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Show EDITORIAL NOTES. "What about natural gas now ? JIabvard beats Yale at kicking in politics if not in football. The Homestead strike is over, but the injury in-jury it has wrought will live after it. One drawback to thanksgiving is that the new crop of statesmen my causo a glut in the market. i Democratic office-seekers are not quite so j unanimous as they were that the Utah commission com-mission should be abolished. Padkrewski is coming to America. From the manner he was boomed by the press bureau, We surmised as much. We admire Chacxcbt Dkpew more than ever. What other Republican can grow hi larious over the late lamented election? Let the councilmen who demand a change of reporters go slowly. The new ones may tell all the truth and nothing but the truth. Were Count Tolstoi in America he would stand high in Democratic counsel. He is the greatest calamity howler of them all. Wb learn by way of SanFrancilco that the road to Salt Lake is not yet abandoned. That may be the theory; it is not the condition. condi-tion. It looks as if most theatrical people were married for the advertisement it gives them, and, moreover, that they need advertisements advertise-ments quite often. Uxcxe Jekry Rusk in his annual report fails to refer to the prevalence of cyclones. Perhaps the last one knocked out the necessity neces-sity for an allusion to them. Mr3. August Belmoxt, who died in New York yesterday, was the niece of Commodore Com-modore 1'ERRTthe hero of the battle of Lake Erie, and a most admirably woman. Grip took her off. A school, system working so admirably that In less than two years since its inauguration inaugu-ration it has raised us to a plane with the most favored cities should be sustained by the people. Let the election on the 7th of December show that it is. |