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Show od. THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT 1 "XE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, MARCH 14, 1909. LT? GAC DELS LL L OMO CLS SO?) 2 LLALL, A/YD hie LIF fA. AL DOT LAL LE TT aud soon had recovered of the lost ground * Gaver ~ she ot Pptuneh of st Pacrice aivvays serves to direct public ae tention to the sereonalition and the achievements of the most cele brated membera of the Irish rnce, soC particularly the foremost representativer of the [righ race In Americn Enpecially does each recurring holiday serve ®s o tlme of retrospect for the erenter of the preceding year among a people who are erer Gilling a very large aphere in 1909, ts ie a by ‘ : 4 j =s = Zo - Line PPtlaep b ebaracter of bis subject>t. An unexpected diMeulty appeared In the execution of the figure of Parnell Only a few photo ae of the i leader could be ee ; ie kA theclint tory as gla bet basis from hbwhich sculptor should work. So St. Gaudens turned for his Inspiration to the caricatures of Parnell pubHshed from time to time in the ua English funmaker, Punch, and thus the cartoons thant had been drawn originally and in the crentire power of his art. to ridicule the Irish patriot canine tn the exactly those qualities which admirers | end to serve an exactly opposite purpose. | of the Irish race nre pronounce | Renders who delight to note the un- © LA AIOALD? war so recognized | ita dominant racial characteristics. | promising World but In the | he alwnys took the greatest pride and That In fall to be | terest beglonings Interested of gentus cannot Inade a mere fight in oe case on be, halt of Johns ‘pinion wa written by aii tice W. M McC cae Justice D Straup a l the Too AFFIRMS FINDING cocceceexs sary of avn Pacific Rail- road in Johnson . fhe the Sin The court judgime was court & affirmed. Utah in the case of Alfred guest at minister Novern} x 190 Od eh wove yer 4 Xr _ gene angons Ww ‘ oI aed n % ot i t re ip t es - eas, ego ml ' ae ‘= ' aa Recs. i . hs een awe ee aited 1 we . esto: ta een Deny nan Cay 1d pf =a war ae ir }-| eee et ian the NTA 1 lose aca.law lew would au : Fe to Baa Attorneys u practice ai ath \ $4,500 eee t oer Ae Booth, a Lee his ee rth of ehurch soclal was and. Mrs. eyen- given Prison. Sent A..G to State in order may program Misswho Mary) of Pasadena. is'a OE : the home of the gave reading When atniy a Unitarian John P.j| He © the arraigned on in the second was sentenced was i state prisor that Saint Gaudens dent at Cooper Institute and ae= Richardson also by was completed sang,an _ The program! instrumental] cayinghis jost selection by Miss _ Watson Re-|¢o freshments were served: iseThe enter-( ;}to tainmentort cares was ie Sa given a. raise money tO) ag fr ‘ a Rade ty le dger the church building of the months non iin! debt Now chance a much wh for is your to to the $100. whenand he position : Bed, Pe Bed S40) 0 aTAS: er V. R + en Beds and in our. 20 PER CENT Discount. weer ee nies Beg Ee ¢7 ae ee ad ss ee il ate é ade | sez arcied AFirst ‘B. i his room ie lay the rte DID NOTE PAY upon ; } Lincoln} AND South and | Althous street, of Palis-| to reach the for reproduction on the one bondred miilion commemorative poatage stamps which have heen tssued for nse this year Other notable statnes of the nation's most prominent meo which came from tbe han@ of Saint Gandens were the monnment te General Logan. on the Inke front, Ch'engo; that to James A. Garfield, in Fate: monnt Park. Philndelphia: and that ¢rtomphant Sherman. in Central Park. New . the horse and rider preceded by that exnultant Inspiring female figure of Victory which Saint Gandens modeled from the woman whom he always considered to be the bandsomest model he had ever seen Whistler. the painter. and other giants of the world of art who were also congenial and companionable to Saint Gan/ densa, endearored to keep up the seulptor's Rpirits In the face of enecronching 1) henlth, bnt from 1000. when he returned to America after o sojourn of three years in Paris, it was a losing fight. He lived aa much oa possible in the open. skating and golfing while his strength Insted. and Inter sitting by the hour on the porch or being carried abont in an tmprovised Sedan chatr. With his ebbing streugth he, at the request of President Roosevelt, prepared the designs for nation's new gold coins, and finally denth found him with bla bands still molding a cherished relief of his wife. There the month dedicated to St. Patrick. John LG. WAS : = ALIMONY SENT Jo Naan Our TO was Ir ht. aa JAIL found r's barry cvllty| ner, after he had} of contempt of court by Judge C. \ tr the hotel and OF | Morse, in the Third District court, and| | causes w i . ss and at once ‘ hospital, running up. expenses Lincoln house about of $200 . ae: paying | somethingin -front sparkling caihh) a as|icoping of a possible of the bill he ws coy gz and resorted to the theft of} was the telephoned Coming 6 back o'clock, "ian mulloH the ring New Goods. 10% to 334% OFF weights It' Ss are theh all re custo- wait-when for coal in thata the serene r Who ane r You The People J. 2 Silas CO. Watson,Transfer Sananer. Co. yd kick. a Treat shee Sieh Right alae n to ai he n to} the | saw} the allmony Judge ~"since Morse make instructs payment wSaar 1 4 ad t| j later th 4 to comply for J the three of December, d the _ Johnson Mier / Tass aaa as see them. stock. at od $32 Bed ped Red Me paige e and} Ind. to amount - not days Wont {5 GES speeeat : | incarceration Whe adven y > 955, TA Bell oer1e ae elnig |e instructions a calle Bea Btvect onethe All thelr rooms, ce WE less News. 50 0. armanentio 137 Cents = new and 212 MAIN TREAT extraction , Dectealn bandaor nely ST. YOU of equipped Remember RIGHT. teeth or no £450 Inlaid $3.60 Inlaid $3.20 43.00 Inlaid. $2.75 Inlaid... : SALE. s47.50 Rugs. 1.75 Linoleum $1.45 Linoleum > 30 $1.3 $1.05 AC45 e CI $39.00 Ee(nes or ranges Rugs $1.10 $ 30.00 Rugs. 75 1e Oil | ie ga Cloth : RNR stv i th a Rute. $2.00 £1.00 Oil Cloth RG, a 52,40 80 S .70 $26.00 $ .60 _$38.00 Ca 4 ee on $35.00 $32.50 $24.00 oe Bence ae $10.50 Cart with 0 $91.50 Cart with Carne ; Carpet$ 1.00 $35.00 2. English agh er Denes ~ $a . $ =. Lincleums iN yay set 1.50 41.95 $1.25 \ elvet reais Velvet Carpet. 7a Ce Carpet. Brussels Brussels 51 cS .$ 1.40 ne to 57 FURNITURE, CARPETS AND STOVES $ 8.65 11.90 - Hood..:.............. 16.95 , Carriage......... Maa ac 27.00) y EAST FIRST SOUTH ST. - Hood......... $13.75 Cart with Hood........ See Our indow isplay pay. - - AND ; RUGS Ua. Pain- ARPETS £4.00 4 456 $16. oO. Main ONE MORE WEEK OF THE BIG DISCOUNT EVERYTHING IN THE HOUSE. MADSEN, Manager. C. F. McCARTHY, Asst. Mer. "scem LirROL@URIS a E> 3rass statues), procure a secure erass Brass Inst very apex of nchlevement as counterfeit Presentments of the saylor of the Union. Only a few weeks ago the national gorernment selected the Saint Gaudens bead of Lincoln aos the best portrait extant, For nlmost sixteen yenrs therenfter Saint Ganudens labored consclentlonsis witb splendid resnits in the studio he established tn New York and became almost from the ontset one of the moat conspicuous figures in the art Ife of the metropolis. While nat work upon that wonderful monument to the lute wife of Henry Adams, the historian, a masterplece of sculpture which stands tn Rock Creek Cemetery, Waxhbington, and for which a score of deficient titles have been Proposed. although Snint Gandens wonld bever gire it one-the sculptor first risited the picturesque hamlet of Cornish, New Hampabire, nnd there he soon afterward bonght an old brick tavern and converte: it Into 1 summer home. To this haven in the uplands of New England the physlcally broken sculptor came man ears later to make him permanent resideuce and here he did bis final work e ams monoment, somber and Inscrutable, is assoctated with avother siznificant event In Saint Gaudens' career. One October night In 1004 the sculptor's chief studio burned, carrying to destrué op not only all the sculpture tn progress, but his portfolios contalning the records of forty years. On that dreary morping after the Ore the head of the Adams won; Ument faced [ts creator-a seemingly appropriate souvenir-the one and only thing that escaped the Games After this blow Salnt Gaudeng set bravely to work "Finally, however, bis skill in cameocutting luspired some of the young man's customers with his own confidence in his future io a larger sphere and one of these (Mr. Montgomery Gibbs, an American) gave Satut Gaudeng the opportuolty to OGnoish bis irst statue-‘'Hlawatha''--to ex- any Deaa National dens' VALUABLE R'NG LAY SRLULIC CAR ONHCne amount he | penniless k see t R(} stu- Academy of Design marked the span of the Civil War, and the boy, just at an age to be mentally sensitive to the dra matic events of the period, was deeply Impressed by the spectacle of troops de parting for the front, and a gilmpse of the immortal Lincoin {in the streets of New York-vivld mind pictures tn which may be found something of the ground{ngs of that {nepiration which Inter produced those matchless figures of Lincoln, Farragut. Sherman and Log A couple of yeara after the close of the war Salot Gaudens' life in New York came to an end for a time. He went ahroad to stndy, working bia way, as it were by cutting cnmeos and for fourteen years, or from the time he was eighteen yeara of age until he was thirty-two, he wae almost continuously bard at work In the art centers of Evrope. He went at first to Paria and there, he came wear enlisting In the French army when the Francg-Prosstan War broke ont. However, a letter from his Irish mother, who seems for once to have been derold of a traditional trait of ber race, deterred him aod he = to Rome, where for four years he ged a continual Ogbt with por erty ip ta effort to complete bis train- dees elght ig a muck UYERS GET EARLY BARGAINS AT EARLY S60 wan work Ieo Bradley, who is charged with robholding up Ge org Molsteadt and bing him of $1.5 oe LsZOo, Was & 1 pleaded not guilty M oy: te adt positively identified Bradley few hours after the robbery, a chargeyesterday of bur-| was housefound in East degree, by to t to years eakin In N series charofhe February 16, 1909, tine sd. the police of the ring's disap | senten ed to . three days in Yes the county! « stic responded Le 1éS 3 ¢ of l Lar- | Hy On ac the » night ered grocery store of a| | pearancs ; E é we icteristi ketecl Irs ran anson enter the gr ys . : 2 3 leat) Saturday: TORMSBaAS TasdordA son proved her histrionic ability by) former « beg r at No 134 West Mr. Altho 1s : as : pasioe ms ring iain iste Fay BN BT ie ) : Y scene Tro S Southh Ter ickeln some manner i a) snov a aus 5 pb § i render} ng thei balcony scen from) Temple and annéxed the nickel-|in a coata pocket ane / , ; : "Romeo and Juliet." Mrs, Frank J. | {n-the-slot machine itached to the} pulled it from the pocket ith his| not pay his et Helga J. Johnson, Browning, the soprano of Unity W.quar-| lephone young Hanson a hard-| gloves when he. entered the house} alimony of $20 a month, as ordered tet, gave several selections A.| teworking man had and been succeeded in} at 3 a m. yesterday. He discovered| by the court Johnson h 1d not paid | oe] vorth : and series machine The his 5 ? a a Mr. 5S. | the: evening's Phelps \ M: Toline no oO JOUNsSON ustain¢ tralysis of by slot Mahan at their residence in B street : | HOu two hours yeste About 50 guests were present Hung Was the plea of Hans Han-|a $150 diamond ring Musie and reading were a part of | 50", 25 years old, to Tadeo T. D: Lewis,| pavement In front of Third District) the Supreme rl Johnson of Provide nee, a I., ag ee th Tnion Pacifie railroac Saturday Phis < ' ¢ Ach -? case Was tried "Re fore Tudgt r. I «| per tug inrae sulted first Unitarian ‘Thursday the by PLEA UF HUNGER' | Tells eTale of Misfortune and is. ¢ Parties to, be-giyen by women Of ; Case prosaic one of the shoe trade, and ac cordingly Angostus had early to take a band {o the battle for livelihood. The firet dozen years of his life, during which he received the ordinary common school education of the New York boy of half a century ago, were spent in sordid surroundings, but after he !eft school at the oge of thirteen yeara and was apprenticed to a cameo-cutter hia artistic talent developed rapidly, nnd this despite the fact that the man Avet, to whom he was apprenticed-one of the first stone cameo entters In America-was anything but apn agreenble emplorer After several veors of miserable life under this {ll-temperead master Saint Gaudens rebelled and found employment with a4 more tolerant cameo cutter, Jules Le Brethon by onme. All the while he was studying drawing at the Cooper Institute o the evenings, giving rein to n talent that had first manifested Itself in charcont scrawls on the fences near his bome and which had Instantly arrested the attention of some of the customers of the shoe-making father. A little later th talented Ind left the Cooper Institution to take up life = at the National Acadewy of Desig the CHHE man was not only nelfsupporting. thanks a bis skill lo cameo cutting, but ensily excelled all his fellow students at the art school, Just here It be mentioned that Saint Gaudens' cameos were og remarkable in their way as were his later achievements to marble : was eloquently attested by the specimens shown lo the memorial exbibitions of the work of Sulot Gaudens recently beld tn New York and Chicago. 5 2 in the environment In his ontive land there ts ample | which ourtured this exponent of Irish evidence and It ts efpnificant that the | poetry in marble and bronze. The father Inat pretentions plece of work upon which | of the sculptor, Bernard Paul Ernest he was enguged wos a statue of Par- | Salnt-Gnoodens was a native of the south cell destined for his birthplace, Dubd‘in of France, and there learned bis trade of This figure of Paruell represents sboemnaker &® young map be over. great Irish orator Just rising and pnt came the tndolence of that sunny cline a cameo-cu ting on bis overcoat-an unconventional and became tn effect a tramp shoemaker, Persous who are perhaps just o trifle | but cbarncteristic attitude, but In this, journeying by easy stages to Paris, thence Jealous of the pardonable Irisb pride In os in many forerunners, §S Ganudens o London and finally to Dublin, Ireland, St. Gaudens are sometimes wont to poinr | conquered not less by the perfection of | wher e fell under the witchery of the out that be was not unreservedly an Irish his ae thun by tbe daring of bis conIrish beauty of Mury McGuinese a giri Product. His fatber was a Frenchman cept who bound slippers In the shoe store for may te Judged from tbe name, and ine' friends of St. Gandens reenal! that which be made boots It seemed for a Augustus St. Gaudens. although born ts it gave bim especial pride and plensure | time after the wedding as though the Ireland, was brought to the United when ip the afternoon of ils all-too brief merecuorin! Frenchman would settle down States when a baby, so that the two re life there came to bim the commission for | and Hye appy ever after tn the Irish Publica can claim with the Emerald Isle this statoe of Charles Stewart Parnell metropolis, but a few months after the Share of the credit {fn fostering bls Although the sculptor was already benv- ) third baby came the old pomadt gepirit genius. ‘ly bandicapped by 11! bealth and was pot returned, and so the shoemaker, his wife However, S audeuos will probaniy | as free from financial worry ns the artist and hd set eal] for America. co down tnto eee es pre-eroinently | should be, be attacked thls new work In New York the eccentric Frenchman, an Irish acalptor-not so much because | with unusual enthosiasm Ne remarked, hothended and fanelful. devoted far more of the locale of bis birth as because be | over nnd over agatb, that he bad enough attention eogrossiug subject of seemed to trpify in his temperament {| Irish in hls makeup to sppreciate the | secret societies than he did to the more Old. That brilllancy whleb appears to be o tralt of the Irlsh race was, Gandens. matched by hfs versatility In his prolific sculptore he bandled the widely divergent medinms of marble and bronze with equal facility and {tp early fe be tad proven bimself a muster ns Appeal ecute his Orat ordered monument-a figure of "Silence''-and ultimately to return to America with thnt priceless boon-the Prospect of a fair amount of definite es Even then {t was a hard fight In the coun try of his adoption, but at last there came the order for the statue of Farrngut. which now stands {n Madison Square, New York, and from that moment the skies brightened. With enccess seemingly assured, Saint Gandens wedded Miss Angusta F. Homer-a marriage that had tong walted upon the dawn of financial {nde pendence. th: # Be | significant he. passing of Augustua ‘n bis generation and not only {pn the New | : : | Tt bas neen enld that St. Gandens was the greatest a eitie genio of the century He wan more--be was one of the xrentent cenloses ste world bas produced to many decades ot only wna he Amer Jen'n foremost sculptors, but he wna per haps the premier sculptor of the world < : | especially enuse it marked the St. Gnaudens, seniptor ye | the world's work -he the work artlstle . Jodnstria!, pollticai. Io Eta' seepext commercial tie" oaeiena or tia ae han March. : | in One circumstance that, aside from hie death, gives Saint Gaudena unusual prom!nepce in this, the year of the Lincoln eentenary, fa that the Irish sculptor {oterpreted the martyr president in art ae ne other painter or seniptor bas ever been able to do. Els two heroic figures, the one wepresenting Lincoln standing, baring place {n Lincoln Park, Chicaga an4 *be Other showing Lincoln, seated, n gift tw the South Side of the city of Chicago by bequest of the Inte John Crenrer, of that city (the latter one of Saint Gau- |