OCR Text |
Show WHY LEAVES CHANGE COLOR. Chemical Element. Produce the Huea We All Know. . , coniPoaed of a great num-bof cell, the walls of which aro ,Jn the spring and summer ,wn- -cells are all fllled with fluid colored with minute grains of red mr7n1.v0ther p,ment. which appear green. In the autumn, through the cold, oxldaUon and other changes take place In the ore or less d1e8troyin apidly of the color elements. As soon as one of these elements Is gone the leaf no longer a normal green, but assumes appears the shade of the remainder of the color elements mixed together. When only the red element Is left the leaf Is the' yellow alone remains the leaf is yellow, and when all the color tag matter has gone the leaf Is brown. Frost Is not the sole cause of the changes of color, but It is an Import ant cause. The more gradual tha changes of temperature from summer heat to winter cold, the greater will be the variety and brilliancy In the color ings of the autumn leaves. Womans Home Companion. er red-whe- n and doctors do fany women .nt recognize the real symptoms If derangement of the female jjjans until too late. bad terrible pains along my for two years and suffered I was Siven different Kadfully. wore plasters; none of helped me. Reading: of inal cord Snes, E.Pinkhams has brought Stable Compound felt that it was genres that Lydia htmt hat I I somehow needed and bought a bottle to How glad I am that I did so; JJ" bottles brought me immense relief and after using thtee bottles more and blood surging f felt new life as trough my veins. It seemed Sough there had been a regular home eleaning through my system, that all the sickness and poison had been taken I out and new life given me instead. .dvised dozens of my friends to use DIAMONDS !T Ivdia E. Pinkliams Vegetable Lood health is to complete happiness, and indis-uenssb- Compound, fydia E. le Pinkkams Vegetable Compound has secured this to me." -- Mbs. Laura L. Bbemxr, Crown Point, Indiana, Secretary Ladies Relief $5000 forfeit If original of abooo lottor Corps, pfcrgfonuuitncss cannot bo produced . Every sick woman who does not understand her ailment should rite Mrs. Pinkbam, Lynn, Mass. Her advice In free and always lielpfuL Scarcity of Naval Officers. Secretary Moody faces considerable difficulty in keeping a necessary numofficers in tha ber of commissioned This is because of the contnavy. inued applications for retirement under the provisions of the navy personnel act. There is no way to prevent these retirements with advanced rank. Deafnesi Cannot Be Cared local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion o( the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that Is by constithy utional remedies. Deafness is caused by aa infl jned condition of the mucus lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you bare a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal tondition, hearing will be destroyed forever; line cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, vMch is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucus surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cainio. be cured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHF.MEY ft CO., Toledo, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Ball's Family Fills are the best. a INJURE THE 8IGHT. New Peril Will Not Greatly Trouble the Average Man. Somebody has advanced a new the ory. It is declared that the fashion of wearing so many large diamonds Is injurious to the eyesight This news will not Interest a large percentage of the feminine population, for obvious reasons. Neither is it likely to make unhappy the one who wears a tiara and a sunburst the size of a plate. The danger Is only to the admiring and envious few who surround the wearer of the gems. If they gaze too long and earnestly at her jewels, according to this authority, the effect produced on the eyes is somewhat like that of the electric light, a sense of bedaz-zlemeand strain, which Is hardly noticeable at first, but tends to become strongly marked. semi-medic- CONVINCING PROOF. Case No. 41,206. Capt. Alfred G. Rigler of Hose Company No. 4, Canton, Ohio, says: I had a weak back ever since I wag a boy, and about six years ago the cause developed into rather a bad case of kidney complaint It was not a little backache now and then, but backache which caused actual suffering day and night, and the harder I tried to get rid of it the worse it became. When the attacks were in the acute stage it was difficult to sit down, and when down It was just as hard to regain an erect position, on account of the twinges of pain in the kidneys. I can only describe some of the pangs as Blmilar to that received from a M U, 'r In time, distressing and terribly Inconvenient urinary weakness resulted, causing aunoylng embarrassment during the day and loss of sleep dur-lf e , the ing night of Aged Darkey. I took everything which came to oldest men in the south my notice from reading, from observais Uncle Joe Donaldson, a negro livand which my friends and acing at Gainesville, Ga., who has just tion, I consulted advised. quaintances 110th his passed year. One peculiar not physicians, but none of them were lty about him Is that he does able to relieve the trouble, let alone claim to have seen Washington. stop it It became so well known that I bad CARBOLIC SALVE a pronounced case of kidney comwill prevent blood plaint , that I often received circulars medical companies offering to poisoning in Outs, from cure me, and one day eighteen letters Wounds, to me by the mall carand heal were banded rier. 4 cents. too. 25 them, When Doan's Kidney Pills attracted Would yon have my attention I wanted to try them, TOOTHACHE just as I had tried everything else, 15 cents? Our'Jap-anes- e and Mrs. Rigler went to Durban ft Tooth Ache Wright Co.s drug store for a box. Relief followed. Drops will rid you I knew after ,a dose or two that of both. was acting directly on the DeCOSTAS LIVER the medicine from the altered condikidneys FILLS is tion of the kidney secretions, and, encouraged, I continued the treat25 cents a policy. ment. Finally, the backache and What is your health other complications stopped. Let me sum up my opinion about worth? Doan's Kidney Pills by saying, I All Lung Diseases would willingly pay one months start with a cough. wages for a box of them if I could not If you will cough tip buy them for less. You can refer a quarter for a botany one to me about Doans Kidney tle of Cough Balsam Pills and I will convince them that youll stop coughing they act Just as represented. Four Years After. Japanese Corn Cure will rid you of a 'Lapse of time has strengthened dozen CORNS for a my appreciation of Doans Kidney do Pills. I gave this remedy my unqualiquarter. Which fied endorsement in the summer of best-co- rns love the you 1896, because of the results I obtained or quarter? from a course of the treatment. I can now add to my original endorseALL DRUQGIST OR STORK OR DIRECT FROM I I I ment the experience of a number of others who are just as enthusiastic, when they express their opinion of Doans Kidney Pills, as I." A FREE TRIAL of this great kidA SOUND ARGUMENT. ney medicine which cured Mr. Rigler, will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. AdCo., Buffalo, N. dress Foster-MIlburY. For sale by all druggists, pries 60 cents per box. Peculiarity One of the Bruises, Sores, for Health Insurance for Z. G. M. I B. The Cost of Warfare. 1850 the world has expended 300,000,000 in waging war, and four times that sum In holding standing armies in readiness. Since How Advertising N. W. Ayer & Son, Grows. the Keeping It advertising at Everlastingly agents of Philadelphia, have found it necessary to move into new and Chestnut larger quarters at Street in that city. This announcement will interest Tooting up the praises of Three Crown Baking many publishers, because Ayer ft Son TowUit. Extracts and Spices. Ask for them. are so widely known as promoters of For sale everywhere. They began newspaper publicity. business thirty-threyears ago, with two people and an annual business of SUBSCRIBE FOR 335,000. They now have one hundred and ninety employes, and have for The Leading Mining Journal In the West. years done the largest advertising 12.00 Ter Ytar In Advance. , business in the 'world. The difference 60c for three months emple hulMcriptlon, W AM LJJ HOLICITOKS between then and now is, they say, . every pity in the United States. Yon ean make simply the result of making newsh.i to siu per day commission. J1 n s'Kinp f.r sample copyand par.lcnlarv paper and magazine advertising pay JULd AMj M&i'ALS, Mining Exchange, Denver, their customers. 300-30- 8 HEULETT BROS. CO e ORES!? METALS RELIABLE ASSAYS. am Go d AS ver Gold $ikj, l Gold, fill r f M Prompt returns on75; mail sample OGDEN ASSAY CO. DENVER. COLO. When Answering Advertisements Mention This FaDcr, Klndlu Found Powerful Spring. At a spot Indicated by a water diviner an artesian well was bored at Sleaford, Lincolnshire, England, with the result that at a depth of 160 feet a spring was struck that Is now yielding 6?4,0OQ gallons of water dally. For New Summer Resort Charles M. Schwab of the Steel trust is said to be at the bead of a syndicate of wealthy New Yorkers who have in view the establishment at Great Neck, L. I., of an exclusive eummer resort similar to that founded many years ago at Tuxedo by Pierre Lorillard. The buying of shore front property at Great Neck has been going on for months big prices being paid in some cases and ere long the little hamlet will have been replaced by splendid summer cottages. Five thousand dollars an acre was paid for an estate of 105 acres. TOWN ALMOST DEPOPULATED. On Proaparoua City of Aspen, Colorado, la Being Deserted. A special to the Salt Lake Herald from Aspen, Colo., says: The recent slump in price of silver Is virtually a disaster to this once prosperous city, and has brought great distress to formerly happy homes. At the present price of the white metal not a mine in the camp can be worked at a profit, and almost the entire population of the town must give up old associations, many of them of a lifetime, and seek other places to make a livelihood. Queen Wilhelmlnas Crown. In this exodus, sons, daughters, parQueen Wilhelmina's crown Is very ents and children must necessarily be gorgeous. It is of dull gold only the separated, and there Is great dejection edges being polished. It consists of over the prospect. Every outgoing a crimson velvet cap inclosed in a train carries people who have forcircle set with sapphires and emer- saken their homes here, being unable alds. The imperial arches terminate to sell them at any price, to seek In sixteen points, eight of which are work or make a new start In life in surmounted by large single pearls, other sections of the country. Aspen and the other eight, bent toward the has been known heretofore as tha center and there crowned with the greatest silver mining camp in the United States, and at one time the globe and cross, are set with nine greatest In the world. The city Is sib pearls each, which are graduated in uated in a pretty valley surrounded by size, the smallest being placed at the three huge mountains, which abound top. in the white metal which may nevet see the light of day. During the bust H. C. Havemeyers Generosity. ling days of 1887 to 1893 Aspen Until a few days ago Henry C. boasted of a population of 15,000, bul had a claim of $15,000 against today scarcely 1,500 remain. Aftei the First Presbyterian church of the panic of 1892-9and until a few Greenwich, Conn. The church was weeks ago, all of the large propertiei built ten years ago, at which time Mr. have been worked under lease and th Havwneyer contributed $20,000 toward miners made a little better that a residence for the pastor. In 1900 Wages, while silver was between 5C he remitted $5,000 and last spring no- and 60 cents an ounce. tified the pastor that K the congreCOAL STRIKE COMMISSION. gation would raise $5,000 more he would cancel the remainder. The re- Mine Workers Expected to Connnme tho quired amount has just been subEntire Week. scribed and the church is now free It Is expected that the mine workfrom debt. ers will consume all of the week In Both Reserved. presenting to the anthracite coal Some time ago the lord lieutenant strike commission their side of the of Ireland agreed to attend a certain controversy with the coal operators. race meeting and a carriage was re- It is estimated the employers will take served for his excellency in the spe- about ten days to submit the informacial train run from Dublin on the race tion they desire the commission to day. Seeing that the adjoining car- have. The commission will ask the to present riage was reserved for Lord Ardllaun attorneys for both sides what figures they already have preof brewing fame, one of whose products is a malt liquor known as the XX, pared, so that the arbitratorsnotmay who are yet a porter took up a piece of chalk and study them, and those to present their figures will be wrote upon the one carriage, For ready to make an extra effort to His Ex, and on the other, For His requested the work. The commission expedite XX." has no desire to unnecessarily huriy anyone, but feels that all interested Perfumes Liked by Horses- as possible. should work as However little credit a horse may The arbitrators arerapidly daily receiving letcommonly receive for possessing ters of advice from persons in all delicacy of scent, there are some per- parts of the country. Nearly a majors fumes grateful to him. ity of the letters make pleas for tbe are aware of the fact, and make use protection of the n men. of their knowledge in training stubTHOMAS NAST IS DEAD. born and apparently Intractable animals. Many trainers have favorite Famous Cartoonlit Succumb to an Attack perfumes the composition of which of Yellow Fever. a Is and It the they keep secret, Consul-GenerThomas Nast died of this means of appealing to the horses aestheticism that enSunday noon at Guayaquil, Ecuador, ables so many of them to accomplish after three days illness from yellow such wonderful results. fever. He was Interred at 5 p. m. The funeral was attended by the governor, the consular corps, the American col IrrlgatlorT Figure., The third annual report of the irri- ccy and bv many friends. The coffin -d stripes. gation Investigations of the office ol was wrapped In the stars aa consul recited The British prayer In United States stations, experimental Mr. Nast department of agriculture, made un- the cemetery. The death of der the direction of Elwood Mead, is deeply lamented by the natives, who held him in high esteem. says that averages of measurement Mr. Nast was appointed consul-generembracing nearly all of the arid state! at Guayaquil this year, leaving show that during the past three years New York for bis post July 1. He into was turned the water enough was bom in Landau, Bavaria, Septemheads of ditches during the Irrigation ber 27, 1840, and came with his .parseason to cover the land Irrigated to ents to tbe United States six years a depth of 4.45 feet; or, stated In an- later. As a caricaturist and cartoonist other way, 4.45 acre feet of water he became famous. were taken from streams for every Going to Old Country to Spend Christmas acre of land Irrigated. The annual exodus from the northwest and the middle west of Scandi8pencer Not a Vegetarian. Herbert Spencer is poking fun at navians who returned to the motherthe vegetarians of England and hag land for the Christmas holidays, is untaken them completely by surprise in- usually heavy this year. A special asmuch as vegetarian faddists thought train that left Chicago for New York they could claim the philosopher as Sunday carried 600 of these excursionone of their own. Mr. Spencer does notj ists to Norway and Sweden. The train, was elaborately decorated with apparently think highly of the mental which state produced by a year of vegetable the flags of the United States and of and Sweden, carried a brass diet He said recently: I went over1 Norway all of the excursionband. Practically the written year I had during all that ists will return to the United States, conand practiced vegetarianism Since then and a large number of them have arsigned it all to the fire. some facetious ranged to bring kinsmen with them oh he has been saying the return trip. things about the "devotees of the RICH STRIKE IN WYOMINQ. truck garden, as he calls the vegeHav-emey- 3 Horse-trainer- non-unio- n tarians. Three-fo- Mrs. Clevelands Social Plans. Announcement Is made that Mrs, Grover Cleveland, having seen her four children beyond the very young stage, will spend a good part of the winter in New York mingling in social gayety. All the children except the boy favor their father. The exception is distinctly a "Frances Folsom boy, so the friends of the family say. Miss Ruth has begun to go into society a little, though as yet she is far from out. But she visits numerous families in the Cleveland set French Premier Not a Giant M. Combes, the French premier, is only 5 feet 3 inebes tall. He is by profession a physician. He was at one time a schoolmaster and is a leading authority on French educational affairs. His scholarship and literary activities have for years been large and comprehensive, embracing such topics as the Latin poet Virgil, Kants the philosophy of St. metaphysics, Augustine and the social theories of St Simon. ot Load Which Assays to tho Ton In Gold. 4,388.00 One of the richest strikes ever made in southeast Wyoming is reported from the Silver Glance mine, In the Hartville district, where three-foo- t lead has been, opened up which assays $4,328.60 to the ton in The ore from which the regold. turns were received waB selected rock, but it is said the vein matter is very rich, containing, in addition to the gold, about 15 per cent copper and some silver. THE PROOF OF THE PUDDING LIES IN THE EATING." The doctors are dumbfounded, the druggists astonished, and the people excited and Joyful over the wonderful cures and tremendous sales of the great Remedy, SL Jacobs OIL Every case of Rheumatism some of many years standing has given way to this powerful remedy. Thousands of certificates like the following can be furnished aa to its value: ' George Scleyer, Publisher of the Chilton, WUl, Volks bote," used SL almost unbearable Jacobs OH for which had comtbe back, in puina A few applihim." pletely prostrated cations cured him entirely. Mrs. Fred Eberle, Bellalre, O., was for a long time severely troubled with Rheumatism. SL Jacobs Oil instantly relieved and entirely cured her. Rev. Dr. B. Pick of Rochester, N. Y., suffered so intensely from Rheumatic Polina that he was unable to preach. Several applications from a bottle of SL Jacobs Oil relieved him. F. Radder, Cleveland, Ohio, says: Two applications of SL Jacobs Oil cured me of great and pain In my foot Messrs. C. L. Brundage and Son, Druggists, Muskegon, Mich., write: St Jacobs Oil .has a wonderful sale. We sold eight bottles at retail yesterday. This will give you some Idea of how well it Is liked in this section. Mr. Louis Hinkel, of East Poesten, I call St. Jacobs Kill, N. Y., says: Oil the best liniment I ever used. It cured me of Rheumatism and pain in the back. Manchester, N. Herman Rittner, I have tried SL Jacobs Oil, and H.: found it excellent. All those who have purchased it speak of it as simply incomparable. I Geo. G. Erffle, Palestine, 111.: was in bed suffering from a swollen leg, I used SL Jacobs Oil, its effect was wonderful. The following day 1 attended to my business again. Dr. Otto Fuls, Reading, O., writes: The sale of SL Jacobs Oil Is constantly Increasing; it is praised by everybody, and never fails to give entire satisfaction. WEBSTER'S International Dictionary of ENfiUSH, Biography, 6m mphy, Fiction, ttc. The Oae Great Standard Authority. TboXo lditiiliM0,oaMW word BOtfim. Nvw yltiw tfcreafbosl lUoohrmmo. I00U Too UtUoSonJ Toot In Frofm clitic, A it Aim liaoptfss. vFirt-rl8. t FREE wwttnn Wokilcr't ollegt t Dletloaurr. IAoU ahoXrslioBA. Aim Affords pi C. KERRI sol If AM tv. FAftPHLBT CO., fobs., .liOstMtaft. lit ate. A LAO Sprinf!nt4, Hun. In Use Pe-ru-- na Gn -- n Colds. for Coughs, Congressman s Catarrh-- A Leftc.. Fruit acids with dyed DYES. COULD will not PUTNAM NOT USE stain d Work on American Pacific Cable. Clarence Mackay, president of the Postal Telegraph company. Vice President Baker and Vice President Ward of the Commercial Cable company arrived in San Francisco Sunday nighL They stated that they came to witness the beginning of the laying of the cable to Honolulu, and expected that the event will take place the latter part of this week. Mr. Mackay said he believed the branch from Honolulu to Yokohama via Guam would be la working order July 1, 1303. k goods FADELESS SIDE SADDLE. Woman Turned Down by Livery Keeper. It is bard these days, says a popular actress, to be an with the best Intentions woman I was resting at a rather fashionable little place not long ago and wanted to get some horseback exercise, of which I am very fond. So I went to a pretentious looking livery stable and applied for a horse. The proprietor As inquired how I intended to ride. a woman should ride a horse, with a side saddle, of course, I answered. "Then you can have no horse of ours," was the verdicL A side saddle unfits the best of horses for any other use. Its an Invention of the devil and as Injurious to the woman as it is to the All my wiles were powerless horse. to overcome the horse owners objections and I was forced to forego equestrian pleasure." ru much anxiety. The novelist recently reproductions. Is now ready for had a serious hemorrhage, itis said, drawings by Bryson, and will be mailed on redistribution He condition. weak a in him that left (25) cents coin of twenty-fiv- e rapidly, however, and ceipt recuperated A. Miller, GenF. Address or stamps. since his condition bas been more satChicago. eral Passenger Agent, is factory. I do not believe Plso's Cura for OonsnmptUn has an equal for coughs and colds. Johh F Ind., Feb. )S. 1900. Boras, Trinity Good News by Wholesale. postal card sent from Billvllle to one of the absent brethren reads: Dear Jim Nuthin but good news The Real Trouble. to tell you. Your crap paid off the amThe "discoverer of the golden your brother broke out o mortgage, violins" Cremona of the varnish ber an daddy has Jest got $1,000 your jail, York newspahas been visiting New out the railroad fer runnln over his are There enough offices again. pers Aint Providence providin! leg. good violins. Would that there were Constitution. Atlantic fewer bad violinists! A Sp-n- Why In every country of the civilized world Sisters of Charity are known. Not only do they minister to the spiritual and intellectual needs of the charges committed to their care, but they also minister to their bodily needs. With so many children to take care of and to protect from climate and disease, these wise and prudent Sisters have found Peruna a never failing safeguard. Dr. Hartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters from all over the United States. A recommend recently received from a Catholic institution in Detroit, Mich., reads as follows: Dr. S. B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio: The young girl who used Dear Sir: the Peruna was suffering from laryngitis, and loss of voice. The result of the treatment was most satisfactory. She found great relief, and after further use of the medicine we hope to be able to aayshe is entirely cured.' Sisters of Charity. The young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Peruna for catarrh of the throat with good results as the above letter testifies.Co. Co, Send to The Peruna Medicine lumbus, Ohio, for a free book written by Dr. Hartman. isfro" , The following letter an Meekison, of .Naombus, O. eg The Peruna Medicine ,ttl Gentlemen: I have used several bottles of Peruna and feel greatly benefitted there- by from my catarrh of the head,and feel encouraged to believe that its continued, use will fully eradicate a disease of thirty FJ David Meekison. J , Dr. Hartman, one of tb in theUrik physicians and surgeonsan to formula States, was the first Peruna. It was through bl$ was introduced ! perseverance that it of thia the medical profession and iaU. If you do not derive prompt use of the from results factory write at once to Dr- - Hartman, and be w full statement of your case valuable A his to be pleased give you vice gratia. Address Dr. Hartman, President! C The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ire, ' Figs Symp.of laxative Its component parts are all wholesome. It is pure. It contains ikfrbfcst family 6 after-effect- s. It acts gentlyVitkut unpleasant It is wholly free from Objectionable substances. It contains the laxative principles of plants, It contains the carminative principles WpN wholesome aromatic liquids which agreeable and refreshing to the taste. . It is gentle. AH are pure. All are delicately blended. All are skillfully and scientifically compounded. It is pleasant. It is efficacious. - It is not expensive. It is good for children. Its value is due to our method of manufacture and to It is excellent for ladies. To get its beneficial effects the originality and simplicity of the combination. Manufactured by It is convenient for business men. It is perfectly safe buy the genuine. under all circumstances. It is used by millions of families the world over. It stands highest, as a laxative, with physicians. If you use it you have the best laxative the world produces. (auforKia San Frnncisco. CaL New York. N. Y. Louisville. Ky. FOB SALE BT ALL LEADING DB EGOISTS. Mon Telle a Peculiar Story Regarding tho Death of His Sweetheart. one-thir- ry. IaJb jo the Cosmopolitan Some Good Advice. My young friend, Jimmy Banks, was married a little over a year ago. He had previously spent twelve months In the most furious courtship. The girl at first had not cottoned to Jimmy very much, but he moved heaven and earth so vigorously that she at last consented. Now, the other day who appears before me but Jimmy, with a long face and makes a complaint that the baby keeps him awake Good gracious! Jimmy, I nights. said, didnt you know that babies always do that? A baby has to have some relaxation. Go home and be thankful that It isnt twins. There 1b the reverse side to every Joy. You cant have the advantages of bachelorhood and married life at the same time. You buy everything with a price leisure, family, office, learning, wealth, fame, position. Nothing 1b free. Be sure you want the article, pay the current price and enjoy your possession. Cosmopolitan. Writer SISTERS OF CHAM Novelist In Poor Health. co-cu- good Gives THE ST. PAUL CALENDAR Private letters from Sorrento bring FOR 1903 ' the Information that F. Marlon Craw10x15 Inches, of beautiful fords health Is giving bis family six sheets In colors, of pastel s' nbat PRICE, d Annie McMahan, a domestic employed in a Springfield, Mo., hotel, whs found dead In her room Sunday. WilNovel Wedding Ceremony. liam Pittman, an employe of the FrisJustice of the Peace Henry Bundy co shops, slightly wounded, was also of Jersey City recently married Mrs. found in the room. PIttraaU asserted Mary Becker, and the ceremony was before a mirror. The bridethat the girl, in a jealous frenzy, shot performed groom officiated as the minister, and him and then committed suicide. Exlooking in the glasj asked the usual amination by the police disclosed the questions of his own reflection, and fact that the girl had been shot in the answered them himself. Then h proback. Pittman was held for investiga-tion- . nounced the couple man and wife, kissed the bride twice, once for the Denver Women Are Ambitious. justice and once for the groom, and In Now Mexico. Jefferson The Jane (womens) Prosperity then started on his honeymoon trip. Democratic Club of Denver bas taken The annual report of Governor charter. It is hoped Otero of New Mexico to the secretary Bln. Winslow! Soothing Byrap.' out a thirty-yearreduces t For children teething, softens tbe gums, c mi fa Allan, alleys pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. by the originators that the club, which of state is the unusually territory says of was named in honor of the mother work has taken Bagpipes Not Scotch. Thomas Jefferson, will ultimately be- prosperous, Irrigation are mines new said is that the only thing Scotch It Demoopening of strides, national come a great organization in a set of bagpipes is the sheepskin and new towns and cities are springcratic women. ing into life. The net bonded debt of and tartan. The wood ebony or s the territory is $1,034,054. The ascomes from Africa or Jamaica, sessed valuation of property in New the ivory from Africa, the horn from Mexico is now $41,107,745, which, as and the cane for the reed of Australia, the governor says, is not from Spain. for taxable value actual purposes, its a fair estimate, he says, not falling Stops the Cough and Works Off the Cold far short of $150,000,000. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 2Sa ftftsar Iks tMtlWIrtfl. holidij hots abeoM kv w givSBMM PAY THfLXURRENT DOGS THAT BROUGHT RUIN. Instincts of the Wolf Developed In the Scotch Collie. Perhaps tbe most utter ruin ever inflicted upon human beings by domestic animals, says Answers, was In Patagonia four or five yearB ago, A number of Scotch crofters emigrated to North Patagonia and began sheep farming, at which they were very successful. They brought out with them several valuable collies, and these for a time did good work. But one winter one of these farmers died suddenly. His dogs, left without food, began to devour the sheep. They ran away, took to the hills, and became the progenitors of a race of wild dogs, which come down in packs and kill the sheep by hundreds. So serious have matters become that a bounty of $10 a head is offered for these wild collies. Veils and Eyesight Dr. Nagel, an eminent German oculist, has again been investigating the effects of wearing veils, and has exwoamined the cases of eighty-eigh- t men whose eyesight has been injured by this practice. He finds that the size of the mesh, the distance of the ve!! from tbe eyes, and the color of are determinthe ' veil the ing differences, and that 75 per cent of the women who habitually wear veils, by neglecting to take account of these matters, impair their sighL this result being brought about by the average defective veil ia a period of What Children Should Be Taught. Merely what Is contained in the textboo) s is not what children should be taught at schools. They should learn justice and right and fairness and the principles of right living. XI justice is done they are sure to real Ize it, and it will have a bad effect upon them. Character is formed at school. An unjust rule will not tend to make just men and women out of the boys and girls who are compelled lour to tb?qrv9 it. Toledo Bee. Utahs Favorite Confections! MOLASSES DAINTIES CARNATION CHOCOLATES AdK your "Dealer for Thant Salt Lake Candy Co., Sole year. . St ? |