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Show j SKULL OP TYLER INVESTMENT SURE LOTS IN E A A suburb Of Ball Lake City where three steam railroad! runs by and the Harrhn.'ir, Blectrii Franchise through the town only 30 minutes' ride to the enter of Kilt Lake, City. TEN Mil I IOV ixil.l.Alts are now being expeii'lici In unrkb by the Garfield smelters which will grlvc employment to thoussndi people who itmnt have hamea, ai d - Bast Garfield Is the only a town In e&a Icing inee the lote ere rapidly being fold Ten business houses riow flourishing and more coming, present prices will advance aooa. BO buy bow while thel are cheap. Size of lots 25x11' l feet, corners 35 feet. Price $40 to $2?.fl each Terms, nix in cash, balance equal Liberal discount monthly payments for cash. For maps- and oilier information address a ; once f jL BBSBBBy BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB ..- one-four- th ide Investment Bast-Roo- Rids., sail l.nke Referen.. Walker Broi".' Hooper l ily. Bank. Co I lah a I M AFTER NEARLY TWO bHko3pS( m WMAIN First Year Leases. year leases are said to hate had their origin In England. In Queen Elizabeth's time a law was made prohibiting property owner" from renting their ground or buildings for a longer period than 100 years, and thereafter the 99 year lease became popular. At one time there was a statute in the Illinois code by which the length of a lease was limited, but this later was declared e The Youthful Mind. Among the answers to questions at a recent school examination appeared "Gross ignorance Is the following: 144 times at bad as just ordinary "Anchorite is an Ignorance.'hermit sort of a fellow who has anchored hlsself to one place," "The liver is an Infernal organ." "Vacuum is nothing with the air sucked out of it put up in a pickle bottle it is ver. bard to get." Grewso-n- Humor. city officer In Auld Reekie was celebrated for his cunning and wit. His mother having died In Edinburgh he hired a hearse and carried her to the family burying place in the Highlands. Me returned with the hearse full of smuggled whisky, and being teased about It by a friend he said: "Oh. man, there Is no harm done! t only took away the body and brought back the spirit." Keep Moving. The heavens themselves run contln tially round: the world is never still; the sun travels to the east and to the west; the moon is ever changing In Its course; the stars aud planets have their constant motions; the air we breathe is continually agitated by the wind, and the wators never cease to ebb and flow doubtless for the pur pose of their observation aud to teach us that we bhouid ever be in action. Burton. Smelling for a Living. has beeu devel already Is being successfully worked, says Popular the requirement is a Mechanics, sensitive sense of smell, and a little practice makes the detector quits proficient. He Inspects the gas pipes and fixtures of a building and charges 18 cents for each leak he discovers Some of the men earn lu a week. A new occupation oped In London and The Changes of Time. The physical characteristics of the English are altering rapidly says a writer. The tall, graceful woman with the finely shaped head, well chiseled nose, kindly eyes, sweet smile, small feet and hands, and light tread Is almost extinct; she is being replaced by big made won, en. with a Arm chin, hard looking, and taking long, decla Ive strides After Dinner. From New York comes a wall Prosv.Talk of agony It - the despairing cry of the bored diner: the nut who goes to a banquet and has Ma entire evening upolled by. the stupid speeches which top off the feast. He even threatens to forego this feeling; a terrible threat for a sMtropoHtS and an Index of the greatne-- - of the evil and Its accompanying torture. Suicide Among Negroes. The number of negroes committing suicide increasing rapidly each year, "nit before emancipation such thing as a negro killing himself was almost Now they occur with unheard of great frequency. "Poodles and the Man." At a tea party the conversation turned first upon the poodles aud then, upon men, and ooe of the ladles asked deaf old Aunt Thekla, apropos of ths last subject which ihe preferred, fair r dark o said the old lady, thinking they were still on the poodlss, "I liks them quite black; they don't get " dirty so soon The World's Habit of III Using. Though my complaint of the world Is new, Its hsbit of Is vary natleat Columbus While In Chains i7f B ' aBBBBXal In War, First GEORGE WASHINGTON. Peace and First in the Hearts of His Countrymen. in THE Ninety-Nin- e well-know- M aSBjBBHHBBBSBBW'' -"ST. SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. Somewhat Hf JH W "ftfUiMH 170 A tu - BBBBSSBBBSBBBErck Bk Ninety-nin- m YEARS We are atalo to announce that ou Watch Repairing Department ha been enla-gosufficiently to PROMPTLY take care of all work sent io us. - KS'JnL uSKlIsI Hflrl OF 75 STILL AFTER THAT CUP. Engiish Yachtman Thirks He Can Capture Trophy. New Y'oi'k. The report comes from Glasgow from well informed sources of yachting informal ion. that there is a possibility of another challenger appearing from the other side for the America's cup iustad of Sir Thomas Lfpto'u. The second aspirant is said zo be Kenneth M. Clark, a well known English yachtman. It is said that Mr. Clark has definitely made tip his mind to challenge, but that he will wait until the end of the comins summer to give Sir Thomas l.ipton the chance to get in his fourth challenge if he still desires a race, hut in event of the matter being un determined at that time, Mr. Clark will send his challenge and take precedence over the Irish baronet. JAPS N our near approach to the anniversary of Washington's birthday it behooves us all to be very grateful to God and the revolutionary fathers for the nation which they gave to us. Away with the man who does not love his country. It has its faults. It is no better than the best man who lives in it, and the best man who ives in lt Is separated by a long dis tance from the angels of heaven. The writings and orations that would put us beyond criticism explode against some very hard facts and let out upon the air a great deal of silliness. Our politics are not so absolutely pure that a seraph's wing could graze them without contamination. Our ideals of greatness and glory are closer to the ground than they ought to be. Our reverence for the sacredness of law that should be as firmly fixed, in our national conscience as Pike's Peak is firmly fixed in the soil of Colorado, is not beyond the cavil and complaint of those who study the foundations of our institutions. Hut of one thing we are persuaded, and that is that the virtues of our Its faults. country There are more angels than devils among us. The devils are making the most noise, but the angels are doing the most work. The man who believes that righteousness is losing its grip upon this nation is a woefully mistaken man. I heard a speaker the other day who proclaimed that we are falling from bad to worse and from worse to worst. Wo do not believe him. We believe that we are rising from good to better, and from better to best. One of the chief roots of our patriotism la gratitude, the realization of an Immense debt to those who battled uhnut Hip rrurl .1pv. nf rnr nqtinnni inuiviiai istence and won our freedom and In- dependence at the points of their swords. Here we are because the men of '76 put us here. Here we stay because the spirit of '76 has kept us here. Stormy Atlantic, mild Pacific, sleep ing lakes, waving forests, tree crowded mountains, gold mine and silver mine, storms out of whose tempest-drivehearts have fluttered the birds of peace, fiery baptisms through whose flames have crept forth the evangels, gave covenant. When we think of these things, when we stand upon the mount of vision, and the splendor of our country breaks upon our eyes, when the song of the reapers conn s up to us. when we hear the hum Of Industry thrilling along the ground, when we see the gleanrug rivers curving and winding like silver threnils through vast gardens, what account of ourselves shall we give to ourselves It wo take not ihe cun of praise and thanksgiving In our hands and Mmr it out to the heroes whose patience, faith and courage ushered In the dawn of our splendid prosper, over-balanc- e white-feathere- ever-lastln- office-seeke- centuries. And out of this Jove of country and this guardianship of our children will come the patriotism of service. The Roman soldier cried out "it is beautiful to die ' for one's countrv." Our country does not want anybody to die for it now. but it does want all the multitudes of its people to live for it to do their big best or their little best to serve its highest and noblest Intents, and pass it along to the future cleansed, purified, sweet to the heart and sound to the core. WASHINGTON. - They wore fighting for the future. for the country that was coming. So are we lighting for tho future for the rountry that Is coming. As we hxk Into Ihe faces of our little children wo cannot feel that for us the battle is ended. We have won a country for ... . . i ourselves, cm wo musi win a country tor tnera. ArxA love of country and love of chHdren run toft the? with the arabl- - , qaUi. ,"MU mgn-poise- statesman, rarest unison example of great duties done Simply as breathing, a world's honors worn As life's indifferent gifts to all men born ; Dumh frtr - hlmir ""ices n. were to God, But for his barefoot soldiers eloquent Tramping the snow to coral where they trod, Held by his awe In hollow-eyecon- tent; Modest, g U i tion to win a better country for them Home and patriotism are linked toThe children will help to gether. make the nation. Hut. the nation will help to make those children. That little dimpled cheek will not allow you to take off your uniform for a single day. You must build his home. You must fight for his inheritance. You must put your life into the moving and marching forces of righteousness that are trying to win victories for him. The next generation will live In the country which this generation is mak lag for it. And each one of us is help ing to make it. All of us are nation builders. Every time we cast a bal lot for an unclean r we ate committing an outrage upon the fu ture. Patriotism can never be selfish. It can never be bound up and roped round in its own pleasures and com forts. it can never stand still, looking backwards. lt can never content itself with making a noise. In Washington's farewell address we see the prayers of a great soul embracing a nation's posterity. The pen that wrote the emancipation proclamation was tracing on the paper a heart's desire for a long procession of yet firm as Nature's self; Save by the men his nobler temper shamed; Not honored then or now because he wooed The popular voice, but that he till withstood; , higher souled. there is but one Who was all th,,, and ours, and all men's, Washington. James Russell Lowell. Broad-minded- Washington's Wealth. Whether Washington can be put Into tllf PTlvIffWi ruf(.n-Ai-t ' .Ires no- one can T i According tn tho lair. in,.i tnwiUYpiv Ford whose work. "The Tm.' has J,,,,,, Washington." recognition, "the father of his conn try" was worth $530,000. This fortune did not Include his wile's nevertheless it made him one of th wealthiest Americans of hi. .. : nine Her part of the Custls pro ie rt i pnimird 11.600 acres of lanrl a 'j . ..... nart of It adlolnlnu- th lalmsburg m rl rr.l.i i EVIDENCE. Feature of the Trial of Steve Adams at Wallace, Idaho. I Wallace, Idaho The skull of Fred Tyler was in eidence In the trial of Steve Adams ou Monday Held up before the jury by the hand of Deputy Sheriff C. H. Williams, it bore its own testimony of a cowardly crime. A big bullet hole back of the left car and another hole on the right side, where it is supposed the ball came out, ihowed how he met his death, shot by an assassin who stood behind him. The state, it is believed, ha? won the first round in the battle of witnesses by producing a mass of evidence which seems to leave no doubt that 'he body found in the woods in the St. Joe country was that of Fred Tyler. GARFIELD ST IN MAY ATTEND SCHOOL. Problem at San Francisco Has Finally Been Solved. Washington. The San Francisco school controversy, growing out of the segregation of the Japanese school children in that city, has been settled. The basis of the agreement reached at the White House conference on Friday is that Mayor Schmitz and the members of the school board will, immediately after the passage of the immigration bill as reported by the conferees in congress, abolish the Oriental schools and again admit Japanese children into the white schools. The president and Secretary Root assured the Californians that if the hill is not passed at this session an extra session will be called immedi ately after the adjournment March 4. TO STUDY WATER SOURCES. Will Make Scientific Investigation of This Subject. Washington. The senate has passed a bill providing for the investigation of the water sources of the TJniled The investigation is to be States. made by the director of the geological survey. Both underground and surface waters are to be investigated. An amendment was adopted to the measure which permits between the states and the general government In making hydrographic surveys. Japs Pleased, Whites Angry. San Francisco. The terms of ihe agreement between the Federal thorities and the Schniltz party Washington is very agreeable to. the Japanese of this city, according to a statement issued by U. Oyama, "secretary of the Japanese consulate. On the other hand, labor leaders are very much disappointed over the turn affairs have taken, the statement being made that "the proceedings have served one purpose at least, namely, to demonstrate the hopelessness of securing protection against Asiatic immigration by any means short of an exclusion act." Promised to Sin No More. Ga. In the United Savannah. S. P. Shelter comthe court States the Patterson Downing company, Naval Stores pany, the Standard and S. P. company, corporations, Sholter and J. F. Myers, individuals, known as the turpentine trust, of guilty to a violation of act. The other the Stserinaii anti-trus- t individuals indicted had their indictments nolle prossed. Shelter and Meyers agreed in writing not to violate the law again. Crime of Farm Hand. After sending a BUckfOOt, Idaho. of Mrs. heart hullot through the Maude Leslie early Sunday. Roy Mer rill, a farm hand, committed suicide. The tragedy occurred at the ranch of Mrs. Leslie's father, J. W Keeney. a Mrs. Ieslie. who prominent farmer. was a widow, was banking the lire in the parlor and the rest of the family had retired lor Ihe night when the shots were heard. It is supposed that Merrill was Insane from disappointment in love and jealousy For Starving Chinamen. NaWashington. The American tional Red Cross on Thursday Cabled an additional $5,000 to Consul General Rogers at Shanghai for the famine There are 7.0(0 bags of sufferers. seed wheat-n- t Portland, Ore destined for China, but owing " ihe car shortage Un- Hi ii CrosiFti unable tn semi it to Seattle from which perl it would It is exbe sent free nf charge pected, however, that fifTattgeBM QU will b" made to send this seed to the Orient at the earliest possible moment ' EARLY NORTHWEST VOYAGES. Soma Account of the Arctic That Have Been Made. PROVE Trips Or. - CLAIM EVERY Williams Pink Pills a Specific For Anaemia and a Safe Family Medicine. Beginning with the American dis- coveries of John Cabot in 1497, the search for the northwest passage was for many years the object of rival ex- peditlons from Denmark, England, a w r ranee ann ecrrnr Greely, In the Century. It was Frobish- er, however, who in laTC-7first gave a distinct national character to the quest. John Davis of Davis' strait, followed in three voyages, 15&.VS8, and then, in 1612. canie the illustrious and hapless Henry Hudson, whose motto was that explorers should "achieve what they had undertaken or else give reasons wherefore it will not be." The search for the Atlantic side closed for two centuries with the voyage of a great seaman, William Baffin, who, in a tiny boat of 55 tons, with a miserable equipment, but an undaunted heart, attained, in 1616, the highest north in the western hemisphere, 77 degrees 45 minutes N., and discovered three radiating sounds, Jones, Smith and Lancaster, the last being the eastern entrance to the passf.fe. When the body becomes run down, either as a result of overwork, worry or a seve illness, an examination of tne blo0(J would sbow lt to be weak and watery Tnis condition is calicd anaemic, which is the medical term for "bloodless." The common symptoms are paleness of the lips, gums and cheeks, shortness of breath and palpitation of the heart after the slightest exertion, dull eyes and loss of appetite. Mr. Louis L. Clark, a painter, of 19 Lincoln Place, Plainlield, N. J., says: "Last May 1 was obliged to undergo and an operation for append'eitis while the operation in itself was successful, I did not recover my strength and health. I was confined to my bed for over a month and was under the doctor's care. When I was able to get up my legs were so weak and unsteady that I could only walk with a cane with difficulty. "I was getting no better and could not think of going hack to work. I was discouraged, when a neighbor told me that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had cured her and advised me to try them. I began taking them about the middle of June and soon felt so much BABY TORTURED BY ITCHING. better that I kept on and was cured. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have curRash Covered Face and Feet Would ed rheumatism, chlorosis, aftereffects Until Out Tired Cry Speedy of the grip and fevers, and, as the Cure by Cuticura. health of the nerves depends upon the purity of the blood, they are invalu"My baby was about nine months able in neuralgia, nervous debility, old wheu she had rash on her face sleeplessness, dizziness and even loand feet. Her feet seemed to irritate comotor ataxia ami paralysis. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by her most, especially nights. They would cause her to be broken in her all druggists or sent, postpaid, on reRO cents per box, six rest, and sometimes she would cry ceipt of price. Dr. Williams Medthe $2.50. boxes by until she was tired out. I had always icine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. used Cutlcura Soap myself, and had heard of so many cures by the Cuti-curIndian Reaches Advanced Age. Remedies that I thought I would Columbus Cunnltubby, a give them a trial. The improvement Choctaw, probably is the oldest was noticeable in a few hours, and before I had used one box of the Cu- Indian in the United States. He is betlcura Ointment her feet were well lieved to have passed his one hundred and have never troubled her since. I and fourteenth year. Other aged men also used it to remove what is known of his tribe declare that in their childas "cradle cap" from her head, and hood days he was a grand specimen of the redskin race. Even now his mind lt worked like a charm, as it is clear, but he is so feeble that he can cleansed and healed the Bcalp at the same time. Now I keep Cuticura not talk more than two or three min utes at a time. He has 23 children Ointment on hand in case of an and 109 grandchildren. little rash or Insect bites, as it takes out the inflammation at once. Per 18471907. 60 years ago Alicock's Piasters were haps tills may he the meaus of help lng other suffering babies. Mrs. Hat first introduced to the public. They are tie Currier, Thoniaston, Me., June the world's standard plasters. 190G." This invention has been one of the greatest blessings imaginable and afSOME NEW FRENCH KNIGHTS. fords the quickest, cheapest and best means ever discovered for healing Queen of Holland Has Agreed to Rec and relief of certain ailments. ognize Vatican Titles. Allcock's are the original and genAmong the lucrative sources of rev uine porous plasters and are sold by enue of the pope the separa Druggists all over the world tion of church and ranee was To be a grert man it if necessary the toll or tax SBBBBBBBBBBV of nobility to turn to account all opportunities. and decorations' the rupture Rochefoucauld. the French gove IsbbbbbbbbB longer rec les and dec- ognizes the enno Garfield Tea insures a normal action of orations of the holy m ii er. To have the liver, overcomes constipation, and the right to wear the Vatican ribbon keeps the blood pure. Drink before retir ing. or to be called count, it was necessary to obtain a confirmation of title. This What we are stretches past what we . gave much perplexity to the candl do, beyond what we possess. dates. The question has just been settled. fII.ES CtTBtKS IN 6 TO 14 wueen wiineimina lias consented to PAZO UINTMKNT is muurajiteed to cure urn- - eaae Blind. Uebjtitf, ,r I'i .!.rudl ug Piles in validate such titles and distinctions. of I to 14 aays ormouey refunded. 60c. The result has been an amusing pil Flattery is like friendship in show grimage to The Hague and also in an increase in the price of these pon but not in fruit. Socrates. tifical favors. Mre. Wlnslow'e Soothing- - Syrup. In the last few weeks the French For cnlldreo teething, sofiena the pun, reduces allaya pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Knights of the Golden Spur, of ths Holy Sepulcher. of Christ, of Gregory Some men blame their wires every the Great, of Pius IX. have greatly time it rains. j 8 long-sough- t a to-da- y .s, Drum-mond- miv CATARRH CURE. HOME-MAD- Sufferers Should Make This Up and Try It Anyway. MUSCULAR AILMENTS Any one can mix right at home the best remedy of Its kind known. The name "Cyclone" is given to the following prescription, it is supposed, because of its promptness in driving from the blood and system every vestige of catarrhal ioison, relieving this foul and dread disease, no matter where located. To prepare the mixture: Get from any good pharmacy one Fluid Kxtract Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kargon and three ounces Compound Syrup Sarsa-parillShake well and use in doses after each meal and at bedtime. This is a harmless. Inexpensive mixture, which has a peculiar action upon the elimlnative tissues of the Kidneys, assisting them to tilter and strain from the blood and system all catarrhal poisons, which, if not eradicated, are absorbed by the mucous membrane, and an open sore or catarrh is the result. Prepare some and try it, as it is the prescription of .an eminent catarrh specialist of national reputation The Old Monk-Cur- e will straighten out a contracted muscle in a jiffy. half-ounc- e ST. JACOBS OIL Don't play possum with pain, but 'tends strictly to business. Price 25c end 30c SICK HEADACHE A Mortifying Answer. Richard, aged seven years, In company with his parents, was visiting a friend. At the dinner table he was asked to have some cake. He hesitated. Will you "Say, quickly, Richard' have some cake?" said hil mother. Imagine her chagrin Whan Richard replied: "If It's the kind we have at home, I don't want any." How's This? We ofW One Iliindrn.l KtAllaM BSH of I m.rrh thmt BBSaOl be ItUM-r- Cure. r. ,T. C1IF.NKT nnn ...i ... rami hr Htli l K. J Chcner hnve known ro.,Totdn. foriholiut nyeern, nd believe him perrertlr ban. in ii Luilneni irnnna. Uom nod orblp nnnrlir eble tu cerry out any ..bllgminnii mede by hi. drm. WALnisu. Kink.s MeSVIB, Whn'o; KrunfMa Tuledo. O. Bt--ir. n "rrn h inkcu Internally, nlni r"" h bloos esd Bmeom tarfsoe ot the jtrert.y up,,, ' " ' Lh '.m '.""".'."'A' cent per S,,id DrtHta BoJI Hall's Family Pi'i- - f ,r "ouaf ipstlra. we. tho iindcMljrnril, O. Most people would fall short If measured by the golden rule. CARTER'S flTTLE If PILLS. aBBBBBBafiB refrulato the Bowels, SMALL PILL. Positively enred by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia, In-- d location and Too Hearty A perfect remEating. edy for Dizziness. Natises. Drowsiness, Bad Taste In the Mouth. Contei Tongue, Pain In tho Side. T.'P.PID LIVER. Thar rurely Vegetable. DOSE. SMALL SMALL PRICE. ' ICARTFRSl Genuine Must Bear Signature ie iTTtE B IVER PILLS. REFUSE SUBSTITUTE!. HOWARD E. BURTON, Specimen ver. iSc: ,r'.-- . Vm.st."0 i.oid. Si:rcr. Irfwal.ll: Uo.d. "JJ. i.n l for Z nc or tl. MeilinenT.Inwa aiid full Prt.wllataent.onenpiioT tlnn m.ir.,1 an.l I mv r work .,! Vllle. Colo. aUfer.no,. Oar wdm SSSmHSL I |