OCR Text |
Show MOBXDfQ air will he conveyed underwent a test this afternoon and the machine drills will be maned tomorrow. The machine drills, pipe and other equipment for the new air line for the South Columbus company, which Is also to buy vlOV'EY for injury to wanted A BOY. u fifod In damage suit court yesterday by Percy 5ya Sadler, by Percy T. Sadler, his Robert Preston, to ilrdiaii. again JStjver that amount for Injuries receiv- In an alleged assault upon bim by the defendant A 130 WW pitied May 28. 1M- - u 14 ?daut choked and lIeed do" plain-an- d mal-treai- ed caused permanent injurlea to nervous system. IK ai The time of the alleged aaaault It' is the latter part of laat May. stricken .idmed by ihe family of the lower limbs are completely ly whose that It was a habit among Mniyxed, Jhe youngsters of the neighborhood to cetrh sparrows to feed the cats, and with another young boy. the victim undertook to take a canary out of n or-t- o rase In the Preston residence. In do so. they unhooked a screen of door and the result was the release the canary, bnt it was picked up by'a Preston neighbor. About this time Mr. appeared upon the scene, his anger much aroused. It Is alleged that he chased the hoy home, a block away cursing him all the time and taking his that hs cap. with the exclamation vonld keep it until be cut bis heart out or broke his backbone. The result of the scare, the doctors claim, was the paralytic stroke. They ray that the shaking given the boy by Mr. Preston was enough to render him helpless, without paralysis. Mr. Preston was seen this afternoon at his home Just through the Eagle He said, Gate, regarding the suit. merely: 'They broke Into my house, atole my canary and released it. The to me hoy who did it was pointed out and I chased him home. I would have I did not given him a good kick, but get near enough." Attorney C. S. Price represents the vi-r- plaintiff. WOMEN IN CONVENTION COLORED The first session of the Western Federation of Colored Women was held In the city council chamber yesterof day and a permanent organisation the Colored Womens clubs of a number of the western states was perfected. Nine delegates from Salt Lake, Ogden, Murray and from Colorado were present At the mornings sesklon and it la expected that delegates from Idaho, Wyoming and other western states will The attendance in be today. federation will be in session today Thursday and will be brought to a close on Thursday night by a Gmd and ball, to be given In the legislative hall at the city and county and building. The convention waa called to order by Mrs. W. W. Taylor of this city, after which "The Star Spangled Banner" was sung by the delegates and an Invocation was offered by Rev. F. P. Green-le- a Mrs. B. B. Nesbitt of Ogden waa selected as temporary chairman and Mra J. E. Emery of Colorado Springs wu chosen as temporary secretary, Mra W. W. Taylor then read the call for the suctlng, after which the following perment officers were chosen by acclamation: President, Mra W. W. Taylor of Balt Lake: first Mra B. B. Nesbitt ot Ogden; second nt Mra Clara G. Ashford of Cheyenne, Wyo.; secretary, Mra William Redd of Salt Lake; corresponding secretary, Mra J. E. Emery of Colorado Springs. Cola; treasurer, Mra C. M. Ernest of Ogden; historian, Mias Leona D. Troutman of Denver chaplain, Mra A. H. Grice of Murray. Mra Elphator Smith of this city and Mra Maud Stallings ot Ogden were appointed to escort the new officers to their seata Each officer thanked the convention for the honor, and said they would do all within . their power to make the present federation useful In tae causa of the colored woman and to make It a help to the National Federation of Colored Women. The convention then adjourned until 2 'clock this afternoon. - UST OF INJURED power from the Columbus Con. com- pany , arrived In camp this morning. Th9 equipment will oe Installed Within another week It will be ready for operation. The grading for the new Columbue Con. mill Is completed; the lumber and machinery hu arrived and Superintendent Jacobson says the contractors are otherwise pushing the constrm-tiqof the plant speedily as possible. u THE NEW MONTANA. To Lead in Irrigation and Mining. The great copper, silver, and gold Treasure mines of Montana, the hu State" of the Union, potent been their Influence in her development and while they are yet far from their maximum output and value, must soon take a second place In the states resources. It is Montana's destiny to be one of the richest agricultural states in the Union. As the foreagriculture of Colorado, now the most state In the production of precious metals, has already outstripped her mines, so in a few years will Montanas farming lead her mines. With lands of surpusing fertility, in which agricultural plant food has lain stored for centuries, with no drenching rains to leach them away, and with a magnificent water supply from the rain and snows which fall upon the high peaks and water sheds of the Continental Divide, Montana's fat cattle and sheep, splendid fruit, heavy grains and varied agricultural products will be become widely famous. GREAT AGRICULTURAL WEALTH. The next ten years," said a prominent official of the Government Reclamation Service, in' speaking of the great present and coming development of the far northwest, will see Montana lead ail the western states in the area of her irrigated land. Her agricultural future is assured and brilliant. She has the land and she has the water all that are needed in the arid region to produce fabulous wealth." Montana has an area equal to that of Franca She has, It has often been stated by various authorities, with all her great water supply conserved and made to Irrigate her rich lands, room tor as dense a population aa that of France. of this great state Over three-fifth- s is drained by the Missouri River and its big tributaries, such as the Yel iowstone, the Jefferaonjhe Milk River and other branches. Strong rivers these are, rushing down out of their mountain fastnesses the AbBaroka, the Snowy, the Big Horn and the Wind River ranges where at elevations of I and 10 and 11 thousand feet the snows are perpetual, melting under the summer suns and furnishing a constant water supply, especialy In the late summer when It Is most needed for Irrigation. Much has already been accomplished by cooperative effort In irrigation among farmers. The irrigated area, according to the census figures, has Increased during the past two years at the rate of about 100,000acres a year and now aggregates 1,140.000 acres. This has been accomplished by the cooperation of small communities and some of the most successful examples are seen at such places as Hinsdale and Chinook In the Great Milk River Valley where farmers have combined, taking up land unr homestead law and der the constructing their own irrigation works, thus owning the land and Lae water and paying no rent or tribute s. to water companies or water u five-yea- bond-hoder- SMALL COST OF IRRIGATED HOMES. Most of these works have been simple diversion propositions without expensive dams and the cost has been very light, land reclamation averaging according to the 1900 census, but 14.92 per acre. The opportunities are legion where bands of twenty or forty or one hundred enterprising fanners with a little money and with their strong arms and good teams may build diversion or storage dams and lead th" e homestead water out upon claims, building up homes upon the desert which will make each and every one of them prosperous and wealthy. The great productivity of Montana's lands Is shown by the census figures. The total amount invested In ditches in Montana up to June 1, 1900, was 14.683.073.00 while the total value of irrigation products for the one year, 1899, was 17,230,042.00. At the rate of increase In farming and Irrigation In the state during the last census decade the next ten years will see Montanas cultivated area trebled if not quadrupled, even leaving out of consideration the vast reclamation works proposed by the Federal government under the. national irrigation tow. 160-acr- ON THE FOURTH. William, aged 30 years, East Fifth South street May lose right eye as result of accidental crack-r- e Johnson, 134 explosion. Ellen, aged 30 years, Popper-Ion- . right knee by a bullet Ball will remain in leg Smith, Shot in lor life. Mayses, Fred, 14 years old, son of Haynes. 175 G street. Cracker txploiled In left hand, burning fingers I. A. iily. Nelson. Christian, aged 21 years, 436 Essr Fourth South street Leg struck urt burned by exploding cracker. Kane, Mary, 11 yea raid t John Kane, Tenth South daughter street. Thrown from buggy as a result of run-tva- y caused by crackers exploding. Williams. Roy, sged 14 years, Sev-jt- h -- CHANGING THE COURSE OF TURE. EXAMINES, OGDEy, UTAH, WEDNESDAY MOUYISG, cupied by sealers aad their families. There seems to be a strong sentiment throughout tbs state for the repeal of these tons leaving only the original homestead law which has worked so successfully to building up Irrigation colonies in the Milk River Valley. IRRIGATION INCREASES MINING. All of this great promise of agriculture will, ho ever, but sdd to Moutan-a- 'r fame as a mining state. Speaking from a miners standpoint." said the Geological Survey official above quoted, Montana's surface has been but indifWe know that ferently scratched. whole mountains exist, of ore too extensive to work because the cost of living for man and beast Is too high. The state has thousands of other mountains of which we know little or nothing. Montana is a vast country of itself; the mountains of its western half cover thousands and tens of thousands of square miles. Now extend agriculture throughout the state, lead the great su earns out of their deep channels and spread them over some millions of acres of arid soil and this mountain wealth ran lie turned to man's account, railroads will iienetrate the desert and Montana can almost supply the world wlih the metals." GUY E. MITCHELL. . GIBLIN USES GUN FREELY Man Whs Charged Negroes With Murder of Gallagher Tries to Kill Someone Himself. San Francisco. July j. Edward G. Gildlu.lhe stableman who swore to the complaint, against James II. Smith and Arthur Williams, charging them with the murder of Anthony Owen Gallagher on Saturday night laat, and wiio testified at the coroner's inquest into the death of Gallagher that union men never carried guns and that be himself hud never dune so, used one quite freely yesterday at the corner of Polk sud Post streets in his effort to murder a man. The scene of the shooting is only a short block from the Excelsior stables. where the negroes were employed, and a stone can easily be thrown from that spot to the one where the shooting of Gallagher occurred. Gib-ll-n was crazy drunk. It Is due to that alone that be did not kill or seriously hurt any one. He tried hard enough, firing five shots at the expressman who was his target, but all the bullets flew wide of the mark. Three of them burrowed deep into the building at llu4 Post street, directly across the street from where Giblin stood with the gun. One hit the front doorpost and fell to the stoop, another lodged in one of the steps of the stoop and the third made a largo bole under one of the side windows of the bouse. Where the other two went has not yet been discovered. Giblin had been loafing around la front of the Excelsior stables during the morning and filling up with bad liquor at a neighboring Polk street saloon. He was primed tor trouble at 9 oclock and in an ugly mood.There are several stories of how the shooting came to take place, but the one which seems to be the correct version concerns the appearance at Polk and Geary streets . of an Italian peddler who was driving his wagon leisurely along Geary street, with no thought of trouble, when Giblin objected loudly to the way In which he was driving, and, walking out into the roadway, seised the bridle of the horse. The vender tried to make the intoxicated stableman let go.but he hung on until a piano express wagon came along and the expressman dismounted and forced Giblin to let go his hold. Giba grocery into lin then went store at the corner of Geary and Polk streets, where he is said to have got the gun out of a drawer, although the grocery man afterward denied that The expressman had turned into Polk street, and be walked along Polk street until he got to the southeast corner of Polk and Post streets and caught up with the expressman, who had stopped for a moment to water his horse. Standing behind a house on that corner so that he mas screened from the view of passersby on Post street, he fired five times in rapid succession. Then he turned around and ran down Polk street to Cedar avenue, where Carpenter 4b Williams have a grocery store with a saloon adjoining. He walked into the grocery store and back to the rear of the saloon, where there is a small closet. He threw the gun into a basin in the closet, and it was afterward recovered by the police and turned over to Detective Whittaker to be used as evidence. . BUFFALO BILL'S HOTEL NA- West and South Temple streets. Four fingers badly powder burned. The project for storing the flood waters of the Milk River In Northern Mitchell, young son of Heber D. 641 Ninth East street. Powder Montana under the direction of Engineer Cyrua C. Babb, of the Geolbgical burned. Orem, child of Walter C. Orem, 863 Surrey, is one of the first great works East Second South street. Eyes Injur-fd- , Investigated by the Government engin- He Erects a New Hostelry on to Yellowstone Park. Routs Mit-mel- l. Spencer, young son of Sam G. 2(16 burned. Canyon Road. Span-f,- r' Face powder son of J. H. Kesr K!tjr- - J 3 Vine street. Powder bums. .. ELECTRIC LIGHTS BURN IN ALTA. Alts was brilliantly illuminated the night of the Fourth of July for the first time by doxens of vlcetric lights. The Columbus Consolidated Mining companys power plant regally completed at a cost of about Jt'i.iioo, waa In operation and a new era waned in the history of the camp, if lopbone menage from Superln-ndeA. O. Jacobson shortly after noon today conveyed the information Tba power plant had been accepted1 by the company no that It was running as smoothly as Myons oould wish for. It will take a or My two to aiake all the adjustments, otherwise everything was gi- The new com- , right plant wu started up today and too, moved off without a hitch any--. The compressor hu capacity T: .00 cubic feet of air per minute, and riven by an power motor-Prlf- ij pow r Plent was accepted by 1 Tony Jacobson and . Serre-- r Arthur E. SnoV of the Columbus 0ai&;B7- - Among tbs other vttl Cargo of the local J nt 100-hor- se . iiYn ot tie Wnflnghouse toopany Controctor j. Burkr . ?nrno ft party visited the A-- 1 1 il npjr mIne- - era.l 2. or. tro Tw Properly the Columbus la to com- - The pipe Une through which eers, even before the passage of the national Irrigation act This involves huge dams and canals, and will reclaim when carried to full completion a very large area probably half a million scree of exceedingly rich land Jn the already famous Milk River Vall. It will he a famous engineering exploit, by which the water now flowing Into the Sasgatchewan, and thence into Hudson Bay will be carried Into tha Missouri basin and ultimately reach the Gulf of Mexloo. The Government has also taken up the Fort Buford project In Eastern Montana and North Dakota and Is likewise preparing to spend $2,500,000 In the Wyomlng-Shoshon- e project which will reclaim some of tbs lands of Southern Montana These are the most advanced of the Government works. In various other parts of the state the national hydrographers are making reconnoissances and surveys. Investigating reservoir sites and areas. A serious menace, however, to the agricultural future of the stats lies In the tendency to land absorption Into Immense private holdings, which have resulted largely through the abuse of the desert land set and the commuters' clause of the homestead act under which government land Is entered by speculators and dummies and not by actual settlers. W. W. Wooldridge. President of the Montana Fruit Growers' Association in fi recent address, clrtd 11 great nnces in Montana with an avenge acreage each of 55,000 and showed statistically the greater benefit which would hero come to the state had these been settled up into several thousand small farms sad oc Codv, Wyo., July 5. Col. W. F. Cody (Buffalo Bill) has begun the erection of a new hotel on the Middle fork, on the Cody route to the Yellow-ston-e park, about 60 miles west of this place, and adjacent to the eastern entrance to the park.1 The new hostelry Is designed for the entertainment of tourists on their way to and from the park, as well as others coming out here to spend afew weeks or months In the mountains. The new hotel will be a unique one In many ways. It will be thoroughly rustic In construction, the timbers being left rough hewn and the i The establisbmeui furnished elegantly throughout will bf almost an entire a drpr-ies- , such as portivir-- . Ti.,. ;jea of Colonel Cody being ot a ooustant uainterrup' u ,IIU, llf the pure mountain .: the -v building. Every cur i. Iho comfort of guests, . , ,.r i healthy ersons. v The'locsrion is oi. uaII'lrai r.'i H hleU t.mi beauty, being situat uenee. at the base ' lt..d..!n ;m mountain, eurroumi-- , r moun... tain of various ai'i :.vl, which are lovely verdure . v, i valievs. through which iivery streams of water, il.t !).. uiiiiiug iii scenic forcjUiuas o.' gran deur. The building will . ral thou-sandollars aad ts: : first oae tv of a chain of similar that Col. Cody has deckled ' between here and the Yeliovua.- park for the convenience ai . ( i ion of pary fr . Vl r.-- . d - tourist. JULY 1'kiiM Jana Has gat. In a book oa Japan Douglas Staden reivauta the thing that the Japanese have not. They have no bread, iw beds, no loit ami shuea, ui trouser for the men. no petticoat fur the women Tlii sound alarming, but both oxe wear instead several dmaiag gown, one over the other Urn kimono of coiiimetve. In their houses they have no windows, no doors, no walla no cel'iiiigN. no chesis of drawer, not even a washing aland, and the ward-rob- e only a lot of boie piled one on t.ip of aaittber. In the kitchen they Lave no range, no pota no pans, no flour bins. n flour, no kitchen tables. But. then, they have no tables or rhairt in the drawing room, and in tha real native house the drawing room Itself Is ouly n lot of bedrooms with their walls tsken down. There Is no ruon wby you should find anything in a Jaimueae bun except msu and a charciM:! stove for warming your linger and tl lea (Mil aud eommittlng suicide. Japsa is full of cherry trees and plum men, but limy do without fruit. The cherries are used for the blossoms and the plum for hanging 1 A Bit of C arras Hit. An lrifhmau love s joke M ac'.i of s good that Lc keep the one always green. In s txmk of by u eld uiciuiier of the Irish parliament is au muuMug illuatruiuui of Curran' ready w it. A certain Judi-- . Loi,1 Norbury, was famous for the sisiTiiy with vrhiib Lc condemned prlsorer to death wheu be might have pronounced a more niercifiil sentence. Ou on occasion when he wss dinlug lu pubhc with the fotvuKMd members of the Dnhltn tar he helped himself to some meat, at the same time asking: "la this bung beef?" Not yet.' said Curran qqjckly. "Your htcilsbip has not tried it. rvol-foctiu- Feeallar lliablaad di ! ALL EIGHTH GRADE GRADUATES n .M per cent ms lauea within t'jc S'i day- -' a O Ac'liEKGS STUDIO, 276 25th St. n receive 111 a'l r.ixt .; pii-tu- ' "W ' r.lV.nJX ftsafaflAa We wire houses and wire them fine With the best of materia! in the Electrical line. DONT TORGET THE PLACE THOSE LITE MEN Srartlri. A popular highland remedy for both consumption sud general dchibty waa COMMERCIAL ELECTRIC CO. what is kuown as suilh nan caber (the Juice of deers' lionnu. Tlnoe were gathered lu the hills when the auiuial oust t iu the springtime. They MANAGER. were boiled for kouio iioiirs end the 2279 avenue.. Fougtvne, 614 x. Wash, Juice thus obtained 1 Kittled after being strained. Candy augur aud whisky are usually added to 1l nowadays. Crab' alien pulverized and eaten on bread end blitter were uaed for consumption, HAS MOVED a mi lui i a and w hooping cough lu the Hebrides. Caledonian Medical Journal. thu popular hack man has moved his Eland to tha Key Bolt Iter Malt las of Till Herb. building, corner 25th sud Wash1 In New CakHlniiia them said to bo ington Ave. if you are in a an herb which has the rare property hurry Mm Blade, he's always of revealing oue'a accroi. It is kuuwu on lime. a tbe Datura stramonium aud Las Kxcundon wagons leave dally at 8 a. m. amt 2 p. m. for Ogwhite flower au.l rough berries full of den canyon. Partin over 20 r dark gralu. They are treated of in tlie ccivn apeciul rale. "AiiimI of Hygiene and Colonial MedPhone 07 k. lie., 244 k. icine." A erson who has swallowed the tea inudn of this herb will after fulling asleep tell where Ids money i hidden and will ul urlo and go direct to where ills treasure ia ooiieealed. t Robbers often nee thia tea as drop with which to rob their victim. The planning an.1 out of i; h. Irt the the scheme is l.i:c advice of Col. D. K'.r.; wci. who will have charge of i.ir i ruction or the building. It is very certain t i.it mauv tourists and health se. ken iu itocom poems on. place, breathpatrons of this romuti-.ing the pure sir, a.:.ving the maglea aad Salaiala la Water. nificent scenery an. :u the rein.' time The animal has no advantage in any have all the comforts ut nniJoru way in water over mail, and jet t lie nutn drowiia, while the animal swims. The dog. tlie Lothc. the row sud even the cal all lake to the water and are able to walk as they do when out of water. Throw a dog into the stream. Slid at otiee hi tiegius in walk Just sa he doe on dry land. Why should a uiuu, woman or eblld set differently under like eireiuuiauceV 11 seems strange that people have to BOSTON VS. BROOKLYN. be told to do what the saitnul do InR. Before today's stinctively uiid Instantly. Mau'a ignoBoston, July game waa called in the seventh in- rance of ko simple a tiling aa treading ning on account of rain it had grown water ia remarkable. It is without rea-ao- n too dark to handle the ball properly. or excuse. There In a popular noBrooklyn gave a ridiculous exhibition tion afloat that In aoiue way the dog of fielding. and other animal have au advantage Boston . ,7 14 3 over man iu water. Nothing could lie 3 4 5 further Brooklyn from the truth. The advantage Willis and Needham; Jones and lie with Crab Sheila a Barometers. man, who la provided with a Bergen. A rurion barometer Is mild to be puddle formed hand and know enough need ly the rotuusnt of the Araursnlsu to float when tired, annictJiiug th aniPORTLAND VS. LOS. ANGELEsT race vrahvb Inhabit the southernmost mal rarely or never dor. province of Chile. It conniat of the 5. Purtland barely A Portland. July east off shell of a crab. The dead shell wriest Snorts Anssar Hebrews. the escaped being shut out in an unintertha llgeons as letter carriers, traditlou la white in afair, dry weather, butIndiesting gsu.e today with Los Angeles tells us, wsre employed at the tints ipprwilMf moist stmnaphere is through Inability lo hit Hall opporcated by liw apiwsrauco of small red tunely. Ira Hastings, formerly of the when Joshua invaded Palestine aa mespots, 4m the nuilHtnre in the sir indium of couimunlCHtbin headNational between team, Philadelphia pitched for Portland and made a good show- quarters aud csuipa In lauds for off on crease the shell becomes entirely rail ing but was accorded poor support. the other aid of the Jordan. At the sud remains so throughout the rainy H. H. E. time of the Talmud they were need In season. Score 3 9 4 Portland. .' amusiug gomes. The Talmud tells us 5 ti U Los Angeles S1ee'For Insomnia. that betting waa indulged in at (life pH Patient-C- an you give m something Hastings and Steelman; Hall aud geon play. The owner ot the pigeon for insomnia? Physician I can recSpies. which reached first the point designatommend something, which amounts to ed was the winner. SEATTLE VS. OAKLAND. Another play connected with betting tbe same ililug. Patient Foe hiavcn's was the kubya. Kubya means a small soke, tell me at once, rbystolau-Tlie- re n Seattle, July 5. Seattle baited In fact, only one sorerelru bird and won as they pleased. pot (Arabic kubela, small glaas). Tbe remedyJo,far slrepfosmMM, and that is was a little waa an OakHall wherein dim to kubya pot enigma Charley sleep. Three dollars, please. Boston land. . Up to the ninth, when he put were shaken and thrown Umiu the lathe ball atraight over the plate Oak- bia The dice were numbered as our Transcript. land had got only three hits. modem ones are. Against thees two R. H. E. games the Talmud waa in Lirkr has, Score ariiM, sml Seattle . , , , 19 3 their "My lurk la the bnt any mas ever were not allowed to applayers had." Oakland. ...1 5 5 as wJtnesms before the bar. Hall and Wilson; Mosklman and pear ."The deuce ft Is!" Bryne. "Yes. sir. A girl refused ms yester-'daCwlowbno and the Golf Stream. and I see by the morning paper It is curious to note In the history Cincinnati, July 5. St. that her father hns loot all bis money." of the stream Influbow its gulf great game postponed, rain. Cincinnati Commrrrlil Tribune. ence baa been on the fortunea of the NEW YORK VS. PHILADELPHIA. new world. Before the discovery of America strange woods and fruit EXCURSION STEAMER SEIZED. New York. July 5. New York won were frequently found on the shores of the third game of the series from Europe sml off lying lalanda Homo of Victoria, B. C July 4. The slimmer Philadelphia today by heavy batting. these were seen and examined by Co- City of Nanaimo, carrying Fourth of Attendance 4,000. lumbus, aud to bis though! ful mind July excursionists from Virtorla to R. If. E. Score were confirming ev Id rues of the Port Angeles, Wash., was soiled this they New York. , .,,...6 94 0 fact that Strang lauds were not far afternoon by the United States cus3 4 Philadelphia io tbe These woods were toms officers for an alleged violation westward. Powell and Klein; Bender and Powthe passenger carrying regulations. carried by the gulf stream and by the of ers. It la said that the City of Nanaimo prevailing winds from the American foiled to submit herself to tbs usual continent, so that In part th gulf insiiectlon by the United States offCLEVELAND VS. ST. LOUIS. stream Is responsible for the discovery icials. She wss making her second Cleveland, JnJly 6. Cleveland won of tho new world. trip to Port Angeles when solxed. another slugging malqh today. Tha Tbe steamer Is tha propcrty'of tbe batting of Hickman, Lush and Bug-de- n Esquimau and Nanaimo Railway comWiihlas OH the Raaalaa. and the fielding of Hill, Hickman, is ahrays glad to get an- pany and Is valued at 125,000. She England Wallace and Brantley were features. other, cltlseu, bit sometimes she held until the case is submitgoes will tobei he R. H. E. Sou re ted Federal department of marIt In a about accordmanner, strange .14 19 3 Cleveland. ine. Tho steamer Whatcom, of the to A the ing Bprlugfleld Republican. St. Louis. Alaska Steamship company fleet, went ..4 16 3 Bernhardt and Bemls; Sisver, Bug-de- n sailor deserted from s Ituimiaa battle- over to bring I he excursionists, w ho an and Joined ship English crew on a numbered over 500, back to Victoria. and Kahoe. faraway island. He told them that NEW YORK VS. PHILADELPHIA. he wss tired of the rule of the cssr THE NORTHWESTERN UNE and wanted to become on English etti-seA.TLAB. Philadelphia. July 5. In a ten InThey were at a loss hew to Datura lice him, but finally each one threw ning game today the locals interruptA War Adas has ed New York's succession of victories. a bucket of water on him and ao washbeen Issued by tho Chicago A NorthSingles by Doom and Hall won the ed off th Russian. western railway. Three fine colored game. maps, each 14x20, bound In convenient R. II. E. Score form for reference. Th Eastern A Tort BtteH. 1 New York. 13 ..,..4 shown In detail, with tablet In arguing a ease in an English court 6 13 1 Philadelphia showing relative military and naval Frederic the late Rem whom Goudert, and McGlnnlty, Taylor, Warner end financial resources of took occasion to strength Boweiman; Kuggieby, Fraser, Roth wit was rapler-Uke- , Russia and Japan. and Dooin. deprecate the legal learning of Lord Copy mailed to any nddress on reChancellor Fitxgtliboa, wham his opceipt of ten (10) cents for postage by WASHINGTON VS. BOSTON. ponent was quoting. Tbe trial Judge C. A. Walker, Gen. Agent C. N. W. took timid exception to thia "I have Ry., 2204 South Main St, Salt t 5. Boston Utah. JuJly Washington. reed his opinions, he said, "and I bunched their hits in one inning today hare often wished I knew as mtmh law and defeated Washington. Six double as he did." "1 wish you did!" retortplays were the features. Attendance ed Comfort )! v n r rrtm i 600.. 8 2 Washington. The TreeMe. . ..... 6 9 0 Boston. . "I wonder why Mr. Old bow goes to Townsend and Clark; Winter and see Miss Frocks after she has rejected FarrelL him so emphatically," remarked IIo-jseIn-i- n ; STAN. S. STEVENS ! BASEBALL J. S. SLADE kmu-kou- (LGustom shoemakers make one pair of shoes and charge from $8JQ0 to $12.00 for them ; 1,000 pairs of CRAWFORDS ' are being made in the same time. 4y 4r trial mt tnai Mos-klma- gf.SS mi&MftthtmammUih wS tIOOO fnAliw, LOCAL jtCENCTi NYES ,...,,.,.11 y, Luuia-Cln-clnna- ti Carpentering, Building, Rs-and Remodeling of I pairing Houssa Promptly attended to. All I work Guarantood. Enquire of) Ol Nelson, 648 lltfi strati Telephone 329-, y. Please Travel. BUTF Before you start call Ticket Office Healy House, Opp. Depot Phono 1S1Z. A large Asaortmoot of Low Rates and Reliable Information constantly oa hand. Guaranteed by th A mart can Ticket Brokers Ass. n. Russo-Japanes- e oo ,.,..,..2 ........ j 0 bnirr 'itm. Englishmen Jn Queen . Elisabeths time dined at 11 s. m., and Shake-spe- d re rang up the curtain at the Globe theater at 1 p. ni., the performance ending between 5 and 6 o'clock. By the time of Chsrk-- II. dinner had advanced to 1 o'clock and the play began at S p. in, aa Pirfi records. A century later Horace Walpole complained of dinner being at late aa 4 o'clock and general plan of the building will be evening not beginning until 8 o'clock. very similar to the primitive block to the middle of tlie last century houses of early American days, which Up were erected for comfort as well as theaters opened nt 6:30, dinner being earlier. protection. The first floor will be de- proportionately voted to capacious dining and sitting tinila. rooms, with lofty ceilings, a large fire The whistle of s locomotive Is heard place being built in the sitting room. The remainder of the ground floor 8,300 yards through the air, the nolM will be given up to kitchen and office of a railway train 2J9C4 yards, the repurposes, with the exception of one port of a musket l.iO yards, an orcheo-trroom which Is to be designated as the or the roll of a drum 1.600 yards armory wherein will be gun racks, fill- and the human voice reaches to a disthe of latest with ed styles weapons 1,000 yards. Distinct speakand also some ancient ones that the tancei of beard to ri air from below to ing travels. la his colonel has secured There will he a large open court In a distance of nos yards; from above It the center of the hotel and around Is only nnderstsod to have a range of this court on the second floor will be 100 yards downward. 89 sleeping rooms, In which will be Cbsafier to Here. placed rustic couches. The bedding, "I am told the Fti oilers hare but $5, including mattresses, springs and linen, will be of , the lu.'St obtainable 000 a year." kind. "WLat are they getog to do with It?" The house will be constructed of "Going abroad. logs and the general Idea and plans "Why?" ot the old style block house will be "They can't afford to slay at home carried out. Inaiead of metal door ibelr knobs being used the old fashioned and keep np with wooden latch key with hanging string Plain Dealer. wiU be substituted. a "Just to pass away tbe time," sug- gested TomdJk. "But the reason be wss refused was that be had already passed away too much time. Detroit Free Preaa. you want Eastern Corn-Fe- d j Beef go to Ballard & Rinckers 331 24th Street. 'Phan rjr No. 127K I fl, 11 Keep Cool j J cook good Why stand over a hot Range and this hot weather when you can buy a two-burn- er Special Pries on Wether Derflf. "Does young Bqulggles go much Into gasoline stove for $3.75 ? Freesers. WHEELWRIGHT BROS. 2476 Washington Ave. society ? "Not now. But he did when he first He got Into it about $2,700, thanks to his pleasing manners - ami his power of touch. Chicago Tribune. ,mrJ res coo came here. 30 Ol Parian Fas It. "Before I was married," said the confirmed pessimist, "I spent my money on candy, and ss tbe result I now hare to spenj it on my wife's dentist bills. Portland Oregonian. UTAHNA PARK STRICTLY A TEMPERANCE RESORT. a set''--Clevel- ai.l va-W- ... Sharmans ... at Nothing is politic fly right which la mocaUy wrong. (FOoaaett. Tsy, pa, it says luteta UiyClin, sot part to scorn. What does T trow mean?" "Thats tbe poetic way of saying Yon bet. "Chicago Record-Herald- . T trow they did Tn EOI- -. "Advice to a newly married couple Is so sinless! "Yes--all the harm Is done then." TTe may glean knowledge by reading, bnt tfaerhtfT must he ' separated from the wheat by thinking. Entrance on 25tH street, Opposite Reed Hotel. The Week of July 4th ... ., ... .. .. ., ...... ...... .. .. KIRALFO. . Comedy Juggler KRAFT ..The Irish Policeman BENNETT SISTERS Californias Favorite Children in Song A Dance ILLUSTRATED SONG MISS VESTA MONTROSA MASON A FILBURN .. . Comedy Dutcn Sketch JOHN MORRISON. You All Know Him New Songs. THE GREAT BARRINGTON Ventriloquist With Tommy A Bridget E. R. GOURLEYS UTAHNA SCOPE NEW PICTURES. s AdnltS PRICE OP ADMISSION. IMIHtHMM Children under 13 years. :T,UUU I BOBBBO ,.. MlMfMB ,.,,, OBB OBo B1 m.i VWWUliiMTT.SSlH tV FfYl 0 BOB 10S 6o |