OCR Text |
Show SlAiii - i' WON DAT. C . T wo.. . put, rrTMs...-riimonuii anyV three ::::::: 1 months.... . .fJ on year. ....... ........... I Tribune, i.vr I I r.dsy Tribune, tlx man tit M Tribune, one year:. ....... .......... 2.01 trlly J SO Uy Tribune, tx month. :75 All communications rilaUcsr to news or edlte- Tialmatux should b addrcs4 to "Eoitob lafr and business letters shonld jl 11 remittances rt to Til TtmL'SI 1'VMUSif IK vO" T, bait Lake City, L tab. FUBLISUIKO CO. THE I. H. Lakwaji. MKU. J 4 1 nr-Js- -- '. hajra been unablo to Eastern papjr that In the pro Up to date, find anr We ceedings of tbo National Bepablican Committed Dtibllshei tbo roaolation lent to Salt Lake. Tbl fact rather emphasises the suspicion that the reso lutions were smuggled in and passed on a sneak, br a little squad, after moat of the Committee had gone. out It ! pleasant to rekd of the square Council. Oruaha In the free fight City The rule that men should settlo their differences by pure Intellect and reaton doc not appljr when men havo not any Intellect, and the average City Council, outside of Salt taki City, Is not very much burdened with that thing called brain. Hence when there is a misun derstanding it I not only natural, but entirely appropriate. to settle the busias ness In the old prim Hire way, such men adoDted In the stone age before there wereany;CIty Councils, and when the law of might ruled the world around. it " Siteakiso of the probability Mine's election as 'fpeaker of Mr. of the next House, an Eastern paper In mentioning the anDronriateness of It gives a little Democratic record as'follows: . When tbe Mills bill pending-- Mr. Buchanan of New Jersey'j offered an amendment to prohibit the importation of good by conrJet. add everjr Democrat creaenfe voted ac&inti It, and tt was de feated. Such a prohibition was Incorporated In the MoKinley bill, and It was sustained, though on the vote every Democrat In the House voted agulost It to ado Which makes the record clear that, in the opinion of free traders, if we can get goods made by foreign convicts cheaper than goods made by free labor In this country, the more such goods sent to us the better ft Is for thU coun try. The paper referred to points out these facts for the consideration of the worktngmen of the United States. Tub December magazines bogin to bring pictures of Santa Cxaus. He has the same old ancient! furry robes, he Is loaded down as of old with gifts, he has a benign and still Jolly face, such as boys and girls have been looking at for so many years, and of all the precious hum bugs In the world he ts tbo most cher- lshed.' Most children get their first idea of an unseen but always merciful Provi dence from Hakta Claus. He gives them their first Idea how by prayer, how by good works, frouV an unseen but merciful source good comes. They never ton to ask where he gets his stock of goodie goodies, whether he owns a fac tory, or whether he is of Divine origin and can create such things just by his word. With the same confidence which the simple African has in Christianity .they simply accept the fact that he cornea once a year, and loads down their stockings, and fills ihelr hearts with grand and wonderful glfts. And though he is a sorry myth, (hough In point of fact he Is a veritable humbug, his divin ity and his wealth are never questioned by childhood. They jro on confiding In him, and drawing their treasures from him, and to them everything is just as real as though it were a fact, because they do not look beyond the gift, they are willing to take the world's word for the fact that while they were asleep he came and unloaded those blessings upon them. And men are? simply grown up children, and they are a great deal like them in tbe fact that when a good, comes to them they are perfectly willing to accept it, and not to question too closely the authenticity of the gift. And if It pleases them they are willing to clothe the giver with any celestial robe that their imagination can stitch together. Santa Cf.Ats makes a little religion for little people, and as it is Innocent and harmless it is just Jas well, for what causes joy In this world ought always to be cherished. - J - The New York Commercial Advertiser Is an independent paper of very strong Democratic leanings, f It says: 'A good many persons are on ne up loe or ex pectation to see what Senator David B.' mix will do when a free coinage measure comes over.from the jiHouso." To this the Philadelphia Pre responds: WhleheTer way be jumps it will be up- II ill, work for the Democracy. Mr. Hill Is inclined toward free stlrer. but aid be cannot coma within TOOO vote of carry last New York on that Issue, and a platform ca which he can carry New York would be awan-.pela tne rtese. oegms to look as though the big Demoeratto majority ot the eorain House will be a big boomerang to the party which put it there, whichever way the cat may Jump. That is worth notice simply to correct an error. There are Hot three Congress ional districts In the United States in which tho question of free silver would not pass by a large. majority If It could ba submitted directly, to the vote of the Tho bondholders would not people. submit that question to the people (dire of any State in the Union; they prefer. to juggle with it through the election, and then manipulate: legislatures and Congress after the election. One thing Is sure, and that Is that if any member of Congress thli winter, bo he Democrat or Republican, dares to make a C.iht against free silver he can make up '. mind from that if. he Is nominated . r President next summer he will not t the electoral vote of a single State i.l Hi new West. He will have to de-- nd on the solid Booth, New York, ecCr-at and New Jersey for aa And ws era not at all certain t'.o solid. South. Texas vjf: :rylng rl on the sliver tiaory tot 1 lliM tra h1- tLy arj 4 The caaaa of silver does not look very -- the following: ,Correr Vuaas 'Aiiiuii ii: "good in the Hast. Tbe Philadelphia JVexa . under, the bove beading prints NOTEMBIB 80, USl. GOODWIN ii-tkii- . Tbe silver xotae owner are again at work the free coinage agitation. I "promoting" M. Itarnsey. president ef the Granite lloan-tai- n Mining Company, who f tbe head and tail of tbe "National Executive Silver Com tnlttee." foots tbe bills, though ft Is probable be Is partially reimbursed by other that owners. mine Mr. Ramsey knows how to cet a "fair re turn" on an investment, as appears from hi report as president to tbe stockholders In his company. Lie states that on receipt of private information "showing 175,000 net in Hght for $7700 expended." the syndicate which he organized made a nay meat of 820.000 toward purchasing the Granite Mountain mine. "The report adds; "The of tbo ore having quantity and quality Improved, on August 1. 1881, the steadily second and lewt payment of $30,000 was made and the syndicate owned the property, and proceeded to organize the company." This company was floated with a nominal of flO.OO'J.OOO on $17,700 in rented. capital and dividends to the amount of about $2,000,000 per annum bare been paid. In the same report the cost of production of pure silver is given at about 12 cents per fine ounce. Mr. Ramsey, not satisfied with 800 per cents profit wants tbe Government to pay bint 33 cents more an ounce than he now gets; thus increasing bis profit to over 1000 per cent. For that purpose he ana other mine owners organized tbe "National Executive Silver Committee." which has headquarters in Washington and b as been busy. ever since lobbying in and out of Congress to promote their selfish ends. They have practically captured tbe Democratic party, but they failed lamentt ably with tbe Republicans. But tbe fleht is not ended. Tbe mere power of money n American politics, when Is somesupporting specious arguments. That was shown in thing tremendous. New York at t hell ast election wben a flamboyant mllllontare, without a single qualifi cation for his ofU.cc other than that of being a good fellow," was elected Governor and is now reacblnzf; out for the Presidency. And yet that man voted to increase the silver miner's profits from 800 to over 1000 per cent. No man opposed to this Selfish policy of plunder is ever mentioned for Speaker of tbe next House. It Is a matter which the American people need to give serious consideration. We copy the above to show our read ers that the gold fiends of the East do not propose to limit in any! way their fight upon fcllver. Of course the mani fest unfairness of It will be apparent at a glance. The jPrcss tries to carry the idea that the Granite Mountain mine is an average silver mine. When Democratic papers pointed a. few years ago to the colossal fortune made by the Carnegie company, the Vyes waa perfectly able to explain that It was an exceptional case: that it did not give an Idea of the l industry at large any more than, when man In California in the old days found a gold nugget Worth $30,000; that that gavo an idea of the average profits of gohi mining. The Granite Mountain has been a great success; there are in Montana two or. three other successful silver mines; there, are five or six In Utah: there Is not one in Nevada, to day the best milling State of all; there is hardly one in Idaho that is paying dividends, and cfnly a few In! Colorado. But the value! of the silver dollar was established after the cream; of the Mexican and South American silver mines had been exhausted. It was rated at what our fathei's established it at, not by an accident simply, but by as careful an estimate as the experience of the years could give of the amount of labor necessary to produce It. And that rule Is not changod, notwithstanding the Granite Mountain, the Ontario, the Daly and a fewf other dividend-payinmines. The rule Is just as correct to day as It was a hundred years ago; 371 grains of silver make a dollar because it costs a dollar to, produce It. If the editor of the Press could come West and see the endless miles of tun nels and shafts that men have run in and sunk in the! hope of getting sllv'er; form some estimate of the thousands and ten thousands of lives worn out in the pursuit of 'silver In vain, it might change his mind somewhat. Even the Granite Mountain was so long being opened, it required such vast expend! tures of money that the owners tele graphed the foreman to close it down almost at the Same hour the foreman telegraphed the owners that he had struck the lead. The dispatches crossed each other on the wires. Had the dispatch been sent from the East a week sooner, the chances arata hundred to one that the Granite Mountain would still be un round. Before the great Bonanza on the Com stock nas found it was neces sary to sink 1300 feet through the solid rock, then to drift from the bottom of g that shaft feet through blasting rock all the way to find it. Had that drift been run In any other direction the 120(J chances are a hundred to one that It would have found nothing. And thero are through tlie Comstock lode miles and miles of Just such work that ended In failure. For a newspaper to pick out one fortu nate mine and give that as a sample of the average result of I silver mining, is worse than Ignorance, it is direct dis honesty, and does not alter tbe rule that 371K grains of fiiie silver Is worth a dollar, because it eots a dollar to produce it. to-b- d ij : . : -- ? '.ir.' f t: V i : r.--r Here Is a characteristic article from that prince of free trade journals, the Philadelphia Record: Our esteemed eon temporary tbe Manufac turer publishes the statistics of Imports of woolen goods for; tbe nine months ended September 30. The returns show that these Imports have decreased in value to $27,308,- 14 from 95.603,8113 In tbe same period of last yeara decline of $18,297,704. These figures show that the McKinley act Is get ting in Its work bravely, the decline In Im- ports of woolens ha ving been chiefly in elotba and in dreas goods tor women and children. upon which tbe duties were most heavily Increased. But our contemporary is ofl" In Its arithmetic f in stating the decline in these imports in the period mentioned to have been 60 per cent, when It was only 40 per cent. A decline ot 40 per cent In nine months in tbis branch of trade is bad enough, f la all conscience. It seems incredible to read such an ar ticle in an American newspaper. There has been no Increase in the cost of ordinary dress goods f or women and chil dren, or in the woolen cloths such as the poor and those in moderate circum stances purchase : in this country. Aud the fact that while population Is in the these creasing imports of things have fallen off more than eighteen millions of dollars it a clear proof, not that the people wear .less clothing than they did before, but that the eighteen millions of dollars which would other wise have gone to England and Franca hzs tztn tr out to America. a lrbsrers. :c:t, it )c-r:- r reJ t'aa it ctill la cireu!at!ca in j ' -- j di tc-z- JLo K &AJL.-A- n CITY; UTAH, HOjSMY ZIOLVSTSG NOVH!kIBJ3K proof that the food producers ef this market for country have had hcca several million dollars -- worth of their products which they would not have had except that that importation had been cut down. Any one would think that an American newspaper would welcome this, would imagine that we are nearer being than, ever ' before, that self-sustaini- ng our artisans are increasing in their skill, that the market' for .our farmers products it being extended; but the editor of tho Record has no such thought. If the American farmer could only be forced to send all his surplus across tbe sea and the sphere of the American artisan be reduced to such a limit that half of those artisans would have to go out upon the lands to make a living, that would suit this free trado contemporary. Tariff reform in our country in certain directions has got to be a mania, and we seriously hope that the question of the tariff will be the only one in the campaign next year, that tbe American people may stam p the free trade heresy out of sight at the polls. Here is another characteristic item from the Philadelphia Record: Another victim of McKlnleylsm is tbe Boiling Mill, In Cambridge-por- t, Mass. Tbe high duties on materials have compelled the managers of these works to wind np their operations, and thus avert Eus-tl- s, further loss. Onef tbe directors, Mr.exoes-Bive explains the misfortune in the cost wltb which tho Republican party has burdened raw materials, and in the high prices of old rails. Both these facts are due to one and tbe same cause. Tbe heavy duty of $0.72 a ton on old rails prohibits their importation, and thus one source ot the profits of American mills In converting old iron; rails into steel rails has been destroyed. Tbe duty of 75 cent a tononsoiron ore has done tbe rest of the business far as the Cambridgeport Iron Works are concerned. Will the Record tell us where tlie old GUnfore-Eusi- ts ' rails would be imported from? The rolling mills of the Old World understand converting old rails into new as well as this mill In Cambridgeport does. truth that "favors lose their ralue br delay' is as old as Ot1L Its appll cation to yourself fs suggested Immediately by the near approach of the Hol - rTTTHE .,"! If ff - ,1 idays- - man-of-w- ar WALLACE & CO.'S, CriAnr.Ks Young, the Chief of tho Emerson stitute 26 W. Second South St, opposite Cullen Hotel. -- p I AN O m - j liegin with tho decision that whatever happens you will not buy ar"cfceap' set. Verily the last days of that chamber set shall bo worse than the flirst. It " will never be satisfactory. . ONLY INSTALLMENT HOUSE IN Stcinwaj and Qiickering WORLD-RK50WNI- THESE only F. by PIANOS AB1 D . WABPEN E. MERCANTILE CO., Walker THE FAH0TJS LEADS. MRTMft EMBALMER, one-ha- lf This is a sample of the conversation one msj hear any day at our principal hotels: to Mb. JoNiB-U- ou't (ret a you find It hard ood Imported Cigar nowadays? Me. Smith I hare quit smoking the Imported article ever since tbe McKinley hill went into effect. 1 am smoking- a Domestlo Parana Cigar which suits me better than the washy Imported Cigars, and they don'tis cost as much. the brand ot the Cigarf Mb. Jokes What Mb. Smith They are SAB1 LEVY'S And are manufactured street. Salt Lake Citr. at 171 and Main 173 McGURRIN, TIMES 6US HEE6E, Enable us to build our houses at Supported by the Queon of Comediennes, 10 PER CEIIT LESS A LUMBER CAMP IN WINTER. inz sensation. The . A LOO JAM. OF tL. THE BREAKING 73a. Popular Prices 25c, 53c, Keit Attraction, soul-thr- ; i il West crTtunflar. Lai. Asia rtrest. vpestti Walks efldtst. Cerrsrpsftfi O S4W C82. Sitk Strast, tl W. Sttni LAKE CITT. t j! 7 T C- first-clas- s 5 HOURS PANTS HADE IN 'By Erttclats workmen, to, thlscitx. I Cntfol Lwcatlon. m f I EMm tt "; 1 EDWIa ICDLVUBD. Cr&ix Admission 10 Bes! Gra2es cf Roller Prucca Flcur,- PEALEB3 IN - COPPER. Eole aeeots for tbe PATEiC, WATCHES. Cz 1, i 4c CO, J I. equipped Jewelry House la the IT est. PilRK- JOSLIN onlr anthorized City We are tbe Time-ILeeyer- s. Fjxclal attention to mail orders. BIBIE. ( ,( If s -- V) 4 city. :u 1077. r- PHILIFP SOUVENIRS la TSA, COFFEE and ORAiiGH r s ; . The finest and largest ortraDt lis fiPOOKS. Tourists will find here tie most anlqn4 to elet from. designs All the Latst Noreitiss la Gold aad EUrer. Our store has lately been enlarged aad reS tte and uewlr stocked, and we now haw tae fijaesf Ores arid 3Vtattes Copper TTriU lot Prises. "-- H JEWELRY AMD SILVERWARE., R. M: Bajsn ef all Clauw of ; jj, DIAUOriDS,' WATCHES, . Brands: Hlfrh Patent aad Straight Grade, as good as any taaae Is Utah? anj .warranted 3EfThe hishest cash price paid for rood Wheat 10 in 2To. 10& CUoe on F.m iciepuone First South Street. aims, Cents. : 1 Transparent Man. Cents. !i JEWELERS; 170 -- 172 Main Street, Roller ; Mills. 3! 10 snBrr. an! WASATCH TJuth. Grovcr, Frances and Merry Musical Troubadors. M 2Utkblislie& 1Q02. aa TTarefeenses cor. 4tb yfK 42aASoath. PAINE B Cr&OCTXS. tjr far AH Imtn Eetii. - raa day. Flosr cad Hill StcD Bceds, Cay, Gniia, : w fci All' SpeoiaI smas to theatricals and Dartiss, Fire esompaa on ersry flcor. fasten Urs rnr alrrator. and act eold water. heat, (team Uzhl Kleatr SSB A B ttjA liA I HaaM X. C. ARMSTRONG, GENERAL DEALER Ef Patent S i as -- - Pffloa First-Q- RATaa ca AND $slco All roods warranted as represented. SpeclsJ ttentkB (ltca to fine watch repairinc- to ', Its Appointments. -- fad tRQP. WEST FIRST SOUTH. IA SILVERWARE, road's Vstsnt - HOTEL M mow epoa for the reception os Uusical Boies. Optical Goods. Etc.. Etc. AOBXT TOM H. L. HALL, . MORGAN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, Blelf-WladJbt- cririr. Lpcatlonj nnsurpassed, belnir )n proximity V Jeadincr wholesale and retsiii houses 4nd of Interest. Headquarters for mining iand places eattlis men. 1'ullmsn Car and Union Ticket O files In hott-11.60 to tri.QQ per day. j Kates, 1832 BstallabeA ncroBm xm czaxsm or SOU house hotel; lake L. ELIHS0N. 220 S. Blain St. . fayt OLD ESTABLISHED to $55. SUITS MACE IN 24 HOWS I: . 15 ! This old reSabl, BoteJ fa mem eedet new maBafement, has new plumbing through-a- t aad city sewer ooddsoUob. M, H. BEARDST.ET. FYoprltor. J WHITE SALT tmU pjotel, SALT LAKE CITT, UTAH Cabel, the Tcilor, 50. kbtssust, HOLMES, rrop. . 1752 CUnTIS ST., . , 75 Rooms with Batb. TAILORS, Continental THE OLD HOMEGTEAOi i JUNE 3. New and Elegant Id All Its Appointments. O. . a Saturday matinee, eommeno Four nights ami ingT WEOSESUaV. UtC 2nd. . Fopvlar prices 25c, 50a, 75o, ft. Sala of seats begins T uesday, Dec 1st. HOTEL KMUTSFORD rat rcrrut HUSXjEIX & CO., and an exceptionally strong cast. The colossal ec enlo sensation, Than-Durin- It The Modern Hotel of Salt Lake City. Buckle & Son : YOCISOU. i 250 Rooms, Single or En Suite. ESTABLISHED I87fb THEATER. ' L. RULLEN. OPENED "FAMOUS" CIGAR, - Monday, Nov. 30, Tuesday, Dec. ! Fropri3tor. ; - ii in. to j j s lii-- a fHE half-starve- . First-dim- G. S. ERB, -- Stw i First-Clas- s OivenJfrom o a Rstu'rat. li p. m. Dinners lor privatj anil jth'SFitri-cal in private dinizig-rodm-i , parties on short notice. Two EYANS . House. House in Salt European Lake. J Only , B. 234 SXAXE STREET. 234 In aU of Uth, Idaho and Wyoming. We are also sole agents for Kmabe k Co., Decker Bros.. A. B. Chase, J. A C. Fischer. Et- Barnes Pianos; Story A erett, and Smith Clark. A. B. Chase. Lorinc dc Blake and Bridgeas. We carry a larfre and complete asport Ore nof the above named instruments always sortment on hand, any of which we will sell on time pay No trouble to show instrudesired. nienta if ments whether you do or do not buy. Correspondence promptly attended to. Prices and terms quoted on application. Old Instruments taken In exchange. We carry the largest stock of instruments and sell at lower prioei than any house west of Chlcasro. Stores located as follows: Salt Lake City, 79 W. Second South; Osden, 2378 Washington. Ave. Boise City, Id alio: Cheyenne. Wromlag. pig-irp- & 9 TOWN. THE FREED FURNITURE AND CARPET GO,, THE TWO GREAT LEADERS. In- theme of superficial writers to point to old Rome, how one man or two men stole away the liberties of the people. the Summer.' The truth is that Rome perished because It was not fit to live; Roman peo $3000 HOUSE FOR $2700. ple had become unworthy of longer as or considered noble; they great being $5000 HOUSE FOH $4503, did not lose their power or their prestige until ln 4he book of Justice the record waa made that they ought to be wiped ON - MONTHLY - INSTALLMENTS from tho face of the earth; Not only or for all cash. were tney cruel Deyona mil estimate, but they had lost all sense of shame, MILLER T.1ILLER, and held virtue in utter contempt. That was more than 18C0 years ago. (Xot "Urottwsrs" 3o relation.) but that awful taint still clings to the 33 W. SECOND SOUTH STREET, race. Last week we published a full description of tho last battle in the latb civil war In Chile; where the firing continued all night, where 5003 lay dead' In tho streets in the morning, while, the wounded and prisoners were killed. It is that old fury which was cultivated 4 W IS 00 years ago which still warms the H blood of tho Latin race when their pasMl sions are aroused, and . makes them a n Anglo-Saxodifferent peoplo from, tho or the Saxon.. race Indeed ha3 got The Anslo-Saso- n a mighty work to perform. It is Its Of tha house yon 1 u ' ' T I t Si I a nsvr civilir.tlc:i to tbo tat :is:i vour duty to clve 1 f :. ZJ earth, - - ... -l 1 j (HARRIS I1UILDINO). In HARD '. j i Washington, bears such a to Mr. (Blaink, resemblance striking is he that mistaken; for the n has fallen in price since Secretary. frequently And also is said that there Is a It the McKinley bill has gone into opera man in New York, who walUs down tioni So both the reasons which tho Warren street from every Record puts forth are without any sig- morning, wh bears a Broadwayphysical startling nificance. The truth is. tmt with nat- resemblance to the Secretary. Thero is ural gas In Pennsylvania hand cheap another man in San Francisco, Colonel labor In Alabama iron and steel are be- R. II. Taylqk. who looks like Br.AisK, (Sucoessor to Evans A ing made at prices with which the New except that he is better lookijig, and England manufacturer canhot compete. when he is shaken he can mike just And then last year because of financial as good a spefceh. up And ho is by jthe way, trouble In the East and across the sea, the most versatile genius, actor, orator, the usual amount of railroad building story teller, reader in the wo rld. He almost ceased. Tho demand in that can convulse a crowd of men with a line fell off last year more than 600,000 story, and he next moment read a tons; that Is why the mills are in trou- funeral sermon in a way to make every 214 STATE ST., - SALT LAKE CITY. ble, and the cause is not due to the tar- woman in the house cry her eyes out. iff, but to the accursed law which If Blaike is In bad health ho had better the money of the run for President, and get his doubles struck down Special attention Riven to thai shipment of bodies. Open all night. Telephone 301. world. if those in the East aroliko the ono In the West to; do his stump sneaking. WHY OZiD BOMS rSBISHED. By the way, he won't peed any stump In the current Cosmopolitan is an arti- speaking; if he runs for President and cle oh tho "Massacres of the Boman lives until election, the fellow on the Amphitheatre,)" by C. Osborne Ward other side will not be in it. Tho great Coliseum Is described, which Our morning contemporary, speaking was elliptical In shape, 620 feet long, Administration holding on to the ofhe 513 broad and 150 feet in height,' and on Utah says, with a sneer, which was exhausted all the skill of that it Commission, also still diners to Egas. Will Doric, Ionic and Corinthian architect it please tell us why it should not? Does ure. j Then follows a description of the Jt know anything against Mr. Egan mighty tragedies enacted within the ac except that ho 13 an Irishman and a Recursed place, wnere men and women Has the first thing been 13. tt. MOAD, were forced to fight naked, where wild publican? proven against him? Did not he, after Manager Kxpert Dental Company; beasts and men were made to fight, and Balmaceda's death, when all the recon where Christians by thousands were ords were In the Installhands of his enemies, Dentistry One-thir- d Weekly Down d and ments, In wild beasts demand an turned and and challenge on rest the investigation Easy Payments. Jtrr-rtrlet loose upon them. Cj;sab them to bring any proof of, the dirty Teeth Extracted Absolutely Without Pain. compelled 300 pairs to fight and kill each charges which certain English correa com in other day. Augustus often. Sets of Teeth, from ......... .$5.00 Up spondents had telegraphed td Great 1.00 Up Teeth. Filled, from pelled 100 coUples to fight at shows Britain, and which. certain disreputable BLOCK. CENTRAL IN OFFICE which were gotten up for private feasts. newspapers, liko the New York World No. 6 TV". 2nd Sooth St-- Across tb More than 10,000 massacres were com St.- Louis Republic have kept Street from Wondorlaiid. mltted during his reign. Titus caused and thein this and that up to OF33ZT SHUT AYS AHD HOX.DAX8. going country, great numbers of human beings to' fi&ht date there is no response? The bid plan with wild animals. The games glvenlby of a falsehood against Titus at the dedication of the great somemanufacturing and then giving It plausibility one, Coliseum are described. The seats for by repeating It every morning, has lost 87,000 human beings were all filled to Its It does not count,; watcli, the awful tragedy. It began paperspell. tries it does not happen to that with the fight of chariots one line came Injure anybody in tho world except the in and turned to the right, the other to paper itself. the lof tj they were drawn some by glad The Albany Journal refers to Goverlators, and some Dy elephants and somo nor and Senator Hill as "His Peanuts." by Hons, and when they met, all en s. e. cor. X gaged, men and beasts, in the contest That is a very contemptuous expression, IsMainbSouth which only ended when all of one side but peanuts aro very useful things at a were dead. Then oxen ln4 chains were circus, and David B. H1LI4 is liable to ;''JL','' driven In and the dead animals and men bo in the circus next summer; and the and women all hauled out. " Then there Journal should keep that fact in mind n iii in in i ' iiinir was a grand naval combat the floor was let down; and the amphitheater became DO YOU WANT A PRACTICAL TYPEWRITER a lake; on this lake appeared InnumeSALT LAKE which, has stood, the test rable craft, and the ozfrsmen and crews and has been, constantly were cool posed of hostile nations, and CHAS. S. BURTON, Mixaoib. improved for fifteen years, they fought until spent. Then engines and which has proven it-- I forced the great floor up into its place, self to ba tha most durabla the water disappeared into the Tiber 1. were drawn away. J and perfect writing maand this dead was and the amphitheater chine ever put on the ready Jacob Litt's Big Comedy Sensation, for the third scene a battle of market? twelve 'pairs of armed gladiators, If so, then buy A REM-- ; on horsepack. The closing seene waa INGTON. YO the slaughter of Christians, They were F E. brought from the mines and the quar 403 Progress VuUdlnff. dens and and subterranean ries galleys, A play that is built around a character, that and 5000 animals, starved to frenzy. is aistinctiy original. were turned upon tnetn. m Xrrus's of Scandinavian di- the Presented by originator alect comedy, reign he caused to be killed more than : 1,000,000 Jews. We note this because It is a favorite j Montaigne decl&redlhat he lored "a friendship that Is not civilized and arti flctal; that does not tread lightly and feel the shock of unvarnished truth.' That is just what you want n drawing-roofurniture; something not too clTillzed and artlficlalSomjethlng that does not need to bo sat upon gingerly. In these days no one gets as far as the outer door mats of society! without finding It essential that he should possess a fine Dining Table. You have your choice of many styles In five beautiful woods, and the reduced tables helps your resolution prices which we are making this month on high-clas- s to a decision and an immediate purchase. There has never been a time when artistic Dining-RooFurniture could be procured at so small an outlay. Why not remodel your present Inconvenient arrangements for dinners and put this most Important apartment in tbeihouse on a proper footing. If you are ever to change your old Sideboard, tho time to do ltls Now. Thero are a host of styles from which to mako selection, and prices aro eyi-- lower ''' than the very low figures of last year. You are facing the problem of a new set of Chamber Furniture. It 3s a criti cal purchase. On it hanes your daily comfort and convenience for m t and In the same connection one s given to North Carolina. If we limit ourselves to American names then they must all be Indian. That, by the way,; would not be a bad idea, because some of the Indian names are magnificent.! With some there Isla peculiar resonance,; while others carry a splendor all their own. What would sound finbr for war ship than the "Shawnee?" At the sound of the word one thinks, lnl a ment 'of old Tecumseh, who Is as turesque and stately a figure as marched proudly through life, and died valiantly fighting in a hopeless war for his peo-th- o plei So, see how such names as Shenandoah, the Ohio, the Ottawa, tho Mohawk, the Seneca, the Chippewa, and scores or hundreds of others rln they are spoken. We are inclined to think with our neighbor, that inasmuch as our navy H getting to be a big Injin" navy, it would bo just as well to give its ships Indian names. - J. ? - 9 thai an American is named "Rafx leigh," because It is an English! name,' and ask s why the new cruisers cannot have American names. The cdtn plaint would lie just as heavy agra.net the "Charleston" as against the "Eialeigh," FOREIGN GOODS CNTT and against the "New York" as against "Philathe and I the("Raleigh," against j delphia" as against the "Raleigh.' The new cruisers are named after different: Erening Suits, in Cutaway, Prince cities. Massachusetts has one, New; Albert or Full Dress Styles, made York another. Pennsylvania another, manner, at New Jersey another, South Carolina an- in the most eleg-ariother, California another, and so on; It Is said that Professor J V justice go hand a .hand"; and those that heed that fact . Cl0s6st are toj excel In power and bring the world under their domination. A contemporary deplores the fact SO 1S0U r a K-;- v r a C. r i r ' t |