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Show I ad TRAITS Hunter Makes Sweeping Indletment at Native Trlba. A hunter of big game fa Africa gives a description of a tribe of n tives, ho eaya, --live 1b tha swaajps, their staple article of diet being flab aad flour mads from tha seed of tbs water Uly, although during tha rains they grow patches of cassava root and sweat pots toes at the edge of tbs swamp. They smear their bodies with mud to protect them from mosquitoes end are extremely dirty end evil smelling in conseqaenee. They art very low down In tho seals of h inanity and hava a bad repntatloa among tribes living on tbo high ground, which reputation they upheld during our visit Wo engaged several Watwa natives aa carriers, but they only camo to aa what they could teaL One day 1 shot a reed buck In sight of tho camp and left two Watwa to carry It In while I went after a hartbeest, hut 1 never saw either men or buck again. It was no use following thorn into tho swamps, a they knew every inch of tha ground and watsr. They bad small canoes bidden everywhere, and Immediately they crossed a stream they sunk ths canoe again whom they alone knew where to And it Our hoys were afraid to follow them, aa they naed poisoned arrows, and somotlmas sol poisoned takes in the tracks leading to their haunts. Holmes, treasurer of the Young Woman's Temperance Association of Buffalo, N.Y., strongly advises all suffering women to rely, as she did, upon Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. Dub Uu Fnmii Tom med- : OP APRICANSu icine is indeed an ideal woman's medicine, and bj far tha beat 1 know to restore lost health and strength. I Buffered mieerj tor several years, being troubled with menorrhagia. My i- -J ached, I had bearing-dow- n paiaa and frequent headaches. I would often wake from restful sleep, and is such pain that I suffered for hours before I oould go to sleep again. I dreaded the hoping to get relief, bn their medicine did not seem to rare me. I tried your Vegetable Compound on the recommendation of a friend (ram tha East who was visiting me. "I am glad that I followed her advice. for every ache end pain is gone, end not only this, but my general health ie much improved. I nave a fine appetite and have gained in flesh. My earnest advice to suffering women 1a to put aside all other medicines and to take Lydia E. Pinkhami Vege- Resembles a Pouter Pigeon In a Sherd Skirt. The Tibetan young m'sn of faahlos wears his pigtail like the Chinese and would be lost without hie native girdle. This ia a complete multum in parvo, at once his arsenal, bis pipe rack, and his treasury. In it he carries all that Is really dear to his souL Tho amort tailor of tho locality makes Misa Nxixm his great cost with hugs bulging table Compound. Bolus, 540 No. Division St., Buffalo, breasts, which he stuffs out with wool, N.Y ISOOOferflUforhlmalefmbtmlttttrFn. bella of barley dough, and other odde tte reaafeeeasa Sssisssa and ends that aro necessary to a halfnomad existence. As he walks ka lobks like a pouter pigeon In a short skirt He is an Industrious person In a way, for ho always carries a distaff In his bolt with hia other weapons, and na he goes ho spins npon it like a perambulating woolen milL Nows the time To Buy Stocks It Arriving at a Verdict Kusheqna, Pa, Aug. 1. (Sped all- -in this section of Pennsylvania there la a growing belief that for such Kidney Diseases as Rheumatism and Lame Back there ia only one aura cure and that is Dodd's Kidney Pills This belief grows from such cases as that of Mrs. M. L, Davison of this place. She telle the itory herself as follows: 1 have suffered from Rheumatism for thirty years and find that Dodd's Kidney Pills hava dona mo more good than any medicine I have ever taken. I was also bothered with Lame Back and I can only say that my hack hasnt bothered me since I took Dodd's Kidney Pills Considering that Mrs Davison only took two boxes of Dodds Kidney Pills, the result would ha considered wonderful if it were not that others are reporting similar results dally. Kushe-quIs font arriving at a verdict that Dodds Kidney Pills are the one aura cure for Rheumatism. known, fset to everyone that seourltiss hsva destined from Twenty to Fifty Dollars peri lure Is the peat twelve months. The market now In ntacnnnt. What will bo the nest movement? Dp or down? Up, nuro as yon aro a foot hlfh. Buy now. while stocks ore on the bottom. Bond for our book of Information (Hyitem of and Dally Marks! Lottes1, malted free npon applteatloa. Is ") Spoon-larloa- CUMMINGS COMMISSION CO. BROKERS GmSbum Qurtafieiw sa New Ynt Chiaa Grwa. baton U Un md Stock and Minim Excfwsi1 o. p. wslksh blds SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH a All Hallows College Cherokee Chiefs' Portraits Arranged upon the walls in the ex ecutlvo offices In the capitol building in Tahlequah. are the portraits of near ly all the Cherokee chiefs who have ruled since the time of John Ross who was principal chief for forty consecutive years SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH BOARDING m DAY SCHOOL STUDIES RESUMED SEPTEMBER 71b Minim, Primary. Academic. Col- lege and University departments. Special attention to Science, Mathematics, Muslo end Commercial branches. Courses In Hebrew and Syrlo . Chaldalo, Physical Culture, Military Drill. Students ere prepared for West Point, Annapolis and all departments of the Civil Service. A complete corps of able and experienced professors. A limited number of private rooms, for which application should be made early. For further particulars, cell on. or write to the Very Rev. President. I am bum Pteo'aCure for Consumption savet my life three year wit !Uih Tnos Romiaa Maple Street, Norwich. N. Y.. Fete 17. 1BU0. Water In Grass The amount of water given off by an sera of grass is estimated at thirty hogsheads a day. About 100 parts by weight of water pass through a plant to one part fixed and assimilated In Its tissues. FLOUR SALT LAKE PHOTO SUPPLY CO. Svcc marts Warwick Phots tapslj Ca OGDERS BEST ucmtsivs rhetugrapkic Itakn PHOEKX HIGH PATENT wmvn sen oavaLOeua LAKB BALT Sun SOUTH AND MAIN. CITY MADE BY UlllOin 5,000 COPIES IllUulU tody STANDARD OGDEN MILLING & ELEVATOR Cu. PIECES. UTAH. OQDEN, fnr tl.OO. Snd COPIES (patpa'ili Aim wun- - PIINIK dlrrrt fpxn fnslnry. inniitJ a big uvinn w yon. hnnsnlni In pifal writ nl one fur rat.loffur nnd prlrs. Nnnaa-llGuitars, Hirings end Klttlugl. THE McKANNON BROS. MUSIC CO. Wanhinaton Aa. Oedan, Utah. IO u, MICROTINE. dill A poaitlva cure for catarrh, cold Is the bead, hay fever, headache asd all bronchial affection. Aek Your Druggist for H. R. H. OFFICER & CO., AS8AYER8 AND CHEMIST8 gjU fcmywtyawdMMMWP j Lth (fy, Clil CO. JOHN OGDEN Aar '70..IIJO i m ,VL aid. Mlrar. Oappar aar ihraa t.O gl.W arLaad aueailnn. tamplaa by null iwelre promptnan Sought. Pliaar Gold. Iletoru and Bleb DKim.lt. (KILO 1TSB Aiwpehsa SL SEND FOR FREE SAMPLE. MOUNTAIN TEA MEDICINE GO 272 Ninth StrseLSan Francisco. CaL ASSAY Howard E Barton, THE DAISY FLY KILLER Id dlalm-ro- , ! SSSSSSSS Hng ruom and a Ach.ri Oold SU-prtaaa.Sld.BIIir.UU.II: rarTtaTeoJd. Ms: Baser Copper II lyaatdaiaaut Mnillas aaralapaa aad fall prtinltaM eaell-aalloCoatral ea4 Umpire work aallrtMa. LMd-vtll- a, Cola. Badereaea. Carhoeaie Sat'l Saak. W. N. U Salt Lake-N- o. 32. 1004. piaeMl r iron I tlr-co- ne te Major-Genera- n prptNiM for ton MAHAL M 14 MIsM An a. Kindly Mention This Paper. When Answering Advertisements Ml ..ie: Maine, New Hampshire, Ver- niunt, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connect It ut. New York. New Jersey, Delon are, Maryland, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Geor-ge- . Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Smoke that Is black oer the faetory Texas. The District of Columbia has town. also been Invited to send troops. Gray on tha sea from a tramp, pulldown. crown. But here, es It ranoplee over my Limit Line for Modesty. lllue na my palace roof This Is what an old civil war vetGray from my lips and blue from tha bowl And cerulean blue the wreaths that roll. eran, who haa won inedala for bravery, Each but a flnme'a departing aoul. Buy a of bis first deed In gallantry: Or my Idle Fancy's woof. I have always felt that 1 never i Rut, ah! the color my Kingdom erlee; earned that first medal. We were orAnd the color te all for iny Kingly eves; And all for my ear tha songs and algha dered to charge, but the enemys fire That surge through tha softened soul sent us galloping tinck with a dozen Tha sky's lost blue tha green o' the addles emptied. Then we were or trace The arguing stream the reproving dered to try again, and once more the Ah. dream by the Are with a King's own enemy's fire stampeded our horses. My mount rose on his haunches and And color the pipe's sweet howl Till the light dies down nnd the pipe struggled in terra. I never felt eo hems deep; weak aa I did then. Then the King turns ever and goea to sleep. My horse trembled with fear and While, overhead, twinkling pickets keep darted forward with a scream. I haulroll. Watch aa the night-houed on the relna to turn him back, but Stephen Chalmers. he dashed right on toward the enemys To Fight Bull Run Again. lines and I Instinctively held on to the Every veteran of the civil war, to pommel of the aaodle. I closed my eay nothing of the studloue, ayes and tried to pray, but It seemed will be of West greatPoint, fledglings to me 1 fainted. ly Interested in the reproduction of When I recovered my senses fully the battle of Bull Run, for which the a dozen men and officers were shaking ar Is War department now making bands rangements. Though the plans at where with me. and we were standing tbe enemy's line had been. The Washington are not yet completed. It whole squadron, encouraged by what Is learned that probably 36,000 troops will participate In the mimic fight, and they thought my daring, had followed, that no less distinguished an officer with victory aa the result I kept trying to deny that I had l Corbin personally than will direct the movements on the old been brave, and even told of my terror during the charge, but they all amiled. Virginia field. When they gave me the medal I prola over Run Bull again Fighting tested. Finally I was effectually shut of merely a part of a grand series army maneuvers to take place in Sep- up. An old, grizzled major came up to tember. In which the militia of more me and took me aside. Sonny, said he, we all like to see than twenty states will be privileged to act In cooperation with regulars. modesty, but I wouldnt carry it too President Roosevelt and officers of far. Not too far; dont lay It on too " high rank In the army have been con- thick. Presion and the the plana, ferring Paid Loan After Forty Years. dent has stipulated that the civil solMayor H. 8. Benner of Gettysburg, diers be afforded every opportunity to profit by the experience and training Pa., last week received $20 with simple Interest at 6 per cent for forty of the regulars. In all, as far as the plana are made, years, which had been borrowed from there will be about 18,000 regulars him by hi old comrade, Capt. George and militia soldiers on each side, con- Brown, while they were confined to in prison at Plymouth, N. CL, sisting of Infantry, cavalry and artil- gether after their capture in the campaign lery. of 18G4. While the maneuvers will not be offTbe money had been borrowed by icially scheduled as following tbe preCapt. Brown in order to buy some excise movements of the Northern and tra provisions, for it was almost imSouthern soldiers on that memorable for a man to subsist on the possible occasion, this particular field was food furnished by their Confederate chosen for the strategic lessons to be Jailers. learned from that great battle. Both men were members of the The intention of the War depart- One Hundred and First Regiment, ment Is to make the disposition of Pennsylvania Volunteers, and during the troops on both sides conform as tnelr term of service were close closely aa possible to the presentment friends. But after escaped from on that memorable Sunday, July 21. Plymouth prison they became sepathey 1861, when McDowell's army, 85,000 rated and never saw each other strong, advanced on Manassas Junc- again until recently. tion from Blackburn's Ford, In three After mutual greetings a settlement divisions, commanded by Gens. Tyler. was effected by Drown giving his Hunter and Helntzelman. comrade n check for $68. It will be recalled that Gen. Beauregard, who comm a ml oil the ConfederGettysburg. ates upon that occasion, had about Gettysburg to the world's greatest waa reinforced battlefield. No other ia visited by ao 80,000 men. and Inter by Gen. Joseph E. Johnston with 6,000 many people every day in the year, fresh troops from the Shenandoah val- and particularly on Memorial day. It to not only the scene of the greatest ley. Dull Run Is whore fien. Thomas J. battle of the greatest of wars, but Its Jackson, commanding a Confederate monuments are morn numerous and stood like a atone wall more interesting than those of any brigade, It Is easily the against the assault of the enemy, and other historic spot. thereafter was railed "Stonewall Jack-son.- " greatest art gallery In the And many veterans on both world, and the cost of lla monuments Ides remember, too, that Jefferson and tablets runs well up In the milDaria waa present at the battle, and lion!. It is all under the nation's afterwards sent a Joyous telegram to charge, and the government haa built tbe Confederate ofllrlals at Richmond. beautiful roads along the old lines of A good part of the country around battle and every care la taken, not Manassas Junction haa changed since only to preserve, hut also to restore, '61. hut the relative positions of the as far aa possible, the natural condivarious components of the opposing tions of the field as It was at the Dine ermles are known almost exactly, and of the war. It la eminently fitting the War department expects no diff- that this famous field should annually be the scene of the moat notable of all iculty lu making an accurate reproductbe Memorial day exercises. tion. There were two fights at Rull Run. The Last Survivor. The second occurred on Aug. 30, 1863, That waa a pathetic scene at Paris. when again the Union force, this time under Gen. John Pope, was compelled III., when the last suriror of a comto fall Track to Washington. The bat- mand which took part in the Mexican tle of July 21. 1861. however, waa real- war went alone to the fair grounds, ly the most Important one. The hat-ti- e where he had mer bis comrades for opened about 11 o'clock in the fore- forty years, called the roll to which noon. when Hunter's division, which there were no responses, and spent had crossed at Sudley Springs, made the remainder of the day In solitary the attack. The cannonade soon ex- meditation. The time to not ao far distant when tended down the stream to Blackburn's Ford, five miles away. The a veteran of the ciII war may do the severest fighting was between Tylers same. The remnant of the Federal division and the Confederates, near armies which assembled at Washingthe Stone bridge, on the Warrenton ton for their lest parade la dwindling road, about two miles south of Sud- rapidly, and with each year the death ley Springs. For four hours the ter- rite increases ao rapidly that the last rible conflict raged, and the Confed- s'irvivor haa not now long to wait for erates seemed likely to be defeated the melancholy and transient honor of when up came Johnston, fmm the having traveled a little further along Shenandoah valley with his 6,00ft men. the bridge of Mirza's vision than hla fresh and reudy. The Union forces fellows. New Y'ork World. could not withstand the Increment and retreated toward Washington, 25,000 Age Pensioners with a casualty list of 3.000 and the According to a table prepared at the loss of twenty-sevecannon and a Pension Offlee. the unknown army" large amount of ammunition, equip- of veterans eligible for pensions under ment and supplies. Tbe Confederate the age pension order" will not num- loss waa about 2,000 men. her more than 25,000. it was estlmat- - ; The old battlefield, which extends ed by members of Congress and often miles in one direction and five In ficers of the pension bureau at the another, is In private hands. The time the law was passed that tbs "un- owners are farmers, and from them known army" would number not less j the government haa obtained a lease than 160,000 men. There have been for fifteen days, the period covered by very few applicants for pension under ' the maneuvers. The fields are now the age order. and It was aaid by under cultivation, but the crop will an officer of the hurea that there are have been gathered before the time nt more than 20,000 veterans of the get for the maneuvers. civil war pw living who are not on The states Invited to send guardf- - tbo pension rolls. rs OUTFIT OP TIBETAN DANDY. (Ut-edc- In Camp. i lay me down when the day Is dona With pipe and tobacco, a dog and a gun, Yba World forsaken and l.ife began. Ah. this is a King's doaire! I lay me down in n leafy lair. All lost to Care was there ever Care? And dre.un in the bulmy forest air lira By the smoke of a BmUmNi ALFALFA SEED BAILEY A It. SONS tiK late Cl are headquarters for tha bast quality Alfalfa Beads: also Ursa aad (tardea Seeds, Orals Bay, ate. la ared builasaa 40 years. Mail aiders gives special atteatloa. M E SsceaC Sseth Kindly Mention This Paper. When Anawerlng Advertisements , i CHIEF OF POLICE SAVED, Newberry, EL C W. H. U arris Chief of Police, of Newberry, says: 1 suffered for a number of years witb kidney complaint There was a dull aching across the smell of my back that waa worse at night and made me feel miserable all tha Urns. The kidney eecretlona were dark and full of sediment and luck of control compelled me to rise a number of times during the night. Between this annoyance end the backache it was impossible for me to get much sleep end my health waa being undermined. I tried a number of remedies, but nothing helped me until I got Doan's Kidney Pills. The use of ibis remedy according to directions promptly brought about a change for the better. After using two boxes the backscbe ell left me, the kidney secretions cleared up end the action of the kidneys became normal. A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Chief liar rls will be mailed to any part of tha United States. Address Co., Ruffalo, N. Y. Sold by ell dealers; price fifty cents per box. IN THE MIKADO'S Traveling EMPIRE. la Not Altogethsr Mixed Delight. aa U A lady traveling la Japan gives the following sketch of an inn nt which ha stopped: The landlord nnd hla wife nnd tha servants all come to talh to you and when you Inform tho cone pany that you aro sleepy and wanl your bed laid, everybody saya at oneq Honorable bed auguatly Is it? but no body does anything, and when at Iasi yon have achieved your dealrn yoi have to force apart. In defiance of po lice regulations, the wooden ahutten which hermetically seal the bouse, la order to avoid being smothered with the fumee of charcoal and humans. Ai toon aa things sre quiet enough rats chase over the rooms and generally over you a well, and sometimes hits you. One o'clock In the morning, to the old Japanese reckoning, was called the hour of the rat. doubtless for this reason. And all night long the watchman sounds hla rattle to show that he to attending to hla duties. Yon bars to he up with the cock to get the first go at the bath, which la only filled once, and the wash hand basin, which CURSE THAT WAS EFFECTIVE. ia only aa large aa a cake tin, to ok ways kept in the .veranda." Lafcadle Hearn Tells 8tery of Japanese Superstition. $100 Reward, $100. The raadanuf thla paper will ha plaaaat te laws In one at hie recent stories Lafcadto thu I bars ia at leaal use OraadrS dUaaaa that Mtaan Hearn danls with n singular supersti- haa hace ahta w cars la all lu uaaaa. aa4 that k I alarrh. Uall'a Catarrh Cara la Uu only KalUra tion In Japan. A woman had, accord- can bow kaowa lu Iba niadloal fraternity. Cuairk a Slews, raqalraa a auntie ing to a very common custom in Ja- betas Uaal Irralmru. Uall'a Catarrh Cara la takae N pan, given her mirror to go into tho tonally, ecilaa dlraedy spun the bluud aad aeata thumb tairapai Iba surfaces of tha melting pot to make a bell for e Bud- taaduka of iba arauai, Skwaae, aad (IrKi tba padsal atrauicib ky balldtas ap iba aunailiailua aad asrtea dhist temple. After she had given nature In dulhl lu arork. Tba pmprteleia ban eu aiarb faith la lla curativa powers that Iter MS it she remembered that it had bean las UuaalrrS Hollars for say rate that k fella tr her mother's end her grandmothers, One ears. SruS fur list of taettitioalale, Aildmaa K. t CIIKNKY CO., Tedl, 6 end that it must hava reflected e good Sold by all DramMa, 7kc. Taka Uall'a Yiully 1llla for aBaatlpaUaa many happy smiles. So she regretted giving it She longed for the chance Buddhist Buperstltlente of stealing it back, but it never came. As the mirror was given grudgingly Japanese Buddblets have a worfi It would not melt She was sure that "nazoraeru," which la translated by everybody must know who bad done the dictionaries aa "to imltata," but II such a dreadful thing as to grudge a hae the esoteric meaning of "to aub tttute in imagination one objaet gift to a temple, ao she drowned herself, leaving a farewell letter contain- action for another, eo aa to brtoi When 1 am dead, about soma magical or miraculous re ing these words: it will not be difficult to melt the mirult" Au example of thla la laying i ror and to cast the bell. But, to tbe pebble before the image of Buddha ti person who breaks that bell by ringhow that you would Ilka to build a ing it, great wealth will be taken by temple In hla honor if you were riel the ghost of me." This was a magni- enough, end making a bookcase rs ficently effective curse, because every- Yolve which contains tha 6,711 vub body tried to ring tbe bell till It should umea of the Buddhist canon, and ear break. The priests were driven to neatly wishing that you had time to the verge of madness by tbe ringing read them, by which you acquire tha and threw it into a swamp, so that same merit in the eyea of heaven aa nobody could ring it any mors. it you did read them. Tha bookcase la fitted with a kind of capatan for tha Worship of tha Successful. purpose. While the world to generally com Mrs. Wlnalnw's Hoothlne Syrup, Tinced that it la only tha already Tor rhlMrsa toMbtaa, anfroM tba pmsa, ralaau a person who can be of any use. lairmiaiMia.ailsyspsiaiBame wind aullo. teaabawe It must put up with having a very conEccentric Grave Digger. siderable amount of eham success An eccentric Shropshire, England foisted on it. Why ever did yon trust tho defendant with all these goodsT" exton, who hae Juet died at aa ad need age, had been for over sixty a Judga naked a plaintiff. You should have seen how he wee dressed, and one years connected with Weill ngto the jewelry he wore, your honor! re- pariah church aa gravedigger aad eat merchant ton. The man had never ridden to f plied tbe That waa the very reason why ha train or any other kind of vehlda should not he able to pay you If ha had spent his money In those things, Important to Mothern. remarked the Judge severely. But the Xxamlna eurfutly every botUa of CAfiTOBU, a safe aad sum remedy for infanta and ahlldma world will not see it in that way. Fuster-MIl-bur- X n auo-easef- "Quick aa Thought Quick aa thought" to not eery quick. While a light wave would travel around the equator In a second n nerve wave makes but about 100 feet a second. and see that it In Vm Tot Over SO Years, Tba Kind Yoa liars AT THE AGE OF IX a Curious Way of Finally Attacking Some Organ. from coffee are cumulative, that la, unless the coffee la taken away new troubles are continually appearing and the old ones get worse. To begin with, saya a Kansan, "I was a slave to coffee just aa thousands of others thought I could not live without drinking strong coffee every morning for breakfast and I bad sick headaches that kept me In bed several days every month. Could hardly keep iny food on my stomach but would vomit aa long aa I could throw anything up and when I could get hot coffee to stay on my stomach I thought I was heiter. Well, two years ago this spring I was that sick with rheumatism I could not use my right arm to do anything. had heart trouble, waa nervous. My nerves were all unstrung and my finger nails and tips wera blue aa If I had a chill all the time and my face and hands yellow aa a pumpkin. My doctor said It waa heart disease and rheumatism and my neighbors said I bad Rright's disease and was going to die. Well, I did not know what on earth was the matter aiid every morning would drag myself out of bed and go to breakfast, not to eat anything, but to force down some more coffee. Then In a little while I would be eo nervous, my heart would beat like everything. Finally one morning 1 told my ! believed coffee was the cauae of this trouble and that 1 thought I would try Postum which I had seau advertised. He said All right' so we got Postum and aithuugli I did not Ilka It at first I gut light down to business and made It according to directions, (hen It was fine and (he whole family got to using It and I tall you it has worked wonders for me. Thanks to Iosiiim in place of tbe potto a. coffee, I now enjoy good health, have not been in bed with alck headache for two years although had It for 30 years before I began Postum aad my nerves are now strong and I hava do trouble from my heart or from the rheumatism. 1 consider Postum a necessary of food on my table. My friends who eoma here and taste my Postum ay it to delicious." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Get ths book. "The Road to " In each pkg. Alla J - f i BUNCH TOGETHER Coffee Hae Always fisefhk that coma to-da- buw-ban- X s Walk-ville- Interesting Relic of Musician Urnri Discovered In Parle. An Interesting relic of IJait hat been recovered at Parte. At the agt of 13 be composed Don Banche," ths libretto of which waa written by The aulon, who. In tbe course of hie career) waa the author of 250 places for tha stage, and by De Ranee, who la net known to have made any other effort In dramatic literature. After four pen formancea Don 8ancbe" retired Into the obscurity which befalls the major ity of literary and musical efforts. The MS. was believed to have been to atroyed In the fire at tha Rue Lepafi letter, but it. Jean Chantavolna haa found tha score In the Blbllotheqae de lOpera. It fllla two volumes and com tains In all 83T pages Apparently Don Bauchs le not a very origins! production. The mualo even of Liaal at the age of 13 could hardly be mom than an echo. Nor dose tha libretto exhibit any great amount of novsltji for the theme le taken from a tale hi Florlan who calls it Portuguese Excellent Opportunity to Arrange for Your Reception at St Louie, During the Fair, Free. if you intend going to the Lonlalaae Purchase Exposition. SL IaiuU, Mia sourl, opeuud by Roost rah April 301 b, !)U4. It will be very much to your advantage to correspond wltl Mr. F. H. Wursley. No. 411 Doolm block. Salt lAike City, Utah. Mr. Wnrsley has arranged to have al bis parties met at the St. Lou la depot and esrorted to their lodgings whld will be reserved In advance. Information relative to pastengm rates, stopovers, ticket limits, hots rates and all other necessary Informs Don asked for will he cheerfully gives free of charge. This will eepeclolh be of benefit to those dealring to trav wltb Utah parlies or in parties of fowl or five. School will alas hear sume'hlng to their Interests to writing abovn party. Pn-iddv- iea-her- a ought Death but Found Life, A soldier who aerved under Ora Wolfe In the campaign resulting la tha fall of Quebec was dying of an abloom la one of hla lunga. Well," said hq as 1 am to die, 1 will die in battlq sad he iselated on joining tbo flrtog line. Vary soon be got s bullet throng! the lunge- - The bullet pierced tho sb aeoss st ths psychological mmea$ and drained IL The aurgeona worn able easily to cure the bullet HI sad ths soldier lived for many s mj sfitorwsrff |