OCR Text |
Show a. OGDEN DAILY COMMERCIAL: Fill DAY, AUGUST 14. 1691. Uo la to Kin. are connantly In New York citj out of Wi.;luvmrt. Is 4?,Oi0 per-.ciLer cities the pn.jp-- niuu is tie sane AH then CQ aCCOriicg tO populiUvO. fcrtaimte individuals pr.tfcss thrir at.x-letto work, to Uil for almost aty price, that they may keep soul and bo!y together. TLe sole reason why they da not work, they would Lave it believed, is because the world is agii-s-t them aui vUl tot toiler tLcia to earn &a Loiet living. Try them, Give them employm-- nt B will be fuand that not one sewing in five can even run a decect sein. k profess to o 2Tot girf ta tea c' do housework can kindle a fire properly. Of the men, not one carpenter in foui can be trusted to perform a simple task in woodwork. Not one iron worker is four can do exactly what he professes U do. In large printing cfiiees it is will great difficulty that satisfactory proof readers are secured. Anions stenographers and typewriters cr.Joubtediy not one in twenty knows the proper of the English language, enough of current events and literatur-tmake a tolerable business letter writer. Probably a third of theia are shaky in their excelling. of the unemThis is why three-fourtployed in America are out of work. They are out of work because they have not 4one in with all their might to prepare themselves in the best way for what they had chosen. They did not go in to win. If one who has a task to do puts all his soul into it, and resolves that he will do it as well as it can be done no matter how simple it is, that person will not be The world long out of employment. has its soul vexed out of it because of tlovenly work. Life is a burden to those who hire employes, because of things half done. All depends on the spirit with which one starts in life. The winner selects his future occupation carefully. lie is bound down to no particular rut of suc cess, lie only knows that whatever task he has selected he is going to accomplish it as well as it is possible to do it, and that in the long run he is going to win. lie may be out of employment He may be forced to change his occupation. But he still knows that in him is good, faith ful work; that there is a field for it somewhere, and it is his place to find that field. The winner is he who never does slovenly work and never lets him self run down. al-.t- y T Ti TTnvrvm DO YOU MED JOB riilJN TLB U ! Hu'w to kp eo. J in Let weither: WciiLcr is PiTTicii. being BOW a respectable EllT- ricd man, illicit come to America nmke a career for timstlf. He u cer- ail tainly a better man than the Prise of Wales. And in America, we say it with modest pride, ability a&l respectability are always recognized. OF ANY KIND? When Joseph E. McDocall died the Democratic party lost one of its wisest Leads, and a Udy whom Edwin vro-Tt- Arnold pronounced the most beautiful woman Le Lai ever aeea, lost a model husband. If You are engaged in any kind of Business, be it Large or Small, you will need something in our line. COMMERCIAL, RAILROAD, BANK, LEGAL AND COUNTY A live prince is he who is now via; tier America Prince George of Greece, who came to us by the Pacific route, and saved the life of the heir to the Russian throne just before he left Japan. George is 6 feet 7 inches high. If he is every inch a prince he xnut be a very fine fellow indeed. L. F. Livingston, president cf the Georgia farmers' Alliance, visited Earn, lately, and initiated the Kansas farmers into the Georgia Alliance methods. But he has views on the Union soldier pension business as follows: "I must take stronger ground against the infamous pension swindle, for I saw lots of lazy, healthy bummers, able bodied, who should be at work on the farms, and would, were it not that they are supplied in idleness by a pension. They are no better than our who are compelled to earn their living by manual labor, and are, therefore, a much more self respecting lot of fellows. Had our southern Alliance the power we would abrogate all The war was over more than pensions. twenty-fiv- e years ago, and our southern people won't stand that swindle any To-pek- a, longer." The Oldest Republic. there are 200,000 Swiss emigrants, and they are among the most desirable of all our foreign citizens, In this country PRINTING AND BINDING. these brave people who come from the oldest republic to cast their lot in the greatest and richest one. Among all the quarter of a million Swiss among us there is scarcely a pauper or a criminal, and not a tramp. In New York city alone are 25,000 Swiss inhabitants. Twenty thousand arrests were made ia the big city List year, and of these only were of persons born in Switthirty-fivzerland. Arrivals at the portof New York from the little mountain rimmed republic number 8,000 a year. The Swiss confederation will be 600 years old this year. Sept. 5, 6 and 7 will be celebrated the anniversary of tha final throwing oil of the Austrian yoke in 1291. It is a wonderful story, whether Wilhelm Tell ever lived or not, the tale of how mountaineers wholqyed liberty banded together, a mere hand ful, and defeated the Austrian army. Mountain dwellers have ever loved liberty. Besides being the oldest republic in the world, Switzerland is undoubtedly the best educated one. She has the best free schools of any nation. Here practically originated the idea of the trade and technical school which has done so much for European industries. The Swiss are the best educated nation in existence, and this is why they make such desirable citizens in America. Americans must never forget that Louis Agassiz came to us from Switzerland. e The Prince of Wales. The mother of the Prince of Wales is ft woman of uncommon intellectual power. Probably not till after her death will it be known how much real influence she had in a quiet way in shap ing for good the public affairs of hex realm. Certainly at times she has dis played rare tact and sagacity in a manner that surprised her ministers. She if one of the most scholarly women of hex time, too, and has good literary talents. Prince Albert, father of the heir to the British throne, was remarkable for hie Bhrewd common sense, lie was greatly interested in agriculture, and many public enterprises of great value owe either their inception or encouragement to him. He originated the Crystal Palace World's fair. He was so moral as to have been considered rather Miss Nancyish by the fast set in England, but he went to his grave honored and lamented by the British nation, and without a stain on his memory. The son of these two excellent and uncommon individuals will ascend the British throne in the judgment of the people the more distant the day the better. What qualifications has Albert Edward to be at the head of a nation that thinks itself the leader of all civilization? Well, the Prince of Wales is good natural and has a pleasant, easy society manner. And he has so little of what western Americans call "gumption"' that he will tell any secret, however dangerous, to a woman whom for the time being he is sweet on. It is a proof of the wonderful security now enjoyed by ocean passengers that the steamer City of Richmond took fire when about half way across the sea going from New York to Liverpool and remained on fire six days, and yet not a life was lost The passen gere were not even seriously alarmed. The fire broke out in the hold and burned silently till the ship reached Liverpool, damaging nothing beyond the part of the cargo where it first ignited. While the officers of the steamer could not extinguish the fire they did keep it under perfect control. The first woman to receive the British decoration of the Victoria cross of honor is Mrs. Grim wood, wife of Commissioner Grimwood, who was killed at Manipur. While brave men fell all around her during the massacre, she attended to the wants of the wounded and dying. The heroic woman was exposed over and over again to the hostile fire and finally received a painful gunshot wound in the arm. Whatever you may need, be it much or little, come and see us. We want to figure with you. We'll figure with you right. We'll treat you square. The especial attention of attorneys is called to our unequalled facilities for turning out pamphlet work, in the way of briefs and abstracts. The Monroo Doctrine In Hayti. The New York Sun speaks the senti- JrT ISFACTION GUARANTEED. We are fully equipped with the latest pattern machinery and new material to do you justice on prices as well as a high class of work. In a case which was pronounced genuine hydrophobia from a cat bite, the patient died, be it recorded and remembered, without any of the violent and tragic symptoms, such as barking, snapping, etc, with which popular superstition invests this terrible disease. Once more the drowning season is on and in full blast for the unfortunates who never learned to swim. In Illinois the bill entitling women to Tote at all school elections is now a law. Tie Commercial Plishii Company. ments of every citizen of America in discussing the possibility of European interference in Haytian affairs, in case the negro republic shall prove unable to hold herself down. A statemeut was made in the Paris Siecle that European cabinets were discussing the expediency of taking united action to restore order in Hayti. That is how the European governments would probably word it, all the while that the fingers of some of them at least were itching to get a hold on the big and rich West Indian island. But the United States would certainly not permit that under any circumstances. The Sun remarks: It la not likely that the European governments of 1891 will undertake any sort ot intervention in Hayti, or interference with the domestic affairs of that island, npon any pretext whatever, without the cognizance, consent and approval of the United States. The broad principle formulated for the Information of the other hemisphere by President Monroe in 1821, covers this case and all others of its kind: "With the existing colonies or dependencies of any European power we have not interfered, and shall not iuterfere; but with the governments which have declared their independence and maintained it, and whose independence we have, on great consideration and Just principles acknowledged, we could not view an interposition for oppressing them, or controlling in any other manner their destiny by any European power, in any other light than as a manifestation of an unfriendly disposition toward the United States." For nearly seventy years there has been a vast difference of opinion and conflict of historical evidence as to what the Monroe doctrine really was, and just what construction was originally intended to be put upon the warning so boldly proclaimed to all Europe by Mr. Monroe at a time when this was a nation of only 10,000,000 people, with a total annual revenue of only $aa,000,000. But of the meaning of the Monroe doctrine as anderstaod today in the United States, and as approved by the sentiment of all patriotio Americans, and as generally respected on the other side of the Atlantic, there is not the lightest room for doubt. It ia therefore quite incredible that then should be any preconcerted action on the part of European governments for the regulation of Haiti's internal affairs, with the Uuited States ignorant and Ignored, or even that any individual power should carry Its Intervention or interference beyond such measures as are commonly recognized as necessary for the protection of its own subjects or citizens. If in the course of hum mii events such a thing should happen, our department of state wonld know Its duty, and in the perfunnauoa of its duty it would be sure of the support of united public sentiment. |