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Show not strange that the steeple amonf the Chimneys has lost the influence ol the old tower that rose above th apple blossoms in a cleaner, sweeter o moo OQOQTryt. o) life. When we discuss the religious aspect of this great question, let these tacts be also remembered. Ini UfMo si For Infants and Children. I The oy i'Ui It was an old ?J llNlRNt7Cirf!frRNl Bears the Lon-Th- Signature of KotHarcotic. aroUO-SAWELPtTQ- Seedf Mx. Senna, In jinust Seeei hirm Srvd. - m flavor. for Conslipa-Tio- Use n, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverishness and Loss Sleep. For Over of Facsimile Signature of Thirty Years new' YORK. THI CENTAUR IOMMNV, NEW YORK CITY. jpr W. L. DOUGLAS 3.50 & 3 SHOES B UNION MADE Custom Bench Work in all $5.00 and $4,00 the High Grade Leathers. Three Soles. IN THE and $2.50 $2.50 Police, BEST WORLD. $2.00 WORKINGMEN'S, $1.75 Boys, for $2.00 ANDSchool $2.50, Dress Wear. and $7.00 SHOES.. AS GOOD AS Send for Catalog giving fall in -IV. I.. Donclas uses Corona Coltskin In I how to order by mall. his $3.50 shoes. Corona Colt is ronrriled sru-tloL. Douglas, Brockton, Mail. W. made. Leather be to the finest Patent ni STAND THE STRAIN! Mountaineer "lyeralls, made by Z. C. M. I. Boot, Shoe and Overall factory, poss-s- s ALL the good q' necessary for the makeup of Over ills to be used In the country, they Mill stand the hardest tests to which such garments are put. a ade in nil sizes for men, boys and girls, by Utah labor, in a factory which is a model of neatness ana cleanliness. When Western people can obtain ths very be.t Overalls made anywhere, at the mod reasonable prices, we think the ' Home Industry proposition is entitled io consideration. W hat think you? Mount dneer Overalls are for sale in most every general store - in the whole west. If you- dealer can't supply jou, write toZ. C. M. L Salt Lake City, Utah. a',1-tl- ts us. London Is a mass of humanity pitch-forketogether by a careless fate. To speak unpalatable truth, there is no city in the world that possesses less of a corporate entity. What percentage of its people record their vote in a county council election? It Is absurdly small. There are thousands on thousands who do not know what parish they live in, nor do they trouble to inquire. As competition grows keener so do working bours lengthen and leisure hours decrease for all classes. To the professional and commercial men has come a new disease brain fag. Society, apparently Inspired by the custom of the times, endeavors to emulate the rush and whirl of a workaday Iuttr-mounta- in sm BUSINESS COLLEGES and (Over 600 SALT LAKE Bookkeeping the students.) most Shorthand the mst ra id Typewriting the most perfect, Telegraphy the most accurate. Penmanship the most S'mple. Each course a profession, quickly acquiree. Positions secured for graduates. Business men look to us for their employes in office .work. Apartments delightful, teaching force S'rong, equipment perfect, cost progress certain. Come and see light, or write for caialog. Silt Lake City, Utah. tho-oug- s coat-of-arm- Heretofore I have been wearing 7.00 shoes. I purchased a pair of IV. L. Douglas 3.AJ shoes, which I have worn every day for four months. They are so satisfactory I do not Intend to return to the more expeniloe shoes WM. G KJiY KNOWLES, Msst. City Solicitor, Phita. Brockton Loads the Kens Shoo Fashions of the World . L. D. S. at well-know- n Jj, Douglas makes and sells more mens $3.50 and $3.00 shops than any other manureason they are facturer in the world. The tlie greatest sellers is, they are made of the best fit hold their leathers, shape, better, wear longer, and have more value than any other shoes. W.L. Douglas guarantees their value by stamping his name and price on the bottom. Look for it take no substitute. Bold by shoe dealers East Color Eyelets used exclusively everywhere. TV. PSE COMBINED (Vibject for four-fifth- s Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful-nes- s and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morphiie norliueraL Aperfecl Remedy (XiSBSfa3MZ) discussion, A Is pagan Lon$m, long before Archil scon Sinclair revived the problem St SL Sepulchres church recently. "Church or char! he said, "are only attended by abo '18 per cent of dons population! means that of th people do not w ship God at all. Many clergym ascribe the decline n Londons churi going to a weakening of religious belief. But there Is no reason to ta ;e so pessimistic a Tiew There are many other causes which affect Sundi y attendance, causes which directly ar se from the growth of our vast city, from the strenuous competition In midern business, from the nerve fag ad brain fag of the workers, and froth alterations In the manners and customs of all classes of j society. The village chtjrch was the center of the village lifeja half century ago; and In many parte of the country It remains in this (respect unchanged. The chapel shared and still shares, its The children are taught position. their religion in thfe Sunday schools by whatever branch oi the Christian creed these establishments are conducted and maintained. They grow up to associate Sunday wiljh the old place of worship, to reverence those who lead and conduct its services. Few, even of the youngest, are absent, for the parents, should they stay at home themselves, like to get the children away for the mornlrg. As In youth, so in the riper middle age. The church and chapel become the meeting ground of the villagers, separated by scattered farms and lonely cottages during the working week. They gather before the doors after service, greeting each other and saluting those above them in station. Should a figure be absent. It is understood that he is ill, and inquiries are made concerning him. The squire and his family regularly attend. They may be modern enouga in their views, careless enough in their religious observances when in London for the season. But on their own land, among their own people, they fill the great pews under the ancestral just as their forebears filled it, for an example, if for nothing else. Are there sports to be held, the clergyman Is on the committee. There are suppers for the bellringers, excursions for (the choir, treats for the Sunday school; there are mothers meetings and clothing clubs. The hold their social gatherings and concerts. Church and chapel still remain the hub of the social wheel In rural England. Are they so in town? The question would be laughable were not the answer a subject for regret to many of Always Bought uh Afcgefable Preparallonfor Assimilating HieFoodandBegula-lin- g the Stomachs and Dowels of Jkape 3PZTJ4Z Kind You Have d Earrings Indicate Nativity. The earrings worn by Italian organof grinding women indicate the part ' Italy the wearers come from. The longer the earrings the farther south the original homes of the women. In the far north the ornaments are quite short. GOT EVEN WITH old town and fly to the country for a breath of fresh aiv that can give stamina and endurance to the body for another week of toil. And thus it Is that Sunday trains pour forth their golfers, that Sunday roads throb with motors by the hundreds and cycles by the thousand. Those who cannot afford such trips do the best they can for their tired bodies by staying In bed until noon. Hew can you get these people Into church? It Is a problem that no bench of bishops can answer. It would almost seem that you must first reform the system under which we live. Yet If we give more leisure through the week, less ardor to commercial and There can never be that reverence and affection for a London church that the country people feel for the gray old house of God perched upon the hill and ringed about with whispering Their elms and melancholy yews. fathers and grandfathers were married there, and now lie buried there under the waving grass of that peaceful acre. In the old pews they sat as children, fretful under the eye of the clerk as tne sermon droned Into tedium; there were they married, and at the ancient were christened. font their first-bor- n The greatest joys and deepest sorrows of their lives are bound up with the village church and its graveyard. And as it is with them, so has it been with their forebears through the generations. But in London we change too quickly. From one parish to another We professional existence, how are we to hold our own as a nation against America or Germany? 'lit with no regret for broken associations. Where were you christened, where married? Almost will some o. the true-brecockneys forget. Where will be your burial? Some well-kep- t, dismal park, where you will lie with thousands of the other forgotten dead, .vho in ten years have none left to lay a wreath upon the marble slab above them, or to stand and think upon their memory. In the village those who knew the woman good man or gentle-heartewhose tombstone rises beside the walk to the church door will speak of them for many years, even pointing out their graves to the children, that they, too, may remember some one who did his duty in the little community in which he dwelt for a while. The clergy of all denominations are working harder in our greatest of cities than ever before. It is not their fault that pews stand empty of a morning. But the parishioners have lost touch with churches and chapels. The great sea of London has swal- d d BLINDNESS AND DEAFNESS CURED AT HOME If you have weak eyes, failing lids, scums over el.ht.granulatea the eyes or sore eyesoi any kind, m rite full decatarrh orofdeafnesM, yuur case and a trial scription treatment will be sent you H. OFFICER & CO., ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS np'e by mail receive prompt i careful attention. Salt Lalt Citj, Utah When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper W. N. U.. Salt Lake No. 36. 1904. This trial treatment is mild and harmless and nuscuied many severe Ir comS. Dr Moore was appointed by two Governors, Chief t ve and Lar burgeon to t lie Misfor the Blind, and was also Prosouri State fessor of the Eve and Far In the American Medical Colbv new painless method. straightened Cross eyes lege Wr te to DR. J. HARVEY M00FJ5, Eye and Eat Institute, Saite&t), OadoLows liidg., bt. .Louis. responded the phy- The sharp had to pay the bill. Several weeks later the sharp was on a train out of the city and the doctor was in the same car, but ha did not recognize his former patient. The sharp was working several of hi3 little tricks with the boards, and he finally induced the doctor to play, who at last was $30 out. Here! shouted the doctor, when he say his roll disappear. You havent given me any show at all. You got that money out of me by a simple twist of the wrist. My dear sir, replied the sharp soothingly, thats no way to look at it. You should consider the years of practice necessary to acquire my skill. The doctor looked the sharp over curiously. Then he smiled faintly aqd blushed as he said: Cant you jjjive' me back $15 of that and call it square? Vhite Robin In Colorado. white robin was seen in one of the parks of Denver recently and captured by a city employe. A wealthy man purchased it for a handsome sum. When captured the bird was not over six weeks old. It was first seen in a spot near a nest wherein the mother bird was a perfectly natural redbreasted robin, and it is supposed that the white creature came from that nest. The little bird could not be made to eat, and it died the other day. It has since been given to a taxidermist, who will mount it, after which it is to be presented to the Colorado state museum. Within the last two years two other white robins have been seen in Colorado, but they eluded capture. So far as is known, these three are the only white robins that have ever been reported. Naturalists are much puzzled to account for them, or explain1 why the peculiarity of color should make its appearance. A A Tramps and Hops Congenial. Oneida, Otsego, Schoharie and Delaware are the four chief hop counties of New York, and when the period of picking is at hand there Is a large influx into these counties of tramps from other places willing to earn an honest dollar or two for a few weeks labor In the fields in advance of the winter season. Precisely what the connection between hops and tramps is in this country, in England, or in Germany, which are the three great countries in the world, is not easily high poles. New Light on a Bible Incident. Guitars, Btriugi and Fittings. THE McKAWNON BROS. IVtJSIC CO. . Oden, Utah 2283 Washington Ave. Fountain, Trafalgar Square. SALT LAKE PHOTO SUPPLY CO. Successor to Warwick Pnoto Supply Ca EXCLUSIVE Photographic Dealers ELSE Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use In time. Sold by druggists. OONSUMP-TIONRif- : PIECES. for catCOPIES (postpaid! SI. 00. Send alogue. Al6o won- - 53 SIIPC dn ret iron, factory, tlerful b&gafps in rimtwO A big sating to you. Write at ouce fur catalogue and prices. Xilando-Uu- s, PISOSCUREFO!t MIL;. ALjL dear sir, 10 . CURES WHERE My sician, with professional dignity, that is not the way, to look at it. You must consider the years of practice necessary to acquire my skill. stated. Whatever the cause may be, in this country, in England, and in Germany it is the tramps who, to a great extent, reinforcing the farmers and the farmers sons and the farmers daughters, pick the hops during the brief and fleeting harvest season among the 5,003 SORES STANDARD Card Sharp Knocked Out Physician with His Own Words. A card sharp swallowed a fish bone and was choking when a physician reached him. In a very short time the doctor removed, the bene and the gambler asked gratefully how much he owed for the service. Fifteen dollars, replied the physician, without the sign of a blush. What! exclaimed the sharp. You werent working a minute. Thats an enormous fee. g FREE OF CHARGE. Klpans Tabnles are the bet dys medicine ever made. A pepii hundred millions of them have been sold In the United btates ip a!y a single year. Constipation, heart burn, sick headache, dizziness, bad breath, sore throat, and every ill nes arising frnn a disordered itomach are relieved or cured by R)pan9 Tabules. One will generally give relief within twenty minutes. The flvecent package is enough for ordinary occasions. All drugghu sell them. DOCTOR. , WRIT. FOR OSTALOSUB IM SOUTH AND MAIN. SALT .LAKE OITY. existence by leaving shattered nerves as a legacy for those who serve it faithfully. Sunday! What, a blessed name it is to London. It is a .day. of rest, but not in its religious significance. To rest from labor Is to leave the smoky t lowed them up. When old tie3 and associations are broken, when no r one knows his neighbor or troubles to inquire, when gold is the supreme desire of our frank civilization, when labor is a feverish Struggle 1o acquire wealth for display. It is ole. next-doo- The Sunday school teacher had just read aloud the thirty-firs- t chapter of Genesis, and proceeded to question tha class about its contents. Tell me about Jacobs departure from the home of Laban, he asked. .Well, he stole Labans underwear," was the startling response. That was the way the little fellow had interpreted the line, "And Jacob stole away unawares to Laban the Syrian. |