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Show DAILY 2 TAKEN MARRIAGE VOWS KME TIMES WOMAN HAS WORLD'S RECORD. MATRIMO-NIA- Divorced Onco Each From Four, married and Divorced Again From Two. L Re- HARRISBURG. Neb., July 5. A matrimonial record presumably without a parallel In the connubial annale of thla or any other civilised country haa been made by a not uncomely middle-age- d woman, who haa Just sold in Scotts Bluff county, her ranch north of here, and gone east to live with a man to whom she wai recently married In fulfillment of a promise she made to him when they were lad and laas in Ireland. of She haa earned the diatlnctlon vows nine the taken marriage having times, of having been taken to wife by seven men, of having been divorced from four, of having remarried and been twice divorced from two, and of having borne a child nr children by every one of her seven husbands aaVe the husband with whom she is now living. She Is the mother of seventeen children, nine sons and eight daughters, all of whom are now living and all but three of which have children of their own. Ann Moore waa born and reared in a county in the north of Ireland and was accounted the moat buxom and comely lass In all the countryside. All the lads were in love with and courted her, but Thomas Fltxgerald waa her favorite suitor, and to him she early plighted her troth. But he waa poor and unable to support a wife and it befell that soon after the engagement of the young couple waa announced, ahe waa brought by her parents to this country. Thomas and Ann hade each other a tearful farewell with many protestations of love and fidelity on the part of both of them and with the promise on his part that within a year he should come over the sea and take her to wife. From New York, where they landed, the parents and their only child made their way to a village in northern Ohio. Letters from Thomas came regularly to Ann and letters from her went regularly to him for several months. Then a misunderstanding arose and the letter suddenly ceased. Doubtless no serious consequences would have flowed from the misunderstanding had It not happened that soon after it arose the Moores set out for the west and Thomas set out for Ohio to Join them. The Moores in the hurry and excitement of getting away forgot to tell the postmaster where to forward their mall. Thus it came about that when a letter came from Thomas telling Ann that he was on his way to Join her it had to be sent to the dead letter office, and that when Thomas himself arrived he discovered, not only that his sweetheart had gone away, hut that nobody knew whither. Well he set out in quest nigh heart-broke- n of his sweetheart but it was a futile search, and he waa soon compelled to abandon It and go to work to earn for himself a living. Ann did not know that her father had neglected to tell the postmaster where to forward their mail, and as time went by and she did not hear from Thomaa she became convinced that he did not care for her and grew bitter in her feeling toward him. In her disappointment and bitterness she lost somewhat of that pride and discretion which had marked her earlier life. Her father went from town to town In the middle west in quest of the fortune he never was able to grasp and she and her mother went with him. He was a man of some education, but he had neither trade nor profession, and thus was compelled to turn his hand to whatever offered. Ann lost none of her comeliness as she grew older and wherever she went young men were attracted to and paid court to her. Not long after she left Ohio sh was married to a young Irish lawyer in a middle western town. She admitted thnt she did not love f him, but he declared he could win her love, and she accepted him on these terms. He soon became addicted to drink and then became cruel to her. Have You a Cough? A dose of Ballard's Horehound Syrup will relieve It. Have you a cold? A dose of Herblne at bedtime and frequent small doses of Horehound Syrup during the day will remove It Try it for whooping cough, for asthma, for consumption, for bronchitis. Mrs. Joe McGrath, S3? East First street, Hutchinson, Kan writes: "I have used Ballard's Horehound Syrup In my family for 5 years, and find it the best and most palatable medicine I ever used." 35c, 10c and SI. Sold by Geo. F. Cave, druggist and a few weeks after a child was born to them he deserted her. She secured a divorce and within a year wa married to another man an honest, industrious mechanic. They lived happily and children came to them, but within a few years he died, and a few weeks after his death another child was born to her. Her father was poor, and in order to support her children she was corniielled to go out to service. With her children she went to a neighboring city in the hope that there she might better support them apd herself. By another marriage, more children and another divorce within a few yeara were the fruits of her going. She went to a smaller town and there within a short time she was unhappily married again. Thus her matrimonial ventures went on, every one adding to her already large family of children. One of her ventures was an honest, farmer in Iowa, who told her he wished a housekeeper and would give her and her young children a comfortable home. He was her sixth husband. Before she married him she had been taken to wife by five men, divorced from four, and remarried and from two. With her sixth husband she came from Iowa to western Nebraska and settled on a ranch in Scott's Bluff, county, where they lived happily together for a number of yeara, and where she bore more children. Husband and wife labored hard and had made for themselves and the children a comfortable home, when suddenly he fell 111 and died. Mrs. Conroy, for that waa her husband's name, was grief stricken at the death of her husband, for he had been singularly kind and considerate with her and she had formed a warm attachment for him. She was getting along quite comfortably as a widow when the real romance of her eventful life developed. One day a tall, man, with a full, reddish-brow- n beard streaked with gray, and with kindly blue eyes, alighted from the train at a little railway station In western Nebraska and inquired the way to Mra Conroy's ranch. What happened when he arrived there only he and Mra Conroy know, but since they were married It became known that his name la Thomas Fltsgerald, and the story of their early love affair has ieaked kind-heart- broad-shoulder- ed ed out Neither of them has been much disposed to talk about their affairs, but from remarks he let drop it transpired that when she was living with her sixth huslwnd he by accident learned who she was and where she waa He forebore then, however, to reveal to her his own Identity or whereabouts, but as soon after the death of her husband as the proprieties would permit, he went to her and asked her to marry him In fulfillment of the promise she made to him when they Were lad and lass In old Ireland. They have gone down east somewhere to live and appear to be very happy. Thus her ninth matrimonial venture, which should have been her first, bids fair to be the most fortunate and fit one she has ever made. SKELETONS DUG UP WHERE INDIANS WERE MASSACRED RENO. Nev., July 5. In making tests of soil near Fallon government surveyors unearthed two skeletons. Close beside the And they qlso discovered two bows and arrows In a fair state of preservation, together with a white daguerrotype of a fair-hairgirl about sixteen years of age. The place Is the site of a massacre among the Piute and Shoshone Indians that took place In 1857 in which 1.000 Shoshones and 500 Flutes were killed. Leslie Sinalll of the Fallon Standard, and Ralph Fortune, a hotel man. will lo ve for the scene with a plow to unearth. If possible further evidence of the terrible affair. Old timers state that the dead bodies were never burled but in the half century of more that has elapsed most of them have already been buried by the sands of UTAH STATE JOURNAL. JULY TUESDAY, 5, 1904. the hotels, morrow, and already boarding houses and private residences are crowded with delegates and visitors, while special trains with ad- F BEAUTY TEST ' FOR TEACHERS ditions to the advance guard are still A . - A AHA The main purpose of the socieof 8CRAWNY ONES ARE TRYING TO FURY AND DESWILL BRING ty, which has a total membership GROW FAT. scattered throughout 4.000,000 TRUCTION. nearly the United States and Canada, Great Rrltain. Australia and other foreign Directory of Child 8tudy Laboratory 8ome Will Be Tropical Hurricanes lands, is to promote a special spirit of Decree that 'Shape' and Brains and 8ome Transcontinental 1 loyalty and earnestness toward the Are Related. Cyclones. Baptist denomination, to the end that, as the old supports of the church are 6. A CHICAGO. July physical 5. seMore gathered to their fathers, the ranks WASHINGTON. July even and the be test Baptist is for ordeal the kept latest in may vere storms than experienced beauty orAmerica during the past ten years are army increased from the Junior Chicago teachers. Applicants from all predicted to occur in the months of ganisation. of the country who are trying workers parts Baptist Representative August. September, and October This Pacific for positions in the public schools are warning Is given by W. T. Forster, the from the eastern coast to the of breakfast consuming forecaster, who declares slope are her In force today. Among foods and quantities exercises and with tolling that the storms are to come with auch them are the International president, the masseurs in an endeavor visiting Rev. of H. Chicago, John In Chapman leave will havoc force that they to put on or take off weight. their path over the entire territory Drs. A. C. Dixon of Boston, Lathan A. A rule of the board of education that McCrandall of Minneapolis, John through which they pass. shall satisfy the medical applicants will deliver who These storms will be tropical hur- Neill of Wlnnepeg. examiners that they are of proper Cal-le- y, Walter convention sermon; ricanes and transcontinental cyclones. the and the angeneral secretary of the Baptist slxe, height, and weight, The hurricanes will come from the will be nouncement candidates that south and southwest, off the Gulf of Young People's Union of America; H. deto their physical transcontinental Francis Perry, of Toronto, and Joslah graded according Mexico, while the buildto led tissue the has velopment, storms will wend their way from the William Bailey, editor of the Biblical ing struggle. territory west of the Mississippi val- Recorder, Raleigh, N. C. Of the 650 women who are taking ley. Mr. Forster says indications' the academic examination at the West point to a series of these destructive DAMFINO HIS NAME; Division high school more than a hunRIGHT WAS ATTENDANT will be far winda and the results dred who are inclined to scrawnlness more serious than people would supare 5. seeking to obtain embonpoint. NEW YORK, July Supreme; pose. Of the candidates many are plump was During the past few years severe Court Justice Kelly, in Brooklyn, and young women fresh from the rosy some at legal papers yesterstorms have swept the country and looking but the number also schools, country he said: when much serious damage has resulted, day, those whom nature has to Includes in this is case?" the Who plaintiff but the character of those predicted not been kind. Their weight is not Court Attendant Damlino," replied by Mr. Forster are. manifestly, far the to their height, and in proportionate most dangerous the country has Alexander Cabre. to form resemblance little have they Whats that? asked Justice Kelly. known In many yeara new dictum A classic from the modela said I answered your question, Mr. Forster makes no attempt to locate these storms or to tell where they Cabre. The plaintiff is Gulseppe Dam-fln- o. child study laboratory to the effect that the best specimens, as all canwill reach their greatest force. He didates are Impartially called, are well said Justice settles That It, Kelly, to announcethe confines himself now proportioned physically was issued toment that they will come and the des- smiling. day, and in assigning positions cometruction with which they will be atliness will be considered as a factor. tended. He does not forecast them for MEXICO CLAIMS THE MEN 8MALLEST OF According to the directors of the any particular locality, but says that laboratory mentality and physical they will sweep with remarkable force are 5. A closely related. ExperiGUADALAJARA, beauty Mex., July from the directions already told. as much mental smallof the child study debe believed to who is the man, For many weeks Mr. Forster has haa the research has est In been has been, partment the world, attracting In at work of the the library been Alfrom which data the directors for attention several yielded days. great his naval observatory completing new axiom. a Dr. 27 years of age, he Is have deduced is he though conditions all the and following maps direct20 Charles assistant name of this Inches The tall. C.Krauskopf, over the country. So positive is be only that his forecast is correct that he Lilliputian la Francisco Varela Acos- or, who is recognised as an authorsays he could fortell the approximate ta and he la said to be a native of ity at the board rooms, phrased it in time the storms will reach a certain San Juan de las Lagos, state of Jal- this way: The healthy person develops symlocality, but that he is content in stat- isco. He is fairly well educated and voice. tenor a metrically. Beauty and brains go topossesses good hurricanes fact will the the that ing In the test specimens it is gether. surely come. found a fine mind generally goes 8CHOOL. 8UMMER CATHOLIC that Mr. Forster gives a general forecast 'well a with proportioned body. for the month of July, In which he CLIFF HAVEN. N. Y., July 5. Having reduced the matter of phystates that a severe cold wave will reach the Atlantic coast about July 8. Many distinguished prelates of the sical beauty and Its value in the school Preceding this chance there will be a Roman Catholic church as well as a room from an abstract question to a short high temperature wave and an- large number of lay members have concrete proposition, the examiners other material rise in temperature fol- gathered here for the thirteenth an- will sort out the candidates for posinual session of the Catholic summer tions into three classes, according to lowing the cool about July 15. July 21 will usher In another cool school of America. The formal open- the physical perfections or inferioriwave, which will not, however, go as ing took place today and, it will be ties. The candidates who fall into the low as the one of July 8. The hot- early In September before the profirst class will be given the advanttest wave of the month will come gram la finally concluded. A large and varied course of lec- age over those less fortunately enabout July 26, and the most severe storms of the month will rage on the tures has been arranged. Special top- dowed. In previous years a dearth Atlantic coast July 5 and 18, and again ics will be treated and among the lec- of applicants has forced the authorion August 1. August, Mr. Forster turers will be Mgr. J. F. Loughlln, D. ties to override the classification to says, will be a cool month, the first D., of Philadelphia: the Rev. W. S. a great extent and to assign positions half of the month being exceedingly Kress, of Cleveland. O.; Professor J. regardless of markings on the beauty C. Monaghan, of the department of test With 650 applicants for places, cool. commerce and labor, Washington, D. however, this year a new rule is to the be followed, and the preference will be YOUNG BAPTIST8 TO C.; the Rev. James J. Fox of RALLY AT DETROIT Catholic university at Washington; given to teach era of the more ornathe Rev. Joseph M. Woods of Mary- mental type. 5. anThe DETROIT, Mich., July land, Professor J. D. M. Ford of Harnual international convention of the vard university, and the Rev. John P. Deliciously refreshing. That deBaptist Young People's Union of Chidwlck, former chaplain in the scribes 8TANDARD Soda Water: all America will be called to order to- - United States navy. flavora and for sale everywhere. long-distan- DEPART. Not 8 Atlantic Mail for gait foti City, Provo and all points east Lake City and Intermediate polnta daily No. 8 Atlantic Limited for Salt Lake City, Provo, :4Ss.a Not 12 To Salt Leadvllle, Pueblo, No. 4 Den- ver and all points east, daily Atlantic Express for Salt Lake City. Pueblo, Denver and all points east, dally 2:15 p 7:66 pjn ARRIVE. Not 8 Not 6 No. 1 No. 9 ce Pacific Express from Denver. Pueblo, Provo. Salt Lake City and all points east, dally Pacific Limited from Salt Lake City, Provo, Denver and all points 12:55 p.m aaUF 11:45am. Pacific ' Mall from Denver, Pueblo, Leadvllle, Salt Lake city and all points east dally 2:40 am Local from Sanpete 7:60pm Through Sleeping Oars to Omaha v City, Chicago and St. Louis. New York andBJ' I. A. BENTON, General Agent pertinent, Salt Lake City. PassenserDa C. A. HINBY, Ticket Agent, Ogden. O. B. OILHON, Agent, Ogden. TIME CARD in Effect June No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. 19, 190L Depart for North of Ogden. Pocatello and Hutte 1:25am. Express, dilly 7 Fast Mall for o and Portland, 12:05am. dally 11 Cache Valley Ex7:15 am. press, dally Arrive from North Ogdon. 8 Fast Mail from Portland and Butte, dally 7:00am 12 Cache Valley Ex10:10 am. press, dally 10 Pocatello Express, 0:00am. dally Depart for South of Ogden. 8 From Portland, Butts and Pocatello, for Salt Lake City 7:25am. 9 Poca-tall- Local to 4 Salt Lake lllOarn City Cache Valley to Salt Lake City 10:45am 2 Limited for Salt Lake 3:20p.m. City, dally 10 From Portland and for Salt Pocatello, 6:30 p.m. Lake City, daily Arrive from South of Ogden, 9 Butte and Pocatello Express from Salt Lake City and Intermediate points, dally. ...12:45am S Atlantic Expreaa from Salt Lake City and Intermediate 8.00 am. polnta dally 7 Pocatello and Portland Express from Salt Lake City, dally. 11: 20 am. 1 Fast Mall from Salt 2:80 p.m. Lake City, daily 11 Cache Valley Express from Salt Lake :55 p.n. City, dally No. 12 No. No. No. ' No. No. No. No, ed the desert PHOTOGRAPHERS AT ATLANTA. ATLANTA, Ga., July The annual te convention of the Southern Photographic association began In Atlanta today. Leading photographers of Alabama. Mississippi and Georgia are In attendance. The convention will be devoted to a discussion of recent Improvements and discoveries In the methods of photography and to lectures and demonstrations by prominent members of the craft 5. Tri-Sta- TEXAS FARMERS CONGRES8. BRTAX, Tex., July 5. What prom-Jsto be the most Important meeting ever held by the Texas Farmers congress opened today at the State Agricultural and Mechanical college. The sessions will continue until Friday. Many distinguished agricultural authorities will address the meeting. Much attention will be given to the boll weevil question. es Golden Gate Coffee TIME CARD, in Effect June 190. 19, DEPART. held in the highest esteem by critical coffee drinkers. It has that distinct flavor and aroma obtained only from the perfect blending of rare old coffees, properly aged in the country where the coffee is grown. No. No. 2 No. 4 8 is Only the highest grades of coffee are selected for this brand and the greatest care and skill exercised in blending and roasting. I and z lb. aroma-tigtins. Grind fresh each day not too fine. ht J A. FOLGL'R dl CO.. San Francisco Importers and Kpnittn of Fine Old Cofftsi mmagggg Mall and Express.... 8 :20a.m. Oveland Limited for Omaha, Council Bluffs, Denver, Kansas City and East,dally Atlantic Expreaa for 2:50 p.m. dally 7:20 p.m. Denver, Omaha, Council Bluffa, Kansas City and all polnta east, ARRIVE. No. No. I Pacific Expreaa from l Council Bluffs, Omaha. Denver, Kansas City 3:16 and east, daily Oveland Limited from Omaha, Council Bluff Kaneaa City, Denver a.m. and all points east 2:40 p.m. dally 2:50 No. 101 Fast Mail C. A. HENRY, Ticket Agent p-- A. R MOSELEY, Trav. Pass. Agt, OGDEN, UTAH. |