OCR Text |
Show 1IIK xTN S I IN . IT Ml Dorothy's Mother Proves Claim Salt Lake City Directory I 1 1,1 leva d Lardy like tin I t. tl! ell nf ll-n- irib.q al u J! tr ma nwi t'i-- l fit l. t e ..tdWl 1 Nlva food, im- nmt la l!e - no li:lau, by, foUMlpntrd, jr or cl.fid evt--f feverUh, fretful fulled 11 re.Kld l 110 Hit! Ilitlg-Hi- e of CaLfumia I1 Is) rap n iMr lry (rU tt.rtofibtjr, rlrana and atrretrn I bent tn I bey rxKitlnue to art tirnHjr, of tbdr of toH er Million titr Wtro H tat hve bi iir ti biUM uill Ii4 4. 4 jaMUlt 4 I Mt i tt 4 Km U lf Hr hUxl..; Vf f M ai4 ta tw, ! UIW VUVHO The Msjrnecoil Company II Ml 11 ItfMllMI, lh, Of, I Te, an I Mile Iff toel lly t and very weak. I tailed lit-- r on II; Kyrup when he b nnd ll reett-- j wn a fw month laled ber, qubk. I baVe t ll tl!l ler ev-- r ainre for rtl ! and every III He act bark and ber wonderful con t'llluU ! d4 1 k; If 4 ItlbeuW4vJSM.ai N MMr l )ar t - dxut "Cbllforola IT; Pyrup I rer all that Claimed f r It. I have proved ibat with my ItiMr nro-- I Pbe ilcllt'ale, IICAL1II IS CHEAr bat 4f Al Mn, a); Ulnly by. finf P)hCMfG.CO.li.hLUCy.t!ik II; Kjrtiji from riperleuei A mother, Mr. J, . 1 19 OUT Ave, San AMnK Citlif.imla wiVU'ol mmmfj Wotk Cluilir aumifwltrwl by I of tea eetild. lV k HAWK BRAND ll quick, Mt i - wn Hm. p la-ad- it It Man I be in out i I a teller thnu tor! bur Jt 111 liell." Mt, fbiH OdK it IlM m4 tflTlrCTI lMf liwcli 4' i4 V vtb'iipT, 4c I1 wil ip 1 1 , U ( toj I ll 4 eir 4b,4 41 wa!, I Ki 't P (4 M HI I Ol. IftlltOMMMMm Until, NH K Nl tlt l tl I . .f, 'l 10 GUM yt v C!t rtn bmi tUbt4 kig 4 Band Place cf lleaJsman's Viclmt Chcpcl r'taptl of Si. Filer and the lower. In laonion, wa t rally In Ibe Twelfth ten ury though but little f ll.e original f.ibrlc remain. The lmsl It Inter Ml SALT LAKE STAMP CO. . . tall lv City. Uuk bfiutfe bl ' t l'l W. iMi't I ImjeMM-- ! on. fst U.at the IV Hjrup )tl buy bear tbe name, th jnti California" yt.j'U Iih. f jtuua for V yearn. Amn tSt) L)UfUbM4 CILL riSTOM RING CO. tall Uki City If East 4U iMtk The Ibtyul Vitn ula. In SURETY HAND SOAP ontM-tniit-- a Ix'lng llu burial phict? ol '.ho'-KrMr.a ri.ilmnl tituglt to hate I ie n iii'cordi'd the "privilege of belli; eliHUted wllliili tbe Tower Will1 Here, any a Stow; "There lyctli lie fort the high nllar two dukes between two quit lot. lo nil. I he duke of Sumer r and Ha duke of Xorihunfiierl.iiid telwiKUi Queen Anne (Puicynl and Queen Katherine (Howard) nil four i Ming It lu m my, Cy LOUISS M. COMSTOCK i:X Mr. llomcr r Sir IItIht W X JZzmnZyS TRfXmrr xswtimr '(a&ZWW Al lucmisa up her ih'lm-Ml'i III the Whitt ll"i.t ti'. I 'nrtli. raabt'liHlimm to will tl.i according of r fished by IQ predee who imiiMi.il M'r nnl.t It mil t l hint molded In It irv.int furm I lit chiiunrt'ii rult rf Hr-- t I July tf il.tt Smith W iwl o .tit-ti- i imil. Love, roman. ml ctiture. sue. mill f.itliiu Imit fniiii t lliftii whllti first Imm. ml strt vs of Iht notion I fn Thrt't of Ihctu. I Hit hi Tn I il.m T itr, Caroline SiKtl Harrison iitul I'lti Afstin Wil mi ilh'J there; Ih n't more. Julia Folsom C"l t,Iunl and Cnrdner Tjler, I'riiii'e Edith Chill Wlh'i'ti. hy mnrrving men nlnMtlv In olfiee. riit'ii In llu While House iih bride. Only were liuehelors when I wo of nor President Inmiguruted. n proportion vvlileh allows tliem to Ik no fft'jit!on to the res of Immunity In this partleulir rouped. Tlnv Here James I.iicliannn uni Orovor Cloveh.m!. anil Mr. Cleveland rt'iiinltii'il single toilv n year after hi term begun. Three Presidents wore widowers when they took the outli of olliee iiml t daughters or sifters fell the leiMlislhllitle of Hr-- t l.nd.V of the I. Mini. Miiilliii Washington. the first to hohl this In which to enter-tain isitlnn. h.iil no White I I.ni-- t the il 1i tii:' t mnl foreLn clients of the new Republic, hut, the ehihenite fornmlity of the reeep-tioleiee mnl mush tile ht'l.l In the temporary set ll resilience lit Philadelphia Presidential tlellnlte soelnl tinihtion. I.ndy" Washington wns a oiilow when she nmrriotl the famous the mol her of two ehihlren. mnl she brought him n JKHl.t'iiii estate whit It helped nmke hint the rich-ps- t colonist In h's part of the country. She Is tleserihoil ns n quiet, uuiissuining woman, n good mother mnl n ehnnuing hostess, who held 'court with her Idolized husband with ease mnl gruee In spite of tin lavish ceremony (lie times de mantled. It wo thus to Abigail Smith Adams, wife of t tie second President of the United States, that fell t lie distinction of being the llrst mistress of the White House. Site wns Introduced to her new nbnde on n bleak November day in 1 St Hi. P.ohtnd her lay a torturous stage-concJourney over the miles of mud nnd wilderness which lay between her nnd her luxurious Philadelphia home. And before her well, read what that staid and brll limit woman wrote her sister a little later: I arrived about one oclock lit t Ills place, known by the name of the Pity, and t he name Is nil you can call so, ns expected to find It a new country, with houses scattered over a space of ten miles and trees nnd slumps In plenty with a castle of a house so I found It. The Presidents house is in a beautiful situation, in front of which I haV Is (tie been to GeorgeIt Is the dirtiest hole I ever saw town. for a place of nnv trade or respectability of This house Is twice as large inhabitants. . . believe the groat hall Is qis our meeting house. as big. I am sure It is twice ns long. Put vour coat according tn your cloth but tills house Is built for naes to come!" Mrs. Adams was compelled to endure embryonic Washington only three months, for President Jefferson moved In the next March. Jefferson was a widower and nffairs at tiie Castle were ordered by his two daughters nnd by the vivacious nnd popular Polly Madison at that time wife of the secretary of state. For 16 years, while JefTerson and her husband were President Mrs. Madison built to colorful dignity t lie social life of the new White House; for over fiO years she held undisputed sway over Washington society. She was not handsome; It lias even been said that, though brought tip in the Quaker faith, she rouged, took "snuff and playe.k cards for high stakes. Hut, according to one of her biographers, this daughter Is behoved to have made a of South Carotins to the social life of the contribution greater country than nny other woman who had the honor of living in the While House. n ) ... ... Po'-uea- c. 1 yenrs Though Polly Madison wa twenty-onlived younger than her distinguished husband, they When he forty-twfor year. happily together died at Montpelier, Id widow relumed to Washnnd In ington nnd though then nearly seventy little her made she rlrcutust mines, straitened house opposite l.nfo.vctte square, now tin home of the Cosmo dub, n magnetic ci liter of social life. Her death in isi'.t, when she was seventy seven, was mourned by tin entire capital. Her Immediate smeessor. though perhaps less well known, eaeli left the stamp of her personality upon the social regime of the White House. There was Elizabeth Monroe, n quiet. Intellectual woman of stately hearing, nnd laniNa Johnson Adams, In foreign who, though horn abroad, educated courts and "a person far beyond t lie average of h.v 111 health from her generation, was initiated by Polly Madicontinuing the festivities son. Though Rachel Jackson died, perhaps of a broken heart, some months hefote Old Hickory" was Inaugurated and though she was much maligned during the stormy campaign which preceded his election, his passionate devotion to tier memory was responsible for momentous events nt during his administration, though social life her hands of in the was actually the White House sister-ilaw, Mrs. A. J. Ponelson. And it was nnd a Angelica Singleton, his daughter harming belle of'the South,, who presided over otllelal dinners for President Van P.uren, a widower. I.etitia Tyler, made First Lady of the l.and by the death of President Harrison only a few months after his inauguration, died In the Wldte House. President Tyler met the woman who was to b Ids second wife, Julia Gardner of New York, In story book fashion. They were brought togethe. by the death of her father, who was killed in explosion on the Potomac and whose body was brought to the Wldte House immediately after the uceident. The brilliant activity with which the new Mrs Tyler brought her hushnnd's administration to a close ended abruptly with the entrance of Sarah Childress Polk, a beauty of the dark Spanisli type with a regal manner, whose strict religious beliefs caused her to banish dancing and the serving of refreshments from Wldte House functions Mar-gar- ! Smith Taylor undeitook the duties of First Lady of the l.and reluctantly, resenting t he demands this new honor made upon the husband site had already seen though the hazards of a spectacular career as Indian fighter. Consequently. so It Is said, site sat quietly knitting and smoking a favorite pipe while her daughter, Mrs William Wallace Tdiss. saw to the Installation of new lighting fixtures nnd furniture in the Presi dential mansion nnd entertained for tier fattier. Abigail Powers Fillmore, a s If educated woman and a school teacher before her marriage, was another who. this thee because of lameness, put the harden of playing hostess on a daughter And Jane Means Pierce en'ered the Important nde under a cloud of grief for the death of her thtr teen year old son killed 'n a railroad accident, e o in-la- n nnd though a romi'tct.t If somewhat ddnehed hostess, she had Ml h a dMiko of imllth that I In toe Presidents heine they w ere never d sell I while she waa around I ntrlng l he iidtulniM ration of the bachelor Pres Idem, Jamo p.ui hanan. Id ravishing niece. Harriet I.ane Johnston, one of the most beautiful and Hint pos popular of the women who have held tlon. played First laidy of the l.nnd nnd brought In the historic mansion once ngaln a eriod of high festivity. Then came Mary Todd Lincoln. u pleasant faced, cheerful woman, who would be satisfactory In her place," whose life at the Capital, darkened by the death of her son Willie and the President's assassination, could not have boon a very Imppy one. Her successor, E'.lrn McCurdle Johnson, (hough she taught her husband tn rend and write, wns an Invalid while she lived In Washington nnd was forced to relinquish the duties of her exalted position to a daughter. A new social era, ns well as new furniture nnd decorations, entered the White House when Julia Pent Grant been me It mistress. A talent for entertaining and unfailing energy enabled her to promote n continuous round of gala funeth ns. among them the brilliant marriage of her daughter Nellie, one of her four children. I.urv Webb Hie Hayes, also an excellent hostess, modified nature of White House entertainment by banishing the serving of intoxicating liquors. And the custom of lavish nnd efficient entertainment estab fished by these two was nbly continued by Mrs. John E. MeKlroy. sister of President Arthur, and successor tn I.ucretla Garfield, whose term as First I .ndy was cut short by her husband's assassination. Though President Cleveland entered office a bachelor, his marriage to Francis Folsom soon after gave Washington one of the most popular hostesses It has ever known. The young Mrs. Cleveland was the Idol of the women of her generation. many of whom still remember the dresses she wore nt her famous public receptions. Caro line Scott Harrison, nn unusual woman, skilled In painting and music and the first president general of the Daughters of the American Revolution, died In the White House, leaving her responsibilities to a daughter. Mrs. McKee. At tl e close of President McKinleys administration, a quiet one socially, due to the ill health of his wife. Ida Saxton McKinley, Edith Carovv Roosevelt, another woman still fondly reniem bored, became First I.ndy of the Land She was nn engaging, intelligent person, keenly interested in the activities of her famous husband and such a devoted mother to her five children that site American Cornelia." The lias been called the best remembered occasion of her life in the Id torie mansion Is the marriage of Alice Roosevelt to Nicholas l.ongvvorth, present speaker of the house. With Helen Herron Taft, the new interests of modern woman were Introduced into the White House. Mrs. Taft was active In civic enterprise and wns the founder of the Cincinnati Symphony Her successor. Edith Axson Wilson orchestra. died during her husband's first term In offiee nnd was followed hy Edith Galt Wilson, mistress or t lie nation's first home during the trouhlpsotm times of the World war. Florence Kling Hardin was again n modern woman with modern Ideas i being Hie first President's wife with the pow-eto vote. To the demands of a most elaborate social program Grace Goodhue Coolidge, who after sever' years as First I.ady of tire Land yields her pod tion next March, has lent a charm and tact fbn' have endeared her to the American people. She is a graduate of the University of Vermont anil before her marriage taught In a school for the deaf in Northampton. Through the death of one of her two sons. Calvin, Jr., the long illness of tier mot tier and the death of her husband's father through wearing years of continuous publicity, she has maintained a calm, gracious dignity, and true First Lady of the I.ani. been always Here also are buried Lady Jane umi Lord Guilford Dudley, Ho duke of Monniouih, nnd the Scottish lords Kilmarnock, R.ilmcrino, and t,o at, beheaded for their share In 'be rebellion of ITb'i. Grey TMC 14 tk U fvM ti(v PHYtlCUM SUartY CO. Xm hwoth. MN ! THI (til htk, turctr.l Inoiun. m. t !k !, n,i4 t hif taMa irt llfit) 1iHlt V. L. WE7IIERSE2 fy W. f . TiwpU ItltUkiCliy DiAxosciWAicm B jy your DmmeAd now qjitwtr fr Will Mud tnk hr frte rliiititoA, CArrroL iuuxitY co. ti:r 43 Bat tid Su hi h hU Uhl Clly lo your , When Voltage It Lout The work be dcs Is revolting." What Is It?" (Hi. be reebarge batteries. " WILL DO ALL IT CLAJMSJO DO Ivlrs. Steele Says of Lydia E. Pink-ha- Tratt, W. Va. and nervous that One of the queerest randies In the United States Is partly In Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas, as It occupies land where the three states meet. The ranch Is owned by Thomas Ashton. His house is in Nebraska, while a few feet away Ids bunk houses are .n Colorado and less Hum a mile from his home Is the Kansas state line. During the last dO years lie lias not passed a week without riding range in ail three states and looking after his herds of cattle. I was so weak in bed moat all the time and couldnt ait up and I am only 30 years old. I saw your advertising in a mag- I was azine nnd after I had taken threo doses of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vo Compound I could feel that I was better. Af- ter taking two bottles I began doing my work and I feci like a now woman. I recommend tiie Vegetable Compound to my friends and say it will do all it . claims to do nnd move. I will gladly Mbs. answer all letters I rccive. S. E. Steele, Pratt, W. Va. le What a Relief You don't look well." No, I have just been unconscious A beautiful city costs money, and lots of it ; but you are always glad you spent It. BAYER ASPIRIN and INSIST! Unless you see the Bayer Cross on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Bavet Accept only package which contains proven directions. Handr Bayer boxe e.f 12 tablet Also bottle of 24 and 100 Druggist. Ut trade Wfc at $7er ms Vegetable Compound Ranch Oddly Situated Asplrla to HaIi Hupt-rte- r, Foe Pool r.Mc. and Supflx d .nyilun ta SI iow Cue utd Sum I iuum weak arm Everyday discoveries ore being made with regard to ancient people. When gome workmen were clearing out the rubbish from one of ihu wall of Hie Acropolis In Alhons, for which, by Hie way, Thmlslocles used anything that came bandy, they cutue across tw - nmrbl tablets sculptured In relief. And one of these tablets represented two youths holding hockey sticks In their hands ready to hit the ball, which lies between them, whilst a third Is In the net of giving the signal to btgln. SAY b; c Dkkitrk. Xatefniiy f4t.KHi Field Hockey Old Came for eight hours." What was wrong?" Heavens! Nothing I was just asleep." Pele Mole, Paris. tlrafit Buy From Your Local Printer r - 4 and Mif-nstlo- Ueta, ta it I. i4 la fnur tldld'a tint t.tit. h, k, ll luild up and hiidr-t- . mkr puny, under H. tfirtu fa! heartily, brity ii Lark la Ulr rhorL, Uii-r- . IkrU pliiyful, flirt ft t It, full of life. And little ,a bl M t.u a i . M gee, lte - , t - ir - , 4 K fjth, rolaeMtrs ( I i -- 4 VIVt '?? Beauty Culture m tit $..41 . f loi- - ui ' 41 fki la antll Ita I.K.to l k railed a il '(. IP ! .. K x. I . i f Jk ll " I J 4 4U ICAnoXectara at UosoeceUceddeeter of Siller ilcidi |