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Show ANGLED IN WHEAT FIELD. Three Fishermen Pennsylvania Thought it Was a Stream. William ilnmer, Jacob Zimmerman sad Wallace JarsHkle, while on n flab Ing expedition, cast their linea In n wheat Held, thinking It a atream, aaya a dispatch from Shamokts, Pa. They left here In the morning for Chilllxquaque creek, over a doaen miiea away. Loitering by tha way side.lt was dark before they reached what they thought was the bank of the water. They clambered to the aummlt, sat down, cast their linea and wafted for the flah to nibble. Borne time passed without a catch. Zimmerman fell aaleep, lost bis equillbrl uin and rolled down the bank Into tbs supposed stream. Homer, fearing bis Iwipanlon would be drowned, crawled down the embankment, where, to hla amazement, be found Zimmerman rising to bis feet amid a thick growth of wheat. The trio felt foolish, collected their wlta and returned home, vowing to keep the affair a secret, but the story came out. Phcenix Indemnity Company, OF AMERICA. Insure yourself agalnat sickness end Also Life Insurance. You pay a ... accidents. Installment Flan. little each month. pom FVSVHBS IN FORMATION H. A. 09, 32 Daterel 211, XXXXXX NELSON, General Agent, Km SALT Bldg. USE CITY, STAHL Japaneaa Water Clock. The device shown in tbe aketcb la a Japanese water clock. A metal drum, with a metal axle stuck through it, la upheld by two string! in aucb a manner that the latter gradually unwind, allowing the drum to descend. The drum !b divided Inside Into a series of compartments, in one of which some water la put. The partitions are pierced by pinholes, allowing the A THE 8CENIO LINE TO Olenwood Springs, Aspen, Le&dville, Pueblo, Colorado Springs, Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, SL Louis, Chicago, nmiw .T.r CmSs) Trains. and all points east m n. i al Ogden Union Dtpnt arltS all Southern Puiflt and Or pea Short Uaa Tha snip TransooaHaMtal Lias passing directly SaK Laka 01(1 lhrsh quotcd BETWEEN 0SDEN AND FACT THAWS DAILY W Nirnl..., Tar Wrtltrt DENVER See tie . Through Pullman and Ordinary Bleeping Oars to Dearer, OmahA Kansas City, 8L Louis and Ohioago without ehaage. Tree reclining chair oars. Personally Oonduoted KxounLona. Dining Oars, service a la Carte on all through trains. It tat, aUai, free OIusmumS henklata, ere., tafatn pm C Makataeaatiearifylag rtAm taa Kin Omndanaui a Ai P. D, I A. BENTON, V. - kJ A STATIONERY A fBU 11m al Built- try AU - tha leading lrildlMll,aMSaM saa V. A A SALT LAKE CITY A A A Mm CONFECTIONERY NOTIONS... Tha bUlMiaS baal ateab ef CoaUouduery la Mar- M sailli Sa lif.aw Clear. Tojaiaaa aal MOkllt' SNAltaiiaa A liHHMeSMNa MERHUL Agency Troy Steam Lanndiy. i Salt Lake and Mercur Railroad AULT XUKB A UBRCUXl TIMNCARD West Arrive 10:41 iLaave ID Mercur Sul 1:10 M.. .Summit Jet... .1:25 Lm,b one partment to another as the drum goes down. It can only go round as the water runs out, and lta speed can therefore be regulated a cording to the else of the pinhole. The drum takes Just twenty-fou- r hours to go from the top to the bottom of the framework, and tha hours are Indicated by pegs Inserted at regular Intervals on one aide of the supports. Pearson's Weekly, .MB 1:15.... Fairfield ....5:34 Antes y J. O. JACOBS, Gen, Balt Laka City. MHO.... Manning No Rose le Pure White. Probably the largest rose cut in tGIa city this season is a spoclmen of the Marchioness of Londonderry, which Major Barnhart has had In a vase at his residence. This species Is credited with producing larger blooms than any other, specimens six Inches across being not uncommon, but the specimen produred by Major Barnhart is only a trifle leaa than seven inches across, and contains a double handful of petals beautifully imbricated and appearing pure white, but there is a slight tinge of yellow discernible shout the base. Mr. Barnhart says there is no really pure white rose, the whitest known when placed alongside snow showing a tinge of some color. This hugl bloom was not the result of disbud ding of other forcing, hut was produced on a shoot which came up In the center of the bush, and so was well shaded during the late warm weatlrer, which caused It to attain the extra size and lta perfection. Portland Oregonian. Monkey Trap. I "Wien I first went to Tahiti," said a traveler from the South Beaa, "I landed on one of the remote Islands. Tha first night I went in state to visit tha chief. "He waa a fine old fellow, fully feet 2 In height, and a man every Inch found that I wae an American they all asked for John I "Some of them knew who waa president of the United Statea, though most of them who had any Ideas on the subject thought it waa Cleveland. But every one thought he knew who waa champion of the world. In several native huts I found little prints of the Boston boy. It appears that the Americans first began to come In numbers to the Islands about the time when John I waa supposed to be unbeatable. These Americana Introduced the boxing game. "It wae a great hit. Every native wanted to learn. And wben the Americana told of their great champion the natives took it all in and made him a tribal tradition. "It'a a study in the growth of legend. If they aren't killed off by clothea and consumption, I suppose tneyll have him a kind of on Odin some day. When an American beachcomber strikes those shores, he has to put on the gloves with the natives. If he cant beat them, they've no use for him. Luckily, the natives are about aa poor with the gloves as they make 'em. It doesnt take much of a beachcomber to whip the champion of Tahiti. That fact saves the faces of our countrymen. of him, I happened to know people who had lived on hla Island for a time. Through an interpreter he asked me all kinda of questions about them If they were well, if their hair waa getting gray, how mueh money they had, etc. Then conversation languished. "At length I heard him repeating to tbe Interpreter a word that sounded like Yonelnulwan The Interpreter seemed to catch it finally. He said: "He wants to know how la John L. Sullivan? Ia he fighting aa hard as ever?" "Oh, no I said truthfully. John L. Sullivan isnt champion any more. He waa beaten by a big man from the West, and a man from the Big Islands beat that man, and another big man from the West beat him.' When this was told to the chief be looked me all over and said something in a very positive tone. He tells me said the Interpreter, that he doesn't believe you. He thinks you don't like John L. Sullivan.' "Everywhere I went on the Islands It waa the same story. When they Bradley & Metcalf Company - WM. - MILWAUKEE, FOR BALB BY William Billing a. Golden Gate Chat tor. Worlds Fair Roots OFFERS THE BEST SERVICE POSSIBLE TO ST. LOUIS. Say Jewels Have Life water to paaa com- When an Iceberg Turns Turtle. Think of sections bigger than Rhode Island being torn from a glacier and wept off Into the ocean, to be ferried 3,000 miles on the bosom of the Labrador current until the heated wateri of the Gulf Stream cause them to vanish from the human ken!' Then can one form some Idea of the ln menslty of tbo Ice area discharged from the Greenland seas each year. Thousands of miles of valley are constantly emptying their contents into tha bays and fiords of tha north waters, whence tbe tides hurry the detachments southward to cumber the wide Atlantic. The disposition of Icebergs to turn turtle Is one of their moet dangerous It arises from several propensities. causes. Wben they start out from Greenland their bottoms are heavy with the detritus gathered in their glacial period, and this drops off at Intervals as they move south, causing their renter of gravity to change and the berg to assume new positions. The scientific theory of the formation of the vast submarine plateaus which extend from Labrador to Pundy and are commonly known aa the Great Banka of Newfoundland la that they are the products of the deposits of bergs during the countless ages. Leslie's Magazine. m John L. Their Idol through bflbkdidi.t Shoes for Men The Frisco System traverses THE FOLLOWING STATES: speak without a shudder. It was an evil Bton9 and brought misfortune. The stone was really a drop of watei1 from the dews of heaven, hardened by the rays of the morning, and Inside It was a malevolent influence. Never wear opals. Never run the risk It is too great, said the princess. Every one had hla or her own particular Jewel, and It was a grave thing to disregard its significance. How could one find out ones own Jewel?" the princess was asked. By wearing each of the seven precious stones for one whole week and keeping a record of the emotions and experiences and at the end of tbe seven weeks comparing them, was the reply. If her hearers had been interested In the princess talk of precious stones, they were reduced to wonder when she proceeded to expound the past and future of the ladies In her audience from their Jewelry, to interpret their emotions, and to give them warning and advice. Each lady placed a favorite tflnket to the little pile of Jewelry In front of the clairvoyant With closed eyes she lifted up the rings and bracelets and necklaces, one at a time, with her left hand, for that was the one nearest the current of life, the heart, explained the princess. London Express. Persian princess is now demonstrating the occult sciences of the East In the drawing rooms of the West End of London. At a house In Mayfair recently this sibyl lifted a corner of the curtain which holds the magic and the mystery of the Oriental from English A dark-eye- d eyes. Clad in a loose gown with Jewels entwined in her dusky hair, and preejoua stones glittering in barbaric array on her corsage, the princess succeeded In completely mystifying her audience of ladles. She declared that only the Eastern mind could understand tho deep, passionate devotion of a woman for her Jewels. The Eastern woman adored her Jewels. The life that waa within them responded to that love, and they shone with added luster. Precious stones had all a life within them. Stones had sex, continued the eibyl, and If the male and female were placed together In the wrong way the beauty of the atones would be diminished. Place a male and female dlar mond, however. In a tightly closed box and at the end of a few years the diamonds would give off little crystals. For this came reason Jewelers learned In the lore of the East massed their diamonds together. Of the opal the princess could not flame-colore- One d Mans Ideal Woman There are lots of pretty women and lota of beautiful dolls, but there are none too many really beautiful women, measured by the standard set up at the present day, aaya the Pitts- lllincls Indiana Mississippi Kansas Arkansas Tennssses Alabama Hissonrl Oklahoma Indian Tor. Texas. THE SOUTHEASTERN LIMITED, Leaving Kansas City at 6.SO m. aa. dally, will take you to Springfield, MemphU, Ilirmlngham, Atlanta, Jacksonville and all points la Southeast. Excellent route to an Worth, Fast, South, Suuiheaa Ipoints and South- - Vr detailed lafomatlsi, . apply to W. MARTIN, OCNMSt AOCMT, Devin, cou E. DRAKE, Dist. Paas-- n Salt Lake Aqent, Citt, Utah. T. A. JOHN, GiNcask Auiiit, Bum, Montana. r 4Av W 1 Illinois Central Railway. SUFFICIENTLY1 SERVES A YAH TERRIITORY By through service to and from the following cities: Omaha, Neb. Chicago, XU. Bt Paul, Minn. St Louis, Ha. Minneapolis, Minn Peoria, X1L Kansas City, Mo. Evansville, Xnd. Nashville, Tana. Memphis, Tenn. Cincinnati, Ohio, Atlanta, Ga. (Louisville, Xy. Jacksonville, PI New Orleans, La. Vicksburg, Mias Weekly through service between Chicago and between Cincinnati nor blunt, but gently undulating in ltd line, round and cushiony, turning a little upward, with a dimple in It All this must be supported by a And the Pacific Coast and Montana round throat, full and pillar-llkTerritory, She must have glossy hair that burg Press. Conn actions at thasa terminals Ns beautiful woman, first of all, must has never known the touch of bleach tha or dye, and ahe must fully understand have clearly cut, regular features. She must have a akin above re- what suits her best in the way of EAST, SOUTH, WEST AND NORTH. proach, untouched by rouge or pow- hair dressing, and cling closely to Fast and Handsomely Equipped that style. der. Steam Heated Trains Dining Care commust with She have clear Buffet-Librarsmall, delicate, She must have full, eyes, y Cars Sleeping Carefree Reclining Chair Cars. shape. tha eyelashes long and curling up- pact ears of shell-lik- e She must have a forehead smooth, ward. Her eyebrows must be finely Ask ticket agents for tickets via the marked, slightly arched, long and nar- even white, delicate, short and of an ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD SS row, yet the narrow line should be open, truthful character. apply to A woman may have all these attracthickly covered, so aa to be well J. A. FOLBT, tions be either dark or fair, tall or marked, as If penciled. T5 W. 2nd So. SL. Salt Lake CMft She must have a straight nose, yet short, slender or full formed, grave or delicate, neither fleshy nor pointed piquant, majestic or vivacious, serene nor broad at the tip, with the nostrils or brilliant and unless her own perfree and flexible, and mouth must be sonality is charming, unless she has rather too large than too small, with ' tact. It dawns on you after you have lips full and plAmp and rosy red. seen her once or twice that she Is not Even an exquisitely shaped mouth has a beautiful woman, but a pretty doll. Such a one notwithstanding her atno charm without expression. Her regular teeth of moderate size, traction of face and figure rarely the pearly white, with full enamel, should becomes the chosen helpmeet of doll-like Ideal husband. The day of the show when she la smiling. damsel is long past She must have a chin neither sharp e. ' : Complaint of a Lover A grouchy and crotchety. fussy old man. Whose stick on tha walk beau a There's pride In the white crest uplifted so high. Defiant the tnt of the old beaver hat. Contempt In the stare of tha unknowing The cut of hla coat on an eye. And (he click of hla stick with IU plan. A shiny, red noae and a worn beaver Ha spurns me, he scorns me, he hatea me he knows A blare of defiance, he trumpet hla noae. Tm nursing in secret soma pilfering He clears hla hoarse throat with a plan from Its parental arbor the But tha girl on hla arm, ahe a aa fair aa To pluck roee a roee. on a such flower on the arm of thla fussy old rests a That such How grew man. gnarled stem! bushes hU eyebrows and aeowU upon So he peases me by with an unseeing tare. His cane heats defiantly la 'stick with a click beaU tho walk He trumpets his mw with a furious blare. as we pass, There'e pride In the tflt of hla worn scowl wastes the bloom of a smile hat. id freeaen'Tt stiff on the lips of the Love may laugh at locksmltha, nor has-an- d a rare raises' hla hat with a Chesterfield air. In bridging most gulfs of despair with a span le sweep of his arm Is chill courtesy's love needs more courage than mine But The greedy monkey la thus made an me by with an unseeing has. I swear. pass hhMryea easy captive, for. having once grabbed To laugh at thla crotchety, fussy old nllllnw hi dahhla man. he'd far he on holds the nut, and cannot withJ. W. Foley, In New York Time. draw hla hand. them many happy returns of tho day. Coffins as Presents. Landed Record Shad. When Chinese parents arrlrs at When death comes these receptacle! The largest shad caught in the Conare used for the purpose for which the age of 55 their affectionate about necticut river this year waa hauled In they are Intended. Coffins are to ba by Charles Olson of Portland, Conn, sons and daughters dub together end seen In many house In China, some and weighed Just twelve pounds. give them each a coffin, sod wish of them being utilized as wardrobes. UNIQUE! ENJOYABLE! HEALTHFUL! glased wtlMnicathsfaU at XksWuw SALT LAKH HOT SPRINGS Sanitarium D ATUC Jjiino QV.JJSmA Salt Laka Fkul NSk R Ih Qty Vri f ai OmuriugevurausaaS tar mns Saif a nlUtou pah leaa ti water pant ISf igk the gaols cash say. Ha Uptw Llti la Fiwihhi 11J M lb Tit Mum Plaxu OCCrw Sad ln 1- -1 lug Pah W OmMue health aad pleasure hy VMtlug there bulk wkee ta Suit and ulgka taka Opes hf waaaaiSBBMdd |