OCR Text |
Show WW; US VOL. H' III. EUREKA, JUAB THE REGULARS WIM THE DAY. ture of sufficient strength to carry out any legislat ion attempted, despite the veto of Governor Flower. Just what effect it will have on Na- it is hard to predict, They Elect the Entire Ticket tional.legislation Cleveland assuming that it is not a V . criticism of his methods, but it is well iii Eureka, r . that he expected an known, however, It may Democracy to go slow on tariff re vision and also induce them to enact legislation favorable to the West. altogetner different result. the" TERRIIBRttt THE ELECTIONS.. UTAH, FRIDAY, HOVEMEER 10, COUNTY, bread. It penetrates the remotest channels of commerce, and its abundance, bulk, and small subdi vision prevent its deposition in sufficient amount to distuijb or unsettle values. If it retires at the approach of danger, or from the presence of an inferior currency, it still remains at home, ready to respond to the first summons for its return. The School Election. ; A Republican Lcpdullde Throughout the Conatry . 8?lvr Democrats The vote for trustees of this district Are your children subject to croup? re Well Pleased With, the Returns. last Tuesday, is as follows; If so, you should never be without a 184 Tlte SVhl te House Autocrat 'In- Lombard of Chamberlain's Cough Remebottle 169 different' ' ""' ','"-' Driscoll.... for croup, and 166 dy. It is a certain cure Freckieton... fail. If Riv to never known been 123 has Gourly.... soon as as en the croupy cough freely 79 Election day in. Eureka passed off Loutensock the attack. it appears prevent will, 109 ery o,tjietlyt(. vtbough considerable pillespie.. '" thousands sole is with reliance the It rustlirif; was done by both sides' The children who have of mothers croupy The Treachery of Gold. adherents of the Original ticket were ' There never and them. disappoints eonfidetlof success,' asS the 'friends' Senator Ingalls, of Kansas, in a is no in giving this Remedy in danger of th'sulsUctt.Ver.V''OVnft speech in 1878, in the United Sen- large and frequent doses, as it conMonday, to haveco:iceitd the elect ion in 50 cent bot of twd end possibly three, on the op- ate, depicted it graphic language tains nothing injurions. tles for sale by Eureka Drug Store. position ticket to the Council., The as follows (Congressional Record, fight on City Justice wis complicated Volume 28, page 1052). The Home Newspaper. somewhat by Ed Pike coming out as The original American idea was The Oregonian publishes the fol an indepindent candidate but as the a single standard of silver. Gold result shows,' it' w'as an advice to a communiwas, an innovation, and, in my lowing good more on Ed's part,-th- e made point ty, and how true it is: against him being that, as he was the judgment, a grave mistake. The remonstrance against giving If we are to have a monometallic chairman, of" the meeting that Regular ticket, he should standard, I believe silver to be im- advertising of their towns to "outhatejabided by its decision. We unto gold. It side'' publications of questionable derstand he Mrfterids 'contesting the measurably preferable is less subject to fluctuation; its influence, which are seen in the lectoh df .Watts. onhe ground' that the ordinances do not recognize such production is more steady; its cost columns of Western Washington's more uniform. an office'. Police Judge,'and as he papers, are justifiable and well tak- 11TI No enduring fabric of national en. wnen a local newspaper is 'highest number.of votes as City Justice of the Peace, he is there- prosperity can be builded on gold. not good enough to herald a town's for entitled, to the position. is the money of monarchs; advantages abroad, there is someThe voteoh tbe'eity ticket Is as fol- - Gold kings covet it; the exchanges of na thing wrong with the town. The V. Vote Maj. tions are affected by it. Its ten- newspaper is, to a very great exJfatbr dency is to accumulate in vast tent, what the community makes 278 269 McChrystal masses in the commercial centers, it; and by reason of its representaiiy4, f, h: and to move from kingdom to king tive capacity, the community has a i , dom in such volumes as to unsettle measure of responsibility towards Councilors, values and disturb the finances of it. The people who will not help 184 Dayton ....146 the world. It is the instrument of make a good paper for their own Clark.:;..... AdaSfcU .210., gamblers and speculators, and the town must not complain if they are Hyde, Geo. L"........;.'."....13.f5' idol of the miser and the thief. held in low esteem by the outside 179 Boweb.'..t..,!. ....... Being the object of so much adora world. The home paper, properly Wilson . .................. .132 ad.....123'' Shea tion, it becomes haughty and sen aupported, not particularly by sitive and shrinks at the approach vertising patronage, but in a hunScappatura i...... ...130 109" Hanson r. .y. of danger, and whenever it is most dred ways of kindness and of ser' ' .'. 2ieeordsrf needed it always disappears. At vice which costs nothing, is always 71 .173 . Vierc. ' the slightest alarm it begins to look the best possible medium for ad.107 l?ullride. n for a refuge. It flies from the vertising its locality, because it Treamrtr, 32 at at war to the nation Blue..... ,............. ....158 peace. will be bright, newsy, and will be 126 read by intending settlers and capCarpenter War makes it a fugitive. ' ' ,". MarffiaV " in a great emergency italists as a truer index to the town's No people ' 97 191 llenfio'd;. ever found a faithful ally in gold. social and business life than any m; Leu .:r. ' ' It is the most cowardly and treach other printed matter could be. Judktof th Peace, 39 erous of all metals. ...........127 It makes no The proprietor always spends Watt.. 69. . Selwo.. ?.'?'. does not break; it has his income to improve his paper. treaty that it 88 Fike no friend whom it does not, sooner It seems that he can't help it. CoOtctor, or later, betray. Armies and na- When he gets a few dollars ahead Wilson, Geo! A...'.;....'... 48 ' The vote on the legislative and coun- vies are not maintained by gold. he must get the paper a new dress, In times of panic and calamity, or some galleys, or a new ty ticket was: ; Or if a few hun. machine'. Covctl, shipwreck and disaster, it becomes mailing 20 138 fe ...'Av Hague, the chief agent and minister of ruin dred, he buys a new press, and " 118 McCune, D No nation ever fought a great war once again puts his nose to the ' Jtepntentative, On the contra grindstone to get out of debt. 20 by the aid of gold. 138. McJPT;ide,;R.. 118 . D......i ry, in the crisis of greatest peril, When he thinks he sees good times ' Svlrinienacnt, it becomes an enemy more potent ahead he enlarges his paper and inthan the foe in the field; but when creases his pay roll. When money 119.;" caijrDl.u;:;..;, the battle is won and peace has gets scarce again he tries to keep 1 38 been secured, gold reappears and a stiff upper lip, taking wood and Ada,R. 109 claims the fruits of victory. In potatoes on subscription, works TTatfc, D Jwtict, Prr4cl our own civil war it is doubtful if eighteen hours a day, backslides at 102 VelaoB. the gold of New York and London the church, defaults the lodge, for21 123 Tona Dl.....m' did not work us greater injury gets his friends and neglects his than the powder and lead and iron family. Whatever else he may 5 Vra not,candidates' for the posi- - of the rebels. It wrs the most in prove recreant to, with his paper ,lloa. '.v; vincible enemy of the public cred it is always "love, honor and cherthe tlifoughout" Tta 'IlpvblicarlM, it. Gold paid no soldier or sailor, ish." All the aid and comfort a TerriiotT made gains and the complex refused the national obligation. town gives to its paper goes in it. ion of 'the- Legislature .will be It nltf'dHrftreato' 'thf last one. ; In It was .worth most when our for Subscriptions paid in advance blosthe. CottOcil., there wilUw 5 Ke'publi- - tunes. were lowest. Every defeat som into breezy locals, and half-pag- e rnai Al)cmocras arid 2 Liberals, the ads bring forth tl)iible-headcgave it increased value. It was in on National UtfcM biog Rt'pviblican alliance with our enemies the editorials on the newjwatcr works lsVf'-Tb'IIou- se will fOntain 12 Re- - open and the world over, and all its energies and the shipping pubUM&a, H Iknioc.rats and 6 Liberals. wealth ami wonderful, destruction evoked for our country's m Of Ihc UUir, three are s lpUblicuns, were J tmn are Tlpmnrr.iti and one.' Populist. But as usual, when danger has been progress, lo tenner; it generous In S&H .Lake tljc ' Liberal ticket is averted and the victory secured, support is to invite ca Ditaljto with- beatfi, cwtth'lhe oe'ptlon of.puke gold swaggers to the front and as- hold, "tendeth to pof rty." for, Treasurer. . Provo r.nfi Ogden both The live town wi lmvc a live serts the supremacy. But silver fnrt. P.Tiuhllran eltv ffovevrmeata. U the money of the people. It is paper; and if it lias a; I thing worth elect' t'he" iite'; t ick by oyer '1 t)o;0o0 the nwney of wages and retail. I ts the attention of the llside world. majority. VcKIniey is elected; vov teudeney ,is toward diffusion and and wants it told wi re it will d a ftiaJority ol 80,000. .rnrr of Ohirf dissemination. It enters into the the most good, It wi! always put siielT6 'Democratic Co?er-lio- r Wr loii' concerns of traffic and is its trust in the home, pper and the Boies by' a "majority of 30,000. minute, do t ;e business, w york eU'ct's a rweiUpcai legisia exchanged day by day for daily home iviper will ,' " .; h si j :V.y 29. IS93. exclaimed a careful (?) mother, making room as tshe spoke for the nursegirl to place the little boy in a better position. No sooner did all these women gain a vantage point from where they could best behold the dreadful burden which . the policemen bore without either tenderness or care into the waiting station of the morgue than they began to tremble and to cry. "Oh, dear, how dreadful!" moaned they iu unison, while their fascinated gaze was unaverted and their jjocks were craned to see it alL j.. And then because I am a philosopher in my own poor fashion and can no mora help philosophizing than a spider spinning webs I said to myselft That is the way with all of us! W seek out our own discomforts and we cnl tivate them with our own tears. We gloat over the very things that bring us pain and take a front seat to witness our own tragedies. Given, the most of lis, a cbance to spend an afternoon among tha tombs or to go fishing for goldfish ou. of a crystal jiond, and we will trot along with the mourners every time, We ar always in the attitude (most of ub) of the Peterkin family at the seaside. They were continually looking off shoro for whales, and they saw whales and nothing hut whales from season's start to season's close! What we look for we find, what we sow we reap, what we dread we draw and what we expect comes to us. Take two girls and send them out through the divine beauty of these Jane woods with a basket apiece. They ars after violets, wo will say, although th purple drapery of the dim spirit flower has been almost withdrawn from the woods already, like a curtain uplifted by an eager hand. One of the girls ij afraid of snakes and declares the sight of one would kill her on the spot. How she looks for them! How eagerly sli9 watches every tremor, of the nnderi brush! How she starts at a floating tint otby and shrieks when a clover jostles in the wind! fi.nd she sees snakes " plenty of 'em! She goes home with an empty basket and has to take a powder to ouiet her nerves. The other ' onvio eis anu nevw &rl K(iePs n?r twa n KfrTMnr a Trail. n in jtuhh iioiiiu. with a basketful of flowers and dreams that she is setting sail for .paradise ia a purple boat with the tender green of violet stems for its oars and a sail that wiiells of the wood flower's perfect bouL Amber in Chicago Herald. House breaking in Eureka goes merrily on, in spite of the eiforts of the city oiliccrs to discover the identity of the thieves. Lat k'rkiiiy night or Saturday niontinu'. the saloons of W. 11. Wood and 1). C. Harrington, were broken into from the rear, and a quantity of old whiskey and several hundred cigars taken from the. former. Harrington's principal loss was the money in the cash drawer, amounting to about' 16. Saturday evening John Riley and Charles Oliver were arrested for the theft and had a preliminary hearing before Judge Pike on Monday which resulted in their dismissal. Sunday night, during the absence of Rev. George Coniar at church, an entrance was effected into his residence, and about all his eart hly possessions taken. The contents of the larder, the bedding and clothes of himself and wife, and several large silver dollars, made up the booty. On the same night, a cellar containing caa-hel- several bushels of vegetables, in the east part of town, was broken open, and despoiled of its contents. The work bears the ear marks of the same gang that tapped Billy Woods' place several weeks ago. Tliey are very bold in their operations, and sufliciently wily to keep out of the clutches of the law. THE GLOOMY SIDE. norhi-nated't- he 1 ! 1 ciark:;l.i...:..v;... . ' na-tio- all-bra- ss . , :lt ....., '. , Bt d en-ut- 1 ,t . c, SOME POINTS ON THE WOMEN WHO DOTE ON THE GREWSOME. Gloating Over the Things Which Cause Them Pain Gatherln;; Pannles, but Looking For Snakes K;UoiIe of a News-pap- T Woman's Street Car Ride. The other doy I was riding in a street car. There were 11 women and 3 men in the same quarters. Wo jogged along our way as people do out of whose life all interest had been taken by a hot day, as a rude nurse snatches playthings from helpless children Whether "school kept or not" was a matter of not the slightest moment to any of us. Indeed I had reason to hope that I should never again bo confronted with bulletins as to the riso anil fall of that mythical edncitional bureau whence we a"l draw more or less of knowledge fraught with hitter experience. Its pupils are so stupid and ita head preceptor so unrelenting that I have of its curriculum. long been Opposite in the car sat a young woman whom I often meet and shall continue to meet, I suppose, until the sexton shovels a few feet of dust between our faces. If she were a man, she would be iu the at- titude of one who is "spoiling for a What is mere coinbativeness fight." in men takes the form of insolence in women and is harder to hear. This She young person eyes my clothes. gloats over my shabbiness. She knows exactly how many times a day my poor old gown is groomed. She ia cognizant of the fact that my off shoe has sprung a leak, and as she tosses her bead and smiles the smile that, passed from worn- -' The Ostrich and Iu I am rehearsing a few of the peculiarities of the creature which have made it of interest ever since the days of Job, "which lesveth her eggs in the earth and wanneth them in the dust." It would appear to be an evidence of cunning to adopt this very simple method of incubation. However, it has its disadvantages, for while she is away getting a good dinner her enemy, the white necked He crow, spies the unguarded nest. knows ho cannot break one of thoe mammoth eggs and devises a shrewd plan to help him. Taking a stone in his beak he flies over the spot, calculates with bird sagacity the necessary difl- -' tance and drops the stone. Think! An an to woman, means more than a blow egg is broken, and he descends to his I seem to hear her say: "Ila, cumberer, are you here yet? Last time I met you of a raven that fed the prophet Elijah. I thought 1 stared you dawn, but euch His wisdom seems almost of a supernatrubbish seems hard to kill! A trifle ural order. It is said that the cry of an mora ridicule, though, slightly veiled, ostrich is like tho roar of a lion, and tha like poison in a capsule, will lay you Hottentots often run from it in fright low, and I shall have the pleasure of until they see the bird. Detroit Fre. turning my battery upon some other Press. God forsaken crank wdio appears to have A Remarkabla Bedgtead From Bomhmy. ' more brains thau style!" A Bombay man has constructed a We were tumbling along in the old street car, a tired and dirty lot of us, bedstead priced at 10,000 rupees. It i bound for the depot. As we passed a certain undertaker's shop on the way we ners four full sized, gaudily dressed noticed that a big crowd had collected Grecian damsels those at the head at its doors a hushed crowd, with white holding banjos, while those on the right faces and bated breath. A police patrol and left foot hold fans. Beneath the. the was drawn up to the curbstone and four cot is a musical box which of whole cot the and is ofucera length were capablo lifting something brawny out of the wagon and carrying it within of playing 12 charming airs. The musio the undertaker's open gate. Tho some- begins the moment tho least pressura thing that lay beneath the old tarpaulin has been brought to bear from the top, was very still and outlined itself sharply which is created by one sleeping or sitr beneath the sable folds of tho pall that ting, and ceases tho moment the indicovered it. I turned away from the vidual rises. While the music is in sight, for there is that within me that nresrress the ladv banioists at the head revolts from such sights as the butterfly manipulate the strings with their findoes from the thistle or the swift run- gers and move their heads, while the two Grecian damsels at the bottom fan ning boat from a capful of head wind. I knew well enough what the "some- the sleerier to sleep." t thing" was. Ten minutes before perISoys In Church Choir. . haps it had been a man, swinging like a Boy choirs, trained ts such singers ara sailor on the uplifted ladder where tho trained in Great Britain ami in Gerpainter pursues his craft, or a careless many, wero almost unknown in thin vagabond knocked down by a passing country !0 year a ago and aro not comvehicle and straightway ushered into tho mon now, though there are several ad-: l l V., audience chamber of the great and only ......vi.. : . . ... . P A'- .King, or a merry hearted boy spurned ty a flying wheel, or a tired old woman choir boy's voico to change, . the consci"lifted high as heaven" by the tender entious choirmaster bids him reel in or- arms of death. 1 knew very well that der that his natural male voice may not the awful something was once a breath- be spoiled for singing. The task of ing, blundering mortal like myself and teaching tho lads to sing in the artificial that a Ku.hlen calamity had transferred manner required hi most laborious, anvl it into clay. h(r or ia what terrible the earnings of learners are trifling. did not care to see. But ev- Ltter a well trained cboriskT may earn ' manner ro le from ery woman in tho t ar in which per year by his Sunday jumped from lu.r seat to watch the work. The choir boy of the rural parish, , is usually an unschooled imp, chosca grewsome thing I turned away from. "Oh. I wish tho cover woul fall oil bo for his golden hair and cherubic face. that we cerdd rec!" cried one. Ktw York Hi.m. "Lift Wi'lio up e ) that l.u can look!" ' ' " , , . s ; . u. T 1 TY 1. A -- . At- ', 1 1 1 |