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Show HUJl' 21, 18903 THiii SALT LAKE TIMyR. TflUKSDAY. " "Jg I THE PENN. MUTUAL LIFE IN3. 00. '0Fa?ESkaP& meSs0bV m'tnSe, art h.$s uTaK dividend PyS ''hllt."r(( Stephens, general agents, building. LIQUORS AND CIGARS. BEABD'S CIGAK STOEE. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC "GARS I SolengeutsfortheBuckerScCigar. 17 west 2nd bouth t. THE TWO PHILLIPS PLACE. CHOICEST BRANDS OP IMPORTED Wines Liquor, and Clears Schuster Phelps, proprietors, 83 E. Tulrd South street, Salt Lake City. P. T. NYSTE0M. COMMERCIAL SALOON FAMILIES L supplied. Cor. First South and Commer-cial streets. . HAmm a n BUSINESS ' DIRECTORY. ADVERTISERS OF f'IRSTCLASS CITY. The Times commends to its patrons the Business and Pro fessional men whose cards ap-pear below. stenoguapiiy. 2 fTeTKcGUBEIN, STENOGRAPHER; ALT. KIND3 OFFICIAL Denier la Ren.lnKtonTppewiiter and supplies; Progress UlldiUg- - ' TAII A. TAYL0E, lfTRPRANT TAILOR. NEW SPRINC Just arrived 43 aud4east Second South street, Salt Lake City. TIIUNK. HULBEET BEOS,, OF FINE TRUNKS. MANUFACTURERS esses to order; repairing a specialty; 1 west First South street. WATCHMAKEbTaND JEWELERS. "ad"o&h"hTueba6T&'sons, T PRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS. WATCH-- es, clocks and Jewelry repaired and cleaned. A full line of Waterbury watches. No. 10, h,. First South street, . T. M. SUEBAUQH, AMERICAN WATCHES, CLOCKS, FINE watch repairing a specialty; prices reasonable; 75 west First South street Salt Lake City. Utah. TiUi UUXi auii, CHOICE WINES. CIGARS AND LIQUORS U diagonally opposite the Utah A Nevada depot. J. Sullivan, proprietor. B0UD0IE SALOON, SO MAIN STREET, SALT LAKE CITY, NO.Utah. Hillstead&Co., dealers In Wines. Liquors and Cigars. Salt Lake City Brewing Co's celebrated beer on draught. ACCOUNTANTS. HAEEY E, BE0WNE, EXPERT AND ACCOUNTANT, 1HK9, tfil south Mala at. The very best of city reference given. Geo. M.Scott, JAs. Glkndeknis H. b. Rjj President. Vice-Preside- nt , 8ecrf GEO. M. SCOTT & G( (INCORPORATED.) --DEALERG I1-T-Hardware and Met Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGENTS FOR the Dodge "Wood Pulley, Roebling's Steele Wit Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engineia ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, Blake Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools, Etc. ... 168 MAIN STEEET. Salt Lake City, U MISCELLANEOUS. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE AND SCHOOL CO. FURNISH FURNISHING for schools. W. P. Dodds, general agent, 78 east First South street. JOHN GEEEN, WITH GREEN & CO., SANITARY CON- - V tractors and scavengers, p. O. box 65a WM. M0EEIS. EMYE EYN0N. ALT LAKE STEAM CARPET CLEANING nWorl i, corner fcth West and Hazel streets, telephone 472. First cl.isn work guaranteed. Orders taken at J. O'Conner's drug store, l!38 Main street. P.O. box 5W. NOW IS THE TIME Yes ! Time to Sea mmm m Who Have From $500 and Upward' to Loan on Cood Security or First Mortgage. Will give 1 to IK per cont Interest. Guar-antee strict business. Christiansen & Olsen. 29 Commercial St - Salt Lake City AKUnllEvrS. 0. H. LaBELLE, lfl EAST FIRST SOUTH ARCHITECT, Lake City. I am prepared to furnish all manner of plans In the most im-proved st yle of architecture, such as churches, opera houses, hotels, banking houses, private residences and business blocks of any descrip-tion. Beet of references given as to my stand-ing. J. HANSEN, M.ATR OI- - CHlOAOO.l A RCHIT!?CT AND SUPERINTENDENT. iV has removed his oftlces to 7, East Second South, room 38. FEED A. HALE, (LATH OF DKKVEB.) AHCHITF.CT OF COMMERCIAL BLOCK, U0, Wasatch building. WHITE 4 ULMEB, ARCHITECTS AND SUPERINTENDENTS. and 411, Progress Block, Salt Lake Cltv. ATTORNEYS. WMLlToONDON. ROOMS FIRST FLOOR IAWYER, First South, between Main and Commercial streets. S, A. MEEEITT, CITY ATTORNEY, ROOMS 610 Sit, building. John M. Bhekze, jambs A. Williams BEEEZE & WILLIAMS, ROOMS 314 315, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , O.W.POWEES, ATTORN OPPOSITE Second South street. CUMMIN G & CEITOHLOW, ROOMS t AND 5, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , lab Main street. M. E. MoENANY, ATTORNEY-AT-LA- floor. PROGRESS M0SHEE, FLOOD 4 CO., SALOON, 135 MAIN STREET, MIRROR City. THE PHCENIX SALOON, PEACOCK, PROPRIETOR, 338 STATE TE. Ice cold Beer on draught; choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. MACHINERY. silveTbeos TRON WORKS, MACHINE SHOP AND J. Foundry ; steam engines, mining and mill lng work. No. 149 west North Temple street; Telephone No. 468. MILLINERY AND DRESSMAKING. IlTcGHN, ONLY LADIES' TAILOR IN THE THE Ladies desiring the latest styles and fashions will do well to call on him. No. fib East Second South, rooms 3 and 4. MONEY" TO" LOAN. LWATHJHJ, BROKER, 81 E FIRST SOUTH STREET, Deseret National Bank, Salt Lake City. Makes loans on WatcheB, Diamonds and Jewelry; rents .collected; railroad tickets bought and sold: business confidential. Es-tablished Itttft. All unredeemed pledges sold at Vuy low rates. "music MXGNUSOLm OF VIOLIN. GUITAR AND TEACHER Olson's orchestra and brass band. Residence, 85 M street, 31st ward. Leave orders at any of the music stores, or at Sharp & Younger's Palace drug store, v OPTICIANS. " iiE?BiEGEa JUST OPKSEU A FIRST-CLAS- HAVE bouse, 'i ney make a specialty ni making to enter atd repairing spectacles. No. 11 went South Temple. PAINTERS AND DECOitATOKS. PETEES0N 4 BE0WN, SIGNS, 03 WEST FIRST SOUTH STREET, Lake City. riuMnixoi A.L.WILLIAMS, Second Door North ofPostoffice, SOLE FOR R. G. PLEASANT VALLEY, CASTLE G. Anthracite, Charcoal, Blacksmith and Pigiron. Yards Cor. Fifth West and Second South Telephone No. 179, DR. ENDRIS. DISEASES ofnand CHILDREN. Royal University. Julius-Maximilia- Wurzburg, Bavaria. We hereby certify that Dr. Wm. R. Endrls, of St. Louis. Mo.. U. S. A., has been late as-sistant In the University Hospital, in the wards for Midwifery and tor Diseases of Women and Children. (Signed) ScAKZoNrvoN Lichtenfels, Professor of Midwifery and diseasos of Women Puop. KlNDFI.ElSCn. Pathology, Histology and Medical Chemistry. To make this certificate valid, we attach the seal of the Royal University. (Signed) Dit. Hei.de, Rector. Da. Koeuel, Sect. Wurzburg, April 34, 1SS3. Vienna. Austria, June 2D, 1893. Witness that Da. Wm. R. Endkis of St. LouIh, U. S. A., wes assistant in the Hospital for Diseases of the Oenlto-Urlnar- y organs of the male and female. Syphilis, etc., and Is skilled in the various operations and treat-ment and In the microscopical and encmical diagnosis of the urine. (Signed) Dn. Robert Ultzman, Prof, of Diseases of Uriuarv Organs. Dr. H. Hittek von Hiihha, Prof, of Syphilis and Skin Diseases. We hereby certify that Da, Wm. R, Endris, of St. Louis, was our assistant in the General Hospital, Vienna, in the department for the Heajt and Lungs, Throat and Nosa (Catarrh and has much experience in toe diagnosis and treatment of these dlseasws, (Signed) Dn. Jos. von Dhozda, Prof, of Internal Medicine. Professor Schnitzlek, Vienna, June 1, im. Office, 2(i West 2nd Soutb, opp. Cullcn. Incoporated, April 10, 1890. Totman House Buiag Coipi, J. T. Lynch, F. P. Mogenson, , K B. R. Hickok, President. Treasurer. General Ma Salt Lake, Utah. This company is purely a home institution, organized to stay, and m spcctfuliy invites the attention of those desiring cottages, either "for homes sale, to tne neat, tasty and attractive appearance presented by this clasj tages when completed.- We claim that they are stronger and warmer th ordinary rustic building, the sections all being made and put together chiucry, thereby making the work perfectly tight. We are now prepared nish estimates, take contracts and complete buildings on ahort time. Thi ronage of the public is most respectfully solicited. Office and yard No, 25! North Temple street. Examine Our flans and Prices Before Ton Build. A.i J. B0UEDETTE & GO,, 1JLUMDERS, STEAM AND GAS FITTERS Jobbers. 18 east Second South street, Salt Lake City. Telephone No. 431. JAMES FENWI0K, PRACTICALPLUMBER, STEAM AND 13 AS 81 East Third South street, Salt Lake City, Utah. P, J. M0EAN, STEAM HEATING ENGINEER, 259 MAIN Salt Lake City. DOOT AND K1IOK AIAKINU. - THE PAEAG0N THE BEST AND CHEAPEST PLACE IS for Shoe Repairing, 11 west South Temple street. m CIVIL ENGINEERING. i HAvnlNbrbWBYi ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS. CMVIL laid out and platted. Rooms 614 and (115 Progress building; P. O. box CW7, Salt Lake City, Utah. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. iOHMLESHELDS; CONTRACTOR - BaUnIdLDING MOVER, general engineer. Brick, adobe or wooden houses raised, moved or repaired. All work guaranteed against crackinsror other damages. The only practi-cal building mover west of Chicago, Ofllceand shops 74 to 75,1 Slate road. J. 0. D0WLING, CARPENTER, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER, ; ftttlug up stores and counter making a specialty. i3 W. First South street, ' GE0EGE BOGQS 4 00., CONTRACTING AND BUILDING, FITTING a specialty. Arhltecct-ura- l wood carving. 157 State road, between First and Second South street, DENTISTRY. DE. BIS0H0F, DENTIST, liiS SOUTH MAIN STREET, and V. Teeth extracted without i,n(n TeAl.h f.xt.r&rtnd nlaln 9h rentn. with SALT LAKE VALLEY Loan and Trust Company, Salt Lake City, Ttak CAPITAL .' . . $300,000. Money to loan on real estate and other good securities, on short and long time. DIRECTORS" O. J. Salisbury, Pres, jr. JJ, Dyer, Vice-Pr- W. S. McCoriuck, George M. Downeu f. Bamberger, " John A. Uroeabeck. Kmanuel Kahn, M. R. Evani, O. U. Cumming, Secretary. 8.H.Fleldt.Jr, . . Treasurer. Real Estate Mortgages. gu?Touteed by the company, for sal Office Daft building, No. 128 Malnst " ' " PLATING. ' TCLTiliMU GOLD, SILVER AND NICKEL PLATING the Dynamo Process. All kinds of repairing done with neatness aud dispatch. Kncdsor IIhos, 81 E 3d South. PHYSICIANsT " DE. G. J. PIELD. WASATCH BUILDING, LATE OF ST. tl Louis DE. J. S, BLAOKBUEN & 00 HERNIA SPECIALISTS; RUPTURE cured without surgical opera-tion. 88 E. First South St., opp. the Theater. DES. FREEMAN & BUEE0WS, EYE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT. accurately fitted. Rooms 17 and 18, building. Franklin Fire Insurance f Of Philadelphia. Organized 1820. - Charter Perpeh Assets, - - $3,174,357.04 . Insurance Reserve, 1,765,294.71 Continental Insurance Company ; Of iTe-- -orls. Cash Capital, - - $1,000,000.00 Insurance Reserve, - 2,470,343.24 Assets, .. 5,217,773.91 When you purchase a policy, that you expect t worth 12000 in case of fire, you should investigate the c pany with the same care that you would use in lending ' sum. No States in the Union have as good insurance! as New York and Pennsylvania. Call at our office for copy of the Safety Fund I This law prevents the failure of a company by great con grations. Under this law none of the surplus funds can divided among stockholders. Both have to be held to security of policy holders as long as a policy remains in f DAVIS & STRINGER. 23 West ' ' ' " " Second South st A Two doors east ofCullen Hotel. Afeni SSPKGIAL-S-Our Addition corner of Second Wes and Tenth South, with fine trees on all streets and alleys, is the choice subdivi- - - S1" adjoining the city.v,. Ties are now I distributed and cars will be running on Second West and Tenth South within . sixty days. Lots at original price .until August ist only. ' ' "aaBsBBWMsWBBslBaBsi Davis & .Strings J.W. Farrell & Co SM if FlDDleR, Gas & Steam Fitters Dealers in all Kinds of . Lift and Force Pumps Orders fafceor Drive and Dud WelU Cesspools built and Connections made am Mam Strert,po. AuerbacK Bros. Telephone, m, cocaine AO cents. Durable rulings b0, 7f cents and upward. Best set of teeth 110. All work guaranteed. Open from I a. m. to t p. d.; Sundays from 8 a. m. to 1 p, m. Cut this out. ENGRAVING. I J.JEPPEES0N, 1JRACTICAL SCULPTOR AND CARVER, North Temple street. J. W. WHITE0AE, DESIGNER AND building. ENGRAVER ON WOOD, FIKNITITRI SANDBEEG FUENITUEE CO., MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN School Desks, Screen doors and Windows, Jobbing aud re- - Ealrlntt promptly attended to. 108 and 110 W. Temple street. groceries E0GEE8 & COMPANY, THE LEADING street. GROCERS, 45 EAST FIRST PEED G. LYNGBEEG, STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, Fruit. Vegetables, Poultry, Fish, Game. eta. t3 east First South street. Tele-phone ei JOHN MoDONALD 4 SONS, I TEAS AND COFFEES A SPECIAL-- ' TY. Main street. 0. M. HANSEN, DEALER IN CHOICE FANCY GROCERIES Grain, Coal and Kiudling Wood, oorner Third South and State street. REAL ESTATE AND LOANS. THE 8YNDI0ATE INVESTMENT CO., REAL ESTATE, ROOM t, OVER BANK OF Lake, Investments for non residents a specialty. MONEY WANTED. IF YOU DESIRE A GOOD LOAN PLACED real estate, call on S. F. Spencer, 897 Main street. ALFEED DUNSHEE, REAL ESTATE, LOANS, INVESTMENTS Main street rear Jdnes Bank, Salt Lake City Utah. J. G. JACOBS & 00. REAL ESTATE DEALERS, 147 PROGRESS have for sale residence property n all parts of the city; also choice bargains In business and farm property. THE MIDLAND INVESTMENT 00. BARGAINS IN REAL ESTATE, LOANS No. 177 Main street BUBT0N, GE0ESBE0K & CO., REAL ESTATE, NO. 99S MAIN STREET Lake City, Utah, Notary In ofttoe Telephone 4M. RESTAURANTS TIVOLr EESTATJBANT, . REOPENED. W. GEBHARDT & CO all hours. K4S Mam street, od posite Walker FOUNTAIN LTOOH STAND, TERRY T. SHIMOI3AKA. PROPRIETOR, J NO. 115, S,)uth Main street. Short order meals at all hours. Commutation Tickets Lombard Investment' Go. op. . . ' Kansas City, Mo., and Boston Miss. Branch office tor Utah and southern Idaho, Corner First South and Kain Streets Bait Lake City, Utah. ' W. H. DALE, . Manager. AfaA-e- s Loans on Farm and City Property at Easy Rates. M. TOBIAS & SON, DEALER IN FANCY GROCERIES. Poultry, Fruit and Vegetables. All poods delivered to any part of the city. No. SilK south First East street. ELI L. PEIOE, C ROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, SM MAIN J street. ' " INSURANCE. . LOUIS HYAMS & 00. I7IRE. LIFE AND ACCIDENT. MUTUAL of New York. M4 and 515 Progress Block. SALT LAKE WAFFLE & CHOP HOUSE MEALS AT ALL HOURS FROM IS CENTS west Second street. Jonks A Sss-Io-proprietors, j GLOBE CAFE, Q F. BALL 4 Co. MEALS AT ALL HOURS 1.7. No. 14 Main street. Salt Lake City. SECONLHANDCLOTHiNCk M. LEVEY, DEALER IN CAST OFF AND SECOND same; notice highest cash price paid for kinds by mall promptly attended to;all tailoring done, m w. First South street BROAD ROAD OF RUIN. Along Its Eongh and Eocky Borders Live the Wrecks of Erring and Bin-ning Humanity. OOUESE OF THE D0WNWAED PATH. When Pleasure and Sin Join Hands There , Can Be But One Besult, Which is Sad and Disgraceful. "She coursed merrily through the half world to the Potter' field." Sole epitaph this, apd aa ephemeral newspaper one at that, of a woman who began lifeas the daughter of doting pareuU. When a child she hud everything desirable from a pet parrot to a high priced govern- - swerea m person ttrli advertisement print-ed by a New York paper: Help Wanted. Female-- W desire to engage the services of a . alf reliant, prepoosUig, well educated, dtteroJined young lady; state ag and particulars; references. Miss Lewis In the spring and early sum-mer bad taught school at Marshall's Cor-ners, near Pennington, and saved from her salary about $75. She is about SO years of age, has light brown hair, brown eyes, good looks and lota of determination. Ambitious to Increase her store of wealth and learning she ventured to the city In re-ply to the advertisement. For a timo nothing was heard of her, and her friends feared the worst. At last she was found working as a domestic In a Long Island hotel. Hor New York visit had cost $80 of her hard earned money, but she hod cleverly avoided one or two vilo traps laid for her, bad accepted the loss of the cash philo-sophically, and pluokily set about replacing it by seizing the first chance of honest em-ployment that offered. As she remarked: "I wasn't quito t he fool they thought mo." Mrs. Mollie Owens, whoso tragic death as the result of malpractice created a sen-sation at Cincinnati only a short time back, evidently hadn't the moral stamina of the New Jersey school teacher. She preferred excitement to domesticity, despite the fact that alio was the mother of three interest-ing children and the wife of a considerate husband. She left home five years ago, and la the end the wages of sin was death. ... Error, inclination, circumstances, env-ironmentall these must be taken into con- - V1 ... 1 FRIEDA BI7KB. cm. The vague ambitions of her teens were partially gratified by a course of study at Girton. Intellectual, accomplished, self willed, she sought the achievement of a lofty ideal in a runaway marriage with a suave rascal who did not count on the pos-sibility of hor father and mother refusing to grant forgiveness. The young couple came to America, wrote home and waited tor a message that never came. The man ' grew cold as the purse grew thin, tried abuse for a while and then disappeared. ' The woman made a final appeal to her out-raged parents. They declined to respond. She sought legitimate means of salt sup-port. They scarcely brought her bread. Two routes lay before her that of starva-tion and that of shame. She chose the lat-ter, and for a time stormed along the er-rant pathway of pleasure like a brilliant meteor. But when a meteor strikes the earth its flame dies out and It takes on the sullen hue of unvalued dross. Diamonds, champagne and gold to start with; a hospital shroud and pine coffin at the end. The story of Alois Hendrix, barely sug-gested In the preceding paragraphs, is by . ' NX MRS. MOLLIE OWENS, sidnrnlion when passing judgment on women like Alois Heudrix who "course through the half world to the Potter's field." But for Chief Harrigan's wise in-tervention Frieda Hnke mijfht now be run-ning the deadly race. Kllle Seymour's career stopped short of a nameless graveonly because she was blessed with a pitying and forgiving father. Miss Lewis learned her lesson cheaply the few dollars she lost were well invested but Mollie Owens went the pace from start to finish, and gained tor the prize a dis-graceful death. Some there are, however, who pass through the fiery furnace of ir-remediable shame and live live not as women, but aa fiends in whose breasts there has ceased to exist the slightest atom of kindliness, compunction or pity. Thoy retain good looks and winning manners, but their hearts are aa the nether millstone and their smiles are the lure to ruin. They have bridged the ohasm of regret and stand on the barren heights of rclentlessness and greed. To this class belongs Hannah Howe, now locked up iu jail at Kansas City as a punishment for swindling the oharlta-bl- e people of that prosperous burgh. Hannah Howe, who is a Canadian girl, has many aliases. At different times and In different places she has been known as Irene Fox, Annie Brady, Irene Rose anil . 5 EFPIK SEYMOUR, no means unique. It is not even uncom-mon. Details of other wrecked lives may be different, but the trend is always to-ward the sarao black and relentless whirl-pool. Details? Of course they differ as much aa one hu man being differs in stature and appeur-auc- e from another. And when some high minded person steps in to avert the conse-quences of the original downward push his efforts are worthy the applause of all who love honor for honor's sake. For this reason Chief Ilarrigan, of the St. Louis police, deserves large credit. Recently Frieda Uuke, a girl 15 years of age, with long curling goldeu hair and big inno-cent blue eyes, was brought before him by her father, who wished her sent to tlio House of the Good Shepherd on the charge that she was of dissolute character. He also apoke of his elder daughter Amanda aa an evil minded young woman. The ehief in vestigated the allegations, found them groundless and sot the girls free. In speaking of the case afterward he said: "The Impression that I received of Huka and his methods was that be folt revenge-ful toward his daughters. He let one or two remarks drop about the girls paying for what he had done In raising them. He aid he thougbt the older daughter should RAXKAH BOWE. Annie Monroe. Uer relatives live at Lon-don, Out., and two years ago she was the "heroine" of a criminal prosecution at that place which resulted In a young man named Alien Paton betng sent to prison for a long term. The young woman's trunk whan examined by the police was found, according to The Kansas City Times, to contain "a largo number of let-tor- s, among others one from ber mother begging the wayward girl to come home, as there was money enough there for all, aud also enough for Hannah when she (the mother) was dead. To this there was a partly written reply by the girl, in which she refused to return. She stated that she was in love with a contractor of liberty, Mo., who was quite well fixed, and who loved hor devotedly. She wrote: 'I am laying all my wiles to capture him. He tells me lots of nice things, but I don't them all, for you know I have had some experience with men. "There were also letters in the trunk from Kingston prison, written by Paton, in whioh he Implored Hannah to come back and get him out. To one of these lot-tor- s a reply had also been written, in which Hannah expressed her sorrow, but stated that she could not holp him. She also wrote that she had received a letter frojn Paton'a mother, whom she characterized as 'an old devil,' offering her a liberal um of money if she would come back to Canada and gnt her son out of prison. "There was much more of a similar na-ture in other letters, stamping the young woman as a most heartless creature." Frkd C. Dayton. ELIZABETH LEWIS, irlve him a portion of her salary, bnt she aid she had all she could do to support kerself and Bister. That is probably true. It seemed unnatural in bim to try and ruin his daughter's reputation. Judging from the appearance of the girls, their talk and their actions, I consider them en-titled to great consideration for struggling ao hard against their troubles. I think they are worthy of great sympathy." Had Mr. Harrigau nnquestloningly ac-cepted the father's statements regarding I'rieda Huke be might have been responsi-ble for driving a young and iuuoceut girl to desperation. As It Is bar future for good or evil lies In her own hands. ' Ouo not so fortunate at the outset of her career ns Frieda Huke went to her grave in Kew York city but a few days sinoe. Her name was Eftie .Seymour, and she died, . broken hearted, on her 18th birthday. Two years ago ber sweetheart, the strong young man to whom she bad plightad troth, ought the west to make a home for his dainty bride that waa to be. She proved fickle, and fled with a newer love. He abandoned ber, and she returned home to die. "I didn't ask her any questions," said her gray haired father. "I knew the poor ohild had suffered much, and she con- - ; atantly regretted that she hadn't been i ' good." Like a gambler Effie Seymour "took I chances" and lost. In that respect she displayed leas strength of mind than did Miss Elizabeth E. Lewis, a school teacher ' JiLJ?-- ' who recently an- - r i Shot by an Officer. IliUsboro, O., is greatly excited over. the shooting of a well known resident Ed tt by City Marshal John W. Lewis. The fatal affair occurred at night. Elliott was having an altercation with some other men when Lewis came up and attempted to arrest him. He says that he did not in-tend to shoot Elliott, but ouly to use his revolver to strike with iu suit defense. Feeling in the town runs high agaiust Lewis, for Elliott had many friends. Aspiration. Evangelist Young man, always aim to spend your energies ou things that are above you. . , ... Young Man-Ye- s, sir; I try to, sir. I whitewash, ceilings. Burlington Free Press,. Up with the Times. Mrs. Slowboy I didn't catch Dr. Timely's text this morning. It wasn't from "Bobert Elsmere," waa it? Mrs. Hastie Of course not It waa from "Marie Bashlartseff." New York Sun. So It Is. "Whero do you intend to enjoy your-self during vacation?" "Well, I intend going into the coun-try, but whether I shall enjoy myself oi not is another question." Boston Cots, rier. Boston Blast Not Be Trifled With. Traveler (in Boston) I want to take the next train .' Albany. Ticket Agent Sorry, fir; bnt we cant pare, it. Puck. |