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Show the Saut Lake Telegram, masses will have little patience with conspirator The Evening Telegram. once proof of their plotting is conclusive. - An attack on. the American public school "jitem THE PEOPLE'S NEWSPAPER. is an attack on the national welfare. It is unjunt, Published Every Evening Except Sunday, as well as unfortunate, and will not be countenanced here in Salt Lake by loyal Utahns. by the The public school underlies Utah's progress. It SALT LAKE TELEGRAM PUBLISHING CO., is the great hope of the State's future, for only (Incorporated.) OfEea 113 B. West Temple St.. Salt Lake City, Utah. knowledge, exact knowledge, brings progress. And Telephone Calls Offlce 240; Editorial Rooms, Oft. there must be no schemes concocted to undermine this school system. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. In onr public schools the children meet on equal ffAft Itv moll in n trtvancn Six rnntha. bv mail. fl.tv.j. terms. There is no religion in these schools. There .60 On month by mall. In advano 1 One week, by mail or carrier should be none- .- Common sense and common Juscent Single copy, every wh era money oraer, nemii 07 f. vj. money oraer, express name I" tered letter, bank and to the ad- tice demand that when all the people are taxed for check or draft, la the dress of th the education of childhood, religion should be kept SALT LAKE TELEGRAM PUBLISHING CO.. Utah. Salt Lake City. out of the school course in order that no faith may ta the Editorial Department be offended. Communications should be addreitoftd pertalnlnr the it Lake laTalacrajn. to the Editor ofunless Whenever religion, however indirectly, Is made aent for Rejected MSS. cannot be returned poetate euch purpose. a feature of the public school, justice and right are nd boalness Communications relating: to advertisement should be addressed to the General Manager. Salt Lake violated. The Protestant, the Catholic, the Mor143 S. West Temple St. General Eastern Adv. Arent mon, the Jew, the atheist all forms of religion, all 8. C. BECKWITH. Tribune BIdar.. New Tork City, forms of belief, and of unbelief should find in the Gineral Western Adv. Agent HORACE M. FORD. 1151 Marquette BuHdlntr. Chlearo. public schools the most intelligent inculcation of es WEDNESDAY EVENING. JANTARY C. if ' J - if " t , 1 . 1 1 Tele-ffrar- 43-- cnd-Ciea- Seo- - Scatter. Telegram reader leaving the city for a week or more can have their paper sent to their address regularly by mail, without additional coat, by making the request, in person ot by postal card, at the office, No. 149 South Wert Temple. WEDNESDAY EVENING, JAN. 6, 190. Roosevelt' Opinion of Secretary Root. days . 49 Entered at the Poetofflce at Salt Lake City. Utah, a g until the Ur.n sa: Th tttr for $6M for 7k-- ; It THAT alartn jou In .r for s ff r r.rn tr.on.j is r j. rrt-abi- rrtl W Rrr.ntaUa th emu mm Mihrsl cf KTa1 joxi. over. t to U J'i !i:t ta'a It in an J Ccm rtr is ii othr Uevrl Olariff. Thr mlr.!!f-- t a rrloya tn In whkh h took th Ilttty rf th rrr hn he to ditIilr.(t rait. Ills failure lo rati. htf th h ; h" wnn.tn t( SI. Hll.ta'a Skr'ill as r.othlrg; he callrj. at1 lm- the srlrlt rr,od. ar.-- it oM movable br dlnr.r: hut Amy st!M. Sh rftni-ihave ktpt hT tlM r.ot like Father Oarai. she M4 not evrn wlh to lik him. tut ah thought th unfiTTUrfvl him. to the trrUr A certain orf-oi'ahow-lUolf In toire of hit fWk atthU time. Th fart that he ha I r&nhirh rrfulud ductM the In th strt-ra- r ttrike was rh.r-Ishe- tl acalr.st him Ir. mim quartar. nvr hr, whtrt Ic-t- 'l i j l n l r Then rt men ha4 a wl.1errel arrulJfR U'ri Kr,'rt tt caf.StAl a nrt r. f. tnr::ie tm to ire r-!- frnrr a msii' i of or...5u llr ; 't la ar-atrj- i-- .". rt-tru- c-- mr-fU- V'-'l- " jj A rf. far A JTi e3- k vauat - AA a iii.uy A A JV rfV CHAPTER XVII. oc r-i'h- . - tn Drifting1. tinuous thread runs through all. But most of us naes our days us if ive thought them a volume of thort stories, which have not necessarily any connection with each other. This is fortunate, Ill we incessantly realized no doubt. events of last week, or last that the were to year, play a part In tomorrow's experience, we should be in a state de-of intolerable hesitation, timidity and pression. If Bradford, for toinstance, had teen forced constantly remember, . s t i K J j l t- it- - - M--.w- . 5 i vhlf-kon his nervcn: and th fart. above all, that or.cp or tvir wnd-- r sufh circumstances !: had Ir trcpi I 's Riant e ard lo'kl quickly iif tl e m;tter! troubll him h forgot th m Hut dayn and ie-altogether, and lived in n hnppy umnr. siioti.n'VF of thpin. nnd walked n n!r. Au or.K these tlnnK of dmibt. h now and thn. whit il wax th rec tor had said of him to Amy. and oji'-Imt Amy put th or twice h asked did rot pk" qurstlors hy, ar.d to pre. s it. though momentarily, at hlmlf for not likirK to. laft, denptd n mur wr.t ro far m to It Is true nfrnld rf adndt to himself that he not fvtn drenm that h t'lar;f s. andofdid hi wif. The fact ih.it In Mas afraid his only etrujret' with th rector if h! fuit for Amy's hand could b regardrd xm fUfti a MruExl" h had rme off of the forrr.er lda, to dirporrl h'.s mind; and the latter he woul I merely have paid wa absurd. WughM. klssM his wife with a krv.er plensnre, and tnl ! her about It with n delightful confidence in her answering rmlle. Never-thtlet- s, he miRKested that Clargf should h invited to dinner. Amy wrinkled her brows Into a ciuwrtlon. but Hradford assured her that they could do no less the rector had undoubtedly ho had married them, and anybody done him fuch ft service as that, he wanted to reward. So Amy aroulced quietly, without showln thut Ih cost her anything, and ftipt- - of : AAA every day and all iiay. that a crrUin difference bftwf.n his own character and his wife's had made plain if. In early i.i their married life, andwas. h love with Amy as he certainly never could huvo not any ( ro;n the Impression that she dietrutd him. he would have dm or.i of two thir.?; hated hr. or hated hiir.?.df. Kither would have deemed unetidurablo or As it was. the lea?t dihtreysinn. at shadow-memor- y fell aero?: his path quite frequently enouRh to annoy him. Instead of careering on comfortably, he was now and then conscious, with a sort of passionate Irritation, of sllcht errors In his statements of fact, or elisrht variations, under the Influence of pome outside suggestion, from his normal procedure. The fact that he Peldom talked so well to his friends as to a ttranger; the fact that a sneer acted like a drink uit I 'H'p'-- va i.'w ! ii "-ouh- t! I r ! rt ntly. n it .if tMrrtn-- l d n.e a K"d tonn. ard I thv n:. ii t: If tlv y P- -' : t t t h.t i- T 1. - in d tt k " . . l.n r'r ;.'r.c. ' ei-lT- . hdd h"M ',!)iii.. 1 t d ' tf; . iitrrrt. n :u t ,t 11. f :it : - I v. . ir t vry h' - SlijJ I w K-- e ro-d- tru'k k. n tXKSar hndr. t In a hurry tual. ST.ii hrd Un he tnti! l l.ac If th- - '.Std out f thfit tn tu'- sr TJR. 11 Shoe; i lu' uA' r.trrv she in our n j.iing (i u u tti.ilily a:.! t!- - d f. lb r ... t V t Jl .rd J air f t' ' ?'.r i -- I 1: 1 J irt i K I t i"! cm a- ; 5 , ; c I nii " ij H i ,n 1 " .' f'-- r.e- t f" ? E'o . t ; J j Ati our j ... , All Mdei r. ; 1: .$aV45 r jr tt, . I St. 00 . . ir ir.4". ct.-- o 75? . s I h " k i ............ I"rk i rfr-... Tnr Si.od , at I . . t ! J. 1 1 4. at ? j ;f s !. ( i- -, - r tr 1 a: - f rr f - .' t 1 1 ; t. v .. t !. it K .4 5S? 1 . I . - ' 5U.S s te-lor- (Continued 1 X j our, trid to Tn l out what the I" (''" hard but the flft rhdd UAl r d to talk. r.d the tu4rn. a 'M. S I tkJ and wou5S"t"t i an o'der Niy. who u at'Hrf It. If he i !, Snr ! lor,"t roull explain. He m is a hrr.y ard se d Is kt rr. rf yr ii other's a dacoTT 1 a stl'.l a little In doubt, anl he n lit hter.i tre further. 'I)? sheeny' nff h.n bat; he .on't on dls street; he't lettrr msey-l- n out of dls If Jte ant ter keep Md nut on.' The he cry evidently quite agreed, for he suddenly cease.J hisrr--tears, and attached htmslf r Rrrrly to that I had to escort him bom to gtl rid of him.' "Wa It a rac warT" lcmethlntt of the sort. I jrlhrr?d." I ; J : s ( f r. . i 5k. on the r.lge of I itn I "V!r.s at t othr W hile M:.d t.d "! Ut kniA.I't. boy, a i t hnn iii h him a. puh f!t Into the Thre hrs r.'d ti ! lr,v. ntv NT DO ef MUST BE SOLD DURING THIS SALE d. . ro-- - t-mt- f.radford e.gr. Aid Into hi pr...im I t t t u!-- , mi-u- - , k u re-F- o.frrf J '- - "! s hf-(.- A few people live their lives like a novel, knoivir.fi that every chapter has a bearing on the ivliolc, and that a con- v f e h-r- i 1 SHOES rr , VA f thr; $20,000 WORTH OF . rn-r.l- s jj tn tita ni:r.rsf: wr. xr.r.n Tin: monky. M:t.ini sren sArnina; maiu: in nuiTwiiAU. fr rlHu.i r 1 By JAMES WEBER LINN rtUe-c- l will 3C d. ir.-tl.- R iv-l- fn-dT- wt'll coilixtjcsa, i So Cheap? tit-- lec-tri- e fr 1 ir rrOTLX r.m.- oHT-.-r rra1 f. m1 or tna iIt rriar. ni l hi lf en the If h ar.-l- "THE CHAMELEON" ra ? : without yo-Jaajr to bn ycu wtlte, and Then hall frl tarry- - H y arx-nr- h thJa "ad' If you tali tbt Drvirarr raaa. yotr bad dabta t ua for -- ri-u'- If-i- 11 r S C t Tht world Is tad ta-k- m -r 1 ' ac-- c Hqcncy, Rcporiinq r. Tts? S:t IWhy Sell Tn l-. !clat yearly a f(fi-- 1 hu!n - ! WWV' . i "t t if PUl!I- - ! j V 'W lUocli. J n : H V1 :ir. - S"-- ciaj fr!.rr 'hat th r.o nor than a fair. r4 rurrr-ltr- a cr.eral i;i r t".t-Jt'.l h: rrut haa Wn What a splendid development! And the use of (that, hi r tTrt to Air.t ma If thv rrul b ra!I electricity for lighting would be even more general fr.fmlft. i far an rouM thank hi It',i.S: were a price which admitted of a reasonable profit to as ! ur.efTrir4 ly quits . r. r a ty tt charged. . But even with the unreasonable cost of the aHvK- d to Mtndf f. r trv. t.n Nt.ns t d oi.r rtuIrto 'lrrH t ...... light to the consumer the fact that it is th ,ir.p; tt ..f kif it is hr.r.osl ! shown an had most popular means of illumination by the la to at Ihe elT!f. t: .. . f t ..It . of the country's central rlee-tri- tid '.: 'it afp r atM I." fourd fact that l;S l.il'.r'f A O .' K. I'V tiKI! V:ric'lNt!lll-light stations are located in places of lss than Iheli w.tuld l U Jl l.if .1000 population. " ":' i k ' t tr." hd l.n.i i lip a n .r!h. r vlc.. t"t cvtn nan.ly f israd- ' t I r. r v,p t tt!"!)' r. r.n is which lord's afrrttio. It is to be hoped that the "mystic three" suspicion. rtli "Com" In'"" r.d " Put right here it is well to warn persons who i.lleged to be obtained in railroad disasters will not to r.f.d th r 'r. .'? hi f'l . I.ow a t h.iir. u.oklJir a Uar. seek to weaken the public school system that the extend to theater horrors. rv r. ar.d V k hr.-T'.ully 'W- for t Prctedlra AocUtio&. EctntlSa Crllertr r Dtbta Eraryrbtra. Otctral 02t Top J !y$r Uiock. rt v V V1 V s Mrchaot u-.- - Iv FRANCIS G. LUKE rlifartlon in thetut ff i;r.lr.rf rt'1 tfrtf-ht. ar.1 the trii-tMr. for three-fourth- s se''fe! r i - YVagos -t n !- 1 'i you'll b bapry. trtd tarrurs l-- Talk HaDoiness y Wh-c- :.; tr UK. n e tem. It was the faction's determination to supplant a competent, valuable official, with a factional friend. In other words, they believed that it was "better to have a friend iu power." So Mr. Moreton was let out. For months stories have been in circulation concerning an alleged organized effort which, it is said, is being made to destroy the usefulness of the public schools, and which has iu view the wrecking of the public school system in Utah. Certain developments of last fall, when a number of principals were dismissed and the surprising retirement of Clerk Moreton serve to arouse public ftlal at f rii to auit h!m!f aa one wl Srh- tl ou!i h- an)wly. A: t. '.r..l tiKhlSy rr.ornvrr. thai a mtr.ir should hvve to fl'ftl ith tractlrl affair i.rr.ni.t-- 1 Mr. w.n aln roji! l rt il ur.i". a any kmcht a nf'r.-'.'t;alr. r.f oi l rvlxht have " ir a r.fri-i- . juj. ten-storMow him tfumrl ni r.nlnic ti cr.Iy cf h rr t r th rror'.aim the nr.d k'.nif. had rolled up hi . a hard In the Mule. Oarr-- ' was It wa tr.r raiiirl. tl'u tlaii-.s- . r.Tumi, system. tHh and thr.c t tio acrtrd Mr. Mr. Judd, a former cigar salesman, who is The Use to hint that i ''.!!- - an oi Lighting. Electricity him. rran should h fourd for to many of the trustees, was selected for clerk In 1881 there were only eight central elertric Kt. an ! eteadler a man hn knew. wiUr.tit Illllas; a at a secret caucus held by a certain faction which light stations in the United States, while by 1002. Ir'd J tr, e It..1 rn wl.irh M ir MMr. !: mn. i:tir" butft u" controls the school board. r.raJfor I according to the recent bulletin issued by the Census r hra'. - . J Iti rued. lnM. This faction could not deny the assertion of Mr. bureau, this luminiferous industry had grown for tojd - Murd- h th- -t half ;.iir.f' t the fmrn tnrrC";rea far n rirs Xelden aid other members, that. Mr. Moreton. be- public use to the following proportions: would nl!rt M wife" nfTr-- lri ; an t l.ard Murdoch, uho- had trylrc cause of his long experience and capable services, Number of crntral Ktations l of hi attUu s with th to mithl!! I 'H.7J.i.! I J was one of the mainstays of the public school sys- Hcurescnltns a coat vl o mart! .nt, UvMr. r. K...; ..t ,; avu r hrr hy fi.a crack-braine- d nnfi ficrw r-- V. mi t . In WtCor-el'l- 'i r or.iy that n. o.r.r.r houM irriu! atrd self-consciousne- r.U &.a. L ntrn: G3na trr " rin". ,'l "' tmm t'f vf. trtc' ray f.r II on trrr ttm.t e. ritH ta Hmcrlcan'Mcrcantilc ArT.jri a th.mW cfflarsn nir mr can m ttr.ew lh buylr.a- of on. 'n tut mf hrr1 woj'.l W s J th th- - hem. put to the test. The New York Sun, which is opposing the Let the enemies of the school svstem beware. of President Roosevelt, has set out to make Secretary of War Elihu Root the Republican Germany is said to have designs on St. Thomas, standard bearer in the next Presidential race. The great newspaper over which Mr. Dana once Danish West Indies, as a coaling station. Not while presided has a habit of raking up ammunition to use your Uncle Sam knows it. against its opponents at the most inopportune times itnd in support of its fight for Root the Sun quotes The "Gibson Post" Is a Silly Fad. the following statement which President Roosevelt "C. I). Gibson and other fashionable artists are incorporated in an article over his own signature responsible for the atrocious attitudes affected by which appears in the last number of Review of Rewas the Mrs. women," young theoy propounded by views : in the University of Syracuse, bea Ayres, professor "In John Hay I have a great Secretary of State. fore the recent Assembly of Mothers in that city. In Philander Knox I have a great Attorney-General- . "It will take thousands of gymnasts and instrucIn other Cabinet posts I have great men. Elihu she added, "to undo the evil effects of the GUh Root could take any one of those places and fill it tors," son aud anguposp, brimful of a as well as the man who is now there. And in addition, he is what probably none of these other gen- larity." Mrs. an indictment that is bribed tlemen could be a great Secretary of War. Elihu on solid Ayres draws Look into a photographer's showtruth. Root is the ablest man I have known in our Govnote the poses assumed by many ernmental service. I will go further, lie is the case and girls who try to look like the "Gibson girl' greatest man that has appeared in the public life of Gibson's creation. of any country, in any position, on either side of Watch that kangaroo limp, that silly droop of the ocean, in mv time." eye and upthrust chin which lead to snobbery. Put the Sun will gain little by its sideplay, as the Gibson has created an impossible type. AmeriElihu Root is probably closer to Roosevelt than anv can girls cannot grow eight fevt tall just lecaus n living Republican. artist so represents them. Xor is the American girl the pert, swaggering minx that Gibson represents Public School System Must Be Safeguarded. her to be. The enforced retirement of J. Ii. Moreton, for thirteen years clerk of the Board of Education, and With a forty-fivstory building going up and n of liyron the election of L. P. Judd, a brother-in-launderground railroad station going down, Cummings, as his successor, can be viewed in only New York hopes to maintain is equilibrium. one light as a direct blow dealt the public school - nl W NOT ft ajr how f ! L"n'.:4 f th Stal. r.rfons th ttt-'i- neecuNT old fr j.i r. of tj sH IF tfe y every y lrf!r. V. 11 il. .ill .....ly ..-:- e l sr-rla- tw-ar- f, Those who wish their children to receive an education in which facts and religion are mingled, have the right to do as they please, but they should do so at their own expense. The man or set of men who attack the American public school, attack the welfare of this country, and theyttack also the standing of their own re ligion in the estimation of the great majority of American citizens. The public school system must be safeguarded when danger lurks near, and we believe that there are thousands of loyal Utahns who would prove staunch defenders of the public schools if they were Yearly Incom s.i:triflri nff.r l : in i.,.., i r tablished facts. cf b. '. In tale In women's rady lowered rr;-! closf-ato fsrtr.Tta rontl&ue. ic Tfa It rved at 19 cents a cuf. continue . The big the Frcll (!ftt'.ti. to llh a row tt Ilatli-- tyf SWISS flCAUFd AND HQI'Altn.H In malth a tvr value ctnt uatvt. M cr.ta a t 'r. fo'.lows; ii cents; rclal nimST X.RATIIK.U TADLH COVERS AM) OKNTKJt PICriM AT HALF ITtlCtS: II M Four o, TO MAIL SUBSCRIBERS The date when your subscrip-tlo- n expiree is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. No other receipt Is sent unless requested. . .a- Tomofros.) sr M Vincent-Not- t Shoe Company U0 MAIN ST. 1 .1! E |