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Show V- t - -. Ttani Hits NEWS SIM Kidney KJdT FIVE MONTHS IJIINES AND MINING NORTHWEST NOTES ARY t i Trsiilc ini Ifcier Snspect It IMs-- M Kastm , pm The total output of precious metals rrf of prvvwleaer Most people do not realize the Harming increase and remarkable ot kidr.cyui-ea,-hilektdne) liis Th total value of I.), ltru kit. i in; AFFECTS POETRY. -- v Orfls Boy Editor Boy A lady with some poetry. How old? Bout 18. Editor What! once, boy. ! Show her In 1 at A Railroad Mana Knock. That famous railroad man, the late Samuel Sloan, said a New York banker, loved fast trains and hated slow ones. They tell a story about a trick be once played on a railroad whose service was notoriously slow. "Having seyertSf times, to use thie " railroads afternoon accommodation, he caused a sign to be painted, which he took from his pocket and hung in . the front of one of the cars when nobody was looking. The sign said: Passengers are requested not to pluck flowers while the train is in motion. , - Surety Nd Smoker. The bishop of London at a ffhtner in Washington told a story as the cigars came on about one of his predecessors. "When Dr. Creighton was bishop of London, be said, "he rode on a train one day with a small, meek curate. "Dr. Creighton, an ardent lover of tobacco, soon took out his cigar case, and with a smile, he said: "You dont mind my smoking, I suppose? " "The meek, pale little curate bowed and answered humbly: " Not if your lordship doesnt mind my being sick. Hows This? W offer Ono Hundred Dollars Hewsrd for eny ooao of CtierrL that caaaot bo cared by Hail a Caiarrb Cura. y. j. CHKXXY CO., Toledo. O. known T.J. Cheney Wa. tho undersigned, bare boo-rubfor tbu laat 15 yaaie. and bo I tore him perfectly la all buitneaa trnnsaeUons and SuanctaJlf Aria. bis bjr Belt stole to carry out obligations Maarur. Wauotxo. Kmnn Whole, ale Druggists. Toledo. O. Internally, acting Haifa Catarrh Caro la taken and raucow aurtacoe of the directly upon the bloodeen five, Price 75 oeota pel Tmtlmoiilele (retain. bottle. Sold by el Draggle. tor eonetlpatloa. Taka liall'e r am ly Pule ut Money for Foreign Missions. The average American church member gives 54 cents to foreign missions. The record is held by the United Presbyterians, who give $1.77 a member. OixirsfSenna act geatlyyet prompt- ly on the bowels, cleanses ne system ejj actually, assists one in overcoming Habitual constipation permanently. To get its bene icial ejects buy tke genuine. Manufactured by the CAUFORNIA Pc Syrup Co. SOLO Bf IDUXNO DRUCGTCTV -- 804 fwWTTlL ri ,t nthi In a hen w 1 pent- dii , ini ur.ihle , su Mj it i me umldut ' ill '111 Ii Mill-. iii l..ifi tlli-- li III at till til .1 Tie IP- . 'Wil Ml-- I 1M- 4 ,i m ' - Hi ot ' ii oi.c -, III oF Va Wil- - ..'ul two glrla w coming j 1! men in Sing Sing mil. than 200 w!io art.ivn.g u ii'n ate UhtiMn - ilimni-- , turm-iheb) Mra it uliim'oii Itooili 1rison league. A tia ! file in the know studs Oil the de- Soutlu rn l'a irtc n ar Tiuekee telall off laveil main Pains and cut egiaph coiiipuaiieation with the east for a time ( raeUsmt n titered the postoffice at Campbell Cal blew open the safe, and ahspaitid $7"0 in stamps and1 S Mu in ii in ou Hooking fil'd in - -- , gritnlm.h in an Tioaul of commis- tor peeipn missions has re- celled adui's tiom the Interior ot severe unusually Turkey slowng famine conditions Fhe persons were burned to death in a fire that destroyed the house of Mass John Clark at Watertown, of Clark the family member Every met death in the flames As the result of the explosion of a quantity of dynamite at Ottawa, Ills., upwards of a dozen houses were wrecked and glass was shattered in more than fifty homes. Bertram Sommers, of Los Angeles, shot and killed his little boy, aged b years, having mistaken him for a burglar. The child, slc-v- it is believed, was walking in his arrested In Italians Seventeen with being memcharged Pittsburg, bers of the Black Hand society, have received sentences of from thirty to ninety days in the workhouse. John Andrews, formerly chief clerk In the comptrollers office In Atlantic City, N. J.. has been found guilty on charges of forgery and embezzlement of sums aggregating about $24,000. Robbers entered the home of Cameron Cool, the race horse breeder, at West Pittston, Pa., and after fracturing his skull with a blunt instrument, robbed him of $390. He cannot survive. j In Roosevelt place, a street In Kansas City, triplets were born to Mr. and Mrs. Barton Curry on December 23. The babies are a girl and two boys, and the mother is doing well. Curry Is a laboring man. ' Albert C. Loenhart, a carpenter, was mysteriously murdered at Tucson, Arizona. It is believed be was murdered by highwaymen who were frightened away before they had time to go through his pockets. Wallace Dyal, a woodman employed at a turpentine still about eighteen miles from Waycross, Ga., was shot down by a crowd of negroes who were Before fighting among themselves. dying he shot and killed two negroes. The Assizes court at Paris, France, has sentenced Gustave Herve, the leader, to one years imprisonment and to pay a fine of 730 for defaming the army and navy and inciting the troops to mutiny by his writings. Jackson Stllley, 50 years old, a well known resident of West Elizabeth, Pa. while stealthily trying to escape the eyes of the younger members ot the family and hide Christmas presents, fell down a stairway and broke his neck. Milton B. Owen, 19 years of age, is mnder arrest, charged with attempting to kill the entire family of his employer, Richard Owens, of the town of Algoma, Wls., by putting poison Into the teapot Sunday night. He B&id he thought It would be fun to kill the i family. Charles Schroff, proprietor of a saloon and bowling alley in Buffalo, N. Y was shot and killed by Ms son Charles, aged 23. Schroff, Sr., had been drinking heavily, and quarreled with his wife, and, it is said, struck her, when she called upon her son to protect her. A 25 per cent increase over the same period last year In the Immigration from all countries Is shown In the November statement of the bureau of immigration. In that month tJ7,476 immigrants arrived at the various ports, against 94,621 in November, 1906. trainer William Bell, an animal known to circus men throughout the country, dropped dead at Kansas City of heart disease Bell, who was known as Texas, was 55 years old. He was one of the few men who r could control Rajah, the famous elephant. It Is estimated that about 500 Mexicans with their families are destitute In Los Angeles at the An effort will be made to present. charter a freight train and send to Mexico. The remainder will have to be looked after by the local charitable Institutions. ; The publication of a retraction of Statements made In the New York American and Evening Journal in October concerning William Astor Chan-le- r with the case of Raymond Hitch-pocmay result in the abandonment of the criminal libel proceedings Instituted by Mr. Chanter. Tin sinners development the according to those who aie familiar wilh that section of Nevada. Tnrt-- e ot the lirgi.--i mines City aie to close down temporarily at least until metal eondiiions get betti r Our l.oou men will be thrown out of employ u.t nt a a result of the shut low n '1 lie lirg'-s- i copper smelters in the wmld capable ot handling the pro-ik t ui what is now believed to be the most txtensivt- eopper deposit in the woild, aie now m course of erection in White Pine county, Nevada. ('onsuleialile suipiike Is occasioned m I'lnli mimnsr cmles by the fact that the Uintah Ticasiiie UiU Mining company, owning the old Uintah Treasure Hill and the Creole properties in 1aik City, has been closed down, temporarily at least The entire output of borax in the United States is derived from Ban llernai ilino, Inyo and Ventura counties, Calitornia, and up to and including 1906 the greater part of it has come from San Bernardino county. The present depression in mining will have the direct effect of intro ducing many improvements and new economies in working, more particularly in the methods of ore treatment, tt declaimed by many of the wise Aim anti-militar- y ( man-kille- able-bodie- d sea-e- - - 46,-33- 4 HE WAS SCARED. Not long ago a large clothing house in New York received a letter from the remote smitbweit tu tills effect; Wbat is the proper dress for a groom in he afternoon?" The clerk who opened the mail re-ferrtd the inquh to the liiui depart- , and the head of that department dictated a brief reply: Bottle green coat, trousers, with top boots, silk bat and cockade. We can make ion pi Ices" In about a week came a plaintive note: I always knew it was expensive to get married, but can't joti suggest something a little lebs elaborate? fawn-colore- SUFFERED ght treated by doctors far years for a bad case of eczema on my leg, They did their besL but failed to cure It. My doctor had advised me to'have my log cut off. At What Bstter Proof la There? thli time my leg was peeled from the Jackson Heaven bleea himl He knee, my foot was like a piece of raw showed confidence in me when the flesh, and I had to walk on crutchea. clouds were dark and threatening. I bought a set ot Cutlcura Remedlea. Wilson In what wayT After the first two treatments the Jackaon He lent me an nmbrellat swelling went down, and in two Stray Stories. months my leg was cured and the new akin came on. The doctor was surprised and said that he would use Cutlcura for his own patients. I have now been cured over seven years, and but for the Cutlcura Remedlea I might have lost my life. Mrs. J. B. ki Renaod, 277 Mentana St, Montreal, Qua, Feb. 20, 1907. I have been twenty-fiv- e limit' !llli ground--nervousl- Important to Mot More. Examine caretully every bottle 6f CASTOR1A a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Alway. Bought Foiled. "I guess I cant collect that money Mf. Jones owe me." "Why dont you mail him a statement? "I was doing to, but a sign on the letter box says Post No Bills. 1 fittfcnraliUD himself la the head was 61 years old. Already the result of their work 1 Is manifesting Itself. In the past twelve months Nevada has sdded more to the world's wealth than ever before. In that time more have been discovered, more niine farms hay been started, more pi pF bv come to the state, and mUe industries have been established' during any previous year.-- 1 thar Positively cared by these Lillie fills. They else relieve Die. trees troas PyspepeU, la digestion eadToe Hearty bUnf. A perfect raw edf for PlnlttM, Xw see, Drowsiness, Bed Tests la tke Month, Cost ed Ton rue. Pels la the Side, TORPID LIVES. They regulate the Bowels. Po,! Vegetable, SMALL FILL. SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Facsimile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES SPOT GSI1 rOR tOLDKRt fatoral AND HKIM 4r W w)w$ luptH 99 nWlpra DM Dltd tree nd wbu boiMraf-dWJAcwra bnCnff JenBl. IK74 tranUtiMHoAaMItluiitl fcotuu4J rigb which hoy. If toll. Talk to old wtrfnwgAaMl $trA. Jtai vim aukher rv aura who wont W or Boat the war and toots redad fltotrmasnt IsimL fpt boy ami nre$k nutup rasy motwy WriisiliNar All Wwawi I blrcan tfur N Oopp. 1 Winiftoa, i. C. for fartltor prUeJr il)g petln, READERS thm advertised in Its columns should insist upon having what they ask lor, ralusmg ail suPsU- - ' (idea or imitations. care wlndcolio ftctbutUa. W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. on. OUCH OH, MY BACK IT IS WONDERFUL HOW OUICKLY THE PAIN AND STIFFNESS CO WHEN YOU USB OIL S-JACOBS ' - i In polite society a snub is a sort of upper cut Woodburn, aetiuk cumtnander of the Department of the Utiinmhla, S. A, In a sta'i meat made at Seattle, said that the whole pacific coast would be helpless ft case the navy should prove unable to prevent the landing of a force of 2O,uO0 Japanese or other foreign armi at any of the numerous unprotected - bays along the coast In the past year 500 families have taken advantage of the government s offer and have settled on the once arid lands of Churchill county, NeIn the next vada. year at least a thousand more families are experted sigh ueadag::i Stop That Cough before it becomes chronic. Get Browns Bronchial Trochee, the best preparation known fur cough. Ill T.- - C,- iMmii - Bleeping Strength. Diffident Lover (trying to feel hi Do 'you know, I r actually dreamt .that I proposed to you laat night Now er what can that mean? Practical Girl (promptly) Mean! Welt It meant that you are a lot more sensible asleep than you are awake, Freddy. ! Colonel The Most Suspicious Ever. Henry Clews, the banker and author, was talking at the Union club in New York about a certain financier. No wonder the man ts so successHe Is the most ful," said Mr. Clews. careful, the most suspicious fellow 1 ever heard of. In fact, be reminds me of a Staffordshire farmer my father used to tell of. It was said of this farmer that, whenever he bought a herd of sheep, he examined each sheep closely to make sure that It had no cotton in IL With Eczema Her Limb Peeled and Foot Wai Amputation Wae Necessary Believes Life Saved by Cutlcura. Raw-Thou- Afraid of Results. Louise spends a great deal of time tu the room of a favoitte aunt who lives with her paients but the child Is not yet up In the mysteries of tho toilet. Her aunt lecenly purchased some of those hair ornaments popularly known as ' lats These Louise did not behold until one dav she saw her aunt remove several. The child flew out of the room, screaming at the top of her voice to her mother "Mother, mother, Aunt Nell is un- raveling' YEARS. TWENTY-FIV- d .hooting , mc-nt- A word Is a winged feed none can in Michigan. Charles EL McConnell, president of tell when once It has gone forth what the Smelter City bank of Durango, its harvest may be. Sydney. Colo, which 'closed its doors DecemUNIT ONE BKOWO QriNINK- ber, 1?, has been placed under arrest. Tbet AXATIVB BltOMO oflNINK. 1,k for hs aiyrutturn of K iiKOVK, The warrant upon Which he was 7ver to Cura a Cold Id Uft Jnur. c. was sworn to by Harry Jack There Is no need io hunt for trouble; son, a depositor of the bank, who had $3, 409 on deposit when the instituever) thing comes to those a ho walL tion closed Its doors. ( Kt l IN H TO I HAIM. Out of work and despondent be PAZO OlNTM KNT iniaJuHe4i L run any emm of Hlirul or Prof rut! ing Ptle ia cause he could not buy a Christmas 6 loJtihlriK U Um hut money refunded, tot. present for his daughter, Charles Wil The man who attends strictly to his ham Mcfteynolds, said to be the oldest telegraph operator west of the own business hits a good steady Job. Mississippi river, committed sun nie Mira. W iniow Moothlnff Syrop. in Denver Christmas afternoon by tor rhli'Ir o tension mififn fftF $rrng, redum to -- Shoe-Compan- Costume Suggested Would Have Made Youth Look Like Circus Freak. In-era- t I NO WONDER lamp F The w: - - The total output of crude borax for he year 1906 was r.8,173 short tnns, valued at $1,182,410, as against short tons, valued at $1,019,154, in 1905, an increase in 1906 of 11,839 short tons in quantity and of $163,256 in value. In cutting a ditch at the Grimes Creek placers in Idaho last week, the men in charge of the work discovered a ledge of high grade free milling ore. It assayed $108.36 in gold and may prove a bonanza. Five claims have been located on the ledge. The annual report of the Quartette Mining company, operating at Searchlight, Nev. is Just issued. Gross receipts were $342,425; operating costs, $248,018; net earnings, $94,407. These compare with net earnings of $172,-67The surplus of $268,-41for 1905-6- . is a decrease of $24,819 from the preceding year. It is reported that two experts in the employ of the Guggenheims recently visited the old camp of Hunter, New., and looked over the Vulcan property with n view to buying it. The Vulcan property adjoins that of the old Hunter, and is accredited with haying several million dollars worth ot ore blocked out. The production of copper in the United States in 1906 was 917,805,682 pounds. This represents the years smelter production that is, the quantity of fine copper in the blister copper produced during the year and the production of refined Lake copper. The production of 1905 was exceeded by 15,897,839 pounds. The Grinies Creek Placer Mining company, which owns 1,100 acres ot valuable placer ground on Grime aid Muddy creeks in the Boise basin, has expended nearly $50,000 on ditches and other work preparatory to taking out gold during the next year. It Is estimated that 25 cents per cubic yard will be taken from the ground. After having been silent twelve years the ten stamps in the mill at the old Robinson mine at ML Pisgah, Bingham county, Idaho, are again ore. The dropping on the Robinson mine, together with several other groups of claims on Mt. Pisgah, was included in a giant merger recently consummated by Boston and Salt l.ake people.Ten of the thirty hot mills of the Shenago tin mills at Newcastle, Fa., will resume operations January 6 next. Ten additional mills will resum e shortly after, and It is expected that the entire plant will be running full force before the end of January The mill, said to he the largest tin plant in the woild, has been idle since July 31. Fully a thousand men are affected. Two thousand one hundred tons of high grade ore was sent from the gro.und of the famous little Florence lease at Goldfield last week to the Globe smelter at Denver. The entire Jot is worth upward of $500,000 and has been under the full glare of electric lights and uuder the eyes of half a dozen guards ever since the management of the lease refused to ship on account of the smeller charges. It will be necessary for Idaho prospectors and minlug men to comply with the old law regarding assessment work for 1907, as the bill providing for suspension of assessment work for 1907 passed the senate, but did not pass the bouse, and is not yet law. The directors of the United States Smelting, Refining A Mining company declared a quarterly dividend on December 28, on the common stock of 1 per cent, and 1 4 per cent on the preferred. The dividend on the common stock three months ago was 1 4 pee oent 3-- Ihnver The total of i u,i m ,iii plus deposits and utnlli kb pii !i of the banks of Reno, Nei.oli, an. ou'it to more of more than $11 0Ui),O"H all imi-asthan 100 per ct nt in tin p,i- -t year Starting with one bin k and a few ewes in Wit tarli eighth's Wyoming has rapidly IncroaM d Inn sin-- , p hold ings until now there are in ing grazed In tilts state appnmma'i ti r omi null sheep. The population of Kli n.'a as doubled fill times ai'lui 'I lt . It to'1 eighteen month-it has has more tlnui doubled by far tin most prosperous ear lh its history Surveying will start during January for tin- new Guggenheim road from Fly to Tonopah and Goldfield The nzad wi'l (am ore to the big comit - now nearly 10,00(Ron M Gill Nil at pleted There are at the present tlipe approximately 800 i"iO rattle in the state of Wyoming, valued at $20,000,000. During 19'tT the shipments of cattle from this state were valued at approximately $8,000,000. Ten miles of electric railroad have been built in and around Reno. Nevada, during the past twelve months, and surveys for 100 miles more eie completed. Work on these lines will begin, early next spring. Hugh Fulton was shot and instantly killed by Ed. Johnson at Silver Bow, a Nevada camp. The cause of the killing was over some mining claims. Johnson was armed with a rifle and Fulton with a Seventeen persons were injured, none of them fatally, in a collision between two trolley care in Denver. One of the cars should have taken a aiding, but failed to do so, and the two cars crashed together head-on- . A passenger train was derailed near Reno, Nevada, the engine, tender and ten cars leaving the track. Two baggage csrs overturned and the track was tors up for half a. mile. Passengers wire badly shaken up, but none seriously Injured. TjffTtrports of the assessor just In shots a total property valuation in Reso, Nevada, of $5,432,820, an of jnore than $3,000,000 In the pad five years. It is estimated that th increase tor the coming year will b close to 2,000,000. The population of Wyoming at the present time is estimated at 125,000. The bonded indebtedness of Wyom-ln- g is $180,000, and this is being paid off at the rate of $20,000 per year. The annual income ot the state government Is about $700,000. Former Senator Thomas M. Patter-se- a was assaulted by Fred G. Bonfllh, one of the editors of the Denver Post, and Mr. Pattersons nose was broken by Bonflls. The assault was a climax to attacks made by each on the other in their newspapers for several years. 0. 6. Shaver, presldent of the Fresno Flume and Irrigation , company, one of the largest lumbering concerns of fte coast, died of diabetes at Fresno, Cal., on Christmas day, after an illness of three weeks. Deceased, bewas fore coming to this country, manager of a large lumbering concern l Ws. 3-- In mi - 1 u gold-bearin- g ston company s -- e - .n-.- firil ol : Maver The toot & Shoe Co ul market foj this cun pa.t - produtt is the great west fro u the Mississippi 'o th- - lacifie I udouhtedly it is Milwaukee's n .true a to this great west maikft whih U re ponMble for tho meat gtowth of tips concern which 1ms been in nopmtion to the growth In the last 25 years they of the blue outg.own six lai lories including the mw fitory nearly completed and the Milwaukee factory annex built ihG last ar the total capariti of the Maier Boot A cxretds 9 000 pairs per day, which a'ea v H been inadequate to meet the demand of the west. Z( lmpaiied tions were tmdli ,i completely worn out and dsionuted I w lie a begun using Doans Kldiiei Ill'-but thi i wint light to tlii- cause of the trmibh a'ut did tbei- "mk well I li.ne be ii feo'ing well ai- r since it s a box Sold bv all dealers "o Foster Milbum to. Buffalo, N. Y, Rings u.i'tk.M Imkits mil trmlttt to the (.Hue of $1 ViH we-- e .'oleu in daring thi. f w!,o t k.- tin- front o hut. window of the Jewi'lri in line for active - lit' , maniit...'"-- ' world In tin arms my eiesigh' imd the kidm i set-- lti1! - I tn ai ! ii n uT, i ti h td s in n t n e r t n g .11, t Mirne spi IN, fell mu mi linen 1 scimiR got bo t tent themtrlrtt AGE - Leaving A! , gnu mill inm.tlii to tin- phy-siuan- s, t, i b.u gtil .nut , Industry Gradually Eastern CoasL um ts and Connecticut are .itli thought of aa the big shoe ti etn.lai t s, b it, as the great wes Ip'- - I' '"ii- - 'll1 densely populated them sijppa a - slowl) losing pi i -- tze cotitdn foi it Mine, bast the 'Second Ave li ing for fti i almost the last recognized by patient and vho cn one-doll- S mu , orders are .the most common diseases that pre-- s at I, they are ot Shoe Cure. pro- - F i COMING WEST. Discharged Because Doctors Could Not Yjomtng e with doHoring the CfM- - wh,lr the orl3' iiuil ditentt undermines t.ie system. Wbat To Do. knowledge so There is comtort iu me Dr. Kilmer s often expressed, that the great kidney remedi Bwamp-Koo- t, fulfills every wish m cuntifc rheumatism, liver, bladaer pain in the back,ofk.dnevs, the urmarv passage Ud every part It corrects liiahility to hod orwater bad nd scalding pain in pacing It, effects following use or liquor, wine o tie, beer and overcomes that unpleasantoite-to go cessity of being compelled man during the dav, and to get up times during the night. The mild and of Swamp-Rothe e xtraordi n arv effectstands the highest is soon realized. It for its wonderful cures of the most disneed a medicine tressing cases. If you Sold In drugbest. the have should you and sizes. cent 111 fifty gists You mav have a sample bottle and a f book that tells all about it.lmth sent free bv mail. Aildress I)r. Kilmer & Co.. lime- ham ton, IN. Y. When Homs oZ 6ni- - Root anting mention tins paper and don't Blake any mistake, but remember the and name. Dr. Kilmers bwamp-Koothe address, Binghamton, N. Y. HOSPITAL. IN OLD-TIMTHIS WELL-TRIEREMEDY FILLS THE, BILL 25c. ALL VFUOOSTS. 60c. CONQUERS PAIN tw 1, 1908. |