OCR Text |
Show Miss Rose Peterson. Secre- tary Parkdale Tennis Club. Chi cago, from experience advises all young girls who have pains and sickness peculiar to their sex, to use Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Vege-table Compound. How many beautiful young girls develop de-velop into worn, listless and hopeless "women, simply because sufficient attention atten-tion has not been paid to their physical development. No woman is exempt from physical weakness and periodic pain, and young girls just budding into womanhood should be carefully guided physically as well as morally. Another woman, Miss Hannah E. Mershon, rollings rol-lings wood, N.J says : "I thought I would write and tell you that, by following your kind advice, ad-vice, I feel like a new person. I was always thin and delicate, and bo weak that I could hardly do anything. Menstruation Men-struation was irregular. "I tried a bottle of your Vegetable Compound and began to feel better Tight away. I continued its use, and Am now well and strong, and menstruate men-struate regularly. I cannot say enough lor what your medicine did for me." $5000 forfeit If original of about letter proving genuineness cannot be produced. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will euro any woman in the land who suffers from romb troubles, Inflammation of the ovaries, and Mdney troubles. 1 PAY SPOT CASH FOR SSK?T LAND WARRHTS Issued to roM'.ers f any war Write me at ofr JTLAXK. H EEGE1, Eartii Block. DEKVEK, COLO. WHAT SICK KIDNEYS CAUSE. KuS!!Y Comt'LAINts. Diabetes, Dia-betes, liright's Disease, Inflammation Inflam-mation of tiie Kidneys, Dropsy (swelling of the limbs or body), incessaut pains in the back or loins. Bi.a!;;?:et? Troctjles. lh-tlammtifoa lh-tlammtifoa of the bladder, hi-flamed hi-flamed passages, pain iu passing urine, incontinence of urine, too much or too little urine. Uric Acio Thocbles. Rheumatism, Gravf, Gout, all Sanies, Lumbago. Nerve Tkouelks. Neural- fia. Sciatica, Nervous Collapse, leeplissness, Melancholia. Many other disorders are caused directly or indirectly by faulty kidney action, and can bo reached and cured by Doan's- Kidney Pills. Tim remedy has cured every complaint com-plaint recorded above, and over 50,000 testimonials prove its urprisfaig merit 50 cects per box, of all dealers, deal-ers, or mailed on receipt of price, by addressing Foster-. Foster-. liilburn Co., Bulfalo. 1ST. Y. "Win. II. Neighbors, the well-known well-known jeweler of West Main Street, "VVytheville, Va., says : " Some four years ago an attack of grip settled in my back, and I have-suffered off and on ever since with a dull, heavy aching across the small of my back, always more severe in the morning. It was difficult for me to stoop or straighten, and if I sat down for any length of time it was hard for me to arise. I took two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills, and the dull, disagrer-ble aching left me." . . ": The bet HoPr-ay gifts are nefiil gift, and cm of the matt uaef'ii U the ZSew joiti EiOud idition of WEBSTER'S INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY . of K114 -lish, Eiofirapliy, Gcraplij, Fiction, Eta. Useful. Eeliable, Attractive. Lasting. The N ; w Editl jnEia 25,000 New Words Hew Gaietteer of ti.6 World Hew Biographical Dictionary Z3M Fk.-e. 0W nialtrallam. Eiell Bindings. Why Hct Give Some Una This Useful Present? FR E E " A Test in Pronunciation." Instruct -ro and eBKrUktuui for t ii whuvm ImmSbj - llttitmtd fuphWb also fra. Q. CpC. MEHSIAM CO., JPnbHsherc, Spiingfield, Mass., U. S. A. t TO WOEVlEfl! To prove tlis healir.K and clean s:mr power of J'aitin loilet Jijtiwptia we will mail a largre trial package I with Xxg'. of instructions ibo!ut-l v fre. This is not i tiny eample, but a large package, enoueti tc con vince anyone oi us vaiue. Women all. over the country ' are praising Paxtiue for what . it ha dene in loeai trettt- ' merit of female Ills, curing 11 Inflammation and discharges, wonderful as a cleansing rapinal douche, for sore throat, nasal catarrh, as a mouth wash and to remove tartar id w hi tea the teeth. Send today; t postal card 111 do. holdby amjrylntBor Rent postpaid by on, SO lint), lrgn box. Satisfaction fuaranteU. TUK K. 1-AXTON CO., J!otoii. Alaaa. 214 Columbt Ave. v; UTAfl Bt DOING-' rtrc.CD3 COTTON f ELT MATTRESS. Bst mattress lr the world. Better than any Eastern make. Will cost you leis mouay. Ask your dealer for It. Look for ottr trade mark. Utah Bedding & M'f'g Co., 3d West and 5th Noah Sts.. Salt Lake City. RICHARD E. tYAKS, FLORIST phoni set Floral Designs and Immortal Work a Specialty. , i Ait Cut Flowers in Season. S 8. MAIN ST. ALT LAKE CITY. capsicui vhseluie (FVT VI IS COLtAPWrBI. TTBES) A substitute f of and superior to maitard or tiny other plaster, and will not blister the most ielicate skin. The pain-aikyicig nd curative qualities of ihis article a: 3 worlerfiiL It will stop the toothache at once, and relisre headache head-ache and sciatica. We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritantknown, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and ail rheumatic neuralgic and eouty complaints. A trialwill prove what we claim for it. and it will be found to be invaluable invalu-able in the household. Many people siy' it is the best of all your preparations." Puce 15 cents, at all draasists cr other dealers, or by sending th s amount to us in postai;esi:.mfS we will send you a tube by ni-vl. fo article should he accep-ed br the pul lie unless the same carries ourHb-t. a.; ot!':i wise it is net genuine. CHESFPCOl'rrj H'fl. CO., 1( StiKi susoi. ntw OKK CITT. i .1 it 1-1 Ji AFRICAN LAKE GOES DRY. Scientists Much Puzzled Over Peculiar Pe-culiar Happening. Lake Shirwa, which has covered a considerable area of country to the south of Lake Nyassa, in Africa, ever since that region has been known to white men, has now dried up completely com-pletely and local opinion leads to the theory that It ha3 vanished for good. Still, it would scarcely be advisable for settlers to attempt the creation of any garden cities or other establishments establish-ments anywhere on the bed of the old lake, which might fill up again at any time. Men drive their buggies and ride their horses along the soft, sandy beds of the Australian rivers in times of long drought, but when the rains come the river steamers resume their old places on the newly flushed streams. It is very odd that this great Shirwa lake should vanish so completely com-pletely without any assignable reason and apprehension is felt lest something some-thing of the . kind will happen to Nyassa or Tanganyika. THE COLDEST LIQUID KNOWN. Scientists Asserts Nothing Can Equal Liquid Hydrogen. Liquid hydrogen is by far the coldest cold-est liquid known at the present time. At ordinary atmospheric pressure it boils at 422 degrees F., , and reduction reduc-tion of the pressure by an air pump brings the temperature down to 432 degrees, at which the liquid becomes a solid, resembling frozen foam. According to Prof. Dewar, to whom the credit i due of having liquefied hydrogen in 1898, the liquid is a colorless, color-less, transparent body, and is the lightest liquid known to exist, Its density being only l-14th that of water! the lightest iiquid previously known was liquid rmrsh gas, which Is six times heavier. The only solid which has so small density as to float upon its surface is a piece of pith wood. Cassier's Magazine. Maga-zine. Cure for easickness. Homeopathists ire said to have discovered a ce tin remedy for seasickness sea-sickness in apoLorphia, a very small dose of which, taken ouce an hour in water, will remove the qualms. FIRST KIDNEY PILi: MADE. THE ORIGINAL DISCOVERY. THE ONLY GENUINE. II. B, McCaiver of 201 Cherry Street, Portland, Oregon, Ore-gon, inspector of freight cars for the Transcontinental Company, Com-pany, says: "I used Doan's Kidney Pills for backache and other symptoms of kidney trouble which had annoyed me for mouths. I think a cold was responsible for the whole trouble. It seemed to settle in my kidneys. Doan's Kidney Pills rooted it out. It is several months since I used them, and up to date there has been no recurrence of the trouble." DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. The Value of Nitrogen. The chemists of the agricultural department de-partment have shown that ability to fix the nitrogen, which is infinitely abundant in the air and apply it to the worhout f elds of the world, will enable mankind to cultivate what is practically virgin soil ; forever, -r The only available nitrogen is the nitrate of soda beds-in the rainless strip between be-tween the Andes and the Pacific, which is owned or controlled by the Chilanos. This niter is a product of guano, there being no rain to dissolve it out. A plant at Niagara Falls is taking nitrogen froin the air by electrolysis, elec-trolysis, but not yet in commercial auantity." ' - -'- '" "- ; BXottier Gray's Sweet Powdera for Children, Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse-in nurse-in the Children's Home in New York, curs Constipation, Feverish ness. Bad Stomach, Teething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30.000 testimonials. tes-timonials. At all Druggists. 25c. Sample FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, LeRoy.N.Y.. International Industrial Exposition. , An international exposition ; of ' industries in-dustries connected with the utilization of alcohol and products of fermentft-tion fermentft-tion is to be held in "Vienna, opening April 1G, 1904, and closing May ' 31. 1004. The exhibition is ; to give a comprehensive - illustration t.' of the present condition of the alcohol industry, indus-try, with particular reference to the use of alcohol for technical purposes, and of other industries connected with products of fermentation namely, breweries, distilleries, malt house. starch works and the production of fermented vinegar. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color more good, brighter colors, with less work than others. ' , , ; Children's Diseases in England.' In England, while the number of cases of 'scarlet fever :r annum has remained practically stationary for the last forty years, the death rate is nnly about one eighth of what it was in the former period. "Tables also show that diphtheria has increased, and that it now causes nearly twice as many deaths as scarlet feer, while measles and whooping cough cause more than twice a3 many, i I am sure ttso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago. Mrs. Thos. BoBBiMS, fcjipie Street. Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 13Q0, A Parith Snuff Box. A curious custom, dating from the beginning of last cectury, is observed at St John's 'Vestry, at Exeter, England. Eng-land. In the year 1S10 a snuff box was presented to the parishioners by the then rector, the Rev. J. Hill, who expressed ex-pressed a wish' that the box should be handed round ence a year at the annual vestry meeting. Consequently on the opening of the meeting the box is, in accordance with the usual custom, cus-tom, handed around among those present, pres-ent, . The Wisdom of Hanno. , Hanno, the Carthaginian,.' was sent commissioner by , the state after the second 'Carthaginian ar to supplicate for peace and iu;;the end obtained, 1 it. Fet one of the sharper Roman senators sena-tors said "You , have often . broken with us peace whereunto you have sworn: I prayby what gods will you swear?" Hanno answered, "By the same gods the "punished the former perjury so severely.' ' Stats of Ohio, Citt of Tolkdo, I Lucas Cockty. -Fkatk J. CHisir make eath that be fa lentor partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business la the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that aald arm will pay tbe ram of ONE HUNDKED DOLLARS for each and every ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Cata, Ct. FR A.XK J. CITES EV, Sworn to before me and ubsi;rltel In my presence, this 6ih day of JUeceiuber, A. D. ISts. , ' I A. (V. GLEASOS, . jsAt.. . Kotary Publio; 1IH' Catarrh Cure if taken Internally, and acta directly on the b.ood and mucoua surface of the system. Send for testimonials, free. . . - F. J. CHE.NET CO.( Toledo, O. Sold by all Irn(ti?l8is, 75c. Hall's Family Fills are the best. Extra Labor for School Teacher. A country school district advertises for a school marm with three children of her own. The pleasant task of the school teacher loses some of its charm when they have to assume the work of producing the children also. - t A Rare Good Thing. "Am using ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, and can truly say I would not have been without it so long, had I known the relief it wouid give my aching feet. I think it a rare go&d,. thing for anyone having sore or tired feet. Mrs. Matilda Holtwert, Providence, R. I." Sold by all Druggists, 25c. Ask to-day. i i i i i - i Moro Music. Moro music is strangely, unrhythmical unrhyth-mical to European ears. It consists mainly of a monotonous reiteration of sound, even a supposed change of air being almost imperceptible to an ear unaccustomed to the barbarous lack of tone. The Moro piano is a wooden frame, shaped like the runners of a child's sled, on which small kettle-cords kettle-cords and sticks laid horizontally, drums are . balanced by, means of Women crouching on the floor before this instrument beat out a wailing sound from it with shaped sticks, while from larger kettle-drums, hung by ropes from a wooden railing at one side, two men accompanied the piano. Everybody's Magazine. Mrs. George Wallace, Jr., of Elmira, N. Y., wife of George Wallace, broker, of West Water Street, and living at 667 Baldwin Street, says: ' In March, 1897, I was cured of kidney and bladder trouble by Doan's Kidney Pills. My. physician said at that time that my life could be saved only by an operation. . Night after night I had been kept awake for hours at a time with terrible ter-rible pain in my back, and the secretions from the kidneys were , in as bad a state as pos- sible. I suffered with hemorrhages hemor-rhages frequently and was in a weak state. Four boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills cured me, and I now gladly reendorse the remedy; because during the tiriie which has since elapsed, nearly seven years, I have never had the slightest sign off return of the trouble." VALUE OF GENTLE SPEECH. Equal to Sunshine to Light Up Dark and Weary Hours. . - , A single bitter word may disquiet an enlire family for a whole day. One surly glance casts a gloom over the household, while a smile of sunshine may light up the darkest and weariest hours. Like unexpected flowers .which spring up alons our footpath, full of Ireshness, fragrance and beauty ; so kind words and gentle ects and sweet dispositions make glad i "ie sacred spot . called home." No -matter how humbled the abodeif it be sweetened with kindness "and smiles 'the heart: will turn, longingly toward it from all the tumult of the world, and home,, if tt be ever so homely, will be the dearest dear-est spot beneath -the circuit of .the sun. - :- . .' - -.- ' . , i Between a man and his wife. nothing ought, to. rule but love. 'Authority is f or . children and ser'ants, yet not without sweetness. ' "' Mrs. Wlnslo w's Sobtblngr Myrwpi- - . ; For children teething; softens the kutiui,: reduce t OtuumaUoa, ailK7 puln, cures wtad colic. 25c a bottle. -V An Island of Lacemakera, v The Maltese are famous as.lacemak-. ers, although the methods employed are of a -primitive tj pel f "All Maltese-lacs Maltese-lacs is of necessity hand made. :"1Th?. people of Gozo,- one: ,of the Milt es group, have a deeply rooted aversion to labor saving machinery J of ail kinds. In many - lines." . of , . industry there the methods in vogue a,., century ago are employed to-day ; The art I of lace-maklng is handed down from generation gen-eration to generation, "and one- will t)ften' find - an exceptionally beautiful design the jealously guarded secret of a single family. To Cure a Cold in One clay. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All iruggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c. J. Bull Drinks Too" Much. ' Statistics, "shakier.-" than evr on this line, assure us that the average Englishman consumes, in a year, two bottles of wine, 178 bottles of beer and six bottles of spirits. A "Frenchman disposes of 141 bottles of wine, thirty of teer and eleven of spirits. If these figures are at all dependable, an interesting in-teresting question arises as to whether his large consuaiptioniCf wine is the cause or the effect of the "fiery" Gallio or Celtic temperament If stolid John Bull would let cp on-'oeerrfor.. awhile-interesting awhile-interesting historical developments might follow. . , ... w - ' .... - ' f ' " New Term for Single UnbleEsedries's. ; A little six-year-old, while stopping at a friends house, became deeply in, terested in three dwarfs, whose acquaintance ac-quaintance she had made. Upon her return home, she explained to her mamma that she liked the couple who were married very much, but she could net bear "t:;e vacart one." PORTER WHO REFUSED TIP. Put Pride of Race. 'Above, Claims of His Pocketbook. A goocl-looklng " porter -who is in command of "a ' parlor car rinaflisJ - westward' did something notable the other day he refused a ; tip. It is believed among travelers that the event was unique. Few colored porl ters are built that way. This was air aggravated case of Ob streperous Traveler. . He came from Down East some where, and his conversation con-versation "indicated that he was con nected with a trust, perhaps With two- or three of them. He was seeing the West, and expressed himself volubly upon th'j sights as they varied with, the change of scenery. It was a hot afternoon and most of the:mehgather-4 ed in the smoking- room----occasionally sipping something that-' the .go6d-lpok- J ing porter concocted, and all the time listening to the ripple of the Traveler's Trav-eler's .remarks. -: The negro prbblem brought the crisis. ' ; --' -' 'No use for 'em, no ;use at all,' wv.',t.ri,- t.ii.nM t.oi-,, v,L i ,Vct0 .i,.. mQ ! to settle the negro question deport 'em." ; r- -.v- "That's what John Temple Graves saye, suggested a man on tne long leather-cushioned seat, :' ' "But he's wrong, about it he don't go at it in the proper way. My plan is this: Ship all the r negroes to the north pole or as near to , it as ships can get, set 'em: ashore with food to last a few weeks, and then go off and leave'em.,K'. - U - ' v . ' He - sipped and the " good-looking porter standing in the door 'listened with indignation' pictured in every feature. But the -traveler was generous gener-ous and ordered "cold high balls .for the crowd,'' and he was compelled to miss some of the conversation. "Yes, of course," the porter heard when he came back with loaded tray. "They'll freeze -to death, every mother's moth-er's son of 'em, and . that would settle the. thing for air time. It's the best plan i anybody has " thought out for stopping the everlasting talk about It. I'm going to present it to Congress next whiter. 'Here, porter " ana he tosse'd a five dollarTbill on the tray. The expense was even mqney.. The tray came back with the .change. Was it divided into halves, quarters and dimes with the inevitable suggestion THE PRIVILEGES OF WOMEN. One Member of the Fair Sex Satisfied jvwith Her Position. Mr. Stead says. that there are only three,, privileges , of - my sex namely. that-in going in or out of a room the woman goes first; that she is served before man at a meal (a statement which Is quite wrong, by the way, only one woman at table having that distinction,- the one on the. host's right; the ether guests, whether male or .female, in every household above mere middle, clasa being served in regular rotation), and that in a train a man gives up hie sat to her. I could give Mr. Stead many more. Our bills are paid for us when our male belongings f have any money to pay them with; we are made love to, which may,, be despicable hut is distinctly dis-tinctly enjoyable; we are .; admired, which is no doubt foolish but none the less gratifying to us. In spite of the preponderance of our sex the majority ma-jority of,, us are so pleased with our-elves our-elves that we have np desire to visit the republic in the neighborhood of the Mountains of the Moon ; and considering con-sidering that we can do anything we like ,in this year of grace and. that we rule' all your sex as Itis, dear Mr. Stead, why call us "despised", and rail at; the world 'for not making U3 ''supreme," ''su-preme," when it had never occurred to trs that we were anything' else? "A Countess" in Reply to Mr. .Stead. ' Naturae . Order Reversed, i' 'William Magelsseri, the American vice, consul. at .Belrut, ' is an intimate frier d .of Najib' Hashim. who is the manager of a theater in NewYcrk. "I 'spent' a' week with'-'Ntagelsssen," Mr. Hashim said" tho ' otlier. day,, "in" the summer-of .1902. ,The young man knew then that his life was in danger, "buje -TiejrVas-fearless .and gay. It. was -a pleasure to be with him. ; - j"Pne day In Beirut" he introduced OIe ,)f his servants to roe;-' ' ' - " 'This boy, he said. . 'had never seen a paved street till he, came to this city a year ajo.-, Tho aay ne reached here; a dog, as he was walk-Ing'-about sight-seeing, ran at' him to bitebim. He-reached down and tried tofpick up a cobblestone ' from the pav,ed street, but the stone. of course, tuck fast, To escape the dog, he had to.take.to his heels. - ; , J'" 'Alterwarr's. in.; telling me the itory; the boy' said he thought Beirut a strange "own, since - In it the dogs were let loose whil'i the stones were fastened down.'" -' True Gallantry.. Sir Walter Raleigh's chivalrous ac - tion of throwing his cloak on "the ground for his Queen to step on is recalled -by the story told by "V. C", of a small boy's generosity. A little girl was standing one very cold morning in one of the poorer districts of Edinburgh, waiting among a.crowd of. poor children to gain admittance ad-mittance into a hall where a meal was to be given them. It was bitterly cold, and ' the little girl shivered violently, and tried "In vaia to keep her bare feet warm. Ay ragged little -urchin who' was tanding near observed her, and, taking tak-ing off his cap and laying it at her feet said: "Here, lassie, stand on my cap till the door opens." Uncle Sam's Gold Supply. There is nearjy four times as much gold in tbe United Stages treasury as there is in the Bank of England.; Dive of a Whale. Because of the pressure, a whale cannot dive to a greater depth tbaa S00 feet that only part of it should be picked up? Not much it was a crisp two-dollar two-dollar bill. , The traveler lifted It gingerly; then looked up at the porter, but that Indi- iciuais back was turned ana ne was half way to the door, through which he speedily disappeared., : The crowd in the smoking room roared, the traveler pocketed the bill with, "Well, he's shy a half dollar this trip.""". "'Spose I'd'tak' his money!" sneered the porter later. "Wahnted to freeze us to jdef I beared him. That kind of fo'ks ain't mah kind' '. : And that ia how the good-looking porter established a record. MAGIC CHARM A SUCCESS. Made Irishman Determine He Would Have One Like It. Charles : H. Heyser, who is prominent, prom-inent, in Masonic circles, is telling this story of a recent trip to Indiana. At Bloomington Mr. Heyser with a party of friends reached the railway station only to learn from an Irishman loung- lag abot that there would be no train for their destination for five hours, but -f-that one might be caught at Seymour, forty miles distant. "How are we to reach Seymour?" asked Heyser. ;There is a fast freight which will stop here in a few minutes," replied the Irishman. ; "But I'll warn ye beforehand be-forehand that ye rAn't ride on it" '."Why not?" - ' "The conductor won't take passengers passen-gers and he can't be bribed. . "Suppose- I were President of the road?", : , "You'd have, to prove it." "That's easy," replied Mr. Heyser, pointing to the Masonic emblem which adorned his vest. "All that is necessary neces-sary is for me to use this magic charm." , r "The conductor has one Just like it, remarked the Irishman. ' In due time the fast freight made its appearance and the conductor's charm proved to be exactly like Mr. Heyser's, as the irishman had said. Before tbe astonished gaze of the latter the tourists tour-ists were welcomed aboard the caboose. ca-boose. The bell rang and the train moved away, leaving the Irishman standing in the middle of the track. - "Hi!" he yelled between his handa, "I'll have . wan av thim two-dollar magic-charms before Saturday night! Exchange. HE WAS EASILY SATISFIED. Possession of Riches Meant Little to .( ' . Florida Man. VThe S'lrSrida Times Union says that there la much philosophic content ment in that state, and tells a story to substantiate the statement. . When the phosphate boom was young a speculator paid one of these contented Florida folk sixteen thousand thou-sand dollars for a. tract of land the native had tried to sell for five hun dred. The sum conveyed only a vague impression to the mind of the fortunate fortun-ate man. What he wanted was the cash in hand. , "Don't do that Leave it In the bank and tell me what you want." He wanted a farm of "sixty acres with a house on it the whole to cost a few hundred. r :"W.!xat elae?" ' : - " - . "Can I have a horse and aaddle and bridle?" "Certainly." "And a rifle?" : "Yes." " "And some provisions?" "Yes." His'eyes began to bulge. ' There was a pause, f. .. -.. What elso do you want?" ."Oh, giv me fifty dollars for the old woman to buy things for herself and the children." ; . He started to walk away. "What el.se?" - ' ' "Is there moro yet?" .-- "Yes." - "Well, give ne a. plug o' tobacco an', set me down where the fish will bito all day an you can-have the rest""' Diminishing Rubber Supply. United Stales Consul Kenneday of Para, Brazil, rerorts great falling off in rubber exports. He says: "The one feature of the situation which is really worrying f he rubber men is the rapid destruction of the rubber forests! in the very region where the begt rubber rub-ber is found. The number of men who have gone Into the rubber belts "this year passes all records and all expectations, ex-pectations, and they are still going in great numbers. These men have heard of the high price rubber is how commanding. com-manding. They are .eager for gain, and many of them, " as well as the owners of estates, are anxious to retrieve re-trieve the losses of last, season. It is therefore to, be exnected that the destruction of the rubber forests this year will be beyond all precedent "enormous and irreparable." Sir Thomas Upton's Eagle. Visitors on the "Erin" who felt sym pathy ior the magnificent American eagle which dejectedly flapped 'its wings in a. small cage on the lower deck will be glad to learn that the prisoner is fre. 5 r When 'the "Erin" sailed away, the floors of its cage were opened' and. the longfmiseiftbie bird soared up and off to its ns.tivu home. The eagle yrt.a a gift to Sir Thomas Upton frori in admiringr friend, but the baronet hadn't the heart to take it to Englard when he saw its pitiable flight V Miss Rockefeller. Like all the other Rockefellers, Miss Ethiil G daughter of William G. Rockefeller, is musical and highly educated,' but has little or none of the retiring disposition which characterizes character-izes most others of the name. She is fond of outdoor life,' is a capital whip and frequently rides to hounds across the country. Shs at.d her immediate family are much more liberal In their religious views than the John D. Rockefellers, and they go Into society a good deal besides. SERIOUS EVIL OF THE DAY. A Tendency to Exaggeration Becoming l- All Too Commoni Exaggeration is one of the most serious se-rious evils of the day. It is common in all the walks of life," people not being be-ing willing to see what, is actually before their eyes, but perpitting their imaginations to enlarge and extend their view frequently to the limit of the mental horizon. Few will deny its deleterious , effect. Rumors on each side of the ocean for which there is no reasonable basis throw the country into a state of unhealthy anxiety and do positive harm at times of a serious character. Very recent events have strikingly illustrated this. It Is the vogue, or it is a temporary evil which has seized upon the public, and there does not appear to be any remedy except ex-cept to let it run its course like any other epidemic and pass away. Baltimore Bal-timore American. - ; ARTIST KEPT FUR MANTLE. Valuable Fur Garment a Reward for : Successful Duplicity. The late artist, Hans Canon, once painted, a Russian prince In a magnificent magni-ficent fur mantle,; which took his fancy so completely that he endeavored endeavor-ed to hit on a plan by which he might retain possession of it. On sending home the portrait be omitted to return re-turn the garment and to the letter requesting re-questing him to do so .he made no reply.. re-ply.. One day, when looking out of a window, he saw the prince coming toward his house. Hastily slipping into the garb, Canon sat down in an armdhair near the fire. The prince, who had come for his coat, started on seeing Canon groaning and trembling at the fireside. "What is the matter with you?" he asked, "Oh,' groaned Canon,, "I don't, know what it is, but I feel so weak and" wretched, and I cannot get warm. Two days ago my brother died of smallpox and I am a bit nervous about myself," The artist kept the coat. , Why Fools. Find Gold. . An Irishman in Australia "who had hunted long for gold and found little complained bitterly that he was not born a fool. Many who , were his friends, "that are born fools, aye, and was fools before that,", were rich,, he said. "An' why? Because the borrn fool gos diggin' in places no sinsible man wud look at an' by jiminy, the gould's there!" ' - - Reads Like, a Miracle. Frlarspoint, Miss., Nov. 30. The Butler case still continues to be the talk of the town. Mr. G. I Butler, the father of the little boy, says : "The doctor said my boy had disease of the spinal cord, and treated him for two .months, during which he got worse all the time. Finally the doctor told me he did not know what was the i rouble. The boy would wake up during dur-ing the night and say that he ' was dying. He would be nervous and trembling trem-bling and would want to run from the house, saying he saw ugly things which frightened him. After , we had tried everything else, I read an advertisement adver-tisement of Dodd's Kidney Pills as a cure , for Nervous Troubles. I purchased pur-chased some and used them until he had taken altogether eight boxes when he was sound and well with not a single sin-gle symptom of the old trouble. Thl was some montha ago, and I feel ur that he Is permanently cured. We owe to Dodd's Kidney Pills all the credit for his restoration to good health." RATHER LONG TO WAIT. Pompous Peddler Met His Match in , Unconcerned Bank Teller. A pompous peddler, who was selling pens, entered a bank and asked for the cashier, and, being told he was not in, said: "I am dealing in pens, and K I suppose, it will be proper for me to deal with the cashier." . -.v . - ' "I suppose it will," replied the teller, carelessly. ' - "Very well, I will wait." The caller took a chair and sat composedly com-posedly for a fuH hour waiting for the cashier. By that time he began to grow uneasy, and, seeing no prospect of a change 'in his circumstances! asked how soon the cashier would be in. "Well, I don't know ' exactly," said the teller, "but I expect him in in about eight weeks. He has just left a. week ago." Substitutes for India Rubber. Gutta-joolatong is a material which la utilized as a substitute for and in conjunction with india rubber. It is a product of the East Indies, chiefly of the island of Borneo, and in. the jprm in which it is imported is described as "whitish in v color, looking something some-thing like marshmallow candy, smelling smell-ing strongly of petroleum and oxidizing oxidiz-ing on expor.ure'to the air, becoming hard." The same description says: "It is not a substitute for -gutta-percha or india rubber, but is used chiefly as a filler in manufactures of india rubber rub-ber gum and gutta-percha." ts importation im-portation has increased from 6,500,000 pounds in 1899 to 14,000,000 pounds in 1903. , : Was a Salt Lake Long Ago. Some rmarkable salt formations are found extending for thirty miles along the Virginia river in Nevada. The salt forms mountains of erystal and is so pure and clea t.1-" X finev print can be read through a foot of it. I This region was evidently once occupied by a great salt lake, as close by are some wonderful wells, one -of which, seventy-five feet in diameter, contains water so ' Intensely saline that a person per-son bathing there will float like a cork. ' "JUST RUN ACROSS " Some People Are Lucky. Some people' make an Intelligent study of food and get on the right track (pure food) others are lucky enough to stumble upon the right ' way out of 4he difficulty just as a Phila. young woman did. , - i She says: "I had suffered terribly ; from nervous indigestion, everything seemed to disagree with me and I was . onf the, point of starvation when one ; da I happened to run across a demon- j stration of Postum Food Coffee at one : of the big stores here. ! "I took a sample home and a sample of Grape-Nuts as well and there tried . them .. again and found they agreed J with me- perfectly. For months I t made them my main diet and as the j result I am restored to my former per- feet health and can eat everything I j want to. I "When I spoke to my pnySlCian about Grape-Nuts he said 'It' is a most excellent food.' " Name given by Postum Pos-tum Co, Battle Creek, Mich. There's a "reason. Look for the famous little, book, "The Road to Wellviile." in every , - . . . r,. ,i v- r - Nuts. GRATEFUL, HAPPY WOMEN 38 jmzmmmm jl Mi Muriel Armitage. I; Female Weakness is Pelvic Catarfh. Always Half Sick are the Women Who Have Pelvic Catarrh. -1 1 f Catarrh of any organ, if allowed to progress, pro-gress, will affect the whole body. Catarrh without nervousness is very rare, but pelvic catarrh and nervousness go hand in hand. What is so distressing a sight as a poor- half-sick, nervous woman, suflering trom the many almost unbearable symptoms of pelvic catarrh? She does not consider herself her-self ill enough to go to bed, but she is far from being able to do her work without the ORE TESTING Wo havo States for and turn over in complete working order Ore Milling and capacity. Our Catalogue No. 39 describes this Office St Works, 8th & Larimer St i. Metallurgies! Dep't, 1737 Champa fit. THE HALL'S CANKER AND FOR THE MOUTH, THROAT. STOMACH AND BOWELS. ... NEVER Nelden-Judson Drug Co., General WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AND HEADS THAT ACHE WISE WOMEN , BROMO-SELTZER ' TAKE TRIAL BOTTLE lO CENTS. WE TREAT AND CUBE CATAKRH Deafness, Nose and Throat troubles, trou-bles, Eye aud Ear lHseases. Bronchial and Lutift Troubles, Asthma. Stomach, liver and Kidney Diseases. Bladder Troubles. Female Complaints, Com-plaints, Chronic Diseases of Women and Children, Child-ren, Heart Disease, Kervous Diseases. Chorea, (St. Vitus' Dance), Kiekets, Spinal Trouble, Skin Diseases Sciatica and Rheumatism, Diseases Di-seases of the Bowels. Piles, Fistula and Kectal Troubles, tioltre (or bin neck). Blood Jjiseases, Tape Worm, Hay Fever, Hysteria. Epilepsy, Insomnia, etc., and all Nervous and Chronic Diseases. Home Treatment Cnreg. Write for free - sviiiDtom list if yon cannot caJL . DR. A. J. SHOKE9. Consultation Free. Weak IVlen If yoo suffer from an r of the weaknesses or diseases di-seases caused by iirnorance. diKlp uion or contagion contag-ion YOU AKB THIS VKKV PKHrjOJi WE WM' TO TALK TO. We have proven onr skill In curing OHRONTC diseases by publishing the many voluntary testimonials testi-monials from homs people, giving names, pictures and addresses. v WE CAN'T PUBLISH OCR Ct BES 1 PK1VA1K DISEASES Because It would betray eontidence. Hence we have to prove our skill In this class of troubles In , ., a ,1.... a u u Tht. isnnrnlfin: DRS. SHORES & SHORES, 'Specialists. UU4UiUliUUUUUiiiAiJiiiiUUUiiiUiiiUi I Fergus Coalter f I -i MUSIC CO. E 3 S350 PIANOS FOR $190 1 $ ISO ORGANS FOR $75 3 I 10.000 PIECES SHEET MUSIC I 3 j t to cents pew COPT . . I t SEND FOR CATALOGUES. Fergus Coalter Music Go SALT LAKE CITY. iTtWHHWtMlifTnTTTTiTnTTTWWITftnnTTTtW CJIIZD PERMANENTLY at. lutnc. -without Knife or Caustics, Caus-tics, ir der i 1 e per: o ial direction of E.H. HariT.n. M. D., Cancer Spfsrt:ii!c i IB years . Write to-day lor iTtrn and full particulars. Hardino's Cell Cancer Cure Co. CG3EN, UTAH. SMOKE 'Not ttyr rhnap, but how good." Wh'taker& Dallas, takers, l.V,:: ISipauTi Tahulc are the best dys-P'jpnia dys-P'jpnia i,ted!itiie- ever made. A Hundred luiuions f them have linen sold la liie United State tu reai'ninVy a single yer. Oonsiipailon. uean-Sii- tinrn. sick lieailai-lie, dizziness, bad breath, s re throat, and every nt- R)omach are relieved i.r cured by Rlpans Tabules. One will renfra!ly ptve relief within twenty minutes. min-utes. The flvt'-cent pic!iare Is enough fur ordinary siccaslons. All drugalstj sell ttieui. , THE INTER- QU (IT Ui BUSINESS Pfil 1 rf F T OOOEM, UTAH, places more bULiXut v.iitii p4uiie into erod posli ions than : anT otht-r edoctioual iustittttlon !c.i-ti'mat iutitutlon In the West wnteior stii i( ,rip tn jr. A. Siill U, i. 2(3 Twenty- onrtb tc Srj xmts a '' Sfi alatKl peose- ,-- and fitset or ."2 e 1 ten years, -m' Vl JEWELRY (0 S(. THANK PE-RU-NA FOR THEIR RECOVERY AFTER YEARS OF SUFFERING. Miss Muriel Armitage, 36 Greenwood Ave , Detroit, Mich., District Organizer of the Royal Templars of Temperance, in a recent letter, says : "I think that a woman naturally shrinks from making her troubles public, but restored health has meant so much to me that I feel for the sake of other suffering women it is my duty to tell what Pernna has done for me. i "I suffered for fi v years with uterine irregularities, which brought on hysteria and made me a physical wreck. I tried doctors from the different schools of medicine, but without any perceptible change in my condition. In my despair I called on an old nurse, who advised me to try Peruna, and promised good results re-sults if I would persist and take it regularly. reg-ularly. I thought this was the least I could do and procured a bottle. I knew as soon as I began taking it that it was affecting me differently from anything I had used before, and so I kept on taking tak-ing it. I kept this up for six months, and steadily gained strength and health, and when I had used fifteen bottles I considered myself entirely cured. I am a grateful, happy woman to-day." Miss Muriel Armitage. Peruna cures catarrh of the pelv9 organs with the same surety as it cures catarrh of the head. Peruna has become be-come renowned as a positive cure for female ailments simply because the ail ments are mostly due to catarrn. Catarrh Ca-tarrh is the cause of the trouble. Peruna cures the catarrh. The symptoms symp-toms disappear. greatest exhaustion. This is a very common com-mon sight and is almost always due to pelvic pel-vic catarrh. It is worse than foolish for so many women to suffer year after year with a disease dis-ease that can be permanently cured. Peruna cures catarrh permanently. It cures old chronic cases as well as a slight attack, the only difference being in the length of time that it should t taken to effect a cure. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac tory results irom ins use ui rauu, -at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement state-ment of your case, and he will be- pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman. President of Th Hartian Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio., the most complete Ore Testing Plant in the United the testing of ores of all characters by any of the mod- era methods ot ore treatment, we determine me oesi im economical method of treating ores and contract to design, erect Plants of any description, and guarantee eUiaency department fully. F. M. DAVIS IRON WORKS CO. DENVER, COLO. U. S. A. DIPHTHERIA REMEDY FAILS FOR SALE BY ALL DRUQQISTS AND GENERAL STORES Agents. Salt Lake City, Utah. DR. O. W. BHOBSS. Pav When Cured - We ci r you first and then ask a REASONABLE FEE when von are cured. You can depend upon our word, thousands ot patients hv Indorsed na. NOW, WE WANT TO CURK YOU with th distinct dis-tinct understanding that we will cot demand a FKB nntil we curs you. This applies to Dost Manhood. Man-hood. Organio Weakness, Spermatorrhoea, Varicocele, Vari-cocele, Diseases of the Prostrate i land. Unnatural Losses, Contracted Disorders. S'rieture, etc.. Contagious Con-tagious Blood.Poison, and all WEAKNESSES Ot men. OFFICE HOURS: 9 a. m. to 1 p. m, Kvanlngs. I to 8; Sundays, 10 a. m. to 13. ; ee w. sicono south t. SALT LK CITY. UTAH, 1 PATE BIT Bend for our 42nd Anniversary Book on Patents, Pat-ents, containing nearly ufl Illustrations of mechanical mechan-ical movements, and valuable law points for InTenj tors and manufacturers; also an Interesting list oi Inventions FREE. D-m't wait, write TO-OAV. MASON, FENWICK & LAWRENCE, Patent Lawyers. Washington, D. C, IDWIFE Mrs. Liszle lsler, Graduate Midwife of experience, oilers service and quiet, oom-fonable oom-fonable home before, during and after confinement. con-finement. Kefereacsg ven. Correspondence Correspond-ence will receive pri m,t attention, and in strict confidence. A dctress, Mrs. UIBbLBB, 336 W. Third North. Salt Lake City. 2Et'" ilRIINkTNNFSS UllUllUblHIkWW CURED. The Keefej Institute, la3ftt.!,TcftT.putih: CRiSMON & NICHOLS, ISSAYERS AND SEND FOR PR'E. LIST. 119 S. West Temo'.a St P. o. BOX 78. SALT LAKE CITY fUTXIABLE ASSAYS. Sold I .75 t Gold and Silver . toad.... -. .To I Uld. bilr'r. Vop'r.. LM Prompt returns on mail samples. Ugden Assay Co. DKsvfii.coto. J. W. CURRIE, SSISSS?. A4P 70 W. Third South St. P. 0. BOX 565. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR RAW FURS and GAME HEADS MEHESY. THE FURRIER. WRIT2 POm PRICE LIST. SALT LAKE CITT. UTAH MASQUERADE EATRICAL COS- FOR RENT .... BtHU FOR CATALOGUES AND PRICES. SALT LAKE COSTUMING HOUSE 'PHOnt TO. 57 RT ATS ST.. SALT LAKK OtTY Elite Matrimonial Journal it'&'oPR Harry to your advantage. Smontl lOc, or 5c per copy with phoua. uw JP ub. Co., f .0. ISSt. Ba.timora. mi. 1 1T A ft II HK nl l'as Wnest price foj. Ulnn eJUniV UU. hides, pelts, beeswax, ru b r. O jppt r, brass, etc. Salt L,alf e City. Utah If amicte i with sore eyes use rThonipson's Eye Water .When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. W. N. U.. Salt Lake - No. 49. 1903 Jkr!te:SrTirJl Izi CURES JlP all ELSE fTltT" I f-fl Beat Couiih byr-.tp. iaf! Good. I X.-J lntiniM. t?old I'V dr;4glt. f - . . i ... |