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Show DAILY PAGE TWO. UTAH STATE THURSDAY, JOURNAL, GOLD, 8ILVER JET BLACK. CLOTHS OF AND OCTOBER 20, 1904. HER RIVAL WILL MARRY HART McKEE. MISTRESS CHARGED HER WITH STEALING JEWELS. SANDSTORM FROM BULLION MINE ORE ARRIVES AT RENO. Mies Anna Fitzhugh la Said to Hava Pawned Gifts of Million-air- o Admiror. Wears Same Divorced Wife of Millionaire Agreed Millionaire Mina Owner la in Charge Parisian Comedian d to Separation SettleDrastao on Stage and in Street of Transportation Attompt ment For His Sake. Her Exchange Plan. Mad at Robbery. NKW YuKK, Oct. 20. Claiming1 actress the Anna Fitzhugh, (known a Ann Fitzhugh Powell in private life), pawned pearls and diamonds given to her by a millionaire friend and then explained their disappearance by saying my maid has stolen them," the maid, Annie McEle-guhas brought auit for 1100,000 damages and defamutlon of character. Miss Fitzhugh was formerly with the "Wizard of Oz" company. She has a handsome automobile, tine gowns and costly Jewelry. Now she la being starred in the "Baroness Fiddlesticks." When a process server from Lawyer George Robinson's office dodged into the actress' expensive suite in the Glenmore apartments, at Fifty-fift- h street and Seventh avenue recently and thrust the law papers into her hands she exclaimed, "What are the papers served on me for? She took my Jewels and pawned them. I pawn my Jewels? Absurd! said Miss Fitzhugh. "Why. I have a bank account and all my jewels. Why should I want to pawn anything? The fact is the maid, whom I trusted, took advantage of my absence and took a necklace to some broker and got 1450. When I taxed her with taking it she broke down and confessed that she had pawned It. Her excuse was that she used some of the money to meet household expenses. "Investigating I also found that she had pawned a pin and another neckMy lace. all of which I recovered. sister blamed me for not prosecuting her, but I could not bear to be hard on such a poor creature. Now she has repaid my forgiveness by this silly action, which la based entirely upon fabrications and will not stand, as my lawyer says, for twenty minutes in a courtroom. The complainant in the action says: I was the maid of Miss Fitzhugh of several months, and she circulated the report that I stole her jewelry just to keep knowledge of the pawning from the young millionaire who gave most of it to her. But I could not be a scapegoat, and the suit which Attorney Robinson has brought for me Is the result. Miss Fitzhugh employed me when she was living at the Anso-nl- a apartment hotel. I was with her at the Cumberland hotel, at 829 West that -- street, and at the Glenmore apartment house, where she now lives. It was at the last named place that money began to run short and the jewelry was pawned. "She told me to take the Jewelry to pawnshop and pawn It under the name of 'Mack.' I raised perhaps $5,000 on $15,000 worth of property, and turned the tickets over to Miss Fitzhugh. " I will have you arrested for stealing the property, she said to me later. The pawn tickets are made out in your name of "Mack, and there Is nothing to show that I got the money.' In it any surprise that I sued her? Ninety-fourt- h ; Sixth-aven- ue Weak, Nervous People. We have received letters from all parts of the U. S. highly recommending Dr. Gun's Blood and Nerve Tonic, until the faith we had In the remedy has been fully sustained. We had confidence from the very beginning that this medicine should make cures, hut lacked that assurance that comes after many successful trials Now that we have been upheld In our belief we want to Impart to others our confidence. Nervous, and unsteady people, weak, fleshless people, pimply, pale, or sallow people are all victims of weak, watery blood. Make new, rich blood, to be forced through the system by the way of the arteries and disease cannot remain. This Tonic cures disease by giving you strength to resist it. All druggists sell it for 75c. per box, or 8 boxes for $2. The Cablets are to be taken after each meal. They turn the food you eat Into rich red blood. Persons who take this Tonic gain In good solid flesh from 1 to 8 pounds per week. Violets. A letter with some violets! Ah, how my fancy backward sets. Until my brooding thought begets A face beguiling! Twin rosebud li)s In Cupl'MIne; A brow where curls or-droo- p and twine; Deep eyes that tenderly meet mine. And answer smiling. And fastened loosely on her breast A bunch of flowers! What fairer neat Could blossoms have wherein to rest In any weather? To hear her dear heart beat, and know If, when Ia whisper so and so. It tlirubs wee Idt faster Uh. 1 wonder whether! Scenting their delicate perfume, 1 cateh somewhat of her sweet bloom A loveliness that lends a room Through which she inishcs The wilding wlnaomeneaa of spring, The vernal air and light that cling To apple branches bourgeoning. And vernal grasses. Ah, violets, you cannot dream How much of blessing and of beam You bear with you Joy's perfect gleam Transcended never; O fragrant firstlings of the year. Because she loves you doubly dear. Your lover I, and, year on year, Her lover ever! Clinton Scollsrd. Another Man Ahead of Him. An Irishman who had been out of A job many weeks found In the river that flowed through bla town the body of the keeper of the railroad drawbridge. He Immediately betook himself to the superintendent of the division and applied for the vacated job, saying that he had seen the body of the former keeper In the river. Sorry. said the superintendent, briefly; the place has been filled. We gave It to the man who saw him fall In." Harper's Weekly. ....Free Street Fair and frrniw ' Ogden, Utah! Ona-Sida- KKXO, New, Oct. 20. The bullion from fifteen tons of ore, taken from the fuinous Sandstorm mine in Goldfield. arrived In Reno Wednesday The bullion la night from Sodavllle. In charge of T. L. Oddie, a millionaire, who is one of the principal owners of the mine, but ia divided among sever;! I men, whose identity is kept a secret to prevent robbery. Certain persons in Goldfield know the gold is en route to San Francisco and have made one attempt to steal some of it The bullion left Goldfield in a wagon train under an armed guard of several men liist week and on reaching Klondike Springs, fifteen miles south of Goldfield, darkness overtook the train and camp was ordered. A close watch was kept on the gold and In the middle of the night Captain William Parry, a pioneer frontiersman, saw two men trying to carry off two of the sacks. He fired at them and called for them to atop, whereupon they dropped the sacks and disappeared In the darkness. They are thought to be following the men In of the bullion and the possession greatest precautions are being taken. Cures Winter Cough. J. E. Gover, 101 N. Main St., Ottawa, Kan writes: "Every fall It haa been my wifes trouble to catch a severe cold, and therefore to cough all winter long. Last fall I got for her a bottle of Horehound Syrup. She used it and haa been able to sleep soundly all Whenever the cough night long. troubles her two or three doaea stops the cough, and she la able to be up and welL 25c., 50c., $1.00. For sale by George F. Cava. POLLY'S PROFANITY 8H0CKED LADIES OF ELITE NEW YORK, Oct 20. To the utter dismay of Mrs. Herman Oelrlcha, her pretty parrot haa contracted the habit of low, coarse and violent language. It was at an informal affair In New port recently, while a gcoup of well-knosociety women were present that the break occurred. Polly was hungry, and was constantly demanding a cracker, steadily refusing to reply to the questions of the fashionables, retorting to their "What a pretty bird and "What pretty plumwith "Polly wants a age he has cracker. After the demand had been repeated a half dozen times without any volunteering to get a cracker for the bird Polly burst out with a streak of profanity of such a wlerd, wlzsy and sulphuric quality that It promptly classified for a post graduate diploma. Shocked, the women fled from its presence, while Mrs. Oelrlcha ordered a butler to place Polly In disgraceful retirement for the rest of the season with a Newport bird fancier. Mra. Oelrlches might not have given the bird such a severe punishment If a moment before It opened lta floodlets of profanity she had not proudly explained to her guests that she herself had taught Polly every single word In Its vocabulary. When Mrs. Oelrlches returned to town the other day she did not bring Polly, who was a present from her brother, the late Charles L. Fair, killed In an automobile accident In Europe. NEW YORK, Oct. 20. On indisputNEW YORK, Oct. 20. Rejane, the most Parisian of Paris' comedians, able authority It la learned that Mrs. arrived here this evening on La Lor- Genlvieve Phipps, who recently was raine with Germaine, her daughter, divorced from Lawrence C. Phipps, son of Andrew Carnegie's old business Hnd twenty-seve- n persons of partner, is on the verge of nervoua comedy company. Ninety-fiv- e trunks for youraelf collapse because A. Hart McKee Is someone exclaimed. "What going to marry Mra Cordelia Baxter-Tev- ls alone, in Egypt. Her agony of mind sensational gowns have you in them? "I hope they are sensational, she ia caused by these hitherto unknown replied. "One la of cloth of rold; one facts: That she was Induced to agree to la of cloth of silver, another la black as jet. I am to play the Lady of the any settlement with Phipps, so as to Camellaa in black. This was never leave her free to marry McKee. That McKee caused her to submit, done in Paris." one said. "But so that his own wife would have no "Bravo!" some hasn't the sea tarnished the gold and chance to base an action tor divorce, silver of your gowns? leaving his own ault unentangled. That, In accordance with this unThey are in specially lined mine boxes, she replied, smiling. "I am derstanding, Mrs. Phipps accepted not afraid. I have no beautiful gowns $1,000,000, where she had demanded that I do not wear on the stage. One $3,000,000. That she consented to the espionage of my good friends said to me recently: 'Rejane, how do you manage to of the two nurses who betrayed her, have such beautiful street gowns? I these servants to be with her whenreplied: They are the gowns that I ever the two children were under the wear on the stage.' She said: 'Oh, I mother's care. cant wear my stage gowns In the McKee la the son of J. Sellers McThe reason is, Kee, who made 820,000,000 as a glass street! I replied: my dear, that you do not know how manufacturer of Pittsburg. Mrs. Tevis, to dress. Surely one ought not to who sailed on the same steamer with wear In a modern play, on the stage McKee, and who has won the heart street, gowns which one could not of Mrs. Phipps' squire, has millions in her own right. wear In the street of real life. This astounding romance of society "You are to teach that in your and riches la complicated further by school here?" she waa asked. My school here ia In the air, she the fact that there haa been a secret The place to talk of It ia McKee divorce and that McKee soon replied. here, and not In Paris, where it waa will be able to marry. Its latest phase vain gossip. The truth la that the la colored by a cablegram that Mra. Paris municipality offers me and to Tevis and McKee left Paris for Egypt. This information reached Mrs. Phipps, no one else a lot In the Champa for a playhouse, and it la to re- whose rage as a woman scorned has vert to the municipality In twenty-fiv- e nearly prostrated her. Looking pale and careworn, the years. I insist that my lease of the lot former brilliant and dashing matron should be for fifty years at least. I hurried through New York today with may win, if Mr. Frohman will aid me. her two daughters and their nurses en He may aid me by establishing a Re- route to Denver, Colo. It was the first time her friends had seen her since jane theater here. "It would exchange companies with the divorce was granted In Denver, the Paris Rejane playhouse. The Re- and they were shocked at the change jane theaters would not be a trust; that had taken place. No one believes that it was for the they would be true true means exchange. I would make of them a settlement on her of the income from conservatoire, where students would $760,000 that prompted an amicable be taught by me and paid tor playing settlement of the case on the bus-banIn public at the same time. terms; and It is reasonably Inferred from the fact that it was announced that she had a complete deFRIGHTFUL MORTALITY. fense to all of the husband's charges Due to Brighte Disease The Fearful that there were reasons not made public why Mra Phipps consented to the Increase 8hown by the Census. ea eek, Commencing Monday, October 24th, Diavola Looping the Loop. The weeks amusements furnished bv the Nat Reiss Southern Carnival Co. The larged and most complete Carnival company in America today. more Free Attractions, more Presenting Real Features and more Wholesome s than any other organization traveling. Many thrilling and New Sensations. HONORABLY CONDUCTED. TRUTHFULLY ADVERTISED. Dont forget to see Amuse-ment- DIAVOLA Looping the Loop in the ...STADIUM... d's The Intervening figures Increase as averaged by 1890 and 1900. show the years. A horrifying picture nearly 59,-0- 00 TEA terms of the separation. Mra Phipps refused to discuss her affairs at the Manhatttan hotel last night, where she spent a few hours before resuming her Journey from Atlantic City to Denver, whither she is going to return the children to their father. "When this has been done, the young woman will be alone tor tne first time since the differences arose between her and her husband. Current report had it for some time that within a short time after she had been divorced or as roon as A. Hart McKee could secure a divorce from his wife, from whom be had been separated eighteen months, he and Mra Phipps would be mairled. Ten days ago Mr. McKee sailed from New York tor Europe on the same ship that carried Mra Hugh Tevla Coincident with the arrival In New York today of Mra Phipps, the announcement Vas made that McKee and Mra Tevis had departed from Paris for Egypt The day McKee and Mra Tevis sailed for Europe, Mra Phipps went to Atlantic City. So far as known they have not seen each other since the Mra divorce was agreed upon. Phipps now authoritatively denies that he ever Intended to marry McKee. McKee and Mra Tevis are silent as to their plana Mra Meanwhile, the friends of Phipps are seeking a way to divert her mind from her troublea His Lift. J. W. Davenport Wingo, Ky writea June 14, 1902: T want to tell you I believe Ballard's Snow Liniment saved my life. I was under the treatment of two doctors, and they told me one of my lungs was entirely gone, and the other badly affected. I also had a lump In my aide. I don't think that I could have lived over two months longer. I was Induced by a friend to try Ballard's Snow Liniment The first application gave me great relief; two fifty cent bottles cured me sound and welL It Is a wonderful medicine and I recommend It to 25c., 50c $1.00. suffering humanity. For sale by George F. Cava Saved 66 at W Re-jan- es dead within one year, and an army of several times that number of new recruits already primed with Kidney trouble" for the call. What does It all mean? Just this that countless thousands have "Kidney trouble, and not one In a hundred knows that It Is Bright's Disease and that If It gets chronic (does not get well In two or three months) that the victim has been enrolled In this awful When we take the risk of army of death and that there la then only one thing known that stands beyour liking our tea, the least tween the patient and death, viz Fultor Bright's ton's Renal Compound Disease. William Glddings, druggist. you can do is to try it. Is local agent for Fultons Compound. In mry pnb of Schilling! Im Tm b a The dangerous symptoms are: kookln: How To Malm Good Tea, weakness or loss of weight, puffy ankles, hiinda or eyelids, kidney trouble TALKING TREE OF KENTUCKY. after the third month, falling vision, Out on the farm of Will Albert, near drowsiness. One or more of these. Heath, this county, the people of that section are yet wrought up over the RAILWAY ACCIDENTS INCREASE. A report recently issued by the Inte"tulking tree that has been there tor some time. Enormous crowds con- r-state Commerce commission shows tinue to congregate there almost every that the total number of casualties to Sunday to hear the , strange noises the person on railroads in the United that emanate from the tree. The voice States during' the fiscal year ending can be distinctly heard and says June 80, 1904, was 65,180, comprising "there are treasurers burled at my 3,787 killed and 61,343 Injured. This roots. shows a large increase. The total A party consisting of the most relinumber of collisions and derailments able citizens of the country visited the was 11,271, involving $9,883,077 in tree not long since to make a thor- damage to cars, engines and roadway. ough Investigation for themselves as This la an increase of 648 collisions to the noises being heard. They list- and derailments. ened paitlently for several hours and The casualties were an Increase of were preparing to leave for home when 233 killed and of 5,366 injured over the a sudden crash, which has been given preceding year. Four hundred and many times before the marvelous pro- twenty of those killed were passengers duction of a human voice, came. and 3.367 railroad employes and those The mystery yet remains unsolved, injured 8.077 were passengers and 43,-2and so great has the number of peorailroad employes. Included in ple been who have gone there in the these figures are the statistics for the past several months that the tree Is last three months of the year, which now dead, caused by the continuous show a total of 677 killed and 11,418 tramping on the earth surrounding Injured, a decrease from the preceding the tree. quarter. These figures do not Include The only theory that has been sug- casualties at highway crossings. The gested Is that a man was killed under report says: the tree In 1862, and while many do "As the accident bulletins are Issued not believe In spirits. the facts are to furnish the public with facts, this so plain and the voice can be so dis- exhibit of the dangers or railroad tinctly heard that they cannot dispute travel is an exhibit which the most the fact. A family of people who lived conservative must agree should be there many years ago became so fright- termed alarming, and will not be made ened from thb voice that they sold the subject of comment In this their farm at a sacrifice and went west but It will be proper to observe place, that nnd are now living In Texas. Paducah each succeeding bulletin to the mass of evidence meaning to enforce the observations and recommendations The Bast Doctor. which were made In the last report of Rev. B. C. Ilorton, Sulphur Springs, the commission. . Texas, writes, July llth, 1899: "I have used In my family Ballard's Snow A Love Lsttsr Liniment and Ilorehound Syrup, and Would not Interest you If lookthey have proved certainly satisfac- ing for a guaranteed Salveyou're for Sores, The tory. liniment la the beat we Rums or riles. Otto Dodd of Ponder, have ever used for headache and Mo writes: "I suffered with an ugly pains. The cough syrup haa been our sore for a year, but a box of Bucklena doctor for the last eight years." 85c., Arnica Sslve cured me. It's 60c.. 81.00. For sale by George F. Salve on Earth. 25c at Jesse J. the best Driver's Cave. drug store. News-Democr- One Edible Bird's Neats. Coron, a little island of the Philippines, is one of the chief sources from which come edible birds nesta It has sheer walls of rock fronting the sea, In which are deep holes where a certain sea swallow builds lta nest The wild aborigines, Tagbanounas, collect the nests from the cliffs by means of long vine ropes, selling them to Chinese traders, who export them to their own country, where they are considered a great delicacy. The nesta are three Inches long and bring $12 (Mexican) for bunches of ten or twelve, according to size. The gum of which they are largely composed Is a secretion from the salivary glands of the swallows. Cures Chills and Fever. O. W. Wrlrt, Narogodohes, Texas, Ilia daughter had chills and says: fever for three yean; he could not find anything that would help her till he used Herblne. His wife will net keep house without It, and cannot say too much for It. 50c. For sale by George F. Cave, By The Big Show. Harry DuBeel, On the High Electric Wire. Afternoons and Evenings. FREE! FREE!! FREE! . ECLIPSE STEEL Coles Hot Blast RANGES Stoves Heating Wheelwright Bros. Crockery PHONE 2476 WASHINGTON AVENUE. HARDWARE AND CROCKERY. Your Old Front Door Store 147-- Z Is Open FrMt to a change, so you should call and see the Splendid Lin of Doors Just received, as well as a large line of Porch Columns, by 143 Utal TWENTY-FOURT- H 21 Lumber Oregon 8T. IF YOU WANT TO SEE A Co PHONE MAN OR IF YOU ARE HUNGRY prop izho Falstaff Frisco System CHICAGO A EA8TERN ILLINOIS R. R Double Daily Trains BETWEEN St. Louis and Chicago MORNING AND EVENING o.efl m.-i9:-1P om LaSalle 8traet Station, Chicago 9.30 a. om Union 8ta. (Merchants Bdg) 8t Louis, lth terrn ornlng or evening connection at. both through modem julpment entirely new and DOUBLE-TRAC- K RAILWAY. lancet, with practical and approved aafety PP verfinF lulpped ibstantlally constructed. THE JOURNAL Carrier, OneMonth, 60c One Month, By Mail, 611 |