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Show i t THE TKANKCKIPT THE ... JAMES DUNN, TOOELE Publisher UTAH STATE UTAH NEWS Thirty carloads of sugar lx-t- s were shipped frora Vineyard this season. Samuel House, of Grantsville, was injured in a runaway accident last week. Ksther Oiffotd has been appointed postmaster at spi ingdale, Washington county. The first tiailieis instu .ire .f the for Summit county, was held in Park City last week Threshing is in full blast auam at Grantsulle. busy shifts being put in between storms. In a street far collision at Ogden, MoUirman Charles Kish or was badly cut about the face and hands by broken glass. inevard The recent windstorm at did considerable damage, a number of email buildings being blown down and trees uprooted. Tlie Tooele electric light company is putting in more facilities, in order that better service can he given to the ritiens of (irantsv tile. The Davis Comity Teach oi s' institute, which for years has been held monthly during tin st liool season, In Farmington, will hereafter be held in Kaysville. Samuel Steel, Victor Shill and Will Sunders, all Utah men, who had lived at Provo, were killed by a premature explosion In a lime quarry near Douglas, Arizona. The great scarcity of coal lias been creating consideiabie trouble In Park City lately, and several times some of the mines have been on the verge of closing down. Several Grantsville capitalists have purchased l.iieO acres of land near the City of Mexico, and will cultivate the rubber plant on their newly acquired plantation. .Many settlers on the Kintah reservation, it Is said, have made no attempt as yet to put In any crop, having spent their time in erecting their houses and bains. An irrigation system is now under construction on the Uintah reservation which will water about 10,000 acres of land. The cost of the canal will he about $05,000. David Galliphant, driver of a laundry wagon, was struck by a street car In Salt I.ake City and seriously injured. The wagon in which he was riding was demolished. Over $30,000 was distributed by the Utah Sugar company uniting the sugar beet growers of Sevier county two weeks ago as one installment on the beet crop for this year. William E. A. limes, a Nevada mining man, suicided In Salt Lake City, choking himself to death with his suspenders, which he knotted tightly about his neck, while on a protracted apree. Green river is to be made a division Iioiiit on the Rio Grande system. With the establishment of a division point at this place it Is said that the freight division offices now at Helper will be moved to Colton. Bruce Ditty, a boy of Granger, has been deserted by his parents, who sailed for Ireland last week and neglected to take the boy with them. He will be furnished a good home by citizens Interested In bis case. What will be one of the most gigantic eleqtric railroad systems In the west will be the electrification of the Harrinmn lines from Green River, Wvo., to Sparks, New, and from Butte, Mont., to Salt Lake City and the Garfield smellers. The cold snap, whieh it Is feared will he continuous for the winter, will cause considerable loss to beet farmers in the neighborhood of Frovo, who have not yet been able to deliver their beets, for the reason that the factory could not work them up. alias Hymm Hyrum Youngberg, Young, has been arrested in Salt Lake City, and is charged with a dozen burglaries. Though Youngberg is hut nineteen years old, he is believed to be one of the cleverest burglars that ever operated lu the city. A. J. Coleman, the colored waiter, who shot and killed John F. Larson, a business man, in the yard of the city and county building in Salt Lake early one morning in last March, will not be brought to trial. The negro mistook Larson for a highwayman. In a decision by the supreme court last week in a divorce case, the court holds that where a marriage is eon Ruminated In Utah, or is ccmsummat ed elsewhere and is maintained or es tablished here, service ov publication or "constructive summons, is valid. J. Kyaki. a Japanese of Brigham City, has succeeded in leaving Brigham City wth close to $15.0im belonging to numerous Japanese laborers emnlojed in the tied fields north of Willard. The authorities of three counties are scutching fur the missing man. 4 i - twelve-year-ol- GREAT ONE TURKEY THEFT SANDTOWN ON Tart Reply A Story of a Mean Man and a Mean Deed That Was Its Own Reward. Noah Wamskittle was a mean man; one of those mean people who hate to see others prosperous, even though it does not interleie with them at all. He lived in Samltown and raised tuikeys, like eveiybody else Ho earned a lot of money, because Im fattened Ins tuikeys well. It was his only geneiuiis deed, for he begrudged even the tood that he gave himself, and as for otliets! Well, Deacon once said that N'oah was so mean that he would walk three miles to borrow a match rather than use one of his own to light hie lire in ih looming Noah Wamskittle did not like Deacon Winder tassel at all. arid he llkid l him even less after lie this So some days befoie Thanksgiving day, he went to a poor man in Saml-towand said to him; You know that we will ail have to Wam-skittl- and tinning, till Noah was dead and only his great mean-- i ness kept him going At last, scratched and hiulsed and full of mud. weary anil suffering, he fell into a deep mudhoie, whieh. strangely enough, had been avoided t level lv liy pool hut honest Bill. Nfvei mind," whiapeied Bill, help-ing him up, "we have arrived. Noah looked through the under-- , brush, but lie could see nothing ex-- i f ept a k mass ot something in the twisting nearly j e dark ness "Those are the barns, said Hill. ,Here, take this saw and saw holes into ilu walls theie and I will creep mound the other way and scale the tuikevs so they will come out. Noah, madder and meaner than ever, work d hard and sawed big holes, out of which the turkeys scut- tied. Then, as Bill at tired them up, ship our turkeys tomorrow. Now, off they flew into the woods until the you have only an and if you do not whole big flock had vanished. a As soon as the pet a good piice for them you will lie (Jne had gone, hard pressed for money this winter. fioor hut honest Bill s ized Noah and We must hurry back and we Well, I know a way to make the said; prices higher for vou. If you will go must go the same way we came. to Deacon Vamlci tassel's place with Oh, dear, oh, dear, groaned Noah. j n j fi.-- j me we can cut holes Into his turkey houses and let all his birds fly into the woods. He will be quite unable to catch them again in time for shipment and the people in the city will bo glad to pay you high 'prices ' f for' yours." The poor man, whose name was Bill Leggo, made believe to agree with the mean man. But really he did not agree with him at all, for he came of poor but honest parents, and was very much like them himself. So he devised a cunning plan. That night he went to Noahs house and said to him; Let us go to do this deed. But we will have to go into the woods Just behind your house and work around through them for several miles, so as to approach the deacons place through the underbrush In the back. It would never do for ,us to be seen. That is a good idea, said Noah. "But I do not know the way through the woods. "I will guide you, said poor but honest Bill. "I fear, however, that you will find it rough going, for we cannot dare to carry a lantern." He took hold of Noahs arm and off they went, up and down and In and out, through thick and thin and thorn and swamp, this way and that way. But he followed, and once more ba was dragged through mudholes and creeks and over stumps and rocks until his shins and nose were skinned and every part of him was sore. At last they emerged on a road and In a few moments they were at Noahs front gate and the mean man hurried to bed. The next morning he could hardly get up, because he was so sore. But he crawled out to feed his turkeys. When he got to the barnyard, his heart nearly stood still. There was not a single, solitary turkey in the plaee. lie stood with his mouth open, wondering. Then, slowly a terrible suspicion entered his mind. He limped as fast as he could to the back, and, sure enough, there he found great holes In the walls of the houses. "I see It all, he moaned, sitting That vilright down In the mud. lain took me through the woods and back to my own turkey houses." He was quite light. When poor hut honest Bill went by the bouse, carting his 50 turkeys to the town, Noah Wamskittle shook his fist out of the window, but Lilli Leg-gonly laughed, and so did everybody else In Sandtown when they heard of It. o IQOOOOCCOOOOOOOQOSOOOOCCCOOOCOOOCOOOSOSOSOOQOOSOOOOOOO THE FESTIVAL OF HOME. lives, so to speak, and marks the passage of years perhaps even more disthe bay tinctly than New Years (lay or birthThanksgiving of Family Gatherings. days. For Thanksgiving is he festival of home, the day of The good old New England festival all others when home ties and associaof Thanksgiving Is one that age does tions assert their sway the strongest, linking he present with the past and not wither nor custom stale. Originalall to the future. All who are ly, and still nominally, a distinctly binding enough to have a home and happy to It all, festival. appeals religious to it for rest and hearth turn whether old or young, whether pro- refreshment gladly of body and mind, and, whator and not, fessedly religious whether present or absent from the ever may be their religious belief or home circle, that Is the renter and Ini l convictions. To college boys and football teams the day may seem to be of special significance In reference to triumphs or disasters on the gridiron field, but even to these It carries another and deeper significance which will grow with the years. And to those of mature years, men and women past 40, for example, this gracious, festival serves to punctuate their time-honore- spiration of their thoughts. Perhaps to none is the day more full of associations and memories than to those who cannot thus join the home circle. The toiler in the city or in the country, tumble even for a day to quit his duties, still takes pleasure in thinking of those at home, and in imagination. at least,- takes his plaee at the annual home gathering and shares the pleasure of the day. THEIR PRENENTION AND CURE. November is the month of falling temperatures. Over all the temperate regions the but weather has passed and the first rigors of winter have appeared. As the great bulk of civilized nations is fixated In the Temperate Zones, the effect of changing sea sons is a question of the highest importance. When the weath- er to EDWARD ATKINSON. to Hie Cordial of Old Friend. THE Greeting BEST The late Edward Atkinson used to tell the following story at his own expense: In his boyhood he was one of number of boys who used to play ball on the Boston common, which was then against the law. At regular , Intervals old Erastus Clapp, the would bear dowr. upon th trespassers and put them to flight. The boys used to have great fun with this rather choleric old man Disastrous Clapp the boys dubbed him. One day after Mr. Atkinson had grown up into a prosperous and re jpected business man, while passing along a Boston street in company with a friend, he recognized in a bent and wizened old man the likeness of his old acquaintance. Constable Clapp TEA GROWN con-itable- begins change from warm to cold, when cool' nights succeed hot nights, when clear, cold days follow hot. sultry days, the human body must adjust itself to this changed condition or perish. The perspiration incident to warm weather has been checked. This detains within the s.vstem poisonous Mr. Atkinson immediately addressed materials which have heretofore found the old fellow. escape through the peispiratfim. Don't vou remember me, Mr Most of the poisonous materials retained in the system by the checked Clapp?" he asked. The old tnan leaned oh his stick perspiration find their way out of the body, if at all, through the kidneys. and surveyed Mr. Atkinson coldly. This throws upon the kidneys extra Naw, he answered, and startlabor. They become charged and over- ed to hobblefinally on. loaded with tlu poisonous excretory Why, I'tn Eddie Atkinson, whom materials. This lias a tendency to inyou used to chase off the common flame the kidneys, producing functional diseases of the kidneys and some- years ago. Clapp glared at him suspiciously times Bright's Disease. Pernna acts upon the skin by stimu- and finally put an end to the interlating the emunctory glands and ducts, view, much to the amusement of Mr thus preventing the detention of pois- Atkinsons friend, by saying sharply: onous materials which should pass Well, sir, no honest boy ever had out. Pernna invigorates the kidneys cause to run from me. and encourages them to fulfill tlieir function in spite or the chills and disWhom Could He Mean? couragements of cold weather. I happened last evening to he talk Pernna is a ing politics with a physician a gooc combination o f well-triephysician and one I trust, says a writei harIn the Boston Transcript. mless remedies Presently he said: "Did you ever hear of G that have stood P. I.? the test of time. Many of these Who's he? I asked. remedies have been used by doctors Oh, exclaimed the doctor, G. P. I and by the people in Europe and Isnt a politician; it's a disease gen America for a hundred years. era! paralysis of the insane. Pernna has been used by Dr. HartThen he explained that the malady man in his private practice for many begins with delusions of grandeur, thal years with notable results. Its efficacy has been proven by decades of use by the patient thinks himself great, thal thousands of people, and has been he conceives enormous ambitions, un substantiated over and over by many dertakes colossal enterprises, displays thousands of homes. frantic energy. Only, he accomplishes nothing. RATTLE OF THE RIVETER. REDUCED RATES The Man from Oklahoma Thought It Was a Woodpecker. From Utah and Idaho to All Points East and Return, via the Santa Fe. Charleys uncle from Oklahoma was , From Ogden and Salt Lake City to: up town being shown the sights, he Missouri river $32.00 points having come in the day before with Chicago $44.50 a few loads of steers, and Charley was St. Louis $39.50 'doing the honors. rates from Idaho and Proportionate They were walking along on Grand other points. Dates of sale, Nov. 20th avenue discussing the tall buildings, Dec. 18th, 190G. Return limit, tiu and when all of a sudden one of those days. Send for literature. rackety riveting machines began hamC. F. A. T. & S. F. a on at high speed top Ry., 411WARREN, Agent mering away Lake City, Salt Blk., Dooly story of a steel skyscraper building. Utah. The old man stopped as if he'd run against something. He turned his eyes Delilahs Little Joke. in the direction of the sound but Samson awakened suddenly and discould make out nothing. When he covered that Delilah was chopping his turned to his bewildered nephew his hair without any regard to the latest eyes were fairly popping. styles in the ancient tonsorial parGreat Scott! he exclaimed. But lors. It I'd like to see that woodpecker. "What ails you? thundered Sammust be a whopper. Kansas City son. Can't you cut my hair straight Star. without taking so many hacks? Delilah smiled over her huge shears. WORST CASE OF ECZEMA. "All right, pet, she assured. After I will take automobiles. this Spread Rapidly Over Body Limbs Refusing to crack a smile at Deliand Arms Had to Be Bandaged lahs alleged wit, Samson put on his Marvelous Cure by Cuticura. shin guards and rushed out to join a football team. Chicago Daily News. My son, who is now twenty-twyears of age, whep he was four Usefulness of the Bachelor. months old began to have eczema on The bachelor is a useful person in his face, spreading quite rapidly until A woman who has reaworld. he wfas nearly covered. We had all this soned the whole thing out ooneludes some from doctors around us, and the that he contributes indirectly to the larger places, but no one helped him happiness of her sex. Her view of s particle. The eczema was something I dont know why one's it is this; was said it doctors and the terrible, bachelor husband's chums should, as the worst case they ever saw. At a rule, be so deadly dull, but they times his whole body and face were usually are, and, as a matter of fact, I had to covered, all but his feet. it was probably their dullness which bis bandage his limbs and arms; drove him into matrimony, originally A friend scalp was just dreadful. only he has not the sense to see it. teased me to try t utlcura, and I beThere would- be fewer married if it gan to use all three of the Cuticura weren't for the bachelors. Remedies. He was better in two months; and in six months he was well. Mrs. R. L. Risley, Piermont, TRY ..IT.. BVY FROM YOVR GROCER TURNED HIM INTO A FREAK. Young Man's Unfortunate Experience With a Hair Wash. There, is a young resident of the upper western section of the town who is blessed with dignity beyond h?i years, and with a sister whose years, albeit these number but 24, are beyond her common sense, says the New One night, having an York Pre. extra guest, and the sister being away at at seashore. Links occupied his sister's room for the night. Discovering on her toilet table a bottle marked hair wash, and thinking that perhaps his own not ovet 'uxurian crop required attention, he applied the contents of the bottle liberally to his scalp locks, nibbing it in with thoroughness. The following day, two hours before any business house opened its doors, an individual with a slouch hat pulled down over his ears and having all the signs of dementia went speeding down Wild town on the subway express. eyed and incoherent he sought the establishment of one of the best hairdressers in town. He has repeated his visit to the shop every morning since that time and the specialist is slowly removing processes known to hi? by occult trade, the brilliant gold streaks which were so noticeable amid the jetty black of the remainder of the coiffure Like Attracting Like. "Do you see any good reason why a doctor should not also be a poet? Certainly not; isn't poetry a drug in the market? Townsend's Enamel Cream Hakes attractive faces immediately. Supeiior to face powders, its use is not detected. For sale every where. Price 50 cents o A Splendid Business Opportunity - For reliable women to sell a line of Western goods profitable to Western people. Write at once for our improved contract. 758 S. Main Street, Salt Lake City Union Assay Office S. M. 4 V. HANAUSR. AOLBft. P. O. BOX 144t SALT LAKS CITY, UTAH When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. N. IL. Oct. 24, 1905." Sweet Thoughts. father is very much disgusted. He rcently bought his daughter a $75 gold watch, and she isn't as pleased with it as she was with a box of chocolates a young ntan sent her. The watch from her fathehr means nothing, but the chocolates seem to mean enough to cause her to sit and look out into the dark and think, and think, hours at a time. Atchison Globe. An Atchison T I Do not rely alone upon the fact that ours is the oldest reputable Jewelry House in the State, nor upon the fact that we have an enviable reputa- tion for reliability and reasonable prices, hut rely particularly upon the facts that we carry the largest stock of Precious Stones, Diamonds, Watches and Silver in the West, and the immense purchases we make direct from cutters of Diamonds and the manufacturers of Jewelry and Silverwares enable us to make prices impossible for others to make. IOOOOOOOCGOOCOCOOGOSOOQOOOOOGOOSCCOGiOGOOOOCOOOOCOOOSO INCOGNITO. Booster For heaven's sake, Strut, old boy, what are you doing in that garb? Been in a wreck? Gobbler Psst! No; not so loud; you know It Is not safe for me to be recognized this time of year. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAK |