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Show a L-- THE . V ' r , r- , - - - - NOVEMBER L V)GA.hi UTAH, JOURNAL, - TRI-VAr.XL- Y -Sv - n y 9E. CVJQ Tpn A no ruu. wtioKT FACKAGKS . I I Ua that haa ; unpleasant aftar effects Used dally by Upo-thir- d of Utahs popula- - tkn In' There was a moments fierce struggle the old womans breast Then she said in heroTfn grim way: I reckonTU have to help yon bring in your things. Theres nobody else She marveled at berse'lf when she found herself tugging at the heavy trank and helping this girl thlsDbro-thy- . Carew.wbom nobody wanted, to get her things Into the hall and from I -- boy I wasnt for you, eke said then, ungraciously enough,.but I reckon you' can stay a few days till DOROTHYS . ' you git rested up- .cried Dorothy Oh, thank you! PRODIGAL sweetly. - This is a lovely old place, If Aunt Polly! How you must love it! A Thanksgiving Story. window She was looklngout-of-th-e as she spoke. Inside the house every thing was bare and unattractive, but when ishe glanced around her only i Well, 1 don't spose anybody ever thought was, How pretty It might be 'saw the likes othat! said Miss Polly. made!' iThe" thing that nobody ever saw the She began making It that very day. like of was a tear. It had rolled down Even Miss Pollys- stern facerelaxed Miss Pollys wrinkled'cheefe and fallen w hen she looked InupoD It that evenon her hand. While she looked at It ing. Pretty pictures and tiny shelves jcurlously another tear slipped down with dainty silken hangings brightenjthe other cheek and dropped beside Its ed up the walls, and aU about the reem. fallow, where It glistened as her hand were charming nothings that pleased the eyes of the old woman. And yet trembled. Well, I vow! murmured Miss Polly, she did not acknowledge It No, indeed!. She said something sharp InIn amazement. stead about all that flummery-ani no could When further. Words go intimated that it was nothing more nothwas there Miss Polly vowed, a trap to catch the dust bethan was All be to said. more this ing Oh, Ill never let the dust get Into cause the physician' bad come in from the other room and had said in his them! said that strange girl brightly. And It Is so easy to make a hem genial way: Shes ever so much better this morn? pretty! And then . pretty things began to lng. Miss Polly. I think shell pull bloom ont all overlhe bouse, even In through. . That was bow It happened that the Miss Pollys room, that stiff room with .two tears were glittering on Miss Pol- Its hard bed and Its straight backed the stiffness and the lys hand. They were very Inconsist- chairs. Somehow melted away as if by magic. ent tears, and Miss Polly had always angularity ribbons of Bits looped back the been consistent It was like turning bright one corner In curtains. suddenly apher whole life wrong side out and she with the daintiest a little shelf, In peared Miss the first realized It place, pink vase upon It and a rose ln- - the vase. Oh, she was a wonderful girl, . this Dorothy! One day she went up. and laid her fresh young cheek against the old womans shoulder. Aunt Polly, she said, I mla my piano very much. I left it boxed up ready. to ship. Suppose we send for it. And Miss Polly sent grim old. Miss oily, who had always considered, music of every kind an Invention of. satarn When the piano came and the people saw It carried Into that house, they crowded around the gate and stood on tiptoe and peeped over the fence. Several were "heard to declare that Miss oily was undoubtedly crazy. She came out then and shook her fist at them, and that was so much like her eld self that they concluded her mind was all right after alt But, if not crazy, then J , '- ;7'-- 40" ? -- ' . . ( - A.-- thy h,ad f Beefr f.1utton,-- Porkr Veali Lamb. " . . . Corned Beef. Sausages, Smoked V - SeasoD, at , . Central Meat Market Third Street, Loean, Utah. BELL BROS., Props. atTuaS mTny me DoroUlJ. tralghte, 5d me out Itn glad you did it, Doro-was a foolf a Btu5born Uy. eld foel! If I only had my poor boy bak rd hap ple8t womaL afl There were tears In Miss Pollys eyes now, sure enough,' and they : rolled down her cheeks without attracting , great armchair all wrapped upMn ilankets. Miss Polly said in her own abrupt, way: Fm goin to keep Thaaksglvin, Doro- the least attention, for Just then a won thy derful thing happened. The tramp Dorothy's eyes flashed with surprise arose from the table, took off his ragand pleasure. eeat, pulled off his sunburned hair.; .Dont yon havent you always kept ged It? she asked. No, Ive never kept ; It I thought the day was nothin tme, and so I : chut myself up and worked harder than ever and hated other people so much of it But now this ls different. Im goln to cook a good dinner, my dear, and you .shall ask the guests for your pail. . I reckon yond iietter Invite the choir, people, some of. 'em, and Colonel Dalys daughter, thats been here to see you so many for-maki- ' times. , , Aunt Polly, was all that Dorothy said, but ber pretty pale face was suddenly flushed, and her mind was already busy wltb plans. What' n Thanksgiving they would have! Cook ever so much. Aunt Polly, We shall want she said coaxingly. the two long tables- - put together; and want them fairly filled, because that-wi- ll be here would' not have had any Thanksgiving at home. The Btixt day Miss Polly stood'at the pantry window and watched tbe guests come. The first arrival was that poor old Mrs. Day, who bad not walked a step or been outside of ber own miserable house" for more than Iff years. Dorothys friends, the boys;, bad carried her over, chair and alV In & kind of triumphal procession, and when they set the chair down they went outside and gave three cheers, for Dorothy and thrertnorc for Miss- Polly. Then came three girls from the factory, country girls, far from home and with few pleasures that were "safe ones. all that great, busy .town nobody remembered them but Dorothy, it seemed. Then there was tho old gentleman with tb shabby clothes and the courtly manners, the old gentleman that lived all alone in & little room at. the top of a big house. What a pretty picture Dorothy made going out to meet him and pretending that he was assisting her up the Steps when all the time she waa helping hlinP And there, were jnany others, enough to; fill the long table. Jnst as they were about to sit down Dorothy said: - Theres a poor tramp, Aunt Tolly, looking In at the gate. I1 believe Ill go and ask him In. Now, Miss Polly had been the sworn enemy of tramps all her life, and she tlie-peopl- e - misunderstood herself. Dorothy was taken 111 It had seemed nothing but a slight cold at first, but by the next evening It was so much worse that Miss Polly herself put on her bonnet and ran for a physician. ' And so for many days they battled with the dis laid Its hold upon the ease that-honot give her up. would and young girl Then Miss Polly began to learn. People that she bad not spoken to In years came to the door and asked If they might help take care of Miss Dorothy. An old woman that had been Miss Polly's mortal enemy and whom she' bad passed Jn Jthe street a hundred times with her head turned contemptuously away now J haunted the house with dainty, dishes which she hoped-lnlg- h tempt the invalid. Even the boys of the neighborhood, between whom and Miss Polly, there had been bitter warfare, hung abou -- - In , -- i are the prime roast, boiling, broil ing Qt frying beef, mutton,, pork and other meats kept in such great assortment at the Pulton Market A the season arrives this o noted &r game.' The best ony ia market is als its fish and bestand the found AhereJ prompt deliv iarta of the rree.ind . ery to all city. WILLIAM READING,. Frop. Main Street. Working Night and Day. The busiest and mightiest little thing that'. ever was made is Dr. - Every pill globule of health, that changes weakness into strength listle8aneB8 into energy, brain-fa- g Kings ia a - n TENDEB n No, -- and I woman tor a soil -- And Dorothys music! She Hked best to play when the twilight was in the louse, and the old woman would sit over by the dim window and look at the sunset sky and listen. Dorothy knew little about classic music or brilliant effects, but she could play many of the old time piece's and sing them, too. In a voice sweet and tender. At last something happened that showed the lonely old woman that this was not quite so bad a world as she d " it FAT, JUICY WeU, I dou t spose anybody ever ' saw. the likes o that! One day, when the Invalid had grown strong enough to sit up and was In the - -- tZSsi1 CHOICE could not have won heartier applause. jven the baby cheered because the rest dhL - But Miss Polly was still Miss ay-- 1 npon ber wrinkled bards and Bald -- , sae knew i I I had-eve- j'- -' - -- liadthOught Itarrdthatshe suppose 7 . body but me. Andtso It came to pas3that when the doctor came out of that quiet room one day and told Miss Polly that the crisis was past and that Dorothy would jet well the old woman sat and looked d wo-Txna- n. sTSsr? James Mack, W A. Robsiteb, H. E. Hatch. he-Uttle bat the greatest after dinner orator I Polly had never been an attractive She was grim and harsh and hardworking. She was really a Mrs. Stephens, but shewas married after having been an old maid for some years, and her old name still clung to her. Dor husband was a mild, quiet man and bad lived bat a few years after their marriage. People said that Miss Polly had driven him to death and that be had been focce&to die. to get a little rest There had been a child, too ahMiss Follys grim face took on a look of - pain -- when, she thought ofhlin! a handsome, high spirited, boy, who would not be driven, and yet 6he had tried to drive'hlm. It had never oc- - curred to her that there was any other way. The result had been that he left home when he was 15, and she had never heard from him since. Frpm that day Miss Tolly had grown more grim than ever. She made friends with nobody. She repelled everybody. 7JHer black eyebrows drew nearer- - to-getherln a forbidding frown. Her voice grew harsher and colder, an she became, as the years passed, more "gaunt and Iron grny.'FoorolJ Miss - Polly! People pitied . her, but they were wise enough to let her alone. . One day a letter came from a lawyer , in a distant city. It said that her only ' -sister, Mrs. Mary Alston, bad died, leaving her a considerable property In trust for my adopted daughter, Doro- r yJtoICHEK, L. Sr. Hills, W. D. Hkndkicxb, ?? Meats, Fish and Game i BUS BAID. Utah. ontiCToae : re - TOU ASS AUJTT POLLY. 150,00000. Logan, -- XSVWVS what? (Caoltal -- j -f I - bedroom,"whIrfi' thepaitfsince had been nn had.' her W.VAWAV to i thereinto ' Russell Co., , For seven yean coined bed most of the tune- - 1 1 weakness of internal organs and fc - f said I could tinand doctors had four I Afterth. doctors said not be cured. cored. could not I wmite to Doctor be I I i ollowcd the Pierce for advice- I . i letter than. I advice he gave..... do not look ever did. My friends aay-rwoman sorry I did end there around the table and rethe like ratty not take Dr. Pieru't nudick fo when plenishing everybody's plate before it first began to have poor heal&J. I couid. wan half, empty. J Her face waa fairly have saved what I paid to hun bogs.r- -. glowing with happiness. -No one ever regratted w riting to And then all at once old Dr. Pierce for advice. Manjr hava gentleman in the shabby clothes stood up and leaned his trembling hands pn regretted not writing sooner. He wanted to express hla Sick women are invited lo dora-je- 1own happiness and that of all the stilt Dr by latter, riband guests, be said, at the privilege of joinno obtain tlie opinion and advice of ing in this, blessed. Thanksgiving feast. specialist in diseases' peculiar to Some of them had been living hard All correspondence pri- lives, yery hard lives. Some of them women. Address Dr. R. V, Pierce,. had. feared, -- had' even thought, that vate. they-wefriendless and alone in the Buffalo, N. Y. world. He thanked, heaven 'for their Dr. -- Pierces Medical Adviser, home 1008 pages, is seat fnx receipt o( day a home for so many others, and he thanked heaven Tor the lovely young girl who carried Sunshine wherever she went. It was not a very eloquent speech, In - - take pen in Davis, of Honaker, Va. . She writes : withered cheek that had been unkissed occupied 01111(1 &0 write to Dr:- - Pierce Then you hand and begin- the experience of Mrs. M. P. so long. slept there. f . . If you lave . S $flO . rjLzzs pic-tub- e. I Thatcher BrosTianking - - Japan (Tree Thanksgiving dinner, and' he hasnt Then she went out, and they saw her speak to the man and invito- - him, la. After all, Jbey were glad"of ttr It was too bad to think of any man going hungry while that dinner awaited- themt and they cheerfully made room for him at the table. And such a dinner!' Why, if Miss Polly had been In training for It air her life she could not have done better. And there was baby dt the table, a thin faced baby in the arms of a thin faced mother, and when It cast; one look over the table It absolutely laughed, a funny little quavering laugh, aa though It were not used to It Then; In a moment, everybody was laughing, and there never was such a merry crowd. Why, even poor old. Mrs. Day was laughing like a schoolgirl and declaring that she liked any part of; the turkey, so there was enough of it As for Miss Polly- - well," there was absolutely no accounting for her. There she was, earring away as though her Ilfs depended on it tnd flying here T:a jRiuj Miss-Polly- of l3i .jtt tftijj-a-- - threw the letter Into the fire. A- week later she saw a carriage drive up to her gate and deposit there a young girl, wltb her trunk an$ boxes. The girl paid the driver, and the car , rlage.went away, and then and and in stood went amazed, angry the door, ready to warn the Intruder off. The girl came up the walk and looked straight Into- Miss Pollys'. face with her pretty, frank brown eyesi You are Aunt Polly, she said. I know because;! have seen your I sin Dorothy Carew. ' And then, before Miss Polly could say a word, the girl took one of the bard, wrinkled hands In both her own and leaned forward and kissed the -- Pride - SO New Life Pills. Bugar-coate- d into mental power. Theyre wonderful in. building up the health. Only 25c per box. Sold by 3Biter THI UTTLB OLD 6S5TIJDCAV STOOD UP, Co. and his shaggy beard, .and stood there; Bros. Drug a tall, handsome young fellow And then tho astounded company saw him go around and take Miss Polly in his EUSTIG arms. ' 'Hero 1 am, mother, he said as. ho kissed her.- And you are. glad ta see . me, after all? What a time it wasl He told them after awhile how he had so longed for a glimpse of the old home that he had determined to disguise Mmspif gee the house and his mother once more. He had becn in a distant city all these years and was in' business there and prospering too. And to think how near 1 came to drlvln him away from- my gate -- at last! cried Miss Polly, her voice shaking at the very thought. And it was Dorothy that saved me from that! Oh; Dorothy, you have Baved me from so much! Aiid you have done It Just as' though it was the easiest thing In the world to take up a crabbed, sour old woman and make her over again. Philadelphia Times. L - GOODS AT HALF PRICE. W If Of TOU : csijKftSJiga:- a ATI LI1BH, ABUOllAAL - ,, gS-gSss- ss: dswsOTJila varB tAiad -- nmt your manJ- SPECIAL PRICE M . iuu ui auo, .M..I h.M, LwM.HMt-1HIIMM.LS- krtSaw h to RprH. U V- Aut eooTieh nil of of I..LM rJioirno. prolwetoi ruUwr thretuL ''ritoforoiirftv'T S.W. Iflnrhrv bail ch.cabo, slars, !i3:pua a eo- - c'no.. Editor Soes Wonders. C.AT Snow & Co..r Patent Law Editor W. V. Barry yere, opposite United States Patent Mammow " Office, Washington, D. C who Tenn 'in expioring have actual clients in every city Cave, contracted a severe through nd town of the United States and Piles: His quick cure Jan ad a, report that never before in using Bucklen s Armc f woria him it ia.nother the gate now, nndwheu their ancient started up suddenly,- heir 25 years practice has the vine w. enemy appeared they asked her itlhey -y! Drive him she i rork of the Office been so well up wonder. Cures aU h jjrop' couldnt be sent on an errand or some- cried. I cant endure , to date. They claim that patents flammation, and Carew.1 tramps.Brw thin. -25oatRiter -But c be Fiddlesticks!- eclalmetLMissFolly, ''hungTyfTr''6a!d anno w procured in .less than tions.Ogly a Fdldutthlnk she knew one o these Dorothy, perhaps"Les her brown turning, full Mary always was a fool!" .And she Co. I the time alf eyes formerly required. poonie. snll the bcwflJeredMIss-Poltinon itlToUr.' "Atul jye have a . r - ; ; . kway,-Doroth- |