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Show h t. I fc mUlctrb .. i 3Iaoe. LAZIEST MAN ON i, .. RECORD. .' OUB BOYS AND GIRLS. Hli Manner and Appearance Aroused ONE Cariosity and Comment. The stranger, a Mr. Burr, produced PUBLISHING CD. a quiet sensation by,, arousing every- Published Every Wednesday at UTAH DESERET, By The-MILLAR- Frank J. Cannqn. Delegate to Congress TERRITORIAL OFFICERS. W. West. ....Caleb "Governor.. C. C. Richards. Secretary S. A-- Merrltt Chief Justice. Geo. Barren. Win. II. King. Associate Justices S. W. Smith. ..J. W. Judd. Attorney... Prosecuting D. S. Marshal ..Nat. M. Brlgham. Groo. Land Office.. Bryon Registrar n b- TT n rrt . Pro Receiver Land Office... T. B. Lewis. Commissioner of School s UTAH COMMISSION. . Thatcher. . . . . George City. A. G. Norrel ga tt Lake 8a Lalie City. J. R .Letcher t Lake C ty. Hoyt Sherman Salt Lake City. B. W. Tatlock MILLARD COUNTY DIRECTORY. Joshua Greenwood. Probate Judge.. . (Andreas Peterson. John Styler. Selectmen James Gardner .O. O. UOIDtook. Sheriff .Alma Greenwood. Assessor A. A. Hinckley. Collector ..Thos. C. Calllstar. Clerk and Recorder. Jno. M. Hanson. Attorney ; vWllla,r(U Surveyor 'fjk v 3o?Vh DVnSi Treasurer Sidney Coroner , - i v1?" I - Orvll Thompson. Schools SpL When you have 365 days in a year tc advertise in, it is probable you will be able to drive home all the points about your goods, even if you take one point at a time. The drama is receiving" some body Actor John L. Sullivan's blows. company has been stranded, and Actor Bob Fitzsimmons' company has gone into the hando of a receiver. There are, it is reported, 42,000 Spanish troops in Cuba, who are tc be reinforced by 7,000 more from Spain and Porto Rico, armed with Mause rifles. The insurgent force seems to be mainly composed of newspaper correspondents armed with pencils, kodaks and" like deadly weap- ons. In New York a member - of the police force who was intoxicated waa arrested the other day and fined!. ' provided he a Tammany have bden Time works in this sad "Under the old regime, bought his liquor at man's dive, he would eulogized and promoted. some wondrous changes old world. . He came to the body's curiosity. Arab servant, an hotel attended by of Engwords who spoke only three had lish. The newcomer ample means, ease. He his loved evidently, and in the hotel and had no acquaintances He drove about considmade none. erably and lolled in the reading-roo- chair or in the vestibule in an easy He said very carried by his servant. occasmoked his in ate room, little, sionally in public, the servant always wants. attending and attentive to his He seldom used his legs, and never used his arms at all, carrying them both in a sling. This was the point over which the fancy of the observers exercised itself. They couldn't understand it. Nobody, of course, liked to speak about it to the man himself, and the servant might as well nave oeen aumD, as he spoke only Arabic. There was never a more completely mystified set. The man was burned brown, perhaps by oriental suns; he was well and carefully dressed, was never in any hurry.nevor surprised, never irritated, at but always comfortably as and placid peace with all the world, as still waters that run deep. Everybody was certain that there was something beyond this some romance or notable intrigue or some mystery more subtile than either; perhaps a crime of a rare Eastern order, tin which love and sharp blades and poison took part It was beyond all question that he had not come out of the affair as he had entered, as both arms in a sling bore witness. Some held to the notion that he had been hanged and revivified, arriving at this conclusion by observing his habit of always resting his head on the back of his chair; some suggested Spanish witchcraft, others India hypnotism, but the vast majority could not agree on anything in particular, and consequently drifted in their opinions from time to time. Colonel O , well known everywhere, entered the hotel one day, nodded to the stranger, sat down him, and conversed quietly for an hour in French. Nearly everybody, of course, knows French, but it so happened that nobody near by could catch a word of the conversation, because the two talked scarcely above a whisper. The stranger paid his account and left next day, and in the evening when Colonel O called again and Mr. asked for Burr he seemed not in the least surprised at his friend's dism self-pose- d, .bo-si- de The proposition of a New York doctor that epilepsy may be cured by instituting some other disease is paralleled by the experiments of Professor Wagner of Vienna with Koch's tuberculine for the cure of melancholy. By inducing a high fever, appearance. cases of insanity, he avers, have beeiu Pardon me, colonel, but he's a cured. permanently lingular man," somebody remarked. Rather," replied the colonel. A France protests that her, embargo great traveler, I presume?" on American) cattle is ordered simply No; he comes over from England as a sanitary precaution against epi- once a year. " Know him along while?" zootics, and that it was put in effect All my life." with the utmost reluctance. SwitzerHe's had quite an adventurous caland was so kf raid of Texas fever that she had threatened to keep out all reer?" 'I shouldn't think so." cattle from France and this forced the hand of the latter. Well, he certainly produced a senj sation here." The official utterances of the GerWhy, pray?" Oh, I mean he interested us all?" man war minister are unusually paciThat's the case everywhere." fic this year, but' the fact remains But he hardly ever spoke." "Indeed! tiiat more than 3000 workmen are That's his way." kept engaged night and day in mak"We all concluded that there must and ammunition. other ing cartridges " Forts along both the eastern and hftve been a curious accident He never had a mishap in his life." western boundaries have been newly But the arms, colonel?" quipped, and, while the empire is Oh, I forgot. I am so used to seeof talking peace, only the button need be touched to bring about a trans- ing him I forgot how the thing im, formation for war.! presses others." "What thing?" I mean the way ho carries his There is something approaching a general belief that the gout is asso- arms." That's the very point, colonel." ciated with wealth and 'aristocracy1. Oh, I see! Why, my friend aim If this conviction were true, it would establish the position of Great Britain ply carries his arms in a sling because he's too lazy to carry them in in the line of high breeding and Dr. Savory, an English any other way." physician, asserts; that there is. a flatFinding: Out Who Were Poor Pay. tering prospect that nearly the enA German paper says that one of tire population of England will sooner or later have the gout in some shape, its contemporaries recently published not more than A the following advertisement: escaping. young lady of enormous wealth, who The total number of immigrants ar- is prepared to pay off all the debts oi riving in this country during the her intended husband .desires to form seven months ending February 1, the acquaintance of a respectable 1895, was 113,375, being a decrease young gentleman, with a view to matof forty per cent from the number ar- rimony. Each reply to be; accompariving during the corresponding seven nied by a photo of the sender, and admonths a year ago. An unpleasant dressed to J. P., at the office of this feature of the record is that the fall- paper." The r delicate hand which ing off" is greatest in .the western drew up the above lines and thereby countries of Europe, from which coine secured a very large number of offers the more desirable immigrants, while belonged to no less a person than' from Russia and Hungary the emigra Herr Itzig Schlaucheles, who had tion to America has increased. t lately opened a clothing establishment Jn town. By means of the photos The offer of the king of Sweden! to sent in he was enabled to ascertain settle the political difficulties in Nor- which of his would be customers were of leaving their" debts way by abdicating and sending hia in the habit New York Tribune.l son Oscar to be crowned king of that unpaid.country, is not likely to be accepted. One Way to Get Rerenge. The Norwegians always were an obstiI "If were only a judge !'exclaimea nate people;, as Charles XIL r foUnd to bis eorrqjw. Moreover, they have the young man, as he picked himself recently been cherishing a liking for up at the foot of the front door stena. a republican form .of government. and looked up at the closing door, ' JTor the stdrthing to resolve on hav- clenching his fists and gritting a "And what ing president of their own choosing his teeth ferociously. rather than? a king the Swedish ruler would you ' do if you were one?" passer-bmight send j them, would not greatly asked a to sympathetic him brush off the world ha3 been that thei of stopping help surprise "Fine that confounded old late observing affairs among the dust. fellow $50 for contempt of court!" the "Norsemen. I young man ansvered, viciously. And the chrysantheWhile the German war minister is then he straightened ' mum in his buttonhole and sadly S,0OO cfficiallj proclaiming peace ' walked Somerville Journal. away. workmen are busy night and day making cartridges and other The Fat of the Hon." forte havo been newly o.t the soiree, equipped on both, eastern and western Mr. Collegeboy, passing through a boundaries of 'the jempire. Peace lonely and deserted corridor Hello! must be had at any price. What are you doing here, sir? I ran to save myself from the crowds General Booth eays the people of here that keep lionizing me. .New York are 4goin down at fearVenerable Figure I am the The ful speed." And yet they are paying man in whose honor the " enormous sums for the express pur- distinguished is affair given. I'm here because I '5se of keeping ice ana mua on ion couldn't get anybody to tabc U.' i plu-toerao- y. ; one-ten- th . ; l -- . , y, j S . " ammu-nition,whi- l4 ' ? j - Kecord. -- Chicago i HOUR AND ITS THOUS ANDS OF COUSINS. X: They Came Pouring In the WlndowtO jvUIt Nellie Were I the Sun Engrat- i Composition-- . In g on Choeolate Candy. ? Effgr-l-jrohnn- y' 1 sixty v. 31 lnntes Make an Hour. "Sixty seconds make a minute sixty, ininutes make an hour," sung brown-haire- d Nellie, on the afternoon of the very last day of the year, as. she rocked to'and fro in her smalr rocking' chair a 'gift from Santaf Clans, beating her breast with her little fist, as though to beat the lesson so firmly in that it never could get out again by any chance (I think it would have been far more sensible to have pounded on her head for that purpose) "sixty seconds make a minute, sixty minut es make an hour," over and over again, until the childish voice grew, fainter and fainter, and the last "hour" never got farther than "ou." Then Nellie ceased rocking, and her head sunk back against the pretty scarlet and green "tidy" which she' had found on her Christmas tree, and the' curls fell over n the eyes, and she began to think of nothing at all. And while she was quietly thinking of nothing at all she suddenly heard, to her great amazement, a tiny voice as clear and sweet as the tinkling of the silver bell that hung from the necklace ot her favorite cat repeat the words: "Sixty minutes make an hour;" and peeping through the cloud of. hair that veiled her eyes, she saw a wee figure standing before her, dressed in white, with a daisy in its bosom and a snowdrop clinging to its pale, golf en j dark-brow- n dark-brow- "Snow-and-Cream- ," curls. It had a round, cheery, baby face, with a dimple in one rosy cheek and another in the rosy chin, and its eyes were as blue as the eyes of a kitten when it is only a few weeks old. ' Dancing in at a hole in one of the window panes, and thence to the floor, on a long, slanting sunbeam, came other diminutive figures, followed by still smaller ones, and the smaller ones followed again by comical mites no higher than Nellie's new silver thimble. "Oh, you darlings!" cried Nellie, clapping her hands; "How glad I am to see youS Are you fairies?" "No, dear," replied the baby-face- d one, with a bright smile. "We are hours, minutes and seconds, and, we belong to the year that is almost gone. I do not suppose you can remember the minutes and seconds, your acquaintance with them was so very slight. They stay such a short time that no one can become well acquainted with them, sixty minutes and 3600 seconds coming and going during the visit of one hour, but I am sure you can remember me and my sisters and cousins that is, some of us. It would be impossible for you to remember us all, of course." "Why, how many sisters and cousins have you, you cunning tot?" asked Nellie. "Twenty-thre- e sisters and 8736 cousins," answered the tot. "Good gracious!" and "My stars!" exclaimed Nellie. "What an awful a very awful large family! I never heard of such a thing. It stands to reason" Nellie borrowed this expression from her papa "that I couldn't remember such a young memory as I have only six going on 6even the half or quarter of so many hundreds and thousands, even if I'd met them all, which I do not believe I have." "That's just what I was about to say," said the hour, shaking its light curls softly. "We do not expect you to remember very many of us, and you're right in thinking you have not known us alL- In fact, but half of our number have been introduced to y6u. The other half glided silently by while you were sleeping, and some of us' were so much alike that you couldn't tell us apart; and a few erf our relations have yet to visit you that is if you stay up long enough to receive them. The last will fly away as t he clock strikes twelve and the . eve." "And I saw you take it down the next morning, filled almost to bursting with good things to eat," said another, with a face like a doll's plum pudding and little black currants for eyes." "And I " But at that moment Nellie's arithmetic fell from her lap with a bang, and aOay fled the seconds and minutes and hours up the long, slanting sunbeam and out at the window. And when Nellie", in a great hurry, leaned out to look after them she saw nothing but the snow, and two street sparrows picking up crumbs and chattering noisily to each other. Detroit Free Press. Engraving on Eggs. Here is an experiment pretty and Write upon the eggshell simple. with wax or varnish, or simply with tallow, and then immerse the egg in some weak acid, such, for example, as vinegar, dilute hydrochloric acid, or etching liquor. Wherever the varnish or wax has not protected the shell, the lime of the latter is decomposed and dissolved in the acid, and ters that have sufficient relief. Were I the San. I'd always shine on holidays, Were I the sun: On sleepy heads I'd never craze, ar ar sky-blu- . For Humanity's Sake, After Tears of Slavery, He Tells How He Was Set Free. Nerve-Creepi- ng . Caldwell. N. J., March 18, 1895. (Special.) Since one of our prominent citi-Eesuffered so terribly from tobacco ns tremens, has made known his frightful experience in behalf of humanity, the ladies here ate making tobacco-usin- g enhusbands' lives miserable with their treaties to at once quit tobacco. The written statement of S. J. Gould la d attention: When attracting he said; 'tl cominterviewed menced using tobacco at thirteen; I am now forty-ninso, for thirty-si- x years I chewed, smoked, snuffed and rubbed snuff. In the morning I chewed; before I put my on, and for a long time ounces of chewing and eight I used twopants ounces of smoking a day. Sometimes I had a chew in both cheeks and a 'pipe In my mouth at once. Ten years ago I quit drinking whisky. I tried, to. stop tobacco time and again, but could not. My nerves craved nicotine and I fed them till my skin turned, a tobacco brown, cold, sticky perspiration oozed from my skin, and trickled down my back at the least exertion or excitement. My nerve vigor and my life were being slowly sapped. I made up my mind that I had to quit tobacco or die. On October i I for three days I suffered stopped, and Of the tortures the damned. On the third day I got so bad that my partner accused me of being drunk. I said, 'No I have quit tobacco. 'For God's sake, man,' he said, offering me his tobacco box, 'take a chew; you will go wild,' and I was wild. Tobacco was forced Into me and I was taken home dazed. I saw double and my memory was beyond control, but still knew how to chew and smoke, which I did all day until towards night, when my system got tobacco-soake- d again. The next I morning I looked and felt as though had been through a long spell of sickness. I gave up in despair, as I thought that I could not cure myself. Now, for suffering humanity, I'll tell what saved my life. Providence evidently answered my good wife's prayers and brought to her attention in our paper an article which read: 'Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour Life Away!' "What a sermon and warning in these words! Just what I was doing. It told about a guaranteed cure for the tobacco I sent to Drughabit, called gist Hasler for a box. Without a grain of faith I spit out my tobacco cud, and put into my mouth a little tablet upon which was stamped I know it sounds like a lie when I tell you that I took eight tablets the first day, seven the next, five the third day, and all the feeling, restlessness and mental depression was gone. It was too good to be true. It seemed like a dream. That was a month ago. I used one box. It cost me $1, and it is worth a thousand. I gained ten pounds in weight and lost all desire for tobacco from the first day. I sleep and eat well, and I have been benefited in more ways than I can tell. No, the cure was no exception in iriy case. I know of ten people right here in Caldwell who have bought from Hasler, and they have been cured. Now that I realize what has done for me and others, I know why it Is that the makers of this wonderful remedy, the Sterling Remedy Company, of New York and Chicagk .say: 'We don't claim to cure every case. That's Fraud's talk, a lie; but we do guarantee three boxes to cure the tobacco habit, and in case of failure we are perfectly willing to refund money.' I would not give a public indorsement If I were not certain of its reliability. I know it is backed by men worth a milhas been a God-sen- d lion. to me, and I firmly believe It will cure if faithfully any case of tobacco-usin- g tried, and there are thousands of tobacco slaves who ought to know how easy It is to get free. There's happiness In for the prematurely old men, who think as I did that they are old and worn out, when tobacco is the thing that destroys their vitality and manhood." The public should be warned, however, the purchase of any of the many against Imitations on the market, as the success has brought forth a host of of counterfeiters and imitators. The is sold under a genuine guarantee to cure, by all druggists, and every tablet has the word plainly stamped thereon, and you run no physical or financial risk in purchasing the genuine article. ; wide-sprea- to-nig- ht e; I , ' contribution to; the prevailing sion. Ambitious revenue officers, aided and abetted by zealous reporters.! they take into their confidence, break out at regular intervals with stories of their prowess in raiding-illici- t distilleries and capturing bloodthirsty revenue outlaws. Many aW their hairbreadth escapes, and thrill- ing are the battles in which they have--:' engaged. These stories of moonshiners and moonshining are the response to a. strong (public demand, the appetite for the romantic being especially lively in connection with a state whose people are considered to have such?, marked personal characteristics asi Kentuckians. But they must be taken with'a large amount of salt. We certainly have very few moonshiners in Kentucky, and they are not numerous or bloodthirsty anywhere. Usually they are poor people who lack' industry or pluck enough to succeed in,, farming or other vocations. Such men will not fight if they can help it, and their operations are generally on the smallest sort of a scale. are equally insignificant, and. out of all proportion to the space they take up in the newspapers. impress- - j j ' , , Their-number- Just s Received! if Pure Wines, Whiskies ant No-To-B- ac. Brandies AT THE No-To-B- ac. nerVe-creepi- ng No-To-B- OCCIDENTAL SALOON ALSO PURE ALCOHOL. W. A Keysor, Proprietor, Gr A. Gardner, WATCHMAKEE, No-To-B- ac No-To-B- ac No-To-B- ac UTAH. DESERET, ac NEPHI, UTAH. Watches and jewelry promptly re paired. Mail orders solicited. K. E. L. COLLIER, C.E. Engineering in all its Branches. Land and Irrigation Work a Specialty Engineer for Central Land and Irripatlos Land and irrigation Cv., Co., Clear Fillmore Land i r d Irrigation Co. and Wbiw Mountain Lana and Irrigation Co. Office: Court House, Fillmore, Utah. THE DESERET DAIRY CO. No-To-B- ac HAS FOR SALE No-To-B- .ac FULL CREAM CHEESE. Nb-To-B- ac ? . hot water, a teaspoonful of vanilla and a pincu of salt After it begins to boil allow it to be on the fire for ten minutes only. Stir constantly. The candy should become ofthe consistency of thickened molasses. Butter some tins and pour the candy in, and stir back and forth with a silver knife until it begins to sugar. Then and put away make off into squares to cool, Stewart and the Ham. Stewart's mother was making sandwiches of deviled ham. The little fellow came along and, seeing tht can with the picture of the imp on it, regarded it earnestly for. a while nd then saidr "Mamma, what is thai stuff?' "This? O, this is deviled ham." He looked seriously at the voice inmixture and j in an awed ' have they quired: "Why, mother, killed him?" Boston Congregational-is- t v::; IV, H . v ,.;t i ' i t , -- i " I Thirty-Si- x -- ; s';?0 ! Deperet is noted for the fine quolitj of its Milk, Uutier and CLeeso. GWix o ur products a trial. N. S. BISHOP, SUPT. to-da- . g Financial Worry and Physical Exertion Hot the Greatest Destroyer of Human Life- . ' Frank D,JBobbs, ttg.'tttr ' (Lal U, S. Land Office.) Land and 'Mining- Attorney. .Correspondence solicited. Twenty-threjj years' experience, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. - e BIRD & LOWE, r-- , d, Kentucky Moonshiners Not Nearly Numerous as Is Thought. In an interview the other day th commissioner of internal revenue said that practically every dollar of the tax on Kentucky whisky was collected and. with less expense than any other revenue due the federal government. The commissioner is, of course, correct, but this has not been the popular opinion. The 'moonshiner," say si has taken such a the Courier-Journa- l, prominent part in the literature of the in newspapers, magazines add day books-L-th- at his numbers have been is. mtfch nlagnified as those of that soriy set of scoundrels who attacked the, brave Sir John Falstaff on Gad's Hill. Ambitious dialect writers and a horde of cheap humorists have .added their j (Philadelphia, March 16. The first step toward the emigration of the colored people from the southern states to Liberia was taken y by the departure from this; port for Savannah of the Danish steamer Horsa, under Captain Henry Wiburg. At Savannah the boat will take aboard 200 passengers, who expect to make their homes in the African republic. The International Emigration Society' is back of the movement. sheep' until he fell asleep." "I remember," said Nellie, her face all aglow; "and mamma kissed me as she took l.baby Willie from me, and called me her 'own brave little ; daughter. ." "And I am the hour," said a small, grave body in a gray dress that hadn't even a bow of ribbon, on it with marks of tears on its cheeks, and a red tip to its dot of a nose "that stayed with you when you were being punished for telling "Do not mention it, please," interpleasant-lookinrupted a bright-facee hour, in a robe, with a wreath of the tiniest chrysanthe-mum- s around its head. "What's the use of talking about it? It isn't a! cheerful subject, and I've no doubt Nellie always told the truth after that I heard her sobs of repentance Madge's Fib. and her vows 'never never never "I never told a fib but once. said to do so again, and saw. the smiles little Madge, "and that was yester come back and chase away the clouds, "What? You told a fib?' "Yes. when all was joy and peace once day." teacher asked me what My more." and said dorg." Harper! I spelled, VI d anced with her in the meadow," Young People. ; FEW OP THEM LEFT ONLY j Harconrt to Succeed Feel. London, March 15. The Globe this evening states that the government has conveyed a hint to the opposition that Sir William Vernon Harcourt is to accept the speakership when disposed Sir Arthur Wellesley Peel resigns, providing St his election, isi not opposed; The idea is :NlCholS. said to have been well received by the Chocolate Candy. and if it is adopted it is reopposition, Three cups of granulated sugar, one ported Campbell Bannerman will succup of grated chocolate,, a piece of ceed Sir William as Liberal leader in the butter th0 size of a walnut, a cup of House of Commons. . v"Oh,dear no." said Nellie; ,4I shan't see that one. I go to bed zackly at 8, 'less on 'casions, and then 9; but I do not think this is a 'casion for me. But you who you are yet." haven't told. me "I am the ' hour that was with you the moaning, nearly a year ago, when your baby brother broke the beautiful wax doll Santa Claus had brought you, and you forced back the tears when you saw his rosebud mouth begin to tremble, and, taking him in your arms, told him, 'Baa, baa, black , WAS GOULD INSANE? Bound for Africa. But focus all my morning: rays On busy folks of bustling ways. Were I the sun. I would net melt a sledding: snow. Were I the sun: Nor spoil the ice where skaters go, Nor help those useless weeds to grow, But hurry melons on. you know. Were I the sun. I'd warm the swimming-poo- l just right, Were I the sun. s I would hide my light, On school-da- y The Fourth I'd always give you bright, Nor set so soon on Christmas night. Were I the sun. I would ;not heed such paltry toys, Were I the sun-S- uch work as grown- - up men employs; But I would favor solid joys In short, I'd run the world for boys, Were I the sun! midnight bells ring merrily to welcome the birth of the New Year." par-tic-u-l- the jolly little bell laughed, and Nellie laughed loudest of all. "And I," cried another, tossing its head and trying to pout, "sat by your side when you were sent from the supper table because you were naughty and wouldn't say please." "And I," lisped a roly poly, cunning little thing, "when you said 'please please please,' and grandma gave you a slice of bread and butter, but you couldn't see the butter for the apple jelly." "I remember, I remember," said Nellie. "I wish I had some now." "I was with you, dear one," murmured an hour, with kind, gentle eyes, and low, pitying voice, "when your poor head ached with a terrible pain, and between your moans you made a prayer to the good God for help." "I aam the hour," said a merry, sprite, with holly twinkling, bird-lik- e berries hanging all over it, "that looked on when you played games with your brother just before you hung up your stocking on Christmas the writing or drawing remains in relief. A few precautions must be taken in order to be successful at the first experiment. In the first place, as the eggs that are to be engraved are usually previously blown, so that they may be preserved without alteration, it is necessary before immersing them in the acid to plug" up the aperture in the extremities with a bit of beeswax. As the eggs are very light they must be held at the bottom of the vessel full of acid by means ot a thread fixed to a weight, or wound round the extremity of a glass rod. If the acid is much diluted, the operation, though it takes a little longer, gives better results. Two or three minutes usually suffice to give charac- - par-tic-u-l- the sanjr a graceful elf, standing onarms its and toes, of holding tips its above its ead,; as thdugh it were about to fly, "one summer day the and dande--; day she gathered daisies lions and sang fa sweet and joyous a song in answer to the bird that had nest in the apple tree. In that nest were four baby birds, and they peeped out and twittered when they heard Nellie sing." 'Yes, yes, indeed!" cried Nellie. "And what big mouths they had!" "And I, Nellie, dear," said a queer cap, on the exsprite, with a pointedwas a jolly little treme point of which bell, "fell into the brook with you, one Augusit afternoon, when you were trying to catch a frog. "Kerchunk! How scared the frog folks were when you tumbled in among them!" and the sprite laughed, and j e-a- -i Land Agents & Attorneys. !. Consumption Not Contagious.' Cincinnati, March 18. (Special) The SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. -- resolution to Isolate consumptives at the pest house, came before the tal trustees yesterday. A protesthospifrom Dr. Amick was read. Two hospital doctors persisted that consumptives .be sent to the small-po- x pest house. Mayor Caldwell and another trustee opposed the removal. By unanimous consent the resolution was tabled indefinitely, never to be resurrected. Mayor Caldwell suggested use of Amick treatment at the hospital. Definite action was deferred- - This victory won, Dr. Amick will battle for consumptives everywhere. He Is mailing free, copies of his victory and the Amick consumption records, to physicians and consumptives who write him. HUFF HOTEL, OASIS, UTAH. Contiguous to Ball way Station. fare. Rates reasonable. Good JOHN B. CONK, Whose name should be familiar tc erery, one in this locality that wean ""v" vt openea ror the man ufacture ouwt and repairing of 0S H oots and hoots and OES OES Bills for New York; City. Albany, N. Y., March 15. The bills to reorganize the police department of New York City were agreed upon by the Lexow committee The bills are I IULU drawn so as to take from the reform Shop Just east of the Cash Store. mayor of New York any power of appointment and lodge it with the party MRS M. HUFF leaders by retaining the present heads of the police and doing away 'with any special reorganization committee to bo Is still to the front with seasonablt merchandise at bottom prices, for cask appointed by the mayor. .'!-- . PASIS, UTAB r to-da- y. Moots and ... V !: 1 |