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Show H 8 I lllll I ! -Jma""tl''aailt'MlMiiaiai,lMBIW " " 1 - 1 ' . . I I Beck s Jewelry Store. -A Magnificent Stock of- Rich and Useful Presents, At Prices to Suit Everybody. Watches, Clocks, Diamonds, Opals, Rings Canes. Rogers IJros. Solid Silver Knives. Long Chuins, Umbrellas, Spectacles, Lovely China an 1 Cut Glass. JProvo City Mk . CALIFORNIA'S Mm MsMS Best Newspaper, Jiill arD 32-Page Metropolitan L iii Paper, Every Oolumn Bristling IgM sag; iM . UVENEWS. Jinm " NO A COPY OF THIS PAPER ,' iSM THE DAILT BULLETIN ' Sunday Included) ' JtC - Pils3 4 vEti nap s in Headin Matter N cr-0 1 real i tig. It G.od MM" ly now a-m a-m alter in I N'DKI'KNOKNT' 'Oll, t linn liv anv other one 'rtii get too inncl i lvMieHeial "iitler all eon! -i!:ii t l- hal veiy lieHj layi- I ;;ei liti ynir read ng ciMiiit-iM ion with TlIK -aii jr t ft more elieaidv ? - - means MY t an q'lote Iuhhing rais witli mIiih-( anv pa-r r pel iixl icil published. Tlu following are yample: - The Independent and McCalPs Magazine. - both one year for $2.25 M-Call's Monthly M-igazne is one of the leading fashion magazines of the -day, and ever3' lady in Utah should have it. It is first ela!s, and at the same time quite cheap. .X free pattern goes with each year's subscription. sub-scription. - Theiln dependent and the ... St. Louis Semi-Weekly Republic , v . botl one year for $2.25 The Republic is one of the best general newspapers published in the Mississippi yalleyfv'and' furuistfiesT a largejuantity hf-ji&-.Qd:.-otber-'.mat4fer'?t $frt)Q rer year. W.1P3W . $25-inat- abYu-ttiii : 1?--r ,itipa liacd.-tQ .beat.-, .-: : - The:.indfipendent - and the San rancisdoVSunday Bulletin '; both one y ear for $2. 50 il'iVe-Bulletin is.now issuing a Sunday nioru-ing;iaber-of L$ and 32 pages, profusely ilius-ir1ed, ilius-ir1ed, anl of fcUeh oxcelleiiv-e that it has nlfeady beemne the favorite Sunday paper of 4 San Francisco. Mai ki t ami financial rejlorts are majde . a. f peiiiyj .featjire, 'i'he subscrlptionprice is $1.50, but we can furnish fur-nish it and our paper for. $2.5.0.- The Independent and the New York Ledger Monthly . ; . both one year for $2.10 - The famous New rork Ledger, is now issued monthly at 50c per year, is the great story paper of the day. It is better thau ever. We can save you money on it. A SOLDIER PUNISHED. ' HnUlUt br Havtto Ptlllr Retract laamlt t Bta Float. The Parisian paper are variously commeatiug on an incident that lately occurred in the garrison at Toulon. A soldier named K , while among hi comrades at the barracks, said thing which CoporaJ Delborbe deemed an insult in-sult to the French flag. The corporal ordered the man to be punished. The colonel, when he heard of the case, was horrified and straightway reported the matter to Crn. Coronnat. commanding the Fourth brigade of marine infantry. The general waalso horrified, and addressed ad-dressed the following letter to the troops under his command: "Private R .of the RleVnth company. Eight li regiment, has been punished for having hav-ing wantonly wid outrageous tbinff concerning the flag. It Is with sadnea that the general brings to the knowledge knowl-edge of the troops this Incident, which is a veritable crime against toe count ry. As this soldier had deplorable antecedents, inmilts coming from him cannot soil the sacred emblem. Rxit as he regrets his fault, we shall confine ourselves this time to the following reparation: The Eleventh company, which witnessed the scandal, shall be formed in the square of execution before be-fore the colonel's office, and the flag shalt be unfurled. Private R shall present arms to it and expre. his regrets re-grets in swearing to die for the honor of the flag, as every good soldier ought to do. If this soldier had not signified his repentance, one of the five men of the color guard, drawu by lot. would have forced a retraction with arms in his hauds. and the delinquent won! J have been sent to a 'coropagnie de discipline.' dis-cipline.' The color guard chose to defend de-fend the flagagaicst the enemy should -have the privilege to defend it against instilters. Corporal Delhorbe is to be praised for having noted the. words of Private It and for having caused his punishment." dreas Maygraf, of Berlin, in 1747, and the first beet sugar factory was established estab-lished in Silesia in 1801. Napoleon's wars and his restrictive commercial policy pol-icy gave impetus t5 the beet industry on the continent, tor no Other tugar could be obtained. With his fall and the opening of continental markets to British trade it languished fcgain, and it was not until 1830-40 that it secured a firm footing." Since then it has become a national industry in France, Germany, Ger-many, Austria, Holland, Russia and Belgium. Bel-gium. Keys ion e. : Robbed the Grave. A startling incident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadelphia, was the subject, Is narrated by him as follows: "I was in a most dreadful condition. My skin was aim. tat yellow, eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continually con-tinually In hack and sides, no appetite gradually growing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Fortunately, a friend advised trying 'Elcotrlc Bitters'.' and to my Rieat Joy and surprise, the first bottle made a decided Improvement. I continued con-tinued their use for three weeks, and atu now a well man. 1 know they saved my life, and robbed the grave of another victim." No one should fall to try them. Only 50c a bottle, at Peterson's Drug store. NOT THE REAL THING. OBJECTED TO HER GLANCES. A. Woman Tbonjtbt to D Trylms to taflacace Jar) mn Proved to Be mind. The Mnn In the In I form Wol Made IJneoaafortavble br 8rec Renarki. That juries are affected by hand&me at.d languishing eyes is proven by' a rrmarkable -experience--of. the great est advocate, at, the, New Yerk brrJtb 'ate James T. Brady, -He .was eounse'. for a young woman !rn a case involving af. attempt to break a wi". r Uis client &at by his side. She was a very beautiful beauti-ful young woman, whose ey's seemed' a!ways to rivet the attention of those upon whom her glance fell. There wa a' pathetic expression which affected everyone. She sat watching the jur3-during jur3-during the courre of the trial and at last there was some complaint that she v.-as attempting by means of her glances to excite the sympathy of the jury, soys the Philadelphia Press. Then Mr. Brady arose and in one of the most touching and beautiful of all ;he addresses he ever made in court he spoke of the b!essings which everyone who had an appreciation cf beautiful ibings and could see them enjoyed, and iivelt for some moments upon' the hap-).v hap-).v lot of the jury, who could tee the budding of the flowers it was then" springtime and the charms of nature, then, suddenly turning to his client, he said: "That blessing is denied my cM-?nt, cM-?nt, for, though she has eyes which may seem to lock upon you, gentlemen, there is no vision in them, for her sight has been taken from her." She had been, iD fact, the victim of tctal paralysis of the optic nerve, which had not impaired the beauty of her eyts, but had given to them that sin gularly pathetic expression which she j was (bus falsely charged with employ-; employ-; ing that 6he might secure the sympa vmea or. tue jury. RAG TIME. A young officer of one of the local companies is home on a furlough. Naturally Nat-urally he is the recipient of a gTeat deal of attention. This comes no alone from his numerous friends, but from the general public, which still although al-though the novelty is wearing off regards re-gards the returned soldiers with special spe-cial eye. This applies with special force to the feminine public. Well, his particular chum Is a loud youth whose soul is filled with regret every time he thinks of his lost military mili-tary opportunities. Nevertheless he chaffs his soldier, friend unmercifully over what he calls cheap notoriety. "I tell you," he said, "it's nothing but the uniform that they care for. It isn't the roan by any means. If they devised a. cornfield scarecrow in soldier clo'thes ' you'd find pretty girls by the score throwing kisses at it across the rural fence." I "Xo," said the soldier, stoutly, "you're wrong. It's a mixture of man and uniform. uni-form. The man alone wouldn't be run after, and as for the empty uniform, well, there wouldn't be anything attractive at-tractive in that either, but take the man and uniform together, and there you have it." "Wouldn't any man do?" asked the sarcastic youth ) "Xo. he wouldn't." retorted the soldier; sol-dier; "it takes a man who looks as if he belonged in the clothes' to draw the right sort of attention." "Nonsense." said the chum; "any old masculine would do. and I'll bet on it." "How much ?" queried the soldier. I "I'll bet you a spotted fall necktie that I can put on your uniform, go down town and attract the very same kind of attention that j-oudo." The soldier reflected a moment. "It's a go." he said. Try it this evening. Put on the clothes and let me know the result." j So the confident youth donned the natty suit, and trimmed down the flowing flow-ing mustache, and put on the jaunty cap. 1 "You make a very s-weet-looking war rior." said the real soldier. r i ; MAY HAVE TO: GOVERN HAYTI. t - The t'nlted State Government Likely to Interfere' to Stop Vlcloaa Practice. A mulat'tress with' a plump baby in her arms reached Philadelphia on a sailing vessel from Hayti the other day and declared bet eager desire to become be-come a resident 'of the United States. It wa necessary for her to get a bond as guarantee that, she would not become be-come a public charge, and while the in-ciaentftl in-ciaentftl formalities were in progress somebody ' asked her why she had come from a tropical island and her own people to ve adong strangers, where the making of a living is a taak by DO means easy. The woman answered an-swered with an earnestness, that said much for her sincerity and something for her accuracy, that she left Bayti because the season for certain canni balletic rites in the district where she lived were com'ng on, and that her child would have been killed and eaten if she bad not left the country. ; This horrible charge has been made against the Haytians tnauy times and m often denied by tbem, but the denials de-nials have not carried. the weight of the accusations, and the best authorities authori-ties regard it at least as highly probable prob-able that in parts" of the black republic repub-lic heathenish customs of the moat frightful sort have been practiced ever since the expulsion of the French. The Haytians are now Very close neighbors of our own, and it remains to be seen what the consequences of this proximity prox-imity will be. The old isolation is sure to be broken down, business and other relations with Americans are inevitable, inevita-ble, and existing conditions in Hayti may well become as unendurable to us as were those of Cuba under Spanish rule."1 - " Even if cannibalism is a mere sporadic crime in Hayti, there are other tnings mere pruct:ufy worse BOYS SEE THE POINT. They Make ig Money. Make It Easy. .40 Capital Invested. How They Do It. There are several thousand boys and hundreds of tnen encaged lh St. l-ouis in a busineis which brings a weakly profit of from tS.000 to flO.ono. It's the selling of dally papers. Hundreds of families live comfortably com-fortably on the profits of the sale ot daily newspapers. In St. Louis the favorite newspaper wtth the loysi thfc Post-Dispatch, because it selUJasl. An InvestjsatUm. .has shown that the boys s'll more copies of the daily r,P )ST. DrsPATi u tli:ni t hei'i-oiiibined sales of the two other English evening papers. Ono of the pleasures th- noy find In sell-i'lK sell-i'lK pp.r 's they are their "own bowt." They come and po when tlwy please. While many have regular comer and HeWHtands. others merely wlk the streets each havinr lils own peculiar wuy of "crying" out hl papers. The situation Is quite different on Sunday. The papers are primed In the moraine and by six o'clock the boys and men are out In search of buyers. There are four English Sunday papers. Many boys take out . hre hundred papers. A boy taking from two to three hundred papers has all he can do to Ret over the ground. Sunday as on week (lays finds the Posr-Di-rA-mi everywhere. It's a ready setr. 1 1' the "most; forth money. The Sunday i I OT-l'isPAT.CH has many original and ex clusive features. Including the colored comic weekly. The sreht newspaper offh-es have what Is rallod a "Circulation l)epartmcnt." the ob-jeet ob-jeet of whlli is to promote the sale of the papers. This department answers all re quests for sample copies (which are sent ' f ree. ami soon. In lb country as In St-Louis, St-Louis, they are constantly looking for -.tKcnts" (loys or men to represent them). This is done by the aid of traveling men and correspondence. All letters are promptly answered. It Is pleasant work, especially In j the towns outside of St. Louis, ltoys In the outsldo towns arc not called newsboys, bul agents. More money Is made outoldo of St. Louis and morally almost as bod r.bout which because- tlu selling price Is more and thi agent for the e to thecir there is no d'jubt whatever. The gov-, profit greater. . . . , . If you would llko to be an ag ernment is corrupt and sangumary. post.fKpittch , tlis rity wr. and the treatment of white foreigners is often atrocious; The Haytians have had many years in which to develop the power of self-government, but they remain far below the standard of civilitatiion, and harsh critics declare that they are sinking rather than ria- ing. Moreover, this island is potentially potential-ly of great value. There is a basis for prophecy in that fact. N. Y.-Times.- dilation department of l'ost-Dispatch. Louis. St. Grip makes one sick, weary and restleu. Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine brings rest. PUKGEHT PARAGRAPHS. Lnerhtnl'i Pnnlaument. A friend, intimate with the prison system of Switzerland, was telling me the olherday of fhe fiearful torture that the sentence of perpetual seclusion passed on Luccheni, the assa&sin of the empress of .Austria, involves. For the first ks months he will be in a Billy "Does yOUr mother give you anything if you take -your medicine .' without. crying?". Billy J'No; bat she gives me something if I dou U lonk-ers lonk-ers Statesman. Little Mildred "Say. Tommy, do you know, what a category is?" Little Tommy "Course! It's the place where the cats goes to when they die." Cleveland Leader. Suited to Him. The Pugilist' "Say, dungeon eight feet tinder ground, j ,)lU ,he paM of 0lheIl0 ;8 jll8t style.' where never a sound is heard, and only the 'faintest streak of light is admitted, lie dare not speak to his jailers, and the punishment is severe if he makes the slightest remark. Unless it is in re ply to a question. When h's spirit is brc-I:va by this tre-ntnvent he is removed to a better-K-ituated cell, hurt the taime silence prevails. To the end. of his days the powers of speech and hearing are denied him. As a rule, the prisoners prison-ers go raving mad. To-Day. A Stew I.eef. The dawn!ng ne.TV rear, like a fresh cifar To which the smoker lightly puts tbe flame. The same old brand bears, yet may differ far From - bygones, that from out the same box ciyne. Jude. rBaanox an!-ls!tlo'l -Aipjjuaiuoo u.viop pens pa.8 uSjs u pdABdtj aula pu" M'I.up;noo l jat i?ui j -ocjqta-3 'nnj ptws ..'js uo HiSi,, A Popular Negro Pknue of the Day Thavt Had Ita Orlrin in Spaa. lah Mnalc, "Don't I?" flippantly returned the - . iJOUi tuu out jao .uop no.i youth, as he gracefully touched his cap oll JBaJ somijatuos i 'A'utiqmaJi and pirouetted through the door. ( "Iia P! P'M "aouj uo.f oq Vithhis shoulders squared and his '": .iJojjg v cap. pulled down over his eyes, he start-, Hard Lncit. ed for the nearest car. lie swung him- Philanthropic Matron It was -pov-self aboard and took a seat immediately crty that drove you to drink, was it in front of two pretty girls. j not. my poor man ? lie noticed as he came in that every- Tuffold Knutt Xo, "What is 'rag- timer" the enthusiastic enthusi-astic artist was asked, according to the Baltimore Sun. "Well, the extensive literature on this subject will explain it beet. Now. here's a rag-time primer." At this juncture he produced a big piece of jsheet music with the picture of a young man looking very unhappy in i dress suit. l his young- fellow, pointing to the picture and- reading, "claims to be the. 'original .instructor to the stage of the now popular rag1, time in Ethiopian song. The author guarantees to te-ach anybody Who can play the piano a bit how to play in rag time. -The preface says rag time tor negro dance time)1 Originally takes1 its imitation steps from Spanish music, mu-sic, or rather, from Mexico, .where-it-, is known under the head and names of Habanara Seguiililla. etc., .bying nothing noth-ing but consecutive music, either in. treble or bass, followed by regulaf(timc . in one hand. In common and two-four time tbe quarter note of the bass -precedes the melody Jn- othr ;Wrdsi it is what the musicians pall syncopation, and this syncopation.. and tbjs.ctynnge tt notf.nt in ffiffi a(.i.nmnnnimpnt ia - ..r-T. kept up continually; in tbe same way us me oeai-oi a snare arum. " -This method 'Wiriws -theipNrpil how to play a rag-time dcOmpdniniect to ! any pieee. Here is .eVen'aO.arraitge--' meat of 'Old Htindredo'VVtMJiejLattrievr and the hymn, Come, T-bou Fount of Every Blessing.' 'Wonderful, isn't it?" Booke In Jspaai ah tftnlri The Japanese rvr, pblish. . three-, times as many, books $s the Jtaliftns, . . whce' literary, pWeTa. Mtm 4o.Jia,Ye, I faded almost entirely a7-fty.,.Cmit . 55.000- onmesntiubli5neoias year in ine laqo pi iinntrei wianw(wrre raw books and 1.300 treated of rellgiont; which shcews, that t,h. rpnaantip little. nation has 'not "taken kindly to written form of romance. ma'am. Hk's mostly- poverty wot ket ps me f'm drinkin', ma'am; Chicago Tribune. body o-n board turned to look at him: and this filled his heart with delight. He sat bolt upright, wondering what the pretty girls would think of him. lie didn't really expect to be kissed, but he was prepared for almost anything. any-thing. Pretty soon he realized that the girls were whispering about him. 1 A word or two came to him above the smooth roll of the car. His ears were strained to the utmost, and his hearing Is abnormally excellent. "Pretty, isn't he?" murmured one girl. - I Yes, quite too pretty," giggled the other. "Just out of the bandbox," whispered the first girl. . Ot the moth bag," said the other girl. . "Why, Sylvia!" Then a soft duet of giggles. "Hasn't he a lovely complexion?" 'Hasn't he! Xot a mite of tan." ' "Perhapsi he wears a veil?" . "Why, Laura!" More giggles. ''Can't be a real soldier, can he?" "Xo-o-o. The ideal" ; "But the uniform?". "Perhaps the real soldiers went away and forgot hrm." 0 "Prolonged giggling. ; -..r ' "Oh, Laura. I've guessed it." ."Well,-what is it?" "ne isn't a soldier." ! "I guess! that "lie's a" recruiting officer." a iew moments later tbe make-believe ffn- -fT-. ck -r-v " tttTs o -f O soldier stopped the car" and alighted. AlXer lHo Orrip-Wllcll f rhen.be walked. bock. JimJ he said, abe flung the cap on Saved br His Cnlllnsr. Hardupp IIcllo. Space, old boy, will you indorse a noie for me? Phil Space Kxcuse me. but my journalistic jour-nalistic training would never let me have anything to do with paper written on both sides. N. Y. Journal. rrogreu. He And still you can't bake biscuits without burning them. . She Edmund, bow unreasonable you tre: Liaven t l got so i can baKe Biscuits Bis-cuits without burning myself? N. Y. World. . ' i ... How She Helped. Hibbler Does your wife help you in your work ? . Scribbler Yes, indeed t She always goes calling while I om writing. Brooklyn Life. 1 f tnoppreclated. "My little roan, aren't you pleased to have a new bnby brother, or did you want a little sister?" , . "If It is. all the snme to the Lord, i preferred a goat." Scribner's. Moroae. On Christmas, folk shall laugh and Joke, A If care ne'er had caught 'em;.. . By New Tear's day the toys are broke. : And so's the man who bought 'em. Tv'aahlr.g.on Star;. t The Patron "Could you play it?" The Pugilist "Sure! I never saw anybody yet I c ouldn't smother in two rounds. ' N. Y. Journal. "The wheelmen all voted for him. "Certainly. He is the author of the law forbidding anybody to walk on tbe street faster than two miles an hour, or i after dark without a bell and lantern.' r Detroit Journal. - Mrs. Dix 'They say Mrs. Peck speaks four languages." Mrs. Hix "Indeed! And how many does her husband hus-band rpeak?" Mrs. Dix "Oh, he I'oesn't dare speak any when she i around." Chicago Daily News. A Patriot, Anyhow. "Brethren." said the political orator. "1 admit 1 was never in the war, but 1 bad ;wo relatives rel-atives who were killed there." "And what were you a-doin of all that time?" u-ked a man in the crowd. "My friends, taid the orator, "I was bus3- makin coilins for 'em!" Atlanta Constitution. Mrs. Xiftie "What beautiful china! I wonder how Bentleigh can afford tucb extravagance." Mrs. Passay .'That is no mystery. It's cheaper in tbe end. you know." The dishes are no handsome ,that"intheif 'admiration his guest, .forget to eat as much as tbe otherwise would." Boston Transcript. Mrs. Griggs "John's getting more terribly absent minded every day!" Mrs. l5rigg "Why. what's he don now?" Mrs. Griggs "I told him to tie a knot in his handkerchief to remember remem-ber to get me some thread the other day, and he tied the knot without even noticing that he hadn't any handkerchief." handker-chief." Town Topics. Tbe! Lrttm - Mtttch can bo e at neat with Dr. allies' N EUVB PLASTER. Only 26c THIS MEANS BUSINESS. any. Klnar Inv1d'a Tenth. ' The German emperor- wasi it teem, after all, not the first unbeliever to visit the grave of King David. Father Winkler, parish priest of Linz, writes to the Austrian papers to claim lh tonor for himself. He ays he was there on the 2Jt.h of April last with a man w.jj) Vnowu in Jerusalem, whose name be gives as a witness. He paid one franc only, and this, with the permis-yion permis-yion he gave to the Moslem attendant to examine fcis white clerical habit, made the man so amenable that, of his pwn accord, he invited the prieat to enter the grave of David. On the spot which marks the grave a catafalque is raised covered with a cotly old carpet. Through a window, without glass or shutter, he could enjoy a splendid view of the Kedron valley and the conntry round the Dead sea. The priest was in the coenacalum which adjoins the grave of David 13 years ago,-and at that time it was not allowed even to look through the chinks in the door of the tomb. London News. the chiffonier, "von won!" -fie v. , iahd Plain Dealer. ' - v '- t I -Ip going to take I want to play tEe. Beet Bnarnr. The existence of common sugar in beet root was first discovered by An- Snsje O'SJaanier, Ihe music course, piano awfully. Jenny Jacket Why. "dear, you do that now. Illustrated American. Deal Toaaeeo Svit tad Smoke Tear Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag aetlc. rail of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-Bae. toe wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 60c or II. Cure guaranteed. guaran-teed. Booklet and sample tree. Address Starling Kenedy Co , Chicago or New York. WANTED Several trustworthy persons In this state to manage our business In their own and nearby counties. It is mainly oflice work conducted at home, tial-ary tial-ary straight Su0 year and expenses definite, defi-nite, bona fide, no more, no less salary. Monthly 7.". References. Knclose self-addressed stamped envelope, Herbert E. Bens, President, Dept. M. Chic a 50. Y.u .thought you had the best, of t he !fip and you delet mined to wear it oil; buL feoiuclniw -,it dot s uot wear irtT a you' expect en. You pass rcst-les, rcst-les, sleepless nights ai.d get up in the morning feelim ' autre eihliusltid irritable 'nhil nervous and hare no 1 appetite for yur 1oku lou go aiMjut iu a listless, halfhearted sort I of way, and everything1 you undertake under-take to do seems to go wrong. Do of nervous prost ia' ioii? You need help; ami yu need it utore now ttiari yu did wbeu the grip was al its wuit". Dr. Miles' Nervine is the best medicine medi-cine you can get to build up your shattered nerves and restore your wasting strength. It invariably insures in-sures sound sleep and gives the overstrung over-strung nerves their natural ret. It' makes The appetite keen, facilitates the ditfslin. gives bt-al ill ful vitality to the nerves and .restores health. "I. was nervous, restless, irritable and altogether out of sorts. It was I iiupossible iU get njy ' natursil sleep 'and 1 bvcanie so weak and extiamted that I could not leave tny bed. cm-ally cm-ally I coiuruenced taking Dr.. Miles' Nervine, and 1 began to ituprove from the tirst d ise. In a S.SUf-titne my health was compl. tely resumed" Mes. Dow Heaqlb,. t-Sing t-Sing Sipg, N. Y. ; ' A trial package of Dr. Miles' favor-' ite treatment for the grip, consisting of Dr. Miles' Nervine, Dr. Mites' Anti-Pain Anti-Pain Pills and Dr. Miles' Nerve and Liver PillJ, will be sent absolutely free of cost to any person, sending name and address on a pmtal cant; requesting the sample?, and mentioning mention-ing the name of this pap r. Address Pi, Milts Medical Co,, Elkhart. Xnd. On Ihe principal lines of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway passenger trains are electric: lighted, sleam healed uiid protected ly block signals. With these mml-rn appliances, railway traveling at high speeds lias, readied a degree of safety heretofore unkown and not attainable on ro:ids where they are not in use. Electric lights and steam heat make it possible to dispense with the oil lamp and tbe car stove. Block signals sig-nals have reduced the chances f r collisions to the minimum by maintaining an absolute interval in-terval of apat-f between trains. . For maps, lime tables and information in-formation generally, call on or jtddres? L. L. Do.ning. Com-nuitial Com-nuitial Agent, Salt Lake City; Utah. -.8 1 1 well known fleia YoFker ; payslthis;tjihute to the Purlir.gton's dining-car serlce: "The dining-car service? of the lWirlington Koute h about thebelt', there I. On every.taVle in the dining-car is a fresh bunch of American Amer-ican Beauty roses, one of which the waiter affixes to your coat when you have finished your meal. The cloth Is changed with;each guest, no matter how little soiled. The menu, thourh not long. Is woudcr-f woudcr-f ullj well-selected and admirably served." . ' Go East on the Chioapo Special which leaves Denver at 1:40 p. m.. or on the VeMibuled lr iyer which leaves at ,.:.'i0 p. ni.. and you can see for yourself how good, how clean, how reasonable In price, our dining-car service U. Ticket Office 214 S. W. Temple St. W. F. MCMILLAN. General Anient, Salt Lake.Citt. It. F. Neslen, Trav. Pass. & Freight Agt. A BOON TO MANK1NDI To Care Cooatlpatlon rrevar. TakeCasraret. Candy Cathnrtic. .10e orSSe. It C, C. C. fa i.J to euro, 4rugciKts refund money. trTYLIStt, RELIABLE V ARTITIC Recoainiende4 by Leaning Dressmakers.' at They Always Plense.'VaV' MS CALL; n. BAZAR TTERNS N0N6 BETTER AT ANY PRICE : 7-ThM paitnts ar sold la arly ; 1 avcry citv and town lo tB UM sums. ; ! If your dulcr don mi kacp thtm Mi i I diiecl mm. Om ca alaiiapa raceiwd. ! ; Adams jroar BMrrat poiau THE WcCALL COMPANY, 138 te 146 W. 14th Street. NtwTtrk ; uts orrir 5 ... . So Fifth' Ave.. Chtcaro. and osi Market St.. 6an FraneUcn. ; 1 MAGAZINE DTABLER'S BUCKEYE PILE a?a.tff,rnf1R 5 jZm K?2r:5 him uinmiM'i i Di 1 r t orl CURE A New Discovery for the Certain Cure of INTERNAL anci EXTERNAL PILES, WITHOUT PAIN. CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED. Tubes, by Mail, 75 Cents; Bottles, 50 Cents. JAMES F. BALLARD, Sole Proprietor, - " - 310 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS, MO. For Sale By C. J. Peteraon, Druggist. R.' A. BITKSIjEY. S TntS; Av BEKSLKY. BEESLEY MARBLE WORKS MASM;F.'-.fT"ri;!.i..A or IllClli GllADi'. (Ddbumental : (Ilopk IN MARBLE AND GRANTTE- Examine Our "Work. Get Our Priced. All work guaranteed strictly first class. PROVO -.s-r UTAH Ride a Monarch and Kseo in e!r-.!!, mm III urn MONARCH F DEFIAMGE BICYCLES Are recognized the world over as representing the highest type of .excellence in bicycle coustruction. -. ; $25.00 KING and QUEEN $25.00 The best pair of bicycles on earlh for the money. MONARCH CHAIaLESS $7522 -MONARCH ROADSTERS $5022: DEFIANCE ROADSTERS $3522; H Send for 1899 Cataiogua. AjenU wanted in open territory. MONARCH CYCLE MFG. CO., ' Lake, Halsted & Fulton Streets, Chscago. Branches NEW YORK, LONDON. HAMBURG. Send 20 osnta in stamps for a deck of Monarch Tlaying Cards, illustrating Jessie Bartlett Daris, T .illinn fiaBaell, Tom Cooper, Loo Richardson and Walter Jones. "alx roads are ALIKE TO A MONARCH." Sold at retail,-by Wm. M. Roylance, Si'uingville, Utah. Brizntest Manila Pabtlshiea! ran'ta.ina Beautiful Colored states. illoauatea Latcn. ratters, rasa-; inns. Faitcv Work. Amenta warned lor thh ajMaxine'taewry ! 5 locality. Beautiful premium, lor a little g! work.- Write for term and other aartic- j -2 .Jars. Subwrfiption oply AOc per year, i . ..... KWtf ,-.. . I inciuows x r n ea imwn. -jSAddreai THEMcCALL CO & -JZ ,3S to m W. 14th St.. New Vack g yiyoae)iVveeia)eyeeey An eiueriy iauy uYing at r orunam Heights, a part of Kewr York City, and who was known to be a warm . adVocate of Ripans Tabuies for any case of liver trouble or. in cli tceeticru. i : . i i : a j 1 V - 'the purpoeo of learning the partieu- .employed a phyaician and did bo on' i the last occasion I had for one.. bijt.v. at tnat time .obtained no Denenciar results. I had never ftia'aby faith' in patent medicines, but havint; seen Iii pans Tabules .rfcommeiided very highly in the New York JcraU concluded con-cluded to give them a trial, and found. they vrore just what my case demanded." I have never employed a phyaiciaa Biace.fatau that means a t savin k ox i a call. . . A dollar'a worth of " Ripans Tabulos .. l-Afitsi rrta m and I would cot be - j without them now i li it were my jaq dollar.' At the time of this, infeft--view there were present two daugh-. ters -wno- Epeciauy objected to their mother giving a. , testimoaial w hich should parade her name intlw:BfwJrrpB.lut.to do ". "this the elder lady argued : There may be'othiDr cases just Tike' mine,' and I am eure I take great pleasure 4n reoemmending theTabules to any one afHicted as I was. If the telling about my case in the' papers enables "Boih.fi cfVer person similarly affected to be as greatly benefited as I have been. I fseano'objecfion." The daughters,' daugh-ters,' koviug l:ow earnestly she felt about the benefit-ehe had received, decided she was Quite right. .1 A Pro nsliient pjrlel in. A prominent New York phyRcian In discussing the merits of 'Ripans . Tabules with a brother M. D.-said : Several years ago I asserted that If one wished to become a plulan-thopist. plulan-thopist. and do a beneficent deed one that :would help the whole ha-maa ha-maa race nothing could be better than to procure the Roosevelt Hospital Hos-pital preecriptrori, X&Jt is the basii ftJU Jfianr Tabtttiu-tSii. cause it -to be put up in ihe form.of a ketchup ana diMriboted among the poor. ' . Haiti Inereaalaa. . . The iargest retail drug store in America is that of liegeman & Co, on Broadway in Kew York City. A reporter who went there " learn bow Kipans lar-nlea lar-nlea were selling bought a five-cont carton and asked : " Do xotT have mochcall for these? He was referred to a gentleman who ; proved to be the Lead of the depart ' The eah of Kipans Tabules - Is MmerfAnc ' and w lrkArAAAinfr rltiA... . especially t6 ihe lnfiuential character' IrfHthe tPatimoniaJ4in trip d.trV &Tti.'' ; and growing out of these, trhreuglv the . recommendation, of. friend, to friend.. Satisfaction with them is ' ver grtieral. "When once' th'ey are ' , begun -1 notice' that a ' permanent . .customer for, them is made. This, 1 ' believe, .is through '.their intrinsic 'meritr, 'which proves thel bona fide -charadter' of the advertising.' 1 think jthem fpefajlytttsefclini'he gsneral ' runef stomach Jtroubles. . - A'r'gryleBekeeoteirilri(rTran'irTi?rij;pacScr4iB pacur'crrtonCwirboutsiaviXaBOw fur eeJeateoege ttrmr etoimi tok rrra ccyrs. Tui- kw-iT: - ci sort La t?t-;ili.d f r tbe poor and tba . fwnamleel. 0tm aoaea of the Sve-eent ertoas 0 0 ia .l,-ii be Ji- d bj tanil hf ecndmg forty-irirleeeutou, forty-irirleeeutou, KiPAjre CrataicAi. Ooap. ky. No. i) urcu: t. r.?ct , c t o.l; or a single emrtoa (m tmuD win aeeratf..r ftreornte. Pi.;7'l1., nit . Uual of ki pmn, gcaaral |