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Show Tim Spanish roRK press. spANisn A star til he tiite nrti MWWM" Aal lh i'K kul llwt U e,ailaH li THROW AWAY YOUR Pea Gmr Tongue, i Ficilo Ltt,le Sti EYE-GLASSE- Htertlta M 1 We kl Mill sad tmt lepulaMU MS I4MI.M awourru-v-fi kiuw i) I ttHlM m It ; r'utrs 111 You Can Hava FlHad of 0.000 horsepower A e position. f .ttttttttt f yesei' a i w . ; cTLMcrcrrzzcj&xi-- I r i 'i Q I! V'.VjV: ''vt , )$. eyi --j fc V ;!'Xkr Now l the lima l oM-- r four MH.hiI I urnilurv. hiii'i''!. aivm Ui-- 1 ( : ;a h.,,1, Mi. M., Hall Lake City. I'lali. IsAUsACX 2VhZ7?, 'S7IRU.HG, ZCOTULYD hemtol Not Bo Much to Dlamo. "I didn't know you war so . V rzix ,wr w EumsDArrnzczwz 'jzji.i iV&ss AND story." t, - ' k, r . , 4 v rtfoA.rorA.7c y.is The amateur poet Is going some when ho earns enough money with bis pen to pay for the Ink. KjL rT Al(mrr, f SUPPLIES alntk-a- , - Dont follow your Inclinations unless you know where they're leading you. - W H MACHINES - fnri'alalna, GUARANTEED W J. Loui Anderson IMS?1 a!r. limn helwe-Only Tirluiln Mirtorryt-aiul Ihe 1ai'itlc Cml I 2 rm,. a4 PERA POSITIVE MANENT CURE FOR , Liquor and Drug Addictions TW I, a,Hitin. at Alia, IWai tniNl a inolilr m m Iknr awa liaa. THt KEELtT IN. STITUTE. 1M m. Wk Stmt. Sk lakt Car Tl i GT iUTO, CARRIAGE, BUGGt TOPS Mat 1'i UfiK-ra- l xrni. Toil Mlpa, I'u.lilmi, and Uphol. u riti. Aitlo i'a.iiliug. W rilr lor price. . " The Wei i nit oil A u t o Top 1 t 4 & Painting Co. Trimming I'htme WiiaU'h MM WS? Pint Oflir HU ShII Lake Clip EXPERT KODAK Finishing lava our prufi Mliiual plmtoirriphiira do your L' U C 144 South kl alu kni.limg. Tilaa CUipi onirLLno bjimmitj Caa.ra. hullH MEN AVI) WOMEN to laarn barber t trade. oppurtuuitlu, open lor you. Tool, lurumlied and while learning. only eight week, pli rniutrc I. Cal. or write lor particular and U Commercial Street. Halt Lake City. U lab. ViAtTED Exci-llen- n cat-kin- a The Way to Unlock. The office boy was whistling a late popular air, hut he didn't carry the tune very well. You will break Into song occasion will you?" remarked his employred-haire- er. "Sometimes," haired youth. answered the auburn "If youd get the key you wouldn't Hied to break In," retorted the boss. Naiioual Monthly. The Cure. 'Ho you mean to say you have ac- tually begun to smoke those awful e.Kars your wife gave you last Christ- - Buis "Yes. I dug them up the othei day. and they are a great help in my Present situation. 'Miat is that?" ' am trying to leave off smoking lor good." 1 Beaver Home Coming. ExHeaver city, Utah, July cursion rates via Salt Lake Route Tickets on sale July 18, 19, 20 Returr July Both. Adv. 20-2- Needed. "I heard something this afternoon." remarked Mrs. Jawkins, "that fairly knocked me speechless. "That's fine!" replied her husband. Just the thing I nave been looking for. Do ou mind repeating It to the baby? Excursion Rates. Between all Utah points on the Sait Bake Route, account Pioneer day, July 4th. Tickets on sale July Return July 27th. Ask the Salt Lake Route agent tor information. Adv. 23-2- The fool man who la always asking for advice ehnuld be advised to keep hie mouth closed. The honeymoon Is over when the brldo discovers that the might bsve done better. tel tnsrhlnea, loin, all trtc- anl lmr ' acconv-ptluhe- d a linguist," be remarked as he glanced at the apcr she was writing. "I don't make any pretentions la that direction," she answered. Russian newspaper "But that Is you have picked up" , "Why, so It Is," she answered In eur 1 prise. thought It was a dialect THOR MOTORCYCLES . shall giro answered the child, son of a clergyman, "lit give you two orange if you'll tell mo whpro bo la not." if ath-titlo- Iaoer WA MImmI M.Millr, I ... jSi'f. y I God la. "My lord," , V man, you this orango If you tell mo ubero .'til k an Of litila child, remarked, awaet r"Now, my lllUa o SCHOOL TRUSTEES lormwiileir align to talpi, if I ataloam. Going Him Ona Batttr. An Engllali blahop, offering imm Viiii nr-li- tin to any aeflva drug ainra : thir rahn ,,?.TMlra.;if(l Ratill sz?.az:v. at awTiz z? dz:a '"r" All if y izvrzz L'fZ.VTZfcrsLvanitxr (u:cactf ihi Houth Mala Lake flty. Utah l Hoot. trvinit aid a to4 ! a Mli la of I don. Fill a lw and ou nr boll I with warm water, drop la one Opiona !ahl and allow la giaaolva. hatha tba ayea Iwa la Wol this four I'me dally, You ahoobl no ilea your eve Hear tit pereeplllily rgbl from tba flta tart and Inflammation will nub-klappear. If vmir eye ara bothering you, vm a little, taka aiepa ta aava them I now before loo lata. Many bop. aavrd If Irmly blind mlahl hava In lima, Adv, bad for rarad they tt USED AND NEW CARS an-- nra ,na et.-riibn- secv i j STU DEBAKER C. A. Quigley V 1a tanbl In now ii a r,l in-I will ba al-llima and nixlmu.lea even to ba an irenrthen their of aver selling lha trouble and glnMra. Eva troubira of tnanv lion may ba wonderfully benefited by Mbxtlng Ilia imda rule. Ilera la lha hld, a Salt Lake City, Utah wn ran ,1,. Fire Escapes, Wire Work and Ornamental Iron Work of Every Description. Crajer Vire & Iron Works Can. si, but wllbout prow riuon for nfta iixiia I lef. ran avail everything o-i- m flna print aiibnot alaarM H a rr4 belleve4 that Ibmieanda Wba af W ti Sacoad-bao- l: fl4 0t m" ilvr 10 ra4 allll of vnt4 half thia Engineering, Fall term pen September I Oth Full information lent on request M iba yrlo Mil iMif iiita of this wmvbrtul lt-- fraarti)lbn. "I tM ima man ays. iryma at lotoal blind, mhiM IMI aa to II Now I avaryihtixf iihout I 4o walaf alsaa-- a an. ntf oy mora. At tbay wull pain Ann all now Iba diaadfuliy; ibrjr A lima. It nsa Ilka a mlraota ! I ladf who boa. It mvs: Tba imiMpMrd nr (fats Education, Law and Medicine. A preparation for a life a well at a living i given. Bargain ltruhlhf M ibt (l v Piatlical count are offered in Art, Science, tttLt.ttr.J- h J" . Salt Lake City, Utah b-- u a - IB University of Utah isfjfc, I V ,li will I uro fotlio. l ovm ! vi you a vl of Mhr UI lu N("W ytii Unr li fool f,r you. flOVU rtolfais (.- - UrZStkVCXST and Uaa at Hama wr tm ymi nf r If Dial (hero till! rT37t3 ctriTXMT'jsy VXZXhWJ 14 trlesl energy dally to run tbs ran ama-Par.lfl- o A Frco Prescription iWW uns vh,wii Milft ! w S! Ml kMH K fork. mn. .'tr V. w jMy "fo ., j", i, 'i ( . V EZKar&oiiZsca iz&JtfczczciS RECY, a town of northern FTance, Is famous In history for the great victory gained near by on August 26, 1346, by the English, under Edward III, over the French of King Philip of Valois. The first attack resulted In disaster for the French, who were driven back. The second attack was made by a large body of French knights who bad arrived, and served only to ln-creaso the number of casualties of the French forces. A few of the y more valorous charged up to the English line and fell near it. The blind king of Bohemia, with a party of devoted knights, succeeded In penetrating the English line, and the king wns killed among the rankB of the prince of The tablet In the IllustraWales tion marks the spot where he fell, as near as can be told at the present time. WHERE WALLACE GATHERED HIS HOSTS. Wallace tower, Stirling, Scotland, marks a spot famous in Scottish history. It was here Wallace gathered the Scots for his greatest battle. Six centuries ago, when Robert Bruce was fighting for the throne of Scotland, the patriotic William Wallace led a royal army of Scots to the hill In preparation for a battle with the English Here they under Surrey and Cressingham. camped one September night In 1297 and the next day utterly defeated the English In an encounter at a bridge over the river. Up to that time the English forces of Edward I had had the advantage: Wallaces victory here turned the tide of fortune, and though he himself was afterward taken prisoner and put to death (1305), the splendid triumph of the Scots a few years later at Pannockburn (only three or four miles from here at the other side of Stirling) did secure the InWallace dependence of the land. The memory of Scotland. of lover to Is dear every "While the great rock he watched from shall endure, His monument Is sure, Build low build high, The great name cannot die." GRAVE MOUND OF GREEK HEROES. The Soros Is the mound erected over the In the battle of graves of 192 Athenians who fell C. 490. The mound Is B. 12. Marathon, August in circum-(erencabout forty feet high and 300 yards Underneath the mound lie the heroes men-at-arm- e. Tnzuoiror mzmx) xnzicmz2 who died In this most decisive victory whldb prevented Persian Influence from Invading Europe. The battle had hardly begun when the Persians, In Immensely superior force, doubtless ten to one, pulled themselves together and by sheer mass broke through the Greek center. But this had been calculated upon beforehand. Mlltlades employed strategy, making his line weak at the center, and allowed the Persians to break It Then with his heavy masses at the ends be ground the Persian wings to pieces and fell upon the Persian center. The most stubborn fighting, apart from the battle at shlpB, was probably at this spot, half a mile from The shore. Six thousand four hundred Persian bodies lay on this plain and along the shore, while 192 men of Marathon lay wrapped In glory on this bloody field. THE MASSACRE AT CAWNPORE. A beautiful memorial was erected at Cawnpore, India, in memory of the women and children murdered by Nana Sahib In 1F57. Perhaps the saddest, most pathetic Incident In the entire history of the world Is marked by this brooding angei. In the terrible Indian mutiny, half a century ago, 200 women and children who had escaped slaughter at the massacre of Cawnpore, were brought back by Nana Sahib, and were hacked to pieces here by professional butchers. The bodies were thrown Into a well beneath that stone upon which the angel now stands. Her arms are folded, denoting resignation; she holds In her hands the martyr's palms. Around the well curb is Inscribed, "Sacred to the perpetual memory of the great company of Christian people, chiefly women and children, who near this spot were massacred by the followers of the rebel Nana, and cast, the living with the dead. Into the well below, on the 15th day of July, 1857." THE LION OF CHAERONEA. One of the Illustrations shows the Lion of Chaeronea, which guards the graves of patriots who fell on Mt. Parnassus, Greece. 338 B. C. A few years ago one traveled past this spot and saw only massive pieces of marble, evidently parts of a lion. The head lay with its muzzle upward; other fragments lay scattered about. There was never any doubt among Intelligent Greeks that these were remains of a lion set up over the Thebans who fell In the battle on or near this spot, when the Thebans and Athenians made a last heroic struggle for the liberty Licit uf cKwar&.rAvwsoS) &&& of Greece, 338 B. C. All who honor w lost causa will bring their offerings to this sacred spot The heroes who fought hero did not propose to submit until they had dona their utmost to save Greece from Macedonian Philip. The battle was fiercely contested, especially by the Thebans, who formed the right wing thrown out Into the plain, resting on the Kephlsoa and facing west, while the Athenians at the other end of the line rested on the hills, one of which appears Just behind the lion. The Macedonians were commanded by the veteran Antlpater with the youthful Alexander by his side. When after a stubborn fight, the Thebans were beaten, the Athenians were Isolated and rolled up a loss of over a thousand slain. Demosthenes, the sou' of the enterprise, fought In the ranks. In the enclosure where the lion now stands, 154 skeletons were found and carried to the Athenian museum. The lion Is a funeral monument not only to the Theban dead, but to dead Greece. Greece remained a power by Ita art and literature, but the Macedonian and then the Roman were Us rulers. WHERE JOAN OF ARC WAS BURNED. A slab In the sidewalk of the Place du Vieux Marche, Rouen, France, marks the spot where Joan of Arc was burned at the stake. For a century and a hatf after the conquest (1066) this northern district belonged to England, by virtue of the sovereign's Inheritance from William of Normandy. Rouen here was an English town. Then the French captured and held It until 1419, when It fell once more Into French hands. While the Inspired peasant girl, Jeanne dArc, was leading the French armies against the English, this was a stronghold of her enemies, and every victory she won made their hatred blacker. According to the old chronicles, she had premonitions that her mission for France was accomplished when she raised the stege of Orleans and secured the coronation of Charles VII at RheimB; but the king would not let her go back to private life. In 1430 at Compiegne, she was taken prisoner by the Burgundian allies of the English, and by them sold to those against whom she had defended her country. It was In an old castle half a mile away behind us (the building Itself Is not now In existence), that she was tried for heresy and condemned to death as a witch; on the spot where the slab Is set in the pavement (1431) she was burned at the stake. THE LION OF WATERLOO. The battle of Waterloo was one of the most Important military engagements of all history. It was fought on June 18, 1815, between the allied forces of Great Britain, the Netherlands and Prus-Fla- r under General Wellington, and the army of France under Napoleon. This battle was the culmination of the campaign following the escape of Napoleon from his exile at Elba. Napoleon was defeated ; he left the field In the center of a square with a somber but calm countenance, his glance probing futurity, and seeing that more than a battle had been lost that day " On the 21st of June, three days after his a feat, Napoleon reached Paris, and the following day presented his abdication. The huge statue shown in the illustration mound In the center of the stands on a 200-fobattlefield, about ten or twelve miles from tha city of Brussels. g If s woman didnt carry a watch aha would never know bow late she Is. Microbes In Ice have a gay old time these torrid days. Domestic discord la the apple. man In the case gets the core. The When relatives do n favor they allow the recipient to forget IL A woman loves a man In proportion to his ability to make her angry. And many gems of thought turn out to be paste. Revenge la sweet only to the very small Individual. The real secret of happiness Is to let the other fellow do the worrying. WRONG BREAKFAST. Change Gave Rugged Health. that for Many persons think strength, they must begin tho day with a breakfast of meat end other heavy foods. This is n mistake ns anyone can easily discover for himself. A W. Va. carpenters experience may benefit others. lie writes: "I used to be a very heavy break- fast eater but finally indigestion caused me such distress, I became afraid to eat, anything. "My wife suggested a trial of Grape-Nut- s and as I had to eat something or starve, I concluded to take her advice. She fixed me up a dish and I remarked at the time that the qual- ity was all right, but the quantity was too small I wanted a saucerful. "But she said a small amount of Grape-Nut- s went a long way and that I snust eat It according to directions. So I started In with Grape-Nut- s snd :renin, two soft tolled eggs and some crisp toast for breakfast. "I cut out meats and a lot of other Stuff I had been used to eating all my life and was gratified to see that I was getting better right along. I concluded I had struck the right tblug and Btuck to It. I had not only been eating Improper food, but too much. "I was working at the carpenters trade at that time and thought that unless I had a hearty breakfast with plenty of meat, I would play out before dinner. But after a few days of my "new breakfast I found I could do more work, felt better In every way, and now I am not bothered with Indigestion. Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read The Road to Well-vllle- ," in pkgs. "Theres a Reason." rrad the above letter? A new n ntMiriir from time, to time. The? ire due, true, sad full of hum a rer .urioit. |