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Show 4 THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1907. eo HM UINTAIN Published Every Inter - so Mountain TT ea wee ___ Official Organ All ported Morning Republican in ean Utah. lives Rae eae = Feb, 10, 1906, at fre the Act of Congress,| Newspaper in S¢ alt Lake C City. ee to subscription - ahould. toay reCirculation Department, or to Office. News items > Department. Do should not be give In Advance, exercise 3 f effort of their at ; abilities justice, with and > laws with ‘omen a that] Raleigh genuine;acts, are right Thera There is do not get less than they sehines active something attractive in him who and Biv sense . of tand cc, no wants much are entitled the ° of nothing to Not iree saan Mo aha ae eee 6.00.0... sere eee. 1.50.........,Sunday to to carriers the Editorial In ene Chief among this i" formerly United States ; . latter Bae CR Dearie aaa > sccnseee ‘Only, One Year. : a convict is Weekly. They fit o oan oeV in federal George are from Ralph Burton, Kansas, ; y penitentiary Harvey, more in editor = of SateSPENT Este eet- clients that ever started in to filech i . the senate, 6 . : > has ich GOVERNOR CUTLER DID RIGHT. No one has much j = e n ' e When he vetoed the bill giving rights of eminent] felon who has s wantonly j iter people, Governor C utier did exactly|{ished. He deserved all i p smelter pe 7 : . "bows sensible to men of the ¢ the : ‘ : ‘ community will - neither Heve the believe place rove that in and time . 5 ere judgment to oO it to the submit on os Weoat are judgment Ss ri of this matter tO} ‘fectly willperfectly W every citizen in Cutler when he has well would refused his faithfully discharged Indorsement of so his or portance of in a land that the smelter many smelter munity, tion the of and are- , they with has any more fecling a rights every to Dp every And necessity big of for stake to all the in 2 of - it would be bad so a eminent domain. great for 3 : law ; them they may of the law, they want ce Fs. , But i in the _ are from 7 right are not we Gs FOR of ows the} ele was = en glad help and of pay for took, such of property course. gulating the We But the of to of his help the peopel At the for a same to confer for when their uses, they time, upon a no it would 0 power good is man by as has a a fool faculty Burton An to meeting i > by would right land the unwise be of became right to oe selection Widtsoe will The = ASS ry a possible election ieay ability the of Mrs.vs of W.; A. no a in eminent do- the it, that the] that there was an , me is a now eae epee | 2aASe ats ra va meee "standare, re feet wide sr and case theig bus ; of too ue : operating not really side o as un- wae oe Int ORy in this country as this inPiaoaare this to take attention away from o 5 Se ‘ « c : a say anything aboutcostly Be oan eae ee ane part of the have more mileage eo sleme C 5 7-O a ment of conomy c Jt. as §¢ ld enough hee wee 1 long hen the same Rat near Te. eIBa some ; nees hempen any othe Dec uilding : eee Nt smontia : : Sigurd vee) | See ng c eT offense of of Professor It ~ of the ;a , one . of > j RAILWAY w TERA EE together GANT in troubles ahr very earls - Two of them the A. bring and he in public would:get no power of supervision or regulation the the enjoys been the results of very at of and #9¢ i and] highest through with actie ate neitner 1gS e O'Donnell return- For Cap‘per- even. absence He sat a the others, turning photographed secing one of celethem. was revolving itself over ain again in in his brain : until had grave If of not in i aed the Methodist he a at church- she had, who then, in the all that was wonderful, was He thought, till wkh Sir spitz ? . ‘ at Redmond O'Donnell's dark. tired face and somber, blue eyes, and wondered, with a sort of awe, of what he could be thinking so intently and , Gg "There himself, is take, is but one way," moodily; "a way and yet-for for Rose's-for eter''s-it should which erine Dangerfield posi- | 480, \ every he I was buried My ae ain mi ce will be director of the experi-|a burden. to to sake- Sir) six years| eee ith > said hate one's Tregenna''s-for be taken If Kath-|} ee Ss made pe up." eise che be! rose Ge "I'll wonder no longer. No in compensation ro as a rule x with heavie ( vast expense have cous inener greater expense will incurred, for in any Bees roadbed will have to be widened, and cut and fill don over, and nearly every f rebuilt To meet the undeniably {nereased e ot such eee every bridge fi aan ee all by c x0, have it don have I. shall happens "ve never may hope Sir Peter fury: Tet us hear of Earl of RuysThe "Your Faia conlaughed niece land's arte his that if all wonder temptuously sol himme or is for al solicitude me self? It Sir Peter turns you. must dress is made, Raoul! I shall go to the maspromise given ' che ue p tunnel wholly ; and qué de." Peat came-that delusive quiet still reigned at Se arswood. When the afternoon train from London rushed into the Castleford station there ap- i increasing demands for transportation tha ca smane scognincal ean effective method seems unmistakably not to discard any| thing we now have. but to give to existing roads the in- trackage was by Mr. Hill, and to peared add hes buried?" the before they came soldier ask- had him a into the parlor, among the passengers Ci O'Donnell and Major Frankland; platplacid and patrician pacing the form, of Ruysland. You "Ah. O'Donnell-back again. don't suppose your Le indispose¢ the case-nervous say or something vague of the sort. dog, Frankland? On. your. way Permit me to accompany Sears wood' you there." back i hn some But the major drew trifling embarrassment He wasn't golng to Secarswood this afternoon; tomorrow-ah-he intended to put in an appearance Would his lordship be kind enough not to mention having seen him at all? eyes were blue he earl' tre anquilly the major's face he answered, understant 1," are down on the quiet-Sir Peter is to hear nothing of it until after the Is that your little game, dear You see [ know all about it, and my age and my relationship to Lady Dangerfield me the right to. interfere y dear fellow, that masquerade ¢ must be give n Be , He took younger mat arm, speaking quite pleasantly, and yaa him | new roads wherever the growth of business demands | them or the roads that now refuse or neglect to adapt their facilities to the needs of commeres A ne lot of gauge wars would be deplorable from all naintsé of view. FLEMING she recommended ' was HaTae: uggle was abanas gauges. é made. to unify the * ; « > ' "Vv pea oe Caaeee > t, eee Banks', at is priced hat above The Maal at $75.000 1 street, 116 So. tuscan mixed braid < white and blue ‘Can you imagine millinery creation' & more delicate pa Nay A Ne aut heavier trains and carrying ~apacity of cars more than doubled This was done a eae acy ree and. that cost is partly responsible for ‘ ‘ z : 4 some recent discontent. If Mr. Harriman's prediction of returning to a discarded gauge be carried out in action : F 3 oe bead suTredarali ‘ ed seated neal her, glanced furtively across the length of the drawing-room : Mr. E. D. Ball, who | AGNES dizzy. Had Katherine Dangerfield six years ago, or had she not? If oe quiet yard? name with former > a | far this of the whom i long | sternly. He affairs against | | | | "-e | creased pesos tha Miss his train. was Maze 5 Lady Cecil Clive, ability credit a } as has been the surprise of view at the utterances of his recent examination commission, and on some fact-noticed Soe - nor his sister's apart from Over> was died was was a nie ie Re albot One question presi-}] presi- eminent Washington, connected, college. the as ve urre ceive little succeed President] on of resigning. Mr acric agricultural nation department has the college . ‘fe scientific he agricultural (jon to a noticeable over a book of brities, and never whose | as the men t Sacre } andes anda real movement <4 . P ra ‘ | Within twenty ventsces «Ia Franciscans aad Bd have eae ©°ledtain toO'Donnell, the drawing-room. he ‘did: not: trustees rustees Widtsoe 7 Z ‘ he | | devices until a,afterRen the Poet e as 7 TOs GAUGES, MAY as = the it ft lying ae a Herneastle the ce fitting a was oe : : ee Stohl Ft direct and while z BY It oe as Es vice i is ability John. , of police : as chief criminal charges --- CHAPTER XIX. Knight and Page. afternoon ; eine safely : McCune c wise. less woman f throughout line, for|service and W this of Jersey ther Onions of The at Erie a agrailway, > from s cauge,¢ 2 in 7 < ee ree ee pe eae ease Louis, was made Mississippi, ' C ‘ < 7. }j thie mace in expectation of ultimately oor En = o : sve were other Oe } the same eee naa acd ait aati a The conflict- ever of -----W-W-__-____ together. ac a Mr. of to important t action impe actic - : practical in recognized the necessary to amount gauge hes, the would so-calleda made about two: Ine ys oe whether A WONDERFUL WOMAN get- egotistical trustees yesterday ; 2S greatest ¢ and election ene: =B0etst the for take the ing grow in thishave country standard } ae prevailed e because, has because : committed d 1-4 cars the He must have Kno ha e "wars of the gauges though ee to have taken much part in them | struge le in England Bae ie E Raver, as merely of his is asal inso- habit that he UTAR! the : their Utah, any. heart, recognition eee country.|service oper-| the : feetthe & }| attention Fn Pe the | == as for belong FOR dent of the Agricultural college, to : . Ixerr, who has announced his purpose owners] 2» the It Tribune trial had Chicago Chronicle: Much cues from various points Mr. Harriman at the time Ra fore the interstate commerce of the board is especially to be commended. He} of character and ability, with the interests of] But and]in for their to Ne in their enmity. done . at the Ss one the trustees were dent re-| held others in assailing big questions. and work of in and one college at Be get of smelter of motive the of have the ‘tic portion the them piece would , any nor was and r > WIDER station, con-] presence in official relation with the college will be helptheir)ful to the last degree. In the election of both secretary] condemned retain minute devastate main, smelters would is not their purpose, ations. The;ey 4 and thing he said was. more ai ik Sout changing the . : Speaking of pis ee. ee S tracks. : carry to predicted from feet / control, Tri the even serve grave ie e fellow- former people great Harvey llege college result college, proper f management, think purposely That as they smelter don't would owners. the > 'ssmelter * owners. to not of his COLLEGE-AND aS should e cor-| it can of police And thea San b ; E of Salt RsLake. a notion that under the circumstances, city would better be in the hands of : . =j . A : no charge of crime has been brought e : he deliberations of the board. nearly} private Ke a : roads of [2 men The San Francisco Chronicle wants to know who is of a] going to govern that city for the next nine months. Most see an one CRE Pe eee he cece . Cig é 2 Cc e > ( é pu , ae D BPS p days] before the next term of the criminal court, as is the chief se 3 rights and get the right of control in exchange. The peo-| and treasurer the board gives additional reason for gratu"ple would get nothing in exchange for the rights they] lation. : mirit surrender he " -ichabiitsons lasting the is honored THE rg Agricultural the : omission the Tribune's long estab- | t wy ¥ ele vilifying every man and | pik ; n . to under it he had committed had chosen to work B regain States, side fitness. Agric of|the : underander porations, They remain under the supervision trol of the people who surrender a portion ; would whom Sheets that the]decline a knave, Harvey, wrong of That itcan] granted eR property, private railroads jus can will : oe Even if he oy tor United been President president private/js a man to any j ied implied GOOD have/the take /private properts and build their lines pretty to. the The Cutler/It than to grant is is as Railroad companies y right, and safeguards business power magistrate com- . purposed Bt accordance with ‘ of assailing and : George eer him, but he did]is fei the forfeiture of y would he good the has Colonel sense people. the = we. But thinks the of to on fine considera-| of the eeat , hostility win As fact the the rest rotec protection the we don't think Governor ; interest where even a smelters] appreciate entitled in has not a whit of} poseur, and inflated admirer of self, the accidental head recognize the im-]of a once great house has chosen his associates with a fully have are the entitled» throw about them. the We owners that consistent ar They interest; mines. They Giligentiy he undoubtedly ting Republican people. We if President duty} dangerous (and But policy. In saying this The hostility to the smelter ow have had the instant and vherever hehe might go wherever & z men : and is And]evidence good name among listen to the wail eerie ae ry : > x Pe violated the > |law, and been he got-and more. A few ay everywhere. any Union. The smelter interests never should] of the been granted the right of eminent domain, and Gov-| state have ernor raruwhere honestly fectly willing to OnEe of our own people. submit we a a use of language as even : ee indulged. it ti is as unfair as ; ut | And paper has established Pres- his' to nor] him recover his lost ground. apsset ¢ s ered for it. ap-|e crime, anda pultere: ) measure » the ing m a the/men chureh-Mormon Is meant, no doubt-controlled him, : + ere corn ‘ that he did a reprehensible thing w hen he refused to is " the 28 we find this staten l ~ 2 SRA TOMeD. ee Vat that Whitaker is ‘a judge There lent a eid HisHIDRRE les h here in .Salt Lake may: read with satis-}pago Burton stated in the public prints that ¥ he was going} right. enemies ' Z faction the; statement of untruth in that ‘Ralph Burton is not a dead one." In] a 5) ste Fat hureh and killstheir the general bill," Butorgan|{o the/such show enterprise, he would have the staunch support of] he March Pee public . "obs occasions, pe hea : . sl lan nrg li fAllway later ee oe not down habit every r Harper's] money . people. He earned whatever they paid ft at the expense of his honor, and to his that of the court, has It and convyict!| common. the world with his story of i in securing his conviction, wrongful | could in the same article is the following railways or eee a ete sell: becaes at | dicates aetee id ane i , magistrate arcistr . had . || some committing bound him over. for theme re-|lished Missour),| of . that ; Pooks alten + . And still further: "He (George Sheets) has been bound over unjustly, in spite of the showing : ‘i innocence men. He has pursuing him.| Harvey and Burton-calumniator xe : well together. They have much in Burton is offending Roosevelt's part {dent brood senator the Colonel other silently Tribune 4 to : ey are 7 ; charges of the judge on town of Erie, Pe ee pees : : aE A : ; ng ears in and transshipp the world's reply is that Burton didn't get a whit more|against the laws of the state. He did not make a "‘showaoe seen there brought. on riots .and street fighting of ‘ . 4 ' eve sre than his dues-if he received all that was coming to]ing of his innocence.' He will get a jolly good chance to Gawain chara renee ‘acticing before the departments] do that when his case comes to trial. Tf he be innocent, | "The early atte ate to remedy the trouble looked to him. He took fees for practicing be epé i § . AR ‘ing a third rail within one of the two wide gauge while he was a senator, and he knew there was a law!he can establish it then. If he be guilty. he should be | wants a eats clumsy5. at couplings that 2 5, 4 £ 5 « attempts forbidding it. He took fees from about the slimiest lot{ punished, Meantime, if he had any self respect, he would | would admit of trains made up of cars of diffe ofa eee McAllister, General Manager. Fy : le St Offices-Dooly Block, 208 South West aoe ; "Phones: Bell, Exchange 25; Independent, 3190. ----- . * , 7 x r o SALT LAKE - CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, MARCH' 29, 1907.7 = them it. Another OE RE an tne ee ~ 00 see Op rer mreleisia ' 4.00] Malcolm ------------- als enemies. Some of Others are noisy about court : strong so | | news Further ase biased trial." : unlike evidence district title equityJv? ~ S ENEMIES? ARE HIS ENEMIE President Roosevelt is not cently Paid ES the ; criminal the on S it. In the n: e will be "Tt to.;of "Ory theory has to and s : in their}|ignore lawless anarchy-for : WHO RATES: Z . notice addressed SUBSCRIPTION eUUisce 5 66 fet eee 3.00........ an Daily relating to the ence the in ee eee hee i tI patures do not as they xget as much out of the world wish, ' the men women whose natures are and whase| iand 1879 matters DIRECT the local or solicitooO oa Party : cane matter City, under in framed heses Company IT Republican e by Republican DL ee y the Le as secondSalt Lake mntoee an postoffice at -- Sey é The Only -----e of REPUBLICAN and long and talk Miss Otis never two weeks after maswent up to. town good. air," [It was quite enough. Captain O'Donnell rose again; his grave face had resumed its usual habitual calm; he had heard all he wanted-more than he had expected He pressed a half sovereign into Doreas'' willing palm, bade Mrs. Wilson good-morning and depart- "Only two days, sir, and she looked lovely to the last. I remember her His face was set in a look of fixed, well, lying in her coffin, with flowers steady determination as he quitted the all around her like marble or waxcottage and returned to Castleford. He work, and misses a-crying over her had taken the first step on the road and master with a face like white to discovery-come what might, he stone I saw it all, sir, saw the coffin would go on to the end now lid screwed down, saw her carried out, The middle of the afternoon brought and a tine, respectable funeral she Lanty Lafferty to Scarswood park with had-all the gentry of Ne neighbora note from the captain to Miss Rose. hood, poor dear young lady.' It was only a brief word or two-say"Humph!" Captain O Donnell said, ing he had gone up to London by the knitting his brows Katherine Danmid-day train, and would probably not gerfield had died then, and Miss Hernreturn for a couple of days castle had nothing whatever to do away Miss O'Donnell was in her room With her, in spite of all the astound"Do; you. know )why. <I took the suffering from a severe attack of nerving coincidences. "One question more, trouble to drive four miles under a ous headache, when this was brought my good woman; how long after the blazing July sun, over a dusty July her. She looked at the bold, free char- road, to wait five minutes in a stuffy funeral was it that Mr. Otis left this acters, then pressed er face down place for London? station for the 2:30 express, dear boy? tell Redmond the pitiful story of my "Abo a month, sir-vyes, just a To meet and intercept you--to ask folly and disobedience. month. I think they would have gone you as a personal favor to myself, as sooner, but for the unexpected arrival "And I intended to have told him an aet of friendship to. Ginevra, not of his cousin, the sick young lady from to 50 to = fane, yY bal all today," she said, "‘as I should have Essex ‘My rd,' interrupted Major told him long ago if I had not been a Captain O'Donnell had risen to goi Fi anbicnd. uneasily, "am I to undercoward. To think-to think that Miss At these last words he suddenly sat stand Lady Dangerfield has commisHerneastle should have known from down again. sioned you to-" the first Ah! how shall I ever dare "The sick young lady from Essex. "Lady Dangerfield has commissionamong the pillows with a sort of } Ah! I think this may be what I want jed me to do nothing-has ordered me, groan to hear. Wher did you say the sick to stand aside and mind my 8 hat eres Wednesday-passed very }indeed, ;} young lady came business All the same, I -<am lull} own quietly; it as the treacherous "On the very identical night of the Dangerfleld's nearest male relathat ercond oa all storms. Miss Hern- |Lady /funeral, sir, and most unexpected. and, as such, bound to warn her eastle kept her room; she was putting | tive, had gone to bed, and misses, she came her danger. Failing to impress still a few finishing touches to that} of I come to you. As. a gentleman to my room next morning before I got lovely page dress Late on Wednes- | 1er, an old friend up, all white and in a tremble, and day evening came from town a large land a man of honor-as says to me, ‘Doreas, get up at once and | box addressed to Major Frankland jof poor Ginevra's, you. will perocive heat water for a bath'; and then she|my lady and the governess alone knew | at onee the foree of what I say. sat down in a chair, looking fit to]that it contained Count Lara's cos-!} ndeed _You will pardon my stu-~ drop. I asked her if any one was My 1 > was on her best be-| pidity if I fail to perceive it as ye : for that surrender ment station, is especially fitted for the work to which sick, and she said yes, a young lady }|havior to her Rue oeee to the mas"It lies in a nutshell. Sir Peter wit ut cool and Ton thts Serine it smelters may be given that right, then any other| he has been called. ghost- seeing -this mystification. Vl who had come in the night, a niece |querade she was resolved, and braye | Dangerfield does you the honor of beSir Peter might/ing infernally jealous, That is an a big interest is entitled to it. If a big interest is entitled, The result of yesterday's meeting should be of the ie i And 1 a begin the first ching of hers from Essex, and who was go-|all consequences. ing to stop with them a few days. She|never find it out, and if he did-well, |state of things this masquerade at : mor then any little interest would of right be entitled, as| greatest possible advantage to the college. It should, begged me to keep it a secret The e did it would blow over, as other) that woman's house has brought Adie He ea and went home He has told = hs well. The brewery, the boiler the stockyards|and we believe will, result in a more distinctive agri- I t was a brilliant summer night, and, young lady was weak-like in her in-]|storms had blown over, and nothing|ters to a climax. factory, tellect, and they would be obliged to} would come of it. Dangerfield that if Bee AEA he neared the fields, he stopped might with equal fitness be given the right of eminent] cultural quality in the college work, and should go far confine her to her room. I promised There were others who judged air- | not return, and a nd looked suspiciously around, But hs coo domain; and the precedent established would become] to allay the friction that has existed betw een the college|if ‘he looked for Miss Herneastle, no not to speak of it, for misses she look- ferently. Some inkling of what was| he means it Pen ane hag a aeae naok ed trembling and frightened to death brewing, something of what Sir Peter stinate as the devi it o ° BO, ee dangerous. and the university in the past. ae oo oe id a : hen ae almost. And so she was all the time had said, reached the ears of Lord separ ate oe aon i seh a or .. i ow, Just what is the best' solution of the smelter puzzle, = BE er Se aces the se." strange young lady was in the ventured Ruysland, in and Lord delicate Ruyslandmanner had|this isis awitully vs on nd Toa i Sete ripe cea reached the Silver Rose, but even then the most | She blind te ee we do not pretend to say, Let us hope that the owners| KANSAS PAYS THE FREIGHT. he did not go to bed. e lit a cigar "How long was that?" to expostulate with his willful niece. |bUt you wil ; Pare may find locations that are favorable to them, and not When members of the Kansas legislature go up to and sat down by the open window to "Not quite a fortnight, sir; and a ne game and. think. The town was was not worth oo Eee: harmful to the interests or destructive of the property the capital to make laws for the people, the state pays smoke sight of bother she made-all her -the masquerade was not the worthcandle the} only #5trousnea eaten ee you ae we wall all ales, the lights all out-the stars and meals took up to her room, and misses pyjce she might pay for it. Better|/depend The but one thing for of ae the people, O'Donnell had the peace and i ; But we are very : sure the 5 granting x of the their fare. When they go home at the end of the ses- Captain Stayv!-I know Seite of the sweet July night all to a-trotting up and down all day Jong, humor Sir Peter and his old-fashion- | ¥OU to dp=-aon't g0. right of eminent domain to them is not the ee WHAT WOULD Emma is as B the the solution of all riefly stated, this is of preacher Canada governmental her do of what and from anarchy, she social problems. utmost to set class human heart. Government is always on against the side it except Suppose take in the Emma Dominion. the by at his men her of and every provinee respect influence word, Suppose entire own in the rights Canada abolish as fee of for all the| tomorrow morning as exact natural equals, with no] law compelling any one to any certain line of conduct, and leaving each to do exactly as he pleased-limited| eth i : alone by "his By own noon boiling lot respect the of for province trouble. : en Ri of Some ; of Ontario men ya others. would : have would a in would think man had entitled to a would believe vileges very The trouble of the she first for. right to an to income to another what i . is Canada the home start even hour. would put We ever were not are They don't| accept themselves. guilty of companies who for or It desire is former fact is : at the improper for] are charged wi aki ‘ See RNS oF. under obligation to the companies concessions. not the And it is from what it a the valuable at Emma the be dawn, one and Goldman things of there weuld some one else the last to wanted for herself forse and no betteror worse state's business. large, large as legal it but might is unfair, influenced present. want, The item no by And if he limit neither is be. } And all of sixty et railroad the pay know the pos- going to to the peo- Te fare of a that remain no pay at may not} legislator least in as Utah and complete their for service past the} days. why the state s M legislators, and should : every pay rea- should not. the railroad companies why It one is the surrender any "r other "andl mustSh hjs six way enact years ago had the died. abe a take will vot ae ae one = Seesnow Sue the consequences f f,-Ne Pils r > rat atrb ped are rl the cottage present-that much he had ascertained at his inn. t very in en possession the which Mr. Otis had left, and had been there ever sin Mrs. Wils a s }ittle the the com-| was when he|S°". is he is unfair of There are many reasons td : traveling expenses of its INSOLENT would wanted, , took matron gnswaned the eon in faniiis ‘of we YY! big ee ae now in the service of Mrs. WilHis business was with that ser- fan ik cuivat Be The little Done bate |firmative. ene ‘hers mistress a of magmient the -or cottage spared' tele tee ihe at, He meant Doreas, of course wise and reasonable legislation at his hands. -Dorcas had come to her with the The state would better pay the fare. That may prop- nouans ROA Dorcas yas in the kitchen at present, and would wait upon the erly be done, He is an employe of the state, and is about|sentleman at once, = tah i ee a SPA in is ea TO THE not contempt judgment comments. the than He Dangerfield erson, and ushered h milit i vi sitNae or 6 <t the at ; once into parlor. Captair ae eOaptalh that O'Donnell's business with Mrs. Wilson matter Was very simple. He understood that ple who elected him, to the state of which he is a sworn officer, and to that posterity which has a right to expect pri-|son be darkly court. °o 5 But And for COURT, The Republican of court. of the we we do note That is to a magistrate know that a-waiting when a the for say when matter upon writer Tribune an entirely whom is is the editor within editor insolent to insolent to that # attitudeos is Judge' Sheets and George, George upon "What her was herself.' she like-this young long was she kept here prejudices Dorcas shook he her head couldn't tell, sir. TI never and Pyerleigh. Ginevra -a gleam caine throw listened, in her of her eye over eyes inyincible She Mrs nose compress- eae you one of | tO dre Dang obstinacy | Cctera. was would aay sed-your break rfield Granted-but & vou. have is in will promise tthe be is prom- house- offended, that it not et better involves so laid eyes on her, leastwise except once. Master and misses they kept waiting on her, all day long, and misses she those people wham opposition only|™much? Is it not better to tempordoubly determined to have their way. | #tily offend Ginevra than ruin her for "That will do, Uncle Raoul. Your| life? Frankland, as a man of the slept advice with night." her you "Yes, in saw the her sir, but and She at night I didn't never stirred out and at night and shutting of footsteps, same room think ence by an see all I used to hear doors softly night I may be your of good ut three-score this life had accident, | body ever yet relished her day and One at] once?" it was face.} long,| go the to the page Everleigh dress and I shoula; years' World, experi-|that taught good you advice. no-|to I'll; party-lI'll wear snap my fingers watched, | er late in the day for him to play ‘the She tion was of tall, permed and mine-if this dressed was ss | in only a dark} no- Henry, be- flurried‘Well, sort. of way, monstrance would i you > fall to is open Trust me to weeks have perceive to make she saved you- your will her, see and Tomorrow Morning.) ; Russians Smoke Constantly. ale in Russia tussi male over er fifteen Every vy a j'ye ars old smokes about 150 ci ts a week. ac di s pore go, my dear-t| | sular elif 5 for Pai, to a British. conhow useless reae iit si OB -29 and and Lithuania, be, but Cecil with would| Dangerfield hadn't heen dead and buried, I should have said the height and the figure were like hers,"' The blood rose dark and red over the sun; browned face of the African soldie For an instant his breath seemed fairly taken away. "Well?" he said in a tense sort of w yo not course three (Continued I heard the aoe door shut softly,|rele of Bluebeard. TI shall ro and directly afte I espies master The earl shrugged his shc walking in the a garden with al gave it Teena _ oulders 5 and | } argue can one In |from thank sounds|atindeed! Sir Peter Dangerfield. His threats, is Poor little manikin! {t's leady : on his arm. ce Dp It was a cloudy sort] woman of a night, and I couldn't see her very "Certainly you'll plainly-I couldn't see her face at all. | knew perfectly well you but Withdraw. Peace. opening] looked at him in. surprise. sir,' she said, "the very next night after that the sick young lady Mrs. Wilson went and Dorcas came ran away. I don't know whether the stout, elderly woman, with an inhad been keeping her against her will iat ag dak face or not, but in the dead of night she ak Sec Yan away. When misses awoke next to. obtain a few particulars Aaa ae ieee the Hae ee death a morning she found the bed empty, the young lady in this use six years door unlocked, and Miss Otis hey called her Miss Otis) gone. he #80". the chasseur began, into his subject at once. "You plunging rememscreamed out like one crazy, and ran her, of course? Her name was down in her night- clothes to master's Katherine Danger field." room. saw him r ‘ Dore as remembered perfeetly|aand except when well, remembered as though it were Dangerfield dead in her coffin. I never She had come to the cot- saw him wear such a face. yesterday. I declare tage late in the evening-a cold, dark it He searched the winter evening it was-to see the sick garden, but she was young man, Mr. Dantree. fr. Otis nowhere to be found. ‘Then he set off himself had let her in. The next thing for the station, and discovered (TI she heard, half an hour later, was heard him tell his mother so) that a Mrs, Otis scream. rushed in. tall young lady, dressed in black and on Dangerfield was lying then on the closely veiled, had gone up to a ofa, white and still, and Dr. Graves aa ie the very first train. That sa said a en dea © got a telegraph dispatch re "Yo Dantes) and he went up noaes: ' Yes, Baa dear, and a beautiful m came back in three days, se she de, calm and white, dreadful gloomy cpu looking me nau peaceful, afiw:. ineand slau "asin more eae as His mother "How ed lady?" clothes, legislator compdnies here, "But OF the something manifestly -s me n, to that pleasant cottage adjoinng the churchyard wherein Kather- tne Soin omrem:, Bat the breach honored usually legislature. themselves grant im- observance. asking accepts wan that that He thoughtful for. oyer:.aairhour.: When Het plan he hadof it himeelf all out; onhis hiswhole aaner eye verare him ng he benext morn passes not charging ate been better wection of the world. The men and women there have Judge Whitaker. itv to " "enjoy , to the 2 uaeest extent exte heir seselfOf course, the reason an opportunity their . : expression." They have that privilege now, and are| Whitaker's order holding ws too. Session of a pass. If he js not going to do what panies want, then he is unfair to the company other and property that the wheter a|seem she no men would believe himself ny Ree without work. Some|the to companies. ¢ v4 has Utah the| members of the legislature men|work, even though they get some there, others. desire herself to man entitled themselves might in a Some comfortable dear race be and had they worked those "‘respect] for the rights of others' wholly differing from "respect" entertained by their neighbors. Some the of the be fare representatives-should custom in are ef the human roe were started in life] Ontario a ands to to| in and Railroad of] were laws is than of| the rich against the poor, of the strong ee the weak,| of the robbers against the robbed. erefore, anarchy intends to destroy government, and sires eS man to be a law unto himself, unrestrained by any fo of coercion. Every human being will then be able to a the fullest extent of self-expression and gratify his own desfres, un- restricted others their DERE tS Roe ere sete eke memes. members, who know they are guilty. If so, ‘ Pint kira in : : o be regretted. It Is sa to have been the class, sex against sex, individual against individual. Goyernment makes moral eripples of individuals by teaching them to rely on erutches instead of depending on their Vitality and energy. Government kills the finer traits of the pays the railroad atelegislator i of any regards gospel: their state passes from the railroad companies, and they don't to pay their own travelling expenses, either. That looks like the better way. Certainly legislators -senators woman people "Governments ake age THEN? the telling the ce 5 a HAPPEN Goldman, now way talk aabout "thee church" directin ‘ [1 , 1,000 Pecigarets, eere tee ee ences. ‘= fOr CUTLER BROS. CO.i 36 EW - MAIN STREET ARRIVE now replete with the latest Productions in Trousers and Suit Patterns, Blue Mixtures, Brown Stripes and : ' Wl ur tailoring department is ° best out of the difficulty. And it is follyy to that the bill be killed. Plaids. Staple Greys, Pants to order, $3.50 to $12, 00. Suits $20.00 to $45.00, mr. I |