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Show IDE JOURNAL, LC3AN, UTAH AUGUST 11, TEI-OTESL- Y - v ' im ra. excitement the saw e what it was. It was tha sketch that Francis Raleigh had, drawn on board the Cephalonia three years before, he sketch of Maleom bolding' the baby. Dorothy sobbed as she saw what' It -- tTciuia-th- Jiiuii!U!miuiiiiiiimimKiKiri:iii:Ki!in;mniin:iiriini::i:ii::i;i!iiifiiiiiiii!nnni!iiiii!mmniimiinnnrnine' '' ' , rC:ZjQ:- - m ltuimiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiitiininiirniiiiinjniiiiiiiiinniniiiiiniiiiiiniimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiniiniig i.JU !I1 'My attack of miller Asthma waa very bad. I was afraid to lia down at night tor fear of smothering. I wouldnt get mj breath. No matterif all tha doors and windows in the house were open, it seemed as If there was no air j and that I mast surely smother to death. Mr. W. B. Long, of this city, ' the things they ? t 3 - tS sH 3 ''3 f h me wonderful reand the second bottle cured . me completely. Sly is permanent, too, for ever since 1 bare not bad the slightest return of my old enemy. I consider Ackers English Remedy by long odds the best medicine in the world for hacking coughs, asthma and bronchitis. It complctelymasterr'those stubborn diseases that many people wrongly suppose to be incurable. If sufferers will just try a single bottle, it will prove every word I have said, and more too." (Signed.) John D. Elliott, . ' Commander John Megarah Post, No. 132, Portland, Mich. Sold at 25c.. 5rtc. and $1 a bottle, throughout " the United States and Canada: and in England, at Is. 2d., 2. 3d.. 4s. 6d. If you are not Tmtisiwi'after buying, returrt the bottle to your druggist, and get your money back. j i 4 lawle-mann- cntlre-movementfo- r ' -- -- -- - n, - I-- wilL tt'e authorize the abort guarantee. JL HOOKtK fc CO., IhvpnUort. A'u York BiosDrngCo.Logan ter ss s5 ? , lief, bv-Ri- ? homo and nearly .all' p, counted dear! , , ,,yr ; 1 It was over soon, and in a Htto while' the church and parsonage, the work of many a. weary1 struggle 'for little company of disciples, were H their H dreary heaps of ruin. A bard fight on s , oorraianr, 1300, nr th adyanc rcBusmsa oo. the part of the wornout citizens bad kept the other houses from being burniilllllllinilliillilllllllliillllilll TQrattons by Berman Hcver 111!!11I!III11III!IIIIIIIII111U11 ed. . The church aud parsonage had Btood In a Large lot by themselves. , After all, said Maleom when It was . f whom her soul dearly loved. all from Continued over, as be sat down by Dorothy last issue.) ( .Down came the great wall of fire and a trunk whllo a little group, of the fact that the on smoke. The hot air scorched the faces people of the stood by discussing the Inci- were neighbors on out of the fire fighters. Dim figures to abolish the saloon M trying all, dear, we legislative amendment to CHAPTER IX the advance line were seen desperately dents Aof the fire, to after the consttou bo thankful deal have for" good town Kir.K tkevexts a lyncuIxq. element. The the tlon.' At such a time as struggling with that, for th Yes, said Dorothy, with a smile. temperance As Maleoui Kirk and Carver ran on was enveloped In smoke and burned people to act In & hard was she a as sat for her little It directly tot h of aee ot that wild line of outTnshes of prairie. grass that sifted toward even the enemies of to Imagine that Dorothy Gilbert the home fire, and smoke there was only one cu- over the workers until the faces and there and the church would be aa preine thought In the mind of Maleom. hands of all were black and grimy. wh.ouce back In the old New Eng- act of folly so great, that It might enHe saw the lwys mother, and while he Scores of men rushed upon the fire line land home bad been noted for the ele- danger the nrohk- refinement -- ' of all hcrwaya bitlon. ran he hard her voice as she had ap- as It came on, 'checked some by the gance and : . l pealed to him in kls'lsfudy. I am perhaps, continued Maleonr short v grass, "and -- stamped oiit "the and 'surroundings.- - Nothing ' but the off Instinctively,, the two men bore flame with their feet, with rags, with grejit love she bore the man who had the most t Interested 'pcrsonln this from the road overwhlcr the horses old'T)rooms. with pieces of carpeting: asked her- to share his life now made whole matter, wit la. my church that had entered the town toward a swale and bedding torn -- from their- - own her insensible to that former life has been burned and my home that has wLere the grass and rosin weeds grew been outstanding line of fight-- , fre he was married. , 'And yet I say to you Maleom Kirk sat there gazing at, the, men destroyed. deep, and It was but a. few feet from ers was forced back, burned and ex-- h If that tense fTdlenee you attempt the beaten trackof'tbe,'prntrie road hausted, but the fife had been checked, .fulhs of nlsliome and Lis church, and toward B!g Jake .or other saloon " h l beartr that they saw the lody of. Philip J5ar-io- and as It broke out In new places fresh on Veground"of this clrcumP'J100 keeper lying face downward, the hands groups threw themselves upon It and mighty conflict going on. He had lost stantlal evidence and take the law Into his books, nearly all that were of value,. clinched and holding tightly a broken fought for the life of the town. r own hands defend him an the other losses were great. He ; your of of lines the the i harness, "remember not bow piece , from snch' violence at the risk of my Dorotbyeould No time then to stop and ask wbeth- - she cameJQbejrJthflheJlghters-ottth- e his clothes own lifeTT Let us act like men in' this erh tr wenrlivingrbut np niGThlhrbe-twee-n prairie Instead of with the water. 1fl"raged rents about blm. blaj men who seefurthor than them andback totketown with rlersrbunt was undoubtedly her anx- - great fists were bleeding,' and here be-- , nnd all the power of their pulsing man-- iety for Malcoms safety that urged (Mde him was the woman who had left personalvengeance our ed that be directed not shall fight hood. her out toward the fire. -- Her dress had t tU for what? To share xsuch priva- - against the saloon keeper 60 much as "Carver was'eaflrely sober now. lie caught on fire and been put out several Hons; dangers, losses? against the business he represents was naturally a man of great muscular times; Some one had thrown water i For a moment he hardly heard what That is what we want to for to endurance. .Maleom had kept up his over her, but she had hardly known It Bome of his parishioners were sayjug. .behalf .of all, our homes andfight churches physical training In his work with the She worked with all the others in a si fhey bad "been talking excitedly to- - and our state and country." young men In the church. "He got down off the box after he had lent -.Suddenly she was - con- - - Clicr. "Not a word was saId. They realized scionsfrenzy. r rJr tTre ar.e PInIn that spoken and. appealed. In .a. of a tall, awkward figure near cjulet butb Af vas incendiary. . that the time was short, and- they .ran her, looming up. through the some manner of to' the more powerful smoke,; with their unconscious, heavy burden thatr fkd Maleom, rous-- ' Influential men In the crowd not to. at fire with powerful en-- 1 the thrashing ' ' between them. a very incarnation of resistance Ins up a ttle. let, the men act lawlessly. Els speech, j Meanwhile men, women and children ergy, In was seen of It the tow- - nnd j The first appeal bad their effect A smalt hnd organlzed In a desperate effort er. fire from the 'Now, ('the prairie ..Maicorar'6lie crIedf aud, frict ,9 group of men on the edge of the cnM ; save the town. There was one fact toj In ghe could not1 possibly, hare caught .up i Ehe sigL cew life at the fejt wa8, gathered farther np the street, and aft- -, their favor. It had been the custom of him. there. Some one must Jiave set It. ,, cr Kirk had gene home they marched for those living on the edge of the town Them different ones began to whisper Dorothy! Thank God, we got back Big Jakes" saloon, only to find' ' to picket their animals out on the prai- with V their suspicions. ' r j him just in timer , It closed and the proprietor fled. V.t v,t rie near by. The grass was cropped There was no time to say more. The next day, while llaleom and The short on this account. Under any orwere staying with' one of the Near together To be Continued danger was still church members who took them Into dinary circumstances this fact would now, husband andgreat' wife fought on. The have. Insured .safety from wny, usual citizens of Conrad home,4be rumor grew that the fire afterward, bore wit--- ) fire. But the whole prairie was aflame, ness was the work of the. whisky men. to the way In which they fought on the street excited groups of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Pow&f Down everything was as dry as two months Say, did you see Mr,. Kirk? A men J Qoid VUdjl UiMCv Fab. Saa P nod of drought aDd hot winds could make gathered that evening, discussing i men at the postoffice, several of group it, and water for a long time had been matter. Every one knew that Mai- -' days after the great fire, were talking the L com very scarce in wells and cisterns. Back It over. - . Kirk had fought the saloons from r ; t , of all that advancing line of Are was a Con: first of his Into entrance the A. REA Ty lay These New England folks beat evprairie gale that shot the flames ery other kind when it comes to never rad.' He' was feared .and bated by them more than any one else. He had'., straight forward, and old settlers, Bome giving up. of whom had seen the great fires In Dasucceeded to a large degree In getting , mindevIL Our Yes, or fighting the kota in the early sixties, looked at the ister beats all the rest at that said the other churchesjto act together In j?!ght now before themw!th .grave Carver. who spoke of ' Kirk as our the agitation now going on all over the v j fact's. state. Ho was already noted for his , minister," although he had never been Dorothy tame to the door of the par- a member of any church and rarely leadership throughout' the county and. sonage, stood there a moment and then went to hear even Maleom preach. Bntf had written and spoken on every possi-'A. nmrwUhotherwomenrhef neighbors, it was a tribute Jo the bold Maleom Ple occasion for the proposed ( prohibl-ha- d ' ' down to the main street. ' secured on such men that they i tor atneQdment. Bucket lines were being formed from So there was reason In the suspicion him somehow to themOocVwcrk all the wells and cisterns that were appropriated held by the citizens. As the evening selves or to the best that' wa3 strugMotor, available. She Instantly joined with wore on proof of a certain saloon mans , ' MechoaiM them.. in the others la handing the water. A gling sure. Two or : Vitibla. 0 ' It was nearly the middle of the after- guilt seemed almost him. A?. Oaratle Cow seen hod out large company of men armed with wet noon of that eventful three persons, coming day that the peocloths te whip out .the-fir- e itractio.' began te ple of Conrad, exhausted, ' burned, of the parsonage yard that afternoon form as far from the houses as they saw the great danger pass of the fire. . A child had seen the same FUN. dared. It tvas too late now to plow blackened, man on the steps of the church a' few NO. BOTHER, J.IUOI whirlaround them and the galloping fire breaks and toa windy to make n , i AU th WootfersenaFtoasore of wind thuudered off beyond the town, minutes after Dorothy bad left the- parJU fa Kcc'irder,, back fire. . The only hope that any one r 0 , j, , ' 1, When accompanied sonage; , a desolate and leaving expanse mighty by to make kc oroa. had was that the shortness of the grass It was now 10 oclock.- The crowd at A Graphophone can be used black and smoldering prairie ' be-v Recorder. near the town would check the fury of of with Price 1 ; the corner, by the postofflee grew every, the ctandard Record.47,60. wear ajirfwwM hind IL t the advancing whirlwind of flame. , i',v the' was severest trial minute larger and more' threatening. (o our ntarett o$c. , It that Have You seen Mr. Kirk?" Dorothy ofThen some stood men of tO.DcPy30 CCLUM3IA PKOiNOGEAPll surrounding Groups all came to Maleom and Dorothy. asked as she first joined the others. I who urged lynching as the .... - KIW YORK,'wu? Ero.dwr speaker Into one had bouse of the gone They - - CHICAGO, Si Wbli A ; And they told her Her faea blanched such for Satisfactory only punishment St. Oli St. LOUIS, jro-jand her Ups breathed a prayer as she of their parishioners,, where the body a crime. The citizens were exasperat- WASHINGTON, 019 Feimsyt! A( been of carried.' had He Barton Philip worked on silently,. Blie knew that be and' nervous from the great strain, whom she; never loved ns. she loved was living, but bad received some in- of the last two days. i juries from falling out of the wagon tij Ceay Sc Sou levari lr Maleom Kirk came down' town late HUS, team ran pfobablywhen the' away. Kronen.; SKKLIN, that night to get the mall from, the They had come out of the house and east hound express and walked Into the j were on thciy way homo when some mob Just as cries of Lynch the fire tnytn'thrT6tiretr''SUdleiily ditched bug! rose from many voices.' As soon Maicoma arm. and, pointing through as tbo crowd saw him It surrounded ' the smoke, cried out: .V 'V Look there! -- The church is on fire I him excitedly,. wovo Kirk, proof - that- - Blg The church and parsonage stood at i to set church."- . fire Jake your the opposite cud of the town from the Maleom over a c.rowd the looked. prairie fire, aud the danger had been moment In silence.--He had not been the least' In that quarter. - That part of the town had been entirely deserted thinking so much about the loss of his While the fight had been going on at church and parsonage as he came down ' town as about Dorothy and his future end. ' 75 But the sight aud sound of '"If the 'church "goes, the parsonago prospects. will go, too," thought Maleom, as he that mob of citizens brought his mind J.s back to the situation not only in the and Dorothy raq through the street entown of Conrad, bnt throughout the When they reached the parsonage, the roof had already caught, from ' a tire state. For the time, therefore, he liatsl Er,Elppc(l;fcIptor; flying timber blown ff the church let his pwn personal plans go af lie tower. The water of the, town was ex- faced the fact of a grave crisis la the 7t . hausted, "The weir In the parsonage tcmpcrance movement He more had one than Mal-coSunday was 'I TbVliiiet' yard already nearly empty. outdoor services at the very rushed Into the house and by work, helped: by. several other corner where the crowd now gathered, tarinra are now (.itjSrr Dorothy- had often helped ' himat men. succeeded In carrying oat some who has been t1.4. jartv th such services by playing and singing. Barton, far? estol Artist furniture and 4 few of his books!' .stlbshJJ I' One of the boxes In Dorothys room Eyery man In .Conrad was familiar EllIartmaa,irho was blazing as be carried It out and With the tall, homely awkward figure her im eiamtsiwlUhs Fillers- ' ad now over Hal towered almost that every threw it over, and a pile of papers In a lias Aa t man lh Conrad nn, flTiTaTk; portfolio was scattered. Dorothy, as the head : and every 5;l.TArUrfrt Vd , . , They ran Kith their unconscious burden .worked helping to. carry home pieced spected him.' 1 . ' lctvxa them. lteB.te There was an' empty dry. goods, bev of furniture to a, place of. safety; felt -ht tor gaat! him at that xrmeot la ths r".ef Something blow n gainst her fa efi and. hear1 one'of the "stores, aid Mztoom Kirk aaked some of th men, to drag It duty, and aha woulJ not La re called putting up,-- her hand she caught him back from ut her heart cried piece of out to the comer cf th t ,Thv , ptptr.r' v j: ? n..-- . a a - v i nn f.r v.s eeta . that it might help me a little. It gave Sold , , A Tale of Aldrd IlercisinTln Overcoming the World. ! , S called ray attention to Ackers English Remedy for Throat and Lung Troubles. I thought little of it but bought a bottle in the hopes 1 IT. ' MALjOMltiRK Slnuto'hTlSrSoSV? became silent. crowfl; It is a rare g!ft toValiQ to a great crowd of men Kola teem. Kirk M His voice was a splpadld and ho knew hoW.te use of Gladstone that In the daj, of?,1 greatest power a would linger In the corridojW house of commons when he was lmply to enjoy the tone of his voice, although tbeLST not distinguish a word that was ,v? Something of this same Sf' Kirk's voice a fascinationquality for nQ once. Whatever It was it could be called a great gift of God, And he used It now In a godlike man ner, He began by calling attention - Utah j- - Franklin, - Preston .and Mont - - palier, Idaho. lu- -- A Mother Tells How She Saved Ser 'Llttl daughters Life. am. the mother of eight childrea end have h&d a great deal of experience with medicines.1 "Last 'summer , my little , daughter . had lhe dysentery in its worst form. We thought she would die. I tried everything I could think of., but nothing eeemedtodo her any good. I saw by an advertisement in our paper that Chamberlains Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was and highly recommended and-seonce. bottle at proved to got a be one of. the very best medicines we, ever bad in the bouse... It saved my little daughters life. I am anxious for every mother to know whaV an excellent medicine it is. Had I known it at firet it would Have saved me a great .deaf of I nt 'It anxiety and my little daughter much suffering. Yours truly, Mrs. Geo. F. Bukdick, Liberty, R, I. For sale byRittr Bros. Prug Co. a . A.. 4 throat, chest! and lung troubles. Only 50i and, $1.00. Guaranteed. Trial bottles free at Riter Bros, 8 drug store, 5' t Bscklea's Arnica Sava. ; Has world-wid- e fame for marvellous cures. It surpasses" any other salve,lqtion, ointment C.r.bilm forDais.Co'ns, Burns, Boils, Sores, Felons, Ulcers, Tetter, 8alt Rheum, Skin Feyer Sores, Chapped-Hinds- , Eruptions; Infallible, for. Piles.1 Cure guaranteed. Only, 25o r Riter Bros. Drug Co. 1 . What most peorle want is somo-thin-g mild and gentle, when in need of a' physio. Chamberlain's Stomach and Live 1 ablets' lilt- the bill to a dot. They are easy to take and pleasant io effect. For sale, by Riter Bros. Drag Co,. - . For digestive weakness nervoui-ne- t; piins in the side, flatulence, dizzine8, wakelulae88r headache kod other annoying acoompanl meat of costiveness, HERBINE is a prompt and unequalled remedy. Price, 60- cents. . , - . - ' it8 9 t T - . Ackfets Dnpepiia sold on a 1 ablets are 'Cures positive guarantee heart-burrailing of the food, distress after eating or any tom of dyspepsia. One little tablet gives immediate relief. ?5 cti. and CO ct. , 3 . r f i , i 4 ' n, r . J ll 1 -- lothy !' 1 -- GRAPHOPHOHK - 1 2 , , .'; 4 4 -- , t. Kigb-IVk-- -- sl - , - - - J . -- -- the-oth- J U"AVCIOt . -- wem. nw i 4 PrsYsntsd a Tradogy. Time! jr information - given - Mrs. George Long .of New. Straitsville, Ohio, saved two lives. A frightful cough had long kept her awake every night. She. h&d tried' many remedies and doctors but steadily grew worse until urged to try Dr, KtqgVNew Discovery; ''One bottle wholly cured her; and she writes, this marvelous medicine also cured Mr. Ijong of- - a' severe attack of Pneumonia. . Such cures'are positive , proof of its power to cure all MCMt - er 1 evpn-ing-be- hl m rrT itrnti kryy dcs-pern-to t.1 -- -- . rt . It-B- rj"'r3 I t ( J : .' I ' |