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Show TUB SIX. cs Mileage Joe TRI-WEEKL- wife-beatin- back and forth until he thought had severed the jugular vein i.r and windpipe. Thu ax was not The Salt Lake Herald gives this 6harp enough, howeVer, and his information about Joseph How- pounds were sewed up and he; : ells new title. It will be inte- will recover. rring reading for Cache county HIT BY STRAY SHOT. people, especially those who have Reheard Sir. Howell say, that Eight year old Sylvester Swift 1; publicans do .things and DemoRead it: was struck in the eheek with crats do the people. "A correspondent has written some stray shot fired from a shot- to The Herald asking where it requires several stitches for to close one long wound, which gressman Ilowell, candidate on the Republican caused him much pain . The care-- 1 II ' ticket; acquired the title of less person who fired the gun was As the request not located. IK . "Mileage Joe. one made been have to seems by who is honestly seeking informa THE REV. IRL R. HICKS 1907 I ALMANAC. i tionAhe, answer., isgiven here k he t- - - - Another Fascinating $ Story by A. Conan Doyle It President Roosevelt called congress together in extraordinary session to enact legislation in conformity with the commercial treaty .entered into be tween the United States and Cuba. Each representative and each senator, upon arriving, in "Washington, drew from the treasury of .the United States through the duly constituted disbursing officer, a sum of money sufficient to defray his traveling expenses at the rate of 20 cents per mile. The special session finished its business at noon on the first Monday in December, the date fixed for the opening of the regular ses- - In 1903 -- jsion. It was followed immediate- ly by the regular session. When the regular session was a few weeks old one of the Republican members of the house conceived the notion that there might be a "Ycat little graft" in the mileage business. He introduced a bill providing for the payment of mileage for the regular, as well as the special session. Now the moral obliquity of the ball is found in The Rev,, Irl R. nicks has been compelled by the popular demand to resume the publication of his well known and popular for 1907.- This splendid Almanae is now ready. For by newsdealers, or sent for 25 cents, by Word and Publishing Company, 2201 Street, St? Louis, Mo., publishers of Word and Works, one of the best dollar monthly magazines in One America. Almanac goes with every subscription We have ordered a supply of these, and will soon have them on sale at this office. Al-man- ac - - In The Depths ' ' i Historically-Instrvcti- - ve the first chapters. After reading "them you will not miss the others. 1 Y French navy has suffered another disaster in the loss of the submarine torpedo-boa-t Latin, which went down in a diving trial off Bizerta, October 16, with four- to the - - -i- r Charmingly Written Full of Incident The nd -- -- em-ploy- ee . CURES lood poison The first outward sign of Contagious Blood Polsoa Is a small sore or blister. As the poisonous vims becomes more firmly entrenched in the blood a red eruption appears on the body, the mouth and throat ulcerate, the hair begins to come out, glands in the neck and groin swell, copper colored spots appear on the breast, back, etc., and the unfortunate victim finds himself diseased from head to foot. j. Mercury .and potash do not cure Contagious Blood Poison ; they shut the disease up la the system and remove the out ward symptoms for awhile, but when the treatments left off the trouble returns. Then the system being weakened from the action of these minerals the disease makes more rapid headway than before. S. S. S.strong is the antidote for Contagious Blood Poison. It cures permanently, and certainly by' going down into the blood and removing every vestige of the vims "It is free from all minerals, and while purifying the blood it builds up the entire system by its fine tome effects. 8. S. S. destroys every particle of the poison and removes all danger of transmitting it to others. S. S. S. cures Contagious Blood Poison because it is a perfect blood Book with " instructions for self treatment and any medical advice purifier. free. TIISSY.IFT Is one of A. Conan Doyles best stories. The reader who begins it will enjoy hours of . K pleasant anticipation between installments. I J :rzcma co atiazta, cz rescued, and FELL THIRTY FEET. Dennis F. Keith.Y member Music and Talking Machines. the Salt Lake fire department, fell Y We have theJVictor and Edison thirty feet from a roof he was in repairing, sprainin talking machines, several hundred siting ankles and one wrist. records, all the latest sheet music, Y also e a full line of McKinley 10c ' CARRIED HER POINT. music. T. R. Girardat has filed HOBBS MUSIC STORE suit for divorce against his wife Violet, in Salt Lake, alleging that the lady drew a revolver upon him, making him dance and perform sundiy Plaid Silk Petticoats Avoid The other acts with his Short Circular Skirt Bro- - - dignity. . pade Linings. LLEST WE For wear with tailor made forget --Baby is restless, cant clothes plaid silk- - petticoats are sleep at night,, wont eat, cries very popular finished with self spasmodically. A . bottle VI trimming. of ' ' Whites Cream Vermifuge never Black lace gowns trimmed with falls to cure. . Every, mother white lace applied on the ' black should give her baby Whites H net are 'sufficiently now in design Cream Vermifuge. So many times to be attractive when the baby is pale and fretful, When selecting a fall walking the mother does not knowwhat to do - A bottle of this medicine X1 skirt.be sure to avoid the No matter how well it would bring color to his cheeks 41 ha cut, it will need rehangmg al and laughter to his eyes. Give it every time it is worn. The a trial. Sold by Riter Bros. correct length for a short skirt is Drug Co. b two inches front the ground. Brocade will line most of the smart fall and winter coats, and One of My. Customers another old fashioned silk which is being largely used for belts is satin merveilleux. Ia miUinery, colors are chiefly 41 on the dark and somewhat somber &i order. Black is in high favor, browns re maichlikedYnd the wine shades are very prominent. Green appears in many charming shades, and blue in all tones is in evidence. The brims of the large picture Brown will ' 'r jj get7 his. t- - 4 4 -- Y Y 4 4 44 4 Smart Styles - 4 Jo fis se sc loi I 1 sli fo tl - . 44 tb Refugees 4i ii l sub-marin- es - Thrilling tale detailing the intrigues of the French court in its halcyon days anL in striking contrast, the strenuous life of the early. French settlers in Canada when every 5 man had to be a fighter. - Vivid description K of a frontier battle with Indians. Through it all runs the love story of a beautiful girl and a brave French officer. Jjj Watch for 1 V It Will Be Run In This Paper, Beginning Soon.; Our Patrons May Prepare Themselves for a Rich Repast of Rare Reading 14 - . 4 1 -- to-mon- Who Wrote the Sherlock Holmes Stories i.The teen men and two officers and the fact that the purpose of the failed to come up. As in the case mileage law, as originally passed, of the similar. accident to - the was to pay the actual and neces- Farfadet last year all those who sary traveling expenses of con- were carried down lost their gressmen in journeys to and from lives. As it happened rescue their homes. It is perfectly obvi- would have been impossible, for ous that in the minute fraction of jtheLutins hatch was open and time between the close of the the crew must have been drowned special session and the opening at once. But even if the men had -- of the regular session,' no - con. been imprisoned they merely gressman could possibly have would have died before the dilagone to his home end back. tory. salvors got the boat to the The truth is that there wasnt surface. The Lotin stayed under time for one of them to walk out water nearly a week before the on the capital steps for a breath French authorities Succeeded in of fresh air. The bill was a graft raising her, even with British billt pure and simple. It meant help. The tragic lessons of the .something like $1,000 of public Farfadet and of the British A 1,A 5, and A 8 seem sentative Joseph Howell of Utah to have worked no improvement Joseph Howell very promp. in the European methods of deal - Uy voted for it. ne had no more ing with such accidsnts. For some moral or lawful claim to the mon- reason disasters of this kind do n-a ey than he has not happen in the American serbank in which he has no account. vice, aad our naval experts assert The senate very properly refused that not.. could It may be they to endorse the double mileage said that the" reason for our imswindle, and therefore it failed of munity is that our submarines do ri r,l not passage. go to sea, but their construcAnd that is why Represents tion certainly seems topro.vide tive Howell of Utah has come to against almost every conceivable be known as Mileage Joe. He mishap. But aside from that has never ..attempted to explain there apparently must-be some" " that vote. thing wrong when7 with all the appliances of a great naval sta( SHOCKING BUTCHERY tion at hand, it takes a week to raise. a. craft. as small as a subBecause his wife had left him, marine boat. The repeated distaking with her their only child, asters to submarines have led to 'A. E. McKenna, an O. S. L. all nations suggestions that in Salt Lake, attempted should bind themselves at-T- he suicide in the most shocking man- nague to abandon their ner, by placing his throat across Colliers. --a- vo rr Con-(gu- n. 1 g RUN DOWN BY CAR. old offender in the W. N. Trense, of Salt Lake, was who $500 out line, and pider Waa knocked down by a street caiv but bonds to leave her alone, assaultand swore to escaped with nominal injuries 5J the blade of an ax and drawingit with: fi i T-- Thursday, November 8, 1905 JOURNAL, LOGAN, UTAH Y 1 be - jar-shape- 4most 4 Heart of Africa bats doT not turn up in a freakish fashion from the face as they did last but year, droop prettily over More than 1,000 blach men, in tion to the end of the .farthest a 'high bandeau. charge of European engineers, navigable reach of the steam. By Crowns on the new hats are have been engaged for more than building this new railroad the most varied in character, hut the & year in grading the roadbed, Congo State has added 261 miles small round Jorne erown disap- laying the track and doing pll the of steam transportation to .the rough work on the new railway 1,325 miles already in operation that has just been opened along between the Congo mouth and the upper Conago. - This road be- Stanley falls Navigation is again tween Stanleyville and Ponthier-vill- impeded at Kindurl865 miles 75 miles, circumvents the the terminus of the new stretch of rapids that forms the and the government intends first impediment to navigation on to begin at once the building of the upper river. The line was the third and last stretch of railopened a few weeks ago and it is way along the river from Kiiidu the pioneer railway in tropical to Bull, about 180 miles, above Central Africa. In straight lines, which-ther- e is interrupted naviits southern terminus at the head gation for smaU steamers for 372 of the rapids is about miles miles, 970 and miles from the river for large commercial fronj Zanzibar the Congo mouth. . , purposes practically ends. It has been interesting to watch The total length of steam transthe progress of this enterprise. portion along the .Congo when Few railways have been -- built, the last mile of rail is laid wi.l be with primitive labor so far from 2,141 miles, of which 1,548 miles the sources of The wil be by water and 596 miles by first step was the building of two land, and the end - of -- this 'bWg large storehouses at Matadi and route will be in touch with the Stanleyville, 1,235 miles apart, fol- great mining reagon of Katanga, lowing the Congo channel, to which is said to be as rich as Rhodhouse the material at its landing esia in gold, while the prospects peared with the smaU round hat. placejn Africa and at the start- of copper production are, perhaps, Draped crowns are in the majoring point of the railway. Locomo- unsurpassed in any. other, part of ity, and square -- crowns - on the tives, cars and bridges were carri- the world. The importance of ex- Gainsborough order are in good ed up the Congo in pieces, and put tending transportation to this rev standing. . is were needed where efforts giou of the stimulating The hat petured is of hyacinth they together on the line. Atherejwas delay the Congo government. It remains blue velvet, the crown .is in the delivery of some of the to be "seen whether the Congo rail swathed malines of a lighter bridges, temporary wooden con- and water route will reach this shade of blue. At the back of the structions, .very rough but strong, southeast corner of the state be- chapeau is a panache of ostrich were thrown over some of the fore the branch of the : Cape to feathers in varying tones of this small Congo tributaries, so that Cario railroad arrives at the same new blue. work trains might carry rails destination. New York Sun. , JUDIC CnOLLET. to the roadbed perpared for them. Some of the gangs of labTHERE XS NO REASON ALWAYS WAS SICK. orers were Superintended by young natives, who had been train- why your baby should b6 thin, When" a "man says he " always ed for years in industrial schools and fretfed during the night. was with a cough of the government of the mission- Worms are the caisw of thin, lasted that all winter what ary societies. Here, as elsewhere sickly babies. It is natural that would you think if he should say in that continent, the natives sup- a healthy baby should be fat and he never waa sick since using plied the brawn and muscle, as sleep well. If your baby does Syrup. Such well as some elementary supervis- not retain its food, dont exper- Ballards Horehound "" man exists. C. Clark, Mr.J. ion in carring forward the vast iment with cblic cures and other Denv medicine but try a bottle "of worfcrof progress inAfriea; I was troubled with a seThe extent of navigation avail- Whites Cream .Vermifuge, and years vere cough Jhat would last .all able for steamers on the Congo is you will soon see your baby have winter. This cough left me in s now well known, and the purpose color and laugh as it should. Sold miserable condition. I tried Balb is td carry railways around the by Riter Bros. Drug Co. Horehound lards Syrup and few parts of the river which are have not a sick day since. WOULD MURDER WIFE. obstructed by rapids, so as to exThats what it' did for me. Sold tend unbroken steam transporta- - Charles Brown, of Ogden,- - an by Riter Bros.1 b Drug Oo. - e, ve ra-wa- 1,-0- 70 lb y, wfaere-the-importaru- '.yof . ad - EKSM tpme easJ will not give her name) bought (I a HENDERSON CORSET from us early. in the season. A few days ago she said, I never knew what a comfortable corset was un- tell me I never looked better than - now. If you want a corset that will give yon a figure that is in accordN ance with the styles,' get the CORSET. Then at the same time youll have style and HEN-DERSO- I have them in prices from $1.00 to $2.50. And ranging at any price you pay you get s better corset value then is obtainable where HENDERSON CORSETS are not sold. comfort. FOR SALE BY I E. R. MILES JR. f- - (. UTAH SMITHFIELD, m NC NEW BLADES. Y NO ANNUAL TAX. . If you wfch to Csst one of thoso Razors without RISK or OBLIGATION on your part, apply f II for y datftllsl yv jr caixf FREE BOOKLET HINTS TO SHAVERS CWo-VScnt- Sc Cosbies Strop I. sick-troub- led St.OO. A. LARSEN a Hardware Company LOOALAGENTS Z5w3 Chas.: England tttIttttttt AAftft i a ft. NOTARY PUDLIC j r .a. a .a. a a. TT7TTTTTTTT J AA Joamal Office, , Loaan f 4 |