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H j 1 I jo TRUTH, H ff ; Etlibllthid 1864 W. P. KISER, Mgr. m jj Henry f 'J S Wagener 3 I 1 I Brewing I I co. f I : I LAGER BEER & PORTER" I l I y Social attention given to bottled HH n Jt 1 beer for family trade. Free '' m m ', 1 m delivery to all parts of H I the city. it J m M ' office: 1 J 74 E ST FIRST SOUTH 5 ll m PHONE 21B. H Hi' I PROVO LETTER. j I M f Provo, Utah, Sept. 8. Tho cam- H j , palgn for tho municipal election will H bo lato In starting this year, if the H ' present Inertia in the political Held H is a fair criterion. H t) ' Tho main office is going begging H on tho Republican side, that of mayor, H ' if silenco regarding it is any criterion. H Tho Democrats aro compelled to line H up with Mayor Roylanco or repudiate H ; ' their own administration, and that H ! is not likely. H The old fight of east and west end H will cut some figure again, and the H Republicans may this time attempt H to run a west end candidate for may- H or. L. L. Nelson is mentioned, and H . ho Is a likely candidate, having H served two terms in the council, one H timo ns president; but ho got into H, , nn unfortunate feud with members H of his own ward at tho last school H election. Nearly two hundred Repub- H llcnns at the north end of tho ward H are raid to be against him. H A. L. Booth, at present a member of H the council, is said to be holding his H lightning rod high in tho air, hoping i that tho mayorallty may come his H way. Ho would bo a happy compro- H miso between the west and cast end H factions. H Democrats will not scrap on the H mnyornlity, but there is a nice little H row brewing over the marshalshlp. H If Mayor Roylanco keeps hands off H tho opponents of Marshal Henry H though they are saying hard thing? H about him, will have a hard timo to H defoit his rcnomination. H The peace officers of Provo aro gen- H erally having a hard time of it these H days. Sheriff Harmon has demon- H stratcd very poor executive ability. H Though he now resides at the jail, the M county having furnished him with ele- M gant accommodations, prisoners will H escape. When ho undertook to censure H ono of his doputles, that important M functionary In tho offlco up and re- H signed. This is the second timo Jack H Buchi has wanted to go, but the slier- M iff Is said to bo at a loss to run hip M office without him, and it will likoly 1 result in another truce, with no ben- H efit to the service. H Tho appointment of Rev. S. H. H ' Goodwin to tho important commission M ' that Is to determine tho courso of H studies at tho Agricultural college and H tho Stato University was a general H surprise. It meets with poor favor Hl among tho cducataors. Rov. Goodwin Vj ruins a mission school, whoso teach- H ers do not fraternlzo In any way with NH - church or public school teachers. Tho preacher's courso will bo closely watched. H. S. Pyne, tho erstwhile political correspondent of the Tribune, is very quiet during his vacation. Ho Is now studying to enter tho George Wash ington university department of mea iclno nt Washington. A. C. Sorenson says ho is also going to the same school, and will not be a candidate for anything this fall. It may leave Recorder Harding easy sail ing for rcnomination. The delay In deciding the location of tho state experimental farm is con ceded to havo been detrimental to Provo. Tho committee still believes that It has a bare majority where once It claimed a fair majority. MUST HAVE A BEGINNING. Do not postpone tho opening of a sayings account simply because of tho smallness of your first deposit. All things, you know, must havo their beginning. Tho big things of to day were tho little things of yester day. Remember wo receive deposits as low as ono dollar. Utah Savings and Trust company, No. ICO Main street, Salt Lake City. Established 1889. W. S. McCornlck, president; John J. Daly, vice president; Heber M. Wells, manager. In tho heart of the shopping district. Russell Sage In a Turkish Bath. Russell Sage once visited Boston. It is said that after a rather dusty jour ney ho thought he would like a bath. Ho visited a Turkish bath, and, in quiring tho price of a bath, was told $1. Mr. Sago objected to the price. On tho proprietor telling him that they would sell him twelve bath tick ets for $10, Sago's reply was: "How do I know I'll live twelve years, any how?" Which the proprietor of the bath thought indicated that tho mil lionaire takes a bath once a year, "whether he needs it or not." j Americans and Britons. An Englishman In Canada writes homo In considerable excitement as follows: "Tho majority of Canadians never read an English paper of any kind whatever; all their literature Is American. All the booksellers' shops aro filled with American books, Ameri can reviews. American papers. And with what result? There can bo only one result Canadians will think 'Americanly.' " n Lord Wolseley's Daughter. Miss Frances Wolseley, tho daughter of Lord Wolseley, spends most of her timo at Farmhouse, Glynde, England. Sho Is one of the keenest women gar deners and thoroughly understands the scientific side of the subject. Sho has founded a school for gardening at Glyndo and personally superintends tho teaching. Miss Wolseley Is heiress by special remainder to her father's viscounty. o Musical Comedy in England. Musical comedy was Introduced into England May 23, 1G5G. Dignified by tho name of "opera" an entertainment called "Tho Cruelty of Spaniards In Peru" was produced at tho Cockpit theater on that day. o Device of Beauty Doctor. A beauty doctor doing business In London undertakes to remove wrin kles and other lines in tho faco of a patron by repeated applications of a pneumatic cup, which draws the sunk en tissues out. The Weaving. Sho Razed nt tho weaving sadly 'lhc warp and weft In the loom, Wlicro the bright colored threads In the fabric Seemed always o'erahndowed by gloom. And ever sho saw tho tangles Of threads, so often astray, And It grieved her heart sore that the Weaver Used only a few bright and gay. So one day sho cried In sorrow: Oh, loll me, Weaver, I pray, Dost thou enro If tho threads are so tangled, And so many so somber and gray? "I pray thou wilt weavo me. Weaver, In warp and weft of thy loom. Only colors like tints of the Autumn, With never a shadow of gloom." Tho Weaver worked on, 'n silence. Unseen by tho eye of man. And ho lovingly fashioned tho fabric According to pattern and plan. At last, when tho web was finished, Ono lato Slimmer evening tide. With tho hands that had guided the weaving, lie beckoned her to his side. And there, all complete, ho showed her, From every tangle free. That tho web of her life had been woven In heaven-wrought tapestry. Valentino March In tho Housekeeper. o No Time for Mere Lovers. Tho world has no time for mere lovers. It wants men who can do things. "Love making," says one, "Is the Idleness of the busy and the busi ness of the idle." When a youth for gets and takes his eyes from the goal, to become merely a man In love, pen ning dainty poems to his mistress' eyebrows, soon you will behold him among the Idlers and among the fail Tendency of Fish to Decompose. Fish, because of Its tendency rapid ly to decompose, holds a peculiar posi tion among foods, in England it is tho subject of a special act of Parlia ment. So long ago as 1C08 men knew tho evil consequences resulting from eating mackerel of uncertain post mortem age. So they passed an acl providing that except during the hours of divino service this fish could bo sold on Sunday. That act has never been repealed. o Warned Against Tea Drinking. A youth at Cambridge University was in 1717 mildly remo"stratcd with by his uncle on account of his chand ler's bill being too high "by reason ol ye foolish custom you have got of drinking and treating wth Tea wch Is not only very chargeable but Is ye oc casion of misspending a great deal ol time. I hope therefore you will leave It of." o The Seven Sleepers. Tho heart of tho five-year-old heir of tho house r-d been delighted by a present of a train of six cars. Ho played with them until past his usual bedtime, and then reluctantly went to his crib. His mother went to kiss him good-night, and found his beloved train in bod with him. Sho remonstrated, and tho boy replied: "But, mamma, they aro sleeping cars." o Edward Never Sells Horses. Ono of King Edward's rules Is that when a horso has been in his service It shall not be sold. Tho horses are kept until they no longer can bo used and are then chloroformed. w An Aid to Appetite. Do not eat when tired. Lie down for a few minutes first, then when a littlo rested tho dlgestlvo organs will perform their duties much better. Letters from Prominent Men fl In a list of unclaimed letters iinb 9 llshed by tho New York postofiice -ifl fow days ago were missives addressed to Harry Thaw, the young Pittsburg fl er, whoso marriage caused a sonsa tion recently; Rider Haggard, tho Em; S lish novelist; Marconi, the wireless telegraph man, and Craig Wadsworth H secretary of the American embassy in'l London. H You may havo littlo power, but youfl can use it wisely. M The spending of other people'sl money never seems to ono like heingl extravagant. H 1 Rats Walk on Wire. S At Sllgo a crowd watched nearly B 150 rats cross high abovo the ground on an olectrli wire, from the town liall to a floor mill over 200 yards away.B Tho rats used their tails as the pro- fcssional walker on the lofty wire uscs his balancing pole, and not one madeH a misstep. H o 3m Municipal Poultry Farm. fl Tho Mundesley (England) Parish D Council, which struck out a new llne In municipalization by str- g a poul-B try farm, has realize'1 )..ts on theH first year's wo-' 'qtialH to a reduction 1 of nM cent and ' tfth v M Fluorspar to Color Glass. B A new use has been found for the H mineral called fluorspar In the maniKB facture of a very beautiful kind ol H glass. Tho substance is added to theH quartz mixture, and produces an ex-j Quislte play of opalescent color, M Haunted House to Come Down. jB Uninhabited for nearly half a cen- M tury because It Is believed to be liaun- H ted, a well known house in tho Belle- S vuestrassc, Berlin, is about to be H pulled down. S U H In Nashua. H A sprightly young fellow In Nashua j Determined to throw nil his cashun, j Cried loudly, "Ha. ha! H Bring ma a pate fole gras." H And disdainfully motioned the hashun. JB Puck. ,Hll KRUG'SI OMAHA BEER. I KrugVCabinet" I As nutritious as any English Port- ers or Malt Tonics, and a H Connoisseur's delight. S Krug's "Extra Pale" Light, and mild, palatable, and jM appropriate on all fl occasions. S Either of the abovo brands deliv- fl ered in any part of the city. The Old Resort, I 276 So. Main St. ADAM SNYDER, Proprietor. M Telephone I06I-Y. fl