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Show SPANISH VALAGE WASHED MINES AND MINING AWAY BY A CLOUDBURST ------ THE KISS IN JAPAN. QUALITIES OF WIT AND HUMOR. Russian Girls Risk Life for the Cause One Western idea That is Popular with Eastern Maidens. Alike, Yet in Many Ways Fundament- The organization of a stock companys st Weiser, Idaho is In progress it be a, ing the intention to bore for fr that Unprecedented Storms Southern in Eurere Causing Death and Desojation—Cliff Threatens to Top ple Over vicinity panied by torrential wee) is causing The Π northward, southern African Sula very France coast great Warships com distte@ss. was off of Olet, Nevada literally Barcelona, washed away by a cloudburst, and the river Liobregat, ju aouth of | elona d ribed as belr 4 ra ν rent, constantly claiming n Sebastian, in been victim The city of St the north of Spain, has ravaged by a hurricane blushing faint- been found difficult to analyze them, says a writer in The Atlantic, Upon Dredge of the means is to talk freedom di- company’s causing a loss and one | rectly to the soldiers For this girls “Yet it comes as a great shock at It is so different, you know, some points, however, those who have essayed this puzzling task agree, for they all hold that wit is an intel- lectnal, humor an emotional, quality; first from anything in a Japanese girl's experience. | have known maidens who per- blance, and humor a_ perception of contrast, of discrepancy, of incongruity The incongruity is that which Yet these must | dreds and hundreds of girls are now nightly meeting with groups of solknown, arises between the ideal and the fact, very maids became afterward ardent advocates of the new western embrace between theory and practice, between “Frankly, l like the kiss myself. Its stimulus, and the feeling, as of red satin, when mouth touches mouth ways or almost always a moral congruity. In the case both of week, 1 The fire while individually deposits rich, cannot supply During the past month the two mills of the Utah Copper company reduced high-grade eve ry 100,000 tens of ore to a concentrate probability diers, in working men’s homes and in barracks, the entire demand. »pproximately near Wit and humor are such elemental fundamental things that it has always have been found to be more effective started in the | than men; the young peasant soldiers are more willing to listen to girls, transforme: and are far readier to protect them If the United States to produce So all over Russia hunenough nickel. cobalt, and tin for tts | from arrest. the penin student, ly, “Was unknown in Japan 50 years ago Now, among the aristocracy, it is becoming quite renowned. working very the army, “The kiss,” she said, ally Different, graceful in hard to win over | be discovered, fer those now sielter She was a Japanese college little and thin, but very tionists are at present own consumption, new recco and and the Spanish ought villace Spain, rh again few days has po. foundation im fact of $1,000,000, unprecedented the past three a extends from ove Portugal, Sp have Phe rains of of work her Paris gown was burned last ing on the heel rainfalls and floods opened last το among the soldiers,” said the young woman. “As you know, the revolu- The the in. Europe Southern a tremend storm, accom “When the university | autumn I started dredge and property at Oroville, Cal Paris.— grasp of of Liberty. The rumor from: Park Cit to the ef Daly Judge company fect that the would close its mine down within a on Town, ποτα τ SEEK TO WIN SOLDIERS. that and there that ts figure will be eclipsed during the present month To go into barracks and talk revolution to the soldiers, hardly anything is so dangerous—for the girl caught is tried by court-martial and in a day or two is executed.— From Leroy Scott's Interview with a | Russian Woman in Everybody's The output of the mines and leases of the Goldfield district for the week | ending October 12 was 3877% tons, having an estimated value of $382,350. This is something like 100 tons more Man Whose Memory Was for the defense had dodged questions, faulty memory was kiss that was with a warm, soft shock—ves, frank- ly, I like the kiss, and I tremely difficult to deny find it exan eager young man so innocent and so delightlightful an embrace Bad. For more than an hour a witness His fainted at a first haps too warmly tendered, particularly Bible Names for Colts. A hostler from the Blue Grass has just found employment in one of the that wit is a pereeption of promise and performance; resem- and per- haps it might be added that it is alinwit and humor there is also a pleasurable surprise, a gentle shock, which ac- companies our perception of the hitherto unsuspected resemblance ‘or incongruity. A New Eneland farmer was once ence of describing in the a very humane pres- person the great age and debility of a horse that he formerly owned and used. ought ta have killed “You him,” interrupt- stables of a New York man His The recently flooded rive in the ed the humane person indignantly. than the output for the preceding | €xasperating for the»counse] for the south of France are again rising darky dialect is so quaint and his plaintiff, who was seeking to recall “Well,” drawled the farmer “we did week, In the department of Savoie, a great stories of “Ole Kaintuck” so unique to the witness’ recollection an event —almost.” Vanadium, one of the rare metals, overhanging cliff of KOO eubic meters, of four of five years previous. Event- ‘no member of the household misses is reported to be moving and in immi- is used principally for hardening steel, ually the man remembered “some- | an opportunity to speak to him and A Young Composer. and | especially in connection with chromnent danger Gf toppling over have him say a word. thing about it.” Rachel, aged 12, wrote an compo1,000 Tormery, of jum... This rare metal is to be found crushing the village His employer said to him a few “Ah,” continued the lawyer for the sition on wild flowers in which she | in small quantities in Utah and Colofeet below days ago: “I suppose your mas- | praised the arbutus, the liverwort, A dispatch from Brest says several rado, as well as in some of the south- plaintiff, “what dd you think of it ter down south had a good many at the time?” sinacks have capsized and their crews the spring beauty, the blood root, and ae western states, ing before the lawyer for the defense horses’ “Dat we did, sah had my “Really,” have been drowned Four Utah mines posted dividends last week that will call for the checkGAVEL WIELDED BY TAFT. They were: Colo| ing out of $94,500, The Philippine Assembly Formally | rado, $60,000; Beck Tunnel Con., $20, Opened and Ready for Business. | 000; Grand Central, $12,500, and Utah, of Fish Springs, $2,000 Manila.—Secretary ‘Taft formally | Rich opened the Philippine assembly in the | Wednesday| week returns were received last from assays of rock sent from National theatre at 11:15 morning, in the presence of a large | the Keystone mine, a property almost crowd of people. ln his opening ad: | within the city limits of Weiser, Idaho. dress Mr. Taft declared that his views | A Baker City assayer found that the rock carried $174 to the ton, and the announced two years ago regarding | Boise assayer found $108. the independence of the Philippine| The average cost of copper produc. people were unchanged. He did not | tion from Butte mines under the re believe that they would be fitted to stricted output is today not Jess than govern themselves for at least a gen- | but he added that the matter | 12 cents per pound, eration, At Lake Superior the cost will probably average close was entirely in the hands of congress. & The secretary denied emphatically | to 10 cents. The cost of Calumet that the Untted States had any inten- | Arizona is only 5.71 cents. time to interpose objection, “it was so long ago | can't recall exactly what I thought of it.” “Well,” shouted the cross-examiner, excitedly, “if you can't recall, tell us what you think now you thought then.” assembly, but recommended that attention be paid to the civil service. Wednesday, voted upon the question the establishment of a court. There permanent were thirty-eight votes in favor of the project, Belgium, Denmark, Greece, Roumania, Switzerland and Uruguay did not vote, and Mex- tons of ore are now in course of com- tent of more than a third of a million dollars through the discovery that certain placer mines aear Landers, Wyo., had been salted and that the property in question fs worthless It is learned that during the next ico, Brazil, Greece, Colombia, Salvador, Persia, Guatemala, Hayti, Venezuela, San Domingo, Paraguay, Panama and Ecuador, China, Bolivia and few days therg will be a number Οἱ experts in Utah who represent great Nicaragua voted favorably to a permanent court, but with the reserve that such court and the negotiations in Standard Oil company, but who have not become very aggressive in Ameriean as vet. Their coming looks good that direction should be conducted on the basic principle of absolute judicial London operators who tackle the flelds of the world in competition with for the Utah oil fields. El Paso, Texas.—Four Foully and three women, one of the former being a government mail carrier, were am- bushed and killed between San Jose de Hila and La Colorado, east of Hermosilo in the lower Sonora country, by Yaquis. The killing was discovered a short time afterward by a party of American mining men, who were traveling over the trail with an | escort of Mexicans. Five Million Acres of Land Opened to Settlement Next Year. Washington As the result of the works by construction of irrigation the government and private parties, of it is expected that 5,000,000 acr land in the west will be openedto settlement in 1908. The office of. experiment stations will make a special ef- ᾿ and general manager of the Old Pea- cock mine in the Seven Devils dis- trict, men the George W. Boggs, one of the lessees equality, Four Men and Three Women Murdered by Indians. states he has twenty-one men employed at the mine, is taking or from the new strike and bas a number of teams hauling ore from the dump to Council, where it is shipped {ο the Sumpter smelter. T. N. Barnsdale of Pittsburg, the owner of the Monarch group of mines at Atlanta, Idaho, has expended nearly a million dollars in developing and blocking out the ore bodies of the Mon- Rio Grande railroad is being taken by mail on the question whether they when he refused to test and the future of the camp has always been dependent on the successful work “g of these ores, which in the past unas been a failure on account of stock in rich copper properties, nota bly the Cananea Central Mines company and the Greene Cananea Copper company Western | inexhaustive bodies of ore in reserve. From $15,000 and} bodies of ore in sight. pounded om 85 per cent of them belong to the Or| to $20,000 has been monthly by the present 10 stamp mill, der of Railway Telegraphers. road A Doctor of Divinity, now Editor of a well-known Bustle, Stays and Crinoline, was all one Spring's colts!” to publish her article, he called her attention to that fact. “You've Reason This Out. An English quarryman was charged him wid his written on both sides of your paper,” said he. “Well,” was the reply, “and don't you print on both sides of yours?” Most Unhealthy Work. According Dr. Horn, to a German physician, miners age so rapidly be- cause of their unhygienic surroundings that they present all the aspects pick; an’ if he'd hit him wid his as of senile decay at the age of 50, behard as he hit him wid his, he’d have | yond which few are able to ply their near killed him, and not him him.” vocation. / such as white bread, potatoes, rice, partly cooked cereals and such, Starchy food is not digested in the upper stomach but passes on into the duodenum, or lower stomach and in- lous than any comment of ours could written regarding the controversy between Collier's Weekly and the Religious Press of the Country and oth- make it. Does Collier's expect to regain any ers, including ourselves. ing suits for libel brought by Collier's monstrating thru suits for damages, that it can be moreartful in evading testines, where, in a against liability humble into a form of sugar is completed and but resentful victims of its defamation, then the food absorbed bythe blood. But if the powers of digestion are weakened, a part of the starchy food will lie in the warmth and moisture of the body and decay, generating gases for paper, ods, has not made itself more ridicu- has us Religious Also regard- commenting upon its methods, These are his sentiments, with some very emphatic words left out. “The religious Press owes you a debt of gratitude for your courage in showing up Collier's Weekly as the “Yell-Oh Man.” Would you eare to use the inclosed article on the “Boo Hoo Baby” as the “Yell-Oh Man's successor?” “A contemporary remarks that Col- lier’s has finally run against a solid hickory “Post” and been damaged in its own estimation to the tune of $750,000.00." “Here is a publication which has, in utmost disregard of the facts, spread broadcast damaging statements about the Religious, Press and others and has suffered those false statements to go uncontradicted until, not satisfied after finding the Religious Press too quiet, and peaceful, to resent, the insults, it makes the mistake of wandering into fresh field and buits its rat- tled head against this Pos* and all the World laughs, Even Christians smile, as the Post ‘suddenly turns and gives it back a dose of its own medicine.” “It is a mistake to say all the World laughs. No cheery laugh comes from Collier’s, but it cries and boo hoos like a spanked baby and wants $750,000.00 to soothe its tender, unanimous for strike. About 400 oper- | of sufficient size to reduce the vast the hame Shouts a Spanked Baby. ings.” It is reported that the | It is stated.the company will enlarge received are practicaly the present 10 stamp mill, which is not ators are employed on all “BOO-HOO” arch mine alone before even placing a shall strike in consequence of the reThe Minerva mine, im the Atlanta fusal of the company to reinstate R district, Idaho, for the past two years H. Skeges, former wire chief at Grand| Junction, Colo., who was discharged | has been producing steadily and has Union wires. votes already ‘em hypnotism; the sound seems almost to | wid his pick, an’ he hit clear the air, or at least to lull one into a kind of dream in which only the sense of hearing exists. mill on the property. This alone assures us of Js confidence of the great possibilities of the camp. There are millions of tons of ore of commercial value blocked out in the mines of the Atlanta district, Idaho, fort to aid settlers in adopting the the great loss caused by not having most economical and effective meth. | the proper process to treat the ores. ods. It has made plans for the drainThrough a compromise reached out age of 2,000,000 acres, principally in of court, civil actions involving $500, states east of the Mississippi river, 000, pending in the courts of Los Anduring the past year. | geles, Boston, Duluth, Tuwetson and ended. Railway Telegraphers May Strike. | Tombstone, Ariz., have been Denver, Colo.—A vote of the teleg- ‘the actions involved large amounts ot raphers employed on the Denver & ity, had Faith, Hope and Char- all of the other blossoms of dell and dale. But she wrote on both sides of her sheet of paper, and when she asked her father, who was an editor, Two of the largest up to date and Question is Finally Settled Favorably The Record gf Helena, Mont., pubat The Hague. | lishes a story to the effect that numerMontana and Washington inThe Hague.—The ninth plenary sit- | ous ting of the peace conference, held on vestors have been muleted to the exof master And Wagner as a Curative Agent. Vernon Lee has told somewhere the an eyewitness of the occurrence gave story of the marvelous effects of Wag- some curious evidence “He tuk a pick an’ he tuk a pick,” ner on a headache. One does, after a time, succumb to what is a kind of|| the witness began, “an’ he hit him modern quartz mills in the state, with a daily capacity of reducing 250 pletion for the big mines of the Monarch and Bagdad Chase Mining companies, in the Atlanta district of Idaho. PERMANENT ARBITRATION. ole Bible names. dat we did! with assaulting one of his mates, and when the case was carried into court, tion of disposing of the islands; said Considerable excitement was develhe had absolute confidence in the Fili- !oped in Logan, Utah, mining circles pinos, denied that ne was disappoint- last week by reports concerning a reed at their inability to legislate con: | cent find in Blacksmith Fork canyon, servatively, and asserted his belief | | by Captain Silvey and H. J. Smith, two that they felt their responsibility and | Ogden prospectors. The discovery is acknowledged the necessity of sup} said to be an extremely rich one. porting ‘the American government. Mr. Tatt refrained from suggestions regarding specific legislation by the said the witness, speak- lacerated feel- * “Thank Heaven it has at last struck aman with “back bone” enoughto call a spade a “spade” and who believes in telling the whole truth without fear or favor.” Perhaps Collier's with its “utmost disregard for the facts,” may say no such letter exists. Nevertheless it js on file in our office and is only one of a mass of letters and other data, newspaper comments, ete., denouncing the “yellow” methods of Collier's. This volume is so large that a man could not well go thru it under half a day’s steady work. The letters come from various parts of America. Usually a private controversy is not interesting to the public, but this is a public controversy Collier's has been using the “yellow” methods to attract attention to itself, but, jumping in the air, cracking heels together and yelling “Look at me” wouldn't suffice, so it started out on a “Holier Than Thou” attack on the Religious Press and on medicine. Weleaveit to the public now, as we did when we first resented Collier's attacks, to say whether, in a craving for sensation and circulation, its attacks do not amount to a systematic mercenary hounding. We likewise leave it to the public to say whether | Collier's, by its own policy and meth-! self-inflicted for loss of libels prestige than the by de- or does it hopefor starting a campaign of libel suits to silence the popular indignation, reproach and resentment which it has aroused. healthy individ- ual, the transformation of the starch Collier's can not dodge this public controversy by private law suits. li and irritating the mucous surfaces un- can not postpone the public judgment against it. That great jury, |the Pub- lower part of the alimentary canal, including the colon and the appendix, lic, will hardly blame us for not waiting until we get a petit jury in a court room, before denouncing this prod- igal detractor of institutions founded and fostered either by individuals or by the public, itself. No announcements during our entire business career were ever made claiming “medicinal effects” for either Postum or Grape-Nuts. Medicinal effects are results obtained from the use of medicines. Thousands of visitors go thru our entire works each month and-see for themselves that Grape-Nuts contains absolutely nothing but wheat, barley and a little salt; Postum absolutely nothing but wheat and about ten per- cent of New Orleans Molasses. art of preparing these simple The ele- ments in a scientific manner to obtain the best food value and flavor, required some work and experience to acquire. Now, when any publication goes far enough out of its way to attack us be- cause our advertising is “medical,” it simply offers a remarkable exhibition of ignorance or worse. We do claim physiological or bodily results of favorable character following the adoption of our suggestions re- garding the discontinuance of coffee and foods which may not be keeping the individual in good health. We have no advice to offer the perfectly healthful person. His or her health is evidence in itself that the beverages and foods used exactly fit that person. Therefore, why change? til under such conditions the whole becomes involved. Disease sets up and at times takes the form known as appendicitis. When the symptoms of the trouble make their appearance, would it not be good, practical, common sense, to discontinue the starchy food which is causing the trouble and take a food in which the starch has been transformed into a form of sugar in the process of manufacture? This is identically the same form of sugar found in the human bodyafter starch has been perfectly digested. Now, human food is made up very largely of starch and is required by the body for energy and warmth.. Naturally, therefore, its use should be continued, if possible, and for the reasons given above it is made possible in the manufacture of Grape-Nuts. In connection with this change of food to bring relief from physical disturbances, we have suggested washing out the intestines to get rid of the immediate cause of the disturbance. Naturally, there are cases where the disease has lain dormant and the abuse continued too long, until apparently only the knife will avail. But it is a well-established fact among the best physicians who are acquainted with the details above recited, that preventative measures are far and awaythe best. Are we to be condemnedfor suggest- ing @ way to prevent disease by following natural methods and for perfecting a food that contains no “medicine” and produces no “medicinal effects” but which has guidedliterally But to the man or woman who is thousands of persons from sickness to ailing, we have something to say as a result of an unusually wide experience health? We have received during the years past upwards of 25,000 letters in food and the result of proper feeding. In the palpably ignorant attack on us in Collier's, appeared this statement,—“One widely circulated paragraph labors to induce the impression that Grape-Nuts will obviate the necessity of an operation in appendicitis. This is lying and potentially deadly lying.” ; In reply to this exhibition of—well let the reader name it, the Postum Co. says: Let it be be understood that appendi- citis results from long continued disturbance in-the intestines, caused primarily by undigested starchy food, from people who have been either helped or made entirely well by following our suggestions, and they are simple. If coffee disagrees and causes any of the ailments common to some coffee users quit it and take on Postum. If white bread, botatoes, rice and other starch foods make trouble, quit and use Grape-Nuts food which is largely predigested and will digest, nourish and strengthen, other forms of food do not. It’s just plain old common sense. “There’s a Reason for Postum and srape-Nuts. ¢ Postum Cereal Co., Ltd, |