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Show Nig WEEKLY. Key No. PIANOS in use. No. SS= = A Box D. & SNELGROVE, 74S. Main St., Salt Lake City, Utah. DR.G. H. KEYSOR, a de oS ee Painless extraction of Teeth by the use of vitalized air. ‘ Artificial Teeth, $10 to $15 per set! Office in the Scott-Auerbach Build’g Provo Go-Qperative |nst’n, The Largest Institution South of Salt Leke. —DEALERS IN— General Merchandise “wd ail Kinds of Utah Produce. NO PLACE LIKE HOME. FF. W. C. HatHENBRUCE, Supt. Hz was wrona.—‘‘Can I speak to you a moment?” he said softly, as he called the chief clerk in the post-office to the window the other day. “Certainly.” “Thanks. I did’nt know but you were busy. Two months ago I came here and asked for a letter. Remember it?” “L do note’ | Wholesale and Retail Dealers Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Doors, Windows, Blinds and Mouldings, Comet inatio a Wire and Slat Fence and all kinds of Building Material. all Gods Sdldet Salt ake Paces: W.-R. PROVO CITY, H. PAXMAN, Supt. UTAH. ‘much TAILOR, 29 &. First South Street. . falifornia Fruit Store, FRED G. LYNGBERG, Propr. Groceries, Provisions, Poultry, Fish, Game and Fresh Oysters in Season. 53 H. Second South St., Opp. the old place. Telephone -No.68. SALT LAKE hurt. CITY 231.—Concealed No. Ne: “Probaply: not, asl am great consequence. J now how I take it back. Birds. 282.—Pictorial L_—_ EF Arrange In ‘‘boom” I thought I might as well put them to some use, so [—what! must you go? Well,be sure to call again.” LITERARY CULTIVATION— “Oh, Mrs. Watts, you should join our Literary society!” “Should [?” “Yes,indeed! We study and learn somuch. Last meeting we took up Carlyle’s quarrels with his wife.” “It must have been interesting.” “Very. Next meeting we shall investigate the private life of Goethe and his love affairs.” “How instructive!” “Yes, and we have found out everything about Poe’s dissipation and disreputable conduct,and purpose soon to thoroughly investigate the immoral actions of Voltaire.” ““Indeed!”’ “Oh,there’s nothing like a literary society to increase one’s culture. You ought to join!” in their diamond. order. Read either of breakers of the shore; The one that One sunny And totals in All two’d by Ill never doit again. “Yes, very well indeed.” “My gracious!if there ain’t two of the same buttons my husband} a In “‘whisperings” of summer I of one of her numerous progeny. A neighbor passing stopped in for a socialchat. A large work-basket, half full of buttons, sat on the floor of the porch. After various remarks of a gossipy nature the visitor said: “You seem to be well supplied with buttons, Mrs. Goodman.” words No. 283.—Double Word Enigma, I, “winds” that whistle round my door; In ‘“‘rose and rue” that grow together; was wrong. Shake.” “'That’s all right.” “Thanks. the names will form down or across. one? I apologize. Os No. (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) a (f) (g) (bh) (i) (j) THE CURIOSITY SHOP. Figares — Numbers Which Produce Strange Results. figures get a product of There we sat. Into my arm, Real fun. Nay, I repent it. Terrible pose. | will never grow old. 287.—Conundrums. (a) Spell “blind pig” in two letters. (b) Spell ‘‘evening” in three letters. (c) Which are the two most disagreeable letters, if you get too much of them? (a) Why is the letter W like scandal? (e) Why are two T’s like hops? (f) What is that which is always invisible yet never out of sight? «) Which of the feathered tribe can lift the heaviest weights? (h) What pious work do railroads do? (i) What is the best kind of agricultural fair? as in Rhyme. the tortoise—as swift -as the wind; As true as the Gospel—as false as mankind; As thin as a herring—as fat as a pig; As proud as a peacock—as blithe as a grig; As savage as tigers—as mild as a dove; As As As As stiff as a poker—as limp as a glove; coolas a cucumber—as warm as a toast; flat as a flounder—as round as a ball; blunt as a hammer—as sharp as an aw). Puniana. The crow is the most rational of bipeds—It never makes a noise without caws. Men of note—Those whose faces you see on | greenbacks, Out of season—An empty pepper box. A person who should be “‘rapped in slumber’—One who snores. Happy Hits. The animal most susceptible of attachment | to man—The family. no censideration tor herself, wakes at the 111, 111, 112, all we IVs ex- consulted before that of her mother, the son whose hours cr study or play must never be interrunted for his mother’s sake, the husband who knows that his wife isa saint for unselfishness, impose unconsciously upon her goodness. And they developa dullness of syinpnthy, an unreadiness to think of her needs, which is as burtful to their own moral growth as it is heartbreaking and incolnprehcnsible to the woman who has use lessly laid down ber very life for then.— Christian Advocate. . Marritce, Maise and Erie. ‘Mark you,” Suoviy reusing, to her .boy lover, “we have cia, taisdvancage over you—we can atany time step inte ease and competence, Where vou iust labor paticutly for it. A littl weeving, a little wheecling, alittle sclf cesradation, a lttle careful, use of ouradvantaces, and then some. man will say “come be my wife? With good looks and youth marriage is easy to attain. There are men enough, but a woman who has soid Lerself even {cr a rins anda new name, need bold her skirt aside for po creature in the street. They. both - carn: their cbread\ in one way. Marriage for love is the beautifulest eternal syinbol of the won or souls: marriace without it isihe unciouncst traffic that defiles the world.”—‘“‘Sctory of an A rican arm.” ae : The Most Valuable Diamond. The king of Portugal has, pervaps, the largest.and most valuable diamoud in the world. It weighs 420 carats, and is valued at $28,00.,000. : The famous Kohinoor of England weighs only 106 carats and has a value of only $700,000. ; Two Sounds by One Word. The reason a person at one end of a long pipe will hear twice over the sounds made at the other end, is that iron isa better conductor of sound than air is, so that the sound which is heard last travels through the air, -and hence more slowly than over the metal, Jas, W. Eardley, The word almanac is from the Arabic arti- leech. The chief peculiarity of the Canadian cli| mate—It is beneficial to bank cashiers, to count; a word received by the European nations from the east, de noting a book or table containing a calendar of the civil divisions of the of the various astronomical useful or year, the times phenomena entertaining Voting in elections. The for every complete 280 in- direct electors, choose the representatives. Emergency Successfully Square. . Deplorable Miss Hannah Billings Keeps constantly on hand a full stock of MILLINERY LADIES’ HATS Mistake. Nothing is more thoroughly mistaken than the idea that a woman fulfills her duty by doing an amount of work that is far beyond ‘her strength. She not only does not fulfill her duty but she most singularly fails *~ it; and the failure is truly deplorable. on and BONNETS short notice and at very reasonable rates. Place of business, a few doors west of National Bank, PROVO CITY, UTAH. t=" “Home Industry Our Specialty.” Provo Co-Operative CLOTHING DEPARTMENT FULL SUITS LINE —)o:0(— OF HOME-MADE CONSTANTLY ON HAND. '_)o:0(— Ensilage. “Ensilage” is any kind of green food preserved for the use of cattle during the winter. A pit callegda ‘‘silo” is the means em- ployed to keep green fodder over winter. GOODS Of the best quality and latest styles. trimmed to order Met. An English physician tells the following in regard to an emergency which, fortunately, is not of frequent ovcurrence: A patient of mine recently swallowed a plate (gold, with two teeth), and | immediatcly adop:ed a practice recommended to me some years ago by Sir. James Paget in a similar case.. I made him eat three good sized slices of bread and swallow four tablespoonfuls of flour and water made into a fairly thick mass, I then administered an emetic, and the teeth returned entangled in the tenacious vomit. I may add that the first case was equally successful, and that something of this sort is habitually done at police stations, when prisoners arrested for passing false coins swallow them. A north of 8th Ward indi- rect electors ae divided; according to their taxes, into three clavses, each of which pays one-third of the entire direct taxes. The An 3408. First East Street, half block Germany. municipal one Dealer information, The members of the reichstag are elected by universal suffrage, by ballot, fora term of | three years. In Prussia the right to vote indirectly for members of the abgeordneten-’ haus, or chamber of deputies, is restricted to men of the age of 25, who are qualified to direct electurs, { umber and Till a comparatively recent date, this additional matter consisted of astrological predictions and other analogous absurdities. The Alexandrian Greeks had almanacs. The first printed almanac was composed by Regio Montanus, a pupil of Purbach, in 1475, After that they were composed and printed in 1487, 1491 and 1524, from which last date they were pretty regularly issued. vote in their Comparisons as as the multiplicand, 71, cles al.and manach, other My first is in shark, but not in whale. My second is in head, but not in tail. My third is in even and not in odd. My fourth is in river and not in sod. My fifth is in isle and also in mountain. My sixth is in dale though not in fountain. My seventh is in army and also in camp. While my eighth is in candle, but not in lamp. My whele is a soldier, brave and bold, slow same read 72, the multiplier. No. 286.—Cross Words. As the cept the first and last figures, which together Again—there Vulcan’s strength did dwell. No. exactly start. _. Another mathematical wonder is the following: It is discovered that the multiplica tion of 9876543821 by 45 gives 44, 44, 44, 44, 44, 45. Reversing the order of the digits and multiplying 123456789 by 45 we get a result equally curious, 5, 555, 555, 505. If we take 123456789 as the multiplicand, and interchanging the figures of 45 take 54 as the multiplier, 6, 666, 666, 606. Returning io the multiplicand 9876543821, and taking 3) as the multiplier again, we get. 43, 333, 303, 24 9211 3’s except the first and iast fig: ures, which together read 54, the multiplier. Taking the same multiphcand and 27, the half of 54, as the multiplier, we get a produet of 26, 666, 666, 667—all 6's except the first and last figures, which together read 27, the multiplier. Now interchanging the order of the figures 27 and using 72 as the multiplier aud 987654821 285.—Beheadings. laurels of fame in the scrvice of ber Almanac. Find first a fairy’s magic spell, Behead it, and ’twill not work well, Whose too much t is the easiest thing to do to reserve nothing in the way of devetion, but it is not tue wisest way It develops selfishness instead of tuougntiuluess in tic beloved Gues Whol whom) she'served; and it too often that the wifeand mother who denies herself constantly in Waitin; unon others, and de- been x No. 276.—Enigmatical Cities: Vo ..eio. Buffalo, Savannah, Havana. No. 277.—Anagram: Pride goeth before a fall. No. 278.—Word Squares: Tide PB AGR lL DD OFRa ah MAIN: fk CO NAG 8 ak Poa AD bs Bie Oe. 7 AGN DOEAA IN S AwOo Ry el A Ne iA: A ie Bi ee ee Das By ae ee ts 284.—Anagrams, Norse eats. Mad. policy. ’Tisin charity. Nine thumps. Go nurse. No. weather. lay upon the ground, day has wholly banished, its place are found, April ere she vanished. Unselisianess. later in life to find that s*¢: bas ina:le a 1:215take Out of the fuilness of her heart she has civen more than she ou ht for the sake of her family as well as herself, The daughier whose confert bas always vi 4, ber, the of no desire ether mands Curiosities in Multiplied Diamond. Will you for- could I get Puzzle of Fourteen: A very curious number is 142,857, which multiplied. by 1, 2, 8, 4, 5 or 6, gives the same iigures in the same order, beginning at a different point, but if multiplied by 7 gives all nines: Multiplied by 1 it equals 142,857, multiplied by 2 equals 285,714, multiplied by 8 equals 428,571, multiplied by 4 equals 571,428, multiplied by 5 equals 714,285, multiplied by 6-equals 857,142, multiplied by 7 equals 999,999. Multiply 142,857 by 8 and you have 1,142,856. Then add the firste figure to the last and you have 142,857, the original num- Nonecame. She coulden’t She was dead. See? | write one. Therefore, 74 275.—The Oditty. Remember?” had on his last winter suit. Id know ‘em anywhere.” “Indeed!” said the minister’s wife calmly. “I am surprised to hear it, as all these buttons were found in the contribution box. So HENRY F. CLARK, THE No. The minister’s wife sat on the front porch mending the clothes in 280.—An How long is that small ark? Can ccep love receive this wan face? I hope wit will be rewarded. Brave not the storm, for not a star lingers in the sky. Does Parr owe Rob instead of Joe? Oh, pshaw! reit omseli at once. This is an honest post-office. I was wrong. Good-bye.”-—Detroit Free Press. Aud Building Co. ladies my opinion that some of you had stolen it. Remember?” a “Nol “Probably not, but I spoke very emphatically. That was my opinion, and I went away feeling very aunt. Lumber, Manufacturing young “Probably not, as you are always busy. I didn’t get any. I gave it as “Thanks. I beleived you would. You see I expected a letter from PROVO fifteen. Teacher. Fifty is my first, nothing ismy second, Five just makes my third, my fourtivs:: vowel reckoned; Now, to fill my whole, put all my paris t:gether; I die if/I get cold, but never mind ecw... weather. ae give me?” _“Of course.” PROVO CITY, UTAH. ha.._; No. to ask your pardon. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to. teacher “oleulating under her charge, wished them to take a walk each day of the week. They were to walk in five divisions of three ladies each, but no two ladies were to be allowed to walk together twice during the week. How could they be arranged to suit the above conditions? Catalogues Mailed Free with Pleasure. COALTER 279.—Ti: for It is a method of ‘‘canning” forage, so to speak, similar to the canning of fruits. Suits made to order from the celebrated Provo Woolen Mills Goods, samples of which {. are sent on application. Try a pair of our all-wool Cassimere Pants at $5. A. SINGLETON, Supt. tees agrateagin marae AND KNABE Satnt It ia true that the ypouny wee and mother is moe often too self sacrificing than oiberwise. She sinks her own individuality alto- sees WEBER 225,000 A Puzzler. ae Estry the tte tr per Music Dealers. - ORGANS, to No. 270.—Poetic |! Enigma: Flag, No. 271.—Changing the Middle Letter: Spy —sly. Ale—ace. Whale—whole. Apne— awe. Dam—dim. No. 272.—An Easy One: Pi-an-o, No. 275. Adirondacks; Potomac: Kandy; Kiel; Coast; Fox; Van; Lucca; Alton; Angra; Forth: Owl. No. 274.—Hidden Proverb: Spare the rod and spoil the child. RFR Fue JOKER. : Re / SOALTER & SHELGROUE WESTERN 3 - THE ‘ye OO Se ta oe PETE Mert E, Setos nn ante a nh toma it 2 7H INEO te tc Be Pa torts PSA |