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Show X i f' POOR DIGESTION CALIFORNIA DESPERADO DEAD. LOS ANGELES HOAI) WILL BE BUILT LANGUID AND TIRED. SAN An Interesting Letter Concerning Peruna. PEDRO, LOS ANGELES & SALT LAKE BUYS PART OF SHORT LINE. ROAD um and fcqulpmant f th Coat pwny Sooth of Hall l.aka, laeladlag tba by Leanilugtoa Cut-of- f, Sonutor Clark aod Ml Aasool-ata- a Una from Salt Laka to Lot Aagolot to bo Puihod to Completion. All tht 1.1 Frihul According to the latest reports, It now seems an assured fact that Salt Lake City and Loe Angeles will be connected by rail In a short time, by the San Pedro, Ixs Angeles and Salt Lake line, the road which Is backed by Senator Clark of Montana and associates. , The Salt Lake Tribune of Sunday prints the following special telegram regarding the matter: New York, April 18. Senator W. A. Clark states that he has purSan the chased for Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad company all lines and equipment of Oregon Short Line company lying south of Salt Lake in Utah and Necnt-ofvada, Including Leamington and has obtained a ninety-ninyear e lease on terminal facilities In Salt Battle Between McKinney and Reeulte In Three Deaths, James McKinney, the outlaw, was shot and killed at KakeraHeld, Cal. Deputy Sheriff Tlbbets was also killed and Constable Packard was fatally shot. Sheriffs Kelley of Kern, Collins of Tulare and Lovin of Arizona, with Officers Will and Rurt Tlbbets. Gut Tower and City Marshal Packard, surrounded McKinney shortly befou 11 o'clock Sunday morning !n a house in the renter of town. Will Tibbetj and Packard approached McKinney In the house and ordered him to surrender. McKinney answered by shooting. Will Tlbbets was shot through the stomach and died shortly after. Packard was shot through the nock and shoulders and dangerously wounded. Burt Tlbbets, a brother of the dead deputy sheriff, shot McKinney through the mouth and neck, killing blm. McKinney has been In Bakersfield two .days, and was harbored by some friends In the Chlnesejoss house. McKinney was accused of having committed several murders, and last July In Porterville he killed Billy Lynn and wounded Constable John Willis and another man In a drunken row. He made a sensational escape from capture and for several months wandered around the practically unmolested country. Lake City In conjunction with Oregon Short Line. The property wllj be transferred as soOtt As necessary directors meetings may be held and contracts approved. Grading and track laying will be commenced at Daggett, California, and the road will soon be extended from Callentes through Nevada. From Leamington to Callentes the roadbed will be Improved and d rails. The with seveuty-flve-pounwestern terminus of the road is now being operated from San Pedro harbor to Ontario, and will soon be completed and in operation as far as Riverside. He hopes to have the road completed In about two years. A. UNDERWOOD, (Private Secretary to William A. Clark.) This will Indeed prove good news to i the people of Utah, aa the San Pedro system will enter a territory which has long looked forward to the time when they might have proper railway facilities. The San Pedro system will be an independent line. It will be controlled absolutely and owned by Its own officers, and all railroad lines will have access to Its facilities on equal terms. This insures Salt Lake City against any combination which will preclude railroad rivalry or fixed arbitrary rates to the Pacific slope. Tbe ditectors of tbe road ae: W. A. Clark, president; R. C. Kerens, J. Ross Clark, T. E. Gibbon, T. F. Miller, F. K. Rulo, W. S. McCornlck, Thomas Kearns, Reed Smoot, E. W. Clark, Perry S. Heath, Ross W. Smith. Tbe Tribune publishes an interview with Senator Kearns, In which he says. In part: "I believe that trains will be running between Salt Lake and Los Angeles over the completed line within eighteen months from today. The San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad company has now available on call $25,000,000 in cash for the completion of the main line, branches and spurs. There Is no more financiering to be done, and there will be no more delay In pusn-lnthe completion of the work. As soon as Senator W. A. Clark arrives In Salt Lake City, which I expect will be within the next two or three weeks, tbe formal transfer of the 444 miles of tbe Oregon Short Line property south of Salt Lake City will be formally railroad made, and an experienced of will the take opermanager charge ations of the line and all of Its Interests at this end, although tbe transfer by completion of negotiation and signature to contracts has been made on paper already In New York. Too much credit cannot be given to Senator William A. Clark of Montana for the faithful manner In which he has carried out every promise made to the citl teas of Salt I ake City In the autumn of 1900, when lie promised that this line would be constructed and that It would be an open gateway between the capital of Utah and southern Cal ifornla. re-lai- d Miss Della Janveau, Globe Hotel, Ottawa, Out., Is from one of the oldest and best In a recent letter to The Peruna Medicine known French Canadian families in Canada. Ca, of Columbus, Ohio, she says : Last spring my blood seemed clogged vp, my digestion poor, my bead ached and I felt languid and tired all the time. My physician, prescribed for me, but a friend advised mo to try Peruna. I tried It en. ihlrrl 111' i nd am pleased to state that I found It a wonderful cleanser and purifier of the system. In three weeks I was like a new woman, my appetite had Increased, I felt buoyant, light and happy and without I a ache or pain. Peruna Is a reliable family medicine . Adia Brittain, of Sekitan, O., writes : After using your wonderful Peruna I Viree months I have had great relief. list continual heaviness in my stomach, Iras bilious, and had fainting spells, but they all have left me since using Peruna." -- Adia lirittain. U you do not derive prompt and satis- - factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and ba will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of Columbus The Hartman Sanitarium, Ohio. - Dili ALABASTISn3E iswrat? A natural, rock base composition for walls and ceilings to be used in white or any number of beautiful tints, in powder form, to be mixed with cold water, making a durable, sanitary and cleanly borne. Any one can brush it on. KALSOmiNES ARE WHAT? Unnatural glue and whiting decompositions for walls and ceilings'that tick only until the glue by exposure decays, when they rub and scale off, spoiling walls and rendering them unsanitary and the rooms almost uninhabitable. Atabastlne possesses merit while the only merit hot or cold water kalsomines possess is that your dealer can buy them cheap. There are many reasons why you should not use poisonous wall paper and unsanitary kalsomines. Buy Alabastine in 5 lb. packages only and properly labeled. Please write us for Suggestions from odr Artists with ALABASTINE. In Decorating Your Rooms ALABASTINE COMPANY Office and Factory. GRAND Hsu Ysrt Office, I OS Water SI RAPIDS. MICH. Yours fora dearHead3 BmiOSElTZER, OED EVERYIVUERE DRUNKENNESS CURED, B ur to data In orery rtu.p'l. 0r terns and literature, eddreas wad pualUtely INSTITUTE, THE sasrKEELEY cirr. urnsour st.. satr 1 - Lightning Causes Death and Destruction on a Nebraska Farm. During a thunder storm near West Point, Neb., Saturday, lightning struck the farm house ot Fred Sendlgrlff. All the occupants father, mother, and four children were badly burned and When Send! rendered unconscious. he found tbe recovered griff partially house in flames. Ho managed to drag his helpless wife and three children out, but was unable to rescuo one child, a hose charred body was later fuund In the rulna of the home. nm fARtniote now without a sherbet nr Ice. Mont will unl th n oik t, o k1 yours If you wr rour. You 3-Cro- cans riser 1st wn FlAVONtM)PfcXTRACT Try a hotilnf rnirTrlpt Vanilla. It's mad keli-ifrom ih tiniKt and mwi smite 001 I Iran. ImkiIi 11 Its you want HEWLETT ard. erlully pur. it All stores. BROS. CO. prrfai-it- Ihnaa that -- alter. IT rears . uiiomi; am no permaneeill Hand La. Idea 1n'ar-- h 'ut AI.HMIT II. l.HAIIKIl. SIS W. EL IT Your hint wu. PHI. When Answering Advdrtlimnts Kindly Mention Thle Peptr. W. N. U., bait Lake -- No. 17, 1003. rTuimatW-rtKIil- ! eM a , 4 w . ka 1I, In. ltt. t S4 6- w a at1 a MHMWiVa aawwi rn !( cunts laUun hnt. In urn. Twu-- !. d"irr uu U - ', . 1 . , r - 1ru a ...... . -r W - y- , , ... SJEKEECIl; AU tut m I" IV Damage to the Shamrock. Shamrock III, challenger for the America's cup, which was dismantled overIn a squall, la being rapidly hauled.. The destruction of her stand Ing gear was almost complete. Everything above deck must he renewed Tho wrecking crew la not trying to save muih, the object being to clear away the wreckhge aa fast aa possible. The gaff badly dented, but may be repaired; the boom Is practically un S ElO W3l8f .Injured, the topsail yards are meleaa ' nd the sails are ruined. r FASTEN AGE MARKS. Of-fee- Sick Kidneys make people look older than they are j hasten the evening daye of life; fasten the marke of premature old age. The world over Doan's Kidney Pills Is the recognized Kidney Specific. Aching barks are rased. Hip, back, and kiln paius (vcrcome. Swelling of the iimbs and dropsy signs vanish. They correct urine with brick dust sediment, high colored, excessive pain in pnss log, dribbling, frequency, lied wetting. Doans Kidney PiHs dissolve and remove calculi ami gravel. Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness, headache, nervousness. the eatnple of Doen'e Kiduey Pllle I eoulj scarcely hold my urine. Now I can aleep all night aud rarely have to get up, and that ach Ing arrosa my hack a little above tny hips le goue. lasso V. Stii'ukns, Cambria, Wyo. IDoan's March St, 100.1 I received the sample ot Doan's Kliluey l'llls, suit with the use of one more box from my druggist 1 am entirely cured of a very lotus back. W. A. Rosa fit in, Fa , March 29, 1901. The free trial of Doau'a Kidney Pills have been of great benefit to me. Htuce using them 1 have no occasion to gal up to ofleo st night. My complaint affected the bladder more when catching cold. Josxrii Arrested for Crime Committed Five Years Ago. Two men charged with complicity In tbe murder of Jennie Hickey in Douglas Monument park, a crime that has baffled the police department of five years, have Chicago for nearly been arrested. One Is Richard B. Finn, a plumber. The other Is Martin L. Marooney, a clerk for a big commercial house. Both men are being held without bail. Finn denies all Marooney knowledge of the crime. has stated that he was sitting at the entrance of the park when the murder occurred; that he saw Finn strike the girl and afterward carry the unconscious form of tbe girl toward the lake, and that In the course of half an hour he saw Finn return alone. Marooney offers no explanation of his long silence and has made many contradictory statements since being arrested. The Hickey girl was only 14 years old. Her body was found In Lake Michigan at Thirty-fiftstreet In September, 1898. o h Wyoming Sheep and Cattle Men at War. A hlcorfv war between the sheepmen and cattlemen of Swcctwatqr county In reutral Wyoming, la Imminent, and the state militia may be called out to suppress the in pending battle. The cattlemen have established tho "dead line" and ordered all sheepmen to h ave a tract of fine grazing ground miles eighty miles long by forty-fivwide, threatening death to the herders and destruction of the flocks if the owners fall to comply. An Early Skirt Dancer. and Waa Satisfied. Young Stanley McMlnneman ot Rumford Falls, the aon of Mr. and la supMrs. George McMlnneman, posed to he an attendant at Father La Flamme's church. For the past few week, owing to necessity, he has been sent to church alone. Tbe other day be startled bis mother by announcing, as he buttoned bis collar under his chin: "Well, I guess I'll go back where 1 belong 'What do you mean? bis mother asked In surprise. "Why, the little chap answered calmly, "Ive been going round to see what church I '.Iked best. Hut the Unlversallsts and tbe Baptists are no good. The Methodist church's on the bum they have't got any altar, nor altar boys, and I'm just going lack to where I belong!" Ills mother took pains to assure herself that he did. I.ewtaton Journal RATHER A NASTY QUE3TION. Thoijhtlesa Inquiry Disturbed bors Amenities. Neigh- A self made man bad accumulated a considerable amount of wealth aa a successful building contractor. Chiefly at the behest of his wife be had pur- chased a very attractive rural site in the suburbs whereon to build a borne befitting bis means. The building operations were In full swing when one day a neighbor noticed the owner superintending tbe work with considerable pride. T see you are spending a lot ot money on that house of yours," re marked tbe neighbor. "Yes," was tbe reply, "I want to make the place a thoroughly fit home for a gentleman. "Oh, then you mean to let It, do you?" thoughtlessly blurted out tbe TRAINING THE HUMAN EYE. Wonderful Possibilities of That Organ Ara Little Known. Unless we are color blind we all ran see the seven colors In the rainbow. That .Is ordinary eyesight, which may by careful training be wonderfully developed. The tapestry workers of France, for Instance, by continued practice, learn to distinguish different shades of the same color In a truly marvelous way. Some ot these men and women, by actual experiment, can perceive 1,600 different shades of a single color, and combine them In wonderful harmonies. Their eyes are ordinary human eyes, like those of other people; hut they have trained their sight unUl It becomes almost unbelievably perfect The'r work Is priceless, because they have raised an ordinary possession Into an extraordinary endowment Killed by Wooer of Daughter's Hand, Albert Coolman. aged 20, shot anJ Instantly killed Frank Stamsmlth, prominent farmer and Justice of the peace, at the laltcr'a home near Columbia City, Ind. He bad been calling Miles of English Canals. on Miss Heartachrader, a stepdaughter Tbt Bridgewater canal waa opened of Stamsmlth, against the tattcr'a in 1772, and 2.000 miles of ranala were wishes. When he called to take the by 1800 In operation In England. There girl to a party Stamsmlth refused to are at present 8.620 miles of canals in allow her to leave. After a few words England. Coolman drew a revolver and shot twice. He escaped, and Is being searched for by a hundred men. ' Panama Fixes a 23 Psr Cent Duty, Thn assembly of the department of l'snstna has ended Its session. Among other Important matters which acre settled Is the placing of a duty of 25 per cent on all merchandise Imported to the Isthmus, and the aproval of a contract for the lighting of Colon, made with the Colon Electric Illuminating company. This company was organized In West Virginia. Thn contract with It whs made In 1898. hut was suspended a year Inter by the governor of the dcpartinc.it when the revolution broke out. JWICl Ill , March 30, 1903. The sample of Doan's Klduey Pills came to hand. 1 also got one 60 cent box from our druggist, and f sin ikaukful to ssy the pain arrosa the smalt of my bark disappeared like a snow bank In hnlsun. Doau Pills reach the spot Klmeb Wsarxi. WILL OUT. (Kidnev J Pills?. Clstxlano, Qal.ltsBOlta. burled by him. When confronted with evidence recently unearthed by Lew Jenney of Gillette, Clifton broke down and confessed his crime. Clifton Is a rancher, and lived near the Churches, Clifton said that after murdering the Churches and biding their bodies In a granary on the Church ranch temporarily, he hauled them two miles away and buried them. Before doing so he stripped the bodies of Jewelry, which he afterward had made over Into a ring for himself. He then drew up bills of sale In Church's name and disposed of the stock and some of tho household goods, all tbe while making his abode on the Church ranch. well-to-d- BETTER KIDNEY HEALTH. Saibu, Mass, Kat Vaughan, who died recently in Johannesburg, Is aueged by tbe English to have been the originator of tbe klrt- - dance. She was an all round actress and had been on tbe stage from early childhood, the parts ot Little Nell and Little Em'ly.ln "David Copperfleld, being among her preliminary triumph. 6b first attemptCONFESSED TO MURDER. ed her dancing in the "tempestuous Mystery in Wyoming Cleared Up by petticoat" ao long ago that few living exponents of tbe ar( pill bare to conConfession of Guilty Man. test the claim that she was first. It The mystery surrounding the disap- Is said that tbe manager of the Lonpearance several weeks ago of J. W. don theater In which Mlsa Vaughn of first gave the dance cheerfully Church and his wife, formerly paid Omaha, Neb., but more recently enweekly bill of f 40 for the renewal gaged in ranching near Newcastle, of her skirts. Wyo., has been cleared up by the con"The Klnan.Kool Kitchen Kind" of stoves fession of "Slim" Clifton, who has make no smoke, smell, soot., ashes or exbeen under arrest on suspicion of hav- cessive beat. Always look for trade mat k. BACK TO HIS OWN CHURCH. ing murdered the couple. Clifton admits that he killed them, and has told the authorities where the bodies were Youth Had Gone Round of the Other MURDER MM -- TO roena Milan as Co., Buffalo, N V. Please send me by mall, without chars, trial box Doan s Kidney puis. Name... ... Post office Slate out eeennn ea dotted Knee see mail 14 leeterM.lbur Co.. Bulimia, X. t. Medical Advice Free Strictly CeafldeatlaL I Cut Divorcss in Connecticut 600 divorces to be exact, 492. with one county estimated wr granted in Connecticut last year. The most common cause or excuse set forth was desertion. Next cams cruelty, then Intemperance, and lastly infidelity. Many of tbe divorces were r garded as the result of collusion, but Just how many cannot be stated. Nearly I)str For AtUes FooS-Raapowder. It reU the feet. Cure Ooroe, Bunltins, Hwolleu, More, Hot,CalloueAchiof, Hweallng FeetsndlngrowtngNaUe. Allen's Foot-Ew- e make new or tight kboes easy. At all Druggist and bboe stores, M osnls. A cent no substitute bampl mailed KlU. Address Allen H. Olmsted, Lelioy, N. Y, Ask Yonr e, A HOW TO MAKE KAL30MINE. Magrxlne Gives the Recognized Recipe. One pound ot uncolored gelatine glue, aa free from grease as possible, is soaked over night In cold water sufficient to cover the glue. Thirty Parts pounds ot English cllffston white, bolted or best bolted gliders whiting, Is also soaked In anfflclent water to make a paste over night, and next morning both are heated with steam or over a moderate fir In a water bath to the boiling point, and when the glue Is fully dissolved the two materials are thoroughly mixed. In summer time on cooling a small portion of carbolic acid, say about of an ounce, diluted with water, Is added for each pound of glue used In the aforesaid ferraula to keep it from souring, and In this way the kalaomlne will keep tor some weeks. It Is said that the workmen rather like this preparation, because of its good working properties. Paint-erMagazine. Painters ow-elght- h THE MUCHFEARED CENTIPEDE. On Full Grown Gives Shock to the Nerves. The sight of a full grown centlpedi la said by travelers In tropical lands Sight of to be enough to affect the atrongeal nerves. Ten to eleven Inches la the average length, although larger ones have been seen. I.afcadlo llearn, In "Two Years In the French West In? dies, says that the vitality of the centipede Is amazing. He kept on In a bottle, without food or water, tot thirteen weeks, at the end of witch time It remained aa active and dangerous as ever. Tbe hen attacks the centipede with delight, and often swallows him head first, without taking tbs trouble to kill him. The eat hunts him, but Is careful never t put her bead near him. Ebs has s trick ot whirling him round and round upon the floor so quickly aa to stupefy blm; then, when she aeea a good rhance, she strikes him dead with her claws. It you kill a centipede you are sure to receive money soon and even If .you dream of killing on It Is good luck at least so local tre dltion aayn Brains Cost Momy. This Is the opinion of n large retail merchant on When aa irate customer complained that the store was full of Insolent chumps who did not understand the first principles of waiting on a patron ho aald: "If to my clerks had brains enough amount to anything they would not be working here st $7 or $S per week." with "Why dont you hire clerks brains?" asked the customer. "Because brains cost more money than 1 can afford to pay," was the reply. "In our buslneis we pay large salartee to slave drivers and nothing to the slaves." wage-earner- Natural Oil In Dublin, It turns out that tbe natural oil well, which has Just been "discovered" In the heart of tbe dty of Dublin and which Is to be capitalized and worked for commercial purposes, has been flowing for several year pasL Scientist say the yield la sufficient In quantity and steady enough to permit of Its being profitably worked. Just ih lams ss svsr StJacobsOil conUmm to b Ih surs cur cf Rheumatism ""'Neuralgia Price, 95a end JOc. |