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Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN Published Every Inter -Mountain Oficial Organ Morning The Only Republican All the matters DIRECT local Party some in Utah. Do not Nows items Department. should be it in Salt Lake give notices to addressed to City. McAllister, Gencral Member ~ OF And a editor truer President of the of Roosevelt eountry-in thinks covers is as tells to f. : world Mr. Even Bryan when to the less for being the the men dis- party scheme that has even been the things the vision could come of are] of in things that the it thoughts of the Republicans think, and to enact into established best the age-no than it running. the New tion of that York men and the have matter two other gives those in office institutions the who originated sets of them. to a find gone the opportunity a desired to escape for condli- the con- But the wine to Sherry's. two thousand years ago. the of January of continuance 24, im- touch- polygamy in paragraph: is find in in part soos Utah tod himself fair a everything sentiment nation it here of polygamy, reasonable which is Mormons, not well to people were Of course it. And country wives, still entered been of into lives the she as the wife managed other the in to we she of be who at live conditions that polygamy a _ to the of women their have regard wives, how relations with those loved them-these are she world can not understand. did. These seen women were the Lidn evidences of those the at of the faces from the mark of not and sign are manual good Now, we putting an are not "flaunting" depraved. We that for years is move to hundred mocked the free is eyes. they less no Those are honestly have, without the and relations asthe issuance certainly manifesto well that the those waiting living old for have by not later as Mormons, best solution relations the sure example passed con- of an have of the to continue hand of ‘time this as course. polygamists of well ordinance that considerations There in the four them as are state of hundred dle, since now less Utah-out thousand. all have of than of Every long since from the lists of has young men. pronounced In against the nature polygamy, of and settlement. Since we of the rest of the nation have permitted it to continue so long, since we have been in some degree now cellent women grown to So she induced such grace that hated the zealot her daughter and monarch girl the queen,' abandon into as to dance might promising to might make upon him. Salothe danced, and Herod girl, filially following the for be poem of is on the suggested which girl won by the opera the expected honor any to of with drive draft her the Then offended Baptist in a charger. degenerate was animal before Herod instructions the impertinence. gave the promise. mother, asked for the head of John ‘And Herod had to give it to her. It his builded rather writer that than of the the dancing the aesthetic appreciation of Herod. Miss Fremstad, who was the "Salome," had previously established a reputation for success in the part of "Carmen," a Spanish lady whose dancing usually has the same effect on spectators of the sterner sex that the Salome dancing is supposed to have had upon the King of Judea. Not to put too fine a point upon it, her dancing is beastly captivating. hat part of it the New Yorkers with a double standard - of morals might, have been willing to suffer without calling the police. But when the barbarian potentate went to the logical conclusion of the primitive situation, and gave the demoniac daughter of a sabretooth woman the dripping, bloody head of the man whose gospel of righteousness had offended, the New Yorkers were disturbed. It looked too much like getting what ‘they were paying for. They preferred to have their Salome dances on the wine tables at private dining rooms, and to. stop =e show before anyone was decapitated. hey revel in every detail of the Thaw . trial-up to the very logical and convincing pistol shot, They want the dance without the head on a charger. They can't have it. They may flatter themselves they ‘are keeping up the wall between their public and their private code of - but they are not; and for every Salome dance responsible for its the case has been establishment, have entered maturity, have left since life in homes to a sincere that and and relation, children of ex- have their countenanced polygamy than have we Gentiles who have traded with the Mormons, who have received favors from their hands, who have dealt with them, watched with them at the beds of sickness, and labored with them in the fields of health, joined them in business organizations, sat with them in councils and committees, mingled our dollars with their own when the call for charity came, rejoiced with them in the glories of music, wedded their women,-and honored them as admirable wives. Of such "countenancing'" all have been guilty, Senator Smoot has done no more. Because he is a Mormon, and influential in his church, he has done more than The any one reason senate is this. with a proper tions note the Gentile in assigned extirpating for his polygamy. removal from the And it can not be urged in fairness, nor sense of the humane and politic obliga- that lie upon that the rest uninflamed could the of view. community, the ‘The nation It is is taking period of a pleasure the excited to normal, misrepre- sentation and intemperate attack has probably passed- or is passing. And this appearance of Senator Hopkins's article in the Independent is an expression of that bettered judgment through which all substantial good shall come, - : - as ALWAYS A FRIEND OF BRYAN. Still another illustration of the Tribune's banderlog policy is found in its Bryan cartoon of Friday morning. e party. They good with paper a and no the wants to scraping - with matter how in the end toes speak to atl on the l@.Annan DPA IE DSP ALE here do the -make S Republican As In in Salt Lake. Nevada, which "Plenty more illustrate It has a where this a heaping sits with haye day of they four weeks could can't déalei the repeated that You coal came warm eartoon statement fill even the with a picture thoroughly tnderats and FLEMING though you baronets in met his eyes full for the first refused are one Sussex.' the time.. She was pale, but there was no} morning. tremor in her voice as she slowly re-| grim as of the ne WroNne every man has name yours, and | °Y"! Ps | Now what. an wealthiest , proffered handelnap thls|}YOU Know For good or for evil the vow was} for she stood under the} to become Gaston Dan-} | en Dhpeesk prea inswered ind T CHAPTER ge aN Before In the aa October V, en | fastening Breakfast. *bleak, raw dawn = morning, Str went cf John wet) Danger- | home . among gleamed the While t Merriet Bataiae table, amid it and the hair. ceased | Secure speaking, and made the ere she turned from the "phat She laughed as Pe eee a; feverish lustre flush, oot robe béhind her, room-went up a tune between not aS of all & the in her rouge, on a fever-| Strikes my . her cheeks,| adorer quoted: at the; me MustI go, ‘Why! | not ; strictly oi and you "Certainly. Arabi: in. why ask I of champagne So also Perhaps eyes and but to at a ed so long the Were due deal to pay the off of} for afflanced had - in Katijermie" husband, passed se purgator in a 0f ing, on) a fair} Sir John sort a heart, one you at that ask' a of are had| "I r . His once Why not am fit to I ready of voice Vavasor' you a not! -sO to sake tell Vhat have There was had never did| she ing I} it see to fall not could in "T person mind, her y fear has my flung back | head an n0/a her this |} longed, « Ah, my lady! my lady! You were a] oe roses dcining room a 3 Ho as & 8 ‘ Schultze was the J. luncheon yesterday, hostess followed by Harvey and Mrs who are guests Of. Mrs. E..7 arvey. The table appootnements ere nes te oe in red carnations and asparagus ferns. |The following guests enjoyed the afaj aside from. the guests of honot | Mrs. Ee -T: ‘Harvey Mrs 1. Green | arr George WN ‘Putnam Mes 7. Ww. : } . ‘ ; Bdmunds, NK@ | yor. Mrs isy : M;) the Bel, Mrs, truth! C. W and. the attended the dance officers and ladies of ach Somine fei aT ae ME ations BAT TSON, T eee for OS, the TID entertainment ofHee the ) Visiting officers who arrive at the post week : to! se Co. to) Orphegan." present lass, Dalvie , "Mis own, , oe ‘ ard iut ne} card. « pie people enjoyer a aici corservatory | ton, Beatrice Mr, nephew-do , ciose * officers' who The : | next | in the I thie ean come' bachelor i the broztd Bs bore him- | rhe there was | Young chair dainty, conversation no the | young girls from tow! strong, standing-and little, doubt, appears, sea So sprighth-!jast some until we' a "Fi PS : d Ca box partly Gy ene Mr. were nd ark ‘Gra REG f mf a cea Mrs and Mrs. T. E ; Ro Misa ul Chir O'Connor,' a Hunt and W.Miss M. katee McCrea Si, ee nT arvey. entor- : 1 ae you saw will as me Bia ringleted Miss may she be ae Mr. take| the cori-| in DODO = ia and pro- | entertain Danger- |! well t r ee es eae Ake Mrs. George tonight Mrs. Number night with Mer. Peter with more money than bralns, to| the Kursaal; I gambled ever so little! id myself. But , what> would you| > re hav Poor little women must live.| penniless widows must earn thelr} bread and butter, and TI labored ac-| eon at a S. of her Keysor bridge ares E. him today when "And you ‘I told Ferry will friends toldotim ail?" him-nothine! ?-a poor little at Miss guest Mv: of will party. entertain, this a afternoon, the * imbecile you! should 1 tell) pettifogging attor- Mrs. Barnes I was ashamed. ‘born been is not a Very| touch of pity or I did not se- any living thing, And gave Ott -* | afternoon, followed by it) inheritance fell to me-fearing a * bé the = and bridge Mrs this tea. is8 at home this to a Banter of Miss athel Cane for IMontana: In F pe ews Fy al. felt never' He oe fore mercy in his life and never will.' oli, will @ W. R. Wightman will entertain at eae lect it because I liked it. As you say} know it!" the baronet said with as George here in England, it was ‘Hobson's | a groan. ‘I knaw it too. well My }at cards this" choice." To work I was not able; to} life has been a life of terror since this | © harle s Wesley beg Commercial Mildred honor de Fil ney I only drew him out there- | ° read= him,1: youz know-and he 1s very-| Mrs "Ww Annesss : Mrs. large print, indeed. Woe to'the man | eee Efrniaceiie or woman that stands in his path to eee telenda fa eae fortune!-hbetter for them ae hadilinararatner departure néver blame! can Who light my to cording Danger-| ma-} field." been polsoning your dear Sir John. 1} A gambler's decoy suppose our handsome tenor proposed| me? in the conservatory? Waat a capital| reputable profession, but joke it would be to let him marry| her after all, and then speak out. think 'li wait until the weuone day.| ae © the widow. sak down | DCE. Pe tin Hatvey aud cushione-all this <time| 2S. *o" her Buests, Mrs. tarvey am been tims, He the you ‘In‘ the' a my him?' ly him. .Mrs. understand, . have; come you little, that lay upon clenched He before her, but God's said al-| field are I. a me he they crossed answer fit-you Amtell broke received a salary at Homburg, I ad-| old baronet, what an mit; I lured a few weak-minded vic-| must think me. Why for ) Latva another you out [3 an} feel-) aly anguish shadow| have nae you say I will turn "Poor ‘old Sir John!" tie little wo-| man said, airily, to herself; "I'm real-| concerned Jast sess if I|do?) I.Ea saw you ia | last night pare said} you mean to tell womanly your not demanded, manner." liclous simple me any. harm-poor old soldier. How} plainly he shows . his abhorrence of : 5 me in his face; foolish, uncivilized old | man. If his precious daughter were not so wrapped up in her curled darl-| ene Scarswooa? | bridge, given for Mrs. John would Denni of Chicago, | mortisoldier's il fear and mortal blue eyes "As why?" are laughed. | mind} rice Do| myself se as dwell heart, never ask ee he associate for any young girl. I know | servatory last night with -your| Who are invited to meet Mrs. Pasthe life you led at Homburg,' | nephew I did not know you did me] torius at a bridge tea. "You do? And what do you know the honor to' watch me, Sir John. | Pn ae of that life to my discredit?" Well, yes was in the éonservatory'| Miss,Fannie Breeden gives a lunch. est earthly spark given which eee drawing- twined with smilax extending the chandelier to the corners of Mrs. Bonnemort was us- ‘ don't fn | old | path." I have 4 oe st At ene 7 Sh ei Why question?' it woman's would ‘Again wait- Dangerfield's| "Kad night "You Possessed owing| Katherine's going she Way to vancine a full ree Peter Dangerfield was Sltsixt as wax| in-her hands. Gaston Dantree was the man of all men whom she would have chosen frigidly. in Tnee ly In the evidence has popular oneal you | Burmester Punch was served in the for-'| library where everything was carried out In red by the Misses Minnie and of} Wilna Burmester way- She I to entered If Sir Harman, | wordMt of this kind the/ hour, a minute, under the same roof}/the window; with-with my daughter. If you had! in jts silken Cliquot,| was was little debt to of brilliancy more Everything The hiccoughs|} flow Vavasor herself.| of a good triumph. and poetic Mrs. little color then supper the had and most caidas program, ee SR occasion in club the table | asked him?' And Sir] if you would?" 3 ; E th Indian officer a look of disgust and] us keep to the subject please [.am in no cisms S or Vo," }f-think of the it house. well inj} the is ' say, Sh | either . 0. "In NS her lovely: silken murmur | to en at Scarswood..as long Like an angel clad with wings." plea Be "the Indi n The adorer had taken a great deal! "Because, 1¢ Indian oMecer interrupted quotation as went up| Parislennes 1 USE leave Scarswood | inewy hand with the | At once? saa, manly my dear bar- | Window sill, her lips,| onet. that is a phase of hospitality it| Selt bravely eyes, woe hopeless stairs oo ones rose} rror a ers on the landing and stairways, Mrs.|Jeh! Excuse my inattention, but} Vavasor, trailing the yellow glimmer] the toflette patore everything with us| of her silk to her own fag-end of musical and were of eaehee tea the her is': - -yellow cee ra improvement, roses always look blac a hair What did you flow- Orpheus one Fieide at ven, translater means, I sup30dy and Miss Laura Samson at} pose, you would not marry me Us| te i not leap-year, im aware tnd -my i s proposal may be a little out of place The concert hop at. the "post last | But just think .a-moment, ‘Sit John - | evening was as usual a delightful afwas éfabenatety what if the telling of your sect de. | fair, afterwards Major and Mrs. A. M luxurianee of her} pe ded 6 aha ie 12 Sa Smith gave a charming little suppe1 |} bluck the} the aaah you must jJeave Scarswood arid once." 7 raat aS AS i : Sir John's guest had taken a rose from a glass of flowers on_ coldly. lies ute said He stood tall and stern and; ™isht When I first a Ae ech un himeelf. drawn| | said ‘L wonder the ona a | was effective in red. On the table a | center-plece of red carnations was placed Eh a cluny lace cloth over treamel of red satin rib- as his price-will leave Scarswood what peated his words, Clearly and firmly | up to his full helg , marry me if I ee ene | ‘e are quite (ane Mra, --- Va-| John, I wonder ours yaston---yours only, ror asor. « 4 ; s ss * an good or for evil: PekiRiena or Por | vaxor, sinoe roe areca to call your-|_ Mi pte iffecseaursl" : ‘ , ind wee Le ifford | answered, With mre s : dey 5 | to drop private theatricals, I fancied| contempt let sa good or for lag arate ccc lis von us down before taietiae lin. hand, if you ‘ anc ave bee ‘ x uu e or fo a plighted; and lamps pledged tree's wife. a' favor. . « ‘Mrs, Harman''-abruptly-"they say | William: Moffat. and" Mrs. ‘Theodore me, eyes, "whatever betides, for good or| She held out one slender white hand | Putting: it-my . price yr ill, you will not draw back-for) all aglitter with rings 2ut as he haa)' Wel yes, Sir John, good or evil you are mine!" refused ft lnat night so. the baronet }OWning as much. I ha She the ame for the suppose we lake breakfast, It ls past} pon jten,i and Tameae hungry. without , eee ear pes ner (thie BY MAY AGNES conventiona eee ti I a much as his cellent o1 John, each of rang with ; jwe eeerom at the hospitable home of Mrs Bonnemort. Mr. Sibley, who is a mem. coal. Sir te ae with three of dear On as course, luncheons the musical Bree ee 1¢ Fea nowat or on ‘ weeee musk of honor at delightful i guests ineetede ning given -- now, oe) small sitend meet sine within Ni @°o rere side delightful ae rgeor- afternoon, coal rc the| stated times. orders And onme yesterday his| tells falseéhood- many cash house street Y eee "e from." Main: Tribune's the not along I ae J vat era |} ber the very cehe journed house= grate, warming a paper which and with a tom-cat 8 general was so at the Spmrehony concert Beier yore to CIE society in evidence | several intended likely. ‘yet, the party, in on : ce herself ys "Katherine," he' said, taking both| her hands in his and looking in ner! O sec Tribune | ROOMS, cartoon ALA | jts sscophantie not a a famine coal shortage behind him. legend: he | and would 7 WARM prints of the coal Very are strongly he wes And' Tribune. defeat it, win cleaur to polities of will sitting. before his well-filled. its blazing coal fire, reading of the scuttle make that Utah, far tao; pirate of admission Bryan ao to jly DON'T Tribune holder Scotchman forces to can party good, ww PICTURES greatest hand who jchestra The hurt canny anyone Democratic published particular minute | the for would great ascendency with the and any and and simply time the a people And, up of isn't Democratic that "Utah," ‘ , in with the So wand deal He him. for Tut Bryan, chance join bowing Bryan!" Bryan the to wants ] W. Putnam afternoon him * entertains for Miss 2 great peeress and a brilliant woman|up, when I heard of your good for-) fearing you f he had been any The musical cones of the week will in your day, but you're dead now, and| tune, forever, I hope I said to my-| other kind of 4 man than the kind he wind up with the pianoforte recital forgotten, and little Harriet, whom| self, Harriet child, why lead this} js, I-think-I know J. would have | at the Salt Lake theatre this evening, you circumvented so cleverly, lives! naughty i longer ?-why} braved all consequences and told him} under the management of Mrs. Marstill, and prospers, and hates you dead} not give it up, pack your trunks,!the truth, and thrown myself upon} garet Robertson Kerr assisted by as she hated you alive." go back to Bngland, and become vir-} his generosity. My life has been one| Prof. J. J. MeC lellan and Hugh Dou- fire still burned on the marble; hearth, the waxlights glimmered soft-| ly. She drew the window curtain and| looked out at the rainy morning light| struggling feebly in the stormy gray! sky. The elms and beeches rocked in| the October gale, the swaying of the} giant trees was like the dull roar tuous and happy Here is your 01d} prolonged misery ‘since. we came to} gall. The affair is anticipated and live will' death, and the to‘IL: have become‘money' old, pay_hirelings This es of|/never see you hungry or cold long or short I the last to Sussex Mads my fortune, my 61 y revenge. And -I will go back Paris! beautiful life there. grave Vill I} once more, grown from a lovely Ienough' wonder?left and| lishShemiss-what rapture! to| clasped her little hands Gaal visit will as jour-| any dire : | her advanced class, will rank very foreign curely/ great gesture, imploring Eng-| little episode in both | happened in the Paris with 4) ifted two and eyes to nis face. years go-tell generous, how The) h shall at least have en-|creature in this my lady./and never will. last, and| your nature Re meat I suppose ! ee vee gray Have you ever seen the swift pallor my secret to the grave," of sudden strong emotion show under crossed over to the wardrobe where they had placed ler trunks,|;ouge and pearl powder is not opened one, and took out a book ot)q pleasant sight After the baronet's cigarette paper and an embroidered] jast words there was a dead pause, carry tobacco-case. "It's no and use "I You saw our lives that) hospital fifteen} him, and see magnanimous he me talking to him, how can ho regulat the Y. W monthly : x there were a6 many t = a a ane you as-one the week young set social evening Thursday night very enjoy: ae affair A fan rene aaa rl mT WiTnGaae attractions the well as give me | baronet sighed heavily | Say in the conservatory last night oe Seno ang 7A pause al cag ann | q a rer oot on help you, ‘Harriet! You} Would you like to know what we were | S2me_ evening An excellent musica when-all fs over) "Heaven I . if o tae Sees vere | program was given in which Miss to Paris-oh, my! might haye been a bette woman |talking about? Well-of Katherine! Alice Wolfgang, Miss Allenbaugh, M BD Sark hoe i S oe aes the dowir-at looked and stood He the child, or anything loved had of| you rest the live and Whether that life belelse. But you never loved any humé an| small mocking face, and the derisive ater Are Ghaniest is eeu! ae joyed every hour of it. And, I'll be even with you to the thought. with frie end-well, acquaintance, then-| Scarswood I knew if you were alive, | much interest and pleasure by music Colonel Dangerfield, a baronet. owe you would hunt me down as yeu have. | lovers with a magnificent estate in SCX.(It would be better for me. if I were | fs ¢@ and eight thousand a year. _ You did} a beggar on the streets | fe dancing party at the Ladies' him good service once-he is not the Mrs. Vavasor listene d to this pas-| ‘rary club house this evening, givman to forget past favors; he will | sionate tirade with airiest freien ayy by rs. June Sadler Donnell fer the sea, She dropped the silken cur-| more. And la petite is there-the lit‘Then go and be a beggar on thej|of the society affairs of tain with a shiver and turned away. tle Katherine wom fifteen years 480) streets," she responded; "nothing is}and much enjoyed by the "It gives me the horrors," she mut-| you were so nd of-a ene lady, | e: asler. Throw ee upon your | who belong to ie 158 tered; "it makes me think of a age,|and a great eirnas now To see her} ne phew''s generosity-tell him that| natural own, have as conscientious a belief in the rectitude of their lives as Mrs. Schoff can possibly have in her own, no harsher course could have been adopted by a nation inclined to be fair and just. Senator Smoot has been assailed because he has "countenanced" polygamy. He has done no more in that direction than have the rest of us. He has no more harm himself That he mercy, approaching numbers as view permit every population year If the Gentiles passed away. Sentiments of five sincere on were There Mormons none the to obliterate fewer record marriages. objection, justice, a and plural taken problem to they people, without the tacitly recognized passage of the law the lasvy Utah a they needless, fact, manifesto, of is that honest, polygamy. the the vice those with write say women. of tracting of in night; which To to before evaded Thursday. believe end sumed the house heart-pains unhappy. depravity women to so well. do not believe there could be-assembled anywhere in the United States such a number of women as were for lay Mr. willing came Bryan." js a alliances wish tie friends, Commoner likely not children to friendly Gentile of might looking, entertained. other Republican there the ish part proper.» It involves the rather gruesome story which readers of the New Testament may find in the Gospels. John Baptist had offended Herod by telling him he had no right to murder his brother and take to wife his sister-in-law. And the woman, "once our cousin, our this entangling them which im- the way is Bryan and everywhere But he is political partnership with that pretty Bryan Friends, party in any way possible, ¢ Q , occasion what they feel all the homes properly, grossly to declare that up named i e eo of of and the is no "Out Democracy, figure hand Best keep when Republican a of managed had who become Many for of world too injury to fanciful é the is speaketh." and impulses the would believed still think as owners guests we regarded Tribune E its ta "Always 2, 1907. toward That mouth hostility grasping him: party. the of tendency that paper, and it them exemplified: themselves, their FEBRUARY natural of by heart printed him to The if the control They3 made flel@s the was town lamps York it to was be- plural whose had love of a Demoeratic fiction not good laws taking always who indeed, the Instantly the relation, relation man century office restrain the could saying of condition But the that and maintain women-how, things But of condition same a a a and association. that of responsibility half bowed basis everywhere woman comforting people quit the a in hand. had lifelong par- is their belief that it mistaken; but they polygamous on a with mothers herself the by East and demand of faith remained mothers, that they good established their were in there out position the after for its expressed. share easily sincere in they were to of it knowledge of Utah, understand insistently when and a And real to anywhere very no voice that to paper Hopkins's The could all have eradicated-Iinstantly, many right. Senator has of Presbyterian. admitted hostility fairness is It who has Mormon, certainly growth optained of its a the they consistently sident religious it indication. in be and That statement to to literary class intolerant existence pe is is said SATURDAY, Tribune fullness Usually, for things, they must within a few years have vanished from earth. And, with the least possible sorrow and hardship, with the greatest consideration for that sentiment of because the with Only has a very demnation of such portions of the public as may be handicapped with a single standard of morals, by which they prefer to be guided at all times. "Salome," the opera, was withdrawn from the New stage the dance. Independent so a the of has morals-one for use when an and we encouraging ticularly "SALOME." seclusion Salome one highest been How Demo- es OPERA ‘public use, very an had President Roosevelt may be simply ‘Bryan in office," as the Sacramento Bee declares he is. But the point is that he IS IN OFFICE; that he can accomplish results; that the people put him there because they had discovered he had thoughts that were worth something to the nation, and could effectuate results with them-results that were needed and desired by the people. And they haven't put Democrats into office because, to speak plainly, Democrats think one think before election, and another afterward. Mr. Roosevelt is THE BEST OF THE NATION- IN OFFICE. And he is in office because he typifies the best of the nation. THE from government Independent is had In was of of they started for append Hopkins columns the from power, appreciate All of the jiave the power of the given. and stopped the federal Mr. have present. in expressed out to then was it Rome of the Democrats think, but none of them DO! thoughts of heart of a prophet. is opera, Herod in polygamy the power, government to come true. cratic party at its true worth. Having none of the cares of office to distract the attention of its statesmen, nor disturb the reveries of its bachelors, the nation has a right to expect an output of good policies from the Democratic party. But that is as far as the nation is willing to trust oven Mr. B ryan. eee is The oll Witerence! between thinking and doing. | ayticle "We lieved them was splendid when has] true. true. bring party hopelessly have them not down good when people bring bettering head dance help broken Fillmore, in 1850, gave both recognition are areas ment to the practice of polygamy in the Mormon chureh in Utah by appointing Brigham Young, the head of the ehurch, governor of the territory of Utah, with full knowlege that he was an open advocate of polygamy and at the time had a number of plural wives. The senate of the United States confirmed that appointment. Ha was reappointed by President Pierce and reconfirmed to the great office of governor of Utah by the senate of ne United States. For many years polygamy was taught by Brigham Young and his followers as one of the doctrines of the church, without any interference upon the part of the general government; and plural marriages were entered into without objection or any legislative it that is party things party, to respHusibility The good those the Jefferson Democratic And ing 5 Democratic Democratic the the in political home of the owners wonder that the old adage is about says good can in SHARING TE.& RESPONSIBILITY. Senator Albert J. Hopkins of Illinois pressive office in universal not party into Thomas prolific ever can the bring uttered of fact the funeral is aMliation a the haven't preached The wishes Democratic been ae een world needs simply the have turned terminated. the as stopped is on the ALL Democratic the that is of the severed surely they times when one of its members, with a/4 qdistance, public speech, like Mr. Bryan, rises and among the But days office," Bex. IS he the there CITY, UTAH, There And that is tho New York whose legislature has busied itself for the correction of the morals of Utah! for touching The failed in fine. There are blessed gift of shown him, And the he Mas when it of uttermost, condition, burial that "Best spoken. simply that the times truths perfectly 1907. profoundly are There Bryan never is The difficulty with can't DO anything. It 2, the as They haven't imbibed the lesson that John Baptist is preaching to them today as clearly and as impressively thy office. point practical The FEB, to SALT LAKE pitiless hindrance. is only was as have ®he MAN. the Sacramento word instead and and Utah. AN BEEP Roosevelt sagacious SATURDAY, fulfilled Thaw Oftener death But Mnnager. Press Assoctation. UTAH, THE "President ihe Publishers' CITY, LAKE SAGACITY is They Editorial Offices - Dooly Block, 208 South West Temple St, "Phones: Bell, Exchange 25; Indepemient, 3190. is REPUBLICAN, savage suyypers. carriers the it as Whyite house, Mayo it is a They SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Not Paid In Advance. Paid In Advance. BBO acre cutee aveiae CONG (ATONE, . con ncceeccses- ob 1.50... cece cseceee Three Months. ..-+.e00-e+50- 2.00 3.0066 le wecneceeesecSIX Months. ..c.cceeeeseee 4.00 UL re é wie teagns One YeaAD cece ccc cee ensececs 8.06 LJ 60....-.++++Sunday Only, One year.......-.. 2.00 Malcolm and every & Worrfan Feb. 10, 1906, at the the ‘Act' of Congress, Dally Newspaper Office. demand underta&cer. relating to subscription should be reto the Circulation Department, or to Branch a For or solicitors, SALT is Herodias, by Republican Company of the Republiean Entered as second-class matter a at - Lake City, under March8, 1 ad there going meyer abnormal hou wee my cates can to bed," sleep at she! these in the dull, chill ghastly change "Never loved come any light he saw over her human gnawing the ends: of /his aoe the assembly lections from well poets in her pone morning. witht eveial se- known authors and charming manner. Brown and daughters, Mrs. James H Mrs. Margaret Robertson Kerr and accompanied by Miss Woodmansee Professor McClellan, ier by Hug Creighton Brown, left Thursday Dougall, vocalist, will giv a piano} fand night for Long Beach, Cal., for an inforte recital in the Sait Lake theatre that creature will|in the werld!', She repeated his words slowly after him, then broke suddenly sluminto a shrill laugh. ‘Sir John Dange r"She began, with quick, deft fingers field, after half a century of this life's vicissitudes, the power to be astonto roll half a dozen cigarettes, ‘and ished at anything earthly should have then lying back in a luxurious armleft all men and women, but you are chair, with two slender arched feet sixty odd, are you not? and if I chose upon the fender, to ligat and smoke I could give you a glimpse of my past! One after another she smoked them life that would rather take you by o the very last ash. The rainy dayut I don't choose-at least | light filled the room as she flung the surprise. not at present. Think me heartless, end of the last inch in the fire unprincipled, without conscience or a; arose with a yawn, extinguished womanly feeling-what you~ will- ghts, drew the curtains and let in this lower _ ‘thie full light of the gray, wet morn- what does anything world signify except costly dresses, ng. The great trees rocked wearily " good wines, and comfortable incomes? iS the high gale, a low leaden sky And that brings me back to the point, lay over the flat, wet downs, and miles I tell you coolly and deliberately, away the sea melted drearily into the and horizon. In the pale bleak light bril- and determinedly, that IT won't stir one step from Scarswood Park until 1 see liant little Mrs. Vavasor looked worn, fit." and haggard, and ten years older than eter mustache Continued tomorrow cigarette better than Saturday evening, ets stor sale enefit 5ie, Peanylenan | | | February 2 ick-| at Clayton's ‘music Organ, Fund, First ehurceh. definite a stay. Frank trip to T. = Roberts Milford has and returned from southern Utah CUTLER BROS. CO. | 36 MAIN STREET = & last night. "Such a miserable morning! a wretch I must lock in this Captain Devere last night, fell lieve, at-least aoe dragoon pea now! ee all.'* paid me What light. compliments in love with me, I beas much in love as a ever can fall. If he belleve I'll go to rs. Vavasor went to bed, and her eyes closed in graceful slumber before her head was fairly on the pillow. And as the loud-voiced clock over the stables chimed the quarter ast ten she came floating down the stairs in a rose cashmere robe de matin, and all her feathery black ringlets "afloat. ‘Am I firfist, I wonder?" she said, peeping in. "Ah, no; dear Sir John, what an early riser you always were. You don't forget your military habits, She folded her hands one over the other, and looked up in his set, stern face, with an aggravating smile on her own. "Tt is of no use your blustering and threatening; if you should feel inclined that way, my dear baronet, it w do no good. I won't go. But you are too much a soldier and a gentleman to even try to bully a poor little mee n man Uke me. I have an object view in coming to Secarswood; when that object is area Jt shall leave -not one instant befor "And your object is 3" "A secret at present, Sir John. As for your daughter,''-with sneering emphasis-‘'I should be the best judge, I think, as to whether or no l ama Miss Danger-| fit associate for her. field appears to be a young lady in every way qualified to take care of TWO FOR ONE SALE OR ONE ARTICLE AT HALF PRICE. Ladies' Linen Underwear Sale CORSET Worth Worth Worth Worth 30c, 40c, 60c, 80c, COVERS. sale sale sale sale 15c 20¢ 30c 40c NIGHT | | | | GOWNS, Worth 90c, Worth $1.00, Worth $1.25, Worth $1.40, sale sale sale sale DRAWERS. 45¢ | Worth 50c forth 65c | Worth 70c | Worth 40c, 50c, 70c, 90c, sale sale sale sale 20¢ 25c 35c 456 For 10 Days, Commencing January 28 50°, OFF BA lasts one week longer "50°. OFF Provo Flannels & Dress Goods. Watch for Our Immense Clothing Sale in February. |