OCR Text |
Show Bes - ;"' [ar- Mountain f Repub THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, : |f denominathe what matter No held. McWhirter} the remembers one when case-a case where a ten-thousand-|tion, neighborhoods want a Sunday dollar winning at a bogus game was a]school, especially in the summer time. fall Entered second-class as Cliy, Uta 18 2 Republican in Salt One Six Months Feb, sn coo City. Sunday a Edition only, -+$ i 9 208. Block, St, 8.0 , west new have , square for demand, the In as controi of sto history the s ee extends, a the public any an} of city party, : since the past? the . : : The he Pp o j contention But has : one does the ari merit. It American have political not party the past. the It managers control of hours Pieces there D S | no attempt to live fifty : the] not were to by K E N or UC Be si enter Is Mrs. Mary in the] d tisis will frank,| tra . Pte vece de-]? schools of "S= deficit of two have pee to pelo: gut their 1 by remain, Meatteh classLS class in s and as their listen n a1 ; a of} the she'll get house, as can before: fixin's. around my hardly "Please,| pa, nice pudding if) or us ‘ars ye ey yes, to us be oO raised 1"re!" filling up, if ‘to' will lounging then board I a an youre fully" = doth ; shouk Middleton around" plenty Gt. ‘ renc a‘re ‘ actice, re the quired re-| particularly more mot's plans and wishes, that was no doubt that Utah in {tain @ good ‘school In. neighborhood. "Your 2 ar opin‘< > ands "8 )] ea ee er ‘ Raia »« into Mr. Hak Wil-| pot and ee he could Az all hee very ~ tax The Phe pe again Anna next é » at , o they have done in the past? Why, 7 =< pds : they reuse willthar ratee nica that, sTERRITIR RES eee TATE as : a C™e#S¢ that burden ee Ses Ee AROUT ABO | TOW ‘ the TThat boys. has ily dui ing hh arrangemen custody is, hubband : Z : of her] seeping in|to the keeping in ‘ ‘volves yn her 3ut as BAe eee GENO Eee b en ve i ; the Portland Oregonian points out: The three sons are the real sufferers} ° are oO from the mercenat y marriag while Fann; bet oF and and to multe Me Fave' secre fromthe do palms. Jrst the idea of aid laughingly said, perior bs |? littleey Se and of that ledge that the'evile. that flowed from such es er denied ar ‘disregarded the law Does any one who voted the Amertcan 5 ticket Rlefige one on that has been ee y : art party elieve Neen here redeemed a ; Qe the compelled are saloon who rigidly sult their that obey own time; for business, Th ey doors neglect Be "ts think ° pee Seca the Ane rics 1 Sunday: saloons . have yeaa] oS obey keepers in ee Salt ny Lake the law --and interests at con-. the same no pretense a of keeping the 1 ir do not: even ralose thei! om Sunday, and in- that advertise thelr disregard of Jaw they should obey, as well pledge their party made to the the will be scandalous public office in the] And there mismanagement of school control office six days is enough for any But there are many more make } ay. front pledge There will) be | other, who is a bitter enemy of their} graft in the erection of every school-|mother and under the influence of house, as there is graft in the water |their father. If the countess succeeds a ae i 7 ; in making even decent Frenchmen out] office. Even in the i there . city with the world demand lic as the of it best in of: her ons ae undet both she and they ally fortunate - the | #lly be improper > control With a of party the to|So ~ pub- is the far as of fices that have been entrusted to them, | without a party so recklessly these will be extrava-|ous hard misfortune the grief exception-| trial of and aa be knew,| what was likely| wedded a Sen abroad. It must be , Saati St ae ie she deserves to suffer when. she else race ears bie der': see sath Maes a ble . trade: Her Sewn : AR PED ADAS jence for the party managers to ask|riches for the Frenchman's‘y title. for further power when they have so But the boys are not to blame. They] openly abused 2 has so been the power palpably so they had.|were not = . suffer, ayed. palpably suffer, betrayed consulted. > and can They are s escape es not human sidewalk the truth. And ng, it is easily known. Any one and restore Tae the ground Property to owners pav- | blest passable were oe |4nd Godly aes behavior, not | thelr father with andae Mr. Wilmot. was. ¢ Bree , Peet is », promise five as life o his the busier districts of Salt Lake, It]refuse left by the contractors. is not-a question of dodging around|the city has to pay for a job And | that that tain. They Americans might enter- the losers. Wealth will ton; x soon | Sary eae that fle sapacity t a suc-|shor turned|took he more. entered should . she higz ech at lex eenit very night the or space home of oe we Sowles H. parish painted a H. -A Rak are . H: a Jo invited. * ; iy % Ak 5 R. willbe the © }} George admire this fur 3 Io L16=80W" BANKS': combined. in use ee oe of fates MAIN, vainS the best assortment helt makes up hi y he tate hete announces & daughter marriage month. the the : W. ae sae curate, of the week und': dancing Bele ar I shit night by Dr. Putnam. ; cards at. ey scchool cane . toad ee + instruments Pa Jarze affairs reception ~ Friday Wright, next Monday Pp Preem: Bb. Freeman, be os If vou Ne ford teOpa."tome ; entertain on Miss Sallie will for PEAR the the E.given S. s | Free man : « Behle afternoon One of OE he ; Be & | host=| for‘ Lig 4 -Shej e given ¢¢ Zz ‘ Pie y ery today, B ae ; yy {Z cue 6 Shultze luncheon Mrs. Mrs. ay . : enterained in receiving the guests| and Mrs. F Whitneyey an : Party Mrs. perale of child's Hepes ahs I use the most , and ydern apparatus Rea. ar ret scie c : methods. No guess w ork H. O y, "nse evesight d Sette, oS aan an . . ant entertains } 4 for Mrs.. R *_ * ® The. . n id Daughters g ‘ 0 f thie the . Revolutio will "mastic the residence' of? Mre ovember Alice: M. Horne Wd<¢ Priday:«N "mb 3 0 Fanny Mr. neso."Pet was er oh Saas Willou i | so mue n oso for books said she had lessons during With do time, her it at night, plenty of the school all day at was just oe ean . ~ Har Hien an, e oe ae) i anc Who Saturday afternoon at reli room metas Claridge, (7 Samuel the old. a) re ; doesn . diamond? t want al is The Daughters of the Pioneers will hold an interesting meeting next reverse. "Sometimes peas Stephens, i agesee oy fdna ao Hatch. and time fot hours. the school! executive s avenor, ean never|Rayi she She got her lessons at home, and play-| sit-|ed pretty good," said Mr. Middle-|she would "fifteen earth and five unsartin. | more faces unsartin resolve at that not to make any booby, Bill Jeffrey, ones?-ol al ror the girls to laugh any more pictures at, nor of Mrs Tiernan, left yesterda to draw gone on her slate of the ilmot replied that he believed | Dame Sobriety, a Mr. Julia Thornton who had hesi-| jand deatiyy waktbac aspin sheMae ealled morerchells Mr. was A tated about "He'll signing sign,'' ‘‘l's ‘'l's thar 3 o'clock the in Lion. father We have the the i diamonds ready i house. at tempting j sizes and prices. |tags said after Mr, Middleton.|a yas, was, you ¢ and on dear he . told! ons tions the : boys' lover werere. coats. of fun, se soon ne But and shé her orgotte forgotten. ‘s. Mrs. was|#" lesles- * F F. Mrs. hh and aos Y< wee ae + Tab J. Mrs. abel si eaves Fabian Eastern resolu- Heryr two of today leay fo today fo. LT ae Be E LAKE CITY, UTAH SA ce 7see O: W iil hay e . as. her |--- her SS me you might put down five for him sons, however, were generally well-|guest for a few days her cous in, Mrs 'em. He I pay for two on lr One Hundred Bricht, New lives on; learned, and well recited; she|O. M. Williams, of Rockford, IIL, who my premises: and ff he doesn't pay up; could not compete with Julia. but neither|!s on het way to California rl to Beautiful Oe Uother three, why, he'll jog, that's|did she wish to. She often wondered |the winter. WOOD MANTELS |? how her sister could learn so long lesMr. Wilmot ‘said he hoped no"one/sons, Just Being Unloaded. and, secretly, she had her own RUSSIAN would send enough, be through hallways, or making a pre-|should have been completed by the|theirs, of course, But it :will be one ‘ s ae : x tense of a cigar store accompaniment. | contractor. of the miracles of; an eee The saloons are open as saloons, and All over the city streets are in| human life if they do not employ its] piatdly no: an awful condition. theLast April bids|Use in the fictitious pursuits so likely £ There is a still worse phase of this were opened for street paving, and|‘®, appeal‘ nN to them. subject. In nearly every one of these|Pat Moran, the favorite, was underMoney is a good thing. But if Anna} saloons there is a card game-usually}bid by thousands of dollars. x ,a ‘Ss% ting-room that evening. reprimand from Mr. Wilmot would] A. . McCune, will give -an address, ‘ ‘Very good success,' returned Mr. bring the tears into her eyes, and she|speaking of his early experiences of Wilmot; "I am sure of fifteen achainrss would wonder why it was she could] Utah... There will also be an informal and have half a promise for five|not behave and make Mr. Wilmot pee musical pr i ‘ ™ere." ; her as well as he did Julia. The ae: cs, D see are ‘ was He at Wilmot .: who cares to go down street on Sunday | able to get into or out of their premis- | they are not likely scheming mother, | wishes. to realize the antebest old F hteaton ‘icans i will find a score of saloons open in|es because of the mounds of earth and|hopes Ke when of Middleton, can], it eatin the and his face homeward he had the names|she of. fifteen ~ ‘scholars and © the eee ; can Onene of and s . subscribers cessful; their Who are Ph must|1 ceo s In these saloons young men gather not have the liveliest hope for the who are harmed by the time they|SUPPLEMENTAL MONEY. mother, since the little we know of her E ; acks| spend there; young men who can not= At the Monday night's session of|/!eads to the belief that she lacks] afford to waste the money they leave] the city council the street commis-|4epth And when the there; young men whose fathers and|sioner was given a thousand dollars|lads areof tocharacter. grow up with influences} mothers would not for a minute support] with which to follow up the con-|alternating between that home unthe American party if they could know tractors on street and . _ ; » ty a anliness mi : pearing amiable and of surprising Mra. Toncheon willbe given. in. commemWilmot with her wonderful powe 's Of l oration of Thanksgiving day. fparning, pals last she oa to Berteo: = ie ea tion 0 J e8S0n, "Was. 80 ong * but. ‘it hase junior ge) vee clas . fonrat was readily learned, and its substance The of the . university "Well, any boy, what luck?" said Mr.| held as the And it would be folly for the people }lives brought without choice of public.}to trust. them again when that trust}own Into a situation where they arte h ve ‘ reputation at-home or Ss behavior ie ts to begin with Thar's| Aleck ‘Il just suit you, He'll not throw Isadvaire ably told in words of her own.| met Monday afté rnoo0n ..to mal ears you on the gate, for he doesn' t trot as 1e preferred reciting alone, and she|rangements for a promenade ‘coricert black ant ant can Ik! t: far outstrippec i Ke others to p be given ' the i first of 4, the year. wa so in the ) : It Aleck was saddled and|length of her lessons. it seemed neces-| Will be an important social event, The . ape er sreatlart She be fast as a black Accordingly ee , not wasted. any sense, when she > it, ofthe it, after aJl.]bridled mother is of iF will there sympathy regardless of its pledges, so flagrantly |if she had wrong In its administration of the of-|to happen with the a coneerned, palpably|deal so : is ae : &i ¥ * e, ‘Ho at Christiansens 10! So vo ye got some ee om inking 00 Eg r20 e Sis-|* ' : . at mrs ) "ed vVitations have State notions already, have you?" said ter be Heats is Tw hundy nein Mr. Middleton Well, honey, you're The following Monday Mr. Wilmot Ss hal more'n rht, I | reckon, half vigh ck * iSois i » sa y-| repaired 1 t to his as schoolroom } lroo , where he rere ity Bec pe gn eATa ot edt Se tate poy ing, he ) for the fourth ‘ time 7 passed up|found ‘ i assembled ‘ ri all his pupils ) It}... Miss~ Ice oune : ‘ evening Saturday: formally arrange] to easy comparatively |; Was cup coffee his Breakfast being over, he took his them into classe 8, and ere the elo ht ® "Very well,' said Mr. Middleton; ‘from the acounts' T hay heard: of} os Seen oe it ay re improv- | ¢d; so I reckon NOU GAVEsYOUa Very | conditions,|Skeary horse fortunate. cA There party|there political would S a partisan schools, js today treasurer. in of aik® Serer ae " * to learn. deter. of "her him| si been badly eee epinted:out.\the, many laws, i and ~ aE ens anh eee pbc eee particular, they promised to correet Sia Fie : . such saloo dp that heline and sh¢ Nona to Melvin Peterson, her suto take place the last of ‘ ns : ability artifices hiehlyto agi eid: -6 Mrs..0! D"Banks engagement" of . their the] While issue the are they which contract with "hecters: thelr, that as bered d be remembere tha theypolttica) have fattened Mr. Pat Moran] mother is given the custody of the party demanded |*~ : a cee . : Idren-all of whom are of tender|¥Young friend to the stable and bade) of the day the school with contracts for the paving of the oe wa: pretty gendren-a \ city because the city : ve bem i ans ‘i : 2 : "ars-they are to be given over to]hfm select for his own use any horse] erally = a organized Wee Ks ~~ Istreets of the city passed On,| There will be jobs Soe its ; he chose. administered Mr. Wilmot They declined, 5 say-|and thal father, a man of vile habits, day the two Yankeec schoolmas-| ; : I each . ; -|in every piece of ground they buy for] qays in the week, one week each at}!Og he was not much accustomed to| ter gained in the love of his scholars, s evident violation of a scnoo schoolhou w us there was ouse, mam-|Ne as Pie ses; é Year é a and t Baster, « s oe month|hor ty and .a nd 7 he preferred ‘ that g F = Middle-}a made 2 Mr. the : solemn . one of them. moth job from at least, ae ai beginning to Jena or the gained : in in summer of each year. bs During a ae ps Bean choose any horse ao he thane ees cone. 2 - 4 the te en, s ‘ ulin fs ; , Pre te if they ~Asec were given powe1 ee , times they will ad be with adherec their granc leas o a her : reso et ( : on of apsig : » Se 4 tie In Cottonwood conduit i will be Mrs...‘ a the had ee H. Mark will tecivas-cerfectiy.aollient- scholarshi various Hal gr a Bees et i3 hostess SeCicntent . oS ie e« 2 by ve Mrsee Harty Knight. eae 5. Caen lee x _ a odes J. Schpltze and Mrs, How‘ae. t ; a). She, however, felt some misgivings lest Fanny should rival her in his esteem: but she hoped by negro bribery, and sel -rooms at" y at é é infor nfor- at 500" Freeman, eee %. i é Zz & Stowe, Mrs: Wil-| ess at at near|guest, him rrr an ae i ft yesterday ) n. afternoon. Four Fo et "enice were played ".'%e ite ae * Mrs. Mark L. Requa will be at home this afternoon at her. residence, Me ev south. Temple street, at ; a tea to Fast South of friends embers:and wl 1ich all dais é mem cae Mr. having enter Ri: B. rhe,' wae, ee Sole in The q sn terte ent Ba} to 1®Mrs.priz you ae Is Lo seen enough of him. to know. set a great value upon talent, resolved to surprise him with Wor :seholarah ptr < speech Julia! to look in-! SIR «es sell ‘the% blacks, think."| ee pr i.I Eoin} pn fat | =| nile 3 | eee ead tobe i \ I $ viene ted . { s 1 entertaine th with 1er all the time was per g to tell te j ful She resolved to gain his good Mrs. A, with my two opinion, cost what It would To do|Thursday knew she to go rund this, s, she Jeonare she knew she mustst appe: appear to ob be| Leonard st, and Sun- |} amiable.-and that she determined to a full se nos do-before him at least. She had also Mr. and. Pa, what makes you always bet sister and me, just as though you could! coq] us like horses? t's bad enough | oO. streak 8 ©) it afore night." At the last part of this curled her lip, and tried i a . di-|dignane t, been hiées< worthless her secured has three ee BOYS? Ss? Castellane , from vorced and ee HER ‘ Gould its a - |; se ; at SOAt was dethled: hak. Ma, Wim bt said | should remain in Mr. Middleton's fam| 3 a Te wa; « on subseripti , ‘ te strenk o' lean: and if I we unt ob-|a° kindness pray let me immediate that best pat | po-|tractive ¢-y76.c\vilmot: remonstrated at civ-|ard ing so much. \\at » M1 Middleton' 8 © ear I ae ‘ eae The fron he beaui : appointed table in tiie dining | Philadelphia with} of ; real-and such] tatoes. Brace such| bacon and corn meal-and Vie ; {tare as ws have 3 on , fe ior : ome to says, ly| Mee Oo aes a :dollar: ee ; Sree 3 VE 1alf, or even a or} on there's: wants this |mally ai ; yesAB, ae house. Mire heaps of horses|compliment to M1 I've 2 neck Y OI Fifteen. Chrysant tables hemums were bik i Why. a shell of thar's do: he think 3 "replied ae ‘foolt!. and niggers will] looking-glass new aan wohine i profusion. were used ST drawing-rooms ane ay «pont bea |iinfernalold. T'll I J "4 a) E ane rnoon ‘ornick. Corr: ore?" on learn.<to.\make« a). of Aunt Judy, will par , houses of Utah. know and what you ask a liffcult thin to ac-|others I'll head the list Wane: : Halted. Lee Pan at the |S2!s and give‘ you aa horse hor: gals eee ae me pee a with. and T'll bet Tempe of the public school house shine, too, that vou'll get school _ a Cs ihe |quire, and {n-}threshhold r axes |lic . and What basing wil they with the‘on school your doargument what tae yesterday IMolmies. hie |i ig does! shaggy Vil ple a walt} MY rides.as gene rally old tars|* . i she spends. Devil of a cent if she she and I BLD LPL orn An elaborate bridge e a KY | " E i J, ae raves . and though Note. rout par) to B uehp attorney ge 5 ee 1 { the hundred the ee SHIN "I want { plied, to k now haa | YOU se very cheap!' ee "Why, yes Do you . Tempest . . , give it all1 te » ‘Sunshine unshine'; : ee s ene"ere rentle aoe n rounc me, anc irms x Form- sc eee Continued 0 ) ‘ ; Se re - roo apout a eras wee teachers ar ty 3 till I'm dead money in fool no to give an hour the expiration II en on: the] the| oe Mormon religion the > Morm & ; school is dismissed. required be]/ents pies rhel 2Ver: ral with|seve vrais j C within thousand dollars at . ek ase ssi > £ 1 possible N yp IN By (Chapter ap Those} also $e e| 1 BELD BOO PLR : day.¥ The regular ns re hair?' nat And tl ‘tis‘tisn't 7 in my eS > school|y were | rocKking-c POs net And then RECS se UY ; aired , on are ent by saying, closed up, the pupils were natur to refuse. Oh, yes; Sunshine ts " ater cio é a eine You Sbe I've oe Reo eaters Sa er tien cae etceet taeen a liking to ron ae Bageure, J the|to stay, or whose non-Mo ee Us SoS ? : . ay at ene iv sce you trying to help yourself, Am did not want them to stay, were eee oe showed hex" sunny 1 fe to try a Ip CA They tn A shildre ace : r ATL: says.they; allowed to say go m Mormon a rougf children : : : . | )1 Hock est Ss I'm but am maybe | and be old in-} Middleton Mr. breakfast During ar ir , why should E bet- ey denomibut there . es x ~ the | erly it was the habit; of school in reason " "ae party, entrusted » citv affairs, debtedness-a | ec a". in seeing what the American party ; has made of sar that . power was intrusted to Pate it in| use the But r N § ; Conduct of the city affairs, raised jion forbidding y that e s i » pra cea : a p fist you write, and half the folks in} spe aa rate of cothe city the oN, very They lirst/then there arechurch no ay religion classes of Kentuck will judge you by that In| moi ind the Mormon: he ‘pubslins' ‘heldvinet wanes youdiniet ‘tell what eyou har all) they were in contro ; Z he The|#™4llest8 party the na A LIF 7 devoted exclusively text books adopted of o S i denomination"< 4 Wy se school authorities. f they the 21, 1906. Lt or other scho in P re-|the ae tax ' serve the control of . a? skinge eile mth eee tion, one is warranted to M of globes. story" clean. But they|who were Mermons promise even in]religion class after another American ¢ . P the. name and solely be-|* ; wants it. souls "ity | teaching » 9 authority, of = try to do|hours after ; e would-lik they teaching time|school 2 cnowledge|year cee madé a partisan 5 has. pepn seustbegneniy, in of any political party, and . . cause that political party old their teaching The]hours are . aching keep] first ; has demanded ‘ the con-|income. , They raised ult oem the daxes, of the publie schools It is the| their expenditures have involved time the control of the schools|¢itY in a quarter million dollars of nt manageme : trol first presence the "old, r of no Mormon mnchi future}/al naturally be they ts American schools.|t this: in é as "Sel = ae ail is the first time ee it in would would in youjare a on . given control of the : 5 public a schoolnic a|The school taxes are already high . - on ibuc made the the and the first trial you have given them.|the school > : : . Certainly you have no reason to expect| work was they will deal justly by you in the ere - political been they can better broom-sweep not kept their There : be It is then future, past ; 7 > eR THEY DESERVE IT? Our American friends have in NOVEMBER ( E st how ; ; they aaah were entrusted with if ever they were going to * Z 2.00 Member Publishers' Press Association. Salt Lake Clty, Uh. Nov. 21, 4 1906. DO of|follow their|terment keep there blackboar ; d to]the managers not And to have pledges Manager. | right. South do them. when their Phones-3190. Both The party them they - 2.00;/Ume 4.00) Year. . » General mentioned i are truth: give expect o.|than 275 seree-ee> One Malcolm McAllister, Dooly this things American people 22). .20..0.6; --. ......... Temple impress the Rates: SOR le cies «MM cisie «x le ers 6 OMIces these and pledges to the peoplp-whone votes they er, eee core 2 een i ask In election. They do not make albe religious service of other right and proper use of the power the] nations In the school houses, r Lake . 22.0 cceneannas: Month Months MG) a 7 . Daily Newspaper Subscription ahree matter ‘under the Ac March 38, The Only Now ‘Now of Utah. Bible, WEDNESDAY, = Published Every Morning by matter of so slight importance, so Ht-|and they organize one in the publie INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN C0./tie out of the ordinary, that no at-|school house. They : have officers, E and tention at all was paid to it by the]lesson leaves, and song books and the Oficial Crean of the Republican party police the State UTAH, = only to school he's stingy your pa Mr. Wilmot bo handed POPULAR against ; their suspicions to keep eee 5 i went hal like: him Let the and on the them mcs é ors me away. ng place |mates had paper, but chose He much, almost, liked ie and one without nea; a. of his Heroic In OUR > Manteure, Is RADIANT working domestic a comfort And also fact, the 4 GRATE Grate was a a mint gp ithin a Ruscha its in-] knowl-| SONGS eee The te to ‘Mr Wilmot( verg Mr. very | Faiz Ola » aaraectis subject, to herself. and Revolution in Salt Lak e Cl In ES ear very pret loftiest « lite he went on: ‘'Thar's ten scholars edge, wound herself strongly around rom both sides of the Volga eight dollars-that‘ makes eighty; | hiss heart a For time ‘ he struge fa Werere ggled quite enaran 1ored _ qu the neat then thar's five at eleven dollars, and|against it. for his first acquaintance} And captivating Olg fifty-five and eighty make a hundred | with Julia had not left a very favor and thirty-five; then thar's five more} able impression on his mind. ; But since | Put Olga was a Nihilis Nih at fifteen dollars, five times fifteen, | that night she had been rfectly | 48 Well became five times fifteen is twenty-five-sey_ her station pleasant before perfectly.| che often shoolc her tiny fist and had given , exusper: enty-five dollars;-seventy-five and a} but one demonstration of her passion-| "prow ean The|Gould has those who've sought a heart, Bow ean? I punish there is strong hundred and Runa The ae ty- pave eae aud a ate temper, ae ; 6 , ry To have our rights abolished?" : one to se poker. Of course, the game runs every|American party in control of the city | Probability A > ha that ft will be w roe ae "Hote einai clevenctwo: s Husarce ee aaoe ; eon 3 Wwe Mn al 2 ae seri beaten She at whene lo!o! a Grand Duke : day and every night. That is known| pretended to wrangle about the bids, fae by the iad ig fat \ et dollars!) Why, quite "a heap! Of] in some preserves, and in passing them]| to every one who has the slightest de-| though these were as plain as day.|!8 the demon that His fingers to be polished. has cursed her life,| course, you've got clothes enough sire to know what is going on in the| They did not give the bid to the low-|#24 must carelessly spilled them upon rest as a blight on the lives} last a spell, so you can put two hun-to/very Julla's new blue merino. In the anger| Fair Olga laughed in ea ia dred de Le out at interest. city. But the Sunday games are dis-|st bidder, but quarrelled and I'll take it and| of the moment Mr. Wil t sj . The kind in which hate jug- | f her sons. ling give you ten per cent.''* astrously harmful. | good opinion were forgotten. Spring Always the game gled the matter for months, and finalome wer seS powder white | ae Mr. Boe smiled at seeing his|ing up, she gave the girl a blow w hich nee is played by men who are at work ly awarded the work to Pat Moran gm iesuen: thine, tu see." for FOR THE INTER-STATE PAIR. T wes earned Sie Tote the week. Always the play- thousands ers are plied with liquor, and the more|i"@l copiously they do drink they course. the play. more ‘They lose, of Caer. bid, and reck-|i9S of of|50% the he streets to complete too into late a single 44 all through cE Tee . mits because to openly was pay- the block sea- of the continue its Pieeices or36 pledged co the of people when|in of that the the Li the winter, and aie: piien : sImDp!¥ | dishonest bidding' and early months contract of they would make an end of the Sunday saloon. They dare not deny| that. They promised there would be ho more open gambling. They ae they have broken those pledges. would be impossible to more en disregard the law than jt is being disregarded now. |Schools entrusted to letting 1906. a Managers the streets work, and to see the party so Indif- and promoters of the in-]" Aer ter-state fair project are now attending ; ; to the preliminaries for their exhibit next season here in Salt Lake. It is an] enterprise which will command the support and encouragement of every one in Utah who wishes well to the state. management the American. party managers were| Let any man look at seeking control of the city that the} Where Moran has begun laws would be enforced. ‘They de-|a8k himself if he wants clared /onlg- the in And they can not-either in|™4"¥ awarded to him. money or in health-afford the loss} they ‘sustain regularly in the Sunday saloon that the American party perIt Sbove:/his started Nothing Utah than here the can be a fair of greater which products of benefit will the prodiited. in the recent giving inter-moun- hace: An inter-state fair which will adequately show the resources of the region, which will impress upon the stranger within our gates just what RELIGION IN SCHOOL HOUSES. are the reasonable capabilities of this Religion seems to be a particularly | region, will be one of the most help- ment for tributed. the Some to pay, be protected. and tribution but do places campaign, protection ‘as a money that was not men know Some just of saloon they on they made attempt business on to declined} nomination. will states their general and| building. But in other parts of the] would feel a common interest, each pay-|country the school house is the comfor all the rest, in making Utah and con-|mon religious sanctuary of every de-|the mountain West appear webl in the not| con-|the principles, | and open "Sunday. All their|number the been services house usually But{have through preaching school on night Sunday. religious held in the \the are older] held after No man "revivals" school that| houses and songs It are today trying to the public, is folly to again de-| pel at night. sung there. pretend that gaz-_b!ing]are offered Denominational And the nation. region a And material representatives Utah has of of the it would] in advantages tunities not equalled of | tion then good other show- sections and oppor- by any other por- Union. number There needs be no exelusion of the occurred|argument in favor of any other state: children] but it is probable Utah would dominate the day|the exhibit, since its nearness to the the gos-|place of exhibition would be in her! Denominational there. the can|that those that are open are open be-|the middle West. No man can cause the proprietors have becn given | the conversions that have protection by the city authoritics they|there. The benches at which helped to put in power,-the party|sit for their studies through that secured office by false pretenses, |are occupied with listeners to ceive eyes of the in|do night,|/ing lives are|favor. prayers} of But which men|And it would all the region it is clear to be an would Salt honor to be entitled. Lake business has been driven out of the cily when|and of women have been changed|men that nothing can benefit the reone can see the games going on eith-| there from bad to better ways. gion round about without conferring er Sunday or week day in tne saloons There {8 probably not a public}/4n advantage on Utah and giving a that are favored by the American|]school building in the country from| benefit to Salt Lake. party politicians, It is folly to pre-|the Mississippi river to the Hudson at| The whole inter-mountain region tend gambling has been riven ovt,|which Sunday schools have not been gees forward together. There is no 4 * canbe deducted." was The ee . advancing hee eo broken Won in time she Whe twenty ie . pieces. exclaimed tone, "Devil loss of the dish in a. At Remarke 2 the And loud one ol eh anes ee es section or one state /traya and Utah, which can party once, he and it e Ce eA eats atate "dee| The asks you to commonly the trust American betrayed your trust] it asks have® not. started m7, ..., Ee Rap Era Roe Bie and Mantle substantial Utah we adunk in dit sure ‘te rest.of:: their dss ddiniveblo jSwensen. can ae ee the: capable confi- ana} efand coe ing a" chairman grounds: There schools mountain] ichdeavors: For and. that "suckers glad party from the the Mo- of the That- isthe itite, the Wein sort Feastern: eiabie Stal of ~ reputation: states: tea traci td-send It: really ae car lines. does | Waited our | made for Those the schedules cars wind as run to. the heart of But let as if start old of Olga? Elias MeMorris & Sons 60. 21-27 quite aloof A flurry Ss her dut : ie omas: Re aes grew W. ---- sialic manicuring "she ‘dias kivitch f) So. Temple - are positive manent and CURED -per- cure ~ ye for fae en, and Seinon see t | ipouse, Dwight, ©T1: eae con- EEN, EY aysrrrere, em. 5t., Salt Lake City, ¥barra. ew. -------_- 36 = 6 MAIN - CYS hos Gl oS ea = Loos mae a =- C) lady they them, STREET o =pS2s 2 = 3 of? -s Tea oS Ro? a - ae = © os A a = =a =) = 2S o oe == x 2 = ~-gwpo>~ Mw path=. ao7se ° 2O3'a & en a al S W ® om a SS6e a S=5 om oad :2Ts oo S55 S SlaN= oO ortnes =. S| ono Ss 2 = = 2 oSOrFS| Byes meds a so Sap eae =a = S3= S ate Sal =| = / = oes s -o a 2Aax os am oy aod - kept | "Vern and stopped wheneyer the con| 7uctor heard a dog bark. If a man lives on East Second South and likes to walk, those cars are about as satisfactory as anything else in the landscipe. = 2 O Ss > o y= = oo H to make, 15¢, 30c, and 50c Utah --- SOD x o..2' savtn ©) SE rk errs DRUNKENNESS Ss = apply. See what winning the Clark cup a ooo Haisecdial donee sie cea x We don't care how much Mr. HarriUtah. Eastern dealers are simply over-|'™*" Spends on the street car system whelming the orchardmen and ao ALOE Salt Lake, but we make a point on onants here with. orders for Utah trult the routing of the Second South street schools are blighted with "the lecherous embraces of a. polygamous hierarchy." And ft comes a whole lot nearae being re es ee If you trust a man once and he be- | what build- Pat- managers. Scotland" hush! it- k be a capture would American no of committee: would fous, politics, schools SS they iniiceeetent support "andthe country a° are on ene ae ~y., ete ie uae through the ,roof The local Nihilistle set a inurmured, "w hile thet cree " a | For superintendent of schools on the the inter-state fair | *Merican ticket: Gearge Sheets. For moment..too..sdon j treasurer of the school board: Frank of Le: sme The oe do] |." oa late he bad name some Of BET sone iitstilden, "Me. Te «ee aes eae aa eben a And e:tate| that he is the victim of politics, He is Sse Gana oba ahie g Re vate the | wrong There is no politics or religion] HOW albtaY Sia Kee ced to ait Bdng med pln the Luke case SRS SR ac Wak diva: ta. tals bert neighbors. The.matiagers blade biecarecioua! Med ion neta vee eee a And, ao the Duke knox Sp straight Zain oe ee extendthe tue kriowledge of affairs in every '/possible way. Now ee Will be of decided good to all the] you to trust it again. iInter-mountain country. Utah has sufYou will not do it. ise it A soon deal by the ‘bad adyer= eran Ae eee of ite my tale rast Keep the schools out of Sit pe adjoining - have) and Keep politics out of the ee dake thésa at Fair Olga took a little bru And 1 vigorously rubbed it: | And you, innate take you, Zube!" | "Twas powdered dynamite-oh, elicted a series of At least, so chemists dt tnbae Y{theut conferring a blessing on all, him again, you don't But above all things, the enterprises | jt-ao you? which can make the rest of the naWell, you trusted tion acquainted with ferent to the public interest. It would be a remarkable exhibition of bad judgment, It will not be done. Saloons are| fearsome thing. It is especially to be| ful enterprises that could be county them be boarded for a dollar and a half oaths from Mr. Middleton, who called| a k" WEe: his daughter such names as "lucifer| eines eee peu eet: mare sige et match." "volcano," "powder mill," and Mr ovine Sua ha nadie of the =e gentleman, to which Mr. Middleton re-|7 rere . assemble imagined. open Sunday, and gambling fs con-|avoided in a school house, It will, in the first place, stimulate} ducted almost invariably in the SunThat carries a reminder, Of course | activity among our own people. They day saloons, and men are the worse|/it would be a gross attack on the/will be spurred as nothing else could for it. But the American party man-|rights of the public of a Mormon ser- spur them to an exhibit of the best agers assessed the saloon men heavily | vice were to be held In a public school|that has been produced. Then CAD are to to tain region, and bring to Salt Lake the| people from states of the East who want to know the best in all lines that is Ss my be bard Your what?" asked Mr. Middleton.|same "My. ‘ i, =") ean ate aiine it. a ae pee angry - bee through lessly at 20 C, 65c. 25c, eo = - ae BQ & % we ' T2548 aD oa. D S Ss ) O : |