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Show RU tion of daily editions. By this course figure, there is only camas roots left does not as an article of diet for the it will merit respect where it poor man who thinks he is. prosperous. it. command jiow . o --o ... - has been of the people IT is now admitted in high THE voice ; : of the pawnbroker that he ought to firm and had come to collect a bill of fail. His liabilities are scheduled at $630. He did not get the money and $24875 and his assets are placed at half an hour later the law firm of ' Shepard & Shepard instructed the $22,740. sheriff to attach a portion of the political In the failure of the Sheriff Cummock perBig goods. circles that the Socialists are going to Boston Store" there is a complication formed Deputy the and also laid obsequies,' cast a moderately heavy vote; The of conditions and a variety' of opin- his heavy hand upon the cash drawer. Socialists differ from the Populists in. ions. In justice to the 'substantial He got $125 in money that had been the important particular tha.t set aside for paying the young women they business firms of Salt Lake it be clerks. ' Although the salesgirls had may will fuse with no other party. said that the Big Boston was" con- been trained to yell cash ' in ear0 ducted piercing on cried cash in tones, a they system peculiarly its own. vain BUSINESS FAILURES. when they wanted their salaries. G. S. Hoagland, the sole proprietor, Most of gathered up wearing apSalt Lake has been startled by did not come from Boston, but was parel forthem their pay, and left the store three business failures in one day. originally a cowboy on the plains of as though they had been attending a First came Korupkat & Co., then Wyoming. He is gifted with an im- Christmas tree celebration. Later in Pawnbroker Petrovitzky and lastly, mense amount of energy and perse- the evening the Utah National bank levied an attachment for and the Big Boston Store. Each of the verance, and the Utah National bank before Monday morning the$8,000 claims of three failures was surrounded by pe- might be influenced to confess that he other local creditors were filed to also has On culiar business methods. $2,647.06. amounting hypnotic powers. The Big petition Edward of the local creditors, judge Marshall Korupkat, the grocer, was doing busi- Boston flashed upon the commercial Gould B. Blakely as reness in his wifes name. He had a horizon as early as last April. One of appointed ceiver. Mr. Iloaglaiid says his liabilities capital stock amounting to $4,000 and the distinguishing features in the conwill amount to $28,000, and his asbook accounts reaching the sum of duct of the store was the glaring ansets to $60,000. . It is said in other $6,000. His liabilities are estimated at nouncement on its letter heads that that the liabilities may. run quarters $14,000. The Bank of Commerce, any wholesaler who was a subscriber up to $75,000. It seems ' unfortunate which had loaned Korupkat a small to a certain commercial agency need that the uniform godo standing of Salt sum of money, caused his arrest, not ship goods to the Big Boston. Lake merchants should be injured which intensified public interest in the The store has attracted some ques- abroad by the failure of the Big Bostionable attention by its freakish ton. To send by telegraph throughfailure. E. J. Wilkinson was appoint- methods of advertising. Having been out the United States the information ed receiver. a cowboy himself the proprietor de- of a mercantile failure always has a That Peter Petrovitzgy, the' genial voted a portion of his energy to hir- depressing effect on credits, and some cowboy bands to parade the worthy merchants doing sound busiSecond South street pawnbroker, ing streets. If the quality of the goods ness may be put to great in convcni- -' should throw up the sponge was itself sold at the Big Boston was any- ence on this account. a rather unique proceeding. Up to the thing like the music furnished by the first of the present year the pawnbro- band, there was every cause for riot Angus it. Nicholson, generally ker had paid all his bills promptly. and revolution. Last Saturday night a known as Trilby, came down from man. with the euphonious name of Nobody can tell, except his confessor, Smith, entered the Big Boston and Boise Wednesday and will allow the when the idea first entered the mind said- he represented a Kansas City Boise Capital News, of which he is city editor, to take care of itself until after election. Trilby declares his mfMTnmfTmiT!mnnTTmTTmwnnwnm?wnMmnTfWTmmTmnmnwwwim?m main object in coming home at this PHONB BOB time was to vote against a number of candidates on both tickets. ? - to force down strong and loud enough ' to- - 56,989 -- .men. the standing army This is not a military nation, and the d satraps who flourish under martial conditions will have to beat their swords into pruning hooks. So widespread has the hatred of miliin the United tary power become differStates that the soldiers at the ent army posts complain that the and treat them people insult them with derision. The man on horseback has always been a menace to ree government, and General George himWashington, although a soldier self by instinct and breeding, gave out repeated warnings to the new repub-- : lie to beware of military encroach ment. The spirit of Washington still ' inspires a hatred of the oppressive more is power of arms and nothing needed to convince the unbeliever that ; gold-lace- ; ' God reigns. o i STATISTICS are being gathered throughout the east that are quite alarming to Republican success so far as the next congress is concerned. It is said that the labor disturbances, extremely high coupled with the trust-made products, have prices of . had a most serious effect upon Re- -. publican anticipations. It is being predicted that the next congress will have a Democratic majority. : . 1 so-call- ed . . . . - . ACCORDING to a circular of statistics issued by the Republican campaign committee, working men throughout the United States have received an advance in wages during the ten years between 1890 and 1900. In 1890 the average annual income of all those I who work for wages was $444-09Noth1900 it had advanced to $44S-42ading is said, however, about the vance of 100 per cent in the price of provisions. -- Coal Lumber - - o THE city editor of the Butte shot and killed a noted physician for being in the room of a milliner to whom the newspaper man had been paying his addresses. Now if the city editor is wise he will hire d some girl to say that she saw the physician shoot himself. She must declare that she was after a drink of blackberry brandy or the story will have no precedent in law. Inter-mounta- in 60 W. Second South. 363 W. Fifth South. 3 Ya.ni eimimaiiiiiiiiUiiUimiAiAiiimiiimiiiAiAiiiiu iiiiimiiiumiiiiiAiAAUiiiAiiaouiiiAaua .... THOMASOMERiJ-esse-e Manager munity. o - A SHARP advance in the price of flour is one of the events of the: week. As flour was one of the common necessities that remained at a moderate The announcement is again madp that Colonel W. H. Dewey is to open his hotel at Nampa, Idaho. This time the opening is to take place at Christmas time, and there is to be much wine and frivolity to celebrate the event. Considering the fact that the opening has been advertized to take place at least a dozen times, those of us who hail from Missouri will be excused from placing too much confi. fifteen-year-ol- THE convention of the Utah Federation of Women's clubs at Ogden this week was an event of unusual interest to the cultured and public spirited ladies of the state. It was largely attended and the addresses were vmore than ordinarily able and interesting. The Womens clubs are doing a great work in the improvement of social and economic conditions, and the talented and brilliant women who compose the membership are entitled to the gratitude and support of the com- The movement started some months ago by Truth in favor of opening the public library on Sunday seems to be bearing fruit. The other papers now begin to see it is a good thing. After Truth advocates a measure the grannies aH fall into line, but none, of them originate an idea for the good of the city. iff OftalnDtMntliaJional TKLKPHONC 14 Bank SjutLakbCitkVenl capital itisodm dence in the much-herald- announce- ed ment. In some ..respects Colonel Dewey is a great man. He borrowed $400 from a California friend .named u controlled and arranged for tu Is aIsper-re- OConnor, and this was the basis of his fortune. He took a bond on an fect servant. Does everything It of use The Does well. do. it to quired abandoned mine and broke through well made into rich ore with the first stroke of his pick. - Since then he has prospered, and the Nampa hotel is quite a buildGoods ing. It stands in the center of a sage elecbrush of the latest designs by experienced plain, and is big enough to shelter our work that quality tricians gives to comfortably every man, woman, child and dog living, in the village which all men of Judgment approve. Wiring for Bells, Telephones, Annuncia- near which it is built. Some philosotors, Burglar Alarms and Electric Light. phers are constrained to. call it Deweys Folly, but the colonel himself it is nobodys business how many Etc. says Telephone?, ChoMiers, hotels he builds. As the colonel is considerably over eighty years of age he will have to hurry, for he cannot horse and 45 E. First South successfully defy the pale ' its rider inueft longer.- - Tbe Electrical Plaid . . Electrical - . A |