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Show THB HOUSING EXAMINES, Soldiers Walking Race gAlljAKE OGDEN, PATIENT JOB c semi-circul- nourish-ishme- nt s hot-wate- three-quarter- r s t. x a long-distan- light-seein- g hard-boile- d gratulate promotion. upon COLORED WOMAN BENT ON MUR- DER. A heavy revolver la tho hands of Mrs. Williams, a mulatto woman at East Mill Creek, was responsible Monday afternoon for stir- ring Incidents. Not content with beating an aged Dane named Sunderland over the head with the butt of the weapon, the enraged woman Wound up the proceedings by emptying the revolver In the direction of the object of her wrath. The trouble arose from some litigation over a atrip of land which was commenced some years ago. it appears that Mr. Sunderland was driving along on his mowing machine brier to cutting hay on hla own land. En routo to hla destination he came to the atrip of land in debate and proceeded to let down the bars preparatory to driving through the gatsway when Mrs. Williams appeared on tho scene armed with a big gun. From words to blows was but a matter of a few minutes and Mrs. Williams hit the old man repeatedly over the head with the revolver inflicting some ugly ' scalp wounda during the process. Nothing daunted, however, the old Dene mounted his seat again and with the blood streaming down hia face proceeded to drive through the gateway. At this juncture the colored woman commenced firing. Two bullets whistled dose to the head K Mr. Sunderland and then the hammer fell harmlessly on tho third carn tridge cap. Nothing daunted the again pulled tho trigger at the same time exclaiming that ahe would kill both Sunderland and hla team. The next time the gun went off and she continued to pump lead in the direction of tho object of her wrath until the weapon was emptied. Later Sunderland came Into Salt Lake to report the matter. He failed to locate the sheriff or the prosecuting attorney so he returned home last night. He came into the city again yesterday with better success, with the result that Sheriff Emery left for the scene to investigate the story. themselves." The winner was private Girard, of the 140th Line Regiment, who arrived nt the "control" in the Galerl des Machines, on the Champ de Mars, at 1:40 P- - m. Hia official time for tha twenty-eigh- t miles was 6hra, llmln, 48aee which means that ha kept np an average pace all the way of nearly six milea an hour. Number 3, also an infantry .man, was a hundred yards behind, and the third, who belonged to the cavalry, followed sons 500 yards in the rear. Besides a splendid bronse statue, offered aa n challenge to be competed for annually, the winner secures a number of valuable objects, including a Sevres cup offered by the President of the Republic, a field glass, a gold watch, a gold medal, etc. To the next ten competitors will be awarded pictures, bicycles, statuary and numerous other valuable articles Daily Mall. ODD BLUNDERS OF ORATORS. The Londna Spectator baa collected tha following Instances of queer blunIn offhand ders Parliamentary speeches. "Sir, we are told that by this legislation the heart of tha country has been shaken to its very foundation a." I am only too thankful that we have removed one of these miserable barbed-wir- e entanglements and that we And ourselves in smooth waters at last" The Secretary of the Education Department waa the father of a statement of which the bottom was knocked out by those brho followed him In the -reading debate, yet the honorable member for 8L Pancras baa thought fit to irot it out again." Among the many Jarring notea heard In this House on military affairs this subject at least must be regarded aa an oasis. "The interests of the employers and employed are the same nine times out of ten I will even say ninety-nin- e times out of ten." "Our tongues are tied, our hands are fettered, sad we are really beating the air to no purposa" I will now repent what I was about'' to say when the honorable member interrupted me. "The West Indies will now have a future which they never had in the past." "A thorny subject which baa long been a bona of contention among us." "A slumbering volcano which at any Wyoming County Visited by a Twister moment n spark might set aflame." "The Chancellor of the Exchequer Ranch Which Blows Down denuded us of every rag of the has Havoc. Heussa and Creates principles which wa have been proclaiming from tho house-tops.- " Word "Ah I The honorable member opCheyenne, Wyo, June II- has been received here of consldsr-kbl- e posite shakes hla head of that But he damage wrought by n cyclone in cant shake mine! Weston county. Trees were uprooted, Regretfully the compiler admits that ranrh houses blown down, hay stacks not one of these blunders was made Scattered, livestock and several per-- by an Irish member. injured. The folowing story is told of Gen. The twister passed over the conn-tr- y and narrowly missed a passenger Sherman, the time being Just after hia train on the Burlington railway. failing to break Joe Johnston's front at Kenesaw Mountain: "It waa plain that more flanking must be done, and COLORADO SHOT TO PIECES. ordered Gen. so the Great Flanker Treaty-thir- d tbs of division Cox'a as Charlie Streeter (familiarly known and threaten a Grizzly Jake") passed through town corps to make detour Involved a left. This long yesterday aboard the hurricane deck of the enemy's Jackass bound for Lincoln county, march, and Gen. A Sheimen made his and other Nevada mining camps Ac way to the top of high hill, where we to enable him td overlook tompanylng Jake was Ed Thompson were lying, and see operations better "I U. 8., and eleven pack burros. the country Jake was leaving Rock Creek, in the He ast on a stump with a map spread and was giving Gen. Sal district of Colorado, out on bis knees, to his line of mach. as Cox directions near the mining tima old Utah line. He le an mounted his borne he this After doing Inspector, chock full of the pyritesn. and started away, but, after bavlng "t hope and concentrates of expecta-oShouted back He Informed ns that Colorado gone n little distance,n he a shot to Bee here Cox, burn few barns pieces because of labor trouaa you go along. I can't un bles and Nevada was now the meccu but I know jjf ye old time omsnector. Emery derstaad those signal flags, what amoks rnenne-- " Chicago Mail. rn"tv Progrnai. wo-na- DAMAGING CYCLONE second- Now, aa all anjmal fanciers know, apea end monkeys are about as hard to keep ea any animal alive. They are prone to LffiR'way end die without cause; homeaickneae or ea it la celled nostalgia kills monas it keys eometimee, just solSame Uncle kills far-off climes. diers occasionally in Tuberculosis and all pulmonary complaints carry off monkeys In ahoala. But not so with sturdy Job. He thrived immenaely end waxed fat Finally the time was ripe for hia service to the public. He wee so much Tike n human being that it waa decided that he should be exposed to human diseases in order that the physicians might observe every phase end have opportunity to experiment toward more certain cure. It waa not without misgiving that they gave Job hie first doae at disease. Would he Buccum at once or not? Would hie power of resistance be ao trilling aa to preclude recovery? Would t'Je experiment give the physicians n chance to determine whether or not better means could be devised toward alleviating human suffering and haatening the cure of men, women and children afflicted with grievous diseases? This affliction for Job waa not done for mere demonstration. Thera waa none of the spirit aomtlmea seen in medical schools, and even in lay colleges, to put an animal Through some suffering limply to show what might happen. Each time he waa made ill on purpose, various remedies, diets, mechanical treatments, baths, douches and other medical aids were intention deliberate of ulwith tried timately discovering shorter cuts to cure. Things that no physician would human being were tried try on on Job, and oftentimes Wire successadea-tifical- ly i ful. Job waa started with fife mumps He was inoculated with the microbe taken direct from a human sufferer. In due time he came down with a typical case, finely developed," aa the physicians say. Aa soon aa the Was fully under way the Health Department physicians took Job in charge. The newest drugs were tried In fuccessiop. The pain waa suppressed as much aa possible with anodynes. The swellings were treated with poultices. Hia alight fever waa soon allayed,, end long before the average boy or girl geta over this bane of childhood Job waa np and doing, and eras for more to eat This encouraged the doctors. Here waa aa ope, supposedly with little poweir of resistance, who had conquered an annoying ailment far more easily than most human beings. They promptly decided to try .something more potent perhaps the worst scourge of childhood scarlet, fever. dla-ea- se GAVE HIM SCLTILET ravETt TTTTre was no lack of the scarlet fever bacillus on hand. So when Job had thoroughly recovered be waa' inoculated With 'a good dose of the germs and,- humanlike, he fell ' ill. Again the doctors. went at him; likewise the nurses. Where .there wae little to do with the mumps, now there waif everything to do. There were Ice batha at regular Intervals to reduce the. fever and powerful drugs to stimulate tfib flagging USart. New forms of nourishment were tried and those 'Which gaVe good results were continued. Long before the art w.gs .child could even get out of bed Jolt waa up and doing, prancing about' hla rage in the full possession of every attribute at good health. When the scales showed that the patient ape waa as well as ever he got another doae of germs this lime typhoid fever. All the Health Board physicians were invited to make aug gee t ions for treatment which' they could not ronacieetianaly try upon 3 - human patient. The nurses kept 03 duty, giving tha simian every care can suggest. that modern medu-inUnco more Job responded to treatment. Then he waa tried with the new infectious disease from the trop ica enteric fever fare and skill to healtn om-brought- him bac'--i more. Now cam- - the final and most serious teat smai' pox. Job waa vaccinated with the irus from a human is vaccinated being, just as a on rhe ivory poln: with the cow-poof the vaccinator. Ho came down with a fine case f this terrible disease. It was a t. pica I rase, and Jolt waa terribly sick. They strapped him to Ms cot ao thi.L he might not iiu scratch himself, and went at along new lines. Job gut well with not so much as a single pockmark. When 'he present epidemic of meningMla raged In the tenement district Job got another in oculation with this almost unknown bacillus. Ordlnari'y a large percent age of the victims die. But Job held on to life, end, thanka to extreme rare and many experiments too technical to discuss here, he threw off tho attack and got . Today no livelier monkey exists than Job. He ia tine, fat and hearty His weight shows a gain of almost five pounds since January, or, roughly. pound a month, since he started taking hla regular course of diseases. Just now some fine microbes of thi bubonic plague have reached the Health Department, and the officials are making up their minds whether or not it would swve any useful purpose by trying them on Job. New York has never had the bubonic plague, but if It should ever romu here, perhaps Jobs early aenrlco might save thousands of livea. SHOWS GRATITUDE TO THE e The "March at the Army," n walking Of all the millions of animals in the contest for French soldiers organised world, perhaps not one baa contributby the Faria Matin, took place the ed more to the welfare of the human other day in the capital. race than big, black Job, the ape that SANITARIUM FOR INSANE WOAt seven o'clock in the morning Delongs to the Department of Health MEN. urn each competitors in teams of of Neck York City. And of all of drawn from artillery, them. Job la the most tenderly and With extraordinary Intelligence and and engineerinfantry, cavalry, mustered on scientifically cared for, without doubt. with a aplendid flow of language, Mrs. the Boulevard regiments in front of the "Matin" His food is far better than that Ida May Frye Jacobs yesterday af- office and, preceded detachments of eaten ty hundreds of thousands In ternoon related to Judge Hall and military cyclists by and Republican the tenements. Ills bedding ia finer County Physician Mayo, Ur. Ellerbeck Guards, marched with flags and bands and more frequently changed. He in interested and the attorneys to the Place de la Concorde. gets the daintiest playing of meals at regular a to as her sanity, the examination They were accompanied by an im- intervals. He drinks sterilized story which, if it had come from other mense crowd of enthusiastic spectat- water, in which not a only single germ U than a deranged mind, would have ors. snowed to lurk. furnished material for a most ronisa-tiafter eight, the two thousChiefest of all, when ho ill, as he is novel. The story, which is noth- andShortly men, ranged in ten about half the time in hia contribudean more than hallucination, ing lines of two hundred each, were sent to ISe health of tails a struggle for a position in the off. The weather was bright and warm tion to science and is tended by three this he city, big CaliforLob school at Angeles, High and although the soldiers wore linen trained nurses. Each one of them nia, the creating of a reserve fund trousers, their thick cloth Jackets and stands her watch of eight hours, obwith Mrs. Jacobs friends of by die heavy army boots soon caused them serving everything tha ("takes place in apthe on to the fight; which carry discomfort. The route mapped out. for the condition of this moat interesting pearance on the scene of a wealthy the contest was through the environs of patients. Chicago man who interested himself of Paris, a total distance of nearly TREATED LIKE A RICH HUMAN in behalf of the won tan and placed twenty-eigh- t miles. Each competitor PATIENT. ZO.OtX) worth of bonds in a sinking had a number pinned on his breast The nutses give him bis fund from which she was to have re- and back. in exact accordance with the ceived an income after she lost her With tha crowd cheering them on, doctors orders. They take hia temand loss of the her position position; the soldiers went nt a great pace up pulse and respiration with then a quarrel between the Chicago the' Champa Elyseea and along the perature, that might be acall the precision who taunted n friend had and man Avenue de la Grande Armee, and so corded to some aick millionaire or beto in his action In him regard statesman. closely did they keep together that Every friending Mrs. Jacobs, resulting in the whole !,U00 took barely twenty change in hia condition is promptly finthe former killing the latter and But minutes to pass a given point. noted, and if the symptoms be serious ally tha attempt of Mr. Jacobs and aa the sun grew hotter and the men the doctors are summoned. ethers to rob her of the bonds. tired, it soon became apparent that He ia bathed in Ice water to reduce Mr. Jacobs was placed on the aland the order of the at the be- Mb temperature just as n Vanderbilt and told at his wife's peculiar actions ginning was no procession indication as to how or as Aator might be, and with equal during tbs part few months. He said the match would terminate. care. If he la chilled he geta the to a hie to wife send wished he fhet ARRIVAL OF THB WINNER. proper dose of stimulant and the if at sanitarium Pueblo, Colorado, "I watched the competitors coming bags. then apwould and court permit hint, through U arches," a cooling draught telegraphs our If he la point him her guardian. Parla correspondent, "when they had la placed atthirsty once to hla lipa. If he At the conclusion of the examin- covered of the course. ia in pain, Tua regular anodynes are ation, Judge Hall ordered her commit- Being Sunday all Paris had gone out to administered. ted, and also ordered her turned over meet the soldiers, and the windows In a word, Job 10 contribution to to her husband, who ia to furnish and gardens the route were the sum total of medical knowledge bonds In the sum of $500, to secure full of people,bordering while both aides of tha ia with the moat scrupulous her safe keeping. She will now be roadway were lined with spectators. care.repaid This is only proper and fitting, sent to Pueblo for treatment Exactly at noon, amid great excite-men- for in Lis devotion to the health of No. 643, a tali infantryman, the city he haa gone through mumps, AND RESIGNS UTAH LEAVER came in sight. He waa very hot and scarlet fever, tfjfboid fiver, enteric FROM OFFICE. very dusty, and half a lemon which he fever, small-poand cerebro-spina- l waa sucking to assuage hia thirst pro- meningitis. County Attorney George Weatervelt, truded from hla mouth. He le next booked for bubonic who has been out of tha city since The cheers of the crowd had hardMay II, today tendered hla resignation ly ceased when three more Infantry- plague. He bae survived them ell end to the board of county. coGimlaalonera, men came bathed in grown fat. He weighs nearly five and the asms was accepted on motion perspiration. marching along, pounde mure than when the first beof Commissioner Wilson, and J. J. After that it waa a constant proces- gan hia course of diseases last JanuI ik boon first assistant who Vtttikr, sion of men representing various ary. county attorney uuring Mr. Wester-velt'- branches of the Service, with InfantryThere ia nothing extraordinary was administration, appointed men It was evident about Job. Hbe la Just a plain black predominating. as eonnty attorney, on motion of Com- that most of the men had suffered ape such as you might see in any sou missioner Btandiab. The action in cruelly from the sun, and their jaded or circus. In company with five other the matter was taken at a meeting of and pale appearance In many cases apea he arrived in New York at New the board this afternoon. be the one Mr. Weatervelt left the city on the provoked compassionate exclamations Year's and happened to) the crowd. chosen by the Board of Health when above date and went to Chicago, pre- among "Their step was rather quick for a Ur. Park, of the bacteriological labsumably on a visit It has developed walk, and I missed the oratory of the Board of Health, went been another that he has looking up athletic of British infantry. hopping for apea. He waa chosen long awing location, and has decided to remove A short distance from Garaches rail- chiefly because he seemed to be e to niinoia. Just what point la not a free buffet had been pro- firatrclasa specimen in excellent known at present although his resig- way station vided, and aa the tired and tblraty health and sound in every organ. nation was sent from Peoria. Mr. men came up, kind Samaritans ran out Job got little rhance to do any Whitaker, hla successor, will taka to meet them on hia own account He with glases of beer, cold office ones. of at has Ha tho charge soup, little packets containing was promptly taken to the laborabeen in full charge ever since Mr. coffee, cubes eggs, and tory at Sixteenth street and the East Weatervelt left the city. He ia a lemons.of auger, River and there fed on everything at n young lawyer ability, and la Utah so "But moat soldwere that la good for apea until he fairly of the eager product and hla many friends will con- iers that they barely halted to refresh hone with health. him his much deserved world-famou- WEDNESDAY UTAH, x wt-;i- DOCTORS. Job today ia a prime favorite with lie everybody in 1 he laboratory, shakes hands with the physicians, whom he recognizee aa hia benefactors, and when hla nurses cornu around with a peanut or an apple ho goes into ecsasies of delight. Hia intelligence, almost human, had told him that it waa they who had brought him around to good health each time that he waa ill. All these experiments have the full approval of Dr. Darlington, tho Health Commissioner. There la nothing brutal or inhuman about thia," said he. "This ape ia rendering great service to humanity. When he is inoculated with any disease he Is cared for with as much skill and pains as Is given to most human beings. In fact, I am safe In saying that there are thousands In New York who do not receive surh intelligent care whi n they are ill. On the other hand, Job ia adding to the sum total of human knowledge. Much good baa come from these experiments and even more Is anticipated.'' JUNE 20, MOUSING, 3 1901, lainous Thynn lies with Chatham and Dickens and Wilkerforce. In the same company lira Aphra , the barber's daughter, who waa the first woman to live by her pen in Fngland. She wae a notorious and scandalous person, fit for the court of Charles 11, w ho used her as a spy, and some of her plays were the worst ever acted. She delighted in her wickedness and rests with the aaluta. The atage iu ulden times waa more closely allied to the church than now. Thomas Betterton tottered off the atage Into a grate In Westminlie was old and crippled ster AliU-y- . with gout when he trembled through his last triumph before a house packed with great people, aad in two weeks the same great people were gathered gain iu tbe abbey to see the actor go dumbly through hia last part. Here lies Mia. Bracegirdle, and here, too, Ann Oldfield,, her rival for fame. Born In a tavern, ahe went on the atage almost before she was tn her teens, and she grew up a woman with a great gift and 110 character. The ready dean of the abbey found her a place when ahe died, end Ann went to her grave aa ahe would have gone to a play. IU-hu- LOSES A Hay-mark- He is Robbed of $12,000 in Gold While on a Pullman Car Between Pittsburg and Harrisburg. Philadelphia, June 28. Walter Scott ceremonies have interfered considerof New York reiuirted to the police to- ably with tbe uses of the law, while day that lie had been robbed of $12,000 multiplying its abuses a hundredfold. in gold while on a Pullman car be- The farce of drawing up "legal" doctween Pittsburg and Harrisburg. Scott uments shows a mere idiotic repctlx raid he had been in Dawson City, Alas- turn of useless expressions so that ka, for several years, and acquired a the clerk and the scrivener may earn and the client One would not, sure be frightful when fortune there by mining. He thinks the a few extra money was stolen while he waa asleep. me mulcted In bills of cost. Let anyone's dead. one who has had a series of dealings And, Betty, give this cheek a little red. TI1E 81NS OF ETIQUETTE. with lawyers pause to ask himself bow much of it all was any benefit -FOte makes her say, and the' actress Hitta." By or any service. wae laid f u her cofflu- hiked with BruiEtiquette Is the foolish, and insints lg lacb and wearing new kid gloves. cere science of ceremony , A. Fresno, Cal., June 28. Charles The preacher In the auuey buried her, From a mere conventional form it Griffith, a retired merchant of Nebrashe told tne mornera, very willingly haa degenerated into tyranny. From ka City, Neb., fell from a wagon today London and with much satisfaction. merely regulating a code of behavior, and broke hia neck. He waa here foe Mail. or a law of precedence, it haa usurped hla health. I he government of professions and e WOMEN. more or leas the ruler and (he Representatives of 100.000 organised taskmaster of social life. worker! on the railroads In tha territo Receive adSaid in Some Chicago Naturally etiquette haa certain tory between Chicago and Buffalo are $10,000 a Year. vantages to distinguish its place in preparing their demands similar ta the economy of things, just aa tho those recently granted to all the trainAt least half a dozen women in wearing of wiga gives dignity to legal men and euglneesa west of Chicago, the litiainesz and professional iite ot officials, or the surplice aud hood and Chicago are the recipients of $10,0utl lawn sleeves of the clergy represent, Tha average wages received by each per year from their vocations, it is grades of office or academical hon- laborer in Iowa per annum have inestimated that there are over a score ors. creased from $352.71, paid In 1890, to of others who enjoy the privilege of But, like many other rules for regu- $428.41, paid in 1903, a gain of $75.78, spending or saving at least $u.00ti an- lating human conduct under varying nually whieh they make in legitimate k conditions, etiquette haa become an TRAGIC MISTAKE OF FATE. professional practice at liuea of busi- abuse of power, instead of remaining ness which they operate independent- its regulator. It haa usurped one office A Montana convict waa pardoned ly or as heads of department iu the after another with the greed of a from the penitentiary the other day af. It baa robbed truth at ter he bad larger places of business. served twenty years of a Women in some of the largest State Ha moaning, dignity of its worth, and crime of which ha Street stores talk aa freely of salaries justice of lie once clear rules of ar- life sentence for allfa'a rewards and of $10,0imi a year aa the average clerk bitration. The whole complicated ma- waa guiltless. It be estimated In com docs of $2t) a week. And if you feel chinery of the law haa arrived at its punishments may what indeed must be thq pariaoua, Inclined to argue the question of theli present unsatisfactory condition by of this man aa ha steps again tyrant. It haa thoughts right to receive such large salaries means of thia world of freedom? Ho will tba Into it. ins axiomatic become Ira possible for two rational thew will tell you comfort In tha fact that by email taka they will tell you it ia axlomalie persona to arrange a difference, settle one of the tragic mistakes of fata ha ter year unless they earned them. a bargain, undertake or complete a was mads victim. San Francisco Calk Compared in number with the men purchase without legal advice. And who receive salaries of this size, one legal advice must alwaya run la douhire Bunham The paper tella of a woman aaid that among ble harness. man who received $5,000 from another THE FRAUD OF THE LAW. her acquaintances there la about one who alienated hla wife's affecIt would not be etiquette for a law- man $10,000 a year woman to five mea tions similar who share a yer to arrange matters with tha other luxury. I wish I were a Mormon. Denham It Is reported on seemingly good au- party concerned in hia client's busi- Town Topics J thority that two women members of ness. He can only do it with the said the legal profession of CMcago bavo other party's" legal advlaer. Thus a shells of Ila aat beneath a rain realized an amount approximating simple matter resting on Individual Aad didnt flinch a bit; $10,000 annually from their practice, faith or, honor becomes surrounded Twas peanut ahelia but late years have seen a reduction with difficulties, hedged by suggesThat fell by apella in the income of all lawyers since the tions, sharp sat with obstacles. It la From gallery to pit. formation of large title and trust com- furthermore Involved by contingencies, Baltimore American. ' ruinous expense, panies haa taken over a large portion and usually ends la of tha btulnesa which formerly legal fees and general animosity. Of "Didn't you say you had all tha comall tho gigantic frauds of civilization, forts of home?" swelled their annual inoome. asked tba Indignant Several years ago, at the death of the law la perhaps tha moat appalling. guest her father, Miss Ada C. Sweet took up No aane mind can contemplate It a "Well," answered Farmer Corntoaael, that portion of her fathers business work without a feeling of absolute "after you folk are gone we do relating to pension claims, and haa hopelessness. Tha process of making have em. That'a what wo taka boardcontinued It since. She aaya ahe haa wrong seem right, aud truth a He, or ers for." Washington Star. realised aa much aa $1,000 per year vice versa, la essentially the grand achievement of legal equity. Tha old from her work. He Why does a woman alwaya Nearly a score of years ago two story at tha lawyer who act up In a think aha ought to wear a smaller shoe a young women entered the employ of country town and nearly tarred for than aha can? a State Street store aa employes of want ot work until good fortune sent She Why does a man always tfclnk the dressmaking department They a second lawyer to tha same place ha ought to wear a larger hat than ha oon showed a mastery of the details holds good aa an example of profes- can? Yon k era Statesman. of tbe work required of them, ani sional utility. It also enforces tha were advanced steadily. They were right and Just observance of legal etij YELLOWSTONE PARK EX-known then as tha Mlasra Rearaon, quette, which makes allk superior to CUR810NS. ' j to ermine and now reguaa Meadamea J. R. Hull and allk, and stuff," aad 'JULYTth. rolls Margaret McCarthy. Mrs. McCarthy, late the number of hnrae-hai- r before her marriage, la said to have in a chancellors wig, and would make been the first woman In Chicago to re- the loss or multiplication of one inch Via O. 8. L. Round trip from Ogden jffnnse! ceive a salary of $10,000 per year, and roll a crimir $49.50. This rata cover all necessary Which Is all very funny and con- rail and stage transportation also it la stated on authority that both ahe and her slater each receive thia stip- temptible, and very true! Probably hotel expenses beyond Mon Ida for tha end aa Joint superintendents of the legal etiquette has its uses, Juat aa seven day tour. Reservations should dresumaklng department of thia big the mace and the sceptre and the rotie be maJe now aa the party la limited to tore. Mrs. McCarthy spends much of stale have theirs. But there ia thia fifty persons. 8ea agent for foil parAsk for beautiful Yellow-aloof her time In Paris, representing her difference. The chicanery and eompli-calion- ticulars. of legal restrictions and legal folder. firm aa buyer for her department. Occupying a similar position with another store, Mrs. Catherine Dodd, it ia authoritatively asserted, receives a salary similar In amount Mrs. Kate Knox conceived tha idea of starling a noonday dub of women, an idea that haa since become popular here. She ia now proprietor of STRICTLY A TEMPERANCE RESORT. two such institutions, and those who know her Intimately estimate that her Entrance on 2Sth street, Opposite Reed Hotel. profits for the year Just ended would require five figures to express them. There la a philanthropic aide to her work, and in this Mrs. Knox takes MONS DU BEE'S ..Dog. Cat and Monkey Circus especial dclighL Since the Inguguara-tlo- n WALTER SPENCER ... ., , . ,. .. .. ..Ballad of this idea in Chicago eight simIRWIN and MAYER ...Eccentric Dancing A Crayon Drawing ilar dubs have sprung up, and the WALTER SPENCER ... ... ... ... ... ... ... Illustrated Bong managers in each rase are reported to THE ALBIONS be realizing well from their ventures, Presenting the Dutch Professor CAMPBELL BROS ... ... .. . Comedy Juggling though none of them la conducted on E. R. GOURLEYS UTAHNA-9COPNow Moving Pictures ao large a scale aa those operated by Dont fail to soo Pauachaunt, tho Indian Wonder, turning whita in Mrs. Knox. tha past 85 years, attributed to prayer. Fifteen years ago. when one of the PRICE OP ADMISSION. department stores began to expand its restaurant service they employed Mrs. Adulta iiiimimiimmiimmi 199 L. W. Harring to superintend thia Children under 12 years. ... . . . . . ItltMOSII So IIIIM department of their business. 80 successful haa ahe been in the conduct that, it ia asserted, the owners sen a value represented by $10,000 a year 5 In her services. When she entered tblr employ, sh says, the only qua) employ, she says.the only quallfl-goo- d knowlege of cooking and a demonstrated ability to manage In a neat and careful way her own home. Among the medical fraternity of Chicago there Is at least one woman whose Income reaches, if not exceeds, $10,000. Nearly every woman who has lived in Chicago for any length of time will acknowledge that Dr. Leila G. Bedell receives a large Income, and those who claim to have Inalde Information place It at $10,000 aa a minimum figure, while others say that It yields her over $15,000 annually, Chicago Tribune. - D place-server- red-tap- e well-know- . 8H0ULD THE DEAD AWAKE IN WESTMINSTER ABBEY. It la a strange and startling company that would fill the abbey If Its honored and dishonored deed could wake up in the night. The son of Charles 8tuart would meet the daughter at Cromwell; William llit would be standing. It might be, with e pugilist or spy; Robert Browning would be in the company of e writer of plays. Great and little, good and bad, famous end infamous, meet at thia shrine of Immortalities. The shelter of the abbey haa not always been ao jealously guarded aa it la today. Hera, In the holy quiet of the cloisters la a momentum to a prizefighter! Why it ia here probably no man knows no man in the world knows why some of the people buried in the abbey should ever have been there. John Broughton, if he had ever any tills to a place at Westminister, baa y. certalaly not left it clear to the He waa a waterman who lived through most of the eighteenth century and revealed his bent for fighting and down. He knocking hla brother knocked hla brother down ao well that he left hia boat to become a "public bruiser, and hla booth in Tottenham Court road waa the resort of the elite or the bruiser-lovinfraternity. You would have found even royalty there, until one day when the Duke of Cumberland backed him for $50,000 and Broughton Inst, The Duke never forgave him, and thought he had made hla protege a yoeman of the Guard, he took away hla patronage and left Broughton to grow rich alone nt hia theatre off Oxford street. Thera he fought until be died and was carried to hia grave by five pugilists appointed by himself. He haa n niche in fame aa the father of prizefighting in England, and it la surely the strangest claim that any 'man haa ever had for being honored in the most sacred spot of English earth, among statesmen and poets and kings. Thera would be room for all our great men in the abbey if great men only had ben buried there. The doors in centuries past were thrown open very wide. The duke of Buckingham buried a Scotsman there for no other reason than that he waa his friend, and on the funeral day a dog was buried in Totbill Fields in public ridicule. Thomas Parr, though he did not write poems, was not a poet, could advance at any rate, one claim to lie in Foet'a Corner. He was not the oldeet man alive? That is reason enough, clearly, why he should He where Shakespeare does not He, and it waa reason enough in his day, it would appear, why he should lie among our Kings. Parr, if the inscription in the abbey speaks the truth, was 153, and lived under ten rulers In England. He married again It is said at 133 and threshed corn nt 130. He began life aa a farm servant in Shropshire, and would have died no doubt on hla Shropshire farm If the Earl of Arundel had not unearthed him, brought him up to town by stages and presented him as apioce at antiquity" to the King. "What" asked Charles Stuart, "have yon. who have lived longer than other men, done more than other men?" and Parr Informed the king that he had done penance In a white sheet when he waa 100, Parr waa exhibited aa a curiosity at a tavern in London until ho died nnd In 1635 the "old, old.very old man" waa burled in 'Poet'a Corner! He had perhaps one other claim to the honor than hia years ho adopted tho religion of hla ten Kinga and Queens He came into thia world raw, aaid ha to Charles Stuart, and he taw no good In being broiled out of It. More bitter waa tbe insult paid to the dead when Thomas Thynn waa laid in the abbey In 1633. He waa an infamous man murdered In Pall Mall by the creatures of a Swedish Count who wanted to marry Thynns wife, a girl three times married at 17. The men were hanged at tbe scene of their crime where Waterloo Place now is. and the assassination ia pictured In in Westminster Abbey, where tha vil post-terlt- g tas-hell- ef - 'k ne a f II & UTAHNAPARK The Week of June 27th ......, ... .................... E MACKINTOSH Light ness WEST VIRGINIA WANTS MGRAW. Parkersburg, W. Va.. June 27. The West Virginia delegation to the St Louis convention started from here today, occupying several private cars. They will launch n boom at St Louis for John T. McGraw of West Virginia as n candidate. Mr. McGraw has twice been hla parfor United States renator tys nominee and has been national committeeman for Went Virginia for eight years. WITH WADERS Free dom FROM Dis Dura com bility fort ial SOMEBODY HAD TO GET BUSY. Caller Where's your mamma? Tommy At the literary club. Caller Where's auntie? lYmimr At the physical-cultur- e school. Caller Where's stater? Tommy On the golf links Caller Where's papa? Tommy Cellin' supper. Chicago We have them in all styles and. will be. pleased to have you inspect them Browning Bros. & Co. |