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Show , . 1 , AN. - , A, r - , ". 1 ' V ..: . i . ' ' , I V Deoeret News 1 Bldg- , - , nits ss.c...... latatik lemis mouth Otte, year blase eoploil Tho above i . - ,e..4 11 10, sr ..........,, , V. rates Brynmawr.- - &and ' : .: i 1 i , , - -- , .16 66 60 , etlinntinitattens )(Ewa. .'saiit Lake City. UMW and' Iiion matter for THE DEFEHET , ' - - Aticoritsing Reprosoontativa. - Volts 221,ith Aro. Nrai Torii CItyl'C' Ftr Chicago. 111 Dotroit 111 Lightnr Slide Victor Bldg. Set Kansas City. Atlanta 2S1 Consiitutioo Bidg. P'41g Victoria Logi,. It San Francisco, lell Moradnock irolig 1.43s Angele,a ill Trust & baying. Bldg : ' 1 6 Cones Idaho Wieeeds giant It' 4.,,,,,,, C., ---- , .. . t bilinei "MittanCell and ! Address roarrrraorderro 1 Ipubbestion to THE EDITOR. . rlith. Otter. .,1411 4.. si apply to le ' ... . 6 1 , . ....-- ---...--... 1 Cito I; rotered at 4Pli nostorfle of Pet Lake tend ele, nattor according to Act of Coast's. 'girth 3, 1471 , , I entStlett to The Atone:Afoot Pees is exeineteeif news olsoatchea the use for republicAtiOn nt eil ervitted in this !reedited to. it of not otherwise putoashea on4 aloe' the local otos SPez11& ewspeper.ALI.eerar.s.44.seocaolfra-on,,of Potato,. patches here gee &too Feveren 1 ' ' , ,, .. ., ,, LAXE rf-v,- JA3A ..4 -- of - , "A VI" , AND REGRETTABLE M. . , t I , .1j:istg, the nett three ila,s the Pioneersof -- natural' telltales of west, But even:the nmice le the forest should know enough to put out his fire when be breaks camp. Everyone who has traveled through the national forests. the great I;sliygrounds of the VoPle. has noted at frequent Intervals posters vvtich call attention to the tact that the Tor.. est Service insists on all fires being extinguished"when a camp ittJett. The posters further esplijn the danger of forest fires and enumerate 411' Slt,t4J1)..t,I..IVuTt..r.14-11n- a dingy-buildi- 77,!rft,ITteP .!tk it - 1 - - tThe rare - r ..4 mcome-outer- s." I. come-outers- :4 - - , ngs. "Well.. where are an BX ths murderer Piccadillyif clirrenute.tndettowittrthh.ledhl.anpotaaBbi:extuht cream , , ? ' , i ! 7 ay ant atteocoa.bentoef:stlbeeatr:t1 then smoked cigars, --- - Earth: 'Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun . be derkened and the moon shall not give her light, the stare shall fall from heaven.-anthe powers of the heavens shall be shekels: And then shall appear the sign of the on of Man in heaves: and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn, and they shall - moo the on of men coming in the clouds of heaven with power . anti great glory. " ' when a man is lying, psychological In India and chemical change.. where natives usually testify barefoot, they watch the toes of the whiten. If be twists his big Mid it is a sign that he le lying. If itn his toes reA machine. with & long name, b main quiet it is a sign be is tolling aupposed to deism falsehood-- A Jodirs the truth. In Washington soYe tho Juryman is The elYeS reveal faleehood Oefraidena better talsohood detoctor than-anally. Therefore, the profesaional permachine and won't try the machine. jurer learns Mot of all to look you It is a tact. bowsver. that cortain straight in the eye. even untruthful hates occur bt tho human system. children learn the trick. to Jail would bo to stay out of Jail, keep on working st his newspaper and put out of attic anybody that tries to put him in Jail. That's the modern method. . . , . , ' tosNiEfts li t - or-W- O . ' I LIT'.1.3'i:nitIL - - 0 , - - a ilki7 I s PP .., i, tancLs Punishment . hs , . . ,..,... ova . tl A ,r -t ,.: ' 7 ,.' , ':SS:ZIgene --- r'' --- - - . - , ..... s - 7 . ns . ,.::. f - lib III - : - of oditor Allen White, William ,- ,...-,,- i and-- i Kansas puts up a yellow poster his sympethy for striking shopmen. 011 fellow Kansan. Governor Allem, orders it down because it conflicts with the industrial court of KazusA and the Kansas system for adjudicating industrial disputes Whits says his poster stands for the right of Americans to say and print what they think. and that you can't pass any law to do away with that right. And William Allen Writ. is right. and ougtit to go to jail for his opinion if he hasn't anything more important to tio. A bettor thing than going - :1 - stop-Natu- I ' ..,- V - -- - I - to-d- ay . - That method of bunting now flu. urea in urea fighting. Our battleships will go out carrying flying machines on their decks. as the hawker carried the hawk on his wrist. A flying machine, hydro aeroplane will. attack its enemy. then come been to perch on the deck of the hip. Our navy most Important announcement. has perfeeted a device! that enables a machine flying slaty milea an hour to land ott a ehipts deck. 'nit thing Is done with wir4 stretched across the dock. with weights attached. Hooks under the flying machine seise these wirenand tho machine is gradually brought to standstill. It works very much like the booked claws of the falcon when they fastened him on the wrist of re their owners and came to a sets the example and man proves on nature vastly in creative-- 1 noes, also in destructiveness. . i same-- - -- I.. 1 1 -- Tn ancient bunting, ladlea and gentlemen rode out with hawks on their wrist Each hawk wore a hood covring its eyes. When the hawker saw a bird that he wanted. be uncovered the eyes Of the hawk. It flew after the game. brought it down. The hawk wait trained to come back and roost on the wrist again. n I and half as deep. It ItAll the appearance of iron that may have bees the. molten, which is accounted for by the friction peasint Earth atmeephere,:fhltittlIght from' thi.ohle's. There ire serviiral mailer meteorite exhibitedolonewith this, thati have been collect.; ed from various pails of the United States. . Upon a visit to the 13storkel Memum of Vienna severaryears, , ite PASO; iliterefelLittlitenletteril.V011entie&Abert,.70,-.....-- a, lisA-Or- lia Imps. large and Moan. a hundred siderite, were shown. Among theee ' the most extraortUnary and most discussed, during the latter halt of: the lath century, was the famous Royahloyartiamed after the Hun., - tartan tows near 'Where it fell. It is known as the Hahn meteor be. cause of the exhaustive study siva St by Dr. Otto Hahn. geologist of the 'Vienna tiniverality. According to kis Mews this meteorite was imposed bogey of fossil animals and Plant& Meal German scion- tine mos agreed with him and taunt disputed this claim. Upon it and ether siderite& Lord Kelvin based hie hypothesis that all life was writfrailty brought to this earth from other planets in meteor forma which brought not only fossils but living germ cells. It now comes out that Dr. Galippe. the eminent ,leureste of the Trench Academy of Science, sided by his famous colleague. Dr. Souffle-lidhavenomplorett- wtra tie& & series of experiments erhkh yield convincing proof that ear., tabs meteorite& which are known to home fallen from the sky. con. lain fossil forms of both animal and vegetable life. Therm expert.. manta...involving the most careful microscopic and chemical analysu . hire reveeled not only the ntlearalized forms of isuch lower attirnall as the crinoldsto which oterlish and belongcorals and sponges. but peat and coal, as well; and la urns of them traces of water are found and In others omen- - All these Phenomena hay. been highly magnified and photoymphed. Dr. W. If Ration. commenting on the shove facts. says: 'These discoveries imbedded in the Molly mu.-S- s teem a maims compact, unequivocal and stertling They show not only that life exists Renumber 'out titers in the world they have been torn from. but aiso that the world out there' must have been. In some respects. like our own. The crinoitts, sponges and corgis prove tilts other world pooseesed an ocean; the peat and opal that it had vegetation and probably forests; the water an oxygen that it ,,... ' peasessed so atmeellhere." Whore rolled the worlds of which all these meteorites are dimevered parts? It is said that our Earth passes.1revery twenty-fou- r hours through over two hundred million particles of stardustsurviving- parts of other worlds; the largest of which we witaess every aneocciudettal meteors. What happened to night.- as shooting-star- s these worlds that we honk reeve such sires of their destruction? It lc a gunnies to excite the most intense interest, and conterepla.-on of ether Ogre front the barrens Of portent to the dwellers on Where bevel) Japanese and Italian gone now that "civilization" has killed both of them by electricity? Did they lama in the IMMO hatirett or hell by different roads as they land-a- d in tauss and Ms same electric chair? Will they have another chance. 'a million more chances perhaps, or is It all over after the first chance? you-..the- rs's , , Siu-ilt- "You'rs from Chicago! And You coma See runts to peaceful, sleepy old Lintehouse looking for a thrill Why. mister, rye spent all my life wishing I could go to Chicago and be a coppor in that place you call the where all those murderer, and gunmen and gangsters ate- - Thece.11 Ute for thrills. Sayrd chuck this job any time to work there.--whe- re there WW1 oomething doing like." (Copyright. 1922. by Frank Cress.) , o. BRZSBANIC. they bad arrive d. at the rant You Annrra Nunalata shot hi. victim. Taiso tningled his with a cord. having abled him with a trkk. Nusiata gave a farewell death bowie ban.. The cop edged closor. with sudden intor . n By say? has been turned from a pflOSTIVII R CSSIA homeland into what has the appearance of sPokir. money. Both were- - in th Bing Bing death house. both were killed byelegaricity iitferent rend& ianguagen. education and sells-ions.- excitement." American mid nothing. but tho "bobby" tontinutd: e"tinter- a foreigner. aren't you. air? Amorican? That so? From Chicago. you STWVLNG NOM tDS. --- . ,Jfirishnutological 'murdered his room mate. sloe a Ripened to get bis No-rtbs- to's Loop---dow- , llarrrilOWNiii:tirTa-b-CdThI murdered Professor Kotkov of the There nomadic life for hundreds of tlousands of Me women and hildren. are.. i uJiksmen, I yEARs-AG. moving toward the citiu and hit neighboring ---- -- TwEtny-countries. These peasants figure that there ' JrLY 12. 1903. will be another drought and a failure of the Governor George P. Savage of Nebraska. accompanied by eleven won known me of crop next August. The officials of the Soviet that state. every one of them colonels sr. government at The Hague spoke glowingly of ; rived in Salt Lake front Seattle. whore the a new Russia with millions of pounds of grain went to assist in clinching th first rivet in 1 to export next fall. Of course they were argunew battleship ntebreeka. The party Ithe , Dm Treueeeord hetet ing or &loan, But in spits of this- rosy picture 111110i1111 were Soviet Advice , thoulands the Manila received from of that portrayed by .. Montt lien and Fe lisardo. notorious Wren, were treking away from the Volga. ; ' in chiefs broken bad the ' Philippine T, 4, Their nearest country is 11011Mattill and the through the constabuiszy cordon In Cavite .1 !,,. Roumanians do not. know what they will do and province escaped to the mountains 1 with such a multitude of ssndering Russians Protfi. I. McClellan,-- R. E. Giles C. R. who would be willing to face bullets rather $avage and Ell IL Peirce returned front Reber City where they wont to perfect or.. I than meet another starvation SeaSOn like tut rartirements for an outing to be given mom. year. Hordes of starving Russians are invadbe-- s of the Tabernacle choir. ing Poland and Roumania. Steps, will be taken The executive committoo of Solt Lake blending of peoples. by both these 'countries to keep thee e wanderlodge O. $I. B. P. O. E., received a letter ; ' . Theirs were the bands of cheerful, useful ers moving en; but somewhere will have front President :oomph F. Smith that the they labor, and they were sustained by a noble purTabernacle and Assembly hall would be to stop. It begins to look as though a needy and at the pose of the Elks for their by unquenchable faith in the God world would have to feed again this winter. a, Iplaced lodge disposal emotion the second week in 1 ; , they worshipped. These Pioneers were honest, starving nation. - l August . . folk. By cheerful. kindly . lovable, work-a-dEfforts have been made to check this great .. won R. T. maker known harness a Black, the strength of their brawn and brain they migration by official order but the movement of this city. was nomhsatod by A. J. Davis conquered the desert, opened the mountain re- -I is as Irresistible as an invasion of to A. A. Robertson on o molober of succeed grasshopceases, made the virgin !glad to bloom In beauthe etty council, and was unanimOulll pens siciuld be. Roumania is crying for help. ' ' ! elected. ty and fruitfulness. caused cities to rise 'and Russian cities are already deluged L 6 influx I by it went invinclly dawn tbe highway of life. from the country sections. The situation is millesev.tremo dbregrsioarresbberisidal G.TclierlsoPteahboale;:insalgsmshialralith To you and to me they have left. a rich serious and full of Portent. , heritage and an honored 'name. Let us corrupt sociates on a mission to Japan. had safely .::.. the treasure they left. All honor to them arrived at Yokohama the previous Friday. TOYS ..AND "MADE EV GERMANY,' - not Dr. A. T. Mockler. that are with us. and glad reverence to those noted scientist who etwomama t.- was made a member of the Order of the wtio have passed on! ,.. DRIOR to the war Germany manufactured Red Eagle" by tits Gorman emperor, ' gn Salt Lake City enrouts to Alaska I moat of the toys used in the United States. TAXES. CRY Á : Tbe legend "Made in Germany' was almost Iwhere hs proposed to studY moow000to of glacier. ... t ::. uniVersal ------4 "Toy land" in America: .; .i. . IT ill be rather disquieting news to Salt take as, indeed. throughout also. was true other countries . in home to , .i seems about owners, rs. and ominous a silence that taxpaye particularly preserve The w'ar not only intirferred with, but practhi right to work.Fitchburg Sentinel. to learn that in all probability the city tax ley tically disrupted. this trade. Already, since the ' i '.. , ,. , - for this year will be increased to 115 mills. war. Al SIAIFT RIDDANCE. . however, German toy,makers feel that they seven-tentof a mill abcoe svhat It all have obstacles in swept their ,way fight was a year ago. At the beginning of the year 1Vben Mr. Fords money becomes to bur4 i.,, to recover the American market. ' densome he might try backing grand opera"... in were officials emphatic quite declaring city AdVices from Nurnberg iluMcate that the Atlanta Constitution. that taxes must be reduced and the hope was , German manufacturers are unqualifiedly opto a would be cut entertained that the levy MASTER THE rt , nAyrit., timistie as to the future in this connection. 4 ,: point whkh would make such a thing possible. 4...4 Nurnberg been shipments-oold. Ihntotal, worn f bad that. played An statisticsput announcement harp ismafhatthe Now, however. 4 Germany toys to the United States last year Till all its strings were loose and frayed, decrease in the assessed valuation is such that ., ; . ; Bate. and Fear, each one essayeA increaite Joy. an of 5629.000 over 1920, cannot be met unless the levy is at expenses .. To play. But each in turn had found . a but over of 12,000,000 from of the value ' drop to the &Inman,. indicated. Inother words. No sweet responstvenes, of sound. ,' and a decrease of 50 per - , , a reduced assessment means an increased levy exports of came ' Then Love the Muter-Play- er , cent in quantity. ' With heaving breast and eyes aflame; and vice versa-- so that instead of there being , 1 The German industry recognizes Japanese The Harp he took all undismayed, ' ,, ., a reduction In taxes, in many cases they will son& ,wompetitionsbut-irmistrittiartirbtit'latzi:4,- and strong.. a monopoly in lb. American market for 'dolls, And brought forth musts sweet LAWRENCE DUNBAR. Figures given out by the city auditor in- children's chinaware, Christmas articles of all - &cat that the assessed valuation of city prop4 4 t . t THE TWO. . i ' ert: 'lis after allowing adjistments made by the kinds, and musical glassesOn some articles, as bicycles, toy motor ears and carriages such t; board of equalization. is s1i7,37.1.250, county 1 i German manufacturers admit the American I saw you toss the kites on high akY; A ' The City budget, to the And blow the birds about the made artide is yet preferred. rt" ' .r 4 est possible notch, is t2,796.027 And all around I heard you Pass ' lack it is All of which raises the question as to why Like ladies' skirt &emu the grass pointed out,' will require a tax rate of 11.5 ail day long! () wind, mills. This will yield a revenue of 112.150303. to American manufacturers can not eomPete sucsz, : .," ' wind, that, sings so loud a soils3 0 scsaluilywiththaGexmans---in-theonsrtiais ' , - ' 'income from aniseellaneous . a , saw the different thints You (1.11; Of toys as well' as the other. Haw much of this ,t : s.ources . to .1E800.000, making the total amounting I But. always you yourself You 14'u, .4 failure in 'competition is due to the old 1 reve.nue this is deducted tra,1 heard !lied you. r.,S64,803,From I I felt ..1 you ,;' ditional reliance On the "Made.in Gennany7 I could not,Posh. ':'::'''' .7 : see yourself at all- -charges of $118,000, leaving a net revenue of ---. all day lorige 0 1Za S40,776 more than the budgetcalls ... 0 wind, that sings so loud s soOF perhaps through propaganda as through ea: ,.!' ' -' for . , .. O you that are so strong and us" Last year theasilessAd valuation of Salt eellence of the wares involved. old? , O blower , are you young et : I Lake City property was 1191.73i.S57 net. Tbe beast of field or tirrel:1 Are you A RIGHT THEY FORGOT. , , reduction tills year is said to be due largely Or Just a stronger child like , '' ..: lone all slay wind, 0 rentie business which depressed conditions, 4' I, J Samuel G ornpers and ,p 31. Jeweit whn O 1,4nd, that ainta le loud s sfe-4 ,, t dered necessary e lower anPrsilement of stocils t are so vociferous about the 11011tERT LOUIS right to strike. .. The' Editorsmi - Very-quiet , - Our Navy Goes 'gawking. duty outside a, pub-- "None around bare sir." was the answer. 'Thema are parts." But I thought this was tits tough soc U. on. bop houses. Chinks. a pretty rough gang all around.' Oh, no. atyvery quietelike. Let's goo. titers was a fight laat July in. a pub, but few Chinks nothing much round hire. Lot's simithere's a Chines In '""--.-- , lobbi standing .entry reatatirant up -". g v. A Death House Meeting. about,' VIM- :- A ft was serene and calm. No Chine. seas In ;Wit- - No Slum J111to "inl d functioning. No drunken sailors lurched -- e .settify-th- . TODAY JUL-It- Pe-S- squarsi."-Sillet-sh- interAbe -- ry drab nett was surrounded by were this usual 'lumbar of pubs. rule plead ignorance or plain ,carelessness. It ts viry rare.'hOieVer. to hear icat, a leader In out-dowork has been brought into court. and it was most surprising to learn during the men 4webargnattn-Boy.Scoi- st, caravan,' with supposedly credited scoutmasters in the party ahmild be fined for- leaving live fires burning oin a national forest. The incident occurred in a state adjoining Utah. How one trained in scout craft or even with the barest inkling of the Boy Scout oath could fail to follow this first law of the forest is hard to understand. It may be that there are facts not disclosed in the reports of the affair. The Stout himself is taught to do a good turn eath darend surely. sa good-turnto help preserve the forests and at the same time to uphold the law. To the credit of the Scouts it must be said that in ninety-nin- e cases out of a hundred they set a commendable example in this regard, and it is to be hoped that the incident referred to above will serve to impress all boys who hear of it with the seriousness of the lesson it holds. irritatc--Ad- Saturday News. th-ei- rosy-whi- reaufe-7- Ills natural phenomena of the world we mimic-wonderf- ul and' varied 'al .. they Oa In this progressive bold, ocieotille age. the wonder! the evidences of their nature. the probability- -r of other worlds. of being inhibited. the possibility of communicating with them. - ars ontaling. more ellen ever before, the thought and ernest en- deever of scholarli. sincere ebonite, with hopes of sehlevement that ... '. 'have bithertobeert flouted as chimerical. 'Just at present the estrum. devoted attention to MatIVIterw st .perihelltm.. bear. niers ertli be for 'nether eighteen sr to the earth then the ruddy-plane- t years. Many claime of the late ?releaser Lowell. Author of 'The Caltali of Mars." are being verified, it is mid. by observations knd - photogranbartaken- on every clear inghtirosti--th- e great Lowell ob- servatory st Flagstaff, Arbour It la thought these givo sesumlice of that planet htivilig four seasons. about twice the latent of Earth's. and consequently of life Ouctain ing conditions, analogous to those of the Earth. , --Upon a recent grist.' t to the American Museum of Netural FillitorT.- -I took renewed interest in examining the great eiderites or meteorites forming tbe collet-0;lthere The chief of these b the one brought by Captain R. E. Peary from Greenland. I.0 is an illUnI11110 boulder; foot and weighs thirty-M- x measuring thirteen by 410411bv-tivHE researches TtraZiegZE whiteness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this lemon lotion to bleach and bring that soft. t. clear. complexion. also as a. 67, unhurt end Ian bleach b at-to- the peralties prescribed under federal laws. Desiiatsall-Lbes- e Avarninni.inany zainpers carelessly fail to comply with these laws and Written Tor of - two-sto- " WITH tEM.ON Squeeze the juice of two lemons lute a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard Whitt which any drug store will supply for Saw cents, hake well. sot you bee ar,ttuartet Ititte-less and delightful lemon bleach. Ma.- sag. this sweetly fragrant lotion into the taco. neck. arms and hands each day. then shortly note the beauty and - is.-b- the-great IHITE, , --- 'as , ,, .i 4 We aro creatures of Imagination,- - and almost all of our fun come from the imagination. and we have & way of tramping attualitr under foot. The commonest.' though unspoken. Creed of mankind la Whatever Is. I. punk. A. tho late lir. Pope. expressed it. "Man 'eerie WIWI b4. bloat?' An Illustratton of this is given by an sisc. .tount furnished by a newspaper reporter of a you American in London. Standing on the Strand he saw among the 'buses which passed. one labelled with the mystic word "Limohouse." Hs bad read about the timehouse Nights and as hi had somewhat of a thirst ftr boarded tho bus:It took a log, while for 'bus No. SS to get to lAntehous& Vt passod through White and ths East End and along row y row of dingy. houses. At last the destination was reachad. found the centre of ',insetbuss to --ba i -e some of the conservation regulations laid down by the government for the pre:. ,. .. .B1pLE-7,1j-10Pql-itS- osuderef.--the-sittest.'"--- - .4 tlaborate preparations have been made for tbeii' entertainment. We delight to honor them and are glad to shos- our apprecialion-o- f ihat their hands wrought slim they laid the foundations of this now prosperous state and and other cities. towns giarmed this fair city ' , throughout the intermountain and hamlets est. pioniee through the gm' has conga. woman-mo- d. special, type of manhood and and the:Mormon" Pioneers, whose corn-i- ns ago we into this valley seventy-fiv- e Celebrate. were true to this type. All history reads us the lesson that great ibanrs or reforms, whether in the politiCal. the Mal or the religious world, have been , womenthe Irrought by this type of men-ans.It was the fortunate that the 'Mormon" people came to ;" these valleys; that they were idea is to stand forth so that it has for in if . any effect on the world, it most come out from itg surroundings and outline itself. incorporate itself, make itself distinct and definite, so that It can print itself oi the consciousniss of the world. It then becomes a mighty force of resition for good. Always when there has been sc- and proress-n-the question world we find this pioneer type of mind asitself. serting . Abraham WaS of this type; )he Children of Israel in their orranized life when they left tgypt and went wandering In the siilderness seeking a new homes were of thie type; Paul. - die felt that he must forget the past and help TtO make a better religion for the future, was of this type; Vie great reformer Luther was a the Pilgrim Fathers and the 'iformoti" Pioneers were of this heroic mold. called Ibis people whom we honor. to lead the way because He bad prepay.. ed -them for the task of conquest. They came from the choice nnks and from the fair lands i I of the earth...and power and virtue were in this 011151.11LEACH1ICIN N, was Thomas Huxley who said that ire bellove that it is pleasanter on the othar.,.. - 0vft-loc-k , , -- It the .. , , .i923 22 JULY,-:- (Ivor thei Deseret blvra by DT. Pbrattk Cran&) To tho roving and dissatistiod spirit of man th Ohne whoa he is to ho halm' la and tile piaci is somowhsre I or hITING - SATURDAY- SOMEWHERE ''ELSE. IIT of doors 'are - to be excused not knowing thoroughly the rules of the forests anti.. their preservation, and it is out - .-- - . Airsf.rytt,,,,art NEWS epriala practically as it was a year ago, making it. per- fectly clear that mil subattrill reduction in taxes can be hoped for untiftecTre vigorous re--' trenchmentis ordered in all departments of i'ity government. SURITISING ., , TH E DESERET 1re2frty .....tn.e.rrband'-- . gt!s.....R.11,Idelet a 1 , 11-- Published Dully Esept Steadily. litombor of Audit Rupees of Citrulattee. 4 . ,. , ,... . ,t I , - . iglichtTgaZi;-.N.C11- -- . - . r. ,.., . .. ,s4- -. ,,A , ,- ,,, ,,, ., . ' " 5 , ft., ,e , t .;-,..,- ,, , r' 0 , , -- --- - -''' . -- I . rampiing,--Scuttling, . vsti.,-.- Running Feet. . ' 4 , - - 1913-19- 11 , , etr , ' -- - , , ' ' i .. , . - 2 - - - - - , , ' - i 1 ,. .' ' 1 ..,.. r :ia311:C - ''''- - , . .,,.. - witut-a-islowin- , ;. .,. tom $ ' Bennett's Varnite, too, Chita an excellent wearing surface for to hest, cold. water or wear. - - ' fleors--imperti- Lb. 15 , .. -- - .-- - ' 1 - r- - - 7- Bard glossy, tough, elastieBennettla floor pahit gins the best service, standing the severe wear a floor receives and retaining its .good appearance. LO - ISlirson , s . beat ' , . , ' n en , , .i 16.,mb.mium... , : , :. 4,1,4 ,,04 ... - " ., .. rt.1 , .. 1 ,.. .. .., . .. , .... Vititt.: , ., i 7. -- - - -e ---- -- ,, )1orm --.1 - , , ., , , . .. , , ..., . , , : . .. , , . . . , , ,,.. , .. . ?7 - - ' e . , -- ' - irrloul A a - - -- -- ky,5 ct la.. tzs , , , 7NN L3s gal til d22 , , . , . ,, -- , . ' . - , ons Mors than 35 years- of games' in the west is the ...,rec momendatimi fel'', - Bennett's - paints . - ,- - : , , pared-and-Shave- .. - , d - , . uLStillBENNETTS Lasts! . . . , .. |