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Show (rnt kakk: of $aguarantl iWi aiu( rkanc VUAUtC (jp kJ aua(lctIn Ill iai baiitifd jewlry. I nptrinci altrial. .. n (. Tit Tint Mtartial tkca ikill, tut,, tia, fme W kre all th UMatiiU, aatl Til-ag- e nl raaaha kata MUUiikeJ aar raatatiaa. Steering Committee Has Practically Agreed Upon Legislation to Be Carried Out. it SALT LAKE dVlUTAA PRESIDENT NOT SATISFIED? THE SHORTEST ROUTE TO JZ1B3UDE IS VIA. DEETII, NEVADA DEETH U aalj S5 ailea fraa JARB1DCE aid it aa tka aiaia liaa af kath tka Saatkera Pacific aad tka Wet ten Pacific Railroadt. Why Not Own 3 P 3 rm 1'1 r Thousands of aorea choice agricultural land being brought under cultivation in Millard and Beavercountiea by irrigation Fifty Thousand Acres In Millard county will be disposed of un- der Carey Aet rules Drawing at Lynn, Utah, (Lynndyl P O) Monday, April 11, See the Agent at 169 Main Street, (Phone Bell Exchange 16) for excursion ratea and literature. T. C. PECK, 3. H MANDERriKLD, Gen, Pass. Agt. Asat.Gen. Pass. Agt. TESTED SEEDS It costs hundred of dollars every year to mmmm TEST OUR 8ESDS But when you buy them you can depend they possess Tha Quality. Y rite for our aw Tree Dascnptiva Catalog. ALTON CO., Salt Lake City PORTE R-- STENCILS TRADE CHECKS, Etc. Full line Rubber Type Outfits, and supplies iu stock. Mail orders receive prompt attention.. ALT LAKE STAMP C0.9 Salt Laka City RUBBER STAMPS SEALS, BADGES, Why He Returned. Last winter Mrs. Clifford A. Neff, who resides in that part of Bratenahl still known as Doan street, sorted out her husband's castoff clothing. To the first applicant wtu camfe along sttie handed a complete , suit of ' clothes which she thought had seen enough sendee, and the man went off rejoicing and voluably thanking her. This week he reappeared at the Neff home, where he was immediately recognized. "Last year, madam, he said, with a bow, "you were kind enough to giro me a suit of clothes In the pocket of the coat I found a! dollar bill, all crumpled up, and fAnd you waited all this time to return It? interrupted Mrs. Neff. "No, - madam, replied the panhandler with another bow, I called to ask you if you hadnt another coat to give me. Cleveland News. s - In 8pite of Tommy. Home study for Tommy had Just begun and he found It hard to apply himself to regular hoi rs. At bedtime one evening his father salD "Tommy, I am not at all please 1 with the report your mother given me of youi conduct today. No, father, I knowee you wouldnt be, and I told her so. But she went right ahead an made .h report Jest Ladies like a woman, alrt It? Home Journal , His HospitrDle Instinct. A farmer was 'xsked to assist at the funeral of his neighbors third wife, and as he had attended the funeral ol the two otb'jrs, his wife waB surprised On when he declined the Invitation. being pressed to give 'his reason he You see, said with some hesitation: MIrandy, it makes a chap feel a bit awkward to be always accepting other folks civilities when, he never has anything of the same sort, cf jhis own to ask them back to. Ladles' Home Journal. ' , Userer Rebuked.' was bargaining rfor A hia Shylock pound of flesh. Nothing doing, answered Portia. "We are on the vegetable wagon. the terms, Not understanding hakespeare wrote up a different version. New York Sun. Hie System. ' "I cant say Ive never told a He. "Say the rest of it. "But I never tell a man a bigger 11s Kansas I think hell believe. City Journal. bn Embarrassing. I went to the phrenologists ist week." Oh! what did he tell you? Sue Low Well, I cant understand. Ha oughed a little and then gave me aok my money." Low Just Before the Quarrel. First Mother I dont know whetfc r to enter my baby in the pretty aildren contest or not. Second Mother Yes; It does seem ither too bad to take all that trouble r nothing, doesnt It? MILL BUILT BY WASHINGTON paign. The members of the Republican congressional committee hope, however, that at least four administra- Old Building Erected by the First tion measures can be put through President Still Stands in congress at this session with united Pennsylvania. party action back of them and then, view as the officials of the committee Pittsburg, Pa. Near the little can , go before the It, the speaker of Perryopoli8, Pa., stands a grist country and say, We have carried out nill which was erected by George the promises of the Republican plat- Washington, The mill is In daily opform in large measure, and we pledge eration, after only two changes since ourselves to carry out the rest of the the days ot Washington. Sixty-first before the recommendations Originally It was run by two overcongress adjourns next March. shot water wheels of rude construcChairman Lloyd, of the Democratic tion. These have been discarded and congressional committee, says that the a more modern wheel provided. This Republicans all through the west, wheel, with the chimney at the end ot and to some extent through the east, are disaffected because President Taft has not carried out In full force and effect what are known as the Roosevelt policies. Mr. Lloyd says that the Republicans who are disappointed over what they consider lack of aggressiveness on the part of the present president, are bound to vote for Democratic candidates for congress tn order to make their protest against the disinclination of the party to go ahead along progressive lines. Look to Roosevelt. The Republican managers In the coming campaign, as has been printed Washingtons Grist Mill heretofore, may make an attempt to get Theodore Roosevelt to take the the building, are the only Improvestump In support of hla party and of ments made since the mill was the Taft management lEitbe progres- erected. sive policies. It may be thifi the mighty The mill is on a small stream hunter will return to America and In- known as Washington run. Residents but dorse what Mr. Taft has done, of this place, which was laid out by even If he does this there are many In allowofficials in Washington having some Washington, take great pride visitors old grist mill. the ing reputation for wisdom, who say that they doubt very much whether Mr. Roosevelt will consent to go on a GREAT RIVERS MANY NAMES speech-makintour, and that he probably will content himself with sitting Various Aliases Under Which thr In his study at Oyster Bay or in his Hudson Has Been Known In editorial room In New York city, there Past Centurlee. to put out in written form what he thinks about political conditions. In the course of the last 400 years Chairman Lloyd, of the minority the Hudson has been known by at that committee, says partys campaign he Is convinced . that the unrest least 20 different names, and even toamong the people will result In day,- in New York, at any rate, it is Democratic victory. He refers, of Indifferently referred to as the Hudson and the North river. to the course, complaints that have While Henry Hudson Is universally been made about the high cost of living and the feeling evident In some acclaimed as the discoverer of the noplaces that the high prices are trace- ble river which bears his name. It Is well known that nearly a century .beable to the tariff. fore Hudson's successful exploitation, Faction Troubles. Republican The Republicans in New York have John da Verrazano, a Florentine, enbeen having troubles, and while In a tered the mouth of the Hudson and remeasure they have been settled, occa- ported that he had passed up the river sionally messenger v from the Empire about a league In a boat, not venstate Republican camp are still being turing to sail his vessel, the Dauphlne, sent over to Washington to confer up a river with which he was unfawith President Taft and with Sena- miliar. A sudden squall impelled him to retors Root and Depew. The feeling of most of the Republicans seems to be turn to his shipl Verrazano called the that the party in New York will not Hudson the river of steep of hills." get into a definite state of peace un- This was In 1524. Some years later til former President Roosevelt returns. Verrazanos brother made a map of Apparently a great many people ex- the region, and he named the mouth pect that as soon as Mr. Roosevelt re- of the Hudson San Germano." turns to this country, he will have In 1525 a Spaniard named Gomez, something definite to say about the who came to America on an exploring The Repub- trip, made a chart upon which he des present administration. licans who think that President Taft lgnated the Hudson as San Antonio. has not done his best to forward the When, some 80 years later, Henry Roosevelt policies, are seemingly con- Hudson, in his efforts to reach the vinced that Mr. Roosevelt at once will East Indian possessions of the Dutch get out hla big stick and use It on the East India Company by a northwest administration of the man who during route, accidentally ran into the Hudhis presidency was his secretary of son, be promptly dubbed it the war and his closest friend. Other from the name of the Indians Republicans believe that the mighty who dwelt at Its mouth. hunter on coming back, will say kind Hudson sailed slowly up the river ly words for the administration, and as far as Albany, and his experiences will insist that Mr. Taft has been all with the Indians and his observations right, and that the only difficulty le of the surrounding country were so that hla methods have been misunder- gratifying that he returned home with stood. counglowing reporta of the The men who are the closest friends of try. Mr. Roosevelt, men whom he consulted on political matters, and who in fact were members of his official WILL WED ENGLISH COUNT household, are of the opinion that the colonel will keep silent on adminis- Mia Margaretta Drexel, Latest American Heiress Who Will Acquire a tration affairs for a long time after be comes back to America, and that he Foreign Title. will make a close study of the first Baltimore, Md. Word has been reyear of the administration and of Its outlined policies for the future, before ceived in this city by cable that Mr. he sayB or writes a word In approval and Mrs. Anthony J. Drexel, who are in London, had announced the engage or disapproval. Sees Work for One of Mr. Roosevelt's close friends, however, a man who was nearer to him in an advisory way during his term as president, than any other man in the United States, Is now an office holder In New York city. Unquestion ably this New York man, whose identity is not hard to guess,' is particularly Interested In New York state politics. He foresaw the row which recently broke eut between the Repub tican factions in tbe Empire State, and he came to tbe conclusion apparently, for he Is a good judge of men and political conditions, that affairs In New York could be straightened out only by some one with a strong hand, and he had one man in mind who at that time was far away in the jungles of Africa. The Democrats In Washington are not at all unhappy over the troubles which are besetting the Republicans in New York state. The Democrats have set it down as a certainty that they are to carry the next house ol representatives, and they say freely that with a Democratic victory next fall another Democratic victory In the ment of their daughter. Miss Margarfall two years hence Is certain to fol j etta Armstrong , Drexel to Guy Mon, viscount low. It Is virtually a necessity that tague forge the party which elects a president, Maidstone and heir to the earldom of Winchelsea and Nottingham. shall carry New York state. The Republicans have troubles also Fat and Thin. In Ohio and in Indiana. In these two The two women encountered each states they have not taken on as sharp and virulent a form as has tbe quarrel othep.pt a dance. They had not met for In New York w feral years. thin you have grown! The Republicana ien twitted one. about tbe difficulties width they seem low fat you've got to be! the othto have fallen Into, that hiser cried, and they stood gazing at tory shows that the Repu each other In some dismay. rel as they may, always "Before you come to blows, reIn time to save the day, ai marked a mutual friend who stood by, ask the Democrats who lets take a vote as to which Is worse, ting whether or not this to get too fat or(to get too thin. as truthfully of the party In the minority. The De swer that their party troi Fancies have more to do with behind them, I EORGE than facts. Rumors Around the Capitol That the ' Chief Executive Is Not to Havel All He Wants Leaders Preparing for Campaign Party Factional Troubles. Washington. Members of what Is known as the steering committee of the senate practically have agreed upon what legislation shall be put on its passage In .the upper house at the present session. Naturally Mr. Aid-ricbeing the leader of the Republican majority. Is the chief member of the steering committee, and as most of the other members are In sympathy with the Rhode Islanders views, it goes without saying that the committee Itself comes pretty close to being President Taft has been informed of the committees desires in the matter of legislation and it Is said by those who are close to him that he is not altogether satisfied At a recent meeting of the committee only two measures were discussed in detail, al though sanction was given to one or two other measures which will be taken up for committee study somewhat later It has been said the chances are that the senate leaders would make concessions to the Progressive Republicans on the bill providing for amendments to the interstate commerce act. It is now practically assured that some of these concessions will be made In the hope that they will be sufficient to make the Insurgents yield and to join the regulars in putting the bill through with something like unanimity. As Is pretty wetf known President Taft seems to thiim that In harmonious party action on chief administration measures lies the principal hope of Republican victory at the polls next November. The Democrats In the senate believe thart the concessions which Mr. Aid-ricis making and will make later to the Republicans who are led by Senators Cummins and Clapp will not be sufficient to make the middle and far westerners come into the harmony camp. Harmony was secured on the postal savings bank bill, but now It is ig Intimated that the senate lead ersV expect the house to make such changes tn that bill as will nullify the effects 6f the yielding of the leaders in the upper house 1 Accused of Playing Politics. In other words, the Democrats are saying that the Republican leaders In the senate gave way In some matters simply to get harmony In their own ranks, believing fully that the bouse would take care that the concessions made in the senate would, not be apparent when the bill flnaliysjiecomes ' 'f a law. ,,t It will be remembered that Senators Cummins and Clapp, In tbelr minority report on the interstate commerce bill, took exception to the provision which puts Into the hands of the attorney generals force the government defense of all actions taken on appeal to the interstate commerce court. The senators in opposition to this provision say that the attorneys for the shippers and also law officers working under the Interstate cqmmerce commission ought to represent the government before the court, because they are well informed as to all the details of the commerce cases from the time of their Inception. It Is understood that the leaders will yield in this matter to the insurgent desires. , Seeking Public Opinion. Representative Willian B. McKinley of Illinois, chairman of the Republican congressional committee, is getting first hand information of political conditions throughout the country. Some time prior to Mr. McKinleys departure from Washington, Representative James T. Lloyd of Missouri, chairman of the Democratic congressional committee, went all through the middle west trying to find out what he could about the political Bentiment Before he left Washington some few days ago Mr. McKinley had a long conference with President Taft. Of course no one was allowed to know Just what the president said to the Recommittees publican congressional chairman, but there are hints that the president again declared It would be bad policy to make any discriminations as between Republicans who are trying to secure to the lower house. r Once on a time, it Is said with Mr. McKinleys sanction, letters were sent out by the Republican congressional committee which In tone and temper were not to the liking of the insurgent Republicans. This kind of letter writing has been stopped, for the president would not sanction it. and now the material that goes out is what may be called straight Republican doctrine. Concerning New Tariff Bill. Of course it will be necessary, or at least so the ruling powers in the Republican party declare, to defend the Payne-Aldrictariff bill on the stump during the coming congressional cam te h , h g Man-hatte- new-foun- d Flnch-Hatton- f ret. love-makin- s, Goaded. Saving became a passion with the man and the woman. No privation was too great, U so be by It they might add to their accumulations. And they labored jointly. The womans sacrifice was in every respect equal to that of the man, But when they had amassed $10,000 the man, because he had the power, took the money and purchased with It, not the automobile which he had led his faithful wife to expect, but a home. Brute!" she cried, and when next a mob of suffragettes came that way she joined them. Who could blame her? Puck. Sometimes. Miss Blithely (interested in science) Can one get a shock from a telephone? The Professor That depends, my dear young lady, on who Is talking at the other end. M. A. P. Theres more strength in a bowl of ' Quaker Oats than in the same quantity or the same value of any other food you can eat. Most nourishing, least expensive. 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