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Show (H.DKN DAILY COMMKlX'lAL; WrlDN'KSlM V. Ali.l'ST o, loll. 3 i macy of our aUt ar HONJLMlRONlTiB Rfiiublieaa Orator presses His Views. TLe THEIR A PAST Terr Bad Sotkm Lkh Has the WorlJ Kiver of llniuau Lluud. tvt of Utah? Bat bow about the peoj-lWith reference to theui, icy surprise reference to th &g a great aa w ith country. I epoke to e.i large audit-coes- , (in the towns of UriLam, Ixvan, I'njvo, Salt Lake City and Otiden.) There were 2,i.X0 people present at my second Bieeti at OJcd, and for appreciation, enthusiasm and quick apprehension that audience cannot be surpassed in any New England city. The long and bitter fight between the Mormons and gentilt baa injured the territory greatly. An effort ia now being made to induce the people to divide on different lin. This ia leading up to a bitter contest. Some of the gentiles who have been engaged so long in the contest of the past refuse to believe that the Mormons are sincere in their claim that they have abandoned polygamy and will henceforth obey the laws. Many good men in the territory think that the Mormons should be taken at their word and given a fair trial. I mixed as little as possible in these local of quarrels. More than the people in Utah today are Mormons. With their past history or ruligious belief I have no sympathy. No doubt the development of thut uninviting country is largely due to Mormon pluck and energy. Borne day some wise man will be able to explain the why and the wherefore of the various religious svBtetns which have uppearcd in this world of ours, and may be able to show philosophically how and I why they took root and fl jurished. cannot do it. I do know as a rule that heretofore persecutions have always ended in an increased growth of the persecuted. The ashes c f the martyrs have been the seed of all the churches and without regard to their faith. The blood of a prophet has often been the only thing which hs made the of his calling sure. The moment a man suffers persecution for his belief the masses think he must be right or he would succumb and avoid his punishment. So, I presume, it will ever be. The future growth and prosperity of Utah is of equal interest to Mormon and Gentile. The inllux of people into thBt territory from the east would be large if its real merits were once understood, and if it could be decided that the government is to be run on the principles of There can love, charity and kindness. be little doubt that the Mormon rule has been one of exclusivent9 and prejudice. It has taken a long while for the Mormons to lenrn that 100,000 people cannot manage or dominate They have no doubt been taught that they owe a higher allegiance to their church than to their country. Millions of Christians for fifteen centuries were taught and believed the same thing. To destroy that notion has cost the world rivers of human blood. A mere handful of men can never establish that doctrine in this world again. The world as a whole moves forward, not backward. From thi time forward governments will permit people to hold what religious notions they please, but will exact of them complete submission to all civil authorities in matters which pertain to civil government. Questions of civil politics will never again be left to the decision of pope, bishop, apostle or priest, simply because that is one of the things that the world has outgrown. AVhen this is once fully comprehended the Mormons will accept the situation, no doubt, as other religious societies have done. The Mormons have heretofore held doctriues repugnant to the rest of the civilized world and leading to practices in violation of the civil laws of all civilized nations. They have no doubt been intolerant in many of their practices. It will be hard work for them to change their views. Whether they do it or not, one thing ia clearly shown by the experience of past aes. It is this, that they will never be led to abandon their beliefs if their teachers resort to the same intolerance and unkindness complained of by the Gentiles as being characteristic of the Mormons. It is natural for all people to think themselves right and every one else wrong. The Mormons act as if they kaew they were right. No doubt many of them really think that be the such to know they of the balance The fact. world ore just as certain that the Mormons know nothing of the kind. Such belief naturally leads to intoleraace. The practical question is how best to treat such a genuine belief, even though it be all a delusion. One's impulse is to crush it out by the strong arm of the law and by harsh measures. The history of the world is that the crushirg business seldom if ev?r wins. The great bulk of these people are sincere, devout, earnest people. Prayer and pioty seem to abound among them. In worldly matters they are admitted to be frugal, industrious and honest. They have made a dry and barren waste rich in fields of grain, grass, roots and fruits. Their religion may have been bad; their husbandry has been good. The , the Gentiles, are soon to outnumber them in Utah. The march of human events has already d screed that. Would it not be well if Mormon and Gentile could unite on some plan that would let the bad in each system good drop out and simply preserve the in both? A people which has subdued an arid waste, which has created a wonderful country where nature seemed to have decided in favor of a desert, surely subdue to able ought to be and g07ern themselves. I predict that Buch in the end: will be the outgrowth of the present intermingling of different kinds of civilization. Commerce and business have often worked wonders where bigotry and intolerant Love of humanity, kin have failed. nese of heart, comfortable houses au good crops enable people to live as neighbors who have few religious notions in common. That such may be the e lutionofa problem whi.lx has tcxcj three-fourth- s ' Anglo-Saxons- , C OEl tO list i Jt Lff jwt'i j 1LU. ih i ttat-xf-- IK.. HOUi'HCLSER'S Mr j ! Bajrif D FFlCU-T- id Y. iww it Auy LasrQ-IJr- r, wU.jj to pay fur the of a fiii;!y, Yur isile Aarut lh. Lk-ul- t must l iftN of ti ntft-iuThe tV.its Fkujms PuUitbirg A getting w ith any a raiily H. ub lit kt tJ Grounds, iucIuJIe article cf aiinwt aay tort it i bfR-UUJ fort, and t o budding, tstiief in the casa of luxuries, for tLa Li L sold at undrr tale ordtrg prnaie of lLa probfcie court, oo iuust e!lu reason tluit f ttawj the demand u inor ejuall- -' Bids Hi art be Lauded into the law fcmited, the number cf parckist-rWash- ti. the Eumbrr cf prodaoe-rcomsponi- ofik of breJen A Gunnell, 2t ington avenue, between-- now and August icgly email and the chance of tracking :iiia. Tti u eLoioe uisil" property, tutl woi k or untruthful statements grtat-- J tiMog the sain now occupied by Alfred er. Bat fur the thicks Lkh every one IL Xeiaun. iuut bave, and which tnot tnu&t have There are but two cLkf crossings of , cheap as may be, buying ia a lottery, ti WatLicgton avenue; oce it at Tnty-fourt- h j with a miserable prevalence of blanks. and the other at Twenty bfih Yon can get tin nous butter fur a dol-- ! i street; aud of th twa, Twenty-fourta pound, but the search for eatable lar u a re Hill the better the City 64 butter at forty cents a pound ia a weary kDocka out the part of T?nty-tifth- . and depressing pursuit. It is the &mb This property, by spending a little with the innumerable articles cf clothrental ing anl materials of clothing. From aicney for repairs, will bring equivalent to twenty-livper cent- - on the hat that grows gray in a month's the investment. Title guaranteed pererTiee to the shoe eoles that will not fect. stand a day's rough tramping, the things that are turned out in Urge quantities OBSTACLES OF PKOGEESS. for "the million" are not trustworthy. I think the chief reason is that in our Some People Who are too Cautious complex and widely ramified tystem of About Their Discoveries. exchanges the producer and the conMr. D. D. Jonee, chairman of the com- sumer rarely come into direct relation mittee on manufacturers of the Cham- with each other. The former rarely ber of Commerce, ia always working knows, and still more rarely cares, for the opinion the latter may have of him, away persistently and intelligently for of hia methods, his character and hia the development of new enterprise in The seller deals today with one Ogden. His committee, indeed, has in goods. et of tomorrow with another, buyers, branch most about the charge important of industry and enterprise connected and to on, and the buyers change their with the development of Ogden for places of purchase with the greatest frewithout the introduction of new and ex- quency. tensive manufactures in and about our The relation indicated by the old fashlimits, we can never hope to attain that ioned words "custom" and "customer" growth which we have a right to expect. is dying out, and with it the possibility So we always keep an eye on Chairman of and the hope of profitJones, who by the way is too good a bus- ableaccountability honesty. The type of modern reiness man to give details of projects pretail is that mott abominable dematurely. Yesterday Mr. Jones sat in vice dealing the "bargain counter," where cheaphis olllce with a peculiarly pleased expression upon his countenance and con- ness, real or imagined, is the main thing jecturing that he was ton happy to be considered. Scribner's. curt and laconic we ventured to enquire A HlUaful Ignorance. what he aa chairman of the committee on manufacturers was doiig for the city. Nature has evidently done wisely in Immediately his face lengthened out hiding tomorrow behind an impenetrable and ho replied: "O nothing tint is, night What a dismal plight it would nothing for publication you know." be for Flora to foresee Reginald's angry Mr. a Jonee found magnifyHowever, and possible profanity in the impatience ing glass and produced some white sand sudden May day shower, and so for an as tine as powder and us to examine it under the glass. There are incident which has not yet occurred to several varieties of the white grit and feel that she must give him the mitten! each kind was readily distinguished We can hear the poor girl sobbing, "Regfrom the other by size shape and color inald, I love thee, but never more be when magnified. These were specimens Buitor of mine." But why, in the sumof sand used in the manufacture of mer moonlight, as they loiter by the sea glass. Some of them no doubt came and breathe the lover's tow, should they from this neighborhood but there were listen for the langh of fate? Why, beseveral samples from the east used probcause unfallen of shower of May that ably for purposes of comparison. Mr. Jones gave many interesting facts, con- npon furniture yet nnstuffed, should lose the hour which, whatever becerning the peculiarities of sand used in they the manufacture of glass and it was tides, will be theirs forever? Why should easy enough to determine that he is in- Flora know Reginald except as time vestigating the subject with a view to gradually reveals him? local application of his knowledge but Would you have her see today the thin he absolutely rofued to talk about that. white hair on the shining dome that Ho stated however that one of the chief shall tomorrow replace this brown luxdillicultios which and uriance of curls? capitalists Would you have her in others encounter developing the various depositee of the mountains aghast untimely at that ponderous form is the inaccessability of those who think which shall hereafter supersede this they have found a good thing. Those slight and elastic figure? Would it be parties who make what they think is a better for her or for him if she could hear discovery often want a Sl.OltO, or so the the sharp, impatient word that from first thing before they will tell where those tender lips she never yet has heard? their specimens come from so that it is Who knows? Perhaps that she has almost impossible to give their alleged never suspected the possibility of that discoveries a thorough investigation. word may make it impossible. sharp Of course there are dozens of worthies s knows? Perhaps when May day Who 'discoveries' of crude material comes there may be no sudden ore, marble, tire clay, etc., and specimens moving often give no idea as to the value or shower. George William Curtis in Harworthlessness of nn alleged "find." So per's. it is hard to sift them out and because A Huge Turtle. of this rroj ens'.ty r wantinr too much About two miles below the junction, before anyone can know whether a disin this county, can be found a deep hole covery is of any value or not, has been of water in Current river, in which a made. No doubt that many valuable "tiiids" in the mountains have not been large turtle, measuring about four feet utilized for this reason. Of course this across the back, has been seen at differis a great obstacle to various manuent times for the last fifty years. Various facturing enterprises which it is be- plans have been devised and put into lieved might be protitabiy introduced in execution to capture the tortoise, but np this vacinity. to the present time to no avail, as he seems to be proof against spikes, spears, Everybody take the Union Pacific trains to Hot Springs, as the motor trains gigs, gunpowder and dynamite. A few days since a hunter residing in will not run today. that neighborhood, while passing along Loans Closed Promptly. near the river bank, espied his turtleship There is no delay in closing loans on basking in the sunshine on the root of a improved city and farm property. large oak. Quickly bringing his WinJ. D. Jarvis, chester to his shoulder (a he First National Bank Building. fired, the ball striking the monster fairly between the eyes. But judge of his A BET OF $1,000. chagrin and surprise when the turtle, instead of tumbling over dead, quietly let J. S. Black on a Tour of the World go his hold and swam away as placidly and unconcerned as if he had been Against Time on a Cycle. J. S. Black, a young and expert bi- thumped by a gravel. Upon examination the hunter found cyclist, gave an exhibition on the streets of Ogden last night that was well worth that the ball, after striking the turtle, had glanced upward and imbedded itself witnessing. Young Black is on a tour in the body of the oak to a depth of six of the world, w hich he proposes to ac- inches. It is supposed that the monster complish wholly on a bicycle. He left shellfish made his way up from the MisCleveland, O., on June 2nd and arrived sissippi river in the great freshet in the here last Sunday, lie proceeds from spring of 1841. Eminence (Mo.) Current here to San Erancisco, then by steamer Wave. to Japan and Australia, and then to A Story of Miss Eamet, China, and thence overland through Asia to Europe and finally back to CleveIt is recorded of the young beauty that land. the Prince of Wales, one evening during The tour was undertaken under a bet a performance of "Romeo and Juliet," of $4,000, that it could be accomplished sent one of his p to inform in two years, the bicyclist to pay his way her that he was to visit her in coming as he goes exclusively from the exhibi- her loge to congratulate her on her briltions he makes. On Thursday night Mr. Black gives liant snccess. "Many thanks to his royal an exhibition in Cook's rink at Five highness for his kind intentions," was Points, which will doubtless draw a large the reply of Miss Eames, "but I never crowd as he is a great master of the receive calls from gentlemen in my wheel. dressing room. If the prince and princess will permit me, I shall be happy to come The Ladies'8 Friend. to the royal box and pay my respects to Is anything that makes their washing them instead." This spirited yet courteous response light. The King ' of Soap, handled by If. M. Bond & Co., is a boon to all house- was reported to the Prince of Wales, and, holds. in consequence, he has taken a great fancy to the young vocalist, who is to be Davis Will Case. the prima donna at the private concert 4. Arguments Butte, Mont., August ve case Davis in were continued the today which the prince and princess will on the admissibility of expert testimony at Marlborough House. Cor. Pittsburp on hand writing. Warren Toole opened Bulletin. for the contestants and was followed by A ''Rt Thut Plaj . the luno. Mr. Clayberg, Col. Ingersoll and Mr. M'oi. '"sb'e, of Shelton, Conn., Meyer, quoting abthorities in support of n Us iino he other the admission. The contestants Sj i closed their arguments and propoLents morning, tnd i ao lug mat no on was in the room he began to be a believer in side will be closed tomorrow. spirit. Ou investigation he found his Journalise i)ead. . (stpf. icing up aad down on the key-hv- i. 0 uipgly delighted at the sounds iv tiro, August 4. 1 .Tames Hugh re, After that she was watched, .:ditor of the Pica produced. ti i and whenever the piano is left open she 9 of the brightest journalists in u:.u will play upon it to the best of her this .ty, died this morning of ability. Cor. New York Sun. ia j e s J tcue bt e t , aides-de-cam- r -- ,th? ty the lliag. LapiLnrss g'l HISTORY. W L J ia l"uh bu-di-- 1 Ex- IX?t tti .1 U--t Low completely he is d ;t aevrt liiOUU t4 a jui.tl He Lad Ilthett of all b Power. Lcarcoji U. JL Au. Gov't Report, 17, fever iaamc.L but gr-.tit- Lru frjuie t'f hi ergtl cjva Liia the aJriasb:'.!- - of taking a wite he aur-cteif tey wuii find and wid a nice girl be wuuli marry Lrr y i4ikl oat a leNiLt fced girl from hi factory ai-- 1 Ler to uurry him. &e consented, ar-- d LJis-.- agreed hi twlowl laboratory t j to leav a day's weJdicg trip. Oa the way from th chapel ia wh:c i they wer married (o the railway staUun the carriage j aased the laboratory. The temptation was too mach. Edison Mopped the carriage and, telling the bride that he would fallow her to the station in time to eaten the train, ha plunged into some experiment that had occurred to him daring tiio church ier- Ticea. Hour after hour pa-d- . The poor bride waited all the afternoon in the station and was then driven back to the hooee. It wa 11 o'clock at night before. hia assistant could tear EdLon away from hi laboratory and get him tjj Baiting? t.t d Poivder ard ; n home. When he is at work CJiaon loses all count of tuna. Ua win keep the whole establishment on a rush for hour at a stretch, and atem astonished when any one hints that it might be well to get something to eat He ia capable of working all day and night without allowing fatigue. Chicago Journal. Spe4 ud Form Id Ship. The primary condition for high peed is fineness of form, so that the water at the bow of the vessel may be separated and thrown to one side and brought to rest again at the stern and behind the vessel with the least possible disturbance, and the measure of efficiency of form for the maximum speed intended is inversely at the height of the waves of disturbance. A ship that has been designed to attain a speed of fifteen knots will, when moving at twelve knots, show a very slight disturbance indeed, and in one designed for eighteen knots, when moving at this lower speed, it will be scarcely observable; but however fine the lines of a ship may be, she must at every speed produce some disturbance, although it may be very slight, as the water displaced by her must be raised above the normal level and replaced at the normal levels hence, at or near the bow of a ship there ia always the crest of a wave, and at or near the stern the hollow of one. When a vessel is going at its maximum speed, and is properly designed for that speed, the wave should not be very high, nor should it extend beyond the immediate neighborhood of the bow; likewise the wave of replacement should be the same at or near the stern of a ship, and the "wake" or disturbance of water left behind in the track of the ship should bo narrow. A. E. Seaton in Scribner'a, Coats In Theater). What ought one to do with one's coat, hat and umbrella on entering a res taurant or other place of entertainment? What one ought not to do is to hang them on the nearest peg. However in vitingly these conveniences may offer themselves, it is at your own risk that you intrust your property to their keeping. Yott have no remedy if (as will sometimes happen even in the best regulated restaurants) somebody makes off with them, leaving a very inferior assortment of articles behind. If, however, a polite waiter offers to help one off with one's coat, all is well. If he takes your property and hangs it up for you he does so as an agent of his employers, and you can recover from them if it disappears. This principle has been asserted for theatrical cloak rooms by a decision against Mr. Augustus Harris in the Westminster county court. A gentleman had left his coat and hat with Mr. Harris that is, in Mr. Harris' cloak room on the occasion of one of the fancy dress balls at Covent Garden. They disappeared. He had to leave without his property, and has only lately and partially got 6on.e of it back. His honor said (we are glad to see) it was monstrous to say that merely nominal damages were sufficient Pall Mall Budget ABSOLUTELY PURE CARPETS To please all purses and tastes. Come and see the noveltie1 ia.es am d) i rint. If SO it will be well for von tn remcmlu'r tint iv i elegant line of samples from the largest exclusive Carpet House of the Northwest- We offer no old stock but new attractive styles, novel colorings, new weaves, pleasing patterns, reliable new things in every grade. We have secured the exclusive control for this dace of the onlv nmrtirnl pet Exhibitor to show our samples in. We will show yon a etlect is pleasing and gratifypanorama ot Carpets tree--ting. Call at r- Times. -' - rr. he THE PEOPLE'S STORE. StKa.t of Potoffiee. Twentv-Fonrt- h DR. J. STEINBERG, German Specialist, cures all diseases of a private nature as successfully by correspondence as at his ol!ix8 which is evident by the hundreds of testimonials from all over the of which are publisher however. Medicine furnished for borne treatment carefully packed to any part of the United States; Caeada or Mexico. Do not give up hope even if your case has been cronounced incurnahU v others but write to me for advice. Corwjiondence confidential. Knclose stamp for answer. J. NTK1NBURO. luxims Zl and 21 Knickerbocker building 178 and 17l Tremont street, Boston, Massachusetts. coun-try'no- MY NERVOUS DEBILITY AND SEXUAL WEAKNESS for male or female made from my special German formula. or aiz boxes which will cure most cases for j& FILL lYic ner box II RICEEY'S UNDERTAKING PARLORS Funeral Directors and Embalmera Wa carry the largest, most oomplnt CASKETS Wt of Chicago. 0 bodib and e'.waot tnrk of FUNERAL FURNISHINGS Services and conducted at onr Parlor when denlred. Embalming or ahipmeut a specialty. RICHEY'S UNDERTAKING PARLORS. THE FINEST IN UTAH. 1 113 ARSE 2263 Washington Avenue. Telephone 207 HARDWARE! IIAKDWAKE! BUYERS WHO WANT THE BEST GASOLINE STOVE SHOULD LOOK AT L m id p Gut Jcwe CALL EARLY. - yy 360 24th Street, i While there look at our Peninsu lar and Ohio Steel Ranges. KNOW BES0RB & CO: NEWLY ESTABLISHED- - T. WOLLSTEIN & CO., (Branch No. 14.) Kauf-mann- Bow Hair Is Blanched. It will be observed that, if the papilla is obstrur tcid or incrusted with deposits from tho sweat glands, such as sodium chloride or orgaaio salts, the sebaceous Stcretioa not be'.ng able to reach the papilla the hair is deprived of its coloring material. This we believe to be one of the most common causes of blanching of the hair. The skin eliminates a small quantity of salts, a little carbonic acid and a large quantity of water. The average amount of solids, according to Foster, in the fluid perspiration or sweat, is about 1.81 per cent, consisting of common salt and organic Baits gener ally. Hyland 0. Kirk in New York, - DO YOU WANT A NEW CARPET? Why Called "Omnibus." The father of the popular name "om's nibus," according to Rbhard story of "The Omnibus in Paris," was a certain M. Baudry, of Nantes, at the beginning of our century. The Pascal coaches, which obtained a monopoly from the king in 1CC3 for carrying his subjects at five sous a head, along three different routes in Paris, were first used But after a few by the bourgeoisie. years gentlemen and ladies, of high, birth and courtly breeding ruled that it was not vulgar to ride in a Pascal chariot or "five sous coach." The use of these public conveyances by the "quality" was noted as. an important event in the journals of the time; but it resulted in the exclusion of the common people from them, and the virtual appropriation of these privileged coaches by the aristocrats. The favor of "the classes" ruined the monopoly, however, which only paid so loug as its coaches were crowded by the masses, or So the PascaJ chariot disap"omnes." peared from the streets of Paris because it had ceased to be omnibus, or a democratic vehicle. Pall Mall Gazette, ! lislifs, lifts He Domestic and Importedo ant - Cigars, Ale and Porter. We make Family Trade our Specialty and will promptly deliver goods to all parts ol the city. Mail orders solicited and satisfaction guaranteed. Write for prices. Box 133. 240G Washington Avenue, OQ13EN. UTAH. THE OGDEN SPECIALISTS. Tt. C jM. IX SPECIAL, ATTENTION GIVEN TO T. A- - Cottingham, Diseases of the Ear. Diseases of the Nose. Diseases ot the Throat. Diseases of the Chest. Diseases of the Skin. Diseases of the Nervous System. Also Galvanic, Faradic and Static Electricity used. Oottingham, M. I Dispases neculiar to Women. All forms of Catarrh- " rr t" 'i. I!.: Diseases of Rectum, gans. viz piles, fistula and fissures treated without operation. Cancers removed without the knife. Antiseptic Surgery in all its departments, The "KOCH LYMPH" treatment for Tuberculosis. Mioroscopioal Examinations made. The above named doctors are regular graduates and have permanently opened for consultation and practice of various specialties. Having had advantages from the leading Hospitals and Specialists of the East, feel confident in assuring the public that all advantages will be given oases equal to Eastern Specialists. Office over Postofflce, No. 321 Hours to u a. m. ) SUD t0 ' m" ' Twenty-fourtStreet, ) i tu 8 offices h |