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Show ! <7 . UTAH Work is | At to UTAH | as ‘i do you & eS : Gossip of People and Events Told By ALEXANDER MPIKLEJOHN, in Interesting Manner. 170 Professor of Logic, Brown University. rapidly AIN ST. as possible on the new joint Oregon SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ορ Bhort Line and Salt Lake Route te pot at Salt Lake City, The eighteenth triennial conven. tion of the American Instructors of the Deaf, held in Ogden, closed its ERE is no ibt that our popular games as they are played ‘They are often tricky and unfair, somemany defects. have vorial f ativivelibor 4 Giae: ave a i fis al; they are altogether too feverish im BS COATES BER t their demand for victory; they are final session on July 10. The people of Ogden have voted to the gambler and the too frequently saloon-keeper as parts of the Hetty Has fr Green The | used b ee ff dollars They are providing wholesome recreation for young | wife’s. And further, there is no other one of the Astors. These are conclu-| sions that probably would be reached if the Green and Astor possessions could be valued correctly and figures compared with those which would rep-| resent the vast wealth of Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Jones of New York and| Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island. Further than that, the social crown of America, long held by the Astors| by reason of their wealth, would be-| long to Mrs. Jones, if she chose to} If anyone doubts the need of providing wholesome amusement for our men let him go through the streets of one of our manufacturing towns hibition. in which just now the mills are closed for two or three days a week. He A. W. Terry, who bit off the ear of an antagonist in a saloon brawl in will find standing about the street corners hundreds of idle men who have Ogden, has been bound over to the either no means of enjoyment available or ho proper sense of what they district court for trial on the charge may do with their time when they are free to do as they please. And the same is true of the idle rich as of the idle poor. As a people we have But though it be admitted that athletic games are better than theat ent month, tractions of the saloon, the public dance hall, the race track, the street corner, it may be said that we might much better find amusement in the The development of athletic sports may involve temporary economic jloss, but none the less it is desirable and necessary. For the physical, social and mental well-being of both players and communities the interest One of the leading features of the entertainment at the State fair this in such sports should be enlarged. | To Smoke | or and Sam Petrovich has a bullet wound | between different factions among the Austrians employed at Garfield, Mike Bovich was shot and fatally wounded, in his arm. Four men are in sharged with rioting. jail, | Some idea of the business enterprise of Utah business men may be gained from the fact that within a few weeks eleven carloads of Utah Becoming despondent over his unre- | married Is smoking in modera- Not to Smoke? effect of smoking on health, we should know woman, coupled with a superinduced by company. The passing of Flager, although foreshadowed for some time bythe feeble state of his health, is yet an event of the first importance in the great world of finance, in which he was so long a striking figure. The son of a Presbyterian minister in western New York, he engaged in several lines of busi- that tobacco, which is classed as a narcotic, This fact, though well known to physiologists, is not so well known to the laity, and is usually quite misapprehended or ignored by popular writers on alcohol and tobacco. Dr. John H. Griscom and others who have themselves been peculiar- country and to the northwest. quited love for a wholly satisfactory. tion harmful at all? Nay, may it not even be beneficial? But before we can learn the By G. ELLIOT FLINT. ὑΤΑΗ 8 FAMOUS _WATERING PLACE. Coney Island of the Wast. Finest Bathing in the World. Largest and finest Dance Floor and best Music in the State, Held's Band all summer. Bicycle Races twice weekly. For recreation and pleasure go to Saltair. Trains every 45 min. ACCEPTED VERDICT OF DOCTOR. Great is now called Oyster Painter Heard His Sentence and Caimly Passed Away. When Turner, the famous painter, was dying at Chelsea he sent in despair for a Ramsgate doctor who had done him some good during his recent stay at that place, and who, he hoped, might take a different view of his case from that which the London physi cians had expressed. The doctor ar rived, and confirmed the cpinion that the artist had very little. time longer to live. “Wait a bit,” said Turner to the doctor, “you have had nothing to eat and drink, yet, have you?” “No but that’s of no consequence.” “But it is,” replied the painter. “Go down stairs and you will find some refreshment; and ‘there is some fine brown sherry—don't spare it—and then come up and see meagain.” The doctor refreshed himself and then came back to the patient. “Now, then,” said Turner, “what is it? Do youstill think so badly of my case?” The doctor regretfully said he could not The artist.. | alter his former opinion. shook his shoulders, turned his face to | the wall and never spoke again!— Dundee Ady ertiser. Bay, L. L, in 1693. He brought with him a comfortable fortune, won on the seas through privateering privileges granted him by James II., whose cause he supported in the battle of Boyne, This fortune has been handed down from the eldest of one family to the eldest of the next through five gen erations, until now the bulk of the vast accumulations rests with Mrs Mary Elizabeth Jones. Mr. Flagler, according to the government figures, owns more than eight | per cent. of Standard Oil stock, and has drawn $30,000,000 in dividends in H ENRY M. FLAGLER, at the age of | the last ten years. He was one of six | me n wae controlled vem: 000,000 of 78, dropped quietly out of the Standard Oil Companythe other day. The new law Offices of ‘State RepreTo smoke, or not to smoke; that is the Only a bare announcement was made ''ημαί he extended his Florida to |sentative Harry J. Robinson are ip public by the directors at the close of East Coast railroad from Miami The decision of the encyclopedias question. their meeting. It was coupled with Knight's key, over 15 miles of water | rooms 102-103 Mercantile Block, Salt is that smoking is the least harmful of acg20" that his plage as vice- and 19 milesof Swamp. t | Lake City, Utah, to whom all whe luxuries. That decision, however, is not president had been taken by W. H. Several years ago he divorced his are in need of legal advice are reTilford, heretofore the treasurer of the first wife after she had become in- ferred. is a stimulant in small doses. pickles will have been shipped to different points in the intermountain 100 Atlas Block, SaltsLake City. | ness, and had “gone broke” when he met John D. Rockefeller and went into partnership with him in an oil re finery. It will not be easy to keep them free | fall will be the fireworks, arrange- || from excesses and perversions, but none the less we must take them and ments having been made last week ] use them as best we may. As a people we have learned perhaps too well for the greatest pyrotechnic display |the lesson of work. Oneof the things 7 2 ; ever seen in the state. ,which we now need is to learn how ~The two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, J. M. French of Green River se- to play cured some fiy poison one day recently and took quite a quantity before he was discovered. The little fellow was quite sick but no serious results will eysue, Ass the result of a free-for-all fight Our facilities for handling your account unexcciled. We make liberal advances on all Utah Stocks. es- Flagler Retires from Standard Oil Co. Mr. Pinchot is making | fous reserves. Jones to be her ambition to own property in every city in the United States, She owns property in most of them now, and each year gets nearerto a realiza tion of her ambition. The other day she started a controyersy with the city of New York about the ownership of the sunken meadows in East river. They are estimated to be worth $1,000,000. The grant to the Jones family goes back to Queen Anne, so it is likely that Mrs. Jones are written largely on the pages of| what American history from the days of} colonial wars to now, Probably no one, not even Mrs, concert hall, the lecture room, the picture gallery, the woods and fields, Lake City and Elko, Nevada, Jones herself, could say accurately than in athletic sports. ‘To this, however, there are two answers. First, Ther. were 80 deaths and 142 births how great is her fortune. It is most-| mm Salt Lake City during the month there is no reason why we cannot have both sets of interests and unite, ly in land. She acknowledges dhe of June, according to the monthly reowns and pays taxes on land in every | as our colleges are trying to do, athletic exercise with the general developport of the board of health, Of the school district on Long Island, in near-| ] number 22 were hoh-residents. ment ofall the powers. And second, to a great majority of our men, the ly every county in New York state,| + Gifford Pinchot, chief of the forest athetic interest offers a stronger appeal against the lower forms of amuse- and in every state in the union except tervice, is expected to arrive in Salt ment than ean any of the interests just mentioned. | Texas, Lake City some time during the pres4 tour of the west inspecting the var- Then there is the is related also far and near to nearly Jones, “who came from Strabane, every one of the great families in New | in the kingdom of Ireland,” and York and New England, whose names| settled with his young wife near and it is time that we gave some attention to the situation. Tha force at work on the Western Pacific is being increased daily, about 660 men being employed in the con struction of the line between Salt SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE of his claim it, for her fortune is doubtless} will retain possession. greater and her lineage in this coun | The foundations of her vast fortry runs a century further back. She|tune were laid by Maj. Thomas City’s oldest architects, died in Salt not yet developed a proper sense of sane, healthy, self-controlled enjoyLake iast week. He had been oneof ment. In this respect, we are far behind the people of western Europe, the city’s leading architects for over twenty-five years. far short a BROKERS tate which is owned by some 25heirs, EW YORK.—The richest woman in which also runs upinto scores of mil America—or in the world—may | }ions in value. not be — Hetty Green. The great Three or more theaters in New York est landowner in America may not be city are owned by her, and it is said petitions, of Salt Lake lives F Oliver Livingstone his possessions fall general devotion on the part of our men to clean, generous, athletic com- ef mayhem 0 5 | Jones, is also a great land owner, but set of activities which could at present tak their place in promoting the It is estimated that there were And further still we 2,000 visitors in Brigham City on Sun results which we seek from our popular recreations. day, the occasion of the annual outing need more athletic sports, more men playing, more men interested, more of the Scandinavians of the state. The Rev. P. A. Baker of the Antt ealoon league of America, is conductfing a series of mass meetings throughout the state in behalf of pro she » i om, : Her husband, Dr. from the strain of daily labor. ten years in the state prison property machiner men of physical vigor and for older men who need relaxation Balt Lakefirm, has been sentenced ta Jones ee : τ immediately Mrs. | rounding the old manor house at C = But on the whole they are doing well a work which is necessary. i n I Rival of his business. bond the city for $75,000 to erect a new high school building on the site fonated by Fred J, Kiesel. A. Fineburg, the young man who stole diamonds valued at $1330 from a William Carroll, one care, sore, then co me ani 1862 of New York Talk : Interest ingin Sports F ore net, we probably can’t do muchfor ' Effect of Grow- letes ATE NE W Ν STATI νι being If you don’t care what your jewelry costs, or whether it is good or PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY ΝΡ a | E R G A7 I S — SALT LAKECITY sc natural depression | a protracted spree, ily susceptible to tobacco have declared that it depressed the digestive, cirDavid Wheeler, a prominent young | culating and muscular powers. But this is true only when it is indulged man of Slaterville, Weber county, | in to excess. We have the authority of John Fiske, M. A., LL. B., for whote two letters to bis friends and Hospital Devoted Solely to Cats and Dogs |saying that narcotics, moderately used, “instead of lowering nutrition, will raise it; instead of paralyzing, they will invigorate. Taken in a stim- | ulant dose, tobacco is not only not a producer, it is an averter, of pargly-| sis. It is not only not a poison, but it is a healthful. reparatory stimulus.” | in the siege of Khartoum, and who died in the Utah state prison while |The effect of any narcotic depends upon the amount of the dose, a small | serving twelve years for burglary, | aoa having a directly opposite effect to that of a large dose. But indi- | will sail for England soon to claim | i viduals vary, some being narcotized by an amount that would stimulate portion of a vast estate left her husothers. band by an uncle. then ended his life. Mrs. Mary Grice, widow of Samuel | Grice, a British soldier in the Soudan, || when the heroic Gordon met his death sane, and married a younger woman. | The Fashion in Names. He practically cut off his son by his Babies are the victims of fashion first wife. The divorced wife is livlike their elders. Whatever happens ing in isolated luxury in a mansion on | to be the name-phase of the period in Riverside drive. It is believed she which they made their advent, to that does not know she has been divorced. they are doomed. Just now ElizaThe second wife was a North Caroli beths and Jameses are being literally seamstress. Newport society refused christened by dozens, and Peters are to receive her. | Slarmingly prevalent. —Pictorial. clasps, buttons, pins and needles, are among the interesting things she has added to her collection from this DRAWING PAPERS, the best kinds, PEMBROKE STATIONERY CO., Salt Lake City. Strange Human Nature, “Hit’s a mighty strange thing,” said Broaher Williams, “dat w’en we lays source. up treasures in heaven we still A sick dog is as finical about his spends all we got on earf wid de docfood as a sick person. One great dane tors to keep us fum gwine whar it is! who had received an injury to his We pray erbout it, and we sing erbout spine refused to eat anything. He it—streets er gold an’ milk an’ honey, | kept alive by having his mouth held | but somehowor other we don't feel LUTOCRATICdogs sometimes have | open while raw eggs were thrown into lak walkin’ on a shiny pavement, an’ appendicitis, just like their mas-|it. He was fed despite himself and ters and are operated on to remove his life saved. The first thing he ate | milk an’ honey don’t seem ter suit our | appetite! I reckon it’s des po’ human the vermiform appendix. There is al voluntarily was ice cream, which is as dog and cat hospital in this city in | frequent an invalid dish in this as in natur’ showin’ up what hit’s least exWe is all weak critters!” -which there is a woman surgeon. She |a human hospital. Cod liver oil, malt- pected. Atlanta ( vonstitution wears a sterilized cotton gown when ed milk, milk punches, beef juice, and She operates, and uses sterilized in-| pure cream are among the invalid | Leaf That the Devil Tore. struments and sterilized cotton ban-| dainties served. Yn the library of the Massachusetts dages, just like in a real hospital. One patron brings in her twolittle Historical society is a leaf of a sermon There is a long table in the middle of | dogs periodically to have their teeth on which is written the following the “operating ward,” and there, gen-| examined for deposits of tartar. This memorandum by Dr. Elliotts tly soothed with a few drops of ether seems hardly necessary, as each little “Dr. Cotton Mather's leaf of a seror chloroform many a dog, quite un-) fellow has his own tooth brush and mon which the devil was so spiteful known to himself, has parted with | tooth powder. and has his teeth as to tear. The leaf hag been torn, some portion of his anatomy brushed carefully twice a day. Each and near the rent is the following One day this woman surgeon re-| has his little bed as well ae his own memorandum in Mather’s own hand- If one smokes it is important that he should avoid excess. The evils | Peter Nelsen, a laborer employed on the street railway of Salt Lake of cigarette smoking arise from the facet that « sigarette tobacco is mild. City, was struck by a gravel train Therefore nearly all cigarette smokers inhale and are consequently much one day last week and fatally injured. His back was turned to the approach- more quickly narcotized than are those who are content to draw the smoke ing car, and he failed to pay any at- merely into their mouths. Cigar and pipe smokers generally do not intention to the signals of the motorhale, as such smoke i« exceedingly irritating and disagreeable to the lungs. man. Benjamin Carter pleaded guilty in Further, the writer has been informed by tobacconists that cigarette tothe district court at Junction to an| bacco is moistened with a preparation of opium, so that it will adhere and | moved an appendix and found it full dog basket, where he sleeps upon a writing: ‘While I was preaching at a assault with intent to commit murder can be rolled. If this is true, it may explain also the adhesiveness of the of coal. This is a specimen of the| hair mattress beneath a down quilt. private fast (kept for a possessed against Lawrence Hamel, and was things puppies will eat. One day she} They have dainty velvet robes to wear young woman)—on Mark ix., 28-29—ye sentenced to serye a term of ten| cigarette fiend to his habit. removed a toy watch from a bright {in cool weather, and their mistress Devil in ye Damsel flew upon mee, To-day leading physiologists agree that moderate smoking is harmyears in the state penitentiary, The pup's digestive apparatus, where it had buys prepared tablets at $3 a bottle and tore ye leaf, as it is now tore rouble occurred at Kimberly last less, if not positively beneficial. Certainly there are some persons who not digested. Buckles, pocketbook to lend variety to their menu. over against ye text.’” fune are peculiarly susceptib le to tobacco, and these would better not use it at For some considerable time the First National Exhibit. Oothers can take comparatively large quantities with little risk of Southern Pacific has been using a all. The London Society of Arts is em Dr. Parr would smoke 20 pipes in a single evening. The illustrain containing water from the Great narcosis. titled to the credit of having originated | language, but failed Salt Lake on part of the line out of Then the suit national exhibitions, when in 1761 it trious Hobbes sat always wrapped in dense clouds of smoke while writing, was begun. Ogden to kill weeds along the track. held a show of agricultural and other A list of the great men | The papers were served on Miss The use of the salt water has proved and yet managed to attain the ripe age of 92. machines in its rooms. The idea of very efficient in the destruction of the who have been smokers would be very long. Gould, after months of effort, the other an international exhibition, however, Bismarck, Carlyle, Thackweeds day at her country home at Irvingtonwas long viewed with disfavor in all eray, Tennyson, Paley, Zola, Guizot and Cromwell were all great smokers, Arrangements are being perfected on-the-Hudson. Miss Gould is quoted countries, a French minister of com have been injured by the by the old folks’ committ ee of Weber and the brains at least of none of them seem to |as saying, when the papers were merce even going so far as to suggest stake for the an ual outing of the old practice. | served, that the Gauley woman is dethat a proposal for the representation people, which will be hel d at Lagoon | mented Science has — demonstrated the following systematic effects of of foreign products at a French exhi July 21. Free transportation has been ISS HELEN GOULD, phiianthro-| Elizabeth Gauley is about 40 years ᾽ bition emanated from the enemies of . It acts on the sympathetic ganglia, increasing offered to all of the old folks who| moderate smoking: pist, charity worker and eldest | old and has been in this country for French industry have passed th three-score year and the flow of saliva, gastric, pancreatic and intestinal juices, thus aiding di- daughter of the late Jay Gould, has| | more than 20 vyeare nearly all of ten mark. gestion. 2. If μὑήών the medulla oblongata, aiding the circulation. Fanatics of the Peak. Myrtle Densmore, a resident of the former servant on a chargeof The real climber is always a fanatic. vice of New York families of wealth It stimulates the interstitial nerve-fibers, aiding the general assimila- Elizabeth Gauley, formerly aslander. red light district of Salt Lake City, parlor and position. At least four of the ser. He does not grudge time, money or attempted suicide for the sixth time tion of prepared material. 4. By increasing the nutrition of the brain maid in Miss Gould's house in Fifth yants who heard the siiewea tender labor in the effort to attain some last week, but was unsuccessful. The avenue, is the complainant. will testify in her behalf. she and her glistening peak, and he finds in an uncord, it alleviates abnormal wakefulness spinal and latest alleged attempt at suicide, as The young woman charges that in lawyers declare Ξ rivaled record the greatest happiness { tobacco that So far from its being true well as the former ones, is said to and tremor. the presence of seven other men and on earth have been an effort to make a recre- users are less healthy than other men, the reverse women servants Miss Gould dencunced Will Open Up Vast Tract. ent lover penitent. Destructive Power of Water. her as a questionable character, using however, may be duepartA great extension of the Siberian After coaxing, threats and cajolery seems to be the case. This, Water, looked upon as the tamest of the plainest words to make her mean- railroad is propose d along the River had been tried on a balking horse, P ly to the fact that men who cannot endure tobacco liquids, is as great an explosive as dying clear, and accused her of indiscre- Amur, and as it has met with hearty H. Whitaker resorted to force, and constitutions and weak resistnamite under certain conditions. In Helen Gould Is Sued by a Parlor Maid been sued for $20,000 damages by 4| which time she has spent inthe ser. | have naturally delicate ing power. Any healthy, vigorous man should be able to smoke moderately with impunity. with a big club is alleged to have} | beaten to death an animal belonging | te his employer at Ogden. Whitaker was arrested and will probably de enished for his cruelty ¢ Ζ > tions with the men employes of the| anproval on the part OF the present | bousehold. | ministry, it is likely to | The complainant says she tried to/ it will open up | get Miss Gould to apologize for her corn land 4 tad be constructed 000,000 acres of one day waier breaks up more earth and rock than all the gunpowder, guncotton and dynamite in the world de ‘in a year ee κα |