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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES. SAT UKDAX. AUGUST 9, 189g 2 ' ' WAFFLE & CHOP HOUSE B USINESS DIRECTORY. ADVERTISERS OF f'IRSTCLASS CITY. The Times commends to its patrons the Business and Pro fessional men whose cards ap-pear below. SALT LAKE AT ALL HOURS FROM IS CENTS MEALS west Second street. Jo.vjts & oust-- ion, proprietors). " - GLOBE CAFE, BALL & Co. MEALS AT ALL HOUS3 SFNo. 81 Main street, Salt Lake City. 6KCONU-- ANI CLOT 1 Sti. m7l'e- ?- IN CAST OFF AND SECOND DEALER highest cash price paid for eame; notice by mail promptly attends! to: all kinds tailoring done. 09 w. First South stre3t. STENOGRAPHY. AL STENOGRAPH ER; ALL KINDS OFFICf and Typewriting. Dealer in Remington Typewriter and supplies; Progress building... TAILORS.'. w. aTtaylor, MERCHANT TAILOR. NEW SPRING arrived. 43 and 45 east Second South street, Salt Lake City. " TRUNKS. HULBEET eros MANUFACTURERS OF FINE TRUNKS. sample trunks and rases to order; repairing a specialty; 87 west First South street WATCHMAKERS AND JEWELERS. "ATdLPHHAUEEBAOHTsONSr" IJRACTICAL WATCHMAKERS. jewelry repaired and cleaned. A full line of Waterbury watches. No. 16, E. First South street. T. M, 8URBAUGH, FINE AMERICAN WATCHES, CLOCKS, watch repairing a specialty; prices reasonable : 75 west First South street Bait Lake City. Utah. MISCELLANEOUS. JOHN GREEN, ryrra green & co., sanitary con- - T T tractors and scavengers. P. O. box 859 Wit MORRIS. EMYREYNON. C ALT LAKE STEAM CARPET CLEANING Works, corner fth West and Hacl streets, telephone 47tf. First cliiss work guaranteed. Orders taken at J. O'Connor's drug store, 258 Main street. P. O. box MO. ACCOUNTANTS. HARRY R. BROWNE, EXPERT AND ACCOUNTANT, 1KH9, 851 south Main st. The very best of city reference given. ARCHITECTS. 0. H. LaBELLE, ARCHITECT. 1 EAST FIRST SOUTH Lake City. I am prepared to furnish all manner of plans In the most im-proved style of architecture, sucb as churches, opera houses, hotels, banking houses, private residences and bUKlnesB blocks of any descrip-tion. Best of references given as to my stand-ing. ' ELI L. FEI0E, ROCERIES AND PROVISIONS, UM MAIN CI street IN.Sl'RANCE. w. ' LOUIS HYAM3 & CO. TIRE. LIFE AND ACCIDENT. MUTUAL V Life of New York, f.14 and 615 Progress Block. THE PENN. MUTUAL LIFE INS. 00. PHILADELPHIA. PA.. INCORPOH-ate- d OF 117. conducted for members by members, and havinst unequalled necunty and greatest dividend paying ability. Taylor & Stephens, general agents, 40J and 401 Progress bulfdlnir. LIQUORS AND CIGARS. CHAMBEE OF COMMERCE, AND IM WEST 2nd SOUTH. THE WZ iluest Wines in the city. BEAED'S CIGAE STOEE. TMPORTED AND DOMESTIC CIGARS. 1 SoleagentsfortheSucker&cClgar. 17 west 2nd South et. THE TWO PHILLIPS PLACE. BRANDS OP IMPORTED CHOICEST and Cigars. Schuster Phelps, proprietors, 63 E. Third South street, Salt Lake City. P. T. NYSTE0M. COMMERCIAL SALOON FAMILIES First South and Commer-cial streets. THE COTTAGE, WINES. CIGARS AND LIQUORS, ("1HOT.CE opposite the Utah & Nevada depot, i. Sullivan, proprietor. BOUDOIR SALOON, NO. 39 MAIN STREET. SALT LAKE CITY, Utah. Hlllstead & Co., dealers In Wines. Liquors and Cigars. Salt Lake City Brewing Co's celebrated beer on draughty MOSHER, FLOOD A CO., MIRROR SALOON, City. 135 MAIN STREET, THE PHffiNIX SALOON, TE. PEACOCK, PROPRIETOR, 238 STATE Ice cold Heer on draught; choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. ' THE OCCIDENTAL, PURE GOODS ONLY AND OF THE BEST Studious Attention. Acer A MrmpHY, Proprietors, No. 18 east First South street, Salt Lake City. CL1FT HOUSE BAB, 97Q MAIN STREET. A. J. TAYSUM HO Proprietor. " ll JKkUS s harden City, 4, llpl "fi rill a tltim S - JE - HttsaS! PPPp i a 'i Tn FFff LLiiWMfi4tJJ Geo. M. Scott, Jas. Gi.endennino, H. 8. R(nm, President Vice-Preside- nt Secret, GEO. M. SCOTT & CO, (INCORPORATED.) --DEALERSIN-Hardware and Mete Stoves, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc, AGENTS FOR the Dodge "Wood Pulley, Roebling's Steele Wire ! Vacuum Cylinder and Engine Oils, Hercules Powder, Atlas Engines and ers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson Horse Whim, Bljk f Miners' and Blacksmiths' Tools.', Etc. 168 MAIN STREET, Salt Lake City ' -- ' - Utj A.LWILLIAIvlSr Second Door North of Postoffice, sole foxs, R, G. PLEASANT VALLEY, CASTLE GA' Anthracite, Charcoal, Blacksmith and Pigiron. Yards Cor. Fifth West and Second South. Telephone No. 110, Incoporated, April 10, 1890. Total House Buiing Compan, J. T. Lynch, F. P. Mogenson, . B. E. Hickok, President. Treasurer. General Mam Salt Lake, Utah. This company is purely a home institution, organized to stay, and most sportfully invites the attention of those desiring cottages, either for bomeior sale, to the neat, tasty and attractive appearance presented by this class ol tagns when completed. We claim that they are stronger and warmer thai ordinary rustic building, the sections all being made and put together by chinery, thereby making the work perfectly tight. We are now prepared to nish estimates, take contracts and complete buildings on short time. The ronage of the public is most respectfully solicited. Office and j yard No. 25S1 North Temple street. Examine Our Plans and Prices Before Ion Build. THE UTAH POIXTRT t'OMPMY, Wholesale Produce Dealers, General Commission Merchants. Sole Wextern Ae'nts for the Heston and Bell Spring Crenmery Huttor. 1! West 2nd South tit. Telephone 7U; P. O.boxfill. Branch house Park City, Utah. Real Estate Exchange 29 Commercial Street. MONEY TO LOAN On Good Real Estate Security. F. REHRMAN & CO. NOW IS THE TIME! Yes ! Time to See CHIll 1 OLSEH! Who Have From $500 and Upwardf to Loan on Cood Security or First Mortgage. Will give 1 to Vi per cent Interest. Guar-antee strict buslneHrt. Hanson & Ob, 29 Commercial St. - Salt Lake City J. HANSEN, ft.ATR or OHICAOO.1 RCHITECT AND SUPERINTENDENT, has removed hi a offices to 7, East Second South, room Oi. TEED A. HALE, (LATB Or DENVER.) ARCHITECT OP COMMERCIAL BLOCK, (W, Wasatch bulldiOK. WHITE & ULMER, ARCHITECTS AND SUPERINTENDENTS. and 411, Progress Block, Bait Lake City. ' ATTOBNElfS. wIlluiToondon. LAWYER. ROOMS FIRST FLOOR First South, between Main and Commercial streetu. S. A. MEEEITT, C1TV ATTORNEY, building. ROOMS 610 611, John M. Bkkkzk, James A. Williams BREEZE & WILLIAMS, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , ROOMS 3H ft 315, 0.W.P0WEES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW- , OPPOSITE Second South street. GUMMING & 0RIT0HL0W, ROOMS 4 AND 5, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW- , 1U8 Main street. M. E. McENANY, ATTORNEY-AT-LA- floor. PROGRESS BOOT AND SHOE MAKING. THE PARAGON IS THE BEST AND CHEAPEST PLACE for Shoe Repairing. 11 west South Temple street. CIVIL ENGINEERING hXvixand'mnby, CIVIL ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS. laid out and platted. Rooma 614 and 615 Progress building; P. O. box tW7, Salt Lake City, Utah. . CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. 0HARLE8"E.FIELDS, CONTRACT! )R 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 749 to 751 State road. ROBINSON & SJ0BL0M, CCONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. OFFICE ; and store fittings, general jobbing, pattern making; Agents for g folding bath tub. 174 weBt First South street. J. 0. D0WLIN( CARPENTER, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER, executed ; fitting up stores and counter making a specialty. 823 w. First South street. GEORGE B0GG3 k 00., CONTRACTING AND BUILDING, FITTING a specialty. Arhltecct-nra- l wood carving. 1S7 State road, between First and Second South street, MACHINERY. SILVER BROSi IRON WORKS, MACHINE SHOP AND ; steam engines, mining and mill lng work. No. 149 west North Temple street; Telephone No. 466. MILLINERY AND DRESSMAKING. grj()HNi ' T'HE ONLY LADIES' TAILOR IN THE X city. Ladles desiring the latest styles and fashions will do well to call on him. No. 6b East Second South, rooms 3 and 4. MONEY TO LOAN. L WAITERS; BROKER, 31 E FIRST SOUTH STREET, Deseret National Bank, Salt Lake City. Makes loans on Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry; rents collected; railroad tickets bought and sold: business confidential. Es-tablished 186A. All unredeemed pledges sold at 'u.y low rates. ., ,r ..; i MCSIO MAGNUS0LS0Nr TEACHER OF VIOLIN, GUITAR AND Olson's orchestra and brass hand. Residence, hr M street, 21st ward. Leave orders at any of the music stores, or at Sharp Si Younger's Palace drug store. PAINTERS AND DECORATOR)! PETERSON & BROWN, O IGNS, 63 WEST FIRST SOUTH STREET, O Salt Lake City. PLUMBING, A. J. BOURDETTE 4 OoT 11LUMBERS. STEAM AND GAS FITTERS Jobbers. Weast Second South street, Salt Lake City. Telephone No. 431. JAMES FENWIOK, PRACTICAL PLUMBER, STEAM AND GAS Engineer. 61 East Third South street, Salt Lake City, Utah. P. J. M0RAN, STEAM HEATING ENGINEER, 350 MAIN Salt Lake City. PLATING. novtmyIianufaIdt GOLD, SILVER AND NICKEL PLATING the Dynamo Process. All kinds of repairing done with neatness and dispatch. Kwuuson Bos, 61 E 3d South. DE. END II IS, DISEASES of W0KE9 and CHILDREN. Royal University. Julius-Maximilia- n, Wuuzburg, Bavaria. We hereby certify that Dr. Wm. R. Endris, of St. Louis, Mo.. U. S. A., has been late as-sistant in the University Hospital, In the wards for Midwifery aud for Diseases of Women aud Children. (Signed) Scanzonivov Lichtenfei.s, Professor of Midwifery and diseases of Women Puof. Rl.NDFI.KISCH, Pathology, Histology and Medical Chemistry. To make this certificate valid, we attach the seal of the Royal University. (Slgued) Dk, Hei.de. Rector. DB. Kobbel, Sect. Wurzburg, April 1883. Vienna. Austria. June 29, 1883. W ituess that Db. Wm. R. Endhis of St. Louis, U. 8. A., was assistant In the Hospital for Diseases of the Genlto-Urlnar- v organs of the male and female. Syphilis, etc., and is skilled In the various operations and treat- ment and In the microscopical aud cnemlcal diagnosis of the urine. (Signed) Dn. Robert Ult.jian, Prof, of Diseases of Urinary Organs. Dr. H. RIMER von Heiiba. Prof, of Syphilis and Skin Diseases. We hereby certify that Drt, Wm. R, Endris, of St. Louis, was our assistant in the General Hospital Vienna, in the department for the Hea.it and Lungs, Throat and Nose (Catarrh) and has much experience In the diagnosis and treatment of these diseases, (Signed) Dh. Jos. von Dro.da, Prof, of Internal Medicine. Professor Sohnitzlkr, Vienna, June 1, 1884. Office, 28 West 2nd South, opp. Cullen. 18 years in Salt Lake City, Dr. C. W. Higgins The Woll-Know- n Specialist, Has removed to more elegant and commodious parlors, 17 and 18, - St. Elmo Hotel. UENTISTKY. DR. BIS0H0F, DENTIST. 1U8 SOUTH MAIN STREET, and 8. Teeth extracted without pain. Teeth extraoted plain 2fi cents, with cocaine 60 cents. Durable rulings SO, ?r cents and upward. Hest set of teeth 10. All work guaranteed. Open from 8 a. m. to 0 p. ui.; Sundays from 8 a. m. to 1 p, m. Cut this out. J, JEPPERS0N, 1PRACTICAL SCULPTOR AND CARVER, Office, 11 east North Temple street. J..W. WHITE0AR, DESIGNER AND building. ENGRAVER ON WOOD, 1EKF1KFI Frankin Fire Insurance Ct Of Philadelphia. Organized 1829. Charter Perpetui Assets, - - $3,174,357.04 Insurance Reserve, 1,765,294.71 Continental Insurance Company, Of ITew "Soils. Cash Capital, - - $1,000,000.00 Insurance Reserve, - 2,470,343.24 Assets, - - - 6,217,773.91 When you purchase a policy that you expect to worth $2000 in case of fire, you should investigate the co: pany with the same care that you would use in lending tl sum. No States in the Union have as good insurance la' as New York and Pennsylvania. Call at our office for copy of the Safety Fund U This law prevents the failure of a company by great conJ grations. Under this law none of the surplus funds cant divided among stockholders. Both have to be held for c security of policy holders as long as a policy remains in fan DAVIS & STRINGER. 23 West Second South st Two doors east of Cullen Hotel. AgentS. SSPKGIALS ' Our Addition corner of Second Westl and Tenth South, with fine trees on all streets and alleys, is the choice subdivi- - Ja .on adjoining the city. ' Ties are now distributed and cars will be running on Second West and Tenth South within sixty days. Lots at original price until August ist only. DaW& Stringer. .. ( i PHYSICIANS. DR. G. J. FIELD. 57LousASATCH BUILDING LATE OF ST. DR. J. S. BLACKBURN & CO., TTERNIA SPECIALISTS; RUPTURE 15??.clS!y d without surgical opera-tlo- South st., opp. the Theater. DRS. FREEMAN & BURROWS, "PYE, EAR, NOSE. THROAT. SPECT-J.- J cles accurately fitted. Rooms 17 and 18. h building. JlKAL ESTATE AND LOANS. W. P. D0DDS, IJEAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE Kioufa collected' '8 K First Sout THE SYNDICATE INVESTMENT 00., R stiV ,FTAT,E' liWM OVER BANK OP aspecialtyf lnve8tments for non residents . . MONEY WANTED. IF YOU DESIRE A GOOD lZlCm' Cal1 Cn S- - Spencer? ALFRED DUNSEEE, RZ$k 5,STATE' LOANS, INVESTMENTS. Lake City uh8treet Jne8 Bank- - Sa'' J. Q. JACOBS & 00. REAM',STA?'E DEALERS, 147 PROGRESS to for 8ale "Idence all parts of the city ; also choice bargaikslri business and farm property. THE MIDLAND INVESTMENT 00. BARGATNS IN REAL ESTATE. LOANS No. 177 Main street. BURTON, GROESBECK & CO., "DEAL ESTATE. NO. StU MAIN 8TREET. RKSTAl'ttjLNT& fountaBlWhItand J FKoW-S.iZ1S,KKA- PROPRIETOR, meals itVail ,Mn "treet- Shrt ordor Coramutatlon Tickets to. FURNITURE. SANDBERO FURNITURE 00., MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN School Desks, Screen doors and Windows. Jobbing and promptly attended to. 1US and 110 W. SouthTemple Htrcet. GKOCKKIES. W, E. D. BARNETT, Agent, CGROCERIES FRUITS, POULTRY, PRO-- visions, Flour. Feed aud Fresh Meats; 59 east Third South slreeti telephone 4M. ROGERS COMPANY, THE LEADING GROCERS, 46 EAST FIRST street. FRED 6. LYNGBERG, CTAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, PRO-- visions, Fruit, Vegetables. Poultry, Fish, Game, etc. 63 east First South street. Tele-phone M. john Mcdonald & sons, FINE TEAS AND COFFEES A 0 Main street. J. H. CLARK, CI REEN, STAPLE AND FANCY GROCE- - ties, Fruits, Poulty and Fish, No. 68 west First South street. Orders by telephone (2vnt) promptly attended to. 0. M. HANSEN, DEALER IN CHOICE FANCY GROCERIES corner Grain, Coal and Kindling Wood, Third South aud State street. M7T0BIASTS0N7 DEALER IN FANCY GROCERIES. Poultry. Fruit and Vegetables. A 11 troods delivered to any part of the ctty. No. 818 south First East street Dr. C. W, Higgins, Macroscopic and Analytio Piysician, Has practiced in Salt years, and the wonderful and "ell-ea- t abashed LXm,fl',hleffe,iie1 tn that time prove ?he compounded. Forming on dtaSnolir the are a microscope enable him to detect the pcarlimcaurrye.causof the disease and efft a radl The Doctor has cured thoisauds of case of Nervous Debility. Mental and Phy- sical Weakness, Lossof Manhood and Nervous Prostration, the result of early indiscretion "1 and will forfeit Fl v H UN oreft Dollars for any case taken under hii treat- ment which he falls to cure. niSSli1ng''e!r?ingG0?Jo!riia leet, Stricture and all diseases,which vitiate "ntly ?ured 'y,tmi thorou8hly Perm? ALL CLASSES OF FITS CURED. Ttseioros remoied sitb Head or no Pay. A FOOLISH QUARREL. John B. Burton Characterises the Controversy as Bncu. It is indeed a sad eight to see labor leaders st loggerheads over tho merit of their respective organizations, and ex-posing to publio view the alleged incon-sistencies (or worae) which have been practiced by their rivals. It matters nothing to the labor movement at large whether Powderly or Gompers is on top, bnt it does concern all that the labor movement shall move on steadily toward the goal of the greatest benefit to the greatest number. The educational feat-ures of the Knights of Labor have been often subordinated to personal ambi-tions, no doubt, and calling the attention of the membership to such disregard of the plain object of the organization is right provided it is done with the pur-pose of remedying the wrong; but when two leaders indulge in a wordy war and answer each other by "you're another," it is time to call a halt. Neither organization has all the good features of the movement. Each can work where the other cannot work to advantage. The trados union movement cannot possibly succeed without the help of the Knights of Labor. We see that in every strike. For timos have changed so as to make it impossible for any body of workmen to permanently gain ad-vanced conditions without the of all. The movement must be general, and the quarrels of leaders are apt to be taken up by their follow-ers, and the movement is thus retarded to the detriment of the workman. Sala-ries of officers may go on, but wages of the rank and file suffer from the weak-ening of the general body. The treatment which Mr. Gompers and many trades unionists have accorded to Knights of Labor lias not been justified in any respect. These gentlemen should remomber that union men made the Knights of Labor the power it has been. In Detroit, for instance, the union mem bers of the Knights of Labor have al-ways maintained peace between the two organizations, although at times the ex-tremists on both sides have done their best to raise trouble. In the cigarmakers' trouble here, while dome of the Knights of Labor wished to give the label to non-unio- n workers, they were headed off by the adoption of rules which provided that it should not be given to any work which did not pay the highest price for manufacture and abide by rules as good as those of the union. In the molders' trouble, too, when the St. Louis patterns were sent here, it was the union members of the K. of L. who suggested a meuns by which a fight, which the manufacturers wished to force, could be avoided. In the late carpenters' strike the K. of L. ship carpenters were found with thorn. When Mr. Gompers characterizes the K. of L. as scabs he should remember that he libels many men who are stanch unionists as he con possibly be. What the workman wants, whether he belongs to the K. of L. or a union, is the best possible conditions that can be attained. Whatever will help him to these is to his advantage. Whatever will hinder his attainment of them is to his detri-ment. John R. Burton in Detroit News. NOVEL DMH FIGHTS. Some Queer and Usually Satisfactory Methods of Settling Disputes in the West. DUELLING WITH HOWITZERS. A Mortal Combat Beneath the World-De- ath as Dealt Out by Reck-less Men. The riata duel is not ft new thing on the Mexican frontier. Indeed, there is hardly a big cattle range anywhere that has not its gtoriea of hard fights with the lasso. Such duels are bound to he fierce. But so skillful and quick do those rope throwers become that such a duel not nnfrequently lasts for hours. Probably the best remembered fight of this sort was that between a Texan, known as Kid Long, and a little Mexi-can who was only spoken of as "Gabilan" hawk on the great Lievrerango. They ' circled around each other, dodging the rapid throws from 10 in the morning until after sunset. When the horses had almost given out the Texan threw at his adversary, who threw back so that his nooee passed right over the other man's lasso and hand and caught him fair round the neck and under tbe armpit. In almost no time Kid was out of his addle and being dragged over the ground at a rate that knocked the life out of him before he had gone a hundred yards. The west, during its wild and woolly days, and the Mexican frontier nave had many remarkuble duels. KING OF THE CAMP. That between "Parmer" Peel and a soldier, near one of the forts in Utah, is among the classics of the field of honor or what has answered fur that in tho cow towns and mining camp. Tbe weapons wore rifles, revolvers and bowie knives. The men principals wore placed on opposite sides of a hillock, around ' which ran a road, and started to meet. The curve of the hill prevented their see-ing one another until they were within hundred yards. As soon as they saw one another both fired. Though part of the rim of Peel's hat was cut off, and the soldier's sleeve was pierced, noither was hurt. Then they pulled their pis-tols and advanced, firing. Both dropped badly wounded when Jess than twenty yards separated them. They lay there squirming and shooting until both had emptied their weapons. Peel was des-perately hurt and his adversary had one ball through the stomach and several others distributed all over his anatomy. When they could shoot no more they lay for a short time swearing. Then Peel, who was so badly hurt that he could not advance even on his hands and knees, began to wriggle toward the fallen soldier. He pulled himself along with his elbows, and with his one uninjured hand finished the soldier with his bowie knife. Farmer Peel already had the biggest private graveyard of any man in the vicinity. This encounter spread his fame all over the coast, and when he went over to Nevada he received every-where the homage of lesser lights. DUELING IN COMSTOCK MINE. I. They have lots of deadly encounters up there on the Comstock. There was one a number of years ago fought over half a mile under ground. According to the evidence given at the inquest by the survivor, the two miners were working alone in a drift They were rivah over the affections of a woman, and in a quar-rel one made a drive at the other with his candlestick. A minor's candlestick consists of a metal socket attached to a sharp steel spike, so that it can be stuck in the face of the drift anywhere. The second miner defended himself with his candlestick, and there, thousands of feel tinder the ground, they wrestled aud stabbed antil one's life was gone. As they did not come up when they should have gone off shift others went down in search of thorn. They found one dead , and the other unconscious through loss of blood. The jury, of course, had to take the survivor's story of the affair, and he was acquitted. A strange duel was fought in a sparsely settled part of Sonora, Mexico, abont fifteen years ago. Capt. Villenueva and a lieutenant of a battery of light artil-lery belonging to one of the posts had some trouble about whe was the best shot with the mountain howitzers. They quarreled and agreed to settle it with the howitzers at COO yards. They took neither seconds nor assistant gun-ners, but from the top of small hillocks they fired explosive shells at one an-other. The captain was wounded by a fragment of a shell, but they fired ton shots before either was disabled, though each was covered with dust. Finally the captain landed a shell fairly under his adversary's gun and the explosion so mangled the lieutenant that ho died be-fore thoy could remove him to the post. AN APACHE SNAJEB VIOUT. A little blind canyon in the Siena Jlaflre used to furnish the Apaches with the means of formally settling their dis-putes. This gulch is fairly alive with rattlesnakes. When two bncks hod a quarrel that they did not winii to sottle off hand they repaired to this gulley, and while the remainder of the tribe stood around and watched from the . hills on either Bide the combatants went together to where tho serpents were thickest. There stark naked and weap-onless they would wrestle. This would wake up every rattler in the glen. The aim of each was to force the other on to the angry snakes. It was not unusual for both to be bitten while they strug-gled and rolled around among the rocks. Each was bound to remain and wrestle as long as his adversary had life or trength enough to struggle with him. A most remarkable duel was fought at Las Camitas, N. M., many years ago. An under sized stranger came to the town and picked a quarrel with "Hand-some Harry," a gambler renowned as a dead shot. They got out Into the road and both fell mortally wounded. It was discovered that the stranger was a wom-an, and though she never spoke after he fell the story became known that he was a sister of a girl whom "Hand-some Harry" had wronged years before. San Francisco Examiner. A Law of Nature. Alasl the capitalist, it must be owned, is too often angered at being defied, and, strong in his possession. of the sinews of war, holds out and refuses all efforts toward conciliation. It is scarcely credible, but it is the fact, that at one time it was regarded as a criminal conspiracy that the weak should join forces aud unite against the strongl Why, it is the law of nature and a device adopted by the very beasts of the field and tho forest. What have all parliaments been but such unions? That doctrine, a relic of barbarism and the feudal system, and of atrocious and abominable slavery, has, thank goodness, long been swept away! One word of warning to union men seldom, however, now necessary. Never imperil the moral strength of your posi-tion and infallibly alienate publio sym-pathy by an appeal to your strong right arm. Never use force I The days of force have gone by, even if you could do any good, which you can't, for you are bonnd to be overpow-ered by a superior force police with batons and staves, or military with rifles and buckshot. Detroit News. Official Information. In one of the rooms where eighty peo-ple were employed, nearly all girls, the place was so filled up with rags and clothing that there was scarcely room for the girls to move their elbows, and the atmosphere was enervating. Passing out we struck through street. The breeze brought an odor to my nostrils which surpassed in vileness anything I ever experienced. It was like a hundred intensely vile odors rolled Into one. "What U that?" I asked. "Oh, tliat is only a whiff of Essex street air," said my guide. "You'll got used to it." I said to myself, God help the people who breathe that air all thoir lives, and resolved to do what I could to call atten-tion to their surroundings. Mrs. Bremer, New York Factory Inspector. Ti'nu There. Gentleman I'm afraid you're a bad egg. This is tlie third time I've caught yon poaching. Pat Sure, av I wnza bad egg I wouldn't poach. Harper's Baaar. A Patriotic Employer. Blobson By the way, Dumpeey, how do rou like your new clerk? Dumpsey Don't like him at all. Blobson Why don't you tire him, then? Dumpsey So I ahull, but not right away. It has occurred to me that it would be a neat little bit of patriotism to hold off till next Fourth of July and then fire him. 6eef Barlinaton Free Press. 1 Quit Bight. Jim Jack, lend me a fiver, pleaae? Jack-Certa- inly. Lend me the fiver 1 last loaned yen. aad you oas have it. Bas-so Courier, |