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man000137. Helen J. Stewart Papers, 1869-1978. MS-00171. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d19882x68
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Oregon^' Mil
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ity•inl839and ^ AmongYSeteral $
c&oreIsmooth;y'\&nd will be t pleted, I because, i f 'the-, dispo tbrs;*td; act
morh quickly com pH I in- many *Quar■
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yl^M up^r Suspend^
iRGlNIA CITY; Nev., June 24,—Tlte first heY'spapei*
changes' i | | t >t'i'oblehi^:'%f|recOn-I 0ixtctibuhhAa Khe question of manoy-*
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prol of §§ten of the country's j]
hostelries. DUN’S-'WEEKLYEW f.
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test at ■McMimi-H
Stages ; Pinancial Condi- "lions Improving,
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W L J J J W H W I«v^^,v aHHW L^-JHBUIR H S^nicQi, Minn.,sfrom KiSiW
BHP M Mpm ,,twPfeiYeB.c.e on-•the
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ucians say wolid have killed fhe
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Chippewa Indian chief Vho had
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Sait Lake System Official Leaves Widow and Daughter; Funeral Has Not Been Arranged
William B. Kelly; noted as a railroad at torney and an eminent Mason, died last night at his residence, 1400 West Third street.
Mr. Kelly was for some time director and general counsellor for the Salt Lake sys
tem. He was bcm in Perry County, Ohio, in 1849, and five years ago came to Los Angeles, where iie became prominent in
jbig profession, and a director, and general counsel for the Salt Lake road.
Judge Kelly’s early life was military. He enlisted in Company E of the Twenty- third Regiment in 1864. After the war he studied law and in 1885 was connected with the legal department of the Union
iPacific Railway, later becoming general !solicitor.
He was a member of the Loyal Legion, the California Club and several other or- Iganiaations. 1-Ie leaves a widow and daugh-
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Awarded Judgment in Action to Se* cure Money for Selling a
m.
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WilliamR KellyDies; Noted Railroad Lawyer
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W! ter, the latter, Mrs. R. M. Welch of
Annette
ment of $ 5 0 0 0 against Samuel E.
Pjf/gmaha. Funeral arrangements will be gannouhced later.
Yount in Judge Valentine’s court yesterday. The suit against Mr. Yount was tried last November and involved a commission for securing a purchaser of the Boss Gold Min ing Company’s claims in Nevada. Mr. Yount is president of the com
pany.
She claimed that she was to re
ceive 10 per cent, of the purchase price of $150,000 for selling the mine and that she found a pur chaser December l, 1914, and^ was therefore entitled, to a commission of $15,000. The defendant in an answer denied that the mine was
sold through her or that she was entitled to any com m ission.
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Ijbr centuries the poets of Europe were animated by the spirit of the singers of Greece and Rome. The influence of the ancient bards was as dominant in Byrons day as in that of Shakespeare. They sang in heroic measure and pictured their Characters in strong and glowing colors.
To-day the pendulum swings far in the opposite direction. The bard of the twentieth century searches the soul, giving expression to thoughts the poets of old never set before the people, and which, if they had expressed, probably would not have been understood as they are in this age.
,It is but a m irror of the time. The Greek and Latin lived in a day of arms,
passion, turmoil, intrigue, and strife. The present is one more of peace and introspection.
The Greek and the Latin school still finds voice. The robust tones of Kipling —perhaps the greatest of living poets—are attuned to those of the bards of long hut men and women of a promise as strong as he who gave to the world
“The Recessional/’ are cropping up on both sides of the Atlantic.
There never was a time when there was a larger demand for poetry or when the poet was better paid. There never was a time when a really great poem was
more certain of appreciation. /
Two healthy signs are the evident success of the poetry journals printed in Boston and Chicago. They are edited with rare discrimination. Through one a poet who may rank with Whitman has been brought to light and in the other are seen gems that show the rays of genius.
88 THE ‘PO'PULJTR MAGAZINE
give a snapper to a joke one may exaggerate and remain blameless. But to the man who has asked for facts, an inaccurate statement given with the air of accuracy is more dangerous than outright falsehood.
Plausible people who have the "intention and standing of truthfulness, yet who rather explain afterward why they were wrong, than find out in advance if they are right, do far more mischiefthan*willful falsifiers. It is so easy for them to make up what they do not know, and to fill the gaps of their information with
guesses. Their motives are good and they are very obliging about it; but the
results to the man with'only five minutes to spare who follows their directions one
block out of the way, or the one who stakes his reputation or his money on their
statements, the result is just as disastrous as though they had intentionally de ceived him. ;V-.
In poetry or flowery speech, one may juggle facts to accommodate rhythmic and sonorous words. But in building bridges or mixing chemicals, it is not safe.
> IN •£ ^ SCHOLARSHIP
E received a letter recently from a Yale undergraduate, who is working ten hours a day chasing up news items in order to win a job as editor on the Yale News. He wrote while a full third of the college year was still ahead of him:
“ I have worked very hard getting ready fo r it, and have a good stand whicli will remove the necessity of any further studying ”
THE PULSE OF THE WORLD
HOETRY has been likened to the pulse of the world. Because no man of jthe rank of Tennyson has been poet laureate of Great Britain in recent (time and because America boasts of no Longfellow or Bryant to-day, there
j is an idea that poetry is declining among the Anglo-Saxon people. The truth is quite tne reverse. The present marks a great evolutionary period in poetic history. We are near the dawn of a new era.
■
m
I
C m i Q H T IN- 7 7 f £ / V f i T
, s? yery l°n& ag°> a group of enterprising -men decided to reproduce
the War of the Messiah, and gathered therefore, near Pine Ridge, South Dakota, some eight hundred Indians of the Sioux tribe for the “local color." There was, among those eight nundred, many a warrior, many an old chief, who had fought through that war, who had lost ones he loved in the various battles— but they came back to fight it all over again because the white man had said it would be a good
preservation of some of the Indian history. There were squaws, too, who had lost husbands, sons, sisters and brothers, and fathers, but they came back also.
Upon the battlefield of Wounded Knee they pitched their tents and their tepees; they found the spots where they hadr camped that December day, in 1890, when the onrush of Forsyth's troops turned a battle into a massacye—and there they remembered the past. In circles they walked, the squads sobbing and sing- ing the wailing death song of their tribe, the braves awkwardly handling their rifles, their lips pressed tight, their eyes narrowed with the pain of it all. Grief,
tw,enty-three years dead, was coming to the surface, nor was there any effort to hide it. By day they sang, and walked to the great trench where the dead of Wounded Knee are buried; by night, gray shadows against the sky, they sought
the hilltops, and to the muffled music of the tom-toms danced slowly as they sang again to the memtrty of the dead.
For this had been a massacre. Among those who sang and sobbed was a squaw who had seen her four papooses shot down as they ran for safety. Per haps there would be the fabled hatred of the white race here—perhaps------
She sat before her tepee, threading a chain of beads. The visitor with his
interpreter approached. The questions were asked, but the Indian woman onlv smiled.
• That is all in the past," she answered. “And why should we hate for what is gone ?" Her face changed its expression. “ We can only grieve," she finished.
The Indian of the past, supreme in his own country, hated and never forgot, concealed his emotions and grieved not. But the Indian of to-day is different. Stoicism has vanished. He is only a human being.
THE REFORMERS
rHEN we sally out into life in high hope that we shall find persons that can be “ elevated " w ith results that can be catalogued, we meet life itself and discover we are dealing with a little cross-section of the eternal problem. The ordained forces of sin and folly are in tireless
phalanx. There is a darkening of the hope, as we join battle with a whole array of griefs and problems. There will not again be peace of mind, not so long as the light shines to show the evil corners. The reward is the fuller initiation into life, and the conviction that, however clear-cut the other ways of going may be, however definite, there is no way but this.
THE EASIEST WORD
T is easier to be plausible than accurate. Many men, who would reach for their hip pocket at mention of the short and ugly word, make statements every day that will not do for statistics. Many people who intend to be the soul of truthfulness speak the easiest word that sounds plausible. They say
“Yes" when they mean “No," and think “No" when they say “Yes." They direct people along ways they do not know ; quote definite figures when they are not certain, and make positive statements about things they have forgotten.
Where nothing depends upom it, to give a real name to a fictitious story, to name definite figures for an uncqrtajg sum is permissible. To flavor a $|pn or
\
87
DEAD MAN’S GULCH
His name from the first was Pronto Jim,
W hich all hands knowed was the name for him
W here he hailed from nobody knew. He rode a hoss of a darkish roan,
W hich for speed she was sure the devil’s own, And he never sat in a pew.
His gun was short, but his rope was long; And oft at night you could hear his song,
As he ranged some dark coulee.
And the dames they loved him, quite a few, B ut the girl he loved she never knew ;
And a reckless cuss was he.
By the old corral of the Four X ranch A lariat swung on a live oak branch;
To the end he wore a smile—
H e alw ays hoped to die in his boots. Coyotes bark, and the ground-owl hoots
Round the gulch for a longish mile.
Shady, shameless, shifting, Shrinking ’neath the rod.
Down stream they are drifting— Floaters to meet God.
D efying death and docket, Despair hath lost its dread—
There’s poison in her pocket, There’s cold steel for his head,
LOS ANGELES EXAMINER QUEENalexaUdr
AND PRINCE;OLA
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ONDON, Dec. 3.—Queen Alexandra’s stay at the Villa Hvidore came to an end week before last, when she left Copenhagen for England in company with Princess Victoria, Queen Maud of Norway and Prince
The mm?&l party arrived i i London on Saturday and were irfet At Victojti hi' ard Quef
V fU itn tlfllM rfjQ
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at Barker Bros.
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$2'!/jS€&tee or Sofa sht>wn in the above a n a i s s» g p m i m e J . G . S t i c k ]
In our extehsj found many of will prove most Anatolians—splel
m ost attractive? sized Bokahary Baluchistans a i Kazaks at fra II
In purchasf I I are assured / |jl point—dope/ ■
ity of weaW
an artistic/ I guarantee/ I Oriental I
which areV
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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1910
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MISSION SOFA—The effect of two arm chairs joined is particularly pleasing—beautifully grained quarter-sawed oak in weathered finish; l3est Spanish leather seat;
$25.00 value..
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Las Vegas, iVev. S 19OS
subscription to the Lincoln County Division Club, to be used in carrying on the campaign
e Division of Lincoln Couniy.
Lincoln County Division Club,
ao
....... --.-Dollars,
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|•club |of .America* ,t'i%Q | ■of ;Evansyille,
ifcv.the o ld F a u n tle ro y d
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tlie ■iossiblllty of *
I 111to the ixeigjral
s>W 1pi facfcordin
fe® EVansy paper. f®tie
| of tlie State jFederations
Indiana fees taken the first
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pary \yill ® the appointment of a Board /o f Trustees for Lae Vegas. .
It has been suggested that an in formal election be held at which the citizens may select five men to recco- mend to the County Commissioners to look after the city business.
This will give all an opportunity to have a voice in the matter and will at the same time relieve the new Board of County Commissioners of any embar
rassm ent's such a choice by the people would undoubtedly be ratified.
The idea is a good one and The Age ^suggests that an informal election be |ld on some day between Christinas
Ne%Year.''\‘ "• " H. lla ygg|||g x
always afraidsluM ^el^^^^^S?* v~^
"‘The man «vho wrote ‘Curses, lilk
chickens, come home to roost—__ ■’ \
Well?^ “ Must have had different
BO neighbors from what I've got.”— Hous ton (Texas) Post
“This gas bill is only for 10 cents.* “Well, sir?” “Couldn’t you add $4? I’ve been writing my wife that I’m
spending my evenings at home.”— Lou isville Courier-Journal.
My dear,” remarked a gentleman, opening the dining room door, “the gj left the vegetables on the hall taffSt- “pon’t be so stupid,” exclaimefrjgtj wife. “That is my new bat.”
She— John, what is a stock qj He (on the; wrong side
lbJ
Finest Telescope
/ ^ Mirror Finished
PITTSBURG, May 16.—What is Said to be the finest telescope mirror in the world and the second largest
was shipped from the workshop of Dr. John A, Brashear here to the Dominion astronomical observatory in Victoria, Canada. The mirror is 73 inches in diameter, 12 inches thick at the edge and is,pierced centrally
by a hole 101-S inches in diameter. This mirror is not quite perfect, Dr. Brashear says. The greatest error in the work is one-four hundred
thousandth of an inch.
The large piece of glass which in
its finished state weighs 2 1-4 tons, arrived in Pittsburg in 1914 from Bel gium, two weeks before the declara
tion of war.
i>r. Brashear made the largest tele
scope mirror ever turned out. It is a 100-inch mirror and is in operation in the observatory at Wilson, Cal.
Satins at $1.35 ns to go at $1.00.
ond Floor—Jacoby’s.
X 14 C
lilt
e they
tly soiled we
iced these
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fe, Sure Use of *sla Tablets Will
Becaiise of the renewed serious ness of the dispute over the act President Wilson has made recom mendations for railroad legislation the principal part of his next mes sage to Congress, which he com
Any Stomach
rer, pleted late today, These recommen
dations, it became known definitely aaes there are due tonight, will be practically the same m iserable, close- i as those made by him to Congress last August, when the Adamson bill, a part of his programme, was en and women cau- acted to prevent the threatened i/ishness, for they jstrike. The question was discussed at today’s Cabinet meeting, and At-
afraid-to-make-a-
dud of dyspepsia
should be pitied, breath, gastritis, mach, pains in
ty.-Gen. Gregory reported on the steps taken by his department.
It was learned today that „the President has been strongly but vainly urged to recommend legisla tion authorizing, the Interstate Com merce Commission to regulate wages paid on railroads. In addition to the proposals made last summer
ness, etc.,
ns of
heartburn, com e from digestive
sm exhausts its
yer, when the pan-
become thereby! for enlargement of the commission,
roper digestive forced investigation of disputes be
fore strikes or lockouts, and authori
zation to the commission to consider o do anything wages in fixing freight rates, the
pect this same
J'ng their im-
Pyspep- >ration IS up
President is understood to have de cided again to urge that Congress make all arbitral awards in such disputed judgments by a record of a court of law.
The railroad executives now in Washington held an extended meet ob- ing today to determine the order in which their testimony will be pre sented Thursday to the joint Con gressional committee investigating railroad problems. Their first spokesman will be A. B. Thom, counsel to the railway executive nd advisory committee. Frank rumbull, chairman of the advisory
l^nmittee, gave out a statement ing the executives wanted to help i joint committee in arriving at fonclusinn which would make the
iroads more useful, but adding:
‘The representatives of the rail-
Is had no completed plan of the
roads to submit at this time and
not tyish to appear as the advo-
or opponents of any special
99
Triimbull said the executives pt many laws relating to rail- especially State laws, wer
ly punitive and restrictive.
' surroundings. When, upon the as sassination of the Empress, the court ; went into mourning, Frau Schratt Iwas seen but little. Shortly the old Iintimacy #as openly resumed, but it j was impossible to continue malig- Inant about a friendship that length ened into old age, and the sting of criticism gradually died out. At Schoebrunn Castle, Frau Schratt ap peared nearly every afternoon to keep the Emperor company for an
hour or two. In turn he delighted to call on her at her town house as a private gentleman, where he could meet a few friends of his own choos-* ing, and not guests imposed on him by etiquette or reasons of state. Pol
itics was never discussed. Frau Schratt had her own town house and her country house, together with a goodly allowance, but it never was objected that the Emperor was lav ish with her and she had the dis
cretion not to make her ostentation a national scandal.
As a soldier, the Emperor ' was beloved of his army. In a crushing reverse by the French at Solferfcio he suffered such humiliation that he is said to have so wished to die with his men that he stood motionless in the fire of a battery hoping to be
army. He was tr people and especia tall, gaunt figure every Viennese, the streets ungu the salutations of If it became kno; leave the city a c* gate to see him imperial, yet de years he held we. the common peop of his subjects el for the righting
MOOSE AND J DEADJ
m
(BY A. P. LINCOLN (N
election just pas.^ o f at least onej political partif Progressive
per cent, oj
court, Pej
State order
Ti seps
fail
struck down. But none of his re verses made him any the less popu lar at home.
lej In recent years he interrupted his winter rides, but each spring found
him on horseback again, and he at tended the army maneuvers to the last. In the field he was the em bodiment of indefatigable energy Three or four horses a day he wou
wear out riding in a gallop to t foremost front of a reserve and fr wing to wing to acquaint him
with the last tactical details. His popularity reached beyond
The Fitzgerald Stq for Real V<ilue\
•■
does mak difference w
ston.if u>
‘Thank you very much—if it doesn’t bring you out of your way. My name is W yckoff, Ethel W yckoff.”
— They turned and walked northward. Something seemed to open in Harley Johnston s mind, and let in old memories
and old feelings. The fierce gripping nightmare of the last months nasspri
in a mist
to weave in and out of each other like the pattern on a loom. He wanted to marshal them all into proper order so that he could review them with a single glance. The insult of the Sixth avenue crook had acted on him like a splasll of
water in the face of a sleeper. It had Krn”-°'ht him to himself with a paralys-
AMBURGER’S MAJESTIC THEATER
Broadway Near Eighth.
2 Weeks, Commencing Next
Sunday Night
Wm. A. Brady, Ltd., presents the funniest play ever written,
BY MARGARET MAYO
With WALTER JONES, ERNEST GLEN DENNING Sh&~the original company di rect from a solid year at Daly’s Theater, New York.
REGULAR MAJESTIC PRICES. POP ULAR PRICED MATINEES WEDNES DAYS. REGULAR MATINEES SATUR
DAYS.
SEATS ON SALE TODAY
Belasco theater
MATINEES THURSDAY, SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
TONIGHT« Com*c ’ g=T©NIGHT
THE BELA&CO THEATER COMPANY WILL PRESENT CLYDE FITCH’SMOST SUCCESSFUL COMEDY,
With THAIS MAGRANE and all the Be lasco favorites in the cast. First appear ance of Bessie Barriscale and Howard Hickman. Regular Belasco prices: Nights 25c, 50c and 75c; Matinees, 25c and 50c.
NEXT WEEK: “THE SPENDTHRIFT,” with Thais Magrane in her original role. Seats on sale today.
MASON opera house
|WS Broadway, Between 1st and 2nd Sts.
W- Ti WYATT, Manager.
Week Beginning Monday, August 14. Matinee Saturday: j
In His Tremendous Dramatic Success,
By H. S. Sheldon.
Prices : 50c to $2.00.
Seat Sale Thursday, August 10. Coming: Richard Carle.
“Examiner” “Want Ads” bring quick,re suits, thus showing the “Examiner” to •b the best advertising medium, because it ha* the largest circulation of any paper in th great Southwest*
Mayor'of Las Vegas Asks ‘Ex aminer’ to Find Woman Who
Disappeared Mysteriously
Mrs. Lorena- Buol has disappeared.
Her husband, Peter Buol, Mayor of Las Vegas, Nev., United States Commissioner for Nevada | and wealthy realty dealer, after enlisting the aid of the police, ap pealed to the “ Examiner” last night to help find her.
Mr. and Mrs. Buol were in the middle of a highly enjoyable summer vacation of two months when she disappeared. To gether they had spent a month camping, hunting and fishing on the Apache Reser vation in Arizona, and July 27 they came to Los Angeles for a visit to Mr. Buol’s
mother, Mrs. Emma Buol.
Last Tuesday Mr. Buol was called to
Lias Vegas by business. On his return they were to take a cottage at Venice for a month or so. She bade him good bye at the train.
The next day he received a telegram from his mother reading:
“ Lorena is missing; you’ d better come down.”
Buol caught the first train and arrived In Los Angeles yesterday morning. Ac companied by J. McPherson, a mining man with offices in the Stimson building, an old and trusted friend, Buol undertook to make the search privately.
“She must have met with an accident,” he said, and searched every hospital in the city. Mrs. Buol was nowhere to bo found. !
The last sign of Mrs. Buol to be found was last Tuesday evening, when a do- livery wagon brought a package of dress
goods to her/mother-in-law’s house.
The missing woman is a decided blonde with light brown eyes. She is 31 years
of age, five feet four inches in height, and 135 pounds in weight. When last seen she wore a wide-brim black sailor hat of straw, a white shirtwaist and a white and black checkered woolen skirt, while she carried a white linen umbrella
embroidered with a large “B.” She has |a quite perceptible scar on her left cheek ibone, just back of the corner of the eye.
Oldest Doctor’s Birthday
CHICAGO, Aug. f>.—For the first time in many years Dr. Henry Knox Stratford, 90 years of age, and the oldest practicing physician in America, celebrated his birth day away from his home, 236 North Wal
ler avenue, at Austin. Dr. Stratford Is visiting a niece, Mrs. James Barron of Los Angeles, and he will not return until the middle of September. _______________
!CASTOR IA For Infants and Children.
MM***
Scenes at ground-breaking cerem<
On West Sixteenth-street site that is to be crowned by ten noble bi Catholic school. Monsignor Harnett, administrator of the diocj shovelful of earth. Rev, Father Frederick A. Rupert stands ai
crowd.
,»they should boost the city’s annual ,|ncome more than $1,500,000.
Among the business lines which Alderman Horne would force to pay the city licenses annually in the future and submit to municipal regulation are produce commission
I firms, cpld 3 storage warehouses, l wholesale drug houses, wholesale land retail confectioners, business
olleges, shoe-shining parlors, fruit stores, wholesale and retail grocers, (itomobile repair shops, automobile kles agencies, massage and Turkish hs, slot machine companies and
p agencies,
ON LOAN SHARKS.
» .
COLLEGE S,
FTER formally c the gra^tfk^ Rt. RJ
diocese ies, j A ricjfl
would put a particularly heavy n loan sharks,” Horne declared,
o shall urge the Council to| it the dmbit ol r^ewing frej
L ^-------
fr3*I*4*l
| MILESTONES IN CAREER
OF LATE FRANCIS JOSEPH. 1
Born August 18, 1830. 1 Ascended the Austrian throne December 2, 1848.
Reigned as Austrian ruler continuously sixty-eight years.
Was Apostolic King of Hungary forty-eight years.
Lost Lombardy in the war of 1859 with Prance and Sardinia.
Lost the Duchy of Holstein to Prussia and Venice to Italy by treaty.
Forced the war upon Serbia which started the general war now in progress.
Cursed by Countess Karolyi, whose son was put to death by his order.
Maximilian, his brother, sent to Mexico as emperor, executed by his soldiers after brief reign.
Carlotta, wife of Maximilian, driven insane by husband's death. + Stabbed in the neck by a Hungarian at Vienna in 1853.
Shot by an assassin at Prague in 1882.
Imperiled by bombs thrown by anarchists at Trieste in 1882. His son, Crown Prince Rudolph, and Barbara Vetsera found
dead in 1889. Crown Prince believed to have killed woman and himself.
pis nephew, Archduke John Salvator, renounced his claims and fled to America under the name of John Orth.
His sister-in-law, Duchess d’Alencon, burned to death In a char ity bazaar fire in Paris.
His grand-daughter deserted her royal husband and eloped with an army officer.
His son, Francis Ferdinand, heir apparent, married beneath his station and forced his father to accept the situation.
His beloved wife, Empress Elizabeth, was assassinated in Switz erland September 10, 1898.
His son, Francis Ferdinand, heir apparent, and his wife were assassinated.
....
■Bib Died November 21, 1916.
.i
Francis Joserh.
Saw more than 2,000,000 of his best soldiers melt away in the war now in progress and his dual empire shaken and falling apart.
(Continued
Page.) Elizabeth, younger sister ofx / $r tended. He resolved that /o.
[exico, should be his bride and the came in 1854.
■by In addition to hery^ /^. >! beth was highly en
l ents, but she found v / $ court. The EmpeV^Wf o-
ould hardly eountenan\'o, ^ 1 I" I| yiennesVV
,»T—T«»f«
where he spied a little girl whose traordinary beauty attracted hin//^ "He learned that she was Pe' / $ 1
Ik
I
been brought up by the Italian gov- reth. According to the Haggadte, CTai-^ :ebh^Ii3ered the’propositjon
( s c M r - w c C K i v . ) __________
Published every Monday and Thursday, corner of South Temple and East Temp Streets, Salt Lake City, Utah. ____ _
Charles W. Peniose, - - - - " HoraceG.Whitney - BusinessManager.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICES.
(In Adavnce): $2.00
Saturday Edition, per year .............. *
Correspondence and other re^4J2f«idato ter for publication should be address
becomes thoroughly warmed up, this language, and in some instances young will have marked effect upon our own men were taking undue liberties with climate, too. Many of the cold waves the young women, some of whom wereN that sweep over this country come beastly drunk.”
from the Dominion. If cultivation has This is a startling description of ac the effect of modifying the tempera
j!'
(From Monday’s Daily.)
The question of the whereabouts oi the Ten Tribes of Israel, who were
Not long ago Sir Henry Campbell-
Bannerman, in^he "(House of Commons,
declared the policy of huge
arniai8SS^jps^Teed^‘ the belief ^that force
carried into captivity by the Assyrian is tfcj
ruler, in the year 724, B. C., and placed in the land of Media, on the river Go- zan, is one that has interested students of history, as well as theologians, in all
ages. It can hardly be doubted ut this
time, that, in the course of centuries,
they have kecome mixed with
numerous other ‘ nations, or th^Stl TM The European press was rather sar
some - of .the blood of Israel castic in its comments on the disarma is found *all' over the face of ment discussion. The,Journal des De- the earth. History, or tradition, follows -bats expressed a general opinion when the exiles in every direction, and then it remarked:* “There is c'ountry, they are lost sight of, not “lost.” there is no government but wishes U
The New York Tribune, in answer could spend less on war materials,, bur to a question, gives the subjoined sum when it comes to the realization of mary of various efforts to identify the this laudable desire it is found that Ten Tribes after the exile:
every one is waiting for his neighbor to begin. In theory* every one is in accord, but when it com es‘ to practice, unsurmeuntable obstacles present
them selves.”
It is therefore rather surprising
ftadltiojiV' too. Ten Tribes were^ :faY;orahlyt:||||||is jjj question that ^will -divided into three groups, one on this not ghost irj H am let
side of "the RivCr Sambation, anotherj it- pops up again and again. This on fhe opposite side,; and the third in shows what the popular sentiment
the neighborhood of* Daphne, near A n really is. It proves that the leaven of tioch. Josephus (Antiquities xi, 52) be peace is working, and indicates the apr
lieved, in faet, that in his day they proach of tlie great day of general
“In the Fourth Book of Ezra (xiii, 39-45) it is declared that the Ten Tribes .were carried by Hosea, King in the -tim e of Shalmaneser, to the Euphrates,
At the narrow passage of the river,
to 1earft that the question has again
Wl#nce fheywent on. a journey of a
lyear' and a to :||.t)lace t3alled Arza- Iernmeiit, and that both; England and'
jdweltll in large multitudes somewhere (beyond the Euphrates, in Arsareth, ac cording to.the author of II Esdras, xiii, >45. In the ninth century Eldad Ben
Mahli'Ha-Dain came forward, claiming jto give specific details of the contem - [rporary existence of Ten Tribes and of jtheir location at that time. Dan, Naph- !tali, Gad and Asher were in Havilah;
Zebulun and Reuben in the mountains
of Paran; Ephraim and half of Man- 'asseh in South Arabia; SimeOn and the other half of Manas&eh in the land of the Cpazars (?). According to him,
therefore, the Ten Tribes were settled in parts of Southern Arabia, or per haps Abyssinia, in. conformity with the identification of Havilah. The imagin ation of Christian writers has sought
; them in the neighborhood of their, last recorded habitation;, Jewish fea tures have been traced in the Afghans, who even nowadays call themselves ‘children of Israel.’ According to their tradition, the Jews had settled on Mount Takht-i-Suieiman (the seat of Solomon) long before the advent of Mahometanism, and a great part of the
Afghans are said tta have gone by the name of Yusufzais/—i. e., the descend-.
Joseph— frdm tim e im m em orial. ____numerous very old customs
Besldesii T
peace and brotherly love.
Our own country has a very small
army and navy, but the expenses of maintenance are enormous, and it is becoming evident that even here mili tarism m ay assum e the proportions of a gigantic evil. Speaking on this subject Leslie’s Weekly in a recent issue said:
u t a, i.u i
___________
_______
place was crowded with men, and
the beer garden opposite had in it about 200 persons, three-fourths of whom were young men and young women. Many of them were in a state of semi-intoxi cation, and were throwing beer at one another, swearing and using indecent
lias been completely M jjto ■
a number of feet liliW the surface ana it is now thought quite pro Dame that the expulsion of frost from the son will quickly bring about warmer sum
mers throughout all northwest Canada. This is probably correct, and it is be lieved that, as the Canadian Northwest
5TcT coming out of “the b£
One Tear ................................................. 00
fclx Months ..............................
Daily News, per year ........................ 4*50
Six Months ........................•......... 0*25
Three Months ............................... places be speedily settled with an in where such scenes are enacted nor un One Month ........................................**©'00
ture it is to be hoped that the waste tual occurrences: It does not matter
dustrious population.
ITALY TALKS PEACE.
der whose auspices they are permitted. They are evil and also unlawful. They should be corrected or suppressed. The Baptist minister rightly condemned
them and showed their effects upon j Address all business communications Italy has been heard from on the people who are not themselves iftl-qg
the EDITOR.
and all remittances: ^T«-n7o
moral, and upon their children wh.5% are allowed to mingle with the throng/c that frequent such places. H e said:
“The' people who are of the wou-
t h f e n e : i k m W i <> * j t M m * . 'may ply their business; they are in BALT IjA K e "C~ITY, - JULY 19, 1906 favorably entertained by these two the crowd. You would npt think of letting your son, or your daughter; either, sit on the sam e seat w ith a
THE DESERET NE^S,
question of disarmament. A Rome dis
patch is’ to the effect that the Italian
___________Salt Lake City. Utan. ^Entered at the Postoffice of Sfilt Lake
government has proposed considerable City as second class matter according to reductions in the military establish-
the Act of Congress March 3. 1879. . mp n t s of. Britain France, and "that the project has been
THE TEN TRIBES.
countries* Italy proposes to set the ex ample by the' immediate discontinua tion of two corps, which would reduce the effective strength by 60,000 men.
libertine, in your home. They are taught to shun such people as the emissaries of hell, but the public gath ering made up of those who are weak in flesh, gathers them all up and they go along with our families and we
tf,3fiiot the only solution or become accustomed to vice ill giving
it one place, at least.” *
A full synopsis of. the gentlem an’s dishourse,appeared in our local columns on Monday. His strictures and sug gestions are worthy of deep considera tion, and we echo bis call upon the city and police authorities to enforce the law concerning such am usem ents as he described. If the city* officials will not perform their djlty in this regard, then the county authorities should take the
matter up and execute the statutes in such case m ade and provided. Section 467 of the Revised Ordinances of Salt Lake City provides that: .
“It shall be unlawful for any person to keep open on Sunday any store, workshop, bar, saloon, banking house or other place of business for the pur pose of transacting business therein. The foregoing provisions do not apply
to persons who on Sunday keep open hotels, boarding houses, JnJJas. restaur -
d' ug stores for the legitimal business of each, or such manufacture ing establishments as are usually kept’ in continual operation.”
Section 325 provides that
“It shall be unlawful for any persoif ,or any manager, agent, bartender or employe of any person, to sell, give
away or otherwise dispose, of any in~* toxicating drinks at any time during^ the first day of the week commonly
.called Sunday, except he be a druggist and then only for medical purposes upon the; prescription of a licensed physician.’*
So much for municipal ordinances in Great Britain are such thaj we need relation to this matter. .Now let us see
kiqifal differences, it , becomes highest tasks of the states- adjust armaments to new ana hap#y conditions.” A resolution was passed*by the Commons urging the ex pediency of reduction, but this was
jrajaB
^qm ed down in the House of Lords.
“Many believe that our relations with
little or no defense works along our,
northern border, and that public money
appropriated for this purpose is Worse
than wasted. Nearly $30,000,000 has al
ready been appropriated fbr seacoast up, exhibits, opens*or maintains, or aids defenses now in process of construc in getting up, exhibiting, opening or tion, and if the Canadian border is maintaining ■any bull, bear,, cock on fortified it will,require at least $16,000,- prize fight, horse race, circus, gambling
000 more. Unpardonable extravagance house or saloon or any barbarous and has also been permitted for years past noisy amusement; or who keeps, oon-, in tests of new explosives, new guns ducts, or exhibits any theater, m.elodion, and other pieces of wAr enginery, ana
millions * of public money has been annually wasted in this way. A single item of this kind was the expenditure of nearly $500,000 on a great gun at Sandy Hook which has recently been discarded as useless after having been mounted less than three years. It is
not necessary th a f one should be an anti-militarist, or an extremist of any
dance cellar,tor other place* o f m usical, theatrical or operatic perform ance, spectacle or Yepresentatioh, "where any wines, liquors or intoxicating drinks
are bought, sold, used, drank or given away; or who purchases any ticket of adm ission or directly or indirectly pay§ any admission fee to. or for the pur pose of "witnessing or attending any suejh place, am usem ent* sneotaHe. n?r-
’9 0 8 1
<jJET
itifully lighted up
as^iaetive. ) b said they* we*<
what the State laws provide. Section 4233 of the Revised Statutes of Utah, 1898, says:
“Every person who on Sunday, gets
i
ANCIENT CITY
OF SPLENDOR.
Petra, in Mountains of Edom, an Enchanting Place.
Its Story Goes Back to Dawn of Human History.
For Ages a Center of Luxury, Now Deserted and Silent•
[National Geographic Society BuUetiru1 The highlands east of the Jordan River are strewn with ruins marking
the rise and fall of successive civiliza tions— Semitic, Greek^ Roman, Christian, Mohammedan and Crusa der. These ruins have been pre served for the modern explorer by the tides of nomadic life, which have swept up from the Arabian desert; but at the southern end of this No Man’s Land, deep in the mountains of Edom, lies ^one of the strangest, most beautiful and most enchanting spots upon this earth—
the Rock City? of Petra. Its story carries us back to the dawn of hu man history.
In the days o f the Nabatheans, Petra became the central point to which the .caravans from the interior of Arabia, Persia and India came laden with all the precious com
modities of the East, and from which these commodities were distributed through Egypt, Palestine, Syria, and all the countries bordering on the Mediterranean for even Tyre and Sidon derived many of their prec ious wares and dyes from Petra.
The Rock City was always to these regions and peoples what Rome wa to the Romans and Jerusalem b the Jews. Horites, Edomites, Nabatheans and Romans have all rejoiced and boasted in the posses sion of this unique stronghold and most remarkable city of antiquity.
THROUGH A STRANGE DEFILE.
The entrance to the Rock City is the most striking gateway to any city on our p,lanet. It is a narrow rift or defile, bisecting a mountain of many Hijed sandstone, winding
through the rock as though it was the most plastic of clay. This Sik, or defile, is nearly two miles long. Its j general contour is a wide semi- | circular swing from the right to the left, with innumerable short bends, having sharp curves and corners in its general course.
The width of the Sik varies from twelve feet at its narrowest point to thirty-five or forty feet at other places. Where the gloomy walls ac tually overhang the roadway and al most shut out the blue ribbon o^ sky, it seems narrower, and per haps at many points above the, stream the walls do come closer than twelve feet. The heights of the perpendicular side cliffs have been j estimated at from 200 to 1000 feet, j Heights, like distances, in this clear desert air are deceptive, but after | many tests and observations we are j prepared to say that at places they: are almost sheer for 300 to 400 feet, i
Seen at morning, at mid-day, or at midnight, the Sik, the matchless entrance to a hidden city, is un questionably one of the great glories
that remain of ancient Petra. Along] its cool, gloomy gorge filed the cara- , vans of antiquity— from Damascusj land the east, from the desert, fromj
Egypt and the heart of Africa.^ Kings, queens and conquerors all have marveled at its beauties and its strangeness. Wealth untold went
in and out of it for centuries, and now, for more than 1300 years it has been silent and deserted.
Carved in the face of the cliff, half revealed, half concealed in the growing shadows, is one of the larg est, most perfect, and most beau tiful monuments of antiquity— Pharaoh’s Treasury.
Almost as perfect as the day it came from beneath the sculptor’s chisel, 1500 or 2 0 0 0 years ago, col ored with the natural hues of the brilliant sandstone which added an indescribable element to the archi tectural beauty, flanked and sur mounted by the cliffs which had been carved and tinted in turn by the powers of nature, approached by the mysterious defile, it is almost overpowering in its effect.
BUSINESS CHANCES—
Of Many Kinds.
BAKERY IN THE FASTEST GROWING SUBURB in the San'Fernando Valley. This is one of those places that we have difficulty in find ing words that will express the true condi tions. It is the only one in the place, estab lished 14 years, rent $ 3 5 ; sales average $75 a day; can be doubled if the purchaser wants to put on extra delivery, capacity two and a half barrels a day; modem plant, fine large bakeroom, with both distillate and oil. A nicer or better appearing place cannot be found anywhere, and the town
will appeal to anyone, as it is growing fast, with some of the best buildings in any California town. Let us show you this place, and it is sold if you have $3500 cash,
i W. S. RATTRAY & CO.,
1023 Title Insurance Bldg. Fifth and Spring.
OIL STATION CLEARING $225 A MONTH. PRO- prietor has made all arrangements for long tourag trip. Wants to start right away. Price i. was $2150. but to close it up wiB take $2000 i! cash. Fine location. You can't make a mistake
i! buying thi3. M GRAVES & CO.. 727 L. A. Investmeiff Blag.
LUNCH COUNTER AND RESTAURANT, BUSY location, clearing $200 monthly, worth $ 9w. Will sacrifice fow $600; only $250 down, balance $25 month; splendid place for man and wile- Rent $25. Call 208 DELTA BLDG., 426 Spring.
WELL-EQUIPPED ELECTRICAL STORE AND BAT- tery service, station, in prosperous town must
be sold this week; owner going east, TM
stock atf big discount; about $800. Call on DELTA BLDG., 420 S. Spring. Business Inv. to.
LONG BEACH OPPORTUNITY, BUSINESS MEN, take notice! One-half interest in mv busy real estate office; est. 12 years; cleared $5000 yearly. Need - reliable man. Investment only $<50. Cali
511 DELTA BLDG., 426 S. Spring.
$400—-BUYS HALF INTEREST IN BUSY AUTO repair shop and oil station. Owner is me chanic and wants steady man, willing to wora.
This is a. real opportunity for a man^mechani cally inclined. Call 403 LAUGHLIN BLD(/., 315 S. Broadw ay, t _________ ;______
$1000—VULCANIZING AND TIRE BUSINESS, IN- eluding moulds and stock of tires, rubber, etc. Doing splendid business. Good location, ciie&p
ICPEDWARD D. SILENT & CQ., 735 S. HILL.
GROCERY STORE, BARGAIN, $65 DAILY RE- ce'pts, living-rooms in connection, will. sen
fixtures at $400 and invoice stock. About required. See this before buying. MERCHANTS SALES CO.. 313 Grant Bldg.
.$1100 ^ GARAGE, COMPLETELY EQUIPPED with tools, etc., space for 25 cars,.
[i $35, brick building. A real bargain. Should
8011EDWARD D. SILENT & CO., 735 S. HILL. __
ELECTRIC SUPPLIES AND CONTRACTING^ Busi ness.; clearing $500 monthly; wills^T® .gJSJ; Price 3500 for fixtures; invoice about $4800 BtocK, rent -$60. Call 208 PELTA\BLDG., 426 Spring.
I CONFECTIONERY AND STATIONERY
$40 daily, 2 living-rooms, elegant ratures.
fountain, big stock, $1900, terms. Clears $10 daily. 511 Delta Bldg,, 425 Spring, Business Inv. Co.
i850—RESTAURANT AT MOVING PICTURE STU-
■dio, big business; big profits. Rent $30,
Lng iiving-room, new equipment. 510 UELi-a. ^LDG., 426 S. Spring. Business Inv. Co.
KAiBERS, ATTENTION! ~~~~ ~ . f. A -chair shop and cigars, $1 1 0 0 ; heart of city, $24. Going to Canadar BUSINESS INV. CO.,
15l l Delta Bldg., 426 GROCERlES-nHAVE tures a t invoice:
Sfrring. ______ §______ j
Au g u s t
MANY STOCKS AND estimated Prices from,
F i x
Rto $6800. Doing from $150 to $1200 week. BEV- 1ERLY, 522-23 Grant Bld g .____________§||
egOO:—AND YOUR ACTIVE SERVICES WILL give you control and immediate 4ng weeK-
ly income. Absolutely protected.. Ad dress Y, box 33, TIMES OFFICE.________ _
p A«n GROCERY WITH LIVING ROOMS; IN apartment-house section; clearing $200 monthly; •splendid place for: man and wife. Pnge S9W,
|rent *20. 1 Call 208 DELTA BLDG., 426 Spring.
ARIZONA HARDWARE BUSINESS, NOW PAYING better than 25 per cent, net; will sell half in
terest; a big jobbing and
mining and smelter section; will taae about $7 , 000. MR. HVEb ELL, 441 Rosslyn, today. _ _ _ |
$500—HALF INTEREST IN ONE OF THE BESTj
* real estate bus. in town; can show you thel !goods. See MR. MARTIN, room 431, 461 I. W.
Heilman Bldg., 124 W, Fourth s t -------- ----
AUTO STAGE LINE, GARAGE ^ND ^ ^ G E N C Y [ included. Best equipment.-cleara $1000 tnonth. IBusiness increasing. Price $25,000. See
i& NOONAN. 601 and 602 Hibernian Bldg.______
m R SALE — GARAGE, LOCATED ON MAIN ' boulevard near city, including tools, stock and Service' car; cash. Address Y, box 9, T MES TICE. - ________ ___ _______ —-------- —-
URAGE, IN HOTEL SECTION, GOOD STREET Si Close in, repairs and storage, .gjj- » good buy for a mfchamc. $1900 CAMP «
[ WALDO, 730 L. A. Investment Bldg. ___ r_
LONG BEACH CASH GROCERY, $165°, THREE furnished living-rooms, rei?t $25; dmng$45day, <rood fixtures, no competition. 511 DELIA bljjo.,
H I S S oring. BUSINESS INVESTMENT CO. , $275—-CIGAR STAND AND CONFECTIONERY IN j
Hermosa, good bus., clears $150 mo.; re?L |j bargain. See MR. MARTIN, room 431, 461 I. j W. Heilman Bldg., 124 W Fourth st.
FOR SAT.TH!—by OR ALL OF BEST BILLIARD AND
cigar Atore in valley, will take good auto for part terms. Have other business. Address BOX j
•297,', Porterville, Cal.______ ,_J_____ —------ DANDY SMALL GROCERY STORE (PASADENA;)
sell, invoice (about $600.) . Good cash huujnesa. I 511 DELTA BLDG., 426 Spring. BUSINESS IN-1 VESTMENT COMPANY.________ ___ ________ _ "
REAL ESTATE MEN AND BROKERS, B i g I money in New Mexico oil leases; get in now [see me today, a big chance. MR. BLUEBELL, 441 iRoeslyn. _______ _______ - ------------- —• ' $500—RESTAURANT, DOING FINE BUS., CLEARS
SPPO mo cheap rent. Reason for selling So ing East ° *NATIONAL EFFICIENCY COMPANY,
431-461 I. W Heilman Bldg., 124 W. 4th at.
STORAGE GARAGE WITH FINEST SHOP equipment, in the business district, having large clientele. The best buy we have had for
several weeks. Investigate. $45UO«, . GRAVES & CO.,- 727 L. A. Investment Bldg.
OIL STATION, WELL LOCATED, TWO KINDS of gas, nets $200 a month; can be increased
$1900. CAMP & WALDO, 730 I. A. Investment Bldg._______ _______________________—---- —- 1 WANT PARTY WITH CAPITAL IN THE REAL
estate and building game; your money ^secured at all time; don't fail to■see me at 4251 p.i
WESTERN AYE. Miller. ________
OWNER LEAVING CITY. MUST SELL/ ErTAB- lished confectionery line, $200 stock included.
Call 736 SAN FERNANDO BLDG., 10 to 12, or 2 to 4 Thursday. _________________ ______ SAFE INVESTMENT OFFERED IN FINANCING,
motion picture productions. Market .guaranteed before pictures are made. Address X, box 2bo,
, TIMES OFFICE. •'______ '
CASH GROCETERIA. DOING $150 DAILY. MAN ‘and wife can handle without help- no delivery
n- credit Will invoice about $3500. EDWARD D. SILENT & CO.,_735 S. HILL._
WANTED-—CAPITAL, SMALL INVESTMENT WILL
| bring large returns, established business, have I
ten much to do. Security, reference. Address TIMES oEmc
ENGINES AND MOTORS
60-cycle single-phase mo- tors, %-hp. Emerson, 1,150 speed, $28; %- hp Holtzer Cabot, $25; %-hp. Wagner, $38; Wagner, $53; 2-hp. Wagner, $67;
A"hpW
General Electric, 1,200 ?pee£' $22; Yz-hp. Westinghouse, $22; 3-hp.
1*200 speed, $55. Motors bought, sold, exchanged. Guaranteed re pairs. _ Bfyre Electric Co., 613 So. Dearborn
ot/» y
_ BARGAIN— 9-hp. Otto Stationary Gas
Engine. M. Treadwell, 2212 Greenleaf Ave., Chicago._______ *
MOTORS—About 200 brand-new 60-cycle, stogie-phase, 110 V ., Westinghouse motors,
Cn^di/T9ew£ stilJiiln their, original boxes. One 1/12 hp., $11; one 1/10 hp., $13.50*
ho6 inhp’V$15;£neu1/6hp»$18*one% NP,3ri 8t. TM iaSaCh3eDmaier * Co- 1«
. THREE Horsepower Victor Gasoline En- ^ n e , good condition; price $50. W rite Diem & Wing. Cincinnati, Ohio.
N E W and second-hand engines for sale and exchange. Apply with stamps. R. w Richardson, Peoria, 111., r . 36.
40-horsepower direct-cur- 4nnvnitct0flnnEdlson direct-current dynamo,
51110 condition. J. Buchel, Conti St,, New Orleans, La.
. 0% . HORSE Elevator Motor, n o d c” 0 j ^ dlng controUer. F . W . Bacon, Tiffin’,
COMPLETE Marine Engine and Outfit
SSStlnftL h hp" 2 cyc& 2 cyL Cushman engine, Baldnge gear, Detroit lubricator
rear starter, Atwater Kent ignition, auto controls, steering wheel and rudder A 1
iq 9idltQ°nL Eargain, $165. Otto Merker J=>. Central Park Ave.. Chicago.
BhaKP*h5n<*>rf 3? tP’’ 8"Cylinder, in good Bhape, $100. Louis Larson. Harmony. Minn.
„ ? C R Sale at a Bargain. New 5x6 four-
M Tl^p,-TtM^!dHanson-
i n * ° MTtfRiES$ 1 2 N re^tored without rebor- Motor boats, automobiles, pumping and agricultural engines. Wille Adjustable
M°n.Company, 1534 Fulton St. Brook-
REBUILT Engines— We nave on hand a number of rebuilt "B u ffa lo " engines raar- anteed, at greatly reduced prices ' 'Write
Co b? 2g93mi305t*ivnBuffal0 Gasoline Motor c o ..^ 1293-1305 Niagara Street. Buffalo,
CEMENT
IF you want the best information nn foment and concrete consteuSio^lubscribe for Concrete-Cement Age, leading cement and concrete monthly. Sample copy 10 001lts- Yearly subscription, $1.5<h°Pyc o n -
t S T mT 135 NewberrVBldg..De-
Clifford
iffsw ifjStasr
Trnrr^ Sops>AUentown. Henna.
wlthc^ean25^f?ileQ5^yfanclNight Gasses
S lT 12°2TM - “ °G^nf5Bap^ WANTED
accepted. S to"/ T Jones, 150 North Market St. Chlcago '
SALE OR EXCHANGE
fo£ . Floor Furnaces. One or all it a»i,gas "
_ _£_iins^ sporting goods, etc.
b u ? Lo ? M e x ^ T t o o W - s o r T S
ffan^T-y Stephen
machinery, tools and supplies
Hoi5 10” y^agner Engine Lathe, % " Hoi. Spin, Comp. Rest, 12" Four-Jaw Chuck
^mplete. g°°d condition, $155 cash W «t- ern Machinery Co., Cincinnati, Ohio
FerreU,
o i F ° 5 ^xx!-0
~
f S J U F -
'Lighting
^ n^er Bank, Novinger Mo.
Arst-class condition. S2?V?i?nanleo72^ *4ncoln milling machines,
Conn? $10° h‘ Luoas &Son*Bridgeport!
HARRISON r‘M. L p ’* Kev
Machine enables a novice to make perfect duplicate keys for all pin tumbler Plocks
Every machine guaranteed. Price $3 Spe-
kevs d4iar rn2iShT d ?les lor making ? R St^SN. Y $1* narrison & Co., 81% New
.„,^CT°R driven engine lathe 16"x6' price withnut motor $90. Motor if desired W
MaS ght°n' 141 St‘ Jerome A7e-» Holyoke!
CELLAR Drainer operated by water from city water pipes one inch size, $4. Frank C-^Douds & Co., New Castle. Pa.
^ P U L L E Y S , Gears, Sprockets, Shafting
SfSFiiSSi pag„e 12A W- A- Jones J S diy & Machine Co.# Chicago.
2*»>«-•'W. J. plant, 6 hp. engine
LOS£ ANGEL Linnard Offers
to Underwrite Fete for $5000
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J„ June 20, 1919.
Tj^DITOR THE EXAMINER, Los
Angeles;
The idea of big Southern Cali-
fornia celebra- , tion in Los An geles is splen did one. Most important that
such an affair J be staged. This
is opportune time for it. Activities in all
lines should be pushed. Cele bration will be
wonderful advetrising fea ture and will stimulate business of all sorts* I enthustically indorse plan, and will be glad to under write at least $5000. My experi ence in Atlantic City and my knowledge of some of South Amer ican and European plans to at tract travel has made me more than ever convinced that Southern California must wake up to her needs and opportunities. Use these
sentiments anyway you see fit. D. M. LINNARD
WHO THINK
ocal Delegates to Salt Lake Will Try to Land 1920 Con
vention for L. A.
With the firm intention of bringing ext year’s convention to this city, Sec- etary Arthur Lee of the Southern Cali- ornia Retail Grocers’ Association will eave today to attend the annual con-
ention of the National Retail Grocers ssociatioU at Salt Lake City. In a
Itter 'to The Examiner yesterday, Mr. jee announced the intention of the local
ssoeiation to go after next year’s con tention and declared that his organiza- ion was in full accord with the cam- aign to make Los Angeles a convention
ity. His letter follows:
“We have been following with extreme interest The Examiner’ s effective cam paign for making Los Angeles the lead ing convention city in the United States, also its efforts to induce all organizations
affiliated with national associations in Los Angeles to lay the foundation which
will bring more conventions to this city.
“ We also note what Mr. Motley H. Flint has said regarding our additional
conventions and are heartily in accord with his views—that we cannot be ‘pikers* in the matter and that we must go after vigorously whatever we get and that the competition is very keen.
“ We are confident that with the moral support that is being given by your valua ble paper and by the advanced strides that the co-operative movement in the retail field has taken in Southern Cali-
I
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1919
Bankers, Merchants, Hotel Men, Film Mag nates and Civic Leaders Voice Approval
THE business world of Los Angeles, is solidly behind the proposal to revive the plan of holding annual fiestas •in Los Angeles. Xesterday. ap proval of the general proposition was
an excuse. I think the Fiestas should be featuresome of j Southern California. They out to be something that could not be provided in any
•other f*art of the world. The fact / that the features of these Fiestas •were unique would result in such publicity for them, and incidentally various commercial and civic organiza in a great deal for Southern Cali
voiced by bankers, merchants, hotel keep ers, motion picture magnates, officials of
tions, and women of prominence and high social standing. Some of the city organ izations already have taken preliminary action in the matter, and others will un doubtedly do so in the near future, now that the ball has been set rolling. •
fornia. They would convey the thought of ju,st what Southern Cali fornia means for the tourist, the globe-trotter and the home-seeker, too. By holding the Fiestas in April they would be timed just right, in my opinion, to attract a great many people, and to carry the message of Southern California as a summer re sort. I am heartily in favor of the
As far back as February, 1913, The
Examiner began its advocacy of the prop
osition of holding annual fiestas in Los
Angeles, and The Examiner’s plans re
ceived the hearty endorsement of many
prominent people in Los Angeles, among
them D. A. Hamburger. Motley H. Flint
at that time deceived h letter from Mr.
Hamburger, written from Nicei in which J. F. sARTORI, president of the Se he said:
“Los Angeles ought to have a great
carnival every spring and make it wor
thy for people to come from all parts
of the country. The carnival at Nice
is a great thing for the city and the
people thereabouts. If we had a drive
way and a parkway along the ocean’ to the world. It must be nothing
front from Playa del Rey to Santa Monica Canyon, like they have on the Promenade des Anglais, we would have the finest summer and winter resort in the world, barring none.
Writing of the Nice fete, which he had just attended, Mr. Hamburger said:
small or inconsequential, and there must be a firm financial foundation for it before any statements about it
u*.are sent. broadcast. over ^tbe country, t In other words, unless it is conducted on a scale large enough to attract pqople here from all parts of the country, it will not be worth while.
“ The Examiner’s policy of holding
some big entertainment feature each
year must be carried out, for it Its. un
wise and unfair to invite people to come’
here unless you provide amusement ORA J. MONNETTE, president of the features for them.”
“King Carnival and his queen arrived
last evening about 8:30 o’clock, amid » I believe in such things as a gen
the booming of cannon and the noise and cheering of the multitude, sitting' in the tribunes of the open air, slowly freezing while awaiting the coming of the royal pair. It was a beautiful moonlight night, but cool, and sitting, under the canopy of heavCri did not
ad to one’s warmth or personal com fort.
“It was quite a novelty to see an aeroplane appear above the crowds at night to welcome their majesties, but
taken all in all it was, however, a poor show, and one that we would be ashamed to present to the public. The
manner in which the different groups marched was without any semblance qf order.
- “On Sunday they have the procession
of all the floats. They*string this thing out as much as they can and charge from $1 to $3 for seats on the tribune or grand stands. People come from all
over Europe to attend the carnival and the hotels double their rates during February and the early part of March.
“We ought to hold a carnival every Spring in Los Angeles. Nice has im proved wonderfully since my last visit. All the big stores have doubled their
space, and a number of very large and beautiful hotels have been built/*
Here are more enthusiastic endorse ments of the fiesta plan from leaders of Los Angeles:
VERNON GOODWIN, managing direc
eral proposition,, and in the case of Los Angeles, in particular, I know ! that it wiil be of great advantage. j
We must present something to our visitors besides lifeless things; we must show them activity and afford them amusement. With the proper
amorint and the right kind of pub licity, thousands of visitors can be* attracted to Southern California who otherwise would not come.”
J. M. BEST, secretary of the Realty Board: “ The idea of holding annual Fiestas |n Los Angeles wouid doubtless
not only meet with the approval of th directors of the Realty Board, X
would also have the hearty assists of the whole membership of
hoard, when it came time to get the harness and do things. Realty Board has always take active interest in everything
helps to attract people to {sou
California, and undoubtedly the ing of these annual fetes wou that very thing. At the proper the matter will be placed befo directors and some action ta show the attitude of the real
the city on the matter.” i New Fire Tug
Given Trial TrJ
tor of the Alexandria Hotel: “Speak-,
Los Angeles Harbor’s brand new fire- ing for the hotel interests of Cali boat, “Captain Archie J. Eley,” made its fornia, I can express the greatest initial bow to the public yesterday after enthusiasm for the proposal to hold noon when it slipped out. of its berth an annual Fiesta of big proportions at the First street ferry arid went down in Los Angeles. The idea that it the channel out into San Pedro Bav un
can be made to carry far arid wide der the command of Capt Jack Ba‘ly of the knowledge that Southern Cali the Los Angeles Harbor (San Pedrol fh-P
fornia is a great summer resort, as well as a gathering place for tourists during the Winter months, is certainly tenable to say t‘he least. April is just the time to hold this annual fete. To my mind, the great ad
vantage of it is the providing of an excuse to thousands of people who may want to come to Southern Cali fornia at some time during the win ter. It gives them an incentive to
do the wery thing that they want to do, but might not do without such
ASK FOT? and HCT
(department. } Yesterday’s trip was made for the nur
,
holding of an annual Fiesta in Los Angeles, and will do my part to make each year’s event a big success, es pecially the first one.”
curity Savings Bank, and head of the Los Angeles Clearing House As sociation: “In my opinion the mat ter of finances should be looked after
thoroughly before positive declara tion* of the holding of a gredt Fiesta in Los Angeles next spring is given |
I would not favor it otherwise.’*
Citizens* Savings Bank:. “The move ment to revive the Fiestas in Los Angeles has my earnest approval, and I will help in every way possible.
pose of testing the marine and generating
^n?t3? S- Tile pumPln£ engines will be tested in a few days. The boat has a
powerful siren, and during her trial trin f l § s p e e c h o f t h e s i r e n b r o u g h t hun
front. °f CUri°US Perstms to
water
‘High Seas’ Assault Case Is Dismissed
SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1919
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