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Show VALENTIN ty fftNCEJ m ? JCHNEWEHi is like v willow. Rvove sueiv b. swvyirvi.u lUlixd irbct; y SHtfs like eu.se, for dpldeiv beset hn lev? ,m s witKu peaceful lory I it Ktr iLte ,f OP PALMISTRY. lxiU Wait ad oa Tlioaa Fortaao-Tollor- S. My Io'e lx liSwos! foiSrvA hewrl . R IKer 31 The seciet of her swet- ness folded lies. SKe's fik u violet. for its pet tKe tevder blue etnV$'ow of her dev eyes. tv. PHILOSOPHY web-foot- ed ar Dont Spend a Dollar of the Blnlster predictions which ahe read in her palm, combined with her No doabt this girl was "planets. if nut actually luB&ne, but there Is a good deal In her case worth thinking about, says London Truth. Some years ago, when I conducted some researches into palmistry, with the assistance of a lady who claimed to be an expert in that craft, I put the question to her: What If you see Indications in a palm that the owner of the hand will die or incur some awful misfortune at an early date? The lady answered that in such a case she always dissembled, and she led me to understand that it was a matter of professional etiquette Ob, I first buttoned the gate, but he soon found out how to open it. I put the button higher out of his reach, and in a day or two he found out how SOME GOOD STORIES FOR OUR to climb up to it I. hid the box he JUNIOR READERS. climbed up on, and he found another. I then put the button as high up as It A Midnight VUItor I'iie. the Hatton would go on the fence, and now he la tha Right Flasa Tha Faraut gets a stick and opens the gate. What Blackimlth Iona Wonilcri of Natural shall I do? Ah. my leddy, ye dlnna know how II la tor y. to do It Put the button on the boy, A Midnight Vlaltor, replied the old Scotchman. Alexander Williamson went cosily to bed. Tha Karneat Hlackimlth. And on the soft white pillow he laid Andrew Murray relates that In South hie weary head; Africa there was an infidel blacksmith But at the very moment that bis heavy whom no one could deal with. One eyelids fell, day the minister sent the elder of the A certain something happened which church, a clever and pious man, to see He argued with him, but he is terrible to tell. him. And he was filled with wonderment could not be convinced; it was of no use. But there was an old farmer that made him cold and mute, For, standing up beside his bed, he saw who had prayed for years for that Inhis Sunday suit fidel. it lifted "Oh, Alexander Williamson Early one morning he took his horse and rode to see this man, who greeted up a sleeve "Tour conselence Is upbraiding you. him with: Weil, what brings you I'm happy to believe. here at this hour? The old fanner stammered badly, For all the things you've done to me in such a careless way and when he was greeted like this he Are quite enough to fill the heart with could not get a word out. The infidel horror and dismay. laughed. This made it worse. The first three days you knew me, you At last the old man burst into tears, were careful as could be; and stammered out: I am so anxious Tou kept me nicely dusted, and yon about your soul, and hurried away. This led to the conversion of the Indidnt spill your tea. But oh, those happy days are gone, as fidel See the heavenly treasure In an happy days will go. The difficulty with And if I seem a little dull, the reason earthly vessel! some vessels is that they are too high. you must know. Youve bulged my trouser pockets unThe lower down the easier to fill. Some vessels may be clean and empty, but til no one thinks them neat; Tou tore a button off my coat and lost not low enough. Therefore, God can not fill them. it in the street: t Tou scrambled up a bramble bank to "Oh, exclaims Murray, let us pray. Lower down, lower down, lower down. catch a bumble-bee- . And In your very shorking baste you Lord; nothing, nothing, nothing that tore a trouser-knee.- " God alone may be exalted. Then, coming close beside the bed, It shook a wristband low; Tlia Albatrou. The albatross is a "Now; Alexander Williamson, 'tis well bird, that you should know nearly allied to gulls and pctrals. It is That though I do not often come to a very large creature, with a rather visit you in wrath, long beak, hooked at the point, and I wont submit to every shame you of a delicate pink color Inclining to heap upon the cloth. yellow. It Is the largest of Tour roughness and your tyranny shall birds, measuring at least four feet bear an awful fruit; In length and from ten to sixteen feet I'll go to rags and tatters and you In spread of wings. The wings, howshall not have a suit! ever, are very narrow in proportion to And then it got so angry as it knelt their length. The plumage Is soft and against the bed. abundant, mostly white, but with That Alexander Williamson he cov- black feathers sprinkled here and ered up his head. there upon the wings and back. This New if on any morning you should bird 1b often Been at a great distance wander down our way from land, abounding In southern seas, And chance to meet a little boy In chiefly near the Cape of Good Hope. wonderful array It often approaches quite close to In clothes full neatly dusted, and highpassing ships, being, of course, an obly polished boot of Interest to passengers as well ject Its Alexander Williamson and in his as crew when It Is seen sweeping the Sunday suit surface of the ocean In pursuit of Little Folks. flying fish, which form Its favorite food. Its mode of progressing Is very Pin tha Hatton In tha Right Place. Mrs. McLeau, a young Scotch mother beautiful, as It seems rather to float In the air than to fly like other birds, decidedly deficient In government, had two-yeold for, except when it Is rising from the great trouble to keep her streets from of water, the motion of its long wings into the boy running the village. The little woman was ran scarcely he noticed. Indeed, nothgreatly terrified lest her robust son ing ran be more beautiful than the should be trampled by horses on some ease and grare with which the bird of his forbidden excursions. She had sweeps past a ship, often within a few Just returned from an exhausting run yards of it. every part of Its body after him, and was closing the front perfectly motionless except the heed yard gate when the old teamster, Don- and eyes, which turn slowly from side ald McTavlsh, a good home disciplin- to side, appearing to take notice of arian by the way, drove along on hla everything. way home. "Oh. dear, said the little woman. I Thr aunMImn tin. have such a time to keep this boy out "Clothes, you must remember, do not I am discouraged. make the man. "That's where youre ' of the streets. What shall I do. Mr. McTavlsh? wrong. 1 have known many a man "What hare ye been doing, Mrs. whose wife's clothes mode him hustle like the dickens. ed ONE GIVES RELIEF. maid drowned herself, chlefly.as would wen from her letters, on account " web-foot- Consult Last week a poor, egotistical creature who had been employed as a bar- f brevtklnoy My lovl is like gmeXree., As pines (live forth jhetr, spicy fritiTUvt scent. r woici vtf BsJssm.frte iiow til tllty. VitK puvNewv,bTvdl sweetntss fwrly bletu. FOIt ROYS AND GIRLS. Who s. weak-minde- for Medicine d, among really conscientious palmists not to make known the truth when It was of such a naure that to impart It might be dangerous. This is all very well, but no one can prevent people who dabble In palmistry or astrology or other occult means of reading the future from discovering their own fate for themselves. Those who discover by such means that the outlook for them is very black may not all commit suicide, like the unfortunate barmaid, but such knowledge is bound to have an Injurious effect on all but persons of the toughest moral fiber; and persons of the toughest moral fiber, I may remark, are not in the habit of dabbling in the occult sciences. As a rule, fortune telling In Its various shapes Is chiefly denounced as a swindle and a means of obtaining money under false pretenses, but I question whether the moral mischief which may result from efforts to ascertain what the future has in store for us may not be far worse than any trilling financial loss. Nothing is more certain than that it Is to the advantage of mankind, on the whole, not to know the future. In saying this I do not lose sight of the fact that it would be a profitable thing to many to know, for Instance, who is going to win the next year's Derby, or the price at which any particular Btock will stand at the end of the next account ThlB knowledge, however, can only be profitable so long as it is in the exclusive possession of one or two individuals. If it were made accessible to all, the knowledge of the future would cease to have any more value than the knowledge of the past. On the other hand, the knowledge of coming misfortune if it is so preordained that it can be predicted can only have a demoralizing effect, and on the whole life has generally as much of the unpleasant as of the pleasant in store for the majority of human kind. Uow many youths of 2U are there who. if they could ascertain everything that is going to happen to them during the next fifty years, would think the game worth the candle? I doubt if there are many. On the other hand, living in Ignorance of what is coming, taking the good with the bad as each day brings it, and Incessantly hoping for better things from the Inexhaustible possibilities of the future, we manage for the most part to combat our misfortunes as they turn up and cling to life as long as It Is left In us. The proverb says that as long as there is life there Is hope, and the converse Is equally true that as long as there Is hope there is life. Destroy the one and It Is ten to one that you destroy the other. My impression is that so far as the chances of individual life go, no one has ever known the future or ever can know it But whether It be knowledge or not, the pereon who desires to know it is a fool. until you have tried You can buy them in the paper cartons 5-c- ent Ten Tabules for Five Cents. P SNW rtwplr e gritty tha natcwl s mia hulw ! Sai If you don't find this sort of Ripans Tabules At the Druggists n . Send Five Cents to Thi Rita ns Chxxtcal Company, No. Spruce St., New York, and they will be seat to you by mail; or IS cartons will be mailed for 48 cent. The chances are ten to one (hat Ripana Tabula are the very medicine you need. . j.- - ti Hnlta Cuais Itro' The Line ton lit, American Foris Flit! Knlta hi Ctoli but urn VUti Wagon Works Boggles and Wag one of all kind fepaired In first class order at prices to anil the times. LaMDi m (lanij AMERICAN FORE if ABMMOTON ST, InCuti; C.cJ Jutti Henry Lee, Silt Lib Igfa d tlii lid Piltay Sluploj C11 Livery Feed and Sols fflolorabo Sta- bles. to runs hacks all trains. ST I ARRINGTON tWHTfiAW Vr, LtHdIii Cbiir Cm Itblnnb Jlatlroab SILVER THE ISSUE IH 1500. 11 IJmjS Tnios Money the Pricing Instrument i - i ghartftft Cmi! Civilization and Progress Kan Kept Step With Money Supply la All Agei. IScu AMD Etm mmo.w.msTiNB. Kecrhit. mm - B.Z.OS1 KINS Tha Lcadiag Bimetallic Taper of America. A JOHN, of LAW 17 TORNEYS ..- - ri Tbs Money Queitlon diacuawd la tha light of experience and hiatory. iv. r. bailey, A r'ini. I nos. JOAN Swaiey A Martin Bloo Trove, Utah. J U.A Senator W. U. BTSWART, Editor. P A correct accoant el the doing ef Congrew given each week. A family paper for the home and All the important happening of the week, condensed, ia newa columns. A large circulatioa in every Btate aad fire-aid- e. WARNER & HOUTZ, ATTORNEYS at LAW Rooms 13. 14, aud It, Colon Block UTAH, PEOVO, 9A A That Can (.row New Rjm. The Tustara lizard of New Zealand le said to be one of the most ancient forms of antmai life now existing. It originally possessed four eyes, but now has to be contented with but two. It lays eggs, and these take no less than thirteen months to hatch out, the embryos passing the winter In a state of hibernation. These remarkable animals are found only in one or two places In the colony, and they are rapidly becoming scarce, ns collectors from every part of the world are continually on their track. They are about eighteen Inches in length, and, like many of the lizards, are said to have the characteristic of being able to replace portions of their limbs, etc., which have been destroyed. One owned by Mr. Carl Manser of Awanul had the misfortune to lose an eye some time ago. and now a complete eye, as perfect as the undamaged eye, has grown In the place of that lost. Lizard I.ovrr. Farent Of course, as my daughter is of age, she cau suit herself as to marrying you, but the day she does I will cut her off without a penny. Suitor (after a pause) Well, under those circumstances, sir, we will break our engagement I could not think of depriving a young lady of her Inheritance. llarlem Life. SEN J. BATES, ANDREW ADAMSON County Surveyor (J. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor and NOTARY PUBLIC. American Fork, Dish. Territory. Babscrlptten Price, SI Par Taaa. Send for sample; agents wanted. Publiihed weekly by the a a Silver Knight Publishing Co., A A WASHINGTON, 1). C. NEW SLEEPING CKR8. To DENVER, OMAHA, ST. LOUI& CHICAGO AND BOSTON. The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad Scenic Line of the World anuounoee new and Important additions tu theit already well arranged sleeping eii icrnce. hi the future, this popular line will run through weekly Pullman Tourist Sleepers to Omaha, Chisago, New York aud Boston , aNo to St. Louis withont change. These cars will start from Portland, Oregon, tboa giving benefit of through service on Oregun Aaro Madlns a ikaf rh and daaerlptlnu oir Short, Line, as well as all Cidh points. aa ascertain oar opinbin fro wh.ih.r The excursions are personally conductivantlna I probably paKnilalila. Cnmniunlca. nainrlctlrMiaadanUaL Handbook 00 Ial.nl ed and furnish all the coDvenlencee ut ant fra. Oldaat amicy furMtourtna patautx. TaUnta taken tnroaatl Mnnn AC a. raoalva regular pullman sleepers at lees than OaWaiiliis -- nhouiekarse. In tha half the roet. The 8t. Louts ear will leave 0. 8. L. Station every Thursday end Ogden via ltlo Grande Western bantemualr ninatratad wmklr. lareert 91 The mnrulng. By., every Fridny s Terms Journal. ilttioa of ony Boston and 3rk New mts four mofitbiit $1 Sold by all f Dmahs, Chicago, uljsiuu New York Sleeper will leave 0. S. - Stations every Wee need ay sod Salt Lake every Thursday evening, thus affording thi inestimable privilege of a twelve bout A ear lead of the test barb wire lu tay over at Salt Lake City. For rates the world lately received at J. K. Jen nd all details, write to H. F. Nevtos tens lumberyard. Lowest price. Ten, Agent, or H. M, Cunning T. P. A, '. ,t R. G. Ry., Salt Lake City, or any Short Line or Rio Grand Vregon A Cholera Curo DeWItt's Colic rateru Ticket Agent RlMHt aitak raaall. aale M Scientific American. A ("onalilrrato I- I I |