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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 19, 1923. th oountry had at Lincoln In cent that -- your - taatea ar different, tall and winter of 1U3 and 11 0 You, Sam, are much older than youj than satisfied those iho ware wife, it ia a case of Mar aoarrUd t curious about him. that here waa a December." M. A alight pause, and then Eva, the David Lock (Petroleum . V. leader. r- wife, was heard to remark, in a tired hlaattyt."" whose admiration--and-- r Cooyrtslit. mt, by th McClur Newspaper Bradleate. .voice: i pact for him was Intensified by hi talk with him in Quincy at the time - "I I reuVdonf know what ym Is marrietf U t msans y saytn of tltr Hxf heardrtm --4n' A . IW V dtjat"tinS3r 4 r. VMn k Columbus' and waa greatly imprassed of Labor to be seems acaa It by the .way that Lincoln had. aa he way said, pictured th future. He ' be- Day married to da Day of Seel" lieved that he already had a Exchange. f what waa to com "SUtv-erTWO IN A TAXL he told him in a talk they bad after the speech. 'la doomed, aad He (earnestly) One gjaa is an ) that wiUtin a few years. In discuss ask. o street. ing It we have taught a great many she But tins is a thouaaad People to bate it who had sever given It a thought before. What kill the ekunk ia the. publicity It gives Itself. What a skunk wanta to do la to keep snug under the barn in the daytime, men are when around with shotguns." Of course the Impression mad tn New York waa the moat important, for here he A touching cloeely 5"! ., - j sor-- of the chief springs of Repub' r I lican action. There waa William Cullen Bryant, the editor of the -Evening Post, who introduced him, a j and of whom he sajd to on of th committee: "It la worth a visit .'..if ni.. - to New Tork to make "the acquaintance of such a man a William Cullen Then there was David Dudley Field. JAJna W--' Nv,- - Horace Greeley-- and James A. Brigirsi all of whom apok after the' lecture, and the last of whom .said, talking of whom the nominate for Republicans should "One of three gentlemen president; will h our standard-beare- r in th presidential contest of thl year th New of senator Tork, distinguished Mr. Seward; the late able' and governor of Ohio.' Mr. Chase: or the 'Unknown Knight' who entered the political list against th Bail Gulihert of Democracy on the entities of Illinois in UsS. and un horsed, him Abraham "Lincoln. A GOOD PROPHET. That was a rash prophecy at the moment, and Mr. Brigga say that after the meeting soma of his friends ioked him aa not Valna. a rood Inmnhut Rut that riirf not ehlll him Two weeks later on his return from New England. Mr. Lincoln stopped over Sunday in New York and went tp Brooklyn to hear Mr. Beecher speak. Mr. Brians was with him.. and called his attention to the then a dark and dismal place. "I do thia for a reason," he told him. 'I' think vour eh&n fhr iwlnr th 1 next president ia-- equal to that of any man in the country, wnen you are president will you recommend an appropriation of a million dollars for a suitable location for a postofflT-'"tthis city?" m " ' mi mi mi iisssssstjlfcMia' WMi af rii'j "1 will make a note of that." Mr. Lincoln replied, and later he said to Mr "When I was east sev' After Lincoln's speech on February 27, 1860, at Cooper Union, the eral Briggs, gentlemen made about the same committee haying him in charge took him to Brady'i photograph gallery, remark to me that you did today at that time one of the of New Tork City, to hate hia photo- about the presidency : chances were about equal to the graph taken. Later this picture was used in Harper's Weekly, and Lin- my coln nsed to say that It and the speech made him president of the United best." he did not see much in it. He But States. noted that It was not Greeley, or or George William Curtis, Bryant, .: the state of Virginia: and , this Brecise ground appreciate. the pr .Thurlow Weed In New Tork City, wo cannot object, though he agreed of eery trivial detail, or nor Sumner, nor Wilson," nor Hamaccuracy with us in calling slavery wrong. th lin In New England that made these impartiality with Now if you undertake to destroy which Mr. Lincoln has turned remarks to him. He waa not fitted the Union contrary to law, if you from the testimony of 'the Fafor the presidency. He wrote it and , commit treason against the thers.' on the general question of said it more tnan once. Any our duty will be to deal qnea- the -single s!avecylopxtBent wrtH you as JJoEn" Brow h hiLbeeh Hon which he discusses. From the realized he had done, in a course, dealt with. We shall try to do ", first line to . the last from his great discussion was bound to have ourduty."- to his he his friends conclusion, premises claiming him for the travels with swift, unerring direct presidency. It took more than one The speech at Cooper Union on nes which no logician ever ex swallow to make a summer, and the f February 27, lSbO. show best how celled an argument complete and last thing he proposod to do was to bard Lincoln worked and how he, grew full, without the affectation of fool himself. tn this period The invitation to and without the stiffness learning, However, when he went back to make this speech had come to him in which usually accompanies dates Illinois he found that the Lincoln . A force of 200 men has been the tall of 1859. He had been flatand details. A single, easy, simwhich he had left behind him boom, tered and excited by It. Ha had conat Lazoos, under the sentence of plain Anglo-Saxa healthy if not too large growth, working ple sented to go. and had decided to make words contains a chapter of hishad assumed state-wid- e direction ot Manager A. C. proportions. a political speech. Those who were some It means a lot back home to have a tory that, in instances, has to repair the Christensen, with him in these days remembered taken days of labor to verify, and favorite son go for the first time to well how many hours, he spent that damage done bv the flood and which must have coat the author New York Cltjf and make a speech, remove the debris. All traces winter in the library of the state capi-to- l to be introduced to William Cullen months of investigation to acquire. and over Elliot's debates on the of the effects of the flood And though the public should justBryant, and to be reported verbatim Federal Constitution, which he owned. labor bestowed on dailies. have how been removed, and That estimate the in four ly metropolitan The best proof of his labor is the lecthe tacts which are stated, they is what had happened to Lincoln. announces the management ture luelf. The point which he set ' followed It labor cannot th estimate had And he up by greater that Lagoon is ready to care cut to demonstrate in his opening was in New Eninvolved on those which are omitthat papers speeches for its usual large Sunday what the fathers who framed the govted how many works examined, gland had declared the "most powerernment thought about avery. He crowd today. what numerous statutes, resoluful, logical and compact" that they runs them down, one after another, was It a and to. bioletters listened tions, hadever speeches, e thirty-ninConstiwho the signed the hero who came back from through. graphic have been looked tution, and the result of his patient the east to Illinois in March of 1860 Commencing with this address as Is twenty-thre- e that reader the inquiry was proof a a hero who was most depamphlet, conquering political who' framed out of the thirty-nin- e or nis inenas. will leave It as an historical work cldedlv hands in the the government under which we live And what they now did with him is brief, complete, profound, im- were on record on the question, and eurthe subject of our next article. partial, truthful which will "a clear majority that twenty-onvlve the time and the occasion were on of the whole thirty-nine.- " A BAD UNION. that called it forth, and be esrecord as believing that the federal A colored teemed hereafter, no less for its couple stood before the conto had the power government for the second time. worth than its unpreintrinsic magistrate trol slavery In the federal territories the magistrate said to this." "Now tending modesty." the point at issue tn the Dred Scott both, "seems to be a case where theredecision. is nothing very much the matter exThere Is no question but.that the The point was so "clearly and conclusively made. It was of such Importance in the argument, that it won Lincoln Immediate recognition IX EESPOXSFTO OUR KECENT AXXOTJNCEMEXT, WE HAVE in his audience of Intelligent and BEEN .ALL BUT DELUGED WITH REQUESTS TO BRING aa a serious student. people superior It gave a sound historical basis for JAXE COWL AS "JULIET" TO SALT LAKE CITY. IT IS the campaign against slavery exGRATIFYING TO SAY THAT AfTtR UNUSUAL EFFORT ON tension that until then had been PART OF THE SELWYNS AND ADOLPH KLAUBER AND THE was the Here proof tljat lacking. OURSELVES VTE ARE ABLE TO ANNOUNCE THE DEFINITE Republicans were carrying on what APPEARANCE OF the fathers had begun, that as Lincoln argued it was not the north was itself the hut the south that revolutionist. The reception of this speech cer tainly Justified all the care that Lincoln had taken In preparing it. Four great New Tork papers printed it in full, and there was a demand that It be put in pamphlet form for circulation. Charles C. Nott, whom in 1865 Lincoln appointed judge of the court of claims, wrote him about this. Nott had gone over the speech Linand suggested certain changes. IN SHAKESPEARE'S coln's comments on these changes are evidence of the care with which he had prepared the original speech, --YORK, OAST FROM-NE- W and of his sensitiveness about careCOMTNT3 TJTRECT "TO THE PAC1TIC less and unauthorized statements: WITH NO STOP EN ROUTE. AFTER THE LONGEST CONTINTJ-nrvPLAY ONE AT THEATER IN a ntr BHiinsspv.AREAN bitv "So far as It is Intended merely . THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD. WITH THE ORIGINAL NEW to Improve in grammar and eleINTACT. YORK CAST AND PRODUCTION gance of composition. I am quite agreed: but I do not wish the sense changed, or modified, to a hair's breadth. And you. not having studied the particular points so closely as I have, cannot be 5, quite sure that you do not change not do sense when the Intend you it, For instance. In a not at botTHE DEMAND TOR KEATS WILL BE UNPRECEDENTED AND THEREFORE tom of first page, you propose to PATRONS FOR THE ACCOMMODATION OF TOWN AND substitute "Democrats' for 'Douglas.' But what I am saying there THE MANAGEMENT HAS DECIDED TO OPEN . Is true of Douglas, but is not true of Democrats generally; so that ADVANCE MAIL ORDEE PRIVILEGE NOW evenings the proposed substitution would be ..fSOO Boxes a very considerable blunder. The MATINEE SATURDAY .. t oo Orchestra BOX OFFICE Impudently absurd J stick to. The .$2.50 Boxes ISO rows). Orchestra (last striking out 'he' and Inserting , 2 50 Orchestra 'we' turns the sense exact! v wrong. First Balcony SALS BEGINS i.SO Orchestra (last 2 rows). . 2.00 The striking out 'upon it' leaves Firat 3 row, center .AUG. 28TH Blcony Flrt the Ben.e too general and IncomBalance TUESDAY, S Flrat row plete. The sense. Is 'act as they Family SCircle-F- irst .1.50 ... M. SHARP Balance 10 A. AT not as rows cted upon that question;' 1. Balance Family Circle .j.. ...... ,. 1.00 they acted generally." .SO ,. .7 Gallery Gallery ... Mr. Nott and those associated with envelope. Make cheek er money order payable to the include 19 per cent tax and self addressed (tamped him In editing the Cooper Union of Salt Lake Theatre management M were should anxious there that speech ne no questioning or ine- - exactness oi Mr. Lincoln's historical references Accordingly, they asked him to rlv them a memoranda of his investlca- tlons. He wrote back that he had preserved no memoranda, and that to and make notes for them wou'd take more time than he could possiblv spare. The result wa that th editors undertook th InvestigaH tion themselves, and with the speech, published an appendix riving the exact, referances on which, Mr. Lincoln In order to do based his statements M this they declared that thy hsd to available-W-thranack all of the material lihrsH of New Tork. and that thev - consultad a well the leading historians of the dav m GoodelL In their preface thv H Mid jf.thla-.work- . that nn one ... ww) H bed fot actusllv attempted to verify the.detsli of the sneech could the pa'lert riarch and historical uibor which Mr. Lincoln had given to It. "The Mstorv of our earlier pontic." the editor went on. via acsttered through numerous Journal, statute, pamphlets, and letDirceted by Man hall Neilan. ters.: and these ere defective In and armraev of mpletenes COMEDY THE DAY INTERNATIONAL NEWS TOPICS Indices and statement, and In Neither can table (of anyone who has not traveled over look th In the Footsteps of Abraham Lincoln By IDA more TARBELL -- 1 XXVHI. The County Wants to See Lincoln. . glim-nw- chance Oir U bjr any lucky should torn up in Masssrhusetts. "Wisconsin or California, somebody of ' Abraham Lincoln's caliber to disput the' enatorhip with Mr. Lodge. Mr. La Folletu, or Mr. Johnson, and then fenilemen ahould ba forced, as Steto dephen A. Douglas was in lSSJ. bate, day in and day out, for some underlyfour months, the principle ing such a question aa. let us say. the finding a peaceful substitute for war in the settling of International disputes, and the debate should,of take the on something of the character Lincoln and Doug-ladebate, do you not suppose that after it was over. - we, the- people, would be very keen to see the stranger who had dared con- -' test with the celebrated and long-.e established Mr. Lodes. Hr. La or Ur. Johnaon? We would. And from all over the country we would invit him to ora and apeak to us. wanting to judge for ourselves . whether or not a leader who mea-- . cured up to something like the demo- txatie spirit" within us bad at last appeared. " That wa "the wa? ' people felt tn many part of the country after the Lincoln and Douglas debates. They Wanted to se and hear Lincoln. But ... Lincoln was "broke." "hard up." and for the moment pushed of the adIt vances the country was making. ,' was "bad to be poor," but if he Wsiiainesa-B.oth.ex.- . year a he had the lat. he would "go to the I for bread and meat." When? the chairman of the state Republl- can commute his friend Norman ' B. Judd, asked him to - help out on the exoenaea of the campaign, he somewhat reluctantly consented that Judd put him down for J2S0, which was to be settled when they cleaned un "the private ms'ter between us" the private matter being a considerable loan which Lincoln had made to Judd a note which seems not to have been paid until Lincoln's estate" waa settled in 1865. for in the list of his aaaets we find Judd's" note for I300Q. It Is on of several evidences that Lincoln leaned freely at this timer, a at alt limes, to his friends so freely that he was often cramped for moay for current expenses. ' noa-sto- COA-L- . ' ptty&4kf-Pfi .. Jtrf 1 t Kol-lett- WTt rw ' i nil O T - i rnni ft Stiit Oie f PANTAGES -- .. ?StLia?!??' entertaining Mrs. Johns of on nor wnoTeii or Ming snowbound way from Chicago to Springfield In a of with large January Issj, along umber of legislators and politicians to the capita for the election going of senator the election In which Mr. Lincoln was a candidate, but finally withdrew hi vote In favor of Lyman Trumbull The train waa stalled for upward of a week, and there would have been mora actual suffering from hunfrer than there waa If It had not been that two Chicago caterers were also on their way to Springfield on w 1th a r"oer for a reception to SOO peo"' that Mr. Lincoln was giving, the other with suppliea for a big dinner at the governor The mansion. hungry travelers bought out the caterers, but Mrs. Johns doe not tell "hether or no Airs. Lincoln ever her reception! Two years later, February. 1157, we find Mr. Lincoln writing to A In Kentucky: . : . r ld ,. ltr may surprise you when 1 mention that I am recovering from the alight fatigue of a vary large I really and. a very believe, handsome and agreeable entertainment, at least our friends flatter u by saying so. About five hundred were Invited, yet owing to an unlucky rain three hundred only favored us by their same evening rsenca. And theColonel Warren a bridal party to hi son, gave which occasion robbed us of some You will think nf our friends. wa have enlarged our border were here " since you "1 ' ' ' ..... Lincoln's home In Springfield, 111. From a picture laid to have been mad la 1858 at the close of the campaign for tie Benator&hip. By courtesy of Thomas Peaker, photographer, Peoria, 111. valley In those dsys aa there are now,. Both Dickens and Thackeray Emerson was in had been west. Springfield In 18J3, and gives a rather of the town and lugubrious picture of his quarters there, also of his fear' e was time not that his tS&f fkA going to be paid any such rate aa was promised w re.iA v ssm him. It would be interesting to know i y whether Abraham Lincoln heard him. At ail events, lecturing was one of the things that ambitious men of his type of mind tried out, and In the ear following the Lincoln and Douglas debates he undertook a talk on "Dlaooveries and Inventions" a sub ject which had always fascinated him and to which Vn one wav or another bis activities had "contributed. When he was In congress he had spent many an hour in the Patent office at th time he secured a patent for his contrivance for getting boats over shoals the model Is still to be seen on th shelves of the Patent office he had a mind that no matter what in terested It V .prlnciBlft. a. custom.. toot went back to the start and traced th growth of th particular and Inventions, thing. Discoveries their beginning, their progress, their future he would never tlr of studyabout them, and ing them, speculating y now"lFlea: wTCK UitrnrrThar-h- of earning a little extra the outcome of long money, was thinking and observation. He gave the paper only a few times, and with out any particular success, in his Judgment. He doubted w hether it was worth the little sum he was paid: but there are observations in it which convince one that it waa more of a lecture than he thought. For Instance, "How could the 'gopher wood' for th ark have been gotten out without an ax? It seems to me an ax or a miracle waa Indispensable!" mis speculation about the us of wind as a motive power InterestHe thought that possibly one ing. of the greatest dlaooveries of the future would b the taming and harnessing of the wind. In line with his thinking in flilsMecture is the talk on the plow, whether or not It was possible to get some other force for running it than man's own muscular power which Is to be found in an address which he gave at the state fair at Milwaukee late in !Si3 It might he Henry Ford talking: '1 have thought a good deal in an abstract way about a steam To be successful, It plow. must, all things considered, plow ' better than can be done with animal power. . . That one which shall be so contrived as to apply the larger proportion of Its power to the cutting and turning the soil, and the small eat to the moving itself over the field, will be the best one. . Railroad locomo tives have their regular wood and water stations. But the steam plow is less-- fortunate. It does not livwupon th water, and if it be once at a water station, it will work away from It. and when it y cannot return without its work, at a great expense of time and strength: It e will occur that a team might be employed to supply it with fuel and water; but this, too, Is expensive: and the question recurs. 'Can the expeiue be borne?" When this Is added to other expenses, will not plowing cost more than In the old way? How fascinated he would have been with the tractors of today! The pressure on him from the outside waa too great for him to find time to bring the lecture to anything like a satisfactory professional point, and he finally dropped it entirely H wu the public eye" a harPeople assing place! Cooper Institute, where Lincoln made hla first adririw sought his to a Wew opinion on all sorts of public quesTork audience on April 27, i860. Picture and caption by courtesy of The tions the naturalisation of foreign- Outlook. ers, the tariff. The politicians would not let him alon even sought to had been in Ohio, and made nomlc theory under alavorv Here embroil him with Senator Trumbull Douglas In September. Linwe have him attacking the idea that impression. and with Judd. the chairman of the an coln followed speaking in Co- nobody labors unlet somebody else Republican state committee The Re- lumbus and inhim. Cincinnati. At the owning Induces him to do it him to help them publicans expected of the month he was In Mil- by hiringcapital or compelling him. and in carrying out the counsel he was end tn waukee, in December of that Kansas, the state or slave, continually giving, to hold together where he spoke at least half a dosen is fixed also that It what they had built up. and, above times On incompatibleSt. dehe with or February education free Individual prog10, all, to keep the principles on which livered the Cooper Union speech, and gress. His treatment of this "mud they were working uncorrupted. sill theory is keen, flexible, humorLincoln hnd never. haH anv HnnKI followed it up by a tour In actual extent of which ous with pointed, satirical combut what there was more work to be has never the been recorded in the biog- ments, aa many that "a blind horse upon he would do his share. done, and that raphies. has there a treadmill is a perfect illustration Only recently i "Another blow-uhe coming." a brochure on this trip bv of what a laborer should be all the wrote Kditor Ray of the' Chicago appeared of New Percy Coe the better for beinr blind, that he Times after the election, "we shall aon. which shows It to be could not kick understandinrlv." or imiti., have fun again. Douglas managed to much more extended than has been a anaee wno .could Invent a be supported both as-- the best Instru- set Between February CS, man without a head would rement to put down and uphold the when down. he spoke in Providence. R. I., ceive the everlasting slave pow er, but no ingenuity can and gratitude of the March 10. hcn In he mud sill' advocates." spoke long keep the antagonism in harhe made nine Conn., In Bridgeport, Lincoln's work in this period, The "fun" began in a few mony." nearly all of which were March. 1S59. to March. 189. there months. There were powerful Re- speeches, and some of them enthusiare a of favorably Ideas number which his pre publicans who now, as in the year Envious speecnes show have passed before, were hankering after Douglas, astically reported in the New press. gland his mind, but which through believing that If he could be brought The significant features of this six he had not enlarged, whichupon now come into the. Republican party he would months' as on work, to did it the front. coming There is the make its future secure. The most the top of a very feeling he energetic effort to had already shown of the lntuti,-pow erf ill of these wae Horace Greeley, catch are its up of and financially, bitter vigor vituperative attack editor of the New York Tribune. He and the extension of his ranse of upon the southern oeoDle. He never was doing his utmnst to annex' Dougthinking and of research. The work could forget that the people of the las. Lincoln fought it. "Tlw Repubwas fresh, not a rehash of the camsouth had been born to that lican principles can in nowise IKe with with Douglas. To be sure, the all their teachings and slavery, associations Douglas: and It is arrant folly now. paign of his argument was that hsd led them to accept it as a mat as it was la;t spring, to wate time backbone Douglas's doctrine of popular sov- ter or course, a part or the constituand scatter labor already performed ereignty meant the final nationalisation of things, and .that the north in dallying witii him." he told Senation of slavery, but he used fresh had had its part as well as th south tor Trumbull. illustrations and fresh appeals skill- in perpetuating the institution in the In his talk to the Cincin fully seising every significant phrase country. "Lt the Republican party of or wordthat Douglas and. others nati people tn September. oX18i there - llUnoia daily with Judge DougMm. There was called what he was gave an effort to make them feel that las." he told them, "let them-fal- l "the Judge's moral climate line" whlfe he slavery was wronr In behind him and make him their the idea developed by Douglas after and must thought not be and they candidate, and they do not absorb tn a tour of the south, that felt it was right extended, election and should be exhim he absorbs them. 'Cher the Almighty had drawn a line across tended,' did not hate or despise he yet would come out at the on- one side of which in turn them, and he asked that en. all claimed by him labor could only be done by slaves. should not hate or amuiIiuthey him as halving indorsed every one of his we come Once anto with thU acknowledge.' at effort Alongside coil. dtrines-upo- n subject v irwered Lincoln, "that it is the law of cillstlon or better was with which th whole nation Is the Eternal Being for slavery to exist a vigorous expressionunderstanding In regard to engared at. this hour that the on one side of that line, have we any to the suggestion al-Hia reply of simIs negro slavery question sure ground to object to slaves bes had been certain, but never, ply a question of dollars and cent; ing held on the other side?" perhaps, quite so certain as In one of that the Almighty haa drawn a used He Senator Hammond's "mud his Kansas speeches of this line across th continent, on one sill' theory of labor as pertinently. where he used John Brown andtime, his side of which labor the cultivainCultivated on rested an as an Illustration: fate society tion of the soil must alway be or slave class. Hammond was tragic ferior by slave." "Old John Brown thought-slavearguing at this time, "aa a house stood on mud sills." Lincoln picked wrong, as we do: he attacked THE COOPER UNION SPEECH. the expression and used It In his contrary to law, and it availed up There waa no keeping nut of th first tslk on labor and capital the hi m nothing before the la wthat he fray, and by the fall of 1W Lincoln first talk is which he shows that h4 thought himself right. - He :,aa waa in it again aa haxojfaa ever. had bvq wrestling with the eco- just been hanged (or treason t mi., fct" ' tj,f fM0 h-- 1 ... . . . -- ' - ' "-- This enlarging of her social border went on steadily and all that Lincoln' cost money! correspondence shows that he went Immediately after the debatea of Hit hard at the law, and also that he had hopaa of earning a little by lecturing. There are evidences that he long had had the possibility of this In 1SS8. we find a lecture in mind. of his given before the young men's rvceum of Springfield, printed at their request in on of the locat paper. In hi esomplet works, Nlcolay and Hay. hi aecretaries. include sev"note for lectures" eral fragment which they found among his papers. to take a hint: that was Quick a he Is. to aak himself whether this or that thing that aomebody els was doing wa not possible for him. it nattrral that he should think f th platform. Population conaidered. there were probably as many speakers and readers. English and domestic going up and down the Mississippi THE VALUE OF CHARCOAL Few People Know. Hew Useful It I In Preserving Health and Beauty. ' Ttearly everybody knows that charcoal Is the safeet and moat efficient disinfectant and purifier In nature, but few realise it value when propinto the erly prepared and taken human system lor the same cleans- - lag purpose. ;Charcoal I a remedy that the more you take of it the better: It is not a drug at all, but simply absorbs the gaaaa and impurities always present in the stomach and intestines and car-;- " v rie them out of the system. - Charcoal swaetena th breath after smoking, and after eating onions and other odorous vegetables. Charcoal effectually dears and im- -' prove the complexion, It whitens th teeth and further acta as a natural cathartic. , and eminently aaf It absorbs the injurious gases which collect in th stomach and bowels: It disinfects th mouth and throat from the poison of catarrh. All druggists sell cbarooaT In on form or another, but probably the ' beat charcoal and th most for th money is in Stuart's Absorbent are composed of the finest they quality Willow charcoal powdered to extreme finoneas. then compressed In LaWet form, or rather In, the form of large, pleasant tasting loxengea, the charcoal being sweetened to be smooth and palatable. The daily use of these losenges will r soon tell in a much improved condl- . tlon of the general health, better comsweeter breath and purer plexion, ... blood, .and the .beauty of it. ia that ne possible harm can result from their continued roser but, on th contrary, greet benefit. Many physlflans advise Stuart' Absorbent Lozenges to patients suffer-- : lng from gas ia stomach 'and bowels, and" to clear the complexion and purify the breath, mouth and throat They are also believed to greatly benefit the liver. The lozenges coet but thirty rents a boa at drug stores, and you get more and better charcoal In Stuart' Absorbent Lcsenges than tn any of the ordinary charcoal tablets. (Adv.) . " - ' . Los-nge- 1 . . ' Three More . S-wJ- his-hl- y How It Is A Fascinating neg-Jett- HJS SONS. ' ' v , The upkeep of his family was in creasing, for he had by this Urn three boy Robert, old enough now to be in Phillip Lister preparing for Harvard, and a considerable expense of course, and at home. Willie,S. about It year old, and Thomas, alary Lincoln waa hospitable to those of whom she approved and entertained as handsomely as other women bh reck-- : lu her Springfield circle, oned- more than Mr. Lincoln the- political value of aoclal life, and when the legislature waa in session in Springfield, or when there were important gathering of any sort, she waa sura to "give something." The coat of some of her parties seems Where It Comes From wi - EDUCATING iu y," f;ets-awa- wagon-and-hors- labor.-hire- d p n I 1 d strong-hande- e -- -- the-gr- " dis-unt- "ei-forme- ry A Days post-offic- e, Courtesy of The Utah Fuel Company c n show-place- s ht LAGflOil lis N United-States- . Bigger and Better Than Ever Lagoon Ready to Receive You! e. LET'S GO! JAMB 7fi Mail Orders "ROMEO and JULIET" e. At the SALT LAKE THEATRE TWO fri., AUG. 31 SrSr ....... .............. ..'. u II ten fl UFIGJIU W h. mA ' NOW PLAYING! tt In Jean Weljsters Celisbratid Sto tv and Playv 9he Love Story of an Orphan. . til n u u n n nMannttHnanflnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnannfl ' |