OCR Text |
Show TRUTH. 7 dear, I fall Bhort of what I ought to she was mindful of her duty and in- BOTKIN WOULDNT STAND FOR be all the time; But there, cidentally curious to know, so she anKNOX. swered weakly, You should have been here to go Afraid? The idea! The attempt of one of the Kearns- with me to the musicale given by the Then well have one, declared three graces, . Miss Gray, Miss Mona- Mrs. Ward, emphatically. The boy Bruce Johnson clique to fasten a Knox han and Miss Allen. As for Miss behind the counter came forward at button on the breast of Judge TheodoGray, you know her work and enjoy this juncture, and Mrs. Ward, after sius Botkin on West Temple street I, but I enjoy her smile glancing about sharply to see If it So do yesterday evening came to sudden and more. She has a luminous, beatific were observed, lifted her brows they grief. at expression that ought to make the him and said, sotto voce No, you w'ont do anything of the most captious man in Christendom No man nor May we have two ginger ales two kind, said the judge. her me of set disposimen can provided happy, always high balls? tp wear a compel And like her is Miss expression. tion The boy knew his business andhis political tag. I beg your pardon, replied the K.-Monahan, 0, Miss Monahan can sing eye brows responded an affirmative. and sing well, but she is so everlast- Presently the drinks were set before J. henchman. I supposed you were ingly pretty that I lost myself looking them and Julie sipped hers daintily. standing up for Salt Lake City. lift of her Now Julie took hers on an empty at her. That So I am," retorted the judge, I behead and those cherry red lips! I stomach and the effect was sudden lieve it the duty of every voter, male imagine youd have split your gloves and appaling. Her head began to feel and female, to stand up for Salt Lake applauding her. Miss Allen is Juno big and her tongue wobbly. She got City, and to vote for Salt Lake City. with a soul that sings when she to her feet shaken with a sudden But you cant stand up for the city by plays the violin. I am not sure but fear that she couldnt walk straight. voting to Tammanyize It. You cant that I liked her work the best of all. When they reached the sidewalk Julie stand up for Salt Lake City, by voting How I love the violin, how the woods took a car without saying good-by- , to place the police department under and the hills, and the long, long years and Mrs. Wards eyes were bulging the influence of the vicious elements are peopled for me when I hear it as she watched the girl sink limply on Commercial street and Victoria Alplayed. Have you ever thought how into a seat, It serves me right, she ley. We might as well be plain about the songs in The Princess make one said to herself as she turned into of violin? the There is all the Savages to buy some English pens, this matter. The two leading politithink all the the I might have known what to expect cians behind the Knox ticket are Perry passion, plaintiveness, and haunting pain in them that when I resurrected her. S. Heath and Bruce Johnson, and if catsome of in a bit there is wood, that ticket shall be elected, their inThe top season is over for this fluence will be paramount. The former gut and a bow. Where are there such as that beginning: songs year and all the boys have turned has made a record of years standing no more. moon me Ask The may their attention to football. I liked to that is a stench in the nostrils of the draw the sea, . watch the youngsters with their tops, American people. He never touched a The clouds may stoop from heaven the way they would spin them and the political situation anywhere without and take the shape, kind theyd have. By and by when degrading and debasing it. The menWith fold on fold, of shoulder or of they are grown they will be absorbed tion of his name anywhere in America in the earth-to- p cape, and find it more begets memories and recollections of too I But 0, fond, what have answered sport than this of their the most stupendous postal frauds in thee? boyhood days. I fairly envy them the history. The methods of himself and But I must steer away from Ten- treat in store. his coterie of political cats of the This time next week we shall know same kidney made the state of Innyson Or this letter will be like the d for corruption. It story that the man could not write our fate, whether the city is to be diana a finis to, and you would never come dominated by machine politicians, or has ben said of him that he owes his home then, I know. controlled by intelligent citizens. I right to walk the streets without bail I wasted some sympathy on the emi- wish I knew it now. solely to the kindly functions of the nent Dean Farrar last Sunday afterstatute of limitations. Good night, was I Others may follow the lead of such noon, It like this. ALICE. attended the tabernacle services for the first time since living in Zion. It is ' needv .jmjnjfri. less to declare I am not a Saint the statement just made proves it. STILL After the preliminary services a Mr. Morris began to speak. He talked and talked, gramatically and otherwise, i for nearly two hours, and his reunn marks were refreshing in their i truth. In fact, viewed from that point they were quite original. He told his audience that when Dean Farrar preached hope after death for those who die unrepentent, he was talking very stale doctrine; that in reality Joseph Smith preached the same thing forty years before, affirming in every hamlet of England that those who die in their sins do not necessarily perish. He dwelt upon what the AT25 PER CENT Mormons do in such cases and forgot to explain the difference between REGULAR that and Dean Farrars teaching. He went on to tell how the Mormon bapPRICES. tize for the dead and while he did not say the dean preached baptism for the dead, he intimated it by every art of speech he could .muster. It was so stuffy and hot in there that I wonder at anyone hearing him comprehend-ingly- , but the audience listened close50c Fine Fall Dress Goods ly. Finally the organ rolled its diapason again, the choir sang an anthem and I found myself in the good Our 35c Dress Goods Tables Contain Values up to $1.50 fresh air. L wonder what the "black hole of Calcutti was like? I believe at Just Half Its Value LADIES UNDERWEAR fresh air is more necessary to me than water or salt. I sleep with, my windows .flung to the top, and I 50 Per Cent Off LACE CURTAINS should smother if the maid forgot and closed them. Julie De .Lapinasse told and all sorts of NOTIONS at Lowest me of something she did yesterday rrDCDTC 1 Of ULv V CD, LUKoE Prices ever named by us. which was very improper. She met MrB. Ward on the street and accepted PUREST. FRESHEST DRUGS USED IN FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS her invitation to enter a drug store 112 MAIN STREET. V V AT OUR. DRUG STORE. and have a soda water. When they were seated Mrs. Ward fixed Julie with her .eye and. said: are Youre not .afraid of a high-bal: you? Poor Jujie,.you.ktiow.she has'a reputation to: sustain' and., though' the p word "high-ba- ll was Greek to her I well-deserve- d - B. half-petula-nt . ec-sta- cy ex-hilirati- ng bye-wor- 2 ' MONEY SAVING CHANCES CONTINUE Novelty Suit Patterns X OFF XXX X SSMS&B &5 l, . V men, but I wont. I am a rebel against the domination of such men in Salt Lake City and in the state of Utah. I have tho same right to rebel against their choice for mayor that they have to rebel against tho choice of tho Republicans of the Third precinct in the choice for councilman. They and their papers here advise Republicans to vote against Mr. Spence. That is done ostensibly because he is a Mormon, but in truth it is done bccauso they know before hand that they cannot depend on him with their dirty work in tho . council. Friends of Mr. Knox have argued with me that it is a duty wo owe to Salt Lake City to elect him so that we may be sure to have a wide open town during tho expected period of growth. But for one, I am not In favor of a wide-opetown, and I am against man the whose political friends say that is what he stands for. I am in favor of regularting and keping under surveilance every resort ni the city, including "Johnson Tavern on Commercial street. I am not in favor of allowing any of tho great evils which necessarily infest a city like this, to run riot with decency and good fcrdcr.' There is no partisan issue in this campaign. The great over shadowing issue is whether we shall have a worse condition of affairs than wo havo at present; whether the elements of decency and law shall control or whether those elements shall be controlled by the forces of evil. It is whether we hall turn the city over to a gang of Tammanyltes In the Republican party, or whether the great rank and file of our citizenship prefer to elect them to administer our laws who are not, and will not he, controlled by those living on the borderland of outlawry. I have always been a Republican and expect to remain one. But in this case it is how to stand up for Salt Lake City. By voting to make it a worse place than it is, or by voting to make n it better. o It is doubtful whether the Logan Aggies will consent to play a game with the All Hallows team of this city this season, but unless they do, the latter will claim the state championship, providing, of course, that It defeats the University eleven. The Cache Valley Farmers seem anxious to disband already, since they have been unable to secure any games with outside teams. ... . ; . , |