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Show , tt 4 Cite gox ffilber Slews fTANDINO TERMS On la Six Months T tt res Months Yr, WHOM, Pfoprleton. or SUBSCRIPTION DYNAMITER IN PRISON STRUGGLE CONTINUES I DYNAMITE PLOT INDEPENDENCE HAS BEEN REVEALED. : .... v... do n The Striking Packers at Chicago Vote Down Peace Proposition Until They Can Secure Better Terms. B. F. Slagel, alias Robert Romaine, a prisoner in the Shawnee county, Kansas, jail, has made a confession before the county attorney, giving details of the preparations to blow up the Florence & Cripple Creek railroad depot at Independence, Cd,o., and also the plot for the carrying out of the plan to blow up the Vindicator mine. The depot was destroyed by nitroglycerine on June 7, 1904, and thirteen people were blown to pieces, and the Vindicator mine was blown up November 21, 1903. Romaine, in his confession, said: I left Canon City and went to Cripple Creek on the 5th of October, 1903, and hung around there until along the first part of November and went to work on the Golden Cycle mine under Superintendent Holman. The next night after I went to work I got in with a gang of fellows who asked me to join the union and act as a spy around the Golden Cycle and Vindicator mines. They were after Superintendent Holman. I could not find any way to get in there as they wanted and told them so. But a few evenings after the Vindicator mine was blown up by a dynamite machine furnished by me. About the middle of May I returned to Canon City and got a can of glycerine and 600 feet of wire I had hid in there. On the night of June 6 it was planned to blow up the Cripple Creek depot, so the next evening I got the glycerine and wire and with an iron prong about ten Inches long and about four Inches wide at the top with two holes in there far enough apart to catch a pistol back of the hammer, so that you could tie a string to the hammer and not Interfere with it. I and another man crept under the platform and fixed things, running the wire to the ilelmonico shaft, 500 feet away. We footed around until the 10 oclock train came In. I saw some of my friends there and realized that they would be killed. I did my best to run down and get this thing so it would not go off, and when they saw what I was trying to do one man grabbed me and struck me with his pistol on the eye and again behind the ear, where I have scars now from those blows, and 1 was knocked unconscious for a short time. When I came to again everybody in Cripple Creek was around there and there was great excitement. Then I got out of the town as Quickly as possible. That was the 8th, and on the night of the 9th we ail walked down to Colorado Springs, and got there about 5 or 6 o'clock the next morning. Three of the men bought tickets for Pueblo and I think they went west. On the night of the 9th at 6:30 I took the Santa Fe train for the east. The Chicago strikers having voted to continue the stock yards struggle until better terms can he secured, their leaders lire in a quandary as to what the next move shall be. The following statement was given out by the union Wednesday after- Non-Unio- 8T AN DING. Editor. INSTRUCTIONS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Items of news are solicited from all parts of the country. It rite upon one side of the paper only. Write proper names plainly. p In order to protest the publisher from Imparse ns, the full positions from Irresponsible asme of the author should he signed to all The Identity of correspondents will bs withheld whenerer desired. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. UTAH STATE NEWS. Kaysville was one last week, day injured seriously being hooked by a cow. Mrs. Jane Layton of Dry fanning in Utah the past season has proven remarkably successful, the yield being entirely satisfactory. The week on the Salt Lake mining exchange closed on an output of shares of stock, for which f was paid. The Presbyterian mission school at Mantl was opened on the 12tb. The tuition will be free, and the text books are also furnished free. The city of Salt Lake will probably purchase an asphalt bed located at Thistle, and ship the asphalt to Salt Lake for use in paving. In the year 1903 the state of Utah added to the wealth of the world an output of lead, copper, silver and gold amounting to about $26,000,000. A number of bowling enthusiasts s bave organized to put in a set of alleys in Ogden, and upward of $3,000 has already been promised. W. H. Williamson, working for the Utah Construction company, while asleep on the track of the Salt Lake route below Moapa, was beheaded by a train. John Westmark, who shot and killed John Hoagland in a saloon brawl in Park City, has been bound over to the district court on a charge of manslaughter. One hundred and fifty teachers have been engaged for the public schools o! Salt Lake City, and probably ten or twelve more will be needed after the first few weeks. The managers of the state fair are making arrangements for the entry of some of the best horses in the coun-tr- y at the races to be held during fair ' , week In Salt Lake City. According to reports Just received from Clifton district, in the Deep Creek,, county, gold ore worth $5 a pound, or $10,000 a ton; has been discovered in that district. A j An ordinance has been passed by the city council of Salt Lake which requires that all automobiles and driving horses keep to the right when tra versing the city streets. During the past week 906,753 pounds of copper bullion, containing gold and silver, was shipped from the Valley copper plants to the eastern refineries, breaking all previous records. ' A pocketbook containing about $300 la drafts was recently found on the track at Promontory Point, where it had evidently been thrown by some thief who had first extracted the cash. According to Salt Lake butchers, the packing house strikes have caused the fall in the price of western live heel to 2 cents a pound. This means a loss to cattle raisers of from $8 to $12 a head. Within a short time the San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake will establish a regular train service between Salt Lake City and Moapa. The last named station is seventy-fiv- e miles below Callente. Richard Johnson, aged 12, was struck by a rapidly moving street cat In Salt Lake City, but escaped with slight bruises. Had the car not, been provided with a fender, the boy would have been killed. William Bates, the employe of the Rlngling Bros, circus who on Aug. 8, last, at Ogden, struck a fellow employe on the head with an ax, has been sentenced to serve 165 days In the county jail. Bates was after another man, hot In the excitement struck a friend. The recent heavy storms in American Fork canyon killed thousands oi trout in the streams. One party whc lives on the creek succeeded in gets barrels of these ting two slaughtered trout and salted them down for future use. Labor day was celebrated in an elaborate manner in Ogden. Every bus! ness house in the city was closed, and thousands thronged the streets as the parade passed. The procession was a mile in length, and fully a thousand men were in line. , High school teachers in Ogden during the coming school year will be re qulred to remain in their rooms aftei school half an hour after dismissal is the afternoon for the purpose of In structlng lessons and answering questions that may he asked by pupils. ' A Butte dispatch announces the tact that H. 8. Cooley, who recently arrived In that town from Utah, attempted suicide by taking a large dose of cocaine, hot took too large a dose and was saved by physicians. The act was premeditated, there being a woman in the case. , . , , Having been at work hut one hour, afte an absence of two months, C. M. Guerin, an employee at the Oregon Short tine depot In Salt Lake had his foot so badly crushed between the firawheads, while attempting to con-pi- s a car, that it was necessary to , , simputate it shortly after. 192,-03- 2 t: if 1 first-clas- , forty-gallon- . DE- Il-- One of he Gang of Assassins of Men in Colorado Mining Entered suite Post Ollea st Brigham City as Town Confeses to Awful Crime. second glass matter. HYBlU STOCK YARftS . STRIKERS CLARE WAR TO THE END. noon: The vote of the organization was on a proposition to declare the strike off. Out of 28,000 strikers 2,403 voted to return to work and 25,597 to remain on strike until a fair proposition embracing arbitration can be obtained." A committee has been appointed to visit the packers. With the declaration that the majority had voted to continue the strike announcement was made that the fight would bo prosecuted with renewed vigor. Secretary Tracy of the Allied Trades conference board stated that all meat would be declared unfair." MAY HAVE ESCAPED. Russians Believe Kuropatkin Ha Escaped From Japanese Force. There is little news from the far east, hut in St, Petersburg the author- ities are confident that the critical stage of the Russian retreat is past and that Kuropatkin no longer is in danger of losing any part of his forces to the pursuing Japanese. The Russian commander has arrived at Mukden, and It is given out in St, Petersburg that the bulk of his army is now near there, while a dispatch from Mukden, filed Tuesday, says that the main Russian army is pushing northward and evaluating that place. It is Indicated that the Japanese are still harassing the Russian rear. Further than this nothing is known. New Party For Utah. Following a series of conferences, a meeting was held in Salt Lake City, Wednesday night, for the purpose of initiating a new politcal party opposed to church interference in the political affairs of Utah. The meeting was attended by about 100 men, who unanimously adopted a declaration of principles and decided to put a state ticket SCENE OF RECENT BOMBARDMENT AT PORT ARTHUR. Fifty Thousand Killed In Battles in Vicinity of Liao Yang. A Mukden dispatch says: All anx- transport Is over. The Japanese have crossed the Shakhe and are now resting. Only the Russian and Japanese outposts are in direct contact. Thousands of wounded are being sent north. During the five days from August 30 to September 4, 12,300 wounded were treated In Red Cross ambulances, the Sisters of Mercy vying with the doctors in courage and resistance to fatigue. A correspondent of the Associated Press, who has just returned to Mukden with the Russian rear guard after having accompanied the army the whole time since the battle of Liao Yang, says the losses on both sides were enormous. As a moderate estimate he places them at 50,000. phy-aic- Discredit Romaine'a Confession. President Charles H. Moyer and Secretary William D. Haywood of the Western Federation of Miners declare that E. S. Slagel, alias Robert Romaine, who has made a confession at Topeka implicating union miners in two explosions at Cripple Creek, which killed fifteen was never a member of Free Coinage union of Alt man, or any other union conected with the federation. They utterly discredit the mans alleged confession. Ominous for Russians. Horrors and privations of the Russian retreat recounted In the dispatches have not yet ben printed in London, so that the English morning papers, for lack of news, comment chiefly on the details of the battle of Liao Yang. Another day of Japanese silence strikes the military critics with the suspicion that the lull in action may be ominous for the Russians, the explantlon in the dispatches that the absence of developments around Mukden is largely due to the rains net yet having been published in London. Lunatics Bite It Dangerous. Apparent proof that Insanity may he communicated like hydrophobia la shown in a case attracting mtfch attention from physicians at Bellevue hospital. The subject is Nellie Halpln, a trained nurse, who was bitten on the hand by an Insane patient a year ago. Since then the wound frequently has given Miss Halpln great pain and never completely healed. She now suffers severe convulsions resembling the manifestations of rabbles while the; mental delusions are almost continuous. Killed by a Woman. Warren J. Ferguson, 38 years old, a theatrical advance agent. Is dying from a bullet wound received during a quarrel In the Metropolitan hotel, New York City, and a young woman who gave her name as Mrs. Gertrude Rob erts, although acknowledging It to b fictitious. Is under arrest and admits that she did the shooting. Shs alleges that Ferguson attempted to assault her, that she pcirtcd the revolver at him to frighten him, and thst during a scuffle the revolver was discharged BOSTONS 6elect Powers for Congress and Moyle for Governor. The Democrats of Utah, in convention In Salt Lake City, on Thursday, September 8, placed the following ticket in the field: Member of con gress, O. W. Powers of Sait Lake; Governor, James H. Moyle of Salt Lake; secretary of state, Levi N. Harmon of Price; attorney general, Grant C. Baglay of Provo; Auditor, J. W. Geiger of Park City; treasurer, W. B. Wilson of Ogden; superintendent of public instruction, Nathan T. Porter of Centerville; justice of supreme court. C. S. Varlan of Salt Lake; presidential electors, Samuel Newhouse of Salt Lake; Edward H. Snow of St. George; Fred J. Klesel of Ogden. The Platform. The Democracy of Utah, In convention assembled, reiterates its belief in the principles of the organization that has always stood for the rights of ail the people, as against the demands of the favored classes since the founding of the republic, and reaffirms its faith in the great underlying principle laid down by Jefferson Incorporated Into the Declaration of Independence in the following language: "We hold these truths to be that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights, and among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, and we pledge oursehves to' a continuation of the policy which has ever characterized this party; a strict adherence to that principle. We declare once again in favor of the axiom, first laid down by the founder of the Democratic party: Equal rights to all and special privileges to none." We endorse the platform adopted and reaffirm the principles declared by the national Democratic convention at SL and cordially and enthusiastically approve the nomination of Alton B. Parker and Henry G. Davis for president and vice president of the United States. We direct the attention of our fellow citizens of all parties to the conditions confronting the electors of this state because of the selfish and disgraceful contentions which have divided the Republican party In two opposing factions, each led by a Republican United States senator. Such conditions are the net results of the success of the Republican party in recent years, now plainly manifest, and are but the natural consequences of an attempt to array one class of our citizens against another class in a feud, which, if persisted in, will result in permanent injury to the best interests of the commonwealth. The Democratic party of the state enters its protest against these conditions and the causes therefor, and calls upon the people of the state to rebuke at the polls the assumption and arrogance of the party which is alone responsible for the sittime-honore- d t: time-honore- uation. LOSSES ARE ENORMOUS. iety regarding the Russian DEMOCRATS NAME TICKET. The scene of the recent fierce bombardment of Port Arthur reported by Gen. Stoessel, is Indicated on the map. The fortifications under fire are wbat are known as the Keekwan forts, tha most northerly and easterly of the defenses of the fortress. Sushiyen, or also is pointed out. It Is In front of this village that the Japanese are said to be digging trenches In the Tiger valley. Sushiyen is a mile west of the railroad and four miles from Port Arthur. In the field, allowing the supporters of the movement to exercise their political preference as to candidates for the The Democratic party neither seeks nor fears the interference of any ecclesiastical power, with the expression of popular will at the polls. And denies the right of any power or of any man, or set of men, to dictate political nominations or to control political conventions. We ho.d that American citizens are politically free and equal, and the people alone should wield this power. While we are willing and ready at all times to accord to the president oi the United States the credit due him for his work in securing the pasdhge of a national irrigation law, at the same time we positively refuse to concede that it was a Republican measure, but on the contray was, as ' is shown by the record, initiated by, labored for and introduced by a Democrat, advocated by Democrats, passed by Democratic votes, and but for the votes of Democratic members of both houses, wou'id have been defeated by Republicans, overwhelmingly. We believe in the dignity of labor and recognize the rights of the toilers of our state and pledge our candidates for office to the enactment of such policies and measures as will protect them in their rights and insure their personal liberty In the pursuit of their The Democratic several occupations. party now, as in the past, is the friend of labor, and pledges its candidates to a just and equal enforcement of the laws without discrimination in favor of persons, property or power. It advocates a just and compensatory wage for the service of an eight-hou- r day in work on all public works, and In mines, mills and smelters, and in all cases a fair and living remuneration lor the labor of all men and women. With a firm reliance in the integrity of the people of Utah, we submit the issues of this campaign, national and state, to their candid judgment at the presidency and vice presidency. The men in attendance by rising vote pledged their life, liberty, property and sacred honor" to suport the movement, and received from David Keith, president of the Tribune Pub lishing company, and from Joseph Lippman, manager of the paper, the assurance that the paper would suport the movement until the issue was determined. Senator Kearns was not present, hut his hearty support was polls. pledged by Mr. Lippman. CELEBRATING AT TOKIO. v Bad Wreck in Missouri, Eight People Being Killed. ! VILLAGE-LIK- E WAYS.!. Simple Pastoral Life There as a New York Woman Saw It. Yes, Ive been to the country, said a New York girl who keeps her Ive been to Boston. I eyes open. stayed there two weeks, and my head has been in a whirl since I got back to New York, with all the clatter and rush there is here even at this dull time. In Boston the finest shops are filled with bareheaded women shoppers. Theyre not women of the poorer classes, either, hut well dressed matrons and stunning looking maids. In Boston neighbors call to one another from stoop to stoop over r their coffee. There, too, children visit from house to house for all the world as they do in country towns. Neighbors borrow each other's newspapers, to say nothing of magazines and books, and they use cne anothers telephones. They are not above taking a neighbors dog for an automobile ride, and the way the women take their own parcels home alter a shopping bout is enough to make a New York sisters eyes open. For all their cold culture they beat all for asking questions of strangers, quite as villagers are supposed to do. Its fine to go there once in a great while when one wants to return to simple country life, but for every day living purposes New York suits me. New York Sun. after-dinne- DANGER IN A WATERSPOUT. Passed Close to Ocean Liner, Almost Causing a Panic. Such passengers of the Itoenlgin Luise as had never seen a waterspout had an opportunity of looking , one over, as that vessel was nearing port, end looking it over at such, close range as to cause many to shrink back in affright. It was on Monday noon and on the outer edge of the Gulf Stream when the spout was first discovered. It was about five miles distant and broad off the starboard bow. The word went round that a waterspout was in sight, and the 500 passengers who were preparing for luncheon hurried on deck to see. The captain, with his chief officer, joined the fourth officer, who was keeping watch on the bridge, and narrowly watching the swirling mas3, calculated that it would clear the vessel and that It would not be necessary to alter her course in order to avoid it. The spout rapidly drew near, and with base bubbling and frothing went swirling by a short 50 feet under the stern, making as it passed a loud hissing, which was described like that of escaping steam. Just then a rain squall came by, and after it passed the spout was seen astern, dim and shadowy, like a long waving ribbon suspended from the clouds. Captain Volger estimated the base to be 20 feet in diameter and the body about 5 feet in thickness. New York Herald. The Child Mistake. She walked before. I 'couldn't aee her face. But, as she walked along, with her went grace. Beneath her bonnet glistened auburn hair. I followed as youd follow if you were A Spring day Idler as aimless as a wind From wind kings prison newly unconfined. I did not wish to speak to her at all-S- till it was good to watch the sun rays fall Upon that hair and there remain, content In sense of kinship, at their merriment. A man and child came up the other way. The man looked sad on such a sunny day! He was In mourning, and the little child (Oh. bow can youth and crape he reconciled!) A girl of four, perhaps; the pretty mite Wore cheerless black Instead of They faced me. me and her who walked before. Some twenty steps away from her, no more. When suddenly the two perceived her, . and T saw the child let go its fathers hand Run forward, chubby arms extended, eyes As glad as angels viewing Paradise! Then, running so, the child glanced once again At her who walked before me. Then came pain Where joy had been, and, with a little moan. The child turned to its father. left alone. Meanwhile the woman, unconcerned, se- fene. Had paed the two, whom she had hardly seen. The child said to its father, doubly sad: 'twas mamma back from I thought dad. heaven, Chicago American. Novelist States Position. George Meredith has at last fallen victim to the interviewer, and apparently a'willing victim. There is something a little reminiscent of the new Swinburne preface in the great novelists pronouncement as to his work. The English people know nothing about me, he has confessed. There has always been something antipathetic between them and me. With book after book it was always the same outcry of censure and disapproval. The first time or two I minded it. Then I determined to disregard what people said altogether, and since that I have written only to please myself. The Wabash railroad passenger train southbound from Des Moines to Conditions, However. St. Louis was wrecked near Pendleton, A Toklo dispatch says the general Mo., sixty-similes northwest of St. staff has not yet made public any de- Louis, Tuesday afternoon, killing eight passengers and injuring fifty others. tails of the battle of Liao Yang. the wreck has not been The people are still celebrating the The cause ofbut it is that a determined, victory, but there Is considerable spec- broken wheel derailed thought a passenger Essentials of Hospitality. ulation over the official silence regard- coach which Jumped the track and If only the people who ask us to ing General Kurokis movements since derailed the dining car with it their homes, says a writer in the Sunday. Holds That a Man Cannot be August Century, would realize that Judge HANGED NEGRO MURDERER. this is the most subtle compliment Disorderly In a Saloon. which can be paid a visitor, there Victim Secured In Spite of Sheriff and Magistrate Pool of New York City would be fewer amphitryons wonderLocal Militia. has handed down .a unique ruling in ing why their entertainments have so After setting fire to the Jail and cases of saloon brawls. Two negroes little "go and why their guests seem so well pleased when Monday mornsmoking out the prisoner while the were brought before him, one having ing arrives. A tranquil manner, an conthe other with disorderly fire department was held at hay with charged avoidance of the showman spirit, a guns, and the sheriff, his deputies and duct and attempting to cut the plain- real, not an assumed, pleasure In the soldiers outwitted, a mob esti- tiff with a razor. The fight occurred gathering their friends about them, mated at over 2,000 persons on Wed- In a saloon where the negroes had are the essentials without which no nesday night, at Huntsville, Ala., been drinking together. When this mortal, though he be the owner of lynched Horace Maples, a negro ac- was made known the magistrate ruled: cused of murdering John Waldrop. A man cannot be disorderly In a sa- the most splendid establishment and have the wit of the De Mortemarts, The negro was hanged on a tree on loon," and dismissed the case. can achieve real success as an enterthe court house lawn. tainer. Body Found In River. Express Robber Captured. The body of Theophll Brugger, until Father of the House of Lords. Pap Reed, a notorious outlaw, Lord Templemore is not only the professor of physics In the who, with two companions, one of recently Portland high school, who disappeared father of the House of Lords, but of whom, "Kid Riley, was captured last over two weeks ago, has been found the British Parliament as well. Beweek, robbed the Pacific Express com- In the Lewis river, near Lewis river tween his lordships debut at SL pany at Kemmerer, Wyo., of $13,000, ford, by Indians. The body was Stephens and that Of Sir Michael was captured, says a Cheyenne Bllghtly decomposed and easily recog- Hlcks-Beacthe father of the dispatch, by Sheriff James and posse nized. Professor Brugger left Gresh- House of Commons, there is a gulf of on Duck creek in the Wind River am, Ore., to visit his brother at Woodmountains. Reed had abandoned his land, Wash., two weeks ago. His upwards of two decades. Lord Temjaded horse and took refuge In a de- horse, saddled and bridled, was found plemore took his seat In June, 1842, of the excheserted cabin. He made no resistance a day or two later, which led to the while the when the posse surrounded the cabin fear that Brugger had been thrown quer did not enter parliament until and demanded his surrender. None of into the river while attempting to July, 1864. cross it. (hs stolen money was recovered. There is Littie General Knowledge of x Value of Moderation. The question of the possible dura-tloof human life, when put to great Grand Monarque Said to Have Squandered $5,000,000 in This Way. statesmen, scientists and others who have almost reached the century Twenty thousand dollars for a pearl scarfpin, $15,000 for a mark of life, has been answered in pearl stud, $4,940 for a coat fastener various ways. Von Moltke, at the age formed of a white bouton pearl with of 90, was still possessed of fine power, and remarkable vigold bar, $850 for seven buttons en suite and $775 for a pair of brilliant tality. When asked how he managed setve links there are a few of the to live so long and in such excellent prices realized xt the recent sale in health, he replied: By great moderLondon of a noble marquis jewelry. ation in all things and by regular exercise. But, after all, everything is Compaq ative, and the marquis gems, rare and costly though they are, would have been quite eclipsed by Louis XIVs personal jewelry. The grand monyou havent found-ou- t. arque had many crazes, but for buta In tons he had a positive mania. Schillings Best you are misssingle year, 1685, he Squandered $600,-00on them, and some of his pur- ing a good deal of comfort. chases are well worth glancing at. Tour grocer returns your money If you dont On Aug. 1, 1685, he bought two dia- like Schilling's Best. 960 and mond buttons for 67.966 francs diamond buttons for seventy-fivPUT TO TEST francs. The buttons for a single CHRONOMETER vest cost Louis $200,000. Of the 254 "boutonnieres used 162 contained five It Is Kept ort Ice to Secure Accurst diamonds each, while the remainder Adjustment v In all, the ' Each yea' the time Ai onometers were single diamonds. is said to have of the United States navy are subgreat monarque spent $5,000,000 on buttons alone. jested to a test to determine their accuracy and to correct any irregulariMan and Wife. ties. This operation commences in 12 Buxton, N. Dak., Sept. (Special). January and usually lasts until the Mr. B. L. Skrivseth of this place middle of June, and during that time has been added to the steadily grow- these delicate timepieces are kept on ing following that Dodds Kidney ico at the United States naval observPills have in this part of the country. atory. It is not for any fear that Mr. Skrivseth gives two reasons they will spoil that they are subjectfor his faith in the Great American ed to this frigid experience, but it is Kidney Cure. The first is that they neceesary for the purpose of accurate cured his wife and the second is that adjustment that they should all be they cured himself. maintained In a constant temperature. I must say, says Mr. Skrivseth, The necessity of having a ships "that Dodds Kidney Pills are the clocks all absolutely alike will be realbest remedy for Kidney Trouble I ized the layman when he is reever knew. My wife had Kidney Dis- mindedby that an error of four seconds ease for years and she tried all kinds means an error chronometer the in did of medicine from doctors but it a mile in calculating the vessels loc. not help her any. An advertisement tion. The temperature varies at difled her to try Dodds Kidney Pills. ferent times of the test from 50 to so much box her first The helped 90 degrees and the losing or gaining that she took eight boxes more and of the chronometers under qualities Is cured. now she , are accurately kept tnese I also took three boxes myselt Thus conditions in a chart and they made me feel better and curves with what he expressing may expect from just in every way." stronger chronometer under different condiDodds Kidney Pills have never yet his of tions and, with his therfailed to cure any kidney disease mometer climate, close at hand, and barometer from Backache to Rheumatism, Dia- a sailing master may calculate to a betes or Brights Disease. nicety the correct time and get his location to a certainty. Meat Hanging for Fifty Years. At a butcher's shop at Bourne, LinMrs. Winslow Soothing Syrup For children teething, softens the gums, reduces ttt colnshire, Eng., is a leg of mutton flunmauon, nUeys pain, cures wind coUu. 25c bottle which has been hanging for fifty years. It is shriveled to the size of a Snakes Eyes Never Closed. shillelagh. Snakes may almost be said to have glass eyes. Inasmuch as their eyes never close. They are without lids, and each is covered with a transparresembling glass. How does it happen that ent scale, much sheds When the reptile its outer skin all good tea comes to Schil- the eye scales come off with the rest of the transparent envelope out of ling! which the snake slips. This glassy that it effecdoesnt; not all; not all. eye scale is sothetough true eye from th tually protects Tour grocer returns your money if you don't twigs, sharp grass and other obstruclike Schilling's Best. tions which the snake encounters in its travels, yet it is transparent Man Cheaper Than Horse. to allow the most perfect In the farming districts of Russia It enough if the snake has not a costs 40 cents to hire a horse for one vision. Thus, it may, at any rate, be said eye, glass 35 a cents man. to hire and BUTTONS. COST OF LOUIS drop-shape- d or TEA If 0 4 586,-70- e f TEA It day to wear glasses. Dr. David TEA, "Whether tea is the most important thing in the world or not we want it right and we want it steady. Write for our Knowledge Book, A. Schilling A Company, San Francisco. 930 VOLCANO A WEATHER Favorite Remedy Kennedy cured mjr wife of a terrible disease. With pleasure Jl testify to it marvelous efficacy. J.tiweet, Albany, K. x 4 PROPHET. STRENGTH AT VARIOUS AGES. Have Their Stages of Development and Decline. Careful Investigations have proved that the muscles, as well as other organs of the body, have their stages of development and decline. Tests of Muscles the strength of several thousands of people have been made by the use Its Warning Known to the Ancients of a dynamometer (strength measure), and the following are given as the Many Centuries Ago. As a natural weather prophet, and average figures of the white race. lifting power of a youth of 17 Is Infallible at that, the volcano on the The inisland of Vulcano, twelve miles north 2801b. In his twentieth year this of Sicilly in the Mediteranean, is be-I- i creases to 3201b., and in his thirtieth and thirty-firs- t years it reaches its 1 to hold the record. The follow3561b. At the end of the height is from an account of a dinner thirty-firs- t ing year the strength begins Council to given by the Geographical decline. By the fortieth it club of England in 1893: Capt has decreased 81b., and this year diminuWharton, the hydrographer to the tion continues at a admiralty, told how he had once an- rate until the fiftiethslightly isincreasing reached, year chored in very deep water on the east side of Vulcano, the southern-nos- t when the figure is 3301b. After this of the Lipari isles, but that he period the strength fails more and more rapidly. had kept up stream, with the intention of being off immediately if the wind changed to the east. He mentioned t this to an Englishman who lived on the island and was in charge of some You can see how much borax works. But said the man, there Is not the remotest chance of your confidence in us is worth. the wind- - going round to the east is the making of us. without the full warning. What Tour grooer returns your money if you dont warning? asked the other. Oh! was the rejoinder, the volcano always like Schilling's Best. warns us. The volcano! said WharMoisture in Tobacco. ton. Yes, the volcano; a fumarone The presence of moisture in tobacco always emits a whistling sound before the east wind begins to blow. Shortly is, the Lancet believes, of some imafter this Wharton was looking at portance to public health, since the Strabo and, to his astonishment, found combustion of tobacco containing a that that writer mentions the fact large proportion of moisture is imThe Englishman bad never heard of peded, while as the generation of Strabo In his life. Strabo died as an vapor is Increased, so are the chances old man atiout A D. 25, so that this of the poisonous principle being carexcellent furmarone must have been ried Into the mouth diminished. 2,000 Excellent giving Its warnings well-nigOpportunity to Arrange for years at least Your Reception at SL Louis, During WHATS THE USE the Fair, Free. If you Intend going to tjie Louisiana To Keep a Coffee Complexion. Purchase Exposition, St Louis, MisA lady says: Postum has helped souri, opened by President Roosevelt my complexion so much that my April 30th, 1904, it win he very much friends say I am growing young again. to your advantage to correspond with Mr. F. H. Worsley, No. 411 Dooley My complexion used to be coffee colSalt Lake City, Utah. ored. muddy and yellow but It is now block. Mr. has arranged to have all clear and rosy as when I was a girt his Worsley met at the St. Louis depot I was induced to try Postum . by - a and parties escorted to their lodgings, which friend who had suffered Jrjt as I had will be reserved in advance. suffered from terrible Information relative to passenger of the heart --ad sinking rates, ticket limits, hotel rates and all other necessary informaspells. "After I had used Postum a week tion asked for will be cheerfully given I was so much better that I was free of charge. This will especially afraid it would not last But now be of benefit to those desiring to travel two years bave passed and I am a with Utah parties or in parties of four or five. School teachers will also well woman. I owe it all to leaving hear something to their Interests by off coffee and drinking Postum is its writing above party. - TEA It h indf-jestio- stop-over- place. I had drank coffee all my life. I suspected thst it was the cause of my trouble, but it was not until I actually quit coffee and started to try Postum that I became certain; then all my troubles ceased and I am now well and strong again. Name furnished by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Theres a reason. Look in each package for a copy of the famous little book, "The Road to Wellville." Living With Their Head Off. To go about the usual affairs of its daily existence minus a head would appear to be a rather unsatisfactory business, but this is precisely what certain insects seem capable of doing. Experiments have been made with common house-flies- , with the curious result that thirty-sihours after decapitation the bodies of butterflies have lived eighteen days after the heads were cut off. |