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Show The Salt Lake Telegram. " " . . i . .. ; the estimation of Westerners than ever Bryan went to New York, be disappeared in the quicksands ia ;L,y t a week. Occasionally one bears of him in a newsVHBJ PEOPLE'S NBWSPAFZR. paper paragraph telling of a political meeting "Mr. Published Evening: Except Sunday. Towne, formerly of Minneapolis, also spoke." ' There is an r cast of about COCO playir g the ty the SALT LAKE TELEGRAM PUBLISHING CO., important roles in New York life, and it is changing v (Incorporvated.) constantly. A man who held the center of the stage 143 S. West Ofa 6t.. Salt Lake City. TJtah. yesterday may be a supernumerary tomorrow" and a 33. Ve Roobcs. Editorial Tipho 2: guest of the Ktate at Hing ing before spring. In the financial world there are not many men TitRKs or ruBsciuyriOM. Oft year by mail. In avdvaiice. (like Morgan) who glow with steady light throngh .$7.V . 3.JX) fllx aworitn, &y snail. In . the years, and in industry, theatricals, politics, etc, . . vn ?o.Nith y adva&oe ue we, oy audi orinearner cants there are fewer. Joseph .Jefferson has. not had an SJnrle ovttjr. evarvwh are Remit of P. O. taoa-emoney "idorder. regiscrder, e:cpres engagement along Broadway for four years, Bourke to the tered letter, bank cfcook or 6rft, in toe uaxne of tb" Cojckran, who flashed for a moment a few months 1A1T UIXE TELEGRAM PUBLISH INQ CO.. TJtsh. 8a.it l,ko City. ago, has again dropped out of ight. After resigning the presidency of the United CoTKTOCffil cation ta the Editorial pertaining shsasld W Te'.esrram. too Edltr oC the Seat L "prtrflent to States Steel corporation and until the shipbuilding sent for unless porta. Rajactad M83. caeco t be euoh purpose. affair came up Mr. Schwab's name hardly ever apto advertisement and bvalness Communing tl cms TeleLake should be addressed relating: Salt to tbe General Manager. peared in the papers. gram. 3t 8. Wwt Temple SL FRIDAY EVENING, .IANIWRY li. 1, i . The Evening Telegram. TOMORROW TCv-- ry all-sta- I Manofccturing j Jeweler I I a 1, .AND... -- P) j Ttcn-Ie- . Caas-Ofi- MONDAY -- TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY OF NEXT WEEK ai-rtw- - n-.a- ad-dra- se fill r-'ur- Osnaral ETurtsrn Adv. Agent 9 8. C. BKCKWTTH. Tribune Bide. New Tork City. Marquette Building. Chtcsgo. 43-4- 2nerl Western Adv. Agent H0RAC3 M. JO r. uS. What May Be Done With Radium in 1904. STiySCltlBRRS The date when your subscrip-tto en the address label of each paper, the chance e3E?tnj o Wfcioh tt a s.bfr9q.uera date becomes a receipt for remittance. No other receipt la sent unless requested. TO IAIX S&tsvwl vi, t X&tte M Potofflo at Salt Lke City. Utah, as Bee- - 1 savin e; the Tal3rra TMrs ua or mora have their city for a paper sent to tttalr address rasrulajly by xeaII, without additional eost, by ma king1 the request, in person cr by poereal esrd, at th office, No: 149 South West vek J ' Tempi. FRIDAY EVENING. JAN. 1, 1904. Some Thoughts for the New Year. With the dawn of this new year, the world may look back over the cycle now rounded out and see that the path has been upward as well as onward. Particularly is this true in the realm of scientific thought and invention. It now seems as if the most daring imagination is unable to go beyond the possible for those who have set themselves to solve na- ture's secrets. ;The little that h?s been demonstrated of radium alone, has been sufficient to overturn theories upon which the investigations of a generation have been based while its powers now hinted at reveal possibilities of an age that will bring back the alche- mist's dreams. Notable also has been the growth of the spirit of tolerance in the world of religious thought. The straight-lacegospel of "my creed and mine only' is now seldom heard from the pulpit. Instead the burden of the message from those "who speak of things divine has been charity, and brotherly love. d broad-mindednes- s . It ir.ust be confessed that the literature field of has been rather barren so far as the production of work is concerned, but no lasting and more so than have the few years preceding. In this realm the time is ripe for another genius. And one pleasing thought with which wc may begin, the New Year is that the world is growing better. The criminal and other statistics of every nation show that moral conditions are steadily improving. Now the New Year has dawned let us start in to make the days ahead brighter and better. Cultivate that splendid feeling of brotherly love and do unto your neighbor as you would have him do unto you. And let each individual exert all his energy to make the new year a profitable one. The greatest of life'? tragedies is the failure to do one's best. high-clas- s Failures m the Great Metropolis. New York is a big puddle and successful men of the West and South who go there looking for a larger field often find themselves lost in it. New who pass unnoticed in York is full of the great throngs. An accurate census of domestic immigration would be interesting the immigration from the Illinois Tillage, the Iowa farm or the Alabama cotton field, The business man successful locally goes to the metropolis for a larger market. The St. Louis playwright, the Chicago humorist,- the Denver promoter, the San Francisco inventor they are attracted to the metropolis as to a magnet. And their number is not small. There are about a dozen former Mayors of the city who are scarcely ever recognized on the street, scores of once famous Congressmen, Vernors, once former at least three officers under pnst adminisCabinet a dozen trations, hundreds of literary lights and social lions and uncounted numbers of men and women whose names are, or once were, household words all ovcr the country. When Charles W. Towne, who stood higher in - Vice-Presiden- t, ex-G- o 3 DAYS $1.00 and $1.25 ALARM CLOCKS .... M. LIGHT EN STEIN N. DIAMOND MERCHANTS www WW "THE CHMLELEON" 1 m . A NEW DEFINITION. Chicago Evening Post. "After all, what is happiness?" "Oh, that's easy." "We!!, what ia It?" condition that you don't "Happiness is a until reach o. point really appreciate to lockyou back to it." where you have , PERHAPS IT IS. Chicago News. "There's no marryiiifr or srivini? in mar-riin heaven," quoted the moralizr. "I suppose," rejoined the demoralizer, as r. t-- (vx-r-atio- J tt-a- Kill's Fountain ex-trano- n ; 1 . 1 . . .-- '-- j tfc- ! . , ih'-'uri- .i Mur-dK- 1 h -r fortune-hur.t- ro rrt-rift- sou-net- - r T.t-m.- t- :; j at-tem- pt. 1 frl m with tw trdl r.f th tHT.dlng Klft to C'arfnx t '! g. Fur Populist Opposss Jury System. was so Murdoch t h'-r.fs- a t rr.i-w.- may just lost a lawsuit in which he appeared as attorney. Leastwise, he has formed an opinion against the American jury system. Speaking of the trial jury, in, a recent address he said that thirty years of legal practice, in which he had at least affair success in securing verdicts from juries, had failed to impress him that his early ideas regarding the beauty and the safeguards of the system were correct. "I would not abolish the trial jury," he said, ''but I would greatly VircumsYibe ami narrow the jury's province and correspondingly increase that of the court. .Juries are usually made up of untrained minds, which are the sport of shrewd advocates." It would appear that the former Senator was speaking as a lawyer and not as a politician. Attacks on the jury system have been made in the past, but it is too finnlv rooted in America to be easilv upset. h- ( d urft'h'e nt.Th 11 wrirlrg tr. tit .;.-- t.- - i v -l . ?!:e .r. V,y 1. I ! hi -- . I : j f- n 1 1 tat;t t ' r " n.v.fh as It w. ! te r. bi . bo j h'ti n d i ! I... rj. !i i;:;vn'-g- -t h:; vd.Ten , d. he t l "tnt At- d. - .. Y. I. T-- ti w,it Is i gis Iiradfoid II." mllSlor. n lUtS :a t r j I h' Tf I could ; , - isn trr- - m.iki s it. y '4 r? - r - l.'sd Ut atv ar. th I w !rc t sj .;:tC ;',;rt- tint - wov!l nr.'c; f a f X w . I 'i 1 .1 M j 1 ' rar-- 5 j -. rg an.' trt.. f t th I! : r . i t . t . . r ' t . v - ? 'Mi - . o ! iit. ; 11 ; 5 t: I: 4 ;.! j i r. . j A - ? t t" f l. - . t r-- t l '"?.'';;!:). t i t "7 . I V3, rk .. . f j: . j t f- - v. f '- hut.r,'f.T Th n n r l!f d'i '! Ai iv, t - 1i ; i VJ ;f 1. d j ti h l s r a-- .-, Ttw. . : t..rt, f'-r- 1 ef th had r w 1 li'-- it? vh, t m ;:irs I. aril r l S 5r.:. ; I'vit ,i d- ry g t" auri .?r. million d. liars ia tw. hi IJ.'.r )!';. r '.jh. ar. I I. V. H.-- ,! am I t ) . tnni I h- .; it w.i. shadowed ar.d aw sy ;e .re Jini'c 1. th!r,kirg ijoit); tii wait till h flood, ou rii".m?" l!-i- jh t t W.-."- ; it-,- 1 fr.l.'. -- - w itl . ., ' 1 ;jr 'utc f .r .t:-ir- llradford's r 1 n r.-- h-i- f i s , ri-"- K- trT; dl you know lh.t l run.,red. lie's m le "fio I UL his mind, h ;.s h'? m r. Yes - He t goi;-.- to glv- - ( P ft " ; Is gj ' ; 1 I 1 - A I 5r.-i- ! - -- - . ' t '4 ee t i 1 . 1 r-i-- 1 a! A . a tri" tn.iy svt.r. f 1 . 0lk TilMl rA FOR k ' wrj dim. h - t.lh. T)'- ci't in. th ;gj t t'r. l.r r toh of iity. T. - vi ?; .ll-- rnt 1 l.i . - on-r.itl'-- I j to kr.ow his s ret. If he safely do !tsl ith might not yet lnfrnie the world of h! ess. hf ti lgiil till rnlhT a fw j aroti.cr wy IKr. r fraven. li.n; ffVi-c- , t f In the f;. rf!r tv.rt witnessea who runM ttlfy !.;. r.is afi-- r t li" In ture. Amy wj? jrf- - tly wiling that j all. ir I .rn 1 H e k!n 11 l'.r. Sfor shrul l W tr.M. It ail seemed r.ri!N I h souH I ! Ih" d It t j !rmit U. V: when t. to Amy a d t:.tl. Sh- - n-lm-r. Itr:. lf'fl l'rairrd in the hnif ofth a sny on ii .itt rs v. t.Uh(ji; I'r. n"ti l know. l Mar eh'-'ti1rh S;x r 15 r two e and IJ.C ctl. r halt will t.tver nlnaly . r ui, t'n r cd ll'. urdi rslar.d. 1 -. t a k to mrars "I'nrle Ji uoaba!d t hi great lr,t!'"t r'-give d( l of morey trj ('.it fax C '.'.'. Frwn-- 1 ur.l rv.;; t.i hid brr, r;i r f: j 1 t'txlct iim. run K1" 1. h that h il.Uk-- even tr.f s"tnb!.r.t-- r That eminent Populist, former Senator Allen of tlectlt toward Urad'ord la taor.ey rt-tcr- s In or othrr resi t ; ar.d for anNebraska, is perhaps not so much in love with the other, he any yn vain a wnn whs In n w that t. eagerly desired all w .'l ''dear people" as he once was, or he have e at him Ir. tr.ien t r,el is.tTTp!. at; cvn w$.?i 11 I- that Hntdford should t. tr 1 I --; ; i ! ' f , I - f.t. r j!t. w. - :t U miiifri. Hut ; has It; h rould gl- - It ot;th '1 (Sr 1 t h : l' j th rt muj-i- t t " .' ' . I 1 '" t.r away. H .. 1 li t n t "o gs rlht ? - i ; ! t n ' . t mer. hut" he tht'Ught It was : f.tt-- ' t t'tl u. t t j a f I Ii - ; : . r to vt. i: n I In r , th wh'ti tlm ' " .ilt--i- f I in !. I 1! rn. ij h rj .: 1 if hly iv t y ' t t "Why fil'v . ' ! ' V. f.t a j.i:V ;n t. it" Th" a:t. 'Ui,t sn;n tr. i, n !c3 t $ w.h '.s to gi rSl. New champions have arisen in nearly all lines of Im: o.lb',e to n- -. th ugh.'" 1 tt was all y ' tf tu t,v-.- u d itfyr.ry.. l s .k- ;,!, ; r - Jf.otr1 Wits a Ml!- 1 it urtrlrd. Amy "Why. in The !).".. chamsport except pugilism h; presmt v r e s . t K y Hrilf rd th't,el-i;i.r- y trt y ' j you r." U" s.i I. If d(t;'t af I'r-ait if : ' r I !.! t "w. I.r. a s, Jw! 1:. to j Jure .rr.Kr.r.e. f.xf pion ''pugs" appear to have the necessary staying 1 s I Ih It le ui ; r., s tt Ml t"-llmtT uT' thoutnt r ' sr, g relKt ;ir.d ?! Kat let ( " 11 I ' qualities. t a X'ly t? r rr n w t - k' it l"fore h ws j stwl ;; ui.frg li-hit, ' '' . , j c ' M j ? ' r ; c to ito." ( Y t !'.. rr, hhj-.- . r "1 rail It rather to of tho rll d r,f hjj j o e h; rl, ::.', (i th'ip M h it.e j r" he It takes forty million cigarettes a week to sup- tor to h.r.g s' hr. et t r 1 whn nim t't.iatjii. ; r will L.tiin t- the t.lge a sm n as he ttr.r. h'.m with f.re a l ?? t. ' .' r.ej di-- r ply the demands of New York City callow youths. J "Mur?r r t.ryAdai.d rrlde. -- !! I1t.?3 wn e f "t li - f he do.nrt know. Thii 'mi t . t ' And yet New York's population in said to be increaste, ,Ktrirf." '5 "t!. i. h si.'t t I I .tr,vr I e 'f Is why t'nrle he S i t. Sfd h. tt r. wlU t t rr I out. "Itlle r.! ing. so that Ir. t t tf J j piiMiynt iI If he I' d but the kr.ons he !f the SJfh ai you I.'iwyr;. JS'H ij; ;i?I Ntddy 1 ' f t ar.d I.' to a ti..; n j. 1: e. T'... i.i'.y to 1 Who was it called the Americans a nation of pig. hMurd-nv. u A . t r mudid f h f "How trg f r h' s.iy " k n thhiku $: f thf?' p1 t f ltr rl' ; J!rrg."' at.J r! j t - j r - r ' stickers? What about the Kaiser's recent slaugh- l fiule t " i ' V d th" Stt3fe tt: e, Jai k? A - ;..re I th- - t ter of wild boars? It w,is He n.'Ml.fc. ar.ywHj-ret 1. t v 1 si '.Mi, 1,0. 1 H r-- i.; r- 1 1 tf. :'-n- uk'r l. - 1 :i 1 t- ir '.t-.- r f s X. - c 1 1t.-.- 1 f. tt',tt.e tl,r kr,n Kr-.n- Jtk rrr "Amy"'t "Tin: afraid." I think - of a popv "What proverb?" nskpd he of th inai one annni 10013 r'jsninsr in wmi' angels fear to tread," replied the party of FEMININE WAY. t Kit: Amy" the other part. JUSTIFIABLE. Chicago Xews. "Why did you kill 50 many of your pood wives?" asked the lord hl:h mnckairurk. "They got too fresh, your honor," Old Hluebenrd. "Too fresh!" echoed the 1. h. m. "Yes," explained the prisoner. "They developed a mania for making puna on the color of my whiskers and the wind." re-pli- pd THE WAIL, OF THE VICTIM. Washingto". Evening Star. "You can't get something1 for nothing." eald the man who affects proverbs. "No." answered the easy man; "I can't. Rut the people with whom I do bustneps seem to manage It even' now and then." cmlih limwn now. Jnprs PM V,p palrfuKy hnrd tip Jut t lo?r. Job? Smith Oh. no; th Imn rrild M H.-nry t month, .rsd hl wif Is trlr,K to live up to It. Is CRIME OF SUBSTITUTION. When a doctor calls for certain Ingredients In a prescription and the druggist substitutes some other drugs than those called for, then that pharmacist should be liable to Incarceration In prison. He Is juggling with the lives of the pick and afflicted. He Is atrr.oi as culpable who substitutes some mixture of his own make of the "just a good" kind fo some reputable, welt, known medicine that has stood tho test of many year. tft iij kr.w. hut I ;..Kli'r. s 1 was l. ;;;'. ri 3 -- .. J KiMf n go-;-.- 1 " . If- -' 1 ; iH. ;'-:- 5 ... er i ''pj-Artt-- j! ,t-- j ' d 1 Itd i,r. en-nig- 1 tfl to 1 an tit Tt ) ! t.-- 1 j i in 1 j ;it. ! ' , :i r ti t t , p t 1 '. are . ' k I tr Stit je ; Jr.g W ttia'sm, "Vru If"". h f ' : 1 r r. ? i -- ? furv ri to E " '. -- tt r e.' -- 1 r 4.! mt'sm.the 'V. "WlUh-- lh hrile rr the wgrem"1 a r twre "Yr. r'm." Wi.h a ht heart, ar i sat etrr.,. fatoejr tnurmur rn Ms thedy - j " t " a C'Jo" t tf ,. . - "Y-- :.- )t;u- : . s It ir. C'.; I g ! If i Tri .t--e! the r "'";'-- r : y ih!?k o. tr. t'arr.e-- " r--f 1 a t tv. .!:--- k S". ! 1 j 1 h - t ' . l.'e t e ,irj " 'hamj ge r n' t t t s !i ' ; m iwt. '"" t ! IT '. t ll.!i . :i,e : t " 4 r. v. ' - t ' t. f-- r. trJ . tisM fi 'a r ll", 1 I ti s t?,- - a v h-J- Ar 5 ..: iut .rt Ve l:n r 1 ' ft '- ! g- -! M i '' ? : ' :t. t v.'r !:S t . - 1 t,' 1 T?. o rs, f " -- t. - ir, t: it Ka! tat. lit t : girf" The . .ij . t. ..: r. r f. t whh h Itr.tdfot l had J t l irr.-Sit twfor-r'ir.to JJ.e till d Straight I r was working Ifi I ss t r o i a Whirh 1,1 I t ' l.t - tit-'l mlr-tlt il to iii !! t ( t un that aii He your tually t , r mr.'.lor d ,f (! tan- t ut his tird 'ii the s lr.itru''t'r , lar- atd turn It ov r to t. tr.'.tx '.o unt- - itr-Ir. I'r. i'rmri;Hii ft u run hit h was to ott:roe n u r wltr laxly and have enough r t. ai. they heere-,business?" he had t!u! Sr.? r. I' d. tl.r.t. t r l Hat the an I citi-e- . t "It's ur.b. lie abl"! Then s nore unlelie a I ' still tht ten mll-llo- n ar. t Iin Julyit I at Vmv AJgut wife marrle should wait till that oil tn.in g- -t at iii. ltillia's. wilh a Ha me f r. '. gi'-rn f m si tmi.. 1 aIj. ji. ?dur- ready to rslgn!" f "Why shouldn't It wait, dear? If Vr. !( ll !rSMe of, l;e rtnr.; sail v. raven t.,ii i out, mini; now j v eiiir.gs. were.iurne.j 1'top.e it would be? He Is an oil man. he. "Hy the crul If.rry. w"IJ and he ha t'e-- tl With the rr.',!f oil em r.ireth!r. ! eon e t'. k Amy his life. Oh. It would b ety n tsty of rame ut t!.e Jor.g pn l r urr.e Uncle Jatck wouldn't It?" arm. to where Itradford with two "Aruy." demanded Ilralford. seuteiy. Kste sn I ('Urges. Bradford to-"who thot'.Kht of holdlrg up this glff down to rr,et her. even -- t quirk stfjs of waiting? Wa It your uncle or was thfat trcmer.t she was calm to tt you?" lotdt her ht'?lr.ess r. t his eyes on In- "I spoke of It. I think. Rut. of course. stant. They were faring the altar. Wo glveth this weman to b mrrje Uncle Jack was gUd to wait, ss soon ss he thought of It." Amy believed this to this man? I, her vr.r'.e, and l'h tu. entirely. UtU girt." sail Itradford. kissing rur to oa. rrar.cl take r " 1 " ! r-- " her lip. 1 1 r.-- r . 'llcee, p'iesy' llf-o"I'u k the ;.t,k"' r il tv..r. KilV I.r.'t tri;' to the iJar." t.-r- , - .". - pre-luil- 1 J- ft' l- I 1 fc f, Mio y. " .' : ' -- . 1 l'rtn i t h r J - . - . - i- . I'-r- " , -- - r(i." 1 , - m-e.- t ftc rt-ad- is the foundation prevftrh." that you lively ... thfrc she's jolly; Wife Humph! No wonder ehe's a rien widow. eV t c-- I New, York Times. Husband (at reception) I wish Cranky woman over as were as Cold, Cold, Cold t'-u- JUST A STRIP OF JOKES TO MAKE YOUR DAY MERRIER. "that theory ular SALE! Radium, one of the mineral discoveries of th past few years, is 'apt to occupy greater attention in 1004 than any one factor in the scientific world. ONLY The alleged discovery of radium in Utah ma ken everything pertaining to that metal of interest. Sir William Ramsay of England, will figure prominently in the history of tlm world in 11)01, u the result of what is to be accomplished from his recent discovery of the transmutation of radium into helium. No more startling scientificdiscovery has ever been made in chemistry nor, for that mat' ter, in the, whole domain of science. He observed Man Ordars Promptly Attended To. 214 Main, Opp. Ktnyon that radium gives off an emanation in the form of a heavy gas. Collected into tiny Masks, this gas displayed all the characteristics of radium. Within two days the spectrum of the imprisoned gan began to change, showing the typical yellow lines of helium. In four or five thiyz the helium lilies grew brighter, and in another week the wctrum of t ! ! helium was positively blazing in the sealed tube that had been filled with 1n? pure emanations or 'n j cm dnrlt a re? r,t gaseous output of radium. WEBER JAMES LINN By Hot rv It tf In a word, one chemical element had been lit', H hr XleClar. Frmir A C CorrtM. tr. l trRih tat;ig. t erally transmuted into another of quite differed properties under the eyes of the observer. It was as ; though lead or iron had been converted without XV.CHATTER Continued. a Uh a tcnKh his former intervention into gold. tt lift tn to wr . u tr.lrk ,n No" wonder, then, that chemists are asking, if ... hi During engagement wanri ,v,, radium be convertible into helium through the ,t 1. le.'irnetl In.it nrlrr n!i ho t t.-- t j frt lit .. ...:i... ,.f1 of forces as yet unknown, why may not iron marry an us h had surtd. fr ih Th nl r,ii:, f it" t.lrr,til l rot annoy htm In - h.- - eltu.tton com-d- y bo transmuted into gold through the operation of The information, thleast; In fact, he w,S,d very Utile mi,,)r v,ry the same or allied forces? rAT. WhM a situSl.-non 11. lie ws rot r.ul for a trujtr,i" The uream of the old alchemists that one metal nnrring.re at a xlilon rf Amy for her money; he was neither a story! llf fhuckl-and ffvn fgflhr at a true' may be changed to another, and that gold may be r nor a tuv- cf olvnta-t!on- . th- - t rk.makr et)mtir i; made from lead that dream which modern science Perhaps If Amy had r.o money Craven's age. sjeruUtlr.g l'.k a l;fe r.ot t hir.t has buried beneath cold ridicule bids fair to come at all. he mljht hie trll r.ol to fail sgrtt. rtJf trlr.g U.e at t In the In ho iln love cicr and with her; terhips again, into fashion again andVive some thinking to .t t'ravrn. Ir. "t; stately. might not have lucofiel In his e l. julte untnr.Klom of t s jdo during the ensuing twelve months. (sort VEEN 0t COE BtSt. It Was Murdoch ho ?.JRrst-l l orr him. Th t tin e i:r "Kr.ew vh.it. "Kr.ew w.y I wa CATJSE FOB CHEERFULNESS. SPECIAL . Ur-"- d;&ta efiaV-- lC"f tie , ?!(!. J |