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Show ag Oe ee e UR POLICY. We Favori.. ; a The Free and unlimited coin - ag0 Of Ameriédn Silver at a _ -tatio of 16 tol, VOL .VIIL. NO. 96. | PARIS NEWS LETTER From Our Regular pondent. COUNTY, UTAH, Corres- _— THE T LAKE From ‘ PARIS EXPOSITION, Shag Rh nel Our Regular’ _ Pants, France, Sept. 7, 1900— This Paris Universal Exposit ion is, of course, not the last. There will be many others of greater or less nhagvitude, They are even now projected, Expositions are al- 80, like everything, subject to the law of evolution. They are chang- ‘ing. “This one is both the ‘fers has been reached -with- most ‘rivolous and most serious of them all, buf thie world, as one may look at it this ‘moments, is both frivolous d'plomatie corps,| who added, and serious in 4 greater degree than at any other time in history , | __ It is probable that a hundre d or. a, Ged thousand years hence, the histor-| the ian will have about these something to Expositions. say | gress. If the Crusades were a Civilizing Secretar 7 ALEXANDER ea ee M. BE. MULVEY, CANDIDATIn OR | safety of railway travel “COUNTY COMMISSION there and ER. '. Mulvey has been brough the greater cleanliness of her cities, t and it. into the race by his many must come in the nature o _ friends to realize that the official WM FOR COUNTE ATTORNEY. ce MeMaster -has won an viable reputation as a judge. en-| He |found judgement; | The War Departitent is to}CMmerce is not o Expositi more her mi o| the various Congresses on, an Justice MeMaster that meet hes|p ole Pars as: ef mpre : d importance ! ~ than all the wonderful : : ous temporary univer mechanical] tere are a thousand Thous- [it. was only sity. things of inindexes of material progre throu ss e terest that will hold the attent schola rs, a: they | friends that eit upon to live up to itsae Thesé reflections Game ion notice served Be to the last | Tid a the a delegate : week ata reception given midd! add his impressed that he isbut thewhat fe streng ih to’ the Demo by M. | to her to le man Loubet, President of Ineide nts of peace equal in the Freuch wad shia is Republic, to the thousands ffi ement those of war when of dele. | Side of4 wor Tae in favor of|it is ° positiv wied as the seeks, Mr. Mulvey has had lar fates of the various el Congresses Osen political heroes wage e How assembled in Paris. For his sake, it is to be official information tlieir | €Xperie: nee in the biisiness wo To. enuhas and | contest for the master be in lis daily life ug tmerate these Congresses y in the o pen | 2nd is 4 man of such in matter 8 at) with the business tact battle field of litnian strife, the bar he has alway cerning what the s been ¢ other ; to be an approachable terness often Tises, but | eoterprises, yet im eare split up as a nation| would allow. With the tr They will perhaps: We write Chinese race ontending parties and not say anything orally r oppo: Managers ard men who are, that has| than Mongolian; mak are arrayed against one for here the Japa-/ character not been written or that an- & Success af anything they May not | nese is truly above the under must be read, but who can be dissoci when ated | from take.. doubt the the| ic¢ism Mr, Mulvey is looked contageous enligh tening Chinese by kindly call for it in reason of their and stimnasa straight, up-right a's | : lating influence of thousa and wo foreign foes, the hand nds of} blood, which shows its inflteace in | Cognize of friendship fally successful busine learned, serious and earnest d by hi ss man and | is sealed on the constitution mex | both and The | for this reason his menta) | Placed in the and women striving,howev . ut : er blind friend s haye raits, sc that the Japanese ly and lamely, for improv General Chaffe cables be -the- warmest} rged him differ ements, that he to ‘om the Chinese far more betterments, ideals, Wagons to carry his supplies political contest of] ticket re -than | party may be proud and he m: when able é sing the praises of steam, have such ing the elements| tion ou of men adorn its tick electricity and of the greates the first are -on] t of al iwho people The delegations he casts the first reflee different 1 he ry printing, -but the greates tio from Se v t thei | from resentative standard: bearers r ability of the American the If all the Republicans #ombind work accomplished have mi is to (popularly :become been chosen,irom the preside —SSSS— “, make such Cosmopy itan known. as Caucasian, | Mistake Di moerats, 48 the nt ofthe congres latter ses in their : claim, and eG Possible aud td promot Any sensible man knows uation down to the village nea +1, | Mo e the time and-otherwise ag Aryan; consta: | all the Demoer while that |, . “when the war dram will ble (we give oni. anothpr: ‘page throb no j i longer, when. the battle W Acoaant o f iishis indust ‘ Counts of our state and county ac _ pe yas: en. the flag will be These traits of the|™a - furled in the- parlia con. | Br¥an will be el @n-who was born inment of man, has had an experience the federation of the world. Qe and gh ” A Republican majority of and when the hozeé he garden Party given pitude which amply 25,00 the stretch war-ma by M. alarming in king | Construct cotton tle hands of congress qn ; ‘ in Vermo Loubet, the President artis: of the Rewe shall watcha merry jock- posed nt in September jis public, was cf gigantic those of the presid: ent, proportions |give us pause; a Republican enue to insure stich e ‘There was no sunshine, i b ory in the country in the even. support to the oft repeated 8 system surpri of singly politic little al clairvoyance af. This November. ing-was eloudy, no flirtati derule has been broken ous. unae fords the reflection given in o der the trees, no malici mand for an extra session a, seript ous gossip, . nO laughter, in that seriong Mr. Bryan does not declare assem— | Can for one . blage. ” The Spectacle : rights called of which Se but in few chief, have never been are chosen,” was historic, | Chinese, He has passed upon would b instruetive and decent This ly recreative, Vermont gives all E parties think jt advisable’ to ata 30,000 year IN WHICH SIGN SHALL a worthy of the distizguishe tolerabiy iiss stretch the consti WE TRUST? d per-|Sertion of Genera tution a little on Sonages who had come : from thea properly trained Chir four corners of the world Ex-President Harrison to disEs hag euss most difficult proble ms and physical traits, ie any more islands hasten the march of we fine are found in And here the brillian human He is utterly impart i gress, They arrived about proSpain has| graphists of the dail Must we gird fair liberty’s the|as side that of the same time. claims, might it notbe well for E A great crowd silentus| Permitted all the politica ly collected about the l conven| 68 secure them by tradin g those wel gates of the {solid and tions to pass withou slow,” garden patience,| While the Cosmopolitan river which flowed be | races , from fore the President of within the limits larger.and stronger; Object s of « desert their post of honor until the retary arrival of the Shah. clothes. through ordinary Sunday upon He wore on his ead the entire function his astrachan, and was fol that Mr. a silver basis without lowed by distinguished persons : of|snre to pay all “goin” his suites, who did not leave’ for a moment, but. it oceurr him | of the government and ed with which jt regards not Perhaps utterance is made by know|'T excited because Mark Hanna flea in his ear and not because his voice needed rest, Abdul Hamid; Sultan of Bs need not worro if hig managers received salutes and fulsome letters of congratulations from all the Powers. Such is life, DASHES, which should take the phonograph, |: reese Democrats There is a great of Pox, or some as yet deal unna > “ cans can aceount for and the, latter are trying to figure out when QUARRI ED Mines the of FROM must have been contri buted by th Tammany Ice Trust as THE Oe Repiibliga ennsraceeemeren : -48.to report that one of thé animals its Zoo has appendicitis, - There . to pass a law next winter which wil] Tom Reed has gone prev to live next injuri Leaving ng the country. to Roosevelt at. Oyster Bay. Wen’t | aside the humor 0f this proposal, 1. there bea hot time if Reed's rules: will Mr. Schurz chicken -wants once Chicago is; bound ‘to 'b Muses. ever go Up against Teddy’s strenu- ¢ for two ci All that would | nobody b ut the people are for him| case would be}@nud they don an aud then and should Nugeets of Trath in Dus {,|C@mpaign fund thanhave a bi the Repub with how a successful the new law is3 Séeretary Olney has declared for Surprise as it was Supposed |#2ything in it was |: that if (t0® ex: secretary was confir med Opposition in to|/ Was that The country wil] 7 , kindly inform us the Nebra |8iven independence skan, afte filibuster against |C2¢ Mr, Olney’s reasons with in+A «| terest. to be prevented q in Beveridge chooses | hard at work on A -a is said a stay out of the fight, he cun do Bryan’s imperialisn But he musen’t complain if iS a8 “good as elected he Mr. and oe | suffers the usual that Bryan’s race is only fate of the inno. | id a joke. his par iefs of several naval bureaus i ed not He to be Subscribe be strictly orna- as most vice—presidentg| can. break bronchos for proclamation annexing the T Butthen, Hanna and Jones have Expopublic Prof, the The : was attempted in Paris, |p the most statesmanlike | y that replace t 80. Tehéran.| 4 Persia has millions of reople - but! cf th few newspapers and one in a] be thousand of his subjecnot ts will know | ¢ - that his life criticism of Paris and the sition thathas yet found Temple EDITORIAL {aud unkind people aré! everything, to Col. Bryan slaughter wade? mistake and bill him Hanna I fear hig Subjects will - him on his return through Ofcourse, we|that Prespiration. ve to give plenty of boot. | them! Field of Game and Con- ordering his Secretary of the to me that his smile was happier than usual when he offered his arm gallen:ly to Mme. Loubet, When I]; we s . Gage Mauzafier-ed- | e} And o’er the life, India and China are parall out friction, M, Loubetand Mme. Lonbet surrounded by ght fa Ching their ~civil which ‘there are el and military households in the| The common alities ‘Hall of the Aids de.camp, receive d | ton, Shanghai, F their guests, The aftibality of ‘the Can not underst head of the nation in these trying | 4 guage. Circumstaneds is well known. ey Say “‘trying’’, for, indeed, eve has ~ to be the most amiable and hospit According to the adminis able of men, for itis no tr, small. nn- m en, the letter of Hon, Carl dertaking to receive 10,000 Schurz Neither M. nor Mme. Loubet guests. written in the interest of Mr. showBryaa ed any fatigue, anid they’ di@ not in answer to the asserti dine did not have on, his makes . o better, than nomin ate. McMaster. the Republic | gradually Spen which has been assigned without tumult and. with- te red waves alone Mars for i ig now on publicans. are ow also annexed For years, en bragging most 6f% the ies would obont Britain the gre be the holding of |on ‘his way out to chaneeg are that even China, at he carriés* with Great Waiamhateeaccce ate ea , and waited with Souther here was no_ protess from the|Small and cute,” north against the Sovla, besides which he is a m brought ference and kinds together in. the erusi, of / national views, and Diatects urope and as such India, and from the Nava and from Rie the Guad | Volitieal matters incide igin, namely the te alquiver were intermixed n £ life in this te il a ' SEU Eee abet Sia to a mere city of pleasur e, force, why not the Exposition, eru- | sadeés ofindustry, of art, ofthese thought? ation, A ee aesthetié import. It is possible that the histori an _Tefer to the Congress of Religi wil] ans ai # ey ons ;°! !mportant tr of the Chicag n, and 1 & smile: “Now, don’t, ask me 4) y whys and . where— a quote me as having expre ssed if,” — (a5a.so has can gain the ascendency .”’ |