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Show what would be the 'lived and learned apace, and one RAtil& ENGLAND PULLntHNGCO. presi- j of the tilings I have learned has popularity of who is a Democrat all the jbeen'to look more to the objective c every TuesJiy dent,, Holered! tar in point and less to Pbaariev tod Sitwdry, at Lojao, ban time! eecond-cltto matte Mr. Bryan gave credit to Roose- matters of differenct.0 agree comrades and velt for what he had done in this disagree with-AUGUSTUS GORDON. - - Editor in matter, but asserted that the Hep- friends; on great occasion' and burn rate bill could never have be- great affairs to send all minor dif;to TELEPHONES come a law but for Democratic ferences to the rear the better march abreast against the coin- INDEPENDENT 7 platforms and Democratic votes, BELL 7 and that it wopld have been a mon enemy. " much better law had the advice "We purpose to reform, not to and amendments of such Demo-rece- revolutionizge the government. . demo-crati- c lt is said that at the cra ag Bailey and Tillman been We purpose to naval review the thing that pleas-institutions in th nations ed the President most was not the , sllbjtct'(,f labor, ,Mr. capital, returning to the voters fine vessels of magnificent array what belongs to the voters. We !nrvagaiJ. that might well be envied by the wrnnt to counsel you laboring purpose to drive from the floor of worlds greatest naval powers, nor men that" if not you could not obtain the senate those who sit there, of the crews, the perfect discipline from a Republican Congress be- as servants of the people, hut as nor the resultant perfection of the fore the election the legislation corporation counsel. Wc propose intricate maneuvers, nor the ar- to drive from the floor of the bave 0 dpmandfJ mor nor armament. It seal the house the speaker and his rules ,linR it aflerwards... ' fact that the little dispatch boat y committee, who have made an - carrying the new spaper men bore AN UNWED DEMOCRACY of that which we created a pennant' with the inscription, a legislative body. In a word, we ' Bote. Tress Bryans perfect sincerity of pur purpose to readjust tbe lost and pone; "his unflinching honesty'' to belanee between the people The fact that the American v his convictions and his . unswerving their party has nominated M. Mont. fidelity to what he considered the makers.' Ferry for Congress and Tom Mil- Our jury is tbe nation ;our proof ,e emmon people, were one,, for the Supreme i Court; tha O of the Republican record the 1(t s0 app,lrcllt ,hat th0 eonvention npped, roared an 1 had ke reeeived tbc undividcd witness Theodore 61,p party ; our sto-- .l upon its hind lege while t o lu own party whe he last Roosevelt; ournttorney Mr. Bryorators of V Tbose and flatulent douit that k an of Nebraska. raL (hm cau bc the obodnun stripe of M,i, non-- , roud Here be Is. God bless him and have bfea trimuphanUy eaters poured forth ,J ' cite,Ld bllt uutort,;a,cl, be did give him wisdom. effect no will have denunciations, In lbe &s. ,ie blJ hm ( upon tl lie. ut. Tut fall weather..,,, Mntcd a jn8t tbe and only an indirect one upon the uion of ,he ,j.b DenK1. Very election ;and that one favorable to erac-ythe vested interests Its resented by such papers as replh good old Democracy. Continued From First Page) th j 1 an ill wind that blawsi naebody NewYork World ;and in the South . gude. he met both indifference and oppo No need to talk of that between n,-' two friends! sition;and in botlf Fast and South The Republican .state convcji- dis:oyal.ty folowod him to th e tion didnt pass the Harrington' A lesso on murmuring and because it polls. resolution simply complaining at Biit so true have proved his tins everlasting didnt dare to; not because such final conclusion bur with the lot, the predictions; so a resolution would be supererogatruths lie proclaimed that today that the fault is in ourselves, tory in the Republican party in be stands not and not in our stars, as Shakeonly as the leading Utah, dominated, bridled, ridden and . but real- - speare puts it, from the same proand even spurred ns it has been lv as the duction by the same author. leading private citizen by Smoot. Sitting m the shadow of the nation, if not of the world. River, sparkling river, I, of; its master it dared not raise tlie The great Democratic editor fault to find with thee: protesting or protecting hand; Henry Watterson, once Bryans River though dost never give a but therell be an aocminting in most vigorous opponent, recently, word of peace to m"e! November in which the Smoot main the act of introducing him, paid Dimpling to each touch of sunchine will be made to look as if it the great commoner the following shine, wimpling to each air had bvon "Mi through a threshet. : tribute that blows, T'lnioerats. Republicans and So-- 1 is but There one paramount dost make no sweet replyThou enlists alike t re tired of this on- issue for the next presidential bat" man umna'ii r and will register ing to my sighing for retie and that is the rescue of the pose.' tluur ). rotes! i( the only effective government from hands that have way Flowers of mount and meadow, misused and debatudied it. and its I have fault to find with you, restoration to the custody of the BRYANS IDEAS. Birds of .song and beauty, lo! plain, but sovereign people. The I charge jou all with blame: parties to it are, upon the one hand .During the course of a reccut " all hapless passions thrill rmy ,,f ,,"i"c1 Parli- - Though Mr. Bryan satf that speech fill me, you are still the and sons, hold together not only alone there was whatever virtue same. by the cohesive power of the pubin the ' railroad indifference of Nature to the 0! lic patronage, but by a community law enacted by the .last fact of human pain of interest as unyielding as it is Congress was suggested by a enunthinking, richly caprisoned in Every grief that seeks relief Democratic platform. if at her hand in vain ; treats all tbe of successful war, lie asked his auditors how long an,l on panopy a bird Not speaks forth its pasDie other hand, the mass it would take under a Republican sion, not a river seeks the sea, body of those who hew the administration to punish the a flower from wreaths of sumNot wood and draw the water and pay trusts, in view of the fact that in mer breathes in sympathy five years not a single trust mag- - .taxes, undnlled, unskilled and with me. (widey separated; . often groping . nate has been imprisoned. .. the dark; sometimes misdncted Yet within my inmost spirit I He declared that HieRepublican (in counsels; but never united by can hear an undertone. yet 1 Mippine policy lias cost hj except to coifquer. It is veteran That by law- of prime relation to build country enough money holds these voices as its troops against the raw milita, an the Panama Canal, to irrigate alljunequal e owTn.- though not bootless arid lands of the West, or to ray( ag many well fought fields in Spirit, 0! my spirit! Is it thou construct a public highway from days of old bear witness. Givens art out of tnnef New York to SanFrancisco, .which (but haf the discipline of the regu Art thou would do more to settle the matter clinging to December jars ant a tithe of their eqnipmen1' while the earth is in its June? of railroad regulation than all the an(j we shall drive them before us thou dropped thy past in atv;s that might be passed in the across the barricades of criminal Hast nature? Hast thou touched 'next ten years. wealth, though led h.v Theodore another key? On the matter of the tariff, the Roosevelt himself, thou Art angry that the anthem I recognize as our chieftain in NebrasTcan asserted that the Rewill not, 'cannot, wait for publicans are in tbe position of this approaching conflict the Hon. thee?, those patriots who agreed that William Jennings Bryan of Ne- Wve must all hang together or we braska. Spirit, thou are left alone alone 1 There-costs on waters wild ; sacrifice either me no Jt all will hang separately.! the God is gone, and love is dead, of For or great of personal preference pride ifore, it is, he said, that and Nature spurns her child. monopolies that: have flourished opinion to make this declaration, are not and Thou Mr. I have are drifting in a deluge, always Bryan under the protective system and clouds waves, below y demanding that the tariff agreed as lo the means; we have to end. the as The never its above, disagreed frjends. be reformed by appeal to the mortal nature of the And with weaby wings come back But it was on the subject made with to thee, thy raven and thy' road-rat- e revision thAt Mr. Bryan people, which he has ' dove. showed his greatest power. He de so much eloquence and power I a he was when that was boy. making language, dared, A brothers confidence in and n law enacted by He grew to manhood under my the concern for .a sister. A sad, sad the last Congress was stolen frqm teaching. If at times I have raised story. Brownings Blot in. the a Democratic platform, and thatthe warning fihger of the school-wh- Scutcheon. popularity President Roose j'master even threatening the' rod he was big enough and old Is there a story men could any velt today may boast he owes to man g ; enough his odherence to Democrats poll- enough and Could tell of you, you would con-cen to stand it and to survive iL from me ? has thrived Jn.spite of it maybe Uf a Republican-PresidentcaMr. Bryan; Poet-ofiic- non-essentia- la 1 . ki my nt fI t out-ocrac- lawr-maker- s. - ou,-spok- Interesting Paper ; self-evide- nt . , 1 rate-revisi- ! ad ar-th- ; 4 to-da- , trail i us rate-revisio- at J good-lookin- al u . - Say There is no such story men small sum of money 'and then for could tell, seven long years forgot Johnsons And Ill believe you, though I dis very existence. When, however, the dictionary, an assured success, believe. Tbe wold tbe world of better was on the point of appearing, men than I, Lord Chesterfield, ' as Johnson And woohui such as I suppose you said, fell a scribbling in the World about it. Then Johnson took, his revenge. He wrote the noble lord that famous letter ihTO which he packed the gathered I was so young, I loved him so, scorn of all' those, years of had no mother, God forgot me, ingvand disappointments .The letter it is said was one of those and I fell. kriock-dow- n blows to which no The story of a perfect man, un is answer possible, and upon Roman con- der Roman law, under . is possible, and which no answer ditioiis-rBrutin bnakespeare s , , ns super- comment which Julius Capsar." A man who had upon nuoua. As a man he stands out all the parts of imagina ble human prominently as an example to perfection. Unselfish, just, mag- mankind. Through poverty and nanimous, patriotic, affectionate, leiters -entlc, kind, yet firm, liold, ,nd STRAW wanted Livery. A at . x - CALL EDWIN PEAKE man. Both phones. FOR RENT 27 2 Express! r furnished rooms. East' 2nd South. PAID FOR OATS Thatcher Livery Stable. CASH LOST gold bracelet with garnet sets. Return to Journal office. and be rewarded. j. us . " cersetie. If lie bad a weaknes. h; it i, only to display all the teller the greatness and nobleness of which had its. the character in a growth and manifestation world of imperfection, and which could not be separated from its conditions, or be truthfully from its surroundings. The Blemishes in his character were but the touches of the imperfect world in which he lived Ilis country was the horizon of his hopes and affections. To him there was nothing higher, nothing beyond; there was no God, no hereafter. Hence he was a suicide a suicide because his country gone, there was no more for Brutus, nothing to love, nothing to strive for. nothing to live for, nothing to die for, since to Brutus there was no ever living God, no eternal life. Brutus was a perfect' man, perfect however, only on Roman, not Christian Conditions. All that could be sunui id up of him was: a man. f Mich as tlic.se will in- '",d ! ness of concience, but he preferred poverty to sueh a sacrifice. Few men can plead to more weakness of the flesh than could Johnson. He had failings sueh as fall to the lot of the humblest of mankind. Ilis merit is, not that he had s.VK wVakness, but that through a long life of misfortune, hardship amhdisease, lie daily fought with them and daily overcome. It is the hope in the study of this production also John Halifax, splendid old English story, and True to hi Home, dealing with stories of the boyhood of Benj. Franklin as in others, the result will be a desire for more reading. Indeed the field of literature is so broad, embracing the best efforts of years and years of study, and running in all channels, that no matter what condition of mind we may be in we can find that w'hieli will sooth and charm. Let us try improve in this line, along with the others,, this year and whenever we can let us read good books. If we grow tired and wenrv let us rest our brain with I. alia Ilooke; if restless and diss.it mfieil read Katherine ;if blithe and It ivolous follow Evangeline in her many wanderings, and lay at the dose our earthly burden on the alter Resignation. If sad as we sometimes are, read Longfellows minor poems, or followBryant out into the forest and lose ourselves in natures gardens. Or if these all fail to cheer, let us turn to the treasured volume, and lay our troubled soul at tbe feet of the Great Master, and listen to the lesIlis songs sons that lie teaches. have power to quiet the restless pulse of care and come like the benediction that follows after . This was the noblest Roman of them all"; All the conspirators save only lie. Did that they did, in envy of great Caesar; He, only in a general honest thought, And common good to .all, made one of them. ITis life was gentle, and the Elements So mixt in him, that nature might stand up. And say to all the world. This was ot i struct. elevate, develop a taste for the beautiful and be a stimulus fur the reading and study of more nf like character. Tlie lilt rarv study of the year Rassdas should of course receive special coiisid, ration, and be prayer. handled according to outline in the hope that it will stimulate the habit of reading good books. Tbe story we are told in the Era deals with the vanity of human wishes. It is a series of essavs on the problems of life. The value of the book Hi's neither in the story, nor the solutions of the problems of hte; but it is chiefly valuable fort lie wise reflections contained in many of its passages, Qnd the excellent style in which it is writLADIES, ATTENTION! ten Our display of Summer UnderThe book was written by Saman aggregation of triumph uel Johnson, an Englishman, in wear is the early past of the 18th century ant value. Absolutely everything Johnson was a sickly child, in- new, pleasing, attractive and desirheriting disorders that made his' able is here. The display includeji life, ofter his twentieth year, one Dorset Covers, Chemises, Skirts all long misery. Disease left its mark cc.( in muslin and cambric, of on both mind and body. lie lost qualities, both plain and embroidone eye, and had a sort of St. ered. "Also a large line of Ladies Vitus dance which at intervals Guaze Vests with fancy edges. forced him, wberever he might be, Words cant give half an idea of to perform a series of ridiculous the procession of- - temptations motions with feet and hands. lie found in our stock. To fail to aec also had spells of profound mel- it is to misie sight of the month. We also have the largest and ancholy, which at times came dan best lines of Mens Womens and gerously near insanity. Ilis fathchildrens Underwear andnosiery er died when he was twenty-tw- o for fall nd winter in the city at years old, leaving him an inherithe most reasonable. tance of twenty .pounds. In spite prices Plaee your orders nowr' of poverty he determined to win for himself a name as an author, and struggled amid adverse circumstances until he produced his famous Dictionary of the English Language. ne .issued tbe I prospectus in 1747, addressed it after the manner of the day to V Lord Chesterfield, ,145-- 7 N. Main 9t. tha- t- time . . LOGAN KNITTING PACTORY i r WANTED Office girl ; experience unnecessary." Utah Dental Co., 47 N. Main. COOK STOVES AND RANGES. Wanted at the Logan Second hand store, First North St. Chickens and eggs wanted by Isaac Smith, second house south of Deseret Mills, Logan. FOR RENT Four' rooms near Agricultural College. Apply to Richard M. Smith 631 E. 6th Nortlji St. FOR SALE Six roomed ho.use and lot with modern improve ments. Apply, Phone 134 x at 554 W. 2nd South St. Second-han- d Furniture and sold No handled Logan Bought stuff Shoddy Second-han- d store, First North St. LOST A red muley cow. Branded LL on left hip. Label in ear LCL. Finder please notify Mrs. Gertrude K. Anderson. Logan Second ward FOR SALE OR RENT A 4. roomed brick house furnished. containing pantry, closets and all lern conveniences. Barn and "tker improvements Apply at this office. -- FOR SALE Frame dwelling, 4 rooms, ball, closet and pantry, also summer kitchen. Lot 5x18 rods. Choice location. Call at 228 South 1st East Street or Smith Bros. Lumber Co. 0 HANSON, the Pioneer Tailor kinds of cleaning, repairing and pressing. Suits made to order. Office next coor to Eagle Hotel over Rochdale store. of Logan, does all ATTENTION PLEASE! We , want your repair work. Watches, clocks and jewelry, anything that needs repair in these lines. We will do it right, promptly, and at prices to Ruit. We need your patronage, and we propose to please you in order to secure C. M. WENDEL-BOand keep it. First orth Street. East of E, Tithing Office. BLISS NATIVE HERBS Great blood purifier, kidney and liver regulator 200 days treatment with guaranteed money return for failure to cure, one dollar. Will cure or greatly alleviate diseases enumerated in Bliss almanac. Call on or send one dollar to agent S. S. Wilson, 486 N. Fifth West, Logan, for trial box with printed i guarantee wheD taken according to instructions. A DINING CAR is one of the many things yon consider wheii you are frying to figure out the best route East. The dining ear service recently established oa the COLORADO MIDLAND, is of the very latest modern oafs, and up to date in every respect. The line runs through the mountains all the way, therefore COOL, and wtih the Pullniatf Observation Sleeping cars, what more can you desire. Leave Salt Lake in the evening, spend next 'day in the Rockies. 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