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Show TiJuii iPATTilT ir u iL wenr. I ;:altj 1 t V. - net a read, true Libera) In this Territory that does not feel a thrill oX pleasure at the joy manifested by the Morns on Church over the treachery of J. Hi McBbxds, and oyer resolutions which he was able to get a little faction of the National Republican committee to endorse. It seems to ;do our Saintly friends so much good that It n d would bo a ' KID AT. HOYEMBX3S7. IS3L coomvta . ..Erm f;: There fa Ee-ptibU- can -- tint Hr J 1 t m auaacali-no- a m ........ .....f I - ? 3.UU three tneathe i, 8 j riouae, eae year,...i l.Vft unrtny Trlhuos e months. J 8.0 a a i riDMBt, one year... e M 1JV) vk(r Trtbene, six month. I" . I .74 "fkianDUM, .tnree month. ...L... T t '.J nittui sbaald be addred " tot "Kditob r. ami." AH rcmntatir. letter shonl'l be and bunlne to TifR Taiat-Mri;aLisuiKi bait Lake City. Kfi rUULISIlINO CO. e-- my a ! 1 I Liberal-Republica- cold-hearte- would riot be willing to submit to whatever sacrifice it involves, jjtist to see that joy wh4re joy has been f uch that a foreign contingent for a long time. The National ommlttee will live until ther7th of JUno next; then there aajrf!l will bo a hew one appointed. Judg i J. R. McBbidk, If h4 lives, will probutly I. IT. fiAxxAv, Measurer. 1 nold bis place toj that time, and tnen tho chances are a thousand to one that some one else will! be appointed in his Everjr morning brings news of the falluro of one or mor bank. Had not place. In the meantime neither he nor tho financiers of ibis coiintry better the committee canI Id the least affect iuake a. noto of that fact; bad not tho things In Utah. When Abiuub 1bow5 and Judge Government better makd a riot of that and Judge Bewxett and Judge tact? With almost every failure' aome make thelf petition to Congress Babtcu jexcuso s offered for It, but (the excuse admission of Utah, they wljl the for below all Is that the Iccijrltles on which unprobably lug in this resolution of tho jtho bank loaned money depreciated, Committed as ono of the outNational suffltil tho assets of the bank were not side evidences that Statehood here lent to pay the debts. This has been to outside would be not unacceptable olng on steadily f of fifteen' years. It will be there k an bo Fortunately Republicans. a better explained, perhaps, by at Other considerations that, presented We lttle example than anything elte. will Statehood no be and there for, time, a farm suppose a farmer bwneJ P orth Slu.OOO fifteen years ago. He was this Territory under a Republican adIn trouble and his banker loaned him ministration until i.he genuine men of Territory, who; understand what Is tt 4000 at 7 percent, j FOr threo'ar four the not only fori them but for the best lor fivo years tho farmer fwas able to pay iili tntorost, then he Wasj forped to go to Saints, consent to it. n". that There Is no jthe banker and say: "Ipaurtofc meet the to be set IcBbidb expected Judge a me little show;" fntcrost this yearsIVe In before aside he if 'added person o thel interest to appeared 'the wis committee. It would not be posprincipal, and the) thing! went on. that sible for such a thing to happen, unless or o sx eight frhis continued for fiye be shown that in his private could it and the years, every year tho farmer banker hoDintr that a good crop would or public life Judg McBhide was unjjiako things straight At last there has worthy to hold hiseat there. The uthere jto b n reckoning; and l is found that most that the was to for Abthcb has prevent hoped five Interest or the six years for boen piling up and amounts to 82000. Browjc from being Judge McBbidk's The original loan wa4 54000; that makes proxy before that committee. Under ordinary! circumstances It G00. In the mean jlme the farm has would be impossible to see why the depreciated In valuo,33f per cent, and awkward Territory, who squad the farm is now worth only 30000, and Republiforced on tho market it does not bring call themselves straight-ou- t to exult so find which can at cans, migch Is a case Is there a where that. That a as recommended over, inasmuch 'they beginning with a realty; security. Hut man and for Judge McBbidk's place, outsldo of that, where banks have loaned one was I not name for his fall merchandise the on stocks of money moment What considered; they really has been greater, the ruin is more hppe-ijasover McBbidk that exult is, Judge came.fxoni the legislation That all of wishes the great body of which struck down silver as ultimate against the men him secured for who that place on redemption money. It does pot do any the committee,. has'fused his power thus good to that broken banker, to that obtained to Wei are his friends. Injure broken merchant or farmer to tell him not ho McBbidk that Judge that sllvor mu&t noti bq restored, that wentcriticising we are over other to what the Bide; It would drive all the gold out of the the criticising is that he, in going over, beountry. Those men believe that allcontrayed a trust, and did It purposely, did gold, so far as they are it willfully, and. maliciously and dishoncerned, Is already driven out. When orably. If he had been an up and up i,ho farmer thinks of his ten years man he would have resigned his of useless work, wherein! he could not straight on National Committee when the which time place only keep even, but durlpg ho left the that gave him that .party; was? frittered away; nil his original capital can hts own situahe stand If place. Jnd when the merchant looks back upon us can of If the rest tion the certainly. ils hatd work" and sees that It avails th4 who of old enemies Liberal party, othliiff; and when the banker reflects can In him, twenty years reviling spont hat hi loaning tho mOey ho; followed welcome the he and he that brings, gift nly business rules, that now he has not with the we then why,t congratunly loat his money but he has lost his late them gift, on their acquisition. good liame, neither' the one nor the mon A few last spring thought they of other t comforted by a6y bugbear could the Liberal party before destroy bondholders drain of gold which the used the names that ail of its time; the! they lk of the throats down eop forcing us have helped to give them, and all the ' peopJo. that the reputations which they Tho thing must be stopped or general prestige obtained had carried, and still when the would be Wo It come. believe uin will came It wlas found that they election upon the country now except for the were but an awkward squad at best, and abnormal conditions which prevailed all was found It doubt that. no this year, which gave to this! country a matter how beyond names might be.no great crop, and which gayo it a market matter how high much affection might have is famine which the devastating been lavished through in the past, the upoamen utside nations. was not Liberal composed of the party Mod talk wisely about ihe tariff tho would stuff that permit any friendship, tariff subjoct Is a perfect baby compared or them away from toeod affection, any with tho silver question, And if Conof their the daty. path gress does not see It that way, and our private judgment is, that And on an honost and straight things while Mr.. Brown is rejoicing, basis speedily, there will come a time, now while Judge Bennett Is partly rejoicIn the next twelve months, when there whilo Judge Baktch is rejoicing, will hare to be such ah adjustment In ing, In the heart of J. R. the that rejoicing business a is made in tho world after McBbidk is noto inanifest as he Would ai convulsion, which men call a geolo on to make the it like appear surface, gical period, has exhausted its force. because he .is a proud, naturally sensitive man; and whether anybody else BUBHIA Aflu auvaa. ' """""" knows it or not, he; knows that what he From London comes a rumor that has done Is something which takes away "Russia has about determined to, in the the respect of honest men for him. No riear future, establish a silver standard. matter how brazen! a. fftCO may put It would be perfectly natural If she on, that will hurt him. About the thouldj llussla has 110,000,000 of people; toughest thing upofi him at this time is 100,000,000 of thoso people never see or that he cannot go to bed at night withvjo any money except slayer She can out carrying with Jiini his conscience, establish a silver standard, and buy the and that cansciencib makes for him an gold necessary to settle her foreign uncomfortable bedfellow. balances and intorest; and if she Should tilocMe upon that it would; be a vast ad- AXIMOgT'S WAtt. whole to her Mr. people, vantage Salisbury bewails the protective the way, we do not see why our tendencies of the world; Reduced to a JHy does not sock to make a practical statement; Lord Saxisbubt is direct alliance with Russia and the Latin like the gentlemen who lives in the city Union on tho silver question. To say and supplies a largo part of that city that those three countries could not with the milk and ' butter from his clfset any efforts of Greaj Britain and cows, and bewail the fact that .' the Germany to keep silver beaten: down, is farmers In the neighborhood of that city disgraceful to any American, It Is true Insist upon putting j fences around their that Groat Britain, has; SO per cent of corn fields, which greatly reduces the the ocean commerco of the world, but capacity of his cows to get food. He says that watching the statistics that does not particularly mattor, because more' than 75 per cent of that he cannot but! feel- anxiety lest, the efcommerce, outside of the United forts of foreign protectionists shall be And partially successful;, that on all sides states is with silver countries. " If our country had' j the courage there appears constantly Increasing pro.and the sagacity to declare lhat silver, tective duties, calculated to stifle Brithenceforth with her should be money of ish trade. j;' ultimate redemption ,as good as gold, Those are confessions from tho Presouth of us would mier of England; they grieve the Demothoe countries to the' us. It would cratic party in the United States extoward naturally gravitate h to bo hard establlf a universal ceedingly; they are grieved that this Xiot so that a piece of country should do anything to prevent them ru!n ago among silver would pass as the employees In Great Britain, from United States or as at home. getting full work If It were only Brazil Mexico culekly in And wth that accomplished, with the American employees they- would bo If they couldi only seU railroad stretching t down toward the happy. 1 3uth,;with the Nicaragua canal being their raw products abroad and : :;Uly constructed It would .not bo buy back what they w,ant to use,! thqy f 3 years until tho United States would would be exceedingly pleased. Mr. Oab-lisl.Snato the finances of this continent. probably the istraightest man of Iuw is Just the time when, a little them all, admits that with throwing off 1 li needed In the Treasury Depart-;- t the tariff there would have to be a great a little Washingtoni sagacity reduction in the rates of American tt : la tho Administration, and timo wages; but he flatters himself that t' t r notlco bo seryed upon the things would be so much cheaper hero I ICow Yorli and Boston, who that the laborer could well afford to .'.I.' h and German money in .work for less wagesJ : And when ho gets I llinj An:;riean fiecorltles, to that point he invariably draws a list CoTirrinent cf the of what certain woolen goods are worth :', , U Institution in New York and what they ere vrcrth : r: r ' "t'l c::..i- -. da Leeds n, and coav'ni?nt!y fcr-c- ts tha , ; . ., Com-AJ-- T. L't.-Ui-. t- 4 1 j Mji-Bki- de , j Liberal-Republica- Libral-Repnbllca- ns ' in-thi- , s. f I io i t j ' ad-Ju- j st j, " !( : j I j - ' - . , - j f . b, ! -- i . ? -- b AIT HXBCJKB; goods which Cie ordinary laborer never thinks of wearing, and w hick are bought by American shoddies becavmse they are foreign; because we have a class of people In this country who would catch cold If obliged to exchange a foreign-mode coat for an American coat . warm. as (. equally word Lord that Sausbubt Every says' is ajcompliment to the sagacity of the American people in putting up the fences to keep Lord Saxisbubt's cattle away from oar corn. X.AMJ9 OXf rOCO TBI i.t f A Writer In Seritmer'm has an article on the above subject. It refers particularly to New .Mexico, but it puts one's thoughts in motion regarding Old Mexico. Slowly the men of the United Status are imaklng Inroads Into that country; they are taking possession of the mines, they are here and there getting tracts of land, and If things continue peaceful, in ten or fifteen years they Will begin to assert their natural control in that country. Then there will be a transfiguration there. . Thero was a lime when the men of the United States talked loudly that the destiny of this Republic was to absorb all the other countries of the continent, that jre were to have British Columbia and Canada, that we were to have Mexico; in that way one possession after another would come to us until the great Re public would reaoh from the Arctic Circlet to away down under the Southern Cross We do not think that spirit Is as strong as it was twenty years ago. We think the Dominion will, by and by, petition for annexation, but in the countries of the Spanish speaking people we expect that they will become Americanized without becoming apart ef our Republic There Is no desiro on the part of people familiar with Spanish American ways to have them attached our country. to If be better It will enough of our people go down there and carry on the mines and fields, and give direction to the commerce, the trade and' the progress of the country, to keep those countries always in close alliance with ours, without having them become an integral part of our country. And that makes us think what Mexico will be when the present civilization changes for American civilization. There is no end to the natural wealth of that country; its mines have not nearly ceased producing yet, and probably "will not in the next six generations. There will be some new ones found, there will be a great many old ones reworked; only the hoisting iengines will take the place of the! peon, and the power drill and the giant cartridge and the great pump draining the' mine will change the whole character of the work. Then, when the fields shall be well plowed, there is hardly any end to the food supply that that It has a wonder Country can produce. ful place in the geography of the world; It is a long country north and south, with only short lines to either sea from the center, hence the products of the Country can ibe oaded on board ship sjt When all that land trifling expense, shall be fully utilized It will supply us with nearly al that we need of tropical fruits and products. It will be more profitable for tl at country, to buy of us grain and many kinds of meat than to produce the food for man and beast on the spot. It will be many years, even under most prosperous circumstances, before it will become a great manufacturing country; hence all its agricultural implements, its household furniture, its pianos, its locomotives, its mining machinery and a thousand other articles will have to be sent in as they are now, and perfect reciprocity with the United States will secure for our country all that trade, And what will come to Mexico will come gradually to all Spanish America. T?he shrewd merchants of Great Britain and Germany see this, and it is for this reason that we see the efforts being made by the London press to prejudice the minds of Spanish Americans against the men of the United States. They may put off the Inevitable for a little while, but that is all. Every year shows the encroaching of the men of the north.) Whenever an American gets possession of a mine, he wants American machinery to work It; whenever ho wants supplies, he wants them from his native land; and it is to be the mission of the next three generations of young men of the United States, to make the peaceable conquest of all that land, and to build up there a new civilization, and new prosperity. , All boys In the high schools in our country should study the Spanish It Is more important for them than Greek! or Latin, or French or German, Their jw6rk is to be directly that is, the work of many of them Is to be directly with men who know no other tongue except a broken Spanish tongue. And there will be snch trlnmphs as the world has not seen before, triumphs of engineering, triumphs of city building, .. f r i I lan-guag- ej yzxa rextASSssxtxR It will be In exact accordance with the proprieties of this world If Mr. iUxu of Texas shall be elected! Speaker of the House of Representatives; because he represents the dominant Idea In the Democratic party, the idea that warms the soul of Gboteb Clevmajtd, the old idea that originated with Jobs C. Cai txoux, which idea is that no tariff whatever should be levied except for revenue, and f there is not enough money obtained that way by which to run the Government, that the balance must be made up by direct taxation. Never but once in tibe historjy of the INGTON. F A03 E. PER $30.00 Two "V TV0 in light, medium and heavy weight's, are the most select ever shown in the city. Our Overcoating-- s Full Dress Suits ara one special features. WALLACE & oF our CO., House. w av aa. m - aw m JCuropean. tteataaraau. Open from Up. iu. 6 a. s. e. cor. .. ra. 4:47 p. nu ftZiji p. 111. . I - i x SYSTEM. THE THROUGH Trains Arrive and LIXE. CAR FFPFPTIVP UnVFURPR IflQI I jit Salt Df part Laka Daily as Follows: AUKIVK From all .Eastern pfiiuts ..'..' 4:00 a. rs From IJutt", Port laud, Logan, Park City nnd San Francisim ..10:4.4. ra. From all KHstern ixiit m. ' From Cache Valley. Otrdeu and inter- - l:3jp. mu nodiato p.im 7:SOp. IFrora Millorti and lntcrniediuto point. S):40a. nu From Juab and Kun-kt: 4Up.ro. Kroiu Terminus and Tootle 4:(X)p.ia DKI'AKT ; For nil Eastern noints 7:00a. m. For Hutte Portland, San Fraucisoo JUNE 3. OPENED a and CacliA Valley 1(1.25 a. in. FerCacfce Valley and Park City For all Eastern points and baa Fran- 3:30p.m. B:00. p. nu cisco.... F r Juab and Eureka i...: 7; 10 a. in. JFf-Mi.'tord and Intermediate points. 4:00 p. in. 7:10a. ta For Terminus and Tooele liailv. Sundays excepted. tTrnins between Juab and Milford do not run bunoaya. CITY TICKET OFFICE, 201 MAIN ST. r pjotel, I 5. H. D. E. 11DRLET, Genl. ArL Pafcsgr. Dept. C. R Mr.Li.Kir. E. It. Lomax. O. TrafUo Mgr. ti. I. AiT. Ag:t n. Ci.iik, Genl. Mgr. t i , OLD ESTABLISHED ( ? BUILDIIQ, WHITE HOUSE HOTEL, SALT IAkE CITY. Xocatlon u ns a r passed, belnz In proximity to wholesale and retail houses end lending of Interest. Headquarters for mining and place oattie men. Pullman Car and Union Ticket Oflloe in hotel. Bates, fl.60 to ta.00 per day. 5 CENTS A COPY. THE DIRECT THROUGH LINE THE MORGAN i I TO H. L. HALL, PROP. r. C WABHINOTONj m:uvu;k PACIFIC This oM raHabla, flrstslaaa Hotel la axrw nndei new --oaaasamant, baa new plumbing throngh-n- t and city- aewer eonneotloa. M. B. BEARDSLEV, Proprietor. i j nu mu UNION 6, GEWlNGLIrop, HOTEL HUTSFORD I tk. 1UU Proprietor, Continental - !A l:!p. l:;Op. : rullen. l : l. SALT LAKE CITT. UTAIL ! CHICAGO HOTEL ALL POINTS AMD 14? WE8T FIRST SOUTH. AST. IS Buns Fast Vestibule Trains with Threucrh and Lining Cars, connecting with Trains lor Milwaukee. Madison , and Throngn In Wisconsin and Michigan. all points la svaw epan Sot the reoeptlon oi Sleepers Central Location, Hrsi.aasta All Its Appointments. i . J3 li U I i j RAXZ3. C3 ; nn - j a- -- u Of the house you hare to pay rent for, and establish your home In Linuola! Park, which la Linwith fine hoosesi Iyook beinp built coln Park. tipWANTLANP, j233 .Maintipstreet. . A-N- D 5J2.C50 ' Throngh Sleepers to St. Panland Minneapolis,' with direct connections Xor poin'.s i Iowa, Minnesota and Uakota. PZ3 DAY. For tlekete. sleepinsr car reserratlons, and all. information, apply at any oflloe, or ta VV. Ji. 8TAMMAUL), General Agent, Salt Lake City. It. W MKARS, Travel in(t Freight and itPasse nee r Agent, Salt Lake City. i t, W. IL. NKWMAN, Third M. WHITMAN, Ueneral Manager, i 1 J. VI'. A. Til U ALL, Ueneral Passenger and f Ticket Agent. te theatricals and SpeeUI fain - A. frlra insim am annr Innr. V . aaaga if-vartlea. steam heat, hot mm4 eoM waterT liaati fi Uzhi and batlate mrvy room. ' ... W CtAKlS, Propria SOWZir JrDX.roJD. Jfanacer. tr Vlce-Pres- THE FAUOUS LEADS. Utah Central Railway THiiE TABLE. ls In Effect April win ran ,raarr Trains tity aaa I'arit GREAT LEADERS. LM-h-i ' ! ' t: dally,betwee mm iomowb. ' 6aA - . SALT LAKE CITT. 8:00 A m frala 81 leaTe- .Eighth Soath and Main St, . 4:w p r, M South and Halm 8C, 10:30 a. a 2arrire ARS 1 . H. tt. MOAD, Uaager Expert Dental Company. CO., on Weekiy. Install Dentistry One-thir- d Down and mente, rest on : Co--. Kt-ara- tt, the Easy Payments. Teeth Extract Abscletely, SlTitbt Pda. Seta of Teeth, from..,...;. ..$3.00 Dp I'TeetU Filled, from,.!-....1.00 Up . i OFFICE IX CKNTRALiBLOCK. Xio. 0 W. tod Sssth St. Across th i Street from Wonderland. OFS3 srirsATB Ajra . xzounArra. . iilELfl BYANS! , B-i- .1-- rra 17 ' 4 en THC TiLr Ul-M- oe i nee it II ,r5 f ft beets i m e m OK ranninicl mirml worn. jlcmi rli.iil,daru: &B4 u mor, Jan bi pickml let. MWH .Jki- M -j f :,-- . ( ' i i a D orx hJ) J 1 c. je:H 5i3' a i .9 Kir ce t .K , : . 1 Agtut, Salt lilICi:S LlIMEE ? ' un. nt lint pr een t. wroacui r aveei. .xa- - bow ratalCK mnitmimca'T'" X n f. ill itvtreet. I i tjartiK ,t iearer. Colo. to break. r. l.ltrlitnmt Utah A Montana Machinery Co Lake City. i: nrrjj ! I w ana KEBTJC-E: ertidp.ia and 173 llaia 17Ci C3TASLf-fC- ...... . THC FREICMT aa.Y9 n. COMMNYHKMMB r TT N EIM. i T1CL AT 171 a.a ? .....-...1- p.u 1 . Uom. And are manufactured at treat. Salt Lake CUT- - r neHMHewaMBBwrta ' sxa Office and Depot ooraer Xtght Savth aa4 Main stlactt. J. MACKijrrosa. Genl. Frt. and Pass- - AamaU 2 leare . This la a sample ef the eoareraatioa one may hear any day at oar principal hotels: 14b. Jowie Don't yoa find It bard ta gat a ood Imported Cigar nowadays? the Imported Ma SmithI hare qaitt-nokl- n bill went into article ever since the aMcKinley iaTna Clftar effect. I am srookl&jr D'omeitlo which salts me better than t- -e wacby Imported as taaeb. Clears, and they dontlacost brand ef the Cigar? the Hn. Jokes What aro LEVY'S SAH Mb. Ttiey I: a Full Una ef ttSO . PABK CITT. Vrafn larTlTwFark City - " -; 3 SLore. One-PriG- B ZUar. l' : city !U. ,r 1: iHu. BIVrillAM. G. S. HOLMES. Prop. PUBLISHED AT 89 C0RC0RA3 No relation.) - c. lt 111. : Leave Kalt Lake 8:UUa iul Hcturnltij4 arrlr Fait l.nkeft (HI p. in. C. UUDOK. A. L WELHV. J. II. llKNN ItTT, U. K. A I'. A. Geu. M'.f. Suut. and Cliidering cl, M. 4:VUu, t u. 1 Arrive Salt Luko from l'rovo uml Spriutc ille, ia:'JUa. in. .' 250 Rooms, Single or En Suite. iry.s. i ii LI zr, zmz I .( in. tu. p. in m. i:4'p. 1" p. ASEniCAN FORK. PROVO AMI XPr.INOVlM.S. Salt Lukn h. hi.', 6: '5 p. in. unci U.."J Lmvp p. in : arrive Salt Lake 1V:UI noon tiiul lf'V(.p. nu 75 Rooms with Bath. Keeps anme-- ii ',:."() local llni, New and Elegant in All Its Appointments. & MILLER, (SsccessoT to Crana Jt l V .' 1 i The Modem Hotel of Salt Lake City. 26 W. Second South St,' opposite Cullen Hotel. OiOsUle of Utah. Decker Broa., A. B. Chs, J. A C. FUebr, and Srelth A Barnes Ptanoa: Story A Clark, A. B. Cbaaa, IorlnK fc Blaka aad Bridgecarry a larn and complete port Orfrnaa. theWa abora earned inatrnmanta alwaya-' payn hand, any of wbiob we will sell on timeloatra-igaents menu If deeired. No trouble to ebow whether yon do or do not bay. to. Prices attended Correspondence promptly Old Instruand terms quoted on , We carry tne largest ments taken In exehnnfapplication. atock of Instruments and sell at lower price than any bonae w of Chksaio. Lake City, 73 Stores located as follows: Salt W. Second South; 0den,8378 Waahlnctoa, Ave Boise Cits. Idaho: Cheyenne. WvoaUait !S. ID. 234: m. to THE f3 FOREIGN GOODS OffCT CASH. Q :..i. r: in : O. S. ERB, The Best Friend the Gentile Cause Has PIANOS THE II ia. jv m. m. 7:( in n. H: IS n. . JL Lr (ireen ia :ii a. m. Lv Mantl. ... :."1 in. . IV: 01 p. in Lt Tl.istle. w::wh. in. 10 ir ji. ni. Ar 1'rovo U:.ri. p. in. HI I'mi. Ml. lo:.rTp. 111. l!f:-- ; Lv l'rovo p. in. li);S.' a. in 0:rKp. nu Ar Salt hake. .. y:Vl p. in lS:rtl p. in. r.':'.iln. nu Lv Salt Lake. . ay.ti p. m IV: Tip. in. lV:.sJa. uu I I . . . Ar Ojjeu. ::. a. a. T.:4i) p. in :'.U p. in Dinners for Frtyato and trxoatrl-ca- l in private dining-rooparties on snort notice. a 3B W. SECOND SOUTH STREET. Stc!i2T7ay T :'. . 11 m THIS HOUSE AND LOT ARE WORTH (Not Brothera" Ka . Walker Only SIX-ROO- MILLER ':iIh. A!JX . Hou3ein SaltLake. $2.00 K YEAR, $3500.00, ALL 9 p. 2 :M a. 4:10 a. T:-- 1: 10 p. in. 3:'-- p. ill. r::t)p. m ... in. tu. in. to. in. --a. in. to. itt. p. 1 ia. ft:f-"- a. Lv SaliiiH First-Clas- 3 Reviews .$2706.00.-- f: lua. f:4Na. a. 10:Ua. ja ........ . Ki ver. STATE STREET. The National Independent Weekly M ELEGANT HOUSE, MODERN, TASTY, CLOSE TO CAR LINE, p. tit. . .4 12:85a. m. b:hTt p. to. W:ro p. y:t p. in. 1 :07 a. m. . (rf ARRIS DUILDIN0), s ra. 8:ap. ra. tM()B. P:.v p. m. lira's?. ra-11:40a. in. p. in. Lv 1'ueblo. Lv Lend v ill... . Lv Gienwoinl. A r Grand .1 in. Lv Grand J una A r Green Kiver. THE FREED FURNITURE AND CARPET CO., r MONTH b.W . wASHINGIN McCURRIN, II all dine Profrais Tns Akka Skvbjlxcb mentioned in the dispatch yesterday as the contestant In the ' Searles estate contest, is Mrs. Sevrajtce who Is well known la this city, the wife of Maux Sibuet'Sev-basc- s who for a Ion? time was azent of the Central Pad So here. Mrs. 0. Is a nlsce cf the lit3 Ilrs. Kermis, tad certainly dssorves a lltt'a pcrtian. cf tbsTcstali r: VtiT KORIHBOUMI. Lv Lt Colo S;"(;s lnvpr ina-chin- . . The Gnlu Easy Paument Hotfse in Town. KATE TIElilD ; p. p. p. p. na I TYPEWRITER -- C:05 7:47 7:47 :35 No.-- t m. ni. :4ia. m. m. H Hia. in. m. II :WJa. ra. tu. 11:1- -. lit. ni. ;i:r i p. nT 4 :4" p. 6:WV p. Ar Green River LvOrwn River. Juno. AtUrtn. Lt Grand Juno. A r (ilcnwfMxI. Ar Ar Pueblo. ... Ar Colo Sp'js . . A r Itmwr ; life-lon- and wnicla has proven it-- . self to be the mo3t durable e and perfect writing ever put on the market ? H so, then; buy a REM- No.1 Ko-f- l, Ar Salt Iai?e. Lt Salt Lake Ar Pioto . l$r Proro Ar Thistle.. .. Ar iManti Ar i First-Clas- s lftt. Sunday. KoTember 1, Sotmr and Kahbound. Lt Oirden... We sell more "considering the style! and quality of our goods than any hoUse in town, on better terms, and oKet a larger and more varied stock of any and everything; neede to furnish a house. FOR LARGE BILLS AND" TO HOTELS WE MAKE s wlaicla has stood, ttie test and. lias been, constantly Improved, for fifteen yejars, TABLHi T ,? i Jm KlTect Selling Cheaper Than Any House in the West, I ji RAILWA CITERENT- - TIME , WORLD-EXOWNX- germs of disease that aro always, in warm weather, more or less in the air. If a vote could be taken we think the majority would be overwhelmingly in favor of a real sharp cold snap. - 234 . STANDARD OATJ023. Please, If you ro fbnd of paying-fanc- y prices for v are not j ;'the people you are looking" for. We enjoy the reputation of SPECIAL TERMS. i j j r -- J DO YOU WANT A PRACTICAL j NtSTERN j Government has that ule been enforced. It spread devastation! throughout the country; it stole from us the gold that was dug from the California plaicers; it filled the streets with! skilled Workmen bogging for bread; it started the free soup kettle to boiling in tho great cities; it withdrew our steamships from the seas; it drained the country of money and filled the warehouses of the country with foreign gobds; it served a notice on the skilled artisans of the country that they could not work unless they would work for the pauper wages of the Old World; it closed up the manufactories of the country; it set the farmers of; Indiana and Illinois to burning their corn for fuel; it reduced the credit of the country to the level of Egypt, and mado the ruin so general that even Thomas Benton was forced to admit that the condition was very different from, the theory that in practice the theory of the perfectly unprotected country proved to be a fraud. Mr. Miti-- and his friends, when they drafted the Constitution of fhe Confederate States placed it on that basis. g It has been a principle with him. Gboveb Cleveland, who never began to study the question until he became President, fell in love with it, and he is more rabid on the subject, peror Mr. haps, than ;Mr. Mills Ho is probCarlisle himself. most prominent candiably the President next year; the date for Southern sentiment has beaten back the manhood of tho Northern Democrats in Congress, and if they "have not accepted the fallacy, they have been bullied into silence on the subject; and hence, nothing can bo more appropriate than tho election of Mr. Mills for Speaker. Mr. Carlisle begs that no quarrels shall be inaugurated on the silver question, that the keynote of the Democracy shall be next year, that kind of tariff reform which he and Mr. Mills endorse. We sincerely trust that tho silver question will be disposed of thla winter, so that the tariff issue may be put directly before the people of 'the United States next summer. It will not carry in that event a single Ndrthern or Western State, not even New Yjark, and we give the Democracy notice that their only hope of success next year lies in their making; tho silver issue,, and not the tariff issue the slogan of their campaign. They have a show to win on silver, they have not the slightest show in the world on 'the tariff, in .case the silver question shall not, in the meantime, be disposed of. - ..- - FXaJfOS triumphs In railroad building, triumphs rpHESX In irrigation indeed, theirs is to be the X aol4 only by and. the of the New World on a basis which will ?. E. WARPEf UERCAMLE In ail oX Utb. Idaho and WjraDlaa promise permanent civilization and peace " ' to all those millions of people.' Wa ara also aole aftanta for Kbe We Chink it would be hotter for the healtbJ of this city if we should have a sharp freeze, and perhaps a little snowstorm, t There is a good deal of sickness here just mow, and the Impression is abroad that: this warm weather is 'out of season; and that while it Is cold enough to perhaps Inflame the mucous membrane of children, it at the same time is not; cold enough to kill tho 5! mssa Axrx j . STOyJEMBEIl 27. apbjU- JTH, FRIDA XV HOENING, XiAIIU CITY i i in : |