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Show was onginany a snx merchant in but waa led by his taste for literature to explore the locality around Avon and everything associated with the great bard. On these expeditions he was accompanied by his son, a youth of 16, who, observing the great importance attached by hie father to every work of the poet, thought It would not be difficult to gratify his father by soma productions of his own In the language and manner of Shakespeares time. In 1793, being then In his eighteenth year, hs brought forth a manuscript In the alleged handwriting of Shakespeare, which ha said had been given him by a gentleman possessed of many old papers. Finally he ventured upon compositions in press and versa end announced ths discovery of an original drama under the name of Vortigern, which he exhibited act by act, written In the period of two months. The paper with which he provided himself consisted of fly leaves from old books, his ink was prepared by a bookbinder, and thus all suspicion waa averted. The attention of the literary wovld was at ones aroused and the house of Mr. Ireland was daily thronged by persona of the highest rank in the social and literary world. Sheridan agreed to give G0U for permission to play "Vortigern" at Drury Lane theatre, and on the night of its presentation the crowd waa so great that hundreds were turned away, but owing tu some ill cast characters, which converted grave scenes Into ridicule, the piece was soon withdrawn. At last the juvenile author found it necessary to absent himself from his fathers house, and as the skepticism increased waa finally forced to publish a pamphlet in which he confessed the entire fabrication. It waa so perfect, however, that while the fields. England, terfeiterwof Lit. erary Treasures, v. t i A Rare Opportunity! to THE WISEST SCHOLARS FOOLED. C Slmoalda Grade Xanaacrlpta IhikaipaiMn h - HAVING ENLARGED OUR SHOE ud His Bon Ira lands XotaG Taifti; Train -- Chattartoa. popular desire to poeaeee that which la rare and antique haa proved an incentive to some of the moat adroit forgers ths world haa known, and, strange aa it may appear, their skill has deceived man y of the moat gifted men. Whether It be coins, medals, pictures, pottery or postage tamps, you have only to visit certain cities In Europe to obtain a supply that would gladden the heart of an antiquarian. In- - DEPARTMENT, We intend to remodel the same and renaw our entire stock. In order to make a quick sweep we offer $10.00 worth of Ladies, Misses and Childrens desirable Shoes every pair warranted, at a discount of 25 per cent, from our regular prices. In order to convince our patrons that our Discount .Sill 6 is genuine, every pair of Shoes sold will show on the sales tickets our regular price. For instance: 1 PAIR MIIOI2M DINCOUMT 93 - PEB CT MS KET fa.7 It will pay you to buy Shoes at this sale- - We are offering a lot of Carpet Reman ta, ranging from 1 yd. to 20, In Ingrainn. Tapestry and Body Brussels, at prices to close every remnant on hand. 01 CLOAK DEPARTMENT is receiving additional novelties in Ladies and Childrens Dresses, Wrappers, Surah and Cloaks, Ladies ready-ma-de Skirts, of latest designs at popular prices tsr Our Silk Sale having proved such a success we continue same for another week. Curtains and Portieres, from cheapest to finest, at prices to please you- - Boys and Childrens Clothing, Overcoats, Waists, Hats and Caps, and Gents Underwear, at closest prices in the city. XXTHUSIASTS TILL OX THEIR ENIU. deed, the production of these forged curiae haa become an industry In which are em ployed many hundreds of persons, and so daftly dons is their work that the manufactured article la often honored with the choicest recess in ths cabinet, or finds place among the most valued treasures of the picture gallery. The subject is suggested by the recent death of Constantine Simonides, one of the most noted forgers of Greek manuscripts known in modern times, and he recalls, by the way, the names of a number of others who in their day and generation have illustrated Use gullibility of human nature. If his story be true, Simonides was born in 1888, somewhere in Greece, and la 1887 was employed as a printer in Athens. His uncle was ths superior of a convent near by and a great lover of Greek manuscripts. Having access to these, the young fellows literary taste was stimulated and the idea formed that the fabrication of manuscripts would pay better tliau setting type. After the death of his uncle he traveled extensively, and being a man of agreeable manners and endowed with rare persuasive powers he was everywhere welcomed by the enthusiasts. He even penetrated to the deserts of Asia, where he made many uulooked for discoveries that facilitated his plans for the future. For instance, onoe falling into the hands of a brigand, he found ths latter an archeologist, who in a cavern many choice antiqulLaa, and on parting with Simonides presented him with valuable vases as a farewell gift. Among the early works of Simonides was ths pretended will of Symla written by a monk of the Thirteenth oentury, and he did not hesitate to attribute to the devotees of this school the greater part of our modern inventions paper, printing, the telescope and even the steamboat. At another time be prepared a paper supposably of ths Fifteenth oentury in which he introduced ths discovery of (bo daguerreotype, and among his prod notions were fragipept of the classical authors, Hesiod, HomF and Anacreon. So well did he hoodwink the authorities that he was even appointed a committee to examine antiquities. About tbs year 1850 he announced an ancient Greek work on hieroglyphics and a history of Armenia, for which he demanded the earn of one million dollars. While in Constantinople he one day told runes! Pasha, the minister of pnblio works, that ha must excavate a certain spot In bis garden, when he would he Ut to find a valuable manuscript on parch xnent that had been buried, faimonidei itmA put it there. Snbeequently, bis tricks wet discovered and he was obliged to leave Constantinople, but he found a warm welcome in England, where his reputation not preceded him, and reaped a finan rfd harvest. The celebrated amateur antiquarian, Sir Thornes Phillips, is said to have given him 83,500 for a portion of his manuscripts, and ths British museum bought seven, refusing others only because of missing links is tttttr descent from antiquity. From London Simonides went to Paris, did a rushing business among the savants, and then journeyed on to Lei pale, where ha wss destined to meet his Waterloo. Her be produced soma leaves from the text of a writer of the Second oentury, following it with a history of ths kings of Egypt, said to have been written by an Alexandrian. This was purchased by pro-serve- M We are offering a splendid line of Plush, Silk and Knit Hoods, in latest shapes, at prices, ranging from 75o to $3.50. d CHATTXRTOX IN DU GABBET. excitement lasted it is said some of the enthusiasts foil on their knees before the manuscript. The elder Ireland died in 1802. His son long survived him, but his literary reputation waa blighted forever, and be died In straitened circumstances in 1810. While the most mediocre of writers, he passed off a number of his verses under the name of the greatest of poets. Chatterton waa another conspicuous example of this sort of misdirected ability, and hs is the only literary impostor whose works have a real value Independent of the name under which they appear. When he brought out the ao called poems of Rowley, which still have a place in literature, he was but 16 years of age, and some of his poems written when he was only 11 are characterised by much grace and melody. But ha was greedy of renown, and it a passion with him to deceive the be-pa- public. The old stories of (he pretend monk Rowley furnished him the means, and his Ingenious ballads, poems, histories of ancient churches and genealogies are still read with carious regard. Tha names ef other forgers of antique texts, pictures and relics might he enumerated, but the Instances already quoted will serve to show the methods pursued and the ease with which not only the pnblio may be deceived bnt how scientific experts themselves stand dumb and confounded in tfe pnspqoe of such amazing skilL tf. pg FOJJWM. HU Wife Fought for Him. Noble Rush keeps a small oyster house at Washington, and is the husband of woman who believes in being a helpmeet with all the force of her vigorous character. The other day Noble got into tronble and the police court. charged with keeping an unlicensed bar. His attorney foiled to appear at the trial, and Mrs.' Slush (hereupon filled (ha legal breach with her portly presence. She allowed that eh gnaw a thing or two about law herself, and she defended bar accused husband with ths fierce vigor of an indignant woman. She accused the witnesses for the prosecution of prejurdy" and made an impassioned appeal to the judge, who was ao affected that he let Mr. Noble Rush off with H fine of 8105 and costs. The defendant gntod an appeal, nod Is credited witty the thankless remark that if hed bad two Wives "bossin the job" hed "got it in de Dink inr life, sure. Ths murder of Joseph Gibson, a pfomi pent citizen of Hlawassee, Go., who waa found with his throat cut from ear to ear twelve hours after he left his home, has terribly excited that neighborhood. man named Amons is suspected by some of having committed the crime. Among went to Hiawoseee from North Carolln He is a theological student, but is also a wife beater. Gibson bad reproved him for b ting his wife, and, it is thought, had in that way aroused his enmity. A Question of Building; A comparison of tho building opera-ion- s Ladies Saxony Wool House Jackets, with or without of the larger cities of the Union in the past year opens up an interesting sleeves, from $1.00 to $ 2.75 each. question. It seems that Philadelphia waa the city that built the most houses in 1889, the number being 11,865, while OverA splendid line of Black Chantilly and Guipure Hew York constructed only 6,722. Bnt he oost of the New York houses t dress Laces, Tinsel and Embroidered evening materials, fec. 175,912,816, while the more than 11,000 in newest shades, at less than New York Prices. n Philadelphia cost only $26,000,000; The question that haa arisen is. Which built better, New York or Philadelphia? The structures in the Quaker City were mostly unpretentious dwdlling bouses, lomee of working people, while those of few York inclnded splendid business edifices and magnificent palaces for the CBATTXBTOXS HOUSE, residences of the rich. private Individual for 8,000 thalers, and Philadelphia is noted as being the city afterward sold to the Prussian govern- of homes. It has not so many tenement ment for 5,000 thalers, but Investigation tshowed strange idioms and modes of looses as other large cities, but is sea iered as over wide distances covered of and to familiar tbs philologists speech modern growth, and rhcmlaal tests proved with ootteges, not pretty architectural counterfeit. Ha a wss that ths writing more comfortable and was accordingly arrested as a forger, y, blrt much We Undersold. ileaaant the ttyag ordinary tenement and his apparatus, chemical inks and assays In old writing wore found in his house. Philadelphia's working people dwelling. From soma mum ba wss not axe happier and more independent than prosecuted, bnt this particular branch of those of most other cities, no doubt, but bis work was brought to aa and. At tbs rival pieees claim that these flocks of age of 85 he had made dupes of the most little houses hurt the appearance of the distinguished scholars la the world. He died in ths little town of Albania, Ores os. city architecturally. About 1888 a man named Vraln-Luca- s It Is an interesting topic. Certainly presented himself before a member of the very great and flourishing town wants French Institute and proposed to sell a oth the splendid edifices and the happy large number of autographs to which was mall homes for working people. It waa attached a romance. They had been In ths hands of a celebrated person for mors tha policy of the ancient Greeks, the than a century, but In 1781 ha was obliged most, artistio race that ever lived, to to emigrate. On the voyage he was shipand pnblio wrecked, and ths manuscripts were thrown and magnificent temples stint without heaping money buildings, lathe water, which accounted for their condition when reoovered. The gentleman upon than, bnt to have private resiapplied to purchased 87,008 pieces pf (he dences marked by a simplicity that stuff, paying therefor 140,000 franca. W9UJ4 look becoming in the Among these forgeries were letters and certainly dtizens pf g repgbllo, But the bean-ifpoems of Abelard, Alexander tbs Great, Greeks lived outdoors paost pf the letter from Cleopatra to Joan of Are, Caesar, one from Jodaa Iscariot to Mary time, while either from habit or necessiMagdalene and a letter to Jeans. There ty the modern American spends much were also in the batch twenty-fiv- e letters toSt. Paul from LmPH, .who had been of his existence within walla. It is noticeable that the tendency of raised from the dead. The fraud was finally discovered by test- most of the older eastern cities, with the ing some of the known letters of Galileo exception of Philadelphia, is toward the with tbs pretended ones, and the swindler as condemned to Imprisonment and to erection of 'fewer buildings annnally, aMo tried his imis mt, those more oostly, although here, pay a fine. tative genius on Shelley, Keats and Lord oo, there is an exception in the case of Byron, and Inveigled such keen publishers as Moxon and Murray, bnt after 1858 Ms Moves, which is the sixth city of tbs Inion In the cost of its single buildings, vocation was gone. One of the remarkable modern deceptions of , the larged Mni&j, in twenty-seve-n of this character is known as "Irelands jritian 9 average coat of coanby.tha Samuel Ireland ghwkcepcrosn Forsecr. erected ia 188$ was $5JX)9.- OZCsTEj PRICE TO AXjL -- are never Established 1864. Come one, come all! Mail Orders promptly Filledl F. b Mrtah i Bro., ol Vraln-Luca- Salt Lake City, Utah.. - A BEAUTIFUL If He UTTLE UNFORTUNATE. Wewe Young Again. -- Professor L. P. Roberts is director ol ' The Strong Stoiy of Eva Vliglon'a Short the college of agriculture in Cornell Ufa. Florence Evangeline Virgien, or Eva university. He is a gentleman of wide Koch, or Evaline Gregory, as aha has been knotidedge, full of enthusiasm, and variously called, is a teuijirkably beautiful self made man," as it is called. Progirl who haa succeeded' in accumulating fessor Roberts has been asked what he more mystery about herself in her short life of eleven or twelve years then most would 'do if he were young again. Here people do in a long lifetime; The courts are some of the things he mentions, in The Rural New Yorker, that he would do if he ware young again. They are well worth the attention of those who CPKCTSTOib- PHIJIT and -0- 1L HOUSE. are young still: IwouVl visit the school committee to sei they would not hire a teacher who would conduct me through tho arithmetic euocee, fully la two years last end of Berea; one who had lost tho art at spending fifteen yean in imperfectly teaching how to form twenty eix simple characters, if 1 were a youth just entering my teens I would want a teacher who had both inspiration and a piratioo; one; In fact, who knew more than I did, no that I might be taught what to eat and how to eat; bow to work and whan to play; how to grow strong and beautiful; how to become good and true; and how and to whom to give thanks Then I should want explained to me in tho moat simple language the uses beauty and pleasures of knowledge, so that while giving thanks for the blessings enjoyed, a holy seal, a consuming desire fur knowledge would poewiwe me. I should want a teacher who eould point out tho road, who knew of tho schools of higher training, their specialties their character and quality. I would divide my time first into two ports one for rest sad sleep and one for activity, and these taro parts should not exchange beds or bunk together. Tha bonis of activity would be devoted to work, to getting strong and beautiful, to acquiring knowledge sad to meditation. Aa the hardest thing n young person has to do is to keep till" and the eeriest is to put forth muscular effort, I should be careful not to work too long or bard, in ardor that vitality might ha left for the harder effort of thinking. I would try to get such training and understanding that I could work for myself profllubly; that is I would avoid being so poorly equipped that I would be compelled to employ some one else to difoct my labor, he getting tha lion's share, I getting what was left. I would gut at least two strings to my bow, so that if the world had no long felt want which my theoretical knowledge could fill, I eould make a washboard, a shoe or an apple barreL I would inspect carefully many of tho open doors which are labeled Education; having found the one beet suited to my desires 1 would enter and not come forth till I eould do several things well enough to attract attention, and I would kick" if anybody thrust ms into ths wrong door. . xva virgien. Cincinnati have had two trials of her in the first they decided that she was Eva Koch, but they have now just decided that she is Eva Virgien. Her first notable appearance was after she had run away from home in Cincinnati. She was given a borne by Mrs. Cath arine Lilli, to whom she told a most pitiful story of abuse by a mnn and woman who had adopted her. In a few days Mr. S. L. J. Koch, of Bond Hill, a suburb of dnein natl, made legal application for the child, declaring that her father or stepfather, Virgien, was a convict In Missouri, and that he had obtained the child by contract with her mother, who was in destitute circumstances. To Mrs. Lilli he admitted that his wife was too severe with the child," but os he produced articles of adoption and a surrender by her mother the court gave her to him. She had previously ran away, taking refuge with a Mrs. Pfeiffer at Evandale and exhibiting bruises which she said Mrs. Koch had made with a heavy horsewhip. From Mrs. Pfeiffers she wrote a most af fectiug letter to Mr. Alex F. Virgien, broker at Na 15 William street. New York, but residing In Brooklyn, whom she called uncle." His wife went to Cincinnati, and so the cnee came again liefore tbs courts. This time Druggist Koch alleged that the girl was 12 years old instead of 10, as she had claimed; that the convict Virgien waa not her father, hut his wifes first was, and that ho, Koch, believed the name to lie Gregory or McGregory. Mrs. Virgien, of New York, then told her story to the effect that the criminal Virgien was a brother of her husband and the "black sheep" of the family; that her husband hail spent many thousands of dollars to keep his brother out of the penitentiary, but had finally given him up. Five years ago this child and her mother had lived with them eoroe time in Brooklyn and they wanted them to remain, bnt the mother felt it her duty to go west to her husband. She hail never hoard the Gregory story and believed Eva to be her h ur hands niece. Outside the court the story was circulated and largely believed that a fortune had been left to Eva in England (this baa a familiarly romantic sound), and that the Kochs were being paid to keep her In retirement. The court room was packed when tha case came up, and when the child told of her treatment by the Kochs many of the women shed tears. Tbs childs mother finally came to the front, and declared that she wanted the Virgiens, of New York, to har the child. Judge Bates issued an order to that effect, and the beautiful, youthful unfortunate now has a good home in Brooklyn. Incidentfather is ally it mAy be lidded pgalq In jail in St, Louis awaiting trial for a recent crime. bus-ban- d Circumventing the Middleman. After many yean of experimenting, one portion of tho rural community at least have learned how to dictate their own terms to buyers. These are the fruit growers of New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. They have formet the Fruit Growers' association, with headquarters in each suitable central locality. The growers in western New York and Pennsylvania have now a board of trade, with branches in the fruit districts. They watch the markets and send the fruit to points where the flamum is most brisk and prices best. They are in constant communication by telegraph, and from time to time fix the price at which they win suffer the fruit to go. AU stand together and the buyer most pay tho price or go without the com- GROCERIES, 2! as ware, Window (JInss, ole A GREENHAL.GH, Prop. Lamps, Centre Street between FR.OVO CITY .md (i. H. UTAH. THE West End Store Carries a full Line of Choice GROCERIES, DRY GOODS Hardware Queeiiswarc, BOOTS AND SHOES, IIATS, CAPS, NOTIONS, Come and Examine OUR LARGE STOCK OP GOODS. Courteous Treatment and Low Prices. JOS. A. Center Street, - HARRIS, Proprietor. . Provo Utah City, Kei)ri) Wageqer. Oalifomia Browsry 1 EMIGRATION CANYON. F3 -i 31j-A.O-IE3- h--l t- IK Bottled Beer a Specialty, 1 vancas -- WHOLES A LB ajro Ajaerox, it- jsjstu. - Salt Lake AND HBTAIL. is. iABT Second CSotrxu. St, CUy, Utah, modity. At the same time proper precaution is taken against putting inferior fruit upon the market, or giving dishonest weight and measure. The grower's name is stamped plainly upon tho basket One fruit growers' onion, the New Jersey Fruit Exchange, has succeeded in bringing down railroad freight charges and also the price of fruit baskets. The Hammonton Fruit Growers' Union works more than any of the others on the plan. It collects the money due the grower and applies the law when a consignment of fruit is not satisfactorily accounted for. All farmers and vegetable gardeners, as well as the fruit growers, could have Death Calls a Halt. such unions and stand by each other like Deadly consumption has accomplished the sticks in that bid bundle of the what detectives and prison walls could not fable. do in benumbing the hand of Fete" king of counterfeiters, who died The new historical society composed (be other (Jay in the Ohi penitentiary. In the days when pnunterfeltlpg waa more of women is called the Daughters of common and profitable than at present the American Revolution." Mrs. HarMcCartney earned the title of king among rison. has accepted its presidency. The (hope engaged in manufacturing spurious ills rigl-- t to it Pan hardly be dis- society will build a monument to Mary money. puted, for one of his government bonds Washington, mother of George. Mr. was cashed in Washington, aud the holder Sherman, of New York, introduced into of the genuine bond of the same number was arrested for counterfeiting. Some of congress some time since a bill making his government bunk notes were also un it the duty of government to mark in a distinguishable except by treasury experts. suitable manner the historic aitefl of the The authoritative stamp McCartney was no ordinary man. Al- Revolution, though a vulgar criminal la bis teens and thus being placed upon them, the Daugha noted safe blower he was a good engraver ters of the Revolution will undertake and made the art a study. He was also exof erecting monuments upon the task tools in and bank pert making engraving Koto paper, and added to his deftness of the sites. The permanent annual anni Vers&ry of the society will be OoL 11, the day on which Columbus discovered America. Best Gough Medici no, Iieoonimondcd Cures where all else fails. lleasant and by Physicians. to the Children take it without objection. agreeable By druggists. c:o: n is.uj m r,t. i ,o.n BKATTrt TOUR Of TNI WOUB. Daaial F. Baatty, of Baatlji Calfbrfttcd Oifim ud PitBoa, Wuhingto New Jtrtty, has rctumd horns from kb lour of ih world. Read his sdvs tiss went in this psper snd send for catalogs b-My- w t Dmr Strt W Sums s. Nlsrsef mi ariatf lit wnrl vWUf y, a Ewb In. Iml). SB tiir lit, rl rs ( key pt . ftQ. MCABTNET. g Brown, of Georgia. With Dm retirement of Senator Joseph Emerson Brown, of Georgia, at the cloee if his present term, in March, 1891, drops on of pnblio life another of ths r strong characters of tho civil war. Brown Is not so Tory aged, haring wen horn in 1821. Hs is not so old tar considerable as either Gladstone or River Wendell Holmes, and Senators kwes, Evarts, Morrill and others are several years older than "Joe" Brown. Bnt Senator Brown has had a way of ooldng about 80 or 90 years old nearly rypjr since he became United States mutoff aa$ pay bp feels as old as he Sen-ato- f- - 1 Man with war memories will recall how fiery a secessionist ho was, hovf "Governor Brown's militia" werq almost the only troops that opposed Sherman on lie inarch to tho sea. Those with non modern memories will remember always how energetically Governor Brown worked for the extension of Georgia railroads and for the material development "the state. Many good withes will go with him into his retirement Local from The Montana Stock Growers Journal: Spice, oar ferocious ball-dotackled the big bear Wednesday Afternoon. Bruin got frightened and lit out for the woods, dragging the Dago For some reason the exports of meat and dairy products for the two months ending with September have fallen off materially as oompared with the same period in 1889. A Dakota paper says this: Pat $1,000, 000 into artesian wells and in a few years South Dakota could build a Sues canal pod give ft o the government. Yri li fill f nrrn!)oni t N. VtloRriiBiamj mi Uf hcAitaf m BX4UVOI I MViUr. asd Brally'a. this F wm bnllnvs MATTY. tatoa la rtatami IfiMlAUd. IfiM. Vow to stoolsMj trsfi, biv$ W Lurndm, tfco "iI'T'.Ti II ll.ia SI atntsumsiSir Natter mi this i Of our match nas mayream or ilnica to yni tk I prmwwld llks h.r rmifiHlbtnciln. l,Arll'ilftiiVii SattatectftoB UUaMANrUll or anosoy fit ray tlmo wlthla Uimo (si ycanTpromptly toiM rUb Wmi as per cost, os ottBar Pteao or Oran, mi, WmoinB tea ynors. U70 wo iHrt homo a pomhUokc fdowBojc W Sav. on. buiidmi Uiourand of nrarlyPlniioa In nil onr M. world. If UMJ vsr. not r,iuL could not fc... as man?. louU Nn. Each nnd lq,truniaiit I. fully ar.rj ta lia muulMiiml from ba.S rintcfinl sinrlBst affords or riiady BWU7ths ana bv (h rruM ORGANSfiSs Hs- - The dav or Hnltd.y Pr. ntmlu DriU--I F. The Queen Qveen't All lixpenwen lajn last Free t Trip Europe having excited such universal interest, the publislieni of that populai magazine offer another and grew fut expenses to the person sending them the largest list of English words from letters contained in the three words ICrllIH North Amee tea. Additional prizes rnnsisllng of Silver Tea Sets, China Dinner Sets, Gold Watches, French Music Boxes, Portiere Curtains, Silk Dresses, Mantel Clocks, and many other useful and valuable articles will also tie awarded In order of merit. A special prize ol a Seal Skin Jacket to the lady, and a handsome (Shetland 1ony to girl or boy (delivered free in Canada or United Slates jsending the hi r nest lists. Everyone sending a list or not less than twenty woids will receive a present. Send six U. 8. two cent stamps for complete rules, illustrated catalogue of prizes, and sample number of lncQttcfn. Address Tiik Canadian QVkn, Toronto, Canada. October 29, JtiW. 8WHK, eon-tructe- -l The 17orIl The facilities of the present dry for iproduction of everyth; a Plot will cm dace to the material welfare m torn of mankind are almost unlimited n;x. when Syrup of Figs was first prodcccu the world was enriched with the only perfect laxative known, os it is the only remedy which is truly pleasing su-- refreshing to the taste end prompt nnd effectual to cleanse the system gently ir. the Spring time or, in fact, at any time and the better it is known the mote popular it becomes. -. j L-.- " i France will not withdraw the prohir rftion against American pork at present An Italian applicant for naturalixa-io- n papers in New York pould not speak English very welL That he understood (he main objects pf citizenship, however, was proved by his replies to questions. He wm asked what voters went to the polls for. To pend A man to Albany, he answered. "Well, what does the man go to Albany forT was the next question. And the intelligent Italian Immediately answered, "To make money," ssrui'rs.'f Vanftrrn A&rfo fimarumiii vsutw innfi g, with him. J J Few parts of this big country have made the gain that Minnesota has since the lari census. The whole state has increased in population 519,000, a gain of 65 per cent. There seems to be an attraction about Minnesota. He touch the utmost courage and daring, once jumped froifi a train going thirty pillea an hoar to escape from captivity, At another time, while n a pell in St. Louis, be manufactured a key out of a common tin cap and a spoon, released several fellow criminals, and lad them in an escape through a tunnpl. In the finer art of engraving and printing he was by all odds the master in his time. Before the war ho and his gang circulated large quantities of state bank bills, and ths chief feature about them was their superiority in design and finish. A man whose work and methods were so well known necessarily had to cover hia tracks with the greatest Ingenuity. At one time be wss a sutler in the Union army, again a soldier in the ranks, end at another time he Issued large quantities of spurious government currency of fractional denominations team an fexas town. McCartney was lost arrested for oonnter-itftiois 1888, and waa serving a ten yean entegoa wbpq he died. v L) : U Since 1865 there has not been a year when so many new national banks were established as in tho one ending with September, 1890. The number is 296, with a capital of $34,595,000. The main increase has been in the southwest and northwest, notably in Texas, which beads th? list yrith pixtyrthree. PETE utA Provo Meat Market, Walter cox, DDE -- Lob. CHl.iLL. VV 0RK Proprietor. jiY Wholesale and Retail ia LNlbuSCiUARE.NY. T lanta. 34 ST.LOUIS.MO. ITMTWYTnVTa DALLAS.TEX. The socialists are- - roaring gently. Their congresses in Europe are characterized by mildness and common sense; lie leaden recommend lively agitation Body aad Kind, Effaata OlSer Taaag, adeed, bnt they recommend that it be llilof Xiraraac FimmmIs uf Siin.ralMf. tarried pa through printer's ink, realis-n- g sm3w.wi!s, that in the hands of ipen entirely tastzsifcuaLfKiS'sagrrj.va peat, like themselves, the pen is might; than the sword. At the same timy ley wish not to be confounded with the HAY FOR anarchists in public opinion. They wish mankind to know they are quite distinct by the Bale, Load or Carload, and another )dnd of a reforming party. call on or addraa, Liter all, the recently ottered views of FREEMAN TANNER, le socialists as to the duty of the state Utah. Fayson- so not so very different from fhney of William of FOR XU QDLY3 LUCERN BEEF, MUTTON, PORK, VEAL, SAUSAGE, ETC., A SPECALTY Meat Promptly Delivered. Centre Street, next door West End Store. I'ar Freak Sp?4 your orders Erick tbe pioneer Utah Lake fislipr the mouth of Spanish Fork Mr. Nelson is again ip thp fie npsa and will furnish you the be had. Ills address is Laki P. O. Utah Utah, eai--t of |