OCR Text |
Show I I You know absolutely whon you boy a Diamond or Watch of uathat It lo tho boat and aboolutoly guar- ntood, and that tho prlca la low. 170 SI SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. CHILD, COLE CO. BROKERS SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE Our facllitloa for handling your account unoiccllod. Wo mako liberal advances on all Utah Stocks. tOO Atlae Sleek, vALIAIH Salt-Lik- a Caaay laland at the Wiat. Flaaat Bathing in tha Mferld. laffaU hal Ohm FW ui hat Dak la lh Vata. IWi lui al naaar. Kerri, laa Iviu mUr. aMMahH aad pImmm a l lahair. b TnaanaiSahi Ona Pupil In Naw York Acted aa tha Family Bank. "Where do artinol children gat all tba money they take to school ?" was aaked a New York teacher who waa worrying over the frequeut thefts from the pupils In her room. "I don't know." aha aald. The situation la puzzling. It la a fact thnt almoat every child brings money to achool. Many of them have only a cent to buy a doughnut or a atlck of randy, hilt other carry aurprlMlngly Urge a it in a. Not long ago the charges of theft were ao frequent In iny room that I tried to atop this univeml carrying of money, 1 aaked the mothers not to give their children money during achool hours, except In raaei where It waa really needed to buy luncheon. Many of them promised to ot off the allowance, but tha amall eotna continued to circulate Juxt the aame. A few mothers declared that they gave the children money for aafo keeping. I learned that one girl In my clan came to achool dny after day with from 20 to 30 pinned In her elotbea. The father (pent everything ke could lay his handa on, and aa the little girl's garments were the only place where he could never And tha money the waa converted Into tha family bank." Tba Idas seemed to wotk, ao far'aa bs spendthrift lather waa concerned, but It worried the teacher. Naw Law Offices. The new law offlcea of State Repo aentatlve llarry J. Hublnaon are Iq rooms Mercantile Plonk, Suit City, Utah.' to whom all whn are in need of legul advice are re 102-10- Ike lerred. Werrlca of Modern Life. Nowaday a wo muat not drink spirit I nor oat meat; we must not amoke; the sir of cities la poisonous, the all of tho country too strong; tho light nitna our eyea and the soIm racks out norvos; shaking handa la s means of collecting microbes and kissing Is purs suicide. Life Is Indeed growing dud and difficult. Madrid Dlarlo, French lllltaraey. Although France han hail compuV ory education for about 25 years, the percentage or Illiterates reaches the high figure of 40 per 1,000 men, and 0 per 1,000 women. In this regard Germany appears to great advantage, as she has only four Illiterates par 1,000 of population. Old Gloves. They have about 50 or 80 kid gloves at the ticket office down at Union sta- tion, gray suedes, undressed kills every old kind. Put the trouble is that among them all there ts not one pair. They are all odd gloves, mostly lefts." You see most men carry their money In their pockets, and when they're buying railroad tickets, they take off the left glove. Then when they go away and leave tho glove the hoys In the ticket office are no better off than If they had left nothing behind hut an air of mystery. 'If surprising, too." they say at tho ticket office, how many men have one or two Angers r'taeiug. Out of the lot of old gloves now there, a doten or more have at least one Anger gone. The ticket sellers watch fur men who have Angers niNslug anil try to match them up with gloves that With that exception, correspond. most of the gloves go to waste. Cleveland Plain Dealer. left-han- Soma People. Seme people hunt for work In ah nit the same way that aa optimist hunts for trouble. Mountains of Iron Ore. The world contains at least four mountains composed of almost s did Iron ore. One Is in Mexico, oue In tho United Stales, another In India and a fourth In Africa Just below the Soudan. and there have been reports of such a iiKiititalfi existing in Siberia. Adding to His Offensivenest. who tohl us vo Is always doubly offensive If he routes around after the arrival of our troubles and tries to look as If ho bad forgotten all The man shout It always imagining that at the very next ScLloss or tun 1 was to hit upon 1 wax adventure. liome delectable inly 2?, and inordinately fund of my Dumas, rode In gray whipcord breeches tan boots, a blue serge coat, whit stork, and never a hat or cap till the snow blew. 1 used to laugh when the peasants asked leave to lend me a cap or tn run back and And the one I had presumably lost. One night the delectable adventure for which I was always seeking came lay way, and I was wholly unprepared I The Princess Elopes Am-rlc- sn s nh-n- f MJlil.-Kanlc- - Nit-lkliiii- red-nose- ? SCHOOL CHILDREN WITH MONEY. of poetry In my system that had nevn been completely worked out. and I wax STORYS 3d City. UTAH'S FAMOUS WATCmnO PLACE. at of American make, and the uisnufac-.'irt-r- s wrote to me personally that hey considered themselves grossly in. j wilted over the action of the duke. I ;!doinatlc note were exchanged, and 1 finally prevailed upon the duke to .late that be held the wheel harmless and that his anger had been directed solely against bis niece. Thla letter was duly forwarded to the manufac-turns- , who, after the manner of their kind, carefully altered the phrasing and used It In their magazine advertisement. They were so far apiea-that they offered me my selection from the private stock. Happily the duke never read anything but the Fllegende and thus war was Clatter and Jugt-nd- , averted. Later an automobile agent visited the town at the secret bidding of her highness but he waa ao unceremoniously hustled over the frontier that his teeth must have rattled like a dancer's castanets. It was a great By HAROLD McGSATH country for expedltlouaneas, as you Amfhmr qf will And, If you do me the honor Pi follow me to the end. The Man an I ha Baa.1 "Heerte and Maaka," Cm. So the grand duke swore that his nitre should wed Doppelklnn. and the princess vowed that she would not. The man who had charge of my horses (kaynaak Mfc. taabaUarriuLuJ said that one of the palace maids had recounted to him a dialogue which 8YNOPSI8. taken place between the duke and had c.uiHiil tn llarerliell. H The how tlei his niece. As I was anxious to be off priii'Ui.illly of Kur.ijw, reigning giHiol iluki- - had Inn! to hint a on the road I was compelled to listen hiiM.iiini tho to his fur Ilia , gossip. 1rtn--afinally itwm-twal..of uHl l.al The Grand Duke In two mouths in nl iho jTinca an ugly old wlilnw.-r- , and ruh-- r time . you shall wed the Prince of of tie- - iirtn. iiiallty of Though l.e had lieen In the country atx muntria tin- - Atiierh-aeonaul hail never Been the The rrinccss What! that old lirlriceaa, unit when St laat they Met It uuii-lwaa w-rNever! I shall marry only uf a aurirlae to both. where I love. CHAPTER The Grand Duke Only where you The one picture of her which I was love! (Sneers.) One woulda think, to lucky enough to see had been taken hear you talk, that you were capable when she was six, and meant nothing of loving something. to me In the way of IdentIHcatlou. For The Princess You have to all I knew I might have paast-i- l her on learn. I warn you not to force yet me. 1 the road. Rite became to me the promise to do something scandalous. Princess In th Invisible Cloak, pass- 1 will marry one of the people a man. ing me often and douhth'sH deriding curimy efforts to discern her. My osity became alarming. 1 couldn't sleep for the thought of her. Finally we met, but the meeting was a great surprise to us both. This meeting happened during the great hubbub of which I have Just written; and at the same time I met another who had great weight in my future affaire. The prinress and I became rather well acquainted. I was not a gentleman, according to her code, hut. In the historic words of the drug clerk, I was something Just as good. She honored nve with a frank, disinterested friendship, which still exists. I have yet among my fading souvenirs of diplomatic service half a dozen note commanding me to get up at dawn and ride around the lakea, something like 16 miles. She was almost as reckless a rider aa myself. She was truly a famous rider, and a woman who alts well on a horse can never be aught but graceful. She was, In fact, youthful and charming, with the most magnificent black ayaa 1 ever beheld in a Teuton U bead; witty, besides, and a songstress of no ordinary talent If 1 had been In love with her which 1 solemnly vow I waa not! I should have railed her beautiful and exhausted my store of complimentary adjeci for It. i I had taken the eouth highway: that which seeka the valley beyond the lake. The moonAlm lay misty upon everything: on the far-of- f lake, on the great upheavals of stone and glacier above me, on the long white road that stretched out before me, ribbon-wiae- . High up the snow on the mountains resembled huge opals set In amethyst. I was easily 25 miles from the city; that Is to say, 1 had been In the saddle some nix hours. Nobody but a king's messenger will ride a horse more than Ave miles an hour. I cast about for a place to spend the night. There was no tavern In sight, and the hovela I had passed during the last hour offered no shelter for my horse. Suddenly. around a bend in the road, I saw the haven I was seeking. It was a rambling, tottering old castle, standing In the center of a cluster of Are; und the tiles of the roofs and the Ivy of the towers were shining silver with the heavy fall of dew Lady Chloe sniffed her kind, whinnied, and broke into a trot. She knew sooner than I that there was life beyond the turn. We rode up to the gate, and I dismounted and stretched myself. I tried the gate. The lock hung loose, like a paralytic hand. Evidently those inside had nothing to fear from those outside. I grasped an - English-s- box-stall- s cross-countr- y Dal-kana- n.ir-si'ho- Dread Disease Robbed of Ite Terrors by Simple Remedy. Owing to the prevalence of pneumonia and tha great mortality which attends Its ravages during the winter and spring, several boards of health In northern New Jersey have been taking measures to protect the citizens of their towns from the disease. The health board of Washington, N. J.. has published a remedy which is said to be a sure cure for pneumonia, and other health boards are looking Into the matter with a view of having the ame thing published for the good of the general public. This Is tha publication as it has appeared in the par pen of Washington: "Take six or ten onions, according to size, and chop fine, put in a large spider over a hot fire, then add the ame quantity of rye meal and vinegar enough to form a thick paste. In the meanwhile atlr It thoroughly, letting it simmer five or ten minutes. Then put in a cotton bag large enough to cover the lungs and apply to chest as hot as patient can hear. In about ten minutes apply another, and thus continue by reheating the poultices, and in a few houre the patient will be out of danger. This simple remedy has never failed to cure this fatal malady. Usually three or four applications will be sufficient, but continue always until the perspiration tarta freely from the chest This remedy was formulated many years ago by one of the best physicians New England has ever known, who never lost a patient by the disease, and won his renown by aimple remedies." Shall Marry Only Where "Internal Revenue Collections. The term "Internal revenue" has been restricted in its meaning to such revenues only as are collected under the Internal revenue bureau connected with the treasury department, and does not Include all revenues that are, properly speaking, from Internal sources, that Is, from sources other than duties levied at the frontiers upon foreign commodities. Thus, moneys arising from the sale of publio lands, from patent fees, or the revenues of the postal service, are not generally known as "Internal revenues." New Chart Corrects Errors. Tha great practical utility of the magnetic survey made in the Pacific ocean by the yacht Galilee since 1905 is shown by a new magnetic chart, from which it appears that the charts previously used by navigators in the pacific ocean were erroneous along d some routes to the extent of from three to five degrees, and the errors at times were systematic. Errors of thla magnitude are of Importance in practical navigation where the indications of the compass should be as accurate as possible. e a t Iiul-1,- sir--.m- -.; f.-- r SOUNDS FAMILIAR. The Long Life. I have seen faces of women that were fair to look upon, yet one could ee that the icicles were forming around these women's hearts. Holmes. I Love.1 VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Will Young; of 6 Columbia Ave, liockland, Me, says : I was troubled for a time with dreadful backaches and long a pain in my aide, and was miserable in every way. I doctored until I was discouraged and thought I would never get welL I read what Lydia E. Pinkhama Vegetable Compound had done for others and decided to try it; after three bottles I can truly say thattaking never felt I bo well in my life." Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East EarL Rewrites to Mrs. Phikham: I had very severe backaches, and pressing-dowpaina. I could not and had no appetite. Lydia E. sleep,a Vegetable Compound cured me and made me feel like a new woman." Water, Water, Everywhere. During the flood of 1903 an okl darky living In the East bottoms awoke one morning to find his premises four feet under water. Later he was found by a party of rescuers walking about the yard prodding into tha ground with a fishing pole.' He was asked his purpose. "Good gracious, men, said he, 'what do you think Ah am Ah am tryln to find mah well ao Ah can git mahself a pail of watah." n dog-gone- d Pink-ham- "TWO TOPER8. A FACTS FOR SICK WORSEN. lor Teachers Experisnce. My friends call me 'The Postum Preacher,' " writes a Minn, school teacher, because I preach the gospel of Postum everywhere I go, and have been the means of liberating many coffee-po- t slaves. I ! I dont care what they call me so long as I can help others to see what they lose by sticking to coffee, and can show them the way to steady nerves, clear brain and general good health by using Postum. While a school girl I drank coffee and had fits of trembling and went through a siege of nervous prostration, which took me three years to rally ' from. "Mother coaxed me to use Postum, but I thought coffee would give me So things went, and when strength. I married I found my husband and I were both, coffee topers, and I can sympathize with a drunkard who tries to leave off Ills cups. j "At last In sheer desperation I j bought a package of Postum, followed directions about boiling it, served it with good cream, and asked my husband how he liked the coffee. We each drank three cups apiece, and what a satisfied feeling It left. Our conversion has lasted several years and will continue as long as we live, ; for It has made us new nerves are . , i ,ip The back Is the mainspring of womans organism. It calls attention to trouble byquickly aching It" tells, with other symptoms, such as nervousness, headache, pains in the loins, weight in the lower part of the body, that a womans feminine organism needs immediateattention. In such cases the one sure which speedily removes theremedy cause, and restores the feminine organism to a healthy, normal condition is LYDIA E. PIN KHAMS f, ; A traveler to the mountains of Tennessee had teen stowed away in the beat bed the cottage afforded. Late In tha night he waa awakened hy the voice of the paterfamilias addressed to the daughter, who was entertaining company by the fireside. Handy," growled the old man, is that young man there yit? Yep, pap." "Is he got his arm around yer waist?" "Yep, pap." "You-al- l tell him to take't away." "Aw, ye tell him yerself, pap," replied the girl. In a dull, lifeless voice. 'He air a plumb stranger to ma." Success Magazine. A Bare Possibility. In his diary, which is Incorporated in the "Life and Letters of Sir Richard Did you ever see a pretty girl who Claverhouse Jebb, the great Greek scholar recorded a flash of his own wit didn't know ahe was pretty? which is of a moat appealing variety. At a dinner at Cambridge Sir Richard, then Mr, Jebb, took in a young woman, who got through the first course with little conversation. Suddenly she startled him by saying, in the most unprovoked way, while ahe was still dining with apparent good appetite: Prof. Jebb, do you think women ever die of a broken heart? Perhaps other organs may have something to do with it, he proffered In reply. Youths Companion. ! d. dress Perfect BACKACHI The Grand Duke Rah! (Swears Iron bar and pushed in the gate, Chloe softly on bis way to the stables.) following knowingly at my heels. J Uut the princess had tn her mind could feel the crumbling rust on my a plan which, had It gone through gloves. Chloe whinnied again, and safely, would have added many gray there came an answering whinny front hairs to the duke's scanty collection. somewhere in the rear of the castle It was a mighty Ingenious plan, too, Somebody must be Inside, I reasoned for a woman to Agure out. There were lights in the left wing In his attitude tcjward the girl the but this part of the castle was sup duke stood alone, llrhlnd hts back his j rounded by an and empty moat, ministers wore out their shoes In wait-- 1 weedy. This was not to bedamp entered Ing on the caprices of the girl, while save hy a ladder. There was a great the grand duchess, half-blinand half-dea- central door, however, which had a openly worshiped her willful but modern appearance. The approach wholly adorable niece, and abetted her was a broad graveled walk. I tied In all her escapades. So far as fht Lady Chloe to a tree, knotted the popular? was concerned, she was the i bridle- reins above her neck to prevent (hi m liter of the favorite son. dead her from putting her restless feet Into these 18 years, and that was enough them, and proceeded toward the door. for them. Whatever she did was right Of all the nights this was the one on and proper. Uut the duke which my usually lively Imagination had the power to say what should be I was hungry and tired, and what, and he willed ft that the Prin- reposed. I dare say my little mare was. I cess Hlldegarde should marry ; old wasn't looking for an adventure; I comrade In arms, the Prince of didn't want any adventure; I wanted untiling In the world but a meal and a bed. Uut for the chill of the night air CHAPTER II. the breath of the mountain la cold As I have already I used at night I should have been perfectfrequently to take long rides Into the ly willing to sleep In the open. Down t country, and simu-- ivies I did not re- drawbridge, up portcullis! turn till the foMowhia day. y Cerfc I boldly climbed the steps and groped was always on ihii), and the work around for the knocker. It was broken never appeared to make him and useless, like the lock on tho gate. And never a bell could 1 And. I swore I had ridden hors fur years, but softly and became Impatient People lo throw a leg over a good mount was In Uarschelt did not usually live In lo me one or the greatest in this slovenly fashion. What sort of the world. I delighted in stopping at was this? place the old feudal inns, of mi-!- ing the Suddenly 1 grew erect .every fiber stolid German of drinking In my body tense and expectant. from steins unorarked thi-.-hundred A great A voice, lifted In song! years, of In- -; ancient armor penetrating yet silklly mellow voice; a and satin-- : ing tr.il-.-- .g rom.ru-eatsoprano; heavenly, not tn say ghostly, tached thereto. Ai d often 1 have had coming as It did from the heart of this the rouruue to stop a some qua-ngloomy ruin of stone and iron. The crumbling Schlc s r n!U song from Faust, too! How the jewel for a nlgli s ;f an,i voice rose, fell, soared again with Inm.', horse. Seldom, if did l toxicating waves of sound! What perwith a refu-a- l. meating sweetness! 1 slood there, a I possessed the wl.lm-iea- l I aVt of solitary listener, ns far ns I knew, bepicking out read ami wildered, my heart heating hard and on till night swooped down fromriding the fast. 1 forgot my hunger. a bit (TO bS CONTINUED. hard-heade- How Could She Be Expected te too-ofte- much-traverse- "I STRONG ON THE PROPRIETIES. ooemefs tives. The basic cause of all this turmoil, about which 1 am to spin my narrative, lay in her education. 1 hold that a German princess should never be educated save aa a German, lly thla 1 mean to convey that her education hould not go beyond German literature, German history, German veneration of laws, German manners and German passivity and docility. The Princess Hlldegarde had been educated in England and France, which slntpHAes everything, or, I should say, to be exact, complicates everything. She possessed a healthy contempt for that that hedges in a king. Having mingled with peaking people, she returned to her native land, her brain Ailed with the Importance of feminine liberty of thought and action. Heuce, she became the bramble that prodded the grand duke whichever way he turned. Ills days were Ailed with horrors, his nights with nmrea which did nut have In his stables. Never could he anticipate her In anything. On that day he placed guards around the palace she wrote verses or read modern Action; the moment he relaxed his vigilance she was away on some heartrending escapade. Didn't she scandalize the nobility hy dressing up a hussar and riding her famous black Mecklenburg ? Hadnt she lllrted outrageously with the French attache and deliberately turned her buck on the Russian minister, at the very moment, too, when negotiations were going on between Russia and flnrscheit relative ? to h small piece of land In the And. most terrible of nil to relate, hadn't she ridden a shining bicycle up the Konigsstrasse, In broad daylight. and In bifurcated skirts, besides? 1 shall never forget the indignation of the press at the time of this last escapade, the stroke of aimplexy which threatened the duke, ami the room with the barred window which the princess occupied one whole week. They binned the offensive hirycle in the courtyard of tlu- - palace, cereino-ui.uisltoo, and tho priecess had witnessed this solemn unto da fe from her barred window. It Is no strnln upon Hie imagination to conjure up the picture of her line rage, her threaten 'su hands, her compressed lips, her linrl-'r-K- , flashing ryes, ns she saw her beautiful new wheel writhe amt twist mi tin- - blazing fagots. Itut what the deuce was a oor duke to do with a niece like this? For a time I feared that the United State and the Grand Pin-hof would sever diplomatic relations. The bicycle was. unfortunately, HOT ONIONS FOR PNEUMONIA. aaaj thirty years Lydia & link-has Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousandsof women who have lieen troubled with dispiaeements, inflammation, ulcera-- ! tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic rams, backache, that bear. m Uon,dizo?ieSStratS! TOILET ANTESEPTIC Keep the breath, teeth, mouth end body entiseptieelly clean end free from un. healthy erm-lit- e and dinflrec.ble odore, wnien water, aoep and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A flermieidal, dials fectinf and deodor izinf toilet requisite of exceptional ex ccllenee and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyei, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drufl and toilet atorea, 50 centa, or hy mail postpaid Largs Trial Sample WITH NUITH AND ICRUTt 1 BOOK BINT VRII IHEPmCXTOILEUMostoaw and refreshing. There n Reason." Name given by MI'S t l.nm plumb. ANTED Tontum Co., Ilattle Creek, Mich. Read rlirtrii-ii, Mr IWnihiiU.otBli nri pejii; The Road to Wellvliie," In pkga. tiiriiird iinHMir v.irknirn. IWk if nriii'iratnm 1 N1"J UK Ever read the above letter? A new TKZiimi vS? one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human WlllOWSswtre N CW LAW nhMliuMl Interest. bVEu! . r FISSIONS |