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Show J - r A FOHW1ER v - - f'V AMERICAN 8AY& MUmM LuA Md )Un TUa IHwkM Tblr blrak. Th.tr )mU a - - Tha following fetter; written by Mr. John CuBiDingf of Wetatkiaia, Albert. CBada, formerly of Washing fon, to a friend in the tutted States. one of a hundred similar cases Is ' andonly what was done by Ur. Cummlngt can wore easily be done today by any good, sober and Industrious fame mho chooses to make his home in the dominion. Dear Sir. You want to know how 1 iot along since 1 came into Northern Alberta. 1 am happy to Inform you ghat I am not ashamed to tell. Wa located live rnilea northeast of Wetaakiwlu; left ParmlagtoB, Wash, bn the 25th day of May. driving all the We had tlmfe to build ' our may. log house the first fail, and to make ;tis comfortable for the family and stock. We thtn built four stables. Its to Inside, so that wa rould gut every thing inside them when the cold got down to the fifties, and worked hard getting op the stables, and got through dubbing on the 1st of December; but. do our snrpriir we had no use for the table only for the milk row and two pans of hersts The balance of tbs Ifcorses lived on the prairie alt winter, and took rare of thsmsrlte. The doors of two stahl. s weir i.ft open for them but they Co go Into in a eujd time, mould not do it. but stayed out on the prairie the lo'iWt night we had and looked as apt y as (tickets. batk of my bouse I ctn go leu ri and count ten residents. I know all tt their c in u m 44 tue. Hvery one of Them have doubled their cultivated land, and doubled their animals, and a great deal more. All of us are com- out of debt and as Caratively to thresh and prospects of fair price, end I expect we are as well contented a lot of people as there Is to he found from Florida to the Klondike My son bought two pounds of twine to the acre, and when we etsrted to bind sow barley we found tbst in tteed of taking two pounds to the acre. It was taking nearly five pounds. Then Jrou ought to have seen him hitch up a team and make for town for 100 pounds ignore. I cannot say bow it will thresh. Ail I can say la that U is wnd takes an enormous amount of twine. t 4i Ybe sr.. lm ur. I. Co-si- vU he colls whies tom- of tho Uwwm Body Ufo, k...i.di. pom Of The scientific world is now interest-- , ed in the experliuenls and discoveries the w or'uL of Prof. Metschuiaofl greatest bacteriologist The modest statements which he has given out lead to the belief tbst he is on the way to solve the problem of prolonging human life. For ages physicians and philosophers have contended that the age of man should be greater than three score years and ten According to the law of Floureus, warm blood animals live just five times the period necessary for their long bones to complete ossification. This period applied to man makes his age limit 100 years, which is believed to be correct, unless accident occurs to prevent it' The statements and theories of Prof, hfetsebnikoff are not based on Idle dreahis, hopes or prophecies, but upon years of careful experimenting which has rendered dlscoverte that are accepted by the scientific world and has placed the discoverer is the front rank I yond 125 -- years and hundred, bTI passed the century mark. The tables of the great life Insurance I companies of the present day prove conclusively that 'he rpn of human life is lengthening A person cq jD. I sure hie life tod?; ' a eims Ur Bor4 rwwnal)l9 u,an Us father eould feav j secured. la iLc ardd!- - if the present was a llttis century the ave .g- - of more than 32 je. re" It is fully years Thun t!. n'linge death rate rt bun4; now ' ws 26 for every l ' ct ' cWmtH u he ut countries in which nc Heine is pur- sued as a science an in which hygiene has been promoted hJW this general prolongation of human Ufa. 1 i CUPID PLAYS Sfflr PRANKS. QUEER Vni of n,Ml KradU Today, Although many men and women of celebrity have been unfortunate In affairs of the heart, the great majority bad different stories to tell. Many women deserve, but few women receive, such an L O. U a that which Hood gave his wife. "I never waa anything, dearest, until I kDew you, and 1 have been a better happier and more prosperous man ever since. Lay the truth in lavender, sweeteat, and remind me General Gordon of It when I fall said he never married because he never found a woman prepared to accomthe end rid the earth. pany hin Such a woman Sir Henry Lawrence did find. She went with him Into nearly every place In India wber hla work brought him, however dangerous or difficult. On August 22. 1620, Oliver Cromwell married Ellnbeth Boucher, daughter of a knight and wealthy Lon don merchant Mrs. Cromwell may not have had much character, but her husband never ceased to love her, and thirty yea is after their marriage he wrote to her (the day after Duo-ba- r) : "Truly, if 1 love you not too well, 1 think i err not on the other hand too much. Thou art, dearer to me than For any creature, let that suffice." forty-thre- e years the great lawyer and agitator, Daniel O'Connell, poured out hi heart to his wife like a schoolboy In love for the first time, Ills first thoughts were always of her; and neither the lapbo of years nor tbe tremendous pressure of his pofesslonal and political engagements teems ever to have' prevented bt wrltltg regularly to her letters which la later years he used to call iheJlflYeJsitera-o- t your old husband it ts pleasant to find harmony In the house of fi peat musical composer as well as la Us compositions. There was no discordant note In the matrimonial duet wUth Moxart and his wife played together. For years she was an Invalid, ud he nsed to write by her bedside whiit she slept When he went out in the bo ruing for a ride be would steal softy into her room and leave a tender, tee to greet her waking. Here It on if them; 1 wish you good morning, my dear little wife. T hope you btv aim. well, and that nothing ha dsfSed your repose. De careful not to take cold, not to rise too quickly, sot ts stoop, not to reach for anything to be angry with the servant. Taka care also not to fall upon the threshold In passing from one room to soother. Keep all domestic troubles Dll 1 come, which will be soon." PROFESSOR METSCHNIKOFF. piece of fiction entitled Tbs Killing of the Mammoth, published in Ma- cf scientists He ha proven that ail tin res some months ago, was taken by life forms are groupings of simple to&ny readers aa a record of fact as cells, and that each class of cells perInach to the anrprise aa to tha regret of forms a dlUnct office. He discovered the editors. In the present number, that the office of certain of these ceils was to devour other cells that thwuG klr. Frederick A, Lucas, of the N ensd the heaith'of the Tiirfnan organ- lion ai M u scum .'gives us ' The Truth ism. They are the policemen of the . About the Mammoth;" and the TRFTII, body.r Evgry day people Inhale thous aa M r. Lucas, out of bis ample scienUflo ands of disease germs but If the blood knowledge, presents it, is so extremely la In healthy condition, the devouring Interesting that even those who were cells or pollcemen of the body pounce most misled by the inventions of the upon and destroy them. This Is why Story writer will feci that ample amende many people go through a period of epidemic Of pestilence unaffected, fire here made. while others suffer lingering illness and often death. Carrying his reAVOID DANGER. searches farther, the professor found team at r.tarrfc 01ntmaUTh4 that the stronger cells of the body preyed-upothe weaker one a thereby Cuatala Marram', This Journal, although more particu- causing an Inharmonious ecUon of the larly devoted to all that interests organ a This produces a gradual definance, commerce and manufacture cline In the organs and faculties, what leg, is nevertheless always awaks to la called old age11 becomes manifest, the need and wants of Us readers, let and death soon follows. The protestor the subject be what it may. We were concluded that If the weaker cells asked to Investigate and report upon could be Invigorated and strengthened, the merits of the varloua catarrh reme- 9 as to repel the attacks of tha strongIS tea on the market The production f preparations of Injurious compost-o- n er cells or not to get Into condition to cannot, unfortunately, be stopped invite attack, that harmony in tbe PATONS EXPERIENCES. or restricted at present, or until our working of the human organs would state legislatures .can be induced to be maintained and that life and vigor a such suitable and stringent laws would be greatly prolonged. With this Few minister of the gospel have figai will effectually prevent tber ap- end in view he began a series of ex- ured in circumstances of greater terll pearance on the market In the mean- periments by transposing the blood of than baa Dr. Paton, ud soma of his time, the people must look out for rabbits and guinea pigs, and be found exploits and adventures are as thrll-ltng- iy themselves. In this matter, we have Interesting u anything which that he could regulate the number and pads fi most careful and painstaking can bs found in the world's romance. of different the tbe kinds of vitality confidence Investigation, realising the Dr. is now spending several that would be placed in our reply. Our cells that made up the blood which in weekPaton In United States, where he tbe createe turn the body. medical staff employed to make such Tbe eerum which Pro! Metschnlkoff is raising money with which to proseinvestigations were most favorably impressed with the preparation known has evolved, find will more perfectly cute his work in the Kew Hebrides. is Halls catarrh curs, manufactured evolve, from his experiments and dis- Recently he passed through Atlanta, where he delivered addressee which ay F, J. Cheney ft Co. of Toledo, Ohio, coveries will be Injected Into the sys(find agreed that this peerless remedy tems of human are pleasantly remembered by those to who begin beings our highest Indorsement, show the effects of S$servea of time. who were fortunate enough to hear the ravages catarrh remedies on the This serum wilt strengthen the falling him. Dr. Paton first went to the New mercury, which de- cells market cental and tha life and vigor of tns hu- Hebrides In 1848. On account of his stroys the sends of smell and deranges man body will be renewed. To what Influence over the cannibals in that when the whole system entering can be these renewal! carried, quarter he acquired hi time the through the musous surfaces. From length team ike tueetiOM- - of the hd Ote&Ury htrlgtia-ttijtt'u- l king, and tobow find adiuk that.jUfiUa w.Jon4 jgfic&l.nia ure contains no mercury. It is taken man body can be kept working in har- day the New Hebrides are completely under tbe domination of the gospel. nternally, acting1 d(rectly upon the mony la a matter of conjecture, and-- a blood and mucous surfaces pf thi fifl- - question that the professor don not Dr. Paton la now seventytwe year of tern. We fcavs ne latent whatever discuss in any respect He makes no In this matter beyond faithfully serf pretensions of having discovered the Ing our readers, and as oVr indorse-snesecret of continual youth, and Is workts extended without reward of only to aid In the discovery of n any kind, and is wholly unsolicited by ing to prolong human life to the this company, and will bei received means extent which Its creator seem to have our all with the full ctedenee tha statements have met with f the past Intended, and to make It as free from evtew of disease and pain a possible while it eighteen years. Southern , Commerce. continues, From a scientific point of view the F.dward IVlHgolow, editor of Popular Jong Uvea of the patriarchs of the huScience, a well known specialist la man family srs seriously believed to have been incorrectly calculated Bsture-etudla to con Abet a departto our standard of reckoning ment of Nature and Sclnce for Young Methuselah yearn might have lived Folks In SL Nichols and will answer 969 years as tha time in those days children him. ask alt the questionwas reckoned, but scientists cannot beAnother new departure is the St Rich lieve that a year then was as long In Bias League, an organisation of young duration as It ts now. In more recent people wherein prises are offered for times since ' the beginning of the the best compositions, drawings, pho- Christian era there are numerous in stances of long llvea. In the begintographs, etc. rev, John (l paton 17th century. Got our Me age. la personal app Tha dining ear service of the Drover A ning of the he u UQ 180 Christmases st Dio Grands Ssil road is proving a great Craim celebrated usually handsome lor 0M 01 his year, island In the on the boms of Jars. bis eoBvenlence to the traveling puhlle. Elewearing king whit h alr Hebrides. In 1014, Johannes de Tempo-rltu- a which gant dining cars are attached to all trains gtvehlm tht.t 1520 861, the age-of died at ln Of one of the old patriarch. leaving Denser ea thSepcpuUrvoady where meals are served In a maimer pleasing to the Countess of Desmond died in Engall travelers, and at moderate price. The land at the age of 146. Her death An IntittnMo was caused by falling from a cherry enjoyment of a trip through Colorado P111 PmeHue- wonderful awnery that abounds along the tree which the had climbed, and which met sUIi tr?vLX tfie must have shows been the gate that' toad hi enhanced by the dining car and told me he U pounds Wife other convenience that have been adopted. very active. Thomas Parr died near --What a story teller! For Information, time tarda, rates, etc., Shrewsbury, England, In the early part of tke llthceutury In hi IMd year; newhe5LIesLU. that-ad drera & K. Hooper, General Pmsetrgsr and. was not married until he was to and T.ckct Agent, Denver, or It M. Cush-.teWM he had Traveling Ia-sr- n Tr Agent, 109 West years old. . It Is said that he ate whole- eaten those W11, of food was some yours. fi and . gheat regularly, Second South Street, Salt Lake City. sleeper. Henry Jenkins, of Yorkshire, t Mr, W. X. Stead writes in the Review Twe ringer Prlata Ap- England, completed his' 169th year. He Ter-lioof Reviews for February on The The chases of two finEer had always been a hard working man DT,. . Position of England,1 pointing snl hardly knew what sickness was. n0tOM'-fotebilfonfke wre are a few others who lived bs- Out the dangers which threaten from cross the channel. A It -- - ,f VW . Lui w i ts well-heade- d, r 'v, " ' ASLEEP TWO YEAES. physicians had about exhausted their skill and still could bnd no way of prevent the aleeplcg glrl from elum-berlAN FRANCISCO GIRL SLOWLY her life away. About six months AWAKENING. ago new methods were employed, and these have been highly successful. Now. although nut able to talk. Miss ,Uf r.He of Wilbur takes Ian Interest in her surhiiow Slga of tlx Xirwl roundings and receives the light susDrfMHis H4 Mo goot tenance offered. It is confidently exWa Br. pected she will soon have fully recovAfter remaining unconscious for ered. When s school girl. Miss Wilbur ofihrly two years and baffling the skill wts considered one of tha handsomest el many noted scientists In their ef- young ladles of tha Golden State, sad forts to awaken her. Miss Elida Wil- when she made her debut in society received much attention. bur, a beautiful San Francisco girl, now shows signs of her sense and will soon. It recovering is expected, bs DbtUM Hiding, srouaed from her long sleep. New York Tribune; "is is natural. Miss Wilbur began her strange sleep many stories are afloat at this time," 1S93. tShi found os said George La inborn, of London, who morning in her room, lying fully dress- has lived at Pretoria for several years, ed on the lounge, in an easy and un- - "to account for the extraordinary manner in wbkh the British have been outflanked and overcome by the Boera. I have repeatedly eeen statements that this was partly on account of the superior stamina and endurance of the horses which the Boers rode, which could cover 80 to ICO plies s day and keep it up for Several days. That is all tommy rot; the Boer horse Is s good animal, but he ia of flesh and bpc, and not of steel and Iron, as such endurance as that would Imply. The greatest record ride In the Transvaal waa the one made by Schmidt at the time of the Jam-ao- n raid, who, In a single night, rode from Pretoria to s point near Krugerdorp, on the Mafe-kin- g border, and return. The distance waa about 90 miles, and he covered ft on the same horse, although In so doing he killed tbe animal. ng ti l l vu A MISS ELIDA WILDUR. constrained position and was supposed to be sleeping naturally. The efforts of her mother to awaken her were unsuccessful, however, and physicians were called. Every remedy known to have availed in similar cases was tried, hut in vain. In thi days that followed prominent physicians examined this nncsual case and gave their best efforts for her relief. But there waa not tha slightest Improvement Blistering, electricity, white heat, Ice bandages on the epine, everything known to science was tried in turn, and still the patient lay unaffected and Inert It would have been Impossible to determine when she slept but for the fact that her eyee remained wide open duriag the day and far Into-T- be night "If the lid were forced down they instantly flew open upon removal of pressure. Only during a short interval in the night did this persistent staring at nothing, into nothing, cease. The eyelashes then rested on the cheeks, until suddenly, without movement of the body, or any of the customary signs of awakening, they were raised once again, and the eyes resumed their absent gate. Hypnotism had no effect and the efforts ot Christian Scientists were fruitless. The 1R MALACHY Tlllnr PmtMi'tit. Judge: Miss Jones was 111 and In great haste to go out of town. She wrote to tbe proprietor of a mountain farmhouse that had been recommended to her to engage board. Thie is the Miss Jones My terms are 5 reply; s week each, where, two occupy a room; House large Table cream are ailing women. When a woman has some female trouble sho Is certain to bo nervous and wretched With many women tho monthly suffering I3 SO great that they are for days positively Insanop and tho most diligent of forts of ordinary treatment are unavailing comes promptly to tho relief of these women Tho letters from women cured by It proves this This paper Is constantly print Ing them The advice of &1rs F4ak ham should also to secured hy every nervous woman. This costs noth Ing. Her address Is Lynn, Mass. iICE of the best, with milk and in abundance. Plenty of jhade about grounds Horses and wagons at disposal of guests." But It was the postscript that went to the heart of the matter (and of Miss Jones). It aecemnnodaxe you read; this year, as my hoilse was burned to the ground last May." WILL KEEP YOU DRY. A g, It ... u0 v Dont ba footed wit! a mackintosh rufrVf coaL J fte ttantafoal that wilt keep you dry in the hard t Storm buy th Fifh Brand Slicker If not for sate In your Vr writ for catakurue to TOWE3, friton, MaajT Of fkX Ti, Cf Had to Stand It. From tbe Chicago Tribune; Customer This book I bought here Just before Christmas Salesman We dont make any exchanges of goods sold before the holidays. - Customer I waa going to say you gave me by mistake a book worth 2 more than the one you thought you had sold me, but if you dont rectify mistakes, its all right Brisk wind this morning. Well, 111 have to be getting along, FOB 14 GEIJTSf Wa 3 - wtofc to raiatbteymrWifte erud rda Bt. IPk. Ctf tea incsXtrl'atEa ra)IC"nmbrTta btbcaofl 1 A L Oraeea Market LMooa, Ido jU Kmvtern Malta. iDar Radtth. ' Jtpa Cabbtf lia If ' Dianr Onion, lahvt VrthftMfrl4toBla. , 1 m f ( 9 tid( ( tv I mm , ' 4 Vmw Wbraro raratn SalKtr't j eelearlieetTematotekanteeawrth. S . AtowW FkfiTivarth tLWwawiT! auti yaa frut, toarthr with croat ali satin s siHiea atua 4 1 4 BM r, We nmwroaruul, ana Cal.tl)B BOWE3 DALY. ( fu I latfUfffrbd we IOHI 17. L. DOUGLAS S3 &3.E0 SHOES Worth 54 to $6 compared v with other makes. 1 hdanwd by over 1,000,000 vwnn. have W. L. I DoofW Bin and price ) taaped M boMon. Tak M tubuitoti claused ts b mikeep then bld Ui md a l t Y - i nr .. os isctifS at pnes asd tra lor carnage, buta kind a ieathra end width, plain or can tor. Cat iron l'ae,W. L BOUSIAS ttiOE C(L, Bracktoe, liais I7LBEQPLES- FAVORITE ....choicb or-- TRAINS REE .. DAILY- -3 i OMAHA, I -- AND ALL CHlCAGOr ''' ST.LOUIS, fr POINTS EAST. Quickest Time! Shortest Boot I Buffet Smok. in sndLlbrary Cars (with barber faon)r JJIulu Cr (meal 1 carte). H. M. CLAY. Gsneral AOENT. Ot MAIM STM IT. TILIPHOH ft. 3 OR 4 YEARS IN an i:;depekoe: tee fissunEB If yon take rip your homed to Western Cs-titoc land at Illustrated pmi bleuw ivin expt rrcuees or formers who bar b some wealvbt in growing wheat, reports of dwioesb s. eto., aud fsU a ts Kduod rsl way rated can b !, y, -- Compound Lyffi4ENnkhhVgetlk fS when occupied by one. la very near the river and a brook runs through the place. nt alT1 J iBlormlog me had apptieuioa n the Uupeitutendeot at Immlarratloa, Draartmeut ot laterior. Ottawa, Oaaada, ar to C J. Broughton, 123 Monad noelt Chie.e. Block, 1U. PLEA 88 TRY dl I Malschy Bowes Daly, lieutenant- - ond daughter of the late Sir Edward n governor of Nova Scotia, who has Just Kenny, KL, of Halifax. He is hy and was created a IC C. M. CL by Queen Cession fi barrister-at-lala a son of the ist Sir DomU- - veto secretary to his father. when gov- -' file Daly, hla - motlter being Caroline era or of Prince Edward Island for six He was also private secreMaria, daughter of Colonel Gore, ot years. Macdon-nel- l. G. R. Sir BarrowmounL County Kilkenny, Ire- tary to governor of Nova Scotia, and Sir land. Sir Dominie belonged to an old Irish family of County Galway, and Hastings Doyle, also provisional A. D. waa for twenty-fiv- e yean colonial sec- C. to Sir W. Fenwick Williams, govCanadian the in legislature, rep- ernor of Nova Scotia. He was for two retary lieutensuccessive years president of the Charity resenting Megantic. Hew a also of Halifax, and of of Libago, and subae- - table Irish-Socieant-governor council of the Society of find the Edward general Island, Prince of qucntly ot South Australia. St Vincent d Paul of Halifax. He sat governor-in-chiDaly waa born at In the House of Commons for Halifax Bowes Malachy near Quebec, on Febru- - .from 1878 to 18S2 as s Conservative. He Marchmount, was educated at SL received his appointment aa Ueuten-Mary- s ary 6. 1838. and ot Nora Scotia, on July College, Oscott. near Blrmingfor was at 15, 1890. and waa married He England. aee-- second term fa 1895. Montreal Star. XteUffiz OB July 4. 1859. to Joanna, -- CANDY CATHARTIC pro-bee- - ef or PARALYSIS LocomotorluAtariVartor o noo-od- .! mc4 at mrorrrr of pot D K. II ASES nUMlUAMl MFilTfi ifooS VI fit a fthoat jnorram. A4rtwsnit pnwrof rar Waa. a.uuM.aX4 H.IOth u, t DR.GUIuiSSSPILLS FO A Does, Cura 81c IW Dt " WPiai.Porltj th biro, AH Uoa, PTPYeat BUIowQpf. Auo5uripAor8icicBi Ta IM hiMilihil) Pit BotA bff OM b.a sHEEPr.iEri. WrtmmfmBarVMrararumtbratraavimb SSSSrSil1 prahriatc' whlc V ar mu.ii-F- ESSStaMSSr? W&ea wrWmj 2rSs Zzn Itetek to AtJvmistrs, ricdss tioa th! paper. Tni Men-- - -- ' - ? I i |