OCR Interpretation


The Salt Lake herald. (Salt Lake City [Utah) 1870-1909, December 02, 1894, Image 4

Image and text provided by University of Utah, Marriott Library

Persistent link: http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058130/1894-12-02/ed-1/seq-4/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for 4

fLI ir
w
l o Q
>
jf 3 Qi o f 0 i d ji z 2
I s I < 0
1
Q4 I > i c
0 THE 1 SALT < LAKE HERADSUIDAYI 1flCEM1EItc 2 1894TWE2STTY PAGES
c 0 > i
ri1 lJt1 1JIb Y l > lERAI1 1
i 1
t TB KKKJiXD PUBLISHING CO
> J b
t fc
J 31 Chambers President I
Hitbet J Grant VicePresident
q Rich rdW Young Manager i
I
I i tS Q THE DAILY HERALD Is published
t every rooming at THE HERALD block I
comer West Temple and FIrst South
Btreats Bait LakeCity Jr I
J I
J n TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION i
0 DAILY PER MOlloTHS5 CENTS
i > aiJ7 six months 5 5 00
Dally per year 10 00
SemiWeekly per year 253
Sunday per year 250
Communications should be addressed to
r THE HERALD Salt Lake City Utah
Subscribers removing from one place to
another andh desiring papers changed I
1 should always give lormer as well as
present address
j
SILVER4 2 II I
I XiEAI > Brokers I
price 3 no ex j j
change quotations j
HERALD Calendar for December j
s M v F S
I II l r 4 1if g I
11 9 10 iilin 13 i4 G
Cl IJ 1G 1718 wmrr
c I 1 4 5 7 OS J 1 1
The Kolbites will tip more swearing
oing put than coming in And Jt
wont be official either
1
The secretary of the New England
Free Trade league is a woman Her
naine is Martha E Parker
= Senator Shoup objects to being placed
In the soup He will run for reelection
I
tion His friends believe he will make
I scoop
Tle county court will be at home j
in the new city and county building
IJ tomorrow and subsequently This is not
p a society item but perhaps has as
rr much public interest as if it were 1 j
It is aid Senator p Hill will lead the I I
fight against the appropriation to carry
II the income tax law into effect TCe are
I I under the impression that Hills lead I
I I ership ceased on the 6th of Novem
I ber last
u
Times must be very dull in Xorth I
Dakota when the only news sent out
from there is about the Hirschfield Ui I
I vorce case And Still paradoxical as
it may seem here is a boom < in di j
vorces In Nortih Dakota I
A special agent of the Department
or Agriculture who is in Germany
writes Secretary Morton that in his
I opinion Germany will never become a
greaft consumer of imported meats i
Sauerkraut and sausage are too strong i
for the meats I
Mrs Ida Carr Wilson named as co
respondent in the Addicks divorce
suit calls her country seat at Clay
mont Del Miraflores It is not stated
whether she calls herself Oriana and
Addicks Amadis although she would
be warranted in so dubbing him as he
seems to nave the gall to justify it
When Republicans want a nonparti
san school trustee nominated they
should postpone all nominations until
it has been determined whether such
an arrangement can be made and not
call a party convention make their
nomination and then ask the Demo
crats to endorse hint as a nonpartisan
candidate It looks too much like a
I
dodge
The conviction in London of the
American swindlers Jacques and
Thomas is a good thing How so
many people can be gulled year after
year by such swindlers as these who
I pretend to know about great estates
in England only waiting for claimants
to come and get them Is really aston
ishing But there seems always to be
an abundance of just such people for
just such swindlers as Jacques and
TOiomas to prey upon
The City Council was in hot water
last night over the excessive assess
l ments complained of by waterusers It
is to be hoped that the Board of Equal
ization appointed will be able to throw I
cold water on the high rates and
I
bring them down to a reasonable level
I The Superintendent however appears I
to have endeavored merely to carry
out the provisions of the ordinance and
has done his Dailey duty though the
Major part of the assessments look
enormous
It will he gratifying to the public if
during the few days extension of time
before the sheriffs sale is to take place
the Hot Springs railway people will be
able to straighten out the tangles in
their affairs and have the road in their
I full control again with money to push
r it on towards the desired terminus
The Herald will be glad to make the
announcement of the satisfactory set
I tlement and hopes to be able to say
k soon the road is headed for the north
c and the east
a
r
ExSenat6r Kellogg of Louisiana is
not very greatly impressed with Mr
J ft7 S Parkersons Home Market club
It T speech He does not like it because
i the Democrats won by such large ma
r jorities He asks But with what
r face can he ask the overwhelmingly
Republican majority in the next Con
gress to seat by contest members re
turned defeated under such circum
stances and thus give to the purity of
tho ballot in Louisiana that protection
which he and his friends failed to se
cure for it at the polls
A very small thing will at times I
attract a great deal of attention By
some means a cat the other day got
sai to the lintel of a fourth story win
dow on a Fifth avenue house in New
York The police notified the Society
for the Prevention ofCruelty to Ani
mals to investigate the matter and
the society found that an attempt to
dislodge the cat would probably cause
It to fall and be killed Arrangements I
were made tolet it get in at some
ti window but in the meantime a fire de t
partmenivhook and ladder company
appeare l on the scene and the cat
eltlier jumped or was pushed off the
Tjiftel fell in the street and was killed
I And now an officer of the society writes
to the press justifying its action Sure
ly this seems to be a case where there
has been much ado about nothing
How different would have been the
t scene and solicitude for the cat had it
been upon the house top New York
n l
s J is really getting to be too humane and
j
amelic t
J
S
tl
I oo
0
a
f
Cf1
n GKAXD JjflX VIEW 0
r
Ixia conversation with a newspaper
man > lxithJ s region recently Colonel l
Cpck was reported as remarking
I I ant in favorot dravying a wall of
I fire about North andSouth An rica
and telling the rest of the world to go
to the levil That would give us the
prosperity the people are clamoring
f v 1
+ Thatis Republicanism pure land sim i
ple Jfr is the ancient policy of the Chi
nese Instead of the wall they built
to establish seclusion the Republicans
would build a tariff wall which would
act as a barrier of fire shut out foreign
commerce and build up TUI national
policy on thef undaUon of complete
I selfishness The same policy carried
< out in this nation would destroy Inter
state commerce also Each state being
an autonomy would build a wall of
fire ardund itself and let the other
r states go to the dog or Vthe devil
Following the scheme to its logicaimlti
ihate each county then each city n1
finally each family if not each person
would study only individual good Thus
selfishness would reign tri mphant and
discord run into chaos What then
would become of our boasted civiliza
tion
The history of the world has demon
Strated the truth that as no individual
can live for himself and obtain happi
ness and prosperfty so no state rn < 3
nomination can successfully pursue such
a selfish policy The nations of the
world i are branches of the one human
family The welfare of the whole
means the welfare of each The re
sources and products of the earth are
varied as to locality and facility l of de
velopment To secure to all the bane
fitsxjf all should be the aim of enlight
ened humanity 1
In the present imperfect condition of
the race and consideiirig the inequali
ties existing free and unrestricted
commerce may be justly viewed as im
t practicable But at the same time the
I idca to be ultimately reached Is Cra
nization to be promoted by free in
1 tercourse The tendency should be in
1 that direction It should not be back
to exclusion and isolation Progress is
I
towards free trade retrogression is in
the direction prohibitive protection
The former is civilization the latter is
barbarism
Selfpreservation is i called the first
law of nature That may be true
But there is another truth allied to it
that is the efforts of all nature for
the benefit of all There is nothing
that has life but almost simultane
ously with the exertion of force for
selfpreservation puts out energy for
the production of another life or the
benefit of some other form of life This
could be proved by illustration from
the lowest form of protoplasmic exist
I ence up to the highest manifestation
of being It is therefore a law of na
ture correlative and coexisting with
that of selfpreservation
The highest good to individuals is
not to be found in individualism The
great good to nations is not to be
found in isolation selfishness and in
difference to others The march of the
world is towards community and iden
tity of interests among men and gov
ernments High tariffs protective du
ties are barriers in the way They
will gradually disappear with the in
crease of enlightenment and the har
monizing of men The liberty of trade
is one of concomitants of the liberty
of peoples and neither can be perfect
without the other
But It need not be inferred from this
that The Herald advocates free trade
in its full sense as a present feasible
policy On the contrary it favors a
revenue tariff sufficient to pay the nec
essary expenses of government ar
ranged so that luxuries shall be taxed j
higher than necessaries and in such away
I
way that the industries of the nation
may not be injured And the trend
should be in the direction of free trade
not towards that prohibition and ex
clusion which are necessary features
of the protective theory Freedom in
its fullest practical sense should be the
end in view and that ought to be for
all nations upon this revolving globe
Universal liberty the union of the
world good will to all men
GLEX 3IlLIil2K IX THE FORUM
The Forum for December contains a
wellwritten article by Glen Miller of
this city entitled Will Polygamists
Control the New State of Utah The
question is asked but the answer is
not given Indirectly the reply may be
inferred as in the negative
The writer takes the ground that
But for the institution of polygamy
Utah would long ago have become a
state There is perhaps much truth in
the assertion although we have had it
lecently from prominent Republican
authority that it was not Utahs poly
gamy but her Democracy which was
I the real barrier while polygamy was
but a pretext for her exclusion How
I ever the pretext accomplished the pur
pose for which it was used that is to
excite public prejudice and keep up the
hostility against her admission
The writer acknowledges that this
was the case in the attitude of Utah
opponents to her statehood and that
polygamy was made the scapegoat
upon which the antiMormon popula
tion of Utah piled its combined griev
ances He gives a fair statement of
the situation under the old conditions
and of the causes which led to the
changes that have taken place the
turning point being the issuance and
adoption of the manifesto On that he
remarks That the Mormons were sin
cere both in renouncing polygamy and
disbanding their political party no one
conversant with the affairs of Utah
during the past four years can for a
moment doubt Their acts have con II
firmed their professions I
The political division jn Utah receives
extended treatment and the writers
conclusion drawn from observation and
experience on the spot is that No sort
of religious interference is tolerated
and that To whichever of the national
parties the Mormon voter gave his al
legiance he gave it with all the earn
estness and enthusiasm of the new con
vert
The school question comes in next
for comment and though the past ed
ucational system of Utah receives but
scant recognition indeed is belittled
far beyond its deserts yet justice Is
done to the progress observed at pres I
ent and this gives brightness to the
predicted future
Home industries and the comming
ling of Mormons and Gentiles in busi
ness relations with the revolution that
has taken place in social customs and
the advance in the direction of mod
ern taste and Improvement are cited
as leading to the conclusion that
Utah is rapidly losing those strange
features of life which made her an ob
ject of such fascinating interest to
I 0
ptudents and tourists but to compen
sate for this loss she has placed her
self in complete harmony with Ameri
j can thought and American institu
tions
From all this it may be fairly Inferred
red that in the opinion of the writer
there is no reason to beieve that poly
gamists will control the new state of
j Utah Although I that is not stated In
so many words it is to be presumed
that the narration of facts and the
views expressed will tend to convince
the timid who may yet haVe fears as
to Utahs future that there Is no dan
geof the catastrophe which haunts the
minds of people at a distance when
they contemplate the clothing of Utah
with the habiliments and powers of
sovereign statehood The effects of the
article In the Forum cannot fail to be
reassuring to the uninformed and
therefore must be beneficial to all
parties concerned It is a ery read
able contribution current literature
THE FOOTBAlIi CUlZE x
t
Football seems to be tire craze of
the day among the youth of the land
But It seems to have taken a mire >
virulent form among the college stu
dents where the game reaches its
most scientific development at least
there is where itIs attended with the
most serious results which seem to be
an evidence of sci ntfic play
The matter is receiving more or less
attention in the press and the manner
in which the game iB 5 now being played I
is being condemned The sport is ex
citing at all times butlmder the pres i
ent rules it is i mofe exciting from the j i I
very fact that the assaults and counter t
assaults of those engaged in it are
fiercer and more brutal than ever If
the members of the crack teams were I
not men of Superior physique and if
this were not fully developed by a
course of severe training they would r
very soon go down In the contests 1
while youths who are soft would not f
be atij6 to stand it at all I
Athletics are a good thing and should
I
be encouraged within reasonable lim
its but when their influence on the
I
minds of young men at college becomes 1
so great that the very things for which 1
they are at collegeeducation and
learning are made almost if not quite I j
secondary matters then they become
harmful I
But there is much downright bru <
tality in football Two years ago i
when Yale and Harvard played Hin i
key captain of the Yale team kicked I
the head of Upton a Harvard player
who vSk soon carried off the field in i
sensibloT In that same game Emmons
another Harvard player was disabled j j
by a wrenched shoulder He was at j I
tended by a doctor and then rejoine
the Harvard lines Very soon he was I
attacked by a Yale man who seized
his arm with both hands and violently J j
wrenched it from the shoulder That I I
was an example of brutality that nas
a disgrace to humanity I
In the recent game between Yale
and Harvard Hlnltey resorted to his
old tactics He jumped on Wrighting
ton During the game Wrightington
had his collar bone broken while one
player got a broken leg and another a
broken nose
All this may be necessary as the
game is now played but the question
is is it necessary that the game should
be played as now
There are other games that are just
as healthful and void of the danger
there are other forms of exercise equal
ly as beneficial such as riding bi
cycling boating baseball and the like
The aim of the college is to make a
sound mind in a sound body but foot
ball seems to play havoc with the body
part of this plan
THE SAX JUAN TKOUHIK I
Ii i
Notwithstanding the impression I
which appears to prevail in the War
Department that there is no particular
danger imminent in San Juan county i
from Indian depredations the latest
news from that region is not at all re
assuring Advices received by Gov
ernor West particulars of which are I
in another part of this issue of The
Herald show that there is great prob
ability of an outbreak which may lead
to an Indian war Also that Day the
Indian agent has given the Utes to
understand that they were doing right
in moving upon the lands which they
are now occupying and which they
regard as theirs by bargain with the
government
Under these circumstances further
action appears to be imperative Re
newed appeals ought to be made to
the War Department for instant in
vestigation and relief It is useless to
rely simply on what the Indian Agent
says He regards the region where
the Indians are now in possession as
their winter range and hunting
ground That is clearly a mistake if
nothing worse They are intruding
upon ground away from their reserv
ation and they ought to be cent back
where they belong
If orders are conveyed to them at
once they may be incline to obey
The longer they are suffered to remain
the more reluctant they will be to
leave and the harder it will be to re
move them A collision between < them
and the cattlemen would prove disas
trous not only to those who provoked
it but to the settlers near by who are l
in great jeopardy It is the duty of
the army of the United States to en
force any orders that may issue from
the r Department and to that pro
tection the San Juan people are enti
tled
tledThe
The Governor might send the militia 1
to San Juan but that force would L J
probably be inadequate and it is more i
properly the work of the regular I
troops under orders from the national
authorities The settlers must not be j
left defenseless the intruders must be i j
removed to their reservation and that
without hesitation or needless delay I
llLLlG OFF LITERARY HEROES
A Conan Doyle the English novel
ist author of The Refugees Micah
Clarke The Adventures of Sherlock
Holmes and others has been le lur
ing in the United States He has been
more or less entertained by clubs and
at all these functions he has been asked
by some enthusiastic admirer whether
or no he did not intend at some fu
ture day to resurrect Sherlock Holmes
So persistent were these inquiries that
at last he has been compelled to de
fine his position He has declared
that Sherlock Holmes will not be res
urrected and frankly says that if he
had not killed Holmes Holmes would
have killed him That is probably
true But be it true or not certain it
is that to attempt to resurrect Holmes
after his death in Switzerland would
he a grSSffirtjaary blunder The strug 1
gle wth oriarty and its fatal termin
atIon Was a fitting climax to the
careerof the greatest of all the detec
tives It Was an artistic rounding off
of the life of ihe man who had been
the hero fso many adventures from
A Study in Scarlet to The Final
Problem Dr Doyle did the only
thing a literary artisl can do with a
great character r = kill him off It has
to be done to save the character
S Scott great artist that he was once
committed the same blunder that Dr
Doyle has been urged to commit with
Sherlock Holmes brought him to life
after he had received a deathdealing
blow and his usefulness to the plot
of tHe story was over This charac
ter so brought back to life was the
noble Athelstane He really was not
noble at best he was but a glutton
and a boor When the Templar Bois
Gtufrbert half wheeling his steed
madea demicourbette towards the
Saxon and rising in his stirrups so
as to take full advantage of the de
scent he discharged a fearful blow
up n the head of Athelstane and the
Saxon was held to be dead by all his
companions he should have remained
dead Scott recognized this and also
the fact that his reappearance marred
the harmony of the whole It was a
response to popular clamor and it was
I
wrong
I Cervantes himself found that he had
to kill the immortal Don Quixote to
I
save him He does not seem to have
be jn overly fond of the Knight of La
Manche at first and took no particular
care to guard his reputation After he
put forth the first and second parts of
the great novel he allowed it to take
care of itself This was dangerous In
the extreme Cervantes himself tak
ing no heed of the estimation in which I
his work was held busied himself with
Perslles and Sigismunda The conse
quence was that a Second Volume of I
the Ingenius Gentleman Don Quixote j
of La Manche by the Licentiate Alon
so Fei nandfez cle Avellaneda of Torde
si las appeared Avellandea really
did mankind service as it is doubt I
ful If Cervantes would otherwise have
completed his work and brought the
i
career of the dear old Knight and the J I
inimitable Sancho to a close
I
AddIson haying the example of Cer
vantes before him no doubt decided
that he himself would bury Sir Roger
although he did not create him in the
first instance Budgell tells the story I
as follows I
Mr Addison was so fond of this
character that a little before he laid
down the Spectator foreseeing that
some nimble gentleman would catch I
up his pen the moment he quitted it I
he said to an intimate friend with a
certain warmth in his expression I I I
which he was not often guilty of By
G Ill kill l Sir Roger that nobody i
else may murder him And hc did
well I I
wellDi I
Dr Doyle has made the only decision
he could make regarding Sherlock
I Holmes But the stories about him are
so clever so interesting so exciting
I that we should1 be very glad to have
t
more of them And he can give them
to the world
without the clumsy expe
dient of finding that Sherlock was not
killed by his fall over the cliff Sher
lock said that his brother Mycroft had
his powers of observation and deduc
tion in a much larger degree than he
but that he lacked energy Let Dr
Doyle put energy in Mycroft Holmes
then let Mycroft devote himself to de
tective work and the proolem of more
Sherlock Holmes adventures is solved
A SlIJSTITLTE FOR JJOLMIES
I
We give place to a communication on
the subject of encouragement to home
industries which will bs found in an
other part of this paper The plan of
giving bonuses to enccatrage the start
ing of important enterprises suggested
by our correspondent is good in princi
ple We fear it would not be found to
work well in practice
II It is not explained
expI whether the one
tenth of official incomes in the county
I is to be donated voluntarily or exacted
by law If the first we fear the fund
would turn out to be small If the lat
I
ter we see no reason why rfliin v
officials should be to
compelled to give up
I a portion of their earnings to promote
either a public or private enterprise
j more than any other class of officials
jor private citizens
Any voluntary association of men un
I der the financial
anangement sug
j gested and for the purpose proposed
I I would be lawful and productive of as
i I good results as though they were a
body of county or other officials If
societies of that kind could be organ
ized they would do much no doubt
towards the promotion of home indus
tries and thus bring about the geneial
welfare whether the Investment woUd
prove personally profitable to the in
vestors or not i
But to require every county official
I to relinquish a portion of his salary to
I start home industries would be Cpen
to a similar objection to that which is
I urged against the bounty system
I There would ba an element of injustice
in it and a touch of paternaism in gov
I ernment which is foreign to our free
institutions Every man is entitled to
i thecontrol of what he earns legitimate
ly whether payment Is made by a pri
vate person or corporation or comes out
jof the public funds No one has the
right to compel the use of any part f
it in any specified direction The liberty
of the citizen in this respect must not
be infringed
The bounty system has this injustice
and oppression in it People who pay
taxes for the support of the govern
ment whether it be local or national
are compelled to contribute to a pri
vate enterprise from which they receive
np personal benefit when the money I
thus collected for a public purpose is
put to a private use It is a perversion
jof the taxing power It is a prostitu I
tion of the legislative authority It is not
warranted by any constitutional pro
vision
Our correspondent is opposed to the
I bounty system but proposes something
I which partakes of the same nature
though it would work in a different
I j way Such a rule would not be of gen
torah I application but would operate
upon one class In quite as unjust a
manner as the Bounty system does
upon the general public
We would be pleased to see organisa
tions for the purpose of starting and
encouraging home Industries But they
must be voluntary in their nature
And they need not be limited to pub
lic officials nor to any one class of citi
zens The end our correspondent has
in view is good the means he suggests
we fear would prove abortive But we
arc pleased to give place to the views
of people who think and hope his letter
will leeeivd dSeconsJderatlon
2 i
1
COMMENTS OX FOOTDAlj
The parents who know what football of
today is must possess much of the forti
tude of the Spartans who exposed their
children to the changers of cold and wild
beasts when they commit them tb the
care of a collage It ds the parents the
patrons of the schools who must effect
a cure of tthe Worst evils of college
sports Commercial i Advertiser
Another such game of football as was
seen at Springfield Saturday and the
spOTt will be dead i the players them
selves are not People who wish to wit
ness the storming of Port Arthur and
other similar games are advised to
take ship for thlni Thats not the
sort of entertainment that a Christian
civUllzatCon wants to witness or that an
American university can afford to en
courage Hartford Courant
The gentlemen of the prizering like
those of the football field are there ito
win but they rarely ever cry to in
capaoite an opponent except according
ttj the rules of the game Any fighter
from John L Sullivan down 3r up who
Should kick an opponent when he a
down or jump on him for fh 2 purpose of
breaking his collartone would bs ostra
cised from the ring and would be fortun
ate if he escaped himself with a wttate
skin from the Indignation of the t spec
tators Even hlLEing below the belt
would tar him from further competitan
Harvard 7 in > T Y Evening Pest
I football makes intellectual emin
ence and intellectual achievements ap
pear comparatively paltry and raises
quarterbacks and left tackles into
ridiculous fame I promotes and cher
tishes If it does not recommend the
qualities which furnsh all our citJeswth
the crop of blackguards and loafers and
bruisers who build up the s
and make municrpal government so dif
ficulL I diffuses the gamblIng spirit
through every little school in the eons
try We say deliberately that no one
form of physical culture is Worth such
a price We da not need it either for
right living or national glory N Y
Evening Post
I teak no less a sacrifice than the
life of Alexander Hamilton to arouse the
I conscience of ths American people to the
I wickedness of the duel Is it possible
that a min must be killed before the
very eyes of some great gathering as
somblad to witness this cruel sport be
fore an enlightened public senJment will
demand its overthrow Must one I I
both universities so often represented at
Springfield be plunged into mourning for
th ir own dead before the governors of
these InstitutIons will realize the fact
chat successful football no longer can
fttitutes tin important adjunct to a col
lege education Yale Alumnus 1SG1 in
N Y Kvenlng Post
T there is to be any more Intercollegi
ate football there must be a reformed
s < Jt of rule to restrain tim young gladt I
amm
An then what is quite as Important
there must be umpiring which snail en
farce < the rule snai
This us the consensus of opnten among
tihosa Who wltnasseJ the struggle at
Springfield last Saturday And it is cer
tajnly within the range of possibility to
Contrive such rules and to secure their
cnforcanict It Is useless to Intruat any
ting to the moderaclon of the players
PccUbal is a game iin which moderation
has TIO place The contending athletes
vill ray up to the full 1mit allowe1 by
the rules and then wall seek opportunity
I to evade them The spirit of the game
has much of the fury or battle and this
knows no restraint except the conditions
of success Boston Post
After this game the feeling sprung up
alt Cambridge that the Yale spirit of
We must win was nat an enviable
one That feeling has been slowly ex
tenditng to persona outside of Harvard
cvrelei and on all sides there is now
eIdence of a rapdly growing sentiment
against iIis too often viciously expressed
zeal for victory at any cost The game
I I of Saturday at Springfield carniat fail to
attract attention to the danger which
threatens the fair fame of Yale unless
ths spirit of her rons is manifested
I
I wIthin the limits of Is
wJthJT lmts gent manly conduct
The evidence seems to slow clearly that
i in the vie ous playlnp va eh mirretl the
wank of both tearn Yale WS the inrsti
I guror and first offender Ilarvattl acted
seemingly iin fcalfdefene until her
patience was exhau tuJ What followed
I vas a disgrace to each university and a
serious Beaton menace Herald bo the game of football
IEOPLC OF IHO3IIXEXCE
Whistler the ecentric London artist
was born in Lowell Mass and was
educated at West Point
The Rev Dr Parkrnurst was graduated
at Amherst college In 1866 He Is a mem
ber of the Phil Bet Kappa society and a
member of the Psi Upsilon fraternity
One of the most entertaining of the
oldest inhabitants of Decatur Ala
is Captain J M Todd now 83 years of
age who sfcearnboateJ an the Tennessee
river from 1832 to 1S75
Rabbi Wolff Wihier late of the Eden
Street synagogue Baltimore has resign
ed from the ministry and entered Johns
Hopkins university as a student ot Ro
mance languages
ExSecretary William C Whitney ac
companied by his daughter Miss Pauline
WhiVney and his son Harry Payne
Whitney will sail for Europe on Wednes
day December 5 in ihs steamship Ma
jestic to pass the winter in the souJi of I
irance and a few months iin Egypt
Miss Whitney Is still In poor heal en
I XoboJy who Is acquainted with Father
Ducey Is at all surprlsed at the publicity
I which has attended his quarrel with
Archbishop Corrogan The two men
swords for years
I have been at sWIds points ye13
and the former has never curb 1 his
I tongue When speaking of hs ecclesiasti
cal superior Father Ducey is exceeding
ly popular in Ills own district i
A stranger mIstaking John Boyle
ORcillly for a friend approached him
from behJnd slapped him oa the should
er and greeted him ai Jack with J
the warmth of a lifelong friendship
ORoIlIy turned to face a very embar
rassed man and sad holding out his
hand Im not Jack but Im glad to
know and be the friend Of any man
that is i us glad to see his friend as you
seem to be
1
111
afj f9 X
uSE OLR
Felt Foolivenr mid
He Hl1I
Lndic Felt Slippers 75c
Sac 9100 91UT 91no
I I I
Ladles Felt ShtjeS
ilus 175 tOO and Fila
15uy theta Now
SP XCEi LYNCH co
12i n Street
c < II
Yd
n 1 t
I
SALT LAKE THEATRE
Chas S Burtop Manager
MONDAY AND TUESDAY EVENINGS
December 3 and 4
Special Pcrlortnanc of THan BouctcauUa
Famous Play
4JLED ASTRAY
3
ronTnu
BENEFIT OF THE PIONEER LIBRARY
Under the Auspices of the Ladies Lit
erary Societies and under the manage
ment of
of1IS JENNIE Lone
1Loge1j1u BRICKS rrr no asLssTiiin t 111
Loge8ia j
M
D
a ci
V
GhristrnasGfftsT
Geltlenlen male Presents Ladies
Enjoy Receiving Such
z c i MI 1
Submits a Few Suitable for the Occasion
Presents Purchases
j
A Xerr Coat or Cape Table Dnmnnk and Xapkliia
l A Fur Cape or Muff
IWelS and Tray Cloths
A IJcuver Slinvrl Cotbs
A quarter losscn Hit Glovcft Eiderdown and Flanellctte
A few PJniii Ilcmntitclicil
t or Embroidered Iiuen hand Down Quits and Blankets
kercliicfs
kClcI1cfl Ladles Cloth and Flannels
I Slllc Scalloped HiiiHlkercliicf Emliroiilorcil or 1adies Tea GOIIIIS and Waists
I Iiiidict Fleeced Union Suits
j A Silk Tic or Collarette LUIlc Suis
Colnrctc
and Vents
FOIL MISSES ETC mlicV Sateen Corsets antI
I Skirts
Silk and Wool Iltts
Kiel filo es or Fleeced FOR ChILDREN
Fancy Hair Iiiis Purses Etc Persian Cap School Caps
Hose itnd Globes
Tnm OSImnteri Bonnets
We aaao Sole Agents for the wen known Equipoise Waists and
I j Ypsalnnti Gnilernear
See our PIIESENTS in Queeusirare Department An immense
Variety
4 T C WEBBER Supt
A
AnER WOOLEN IYIILLS
I COMPANY
I ow iReady foir Btisiijess
4 Office and Salesroom 23 W 1st South
I NlW STOR if GOODS w mmN I
THE FINEST ASSORTMENT OF HOMK lADE CLOTHS
< f
41 EVER DJSPLAYEI A FIRST CLASS TAILOKING ESTAB
IISI3IiNT IN OPEKATIOX on ant alter MOXDAV Oct 15
FHAttK W JENNINGS Manager
V > P9 i
VVVvv
j < < o
1 T 0 V ES T
I FO T 3000
AND UPWARDS AT
SSPE1GERBATEM COMPANY 67 Main
I JAMESSPJERBATMAN COMPAY
I I L A J
frEBER COAL COK 0 i
t SUCCESSORS TO HO3IE COAL CO
I S 5
4 Dealers in COAL from mines at Coal j I
vile are now prepared to fill orders for
Lm STOVR NUT AN MUm LAGK GOAS i
by the ton or carload Weights and i
ml Quality of Coal Guaranteed All Coal I
1 I screened Yard 22 I South Third West
WI I street Telephone No 41 I i i
w Jo Montgomery Agent Ii
Iiwe = AenJi 1
iiiiunuim uit lli1tacturll CU I
SUCCESSORS TO UTAH CRACKER FACTORY MANUFACTURERS OF
FINE C KER 1ID CAKES
CREAM A11D SHOWFLAES SODAS liT ONE TWO 0 MB FIVE POUND BOSS
HENRY WALLACE Manager
443 South Second West Street
11MB SHMI WEEKLY HBRALD TA
Reaches a class that the Merchants
Cannot Afford to Ignore
ADVERTISE IT
STEREOTYPING
In all Its Branches at the
HERALD OFFICEI
NEW AND COMPLETE OUTFIT
aste1 n PrJoej +
f
f
t

xml | txt