OCR Text |
Show The capital,' Teheran, has no lessaban , twenty large artificial streams (lowing through it, constituted It the manner described from tho.undcrground ' currents. ' The land lying adj icent to t heso canals Is entitled to the use of the water, thp amount being icgulated by law. Kach district Is under an overseer whoso duty It is to see to the proper 'application of the water and that there Is no ditches. . waste. individuals have also Wealthy private constructed ditches for their own use, . - water to their own tenants; but.lands contiguous to their canals is entlth d to certain water rights, even if f t rnishlng the 15th of next February, which will be made in the chairmanships, as Col. be tiie anniversary of the blowing up of Henderson knows that such men as Can- the Maine, in Havana harbor. Those non, chairman of the committee on Ap- who are pushing the suggestion expect, propriations, and Hitt, chairman of the to succeed, not. only in getting the bodcommiUee mi Foreign Affairs, Miave be- ies interred in Arlington- - cemetery-bu- t come fitted by their long experience to in getting Congress, to provide a line do better work than new men could pos- it onunienl for them. sibly do. ft Is predicted by tho-- e who General Miles', annual report, which ought .o have pretty pood ideas on ho is short and formal, rei; orates his subject that there will be more changes that the sjreng.li of the regin tji e committee on Rankhy and Cur- ular army be based on ilie population rency thairin any one of t ho important oLthocouutry- one soldier to every one commit teos. The old chairman of that thousand inhabitants. committee Walker, of Mass.--wa- s not Recent experiments with wireless :el- e acandida for reelecilon totho present having shown that ships thirty- Houo. , rJ hat is i he committee which egfaphy six miles apart could accurately commuwill report the financialbill which it is nicate whh each other by Die use of tiie rly ir sons for the belief that few changes will on f reco-mendall- on - 1 not belonging to the. owners of the ditches Ti.Ic to t ho use of water is In- believed thoTIouse-vvlif7 Marconi pass-easystem, Secretary Long hiay herent in the lalid and each section of the coming session. C ask uigress to provide for the equipand Is certain of Its water supply. President McKinley is anxious to go ping of our war ships wi ll Marconi Whe i the Immense amount of labor to Nasuville, io par icipate in the welbut it is by. no means cerconnect- come to the Tennessee involved in sinking shafts volunteers, who tain he jvill do so, as ilie. same reason, iugJhem, by underground, J unnclsi.' were she last ttHeuve tiie "Philippines that proven: ed the War Department considered together with the fact that ho desires to show his appreciation of doing business with Marconi when he methods are the most t yet heir conduct In leaving tiie transport primitive only (Continued on 9tb page.) , after mar-can but in vogue, the having embarked for home to redisvel at the patieuco and iudus ry turn to the lighting line. If he can get NOTICE. lu of such his message to Congress completed by the accomplishment played Uni ed Si ales Land Office, Sail Lake gigantic but necessary tasks. Some that, time, lie will probably, go to Nash7 Nov. 8, 139J. Utah, City, sections of Persia, - especially those ville on the 27lli hist. V 7 To.whom it may concern; along the natural rivers, could add-tTito loss of the eruiser Charleston, No. tee is hereby given iliat the State-ot heir irrigated area by the use of stor- which was wrecked on an uncharted Utah has filed in this office a list, No. age reservoirs; but the greater part of 7, of lands selected by saidState under coral reef off the coast of . enrs; -- Anglo-Saxo- n . i o tlibcbntTtry lias ho flood wafers To store, the moiling snows but serving to keep alivo the underground streams. Even In this tyrant-ridde- n country, it has been found best, nay, necessary to maintain govenment supervision of irrigation waters, xwhicL is the ve ry IHo blood o the nation. With system of Water control, the laiid would again be desert. dc-poti- c, se WASHINGTON LEXTER . - : Luzon, w'as the direct result of the careless manner in which i hn 3 unish do everything. "As sooiras'ihtt insurrection is disposed of the Navy Depart uen Twill have a correct chart of Philippines made, so as to avoid such accidents in the future In fact, the Rennigorrhas boeninigaged in the work of making a correct chart of those w'alcrs for some time. While there is much regret at, the loss of the Charleston, everybody rejoices . that none of her brave crew were lost or in-- j re c k. Admiral Dewey and his bride returned to their Washington home this, .week, and one of the first thinys dene by the Admiral after his return was to sign the papers transferring the house recently - presented to him to Ills bride. Postmaster-Genera- l b'mith delivered s the address of welcome to the postmasters composing the National Association of Postmasters, which held Us second national convention In Washington this-wcu red b y 4 (From our regular Correspondent.) Washington Nov. 20, 1S99. the jv EniTon Hladk ... Col. D. P. Hendersons head has not been turned even a little bit by the knowledge that he Is to ill! the exalted position of Speaker of the House during a Congress which promises to he one of the most Important for many years. He lias engaged the same quarters in Washington for himself and familyMIiatT they The Navy Department is considering have occupied for some jears. Owing to ids accurate knowledge the eapa-bili- a proposition to have the bodies of the es of all the old members. Col. crew of the battleship .Maine brought Henderson will avo i.o difficulty in from Havana and Key West and ini rred making the Important committee as- in Arlington cemetery, with approprisignments of the House. fi here are rea ate ceremonies of a naDonal character, h J u. v first-clas- ok- ti f Sec. 12 of he Act of Congress approved Jul 16. 1894, for the establishment ind maintenance of a Deaf aniLDumb Asylum. The following tract, emoraced in said is , is in a township containing' mineral claims of record, viz: Lot numbered three (3) of Section-seve1 (7). -- in -T- (3()t ownship-thirty south, of Range nine (9), west. Salt Lake Rase and Meridian. A copy of said 1 is., so far as it re- -, to said tract, by descriptive Iia been conspicuously posted! Ih this. llice, for. inspection by jjiuy per sou in crested, and by the public goner- la-e- s sub-divisio- ally. Within the next sixty days following the date of t his notice, under depart: mental instructions of November 27. 1896 (23 L. D., 459). protests or contests against the. claim of ihe sta e to the tract or subdivision hereinabove described, on thqground that, the sairn is more valuable for mineral than for ngri cultural purposes, will be received and noted for report to the General Kami Office at Washington, D. C. ' . t' Failure so to protest or contest within the time specified will he eon si Vrod - sufficient, e v ide n eft of t fie ium;ni i iinm K ch a rn iter of said tract, andtho selection thereof, being otherwise free from objection! will, he rocom ended for approval. FRANK D. IIORRS. - Register. GEO. A. SMITH. . I 4 . First publication Nov. v . , Receiver. 25, 1899. T .A- - V - |