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Show - THE. PROVO PROFESSIONAL tBC. CARDS I, D.D. Hovti 1 ATTORNBY-AT-LA- J Watcher and-Jewilry- D.r.;D. C BUck, "Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College Office at Probert livery barn Bell I9e Red Fboe ni,iae , Moving Pictures and Illustrated Songs: of i Quality BKLLMONB 73&LK Saturday Matioee 2 Jo 5 f. m. Entire trhaage of Prcfi-B- e every Monday and Thursday T.T.DAVIES. , Architect Craftsman and Bungalow Houaaa a ; Specialty. ' OFFICE: 281 South Firat East . - Admission, lOc UTAH PRQVO 6 Provo Foundry t o fcfchlniM tt e r lEiro Tr r. v-- - i a - m: ah, Cutioit, Etc . j and the moui : , tains of central and southern Asia ta cludeby far "the highest' moantaiiits- -" of the world the proposltioo an-- T. at the pounced beginning of this aiv title is sufnciently proved. At th same time the age -- of thes.4oftiet mountains is strlkingiy ln contrast are mountains highest PsrW Etc.) This. Is proved by jOJung IBQuntains the- - fact that, high up upon their -. ' 1 adva-nce- r, -- 'c;Baina.,v-'Wha- t' " - - . one-thi- rd one-fift- h - 1 -- s ? Sell OiKnjMfaiifij US Mliva OfW auMl Efiia and Boiler RepaJrt, Iron ' ' Braae X" - 0".-i- shoulders, - they .., bear - sedimentary rocks, of the latest geological period, hamelyTthev tertiary. Where now we behold, the great mouhtalsystems f. A merica, Europe and Asia, the waters mountialK"r uf m "shallow sea prevailedduring the we vealt tB'.HlghlB4aT middle of the .terltary period. West bf the Mississippi iver dry land was of Canada, surrounding Hudson bar. limited to the narrow axis of the are composed of the oldest rocka of Rocky mountain chain, to aa elevated jtheworWfiuMhowhere - -occupied by the great a height of more than 2.000 or 300 plateau now hasln of ' which Utah Ufe theTenter, feet. The Allegheny mountainY likev '. , elevations along the wise, though younger than,lheHlgli-- . JH and line of the Sierra Nevada mountains lands of Canada, are much older than ., .L bordering the Pacific ocsan.- - Since tha Rocky .mountainsr but they t ar '' that time this vast area has been not half as - high. In Europe thelifted up out of tbe sea, carrying the ScandlnSylan and Ural mountains" am sedimentary .rocks then formed, with very oldj and ljkewise. comparatively sheila to a height qw" nowhere rising more than their, abundant-je- a the height of the "Alps, or of several thousand feet- and lifting of the height of the mountalos the original mountain peaks to a cor' . in' central Asia. respondingly greater height. - the duringearly tertiary . Now the.generallj acxejitei.theorxZIII-.- . the stamps are fedforward - the summit of the period,Alps was concerning the earth's hiBtory is that, ' cut oft, moistened and rolled upon the 1 1 a molten globe. but an Insignificant Island, rising out it was originally passing letter. After the envelope of a sea covering all the central re- whTchTwas 16wlrrcooledd8WH,T allow-flap Is moistened and the stamp simgion of the continent. Into this sea ing a crust to form over the surface, ultaneously, attached,tfae letter passes the streams ' brought down vast which has gradually thickened in pro- between a series of rolls under as the.earth has cooled. - Thla : amounts of gravel, sand and mu which were deposited upon the slop- crust la therefore much thicker la stacked.? A counter Tecords ing bottom, and which burled innu- the - later aeolosdcal" periods than It each slSBaP-SP&sseOphhen-velope- , merable sea shells characteristiJc of was in the earlier. As a consequence heck and thus furnishes Electric Punkah. ; that age. Indeed, so abundant were the- - geologists point out that the in-- . i amount spent for postage. the sea shells over certain portions of evltable tendency would be for the Says Moreover, the stamps cannot "be re fere with some of the romance. bottom that extensive deposits of latfyrinkles to be ampler than the.; the Electrical Review and;- WmPI the moved tronMheachln'excett-Jtf- l more or ..less ; pure limestone were earlier ones;" for In the earlier geothe one to whom the key is entrusted. Electriciin (New Vorkl : formed from them. But now these logical ages, whefi the ctustTnis tjora "The punkah Is considered fndls- - stratified rocks," with the included parallvely TthlnICcouldT" nol iustain . TKSTBwireftor" do Wer"bjeln' " ffflF istPetfljr-H&leetrt- t an " elevation m eTl8Tfe"f6un is involved in the operation of the a means of securing a draft of air and the Alpine chain 10,000 feet or more would be possible "when It had thick- -' ifonv disturbinghfr above the sea. : r:,. ; ene3P7tn,ater-ige8.-T- 7 . machiheeicepl tefelRIThg"flhe iiriieeplngnmseets The native servant continU' 1 tetters, la hunches. Tbe motor isat- - sleeper. JEae. ex ten tajvhlch stratajftf ylater? ally jerks the rope' connecied wltF a occurrence of these shells in the times have been folded up .and piled swinging curtain which hangs from rocks on high Alpine elevations were upon each other la almost Incredible. the eeilinav Frequently, the native taken as evidence of the flood, and Prof. Clay pole measured the strata in doias;; atiA ihei sleeper-- is then-di- s ToIlalreZkjtewro turbed. the evidence, except to deny its ingdon, Juniata and ferry counties, 7 has driven Au punkah electrically MiiWI J I n Jfc """liiMW 1riM fruth.: JHe therefore resorted to the IhrPennsyfraniaTand f fouhdhattSS been invented, and although this Is suKgestibh that the shells . found "at where they.were originally spread out.; a eoL the first-o- f Its kind, it "is said to these high elevations had been v dh the ocean give satisfaction because it substitutes - W- -t of 100 miles they had been wftBsjet and there pilgrims by carelessly for thepecullarjerk Which 4s givett-b- y thrown away. TJut Voilaire 'was hp and. folded and crushed together, un the native, and In which the previously geologist, of'he would have disproved til they were compressed within 65 . devised mechanically driven punkahs the of .the flood by. a better miles. Prof. Helntjof ZuHch estlmatea rrfrr theory were lacking a similar mechanical argument, fer these shells are found that the folding up of the Alps result- r-- movement. The satisfactory service about 71 elementsef great thick- ed In the compression-o- f which the punkah gives nesses of rock, entirely.beyond the ca miles ; that is, Alps were.flat- - -Is due to a turn of the fan that the of so temporary a submersion tened out agalnras 'yoti would fatten -pacity native effects by jerking the rop at as the deluge is reported to have been. out the wrinkles In cloth, two points, v each turn. In order to obtain a flick Rdcka of similar age, with their in- on the opposite sides of the Alps of the curtain similar to that given cluded recent forms of oceanic life, would be 74 miles farther away from , to the hand worked fans, the Inventors are found upon the flanks of the Cau- - each other than they are powv Inf. ; - ' of the new electrically driven punkah J0surwmntalns . at an equal height In the. Alps, and indeed haveeTisedtndngeiiioualfiMlj TnThrAppalachlaa inauntalnflUlieUt ' mecbaulsm. moTihUiasaLjitii-elfiYatle- of 13,ooo t perficlal Bedlnaentary trta have besa A horlsoftta.1 spindle is made to :. folded over, s6tfiirwhriiowthe orH,t)00eet; revolve by an electric motor, and tlic As Andfo. the Rocky mountains, ( top was formerly the bottom, against this spindle there is pressed, ... by means of a spring, a - Mailing Machine. piece attached to the tached by a flexible lamp cord to an fan. The' motion of the spindle makes ' ordinary electric lighting socket, and the attachment move over as far as V By GEORGE FREDERICK VVRieHT, A. M.f LL &. to start the machine it is only neces the length oJLtts surfaceand the imA.i'ithnr hfTh Tre An of North America .""Man and the Glacial Period." Etc.) sary to turn the switch. A M horse- petus carries the attachment and the V " 4,1 x (Copyright, by Joseph B, Bowles.) power motor will do the work, so tbatfpunkah a considerable distance from the spindle. As soon as the lath the charge for current Is negligible? The comparatively recent age 6 our southern Atlantic states aha &W . shaped attacnmenteoniea back toHt4 the highest, mountains is most con- portions of New England arb striking ' BY Rill Fn HFiRT BRAIN. revolving spindle in the return swing clusively shown by the simple act illustrations of this effect. In Euan extra impetus Is suddenly" Imported that they-h- a vg resisted the vigorous rope: the XJral mountains are another... " 7 w;tagilf Remarkable Interchanae oVital Fore itathje JUuEtritlfiu. wbiclLnQwconsiat.cf'. a denuding, Between Them, Says Frederic. gives the requisite flick." at work to tear them down; moderate elevation of old rocks rls- - . 1 (hat is, the fact that they exist at all Ing huV f .000' or 2,600 feet above the Campbell, Sc.D. ' F THE ELECTRIC e geiitlyT sloplngj.plalns-o- f sedimentar- y- -hows 4bat theyjare There Is a remarkable Interchange which moment a wrinkle of land, rises out rock stretch long distance- s-: 0 vital force between, the brain and Words and Sentence Changed by I bf the water the winds and rains and. both into Europe and Into Asia. the heart. Neither organ can work New Mechanicajr Device, Used the mountalnt fro"stbegitt4tt without the stimulation of the other. to pieces fetid carrying it back Into of the world have been formed by theBoth Dayand Night. JftheJbiearl!a action become weak. JtteBeaTieJilghMjtllses: thoiore glow elevation of vast continental blood is hot sent to the brain in suffVarious kind of signs have been in- I active become all these agehcieil, The' areas and the subsequent erosion of icient volume to stimulate It, and unvented to attrct attention of the pass- flanks of the slowly rising mass are their sides and softer portions, there consciousness follows; laying the suf- ing publicrmectrlc1Iash signs that soon plowed into gorges and ravines Is another, class of great Interest dl--" ferer on the back makes it easier for by the torrents of water which flow rectlf connected with volcanic forces." the blood tcFflow . to.thellSraln, con-rapidly: downthem, while the rocks Vesuvius and Mount Etna are familiar sciousness returns and the faint is above are crackedby the alternate examples id the "old world of mounCMrigtAt Si Board over On the other hand, the heart itaotion of the heat of the sun's rays tain heights which have been formed self Teceivesstimulus from the brain, and the cold of the rarefied atmos- - by the successive and which Is the great nervous dynamo of phere at great heights, so that a vast , eruption of lava and . volcanic ashes-i- talus-of the entire system,-ans cone about the.penlng-sends Its powrocky erful energyhroughnlieBplnirc5fd to" all the precipices, while glaciers In (In. the case of Etna to STTielght of all Jhe organs. Sudden accident often slow but majestic movements pick nearly 10,000 feet), w hile in North so shocks the nervous system that the we volcanic America have to extinct down and the debris it carry up " brain Is unable to. send the .necessary lower levels at the same time grind- cones, formed in k similar manner, in iBta"cr4",?ooL;feer"iff netgfitT stimulus, and then the heart's actio; Ing a considerable portion o Is Impaired or falls entirely; death foj powder, so that it can be esally car- Mount Rainier (14,400)Mount and varltfus peaks ect (17,784) ried off by the floods resulting from - : In South Americari rising to a still the meltiBg of the Ice. producedU4y purely -- mental au9(es, Mount Ararat and utu us suuuen uaa news, ingnu or Calculations as to the rapidity with greater height. whatever stirs up anger or other exwhich these denuding agencies are at several other peaks in that vicinity citement. The sudden exposue of work In 'all high mountains would are similar "volcanic confs, rising to a guilt has often so paralyzed thef brain show some startling results. At tha height of 17,000 feet. Fujiyama, la ,ai tne fleart has Japan, Is another, rising In boauttfrt- rate atsthT tw from it the necessary stimulus and has work in the Alps they will ;lose from conelike proportions to an elevation Cam Oisci and ceased its action; .this means death. 10;000 4012,000 feet Of their neight in otJ2,000 feet from a region that fa A calm mind and a at"" L0O0.Q0O-ttotherjrolcanlc . . rs, and. dotted overwlth-nanrsmaTTef of But -- Z ioWwhaiTlweir caoporUona. jirejBfe:cieniiric j)asJaJ3tia healthy such propprtions as we have in the most impressive of all to the sden-- " prain anq a sieaay neart. title Imagination are Ithose towering , (Copyright, 1809, by Joseph Bf Bowles.) Det;i Hingtd Sections' J. Allegheny-- mountains or Jn the " ew EngIand.vohegreat- - volcanic, cones like Tenerlffe and" nat le.v,U eaP01 Leaves. while : Mauna manyLoa, which, masses or rising 01 er mountains paTatt, Electric. Flash Sifln. central -et An ingenious teapot is described In of the western AmerlcaTtnousanrTeptDOve-tneTand ' In Asia Popular Mechanics. A strkiner occu- will spell out a name or a short sen- would resist : these r: for sea; have their base at ai. epth agencies of Its upper pies and In tence have proven to.be the best sort a much ou of the the Ibw, ocea, reJpart, bottqm and will period, longer this . Is placed the tea Tieaves. The of street advertising,, says Popular" main in lofty heights long after such e pot is thea Bet'in vertical nosition and Mechanics.--Thes- e signs have The "World's Various Creeds.- - nurrnw ran bps as the Alns an3 the ' ' - All tb Kiplrag;-stort- es "of of ABgle4B3laa Htrtur neeJ do Information regarding the nature and uses of the punkah.' which plays ELECTRIC. MAILING MACHINE. so large a part in all narratives of the land of d&ya -- and hreathls.s Labor Saving Dewlc,.Tfot Will Stamp. nights. The substitution of electrle - Many Letters in a Short Space power for sleepy HWdu servants in, itspropulsion- - will probably conduce to of Time. greater comfort, though it may inter- device A labor and time- - saving .walchdtadtnavjd&HippMc pegs houses, in handling the outgoing enmai)is the electrically driven, counter. and . velope sealer, stamper The machine will readily perform" its various operations on 150 letters per speeded up to minuter ndnnay-b- e turn out considerably more when re ., i quired. etters In bunches are held Against an automatic feed which per mits only one envelope at a time to pass its flap oiietalmetal.disk- - which. rfiVQlieaJnsatert ,3s J.he.:,envelope faajother r" FROM SEAS ,, - . By GEORGE FREDERICK WRIGHT, Ar LI, Author of "Ths ics Afl of North America," f Man and tha Glacial : ".' (Copyright, by joecph B. Bowlei.) jj. - Readers of Beck. MOUNTAINS sLIFTED ELECTRIC PUNKAH, OR FAN Considered Indispensable Vn. Torrid ! Climate as Means of 8ectjr- ,; Ing Draft of Air. '.: i i Fruit andjroduoe. W rovo'CitjyUtah. f AN C.F. Dicker aCo Ifcs. 1,2 and 8,'Parrer Block,' ". IE. I HERALD i . -- slt B Woot Center, ProvoUtnH n i " - - -- OAL! GOAL! - : Castle Gatef:Clearc -- ( t waeBajiM4-ii:aAi.-h.jFaFa&g9-th- . it now while yea orb. "Get We have pleiity7a-ilpfae- l7 , I car-rie- Smoot & Spaf ford bottonT-'aT.olBtan- d Way . hand-worke- e . i Via : " - many-case- All " -- tbe Way. s . fc-- . "u comfort all the way when you travel s east; Don't buy a ticket via a broken route Means Cofiireci agent, J3THEJ)VER JfAND ROUTE as far as it i I ..- s- 4 1 MOUNTlpfORNDOWf MIGHTY lath-shape- d - Tetthe -- leather-covere- - goes?' It means saving of time in avoidance of changing cars, ' broken coMectionsretCrsi "You'B Know When You Go.H Ask any Short Line Agent for rates and particulars. agencies-Mch.aryery-whe- re yotmgi--For:th- " . act-Up- o J - 1 $100ide7$100 d d dehfl81ect-HibBt4wllBg--H J1PO- - - Popo-catape- rtowsr-The-same- The onlj inagacine of national importance pabliehed is the bter-- f zmonntain -- west,' (CJtah) will issue a special edition in Angost which be kao wn This number will Special, jffiH r "otherm 1 -- no-tea- gw 60,000 and will advertise Utah from coast to coast and from the Great Lakes toJhe QnlCEwyC - -win be tytveredr- - reFfe v -- -- F .. Iear-eois- cte sTrrrs ' -- fhe-wsrs- s ex y. moun-ta.lnsj- Q -- .... ... . .. .... ' ' - - - for that Design Suitable I - , tl -ff ohe-ha- - n . 1 - , lf the-on- rf Any person sending one dollar for earff 'jralriptldnmayJ compete. Artiaf ioT abifltty is nofrelySI not do you think wou Id "be a suitable design . drawings or cute. for a Uta magazine, published jof your answer " with your subscription and if tout idea is accepted we willMr . f : UhtndJii xAn'!. 'I hr-nn- JiJlSMte4wiybte&WhB the Infusion is thoLght to be sufficient, Herewitn is II Mini Hn f n,1 a ma chine that may be. constructed with any number of changes In spelling-ouof words amrnsed as a' sign for both . day and nlghir,r nlKDt. t Thejeehan isrn- - "J7 Is- - run-h- yr amall I evidence up- nlficahce; 3Thewncipal -on which Prof Russell relies to prove the very recent elevation of Mount Saint Ellas is that its flanks show so-- little of w slgaof .: erosion.-The- streams - 0 I tianlty has about 47f, 000,000- - followers.'- With the Orlentatja-eedranking next ihv the foll0wlngri3!?rJeri Confucianism s . GetogetheriiilBoolJtali ,. 47,d"Bud.lfilsm, electric, motor. Cams are fitted to a to eat: Into 000,000. "The Christian total Jnclude9 ltjha velscarcely : begun the pot. is again lighted, this, action shaft in the lower-pa- rt of the sign, its sides, as they hare rdone upon mosj 231,000,000.Roman Catholics. 143,000--00separating the tea Jfrom the tea. leaves! and these cams operate levers which other . mountains-o- f that height .. Protestants, and 95,00,000 Ortho in ka Chepictuffegipa-JmUtett.uV-toQUU!- :: doxGr.ee wi are carried pnJThe. levers to. the frdnL- tain-- ' Buiiuings.7 to. the due not mostly scenery e out Probably of every 10,0,00- While nnft set of lerera. ..carrying and are. huiidlngs-etandl- r r irinalt-parta-othe-Abwuthe-Cat; doors, areolngTorf araatf hinged a feature of their youth; world and built j by modern consequently other set are returning, thus changing In ' the bid - age, mountains become said the judicious friend. "What 600 years hence. We .WE be;BtandIn the letters stenciled on the hinged subdued an around the forlorn little farm, 00 not jKnowjijQw- - fo'Dttt stones looking tfoiiTMi "imakeraifiTapiaring:aii4 hose much of their ruggedness, con "ever prompted a city man like you . rd i sappeaTtor"actlOTr-tof - harder to try farming?'- and i consequejntiy the hulldlnw v. slsting "tnerely to attract attention. . . K which have In moderate raise nbwadajA "Because," answered' the city man, height rock; feaiiy mere tempo' erosion - more wanted to get next to resisted successfully rary structurtgi an(j wiu be in rulM dolefully, that estimate tomlpetent engineers ' -- when the ancient buildings-- f which than other portions, and Srhlch are nature's .nearL H Greece (fcereTs t,000,000hbrse-power- : - "?ou have," commented - the Jumere buried bow r than7half "fbullt of from perhaps; thousands be developed easily years could ago, areJB this country. - This would in the debris that accumulated about dicious frlendr "and It ia a very ulaio. food condition as they ;aa mrm uuw. Piedmont region of lease, with rou of heart failure save; annually 225.000,000 tons ol ooai their., basetw The 1 Address: . - .' , " - - - f - ;C0Vm jDES!GNaC0rJTEST, . -- - the-aicie- nts at h -- TnE---.wESTEnfi:fndTixn- - ft. and-Egyp- iy SALT L, A ICE C I T V- -7 -- . -- of.-bos- ses - ' ancestor-- , worship, 256,000,000; Hinduism.- - 190,000,000; Mohammedan- - - and "eTgiiioilt-muulJlifcfaffeBt- ' i . . We make the further JoUowupffewiUi yoariiuhiranptfon 'wA-- . us the names of : three of your friends and we will send each sA v:them absolately-ire- a nf charge a wpy otihe Uiah nambar oi The Western Montaly. ' i...',m .11 e- tif pofiifea the lower part la filled Jalmost to the helgbt,:o tbfi.bottom iahe strainer. Theor irthen tlppej backward onto He back and in thlA horizontal position- the water. floodfs the strainer and b'he-UBgtwi- v water-powe- . -- - |