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Show V. S, Ji? The postofflc department hu ! sued a ruling to the publishers of the country that newspapers must be ipald for In advance, or be excluded jrom the postofflce. Our friends can see tbe position we are In. and will please govern themselves according ly. If this article is marked it means tbe time has come to pay up. Please take notice and try to realize the position we are forced Into without any desire on our part. EASTERN r1 r" work ana el groat expanse, ft is the for Stockton method used by the faireat and mow to and vicinity beautiiul women of Europe. look after renewals and tncrease subHundreds of American women who scription list of a prominent monthly now use It have expressed their do commismagazine, on a salary and light and satisfaction. sion basis. Experience desirable, but This secret is easily unlcrstouc not necessary. Good opportunity for ml simple to follow and It v 111 aavt Box of creams, co auntie. right person. Address Publisher, ' you the expense York. New O. Station bleaches and forever give you a beau it. tlful complexion and free yo ir akin from pimples, bad color, blackheads, ww To woman for eollocUng etc. It alone Is worth to you man It names sad sslliag out times the pries wa ask you to sens aovsitles, we give big fur the genuine diamond ring of la premiums send your name today foi st dertgu. our new plan of big profits with llt-lWa scM you nils ring as one work. Writ today. Address C. roflt above manufacturing coat. Tfti T. MOSELEY, Premium Department, f what other price Is less roan one-hal12 E. 23rd Street, New York City. with evIs free The recipe charge. . ery rlag. It ts a genuine rose cut diamond ring of sparkling brilliancy absoluteA BEAUTIFaL ly guaranteed, vary dainty, shaped Ire a Belcher with Tiffany setting of COMPLEXION 4Kt. gold shell, at your local Jeweler It would cost considerable mors Now Revealed. Wanted TO OUR READERS. EXCURSIONS. June 1st. Frequent dates during June to eastern points. Finest train service, and grandest scenery, via Colorado Midland Ky. Write L. H. Harding, general agent, Salt Lake, for full information and detaila. FREE than What beauty la mors desirable than an exquisite complexion and elegant TINE CARDS. uwels. An opportunity for every woman to obtain both, for s limited TRAINS ENTERING AND LEAVING time only. SALT LAKE CITY. The directions and recipe for obtaining a faultless complexion is the RIO GRANDE. DENVER secret long guarded by the master minds of sad the ORIENTALS Depot: Second South Street, between CHEEKS. This ws obtained after years of Fifth and Sixth West Streets. TRAINS LEAVE: Going south and oast at 7:30 a. m.; :10 a. m.; 3:00 p. m.; 4:80 p. m.; 6:56 p. m. Going north and west at 13:05 a. m.; 10:25 a. m.; 1:00 p. m.; 3:30 p. m.; 5:50 p. m. TRAINS ARRIVE: From the aouth and east at 10:20 a m.: 12:50 p. m.; 3:20 p. m.; 5:40 p m.; 11:50 p. m. From th north and west at 7:58 a, m.; 3:50 a. m.; 1:55 p. m.; 2:50 p. m.; 41:40 p. m. o OREGON SHORT LINE. ' Depot: Third Weet Street, between North and 8outh Temple 8treeta TRAINS LEAVE: Going north, east and weat at 7:10 12:35 . m.; 3:30 a. m.; 12:25 p. m-- . p. m.; l:00 p. m.; 4:00 p. m.; 6:16 p m.: 11:45 p. m. TRAINS ARRIVE: From the north, east and west at 8:15 a. m.; 3:30 a. u.; 11:45 a. m.; ; 7:00 p. m.; 3.05 p. m.; 6:15 p. 7:55 p. m.; 9:05 p. m. SALT LAKE ROUTE. Oepot: Third West Street, between North and 8outh Temple Streets. TRAINS LEAVE: Going west at 6:45 a. m.: 7:45 a. in.; 12:10 p. m.; 3:00 p. m.; 8:15 p p. m.; 11:50 p. m. p.; 11:00south at 8:00 a. m.; 4:50 p. Going m.; 1:30 p. m. TRAINS ARRIVE: From tbe a. m.; 9:05 p. m.; 4:50 From the i west at 1:10 a. m.; 6:30 a. m.; 12:05 p. m.; 1:40 p. m.; 6:00 p. m. south at 9:50 a. m.; 1:45 a GATRELL Attorney A Counselor. 311 D. F. W Piles and External Cancers KJOUtAOOULlOra S NEW METHOD. No Knife Used. I e Detention from Bns iness. t Dr. Johnson, Specialist SUMMER EXCURSIOR RATES SIXTY DAYS $40.00 $50.00 $65.00 WITH STOPOVERS 01 SUE JOSE Id TO SEPTEMBEI 15th, INCLBSIVE LOS ANGELES Returning Same Way . . 940 Returning thre Rea Pren. SSO Returning thre Fertl.nd, III tralna with unaxeallad Dining Car 8srvlc, Pullman and Tourlat Slsspsra. Good on Los Angolas LI ml tod. For reservations or other Information ask your looal agent. Two daily palatial Walker Bldg. J. H. Burtner, D. P. A., 169 Main Street, Salt Lake City All Our Country Friends Should Call 327-- 29 Main St. and Hear the - World-Famou- of the THREE BARS$ El KATE AND VIRGIL D. lltiniyll l) A UK lain t W., UN.) SYNOPSIS. r.iiiii;.- - WiliiKli.il. u nmr hlltli minn.-t- l timi i iilluii-il- . iiiikkiiiK from III nuu-li- - ceMI.- n (.h; Mlxt-ni- ii ii wntuli-i- l nmii-- l l.uvt-- renrlinmn. for tin- I in the river's hn( Ihh-i- i InIhihI ili ran-lii-- "l-it- Ih-i- liml hii lie hi liiicli lian.l ..f Iiiiim- - tlilcr-- . wilier, eiiKUKeil in i.i-IhhikI. hii entile, lie ri-i- . neiir in mile Hie rhftiiKlin; nf I lie Thrw- li.tm" lirnnil mi one aleer to Hie J I'niil lainKfi'i'd, the rirli owner of Hie "Tlni-- Hum" ranch. In will fur hjr Willminn mnl in Informed nf tlm nperatinn. nf Hie nans nf cal I It I lilrvr. a lnd nf mu law a headed by Jeeae lilack, whu luna liun-- ilehed I Ini law and aiitlinr-Itlnt cnuiily. Hnulli liakma, with hniMiiiilv, hill who, lierelnfnre, had not dared in nmli.t any of Hie irnM-rlof the ureal "Three liar." ranch. Willi-to- n alma. Ilia ri'liiclHiicy III niaialnK a band an mwerfiil In finlillca and au dreaded b all I lie cmiiinunitv. Wllllalnn Ida friemlalilp If he lliMge rill aaiial In bringing "Jeaae Black" and Ilia gang In juailie. luingfurd ia ainn-with the lieauly nf Mary, knows aa "Wllllatnn'a little girl." ilmt-over- a s ei CHAPTER III. Louise, It wa reining when she left Wind City, but the ruin hod soon born distanced. Perhaps tbe Judge was right when he said H never rained north or wcat of Wind City. But tbe Judge had not wanted her to go. Neither had the Judge's wife. Full 20 minute., only day before yesterday, the judge bad delayed hN day's outing si the mill where the' Jim river doubles right around on Its tracki, In order to make It perfectly dear to her that it was absolutely outside (he bounds of her duty, that It was altogether an affair on the aide, that she could not be exiected to go, and that the prosecuting attorney up there had merely asked her out of courtesy, in deference to her position. Of course he would be glad enough to get her, but let him get some one nearer home, or do without. It wss'nt at all necessary for the court reporter to hold herself In readiness to answer the call of anything outside her ii (escribed circuit duties. To be sure 3afr would earn a trifle, but It was a hard trip, a hard country, and she had much better postpone her initial Journey Into the unknown until the regular term of court, when he could be with her. He had then thrown his minnow nelne over his shoulders, taken his minnow pall In one hand and his reel case and lunch box in the other, and walked out to the road wagon awaiting him at the gate, and so off to his frolic, leaving her to fight It out for herself. The judge's wife had not been so She diplomatic, not by any nieana. bad dwelt long and earnestly, and no doubt to a large extent truly, on tbe uncivilized condition of their neighbors up tbe line; Ihe roughness of the boldness and accommodations, license of tbe cowboys, the daring and Inaolence of cattle thlpves, and cunning and dishonesty of the Indians, and the uncouthni-sand viclousness of the half-breeShe had ended by declaring eloquently that Iuise would die of loneaomenesa if, by God's good providence, she escaped a worse fate at the hands of one or all of the many evlla she had enumerated. Yea. it waa very evident Aunt Helen had not wanted her to go. But Aunt Helen's real reason had been that she held It so dizxiiy unconventional for her vices to go to that wild and unholy land alone. She did not actually fear for her niece's personal safety, and Louise more than half suspected the truth. She had heard ail the arguments before. They had little or no terrors for her now. They were the arguments used by the people back in her eastern home, those dear, dear peo-plher people how far away she when they had arhemed and plotted ao pathetically to keep her with them, the second one to break wy from the alow, safe, and calm traditions of her kin In the place where generation after generation of her people had lived and died, and now lay waiting the great judgment I" the peaceful country burying ground. She had listened to them dutifully, half believing, swallowed bard and followed her uncle, her father's youngest brother, to the I,and of the DakoUhn. Now, that same dear uncle was a man of power and position in the new land. Only last November he had been reelected to his third term on the bench of his circuit with n big. heart-stirriIn the day majority. of his prosperity he had not forgot the little, tangle-hairegirl who bad cried ao inconsolably when he went away, and the unaccountable horror In whose eyea he had tried to laugh away on that day when he had wrenched hia bcartstrlnga from their safe abiding-plac- e and gone forth In queat of the I10 t gold at the rainbow' end k. a ng Fit any pink-eyed- If-- MiXsXsWdJ t LANGFORD r Or Write & STORY 12.00. Wa mail you thla beautiful comorder plexion recipe free when your mom 12.00 in and for received ring b your ley order, stamps or hills. Gat order In before our supply is ' ex . hausted. This offer Is mad for a limited time only as a means of advertising and introducing our goods. Send today before this opportunity !i forgotten. T. C. MOSELEY, S East 23rd Street, New Verk City. 3SIWli)!HW864gllBIWWWlM CYRUS SERIAL rPP vV DIRECTORIES: flrnt of many generation. Trad! f Chuckll! None o your sase, my tioii knew no other ninre hit a nee, luil! There's my fist. Ileft it it you tors had felled forests and built lioun j don't put no stork in Its looks. Git uf hewn logs. Now be had sent for out o this. I saj!" Ixiiiibc. Ilis emu i tei'iirti-- r had reThe voice wa big and convincing cently left him for oilier Helds of The man wasn't so big. but ome way labor. he looked convincing, too. The truckTlieie was commotion itiii.ilig her man stepped aside, but with plucky people on recoil I of the aMmindnu temerity answered back: Slit- - lived oor again Think you own "Get nut yourself! proHit.itiuii. the du"k days of the tlrst fluting. It the whole cattle country, jest 'cause , might well ho her iineie hud exag you herd a few ornery, rrilters for your salt? gerateil the danger of life in the new slab-sideland. It was gieut fun to sltiH-- hi Well, the railroad ain't the range, He had surely le' me tell you that. credulous relatives. Jest you run tbs ls Commencing talking machine good as the COLUMBIA and make it almost as GRAPHOPHONE. t. written them some enormous tale during those 15 year and more. He used to chuckle heartily to himself at reudlng some of the sympathizing replies. But these tales were held In evidence against hint now that he dared to want latuise. Kvery letter was brought out by Isiulses dear old grandmother and read to her over larutse did nut half believe again, them, but they were gosiel truth lo her grandmother and almost so to her father and mother a well. She remembered the old splrif of fun ram punt in her favorite unrle. and while his vivid pictures took all the color from her sensitive face, deep down in her heart she recognised them for whst they were worth. The letteis were a strange medley of grasshoppers, blizzards and Indians. But a per diem was a great teniptatlou r over a er diem, and times were pretty hard on the old farm. More than all. the Inexplicable something that had led her uncle to throw tradition to the four winds of heaveu was calling her and would not be denied. The dear hero of her rhlldhood was niurh changed to be sure; his big Joints had taken on more flesh and he had gained in dignity of deportment what he had lost in ease of His once merry eye had movement. grown keen with the years of Just Judging. The lips that had laughed so much In the old days were set lu Hues of sternness. Judge Hammond Dale was a man who would live up to ten-dol-l- flve-dolla- your owu affairs, will you? Thanky. Glad lo. And as my affairs Is at present a lady. I'll thank you to Just trundle this here railroad offspring to the back o' this here lady the bark, 1 say back ain't front, la it? Wasn't where I was eddlrated That's better. And ef you ain't why, 1 belong to the Three Bars. Ever hear o' the Three Bara? Kf I'm out, Jest leave word with the boss, will you? He'll see I git the word. Yes, sir, you ol' boss thief, I belong to the Three Bars. The encounter was not without interesting spectators. Isiulse's brake-ma- n was griunlng broadly at the discomfiture uf his fellow employe. Louise herself had forgotten her predicament In the sudden whirlwind of which she was the innocent storm renter. The ruwliuy with the temper, having completely routed the enemy to the Immense sail fact Ion of the onlook-cra- , though why, no one knew exactly, nor what the merit of the case, turned abruptly to Louise. Are you her?" he asked, with a per. reptible cooling of his assertive bravado. I don't know, said Louise smiling fearlessly at her rhampion, though Inwardly quaking at the intuition that had flashed upon her that this strange, uncouth man had come to take the The boldness and liplace of Mary. cense of the cowboys, her aunt had There could be no doubt of argued. the boldness. Would the rest of the statement hold good? I think maybe I am, though I am Louise Dale, the new court reporter. I expected Mias Mary Wllllston to i meet me. "Then you are her," said the man with renewed cheerfulness, seizing her suit case and striding off, "Come We'll git some aupper afore along. we atari. You're dead tired, more'n It'll be moonlight ao't won't likely. matter ef we are late home. Court reporter! Hi be doggoned! The new muttered the brakeman. girl from down east A pore little white lamb among a pack o wolves and coyotes, and homesick a'resdy. No I'll lie takln you back towonder! morrow, I'm thinkln', young lady He didn't know the little white lamb who, bad come to help Paul Langford and Dick Gordon in their big sat-lulle- fight (TO BE CONTINUED.) PROBABLY NOT ON PAY V ROLL. t ,,V--. ir Fathers Occupation Would Likely Be - News to Lord Clare. Louise. the tenets uf hla high railing without fear or favor, through good and evil report Yet through all bis gravity of demeanor and the pride of hla Integrity, Louise instinctively felt lila kindliness and loved him for It The loneliness fell away from her and a measure of content had rome In ita place, until the letter had come from the state's attorney up In Kemah county: Tin rizlilwnth of My liHr MIsh Aukii.I I tlie date net for the hia rln of Jem-- lilack. Will you rnme and lake the I am very nnxlou that the te.thnnny he taken hy a onipi'ti'nt reporter and ahull be grateful to you If you derldo to come. The indue will tell you shout our poor an iiiiiinoiliiilona. !,et me recommend to your riinaidemtlnn some good friend of and daughmine, the WllllHton. ter. They live three nillea north went of The Judge will retnemlier WilK. li. uui, fSeorge WllllHton of the They me eiiltiiri-i- l people, though their way of living ia nereswiiily primitive. I mu sure you will like It better there than lit our .hubby lfiile hotel, which Is a for a pretty rough rluss of men. at court time. If you decide to eonte. Mary Wllllalnn von at Velnen. Please let me will in-- el know your declson. Very alnoerely. nir-HAit- gohdon. here she was, going Into the Indian country at last. A big state, South Dakota, and the phases of Its civilization manifold. Having rome so far, to refuse to go on accmcd like turning back with her hand already on the plow, ao with a stout heart she had wired Richard Gordon that ahe would But it waa pretty hard now, to go. be sure, and pretty dreary, coming Into Velpen knowing that she would see no one she knew In all the wide, wide world. The thought choked her and the impish demon, loneliness, he of the .mirk and horns and devils before her eves, loomed leeringly again. Blindly, she picked up her umbrella, suit case and rain coat "Homesick ? asked the kindly brake-masfth a consolatory grin as he came to assist her with her bagSo The late Frederick McNally had said a Chicago lawyer, "to j consult me about an infringed copyright Mr. McNally said he thought there would be no trouble about correcting this Infringement Tbe thing, he believed, bad been Innocently done. The man who had done it was an amateur In publishing unsophisticated like a girl his father used to tell about In Ireland. This girl was the daughter of a poor man, and every week or ao aho used to come to the village rectory with a pheasant or a hare to sell. The price alie asked was low, and fur a time the pastor bought of her. Then somehow, hla suspicions were aroused. The next time the girl called, he said to her sternly: It la good. fre6h game you bring, my dear, and your price la always reasonable; but do you come by all these pheasants and harea honestly? Oh, shure, yea, yer reverence,' said the young girl. My father la poacher to Lord Clare.' Aa Might Be Expected. A man who, with his family, had spent several weeks at a fashionable summer resort, discovered one morning that he bad lost hla porkrtbook. Thinking It possible that It might have been found by some employe of the hotel at which he was staying, he reported his loss to the landlord. That's too bad, Mr. Johnson, said that functionary. 'Til make inquiries about It. was It?" What kind of pocketbook Russian leather, answered tbe lodger. What color Dark red." Any distinguishing marks about r itrIt bad a clasp." What was the shape of it?" Flat, of course," said Mr. Johnson. Havent I been here more than a month?" Youth's Coinianlon. Trying for Faker Prize. He didn't set himself up to be a naher lip In mortification to ture faker, but he confessed he knew think she had carried her feelings o a story which. If not exactly accurate, palpably on her sleeve. But she nod- was at all events somewhat brilliant. ded honestly. "This happened In the cottage of a Maybe it won't be ao bad," sym- peasant who bad his quiver full of pathized the brakeman. Ills rough children. When tbe baby was put to heart bad gone out to the allm, sleep at night every one In the family creature with the vague trou- was enjoined to be quiet. They were. ble In her eyea. Including the dog. One night, howThank you," said Louise, grate- ever, the dog fancied the room wasn't as quiet as It should be. There was fully. There was a moments bewilderment an clock In the corner There was of the room, which ticked somewhat on the station platform. no one anywhere who seemed to be loudly with its ponderous pendulum. Mary no one who might be looking for The dog, thinking that this ticking her. It was evening, too, the lone- might disturb the baby, went on tii some evening to those away front toe, and, putting his paw against tbs home, when thoughts atab and memo- pendulum, stopped It. And tbit's a Some one pushBut even the oysters on fac ries sap tbe courage. ed her rudely aside. She waa la the the counter gaped with astonlshmauL New York Press. way of the trucks. gage. She bit falr-halre- d i, 'iV'As ? - - |