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Show rr xT CATARRH OF THE STOMACH Could Hardly Eat. Gradually Grew Worse. Relieved $7 Peruna Mr. A. Ikerd, Box West I tarrh M. 31, Installment 6 bd ta of the stomach and mall intea tines ) for a n u mbe r ol years. 1 went to a number of doctors and got no relief, and finally one of my sent doctors me to Chicago, and 1 met the same fate. They aid they could do noth-kinfor me; g aid I had cancer of the stomach and there was no cure. I almost thought the same, for my breath was offensive and 1 could not eat anything without great misery, and I grad ually grew worse. Finally I concluded to try Peruna, and I found relief and a cure for that dreadful disease, catarrh. I took five bottles of Peruna and two of Manalin, and I now feel like a new man. There is nothing better than Peruna, and 1 keep a bottle of it In my house all the time." When I i All Fools' Day. April lifts the latch freakish all aits and wags consider themselves free to vent their nonsense upon the victims whom they would fool by thetr tricks The gay Parisian calls such April fish;" in bonnle Scotland on ' that day they make merry "hunting the gowk," whilst in England and this country a man keeps a sharp lookout lest he be caught at a disadvantage by the Joker who glories in bis smartness if he only can make some one' look ridiculous. But it is just as well not to be too smart. The boomerang has a wicked habit of coming back. Silly as All Fools' day custom may seem to the solemn, it has an ancient ancestry. Its origin is obscure, but somewhere trom tk. tc.ll tim trbt. these Romans felt the Hit of the vernal ecful-noand went on the spree accordingly, comes this rollick Which still trills forth its merry ditty in our streets. Deeper still, the calm, contemplative Hindu, for some reason or other, from time immemorial has gone on the first of April. It was probably from France, whence all 'hings vivacious come, that Europe got the unruly itch for turning this day into a comedy of errors. Thrifty Scot. When Sir John Carr was at Glasgow, in the year 1807, he waj asked ty the magistrates to give his advice concerning the inscription to be placed on Nelson's monument, then The knight recom just completed. mended this brief record: Glasgow to Nelson. True. said the others, and as there is the town of Nelson near us. we might add, Glasgow to Nelson nine miles,' so that the column might terve for the milestone and a At last, in 175R. the end came, when William Pitt thrust smaller men aside and became prime minister in England. Amherst took Louisbourg, Wolfe came to Quebec and General Forbes, that stout and steady soldier, was sent to Virginia to go ag&lnBt The advance was slow to exasperation in the view of every ardent man like Washington, and cautious almost to timidity; but the very delay redounded to its success at last. Home for the Winter. 'Twas November before Duquesne waa reached The Indiana gathered there, seeing winter come on. had not waited to meet them; and the French by that time knew themselves in danger of being cut off by the English operations in the north. When Forbes forces, therefore, at last entered those a fatal woods again, where slaughtered men had lain to rot, the French had withdrawn; nothing remained but to enter the smoking ruins of their abandoned fort, hoist the king's flag, and rename the post Fort Pitt; and Washington turned homeward again to seek the rest he so much needed. A Hazardous Feat. It had been almost a bloodless campaign, but such dange'r as it had brought Washington had shared to the utmost. The French had not taken themselves off without at least one trial of the English strength While yet Forbes lay within the mountains a large detachment had come from Duquesne to test and reconnolter his force. Colonel Mercer of the Virginia Hue, had been ordered forward with a party to tneet them. He stayed so long, and the noise of the firing came back with ao doubtful a meaning to the anxious ears at the camp, that Washington hastened with volunteers to his relief. In the dusk the two bodies of Englishmen, met, mistook each other for enemies, exchanged a deadly fire, and were checked only because Washington rushed between their lines, even while their pieces blazed, cried his hot commands to atop, and struck up the meking - mueelee - with hie eword. 'Twas through no prudence of his that he waa not shot. French Power Ends. For a long time hia friends had felt a deep uneasiness about his health. They had very earnestly besought him not to attempt a new campaign. You will In all probability bring on a relapse," George Mason had warned him. and render yourself Incapable of servlng the public at a time when there may be the utmost occasion. There is nothing more certain than that a gentleman of ycur station owes the care of his health and bis life not only to himBelf and his friends, but to his But he had deemed the country. nearest duty the most imperative; and it was only after that duty was disposed of that he had turned from the field to seek home and new pleasures along with new duties. The winter brought news from Quebec of the fall of the French power In America, which made rest and home and pleasure the more grateful and full of antythe mem-lh.ev- t pass-tagto- AMJ one A rgvuN 51 CITY. UTAH Happiness often consists of not the things we don't want. Which are You Using? 3 There is a first, second, third and sometimes a fourth crop of japan Teas picked each year. The first crop has the rich, fragrant flavor and strength which Tea drinkers enjoy. Teas Hewletts Are First Crop Teas Coupons tor Rogers Fine Silverware in Every Package. Sometimes the only man who cornea out ahead in a lawsuit Is the law jar. "Progress Free to any address. This Is little magazln describing the new 20 etnrx W sker Bank Building end quarter ol Welker Brother Benkera, with eighteen picture ol exterior and Interior end other vlewa, Including one ol flnt home ol bank, occupied by K Id IMS. For coplee, cell on or write - , ca-au- pfrr - .t . j r kllllillftl fnirmriii Bankers Sett Lake City Travel broadens some, hut others can remain at home and get fat. Bargains in Fine Monuments ' Too esa buy a nrt meat from ua lor th Mm er errs 1 than th usual poorly cut monument ou. Booklet Frool o Our kuokUt eteetne a M raux ol S1T I your lor th Write mi lf AIM writ Mantle Catalogue, ; Elias Morris & Ions Co. ii-V. Se. Tarn Su fak UW car n Meoumoets War Til , Marble Work Mantle I d St. Louis nUHtttJ Walker Brothers !! An Accidental Meeting, On a May day in 1758, aa he spurred upon the way to Williamsburg, under orders from the frontier, Washington t4 JJ- fc'veral thmitartiln ol our alarm riof cry moruing in time to get a lot of poo pie off to work Let u wake ou up. Ba on time ail day only $1 for atnaii one. So. Htg Heu sur-paai- the low taxes, let's lower the indirect taxes for example, that tax rod straight upon an adventure he if 40 million dollars a year that tuber had not looked for. ml We are doing a lot to keep this town awake. f zest He was within a few miles' ride of the little capital; old plantations, lay close upon the way; neighborly homes FRIENDS HELP. began to multiply; and so striking a St. Paul Park Incident. horseman riding Uniformed and unattended, could not thereabouts go far After drinking coffee for breakfast unrecognized. He was waylaid and I always felt languid and dull, havlDg haled to dinner, despite excuses and .10 ambition to get to my morning protests of public business calling for There was a 'charming duties. Then in about an hour or so dispatch. a weak, nervous derangement of the woman to be seen at the house, his heart and stomach would come over friend told him, If a good dinner was we with such force I would frequently not argument enough and his business could not spoil tor an hour's stay have to He down. Tea Is Just as harmful, because It in agreeable company. And so, of a contains caffeine, the same drug found sudden, under constraint of Virginian in coffee. hospitality, he was hurried into the "At other times I had severe head- presence of the gracious young matron aches; stomach finally became affect- ' who was at once, and as if of right, to ed and digestion so impaired that 1 make his heart safe against further had serious chronic dyspepsia and quest of adventure. A lady, tor many years J Martha Custis was hut constipation. President of the W. C. T. U., ty. To the charnPof youth and beauty told me she had been greatly ben- were added that touch of flulet sweetefited by quitting coffee and using ness and that winning grace of Postum; she was troubled for years possession which come to a woman with asthma. 8he said it was no Wived In her girlhood, and widowed when she found before age or care has checked the cross to ault coffee f she could have as delicious an first full tide of life. At seventeen she had married Daniel Parke Custis. article as Postum. Another lady who bad been trou- s man more than twenty years her bled with chronic dyspepsia for years, senior; tor eight years of quiet love found Immediate relief on ceasing cof- and duty as wife end mother had fee and using Postum. StiU another only made her youth the more grafriend told me that Postum was a cious ln that rural land of leisure and Godsend, her heart trouble having good neighborhood; and a years widbeen relieved, after leaving off coffee owhood had been but a suitable preparation for perceiving the charm of this and taking on Postnm. So many --each cases came to my stately young soldier who now came Notice that I concluded coffee was the riding her way upon the public cause of my trouble and I quit and business. A Willing Captive. took up , Postum. I am more than of trou-- .Hia.ge..wJ. iex cwfti,.all,jhe.Jaid ble have disappeared. I am well and knew him and loved him tor gallantry and bravq. capacity; he carried happy Look ln pkgs. for the famous Httl himself like a prince and he forgot his errand to Unger In her company. book, "The Road to WeUvUle. Dinner wee soon over, and his horses A sbwv tfce Uttrrt Em Tkv at the door; there was the' drilled and ft time U 1 - ki jmw Mt MVttn arw era ala, traa, , afar cat. e W -- Good Idea. er w Brad-dock'- As to miosis levies in Missouri. Republic. the wealthiest men ln Virginia. But Virginian wealth was not to be counted till crops were harvested aud got to market The current price of tobacco might leave you with or without a balance to your credit in London your njiiy clearinghouse, as it ihum-ev.,nr principal put chases, too, must ft- - made over sea and through fat'ors Both w hat you sijld and what you bought must take the luuuids of the sea voyage the wlitins of sea captains the chances of a market To he farmer and merchant at one manage your own negroes and youf own overseers, and conduct an Interdutiful Bishop, trained sqtrant fey he turned once more to pub- - national correspondence, to keep ths he was, leading hia restless and run of prices current duties, port dues, jmginess Hh-- , and commission, and know the fluctpatient charge back and fortify ths b,,fore h marrl he the in sight of the wlndowa uating rates of exchange; to underterrace where hi young coloael tar M of bur stand and meet all changes, whether e In merchants rted, absorbed and forgetful; man or in markets, three county beast alike had been an in the old days thousand miles away, required sdteuture Ice of the unhappy Braddock. and ln the lldernt.8a and 1n amount of information, an alertness, might .eem to walk there lively alnpe HraddocU.g fata, a steady attention to detail, a sagaories of duty done and undertaken. ha(J maintalned hlf i,ead(,uar. city ln farming and a shrewdness ln But dusk came; the horses wefieSJ striving to keep the border trade, such as made a great property a burden to idle or inefficient men. up; and the next morgjng waa well ad- savages vanced before the abstracted young Successful Business Man. Loads the Poll, officer got at last to hia saddle, and But Washington took pains to sucled he wonder that the poll spurred on belated to Williamsburg. here in Winchester, where ceed He had a great zest for busiHis business, concerned the preparaso many seasons men had ness The practical genius which had Forbetf tions then afoot for General H bear himself like a capable shown in him almost prematurely as advance upon Duqueane. I came here d a gallant, Indomitable sol a boy now grew heartily ln him as a Washsaid at thia critioal Juncture," 4 Twas no unwelcome duty, man of fortune Messrs Robert Cary ington to the president of the council, o take his young wife to & Fo , his factors In HLohdon, must John Sir St of the order expresa 'by manburg in "the season," wheu soon have learned to recognize his fullest the to Clair, represent in Vi was in town in the per-h- letters, in the mere handling, by their nin Winner the posture of our affairs at No detail escaped him when burgesses and the country bulk chester lack of clothe, arms, and once he had gotten into the swing of to ome the festivities try enjoy of lack wiss equipage, lack of money, the work must be as punctilregulations touching rank and discK tkfoo in the business then sure to ious as he They was, they found, ln seeing pllne. t jfcmng soldier was unused to to etcry part of the trade and acA Visit and a Pledge. and suffered a counting with which he intrusted General Forbea kad been ia Phila- b ibllps,v however, find himself them, or else look to lose his lucrato embarrassment delphia a month already, awaiting the fit too conspicuous amidst tive patronage formation of bis army in Virginia; U space He was not many years In learning 11 novel Beene. parliamentary , Sir John St. Clair, hia quartermaster-generalId hardly taken his seat when the how to make the best tobacco in Virhad come Into the provinces ginia, and to get lyrecognlzed as such to see that proper plans wero made Ptkws and stately Robinson, speak In etc t the bouse and treasurer of the England Harms of flour marked and executed; It was necessary that George Washington, Mount Vernon. cooty these twenty years, rose, at matters should be pressed forward th were ere long suffered to pass the into of the thank bidding burgesses, Washvery diligently and at once, and hhior the eervicea of which ail spectors at the ports of the British ington, when once at the seat of gov- wee West Indies without scrutiny It was speaking, ernment, was not slack to urge and worth while to serve so efficient a With Emotion, superintend official action. man to his satisfaction; worth while this sudden praise, spoken with But, the troublesome buslnem once KWeraus or not, he would not be served otherin a warmth there public ln proper course, he turned back to wise. more was than plat, Washington seek Mrs. Custis again, thj time at knm Washington had emerged, aa It bow to meet. - He got to his feet hej own home, ere he went to tbs long wbei Mr. was done, but he were, after a tense and troubled youth, Speaker distance of the frontier. The onset coaldnot utter a syllable. He stood upon a peaceful tract of time, where was made with a soldiers promptness there, hstead, hot with bluehes, stam- his powers could stretch and form and audacity. He returned to his post, from head to themselves without strain or hurry. mering, after a delay too alight to deserve any foot all He had robust health, to which he Mr. Th down, Washington." reasonable mans remark, and yet with ln unstinted work, athletic a pledge, given and taken which made crlsd M 'speaker; "your modesty is gave leave hi your valor, and that an an Insatiable relish and equal strength, him look forward to the end of the he power of any language for being much afoot and In the open, campaign with n new longing as ' to which he satisfied with early rounds seess." the winning of a real home and an of superintendence ln the field where and aa the years again, unwonted happiness. the men were at their tasks, with returned at each This was not Washington's flrst adhis to many a tireless ride after the hounda, take venture ln love, but It was lis last, tbe auembly; and with cue-W- or steadfast wait at theI hauntsi of the and gave him a A ail I fc 4 the ' deay him in stead ess be at first had lacked some practical achievement every day, No young Virginian could five twenty-fioof Hia life broadened which he Indulged by finding tasks of six years amidst fair , women in allthe uses of peace con- - betterment about the estate and keepthat hale and sociable colony without ing his men at them with unflagging being touched again and again by the discipline; a huge capacity tor being quick passion; and this man had the useful and for understanding how tp blood of a lover beyond his fellows. be so. which he suffered his neighDespite the shyness of a raw lad bors, his parish, his county, the colwho lived much in the open, he had ony Itself, to employ when there waa relished the company of lively women need. from the flrst, meeting tbeir gay sal. A Man. Competent lies sometimes with s look from his To a young man, bred these ten frank blue eyea that revealed more year dn the forests and in the strugthan he knew. Love bad first found gle of waHare upon a far frontier, it him out in earnest sis years ago, had been intolerable to live tamely, when he was but just turned of without executive tasks big and various enough to keep his energy from twenty; and It had taken all ths long while since to forget hie repulse at rust. The clerical side of business he the hands of a fair young beauty ln had learned very thoroughly In camp, that day of pasalon. as well as the exceeding stir and strain of Individual effort the IncesAn Earlier Love Affair. sant letter writing necessary to keep Mary Phillips had but taken hli promised performance afpot, the reckfancy for a moment, because be could oning of men and of stores, the nice not pass such a woman by and deem calculations of time end ways and himself still a true Virginian. It was means; the scrutiny of Individual more serious that he had been much men, too, which ia so critical a part In the company, these last years, of a of management, and the slotr organifair neighbor of the vivacious house zation of effort. He had been in a of Cary, whose wit and beauty had fine school for these things all his haunted him in the very thick ol and would have thought shame youth, wb and frontier, the campaigns upon not to have learned temhimself to now stilt mastered his heart km perance. sagacity, thrift, and patience again, with a sort of Imperious charm wherewith to use his energy. in the midst of this very happy sea A Model Family Man. son when he knew Martha CuBtls hi veritable heart's mistress for the fv. His happy marriage did him the ture. It may well hare made hli service to keep him from restlessness. glad of misadventures ln the past t His love took his allegiance, and held know hie heart safe now. him to his home aa to a post of honor The campaign dragged painfull; and reward. He had never before Martha Washington. far Into the dread autumn. Decembf had leave to be tender with children, had come before the captured poet c Wbntid to or show with what 'a devotion he and him facility give the Ohio could be left to the keepli and a wide comradeship could preside over a household all his Oowldge of Colonel Mercer and a little gar own. His home got strong hold upon b afilrs- - Along with quiet days as son of provincials. But when His estates gave him scope of him i ctfen, a neighbor, and a country he wasfree again there was no r came maturity and the command and a life of action. Knfcman, son why Washington should Twas no wonder he kept his faclisa lessons of a various experience longer to be happy, and he waa m; tors busy, and shipped goods authentiMarried a Foriun. ried to Martha Custis on ths 6th cated by the brand. man in Virginia lived more or I n 1 January, 1751 (TO BE CONTINUED.) Wtb a greater zest henceforth than A Brilliant Wedding. His marriage foloael Washington The sun . shone very bright tl Marvelously Condensed. Voeght him great increase of wealth. was ahd the fine glitter !ls there A lawyer of the good old southern day, of responsibility increase as yell gold, the brave show of resplend had left many thousand type bad argued for thre court day ln the little His brief waa a maschurch uniforms, whirr land( and fony flve thousand without pause. the marriage waa solemnized. Offlej- substan-o- f terpiece of classical learning and legal a in mone), gterllng his majeety . aervlce crowfb fortune t0 the ounK ife and the erudition, but it was tiresome, In their lace and there, Colonel Parker," said th wearied gold csrl twQ cbndren who survived him; . coats, to see their comrade wodclei wishing to Pe' judge at last, without WMiiington "he ,ecomethe new governor. Francis governor and intimate in any way that the court com. tru-te- e ,n4 would not be delighted to listen to H rank, and the bridegroom lo It needed your whole argument, I must suggest whole the 0f maDaKtr not less gallantly than tb , and knowledge and patience that the docket is somewhat crowded, rj "d to good farming and that if you could condense a little rlet beelde the coach and si tlj0f no mean orderand get prices it might help your client's cause. profitable f bore his bride homeward amidst t ou; i , , The attorney smiled his acknowltn find ..h.ntoYour Honor, he exclaimedgment. waa in my mind when in- - ed. the thought and out cargoes, to tend by whom 1 prepared array and a becoming ceremot my argument! Suh, for sea to over the satisfied to the fun, and be mnsf vjduc correspondents in re- - the next four days my brief ia a persent goods perishable ..the ship New rejoiced to be so brave a hor of condensation!" tura by the right vessels, bound to fect marvel on inch a day. World. York the nearest river, and the bigger - For' three months ntl of deep estate themore difficult its prop- four tia wi 1 i.i, h more Getting Back at Jh Men. v Ye er conduct and economy, the .res! Crabshaw My husband sty Mrs. effect at. jdIk vj AfgagtTtrat- rlTr tide, where their troth that women shouldn t hsr votes Bef been plighted, forgetting the ti cause they wouldnt understand the baceo a Potent Factor. fl No doubt the addition of Mr.. Cub tariff. th. new Ufe of qnlet love and m 0g. handiome Mrs. Dorcas You Just tell him that pr0perty to hi. own men don't seem to understand It, Yer-the broad and fertHe acres at Mount , non mad Colonel Washington one of either." Judge. for-tig- n BurlIowa, ington, writes: ;:'i vi m IRON WORK ORNAMENTAL OF KVKBY DESCRIPTION Criger Wire & Iron Works Kelt Lake C fir, Utah AfOSITiVEsodrU. MANENT CUM FOB Liquor and Dro nb.lr lilllf eve tew. ITITirri 1M V. m! I I If k L but Ti THE Mt. KEELIf Ur Uk IN' Otr I ATE ST ILI.U8TRAT-- u Kl CATALOGUE. Explains how we fetch barber trad In M or writ Clrht week. MOWER BARBER COLLEOE HALT LAKE Ofl'T Commercial Street 11 It Addictions i la lu (UK KODAK FINISHING Mill order riven prompt atfentloe. Complete atock of Photo Bupplle. Salt Lake Phot Suyaly Co. IM Alain 8t. Write lor catalogue. Some Job. A good wife Is the safety deposit the of her husband's conscience; hook on which he hangs his mistakes end follies; the custodian of his digestion; the living advertisement of his income; his steering gear on the straight and narrow path, and his passport into heaven, at the end," woman who qo says s far has refused to be . Any man's good-lookin- g passport" Faulty Abstract How about that girl who married the Duke?" "She has "entered suit" "For divorce so soon?" - No; against the company that his title." Pittsburg guaranteed ' Post Sassy. boy. I Lady Why, you naughty sever heard such language since th day I ?vas bom. Small Boy Yes, mum; I spos dere wux a good deal of cussln d dajQyou wux bora. - Deduction. Tld-Bit- a. "Why? 'She passed right by th Ice cream and cake counter and took a boiled dinner for her lunch.,, Detroit Free . Press. , r" |