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Show t f TXlJiJDAJXilT anXBtJKJt;: DALT srArssoos zv zoabo ass was. SUNDAY. DECEMBER 8, . -- c. rciuuio o tzkxs J.L. iJ. 3 t i!v three months j.J, A Tribune, ant unday Tribune, six one erkly Tribune, yearj.L kly Tribune, fix month.. rr: ; moth....... N ..rr V':V form.' avsar hobxxx subscription ... rre year. ...... 'rl!r, !Jy Hx months J lU U......i.. . COODWIN The editor of the Boise Statesman expresses the opinion that we are rery much disturbed because he stated that Idaho is more prosperous under Btate-hoo- d vthan It was under Territorial Wo do not think .........tf?fi. ."U 2fM IJZt 3.0J MO .W i I Vtekly Tribune, three months.... . e A communication relating to new or should b addressed to "Editor Xki-t- j f A 11 remittance b Bilstness letters shouldCom-ajiactiretsed to tmbn't PoutBivo bait Lake Cltr.Tiii.'! tj'tai. THE aBlBUNHPUBUSHISOCO. F. tf. Lanxim. MaaacetJ 11 edlro-matt- x. i t, " ' that " " " there Is any- thing particular ,lhat .the editor of the SUxteirnan c&n say about us that will disturb us seriously. To compare Idaho as a State, with It, test oath, which excludes every Mormon In the State from voting, with the jpropositjon to give Statehood to Utah without any test oath, without anf restrictions, which would givo the absolute control of the State to the first presidency of tho Mor mon Church, is something so ridiculous I-AK- J3 ably nine people In the world use silver where one uses gold as money. And If be will bat look around fee will discover that so loag as both had an equal chancej silver was the steadier metal; it was accepted with . most confidence by the people, and that the reason that silver as a commodity Is at a disconnt Is because of no compared with gold, natural law, but - simply through an arbitrary act ot a misguided and misled -- -- Congress. BHZF BTTXUXVa OS i THE WOB1D. The London Industrie makes Llotd's report of the ship building of the world for 1869 and, 1890 a theme for speculation. It tabulates the returns of steam vessels for merchant vessels built In the :j that nobody but the editor of the States two years named, as follows: xrawsrAvas'ii rEOvwoa. man would ever put It out in a grave 1889. tBOOn If a newspaper, outUf sympathy for a and dignified manner, as though ft really public officer's family;, 'permits some contained some outlines of common 3 I minor Indlaeretfons o o 'RO unchallenged, "sense. B that newspaper Is shirking Its duty: ami If Statehood fo Utah could be pb- because of personal friendship Is shieltl-- ' talned on the same' terms that State lomo one who ought to bo assailed; if hood for Idaho wag obtained, that would United Kingdom 583 1.081.007 C33 1,078,230 50j 7,382 80,014 SO tho newspaper, unapjo any longer to bo one propositlon--tobtain it jthe way Germany 17 58,0U3 28.372 30 United State ie 41.343 14 !T7,6e8 keep still over tho rascalities of a public the editor of the Statesman wan ts it ob- France. 7 9.437 ao S3,376 official, dares to exposW him,; then It Is a tained would be quite another What Netherlands 10 8.9nO 36 17,170 Norway Is 22 33 13,693 would be better alt around won Id be to Sweden 6,55 personal spite or a party spite, or It 181 14 8,85 to punish some old offense. That Is the postpone the business until every man Denmark 16 Colonies BritUh 7,185 7,138 IS es5 3 1.140 .. ... '. Is Austria 1,353 tho in Utah, or at least the great majority way way of the world; thajtj 9?J Russia 1.0061 .345 peclally with the crlti$nir and cowardly In Utah, would be competent to vote Italy ...t..... 6,588 1,339 S3 , newspaper that in the past has assalle understandlngly, 4nd would vote ac- Otlit-- countries.. .... a thousand men slm ly because 76Si i.880,80e!8K0 1.328.M1 Totals. cording to their bet Judgment. were doing their duty unci covered them We thought the iiditor of the StatesAud ot sailing vessels: with all kinds of low abuse. man had closed his contract with tho 1890. 1889. Once for all we wish; to say that we Statemakers of ufah when he left tho 'hare no more spite hialnst Marshal Times; it seems he had not quite, and H H I'aUsons than we have toward any other yet some friend ought to counsel him o n s" man In this community; what we have that possibly it would be Just as well 2 r said about him has not boon bucauso he for him to continue to advertise the 'was tiot our candldatci for. iMarxhal, for great prosperity of Idaho as a place 74 119,778 84 121,015 KlnKdom ... when he was appointed wo pub-- j which offers as much to a settler who United 98 89.975 58.460 145 United States 59 37,3?5 20,230 93 be wants a homo af any other spot on Kritlsn Colonies...; llcly stated that ho Should 15 19,307 6,856 43 Italy , 15.W-19 and not exercise his perturbed Oerraany 21,370 earth, Judged solely on bills official 13 i 5,690 20 9,93 Norwuy,. and wo have jkept ' our word soul too much by trying to fasten Mor- Greece 17 8.704 4.319 32 f 6.88. -- ; o '' 1 r j no So ' ; an i j 4 j rec-ford- honestly with him anq with ijtho public. Wo presume thp small harpies that are 'seeking to misconstrues our motives, have no comprehension! of this, but we bellovo tho public hks. The Marshal has appealed to the courts. Wo welcome that test. Thebeglniilnff of tho suit shows a little semblance of manhood which we did not believe he possessed; tHat Is,- It makes jjout for hirn a prima fade case of manhood. Whether 'lie will have the audaolty to press that suit to trial remains j to be seen. Wo he wlllnot, out we hope ' rather suspect he will we hope he will that we may establish In open court that what we have said was not only Justifiable, but that It was our duty tcj say it. We mako lots of mistakes; we are not In tho habit of making mistakes when we call In question the Integrity of a public officer, and wo believe wo can demonstrate the truth of that fact so far as Marshal Pabsoss, If concerned. If ho : ever gives us a chancel) DO HOT BBLIBTB IT. Last Hundays Now fork ILcrald contained a special copyrighted cable, a column In length, fronrParls and signed which he cited Jaquk.i , St. Ckkk, o to Instances prove that the go many Is a crazy of Oisrmany proserin Emjicror are In tho German and that people mah, mortal fear lost some Hrazy act of their , Kmperor may plunge them Into unmeasured difficulties. ThfllieiTiM Is careful about Its cables, and jstlll th,o name of tho sender of this particular cable la J'very French y; and tle whole dispatch Treads as did somo 4f the dispatches which wero put In circulation in French, papers last summer, aad telegraphed off across the sea, which were Intended to cover the Kmperor With contempt and 'obloquy. We do noli believe the dis patch; we believe, farther, that If Itwere true, or half trnd,' the German peopie would thoraselvos ilnterpose and put on their Emperor which ho , restraints trout d not shsrire off; for he Is not a Cxr to absolutely rule his beople and plunge them Into ruin. . lie is a constitutional 1 monarch, and while jthe Constitution leaves him a large margin to 'work on, still the German pebple are a level-- i headed people, ami thay will not permit to carry the Instinct of thorn off their feet ihd their country Into peril just at the yhm of a lunatic. i ' - : . j i : I I j, 'I ; j i ; i ; aelf-proservatl- on j The wires toll us that the traveling trunk of Isabella, at d FkaoiKAND is on the way to ChicagOjta be exhibited at tho World's Fair. Thut reminds us how in four hundred things have changed years. Suppose somel (gentleman wero to try to purchase a traveling trunk of some lady and gontlonjan who In these later days occupy the same relative status in society that jthe meek Febdi-kau- d and the glorllloii Isabella occutheir day. No taodorn ship would iu pied to bo able bring that truuk .The only to get it across the" sea would be to way and propeller; and a keel a rudder put an and It, engine n the hat box to upon run tho concorn. When we. called Isawe were led to tho bella the glorified, remark by tho recollection of tho11 magnificent bluff she made to pawn her jowolry to supply tho means to further the hope of CoLUMBtrsjin finding a new I W'o say bluff, pecause she knew world. that old FKnniXAD would ha?o not that, thorf wa$ too much In chivalry him for suh a thing; or she know that if ho did take the jewels she could steal them out- - of his panta loons pockets in tho morning before he woke up. So It was perfectly safe for all the time her to make that kind of a stagger, she lost nothing by it, andjshe made Immortality by it; A shrewd; old girl was that Isaiiklla of beautiful Castile. IIhitor IlosEWATKi? of the Omaha BccH an enthusiast on! tho question of tho Government ownlriff the telegraph, lie thinks the Government should own and operate not only all the telegraphs e la the country, but all Jthe telephones, and in large cities should supplement this- with the pneumatic tubes for delivering mall quickly. And ho has a right, probably a better right than auyone else, .to speak as to the for he .Is, an ricrlts, cfr ;thequeatlou, !i operator himself, and In rM nly career was so situated and long-distanc- - , 1 . :rl :cf r.:v'r I oaithrottgh the prl-;- " the' telegraph lines, tloclired that it is , t I i t .lit a from 3 r 1 owned 1 mon Statehood on Utah. He is very certain that he knows all about Idaho. If he remains there two or threo years, when he looks bacc upon his present position he will be: forced to remark to himself, as a certatu learned Senator In the West did when taking his own life into review, and said of a certain stage of his career, that as he looked back upon it, he was astonished at the versatility of his own ignorance. AIOTBBB OOartUSBO OOLSITB. The editor of the Century Magazine is another of tho wise expounders of the folly of thinking that an inflated currency can help the people. ."Eh.5 only trouble with his argument Is that he includes silver with I Irredeemable paper, and treats sliver amd irredeemable paper in one part of his article as money and in another as no gpod. The burden of the article is to establish that it is a foolish measure to .cite the amount of money per capita in a country as an evidence of that country's prosperity or France.... 18 15 4 9 2 4,073 2,757 6 969 241,827 483 318.268 6 7 3 6 Russiu : Netherlands Denmark i Austria ; Sweden Other oountrles..... Totals. 1,579 1,830 1,598 1,191 707 528 192 3 3 1 324 1.5C0 661 It then notes the fact that by the table it will be seen that the United States more than doubled its output; and thinks it is evident that lion land steel ship building is becoming an industry of somo Importance acrbss the Atlantic. We suspect that in ten years more the United States will be building Its full proportion of ships. Of cource Great Britain is far in the lead at present, but then Great Britain builds nearly all the ships used by a dozen of the smaller nations of the earth; and Great Britain has the iron, the coal, the mechanics, all appliances for building ships a little cheaper than any other nation at present can. That will pass away after a while; and strange as it may seem at first thought, wo suspect thai in the near cenanything else. Auti ho shows that by future the great Iron adding all the gold to all the silver and ter of the United States will either be all the paper in circulation in ihe United San Francisco Bay or somewhere on States our per capita is larger than it Iuget Sound. We believe that Puget was several years, ajjo. So he says the Sound has oiie or two advantages over per capita was larger in ..Argentine last any other place; but there is one feature year, and says Jthej trouble Is not now about San Francisco that-cahot be apa scarcety of monejjrbut a breaking up proached by any port in the East that of credit. is there is not a day In the year that the The mistake all fhe way through Is work cannot be carried on with full i ' ship-bulldl- that he calls something money In one place which he does not hold as money In another. The only real money in i,he United States or in Great Britain or Germany is gold; tlie whole structure of business rests on '.that basis; and the reasou why the credit broke down last year aud Spread panic through four or five of the great commercial nations of the world was because the failure of the Harino Brothers I revealed something. Not that What was that something? was not there paper enough; not that there were not bills of exchange enough; not that there wore not clearing house retarns enough, but that there was a sorry deficiency in the only ultimate money, namely, gojd. The argument 14 perfectly valid so far as paper is concerned; it Is valid so far as silver is cerned, so long as our country refuses to accept it as ultimate money, but puts it on the same level as greenbacks, a convenience, merej subsidiary money io be redeemed in gold. If all the money in the country, or aiT that passes as money, was gold, then there would bo some significance to say hoW many dollars per capita our people kave. What we really have now per capita is merely what the amount of dollars? in gold, divided by the number of people, amounts to. In hts loose and random way he goes on further to discuss silver, aud to ask if it Is legitimate io make 75 cents a dollar; why not make 10 cents a dollar? It is a cruel thing to say that the editor of so splendid a magazine as the Century should over by hi writings reveal that after all he talks as the foolish talk; but in that question he gives himself away, and virtually confesses that he never heard why4 H was decided to make 212i grains of standard silver a dollar; and It may surprise him to know that it was reached by the experience of 30OO years, and that number of grains was decided upon beciuse it required a dollar's worth of labor to produce that much silver. An dj so that much silver was made the original unit of values In our country, and stood out then as it mado Immortal stands out now and In a form .tocoutlnue its. work for the good of mankind," provided It Is not interfered with by the dishonest legislation of men. J We hope in his nest magazine he will try to explain homr much gold would be worth an ounce if three or four great nations, liko England, Germany and tho United States, were to declare by statute that, so far as they were concerned,' the Immemorial chief use of gold namely, as a measure of values- should henceforth be taken away, and' that It should be i treated merely as a commodity..' If he will study that question a little while possibly the thought will dawn on that probably after all ha was mistaken; that if silver were to be put back, where ft stood for eighty years after our Republic was founded, as good a measure of ultimate values as golditsolf, It would.be. And the more he would think of that, the more confirmed he would be In the beof silver is much lief, beca.'! sa t! taer a Z'" "1 t thtt cf cld. Trcb-- ..- - -- his-min- ta ng vigor. There is one thing that commercial men must keep in mind In this connec' will tion, and that is that not increase in proportion to the commerce of the world. The railroad is driving many a ship off the sea. Russia has driven a railroad clear to and away beyond the Caspian Sea, and is stretching it now on toward the Pacific. That takes many a ship, and many a shipload of freight from the Suez canal route and from the route around Good Hope. Our own transcontinental roads reduced the work of carrjing supplies, to, and carrying products from California by ship to only the coarser, 'less costly and least perishable articles. In twenty years more there will probably be railroads from the Caribbean sea, that will go up through .Venezuela or Colombia, and skirting the Andes on either flank, extend to Chile oh the one side, and to Buenos Ayres on the other, and carry on all the traffic of those countries, except such as will be used Immediately upon the Coast. Then the completion of the Nicaragua canal will take many and .many a ship off that stormy route by Cape Ilorn, and .enable a ship.by making short voyages, to carry twice as many cargoes. Speaking of the location of ship, yards that will build most of the ships,' as timber is given' up more and more, as iron and steel are more and more used iu construction, Mobile bay ought to become a great point; because fine Iron and magnificent coal are mined just above, and both can be floated down to tide water, so that the material for making ships can be produced in its very cheapest form. The course of trade, and the center of many a, great Industry Is going to be changed in these next twenty years. ship-buildi- ng shlp-buildl- ng Clabkk Oatkks filed a.' suit In the United States Court, praying for a right of mandamus to compel the city of New Orleans to levy a special tax to pay the Judgment held, by the plaintiff, etc.. When old men who are how living first began to read the newspapers,- the item that often attracted their attention - was that Mtba Clakkr Gaetes was suing to , recover tho - value, of her deceased husband's estate. , She followed tho pursuit all her life; In the meantime she qualified herself to understand very move made by the courts, and the law bearlug on the case, and got to be .a first-clalawyer. , She was over and over defeated, but she finally triumphed, though we bellve the judgment wa3.hot obtained until after e had worn out a ' long life in pursuit cf it. And now It seems that the city of I7ew Origins Is t Jul "::c-i- t ci execu-tictrying to hzzt th-- . ss n, r : 'i ! s, tions of the shall Revise master-spirit-s, rs tj Cbntta.---VMiMM- . 4, amutSU ercaai aatiam o Um rf a . ary CalV- to MHUtwt foraia Trafflo Assoelatloa haTlm been aeeia U pUsk4 theeemiaittoe bow calk to the enroll f meat of naniM ot all merchants, manafacturera L and producers who wish to lend their support. h moral and financial, to a movement. de- aea to. marK an epoch la W eommerotali history of ear State. The great railway Uaea which reaoh this State bare formed a gigaatio whose ramifieatfoes extend to eombinatSon, .1 lBBBi " Canada. The combination has subsidiary steamship by way of Panama: rates of freight have been arbitrarily determined, and In endeavoring to secure a readjastment you bare had to d with this powerful combination individually and alone. To you is bow offered an: oppori. of placing yourselves in a position so tunity I DOM FESBO. that you may stand upon an equal ground With' combination. It is not proposed to se: Dom Pedro, who died on Friday.made the the power which this association will have'lo a his mark on this age, and though he died: hasty or manner. Only when all under a cloud his name will emerge from; negotiations rail will tbU association make Its power felt. It proposes to deal with the that, aud it will be circled vvith a halo full on through business transportation when a few more years shall have rolled propositions ascompanies business men, and It hopes by away. lie was forty-eigyears Empe- business methods to secure such rates and faror of Brazil, and considering his birth cilities as will afford California an enlarged market. The association does not Intend to and training, his life-wor- k established confine itself to trafflo alone, that If his life was not in advance of his but to take withintranscontinental its scope matters pertainin g traffic. and age, it certainly was in advance of his to the local coast-wis- e BS SBB j b-t- methods of procedure how In! use- and make it possible for men to get their time just deserts within a reasonable I ' before the courts. ENOUGH TO SET YOU THINKING. - i -- Press dispatch,1 appertalnbig to the r ganizatloa of the San, TranelaoOvTal eon-ten- ? last week attracted unusual attention. Out extra indueemenis brought new faces, made customers, and us a grandly satisfying week's trade. The new, nobby and elegant, de signs and gratifying business kept step. .HPHE items presented e g-av- ht trans-Pacifi- country. He possessed a higher and nobler civilization than his cpuntrymen did; he always acted more llkh a father to his people than like a ruleK With a clear instinct he saw that thfcre was no advancement for his people unless their intelligence could bo increased, arid so he set about . to improve and increase the schooISi Of bis Empire, lie saw that slavery was an element of weakness to a nation, that it was a greater hardship to the slavemaster than to the slave, for it engendered In him false ideas of life, false pride, and served to jvitiate his mind and cause him to forget certain inexorable truths; tho chiefe4t of which is that nothing is obtained in this world that is worth keeping, except that it is So he put matters in motion earned. which finally resulted in killing slavery in his country. His own people did not realize the magnitude of the boon ho had conferred", upon them by that act, nor the glory which that act (gave to his country and to, his reign, As civilization progresses in Brazil, in the future there will somo inspired man rise up in that country to tell the generation then living, how in the loug ago Brazil had an Emperor who was a father, who looked beyond jthe age in which he lived, who wore out a half a century of his life in trying to do good to his people; how with one hand he .struck the shackles from thef slave, and with the other lif ted up the schoolhouses, and brought to his country the means to facilitato and cheapen transportation, to more thoroughiv:t.rtf the - fields, to improve the material, the mental and the moral status of his people at the same time, and never for a moment relinquished his work nntil a silly? revolution broke the arm of his power, And then they will build statues to Dok Pedro all over Brazil; his memory will be held in the thoughts of the r people, as that of Washisotos and "Tjincoln will always be held Ih the tj&6r33his people ott the United States; and in the niche of the ages his statue will take; on colossal proportions,"and he will be called "The Great and the Gootj." VMM TBaHSFOBTATIOH BUREAU. Almost a year ago a movement was inaugurated by the Chamber of Com-- i merce, of which from time to time mention was made iafthis paper,: which had for its object the ' consolidation of the different business Interests In this city, in order that redress might be obtained from the railway; companies centering here, for long existing grievances against the business men and shippers of this city. The various business interests were so conflicting and diversified that it required almost the entire year to accomplish' the preliminary work, which culminated at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Chamber of Commerce land members of the Transportation Bureau, authorizing President S mon to engage the services of a thoroughly competent Commissioner, who shall henceforth attend to the duties of the Bureau, under the guidance of the Transportation Committee. Only those who have beenj connected with the preliminary: work ofj the com-- j mlttee, realize what an immense task it has been to consolidate tle business interests of over 300 business men, Inj order that they may:$et unitedly upon the Issues Involved.?! j To inaugurate the work the following was prepared:, r ; . j j j of-th- e. j - I -- le was drawn up j and culated among the business while "they could all more and or less see the advantages to be gained, many 'merchants vvere ratheif timid in signing, for. fearj that they That cir-me- . For Claiming Your Patronage. ' 1)1 a V' p a V ex-offic- io Madsen, T. G. Webber, Jos. Geooiie-- g an, John W. Donnelxan, W.P. Noble they will never buy elsewhera and Denby Cohn, who. In conjunction tell who has with the commissioner selected by the Bureau, will have the work In hand. Our morning contemporary still en- Your own eyes and judgment will then 7 dorses Governor, Hill and his graveyard steal, and copies from the World that "he is taking every precaution to see that the votes cast at the last election are honestly counted and legally canvassed." A falsehood is not strengthened by one liar copying it from another. Governor Hill is not seeing ''that the votes cast at the last election are honestly counted and legally canvassed." What he is seeing is that a certain Senator shall be counted out because he is dead and can make no defence, and permits the same vote for Newspaper prices are misleading. Actual comparison is what wa an Assemblyman to stand. That Is the Garments in free competition way that the Governor "takes care that desire, and if we can't sell our Tailor-Mad- e the laws are faithfully executed." His as to Fit and Style with any Merchant Tailor in the city own political friends la. New., York cry "'shame" as they review his performance. The Best and Host Perfect Goods AT THE FAIREST PRICES, . " ' OFFICE OF CONSOLIDATED IMPLEMENT CO. VJE Salt Lake City, Not. 27,1891. E E. McGURRIN, Cityi-D- ear Sir:-Ple- iOM'T VM1 TRADE 'YOUR- - ase furnish us at your earliest We want no favors, simply state convenience another No. 5 Reming- ton Typewriter. We use the Remington exclusively in all our branches. Yours respectfully, And are prepared to back up ouititements here with the goods we dls- CONSOLIDATED IMPLEMENT CO. Tailor-Mad- e, Perfect Fitting1 ' play at our store. If you want a first - class By F. R. Snow, Secretary. Suit or Overcoat of any kind come and see WHAT RENT DO YOU ; 52.WTO1V9 LEADERS OF FASHION. 4sjae !:''.!,"- PAY? OUTM Whatever it Is. we win Mil too a fine home and let that same monthly rental go toward paytor your home. Don't confute the house ing we build with those that have been heretofore offered by others on installments, and which are lor the most part a disgrace to the city. Finer or better houses cannot be found la ball Lake or Denver than those we offer, t . Tj "4 MILLER A MILLER, sV-no (Not , LEADERS OF FASHION. I (relation) 30 West Second toVith. PIANOS 9-- ' ... J n, Stebway and ChidiGring FOREIGN OOOOS CNTK THE Tt0 GREAT LEADERS. might thereby surrender thai least control over their own business. It often Evening Suits, in Cuiaway, Prince PlaJTOS JIBS required an hour's argument before the TnESB only by .. Albert or Full Dress' styles, made signature thereto was obtained, and at that now over 300 contracts, signed by co.; in the most elegant manner, imcabule many of the most leading business menj In all of TJtla, IdaKe and Wjpmalaf & are In the possession of the Bureau; Co-. are W also sole agents for Ksabe 26 V. Second South St.. opposite speaks well for the systematic manner Decker Bros., A. li. J. C Hsober. v A in which the preliminary work was erett, and Smith ACksn, Barnes Pianos: Cu Hen Hotel. Blake aad Bridfa-jA. B. Cbase, Lerins: Clark, of members the the pushed by Orraas. We carry a large and eomplet assortment of the aboTe named instruments always But the real; work "Is on committee. hand j any of wbieb we will sell on time pay' ir desired. K ortrouble to show just begun. It now rests with our caenta whetber aot by. yee do do attended business men to demonstrate whether to.' Prices promptly Correspondence on appiisatloa. . Ota quoted they mean to stand shoulder to shoulder and terms We taken in exehaBga. carry h larcss and by so doing obtain the! desired re- Stock of instruments and sell at lower prioas any house west of Chicago. sults. If they do, we predict that In than lt Iake City, TS located as follows: Stores less than one year's time thee will be a' W. Second South; Oeden. 373 Washington. Avsv VVTomia. mighty increase in the amount of goods lioUo City, Idaho; Cbmsae. sold for In tho .trade now passing over 1 the counters of the merchant. We' pre1 25 be will least at dict that freight rates cases 50 v per cent reduced, and in many i i j perv, cent. "In other words, Salt Lake i City will become the jobbing center, X3aflSr Utut L.v.5l which it should have been for many "F InntftU- Dentistry on years in the past had not unjust railway tlie rest on XI.s- - I!a.yaeftt3. discriminations diverted the trade into other channels, which rightfully belong to this center. Other cities have been T'.CJ 11 fziM Cf Tsc!a, compelled to move in the same. manner ........ l.U Up ifcft I'laeJ. before thty obtained re Jrcsi, BSil'tlafc err. our merchants Lava not ictsd. Irr.tLe i rxst- must La attributed 'ta tbm causes c!rc- It tiitc 1. To civ an'!; D e vmm . . ; ..... WALLACE ... .. CO.'S, ht-or- y wi Si lnstru-tnan- ts lnstro-raen- ts - .... , , , 1, . T 0""' i Coaaj-AMT.- 1 , frc-cf..- 5 ! -- ARE THESE GOOD REASONS, WE ASK, I The undersigned hereby agree to route all freight as directed by the Transportation Bureau of the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce, until such time as informed by written! notice from the Chamber of Commerce that it is deemed by the Transportation Bureau to mako I this agreement null and void. BEST SERVICE, SURPASSING STYLE, FIT AND WORKMANSHIP, c When it is remembered that San Francisco, while having its freight hauled 700 miles farther at lower rates than Is now being paid by Salt Lake merchants,! yet considers Itself greatly and unjustly discriminated against. It ought to be easily comprehended by our were the driving wheels of the trade. merchants ihere that they must Surely have a Just cause to base their claims upon. Every reduction and concession obtained by San Francisco necessarily means an increase In rates over Interior rate si This is the established basis upon which the railway companies adjust their tariffs. The movement inaugurated by the Chamber of Commerce is therefore not begun any too soon. The Transportation Bureau consists of tho following-name- d gentlemen: Fked Simon, chairman; Geo. Clothing, and will only Any one wanting gaod quality Tailor-mad- e A. Lowe, G. F. Ctjlmer, II. P. Mason, Spencer Clawson, Geo. Osmond, P. W. visit any of the merchant tailors and will then come to us j we know -, We wonder If the rules of procedure will ever be so much changed In 'our courts that It will be possible to. finish .a a suit. We are reminded of it by a no tlce in the paper that lu the New Orleans Court the attorney for the administrator of the successor , of Mtba r I The law is ataagalflceat science thed vneory or it is more splendid man any thing else oa earthy for the Intent 1 through it to ad j oatall the differences anddifScultlesbetweeomen, and compelH the right to ,b performed! but In thai practice of It! sometlmasustlce Is so slow to respond that human lives are worn out in waiting, and In the effort to accomplish something through the laws, and the world will be Improved when some master-spiritor ' some; combina- WOBtiD-EESOWSS- BLOW JUSTICE; tzl r, CITY, TJTAH fJUKDAY MOILXIKG, DECJEMBEB 6, 1S91. which may be continued as long as was is being done In other eHIea, w qe the original one. the following extract fronaa AtaoclataC ) i " & Vr "f 1 I J fir I 3P |