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Show M M jh ' VOL. 111. A WHITE WING'S PBATER. hunt snipe whenever thou ca rest to. indorse everything thou The following article.is a gem of the and we will Cleveland roosters, camcarry doest, "purest ray serene," and is from the paign: torches and forever in;. re sing Gunnison, Colo.", Tribune. It was fur- thy praise. Amen. nished by Capt. Deprezin. THE GOVJiltSOlt'S KEPOIIT. TO ALMIGHTY CLEVELAND. From the Tribune we obtain the folPrevious to the close of the Demo- lowing synopsis of the Governor's recratic county convention last Tuesday, Edward Croke, .mayor of Irwin, arose port. The Tribune has been supplied with .and all the delegates reverently bowed their heads while he offered prayer Lo a report of Governor West to the Sec.Almighty Cleveland. The voice was retary of the Interior for the current tilled (with emotion and the reporter found it difficult to get every word. year. It is brief and confined mostly to statistics. It gives the populat ion But here it is: ; CleveOh, almighty and at 240.085, an increase of i.;00 since land, who are in , Washington, when the census of 1S9:) was taken. In vanot Ashing; thou who art the fatner of Ruth and Ruth's sister, and of Ma- rious forms 348,788.90 acres of knd ria Ilalpin's hoy, Oscar, and the God- have been entered in the Land Oflke. father of. the . Democratic party, (its on which 004,717.43 has been p ad. father wouldn't own it if he were here); Since the opening of the Land Office we hail thy name as the great political prophet of the century. We bow in 1809, 6,245,869.20 acres have been elidown, before thee in humble political te. ed upon, for which has been pud obedience.'. When thou sayestgo, we $1,469,941.75. The re.il property is co, when thou gayest come we come. given at '$02,017,752; improvements, We have no desire but to serve thee. If thou, gayest black is white we will $23,304,818; personal property, While or a total of $108,800,111. ,6weafr to it and lick the everlastin' .6tuflin' out of the man who disputes in the various incorporated cities and it. When thou takest; snuff we will towns in the Territory, the assessed neeie; when thou sayest free silvei we will eclio thy words; when thou valuation increased during the present sayest gold then gold it is. We are year $7,333,270.47. the indebtedness has Democrats after the improved modern decreased by $17,618.53. The number type. Our business is to vote the tick- of horses and mules reported in the et and vote .'er straight. Whit is orit Territory is given at 92.09-:;- with a to us whether we have free silver not? We are but dogs that eat the valuation of $2,818,890. The number .crumbs that fall from our masters' ta- of cattle is given at 259,925, with a bles.1' .When the crumbs f 11 we wag of $2,078,055. The sheep our tails; when, they fall fast we wag valuation with a valuation of number 1,378,83s, we stand faster; when they don't fall, .andrwait until they do. This is Dem- $2,648,128. The capital of banks is is the kind of Democ- put down at $5,693,618, and the amount ocracy.;--This racy which elected thee, our great and of J heir depr sits was $9,237,726. There .almighty Cleveland. Oh, most adored are 1137.91 miles of railroads in the master, we love thee for what thou hast not done for us. We love thee Territory, and 68 miles of street railbecause thou art Cleveland. We hum- ways. The yearly product of copper bly surrender ourselves to thee. Do lias been $91,130.80: of with us as thou wilt. Though wheat for this year of silver. $7,792.3',.-65- ; $2,505,720.42; lead, we 40 love thee; is but cents a bushel or a total of low we love is of $703,040, cotton gold, thee; though though business is dull we love thee; 152.879.87- - The report explains the ; 0, 475,-51- 1, . . -- though thousands, millions, are out we love thee; though our.chiJdren are clothed in rags, we love thee; though our wife, the dear of our bosom, is scantily . companion of employment, dressed and looks so shabby she eanrt go to church,' we love thee, though we are sinking dee per in debt and poverty door and hunger is is knocking face, we love thee staring us jn the our still. This shows great faith and love for thee.. Our wives and childi en we are willing to sacritle, even as the Hindoo mother sacrifices her offspring by ' throwing it under the crushing wheels of the juggernaut. Oh, mighty Cleveland, words cannot express our love for thee. We love our party, too. What care we about the many promises made We know it promised free .silver and we know it wont give it to U8, but we will stick to the party. We know we said if it did not do the things it promised to do we would leave it, but. we lied when we said it. We thought then we had some manhood about us but we ain't. We have r o independence. Thou, oh mighty Cleveland, iiast all the manhood and indeWe pendence there is in the party. re fools, liars, lickspittles, mudsills. We have no business to want anything or to say anything. Last year we favored free silver and now we have to oppose it.'; We, favored it then because we thought it was right. We oppose it" now,' most adored master, because thou tellest us.to. ' Ain't we a honey of the first water? Did ever dog serve his master more faithfully? Did ever a dog geji less for it? Oh. mighty master, we are ever read to serve thee and party. All the pay we ask is to be patted pn the back by some local a good Democrat. politician and called seuse. We don't We ain't got any want any, only enough to vote the ticket. It don't take any sense to be a good .Democrat. What a joyful thougUt! ,We don't., have to think. We don't bave to worry. Our work is all mapped out for us. All that is expected is to do as we are told. We thank; tbee, oh Cleveland, that we arc Democrats. We thank thee for the panic. We thank thee for t he hungry &ni "idle- - men and women in the land. We tfcapk .thec for. low; prices. We thank for the banks that have busted at-th- i . and tbe thousands business failures sice thou co tn est into power. We thank thec for the hard times. We thank thee for the rags our children wear. We thank thee for the clothes our wife needs and can't get. We thank thee for what thou hast done for the bahkeraad what thou hast not done for the. people.. We, thank thee fpr.all things because it is our duty as A gootV .Democrat, to do so. It may bo "against, the grain" but we w 1! take, our medicine.. YVe will work our wives to death, starve ourchildren, sacrifice our homes, crucify liberty and kill prosperity, but will never go back on r dea.old .part. v. and on thee, our most adored CI v land. Thou art more account .than all of us put together." Thouknnwcstrnnrc than the South and the , West. Call us fools' your feet on us; spit in our ;.iecs; wipe we will love thee all the more. And flow,", our great political, father, we ioavc usln thy care. Do with us as thou wilt. Kick silver into the middle of the .next century; give more privileges to te. national banks; Umic more- .bonds; 'preserve the McKinley LIU; cstalilis.il ...state . banks; foster trusts; bribe "congressmen with pat-jv- p age; fish whenever thou wilt, and . - J'JAD COUNTY, UTAH, FRIDAY, EUREKA, mighty falling off of metal mining, the depression which has followed, and incidentally remarks that "our people almost universally favor too maintenance of the p.irity of value between silver and goid a;d the coinage of both metals as money Without discriminaoion against either." Further, after spcakingof the dktorbn uce in the commercial affairs of this and adjacent States and Territories, how mines are shut down, men are thrown out of emeloyment and bnsirn ss crippled in consequence, the Governor Locke from bis hist photograph. It wiaifd stdl at one dollar or more, buf'u ill never be placed on sale. One hundred thousand copies are now printed and bound, and one copv will be sent postpaid free to every per-- ! son who this winter remits one dollar . be-i- n to be hoped that an early and favorable solution of the problem will result in a speedy resumption of our mills and mines and an im'rca-c- i activity in all branches of commerce."' A table of the rate of wnges is gi yen. The Governor strongly urges, in view of the fact that large sums are annually expended for rents, that they arc both inconvenient and often widely separated, and especially as the records are insecure in such biiiidhigs tha Government should supply a suitable building for the transaction of its business. He recommends the transfer of the Industrial Home to the Territory. lie asks for a site forth" Univc-si'- y of Utah on the Fort Douglas reservation, with a grant ofliuid for the same. He has a good w:rd to say for the Agricultural Coilege ;t Logan, the Reform School at O;;don. the Insane Asylum at. Provo and tie Penitentiary. He gives the noiio.- i is .00, and reeomei en of Indians is e-- t oit ''early provisions ho mad" lor .merit in so vera ty of sukaSle of su eh l.md to lie Ind:,:us. ttitities qu this va and that tiie ivni'iind: r tract be thi'"ivn np-- o to the- ;:!.i"c r .s are settlement. Tin pa!.:i n:ted and the amount of i,s..tvy ll r.ils for new sclmol cti'uc ur-- s. attention to the undeveioped r s u;c s of the Territory; itsc poor. ir n. co.i!. d; posit.-- . sulphur and other vidua! He believes that the fund w.iu ii was escheated should be returned, ;'od thinks Utah should be admitted into the Union. tin-ad- 1 X ! ! .e '. the tom; no wi;i;ju.y r.i..m: And book lonlalnliiK all the Nasliy Letters lor One Doll. r. In answer to a general demand from all parts of the United States, the Toledo Rlade has published in one volume, cloth bound, ail of the 'Naby Letters'' ever written by the late 1). It. Locke, omitting perhaps a few unimportant local or forgotten' topics. Only a few of these letters were ever published' in book form. Everybody has real souie. of them, but who I), is rend nil of them? The book contains over 500 large pag:'s: ,md all t be N'scbv Letters written during a peri d of twenty-fivyears; also a portrait of I). e 3!. 24, 1393, the burden will he borne ly those now hero, ami others coming in will share the benefits without a correspoiiilinrjf share of expense. "Jude" Ilolzlieinier, the claim for the Weekly Blade one year. Ev- ajrent of the Kio (.J ramie Western, erybody invited to send for a specimen ami a candidate for Councilman on copy of the Weekly Blade, which will the Liberal ticket in Salt Luke, was given full description of the "Nasby Mon Letters.-- iruest of the Eureka Hotel day. A rumor reached us this niorn-hu- r that Capt Deprezin had struck a line vein of iold ore in his North Tintie property, but wo were unable to verily the rumor before going to press. a ' The Toledo Weekly Blade is t he best and most popular nvekly newspaper some Mammoth properties, in tho interest of some Eastern capitalists. He would not divulge either tho name of the property, or the gentlemen for whom he is acting, until the sale is completed. He has also a commission from other parties, for oroperty in other localities, and hopes to make a considerable investment in this district, in their interest. GENESIS OF THE STEAMBOAT. Ancient Craft That Foreshadowed th Modern Greyhound of the Beau The first eteambont was built by Dennis Pa pin. who navigated it safely down the Fulda as long ago ua 1707. Unfortunately this pioneer craft was destroyed by jealous sailors, and even the very memory of it was lost for of a century. In 1775 Perrier, unothep Frenchman, built an experimental Bteain vessel at Paris. Eight years later, in 1783, Jonffroy took up the idea that had been evolved by Fapin and Perrier aiid built a steamer, which did good sorvica for some time on the Snone. The first American to attempt to apply steam to navigation was John Fitch, a Connecticut mechanic, who made his initial experiments iu the year 1785. To what extent Fitch was indebted to the three illustrious French inventors named above we are not informed, but that hia models were original there is not the least doubt. In the first he employed a large pipe kettle for generating the steam, the motive power being side paddles worked after the fashion of oars in the of is The Miner receipt on a common rowboat. In the second proceedings of the Irrigation Con- Fitch craft the same mode of propulsion gress recently held at Los Angeles. was adopted with the exception that the The meeting was an harmonious paddles were made to imitate a revolving wheel and were fixed to the Btern and enthusiastic one and will doubt- clearly foreshadowing the present less result in much beneiit to the This laiit mentioned boat was the first arid regions. American steam vessel that can be pro nounced a euccees. It mado its first trip C. C. Iliggins, who established to Burlington in July, 1783. But, after the Eureka Chief, is now publish- all, it was not until after the opening of present century that steam navigaing the Mercur Mercury at the the tion started into actual life. In 1807 new gold fields of Lewiston. The Robert Fulton (who erery school child opening is an excellent one, and knows was an American), in conjunction one Robert R. Livingston, built the "Speck" isn't like a man who don't with and established a regular Clermont, know how to work it for ill there packet service between New York and is in it. Success to you, old man. Albany. Tba euccf si of this undertaking was ho C. II. Goddard, the head mud- satisfactory that four new boats wera built before the end of 1811, at least two slinger on that disreputable sheet, of them being designed for service in otb? the Salt Lake Critic, is in the toils er rivers. St. Louis Republic. on a charge of adultery alleged to The Mao In the Iron Mask. have been committed with one Eva A letter to Louvois by Louis XTV, O'Mcara. Goddard will probably written in cipher, has been long in tha realize before he gets through with archives of the ministry of war and haa at length been deciphered. In it the it, the adage about glass houses. king orders Louvois to arrest General for having raised the 6iege de W. I. Drown, County Supefin-teiiee- of Burloude Conti without permission, to send of Schools, has been in this him to Pignerol and to conceal his features under a loup, or black velvet vicinity this week, looking after mask. The order was and the the schools, and expresses himself presumption is thereforeexecuted, violent that tho as well pleased with the maimer in 'Man In the Iron Mask" it was a black We ac- velvet one with iron springs was Genwhich they are conducted. eral de Burlonde. The 6tory tallies with knowledge a pleasant call from the the known fact that the prisoner made repeated attempts to communicate hij front Ionian. name to soldiers; that he was treated John O'iJrien, who has been em- with respect by his military jailers, and that Louis XV, who knew the truth of ployed by the Union Pacific on the whole affair, declared it to be a mattheir Mammoth switch, fell from a ter of no importance. The difficulty is tlat car while at work this morning to discover the king's motive for such a hut he may have feared disand suffered a contusion of the left precaution, content among hia great officers or the hip. . lie was brought to town and soldiery. It must, however, be possible Dr. Dryborough made him as com- to discover from the lists in the war office whether General de Burlonde wa fortable as possible. IIo will be recorded as "missing" or "dead" about sent to the hospital ' at Ogden on the right time. Saturday Review. published in this (( entry. It has the largest citvnlati on of any weekly newsto every State. Terripaper, and g end nearly every county of the tory Union. Only one dollar a year, including the, above mentioned book free. Send postal to The Blu e, Toledo, E. II. Dunning has taken charge Ohio, for a free specimen copy of the paper.. Send the addresses of your of the stock of goods formerly befriends also. lt miring to Tucker & Wallace, for A 't'ard. ol 'i'iiiiiilia. Trustee Burnett, and is packing up The Pastor of t he Methodist Epis- preparatory to a removal to Salt copal Church wishes to express his Lake City. thanks to his many friends in this city, in trye W. D. Myers made a trip to for the efforts they ing to replenish the loss sustained from Le wist on this week to look up a the recent robbery. Hoping that business location. lie is well Cod's richest blessing may rest upon the with prospects of the pleased you for jour kindness, I am, Yours .dncerely, camp and thinks next spring will Rkv. G. W. Comer. witness quite a boom there. have-mad- A M;VV mii'AIi'Il RE. Card in elect 19lh, the Kio inaugurates a special With the new time November Sunday, Grande Western reclining chair car service between Ogclen and Denver. The chairs are of a special pattern and for .omfort and elegance are not surpassed any where. These cars will be free to no '.tiers of all classes of tickets. Are vour children subject to croup? so, you shou'd never oe wit omit a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy-, it is a certain cure for croup, and has never been known to fail. If given freely as soon as the ;croupy cough anenr; ifc wi'l prevent the attack. It is the sole reliance with thousands of mothers who have croupy children and never disappoints them. There if givinj this Remedy in s ar.:e ai. j frequent doses, as it nothing injurious. 50 cent bot K i''( !;:; Drug Store. tle. is no d;i:ee r in con-tun- adds: "It NOVEMBER .AXi.S, in effect to eastern points Rio Crande Western Lly Remember the R. G. W. is noted for the el'.oa'i'e of its equipment, its new its free chair ear.;, its tourist Ares-til- the via eoa-dies- . or colonist sleepers and its new and artistic Pail man Doable Drawing Room Palace Sleeping Oars which run th.'oii;h ft Chicago without change. "Hp-eSafety and Comfort'' is its well tariud motto. Two main line fast expre'-- train- to the East d lily. d, ATTENTION. Tin. i"i: Smith, hist Monday, the injunction pray, d for granted A Campion by iht; Uolhon-Leol- : the Mining Company, collector from coHei. ting the tax. While there is no d i eiot laii a.dd;'ion;d school room i ii' t. r the to, .yd ' corn-idinterests of the district are bitter s. rvcd by the injunction than oth-or-. Tie: amount tiiat would have 'e'en rai ed, yi,H00, would not In til. and cop tip very much of a hows and, as we understand it, two rooms were to hive been built with the money, which would have t lireo hou-.es- , given the probably inconveniently located and unde.-irth- h lor the purposes intended, in our i i imution, the J;'. l . ! i vv-- . w i.- I di.-tri-ct , better way b" to wssit a year or two, until it is decided upon l!i I'ut :re eou.ise of the what, bu.-itown h to be end bond the district house in for a good keeping wilh the nivds and impor-tanew v1 1 s s;i!;-!;;rdi- il o of the town. stern-wheele- nt . Ihive bonds this afternoon's train. Commissioner Pike has a legal form for those desirous of taking advantage of the law exempting them from assessment work on their mining claims for the present year. These exemption notices have to be tiled with the county or mining recorder before the year is out, otherwise the ground is jump-able- ,. . Charley Hanks lost a valuable horse this week, the result of a runaway. One of his ore learns was standing on theCentennial-E;i-rek- a grounds, and, becoming frightened, started down the hill. ly the time the turn in the road was reached, the speed was too great and the outfit went over the side and tumbled down the bank, one horse being so badly injured; that it was considered a mercy to' kill him. Tricks In All Trades. The yonng doctor was sitting in h:s consultation room chatting with a friend when some one entered the outer office. He stepped out, and the friend heard him say: "Pray take a seat. I'll be at liberty In a few minutes." Then he came back into the consultation room and closed the door after him. "I'll skip," said the friend. "Not for the world. Sit down," Baid tho doctor. "But you have a patient waiting." ""Well, it's a woman. Let her wait about 15 minutes." "You may lose her business." "On the contrary, I'll get it regularly. I always make them wait." , . "To give tho impression of a rush of business. It is tho only way to keep a woman. If she thought I wasn't rushed to death, she'd lose confidence in mo and go sumo where Vienna is ing 12 miles city or city threo miles , closed elsV' Chicago Record." Vienna. of nearly circular form, brin circumference. The old projx'r. is, however, scarcely round, ft was formerly in- by fortifications. Immediately outside of these- was u wide esplanadu miming called Hie Cilacis, which has been eleand which could h paid by a very gantly built up and i called Ringstrnsio, 11. G. Wilson has aliout complet-- ; one of the ino.st low ra(; of taxation, probably on splendid F.traets bt the mill. If the huu.-:-e is built now. oil negotiations for the purchase of world. Brooklyn Ugle. i'.l'leeii r. . Parties infen Mug to take advantage of the relief inent law can sen re not iocs on the new copyrighted forms of C. inn or I' red Nelson. so!c agency Tint :,' Ii t riot . i three-quarte- rs or twenty years, |