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Show he gojc (Elfccr t1cu0 STANDING A WHOM, BARK HOES TO BOTTOM Proprietor. TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION: One Year, in advance biz Monitia l'aree UoaUu 11. LIVES LOST AS SULT OF COLLISION. TWENTY-TW- tt 5 85 Kate red at the Poet Office at Brigham City as second olasa matter. UTBCM STANDING, Editor. EVERY THURSDAY. UTAH STATE NEWS. A female hold up has been operating In Salt Lake City. The Bank of Southern Utah, Cedar Citys new bank, will open for business March 20. . Smallpox Is again on the increase in Salt Lako City, ten cases having developed in as many days. A meeting of the postmasters of the state will he held in Salt Lake City on April 7 for the purpose of forming state association. The old city hall building at Lehi was destroyed by Are on the night of the 18th. It Is believed the Are was the work of an incendiary. Final surveys for Cedar Citys water system are being made, and it la expected the system will be completed within a few months. Firebugs attempted to burn the Southern PaclAc wooden bridge across the Ogden river one night last week, but the blaze was discovered in time to save the structure. There is a movement on foot to have the postofllce at Kaysville closed on Sundays, the idea being to receive r dispatch no mails on the Sabbath day. The towns of Lehl, American Fork and Pleasant Grove were in darkness tor three nights last week, a big land slide having crushed the pipe line a short distance from the power house. The "house warming of the new science building of the branch normal at Cedar City is to occur Saturday, March 26. Invitations have been sent to about 1,000 people throughout the south.) The camp of Basin in the La Sal country, has two new stores, two saloons and numerous other business enterprises contemplated in anticipation of a busy and prosperous season In that section. The Salt Lake Route has extended e Its track to a point miles sonth of Calientes, and work is progressing rapidly. It Is expected that they will reach Wabba, on the Muddy river, by April 1st Henry Waddell, the convict, was last week found guilty of shooting at Guard Naylor during the break at the Utah state penitentiary on October 9, 1903, and sentenced to twelve The Bark Lady Cairns Sent to the BotCrew tom and the Entire Drowned. The German INSTRUCTIONS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Items of news are solicited from all parts of the country vt rite upon oce side of the paper only. Write proper names plainly. In order to protect tne publisher from Impositions from irresponsible persons, tbe full name of tbe author should be signed to all communications The Uleufiy of correspondent will be Withheld whenever desired. PUBLISHED RE- bark Mona collided with the English bark Lady Cairns off Dublin hay Sunday morning. The Lady Cairns sank in a few minutes. Her crew of twenty two was drowned. The Mona, which was much damaged, was assisted into Dublin harbor. The Lady Cairns was a ship of 1 .GIG tons. She was commanded by Captain L. Evans and was bound from Liverpool for Timur, New Zealand. The Lady Cairns was built in Belfast In 18C9 and was owned by L. Tulloch of Swansea. The Mona was commanded by Captain Schwarting and was last reported at Adressan. three-maste- DEWEYS GO FREE. Kansas Cattlemen Acquitted on Mur- der Charge. Chauncey Dewey and his two cowboys, Clyde Wilson and William J. McBride, have been acquitted at Norton, Kans., of the charge of murdering Burchard Berry, by a jury which had considered the case twenty-eigh- t hours. Chauncey Dewey, a young millionaire ranchman, went to Cheyenne county, Kansas, early in 1900 to manSoon after age the Dewey ranch. his arrival there he became Involved in trouble with the Berry family, who were also prominent cattlemen. Trivial misunderstanding grew Into serious differences, which terminated in the killing of Burchard Berry In June, 1903, at the home of Alpheus Berry, during a fight in which Dewey and ten of his cowboys were pitted against the Berrys. MURDERER MEETS HIS DOOM. Louis H. Mott Pays the Penalty for Murder at Missoula. Mont. Louis H Mott was hanged at Missoula, Mont., at 6:08 oclock Friday morning for the murder of his wife. Five minutes after the trap was sprung he was pronounced dead. His neck was broken. Mott walked unassisted from the jail to the enclosure in which the gallows had been erected. In a brief speech under the gallows he stated he believed his conviction had been brought about through dishonest methods, and concluded by saying that lie was willing to give life for life. The crime for which Mott was hung was the shooting of his wife on Sun1903. For months day January 4 previous to the murder he had been addicted to the use of liquor and drugs, causing a depressed mental condition. While east on a husiness trip his wife sold his laundry business in Missoula. Ho became greatly angered on his return, liroodirg constantly over his wife's act. On the day of the murder he became involved in a lengthy quarrel with his wife, which was followed by his shooting her four times with a revolver while she was fleeing from the room. His wife lingered for nine hours before death. The case has been bitterly contested, and a considerable sum has been spent in an endeavor to save Mott from the gallows. SUBMARINE BOAT CUT IN TWO. Eleven Persons Lose Their Lives as Result of the Accident. A Portsmouth dispatch, under date of March 18, says: British submarine boat No. A 1 was run down and sunk off the Nab lightship today by a Donal Currie liner, and eleven persons were drowned, including Lieutenant the senior officer engaged in the submarine work. The liner passed on and reported that she had Btruck a torpedo. At the time she was struck the submarine was off the lightship engaged in the maneuvers, and was lying in seven fathoms of water waiting the approach of a battleship. The boat OWES ALL TO UNCLE SAM. was one of the newest of the fleet of submarine vessels and was built from Cubans Attribute Prosperity of Their the latest models, but she has always Country to United States. been a bad diver. She was inspected Admiral Dewey, who has returned recently by both King Edward and the from the navy maneuvers in southern Prince of Wales. waters, called on President Roosevelt MINERS WILL NOT STRIKE. Saturday to present to him a personal message of good will from President Vote to Accept a Two Years Wage Scale Offered by Operators. Palma of Cuba. The admiral told the A dispatch from Indianapolis, Ind., president that the people of the new republic were notably prosperous and dated March 18, says: The tellers tothat both President Palma and the Cu- day completed the count of the votes ban people attributed their prosperity of the miners on the proposition to to the government of the United accept or reject the operators offer States. of a two years' wage scale, and announced the result as follows: Total WOMEN ARE ORGANIZING. vote cast, 165,887. For acceptance of the scale, 98,514; against the scale Will Unions Establish Trades and In favor of a strike. 67.373. MaThroughout the United States. jority against a strike, 31,141. With the object of promoting woJaps Will Care for Missionaries. . men's trades unions In the United The following report has been reStates the executive hoard of the Woman's National Trades Union league ceived at the state department from at its annual meeting in Boston voted United States Minister Griscom: "In to send a general organizer and sec- view of the fact that there are some in retary throughout the country who twenty American missionaries Fusan and that they are unable to will act as a business agent, organizcommunicate telegraph with Mr. ing trades unions among women, in- Allen in Seoul,byI deemed it advisable stituting lockouts and strikes. to mention the matter informally to Baron Komura. In reply to my inyears' imprisonment Punishing Whitecappers. quiries Baron Komura stated that amThe Southern PaciAc company is Federal Judge Jacob Triber at Hel- ple measures were being taken to gradually extending the block system has passed a penitentiary protect all foreigners In Fusan. on Its system and it is expected that ena, Ark., sentence upon three whitecappers, War Will Be of Long Duration. before the end of the year It will be convicted of conspiracy to Intimidate In effect on ail the line between OgAdmiral Stackelberg, who on acnegro workmen at a sawmill In Poln-settden and San Francisco. count of illness, turned over the comcounty. The defendants attorThere is every prospect of unusual ney took an appeal to the supreme mand of the Vladivostok squadron In the La Sal Mining district court of the United States, proposing to Captain Reitzenstein, has arrived activity this season, a number of new com- to test the constitutionality of the in St. Petersburg. He expresses the into a law the opinion that the war will be of long panies having been organized, while federal state enacting to amendment the constitu- duration. Judging from the extensive the older ones are preparing to do an fourteenth which were tion, claiming that under this statute Japanese preparations, unusual amount of work. the negro citizen is granted a protec- thoroughly understood at Vladivostok, A kindergarten school Is to be es- tion in the federal courts that Is not where war was expected even earlier than it came. tablished In Mt. Pleasant the given to white men. Man-serg- Afty-nln- e during coming summer, to be continued each The year for an IndeAnite period. Twentieth Century club is inaugurating the move for the school. An incubator in operation in an outhouse adjoining the residence of Mrs. Jacobson of Sandy caused a fire Sunday morhing that destroyed the borne of that woman and came near cremating her and her two sons. William H. Clow, postmaster of Kaysville, has forwarded his resignation to the postmaster general. His reasons are old age and declining health. Mr. Clow was appointed to the position on August 13, 1890, and has held the place continuously under Democratic and Republican ad- ministrations. Houston Valentine, aged 6, of Salt Lake City, will lose the sight of one eye, and probably both, the result of throwing hot water onto lime. Tbe lime had been left In the yard for building purposes and a number of children were amusing themselves hv throwing water on the lime when the accident occurred. Joseph H. Parry, secretary of the State Board of Horticulture, In a speech at the farmers Institute meeting held in St George last week, showed the necessity of Dixie farmers changing their methods, and Instead of growing lucerne and wheat on their valuable lands to use the more profitable fruit crops. Meianka Narancic, a Greek who is In jail in Salt Lake City charged with a murder committed in Austria several years ago, has admitted to two murders, while it is believed he has killed four people within the last four years. 4 . ... , A Lehi special One Hundred Filiptnoe Killed. News of an Important military engagement has just been received from Catabato, capital of the province of Mindanao. On March 7 detachments of the Seventeenth and Twenty-thirinfantries, troop B of the Fourteenth cavalry and Gatleys battery, in all 450 strong, under command of General Leonard Wood, attacked and captured the cotta (fort) which was held by the Datto AH, who resists the works law. His defensive were destroyed and their abandonment forced by the accurate fire of the anti-slaver- y battery. DIABOLICAL DEEDS OF DEMONS. SHIP STRUCK A MINE. Only Four of the Crew Picked Up After the Explosion. While entering Port Arthur on the 16th inst., says a dispatch from Che-fothe Russian torpedo boat destroyer Skorroi struck upon an unplaced mine and was blown up. Four of the crew were saved. Viveroy Alexteff wires a report conflrmlng previous accounts of the damage done to Port Arthur during the bombardment of the 10th, but says the story of a Are there is a base fabrication. Treatment of German tlers by Africans. Horrible Set- Letters from German South Africa have arrived in Berlin giving details of the ghastly treatment, cf German settlers, 113 of whom were kilted outright or tortured to death in the district of Okahandja akne. Women outand with raged and dismembered pieces of their bodies nailed to the doors of houses, and bodies mutilated and left to die slowly were frequent spectacles The expeditionary columns on coming in sight cf a farmers house would see the beads of its occupants fastened to the roof. These sights appear to have excited the rage of the soldiers. The letters express longing for revenge and a determination, as one writer says, to kill everything black. REFORMS IN MACEDONIA. Austria Threatens to Resort to treme Measures. Ex- The Vienna correspondent of a Paris paper says that Count the Austrian minister of foreign affairs, has authorized the pub lication of the following declaration, which he made officially to the French, British and Italian ambassadors: The Austrian entente on the subject of Macedonia is flrraer than ever. A perfect understanding exists on the subject of the modus vivendl in Macedonia and of Turkeys application of the reforms proposed by the two powers and accepted by the sultan. Russia and Austria are determined to use all their influence, and even to resort to extreme measures, to obtain the fulfillment of the sultans promises. They insist that full powers shall be accorded the heads of the Internationa gendarmerie. The rumors that Austria is is mobilizing troops wholly unfounded. Russians Bound for Korea. The Paris Temps correspondent at St. Petersburg asserts that a Russian army corps is descending from Vladivostok toward Korea. He adds that Port Arthur has a garrison of 30,000 men and Is- provisioned for a year. The Russian ministry of marine, the Temps correspondent further asserts, claims that Japans losses since the opening of the war are four cruisers and five torpedo boat destroyers, and the machinery of a 12,000-tobattleship seriously injured. The correspondent concludes his dispatch with asserting that the concentration of Russian troops at Mukden and Harbin is considered as terminating the danger from a Japanese landing in the northern part ol the bay of Korea. n Timber and Stone Act to be Repealed. The senate committee on public lands, after a contest extending over two years, in which an attempt was made to repeal all of the general land laws of the country, has authorized a favorable report on Senator Quarles bill to repeal the timber and stone act. As reported the bill has a provision authorizing the secretary of the Interior to sell at public sale or otherwise the right to cut timber on government lands. The bill was amended to provide that the moneys derived from the sale of these rights should be covered into the reclamation fund for irrigation purposes, and is now identical with one introduced two months ago by Senator Hansbrough, chairman of the committee. crimes, was killed by Spokane officers in a fight at Spokane Sunday morning. Gingle had been traced to a cabin in the eastern part of the city. The cabin was surrounded by officers. Deputy Sheriffs Doak and Pugh broke In the door and commanded Gingle to surrender. - The latter, who was lying on his back, opened fire, but missed. The officers put three bullets in Gingle, who died without speaking. Will Recognize Morales as President. It is probable that an end may he made to the Dominican difficulties by the extension on the part of the United States government of full recognition to General Morales as president of San Domingo. One result of the MayAowers trip was to eonArm the official opinion that Morales has sufficient strength of character and resources to maintain a stable government If the United States and other nations will prevent the illicit supply of arms and ammunition.. Cotton King Falls. Daniel J. Sully, who has for fifteen months been the largest figure in the cotton markets of the world, and who has "bulled cotton from 7 cents a pound to 17 cents, on Friday announced his inability to make good his engagements on the New York cotton exchange. Within a few moments cotton fell nearly 113 a bale from the highest figures of the day. Many crashes have been recorded, but probably none has been accompanied by such frenzy and confusion. John Glngle, a highwayman and horse thief, wanted by the authorities at North Yakima for a number of - Dr. Wood Confirmed as Major General. says the discharge Bulgarian Amazon Aids Russians. of J. E. Cotter by Judge Noon of Head Hunters Bound for St. Louis. A Bulgarian Provo from the charge of arson seems On the steamer Shawmut which argirl, named Zorka who forxht and was wounded to have given general satisfaction to rived at Victoria Sunday, were SOO the people of Lehi, who believe the native Filipinos bound for the St. in the ranks of ihe Macedonian insurcase, so far as Cotter was concerned, Louis exposition, In charge of Dr. gents, has arri.e;! at Odessa, it is said, to have been a case of blackmail: Hunt, formerly governor of the prov- aud volunteered to- - service in ManSurveyors of the Moffat railroad are ince of Northern Luzon, and Mr. churia. She wen, a masculine attire, now in Spanish Fork Canyon, at Casand handles Healy. The party Includes Vizcainos, is an expert ho'sev tilla Springs. Surveys have been run Tingallas, Igorrotos (head hunters a rifle and sword, x. saw Genmander-ln-ehie- f from Green river In Uintah county to from the mountains of northern Lu- era! Kauiharv, lh3 . that point and it is considered prob- zon), Negrados and Negritos, with all ised to enat Odessa, w.- able that the road will enter Utah val- their native outfit. Three of the party dorse her appl.crs irfbc brought were dying when they reached here, ley through Spanish Fork canyon. tith her a full campaign equipment. to the confinement , ,! owing aboard. Goaish Colombian Legation Closed. The Colombian legation in Washington has been closed, and Dr. Tomas Herran, who for a long time has been acting as charge daffaires, will leave for his former home in Medelin. Future communications between the Colombian government and the state department will be conducted through Consul General Arturo de Brigard at New York. The closing of the legation is the direct result of the events ending in the secession of Panama, and the negotiations of the present Panama canal treaty. That tank of goldfish in the Aqua- float around the top of the bowl. Its watched rium has been responsible for a good a sure sign of death. I have and I am are three all gone, it. Now, many deaths in the goldfish family this winter," remarked the woman goldfishiess. "It wasn t my fault. I knew that. Womwho sells goldfish and ferns. The coming to the top meant that en go down there, see how beautiful she hadn't changed the water often they are with their brilliant colors and enough. The bowl was too small for long white tails and fins, and are at three, perhaps, and they were asphyxonce taken with a desire to own goldiated. But, anyway, I took my net fish. This is good for the business, and caught three more to give her two goidflsh and a silver fish, for a tut not for the goldfish. Its like this. Some women have change. I believe, said she, while I was luck with anything they try to keep. They can stick a little slip in the catching them, that those first fish ground and it will grow and bloom. had one fin in the grave to begin Their goldfish keep themselves. Oth- with. Anyway, Ive seen their finish. ers haven't any luck at all. They buy I gave her the goldfish and thought ferns of us to kill them. They buy I had seen the last of her, but I hadgoldfish which die. Nobody knows n't. She came back one morning with the reason. It is as hard to tell what the news that she had lost her last is the matter with a goldfish as to pollywog. It had flopped over and tell what ails a child. Neither one died, the same as the goldfish, and can talk and tell what hurts. Maybe she had been so anxious, too, to see it the not knowing how to care for the turn into a frog. Every night she fish was helped along by the steam went to sleep with the expectation of heat of the flat. Maybe the bowl was seeing its tail at the bottom of the not large enough. There might have bowl, while it was hopping about on been a dezen reasons. You can never the floor, a frog. tell. I gave her another, and thats the "One woman bought three goidflsh last I have seen of her. She told me of me. I threw in two pollywogs, she burned a gas stove that smoked some snails and a bit of moss, as I in the room. That probably killed the the always do, for luck. Apparently they fish. Or she hadnt changed It wasnt a week water often enough. Fish need to be queered her luck. before she was hack for more goldcool, too. Some people put a lump of fish. ice in the bowl in the summer time. I They are dead, she complained. have known the water to freeze solid Every one of them. First one would in severe weather, thaw out, and the come to the top, look at me awhile fish frisk about as spry as you please, with a glassy eye, then give up the not hurt at all in fact, all the better ghost. I no sooner removed what was for it. You cant seem to get it too left of him than another began to cool for goldfish. New York Times. Ancient City of Seoni Seoul, the capital of Chosen, is built amid a network of hills, eighteen miles from the sea. It is an ancient walled city, fortified in the strongest way by smells that would drive any but an Asiatic army forthwith into the ocean. It is poor in appearance, but rich in fleas. On autumn nights tigers frequently contest the right of way with belated pedestrians and this is the chief reason why one has the entire street to oneself in a moonlight stroll after 8 oclock. Metaphorically, one can scarcely see the town for the Budbald, bulbous and dhist priests who fatten on the superstition of the populace and lead licentious lives in the adjacent monasteries. Barring an occasional court function marked by street processions, 8eoul is triumphantly devoid of sights interesting to a traveler. The streets lack entirely those picturesque characteristics of a Chinese or Japanese thoroughfare, and a vista across the Korean housetop is one of appalling monotony. One seeks in vain for In the small attractive souvenirs. of Seoul Japanese beer, shops matches, cigarettes and cheap crockery form the chief stock in trade, while bullet-heade- d Korean knives are offered in the most pretentious shops. Here likewise can be had the really unique Korean fans, made of silk or paper, finished in oil and covered with curious native designs. These fans are dipped in water before they are used, and the little breeze produced by them is astonishingly cool. The wall surrounding Seoul, from which kites are ever flying, is but a pocket edition of the great Chinese wall that leads down to the sea at Shanhaikwan. Piercing this Korean copy are the city gates picturesque are promptly which passageways and irrevocably closed with the setting of the sun, The west gate will be entered by the tourist on reaching the capital from Chemulpo, and should he come to the outside of this but a minute after the sun has disappeared behind the horizon, and the big bell has boomed its mournful warning note he is elected to camp in the open until Phoebus has cycled round the world on the equatorial path. If he reaches the gate five minutes before it closes on its groaning hmges he will witness a sight that will almost repay him for the toilsome trip up from the coast. Outing. d Houses Had No Stairway Art of Staining The twentieth century American stained glass maker follows without important variation the simple method of the French monk of eight centuries ago. The first requisite is the design. The artist makes a small water color sketch to show the general design and color scheme, accompanying it with detailed studies. From this two are large drawings or "cartoons made, the exact size of the desired window. One cartoon shows where the leads will be placed the thin strips of lead, hollowed on both sides and looking in a transverse section like the letter H, which forms the framework to bind the pieces of glass together. Another drawing gives the size and shape of each piece of glass. This cartoon is cut into its component pieces by a pair (or triplet) of scissors which leave between their parallel blades a space sufficient t for the leads. These patterns are put together again on a large glass three-blade- d cut-ou- Glass against a window where thi stream through it. The ar substitute replaces each tern on the easel by a piec of exactly the same size, c sheet of glass of the color c. the color sketch. To a grea extent this stained glass mented by painted glass, the colors are fired as In cl ing. When all the pieces cut, they are transferred to ing drawing; the flexible twisted into shape and s the Joints, and a special c plied to make the whole v The window is now compieti be put in position, where i secure by copper wires ft the transverse bars oL ir lovers Magazine. WITHOUT 8tq a his soul, and there is a m Uaie Is lower floor whose soul i8 fV" 01 The lower floor man not 1 long . ed a four-lunparlor organ . lares and penates, and Ik daughters cf his began to it. Several nights later a a visit to the first man as he got inside the knartf8 k heard the parlor organ on g 8001 floor. Fine toned Istrument that said, because he. too, had some 1 in his soul. The musiciess man grunted Whose make is it?" the Tlst3 asked. Dont know, was the unera,, answer. How many stops has it? The host pulled himself UD t powerful effort. Well, he its been in the house for week now, and in that time it h had any that I have been able tn 61 cover., For Growing Girls. West Pembroke, Me., March i Mrs. A. L. Smith of this place that Dodds Kidney Pills are thk W for remedy growing Smith emphasizes her ree0im?' tion by the following experience-Mdaughter was thirteen old last November and it is now t years since she was first taken with Crazy Spells that would last a and would then pass off. in a mo.,! she would have the spells again it these times she would eat very Htu and was very yellow, even the whit q of her eyes would be yellow. The doctors gave us no encous agement, they all said they could not help her. After taking one box of Dodds Kidney Pills, she has not hid one bad spell. Of course, we contt ued the treatment until she had used in all about a dozen boxes, and still give them to her occasionally when she is not feeling well, Kidney Pills are certainly the be medicine for growing girls. Mothers should heed the advice of Mrs. Smith, for by so doing they mu save their daughters much pain and sickness and insure a healthy, happy future for them. J PERFUMED LAMPS AND rings, They May Be Used as Means of Di Infecting Rooms or Cars. The use of as a disinfectant is well known, and the scented dandy has perhaps more hygienic wisdom than his detractors give him credit for. It is he who is trying t revive the use of the perfumed ring, an article de luxe which may either be used as an ornament or as a means of a pleasant disinfectant in stuffy underground trains or In insalubrious districts. The ring is an ordinary gold one fitted with a ball at the back. It ii filled by pressing the ball nearly Hah and dipping the ring into a cup ol scent, when the elasticity of the bail draws the perfume into the interior till quite full. By the least pressure the wearer of the ring can cause n Jet of scent to shed its refreshing aroma any moment he pleases, and he may thus act as a benefactor or t nuisance to those in his vicinity. The perfume lamp may also be used as another pleasant method of disinfecting a room. A ball of spongy platinum is placed over the center of the wick, and is fixed in its position by a thin glass rod, which is inserted Into the wick. The lamp is then filled with any scented spirit, and when lighted is allowed to burn until the platinum gets red hot. The flame is then blown out, and a pleasant odor fills the atmosphere. World's Oldest Tree. It Is said that the oldest tree In the world Is a bo tree at Adnuraulapun, Ceylon, which was planted close to Buddhist shrine in 245 B. C., and is fouu-tai- therefore 2,148 years old. Legend has it that this tree sprang from a branoh which severed itself by miraculous power from the sacred tree under which Gautama became Buddha, enlightened one. the DOCTOR DID IT. Put on 36 Pounds by Food- Feed a physician back to health and he gains an experience that he caa use to benefit others. For this reason Grape-Nut- s food is daily recommended to patients by hundreds of physicians who have cured themselves of stomach trouble. One doctor says: "Although a physician and trying to aid and assist my fellow beings to enjoy good health it must be admitted t formerly did not enjoy the best of health myself. In January, 1899, I only weighed 119 pounds. At this time I was living In the Ohio Valley and began to think I had about seen my best days. One day about 3 years ago I had an opportunity to try food for my breakfast. I liked it so well that I ate three teaspoonfuls three times a day and have regularly used it up to the present time, And I now weigh 155, a gain of 36 pounds and enjoy the best of health. mads Not only has Grape-Nut- s this wonderful change in me, but through It I have helped my friends, relatives and patients. The sustaining power of this food Is simply won1 derful. I have one patient who is a section hand on the C. & O. R. , who eats nothing in the morning but four and yet tablespoonfuls of Grape-Nut- s docs his very hard work up to lunch time and enjoys the best of health and strength. I could name a great many cases tike this and I still prescribe Grape-Nut- s in my practice every day. Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Grape-Nut- s R-- Woman of the Future Mississippians Are Accused of Keeping Negro in Slavery. A special from Jackson, Miss., says: United States Marshal Wilson has ar- Oh, the woman of the future! Sound the the drums! rested Iva Henderson and the three She trumpetsbeat has donned the coat and breeches, In of and who are Leggetts, Kemper county, triumph on she comes; fixed her vengeful optic on the charged with having held Shep Griffin, She has trembling tyrant, Man, a negro, in Involuntary solitude, and fche has sworn to quit the bondage of the and the pan. whose sensational attempts at terror- Swornwashtub to spout from many a pulpit. and to practice at the Bar; izing this section were made public She has sworn to crush the despot, and several days ago. The four men have to puff his bet cigar; been indicted by the federal grand 6wom to clip her flowing ringlets, whether auburn, black or brown. Jury and gave bond in the sum of And to raise upon her upper lip a tiny each for their appearance for trial. crop of down. $17,-00- AN ORGAN There Is a man living enth street flat who has Years ago a story was told of a city. It finally became the home of naval officer who wanted a house built the late John Boyle, who was for to please his own taste in every de- many years chief clerk of the Navy tail. He drew the plans himself, Department, and died in 1854, leaving placed them in the hands of a builder a very large estate. The house in and instructed him to see that they question stood until ten years ago on were carried out in every detail. Then the site now occupied by a brewery he went to sea for a years cruise. below the naval observatory. It was When he returned home the house a pretentious old mansion, located in had been completed with the utmost what was a very stylish section durregard for the plans and specificaing the days of the elder John Boyle, tions left by the officer. He was who came to this country in the early Pardon for Filipinos. The president has granted pardons taken through the first floor and ex- days of the nineteenth century. The utmost pleasure In every- record is not as clear as to why the to two Filipinos, Arturo E. Chealer pressed the house was constructed thing he saw. without a and Elias Mendoza, convicted before Now, he said, we will go up- staircase, but there is no doubt about a military courtmartial of the murder stairs and see the second floor. the fact. Eventually, and before it of a native corporal of police. The Come right out this way, where was purchased by Mr. Boyle, a stall' pardon Is granted on the recommen- we have a ladder, replied the builder. case was added to it by a side conThe seafaring man was astonished. dation of the Filipino civil authorities, struction in such form that to the the judge advocate general of the He had planned the house with the casual observer there was nothing to greatest care, but forgot to provide indicate that the entire structure had army and the secretary of war, be- for a stairway. not been put up at the same time. Mr. cause the offense grew out of the InThe story of the naval officer has Boyle had many descendants in this surrection and would have been In- never had a certificate of genuineness city, and they often refer to the house cluded in the president's amnesty attached to it. But an actual case built without any means for ascend proclamation of July 4, 1904, except in which a house has been built with- ing to the upper floors except by the -t a out fuon record in this use of a ladder. Washington tSar. for the stairway is that the cases had gone to final trial. Claims Protection of Great Britain. Mrs. Stewart Forbes, wife of tbe General Leonard Wood was con- secretary-treasure- r of the Telluride firmed major general by the senate on (Colo.) Miners union, who was deFriday, the vote being 45 to 16. The ported by the Citizens alliance, has rank dates from August 8, 1903, the taken up the matter of her husbands day President Roosevelt made the The contest against his banishment with H. V. Pearce, vice promotion. confirmation began on November 19, consul of the British consulate at 1903, soon after congress convened Denver. Should Mr. Pearce fail to in special and continued session, to Mr. Forbes When guarantee protection through the present session. death removed Senator Hanna from upon his return to Telluride, she will the opposers of General Wood only appeal to the British ambassador at two Republicans remained in the ml Washington. Forbes is a British subnority. ject. Killed While in Bed. Trouble IViih ihe Mich. she come ' u i; you r . T to win -- rr; Ini' - 'iXS in hire rlln .nm Joh,, 0 Ask any physician about tbe scientific principles on which Grape-Nutfood is made. Hell tell you tbe prin ciples are perfect. Then a 10 days trial proves that the principles sye carried out in the food ("all the good of the grains so treated that anyone can digest it all ) Shown in renewed physical strength and brain energy. "Theres a reason. Look in each pkg. for the famous little book, The Road to Wellville. s . Pearson. |