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Show The Louis Fourteenth of India. In order to arrive at a fair underin standing of what was accomplished tile decorative architecture during in- man ot biian Jeuuii, uue must take to consideration the uuier iuuuuiiicin.il of Agra, having begun wim inn laj Jdahai and the paiaou. 'me "Muu or Feari Mosque, which is Muaiid, seemingly restful from us appearance of extreme simplicity, artfully conceals beneath this exterior a great deal of studied proportion aud elaborate detail. It on The broad court, when one entera daxsle a bright day, has the blinding for nothing meets the of a snuw-liei.eye but marble aui the deep blue sky. Is u thing could exceed the delicacy of ot tint color and subtle gradations when the eye penetrates from the outer behind of suaduw glare into the depths the arches. But, as in the raj,andmere me is no darkness in this shadow, ueuuls of the innermost wall are clear-A ly visible from across the courts. kiiorL distance from tne fortress r.so the three great domes ot the junimu aius-ji- d or chief mosque of Agra, uecuiaieU with sigsug hands of whue and led stone. T his also Is of bnan jeuan s reign. When we pass on to muni, his chief capital, we are confronted by senes of imposing buildings, the the remains of me great fortress and tne great palaces within the lnclosure, mosque, the largest and most stately pile, as a whole, among Mohammedan religious edifices. And further on, at Lahore, we And still another capital and auotlier senea of palaces and mosques. in the hill fortress of Uwaliur lucre Is yet another palace of Bliab Jefiun, but a small one, only 3211 feel in length, perched, as usual, an the very verge of an embattled steep." uilgnt be Many outer pleasure-house- s added to the list, for this monarch seeins to have taken pleasure in distributing himself over a vast extent of of the territory. An approximate Idea monuprodigious number of artistic ments for which Northern India is Indebted to hla splendid extravagance may be gained by supposing that Louis XIV., for instance, after constructing Versailles and its dependencies, had built tbe Louvre, Luxembourg, and other edlllcea of Faria, the work of different architectural epochs, had then built htuiaelf another capital at London, with citadels, palaces, cathedrals, and still another at Brussels, and linked them all together by a chain of smaller palaces and occasional retreats. Had not death lnterupted his ambition, he would have built a pendant to tbe Taj across the Juuima, and thrown a marble bridge over the river between them. From "Notes on Indian Art," by Kdwln Lord Weeks, In Harper's Magazine for September. There Were Two Macaulays. Then it Is that we become aware that there were two Macaulays: Macaulay the artist, with an exquisite gut fur ' telling a story. Ailing his pages with little vignettes it is impossible to forget, Axing these with an inimitable art upon the aunace of a narrative that did nut need the ornament they gave aud suequate , it, so strong and large was It; and Macauley the Whig, sub-- . tly turning narrative into argument, and making history the vindication of a party. The mighty narrative is a , great engine of proof. It is not told fur us own sake, it la evidence summed up in order to Justify a Judgment. We detect the tone of the advocate, and though if we are Just we must deem him honest, we cannot deem hnn safe. . The great story-tellis discredited; and willingly, we reject the guide who .takes It upon hlmaelf to determine for us what we shall see. That, we feel sure, cannot be true which makes of so complex a history so simple a thesis fur the Judgment. There is art here; but it is the art of special pleading, misleading even to the reader. "Ciu the Writing of History," by Irof. Woodrow Wilson, In September Century. Hattie of Waterloo. On June 13, 1895, Napeleon left laris for tbe seat of war. on tbe lath tne French army crossed the river bainbre and fell upon the enemy. Then came Waterloo. Waterloo! that famous battle, where Napoleon Arst met the unconquerable Kngiish face to lace; where Wellington made hla name immortal; that battle glittering in Its array, brilliant in its maneuvers, terrible in its Intensity, horrible in Its loss of life; that battle remarkable fur little blunders that led to great results, and for magnlUceiit attempts that amounted to nothing; that battle, so nearly a defeat fur England, so nearly a victory for France, that to this day men cannot see Just how It turned tne other way, and historians and military writers are even yet disputing as to the responeibiliy and discussing the operations. It is not for us to describe or discuss It here. Napoleon was beaten; conquered, It may be, as tbe English say, by Wellington; conquered. It may be, as the Germans claim, by Biucher; conquered. It may be, aa declares Victor Hugo, the Frenchman, by the will of heaven. A Hoy of the First Empire," by Elbrldge 8. Brooke, in September Bt. Nicholas. d, an-olh- er er . - Lady Customer (in china shop) Do you break these sets? Dealer No, madam. The purchasers' servants usually attend to that. laiiidun Flck-Ue-L- p. An Interesting Medal. "In Paris M. Molssan has recently succeeded in preparing fairly large masses of pure molybdenum," says the Engineering and Mining Journal. August 10th. The metal thus obtained has a specific gravity of 9, and la only fused with ulihculty. The pure inetal la quite aa soft and as malleable aa wrought Iron, and can be easily forged at a red heat. It can be preserved without oxidation under wuter fur several days. The most remarkuole property of the metal Is, however, the fuel that It can be cemented like wrought Iron, forming a 'steel,' if the term nmy be used, which can be tempered similarly to ordinary steel. Moreover, east molybdenum containing several per cent of carbon can be softened by placing It In a mass of oxid of the metal, Just as in the ordinary process of making malleable castings. Having a very great alAnlty for oxygen, M. Molssan suggests that It may be usefully added to the iron In a converter, replacing manganese or aluminum. As the oxid of the metal Is volatile, It does not remain In the converter." in Spelling. statistician has turned hlmaelf louse on the subject of wasted words and letters. The French and Economy Some French English languages are, aa he proves with many ilgurea, especially often to criticism In this matter, and money Is lost every year by lack of verbal economy. The French language coniaiua 13 per cent of useless letters. There are CSOO THE DOOLEY FAMILY Journals published in the language, and they print lu.s,uob,uuu,Oiio loiters every y . .ir, so that U.fuO.uuu.uuO words are they are needed, printed nut because but they have come to be used In the French language aa It Is spoken. The writer computes that tl.FJh.uuo Is the aunual cost of this useless exfieuditure of printer's ink In France alune. Uf Journals printed In the English language there are 17,(i0u, and they are larger. Twelve per cent of our printed letters are skipped over by the longues pronouncing the words, and so $7,UUU,UUU Useless letters, he is thrown away. goes on to say, till up a large amount of in this way Is lost on and paper, space 1 15.1)00,000 among English-speakin- peo- g ple and 33,600,000 in France. The time taken up in writing these useless let35 at a ters. If estimated day per Grand Journalist, Is worth 34,500,000. total. $!, GOO, Out).' The Inter-Ocean, Chicago, Struggle With a Bear. The strength of the hunter was often sevenly taxed, not only In the chase proper, but in encountering tierce The bear Agures by the way. largely in hunting tales tuld around the e a to camp-firgroup of interested listeners, among whom sits the boy longing for the time to coine when, like hero uf the some tribe, he shall be uble to grapple single-hande- d with the powerful grizzly bear, and tear its feartul Jaws asunder. The niece of a noted Nes Ferce Indian hunter, now a very old woman, relutes that her untie performed this feat, and her story Is well corroborated in the tribe. Attacked suddenly by Hie huge animal, the man seised It with one hand by an ear Into which lie thrust his fingers, while with the other hand, at the expense of a thumb, he lure Jaw and left apart the muscles ofto the i le on the sleep the helpless beast mountain-sidHunting Customs oi the Oinnhus," by Alice C. Fletcher in September Century Why the Powers Divided Africa. be That the Monroe doctrine could strictly deified recognised In Europe is We renot are by the European press. garded as a natlun capable of aggres-as sive politics, and our reputation exto warriors is not sufiiclently great othercite fear In other countries, it la wise with our reputation in the peaceful struggle for commercial and industrial supremacy. Europe has discovered that we are no longer dependent upon her manufactures, while our raw produce Is absolutely necessary to European industries, it is the knowledge of these facts, thinks the Vosslsche Zeltung, Herlin, which has caused the partitioning of the Dark Continent. The says: paier "The partitioning of Africa Is a necessity. Europe must have a market for her produce, must be enabled to produce raw material upon soli belonging to her, and she needs new spheres lino which her children can be sent as culunlsts. lienee the wish to extend their 'spheres of liiiluence,' which has possessed tbe great European nationss for the post fifteen years. The dlscov-eiieSchwelmurtn, oi Livingstone, Wissinun, and Stanley, Nachtigal, many others, gave the impetus, and now even ltussia extends her hand toward Abyssinia, alihougn she is naturally mure Interested in Asia. To civilise Africa Is, however, a much more difficult task than the subjection and colonization of America, partly on account of the climate, partly because Africa is much mure thickly settled. The American colonies were very favorable to settlers, and well suited for the increase of the whites, since, with the exception of the Mexicans and Feruviaus, there were nothing but nomadic hunters, devoid of all civilisation, and unable to resist the whites. Africa has the desert to defend her, as well as the fever, ami her people, partly civilised by the Arabs, can not easily be subjected to the Influence of European culture. Hut the economical situation forces Europe to retain Africa as her own. The New World is doing its best to become emancipated from the infiuenoe of our industries, and seeks to make us dependent by Us wheat and its cotton. We must have Africa to produce both, Hand-to-IXa- anl-iiiu- ih e. A Million Bicycles. The historian who will write the true history of tiie closing years of the nineteenth century will be compelled to say a great deal about the growth, inilueiice, and effects of the bicycle nubit during that period. The points which he will feel obliged to cover are as numerous as they are Interesting. The bicycle, as tbe legitimate successor of the velocipede of a quarter of a century ago, was taken up as an appliance fur exercise and pleasure. These it has furnished to an extent not anticipated by Its most enthusiastic devotees, in addition. It has passed beyond any limits of mere pleasure or exercise. It has forced Itself ou the attention of the great war powers of the earth. It remains to be aeen what warlike purposes it may serve; but it is safe to say that in tne next European war the Arst man of the invading force In the enemys country will be mounted on a wheel. It has conquered society. Aristocracy in England and France, as well as in this country, has recognised its worth. In adopting it the idle and luxurious classes have rendered a service by enormously increasing its popularity. The hundreds of thousands who mlgnt have hesitated between desire and dread in the uncertainty aa to whether it was tbe proper thing have had their doubts cleared away. A custom which has the sanction of the Faubourg tit. Germain uf the British peerage, of the Mlchaux club uf Newport, aud of the local Four Hundred In euch one of our great cities is us firmly established as the Constitution with its subsequent amendments. In this country it Is creating, as we huve said, social and economical conditions worthy of the attention of the Historian, u may not be true, as Mrs. Anthony says, that woman Is riding to sultrage on the bicycle, but It Is undoubtedly true that she Is riding to greater ireedom, to a nearer 'equality with man, to tne habit of taking care of herself, and to new views on the subject of clothes philosophy. The woman on the wheel is altogetner a novelty, and is essentially a product of the last decade of the century. in this country alone the sales of bicycles for this year are estimated at half a million. The total number of bicycles In use Is estimated at a million. These figures are mere guesses, but there Is uuthing incredible or Improbable about them. It Is certain that we are only at the beginning uf what is called the bicycle craze, and the Indications arc that the craze is nut getting ready to disappear, even If it Is not getting ready, as Is more likely, to supersede all other methods of It REUNION. Run Well Till the Saw Came in Between. the Why aren't you out attending reunion of the Dooley family 7 Mr. McKenna asked the philosopher. to me, Mr. "Thims no Thlm's farmer DooDooley answered. leys. No wan Iv our family Iver lived in th' counlhry. We live In th' city, where they burn gas an have a polls Jooi'ce to get on to. We're no farmers, divvle lb bit. We belong to the Indus-thre- al classes. Thim must be th Fermanagh Dooleys, a poor lot, Jawn, an' always on good terms with th lanlord, bad cess to thim, says 1. Were fr'm Koscommun. They'se a Dooley family In Wizford an' wan near Bally bone that bulonged to Hi' constabulary. 1 met him but wanst. "fwas at an ivlc-lioan' though he didn't know me, I lnihrajooced mesilf be landin him back lv th' ear with a bouldher th size iv ye'er two fists together, lie dldat know me aftherwards, ayether. We niver had but wan reunion lv th' Dooley family, an' that was tin years ago. Me cousin Felix's boy. Aluy-siu- s him that aftherwards wlnt to New York an got a good Job dhrlvln' u can-edgf'r th captain lv a polls station; lie was full lv poethry an things, an' he come aroun wan night an' says he: D'ye know, he says, 'twud lie th' hlte iv a good thing f'r th' Dooleys to have a reunion,' he says. We ought to come together. he says, 'an' show the people lv this wu-arhe says, 'how sthrong wa are,' he says. Ye might do It belther, me buck,' says 1, 'shovelin' slag at th' mills,' I says. Ltut unnyliow, it ye'er mind s set on it, go ahead,' 1 says, 'an' 1 11 attend to havin' th' polis there,' 1 says, 'f r I have a Uhrug at th nation. "Well, he slut out letliiers to all th itoscommon Dooleys, an' on a Sulurdah iiiglit we come together in a rinied hail tn' hlld til reunion, fwas great spoon f'r awhile. Some lv us hadn't spoke frlmlly to each other fr .twinty years, an we set around an' tol stories lv Koscommun an its green fields, an th stirabout pot that was niver filled, an th' blue sky overhead an' th' boggy ground undherfoot. Which Dooigy.jtus It that hamsthrung th' cows? Mike Dooley's Fat. Naw such thing; twss Fat Dooleys Mike I mane Fat Dooley's Mike's Fat, f'r 'tls with us as with th list iv our people. Ye take th Dutchman; he has as manny names to give to his chlldher as they'se nails In his boots, but an Irishman has th pick lv ony a few. I knowed a man be th pick iv Clancy a inan frm Kildare. He had fifteen chlldher, an whin th las come he says: Dooley, dye happen to know anny saints? None lv thim thrades here, says I. Why? says 1. Theyse a new kid at th house,' he says, an, be me troth, Ive run out lv all th saints I knew, an If somewan dont come to me assistance Ill have to turn th child out on th wurruld without th rug iv a name to his back, he says. "liut I was tellln ye about th reunion. They was lashlns iv dhrlnk an story-lelli- n an Felix's boy Aloyslus histed a banner he hud made wilh 'Dooley abuo painted on It. But aftlier th' night got along some lv us begun to raymlmber that most lv us hadnt been f rinds fr long. Mrs. Morgan Dooley, she that was Molly Dooley before she married Morgan, she turns to me an' Tls slhrange they let In says she: that Hogan woman, she says that Hogan woman, Jawn, bein th' wife lv her husband's brother. She heerd her say It an' she says: 'I'd have ye to that no wan iver come out iv Itoscommon that cud hold up their heads with th Hogans, she says. ' 'Tls nut f'r th likes lv ye to slamlher a fam'ly that's lv th' landed glnthry lv Ireland, an' fr two pins I'd hit ye a poke In th eye, she says. If U.hkdn't been f'r me bein bechune thim they'd have been throuble, f'r they was good frlnds wanst. What Is It th good book says about a woman scorned? Faith, Ive forgotten. Thin me uncle Mike come in, as rough a man as Iver laid hands on a pollam&n. Felix Dooley was makln a speech on th vartues lv th famly.re 'Th' Dooleys, says he,' 'can stand all th wurruld, an' no man can or say ought agin ayether their honorman their Integrity, says he. Th' says me thats throwin that at ye, me In th' uncle Mike, 'stole a saw frm Felix paid no attenyear slvlnty-flve- .' tion to me uncle Mike, but wlnt on: 'We point proudly to th motto, Dooley a boo Dooley frlver.' Th' saw aboo, says me uncle Mike. Th' Dooleys,' says Felix, stood beside Rid Hugh O'Neill, an whin he cut aft his hand He didn't cut If all with anny wan Use's saw, says me uncle Mike. 'Theyse an old sayin, wlnt on Felix. An ol saw,' says me uncle Mike. But 'twas new whin ye stole it. ' Now look here, says Aloyslus. This thing has gone far enough. Tls an outrage that this here man ah'd come here fr to Insult th head lv tli' famly.' Th head lv what fam'ly? says Morgan Dooley, Jumpin' up as hot as fire. 'Im th head Iv th' famly, he says, be right lv hlsthry. Ye'er an of cow, says me uncle Mike. Th' back lv me hand an th' sowl lv me fut to all iv yex, he says. I quit ye, he says. Yeer all livin' here undher assumed names, an' he wlnt out followed be Morgan Dooley with a chair In each -hand. Well, they wasn't two Dooleys In th' hail'd speak whin th meetln broke up, an th' Lork knows, but I don't to this day, who's th head lv th Dooley fam'ly. AH I know Is that I had wan th nex' morning. Chicago Font. rel-atio- n, d,' be-fu- CJL C.1ARLLS DENBY. Col. Charles Denhy, United States Minister to China, has been instructed by the Government as to the course he should pursue In the investigation of the recent missionary outrage in China. Nothing has been heard from Mr. Den-b- y for some days, and there Is a rumor that he has otTcnded the ofllclals at HIGH-GRAD- . The choicest Is Sslt I.sks since April 17th, !I5. T obacco Cure Eagle remittance subdl-vlsii.- li 353 lots sold City. close-li- t Is a Wonderful Thing, . WHY? It is right " la the city, only 12 minutes drive from business center, LIuli ground, splendid vies), surroniidttd by nice houses, wide streets, Lots 130 feet deep to alley, MU feet wide. Now $90 to $175 per Lot. T HAS NO RIVAL in its successful Work. Read the TESTIMONIALS men. Works no INof wel JURIES on tha system, but improves your HEALTH. TAKE XT and in 5 DATS you will be CURED of the TOBACCO and CIGARETTE HABIT and your days Only half their present value. $10 cash, No interest, no luxes 10 per month. until paid for. August 1st prices will be advanced. W. E. HUBBARD, on earth will be lengthened. Weft Second South. Oakley hat s neer pirk. 43 Send $5 for one bottle to self to the practice of law. Since he has been minister to China. 1SS5 MRS. WYNFORD PHILLIPS. Eagle Pharmacy, E. E. Cor. 8oond South sad West Tempi The suffrage movement If gaining ground dally In England, and the best women in the land are 11s supporters. Mrs. Fhlllips is a slight woman, very beautiful, with earnest eyes and strong As a girl bride. Just after features. E. N. JENKINS Temple of Music. Utah Agent (or the beat Plsuoi and Organa In tha market , 203 South West Temple, POST OFFICE BLOCK. HIE OF "M THE ASTONISHING RIPPER" RESULTS From Tbs Now Confined in an insane Asylum. EAGLE LIQUOR CURE SAFEST, MOST SUCCESSFUL, AND MOST PERMANENT REMEDY YET DISCOVERED. Mrs. Wynford Phillips. Casas heretofore bepeleaa, mow eared aid to aeWaei of life and happiawe. of the Whitechapel brought her husband, John Wynford Phillips, Perpetrator READ TUB TESTIMONIAL of a had been elected to the House of Comone skeptiool on liquor eqree, but bow a Butcheries Was a Young Medical vert to tin Bag. mons, Mrs. Phillips mode her advent Remedy, Hclepeee from Student of Oood Family Who Lost eon other nurse end victim, uf the terrible in politics, and scarcely a week passes liquor His Reason London Authorities dMawe sliuuld nut delay. that she does not address some society. Write for further particulars er enll at She Is an ideal wife aud mother. Her Have Suppressed the Facts Relitwo children are handsome, dark-eye- d EAGLE PHARMACY, gious Fervor Resulted iu Mania. boys. Her London home Is very beau& E. Cor. Sd So. and W, Temple SI. tiful, but she prefers their wild, picSalt Lake City, Utah. turesque mountain chalet In Switzer1. WinsDr. Forbes New the where York, land. Sept. family usually passes n the summer. low of London, a ban specialist DON'T LIMP can you be on suicide and insanity, says that made to JAKES E. CAMPBILL. Jack the Ripper," who, by his crimes walk straight. W'e take plaster uf peris oust of feet to interrorised London a tew years ago, Is sure uumfort Specialist la The Democratic State convention at In a county lunatic asylum incarcerated nominated crippled end defu, med shoes, Springfield, (., .teal braces end erUBolol James E. Campbell for Governor. This in England. Mr. Wlnsiow says the fact limbs or every desoridtloo, Is the third tlmd he has been a candi- is known to the douiors, but they date for Governor, and aa his nomina- uusneu up the facts, ur. w msiow say a tion was the result of a spontaneous be is a medical student suneruig trom Hilgert Deformity and overwhelming demand of the Ohio Homicidal iiiu.ii in. Shoe Co, 'lue doctor has come to New York to SB E Third loath St., aueud tne medical congress which will be held on September tin, bill and 6th. LAKE SALT CITY, UTAH tie will be cnairinnn of tne department ot insanity and mental medusme, aud has prepared a paper on suicide, considered aa a mental epidemic. E. DUNSGOMB, M. D. The story told by Dr. Winslow Is as follows: "Jack the Ripper was a University of New York, IMS. medical stuuent of good larnlly. He SPECIALIST was a young man of slight build, with QLUfwoon opuses, colosado, light hair aud blue eyes. Ho studied Practlos limlten to CANCERS, TUMORS, aid very hard, and his mind being natural- GOITRE. ly weak, gave way. He became a re- RADICAL CUIl TREATMENT WITHOUT ligious enthusiast and attended early KNIFE OB CAUSTIC. service every morning at Su Faul a. "His religious fervor resulted In homicidal mama towards the women of the street and Impelled him to murder them. He lodged with a man whom I SALT LAKE CITY, UTAIL knew, and suspicion was first directed Dealers In BE WIN O toward him by reason of the fact that MACHINES UUClLjlIL aadSer he returned to hla lodgings at unseaell klads vimuus, lag urgent, supplies, sonable hours and that he had Innu- Musieul instruments, Sheet Muila end Musts Manblnee sold on and hooks, luttrsmeuu merable coats and hats stained with bend for our lUo list of sheet y phy-slel- well-know- Young Bros Co. Net-blu- blood. "I have James E. Campbell. Democracy, It has no parallel aa a per- a sonal honor In the history of Ohio poll-tlcMr. Campbell Is a native of Butler county. Previous to his election as Governor In 1889 he had been three times elected to Congress in a Republican district He Is recognised as the best campaigner of hla party In Ohio. Art in its Relation to Anatomy. Professor Anderson, In a recent Lon-dr- n address, as abstracted in the Lancet, said that anatomy owed a heavy debt to art although he might also say that art owed an almost equal one to .anatomy. "But before anatomy was studied as a science the great masters of Greek sculpture, without any aid from dissection, produced works which were masterpieces of artistic beauty and anatomical coredness, although while sculpture hud advanced to such a pitch medicine and surgery were still In a purely cmpyrtcul stage. . . Tbe lecturer passed on to consider the decline of classical learning and art, and after mentioning the medieval treatises on anatomy, which were Illustrated In a way from dissection! of the lower animals. came to times when anatomists employed the great artists to illustrate their worka Leonard! da Vinci executed a series of anatomical drawings for hla own Improvement. The work of Berengorius was touched upon, and then came the Immortal work of Vesa-lluillustrated by a pupil of Titian. Professor Anderson then mentioned the anatomical works of the seventeenth century in the Illustrations to which anatomical correctness was subordinated to the debased art of the day. The figures were represented In various affected attitudes standing on pedestals pseudo-Italia- n landscapes, holding aside their skin or muscles to show th Internal organa Balt Lake City, June 15, 1395, I have had the opportunity the past taw weeks of seeing tlie Eagle Liquor A Tobacco Cure administered to one of the worst eases of alcoholism that 1 have ever seen. The patient is au and was In an exgraduate bad condition, both physically tremely and mentally. 1 huve always been skepticures fur liquor and cal of the other habits, but I must acknowledge that In this cose its success has surprised me very much. When a inan who has boen lu the habit of drinking a quart uf whisky a day and smoking from three to five packages of tlgarcu, s, under ten days' treatment absolutely refuses either and when at the iiinu also returns to of healthy appetite anil a regular arnuunt any other medicine or remsleep without l that of the Eugie Liquor Cure, edy 1 am willing to arknowledge that It D a success, and 1 am willing to endorse the same. II. A II1CKH, )1, lJ, No. 11) W. Ziul South, Suit Lake City, In my possession now a pair of Canadian moccasins, stained with blood, that The Ripper wore while on hie murderous expeditions. I notified the Scotland Yard authorities, but at that time they refused to with me. Subsequently the young man was placed In confinement and removed to an asylum, where he la today. Since his Incarceration there has been no repetition of the horrible murders that ha perpetrated. These facts are all known to the English authorities, and It Is conceded that the man now In the asylum Is Jack the Ripper.' It was deemed desirable, to hush the matter up. Thehowever, details were too horrible to be made the subof ject a public trial, and there was no doubt of the man's hopeless insanity. ate Tits K seley Institute, e direct authorized branch oi me parent bouse at Dwight, 11., ua been upuued at ltiti W. becoud North, Salt Lake City on the line uf the street railway ruuuliig to arm springs. Fur the treatment of the liquor aud opium habit, with Lesley E. Kueiey Uiuipauya double chloride ol gold rein V -- miles. Ihe Institute Is uuder tbe inunago-rneutW. eu John, who has been at work with and In the employ of the Lesley Keeley Coinpauy lor the Dr. of J. BROWNING BROS ed txi-ep- let Mam street. SALT LAKE (JlTT Ml Washington Ava., OGDEN, UTAH. Rambler, aemlngton, Worwtufc, CC mnupi and Feuthentoa Tribune, BluluLtS end cycle luudrln. Duos, Ammunition, Fishing rookie, Terns, Playing Cards, Eta. Illue--t rated caiuluuua tree. rarm ILoans y In UUh. Hawioy Mtg. Mucorulmt loops. salt Lake. Mill co. Reed Hotel Rooms, 3 elevators, lire trio lights. Sirtot-l- y in nil its appointments. Makes a Urate to trade. 137 Unit oless Watchmaker, Jeweler ALEE. I. WYATT. 363 6 Optician Mala b tract. i. BICYCLES. Uloycle past lour years, Ihe treatment and IF YOU WANT sundries, base ball, lawn tennis or erloket sop. mcaiiagemeui of patients will be identl-all- y piles, guns, aDimuulliun, eta, send lor oar illusthe same as at Dwight. trated oetaiugue, tree to aJL DRUM CLEAR Mac Ithub.. loo Main it. Salt Lake WATER NAVIGATION. War Departments Reply to Governor McConnell's Request. Boise, Ido., Aug. 31. Home time ago Governor McConnell sent a communi- cation to the Kecretury of War, urging the necessity of opening and Improving Clear Water river, and asking that an engineer of the Government be Bout out to muke the preliminary surveys. The Uovernur puinle.1 out that a large amount of land would soon be thrown open to settlement by the opening of the Nes Ferce reservation, and that the Clear Water was the only means uf conveying produce to market from a large section; also, that unless It were made havlgable, tbe cost of taking produce to market would eat up the profits. Yesterday the Governor received a reply from Hecretary Ia-nioInclosing the Governor's letter, with the following indorsement of the acting ccgiiiccr uf the department: hor-U- ir "iiy t!u tirm uf the river snd act of Aqgunt 17, lvjl, the examination within requested Is prohibited. Section 13 of that act provides: 'That no preliminary examinations, survey, Florence Nightingale, who Is now an project or estimate for new work, Invalid, recently completed the 67th year other than those designated In this act, shall be mads.' " of hsr Ilfs, iy payment, muila 6.UUU ooplee. THE PARIS-HOM- E LAUNDRY WANTS ACENTS town la Utah to establish ebrasoh aa aeteryorders. Address at ouo olmh Paris-Hom- e Laundry, 346 West d) Washington, but the latter is not generally believed. Col. Denhy wss born In Virginia about 69 yenrr ago, and educated at (ieorgetown college and the Virginia Military institute. In 1S53 he wua admitted to the bar, and In 1356 wan sent to the Legislature. Although a Virginian, he espoused the cause of the Union when the war broke out, and he became colonel of the Eighteenth Indiana regiment In 1863 hs resigned and for tweuty-tw- o years devoted him Streets, Balt Lake City. Wanted Everywhere. Mra. Wynford Phillips, society wo- Agents man, orator and leader of the womans Before buying see that the bottles are sealed with the signature, Dkax Lies Dais suffrage cause In London, la widely None genuine without this seal or when seal is broken. known and much loved In England. s, SPECIAL! AFTER A CAREFUL TEST WE FIN'D THAT THE GRADE OF THREE CROWN BAKING POWDER WE HAVE BEEN MAKING IS THE BEST THAT CAN BE MADE FOR THE PRICE CHARGED. WE HAVE DETERMINED TO MANUFACTURE THE PUREST AND BEST CREAM TARTAR BAKING POWDER THAT CAN BE MADE, AND THOUGH THE PRICE WILL BD SLIGHTLY ADVANCED, IT WILL HAVE MORE LEAVENING STRENGTH AND WILL BE CHEAPER IN THE END. AFTER AUGUST 15, 1805, THERE WILL BE A BLUE LABEL ON THE COVER WORDED: HEWLETT BROS. IMPROVED E THREE CROWN BAXINO POWDER. EVERT CAN GUARANTEED TO BE EQUAL TO THE BEST IN THE MARKET OR MONET REFUNDED, AND WE ASX TOU TO XINDLT GIVE XT A Balt Lake Mty, Utah. HEWLETT BROS., Mfr OAKLEY ! Temple street, THY THE gelt Lake, Utah WALKER HOUSE bait Lake, oua trip. GUO. k. JuHNbuN, Proprietor. X. H. V. V 84 186 A, Halt Laks. Armenian Village Plundered. London, Aug. 30. A Chronicle dispatch from Berlin uys the Vosslsche Zeltung lias iiPvvs from Tlfils that 5HK) soldiers and 1U.0U0 Kurds, under Buko Fusha, attacked the Armenian town of Kemakh and several villages. They plundered the churches and monasteries slid burned the houses. |