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Show s 3w 0U3 INTERESTS WILL PP.OTECT IN THE SOUTH. ' 7 a. ..., No '.V l Vow t v 111 hiii.' rful Sr.i (u'li.s . 1 l4rCi Sy Our tit ttf a.' ATT. . p : Til ti. tiiii:i'I,iil turUiifeut state of afiairs ia Sir.nli Anicriiu, w hore Ven? v.n CoJfiiiii'a hh4 Kcimdor are n:ivJ u; in uu intcruutuinul .qttal)lle, iii:cie.-t- s Statt'S are of tin' t niti-iCook vt'il sua; .if.', i y t'apt. liem-g'fii.-r- , tf liif WlMituii!. '1 he Viutt'il rial's in liy u. ;,! In iiii.l to kt npfa tru:! ii.tts ti.r I ; hitnis of l'ar.u.au, v a;i.l efct'ii!.! tin r lv aiiy 'tu ti.e r will take in.mipf acCapi. tum. C'apt. lit iirr is a I't aiisi lvuiuan liy fnmi ilm i'lttli, iih.l was (tni.Tuan-IfiiiV ih l.Nijli. ti.i!. N.tvul tiii'uu-- 'i His tiie km Ifon Kifady, fiia.as cf the of liutifs. ami lie has tun a :irS-- ty re is srarci ly a a u u to whii'h lu has nut ln'cii :.na. li' tl, and he has had coiiiih-ra'illand duty. Daring the n war tie ctmunanded one of the smaller wai ships. He his pifsi at rank two years ai;o. iscoii.-.iThe will he the Kreatest fightins machine ever seen at. 1'anania. The Oregon ami Iowa have heen there, hut neither of these is as large us the Wisconsin. Comparatively few British battleships or war es.;e!s of other nations come this way, and none that could he compared with ihe Wisconsin. The Whconsin was laiua-hoat the I'tiion Iron Works, in San Francisco, November 2ii, IMfX, and lias been iu commission svu'ral months. She is of and has a 11,525 tons displacement, 2!i length of 3CS feet; breadth, 72 inches. Her inches; draft, 23 feet I I v 1 l mm m. iW-- 3 Resort: Saloam MIKE FITZGERALD, Carry tbe FinH Line of ! isr.iT-'ww- r.. Prop. " rail-rtu- !!! Liquor, Whiskies, Brandies, Win 1 and Ciar3. '' At.L THE !)!!! I s A pi'lVct. Ainusemmit Hall, with a Fine Pool T.ible id oauuutijti. 1 SpaniMi-Auu'iim- An idoal restinrj place to drop . . iu and wait fur the car. A n separa'e. nlc, comf irtablo room hss been f.tted up whre (.adi ii can sit, out of tha hsat and dust and wait for the cars. F rw--rr- w yir, -"- , ,,, v.r.-inu- f.-- Popular Ipfii's Kept on Draught I Vj''V t ' Ai-- - ,, i,,,, ,,,, fTTj ftt G 1 y4 hot Weather "use-- " " fiS gF9, ,V "New Rochester" Cook Stove 33 Park Place and 33 Bfcelay sireet, New York. JOHN GORDON & SON, Faithful DEALERS IN Groceries, Confectionery, Stationery, Novelties, And all Kindsof Fruits. Canned Goods, Etc. Eto, w At the Old Stand. State Street, Murray, Utah, rure 'i jM vM-'- ;!'-- - J. WINES, CAREFUL CARKFCLLT SELECTED U8U0R8 Jto i? Vi? W l? 1? Vif "(! I 1. ft) JW, 'if 'if "(F ''I? A MB ON HAND- CIGARS S - vM. .5 !? W A TiT. 'fcU. 1 () RKTAUj WIIQI.ESAL15.mx5 LUMBER TAUD With a full line of Saah, Doori, Screen Doors, Building Paper, MouWIdct, Casinga, Blnoks, Bodwood and Tine FUiak Cotract Bnilders' llardwar. JTailt, Eto.. Eto. takea, Buildingi figured on, Bttlldioga put up on eftfiy, Monthly pay BieuW. Ai S in nnfui I I Jjom iuu so mom am uctuio iuu uuuu, ...COMPLETE LINE OF COlL... ArtH uu bUA ui hdv iLt. ui iij ia bto nwo iu uur ixio wui anrl nrlll b to yoar intro to do so m vA AOTOOD. Ixnul TX7M. !if S"4 vMfett. LI1 ATWDOD S''! STOCK OP CARLSON & BIRCH. 'e-- 111 t. Jt jt. ATTETVTTO?; given T A MTT.V TT? Ai. Sj Pi) !. vVJ. J'- -- ALWAYS S1 7f"rrai' P. Saloon and Billiard Hall. -- 11 in Hiime niade Ice Cream and Cool Summer Drioki. vi. vV. I U. parlors )flce and Twd Booth itt Germauia on 0. 8. L. Et. ai Atwood Statioa a-- TWTtA ia - M - Johk P. I Tfc fhj IP 7orks, Vnero Folk Read. In four counties of western Massachusetts no less than 120 public libra0 ries are in operation, containing books. Tbe towns where they are located have a population of 307,000. One of these libraries was started with money from a dog tax, and another was begun with dollar contributions. Where a special building is lacking, the books are oared for at the town hall, engine house, school, or the residence of some citizen. Some of the librarians give their time without salary. In several cases the pay la from $5 to $30 a year. One librarian bought a book with her own money, charged two cents a day for its use until the cost was covered, and then put the book in the public collection. The will and the way on the library question have got together in d Antrln H"jr Lack. little Auatrian boy recently met with a piece of lurk. He Unsd in a street In Budapest, and whenever the En peror Francis Joseph drove past on his way to the station, the lad always A Wright rices. Should Use The American Eagle they delr to Reach the People of the County in thetr Homes. . . If It is the Best Field in the State- Much to Practice Acquire it. A strong, sweet, beautiful voice is greatly to be desired hy every one, says Health. In some climates, like Italy, for instance, the voicea are almost all tine. In other places where it is cold and moist the voices are too often bad. In the country, where the young grow up in an life, where they can "holler" and even "yell," the voices are much better and stronger than in the city, where a young person must suppress himself and always speak in gentle tones. Thin, throaty tones, of those with a nasal intonation are bad enough to the sensitive ear when used in the key of ordinary conversation. When it is needed to expand such voices to the declamatory point, then lack of volume and mellowness is evident. Faithful practice may do much to correct faults of emphasis and inflection, but the most sanguine coax'h will not undertake to make over a poor voice in a coarse of three or even six weeks' rehearsals. The possibilities of the speaking voice are beginning to be understood. Parents are discovering that it is a wise plan to cultivate In their children an agreeable voice. Instructors in the art of developing the exquisite mechanism and wonderful capability of the human speaking voice are springing up on every side. It cannot be long before it will be a positive reproach for a woman of education, at least, to speak in shrill, nasal or unplaced tones. The voice is a mirror of the mind. A coarse, harsh, disagreeable voice can best be cured by Improving the mind and heart. public-spirite- Two Doors North of American Enjrle Office UTSBTISS! Do S25,-00- r n UjJ hand to make your new Buifs' rnd clean your old clothes right here in Murray, and guarantees I'lM'd work and Pfit;:;factioa at fair is on VOICE. Will An 0, Yes- J CAPT, GEORGE COOK REITER. trial trip in Santa Barbara channel in October, 1.400, showed an average of 17.25 knots, with a maximum speed of 18.54 knots. A HEALTHY Tobacco and Cigars U IK regret liaviug introduced these goods into your Jce Greom iatf. Tr- The , ) h t ig - Rcst-Dlct-l greeted his majesty by vigorously waving his hat. The Emperor noticed the child, and whenever he was in the Hungarian capital looked for his young friend. This continued for quite nix ye? rs, until one day the hoy was nlss-infrom his usual post. An hour latr a messenger from the Emperor tailed at the house and inquired what had become of him. On learning that th lad, who was now 12 years of are, had been sent to Rchno., tho Emperor promised to pay for h!s education aud BfterwsrJ make an officer of him if be were physical'. It. iinti '0 - TREE9, ud ArTvtta THE PIONEER DRUG STORE.! KtKilh. f Fi dr.ng, wh h baa r the beau? j' iu Mr.- - is. h ;? 1HI- d 1' .it many big, Ktunlv j , I and !, One lU'e- W .tliil it c.ut!.-or injury, aese In s confined to miy l. osui variety nor w.u any single lloiii. uitural caiity alone alt'ectt experts examined the dcaii trees to ;f the had b. come affected hv insects o" rust, hut mulling of the kind was found. Then ? imn.-- IS. Parsons, a veteran nurseryman, was asked to make an investigation. He reported: "The condition of the trees indicates that they have heen killed by Illuminating the gas which has escaped through mains in the streets and has found Its In several cases way to the roots. where the dirt has been dug up around the roots, of the ileal trees there has been a strong odor of gas. If a similar test was made wiili all the dead trees the same odor would he discovered, I do not know of anything else that would kill the trees." Most of the trees were planted more than fifty years ago. At the pies tit rate, however, Mr, Parsons savs he fears that all of Ihem will be killed within live or six years. The same cause he says has killed many of the trees planted in Manhattan. Another nurseryman said that there is no doubt about the gas "Last killing the trees in Flushing, spring," said he, "we planted six trees All the iu front of a residence here. trees budded, but just as they were about to put forth leaves one of them died. We replaced it, but when we dug the dead tree up there was a strong smell of gas. The second tree planted also died. Then we made a complaint to the gas company and found that not fifty feet away there was, a leak in the gas main." The managers uf the Flushing gas plant declare that they are not to blame for the destruction of the trees. They say that there are dead trees on streets where there are no gas mains. The Flushing Association has promised to employ one of the best experts in the country to examine the trees-New York Sun. ,., ( t Dr. Jt)Si:riI MARRIOTT, Pkoi, IS THE PLACE TO BUY- Drugs, Toilet JTirticlest lo-i- In all these departments IN of Slain WliitontM 1 1 rt'iiiieiil we - foos, Stationery, eto. carry the Finest and Best Selected Stock to he found in town. -- l DEFECTS an lck O'Neill to J'rosldcnt "Jack" O'Neill, able seaman in the United States navy, late a member of the crew of the Vicksburg and now on a naval recruiting detail ia the Masonic Temple at Chicago, is nursing a bruised fist and a sprained wrist, says a Chicago paper. He has no complaint to make, but finds satisfaction in thinking of "tho other fellow." O'Neill looks on the President of the United States with a respect loo deep to be measured. The President is to the seaman the commander-in-chie- f of the army and navy, aud that ia O'Neill was standing at enough. Thirty-firs- t street and Michigan avenue on Friday evening. He had Just heard of the atteinp- - io i assasslnato the President and his soul was filled with wrath. While In this mood a man stepped up. "Have you heard about McKinley being shot?" the stranger inquired. "Yes; I just heard the news a minute ago," replied the able seaman. fot "Well, he ought to be sh what " The stranger never finished the sentence, for O'Neill's flat landed on the speaker's mouth with a force that sent him sprawling in the street. As he scrambled to his feet he received another blow in the face that sent him down again. Three times the stranger measured his length on the ground. "Don't hit me again," he cried. "I'll apologize; I'll apologize." "You bet you will apologize," said O'Neill, "or I'll beat your head off. President McKinley Is my superior officer, and no man can insult hiin while J t' J THE ROCHESTER LAMP CO, finest l.iou t: The billion iJur m Fi;. nd lusty rival in a lustrv Iron eoiujiatty, the g:, west of the ouipauy now owns and control,-ille.OuO land un, mil acres of coal Icl'cs Of iron ore With it great sut-- works at Pueblo, Col., Jt lH -i ing a teconj fittslmr-D- ' i.f that city. It emplovs 15- 000 men, represennns. with their famiof the lies, population of The Income of this comColorado. pany last yoar was fu.Mift.wo and its oier fia.i.uOO. expenditures a tr;-It takes over ..W.W month to satisfy the demands o;' the payroll. at Sunrise, Wyo., its Commencing properties form a chain 1.2u0 miles long' to Fierro, X. M The links of this chain are 28 coal mines, nine coking plants with 2.au0 ovens, ami at Pueblo, Col., and Laramie, Wyo,, the only sieel plains between the Mississippi liver and the Pacific coast. In addition to these industrial concents the company owns MhyVJ Hires of grazing land and about 2,Ud of the town lots in the city of Pueblo. In addition to a vast tonnage for several transcontinental railroads the company operates ia miles of railroad of its own. From itscoal mines the C. V. & I. marketed laHje'ir over 4.000,-00- 0 tons of coal, orXO per cent of the Last entire production 1$, Colorado. year it produced 60,OuO bushels of coke, or 15 per cent of tha product of the state, and hundreds of new coke ovens are now in process of construction. From its steel iniIhi2S,ot.W tons were marketed, and orders were refused for over 250,000 tons more. The C. F. & I. company has grown to what it is with a capital of fU5.000.000. It. has recently increased tin's capitalization to by the issue of la.Ouu.tiOO of 5 per cent honds,' with a like issue of common stock to red"m them on demand. The JIB.000,000 is to be spent at Pueblo enlarging the steel plant to a capacity of 1,500,000 tons of finished product each year. The new manufactures are to be tinplate sheets, wire nails and other profitable products of like character. These new mills will, it is estimated, Increase the value of the output of the company by 200 per cent. one-tent- the Miiiifi of How III i t Is a oleasurp. The Riiclifnt Uttao pOOKIXO iimlfri !ithp.c firi'um-iarce- s ir i"Mi'fiHon on ihe Stitvit in q'.iiw' inn. Thf b"8t evident of puny Rriikf thp s:. 1st: cum anjoyt d i, U'stluionil8 galore aud duplicate orders trom alt part of the oriel. You will never household. GAS KILLS FLUSHING HIS SUPERIOR OFFICER. NEW ROCHESTER. Send for literature, both for the and the "Rochester Lamp " :mti't'" RIVAL l'' llllrrl.;!. lilt' 's.HUIl iiiiln STEEL TRUST'S REITO. CAPT. d'EO. C. DEP'T OUR PRESCRIPTION a careful and experienced Pharmacist. Pre scriptions compounded any hour at night. We a!to carry a full lhie of Staple and Fancy (J rocenes. Is presided over by We are agents fur the celebrated remdeuw advertised elsewhere in this paper, namely: "Dr. King's New Discoverj "Electric Bitten", "Buekleu's Arnica Halve'', and "Dr. King's New life Pills " c& Corner of Stata Hurray St. 2Lm YOU ARB SAFE! IN ORDERING flour 'HUSLER'S. Your money back if it don't Suit after a Fair Trial. Inter-mountai- n 338-34- n m Co) Milling 0 State Street, Salt Lake. -- THE- urray iron -- WU. FKKDBB oundry! BOS- ,- THE CAPITOL. Itody Hctulimrt l'lilnllio,'. by Frederic Harrison's admiration for E3HSS the capiiol as an architectural work Crista, S.isl We!$!s, Bill Class, Csst Wislisrs, Bl(c!ii3 Ee!$!s and the central object of the WashingIrois, Mihtkg Gntes, Pestla aad Mortirs and Tcj8.9 ton landscape is shared by so many one can always send a thrill of that pained surprise through, a part of every group r.f visitors hy a reminder Id. 838 Stale St., Silt Lai CJ& Telspbss 713- - 8 Rings. that only hs. two wings are built of marble, and that for the whiteness of Us main body we must thank copious aud applications of white paint Hut quite as much astonishment Is likely to be felt by moat persons at the discovery that the great TAKE ADVANTAGE OF TIIE dome, which has been the delight of all beholders, is not precisely in the axis of the central portico, but about six feet out of plana. Yet such ia tho case. It has been necessary to resort to some trickery to deceive the eye In taking in the whole effect of the edifice, but the cheat has been accomEVERY DAY EVERYDAY. plished so cleverly that it may be forknown to given. Another fact little the public is that the exquisite proportions of the dome are the result of acSTETSON HATS 3.35. cident, not design. The present lines do not follow the architectural draw ALL COLLARS 10c. ings, because when the base of the dome proper was measured preparatory MONARCH SHIRTS 95c. J to lowering it into the collar, which lj&g20r was already in place for It, It was All Boys' and Children's Suits Sold at COST. found to be too large. The collar could not be changed to fit, so the original base was cut off at the point where the diminishing diameter would slip Into 53 the collar. Tbe result was most gratias the many assert, experts fying. If, present dome is perfect. It follows that c? the dome as first designed would lave been imperfect, and if It had been used, one cf tbe most satisfactory public edi2G I'm around." Metropolitan Hotel Block, fices In the world would have lacked a 'iJ A crowd gathered in a moment, V4 Iios-ton of lis preseut charm. among whom were several who had large part Transcript. witnessed the affair. When they told SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Telo'ihoneoSO others what the fight was about exuck. l An Austrian Htty'a pressions of indignation became so A little Austrian boy recenly met loud and threatening that the stranger with a piece of luck. He lived in a made a quick escape down an alley. mmS3 TtMgiargPB street In Budapest, and whenever the drove on Francis Joseph past Emperor Where Greek I Not Spoken. to the Btation, the lad always A very curious occurrence is report-e- d his way by vigorously wavfront a village only 12 miles away greeted his majesty ing his hat. Tbe emperor noticed the from Athens, writes a correspondent. child and whenever he was In the HunA schoolmistress who was recently apgarian capital looked for his young asof on Salesi, pointed to the village friend. This continued for quite six suming her duties, discovered that her years, until one day the boy was misspupils could not understand a aingle ing from his usual post. An hour later word of Greek, which was also a forThe a messenger from the emperor called eign language to their parents. at the house and inquired what had beone language they spoke was Albanian. On learning that the come of him. She immediately telegraphed how matters stood to tbe ministry, who sent an lad, who was now 12 years of age, had interpreter to her rescue. It Is a com- been sent to gehool, the emperor prommon thing for the villagers, of the ised to pay for his education and afterGreek mainland to employ Albanian as ward make an ollicer of him If he were their chief language, but this is the physically fit. first and only instance whore the Amlrallnii. Greek language Is not spoken or unA HcinarloilOe derstood at all in a place so near the Sir George ihbba, who has Just presented King Kdward with a walking capital. slick of his own make, is one of tbe remarkable men of Australia. Ha is A KtioMlnn Woiinm Aeronaut, Inprobably the only nmn In the empire a is Russian Miss Clara Tolzsky who has passed through the two exventor, whose forte ts aerial navigation. The Czarina recently honored treme experience!, of a prime minister Miss Polzsky wilh her presence at a and a prisoner in Jail. Sir George has c, v twice been premier of New South madress rehearsal of the chine. Miss rolzsky has designed her Wales, and has held many other posts air machine on distinctly original of the highest Importance in the lines; she uses no gas, but has her colony; and It was while he was a egg shaped airship just opened at the prominent public man that he had the top, and fitted at the base with an eleo-tri- e courage to refuse to pay what he motor apparatus. thought an extortionate bill of costs. Accompanied by a little girl, the lady ascended to He wa3 committed to Ihtrllnghur; :t a height of about sixty .yards at ber jail, Sydney, for a year, and served demonstration meeting, a sail spread- tho sentence through to the end. ing gracefully as she roe In the air, mm Ill Henry's minlstrel company gave and after remaining there poised for turn-the at Alhambia &t In descended a while she her ship, performance night and Sunday afternoon and proving that it was p"rrtly amn-abl- e to control and a very promising evening-- and gave good mill. faction to STou JOHN F.'dTRATTON COi tho audiences whiih fathered In Maninvention. Lady's Field. Dest. tlio a for theater Miller's preliminary ager nd p!4 ' Aed Jon Ultra how timrd. bit of enjoyment before the rrnular Sit of the M. I.iinln I luoalllnu. of the Crand avenue house tnt VrtHoff on U nid wha youl season clio.-tus u Finest i jik, l of opens next Sunday anernwn witu ttetew Chioaoo, Ma, MUSICfll. MCWCMANDIS1..S. the St. Louis Imposition, is the city' ftvUaa, ku'MI, ItsaJoa, WAtmai t feT.PA.ct. Railwat. for Hawkins." "Hunting hamonloaa. ill Vl)i greatest and most centrally gituated r.srrRATToNcgr jMtfo park, It Is readily accessible, being the AND A girl can pra the looking amlftil western terminus of practically nil tha not nml then the erpul for tnn years rrofslown street rtiiUay lines-- Ia adIn a dog's rtna tnd tula? ctfcrr tal pleading entrenty there la EDWIN W. SENIOR, j dition, five steam railroads run In elo, ryes when he wanU to go al ng. iMtal baotra. proximity. Much of the park Is ia a (ilohe. ATTOMY, USD ABD natural condition, covered with Urge Atchison (Kaf.)have OATiLOGCt FttK& slain jour losts When yon trees and watr-e- il hy the Des Ptrei Hittm, bury their hides. river with Os T.mp.tonBu.cing.ki0tyiUth! jinmH tributaries. aOESCV, P4LMT&A. FA- I GENERAL FOUNDRY WORK. -- MURRAY PEOPLE, ' Big Removal Sale at the Tom and Jefff Clothing Si6li!r238 SrMain 200 SUITS TO BE SOLD AT O'DONNELL & UNDERTAKERS flflD CO , EfrlBflliMERS - 269 S. W. Temple Street, PRINTING ..Stationery. Brief Work Book Work V y high-dyin- an At This Office ay Enow You Are Get , tins t the-slt- r4 s U im 7TH,Vt rlnbi, rr f oy$ pfnl john mm |