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Show DAILY 1 1 1 h Hm UTAH W IS DIED abused vermiform appendix. I JOURNAL, A (Simple PEASANT more profitable. lie who would invest (irotltatily must either know the mining industry, or he must depend upon some individual of good reputation who Is Informed. There are hundreds of honest mining engineers men who value their 11 MacEwen, M. . Reglu Frofessor of Surgery. Unlver-(p- y slr william city of Glasgow.) o very imper-requt- lowed the ingestion of food too quickly , hi. body of our. to permit of the peristiilMls acting to submit It to the the whole length of the small through are et . which Intestine. .m revtifli-ation"UnW? Observations on the Interior of the recommmended to be carwmetiin caecum seen through defects in its il0,ne, ,nt0 the world? Deau-Twalls showed that there were differr not content with the AiHform of the cranium, apply ences in the amount und fluidity of tifl nd the head, of their the secretion exuding from its mucous SSn African. and surface. When Irritated mechanically wwrd. offeprWP Wander. transnx mew the flow of exudate was greater and and place ring and more fluid. At a variable Interval afwWLTVhrouBh them. The Chines ter a meal one or two hours perishigh arch In the feet of taltic effects In the colon ensued, result.very produce bringing the toe. and ing in the extrusion of its contents, their Either We .mile at these and shortly after a clear, thick fluid and call them dl.tor- wus poured from the secreting caeca! pr0VfnI' surface, and in several Instances wus thie seen to exude In considerable quantity a male child I. bom in 1P2 mim consider It necessary from the appendicular orifice. A On one occasion quite a stream of be clrcumciied. Ttnthl fluid poured from the appendix just belater the tonsil, are 'J fore the chyme began to pass through 1. followed by the al still valve. When chyme tonall; the pharyngeal the ever- passed through this valve it did so in an becomes , appendix hieh Is only allayed small quantities at a time, and there In a were occaalonal pauses in which the been bai placed aben that al valve seemed to close there la at present the about discontent probably by a reflex action. This flulj lv expressed Smentsry tract Some are pereuaded from the caecum and the appendix was too ja an Jnteatlnal whorl re- - lnvxarlably alkaline. al Usually the flow from the that this extra whorl It la vealve waa alow, the material passing be an into the caecum in email quantities, alleged that the stomach Is be which elide over the orifice of the apwould body human the nwhich seat chief the It be pendix and get smeared by the exudathough !fUiretion of albuminous substances, tion therefrom as well aa mixed with Jrtftrtth small intestine should take the exudation from the general caecal cavity. STthe large Intestine Is by some It seems as though there were a conal nhvSolofists regarded as a useless valve regulattrol over the an-Ethe amount of material which bequeathed to us by our ing ancestors. of Httle importance as paseea from the email Intestine into the caecum. If the valve by any means goes and mainly function similar to that of be rendered patent the contents of the Udder. In like manner, after email Intestine flow quickly Into the remaining waste matter caecum and a troublesome escape of recepta-!,Th- e material ensues maSuSte. in the intestinal colon, where It remains for a terial which haa missed the caecel dithe gestion. When this agency is interltod. but where It may stagnate, aboccurs, fered with caecal Indigestion moducts of putrefaction being orted and thereby becoming harmful which generally ends in diarrhoea of paritally digested matter, but which to the individual It is boldly asserted that the large occasionally leads to musses of matter intestine and Its appendix are at least gathering in the caecum and causing generally antagonistic to constipation, with subsequent fomeii-tativ- e superfluous, man. action of a kind which is apt to health and baneful to the life of attbe would removal their result In Irritation of the mucoue memthat and ended by happy rcauHs. home who brane and appendix. removal The appendix Is regarded as a mere M tor as to advocate the scruple diverticulum of the caecum and yet It Ibe colon have no or lta vascular and nervous supply perthe - caeca! condemning in All Agree that tains more to that of the email Intesvermiform appendix. n, this Is a rudimentary and useless or tine than that of the colon. the Incompetency When it is recollected that the cirthrough threatened cular muscles of the caecum are conwhich life Is constantly and many times lost. Some persons tinuous with those of the appendix the longitudinal caecal have been so much Impressed by this and that Ides that they are uneasy until the apthemselves on the appendix bands end some it will be understood how pendix has been removed, and easily the surgeons say that while operating for nervous apparatus of the appendix other purposes they never miss the may initiate the larger movements of opportunity of relieving their patients the caecum by first Inducing moveof s possible source of danger by ments in the appendix and how Inhithe normal appendix from the bition of these movements may cause iMaaen. caecal disturbance. The same agency FoHlUy I may be out of fashion by control of the vascular supply will with the times, as I cannot And such regulate the exudation from the apimperfections in the normal human pendix and that in accordance with body u tie alleged. On the contrary, the Impulse received from the email the more one looks Into the human Intestine. body sod im it work, the better one Let ua look now to the character undentind. it and the more one Is and power of this exudation emanatbeauKtrm-with the wondrous utility, ing from the appendix and caecum. ty and harmony of all its parts. In the first part of the large intestine, Comparative anatomy shows us that and especially In the caecum and apIn the lower forms of life, such as in pendix. the lympatblc follicles STORY INTRIGUE OF EASTERN TOLD BY TOLSTOY. re Czar Alexandtr I. Changed Life With a Serf and Died as a Convict in Siberia. reputations as W 1m-he- Jr. re-rt- HKRL1X. June ctsar, Mln-rlii- . Alexander I., told by Count Leo Tolstoy. Ak will t,e remembered, there was inure than a suspicion that Alexander took iiiirt In the assassination of his father. Csar Paul. This so weighed on his conscience afterward that he retired to the town of Tog.inrog, where he lived for a time ns a plain burin." One day as he was walking near the town he came upon a soldier, Michael Slllne, dying from the effects of 4,000 lashes administered by the soldiers of his ,own regiment. When Alexander saw him his back waa a mass of quivering, bloody flesh, and he was seised with horror that suen things were done in hla name. He broke down and nobbed like a child. The soldier was placed on a stretcher and carried to the hospital. The czar followed and asked the surgeon who bandaged the wounds of the dying aoldier: "Doctor, ia it pos sible that this man can recover?" The surgeon, fearing to tell the csar the truth, stammered something, but Alexander forced him to admit that the victim's back was broken in two places and that his death was a matter of a few hours at most. "In that case. Alexander said. "I have a favor to ask from you. But you must swear that you will never betray my secret" The surgeon swore by his loyalty to his csar, and Alexander continued, taking a golden key from hla pocket. Here is the key to my bedroom, bring the soldier in there. I will undress ana you will give me his clothes and I will take his place." The next morning it was announced to the world that Alexander had died and the body of the soldier. Michael Sillne, was sent to St. Petersburg in a sealed coffin. Two weeks later the real Alexander was tied to a post to receive 4.000 more lashes, the rest of the punishment of Michael Slllne. He stood his torture with great and survived as by a miracle. When his wounds had healed he waa banished to a village in Siberia under his assumed name. He was allowed a certain amount of freedom here and learned to till the soil and work with the MouJIks, and soon became known because of his many charitable deeds among the poor. One day two new prisoners arrived. One of them waa very sick, and Michael Slllne waa sent for to nurse him. Alexander looked at him and recognized one of hie former servants. The prisoner immediately recognised his old master and threw himself down before him and began to cover his hands with kesses. Alexander ordered all the others to leave the room and said: "You will not betray my secret. I will tell It to everybody," the man replied and fell in a faint. When he of Lleberkuhn are very numerhad gone, and ous and well developed, the latter being recovered Alexander when he told the others whom the suplarger, deeper and broader than the Slllne was, they corresponding cells in the email in- posed Michael testine and the goblet cells which they searched the neighborhood for him, but contain are larger and more abundant. In vain. He Is said to hare died as a hermit, This all histologists admit. So closely are those glands packed together in living In a cabin in the woods. But the the caecum that the united surface peasants claim that he Is still living, presented by them is immensely larger and that many have met him In the than the ridges between the glands, Ural mountains. which la all that is left at this place for Don Quixote. absorption. So that the histological structure would point to the caecum Advents we of great and small. greet and appendix being made for digestive Much we extol that may not live. Yet to the new-botype we give purposes rather than for absorption. No care at all! The succus enterlcus which is Is by these cells of Lleberkuhn Bo This year, three centuries past, by age of great assistance In digestion. More maimed than by Lepantn's flight. This year Cervantes gave to light powerful Is It that while pancreatic His matchless page. Juice alone took six hours to dissolve fibrin and had not even attacked white Whence first outrode th' immortal Pair d The Hero and his bind of an egg In ten hours, the addition of To make sad laughter for mankind; some succus enterlcus to the pancrewhence And they fare. atic Juice dissolved the fibrin in from where Thronghout all Fiction still, three to ten minutes, and the coagucnance lated white of an egg In from three to Allies Life's dullness with Its dreams six minutes. Allies what Is with what hut seems Fact and Romance Taking the appendix apart, though one there are individual differences, O Knight of fire and Squire of earth! sees In most appendices that the surO changing between The aim too nigh, the aim too mean, face Is covered with glands of Liber I hail your birth. kuhn in an active state of secretion during health. If one takes the ap- Three centuries past. In sunburned pendix at an average of three and a Spain, And hang, on Times Pantheon wall half inches and lines that space with votive tablet to recall InMy glands of Llberkuhn encircling the That laating gain! terior it is seen that a considerable Austin Dobson. amount of succus enterlcus may be more nlone, exuded from that surface Statesman Needed at Home. especially as it is abundantly supplied Col. BUI" Sterrett eat in a Washwith blood. ington hotel lobby grumbling about Therefore the secretion or the appendix viewed alone in this sense the cold and miserable weather. Down In my Texas home, be snort would be a valuable aid to digestion and the excision of that organ, except ed, "the peach trees are probably condition diseased in a hopelessly blooming, the scent of the spring manifestly Improper. grass Is in the nlr, and I suppose my children are going swlmmln. Oh, Cured Be Cannot Deafness I don't know, said Northern acby local applications, as they cannot quaintance. "I have Just received s reach the diseased portion of the ear. letter from s friend of mine who Is down there. He says the Texans art There is only one way to cure deafness, and that le by constitutional enjoying a fuel famine, while the remedies. Deafness is caused by an woods are frozen up. Garden truck Is inflamed condition of the mucoue lindead, and Ink, whisky and molasses When are frozen hard. ing of the Eustachian Tube. "Yes, there yon this tube is Inflamed you have a rum- are," said Sterrett, "the minute I come bling sound or Imperfect hearing, and up to this country they let things go when it la entirely dosed. Deafness is to rack and ruin." the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube Huge Task. restored to lta normal condition, hearnine will be destroyed forever; ing It was a huge task to undertake the cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an In- cure of such a bad case of kidney disflamed condition of the mucoue sur- ease as that of C F. Collier of Cherokee, la., hut Electric Bittera did It He faces. My kldneye were so far gone We will give One Hundred Dollars writes: for any case of Deafness (caused by I could not sit in a chair without a catarrh) that cannot be cured by cushion; and suffered from dreadful Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circu- backache, headache, and depression. In Electric Bitters, however. I found a lars free. F. J. CHENET ft CO., cure, and by them waa restored to Toledo, O I recommend this Sold by Druggieta, 75c. perfect health. tonic medicine to all with weak great Take Hall's Family Pills for I kidneys, liver or stomach. Guaranteed 1h 5 lleo-caec- lleo-caec- short-circuite- he h.ld. "It is on 1 !.r e dls-!tli- ng aeml-dlgeat- or-.a- ng ed I fot-tltu- ami-gland- s and reptiles, the fish, batrachlans caecal appendages do not exist, the small and large Intestines forming a continuous tube. Higher the scale of one life, is In birds and mammals, sees at the Junction of the small with the large Intestine one and sometime, two pouches In which the food undercertain process .of digestion begoes fore it la passed Into the colon. In the carnlverous mammal., as In dogs and cats the caecum la rudimentary. or absent, and the colon is short and uncomplicated. On the other hand. In the herblvora, which do not chew the cud. aa in the horse and the rabbit, the caecum is enormously developed, being much larger than the stomach, and forming pocket occupying the greater portion of the abdomen. Han. if not an omnivorous animal. at least a carnivorous and herblvor-ou- s one: therefore would expect man to by analogy one possess not only a stomach and small but Intestine, o a caecum. Just as he has. During his practice frequent opport- unities present themselves by means of openings made for the relief or Pathological conditions or brought !out by troumatlsm or disease, for observation of digestion os carried out n the various portions of the alimen"bile such observations ts ve. from the very nature of things. Rment8ry ant incomplete, and in lui this respect not comparable to practiced on the lower vnima!. and further having the dlsad-ife of being seen through patho- still they posses, une "roundings, eompensjtting value from having upon man himself. th caecum through def't.brVlv the abdominal wall, it is when In a physiological con- conZen U,"V 'rbert undergoes In form. 1Rlu',atins heln broader and Rome-- b tiniMbT nfa,w' Rn occasionally there movement- - At first such movMnpmi" to be erratic, but ,ert some of them which iPMiwnti ni lh snuiMM SShR,:Ly n lta through ne' In aoine patients, tak, into the a caecal movement coTmMnpnhrr b,ow upward as if pulilve Tn ,natance this seemed to correiMna0." tb inaiMn? l., a Iristaltic action of not be TT discovered, bnt ,n olhera Intestine could and In them it fol- - ama11 tea w interests lie together, dont they? they? Don't they? rn ex-ud- pd js give-and-ta- ;11( :n legltlui:i(t busli.i-s- line Hdvlce ore, and when the men in charge have their own money Invested and ure there with serious business Intent, the chances for large profits are good Just as good as in manufacturing, agriculture, trade, or and the stock offered to the public to rats the money for driv- ing tunnels and sinking shafts, erecting a hoisting plant, and perhaps a mill for treating the ore or else a railroad to convey it to a smeltThat ing works. the men who know transportation In fact, the profits are usually mueh larger on the eapltal Invest ed." IT DEPENDS ON THE MEN AND THE MINE One of the direct- ora and original In- . corporators and owners of the Silver King mine referred to above. Is W. V. RICE of Salt Lake City. The Sliver King haa paid during a period of less than eight years, dividends in excess of ten million dollars. It la now paying dividends at silver-lea- d known mine in the w orld. alThe Daly-Wes- t, so referred to In the foregoing, Is a combination of properties that were merged five years ago. One of these, known at the Quincy mine, at the time of the merger. had produced 12.000.- 000 worth ol ore In a period of fifteen months, and has paid dividends of 1- ,- -- JAMES FARRELL was the principal owner oZ the Quincy and he is now part owner of the The consulting en gineer or W. V. RICE, JAMES FARRELL and associates Is J. H. Shockley. Mr. st. Daly-We- Shockley Is a mining engineer of twenty years' study, research and practical experience In mining in all its phases. For upwards of a year Engineer Shock- - district. James Far- and James Farrell have decided to give investors an opportunity to partake of the future prospects of the Gibraltar Mines 500,000 Syndicate. shares of stock or tr.e par value of S1.00 have been placed in the treasury, and 100.000 of these are nffjredto the public for subscription at 53 cents per share. The entire capitalisation Of th company is 1,- 500.000 shares or the par value of ll.oo, and all share are fully paid and non assessable. This offer la made, not because the Incorporators are in need of any money, but because it is the practice of all mining companies, in ordei to make a market .value for their secur V. Rice Gibraltar Mines Syndicate has been Incorporated to operW. V. ate them. Rice Is president and James Farrell is a director of the new corporatlon. J. H. Shockley's report on the property of the Gibraltar Mines Syndicate is, in part, as follows: "On the Equitable group there are at least five distinct veins. gold bearing Judging from wnat is in sight it Is safe to without area. No Secret About that the MAKERS J. E. Dooly, President. Horace Peery, Ralph E. Hoag, Cashier. A. V. Mclntoeh,Aesistant Cashier UTAH NATIONAL BANK ofOaokN, UTAH UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY. PAYS INTEREST ON 8AVINGS ACCOUNT8 AND TIME . OGDEN STATE BANK H. CL Bigelow, President. J. 51. Browning, A. P. Bigelow, Cashier. R. A. Moves. Aslstant Cashier. Dr. WT" graphs and other mailed will pai-tlcul- be on shows Kings New Discovery FOR Price 50c A $1.00 C Free Trial. Surest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB-- . LES, or MONEY BACK. URIC ACID In the blood causes Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lumbago, Neuralgia and Gout You can remove the cause by wearing one of our REX RHEUMATIC RINGS share. press Prospectus, notices, maps, engineer's reports, photo- cough CURE the LUNGS and It is bound lo become, 110.00 per share Is not an exaggerated idea of what the price should be within a year or two. Every lesson mat has been taugnt practical and successful mining men will be used to the lasting advantage of the Gibraltar Mines Syndicate, and everything that backing by men of fortune can do for the credit of the company will be done. Reserva t i o n of shares can be telegraphed or mailed Ui W. H. Clark, secretary. Gibraltar Mines Syndicate. Exchange Goldfield. Building. Nevada, and remittances should follow by mall In full at the price of 55 cents per those how much we try to advance the business interests of our customers in every legitimate way. In so doing our motives may be tinctured with selfishness, for upon the prosperity of our patrons lies the success of this bank. In every department you will find ua prepared to serve you in a satisfactory manner. KILLthe min- ing engineers say corporators are willing at any time to take these shares and pay for them at the market value. It is. of course, impossible at this time to prognosticate the future value of the shares, company's hut if the property on Manufactured by th Rex Rheumatic Wag Co., Hertford, Coseecdcut PRICC $2.00 leu Paul W. SLecher Ogden, Utah It It la no secret that for Cuts, Burns, Ulcer. Fever Sores, Sore Eyes, Bolls, etc., nothing is so effective as Buck-len- 's Arnica Salve. "It didn't take long to cure a bad sore I bad. and It lr all O. K. for sore eyes, writes D. X Gregory of Hope, Tex. 25c at Ogden druggists. Peery Bros. Milling Company Vice-Preside- that it Is the now offered to provide ample funds to operate the properly and put the company on a dividend paying Should that basis. he necessary, however, 400,000 shares remain, and the in- development, The Money Back Flour recommend- ing one solitary mining Investment, to be enabled at last to feel Justified In writing a favorable report "In an experience of twenty years active milting throughout the west, no series of gold veins hav come under the observation of the writer which had better showings with like development and like ities. and to provide funds for development work for a property that is already paid for in cash and turned over to the company absolutely free of indebtedness to sell a limited number of shares of treasury stock. The money that will be realized from the sale of this stoca will be used for development work. It Is not believed that It will be necessary to dispose of any more than try it? mining regions of the west and the expenditure of much money say that they vary from two to forty shares Flour is the best advertisement of its goodness. Why not satisfaction, after many months of travel through the partners, company called GOLD MINE BACKED BY MEN OF FORTUNE W. Crescent High Patent three-quarte- rell at once went to examined Bullfrog, the properties, and purchased them in the Interests of himself. W. V. Rice and their A trial ortlur for Vice-Preside- nt feet In width. Average samples taken from the exposures on the different veins show from fourteen to thirty-si- x dollars per ton. or course selected ore can be had which runs rnuen higher. These veins belong to the same fissure tone ns those of the Tramp, Kcllpse and Denver aeries on adjoining properties, and can be traced on the surface for nearrs of a ly mile, and wherever opened will pan and show good values In gold. "I have no hesl fancy in saying that the property possesses for greater Inducements as a mining Investment than ordinarily offered, and the chances are more than favorable that it will make a mine. It is with full confidence the above statement is made, and It is with high -- the rate of 11,300,000 per year. The Silver King is the greatest 300.000. ley haa been engaged in the Inspection of "prospects" in a dozen states and had turned them down us either unworthy or not I in in e d 1 a t e ly promising, when hr came into southern Nevada In January of this year. After four months of observa( tion and examination of the properties In Go1d Tonopan, field and Bullfrog districts, he enthusiasadvised tne tically of the purchase Equitable group or claims, the Morris and Phillips group, and the Ugly Duckling and Comet claims, aggregating 135 acres, and situated on Bonanza Mountain In. the cen ter of the Bullfrog Argument mil- are railways convenient to handle the the mine is liuauced of and brains, s the the in always lions telling their own story of the profit In mining for those who use discretion and business When judgment. mining property ha.. been prospected by men of the right sort; when the district is a good prowhen there ducer; quantity, ability ;m,l foresight are ns suie to i out i:i that field as in ny. The man who seek milling' stocks, and who will exercise the same care and discretion as in other Investments, will find them much half-erase- -- price- f such trained and educated im-that the earth Is opened up, veins tested by frequent IkiIIiiks with the diamond drill, ml then. If the gold or silver is found In ailll,j niiiiliiR ;lS in Oi, y m "Or Kti.pi,-- . mon- lleo-caec- Sj find it profitable is proien, not only by instances cited. but by tne rustoij of such properties as the DALY - WEST. SILVER KIND, and Horn Silver of Utah. IV Laliur of Idaho, Portland and Small Hope of Uolorado. and St. Joseph of Missouri. each of which lias away into the. millions. a,,,, so the figures run less. men who would not allow themselves la be connected with a shady enterprise. The advice of suoi men is a safe guide. aa the " sincere j:it advice of a Wall st sect magnate would le safe If it could That the Russian died as a convict in 20. lleo-caec- 3S PAGE THREE. TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 1905. UK EMPE LIGHT ON THE MUCH SOME NEW 1 STATE MEN AND WOMEN. Um Biz W tnr ssastniw. dfMhsrsaaJsflsBiMUMia or clnnihw w broon sot utrtu sod mm. mow PsislnM, IImlVUSCWMIUlCl. emit or soiaosoo. l Sold by Dnnhtz or mM In slslo wroppar. hr npim, propsld. fix lmuiina of wsooss f 1 C. J. A. Lindquist UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER Open AU Night Bell Phone I20X. Independent 129 2420 Waehhigtua A vu. Ogdsa, lit. h. |