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Show Til K WOOI GHOWKIIB. WHY THEY WILL SUPPORT THE 9 -- M'KINLEY TICKET. . Hst Woo I nMWaa fa Vala U Tfaaa Mar I In Wmlw Uk It.tat. eon-ttltu- ta Dee pool la 1$9$ Whpq I ttrd for the r'llson free woo tariff, and I am for free wool now la 1900." Will I at Jennings Bryan TSe woo 1 grower 6t (hd Unltad States know what to expect It William Jonnlsgs Bryan 1 hr any chaore sleeted to tta presidency. Ha hu nailed ia color plainly to th masthead H who. vans may retd. There la Bo qualification wheat ter In hla declaration He la fur free wool now and all the pa Lf not -T- he nundiuoa of the dh eep h an - c- free-silv- free-trad- I . I pound of wool, which told for Zt4 cent per poundrr f 1 ML Here 1 a return from thl animal of fl2 IS. Commenting on thin episode of the rejected sheep, the Ies Moines Register said- Sheep are about the moat proBtable and useful animals on the farms. If they are well eared for; and they about the beat property barometer to Indicate the condition of the Many government and the people farmer Insist tht sheep pay for themaelres In weed killing and enriching the oll and that dll the other Income from sheep la clear profit a profit that will average more than 100 per cent annually aa long aa AmerLcan labor receives the protection It ahould have. The Income from that scrub sheep would not have peld for the aheep'a feed during any six month of e agitaand the tion hard times from 1893 to x.97 scrub Compare the history of that sheep with any of the speecht of Col. W J Bryan, and you will have proof t Mmtn curate baroqieter of the progress and Tell Ifospqrltg of the eatlrf country .nJ prlnclple respect me how stands your sheep productiveness." said Congreoamda Groivenor of Ohio, and I win tell gnu how the country stnnda 1a Us same respceL" (he time of the election of Presin few dent VcKlule? 1 1898 there were In county. Qhlo, In October, of194, c the passage the (United itatea 18, 11.841 heep, week after the Tree-woclause The at am average of tt 83 per Jiead aooJillL with lu wefi worth $67,020,941 Pour years of anlmais sold were all fin Ohio under the Dlngley law ho pd Merino. The file of th resulted In aa Increase of the flock State Journal show that 40 ewee aod td U 131,881. whth St n average value at this sale for 69 cents each, 80 lamb tor 30 cant each, and a registered buck of flfo haw brought th value to 8248 was knocked down for 50 cents Other 175.3. chosen from the tame flock sold lot Hoe boar Inn W rntntl similar prices, and all serf fine at FLOCKS THE DOUBLED NttlRLY Merino sheep. It la recorded that a DOUBLED MORE THAN In Fulton county, Ohio, recently farmer AVERAGE PRICK PER HEAD fold 125 head ot sheep for 800, being THE QUADRUPLED NEARLY 86 40 per head. The farmer of FulVALUE OP ALL SHEEP. wilt ton tell you that under the county If In for the sheep owners to decide by Wilson law that number of sheep a return want whether vote they their Wtl-eo- n would not have produced 8125, perhaps the under free trade day of the and that owners would have had law Or a continuance of prosperity leas, to look around a long time for a purunder (he Dlngley law It la for them any price. to any Whether they want to be paid chaser atthis year the American ProtecEarly for their wool and their mutton In sent a circular of dollars or la dollars worth 100 tive Tariff League owner to throughout the tnqary iheep cents dock. Information for United States vote asking let them If they (rant frae woof, on the following points. William wootr e free vocal id of for tie Number of sheep owned In March, Jennings Brytn ff they want protec- 1896. vote for (Wilson law free wool period.) tion prosperity, let them Number of sheep owned In March, President WlfUam MtKlnle? If they dollar, let J906, (Dlngley law, protected wool want to b paid lu If they wish period ) them vote for Mr Bryan; Average value pet head id March, dollars, aa good to be geld la 1896. (Wilton law. free wool period.) let them on earth, as aeyhody'g money Average value per head Id March, tote for Mr. McKinley. wool There ll ho Middle course. It la fof 1900. (Dlngley law. protected to and period.) small, tie sheep falter, great Up to Jude 4 of this yea tepllea had vote decisively id thl (awe. been received from sheep raiser Id 39 Fleoa. , Sow Piwopevtsy There la 4 World of material tor tuts. In commenting od the returns let Study gnd reflection among the produc- us Win with a section of tha country ot aUtlatlea tha cl the to asset study etron Whex for A Uw (he belief - ing fa 40 Otottod atm I ratoo w Id tSi taol ;wehTy-tw- o year. The that ff you (rould tee prosperity you iovernmint tfport, Which eannot be must look through allver spectacle. queatluhed of inybodjr, show thl Ule Take Montana for kxampli, which Ino April, 1899, had 1.813,103 sheep. Seventy-twt affairs for, t year lined 1878: report front Mdntanh ihow that Number Average In March. 1898, the person reporting total of price owned 804.374 sheep, with n average value heeg. per bead. market value of per ned; whereat id March, 1900, these same persons had Increased their flocks td 825,434, and the average value per head had grown to 84 18. or only 9 cents lets For than double the Value of 1898. 1900 Montana will show Bocks numbering Tully 6.000.000. find protection will be worth to the sheep reiser more than 810.000,000 as compared with tree trade, to say nothing ot an Increase or more than 82 000,000 in the value of each years wool clip. Silver spectacle 414- - not- - enable- - the farmer of Montana to tee this Immense gain In their wealth. to f Slot and it Wll-wh(- -- the nt JOQ-ce- oee 83-1- luh Btrt4 1893 .... $5,048 017 054 lss 1895 ....3S.I9&.7&I JSM ,...18 818 8(8 170 ilk) ....0.294 Dingier tariff; 1891 ..,.7.656 9t0 U1 fc 9p...S.lU45t l?9a ... i 48 178 - 92.721.138 107,697,630 with froapfiriif. Fifteen Utah farmers state that In 1896 their flocks numbered 58 070, valued at 8V per head, and that four years later thl number had Increased to 72 600, and the value per head was now 899. W'th present total of more than 3.000.000 it ought not to be VHTfilfflcuIt to convince Utah iheep raise rs that the country made a good cholcy when It rejected free silver aid free wool for protection and a dottah Id Colorado, according to the report from 33 owner, the Bock hate In4 creased from 164,039 in 1898 to In March.1900, and the average been Increased Talus per head ho 11 would take trom 82 03 to 83 14 tbs combined profits of i good many liver mines under a 16 to I ratio to equal the gain which Colorado has realised On her sheep and her wool. Idaho's ihowtng la Still more Impressive. Forty of her sheep farmers report 156.358 head In March, 1896. and 275.181 In March, 1800; and they state that the value per head has advanced Thl year will from 81.76 to see more than 3.000,000 iheep and a dtp of about 20, 000, 000 pounds of wool in ldah& Can Mr. Bryan and hla free wool propaganda offer Idaho anything equal to what protection baa done for sheep and their fleeces? Texas (raoperity Now let ue turfi our steps toward the tinner ItaU of bourbonWm and a state which a year ago had 2283,658 sheep and kheared about 15,-- 1 00,000 pounds ot wool, but which will (his year abow over 3,000,008 sheep and over 18 600,000 pounds of wool. Frotn Tax w have 80 reports, and th?y toll 89 that ta March, l&W, nnder tbt administration to which Tagil art such a tremendous majority. 58eel Owner bad 100,953 sheep, worth to them 8l46 each; and that hi March. 1900, under aa administration boae eueeees at the poll Texas 414 o wmek To prevent, these same to pwaers had 124.125 sheep, and their average market value was 82 75 per Would you think that Tax head. 100-ce- nt iVo 246,175.33 " aUnlted 8tate government report for 1899 not yet published. In th history of Industrial and ecV nomle condition no more wonderful ol the benefit ot protection can be shewn. Frertij for tbs hnstn, And yet the candidate nominated by lh Populists by the Democrats and by tha Sllyer Republicans voted In 1894 for the Wilson tariff law with it free-wotoday stands wheie he stood then, in favor ot free wool, - ! not thl reason enough tor bringing ta nolle at this time the fact nad American Tariffs figures relating! and American Sheep?" if ever time was when these eloquent statistics nhould be made known to the people of bt fnlted Slates, this te the iime. laAlABce yrlthout number could be Sited bearing out this marvelous proi- - pertly of lb sheeb falser Nob long ago. ,th4 I'slrBela llowal Register printed an anecdote that goes straight to t!ha point of Illustrating tbfi great Increase that boa taken ploca In the gristkctlre value and market value pf 5keci.(f hUca r Thai lot talk fn pocking a sale ot a bunch of shqd fit 18 per head, F. C. Hollister ol Duchah an teWBihlp bad one ewe rejected because ihi did hod come up to the standard. He eared for her during the - winter, and U as well aatlificd gg if Oh had been taken when told. ,8h bad Twin latnba which ' weighed Ml poundla atJanuary three months an hold El cents per pound, or $8 40, The w herself weighed 140 pounds, isaA Wight 84 9b, while she Ob wand reH ol clus,nd 3 V 198 ' . How was It In Nebraska, the home of him who is at one the hope and deepolr of hi party? From that Ut 28 report hivedhu far been received. They ahojccat under the provisions of the law of 1194, which the Boy Orator of the Plante helpsd to poaa, tha parties reporting owned 33.568 sheep, worth 81 69 per head, while ip March, 1900, these same parties owaed 75,730 sheep, marketable la tosh at an average of 84 77 per head. Nebraska will remember who It was that said, I was for free wool la 1894, when I voted for-t-he Wilson free-wotariff, ind I am for free wool now, la 1900." The sheep census taken by the league In detail Is a follow: Report received ,, ol In The Wilson tariff. Free trade In wool: would next November alt oj-1- 1 night and stand la line waiting for a chance to pur In a ballot for Bryan and free wool? There nr cheep owners enough In Texas, not to turn the scale from Democracy to Republicanism, for that la too much to hope for Jusf now. but enough to at least cut down the big majority, of 1898,-a- nd show that Texas has some appreciation of what has been done for her by McKinley, protection and prosper-ti- . ferners 185.-82- 84-1- IAm free-trad- e, Sheep owned In March, 1896 (Wilson law, free wool pe-- rld 1,468,804 Sheep owned In March, 1900 (Dlngley .law, protection pe-Hod I 1501,315 Increase, 1908 1,043 411 Percentage of Increase n.44 Average value per head March, 1896 (Wilson law, free wool Pnod) p.7g Average value per head March, 1900 (Dingley Jaw. protection PrIod) (AM 1900 814 Increase of value per head fof Percentage of gain in Value per head for 1900 in.59 Prosperity Extraordinary, It 1 only fair to gay that the extraordinary increase of prosperity which has come to NBS since the couatry e and cheap dollepudlated lar has In some measure acted as a bar toP The more rapid Increase -- of American flocks of sheep. Having more money to spend our people hsve eaten sheep at an unprecedented rate In the past two years. For this reason the consumption of lambs has increased enormously. Lamb li g gastronomic luxury, and to jfrest hac been the demand and (0 nigh the price In the early month of this year that sheep raiser have yielded to the temptation and sent to market vast numbers ot lamb which should have been kept at borne for breeding purpose. Only a few dayg ago I was told ot a kheep owner in one ot the weterh state who sold to a Xhleago packing company 40,000 lambr ofNiW4 years produce. Why did you Be Itt he was asked; iiow could you afford to so curtail jrour Increase? Because the offer ot 87 (ieF head In spot cash was too tempting to resist, was the reply. Four years ago, with tariff reform In the saddle,- - Mutton sheep sold in Omaha and Kansaa City at 83 to 85.80 per head, and lambs sold at 83.60 to 84 30 per head. In March of this year, with McKloely and protection, sheep (or mutton sold In Omaha and Kansas City at 83 50 to 86 25 and lambs at 85 to 87 id per head But this Is hot all of the story. Under the action of the McKinley law the imports of foreign wools have fallen off enormously. Here la a atatement-o- f the wool Imports Into this country for the various years, showing first that after the accession of Cleveland to power In 1893 but 65,000.000 pounds of wool were Imported into this country, but that under the Cleveland and Wilson fre trade bill we Imported nearly 800,000.-00- 0 pounds, and so utterly overstocked the market that no such Impression was made by the Dlngley bill at Brat aa we had a right to have ?Xpeeted- .lont Import. The history of wool imports Into the United States should be conclusive proof to every owner of sheep la thl country that free trade means th use of foreign wool In American factories, while protection means the ns of American ' wool. Study Ike "'following free-trad- figures: WOOL IMPORTED. Fiscal year. Pounds. Tsar. January. Fin. Medium. Coarse Cents. Cent. 29 It 11 li i! 34 ? These figures are very Interesting. Not the high prices paid tor Ohio wool during th Republican admtnUtratloa of president Harrison trom 1898 to " 1893 Thea note the decline of HI to 13 cents per pound between 1893 and 1897 January price during the free, trade administration ot Grover Cleveland. - Note once more the sharp advance in wpol values la 1,892 to 1900. ft la needless to say that this waa under a protective tariff and a Republican administration during McKinley prosperity. Western farmers will see to 1( that the blgh price of wool Is maintained for another four years by voting for McKinley and electing only Republican congressmen. Every farmer should cut this out and paste It np by his fireside for reference In the first few days of November. LOST TBACKOf FAMILY WkMltra Misfortune Whew He klnl Wnl te Cengmsn. One during hla memorable life General Jos Wheeler, flow commander of th department of the lakes, flrlth headquarters la Chicago, found himself without a local habitation or a family, although he had both a few hours earlier la the day. When he was first elected to congress he lodged fa a fashionable section of Washington, but ia the course ot a few days Mrs. Wheeler became dissatisfied sad one evening when her husband returned from congress, she said: Father, I do not like this plac at an and really think we had better move. If you dont Object "Certainly not, returned the. mother, general; "Just ple6e yourself anr- tnlng suits me. Nothing mors was said on the subject, but a coup! of days later on seeking the society of his family after the official duties of the day were over- the congressman found the apartment deserted and on Inquiry rthaf his family had moved durjn the day. No one knew There Mra. Wheeler had they had gone. merely neglected to inform her husband that they were to move that day and where the bew residence wag. He went to various hotels, but didn't find them, SO finally spent the night at once, and next day hla collqhguej were highly diverted and Interested at the engaging candor with which tha great oA iot nu Lou wm related how n family and asked their advice as to where they ktippoadd he could find them. In the codrse of the day one ot the children came id the bapltol to find out vrfiy their father hadnt been home the night before, gnd then the omission fit letting him know the se- cret of where they had moved was rectified, and he went gayly to the new quarter!. Where, With Mrs. Wheeler, he had a hearty laugh over their temporary separation. - ever-gslla- nt - - Smallest and Oddest Republic. Goust Is ibe smallest republic as 0 ares, but Tuvolara It the kmallest ta tO population. Gouxt Is only one mil In area. It Is located on th fiat top of & mountain In the Fyrenees, between Franc and Spain, and is recognised by both of tbfse countries, . It Is governed by s president and council of twelve. It was established In Inhabitants. The 1648, and baa 130 president la tax collector, assessor and judge. Goust has no church, clergy-taa- n o?cemetery. The people worship In fi church outside of their own territory, and the dead bodies are slid down to a cemetery la the valley below. In that valley all the baptisms and marriages are performed. Tavo lara la tvelve miles, northeast of Safr dlnla. It Is an Island five miles long by a half mile wide. Its total population consists of fifty-fl- v men, women and childrefl. The women go to the polls With the men and elect every year a president and council of six, all serving without psy Tha lnhabl touts support themselves by fishing and raising fruits and vegetables. The republic has no army and no navy. Cincinnati Equlfer. Tariff period. 1893.. 172. 433 838 McKinley tariff. 1894.. 55.152 585 Wait ng for free wool lews flcfaoot Libre rlee, A nw law In lowi provide that ev1895.. 206 033,906 Cle eland 196.. 230.911 473 and ery school district must annually Set RESOLUTION CANADIAN BUFFALOESL t iWltoMt Elko Thstr Kls of Uy AAS They ArtmU J S, ! to UwUUMm, Dsstlasd fa KxUaettoa. Be U vo1t4 so SDsete Br tb LcjUlMorv o ths butt ot Tit stall BiriBtMn iTka-tfoo- il bion, , a Lb . buffalo 9t . tSerrof eoMurrlas tkercls M North America to known, apBritish bevtlot following propotltlos IS smaad in reniiliutlon of ts State at Uta Is pear to b doomed to extinction, kertSv subotiited to tks eusliaed electors at f Uts Blato lor tkelir approval or disapproval, A. Allen of th America Museum Sawalv: Natural History lq. hla pole on tha See ties I Arttcia It. of tka CoatUtutlos bt t tke Stats ot Cta shall be amended to raa wood blaon fummarltes the number of aa follows . bee-Tks Lealslature shall proilds kg lav lea huff&Iq estimated to exlx( during S uniform and equal rate of famnwal aa the lost ten fears as folio warEatimatf laxative oa all property la tke State. eeeortaf in 1889 of Professor HoroadaI flow to lie value la stoaev. and ah all praaertba ky teaeral lav suck refuletloaa aa shall secure a director of the New fork Zoological ua value Uoa tor texaitea t all preparty, as that every pcroe n corpora pa shall pey a society, 650; Ruaeftv 1894, n few hunlas la prepvrtkea o (he velue of kle her Or lie dred; Jarvis, 1897, about 300; Mober y. are pert y . VceiSaf that a Seducttoa of debits 1897, 258 lw 300, and Stone, 1899, 64. Provide treat credits may be authorise further, that th property of As Cafte autos, The home of the wood bison has boaa pf Ik State, eouatle. cities, tests rkel In the neighborhood of the Ofeat Slave Slilrtrla, aiunlrlpel rorp rations mot public ace lbrrle lot forVila th BUlUtlar theraea l thf northwust territory. Within lake vorskl cither retlcloaa exclusively chart table purposes and place of putts) not the last alz years these blaon seem ta kel r a4 fov prlrala or corporate bene Si, Pitches hav worked northward, pn4 MrVAllea Shall be exempt from texaUo sees) reservoirs, pipe- - n Bum evaed aa It is pretty saf (o pssuco tha) ae kf Individuals or dor mrailoat fov lvrlat-k- f sys:' (hey have been exterminated, .entirely lyudx eased kp turh Individuate or eorpora-Buaer the Individual members thereof Ihall from thely former range south of (fi Set be separately used t less ss they shall b tor evaed sad used exclusively tor such purpee. Peace river, and that a few year Provided farther, that the taxes of (k Indl ent will suffice for their complete extern poor may b remitted er abeted at aueh time Frank Russel), who hinted aad la sunk manner as may be provided ky lav. (nation." See . I Th Vecretary ot Sum It hereby the wood bison in U94, wrote of thei rdered to reuse this y reposition te be leestoe newspaper fa every count in 1898, saying: Tha herd a( preaanj oh Sum vher asoepaper Is published, constats of a few hundred ft only. .Thqy fox top months immediately precedla tke kexl re ap wary that only one pffectiv ho4 general election Oa This proposltfoa shaft he submitted fa the also tors el this State at the tut senerel can ha fired, when they betaka thoiof All selves to Instant flight, and. aa , wit lection, for their approval of disapproval edlrlal ballots used at aurh election chill have ' AS Pas or (h piooxe, pursuit Is altogether futll words, vrltlen Aa tkemoa prtatsd Amend meat to Section Arttcia IA of Aa They cannot he hunted In summer and ' Ayahttt the Amendment' I flection A Article 13, of the Constitution, the country which they inhabit Is mosvfth such ether fad deatsnstlny sack and a wooded swamp aj amendment tl may be provided br tan held quito infested he Hole shall be received and said vote shell this peaion. can only bp. killed They be Abes, counted, canvassed and returns thnrv stalking In midwinter, when 4wii ff be mad la Ae same manner and in all aa la provided by lav la Aa ret ot the pelage is at its best. The Indlay slectloa ot Mate e .Baers the Peace and Slave rivers be 4 This resolution shall Abe effect sad kng be A tare from and after ltd ad ptloa. pccaslonal trips into the buffalo, country Vflth dog team to establish Upaf RESOLUTION of marten trap. When they discover n hand of buffaloes, they, of coutw cot Sestfea g, Prep ad aa Ameadaeeat I ax many as tbey can, but Artlole of the gevstttvttea, Hetatlag k(lj A Iks Covtrol sad SalsteauM f hav not mad systematic effort to Favlle aehoola. hunt them for tbelr robea, as they hTf Be it resolved and enacted by Ae Legislature members of pf A flsu of Utah, (he musk ox. Fortunately the offleeiw hereof eoerurrtax therein Section t Ike Miovln proposition to of the company have exerted their mend Aa Constitution of the SMie Ot Uuk Is toward the preservation of fha kerehy submitted to Ac quail tied elector of Buffalo, not trading for the robe nntj) th btale for tbelr approval or disapproval, namely That Section ( of Article 10, of the Conatltu-tto-a the recent advent of rival traders. Dupof th Sam ot Utah shall ha amended to ing the winter ot 1892-9- 3 forty fujff; reed aa follows See I 1 ettles of th ffrat and second elass loes were killed, the largest dumbo school controlled be the public by that had been secured for several year system shall the Board of Education of such cities separata I saw most pf these robes, which wer On apart from the counties A which said eltlea M Hro-our- d , j 1 S d la-- Tree-tra-de. McKinley and pro-tetlon to farmer. Under the McKinley tariff ia jgcjj we Imported 172.433 83a pounds ot foreign wool, Ia 1894. while buyers were waiting for theree trade Wilson bill to become law, we Imported only 5J.15J.685 pounds. In the free trade years, when American sheep were being slaughtered because tt didnt pay rrartarmers to sell their wool for a few cents a the foreign wool came floodingpound, Into our markets by the shiploads moro and more of tt each year In 1897 we bought, under the froa trade Wilson bill. 330 852 026 pound of foreign ool. This was 175,426 tons of tt enough to load 58 British merchant vessels, each carrying 3,000 ton of wool grown moetly In British colonies. This Is the sort ot treaty that the Democrats make c -- I, 11 two-thir- arc located Secratary sf St.te b hrrab, rdered to eeuae Als proposition to bo published In ntteast one newspaper In every eountv af (b SMie where a newspaper 1 published, lot two months Immediately preeedlnf the next federal election See I This proposition shnlt be submitted to Ae elector of this Stale at the next eeneral On Action lot Aelr approval tf t disapproval all oOrlnl ballots Deed at such election three Sco-tloaf shall be printed Tor A Amendment to A Article 10. of the Convtltuilon," and Ax Inst A Amendment to beetlon , Article 10, of A ConstltuUou," together with huch etbef title ffesicnatliif aurh amendment aa may be provided by law bald ballots aba 1 be received and said vote shall be taken, wanted, navtesed and returns thereof be mad la Ae Came manner and ta nil respects na ta provided by law to th case ot A election of btoto ffloers. RESOLUTION AmewdaseaU te Oeottowa 1 aad rttesstaf SI of Arttote S af the Cewetltetton of Aa fa Sate Of Ctow, Set tin a io Direct Legtelelioa by t he People, It meolred sod snooted hr the MtlsUN aU the mempf A SAM of VAb, bers elected to each bouse (hereof eoncurrlnf ibe rata: Seetloa 1. That section of Article 4 of tbs Constitution of A Sam of Utah, be amended to rend aa follows See, I. The legislative power of th State Shall be vested 1 Id s Senate and House of Kepresentottves Which shall be Oeslgaated the Legislature of Ae 8AM of Utah I in the people of Ae SAM of Otoh, as hereinafter stated Th legal voter, ar Such, fractional part Aereof, of As S Ate of Utah as may be pro1 vided by law, tinder such conditions aad In sueb Si an her and within such t me as may bo provided by lab, may initiate any desired legislation sad cans th same M be submitted te a Votf of Ae people for approval or rejection, or tony require anv law passed by the legislature vote (except Aose laws passed by a two-thir- d of Ae members elected to each house of the to ot be voter submitted to Ae Legislature) th Uaa before such law shall Ake effect The legal voters or such f ractlonsl part thereof at may be provided by law, of any legal subdivision Of tbe SAie, nnder nneb conditions nod In such manner and within such time ns prodded by law, may initiate any deny belegislation sired tad cause the tame to be submitted to a voM of tbe people of said legal Subdivision for approval or rejection, or may require any law or ordinance pased by tbe body of said legal subdivision to be submitted to tbe voters thereof before such law or ordinance shall take effect. See. 1 Also Aat section Jt, of Article 6, Of Ae Constitution ot the Stale of UAh be amended torrtd a follow' bee. XX The enacting clause of every htw shall be, Be it enacted by Ae Legislature of the Btete of Utah ' Except neb laws aa may d be passed by Ae vote of the electors as la oubdlvtslOn I seetloa 1 ol Alt artlcla, follows. nod such laws shall begin ss He It enacted by the people of the 5tne af Utah No bill or Joint Resolution shall be passed, wl A At ease at of A majority of off As members elected to each boos of the Leg Iris-Ar- e. aad after It has been read three times The veto upon the ffnnl paaeage of all hi Hi shall be by yeea ta nays, aad so law pkall be revised wr amended by refereno A Its title only, but tbe act aa revisal or seetloa aa amended, shall b aad published St length , 84 9. Ihl Secretary gf SAM ll hereby rdered to eaus At proposUton to b punf ished la at least on newspaper In every soantv of th Sam where nswtpaper ta published. for two month Immediately preceding A next general elec tins 8o 4 Thl proposition shall be sub mitted to tbe electors of Ale at the next general election for Aelr approval or rejection. The official ballots need at aald election shall hare printed thereon. "For the amendment te beet Iona I and gi. Article 4, of Ae Coastltntloa, had. Against the amendment td fine. etc Uon I and tt. Artlcla A of tha Constitution, to," nad auch designation of till as may be provided by law bald Allots shall hr received and said vote shall A Akea counted, canvassed and return Aereof A mad In tbe asms manner end In all respects as Is provided by law In eas of Ae election of Sass OfBoers 8aa aside from 6 to U cents for every child o( school age, the money to go for the purchase of books for the school library. During (he school year the ov l book! are to be kept ia the school Office fiTxm of Secratary of State, ( Vacation time they will room, but in L James ? Bammond, fieeroAry of 8 tats af A State of Utah, do hereby certify that A be kept for the use of the pupils In are true aad norrret copies ot tbe pome private house or store selected forrgelng resolutions proposing am-a-O meals a the of this Sam, passed at the books Constitution boardbe to The purby the ragalar tension of Ae Legislalu af Als chased are limited td a list which the Third bixta. la Testtmmp Whereof. I Ae hera- state board of education Is to make uaw eat my hand and affixed A ouL Already most of th lows cities Great Seal of A 8am of Utah, at 81 1 Lake City Ala ttrd Ay of Au- have availed themselves of the iaw gust, A, I 19 0 director to school spend J T HAMMOND, permitting SecreMrj of 6AM. 821 a year on book s. Bath finder. PtiuaUky Tvwheia Bane Bandit Lynch, who kOempteti to Chicago Is determined to have Wld np n gambling house in Salt Lake women teacher Hereafter all hedlthy and shot Colonel Prouse, who norrecently admission to for the candidate mal school must be submitted to a luce succumbed to hik wound, has phyalcaLixamlaatlon jnjthe presence been identified aa owe ot th three toe of the women members pf the hoard who recently held np gwabling bouse L PulAnd three women physicians In Mercur. monary tuberculosis, physical deformOver 3.000 people celebraUd Spring, ity, neurasthenia, or nervous exhaus' villee A I'ewwrfm jubilee day on In defect or Arf eight tion. irremediable tb villa waa first nettled And finally comes the viue of the hearing or organic disorder or nutrion Sept It, 1 85, by Captain Aaron wool clip. For Illustration we take the tional deficiency, uch as win prevent of control price ot Ohio fleece woed g t will Johnson, who waa Mot there by Fre'sl-Aeend care pupils, M proper quoted by Manger A Avery of Brigham Tovng with Ight laami be sufficient to exelude. Journal ct for a series of years. for Uat pnrpoae. Education. , 197350,852.026 1898. 132.793 202 . . pro-Brltl- I8th--8pri- nt JfillLfiJltltJllIdLAIMLfiUgJA a robe superior to that of eltk; Ther buffalo, were so large that (he Indians hatf to cut many of them in half for eon nience In hauling on the sleds. Froa 810- to 850 Is paid for the robes. making ermuskoxorL plains Smoothing tho Wo The Duke of Cambridge a brnvd d soldier and a gentlemoxL but he Is not s scholar. He has bc recently in Rome, and one of his ys perlences there U toll in the London Chronicle as specially characteristic ot all persons concerned. On thq occasion t)t a visit to th Vatican, the duk hearing from a friend that it was proper to ta k Latin there, rather n?i brushed up s few phased flflB The Vatican, on it part Sassworda. thfl duke gpoke hothiiii but English, was equally ppactilloua All guards who could speak English were ordered to th front Tb chamberlain of English (rationality A speech were require! to attend, aai the pope himself practiced th Englkli sentence! he had learned from an English resident In Brflsael- a- fifty yean ago. The gallant duke, when he arrived at th outer portal of th Veil-rawas addressed by a guard, WhO said, "This way, your - Royal High- ness. The duke Started with relief he was rid, for a moment. Of hta Latin. The same experience met him fl H at each turn, and in the was repeated; Reaching at last th door of the popes private apartment the duke was met by a monslgnor, whose mother was English and whos own accent is native, who offered th take His Royal Highness hai Presently Ihe pope; evidently prldlnj tin!-- ' Self on the vernacular, asked his vii-ito- r tq seat down. "Well, Ill be hanged! blurted out the astoundad duke Youths" Companion'' 1 kind-heirte- -- ante-room- A Box Invsaton How Important to the world tea? fn the turning of boys thoughts lhtd tbe right channel Is Indicated by tbfl tart that the telephone was originated by fTof. A. G. Bell when b wot a boy.. His' father, the venerable Prot A. M. . B1L gives n account Ot the matte 111 a letter published In Mf. Georg lies' new work, Flame, Electricity end th Camera In th boyhood of my three sons I took them to see th kpeaklng-machmf- e constructed by H0r Faber, and we wer all greatly Interested In It professionally. To test their theoretlcal knowledge and thel mechanical Ingenuity, i offered a prise o the on who should produce the best results in Imitation of apeeefi by mechanical mean All, of course, bet te work, but nothing of Itartltng novelty Was devised. Tbe schema of flay see-on-d ion, A. G. Bell, was, however, the pest This contest as well ss th Whole course of the boys educhtloh directed their minds to the subject,' until tbe sole survivor of the lads came to the conclusion that imitative mo ehanlsm might be dispensed With, and merely the vibrations ot speech be transmitted to an electric wire. This ss entirely kls own Idea. He llftjs-tpfltIt to m by diagrams, had sketched out the Whole plan o! reo-tr-al --office cotamunlcstlon long before anything had been don for the practical realisation of th Idea. 7 1 can claim nothing In th telephone but tb Impale which led to th invent!. ed WaMhaeoa toast aa AkesO.' Newark IN. ) ofltcikls feeve 4ld- 4 tbfct ib latomobfie la tubjct Io th same law k traction engine, and bould b preceded by A watch man by at least an eighth of a mil ; j -- |