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Show STORY OE THE DELTJ&E the world worthy a race,and to with more grateful beings. re-peo- ple THOMAS GEEENWAY. , When he had finished he raised his to throw a thunderbolt which THE LEADER OF THE MANITOBA hand By Virginia Horten. HERB was a time would fire the world and utterly destroy . LIBERALS. but Mercury held his hand. beforein Jupiter it,"Sire, would you destroy heaven, too, heaven, reigned ' and a deed?" so ; Be Has ' Defied the Imperial Authority rash by .when peace J and May, Soon Lead the Alanitobans Jupiter then realized how so great a love and gentleness ruled the uni- conflagration might set fire to the heavto a Republican Form of Govern verse. The vorld enly bodies, and changed his plan. ment. p.! v was full of the Mercury was dispatched to chain up Aquilo, the North Wind, which drives t , glory of a perpetuF Manitoba rebels sun the to call and away forth; clouds, Th? al spring. If against British rule shone with kindly Notus, the South Wind, who soon cov fill and sets up an in- warmth and light, ered the land with a pitchy blackness. dependent govern-jj- n which Then the rain descended In torrents, earth, the yielding ment of its own, vivifying but Jupiter, still unsatisfied, called on in fruit and blossom fresh brought wuicu is oy no his brother Neptune to let loose his wameans plenty. A carpet of grass continually unlikely, the renewed Itself, and trees were ever ters. Then,! hurling a thunderbolt, he man who will lead rent the world from end to end, and fresh and green. the revolutionists It was one long holiday to the people, thus drove up the waters from the sea will be Thomas who lived in the innocence and purity in solid walls, which rose hundreds. of Greenway premier of childhood. There was no need for feet in the air and fell with resounding of the provincial destroying plants, cattle, government and hero of the hour in work, for the earth, their kind mother, crashes, houses, for their people. gave all that was necessary so the world was destroyed. The that colony of England. Greenway is And labor. their of need without welfare, of a dictator in fact, very were covered by the something It was the Golden Age of the world, highest tree-toa dictator and a natural of much and laughter and music were as com- surging waters, no trace of human habileader. He saw the importance of mon then as trouble and- - misery are tation could be seen, and the whole striking boldly out for the majority of world was a great sea, extending" where Manltobans in the common now. fight against religrose asar ious schools in the province arid paved Why did this age ever end, you won- rthe top of Mount Parnassus der? It came from the desire to rule. mtie island in its midst. the way for revolution by thrusting When Jupiter saw his object accomaside with contempt the order of the Jupiter ascended the throne of heaven and earth; a code of laws and morals plished he commanded Notus to retire, imperial privy council of London, was instituted, and as heretofore the and Aquilo soon drove back the dark which was a short command to him to veil of clouds; while Apollo smiled upon restore the people had done right from the intui- the parochial schools. He is a commanded waste. Then were Neptune man of strong character and implacable suddenly tions of their souls, they and rudely awakened to the possibility Triton to sound upon his horn, and the determination. He was born in Cornwaters retreated. The land, rich with wall, of evil. England, on March 25, 1838, and soon its forth strength, moisture, as came put was educated in Canada. With this mental conception He twice a result a material change. The Golden and the world soon became a garden married in the latter country and went of beauty again. So out of death is to Manitoba in 1868. He was returned Age was succeeded by the Silver Age. a there regeneration and a new life. to the dominion house of commons in The people did not suddenly become and the rainbow of the Iris, goddess 1874, and was unseated in the following evil, but there was a gradual dropping looked ftwn the of messenger Juno, The He aided materially in settling from old childlike the faith, away on year. world grew older and the people, who, upon the radiant garden, and sawwho and developing southern. Manitoba, and was elected by acclamation to the legisthus far, had been always young, bgan the top! of Parnassus two beings, the when were saved all been had that to grow eld, too. The perpetual spring lature, in 1879. He was in flooded the world. 1S83, 1886 and 1888, and waters devastating and 1892. heat to four in seasons, the way gave again fcoth He formed a government on the resigand cold, in th.p"- - intensity, drove! the Deucalion and his wife Pyrrha, just and faithful and good, saw the god- nation of the Harrison administration r in caves. people to seek in 1888 and took the offices of president Then the ef did not yield so dess smile, and hope filled their hearts. temthe new With sought vigor they of the council and minister of agriculsow was man driven to; abundantly and bowed heads of with and the oracle, ple ture and immigration. On July 23, the seed, and for the first time the oxen were placed under the yoke to drive the and silent prayers asked guidance howa 1892, he was returned to power. He is they might repeople the world with a man of tremendous force of character, furrows. aacai-to- r boundless energy and progressive ideas. So age succeeded age, the Brazen,; the race as good and pure as their done had Prometheus long ag. He has chiefly interested himself in producer of a warlike race, was folAs they knelt in the temple, covwnd lowed by the Age of Steel, with the agriculture and Immigration matters. a soft and was as slime ooze, with it A thorough farmer himself, he undermen hard as that metal itself. sounded waters as of distant rushing stands the needs of that class and has Then the crime burst upon the world ears. It soon became a distheir upon caused the organization of agricultural like an fire, sweeping Imto societies and exhibitions, and of popubefore It and annihilating truth, hohor, tinct sound, which formed itself these words: lating the country with a substantial justice and mercy. Fraud and, cunning with and into the woods, "Depart kind of settlers. His attitude on the and violence and greed came Into the hair and unloosed garments, school question has been consistently hearts of men, and fathers could (not flowing trust their sons, nor husbands their cast behind you the bones of your aggressive, and it is believed he will be vindicated by the majority, despite the wives. Not satisfied with what the Sur- mother.' Deucalion and they thought Pyrrha constitutional face of the earth yielded, the men must lodged in the powan avenging spirit erful minorityright and indorsed by the needs dig into the bowels and cruel iron must have heard for how cou2d they be so wicked and mischief-breedin- g gold had their speak, as to desecrate the remains of the dej" birth. , But suddenly, as they wanWars then broke out, and the two ceased. along, a bright dejectedly metals were used as weapons, and the dered came to Deucalion. father was not safe from his son ia his thought if I mistake not, the earth greed for the inheritance. Family lbve is "Pyrrha, our mother,1 the great parent of all. lay prostrate in the mire, and so pad The stones are her bones. us east and heartrending was all this to ithe them behind us, it can do noLet harm." newly-ejecte- d gods that in fear of conPyrrha readily assented, and thy did tamination, they left the earth and the oracle commanded. into heaven. All save Astraea asAnd so the new races rose to life. The stones thrown upon the ground became soft and took on the shape of rude block forms which by and by appeared as living images. The stony part became the bones the slime and moisture the flesh! and blood, and the veins remained veins only with different functions. All those thrown by the, woman's hand became women, and those that Deucalion cast behind him became men. Under the guidance of Pyrrha the JOHN GREENWAY. women became: noble and good and In Great Britain and tribunal highest worthy of; the land they Inhabited. The by th!e parliament of the dominion. . men, following; Deucalion, were brave and honest, truthful and After Seventeen Yean. and so in .those 'early days was laid the The daughter of Gilbert Mattson, a foundation of the principles that must farmer living three miles south of Hecever be kept fresh and vigorous, that a has been heard from, says the tor, nation may live. (Minn.) News. Seventeen years Then Jupiter looked down upon his Buffalo tills summer the ago girl was new creation, and he was pleased. And la to sent Out to carry lunch her broththe smile from his countenance caused wrio was er, herding cattle not far from a glory to desceind to the people. And THE DELUGE. house. the This was the last seen of departed ; she, the goddess of purity and they werei roused from the sluggish laone the little until a letter from New innocence, still found a refuge in the bor of mere bodily toil, and felt the York came recently to the home of the hearts of some young maidens. But spirit within them moved. Mattsoris from the daughter, now a "And some, rising up beyond their after a while even she was forced to lady 21 years old. leave. fellows, looked upon the glory of the young After her sudden and mysterious disAnd then, with no hand to stay Its past, saw! the promise that waved as a appearance the country was searched deadly leap to destruction, the world banner of light for all who would attain for miles around; all. the sloughs were swept on, and blackness was too light It, and strove to wing their souls to the dragged and every effort made to reI. fountain whence light and itruth come cover the child who was a word to describe Its state. , lost. Finally Jupiter looked down from his throne to man.. was the search and the little up given on high at the pitiful state of the earth," And the reward was not held back, was as mourned and when dead; feel the joy of it. For girl but only anger found place in his heart and we were to be what the bones at the people who dared to" destroy that upward flight of the spirit in those of a small supposed child and some pieces of their beautiful garden j and make it j a times long dead, yet living; for us, has clothing were found in a slough prison house, dark and; drear. And in given to the world art, music, poetry, near the Mattson'farm, it large was his anger he called an assembly of the science. And we still look upon their certain that the little one wasthought ' dead, ' works and listen with attentive ear to and all gods. , died. hopes Then came one and all along the the heavenly strains, and we are lifted The letter which came to reawaken Milky Way, which was the royal road up and borne in! spirit to the very land, hopes in the hearts of the parents statto the Palace of Heaven. The abodes to the very time when all this wonder ed that, on his deathbed a man whom of the great rose on each side of this was upon the earth, and the wonder the girl had been brought ups to believe silvery pathway, the gods of lesser is riot yet deadIt lives in the, immorwas her father had confessed might dwelling remote from the central tality of the race, and will continue so seventeen years ago, he had stolenthat, her T" long as man continues to have a speck from her sphere; .'' He home. her told prairie When all had assembled a hush fell of the divine within him. the names of her parents, where they upon the company. ' Jupiter sat upon and fully described to her the parlived his throne arrayed in all his dazzling Paderewskl and the Banjo of her abduction; A letter writThe other day when Paderewskl was; ticulars splendor. His right hand' grasped the ten to verify the deathbed confession thunderbolt, which, at his will, he dining at a hotel, a fine nickel plated stated that he young lady would rehurled through the air at wrong-doer- s. banjo was sent in by a banjo player, turn at oncvo to her home, from which Juno sat upon his right and shared the with the request that the great piano she had been so long separated. throne with him. Mercury, from whose player should write a short musical The story seems too ' strange to beface even Jupiter's dark frown could sentiment on the sheepskin head. Padebut it is nevertheless true, and not 4ispel the bright, bewitching smile, rewskl complied with the request and lieve, when the young lady comes there will hovered over the lord of the counsel, this is the sentiment to which he atbe rejoicing in that home. awaiting his every command. The other tached his signature: "I have riot the gods and goddesses stood or sat around pleasure of being a performer on this A Lover of Kreton Folklore. the hall, and from all faces an anxious beautiful instrument; am only a piano e, Le Vicomte Hensart de la i A V player." Now the banjo player is asking suspense was reflected. who died the other day at the Could the world in its wickedness his friends if the virtuoso was "Jollyof had done more probably than 80, tge have known of the sorrow and anguish ing" him. in 'this, generation to populartanyone It caused the high potentates of heaven, ize the knowledge of Breton fd'.lk-lorChurch Growth, would It have been better" and reand folk-mus- ic id France. The growth of the church is not keepfrained from evil doing? "Who can tell? a collection! "Barzaz His of the After a long silence Jupiter addressed ing pace with the growth of the cities. popular songsBrlez," of Brittany, with khe orthe assembled host. He told of all th$ In 50 of our cities statistics of sii large iginal melodies and critical excursus glory that had been upon the earth; denominations show a. falling ) off of and notes, is a standard work. was of all the made known about 37 per cent. Rev. W. A. Stan the first, to provide a translation bf the hlv determination to dertrov to un ton, Baptist, Pittsburg. Breton bards of the earliest epochs, - ; . - . j ' f . - ' j i '" , , ! ; , ps ; i MISS ROSE HOOPER. A San Francisco Girl Famous on the Coast for Her Great Beauty. Oue of California's sweetest flowers is Miss Rose Hooper, the only and lovely( daughter of Major and Mrs. Hooper, of San Francisco, The metropolis of the! west is noted for its beautiful women,! and justly so. Other cities lay claim to a more than proportionate number; of pretty women, young, , middle agedj and old. . New Orleans, Baltimore, St.! Louis, Chicago and Philadelphia arej forward in this respect, and are generally admitted as showing much femi-- j nine beauty in the crowded thoroughfares. But no city on earth can com- -' pare with the brilliant town on the bay for the almost universal charm of its women. Miss Hooper is a debutanto that has drawn widespread attention in San Francisco society. That she will be an ornament to that bright and gay life there is no doubt. Even as a child she thoroughly comprehended the duties of an entertainer and her birthday parties were models of youthful ele- 1 all-devour- ing ; - jas-cend-ed j law-abidin- g, , : . . A. Choice Jokes and Jibes Which We Heartily Commend to Ow iLean Readers The Pessimistic View of Things. ITe-v- r HE SUN ALWAYS shines when we can't go out, When we're out it always rains; When we've plenty to eat we have the gout To torture us with its pains. to-d- ..--,'-- : -' ; e, folk-poet- ry wrong-doing.a- nd Ie . V ilV""" Address : Utah. Oasis, Jno Dewsnup If ' H Address, in left ear.. The earth turns' round from west to east. Oh, horrors! must we stay Upon it, when we know at least : Address, . - Deseret, TJuh It should turn the other way?,; The north star's always in the north, It Alas! and would that we were dead. We're failures through and through; We live along until we wed And that's a failure too. fitrWW : Address," Breeders or s ! .1 br&nd r Upper and tutvun Ktngi rWn montitilni - Parley Alind Horses same brand on left thigh. Cattle close crop in left and slit in righl Kinge, Sevier. Lower Des par, Address, yrel. Utah. tt! on same hraad si hfpef eatUaBup iixow eprap. Address, , ...-- - ton, J. F. oprmgi, JuahCouBty. TTt j i G Ton left fc!f' double svsllif fork In left Range, Lever l vler. AidrsH ew CMs. Tti:r;: Oatla, JililariOa - "ii i PP 1 Mark, slit k right aadtwsi& in weft ear., ftm lift brand sn kornc boulder en P. N. Petema Addreaa T7taJ er Oliili Bangs, fetf f Serlav. Same left j fidgt: on Horses. f Upper slope Ml one nndsr sUt k left ear, sad tm nnder tm in l& m ear. RAKQB Creftx. j Sims Walte a TJtsk aty, Addroma, Oak O. S. MARTIN SALT LAKE. GGneral Commission Mercliai Dealer In Mr. Normaa hira- - FRUITS, VEGETABLES, r"lllfr , o TT Mills' ataim. ... P. Fy and Leaoington. Addieee, leamintou, Millard Co., Cki. f fl ct thigh., each ear. Sevier f ...... j dealers In Short born Dnrknsi Hortei - Harvard students. ' iirersoite j Mrs. Jones stepped in to see her next-doneighbor, Mrs. Smith. "There is something on my mind that I wish to speak to you about," said Mrs. Jones, "and I feel that you will London Chronicle's Commissioner. treat the matter confidentially. I wish Henry Norman, assistant editor of to askif you heard my husband come the London Chronicle j who came f to America to tell the truth about the home abput 3 o'clock this morning?" Mrs. Smith admitted that she had. Monroe doctrine, has made a good im"Well," continued Mrs. Jones, by way pression by Tiis personality and by his of apology, "I am very much disturbed work. He has been pad the high compliment of having the dispatches which that such a thing should have occurred, which he cabled from Washington to especially as his condition, as you London immediately cabled back to know, was deserving of the severest censure; but I am free to confess that New York for publication in the newspapers of the Associated Press. When this is the first time he has conducted he reached Washington he went quietly himself in such a manner, and I can to a hotel and began his work. Though say with reasonable certainty that it he had , been in Washington several will be) the last. I know you will symdays, his dispatches cabled back from pathize with me, Mrs. Smith, for I cerLondon and published in Washington tainly deserve it." "Of course," replied Mrs. Smith, nerfirst revealed his presence, though they did not reveal his name. He speaks vously, "you have my sincerest sympasix languages and some one has said thy, but I feel that I am also to be that he knows all countries, has shot pitied on account of the affair." "Why so?" asked Mrs. Jones, with tigers in the Malay Peninsula, sipped coffee with Ferdinand of Bulgaria, has some degree of wonderment. "Because," answered Mrs. Smith, been the cause of diplomatic communications among European governments, confusedly, ''my husband and yours York knows how "to make a cocktail, has came home together v World. a is written four famous books, sportsman to his finger tips, scents a piece of news a mile off, is a Parisian boulevar-die- r The Original One. one month and a desperately honFrom Life: Adam had slept too long. He felt sure of It as he stretched himest critic of Japan the next, and is a philosopher, courtier, diplomat- and self, yawned and rose, with a heavy by turns. sensation in his head and a lightness journalistic corkscrew an Mr. Norman is Englishman, round his stomach, to take a turn about Though he spent his boyhood in Paris and was the garden. When he was educated at Harvard. But suddenly he doubted whether he asked to come to America and tell the was yet awake. truth about the Monroe doctrine he had There in front of him was an animal from returned he Constantinople, had never seen before. He thought just where he had been telling some things it was an animal. But it was strangely about the sultan and the Armenian like himself, yet strangely different.' His atrocities. Mr. Norman's greatest feat surprise increased. For some moments was sending-- telegram from Constantihe was speechless. Then: nople to his paper announcing that the "What are you?" he gasped. r sultan had accepted the scheme of ArThe unusual creature smiled. menian reform imposed on him by the She picked a loose hair off one of his In getting this big piece of shoulders, powers. compared it with hi$ wild, news he beat many of the greatest locks and smiled again. unkempt newspaper correspondents in Europe, "I am the New Woman," she said. Mr. Norwho were on the ground. man's first book was f 'An Account of the Why, Indeed? Harvard Greek Play," being a report of the performance of "Oedipus' by ."--N- it Oasis, Utah. I Sympathy for Two. MISS ROSE HOOPER, Miss Hooper is a bud in the gance. complete sense of that figure of speech. Ann RANGE: Houfft Mouni&lBj &Di Lower Metier, Who have such troubles found. "2 r a. i Horse Grower e'er brought forth W u .tinnn ought! to change around, Oh, why were mortals ' BUHEHl Pp Kgga, Poultry, Game, Veal Tiak, BteVBmoked and Fresh Flanr. Hav nd Grain. .. v rrruMa tA Itti A m you w uuiy itr. wui paj te a for haadlinfc and ;.it ekarge 10 per eent. soon aa goods are sold. Can give nfrtf. oonntrjr references li aesirea. illP W. Q.M STEWARD. ASSAYED OFVICKl T LAKEOiTl 449- p. o. box ' Ville-marqu- 4 etil)'. RANGE t Lower fierier and Sink ox Beaver. 1 ; ay ! CHes. F. i i 4 - tippet e Jit In tinder slit right, we The air that In left ear breathe is full of germs, Range: Cricket The water is full of snakes, . Mountains The fruit that we eat is full of worms, Lower Sevier.and Existence is full of fakes. - - H, : j ! v v publish brands under JwlJ C0E-- acV seminal price. The advantage to the larizing lie public with hi. bSaaV-- a re to well known to need attentu 1 tae stockman as valuable as an a" II U it is to the merchant. , ed j LAUGH. MAKERS. ; - Our Stociralsers Colnr Tk Blad will con tt rms ja The moon always shines with a yellow light That's enough to make you weep; And worst: of all, it shines at night When you, want to go asleep. j . LATEST PRODUCTIONS OF THE . j re-elect- OUR WIT AND HUMOR. -- HENRY NORMAN. self played in the cast as Creon. "The Real Japan" remains, perhaps, his greatest . permanent literary work, though his "Peoples and Politics of the Far East" is an authority on the present conditions in Asia. Mr. Norman has visited nearly every country on the globe and all but six states' in America, and yet he is under 40 years of age. ' "Mamma, didn't the Vicar say that Hand Sample the natives of Gongalooloo wore no Iron Assay clothes?" Copper Asay Bottle B&mmef "Yes, darling." "Then why did papa put a button in the box?" . Murmurs from the BXuseum. ' The Man gazed inquisitively at the Girl Giantess. "You're here pretty long?" he said. The altitudinous lady nodded affirmaVivisection at Harvard. tively. Tender uearted Bostonians became so "Well, I'll be here," he smiled knowexcited over vivisection a short time ingly, "quite a stretch myself." ago that the professors in the Harvard On the next the Medical School issued a statement of Man emitted aplatform smothered growl. w,hat sort of vivisection was practiced under their supervision, what its use Speaking; in Time. was, and how it affected the dumb Alkali Ike How much do you charge creatures most intimately concerned. for a hack to attend a funeral? '. The report was not satisfactory, Death Gulch Cabman Eight, dollars; when do you want It? Alkali Ike Let you know in an If you are not against the saloon, hour. I'm on, my way now to demand are what you doing in the church? an abject apology from the editor of Ram's Horn. , the Bazoo. India-Rubb- er Dog-Fac- ed . Frank " V i I D. Hobba Land Office.) Attorney. thre years' eyperienre. SALT LAKE CITY, BIRD & UTAH.- LOWE: ' "I j "Vgj 1 'rupifer U. 6. 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