Show F f If 11f I i ji t F t t J SOTTO YVOOE v k d f soIiLethingtosayastSunday t i 4 Vfs HAD something say at and instructresses I instructors I to the jl 11 various Mission schools in this city t concerning the moral effects a course of f reading in the Salt Lake Tribune would I I II t yf have upon their pupils Since that time I F thcjpaper in question has printed an editorial 1 V i J ed-itorial on The News Exposed which i J we cannot help wondering if the preceptors > j pre-ceptors have seen It is in the issue we 11 t l believe of last Sunday We cannot j bring ourselves to the task of reproducing t P reproduc-ing it but we commend it to the perusal of every father and mother who is in l I ilie habit of allowing the sheet a place i t sn the library table r q Two PENTLEMEN of literary tastes were i I f the other day writing in their respective i I i iomes in the tIt ward Their houses i if sis only separated by a narrow lane One of them becoming puzzled over a II cord sang across to theotber Vhats r of ultra What I ne meaning ne plus the other of hi i I Ed he savV inquired i L me He wants to know nettling If bout about new plush ulster was j ier unconscious reply i i i 1 j THERE is a mine in one of the Cottonwoods 7 Cotton-woods conceded on all hands to have the I J 4 brightest of indications and only kept n SHe from a lack of the necessary capital to work it with There came to the city t I I some months ago a gentleman from San t Trancisco on his way east to find an in i tment for 20000 the drafts for which t i ictad in his pocket A gentleman interested in the mine above mentioned t 1 and a friend of the San Franciscan in i I I 1 sited him to look into the prospects of I She property with a view to purchasing r He complied after some hesitation went up to the hills weighed all the r chances and admitted that the outlook i i Iras sufficiently favorable to entitle it to consideration he took a night to I ihink over it promising to report next I i i morning Next morning his friend I hurried to the hotel and was received with the following I have looked at I the matter on all side and I believe It that your mine offers ft legitimate channel for speculation with a more f than reasonable hope of a heavy return I t re-turn but there is another view to take of tie question and that view has demoted I de-moted me on going further east to invest i t my money the warring nature of your 1 1 j Irasinesi elements here I leave my I I money here and go back home I have r l probably been there a month when over the wires couie > Li Salt Lake dis I 1 j latch that the Mormons are in arms or I I that they are plotting treason that I 4 anything and everything may happen 1 i here arid how do I feel about the in Trestnient of my capital The biggest 1 f t jetarn I might get would not pay me I I Ii I t for my worry and unxiety i 1 THIS SLKVES as illustration of how 4 t she Sult Lake Tribune has benefited the tJ commerce of Utah That paper has i enjoyed a monopoly of all the utterances I I it utter-ances and opinions that went out oft 1 of-t Utah over the wires to the Associated t Press and one of the shrillest of its t cries has been Let Utah once gain a Staf hood and the mine will be taxed I ant of existence The capitalist reads peters and turns to Colorado or Lake 1 Superior I t WO l1ot hell thinking what would li the result to Dr McKenzies hotel Ii I t I 1 roject if there should be a re I j I I f Biote chance of Utnh creeping into j J 1 the Federal sisterhood The first thing r f I mould be such a howl as only an I 1 1 I American gentleman in agony knows I I How to give to the effect that the mines I 1 I S I j i were gone farewell to the mine that I I i no Gentile or his property vva > any I 1 j J i Ibnggr safe in Utah and that general II t S aaarciiy would soon reign the next I I II 1 wouldibe the transmission of the same I i intelligence to the Associated Preis i r i wliue hcKlquiirter are at Chicago i i And the final mow would he the receipt fl it of onitthiK like the following dispatch irom Dr MrKcuxics capitalists vho I t arcaJuo understood to belong fp t that I I I I 4 < city 1 I I t Slop BlJ operations and negotiation 10k I tug towrilb hotel 1unhur consideration t hasjrtecided us on wilhdrm lug from the nndertJiking i t j I J t I WV HAVE a few instance of snobbery i I iu Utah but not many One of them j 4 i Imd occasion recently to make a visit 1 iaUvthecountry where he enjoyed the I i ro gbbut hearty hospitality of ye hon I I II st granges Our lahdidah hero had i I just seated himself at the morning meal I t t ot the farmers family when he was if j horror struck to observe the hired girl i t tn the act of uniting herself at the clp I I 4 su > tic board be dropped his knife in I j peechlcJSnes Why wots matter I the host t anxiously I buy inquired j I 4 I I We dont have the ervants cat at the I I L t II same i ladle at our house he replied in i I fato I I t a uj > ulch il Lot The farmer IJ 1 f I 4 grew evere Timiny said he you f cant dtwtye Well 1 knew your dad i f I k f when the liadnt A thing on earth but t I i l Uififltithei he stood in anda ox j t j J t 5 Thctnc4proceedeU in silence I i i t J AT tiuor regular interval we hear I tN i r She pitiful wail of till dry benchers for I P 2 S3W ijit U is always the same only k encc iii a while little more vehement I I f j than at another Their location on the I 1 ban < h Li one of the CHI > t delightful to I e II I It1 I J conceived of and ome of our leading I a 1 i business men have years ago predicted I r f 4 litatat Foiue future time that part off I of-f J the town would be the residence quar I ier of the most wealthy of our citizens T toth becaHse of the location and its re i l z Sirement from the iioiM and bustle of li fcusinehh but that will never take place 4 until water enough can be supplied for j f both culinary and irrigation purpose and it is to be hoped that before longsome r long-some feasible plan open to no legal objections I t ob-jections imiy be developed whereby r staler may be supplied to that magnificently magnifi-cently located part of the town Wet We-t I firmly believe that water will be obI ob-I j laiued some day but how we cannot p t 1 4 1 new tell perhaps from Utah Lake directly I di-rectly or indirectly from sonic source h h outside the valley or by means of j lf reservoirs if not m City reek perhaps III i in some of our neighboring canyon r I TJIURE AIm somepeople so dull i 1 atupid and moonfaced and ilo to I f I wholly and complacently wrapt up in I time contemplation and admiration oft of-t their own virtues and accomplishments i that no matter what eggregious asses i they make of themselves they are never i < ware of itand always look down in racantscorn pity or no one cun very 1 I ell gueSswhat upon thtdie who mire making merry at their exemmse Sucb f persons are very fortunate in that they are never annoyed by theirown asinine t blunders and inconsistent behavior but in nother respect they are very nnfor I l 4 Iu tunate silica never dreaming their liability err and of their ridiculous positionsthey never see any occasion for improvement and hence are always al-ways the same carrying fheir increasing increas-ing imperfections with them to their grave In this class of men may be included in-cluded without any qualification whatever what-ever not the handsome Governor of Utah but the other one i e the one practically governor of Utah HOWEVER APPOSITE the time when this last storm occurred for those farmers who were waiting for an opportunity to plow up the soil it still found some getting get-ting in their crops of hay and must have been productive of more or less injury to them a misfortune that might have been avoided if we but had some means of fortelling the occurrence 9f a storm orat least of stating Ihe chances in favor or against it We believe that this is not an impossible thing if the signal service could be made more farreach ing in this section of country and probabilities could be given in plain terms so that the farmer would not have to be a metcorelogist in order to understand them If we are not laboring I labor-ing under a wrong impression we are of the opinion that a great deal of good has been done in the eastern and middle I States in this way certainly more than the cost of the service THE SUM of from 15000 to 20000 the amount of the Utah Central dividend due stockholders here will find its way into circulation on and after October 1st and will no doubt tend towards the improvement of trade a little atleast as most of it will fall into the hands of those who know how to make a permanent perma-nent and paying investment of it so that the good effects will not only be immediate but lasting as well |