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Show k W. L. 3 & W. L. Douglas 3 f SHOES',?, &CATAKKH) Douglas 4.00 Cllt Edga Lino cannot bo equalled at any price. 1 HEAD WDHK THRQAL,, BLADDER UUNGSi fin nnn vlUfUUU RtWARDtawjroaawhaeM ditprtte this itatiinMrt, L Douglaa N.iO p. ahoae have by tbclr fitting, and auparier wearing aaie ef aay achieved the SJ.sO qaallila, large! ahee la the world. They are Juat aa nod aa ttnaa that.coat you 5.00 to 7.00 the aaly dllle ranee la the into, If I could take you lata y factory at Brdckton, Maaa.. the Ivy eat la toe world under one roof making mra'a fine ahaaa, and ahow you tho caraulth which evrry pair af Uouglaa ehoea la made, you would raallxe why W. L. Douelaa SJ.80 ahoca an tha beat ahooa produced la the world. If I could allow you the difference between the hoee made la my factory and theea of other uukea. you would underotaad why Douelaa Rd.M ehoea coot more to make, why they hold their shape, fit hatter, wrar longer, and an of greater Intrlaalc value than any ether 5.50 oboe oa the marttet callnt alyl, raay y. . Owafaa Stroma Noda Ibaoa for SsTbO, $2.00. School $ don, mo Shooo.S2.BO, Boy' $2, $1.1B,$I.BO CAUTION. lnsiat upon baring W.liDong-la- a alma. Take no anlwtituta, hone grunino nitlioat hli name aud irleo ataaipod on bottom, WANTKI), A Shoe dealer inertly town where W. L. Ikmglna Rime are ant anld. Full line of ample aeul five for Inspection upon requaot. ftut Color Cyatata etad; Mil mill not aw ar brauy. Write for IllnatratMl Catalog of Fall Stria W. L ItOlGLAg. Itrarkton. Mow. Great Western Iren and Metal Co. inCOBFOUATID. Paid op oapltal ia.000. Wholeaal and BatalL Wo pay higneot priom tor Sorap Iron, Qejiper, Braao, Lead, Kano. Rubber. Houloa. Hides, Pella, eta. Rail Phone MMo. Independent IHL Koa. MB to US booth rirot Wool Street, SALT LAKR CITY, tTAII f You Have You will sit down right now and write us about any Jewelry or Silverware you want for Christmas. You can. draw from the, largest stock of good Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds and Silverware in the west 9 The old established store 170 Main Street, Salt Lake City Showing His Friendship, At the annual business meeting of a country church In the western part of the state several of the brethren spoke of the annoyance caused at the Sunday services by the habit in which some persons Indulged of spitting npon the floor, especially in the neighborhood of the stove. The pastor suggested that if they had a couple of cuspidors in the church perhaps the annoyance might be lessened. Whereupon s good deacon arose: "I move that Brother A. and Brother B. be appointed as cuspidors for the ensuing year. Philadelphia , Ledger. Old In Church Wall. 100 Years Whisky Concealed somewhere in the old Presbyterian church at Fslrton there is said to be a bottle of whisky at least 100 years old. When the edifice was being built. It is said, the workmen struck for whisky, which in those days seemed to be a necessity. A quart was furnished them, but according to Hoses Husted, then an apprentice, the liquor was so ornery that the men couldn't drink It, but buried it in the walls. Robert Wesooat, who relates the Incident, says tha bottle Is still thee. Philadelphia Record. - Really Mans Superior. Many a woman in her secret soul knows that, although she may be different from her husband and Inferior in matters of secondary importance, yet ahe is aa good a being ai he la, and, perhaps, in the nobler traits of character, really hli superior. Still all she has to submit to his domination on the false and hollow supposition of her Inferiority. Occasionally the husband will excell the wife Intellectually, but this does not prove her to be an Inferior being. On the contrary, says Gen. Booth, go back to the beginning of her life, and she will not be far behind him, even if ahe Is not fully hla equal in this re- spect Indian Princesses In London. Three Indian princesses live In an old fashioned red brick house at Hampton Court on the Thames, London. The house, which Is called Faraday House, was given them by Queen Victoria, and the girls are Bamba, Catherine and Sophia, the daughters of the late Maharajah Dhuleep Singh. They have been brought up entirely In the English manner and live the life of young English women of rank. FOR EMERGENCIES AT HOME And for the Stock on the Farm NOTHING How to Acquire and Retain the Priceless EQUALS nil Posses- sion' of Good Health The Home Climate for tho Consump- tive. ORGANS Foresight ii CARE OF THE BODY Change to another, usually a warmer, climate, was once thought to he the only hope for the consumptive par tient At the present time, however, :here is a consensus of opinion among a leading authorities that there is ao climate which has a specific curative power over consumption. Many, Including Dr. 8. A. Knopf of New York, an acknowledged expert on the treatment of consumption, hold that cures effected In the home climate in which the patients will have to lira and work after their restoration to health, are more lasting and assured than cures obtained in more genial slimes. While It Is known that parents cured in the salubrious region of the west have been able to return and live In the eastern states from whence they came, it is also known that others can never leave the region In which they recovered, for on their return to their own state their disease recurs. Prof. Cornet of Berlin, a writer of To international reputation, says: day we rightly regard no one climate as specific. Tuberculosis occurs In the warmth of the south as well as in the colder north, and upon lofty plateaus. Recoveries, too, are seen in every clime. The following reasons are given by the Illinois State Board of Health why an attempt should be made to cure a patient at or near his own home If It be ,n a climate not unsuitable for the cure of consumption, and why he should not be sent a long distance from home: Separation from friends depresses is a Home sickness the patient malady which often baffles the physician. The expenses of tha Journey are a It is hard to get in the bwlm withserious drain upon his resources, and out getting eoaked. are often Incurred unnecessarily. Aa A round trip rate of $50 to Cblifornla has been aptly stated by the State will be in effect all winter via the new Board of Health of Maine, Many paSee tients could be well put on the road to and popular Salt Lake Route. neareet agent or write for information recovery In their own state at a coat to J. L. Moore, D. P. A., Salt Lake City. which would barely defray tbelr exto from Colorado and Art and penses Tribulations apell triumph. tons." The lack of home comforts in a distant state, and the inability often to obtain proper accommodations unleu at a prohibitive price, naturally handicap the best efforts made to cure the STOMACH, W. FEMALE me patient The expense of living in the states having "specific climates is great Even if his disease be cured, the par tient may not be able to return to live in his own state. If the patient must work, he can find no occupation. Too many have preceded him. For the wealthy patient who jab be surrounded by his relatives and friends wherever he goes, a change of climate may be desirable. For the poor patient a change of climate frequently quickens an unfavorable termination of the disease. Consumption has been cured la the past and Is still being cured, in the eastern sad central states. It is often not so much the best climate for the disease as the beat place for the consumptive. Twisting the Palate. A large share of the physical degeneracy that is increasing on every hand may be traced directly to unworthy eating of things never designed to be eaten, and which no one would ever think of eating except for the fact that they momentarily give an agreeable sensation to the tongue and palate. No thought or consideration Is given to the possible effect of these substances upon the stomach after they have entered It A gentleman once said to the writer: I eat mustard, pepper, and similar hot substances because I like things that give my palate a twist" This gentleman, with thousands of others like him, quite overlooked the fact that those things that twist" the palate are equally able to twist the stomach, the liver, the nerves, the brain and every organ and tissue with which they come in contact in their palate-ticklin- g Journey through (he body. An nnperverted palRte is a wise and ever wakeful sentinel, which says promptly to the eater, Enough," when he has taken a sufficient amount 3f nntrlent material to meet the present requirements of the body. The palate was given man, not as an Instrument of pleasure, but as a guide whereby he might select In proper quantities food substances of the quality suited to his needs. The debasement of this function to the ends of pleasure is the beginning of a prostitution of the body which ends' only In abandonment to the grossest forms of and tends to premature exhaustion of the vital resources, early decay of the bodys forces and Ignominious death; for no death can be considered honorable which is the direct consequence of ones own acts, or suicide. Said an eminent French writer, Man does not die; he kills himself. The Country for Intellect. This noted sanitarian thinks that the country Is the proper breeding place fo intellect The country lad may be a little slower to learn than the city urchin, hut he has staying power which the latter lacks. The abnormal growth of cities Is liable to dry up the reservoirs of strength In the population and leave an Immense proletariat of Inferior anality and without commanders. For Infants and Children. Seasonable Clothing. More clothing la, of course, neces-ar- y in winter than in summer, but tbs difference in the amount of clothr lag required is less than the difference in temperature. We are all conscious that we suffer more from a temperature of forty in the summer than front n much lower temperature in the witter. This is due to the fact that the system undergoes a change with the season, by which it adapts itself to the new conditions. This change produces what is termed a winter constitution" for winter, and a "summer constitution for summer. Tbs winter constitution is well adapted to resist cold; while the summer constitution is prepared to resist heat. Consequently, the reverse of the conditions for which the body is prepared is severely felt On this account, we need mors clothing in summer than in winter, at the lame temperature. The custom of putting off and resuming winter or summer clothes at certain dates is a pernicious one. In cold weather the underclothing should reach to wrlris and ankles. The feet should be protected with thick, warm shoes with tops high enough to provide extra protection for the ankles, which are easily chilled, having less tissue than other parts of the legs. In winter several suits of under I garments afford more warmth than tys same weight or thlckncsn in a single garment; as the warmth of a garment Is due, not so much to iti thickness, as to the amount of sir which is entnngled In the meshes oi between Us layers. An extra suit ol flannel affords almost as much warmth as an extra coat or qloak, and is both cheaper and less cumbersome A Change from warm to cold weather or the reverse, at any season of the year, should always be met by a cop responding chango in clothing. Observance of this rule will amply repay the slight trouble Involved, In the sav lug of sickness and consequent expense and lots of time. The Kind You Have Always Bought AVccelalle Prt pnralionfor Assimilating the Food andGctfula -ling Use Stunachs and Uuvwls of 1 1 Bears the Hlti'REN NFAN IS IYomotcs Digp slioniCIwfrrul-nes- s and IVsi Contains neiitnr Otmim .Morphine nor Mineral. Not Hah c otic. Signature of jhofttfoujrsM.npiraaR jw- - w; In mx. Wiyfa- - Use , Sour Stonuvh, Diarrhoea Worms jTOimilsioiis .Fewnsh- nrss and Loss Sleep. Aperfi'cl Remedy forfonsliYi-lion- s For Over or Facsimile Signature of do&ffiZicJL it Thirty Years NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER, fes EXCELLENT HELP TWO BOOKS WORTH READING Kni mutiny at hunt, Dont send nnst for WatoKaa, Diamond and Jawolry. Trada with poopln you know- - Maorly ovaryono knows us, and otharo aught to. Our Catalaiua A of Watohaa and our Illustrated Catalogue B af Diamond and Jawalry ( Twa Book ) for Nervousness Work alone does not unnerve us. Overwork seldom does permanent barm the damage Is done' by worry that arch enemy of peace and hap plness. will help you Mailed free upon request. It has been proven over and ovet Phan 65 for tha correal again, says Dr. H. J. Hall, that honSALT LAKE CITY. time. est manual work, even of the com mon, everyday sort, has In It the pow er to drive sway worry. The worn an who works with her hands ai housework, day after day, may not ap 2 3 Cts. predate the blessings of her hard PRICE, task, but the blessing Is there, and AE3TI-GRIPI- QE the average of nerves' is far lower gTOOIRE THE GRIP , of than this rfmobgUhe workers type IS GUARANTEED TO CUKE among those who plan and think and have the social burden to bear. If the GRIP, BAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA. to dealer who woat Chtaraatoa I wont Mil lady whose time Is full of social enbttHotmnRHftcMtt It. Call tor your M OK KV Btl'Kir IT BOI'T OVSS. gagements, and who is distressed over V. IF. JJituusr, M. 1 ManuTMturer.Sljtrtf ttyleld, Mo. the servant question, would sometime go Into the kitchen and cook, would get down on her knees and scrub, sbe HALL'S CANKER AND DIPHTHERIA REMEDY might thereupon taste the Joys of the simple life, and Bhe might be sup PON SALS IV ALL BNUOKISTK PON VMS MOUTH. THNOAT, prised to find how soon, under the be NEVER FAILS ANO OSNSNAL OTORSO,.m STOMACH ANO BOWSLS MU nlgn Influence of work, the problems cA life would grow less complicated Nelden-JudsSalt Lika City, Utah. Drug Co., General Agents. An hour of work each day, good hard work that clears the brain and leaves no room for worry, may prove a sav Novel Headgear for Fish. lag of time and of strength for tha woman of affairs, for It will break the A trout was taken from the Thames, iH nonotony of the intellectual strain near Hampton, Eng., with Ita head and make life brighter and easier in lightly fixed In an old meat cul every way. We will give On Dollar for a Postal I Card giving the first reliable news of I Mind Power. a chance to sell a horizontal steam The following story of Benvenuto of the tea Three engine of our styles, within our range Cellini Is told In Success by 3. of sizes. We do not want Inquiries at lincoln Brooks, who declares the ex is in this this time for vertical, traction or gsa I country very to of mind be a triumph psrience engines. over the physical condition: good. When about to cast his famous statue of Perseus, now in Loggia del The fraction is not too Ianxl, at Florence, Cellini was takes with a sudden fever. In the midst oi high. ENGINES AND BOILERS Us suffering, one of his workmen r Tour ntana yoar mmj If yoo dont hire hr year beta lh iiidsid far U anna rushed into his sick chamber and ex Jkr KM plant. Baal af meitrlal and workaaaahlp. O statue it Benvenuto, your claimed, Our bi aalpit mbl.. to aII oa mall prof-Umbrellas In Abyssinia. If. Aa Altai, tha beat la fh world, caata no spoiled, and there is no hope whatever nor lhaa the other kiad. Nearly everybody in Abyssinia card saving it!" Writ i today tar ear ipaelal attar, Cellini said that when he heard this ries a Robinson Crusoe straw umcan not be closed. ATLAS ENGINE WORKS he gave a howl and leaped from hit brella, which la all dew INDIANAPOLIS Mill, ted. Dressing hastily, he rushed tc Veter Take lenem MlaMw llek fined IWIau his furnace, and found the metal Ci ul latlarr Tutelar Mien He ordered dry oak wood leaked." AiiteaiaMalajlara ThnAUl--c faclara ftrtelilaSMlaai Atiaa faclaaa la aarrtea tflojoa H. P. and fired the furnace fiercely, working Alter Bolten la arrrtea IfiOMO M. P. is the rain that was falling, stirred the channels, and saved his metal. He continues the story thns: Aflet sfl was over, I turned to a plate ol salad on a bench there, and ate with JEW a hearty appetite and drank, together with the whole crew. Afterward I re fclKE tired to my bed, healthy and happy for It was two hours before morning and slept as sweetly as if I had never FOR WOMEN felt a touch of illness. tteabled with ills psealisr to , 'SALE their sex, ased si dencka i msrvelauljr i His overpowering desire of saving ALLTHE . eeaafol. Thorooghlycleuiae.kllbdiiaaMzermi. Ns statue not only drove the Idea ol atop difckstgei, seal lallaamatioa end lacag BEST DEALERS &ntss aoraaea. Illness from his mind, hut a. i drove ESTABLISHES CO. TOWlt 163. B Panina la la powder fora to ha diaaolvrd la pare AJlBOSTON a- NEW YORK CNICASO sway the physical condition, j,d lefl K oiler, end ie br more cleeneine, healing, Earaindal CANADIAN COL.lstMTOtoNTO.CAN. Mm well. j? ad economical Ihaa liquid anuacpliis lor all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES 00 ceota a boa. For ala at Worth Remembering. Trial Bos aod Book af In tract laa Pna Remember that people Toe R. Paxton Gonpanv Boston. Miaow are not apt to be sick. Dr. Sunlight is the most successful HOWARD E. BURTON, doctor in the universe. r. Specimen prlraa: Hold. Sllrar. Lend, Hi Hold, The only sure consumptive prevent TSe; (told. Sue; Zlneur Uoppar. tlTCyaalda MMa. Mailing enralopea and full price llat aaat oa applies Ive is fresh sir, and its cheap. Mod. Contnd and Umpire work eulkltod. Laad-elll- Oi It isn't rest you want, but exercise; Colo. Kefaiaaea. Cartnaat HiaUunai Saab not stimulant, but food; not change W. N. Uh Salt Laka-N- o. of air, but air. 47 1905 Chew yonr food dont bolt it. The Thlalath Katlrara yon read aboaL MadolaSre eatches the early trail SlSnrant erotica. Irtn-- fnua SKIM to HAW Auk for the cemetery. roar fur nit a re dealer lor IL If geaelna, or Tran Mart la lb tag. filled witl well Keep your lungs fresh sir, and you won't need to bav Utah Bedding & Manufacturing Co. s prescription filled. at lsnn Cit- - Utah Work aa a Remedy lllua-trata- d mmsk Aad-Orfpl- ae oa fti-onnTBG- Reliable Information TEA qirters I nit ATLAS erroc-r- I 1 f I'SJtlCREES fw well-tanne- d BO-v- qnick-luncb- a |