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Show (oHsonaT o Parlor. -- South Caroliua oruwueil the hotels aud streets of Oluilestun at the tpenlng of the South Carolina interstate and Went Indian exjiosition, December 2d. There were present also thousands of vMtors from both neighboring and distant states. All Journeyed to the exposition grounds where In the auditorium special exercises were held to celebrate the completion of the great undertaking. There were addresses by prominent men, an original ode and music by a chorus of 500 voices. At noon President Roosevelt pressed a button at Washington and thus officially opened the exposition. The exercises were participated in by 30,000 people. The instant President Roosevelt set the machinery of the exposition in motion a salute of forty-si- x guns, one for each state of the Union, were fired by the German artillery, an ancient military organisation of the city. The paiade was reviewed on its arrival at the exposition grounds at the grand stand on the race course by Governor M. B. McSweeney of South Carolina, Mayor J. Adger Smyth of Charleston, the distinguished guests of city will soon ltiuu u Thu Hague. True gouid giVtin smatl nourishuu ni. but or false, tnis gossip has caused the it goeth easily into the bottom of public In Holland to be openly hostile the stomack by reason of hys to the former Duke of Mecklenburg, Apples, on the contrary, whom Wilhelmlna married not without are co!de, and go slowlle dowue." some protest on the part of the legisif while of pears we are told that lature of the Kelhei lauds. sodden with todestolles they will not hurt them that eat them." But the doctor adds a caution to the effect UNITED AT DEATHBED. that if a man fill himself wyth othrr from llt-- r Daughter pcarea, oftymes they bveed the colick". fur Truty-lu- o Intn. the truth of which many a modern Beside the deathbed of Mrs. Jane schoolboy will be able to confirm from Williams, who died at McKeesport, Pa., experience. Galen holds that all fruit last wet k, her da 'gbter, stolen from to be wholesome should be eaten beher twenty-nin- e Of years ago, was re- fore Instead of after other food. stored to her. The relatives of the dyThey peaches he particularly says: ing woman gathered in the room de- ought not to be eaten after meat as scribe the meftiUg of the long sunsome used to do. And thys rule must dered mother and child as affecting In be holden In all those meates that are the extreme. It was at first hoped that of evell Juice, and are moyst and slyp-per- y, the Joy of receiving back her child that they be taken before all other meates. would enable the aged woman to recover, but her health was shattered and though she rallied at first she died BANK BILLS IN CAR WHEELS. holding the hand of the child, now a I grown woman, who had been stolen Carre aey Macerated at tbe Tmiiif Hnlktere. Vied Car the bj from her so many years before. It Is the commonly accepted belief Mrs. Williams for many years resided In Chicago, in the days when the that the old currency redeemed at the Illinois metropolis was not a large city, treasury department is absolutely demany of her relations being residents stroyed. Such, however, is not the of that state. While in Chicago she case. A single wheel of a locomotive married Mr. Williams, who, however, represents many millions of what wss once good paper currency. From a died in 1869, leaving her with two chil dren, of whom the youngest, Mary, was bank note to a car wheel Is quits a about 2 yean old at the time of his radical transformation, but It happmis death. The older children bad reached every day, and to become a supporting mass Is the ulthe school-tim- e stage, but the baby of atom in the revolving soiled of fate timate $1, 10 or every the family was thought by relatives not to be strong, snd they feared that the 11,000 bill. Between 150,000,000 and 1500,000,000 mother would uot have the time to worth of paper money Is cancelled evgive it due attention. Relatives desired to adopt the child ery year in the treasury department la shortly after the death of the. father, Washington, and after being macerated but Mrs. Williams objected, saying Is converted into filling for railroad that she did not wish to see the home car wheels and the government gets $40 broken up and that she would not let a ton for It from the manufacturers. The destruction of soiled paper curher little daughter go away from home under any consideration. Several times rency goes on dally and is in charge efforts were taken to induce her to of three treasury employes, who repreof tba give up tiie child to those who were sent respectively the secretary United of treasurer the the treasury, richer, and, it Is claimed, more able to look after the child's welfare, but to States and the comptroller of the curCAPT. F. W. WAGENER. rency. Bundies of the canceled notes no avail. President Exposition Company, Then when little Mary was about ! are dumped into the big mscerstors and of the exposition company from The other states. years old. while playing with some lit and crushed into a puttylike mass. After the review the opening exer- tie girls In the street not far from her pulp Is then treated with an alkali, cises took place In the Auditorium, tome, a woman accosted the group of which extracts the ink; the stuff is The ceremonnes were presided over by children snd asked them whether they dried, chirped In bales and forwarded Captain F. W. W&gener, president of would uot like to have some candy. to the car wheel manufacturers. For every cote so destroyed, unless It the exposition company. He Intro- The children, naturally enough, assentduced RL Rev. Ellison Capers, bishop ed snd the stranger led the girls to has come from a national bank In liquiof South Carolina. After a prayer by the nearest candy store, where she dation, a new one of the same denomof Bishop Capera President Wagener gave them a treat all round. Then ination is printed at the bureau made a short address declaring the ex- Mary got into a vehicle standing near, printing and engraving. All this work The position work completed, and Intro- together with the stranger, and abso- costs the government nothing. national banks pay the expenses, alduced Governor McSweeney, who de' lutely disappeared. llvered an address of welcome on beThe police were notified of the dis- though the treasury department has division. half of the state. appearance of the child and for many full control of the redemption Mayor Smith followed the governor months a close investigation wss carand welcomed the people to the expo- ried on, but without result, and when Generons Gift to 1nrdaa. sition on behalf of the city. The mayor the months lengthened Into years and Mrs. Eliza Fowler of Lafayette, Ind., then Introduced Chauncey M. Depew there was still no sign of the child who recently gave Purdue University of New York, the orator of the day. most of the friends of Mrs. Williams $60,000, is the wealthiest woman In At the conclusion of Senator Depew'a uelieved that the child wai dead. Not Tippecanoe County, and is tha mother address a message was received from so the mourning mother. Never a year of James M. Fowler, President of the President Roosevelt at Washington passed that she did not make some ef- National Fowler Bank of Lafayette. and read to the audience. A reply was fort to find out where her child had Mrs. Fowler Is 85 years old, but deat once sent by the exposition author! been taken, but until recently use- spite her age continues to personally ties and the Instant that it was re- lessly. look after her business affairs. She ceived at the White House the Presi- About twenty years ago she went to has long taken an Interest In educa- riSi-n-ii- slyp-perynes- s." Only Till ;i57 MMI There reallrereni lu.ecle Numerous. In the last und almost unknown Interior of Alaska, far beyond the influence of the "Kuro Siwo, the climate is arctic in the fullest sense of the word. There are only two seasons hers winter and summer. The winter Is of eight mouths' durution, dry and, excepting certain restricted localities, entirely free from wind. The temperature descends as low as 80 degrees below xero (upon rare occasions even K degrees has been reached), with a mean of perhaps 40 degrees below. lee foruii In the rivers and lakes to a thlcknesi of eight feet and more. Summer extends over a period ol four months. During its earliest month high winds prevail, greatly assisting In the dissipation of snow and Ice, but rendering this time extremely disagreeable. The balance of this short season is mild and the temperature pleasant, rarely exceeding 86 degrees. The snow and rain annually precipitated Is about 12.9 Inches. The hapless resident In this Inhospitable section Is afforded no relict after his long winter's fight for the unity of soul and body by the advent of this otherwise agreeable period, for, with the first tempered breeze, comes countless legions erf mosquitoes, black flies snd various stinging insects besides, while agonising assiduity snd ghoulish sppetite preclude the enjoyment of the briefest moment Whence comes the abnormal instinct says writer In the Era Magazine, that marks man at first sight for their prey eon slderlng the fact that their ancestry, back to protoplasm, had no knowledge of his being is an interesting problem best left for entomologists to Fine bath room in connection: 12. PAYSON. and Fruit company of Gautemala and New Orleans has gone Into business. Men will be down in the rubber country In the next few days, and the work of tha company will go forward at once. The officers of the company are all New Orleans men. The company has been Incorporated under the lawa of Louisiana. The idea la to handle rubber on a large scale, and to manufacture the raw product here. Tbe plans contemplate the establishment of a factory la America in which all kinds of rubber goods will be made. Tbe company has several valuable concessions, and la sending Americans down to the countries in Central America to look at tha lands and to start the work of develop- ment - - Proprietor. UTAB Between Denver and Uiicago THE FREE RECLINING To Cultivate Robber. The Los Andes Rubber, Lumber DEAN, CHAIR via tbe Santa Fe Route provide as comfortable means of travel aa cau lie offered As an economical aleepera excepted. measure they are unsurpassed. They are hauled on fast tiains, and are in charge of experienced aud polite port- ers. All essentials for the toilet towels, soap, water, combs and brushes are provided free of charge. C. F. WARREN, Qenl Agt A. T, & 8. F. R'y. 411 Dooly Block, Halt Lake City. CARS OREGON SHORT LINE RY. OFFICE IN BANK. New Train Service. trains will be elegantly equipped nra lylooal anil always on time. Patronise tham when you travel. TLaaa LOCAL TIJE CARD. In effect July II, IWOi Empreaa Imm liar Power. and Depart at tha Various Arrive Trains Dowager Empress Marie Dagmar of Follows i as tatlons Russia, who, It la said, haa lost all of North Round her once potent influence over the SouthI Bound I "bTAtfoV "lir.lAr Lv. tv. No. No. I young czar, spends much of her time No. 4 No. A Mi PM at tba court of her father, King Chris- A U P Ml 10 Ml. 7 Ogdsn I Ml tian IX. of Denmark. The empress a 45 6 .70 00 waa formerly called the Princess Dagmar, and during her reign In Russia, Lob I J notion waa regarded aa the beat dressed l.chi American Fork woman In Europe. She waa also one Plssaant Grove of tha prettiest German In blood, the Provo Kpringvllla Spanish Fork isafti1 mm to ii R. S. Wimmer, Notary Public. uk'i& 9'0 You Can Have Money by purchasing your COFFINS & CASKETS Ol A. PETERSON, PAYSON, UTAH. Hearse in Connection at Reasonable Prices. HOMEMADE CUPBOARDS AND FLOUR BINS AT LOWEST PRICES. Payaou ml oo ..1.11;: 0(1 .1. (Tear Lake MANGE Lv! UllfordAr Lund Mml-i- ia Uvsila Frisco f- a- train. ds.Iy iSSSSMdVr luytihair Cars alt l.ake to Chinas o , si him. Klrcant llay Coaches dining The only Hue from rwslt The hortnet and Fastest Una all Lahato Denver. KrnusCity. Mmaha aud Points Bast. Passengers not carried o freight trains. W.H. BANCROFT, Vies- -' res snd Gen. Mgr S. W. KOCS LB Gen. Trf. Mgr. D. B. Burley. Gnn'l Pjsaengar Agt. Lake City. City Ticket Office Ml Main it. nit Fast Trains Daily to All Points East. lln; Cottok Palaco HU.iiCW dent pressed the button that set In mo- McKeesport and made her home with tion the apparatus In machinery ball. her son. Last summer she was strickCaptain Wagener then officially de- en with illness necessarily fatal In Its clared the exposition opened. character and nbout two months ago While the work on the exposition it- it became apparent that death was not self Is not entirely completed, the au- far off. W J the approach of death thorities have fulfilled their promise to the longing of the mother for her have all the main and many of the child grew more intense and five weeks minor buildings finished. The cotton ago the relative who had taken the palace, tbs palace of commerce, the ad- child wrote, saying that the little girl ministration, agricultural, machinery, had grown to womanhood and married. mineral and forestry, art and woman's This fact was made known to Mrs. buildings snd a number of others are Williams and Immediately arrangecomplete, with the exception of plac- ments were made for the daughter to join her. ing some of the smaller exhibit. The daughter, now Mrs. Annie MadThe grounds have been put In admirden of Liverpool, England, was sent exable condition and present a most quisite appearance, with acres of trop- for and arrived a week ago. Tba dying mother recognised her child In ical plants and flowers in full bloom. spite of the years that had passed sines their cruel parting and aled holding I Prior I'npoputar. Henry of the Prince Henry, consort-royyoung Queen of Holland, w1:(j:u cables from that country report as liPing execrated by the entire dominion as the cause of the piesent lllm-- w of bis beautiful girl wife, is a memi.-- r of the Tiie ducal houso of Merkb-nhura- . story generally circulated Is to the effect that Queen Willii lniiita ami ilir marprince had discovered that tlu-iriage was an utter failure; that tlu-itemperaments were incompatible and ii. r:o! occurred that a ill. Just before the queen wt. ttiki-These stories have been a flout In Tbe Hague for some days ami are now reQueen peated on all hands. Ii.iw.t-i- -r Emma, Wllhrl . i.:as unit. .or. Is said to have been k nly ill dressed over the alleged quariri, let r- - fuses to discuss the matter. TV queen Is said to be constantly 'proving in lpr,th. and It Is now believed that the court her hand. al r r -d I ! The Artichoke. Artichokes were not held In estimaGalen sayeth tion by the ancients. that the nrcliyi hock hath a naughty juice Hnd giveth vTl nourishment to tiie lituly '' hut this opinion is less surprising when we learn that It was ;he rout of our crown artichoke, which they usi d to cat "bo the rawe and sodden. We arc reminded of the savages spoken of by Mark Twain as having an equally poor opinion of orBaked they were tough, and anges. even boiled they weren't things for a man to banker after. Cucumbers also "ingcmlre In the body a naughty juice; liowbelt ye shall finde sum that -an digest them by the reason of a certayne famlllarltle that Is betwene their natures." says a writer la the Nineteenth Centiry Magazine. "The e Cannk ce--. tional matters, and, believing that aha could use some of her wealth to no better advantage than in erecting an assembly hall and chapel at Purdue, she presented the treasurer of the board of trustees with a check for the amount necessary. Mrs. Fowler was bom at Hamilton, O., and removed with her parents to Lafayette seventy-tw- o years ago. She waa one of seven daughters, and two of her listers. Mrs. Jemima Wlnahip and Mrs. Adams Earle, are still living, both residing near Lafayette. Wa Feed tha Ealira World. The United States are the great bread producing country of tha earth, and If our supply of foodstuffs waa suddenly cut off half the people of other countries would starve to death. Recently published statistics Bhow that the United States sell approximately $1,000,000,000 worth of surplus agricultural products In a year. They feed tbe armies cf Boers and English, and a squeeze in prices in America la felt all over the world. England la the best customer of thia country in food supplies. In 1900 wa sold her $108,000,000 worth of farm products. Germany spent here for agricultural jtroducta. About half of this waa for cotton, tha rest for food. Franca buya annually from ua about $15,000,000 worth of agricultural products, mostly bread and meat $134,-000,0- 00 Long Stretch Wltliuat 1'ltles. From Tomsk to Irkutsk on the Siberian railway, a distance of 932 miles, thara la only one town deserving tha fame Krssnoalrs with a population ef 28,000. AlexIThornton. Agent. Payeun. All the RUSSIAS DOWAGER EMPRESS, empress la said to dislike everythin! German. Bismarck she particularly hated. This bright woman. Ilka everybody who goes to live in Russia, was rapidly converted Into a Russian and la today Intensely Interested In thi destiny of the country over which aha has long alnce lost her last vestige ol power. Comforts of Home Can ba had on the Magnificent Limited Train of the - Pullman Palace and Ordinary, Slerping Cars. Free Reclining Chair Cars. Perfect Dining Car Service. Personally Conducted Excursions. Trains leave Tay son for Tlntle and Intermedlatee at 6:43 a. m. and 6:52 pt m. For Halt Lake City and all joints East and West at 7:50 a. m. and 8:11 p. m. Best Local Train Serv ice in the State. For rates, etc., Inquire of ! St. Fail R'y. W. H. SIIEKMKR, Agent, Fayaon. GEO. W. IIEIXTZ, A ant. General Fawenger Agent. American Flour In England. 0:00 iv m., A London paper complains that tha Leaving OMAHA daily at English markets are now being floodCHICAGO. for T.Q. WIMMER Provident. ed to a greater extent than ever before W.H. TANXKR Gleetrio-Cteh-eto d with American flour. According K. S. WIMMEK.Caihler thia report, the American exporters Authorised small In flour over have been sending 'iapltnl StOilk bags that were convenient In size, and SI O.OOO.OO. OK yet were sold at the same rate as were retail barrels. Thia ratering for the Dining-Car- s, Coaches, Chair-Cars- , trade, the paper states, la something Dij new in the export flour business from and Palace Sleepers. Library-Ca- rs tha United States, and it Is growing at such a rate that It threatens a dull market for English flours for tha rest For tbwm who aleep well on a train, Pity eon, Utah, of tha current year. Bag flour haa, of wa liave wlmt you waiit. Fur tlniM for elert-rlo In thia an liavw frunvti n General Banking Buatnoen country course, been sold who don't nlwp well we Iwrth In by yur many yeara, and It la a convenience to 4 lamp rending per cent Interest tha small customers. If It has never which you can riHl 11 ntalit if you paid on time depo$ite. been tried before In Great Britain, we wish, without tlialiirhlnq otliern. cmiVMilfiiivs mmlmi In fart all the do not doubt that the move will be a iotii for SAFETY nn.l COMFORT, popular one, though it seems very ere to be had If you travel via the C. strange that the experiment haa not M. & SL P. Ry. Commercial Agt. bean attempted before thia. Boston L. L. DOWNING, A Herald, i Salt Lake City, Utah. nt R golid Train paysonexchange BANK SAVINGS COLLECTIONS SPECIALTY J |