OCR Text |
Show THE SALT LAKE ENTERPRISE = IMMIGRATION. Salt Lake Enterprise. The Missouri Immigrant, St. Louis contains the following wholesome PUBLISHED EVERY WEEK. 7 | advice: BY THE «Talk up your country; speak a Enterprise Publirhing Company. good word about your neighbors and Editor. L. Dow Kinney, your neighborhood—not only. when - Business Mg’r. M. Bernhisel, but when you are at Collector. you are abroad, AND W.L. INDUSTRY. OF JOURNAL Goodwin, Articles on all Industrial, Manufacturing and Mining subjicts are solicit ed. THE ENTERPRISE LAKE SALT is devoted to the Mining, Agricultural, Stock-Raising and Manufacturing Interests of Utah. ‘It has already a larger circulation in this section and abroad than all the combined journals of its kind published between Omaha and San Francisco, Itis the most valuable and satisfactory medium of adver- in rapidly this developing country. REAMERY FOR SALT LAKE CITY. A —_————- The absence of a creamery in our city would surprise the people from Eastern cities where they are so numerous and popular. There is no small enterprise so profitable, and the writer has never known of afailure, in his experience , from Maine to Utah. Ten thousand dollars is a sufficient - eapital to successfully establish and run the same. sufficignt. wise A hint to the is A MEDICAL INSTITUTE FOR UTAH. es _ Nowhere in the United States will give them a living for knowing.” The criticism still holds good of most of the world will give them a living for knowing or doing, but they do not, save in a few cases. teach them to anything that will help them to get, without fur-| ther fundamental instruction, stories or untruths, but don’t take delight in making prominent every little mismanagement of public affairs and every little circumstance of your country’s history that was not just according to your ideas. Tell the strange visitor that your people are good and hospitable, and prove. it by introducing him among your Let every man speak well friends. borhood and his country, neigh of his and try to. induce strangers to settle there. Where a stranger locates near you, make him think well of you and your neighbors. If there is a bargain in a piece of vacant land or a farm near you, help to get that bargain disposed of. When it is in stronger hands, and out of the market, it will stiffen the priceg on all the lands surrounding it. Get all yonr farms into can lthe hands of men out of debt and LEARN can be apprenticed willing to work, for a trade and _ the self- if every man was your natural ene- supporting knowledge or skill. We would suggest to all young permy, and you were hopelessly tied up start, have who are about to make a you sons which with in a community Don’t run that they select some one specialty no common interests. among the numerous callings of this down the country and berate your age, and-learn it thoroughly. busy fellow citizens to every Stranger you Wheather able or not to acquire -the stran meet, but brag them up. Tell most liberal education concluding with Don’t gers you have a fine country. the study of one of the ‘‘professions” | deceive them by telling exagerated A'LRADE. Any young person ‘tising for those desiring to place: their business ing the purils anything that the world go around looking as Don’t home. E. L. EATON, Make the Schools Practicabal. ‘Wendell Philliss once condemned the public schools of Boston ‘‘for not teach- who is molders or boiler of life. Persons of ambition There are to-day, speaking of the trades requiring the highest skill, better reasons than ever before why boys should learn them as trades, and not work along through their lives at some little detail of them. And there are better reasons than ever before why manufacturers should give the boys a chance to learn trades__[ American Machinist. NEB. MB DRUMMOND& C0 and very short of the required amount necessary for the satisfactory transaction. Six hundred freight cars of business. are also being built for the railroad Sixty-two lococompany inthe East. motives will be turned out of the Sac- benefit. Builders. Carriage healthy-looking A Sale Agents for A. F. Babcock & Co's Celebrated “In reply to that,” rejoined the other, ‘it most assuredly does. I am glad so many of you’allow me to have the field to myself. When I am overwhelmed with customers itis hardly necessary for me to advertise. When business is dull I want to have it brisk, and the ———— MADE TO ORDER. 1315 and 1317 Harney Street. Indian Omaha, Idaho, last Tuesday that would made the oldest placer miner’s have heart and customers with it. Yes. sir. It pays me to advertise these hot Ihe city isn’t depopsummer months. ulated by my means.’’—{Philadelphia Call. Neb. Rees Printing Compay. — Lithographers, Printers, | The surface gravel had all been washed off, and the large cut in the jagged bed-rock, for over 100 Tn feet, was. a mass of glittering role, places where it had lodged in the creviway to make it brisk is to advertise. ees it could be picked up by the spoonThat has been my experience during ful. About a pint of nuggets, from $20 | to $50 in weight, were picked up, and| the last ten years. of gold has already been ‘“Printer’s ink can out-talk any sales. 1280. pounds itaken to the bank, which was scooped | man. It can out-argue any obstinate out of the potholes. No very large} ~ buyer. It can’t be talked back to, and pieces have been found, the largest | three oun | comes up smiling every day and brings would probably not go over ‘The cleanup, which will probably | ces. conviction - - + es There was a sight in Buckskin Gulch, leap with joy. and The Finest Delivery Wagons West of Chia “T see you advertise all through the —{Fort Macleod Gazette. dull times,” said one merchant to another; “it certainly doson’t pay you.” _ Buggies Carriages. came to the agency with an ax to grind- Mr. Ede, whois in charge of the agency, volunteered to hold the ax while the while the Indian was to do the turning. The job was finally finished, and the Indian took his ax he demanded 50 Mr, Ede cents for turning the handle. this country, and a few years’ practice { thereupon presented a contra account, and endeavor to know something} THE POWER OF PRINTER’S INK. and informed the Indian that he wantmore about their trade than the mere The Indian ed $1 for holding the ax. drudgery of it, have earned the right A Shrewd Merchant Find It Pays to Ad- took the situation and went back to revertise in Summer. to be called skilled mgchanics, Such flect on the wikedness of the white man. skill to speak of is far too great. Street, OMAHA, —— makers, as the case may be, but these are not the kind of men that are While there are, as is freneeded. quently stated, probrbly a good many unemployed men, they are certainly ramento shops as soon as they can be not men who learned their trades in built. men as this, the superintendent remarked, are in demand, and always likely to be, just as much as the services of the best doctors or lawyers are always in demand. , There are a good many- highly skilled mechanics in the country, but the proportion of those who are working in the trades without any No.1829, Farnam is better than mere clerk- able to hold them, and you will see a tallent could thus gradually prepare but themselves for the noblest professions | boom in the real estate market; sale and ultimately develop their greatest for farm a is there as as long under the pressure of debts, the prices possibilities. —{ of other land will be influenced thereIn The Cathedral at Cologne. busiof row a in store t vacan A A by. Lake. Salt eral springs, and Great In the Cologne cathedral there are 7 the rental of all: staff of Physicians and Surgeons. aid- ness houses injures inches for the reception of statues at more one for d deman a others; into the es, ed by the natural advantag the chief doors and at the side enhas the con- all valids, ought to successfully treat store than can be had The height of the vestibule is trances. Prices of land are affec- 7 times 8 feet; 7 pediments for the figany disease which the human flesh is trary effect. ted in the same way.” ures stand in the same; 7 chapels sur: heir to. round the choir, the width of which, This would not only be a great ~The winter is on us and of course like that of the innerarea of the church blessing to suffering humanity, but the height of a profitable enterprise to the promot- we are preparing for winter work» is 7 timss 23 feet, while the height feet; 23 times 7 is choir the e surpris in h e eyes : ! ae Don't open your ors. of the aisles are 7 times 10 feet, and with farmer the magnificient structure, for A work of talk we when twice 7 pillars adorn the choir. In the beautiful surroundings would be nec- during the winter; we have ever con aisles are 7 times 8 pillars, and4 times This would be an ornament tended that the agriculturist has no essary. 7 shafts rise along the walls. The to our city, and a great advancement right to eat up in the winter the pro-| western portal is7 times 33 feet wide, to our territory. Clean the barn, the length of the vast building is 7 fits of the summer. paint the times 76 feet. The three transverse tools, broken the repair LABOR. SKILLED FOR DEMAND wagons and the wood-work of the aisles are 7 times 15 feet wide. Not A well-known mechanical superin- different implements; and, just for a only does the number 7 enter so largely tendent of an important manufadtur- change, you know, do a little work | into the general architectural arrangeing works recently remarked that few about the house helping the good ments, but also into the smallest details as the parts of decorative work.[—Chipeople were aware of the searcity of wife. cago News. , really skilled mechanics; there was, perm tes ts was Needed. that More Rolling Stock he said, a demand for them Lo, the Poor Indian. far from being supplied. Twenty-eight more locomotives are Rather a good Indian story comes We hear substantially the same re- to be built at Sacramento at once for from the Piegan reservation. It is as It is easy enough the Southern Pacific Co. The same wellknown fact that an Indian generaly - mark every week, freight cars to find men with a liitle smattering company is having 1,000 expects pay for anything in the way shops to relieve the same the at puilt are who trade a of work which he condescends to underof knowledge of strain on its rolling stock, which is now take, even ifthe work is for his own ready to do work as machinists, makers, CRAYON FROM THIS HOUSE IS UNEXCELLED IN THE WEST, . ships. The rule we would suggest therefore is one of progress, ‘each step showing something a little higher than that which immediately preceded it, and the general result showing a self-made man \prepared for (and all) the emergencies PHOTOGRAPHER. PRACTICAL that there is in it, the idea prevails be found a more suitable location for a medical and surgical Institute and Invalids Hotel, than in Salt Lake City, Utah. Our stimulating climate, beautiful scenery,and numerous min- pattern Picture Frames, Mats, Albums, Etc, sooner or latter’ all must assume the responsibility of ‘The training should be self-support. directed to this end; for-although work- | ing at a trade may never be necessary, the knowledge of one may prove the | secret of after success. Now if atrade be industriously followed, in a few years, with an economical administration of such money as may ‘be earned therefrom, the mechanic will bé placed in.a. position to learn Whatever of truth something higher. clerical work MATERIAL, PHOTOGRAPHIC take two or three days yet to complete; will be, by far, the largest ever made | It is estimated to reach | in the camp. 50 pounds, or in tne $9 ,000.—[Chronicle. neighborhood of Blank Book Makers, And Book Binders. 106 to 12 SOUTH 14th SREET,- Omaha Neb. — |