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Show rf.nL WI'K THE BEAVER COUNTY NEWS W. Kli-Hli- -. MILFORD f- - .... Editin' A: Man.im-i- . ; in the tea t costs cents a month twenty-fiv- e to carry one of our 975.00 welches years. it it only waers twenty-fiv- e Without abuse it will wear twics The uian higher up must be railed down Wonder It they serve ... gif Think of this a minute! UTAH Rread pudding Is a cheap filler. beats GUAPANTLtl or-- long. between Eng!i.--h Wnsn' It Nebuchadnezzar who started the first men I trust Inycutl? 3 rnixncJ - When it comes to payiiiK (or one of the cocoon gowns the worm will turn " SAUTE Dice, dins Mnhelel I Rujyell salt iamb 170 j'MAIN K UTAH cut () Emerald, magic gem!" to this souvenir of green wells ocean depths and clear-def- t prairii-Mof pe.icdul power It was occult to all ancient peoples. It of the shoue midst the verbena leave crowns of Druid priestesses, in the tangle of Now It is said that kisses spread tudark hair, above the unutterable yearning berculosis. lint science never did have of their eyes of splenIn terrors for osculation dor, as never the coiiienlional corMinister Wu promises to return In rect ness of 19.19. If he keeps his promise, he cersetting. Color of universal tainly ought to show us how he does It. of emblem harmony; The next time Cincinnati la afflicted hope, joy, iibiiluliince; with a hood we presume she will it rured epilepsy, eased the pangs of childbirth and brought sleep to tired proudly call herself the I'arls of brains It healed all ocular diseases. Indeed, ao pure was its power that Should a man lift his hat when he when the eye of a serpent met the meets his wife?" asks a correspondent. eye of an eiucrnld the serpent became If he has tieen properly trained he will, immediately blind, ur perhaps had anyway. to wear glasses like the cobra the rest of bis life. Heeresse of eld used A Parisian scientist has succeeded to hold an emerald beneath their In making artificial sapphires. Why tongue ao the Incoming wave of psydocan't he counterfeit something of chic vibiation might be met by Its value, like eggs? force and not utterly overwhelm them. Light seems to traverse, to linger If a man had a hen that would lay and caress this lovely stone, whilst eggs as persistently us the St. Louis the diamond seems to turn back (lie seismograph records earthquakes his reflection bo violently it strikes oue alfortune would be made. most aa s blow. Verl-dpre the emerald is sister Aa the Halley comet Is 1 .000,000 times as big us the earth some of our busy magnates never will bo really happy until they owu It. Kven with choice new hav at 923 a ton it doesn't cost any more to run an automobile. 'ft , - e jezctfi'osA'i rc Not Own Why tt i 1 V mi in TIkmiiuI ut aiTi-i- i ,.inii'i- sKririimiral liroiiKlit i:;:lrr rullivalum in Iiiii.l Millurij iiii'l - ty iriiKatuni Kcan-riiiunli- Acres Fifty Thousand iIimmimnI ut In Millnnl rnumy will lx-- VI 111 Ml arms &C72r In New York charity applicants have increased Mi per cent, in live years. Is not Looking at the tall building Very nourishing exercise. to be. One thought of the enormous waste in cutting them all the same Kuch should have been of shape. slightly different form, their selling following as itumgh the artist were loath to lose any tithe of beauty; the edges should show the touch of hi cp'ntive hand, perhaps even the hammer murks Each link speaks individual strength and feeling in its twist, with grains and should be of gold, beads of enamel or tiny gems, mid some continuous design run even on the inside. Km- i hose who are really rich, yet may have hut little money, there are other beautiful green gems. The peridot should he given sacred honor, for it is the only gcin that has .vv-been known to fall from heaven, having occasiorally been found in. those mysterious masses called aero-lilcs- Curry Ai t mil- -. Irtmimr si 1. 5 mi, Mnmlsy. April II. full. 'I.ynmlyl I'Hi .'Main Si-- r Slrcel . iJimni si Ji'i KHI Hint T. C. Ii--i k. Ill'll. I'ssi. Airt. lor rsl.-- J. H. Maviikhkiz.ii, Awl. inn. Pbmi. Axt. Good indi arc the true fondslisa of large crops. Our big Catalog a tells all about tbc best Kfdi I bat grow. Seed for Free Copy. VOCEIEI SEED CO., Sail Like City TESTED SEEDS It itm'Ix liiimlnil nt ilnllar every yi'urtn TEST OUR SE2CS mm mm ran ti'.fint t'lein ulii'ii you lint Imy ymi Iticy imwiw The Quality. lunmr Writ Free Descriptive Catalog. CO., Salt Lake City PORTER-WALTO- SI VI S. SThVCII.N l.ilie Some rare sea thing hh Kill! in sea limes i the pendant Murk. in mul lintii'il.es Knl'l'i'r Tpi- (mulls, nquti-i- , of peridots, oliviin-s- . Jljii i.rli-i- reeeive I'minin .itli'iilioii. anil violet tinted SALT LAKE STAMP CO., Salt Like City inline pearl. Half hist in gauze, it would encourage anil Asking Too Much. a personality reveal Tin- uioilicr of lilt1 (i year-ol.Mary i hat would he com- had told lu r a nuuilicr of times not pletely extinguished by to liilch her sled to pulsing sleigh, feeling that it was a dangerous practice. It was such fascinating sport, however, that Mary could not resist it. and one day her mother saw her go skimming past the house behind a farmer's hobs." When she came in from play sht was taken to lask, her mother say-in- g severely, "Mary, haven't I told you that you must not hitch onto bobs? Resides, you know it is against the law." Mary tossed lier head. "Oh," she said, don't talk to me about ihe law. It's all I can do to keep the Ten ComWoman's Home mandments! the diamonds of the archduchess. Don't value the emerald on account of its comHis Discovery. mercial value but on account of the matrhleas value of its tune in relation to other tones. SomeThe small on of the household had times a touch of enamel, or chrysoprnse or tur- just. Iieen initiated into the art of quoise does sb well. If you can attain to its glory, cleaning his own teeth with the soft it is s grout privilege to wear it with other things little brush hi mother had bought for that show your right to such beauty, blit not him. Hearing the hahy cry lustily a simply In display, as if bidding for the prize of few minutes later the mother ran into a gem show. the nursery, only to find the nursing bottle on the floor and Johnny, toothiu hand, leaning over the crib LONDONS OLD ROMAN WALL brush of the screaming infmt. "On, iniivver!" he cried anxiously, Visitors to I am don whose tastes lie in the dibaby must hare tr r:i burned wlfout rection of exploring ancient remains will be gratiNew York Times. fied to learn that the Society of Antiquaries has any toofs. succeeded in securing the preservation of a very Pretty Long. fine fragment of the great Roman wall around Mrs. Cahliel What do you think, London, which has Just been laid bare, a London letter to the New Y'ork Sun says. From time to George? When the doctor called the time portions of the great structure, the external other day he uske me- to put out my wall of defense built about the city in the fourth tongue and when I did so he quite nr fifth century, have been uncovered in digging hurt me. I le Mrs. Gahhel ( interposing foundations while rebuilding streets or houses. Did he These have rarely escaped demolition. The latest step on it?" Cliiriigo Examiner. discovery is to be preserved for the benefit of The Trouble With It. the public. "There is only one trouble Is with near situated a it Newgate street, close to new annex of the general poslofflce. The frag- your play." said the manager. Whal's that? asked Ihe eager ment. which is that of a great rurved bastion, 'isn't there enough acis 10 feet long, 20 feet high and 8 feet wide. The dramatist, present summit lies several feet below the sur- tion in it? Does ft lack situations? face of the ground. The whole is in a wonderful Don't you find thp dialogue bright state of preservation. enough? Or do you find that the The material Is that known as Kentish rag." moral is brought out as rlearly as supported by heavy Roman bricks and showing you could wish?" "Oh, It's all right in those respects, clearly the characteristic layers or bands of red hut I'nt afraid it couldn't lie novelized tiles, such as may be seen at Burgh caetle, and Richborough. The interesting relic is If It should make a hit." to be built around, so that it will lie in a rave Three Versions. which may be entered by stairs and inspected by How far is it hetween these artificial light The line of the great Roman wall asked the lawyer. well is known and much of it undoubtedly reAbout four miles as the flow mains below the houses which ure largely built upon it as upou the securest of foundations. cries." replied the witness. "You mean as the cry flows." No." put in the "he means POLE FAKER LONG AGO as the fly crows." judge, And they all looked at each other, It is told of a titled Englishman that when his feeling that something was wrong. -son explained his folly In going down h coal mine Everybody's. by saying that he spoiled his clothes so as to be A Princely Gift. able to say that he had performed the feat, re"What was the bride's plied: "Why did you say that you had been down father' the mine and did not go? This method appears present to the happy couple?" to have been followed by one James Knox de "An order on the butcher for twenty-fRolduc. a monk. who. according to a Paris con- our pounds of sirloin steak." temporary. says the Army and Navy Journal, Various Reasons. made his polar voyage In 1665. This ts the pole What are von doing 1 1 a barefoot as described by (his Rolduc: At the pole one finds the place where all the dance? Oh. waves of the sea concentrate to disappear In the always patronize art. An 1 same whirlpool. Four great islands surround this you?" "I ratne to see if the stage was precipice, separated by four great canals, sucKansu City Journal. ceeding which are the divided seas. Ad enor- sandpapered." mous rock, quite black, and 23 miles In circumThe Mean Thing. ference. marks the pole itself. Nellie Mtat brought about this The unfortunate shipe which venture Into these latitudes are Immediately lost, if they are serious trouble bet wen Mlggs and his sweetheart?" not assisted by favorable winds." Arthur "Nothing; oiily he thought The Civil and Military Ciazette of Lahore. India. suggests that the account of Rolduc may be i quarrel was cheaper than Christmas resents." found in tbe Teutsrhe Acta Eruditorlum" (17121. - - Two thousand five hundred sailors In the American navy cannot swim, und let ua hope they never will have to In order to keep from drowning. - There la a movement now to ninke women In theaters remove their hair along with their hata ao that peruona behind them may sea the stugu. One would think that Halley's comet, with Its great reputation, would he aahamed to let a comparatively unknown celestial wanderer get here cv,ssrarass- Now comoa the meatless dinner. The object is to bring about the condition of a powerless trust As money talks, ita alienee may be the beat argument In the cane. At the same time an Indian princess in her emeralds and fringes of pearl looks more poetic, her grace just divined through the saris veil, for there Is a - first W Though Halley's Justly relehrated comet is 1,000,000 times larger than the earth, fortunately It ia of a sunny disposition, ao our email planet has nothing to fear from its approach. It looka like an investigation of food prices and the cost of living nil along the line. Well, the poet tells us "the proper study of mankind Is man;" nnd what will a general Inquiry Into the food question be but a study of man and hla ways, with perhaps a chance to have some of the way corrected? The burning of the palace of Chera-ga- n In Constantinople, in which the national parliament held sessions, takes on the aspect of a calamity, since the direct property loss Involved Is estimated at $lfi,0n0.00(), while the destruction of archives and other belongings adds vastly to the deplorable The building was one consequences. of the "show places" of the Turkish capital and renowned fur ita beauty and elegance. There la a new pavement. Intended to resist the strenuous wear and tear of sutoraobtllng. In Kngland this la called Durnx. It Is or Irregular cubes of hard stone laid In small segments of circles. The stones ran be cut by machinery, and are comparatively Inexpensive. On account of Ita cost, they are laid without grout, (lerinany la putting down a good deal of Ilurax pavement, which fact should be sufficient to encourage experiments with Durax in the United States. pavement three-inc- h Choice of occupation is mostly a matter of taste and aptitude. No honest calling la In Itself much better or worse than others. Kvery business Is considered the best by somebody, while others declare It the worst of all. The question Is not have you chosen the best vocation, but rather have you found out where you belong? The right road will seem to stretch out before you the distance of a lifetime without a barrier; the wrong road will quickly lead to a blind wall, or at best to a very steep hill. About the time that the first bad season strikes a young farmer, the crops are poor, the mortgage looks big and the work harder than ever; then Is the time that the kind of man hangs to It and wins. Rut the quitter gives up Just when, perhaps, a turn for the better Is at hand. He will try something else. Ilut every business has its bad seasons and Its features, which bear discouraging harder upon the beginner than uon the man of experienre and capital. Rrace up, work hard, think harder and push through. dog-at-ro- tha leaves and, like the sapphire, Is best by lay and shrinks from artificial light. Consecrated to the month of May, it is said to symbolize the charily that springs from a well of goodness In the heart and Its color, nature's favorite, to to peak of hope and new spiritual birth. No other gem holds aa many fascinating legends or haunting historical memories; they go back to Immemorial time when the Incas the goddess Esnierclda in the person of a tone aa big as an ostrich egg and offered other meralds to consort with it, so that the Spaniards were able to seize the vollve treasures of centuries. The five emeralds which Cortez stole from the crown of Montezuma were of enormous In the form of sacred symbols of Ize, rough-cu- t ex worship. Kven Corti-- was so enamored of them that he refused to sell them to the empress ind so lost favor at court. There is still preserved at Rome the emerald lent to the pope by Peru after the Catholic conquest of that country and the name Kmerald Isle, given to Ireland, was from a magnificent ring sent by Dope Adrian to Henry II. when he took dominion over It. The orientals have always known how to handle this wonderful crystal, setting In peacock-toneembroidery of rnmiiel, keeping its Irregularities of form, perhaps simply smoothing the edges so ns to preserve ns much color as Indian princes often wear emerald rings hilly two Inches across. In the shrine of the great Tooth temple of Kandy, Ceylon, there Is a Buddha of fabulous value carved from s single em. I have seen In the treasury of the sultan af Turkey whole rubes encrusted with emeralds, wtlh superb single stones of the purest water set In the handles of artmltars. There were prayers In the interior of the Taj Mahal spelled in emeralds before the British soldiers dug them out with their knives. We read of Nero viewing the games men played with death, where death must win" consort through emerald eyelids. Caligula's leaned from the balconies of the (older hill adorned with two millions of our dollars' worth of emeralds und pearls. Napoleon wore through some of his bloodiest battles the great emerald torn from the throat of Charlemagne when they dared to disturb his slumber and to this talisman the Man of Itestlny scribed his power to sleep ut will and as long sr little as he would. When laahey was to paint Die last portrait of Josephine, she said: Paint lie In emeralda to say that my sorrow will be iver green, but surround them with diamonds to portrsy the undying purity of my love. Of course royal people hold the finest examples of this gem, which, In conjunction with pearls, they prefer to all others. Queen Isabella was very proud or her carved emeralds, but carving destroys the greatest beauty of the stone, the perfect limpidity of Its color. An Italian princess possesses the most famous psrure in Europe, enhancing her patrician beauty as she stands ignlnst the faded green tapestries, the ormolu Kiri ninliw-hliof her Romen palscs a nevar-to-- t forgotten picture. wor-hlpe- pos-ilbl- verd-aiiliqii- e e d certain pinched stiff- about even the ness fZ&PfjYAZ&irfJ best of our modern all seems mere ' millinery with heart, body and soul expression spoiled by the of trying to hold together so many unrelated parts. The most splendid regalia at the Viennese court is that of the archduchess Marie Josepha, wife of Duke Otho. She haa Just had them set In a new and massive design by the court Jeweler. The large A stomacher we give as Illustration. emeralds are so arranged that they can be detached and other colored stones clasped In the same settings; thus the archduchess has rubies, sapphire, pink topes snsd immense diamonds of the same size, so she may change to suit her toilets. Also all the sprays can be taken to pieces and worn as smaller ornaments or massed together In different designs. This fashion was introduced by the Empress Elizabeth, who delighted in such combination and would cover the whole front of a court garment with complex design. Such may be done with a modern artistic design If made by a special jeweler, and la convenient to those who inay only poaseaa a few pieces. Thus a girdle may separate into brooch, pendant, cloak clasp, necklace, at will. There is a vaporous blonde actress at the Coniedie Francalse whose favorite color Is sky blue, which she clasps with a girdle of emeralda so valuable that a big policeman never loses sight of her when wearing it on the stage or off. This appreciation of the charm of related blue and green aud violet ia comparatively new to us, though always known to the orient and to antiquity. Emeralds are usually cut In simpler form than diamonds and the corundum, or ruby, family of gems. The table cut, square or oblong, with large, flat face and beveled edges, the lower surface in long, narrow facets. Tbelr value depends upon the tone, transparency and especially In the western world the (lawlessness of the gein. which. If of dark velvet depth may even be worth more than the diamond, though the prire put upon all expensive gems by the leading American Jewelers is entirely fictitious. The flawless emerald has become a classic comparison for perfection, as nearly every stone le full of little rifts or clouds or discolorations that make It unfit for the split superlatives of modern taste; to the oriental mind nothing is more beautiful than beauty: each stone Is but a note of color in a general harmony and the eastern jeweler has no prejudice against "flaws" or off colors' and finds worthy and dlgnilied place for roanay a gem that our jewel butchers would incontinently cast off. At a recent dinner I noted the chain on a beautiful arm next to me. Heavy links of bright polished gold, carrying with Utile relation lire great raboehon emeralds, divided by four large diamonds, soldered on to them. If the diamonds had been replared with turor olivines or peacock quoises or violet-berylopals, their great value would have sufficed to pay for some real art work in snamel or design. Then the emeralds themselves were so "perfectly matched" they might as well have been bits of glass. 8o equal In tone all mysterious magta gone no thought of Druid forehead or Imprisoned spring right from the factory these looked s d Com-lianiu- - to-da- OF 1 n. |