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Show At ft 'ZihOUUJ 158. I Valentine lost bis bead In the Claudlan persecution, 279 A. D. Ever The supreme court holds 'that the since then men who have lost their law creating municipal Judgeships Is heads have considered St. Valentine's day a most suitable occasion upon constitutional. which to tender appeala to the ladles The first shipment of wool from responsible for their losses. This seems reasonable. Utah this season went out from last week.' ' Mother Oray- - Sweet Powders for C Ml dree. s Salt Lake and Ogden wifi have Successfully used by Mother Grey, nurse ball teams' this season, It being In the Childrens Horae in New York, cure Bed Btomech, the Intention 1o play four games each Constipation, Fererishneee, Dieordere, move end regulate the Teething week.' Bowels end Destroy W erne. Over 90,000 At ell druggists, 36o. Sample Eleven girls were sent from Salt A. 8. Olmsted, LoRey , N. Y. Address FREE. Lake City last week to take the place In of the striking telephone girls No Convictions Yet. Butte. There are arrests enough of "get Stockton now has an Athletic club, rich quick" promoters of swindling of these presthe club" being formally . opened last schemes; but how many wear Casanovas and ent Cagllostros contest was week when a and serve out tho terms In the stripes pulled off. prison which ought to be their porA local telephone company Is being tion? New York Tribune. organized In Falrvlew which' will InHOWS THIS? stall an exchange there in the ImmeWecffer On Hnrulrl Dollars reward 'for tnj diate future. eate of Catarrh that cannot b cured by Hali't Cura. The Utah Iiouislana Purchase com- Catarrh F. I. CHENEY ft CO., Prop.. Toledo. O. have known F. J. mission, accompanied by several mefa. forWe.thethelastunriarsttned, Chnj 15 vcart and believe him parfactl) bers of the governors staff and ladles, honorable In all buameea transactions and finanri ally able to carry out any obligation made by will start for St. Louis Saturday. tbeir firm. WEST ft TRUAX, Wholesale DrorrlM. Toledo, Very little Bpring wheat has been Ohio; WALD1NG. KINNAN ft MARVIN, Who) ale Dniccuu, Toledo, Ohio. are the awaiting planted, and farmers Hall s Catarih Cur is taken Internally, aetfnf to weather seasonable more of upon the blood and mucoua surfaces of the directly advent vsteou Testimonials sent free. Pno.75opf and of woTk the plantplowing bottle. Sold by all drutcUu. begin diall's Family Fill ate the ing. To Determine Earth's Density. Arbor day was generally observed .Experiments to determine the densthroughout the state. "Governor Wells In and the state officials followed tbelr ity .of the earth will be conducted of a at .Tamarack mine, depth the usual custom by setttng out a number 4,530 feet, by the Geodetic survey. of trees. The density of the earth has only been ' Mrs. David Collins of Monroe last computed by formula based upon the week gave birth to her fifteenth child, law of gravitation. and it Is said friends of the family InTo Cure e Cold In One day. tend notifying President Jloosevelt of Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet. AU : the event dniggiata refund money if UfailstoeuiwUOn Another Utah pioneer, Z. B. Decker Washington and Lee. Cen. Fltzhugh Lee, referring to Virof Parowan, passed to the Great Beyond last week.' Mr. Decker was a ginia's proposal to place a statue of New Yorker by birth and was In his Robert E. Lee in the national capltol, aye he thinks they should honor eighty-sixtyear.the successful, as well .as Washington, ' Charles Thornton, a private sta- Lee, the defeated. tioned nt Fort Douglas, was almost inUnusual. stantly killed last week by falling unA captain or an English regiment der a wagon heavily loaded with sand, stationed at Natal, while paying off hi the wheels passing over his head. sew recruits a Transvaal halt crown, J. Boud, a Salt Lake lad, while en- which bears the Image and of Paul Kruger. The fellow gaged In a baseball game last week, was struck on the nose with the ball, soon returned with the coin, and It on the table, declared It receiving a broken nose, being ren- throwing one. The officer took the bad a was dered unconscious for thirty mlnuteB. coin without looking at It and rang U Although Bessie Knecht, the Sa on the table. Lake girl who has been sleeping for , "It sounds all right, Atkina; whata the past sixty days, has not yet awak- the matter with it?" he asked. ' Well, sir," replied Atkina, If you ened, she is said to be Improving, and it's all right it's all right, but It'a resay believed will Is she it eventually first ..time Ive seen the Queen the cover. with whiskers on." A number of tho farmers of Spring-vlll. Russia's Richest Man Dtad. have started to put Jo their beets. The richest man In Russia, Nikolai There are about 900 acres of beets conIn tracted for in Sprlngvllle and Maple-ton- , Terestchenko, dlad tha other day a In hla 85th year, leaving Moscow, and the prospect for, a crop la fortune, of 5100,000,000. For, more very fine. than fifty years .ha had been one of Hartley Greenwood of Central had the curiosities of Moscow. Ha slept his foot badly mashed In a bay baling only four hours In the twenty-four- , machine. He was forcing bay Into two hours at night and two hours aftthe machine with his foot when it er luncheon. At 2 o'clock every moraclosed up quicker than he anticipated, ine be bad mass a&ld In hla room. At 8 oclock bo began work with hla catching his foot secretaries, eating nothing until noon, Kline and Maguire, the two students when he took an egg or a bowl of arrested. In Salt Lake City' some eoup. He had only one solid meal a months ago on a charge of highway day, and that was at 10 oclock at robbery, their arrest causing some night ' : thing of a sensation, have been dls-- . Guards Secrete of Letter. charged from custody. An American baa Invented an enIn Salt I ake last week, William Sub velope which records of Itself any ton shot George Hancock, the bullet attempt to tamper with Ita contents. striking! watch which Hancock wore The flap is imbued with tom chemical over Ms heart, thus saving his life. composition which when operated The Impact of the bullet caused a deep upon h7 dampening process or any other mean of penetrating to Ita bruise over the heart records the transaction by Arthur Van Meteer of Salt Lake City the words "Attempt to open" causing baa been trytng fasting as a cure for to appear. It Is thought that the Indropsy. After fasting for forty quisitive will think twice before purdays he has reduced his weight from suing their researches In face of such 230 to 127 pounds, and Ms flesh Is as an Invention. bard as a rock, and he Is strong menBUILT OVER. tally and physically. The constitutionality of the recent .Food That Rebuilt a Man's Body and law enacted by the legislature making Built It Right It a misdemeanor for dairymen to feed By food alone, with a knowledge of their rows on brewery malt and like wbat food to use, disease can be substances Is to be tested, a Salt Lake warded off and health maintained, Iso many even chronic diseases can dairyman having been selected for be cured. It Is manifestly best and that purpose. safest to depend upon food to cure Homes of refuge for orphans and de- rather than too much drugging. pendent children will bo established In A case in point will Illustrate. A various parts of the Btate, If tho plans well known man of Reading, Ta., of the Childrens Aid and Treaa. of a certain club there, says: association are carried out. Tho "I have never written a testimonial association will be Incorporated and letter, but I have been using Grape-Nut- s about a year and have recovered the work prosecuted vigorously. my health, and feel that I would like An agreement entered Into between to write you about It for the case is husband and wife, Including a division extraordinary. of tholr property, to facilitate the pro For five years I was a sufferer curance of a divorce. Is against pub- from a dreadful condition of the bowlic policy and must therefore be held els; the trouble was most obscure." to be null and void, according to a re- Here follows a detailed description and the condition certainly was discent decision by the supreme court , enough (details can be given All the stone quarries located In the tressing by mail). valley of the Great Salt I ake are now "Nothing In the way of treatment controlled by a single Interest as the of drugs benefited me In the least mult of a romblne, or absorption of and an operation was seriously In May, 1901, 1 commenced Interests, which has recently been efas a food and with Grape-Nutusing fected, and the price of building stone bag been advanced 50 cents per cord. do Idea that It would In any way help my condition. In two or three weeks The Oregon Short Lino Railroad time I noticed an Improvement and company Is said to ho looking for a there was a steady gain from that shorter routo between Salt I ake and time on until now I am practically Ogden, A corps of engineers are nt well. I don't know how to explain work west and south of Ogden run- tho healing value of the food hut for ning a lino of surveys across the sand borne reason, although It has taken reaily a year, I have rcrorere-- my ridge. health and the change Is entirely at The dnuvhter of Fred trlbutable to GiapeNuta food, for I Btirkhardi, a Janitor of Salt I ake City, long ago quit medicine, 1 eat only climbed on a chulr which steed by an Grape Nuts for breakfast and lunchopen seeond-stotwindow, when the chair slipped and the little one wna eon, but at my night dtnnor I have precipitated out of the window to the an assorted meal." Name furnished Toatum Co., Battla Creek, Mich. sidewalk below, receiving Injuries ty which may prove fatal. UTAH STATE NEWS. 13L Fair-fiel- d first-clas- - five-roun- d h super-crlptlo- n ... . e Home-Findin- g con-Idere- - s l d 'CRIME OF LOVE SICK SWAIN. NEVER Murders Woman Who Jilted Him for a Better Man, MrB. Frieda Baker, wife of a commission clerk, was killed in San Francisco Tuesday by Mike Nlhall, a barkeeper, In a fit of jealousy. Nlball then turned his weapon m himself, Inflicting a slight wound. Nlhall was a former lover of Mrs. Baker, and since her marriage to Baker several months ago, has hounded the woman continually. Tuesday morning he met Mrs. Baker and her mother walking on the Btreet and accosted them. Mrs. Bakers mother, seelhg danger In a meeting, advised her daughter to run, which she did, followed by Nlhall, pistol In hand. Mrs. Baker entered the saloon of one Fowke, and appealed to the proprietor for protection, but before he could be of assistance to the distressed woman, Nlhall entered, and, throwing his arms around "Mrs. Baker, began firing his revolver. Several shots entered Mrs. Bakers body', killing her. Fowke grabbed a revolver und turned It on Nlhall, but did not shoot, as was pointing his weapon at his own head. Nlhall fired one shot, but tho injury is not a serious one. He expressed gratification that he had killed the woman. Ni-ha- ll AFFAIRS IN PHILIPPINES. Numerous Tribes Accept American Sovereignty and Pledge Peace. Major General Davis has returned to Manila from the Jolo archipelago. He did not see the sultan of Jolo, as the latter went to Singapore three daya before General Davis arrived. The sultans absence compels a temporary abandonment of the negotiations for the abrogation of the Bates treaty. s General Davis reports that of the Lanao, Mindanao, Monos have accepted American sovereignty and pledged peace and friendship. Representatives of forty towns north of the lake professed allegiance to the United States before Major Ballard. Peace is .assured until an attempt is made to abolish Blavery. It is believed that would unite the Moros In opposition to the Americans. The head hunters inhabiting the Sierra Madre mountains have made a raid In the province of Nueva Eclja, Island of Luzon. They beheaded four natives. A force of cavnine-tenth- alry Is pursuing the raiders. i REVIVAL OF BOXERISM. Chinese Still Organizing for Purpose of Driving Out Foreigners. The steamer Shinano Maru, which has arrived from the Orient, brought news of excitement at Pekin, owing to t. the revival of Boxerlsm In the Tho Shanghai Times says the legation premises are now being policed by armed patrols In the nighttime. News was brought some time ago of Russian expeditions visiting Thibet and of opposition on the part of the natives. News was received by the Shinano that a party of Russians was told to turn back at Cham-dand, on refusing, the party was attacked and seven killed and twenty-on- e wounded. adjoin-Ingdistrlc- o, CEUTANS ARE SCARED. Trouble in Morocco Assumes Alarming Proportions. A dispatch from Ceuta, Morocco, reports the port of Tetuan, Morocco, as being In a very critical poeltlon. The pretender Is being urged to attack Tetuan, the capture of which la considered easy. The European and Jewish residents of the place are unable to leave except by sea, and have requested that a steamer be sent to fetch them, as in consequence of the Insuf. flclcnt garrison, the town will soon be In the hands of the Insurgents. The Spaniards have demanded the protection of the Spanish government. A Lucky Logger. At Maple Falls, Wash., two unknown men sandbagged, robbed and then bound to a tree In the woods nearby, Charles Anderson, a logger, whom they enticed to a cabin In the outskirts of the village. After leaving their victim tied out In tho forest, the rob bers went to the village, where they cashed a 53 check which they had taken from him, and then returned to the place where they had left their supposed helpless victim, presumably to murder him. hut found him gone. Ultimatum of Lumbermen. The fourteen sawmill and lumber manufacturing firms of Portland, Ore., have given notice that they would refuse to sell lumber of any description to local contractors until the differences between tho contractors and the union laborers are settled. Already 300 carpenters have been laid off as a result of a scarcity of lumber, and wita-I- n two weeks It Is probable that all building operations In the rlty will be tied up unless a settlement Is efforted. It Is estimated that 5,000 men will be thrown out of employment. Rioters Sentenced to Death. Pretoria dispatch says five private soldiers belonging to the Leinster regiment were on Tuesday sentenced to death In the supremo court In connection with a riot hlrh took plvce nt the barracks on March 28. When the military police attempted to arrest a number of drunken soldiers the lat. ter, reinforce bv some of tholr comrades, fired on the police. One of the latter, a member of the I elnster regiment, was killed, and sixteen men ere Injured. A SAW SUCH URGE YIELDS. ?P0l BATTLE OF CONVICTS The Climate It Healthy The Winters DESPERATE STRUGGLE OCCURS Are Pleasant in Western Canada. BEHIND PRISON WALLS. Writing from Stirling, Alberta, to one of the agents representing the Canadian Government free homestead Two Desperate Criminals Engage Ir lands, Mr. M. Plckrell, formerly of a Duel to the Death, One Being Beechwood, Ky., says of Western Caa-adArmed With a Knife and the Other With an Iron Bar. In the first place we will say that the summer season Is just lovely Indeed. As to the winter, well, we never William Brown and Ed. W. Hamilexperienced finer weather than we are ton,1 two convicts at the Utah state now enjoying. We have just returned were desperately and from Northern Alberta, and will say penitentiary, wounded in an enmortally that we found the weather to be very perhaps cff the prison corridor counter the in mild, the air dry, fresh and invigoratAs the result ing. Considering everything we can early Monday morning. is confined In Hamilton conflict of the say that the winters here are most pleasant, healthy and enjoyable to the prison hospital, breathing in gasps what they are la the States. Here it through a perforated lung, and suffergets cold and continues so till spring ing from other wounds, while Brown there are no disagreeable win&s. in is lying In his narrow cell . unconSouth Alberta It la some warmer two scious from a rain of blows Inflicted to four Inches of snow may fall and Iron bar upon his head. Both an with a in few hours a Chinook wind cornea along, evaporating the entire snow, men were horrribly mutilated In the leaving terra firma perfectly dry; In affray and neither Is likely to survive, fact, we did not believe this part until according to the statement of Dr. A. we came and saw for ourselves and C. Young, the prison physician. we now know what we herein write Neither of the wounded men will to be just as we write 1L There has talk regarding the tragedy. The mep not been a day this winter that I could adjoining cells, and had been occupied not work out doors. Farmers here are the night before, heard quarreling on calculating starting the plow the when Hamilton Informed Brown he first of March. The men were "As to farm wages, we would not ould get him. advise a man to come here with the marching down the corridor, Hamilton expectation of living by his days being Just behind Brown when sudwork, but all who do want a home I Hamilton drew from beneath advise to have nerve enough to get ny denly his jacket a short Iron bar and struck and come, for there never has been, on the head. Brown pitched Brown and may never be again, such a grand aud tumbled down the Btairs. forward a man to for a home opportunity get alniost free. Hamilton, with a fiendish yell, sprang "As to the crops, I have been In the after the prostrate man, and struck fields before harvest, saw the grass him again before he rose. Brown put up and the grain harvested, and I Inched forward and tottered to his never saw such large yields. I saw at the same time a long cats near Edmonton over six feet tall feet, drawing folds of his Jacket. from the knife that yielded 80 bushels per acre, and 1 talked to a farmer tear St. Albert who Seizing the arm which held the Iron had a field year before last that aver- bar with his left hand, he struck his aged 110 bushels per acre and weighed assailant time after time with the 43 pounds to the bdsheL All other knife. his arm from Loosening crops would run In proportion as to Brown's grasp, Hamilton struck the potatoes and vegetables, the turnout hand which held the knife and sent was enormous. I have such reports as the above from all sections that I the weapon clattering along the cehave visited, and that has been every mented floor. Unarmed and facing a desperate community between the Edmonton district and Raymond, In the Lethbridge antagonist, Bron lost courage and district fled. Dashing madly up the stairs ho "As to stock raising, I would ad- rushed hack to his cell Hamilton vise a man to locate In this place, or followed in close pursuit, beating the any place, In South Alberta; but for man over the head with the iron bar mixed farming I . would say go up as he ran. Brown reached the cell, farther north, say near Lacombe, or Edmonton, where It Is not but tried vainly to escape his assailso and where there Is some ant. He was beaten Into insensibility dry quite timber to be had. I will say that no- before the' guard and other prisoners where have I ever seen a better oppor- could separate the combatants. Both tunity for a man, whether he hae men are so seriously injured that there money or Dot, to obtain a home. No- Is no hope for recovery. Brown was where can be found a more productive forty-yea- r a sentence for murserving water and a better govsoil, better a Chinaman In Ogden, while erned country than Western Canada dering Hamilton had been sent up from Salt affords. Inducements to the home-seekake county for three years for asl are unexcelled. I met two men sault with intent to commit murder. sear Ponoka on the C. 4 E. R. R, who borrowed the money to pay for TORNADO IN KANSAS. their homestead, and in four years those two men sold their farms one Several People Injured and Much for 52,500, the other for 53,000. I met Property Destroyed, a man near Wetasklwln who landed a Word has been received of a here with. 25 cents six years ago. He at St. Neosho Kans. Paul, county, Is now worth 58,000. The advantages for ranching are excellent In fact I j Saturday, which destroyed a great do not believe this section can be amount of property and Injured five beat Markets are good; as to living, people. four of whom cannot recover. a family can live as cheap here as Mrs. David Chamberlain and three they can In the States. The average members of a German family named yield of oats In this neighborhood last Longham will die, it Is David year was 70 bushels per acre; wheat Chamberlain has bruisesthought a severe of averaged 35, barley 40, and the beet crop was good. In ' consequence of character, while several other perthe successful cultivation of the beet sons sustained minor injuries. The a large beet sugar factory Is being three-storbrick school building was erected at Raymond, seven miles from entirely destroyed and the homes of here. Mr. Chamberlain. Mr. Longham and "In conclusion I will say that N. W. Mrs. Melluse Mown away. Many T. from Manitoba to a long distance were houses also unroofed. The depot north of Edmonton produces most wonderful crops. Lakes and rivers abound platform waa carried from the town-sitThe tornado jumped a building with fish, and game Is plentiful And taking a house here and that this Is unquestionably the coun- occasionally, a barn there. The storm lasted about to come for man to If he desires five minutes. Near try Cherryvale all the to better his condition In life. 1 would buildings on the farm of Stanley Fosto the advise look ter were badly Injured and their prospective settler over the Lethbridge, Lacombe, Wetas-klwt- n child was fatally hurt, sufand Edmonton districts before fering a fractured skull. locating. MINERS LOCKED OUT. "I will locate In the Edmonton district next fall and several families from tho States will locate with roe. Company Refused Them Work Because They Would Not Work In the meantime I will receive my mall here and will be pleased to give Long Shift. the Interested all the Information deThe Philadelphia and Reading Coal sired." Iron company caused a lockout at For Information as to railway rates, and one of their collieries In the every etc., apply to any agent of the CanaPa., district, Monday, Fhenandonh, dian Government, whoso name appears The men were notified on Saturday In this paper. elsewhere that If they did not work the full cine-hou- r day they could consider themTwo-flfthLeft No Heirs. selves When they reportOf the twenty five men who have ed for discharged. work Monday they were told been president of the United States there was no work for them. no descendants. ten have to-d-ay Funeral of Mrs. Fitzsimmons. Plio's Care rsnnot be too highly spoken of os Funeral services for Mrs. Rose Fitza rough rare. -- J. W O'Uiusn, Third Are., simmons, wife of Robert Fitzsimmons, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 4, 1900. heavyweight pugilist, Tbs habit of talking to oneself re- were conducted Monday at her late sults from intense preoccupation. It home In Bcnsonhurst. So large was tho attendance at the services that la tbs initial symptom of dementia. not all of the friends of the pugilist and his wife could crowd Into the Mr. Window's Soothing KyTnp.' ill itunr, runct hfc hlidrp tUitig, ufi house. "Jim" Jolfrles, who wrested Ff SauiaiaUua.ailejrt pam, curat wind ouita, ttcshotUo. the championship from Fitzsimmons, "Cub" Ruhlln, "Billy Madden, "Sam" Wood for Pianos Must Bs Perfect Julian, Wood Intended to. be made Into Madden, Clark Ballt Martin Perry O. William and Newton Benpianos requires to be kept forty years nington were among those who atto bs In perfert condition. tended. a: er tor-nad- e. a Miss Cannon, Secy Detroit Amateur Art Association, tet young women wbat to do f avoid pain and suffering caust i . by female troubles.. I can conscientiously recotnm Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetal, Compound to those of my suffering with female, weakness t the troubles which so often btl women. I suffered for months w.f general weakness and felt so wev that I had hard work to keep up, j had shooting pains and was utter1! miserable. In my distress I was s, vised to nse Lydia E. Pinkhau) Vegetable Compound, and u a red letter day to mo when I took & first dose, for at that time my restotv tion began. In six weeks I wt changed woman, perfectly well , every respect. I felt so elated u happy that I want all women wi suffer to get well as I did." Mu Gun.! Gannok, 359 Jones SL, Detro-.', Corresponding Secy Mich. Amato Art Association. j.moo forfeit iforiqi, Stow httir proving gtnuhtonist ean not 6 proiant It sliown in tW lady's letter that Lydia t Pinkhams Vegetable Coraponm will surely cure the sufferings o women ; and when one consider is clearly minor that Miss Gannons letter is onlr one of hundreds which we have, great virtue of Mrs. Pinkhame must be admitted by all. tit Min met-cin- e t known Fi Ca, of C Bound to Have Hla Cigar. King Edward has been restricted his physicians to five cigars a di He has been an Inveterate smoker J most since his boyhood. Some thlr-- i years ago' he was dining with the lat." Lord Derby, who regarded the use s tobacco as a vulgar and unpleasat: bahlL After dinner the prince sui gested a cigar, whereupon his lort ship drily expressed regret that hi house did not contain a smoklng-roooadding that he could. only suggest tli stables as a suitable place for burs ing tobacco. Much to his surprise thi prince adjourned to the region k dlcated and enjoyed his postprandlt head at frescri tad an I tier oi ippetlt loach Adia I "Aftei tiree Ins ,' they all If yoi Government Reserve of Reindeer. herd of, reindeer In Alaska, which is expected In the I future to supply food and draft anl-j- i mats for the natives, numbers 10,000.' and U to be Increased by another, thousand now contracted for In 81 berla. The government DYES wh w&i K sti P pr duce the brightest and fastest colors 1U Disease Traced to Cattle. Tuberculosis was not known amoni cattle In Denmark until the Imports tlon of Scbleswlg-Holsteln- s began. It then spread so rapidly that a govern meet commission which tested 144,001 head with tuberculin found one In tree affected. . ka V r, Xs SIV an F Y( llo I CARBOLIC SALVE will prevent blood? iscning in Guttf j Wounds, Sorei Bruises, andiei cents. them, too. 25 Would yon have TOOTHACHE for 15 cents? Oar Japanese Tooth Ache Drops will rid yon of both. DeCOSTAS LIVES FILLS is Health 25 cents a Insnrance XI ' x for policy. Wbat is your nealth worth? All Lung Diseases start with a cough. If you will cough up a quarter for a bottle of Cough Balsam you'll stop coughing Japanese Corn Cure will rid you of a dozen CORNS for a X IV1 X A quarter. Which do you love the bes- t- i !E corns or quarter? au DRuanisva on aTonaa on oinacT rnoM seise Z. C. M. I. AIT LAMt 'TV, to Hi You i a irnl CANADA WESTERN la aurmnit, mere attauUoa abv eihar lalliavorM. Uioa uWc - Tb Oranary af tha WarU. Tha Last af ahiaa." Tka haiatal faadiaf Qra4a lar ( araa loot la , , , l.MT.SSOatraa, Artnt,r .... , , lit, 14,704 haoAoio. AHandaaco of Watori T1 Biillrtlii UonS ilraaa fr I'"" one bn a fertlia 0HI a " Vanderbilt to Be Secretly Wedded. A pupil In one of the rural schools dual rainfall and a cllitiaMKlrl aa aaatirnd and adaaal It Is reported In Paris that W11- of Lehigh county was told by his oauoa of irowili. tenchor to form a sentence with tho Ham K. Vanderbilt Is to be married HOMESTEAD LANDS OF IG0 ACRES FREE. word cuckoo In It. The youngster at quietly to a young American widow tha nnljfto rliariro fnt which I, III) (nr makln ontry, loan riiurrtiM, hchuoia (to, llatKara tap enro replied; "Chust because she to whom he has recently been paying aattidl dlatrt. la. pend fur Atlaa and oiltnr uia.a. to superintendent pf Inini'arall.'n, tluawa, I anad. , male thoso cuckoo eycR. attention. The name of the or to J, W, Taylor, But l.ake t tty, Utah, tho autwc t anadlan led M,vrniient Apant, who will a.pr' who Is nt piesent living In Purls, yon with ooiUBaata " Tho Vital. ty of Whsst glrlus ua rodueod raw--, ata. Is Is kept secret, She reported to Wheat seldom preserves its vitality for more than ten years. The stories, have visited New York a year ago, RELIABLE ASSAYS. therefore, of Egyptian mummy wheat where sho win entertained by her sis- P" ... .1 .70 Hold and Btivwa ....(I Load...... ttliw- - d mif'f. 4.000 years old growing when planted ter, an unmnrrled wrman. who la In (p r.. L ran ratal own aampioa. Fmapt tho secret ol the apprcachlm marshould bo accepted with caution. m ,f riage to the exclusion of Mr. Vendor Ogden Amy Co. bilta relatives In New York. Clia-- Bright Pupil. t cigar. PUTNAM . FADELESS con bili pl Try fiem I anil feotM Cal Oirwd w III i bride-to-be- - W. I |