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Show Ieeeay 5 ores,πντατάσαζοσιΦΤΦΦΦ᾽Φ᾽4"Φ'ΦΦΦ᾽ΦΤΦΤΦΤΦΤΦΤΦΤΦ᾽Φ'ΦΤΦ᾽ΦΤΦΤΦΤΦ6Leeeee yup ifFiids αὶ Ν ΕΤΑΙΗ ΟΕ ΝΕΥΟΝΝ ; 4 5 and Acts οὶ “ys acts vuly as Best forMenWomen ondChild Old axative. Com- G Srrupe Co. whom it ia i mufocturedprinted on the NASTY. A. All except your face. suggested to Mrs. Gould that she pay, she OK'd the bill and airily suggested cured me and I have not been bothered with the itching since, to amount to anything. About two years ago I had la grippe and pneumonia which left me with a pain in my side. Treatment ran it into my leg, which then swelled and began to break out. The doctor was afraid it would turn to blood-poison. I used his medicine but it did no good, then I used the Cuticura Remedies three times and cured the breaking-out on my leg. J. F. Hennen, Milan, Mo,, May 13, 1907,” Where Great Writer Lived. Carlyle's where Craigenputtock, “Sartor Resartus” was written, has just been the scene of a notable wedding. The bride was Miss Mary Carlyle of Craigenputtock, a grand-niece of Thomas Carlyle, and the bridegroom James Carlyle, a farmer of Pin- about four miles from Thomas Pingle is Ecclefechan, Carlyle’s birthplace, and this village is the original of the Entuph! of “Sartor Resartus.” Was Used to It. On a very hot Sunday nified methods employed by certain New York women to attract a following.” Speaking of the class of women who “Father,” said he, “why need people go to church when it is so hot?” “My son,” his father replied, “Satan is around as much in hot weather as at any time.” “Oh,” said the boy, “but Satan does not mind hot weather!” Youthful Criminals. Two bad little boys were standing on the street corner, when another well-dressed little boy passed on his way to the drug store to buy candy. “Let's take his penny away from him,” one bad boy suggested to the other, “No,” replied his wicked companion, ‘ft’s best to wait until he goes in and buys chocolate with it, and then we'll steal the chocolate. Wot’s the use of doin’ extra work?” NO GUSHER ’ But Tells Facts About Postum. “We have used Postum for the past eight years,” writes a Wis. lady, “and drink it three times a day. We never tire of it. F a traveler from Trieste or any other across-the-sea city were to be led blindfolded into Wall street at present, if the blindfold were to be then removed and he were to be asked quickly what he jydged from appearances, the attitude of the street was toward the coming presidential election, his natural reply, translated, eat anything on account of dyspepsia, bloating after meals, palpitation, s‘ck headache—in fact was in such misery and distress I tried living on hot water “T had quit coffee, the cause of my hut this was not nourishing. “Hearing of Postum I began drink ing it and my ailments disappeared and now I can eat anything | want without trouble. “My parents and husband ha the same experience. Mother would often suffer after eating, w yet drinking coffee. My husban! \ a ereat coffee drinker and suffered from indigestion and headache ard | Postum both ailments leit hir He will not drink anything else now and we have it three times a day. I « ὶ ‘write more but am no gusher—only étate plain facts.” Name given b, Postum Go. Battle Creek, Mich. Read “The Poad to Weliyille,” in pkgs. “There's a Poxscn.” Ever read the above letter? κ new one appears from time to time. are genuine, true, and full of παπ-- interest. man, received one dollar each by the | at Park exclusive art circles. (City the, The company intends to put including giving away a beautiful cook book to every one of our lady readers. Write for it to-day. It is worth $5 to any housekeeper, See ad. in another part of this paper. the boiler| Happy. Mrs. Newlywed—My will of their father, Solomon P. Clemmons, who died hearbroken over the tains many new recipes you ought to World. The company has employed a lady cook and two of the old crew went back to the mine to work. have. See ad. in another part of this paper. A message received from Oro. grande, Idaho, states that a rich strike Altruism. Reformer—Do you know, myfriend, has been made in the Four Mile min ing district. This strike was made on a claim about 400 feet from the rich find made last spring that started the big stampede to that district. In Boxelder county, Utah, that we could live on one-half of what we now eat? Gormand—Maybe so, but if we didn’t eat the other half, how would our grocers and doctors live? where one can stand and look over into the The Tempered Wind. states of Utah, Idaho and Nevada, is Jim (regarding damage done to a mining section that is coming to church by fire)—Good job it wasn’t a the front in an ore development way | | factory, Bill. without making much fuss over the) Bill—Yoy’re right, mate. Only one fact. his section is in what is| known as the Goose Creek range of mountains. | The Zenoli SilverCopper company) last week marketed a lot of ore from | its mine at Palisade, Nevada, from | which it realized the sum of $2,698. 10| man put out of work, and he draws his money.—Boston Transcript. Book, given away absolutely free to our readers by Jaqués Manufacturing Company, Chicago. See ad. in another part of this paper. Allowances, “But,” protested the wayward son, |on Little Cottonwood creek, in the “you should make allowances for the follies of youth.” exception of the last section of con. | “Huh!” growled the old man. “Tf crete work. The diverting of the it wasn't for the allowance you get | alta district, is complete with the of The production of gold and silver by the mines of the United States for the calendar year 1907, as determined bY the bureau of the mint and the Se0logical survey, acting in conjune- polities | tion, aggregated 4,374,827 ounces of| there would be less folly.” Mere Aggravation, “Sir,” announced the private secretary, knocks at your “Throw something at her,” ordered the great magnate. “Everybody knows I'm trying to die poor.” paper should get a free copy of Mrs. Active development will be started | Hill’s Cook Book, now being given at once and continued all winter at away by Jaques Manufacturing Comelection year there are not more than| the property of the Liquidator Min-| pany, Chicago. See ad. in another part three or four offices in all the street of this paper. broker was about right, too. ing company, situated near the Hee- la, in the Coeur d’Alenes. The com-| pany has just ben organized for the A Proposition, “Johnnie, I will give you a quarter if you can get me a lock of your sisclaims. The strike in the Columbus Exten-| ter’s hair.” purpose of working the sion company’s tunnel at group Alta of “Gimme four bits an’ I'll git you de has whole bunch; I know where she hangs it nights."—Houston Post. opened into from 30 to 40 feet of sulphides, the greater portion of which fs fine stuff that slides like sand, | making the progress of work very | slow. Not the entire body is of com- | Absent-Minded Gallantry. Lady of Uncertain Age—Ah, major, we're none of us as young as we were, mercial grade. The Dominion Copper company, formerly operated under the direction of Samuel Newhouse, but subsequent- Major (absent-minded, but vaguely aware that a gallant answer is indicated)—My dear lady, I'm sure you ly turned over to eastern sharehold- don't look it!—Punch. ers, is to be reorganized. The neces: | sity for this action, says the Boston | A Beautiful Cook Book Free News Bureau, arises from the lack of To all of our readers. See ad. of K. C, | treasury funds. Baking Powder Company in another The officials of the Uintah Treasure | part of this paper. Write for it to whose day before you forget it. The book is company, Consolidated Hill property ts located in Park City, have | one that you will be Brows to own. | called on the stockholders for one > | no one has yet disputed. to be Agreed, Following this came in rapid order |eent per share, the money “Don't you think the curtain should | the feats of “Lamby” Smith, who con | raised by this assessment going toan be lowered more quickly on myfirst | sumed 76 lamb chops at one meal, an¢ wards placing the company on act?” asked the young play wright, | the achievement of the wetwenalon'| operating basis. News of a very fine strike of rich “Yes, by a good half an hour,” re | champion of consuming 17 juiey speci | Early in the summer “Beefsteak Pete,” a Bowery character, consumed 17 pounds of the meat from which he takes his Cognomen at one sitting, and| five days later he raised this figureto | 24 pounds, thus making a total of 41) pounds of Meat consumed in two days. | A little later the champion pie eater of| pie} Brooklyn, who al so claims the championship of the world, consumed } a record whieh I complished a few days ago when “Lit tle Neck Silas” of Staten island, after eating 600 clams a day for three sunt cessive days, choked on the five hundred and ninety-eighth clam on the fourth day, just failing to establish | wh the record of 2,400 in four d nye are ee he was seeking } In view of these records New Yor | may reasonably lay claim. to baving | the bigeest eaters in ‘he world. silver-lead ore was brought to Salt plied the heartless manager. Lake last week by .W. L. Harwood, the general manager of the Park City Mining and Power company. The other among company Park City properties owns the noted old McKeeterritory. The Chapman and Work as a Necessity. Follow your calling diligently, for be assured that work, far from being a iardship is a help, and a blessing vithout which you cannot reach your highest good.—Ruskin. Baby RBerry-Rocha mills at Manhattan, Nevada, have re. duced to $5 a ton the rate of milling ores containing values up to $20 Free to Housekeepers. a Don’t fail to get the beautiful new ook book given away by Jaques Man facturing Company. It js worth $5 o any housekeeper. See ad. in an ther part of this paper ton. For every $5 a ton value over $20 forty cents a ton will be added to the rate until the maximum chargeof $8 a ton is reached. As the most practicable means of getting under way a large amount of development work in its empire of mineral ground, the Bingham Central Standard Copper companyis about to adopt the leasing system, in addition to continuing vigorous develapiaent ap companyaccount. TAXPAYER FEELS HIS DIGNITY. Effect of Ownership of Property is to Make Better Citizen. “Many a time,” said a policeman in the southern part of the city, “when arresting men, especially intoxicated men, I have been told by my prisoner that he was a taxpayer and that he helped pay my wages. “I always regarded this sort of back talk as merely drunken insolence, and never paid much attention to it until about a year ago, when I bought a house and lot and became myself a taxpayer. I had always rented be fore and never gave a thought to taxes, but as soon as I moved into my own house I began to appreciate the feelings of the men who resented arrest because they paid taxes. There {s certainly a considerable addition to the dignity of the man who helps sup port the government. He feels a de gree of responsibility that a renter or roomer never understands, and my idea is that every man in the country ought to become a taxpayer as soon as he can, and the mere fact that he does help to support the government and bears his share of the expense, makes him a better citizen. Habitual criminals, excepting, of course, high financiers, are rarely taxpayers. They know they may have to run any day and perhaps never come back, 850 they do not buy real estate, but are roomers and lodgers all their lives."— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The newlawoffices of State Repre sentative Harry J. Ropimson are in rooms 102-103 Mercantile Block, Salt Lake City, Utah, to whom all who are in need of legal advice are referred. HOLLAND BULB TRADE IMMENSE. Over 10,000 Acres Devoted to Raising Tulips and Hyacinths. An industry characteristic of the Netherlands is the raising of tulip and hyacinth bulbs. Attempts have been made in several parts of the world to grow these, but nowhere can successful, as the proper kind of soil for propagation of perfect bulbs seems only to exist in the small space of ter ritory between the cities of Leyden and Haarlem. This stretch of country 1s in reality the bottom of the old Haarlem sea, which was laid dry about the year 1852, and this sea-bottom dirt, a combination of sand and decomposed vegetables and plants, appears to be the only soil capable of producing the flower bulbs mentioned. These bulbs are exported to all parts of the world; the demand is constantly increasing, and an increased area is from year to year set apart to the cul- tivation of bulbs. The statistics for 1906, the latest available, give this area as 4,058 hectares, equal to 10,027 acres. BLUE PRINT PAPER. Write to iargest Western Dealers, PEMBROKE STATIONERY CO., Salt Lake City. Don’t Fail to Get It. Every womanor girl reader of this cents an ounce, or $37,299,760. were wont to pe hung conspicuously over the stock boards or tickers. This “opportunity door.” \fine gold of the value of $90,435,700 | was more in evidence. In former years pictures of the par- |and@ 56,514,700 fine ounces ofsilver of the commercial value averaging 66 ticular office choice for the presidency SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH the experiment be said to have been Every Woman Should Cook And cook well. To help you do this get Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill's Cook | posed to belong to us, but whom we)| cent copper. The dam for the first power plant | never see and do not know even by | regions where the spirit ad- few days ago, being dissatisfied with | of their new cook book by Mrs. Janet the Chinese cook, says the Idaho City McKenzie Hill. It is a beauty and con- information about certain women sup- |ver, 8.15 per cent lead and 2.5 per) sight.” husband Alaska produced $18,489,400 In gold | mires everything about me; my voice, during 1907, followed by California my eyes, my form, my hands! with $16,858,500; Nevada, with $13, Friend—And what do you admire 411,000; Utah, with $5,121,600; South about him? Dakota, $4,138,200; Montana, $3,472,Mrs. Newlywed—His good taste. 600; Arizona, $2,664,000; Idaho, $1, | 255,900, and Oregon, $1,222,200. To Our Lady Readers. Send to-day to Jaques Manufactur Twenty-three miners at work in the Mollie McCarty mine quit in a body a ing Company, Chicago, for a free copy mens of his favorite fruit in one day | Another man ate 53 hard-boiled eggs in an hour, as a result of which he HB gastronomic feats performed in died, while the champion green-corr | New York during the last three eater has raised his record by con | months of hot weather, otherwise s*.ning at one sitting such a numbe: | known as: the silly season,” seem al- of ears of corn that the length of the most ineredible Nearly every record cobs laid end to end aggregated 21 for the’ consumy xtion of various kinds | feet seven inches of The latest feat in this line was ae of food has been broken. $1 piea in 91 minutes. ex- | adjoining \suildings. likeness. ie’ hand!” As the — | house, dump, engine house, and small| Many Gastronomic Records Established and toast for nearly a year Italian Perils. “Isn’t there danger,” said the timid tion case now stands, Clarence man, “of dropping things from an airThree feet of solid galena ore that} Shearn, counsel for Mrs. Gould, is i ship on the people below?” and 45 | µ decting to a jury trial, while Mr. | averages 65 per cent lead | “That isn't the worst,” answered the Gould's lawyers have asked the court | ozs. in silver, with several feet more candid inventor. “You're lucky ifthe that the merits of the case be sub- of good second class ore—such are | whole airship doesn’t fall on you.” | the handsome proportions of a strike | mitted to a jury. justed by the courts. where a photograph of Mr. Taft or Mr. Bryan is to be seen. On one of the Although the election is only a short bulletins on the floor of the produce time off, it is true that there are few exchange pictures of the two candiindications in Wall street of its prox- dates were pasted some time ago and imity. A round of a score of broker- a notice was pinned thereunder reage offices does not bring to the ear | questing the members to inscribe their much political conversation. The Afri- choice on appended slips of paper. So can hunting trip of Mr. Roosevelt is little interest was evidenced in the exciting a great deal more corijecture vote that the attempt to get at the po. than the Tuesday after the first Mon- litical sentiment of the exchange was | day affair. abandoned. One of the brokers on the stock ex- | In the thoroughfares a_ straggling “Take a look vendor of campaign buttons may be change said recently: noticed humming away the time and around the lobby and you won't see pausing once in a long while to bar- any of the readers with their eyes on | gain with a messenger boy. The lat- | the political news. When they’re not ter, in fact, is about the only one reading the financial page they're| whose lapel is adorned with a button reading the baseball news.” ‘That | Bill's red in new boilers and new machinery io might be, “Oh, you joker!” bearing one of the “For several years I could scarcely in A Great Educational Work Is now being done by the manufacturwater| ers of K. C. Baking Powder. They are water. assault the plaintiff sick, sore and lame; Earlier in the week several men went down into the financial district to offer for sale small flags having prints of | the rival candidates’ pictures. They | remained a day, and then disconsolate, | betook themselves to other regions— | tion. “After he stopped coffee mine through a tunnel to admit of They say that fewer campaign souve-| the last section has just been nirs are being sold than at any other laying | period within the scope of recollection. | finished and short shift will be made |of the work remaining to be done. inclina- trouble, and was using hot wat The Wabash Wall_trest Not Interested in Politics. water morning pencil eyclopedias, Giotto moved in the most her age, has been obliged to relinquish “The best women in New York soher position as leader, says: “I am ciety, those of the greatest influence not vain enough to think New York and those who give it its true tone, will not be able to get along very well are almost unknown outside of their | without me. Many women will rise own circle, Society newspaper notoup to take my place. But I hope my riety is interesting to them, as it is after freight and smelting charges | The settlement | influence Will be felt in one thing, and to me, as a study, a very amusing one, had been paid. too, sometimes, as one gains so much| Showed values of 231.3 ounces in sil-|| that is in discountenancing the undig James was required to accompany his contrary to kis and bas closed down on account of give entertainments to foreigners, Mrs Astor says: “Their sole object is notoriety, a thing that no lady ever seeks, but rather shrinks from.” She says that women of this stamp are few here, but they are appallingly active. “They have done untold harm to the good name of American society in the minds of foreigners. RS. WILLIAM ASTOR, who for “When a distinguished man arrives many years was recognized as the | from the other side he is seized upon leader of New York society, has shown | relentlessly, although possibly a her disapproval of the methods of | stranger to his hostess, and plunged some members of society in an inter- into a mad whirl of extraordinary fesview, and declares that “many women tivities. He enters upon them with have given entertainments that belong much the same spirit that we would under the cireus tent rather than in a have as spectators of an Indian war gentlewoman’s home.” dance, and thus he forms his opinion | Mrs. Astor, who recently, owing to of us. father to church. That was $1,916,000, “See his fine $1,049,400. Mrs. Astor Scores Members of Society tome Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent and began to get better right away. They his claimed the enthusiastic bystanders. California, | Thereafter, as we learn from the escapades of bis daughters, Dustin Farnum, the actor, and Col. W. F. Cody (“Buffalo Bill”) have been accused by Howard Gould in his suit against his wife. The dealer asserts when he timidly dipping You take no chance at al! In buying a diamond, watch, or piece of jewelry or silver of us. Our reputation for rellability is established and we main tain it by our absolute guarantees. $5,206.300; sibly wear if she worked day and night Then I used Carlyle’s favorite nephew. ισαπο, Ne | Mrs. Gould and her sister, Mrs. Sun just made in the Branburg property| Yue, wife of a San Francisco China- | in Big Cottonwood district. I had a breaking-out, and it itched, and stung so badly that I could not have any peace because of it. Three gie, Dumfriesshire, a son of Arizona, supreme court, that the throat, choked insulting epithets. goes on to say that Mr. and Mrs. Gould are yet to be ad- Scofield, Utah, at nothing but changing her clothes. “About twelve or fifteen years ago vada, $5,465,100; She says in her complaint, $7,345,500; expensive lingerie without ever a | thought of paying. Mrs. Gould always insisted on having the very best of | everything, he says, and ordered far | greater amounts than she could pos- SKIN TROU BLES CURED. First Had itching Rash—Threatened Later With Blood-Poison in Leg— Relied on Cuticura Remedies. Montana, with Mc- a profligate manner, he declares, and bought great quantities of the most doctors did not help me. 600; has sustained a severe shock and nerv- handle the large volume of | ous injury, and has been mortified, | that has come up in the mine. Fire resulting from an explosion of| Laughlin, a shirtmaker, comes to trial. humiliated and chagrined, all to her a can of oil In the boiler house burned McLaughlin | damage in the sum of $50,000.” declares Gould Mrs. caused & process server to summon | While the bill of $248 remains un- | all the buildings belonging to the her in a suit to enforce the payment of || paid, the marital differences between Union Pacific mine at No. 2 dump, at! $50,000 damage from Frank The shirtmaker is preparing a lively defense, and has fortified himself|| with many instances of how Mrs | Gould made the money fl» She or | dered dozens of lace handkerchiefs in He—Um—yeés. Giotto, Howard Gould, when her suit asking a bill for $248, He—You are natihen on fine. She—Am I swimming gracefully? ee property have| Next to Colorado in production of| paint and using his elbow as a pivot, silver during 1907 was Utah, $7,528, || had just drawn a perfect circle. only, maliciously, and cruelly” insult SOLD FALLLEADING Neὁ ὕβύοοιστα one size only, regular price 50 Nasology Is the Latest. Palmistry has a rival in the new for| tune-telling science, nasology, Which ore taken from this run as high as $800. | whose name she did not know, “want nowon file in the | he seized her by EW YORK.—The public is prepar | her, and applied ing to hear many interesting things And the complaint regarding the exiravagance of Mrs. || “ “by reason of the Katherine Clemmons Gould, wife of has been rendered "CALIFORNIA by 5 | that he “send it to Mr. Gould.” would have Mr. Gould, however, | none of it Hence the suit. Mrs. | Gould says that the process server, |ed her. | “Uncle” Jesse Knight will soon | Everybody has a nose, and this new have the Uintah Treasure Hill mine | method of its examination appeals to machinery installed. He is installing the credulous. The old lady looks at new boilers, compressors and ma her visitor's nose through 2 microscope, and she finds better indications chine drills. The Gold Point Mining company on in the marks and lumps than ever she Red river, in Idaho, has ordered 8 40. |found before in the lines of the Assays of) hand. ton capacity Chilian mill. To Reveal Mrs. irs.Gould’s Extravagance éieeee | name of the αὶ κ we PaO#LOLOTOLOLO6elseleleleleeleLele16SIIIS ac a due ieConstipt a ue Gossip of People and Events Told in Interesting Manner. R ῇ AND MINING! Colorado leads in the production Οἱ | has been of late winning converts in both gold and silver for 1907, having Paris. An elderly lady has set up in furnished $20,§97,000 of the former | the Latin quarter, where she reads caand $7,587,000 of the latter metal. |reers in the noses presented to her. % [ήχο the tila [ος are5 5 % σἙ]ιχιοSenna uall “MINES Cultiy ate Tact. Theart of saying appropriate words 1 a kindly way is one hat never goes t of fashion, never cea ses to please id it is within. the reach of the | umblest— Boileau. National Conversations. If you see three men standing to gether on the sidewalk in any given country, you can guess the subject of their conversation. In Germany it ig the army; in Russia the bureaucracy; in France, women; in the United States, business; in England, sport, and in Turkey, nothing at all.— La Derniere Heure, Brussels. Doubly Useful Mucilage. “If you make your own mucilage (one heaping teaspoonful of gum arabic to an ordinary mucilage bottle gives it at a cheaper rate than that bought ready made), you can dispense with court plasters, Nquid or otherwise, except where an antiseptic is necessary,” says Women’s Home Companion. “Ordinary cuts can be coated with it quite as effectively as with the patent preparation. Two coats thoroughly dried will stand the application of water better than anything but the adhesive plaster doctors use— an inconvenient, expensive luxury.” A Side Light. The fortune teller, whose specialty was restoring lost and stolen articles by her powers of divination and spirit help, was perturbed. She had missed a wallet full of bills and a diamond ring from her bureau drawer. “Maria,” she cried to her assistant, “have you taken the most effective means to get those articles back?” “Yes’m,” said Maria. “I reported it right off to the police.” Needed an Hourglass. A clergyman made an unusually long call at the homeof a parishioner re cently. He talked and talked, until finally little Edna, who was present, whispered: “Mamma, did the preacher forget to bring his ‘amen’ with him?” The Smallest Possible. Rodrick-—"But if he is an enemy of yours, why did you contribute to his wooden wedding?” Van Albert Just to make him look small.’ Rodrick— “What did you send?” Vap Albert— “Why, a toothpick.” |