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Show ry The Liler-WMountain Republican Published Every Morning polities only A. B, Soop BLUNCK, Pres. and eee Mer. Utah, tah, The forces Republican on ree ae City. Subscription One onths, Offices, in Dooly Temple advance Block, St. ..... Both York Chicago Office Ofice Boston Z Office Member 2. Senate, grafted : : 208 West 4.00!he South Salt | 117 Tribune 1613 Lake City, Utah, * April 5, o ver a great Clty 9 national 2 affairs ower by vir a most made the + S on ss vote of 202 to th lirorest e 1 e ileres t 1} which E AVE moe is over vote 26. { o in from most ci or the benefit of the national/old the federal ad e Tuesday qn ic It is th to very people sinning. the - And ravida cr provide who held south. ‘the|their > came have that fre from from the there aAVvor officers} largest 7 : : |task.~ not} of the bridges the onset ARGH S ay generally very not a That >, ee is held by "T os think, of i; who aap the : for the ane rapidly been w x repairs} ip. fl "As he made , widow country, have Seema was > hs a a op nn That sy- > in {issuance of the $75,000,000), tremendous amount begin ce while record, afiarity a a 60 oc have of per/cent. construction Weil have' held that to take care business, Fallon lis side rn <seateis in country. lower & cach ease state in the has been the people an of. where the disease was Usually strife to as as be- Th to >be -fever men erades have been protected set cut in the so} nat current to some tremendous itehave of flood ve a printedeas in tozraphs ure deflect demolished. the power completely idea, almost ¢en One gets when. . The ' has) bebe of made made cv high figds‘a hopeful condition. exerted. The with It /to more the the It the any one ingress |fact that a very large vote réad of repair the no |itme upon who which perfeeuly the driving work. of} | 4 Mrs. is eas2 New the é . to insist as to to the by no high of reformatory man. sick the know "want 30 just to kno ashinie what IT have Star oe her Tumor. of eect s ‘ ae two' Rem te & places. Is our cook.- Sun think fads aa I think wife' s zk didn't hair, es van phia. Press. but are a ae poate fad are, but someare: always. so Tree i Press ie oe get a very it's ood a as good deeided look blonde, the} of | ofliciais, no} Ther» advance is of the Lake the with your bEng- She-Well-er-yes, but a little undecided about the roots.-Philadel- to con-| stintingy methods. a jis he- possible which it held Ten nes-]active Louisiana. participation of the elass that|at the beginning, and which, without aL Sas have | us ually remains away from the polls. doubt, it will always hereafter hold. ry argues a better state of citizenship. In the effort The Republican has "struggle for the treatment of the dis-| It has all' the appearance, too, of made to eollect the news, much. aid ease, and the result has been great} forecasting the fall of Democratic has been given by the officials and emsuffering, terrible hardship, and no} power in Chicago, The next city elec- rloyes of the railroad company Every progress from with the handling of yellow to tion, fever. be should Last year when the fever discovered In' New Orleans authorities there was first the local) undertook: io. held result |¢ity by the \yilwaukee con-|won, in in the the spring recovery Republicans, and Kansas and a great of facility, 1907, of thal|tions for of visiting the road So that, with | vided, and City already |the outlook step taken-in that |}courtesy as as disturbed wads promptly pro- with been much -their through Republican's through the labor of The | correspondent, armed of one state Then with the all the others, government took a hand. At the suggestion of President Roosevelt the chief officer of the marine hospital service was placed in control. New Orleans and all \of.. party's complete general election. ee WALRING Louisiana triumph Walking at the She next Kind pen a WATH_ with mother is a blessed regards This John to have accepted loyally the task of. obeying |4nce of it, and patter proudly about) federal orders eyen in the most inti-|the world because mother is.with them, mate details of eity health regulations. As they gain in. ‘tature, tney begin to And the result was a diminution. of | *ealize that this controlling being -has family fatalities, a control of the discase, and }@ vulnerable side, and that the mother would not and]|while the walk progresses. It is a& thingjafter a while, the Ret that which the state noi have done. thing could And on Tuesday the elected rep- with us. It is you who are | Dowie resolved the Nebraska trict, of number the of estimate Rocky Ford cantaloupes Soe disFord the Rocky from as out, previous sent the were. cars carloads 592 hundred against Seven season. last Colorado, theories| / Year, walk- affairs. the states There could own affairs, need of time take care when there when of their was of any the to day the ng side you you way in uncertain are not become And the general whole eontroliing whieh touch in their country do| that effect. becomes foree in the interests those of the affairs the states associated. monwealth can be and not and mutually With ; : t ! far in is a the mighty the from a matter has unrelated. authorities. quarantine abandoned its conthe far as party throughout the concern- elections cities -waukee former have apart ers' joys ihe ie much and best of it in Mil- in Kansas City, but in the ense at operated from the Jeast to local conditions introduce considerations influences of national a] parent] are of life, those she then in has when many not and borne such are all are the time so heart, there two outside lost she she the be alene pains and in oth- completeness waiks mother in with memory of be- alone but goes the halting she with leaps only done her to and joy her waiting, is her of may of tions, all Salt Lake from the habit and fairness and beginning, pected result. aid people ing states with are best It costs pev was care out the border asking to keep It in telegraph transmission. when and Long the Time simply can waiting, And in know the that Tell to the keep your advised movements women, they can Tnter-Mountain of if Utah's of get the the pa- her it it is they progress, best by for for people that its the with want and men and reading The Republiean, "With kiss coulan't to hand you? scorn STORIES | ie Nothing more of minutes, and leaned over and per added: "I told him to and, and that's The was said for a couple then the old man a confidential whis- in hang what on he late George for a thousis doing." Joe Kerr. MacDonald, the English novelist," said an editor, "had a great fondness for children. He wrote charming fairy tales, and often heard him entertain Shildren na cere stories. At same tim he sliked sroublesonie: mauibitive pou entons and to a lad of this type-- to myself, to be frank-he once told a dry little tale. "He said that a man hurrying out of a postoffice one day Knocked down a boy who was trying to sell him some matches, "‘Oh, man ing did I hurt asked ‘Ne ir; box. as he " "Well you, notv-at picked meant and knocking hurried o the my lad?' the ‘all, sir,' replied himself up, smil- to," boy said the down man, again, he Geronimo, the Apache chief, has gotten married. for the eighth "You are a brave man, Geronimo, to marry so often,' a paleface said the GENCE day to the old warrior. Not) Gdsoniae: that with money But of con- provision and friends paper found. requires only way to provide the the best iim state news. treas- The _ Interthe be touch beside her, state adjoin- wherever the to at ex- collection means collecting bounds the in as can It news, with the in for fairest that situations it adopted People cireulates. resec- impartiality. having and the several printing is money, interesting and obtaining fullest. thelr parties, dispatehes is The representaof Republican the much that Utah and over Mountain Repub- very and of of paper, of and is this news country, latest me a long, before capable section the persons the stant she state news absolute the removed. work. ports the heart she of securing every do SPRINGTIME absence affair readers. which viger keeps. presence gather which of it in them she youthful ‘noticed. its. she never Inter-Mountain Tnter-Mountain trom which the about, have any of tives dis- an as supply in Berlin and In to talk else The best dis- the princess mother with day, regarded provides policy a you, expect "Anything doing up at. Albany?" queried the old man on the street car of a gentleman who had just laid code his newspaper and orepared himself to ogle a good-looking young woman who had just got 2 "The usual thing,'' was the curt reryby "What's: that?" "Corporations buying up the members. I don't believe there's a man in the entire body who hasn't sold out 1 have to take that back, my friend," said the old man with considerable spirit "T've got a son up there, and L know he hasn't sold out. At least. he hadn't a week ago. "Well, I'm glad to hear of one henest man. He had a chance to sell, did he?" "He dic Yes, sit, he was. offered $500 for his vote‘ mre ‘And he refused it front never stoekings--of Berlin, that found the time. the wife, the to are effect that her noble pairs will' Yow may to Long beiter for in (his them adding her are second probably knowledge her own, Long patience Here of anything state news that when lcompose-the having good her of years, fill her men three the placid and sons by, and know, with many time-tvading go the of temper ures given sit seasons usperities day feeble whielr closes in takes joy 9 May may may dark they rapture walks country, any one much of a "‘line"' bilities for the future. get of and daughters is the of} for mother's are the And world, the There at avenues the of the mother's the when heart polities we do not see that Tuesday, held cans growth as TUESDAY'S ELECTIONS. So the the from shadows coming. when all ancient of state rights away trembling nurtured, ? ed, f all is yet days national doctring thought years results of of com- fends power, disputing untenable child best forever. 1 the central independent, acceptance south and It which from the trol ' in obtained pair merges into the fellowship of the fam-|jican. so many days when the ily There are that a country.This is a nation, hot a fédératicn. It is a union of states, not a lot of wears And the of bill once There are so fellowship ob- authority the when that/}tains, rapid interests local- no Ra. & so there so and common com' her as blessedness by unre-| daughter. is too big to be managed There is no gloom. Interlated and diverse authority. course between the- sections has be-|many years in whieh great patches to the is bankrupting her reserved is that joy and] fact be- with the comes the other, and in teddle feet, uncertainly that. day |sonship, thought will she when with pattered na-|in country The passed. paving the with places |ciianging But his restored Cecele Princess page. and him get to pened unconsciously | couraged is that being another) into grow suddenly and |her, sub- of the the growth has day that tion a oversight with But ject. and national was of control national a of need the of big your heart is placed to her credit, and sou guide her, and smooth the way for recognition | being-a common the demonstrates jt because significant ts it And to don't city thous- hundred six million the jis Wise. itself Into a| Last May the German crown prince It stirs the heart resentatives of that whole section, ex-|ing with mother. such a flourish of cepling some of Texas, indorsed the|with a strange emotion when that Is was married with And)all the treasure of service | trumpets that all the world gave atnational control in matters: of*quar-| seen... Since then nothing has. hapIt is a condition which runs|she has been laying up inthe bank of | tention. antine. counter to all the state right that‘ have ever been uttered. She-You them affatr | Was He (after he snatched the Oh, please pardon me, but I help myself. quarrel. enough Twelve walking} | been | ve smoecratic and "dry." ‘ wha eA en a leaves : errifie ty lit; lation. : canines eonsols pee he- alone and- have am for for » in not. ts Mother. passed has gained be to advantage o nat ‘ the Supe shipped accept gladly they p and for a time, but whieh |come the feet of guidance and help. when they see the|And slowly, unconsciously, a condition tried to prevent Wilkins, men | Curiously "Aad then, once have paused, have then ‘and |pattered, south thé over all reactionaries which iiie tle find shal. day, each stronger srowing never the city which It is a thing nestle: ther and of mother, hand a|the is It itself. of done have could Mr, Alexander yielded to the national authority, and | ‘ing. ~ Little people know the import-P ecg. ' ; the eventual obliteration not alone} Who walks beside them has need, at of cases themselves, but the condi-|times, that the pattering feet shall fall in by the side, and the littie hand, tions which gave rise to the plagie. to ‘ as Some na avers MOTHER. Professors in the University of Maine have perfected plans to travel througheut the state in a finely equipped speclal train and give free lessons in theoretl agriculture to the farmers. Buffalo Bill, who as a real rough rider has had few peers, is) sald ta have been 60 years of age last Monday, and it is also said that he never human being except Was afraid of any h wife Miss May Carrigan. of Springfield Mass., has broken all records for blindfold typewriting from dictation, writing 5,221 words in one hour exclusive of er for each of whieh five words re an "The Indian at) fact all," of is snnecer returned the in matter his is own house and marriage hasn't the terror for him that it has to a white, "Whites and their wives" Geronimo chuckled, ‘Why, tailor's shop in congressman who wished to order a new sui he congressman selected the cloth and the tailor measured him, calling out the dimensions ie a clerk with a book. After the measuring the tallor "Married or single, sir?' ‘Married,' replied the congressan. " ‘One poeket concealed in lining of vest," the aller bade the cler Me CHAPTER Inside was recently by middle Willlam descrip- American PARTY. mane- The Rear, who likes whatever's sweet, Used the ‘am Instead of mustard; The Elenhant put both his feet, While carving, the custard, "Please pass..the Lamb." >the Crocodile maclal ned: "I'm. fond of mutton." so he cobbled, with a smile, His. Yellaee suest-the glutton! table, the Hyena's laug zh, whic h mockee the Bison' : bellow, Disgusted the refined Gira he's a stuck-up fello At wasn't anything ka. arink, mr 1 ad swallowed all 4 feeble room. tery Gunn "TL guess and do," consulting froma a drawer said the the man drawer He and ages of he pinned upon . to show," he Is all." "Show ‘en me out. with don't the ; will took the wondered had not learned on the Statement. Ken. $250 asked Gunn solice- a robber," shrieked man om Ste Tae i J ne wha "went. over ‘to-the city Nall ‘the chief much he dollars." thousand almost ot detectives had lost. replied ready have omona nse, "sald ra onsense repeatec Phat | detectives. siirgte isa the to weep. vl ess nen y im Chieago with half the money Take at down Now what about you, young ‘ turning to Dan Gunn. Lam from Towa," said that worthy. before I came-here to look for a fellow who is been passing counterfeit five- iad uw bills Ot in Ey OOTY Here is 2 sam‘ ple of the work he is doing." Ane e the com-'| displayed the wad of Bacon ana oe to protect |had taken from the stove in that ttle why money Dan a :‘ sping fawn vv ti Raspl ae bunko Ss his»money. him how | photogr: MPR ear at Mauton: Go.on,". sald: the chief of detectives. are a so green as you look. Any William You since he had, | time tyr. Thompson, | with that, of won ake falle snomerchant, husts ably to show can give you the cash." "What Is that for?" tf et : Well, it is the rule of pany We have to do it said comes robber." They pack-, sax is frantic Dan: Gane. and cried coe ar Sea ear him man aptook and breathless Thompson was ‘as ‘tantly recognized |} He was wanted in half a dozen cities |No one would believe a word h® said |When he declared Dan Gunn had ta- another I ourselves.' Dan Gunn the he there' ‘Here .; art Fy ne oe of | paper demanded have come yy you?" "busy several strips robber!" {Stopped ‘That pen. them. "You will i said, pleasantly. what?" lot- Thompson Dan Gunn. his pocket openly stopped, "Hold on Wwarningly. busy | said which opened pulled bills, pee hust- his» book a with) down "You cash them here, "Right here, sir,' said. looking the replied putting 'examined it Thompson table, To him watched $250,"" you. man, litthe was the presenting Dan ite looking There lnny explanations Mr. [peared in the alley. | tat long pistol from show table, held behind a pen advanced, ticket. great Interest, "T guess IT win the ‘ ii ndoon. aan chanees he asked Whe "non Sahara's =e ae The Ostrich gave a The Lion ate with iene Sank His appetite was hearty. There the looking man a ledger and And that Judge Parker closed his speech before the Mississippi legislature with a warning against demogogues, which, they must avoid like the pestiwhich walketh in darkness. "For the first time in our history see reflected the ' future the ful, sinister Creature.' Strong language, and not curate. Recent happenings York, coupled with certain preliminary features of the campaign of 1904, have stirred the judge's feelings. If ever there were a people familiar with the demagogue, the American people are entitled to a front rank. Like the poor, the SEU RCE Ie has always been with us.was In the American army, Sera the heartstrings of Washington during the gloomiest perjod of the revolution. CVery war. since, He war even With Spain. The presidents were beset by him, and some of them did not disdain on occasion to employ his arts in their own behalf Some of our greatest statesmen have at times disfigured their records in that way. The demagogue of the earlier half of the last was a more benign creature his Successor. He was not so harn possibly, because the people were more primitive and more easily deceived, but there were plenty 6f them, and they work "the dear people' and their "Inalienable ri i hey were orth strange conditions arose in > half of the nineteenth cena broader field ury demagogue, and at the same for the more dangereus made time is this aspect of the demagogue oceurred to Judge whe saw his _ baleful shadow. reflected on the screen of the Se The demago ie is more danerous indng. becaus e has more complicated candies and uses more angerous tools, but there has been a change in the people more than comwith the development of mensurate the demagogue. The people are better informed, have ciearer Ideas of their rights and duties, and very many more of them than formerly take the measure of the demagogue with great accuracy. That is not saying that the people can not be fooled. They are always in danger of that. As Mr. Lincoln said, ‘ the people can be fooled some of cig time, and some of the people all of but all of the people can't { time be fooled all of the time." There are spots where demagogues | pretty much all of the time, even in such instances there are periodical recoils, and it is possible for craze to spread the sober second American can be reof the sanity. upon to restore political OSTRICIUS was By LeRoy ARMSTRONG in the same) you you you. will need Find wear any that help my men counterfeiter are and diamonds.' manne) The clock at Ene entranee of Lord Pllesmere''s esta at Worsley strikes thirteen at 1 stole k. This peculiarity is due to the last duke of Bridgewater. Noticing many of his workmen. loltering around after the noon. hour one day, he made inquiries, and was told they had not heard the clock strike So he had it fixed - so that it would strike thirteen. THE of busy with of Triumphs in a Big City 9 XNIV-Contimied. room habitually Fastening a plow, compass to his Captain Syeamore, who satled Sir Thomas J.ipton's Shamrocks in the American, cup contests, defeated a eal farmer in-a plowing. match at Lrightlingsea, England, - last month His furrows were far straighter than his opponents. -Baltimore the Story a Countryman' s of furniture, A long, plain tered with» printed matter, You Mrs. Julia Ward Howe introduced in a most the presiding officer ing me, it mentioned, for I never recognized myself from tien The GUNN deducted, speakers at the dinner to be givThe en by the trustees and aluroni of the George Washington University, in Washington, March 14, are former Attorney General Wayne MacVeagh, Dr. Andrew D. White and Ambassador Jusserand of France union of states on earth ee POSTED ON DEMAGOGUES. por- exact. situation, the future, has. the for }ascertained trol it, and failed. . There was the} q@irection by the second largest: city of usual investing of state borders with | the nation, there i sa shade of advantguards, and the usual conflict who desire the old for those age the By the death of the late Phebs Gates Strawn, of Jacksonville, TlL, the college receives Jacksonville Female at $75,000, for her residence valued the purposes of an art gallery Judge J. T. Fleming of Oklahoma is unique characters of that territory... He served for several years Confederate arnty, and voted the first time in his life for Grant and the last for Harrison le Is proud of his record as a Confederate soldier, but at the same time he believes that every Union soldfer should be paid a pension of $560 a month. for the reason that they saved the greatest repair Route smallest: condition plain exhilarating | is Salt having in Rev. Silvester Horne has a billiard room at. Whitefield) tabernacle, London, says the Ram's Horn, and he vs it has been the best recruiting ground for his chureh we . on Kickner-So York be He-I jat built progress There lagging to|pesitation proves world.' up ‘"-Chicago against It r rard Written Best The TEA ike pho-|considering is: engineers much besides. first been found in New Orleans; and | defeat the aldermen who favored Me |cteady und swift were forces, and the _. Texas has flung a shotgun army to | $1,000 and. they fee, license the border of that commonwealth, signally beaten. This, added to the/ing restored in of the muttered ke Dey themselves. is, inter-|money, strength said } with - enthu- against J ought | Known. light, grotulate license saloon all think Bae , "You no time to gain nolids| "Well, must oppose provision | 2 ee . expensi before that rf | the line , WIN have- to follow- one eyer In a fallacy the Chicago est such further. seems success was you x See necessary,' Prescriptions of! Kx fons Republican considered. whieh has had ity, and which vs lead-!).4¢ take you a so "__Tit-Bi Tit-Bits, publisher put ee isn't Reeord Lecore | fex-| SUr-|eqmmonly believed sufficient wninst| par€}on attack more severé than the rerion| causes are " and literary man," blis er rth |). tost js the more eatisfactory wnaen | OU are taki ae MES But 1 don't oye considers that theTT jetties of: sone} | irsuble. enough: peoples to from logically tn the and may , fairly fairly the makes me . : j lish." said) the man cept ina few cases these stone defenses instinets r | $ fort'asked the | = what save to sufficient proved have banks-from' being washed away Ana'! So that you may the vote there was It clearly {5 the result, |movement you a | phia mia affirma-|\osterday ownership consider that |ing: what states likely yellow to |steps bsteps The those wisdom ]ing dis-|preasonable fit.. arméd of' held eld the saw. tween the} inthe haveVES combat each result developed. of municipal met a defeat The socialist prisingly large. ‘condition people valley ane must way state}diate own |/have section the ~ Mississippi Peper that joce a-Jimited Heretofore each of its millionaire man was | lace Another tribute to good engineering| ES i. the system: of riprapping by vchich ihe of ava majority the z provisions requiring of Aa little daugh- the a What poet e "T'll the to told grasping siasm, known i. snes .9 Reauhse : " have done} the style i 3 one. ts Wd é ntl < ps x ant "| Wigwag-Hello! Se ribble ‘Tr. Writing in some measure for the bridges' per-| any poetry these days manence. as gives earnest of the gualSchribbler-oOnly e ‘nough to keep the f 7 : woll from the door ity of work that will eharacterize the| why ' ; i f Ue Wigwag---Great:. Scott! The wolf entire line when the rebuilding is fin-| can't read poetry, can he?-Philadel- fight); e that Waited a FUN delightful nice be "allowed to interfere with the af-|tive vote, has not been complied with. | pf extracrdinary, of phenomena! flood "Do you fairs of # state. It is the same peo-|So that Mayor Dunne and the imme-|ctyiking a newly constructed | ~ line | thing 2" ple-who was able' ; OF paciiieies 2 and "How bridges & veing commonly 77) Been the was : charming DAN | eountr Joseph Nix, the Wesleyan. reformer took 3.846 signatures to the pledge in a nine da gospel temperance meeting recently held in. Bradford, FEngland ' Riley. | jter ‘Want f withstood and content at mine toda -Janiea Wy hitcomb | ist / Be $80,006 Andrew Carnegie has given N Acadia. collerfe at Wolfville, conditions are attached to the ett e A wainut tree anda bor tree of peen planted on the gray Goverwith his nor J. S. Hogg, in GO thin AOS dying request : rae FRAGMENTS Warner French the just returned to this extended (rip abroad. to No az | descrip- ital ation rra Ber eerie are , This perfectly unprece:lent- | 5° "Mz one or (wo exceptions Mamma i has SARA waiting has exact er AT woos - o the With: there, ian equally aN 3 he with all the divide, ry : on eae vast part}; ourur <p af wings sorrowing laughter Oy. nd on, city| paper wen pal expense to present have of A ° Ne- this °O SEAN a aes on Let the ‘lips of y= ia , : intimately of Anne ess has jrom an 2 the ees i ‘ structure It en- to Republicans and . But on law, ; a ee and and » ern view STEM 8a which municipal ownership, of the pinkae) walle ue. oand| F of the S street railways, operation, be-|]gone must e are campaigns As the reports ‘ itv e or aireteron aes et have expressed themselves in ate the the nation a GRU It from zs state seems discourage a meas-|further ti sections « ae Ma fr su 34 Chieago os 1 i severely, but j uesday}much de through so. affairs . that trouble SAAS - Down : ake a of ang el Winn aw ik gt ae APRIL 5, 1906 NOTES OF NOTABLES Dear Lord, kind Lord, Gra s Lord pray Thou wilt look on all I love Tenderly today. Weed their he ase of weariness; Sca ter ever: " which ‘ damage the : is the ae in the it second See Nn ccessf eee eet irely tirely successful, "would. LSSEC 4 parties of road with | rnotograph by a Republi). redemption to the to the manage-|bonds Laie in stronger visitation than] with which mentoof that ‘ i sooettcat © , state c any state-could the the morning, or THURSDAY, PRAYER. bt tehrorkee ae On that a these, bridges are through rock: ballacted, | SUselIng authornyine "Tm £ already ¥ we AINE r m u neaanew. road, and such aulahine roo commonwealth visitations of yellow fever. That}favor of say, asure -~W . "atin a say, it issg a measure drawn for|purchase too and &* the ¢1 , ~ And A rome reason |, , senator . A ea a i is; DAMAGE a » toute " The vada en- With nit res, re her abundant that its trials and triumphs area recovered. : With of > Republican, a THE Lake ihecSalte which tometer" } thele States i on= . Ge ak oo ic ans, a L Coon bill, ' avitielcn en ; an oo c house Bee Cit City "ity OF "leopnected sicker : and 5 , a 'Salt Lake more directly3 Interesting | all the people than that of The Re- ir to reM Mr. been additional significant. United 2 tion is of for lost. folding are publican yesterday mublican yesterday : scribed the extent . is nothing hicikerin er be State 2 hours the full their love A { 3 articles have ever been priated || Few been laid. Reino cReton: SS re eles U | gees oP OPOSIUO Zc significant con-|yesult in Chicago. There was no clear‘ : to the principle} eut trial of strength between the two : soverelgnty was quarantine are Taene there nolicy ___|tire i to the : i - i There fuck deal kK F ansas Kansas Missouri, a 41F Lancto i. In| ga@neral atari state. at morning the | PYPENT 1 2N Se ‘i a generally Rae int party, -jcan Soa TRABESS UNIONrr ot of raine of measures laws, . be a In n 1906.) 16¢ have ; into i tle more - = ane Sper) Street ‘ i ; Ls "oe Sue and Building | 4. Beacon Press . Association. nn . A NATION, ae Perhaps the : : can cession -ever the REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, all love and in| beside hon with watled ele- consin. se spirit, whe about with measures of sce of the reform and those Ciao, The can so long2 divided Wisconsin. _ labored Building|the Marquette .............- 2 Z ond have rity fn party Ut a beginning f the f£ > ces ‘4 8.0 ae ‘Phones-3190 Publishers' as _ ‘ Ses --- Jew stalwart ne ° ...--.-+++ y advance in we reuniting INTER-MOUNTAIN heart in CULTS overthrown. ee ce ae in advance'....+++> Year, in mide advantage (ean serve wait » Rates: ee Months, ne y beer cause of‘ the very largevote by so"ig 3 "Re inee has eee the ee See ‘ see won he ce The result shou -_-_-_----~| Newspaper Dally Lake Salt in of "PUNO elgot apparent ments which . Republiea = la st at is the for that artly ongbeused,tiles; shrewdly so mt Cong ekarch|has sali la Sod lad siaatbel Congress of i De ae ee ee nde Tie Act the Act under Only is ts ww partisan there Entered as second-class matter Feb. 10) Rose. the famous, by INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN CO. i David of mityor OV én "You ull. the for trouble ef you in-} of the pr rize. g Cc repliedrthe tatteryace nt. simply Iere is show your it to $250." me That's He pushed forward quite a stack JaUBieea iT WEEE Haein eerasicot IRR ae asennad William, Mr. Guniiwent ation ence tothe seemed. Thompson said Will Mr. a check Thompson. and Dan window>-Ihe to demand aven't. got ie nasties the a $2n0 The crisp clerk tiene for a | Agfrom breakfast rh all the [AKere out of | make practical work; that sheaf of ET oan ItaE seem- photographers all had had ex- money with it? (ie meen ability to car and Among advertisements the were ERC ROR Aeon ' Dan Gunn took the entire ere: up to his room. ‘There a he did was to count and sion replied a great SSG morning. next |" | farts demanded | *i8 money. "Nothing butmancurrency," looking busy XV. had PET perience in the country, ed man of them doubted his |tuke charge of a traveling situs | ulestoto;the: confer- with answer?" Chapter $2402" winner ‘ale, of He found <almost $1,000 the |}doubts breught to about himself more in pos- some some bills than Chicago. He the quality of got to stick together ewe you. $10. All you count out the money him that: we have f it right back to you he had had by dewhere now I will} they would have to pass inspection. He need do is to|CoUuld lose nothing, even if nine doland prove to | lars out of every ten Were thrown out {1° will hand | as counterfeit. And he was not afraid and give you a/°f note. What do you say? +} ten-dollai "I have ven't that much money sea me." "How much have you?" "Probably $150." haven't more than $150 with| us,"" said the hustler; advancing toet he agent ud ee up clear and OWE ill do Oh, re- two lot and the first arrange "Can't, you. help "me out?" asked |/204 Proposed to test the matter William, turning to Dan Gunn, "We've | Positing the lot in some bank, uess cor gai his ability to explain where he got it, even if the oMcers of the law should trouble him with inquiries. Then the letters engaged hi He had seen Ralph raneevs s handwriting often enough at Mauston, and he labored through the ai of correspondence searching for But there was nothing at ‘ail resembng the close, even handwriting, ex- it's irregular. jeept. one jn the ietle heap that had Make it $200 if you ean eome from a woma Was signed Thompson and the. hustler' looked | "Mrs. Mary J. Hall." and it said no Dan Gunn inguiringly. He nodded.| more than the writer was a practical Then he did a very daring thing. | Photographer and had traveled with He took out his wallet, went over by | her husband .who had since died, ‘"dothe door all alone and counted out|ing" all the county fairs in northern at the amount required He advanced | Indiana to the table. The heap of bills, still lying there Mr. Thompson ee carelessly on the end of tabl William, the hustler, reached w This reply was remembered. All the was |letters were heaped on the little bureau the}ia his room. He went out fora stroll and the for|mame "Mary Hall''-without any the money ust; as his fingers | logical reason-recurred to him. He touched it Mr. Thompson said, pleas-| concluded to go down in the part of antly the town given < Mrs. Hall's address and see if the vicinity told anything. "Look here!" He found a bank which received his Dan looked om saw the muzzle a: ank deposit, after asking him a good a long revolv was smiling in his | vane questions that seemed to him irThe me chin a jre levant, and then walked aerial: on most engaging manne near Polk Street his| The course took him leaned busy looking man depot e Ibows on the table and laugh ed aloud A woman was standing ina hallway me the stuff. It's all up with | did not seem to notice him until you," said the ieee again reaching {She he had passed and then she called out: Tou ; nd get . ke . You dropped your poeketout said eae: the still ‘sit-| made even Dan ling on the end of the ta Gann look "T don't just understand,' sala Dunn, around, On th e sidewalk, about a dozen teet behind slowly patting the bills Into the pocket him, lay a black leather of his coat and resting his left hand Acris tes He went back and picked upon the edge of the table. up. The woman stepped down from you damn jay!" laughed the the Thndite, apparently interested, She agent "You are. easy." ett the hall door wide open, A And then came the surprise That "Thank you," Gunn and said Dan sinewy nd suddenly grasped the was starting on aaa. edge of the table and lifted. The ta"What's in it?!' asked the womar was overturned in an instant-its "Well, why should J tell you =i legs in the air, the merchant and thejis in my poc icetbook : busy looking man sprawling upon its "Come on," was her rejoinder. "You upturned nether side. The merchant's know it is not your long revolver was discharged as he fell, "You said it was." and William, the hustler, at the op"Come here and count the money posite end, bounded into the air and| You ought to give me half for showing ee ; : , . it to you "You have shot "T'lL thie think abo ul iit when rhe C : Dan Gunn kickedme!the pistol toward back eas ae TT. come ' the and corner of the room the other two had ference. Then table, repellant somethin shot down.nearly pa he near which he "Come stood for con-|She was swung it above head and ran toward ihe windo He calculated "the glass would offer] a stout resistance, but would. have had to be ten times as thick to stand before that heavy and fiercely hurled projectile. It went out with a crash, lesing a leg arainst the casing, and seized the 150 feet to the stone here a stout a face. 2 ". me Write it," "LE sai a minute," woman want j cae she with to ee insisted a hard tells you ug a She had kept abreast of*him as he moved on again in his original course. She was higher by the height of the step which fronted the building. And ane had grow n play fully insistent, ome here He did not stop. With a swift movement she reached out and caught his cap from his head. She. tossed it into the hall, and it rolled on the star to the foot of a flight of carpeted stairs, cone here," she insisted, smiling, I nt to speak with you Dan Gunn looked at the cap on the floor of the dark hall, ere then he slowly drew from his ocket > that hen's-nest. hat of the pclae man he had twice met-and twice beaten-Iin the territory of the ~Market™ street ang. "LT said T would put sil on the first bare-headed man the countryman, and moved on, aughing at the discomtited "strong-arm" wom un, may lose on the cap," he said "and I may not make on the poocketbook, But. there is a place in the Bible which says ‘they that turn in into her house the " And I've got to find | a certain photographer before 1 die athe number and street given as'the address of "*Mrs.. Hall" was a hotel. Dan Gunn stood across the Way and noted the building. He had an impression that the name ‘Mrs, L Hall" did not belong to the ee mm fact, h mat was a ee at ‘all one ment or alley. That loosened table leg Dan Gunn rasped and hurled at the agent-who was the first to recover and who had lifted his chair as a V nO e impact wood was too much, He fell in a heap against the eee wal William, the hustler, in inercasing and pain, we as clutehing at his breast staggering about the room. Mr. Thompson, the merehant, darted out of the door, slamming it after him. Dan Gunn kicked among the littered pupers on the floor, found that wad o vf bills which William, the hustler, wa said to have won, and then followed his table out of the window, There was a fire escape and an tron ladder ‘leading from tron landing to iron landing almost to the ground, He knew it would be a race between him and the bogus merchant of Twentysecond street, and no man, even with the peril of fire above him, ever went down so rapidly Instead of utilizing the Jron. stairways, he dropped from one landing to the next below, through the opening and inside the protecting rail. And he won the race Several men and boys had gatnered about the shattered table in the alley. They saw this swinging athlete descending and waited for him to eyplain. As soon as he reached the - Pondering on many detatte in he wrenched the drawer fram the tathe BeaR ars, and watching for Ralph ble and took out a neatly pinned buns he passed back through dle of bills: Then he dragged the ta- Gran the city's busy cener, he cam e to his ble out of the roadway, and remarked own hotel again, and sat aay in the to the little group of astonished watechwriting-room. ers that he didn't beleve ne wanted that piece of furniture ¢ Before they could sitanie ‘him. with (Continued Tomorrow Morning.) a THE 7y™ Bs 4 |