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Show L, all EUREKA, JUAB COUNTY, VOL. IV, :: KAUN & WILLIAM F.LOOFHOUKOW 1 CAKE Attorneys and Coacssllors at Law. OFFICE-Room- 71,72, 73 Commercial Bl'k. sro, UTAH. - SALT LAKRCITY, JDWARI) PIKE. - Office In New Court House, Eureka. c. M. TUACKSTON. Attorney at Law t -- at Office N. -- Union Drug Store - EUREKA, UTAH. - A. KOBEKTSON, With Bennett. Marshall & THAT STATEHOOD BILL,. The Utah Statehood bill has finally been taken from the pigeon hole of the desk of the Committee on Territories, where, covered with the dust of dissatisfaction kicked up by the present adminintration, it has slumbered for past six months, and reported to the Senate where it passed without divis- ' ion Attorney at Law and 0. s. Commissioner. Bradley. MINING LAW A SPECIALTY. The objectionable clause is that which provides that this Territory shall mt be represented in the Senate until 1896, which was added by. Sen ator Faulkner, at the dictation of Cing Grover, who intimated that it would be useless for the Senate to p:iss any measure which would irrrjase the force of silver representatives in Congress during the present administration. It shame and a disgiace to principles and manhood that any member of the United States W. McCHKVSTAL, OAH N Senate, (which was once a 1 1 I iJ . NotH branch of the government), would Office in Tintic Mercantile Co.s store. grovel at the feet of the chief execu-uiv- e for instructions how to legislate BN C. STOTT.Xotu ry for the best interest of a nation of intelligent people. It is an outrage that Attorney and Counsellor-at-Lapeople are denied the rights which Will Practice in all Courts. statehood would give, because it does not suit the whim of Grover CleveOFFICE: 1st door north of Eureka Undertaking establishment. Eureka, Utah. land, nor the policy of Wall and street Shylocks to grant them a T. C. BAILEV. constitutional privilege they should 163 S. Main St.. Salt Lake City. 1 1 is a Ameriran 1 Public. w. Lorn-bar- Attorney -a- t-Law, d enjoy. Many prominent Democrats are over the bill and some of elated highly our Federal appointees, who are mere puppets in the hands of the Most High iiodgixs a youxg,' and Mighty, can hardly contain themselves for joy over the great good (?) TAILOBS their party has done the people of Utah. If the bill had provided for the election of a representative to ConAll Work Guaranteed. UTAH. gress at the coming election and given EUREKA. the people a chance to rid themselves of some of the administration paraEUREKA UNDERTAKING CO., sites who hold appointive offices in the Territory, it would have been somJAMES EUSTICE, MGR. ething to crow about. Patents and Land Office Business a Specialty Salt Lake Citv. Utah. Coins EUREKA. UTAH. Horn. F. 0. Markland C. B. I Works, 8th South and 4th West. Office, Opera House Building. Ores carefully sampled and sold at highest market price. Returns made on day of sale. Consignments solicited. Address The Conkling Sampling- Works, P. O. Box 942. Salt Lake Citv. Utah. - ROUSE & MORGAN COMPANY, Dealers in FrcsU and Cured Meats Have on hand and for sale a 1- -2 ct. Per Pound well-to-d- Several hundred Tons of Pure, Clear Ice. , Delivered at address by leaving orders at Meat Market. Main Street. Fresh fish everv Thursday. cret. TTo ? a eutuld.'ue aule H I.-- . stents aeil t ,rt:. r.ira ui t: . jnrfchil). .ir. at.n.t .rii.riiiiM. 1 We pell froi at. h!e kitlor lcl'orc Oula l.t f!l If.mr f m ri an II ksuir; Zi ii.h.. Aulut! aa U 11 T K S55.S? R3A0STEE1 $S5 UuHrnntoed am9 aa tgonlt tell for f.5 to ACKE ROAD RACER, WOOD-RIM' HIT 25fos.0pfl OUUi S, MpitIiib. jwrfirt Mjnptmrrt. rorffrt tinon. ' r i" it n tnr iu' and !.'.. Cunrmp"l nt"pr'ct ICrt ry Or with evurT ni"Hitiii y ill Vu 'en with rn yi lr- "iroi'i-l- i ui r.'iit yon vaylM't Irj'n fur nim qiiHMlii r r t Iihi. ,iir wliiilfhU' prlra I'euMn nf'ont i" much to HI Mr nr thrmtrl tu trulip tlu'in. finoti,. nnA U'iUT" ;i It anil err.riomy phcui-- I th hettrr wht nti lruui-iitbuy If ni u iilnv t at wlidlcf jl" irkf lilustratrd mtalnKiie free. - - Acme Cyclo Company, CLKIIART, 1ND. I A kicked H. S. Shafer of the The best meals to be had in the city at the Vienna Bakery. T It The best beefsteaks and short 1 It Vienna l.akery. It is rumored that the Democratic Club of Eureka are about to disorganize for the present, and at some time in the near future organize a new society, the object being to rid the club of the objectionable character who I! DUIUIIH. now uccupies the chair. We wonder a exists There where the would be Richard Croker of general and deeply rooted direct idea current dynamos of that to local the Democracy expects get high potential are not at all prachis support for the nomination of sher- very tical. Tiie actual historical and praciff, or the appointment' of registrar of tical facts are that the hi;di potential diJu lb County: perhaps some of the rect current machines were more extenfourth of July committee, to whom sively and successfully operated when he gave so much of his valuable time the dynamo first came into gemral u.st assistance and money (?) in securing about 1SS0 than any other type, either ballot for the Goddess of Liberty, direct or alternate. Furthermore, their will come forward with the necessary number and size have largely increased, and the vo?Tage at which they can bo endorsement. How the mighty are practically voiked has been steadily falling. raised iT.til we now have GO light dynamos as the standard size of large maTHE BEAUTIFUL ROCKIES. chines, gciieraiiug about iJ.Ot'O volts and 10 amperes. They Contain the Grandest seenery of CO Arc capacity arf and the Most Famous Gold ('amp In alo dynamos made lightseveral manuby regularly the World. facturers, and 10 or even 12.1 light The richest, the grandest, the most are built and used. I to awe inspiring range of mountains in know f one station where therehappen are four the known world is the Rocky moun- arc rated at 1,.") lights each tain range, extending entirely across whichdynamos run every night with a load of and bejond the state of Colorado. Grand old Pike's Peak, at the foot of from 100 to 105 lights. These machines whidli is situated the marvellous Crip- must generate about "i.COO volts each.' ple Creek gold camp, is here. That No greitt practical or other difficulty is Rreat national illustrated family paper found i:t operating arc machines, except the Rocky Mountain Illustrated Week- that cf tlatiKt r to persons, but this is ly, published at Denver, Colorado, (esdue to the high potential ami dees tablished 1800), illustrates this granti nitrly not depend very much i:po:i the type of scenery every week and tells about machine or t of current. Caser the wonderful west. Also true stories hier's llugazine. of love and adventurt'. This big week ly, containing eight large pages, fifty-silie I.oHt II (.'m.e. long columns, will be sent on trial one of the nio't eloEmerson, three months (H weeks) tor only twelve "Judge t stamps: club of five for a dol- quent men lliinois ever produced, was lar bill. Handsome solid gold rings once taken down completely in a speech set with beauiifui Rocky Mountain at Decatur." said E. F. Layman, an atgems are given free as premiums to torney of Chicago. "lie had a case in yearly subscribers. Address as above which there were some peculiarly and mention our paper when you circumstances, the rights of a write. young girl whose projierty had been W. II j. Nelson, woo is in the drug squandered and who was reduced to desbusiness in Kingsville, Mo., has so titution being involved. Judge Emerson much confidence in Chamberlain's Co;-i- made the most of it, nnd as he closed his Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy that speech a solemn hush had fallen over th courtroom. be warrants every bottle and offers to "Tears stood in the eyes of the jurors, refund the money to any customer whu and even the judge coughed sympathetis not satisfied after using it. Mr. ically and hid his head behind the trial Nelson takes no risk in doing this be- docket. His opponent, whose name I cause the remedy is a certain cure for have now forgotten, saw that the spell the diseases for which it is intended had to be broken in so way, or his cast and he knows it. It is for sale by the was lost. Arising slowly to his feet, and in a voice of deep solemnity, and with Eureka Drug Store. slow deliberation, he said, 'Gentlemen of the jury, let us continue these solemn DRS. MIOitKM fc (SHO.tF.S. Terms $5 a month including medi- exercises by sinking the one hundred ami psahu." A roar of laughter cine. Consultation free at the Hat- fifteenth fol'owed from the audience, ami Judga field House. No cure no pay. Emerson lost his case." the man? The President of the United States. How did he get there? The Democratic party put him there. What is the Democrat ic party? It is what swiped the Republican party off the face of the earth in i89. Did it? was the inference. How was it done? By promises. What kind of promises? Promises to do what the people demanded by the majority to be done. Have the promises been kept? Yes; kept in the background, where they can't be got at. What are these promises? The substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seeu. Ah, faith? The same, but the works are rusty. Who is doing this? The three C's. The three C's? Yes; Cuckoos, Compromise and Cleveland. "New York Sun. That s har-ci- x 1m j two-cen- ic c. g, 12-- tf is j hors WILL END. WORLD Die Not liy Acclilctit, but a Mittim I leath. According to ill probability, notwithstanding all thw circumstances which threaten it, onr planet will die not of au accident, but a natural death. That deal U will be the consequence of the exiine ioti of the nun in 20.000,000 yearn or more perhaps 30.000.tHIO since its condensation at a relatively moderate rate will pve it, on one hand, 17,000.000 years of existence while on the other hand tlio inevitable fall of meteors into the snu may double this number. Even if yon suppose the duration of the sun to be prolonged to 40.000,000 years, it is still incontestable that the radiation from the sun cools it and that the temperature of all bodies tends to an equilibrium. The day will come when the sun will be extinct. Then the earth and all the othe r planets of our system will cease to be the abode of life. They will be erased from the great book and will revolve, black cemeteries, around an extinguished sua. Will these planets continue to psrt even then? Yes, probably in the cas.? of Jupiter and perhaps Saturn. No, beyond a doubt . for the small bodies, audi an the earth. Venus, Mais. Mercury and the moon. Already the moon appears to have preceded us toward the final desert. M;trs is much further advanced tlwii Vethe earth toward the same destiny. surwill doubtless than us, ens, yo'.injitr vive us. T'u se little worlds lose tin;) r f vitality much faster than elements the mmi lo;es its lieat. From century to century, from year to year, from day to day, from hour to hour, the surface of the earth is transformed. On the one hand, the continents are crumbling away and becoming covered by the sea, which insensibly and by very blow degrees tends to invade and submerge the entire globe. On the other hand, tho amount of water on the surface of tL globe is diminishing. A careful and reasonable calculation shows that, by thtj action of closure alone all the land ou our planet will he covered by water ia lo.Oo0.00O years. Cannlle Flamuiariou in Astroiioiiiie. Freeinyer House, Middleburg. X: Y.. on the knee, which laid him up in bed and caused the kn;e joint to become stiff. A triend recommended him to use Chamberlain' Pain Balm, which he did and in two days was able to be around. Mr. Shafer has recommended it to many others and says it is excellent for any kind of a bruise or sprain. This same remedy is also famous for its cure of rheumatism. For saie by the Eureka Drug Store. Grover Cleveland. Who is Grover Cleveland? j 12. ish display of elqquence have since managed to secure a membership of 4H. The Republicans organized with a membership of over 100 members on the roil at the first mcening and the number has been constantly increasingA meeting of the James G. Blaine Republican Club of Tintic District was held at Mammoth last Saturday night and was fairly well attended. C. L. lirown and Dr. Clark addressed the house, the latter reviewing the condition of alfairs tnat prevailed while the Democrats were in power prior to 18(10 and compared it with the state of alfairs since. A number of names were added to the roll which now contains nearly iihu names, and many m nv have expressed a desire to sign. the man. Who is the man?"' The strike seems to be about ended, business having been resumed with its old regularity on nearly all lines tied us. Debs and other leaders of the movement have been indicted by the Federal courts of Chicago for being insurrectionists. The strikers have accomplished nulling directly beyond discommoding and stopping the business Of the country and exhibiting the true state of affairs now existing. An indirect result, and one that will will be that it be more will cause some of the dormant manhood of our republic to step forward and domar d a system of legis ation that will do away with so much idleness and inaugurate an era of prosperity in which all may participate. The gilded plum all were so anxious to obtain in l"i!)2 has developed a persimmon anrnow they cannot rid them-selvo;' the barnacle their rapacity fastened upon themselves. The people of the eastern portion f our country are beginning to discover the true remedy and a sentiment in favor of applying it is rapidly crystallizing, as is evidenced by the numerous eum-n- u nls that are made upon t he stand taken by Senator Don Cameron on t he silver question. A forecast of the p ilitical complexion of the District this fall rn.iy be taken fr.ini the manner hi which the two 13, 1894. The political clubs were formed. HOW THE Democrats called a meeting and elected officers and by hant work and a lav- Our Planet AVI II 1 do see o, ion takes, so many mi! inns of dollars' .vortli of the metal from the world's s'ock in this way. Some gold is lost all possible Hi remelting. though means be taken to reduce it to the lowest, possible figure. Not only are the floors swept and the dirt treated for the recovery of the yellow substance, but the wooden planks are burned eventual')' with the same object. Even the shoes of each man who works with the metal are subjected to the chemistry of fire, yielding a small "button" of the precious metal. Mining & Scientific Press, The Ideal Young Man. A gentleman is a man who is gentle. Titles, graceful accomplishments, superior culture, princely wealth, great talent, genius, do not constitute a man with all the attributes needed to make him a gentleman, lie may be awkward, angular homely or poor and yet belong to the uncrowned aristocracy. His face may be bronzed at the lorge or bleached in the mill, his hands huge and hard, his patched vest like Joseph's coat of many colors, and he may still be an ideal young man. The dandy is a dry goods sign, not a gentleman, for he depends upon dress, and not upon his honor and virtue for prospect to society. The man who has no money is poor; he who has nothing but money is poorer, and is not a gentleman. Some of the most distin guished men in the world of letters, in the world of art, have been grossi vulgar, ungentle, consequently not idt al. "You are a plebeian,'' said a patrician to Cicero. "I am a plebeian,'' said the eloquent Roman; " the nobility of my family begins with me; that of yours will end with you." I hold that no man de- Do you see Soet-bee- r, alarming statement. It is to the effect that t he total amount of gold dug out of the earth annually suffices only to supply the present demand for that valuable, substance for use in the arts. "Not a bit of the new product of the mines is available for coinage. Trinket use and waste in manufacture exhaust the whole yield. If this is correct, then gold must vanish from circulation before long, because the output of the gold mines is diminishing rather than increasing, and there are few fields left to explore. But Uncle Sam's metallurgists say that it is not so. The writers quoted failed to consider the fact that the gold employed in the arts is utilized over and over again. It goes through a sort of a cycle. Articles of jewelry often disappear, but are seldom lost. When, through accident, they pass out of the possession of the they go who sell to the poor and sharp-eyeor pawn them. Some jewelry is lost by fire and some in the sea, and these losses are absolute and hopeless; but jewelry otherwise is certain, practically, all of it, to find its way, sooner or later, to the pawnshops, or into the hands of dealers in old gold. Thus it is melted up eventually and reappears again other shap. s. This is what is termed the "invariable supply" of that metal. There are a number of unavoidable causes of loss of gold. The first and most important of these is by abrasion. Jewelry loses much weight in that way, especially rings, which are eighteen karat and are worn rapidly. C tins suffer much l ss, but still considerably, from wear. All gold leaf is a total loss to the stock of the world. Where used for decorative, purposes it is never recovered. It is not employed for filling teeth as much as formerly, "porous guld" being suhst ituted. lint , of course, the gold utili.ed for filling tot th is a total los-- , and in the aggregate it is enormous in quantity. If it hi supposed that the average dweller in cities of this country lias fJ cents worth of gold in his or her iikmi1.Ii, which is placing the figure very low. it will lie seen how gre.it is the waste in this form. Each succeeding g.n;r-i- l JULY Another lirlff Catechism. The world's Supply of Gold. The most eminent living writers on the precious metals, Suess and have recently published what the New York Telegram calls an and Castets. UTAH, FRIDAY, serves to be crownod with honor whose life is a failure. The world is no better for his living in it. He never wipd a tear troni a sad face, never kindled 1 fire upon a frozen hearth. repeat a is he with emphasis failure. There is no flesh in his heart: he worships no God but gold. John G. Martin. IT FULL LIKE OF 11 ttf'Wi( Fr R. 0. Wilson, whose efforts to sethe n imination for sheriff on the Democratic ticket have been mil irintr, now aspires to the posit ion of registrar of Juab County, the position by F. V. Chappcl. We ci ns'der Mr. Wils in t it ally unfit for a position which is in any waynni- Of course it nect"d with voting. on be election bal- ;m different might held out ." he but that fact the lot, tm the Goddess of Liberty b..!lit. pre-- i eludes his endorsement for the position by reputable c.tiz ns of turcka. cure, now-occupie- j He Had ttla Hewufa. It was in alare department store that a gilded youth drifted up to the candy counter. "Do yon know," he said to the pretty yonng woman in charge, "if I wu'jtL proprietor of this establishment I should dismiss you?" "Why?" she asked indignantly. "Iu order to give the candy a chance," l.e ansv. tred. And s!ie g tvahira . an b f " .i0 c t:s 1 pounds of T cent I n" Press. n-tr- oit |