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Show . ' ! - 3 ; ; ., THE SALT LAKE TIMES, SATDRDAY. AUGUST 30,1890 " THE PENN. MUTUAL mb in 00. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ADVERTISERS OF f'IRSTCLASS CITY. The Times commends to its patrons the Business and Pro fessional men whose cards ap-pear below. Popular Route "PTOALL rOIATS EAST Only one change of cars Utah to Kan-sas City or St. Louis. Elegant Pullman Buffet Sleeping Can Free Reclining Chair Cars. Be sure your ticket reads via the Missouri PaciflcRailway JET. C. Townsend, O. P. & T. A., Ht, Louit, S. V. Verrah, C. F. & P. A, KotmiOS, Progreu Blag Bait Lake City, Utah, Time Talile in effect August 24, 1890 EAST BOCMD TRAINS. No7a NoTi Atlantlo Atlantio Mall. Express Leave ORden a.m. 6:40 p.m Arrive Salt Lake 10:46 a.m. fl:!ifi p.m Leave Salt Lake II :X a.m. 7:06 p.m Arrive Provo HS:f0 p.m. 8:4ft p.m Leave Provo 18:50 p.m. 8:45 p.m Arrive Green Kiver 7:05 p.m. 4:BU a.m Leave Green Klver 7:25 p.m. 4:30 a.ra Arrive Grand Junction... 11:30 p.m. 8:45 a. in Arrive Pneblo Arrive Denver DEALER IN CASTEIF'' elolaini. hL same ; . "Hi kinds tailoring1! ii OFFICIALTKnS Shorthand and TvPH-1- . I --iHKs? I MERCHANT arriVS8, South street, Sajtuffnff'Mli ' m!S cases to orderrwpai' ""apt First South street. "Wil AD0LPH HAUEEBAri PRACTICAL WATCHMAiftn es, clocks and Wbi7keK Msnkwr8fS' Lake City Utah MUKLIAXrn, MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE it Ip'CRNISHING CO A'SJ general agent, 76 eLt tteJ JOHN GREEN, WITH GREEN & CO., SANn ana scavenr p WM. M0BEIS. EKYBi KALT LAKE STEAM CARPET PWorks, corner xthWeit 21c telephone 478. First class work"4 Orders taken at J. O'Conner' L Main street. P. O. box PHILADELPHIA. PA.. INfJORPOR-(- ) ated 1H47. conducted for members by members, and having """''f.l"80;, "n2 greatest dividend Py'ng Stephens, general agents, 400 and 401 progress building, LHJUOKS AND CIGARS. BEAED'S CISAE STOEE. TM PORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGARS, Sole agents for the Sucker 5c Cigar. 17 west aid South st. THE TWO PHILLIPS PLACE. CHOICEST URANDS OF IMPORTED U Wines. Liquors and Clsrars. Schustkr iei.ps. proprietors, 63 E. Third South street, Salt Lake City. P. T. NYSTE0M. COMMERCIAL SALOON - FAMILIES (j supplied. Cor. First South and Commer-cial streets. THE COTTAGE, WINES. CIGARS AND LIQUORS, CHOICE opposite the Utah & Nevada depot, J. Sullivan, proprietor. B0UD0IE SALOON, XTO. 39 MAIN STREET. SALT LAKE CITY, IN Utah. Hillstead Sc. Co., dealers in Wines. Liquors und Cigars. Salt Lake City Brewinj Us celebrated beer on draught. . MOSHEE, FLOOD & CO,, SALOON, 135 MAIN STREET, MIRROR City. THE PH03NIX SALOON, PEACOCK, PROPRIETOR, 238 STATE TE. Ice cold Beer on draught; choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. MACHINERY. SILVEBBE0S., WORKS, MACHINE SHOP AND IRON steam engines, mining and mill lngwork. No. 149 west North Temple street; Telephone No. 4S6. MILLINERY AND DRESSMAKING. T&TiTcOHN, ONLY LADIES' TAILOR IN THE THE Ladies desiring the latest styles and foshions will do well to call on him. No. e East Second South, rooms 3 and 4. School 3ao AT D. Mv McAllister 72 Gainst And Everything Else in the Books, Stationery, Toys, I Booh of Mormon " Lombard Investmen O-F-Kansas City, Mo., and Bostoi Branch office for Utah and soothw Corner First South and Main Salt Lake City, Utah W. H. DALE, lac , Makes Loam on Farm m Property at Easy Eatt. WEST BOUND TRAINS. STTl No. 3 Faclno Paclflc ' Mall. Express Leave Denver Leave Pueblo : Leave Grand JmioUon... 7:00 a.m. 7:15 p.m. Arrive Green Kiver II :1W a.ni. 11 : p.m. Leave Green River 11:40 a.m. 11:30 p.m. Arrive Provo 6:10 p.m. :je a.m. Leave Provo fl.ao p.m. 6:46 a.m. Arrive Salt Lake 8:10 p.m. 8:S5 a.m Leave Salt Lake 8:1 p.m. 8:50 a.m. Arrive Oxden.. 9 :40 p.m. 10:05 a.m. LOCAL TRAINS. SALT LAKE AND OGDEIf. Leave Salt Lake: Arrive Salt Lake: 8:t0a.m. 4:30p.m. 10:46a.m. 8:i6p.m. 6:66p.m. SALT LAKE TO BINGHAM AND WASATCH. Leave Salt Lake f 8:46 a.m., returning, ar-rive Salt Lake at 4:20 p.m. D. C. DODOB, J. H. BENNETT, Gen. Manager. Gen. Fas. At Utah Central Railway. Time Oard in effect May 22, 1890. Passenger Trains leave and arrive at Salt Lake City and Park City daily as follows: SALT LAKE CITY. Train 1 leaves Eighth So and Main st 1 :30 a m f !v.s iSiSSS ; . " " 7:30p.m PARK CITT. Train 1 arrives Park City ', 10 :00 a.m " " " 7:30p.m " Weaves 7:30a.m 4 '" 6:00p.m Freight trains leave and arrive at Salt Lake and Park City dally, except Sunday, as fol- lows: Train No. 1 leaves Salt Lake 11 :30a m ' fl arrives " 3'lfrnm " 6 leaves Park City II :00 a!m ' arrives " 4:00p.m No paBsengerB carried on freight trains. PASSENGER BATES: Between Salt Lake City and Park City sinele trip, Vi. Bet ween Salt Lake City and Park City, round trip, S3. JOS. II. YOUm, T. J. McKINTOSH, Manager. O'en.i'fc C fat. Agt, AKCHftECTB FEED A. HALE, (LATE OP DENVER.) OF COMMERCIAL. BLOCK, ARCHITECT W, Wasatch building. WHITE & ULMEE, A RCHITECTS AND SUPERINTENDENTS I. Rooms 410 and 411, Progress Block, bait Lake Cttv. I J. HANSEN, (LATE OP CHIf AUO.t A RCHITECT AND SUPERINTENDENT, j has removed his offices to 7, East Second South, room S6. 0. H. LaBELLE, 10 EAST FIRST SOUTH ARCHITECT. Lake City. I am prepared to furnish all manner of plans In the most Im-proved style ol architecture, such as churches, opera houses, hotels, banking houses, private residences and business blocks of any descrip-tion. Best of references given as to my stand-ing- . ATTORNEYS. B. A. MEEEITT, ATTORNEY, ROOMS 510 511, CITY building. M. E. McENANY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.PROQRES-S floor. John M. Breeze, James a. Williams BEEEZE & WILLIAMS, ROOMS 314 a 315, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , ' CUMMIHG & CEITCHLOW, ROOMS 4 AND 5, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , 128 Main street. 0.W.P0WEES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW- , OPPOSITE Second South street. WILLIAM CONDON. ' ROOMS FIRST FLOOR LAWYER, First South, between Main and Commercial streets. ItOOKS AND STATIONERY. SAMUEL G. EEAD. BOOKS AND STATIONERY. LONDON Depot, opposite the Denver & Rio Grande railway depot, Salt Lakeulty. Orders lor every variety o( American and European periodicals, magazines, etc., prjmptiy at-tended to. ' , . UOOT AND SHOE MAKING. : THE 'paragon " IS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST PLACE for Shoe Repairing. 11 west South Temple street. CIVIL ENGINEERING CIVIL ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS. laid out and platted. Rooms 614 and 615 Progress building; P. O. box 6:17, Salt Lake City, Utah. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. CHARLES E." FIELDS CONTRACTOR BUILDING MOVER, and general engineer. Brick, adobe or wooden houses raised, moved or repaired. All work guaranteed against cracking or other damages. The only practi- cal building mover west of Chicago. Office and shops 740 to 751 State road. , J. 0. D0WLING, CARPENTER, CONTRACTOR ft BUILDER, executed; fitting up stores and counter making a specialty, as W. First South street. GEORGE B0GG8 & CO., CONTRACTING AND BUILDING, FITTING a specialty. Arhitecct-ma- l wood carving. 157 State road, between First and Second South street, DENTISTRY. - DB. BIS0H0Fr DENTIST, 128 SOUTH MAIN STREET and 9. Teeth extracted without pain. Teeth extracted plain cents, with cocaine 60 cents. Durable fillings 50, 75 cents and upward. Best set of teeth 10. All work guaranteed. Open from 8 a. m. to p m Sundays from 8 a. m. to 1 p, m. Cutthis out. ' ' MONEY TO LOAN. I. WATTERS, BROKER. 31 E FIRST SOUTH STREET, Desoret National Bank, Salt Like City. Makes loans on Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry; rents collected; railroad tickets bought and sold: business conndoiutlal. Es-tablished 18St. All unredeemed pledges sold at viy low rates. . MUSIC ' MAGNUS OLSON. TEACHER OF VIOLIN. GUITAR AND Olson's orchestra and brass band. Residence. 85 M street, 21st ward. Leave orders at any of the music stores, or at Sharp & Youn,','er's Palace drug store. OPTICIANsT ' gfrzbemer" JUST OPENED A FIRST-CLAS- HAVE house. Tney make a specialty of making to .order and repairing spectacles. No. 11 west South Temple. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS. PETERSON & BROWN, SIGNS, 63 WEST FIRST SOUTH STREET. Lake City. " ' PLUMBING. A. J. BOURDETTE & CO., 1)LUMBERS, STEAM AND GAS FITTERS Jobbors. IBeast Second South street. Salt Lake City. Telephone No. 431. JAMES FENWIOK, PRACTICAL PLUMBER, STEAM AND GAS South Engineer. 61 East Third street, Salt Lake City, Utah. P.J.MOEAN, STEAM HSEaAlTt ILNaGke ENGINEER, 359 MAIN City. PLATING. NOVELTY MANUFACTURING CO.. GOLD, thSeILVER AND NICKEL PLATING Dynamo Process. All kind3 of repairing done with neatness and dispatch Kmuuson Bros, 61 E 3d South. PHYSICIANS. DE, D. A. SYKES- - nOMCEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND residence VJ6 So. Snd E. DE. G. J. FIELD. t 57Louis ASATCH BUILDING, LATE OF ST. DE. J. S. BLA0XBUEN & CO., . HERNIA SPECcuIrAeLdISTS; RUPTURE PER. without 6b E. First South sL, opp. the TheX? JOHN G REE Sanitary Contractor and St; Excavations for Sewer Cow. Specialty. Special terms for monthly work tot families. 203 Main st. Telephone t box 659. TAKE THE CHICAGO MILWAUKEE & St. PAUL 3IL"W-- T For All Points East ET.l,eIctlt.r"i,cth.Le,iofntelyd,Une running solid Vestibule, Steam Heated trains between Chicago, Milwaukee aud Council Bluffs, Oma-ha. St. Joseph, Kansas City and Soulx City. All trains composed of Pullman magnificent sleeping cars and The Finest Dining Cars in the World torther Information appiy to the nearest ticket omce, or ALEX. MITCHELL, Commercial Agent MS south Main street. Bait Lake City. IBLE, The 6b!j Excfuslve UerH Youmaris Celebrated h SALT LAKE VALLI Loan and Trust Oil Salt Lake City, VIA CAPITAL - ' Money to loan on real estate id jand v . securities, on short directors: p. O.J.'salitbum.Pre. W. 8. McCornick, (!e?fi tint S. Bamberger mH Emanuel kahn. . d. M. Cummmg, laeZ S.H. Field. Jr. - 7 Real Estate Mortgages, purw w company, lor Daft building, , DES. PEEEMAN & BUEE0WS, IYE EAR, NOSE, THROAT. accurately tltted. Rooms h building. 17 aud ls' REAL ESTATE AND LOANS. TEE SYNDICATE INVESTMENT 00 n EAL ESTATE, ROOM 1, OVER Specialty?1'"- - IllV6st"s for uon resldeSs MONEY WANTED. TF YOU A GOOD Leet?8tat' C"U on S; sArflg ALTEED DUNSHEE, REA.L ESTATE, LOANS, INVESTMENTS iL'cityUh.' rear J. G. JACOBS & 00. T?EA,L ESTATE DEALERS, H7 PROGRESS business and farm property. m THE MIDLAND INVESTMENT 00 BUET0N, GEOESBEOK & 00 REiLlELaTkeTCEltUta2h3 AI STSET Telephone 4SL Notary - oOXca " RESIAl'KAMS, TIYOLI EESTAUEANT, REOPENED. IV. GEBHARDT & m FOUNTAIN LUNCH STAND, JKJ!?Y.-T-r.SH0,ISAK- PROPRIFTnw SALT LAKE WAEFLE & CHOP HOUSE AIEAAT ALL HOURS FROM 15 CENTS GLOBE CAFE, 71 engraving; J, JEPPEESON, PRACTICAL SCULPTOR AND CARVER North Temple street. . ; J. . WHITEOAE, DESIGNER AND ENGRAVER ON WOOD building. ' Fl RN ITCKG. ' SANDBEEG FUENITUEE CO., MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN Screen School Desks doors and Windows. Jol'bimi and re-pairing promptly attended to. MB and 110 VV South Temple street. GKOCEUIKS. " EOGEES & COMPANY, THE LEADING street. GROCERS. 15 EAST FIRST FEED G. LYNGBEEG, OTAPLE, AND FANCY GROCERIES, PRO-- visions, Fruit, Vegetables, Ue- -ri South street TeL: Phone john Mcdonald & sons, FINE TEAS AND COFFEES A SPECIAL Main street. 0. M. HANSEN, DEALER IN CHOICE Graia. Coal and KJndUnviS? corner Third South and State street ! mTtobias & son; eli l. price, (Wrlet1113 AN PKOVISIONS. 3M MAIN Jknce. louis hyams & co. FIRiE;.L1AE AND BlociIel1NeW1Vrk- - WwrtWSgSS J.W.Farrell& &eI3- - 1 ppf ' " Jlllllk Plnmlers, Gas & Steas F Dealers in aU Kinds Lift and Force Orders taken for Cesspools built and Owj. -l- & Main Strert, opo-- Aur Ieiip . Joit Kereiveil. Large shipments of fall Derby's In all colors. Bast-Tek- Mercantile Co. Hatters and Furnishers. R I. Burton, Jr , J. A. Groesbeok, Vf. B. Andrew Burton, Groesbeck & Go,, BUYERS AD SELLERS OS" CHOICE Business, Residence and Acreage Property. Sole Agents for South Lawn Addition. Office 289 S. Main St' 1 Telep&oni 484 FOR THE UTTLE ONES Short Stories in Poetry and Prose for Bright Boys and Intelli-gent Girls. SOME GEEAT MEN AND WOMEN. Excitement, Hardships and Bisks on an Elephant Hunt in the Wilds of Africa. ' , la the impenetrable forests of Central Africa elephant are secure for mauy years to come. Theee animals are not a a rale found In open places. They prefer the shelter of the thick tropical foliagj. They are to be found in families of two and three, and in herds of two and three hun-dred. An elephant hunt is attended with hardship and risk of life. It may mean tramp of many miles before finding the THE FIRST BUOT. herd. Even when found there are serious obstacles in the way. Of oourso you could hit one, but unless an elephant is struck in some vital part to wound him is down-right cruelty. When you have fired your first shot you must be wary, as it is likely that you may find elephants on all sides of you. Upon their being startled by the report of yonr gun they all close together, preparatory to making their escape, so that you have to be very careful to avoid being trampled under foot. The noise niodo by a herd of elephants is simply indescribable. Every animal seems to wish to outdo the others in tho shrillness of its screeching and trumpeting. This, combined with the crashing down of trees, as they plow their way through tho matted undergrowth of the forest, once hoard will never be forgot-ten. An angry elephant will vory often churge at the hunter, especially if the ani-mal is a female protecting a young one, so that a hunter seldom fires unless he is close enough to be sure of bis aim. I had been within a few yards of an elephant several times before I could clearly distinguish my game. Finally from a patch of tangled brush a large animal came along right in my path. I fired, and the beast dropped on her knees; and then upon another shot from a native who was with me she rolled over on her side dead. Hod I not succeeded in bringing her down at the first shot I am afraid she would have taken such steps as would have been very unpleasant for me. Great Men and Women. Curious enough, tells Golden Days, it is tho busy people who have the most time at their command. To idle people every ex-ertion is a trouble. They never have time for anything. Then again busy, active people live the longest, because, like any machine, it is easier to rust out than to wear out. Observe how the great men and women of the world have hung on to life. Empe-ror William, the busiest man of his day, lived to be 01.' Horace Walpole was 80 when ho died, Sir William Herschel 84, Daniel Webster 70, Henry Clay 75, Disraeli 7(1, Emerson 70, and Chevreul, the French chemist, 101. Of living notable persons Gladstone is 80, Dr. Holmes 80, Bismarck 75, Bancroft 88, Gen. Sherman 69, Mrs. Stowe 77, Kossuth 80, De Lesseps 88 and Hannibal Hamlin 80. All these men and women were workers and never knew an idle hour. They wasted no time, and consequently always had time at their command. n ,. The Cat's Explanation. You ask the reason, little friends, Why cats don't wash their faces Before they eat, as children do, In all good Christian places. Well, years ago, a famous cat, The pangs of hunger feeling. Had chanced to catch a floe young mouse, Who said as he ceased squealing, "All genteel folks their faces wash Before they think of eating!" And wishing to be thought well bred Puss heeded his entreating. But when she raised her paw to wash, Chanos for escape affording, The sly young mouse then said good by, Without respect to wording. A feline council met that day, And passed in solemn meeting A law forbidding any cat To wash till after eating. Brave Tommy. Tommy was always saying, "I'm not afraid!" His big brother Joha said he waa a "little brag," always telling what he would do if a great bear should come out of the woods, or a great giant should threaten to eat him up. HE STOOD AND SHRIEKED "OH, OH, OHl" "I shouldn't be afraid! I should just hit 'em with a big stick and say 'go 'way,' and I should chase 'em and make 'em run." He bad never seen a bear, or a tiger, or a giant. But one day he went in wading among some tall water plant. A great insect with a long tail came buzzing about his face. Its eyes were large and fierce. And what did this brave Tommy do? He stood and shrieked "Oh,oh,ohl" till brother John came and drove the big harmless thing away. Little Men and Women. THE GREEDfOR GOLD. Men r Who Sweep all Scruples from Thoir - Path to Gain the Coveted Gold Pleoe. I0B0ING PIOKLE FGETUNE'S FAVOB , One Adventurer Now Dying in a Peni-tontar- y, Another in Custody, A Third a Fugitive, Etc. ! Stronger than the love of woman, fiercer than the desire of the mnn-eatin- tiger, mightier than the whirling fury of the cyclone is the never satisfied thirst of that rapacious portion of the human race whose thirst is the thirst for gold. Long ages have passed since King Midas had his wish, unil felt the yellow wine within the royal beaker turn to molten metal at the touch of his charmed ond cursed lips. He had attained his utmost desire; a willing god had granted bis request; riches beyond the most tremendous dreams of avarice dis-played thomsclves beneath the magic of his merest touch. Yet his life was anguish, und his death fantastic in the terror of its torments. So much for the old legend, the sym-bolical myth of grasping cruelty which at-- tuins its object, grinds beneath the heel of papers received his contributions with favor. A few years of steady work and in-telligent application- would have mode him a rich man, but ho preferred to reach affluence by the short cut of fraud. As an attorney he swindled widows and orphans; as a newspaper man he abused tho confi-dence of his associates, and as an acquaint-ance he imposed upon the credulity of those who trusted him. Now, with his pockets full of ill gotten wealth, he is a fugitive from Justice. The cases cited above are sorrowful to contemplate, but probably none of the three can equal in horror of detail that of the Kansas City miser, Peter Lefler. This miserable old man had lived out the allot-ted tale of threescore and ten years. His early history is obscure, but for the last quarter of a century he had kept a small store on North Third street. Ho dwelt alone in a miserable hovel. Outside of business hours he shunned his fellow man and he was regarded by his neighbors as a poor unfortunate whose scanty income from trade brought him the bare necessi-ties of life. But the outcome shows that he like the others was a victim of the aw-ful and relentless thirst for gold. He had toiled and saved, and spared himself in no direction that he might add to his store of shining mctul. At the age of 70, alone, friendless, unnttended, he first saw the tiollowness of his life's ambition, and lock-ing up his little shop sought the filthy buck room in which he had spont so many solitary nights and ended his dreary life with a shot from a revolver. Bo meager was his patronage that days passed lief ore tlio poor wretch's tragic end was known. When found he sat dead in a chair. A frlghtfail hole marked tho mid-dle of his forehead. Hewus naked above tho waist. His false teeth, says The Kan-sas City Times, protruded several inches from the mouth. The nose had rotted and sunk into the skifll, leaving only a deep indentation, and maggots were worming themselves in and out of the apertures in his face, He was thought to be a pauper, but in the cellar was found a bag of gold oppression or fraud the victims of its desire, and stands triumphant but dismayed upon the awful pinnacle o! C&tvfffi' "iaedRk yj ft : b u jfW'Uf1! f M'CABTKBr,l890. a success that f&gf. tWiVs-bu- s been reached '4 SvSHlilS' regardless of HVSJjm 'Z? others' suffer-ing, V I Mil' I mid from i: which the victor m'cartney, 1878. stretches out an appealing band only to learn too late that depths of misery attend the achievement of success, aud that the golden prize within his grasp has crushed like an apple of bodom and disclosed an interior made up only of tho ashes of dis-appointment. The tale is world old but ever new this tale of men who have struggled along desperate pathways to secure tha vast power that wealth alone can give. Some have sought the fields of speculation and climbed to prosperity with pitiless glee over tho wrecked fortofc's of their less lucky but equally culpable comrades. Others have toiled and saved and hoarded, starved their bodies, impoverished their minds and viewed only, glimmering through tho durkness of their mental and physical squalor, the glorious yet sullen star whose name is gold. Still others havo trod the somber highway of crime, and endeavored by brute force or cruel cun-ning to wrest from the honest, the credu-lous or the unguarded tho treasure which represents the accumulations of honest in-dustry. For all of these, the swindler, the thief or tho miser, there is but one end. The unlawful thirst for gold means almost without exception disappointment, die-gra-and death. FETEIt LEFLER. pieces. In a drawer lay a bank book sliow- -' ing a large sum to his credit, and notes , given by responsible parties for hundreds of dollars. The till also contained a hand-some sum of money. In addition to these was found a will by the provisions of which small fortunes were left to five persons living in Baden, Ger-many, and two other people resident in Knnsos City. The old man directed that after the payment of these bequests and a magnificent disbursement for his funeral the residue of his estate should be turned over to the Young Men's Christian associa-tion of Kansas City, with the exception of his stock of goods, which ho bequeathed to an old cripple named William Taylor. Viewed in all its aspects can it be said that there is one redeeming feature to brighten the somber history of the world old inordinate greed for gold? Fbed. C. Dayton. HAKRV S. MAKHF1KI.D. Take, for example, the case of Pete Mc- Cartney, who is gasping out the lost days of his life in tho Ohio penitentiary. Prob-ably no man In the United States has had a bettor general education or has made a more thorough study of the principles of engraving. He is a skillful chemist, an expert manufacturer of the finest of art-ists' tools, and possesses a remarkablo knowledge of the manner in which paper used for bond or monetary purposes is made. Yet fo? forty years this singularly gifted man bos devoted all his energies, education and special skill to the uttering of counterfeit currency. His illicit enter-prises, undertaken with a desire to accu-mulate a fortuno at the expense of others, have brought him, on the whole, nothing but merited disaster, and now old, penni-less and forsaken, the famous king of American counterfeiters lies dying within tho frowning walls of a prisou. He is but one, hovvovor, of the mauy who have dulled the law aud found that the law Is more powerful than criminal ingenuity. One of his younger brothers in the com-radeship of crime tho other day begun his experience of the thorny road along which McCartney so long has trod. His name is Harry S. Mansfield, aud until recently ho was the trusted ageut at Topeku, Kun.. of SEYMOUR K1SCH. the Kansas and Texas Coal company. Large sums of money passed through his hands, an opportunity presented itself and the greed for gold swept away the barrier of principle as a sudden summer torrent bears down before its resistless fury the frail obstruction of the flimsy dam. He put in his pocket tC.OOO of the company's money, fled to Canada and with the stolen cash started a business enterprise in Lon-don, which had just begun to prosper when detectives swooped down upon him and carried the amateur in crime back to Kan-sas to answer for his sins. Like McCartney and Mansfield, Seymour Kisch might have prospered along the or-dinary lines of honest enterprise. He was well known and liked in the business and ocial circles of Chicago, and had achieved a respectable reputation, both as a lawyer and a journalist. Clients willingly intrust ed him with t'jecausand the news-- The Sensational Strike on the Central. ''Holland is responsible for it." So said Vice President Webb, of tho New York Central railroad, the other day, in speaking of the strike just then begun on the great transporta-tion line over which he exer-cises control dur-ing the absence in Europe of Presi-dent Chauneey M. Depew. J. J. Holland is regarded as one of the most influen-tial men among the Knights of Labor., He is chairman of the national legisla-- t i o n committee and a member of the general execu-tive board. By traue ne is a snoe- - . . iiolland, maker. Ho left the bench to enter the northern army dur-ing the civil war. At the close of the con-test he settled in Florida, and continued in business there as a merchant until he became actively identified with the Knights of Labor. He is a man of large physique, and possesses a strikingly determined cost of countenance, A Strang Anonymous Letter. Claude Rosaire lived with a French Can-adian family in southern Michigan until he was 33 years old and believed himself a son. In a moment of anger three years ago his supposed father declared that Claude whs an illegitimate son. This so hurt the young man that ho ran away to Chicago. He has not seen the family since. The other day he received an an-onymous letter stating that his grand-mother was tho Duchesse do Saint e, of Kormaudie, who fled from a cruel husband to America with her only child. This child eventually married a Confed-erate soldier, Cluudo being born to them a year or two afterward. Another woman (the writer of the letter) loved the hus-band, and in her anger stole the child. The father, in despair over the loss, com-mitted suicide; the mother has disappear-ed. Inclosed in the anonymor.s letter to Claude was the certificate of his father's and mother's marriage. Agricultnral College of 'Utah, Tho Agricultural College of Utah, Lo-cated at Logan, Utah, will Open for Students ou September 2nd. It is a Territorial Institution, founded upon a United States land Kraut aud by Territorial appropriations' for the purpose of givine tho young men and young women of Utah a liberal aud practical education in the several pursuits and professions of life. It has courses in' Domestic Economy, Mechanic Arts and Mechanical Engineering, civil Engineer- ing and other special courses. It has a modern equipment and specialists In Its several fields of Instruction Its raeansot illustration lnrbuW the United States Experiment Station ar.d Its work of re- search in agriculture; a flno firm, lncludine horticultural grounds, equipped with modem appliances; a cooklne, dairy, cutting and sow-lii-a neiwlep.irtnient, workshops In wood and Iron library, museums and other means of Illustration. Students will be kept in constant contact with illustrations of schoolroom teachines throughout its four years courses. For pamphlet containing announcements and for further particulars, address, J. W. Sandborn, President. Some business men in Chicago have un-dertaken the erection of one ot the largest buildings in the world. It is to be 190 by 850 feet in size and sixteen stories tall. Its construction will cost over 3,000,000. Sport on the Reitigouehe. The more the Restigoucha is fished tho greater appears to be the number of fish. Dr. Rainsford, a rector of St. George's, New York, has killed sixty-eve- n salmon .since the season opened, each averaging in weight over twenty-thre- e pounds. Another gentleman killed twenty in one week. It is the best fish-ing this season that has been offered for the past ten years, and all who take part In it are very much ploased with their luck. St John (N. E.) Gazette. He's Gone Elsewhere. Accepted Suitor But won't you find it awkward, Blanche, when you meet yonr first husband in heaven? Pretty Widow My dear George, Tm not a bit afraid of that ever happening,: Chatter. He Will Get More Than the Heir. "Why this sudden determination of yours to become a lawyer?" "Well, my rich uncles will is to be contested, and as I am not one of the heirs I will take the case and get some of the money." Epoch, |