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Show THE BEE 7 9 June Weddings. One of the I ' Ml I The marriage of Mins Annie McClellan aud Prof. Fml X. PouKon, both of Payson, occurred last Wednesday iu the Salt Lake Temple. MUa McClellan U the daughter of the late J. J, Me Clellan, for many yearn prominent iu Payson, and sister of the Salt Lake musician, Prof. J. J. McClellan, Mr. Poulson is fast gaining a flue reputation as educator in Utah county and he has full charge of the public schools in Payson. The young people are popular in Utah county and well known iu the state. (iLEANINOS FROM ono very much as if tho compositor in typo had thrown them in on Ids own responsibility. They need displacing almost as much as a misspelled word would need correction. set-tin- g , CHOIR INVISIBLE." Shu would in secret sometimes liken him to one of those rare unions of delicacy and hardihood which in the world of wild llowers Nature refuses to bring forth except from tho cranny of a cold rock. Its of black roaring home is tho battlo-tieltempests; the red lightnings play among d its roots; all night seamless snow-drift- s are woven around its heart; no boo over arises to it from the valley below where the greon spring is kneeling; no morning bird over soars past it with an observant song; but in duo time, with unswerving obedience to tho law of beauty unfolding from within, it sets forth its perfect leaves and strains its steadfast face toward the EXTRACTS FROM AN ADDRESS. Uj distance and at the disadvantage of a hundred years, hands- him down to posterity man with a seedy growth as a of hair sprouting laterally from his tems ples, so that his ears look like little half hidden in little canebrakes; whiskers growing far with mutton-chohis cheekup on the bones and suggesting rather a daring variety of lichen; with a long arched nose, running on its own hook in a southwester-direction- ; - bald-heade- d flat-boat- p over-hangingledges- of one eye a little higher than the other; a protruding upper lip, as though he had behind it a set of the false teeth of the time, which were fixed into the jawTs by springs and hinges, all but compelling .a .man to keep his mouth shut by. main force; and a very short neck with an overflowing jowl which weighed too heavily on his high shirt collar. In a book where there is so much that is, as here appears, so exceptionally fresh and charming and original it is a surprise and a disappointment to find such weary, time-worexpressions as her low, beautiful brow, the white mice of her feet, He asked himself what he. had done to deserve all this. They seem so out of place; are, such blemishes.. They strike n Mr. KU-- u IticliunUon. talking about that which elevates faculty into an outgrowth of manhood; that which takes a fanner and makes a poet of him, yet holds tho farmer still. Wo want no education which takes a farmers boy and educates him so that he can- not go back to tho farm. Wo want an education such as will educate tho powers of tho young farmer, tho mechanic, or tho artist; so that In can go back to tho farm, the shop, tho studio to develop each tho hotter. Education should turn to practical ends, but while training men to practical things it should bo (lone with a divino impulso, soul and body taking tho training for harmonious action. Love and wisdom creating the being whoso force for good shall make the character strong. Then would business becomo moral and the world better. I am AN His portrait, scrutinized now from the Prom 170 to IM0 In was official reporter to the courts in Calhoun, Eaton and Harry counties, Michigan, was of the Michigan Law Stenographers and from 1MU to 1KU association in official reporter to tin district court in Ogden, Utah. From 1MC to tin present date law reporter and teacher of shorthand. Ono of his pupils is at present in an office receiving :lt( k h per year, others ,.r n i, si.Loo yer year, eighty and soventy-tivdollars per month, etc. Wo fool sure many persons will be glad to have tin opportunity of studying under so experienced a gentleman during tin coming summer months, and wisli him continued success. vice-preside- nt sun. The gathering hush of night, the holy expectancy of tho stars, a llock of white clouds lying at rest on tho green sky like sheep in some far uplifted meadow, the freshness of the woods soon to bo hung with dew, all these melted into his mood as notes from many instruments blend in tho ear. has reported contained over 10,000 typo written pages composed largely of medical testimony, which was lxnmd in a number of volumes each about the size of Websters unabridginl dictionary. cum he EFFICIENT TEACHER. Hearing that many people intend taking up the study of shorthand during the present summer months, wo have made inquiries respecting tho standing and skill of tho successful shorthand teacher and law reporter, Mr. George Gatroll, whose office is in tho Auerbach building, and ascertained tho following: At twenty years of ago Mr. Gatroll commenced the study of shorthand, became a member of the Phonetic Society of Great Britain and Ireland and was one of tho skilled twelve who at that time wrote 200 words per minute, for which ho received a certificate from Isaac Pitman (the inventor of phonography) as well as a teacher's certificate. In 1871 he was the first to introduce shorthand reporting into the courts of Kansas City, Mo., and he has been professor of phonography in colleges in Kan sas City, and Jackson, Mich. The largest 1 o t DO OFTEN question whether the! world is growing hotter or worse, When I was a young said a friend. T 1 girl, fifteen or twenty years, ago,1 I remember tho droadful thing a boy did and tho good pooplo pronounced him incorrigible, fit only for a reform school was to march up Nob Ilill ono fall evening at the head of a quota of boys, leading in fino vim and lustiness tho doxology. I can hear it yet, alternating with tho ringTo me it was ing command of Ko-pea- t! quite stirring, but for that matter it was to tho residents, too. It was thought to be droadful sacrilegious beyond words, but would many people think much of And does tho change such an act today indicate more charity or more indifference? More freedom or more lawlessness? V Advertise in The Bee. Baby Carriages ' Half Price AT THE Golden Rule Bazaar. Come and Get One Before They Are All Gone. 227 MAIN ST. CURES ALL FORMS OF DISEASE. it VICTORY For Self Treatment, gi ves vigorous health by instilling OXYGEN from the air into the system, and cures all forms of disease in Men, Women and Children without medicine or electricity. Applied as in illustration. Get the genuine, made by the Discoverer and Inventor, I)K. II. SANCIIK, 261 Fifth Avenue, New York. THE NEW LIFE GIVER, ' P TYPHOID FEVER. ATLANTA. Ga., June 2. LSPti. first applied the Oxvdunnr Victory" to my wife, who had Typhoid Fever, and in four hours the fever was broken, and there were no more symptoms of it. Then immediately following three other members of my family were stricken down with the lever, and in every instance it was broken by the prompt application of Oxydonor. in a shorter space of time than the first, and without the aid of other J. K. I. Carlton. remedies or medicines. We have used it for various other ailments with marked success. I CALL ON F. W. SEELEY, OFFICE, ROOM 1; No. 232 MAIN STREET . . . I Dealer. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH |