OCR Text |
Show ..u i iM"i ' ! ; j PWTOY 0 W 1 - C, 4i ", r, , II fr- r. r .n.'- - : s, ' v- - ' THE TOURIST'S FAVORITE ROUTE SAIT LAKE CITY AND SCENIC CQLOIUI THROUGH TO THE WORLD'S PAIR i 'nor give 6n a FAST FLYERS DAILY BETWEEN OGDEN AND DENVER- - 3 'a blku fit th i tires CHOICE OF ROUTES. PULLMAN THROUGH AND ,tks plaits, TOURIST SLEFPFtk TO ST. LOUIS WITHOUT CHANGE OF CAM Free Reclining Chair Cars. Dining Car Service a la carte on all through trains. For Folders, Illustrated Booklets, etc., address Rev. Joseph F. Berry of Chicago, 1856, and received his education In who was elected by the Methodist gen Milton Academy, Ontario. Dr. Berry eral conference as one of the eight entered the ministry lnl874 and rapidpew bishops. Is a distinguished mem- ly rose In the esteem of the church ber of the church, who has been editor leaders. He was editor of the Michiof the Epworth Herald since 1900. lie gan Christian Advocate from 1884 until was born at Aylmer, Canada, May 13, 1890. HELPED KOUROPATKIN IN REAL WAR. Foemen General Facing Worthy of His Oteel. It ought to be a source of considerable gratification to Gen. Kouropatkln to have the opportunity of encountering a completely equipped and highly intelligent enemy. A warrior of his voracity could hardly have died replete if the scanty fare of his previous campaigns had not been supplemented by this brawny piece de resistance. years Kouropatkln For thirty-eigh- t , fought Bokharlans, Algerians, Khokan-dlans- , Samarkhan-diansKhlvans, Turks, Khlrgbizes. Tashkendians and His foemen variegated were worthy of the arsenal of stars, words and crosses which they won for him from the czar. They were wolves. But that Is just what they were. Even the Turks, because of the Infirmity of their government, resembled a pack of wise animals rather than the army of an organized nation. When Kouropatkln went to SL Petersburg In 1898 as minister of war he must have felt that he had been not o much a conqueror of men as a hunter of Inferior breeds. To-daas he watches Kurokl come toward him over the Manchurian hills with a commissariat department and a chess game plan of campaign, hts heart should bound with the prospect of making his first offering In the Temple of the Real Thing. How many strange scenes, drawn from strange and widely separated parts of the habitable world, must float now through Kouropatkln'a Russian mind! He must see himself as he was In 1874, young enough to have the "wandering feeling In the feet," and therefore wandering to Algeria in the How far French army under way. how unreal those Algerians must seem with whom he fought on the desert sands and over whom he rode Into the Legion of Honor! And then the Turks especially tho dead Turk under whose body he lay. wounded and unconscious, ' all one cold night! They must come back to him together with bis chief Skobe-leff- , standing shoulder to shoulder with him In hand to hand encounters and with dripping equally with blood while Archibald Forbes askod them questions and telegraphed to his newspapers his famous description of their gore embossed uniforms. Turks and Algerians, however, must be but feeble Images to Kourowith those patkln compared Turcomans Bokhnrlans, and the rest whom It was his Ufo mission to subdue. The Russians will not be able to conquer the Turcomans," said Iord Sallsnury. The Turcoman barrier will last for our llfetlmo at least." It was Skobe-lcf- f and then Kouropatkln who riddled this prophecy. The Turcomans yielded to marches as magnificent ss that of Lord Roberts on Kanduhar and to massacres as promiscuous as those of Caesar In Gaul. IW Kouropatkln remember Geok Tepo now and the 20,000 men, women and children delivered to the flesh and Mood lust of the Russian soldiery In one of those thorough dissuasive lessons which, In the ouk of Russian colonial assimilation, precede the Insidious suasion of administrative j Certainly there could hardly In s mild-Asiati- c Kho-kandla- enth-ness- found for any Individual man In any previous period of the wot Id's history more varied retrospict than that which conies now to tl.e Ku isinn gen oral, who, a rontliunutt aw ay from home, Is taking whit Is perhaps Ills last stand again t the t in tides of hts sovereign and Is fighting limit ad of hunting. m led It fabrics num The front Wk SALT LAKE CITY, UTAB BT. The Popular Route to tbe prr-jazrpf-r-MPp- y' basbi-bazouk- p fitted PACIFIC 'I 1 tollem ji eon FROM OGDEN OR SALT LAKE I. A BENTON, Q. A. P. D fits BY CARNEGIE INSTITUTE Dr. Lehmer Given Funds to Complete Successful Invention. Dr. Derrick N. Lehmer, Instructor In mathematics at the University of California, has been voted the sum of $300 by the Carnegie Institute to be devoted to hiring assistants In order that he may complete a table of "smallest devisors which he has been .preparing during the last three years under a new and successful method. Dr. Lehmer's achievement Is the discovery of a new and simple process1 for finding the factors of all numbers up to 10,000,000. The task has been rarely attempted on account of the enormous labor Involved. Dr. Leh-mer- a method Is brief and complete. While hts tables carried out to the 10,000,000 would take a period of for- ty years. Is Prisoner. Few people realize that for nearly of Turkey thirty years an has been kept a prisoner at Kourbad-Jl- , on the Bosporus. This unfortunate man Is the Murad, the eldest nephew of Abdul Aziz, who came to the throne in 1876 on his uncles death, but was allowed to reign only three months. He was In weak health at the time and there was strong party in Constantinople which was desirous that hla brother, the present Sultan Abdul Hamid, should be caliph. An Intrigue was therefore set on foot to declare that Murad was and he was quietly deposed and Abdul Ilamld reigned In his place. The who Is now 61 years of age, has become seriously 111 and his life Is despaired of. Ex-Sult- n Int-an- Could Not Predict Further. More than two years a friend of George B. McClellan made a wager of a dinner for a dozen friends that he could write the name of the next mayor of New York on a slip of paper. He wrote the name of Mr. McClellan, put the paper In the snfe and won his bet. Mayor McClellan and this grand guesscr were recalling tho remarkable feat In political prediction the other day. The mayor said: "Take an other peep Into tho dim and distant future, old man, and toll me what new honor Is In storo for me." "Cant do It, Mr. Mayor," was the reply. "Mr. Murphy, the Tammany boss, has not taken me Into his confidence this time. Coming Arbitration Congress. Fifty thousand dollars has been placed at tho disposal of tho secre- tary of tho treasury for the proper entertainment of the delegates to the International arbitration congress, which will hold Its next meeting In tho United States during tho fall. This Is tho first time the United States have had tho honor of entertaining this body. Tito International Arbitration to give tho organization Its full title Is composed exclusively of members of parliaments and national legislative bodies of the different European countries. Worked Hard for Material. In gathering the material for a ImxiU S. It. Crockett lived for m arly three months with ft family of on the eastern Py reran smuggler siontler; he rpent a week In a camp of Cnrllsts, and with them ran away f.'ont the gendarmes; be passed three nights with a hermit who dwelt among the reeks at the tipper end of the Valley of Arlege; In a fortnight among hnreiml hunters ho illeeovtred that they were mostly ex brlgn ids and "not so very much 'ex cither," as savs. re-ci- tt Helen Miller Gould, through whose with Spain she gave the government Influence the sending of race track dis- $100,000, and for the care of sick and patches by the Western Union Tele- convalescent soldiers at Camp Wikoff graph Company has been stopped. Is she furnished $30,000. Miss Gould Is a distinguished for her benevolent work. sister of George Jay Gould and of She is a daughter of tTie late Jay Howard Gould, both of whom are disGould and was born in New York June tinguished men In the financial opera20, 1868. At the beginning of the war tions of the country. PLACE OF HISTORICAL MEMORY. In New York a National Institution. Both' because of its antiquity and because of the many historical memories that are, associated with it, Fraunce's Tavern in New York well deserves to be taken over by the city and maintained as public property forever. Short of that, however, it Is not unfitting that It should now become the headquarters of the New York State Society of the Sons of the Revolution, which has now purchased It. Fraunces Tavern ST. LOUIS FAIR and Points East : Pullman and Tourist Sleepers ARROGANCE OF THE RICH New York Millionaires Fence In the Public Domain. Most of the very rich New Yorkers now own their own private hunting grounds In the Adirondacks, In Maine or in the Carollnas. A great many are members of clubs which own such territory. The Vanderbilts, the Rockefellers, the Morgans and the Drex-el- s all have preserves. In spite of the democratic idea that unused land belongs to all, they fence off a few hundred square miles wherever naThe tavern stands at the southeast ture has been particularly bountiful, y corner of Broad and Pearl streets, and erect "Do Not Trespass! signs, In wardens and with mansion of was the the livery guards originally family. Having later been loaded guns in their bands to keep off turned Into a tavern, it became as the public and make of the most beauearly as 1768 assured of historical tiful and luxuriant spotB in America memory, for In that year It witnessed private hunting grounds that are as tho organization of the New York carefully preserved as ever the royal forests were In the early days of NorChamber of Commerce. The event which gave It its widest man kings. fame, however, was Washingtons fareOnly Wanted to Talk. well meeting with his officers at the close of the revolutionary war. WashThey are still telling stories in ington chose It for his headquarters Washington about the convention of when he entered the city after the the Daughters of the American RevoHe re- lution. On several occasions half of evacuation by the British. mained In New York but nine days, the women were talking at the same and then at noon on Thursday, Dec. 4, time, and Mrs. Fairbanks, the presi1783, be summoned the chiefs of his dent, had to make almost constant use army to meet him in the great room of the gavel. At one time a New Jersey delegate Insisted upon talking of the tavern. It was one of the few occasions In when the motion before the house was not debatable. She was informed of Washington's life when he gave way this situation, but calmly replied: to emotion. With the men before him Madam President. I do not wish to be had shared the perils and hardships debate the question; I only want to of tho long years of the war. Ilis talk about It Now, if this convenwords to them were: "With a heart tion " The gavel fell with a roa-ta- t full of love and gratitude I now take and the New Jersey delegate Indigleave of you, and most devoutly wish nantly refused to continue her your latter days may be as prosperous and happy as your former ones have been glorious and honorable." Pays Taxes Under Protest. He drank their health, and after a Mis Mary Anthony has paid her T cannot come to each pause said: of you to take my leave, but shall be taxes again under protest. She writes obliged If you all! each come and to the city treasurer of Rochester, N. shake me by the hand. ben. Knox Y.: "Once more all women, politi came forward first and then the other cally classed with minors, criminals, lunatics and Idiots, are compelled to officers silently In turn. contribute to the support of a governas tavern the before, Afterwards, ment which denies them sny voice In was long the gathering place of the men of wealth and fashion of New Ithe control of affairs, and once moro pay my taxes under protest. Please York. Many a political movement In so the early days of the republic had Its and record It." Miss Mary Anthony her distinguished sister, Susan B. headquarters there, and the meetings of the Clinton men. who called them- Anthony, never pay taxes without a selves "Federal Republicans," are protest of this kind. Ameriremembered. Few especially Koscluszko'a Statue In Capital. can buildings have had an "active The secretary of war and congreslife If that term may be used which stretched over so long a period sional committee appointed for tbe purpose expect soon to take up the aa bad Fraunco'a Tavern. matter of erecting tho statue of which I to adorn one of the DEPEWS 8TAND FOR MORALITY. corners of Lafayette square, opposite Nsw York Senator Indignant at the White house. Just before Its close congress pacd a resolution auThought of Anything Shady, Chaunccy Dcpcw heads the list as thorizing tho acceptance of a statue, a director of companies, being a mem- to be erected at the expense of the IBs ber of no less than seventy-tour- . citizens or the Unitfoes for attending the meetings of ed States. Theodore M. Ilellnskl Is such bodies would make a right com- president of the central committee of fortable Income. New Yorkers are en- Polish organizations. joying a laugh at the senator just now. The police ere making it uncomfort-ablPrlmroe League to Celebrate. for keepers of poolrooms, and alTho Primrose lengtie In England Is lego that the Western Union Tele- already making preparations to ede-bratthe otto hundredth anniversary graph company Is giving aid to the gamblers. Mr. In pew is virtuously of Disraelis birth on Dec. 21. It was he who culminated his Indignant at the Idea that a corporasulking an tion of which bo Is a director would somewhat theatrical career by nmkln In violating t the Victoria empress of India. It wit p.-deliberately ho rays, "anylaw, "I will not bap natural that the late queen pr , thing which Is even tainted with Ille- furred hint to who was gality, If I find that tho police n'h ga- poor hand ut flattery, "Mr. (Mudstone llons arc true t shall resign from tho Victoria I credited with saying, board." On reading which tho averme a though I wen a public wink tho other eye. meeting. Mr. Disraeli talks to me age Nqw Yorker ai a woman." Chicago Chronicle. from Ogden and Salt Lake to St. Louis THROUGH SCENIC COLORADO WITHOUT CHANGE OF CARS. Dining Cars. Free Reclining-Chai- r Cara. Everything For bertha, tickets, folders, etc address Ftrat-claa- s t em-pl- De-lanc- Pollsh-Anterlcn- n H. C. TOWNSEND, G. P. & T. A., ST. LOUII ARE YOU GOING To the Worlds Fair? If so, you undoubtedly want to get then as quickly at possible. A Ri la Connection with the cro! la Union Pacific Railroad :ac; I'iC I A the H SHORT FAST D. K. BCRLRY. o. r. OREGON SHORT LIRE t. a T. U. SCHUMACHER, T.AFFIC MO D. a. BrUNCF.R, a. o. r. a t. a. Salt Lass Citt, Dm, OT ' .e ROUTE It To ST. LOUIS and all points EAST. Ask Short Line Agents about Special Excursion Rates. tic LIST YOUR REAL ESTATE o WITH US o nm-D- i AT THE (llad-Uone- "h,,!-angtie- s Press Office t |