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Show northwest notes of Butte, Mrs. Joseph Hagerty, whose husband committed suicide lat week after shooting her and her children, Is dead. Adulterating Dairy Product. young The adulteration of dairy product Harry Hart, a does not mean only the putting In of tnan eighteen years of age, lost his life bulky aubBtances to deceive the cus- Just west of Livingston, Mont., while tomer that finally buys them. The to board a moving freight term has a much broader meaning in attempting train. the view of the power son of Mr. and Mrs. The year-olthat have attempted to deal with the Milk adulterated C. be died at Union, Ore., by Toland may John subject the addition of water, and that Is the last week from the effects of the bite most common way of adulterating it of a woodtlck, causing paralysis of the but the man that adds any preservathroat and blood poisoning. blam-able tive adulterates his milk and Is While playing In the Cooper orchunder the law. The adulteration with preservatives Is more harmful ard near Wenatchee, Wash., the two to the people than the adulteration by sons of Fred Cooper, aged II and 9 means of added water. When the were struck by water Is added a little money Is years respectively, killed. Two smaller chiland lightning filched from the pocket of the consumer, but In adulterating by means dren were stunned. of adding formaldehyde the producer Wlille out picking wild strawbertakes the health away from the one ries on the hills near Portland, Media that uses It, if the adulteration be Boehrer was struck by lightning and heavy or If the consumer be weak. killed. Her body was found Adulteration of butter consists gen- Instantly a searching parly, her father being by erally of adding wbat is known as neutral oil and selling It for butterfat. at the head of the number. But of late years other kinds of adulA dispatch from Grand Encampterations have been brought In, many ment, Wyo., says Mrs. Dot Wilson, of which are more subtle than that of alias Miss May Shipley, Is dead from adding a foreign substance to the but- a dose of poison, ter. One kind of adulteration Is to add more water than the butter would The woman was once the wife of a man of Colorado. naturally contain by working the but- prominent mining ter at a high temperature. A second Mrs. Clementine D. Rosier, aged 38, kind of adulteration Is done by churn- committed suicide at Butte while teming at a high temperature, thus addporarily Insane. She blew her head ing a large quantity of casein with oft with a Her revolver. the butterfat. The resultant butter Montana of Is husband foreman tbe Is largely cheese and will develop a cbeesey flavor in a few weeks If not Ore Purchasing companys smelter. used. In either case direct fraud has According to advices from Reno, been committed on the consumer. Not Nevada, a large party of surveying enonly should every honest man refrain gineers has been at work in the neighfrom adulterating his butter, but the olficers of the law should be keen in borhood of Becktwlth Pass, making h lines for the Western Pacific hunting out violators of the law moun-tainto is be built through the against adulteration. The common way of adulterating cheese has been to add neutral oil A double tragedy took place twelve and other compounds not butter or miles east of Eugene, Ore., on the 1st, casein to take the place of butter fat John Richards shot and killed his sisthat had been removed. That has ter and her husband, Sanford Skin been largely stopped by the officials, but the new way is to skim off part of nor, following repealed quarrels over the butter-fs- t from the milk that Is to family matters. Richards Is under arbe made lato cheese, giving a full rest. cream cheese that Is not full cream, son Lancelot Steele, the but has in )t too much casein. It Is, In of Thomas Steele of Uilca, Mont., reality, a skim cheese, even though the milk from which It Is made may while out hunting with J. D. Waite, Jr., be what Is known as a three per and Bradley Waite was Instantly killed by a big boulder, which became cent milk. dislodged In some manner and rolled Sctence of th Balanced Ration. over him. At & convention of dairymen, In a Olevla Staumbaugh, a Lakevlew, discussion of the balanced ration, a Oregon, schoolgirl, was fatally burned speaker said: All animals require In the food on tho hillside near the school, while enough substance to meet the ex- several of the children were playing. penses of the body in carrying on its One of the small hoys lighted a little physiological functions. Every move- bonfire, and the Staumbaugh girl's ment of muscle, the beating of the clothes caught. heart, breathing, etc., requires the Henry Arao, the Japanese murderer expenditure of energy that comes of a Spokane Chinese, Sam Chong, from certain compounds In largely the food, which compounds we call was hanged at the penitentiary at protein. We know then that If an Walla Walla, Wash., at an early hour animal Is to live and work, the food Saturday, The murderer was unusualmust contain protein sufficient to ly brave throughout the ordeal and meet their constant expenses. The died In twenty-twminutes, harder an animal works the greater Edward Challenger, Joe Johnson and these expenses, hence the more proLentz Borst, being held awaiting trial tein must the food contain. Mont , escaped from tho we Again, give carbohydrates and at Choteau. fats to accomplish another purpose. Teton county jail and are still at The temperature of a cow is constant, large. Johnson and Rorst cut their practically at 98 deg. R it is constant way out of their cells with a tile made In man at the same mark. How essen- of a caseknife, proe tired the jailor's tial it Is that this constant tempera- keys, and weapons from his office durture be maintained is very apparent ing his absence, and released ChalIn the human system when we realize lenger. that oue-hai- r George J. Klndel, a well Known mandegree below normal us a of Denver, has been arwhile one ufacturer chill, half to one gives degree above normal gives us a fever, rested on the charge of having crimieither condition incapacitating the nally libeled the late Henry II. Hyde, man for work. If we should attempt founder of the Assurto keep the temperature of a box the ance society, byEquitable IJfe printing hts picture cow a 98 of at die deg. R by the aid In a circular between thoBe of two of an oil lamp we would soon be outlaws, over tho inscription: Kin- made aware of the Immense amount del's Gallery of Dead Cheaters. of heat thus required. The animal The dead body of Oliver Atkins, a herself Is constantly keeping up this enormous expenditure of heat, but she young man living in Aldridge, a coal has only one source upon which to camp near I. Kingston, Mont., who disdraw and that Is manifestly the food appeared last winter while hunting, consumed. The peculiar functions of has been found In a like. He evithe carbohydrates and fats is to keep dently was drowned while trying to up Che body supply or heat, in fact cross on the lee. they are more efficient as heat pro Killing Et nest Hickman of Oregon duccrs than are the other compounds In a saloon row at Piaiile Cltv, of the food. The science of a bal- jdtv Ore, six wetks ago, nitty cost Marshal anced ration then consists In supply-Inenough protein to take care of W. 11 Lucy of Prairie City, a form the dally waste of protoplasm to the in the penitentiary, lie has just been animal's body and in supplying a found guilty (,f manslaughter, hut lu sufficient amount of carliohydrates case will lu appealed. and fats to maintain the temperuture Dick Anwlne, owner of a barber of the animat's body. shop In Casper, Wyo.. lias been missing for several days, and an Investlga. Clover and Corn Rodder. Tb time has gone by when corn tion shows that bo has left many credas a grain can be fed to dairy-cow- itors In the lurch. The men who were In large quantities cither working In his shop have taken steps ground or unground. Cheaper feeds for the recovery of tliolr wages, must bo produced, and they must Tho cave-lat the United Verde consist very largely of clover and mine, at Jerome, Arl., on May 22, corn fodder, both of which still prove to ho less extensive than at remain cheap. The clover will sup. flint letsnted. United States Senator ply the protein and the cornstalks the W. A. Clark, of Butte, owner of tho carbohydrates, tbe one balancing the property, has received a report that other, so far as the bulky matter of the plant Is running again, lacking tiuo tbe feed Is concerned. The problem furnnee. of bow to get a cheap concentrate is The daughter of John on that has not yet been worked out. a farmer of North Yakima, Temple, as all of the concentrates are very Wash., tiled In (treat agony Friday of high now and likely to remain so. lust week from tho blto of a rattlesnake. Tho child was bitten ThursDairy Law In North Dakota. day morning, and although doctors A now law regarding the Inspection were called promptly they were unablu of creameries bus been passed in to relievo her. North Dakota. By It tho slate InspectA Billings, Mont., save dispatch or la also made an instructor, it also Harry Ovortuf. aged an Omaha for licensing creameries, provides Neb, civil engineer, was killed by chceso factories, renovated luittur fac- lightning on the Crow reservation tories, and makes It tho duty of the near Custer station. Overttirf was Inspector to enforce all dairy luwa now assistant In the government survey engnged In laying out the reservation passed or t he passed In th future for settlement. well-know- n g d i V I I (Special Correspondence.) OthBologna is the city of porticos. er cities in Italy have occasional porticos as adornments of a fine buildthe ing or as a refuge provided for of uncompromising in days public sunshine, or In bad weather when But Bologna rain falls in torrents. revels in porticos. There are, Indeed, Individual buildings devoid of this peculiar pillarled shelter, but they are few in proportion to the rest of the houses In the city. As soon as the traveler lands at the railroad station of Bologna, the portico presents Itself to him. The care for the beauty of the city 1b at once brought home to him. Here, where an ngly hill, with Its steep, , earthy and stony sides, I a Montag-nolawas the first object that met the traveler on his arrival in Bologna, there is now a magnificent staircase of beautiful white stone. The height above covered with noble trees, amid which wind shady walks, now presents a most altractive spectacle to the visitor, and constitutes the first of the surptises he meets with. The streets are narrow, and the X ' ' t road-whic- s. o g s VTA1I STATE NEWS Italian City Famous for Its Porticos Narrow Streets Turned Into Things of Beauty. y L tX v V Fountain in Public Square. footpath is altogether covered by the arches that rest on columns. In ront of some church you may find a double or even a triple row of columns. The effect of such style of construction is grandiose. As you Btand at one end of a street and look along Its length the columns stretch along In gradually diminishing perspective, which Is quite picturesque. New buildings are made conformable to tho old In respect of a columned portico along tho street. Some of these, such as the savings bank, are very fine structures. In several cases these newer const ructions are Imitated, more or less closely, after the more ancient buildings. Few of the modern buildings can approach in delicacy and beauty of ornament the grandiose portico that passes alongside of the Church of St. Bartholomew', a sixteenth century work of great artistic merit. When all this adornment carved In stone Is considered, and when the abundance of such ornate pillars Is reckoned, the prodigality of riches spent by the Bolognese on the beautifying of their city is startling to the ImaginaA thing of beauty is a joy for- tion. was John Shelley of Salt Lake accirunaway a In seriously injured dent last week. In Salt was Is it and said, who, the place, Bob Fitzsimmons has arrived charged to write to the Emperor Fred- Lake and gone into training for his erick II when he demanded the rewith Schreck, on July 4. lease of his son. King Enzlus, whom fight Robert Stephenson, a the Bolognese had caught and kept In twenty-twa mild Imprisonment for Salt Lake boy, won the Decoration day. Farming-tonyears, road race from Salt Lake to This Rolando counseled the citizens to show their power by holding resiJack Quinn, one of th oldest Enzlus, and at the same time to write was shift who and Park City a civil but firm refusal to the emper- dents of on the or's demand. Rolandino must have boss at the Daly for years, died been an extraordinary notary, or the 2nd, of tuberculosis. unpeople must have been very simple, Geoige Burk, who was Injured when such a monument as this in so the der some cars while switching for prominent a plare was given him. has The records of the time also record Union Pacific in the Ogden yards, one of that a magnificent funeral was given submitted to the amputation him at the public expense. foot and will recover. War is being waged upon the Portico System in Interiors. Weber county, bottles of The portico system of construction gophers in for their destrucwhich is so prominent and distinctive powdered strychnine furnished by the county a mark of the architecture of Bologna, tion being is not confined to the exterior of clerk to all applicants. buildings, but Is also used in the InWork Is to begin at once on the terior. The courtyards of the palwaterworks system at Price, and when aces. with whhh Bologna is plentithe system will be of suffifully supplied, seeing that it was a completed a much large papal city, or city possessed by the cient capacity to supply papal government and governed by place than Price is at present. its delegates from the time of Pope The Indian war veterans will meet Julius II In the early part of the sixsoin Ephraim during the week and teenth century, aru richly adorned be to led a place for the encampment with columned porticos. of A number The beauty of porticoed courtyards held during August. Is greatly enhanced when the decora- towns are after the encampment. tion is added to by plants and flowers The Odd Fellows and Knights of and an occasional statue, such as of Clear Creek and Scofield one meets with in that of the town Pythias on Memorial day to do honor united museum Museo C'ivlco. In the hot of their brothers who days, when the sky Is as a furnace, to the memory and the streets are silent for want were killed in the disaster of four of passersby, the murmur of the founyears ago. tain In the courtyard and the water The year and a half old son of Mr. plants and flowers suggest all pleas- and Mrs. John Tobler, of Mantl, was ant coolness. one fallAround the walls are the grave- drowned last week, tho little the creek the through into running stones of a past and wellnlgh for- ing several founo remnants of time the the body being gotten race; city, when Bologna was known as Felsina, blocks from home. or later still, when to the Romans It Reports made to the Salt Lake was known as Bononla. And if one County Horticultural association show ascends the stair, and wanders Into the fruit crop In the county will these admirably arranged rooms, he that in the will be brought as near t.v the ances- generally be short, except tors of the Bolognese as It is praetlc Draper district, where only peaches able even In these days. When one are reported as doing badly. ran contemplate the hones of a dead Surveyors have been at Pelican ancestor one feels that he is brought Point for several days, running lines close to him. and cross sectioning for th big New In the museum are ranged several house concentrating plant. It is being very ancient tombs, not carved out of out that ground will he broken given a block of stone such as we see In next two week. churches and sustained by the pillars within the In Heber Huggard, of American Fork, arranged portico style at St. Domin ic and St. Francis. These earliest was seriously injured by an old famsepultures were constructed in loose, ily horse last week. Mr. Huggard Is smooth stones, and the whole con- a blacksmith and was engaged in shoestructed, with the skeleton half burled the animal, when It knocked him In a hardened mud lying on the bot- ing down and trampled upon him tom and surrounded by his weapons of has The appointed president war and Jewelry, Is here exposed to Charles De Moisy of Salt Lake City view. The Bolognese of today may thus register, and Don B, Colton of Verregard his predecessors. Here he nal receiver of the new land office at the works of art that were pre- Vernal, Utah, to take effect July 1, valent In the olden time; the rather when this new office Is to be opened. pretty vases, ornaments in bronze A shocking accident occurred in the mirrors, the shine and glory of which have departed, and other objects with canyon above Ixigan last week, Walter inlaid silver adornment; brooches and Nyman being killed outright by fallbuckles and necklaces of strange ing under the wheels of a wagon. The worn gems, earrings and finger rings lad was 15 years old, a son of Charles In gold, silver and bronze; utensils Nyman of Greenville. The family is of domestic use also abound, and with prostrated with the accident. the skeleton and the objects belonging As the result of a runaway horse to him, scientists may very well build dashing Into the funeral procession, which was bearing the remains of r , . T i J"'.t V, ' Mrs. Eliza McFarlane to the grave Sunday afternoon, George F. Kompf, of Salt Lake City, sustained a broken a r i : rt leg aud Injuries about the head. The epidemic of measles In Mt. Pleasant still continues, but the authorities seem to be of the opinion that they have the spread of the disease ehecked. Two deaths have ocJ & ' curred of little children as a result I of measles during the past week. t, jlV ; Mt. Pleasant is making a strenu.1 ous effort to get the annual reunion f". v of the Black Hawk Indian war veterans, which will be held some place 1 in the county early In August for three Vi It is expected that at least days. fev Jwa , 10.000 people will atten(l the reunion. It Is believed the mystery of the dis'Vi' V' iM.' of Era and Gcorgo Penny appearance I T k4 from Kauosh. about six years ago, is about to be .solved, their wagon and . J harness having been found near r The find, it is believed, will lead to Hie conviction of tholr murMn- - may-not- e . lo vjv O - r n - . f n: Vd ? U a A , 0007 dj fm ' ! 4 V ic ;o o A M x r - v ' A -- i Min-ersvlll- e. VrtMawm- J qa - 4 ' derers. . j "i&J f rx , Altar in St. Bartholomew's Church. but a whole city adorned with up a picture ot the former inhabitants evr'; more or loss of artMlr beaut v and of their grade of civilization. In nnothet room more modern throughout Is a sempiternal Joy which ven Kent did not contemplate. surprise the traveler. Across the street within the great cathedral Tombs in Public Squares. a chapel henrlng the name of Bareioe-ch- i One of tho most curious surprises brings up the memory of another that await the traveler In Bologna Is lace. This Haeeioechl was the husthat of toiuhs erected In public band of KIIh-- Bona parte, the sister quures In very conspicuous style. of tin- great emperor, the master at Near to the Church of St. Dominic one time of Europe. Here on the wall two of these tombs are standing In of this r Impel rise monumental slabs near the church, and to this sister of tbe the great square to her other two are tn the precinct of the husband and to theiremperor, children, To Church of St. Frauds. many who come to Bologna the Etrns They are described ns "canopied cans ure well known as these jt.i,.. medieval tombs," In the one which ciocchis. Is nearest the church of St Dominie, the sareaphogus rest!, under a sort of Boy Kills Babe. A boy of five tiny portico supported m Its turn by cuis i.eentlv killed another series of pillar also farm'ng a babv in I herpoo l,v startin' hrend a tiny portico. The pvrnmid shaped Into Its tht oaf lb- slid he did It top completes in a quaint mnnin r "for fun" Tile call i,tl moniPv 'ns in,, " this curious nionunn ut it.,.p. EtmiNh law a a certain Rcdaudiro who child mi r s.un i oaslder.-In was hoi In l?-tM,-it tel aide 'f s - m - Ie-sagit- t. i John Hancock, a convict in the California penitentiary Is to be tried for the murdtjr of George Kngolke, form-eriof Ogden, a veterinary surgeon, and Joe Edmlaton, a Canadian, who were foully murdered for their money on the desert in south Nevada. May y 1G. 1897. . P. Smith, of Salt Ijike City, was severely injured at Provo by a fall. Mr, Smith, who I quite a largo and heavy man, was taking a hath, and while standing up n the tub, his feet slipped and lie fell, striking his side heavily against tho edge of the tub Some of hi ribs were dislocated. ( aleh Baldwin Rhodes, who came to I tab In IMG, prior to the of tho Mormons, died t his coming country home between Price and Helper last week, at the age of tilt. He was a trap, per and prospector In the early days ml claimed to have located a fahu' lously rich mine on tho reservation. Fire completely deftroyed the home W .'fJ11 at Nephl. H,r'.lK mother Wits awnv home on,, of fu. mrtaiier h0vs from w(l Im ,1" !" summer kltc'h'n l w r he powd.-ignited ttnd s t file lo M, no vines whlgh ran up the wad del it, ,, tp e root r Proof That Owner of Small Bov e Lacks Excitement. The bell rang, and Mrs. jot opened the door to a rough fa? man with a whip m one hanfl e, boys cap In the other. Got a little boy?" he ufcei when she assented, he went This his cap? It looks like it," said the ooti beginning to feel alarmed at the bi. tone. "Well, maam, Im awful 80m just dont know how to tell youo the truth She braced herself against the on-- faltered: and: Tell me the worst! is he It wan't eggzaetly my fault; see the little chap run right jj under She pushed past him, crying t fran.lcally: Where Is he? Where Is my murdered boy? At the gate she met some J!t. lads In a bunch, and then she t sure they were bringing in then gled body. How she had strengtl go among them she never km but suddenly one atom detached self from the swarm and lea,, toward her. It was hatless, but it her William alive, at least. "Mother, he shouted, "a man's clean, plum over the basket of you sent me to get. I told him I J you'd make him sorry! Every i one of the blooming lot is smashe, Unknown Graves. Blue hangs the morning haze on Loot Mountain, Still flows the winding river to thos, Long years have shed amelioraUv shine Since hung the battles cloud on j. and lea. Here lie the unclaimed dead of that Unwept, and without mark at toot head Except the great white poet that this legend: "Here sleep, in broken ranks, tho known dead. Here lies, mayhap, a youth from southland, Who was a fathers pride and nr How slowly dragged the years, ere departed. Vainly watcidng for the coming of boy. Here, too, is one from out the north boi dcr. Unto whom the homing furlough et came; Fond hearts had mourned, yet k through mnny seasons For upon the list of 'nils!ng wu name. & th For them no organ peals, nor mean dirges. No agonizing sobs nor fiiendly teui They died apat t from home and ftk and kindred. And sleep the unknown Bleep three, passing years. What matter what the cause for !.' they battled? What matter now which argr day? Their earthly recompense !.K 1 . Is found within this ridge clay. Flow on to ocean home. O gentle It I.so high above the mists, Kind Nature, spread a coat of iprinf Th1 botfioc-head- o(oine 'Oer all those lonely graves of dead. lint A. L. Mir Shoemakers Once Were Well Pi Thirty years ago, when ail 4 were made by hand, the shoe earned a fair salary of from I" $16 per week. Every shoe shop from five to ten shoemakers wort Shoes and boots cost from $S lo and they received much more re ' Ing than dft the shoes of girls are working in the factories hundreds of good shoemakers are tng for something to eat. Our! of the shoemakers who fom worked In the shops are worMct other lines of business, and w more money. A Journeyman cobbler seldom na more than $8 or $9 per week. One may wonder why it Is that cobbler nearly always finds a to dirty hole to crawl Into and It a repair shop. The fact Is, he'1 not afford to pay much rent. It average shoe shop In the good spiring and summer be can worth of repairing a day, and more than $6 If he works In the b time. Four dollars per day u week days a week make $24 per Love of Patriotism Instilled' As an organization, the mend'of the G. A. R. keep alive the latere national anniversaries, such mortal day, Flag day, etc. The! set once of the veterans In the on such oeeasions keeps before country rising generations a loveof Instils in their minds patriotism a love of the flag for which they so nuuh. A history 1E living s F Inspiring at all times than one. Tho Womans Relief Cmp. no would not exist If there were end of the Republic, Army ((imposed of loyal women, enaw ty of tho fact that they arc disable bring relief to the sick, wornout veterans, ami laves Ut caring for the Inmates of homes. TnaH Story. the days of the prevlouF' thm many were the singular slowed by their parents on er In (Iren of Cape Cod and tho tlon. At Nantucket dwelt named Fish, seafaring of the bods had been served," In his early pw dubW chlldh now commands a fishing one of his voyages his bark en at sea "What Is the name of yor Flying Fish." "What is your captain Preserved Fish. What did you say?" "Preserved Fish." n It. I didn't ask'M "D your cargo." Explanations ensued ,r |