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Show F. C. U. THE TREMONT TIMES. At Published Every Thursday Tremonton, Utah. Wra. FARMERS' CASH UNION. Oepwett, Kilit r hdiI Manager. EL Entered as sci' .nd class natter April. 1904. at the 1. st ffice at Tremonton, Utah, under the act . f congress of March 3rd, 1879. (Trade Mark.) Subscription rates. BUY 1.25 Onu year iu a ivance fiix months in advance-Onyear not in advance .75 $1.50 A LUMBER WAGON H. L. TUCKER, NOW Contractor and Builder, TREMONTON, UTAH. Plans Furnished and lEstiniates Made Your patronage solicited. We Have Them At Right Prices. on all kinds of work. B. C. CALL, Lawyer, County Attorney. Practices in all the Courts. Okfick : ('oi ht ReOtS, dayid Brtgtan, Utah. Boa 972 P. Both Phones. NEBEKER, HART & A NEBEKER ' Lawyers and 5 R ; Commercial Mock Utah. Logan 1 ft f1 P,0IJO(M Phono 70. Kent's New Livery. 7 t ' Suite is AT cylt rear of Hotel Kent, .I Scientific Optician i:s TE8TBD FREE General Real Estate Business, Choice Improved farms in Bear Rivt.r ValloV a specialty. Eftgy terms. Call on J. V. FERRY, Corinne, Utah. Job Printing for Every body. Why not have some letter heads and envelopes printed with your name, business aud address on t hem for the use of We can furnish yourself and family them at very little more than the blank ones would cost and they look much nicer. Call in when in town and let us show you samples and tell you the cost. Tiik Tim us, Tremonton. Utah. '.' the News every day for 50c a month The Intermountain ReAll Ad publican. Subscribe dress, 208 South West Temple, Salt Lake. to-da- y. Get Your Printing Done at The Times Office, Tremonton. PINEULES 30 DAYS' TREATMENT FOR $1.00 Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. FOR ALL KIDNEY BLADDER RHEUMATISM TROUBLE, AND LUMBAGO A dose at bed time RMlC aiiy relieves the most usu-W- & severe case before morning. BACK-ACH- E PINEULE MEDICINE CO. CHICAGO. U. S. A. For Sal3 By Tremont Mercantile Co 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Tram Marks DrsiGNS Copyrights Ac. uliHrti null rtiirlilnu lnnj etir OfinkMI frtm whether an qtilrxif Mfartaln fomtnunlCR-tl.im.iririlyr.miInvention t prtthnMy pinnttlo. inilnl. MANOUOOK on futwiLi ei.t trva. Olrlful HVIICf fer MM lirlntf iwlonts. Patents iiikcu dir.. null Munii 4 o. racolrw tprcitil nitlct. without cliwfim, In ttio wMi't - A n Scientific American. A It I11nlnif handfn.M l wfhlr 1 nrtTMl 'I Vnim, $3 of jutv nitfii ith' $i. fMbjaU fpwadpulera. f nr tmtr MUNN & Co.3G,Bfoadw- - New York ; Hranch MM Ml i 'in e. TRADE-MARK- OUUJlti Ir, (OS V HU. THAT PAY, Wuhiomuii. ' S Of n I., bu It ' p JllU olAMi IV - i I" h'l. thl The betrothal of Miss Gladys daughter of Mrs. Cornelius Venderbilt, Sr., and the young Count I.aszlo Szechenyl of Budapest, Hun-bar(the marriage to take place on December 4), had the dash of an Anthony Hope romance about it. What's more, the young people, knowing all the facts of the case, must be laughing in their sleeves at the sensation caused by the vague rumors from Newport that found their way Into print. From what Austrian officials tn this sensation country say, the was quite a affair. One of the richest of American girls had been formally betrothed In a Hungarian castle weeks before, and on that occasion the details of the "American betrothal In October" had been arranged. Then a young Hungarian nobleman had dropped quietly Into Newport to play his part in the formalities. The tlrst surprise over, every one asked: "Who is Count Laszio Szechenyl?" Therein lies the romance of the story. Only the last chapter properly belongs to the Anthony Hope school. The first of It might be a short story On the by William Dean Ho wells. other hand, the real romance Is worthy of Gibbon or Sienkiewicz. In It are the raids of a savage Asiatic people uppn the nomads of the Russian steppes, the primeval forests of the Danube and the wild denies of the Alps. There is also the pageantry of primitive war, the strains of wild music of Slavonic harmonies embroidered in a web of national tragedy music hardly suggested by the Hungarian orchastras of the cafes, but mirrored by Liszt and Paderewski, and visualized a few years ago In the latter! opera, "Muni." Then there are the green fez, the Bowing white robes of the Turk, the brown habit of the Christian mission ary, the splendor of a llapsburg court, and tyrannies that led a proud that echoed people to a rebellion And all finally around the world. ends In a basket phaeton on the Cliff Drive at Newport, with a young Hungarian and an American heiresss to tbeir frtendi that they are about to marry. An Object of Interest. New Yorkers have beta watching Mis Vanderbilt with more than customary interest In the last thri years. She is the youngest of Mrs. Coraeinu Vanderbilt, and the only one of her children unmarried. Her sister is Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney; her brothers, Cornelius, Jr.; Alfred Gwynne and Reginald Vanderbilt. She Is, too, one of the richest girls of her age In America, having come into a fortune of $12,500,000 on her twenty-firs- t birthday last August. Miss Vanderbilt was introduced to society three years ago at a dance given bv her mother in the great Vanderbilt house at Fifth avenue and street. It was one of the events of the season. The house had not been opened for five years. The chat of the drawing rooms connected Miss Vanderbllt's name again and again with those of young men who might be considered her suitors. Sometimes these reached the newspapers, sometimes not. One of the young men was Robert Walton Goelet. Another pieiitioued more recently was one of the younger generation In the Gerard family. When any of these reports crept Into print they were positively denied. Then there were rumors that Miss Vanderbllt's trip abroad last summer had hack of It a desire to put as many tulles as possible of pen and railroad between herself and one of the more persistent suitors. He that as it may, Mrs Vanderbilt and Miss Gladys went Ui California early last spring with Mv Flllott F Shepard, then came east and sailed for Kurnpe In April. Van-derbU- t, With L.O. lirislcnseu and Sons Jirighain City , Utah. ( I). L-- ''iiun.li tn H PATENTS t VUgt s. at our I I 1VM ' FREE rrprirt tf pmotlN SUR PASSING Rf FtdtNCCS. I.Thw Oulile Bovk on rmniaiiie l un-nut to on patentability. B03 BOS Soionth Btraat, WnSHINOTOra, D. C . j 13 Fifty-sevent- TREMONTON, - Samuel Kent, - - t UTAH, NEW HORSES, NEW HARNESS, NEW CARRIAGES, Everything First Class and Up to Date. Reasonable Charges. S. F. CHR1STENS0N . FARMERS' CASH UNION, Holmgren, mgr. Tremonton, Utah From time to time reports drifted to America of their summer pilgrimage. They were entertained in London by Ambassador and Mrs. Whitelaw ReJ, then visited the ambassador at his country place, Wrest Park. Later they were said to be at Carlsbad for the season. Then the messages had them cruising on European waters. This went on until nearly the end of August. Miss Gladys was 21 on the 24th of that month. Mrs. Vanderbilt cabled an order to open The Breakers, her Newport home, and she and her daughter started for New York, arriving on Sept. 25. When Mrs. Vanderbilt and Miss Gladys reappeared at Newport, their presence seemed to crystalize vague rumors that had been coming from Europe. The gist of these was that Miss Vanderbilt had fallen in love, in the good old way, with a foreign nobleshe man, and that, Vanderbilt-like- , would brook no opposition when she had decided to have her own way. Nothing was to be learned of the nobleman's identity. There was not an inkling of what had actually happened to Miss Vanderbilt during her trip to Europe. Certain Austrian officials in this country are authority for the story. They say Miss Vanderbilt met Count Laszio Szechenyl they in Salsburg. a called It continential watering place, and that they had fallen in love with each other In short order. The count's relatives were told of it and Miss Vanderbilt was invited to come in the to the home of the Szechenyi family, in the district of Horpreck's, Hungary. At a family gathering there, so the story runs, the young American heiress was formally bethrotbed under Then the laws of Austro-HungarMiss Vanderbilt resumed her journey. Count Szechenyi's appearance In Newport started the rumors of Miss Vanderbllt's romance again with fev erish persistency. In the young nobleman tvho was Mrs. Vanderbilt's guest at The Breakers, Miss Gladys Vanderbilt's friends saw a quiet, affable young man of 28, whose dark complexion suggested a Magyar origin. Many even thought he looked like young Robert Walton Goelet, with whom Miss Vanderbilt's name had already been associated. The chief difference was that the count wore a small black mustache with the ends turned up like the Emperor William's. The engagement announced, every one is repenting: "Who Is Count Szechenyl?" His full name Is Ladislaus SzecheHis nyl von Sarvar und Felso-Vidofamily Is one of the oldest la Austrla-angary. Although a count by right, the title does not mean more than an honor conferred on all men of his class, just as all the sons of the Szechenyi family are chamberlains in the Imperial court of Austria-Hungarby birth, and the senior member holds a seat In the upper branch of the Hun-- I garlan parliament So far as lineage goes, probably none of the titled foreigners who have married American women can In ;ist of a longer line of ancestors than count Szechenyl. Besides his family tree, that of the duke of Marlborough, who married Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt, Is the veriest sapling. Count de Castellane, former husband of Miss Anna Gould, might compare with the fsecbenyta In pride of birth, for bis family Is one of the oldest In France and their castle of Castellane has beta In the family for many centuries. The Szechenyl name, however, go-- s hack fully 1,000 years. The story of the young man vho Is to marry Miss Vanderbilt bvgan not later than IN He comes of the Magyarswild ad. venturers decendants of the ancient Boytkiani, who Invaded vrope b Central Asia In the ninth century and overran Hungary and Transylvania. e R The men of the Szechenyi family have borne the title of count for more than 300 years. Among the most celebrated of them was Count Nicholas Szechenyl, companion in arms of the famous Hungarian general, Zrinyi, who in the sixteenth century stood like a battlement between the encroachments of the Turks on the south and east and the kingdoms of western Europe. Few episodes of mediaeval history are more romantic than the story of Zrinyi's defense of Sziget, a fortress on the Danube, withstanding for a month, and with 2,500 men, the onslaughts of the Sultan Solyman and 65,000 Turks. Zrinyi's fate has been made the theme of one of Theodore Koerner's most famous tragedies. Another of the Szechenyis, holding the rank of archbishop, was the meal; tor in bringing about the peace between Emperor Ferdinand and Roko-czy- , by which the latter was recognized as legitimate prince of Transylvania. Like their ancestors the wealth of the family lies in the ownership of land. The young count's father owned thousands of acres divided into scores As of farms and forest preserves. did their forefathers, the Szechenyis drew from these domains tribute of wheat, Turkish pepper, tobacco, hemp and grapes, and next to France, Hungary Is the greatest country in the world. According to Hungarian standards the Szechenyis are very rich and powerful. During the period of Kossuth the young count's great-unclplayed a conspicuous part. High above all the other members of the family, famous in his country as statesmen and public benefactor, rises this conspicuous figure of Count Istvan (Stephen) Szechenyi. Indeed, his people fondly call him the "Greatest Hungarian." The suspension bridge between Pest and Buda, the removal of obstancles to navigation at the Iron Gate, the regulation of the River Theiss and the introduction of steamboats on the Danube were due to his exertions. Count Laszio Is not the first of his family to visit America. His kinsman, Count Bela Szechenyi, well known In his own country as a traveler and explorer, visited the United States 40 years ago. When Miss Vanderbilt goes as a bride to Austro-Hungarshe may well believe herself in that Ruritania which Anthouy Hope has made the scene of so many adventures. Her new domains, now broken by the Carpathian mountains and the Alps, now reaching out toward the rivers in great grain fields or vineyards, will be a land of quaint customs, of traditional romance and of old world aristocracy in present-day The surroundings. great houses of Vienna and the Imperial court will be open to her, and Vienna is one of the gayest of l.'uropean cities. Budapest will offer her a social prestige little less alluring. The reason for this is that the family of Count Szechenyi is represented In nearly every branch of the official The count's father, the late life. Count Bmerlch Siechenyi, was confidential councilor to the Austrian emperor, Franz Joseph, and afterward Ambassador of Austro-Hungarat Berlin, and wore the Order of ttje Golden Fleece His mother was the Countess Alexandra Sztaray-Szlrlnaof ancient Hungarian lineage. The Count Laatto Is 28 years old, having been born on Feb. 18, 1879. He Is the rotmgest of four brothers. The eldest, Count Dlonys, a man of 41, who Is minister plenipotentiary and councilor of the Austrian embassy at Paris. His wife was Countess Maria de Cara-maet Chlmay. The other brothers, Peter, a man of .'17. and Stephen, who Is 34. are unmarried. All of the brothers are rrserve lieutenants In the Imperial huzzars as well as chamberlains at the court. (Manager. George Meldrum, House Painting and Decorating, HEADQUARTERS FOR WALL PAPER. Sign and Carriage Painting Neatly Done. WiH Meet Prices un First Class Work. Utah. Tremonton, You Can Get Concrete Building Blocks p any quantity and for any kind of building by calling on A. B. MANAUSA, Manufacturer, Garland, Utah. e PRICES QUOTED ON APPLICATION. U LIQUOR STORE, Q. A. Woodward, Proprietor, CORINNE, UTAH. We keep the Choicest Wines, Liquors, Tobacco and Cigars. y n Tremonton Horse Breeders' Association. mam if am Sal BREED TO THE BEST. MOINEAU The Old Reliable No. 44324, An Importe d Krnx h IVrcbcron , Wight 210. is At Charles Nrhmuts'a e Terms of place, 2H miles wrst of Tremonton. fur the season of 1907. tV fer single sorvire, er 20 wlifn the ware is known to be in foal. ser-Tlc- |