OCR Text |
Show THB HQKMNQ EXAMINES, OUDEX, wh. ro:u liati lliUl WHERE VISIONS OF THE LTAII, a When ihr a : kvi ,i rakinj; In i l.i.a rar.is over J. lhe sk U'i kind of .i . -- ..j i. Home of Swedenborg, Founder of the Church of New Jerusalem, to be Reproduced at St. Louis. ulifct r t'fcA !, i1.'! ( !.- - l'v ilem'uil- uf HrsUifv finer in fi'i i was ihe fe ami re. Anendaute. 4H" S ..re Hai'c! es and i'.c jlisf il.lKli, .) iaus:!i pul l waa jMii.ij in a.v but l.i- dl.lll'l. Ti:- ii:tufer flfinri out im.. u'd he?1 '! lUlWM-- I R. II E. - 'hiiii 2 4. 1 10 1 " 7 2 and Katiuc: Rhods m-s- t illl'AiM VS DETROIT. Sn build-!Topposite the line arts SL Loul. the fair .round, at .mail a within now appear, ia two. a quaint gambrel-thatche- d an equally frame house and pavilion, both gan that dia-rt- ly type of the to past. belong, little house and h lvJ: Church pla,1 at the fair by and !r the New Jerusalem In America, !L . faithful reproduction of the hum- Eman-- S home in Stockholm where whoae a'rnuge ou Swedenborg, e of the , New trorhinga the during the rturib has been built, lived aw thirty year, of hi. life. P The question of placing at the m'her iiion a replica of the house the foundations for a ba attracted thinker, waa brought to all parta of the world conference of tgfore the last general There tbs New Church at Phils lelphla. ... no ii0 Sweden borgian churches an aggregate lathe United States, with or mnnhership of nearly 100 .000. Four are located in the thase chun-hecity. The general conference Cued a resolution favoring the projwaa appointed ect, and a committee with plenary power. A lav member of the New Church la tils city baa recently returned from the Swedish capital with photographs dwrtptlon of In oll and i ir.lnut structure. Though built almost two hundred yeara ago and situated at the main thoroughfare of Sodermalm. one ol the busiest sections of Stockholm, where other historic landmarks have hoen awept away, the houae. whim most reTIM the dwelling place of the markable man Sweden ever brought same birth, remains in practically the mtiditinn as Swedenlmrg left it when, eonpelled by religious persecullon. be turned his hack on Sweden for the last time In 177i. For a hundred yeare after his death It vas occupied an a place of residence by people In humhlerfr-rumetsuce-s. hut the Swedlnh government has since obtained poaseaalon ot it. with the result that it has been well maintained and remalna In a state of fair nreervatlon today. A PROPAGANDA ESTABLISHED. The Swedenborg house at St. Louis, a meeting beside being intended as place for members of the New Church rtsittng the exposition, will he used aa it Is I centre n( a propaganda whlrh Intend I la carry on among the visitors who belong to other faith. Thousands of tracts and pamphlets dealing will be with New Church doctrines distributed from this headquarters, and a reading room will he established in one of the rooms. In which there will h piece I a complete collection of a Sweden bore's religious writings well as other Swedenhorglan lilera- - ( odd-Iwki- nc ? J" dot-trin- KEKV f.ure. naive description of how girls who die ycung are treated In heaven. It forcibly reminds one of tbe plan on which boarding schools for young ladles are being conducted on earth. Three or four of the girls, Swedenborg wrote, are placed together. Each baa her own chamber, and adjoining it a closet for clothes anl utensils. They are allowed to have perfumes, end are employed at embroidering nic things, which they either wear or give away, but never tell. Each has her little garden, and the girls receive gold and silver money aa prizes for d'iigence and virtue. The book contains minute descriptions both of scenery and surroundings, as well aa the life in heaven and bill, aa he claimed to have observed it. Ilia narrative would give a deathblow to any assumption that hia mind was of a mystic cast, for it ia laid along the lines of such economy and order aa enter into the general social scheme on earth. Work, industry, eating, and drinking all enter into the order of life in heaven and hell, aa seen by Swedenborg. A VISIT FROM VIRGIL. Atter bom, a Swedish writer of the eighteenth century, in. hia work on Swedish Seers and Bards," relates an odd episode of which Swedenborg's house was the scene. Prof. Gabriel Henry Porthan of Abo, Finland, came to visit Swedenborg. He was asked tc wait in a room adjoining the study cf the philosopher. In the next room be heard voices, one of them that of Swedenborg conversing easily, in fluent Latin, on Roman antiquities, lit' erature, and history. Aa he grew absorbed In the conversation, the door opened and Swedenborg came into the room with a countenance radiant with Joy. He greeted the professor In pass ing, but his chief attention was devoted to some invisible person whom, with many profound bows, he conducted through the room and out through the other door. On returning, the philosopher went direct to his guest and greeted him with a cordial handshake, eaylng aa he squeezed his hand: learned Well, heartily welcome, Sir. Excuse me for letting you wait, 1 had, aa you observed, a visitor. Yes, ao I observed," said tbe professor, with growing amazement and embarrassment And can you gneaa whom?" asked It waa Virgil. He is a Fpedenborg. fine and pleasant fellow. I always had a very high opinion of him, and he deserves It. He la as modest as he la entertainwitty, and most " agreeably ' ing." ' Swedenborg was not fundamentally an Idle dreamer. Ha was a man of solid learning and held a responsible position in his own country. He wad the originator of the Idea of uniting the North sea and tbe Baltic by means a canal. The distance la 300 miles, He "'he canal Is a reality today. wrote, among other things, an essay on mathematics, in which he proposed to do away with 10 as a basic number aa impracticable, and substituting it with either 8 or 18. The denary basis in arithmetics, Swedenborg held, waa derived from the .counting on their fingers by illiterate persona He pointed out how tea was an Impractical basal number, because It waa divisible only by 2 and 5, without breaking Into fractions, and contained neither the square cube, nor fourth power of any number, while 8 waa a cubic number and 18 was a number, with 2 aa a root ' He died in London on March 29, 1772. and waa burled under the altar of the Swedish church there. His licdy waa .disturbed eighteen yeara later. A set of religious fanatics conceived the Idea that Swedenborg poa seated the elixir of life and that there fore he waa not dead. The lead coft fln in which he waa burled waa sawed open, and there the body of the philosopher waa found very well preserved and with the features ao distinct that every one could recognize him. The coffin waa not again sealed and soon the remains crumbled Into dust, all except the akulL In 1817 there was another burial in the same vault One of those who attended abstracted the skull, and for some daya It was peddled among the savants and collectors of curiosities In the British metropolis, but was finally recovered and sectored to Its resting placg by the Rev. Dr. Wahlln, who waa chaplain at the Swedish embassy In London. t-- f Swedenborg was a prolific writer, and al the time of hie death left behind I greet mui of manuscripts. Not a tew of these documents, so intimately 'onnected with the philosopher's life, hive found their way to this country, and these will be placed on view at lhe Swelenbnrg house, together with (he only authentic painting of Swedenborg now In existence. Thia waa obtained for a Swedenborg admirer in this country through the American minister at Stockholm many yeara ago. Swedenborg built the little houae, which contains only six rooms, ana wm simple In the extreme. In 170, when his efforts to define the infinite and its relation tovfhe nature of man through the principles of science had ended In failure, and he had deter-tnlnrt- L after a journey to Imdoa, during vhlrh he declared the Lord appeared to him in the flesh, to turn bis back Jin the world and devote himself purely to the mission of establishing a few wllgion, more eplritual than the Wd one. He lived alone, attended only Sy an old gardener and the latters lfe. About the only services hre from them waa to make hi. fire tnd bring him water. At times he in bed for daya at a time, In a somnambulistic elate, curing which he bad no physical reed eJ lly quirement!. bis Spiritual Diary." which the most interesting Jn Swedenborg house at tbe fair. Swedenborg tells at length how e first entered Into communication vith the spirit world. Hia room would suddenly lighted up by flashes of light in the depth of night, and words of mysterious purport were re jrerd by him In the early morning .. dawn, when all life waa hushed WJt the little house. A prodigious PjJTJHy of being able to ' hold hia mtu without any sense of suffocation to manifest Itself in him. During jnese periods of suspended' respiration occasionally seen by the old n wife, who were hit Si. jo'y attendants, and they declared that 8 gleaming liViT 14 wWe op ?. b asaerta. . De realms of good and Sii 1", spirits, and In conversation with and demons learned the secrets lamau,kenS,, k'88en from ordinary "J will one of te be-ro- rn .r SOME STRANGE TONER HANDS The Colonel was sitting on the porch lazily smoking a cigar toward the end cf a warm Alabama afternoon. His chair waa tilted back against the wall between tha door and the window of the barroom of the hotel, commanding a view of all that part of the towq In which there was anything'doing. The 'Judge would be over from the Court House presently, end the doctor- usually dropped In about 4 for a snifter. The barkeep stepped out to the door and threw his eye leisurely over the buggies In the square, after ding Good afternoon" to the lounger on the porch. "I hew yon had a pretty stiff game last night, Colonel," his began, evidently curious for details. Well, yes, I reckon It was kind of ctiff fora while until ws got the Ysnk sized up." I hearn tell he was from the North Washington way?" Yes, hes a friend of Judge Prowls. Pollticias - or something, and I must allow he knowed the sama pretty welL In fact hea the fust man outn the North that I ever played cards with that didnt raise the ante when he had a sure thing.' Hia style was quite different from that engineer we played with In Huntsville last fall." I hearn tell something 'bout him. beat a Wanted to make out fnlTbouae or some thing. He didnt - CONVERSATKWsVlTH "ritual wtia 8d ,1 tia!he Diary" is replete narrations of these conver- Under the date of March writes that he learned that the spiritual an- divided the angels Into two plrltul and celestial . S l,h? v'sh.r anTthl? thV. . B 1 SPIRITS, rit dis- - On Jan. 11, the annul ,ht the spirits of-to ,tMl things Of small 11 tT exposed In shops, ,tron I Abeir desire that m0T bis hands." On Feb. entr.T" In which he saya: ;,rrlc.ertllleii that these spirits had Ibrii who defrauded nVa uUmer and thought It allow. wer celebrated rtiinf. Thereat I wondered. They , mbout eeWn for things to 'W,d with t,p, r,!-hiVbk OB be Heavenly which will be one of the gives a See rattier . aee-big- get away with much of the he?" stuff, did which No, but he saw-i- l his in' was kinder surprising in mime of ua leaat-waiFain Hill sated it fur him. The barkeep drew up a chair and sat down, evidently eager for further details. Fust time that engineer sal in the game." the Colonel weul uu reminiscently, the cards run kinder poor for the boys; but as they raise l tha Unit every time ou kilters and plsxed them pat for the limit afterward,' some of the engineer's hands didn't do him ao much good as they might have done if hed know'd the game better." He diduT call uoue of Vm?" "fall! Why he laid down three kings twice after having mined tbe ante on them and being raised back, if the Judge hadn't got gay over one pot and showed hia baud the engineer would have been busted the fust evening. Would you believe it. he hadnt never heard of a kilter in his life, and when thq Judge ezplained to him that It waa a principle of honor with all Southern gentlemen who bad a hand with no card above a nine and no chance for straight or flush, to play It pat and bot the limit on it, he thought one were stringing Lira, as he called it. he had run-i- u with the. county clsrk and boosted the pot a couple of times before the draw, lloth of them stood pat and the engineer was called on tha second raise. He laid down a straight and the other man had a little dog. Would you believe it, that fellow bad never heard of a little dog before in bis life and be reached for tbe pot, remarking, I thought you had another of them kilters,' kind of laughing like. He must have been new at the game." "Well, we ezplained that a hand seven high and deuce low and no pair not straight of flush to it was not a kilter, but a little dog, and that It a straight, but wasn't good against a flush. He took out hfs notebook and wrote it down, looking kind of red in the face as If he thought he'd been skinned. Next afternoon he saw two of us retting In tbe hotel and he stopped to remark that he'd ben figuring over that, little dog and had calculated it out that It ought to beat a flush as well as a straight, because it wsa harder to got. . How did be reckon that out?" That's more'n I kuow. but 1 recollect the Judge saying as we didn't play straights right for about ten years, not until they was figured out for ns and that baybe we was a little off on the s, lat little dog. I know be took the engineer's paper and went over Ills figures, allowing be was right because, as he said, the odds against getting a flush was only about two and a half to a cent, while it was something over six dollars against the dog." Might get a bet out of some one that if it waa aura thing, "remarked the barkeep. looking down the street. That evening the engineer stood for It that of little doge waa to be played they should beat flushes. That mads Tom Bowser, the barkeep at 8am Kill's, hot Ha waa In the game and he waa goll darned about something and wouldn't aland for no chancea: but finally, as no one expected to have that kind of a hand, they made him agree to it, Sam Hill telling him H didn't make no difference what little dog teat for one evening, and tha engineer being a stranger. Well, by goah, I dont know how H happened, but about the middle of the evening, Tom Bowser thought the carda was running bad and be called for a new deck and on the very next hand, which waa a jack, damn me if that engineer didn't have a little dog and Bam Hill standing pat against It! And It waa agreed that little doga beat flushes! Served him right for allowing the game to be changed. "That'a what It was. and for fear Sam had forgotten about the flush being no good. I kind of hinted it to him, but he raised the engineer about six times in spite of my warning and when it come to a show aown goll dura me if Sam didnt have a big dog. Well, of course it wae agreed, we all allowed, that the little dog was to beat a flush, hut the big dog hadn't been calculated yet and no one knew what It would beat, not even Sam. In course, in the natural order of things, a ldg dog beats a little dog a well as a straight, and lores to a flush; but the engineer he was firm and said he hadn't figured out no big doga and dint know what they beat. Tom Bowser said he didn't know and it looked like anything fight and to save trouble, seeing things looked as if the engineer would quit the game with money In hia pocket, Sam Hill oifcreJ to divide the pot and make a bet on It, leaving it to the New York papers. The next day tbe engineer came up smiling and acknowledged he lost the bet, cause he'd figured II out that a hand that waa ace high and nine low, with no pair nor sequence nor a little straight wasn't no better dog, nor no worse so far aa being hard to get went; but having the higher cards la It he allowed it beat the littl dog and agreed to play It, provided both doga waa to beat flushes It sounded The Judge thought reasonable and 8am Hill didn't seem to want him to quit the game, ao be agreed." ' Mighty accommodating tbat'a all have to say." ' That evening there was vix of us in the game and tbe ante waa raised to accommodate Bam Hill and tha engin eer, who waa both skinning over their cards looking for big and I tlle doga the whole evening. I reckon they both missed some useful pairs that way. Fresemly there was a show down between the Judge aad Tom Bowser ' tl-a- A WtDOW. WIimm f Thl t rarl tuna. Oiaa I bad tbe opportunity of wciiig a f by iLe Milt! young widow burn of her dercaM-- husband. Tbe IuiuthI pile waa about icii feet l.ili. lu tbe middle of tbe pile lay l diii-uxcau old aud miserable looking niau. The devoted victim ass a young ilnwol In creature about aevciitt-euwhile, wiiu all her Jewel on. There waa a confucd muse of mrgiog and shouting, intermixed with the sound of tomtoms aud al interval ilia hollow and sononnia sound of gotiga and trumpet a. The priori and her friend crowded round her. all speaking to her at er.ee. apparently tn diafract her attention and to prevent ber abriuktng al the last moment from sacrificing herself. There was a sma'.l tank of water Close to tbe funeral pile. They led her to this. I a very near her wbi-- I aw her quietly take the Jewels from hre ears, her nose, unclnap ber gold braceb'tB aa well as the bangles from her ankles and every omanumt aha had on, which were received by her relaTha hiarr lirr-o-l- bim-tiRii- r llHIilM-.- , . Mi1 . , . - -- tree the Bbtdov of tome majestic BURNING d were I'liu upi. July 2 -- The u o.ii i(Kla. Aitendaiu-eS.S'VV Smre-- R. It. E. 0 5 1 1'hi.aan "Wl1.. Ho figure, j 4 11 I right Detroit ,;t a skip M.eie.i O A I'll away and Sullixan: Mullen and lh iiitihe. i sTiaiphi, been: said, TVoo.l. ilitre was so few skip mm do jn ihc pack, lie l 1 kinder rcco: ' in,- - Judge I'liil'AUU VS. ST. LUL IS allnwril 'in aa right h - i o a i 1 r i idlcci his ina:.i- H kind of July 2. - Si Louis today s could pictur. tf i he way ioeaU the worst dluUluiij; the gate come. :!iirc being slmui differin', in- - hair hid this season. Attend-Ul'l- ones, i h ruing from see i,u.i down id (I.O'IU. five higli. while there !! i hm m R. H. E. tic;re of the kind, ruiu.ii.g ironi see 4 (i Imago n to ne high tiigh. Si. laiuit- 19 19 i hi: I made sonic one iim, Inin, what Rat levies - Lundgren. Brown and about And ho Rung;; O'Neil. Xeartos and Grady. in to know (here was such didn't tilings. Wo mid him ir l.e had a TACOMA VS. 1X13 ANGELES the queen in the fhree straight spot It was good enough in Ih hi threes, Tacoma. July lai Angeles took lint nol good ciinimh in t a In lhe morning loda. games natural siiaight. MclKiiiiilit waa haded iir. uf the He rayi-- l out of (he next Jack to game ox in the lirsl inning. Oullielder relieve Ins mind about thnt band and finished tb-- j game aud did well. He saw ihe next pie hand, having L;.ucb In tlie arienuHiu numerous trurw d aces up liuiiself, and 1 kind of ih'nk he Oxerall. coupled with t!:ncl hits a on kilter me r lau In played the and I i less playing liy the borne tram, bin it might hau? been a full. tbe second game. He didn't show It, wliiili waa (bo only gave the Morning gar. exhibition of good play I saw him ScoreR. 11. E. make In that. game. To amo. 9 lu 'About half an hour liefore C quit lax- Angeles l'j 14 1 used up shout three sheer of psper Batteries McDonald. Flirgcrald, on it befmo he told the Judge that aud Graham; Wheeler and Lncb a roufld-- 1 straight ought to dii's. beat a full hand. Afiemouu game: Something wrong about them figScore- R. 11. E. ures, aurc." remarked the bartender, Tacoma 3 2 6 taking a noi her chew, Lob Augclm 9 111 0 Judge seemed to ihlnk they waa Ban eriea Overall and Hogan; Newall right, 'cause, aa the engineer said, ton aud Spies. the ace had to be the second, third or fourth card and that made only Mlallrte and Holly. three kinds of round era. Just halt aa many as there waa of ibe nsnging room wlib bully wreaths and bunches of mistletoe la a time honskips. Tom Bowser, he didn't use it, and ored curium which can he traced to tha he swore If the game waa going to days of the Koniun SHinnislia and even be changed any more he'd nr he'd see Peralan rurinin. Our own curiom lhat some one else quit and the way early cf decorating our room at t'hrlntii.'is he looked al the engine sr we all cornea more Immediately from undent knowed what he meant. But the engineer, he atiiek to 1L Germany, where evergreens were hung In honor of the mldwln'er festival. . that a should boat a The Druid mud la cut the mistletoe full hand, both kinds of nogs, and 'most everything In thepark hut four from their ssereti oaks with elaborate cf a kind. The Judge seemed to ceremony. A golden knife wns nsed to sever tbe paraalte from the tree. care what dogs and dnl, so the game went along and the Daring ihe ceremony two white bulla klltv kept filling up. were as cri tired, and niulc aud pracea-siona- l ft so happened that the engineer formed tart of lhe rile. . The opened the last Jackpot. I waa Bitting grove of klmia. once the favorite renext to him, overlooking lila hand treat of the British Dntlda, were nit like, being out of It myself. all conquering Roman He had area up and Bowser was down by the and from the popular memhave passed the only man that stayed with him. Both of 'ym drew one card, and when ory, bat the mistletoe, which the old Bowser called the second raise tbe Drnldt called all healing." la still an engineer laid down his hand. Tom laid ohjeri of veneration. In some porta down at the same time and reached of England a iierry la plurked from the for the money. mistletoe for every kin. that ia given Hold on, says the engineer, under it, and when there are no more 'youve only kings up. kings and bmlea left no more klaaea are allowed. queens, the fifth card's a jack. Why that'a a blaze, you damn fool,' About Head. aays Tom, getting hotter every mlu The head of the true Rhinelander ia tile. 'All picture cards.' wide at Ihe temples. If the hat la tha What? says the eugiucer, Blaze, says Tom. loud enough to exact length in nine cases out of ten It be beard In Bhelbyvllle. raking iu lhe has to be stretched aldewaya in order to make It lit. English beads are wide, i money at the same time: Then we calmed him down a bit bat not an pronounced aa three of Ger and explained to ihe engim-fthat a mans. There la more of a sliding blaze was all court rards. kings, scale" with them aa to the relative queens and jacks, and that though it length and breadth. The Celtic bead la meat be two paira It mlglu he bel- almost invariably round or oval aad ter, but whatever it was It boat two la without pronounced phrenological pain, but waan't as good as three bumpa. of a kind. For general smoothness of the cranial Well, there was so murn talk between Tom and him that wc thought protuberance tha Dalian cornea next to It best to done tbe game for that the Celts, either of tbe two besting tha rvrning and allow the engineer to classic Greeks in that respect. Odd as It may seem, aualomlata declare that figure it. out fn the morning." I'll bet he made out wo don't know the Turkish skull la tlinoat identical In how to play a blaze, either." shape, size, etc., with that of the enBy gosh, he made out that a blaze lightened Inhabitant of the United was a tip topper and ought to brat States. a full hand and and everything In the pack but fimr of a HaHa Pemea Free BIsMrf. kind. I recollect his saying that the as It may seem many people Strange odda was about 3.000 to 1 against get that rattan and willow furnl Imagine ting one and It was only about 700 to turn are the name. Rattan la tbe Chi1 against getting a full hand. He aays nese Importation, brought direct from when we let three of a kind beat and is reed susceptible of Singapore, we was blaze, crazy. That set him to figuring on all bending double without even cracking. klnda of hands for the rest of tbe af- It possesses, besides this, great firmternoon and when he ael in the game ness and strength, and a chair of ratlittle Hal tan could lie thrown from an express again that evening he bad of the hands and the way they ought train and picked up Intact. Rattan la to play all mad out, skips and little therefore used for such articles as basdoga, blazes and big dogs, all In or- kets and lighter ornamental furniture. der. Each baa its ue, tbe rattan, however, Tom Bowser he was bulling, but Bam Hill he thought It best to let it being better adapted for working up ko at that Jnat while the engineer into Intricate designs. was In town, and I believe he would .rearer lea. have brought Tom round to agreeing The peasants of Fongibaud, In the to It and playing tbe list with the dogs changed only for the engineer! mountains of Anvergne, are acquainted springing something fresh m us. He with a singular summer formation of said according to his figures threes ice. presumably due to evaporation of up ought to beat aces up. underground moisture and conaequent In Alabama? fall in temperature. Of thia pliennm-euoI dont know where. Tom Bowser Ihey have for many yeara taken wae taking a drink at the time and it to cool and harden their advantage nearly eftoked him. I disremember cheeses, which are deposited in certain how It happened. 'Some aald Tom reached for bis caverns where ibis ice ia found to be handkerchief to wipe his mouth. Some present, snd llsis keep good during the hottest summer mouths. said It waa for hia gun. AH I know Is. Bain Hill got the f l(. The Cau engineer by tbe neck and threw him out before we let go of Tom Bowser.' What's all this fuss about?" asked New York Bun. tbe tbe policeman, stepping I two young men. Tbe one that had .get tbe worst of It and waa wiping the blood from hia He nose pointed to tbe other fellow. can tell you her, name If he wants to," he raid. I won't" Chicago Tribune. . -- S- JULY I, 1901. ii' an pa'r l . i.r-i- - I. iiii.i MOKNlMi. l 1..1.1 (i. h bill .1 :.i "A' sk:;i NEXT WORLD WERE SEEN sinxiuv : M-- i S.-- ln-a- be-in- ii-- s tho-com round-the-corn- round-the-corn- . r round-the-corn- . tion. now .nil wu'ii iuen urn iearned to never b make ii.ivjl known, for haymaking i process. and tbe prml'.iet ! uf enuply sun drie-- i grass, hui gr.w wbirii bn been partly fenneuied. I. iu! i a fiuirii ihe wori: of men bund ns flour or cider. Probably it iti-- ovcry wa iluo fn accident, i bill posi'ii'.y learned it from the bur-- " of tile steppes, pika, li " '. wLl i: cii, l.i,y fir the winer.d wo- - M ter. Tl.:-lt in nicely with tie theory l.iiit rcc.'j-s- l Aria wa the Louie of l Arym race" If we were ill a!ine- tn It, aud haymaking i certain' an art n.sinly prac-t!e- d in cold coiir.'.-icfur winter for-agu ni.-ii- r s 1 ikum .'.eetaicr. The creeping plant we call myrtle Is not a nyr!" ul hut rimt.ld be called by it i rmr name, periwlnl'ie. Botnu-h-al'- y it is 'ir..-minor. Ixng ago it "'.he iry of th used to 1" ground." Ti aiucr mert'.ons it aa fresh perviiicke, 'Mi of bcv." The largi blue flowers me vry preily. lu Tns-ennit is kiiowu e tbe death flower" on acennut cf its bring so cD-pin n ted i(m tograver a urii.-:n widen 1 beginprevail lq, tills counlry. There ning l Is a p:viy leaved variety aud r.Uo a t with white flowers net n y varb-gsiei- 8he then riepped Into the water, divested herself of lier chillies of pare white ami replaced them ith clotbea of a yellow color. Bba thru pw formed her ablutions, earns out of tbe water and. nnasstmed. walked three times round the pile, feilowrd by the priests and her friends, who at this period appeared to l more urgent and loud in their discourse to her ? distract her attention. Xhe then, imaKsirinl. mounted til pile, laid herself down by the side of lire husband and pnt Id bead under her arm. turning hernelf toward him. Then they sprinkled largo quantities of oil and afiaw on tha pile. The fatal fire waa then arpbrd, and amkl loud bourn and while the fire readied her I distinctly be id hre utter the words Nirva! NIrva!" I wi very near her during tbe different parts of the ceremony aud could have saved her life by merely batching her, aa ihe would then have been defiled and would not have been permit ted In hare the honor of aarrlllriug bee i l'V T A ! FOR MEN 350and4Qp CCustom shoemakers make one pair uf times and charge from $8J)0 to $12.00 for them; 1,000 pairs of CRAWFORDS are bring made in the harne time. 41101 aAf rt, oeir. tht But tn saving her life I stood tbo eliance of bring torn to pieces, and I certainly should have been hronght to a court martial for disobedience of n, for the English In those daya wen strictly forbidden to meddle with tbe curiom and prejudice of tho Me J tires. Uaorg fibers' Memoir." f Mdiua an AIM pia HIM ifflt ue Anaksk r fndmttmt. LOCAL ACtSCT: mJr SWOtt or-de- NYE-'- S We Trezt &q4 Cure I STtaSH-nafa- w. Tkmat Non InwblM, v soi Bar IDmm. Uiuaaail h4 IjuiiI Truabla. AWiina. BtmaMi. lamM. Hlridw TfoulilM, Kmal Onnsloiau. Chroal Umw or Hwl IHwm Ni-si- h INwiiw, I'l'iw. M. Vilas' Ilf, KMiWt, rlMl Tvuakle. Ski IN wlulHi an HkuMUiB. iMma auM, f Ika lanlx Pile. kUtals kurnl TroukiM. Uolna tor fela aoki, Hn Tim Wwa. Hof IknC11 Hiamli, loanaiaia. W.. u4 fe.leSi ksiax FrtvMe M Ofennla IM Trwtafkl IfVara. Write fne Hraf Hat raaaat rail. free Frea, WM 10(1 ut Weakr Men f aiiiuia If re near frost M w Wl ICtebniMa. tMM.ii YOU ABB' TUB VFHT rXMHUlf W AST TO T41.B 1VX M kav praroamir afelll I reftse CHRONIO r . tv Mklktuw tha woof tuUatMV ualnMlillfmikMH reS' bum, e gatia oca wb CANT rt'tai.tsH SImm aii ItoiM a in Ii reals ruvAT. iMacaaaa vvM teirat I wnSdam. tkl Hraaa, qUm of ua la prova aw skill . TfeiktaawsiMi kiaa l siwikw DBS. SHORES & SHORES, Eipert lai, IK-- Cured. Pay aWhen ul at Wa aaia gab ifeaa Sial re SI BRASON-AHI.- a our. TMmde area aur aoTO. ihniiMaiU of oaitani hiva ladmue re NoW Vfh W AKTTO, lHR a Tull all tha Mtort aoHafauadlM 111 Mill safe iw M ereiaq! a Manlreie. TSI orello Sonlaal Wak-iwuaiaftM. Mwwnuw. SfkklllX Vaiteaeale. Mkewaaf ifeePiwteroOlaed I Manl Uiim. I'wnm, Iheintart, DM-arMa.. iVaMaelai MlaoA Foliaa. aa. ail wrABNFSaKS of ann. omca liulKN: li.B.HIf.a.1 Baaalaat fleli tndkii aa halldar. ft. . IA IX WklhlMlM Bn. Spicialists. 2482 Ofdm Utah. mhmI fl tal -- a. 1 SILVER PLATE THAT WEARS. Wa carry a half doxea of the promt pent plat d lines, and ran show you goods In plate that will surprise you. Wonderful stridea have been made along thia line and our stock' contains pieces of Silver Plate, (hat cannot he fold from Sterling Silver except by Ihe tamp. Aa Iron-cla- d guarantee goes with our Plated Ware, and your table will look 100 per cent better when ll'a there. J. S. LEWIS &CO. Jewelers and Opticians. J TaKe a IiodaK With You BASEBALL BUTTE VS SALT LAKE. The M relag Tfeara Tire. There Is a legend to ths offset that Butte, July 2. In a list less gains Untie won from Balt todav. Urui-ett- e tbe thorn bionics on f'hristmsa day, for Balt lAtke and M'TUl for It la said that 8L Joseph of A rims Butte were the particularly bright three landed near Glastonbury and tars, cai-- making a difficult estrh. atncfc his staff In the ground.- It took Captain Glmlln was pm nut of the root, grew and blossomed every Christgrounds in the eighth for kicking. mas day thereafter. Tbe tree waa Bcorc R. H down by a Puritan of the time hewn Butte 7 2 deed he Salt Lake ..3 5 2 of Cromwell, but in doing thisfrom Us Batteries Hoon and 8penoer; Easliffi cut hia leg. and chips Cylag ax blinded him. The trank, though and Hauaen. separated from tha root, grew and BOISE VS. SPOKANE. flourished, and for many yeara slips and blooms from the tree of St. Joseph Spokane, Wash., July 1 Boise took were sold by the merchants of BriatoL today'a game by outplaying Spokane In every department while Wright waa lag It Ocatlr. almost an enigma to the local batters, sent off tbe dlcpatch Hia Consin-- We Score R. H. E. to stop your model coming. Bat you Botse . , 8 10 had put one word too many, ao we 1 8 Spokane . a truck It out . Wight and Hanson; Dammann and Real Artist Ob. indeed! What ward Stanley. did you atrlke out? ST. Mm VS CLEVELAND. Ilia Collate You had written. He ia not to eeinn. aa 1 hare only just disrev St. Jjftnf. July 3. Cleveland dries ered I cannot paint today." So we td Rl Louis In n llatiess game. eras sod eat 'todsv--" Punch. , J FROM $1 UP. WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF SUPPLIES AND ADVICE. |