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Show ERGATIS Society’s Sins PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY P. SIORIS. SALT LAKE CITY . . . . UTAH UTAH STATE NEWS _By MARKETS OF MEXICO Money Not Brains Is the Ruling | OPEN AIR INSTITUTIONS FORM A ' | Lower Class of Mexicans Said to Be Born Tradesmen—Market Place in Small Town a Veritable | Beehive of Industry. | MRS. STUYVESANT FISH. It is estimated that there are over 600 men and women in Weber county ever 70 years of age. Arrangements are already on foot for a monster parade by the labor or ganizations of Ogden on Labor day. B ts lo meal Db {a spring day [ { should T would } Leon Bailey, an Ogden bartender convicted of receiving stolen good his | 1. lL would have possession t it | er to be 11 I i manners, inte Yet th nothing except money. Indians who the country {s if it were orig inal vase dinner. Heaven at How few to invite men and knows they I would have it so {ΠῚ the immcvement of the highway tween Salt Lake City and Ogden, be the Themm, a German, are scarce enough! from far and near, who come to gossip Mrs. Smith’s or Mrs. Robinson’s. Church -. member of the ‘Western Federation of Miners, who was acquitted iast week in Colorado of the murder of Arthur Collins at Telluride, in that state, was in Ogden for a few hours on his way his farm in the state of Oregon. Joe Pazalez, the Austrian who shot and killed Mike Bovich during a fight over religious differences at Gar- field, will have to stand trial for murder when captured, So far al) efforts to discover the whereabouts of the missing man have been futile. The Univers:'ty of Utah is among the first schools in the country to take official action to prevent the spread of pu’monary tuberculosis by excluding from its class rooms all persons who are shown to be affected with by examination the disease John Smith, a delivery boy, was struck by a train in Salt Lake City and badly injured. Young Smith was holding the lines loosely when thé horse started over the railway track, it is said, and was paying no attention to the animal or his surroundings. superb opportunity to serve mankind than that now calling her to reinforce and carry ] : | Aid forward the movement in the interests of the to her ministers or her members thosestill pre- | Peace pared, under certain conditions, to justify war, yet no man fit to be called a Christian can refuse for an instant to admit the obli- world’s peace. After remaining unconscious all day from the effects of uraemic pol- | a Is that the proper plane for s0- Seldom in the history of the Christian church has there been opened to her a more | The board of land Οὐπιπιιβ[0Π6τ8 Jet a $30,000 contract last week in connection with the $250,000 Piute reservoir project, in the southern portion of the state. The contract is for the construction of an irrigating ca | na] twenty miles in length. Steve Adams. Snooks, and because she was invited . these very people seem to climb up into society. im: he took the drug to produce rest, and had no intention of suicide. over the latest news and trade small talk, as well as to dispose of their more marketable wares. The market place of a small town is a veritable beehive of industry, or the semblance of industry, and it is ciety f agining some one had insulted his pretty little wife. armed himself with a buge revolver and broke up a German celebration in Salt Lake, for which he was given a jail sentence, | soning, superinduced by an overdose of morphine, Frank O. Bucher died at his home in Ogden. It is thought Mrs. By FRANCIS Hi. ROWLET, v0.D., Boston. Even should there be among gation we are under to avert the horrors of | war, if it be possible, by arbitration. If war | A row over a card game in a saloon John Erickson, the terror and d momentum of the peace movement. First, their ministers and ners, with gheir rare opportunities to reach the generation A Typical Market Woman. whether that neighborlive across the street The great Declaration of 1776 that urges upon earth in hastening the day when arbitration shall abolish war. des- gressor. Charles H. Titus, the self-styled “divine healer of Salt Lake City, who allowed two of his little children to die of malignant diphtheria without the care of a physician, and, consequently, was charged with involuntary mvunslaughter, will be tried during the week Della Lunginglino, an Italian, was atipcked by Ermenegildo Digoman, a countryman, armed with a 1085 dirk, at a deserted cabin in Bingham and disemboweled and partly dismembered. Digoman crept upon Luneginglino from behind and stabbed him thirteen times The 9-year-old son of Swen Anderson of Koosharem was seriously in- jured last week. He was thrown from a horse, his foot being caught in the bridle and he was dashed to the ground with great force, being in an unconscious condition when discov- ered. He will recover It would appear that the statute passed by the last legislature and which was added to the criminal code,, making the refusal of a husband to provide the common necesgaries for his wife « family a fel- ony, will fail in its effect unless added amendments are be watneed trom A large chorus w Frovo in the coming Welsh fod, to be held in Salt Lake Ci organization will be I he rection of A. C. Lund, a promi t musician of that place, and will be composed of 125 voices, so as to com pete for the grand prize. Hadley’s health was It is not an uninteresting question consider the The Man Behind T he Bars cal values of the at and behavior of the average public toy ible constituency we tec the human race, I'he sense of what another thinks of one’s s f, what the other expe and looks for, 2 cultivates eaci a vast BROKERS SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE Our facilities for handling your account unexcciled. We make liberal advances on all Utah Stocks. 100 Atlas Block, Sait:Lake City. SALTAIR Largest and finest Dance Floor and best Music in the State, Held’s Band εἰ! Summer. Bicycle Races twice Weekly. Admission 10c. For recreation and pleasure go to Saltair. Trains every 45 min. Herbert grow in value offer for an investment opportunity He made an offer ONMBthe which has since been place, epted, and now he is going west t@iBketitle to So long as this attitude is one of anticipation that bars is |} interior sense of degradation and loss of also that civilization questions his abiljty the sense also that it universally enormous fight y the zg to make for a new ἃ avor and ge trus footing OLIVE THAT SHELTERED SAGE, Plato’s Tree Still Standing Near Site of Athens’ Academy. the property and plan ) acres of corn, at the same time @@etting the benefit of t the high altifime and outAΝ door life irs Hadley. It is well known that olive trees will live to an extreme age, and trees are known which are many centuries old. What is known as Plato’s olive Mexico later in the supper. tree is one of the oldest upon record In appearance Mr. Mfadley shows no It stands near Athens and on the signs of poor heath. Most of his spot where the Academy formerly nds have come to the conclusion existed. In spite of its great age it that indigestion is his most serious still appears’ to be in a flourishing trouble condition and has a vigorous foliage, When he works under high pres Although somewhat damaged by the sure 16 hours a day he occasionally combats of the insurrection it wil} runs down because his nervous system do doubt live for a long time to come, affects digestion. He is the reverse The proprietor of the ground, M, of Gov. Fog who eats four big meals Vamvacks, had the tree examined by a day y is working hard and the naturalist, Miliarakis, in orm grow hard campaign. der to be assured whether the pop ular legend dating it from the time .of Plato could be correct, and it was found that its age was sufficient te bear out the legend. As to popular belief, M. Camburoglus, conservator of the National library of Athens, States that tradition has it that the tree was no doubt already old whes yiously he, | had been a director of the order for 12 years. Mr. Talbot has served in the Nebraska senate. Under his adminis: | Your invention may be valuable ané should be patented. Send for free information and advice to H. J. ROBIN« SON, Patent Attorney. P. O. Box 544 Salt Lake City. A Yoga’s Feat. For 14 years Bava Luchman Das received from the priests of the Black Caves of central India the necessary education in order to become a yoga, as a yoga must be capable of taking the 48 postures of the Hindoo idols. Perhaps his greatest trick consists in balancing himself on the ends of his fingers while the whole of his body is in the air. Bava stated that in order to obtain the rank of yoga in the Black Caves of India he had to continue in this position on the ends of his fingers under the eyes of the judges, without a second’s interval, for seven days and nights!—Strand Magazine. NUMBERING mens of humanity things in the market sale not Rubber for your expedition. A. R. Talbot. tration the Woodmen have flourishea now having 950,000 members, 0) whom 150,000 are in Illinois. The sal ary of the office was increased fron $5,000 to $10,000. The election is fo1 a term of three years Human Hair in Wedding Gowns. Madge O'Rourke, the famous Irish American dressmaker, was showing 6 customer an assortment of weddings gowns, relates the New Orleans Times Democrat. “In every one of those gowns, were you to rip them apart,’ she said, “you would find a lock of hair hidden—re¢é hair, brown hair, golden hair, ever gray hair. “Sewing girls believe that she whe works on a wedding gown, if she sews a lock of her ownhairinto it, will be married herself within the year. “Oh, yes, the belief is universal Every wedding gown in the world is apt to reveal, when cut up, a lock ol hair—some red, some gold, some black, and some, alas, gray.” New place MACHINES, Pads Easy Way to Secure Worms. Take water in which walnut hulls have soaked overnight and ponr it on a spot of ground. In a very few hours the fishing-worms αὶ come to the surface and can easily be secured from the hills to dispose of his handicraft, his baskets, his blankets or even his crude violins. the sun, dirty Ink PEMBROKE STATIONERY CO., Salt Lake City. Density of City Population. The Federation Review, a paper de voted to the cause of liberal immigra But the Mexican market place is not tion laws, in an article on the dens only a plaza for buying andselling. It | ity of city population says: “Although seems to be the meeting place for there is a certain area of about three everything, for dogs, cats and Indian and a half acres on Manhattan island babies. The dogs and cats are al where the density of population is at lowed to scamper around in every di the rate of 650,000 to the square mile yet the city of Par shows a far | rection, with but little cause for ay f populat > | prehension on the part of buyers and greater avera | | sellers, and as for the babies—they han New Y e figures for Paris eing 79.300 are spread out in every ct sgu mile and for It is just this attitude of civilization towards the fellow who has been worst, in nine cases out of ten he probably will not disappoint this tation. We are all governed to a degree by wha UTAH'’S PAMOUS WATERING PLACE Coney Island of the West Finest Bathing in the World stamps, is after all most- behind the bars and has wornthe stripes that is of the greatest possible| moment to him as he comes forth to a free life. the man whohas been behind the CHILD, COLE CO. with only a few centavos to bespangle deal and conduct. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH her natural charms, and his is one of the most attractive booths of the plaza. But itinerant peddlers are common to all countries, and one must turn elsewhere to catch those typical wares of the people. There, spread out on the ground, one may see the cheap native pottery, in various and sundry shapes, serviceable and otherwise, which the Indians themselves have made in their crude fashion. There are the native fruits, luscious and tempting, but fast spoiling in the glare of the sun. There are native man tillas, shawls, rebozos and perhaps a booth with other wearing apparel for women. There are sombreros, and frequently one may run across charro suits of leather with spangles of silver pieces to catch the eye of the visiting ranchero. And there are rough native shoes, with long pointed toes, that were the style in the United States several years ago. In fact, there is no limit to the va riety of the wares which may be seen | for sale within the limits of a very Detroit. ly a social affair. 18 are g vod and | small market, though no grand pianos ruthful and sympathetic and law-observing have been noticed in the display. There is everything, from a penny’s for the most worth of peanuts to a peso’s worth else, or in re] ation to some standard that considers us as social of more substantial merchandise. And These men who get behind the bars anc are marked with the on a fiesta. it is indeed a scene of brand and after a time come forth to the air and sun and freedom of bright colors to catch the eye of an artist civilization the problem for them is what to do with the world they It is to the little market place that again come into and what the world that has bran ed them shall do wit | the Indian, Tarascan, Tarahumara, or whatever his tribe is, trots down them. By REV. WILLIAM GARDAM, 170 AIN ST. Plato sat under its shade.—Scientifi¢ American. to-day and the generation that shall be to-morrow, can make clear the real | only necessary for the sightseer to visit such suburbs as Coyocan to hemeaning and purposes of arbitration. come convinced of this beyond peradSecond, the churches, through their ministers and teachers, mayaid| venture. The little market of a town is she the movement for the world’s peace by laying upon the hearts of their people what has been so well called “the moral damageof war.” Silence on goal of all ambitious tradesmen in its territory. It is at this point taat the part of the church is treason against her Lord, for whatever fine traveling peddlers, street vendors «nd patriotism may have inspired the soldier to maintain his country’s cause, mountain Indians begin their day's no sooner have the opposing forces joined in deadly onslaught than re-| labor, and they have usually sp*rad | out their wares before daylight. venge, cruelty, injustice awake to trample beneath their feet every divine Here may be seen the wandering and ennobling impulse of the human hart. Spaniard or Syrian, with his peddler's Third, the churehes can do more than any other forms of organized pick spread out, with all its gaudy attractions—highly colored handkeractivity toward advancing the cause of peace and arbitration by a chiefs, combs, strings of glass beads, failing fidelity to those principles of the Christian faith that should de- bracelets, necklaces and cheap finery of every description. His is the ma termine the relation every man should gician’s bag to the poor Indian criada perado of the camp, by a man named Henderson The men were engaged in a poker game when the altercation occurred Erickson was the ag- Mr. breaking he went to Texas and from there to New Mexico. While staying at Roswell he found a little farm, two miles out of that place, that he fan cied as an ideal place for a country bome while the chance that it would IKere are thrée ways at least in which the churches can add to the he be white, black, red or yellow 1862 | ὅ Get a Patent. Thomas Matthews, a nine-year-old opinions of mankind.” She must go furtl Salt Lake boy, met death by drownnot worthy the Christian name until “the therhood of man” is somefing last week under peculiar circum: stances. It is claimed some other thing more for us than a phrase to juggle with. boys pushed him into a reservoir, and Can you imagine any power for peace equal to the Christian church as he was unable to swim, he was| if she were to rise to her high opportunity? Were she true to her holy drowned before the lads could get as-| calling, as true she will yet be, she could outrival all the peace soc ieties of sistance. at Newhouse resulted in the killing of thought must be, let it be only after the last possible means has been exhausted that should have saved fo dread and desolating a calamity. power their ESTABLISH Republican nomination for governor is to become a farmer, A short time ago when the doctors This does not refer to to Mrs. Jones’ then everybody who goes to Mrs. Jones’ will not be invited Automobile club of Salt Lake will next take up the matter of a good road between that city and Provo Charles else don’t like if you were one-half as partloular about being pleased with your Jewelry as we are to please you, your problems im sis: Urs would be quickly solvea. birth, breed- Receipts at the Salt Lake Cits po yeople’s idea of society is to hand you the tip of one finger when you ar office during the month of June this | their guest and then make faces at you behind your back. year show an increase of over 10 jc! Oh, I can’t go to Mrs. Jones’ house any more. She had Mrs. Snooks cent «cr the reeeip:s fa: the same mceuth lasi year, an indication of at dinner, you kn growth of the capitil city You ean hear that day in society. I have heard it plenty of Having in motion ths movement for times. Somebody Kansas City —Herbert §, Hadley, at torney-general and a candidate for the urbs of Mexico City and the smaller towns and villages of the interior who do get into βοIt is in these outdoor places of know of the kicks and the dickering that one may catch the true spirit of the lower classes in their most typical dress. It has been said my back because I might that the lower class of Mexican is a | tradesman, born to buy and sell, and y people to my house. that he would much prefer to haggle “And why does she all day over a profit of ten cents than ask us?” to earn a wage of 50 cents, But be this as it may, the market place is the women who havebrains great gathering place of small traders without after fleeing from their res¢ vaulo n insulis they have endured just to get in! in Utah, will have a 900-mile trek | have had things said about me be nd back from Rapid City, S. D William Smith, a negro, is in a/| choose to invite some clever, interesting, bra “Ἡ ΠΥ does she invite such people?” Salt Lake hospital in a dangerous | condition, having been sbot by Miria | n being so original? W1 doesn’t she Bocker, colored becanse Smith man | Seeks big market places of the capiand to these painfully new buildings to which the residents of various | cities throughout the republic point but to those open-air, sun- | with pride; bedecked plazas of bartering which | one frequently runs across in the sub come accepter ν General tal, society made more exclusive, more dig- ! Attorney | those yy mo were fined $30 each. laughed when another colored hurled a rock at Bocker often to be ric | rains Missouri | kets of Mexico in the warm colors of Very be ] bo moost dead, two young men of Ogden leaying the cour City of Mexico —One might travel ' the world around and find few more picturesque institutions than the mar eno men. For driving a hofse hired from a Ἠνοτν stable until the animal was al- has left the country, bondsmen to settle witlr The five hundred Ute revolied and terrorized ] HE pr Wool shipments out of Utah and Idaho for the current year are nearly at an end, according to local railroad PICTURESQUE FEATURE. | HADLEY TO BE A FARMER. 10.000 a York cit only fo Faults. Thank God we do not live wit saints! We live with people full of faults, and it is excellent, for the faults of others serve us either by imposing a salutary constraint or by the lesson that they give.—Translated from Le Figaro. One Original Saxon Crypt. The only complete and wnaltered shxon crypt in Great Bri is that at Hexham abbey, it being built wholly of Roman stones, there being also many Saxon stones imbedded in the new walls of the building The Seventh Heaven, In the Mohammedan religion there are seven heavens, eachalittle finer than the other, the last culminating 1η the “supreme glory,” being full of the “divine light which it is beyond the power of speech to describe.”— New York American. Why Men Refuse io Teach. The teacher mayhave a personality that commands respect in spite of his calling, but outside of his especial work he is regarded by business men slightingly as an improvident visionary.—Educational Review. Do Well Thine Allotted drawers of water. He who hews the stone and draws the water well need not fear the consummation of his work. A pint cup is not as large as the quart, yet if it is full to the brim it is doing all that it is called upon, yea, all that it is expected to do. Advice for the Married praise of another wife 2 ile. az f square s 67.900 Portion. There must be hewers of atone and The wise knows that press egins at home— |