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Show DAILY WESTERN PACIFIC BUTTERFLY IS AGAIN ACTIVE L I1 uu! SURVEYORS IN THE FIELD NEAR LORD ANGLESEA MUST DEBTS. WELLS, NEVADA. PAY HIS Go on Little Doubt That Gould Intanda to Bankrupt and Aristocrat May MatriHas Peculiar the Stage Hava a Lina From Atlantia monial Experience. to Pacific. LONDON, June 8. The sensation of Last evening a Deseret News has this to aay of a revival of 'Western Pacific the day is the bankruptcy proceedings that have been instituted against the operation: man After apparently abandoning the Marquis of Anglesea, the young line aurveyed in northern Nevada who in the six years that he has held about a year ago the Western Pacific the title has provided so much material ia once more showing signs of decided for gossip and writers of gossip. When he came into the estate his Inactivity. Newas estimated at 110,000 a year come M. the C. Spence, According to included Plas Newydd, Anglesea, waa and Lake Salt who in man vada mining renamed he of which the Anglesea castle, and the representatives yesterday, in Staffordshire. ToPark once are Beaudeaert Pacific Western mysterious are estimated at two more actively engaged in the field day his liabilities a million dollars, of driving stakes, the latest survey pas- and millions one and of town which of sing within three miles of the secured. are Mr. In addition, says Wells, Nev. Arrangements were made yesterday Spence, the same corporation has a number of men at work driving for by which the creditors will immediatewater, taking samples of the name and ly receive three shillings on the pound, sending the sealed Jars back to Chica- and ultimately they will get all. In the go for analysis by the same expert meantime the young marquis will be chemist who some months ago tested compelled to radically change his mode the waters encountered west of Grants-vill- e of life and already he has been forced to part with some of his most prenear Great Salt Lake. In course of conversation with one cious Jewels. The Marquis of Anglesea must be of the engineers Mr. Spence says that the surveyor told him that they were rated as an anachronism. Extravagant trying to find a line from Salt Lake beyond description, a fop, a lover of to San Francisco, which would not things beautiful, he belongs rather to exceed a grade of 1 2 per cent How- the days of the dandles than in the ever, to obtain such a line it will be materialistic 20th century. He is ofnecessary to do some extensive tunnel- ficially described as the fifth marquis of Anglesea, the Earl of Bridge, Miding. Gould the no doubt seems dlesex, and Baron Paget of Beaudesert, that There crowd are behind this project with the county of Staffordshire. The marquls-at- e was created as a reward for that long cherished object in view of ultimately owning and operating a chain Earl of Bridge who commanded the of railroads which will extend from the British cavalry at Waterloo. His matrimonial experience has been Pacific to Atlantic tidewater. It is eseccentric as his life. He married the as 28 be will Gould timated that by June beautiful will Whbash when the into Pittsburg, daughter of Sir Guy Chet-wyand into the line its city, they separated while on Smoky open their railroad a the common report Gould Mr. honeymoon, thereby giving he to Pittssettled that $75,000 a year on from being Utah, Ogden, extending her. In 1900 Sir Francis Jeune anburg, Pa. About the time reports were circulat- nulled the marriage, but a few months ed that the Western Pacific had censed later the two met on the Riviera and operations In Nevada came another a reconciliation was effected, with the from the east to the effect that work result that the annullment was set had been stopped on the extensions de- aside. Despite this, however, the two signed to enable the Wabash to rench have never lived together. So successful has the Marquis of tidewater at Baltimore. Emphatic denial was forthcoming in New York on Anglesea been as an amateur actor Thursday for this story by Winslow that London theatrical managers are Pierce, chairman of the Western Mary- trying to Induce him to accept a professional engagement. land directorate. Mr. Pierce said: It ia rumored that the "Diamond since a time never been has There or the "Butterfly Lord. as Marquis," construction Western the Maryland was undertaken at which the work has he is variously known. Is soon to ap progress as rapidly as It is progress- pear on the boards of a London theater. ing at the present time. On the work Lord Anglesea turned his ancestral between Cherry Run and Cumberland at Anglesea Castle into a thea-t- e chapel the contractors forces are larger than and has given many performances they have been at any previous time, for society and the neighboring visiting In of 2,500 the neighborhood and are men. Work is being urged with all country folk. The theater is a tiny affair and holds possible haste, our consulting engi neer now being on the work Itself for only about one hundred and fifty per the purpose of expediting the con- sons. The carvings on the ceilings struction. The tidewater terminal work show its former ecclesiastical uses. Is nearing completion and is practical- Anglesea has his own company. It is composed entirely of professionals exly in its last stages of construction." UTAH STATE JOURNAL WEDNESDAY, JUNE S, 1904. Our June Sale Will Commence Monday Your Ice Free Carpets Alaska Refrigerator For One Month With Every THAT IS PURCHASED FROM US COMMENCING TODAY AND ENDING JUNE 15TH WE WILL FUR-NI8- H Go-Car- ts Your Ice Free for a Month WILL STAND BEHIND t THE WE Hammocks IN MANUFACTURER GUARANTEEING THE "ALASKA TO BE THE BEST REFRIGERATOR ON THE MARKET. WHY? BECAUSE IT USES LESS ICE AND GIVES at considerably reduced prices BETTER SATISFACTION ANY OTHER. THAN three-quarte- rs one-quart- er !! i : I J , I 1-- i f ; i nd V 't t 11 :i ; i lf'i i. ? ; i'i cept himself. I,: ELKS REUNION AT PROVO. You Dont Have to Be an Elk to Enjoy the Fun. r! j While the gathering in Prlvo June 15. reunion of all the 71ks of the state, yet a cordial invitation to attend is extend to all people of the state. Elaborate preparations are be' Ing made for the entertainment of thousands of visitors and every visitor, whether Elk or not, will receive a hearty welcome, and everything that can be done will be done for the comfort and entertainment of each and every, person within the gates of the Garden city. It will be a gala time (or all, and we hope none will feel that they will not be welcomed because they do not happen to be Identified with the 18, 17, 18, is a Elks organisation. The mayor, city council and the Commercial club of Provo have Joined us in our efforts to make this occasion one of the grandest social events in the history of the state. We will have four days of high class entertainments. twice each day. Ballon ascension each day. Vaudeville and other shows running day and night. Parades, band contests, miners rock drilling contests, and other attractions too numerous to mention. If you dont want the blues, come. If you want pleasure, happiness, health, and the grandest social time you ever had, come. Excursion rates on all roads. Bee large posters. Loop-the-lo- ! J " 'J ATTENTION, DEMOCRATS! The Rio Grande trains leaving Ogden at 7:15 and 8:10 will leave hereafter at 7:45 and 9:80 a. m.' & & His latest performance was as Pekoe in Alladin and His Wonderful Lamp. On this occasion he wore jewels said to be valued at $1,000,000. He is now preparing to appear in a new society comedy-dram- a written by himself. The play is to be performed at the Gaiety, as he calls his theater. It will be remembered that Anglesea was recently robbed of $40,000 worth of Jewelry by his valet. AERIAL WAVE3 MAKE THE STARS TWINKLE The great aerial ocean over our heads is made up of an infinite multi tude of moving currents and streams of varying density and temperature, all in process of continued change and adjustment due to the heating of the atmosphere by the sun during the day and cooling by radiation at night. The atmosphere is full of little wavea or streaming masses of air. somewhat resembling the ripples In a shallow stream of water flowing over grave. And if the astronomer will point his telescope on a bright star and remove so as to look directly the upon the object glass, illuminated by the light of the star, ho may see these streaming currents dancing In all their complexity. It is these little waves in the air which cause the twinkling of the fixed stars. As the waves are passing before our eyes they act like prisms, deflecting the light first this way and then that, producing flashes of the spectral colors, and sometimes almost extinguishing the stars, so that momentarily they appear to go out. In high dry countries .where the atmosphere is quiescent, these waves are generally diminished in Importance, and astronomers have noticed that In such localities the scintillation of the stars almost ceases. eye-piec- e, air Is quite free from agitating currents and the astronomers can make good observations. It is worthy of remark that but for the brightness of the sky the stars could be seen in daylight. Even as matters stand, some of the brighter of them have been seen after sunrise by explorers in high mountains, where the air is very clear and the aky dark blue. If we could go above the atmosphere the sky would appear perfectly black and stars would be visible right close up to the sun. Astronomers observe bright stars in daytime the by using telescopes, dark tubes of which cut off the side light; and persons in the bottoms of deep wells have noticed stars passing overhead, the side light being reduced by the great depth of the wells. There the long-foc- us THE GROWTH OF MOUNTAINS. There Is something almost lifelike in the growth of mountains, writes Garrett F. Servias, in Success. They do not attain their maximum stature all at a leap. The first great uplift of the Sierra, Professor Lawson thinks, elevated the range about twenty-fiv- e hundred feet. Even that was not done at a bound. It took time where the gigantic pressures were at work. Vast periods also elapsed while the growing mountains swelled upward to their culmination of fourteen or fifteen thousand feet. Perhaps they are a till DEMOCRATICSTATE CONVENTION A DEMOCRATIC STATE CONVEN-tio- n Is hereby called to meet at the Salt Lake theater. Salt Lake City, Utah, on Thursday, June 9, 1904, at 10:80 oclock a. m., for the purpose ot electing six delegates and six alternates to the national Democratic convention and for the transaction of such other business as may come before the convention. The chairmen of the several coun- A good time to leave Salt Lake City for St Louis is at 1:15 p. m., when the Burlington route's daily through sleeper leaves. No hasty breakfasting; no hurriejl packing; no running to catch early morning cars. ties are hereby requested to make the Juab 20 has its common marks everywhere. An old man stoops, shrinks in stature and becomes round shouldered; an aged tree sheds its branches, breaks off at the top, and finally tumbles Into ruin; a time worn mountain loses its Inspiring peaks, smooths down Its Jagged outlines, rounds off Its steep slopes, sinking lower and lower under the constant wear of the elements, until only a line of hills remains to mark the place where tremendous summits rose into the region of perpetual snows and flashed back the sunshine from ac rown of glaciers. It is relatively an easy task to calculate the age of a mountain range which, like the Sierra Nevada range, had a new birth at the beginning of the quarternary time, the latest period In the geological history of our planet It would be far more difficult to offer the measuring tape of the centuries to the great Appalachian range, which lies just behind the Atlantic seaboard. The Appalachians date back to the remote carboniferous age, which ended so long ago that nobody, probably, would be willing to risk a guess at the number of millions of years which must since have elapsed. The Appalachians may have been magnificent giants, in their day, but time has conquered them as it will also conquer the rugged Sierras, and now their flanks and tops delight the unalarmed eyes of railway tourists, winding on swift trains of parlor cars through the rich valleys that have fattened on the substance of disintegrated Kane Millard Morgan 12 5 green-carpet- ed FOR YOU necessary arrangements for the election of delegates to the state convention in their respective districts and to forward at as early a date as possible to the secretary of the state committee a list of the delegates elected to the state convention. The apportionment to the several counties is as follows: Beaver 10 Box Elder 18 Cache 87 S Carbon Davis 19 10 Emery ?. ..! 8 Garfield Grand 8 Iron 9 growing. Age TWO GOOD TIMES A good time to arrive in St Loula la at 7:19 a. nt, when the Burlington routes daily through sleeper gets there. Streets not ao congested; hotels not so full; places not so hard to find. i . ..j , Drop me a postal and I will write you all about It MU Ticket Office, 79 W. Second 8outh St R. F. NESLEN, General Agent, 8alt Lake City. ... t i:. i ii:i :'-- 30 i . IOC DC 8 Piute 4 Rich 5 124 2 88 16 18 12 7 64 11 18 Salt Lake San Juan San Pete Sevier Summit Tooele Uintah Utah Wasatch Washington Wayne Weber 4 50 Total 524 The committee has arranged for a rate on all railroads of one fare for the round trip, tickets on sale June 8th, good returning June 11, 1904. By order of the Democratic State 'committee. FRANK J. CANNON, Chairman. P. J. DALY, Secretary. Salt Lake City, Utah, April 80, 1904. Acute Rheumatism. Deep tearing or wrenching pains, occasioned by getting wet through; worse when at rest, or on first moving the limbs and in cold or damp weathver-durer, is cured quickly by Ballards Snow Liniment Oscar Oleson, Gibson City, 111., writes, Feb. 16, 1902: "A year ago I was troubled with a pain in my back. It soon got so bad I could not bend over. One bottle of Ballards Snow Liniment cured me. 25c, 50c, $1. Sold peaks. The glory of a sun is gone when it by Geo. F. Cave, druggist pusses from light to darkness, from solar incandescence to planetary opacHALF FARE RATES. ity, and likewise the splendor of life For the occasion of the Democratic li-a mountain departs wVn Ir sinks state conventioln in Salt Lake on from white to green, and from the June 9th the Rio Grande Western has abode of snow to the levels of the made a rate of one fare for the round trip, Ogden to Salt Lake and return. These tickets will be placed on sale Hava You a Cough? and will be good until June June 9th A dose of Ballard's Horehound Sy11th. rup will relieve it. Have you a cold? A dose of Herbine at bedtime and freTEACHER'S SPECIAL RATES VIA quent small doses of Horehound SyR. G. W. rup during the day will remove it return and $47.50 Chicago TJfy it for whooping cough, for asth42.50 ma. for consumption, for bronchitis. St. Louis and return ; i . The Overland Route P'4 PATRONS OF THE Union Pacific Ralroad are assured that all human Ingenuity has been'gdopted to' protect them against accident lions Mil- Pacific In pany of dol-ape- nt by the Railroad Com-- I iars have been Union of mporovement This ment the Its equip line is renown ed for trains ther and. on time, and the general superiority its fact arrival of its service. XJnion IPaoiflo RONS Three trains daily to the East the fastest trains arriving many hours ahead of all competitors. Full information cheerfully fur-- . nlshed on application to G. H. COR8E. ed r . Joe McGrath, 827 East First I street, Hutchinson, Kan writes: have used Ballard's Horehound Syrup In my family for 5 years, and find It the best fend most palatable medicine I ever used. 25c, 50c and $1. Sold by Geo. F. Cave, druggist. Mrs. St Paul and return 42.90 Omaha, St Joseph, Kansas City. 25.00 Tickets on sale May 80th and Slst and June 8th and 9th; good returning until September 15th. 8topovers allowed; transit limit ten days In each direction. IT WILL PAY YOU TO INFOR8ECURE COMPLETE MATION ABOUT THE NEW 6ERVICE 8 4; Union Pacific, and Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Line INFORMATION IN REGARD TO RATES, ETC, WILL STOP-OVER- S, BE GLADLY FURNISHED. C. S. WILLIAMS, 106 West Second South St Commercial Agent, Salt Lake City, lKh |