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Show We are told cow with great unction that bimetalism is rapidly gaining ground. It is within the memory cf every business man in the world almost when bimetalism Mas the universal rale. It is only since the United States demonetized Hi'lrpr thot fhoi. i - vuUO uiiii ut!eD any very great amount of distress from the adoption of the single or gold standard. stan-dard. As soon as John Sherman's poisonous policy began to have its le" gitimate effect, then the world began to have an inkling of what xnonometalism really meant to its commerce. What we now com- -piunoz is tnatthe United States did not first move in the matter of the re-monetization re-monetization of silver, since it has always al-ways been plain that the world would have to restore silver. We might h ve had the mighty advantage of first movement if we had wanted it. The whole nation will hear with infinite in-finite regret that Congressman Wilson's ailment turns out to be typhoid fever, lie has been sent to Guadalabara, one of the most wholesome locations in Mexico. We sincerely trust he wiU recover. The country cannot afford to lose this man just at the present juncture. His life is precious to his country. Every man in Utah able to write his name, should sign a vigorous protest against the removal of the Utes to this territory and send it forward without delay tu Hon. Joseph L. Rawlins at Washington, It can, do no harm, and may result in staying that most iniquitous in-iquitous measure. Let this be done at once. In the Wiman case everything looks a3 though the Dun Agency is placed in a very critical position before the country. It is nearly certain that the agency finds its robes besplattered, and a victim is necessary. If so, they have made but a dismal choice ia the lamb of sacrifice. The Pollard-Breckenridge case could now be kept out of the papers with great propriety. It has become simply and only the record of a life too supremely vile to bear even the remotest remot-est reference to decency. Col. Brecken-ridge Brecken-ridge is beingfittingly punished for his association with the vile thing Madeline Mad-eline Pollard is proven to be. Bland has not only just discovered what everybody else has known for a long time, "that the bondholders have control of the country," and he ought not to lose his patience but should work all the more persistently to down them. Saturday's Deseret News had a very wise and just article on the subject of medicine and faith cure. We trust the legislature will ponder this article well ere it passes the law now before it. The raising of the debt limit for Salt Lake is a bit like Carlisle's selling bonds to pay debts. If there w'ere no reckoning day, it would be all right. The 82,000 relief for Salt cake's poor will be known in history as the Capitol's Cap-itol's anchor over to windward. It was a shrewd enterprise well befitting the Xew England or'gm of its projectors. Tiik Knights of Labor want to know h"!w Chief Arthur made such a large fortune in so short a time. Let them ask senators and congressmen how it is done. The dime novel industry has received re-ceived a fatal blow, in the death of Norman L. Monroe. ' when it has finally heard the lost of Victoria Woodhull. Miss Mackay says hei husband Prince Colonna, is a professional gambler. Da Gama's pathway is lined with roses, but not entirely oi the thornless variety. The crass widow mill, is the latest for divorce court. |