Show TALKS WITH TRAVELER I While In my room lost night I I heard a bellboy pounding on the door of the next room said the elI < exmlnstrel Happy Cal Wagner at the Kenyon yesterday Well I went out In the hal and that boy was goIng go-Ing It with both fists on the door of the room where a returned soldier was i asleep till you could not rest Walt i i I bays I to the kid till I lift you up so you can put your foot through the transom and then you can get In and open the door from the Inside But I at that moment three of the sleeping I I mans comrades came up stairs and they had a key I I They shook rolled and pinched that sleeping Infantryman but hp was dead to the world Finally ono of the soldiers I sol-diers put his mouth to the sleeping mans ear and yelled Fight Well sir no Jarkinthebox ever shot up Into the perpendicular quicker than I that soldier as he reached out to grab I for an Imaginary gun lift was wide 1 awake then and ready for > a scrap with j a I whole battalion of Instirrectos tt I Indian Inspector James McLaughlIn is at the Knutsford where he Is preparing pre-paring a report of his visit 1 to the I Ulntah agency He is a genuine dip 1 loniat in Indian matters and has accomplished ac-complished what It was not believed I any Inspector could doat least without with-out a great deal of trouble The inspector In-spector has persuaded the Indians to Bond their children to the agency schools and to send them willingly i He has had thIrty years experience i I among the Sioux and thoroughly understands under-stands Indian character lie said yesterday yes-terday I went out among the tepees at the White Rocks agency and visited them in their homes It was six hours before I could make any headway but finally made a friend of old Sowawick and finally forty of the leading Indians dropped into the tepee to talk I used their own Interpreter and when they found had been with I the Sioux and spoke the language they were quite pleased because the Utes and Sioux have been on very I friendly terms and a number of tho Utes speak 1 I the Sioux language The conference resulted In a promise from old Sowawick and the other I I chiefs that all heir children should be sent to school and I left them In the I best of humor There Is no danger of Ian I-an trouble on the reservation Some of the Indians arc a little fractious but they can be managed by diplomacy and kindness 1 a o There Is quite an interest In Fremont Fre-mont county Idaho In Sanpete and Sevler counties said Andrew Christen sell of JSphralm at the White house yesterday There are four of us going go-ing up there Ole Olsen and Mart Olsen I Ol-sen of Ephraim and C S Christensen of Centerfold leaving with me We I are on the road north to secure property I prop-erty near St Anthony for stockrais ing and farming i Whats the matter with Sanpete was asked Oh the water and the grass arc too short there while up in the Snake River valley there Is much more of a show There will be others after us to move from Sanpete and Sevier to Idaho Wont the new Mammoth reservoir help out down south Yes J It wash lt but we dont know when that will be j I ExMayor C T Moore of St Anthony is at the Kenyon Seven families of thirty people arrived In town the other I day from Nebraska said he yesterday yester-day They brought eleven cars of household goods with them and traveled themselves In a Pullman These people had only been In ton for IL fev hours when the local banks were S13POO better off than before the advent of the new arrivals The immigrants Immi-grants also brought along l carload of I fine Hereford cattle and all are locating locat-ing near Squirrel tent five miles east of St Anthony where there arc now forty families Thus is our country coun-try growing Building has been pushed right along all winter and new business structures as well as private residences are among them Mr Moore ISL Democrat and when asked what he thought of the new apportionment I ap-portionment act he replied Oh the new Governor Is doing more to defeat the Democratic party In Idaho than the unpopularity of any act of the Legislature Legis-lature by jhls appointments A man may he a valiant soldier and at the same time an uncertain and Indifferent civil administrator a J A Wright of the State Board of Horticulture l l at the Cullen from Ogden Og-den The Legislature has been good to us he said last night and given us the money we need In the prosecution prosecu-tion of our work We have a valuable now man In A H BOwers of Provo and the board 11 meet the first Monday In April in Salt Lake We have got the Insect pests so that they will not Increase and the outlook at present Is highly favorable for n fine year In fruit The Weather has been a little warm at times but none oC the trees are touched as yet Mr Wright has been very ill with pneumonia for several weeks but Is now able to be out I Leadvllle produced 20000000 last year but this year the figures ought to be 23000000 said S M Broyles at 1 the Cullen ydsterday Copper properties prop-erties are looking J up In that part of I the State particularly and there is a quite a demand for copper ores for fluxing the supply coming from Utah Now Mexico and Arizona as well as from Colorado In Pllkln county the copper oies will assay 35 per cent copper cop-per rL Lgadvlllo is building up very fast and the demand Is i sjuchjhnt there have been no vacant buildings for some time and building operations havo gone on right through the winter The 1 amblers am-blers have been knocked out in Lead vine as in other places so that the sports are forced to operate in shady I and hidden pkices a I I lT see by The Tribune of this morn Ing said a prominent builder and contractor who repentlyarrlved from one of the Eastern cites with the Idea of going Into business here that the contractors who are engaged In the building trades here have at last got to the point where they can do some good to the community In which they reside and also to themselves by formIng form-Ing an association such as exists In almost every city throughout the United Slates Combinations of interests inter-ests Identical but which are very often far apart seem tq be the only measure rfow by 1 which success may be gained I have been connected with different associations such us Is now in process of formation in this city for many years in the East and they have been productive of good There is no rcabon why one should not exist here a Corp Frank Jacobs of H troop Eleventh caValry who Is home from Manila is thinking of reenlisting this spring in the Fourth cavalry He rather likes the soldier life and there are opportunities for him to rise incase in-case he returns to the service The cavalry is the service for flic he said last nigh tThpr is no artillery service to speak of In the sand s-and the artillery regulars there are utilized aa Infantry or mounted as cavalry cav-alry The commanding General Is mounting Infantry now When ueked how the boys liked Mac Arthur the corporal said 1 that everybody every-body liked him and that he was a great Impiovemerit Otis whom tho soldiers said had cold feet |