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Show TRUTH. 6 TRUTH that Issued Weekly by Street, Salt Lake City. JOHN W. HUGHES, Editor and Manafar. Entered at the post office rt Salt Lake City, Utah, for transmission through the malla as THE beet is been discovered FOR SALE. vated farms, from 10 to 130 acres, get our list before buying. Hubbard Investment Co. ft i's a small satisfaction. 30, 1902 issue of $250,000 in water bobdB does not exceed $15,000, and In the present state TERMS Or SCHHCRIFTlONt of the city's finances there will not be a ' CHOICE BUILDING LOTS PAYING THE PIPER. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, AUGUST ONE YEAR (In advance) MX MONTHS THREE MONTHS trust has We shall see. would probably be double that sUm. The money left from the sale of the late matter. ss that he again. This time a St. Joe butcher, makes oath to its existence. It will be fciaSs locaGroefery Slore; Very ceiitfal; firet run t earth after awhile. 3ut that tion, itofetfin: good stock, i,80O; . A greiit What the city authorities are aiming butcher will have to hustle for meat HUBBARP INVESTMENT Cd:; at by locating reservoir sites in Parley's after this. 78 W. Second SottiU: estimate is The not clear. quite canyon for constructing a reservoir in the ftx Tuesday neit Peter Mortensen ALFALFA and FRUIT. FARMS real is but coBt the $100,000, canyon We hare some great bargains in highly cultiwill be given a choice of mode of death, in dead earnest. TRUTH PUBLISHING COMPANY. 41 and 12 Central Block, West Second South second-cla- forces the conviction from Temple, city water After the first one hundred days of Thirteen blocks shade level trees, deep lots, wide ground, cent to spare either this or next year the strike in the anthracite coal re- blgh streets and alleys, f 150 to ti 0, 910 cash, ?,50 for improvements to the water system. gions of Pennsylvania had pussed, the per month. Will make you big profits, better A further issue of bonds at this time is operators began to couut the cost. than money On interest. Building up rapidly. out of the question. It could not be Some of the items were enormous, done without a vote of the taxpayers especially the expense of the in favor of it, and it would be folly to coal and iron police. This private HUBBARD INVESTMENT GO,, submit the question to them. They constabulary of the coal find ittiii bar78 West Secohd South. have lost confidence in the present ad- ons is a peculiar body of men. its ministration to effectively deal with the members are picked Up in the large "bUddHa.'1 water problem, and they will provide cities by the detective agencies. One when hiring no more money than they can help to of the questions asked men is; "Have you got herve these In looking over an early volume of be spent for any purpose under the candiIf the man?" a kill to enough direction of Mr. Dooly. The money date for a position oh the 'coal and Edwin Arnold's poems, the writer disthat is now being spent locating reser- iron police answers in the affirmative, covered the following written on the evidence of his fly leaf. The author was the brilliant, voir sites is money absolutely wasted, and in other ways gives he is hired at a salary erratic genius, who died about ten bloodthirstiness, years like a good deal that has gone before. of SI 2 a Week, and his board. He is ih O. H. ago Omaha, who Rothackel, redressed in a blue Uniform, given a w a was & of the late P, The bell boys at the Butte hotel, in peating rideforand a revolver, and he is Public then of Printer Rounds, the United ready duty. Butte, have struck because they do not The "police are under thecOiziraahd States iifader President Arthur, ftotb-acksteaks for dinner. If the of captains and sergeabts, who iisiially get was ii contemporary of Eugene who wonder at the youngsters are men of better standing in the world people Field and Fred j. V, Skiff in the early than the hoboes who make up the rank nerve at so doing, would stop .at and file. The detective agency that em- days of the Denver Tribune, now the once, they would marvel that the ploys the "police charges the barons Denver Republican, and this poem was kids were not served with double port- $5 a day for each of them and $H a day erhouses. Surely rates charged tran- for commanding officers. They must written at the time the crowd was also be fed by those who require their working there.- So far as known this sients warrant it. services. Scattered among the strikers was never tiefore published. are many detectives who are paid about Ancient tiles frdm antique Waif?: The eviction of miners From company S16 a week, and for whose services the Echoes blown from bollow hall Down whose ways no footstep fa Ha, houses, in which they are compelled to agency collects $8 a day and expenses. 1 75 Postmasters sending subscriptions to TbuTH may retain 25 per cent of subscription price as commission. so-cal-led Xf the paper Is not desired beyond the date subscribed for the publication should be notified by letter two weeks or more before tne term expires. DISCONTINUANCES. Remember that the publisher must be notified by letter when a subscriber wishes his stopped; all arrears must be paid In jMer Bequests of subscribers to have tbelr paper mailed to a new address, to secure attention, must mention former as well as present Address all communications to Tkdth Publishing Company, Salt Lake City, Utah. son-inla- President Roosevelt talked to the business men of Boston this week, and for forty minutes his theme related to the trusts. He gingerly avoided mentioning the word "trusts wherever he could, as though the term might he opprobrious or offensive. He called them "corporations, and said that the states had failed to act harmoniously in attempting their suppression. He saw no way out of the dilemma, except for the natioral government to pass laws. In the course of his address the president said: "So you can see, gentlemen, I am not advocating anything very revolutionary. I am advocating action to prevent anything revolutionary. Now if we can get adequate control hy the nation of these corporations, then we can pass legislation which will give us the power of regulation and supervision over thbm. No matter what has been said about Knox being in the Attorney-Gener- al employ of the United States Steel corporation, it is evident that the president has confidence in his integrity, for he says: laws go they "As far as the anti-truwill be enforced. No suit will be undertaken for the purpose of seeming to undertake it. Every suit that is undertaken will be begun because the great lawyer and upright man whom we are so fortunate to have as attorney general, Mr. Knox, believes that there is a violation of the law which we can get at, and when the suit is undertaken it wont be compromised excepting on the basis that the government wins. Is there nothing strange about the spectacle of a president of the United States standing as a guarantor of the Has honesty of the attorney-general- ? the prevalence of doubt and distrust in the public mind made it necessary for er T-bo- ne the-hous- - Guarding the idle mines in Pennsylvania are 5,000 of these hoboes in uniform, armed to the teeth. Their pay at $5 a day B mounts to $35,000, For 100 days the expense reaches S3, 50l),0d0; not counting the food, which at 50 cen ts a day per man would add $350,000, making a total of $3,750,000. Those who buy anthracite coal in the future to paj the expense of the Judging by the recent order of the will have no how much it costs. matter president, the best thing a postal em- strike, The public schools will open on Monploye can do is to keep out of active day, September 8th. The teachers are line The between politics. pernicious back to the city and the officers flocking activity and safe conduct is not plainly of the board of education are very busy indicated. making preparations for the opening. live, has begun in Pennsylvania. Now look out for serious trouble. The poor, ignorant devils, imported to take the place of Americans years ago, have learned just enough of our methods to make them dangerous. The Kimball Piano st .SIttvays 'Reliable and alisfactory -- the president to explain that the is not trying to humbug rney-general the people? And yet there is a good excuse for President Roosevelt speak-in- g as he did.- Past administrations have made bluffs and only bluffs at dealing with the trusts. There is a ring about President Roosevelt's words e A CARLOAD just received direct from the factory. Come and inspect them and get the best instrument for the money in the city, atto- D. 0. CaJders Sons - 45-4- 7 . HW West First South St. .m Co Cloudy fables, strangely told; This of alloy: that of gold: B rn of lips that now are miotfld. Buddha, master, prince' and Greatest werl thou, and the priest; least; Host arid Vassal fit the feast. Ere thou wart, the weary braid Sought the path and sought in vdfttf Cried aloud in bitter pain. Like the voice of music heard In the darkness, fell thy word. And the dreaming flowers stirred. Dews fell on the sun parched plain, And the sound of summer rain Made the great eurth glad again. And the Greater Master said: Ye are hungry, here is bread: Cease your groping and be led. For tbs world-o- ld pain of earth Finds an answer In His birth:; Take it, ye of little Worth. Ottomak H RoTHACKKB. Denver, Colo., Jan. 1, 1881. SECRET OF PROSPERITY. The prosperity in the United States is stifling. The Standard Oil company commands its own prosperity and it is under no obligations to anybody. The introduction of electric lighting into so many small towns where kerosene oil was once used, has had its effect on the oil sales. What did John D. Rockefeller do? Did he rise up and curse the advancement of civilization? Not John. To kick and roar belongs to the The oil cynical and narrow-mindeking passed the contribution box in the Baptist church and tlieu sat down to think. He estimated that a great many gasoline stoves were being used, and although lie sold all the gasoline, d. he wanted to get rid of oil. So he gave orders to raise the price of gasoline, and began to manufacture oil stoves to keep up' the equilibrium of the oil business. His kindergarten pupils throughout the country are how buying stoves, and prosperity cannot be curbed, |