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Show ..WO SIGNALS. DTAII STATE NEWS. Taster Sunday found the Sevier val-- ' ley under a mantle of snow. A number of tho labor organizations of Ogden have Inaugurated a boycott against the Chinese mttauianls. The Mt. Pleasant Oil & Gas company last week lot contracts for tho sinking of two oil wells near that town. There are 11, DSD pupils In the Salt Lake public schools, according to the report for March, of whom 53 are colored. Ephraim Is to have a baseball team this season, tt being the Intention to meet any and all amateur teams In the state. cases of There were but thirty-threclose the at Lake In Salt City smallpox of the week, the disease being on tho decrease. Hans Mathias Nlsson, aged 80, a of Utah, died at Ephraim last week. He came to Utah with an ox e pio-nee- are There d team in 1800. A volunteer fire brigade Is being organized at Richfield for the purpose of handling the chemical engine and taking charge at fires. Last week 42,000 brook trout were planted in the streams near Mt. Pleasant, and the streams are to be closed to fishermen for two years. The Tcport of the secretary of state for the first quarter of the year, 1903, shows that tho total amount of fees taken In by that office to be 815,242.35. The records of the county clerks office of Salt Lake county for the past year ahow that for every six marriages there has been one application for divorce. Private tauls Peterson suicided at Fort Douglas Friday of last week, by slashing his throat from ear to ear with a raz''". There was apparently no cause for the dead. Ella Wheeler Wilcox, the gifted writer, will be the guest of the Utah State Kindergarten association at Its annual meeting to be held In Salt Lake City April 17th and 18th. The price of salt took a Jump last week. For the past six months coarse salt has been delivered to wholesale dealers of Salt Lake for $5.50 per ton, but now they are compelled to pay $9. A new lodge of Elks was instituted new memat Provo last week, fifty-one bers being admitted. targe numbers from other towns attended, there being two bands and 220 Elks In the herd that attended. The Utah commission of the coming Lewis and Clarke exposition at Portland last week decided that a fruit exhibit shall form an important part of Utah's agricultural showing at tho exposition. The Socialist party of Utah held a convention in Salt Lake City last week and elected Btate officers. About eighty members of the party were present and every part of the state was represented. The members of tho Utah Press association will be entertalnod by the Provo pencil pushers on the 20th. At the banquet Senator Smoot will re' spond (o the toast, Senators and Newspaper Men. It is claimed that the MofTat road now being constructed from Denver to Salt Lake will be pushed through without delay. There are 2,000 men now engaged in the work, and the company has plenty of capital behind It. Mayor Thompson of Salt take haa sent an invitation to President Roosevelt and party to Join in a buffalo hunt on Antelope Island. The Invitation has been sent on behalf of John H. White, who has placed the island and the buffalo at the disposal of the party tor one day. Thomas Carrett, Jr., of American Fork, was driving a team attached to a field roller when the horses became frightened and ran away, Rarrett falling under the roller, which passed over him, badly crushing the bones In one . pres-dentl- leg. Violet Padfleld, aged 9, wbllo crossing the railroad track near American Fork, was struck by an engine and Instantly killed, her neck being broken. Three of the girl's brothers were killed In the Scofield mine Ulsnsier four years ago. Miss UeaMe Knecht, tho young Salt take girl who has been asleep for over forty-fivdays, still sleeps. At times she rallies slightly, but soon relapses Into an unconscious condlton. Tho doctors are much puzzled over her tondl-tlos- . e John Mlnact, an Italian, was thawing out giant powder at Kyune when the powder took fire and Mlnaci put one of his feet down on the powder to put out the fire, with the result that the powder exploded and blew oft one of his feet Glass Jars twelve feet high and correspondingly wide will be used to exhibit Utah fruit, in a preserved state, at the St, tauia and Portland expositions, if a firm can be found which can make such vessels at a cost within the bounds of reason. Governor Wells bss appointed George Halverson district attorney of the Socond Judicial district, to succeed Judge A. H. Hayes, who resigned that office nearly four weeks ago. The salary of the attorney for the Second di Irtct Is 2,0o0 per year. two serious ITS fji DEATH AND DESOLATION DEALT BY TORNADO. signalsIlls. Kidney The first al slg-- n com es numer- ous aches and pains. The signal In second comes the Kid- secre- ney tions. urine The& is thin and pale, too highly or colored, and showing a like deposit Urination is infrequent too frequent or excessive. You should heed these danger signals before chronic complications set in Diabetes, Dropsy, Brights Disease. Take Doans Kidney Pills In tlms and the cure Is simple. J. F. Wainwrlght, of the firm of Bones ft Wainwrlght painters and contractors, Pulaski, Va., says: "Four or five times a year for the past few years I have suffered with severe attacks of pain in my back, caused from 1 kidney trouble. During these spells was In such misery from the constant pain and aching that it was almost impossible for me to stoop or straighten and it really seemed as it the whole small of my back bad given away. At times I also had difficulty with the kfifney secretions which were discolored, irregular and scalding, and I was also greatly distressed with headaches nd dizziness. I used a number of recommended remedies but I never found anything so successful as Doan's Kidney Pills. When I heard of them I had an attack and procured a box of them. In a few days the pain and lameness disappeared, the trouble with the kidney secretions was corrected and my system was improved generally. I have every confidence in Doan's Kidney Pills. A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mr. Wain-wrlgwill be mailed to any part of the United States on application. AdCo., Buffalo, N. dress Foster-MilburY. For sale by all druggists, price 50 cents per box. brick-dus- t ht n NOT MEANT FOR THE HOUSE. Put Kansas Statesman In Embarrassing Position. Representative A. D. Morris ot Schuyler county had an experience in the House the other day, that was somewhat mortifying to him for a short time. He had been writing a letter to his wife. In his baste to prepare an amendment to a resolution that was pending he mistakenly wrote it on the back of a sheet of paper In the letter and sent It to the clerks desk. He arose at the same time and said: Mr. Speaker, 1 wish to offer an amendment. "The gentleman from Schuyler, Mr. Morris offers an amendment, said Speakei Pro Tem. Dunean. Read It, Mr. Clerk." Clerk Jeff Pollard, with a quizzical expression, began In an unusually loud voice: My dear Mag gie I find myself awfully lonesome here without you Hold on, there, Mr. Clerk, yelled Morris. That's not right That's the wrong 'side. the House held itsv sides to laugh, while Morris sunk into his seat with a very red face, and Clerk Pollard turned tho paper and began to read the resolution. Kansas City Journal. Mistake Year's Gifts to Charity. Some curious facta in the matter of large gifts for charity during last year are given in Appletons AnnuaL Of the immense amount given for s educational purposes were contributed by persons still living, while of the total for came work foreign missionary through bequests. The gifts and bequests, allowance being made for the breaking of tome wills, aggregate (58,346,789, divided as follows: Educational 120.127,525; institutions, church and Young Men's Christian Association work, 87.588,820; foreign missionary work, (263, 5o0; benevolent societies, (4.364,724; hospitals museums and asylums, (26,480,958; and art Institutions, (6.372,422; New York Historical So(942,440: ciety, (50,000. But They May Be Happy Yet Accounts have been given of the marriage at Atchison of Lieut. Jerome Pillow and Miss Mary Hether-lngtoAt the wedding supper, according to the Globe, Mr. Pillow was called on for a speech. Ho arose and said: "While 1 was at West Point I was taught to keep my mouth shuL and 1 have adhered to the rule ever since" Then the bride was called on for a speech. She arose and said: While at SL Marys I was taught to talk all the time, and I have practiced the rule ever alnco. But how sad It is to see such a spirit of contradiction and contrariness mads manifest even befors the honeymoon had commenced. Kansas City Jourfive-sixth- nal Religious Condition of England. While the Church of England Is schools upon thousands of maintained from public funds being converted into preserves for the inculcation of Us particular dogmas, all churches are losing their hold over the masses, sid the national religion Is becoming a vague agnosticism. Peo pis may regrit this, but regret does not alter fact, and nothing is gained by blinking It. London Truth. FREE A In the Fertile Wheat Fields of Western Canada. The emigration of farmers trom the United States to the Canadian Northwest has assumed such proportions that organized efforts are now being made by Interested persons and corporations to News has been received at Ever- stem the tide. The efforts are being green, Alabama, by telephone, con- initiated chiefly by railway and real firming the rumors of heavy loss of estate interests In the states from life and property In the neighborhood which the bulk of the em'gratlon takes of Peterman and Ilurntcorn, wrought place. The movement of population has taken from numerous states thouby the tornado which passed near of persons whose presence Ten persons are sands there Tuesday. railways in these states made along known to have been killed, numerous business for the transportation combarns and residences and outhouses panies. The movement haa also bewere swept away, entailing a loss come so widely known that it has prewhich will reach high In the thou- vented the settlement of vacant lands sands. Ow account of the bad condi- along these lines, parties who might attracted to tions of the wires, communication is have located there being lands of Canand more fertile free the difficult and the only name that could ada. The result of the movement has be obtained of the dead Is Henry Sal- been that the railway companies not ter, a well known planter. Several only see the vacant lands along their residences were demolished, the tim- lines remain vacant, but they also see ber falling on the occupants, killing hundreds of substantial farmers who or injuring all within the buildings. It have helped provide business for these will probably be several days before a railways move away and so cease their The farmers have correct list of the casualties can be contributions. moved to Canada because they were obtained, as there is neither telegraph convinced that It would be to their nor railroad connection. The heavy financial interest to do so. In moving rains have rendered the roads almost they have been inconsiderate enough to place their own financial Interests impassable. before those of the financial Interests READS LIKE A ROMANCE. of the railway corporations. In addition to the railway corpora Helres to Fortune Found Living tlons, real estate dealers are working Of Among Cree Indians. to stem the flow of emigrants. Mathilda Youngqulst, long thought course every emigrant who goes to to he dead, the heiress to a large es- Canada means the loss of commissions tate at Stockholm, Sweden, has been on land deals by real estate dealers. but to know what found living among the Cree Indians Now a person has interests are that are trying to the as a member of the tribe. A gold ring stop the flow to know what motive is given her by her father and mother, influencing their course. The emigrawho were killed in a raid by the Creea tion means financial loss to railway many years ago, has established her corporations and to real estate men. diidentity. When John Anderson, a These Interests therefore are not of out efforts relative, appeared at Kalispell, Mon- recting their opposition for love emigrants the departing any tana, a year ago, and made Inquiries or out of any high patriotic motives for a family named Youngqulst, no one either. They are doing so purely from could aid him. Finally he met an old selfish interests. It is a matter of dolresident who remembered that many lars and cents with them. They are so years ago Frank Youngqulst had tried patriotic, they are so consumed by that they to operate a ranch In the extreme love for their northern part of the state near what want to prevent thjse is now tho Blackfoot reservation. Oue going to Canada and getting free farms of the best wheat land In the day the ranch was raided by Cree Inworld, and Instead they want to make dians, who killed Mr. and Mrs. Youngfarms In the them stay on qulst and carried away their little United States, where they will conbaby girl, Mathilda, then 4 years old. tinue to pour money into the pockets Mr. Anderson met the girl with a hand of these railways and real estate men. One of the methods employed by of Crees. She remembered nothing of her parents, she said, except that they these interests lo stem the tide Is the were white like Anderson. All she distribution of matter to newspapers, Canada In the darkest colors. had left to remember them by was a painting These articles emanate chiefly from a litllo gold ring. , There was an In- bureau in SL Louis. They are sent scription on th inside of this ring, but out at frequent intervals for simulas she could not read she did not taneous publication. A writer la emknow what It was. Anderson read ployed at a high salary to prepare the the inscription, which established tho matter. Moreover, statements absolutely at Identity of the ornament. It reads: 'To Mathilda from Papa and Mamma variance with the truth have lately Ten Lives Known to be Lost, While the Property Loss Will Be Great-De- tails Are Incomplete. from the back with ALABAMA'S TURN SECURE To the Editor:- - well-to-d- o fellow-citizen- s, fellow-citizen- high-price- Yov.ngqul.st, 1SS5." Anderson and tho girl will go to Sweden Immediately. TERRORIZED THE TOWN. Masked Men Loot Postoffice in a Washington Village. Two masked outlaws held up the village of Ferndalo, Wash., Tuesday night, shot at every man who appeared on the streets, robbed the postofllce of (150. and succeeded in making their escape without leaving the slightest clue to their- Identity. The outlaws made tholr first appearance In the postofllce, where they ordered the postmaster to deliver to them the contents of his till. The postmaster refused, and, while one robber kept him covered, the other emptied the contents of the till into a sack. Nothing but money was taken. Four men who were In the office when the robbers came In were compelled to leave, the robbers firing their revolvers over their heads as they took their departure. Before leaving, a dozen more shots were fired by the - robbers. CAUSED BY A CRAWFISH. Break In the Levee Near New Orlean Due to Hit Tunneling. Water Is pouring tbrougn a crawfish hole eighteen to twenty Inches in diameter near tho base of the Waterloo levee, on the cast bank of tho river, about seventy miles abovo Now Orleans, and fear is expressed that before a run around can bo built the weakened leveo will give way. A break at this point would bo disas- trous. Planned to Free Prisoners. The sheriff at Great Falls, Mont., on Tuesday last frustrated an attempt mado at a general delivery of prisoners. The ringleaders In the attempt were Smith and Vain, arrested a few days ago on a charge of burglary. They had laid the plans to free all of the prisoners In the place, to kill a guard or two If necessary, in order to get away, but at tho last minute tho officials became aware of the plot and locked the men in separate cells, whore they were unable to make a move. Funtral Without a Corpse. A funeral without a dead man has taken place at Asbury Tark. Jacob Ileywood died recently at Jacksonville, Fla., whore he was spending the winter. Arrangements were made' for the funeral services to be held, but Promise to Read Bible Dally for some resson tho body did not arC. ot W. Bishop, minister The Rev. rive. Many relatives snd friends were South eburea. Concord, Mass., Is a tally Bible class of 139, assembled, and they agreed that the who have inrollsd and promised to services should go on. The body arread dally. Tha present courts on ths rived from the south the next mornhistory of Israel wlU cover sight ing and was buried In a suburban cem. months. etery. eon-ducti- ng . s of Vessel Which Took Part In Battle Beached. Manila Boy Floated and Tho warship Relna Christina, flagwhich was ship of Admiral Montcjo, floated was sunk by Admiral Dewey, skeletons The and, beached Monday. of about eighty of her crew were found In the hulk. One skeleton was had evidently that of an officer, for it fifare There side. Its a sword by the of hull In the holes shell teen Relna Christina, one mado by an eight-inc- h shell and others smaller. The main Injection valve Is missing, showabaning the ship was scuttled and doned. The hull Is in fair condition. Captain Albert R. Couden, commanding the naval station at Cavite, took charge of the remains of the sailors, expressing a desire to give them an American naval funeral. The Spanish residents are anxious, however, to ship the skeletons to Spain, and It is suggested that the transport Sumner convey them to Spain by way of the Suez canal In June. A wrecking company is endeavoring to raise all the sunken Spanish warships. PRODIGY Ntw Jersey IS DEAD. Man Known as the Light- ning Calculator. William Vallance, the famous lightning calculator, who could do any sum in mathematical calculation mentally and with but an instants hesitation. Is dead at Trenton, N. J., aged 30 years. Vallance could duplicate the feats of any of the lightning calculators and beat them all by stating Instantly any desired date in history. He could not tell how he knew history, but would rattle off fact after fact He without ever making a mistake. could give Instant answer to such arithmetical questions as multiply In algebra 389,487, by 4,641. Feats were his delight. BACKACHE Backache la a forerunner READ MISS Seating of Senator Smoot Haa No Bearing on Final Action of Case. Senator Julius C. Burrows, chairman of the committee on privileges and elections, says that the fact that Reed Smoot was allowed to take his seat as senator from Utah will temporarily been published broadcast. These aphave no bearing on the final action of letto be In what purport pear chiefly ters from persons who are alleged to the committee. The committee will have gone to Canada and become dis- take up tho protests early in the comand will try to reach a degusted with It Only a few of such ing session have been published, and they contain cision as soon as possible. statements that are absurd In their Carnegie Has Given Away Over Sixty-seve- n falsity. Whether the parties whose Million Dollars. names appear In connection with these letters have ever been In Canada, and, 'The bureau of education has Issued if so, their history while there. Is to a bulletin giving in detail the benefacbe thoroughly looked into. The dis- tions of Andrew Carnegie. These bencovery of their motive, like the dis- efactions have the eaormous reached covery of the motive of the Interests sum of of which (52,2170,-17- 3 (67.212,923, who are engineering the opposition, been has meanin the In United given the illumining. may prove time, however, it may he pointed out States. Mr. Carnegie's gifts for 1901 that only a few of such letter have are given at (30,243,500. appeared, but since 1897 over 87,000 Insane Man's Crime. American settlers have gone to the While temporarily deranged, Frank Canadian West Can any reasonable person suppose for a moment that it Hursh of Erie, IUb., ten miles east of as bad as repCanada was Clinton, Iowa, shot and killed bis wife resented in these letters the 87,004 while on the way to church, and then Amerlcns now there would remain la home returned and killed himBelf. Canadian West if the the country; or, had net proved the truth ot all that Their little daughter startled the conwas claimed for It, the papers of every gregation by running into church and state in the American Northwest telling of the tragedy. would not be filled with letters saying Indiana Man Punishes Himself for so? Imagine 87,000 aggressive AmerGetting Drunk. icans deceived and not making Bhort William Stewart, aged 45, is slowly shift of their deceivers. The fact is the 87,000 are well satisfied and ars starving himself in the Knox county, encouraging their friends to follow Indiana, Jail, the result of his vow to them. the Lord that he would fast for Anyone who sees any of these disdays as a punishment for should remember that twenty-onparaging letters It is railway and real estate Interests a spree he indulged In about two who have from purely selfish reasons weeks ago. Stewart is rapidly wastorganized a campaign to stem tbs ing away, and whon the county prisonIt Canada were halt ers wore removed from tho old flow to Carada. Jail to as bad as represented there would be the new structure, which has Just been no need of such an organization. The Is much speculation as to whethor ho tart that such exists Is of itself a mag- will live to finish his promise. nificent tribute to Canada. Finally It Moors Are Fighters. should r.ct bs forgotten that tho letters Official dispatches from Mellila, Mopublished are brimful of falsehoods, and that 87.000 satisfied Americans In rocco, announce that the insurgent the Canadian West constitute a living Moors have captured tho fortress of proof that such Is the cane. FraJama. A part of the garrison esThe Canadian Government agent and took refuge In Mellila. Tho caped whose name appears in advertisement elsewhere in this paper is authorized Insurgents exploded a mine beneath to give all Information as to rates snd a portion of the wall of the fortress Available lands in Western Canada. and then delivered an assault through the broach made by the explosion. Tho Fan. Lady Beauchamp's Seventy ladles of New South Wales garrison hold out for some time and have sent a fan to Lady Beauchamp. then fled Into Spanish territory. The took possession of the arms The fan Is made of white ostrich Spaniards of the fuglUves and attendod their Barra-doug- h feathers from the wounded. ostrich farm at South Head. The tortoiseshell sticks are ornaCharged With Murder. mented with a monogram In AustraOllle Sanders, Kim Davis and James lian silver, while the handle pivot and Andres, threo colored mon held by the mountings are of Australian gold. Indianapolis pollro, were on Monday Look for this Trade Mark; "Th Knot Indicted by the grand Jury and will KJn, Kitchen Kind. Th Move without amoks, have to answer to a charge of mur sake or heat. Make eotn'ortahl rooking. der in the first degree. They are Snow Will Stop Rifls Bulls!. charged with the murder of Doc Lung,1 A Mr.rtlnl rifle bullet fired at a a Chinese Inundryman, distance of fifty yards will not pass ago. The trial of Dr. several months Joseph Alexanthrough a wall or snow (our feel der on the charge of grave robbing thick. has been Indefinitely postponed the negroes undor Indictment have refused to testify against him. one-quart- e BOLLMAffS EXPERIENCE Some time ago 1 was in s vn weak condition, mr work made nervous and my back ached frightful!? all the time, and I had terrible head t aches My mother got bottle of Lydli E. Plnkhams Vegetable Com. to, pound for me, and it seemed strengthen my back and help m u once, and I did not get so tired it before. I continued to take it, and it brought health and strength to and I want to thank you for me,, th Miss Eati good it haa done me. Boixuaw, 142nd SL ft Wales An., New York City. $5000 forfeit ItarlglmHf Sou letter groolng genutneneee cannot iepruhnu Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures because it ii the greatest known remedy for: kidney and womb troubles. Every woman who is puzzled about ber condition should writ to Mrs. Pinkhara at Lynn, Man,1 and tell ber alL SLAIN IN RIOT. Officer Killed at California Mining Camp Three Others Hurt Sheriff Broadnax of San Diego, Cal., has received a brief telegram from Constable Horan at Picacho, saying that there has been a riot at that place and that Deputy Constable Peter Burke had been shot and killed, and that others had been wounded. Sheriff Broadnax at once left for the scene. Picacho is a mining camp on the Colorado river about 150 miles east of San Diego, and thirty miles north of Yuma. and, one of the most common symp.! toms of kidney trouble womb displacement LAUGH AND BE WELL Effective Prescription That Should It f Easy to Fill. Be Jolly by all means. The late is the "laughter cure," which has the merit of being rational If nothk else, for from time Immemorial fit effect of a good hearty laugh has b regarded as a healthy tonic for fiL melancholic and a restorative for fit' depressed. Another ancient physician recoo mended a good laugh as a powerf. means of desopilatlng the spleen, whatever that may mean; while i third writes of laughter rs "a mlgh.' stimulant to the liver and a lifter-of the heart. Coming to more cent times, Foussagrlves believe, mirth to be the most powerful lever health, while Tissot claims to hs cured scrofulous children by ttckllt them and making them laugh. r- Drug Drinking In London. The new license act In London hirr brought to light the fact that a gre' quantity of drugs that cannot h brought within the meaning of IK act as Intoxicants are drunk by j I pie, upon whom it has the effect t'j habitual drunkenness. Among thlc?f tnat are thus consumed are methyli' ed spirits and eau de cologne, and th Is prevale:, especially practice among society people, chiefly wome-who would resent the imputation th 1 they wore drunkards. J QUIT AND EAT. 8ome Coffe Tales. j Show a woman an easy, comfort-bland healthful way to improve tr? complexion and she is naturally t( terested. Coffee is the one greatest enemy fair women, for in the most of car it directly affects the stomach p'l duclng slight, and sometimes gta congestion of th liver and thereto causing the bile to be absorbed the system Instead of going Its u ural way. The result is a tallo, muddy skin and a train of dlseaves if the different organs of the - to-- I j which, in all too many cases, devei into chronic diseases. J A lady speaking of how coffee a fected her says: "I was very fond 4 coffee but while drinking it was t? der the care of the doctor most of time for liver trouble, and was cH polled to take blue mass a great id of the time. My complexion was b and I had a pain In my aide stead; probably in the liver. When I concluded to quit cofj and take Postum Food Coffeo I b It made carefully and from the wj first cup we liked the tasto of It h ter than any of the old coffee. In a short time the pain left sldo and my friends began to o ment on th change In tny complei and genoral looks. I have never w anything equal to the good I got to' f making this change. "A young lawyer In Fhlladclp' named , whose life was lmos: burden from Indigestion and Its to of evils, quit coffee some months and began on Postum Food Co?', He quickly recovered and is now strong and cheerful and naturt-louin his praises of Postum. Another friend, an old gentle -of heventy, named , who for y suffered all one could suffer and It from dyspepsia, nnd who somotl-foweeks could eat no bread or food, only a little weak grnel or t quit coffee upon my recommend nnd took up Postum. He began tf better at onee.' Now he ran eat r pastry or whatever he likes aib peifactly well. I 'antes given by Postum Co., Ue Creek, Mleh., r wlC IF i! . . & W |