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Show eM THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT ! cnergy, rhe [iler- : . Dll blished Pu Bye Every INTER-MOUNTAIN cal Morning ture by at the pi postoffice under ‘he at Act Salt maintained of money, auwhoi tocentan REPUBLICAN CO, | « "astern A. 1. BLUNCK, Pres. and Mer. Siifisitwd an wecond-clani mince "duties Feb 1 1906, Lake with aided the by have ‘truths to of Congress, March | Never the good history Chalrman paid : Of of committee | then ad-! over country make in a publi- ‘can be be and proved should| he expelled-instantly. polygamist, the |should holding | reason permit- | that he can be-at in they be Three Months, in noes 2: Offices, Deoly 208 eos York Office ause -117 South West from a mony : Bullding Tribune against ; DET And Chiicaro, "Office. .16i8 mech aconBuilding ston Office ..... 0.05.4, Street/{o Lake City, Utah, May enemy as or If : justice 5%, sister state. on unrelated itted SS never 1] eehas eee a Never 1906 It Is unjust to him, on of so can not be, | foreign it e Senator et ey PIGHTING nea REDS. THE a Smoot | defender the 1 of x is and certainly a as well as not hold of of of- fort , ; ; ‘3 srtunate for the nation that the ‘ ; the matter of|*' religion isk applied in test fice. fixes has why Washington, at shown none We regard it as exceedingly un- eel are because he A sey 4G |™°": 2a a OE IY senate. he cx rote scum Cut Lee is of a.Mor- aie ine aN it-in: the ; One Ba ; / | any other Mormon. If he is ineligible polygamist, or a : 3 x 3 ae to office, he is Ineligible to the franMembers of ( : : ; - _ | chise. And that is in perilous violaof congress, have | . ; : : liieraccnichuia tion of every principle of our re- a polygamy committee, é reason, member of that church any ' other churehmal may ee given a . Senator because no so | een trial. the belief in the minds of many who PenUOnlyROneMEId Gr Otetie POaSeNthNTs -____.__. and Pea acceplec e ac } s Some shundreda of enarchiate unOe EBC eee . : public som ee aaa = |well recognized here in Utah that the j dertook to march through the streets | an is not a violator of any law, and eee Came a eter eur Ne of Ciicago on May° day under the wav|)i, ey nol clean as ,{the 5 manhood of the claimant : him‘ srsonal life is as ing folds of the red flag of their cult. oe Aid the police broke up the procession ven if the policese had been : . derelict in that. duty,wt the reds . would me not have " marchedpast the medical schools which jay along their line of progress, ° because the students of med. = - oo Es ae right a " > Baee ae . bors > . oO > stages rho a , teh > ‘tap "eSSIiO :* io on€ a e case o. Ae ‘Poelye oe 8s hin ae ' i = bakRi ok. _ pend é s ‘osec ECE se nae i uae a oe h = a aa stant on - ‘ iced bee i" a which jain, "Arrecte v > » s : ce icine and surgery, being citizens of the United States, and sons of citizens, * protested tility against to their the Insignia nation, and 7 oe ipettie : hi - hosin / 1 oe (rs forcible the They broke of anarchists mn he all » stri rant * Aes He re iss » oO ae » ah » Vv zens, ; ‘ have sought at all times to subvert its |S¢Mators he is appreciated as a courte-| inenituticns and overthrow its power ous, sensible, informed sow friend. is unfair to man, the and state ana} Phere Is naturally a tendency of prosperous citizens, mobbing the: institution. of their' own ‘order- | Credit: the efficiency of a new . -epresentatives states Which ‘means no order. ..They "have | "¢Presentatives Older . ae swelled the themselves rage of tacked with bibulous the only beer, vigor nation and in have much the at-/SUMplUion on. earth elder of in|sreater brother ha en superiority, age were a as far as his nelghto the conror aes for an inmay mainor political franchise ; neither Christian, shouldbe or ofnor Catholie the either. know what the every of friend Utah desire an more thelr|of up. money But than Russia, it the today. set- can borrow whole empire break up of the of maren motive cult No 7 lines better than which the have | enabled extending |@9 of anarchy one who his country erty with the of license Chicago Which seek assemble, to petition and to anteed by rights the constitution, which They freemen constitute a-fveeman laws fing all will the needs. and And archists sible of Chicago. they trine to every have the of lef. possess. achieved Smoot have the It position that the The prosecution the|that he is been shifts a pos-|that he is bound doc-|authority In}tion, sought | be by. to or the reasonable They ruin the the There some may land mén can law. scribe, who govern by en far be a race, the prove without yet do the right to not un- and their obedience they in where as discoverer can But away, a community the their Rule. the place undiscovered, may by activities but accumu- destruction of big utter annihilation a yet manage There captured have rule. be as improve- ultimate who governmental of no those lated property, buildings, and ef plan know of the to Gold- march can hand not They ihe of be constituted ground church true, to laid can too not lesson too of peril heavily upon severely be in pun- ishment for treason. They can too quickly be sent into enforced not so- briety, the and prolonged working betterment of roads. room for them in the of America, cordial and when it bars emblem of There United Chicago approval of the for will every red is no States have the municipality banner as the organization. the States charges Senator will very senate Just that is why. pretend persons on the a pretenders the nation, immoral, doreement states, 2nd posed of judicial have which punof de- Smoot, These the morals women the in pending formal which the of the discredit managed not per- since of the his Smoot entry ‘into the senate-more than three ‘ years ago, The crusade for his unseating began with the beginning of his term, and has been pushed with be a the is American the oe of has of vicious, the unprincipled offended cast with are their a wholly mus to right to the the pense in to that dime metus been contribution the country Utah is a a officials in right in as of dallying. can by the of a be state and has of the other. Let By the that. habit of printing city the county allowing the Tribune just three to case do of the the of halt- It is ordinary edition the much work printed for. the as it for in cast his pomp and were entitled And the paid bills for the of 2,560 they had be pati to were by lines for than allowed in "reform" away friends ware. One eed to that; have "The regard by is obedience freely that there are are elected people to of who allemight suffrage, The Tribune, yesterday: "Thank Ged for the American ae administration!" That would be a good text fer a sermon by some forceful Yes. Salt Lake vice in official canadian so. arise arid for after permit to would praise of to prize cominit so a present administration. ser- be. the retune fight. complete the the should sing a earnest minister And congregation given Utah. And equality of justice ae that observant. Christian That's the famous, he tried whole to say good pre- FRAGMENTS ids aw gh dys oe OF a FUN ee Wicked Kalannazoo, Kalamazoo, Michigan, is wicked town It Is the haven oa of ate dog fights and household draw poker All minstrel companies go there to. get -wreckec do nol] know why they shows get) wrecked) for they. dearly fin next ing DE will Sabbath, and it One-night "The; held Mr. willing, in Providence fishing Moore and he} this per-| there Calls ""Basenberg's ELorse Pt which Pee eae | £0U"4.@ | desk New nbepe a rere 1e@At physically, he Mv. fa- dic Hough's a bit feeling took the .ad- a distinguished publisher of ; : York and put himself in the : é ee sults existed, but no doubt whatever as to the size of the bill.) Mr. Hough pondered long and seriously on the question of getting even with his doclength he happened to think tor. At of his old story of the cross-eyed horse, "Til have the osteopath treat the horse's cross-eyes," sald the author to Spee Whereupon he rewrote the sold it promptly at a good figure and made it a chapter of his last NOEL eart's Desire," where it is known as "Science at Heart's haaee ene | READY TO REMEMBERR . Fallieres' eleetion as Freneh Republic cost ‘y is $20,000 a month Proof Positive. She-Is Miss Sereecher w hat would call a high class singe: He-She must be; you Cate, a single of derstand word what sings. Henry's ue unshe Creditars out collecting subseripwere City Presbyterian for the Jonas White met ehureh One Unele Henry in front of the grocery and asked him how much he was going to give toward > church. Cas you give us something, Unele Henry asked HG Henry. Unele replied a the cause Oe Is not good one?" not able to give "Yes, but I am anything." better; you "Pooh! pooh! I know than that." must give a better reason "Well, [ owe too much money you must be just before I'm generous, y felony the the know owe Goda "But, Uncle He nry, you owe anybody large 1 you debt than else i That' s true, Mr. White, but then me like the balance He ain't pushing or my creditors."'--Albert Morse Noah send out "What bird did the ark?" ask ed a pee ee teacher of a class of -bov cae st boy "A dove, sir! " said the in the class but I should have "Very well of you big boys would thought some h known that,"' said the teacher "But that boy ought to know, sir," said. a big boy "cause his father's a bird ketcher, si ir Two little girls were comparing progress in -catechism study: "I've got to-original sin," said one "How oe have u.got?"" Oh, Um way beyond redempthon," "sald the other "Sarah," said a girl looking out at the upper story of a. small grocery, addressing another girl who was trying to enter at the froht door, we've all been to camp meeting, and been converted; so when you want mills on Sunday, you'll have to come ‘roun to the ack door, An in ser- Amerl- A parson reading the funeral service the grave, forgot the sex of the ae ensed, and asked one of the mournEmeralder "Is this a brother replied Pat,. "only a "Do you subscribe to all she articles the Athanasian creed?" was asked old lady. CN Iz) donit!,. I tcan't<:afford. it There's a collection next week for the convention fund, and n't do any more,"' was the reply. -_- of an A negro, about dying, was told by his minister that he must forgive a certain darkey against whom he seemed to entertain ry bitter feelings. "Yes, suh," he replied, "if I dies, I forret ve dat ger, but if I Be ets well, dat nigger must take care. Proton can om elvenke, aries thirty years' service in the directorship of the Morrison observatory at Glasgow, Mo.. has retired. He is succeeded by R. Morgan, formerly of the United States Naval Obgervato Rev. Henry Wunder, pas stor of St. IN COMIC OPERA detent abate a operas in London thes Are nine ‘ful litte Garodies on Me. Shakespeare's They put on tlaintet me a ghost who does a song and danc And springs a mouldy xen ‘or two, while all the chorus cha And Bere on beholding ‘him, hits up a ively clog, . And say ae ‘ you, father, dear, or Just a Epauen ‘CE When old King Lear goes maundering acros he canvas lea graceiess daughter winks and says: "Now, don't you Lear at me!" And Pe nt exclaims, when, through. the he hears his monarch shout; "tts. pees windy in't it. king, to take those whiskers out?" And when his subjects hail the king, the old man says, ee "Away with you are you. knave, to hail when I am voicing? His dark Othello from the Wars comes ouble-sbu ring bac gays: ‘*]' an of him, because he looks so blac! Desdemona's stiried while that vilcalmly smokes la Remarking, "philosophically, the while: "I ho ec es! And w han Othello Stabs himself, Iago, wi roar, Shouts out: "There's always room where you are bound for just one Moor!" of And When sighed say that cigars. we ought Montague in Los was the turning light-ship point in that the mark- course; be- not quite so far away, Was the light-ship that she had Just passed. More | her, strung put} is out any | face of to w steamer the cost of | of Captain or schoonel $ were out in a long following line, and sea as they brisk wind. an ocean direchead- beat up in th An occasional tug with a tow Hight green water ce and were patches where the wave ran higher and broke oecasionally There were the shoals,the "‘Razorback the "Boneyard," ar the rest 1 it were possible, and fashionable, to erect tombstones for ine S lost) at these hidden cate ei would of.)| bristte to old) messmate}it heave over with them, Not a winter month for Anchor at Vineyard dragging Haven fills in or lime Boston between salvage jobs and it pa) Bradley and the Captain were anhchor dragging merely on speculation a this affoat-best so on. man Talk they ever about had, | taffy! Hej; sell her the beach, for enough If five minutes to pay she why, "Well, you bilge before ‘time wrecks the agent's} was piled the insurance see the the pumps "irst, it had I said up here off rips on | The woula-j|the the had been Point the ‘No,' flat-}a& | two edge lead dories moved of the shoal, smelt | distance worked |The line a dozen previous slowly down separately by a of perhaps a hundred yards. between them, weighted with sinker at each end, was drag- vooted, jest like your little tin honest sing along the bottom. man hat was the first day "Fisherman's luck," shouted Caphat was only the beginnin'.. He kept { tain Ezra from his dory a we at it all the time. There was no chance | ain't found it yit, Brad. We right of losin' a life; ‘twas what was done]on the range Eldredge gave etre fifty times a year. See what' was; P'int Lighthouse and the pole on comin' to me More money? Why,| Black's shanty, in line to the no‘thsure. And the new schooner, best in east. and the Harnisspert steeple and the bus'ness Hu always swore by | Thompson's windmill to the no'th. I me His brothey that's dead used to| Suspicion that we're too nigh inshore say Cap'n Titeomb would stick to} Never mind; we'll keep on for a little owners' orders, if he was told to jump | Ways further." : overboard. They'd treated me better They were dragging for an anchor than any skipper they ever had, and| lost by the coasting schooner Mars now, first time I was asked to really| D. a month before. She had been do somethin' to help the firm, I went | Caught by the tide and the chain had back on ‘em yeen Jet go with a run One of the "Never mind the rest.. Fin'llv they | hands aboard-Eldredge by name got me to say that maybe I'd do it.} WaS an Orham man, and he it wa And I hated self every minute} Who had had the presence of mind to afterwards 1 see, I'd always] take the "ranges" mentioned .by the Wa nh used to takin' risks. liked to} Captain, which information he had ‘em, and I ain't got your saintly | Sold iis fellow-lownsmen for a disposition. my son, Well, let it go at] fiye-dollar bill that. This In the paper is what Bradley and the Captain began rowstarted me talkin' about it today, and|ing once more. They had gone but a tell you honest, &@ wan't surprise little way when, slowly bul surely, the enough in give me a shock of palsy.' dories began to draw nearer to each Bradley' took the paper and saw on]jother. Bradley, looking over the side, the page indicated the words, "Wreck ]|saw that the "drag line" no longer on the Long Island Sand Bars. The|hung straight down, but, tightly Schooner Thomas Doane Lost. All| stretched by whatever was holding it ands Saved." He glanced over the|on the bottom, led off diagonally article, which briefly stated that the | astern. three-masted schooner Thomas Doane "Got a bite!"' he shéuted. Burke master, had struck on the . shoals off Long Island and weuld be "Yup," replied the Captain, shortly. a total loss. he crew, after trying in They Kept on rowing easily, and in Vain to save the vessel, had' taken to] 4 few minutes the pressure on the the boats and reached shore in safety. line had brought the dories side by "I didn't believe they'd: dare do it!'' | side Then Bradley passed his end exclaimed Bradley. "We know, and] Of the rope to his partner, who began they know we know hauling in wen care, By this operaot tell?"' asked the Captain. tlon the skipy . or) Was soon shertly. "Not me, .for IL was in it ‘as prover Mirae over the spot where bud as the rest. Not you. for they] lay the hidden object Bradley rowed know you and me were thicker'n on a molasses stopper. ‘Good-bye, Susan Jane,' so old Doane was concerned, No; far as an been expectin' it ‘ the funeral, so let's forgit apparently Captain aid Andformat it: wood fany vere lo o hear ject pass before Bradley his friend mention It was a Chapter IX. May niorning flles| hit own is the] I've "Now, then," said Captain Titeomb; "let's see if she's got the right complexion.' oe at Titcomb mdnths Was again that sub . = off .Setuckit Point, The Point itself was in the middie distance, with the lighthouse top shining black wyainst the sky, and ae little cluster of fishing shanties show-| ing brown amid the white sand dunes| and green beach the dunes and station was grass. perched its on The the cupola life-savin highest was of| almost boat alongside He leaned one end of pulled: them over the side, and, t line in each ae tight and sawed taking oh 1 merce -vigor- ously ‘-back*and. forth, thus drawing. & section of the rope again and again nder the treasure-trove below, Then he paid out one end of the line and hauled in the other until this: seetion came lo the surface; it. was marked with' a "And dal! red stéin-jron that's all. right ‘BO in shape Bt fur," com- mented the Captain. "She's a lady 0f color, any how. Looks to me as that bread on the waters that T cast, the Eldredge, due had season, of hey. a fiver, to. brought forth Brad? Pass Brother fruit me in that ax conspicuous as the lighthouse: The} *4y. line" thick cloud, apparently of mosquitoes, The smaller end of the "way line," hovering over the Point, was,.in reali-|# Stout rope tapering from ene inch ty, ‘the flock of mackerel gulls that} '¢ Uiree inches in thickness, was are always hunting for sand eels on| SPliced to the "drag line," and drawn Caesar gets the gleaming knives, he's circled oy a u neh Ot show girls, hile lean Cassius mourns: ** "Twas ve man punch!" Mecherh heb ce aged crones dance the flat. Low down across the horizon d thelr. "bubbiing. pitch, miles beyond Was smeared the And ak is wit grin of glee and yellow strea i at marked the tell) me wish ' is witch?' painlane of the C They' A een ita crowds away, they say; right, cies a half mile away. by Avon's wave, j doown It's "al, the bard is turning °too-he's) but ri eoilen the darker water ie inurning in his grave! dicated the ship channel, a four-mast- ae s A. ‘Examiner, line, the the sister, | Cthers, bound in the opposite radley's a| tion, were standing inshore or the your begins oe logé s'pose showing chance commission. baronet. Sir John Sinclair, a, Scotch has presented gramophones and records to 300 asylums and other institutions on condition that they are played to the inmates for half an hour every day. SHLAKESPE ARE ed poured it on tll [ thought I'd stick to} winter and a number of anchors lost the ehair Then T was to have the |} beside They had already picked up new four-master, only-what should] two-one by the Boneyard shoal and they do with the Doane? He couldn't} one, a big fellow, away out on the director of the Paul G. Wooley, of of the Bureau laboratory in the Philippines, has ac of the paththe directorship Siam pyoological laboratory which poses to start won the disGertvude Steiner has of tinction of being the first violinist her sex in Germany to become the having been direetorv of an orchestra, engaged as director of an orchestra in Dresden The was ground bait. Wasn't I sick of oe Baya or an undertaker's cart Vas capable. of runnin' the Past and Mrs. Bellamy Storer, whose husband has been retived from his position aS ambassador to Austria, is the originator of the famous Rockwood Rev. Richard Rymer, of Brixton, Ing@land. is the oldest Wesleyan minister in the world. He has been preaching for 77 vears, and was In the pulpit in France ee Louis Philippe was on the thron figures Nilliams president of $6,000. His had the Senator Fulton, of Oregon Senate as his guests the other day at luncheon in the capitol, when a fiftypound planked salmon was served Gacree you anything!" should we of ike hands of an physician. Perkins. | oie doubts asosteopathic to the beneficial re- evening."--Eli she fered... He told Gus so, and she agreed | that passes "but. vessels are me driven hat, perhaps, he as doing right, })@shore' here, and the wicked tides and He told the "old nate ind so} Winds -scatter thelr timbers far and knocked Miss Tempy's air-castles eT ide. The Setuckit life-saving crew smithereens in one tremendous crash, | have Tew. restful hours from October Not' that ‘this was' an irretrievable | to May calamity, for she immediately be Apt On the edge of one ef these shoals to build new ones on a different plan j} just over in the deep water, a littl ‘Isn't' it splendid!" she exelaimed chooner lay at anchor, rocking and ‘Now he'll be home all the. time, as! plunging incessantly. Her sails were you might say, and we won't have to. |. down ind only one man was aboard worry) when it} storms cause we'll} Half a mile away just where the know jest where he j And wher he litail of the shoal made out into the begins to get rich, we'll have the barn | channel, wo dories were moving shingled, and' maybe the house ean be | Slowly inparallel courses, trailing a painted I think a cCream-yellow with | rope. between ther. The schooner dark green trifmmin''s would be nice; | Was the Lizzie, the man aboard ner that's the way Cap'n Jonadab Wixon | was Barney Small, once a stage drivis goin' to paint his house And, oh, | er, but now, foreed out of business by Prissy! perhaps. now that Bradley and | the new. railroad, back again at his he are partners in (bus'ness. the | old trade-wrecking Captain Jezra Cap'n'll come here onee inoa while, Ej} Titcomb was rowing one dory and hope he will; his advice isso valu-| Bradley Nickerson the other They able.' i were "anchor dragging.' The partnership. articles were | When the gales begin in the fall signed, Bradley drew his money from | Setuck it Point, lying as it does at the the savings bank, ind the. Lizzie |}edge of -the fe urway between Boston changed hands The next month was|andNew Yor js sometimes a natura! very busy one, for- they were at work | breakwater arth foreed anchorage for on the schooner' every day, refitting | the coasting vessels Perhaps the: and: rigging One noon of the fourth | Skipper of a large three or four-mastweek the Captain came downto. the | ed schooner, caught just at night by wharf with a Boston. paper in shis}.a heavy sea and a vising gale. doesn't hand | relish the idea of passing through the ‘Brad he said. abruptly-they | Shoals and over the dangerous "rips" were alone-"'T b'liey never told | bevond Ie determines to anchor in you the full Inside of that last) v'yage | the lee of the Point and wait for dayof ours "Twas this way When we! Ught or to ride out the gale. The got into New York on the trip before |Ssandy bottom js bad holding ground the last one, Williams he sent for me, | for anehors. By and by the wind and and nothin' would do but IT must go} the roaring tide get their grip on the to dinner with him L thought "twas |}Schooner and the skipper sees that queer, for Willfarms ain't heavin' din- |) She is slowly but surely being forced hers ‘round the way vou feed corn to | on the shoals Perhaps he tries to chickens; but when IT saw the lay-out| haul the anchor inboard again; perthat noon | knew somethin' was up, | haps time is too short to risk in the Talk about your feeds! Why. Brad,|) attempt, and the chain is tet go enthere was oysters, and soup, and lob-| tively At any rate, a big anchor, with ster a la poleyvoo-or somethin' like | fa thoms of heavy chain. is left fast in it-and turkey and ice cream. and the | the sand. and the schooner-well, if Lord knows what I swan! I ex-/she is lucky, she makes an offing or pected to see ‘em bring on friea sseed | finds better holding ground at another bird of paradise and giraffe steak ‘fore | place. they got through, nd champagne! Big anchors and chains are worth Say, I could have wild champagne | money, and may be that the skipper to float the Thomas Doane and had| writes to a wrecking company. telling enough left for a bath for all hands| Where the anchor may be found and and the cook But 1 kind of short-.}| what he will pay for the recovery. Or, ened vall on the champagne. tack 1} just as likely says nothing about wanted gny headlights clear for what}il, and then "findings are keepings,"' was comin' 1en, When ‘twas over, |and the wreeker who dredges up the and we was burnin' dollar bills in the }anchor. makes whatever he can sel diligently, with and' much | sky Vhat was needed to fit her up They talked for over an hour, but Bradley | was not yet ready to decide: he would | ake his full week, he said j But. by. the end of the week his | mind was made up: he was ready to} * Knewh last: thaperiodi<stovy resting-place in' Phree years ago, he ‘cabin windows and marking ott lights and shadows on her swelling Trait tiie Ahead of her, against the win- as now, and you and me can't to bed. without his supper table in vain The world Do anything?" more" Cross-yed "he , sought number tHe worldo being |:le* down vice of : 2 ; : minstrel troupe in town, there will SES ° ns A a prayer meeting in this church e jc es cag ag 1 Di . . Saag next7 Thursday own. and the for Next. day Bradley called on the Cap- | flaunted a dingy streamer of smoke tain. The latter had seen Caleb Bur- | here and there amid the graceful | mous novelist found that the ‘recitatjons of the pupils greatly interrupted her literary work. She stood it, howVer, as long as she could, but finally wrote a letter of pretest to the proprietor of the sehool. The reply she received from the elderly schoolmis|} tress was prompt, and ran as follows Dear Miss Corelli: Judging from the literary work of yours which it has | been my privilege to see, I should say | that it would be just as well if. you were interrupted even more frequent| ly.'-New York Times. $ Emerson Hough once wrote a story in Mie , | areater Gils of announce hey under parlor Eri" gess, and the Lizzle could be bought | S¢heoners. for a very reasonable sum Captain Along the edge Given Titcomb was also preparing «a long | sprinkled amid the blue, Marie' -Corelli domestic quiet «at Stratford-on-Avon seemed likely to be destroyed not long since by the opening of a ris' school im the house im- good | medi ately. ‘ghidining brethren," be . good isn't Rev; Lord nave beloved "services church no be alw the minutes, "Say ‘What man him to find a publishes As» none of them would have anything to do with hiss lens ; B blized Secs : pOOs: wos ne gbiiges to bring them out himself Shortly» after. the eoneerance of 1) Mi Parnes of New Yorlk he met | the head of one of the Ste Sublishing house who inquived with a little es | touch of affability how his last book 4 Was selling "First rate' reesponded the cheerful very | ComMmercialist, sold, over two priv-|tOS of itvalready Cee five Vili-Continued, peeked jin leanin' over that gate and talkin' away | hind, as if there wasn't anything else in the | other o take my sta : rnd amice gray And to the world's tumultuous stage Prefer the blameless hermitage? -Thomus Warton. i Stare et ae : nar del- confer- confession their right be- report- meeting socialists international With challenge of the our should speakers on Sunday laws that worthy to ences." socialists their said only made egates the Of as those him I shade as Tro make Prissy dow ‘Years ago;"' he said an old Cornish fisherman at a similar class was asked how he would. treat the apparently drowned """Well' he replied. ‘the. first thing we alwi Lys did was to empty the BARD. £ to city administration. Our CHAPTER es boxes poe eke ts)" Westminster Gazette When Archibald Clavering Guntet1 began the series of nevols which was adminis- 1,841 charged lines and Tribune, city printed but more license traitor, me the 719 of for snp conte of American actually notices, promptness and courtesy and fairness conceded to New baa ov Titinois be a charge as same as the Instead county? evening tration, mon is to the for notices times to Smoot for of the to party for and is we American same computed. the the did procrastination, damage on Utah that people seems the gianece Union. ranks any not advertise quested Senator the law, the has ex- herve. federal the mistaking ing. by the custom they have inflicted of the with policy right a of be than has years. prolonged annoyance state no a the there the committee tnuterests the sea bids ani- have to and of the notices full added complied good fight given for and commissioners organ movement it protest of by the the had needlessly does officials county ever agitation, people Vhe has Washington has of the the and ‘sincere the understand detach- Georgians unreasonable. offered Ilyes, have the a The publication The world and and with the that the needlessly the would Uncle ever of troops. Atlanta lines, These truth. and but the or more has Georgia men, city republic private of men back and have hearing, their to promote is Who preparation. children federal rather of to a little supported him. truth. to have insincere Smoot. failing They who of Why protestants. seekers by good which unseat Who but would smile at guilty state Who but would wish his holy lot Tn calm oblivion''s humble grot? C. LINCOLN Author of "Cap'n shape stud; - in higher of than through ment city publie. have means be itself ridicule In vot- intemperate, revenge the efforts Of martyrs, crowned with heavenly meed' Then, as my ta waxes dim Chant, ere i Bleep my measured hymn, And, at the close, the gleams behold Of parting wings, bedropt with gold CEN ReGh ousetiogsiiay Dine create, HES eve- are ites yeats enterprise school between charge- positively most ‘decency invited their ov the greatest lent aes r in have objected. Considering that the "troops" consisted of two officers and us would men most a holy By JOSEPH was senting certificates to the members ‘of the ambulance class in his) own town many administra. precedent standard eight recommending the the the of quitting of ing He of with bil rest zealous Telegram, a nobler the natives. understand Tribune requires college by ho by the case world greater Senator the suggested charges been- cowardly: right-ts senate in the coterie or proving the has either of commonwealths to a cam- will the | edilion, No wit- conclu- dismissal as but to the Portrayed under the Castro, the | may observe coming Partners of the Tide map. wonder proper to are no be be which the if by com- case, It we is the in the the been or would most for matter, least; other no the} senator, in there has would It made for on At eve within yon studious Hep l-ope my brass-emboss-ed. bo for for times eye | Sometimes we set and. think then again other time we just -Woman's Home Companion A. TT. Quiller-Couch told a Cornish story the other day in five five The in the vyacaney-which at in- societies have credit against the a braver, notoriously to abandon. charges been the unfair- themselves their ts de-- whose secured who investigation them The have good ing There is organized committed paign mit of of people him the that incumbent for craftily of it-which who themselves have sion to made, Senator to lines print. an That trimly paints my Slowiiniiies mount; Or o'er the sculptures, que and rude, That grace my gloomy nalitude: I teach In winding wreaths to portray Fantastle ivy's ding spray explain cents lines to {4 Jjeense as teacher in the high schools. We do not know of any city repeut- There found women to three Salt Take in charg- the years That there against men concern true. that would overthrow Reed be charge were vote, a had known cowardly to 75 three offered world on BIAE congress, scandal delay, hostile have not inflicting Utah to to in the of repeated evidence, to every. expelled against present are political attributed of be case officials One response the office served is Utah, to vengeance-and Interested ishment that it would but for of be stated. say one that anything ly to And mand Smoot not insincere WUuiited Smoot, recommend Mr. why, be against Reed soon until shuffling they The IN THE CASE OF A SENATOR. Dispatches from Washington are to the effect that the committee investigating the city of ed postponements, the dallying with a] for a fund with which to rebuild the public duty, the reiterated promise of | Schoolhouses of San Franciseo. It ts & conclusion, and the ever-recurring|one of the things whieh will insure repetitions of still further delay. siatification through all the life of Tr there is a case against Senator} each donor. Smoot. the people would have known| a it The national government has had Father Sherman may not go mareh- nesses them. of the is Tribune the CE ee raat tie Ghanem Of os treasury when that paper and its it could continued. grown has case and taught anarehy, es the is defending an Through sessions been to assemble authority two has altributable federal with anarchists. The of inquiry unrest , cents. No were established. have in no {nstance labored ‘toward a|cure and submit-proof.", ment. county of i t to make men dessatisfied with their|the seat should be declared vacant. lot, and incapable of bettering it. They }There has been abundant time to sesane 1906. | ele of Ulted/ chairs: and" empty and maintaining e profound Well, : drawled one - of the that of the na- | P'MCtpal looters it 3, particularly Impressed the men who spent the day lounging about the | village stores "What do vou fellows do whe n you sit around the store like this he asked of the crowd arranged in a cir- & a allegiance were If had the of other than If the charge established. bhe- he marriage. government of 1& contended It the it Aad of De: pugnacious: but abandoned member the the that to to charges when Venezuela has become, administration of President against on east, has skies; protest case relating up it publication times, even | 25 noisy based the law is is|the super-| result, a the was in the ing policeman. increase | why their this of beginning popular That that country. they to is considered handieap the violated their the proposed At Senator Wherever for and productivity, it the begin-| which is hostile to of the an-\the United States extended rest plan have the laws assailing of the land has from Been the contention departments When aan constiuents, settlers, possible testimony ability. guar-}1] are privileges of recognition, against the title of one of them, it is additional evidence of their strength, bear arms, and the right to assail the ef the land. The former are much their of actual area absolute an- | they the There is a wide difference between haying the right to march, to peaceably of so for rules can | benefit inculcate. | ¥ vith to secure much amend loves Wish any resident in it to enjoy less|the But no one]4n than the fullest liberty. Wito loves his. country can confuse lib- |! or archists to S° MAY aN Ssca morn I take my customed round | to mark how buds von shrubby mound, (And: every opening primrose count, Ae which they could keep out of the }OWM achieving, A man of ordinary prison ov the poorhouse. It has in-|SWength ts helpless when he' goes to Neither Ogden nor Salt Lake is juriously affected the business inter-|the halls of congress from a state so} very proud of the character of visiesis of the city, and it is not surpris-|eW and so remote as Is Utah. That! tors brought to this region by the ing that the police are called on to} the representation from here has been | prize fight. One of them robbed a no aoe there, Smoot early eee, houses It must be beth iaaa the poor minstrels after the show are invited)) into the best private Kalamazoo fam-j| flies for social intercourse with deacons and clergymen, and are then] robbed When I put up-at Isalamazoo I al-|| ways go to jail It is really the only safe place for a traveling man to go to. T always feel safe in the jail, for) I know while I am there that the ilizens of the town can wot break through and steal my jewelry. The other day a Kalamazoo clergyman thus gave outa church. annou nee ment senate of Senator will oe Kr cat uliieit anel vangenial sues, The wren has wove her. mossy Evom busy scenes and brighthana: To lurk with innocence she flies, Here hopes in safe repose to dwell, Nor aught: suspects the sylvan cell, or \j1} do in the ease of Senator Smoot we donot belléve he! will be expelled. te should not be. We do not; believe there is) a' majority of thesenate \in fayor of that position. We do know that Peet as reverse. tlement of the case, and a termination ef the harmful accusations against {one of the states of this Union. - Sy on {sco : ; ‘ in Francisco isis burned down, and thetr} of his citi- Mormen considered. or as-{earthquaked if thing so «his character of American concerned, advantage : We lo not Ajsand : Utah.) to disee av 1AVO of and is Greek |.) Chicago Has ‘been a: great sufferer affairs, that he is a worker, and that} fidthe activities of the reds. These | "© '* helpful to every one of them-) ldtter pebple "have aceépted*and en- |i" Committee, particularly, he has won| jJoyed every advantage and every lib- high rank among senators... And in| erty that ‘the republic affords, ana | 5! Personal relations with his brother | They have purposely and boastingly | Y°™Y urged:the destruction of property, the It socicty nation a Methodist, DY} practical bustRye ere rela 1S Es to the office to which elect him, his right nsec ib ep aaa on himself, and not on any affiliations he elther of . a religious or, secret." must be fice to, the franchise, 3 a recognized a TUS Meht > Bere is as i D , ae 4 certs Sere Sf pee senate. colleagues as ena LAM) ANAM (8 are | eo a . } his nce Eo There ee taSs Smoot i Bieaoe! that i eee . : after the departure of the pocontinue their demonstration. man. Cee : aie ve . Mr. > interference. little groups sought, lice, to othe, 2 . Ss " co because ‘ the up of joined " hae ra If ; testl- been "ase verdict vo THURSDAY, oe he this either the exponent or defender of man|that or any other religion. We know has subjects 5 UTAH, haa | there why Senato the matter at issue been . |foreeast, as in the case of Saat Publishers' . Press Association, > Member Salt an 4.00 | Dutoie, of Idaho, has pursued 8.00] quest for the discrediting of a 'Phones-3190 Both St. Temple New Block, eae CITY, convicted-and | once. Jaw The Only Republican wet Newspaper ted the gross unfairness whieh has|, Perfect frankness on the part of} in Salt Lake Cit ee acterized Senator Burrows's policy | Is enemles would insure the confes-| | : <a t Mr. Smoot is pursued be. lin this case., Never has ap brother sena- | siSion that ) | Subscription Rates: . tent he | cause he is a member of the Mormon | One Month, in ad a |}tor pursued with such malignity the 9 ' VANCO....0-+$ 76! a s tor|}church. This paper is in no sense j Six Months, in adva One Year, Daily ne pugdae LAKE RETIREMENT. he is a] (Inseription in a WWermitase.) NOTES ay NOTABLES. | Beneath this stony roof inelined. | | | | --- _--__-- - -: Is any| I soothe to peace my pensive mind And while. to shade r lowly cave should| Embowering elms their umbrage wave, |. Irvin Bachelle the author of And while the maple-dish is mine, | ‘ben Haneda ann a little ee they have by not retain his seat, it can be estabThe beechen cup, unstained with Wine, - | north than usual last. summer hile glaring un- | lished, and he should not be beraedy | scorn the gay licentious crowd on his vacation, and penetrated Nee (their case, jan hour. That none of these. positions! Nor heed the toys that deek the proud foundland tle caught a good many the nation|has been shown Is ample evidence| : : fish, but this did not prevent his keepby traveled of expendi| fact much strengthened section | public meetings at which jno means hesitated at city, FeaC oc eee: ad er Angeles | - schooner was nshine flashing moving sparks swiftly, "Om the er down and under the supposed anchor until the latter was looped by 1 Then the "messenger," an iron shackle or collar fastened by bolt or pin, was clamped ae the upper chen . the loop. To this "mess also attached a small cord. (Continued Tomorrow Morning.¥ 2 |