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Show .7: 1 I m -Tsf- 1 1 - Li. ad. -' -n . -,. --i-tt'jMfJe..r- -w. ....... . . ' . - -' VS'. .1 -i AN UNUSUAL OFFER $1.50 THE HERALD (Semi-Weekly) Orange Judd Farmer (Weekly) Year Book and Almanac $1.00 .50 $3.00 ALL FOR $1.75 All the News TWICE A WEEK wirn The Ideal Farm Paper (Weekly) and A 1901 Almanac for Agriculturists TO GET THEM ALL, SEND TO THE HERALD COMPANY Salt Lake City. his signature is on every box of the genuine xative BromO'Uuiaine Tablets remedy that 01 mi cold la one day WANTED! Reliable man for Manager of Branch Office we wish to open a. in this vicinity. If your record i.f is O. K., here is an opportunity. Kindly, give good reference when writing. A.""!. MORRIS WHOLESALE HOUSE, Cincinnati, Ohio. Illustrated catalog 4 cts. stamps. . LX SALT LAKE HOT SPRIXOS SANITARIUM, (America's Carlsbad) Turkish, Massage and Electric PAT M&tiicurc and Hair Dressing. : J. SCHENCK, Business Managar. 52 W. 3rd South St. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. 1 recreation Pointers An Illustrated monthly magazine which will Interest any reader of good literature; U per year. Send Send for free sample ana let it talk for lUtelf. Reporter Publishing Co., Kansas City - - - Mo, 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending s sketch snd dnacrlptlon mar auMclr ascertain onr opinion free whether en Invention ts probably patentable. Communlnv-Uona Communlnv-Uona strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Olitent niiency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive tpteial notice, without charge, in tbe Scientific JTmcrican. A hardsometjr ninstrated wieeklf. Lanreat elr-dilation elr-dilation of any aclentitle journal. 1'erma. $3 a year j four months, L Bold bjall newartealera. MUNN & Co.3618" New York , Branch Offloe. m T Bt, WaahlDtoa D. C V5EA itdSAVfeMOEE S.THSM Hit SJ-ealthre rartrldur" for Marlln. Model 1 !, ooal only ..M a Oiou.aiiil. ISalibre cart riJc for on vol her rcpeatrr made, coat $12 OO a thounaml. Toa can aava tbe entire eont of your Marlln on the drit two thousnud caitri'lKea. WbvtliU la so Is fully explained In the Marlln (land Hook for nhootrre. Il alu U llt bow ui.varv for firearms and how to line them. How to load cartridges with the different kinds of black and inoaeleas powdera. It Klea traleetoiiea. ve loettlea, penetrattiina am iiiiriiuo oth' r points of lntem toaporninirn. 1XS pagea, tree, if you will aeiut atampa lor pnata?e to THI SAKUN FIXI ARKS CO., Vew Ravea.Ct, Brndtle. hrmamph tubtafflartin Runt Ueptlltr. M Si : .1 Mil ' " ! to Dream. A Paria merchant dreamed of hia daughter who died several years ago, and next morning, with hia dream still mournfully haunting his memory, mem-ory, something brought to his mind that it was one of the days on which the municipal lottery was open. To the lottery, thereupon, he went, being be-ing a man of sporting instinct, and his dream suggested the venture. His daughter having died at the age of 24 years, 13 days, 4 hours, he selected se-lected these three numbers to bet upon, and two of the three proved highly lucky. One on which he had laid 8s. 4d. brought him 250 times his stake, or 100, and the other 4,850 times his stake of 1 12s. 6d., or 8,80. London Tit-Bite. Blbcrlaa Banks Get More Latitude. The Russian minister of finance has accorded the Russo-Chinese bank and all its branches in East Siberia the specially valuable privilege of the free purchase of gold dust and nuggets, without demanding from the seller any proof of origin, says a St. Petersburg Peters-burg correspondent. Up to the present pres-ent this purchase of gold has been strictly prohibited by the Russian government, gov-ernment, and the concession is intended in-tended to 'paralyze the secret sale of this gold to other countries. The coming com-ing heavy purchases by the bank will strengthen the gold reserves in the Russian imperial bank, which have been greatly depleted by the expendi-ture expendi-ture over China N. Y. Sun. Strikes a Rich Find. "I was troubled for several years with chronic indigestion and nervous debility," writes F. J. Green, of Lancaster, Lan-caster, NT H. No remedy helped me until I bean using Electric Bitters, hich did iue more good than all Che medicines I ever used: They have also kept my wife in excellent health for years. She says Electric Bitters are just splendid for female troubles; that they are a grand tonic and in-vigorator in-vigorator for weak, run-down women. No other medicine can take its place in our family." Try them. Only 50 cents. Satisfaction guaranteed by the Sprfigville Drug Co. NOTICE. United Stutes Land Office, Ice, Salt Lake City. Utah. February , I'.KJl. To whom It may concern: Notice is hereby Riven that the State of Utah, has filed in this office a list, No. US. of lands selected by the said State for the establishment estab-lishment of bertnanent water reservoirs for Irrigation uuruoses, under Sec; Ion 12. of the Act of Congress approved July 10, 1804. The following tracts embraced in said list are in a townshiD containing mineral claims of record viz: The se se , sec. 27; and ue '4 tie H- sec. ''A. tp. 7 s., r. J c, . li. Mer. A copy of said list, so far as it relates to said tracts by descriptive suit divisions, lias been conspicuously posted in this office for inspection by any person interested, and by l'liVUllUIIJi!c,llIUIlil!IU. 1 ' ww- Within the next sixty days following the date of this notice, under departmental inst ructions of Nov. 27. IWXi (2J L I)., W.). protests pro-tests or contests against the claim of the Slate to any of the tiacts or subdivisions herein described, on the ground that the same is mote valuable for mineral than for agricultural purposes, will be received and noted for report to the general html office at Washington. I). C. Kailu-e so to protest, or contest within the time specified will be considered con-sidered siifliciciil evidence of the non-mineral character of said t racts, and the selection thereof, being other.vhe free from objection, will be recommended for approval. ' 1'kank 1). lloHiis. Geo. A. Sjirrn. Register. Ucceiver, First pub. February 21, I'.KM. Last pub. April IK, I'.Wl. Reaching the famous Hot Springs, Arkansas, "The Carlsbad Carls-bad of America." Also tlirect line to St. Louis and to all points South and Southeast. H. B. K00SER. C. F. & P. A. J. O. REiiER, T. F. & P. A, Suit Lake Cith, Utah. II.U.TOWNSEND, G. P. AT. A. St. Louis, Mo. Do you intend buying a rifle or pistol? If so, get the best which is a STEVENS Rifles range in price from f 1.00 to $75.00. For large and small game, also for target practice. Pistols from $3.50 to $20.00. u Bend stamp for large caUIoene illns-it .trating complete line, brimful 01 valuable f Information to sportsmen. jrkVW ' J. STETEIS 1BHS ARD TOOL C0.OMffl isi is. m-r.mm a emeoprr rma wcwe t- vh r-rx: v aM kMERlCAN FORESTRY Splendid Exhibit Planned for the Buffalo Exposition. Interesting- Feat area of tha Work Performed b)r the GoTtrsneat -Iatade4 as a tssoa for the People. ' Forestry will receive special attention atten-tion a( the Pan-American exposition to bo held in Buffalo next year.' Tbs exhibit will contain much that is interesting inter-esting and beneficial to the general public, a description of which will illustrate il-lustrate the great scope and broad lines upon which the exposition is founded. The propagation, care and preservation preserva-tion of forests has received a great deal of attention from the United States government of late years. The United States division of forestry under Oif-ford Oif-ford Pinchot hss made an unusually generous offer to&ll farmers or persons wishing to improve forests or plant wood lots. An expert will be sent upon application, at the expense of the government, who will make an examination examin-ation of the soil, climatic and atmospheric atmos-pheric conditions, after which he draws up a plan for planting. He also instructs the farmer and his heighbors. so far as possible in the elements of forestry. In the main this takes up the question of the proper kinds to plant in a particular soil and locality, the manner of planting and proper care of the trees until they attain mar turity, says the official bulletin. Particular attention has been given to tbe treeless regions of the middle west, especially to parts of Kajisas, Farmers throughout that section rec-o-nize the value of wood lots as a source of supply for fence posts and fuel, as well as the benefits of protection from storms which is afforded by tree belts, when grown for wind breaks. The necessity has been brought home to them by deprivation, accentuated accentu-ated in many cases by having once lived in one of the eastern states, when, in their younger days, timber was considered con-sidered a nuisance to be gotten rid of with the least possible delay and expense. ex-pense. They do not, however, appreciate appreci-ate the scientific advantages to the country at large, of proper forest influence, influ-ence, which results in protection against floods in spring and droughts in summer. The exhibit will take ty the broad question of forest preservation, preserva-tion, embracing the great national benefit ben-efit to be bequeathed to future generations, genera-tions, by a moistened atmosphere, which in turn will provide a regular, copious co-pious rainfall. One of the most Interesting features will he an illustrntion of the manner in which the mat of fallen leaves which covers the ground in the forest absorbs -the rain as it falls, instead of permitting permit-ting it to course down the hillside, to join the brook which helps to swell the river to overflowing. Distribution of moisture wi -1 ' 1 ii Jj'.i.-i-;riVl1',.i". d" or A, plain, us 11, e ;.fiiS ,."!1,Wcin the great chemical laboratory of nature. How the wet surface of leaves operates as an air tight covering to prevent undue evaporation, wh'le the myriads of tiny tree rootlets take up the water as it slon'.v percointts through thiseoverlng into the soil, from whence it is raised by a mysterious capillary force, through the trunk and branches to the leaves where it is given off in the form of vapor va-por through transpiration, to be once more precipitnted to the earth in the shower or dew that waters the growing crop. The great Importance of forest preservation pres-ervation in the United States is not ap-preciated ap-preciated by the general public. That the sentiment is growing is exemplified exempli-fied in the creation of forestry depart ments in our great universities. For more than a century the natural forests have been cut and destroyed until un-til in many parts of the country the people are brought ftoee to face with one of the greatest problems that ever confronted them. This problem, in its intricacies. Involves not only the supply sup-ply of building material, pulp wood for the manufacture of the largest amount of paper required by any country and the millions of other articles, both large and small, that are manufactured or derived de-rived from wood, but It Includes the question of soil fertility, upon which depends both individual and national existence. India's famine Is a terrible illuKtra-tion illuKtra-tion of the great danger that confronts a people whose lands are stripped of their natural foreRt gTowth. The danger dan-ger may be exaggerated and is probably prob-ably remote, but the underlying prin ciple is t.nere. The forestry exhibit at the. Pan-American Pan-American exposition will be housed in a building which of itself will be an Interesting In-teresting exhibit. With splendid natural nat-ural resources to draw from, and the advanced knowledge of forestry ns a help, it is the intention to make this the most interesting and practical forestry for-estry exhibit ever brought together. Aad Hera Comae tha Anto-Sled. " I Automatic machinery, automobiles, j auto-fire engines, auto-busses, auto-drays, auto-drays, auto-bicycles have followed each other so fast that the tramp is hoping there may be Invented some-thing some-thing in the line of an "auto-work" : that ladies lalk about when he ask them for his daily bread. Put, among all the horseless vehicles, where is the auto-sled? Ira Peavy, of linngor, Me., where "mobes" are about as Scarce a bufTnln. n.11 Slti.ra - He ha inur mrnia ml iv.l. J J - ........ h iininti j in nyirii ten feet lonir, four feet wide and I th ree feet high which will be driven over snow or ice by a 20-hortte power engine. The runners are steel cly-inders, cly-inders, each ten feet long and 24 Inches hi diameter, and having a strip i of steel wound spirally around it and securely fastened to its outside. The ; cylinders are revolved by the engina and their screw motion forces the sled along. Little Chronicle. I GOLD IN -PHILIPPINES Plenty of Precious Metal In Our New Islands. ktaar Americana Now Engaged iB aarfaca Operatlona Interesting- Partlcolara by Mlnlna; Authorlty. The subject of gold to be found in our newly acquired Pacific island is treated in the Engineering and Mining Journal by O. I). lUce. He says that although there is plenty of the pre-. cious metal in the Philippines, it cannot can-not be obtained in any considerable amounts without the erection of larga stamp-mills or smelting-plants, and that the man who is looking for gold without great capital had better enter en-ter the field simply as a dealer, buy-lug buy-lug up the accumulated hoards of tha natives in the Interior. Mr. Rich tells us that, generally speaking, the gold is found either in alluvial deposits or in ledges and veins. The former pay best at present., and numerous discharged dis-charged soldiers and civilians are already al-ready making considerable nioney from operating on the river banks in tbe foothills. Says Mr. Rice: "Some miner in the Philippines claim to have made large profits by working the sands and beaches on the seacoast. I saw one place along tha beaches of Panay where there was mining apparatus in operation for a mile or more getting out the gold deposits, de-posits, which probably had been washed into the ocean in the currents of some river and deposited along the shores The gold obtained seemed to be very fine and worn smooth by long action of the waters. Evidently the original lodgment of this gold was In some far-away mountain, and it was washed to the sens by the rivers. Much of this gold was invisible and would be classed under the head of Hour gold. "Placer gold in the Philippines always al-ways has a smoother appearance for the reason that it is tumbled about in the ravines and along the river-courses for a long time before it reaches a place of deposit in the shores of some rive'r o,r at the beaches. The natives have been at work getting gold for nearly 100 years, and some of them have secured large stores of the valuable valu-able metal without knowing its true Value I have entered nipa shacks of the natives fjr a resting-place through the night and have been shown the collections of gold and other metals of the native father and his family. Although the shack may not be worth ten dollars and there may be a shortage of the necessaries of life, the nalhe miner will be able to exhibit a bagful bag-ful of nuggets about the size of peas, most of them being flattened nnd worn. Flour gold, too, will be seen, but this is the kind that the native sells or disposes dis-poses of in some way first and he keeps the nuggets. In fact, in almost every portion of the arcliipelaco. until tie past few months, there has been prac tically no profitable way for the nnthe m i nersTi" Vha'nge "Li's " VcastlrTittTT" commercial money. He has had to do ' ims uiirienng with gold, and frequent ly .the gold has had but little current cur-rent value in sections of the islands which have been cut off from the outside out-side world. I have Feen natives in actual want w ho were possessors of little lit-tle boxes of gold. "A far richer field to work in the Philippines than prospecting just now Is to go among these isolated mountain towns and barrios for the purpose of purchasing this accumulation of gold in me naiKis of natives who have not the ability to dispose of if. There are many of the natives who never go more than five miles from their homes during dur-ing their lives, nnd they might have several thousand dollars' worth of gold which they have collected since they could work, and have not been able to get the benefit of it for want of means for changing it into commercial commer-cial money. Large amounts of this gold could be bought up and shipped to the seneoast for transportation to America or other countries, and the returns would be profitable. "It Is evident that there will not be any extensive mining operations in the Philippines until parties with capital enter the field and nut un Ktamn-miii or smelting-plants There are some rich lodes in the mountains of the outbern isiandg of the rhi,i)p,n(,gi and in less than five years Rome of the promoters of mining schemes there are going to make a great amount of money. There arc thousands of natives na-tives available for service in the mines at the low rate of wages of ten tofif-teen tofif-teen cents per day, while there arc a greatnumber of Chinese coolies here who would work for even less than that. There are at present some American Amer-ican miningconcerns represented here and steps are being taken to put in' necessary equipment to utilize the veins of quartz which have been lo-eated. lo-eated. I have been through the mining min-ing sections of Panay, part of Luzon, Mindanao and several otlr iiami and in every instance the samplea of gold ore were promising." Arab! Paah.'. LoB Kllle tw Bld It is said that the anniversary of the succession of the khedive of I Lgypt will be signalized by the par-j par-j don of Arabi Pasha, who has been held by the Uritish as a prisoner of j war on the island of Ceylon for 20 ; years. He was an Ecvotinn m.Rnt but by genius and great outrage had' risen to a high ponition In the service 1 the fie khedive khedive. In 1881 he started the movement against the deRiiotic ruie oi iurKey that secured for his country a parliament formed on western west-ern models and reforms thst were greatly 'needed. His success alarmed the European creditors of Kgypt, who were obliged to look to the sultan for their puy, and a Uritish army with the cooperation of the fleet defeated Arabi and hia forces. Little Chronicle. Chron-icle. i . . , ... Warm rings WlitoiStil pi xir A large Pool for Men. Henry they do not All reliable dealers sell Winchester goods. FREE: trated Catalogue It Pays- to H ave Neatly-Printed Stationery. The Successful business man says that it isEso. AIVJ3 HE See The Job Up -to -Date Printing. Their? CUonk Suits! A BOON TO D" TABLET'S BUCKEV 2 -jZrtrr, nS S1?.'ZZuC2 m n tft 7? Ir-V " iitrf 'iiswrkni A New Discovery for the Certain Cure cf INTERNAL and EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN. CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED. Tubes, by Mail, 75 Cents; Bottles, 60 Cents. JAMES K BALLARD, Sole iWiefor, - 310 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. Mm r.aMMi)i ..- r mmm j Safety of "iTO iVIilojs an Hocir Ever on the alert for tho safely of ils nitrons uml its employees the Burlington Route is now equipping nil its passenger engines with electric hendlights. They flend forlh it stream of light that ouri bo seen it dozen miles ttway that euls through the darkness like a knife that innkes traveling at 70 miles un hour safer limn at 40 miles an hour with the old-style oil lamps. Worth while troint: enst via the Burlinizton fr the sole fiafetv device purpose Ticket Office, It. V. NKSLKN", General Private Baths. Barnes, Prop. Siilt Lake City, Utah. SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT WINCHESTER Rifles, Repeating; Shotguns, Ammunition and' Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and ammunition are the standard of the world, but cost any more than poorer makes. Send name on a postal for 150 page lllus describing all the guns and ammunition made by the WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., NGW HAVEN. CONN. KIVOWS. Independent Dei'rtment for MANKIND PILE ' -f-.f Sa. aa.anaa i ' fwmmif & an uo7 w ft at faaaa of studying this .ejest 79 West Second South St. nr.... Agent, Salt Lakk Cliv. aSSEH |