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Show TRUTH. the only Republicans right to aspire. They have a clear track to this opinion so ered. In fact, who have the OBITUARY. But as to the individuals. For Justice of the Supreme court, Breeden will undoubtedly receive the same consideration at the hands of the Weber delegation as any other foreign candidate, that is, none at all, if his aspirations interfere with the selection of a Weber county man on the ticket. There is no question that Breeden would lend dignity and honor to the position should the state be so fortunate as to again secure his services. He won high place as a lawyer by the victory he achieved in the Supreme court in the case of the State vs. Sheets, in which he had to overthrow the written opinion of Deputy Attorney General White. His decision not to succeed himself relieves Weber county from any obligation and we stand ready to wish him well, so long as he does not pose as a candidate from here. The secretary of state, one of the cleverest and ablest of our young Republicans, Mr. C. R. Hollingsworth. He is a very young man otherwise he might conclude that his continuous service in public office since he reached his majority should now entitle him to retire from the public eye for a reason and give some one equally deserving a chance to do the party honor. That conclusion may be reached anyway, in view of the viok lent his ambition suffered, both here and in Salt Lake, by reason of the boomerang effect of his boom launched at Bills coronation. Charley has pinned his faith to Bill, and that means more handicap throughout the state at large than he can carry, and win. But whats the use of talking Hollingsworth. Hon. James T. Hammond will again be a candidate and he will be nominated just as sure, as Wells will be governor. set-bac- Does Bob Moyes think that the Re- publican party was organized for the sqle purpose of keeping him in office? Is there room in his head for any other idea than a perpetual desire to fatten at the public crib. Let us hope so. Let us hope Bob and the rest of the boys will take a big tumble and quietly, withdraw to the rear until some others of the worthy sons of the (I. O. P. have had half as many chances as Bob and the rest to be voted for. No, Bob, you and Charley and Bill and Breeden are not the whole party. Ycju gentlemen have been highly favored by the party. Dont you think it is time to quit be? fore some one calls you all Think it over anyway, and dont put the party in a position at the next convention to declare against keeping some men in office from childhood to old age. Berk-shires- o H. M. Dinwoodey of the Dinwoodey Furniture company has gone east to purchase spring and summer goods for his firm. He will be away for several weeks. HA K KKS, it, but a few of us who followed his remains to their eternal couch know that wo are some better for his bavin WALKER BROTHERS . . lived with us. We bow to tho decree Rankers. that takes him from us and. in the quiet of our own hearts recall gladly Salt Lake City. Utak V Established 1851 the many times when his conversaA General Banking Business Transacted. tions ci jeered us; when his statements enlightened us; when Ills novel Safety Deposit Boxes For Rent. ideas surprised us. For ever a year he has lain on a bel of sickness, awaiting the end he realized was coming, although when ho knew not. Frail little fellow that he was. he murmured not. but contemplated the coming of the King of Shadows with a complacency such as might, have characterized tho most stoical. No word of complaint, no mean of anguish; simply the calm, dispassionate action of orn who had mastered every lesson philosophy could teach, even to the greatest of all, the last, with which she closes the volume of lifo. At times delirium crowded reason from her throne during his fitful slumbers and it was then that his unbridled mind went over all the bcoks lie had read; all the music he had heard; all tho pictures he had looked upon and ad- COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK CAPITAL PAID IN. $200,000. mired; all the great and good things he had seen or imagined. And the GENERAL BANKING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES watchers at his bed lde marveled at J. Duly, the words his failing brain bade his O.Directors .lumen E. Oosgrlff, John Moylan C. Fox, J. M. GYmgrlff, mouth give utterance. For every sen- W. J.1.Salisbury, Noble. (loo. M. Downey, John Donncl-latence showed his familiarity with the A. I llolden. good and the beautiful, and never once did the darker side, with its vulgarity, appear. All the literature of the ages seemed to have been his; all NATIONAL BAr or the REPUBLIC the song and the story that has lived ' U. 8. DEPOSITORY. through the generations. It was not PRESIDENT the babbling of a disordered mind FRANK KNOX. A. OF came JA8. BUTTE, echoes MURRAY, but the that they heard, CASHIER from the hallways, the balconies, the W. F. ADAMS, vast apartments of a great storehouse CAPITAL PAID IN - $300 000 of treasure. The utterances were Hanking In all Its branches transacted. g and grand. They began Kxctiango drawn on the principal cILIgk of in low notes and trilled along, soft Kuropc. Interest paid on time deposits. and sweet, Increasing tha while In intensity and magnificence, until finally, when the great organ of knowledge was playing its diapason of history, of W. 8. MOCORNICK. J. J. DALY PRESIDENT poetry, of prose the end came. 8. H. LYNCH, MANAGER A 8tO. Poor little Joe Nicholson! Out somewhere In the soft and radiant Dial savings & Trust Co. glow of the future, where all the soul) of good men and women are gathered SALT LAKB CITY. torether in peace, will not thy timid, CAPITAL PAID UP $150,006 modest, unassuming spirit find a conSURPLUS AND UNO VIDEO PROFITS.. $44,000 genial place among those gone beInterest paid ou deposits. Loans on ap- r. fore? As the ticks of the pendelum K roved security. Acts as executor, eto. receiver, guardian, assignee, on time of immortal the ar? recorded Title Qua run tee Department: Iusaras great, unmeasured, dial of the uniTitles and makes Abstracts. verse, will not thy soul grow In knowledge and intelligence with those of the greatest of thy companions, 3kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkikkkkkkkkkkkkkkkia there unhampered by storm-tossed- , Utah Light & Power Go. mortality? Freed from the .7 DIED At his home, after a lingering will sentiment stand long as public illness, Jcseph Nicholson, son of for it. However, public opinion is a John and Miranda Nicholson, asset is no telland there vacillating aged 2G years. ing what fantastic caprices may be cut when the people decide to take a hand On Monday morning last, as the in the game and deal out the nomina- fir3t rays of the morning sun illumitions to worthy party members who have waited in vain for these everlast- nated the snowy peaks of the eastern ing candidates to say they have had mountains, the scul of Joseph enough. better known to all of us as Nich-tlso- i n, forsook the weak, shattered temple in which it has, for months, fluttered like a captive bird, yearning for liberty, and winged a flight to a better land. Poor little Joe. Who knew him except to love him? Who ever sat and listened to his conversation, understanding, without beint; impressed with his marvelous abilities, and, leaving him, failed to wonder that one so ordinary in appearance, so retiring in disposition and reserved in manner, should possess such a vast fund of informatien upon those topics which go to make men the mental superiors of their fellows? Boy though he was, the great poets were familiar to him, because he knew them well and comprehended them. To every master of literature he was as the string of the harp to the musician and his sensitive spirit throbbed in response to the delicate touch bf the artist or the passionate sweep of the maestro. For him the sombre mood of Pee had a charm; for (him Scott sang hi3 home songs; for him Bryant wrote of the days when "The In groves were Gods first temples. thi3 little chap, now laid away in the last long sleep ,the essence of a great artist slumbered, and while the genius was never called to animate the fingers or stir the brain to great deeds the select few of us who knew him and appreciated him always realized that could the mandate of the right master arouse him to action, there was no limit to his possibilities. He saw in the handiwork of Nature all the beauty, and In the simplest flower its petals he detected the, to us, invisible, concinnity. In the murmur of the river and the dashing of he breok, creation chanted an anthem, or sang a love song. The great voice of the Universe crooned for him sad dirges or trilled a ditty, according as the mood impressed him. Yet withal, he has lived and died' without achieving fame, and only a few of his most intimate friends and confidantes knew of his many abilities. It is said that: Full many a flower is born to blush unseen and waste Its sweetness on the desert air. Is it not equally true that countless thousands of blossoms bloom and die unnoticed among their fellows in well kept gardens, where other and different conditions would have made of them the most gorgeous and remarkable? How many great musicians lie forgotten beneath the green mantle of Earth who in life never struck a note; how mould, who never many authors a line; how many artists penned besleep, who never saw a picture, all cause of their environments while in the flesh? There may be those to whom this But beboys life appears a failure. attention cause he never attracted the of many; because ' he never made anT&r-tistimoney through his scholarly of failure. abilities Is no sign His short career may have had some of the apparent elements of failure in Joe, tha-opene- c -- n, ... VlCB-PRE- S. awe-inspirin- VIOB-FRBS- T. admin-itrato- pain-racke- d temptations that beset us here below; secure from the influences which sometimes go to win us from what INSTALLATION. BLIOTRIOAL.1 we should cling to, wilt thou not go Water-24- 00 Salt Lake H. P. on, and on, and ever on in thine inSuit Lake..., .,., .SttQiu 1500 H, P. Water MXW H. P. Ogden creasing wisdom until none shall be Water-20- 00 Leased lJlant H. P. before thee? Aye, certainly. Rest in peace in the bosom of the as. common mother, oh, tabernacle o' Lake i ..400 MCu. Ft. Dally. Salt .. 60 MCu. Ft. Dally. clay that held that chafing, restless - Ogden..... was end for that the spirit, designed 7 8. MAIN 8TREET. for thee at the beginning. Rest, never rr.oro to rise again, for in that better SALT LAK CITY. land, protected by an Infinite love that admits of no temptation, clothed in a new body, the Immortal essence of flnity that we knew here as Joe, an THEODOSIUS BOTKIN, begins a never ending career; everness of progression and peace. ATTORNEY C. M. J. AND o Export Wood to Germany. Imports of wood into Germany from the United States have more than trebled since 1880, amounting in 1902 to more than $5,850,000. It consisted mostly of pitch pine. This wood is more resistant to the weather and costs much less than oak. It is used for making doors, windows, floors, etc., while oak is used in the manufacture of the. finer grades of Kelth-OBrle- n Building. COUNSELOR-AT-LA- W Salt Lake City :E E |