Ir r = r lh9 SALC LAKE RERAL FRIDAY NOVEMBER 5 1897 I THE DAILY HbRALD THE HERALD COMPANY R C Chambers President A W McCunc Vice President E A McDanleU Manager OFFICE THE HERALD block cor ier West Temple and First South street tSali Lake City TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION DAJJLT PER MONTHS CENTS Daiiy sir months 5 00 Daily Per year 10 00 S enI Veckiy per year 1 50 Sun1aor per year 250 COMPLAINTSSubscribers who fall to receIve a singlo copy of THE HERALD ehould immediately notify the publisher Readers who are unable to purchase THE HERALD at any news stand or on any railroad train in Utah Idaho Ne vada Wyoming or Colorado will obllse us by reporting that fact NEW YORK OFFICEE Katz 230 > to 124 Temple Court building WASHINGTON BUREAU 1420 New York avenue N W OGDEN BUREAUUtah Loan Trust company building W L Wattis manager Address all remittances to HERALD COMPANY Subscribers removIng from one place to another and desiring papers ciuuiRed ehould always give former as well as present address In New York Henry Georges death I was swallowed UP in Democratic vic tory One of the most dangerous animals I clothing in the world is a widow in sheeps Where is Andree asks an ex 1 change At last accounts he was up in a balloon JJ The Utes are said to be in an ugly I mood This is the indicative mood of mischief with the red man Bulgaria nov threatens to send an ul I timatum to Turkey That would tickle the sultan beyond expression Thttre are lots of bogus 510 bills in I Chicago These are not the only bogus things in Chicago by any means Edisons latest invention that for I separating iron from the rock shows him to be a wonderfully magnetic man The Puritan stock in New England is I said to be dying out It should be restocked from old England and Hol j land Mark Hanna had a checkrein on the I people of Ohio but it did not prove so pated effective in holding them as he antici Campaign for Seth Low ends in a I Waze of glory exclaims the New York World sort of sky rocket affair so to speak A man named Htgg is defendant in I I a divorce suit at Fargo N D Evi dently some woman has been hugging a delusion = = We are glad Miss Gonne has come says the Chicago TimesHerald Our I I Chicago contemporary must be gone on the young woman Death masks of Henry Geonre have j been taken It will now be in order to I take death masks of Seth Low and General B F Tracy The whole world is kin says Poult ney Bigelow He is impressed with this I fact because he is so near Emperor William with whom lie went to school The Spanish Liberal cabinet will de mand an explanation from General I J Weyr If it doesnt demand a share of his pickings he probably y wont kick The new congressional library was opened last Monday There were no I ceremonies of any kind a quite un usual thing in this day of ceremonies Communication with the Klondike is practically closed It will result in a I shutting off of the flood of drear news j from that region for a while at least If Evangelma Cossio y Cisneros would assume the role of a Cuban Joan of I Arc and mit herself under a shrewd I manager there would be big money in it for her It seems that the uniforms of the soldiers are to be changed This is prob II ably the net result of General Miles trip to Europe The general is a great authority on uniforms Dr Von Hoileben the new German ambassador to the United States is a II bachelor Here is a chance for Char lotte Smith to get even for Germanys treatment of the American hog JII Mark Haima will publish no Thanks giving proclamation until he knows definitely what the Ohio legislature is j I going to do on the senatorial ques i tion and he may not even then I The nonpartisan movement must have struck a great and popular chord Ii to win as it did says the Tribune Struck one cord It went through the whole gamut on the harp of Zion F c f Chauncey M Depew says that the r elections show that Bryan and bi i l metallism are not dead Hardly and I t three years hence he need not be sur I prised if the people of the country vote f to place them on top Governor Tanner just went for t the Chicago press And now the Chi cago press is going for him and be ft fore it gets through with him he will i feel as though he had been run throw a Luetgert sausage mill = A filthy old polecat is what the i New York Tribune calls the New York Sun It should be borne in mind that tLe Tribune is an exponent of the moral and conservative idea in journalism and does not belong to the school of yellow journalism II It is said the interior department may I send a special agent to the Uncom 1 i pahgre reservation to investigate the 11 I recent killing of Indians An investi gation should be made and the sooner I I it is instituted the nearer it will get to I the facts in the case A There was a decrease of some 7663731 pesetas in Spains revenue for October J There was a deficit in Uncle Sams revenue for the same month of about 9000000 This goes to show that the Sagasta cabinet and the McKinley ad ministration have an understanding i i r I THE MAYORS APPOINTING I POWER It is known that the last legislature abolished the fire and police commission I and put the power of appointing the heads of the police and fire departments in the hands of the mayor and also that some change was made in the citys organic law In consequence of these changes some have wondered whether the mayor after January 1 next would have an absolute power of I appointment or whether his appomteis i would have to be confirmed by the city j I council They will have to be con firmed by the council the provision of I the code as passed by the legislature i last winter being as follows I Sec 214 The mayor by and with the I advice and consent of the council may appoint all such officers and agents as I may be provided for by law or ordi nance and in like manner fill all va cancies among the same except as otherwise provided by lawC L 1763 92 p 17 Sec 215 Except as otherwise pro vided by law the term of office of all appointive officers shall be until the municipal election next following their appointment and until their successors are duly appointed and qualified unlESS I sooner removed by the mayor with the concurrence of the majority of the members of the city council or by the city council with the concurrence of the mayor From this it will be seen that the mayor has no absolute power of ap pointment but that his appointees must be confirmed by the council And in the matter of removals the mayor and council must act concurrently DINGLEY LAW DEFICITS Deficits under the Dingley or new tariff law continue For the month of October the deficit is 9322653 This is nearly three times what it was for Sep tember but less by some 4 > 5000000 than it vas for August The following tabu lated statement will show exactly what the deficit under the Dingley law for three months has been August 14564432 September 3435718 October 932E653 Total 527322803 The new law went into effect July 24 thus making it in operation one week in that month The deficit for that month was 11073545 Just what portion of this amount accrued under the Wilson law and what portion under the Dingley law we have not the figures for What was the deficit under the Wil son law for the months of August September and October the last year j it was in operation Here it is I August 10139550 I September 1995290 October 7695488 Total 19830858 This makes a difference in favor of the Wilson law of 7292445 If the de ficit under the Dingley law shall con tinue at the same rate for the next nine months as for the last three the total deficit will be 109291212 for the year Had the rate of deficit under the Wilson bill for the three months of August September and October 1896 continued for the next nine months the deficit for the year would have been S7CG21432 but the actual deficit under the Wilson law during the last fiscal year it was in operation was 18 052254 Taking the deficits under the two laws for the three months and the total deficit for the last fiscal year the Wilson law was in operation as the basis of a proportion the deficit under the Dingley bill for the first year of its operation will be about 26000000 in round numbers What it will ac tually do in the next nine months no one can possibly say As a revenue producer it cannot be judged until it has been in operation a full year and that will hardly be time enough We enact laws in this country and expect them to have their full antici pated effect instanter and because they do not at the next session of the legis lature or of congress a demand for a change in them is made thus ever re newing and perpetuating the evils it is sought to remedy As a people we show the same impatience in such mat ters as a boy does when he sets a hen and expects the chickens to be hatched the next morning The protective policy of the Dingle law is to be condemned but it is yet too early to estimate its qualities a revenue producer HANNTS TAYLOR ON CUBA It appears that the article of ex Minister to Spain Hannis Taylor in the current number of the North American Review on the Cuban question has brought forth a reply from Senor Sal vano of Madrid Mr Taylors article and the reply thereto have stirred up the Spanish people almost to a war fever while all the Madrid papers are making savage attacks on the exmin ister The article certainly is one but ill calculated to pander to Spanish pride for it states some very unpleasant facts facts that are all against Spain The following is an extract from the article Spain herself has demonstrated that she is powerless either to conciliate Cuba or to conquer it Her sovereignty over it is in my humble judgment now extinct for all purposes of its right ful existence and the hopeless strug gle for its reestablishment has de generated into a strife which means nothing more than the useless sacrifice of human life and the utter destruc tion of the very subject matter of the conflict itself This deplorable state of things is not only shocking to hu manity but it is a special and griev ous burden to the people of the United States by reason of their intimate commercial and social relations and sympathies with the people of an island so near to our coast line as to be almost a part of our territory Our commerce with Cuba amounting an nually at the beginning of the present war to 100000000 has been nearly wiped out The millions of American capital invested in the island have been either destroyed or rendered unpro ductive many of our citizens reduced to absolute want have been forced to appeal to congress for aid while too many of them have found their way in to Spanish dungeons from which some have been able to escape only through the door of death But last and worst of all our peace as a nation is broken and disquieted by an endless strife that enters as a potent factor into our internal politics With patience almost unexampled we endured all such evils during the period of the great war that began at Yara in 1S6S and ended ten years later with the treaty of Zanjon then came the little 1 war and finally the last great war that has now been in progress for more than two years and a half Thus we have been called upon to witness nearly 15 years of war in Cuba out of the last 29 Through out the present struggle apart from our commercial losses we have been in a state of semi war with Spain a large part I of our fleet has become a coast guard T and our diplomatic relations have been I so strained that for more than a year i i the Spanish government deemed it ne I cessary to guard my place of residence with soldiers night and day Since my departure this impossible state of things has become still more acute and the uncertainty thus produced Is the one obstacle in the path of the long hoped for prosperity just dawning up i on us Business men are plainly stat i I ing to each other that such uncertainty I now hangs like 1 a cloud over all future i i transactions I i It is great folly to suppose that the i Cuban question is something that we l can set aside if we will and go about our own business It has intruded it self nto our national affairs with all its disturbing consequences and it is 4 here to stay until we take hold of it I and solve it wisely not only in our own interest but in that of humanity I Spain would have had just cause for complaint had this article been pub lished while Mr Taylor was our min I ister at Madrid but he ceased to be that some time aro There does not I seem to be anything in the article that is a breach of official etiquette or I a betrayal of official secrets That I which so hurts is the fact that Mr Taylor tells truths which all are ac I quainted with but which gain a dou ble force when coming from one who o has had exceptional opportunities to learn the real situation in Spain as Mr Taylor has had One thing that this article does make plain as shown by the above extract is how really strained the relations of the United States with Spain are The Cuban question is almost certain to be prominent in Congress this winter and it need surprise no one if it reaches a II administration crisis that will compel action by the PACKING TIm QUEENS BENCH Harold Frederic in his London letter to the Xew York Times says For the first time in my knowledge I of England there is a general and spir ited protest in the press of bobh par I ties against partisan packing of the queens bench The present lord chan I cellor coarse porkjovled little prac tical politician who would be consider I ed below the class of supreme court I nominations if he belonged to Tam I many hall has been allowed recently i j to make a couple of judicial appoint ments so much more scandalous than his wont that something like a revolt I has broken outamong the lawyers of his own party It is known that Lord Salisbury personally deprecated the I latter of these that of Darling but it seems he had no influence with such a I resolute jobber as Halsbury who it must be supposed has support in an II even more august quarter still What gives the scandal a keener edge is the fact that no less than seven judges have now exceeded the term of service entitling them to a retiring pension and apparently several of them are go ing to drop out or be shaken out before long to make room for ether of Hals burys appointees Already thirteen out of the present bench of twenty are of his selection so that if the govern ment remains in three or four more years and Halshury holds on to office it may happen that the whole English judiciary will be his creation I have always maintained that our system of electing judges ds our greatest pcint of I superiority over English methods in the whole range of government Even with the English system at its best and now we are seeing it at its worst there is no possible comparison That will be astonishing news to all who are interested in such matters In this country the English bench has always been regarded as above sus I picion in all ways though here is a case where it is not The traditions fl that the bench and bar of tills country have of the English bench and bar are very largely derived from Blackstone and are not founded upon knowledge of what they really are today When comparisons between the English bench and bar and the American bench and bar have been made they have usually been to the disadvantage of this country James Bryce has alwa s had a high opinion of the American bench and bar and so expresses him self in his American Commonwealth in fact what he there says is most complimentary We Americans are in clined to disparage them rather than I to overpraise them Uncle George Swan once went down I as grass before the mower but now he cometh up as a flower NOVEMBER REVIEWS The leading article in the current number of the Forum is entitled Dangerous Defects of Our Electoral System by exSecretary of the Treas ury J G Carlisle The present article it is to he followed by another deals with the manner of electing the presi dent and vicepresident Senator Justin S Morrill continues his Notable Letters from My Political Friends There are letters from Horace Greeley George P Marsh J G Blame W P Fessenden Charles Summer and others Professor J Lawrence Laughlin dis cusses The Monetary Commission the commission that was the outgrowth of the Indianapolis congress A very important article is Edwin F Atkins Our Proposed New Sugar Industry He discusses the question very largely I from the point of view of our foreign commerce and the effect it will have upon it The Disuse of Daughter by Sir Lewis Morris How the Greeks Were Defeated by Frederick Palmer and other articles will all be found in teresting The Forum Publishing Co Ill Fifth avenue New York Price 35 cents The November Bookman has the usual variety in Chronicle and Com ment There are portraits of Mary Hartwell Cathenvood Mrs Richmond Ritchie the late Lord Tennyson Lady Tennyson and their son also of Bret Harte and Maud Adams as Babbie Emerson and Concord is the subject of number viii in the American Bookman series It is il lustrated with pictures of the Old Manse Emerson Bronsen Alcott and Thoreau in early life There are the usual reviews of new books In book sales of the month Two Vadis The Christian and The Choir Invisible lead the latter book leading in sales in our own city Dodd Mead Co Fifth avenue and Twentyfirst street New York Price 20 cents I SOME EDITORIAL CO1OEENTS St Louis PostDispatch Unless the I press can keep Mr McKinley in the traces he will leave Uncle Sam a worse bankrupt I than he left his own state of Ohio Intlianapolis Sentinel President Potter II of the L A W takes a pretty sensible view of the question of tree bicycle lead Ing to Immorality and puts it in a pat form He says The bicycle does not I lead to Immorality any more than the sidewalk Both iake you anywhere you want to go find yet when you come to think about it that is the only objection I that is made to either of them ChJcago Record John R Tanner gov I ernor of Illinois if stripped of his high office would remain merely a small bore I i politician He has chosen to add to this i distinction the signing of the Allen bill t the gas consolid < uion bill and other meas I j ures only less infamous which by his approval became laws of Illinois to the I I incalculable harm ct the citizens Pil i I loried by the ppesg for these shameless acts he turns libeler in the desperate hope I of beating down JOe force of the facts > I I whIcn render him odous to the peopls on Illinois I vshvllle American It is very essential I I that seme drastic measure be taken to prevent the mob violence that has be come so shockingly common of late years i Toe lynching ractice is destroying re spect for law and will prove the precursor j of a muCftude of ills if not stopped Seattle PostIntelligencer Referring to that Thanksgiving proclamation Gov enor Rogers might straddle the question I anu Lturr thanks to tie Supreme Ruler of tne Urk rse which the state consti tution makers discovered and with a positive flash of genius immortalized by i placing in the state organic law I San Francisco Call The man who dived SI i feet into the surf at the Cliff House I Sunday snowiU considerable of the qual ity known as nerve As display of in I telligence however any such feat must I be rated as an absolute failure I THE FIRST RED LEAF i i What is that which the eye perceives j Bowing TTons the < thick green leaves i Is it an oriole perched to rest ur miiiisvu with his vivid vest I Or a lonely grosbeak left behind Forgotten by all his gorgeous kind Alas for summer and woe for me TIs the first red leaf on the dogwood tree Aft why for the grass is not yet sere No blight betokens the falling year A late rose reigns on her thorny throne I All the fairer because alone And nods and smiles In the sunny noon As sweet and perfect as those of June Why hint at winter and storm to be I O first red leaf on the dogwood tree One orphaned lily leans pale and tall Last of Its line by the lichened wall The sralvla tosses It brilliant plume The bright nasturtiums are yet in bloom I And danliaa crimson and gold and white Waste their beauty awake all night Yet here with Its sorrowful prophecy Is the first red leaf on the dogwood tree I The knapweed swings by the meadow path Where mowers gather the aftermath I The first pale aster has but begun To hint that the torrid days are done I Tho fringy sprays of the goldenrod Are spreading their spendthrift wealth I abroad I And while they charm us we need not see The first red leaf on the dogwood tree I Elizabeth Akers in Youths Companion I WIT AND HUMOR Boston Traveler SheSo he married her for her money HeYes She thoughtfiflly How awfully rich she must be Philadelphia Bulletin That rich Mr Muggins is a distant relative of yours isnt he I Oh no hes exceedingly close St Louis Star No concern is so big that it can afford to disregard public opinion Not even the coal trust If these be melancholy days Tis owing to mans Idle ways They come with cheer to every soul WJios got the cash to lay In coal Chicago Record Gaulois See madame did you ever see such a homely man as that one over by the chimney corner I Sir that is my husband r Ah madame how true the proverb is that the homeliest men always have the handsomest wives Cincinnati Enquirer Wallace What is I the reason Johnny isnt wearing his Lit tle Defender badge ariy more Mrs WallaceHe doesnt seem to be so fond of ministering to dumb animals since he held a poor little half frozen bee in his hand to get it warm Cleveland Plain Dealer Mrs Jabber wock tells me she can read ten novels in a week Yes she always begins at the last chapter and reads back until they become uninteresting Indianapolis Journal Of course the brides father gave her away but didnt anyone give away the groom I OTi the groom gave himself away Asked her at flue very first dinner at the I hotel if she took cream and sugar in her coffee I Cleveland Leader What wonderful selfrestraint Dr Cutler has Indeed I ne er noticed Yes we called him in to see my brother yesterday aijd he < didnt operate I on him for appendicitis I CUPIDS DISGUISE Sweet Cupid sat on a mossy bank With a tear In his round blue eye His wings were dragsTed with silver dew And his quiver and bow flung by The butterflies came from the garden near And perched on his dimpled toes And a honey bee sipped at his crimson lip And thought it an opening rose Not an arrow went to its mark today I wasted them all1 he sighed My wines and my I curls too well they know So the men and the maidens hide Mry mother must clip my pinions close And must braid my locks of gold And Ill borrow the frock of a damsel fair I My roseate limbs to fold o So now no more in the flowery field Or the woods wherethe thrushes sing Do we hear the patter of naked feet Or the sweep of an airy wing II He has stolen the gown of a pretty girl And her hat with Its drooping plume And a cluster of velvety violets blue From his breast tO shed perfume He has donned her veil with Its broidered I edge And her gloves of the palest gray And hides his brow in her fluffy fan Before he goes out to slay He has clipped his wings and braided his curls But beware of his roguish eyes For sly little Cupid is still the same In spite of his new disguise London Evening Sun I TALES OF THE DAY He Found the Way Chicago Tribune I was trying to find my way to Colonel Ted Baxters on George creek eastern Kentucky and got lost I met an old man with a gun on his shoulder and six hounds at his heels Im trying to get to Colonel Baxters I said as I drew rein Dont keer cf ye ar returned the old man unlipplng a gill of tobacco juice and looking sharply In my face Im lost I continued Well ef you know enny o the land marks ye go straight on this road till ye come to whar old Bob Peters cut the gizzard outen ole Tob3 Mason Thar the road splits an you go to the left about 200 yards till ye reach the spot whar Ben Carpenter split old John Capfields brain box open with er handspike Go on then a little furder tot < whar John Simp son let I daiylight into ole Mose Turner with a butcher knife an ye take to the road an go on till ye come to whar I sent a gourdful o buckshot Into ole George Lemmos lung holder TIter iye take to the left agln an keep gem in till ye reach a house Whar an ole man an ole woman are drunk in the front yard cussin and fightin Ax if Colonel Baxter lives thar and hell say Yas darn ye Git down take a snort o moonshine an make yerself at home Rebuking Sin by Prayer Boston Herald We have before related I in the Herald an Instance In which two politicians of Boston went into a prayer I meeting and each prayed to be delivered from the faults for which the other was particularly noted In the end they managed aged to get up an animated controversy there in this way and compelled those who had the direction of the meeting t adjourn i I seems that this kind of transaction has been3 precedent A let ter of James Hogg recently published relates an instance in which two Scotch men named Laidloiv and Wat respect ively got into a controversy in 0 relig ious meeting about fee will Wat lauhed at one of Laldlows arguments on which the narrative proceeds to say that Laid law rose with Ay ye may laugh ye have malt need to pray Im really sorry for the pulr auld scoundrel and troth I think we should jttln and pray for him For my part I sal len my unite The prayer was eo cutting that Wat rose lip foam ing with rage heaved Ws Stick and cried 1 tell ye gle qwer Jamie La claw I winna be prayed for that gate If there were several hells Jie prayed that Wat might be preferred tithe easiest We I t couldna expect nae better a plac for sic a man and indeed we would be ashamed to ask I But on the ither hand If it be true that the object of our pet tions perpetrated such and such specified In iquities really we have not the face to ask any mitigation for him at an I I This Tells Where Health May Be I Found 1 And that is more important than mak ing money I your blood is impure Hoods Sarsaparilla is the medicine for I you I cures scrofula silt rheum I I rheumatism catarrh and all other diseases originating in or promoted by I impure blood and low state ofthe sys tem Hoods Pills are easy to take easy to operate Cure indigestion headache I WILL OWN HER CABLE England No Longer Depends Upon 1 the Florida Communication I New York Nov 4A special cable I dispatch from London to the Evening Post says Todays issue of shares and deben I tures by the West Indian Cable com pany limited marks the beginning 1 of the end of Englapds dependency I I upon the United States for cable con j I nection with the West Indies But for I President Clevelands Venezuelan war message England would have probably II j have been quite content to continue to j depend upon the United States lines via Florida and Cuba but directly the officials here realized the possibility of a war with the United States and the consequent isolation of the West Indian colonies she set about the J negotiations which after a long hard fight resulted in an imperial subsidy II of 40000 yearly for 20 years to the BritishCanadian capitalists who own I the HalifaxBermuda cable for its ex tension from the Bermudas to Jamaica and ultimately to other leading West Indian islands and South America The February cable will be completed by the first of IRREPARABLE LOSS I Drawings of a New TypeSetting Machine Go Up in Smoke Deming N 11 Nov 4The winter residence of Otto Mergenthaler the in ventor of the linotype typesetting ma chine was totally destr yed by fire here today Mr Mergenthaler lost all his personal property and many valu able papers including the drawings for a new typesetting machine The prop erty was onwed by Colonel James A Lockhart of Colorado Springs Colo and was valued at 20000 Mr Mer genthaler was spending the winter in Deming hoping tO be benefited in health Another fire earlier in the earler morning destroyed several frame busi I ness houses on Silver avenue I FATAL ACCIDENT A Miner Killed at Angels Camp California I Angels Camp Gal Nov 4Joseph Polar a miner was accidentally killed in the Stickl shaft of the Utica mine yesterday While attempting to clear a chute of ore between the 700 and SOD foot levels a huge mass of rock weigh I ing several tons which had been clog I i ged started down the chute and carpipd him with it He was embedded in the rolling mass of ore up to his neck and horribly mangled His body was re covered some two hours later when it i reached the foot of the chute Another I miner named Florence was also car ried down the chute for 40 feet but miraculously escaped a similar fate Something Know i I may be worth something to know I that the very best medicine for restor I ing the tired out nervous system to a I healthy vigor is Electric BIter This I medicine is purely vegetable acts by I giving tone to the nerve centers in the stomach gently stimulates the Liver I and Kidneys and aids these organs in I throwing off impurities in the blood I Electric Bitters improves the appetite j aids digestion and is pronounced by I those who have tried it as the very best I blood purifier and nerve tonic Try i I Sold for 50c dr 1 per bottle at Z C lf I Drug Dept SIOS AND INVESTMENTS I BUY AND SELL Z C M 1 Stock Deseret National Bank Stock Coop Wagon Machine Co Stock Utah Sugar Company Stock Good Investment Stocks Bought and Sold S15CO to Loan on Stocks JOHN C CUTLER JR 36 Main Street I UTAH NATIONAL BANK Capital 520000000 Private Safes for rent in Steel Vault J 51 STOUTT President A B JONES Cashier SALT LAKE THEATRE CRAS S BURTON Manager I Curtain evenings sit 4 815 Matinee ait 215 2 NIGHTS rnnnv NOV b h BEGINNING fl MATINEE SATURDAY Return After a Tour of the United States Mexico and Cuba of THE GREAT MAGICIAN DANTE ELfASONo Assisted byMLLE MLLE EDMUNDA Western Tour Management of Paul Ham mer Jr Presenting HIS INCOMPARABLE ENTERTAIN MENT OF NEW AND NOVEL FEATURES I Mme Sans Gene Simla Seance The Beggars Dream Around the World An Asiatic Mystery Karmos The Bullet Catching Feat And THE MARVELOUS BICYCLIST Prices 100 75c SOc 2c Matinee 23c SOc Seats on sale at O the box office NEXT ATTRACTION I Three Nights and Saturday Matinee i Beginning Thursday Nov 1 I IN GAY NEW YORK NfW GRAND THEATRE H F McGARVIE Lessee and Manager One Week only RffAMU HAW J nnORIIfV fOV I Saturday Matinee ImlHIHS llVg I Appearance of the Celebrated Comedian M B OURTS Supported by his Metropolitan Company In his Original Creation SAML Of rOSEN1 The Drummer Up to Date As played by him over 5000 times Prices 2 35 6 boxes 75c Change of bill Friday mid Saturday Next attraction Cosgrove Grants zler Musical Comedy Company in The Daz I 0 oooooooooaoooooo 00000000000000005 < THE STEADY MARCH OF PROGRESS g a Marks every section of this justly popular business No 6 a Setbacks no Slipping of cogs or jarring of machinery but 6 each day marking some growth in favor stock r makng i public every Q o swings into line with choicest offerings Want to make 9 9 buying a pleasure for you 9 0 6 6 t j f I aa a rv I 9 < 9 Iii I I t s Mr a C < l 0a 6 a = t ofC 9 a E i a J a = a a a 6 9 CLOTH5WG FIRST g 9 Your mind is on it now You 9 need a new suit and theres no BOYS CLOTHING 9 O use putting it off any longer Hardly know where to begin 9 O the question is where to buy i and just as hard to tell where to 0 A A visit to this clothing store will stop such a collection of hand O settle that where can you find some togs for the little felows I I such a these and every one pleading for a 9 o place in print a few lots at 9 a For 750 Fine business suits random theyll have to talk for O dark brown mixtures round or a store full 6 9 square cut At 150 Boys suits fine Q 9 union cloth sailor collar quality x uion saior cola a For 1000 Our popular price in sizes 3 to 8 braid trimmed 9 a suit all wool cheviots also mix and regular collar 8 to 14 both 9 a ed goods and clay worsted double breasted O latest cuts At 300 All woolsuits made O 0 1300Al a For 1500 Very nobby fancy same style a above very fine Q well made all a black cheviot double breasted quality wel al through Q b At 400 All wool cheviots round or e cut newest thing 1400Al chevots 6 square thing a V 9 thn D brown plaids also black or blue gout a worsted best lining etc 9 O The Overcoat Equipment PEOPLE WONDER g 6 At the rush in our childrens 9 6 Calls for more than its 0 < Cals tha passing department is having garments O comment Its a stock to enthuse made just like Dads that Y < over weve concentrated all the draws the little fellows to us V overcoat knowledge that have much ° kowledge we possess overcoats thaI as Q into the buying of these gar style as grown up overcoats Q CD ments Theres been no haphaz in fact little overcoats for little O ard hitormiss work here not men some beauties thatll make 9 Q ing slighted nothing overlooked the little fellows dance with gleeO that would help to make this the At 150 Cape overcoats gray O 9 most useful overcoat store in this satinette full length cape 4 to satiette ful lengh p 9 Just three items from city thee iems a 14 years Q O room full At 350 All wool mixed a O l For 1000 Black kersey over goods dark gray mixtures ex q a O coats good quality velvet collar tra well made 4 to 14 years V 6 well made proper length At 250 Reefers heavy O lengh a For 1200 Tine black kersey weight blue cloth double breast p a serge lining satin lining over ed sailor collar braid trimmed Q I shoulders velvet collar 3 to 8 years a < For 1500 Black kersey good At 400 Reefers new rough o as tailor made at 3000 perfect effects green black or blue q 9 garment taior in every particular cor large collars braid trimmed q buttons 3 to 8 0 years a rect lengths pearl button 6 THE WINTER UNDERWEAR STOCK o o Comes in for its full share of patronage Theres an honest o ii argument attached to every garment and prices are less Q 6 than youd expect for equal goodsgoing to try and make 9 this the banner season in this department q 9 For 150 the suit nice soft For 100 the suit fine jersey V 9 all wool goods brown color ribbed fleece lined underwear O 9 goods yojall pay 200 for else also double fleece kind O 0 o where For 200 All wool natural 9 For 300 Fine all wool color double front one of ou 9 q brown color silk stitching etc leaders 9O 6ONE a 0 COT A CATALOGUE YET 1 136138 o 0 O g PRICE ON J GARBNE9 Main St 6 6o 9OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO SOMAIOSE BISCUIIS9 For Invalids Dyspeptics and Convalescents Palatable Digestible Nourishing Strengthening AMERICAN MM IMKMG A L CO I WALLACE manager Salt Lake City Utah HUGH ANDERSON PTRE LIFE AND ACCIDENT ESTABLISHED 1873 P O Box 91 URAN C Telephone 195 INS 9 131 South Main St Salt Lake City AUTHORIZED AGENT FOR THE FOLLOWING COMPANIES Scottisii Union and National of England 318352302 London Assurance of England 18216780 North British and Mercantile of England 17500 ° 2 Northern of England 19724989 HamburgBremen of 5000000 of Germany I Aetna of Hartford 10807669 o Fund of California 8111487 JFirranans Fd Caioria I > PLATE A G 1j I A A Q r S INSURED BY THE Home Fire r Insurance Company J OP UTAH DAVIIS HOWE CO t OUiS tftltS1 Manufacturers of all kinds of Mining and Milling Machinery Prompt at tention paid to all kinds of repair work No 127 North First West St h