Show RICHARD MACKINTOSH i Thou who hast solved lifes final mystery I i Knowst thou how dDcp our heart lovo Was for thee Bravo soul thats fled Within Valhalla3 hqll Say cantjL thou ECO us canst thou hear UK call Say through Deaths hush and through hIs Icy chill Can thorc ro cries of those who lovod lbee thrill No answer comes no answer lo our 1 prayer Palls Mice a balm upon tho listening oar Despite tiro longmsfe ana tho tears we sheLl J7o volc comes back from the beloved dead It iarahaxd duty to say a Jnsl word over Hlchiml Mackintosh IDa Joutli comes as a personal bereavement For twenty yearn ho has been a friend often closer than a brother His was a brave soul and generous His father was British ollleer the friend of Wellington Welling-ton he fought under bUrn through all that bloody peninsular campaign and through the thivee terrible days of Waterloo and tin decorations ho won on those battlefields pinned upon his breast lecpt his heart warm to the ond of his days lie was an officer of ilu j NitietyUilnfTJIghlandcrs I and aflor ho Napoleonic wars was stationed at Dublin I Dub-lin Ireland There TJfclmixl waa born The fbrst sounds he heard were ihote of tho sunrise ninl sunpbt guhs and rriarllnl hands the first Imnrcsslons flircd upon his mind were thoSb of the glory pnd honor that attaches to brave men who offer their lives for their coiuitry aniPoC the need of keeping personal per-sonal honor untarnished He grew up In the army and became a Lieutenant when his Interests drew him away and made hlnn forsake everything save that pride In the honored name of his father and that honor which governed his life lo the end Ho capo to New York then In a sail ship rounded Cape Horn and when In confidential mood would sometimes tell how In a spirit of sh or bravado he woull mount thc icy roasts with the seamen and help them bend on or tako in the Icy sails He was blessed with exuberant animal life It was his way up to the time when his lifes great affliction came to him to greet the morning vith shouts to all the children In his neighborhood and his voice was lo the earth what tho larks song is to the skies He made his fight for a fortune for-tune singlehanded and though often baffled and disappointed and though often his hopes were unfulfilled he never for a moment permitted his heart to grow cold never was there a moment mo-ment when his genial and generous nature na-ture did not meet his friends more than half way His home was a welcome place for friends he enjoyed his table most when his friends were around it and when he built his new home though lie was childless his diningroom was the most spacious room He was Intensely proud of his Xumlly name he would rafJier have died than to have had the slightest talnfcast upon H but he had none of the foolish pride which refuses to measure men fairly according to their deserU3 In brain and heart without with-out regard to their fortunes He was married twenty years ago In ithls city and all the strength of his soul went out in love lo his wife She died five years His ago sorrowwas something some-thing pitiable to see and he hae never since been the Mackintosh of old The change could bo seen In fits of abstrac tion In unnatural fits of temporary Impatience Im-patience and In the absence of that Jollity which was his wont of old About two years ago a shrinking of his giant frame and a certain look on his face began to be noticed by those who were near to him which troubled them I Both symptoms Increased until anxiety turned to alarm but to the last ho con tinued to declare that It was nothing that lie would soon be all right Even after he became too weak to leave his I bed ten days ago he railed at his phy sician calling him a pessimist and de claring that he would bo out In a few days and all right Never did a man muke a braver light against n mortal ailment I This courage never forsook him unlll an lipur and a hal before he ceased to breathe Uhen he asked that an opiate might be given him to relieve the pain which assailed him then turning to his I niece he wrung her hand and said This is the end and passed Into un consciousness lie wag a brave man a cloarljralned man of affaire a generous greatsouled man and though born and reared aa he was there wasnever a more loyal man lo the country of his adoption than he lie attended the Queens Jubilee In 1S07 ami once on IIJH returiiiiti1wa3iUc3crlb Ing the spectacle of the thereview of the miles and miles of vafahlpa all In full roar when he was asked which was the handsomest ship that ho saw He an swered instantly with flnshiiyr The eyes United States cruiser Brook lyn His death is a great loss to Utah Half n dozen BUCI men as 5ie would give a character to any lown hq was I public spirited Clearbraiiied and his I sense of perfect Justness made him til vays one of the most useful of citizens But ho was most lo those who drew nearest Id him and knew tho Inner dopLhsfeof his nature howhlgh and true i nnd tender and generous It was To these his death lo a mighty bereave ment they mourn for him as for or a brother and wave their farewells him i with ii sense of irreparable loss u In their hearts |