OCR Text |
Show Get Fixed Wow' news summary Any Jewelry that should be repaired or made over. We will be very busy later on. IO ST. Mi VMAIN SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. Union Assay Office O J. V. 3LT 6AOIER TRIUMPHED Remarkable EVEN Deed LI b Kt OVER 14- IT - H UTH DEATH. Ascribed trian Bandit . to Aus- of 1C20. Dr. Loye tells the following strango story, taken from the archives of an Austrian police officer, and relating to an execution nli to have taken place In Vienna in 1(180: A well known bandit named Sehuvenbiirg was caught, together with four of liia associates, and they were all condemned to death. They were already on their knees, ready to submit to their fate, when Schavenburg addressed the Judge, asking that his four companions might be ranged in single file in front of him at a distance of eight feet from each other. "If," he said, "after i am beheaded, I get up and walk to the first of my comrades, will you pardon him?" The judge thought he was pretty safe in complying with the request "But If I walk up to the second, the third, and the fourth, will you pardon those also?" The judge replied that he would obtain their pardon from the emperor. The bandit was satisfied, bent his head, received yie mortal blow, and his head rolled down but to the great surprise of the judge and the spectators, the body got up, walked alone, passed the first, second, third and fourth of the condemned men, and fell down. The occurrence was told to the emperor, who, according to promise, pardoned the four criminals. ; "Boys Will Be Boys." "There were a couple of old forty-niner- s down in Tombstone, Ariz.," said a tourist the other day, "who were great friends. One of them was 80 years old and the other 81. They were taking their morning toddy one day and fell into a disagreement over the date of some pioneer occurrence. Each was Insistent upon his own recollection of It, and finally they got Into a regular quarrel. Backing away from the bar, they drew their guns and blazed away at each other, but their sight was so dim and their hands so unsteady that all the bullets went wide. When their guns were emptied the barkeep emerged from beneath the counter and made them shake hands and make up. The local paper, the Epitaph, In describing the occurrence, treated It In an indulgent vein and closed by saying: Well, boys will bo boys.'" We Make Travel Easy. Five trains daily via the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Colorado to Kansas City, St. Joe, Chtcago, Galveston, Ask me El Paso, City of Mexico. about reduced rates. C. F. Warren, A., A. T. & S. F. Ry.. 411 Dooly Block. Salt Lake City. Utah. G. Sunshine Helps Sugar Cans. effect of sunshine on sugar is said by the New Orleans to make the crop more pro-ductivtv Thus Spain has become as r growing successful with r as With her established w dustry, notwithstanding an arid climate. On the other hand, the storms and fogs that envelop the British Islands are said to have prevented t ie indusdevelopment of the bet-suga- r average annual there. try England's hours of sunshine ire only 1,400, f n bo"rs. while Spain The beet-suga- cane-Buga- California Recovering. California bank deposits amount to $540,000,000 and the banks In which they are Held are credited with assets of $693,000,000. The loss suffered by San Francisco, by the earthquake and fire, was unequaied by any similar ca- tastrophe .n the history of the world, but despite its magnitude, some of its appalling force Is lost In the con- templatlon of the financial showing made by the entire state. There la great promise of large crops of grain and fruits, the mines and oil wells are turning out new wealth more rap- idly than ever before, and if the in- surance companies would pay up their losses and ihe striking sailors return to work at the highest wages ever paid for similar employment, the Bay City would blossom Into Its splendor at a rate that would astonish the world. old-tlm- His Stay Too 8hort "Want to see the guv'- nor? What name shall I say?" Via-Itor "Herr Schweitzsalsburghausen."' "Oh, I shan t bo aid- - to pronounce all that I'm leaving at the end of the week." Office Boy FADED TO A SHADOW. Around the Metropolis Worn Down by Five Years of Suffe ing from Kidney Complaint. Fire destroyed the entire business district of Tiburon, Cai., the loss being $100,000. Robbers entered the bank at Akley, Minn., blew open the safe, secured $10,000 and escaped. and Joaepfe Fitzpatrick was shot hilled while he was attempting to rob the Hamilton hotel at Wichita. Kan Colonel Jakovloff, chief of the trans frr pris n at Warsaw, was shot and killed while driving In a cab in the n o h "wim e thun-growin- e Shak-erman- well-wor- Chfap Sightseeing Trip. Ixindon firm has organized a srs- tern of seeing Loaded In six days for meal every $10 50. including a midday ... . ua, , , ' "5k1.k r of picturesque or historic InterMt," In the capital and its suburbs. Musical Falls. The Thornrtlke baud gave a sacred concert at Forest lAke last Sunday t,i.v,.. pantry hslvea at far north aa Darr Plaint. Palmar Kagiiter. Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. How many women do you know who are perfectly well and strong? We hear everyday the same story over and over again. " 1 do not feel well ; lam so tired all the time " ! More than likely you speak the same words yourself, and no doubt you feel far from well. The cause may be easily traced to some derangement of the female organs which manifests itself in depression of spirits reluctance to go anywhere or do anything, backache, bearing-dowpains, flatulency, nervousness, sleeplessness, or other female weakness. These symptoms are but warnings that there is danger ahead, and unless heeded a life of suffering or a serious operation is the inevitable result. The never failing remedy for all these symptoms is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Miss Kate McDonald of WoocVbridge, n N. J., writes : Dear Mrs. I'inkhnm: " Restored health lias meant so much to me that I cannot help from telling about it for the sake of other suffering w omen. " For a long time I suffered untold agony with a female trouble and irregularities. Which made me a physical wreck, and no one thought I would recover, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has- entirely cured me, and made me well and strcng, and I feel it my duty to tell other suffering women what a splendid medicine it is." For t wenty-fiv- e years Mrs. Pinkham, of Lydia E Pinkham, daughter-in-la- has under her direction, and since her decease, been advising sick women free of charge. Her advice is free and always helpful. Address, Lynn, Mass. Hinky Dink and Barrie. H. G. Wells of England, the forecas- man and sociologist, met an interesting person in Chicago and in a magazine article tells all about "I made," he says, the experience. "the acquaintance of Alderman Ken-nwho is better known I found throughout the states as 'Hinlay Dink,' saw his two saloons and something of the Chinese quarters about him. He is a compact, upright little man, with iron-grahair, a clear blue eye and a dry manner. He wore a bowler hat through all our experiences in common and kept his hands in his jacket pockets. He filled me with a ridiculous idea, for which I apologize, that, had it fallen to the lot of J. M. Barrie to miss a university education and keep a saloon in Chicago and organize voters, he would have looked own brother to Mr. Kenna." t-novel a, Impossible Advice. In pulling uown an old room at Bocklng, England, workmen came upon a wine flagon imbedded in the brickwork. A page of foolscap dated Aug. 15, 1783, found inside the flagon gave details of the building of the chimney of Josiah Reeve, the owner, with the names of "ye master carpenIt ter" and "ye masterbricklayer." "Josiah Reeve, father of concluded: six children, leaves this memorandum in this place. His wife was Elizabeth Houston, of Great St. Helens, London, to whom he was married March 18, 1773. Reader, go thou and do likewise." "Do Tyrant Cat. you really mean to say you keep a cat?" "Yes." "Well, well, I shouldn't think you'd want one aboift the house at all." "We don't; but the cat insists." - . m -. anv-wher- e - 1 Fifty-sevent- A SUFFERING THE SURE PENALTY Mrs. Remethe Myers, of 180 South Tenth St., Ironton, O., says: "I have Interesting Gossip Gathered in New York War On Between Mrs. worKea nard in my Leslie Carter Fayne and M ss Norma Manro - Lillian Russell to time and have been Enter Horse Racing Game. exposed again and again to changes of weather. It is no NEW YORK--Th- e controversy between Mrs wonder my kidneys Ieslie Carter Payte, the actress, and Miss Norma Leslie Monro, the reputedly wealthy daughter of gave out and I went Ieslie the late millionaire publisher. Norman all to pieces at last. Munro. continues to excite interest among the For five years I was dilettante friends of these two women who have fading away and finally so weak that furnished more space, continuously, for the newsI not could out! for six months get papers than probably any two other women in c.ty. of the house. 1 was nervous, restless New York. Unquestionably there is a sentiment The Liberal, a daily newspaper of and sleepless at night, and lame and favorable to the actress' side of the question, for, Sometimes while the emotional Mrs. Carter Payne is not Havana. Ins been suspended by order sore in the morning. Intensely popular, the people who have been acof the government, and the editor lias everything would whirl and blur be1 with the career of the two women in I so could me. bloated quainted fore badly bei U arrested. the present controversy are also conversant with to and had wear not clothing, tight , the recent alleiraiions made against Miss Munro Accorilfnj to a dispatch from Sunti-agopnt on shoes two sizes larger than by Mrs. Robert 03born of plyhouse and shirtChile, further earthquake shocks usual. The urine was disordered and fame. Mrs. Osborn's experience with Miss waist I Santi!: were dreadfully frequent. passa-'e- s ie been experienced between Munro was so identical with that which Mrs. Car ter Payne is experiencing that their mutual got help from the first box of Dean's ago and Maule. Kidney Pills, however, and by the friends and that section of the public which has hung agape upon the pubA cut of cars backed into a btlgy time I had taken four boxes the pain lished accounts of the quixotical lives these people lead are beginning to at Fosroria, O., killing M. C. Brings, was gone. I have been wonder If, aftet all. the strenuous Miss Munro is not a "hoodoo." and and oil in bloating a prominent manufacturer No room for doubt remains that Mrs. Carter Payne and her recent "deargood health ever since." are at daggers' points. Further sensational developments are producer, and his wife Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. est friend"when Miss Munro returns from Bar Harbor and Mrs. Carter Payne promised Foster-MilburN. Y. i Bv Co., Buffalo, the coll. use of a garage in from Shelter island to their apartments adjoining each other in the building course of construction at Mlneola, L. owned by the Munroe estate. Didn't Have Auk Egg. three workmen were killed and Prof. Edwin Ray Lancaster, presiseven seriously injured. dent of the British association, was FRIENDSHIP BROKEN BY MARRIAGE. It has been known ever since Mrs. Carter's Five political prisoners have been busy in his study one morning recentromantic an woman a I Imnn marriage to the young actor, William 1.HI...1 when lumind. sought country ly k... UVCU ,,,,, 111H IU Ullvl IUU1 H lit 1IUG interview with him. Laying a parcel Louis Payne, that the alliance was bitterly reed in a fight with their guards at Harsented by tJie exacting Miss Munro. That the two on his desk she said, triumphantly: women, once like Juno's swans, "together always bin, following an attempt to escape. "There's two of 'em." "Two of what?" and inseparable," had separated has been known, Hotel Gomez Farias, in Chihuahua, said the professor. "Two 'awk's eggs. too, for weeks to their mutual friends, but no one I 'ear they are worth 1,000 pounds was prepared for the shock which followed the Mexico, collapsed while forty-twguests were housed ia it, and four apiece." The distinguished scientist court action against the actress, brought in the undid the parcel carefully, looked 9c name of Miss Munro's mother, who is executrix persons were killed and several oththe eggs and said with a smile. of the Munro estate. ers injured. This came like a bolt of lightning from a "These are not auk's eggs. Those that Mrs. Leslie Carter clear sky. At Kielce, Russia, 150 privates of comparatively are so valuable are the eggs of the auk Payne, in arrears for rent of her apartments on the Fifth infantry regiment became "Ch, hauk," said the womWest Fifty-nintstreet, owned by Miss Munro's suddenly ill as the result, it is be- an. "Wait till I get 'old of my son, mother, has been sued for back rent and served for send- with papers in dispossess proceedings. Furtherlieved, of having eaten poisoned meat. 'Enery. I'll give 'im wot-oOne soldier died. more, the only thing that saved Mrs. Payne from ing me on a wild goose chase." ignominious ejectment was the haste with which a stockman, Cicior Davis, wealthy she paid up. Natural Color of Pure Water. was killed by au unknown assassin Mrs. Henriette E. Munro's claim against the actress was for $1,593.52, It was long ago discoverel that the lour miles east of Porum, 1. T., being natural color of pure water la blue, the sum of Mrs. Payne's alleged indebtedness for five months as a tenant of Fifty-nintstreet apartments. tihot from ambush while going along and not white, as most of us usually the West When papers in the suit brought to secure this claim were served upon a road near his home. supposed. Opinions have not agreed the actress there was an Impromptu scene of emotionalism worthy the highThree men were killed at Rushville, on the cause of the green and yellow est creative art of a Ilelasco. Mrs. Leslie Carter Payne fell into the arms these, it has been discovered of her youthful husband and shrieked her denunciations of Miss Munro. ind., by coming in contact with a tints; When sufficient strength returned Mrs. Payne hurried downtown in her autoby W. Spring, are due to extraneous accibeen had that fence wire barbed Dissolved calcium salts, mobile to the offices of her counsel, Edward Lauterbach. The lawyer was substances. dentally charged with electricity from though apparently giving a green tint, equal to the emergency, and within two hours the Munro proceedings had been dethe plant of a traction company. due to a fine invisible suspension, dropped. Mrs. Carter Payne had settled, but she did not pay the full that she $825 owed mand and rent months' three defyonly only insisting of distinct the color on the have no effect Two violent and seemingly ing the Munros to prove another penny against her. Lawyer Henry Bogert water when adequate precautions Clark, storms visited Johnson county. Nerepresenting Mrs. Munro, thought hard for half an hour, then accepted color or The brown taken. are yellow the proffered compromise and dropped the legal proceedings. braska, on the 14th, resulting in the calto iron salts is not seen when As the case now stands Mrs. Carter Payne is free to remain in possesdeath of four persons, fatal injury ol due cium is present. The gresn tint is sion for the time being. But the matter will not rest here. Friends of both two and painful injury of five other ; often due to a condition of equilibrium women agrte that this clash is but the bugle call to battle; that Mrs. Carter Five men were arrested in Chicago between the color effect of the iron Payne will speedily proceed to even up matters with Miss Norma, and that latter will retaliate with a bomb loaded with secrets destined to scandalon a charge of selling bogUl bonds tB salts and the precipitating action of the ize white light circles. Ameri Scientific the calcium salts. various parts of the United States can. They are said to have incorporated RUSSELL AS RIVAL TO LANGTRY. two concerns, one with an alleged cap FINDS VIRTUE IN OLD CLOTHES. Speaking of an actress brings to mind the ital of $1,000,000. fact that Lillian Russell has decided to seek In to the at Men's Garments the An attempt by prisoners honors on the turf this fall. The favorite Figure Shaped will not desert the footlights but she by Age Catch Artist's Eye. diaua reformatory to escape was frits has been imbued with the racing fever and has trated by Joseph Edgey, a trusty, .whc decided to try her hand at the game. Lillian's of the artist the garTo the found three prisoners releasing Others ments of eye colors will be carried by horses bred by herself are man the modern only from their cells, and single-handein England. when them has tolerable age adapted When Miss Russell went abroad more than a fought them until the alarm was to the lines of the figure; somewhat raised. year ago she expected to stay in Europe for two to the average artist a new suit of or three years at least, and it was then that she Pacific Canadian the of Officials clothes is an abomination. concluded to become a rival of Mrs. Langtry for killed were twelve persons railway say "It is not only that new clothes are racing honors in England. Shy wanted to race horses of her own breeding and John S. McDonmore ugly than old," said a knight of and ten injured in a wreck at Sud ald was commissioned to buy a number of highbury, Canada. All the killed were in the palette who discussed the quesbred mares. the colonist car, next to the engine, tion; "to my mind no one can be propThe purchases were made early last year and of the west bound train. Most of them erly easy or graceful in them. a majority of the mares now have foals, there were harvest hands. "I never feel that I properly know a The being three colts by Carbine in the lot. Five men were injured, two fatally. man until I have met him wearing an entire list of mares and foals will be shipped to this country this autumn, probably in October. The mares will be sent to a farm, probably to Kensix horses were killed and the entire old suit. Certainly no man can possibe his natural self in evening tucky, while the foals will be reserved for racing year after next unless there bly plant of the Illinois Brick company dress. is another change of plans in the meantime. p..1( ,ioaiv destroyed, when a "I have noticed again and again (iert)0t crashed into two of the how different the same people are ATHLETES ARE POOR HUSBANDS. ,,st buildings of the South Evanston, I when wearing different clothes. m t plant. Science has come forward with a new and went, for instance, to a large family statement, joining a fresh link to the A conrtmartn, at Odessa sentenced striking gathering some time ago, and for of indictments against athletics carried to . some reason everybody had donned chain to hanging a Jewish girl named an immoderate degree. Once beyond the bounds full evening dress. What a differwho threw a bomb at Policeof moderation, physical exercise and physical man Poltavchenko without Injuring ence it made! We were all on terms training, so this new statement says, not only him. Miss Shai:erman admitted be- of intimate friendship, but somehow weaken the heart for a lifetime, predispose to longing to the terrorists, and said it the clothes brought in an element of pneumonia, cause pulmonary tuberculosis, and had been determined to kill Poltav-,'henkcoldness and formality. We all felt make extra possible a dozen other ills, but they because he took part in Jew It even the women, although, of unfit a man for a husband. ish massacres. "It will be found," says Dr. Robert E. Cough-lin- , course, the fair sex are not easily perof Brooklyn, in a series of papers he has suaded of the merits of garTheodore A. Bell, a former conon the use and abuse of athletics and the written discovno man has who gressman from the Second district, ments. But deaths of athletes, "that comparatively few athered the ease and comfort of them letes marry. Of those that do, a small percentage an was nominated for governor will readily give them up. As for the have children, and a very large percentage are Thomas O. Toland of Ventura count v artistic side of modern clothes, it only divorced by their wives." WM nominated for lieutenant gover- Dr. Coughlin has been collecting statistics comes when they have mellowed by bv Democratic tll California I1(. ind following the careers ol athletes for years. use!" convention. state "In regard to the benefit derived from athletics," he says, "one has only to remember the physiology of exercise to become convinced of the fact that WELL PEOPLE TOO Fn,,r ma8ke'1 mon tttemptd tohoW exercise, per se, may be very beneficial. The point to bear in mind is to No. the on Ml train " Passenger advise the person to stop before fatigue becomes evidnt. We can do this to ConGives Postum Rock Island, near Peoria. Ills and but Wise Doctor readily when the athlete is interested in games for the mere exercise, but valescents. such advice cannot be offered when his aim is to excel in an athletic contest. for the presence of mind of Conductor Here is where athletics do great harm, and it would be a safe rule to advise Murray, who disirmcd one of the men against all forma of athletics in the nature of a contest. Athletics may be A to doctor tries nature wise give after being struck on the head, the to be beneficial until the heart begins to be markedly enlarged; this Its best chance by saving the little said passengers would have been robbed. is the danger sigual." of the already exhausted pastrength Soflrpg Qf . tient, and building up wasted energy , 1 n"w '"'" with simple but powerful nourish- WEDDING MAY FOLLOW DIVORCE. established . in Unite countv, .S I), ment. w,tn tho announcement that Mrs. Annie M. ., ,. ,,.. fWVORCE CAjRTli I M . nan omainoti awan a doctor, divorce In Sioux Falls "Five writes years ago," of from William Rhinolander Stewart it became City, who says the Zionists, tired to "I use in Postum commenced my constant bickerings, will i it blish a current gossip at once that Mrs. Stewart would new colony and eventually luii',,1 it own family instead of coffee. I was soon be the wife of James Henry Smith, known as so well pleased with the results that "Silent Smith." whose fortune Is estimated city. I had two grocers place It in stock, from $10,000,000 to $190,000,000. A plea of not guilty has been enThe divorce decree gives Mrs. Stewart the guaranteeing its sale. tered in the probate court at Flndlay. "1 then commenced to recommend custody of her daughter. Anita, until the latter O. bv John D. Rockefeller on th It to my patients in place of coffee, becomes of age. William Rhinolander Stewart, law trust of the anti violating charge Jr., is given into the custody of the father. The consea as nutritious beverage. The troubles between the Stewarts reached through the Standard Oil coiupuiy quence Is. every store In town Is now v in Mr Rockefeller was not p rtOB an acute stage some time after Miss Anita Stewa it as become has houseOtOTt He pleaded through an ittOr- - selling it, art made her debut at. a dinner dance given by hold necessity in many homes. the husband and wife in their town home on West "' "I'm sure I prescribe Postum as street in January, 1905. This was A street rumor said to have been often as any one remedy in the Mathe last social function given by the couple. Marted by n drunk"n man ciued n teria Medlca In almost every case of Mr. Stewart, who is a man of 54. is now at -u nauouni Bar Harbor. He is studious and serious, and he rl,n " Mens" and nervousness I treat, indigestion In 180. Which Kan Atchison. has never cared much for the frivolous side of life. Society to him was a best results. Ihe bank l"d Its and with Ithe was withdrawn bore, and he figured little in the entertainments where his wife was always once It introduce "When a into doort open until 7 sight, at prominent. Is It to sure I remain. quite which time the excitement hid sub family. When Mr. Smith purchased the old William C. Whitney mansion at Fifth shall continue to use it and prescribe avenue and BlXtJ seventh Street and began to play a prominent aided. part In the It in families where I practice. of the "Four Hundred," Mrs, Stewart aided him In the many costly doings John 0. Hnteiy, appointed receive! "In convalescence from pneumonia, entertainments he gave. She managed his dinners and dances, and just prior of Zlnn City pending litigation It) the typholc" fever and other cases, 1 give to the final separation of the Stewarts the millionaire, bachelor and Mrs. hit fit t official Federal courts, r .ade it as a liquid, easily absorbed diet. Stewart were often together. ... -. , i ,i. i. The fact that not a single restriction Is placed on either husband or wlfo "n" ' ' " ' You may use my letter as a reference claret the liabilities of the clt; places them both In position to marry again If they so choose. There was no see fit." Name you way any given by mention of alimony In the decree, and here it Is believed that a money settown bv the books, fed $'. Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read tlement was effected before the suit for divorce was brought. Mrs. Stewart 125,01s, with assets of a !in:. ovc n pkga. charged desertion in her suit, and It was not opposed. "The Road to Wellvllle $5.nnn,ooo. "There's a reason." W7 neglect women's J " i , - Take The Right Road To- - Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis From Omaha or Kansas CKy Chicago Great Western Unequalled Equlp-me- nt on All Trains For full Information Wrltt T. A. ST A RK WEATHER Gtntral Agom - SB W. in So. St.. SoltLaUCItj, Vttk |