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Show .ife & jf.RU-N- A 'm : , Soys Dr A. C '"iriitt WOAEIN WHY THE HAM IS SO SALT. SIGHTS SEEN BY TRAVELER ALONG THE MODERN NILE Gcc, of Son Fronciisco. rtcTCTLV increasing number of prescribe Peruna in their Lpiijn1 wti merits so thoroughly ,eeaits have ovorcome their doctors the te! wB W7' you may go from Alexandria to Khar turn in about six days, says the London Standard. Easily and smoothly you wing through the fertile cotton fields of the delta and Its cities and ,ro.i, rise women to Says Dr. Gee. Ihlam jj is one of the physicians Gee r ;, PUfcWT Peruna. In a letter written street, San Francisco, Cal., 7 t GStT, Jo,, jlfjoa U- I, brunt has performed sol many 1 rHu I cures la San Francisco that i coavlnced that It Is a valuable by I have frequently advised Its ffot women, as I find It Insures Jiir and painless menstruation, ileucorrhuea and ovarian troubles, 'builds P th0 entlre system. I also eriloneof the finest catarrh remedies I heartily endorse your medi-cof. C. Gee, M. D. X. Gaddis, Marion, N. C., is y. pf. Hartman's 'grateful patients, letter, followed his able to say the fol- I tonsulted him by now tions, and is ia klore I Points. commenced to take Peruna I do any hard work without sufier-!e- it pain. 1 look Peruna, and can say leisure that it has done more for me 'my other mediciue I have ever taken. do all my own I am as well as ever; I Si- - ! F. War uid it all never hurts me at medicine for ,a is a great ,; y. populous villages, prosperous but dirty, and at Cairo you settle down Into a most sleeping car for the night Jour-ne- y to Luxor. Early next morning you are in the cane fields of upper Egypt, with the river close on one side and the desert on the other. At Luxor yoti must change to the narrow gauge for Assouan, and there Is time to refresh yourself with bath and breakfast and to look across at the plain of Thebes and the valley of the tomb of the kings, or to ride & donkey out to Karnak. From Luxor to Assouan it is hot and dusty enough', and you are glad to rest there for the night. Next day you embark at Shel-la- l, above the dam, for Wady Haifa, a leisurely voyage of three days. It Is a most beautiful reach of the river; the hills come down to the water In bold, rugged outlines, showing to perfection In the pure, dry desert air. The effect of the dam is clearly seen as far as Korosko. First of all, at Shell&l the boat is moored amid a grove of palm trees, the temples of Nubian villages look quaint enough as they stand on the edge of the desert, forlornly mourning their strip of cultivated land, most of which the greedy reservoir has swallowed. The boundary between Egypt and the Sudan, settled by the convention of 1S99, runs along the wenty-seconparallel; not far beyond this Is the frontier town of Haifa. There Is no mistaking the signs of British rule. The com-fortab- a general objection on the part to advocate oracticing physician one medi- when but any medicines, demon-- . of it people, hundreds f1 value and does not need the lament of the profession, is I think woraaa--Mr- s. E. T. Gaddis. sen are especially liable to pelvic as it is commonly h, female weakness Utah. Girl, a aha, ; the ot. e her t. found ti Peruna occupies a unique position in medical science. It is the only internal systemic catarrh remedy known to the medical profession Catarrh, as every one will admit, is the cause of one-hadiseases the which afflict mankind. Catarrh' and catarrhal diseases afflict of the people of the United States. lf one-ha- lf If yeu do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full jtement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his e lewaji , back. "cricl advice iluable i gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, Jumbus, Ohio. i begu doctor im lotj President of the Hartman Sanitarium, r d : lied. j i Men are til: rrJ hot oh, utler i ian'1 d: ountrj t a I JP . The ly acce; t mntry .ins G. in pc', south III OU j sol-dler- - RICO FINDS MADE IN lllnstoi at th art-- WBrnfm 44 What Luck ! I.ibby Lwvhcnn, made ready in a lew moments. leal Loaf Quitklr made ready to Some important archaeological discoveries made recently at Beni Hasan, Boarcers and Day solars a site In Egypt famous for Its painted Y THB CONOUCTIO tombs and early architectural features, MARIST FATHERS Classical. Commercial and Scion-titl- e are detailed by Prof. John Garstang, courses. For further parof University college, Liverpool. ticulars apply to A vast necropolis has been unREV. J. remarkable for the preservaCriNJ, S. I., President. earthed, tion of the furniture in its tombs and for the wealth of material w hich these Not Lost, But Left Behind. supplied in Illustrating the burial cusOne of the interesting and Involuntoms of the Middle Empire. Four buntary incidents of the return trip from dled and ninety-twtombs hewn in the California of the delegates to the Pres- rock have been opened and examined. byterian General Assembly, occurred More than 100 of them had never been to one of the women of the home mispreviously entered since their doors sion contingent, who got off at one of were closed at the time of interment the stations for a little exercise. She 4,000 years before. was one of those on the first section, In the tomb of one Nefer y, a chief but her train started and left her be- physician, the huge painted coffin was hind, and she was taken up by the surrounded by a numoer of wooden second section. Some of her friends models of objects and scenes familiar cut out this motto from a newspaper from the wall paintings of the larger and put it on the front of her berth, tombs. "To the memory of our dear departed Upon the coffin rested a great rowand It hung there when the first sec- ing boat, the twenty oarsmen standing tion ran Into the station at Chicago, and swing back In time to the beat of where she rpjoined her party. two figures seated on a raised platform In the center. Beyond this was the Rootlilns nyrap.' Hn, Winslow'smiftcn the sums, reduces Iw Fotr children tcctlilng. ieve. Art U, S. Government Inspected, in the hnue tor (or iup emergencies nr wIwl hen for any tune when you A lomrthtng good and want it quuk. wdinmft Uiq,fr hgtokt,MOood TMnato " AUm for I m World, id VOkr, P I for. McNeill & Libby, Chicago, (II. iTHREE C FLOWN -- . . ff V ye ' h Tcoih Poivdsr t' 2ft ties.! tb ood suff't i dm' BAIUNG ' DIG ECX powder.. PURE. fad Trtth Good Tteth a Pearly Lustre lw STRONG AND RELIABLE the Pound. r1 bout Glfm Du! T Give the Teeth Stoss Usu I d LIFE AND LOVE BOTH CHEAP IN THE CAUCASUS ft - gathered from a case In point which has Just taken place In Kosslambek. liokayeff Is the bridegrooms came, and Neshkho that of the girl of sweet sixteen who had the misfortune to find favor In his eyes. His pockets being empty he persuaded three comrades to kidnap the maid, whom he then took off to another village ns his wife. on discovering her But her fatu-rwhereabouts, had her sent back by the jsdice. and then demanded $130 for loss of her services, as we should say. ibikayeff, to whom the demand was n ado, would not or could rot pay. The girls father thereupon claimed that sum from the bridegroom's . com-- I anions, who are equnlly liable, They admitted the Justice of his claim and called up Bokayeff to hand over the sum to them. On his refusal they shot him dead, that being the custom of the ci untry, although daggers are also allowed to take the place of bullets. In the northern Caucasus nearly half the death rate of the Inhabitants Is and at least three-fourth( Bused by vendetta, of the vendetta cases are the result of a curious marriage custom which Is now decimating the population. The native of those parts who wishes to take unto himself a wife cannot arrange the matter in the simwestple offhand manner in vogue in ern Europe by "popping the question." lie must go home, se'l Ills belong-inns- , and buy her fairly and squarely of her parents, the price ranging from $173 to fl.thio. This Is a costly custom many ways, for If Is not every young man who can afford to Invest such a large sum In a wife, however accomIn plished. What generally hoppe.is suih cases Is that the Indigent candidate for the order of Beii'dlck Induces a few stalwart comrade s to seize the maiden and carry her off. What too often follows then may be s , HEWLETT BROS CO. - DEACON HAD NO USE FOR. THE TURKISH BATH ! w flavor x'i-'At rt'Oi!' mfuU w hi h or tJ THE tf thli ASSAYS. ... fcCt,ABLB at Oulrt I "ah twmrn on moil nitre, totpr.. Mmpino, geCe'r i WOfiJ a lit" wife A' ,'igurt.' 'hi t1 i F tO & by t f i ir OSUVOR.OOL. t bait W rlutelyfre. luin p, nut " J Ckwy -- "'t he eH 4 ti pi'll-- c cm nnvonn of L(),nrnU ,v,p ft ukv run of Papr. Loko-N- o ST. ITAII. t nwrlng AdvsrtlitmcnU j Kindly Msntlon Thla SOirmiiSI'LS u 'Vletor FREE Pnk. Co., Clo U. 0. 0, MtlUoloy song, Wo. t Ln.ii.. W. lltt !!.. MUSIC II 'c';z euiiy 30, 1003. Y !l Of a r ftl Asaav Co Jw " ttl amt mivor I i kULEf INSTITITE. 331 nAl.T LAKK f I (llV, -n-lli feJak f 1UK U oiunibu A. Free Medical Advice to Women. to-da- 4 Your Grocar Soils It. my is, Alt erol model of a granary with six compartments in rows of three on either side of the courtyard between them. Men were standing knee deep In real grain filling baskets, while a scribe seatod on the roof, pen In hand, kept count. A group found by the excavators in another tomb represented the making of beer from fermentation of break by a similar proc ess to that employed by the natives Beside the coffin was a sailing boat, the numerous sailors assuming the attitude necessary fur hoisting the large square sail, of which the yards and rigging were preserved. Two men, in characteristic pose1, were using poles vigorously over the sides. In another tomb were found models of a number of warships. In the bow of one, by the side of the lookout, stood a negro sailor, bow and arrow In band. In the tomb of Antef, a courtier, the boats had double steering cars. In one boat were seated two men under a canopy, p'aylng a game of chess. The opening of each tomb was recorded by photography, as the excavation proceeded step by step, 430 negatives being taken In all. e boUiB. ftiu, cure wind colic. Fear for Russian Forests. famIs The name "Wooden Russia" area forest vast to the iliarly applied cover of Russia In Europe, which enacres, or 36 per cent of the feat some Yet tire area of the country. bo defor Is felt that the country may of prt carelessness estml through the is government the and owners, vato of the for protection considering steps built o' the forests. In Russia houses wood are than material any other and almost unknown outside the cities, fuel. the prlrclpal wood constitutes oroetf'-- ' 1 ft ,.vlr Nv Ida ting 4 FOR flAiuibAUuo, aim) Potted Turkey Ox Tongue, &c. Joviled Ham tbs SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. them-sefves- OLD TOMBS IN EGYPT o L So it;: lence t:, sed ALL HALLOWS COLLEGE v'v D , disjoin eoni, the w be dlil. rther do: Their Assets Less Than Their posits, But Nobody Worries. The fact Is odd: The postoffica savings banks of Great Britain are technically Insolvent Their deposit at the end of the year were $700,000,-000- , their assets only about $670,000,-000- . whole place Is rigidly clean, an exof the to filth contrast the Nobody worries about ft llttl traordinary thing like that; the government Is reEgyptian villages. The streets are well laid out and scrupulously swept, and sponsible. Of course the discrepancy rose from the high prices the departshady avenues of trees are springing ment was forced to pay for national up. Haifa Is the railway terminus of bonds before the Boer war. The lowthe Sudan. It is twenty-eigh- t hours to Khartum. Nothing can be more comering of the rate of Interest allowed Is an obvious cure. The postal banks fortable than the sleep were authorized In 1881 and nearly irg-ca- r train, whlcn runs twice a week. $10,000,000 was deposited the first Starting at eight In the evening, you year. Some later developments are strike right across the Raynda desert, curious. By the "slip" system a sum most desolate anS forlorn of countries. so small as two cents can be The stations have no names, but are known merely by their numbers. In deposited. Deposits can be withdravm School savings bank the mornlrg you coine to Abu Hamed by telegraph. are recognized, but are not very sucback to the Nile once more. Here cessful. owing to the superior attracwas the scene of one of the stlffest tions of sweets as a medium of inwhen in Sudan the fights campaign, A feature of the postal vestment. Gen. Hunter made his dash from Kor-kiWhiskers. Missed the Sultan Is that, through their agency, dc bank and here are the graves of the When the sultan of Jolo first met White officers of the Tenth Sudanese posltors can buy small fractional porGov. Taft ho refused to believe thal tions of government bonds. New York battalion, round which the black the was really the man before him World. who died with them keep ghost governor of the Philippines under th ly which and ward torever, and so re Two Retailers of Chestnuts. Making inquiry new dispensation. deem the credit of the regiment, which an Interpreter,' Gov. Taft n Joseph ll. Choate told a story at a came back from the battle without Its through that his personal certalned appearand banquet. Chauncey M. Depew arrived leader. did not come up to what the sultan ex late and in bis turn told the snms From here inward the Journey Is full pected. "What's the matter?" asked story. He did not understand th of Interest. Berber Is springing up Gov. Taft. It's the beard, replied th premature laughter and tho lack of again from Its ruins; It even boasts Interpreter. It seems that every high tumult when he concluded and asked two stations. Then comes the At American official the sultan had pre bis neighbor what was the matter. bara, with its famous bridges, and viosly seen had aflowiug beard and "You told Joe Choates story five mlia then Matiner, whore there is this year he thought the beard was necessarily utes after he had finished it" Mr. a camp of- exercise for the Egyptian a part of every high American official! Depew laughed. "Choates story? ha said. "Why, Adam told that to the army. The camp had a most businessequipment. like appearance. Just as we arrived a snako at their first meeting. I knew A Royal scientist. train came steaming in with a batChoate would tell It, hut thought ha The Prince of Monaco, who was pre- followed me. talion of Infantry, all in full marching motor cycle accident from order; It was exactly like a regiment vented by abis leeture Insurance Statistics. at the Royal Indetraining at the front In real war. delivering If all tho persons whose lives ars Is perhaps the of London, stitution of is Crewe the the Sudan, Shendy life assurWhen Insured by tho ninety-fou- r and. an hour or two later, we ran lutu first of living oceanographers. were of in ance the met country last Association companies the British the terminus at llalfaya. Edinburgh the royal scientist drew unfortunately to die In a night, the to pay out largo audiences to hear his accounts companies would stand 8G8,903j-393- . of his experiments upon the, routes next morning tho sum of , That, nccordtrg to the board of followed by the waters of oceans as distinguished from the voy- statistics, Is the total of lae assuc agers upon tnem. The gambler at anecs at present In force. Besides Monte Carlo would thus seem to serve thm there aro rather over 2, 0U0, 008 annuities. Ixmdon Answers. eclence. Traveling by the ordinary methods called patent medicines jDSt so patients. Send it to theirUse Packers Compelled to Uee the Saline at Preservative. "We are having many complaint? about the unusual saltiness of ham bacon and canned goods this summer, said a butcher, who dues a large fam-'ltrade. 1 suppose it is the same everywhere else. Standard goods that we have been able to recommend for years are salt as brine now. The packing houses tell us that It Is because they are no longer permitted to use the preservatives that got such a taking over the coals after the Spanish war. They simply must pile on the salt or their hams and bacon wont keep. The packers will be obliged to find some way out of the difficulty, or they will have to go out of business altogether. In the trade we are noticing the falling off in orders from hotels and restaurants. No man wants a rasher of bacon or a slice of ham for breakfast if It Is going to send him iround with a raging thrlst all day. POSTAL BANKS OF BRITAIN. urU.r And the seemed Inclined to The two young men had Induced the deacon to take his first Turkish hath. hso his temper. It was aggravating or. to be so extremely nrcomfortahls They hod got him properly attired, they apparently were enjoying rather, unattlred, ami bod conducted when l icmselves, and would offer him no him Into the hot room. no ans of escape that would, to say tho he hut It, The deacon didnt enjoy bust, be dignified. was game. He rolled around nervoustltno ho moved But there was an end of It; ha got ly on h! cot. and every ha seemed to strike a hotter spot. Hut out; and as lie looked "more la sorrow rlimn In from one to the other he stood It like a man until the pe Innumerable in of tli cm, angr" ore asked: spiration made rivulets himrunning off him. Then he liftedplaint-lively- : "Well, uvucon. what do you think of self up on his elbow and said It? The deneon replied solemnly, and of this. "Iets got out meo with all duo dignity, but rather point and only laughed But the young edly: was It Just that to keep quiet; told him "Its a good thing, young man; Its setting comfortable. When he finally absolutely refused a remarkably convenient thing for to stand It any longer they led him some people who need to suitably, preInto the steam room and sat down to pare themselves for the hereafu-i- but as for my part I am glad to get on sr( gossip and enjoy hla discomfiture, again. Us full himself slowly boltlnf away. J Every sick and ailing woman, Everjr young girl who suffers monthly, Every woman who is approaching maternity, Every woman who feels that file is a burden, Every woman who has tried all other means to regain health without snecets, the change of life Every woman who is going through that critical time in Mrs. Is invited to write to regard to her trouble, aol Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., the must expert advice telling exactly bow to obtain a ClRE will be sent abs lutely free of cost. Tim no thins that qualifies n person to give advice on any subject ia ck'itricm'u experience creates knowledge. No ot hT person has so wide uu exisu icnce with female ills nor such of success us Mrs. riukham has had. a Over a hundred thousand cases come before her each year. Somn personally, others by mail. And this has lieen going on for twenty year day after day, and day after day. Twenty years of constant success think of tho knowledge tliui giined I Surely women are wise in seeking advice from a woman with such an exiericiico, esjiecially when it is free. Mrs. lluyes, of lloston, w rote to Sirs. Ilnkliuin when she vvn In great trouble. Her letter allows tfie result. There are actually thousands of such letters In Mrs. Plnkhiuu's possession. , I)kar Mas. ilVKiux : I have been under doctors' treatment for femalt trouble for some time, but without any relief. They now tell me I have ft fibroid tumor. 1 cannot nit down without great pain, and the soreneM extends up my spine. I have bearing down pain ttoth back and front. My abdntnes I kw'ollen, I cannot wear my clothe with any comfort Womb Is dreadluUy swollen, and I have had flowing spells for three years. My appetite Is wot on my feet for any length of time. gisvd. I cannot walk or The symptom of Fibroid Tumor, given in your little bMk, accurately I write to you for advice. devrtlie mv case, Mrs. E. F. Hayks, Sll Dudley St (lloiion), Iloxbury, Mass. Dear Mr. Hiskiiax: 1 wrote to you describing my symptoms, an! asked your advice. You replied, and I followed all your directions carefully am a well woman. for several month, ar.d .The use of Lydia Ik lNnklmm's VegetnblA Compound, togetbo with your advice, carefully followed, entirely expelled the tumor, and strength coed the whole system. I can walk miles now, Your Vcgetat.le Compound Is worth five dollars a drop. I advlsa aO women who are afflicted with tumors, or aoy female trouble, to write you for Mus. E. F. Hayes, 333 Dudley t advice, and give It a faithful trlaL" ' (llostou), Uoxbury, Moss. . 1 1 ' Mrs. Ilaycs will gladly answer any and all letters that iny b addressed to liar aklng about her illness and how Mrs. IMnkhais helped her. FORFEIT sUut tf wsesnnnl fnrVhvlth prndu th r!(tnsl 1st Ur aa4 . 111 bu-, II, th.niut Lj 4U K. I'inhasm MstUulee Cw, UaUuiOulsl, L. tar Mm I |