OCR Text |
Show THE ARGUS. scrub in town. The next newspaper man who is threatened with bodily harm or receives any physical injuries through any truthful article which may appear in his columns, should institute suit against the offender for intimidation of the public press, in which event the bellicose individual will probably not get off with a paltry fine of six dollars and six bits. tbe press. flMtb of AST WEEKS Manti Messenger contained the following Imeditorial paragraph: mediately after the passage of the Dingley bill, wheat raised 4 cents a bushel. Of course, that means nothing, From a Democratic point of view, it simply chanced that way. Singularly, just such chances always follow the advent of Republican rule. The last issue of The Silver City Star: Salt Lake Argus contains an able argument in support of the independent paper as opposed to the old style party organ. We commend the closing sentence to the two great party organs of Salt Lake City which have been obliged to cut so many articles during the past few months in order to keep in line. As party leaders have conducted themselves in Utah, as parties have changed and switched it puzzles the average party organ to keep its bearings anyhow. Mo-hame- 'opening in icebergs. Fred Marshall has taken his place on the Journal Park City Patriot : Soon after Hanna began to boast that the fine prospects for immense crops of com in Kansas and Oklahoma were all due to the McKinley bill, came the hot winds, and now it is feared that the prospective yield has been Hanna is also coming already cut off to the front with the claim that the discovery of gold in the Klondyke country is the result of the f. McKinley bill. that our country cite the recent re- As evidence wTe money has recently been felt from the Alaskan countries, arising no doubt from the Klondyke gold excitement, which has greatly stimulated business in that country. Here, no money, no business, no good times. Every once in a while the denizens of county hear or imagine they hear the rumble of an earthquake, they see or imagine they see things shake, they feel or imagine they feel the earth tremble and the Bugler apparently keeps an earthquake scare set up for constant and immediate use. The latest sensation of the kind is reported from Bear River City. er Utah Editor and Printer : Editor thumping has become quite a popular fad among the roasted of Utah. We cannot understand how these feliows, who object to a little roasting in this world, will manage to get along in the next. It is very evident that they will be continually scrapping with his Satanic majesty. It is coming to be a pretty state of affairs in Utah when an editor must go armed if he publishes any adverse criticisms-whicdo not suit the palate of every h The Mt. Pleasant Pyramid should also read Living Issues on the licensing of prostitution. It The Ogden Standards idea is that the says : social evil does and always will exist and the best way to cure it is to regulate the vice by license and a well regulated police department to enforce such a law calculated to keep the social evil at the lowest point of offensiveness. There is more truth than poetry in what the Standard says, offensive as it may be to a great many people. ts The Castle Valley News contains this .local Hoke Smith has assumed the manageitem: ment of the Mathis house, having taken a lease on the property from the owner and former occuHoke must be trying to pant, Mrs. Bodle. locate as near the gilsonite deposits as possible since he formed their acquaintance officially. We wish that the Klondyke Living Issues : explorers might find gold so plenty that they could load it on cars like gravel. The thing that would amuse us most would be to see the taking the back track. Wouldnt they scoot, though? Then how amusing it would be to see McKinley and his Congress getting to work to make the present gold bonds payable in diamonds. Nothing is r is not doing his plainer than that the The Springville Independent has changed hands and William F. Gibson has taken the place just vacated by Dave Felt, who is about to depart on his mission. The Argus wishes each gentleman abundant success in his chosen field. The Ogden Press claims that it did not lose its temper but that The Argus provoked a out of it. If ranting, raving, calling smile names and disturbing the peace of the junction city is a Press smile it must be awful when it laughs. The Boxelder News contains a long account of the preliminary trial of Editor M. L. Snow of the Bugler on the charge of making an assault with a deadly weapon. Down at Panguitch, in Wasatch Wave: Garfield county, the other day a justice of the peace fined one Jacob Arnold, a phonographer, $20 for allowing four women to listen to a vulgar and lewd discourse or song from the phonograph. This is all well enough so far as it goes, but why didnt he fine those women' a like amount each for adopting such a method to satisfy their morbid curiosity when ten chances to one their husbands, if they are married women, could each have sung them just as vulgar a song as they D. H. PEERY, DE WITT B. LOWE JR. STOCK BROKERS io West Second South St., Salt Lake City, Utah. fool-kille- ports from Pacific Coast cities, where an influx of Box-eld- rot!!!! There will yet be bom Bingham Bulletin : Buddhas and Christs and Confuciuses and and Joseph Smiths. A thousand religions will spring up and flourish before this world grows cold and pulseless as its moon. What of the myriads who will die in the new faiths, since we are told that to reject blind belief in the Christian scheme and its present amended teachings is to be damned. Don C. W. Musser, city editor of the Logan Journal has resigned his position and started for the Klondyke. At present he is in Seattle where in all probability he will remain until the spring is in need of more money 1 for every old administration blunderbuss and popgun in the state. Even his pa, the renowned ecclesiastic j saw fit to take a shy at him. But none of it will amount to more than a flash in the pan. Senator Cannon will go on growing and expanding in the national eye, and when he goes before the people of Utah in another election, it will be easy for him to justify the position he took with reference to the tariff bill. Senator Cannon has proved himself the friend of the producing masses, and they would be ungrateful indeed to permit that friendship to go unrewarded. , Piute Pioneer : and two others and sends them to China. Such rot Such rot ! I Such rot ! I ! Such rotten Park City Record: Because he. had the courage and the manhood to vote against the Dingley tariff bill for trusts and syndicates, Senator Frank J. Cannon is being made the target The Randolph Roundup of the same complexion of the same date contained the following : Europes wheat crop shortage for. this year is estimated at 120,000,000 bushels. This will create a demand for the surplus American cereals. one-hal- but when the United States wants to learn something about finances it packs up Frank Cannon duty. THE. With an air of well feigned astonishment the Manti Messenger exclaims : are Cannonites. And still there Living Issues : According to the Herald, the Municipal League is on its last legs. It is about as we thoughtthat the people have had enough of the mixture of church and state. a The fair sex of Murray Murray American ; have caught the gold fever and now many of them are talking of braving the wild waves and the icebound regions of Alaska. The Provo Enquirer looks at the mission of Senator Cannon and his colleagues as follows : The greatest joke of the season is to see American statesmen, solemnly packing up their and going to China and Japan for pointers in favor of a silver currency. so-calle- fhe few1! grip-sack- s The Chinese are not Says Warren Foster : fit to come to the United States ; oh, no they are too degraded and ignorant, and they eat rats ; A CLEAN, BRILLIANT, HEALTHL-FU- L, FEARLESS JOURNAL $2.00 a year |