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Show WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 10. Ib90. OGDEN DAILY "COMMERCIAL: THE COMMERCIAL. UTAH. OGDEN, Eam E. M. COJUJELU otori3 not eaeite partiau eppcei. lion. Railroads should t made reepuc ibSa fur the killing of cployee just tLe tamm aa they are for the kiiLftg vt patro&a. Then they would obliterate the treat-herofrog, would adopt a uniform and coupler, would out have cars overload!, and would take all It the precautious tbey dow rMflw-- t would be but juet aud humane fur the law to decree the adoption of these precautions and enact severe penaltiea fur the delinquent Aa it ia cow the UrakeoiaB takes his Ufa in bis hand every trip. lie cannot know when his foot will be held faat while he is ground to pulp. He cannot know when he goes between the cars to couple them that his ringers will survive the ordLor the bumpers withstand the pressure. He is never quite certain on a dark night but an overreaching timber or rail will crush Lis head against a box. Surely some of these menacing circumstances can be modified by judicious lavs strictly enforced. Slaughter should be no part of the conduct of WBKiIaI.MCatBEl.... ....... M.1M It' (ni Bltl Kl i i i i Kjr. rtBUftMlMi CO. I li I iMVtll" Co- - bf 'B I'll JMftt tU atj U Mmdb 19 ajnmiirsTi-T- - afeeald 71 i III -J BMLk. li ! fa adlrnul to ITn. Lisa. fKawrW at ta roatoffiee avails as aassaiimii liT I'tak tiiinssii-Oas- POLITICAL CAPITAL, WbM a man bokliog public offioe prwea uatrue to himself and hia eoostitoencr, the delinquency ia nut neceasarlj a reflection oe hit party. True, it may ba. Bat when a party cornea iota power and nuvt pert oroa make a trial of new material, it ia quita poaaible to mak a mistake ia tha aelectwo. Such a mistake wound the party. It doe not carry odium. It ia betrayal of friendship. It aheuid eondesB cotaaet of TiHimiad iadiriduala, but the guilty individual alone. Wbtu a party haa grown old in corruption, when by a yUn of fraud it create a placa for the political ruffan; tha man a ho atuffs ballot boea and falaifiea raturna, it ia entitled to a full maaaura of the disgrace won by any of ita creaturea. The Liberal party in Utah aa a domi- nant factor in publio affair, it new. It in Ogden and Salt aaaumad the rein Lake with mnj difficulties facing it Them difiioultiea it braved and overcame. If any of ita eervanta have proved unfaithful, the punishment be upon the eerranta. Tbey have wronged, deeper than they have wronged anyone else, the people wboaa confidence and votes elevated them. The attempt to make capital out of the acta of one man ia but a frantic clutch at a phantom straw. The Liberal party does not shield an unfaithful steward, and it does not expect to go down with the fall of any weighed and found wanting, if such there shall be. A WESTERN OONGRKS3. The suggestion that a Western Con- gress be called at soma central point, is eertainly a striking one, and worth conIt may be found to possess sideration. sufficient merit and practicability to be acted upon. The suggestion was made in an interview with CoL A. C. Fisk of Denver, recently published in The There are difficulties concerning a gathering of this sort. There ia no one authorised to call it, and there is no way by which its deliberations could be more than suggestion. The congress if conducted with formality might seem too much like a distinct division of the West ae against the East, and an ignoring of the South, which would be entitled to a voice as it has many interests in common with the West. It ia true that the East has leea OPERA HOUSE! Masaw. Kew Tore Money. YJ r IoAJtowillhaveaatormy txmt in tLe election of senator. May the best BMUUit in. star U-'-- IW. Salt Lake Cm is ambitious to Lav aa opera houaa. This emulation of Og den ia in every way praiseworthy. r.&ln4 aliouspus eide now very clearly see his mistake. C. a.sn . 4-- -- ! . ia Sjcial Eifiefit ut tLe KcciH Adrwa, Eng!;-- ii Copper. Lm4 mat Tin. Vn To. Laa4 Si a. Ikrahr, i Tie fairijr mV4 : Busuta, TV- Low much ONLY, unUiy. December 13. 1890 m C. B. t"s Pacifec - i ck. Lata. k) tU.tt.olif TV. It ill (jtfis! 13 ...1 NIGHT ONE -- StwYota. Dec a UAjtm: hOSU 4 EEYO. efcMtw. errubt ', 7a Bonda. I", PxoaAKLT the Chevicce man who hot out his eyes ia at attempt at aui 4H-f- tL-- Ksf tr. B---n o Maaaama Eimw. BESET JAMES aek! UNION Th Electioaa bill ia causing sundry FLVA.ME both in and out of eucgrtx. reauu-- k : K-- i. more the WOOL present Emperor of Germany know than Lis father and grandfather ever Bosnw, Der. a - Territorial ssli ia road at mm;: fur seuared tan, Srm for liaud knew. Sar BMdiosa ; Us ii fur- - aasaiiuaa. 1 aUlurmia axt Unburn airt a4 steady. Wrnus St Louis beer is boycotted fur UGbEX MARKET EEPOET. a Denver brand, a question arise aa to what ia the matter with the home Wholesale Price. brewed article. rMrert4 daily by Gibsea A feenrthoaite. strange vboleaala prod or deahra, 93 Waskuctua St- The statement haa been made that an ua, OrWa City. Vtafc. Bayia-- . Gar Blaine will not be a candidate in 1KJ2 Want, sri Na. 1 auU- The statement haa been made that uC, per bat f i traffic. sarked. per cwl j I green cheese enters into the composition Oat, " I A bariry, brrvuis, harU-,- . " I SS feed. of the moon. PARNEIX'8 PCNIBHMEN'T. 1 SI Rartf, ciMH'pad ora. atera IIH 1 Ti " Cora. caoipi Parnell's position ia peculiarly disThe recent decision by Judge Ander a. Plot tressing. But a few weeks ago, an idol son is exciting much comment Outside Hick patent " tI " confiMraifht crada in and lore t secure the swming the territory the view taken of it is Other craaaa " IW fKH dence of his own nation and the world. favorable. In the DM . Bulled Oata. per IN a different Itraa and bawrta " territory e to the Now pitifully clinging waning result was of course to have been exHat. remnant of his power, and reaching out Timothr. atr'bt per t'a U OS pected. " IS M to friends who turn away from him. Timothy, m id Ked Top ItU in overthrow comes his for II SO The cry Cor. Shepard, of the New York Mail Wild Loeera k great measure from those who hsd and KrunttL. fails to find scriptural au I'soDcr. given him the hand of fellowship and thority for dying his hair, and hia lock Hattar, beet, per 1 lb . 2S X2 Utah, had loudest sounded his praise. are therefore gray. His brain matter Butler, 34 Ymx. per do 1 3U It cannot be aaid that Parnell has not could partake of the aame hue with ad Potatoes, per owt..... I Cabbage, 9 earned the fate that haa overtaken him. vantage to itself. " 4 Ti Onions, & Lureraaseed. per lb... He earned it w hen he shamelessly beCental sacks .. 71, H ' 3D rwaraleas sacks a trayed the hospitality of his associate Aocokdiko to the Denver Table tt It Ui salt, per 0Shea. No palliation can be advanced. the Fanners Alliance and the Demo Clean cuaroe salt p'r t'a ft Retail prices are about 1 J per ceat higher. It is not an excuse to say that others cratic party are working in double har There is no outside market for wheat, and the ) milk. iH-mplC- vJmVi;f - . , 111 have sinned as deeply. It is not an excuse that these others have been shielded, or that they are among the number clamoring for the retirement of Parnell. The wrong was deoe when they were shielded. The time had come for an example to lie made and circumstances of his own moulding selected Parnell as the victim. Whatever the ultimate result, he is a sacrifice for hi own error. He is a vicarious sacrifice for the error of other. It has long been a shame to civiliza tion that a man could safely and with out odium or reproach break laws that involved the downfall and absolute ruin of some woman better than himself, but only weaker. In protesting against the retention of Parnell aa a party leader, people are protesting against this grave Of course and anomalous injustice. there are envious rivals and other enemies who rejoice, but the great mass of opposition comes from those who feel an actual sorrow that one so favored and gifted aa Parnell should have proved so unworthy. There is something discouraging to honest industry in the enormous salaries paid to ball players. For a season of about five months, the actual time of employment being only a few hours each day, with no lost time for rain, the professional player receives more pay than an artisan. He gets more than a minister, more than the man who builds a wall, rears a house or paints it He gets more than a railway engineer, more than a bookkeeper or confidential clerk. In fact, with a few exceptions, he receives greater remuneration than any one else who draws wages. At the same time the average ball player is ignorant and illiterate. Often he has no trade, and between seasons he is simply a loafer. Away from the diamond the average one could not earn more than the usual stipend for carrying a hod. These facts do not have a tendency to incline the young American towards learning an honest and honorable trade. steadily opposed to legislation in favor of western interests, but this opposition ia being overcome by regular methods. There will be a new element at Washington participating in the 52nd Congress, and it will not be hostile to that vast section this side of the Mississippi It will advocate the free coinage of silver and the enactment of laws applying with equal justice to all classes. It will try to prevent the recurrence of such periods of stringency as the present by increasing the volume of currency and wresting from the gold magnates a portion of the autocratic power that has been so abused. Perhaps it would be aa well to wait a while, bearing Col. Fisk's suggnstion in mind, and following it if the necessity West will be in Washcontinue; remembering always that Og ington this winter to represent Utah, den would be the best place for the pro- the necessity for Buch a course having posed congress. been made clear to the business men of the territory. The gentleman will have RAILWAY PERILS. enough to do. It will be his duty to look after every section of Utah imparThe people who travel do not think tially and forget at times that he hails much about the perils of train men. from Salt Lake. If he shall labor for They do not think, for instance, that the interest of one little set of citizens every year 2,000 of these men meet to the neglect of others he will be violent death on the rail and that guilty of the precise form of error that every year 20,000 of them are maimed. he is sent to correct The Commercial Regiments going to the grave. An army has confidence that Mr. West is broad-minde- d of able bodied citizens annually becomenough to stand for the rights ing crippled. Facts worth thinking of the whole people. If he fail in this he will be reminded of his mistake with about, are they not? Years ago the ambition of Young promptitude and clearness. America was to go to sea. Today it is to The work is danbeconfe a railroader. Denver h,ad another murder yestergerous, and therefore attractive. There day. The victim was John P. Clow, an is a sort of fascination in its constant fighter and general tough who dallying with death. Brakemen are in- had long been seeking what he finally telligent. No stupid or lazy lad becomes got He was a bully and coward whose The risky vocation chief delight was to hang about Dena brakeman. 'draws its recruits from the best ver's worst resorts and slap the faces of of families. When there is a col- men who dared not resent it The lision or derailment, and the faithful world could well spare him. employe is found lifeless under the debris, in almost every case it means the There is hardly a hope that the presloss of a useful and citizen, ent congress will do anything to help and sorrow unspeakable to some wife or free coinage, except to intensify the demother. The public does not care par- mand the country is making for legislaticularly. The public is apt to be brutal. tion in this direction. Then the 52nd Now it does seem that the 2000 dead congress can make no mistake. and the 20,000 mutilated were important enough to look after a little. The presiThe n9w buildings along the business dent of the United States thought the streets assume an air more and more subject deserved mentioning in his mes- metropolitan. Ogden is destined to be sage, and probably his allusion to it was architectually a beautiful city as well as the one item of the document that has a commercial giant. There is a probability that people who think this view of the situation correct are being fooled. Judged from an unbiased standpoint the Alliance in tends standing upon its own bottom. supplies for local purpose base exceeded the demand. Farmers seem to be needing money, and hence offer very freely any product Uiey may bare. Chopiied feed of all kiada sella readily, caused doubtless by the firmness of the market ia oata. It ia expected that the coming week will see risible advances in chopped barley, corn, bran and shorts. Hay remains firm, with tb tmarket in faro of the seller. Flour ia produce shows healthy steady, and News of the appointment of S. IL IL feeling. Alfalfa seed is exremely weak and he to the dullest In tb whole produce BDPears Clark to the general managership of the market. There is practically no demand whatUnion Pacific will be received with satis- ever. faction all along the line. There ia no ness. better railroad man in the United States, THE CREAM OF THE SEASON. than Mr. Clark. He knows the Union Pacific thoroughly, and has handled it D GRAND before, displaying greater ability than marked any part of the Adams regime. Mr. Clark has long had the confidence and esteem of Jay Gould, who, appreciates a clear head and the wisdom com AT THE NOVELTY THEATRE ing from actual experience. If Mr. Clark would call back some of his old lieuten- TUESDAY EVENING, DEC, 1(5, 1890, ants, who were summarily beheaded by BETWEEN the Adams axe, he would have the approbation of the west . MISS ADELAIDE MOORE, From the GLOHE THEATRE. London, accunipanied by the Sterling Actor. MR. JOSEPIIII W1IEELOCK, And a company of smierior excellence in 1'IEKht LK CLLRtiE 8 treat play Fatal "A AdmishioS oOo Maiiiiage." and 11.00. Skats on Sale at Bond & Co'&, 333, 24th frr. TEN-ROUN- Glove Contest 'V vT?. "California Dcmpsey . The closing out sale of furnishing trooris still continues at M. M. Miller's, 322 Twenty-fift- h street Prices marked plainly. Atterbury, LJobson & Co. Closing out at less then cost M. M. Miller. Gents furnishings. 322 Twenty-fift- h WHOLESALE Importers G1CERS, ani Jobbers. AND THE "MONTANA KID." to stop the Montana Kid In the Kimcified time or else forfeit the entire gate money. Dempsey airree street Atterbury, Dobson & Co., ri'RNISHERS. leading 4 BOND EEVOB, Real Estate Transfers. Furnished by the Hendershot Aband Friday, stract office, 2111 Washington aver.ua. Thursday MANAGERS. The Largest Confectionary Manufacturers in Utah. Dec. 11 and 12. December 9, 1890: The Reigning Farorites, M. D. Freeman to James Brown, part ELITC11 GOODYEAR, k SCHILLINGS of NWM W., 950. S. A. Lindh to Hannah M Osburne part lot 6 blk LI "B" $500. Wm Burrup et si, to James Burrup And Royal Conrt Fist Part. John Elitch. Jr., WU lot 2 blk 1 plat "B." $1 Proprietor, ('has. E. Schilling, Manager. Wm Shaw to Robert Hogan part lot 2 Everything new in the Program. New New Scenery. blk W plat C" $750. In Gorgeous A Bovle to Hannah Hamiltin lots 33 Wardrobe and J 910,000 Draperies for the Great First Part. and 34, blk 5 Central Park 9550. Comedians as Monte Cristo Jesters. Voraliete A Crash aw to Miss Christabella as Gay Cavaliers. Musicians as Monte Crist Crashaw, part lot 9 blk 9 plat 'B" 1. Fishermen. 25-C- -l Factory and Salesrooms, MINSTRELS, Cof-tum- Total 9 1 ,752. Great sale of Chamber Seta at THE FAIR this week. Atterbury, Dobson from McNctt'b. & Co., two doors Fine neckwear, Atterburv, Dobson & The only original CHAS. W. GOODYEAR. The unique artist, CHAS. E. SCHILLING. The negro Delineator, GEO. H. EDWARDS. Symonds, Hughes and Rastus, Bently Brothers. Brother Leondor. Mason and Titus. THE SOUTHERN QUARTET. And Co, A Citizen'8 Death. The death of William A.Hohr took place on Sunday at 12:20 p. m., at the residence of WT. M. BoRtaph. His age age was 31 years and his malady rheumatism of the heart The remains were sent east on Monday at 5:20 p. m. Host of others. Reserved Seats H.00. Now on Sale at Bond's. H. M- - QUAVER, 2327 WALL AVENUE, OGDEN. fl IHIl'aWIWaW ala MlaWH LPUTIsTAM; One Price Clothing House 362 St. Woodmansee Blk. Twenty-Fourt- h Hats lfli im NOB HILL PROPERTY A SPECIALTY. Sold at All Goods OGDEN, No trouble to show property. Call and spo me No. 2tU, Wash. Ave.. . - t;taii. ogdex, : : FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS! Mug footing StsdlaMUUonaoC Home Miser to Standard superior excellence proron in millions of homos for mors than a quarter of a century. It ued bf the United State Oorernmnnt. Endowed by the head of the Great Universities as tho Stronifest, Purest, and most Healthful. Dr. Price's Cream Making Powder doe not contain Ammonia, Lime or Alum. Sold only PH10E B.UUN0 POWDER CO. in t ans. New York. Chicago, San Francisco St Louis. i GOODS Of the Latest Designs, Conistinr of FINE GOLD AND SILVF.R WATCHES, JEWELRY. SOLID SILVER AND PLATED WARE, CHICAGO PRICES! : : : UTAH. OF- - Stnler takes pleasure in announcing to his patrons and tho public generally, that he has j lift received from the East and West a Mr. E. HOLIDAY Hnnls JOBBERS FINE JEWELRY larjre stock of U SHOES, TRUNKS, VALISES. Real Estate and Loans. and Garden Tracts. law-abidi- Fnrnishmff (Member Real Estate Exchange) CHOICE LOCATIONS in all parts of the City. GOOD RANCHES e I HARDWARE, Stoves, Tinware, Etc. DIAMOND JEWELRY Well assorted Clocks, which he will sell at very low prices. It will, repay any one to inspect Mr. Steler's stock, and be convinced that never before has jewelry been offered at snch low prices as he otTors nt present to the public fall at MILES, STREVELUULMER 24G8 and 2470 Washington Ave. E. STELER. Xo. 27G Twenty-fift- h St. Telephone 211. Roger Brcra., Plated Silverware. Boyle Block. I |