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Show 0 YEARS OLD AND WEIGHS ISO POUNDS. TEN J IS BOY. BIGGEST Fln5er9 and Toes ever .,r's Clothes, and Looki to Be Xwen- - M Ji til) U: Wears Was a 1 SaPv HE Sunday World week- - last pub- lished a portrait and biography of the heaviest living man, M. Canon-Ber- g, abet Paris of 5 To- his only youthful rival, the largest boy in the world, is His name given. a is and he pleasant Mochty, well-to-d- nton with hi3 living at Haindorf, parents, o in lower Austria. jJVten years old, says a writer in jut paper. growing Colossus weighs at the 1 lt inches from arm ures 45 t re- - pit to five feet is exactly He pmeter. his breast pounds, time 150 a a small child he was so phlegmatic refused to learn to walk for four fjs after his birth. With the begin- ( ,:! 01jvsc uia fifth vpar he beean " to r.revn , Tafter a little while learned to walk. fLa a baby Anton was thought rather the Lthi;; -- motner nursed nim until his and he took little solid food jll. year, iore that time. On his sixth birthday, was a party; at his father's f5en there vse the boy first attracted attention giccount of his large features, two pjring the last if ned over two feet years he has seventy pounas in weight in height. Anton six toes and six I Mature gave each hand and foot. As the printed in the Sunday World are perfectly :,owg) all these members well and shaped, except that looped hi small fingers stand out from the d however, work like fingers. V'The jomts 1:ose u the other of : I LAW AND GOLD VALUES DEMONETIZE IT AND ITS PRICE WILL FALL AT ONCE. In Tht Respect It I. No Better than ver Still tne Plutocrat. Claim Sil- thrt - They Cannot See the Problem That ;' Way. Prior to 1844 the price of gold bullion in London averaged 3 17s. 6d. an ounce, while the niint rate was 3 17s. 10d. In other words, an ounce of gold In the form of coin was worth 4 pence more than the same gold was be- it was coined. Why? The fore gold-it- e in-gratl- tuc I m ounce on the mint rate of 3 17s. 10 d. From that day to this there has never been an ounce of gold bought or p.- sv2d in the London y Cohim-- market for less than the price set upon it by the law. Here in America, if the depositor of gold had to wait for his. money, the bullion would be worth less than the coin, and the difference would be in proportion to the length of the wait. If instead of waiting sixty days, as formerly in England, the depositor had to wait five years to get his coin, it is scarcely necessary to say that the difference would be very great. If the bullion could not be coined at all the difference would be still greater. But there is no delay and no charge for coinage. As soon as the value of a deposit is ascertained the depositor receives a draft for the amount, and the transaction is closed so far as he is concerned. The coinage is then executed according to the capacity or convenience of the mint. Of course the closing of the American mint to gold would not destroy its coinage value elsewhere. The mints of other countries remaining open it would be coined in those countries at the rates prescribed by law. For example, it would ictill be coined in England at 3 17s. 10d. an ounce, because, the law provides that any person depositing gold at the royal mint may have it coined into money at that rate. If every other country in the world should prohibit the coinage or use of gold as money it would still be coined o ca G tost every t proper ow. jmmmm,Mmwwy . at 3 17s. 10d. in England under the existing law. Its nominal or "money" value would be the same. But its value in exchange would be less. It would not buy so much. If a man could not use gold as money anywhere except in England he would be very silly to give as many bushels of wheat or pounds of cotton for an ounce of gold as he will give now when it can be coined and used in many countries. So we see that tne expressions that a "gold dollar is always worth a dollar," or "100 cents," and that "gold bullion is just as good as gold coin" do not touch the essence of the money question at all. Gold bullion is as good as gold coin for the simple reason that the law makes it so that is, by operation of law gold bullion is instantly convertible into coin, and without expense. But if there were a charge. for coining, as above stated, a delay in getting returns, the bullion would not be worth as much as coin. We also see that he 'money value" of gold is entirely a matter of law; because money itself is a matter of law. When we say that 'an ounce of pure mean gold is worth $20.67 we simply wWl cut of metal and ounce the an that of amount money. But stamp into that on no law the subject were if there noi coinage value at gold would have be coined. Its not could it all, because be would just what it value, then, in for wheat, or cotwould exchange ton, or corn, or whatever might be fact now The wanted. And this is what It will of anything real value other in things, because exchange for a term of exchange. "value" is purely a If people will bestow little thought easily perupon the subject they will a gld dolof declaration ceive that the 100 worth cents, which lar always being standard the peogold forth by is put redoes not in the "clincher," a ple as main the touch question. motest degree as of gold many grains takes just It as the law says to make a "dollar" At a one dollar. time into shall be put grains of gold to make a it took ; 27dollar. Now it only takes make a Why? Simply because the 25 law has been changed. the gold dollar cf 25 But . st do- a 18 'Vlt acord Haj Ceiorad juble wtear S is ing FATTEST BOY IN THE WORLD. j $1 horn TO forJlM i Do not orde toa's t but ,t .wbolesa la stamp mer &tre ' 1 :1 ! footeear is vnpnsive. His as well as those of a shoes, order. He his father's trousers, coats and shirts, underwear and hats, and taken for a' young man of yiUt was not for the freshness increasing! They were very poor men; piexion and his youtniui what should they ao i be made to i and cuttin per 2 P. nature is so! uC jmust oe generous in ont? ....i. L Mnrtnn was showing a re- even io xpectea entomological bu- the So it is thrpugh Anton porter happens tbat 'aeans a bright boy; but as in, the - IOI pry. hejen6ys aver- - Canon-Ber- g, , and a sunny temper, :,age they call him "the wb- - rtelIJgeuce go; r gold and 7 1 173S Cored io1 PILE- - on '1- - account of the rotunAity ' Matures. 'm tnat 'ifel-r- t l'a 1 normally built; parents and -- erons brothers and Rasters are hed neither for largeness no -. toes ' ... - W fingers. An- ater. ; vnunre In Germany, rodMerbugand . . A him prisoner. u4 to Wasningiou, ' captive rTr brought ui"-nnw in iLa lUttt Vvt he's eartn. on bug house, tne jux- b- nnir 1. rniM: hl?--o120,000. Bpt ver are canaries; vve got the bug.". vicimany auu, - uesiuco . 19 fV.l mai are Bnt 10 market takes about disc A French savant has Dest customers being Dy heaUh aid - mo ivreenune itepuuiiu- many perfumes -- a, to which! countries sal:sing disease fIcrlyDtSs and other lavender, euJPus with large number of sLuts proved very X. X- ' it ; CI. 0iC In tbUJP: V. a o,ooo' , -- is-th- a ueen a big f - did. hd don't look It, but he orsde-fact.! One day anutflt started in' pursuit of this bug. tsOOOO; aro aa vet. hid- .tB scientists who have unaer-- ; fr plain the phenomenon. He traordi na.rv 'iinary swelrTt the presence of Vishnu; and they did parading the not like the dung-cart- s in the marketstreets and standing like payplace. Least of all did they year to the ing a week's earnings every food was. cf cost local board when the Is about twice as valuable as the REPLACES I 8-1- 0. to-d- ay iCOAL. gold dollar of 27 grains formerly was that is, it will exchange for about twice the quantity of other things. 'LITTLE CHUNKS' WHICH GIVE The main reason ror this is that sil, ENORMOUS HEAT. ver, whichj formerly shared about i i equally with hold the demand for money ExNot Balky use, has been demonetized and the de- Smokeless, Cheap and mand has been concentrated upon gold, traordinary Advantages to Ship.. Bail-roaand Factories Fuel for Army with the result that its value in exCamps. change or purchasing power has been or doubled. nearly quite This means that the producer Is now CIENCE now comes to the front selling his product fori about one-ha- lf With a. substitute the amount of money which he formerior Bimetal-list. obtained coal. A French for it. National ly 'O v; Paul engineer, D'Humy; knows how to solidify peARE AGAINST SILVER. He retroleum. That's All the National Blmetalllst Cares duces it into small to Know About Men and Things. blocks, which, when Some of our contemporaries seem to burned, give out intense heat. be laboring under a misapprehension with reference to the position of this These burn only; on the surface, give paper and a word of explanation may out no smoke or smell, and produce but 2 or 3 per cent, of ashes. The pronot be cess is, of course, bis own secret. The National Bimetallist has nothThe finest grades of anthracite coal ing but kind words and kind feelings n make at least 10 per cent, of ashes, and remon-etizatiofor all who are laboring for the bituminous coal fully 20 per cent, of of silver. It is endeavoring to educate the peo- ashes. In this respect solidified petrople to the very best of its ability, and, leum has an immense advantage as a what is more, it is not seeking to make fuel sufficient to render it far preferable to coal. In household use, on any money out of it. on railroads and in manufacsteamers, can If it do some good, and just pay removal of ashes is an exthe expenses, the ambition of the manage- turing ment will be more than satisfied. pensive item. The new fuel Is also far cheaper and We also desire to say once more and less bulky. A single ton of it, in far in the clearest possible way that the of whatever size may be blocks National Bimetallist does not represent the "Patriots of America" or any wanted, represents at least thirty tons other secret political organization of coal, possibly nearer forty, and its whatever. Its work is being done cost to the consumer, as now figured openly, honestly and in the great fo- out, will be only from $5 to ?10 a ton. It has still one other admirable qualrum of the American people. to a Referring suggestion lately made ity; it requires very little draught ; to that the National Bimetallist strikes burn it and very little trouble to set it Democratic gold bugs only, we desire ablaze. A cubic inch of it will proto say that we really did not know duce a light blue flame many hundred that Mr. Sherman was, or ever had times larger in volume and a flame been, a Democrat, Our recollection is which with a strong draught will travel that we have struck him a few blows a long distance. The experiments aland one page of each issue of this pa- ready made have proved that arter oxyper regularly links the names of Sher- gen it supplies the greatest heat obtainable. man and Carlisle. From this it follows that its greatest An attack upon Sherman is in exftrct an attack upon every other Republican value will be where enormous heat is who agrees with his views. required, where there must be great We very freely admit, though, that supplies of fuel and wherever every our heaviest blows have been aimed at inch of space has value. Nowhere are Cleveland and his Democratic cuck- these conditions more evident than in oos. That, however, Is merely because the cases of warships, ocean steamers the Cleveland administration is now and the colossal steel factories that dot in control of our finances and is the England and the "United States. Ship great power that Immediately confronts designers are now greatly handicapped us. by the provision they are forced to Our strictures upon Cleveland, Car- make for the carry from 3,000 to 6,000 tons of lisle, Herbert, Morton, Eckles and coal. Preston have been called out by their recent utterances and relate to curThen, too, every war vessel must stop rent events. frequently for coaling. This has enIf they were in private life we should tailed enormous expense. England has have paid no attention to them except, very nearly the whole surface of the perhaps, as their utterances might have globe punctuated with coaling stations. furnished texts upon which we could The necessity of coal has stared her in have advantageously laid the true doc- the face at every step of her foreign trine of bimetallism before our read- policy. ers. The space saved could be devoted to The silTfc? question cannot be settled extra machinery, guns, ammunition by wildly kicking at nothing and wast- and men, and it would at once relieve ing whole magazines of ammunition on the present cramped quarters in which the manner in which silver was demon- officers and others have to live on board To the transatetized twenty-tw- o years ago. What we the sbips of want chiefly is to show that it is for the lantic greyhounds solidified petroleum best interests of the people that it would also be of the gr'atest importshould be restored, whatever may have ance. A big ocean liner now uses from been the method of its demonetization. 2,500 to 3,000 tons of coal a trip. In conclusion, and for all, we desire Compressed petroleum is especially to say that the National Bimetallist adapted for use in the manufacture of stands upon absolutely In impartial steel, for it contains no sulphur. ground. It will attack a Republican England coke is generally used in the just as readily and as strongly as it will steel furnaces. About two and a half a Democrat. But the prominent Re- tons of coke are required to make a men have been "ly- ton of steel, and the cost of this is publican anti-silving low" of late. When they emerge from $12.50 to $15. To get the same from cover our guns will be trained quantity of unvarying intense heat upon them, and if they don't get hurt necessary to manufacture a ton of it will be because the National Bimet- steel about 500 pounds of solidified allist is not able to bring the necessary petroleum would be necessary. This force to bear. would cost about $1.50, equal to 10 per This journal makes the cause of bi- cent, of the present cost. metallism paramount to every other question and will strike with all its Perfect Love. power any man or any party that is Look in my eyes, my Love, and say opposed to the complete restoration of good-by- e silver. But it does not intend to waste Love is not Love save it hath made us its shot upon those who are in hiding, strong v"" whether they be Republicans or Dem- To meet stern duties that remorseless ocrats. National Bimetallist. throng For doing. Men may fail, but you International Bimetallist a. and I A correspondent writing a personal Should be invincible to live or die; letter, seems to be inclined to criticise To wage firm battle against sin and what we said in our last issue about wrong; Senator Allison's "bimetallism," the To wait that's hardest, dear however writer taking the position that an inlong, ternational bimetallist, is no bimetallist For joys withheld, and God to answer at all. why; We did not intend to intimate that To banish yearning hope if it be vain Senator Allison's bimetallism is of a To say good be. bye, if we "must satisfactory kind, for it is not. Bimetal- Had we but half loved, then parted we might lism which is based upon an impossiole complain condition, will never result in anything were murdered Parting substantial. Such bimetallists have, But loving, O my Love, sopossibility; perfectly, though, a certain value in the discus- We are beyond the touch of any pain. sion, because when a man declares that Katrina Trask in The Watchman. he is in favor of restoring silver by international agreement, it is a surrender Disfigured by Seeing a Cruel Act. of the entire gold side of the issue, A scene of terrible distress is reso far as principle is concerned. of Farmer Gullet, It is an admission that silver, was ported ofin the family 111. It appears that Melvin, wrongfully demonetized and that it north a cat in the prescrushed a. esneighbor ought to be restored. This is the Gullet's Mr. little of ence sence of the question. Mr. Allison was mentioned in an article on "Kings and daughter. The horror and freight the child into spasms, from Patriots," merely for the purpose of threw she was aroused with difficulty, showing the strength of the silver which was with the face drawn and Jitupid, men's position, and that upon principle and one the side to legs practically useeven a prominent candidate for presiEminent less. physicians were called, dential nomination on the republican could be done for the little ticket was compelled to admit that but nothing until death came child, and she suffered ' they are right. re!5.ef. to her No reader of this paper need have any fear of the National Bimetallist Tropical Birds In Germany. being satisfied with "international biA as the metallism" it is preached in gold medal has been awarded to United States. We have no use for any Herr Proseh as a reward for ihis sucmanwho, while admitting that silver cess in introducing tropical birds into of ought to be remonetized, will not vote German forests.. With' the exception canaries laid African parrots,! all the for it until England says the word. birds imported from tropical regions Clara Mr. Sandstone wrote some have been acclimatized, and even the have survived the lovely poetry In the valentine he sent young of the former The new bird winter. me. It was to the effect that it matched severity of last SaxSouthern in situaird Is colony the roses in my cheeks. , ! I . ; persistently claims that the value of gold is altogether independent of cointhe tank, halt and listen to the dis- age. Then what reason was there for coin being worth 4 pence an pute and join in the complaint that "the English ounce more plain gold bullion? 'takkus'j is grievous, the children's food There could than be but one reason. The is being taken away." The toll conwas coin more desirable than the bultractor jhas no concern with their feel- lion. But why more desirable? There ings, and only observes that it is the was one just thing that could be done "hukm'J or command of the governwith coin ment, and proceeds to rake in his dues. uncoined that could not be done with bullion. People could pay The district officers say that the their debts with it. The coin was "lee of the people is most discourtender." The man who owed angal aging; latrines have been put up, the other a pound sterling could tender a filth is parted away daily to a distance from the town, street drains are gold sovereign in; full payment and the creditor was it. cleansed, stray dogs are destroyed, oil But ten tons oflegally bound to take margold bullion at the lamps hjave' been erected in the streets, ket price, of which we hear so much, water of good quality distributed to would not a be "tender" for the good stahdpipes for public use, and they have smallest debt. Therefore a man who a local board, presided over by the had bullion sell would gold it to some Taluq Native revenue officer, and yet broker for less than its coinage rate in they are not happy. It is really too order to get money, because with money bad. Some of the people will positively he could pay his debt or procure anynot drirlk the water coming to them in else that he Taeeded. metal pipes, and some still neglect to thing But it may be asKed, How was it use the public latrines, preferring to that the bullion was worth less than resort to the open country outside the the coin when coinage was free? For town, according to old custom. A native the simple reason that there was a dehand-looweaver, of whom there are lay in executing the coinage. When a many iiji Singhpur, told one of the col- man deposited gold at the mint, on an lectors beons, who told the head clerk, to wait about sixty he had average who told his superior, that the people for returns. Rather than do this days were not ungrateful, but they were all he took the bullion to some broker and queer and liked their, own ways, which suffered a loss of pence on each the English did not understand; they ounce in order to at46 once get the coin. did not notice the pdors which the EnBut in 1844 the English Parliament glish called bad smells; they liked to compelling the Bank of take their drinking water from the vil- passed a tolawreceive all gold bullion of lage weli, or the temple tank, especially England sufficient fineness and the latter, which had been blessed by rate of 3 17s. 9d. an pay for it at the ounce, the bank a allowed being margin of 1 pence - ind Hajt grains ' to-da- day the picture of tL BAD SMELLS. England'. Effort, to Improve Conditions 7 In India. Under English rule "local ernment ' has been bestowed upon the people o India, so the board h around for means to pay for water and drainage schemes and town conservancy; the barrier dues are one of them, and the barters, who have just come in, are as discontented as the people of th town, who pay, one way and another, 2 shilling per head annually for local rates, sys the Gentleman's Magazine. Four annas for each cart entering Singhptr, in addition to four tolls on the, roa4 from Panhunder! It is 'monstrous! How will they get food y for thejnselves and their bullocks?" Here some women, passing on their way to 8-- 10 , i Our Stodcratsars' Thb Blad will oonttnuo loumn in each nufe pubheb brands under yearly contraou at t aomlu&l price. The Rdvantasre to the stoefcraiser of faoall taxlilnff the puhllo with hU brand and mrfc are to well knovrn to need attention. It la t Ue atockroan as valuable at an advertUeaeat U to the' merchant. d, -- ill-time- rs. el. . f RANGEt wiwer eerier ana I v 81nk of Beaver, ft Address: . Utah. Oaaia, .. Hi :'Hwftfij ; Lip per silt 1b right, under 1U In left ear Ran fro: Cricket Mountains Lower Sevier. and Addreaa, DeBeret, Utah. Jos V, 1 P ; - t VWU-- - Hand-painte- d, wasn't it? ony. Under slit t& right, under silt In left ear. Ranee: CrieksV J I '. Mountains Deaeret, Utah Addreta, Join I Smith- - Oasis, Utah. Address, urerson Bm Breeders aa4 dealers in Short ) horn Darbama. Horses s a as , "'- brand an left' thigh. Cattle-Up- per slope la each ear. Ranrs Sevier rive and dioddUItii between ililie' station on ibe U. P. Ky and Leamington. AddrefB. Ieamiugton, Millard Co., Utah ... si5 Parley Mini Boreton same brand thigh. left Cattle close crop in left and , slit in rigat sr. Kmge, Sevier, Lower rtatridma .et. Utah. - Men-of-w- ar n t 'liii-- J m w k !C& L on left Wgk tame brand oa USSt hip of cattle. Baxgo-Willo- Springs. Address, J. Kearny, F. Flak Springs, Juab County, Utak. O Ton left thlbv double swallow fork In left ear Range, Lower Eo rier. Address CMS. TuOljSEl Oasis, Millard Oe. Utah. y. s ' Horse Grower and Deaaxv RANGE: Housa Mountain an-- i Lower Sevier., Mark, slit & and two slit right In eft ear. en left shoulder on horses-P-. N. Petersen, 8aas-bran- Address, Oasis Utah, Range, Lew er Sevier. Same left on Horses. thigh Upper slope and one under slit tm left ear, and two under slits In ear. RANGE right :0ak er Maude Mimt TTLX F'VUS-S.i-V- j to-da- "a Jno Dewsirap d. coal-bunke- - ChasJ F. . Creek. Sims Walker Address, Oak City, Utah. O. MARTIN, S. SALT LAKE. General Commission Mer cbani: Dealer la VEGETABLES, BUTTER,. Peuliry, Game, Veal Fork ant Beef, Smoked and Fresh risk. FRUITS, Flour, Hay and Grain. It will pay you to ship your goods to e. asI' remit charge 10 per eent for handling andfirst-class, soon as goods are sold. Caa give oeuatrr references if desired. W. Q . M STEWARD,. ASSAYER, orncn 58 W. 2nd, South, SALT LAKE OITY P. O. BOX 4-4-9. Hand Samples . Iron Assay Copper Assay Bottle Samples Prank - .$1.00 . 1.00 . 1.00 . 3.00 - e - D, Hobbs, Land (Lat h g'.tier U. 8. Ofllce.) Land and Mining Attorney. Correspondence! solicited.; Twenty ' thre years' experience. SALT LAKK CITY, UTAH. ; ; Und Agents & Attorneys.. SALT LAKE CTY. UTAH, |