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Show , S Til is SALT LAKE TIMES. SAIUKDAY. APitlL 18. ISdii week they they will forget that they ercr entertained such a feeling. Here are thu great opportunitie for mining investments; hero are tho great opportunities for engaging in any of the industries by which the raw materi-als of uature are brought forth for tho u a o of man; here are the grout oppor-tunities for tho founding of manufac-turing establishments to supply tho needs of an industrial empire; bore aro tho great opportunities for safe real es-tate investment; hero is the most fav-ored city on earth in which to build up homes from which tb growth of pros-pering business can bo watched and guided In short this is the place of all others for the investor and tho home seeker, whether hn desire to engage in mining or in any other occupation. COME TO SALT LAKE. The Times feels like extending a general invitation to those who are eeeking new homes and new fields for investment to come to Salt Lake. This is the central point of a vast territory that oilers better inducements than any other section of the country. .Star- - rounding the city at distances of from twenty lotwo hundred miles are a great number of mining districts, many of which are among tho richest in the world. The city stands at the gateway of one of the most productive agricul-tural regions in the country, where the farming industry is not threatened by the disasters of blight and drouth which eo often overwhelm it in other places. The city of Salt Lake is one of the most attractive cities in the world, while there is no other large place that offers any such business opportunities combined with the delights of it superb climate find unexcelled surrounding attractions. The city is beautiful in every respect, while its mountain drives and its lake ' resorts are a continued joy to its people I There is no better governed city in the west; there is none the people of which J are more sociable in their habits. We have a religious organization here j which has been the basis of much out- - ) side prejudice against the city, but The Times can assure all of its readers abroad that if thej w ill Tisit ui for j SALT 2LiA.K:E3 REAL ESTATE D MINES , Salt Lake City I have some first-clas- s jjj ,- - . u mining property for sale, m t ' Offers the best opportunities for profitable investment m PP lca lon- - - Jjj of any city in the west. Almost every known mineral exists jjj !!' in Utah. New railroads are in construction and others con- - jjj III tcmplatcd. ' Coal is found in immense quantities in the cast- - jjj HI em and southern parts of the territory. Desirable acreage, m jjj suitable for platting into lots, can be bought at favorable jjj , Proper care guaranteed jjj prices near the city. The building of neat cottages and of jjj Money wanted on to otter only desirable m ar(er houses affords an opportunity for selling at a large III Mortgages, secured by PrPert- - jjj profit. Thare is a demand for first-clas- s stores and business jjj st-cla- ss property. " jjj blocks; these will guarantee a big revenue in rentals, and Jjj - 'i! can be rented before completed. j'! III jjj I m THE MINES OF UTAH "I jjj jjj III are barely appreciated. Some of the finest mines in the in . Prompt attention given m - III Eight to nine P c. in- - to correspondence. jjj fwor,d. are found in Ltah" Splendid results can be obtained ,, teres?from T to jjj bom investments in our Gold and Silver mines. Mines can jjj jjj be operated the entire year. jjj j III III Corresponded e olicited. References Furnished, J. H.lfVATTS, No. 9. west Second South Street, Salt Lake City. Utah. G. M. SCOTT 4 CO. ' ( TCO0.'TEID ) Take Pleasure in Announcing to the Miners and Prospectors Now, and Likely to be, Located at Dugway, Fish Springs and Willow Springs, the New Eldorado of Utah, that we Carry a Full and Complete Line of MINERS' SUPPLIES, GENERAL HARDWARE, TINWARE, CANVAS-COVERE- D CANTEENS, SHEET IRON CAMP STOVES, . .A-great- s for HERCULES POWDER CAPS AND FUSE, JEFFERSON HORSE WHIM, ATLAS ENGINES AND BOILERS, RAND HAND DRILLS AND COMPRESSORS, BUFFALO SCALES, IRON F1PE, WHEELBARROWS, IRON AND STEEL. Orders Entrusted ts us will Receive Careful and Prompt Attention Geo. M. Seott & Co. Buy su Lot! In the Beautiful PHM ADDITION! METROPOLITAN- - INVESTMENT CO. j Commercial Bank Building?. Buy a Lot. EARLS FURNITURE k CARPET CO. 207, 209 and 211 State Road, corner Second South. Are showing the most elaborate line ot FURNITURE CAR PETS Tapestries and Upholsteries in the city. j We make a specialty of furnishing private residences through- out. Everything now nnd modern. On specialties In Carpets are Bipelow ami Scotch Axmlnsters. Itoyal Wiltons. Kidder-minsters, &c, Jtc Also a Urge line CHINESE AND JAPANESE MATTINGS EARLS FlTtMTl'RE AM) CARPET CO. Parties The Holmes BuUdinjf, Corner State Uoad and Second South St, desiring to borrow or loan money see A. ii. Jaues, 2iy Main ijt. "ULYSSES MENDENALL." What wolio me? Surely in my dreams I heard the teacher call The r II as she did years ago, "Ulysses Men- - denall" I heard tha' name then juHt as plain aud his rep'inse a rlear Aswhon rrom hie far corner seat Ulysses an-swered' "Horn!'' Ulysses Simpson Mend-null- , the partner of my joy- s- The jiaitner of my sorrows, too-w- hen you and I were boys. We learned to skate toaether on the creek at Jones's mill, Together gathered walnuts from the tree around the hill; As parlners trapped the red bird, fished to-gether In the brooks. And joined to (father scrap-iro- to exchange for lines and hooks; Collaborated on the spoil of marble playlnu sk'll; And on the autumn Saturdays we tramped 'er field and hill, And emulated Daniel ttoone from morn to set of sun You with your homely yollow dog, I with my father s gun. And when the sun In summer made the mad a iiiilverliiir track. f low willingly you wooed the chance of bllster- - '.ng your back, In heipinz thin the corn rows Just to gratify the whim Of father, who insisted that I work before I swim! Ulysses Simpson Mendenall. that ragged coat you wore Is Ju-- 't as plain to me as though we two were hoys onee more. Kor I rememi er well eai h rent-ho- w this was torn the day The hornets chased ynu through the hedge while I hid In the bay; And this recalls the time we climbed the old mulberry tree: And thin, t almost blush to say, came from a t with me. Dear old Ulysses Meuder.ail, how far aw y those d:iys' How sweetly painful are the dreams old mem-ories can raise Somehow I nodih d at the flro tonight and doml and then 1 hurried bark across the years and we wcro hoy again. But Oh' to see that rsiRed coat, to grasp that eallonsed hand To taik to you of things which only we would understand. I ll Nose my eyes and try acaln to Lear the teacher call The roll, and hear you answer, "Iloro!" Ulysses Menderall. Cort Smth in Mrper's Vekly. THE SALT LAKE TIMES. jy THE TIMES FOBLiaatsa OOMPAHT. NEW lORK OFFICH, Temple Court. Eastern advertisers will please make their coutractH with our vastcru ailveitUlug agruu, Mo.aft. .'aimer - Hey. Tns Tunis is puhinhed emry iSun Onv excepted , and Is delivered by earners in Bait Lake City aud Hark City at T cents per month. Thk TiMts coutnlnn tbe full Associated ITesn report, and has snarl;.! l.ni.nuh service this entire liitor moniualn reirlon. Thi Tihss Is entered at theposlofflre In Salt Lake City for transmission through, tbe mal'ji a eeeona class matter. Persons doslrlint TuaTiiits delivered at their bouses ran seru re it bv pont-- 1 eard order or throny. telephono. VS'tica delivery la Irregu-lar muse Immediate complaint to this ofll e. tSubnrripUon to the Ually Tbaun. (Alwuys In advance.) fJmouths sr.on e 4U) M.ijri i " : n ' Address Tws Tiwrs. Salt Lske City. Utah. Our Telephone Number, -- SI A IlKMUC'RtTIC AlKil MKNT SI'OII.FU. Oik-- of the lirst fruits of the going lilt effect of the new "free MiKitr" law has been the tmrii.iml7.liig of the Iivul refilling of C'l.srs Si'HKi'Ki.Ks and the Ameriean Suitr h'ellnln company, fonneny known as the SUKar Tru.--t. II will I rememliered with wh.it a Mourlsli of trumpets the mum noth re- - Hurry In f'hlla If lo'ila erected by Hem:' ki'.s c mmeneed opeiaUons ami tho rapid decline or prices whti h followed t ie competition wblih soon sprang up imtween the new retluc ry and flio trust Of c uir-- e there was other oppo.-l-- l on hesiilesih.it of Si'hm.'ki m, but bis was t y all o.bls the iin.et fotiiiidahls and trouble-- Oile.ius i'.c lyiiue. Candid people li.ito always rocog-nizci- l the fact that there, is no connec-tion between trusts ami the tnrifT, but our friends have insisted that the latter is responsible for tho former. Certain classes of democratic organs aiitl democratic orators have cluiiir to that proposition as their stork argument. When every oilier H'oi of their platform has been knocked away they have blazed away about the iniquity of tho tariff in hav-ing built up trusts. The foregoing from the Picayune spoils tho argument slid leaves tho ili'iiini(njT,n in n most sorry plight. If the lirst fruit of the "free sugar" law hns been to hariiionizo nud eonsoliilntt! a great trust; it is dillicult to sea how 0110 could escape from tho cotirltision that freo wool, free iron and free lum-ber iniuht have a similar effect in the other lines represented. Sinco tho tarill was taken off of sugar the price of that article, has fallen about two cents a jiotind. Koiinrd sugar is not free, the miming industry being protected against foreign competition; and if it were true that the tariff is the bulwark of trusts, the "Imrmoni.ing" could have made so perfect that the decline in price which has been recorded could not have occurred. It will not do to assert that tho tariff creates trusts in ono instance and that they flourish on the "free list" in another. The truth is that the American tariff has been no more re-sponsible, for American trusts than English free trade has been for the trusts of Kngiand. l'eople who are honest with themselves have nover be-lieved the assertions made) by tho dem-ocratic organs on the subject, and all such will smile at the manner in which the New Orleans paper has demolished tbe old argument. CLOSING OF MAILS At Salt Lake City, Utah, April 1 3, 1KP1. IT. U.-'- ast mail east; al-- o north to iV'ilen, Ho F.lder. Colliiistou and l.o "t'd a. m. It. O. W Atlant e mail ea- -t X:.0 a. in. I'. I'.- - I.i.rn mad north to 1. and :iiter,r.cuate pointi. also a rio-- iioik I; for San .'ran- lsi o. .:"0 p. m. Jt G. W Mail f r iig.leii :t::v.m. V. I'.- - Mallf.rrldi.il Montana. Port-lau- Kan ViSneiseo ami east .... fir 0 p. m. U. (;. VV- .- Deuvoraud Ama mall Bail p. 111. U. 1'. - i'ark fltv. l oalvp.le an. Kcho at P- "i. V. I'. - Kilseo. M.lford and Intermedi-ate points fl'Pia. m- - U. iJ hlocktoll ."lid luteriliediate isilnts !! a. m. U. C.i'ark C.rv. M II LT.-e- aud local polios ... .: -- "oa. in. K. 11. W.- - Ilitigbam 7 a. m. tioi'its n 11 Ai.iiivsi, or mail at oki'ots. t '. - 1 isti ru fast mall 5:.'lf a. m. V. I'ark Cll v and fa. he valley.. II :i a 111. V. I. - luaho. Mi in ana and Ore on. 6:10 p. m. V. 1'. risen, Mllford Slid points nor'h :fp. V. 1'. St.. I; iti a:lf P-It. i. wst m h :, v. ill.' mall i in p. or )' .'. W. I'lielllc expiest ... 7 So a. Ill Ii fl. w llinglmni ! "' . m L. 0.- - I nr.i cily. Mill Creek, etc.... 6 3t) p. m O. 171 K ll'H l!S. Money order window ojiens 0 a. m closes .'.p.m. Ot'ent:ig U in a. m. Closing regter win, oiv . t0 p. m. ti 'iier.il .leMverv windows open S a.m. tit fl p m Mump window open s n. m to 'i p m' Citri'-erd- ' w oiiiow except lot: Sunday. ti till V p.iu' Nl'KOAV IIHIH9. Ceieral delivery and stamp windows S open ,11a. in. to 1 p. in. Curriers' w.inlow - to I p.m. I. A. lH-.- r 'N. I". M. s a 1 1 ; 1 ) a v.a puii. im.i wi: SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. Mniit Rernm Independent. San Francisco Chronicle. Iu the natural order of events the Australian commonwealth, if it becomes thoroughly homogeneous, must become independent of Great Hritain. This is seen and felt in Kngiand, as is shown by the writings of the publicists of that country who take liberal view of the situa'ion. There are, of course, some who have such an exaggerated idea of loyalty, as they understand it, that they cannot conceive of a colony or a con-geries ot colonies dreaming of separa-tion from the parent stem, but they are in the minority. Clood Judge of Laundry Work. New York Bun. We have no doubt that his judgment of laundry work is fair. When he comes to talk about tariff reform, or the silver question, he is not master of the theme, and he dares not be plain and simple. He is like the man who cultivated an illegible handwriting for the purpose of concealing his deficien-cies of orthography. The Stuffed I'rophet should wnte inore on the laun-dry question and less on tariff reform. The Manlpur Revolt. New V'ork Times. The massacre of ltritish native troops nt Manipur is result of what is ap-parently the most important revolt against' the liritish power that has been made for many years. It is not, how-ever, as a Parisian paper seems to hope, the beginning of a general up-rising against tho foreign ruler of the country. No people have ever been more thoroughly cowed than the inhab-itants of India, and the notion of throwing off the liritish yoke has long ceased to seem to them practicable. TtlllAV'S TIMr'N" TliK Timks presents to its readers to-day a brief review ol the Deep Creek country with a map showing tho loca-tions of the various camps in that won-derful region, fare has been taken to present the subject in such a manner that the people in distant sections as veil as the s to Salt Lake can readily understand where and what the country is. In this effort We believe success has been arhioved and that mining men everywhere will be able to form an intelligent estimate of the merits and possi bilities of the new Kl Dorado after reading what is laid before them. I The desire tins been to lay I this great subject before the I world properly so that the newly dis- - I covered riches of Utah might receive I their proper measure of attentiou; to I show people what Deep Creek has been, whnt it is and how it can lie reached. I Thk Times believes that tha country ' will more than bear out the claims that have been made for it, and it want everybody to know what the merits of this Lrtuh mining excitement are. To effect this purpose this Deep Creek edition has been issued ami will beg widely circulated. The management will spread the paper far aud wide, but every citizen should make it a point to send ouj copies to all whom it is desired to put in possession of correct information regarding the mat-ter. Such general circulation would be of immeasurable ben-eli- t to every interest, because every investigator whose attention should be drawn to this section would find that half has not been told, This is not an insubstantial boom but a great impulse of sound development. It is essential that people everywhere should know what the advantages of Utah and Salt Lake are, as the spreading of that knowledge will bring hundreds of thousands of dollars here for invest-ment aud draw a multitude of energetic from every ijiiarter. It is a shame that there should be so much ignorance regarding the resources of this territory. People are Hooking to cither places that present no such ad-vantages, whereas thoy would eomo bere if they only knew of tho unpar-alleled opportunities waitiug for them in this rich region. All that the people of Utah and Salt Lake have to do to secure immigration and the inlltix of capital is to place the territory before the people in the right light, and that can bo done most effect-ively by distributing; copies of this issue of The Times. Trim ble is brewing in India. There have already bunn some disturbances and others may be expected. liritish rulo has always been oppressive, and the patience of the Hindoos is giving away under it. Tho situation is ag-gravated by the secret agitation carried on by Russian emissaries, and this in-creases the gravity of the situation. It is not impossible that the Russian gov-ernment is but waiting for a favorable opportunity to proeipitato an Indian revolt, expecting then to let loose the dogs of war in Luropo. It is known that Russia hopes to strike Kngiand in thu east, and that she expects to make the blow effective through native dis-affection, it would bo useless for her to invade India unless the European nations were engaged elsewhere. If Kngiand and Austria were busy de-fending the Rnsphorus, and if Krance were moving against the central pow-ers from the west, an Indian revolt would give Russia the opportunity that sho is so patiently awaiting. These conditions make the' present disturb-ances in llindostan peculiarly interest- - Net he Secured that War. llostnn Globe. President Harrison is about to start upon an extended western trip, osten-sibly to see tho country and mingle with tho people but in reality to seek for a renoniination. A presidential renom-inatio-however, is ono of the few things that cannot bo found by seeking. A man ennnot catch it any more than ho can catch his breath by running after it. Virtue ami lleltfrion, Dutte Miner. "Can we havo virtue without relig-ion?" is a question to which Professor (ioldwiu Smith replies in the April Forum. Tbe Miner is pleased to note the healthful tone of the professor's argument aud to find him sustaining the church in its work of restraining vice, encouraging virtue and ennobling the race. The professor says: "If mo-rality lias hitherto been based on relig-ion, there must be reason to fear that the foundation being withdrawn the superstructure will fall. That morality has hitherto been based largely on re-ligion, so far at least as the great ma-jority of mankind are concerned, will hardly be doubted, however, want-ing in deliuiteness and vividness the notions of a moral governor and of retribution in many minds may have been, and however men may sacrificed to immediate impulse that which on serious appeal they would have acknowledged to by their real good. 'Virtue,' seas Palev, in his clear and decisive way, 'is the doing good to mankind in obedience to the will of (od anil for tbe sake of everlasting happiness.' So surely thought even the men of the world in Palcy's day. Besides, such genuine Christiau characters as there were ex- - crted an influence beyond themselves , as practical warrants for the observance of Christian morality and pledges of tho happiness attending it. "The presence of the the ic its sanc-tion has been especially apparent in all acls and lives of heroic or The man who has led a forlorn hope, taken an oar in a life boat, risked his own life to save the lives of others.or given up all his personal en-joyments to the service of his kind, if he has not definitely placed beforo him-self the approbation ol Cod and are-war-in heaven, has fell assured that in losing his life he saves it, and that it would bo well for him in tho sum of things; an assurance which implied tho existence of a supreme moral power. We are told that acts of heroic self sac-rifice and n will become of less consequence to mankind w hen all is regulated bv a scientilic sociology. It may be so, but hitherto humanity could hardly have advanced without tliera." The church is doing good work. She is a guide and protector for the young and a solace for the aged. Her greatest temptation and most threatening wooer is politics, aud as long as she refuses to wed this worldly rake she will com- - . maud the respect of believers and unbe-lievers alike. Those who doubt the popularity of the chnrches in the west would do well to visit the numerous houses of worship in Butte. 1 ArsTHAi.iA is still wrestling with the rabbit pest, all the devices so far ar-ranged for the extermination of the creatures having failed. Tho rewards offered for an effective exterminator have been large euough to give any successful investigator a snug fortune. Hundreds of plans have been experi-mented with but all to no avail. An American drummer has proposed to take an army of darkies over there, arm them with shot guns and turn them loose against tho rabbits. The col-ored man is fond of rabbits, but his fondness for pullets might destroy the advantages of the ingenious drummer's scheme. The Australians would like to get rid of their bunnies, but would not care about losing their chickens Knowing the character of the Col their enterprise, their push, thpir shrewdness and their tireless euergy, we believe that they would come here in great numbers to invest in mines and real estate if they under-stood the superior advantages of this section. This paper will be sent to thousands of them, and w e invite them to read ii carefully and weigh the facts that are given and judge whether or not the particular region treated of worthy of their attention. If they will subscribe lor the paper they will daily secure information concerning the various districts of the territory that cannot fail to be of the greatest value to them. I'uince I.ismakck is ia a sullen humor and there seems to be no doubt that he intends to tight the government. In a recent speech ha said: "The em-peror would do well to de9ist from conceding further reforms." Now, under tho American understanding of the term "reform," there is uo ground upon which Bismarck or any other man can sustain himself in opposition to reform movements. If the emperor is granting any real reform he cannot turn back, for the simple reason that public sentiment will not turn, not even at the command of the great ex-- 1 chancellor. j |