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Show 1 ho iv arc other boss-os who are sorry. For instance, in-stance, liill Dcvory. 4 Sail Lake's voice is tuned to ".Maryland, My Maryl;t:nl." f Salt Lake Democrats expected nothing' and got everything most everything. The humble werecx-fllled. werecx-fllled. and ihe exalted were humbled. -4 Tuesday's elections repeated ihe story of the Dutch lakinii- Holland in the states governed by Quay and Hanna. Dewie's attempt to '-restore' Xew York ended in failure before he really began to put bis work through. Jle lost his head and his temper. 4 ; In an addres ;it Chicago J rover Cleveland said there was room at ihe top. Metaphorically speaking, speak-ing, he meant ihe lop of the ladder of fame. It is only ripht to say that ihe ox-prcsident was not lalking polities Polities and ladders arc inhar-inoiiic.us. inhar-inoiiic.us. r Let Panama might be forgotten, as an item of news it should be stated that the isthmus has se-eeded se-eeded from Colombia and set up a government of i:s own. It ha a llag with four squares, and a star in one of the squares. That flag is its principal princi-pal aset. Army and navy will come later on, pro- ; viding the revolution lasts day after tomorrow. j j In a railroad accident the oiher day. Consul Emma Tooth-Tucker was killed. Xcws of her tragic deaih brought personal grief to hundreds of thou-smN thou-smN all over ihe rnri. Mot of all to the lowliest, lowli-est, for whom, the little Salvationist devoted her liiV. The Salvation Army is a work in the world j !" "tiie other half." It is in and of that other half, j I; i- by and for thai other half. Its officers live i in thai world, coming out of it only to tell the j more i'oruniato half what it can do to help; and j now that one of those workers has gone out of s:di. ili.u world feels the loss with a dull heart--:i'-ho. I: is good to go out of life knowing that I ihe thought of you is closely treasured in hearts that feel they have not many friends to lose. J - T Providing : suitable shelter for children whose mothers must perform outdoor labor for their support, sup-port, is another of the charities quietly bestowed by Alexander H. Tarbet and Ins amiable wife. In ! some eastern paper appeared a write-up of just such an institution, under the charge of a religious order. Meditating upon tho hardships which accompany ac-company poverty in congested communities, the writer felt like comparing the better lot of mothers here with iheir poorer sisters of the cast. Xo idea., of ihe need for such shelter as the Tarbet s provided pro-vided appeared to exist, but we were mistaken. The poor we have with us, and poverty presses along with our prosperity. The labor of love is taken up-in up-in Salt Lake by the ladies of the Children's. Aid and Hume Finding association. 1 The relations of Church and Statevarc defined by our evangelistic friends, thus: It would be a violation of that relation (or separation) had the citizens of Buffalo illuminated the city hall on the -occasion of the reception of the new Catholic bishop. It was no violation of the constitutional consti-tutional prohibition for the Marine band at Washington to appear at an Episcopal function func-tion in cassocks, by order of the president, presi-dent, nor for ihe president to occupy the pulpit pul-pit and address the bishops. Some of our evangelical evangeli-cal friends protested against the proposed Buffalo incident, alleging it violated the spirit of the act rrovidiug for separation of Church and State. The Washington incident would seem to fit the Buffalo I proposition, or vice versa, as easily as putting up a stovepipe." Catholics, however, see in neither incident in-cident any violation of the law. The president may appear in a Protestant pulpit, but the president is not the State.- lie is only the Stato when he mixes up in Catholic affairs, according to our evangelical friends. Li |