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Show ' v vA ,7 ', .': ' s . r, - o Vol. Salt Lake City, Utah, SuJ 1. NOTICE From New York Town Newsy Gossip of Gotham Sheedy to Opea Unique CentraL Gallery . S5n NO ' interest, '1: City, Utah, to pay ', Salt nqnent assessment, together reVet cost of advertising and ll JAY EXTENSION sale. I K. GRAY, Secretary. Coinimny, Ltd., a corporation.; D. F. Walker Building, I. 800-- 1 tlou of principal place of b. City, Utah. Salt Lake City, Utah. Notice Is hereby given thaV SilbE LINQUENT NOTICE. meeting of the Board of Directi I Ltd. on the 2lBt day of Nov., 1906, Jay Extension Mining Co. busi-fit of principal place of sessment of 4 cent per share .. Utah. Lake City, levied on the capital stock of the .There are delinquent onupon ac-- 1 po ration, payable Dec. 26, 1906, to wing described stock h cent D. H. Gray, treasurer, at 800--1 assessment of re levied on the 26th day of Walker building. Salt Lake City, Utai , 1906, the several amounts assessment which stock this Any upon the names of the opposite may remain unpaid on the 26th day of shareholders as follows: Amt. Shares. Dec., 1906, will be delinquent and ad- Nb; Name. 1000 $1.2$ Joseph Paul vertised for sale at public auction. .62 Glbion ' ! ! izoOO and, unless payment Is made before, 2.50 will be sold on the 15th day of Jan., 2o4 Jas. fi. Wlscomb. .1000 1.25 6.25 1907, at the hour of 12 o'clock M., at 20? John Higham . . . .5000 2.60 300-- 1 F. P. Radcllffe....2000 D. F. Walker building. Salt Lake 27 Walter W. King.. 1000 1.25 City, Utah, to pay the delinquent as1.25 SM Win.' D. Pypor . . .1000 adsessment, together with the cost of .62 2 4(9 Wm. D. Pyper ... 500 1.25 ScfiWm. D. Pyper ...1000 vertising and expense of sale. 32 4 406 Irvtng- - Jones 250 L. H. GRAY, Secretary. . .25 200 Jones Irving 300-D. F. Walker Building', Office, 414 Thomas Allen ...1000 1.25 Salt Lake City, Utah. 6.25 442 C. E. Erickson... 5000 First pub. Nov. 25; last. Dec,. 23. 2.50 Ptt J. Stanley Dee... 2000 BLUB 2e Pat Dokfs by Our Correspoadeat OF ASSESSMENT of Art City to Have Music l NEW YORK. Patrick F. Sheedy, tons ol Chicago, who make no pretense ot loving "art for arts take, Is about to realise the dream of a lifetime by opening a picture gallery on West Thirty-fourtstreet. One of the attractions ol his gallery will be an assemblage of old and mod era paintings collected by Jack" Carr, who re cently passed from this life at Copenhagen. These works ot art were supposed to hava been acquired by their owner In an entirely In formal manner. Many were picked up here and there at cjt rate prices, like the Meyer von Bremen recently offered in this city, or quietly selected from private collections. There are a hundred-oso of them, and the last one was ob lalned 28 years ago, according to Sheedy. They, however, have been kept from the public eye sc long that questions of titles are not likely to he raised. The fact that such an artistic treasure trove existed in Europe was pointed out several weeks ago In a cable dls patch from Paris. Sheedy has been In communication with the present owners and when they deliver the paintings In New York he will be able to make satisfactory arrangements for their disposition. These canvases will not constitute, $he entire stock, for the famous painting which the noted amateur, who has now become a professional, acquired from Ralsull, the bandit, will also be on view. Two hundred other art works, some of them from the brushes of old masters and a few now innocent of varnish, will be displayed. It was through the mediation of Sheedy that the famous Gainsborough o! the duchess of Devonshire, which was stolen, was recovered in Chicago and returned to Its owner. Men change their opinions, said Sheedy, but not their principles. 1 . am no reformer and I do not have to proclaim my honesty. I am still Pat Sheedy, and I would be the sanle If I were minister of the Gospel. Ive gone through life looking for the good In what might be termed the bad people and not looking for the-baIn what might be termed the good people. Anybody can buy a picture from me with Impunity, and no one will get arrested for doing so. Im not one of those dealers who will say: Its all right, but dont say you got It from me. 1 have been preparing for this business now about 20 years, and I will have something here well worth lookh r one-eight- 2 . ing at. Many of the nouveau riche have plenty of money to spend, but, having no training in art, they do not know how to do it. For the benefit of the uninitiated I have gathered some small collections which will be placed In rooms so that they may be studied with reference to the furnishings. One who sees pictures In such circumstances will be able to tell at a glance whether or not the works will harmonise with white and gold Interiors. If they dont, they can see the effect In some other color. IN THE PUBLIC EYE American Professor in Berlin. Prof. John W. Burgess, who opened the Theodore Roosevelt course In American history st the University of Berlin the other day, is dean of Co luuibla university of New York city. Three cheers for President Roosevelt were proimsed and given by Emperor William at thr ceremonies attending the opening. The member, of the emperor's suite, the professors and the students responded vigorously. The emperor then conversed with Prof. Burgess, congratulating him on the successful beginning of his work, and alai had a talk with Ambassador and Mrs. Tower The emperor requested the ambassador to cable to President Roosevelt his thanks for the president's cooperation. Besides Emperor William, the empress, Prince August Wilhelm. United 8tates Ambassadnt Tower and Mrs. Tower, Dr. Studt, the minister ol education, and about 50 professors and resident Americans occupied chairs near the reading desk In the lecture hell, while behind them were 400 students, who energetically cheered Prof. John W. Burgess when he entered and applauded every reference to President Roosevelt. At the opening of the proceeding Prof. Burgess read a letter from the president Head of National 1 i&John Nesblt . NOTICE OF ASSESSMENT NO. $9. C. M. 4 638 Leo 689 Leo. 691 Leo 1000 Erickson.... 1000 1.25 1.25 2.50 2.50 2.50 2000 Parry 2000 Parry COPPER 2000 Parry Mining, Milling and Smelting com.62 J. Heckmann 500 Mary pany, a corporation. Location of prin- 666 H. E. Olson 1.25' 1000 cipal place of business, Salt Lake City, C 1.25 C. CIements..,.100O Utah. 1.25 6 7iW. B. Clements. .1000 a Is Notice hereby given that at 3.75 6 2 J. P. Denman. . . 13000 meeting of the board of directors held 6 5 Mrs. R. Y. Healy.2000 2.50 on Oct. 25. 1906, an assessment of K And in accordance with law and an cent per share was levied on the cap- order of the Board of Directors on ital stock of the corporation, payable 6ie26th day of September, so many December 1st, 1906, to L. H. Gray, stares of each parcel will be sold at treasurer, at 300-- D. F. Walker build- Public auction at the office of the ing, Salt Lake City, Utah. secretary, 801 D. F. Walker building, Any stock upon which this assess-meu- t aft Salt Lake City, Utah, on Nov. 27, may remain unpaid on the 1st 114)6, at the hour of 12 M., to pay the day of December, 1906, will be delin- delinquent assessment thereon toquent and advertised for sale at pub- gether with the costs of advertising lic auction, and. unless payment is atid expense of sale. made before, will be sold on the 26th I L. H. GRAY, Secretary. First publication, Nov. 11. day of December, 1906, at the hour of D. F. Walker 2 Last publication, Nor, 25. 12 o'clock m., at 300-GLANCE CONSOLIDAT-e- No. 48. November 25, 1906. jbe g'-in-t 1-- 2 . '. ; V-- 1 r. clMftes. Mrs. Lillian M. N. Stevena In her annual reNo former year has marked port said In part: greater progress. The people more widely than ever before know what alcohol la. The reiteration that alcohol la a poison and not a food has forced the study of the liquor question upon many who heretofore have been unmindful, if not altogether unbelieving. Sir Hiram Stevens Maxim. The fierce, man representing the latest portrait of the famous Inventor and scientist. Sir Hiram Maxim, would hardly be taken for a native of Maine. Yet such Is the case, for he was bora In Sangervllle, ot the Pine a little over 66 years ago. His Maxim gon and cordite," a smokeless powder, have made white-whiskere- . 1 1 5-- . W. C. T. U. Mrs. Lillian H. N. Stevens, who opened tho National Women's Christian Temperance Union at Hartford, Coun., the. other day, has been at the head of the organisation since the death of Miss Frances Willard In 1898. In 1894 she was elected vice president at large and prior to that tlmo she had been assistant recording secretary 13 years and recording secretary one year. Mrs. Stevens Is a native of Dover, Me., and began' life as a school-teacheAt 21 she was married and went with her husband to his home near Portland. She first met Miss Willard In 1875, and materially assisted 1a organising the Maine W. C. T. U. Besides bar temperance work Mrs. Stevens la Interested In promoting homes for the dependent ju. Tree-Stat- e, , TO SEND MU8IO BY TELEPHONE. V , ' i ' r. tew will 'hgw M ..."WlUila the benefit of one of the most wonderful .electrical Inventions of the age the telharmonlc. This is an Instrument. for the transmission of music from a central keyboard to the homes, hotels, restaurants and public places of a city. At a cost of more than $50,000 the central musical "plant has been established at a convenient point in Manhattan. The instrument Is virtually perfected, and In a short time. It la expected, the company will be ready to offer Its musical wares to the public. At no great cost the householder, flat dweller or restaurant proprietor may have a telharmonlc installed, connected by wire with the central instrument or Instruments, and by simply pushing a button will be able to turn on the music. The Instrument that will be placed In the homes Is a small affair and can easily be hidden by a grouping of Aowera or potwateRs'-New-York- ted plants. Four grades of music will be available grand opera, pipe organ, orchestral or piano. Testa thus far made show that the rich tones of the central instrument are preserved in transmission, and there is no marring of the music by the rasping sound of the phonograph. The Inventor of the telharmonlc and the capitalists who are backing him are confident that the Instrument will not only have connections with thousands of homes here, but will soon be used almost universally by the restaurant keepers. - without diilsiv. averages he showed that two Insurmountable obstacles must sooner or later overwhelm the most Successful player, the most carefully devised systems tbe bank's percentage and limit placed on I atakes. For the last ten years and more Sir Hiram has devoted himself to atbe tempts to solve the problem of aerial navigation. Like Santos-Dumonearly discarded the balloon, and devotes all his energy to constructing an aeroplane which can be profiled with such velocity as to lift Itself and its navigator free from Mother Earth. While the young Brazilian has only succeeded In propelling his aeroplane over a track which It almost clears, Sir Hiram, In speeding over his track one morning, suddenly found himself lifted clear of the ground and precipitated several yards to the right. It was perhaps the first Instance In which a flying machine has actually lifted a human being from terra firma. t, SALT LAKE CITY'S HOTEL EVERYTHING NEW and THE NEW YORK EUROPEAN 100 ROOMS SVSRV SUIT! WITH IATN HOT AND COLO WATER JN RVKRY ROOM J. .1 48 Jr recently elected ' Spanish war veterans, of which he was one of the founders, was born in the nations capital while hia father was a member of the Forty-firs- t congress. In 1871. He Is now a resident of Buffalo. Young Ward attended the Vermont Episcopal institute In Burlington, Vt., a military school, and studied law In his fathers office In Belmont, N. Y.. When his father was elected a justice of the supreme court of the slate of New York young Ward removed to Buffalo, and was admitted to the bar In 1S92. Shortly thereafter he became assistant district attorney of Erie county and retained that position until the hostilities with Spain, when ho resigned and was commissioned a captain in the Two Hundred and Second New York volunteer He served with his regiment till its Infantry. muster out on April 15, 1N99, at Savannah. Ga., begarrison duty in western Cuba. Capt. Hamilton MARKET STREET SALT LAKE CITY commander-in-chie- STRATTON, formally Clark af Callan Natal, Proprietor, THE WHITE SEWING MACHINE . Will please your wife for Christinas. Write us and arrange for delivery. WHITE SEWING MACHINE CO. 29 W. First South Salt Lake Jli New Head of Spanish War Veterans. CBNTNALLY LOOATCO. M BLOCK WBBT OR POST OPPICI RATIO RSASONABLS FEDERAL BUILDING CAT 8 WELL CARED FOR. The cats In the basement of the Federal building receive better treatment than any other such aggregation In New Yirk. This Is particularly true of Black Tom and his three cronies. Besides coming In for the best of fare from tbelr guardian, old Barney, tho watchman, the quartette has a feast twice a week on catnip, while It Is In season. Every Tuesday and Friday he brings In a bundle of the herb from bis country place in Long Island, or If he Is staying in tbe city he has his gardener make a special trip to bring It in. As regularly as these days come along Black Tom and his four pals drop in and stroll around. If there la any delay on the part of Taylor, the postmasters colored man. fo spread the feast, Mr. Willcox Is apprised of It by the four cats solemnly filing Into his private office, taking up their station on his desk and gazing at him. In addition to this the cats have become used to drinking nothing bnt the soft, pure rain water which accumulates for their special benefit in a cistern on the roof, naraey discovered this taste of his pets by watching them trot out on the roof and eagerly lap up the water In tbe gutters after every rainfall. Slopping at nothing to keep ttye four In good humor he built a small cistern on the roof. seven-year-ol- . the most thankless tusk that he evet'""' performed for erring humanity was the result embodied In a book of two months sojourn at Monte Carlo. He proved that tradition, superstition, and the most elaborate systems" were alike Ineffective In fighting the game played there. By a mathematical demonstration of the law of A personal guarantee goes with Arrowhead whiskey. This la a new brand. Ask your dealer for It RIEGER ft LINlfLEY, The Whiskey Merchants. Salt Lake City. , ALEX TINY BOY WINS FIGHT TO ENTER SCHOOL. The happiest boy In New York is little Max son of Solomon Blrenbach, the BIrenbach. for he has been allowed to again take his place among his companions In school, who have tong teased him for being too small to enter their classes. Ever since the fall term opened Max has been trying hia best to be admitted, but the teachers refused to let him stay in school. In height he Is only a little over two feet, while the teachers of the school gave a broad Their guess that he weighed only 17 pounds. excuse was that they feared to step on him or that he would be Injured by the larger children, and that he would surely some day drop through a crack, fall Into an Ink bottle or In some other way lose himself. The. boy's father pul tbe matter before the board of education and a committee was appointed to visit the Blrenbach home the other evening, defense: They say 1 weigh only 17 pounds, said he. "but that Isn't so. Now took and see it you don't think I weigh more than that. The little fellow drew hlmseir up. The visitors looked, but while It was evident Max had their sympathy it was also plain that they doubted too We'll settle the matter." said one of them, by taking the hoy to the grocery placing him on the scalea.', (tore downstairs and ami nine auxious Blrenbachs followed. The little fellow Max led the way stepped on ihe scales and bore down with all his might. At exactly 33 pound! (e tipped the bar. There was a shout of Joy from the boy. This decided the matter with the board members. They wrote a uote to the Rlvlngton street principal, ordering him to admit Max Blrenbach to school him world famoua. :Kv VA er CHy f Ward, of the ing engaged principally In lie has been practicing law in Buffalo since that time. He was department judge advocate lu 1901, and secured the enactment of laws placing Spanish war veterans on the same basis as G. A. R. men In respect to holidays, appropriation for memorial service, funeral expenses, license and In part poor relief. He aa elected national judgeonadvocate in 1902 at the Deamalgamation; assisted in troit encampment and was on the committee that are now substantially In force, and preparing the rules and regulations he also assisted Past Department prepared the manual for courta-niartlaCommander Simmons, of Rochester, N. Y., In the preparation of the ritual for the installation of camps. l; i Protector of Frisco Grafters. If you need anything in d Pure Wines or Liquors, mail us your wants. . We will do the rest. MVLVEY 14-1- 6 a CO. East First South Street 5 Salt Lake City, Utah Abraham (commonly called Rnef. who making desperate efforts to prevent the indictment of boodlers nnd grafters of San Francisco by usurping the office of district attorney, is a lawyer by profession, and has been for years a political "boss." He lias ruled the Republican and labor party machines, and was instrumental In as electing Schmitz, the Socialist candidate, mayor of San Francisco three years ago. The Hlice and saloon juiwer he has controlled in the hollow of his hand, but the earthquake and fire upset his political domination in the laiter respect, and the Citizens' Reform association has been on his trail for a long time. Knefs appointment to be district attorney made by one of his tools. Acting Mayor Gallagher, fur the purpose of preventing incriminating evidence reaching the grand Jury Is denounced as most disgraceful. Francis J. Ileney, of Oregon, employed by Rudolph Sprockets to' ferret out municipal graft, has announced that he Intended to prosecute bribe givers more vigorously than bribe takers. By this he is Assumed to mean the united railroads, which is rumored to have given $jK).0t'0 to Rnef and the suiienrlsors to secure an overhead trolley franchise. which had been refused before the fire. Kuef is said to fear more than anything else that a popular uprising against him may be Incited by the oratory of Heney. Heney so wrought upon the crowd In the courtroom recently that observers declared if he had been permitted to speak ten minutes longer there would have been an attempt to lynch Rnef. Heney Is Intensely in earnest. He seems to have the power of exciting his audience and making his hearers share his own feelings. Ruef has received so many threatening letters and has been so loudly hooted that he has become afraid and has angagud a bodyguard to attend hfu wherever he goes. fa |