai utiaeoa oraa- e?iw, kKa Lmw of Hampton, Near Brunswick. Laa Li Ler Nv.ia-M- n L left ia uVtili.le rireuairtisee, Lu'laiid having h fvtrt una of aotue f TVJUU to tha er church. A f r Bradnhaw, young bauiAU,out ot of aud in tha the Id deaooa'a furtuiMt aaarrinl a. t JAr. upa-tn- Lfe-eo- then 63 ) Bradolaa. aho Ia tamg Ler earn before tLe BauMiua Bn-tts- y, u ei(-Utjo- n of Bp-ti- La said: et ?MMieihig over tveire yeara before Lia tint a iff aod death. Laving feeling the need of Laraig aume an to mpathixa lib and care for Lim 'n Lis (tecliiiing years, be came to n e aod ma to beeotua Lis wife, tehtng ue at tha same tune that La aa wjriu a large amount of money, withahurh he life, would aupnly all my waats throu iu and would protide amply for case of hia i'.eath. Ue waa worth at ) M) to that time cot k than f roui luu,(kU. At one of our inter iaa be to accompany Lint invited n botne in Himptoo, 1 went He i, jwod and me hkhouae, furniture, and la told tue be would give ma a. thtwe and H,'iO if I would marry Lin and add I: "If you aurriva ua, at tnv aatli aim of you will receive voiir tha balance.' I aaid, 'Mr. Brdb , bow do you mean you will give them t, me!" He answered, 'I will give them to u in your own right, for you and your On these grounds I consented, and we married. For twelve long yeirs I waited on and cared for him as tei Lerly and devotedly as a loving wife couil do to an infirm and invalid husband. Is all can testify w ho visited our home." I Tha trustees church appear to have worked a pretty good racket on the widow. She say a: "In examining the Year Book of the Raptixt convention of New Brunswick, Nova Sootia aod Prince Edwards Island (or the year 1889, 1 see it there stated stated that he donated to the Baptist for home and foreign denomination tniasiona and other denominational over 970.UUU, and, as I have before stated to the Baptist church at Hampton, Kinga county, ha gave our botie. I now solemnly declare before God that I believe a great injustice has been done me. The last fl5 ot hia money was taken from the house a few days twfore his death by the trustees of the llnmp-to- a Baptist church, whom he had made the custodians of it. In all his consultations with the trustees of the them supchurch and other parties in reference to ply. these donations and other financial busiOut his transcendent excellence is in ness, I was never allowed to be present. his creation of character kings and If they were held in our house I was alclowns, philosophers and simpletons, ways requested to leave the room during dreamers and men of action, women their interviews." devilish and angelic, courtiers and faiThe Advance in Meat ries, priests and cynics, wits and witches, beings of earth and air a numberless Chicvoo, Nov. 8. Chicago packers of crew, but all individuals distinct, defi- canned meats, at a meeting today, denite, as if evolved froqi nature. No cided to advance prices a quarter of a other pcet has revealed a 'lithe of Lis cant a pound because of the incr omnipotence in this respect, and he has cost of tin under the rew W ey 4hd oue of thom made every roeWraifs also considered the plan oltrioviiw unforgetable. Thousands of years licnce stock yards and various house Hamlet, Timon, Benedick, Portia, Shy-loc- plants to a point south ofpoking the city and Dosdemona, Brutus, Cleopatra, nearer the lake. Othello, Lear, Cordolia, Macbeth, RosaAfter the meeting Armour said the lind. Falataff, Imogen, Cassias, Viola, yard will be removed. It was shown to Dogberry JUressida, will be as fresh and be feasible to establish at a profit new human as they ore today; as they were and greatly improved yards and packwhen the ink was uot yet dry that gave ing houses with better facilities for them birth. Ono might almost say that, handling stock and at less cost. The will be used for other purif this planet should be lost, types of its present yards inhabitants might bo reproduced from poses. Shakespeare's models. They are more NEWBURG BRIDGE BANDITS human than humanity, and yet more ideal than our ideas of them. One of Them Killed by a Railroad The controversy still goes oa over the Train and Another Captured. question whether tho dramatist was a man of much or little culture. He apMiddlktow!, Nov. 10. One member pears to have known all that was worth of Newburg's notorious bridge bandit knowing from books and observation gang, John Owens, was killed on the and imagination, and, above aught else, railroad track here last night, and anfrom the clairvoyance of universal genElmer Sarvis, was captured by ius. Is nature educated? sounds much other, Both were fugitives from the police. like the queries concerning Shakespeare's wanted in Newburg for being justice, of culture. degree It is not strange that the obscuration robbing the money drawer of a saloon of his personality should incite specula-tor- s there. Sarvis is a cousin of Tony or to the denial of his identity, to the George Sarvis, another member of the affirmation that he was only a name; (rang, who was sent to the state prison that his plays were written by another for ten years for shooting Policeman or by others. This view, instead of Tappan. At the inquest this morning Elmer lessening, merely augments the mys- Sarvis told Coroner Degrnw that he tery. We can understand how th9 mas- and Owens started out of Newburgh ter dramatist might hide his private self about three weeks ago and have since from the world, but that Shakespeare been roaming up and down the line of could be somebody else passes credence. the Erie Railroad between that eity The poet of poets is bo sinewy, so uni- and Port Jervis, ostensibly in search of versal, so ideal, so inexhaustible as to work, liast evening they stole a ride on train from Greycourt to this put all who understand him into closest a freight relation with him, and make them think city. When the train had passed the was climbing the upthat they have got at the secret of his station here andboth jumped off and grade beyond power and influence. He is not a whit stepped over on tLe east bound track. is he classic; romantic, Teutonic, Gothic, Just then the fast New York passenger above and free from all rule, despising train bore down upon them at high convention, challenging precedent. To speed. Sarvis heard the engineer's warnthe Latin mind he makes no general ap- ing whistle and sprang off the track peal; he belongs especially to the Teu- in the nick of time. The locomotive tonic family, and is the rarest heritage of struck Owens and hurled his body forthe English speaking race, we Americans ward against Sarvis, knocking them both down a fifteen foot embadkment. appreciating him far more, in the mass, Owens' ribs were crushed in upon his than our British kinsmen. The Germans heart and lungs, and his head was cut feel that he is especially related to them; He died soon afterward without recoverthat his genius is their property, though ing consciousness. Sarvis was not serihe chanced to be born on foreign soil. ously hurt Both had loaded revolvers They never tire of writing about him; and extra cartridges in their pockets. Uwens remains will be sent home to they are veritable Shakespeariacs. They are convinced that they have interpreted his widowed mother at Newburg. Sarhim to us; that his inmost spirit is open vis has been taken there in custody of to them alone. Although transcendental an officer to answer to the saloon roband overdrawn they have brought limit- bery. less learning and ingenuity to his elucidaA Stout Faster. tion, and the world of serious thought is Blodmihgton, Pa., Nov. 10. Or a small eternally indebted to them. He anticibed in the village of Whitehall, Lecot inand is America of the today, pated deed more American than English in high county, lies Mrs. Adam Wuchter, combining the highest idealism and the slowly pining away for want of nourishgreatest practicability. ment Although her abstinence from In this country we arc, in a way, food is not voluntary, her existence withbrought up on him, and our love of him out food, which today makes 218 days, is our and last, none the loss wonderful. grows with years. First he is a poet, but common sense forms Mrs. Wuchter is 48 years old. the his base. He is truly English in mak- mother of three children. In former ing his dramas wholly subservient to years she was exceedingly strong and earning money. He wrote Lear, Ham- robust, and until attacked by the which has deprived hor let, Henry IV, Othello, not from passion strange disease for literature, but from ineradicable de- of the power of mastication, has always good health. Despite her weaksire to return to Stratford, to reinstate enjoyed ened condition, she was able to speak himself there, and to write "gentleman" in audiblo tones, and in answer to a after his name. Everlasting fame was question said: nothing compared with his dearest wish "I have given up hope of recovering to be, English like, respectable and com and feel reconciled to my fate." She utterly despairs of recovering, but fortable. But in range and insight her physician has strong hopes, he says, he was the Jesus of the. intellectual of an improvement in her condition. world. Junius Uesbi Bxowkk. Lia OFH&AL DIRECTOR. wn W.crmu iuu lUJtmrt uwl rVntte J Ft tuf . w- - Jm -t koeuniae- 1 ( A I- HuEiiiCT-Tiwta- !, ji jriue-Jot- '. Ujr-n-- J AL WATCHKU rratura! JrcW. !. , r h.le. Ja C bulk. V. 1 la riaeora. I'll. t- -i mum k iwniruif . 4ui BUSiNC TMa-crt- Kucr-fl- COXIR itmrt k. t4uav. NanllO am a rijti A . a. w . rifc, kl at-k- J t 'oaMaitie pur-poe- E. tta - koca. arras ascc tm U. U. ru( t uMUa mmt, Kt A Jan lurm f0 - Pour- K AMIUY1U.E tha IVaof-- W oAj. loelaLle Jainr j aai jHirwai a.fcua. Fia rLm citi rjuTxT. J iU It i'mntr, J I). Jaetio of th rVure KicLird .oq1U1b Jolia I'arkrr. i iT4ii Juctw "f tha Peace Timothy KeodalL Cuoatatae Ujrrua L. Rybaa. Joctke of tha Praee-- rKBrCT. tt Parnr. Countable-Cal- eb riBcntrr. WBBEB rBBTIMCT. W. Hurt. Paara-- J. HoKge- - BUT ph FOR SALE. A BrsiES8 LOT 4U RODS, wiuea U a poaiuve karcata rV)Rat Five Pointa. 8VLE-- Fint Katioaal a ldm IK i Li,,, JAMES IIX) rooina. uod Tuh. R BALE MURPUr, tree, four BTeoua. Oeden, Ctah. arenua and uiiuen, L tan. 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Sirplnw and Capital, iJn.iividea Proflta, 0,000. tohoited. COTTAGE, W Ouors from stalioa -- 8. BOREMaS, Bank, OGDEN, UTAH. ira AoeouDt CHEAP-NE- bath rooan. pantry and clothesin kilrbaa. all nioely fur- TRADE CHICAGO tX)R Ins .urli nf (trv suiida. lavoicina ATTORN JACOB aa ntfr press; Office. OTer Utah National Rank, eorner of COMMERCIAL lus a kite. Liiuuiiiia nu, ar nit'R'h. iioaaa and hH for uuu. uamuar to partiea baildiac oa out lota. A. J. f t ropgry. Ftva Pomta. BIMBALL. BDWABO St. ALLISON. A ALUSON. M. BANKS. O. E. AND THR CHEAPEST DS urau-tte- JllIBALL - auwa. Tweotf-foun- h i bozkl& ooteb rBBcmrr. Juatioaof tha Paace Jama Juhmon. Conntable Krancn H. Hxlnap. National 2:t SALE-LAN- R. WHITE, yT ATTORN E W, Prartiraa In tlut District Court and aU the court. Perwmal attentionPat-iT'- iren toeoUeciiona. s Reniemher the place, in wooik'o build-inc- , Dear meat atap of C. H. Graeawell A Hroa.. M Tweutj-foun- b street, Ogdea. I' lab. P. O. - Conatable-Joax- lht li LAW. OtEca, JUT WashintrtoB Joitioa of tha Paare P. P. BingbaiB. Cofutable- Uaniri N. Drake. Juatice of tha REST A PLKiSASTt'S'llJi awaakaeiOA; : ruuta la lat fur I line. Jnatiaa of tha Prara Prtar L, Sbernar. tooalable Jamra Uarrop. v A GOOD RENT ATTORNEYS-AT-LA- Ltvva retnurr. WTLauv (iraat V IrtMMauaaar.UU Uraat afaaoa. ATTORNEY AT LAW, - Ogdea. Waahimrtoa Atw, Halvanoa. K. Paaca-Sim- oo fTESly aaaa. R EE 1 ruuaa. LAWYERS. POINTER AiKiorr rucnitrr. K RES- T- A SICK. krp cuaupaa) la Ud H a WOETHMAJi. H. rraad&U. Jaatkw of tha Peace J arena Hutchioa. Cwoatable John J. Hutchina. Joatke mt tha IB Oftica: Ruora S. 3t4 Floor, Bauk Luilding. Ocdeo, I'tah. Cooatable iieorce II. Macock. LATBBVU.LB aulixtRca. ATTORN rSBCIXfT. W. EEVT Fl'ES ciwiatd Buor, atnaa tv fALEXTlNE GIDEON. Justica ct tha Peace I'otutable WUaua Pimltcr. KE.NT- - rfJB aaar Siaaaara' ATTORNEY AT LAW un m I. Tama Uuck. Tvaatjr-foart'.iwi, UtfJtA, I tab. sivckoals ran ufcr. &KE8VUJ.B kmmb K. I'taa. Mr leo. a pfwa-ljutUs-Jo- Mia rma. IK atraet, h (, U. Caanea. H. Ta)iur. Ptat. ARCHITECTS, rornna H. 17 aad 14 NaUoeai Baak buntUa. irtt. I' tab. it. rem n aa ARCHITECTS. Kraccr. 11. utu-lab- i Jaatier f ataarraa V. a. G RAIT AM, - turn lictlaj. Juta, UouM. Ott OliBU TVBTTKCT. Jaatirt f lit IVar Jair 1umj. I Juim Umax. J aaaaaa. bac Ta WaaauacMa laaauaua rtwia yoous turru. - fcteet. ninviLU rcansrv. VfM rtEOXCT. I S. Uiu Twectt-fuart- Joatic t ai.i EUILD-- - hulli. Pfv- AD -- t- Je4ienf ih OAll). - - CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Flaaa m4 aHrifioati,a aaa.- aa4 a affiiarauom. 4 arpvuiar' .i caaraoirail k km--. AJ Ww u4 titup, tint Mfr, tU raerrsTT. a. Penia. its ixuti U. ir aa4 v. ItitrnxmA CTDRS r. a. BAkauaa. IlfcKOU a turi. of ih Pf jMti tuttrtnAi arn a 1 - A- i'iul ' hUd-ren.' F.at I- vt Lmvint Seed, iinfi!mii r ufat riarcsrr. u runm rrm-fiPW-A. bUOumL ax.' tmi4r fee. a 4 J a. a manu-acri- , fi mT I rJiSIUXS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 1!, Etc-- . UTAH. d, lUiUlilMlltMi FOR HEN ONLY! Dcds, Mortgages, or LOaXarTAXLIfiO KANROOS) aeaaral aad HEET0U8 DiiXlITXi Wsakaaw of Body aad Mud, Meets CLAP Leans, Ett, Leave. No. 4 Limited Fast, ) Mail, San Francisco daily ) No- - 2 Pacific Arrive. 830 a. IB J ExrroiiS,") through to San Francisco and intermediate points, daily 1 1 2Ka. m - p. m 730 a. 12:15 IB Arrival and departure of U. 8. mails at the Oeden postoiHce : Ar. 1 :30 a. m. Union Pacific " 8:31) Central Pacific 10:00 " Utah Central Hark City and Coalville. 10:11 " Rrik'ham City, Logan " 10K10 and (k)llinston 10 :30 " Dmiver and Aspen 5:30 Utah Northern p.m. 6:33 " Utah Cent ral D. & R. (. W Cheyenne A Eastern 10.-0- " Dep't. a. Bt. 8S 8iXp.m, 5i ' f 6. 9 00 a.m. 5 K p. ta. 6KK) 1 9fl0a. Bui BOO p. m.4 Huntsville and Eden, Tuesaays, ihnrsaays ami, bHturclays. West Weber and Florence. Tuesdays and J POSTOFTICK nOl ES. General delivery windows open at 8 o'clock m. and close at 6 o'clock p. m. jM Money order window opens at 8 o'clock a. m.' and closes at 6 o'clock p. m. i yI free delh eui rtstex. Basiness district, two deliveries per day, at s o clock a. m. and 2 o'clock p. m. Kesidence districts, one delivery per day, at 9 W. IW.f o'clock a. m. P Kimball, i -- J PiKTHOr tODX. StmtrlSn WKA S, lDKTKLOrUOHf uMliw NOBtt tllUTHSt-ll.M- ll, a t,f. M,ll7 Km, u.llfy Trvm fru (U(- - bm r.r--lr WrtuUwa. IM (uiMI IVm, Book, .idIuUIm aa SfSi Warm ERIBMEOICAI, CO., N. V, ruli BtFfo, At THB Figuring tablets at The Commercial office. COMMERCIAL OFFICE I BaaaaaaaMaMBwaweSisaaaasaaaBwaHBB Patronize the new Commercial book bindery, where you can sret first-clawork at Omaha and Lincoln prices. a. ZitH Washlugtoa ATenns Ogdea, Utah. s |