Show NEW MEMBER OF WASHINGTON Would you believe that 78 par cent of our wateh work is the rapalr of damage dono by incompatant workman bofora tha watchoo era brought to us? Our workman are who hava spent years In becoming proficient Wa guarantee their work SOCIETY WEST VIRGINIA WILL BUY GIANT PREHISTORIC MEMORIAL Is 170 'MAIN ST SALT LAKE CITY UTAH to patentProcedure ability FREE upon requeat Send aketch and deacription of your invention Harry J Robinaon Attorney at Law and Solicitor of Patenta 304-- Judge Building Salt Lake City Advice YOUTHFUL SCOT WELL a and VERSED Prompt and Concise Answer to gorical Question Cate- Boston Massachusetts has long en the reputation of having exceedingly learned children who are able so It Is said to dispute on subjects far above the heads of their elders of other regions But Bostou is not unique In "a book entitled “The Scot of the Eighteenth Century” Ian Maclaren describes a similar characteristic of the Caledonian It is the Inevitable tendency of the Scot’s mind to follow ouf every line to Its terminus even If it be over a precipice and to divide every hair till infinity is touched It Is not only In church courts but in market places and In railway sta-tlons In humble cottages as well as in university societies that th8 Scot Is disputing in every spare moment of his time from morning till night The story goes that a minister overheard a mother questioning her child as It supped its porridge after the day’s work was done “What” said this austere mother “is the true relation between kirk and state according to the principles of the Free church?” And the favored child promptly rejurisdiction with plied: mutual subordination” — Youth’s Companion Joyed $2500— CALI FORN A— $2500 - Salt Lake Route now selling Colonist Tickets above rate to San Francisco San Jose Santa Barbara San Diego on nearest Call Los Angeles etc aeent The Appreciation of Music If we would appreciate music aright must remember that its beauty depends not upon the composer alone: out ‘upon ourselves also Deep calls upon deep and the harmony of sound though appealing primarily to the outward ear must be answered by t harmony from within ourselves Tho more culture we bring to the hearing f music the wider our sympathy the more exqufsite will be the echoes which It awakens In the soul If we would understand the composer’s with him we must We must reach out to him with all If we do that the reveour faculties lation of music will ceaselessly renew its beauty ever turning unlmagined aspects to gladden us— Redfern Mason in Atlantic we $2500— CALIFORNIA— $2500 Salt Lake Route now selling Colonist Tickets above rate to San Francisco San Jose Santa Barbara San Diego lx)s Angeles1 etc Call on nearest agent Merely Nagging It Is surprising how many "don’ta” are said every day to children who are really doing nothing In the least harmful to themselves or to other people Have Equality in Rank In the Turkish navy the crew and officers of a warship form a regiment and the officers hold the same rank as on land The captain lsjleutenant colonel and so on Making a Fine Character The sweetest bread that any man or woman ever ate is that which is won by their own energy or deserved by Whether labor b their usefulness that of the hand or the head there Is dignity In It Do not stand around with arms akib-buntil occasion tells you what to do don’t live In hope with your arms folded Fortune smiles on those who roll up their sleeves put their shoulders to the wheel and push! To begin at the very foot of the hill and work slowly up to the top may be a very discouraging process but It is precisely at this spot where so many begin to spoil their lives— Exchange $2500— CALIFORNIA— $2500 Salt Lake Route now selling Colonist Tickets above rate to San Francisco Jose Santa Barbara San Diego Call on nearest Los Angeles etc agent Can Cheer for the Industrious Indusj keeps the body healthy the mind clear the heart whole the purse full — Simmons Photograph by CUuedliiHt Washington C Mrs Huntington Wilson wife of the new not unknown in society circles at the national years prior to her marriage In Baltimore NEW CRAFT WHICH CAN FLY ALSO FLOAT J Harrison St Louis Millionaire Has Made Successful Model Says His Plan Is Sure to Be a Big Succcess AND assistant secretary of state Is capital having resided for three Harrison’s ideas but the Japanese has not since been heard from DOCTORED W Who St Louis — Aerial navigation is not a very difficult problem according to John W Harrison millionaire manu- facturer of this city Mr Harrison recently told a reporter that he had a plan upon which he has worked for more than four years for an airship that would also float on water and he says he is sure the machine will be successful because he made a model of It and the model worked perfectly “1 know it Is practicable and will work successfully” Mr Harrison said I made a model some time “because ago which did all I thought It would and more The only trouble with It was that It sailed completely away and never found it or any trace of It" Mr Harrison made his model along the lines upon which he has planned a bigger machine It was two feet long and operated by a big clock He liberated the airship from spring the roof of his home and it flew He watched It until It was out away of sight and as far as he could see it the contrivance did not drop or show any defect Mr! Harrison fully described his contrivance The machine Is to be built of aluminum the roof and wings to be of oiled silk It is to be provided with two propellers one for air The and one for water navigation of aluminum body is boat shaped The propellers are to be of aluminum Aluminum columns on the boat will the roof which is to be of support oiled silk surrounded by huge rigid wings of oiled silk The dimensions are to be as follows: The aluminum boat Is to be 54 25 feet long the silk roof Is to feet long and the wing area to be 75 The wings are to be 25 feet long feet long The 6 feet between their ends This would make a wing area The air 75 feet long by 56 feet wide to have wings and propeller the water propeller wings The machine Is to be operated by a steam engine weighing 750 pounds This machine by Mr Harrison’s calculations would have a 2 lifting power The machine which flew away was a model of this proposed airship two In 'feet length It was built just like he proposes to build the big one He never made another model but had an engine made for a big machine About that time however he says Other business distracted his attention Mr Harrison sold the engine to a and the Japanese Japanese servant went to saying he would consult the Japanese consul there and to an construct airship on Mr try BY WIRELESS Sailor Injured at Sea Is Successfully Treated from Land Eureka Cal — Calling a physician on shore by wireless from the vessel where he lay dangerously and receiving successful treatment by wireless advice was the unique experience of a sailor on board the oil steamship Asuncion which was off this port While the ship was near this port the Humboldt wireless station received a message stating that one of the sailors Sad fallen from the rigging to the deck sustaining injuries resulting in severe internal hemorrhages Medical advice for the Injured man was asked at once comThe wireless municated with Marine Dr Charles Falk who prescribed treatment The until the steamship remained hove-tprescription of the physician had been received by wireless message Lays a Freak Egg Minneapolis Minn — A Plymouth Rock hen owned by Frank A Breltkrentz Is In the public gaze with the queerest shaped egg on It Is shaped like a squash record with a body the size of a small egg a long neck and another small sized egg on the end MEMORIAL Largest in America and May Have Been Built While Pyramids Were Erected— Relics Inside Full of Mystery 70 W Va — Standing Charleston feet high 900 feet in circumference with trees growing on it 700 years old ihe mammoth mound at Moundsvllle Va located on tho Grave creek flats near the Ohio river — the greatest monument of antiquity in the Ohio valley and a memorial to the life of a prehistoric people will be purchased by the state of West Virginia At the session of the legislature just ended following unceasing activity for 20 years the state appropriated $1000 with which to save the mound from the ravages of modern commercialism This sum with a donation of $5000 from the McFadden heirs owners oi the property and a similar donation from the school children of the state is sufficient to secure the mound for the state A quarter of a century ago G S McFadden purchased the mound tc prevent it being sold to a German who knew the value of the spot for a popular resort and Intended placing a saloon on the summit Several months ago the heirs of McFadden served notice that they had held the mound as long as possible and it would be sold at once The mound is the largest in America and was discovered by Joseph Tomlinson in 1770 the first pioneer settler in that section Standing in a broad valley of 4000 acres it af fords a view of the surrounding country for several miles Relative to the ago of the mound little is known Tomlinson the discoverer said that when he discovered It and first mounted its summit then 90 feet high the timber on the mound was as large and dense as any of the surrounding forest At that time some of the trees bore names and dates one A gigantic of the latter being 1734 oak tree felled years afterward on the summit was ascertained to be more than six centuries old Even conjecture cannot point to the time when the mammoth mound was It may erected by a bygone people have been when old Cheops was being built or when Cleopatra’s needle was Certain It Is that being fashioned the mound was erected by a prehistoric race that was similar to the Egyptians In 1838 the mound was opened by Its owner by excavating a passageway from the north side toward the At a distance of 100 center feet from the entrance two skeletons were unearthed In a vault crudely constructed with unhewn timbers and loose stones A shaft was sunk from the summit of the- mound to meet the drift and at a point 34 feet above the vault first discovered was another containing a skeleton which had been ornamented with copper rings plates of mica and bone heads Probably the most interesting curio or antiquary taken from the mound in 1838 was a stone engraved In unknown characters resembling those used by the Scandinavian priests before the introduction of the Roman alphabet are conceded to The characters be of European origin and If this be true It Is evident that other Europeans visited America before Christopher Columbus TO THE HORSE Bunglinj Hangman Adda to Horror Execution of Wiillam Hayes at Montana State Prison of Butte Mont— William A Hayes of Guard accessory to the murder John Robinson at the state prison on March 8 190S was executed at tho prison Friday morning at 8 o’clock The hangman miserably bungled Hayes’ neck was not broken by tha fall and he hung for eight minutes slowly strangling to death In tho presence of a large crowd of Invited guests The room In which Father Landy said mass Friday morning was tha com one in which the struggling menced that has coat Hayes and RocH The death warrant was their lives also read in this room and the march to the scaffold begun there The condemned man never lost his nerve and from the time the death warrant was read to him until he wa jerked Into the air to bo strangled ta death he remained calm and bravely faced death MADE GOOD JOB OF IT to Gallows lit Fred Lebeau Goes Stocking Feet and Neck Is Broken by Fall Kalispell Mont— Fred Lebeau was hanged here on Friday for the murdet of William F Yoakum and Riley near Fortune in Flathead Lebeau county on June 17 1908 killed Yoakum because the latter or dered him off his place and refused Lebeau was acto sell him food companied by a man named Joe Robbins who is serving a life sentence for the deed After Lebeau had shot the old man In the abdomen he walked up to him Then and put a bullet In his head he had a duel with Riley Yoakum tha wounded him old man’s son and Riley was so badly injured that he shot himself and as the revolver ha used In the duel was the same caliber as (Lebeau’s the coroner’s jury found a verdict of murder and suicide Lebeau went into a frenzy during the reading of the death warrant protesting against the word “murderer1 declaring he was no murderer and imploring the sheriff 4o desist reading Lebeau raced around his cell knocked the paper from the sheriff’s hands was seized with nausea and was only quieted by the efforts of his counsel Mr Long Lebeau was burled in a lot and in a wickerwork coffin which the condemned murderer paid for himself from collections made during his incarceration Just before Lebeau mounted the scaffold he removed his shoes passing a facetious remark to the crowd Then with the rope around his neck he madea speech and was launched into eternity his neck being broken by the drop from the gallows ROOSEVELT AT GIBRALTAR r Visit Makes on His Way to Africa Gibraltar — The steamer Hamburg and the with Theodore Roosevelt members of his party on board came into Gibraltar a few minutes before 9 o’clock Friday morning After a stay of littl more than three hours the Hamburg sailed for Naples Richard L Sprague the American of Genconsul and an Forestler-Walke-r eral Sir Frederick governor of Gibraltar went out to tha Hamburg to welcome the former presThe ident of the United States general had invited Mr Roosevelt to luncheon as had also Mr Sprague but Mr Roosevelt was not able to accept either of these Invitations on account of the short stay here of the Hamburg Woman Cannot be Special Deputy Game Warden Helena Mont — Holding that the of “special deputy game warposition den” was not a public office within the meaning of the law the has rendered an opinion Instructing the state treasurer not to draw a warrant in favor of Mrs Chas B Peyton widow of the deputy game warden recently killed by Indians while in the performance of his duty The legislature in Flathead county her adoped a resolution requesting appointment to this position and she was named last week by the state warden game La '-- v Monument recently erected r in the that oerlshed In South Africa to the memory conflict of Children Sleep While Firemen Fight Flames In New York — Children patients St Luke’s hospital slumbered on earmm ly Friday in their pavilion despite the fact that a fire was raging below them Cautioned by the superintendent the firemen muffled the bells on their vehicles as they approached and quietly ran two lines of hose into the the building quickly extinguishing flames Not a child was disturbed the horses although the nurses were lined up emeran ot case ' ready for action in gency |