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Show I 7 7 -- - Vol. Provo 3. Dr. G. W. SHORES. f J Office Res. ik-Unio- Smoot & Co.b Store. Drug of Roberts House. blk east J. Shores, A. M. D.f SURGEON, Payson, Utah. Reaidenoe, Office Ih Wightman Building, Up Stairs. Attends all calls lay or night-AND PHYSGIAN at F. F. REED, Resident Dentist, So. 10u Bant Baffling, Reran. UTAII. TROVO, Dr. J. N. Christenson, The well known Dentist Surgeon the his lias Office in again opened in moms formerly occupied by himsorts all do to is Provo, ad prepared of Dental Work in the most apDroved style. Dental Reran Ho. 2, Bant Enilling, Utah. Provo, SIMMONS, M. D. F. H. 5 S' Office two doors uortli First w National Bank, and at residence, Prove, Utah. Office hours I to 11 a. m anil 3 to 5 p. m. JOHN B. MILNER. Attorney - at - Law, Hines Building, Utah. Provo, Mrs. Mary A. Martin. Electropathist. Office 7 FATHER OF THE HOUSE. Block and x ( 1 , at Residence, Two blk cast of Roberts House. Patronize HOME INDUSTRIES By buying your MONUMENTS TOMBSTONES Of M. Mickelson, - Spanish Fork, - Utah. TBoiey; House.; Just opened in American Fork, near the Young Mens Hall. Everything new and Our Parlor, are Dining-ltoothe second tt none in the County, being centrally located. It will be In all its appointments. and Bed-Roo- m to the advantage of all Commercial Travelers to stop here. It is also the best companies, place for Theatrical to stop at, being the nearest place to the Theater. 8KETCH OF THE LIFE AND WORK OF THE LATE JUDGE KELLEY. II a Hagan Ufa a 'Poor Lad, Got Ilia Foot on the ladder and Won a Place on a Tory Hlg;li Banc Ilia Death Was Jut What Ua Wished It to Be. The Hon. William Darrah Kelley died at a ripe age and full of honors. He died as he had lived and as he had always wished to die in the harness died in peace and without pain and surrounded by his family and City," gress need not be detailed. It is a part, and a very important part, of the history of the country. He was an ardent protectionist and made the study and defense of the American tariff his life work. In this matter he was In advance of his party, and in other respects often out of harmony with it, but on Belov, - one-hal- BUILDING. photo-engravin- Alex. Hedquist, BOOtS Repairing Slioes. - JOHN EGAN, Wines, Liquors and Cigars, UTAH. p. V. JUNCTION, Carriage Palijler. Paper-hanging- Flret-Claa- a n y remarkable TWO IN SAN 4 enterprises FRANCISCO. The Examiner Sends the Prize Pupil of tho City on Six Months' Tour of Europe The Chronicles Wonderful Building Sensational Newspaper History.Newspapers are .the rulers of the modern world at least of that part of it which is worth ruling. Outside of Turkey and Russia, there is no civilized country (if they are counted as civilized) in which any administration or policyi could stand against the combined newspapers. - Co.S. . Republican paper of the coast. In tho much discussed Dennis Kearney furore The Chronicle at first took radical ground, bat afterwards withdrew its support and became a target for the abuse of the Rev. Isaac Kalloch. The preach or ventured to allude to the editors mother, and Charles De Young shot him. He barely escaped death to be elected mayor, and in 1880 his son shot and killed Charles De Young. Michael De Young has since been sole proprietor, and has become a power in national politics. The ten story building for The Chronicle, now rapidly nearing completion, is pronounced by many experts the most convenient structure for tho purpose in the world. The skill of architects and sanitary experts has been exhausted on the plumbing, while the precautions against fire are so complete that the structure will bo at once thoroughly fire proof and perfectly free from malaria and sewer gas. In the cellar, or basement story, ore located the two immense boilers, supplying ISO horse power, and tlie dynamos to keep the 1,500 Edison incandescent lamps at a white glow, for such is the number of lamps needed to supply the building. Three great double inserting and perfecting Hoe presses of the latest pattern, with their attachments, complete tho working machinery of the cellar. On the street floor are tho business offices, with carved oaken wainscot, beveled plate glass doors and general finish of solid elegance. Many rooms on this floor will be rented fur stores. The elevators run in a carefully inclosed shaft, with approved methods of preventing fire or accident. All the walls, floors, partitions, ceilings anil roof are Everywhere that utterly the stone is not so regarded, it is faced with pressed brick or terra cotta. All tho columns are sheltered with fire proof jackets of tile and cement, and all the vaults and arches are of concrete, cement and fire clay tiles. Experts declare that if every liook, paper and table, every combustible article in the whole building were piled on one floor and set on fire, the flame would communicate to no other Forty-secon- The main entrance will be at the corner. Democratic workmen were discharged on The business offices of The World will be loall sides. One instance is narrated where a cated on the first floor, and in the stories above, up to the twelfth, there will be 150 tailorew was refused work because ber brother had spoken at a Democratic meeting. Pe- offices, each having a street front. These titions for the restoration of the deposits will bo rented. The composing room in the were circulated, and workingmen refusing to thirteenth story will be eighteen feet in TERMS REASONAOLE. galleries for telegraph operators sign are said to have been marked for dis- height, with readers. Above the composing .Special rates to Theatrical troops. charge. and proof g room be will the into all his plant and threw energies Kelley Young C. Af. The restaurant World a for influence his was so employes. The that the fight, and great he prevailed on many Federalist workmen to employes will reach then upper rooms by condemn such proscription and remain away elevators running direct without stop. Facing the main entrance will be three pasfrom meetings called in the interest of the elevators for the accommodation of so him to difficult senger for became bank. get It 1 DKALF.il IS offices. The subterranean story the went to Boston he rented, that work in Philadelphia Home Made and Imported in 1335 and obtained a good place there. His will be the press room, and a gallery accessito will bo arranged so os to disspecialty was enameling, and his success in it ble tovisitors and curious the mass of printing mathe set of was so great that a costly gold cups, play Under the sidewalk a dynamo of Muscat, brought chinery. Imaum ordered for the Done. room will furnish incandescent lights for the his employers a gold medal from tho Massawhole building. The basement proper above remained He association. I Mechanics chusetts .Rubber Goods Repaired. the readaud press room will be used for the storage of hard in four Boston, working years Rubber and Leather Cement and for newspaper delivery. I ing hurd, especially in political history. The paper The in general style or the pullttpr building mechanic public, spoke frequently young For sale at the sign of the is The estimated cost js $1 ,250,7 DemoRomanesque. in was be the to read name his and cratic papers along with those of George Ban- OCX), and tho rite cost (630,000. The houser "DIG BOOT, warming of The World newspaper is ancroft, O. A. Brownson and 8. II. Everett, nounced Cntcr Street. - half block W cut of Hunk. for September next.: lie also lectured, and his name appears in more than one of the lists of lectures in which Tlio Virtue of ITot 3111k. Emerson and Chauning were iucluded. Col. James Page was so pleased with a It is worthy of reiteration that milk heated speech of Mr. Kelley at Fancuil Ilall that ho to as high a temperature as It can be drunk DEALER IS urged the young man to study law in his of- or ripped, above 100 dogs., but not to the fice. Iu 1830 he began the study, and on the boiling point, is of great value as a refreshing 17th of April, 18(1, being then 27 years old, stimulant in coses of over exertion, bodily or he was, on motion of Col. Pago, admitted, to mental. Jq most people who like milk it does the bar. This was ia Philadelphia. He was not'taste so good hot, but that is a small mat very successful from the start. Iu 1845 he ter compared with the benefit tq be got front was made prosecutor of the pies in Philadelit. Its action is exceedingly prompt and phia, aud on the 13th of March, 1847, was ap- grateful, and the effects much more satisfacpointed a judge of common pleas. lie served tory and far more lasting than those of any V as an appointee till 1850, and was then elected alcoholic drink whatever. It supplies real for iSTPure Wines and Liquors a ten years term, but the reopening of strength M well as exhilaration, which alcofor and inal and Family Use. Imported the slavery controversy in 1854 made him a hol never does. Qpqd Housekeeping. politician. He severed his connection with DomestlcCigars.jyi the Democrats aud assisted in constructing A Forthcoming Monograph. the Republican party. critical monograph, by A forthcoming In 1856 be was nominated for congress, but Ilenry Clay Lukens, on American D. HOUSH. humor was defeated. In I860 he was a delegate to and humorists, will be one of the specially $ the Chicago convention, and was the Penn- attractive features of Harper Magazine. , sylvania member of the committee to notify The article is to be soHobed with portraits CalrfnilninK, Abraham Lincoln of bis nomination. That of native write. who during the Eighteenth limine Fainting; both Plan he was elected to congress, and held and Nineteenth centuries were more or less autumn Guaranteed work and Ornamental. his seat, by fourteen successive famed for the gracefulness and grotesque-BerLeave Orders at to the day of his death, nil work in con of their wit. - store, Provo, O-retSe Air. CALIFORNIA'S JOURNALS. all matters relating to the war and reconstruction his Republicanism was unques- Till FCUTZBB No. 43 Utah, Friday, January 24, 1890. tioned. His most pronounced departure was on the finances he was an extreme and literally uncompromising advocate of soft money and diver coinage. He voted against every measure looking towards a return to specie payments and for every measure to increase the volume of paper and silver money. Some of bis speeches at that time were savagely denounced by Republicans, and he was caricathese who loved him best. There is, therefore, no occasion for deep grief, save those tured os a wild eyed communist, yet he natural drops which the death of an hon- held his place in the party ranks and comored and loved one' always calls forth; but iu manded the continued support of his conhis life there is material for many valuable stituents, though they did not indorse his lessons and vast inspiration for all young financial views. His long, intermittent deAmericana His virtues were of the firm old bate with Garfield was one of the most cuRoman order; his errors like other men, he rious episodes of the time, the latter mainhad faults never grew out of a want of taining that the decade of 1850-6- 0 was one truth or patriotism, and it may most truth- of "hard money and great prosperity, while Judge Kelley vehemently denied both propofully be said that sitions. Even his failings leaned to virtue's side. Of his honesty and sinoerity there was Very rarely, indeed, have the principles of never a question no stain of corruption ever as in so the well illustrated been heredity case of Judge Kelley, and his most salient attached to his name. For many years he characteristics give scientific point to Dr. had been the Father of the House the Holmes humor on the importance of select- oldest member in continuous service. That From the earliest distinction' now devolves on Sam Randall, ing a good grandfather. times the OKell ys of northern Ireland have fourteen years younger than Judge Kelley, been adweates of civil and religious liberty, who entered congress in 63, as the deceased Charles O'Neill, also of Philbut at some time in did in 6Lentered congress in 63, but as he the Sixteenth cen- adelphia, d his beaten was the for tury, or early in the continuous service dates only congress from 1873. Seventeenth, the P. Banks, of Massachusetts, the Sept of the O'Kel-ly- s Nathaniel first spoaker, outranks all others Republican on divided the as to precedence, but has really served but religious line, one little time comparatively. section becoming In person Judge Kelley was spare, delicate Protestant, and a ususmall part of this and rather peculiar looking. Strangers he section became ally thought him an invalid, as. indeed of his life. was much of the last dozen Quaker a little la- He was twice married. Theyears daughter of his ir. Iu the times of first wife is Mrs. F. O. Horst man, of Philaoppression which best followed the viola- delphia, and Florence, his other and Rusdaughter, married an eminent tion of the treaty known He also leaves w. D. xstUT. of Limerick, when sian scholar, Wineuski. sons, and these, with Mrs. Ilorstman and the Catholics were forbidden the exercise of two his wife, were at his bedside when he their religion and the Protestants were for- breathed to liis ashes, and all bidden to manufacture, most of the Protest- honor to his last. Peace of the true patriot and the memory colonies. American the ant OKellys sought The Quakers went to Pennsylvania and self made American. South Carolina, and the descendants of TimoTHE PULITZER BUILDING. the latter state, thy OKelly, who located inshoe full of gold still tell of his bringing a with which he bought the ancestral estate. Sketch and 1lctnre of The Now York Worlds Now Home, He was a woolcomber by trade. The PresThe Pulitzer settled in the building, now in process of north, byterian O'Keliys mostly end of the Brooklyn bridge, near the erection soon became name Americanized, where the and their sons aud grandsons, like those of on Park row. at the junction of Frankfort other Irish exiles of that time, were most street. New York, will besi the home of The ardent advocates of' American independence. World newspaper. The to extends along f the men who Park row 115 feet and 136 feet on Frankfort Froude says that around Bos- street. The structure will have thirteen in battles fought the British the ton were the immediate descendants of Irish stories above the cellar and in addition a exiles. The paternal grandfather of Judge dome large enough to accommodate the The materials Kelley was ail officer in the Continental force of editors and writers. Corse hill stone be will used one on side descended was Quincy granite. his mother army; cotta. terra buff and brick from on Scotland, from and other exiles the from Quaker French Huguenots, and thus the blood of the The exterior outline has been likened to ona best stocks in the world for bravery, sincerity great box with a great tumbler inverted and conscientious devotion to duty was com- it. The tower will be fifty feet wide and five stories high from the roof of the main bined in the great Penn jylvanian. David Kelley, son of the Continental officer building. The reporters, editerial writers and a native of New Jersey, settled early fn and managers, the file and library rooms will Philadelphia, and married Miss Darrah, of be located here. Bucks couuty; unto them was born, in that city, William Darrah Kelley, on the 12th at April, 1S14 the youngest of four. The father had become involved during the war and the speculative times which succeeded it, and in 1816 lost all his property. A few weeks later he dropped dead upon the street, leaving a widow and four young orphans without means. The mother at once opened a boarding house, and by skill and industry reared her children and secured them a common school education; but at the age of 11 William was put to earning his own living as errand boy in a book store. His next work was as a copy holder to the proof reader on The Philadelphia Inquirer, and there, he always maintained, he acquired that remarkable clearness of articulation which was the charm of his oratory through life. At the age of sixteen he was apprenticed to a jeweler that having been his fathers business and served the apprenticeship of four years. During this era occurred the memorable war between President Jack-so- n and the United States bank, and Philadelphia, especially employers and capitalists, was almost unanimous for the bank; but young Kelley took part with the Democratic minority and soon became a noted leader among the apprentices and young Democrats. It was an evil time. Only once before and perhaps once sinco has the war of party been so fierce and terrible as then. All considerations of fairness and personal freedom were cast to the winds. Capitalists and employers openly declared that as Jackson was making war on them, their employes must stand by them or be counted as enemies. To borrow the language of The New York Tribune, : room. For ventilation and sewering a most ingenious system of piping has been devised, independent of the building for support, outride tho walls, yet tastefully covered or boxed in any part of it can be reached in a minRAN FRA IfCISCO CHBOIfICLX BUILDING. ute. Besides the most recent devices for The world is familiar with the great catch liarins, and 37,000 feet of piping, there achievements of New York journalists: The is a tank on the roof 20,000 gallons holding Herald's Stanley enterprise. The World's for flushing the pipes. Each closet and wash sending Nellie Bly around the world east- room has a pipe leading the air therefrom ward ami The Cosmopolitans sending Miss Out to anil above tho top of tho building, and Buland on a rival circumnavigation westshafts fin- this purpose project above ward. But it is something of a surprise to thirty roof. the learn of the big thiugs done by the big jourOn the ninth floor are the private and edinals of San Francisco a city that forty-tw- o rooms of The Chronicle, and these are torial years ago was only Yerba Buena Mission, indeed a bureau de luxe. Columns might be a city that in half a lifetime rose from the salt filled with a description of tho polished oaken marsh and sandhill to more than the opu- floors and carved wainscoting, the mantellence of old Venice or Amsterdam. ami paneled recesses, the Venetian furTho Son Francisco Chronicle is but twenty-fiv- e pieces of oak and stanqieil leather and the niture years old (within a few weeks), yet it ia colored cathedral glass. It will bo almost too now hastening the completion of one of the fine for Besides the prosaic journalism. finest publication houses in the world; while 107 offices in rooms are rented there its rival. The Examiner, has just welcomed journal's these have long been taken, all the building; home its lady envoy from a so when the word ready! is pronounced European tour. On the 29th of May last The the building will be put hi use at once from San Francisco Examiner proposed to the cellar to roof. mayor and school authorities of that city that it would pay all the elpens&Tof an exSPAINS INFANT KING. cursion abroad, including a month at the Paris exposition, for any representative pupil, boy or girl, of the city schools, and of a Alfonso XIII, Whoso Serious Illness Has Been He ported. teacher or either parent as the pnpil might elect. A competitive examination was orAlfonso XIII of Spain, the infant king, dered, and the prize was won by whose serious illness has been reported, was Miss May Ayers, who gained C51 credits born to the throne of the ancient realm. out of a possible 760. Her closest competitor, Shortly before bis birth at Madrid, May, Miss Frankie Willis, had only 34 less. 1886, Alfonso XII died, leaving no male heir. The bright girl, a native of San Francisco, The country was then in a turbulent state, in company with her mother and younger with every prospect of another or of tlie sister, left in a few days for Europe, whence succession. The reigning monarch at the they returned after an alwenceof six months, time was the infant Queen Maria de la Merand her comments on foreign life, as pub- cedes, princess of the Asturias, eldest daughlished in The Examiner, have all the charm ter of Alfonso XIL The accouchement of of freshness and unsophisticated youth, with the mother queen was awaited with interest a good deal of quaint philosophy, drawn by the whole Spanish natiion, and when tho from the child's reading and consequent birth of a son was announced tho event was comparisons. Italy interested her more than received with satisfaction at home and in the any other country. She inspected the ruins colonies. The babe was at once proclaimed of Pompeii, saw the towers, galleries and pubAlfonso XIII, with his mother, Queen lic buildings of Rome, Milan and Florence, King Christina, as regent. put in a month at Faris aud visited the most noted places in Germany and England. On her return her schoolmates and the teachers of her department, the Hamilton Grammar school, gave hor a grand reception at the Palace hotel, speeches being made Jay the mayor and other notables. The history of California journalism is a romance in itself. When the Americans took charge they found an ample lot of Spanish type in an ohl mission, the fathers having dons some printing; so a few practical priutera started a weekly pnper, of which the first issue contained a notice like this: We regret to have to announce that vve have no double us, as there are none in the Spanish languogo. VVTe have sent for some, and until they arrive vve shall be compelled to use two v's instead. The Alta California is tho pioneer of San Francisco journalism, Jating from 1848; and Fred McCrellish was long accounted the father of tho profoKJon. But with the close of the civil war came a great wave of westward emigration, and many new journals were started. The Examiner and Tho Chronicle, now the great political rivals, among the lot. The Examiner is Democratic, but politics is but a small feature of its life. It is indeed a power on the coast, but its history has not been so sensational as that of some other papers. For sensation pure and simple, The Francisco Chronicle perhaps excels any other paper in the United States. Every main THB INFANT KING. event in its history has had a sensation conThe has been surrounded with king baby nected with it, the contents originally were of a sensational order, and the lives of its grpwn people principally, as Spanish royal would not permit of playmates for editors, contributors and assailants were dignity most sensational of all. Yet it is now some- his 11majesty of inferior rank. The regent in the same apartments she occuwhat conservative in politics that is, Re- has veil with her Alfonso XII, surpied publican with a leaning that is called con- rounded with allhusband, the of royal apgrandeur California. in servative relics of houses the of Bonrbon pointments, Charles and Michael II. De Young, natives of Austria as they were united by the of St. Louis, crossed the great plains in early and childhood with their parents. Their father union of the Spanish monarch and Christina, died on the way, and their mother reached an Austrian archduchess. From the balcony the baby king received the of the palifornla in poverty, but went resolutely to homage palace who parado upon the of the soldiery work, reared the (toys in tolerable comfort Plana de Armeria. According to traditional and educated them well. In those days custom, the heir to the Spanish throne is a working women in California had to ignore sergeant in the kings regiment of Guards. many fino distinctions os to their neighbors But, as Alfonso XIII, the infant also became associates. without and People capital did of the army and commander-in-chias they could and asked no .questions about captain general .the of all forces. The chief events the moral character their acquaintances had of Spain and tho welfare the affecting peace Out of the poverty borne in tho states. the young monarch during his short reign and social mixtures of those' early years the of were the revolutionary uprising pf Novemenemies of tlie De ber, 1888, pnd a dynamite plot iu January Youngs Tlie uprising in November was materialdragged for an at- following. aimed at Senor Canovas del Castillo, a promtack ch their moth- inent conservative politician, who was a er, which the boys leader in the movement to restore the Bourfiercely resented. bon rule in Spain by bringing Alfonso XII Their love for her to the throne. amounted to an Senor Canovas carriage was attacked by a slanidolatry, and mob, and the occupants, Senor and der of her was the street one unpardonable Seuora Canovas, were rescued by the genThe dynamite plot of Jan. 8 conrin a fact they darmes. sisted of the explosion of a bomb within the did not hesitate to near the apartments of the palace, royal impress upon the monarch. Great devastation of the youthful bodies of their IfAT A AT& . walls resulted, but the royal family experisomeblood, but they con- enced no barm It cost beyond a terrible fright. The vinced people that it was unwholesome to bomb was doubtless exploded by Anarchists their mother. of speak lightly tho intent to murder the royal family. with In 18G5 they established The Chronicle, and The death of Alfonso XIII will place njion after some of the hardest fights in the annals the throne his sister, Maria de las M arced es, have made it the leading now between 7 and 8 of Journalism they years of age, - FULL LINE OF Winter Clottilxi Ins Furnishing v: .j J. laiiaVirW t . ... L Goods S, S. JONES. A I jL -- OXj-A,JrClKI,- Sc ii Co. Garden City Real Estate Agency. Street, Half Blk South of Roberts House provo City, We invite - Utah. - visiting strangers and others to call and examine the list of City and Suburban property which we offer at Special Bargains for tlie next 30 DAYS. Visitors cheerfully supplied with all available information respecting this City and ounty free. HALT ,, CLAR.ELE OO. cfc ALBERT SIXOLETON. WM. JOHNSON. Singleton k Johnson MANUFACTURES AND j DEALERS IN Clothing & Gents Furnishings all sorts lih ve just opened uj of with-- w Choice Stock, IN - - TTtSLtL. Having Purchased for Cash we are prepared to furnish the Best and most Fashionable Goods at the lowest possible figure. Call and examine our stock and get a perfect fit and save money. Singleton & Johnson. THE West End Store Carries a full Line of Choice GROCERIES, DRY GOODS, Hardware Queens-ware- , BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS, CAPS, NOTIONS, Etc omc and Examine OUR LARGE STOCK OF GOODS. Courteous Treatment and Low Prices. JOS. A. HARRIS, Proprietor. Scntere Street, STILL Provo City, Utah. TIE HAD. AT And We are Going to Stay there. 'This is Our Busiest Year. Since Its Advent, we have not had a Dull WHY? Day. Because We have earned a Reputation for furnishing the very best and the ef ene-fnies- and Over-Coat- s Very Cheapest Furniture And All Kinds of HOUSE FURNISHINGS, Also Doors, Sash, Mouldings, Shingles, Lath and Lumber At the VERY LOWEST PRICES in the Country. Send all Orders to EAGLE W. yi rfiiisrf a sortfi FURNITURE HOUSE PAYSON,' ... - " i vw 4 y - - UTAH, |