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Show HOSPITAL Official Directory. CITY. Wm. II. Pettegrew Mayor Alfred Lunt A. It. Paxman Council . . . . - James GaiTett, Jr. W. O. Orme J. W. Brough G. W. KendaU Marshal Recorder ... Mrs .Delphla Teasdalo Treasurer Mrs. Rose Fatten T. I Focte City Attorney J. S. Cooper rolice Magistrate . Walter Smith Street Superintend . Meshack Pitt "Water Superintend Bert Kendall Pound Keeper Sexton Thomas Carver COUNTY. Commissioners - George McCune Thomas Belllston Hans J. Hassell W. C. Andrews E. IX Sorenson Clerk Recorder . . .. M. D. Bowen Treasurer Thomas Bailey Assessor D. B. Cronm Sheriff Edward Tike Attorney C. W. Rees Surveyor Superintendent of Schools Oliver Christiansen ... PRECINCT. Justice of the Peace . . .J. S. Cooper II. D. Goldsbrough. Constable DISTRICT. Dis't. District Judge Fifth Judicial Thomas Marlon eaux Judicial District Attorney Fifth District .. .. Joshua Greenwood Senatorial State Senator Eighth District ... George C. Whltmore Thirteenth State Representative District George Adams SAN PETE VALLEY RAILWAY. NEW TRAIN SERVICE In Effect Nov. 8th, 1900. Trains run dally except Sunday, follows. Going North DLL I V: 1 from I epbt. I Dally. (lag Saatfc So. 2 Dally I eteOpu Xpm It.Kpm 1 SO p Met. from Moil 43 IS 10 ep I I I I SUttona, Naahl L. Moroal Zpbrela Ar. Manti The company this to vary from U.f.Saai At. M S 10 am V 0 V 17 a m 10 8 a at 43.0 L, reserve time-car- the right at plea d are. WILLIAM C. WHITNEY'S LUCK. ARSENIC FOR NERVOUSNESS. FOR SICK PLANTS. No One Ever Cured by Its Use Pro Corner In Nurseries for ilci duces Nervousness. Vegetation. One might as well take whiskey for Leading nurserymen of New Yorl chronic alcoholism as to take arsenic have a curious department in theii for nervousness. Arsenic tn auy form business. It may be called the plant is aa sure to nervousness ad produce hospital. In every large industry there an overdose of whiskey is sure to proIs a special corner set aside for ailing duce drunkenness. plants that patrons have sent in to be Arsenic will not cure nervousness. treated, for plants get out of sorts nervousness. No one will It through being under artificial con.li. was everproduce of nervousness by arsecured tions, just as humans do, and must nic. Thousands have been made ner either be doctored and get a change ot vous by arsenic. Thousands mere will air or die. be made nervous by arsenic. Yet the Plants are subject to all 'sorts of doctors go right on prescribing arsenic maladies. The commonest are worms, for nervousness. Improper potting, want of washing and There are various preparations of too much watering. The lack or ex- arsenic known a many dif cess of water is the commonest of all ferent names. by great causos. Many plants, such as the Arsenic Is death to the nervous sys palm and the fern, when kept Indoors, tem. Arsenic produces bloodless nerve become as sensitive to changes of temcauses the nerves to tingle, centers, perature as a delicate woman. A cold tremble and quiver. draught will set them sneezing, as it Arsenic will make hysterical babies is It of At Inside best an were. hour. difficult for most plants to thrive in of the strongest athletes . It will conwoman into Jiving rooms. The air is too dry and vert a wholesome, healthy a invalid. petulant, puling, faded the light insufficient. This is true it If the doctors were obliged to take mort and vary .general, yet plants than people do in the conditions thai arsenic themselves long enough to disagree with them. For Instance, cacti cover by personal experience the dis do best in an environment like that cf astrous condition It Is sure to produce, the arid desert, while other tropical they probably would then quit admin(things require a warm, moist climate. istering it to tluir patients. But It Is an adage that doctors never take their The effect of sudden changes of tem own medecine. They conclude what perature on the plant Is the loss of some or the root hairs which are an any medicine will do by what the some pom the smaller rootlets and are an import- books tell them or what Then declared. has ant part of the feeding apparatus. pous professor commence and coiitlnua giving 'They rot, and the plant Is then unable they to take enough nourishment When a to give tn spile of the fact that their grow rapidly worse. plant gets off Its feed general debility patients Arsenic, like bromide of potash, is and nervous exhaustion set in. With vigor gone, the plant falls an easy given almost Indiscriminately by tho 'prey to all diseases prowling round, average drug doctor for nervousness. ever cured or Fnngl and animal parasites complete Neither of these drugs nervousness. case ever of a helped Its ruin. Both of them will produce nervousnesd Prof. Earle of the New York botan of the worst form without fail. It is ical garden says: "In the thrifty plant such drugs as these as are re there Is a constant balance between just sponsible for that condition of body the activity going on In the leaves that and mind known as AmericanlMs. We draw sustenance from the air and the are a nation of nervous men and woroot hairs that absorb moisture and men. Our nervousness is generally atsoluble food from the soil. Anything tributed by the doctors to our climate that Interferes with either soon throws and our habits of business and pleasthe plant out of health. The most un- ure. usual causes are lack of light, smoke This Is not true. We have an exand sudden changes of temperature. cellent climate and our business methme leaves are nrst affected and re ods and pleasures are of the best charact upon the root hairs. When the acter better than In any other counplants begin to drop their leaves It try. It is the miserable drugs that we may be taken as an evidence of illness have been deluded into taking that is All florists have trouble with the be nervousness. our for 'esponsible gonia In this way. Of all the nerve destroying drugs "The causes of diseases In plants, '.hat were ever Invented by the medibesides being numerous, are often ob cal bromide of pot-isarsenic, profession, scure. They are grouped for conven and strychnia lead the list. No ience as environmental, functional and tervous person ought ever to take a parasitic Uncongenial surroundings, dose of such medicine. Medl-ta- l such as improper soil conditions, too ilngle Talk. much or too little water, the absence or of some of the Mrs. McCormlck, wife of the Ameri-tafood elements, the pollution of the ambassador to Russia, has left St. air with smoke or gases, or unfavor Petersburg for Paris because of he e able position as to sunlight, often weather. She will remain away cause a slow and feeble growth that Is 1 bout a month. not disease. Instead of sickness It is starvation or The Mighty oaks from little acorn? grow, 'scalding of plants after heavy and ut It Is , long time before the make long continued rains, and the 'tip Aclr best bough. burn of lettuce and potatoes, due to a burning sun after wet, cloudy weather. Illustrate this condition. "Functional diseases spring from de rangements within the plant ltelf. It may secrete loo much or too little acrd. and Its organs of attrition get dera iz-eThe 'mosaic disease' of tobacco of the Chldi and the 'yellow cllr-atoo of little acid or are asters examples aWhen ferment. plant gets this nay It may be said to hvve a bad aitark of Indigestion. The acH Is Insufficient to convert the starch f the green leaves into soluble sugars that ran be taken up the sap and vsed in forming new h over-abundanc- e THEODORE Pres. BRUBACK, Gen'l Manager, A. Salt Lake City. H. S. KERR, & G. F. A. P. Agent, Ma nil. Supt Ilirlkalih St.. Chicago, III., OcL'7, J902. Eight tnontbi ago I was ao ill that I wm compelled to lie or tit down nearly all the time. My stomach u so weak and upset that 1 could keep nothing on it I and I vomited frequency. couM not urinate without freat 222 South Teoria pain and I couched so much that my throat an J tunc were raw The doctors proand tore. nounced it Bright! diieaee and other said it wm consumption, it tnattirml little to me what th?y called it and I bad no desire to live. Ai?T visited me from t. Ijwiie and ekd me if I Lad tried Wine ct Cardni. I told liT I hai not and the that bought abottM. I it a Ted my life. I believe many women could save mneh mffer-in- g it they but knew of ita value. ptt tIiee Lon't yoa want frelora from pain? Take Wine of Cardui and make one eujTeme effort to be well. You do not need to I Ytwi a wak, helf.Iesi (liu Lave and woman's l.'al'.h can a do a woman's work in life. Why not secure a bottle of Wine of Cardui frota your drutrgii-- t today? rr. rjsrjE'iCanQSJi n se-rer- semi-starvatio- 1 ' 'tfrr.-- ' :.:..' "'. ' m ir-ha- :i v. S - L . Mrs. Caroline Abbot Stanley, author of "Order No. 11," was born In Callaway county, Missouri, of a Virginia mother and a New England father. Dr. Itufus Abbot, her father, was a graduate of Yale college, and at one time superintendent of the State Insane asylum at Fulton, Mo. Nathan Hale was a great-grea- t uncle of the writer, who further claims kinship with Edward Everett Hale, Lyman Abbott, and Ezra Abbot of Cambridge, one of the revisers of the New Testament . Mrs. Stanley's early life was passed in the locality where the scenes of tn are laid; and when she set herself nl many months revisiting these scenes and verifying her material. Since tha death of her husband, less than four years after her marriage, Mrs. Stanley has been an Indefatigable worker, teaching in the schools of Kalamazoo, Mich., for eighteen years, and writing early and late. Her winters are spent with her son in Washington, D. C, her summers at her cottage on Lake Michigan. Lettuce Prevent Smallpox. Don't forget that lettuce is a preventive for smallpox. So far as It Is possible for a human being to be protected from catching small pox, lettuce Is a protection. No need for vaccination whatever. Any person who eats a small quantity of lettuce twice a day, morning and evening, is as well protected against smallpox as is possible for any one to be. To be sure, one ought to be cleaa, ought to live in ventillated rooms, and avoid dirt of all sorts. Also avoid con- tact with people who have smallpox. Foolish exposure to the contagion of smallpox is not to be thought of. Hut there Is no need of vaccination. Go calmly on about your business. Provide a small quantity of lettuce morning and evening, and you can feel sure that you have protected yourself rnd your family in the best possible way against smallpox. Lettuce is one of the oldest vegeta ble remedies known to the medical profession. Long before it was usod as food it was used as roediciae. Many times it has been claimed that P. has magical or miraculous powers to prevent conaglous diseases. We believe this is carrying matters altogether too far. But lettuce does furnish to the system exactly what Is needed to protect it against the poison of nroallpox. Medical Talk. d. se' - Ungues. "Vast numbers t parasites infect plant. Scarcely anv plant Is wholly free from them. They Invade every part of the plant, roots, stems. leaves, flowers and fruits. They attack the surface and burrow Into the tissues. They produce smut on the wheat rr oats, palls and knoti upon plum res. and gum bunches on rne cherry tre-;They cause the death of near and applo tree branches and tlnber rots In forest trees. The annual lo.s from plant diseases reaches millions of do:lar In New York state every year, lienor ewer: the question of how to prevent plant disease is nne of trreat fractiral oC y The selenre cf vegetable bad It Is newest. of one the pathology Its 1 s:Snr.Sn only thirty years r. A DiFFEitnxcn. "With disease, of environment the "IVe.s tho gas meter measure the unobvious remedy is to correct the amount of as you burn?" favorable conditions .Individual plants, "No; It measures the amouat you llli 9 Individual men, vary In their abilhave to ay for." 1 ity to resist disease. Even in plant K fh?B differ earns MitTiral Kt cry cloud may ha" a silver ence In resisting power Is often quiU but most people would prei'er to marked." New. York Express. e the sua working on a gol basis. j e. a iHWa, Sl lin-In- 1 ?. Grouse Moor, Bought for a Song, Is One of the Richest In England. William C. Whitney Is going In strong for English grouse shooting dur- ii?E the coming season. His sporting Investments hitherto had been confin ed to the turf wherein it Is understood he has not been highly success. fill, although it is admitted on all hands that he is one of tho shrewdest speculators at present in England. His latest deal, in securing, months tn advance of the ordinary time, a portion of the grouse moors of D confirms tho opinion that he is cither uncommonly shrewd or uncommonly lucky. The moors in question cover 800 acres, and are part of the immense property of the rich and handsome Marquis of Londonderry, They formerly postmaster general. have never been noted for their prolific coveys like those of Scotland, in consequence of their contiguity to the marquis' huge coal mines, which are epread all over the district. Through some strange phenomenon, however, the place turns out to be over-ruwith birds this year, although the fact wasn't known at the time Mr. The Whitney struck the bargain. price actually paid Is not disclosed, but I am told that the moors have been se cured at a quarter their value, and that Whitney has had numerous offers for them at a greatly enhanced price from noblemen and agents 6lnce It became known that the birds were so plentiful. Last year Mr. Whitney promised his American friends that he would give them a season's shooting in England, and he started to look about at once foi a prolific moor. He tried Scotland, Ireland and that portion of the mil- land counties of England which have been noted for their huge possessions of game, but he found that everything with the exception of the supposed derelict moors of Durham, had been snapped up. Bound not to disappoint his American friends, he forthwith en tered Into negotiations with the MarThe marquis quis of Londonderry. was accustomed to hear distressing re-of the coveys on his Durham estate, and was ready to dispose of them for the proverbial old song. The bargain was closed, and now, to all appearances, Mr. Whitney and his friends will shoot over one of the richest grouse moors in the kingdom ib.s season. Boston Herald. A A Special Measuring the Earth's Diameter. the March Pearson's Mr. T. C. Porter suggests a new and simple way of estimating the diameter of the earth. This is by means of a shadow cast by the Peak of Teneriff (where the observation was made) and by the earth itself, and by taking note of the difference tn time when these two shadows touch the same point. This Is found to be twenty minutes. Calculating then the distance of the arc through which the earth moves In this time, by URlng the known height of th Peak, the entire distance througa which the earth moves in twntyfour hours will bear the same proportion to this arc distance as twenty four hours bears to twenty minutes, the lime required to cover the smaller dlstanca. The latitude of the peak must be used to find the proportion that a circle that these bear to the equatorial cirr !and so the number of miles the earth measures around the eqnator is found Dividing this by 3.14tf,9 will, of cour Kive tbe diameter. The suggestion Is at least a novel one. In n Mr. Reedl Mr. Reedi Washington friend of Mr. Reed named her favorite cat for Srim. One morning, when the Speaker wvs calling on her, he stroked the cat ad asked its name. She hastily invented a name, not liking to tell him that it Mr. Reed." A minute later a stetn Mr. voice sounded on the stairway. Reed! Mr. Reed! Are you In the par lor? Come out of there, you raarai: What are you doing In there?" lie- -, f jre any explanation could be made? a white-cappemaid put her bead la the door, evidently unaware of visitors, and cried: "Come out of that par-onow. I tell you, Mr. Reed!" Philadelphia Inquirer. A d r In the Near Future Domestic "Don't you want to go out this afternoon, Mrs. Manning?" Mistress "Yes, Mary, I should like to go out; but, I I'm afraid It will incommode you." Domestic "Oh, never mind me, marm, It'a a long time since you've had an afternoon off I must insist that you take take today. But be sure and come home early. I may have callers, yoa know, and I ahall want somebody to tend th door." Boston TranscrleJ. VBDSffi Physicians prescribe it The number of bills discounted I y the Bank rf France and Its braurbes in 1803 was 1S.4:',.938. The num: er .f notes in circulation on Jaauary 28, 1304, was 2S.030.244. establishments, undrtl control of the povemrnrnt, are to i found in the chief cities of Jajpa. Crc-matkr- i b-- for their most delicate patients. OLD and PURE. For n a1e b HAGUE &JIEII) |