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Show r 7. H Hf-- III. VOL. The "Dumping Grund" of Nation. Amerlcftr, jbp, 'lum.iBS gxo wd." of nations. Not the part of nations as .;was Alexaqfria ofjcdtfr not the home pfc toett fiecrat. hr; own. groud, boast, fcfft tte dumping ,once a J.grojjq,d'i"pf;' nations, the convenient , corner oa,whf:iH;Qpe.d;umps' all her ! . trrie-oiM- ;; timinvaiiarchls filifiiUfieis, ;kand surpjug populationv Iti is doubt- less, aver j' easy and simple way ipr rfd of ;wed?; ;' y." "Iter frt4l J tc string pwi wm 4ravnja kiia-- (re"tt&4 , iHBlHit the wtjnst cfclMof AUm' " And the Snesttlid,' of Adam's Icift, his relationfuand friends, ha wit 1( BoS bfeosbyyr to take sdtantage. of the oppor'upitjfi. T& question ir not so much "of what doe the American peo. pie consist .bt .fathecfof what elements dsijable and most undesirable, .(Joes tfitot, consist? flerein, lies the difference betweea American popular fforernment 'and all othej free , 'Mt peoples are 6r,"aA.0leastj' composed of a..Ji8tincti,el4menti, With, race, traditions, language, history, is a common heritage one or more of these, religion possibly excepted. American will popula gorernmenti rests of a people of all possible peoples the most heterogeneous, that can be con- (.cel?ed..'; ,U tjsJt,. inchoate, partial-l- i copBtftqtfonSv on-th- e .of M&jLmfUdr,vCongWeratipn races, Iangges, traditions, jLnterests, in whfeh the originally dominant, and a ni'fgi$ danger of .belng . Instead ofactiyely, assimilaall ting o$eri (o lt.s$f It is the seeth. Jto d, i'!wafpH:otJjtonhSMoi?, and If orrnm over .again ip the Dane nine-1t- h century and. on a. stupendous after long centuries tri America people pfehaoj; ,tbf iwrefohedi;';;." t;liu'.s' Yet, ia. this, confusion, there are iotpg 'dfstsuctiojc more or less clearly ' inarkedV FJrstty ruje,.'f.ttie most ju askilled'' mechan, flesifabie fmigrant, ics excepted, 4 not remaia in the but take up farms in the west d northwest- - These are, hoover atf aiaVIth the sxme scaled Fossthly, ci-iit- a, .xptiooa wolf jujmbe 1 Secondly Uc,opera- - ftr.e generally oneV. tlvejm"echnicT the ' manufacturing class ih political matters, fo tfie "reaspn that a high tariff does ien (h'igh wages,fprcertain fa Tored grades.' So, tht the line of man, tjeTjrs ipractica3ly betweea ,rcoal barons" ufacturersincluding and "railroad" kings"' mechanics and theone side, and professional men, tradespeople and farmers' ,6n!tfce other, .This intermingling cKf lar w4 maf s on either sidi is complete; the jautjial, poltlcat Interests alum-dwelle- . j rs ' 4jCB4Dg,tht iajlff strong ' i ;, and clearly reeognlsedv , . Yt, r strange It. may appear at first sight, It isJUterally true that )n thla "warf and woof of "class" and "mast lifteret lies he safety and the hope of American popular govern-xotn- t. Wer, a.nx.5Lne "class," or any particular "mass" on one side or the W '4iiiir to'jbecpjai.oier'iKiweringl re wqld be imminent , JUAB EUREKA, danger of ciTil disturbance. Under plutocracy, jreaent . conditions tlwugh. UQde.nAabij; a menace to 'the (welfar,e of,, the "Republic, tan not gain conxptjei contrbi of Jhjs. political raa- - cifa?jj whiiaapnareatiyaQ consequence, of democratlCflnstittttions for. the, reason that the prof essionai and shop-keepin- g. "clii0ses,,,ja4'the', cities, , and the farming ItpaaBses'' in the counU-y- , asues with opposA thejft, t;Qn all.fj&aJ consifitrjicy" superior to all nominal a ' Grey, in he ''party, intercsta," ' jtstmlnstet BeTlew .tor. Argus't. latter is Iiland-Alliso- n . ' "There has been - Mc-Chiiyst- good music and a pleasant time. The admission will be 99 cents and the ladies extend a cordial invitation to all. The boys are expected to turn out in full force and make the affair a success. Be sure to brings a lady. A Ai yet the mayor is the only city of ficial who has attempted any defense or explanation of the action of the city council in appropriating pay to themselves for work which they are pledged to do without remuneration, lie says, the members of that body are pledged, to do the work attendant up on, regular meetings mty, and that committee work does not come under that head.. He does not explain by what right they accept this money, when section 12, of ordinance 3, compiled under the direction of this same council expressly states, that "No councilor can be interested, directly or indirectly, in any contract for work done or service rendered for the city except txuJi as pertains to actual expenses whil acting on committees." The members of the council,, with the passible exception of Councilor Donnelly, have grossly betrayed the trust placed in them,, and. have taken advantage of their positions to help themselves at the public crib. The mayor's explanation of the charge of $16 for 4 days spent in "directing and overseeing the expenditure of poll tai labor," is that the work was done at times when the street supervisor was unable to attend to his duties. In that case, th? supervisor should either have been removed, or some one appointed temporarily, at his expense. The supervisor's report, drawn up and signed by the Mayor tot .which we suppose a part of the 116 was paid shows that he drew for five months' service, 5279.00. The. bills for lumber, ter.msters and wagons were $171.67, total expenses I450.67J cash collected, $66, leaving a balance of $384.67 to be paid by the city. Nqw add to this the labor of 774 men, the number who worked out poll tax, at $3 per day, or $2,325. and we have a grand total of $2,706.67 for ttrectimprovemenls for Jive monslis. Does any suppose that the work could not b duplicated for that sum? one-fourt- h ' fn WAshlngton andne.dailf sg So-fa- r The silver purchased since July H,' gratis and had enacted an ordinance under the Sherman Act has cost prohibiting any other course, hence 3?90, an average of 83 cents an ounce. each 1,000 ounces of silver 'taught at this rate has cost 1930. Kow, Jfitbese ounces had been coined under tbfli" terms' o ,the lAnd,:AUlsn Act of 187 they would have, yielded 1,293 dollars,' or 33 more than the Treasury jotes issued on the same amount otUver purchased under the J&erman Ail- Th total amvuutof sil-Ve- - r" I s. members of the council, as well as himself, for services rendered the city. as we. personally are concerned, press lately about ths bankru' condition of ithe there are no politics connected with by 'coining the seigniorage"1, the matter. Our attention was called ' Treasury which ' phrase. Is, 'mysterious to, many to the fact that the city officials had people. What is meant by It is this;: agreed to do the work the first term ' SEPTEM32R 15, 1333. we were in duty bound to bring the matter to their notice. The Mineu has no desire to injure any one in any way,, neither can it sit idly by and action that might lead no one knews where. He also seems to agj?tf ieved that we stated that Mr. I) pnelii',8 absence from the lastmeeting, and states that the only signifl-cano- e that can be .t iched to that is, Jil tion. 9-- Tiling to Keep at Hand. Troy, (Kas.) Chief. Some years ago we were very much subject to severe spells of cholera morbus; and now when we feel any of the A Good symptoms that usually precede that sickness at the stomailment, such-aach, diarrhoea, etc., we become scary. We have found Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy the very best thing to straighten one out in such cases, and always keep it about. We are not .writing this as a pay testimonial, but to let our readers know what is a good thrng to keep handy in the house. For sale by Eureka Drug Store. s The Coed actor's i.srgs Acquaintance. "When I was out yi Chicago at the opening of the World's fair," said a friend of mine, "I had occasion to make a call on soia old acquaintances on the West Sido. The streets ia that portion of the city Lad many of them the baptismal names of wnmen, and as I lived thera at one time the calling of them by the car conductor Bounded familiar to me, although it seemed to puzzla an old countryman on board, who was doubtless visiting Chicago for the first time. There were a number of ladies among the passengers, and as the conductor called out 'Elizabeth' the car stopped, and one of them got off. A few squares farther and there was tho call 'Ada,' followed by a stop and the exit of another lady. "The old countryman began to look interested, and when the next call came, 'May,' and he saw a lady gather up her bundles and walk down the aisle, he had a puzzed air. In quick succession there came 'Pauline,' 'Roberta' and 'Augusta,' followed by the departure of a passenger. The old man could not stand it any longer. His eyes bulged out, and making a rush for the platform he said in a stage whisper to the "conductor, 'Great snakes, mister, do you know tho names of all the women folks in this big town? "He had been under the impression that each woman who left the car answered to the name that was called out." Philadelphia Inquirer. Interesting People. "What makes a person interestingr It cannot be intellectual brilliancy, for all known men. whose minds we have were stored with the best thought of the world, yet wholly failed to interest us; women whose brains were developed by the widest culture, yet were unable to appear other than dry as dust cataThink of the peologues of knowledge. who and 6tudy their interest you ple qualities, and how few you find possessing just the same traits. It is all a matter of magnetic soul currents possibly. Why not? We can hardly dispute that some human bodies convey electricity much more readily than others. In almost any gathering of a dozen persons at least ono will be found who possesses this strange power, tho touch of whose hand can cause a sensation like that cf touching an electric battery. Is there anything impossible in tho theory that souls have their electric currents, which pass more or loss freely to and fro according to the individual power as conductor? Then we have but to assume that the person who interests us is one whose 8 oul current minglea freely with' our owp. This is perhaps a more satisfactory explanation than tho mora commonly received one of animal magnetism, a quality or. a lower p'liac ;ind infinitely le nubtlt hi characlor. J.Vs-to- Ad crtioer. a 21. .Uy uia Ueatn tne community loses the foremost and the best of Amerieari a actors, and one of the greatest that have ever lived. " To. settle a dispute, will you kindly state whether the above is strictly according to English grammar ? New York Sun. LNVITJXG OLD AGE. .163,047,000 Colntac the ttixntorec. The Mayor charges us with trying and Jfining Journal to.dowahlm politically by calling athas the following to say of that prop-- r tention to the charges made by the . :' talk UTAH, FRIDAY, ounces, on that Mr. Donnelly doesot deem the a be nominal would which there profit duties of the position of sufficient imof. about $58,000,000 by 'coining the portance to lay asitle other duties to seigniorage.' In other words, the attend to it. And further, that of Sherman Act would be declared to sixteen regular and throe special meethave been only play, and the 163,047,-00- 0 ings, he ha? attended! but Ave. In ounces of silver bought since July this we think Donnelly censurable. V 1890, would be coined according to He must have kpown.'when a candithe Act, which ceased date, that some timd would be r to attend to it pd if he could on law a that date. This would to,be be like the gambling of a child, who not spare it he shoul'i not'have aldeelarea for keeps when he wins and lowed his name to go before the peoonly for fun when he loses. In a man, ple. That the council is entitled to that would be dishonest and would compensation, no one qenies, it is the not be permitted. The position of the manner in which they sought to get Government would be exactly anala-gou- it that is objected to. It has the power to create flat A little boy of Mrs. McDonald's, livmoney, but it would lose its credit in ing near here, fell against a red hot doing so; and if it proposes to do it, stove and was fearfully burned. The then it were better to issue flat money pain was terrible, and it was thought openly and without pretense. Noth- the burn was so severe as to scar the ing of the kind however, should be child'for life. I sold the lady a bottle dreamed of. of Chamberlain's Paia Balm, which, ' after greasing the sore, she applied. "Hark! harkt the dogs do bark. The beggars are coming to town, It soon removed the fire and eased the Borne in rags, and some in tags, pain, and in ten days the boy was well, no trace of the scar remaining. J. D. And Some in velvet gowns,,' McLaren, Keysport, Clinton county, And they will give a grand Hard 111. For sale by Eureka Drug Store. Times Ball at the I. O. O. F. Hall ST. .LOUIS IS IX IT. tonight. Misses May Tompkins, cheap rates to St. Louis Mary. Deprezin, Jane Martin and areExceedingly now in effect. The Union Paeiiic Lizzie Sullivan are on the recep- and Missouri Pacific ll'ys are running daily Pullman Palace Sleeper from tion committee, and Mesdames T. aSalt Lake City, Cheyenne and Denver to St. Louis without change. PullJ. andF. W. Blue, Sullivan, Cars Denver to Kansas Fields and Goodman on man Dining City. See J. D. Stack, agent U. P. the floor committee, which insures System, Eureka, for detailed informathe? The EiQnetring ii COUNTY, i trage-dian- i SOME OF THE WAYS IN WHICH WOMEN LOSE THEIR YOUTH. . Mothen Neglect Their Own Needs Ia Exaggerated Devotlou to the Children. Those Who Claim the Immunities of Age When Only Ia the Slidday of Life. The oldest woman I ever knew was 28. At marriage the graces of girlhood passed forever from her life. Economy became tha god enthroned on every altar of her Rufiles and ribbons were tho home. insignia of levity end extravagance. Dresses robbed of a yard or two Krew ungracef ully short and narrow. Books and papers were regarded as luxuries not necessities. Ax. hour spent in reading left a feeling of guilt foivasted time. Devotion to "Will and the children" came to mean self assumed slaver'. Luster left the eye, elasticity the frame. Through a mistaken souse of duty sho grew unkempt, narrow souled, repulsive. It has been said that the true age is what we look and feel. I have known sweet, fresh faced women of 70 who were younger than she. In the great middle class of America the wife too often invites age by concentrating all ambition in money getting. To save tho wages of servants she destroys tho joy of life, the buoyancy of health. Pushing the growing daughter to the front, she sees less and less of society, dresses with increasing plainness and sinks to a household drudge, Belf made and valued at her own estimate. Thirty-fiv- e has no more right to tho Btyles and tone of 70 than to those of 17. Th appropriation of the one is scarcely less ridiculous than tho assumption of the other. Far better than the expensive boarding school is the example of the mother in imparting to the daughter the faultless taste of dress, the gentle repose of manner, the gracious spirit so admirable in woman. A part of the money devoted to the education of the daughter would bo well spent in procuring to the mother the time for self culture. Aa the fair, snowy page is not so useful or beautiful as the one written with pure, uplifting thought, so the immature maiden is less valuable to home and eociety thau the ripe, cultured woman. People of 40 and 50 RLtrifTuTror btrelTo thein3el7es and claim the immunities of age. They are in the midday of life; the time for the exercise of knowledge, power, grace and beauty, for the uplifting cf humanity. These gifts may be enhanced by drefs and manner. The influence of the attractive, self respecting wife, mother, sister or friend is more potent for good than that of the one with neglected person and unlovely mind. Discontent invites ape. Indulging the unrest of the dissatisfied i3 destructive to looks and temper. In his "Story of a Country Town" Jlr. E. W. Howe says, "Be contented if it kills you." Tho advice is not so bad as it looks. Contentment and stagnation are not necessarily synonymous. One may be free from worry while striving for higher planes or work. Woman should have the courage of repose. It is infinitely better than the morbid conscientiousness that goads to endless toil. Eff ective work requires effective rest. Judicious mental work may help to lift one out of the ruts of premature eld age. Head and think of what you read. Don't use your mind as if it were a sieve and you were trying to see how much you could pour through it. There a belief extant that knowdege, if gained at all, must be acquired in youth. ia Fallacious theory I Behold Galilei at threescore and ten pursuing his studies with unflagging zeal, Cato. beginning Greek when advanced in years, Cgilby commencing classical studies when past 501 Gladstone ia as much the student today as when the bloom of youth mantled his cheek. Bo kind to the feelings and fancies of youth. If they prove perennial, so much the better. Don't forbid yourself glad, recreative thought and action. Don't be ashamed to make yourself as pretty as you can, A sensible woiuin may feel a thrill of pleasure innocent as a maiden's when receiving a glance of respectful admiration from a manly man. Smile without affectation, be pleasant without being silly in short, be young as long as you can. Alva liosse in Kate Field's Washington. Cradles Hundreds of Venn Ago. In manuscripts of tho ninth and tenth centuries we had pictures of cradles formed of pail of a tree trunk dug out, with holes bored through tha sides for the passage of straps intended to tie tho baby down in his hod. These dug out cradles are still common in modern Grwco. When we come to consult the manuof the fifteenth scripts and century, we notice that tho cradles aro no longer mere baskets or beds on rockers, but little swinging beds suspended between two pillars, tho prototype of the modern bercelonuette. Harper's Ba.ar. bas-relie- It Cntininaf icul. Tho following is quoted from a hv.d-iiitrtielt i;i the Nsv; Yuri Tr.buae: Yen, I;, MrU-tl- g AnjAuihor' Apology. A clever stry whose hero is a young rector sjH'aks, of hU removing his "hire! ta" during', a protracted walk. '?I wantonly put-i- on his head," says the author, with a laugh.' "I kuuw he oucjht not to rot;m the country in that head- I U;t gear, but it was so bewunng him doit," New Yorkjimes." t ; Graphic A schoolboy tho other day being told to describe Jacksonville, Fla., said, "Itis a gruat summer resort in whiter." New York Tribuue. Tensions For Workingiurn In Austria. Under the provisions of tho Austrian ' poor law. at Cgyveurs of age a man may claim from Lis native town or commune a pension equal to of, the daily wages which he had received during hia working years. The amount varies from. 2 to C florins a month. Iu Vienna alone there are 16.0U0 persona who receive those pensions from the city. one-thir- d She Had Keen There. Perdita You haven't tho faintest idea how much I lova him. .Penelope Oh, yes I have I used to love him that way myself. Brooklyn Lifs. THE SAND OF AN OLD TIMER. Fatal Bravery That Won a Kara Tribute From a l;uud of Apaches. A .company of ranchmen sat about the railroad station in Pomona the other afternoon wuiting'for the. belated overland train for Loa Angeles. .Every man in tho party knew the others, and there'.be-in- g an hour or two to wait story telling of the early days on the border and in Arizona and California came natural. Stories of old times, when Indians were bad and the white pioneers knew what bravery nieiint, were related. John Wilson of El Monte told the most absorbing story of the hour: "Talk about sand in a man,, gentlemen! I am telling you that it takes sand of the genuine article in any man to try a.o4.ja.iiud- olf ninLle handed 40 or 50 Apaches when he knows just how the scrap will cud, and that the end will ta his own death. But that was just tho kind of sand that was in Felix Knox when ho was killed by the Apaches. You seeKnos waa an all rouud gambler, such us the tenderfoot from the cast scorns eo much and knows so little about, but he had a heart in him bigger than any tenderfoot's head. Well, it wf-- in the spring of 1879 Knox, w ith his wife and baby and a Mexican driver, was coining from Silver City to Clifton, down in Arizona. They got to York's ranch, which is on tLe Gila river, about 30 miles freni Clifton, all right, but were told there that signs of Apaches had been seen, and that they had better go in camp there, for a" few days, but Knox who had foutht the Apaches dozens of times and didn't know what fear was said he wanted to muke Clifton that day, Indians or no Indians! "Well, the Knoxes drove on. When they were about two miles from . York's ranch, sure enough a big buck Indian came from behind a low, round top mesa. Knox knew there were plenty more of the red devils hid there and that it meant a fight to death for him. tie was as cool as a cucumber. He jumped out of the wagon, filled his pockets with two boxes of, cartridges, and then kissed his wife and baby for the last time, but saying that he would have-thredskins quieted in a few minutes. He ordered the Mexican driver td lash the team for all he was worth and, to drive back to York's ranch as fastaa tho horses could jump. Thea Knox waved his hand to his wife and said he was going to stand off a few Apaches, although, he was suro there was a big band of them. As the team and wagon flew baclc to the ranch Knox, riflo in hand, started toward the hill for his last fight. He turned once and waved his sombrero to his wife and child and then strode on to his cerUin death, "The Apaches a second later, rushed out from behind the hill where they were eocreted. Knox faced his foes, and standing stock still pumped lead at them until ho fell down dead. Tho next day a party of ns whs made up, and we went out where tIio fight took place. Knox's body lay there amid the cactus in the tun. The Apaches, contrary to their usual custom, had pot Mutilated the fellow's body in the 1 ast. They had taken a clean pocket handkerchief out of Knox's pocket and fully spread it over his face mid laid fastened it there by putting a small stone on each comer of it to hold it in its place and keep the iii.t sun from the dead man's face. That was their tribute to tha sand in Knox. Ceventj empty theUa found that had bt,en emptied frou Kaox's wiacherfUw, 'icd ono of t'. siding Indians ,af(rwfird laid that ;heir pHrty numbered 4',! and that Knox had -- S killed M'vei) of Ahem, . . ' .... - J' |