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Show O F. 0 J LECTURE on this' subject Is the Jailer of Cook county Jail, Chicago He has been connected with that prison for orer twenty years, and during that time ovef'50,000 prisoners have passed through his bauds. His habit has been to' converse; with every prisoner as to his history aqd the; Circumstances which led him Intel crime, and from knowledge thus gained he Is of the opinion that the principal cause of Crime Is defective training durJ , ing youth. The Oilef of Police in New York and the president of the National Prison. Society say that In tbelrexperience they are fully persuaded that thu lack of proper moral training In education Is the principal cause of crime. Maiiylmore well acquainted with the facts might testify here, but I think this Is sufficient as all agree that one of the greatest, if not tlie greatest cause of crime. Is the lack of early edut ation. But tou will say, how can this be true? With our present magnificent school system stretching from the northern, border, where Clod's pqrbetual bow glorifies Niagara cliffs, to the line, where God's gifts make earth an Cden of fragrance and d Atbeauty. I And from the lantic, where the eastern song of t'he sun begins its morning: music,! away (to the Pacific, Iwhere the westerns waters( murmur their evening benediction to ' our land as the tide goes out beneath the How can these statistics setting Sun. more be true when 'young men,; In pro portion to the population, take a c ollege course than In any other country In the world? I And yet, I repeat that the Increase of crime Is greater amid this school system than in any other country civl- l. !j lied except two. Tho ajiswer Is not far. It Is fot.ndi in i the face that C0UI1SE oa Ihnsers That Threaten Osr Country, tfco M. jLane IY. , - OF THE LACK FIHST, MORAL TRAINING. "n fiex t, the Wait Iletwecn Capital and Labor, artd;X.at, the Tendenuy to f Mr. Pretideni, Lkidleaaiul Gentlemen: la with pleasure that I have accepted the Invitation $o address you this evening. Hut I have no studied oration, ouiy a plain talk da that which concerns :l: us all. Wo are Onterlng :the dawn of the second century of puf' life as a nation; the stars which sbdnoi through the first aro of the comfading before the ibrlghtness I ing light. we fcae made,7 .but with this 1'rogress some strange shapes have pome. progress Old ways are gone jand new forts appear, while greater fields stretch beyond the Ii j eight. As we enter thif dawn we feel a restlessness around! usV and ever and anon as f ? the shifting lrokds halt, there come the cry, who comes from M there? There are 'somes tremendous forces at work In our midst; forces that send a of the Natremor through every1 liber ' ' j r "( tion, Wo jfcel hat nothing is steadfast or secure; sclencolasHt mounts in Its flight toward the sun darkens the burnished or ceilings d the fikfWith the shadows and tho miracles while his wing, rapid advance of the present belle the simple truths of the piistf l;ehlnd our cjouyts gleams the rioter's I the anarchist's bomb, torch, Inand sleeps while many cakes justice Is delayed until It goon without execution. Our (iovnrnulent has become the contention of the politician and the prey of tho spoilsmen, while the press, the most s! J ' ; t . . ' j I schools. Do you know f that notwithstanding the common bljef that the character of the human; raobils generally improvi . . ing. It Is unquestionably true that crime the paltf few docades has Induring creased to alarming proportions? Itecont statistics show that In England out of ovcry 10,000 deaths, seven were tho result of vfojence.. In Ireland and Franco the proportion is over eight to 10.000 while the United States the to 10,000, ratio at present 1$ jtwenty-on- o a proportion greater and more alarming than that of any other nation of tho civilized world ejieent Snaln and Itn.lv. V The last statistics laid b;fore the Prison Congres4 shows that the proportion of crime tos tho population! greatly increasing In the XJiiltod States. ?: In 1850 there were 200 prisoners to every million of people. In I860 there were 607 to every? million; in 18TO, 853; in 1880, 1190, and; In 1890, S740. These are alarming facts, but we cannot hopo to have a chango as long as the present conditions remain the same, and if this proportion continues It Is only a question of time as to how long our country can stand this increase of crime over the population. If our Government is going to stand; yea if we want it to go forward to higher and grander achievements, we - must solve this problem and remove this ?::(.: danger.. f You will say, throw ,up conditions to prevent crime and sodol- - but In order to da that wormust 'first find out the urco of crlmeJ If wo can find out and :' E"illVB THE CXUSE w o r v' ho ro to soe the dav wlioh III b.- r.o crime. In order to t t tho rn;t 1 J I I : I j 1 - 1 . - - t- - . ' as a commodity has grown those threatening relations that now exist between capital and labor.a man hires a. hundred Surely when men he employs more than their muscular powers for a certain number of hours each day. Ho expects more than this of them. He wants Intellect, skill, and above all honesty and practical Interest in 'his work and good will towards himself. But how can he expect to get this out of his men when he regards them only as beasts tot burden? A very slight knowledge of human nature will soon convince auy man that labor will not be honest and interested in the enterprise when they are regarded only as a J -c- ! ': k CAPITAL AND LABOR law-broakli- ng . I ig , , j ! ! the great distance between time and The knowledge of bookkeepeternity. ing is not sufficient unless we aro taught also how to balance our. account daily between our conscience and pur Gd. ;j It will profit us little to understand all about the diurnal and annual motions of thej earth, unless we add t& this1' science, some heavenly astronomy. Therefore., we want our children to receive an education that, will make them not only learned, but pious and upright men. We, therefore,- demand! for thcci a training that will forui their hearts, as well as expand their mi ids. A knowledge of history is most useful and important for the student. He should f be acquainted with the lives of those Illustrious heroes that founded empires of those' men of genius who: their wisdom, enlightened the world byreworks Of art. and embellished It by the! But Is it not more Important to learn something of the King of kings, who created all the world, and by ' whom kings reign? ) Is It hot more. Important to study that Uncreated Wisdom, before whom all earthly; wisdom is folly, and tp admire the works of the Divine Artist who paints the Illy and gilds the sky? I tellyou;thtt religious and secul ar ed- ucation of our children cannot be di- vorced from each other without inflicting " ; S - , - i I A FATAL. VfOVSJ co-ope-ra ' cltir l.i : . l:r ' self-intere- . st - - w. " J J -" 1' J and demand, says Join Ruskin, is a fpernicious one and if continued will undermine every free institution. Add to this theory of regarding labor as a commodity the disproportionate distribution of the country's wealth, and you will see another danger. Between 1860 and 1880 the wealth of the whole country Increased from 916,000,000,000 to 543,000,000,000, or 170 per cent, while the working classes were worse off In 1880 than they wore In I860, because prices on the necessaries of life had increased 41 per cent, while wages had only Increased 31 per cent. In I860 the value of the manufactured g(5ods produced in this country was $1,800,000,000; in 1880 it was almost three times as much. " T ? $5,300,-000,00- THIS WAS THE PILE divided. - The of V. t: 0, ; to be number persons among whom it Is to be divided' has grown about 40 per cent not half as fast as the pile has grown. Now, when the working classes come up to get, their share of the pile, they complain and rebel.; "What Is the matter with you?" ask the. men who divide that pile. "Are you not getting as much as you ever got?" "Perhaps we are," Is the answer "but that pile was produced very largely by . our labor. It Is almost three times as large as It was twenty years ago, and it does seem to us that we ought to get a great deal more out of it than we do. Other men are getting inore out of it, for we read. In the newspapers such, statements as this; "The profits of the Wall Street klugs the- past year were enormous." It is 'estimated that one man made $30, 000, 0C0, another $15,000,-00another $10,000,000, and so on. We cannot see why these men should -- - , 0, so lithave so much of that pile, and-wtle. ' Thoo are disquieting facts when fall on the ears of men who live in athey hut while their children cry for bread. Twenty years ago few cities could y boast of a millionaire, while nearly every town has a dozen. We can nanfe twenty men who can buy Utah at k its7 value, while we can name as many millions who do not get a fair work. day's wages for a fair day's y Millions are made by the control and arbitrary pricing of an article of universal use, while , the working classes are growing poorer, and the tottn tho shadow of destering masses stand In ever Increasing pair, swarming legions against the citadel of human life. What Is more, theso rich men aro gaining control of our country and our Legislatures, and of the Congress of the United States, and they get the legisla tion that protects their Interests ar.J builds up tbfir fortunes by taxing us cn of life. e to-da- tax-boo- upon the soul, and threatenin r the safety and peace of our country. GuizOt, the eminent French writer. In himself on this subject, expressing says: I "To mako popular education truly good and socially useful it.must bo fundamentally religious. It Is necessary that National education, should ba given and received in the mids; of a religious atmosphere, and that rel Lgious observances should penetrate. Into all Its parts. Iieliglon Is not a study to be restricted to a certain place or certain hour, but to be it Is a fiiith and ainlaw which ought felt everywhere mind and - life. In oisntry- cf ours whe: a tha t-i- must be in their production; to successbut men can never fully for any purpose when is the sole bond of union! The theory that cash payment Is a sufficient basis for Industrial society, and that the rela- tion between masteriand servant should ive ; law-abidi- ommodity , . - to-da- , Surely the employer must bring into play higher motives, and nobler' prlncl-- , pies of action when he hires labor than when ho buys material. , If the employer wants Intelligence and skill ho must treat his men as if were human beings; If ho wants they them to be trusty he must not only trust them, but he, must be trustworthy. In his If he wants them to be Interested Work ho mast show them that the enterprise is conducted Inholr Interest. ' t.ttaln-'menttot- i' it-pur- e , . - IT TUIS OioKiVNMNT They are only the wheels in the machine, and when they wear out are cast off with as little thought as the broken iron. Does this system establish tho proper relation between the employer and the employee? a relation that Is likely to be permanent, peaceful and profitable to both parties. Out of this theory of regarding labor i ; ... just as Impersonal as the stones and lumber that constitute the building. is often or To-da- tho world will frujsh headlong into diswill all organization, liut koep Its relations prpbrly adjustod . and one nation after another will drop anchor In our harbor andibe at universal peace. Thch lot one who loves his country, and feels tho majesty of Its mission, speaK to you of the dangers that threaten the future peace and prosperity of our land. . j One of the unmistakable dangers that threaten our country. Is tho lack of moral training ahd heart culture In our POCKET THE DIVIDE5D8, sys-tomr- of ns opt In 3,000,000 homes. Three years ago one one man cornered pork, until he layed a tax of $3 per barrel on evry consumer, then tried to fix the matter up with the Lord by saying, 'Here, Lord, you take 1 per cent of the profits I have made by this sharp trick, and build alms houses for the poor ragamuffins I have made', and I will take my yacht and go to Europe for ever and ever. Amen." I tell you that no argument, no plea, can excuse these things when they fall on the tolling man who hungers at his work, where he cannot find food for his wife with which to feed the infant that hangs famishing at her breast. i GREAT 11ATTLE IN EAST AFRICA. Shrewd Tactics of the Savages, Who Nearly Annihilate the Germans. The details have been received at last of the remarkable battle In Uhehe, East Africa, where the Germans were so badly defeated August 17th last. 'So bloody a i battle with the natives has never been fought before in Equatorial Africa. It will be remembered that Lieutenant Zolewski, with a force of about 700 men, set out from Mpwapwa to chastise the Wahehe, who had set the the Germans at defiance. He had to march scuth tiearly 10O miles, and had fairly "entered their country, which seemed deserted, when' at 7 a. m.f Aug. 17, the enemy suddenly : i e, - ; . MKOTIIEIUIOOD j 1! ; powerful factof lit shaping public life, is either throttled tjy money or driven by : fear. Trado Is restless In the grasp of moshackled by liminopoly, and eomntereo tations which some call protection. Our cities aro being Swollen by Increasing multitudes, (and jjthe country is being tripped of ts hardy Bons, because the fields can noj longer give a support. 4VhlIe splendor; streams from the palace jkI squalor crouches in tho homo. i being broken Up and the people are dally building thOuiselves up into classes of tho rich and poor with the middle man between. lw hiss of the nihilist disturbs the safety of our hoities, and the bedlam of i tritnge languages resound ' along the highway, And yet amid It all the great American heart boats f undismayed; standing fast by the charter of liberty the citi-jtoof this country, tranquil and roso-lutare watching; the drifting currents, and calmly awaiting the full day. Who shall boi tho herald of the day? Who shall treali tho way of honor and safety through great problems of this the day? Who shaill :all the people tosoludefence of their honor, ' and to the tion of thoir;da!ng:er8? You my countrymen, you my brothers of the I'. O. S. hi fi.t it Is yours to herald-thday for bet'te things. It is yours to grapple with and master the dangors that besot our Joiutry. It is yours to decide whether tho tremendous forces now at work shall j unbalance the principles of eternal justice and bring chaos, upon 75,000,000 of people. It is yours vo decide whether this KepubHC shall bo destroyed, or stand in the glory of its enlightening the strength as liberty If world. y a giant j young and lusty, bestrides their northern continent llko a loins is the twisted Colossus. In strenthof ten million toiling men. Ills brow Is the crown of material triumphs which aro numberless. From his outstretched arnU the lightning flashes' of electrical discovery are dancing with weird untold meaning. In his eyos are beaming the consciousness of power andpossibilities bqydnd all hnman attainm en t In the past; 11 s brain untram- -' moled by effete dogma and prejudice-I- s throbbing with jtho best and freest thought of an bra of .unprecedented mental activity! j This1 giant 'carries In his bosom the hopes of the human' race, Then let us to whom the task is given see that his heart; grows apace with, his Jjody, and that itj Is kept pure and true to those principled; of truth which are ludlsponsablo to' jtho prosperity and X, . growth of a nation. ' ) - hb-th- e .13 4 I USIvlcnlAt self-intere- st TRAIKtjm have not kept pace with intellectual training. There has been an abundance of a curtain kind of mind culture in our country, but a sad neglect of heart cul ture.. It Is an amusing thing; to note) what ideas solmo people have of what consti tutes an educated man. Thousands of people seem to think If a man's intellect is educated that he Is an educated man. They sem to lose all thought of ills moral training and heart culture The man whose intellect Is educated t the expense: of his moral nature. Is no more educated In the true and proper s nso of the term, than a cannibal would be civilized by being taught to read and write and weir clothes, without, being aught that it Was wrong to eat his fellovr men.' It Is true that the man of trained Intellect orjly may become powerful, and may know how to cast his ballot, but In most cases he becomes powerful for evil. The !soul of man must govern his mind, or will rush into those wild extremes .Which have rendered knowledge a curse from the time its desire seduced our mother Eve Knowledge sanctified by truth Is a great blessing, but knowledge without truth Is a great cur e. It pluckeq Kden's forbidden fruit,! murdered bel, and has( been murdering over since1. It has executed every tyranny and cruelty which have and oppressed mankind. It has built tilled yolce c f torprisons, placed ture npbn the necks of our people, and with uidif tod head, open mouth and forked ftongue it threatens tho very Goddess of Liberty. Ther6 is in man a higher natur a than mind, vk naturo which is above rsason, and woh to that man who finds his only refuge in human logic and intellectual Judgment. fltE SKCKET OF ALL CIlIMld ' ' Is the tfallure to recognize n ijnau a higher fpower than mind, and a higher attainment thail education. J t! Thatf higher power is soul, and .hat htgher attainment is truth. And Unless this higher power and this high er1 are enthroned In man as the h governing; powpx and governing atmind! and their with body tainment are curses and and not blessI' : ings to a nation. Take; your children and let them by olow and laborious stops pass through the college curriculum, from matriculation to graduation reaching- t ie top with honor, and fall to train their moral nature jand you gain no lasting go )d. U You have only constructed a magnificent machine, but where is the power to drive it? I; In the absence of a moral porer, It will beidijlven by the baser passions of human! nature, while "like an A rabian madly through life to death. cpurserrush LThehj how" Important Is "this question. In our' schools, side" by side, For y sit our future and Lour citizens; our' future legislators. and our criminals; our future .ani archists and our Judges. V' Wo are educating them, and, eo surely as the avalanche descends to the valley .below when the warm sunshine of summer comes, so sure is it that the training Of our Children is determining out civil, and religious Institutions of the political '':' i , future.! .: toi know It is jiot sufficient, therefore, how to f read and write; to understand of' grammar and ariththe rudiments T ' li metic, ' It does not snflice to know that two and two make four. Wo ' I TUB self-intere- st i MOItAL AND RELIGIOUS ; ' -- l "- -h j 1 i j . A90THEB DAHOEB demand'by which labor- should be governed? It may be admitted that the employer has the right to get his labor In the cheapest market. It may be admitted and the desire for that wealth have the right to determine the matter. But does his right constitute the only right? Does the right rest ab solutely with the employer? nave the employees no right in the transaction? Should and the law of supply and demand be the only basis of relation between capital and labor? A manufacturer goes into the market and buys a hundred bales of cotton for his mill at the cheapest market price, and that Is the end of the transaction. But has hire a .hunright-t- o dred men, women and children to work In that mill at the lowest possible figure, without auy regard whatever for their social and financial condition? lias he the right to force them by contract to come and live In tenements owned by himself, without any concern about their health or domestic happiness? Has he the right to treat-thesmen, women and children as though they were nothing animals and money-makin- g but clothes-wearin- g machines? And yet this Is the ultimate result of consolidated capital. Labor is considered only as a commodity to be hired In the cheapest, and sold in the highest market.. In many casas the men 'who receive the profits know, nothing whatever about those who receive the wages, though they come in contact daily with them. Labor, ito the people who rock-boun;- ! . m I It TttK AH ACQ If DA MONOPOLY, which swallows up the little enterprises ahd drives out of the market by Its slime the Individual dealer. When the agent of a dozen men. who have captured and control an article of prime necessity, meets the representative of a., million farmers from ' whom they have forced $3, OOO.OOa the year before with no more moral right titan Is behind the highwayman who halts the traveler at the pistol's point, and Insolently tells tbera the men who live in the sweat of their brow, and stand between God and nature that they must submit becauso they cannot help it then It is that the fruits of consolidated wealth are gathered and turned to ashes on the lips. When a dozen men can get together in the morning and fix the price of a dozen articles of common use with no standard but their arbitrary will, and no limit but their greed, and then notiGy the people of this free country that they must pay for these 'necessaries of life what they choose to charge, then it Is that the point of Ji Intolerable shame has been reached. A shame which the people of this county will not much longer endure. Only a few years ago . one man In Chicago tied the wheat crop of the country In his! handkerchief and held it until a poof sewing woman working for 96 cents a week had to pay' him 20 cents tax on the sack' of flour- she bore home in her famished hands. Three men held the cotton crop of tho country of one year ago, until every spindle was topped In England and the lights went threatening our country is the consolidation of capital, and the relations growing out of it between the employer and the employee. No man can note the encroachment In this country of what Is called the money power on the rights of the individual, without feeling that the time Is not far distant when the Issue will be forced to trial. One of the evils of this system Is the present theory regarding labor as a commodity td be bought In the cheapest, and sold In the highest market. Is It a fact that labor Is only a commodity? Should It be placed In the same catagory with lead, coal and lumber? Is there no law except thai of supply and i Trusts and MonopoliesDelivered Friday Evening, Norenjber 131b. ' . ) .,: Ke-for- the-shadow- self-deni- al, , - to-da- ; the-necessarie- amy was from God and has not been rescinded, but only superseded, and that at any time the might direct It to be revived, justspirit as Woodruff was directed by the spirit to suspend Its oper ation, because "if Is not wisdom to war oh 63,000,000 people." Id Indiana hzmil Points Oat Uis make We arO forced to the conclusion that Tea Ilsch Asscspticn. the Mormon leaders have in some way succeeded in pulling the wool over the learned Sludge who has entered the field' r as their champion. Is stress Soine the fact that laid'npon PERHAPS IT IS GOVERNOR ROBERTSON the Conference to which the manifesto was submitted unanimously sustained It. If the learned Judge can point to a Conference of occasion when single Who Does tte Neat and Skillful Job the Mormon Church any failed to sustain A Past of Falsehood Not to Be whatever their leaders proposed, there be some weight in the fact that Wiped Out Instantly The Taber- might so this time. did they nacle Congregation Denounced the We are informed that the Utah ComCommissioner's Iteport Without mission's report for 1891 was published In Tint Salt Lake Tribune during the Knowing What Was In It. session of the last Conference, that it was not published in any paper read by Mormons, and yet the next! day when The Forum for" November contains a the heads of the church again denounced remarkable article on the "Death of Po- tho report as false, the whole Conference, said to number 10,000 souls, not lygamy in Utah, 1 from the pen of Chief one of whom had read the report or had Justice Zane of that Territory. Its contents, the as an slightest knowledge oftheir Remarkable, because it assumes sustained leaders, Mormon unanimously the fact that accomplished joined in the public denial of its Church, claimed to hold in its ranks over and SOO,000 members; 150,000 of whom are statements. It would seem that they protest too located tn Utah and its neighboring g much. twink-InIt would seem also that the very Hates in the and has, Territories, f of ah eye, changed completely, and fact instanced by Judge Zane, of the to abandoned: tenets which they have for whole church obeying the manifesto the hat a merely man, proves were Ifnrue, more been taught fifty years and rethat the church rules its peothe Jteystone tenets of their charge in to ple the from them everything, including party polligion, given directly i itics, and malie them a unit wheneveris lips of God. and therefore that it The doctrine of polygamy, or as called needed, is true., and let them prove by good to wait best by them "celestial marriage," was prachas really come. a works that change ticed by the Mormons at Nauvoo long In the meantime let us hear no talk before it was made known to the worW. of Statehood for Utah. Ft. Wayne Indeed, ufitil about 1853, long, after Gazette. reand (Ind.) aftor Smith's death Joseph they moved at the command of Brlgham Young to Salt Lake valley, presidents, apostles, bishops, elders and priests of every degree openly denied, wherever questioned, that s polygamy was either taught by the church or practiced by its adherents. ;One "member was publicly dlsfellowshlped and driven from the church for; preaching the doctrine in Michigan. Pamphlets were printed by eminent men of the church and widely disseminated by church authority, to prove that polygamy was contrary to the f. creed of the church. And yet all these assertions, denials and pamphlets of the church, were proved to bo deliberate falsehoods by the head! of the ichurch in 1853, prorevelaclaiming to the world a tion from God to Joseph Smith some dozen years before. This was when they were a thousand miles from civilization and believed themselves secure from outside interference. The mask was fthrown off, and men boldly avowed as a virtue what for years they had denied as a wicked slander. Women openly boasted of their having been sealed to the prophet, and all who chose openly entered into the polygamous state.; When 'Congress passed laws forbidROGER Q. MILLS, ding the practice, they deliberately disoas said them and CANDIDATE FOIt SPEAKER. for LEAWKS beyed thirty years, Is develby Judge Zane, "more than 13C0 men Congressman Mills of Texas were sent to prison for them." a surprising strength in the conoping On their release they were generally test for Speakership of the new jllouse. received with an ojyation,' and frequently It now seems clear that he will secure a promoted to higher offices in the church a very heavy vote in the Democratic to compensate for their devotion to this even if he does not secure mx cardinal! devotional of their faith. A caucus, absolute majority on the" first, ballot. year has bot yet passed since the leaders Mr. Mills began his Congressional bf the church, and the church organs, career in the Forty-thir- d Congress, to universally denounced "prosecutions for which he waa elected In 1872, and has to every polygamy and unlawful cohabitation as been successively was the lie since "persecution.' v," time, that . Congress preor the famous jviijis our wnicn During all that time In the court assoauthor sided overM by Judge Zane and his played So prominent a part in the last ciates, men worifen" and children, per- Presidential election. His constituency their sools dally, denying they in the Ninth Texas district apparently jured were practicing polygamy, or ' that they have the great champion of tariff ref6rm knew any thing about 'acts thatWere slated for a life term in Congress. Poslike an open book to all their neighbors. sibly Mills may rival, Thomas II. Benton, And yet, because rthe head of the and produce another book entitled church has Issued, a ' manifesto as re- 'Thirty Years View." markable.; as the 'article,- referred to, Judge Zane seems tobeileve that by Lawyer Jlnkini'aKlnd Heart that simple act all this lying and per"Yes." said the station agent to the of the past has been cured, and the preacher, who was waiting to take the jury d Mormons have ; become innocent- - as train for Atlanta, "talking about can 'em none of there's lamb3, and good1' citizens to be safely men, entrusted with all the duties f Amerv beat Lawyer JInklhs." can citizens. It Is a little curious 'that "Good man. Is he?" Zane quotes only the closing he is. I kin tell you a "You're Judge sentences--othe' manifesto which he little story right which will show what a heart says has accomplished the great reform, he's got in him." and falls to notice that this paper, "I'd like to hear it," said the preacher, which, according to him, "has the force looking at bis watch. of revelation," is largely devoted to the "Well," said the station agent, whitcharge that the Utah Commission lied tling ai corncob, "you see hit wur this In its report for '1890, in stating that way: Bill Jones was a mighty poor forty-on- e polygamous marriages had man, an the railroad took an' cut off his been reported to It as occurring during leg." the past year, and that it in terms de"Well?" clares the source; of the Inspiration "Well, he got Lawyer Jinkins to sue Woodruff received was from 'press the road, ah the road compromised with dispatches having been sent out for him forfSOa'' "Well?" political purposes, stating that fact. So also, he fails to stato that the rea"Well, sir, what do you think Lawyer sons he quotes as being given to the con- Jinkins did?" . ference Sot its promulgation were not "Have no Idea." thought necessary' to be given until after "Well, his charges In the case wuz the "unanimous vote to sustain it."' 8250, but as Jones only got $200, blamed It is also curious to note that a Judge if he didn't let him off with the odd 850, who would naturally, be supposed to be takin only the 8200 for himself." trained in weighing his words, and the "The train's coming,'' said the parwords of otherf.should say: "I have made son. And he was 'glad of it. All the these quotations to show that the presi- way. to Atlanta he mused on Lawyer dent of the church advised its members Jlnklhs's and preached to obey the law" prohibiting polygamy, a special sermon from that text the fol- Atlanta Constitution. and unlawful cohabitation," when there is not one word lnf the manifesto, or In lowing Sunday.the words quoted in regard to unlawful Too Hard Conditions. advice to but cohabitation, only, said his mother, "If I get "My Saints is to refrain from youTommy," the Latter-Da- y a new suit of clothes you must contracting auy marriage forbidden by promise not to climb trees or play mar-ule- s the law of the land." until they are worn out," v i ' Where is there ;any reference tto the' answered Tommy, after a Then," status of marriages already contracted? moment's reflection, "J guess I don't Neither does he : notice the fact that want them. People. Young Harper both of the organs of the church at the tkne strenuonsly denied. that the manifesto had the force of a revelation, nor that there Is not yet heard from the lips Oougli-Cureof any Mormon any denial of the divinUs or of the Are abundant; but the one, best known for principle, righteousness, ity Its extraordinary anodyne and expectorant under the revelation permitting it, nor qualities is Ayers Cherry Pectoral. For the fact: that the church only claims has nearly naif a century this preparationremthat the revelation: Is suspended nlerely, demand other than been la any greater In same hot and abrogated! Indeed, the tot eolds, coughs, bronchitis, and pul ' edy address he quotes .from George Q. Canxnonary eomplaints in general. non of the first presidency, quoted from, I suffered for more than eight month a revelation to Smith to the effect that from a severe cough accompanied with hemwhen tbo Lord required anything at orrhage of toe lungs and the expectoration of matter. The physicians gave me up, but ' their hands, and their enemies prevented my drc&glst prevailed on me to try them from doing it, the Lord would not at their and it hands, require longerthat- as a reason for suspending gave this work. President Woodruff gave the same; reason, addressing that lt is not wisdom to make war on C5, 000,000 peosoon ben to improve; my ple," or "to carry put this principle and I did so, and the He also said: take the consequences. healed, coui ceased, and I lungs stouter and tetUUiicr than I have ever "All that He has promised in this code-o- f beeabelore.i I would suggest that th naae revelations has been fulfilled as fast ef rAyers Cherry I'ectoral be changed to as time would permit; that which Is hot fHxirof Uii, far It certainly saved my lila." fulfilled will be." A,, ".'(r F. J. Olidea, Salto, Eiifinos Ayres. The learned Judjje quotes freely from A few years I toe It a very bad cold, these speeches, but leaves out what on my Isrs. 1 had settlad t i wtkh seems to us the very kernel of the cor.,!x, acl great soreness., a sweats, racking nut be wishes to crack. My doctor's meiieiii t'.l ne no good. 1 is also a curious fact that since the tried many remedies, v.t received no bene-f.-tj It JTorum articles ws In press, on the 19th everybody esjra'red of rry recovery. I vralvl"t I t)vs Ayer's CI "rry Feet ml, and 19th of Cctobar, 1SD1, an examina!! n. I'rt i f ) f.;.J f. M r::::'.,s tion was lie in the court presided "over :,naL.l z tv. o i :, : : :t i r... 3 I i. i known-aH:i Is tLa in what is by Jud3 3 CI TT1 . t C in rLIcL Prccl-.r.:n chrrch f ft r C: j;1c cr i rco-i- Vrew-- 1 si m'c 'r'.r. A: lent C.anc.i, r J Ar"tla Lore -- zo We are not going to submit JUDGE ZAHE to It, is heard on every side. - But the evil of consolidated wealth reaches tna climax of its danger, in Is not fair. snow upon the rock decides the issue. Is placed into his hand,, he needs to have inculcated Into his mind, while at school, the virtue of truth, justice, or honesty, temperance and dor Government will be crushed by the weight of educated criminals. . swooped down ; upon, his column. JThe expedition had reached a dense bush, when, without the premonition, an enormous .force of the Wahehe, numbering, It is supposed, 3000 warriors, rushed out qJT, the brush. They were armed with guns, supplied to them by PortugueSo traders, and with a horrible din, they began pouring a deadly fire Into tho German column. Plunging Into the line of the German native levies, they cut the column in two and standing between tho separated they fired In both directions, portlons while the flrejl of ? the, German troops probably killed many of their own friends ontho oflio sTdo of the'atfcack-in- g Wahehe. in i fact, the Gorman soldiers only .fired half .4 dozen volleys, believing that they were killing-theiown men. They theiv broke and fled in all directions, pursued, by. tho victorious Wahehe5; s. , v Lieutenant Tettenborn rallied twenty of the fleeing soldiers and took up a position On a hill. Here he was attacked by the Wahehebut succeeded in beating them off. He attracted the attention of other fugitives to the rallying point, and by 4 p. m. slxty soldlers and seventy carriers' had gathered under his command. He then retreated in the darkness, up enough fugitives in the coursepicking of his retreat to bring the total up to about 300 men.- About 250 of the rank and file were left dead on the ground, including nearly all the German officers and Lieutenant Von Zelewskl, j the leader of the expedition. Ten Europeans were kjlled and nearly all the rifles and baggage were lost.' The forlorn column which returned to Zanzibar reported that they had left 700 Of the enemy dead on the field. There is good reason to believe, however, that thoy ' were In no position to ascertain the extent of the damage Inflicted upon the Wahehe, and It they Is probable that the estimate of the losses they inflicted is much exag. ; gerated. The Germans have not yet taken any the Wahehe, steps to punish do so if they expect though to hold they must their own In East Africa. It will be a costly undertaking, but the probability Is that before many months the Wahehe will receive so terrible a drubbing that they will be careful how they try to annihilate another white expedition. Mr. Von Billow, an officer returned to Germany from East just Africa, says the Wahehe richly deserves the punishment which Lieutenant Zelewskl had been sent to- inflict. For months while he was stationed at Mpwapwa rumors came every dayof Wahehe attacks Some of their chiefs upon caravans. and other influential men came to Mpwapwa, where Von Bulow tried to Induce them to 5 behave ;f themselves. prdmfsed-:to- ; They repeatedly went keep, the peace, and then away,! and on the next day Von Bulow woo Id probably hear, that some hew caravan taking Ivory coast had be6n attacked and that those who conld not- escape had been murdered. . Unfortunately he had not force enough to punish the' marauders . ; r ',c. f ; - 1 -- i ; - to-th-e - for these outrages.. "," He says the great weakness of the German expedition was the fact that it was compelled to follow a single narrow footpath, and. thus was scattered over a long distance, Instead of being In a combody when the enemy made his unlpact ooked-for attack. New York Sun. lldWile Charmed Her. You're not going: to marry that conceited old coxcomb Johnson, are you, , Kate?" - But dear.must you not speak "Yes, of him so disrespectfully." Of course i,ot, if you are going to marry him. But, really, why do you do so? 'Because,v'whcn I asked him if he loved me he said ho would die for really me. And that's tho kind of a rich old husband I want." FhilaJclpIiia.' Ircss. V " . Tbe vent, but of tHir yfr crcei vho'icj c TV'eU' t i t ' Fair in - a 1" el'y a rf t 9 t L 13 NOVE5IBEE 15, ISOl. THE pAILT TKIBtTXE: GAIT IiAlIE CITY TTTAEt, StftTOAY REVIEWED. IS A-MONSTE- AS LONG AS A ; SEAS Mill Mil so-call- ed so-call- ed . re-elect- ed - X 1 1 r . 1 ! - . ' . - kind-hearte- -- - ? f ' j - " - kind-heartednes- s, - . - ; - s - - : . . - - ; Cherry Pectoral- bo-ca- n!-- : j - -i . :tct cct, L vero n,cr - cz "l i 1 ' f ir'.s ' IfI' - - C T- - d o cc 'rrcitlt tLo f i I Lli - i 1" ' in . , wlt-- i ' "oi. Salt Lake City. The sea serpent may possibly bo a myth, but there is no good reason for doubting tho existence of such terr'blo reptiles In tho vast and fathom-- . i less ocean since a monster over seventy feet long has been captured right here In Salt Lake City. The remarkable facts are as follows: About one week agoJDr. McLennan was consulted in regard to a lady who was at the time suffering pains, i to be of the result supposed dyspepsia. She had been ailing for ton yearsC After the doctor held an examination, he oucstloned her closorv. and elicited tha Information that she had been sue- -' cesslvely under tho care ofI several' physicians who had treated her for more than a dozen different ailments, and finally one and all of them gave her up as a "hopeless case. It required but a d brief examination and a few questions on the part of Dr. McLennan, to reveal the true uuso of her sufferings. The lady was instructed In regard to diet, etc., ahd made as comfortable preparatory to the ordeal through which she was about to pass. n In tho meantime preparations were byy the doctor for. combatting" with ' II the strange disorder and the patient was requested to visit him again fat eight o'clock the following morning." at which hour she was promptly on hand and at once given the prepared treatment., A little be.'ore ten o'clock, the long suffering patient was relieved of ' a monster tnno.wnrm rneA.iirlnir SAVAntir fnnt In length, which the doctor has now In hie office. The patient though weak from long sickness is now free f ro'jn pain, and enjoys the prospects of returning health to which she had been a stranger for so many years. Among the many symptoms this lady experienced, were nervousness, weakness, giddiness, fullness, and bloat ing after eating, specks floating before her eyes, poor memory, lassitude, gurgling and rumbling sensation tin the. stomach and bowels, palpitation of the heart, cold hands and feet, horrible far-fame- d ' - - well-directe- ; te-gu- .. , dreams, swelling of. the bands, languor in the morning and constant feeling of ' dread as if something awful was about' to happen. This statement Is made for the benefit of others who may bo s offer-erin- g as this lady was. ITer name 1 withheld from a feeling of delicacy on her part, as no names are published without consent of the patient.1 Parties desiring-furthe- r particulars should call at the ofSee of Dr. McLennan, 76 W. Second South Street (old Tribune building), where he treats with equal success all curable dIseases,consamption,'Brlghts disease, catarrh and dyspepsia, as well as all other diseases of the head,' throat and lungs, together with the eye, ear and heart, also diseases of the stomach, liver and kidneys. All chronic, dlCcult and lingering dlseasts of women, special organic weakness and diseases cf tt. j sexes positively cured or no fee. (Ti Second South Street.) 1 ; |