OCR Text |
Show Tba Third-Ter- Tradition. m We all remember how the dominating of power of Conklin in New York, LoCameron In Pennsylvania, and of congan in Illinois, extorted from the ventions of those States a demand for the nomination of Grant; how other State followed this lead; how the defriends of the movement were nounced as "restoratlonists" anil "imin their perialists;" how they persisted effort to the very last; how in the Chicago convention they never cast less ftisn SOS votes, and once cast SIS; and Iiow by their persistence they forced compromise which resulted in the nomination of Garfield. All these things are still fresh in our memories, and, that Mm SO, it is not a littleliestrange on foot to a serious effort should give a third term to Ur. Cleveland. The fears which tormented the founders of the Republic have long since vanished. We do not believe that our democratic institutions can ever be aubverted by any occupant of the White House. We stand In no dread when some sucthat the day willorcome some unscrupulous cessful general politician will first seise the Presidency and then use its great power to set g dictatorship, or establish up a of the Repuba kingdom, on the ruins lic. Yet there Is no reason to believe t.t position as laid down on the maps is correct. Htlll, they are approximately not located exactly enough for the needs of accurate observation, and there will, no doubt, be a The importance of the work to astronomers may easily be seen by the example of the correction of the plumb line. In order to determine any astronomical observation It is necessary to have a vertical line in order to find the senlth. The plumb Una does not give a true vertical line In many ruses. At the seashore the plumb bub is deal of work necessary to bring the scientific tables to accuracy, the land than traded more toward toward the sea on account of the difference in density between land and water. The correction of the plumb line, therefore, Is a most difficult problem, Instead of the easy one which one would think. Inasmuch as the vertical line at any point desired Is a line at light angles tn the tangent of the curve of the earth by the results of this survey will simplify matter accuracy greatly and add much to the the world of astronomical observations over. a owes world The whole scientific debt of gratitude to the United Butrt for the energy and skill with which this great work has been prosecuted,of and the completion of the labors the coast and geodetic survey marks an eiorh in the history of astronomy. Kansas City Times scli-ntifl- o at life-lon- e antipathy to a third term is one whit less strong than it ever was. Any sane man will admit that the bank or the railroad company, or the corporation of any sort that should dismiss a tried and able President merely because the stockholders had twice placed him in the executive No chair, would deserve financial ruin.more tendency in the business world is marked than the constant effort to find fitted to carry on men certain lines of business, and to place the management of such concerns entirely in their hands. But the common-sens- e rules which govern the selection of the president of a corporation do not of apply in the election of a Presidentare the United States. Our Presidents not chosen because of their fitness, but because of their availability. Some are dark horses; some are nominated because they alone can reconcile contending factions; some because they can carry pivotal States. Others are forced on the voters by the machine. In theory this is all wrong. In prartice no harm comes from it Under our system of government we do not want, we do not need a President of extraordinary ability; the average man is goofl enough, and for him two terms is ample. We want a strong government of the people by the people, not a government of the people by a strong man, and we ought not to tolerate anything which has even the semblance of heredity. The advocates of a third term for Mr. Cleveland will do well to remember the doctrine of the illustrious founder of their party, that in no office can Prof. rotation be more exiiedlent. John Bach McMaster, in the Navember that the old-tim- Forum. The Surrender of Chief Joseph. One of the noblest figures In Indian history, and one of the greatest warriors, is the Nes Perce Chief Joseph. In this same year, 1S77, he had resisted attempts to put him and his band on the Lapwal reservation, in Western Idaho, and had sought to carry all of his people hundreds of miles to Canada. He outran the force that Gen. Howard had on his trail, escaped from Big Hole, where Gen. Ulldton tougnt him, and again from Gen. Hturgis. wno engaged him in the Yellowstone valley. Hturgis had been sent nut ny Miles; and when the latter, on tne evening -. of Reptember 19th, heard what had occurred, he started the same night with all the available force of the Tongue River cantonment, to head off Chief Joseph before he should reach the border. Hard marching brought the command, on the last day of the month, to Joseph's village, in the Bear Paw The heroic attarlc mountains. was resisted with a valor as heroic, and in a short time Capt. Hale, Lieut. soldiers were Biddle and twenty-tw- o killed, and four officers and thirty-eigsoldiers wounded, among them losing Lieut. Baird of the Generals staff. One gallant charge by Capt. Carter, with a small body of Fifth Infantry, had cost over a third of his command. Promptly varying histoplana, therefore, the situation, and adapting them the General moved up his artillery, and so as the to hold the troops disposed Indians under siege, with escape imht possible. On the sixth day Chief Joseph advanced to surrender. It was a scene for a painter, a typical scene in American history, when this warrior, facing Gen. Miles, a worthy counterpart In mien and bearing, handed his rifle to his white conqueror, and with impressive dignity pointed to the sun in the heavens, saying: From where the sun' now stands, I fight no more. Gen. Miles, in announcing the victory, used the terse, significant phrase, We have had our usual success,' His full report deacritied his brave adversaries as the boldest men and best marksmen of any Indians I have ever and Chief Joseph as "a encountered, man of more sagacity and intelligence than any Indian I have ever met." George K. Pond in McClure's Mognxlne for November. noble-looki- Parallel. Survey of the Thirty-Nint-h By the completion of the survey of h the thirty-nintparallel, from the Atlantic to the Pacific oceans, across the country, the United States Government has made the greatest contribution to science ever given by a Government. The problem of the figure of the earth has ever engaged the attention of scientists and geographers, to say nothing of the commercial 1m- -' portance of such knowledge. The chief object in accurately surveying this parallel was to determine the figure of the earth precisely and accurately. It has already been ascertained by north and south lines, but in order to makefile calculations of astronomers exact, a long east and west line had to be run. Russia has the longest meridian line ever surveyed, going from the Black sea up to the northern limits of ita territory, but the United Htates only affords a stretch of territory to run a parallel long enough to be of service to science, and the line Just completed is the longest ever surveyed in the world. The shape of the earth has been figured out by mathematicians working on the theory that the curth was once a molten mass. Knowing the number of ita revolutions and the centrifugal force, it wns not dllllcult to compute what the figure of the earth ought to he under the circumstances. The earth, however, cooled faster at the poles than along the equator, and consequently varies from its theoretical shape considerably. The necessity ft r a triangulated survey readily seen to be necessary by these considerations. Lines of latitude and longitude will not be greatly affected in their position aa a result of this survey of the thirty-nint- h parallel, as their present E HEWLETT BROS. I.R DOOLEY TALKS OF FOOTBALL Once the Gam Was Sport, but Now it is War. Mr. Dooley "whin I Jnwn,"sald ll played futliall 'twas spoort; now Is war. "How Is thatr asked Mr. McKenna. "Well, whin I was a lad th way we Idayed futliall was this way: Twlnty or thirty or wan hundbred min an boys come together in a varan lot an' we had a round rubber ball that th' bigair gest man biowed up, an so th' wouldn't run out iv It he stuffed a Thin chewed-u- p bread In th' hole. lad th' name Iv McGuire he says: 'Go head now,' an' I give her a kirk an' Thin they put her over th' linn. did, brought it bark, th' little an' 1 kicked It on th' roof iv the Brothers' school. Brother Alexis fetched it down, an' says he: 'Dooley, don't kick so hard, he says Ho I give it wan low kick with th' broad Iv me fut an' catched Ilinnlssy, who was a young man thin. In th pit iv th' stomach, an' he kicked young Began,, an' Began kicked Cassidy, an' Cassidy kicked O'llrlen. an' O'Brien kicked Brother Alexia an' had to do th' stations iv th' cross, an' a boy be th' name iv llogan run off with th' ball. That was futball. But las' week young Clancy asked me r to go over to tli' bark Iv lh' dump an see a game an th hechune th' Young Darnell Yuung Harsflelds. I took Hinnlaay with me. maw He'd Gawd ne'er me, frglvc was seen a game hefure. Th' them whin we come. 1 luked over th' field si:' says I: 'What la this?' says I. y 'Whntre they goln to do?' 1 says, y made no answer. The little kid was done up with wooden shields on his shin an earmuff on hia ears an' a band around his head an' a caruropy on his nose, lie wore f'r panta an' he hail a hnlr Iv head like cole slaw. Th others whs like him. Ye cud iv tnl' no wan iv thlm fr'm th other. Well, sir, a man blew a whistle an' with that little Muleahy reached over an' give Tom O'Brien's son a punch in th' nose. O'Brien calls nut, 'Look there, Mike Muleahy, what ye'er boys doin' to mine. I want ye to stop him.' 'Ktnp nnwan,' says Muleahy aernet th' field. But if that rnsc'lly son Iv ye'er Ivor kicks that boy Iv mine again,' he says, 'I'll have th' law on hlin,' says he. 'Look out f'r his feet little Mike,' he says. 'Now, thin, land him.' 'Well, O'Brien wlnt right aernst th' field afther Muleahy an' th' last seen iv thlm they was down toward th' bridge. Just thin Hogan Cassidy threw his fut Into little Malachl Dorney an oT man Cassidy wlnt over an' pulled Tom Dorney's nose. I took thlm apart near th' river an' come back Just as what th' lads call a scrimmage was on. Tommy gut hoi iv th ball an started OLeary to run away with it, whin little Duggan fetched him a puck cm th' Jaw an' brought him down. Hed no mure thin done that whin Teddy Clancy nailed Duggan with a kick on th' back an rolled him to top iv O'Leary .an fell on him. Thin all th other lada fell on Duggan an' Clancy an' O'Leary, all but wan. That was Dlnny Casey, an' he sthrayed around th idge an' took a kick at any wan he aaw, an' partlculey at Pete O'Shea. Pete O'Hhea was Hlnnlssy's nivyew, an' th' first thing Hinnlssy done whin he see his Blether's son gettln th' worst iv it was to aerost th' sthreet an' come back with an armful iv brlcka He ran throw fr an' old man, an' he filched Casey with th' first brick. Htlek It out, he says to his nivyew. Stick it out,' he says. 'I'll clane all iv thlm alt ye,' he says. An' sure he'd iv done it, but th' lad comes wrigglin out Iv th' pile he: smilin' an' 'Uncle, says lave he go brickbats,' ye'er 'What frT says Hinnlssy. say. see Mulall 'Don't ye they're upharrin' eahy T says th kltl. 'Twas nn'y a down,' he says. A what? saya Hlnnls-sy- . A down, saya th' lad. An how manny more la there? says Hinnlssy. A hundhenl or more,' says th' lad. 'I'm goln' home,' he says. If ye have anny wurrud to lave ye'er mother, he says, 'tell it to me.' 1 took him he th ar-ras we wint home an' saya I, Hinnlssy, 1 says, ye made a fool iv yc'ersllf,' I says. How's that? saya he. How's that? Ye'er an' lllltherate man,' I saya. I can read an' write,' he says, 'an' give ye th' wurruks iv Willum Carleton be heart. Thrue,' says I. But whin ye lnther-fere- d with that game did ye know that ye was stoppin' th' tducatlon Iv lh youth tv th land,' I says. T did 'An' now th' not,' he says, sadly. thought come on me an make me heart gray with trouble,' he says. 'Whin 1 lntherfered with that man that was poundin' Hoollhan with a baseball lat las' winter,' he says, 'did 1 keep anny wan out Iv a proper schoolin "Ye may have, says I. -- Chicago fut-ba- la-a- f la-a- liln-nlss- Mul-rah- mat-thress- collar-an-elbowl- m r Post NOTES OF WOKEN. Borne duys there are when life anil love Kccin i of stria from God sInivc; Hume ilays whin sky and sun anil sea tlumahts of life to me; Bring swiH-les- t Home days heartuclu-- s lull trillcs seem And haunting cures are Idle dreuin Home days. But elnuils may hide the bluest sky. And tears 'ncnlh softest liudu-- s lie; Htrong winds make rough the smoothest sea. And crush to earth the tallest tn-e- ; Though light the wore that to us fall. The pain of others saddens all Home ilays. Jessie F. (V Donnell. Probably a woman would he a bride to her huslumd longer If she would continue making cmnimny of him. Most to save their Jam for viswomen itors when they hnve been marrliN three months. s s women In There are now twenty-fiv- e Chicago wlui are practicing lawyers, more will Siam le admitted anl fifteen to the bar. NEW, HICH GRADE TI I It E EC 150 Wis BAKING POW ER THE PUREST AND BEST KABE. THHKI-l'KOW- T1IUKK CHOWM TR1PPL13 SPICES FJjAVOHINH ext n ac rs AU1IEST laiciuse they are ground fresh every day. OUR AHg DKLK'IOVH. Try Them. GOODS OF THIS BRAND GUARANTEED TO BE EQUAL TO THE BEST IN THE MAR KET OR MOREY REFUND'D. The new women are coming to th too. They have In Finland, formed volunteer fire brigade in Helsingfors and other towns, and have done first-rat- e work, Prepared according to th Naw System. s Massillon, the great French preacher, had a singularly talented mother, whose Influence over his life wus A $1 hox i guaranteed to do you morn good than a gallon of any medicine you aver took. Take your needle, my child, and work at your uitterii; It will come out a rose by and by." Life Is like that one stitch at a time taken iiatiently, and the pattern will come out nil right like the Holmes. eniliroidcry. I3i Tl.i-aim their power ! quickly. You befont Uua I have to taka six tv laelvs box s yna nas uiaka a sun. as to weedier d I kelp-lafelltha elory. you or But bat a day ur two srparHlarvinedia for htouiaoh, Liver and bowel tloulil, Karvoua Kxliuurtiun. Sul acuta Aeutu lullaiuiaalury Ktaumaliam, NUil Chreulc luAamiuuotr) rbeumsUeai, Mumxi-lu- r rhvuuMlLiu and Nausalsiu, UhMu'elluuabx llbronle Diarrhoea. Kunale Trouble. Canker. The Murat baby nullr aura la the world. aouUlu inn no uplab-- a ur atbor utroutlu drug uJ I ah uulutuiy liuriul. to Iba bum! deliaaui iu'uut A wet and a dry catarrh euri, a aura eure br LaUrlppe, and the Idea) cure fur the ll juut llalitt, whleh l.ju.t right, absolutely the tart and mu' but fib If your druggist baa not yet gut our renwdlra, duu't let him sell yon miuiv-Ihiujurit aa giaai," breaueo there le nothing inlbiu wldr world good and harmlx, bul read your Blowy direct lo ue and we will deliver your inedlalua to you prepaid and refund your Its money If you think wa havn axugaraledla lea I. Oar price are, for the Magaeiid folio Cure, bUrenta, Nftyeuitu. Caukereure. lie: (lularrh run. II. Ik for auough internal and lu al luiae-Uuto lad ix seek, aud fur the leaLuea of our fl tor from Iwn week hi inu mouth treatment, making thi Iba ulivapeat treatment in the itorld. I Meant feswdj hr eick fUMH. l diver Wendell ns like Ohms tac rear ipereril. hanalcM Aa UiteioM tamini Lady Korveys has come out in the Lady Cyclist, In Kngland, to say that she consider the rational dress perHhe adds that Lady fectly horrible. Wolverton and Imdley, Lady lady Lurgan all ryclo, but not one of them would apiiear on her machine without a skirt over her knlckcrlmckurs. That ought to settle it. HaMikic ptNtta Hen pamifiri to cart tkaa ant aftke 14 ths. bssimhi illeeilkic RWdieisM. kf Mietf's is Iks f,l lickinf vital Tkt cats An Earlier Thanksgiving Day. Fur a number of years th Lutheran Olmerver (Philadelphia) has been making a special end earnest effort to have the date of Thanksgiving changed to an earlier day in the season, and its proposition seems to find an increasing number of adherents each year, especially among the religious papers. Its chief argument la that the present custom of fixing Thanksgiving day late in November brings it at a moat unpleasant and usually Inclement season, long arier harvest days have passed. It favors the selection of October 12th aa a date which would have the additional and happy significance of being the anniversary of the discovery of America. This year the Observer renews th call for a cluing in the following strain: The proper season for our National Thanksgiving la already at hand, but, aa heretofore, no day within that proper season will be appointed by any Guvernor of a State nor by the President of the Nation. The old anachronistic time, nearly two months out of season and on the shivering edge ot winter,' will ere long b designated, and the people called upon to meet in their places of worship to render thanks to God for 'the fruits of the earth in their season,' and fur all the blessings of the past year. Harvest-hom- e services have already been held in many of our Lutheran churches and the churches of some other denominations also, at which the Bunday-achool- s, and young and old, met in sanctuaries decorated with plants and vines and flowers, and grains and fruits of the earth tastefully arranged, and In appropriate services and dlscourcea praised God for the blessing of the year, with all the Imof Ills bountiful pressive evidence goodness around them. Hueh services and thanksgivings rendered in their proper season are not only most sect ptable to God, hut present most appropriate object lessons and demonstrations of God's merciful klnduess from year to year. But why do not our Governors of Htates and our Presidents apiKdnt our State and National thanksgiving in the prnier season, when already the harvest and fruits of the enrth in more than of our country have king been ripened and gathered? Simlieeause an old precedent and cus-tuply of New Kngland have fixed the time nearly two months luter than it should be. and the stolid inertia of a bod custom has perpetuated the absurd anachronism, and no official Is willing to inaugurate a reform. three-fourt- hs m tisautf. THI NE mttad nd salt nliMSl CMiksllis si DISEASE. Cure Iim ill etker Aecisn tail, TEE ORGANIC -- f Sultan' is-e- set-tk'- d- lllk., tall Luka oluN-rv- IT ls DCTROir. Metno IM and AthlaMc Good, . nu vohil snmam KNVER. omit, LM ANQIUt. HU NCI SCO. HMTUNft, S.CURE or PAIN ts certainly the most important object of medicine. Gives instant relief in cases of Scalds, Burns, Wounds, Bruises, Chilblains, Itch, Frostbites, Sore Nipples, Aches, Sprains, Cramps, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, etc. Easily applied. and will bo CURED cf the CIGARETTE HABIT and your dttyi on north will be lengthened. SOOTHING AND PENETRATING. For sale everywhere. Price, 25c., 50c. and $ 1.00 per bottle. THE DR. J. H. MCLEAN MEDICINE CO ST. LOUIS, MO. Bond $5 for ono boltlo to Converting Rock into Wool. 11 th wiimlir. uf iiindvrn liiiiii-Irthat nf the niunufacture nf a uft Eagle Pharmacy, H. Ot F. Cor. Bao ml South mid Wert Tempi Itraeta, Balt Luke City, Agent Wonted Everywhere. Before b lying see that the bottles are scaled wlili tha signature, Dkan Lkk Iijxo Nona genuine without thi seal or when seal Is broken. w - . move toward starting a shaft on the Muyfhjwcr mine, though It Is rumored tliut ground will lie broken sonic time next month. That will hardly happen, have as however, as no yet been made fur water, and no extensive mining can las done without that useful article. ( i. K. Idtwrrnce, foreman of the Cumberland mine. Informs the writer that a true vein has been opened up in that property. It was found by drifting on the chute of ore cut recently and which is now of a very high grade, running over 100 ounces in silver and SO ar cent lead, with several dollars In gold. It has now been several months since the Record's representative examined on the Comstuek mine, and and while many rcmnrknhly valuable nssaya have since been secured from Hint proiierty, nu authentic shipments Is have been mude. am! the pmis-rtgradually dropping out of sight. Why Is this? Where Is all the nre Mr. claimed to have fn sight and s lu mi whleh he did so much blowing? 't It begin to look as if the Record man knew what he was talking Wall Paper l'AINTH, OILS, KTC. SAMPLES TT MAILED IT IKEiEL O7 P ANY C. 14 K. DJ. am TO aDDKKSHl MIdgleyi xlt Kim South St.. Lakoliit IGENTS WANTED. n to handle our good, roar lueallly - to Send for talary-- llehdai 8 HIIvit King Aru hiir 972.530 is.0i)l Silver King coneonlrntis Lbily-We- st l!i,tU eoncvnliuU'S Total pounds THE DOCTORS COLUMN. I Kl.ul.y li.ti! pub- remedy lor pimples. Take two teasiNHinfiibi of Natrolllhle Halts, tn a tumbler of hot water, twice u week, half an hour before hrcuklost. Apply Eesemlcure as dim-led- . Ohio. What Is a good remedy for dry catarrh In the head? Take Ovlurrhlne. Tint directions must be fallowed carefully. C. A. M., 8l. Paul. Have duff twins III the muscles of my arm and down my burk. Kindly advise. Tnke one I'Vbrlclde 1111 three times a day. Regulate the bowels with Nutro-11tile Hells. W. H. 1)., Ht. Louis. Alternate extract of the brain, with Tesllne, p In iluses, on tlic ton gin-- , threw times dully for a week. Iteiwrt In two uiuiillis. Helen (1., New York. Bend namo and address; will inlvlst by mall. V. HALING I'.ltl IWN, A. M.. M. I). Mill. Iiepl., t'ol. I'hem. Co., Washington. II. f. All letters of inquiry answered free, THE ANIMAL EXTRACTS. MEAD is acwavH oi ute ana EAGLE PHARMACY, Cat Sd Sa and W. Tania St. S. K. Soil Laka Citv.UUk DON'T LIMP live-dro- E, E, COLUMBIA CHEMICAL CO. Now at all Druggist. Send for Liter- ature. Hulil by Inn's Assoclullun, Halt Luke Oily. Mercantile A Full String Bond in One Instrument, All plnyeil ;it the samn time ami lijr one ankui. The grenU-q-t invention tt of tliu iiineteeiith century is iim piano with the jilwtriiiihoni!, nr Is'tter known ks the iiiunihilfn, Isiuju ami guidur utsir.hnient, used only in the famous Kvvrell, the must durable and only emuplete piano manufactured. It is ild at exceedingly low priiiti anil on very easy terms.1 A large aud well selected stock of liese elegant planus always kept In slock at 13. N. Jenkins new Temple nf MuSend for sic, EIH South Main street. We are also catalogues and prices. agents fur Clnckering & Sons and Harvard l'kinosi Kv-cro- i 1 i:TIST, pro-liir- d s wall, a a pmiiid-deaden- r) lit Doors er nf building, and a a ineaii nf alining1 muny ntlirrs, is, iim It mime Implies, a soft nml wooly consisting nf a muss of very line mineral lilier, intcrliieliif; one in every direction, and thus forming an endien nitmlM-- of minute nir cell. The wnnl apfienra nn the market in a variety nf colnnv, principally white, but often yellow nr gray, nml mmle ncrnninnnlly quite dark, nml ncnrlne and certain ny . converting while in a molten stale, into a fibrous condition Ly n hIciiim blast directed agaliiMt tbu liijuiil ninlorliil. 1rnlmhly no tad ter idea ran Ih given of the nature uf the process than liy the annexed sketch, whleh almost t furnace slag qicak fur Itself. form the raw niuterbil for one vuriety of the wool, and a.'imislone f,(r niiuther, nml yielding, reKqtively, slug moo rock wool, tbu latter living preferable for plK coveting of the absence from It nf sulphur, which, wIMi molHlure present, an active corroding agent. The furnace slag or the rock, n the rase may lie, I melted In a Inrge cupola, and a it trickle out at the tap-hoin a ome-whsluggish Blrcnm. it itie-- t a ateam Jet which atumlxes the woolen mineral. If this term may lie UMctJ, blowing it in fleecy cloud into the storage-rooprovided for it. Buft and downy, the tuff ettle wherever a resting place afford itaelf, the heavier anil coarser wool coming down first, while the lighter istwdera arc blown further along by the force of the steam, and Betties in the more distant part of the room. The material thus naturally grade itself into vs r lotto of different quality. A thousand pound of wool per huur are turned out by one of the cupolas, and after the storage-roohas been blown full, the flncculent nwn in packed into lmgs. ready for the market. The whole afford an admirable and interesting illustration of the utilisation of an ttt priccri er TOSKl r mwb of all. it liiii H B. ('IUH)K Aliorni'y nt: I:iw 1 riK-ks- over Hank. offiee R m Notary Public. liFKIGli IN BANK, - - - PAYSON CITY TAKE R. G. W. Ry. Evening Train El & TICE XEW Leaving Spring villa at 9.00 p m Connecting dally with BURLINGTON ROUTE Train Ho. 2 utterly waste product Th Modern Literary King. The World's litre . . Omaha, Kansas City, Et. Louis end Cbiccco. 1 h rough Pullman Sleepers, Free Reclining Chair Cars, Pining Cars Ala Carte. . xSncure Tickets at R. G. W. Of lice. R. F. NESLEN, XSAV. HM ACT. Room W. F. McMILLAN CEXKRAL AOBBT. 11, over No. 10 W.2nd 8oBt, Balt Luke City, Utah. We ifiXE Wheels Too! Q'Jaiily 6sasl3d ths BEST :a L'SS, WEIGHTS and PRICES s NURSERIES C0 la .8. WIMVIER, pro-ce- steeTrarge,'$35 Reliable U m SSSTSScS PEDIGREED FRUIT TREES Fay son, ! at 1 PIONEER w suli-iiaiii- v, The successful writer of the present, once he ha secured the eye uf the public. feel that he must keep himself nml hi work before the eye of that public. O. F. CULKER ft BROS. Ho must produce and go nn producing Manufacturer if whetlur impulse or Inspiration comes to him or not. He must, lie feels, proOK duce Just so much work. 1 le Is slmi-n- ; SHOW GASES KVKUY and cnnHrlenUnu in the hope that UKxCUIPTION he due will In good work. Hut what PAINTS, YKlINISlfKN, OILS, if it happens to be othcrwiKo, which 1 linrSUKS, ETT, mure than likely, he feel that hn 1 K. Flret South Kl.. Salt Lake City nut altogether tn Iduinc. The work mut Le produced. It I not a ease of can; It is Kiinply and purely one of Farm Loans muL lie I In a feverish race; he MuOnratek Work. Salt Lake. needs keep in the procession and os near the head of it a he can. He I driven by a force he neither understands nor stop to analyse. lie must cko nut IiIh living by hi pen. and there lies the rout of the eviL Not only iloe hi present Islung tn another, hut Ills future C 'EXCELLENT IN EVERY RESPECT Is mortgaged. He contracts tn write books for delivery within the next two. three or five years, quite uninlmirul of Wo havn an Itniuonin linn of Stoves, tile question whether there will he a lionk In him to write, or a story In hlin Cangns and Heaters to to tell, or not He is simply "under Kulwt Front, eon tract; his time, his brain, his mind IIKST 1I0T Alii run.YAL'JC IN AMKIUCA! Is mortgaged. Fur each novel he Is offered a larger sum thun he received fur his last, and proud is thnt author Utah Stove & Hardware Co. who, when a publisher comes lo him In these (lays, can say: Sly dear follow, Catalogue iplloullin. I can't undertake another scrap of Corni'r (uaiwrt'iul and Flrrt tauth At, llnx IIM. Everything I do fur the next talluku I HI v work. five years Is sold. My 1R97 novel gis-to my 189)1 stories arc redd in LAn I Criu I AHaahlk.KMtUke Siogasine, while all I do In 1900 I have contracted to give to the . You see how I nm fixed." And For a Suit That will SUIT You If yon ask him what his 1X97 novel will consist of, he has no more idea of its plot or context than has his valet nr Bend for Samples if his cook. Nor Is this in any sense ail You Can Not Call. ' exaggerated picture of the condition of the modern Anieriran author. 'With D L. ROSSg Merchant Tailor one or two rare exceptions so rare that they ran lie counted upon the fin41 W. tSuooad Sou'll SIM gers of a single hand, with fingers to SALT LAKE CITY UTAH. spare the successful authors of (he day are under the thraldom of the modern literary king the almighty dollar. E. V. link, in the November Forum. mh RIGHT I IN er-T-S TJfENTY-nv- STVLE8. ;9n oescnirrivE cataloaui. Katlral Sewing Machine Ga DELVIDERE, ILL. Fair Tests showed no baking powder BO pan or bo great la cat ealag power aa tbe Royal, British Consuls Recognised. Washington, Nov. J. The President has recognised Joseph william il ns r(f Great and High llrllaln for rallfornln, 1tnh and Janie latldlow. Consul of Great ltrltaln for Washington. ( iregon and Stock. Idnlto, to reside at Iortl.nid. Ore. BALT LAKE CITY, UTAH -- st l youta SHOE CO., m K. Third South SL, Salt Lake City, Utah odlo. Tha Institute it under the management of I)r. J. IV. John, who has boon al work wlii and in th employ of th Lesley K. Kndpy Ci mpsny for the past four ycara The ireitment and mcanagoment of pMIunta will bo Manually th sani ai at Dwight. m: lo walk almlght, Wa take 1'iartrr nf Pan wort of foot lo tiouirv eumlort. Sprclalbla ia and Dafornml Shop, 'dtaal liruanv aud artlllulul Until si awry dracriptliiK. HILGERr DEFORMITY e, CEREBRINE, From the Brain. From th Spinal Cord. CARDIN' E, From tbe Heart. TES-TINOVARINE, THYROIDINE, NATB0LITHIC SALTS, For Constipation. OASTRINE, For Dypspepeiu. CATARRHINE, ECZEMICURE, and other pecialtie of th ami downy wuul" front rnnilKtnne ami I from th, wnto alnff cf blast furroui t, one nf the mriMt Hlriklnff. Thu CAlli-niiiu.ial wuul." is already widely uud fur lutckliiff, IhmtfliiM Innltaro atom. Kvtrjr UrrjM'rluiiiinir uf mniiufoclure thing Itc., and the iuooo In hUlh art ilentfoctry. Huilly i deiiiriUd (Cusslci-- Aliiaxinr, uitwln wrvUnulilt for lifa ljr ilmioivl ol ifihl Aliimiuuui or ior-a follow: IlipailjiiKtiiHMil "The wool ltsclf, acrvir.E a variety of uaeftil purihMe, a a covering uguliirt heut and cold alike, BEST SETS OF TEETH fur Bte.'im pipe and cold Klutage room high-prouu- re 81,011 THE TESTIMONIAL uf ieiu oo kaatical aa liquor aura, bat asa auuvart la Ita ltagla Emat-dy- , kalapaai fro attar euna and vkttiau of ita larrIUa llq dlwaaa heuld not dahvy. Writ fur fxrthor potUaulor or eall at 1 Cere-brin- y. le Si7,2s0 1,429,130 I. 1. Jv., lished a SUCCESSFUL, AMD MOM PERMANENT REMEDY YET DISCOVERED Th Kaclsy Institute, a direct authorlnd branch of th parent hous at Dwight, 111,, has been opvmod al 106 W. Hceond North, Salt Lake City on tha lino of thastreot railway ruunlng lo Warm Spring more. It wns Anthony Trollope over For lh lreatinnt of Iba liquor and In the November opium hahi'.s, w?h Lesley K-- Koeley again. E. W. Rok, Forum. Company's doubli chlorlda of gold ram TIerkelratli's employment Petty agenrv, .Vi R. 'Diinl Kouth, Suit Luke City, Utah (tel, 4ii4)ii thoroughly reliable agency where all kinds of help Hoanil situations ran ls obtained. tel, mining and house ludpn specialty. Knclosv stamp for reply when writing. Maker of Victor Bicycla momrom. HcLeans Volcanic Oil Liniment JURIES on th syntem, but iirfron your HEALTH. TAKE IT and in 8 DAYS you VUlhire lo tbo cur whiia viewing the various point of Intrivrt and plenre an extended n of cordial ixvilsliun lo lnpeel the ndk-etin- a oil painting at lh "Oxfurd." Tli exhibit Uw n rps-eneh Ibwiu musii "Jury Modern Author and Their Methods of ttiePIxia.' Homing" and Evening, nad hlrtnrauid Irgead, "Maet-inga-f There la now an author before the llmt lastly rrlhlimtsd Ambuny and Cleaiutm." public whose writing have a wide auENZEftnl'KKIiKR 1IROS. dience, but who has been recently told W.ta and no Is his critic deterwork the that by Pi.oon-wor- OVERMAN WHEEL CO. Dr. J. H. HAS NO RIVAL in ill bnccetcful Work. Rood th TESTIMONIALS men. Work no INof wel e iorating. This Is true, and It is nut strange that It should be so. lie is a man who as a writer shows the highest art in his work, and his earlier iNMiks demonstrate this fact beyond a doubt. But he has come under the Influence of the dollar, and now writes what is called to order." Not long a go a tnagaxlne editor apiroached this author fur his next work, and found him Just starting Umn it I would like it," said the editin'. What will you pay for it 7 wus the author's first question." How long will it prolmbbr be?" inquired the editor. "Oh, 1 cun make It as long or as short a you want It," said the obliging author. Then he added: "It upon the price. I cun mnke a d story of it if you like, and thi-it u 111 cost you fnxn. Oh, 1 can to words and that Is spin It nut 1 really wh.it ought to huve tn let the story toll itself: hut then I will want 17500 for It. or course, if you can't pay more thun ftiuOO, 1 can trim it accordingly. The real question of the story itself did not enter Into the question. K was simply a matter of price. You paid so much anil you gut so much. If you paid a little more you received a little For beauty, strength, lightness, durability and easy running qualities, no other bicycle can equal the Victor. Iiuy a Victor and know you have the best. Is IbN-sn- te Mighest grade MADE Tobacco Cure Eagle aWonderfulJhing. Dus-seldo- rf Kastcrn Vilayets of Asia Minor, a pore tlon of the offices aie to be held by Christians and the Moslem Governors are to have Christian secretaries Pledges, on paper also, are given about amnesty for the Armenians now under arrest and alxmt reform In prisons and management of ths police. That seems in lie all that, after these five months of negotiation, I lacked by Impisilng muster of war fleets, has been exacted from the Hultan. It amouta to nothing more than the reutllrmatlun of the pledge that he gave eighteen years ago, and he no doulit would have been delighted to concede it on the very first day of the negotiations Even this much he Is allowed to minimise in the eyes of his own subjects by declaring, through official newspapers that what he la doing Is not for the boneflt of Christians by themselves, but la merely an exiierimental step In a programme for reforming the Governmental machinery of the whole Empire. Nothing could be more fatuous and impotent than this conclusion, if it had to be regarded as concluding anything. But. unfortunately, the Eastern question remains as much open as ever. Neither the Armenian committee, on one side, which has been running this whole movement with plenty of money at Its command and a sort of walking-delegaauthority to close up the Armenian shop and coerce the entire Armenian community to do its bidding, nor the Mohammedan governing clique, on the other side, has any intention of abandoning Ita activity or of laying down its arms because the Hultan signed one paper more or less Every taindon newspaper man in Constantinople iiredlcts that there Is to l a revolution in Turkey. That there la direct danger of England and Russia becoming embroiled In Turkish waters is not suggested, but it is apparent that they have finished with the farce of pretending to act In concert, and stand at last free to the Turkish confusion and anarchy, each on Its own account anil In Its own Interest. London Correspondent New York Times 08 are REMEDY CO SjNleru Hiijlr.. right puny. ujianMPledge of Armenian lll. SALT, LAKE PUBLISHING CO. 917 Reforms. bug. Malt Laka Lily, Lull. It I really playing with words to call the diplomatic arrangement which " PAPER! hua arrived at in Constantinople LaMBMIT PAPKU IXXAalt Lak settlement. Nothing has lieen England has been forced to choose between open rupture with her Watchmaker, Jeweler Optician ostensible colleagues or accepting their ALKX. L WYATT, at Malatarwt plan for letting the Sultan down easily, and very relucluntly Las taken the latter course. Accordingly, the Hultan has ASTONISHING RESULTS signed a document which concedes about a tenth part of what Rosebery From Tha originally claimed, and Ignores alto- about? are the ore shipments from gether Hallsbury'a Inter and magnified theFollowing EAGLE CURE LIQUOR Mackintosh for the demands There la to be reform on pasampler present per of the local government in six week: SAFEST, MOST Cli CTcm MBICYCLEStfC The Organic Remedies front Wnr-hurt- Tonsiil-Geiion- Grow only First-cla- ss Grade I-- N. U- - Bolt Lak City, 83 88. Arl-xon- a: Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder WwM's Fair Hlgtast Modal sad DIpteM. The Ciitnpt roller of the C'tirreny has leelsred it ilivldend of pi ier i'ent In favor ef the eridilnrs nf flic Klrst Kkllonsl Kun nf bunk lleriiiirellini, Cnl., slid tlie liukcr L'ily Katluiial bunk of linker City, Or. |