OCR Text |
Show a mechanic, was found dead in his bed in Salt Lake City, death being due to alcoholism of the heart, Tremayne haying been a beavy drinke A fight for fewer saloons and better ree ion of those that continue in business is on in Davis county, the movement having its in i 1 Kaysville Alonzo Watson, a Salt Lake boy, while riding his bicyele alongside a etreet car, holding to the car, slipped and fell, his hand being thrown across the rail and cut off, The state board of land commissioners has completed its purchase of jand on which to locate the proposed Piute reservoir, near Marysvale, at a cost of between $30,000 and $35,000. Four cases of smallpox have develeped in Ogden within the past two weeks, bit it is believed a rigid enforcement of the quarantine law will prevent a further spread of the disease, The state organizer of the National Humane society is endeavoring to enlist the efforts of the school children throughout the state in a warfare against the mistreatment of dumb animals. It is estimated that there will be 6,000 uniformed men and 100 floats in line in the parade to be held im Salt Lake City during the convention of the Commercial Travelers, June 18, 19 and 20. Leonard Boutwell, who says he is a son of the late Governor Boutwell of Massachusetts, has been arrested iq Salt Lake for attempting to get money on a check issued on a bank tn which he has no funds. rial for the it, heart | if Ό thetrees Lookatthemwave— My whatabreeze! —3 your Ajerendeaseense— Sintellingkaae, AMEER OF AFGHANISTAN Habib Khan, ameer of Afghanistan, “Beloved of “Lamp of the Congregation,” Light of the Faith,” and “Seeker After God's man, “because you didn’t followit.” “What do you mean? I—” H i x an official war against British the wise man laughed heartIndia. He has not declared war yet, but he has | fly.Then“Don’t you see,” he replied, allowed 20,000 of his soldiers to invade India and τ : tack the frontier guards The first result of this “nowthat it is too late, that you beindiscreet act will probably be the withdrawal gan on the wrong end first?”’—Judge of the subsidy of $600,000 a year he has been GIVING HIM ENCOURAGEMENT. Mrs hours the track. Track ὶ | }| | the are keep i in until the of the new road year, iy 1, after which, it is announced, the men will be put back to work Ὶ has ind Kyrle Bellew p] the “Gould Τε ψ Mrs. } Mr future, be ( Mrs. Burke and Bishop Potter It seems “Do you think your father would| that one time when he was sick he had his tonsils cut out, or suthin’ of the sort, and now when he sings you can’t tell it from a phonograph, scrapin’s and all, They just have him on the go the hull time from one church festival to another, and from sociable to party, till it’s said he’s most worn out by the continual round of dissipation not to mention riotous livin’—Puck. THE RISING GENERATION, Master—You want large wages fot ἃ b0Y who's had no experience. aapae it eter for ae when I don't acta Opinion. know how?’—London “Man,” didactically began Prof. Broadhead, “is the only animal that laughs—” “Eb-yah!” broke in the Venerable Grouch. “And that’s b’cuz he is the only animal that owes money to another animal and is therefore obliged to laugh whenever the latter animal gets off his favorite funny story.”— Puck Ρι don’t he matters “We pul I . much Ν ab did ve figured promins Miss Cuiting—You might try. You can’t make it any worse! ] f re ] at as i is 1 Se a i n.’ ' as Coney Island of the West. Finest Bathing in the World. Largest and finest Dance Floor and best Music in the State, Held’s Band all summer. Bicycle Races twice weekly. For recreation and pleasure go to Saltair, Trains every 45 min, Living in Suspense. It is a miserable thing to live in suspense; it is the life of a spider.— Swift. A PILGRIMAGE TO ZION. Commercial Travelers Preparing for Their Annual Convention. Salt Lake City—Great preparations fre being made by the residents of this city for the Commercial Trayelers’ fifteenth annual convention. For three days, June 18, 19 and 20, the jolly knights of the grip, their wives, sweethearts and customers from Utah, Idaho, Colorado, Montana, Wyoming and Nevada, will be the guests of this city—three days and nights that will be crowded full of pleasurable events. It is estimated that a million yards of bunting will be used in decorations, the work having already begun, while countless: thousands of electric lights will literally turn night into day. All of the many resorts will be running at full blast at that time and will keep opem house for the Commercial Travelers and their friends, special programs of entertainment being prepared by the management of Saltair, Lagoon, Wandamere, the Salt Palace, and the dif ferent resorts. There is to le 8 parade, the greatest in the histury of the state, in which 5,000 uniformed men and hundreds of floais repregenting the progress of western develop. ° ment will play an important part, Fifteen brass bands will furnish music, there will be baseball games, bicycle racing and other sports, feasting, social entertainments and a re newal of old-time friendships. It is expected that this meeting of the Commercial Travelers will be the event of the year in a city noted for its hos pitatity to the visitor and pleasure seek +r, as thousands from all overthe covntry will no doubt take advantage of the reduced rates announced’ by the railroads to visit Salt Lake in the most joyous season of all the year. Yes, | howli father; I ha Gen. Jouvert Pienaar was talking reporter about to a Washingtor a West African o Ἰ(Ο181. “It Is in that man ‘s territory.” said Gen. Pienaar, ‘that the blacks are still branded. The man neglects his work. Well intentioned, but lazy. In his ignorance he suffers al] sorts of inlquitles to go on among his people. “Yes, he is lazy and neglectful. In the last heat he was taken sick and a physician was sent for. sald tu the physician, ‘what is the matter with me.’ “The physician frowned at the fat, flushed face and, frankly enough, replied: ““The trouble with you, sir, is that you are suffering from underwork and over pay Lost to Us by Incredulity. Knowledge of divine things for the mos 3, is lost to Nearer the Soil Mr. and Mrs. Egg at children es ed the with the greatest troubie by the “I should 1 studyi youl 10ney Education. 1 you lied.” only All firemen.—Los 101 were V Ang Siberia’s Many Minerals. Foremost among the miner thou wi a Ailment One Comparatively Easy to Cure. in their night clothes and we ed into the lower ha W | t The Modern my im-/ UTAH’S FAMOUS WATERING PLACE. “I want you to tell me frankly,’ he The Reason. It De Auber—How do you like landsveape? Do you think I can prove it any? GALTANRscent Official’s a rms ich Sait Lake City His TROUBLE WAS NOT ORGANIC. € in doesn’t go in fer a town house, for he believes that in the growth of society, the hoteig must serv) in a large measure the purposes of private homes. You Farmer Hornbeak—That ‘pears to Frances Pruyn d the characters, the function which Mr, Martin eception to the Duchess d’Uzes, and the te: F. J. HILL DRUG CO. A Great Favorite. |be the general impression. en the Ward McAllister for the three great functi: George Gould, WRITE US τ... Stackpoles nephew, that’s | here from the city, is a wonderful en| tertainin’ young feller? elf. als in which Mrs. Drug Line Farmer Bentover—I understand that > f the year—the And it is in the 5 Mrs. Woodson—Indeed, I am. τ οἳ self-conscious taining King a Oo BY RETURN MAIL Giving Himself Away. She never knew he was only a waiter, for he had basely told her he was a gentleman of independent means. One hot day they were sitting in Hyde Park. He felt very drowsy; she felt very loving. “John,” she whispered, “do you love me?” “Eh? What?” opening his eyes. |. ‘Love you? Of course I do, darling,” and again his eyes closed. “How much?” she asked; and he dreamily said: “Roas’ beef, shilling, sir; taters, tuppence; cabbage, tuppence, sir; bread, | penny; half-stout, tuppence; one an’ | ten, please, sir.”—Royal Magagjne, | Cardinal Michael Logue, archbishop of Ar origir IF YOU WANT iT know while I was away Henry went fishing and the neighbors said he came home with a beautiful “skate. Mrs. Bronson—And is that why you are so pleased? Mrs. Woodson—Certainly, my dear. llooked in the encyclopedia and found out that a “skate” is a large fish. ) REAL RULER OF IRELAND He has tact, 100 Atlas Block, Sait Lake City. Bronson ~You appear pleased, my dear = drawing from the British government; the sec- oes without ar T man riding on Our facilities for handling your account unexcclied. We make liberal advances en all Utah Stocks. SHEWAS INNOCENT. this youing man n BROKERS SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE Didsomebodyyell? of magh and primate of all Ireland, the man who is hurt me if I was to ask him for you?” regarded byall, even the British government, as “Hardly. But there’s no telling| The fruit growers of Weber county the “real ruler of Ireland,” quite appropriately took what he will do if you don’t say some-| have organized an association which a leading part in the centennial celebration of the thing pretty soon!” will take care of the fruit shipments archdiocese of New York. Not only is he a fellow Cutting Out Losses. countryman of the majority of the people of the from that county, and in future it is “Ts bridge still popular, Mrs. diocese, but he is the direct ecclesiastical descendexpected that fruit will be shipped in train loads instead of carload lots. ant of St. Patrick, who was the first bishop of Gamble?” “Yes, Mr. Thrifty, it is with me—I Armagh; the Armagh cathedral, like that of New Frank Gilbert, a 10-year-old Salt York, is named after that saint, and Armagh is play every evening.” Lake boy, was accidentally shot and “For stakes?” Archbishop Farley’s home county. dangerously injured by a playmate “For high stakes.” Cardinal Logue is possessed of the truest sort who pointed a target gun at him, “Tt must be an expensive pleasure.” of patriotism, a patriotism that urged him in the thinking it was not loaded. Thebul“No, one evening I win and the next let struck the Gilbert boy in the neck first speech he ever delivered in America—for this is his first visit to this country—to urge his hear- time I lose.” Not only in Utah, but in southern “Well, why don’t you play every ers never to forget the old sod, but not to allow Idaho and western Wyoming the wool | their love for their native land of their fathers to other evening?” growers are joining in the movement render them less devoted citizens of the land of | started in Salt Lake for the storing Nothing New. their adoption, where no man could say that he! of the year’s clip until the present Miss Passay—This is my twenty low prices are broken and better had not a chance to get on in the world. | third birthday. | prices offered. It was Cardinal Logue to whomthe British government owes the defeat| Miss Pert—What? | Benjamin Hopkins of Henefer, em | of its half-way homerule measure. John E. Redmond had undertaken to ae Miss Passay—I say this is my twen ployed as foreman of a repair gang| it adopted by the national convention. The opposition of Timothy Healy, Didn’t you knowj | ty--third birthday. William O’Brien and other politicians would have had little weight, for the | at the Devil’s Slide plant of the Union it? people knew the antipathy that exists between the two factions, had it not Portland Cement company, near OgMiss Pert—Well, I declare I didn’t. | cen, was instantly killed by falling been for the pronouncement of Cardinal Logue that the bil was utterly un- | It has aged terribly since I first saw| from an elevator a distance of fifty satisfactory and that any politician who endeavored to secure its acceptance ΡΕ feet to the ground, by the convention would incur the grave suspicion that he was endeavoring | to deceive his countrymen in the interests of the ministry. The archbishop One immediate result of the meetA Peacemaker. ing of the good roads advocates in οἵ Dublin and the bishops of Kildare and Limerick joined in the ecardinal’s “You're a liar!” exclaimed the first | Salt Lake was the appropriation last denunciation ind the measure waskilled man. | week by the Salt Lake city. council Cardinal L« gue was created a cardinal in 1893 when he succe¢ ded the late “You're another!” retorted number | of a sum of moneyto assist in the im- primate, whose coadjutor he had been. He is a stern disciplinarian, as some two. | provement of the road leading out of of his clergy know, and will tolerate no shirking of duty. ‘Calm yourselves, gentlemen,” interthat city to Ogden. posed the peacemaker. “It is quite The fifteenth annual convention of possible that you are both right.” the Comm« reial Travelers will be héld Juat in Time in Salt Lake City June 18, 19 and 20. Rates have been granted by all the Policeman—I just called to say that Mrs. Bradley Martin is in the limelight once railroads, and it is expected the greatyour dog license had expired | more, not as giving a ball that cost more than τ ; |} est crowd of the year will be in Salt Mrs. Sniff—So has the dog. He died| any other ball ever given in Ar a, OF as man | Lake on those dates this morning. aging mamma marrying he r daughterto a foreign L. U. Colbath, one of the most | earl, but as the mother of the director-general HER CANDID OPINION, widely known mining men in the of New York society, the man who has extended τόμο. country, died at his home in Salt Lake its bounds to include 2,000 of the elite instead of on Tuesday of last week. He came the original 400—Frederick Townsend Martin, to Salt Lake in 1870, and had been better known among his intimates as “Bachelor” connected with the Ontario Mining | Martin, he being a single man company since 1872 | The passing of Ward McAllister and the panic The movement recently taken by left New York society demoralized, | and it was the Utah woolgrowers to store this Bachelor Martin who pull a it through the past year’s ip until the market becomes son. Now he is goir d to plan enter more actory to them is said to untess of Craven, be 1 great success rhe he jaded tc 1 ooked for storage is under said to be 900,000 pound in the A @ ᾿ thr r, sO much di fferent pe him. <a So the young girl went away andj} K eeptothecourse ins, in Jersey Jingles pondered and while she was ponder-| —Leonard H.R ing a nice young felidw came along. | He Was poor but handsome, with/ broad shoulders and so forth, and she fell in love with him and married him But after they had been married a little while, he grew suddenly extrava- | gant, and would probably have squan- | dered al! her money had he not been | killed by dissipation | Then the young gir) married a noble- | man. And after they had been liv-| ing together for several years, he, as | is the nature of all true noblemen, ! began to abuse he) At last, not be ing able to stand it any longer, she secured a permanent divorce. Then she went back to the wise} man. “Oh, wise man, > said, “your ad-| vice has bee. very manneus. What | have you to say for yourself?’ “It was your fault ἀνά.ike wise : Fitzgerald was born in Trolleydodgerville March 10, 1872. After a course in Brooklyn public schools he went to Manhattan college, gradu with the degree of bachelor of arts. Then he studied law in {11ο Νι k law school, and was admitted to the New York bar when 21. It wast ng before he became interested in Brooklyn poli ties. He was a delegate io the national Democratic convention in Kansas City in 1900, when W. J. B was nominated for the second time. He was then a representative in « es having been elected from the Seventh New York district to the I sixth congress in 1898, when only 26 years of age. He was re-elected to t Fif venth, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth congresses | 18 1 The senate passed the bill granting 8 perpetual leasement and right of Way across the Fort Douglas military reservation to the city of Salt Lake for the purpose of laying conduit anda water pipe lines. CHILD, COLE CO. Abe’ ee “Third, marry a nobleman.” being one of these ond a scund thrashing and the third may be the withd rawal of the title, “Your Majesty,” conferred upon him by King Edward when the ameer visited India lately. He was invited to India in the hope that the of an Asiatic nation of 300,000,000 people prospering and peaceable under British rule would reduce his bumptiousness, for he had begun to entertain the idea that his capital, Kabul, was the The sight of the riches center of the universe. of India seems only to have stirred up his cupidity and the predatory instincts of his robber aneestors The ameer is an autocratic ruler and has an armyof 50,000 men. This by no means accounts for his full fighting force, for every man of the 4,600,000 population is a born fighter and goes about armed at all times, ready to defend his own life and take that of his neighbor if a good opportunity rs. The Kentucky mountaineers could learn much from the Afghans. ameer is not a aa ruler, as Orientals go. He has a total lack of reometimes what we would lying” of the nervous si nnounced: that the Russ ordered him into a tree to hard below to kvep him there. When unable to hold out an ropped upon the bayonets below. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAIi Mail Orders promptly handled. Whatisthatblur? “First, you can be an cld maid and Congressman De Armond of Missouri is 17ο IN ST. ~ Streak reakingthesky. three things that you can do: e in uj om will descend the mantle of John Sharp Ἢ liams when the latter goes to take the senate seat to which the Mississippi Democrats elected him last fall, the Democracy will want one or two others to bear the brunt of battle on the floor. Fitzgerald appears to be sure j; | 14 | η | And not knowing what to do with} she consulted a wise man. He} devote yourself to charity. “Second, marry the man γῶν| on μεθμβε for the purpose, leading a simple life | When the young girl’s case was pre- | sented to him, he said: “There are | John Joseph is gradually, but surely, working his way to leadership on the Democratic side. While ] lived all alone in a tent he had built) Democracy ESTABLISHE Twomilesaminute, Once there was a young girl with barrels of money John Joseph Fitzgerald, or “Fitzie,” as he is known among those who enjoy his friendship, is one congressman who is making a name for himself in the present alleged “do nothing” session. John Joseph is a member of the minority and a loyal follower of John Sharp Williams, hence he is in his element in these closing days of the session, when John Sharp is making campaign mate- old reliable 1862 house. TWO MILES A MINUTE. NOT HIS FAULT. lishing a United States assayoffice at Sait Lake City Lee Hong, a Chinese'truck gardener of Ogden, was struck by a street car ‘ast week and seriously injured. The state convention of the Social ist party was held in Salt Lake City on last Saturday, whem candidates for state offices were nominated The Newcastle Reclamation com pany last week filed articles of incor poration. The company will reclaim | by irrigation lands in Iron county. Nephi Bowthorp, of Holliday, was found unconscious in the suburbs of Salt Lake one day last week, and died the next day, death being due to apo plexy. Frank Campbel!, who hired a horse and buggy from an Ogden liveryman, and was lat found in the act of selling the outtit, will face.a charge of horse ste: Ρ+ A RISING CONGRESSMAN A bill has passed the house estab- remayne, + PeeSS SEEEE ESE You may be absolutely safe inyour | Jewelry purchases if you buy of the EATEN. OnIILOG + + Ο U ΤΦΒ UTAH STATE NEWS George SS FSS ------ knew —Judge aa BY P. SIORIS. CALT LAKE CITY Σx PEOPLE TALKED ABOUT = PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY τ se τ a ERGATIS R 8 5 é of Siberi f e wealth, are gold, fron, I inur meraids, topazes, asbestos r's salt, rock gait, and. in all probabi naphtha “+ |