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Show t TRUTH. PEANUTTA POLITISH. (With Apologies to a fellow' down east.) One day'wann I ees settin here At dees peanutta' stan, Hepublikana politish He. come shada'da han. I hear you ees a naturlize, Da politish he say; An ho you getta da big vote Wann como election da. I gone for takin care of your An feex you pretty well. Eef you is maka da big vote FOr Mr. Rcosevel. An. so I make pretend with heem, Dats what gone for do, ' But alia same you bet yourl ife, I know7 something or two. - An den ees vome an shaka han Weeth me some other da, Da Demokrata politish An'dees;ees what he say: You vote for Meestah Parka now, He say- and wink hees eye, An; I gone see dat you will. be A reechman by an by.! An so I make pretend with heem, Dat's what I gone for do, But all same, you bet your life, I know something or two. - . I reada paer every da, An alia taim I see Som news abouta Meester Kearns He ees da man for me. I gone to vote for deesa man , - de-iisrbt- ed For president's posish. - Because I thinka he play him Peanutta Politish. More beaz'ness to do . Hooray for Kearns, you bet your life, I know something or two. . o UTAH AT THE WORLDS FAIR. A most interesting collection of more unusual minerals and other things brought to light from the mountains of Utah. Carnotite, from which that most wonderful of minerals, radium, is produced may be seen.. It appears that it is of such frequent occurrence in the Utah mines that it is quite likely they, may be able to supply the world's demand. Altogether, Utah has twenty large glars cases and about forty-fiv- e tables filled with mineral exhibits, to say nothing of the floor space. Utahs exhibit in the Palace of Agriculture is the enual in beauty, completeness and ' dignity of any state and maintains the reputation achieved n her mining display. The arrangement of the exhibit is striking. In part, it is displayed in a pavilion, the beautiful dome of. which is upheld )y glass columns filled with seeds from irrigated farms, while the columns themselves ' are entwined with grapes and wild' flowers in rich profusion. The display of fruits, vegetables and cereals is particularly fine revealing to unaccustomed eyes the vast possibilities of ' irrigation. . Overliving the exhibit stands Miss Utah, carved with artistic skill from a seven hundred pound mass of bees wax. That she has many admirers from other states than ler native one is attested by the crowds upon whomN she vouchsafes her kindly smiles." After climbinsr a short stairway one is well repaid for the exertion with a panoramic view of the Utah Valley. It is ntended to show what irrigation has done for a former desert waste transformed it into a vale of entrancing beauty; waving fields, bright gardens nd cases of green; dotted with cheerful homes' and herds of fat kine. No visitor should fail to see Utahs real-stipicture. The exhibit of the several State Agriculaural colleges under the direc-io- n of the United States Department of Agriculture, something new in exposition business. In the Palace of Education and Social Economy, has -- n "ttrnction than that of fered by Utahs college. The models of the irrigation plant and of the vegetation house are particularly interring. These models supplement ??ch other and illustrate the scientific propagation as well as cultivation of plant life under varying conditions of climate and moisture. Utah has also a most interesting exhibition of her accomplishments in the space allotted to. the social economics. In her great farm conducted by c 8tate Whose Productions Astonish the Visitor. By T. W. Park. In the year 1903 the state of Utah added to the wealth of the world an output of lead, copper, silver and gold million amounting to about twenty-sidollars. A state capable of doing this, without unusual effort, in one line of industry mining might be expected to have something to show when it came' to make an exhibit for the great Worlds Fair. She has not only anticipated, but has far exceeded reasonable expectation. She has an exhibit worth crossing the ocean to see and has fully justified her claim to be considered one of the great industrial states of the American Union. We wish first to mention the exhibit in the Palace of Mines and Metallurgy. Whoever planned and constructed the display was an artist in his tastes and experienced in his business, and the remark may equally apply to the arrangement of the exhibit in the other departments of the Exposition. This mining display is comprehen sive. As large as it is, it can be eas x Men who expect to die like dogs are ing herds to fatten in the fastnesses of the hills,' lent a rival to the buffalo likely to live like hogs! grass in the following alfalfa; builded school houses on all the hilltops and The pessimist always bites the dotted the valleys with church spires. spots on the apple first. The commissioners appointed to look after the interests of the state The man who tries to cash flattery at the Worlds fair have not been finds it a forgery. neglectful of the social ethics, the ob- always servance of which illustrate the culWe are all willing to admit the de. ture of the citizen. With, an inadequate appropriation it has been so pravity of our neighbors. economized that, without stinting the One does have to wait to be fleeced productive exhibit, enough was reserved to build and appropriately to prove that he is not a wolf. equip a home for visiting citizens and the entertainment of their guests; It is hard to be popular with pigs and it is a beautiful home, comforta- and to keep out of the trough. bly and even luxuriously furnished, and adorned . with excellent, taste. a man would be rich if he did Here Utah displays her social side, notMany so. hard to appear to be. try and nowhere does it shine more in culture and grace and The man who puts his head into a with more genuineness of hospitality. It cannot but be concluded that the barrel does not eclipse the sun. state has taken its stand triumphantA little smile may be worth ly in the ranks of the American commonwealths; and here in this great the most eloquent funeral sermon tocompetitive exhibition of material and morrow. civic progress, with all the world for judges, she stands without a peer. It The value of a mans principles deis regretful that every citizen of the pends on what it costs him to cash state cannot visit this greatest of all them in practice. the worlds expositions and exult in Utahs deserved: prominence in Its a good deal easier to sit up such goodly company and prideful straight in church than it is to walk rivalry. upright in the world. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. The Lord would be pleased if a lot For President Alton B. Parker. G. of people would take the padlocks off President Henry For Vice Davis. their purses and put them on their STATE TICKET. lips. Member of Congress 0. W. Powers of Salt Lake. Where the feathers of vanity fly Governoiv-Jam- es H. Moyle of Salt there is always a good mark for the Lake. gun, but never enough "bird to pay Secretary of State Levi N. Har- for the shot. Chicago Tribune. mon of Price. Attorney General, Grant C. Bagley of 1 WIT AND WISDOM. Provo. Auditor-- J. W. Geiger of Park City. Treasurer W. B. Wilson of Ogden. The check book' is mightier 'than of Public Instruction Superintendent the alimony clause. Nathan T. Porter of Davis County. For Supreme Judge C. S. Varian of Some political booms need nothSalt Lake. For Judges of the Third Judicial ing so much as a coroners inquest N District Samuel Stewart, A. It would take more than a skyC. W. Hall. Cherry, For Muncipal Judges Morris Som scraper elevator to elevate some peomer, A. S. Fowler. ple. . to-da- y - SENTENCE SERMONS. .NoW cometh the dog Prayer is the parent of persever- : ance. star days, when' the thrifty housewife may live on the' delicatessen plan. Ambition is the fidgerty bumptiousIt is easy to mistake gas works for ness of a man who wants to step over his own head. Uncle Sam. the state maintains her good works. enviable prominence in practical Sacrifice determines the value of Some' men go through life pretty ngrioulture. and but few states show service. a wider variety of commercial pro- any much as a dorg with a chain to his a or acre a greater yield per ducts, collar and a woman ' yanking - at the No man is so rich he can afford to business end. finer quality. terlose a friend. When it is recalled that Utahs ritorial days were full of trouble and If a negro adventuress could wheesaid be life may fhat her commercial Only those who face their sins find dle a cool million out of a New York o have begun less than two decades their forgiveness. millionaire how much could a hardat cannot one help wondering 'gtf, working deserving white woman get? her achievements in so short a. time The religion that makes good will in the is illustrated by her ofexhibits Snakes iri India. the exposi- make people good. various departments About 400,000 'snakes are killed tion. Her enterprising citizens have meant cushwas not as love a Gods unlocked the teeming riches of the every year in British India. The feet our laziness. ion for to the waters mountains, led the fresh paid as rewards .annually! for the do blossom them made and The struction of beasts of prey and vendesert places ily compassed even by the novice. never dwells in Master the the in The orchards omous snakes by the government oi first thing to attract attention is a as the rose, planted low sent malice. same with heart cactus, of the home prickly India amount to about $125,000. concentrating mill in complete opera tion. All the various manipulations of the ores to the ultimate output of pure metal can be followed by the eye and The looker-oreadily understood. takes his first lesson in actual min tag operations, and while he is astonished at the1 processes ' he is practtcally educated by the object lesson Aside from- the usual products of the mines in the shapes, of. pyramids and columns of valuable ores, there is -- , ? n - - - -- |