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Show DAILY i.'- 'W'ea.k Stomach. iii stomach is most caused by the over-IJan- d fre-AI- lv exhausted nervous RUClllr.PTiLTICAL PRI8ON IS ISLE OF LOST. that runs the C.mnower arhls the nerve force sent the brain through t0 rtJrrts When the nerves the sup- weak or exhausted insufficient SSieactSof the stomach sults m lm' No Person Who i. Ever Sent to This leland by the Government Ever Returns. Seventeen cents a day is said to be the cost of Maxim Gorky, the Russian novelist, to the Russian government for food. Gorky was recently arrested and immured in a solitary cell by the government for hia complicity in the outbreak of the people. He ia luxuriously fed in comparison with the Russian political prisoners and criminals on the Island of Saghnlien. The allowance for these is seven and one-h- a If cents for the same period, says the New York Tribune. Saghallen is an attenuated island lying on the eastern coast of Siberia, in the Sea of Okhotsk. Russia has used It as a penal colony since 1S69. Among the people of Russia it is called the Isle of the Lost. It is well named by i Effect digestion-dyspe- psia. Miles Restorative r Nery-;rnerve cases nerve Athens and buildstheupnerves to vigor Sfgives S muscles 0f the stomach; jfs produces a healthy activity. inflamma-fa- n Kervine allays the heals the membranes, and the stomach strong and Sjthv. There is nothing that to the 5b quickly gives energy Restorative as system y enough for Dr. ItMiles' will I don't kSow whatcured me but It certainly aa now am I and 5&ShtrouW. was. Two physicians vdl to iSevo me, but In three or taking Nervine I wae wL.iS2itaved. Fourhottlea made me at the coet of 4.00." i?Am B.HABT, Detroit, Mich. L Nervine la eold by your them. . the J&a whowill will oufantee that benefit. fsilSy hi SmiSund your money. Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind iSeettli gib OF CONFERENCE STATES MORMON NORTHERN MISSION. Smoot Investigation Little Effect on Their Lahore. Eldara Say tha Haa Had (From the Milwaukee Sentinel.) The Reed Smoot Investigation haa hid practically no bad effect on the powth of the church of Latter-da- y Saints, and haa even been of material instance to us," aaid German E. Ellsworth, president of the northern states Mon of the church of Latter-da- y hint. which ia holding a conference k Milwaukee at the mission, 1724 Fond Lac avenue. Ai far as we can discern In the United States it haa had little or no effect our labor. Some friends have tamed ua down as the reault of the lonitlgation, while In other cases It hu made ua friends. We have more direct knowledge that It has brought n friends through the agitation. Whatever be the sentiment, I positively know that our membership la gradually . Increasing.' The conference la tolth in Wisconsin. ived in Milwaukee of members of the Twenty elders arrn yesterday and their sessions in the afternoon. President Ellsworth, in hia address, poke at length, reviewing the good ork that had been thii and other states, the be-p- accomplished In and declared that is spreading wonderfully faith throughout the country. In the northern states dndi the workers are he says he greatly encour-e- d with the prolific results of their kbors, so much so that In several it has been found necessary to cany on the work along broader lines. He declared the are beginning to people kke an Increased interest in the of the church, and thla is evidenced by the fact that an increased attendance has been manifest during ike last six months. It is customary r the elders to assemble twice a year M an appointed city in their respective Utea to report on the progress of the k and to be reappointed or released. majority of the elders and present came from Utah. "Whg them are the folowing: Orman E. Ellsworth, t, Utah; elders, Anthony Rasmussen, c. I Ruchert, Salt jwdman. t'tah; fk City. Utah; C. E. Booth. Logan, ink; c. R Ernat, Salt Lake City, A. & Jenaen, Sandy, Utah; Grunder, Logan, Utah; Ruel ilder, Franklin, Idaho; N. R. Jensen, "kiln. Idadho; G. L Blealnger, Salt City, Utah; Joseph Grant, Thur-JUtah; F. & Belnnp, Ogden, Utah; Harking, Vernal. Utah; D. N. rr,1, klantl. Utah; L 8. Hess, Goshen, Jko:. 8. L. Leigh. Cedar City, Utah: f; Naegle, St. George, Utah; A. ch wine,.. Salt Lake City, Utah; T. gjbdo: Thayne, Wyo.; c. D. Hahn, doc-Wn- ea No person who is gent to the island ever returns. The government apparently desires to add to this impression of hopelessness by preventing, as far as possible, any description of the life lived there from reaching the people. It would have an atmosphere of gloom hang over the Island. It would have exile to this forsaken spot mean the crossing of a yawning gulf into a world from which no word can return. There a false passport is not worth the trouble of writing it. Passport or no passport it makes no difference. A few foreigners have been able to spend a short time on the island in recent years, it has usually been difficult to secure pictures of the life there. Only those who are sentenced to penal servitude for life because of some great crime, personal or political, are sent to Saghallen, The prisons are not great stone dungeons, such as those to which the American la accustomed. They resemble barracks, or great wooden warehouses. The stockades around the portion devoted to the incarceration of the moat violent of the criminala, if constructed around an orchard, would only add to the fun of stealing the apples for an American boy. Leaving the prison, however, Is like Jumping from the frying pan into the fire, so the temptation to do so is not great. The main prison is divided Into three parts. One is for the priviThe workshops and leged convicts. cells for the best behaved convicts, who are permitted to go outside in the day to labor, occupy the middle part. The northern1 quadrangle is surrounded by a strong stockade and overlooked by a watch tower. There are kept the most desperate criminala who wear lrona" weighing fourteen pounds. All the prisoners are kept there through the first year of their incarceration. Aa capital punishment la not a part of Russia's criminal code, many of the prisoners are murderers who have been sent there to remain for life. All the servants of the officers are criminala A visitor to the place says: "It la d uncomfortable to know that the woman who enters your room 'In the morning with a light breakfast Is a murderess. It does not add to your comfort to learn, when part of your beard hHS been removed, that the barber is also a murderer. You are glad to have a revolver under your pillow when you go to bed. You readily obey the injunction not to leave the house after the t o'clock curfew bell haa been rung." Women are privileged Inhabitants on the island. They are relatively so few that they are at a premium.. When a male convict has earned the right to live outside the prison walls In a small house of his own, he often invites one of the women to live with him. She makes no may be a murderess, but that murdered She may have difference. two men who occupied the same relafact, tion to her that he doea Thlaknout-Ing A detriment. no Is apparently, and solitary confinement are the be only two punishments which can infiicted. The women are so few that they are not In much danger of being knouted. surly-face- What Tim mls-nr- le Le-k- Je w. VUh. lJ" A Touching Story from rienth of the baby A. Eyler, Cumberland, Md. I,. Tp0. "At the of 11 montha' e,rl WM in declining health, JIfc Thrat Trouble, and two "rr,0ua ans gave her up. We were al- trr n. nJ eapa,r when we resolved to nr" wW D'"00very for Con- Cough and Colds. The first ve relief; sfter taking four " Wn" cured, and la now In umIi health." Never fails to relieve "rough or cold. At Ogden arantd' Seeand 10n vln 925 TO A The way to get rich is to dp your neighbors get rich y selling them tea. hw me if you don't ilk Proves. This thing of being sick and looking for a cure is mighty serious business. even at People s re not given to joking of the first symptom of the approach want not do They the Grim Destroyer. to be the subjects of experiment,testbut of want medicine that has had the has medicine that A It. behind years been made and used for 20 years gives assurance of Its worth, and can be taken with a faith that they have the affords. All very best cure the world Imthis can be said about Dr. Gunn's sick for a remedy as Fills Liver proved it headache, dyspepsia and indigestion, trouth of source the begins right at an ble and removes the cause. Sold by tor One pill box. 25c for per druggists Co. a dow. For sale by Wallace Drug -t UTAH STATE JOURNAL, FRIDAY, MARCH PAGE THREE. r is coiicerred. will not stand the investigation or aclen QUITE of modern l't t,iir vriiicimti. Mr. Vlgnaud is not the first to attack he authi From nticily of Ijas Casas. i.nir (,, im.e there have arisen his- torian to deery his papers. And yet this Catholic bishop remains one of the lriiirii.il source of Information concerning Columbus himself, his voyages, hi adventure and hls trials. He was 111 turn h with Columbus, and played a leading part in (he settlement of the new world. Hi father. Antonio, had crossed the Atlantic with Coluntbua In 1493, ;,nj returned rieh to Seville In l!s. At this time Bartholomew waa completing his studies In the university cl Salamanca. He hud as a servant an Indian slave, presented to hint by his father. When Isabella, in her transport of virtuous indignation, ordered all Indian slave to be sent back to their natie land, this one waa taken from Lis Casas. The young man was amused hy the circumstance, and on considering the nature of the case, became imlamed with a seal lit favor of the unhappy Indians, which never cooled throughout a long and active life. According to Washington Irving, one of his biographer, his seal "was excited to d fervor when, at the age of twenty-eigyears, he accompanied the commander nvando to Hispaniola In 1502 and was an to many of the cruel scenes which took place under his administration. The whole of hi future life, a iace exceeding sixty yeira, was devoted to vindicating j;,,, cause and endeavoring to ameliorate the suffering of the natives. As u missionary he traversed the w of the new world In various directions, seeking to convert and civilise them; as a protector and champion he made several voyages to Spain, vindicated their wrongs before courts and monarch, wrote volumes In their behalf, and exhibited a xeal and constancy and intrepidity worthy of an uiostle. He died nt the advanced age of ninety-tw- o years, and was buried In Madrid. Some censure the memory of Las Casas as the man who founded the Institution of African slavery In America, for In hls efforts to maintain the freedom of the Indian he resorted to the expedient of Importing Africans, because these had become accustomed to the idea of bondage, and, he thought, were of a lower grade of the human race. His champions deny this charge, and quote historical facts and dates to prove that slavery existed in the colonies and was authorised by royal decree before he took part In the question. Although the author of many works, the most important from the pen of Las Casas Is a general history of the West Indies. It exists In manuscript only, but, as stated before, it Is a fountain from which historians have drawn large supplies. In the course of hls work he mentions certain original papers that were lying before him. Besides the letters and Journals of Columbus, he had the map, formed from study and conjecture, by which Columbus sailed on hls first voyage. These have all been lost to the world. Mr. Vlgnaud evidently Is able to produce strong testimony to combat the words of this venturesome missionary and picturesque chronicler of a romantic time. What he has found will be devoured by an interested world, for every new fact concerning Christopher Columbus sheds light upon one of the most fascinating, bravest, wisest heroes of all ages a lonely, lowly, stoic sea captain whose exploit In addingfor-a hemisphere to civilisation will be ever a story to delight the Imagination. ten-fol- ht ss Ild-rn- ers INDIDA INK IS STILL A SECRET. With all their modern improvements and all their science, none or the advanced nations has been able to produce the equals of the Chinese and Japanese lacquers or India inks. Chemists. Ink manufacturers and artists have tried for generations to discover the secret that enables the Chinese. with primitive processes, to produce these materials In such perfect form, but the secrets still are secrets. The manufacture of India Ink in particular has baffled all foreigners. It Is made in China today practically as It was four generations ago, when Chen Ki Sonen invented the process. The oil is pressed out of the seeds of a certain plant and then set to simmer, while the workman adds a mixture of powdered redwood, grated sandalwood and seeds of almonds and other powders. After the simmering Is ended the result Is filtered and set aside for a long time to settle. Then it is put Into tiny earthen dishes, each of which has a A great wick made out of a reed. are set dishes little these of quantity a la over each placed on bricks, and funnel-shape- d clay cover. Then the wicks are lit, and the soot produced by the burning mass Is caught on the Inside. NO EXCESS FARE CHARGES NICKEL PLATE ROAD. ON best Its trains are composed of thevestl-buled equipment, consisting of through sleeping cars, in both directions, between Chicago, Cleveland, Buffalo, New York, Boston, end intermediate points, with unexcelled Dining Car COLUMBU3. Service, meals being served In Nickel ON NEW LIGHT Plate dining cars on the American Meal Plan, ranging m price from Club dealing records the into In delving luncheon, 5 cents to 1.00; mid-da- y of Christopher affairs with the life and Ameri50 cents. of the Columbus, the secretary Train No. 2. leaving Chicago at 10: 5 can legation In Faria. Henry Vlgnaud, caa. brief to a m., dally, has through vestlbuled haa discovered, according capital, French sleepers for Boston, via Nickel Plate, ble dispatch from the of West Shore and Boston A Maine roads, storles treasured of the many that false. and through vestlbuled sleepers to the greHt adventurer are utterly New York and Intermediate points, via subject the of love mere Prompted by a forNickel Plate and both the Lackawanna musty, Into the American haa dug and so and West Shore roads. overlooked papers, and gotten Train No. 4, leaving Chicago at 2:10 In Columhas made clear those periods m.i daily, has through vestlbuled p. have remaned bus's lire which hitherto cars for Buffalo, New York In those sleeping obscure, particularly formu- and intermediate points. and dream hls great dreamed Train No. 6, leaving Chicago at 0:15 lated his vast design. all be will m., dally, has through vestlbuled as p. Valuable and absorbing cars for Ft. Wayne. Cleveland, ri'scovered.there sleeping has Vlgnaud that Mr. ill Erie, Buffalo. New York and Intermedithat researches hls of Is one result students ate points, arriving at New York City of especial Importance to dec--- res early the second morning. American history. For he not Rates always the lowest. Write, that demonstrate to able Is that he Las or cnll on nearest ticket agent, Bartholomew phone one act recorded by or Chas. E. Johnson, District Passenthe eatly msas as forming part ofconfirmed. lie ger Agent, Nickel Plate road. 205 Cenof Columbus enn be Laa Casas, of tury building, Denver. Colo. Chicago narrative snys that the depot. La Salle and Van Ruren streets. the explorer's of far as this period 5 17, 1905. A MODEL YOUNG MAN. "iMiln't that hurt The sir?" clerical looking gentleman in the rear seat of the nulcy car III rued inqulrlng-Ingl- y to i tie nii ely dressed mid clean cut young man n ho sat beside him as that indi iiiuil winced slightly, for his fool had Just been stepped on hy a portly man who was leaving the car. i very much." he "Yes, e'r, l; said simply. "I thought so." N.iiil the clerical man. "Allow me to congratulate you on your control. I observed with pleasure, sir, that no oath sprang to your lips. Great pleasure to meet a young niun like you. Have a cigar?" Thank you. I don't smoke." said the young man. exclaimed the clerical "Splendid! "1 smoke interrogator. myself because I lead a sedentary life. But I glory in a young man who doesn't. May I inquire, sir, if you know the tate of liquor?" "No. sir. never touehed a drop." Hi new friend cluied him by the hand. There were tears in hls eyes. Remarkable!" lie exclaimed. "In these unregein-ratdays it is indeed soul-m- it Isfylng to gaze upon such a model. May I inquire, my dear rriend. what high motive imid you to abstain from these influence that are sapping the life blood of the nation?" The young man smiled. "t'ertainly," he replied. "The fact is. sir, I find that I cant disstpnte and deal faro bank at the same time. Colliers Weekly. )u, HOUSES TENANTLESS WHITES RIVAL THE NEGROES IN SUPERSTITION. The Real Estate Agenta Woea Upon Investigation tho Real Spooks Are Revealed. (Erinn the Iiuixville Courier-Juuriml- .) "Well, there it gov again; there mut be a ghost lit that house, too," eaid Ihe real estate agent, a the dissatisfied renter closed the door of the office, after announcing that he had prepared to move. He had moved into the house the day before. A lot of ix'ople think the day of ghosi i paxi." said u real estate man. "but any one in my liuineM knows that xjHioks are still plentiful and vigorous. I know of a dozen house right here in Iiiiivllle where ghol have full sway and are never diturbed for more than one night at n time. You have no idea how many people refuse to li c in house that are haunted. It Is worst among the negroes, but there are many white people who have refused to take certain house of superstition. A good-size- d spook I about the worst tenant you can have. I!e canTwenty Years' Trial. not lie found when you want to collect the rent, and it is of no use to take There are lots of good things the legal action against him, for constables doctors know nothing about. We freare unable to serve the paperx Tou quently cure people of disease after the might stand an unselfish ghost, but doctors have given them up. If the none exists. A spook wants the whole disease comes from overwork, dissipahouse to hintself, and he usually has tion or exposure, causing weak and it. He not only refuses to pay him- watery blood and loss of flesh and self. but he will not allow the presence strength, we have the one sure remedy of any one who 1 I Mine enough to con- In Gr. Gunn's Blood and Nerve Tonic. These tablets taken with meals turn sider that formullty a necessity. "This is not my first experience by the food Into rich red blood, making any means. Many times I have had strong, steady nerves and Increasing houses in nty charge and discovered the strength, producing solid flesh at that they were useless as producers of the rate of 1 to S pounds per week. This revenue on account of the presence of means health. Druggists sell Dr. active ghosts. It does not take long Gunn's Blood and Nerve Tonic for 75e to discover the presence of the flimsy per box, or I boxes for $2. For nervous tenant. You rent the nouse and the prostration, loss of memory, or a pale, new tenant moves In. The next day sallow complexion, a better remedy he appears at your office and aays that was never made.. Doctors know nothhe has found that the rooms are un- ing about this remedy, only the fact suited to his needs; that the cellar la tbat we make cures, which we have damp; that the walls are not good; been doing for twenty years. For snle that the flues are unsafe; that the by Wallace Drug Co. plumbing is bad, or some other similar Is It true that you and Bliggina no complaint. He will not listen to your apeak?" longer remedied, faults the have to promises Yea He la one of those hopelessly because, he says, he has found a house Insisted on that suits him better. He goes sway dlaeagreeable people. lie huc-better and moves out before nightfall. This calling attention to how dollar than time watch hls my keeps hut in most once any house, occur may Washington Star. If it Is repeated two or three times, you 5200 chronometer." know the real reason of the sudden departure Is not being divulged, and that a spook has asserted hls priority of occupancy. "I have murdered a number of ghosts In cold blood that is. my blood was In gold at the time of the execution TO- most cases. There Is only one way to deal with a ghost. You must find how he makes hls noise. He canot make AND THE He must have a noise by himself. creaky staircase, or a loose board somewhere, and when you take away hia means of making hls presence VIA known, he is murdered, and that Is the of habit end of him. If he is in the or groaning be la using a twisted flue can some crevice through which he blow hia breath, and if you take it away he ceases to breathe. RAILWAY Ghosts usually Inhublt old houses, that find will while you a but once in THROUGH SCENIC a spook takes up hls abode In a house before the builder has time to move In. The timbers of all houses shrink or '' expand in course of time, and It may FERTILE be that an Improperly placed timber KANSAS and MISSOURI will soon shrink after it Is put In. "When I want to find a ghost I go PULLM A N to a house about 11 o'clock at night and SLEEPING CARS, remain there until morning. The ghost OBSERVATION about usually makes himself knownwhim DINING CARS. of the be midnight This may Electric lights, the ghost family, or It may be caused electric Fans, by the fact that people are naturally vitalchair Cars that and reclining suspicious at that time, (tsarsDAYncs), ity la then at Its lowest ebb. COACHES I know a house In Igiulsvllle which was haunted for years. The ghost apTickrTs, Fv Isrilif, FMfcre, tic., ufrtss a ghastly peared Immediately after shot murder. The owner of the place hia wife in her bedroom and then killed himself. The next night groans were H. C. TOWNSEND, It heard, and report, of course, hadeach that the unhappy spirit came backof the night at mldnlghb the time murder and wailed about hls former dwelling. The house came Into my charge about three years ago. and Bfter I found that It was useless to try to get any one to stay In it, aa long as the to extermighost remained, I decided went to the nate him. Accordingly, I house one night and listened. I found the room where the murder had been eominittetd. It was a large apartment on the second floor. The house Is of is a peculiar construction, and there flue running up through the center of the building. "About midnight when the cars had stopped passing and the neighborhood the lapsed into perfect quiet. I heard sort first sound. It was a sad. pathetic of a groan. I remembered how It made like my blood tingle. I felt all over to sleep. your foot does when It goes control of It took me some time to gain at varied came The groans myself. Intervals, low or loud, short and It was like the wail of a lost soul. But I took my lantern and The Mott Laxorioss Train ta the World from which approached In the directionI assure you. went slowly, Compartment and drawing-roo- m It enme. I and I am not ashamed to say that I sleeping cart, observation cart, dinmy hand, grasped a pistol tightly inwould and library ing cars, have It though little service bath with and Book-love-rs cars, barber, Finally done if I had met a real ghost electric was entire train Library; I found the origin of the noise. It In the flue, at a point about aa high as lighted, through to Chicago without my head. I marked the place carefully I change. Direct connection (nr and the next day took workmen to the spot. Upon Investigation we found a St. Paul Minneapolis brick pushed out into the chimney and bullet a I found Tlckcti, Mfervatkins. and full flattened ngalnst It ran be obtained from one probably fired by the murderer A. Walker, General Asent, C wife. hls with waa when he strugling North-Westethe and rn present 'It was easily fixed, Ry. Chicago & tenants have no Idea that their house Atlaa Second 38 South Weft St., Bldg., was once the home of so evil a spirit Salt Lake City, Utah. Nwiao as was reputed to live there before the brick was put back In place." four Leaders Farmers Union Smith-fiel- d Flour Chase and Sanborns Teas and Coffees Morrells Hams and Bacon Batavia Canned Fruits and Vegetables To thorn; who have list'd these famous brands, no comment is UL'ccrisurv. To those who have not, we tiimjily pay: e Try Them YOU WILL WANT MORE EDGAR JONES CO. Both Phones 124. 3SS Struut. Twuntx-fift-h J. E. President. Dooly, Horaco Peary, Ralph E. Hoag, Cashier. A. V. Mclntonh.Assistsnt Cashier Vice-Preside- UTAH NATIONAL BANK of OGDEN, UTAH UNITED 8TATES DEPOSITORY. PAYS INTEREST ON 8AVING8 DEACCOUNT8 AND TIME POSITS. Through Service ST. LOUIS CAST Eye Glasses Are becoming if filled correctly. I have all the different styles and make a a;eclalty of fitting them comfortably anil properly before the eyes. No charge for examination. Missouri Pacific J. T. RUSHMER EXPERT MF'G OPTICAN. At the nig Specks. COLORADO Limited long-drawn-o- ut. buffet-smoki- Riverdale or Phoenix Flour CO.SVSiOht will no longer remain a question once RIVERDALE or PHOENIX Flour is in your larder, ror then the resuli of your baking are light, white, wholesome loaves pleasing to view and healthful to consume. MADE BY OGDEN MILLING & ELEVATOR COMPANY Allen Transfer Co. ng I Albern Allen, Mgr. Phone 22. 412 25th Street and 1 Eastern Corn-fe- d Beef Ballard & Rinckers 331 TWENTY-FOURT- H 8TREET. |