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Show SOCIAL AND PERSONAL. Hrs. McCarthy took a party of young people to Wasatch for an outing. out-ing. , Mrs. J. J. Broughall. wife of the assistant as-sistant manager of the Daly-Judge Mining company, arrived in the city after an absence of two years in New York City and other eastern cities. Rev. John T. Axton, late secretary of the Y. M. C. A. of this city, is now a. full-fledged army chaplain in the service of Uncle Sam. His commission, signed by the hand of President Roosevelt, Roose-velt, arrived the other day, and Mr. Axton expects to receive orders at any time to join some detachment of troops. There is a possibility that he may be assigned to Fort Douglas, with the Twelfth infantry, as a vacancy in the chaplaincy exists there. F. W. Gurney. manager of the Short Line hotel at Focatello, Ida., was here at the Elks' reunion. S; A. W. Hurley, chief clerk atg the Cheyenne-Arapaho agency, located at Darlington, Okla.. attended the Elks' reunion, accompanied by Mrs. HuHey. P. W. Putt, store-keeper of the same corporation, was the' third person in the party. W. P. Kerwin and lady. J. J. Gallagher Galla-gher and lady of Oelwein, Ja., took iu the Elks' carnival. Mrs. David Eccles and Miss Bertha Eccles of Ogden are with friends in town. Mrs. J. F. Dunn of Bingham is visiting vis-iting friends in the city. Mrs. W. C. Buck of San Francisco is visiting with her sister, Mrs. H. C. McDonough. for a few days. Miss Anna Wall of New York is visiting vis-iting Mrs. James Ivers. Mrs. P. J. McKenna has returned from her five weeks' trip to Colorado. Mr. and Mrs. James McKenna and Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson of Salida arrived Monday and are her guests at 12 Bele-vue Bele-vue terrace, where they will be pleased to see their frinds. Miss Blanche Burke was the hostess at a charmingly arranged luncheon at the Country club, given in honor of Miss Katherine Dillingham of Denver. The table was spread in the large dining din-ing room, and artistic decorations of sweet peas were used. The guests of the day, besides . the guest of honor, were Mrs. Louise Smedly Smith and Misses Sherman, Laura" Sherman, Lockhart of Colorado Springs, Dooly and Geddes. S Mr. and Mrs. F. Haskell of Grand Junction, Colo., in attendance at the Elks' reunion, paid the Intermountain Catholic a friendly call on Thursday. PARK CITY. (Special Correspondence.) Mr. Tom Scanlon is spending Elk week in Salt Lake. Mr. Dave JKeith was up from Salt Lake on a business visit last Friday week. Mrs. Thomas Kelly returned from Butte Wednesday. Mr. John McGivern is one of the happiest hap-piest men in town since the arrival on Saturday of a baby girl at his home. 4 . jjessi. uan j. Jiaran ana isarney Seiillan returned from the east' last week whither they went to accompany the remains of Peter Haran and John J. Gill, victims of the Daly-West catastrophe. ca-tastrophe. Mr. Dan Harrington arrived Tuesday Tues-day from Mexico, where he has been operating some mines for th" Hearst syndicate for the past -six years." Mr. Harrington is a brother of Foreman Harrington of ' the Quincy mine, with whom he will visit for a month before returning to his family at Mexico. Mrs. Pat Holland of Eureka arrived Wednesday, and will visit here for a few weeks. Mr. John T. Sullivan is spending a few days in the metropolis this week. Mrs. M. M. Winn is visiting in Salt Lake this week.- Miss Grace Hennessy returned to Salt Lake Friday. Mr. M. II. Hennessy visited the city Tuesday, i TONOPAH, NEV. (Special Correspondence.) Tonopah, New. Aug. 11. Our camp still improves and the future prospects ! ;;re bright. The health of the camp is improving. The Tonopah Bonanza tells that in the past thirty days there have been just three deaths of adults, in a population popu-lation closely approximated at S.00O. In the Miners' hospital there is but one patient now convalescent. The customary cus-tomary supply of good well water is coming into town right along. Even the parties engaged in sinking other wells have made no intimation of a possible decrease of the present sup-Ply. Frank Golden, who arrived last week, I is the busiest man in town. He is superintending su-perintending his new building and has a small army, to direct. M. J. Sullivan and John Lynch have gone to Tahoe to rusticate for a few-weeks. Buildings are being erected as quick as the material can be supplied. The Miner says that during the past six weeks over a hundred cabins have been erected. The Miners exchange hall building and the new home for the Tonopah stock exchange have been completed and work commenced upon Frank Golden's new block. This is a showing of which any town might be proud. A theatre party, "who attended the Nevada on Wednesday, the 6th inst.. partook of an elegant supper given bv Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Sinclair, after the performance. The invited guests were Mr. and Mrs. Pittman, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Sinclair, Mrs. Sinclair, Mrs. Holmshaw, Miss Lloyd, Miss Archam-bault.. Archam-bault.. Miss Roach, Miss Roberts and Messrs. T. J. Lynch, J. C. Lynch. Jackson, Jack-son, Pittman, Blumenthal, Cushman, R. L. Johns, Maurice Lynch. Freeman and Donellan. J. L. Butler goes away to recuperate recuper-ate his health. His presence in Tonopah. Tono-pah. even for that short time, will be missed. To show his tender feelings, feel-ings, the following story is told about him in the Miner: - "J.. L. Butler, while on his way to church the other evening to listen to the words of wisdom dropped by his namesake, han across a 'canned horse' that is, one with a coal oil can fastened fas-tened to its tail by means of a wire reaching from the noise making machine ma-chine to the poor beast's fly scatterer. "You may say' for me.'", said Mr. Butler, 'that I am a lover of and a friend of dumb brutes. .' Without the assistance of the burro I never could have traveled over the desert for years and I doubt very much if Tonopah Ton-opah would be on the map, much less the greatest mining camp the world has known. -- - - - " 'I will pay to anyone who will cause the arrest and conviction. of persons per-sons ill treating animals a reward of J50, and we will see if this will not have a tendency to lessen the burden of the poor unfortunate brutes which arenow being tormented, starved and ill-used." |