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Chicago News: Mr. Blmstead— Foi I my part, I can't understand why you permit that young Lempley to pay luch marked attentions to you. Why, that fellow couldn't write a gr&mraat leal sentence to save his life. Miss W ellwood Indeed! I received my first letter from him yesterday, and It contained à proposition which had a tendency to malt* me forget any gram matical blunders there may have been In It. Oh, must you be going? Well, give my love to your sister, won't you? On* Mora ITnfortnnet*. mat iv.M. r i, ' r " r Going East, take the Santa I e Uout> as far as Ch.oago. Most direct lino from the Ucstgenor ally, and thirty miles the short, st between Missouri river and Chicago, which insures quick time and sure conn, étions. Track is straight and rock ballast, d. with very few Cr vw"r.lt t ÆoAl ». ■ ' estibuled limited oxjh(* s~'CS, itli lutfst natter« Pullman* a. ,1 . i, » n , ar patitrn j unmans ai.d rice ilia.r car», Meals In dining cars, served ala carte ! Inquire of C. F. Warren. General Agent, <11 Dooly block, E-alt Lake City, Utah. 1 I Recl*ty Yj*t»rl*r« à re necessarily people of excellent Jude nent, taste and refinement. In traveliu » they demand the last service obtainable ind the libera.ity with which they pat ronize the Union Pacific is one of the l est proofs of that line's superiority. Ticket ifflee, ''Old Stand," 3dl .Main struct. A Doubtful Question. Mag (reading fragment of novel) Lueius fell on his knees before her. "Now that we are engaged, darling," he cried, "I will claim the privilege of my first kiss:" Liz—Say, Mag, how d'ye s'poae she ever come to get engaged to such a guy as dat?—Puck. ''Princess Nadine." by Christian Held, the complete novel in the M:i> issue of Lipplncott's Magazine, appeals strun rl.v to (very lover of ronmn e. Thd introduction Of the Riisso-Amei ican prim ess at the Mi Carom.' and Battle of Roses at Nice, whore she Is fittingly framed by a pink tinted sea-shell of roses, an I where she is loeu for the first time bv a w althy Cen tral American, who is to lnllnenee her (fter-life, surely compels attention, this man, whoso ImlifTerene «ex is exceptional, should imperil his lifo for her seems but natural, as we see, corn Tt: at I e to the fair I 1 binod with the charming personality, a character unspoiled by adulation; sympa The story can be fchetic, faith ami brave, laid truly to be among tlio best work of this popular writer I Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and Bhoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S. OlniBted, LeRoy, N. V. Do Vonr Fe.t Arh. ami noroT leading article U outitlod "The Bi voitac of the Dead." It is from the pen of a well known war correspondent. The article is illustrated from photographs taken by Collier's Weekly staff photographer. The ,, , ,. !. Quay investigation at Harrisburg is w ilt ten up by a well known newspaperman, and illustrated from photographs of ex Senator Quay and the members of the committee. Collier's Weekly for April 33 is full of Interesting material. The front page has a picture of the military burials at Ar llngton, showing the troops lined up along side the long trench like graves and the caskets drapod with American flags. Tho tom I.a * tern Mall Is now carried on the Overland IJn.ltid of the Union Pacific, because ' I 'ncle Sain" knows that the 4 Old Reliable" p best service and makes the quiet est time of any line in the west, licket office,"Old Stand," 101 Main stre t. MoClure's Magazine for May will intro duee a now writer, Mr. Booth Taskins^ton, of Ii*eunapolis, with the* op nimz install ment of u no e! of present day American life. The story is pr »noimcei by th »so who have read it iu manuscript, as fresh and absorbing in plot and remarkably pleasing In its atmosphere and spirit. A portrait of "Littlo Susan Boudinot," daughter of Elias Boudinot, president of tho Continental congress, is tho frontis piece of the May St. Nicholas. The poo in by Ethel Barton which follows it, cele brates the refusal of this nine-year old maiden of tho last century to drink a cup qi taxed tea at the home of the royal gov •roor. is tli» FRANCES WILLARD HOSPITAL USES PE-RU-NA FOR CATARRH OF THE STOMACH. mim K I« - mZ. ■ DfiXI 'T iü: ,7 The Frances Willard Hcspital, Chicago. 111 . Mis* Georgians Dean was for three years missionary in Liberia under the M. E. Church from the training school ln Chicago. After her return she stud led nursing, graduating from the pres •nt Frances E. Willard National Tem peranca Hospital of Chi ago. She is an enthusiastic friend of Pe-ru-na, as i evident from the following letter ; Chicago, 111., Jan. 20, 1899. Pe-ru-na Drug Mfg. Co.. Columbus, O : Gentlemen—You will be glad to know of the happy results obtained from th« use of Pe-ru-na among the patl«nts under mv care whenever prc scribed by the physician I have seen Q U»Mt C'uugA Hjrup Tiut E In tinu* Rolit bv <lr m »I U;T * ;.T1—I CUKES WHERE ML Etd OILS. E3 Food. Use r> CONSUMPTIOrr ^ vm When flntwerlng fldvTrtlsrnmnt# Kindly Mention Ihlà Fdotr, Thins* a Mother Should Wot Do, I Ehe should not forget that if ah« treats her boy as a gentleman, she will do much towards making him a gen ileman. She should not treat her bor to perpetual frowns,scoldings and fault {ladings. "Sugar attracts more me. than vinegar. ' Love w in. her hov to a noble manhood. She should be i0 buav nr bard . pressed f t hat. she , At Albany the law-makers are wrang Uu>-r over the abolition of the death pen ally The man who succeeds will prove as great a benefactor to the breaker oil man's laws as Ilostettor s Stomach Bit ters has to the breaker of nature's laws. if you've neglected yourstomaeh until indl Bestiou and constipation are upon you, try Hostetter a Stomach Bitters » V.n.gated History. a firnilinr Kiuht unnn tlift Pridn Laminar sight upon trie Fra do nowadays is the plea ant countenanc« ! of colonel Alonso Ridley, a native of Virginia, who hails from Texas. Col oue | Rj d i e y ig a "forty-niner," and Is 1 known as an unreconstructed rebel, H« formed the escort which conducted Al I bert Sidney Johnson from California to San Antonio, Tex., and entered th« confederate army with him. He was one of his bodyguard when this con federate general was killed, and In company with Colonel O'Hara, the au thor of "The Bivouac of the Dead," carried him off the field. After the rebellion was over Colonel never time cannot listen to him. he lives to he a man he will all too soon leave her. If She should make the most of him while she has him. should encourage outdoor exercises sports, aud she should not forget to train him with proper regard for his personal She or g , ie ghould never nn(? h)m( Qr f()p _ that he Is a creature of reason not ;in un imal that requires to be driven abe g bou l,l not fail to instil in h! dlslaste for aU that vu]gar hold a appearance, never allow him to form such habits as coming to the table in his shirt sleeves. neglecting his nails or teeth, or carrying soiled handkerchiefs about with him. She should m a House Aboli*!) th* Penally is at I I Ridley went to Mexico and there join ed Maximilian and was with him and Plon-Plon in the fight at Querataro. 1 He lived In Mexico for a long time, a after which he went to Arizona and there settled down to raising cattle.— Times of Cuba. of I "The Story of the Captains" in the May Century w ill mark the clima • of thatmag azine's Spanish War serins, giving, as It dous, an account by every commanding officer bnt, one of the part played by hls ship in the famous fight ot? Santiago, that résulté! iu the auuih lation of t'orvora's of tlie Oregon and contributes a criticism of the Spanish's admiral s strategy. The is textof this novel group of firsthand uo counts of one of the most remarkablenaYal fiatt les ever fought is profusely Illustrated ... , -, i 1 \ . . with portra ts, drawings and photographs, the latter from snapshots made from each one of tho ships during the progress of the tight. lloot. Captain Ev of the Iowa, Captain Taylor of tho Indiana, Captain (now Rear-Admiral) Philip of the Texas, Captain Cook of the Brooklyn,Cap lain Chadwick of the New York, and Lieutenant-Commander Wainwrlghtof the Gloucester, while Captain Clark of the Oregon endorses LIcutuuant Eberle's story describes tho doings Mr#. IVImlow'# Soothing Syrup . reduce* !n ivludooU*. 2àoeatf forchlldreu teething, soften*the g attou, allays pain, a boule, fin The May Atlantic opens with an article ipon tho Australasian Extensions of De mocracy by H. de R. Walker, who dis cusses the management of affairs, espe cially financial, in the five great Pacific lolonies of England, their methods of gov emmental louns, their banking deposits and tax regulations, and their relief and pension syst uns. Two bottles of Piso's Cure for Consump tion cured mo of a bad lung t rouble.—Mrs. J. Nichols, Princeton, Ind., Mur. 20, 1895. the tiimrd-House. 'Twas in a lit of childish pique, I struck my captain on tho chique. Flo got so m id he scarce could spiquo, Then ordered me for many a wique To occupy this cell so bllque. Oh, wnuld that I had been more mique! —Jobn C- M. Valentino in May 8t. Nicho las. A M. I i some very remarkable cures of cases of very obstinate catarrh of the stora uch, where Pe-ru-na was the only med lcine used. I consider it a reliable medicine. GEOKGIANA DEAN. The symptoms of catarrhal dyspepsia are: Coated tongue, pain or heavy feeling in the stomach, belching of gas, ! dizzy head, sometimes headache, de spondent feelings, loss of appetite, pal pitation of the heart and irregularity j of the bowels, Hartman, j Beauty." | lumbus, O. Send for a free hook written by Dr. and * entitled 'Health Address Dr. Hartman, Co " j J j j W. N. U., Salt Lake—No, 18, 1899 ! CANDY CATHARTIC NEWS SUMMARY. Dewey day was generally celebrated throughout the United States. In Sharon, Mass, .John P. Ross was «hot and killed by his wife, Mary E. Ross, in the course of a quarrel. The exports of specie from New York for the past week aggregate #*.>116,144 of which #883,048 was silver and #54,0<J8 gold. The Duke de Arcos, the newly ap pointed Spanish minister to the United States, will leave for the United States next week. A family of four, living on the Dodge ranch near Mount Vernon, S. D., were frightfully burned, one fatally, by a prairie Are. Three thousand recruits and twenty officers will be concentrated at the Presido immediately. One thousand are there now. In Dayton, Ohio, Murderer Kirves I has been declared sane and will now j be sent to the electrict chair for Ui 11 , ing hia own child. j Secretary Alger will be a candidate i before the next Michigan legislature for United States senator to succeed | Senator McMillan. | „ ... , I5r ' tlsh governmentw.il not 1 tftke *"* s,1;lre in the 1>a, ' lfic cable - >' ut ! will contribute a sum uot less than £30,000 sterling annually. | A fire at Sebastapol, Cal., destroyed I , , Chinatown, consuming fifty houses , . , . „ „ „ e. e, U i and causing a loss of #'.0.°00. One Chl i DeSe WHS burned lo ,leath ' the expenditures were #'.".',800,000 more thau those of the previous month. , rl . , 16 foll " wln k r customs and taxes "ere collected at the ports mentioned during April: SIS,534; Cebu, 80,5 Treasury receipts for April fell 815, 400,000 below those for March, while Manila, #157,003; Iloilo, 77; total, #533,203. It Is stated that eighteen of the I judges of the French court of eus sation are in favor of, and fifteen op' posed to revision of the Dreyfus case. One thousand of the small army of Manila recruits assembled at the Prc j sulio will leave this month cn the three transports, the Grant, Sherman and Sheridan. At Fresno. Cal.. Collector \ 8,000 contraband cigars that have been Internal Revenue has seized about Griffin, sent there by Jacobs A- Kendigof Lan caster, Pa. Advices from RluefieUls, Nicaragua, indicate that the situation there, so far as American interests are con cerned, is extremely discouraging aud unsatisfactory. The conductors, engineers and fire men of the Santa Fe Pacific threaten to go out on a strike because of the new schedule of wages, which cuts them 20 per cent. J n i) a ]] a8i Tex., Tom Robertson was hanged at Hillsborro, for assault, lie , . , . , . ' , claimed tobe innocent. The mother " >>s ' let nu w as present und wanted to pull the rope. As a result of an expedition of the Dominion police against the obstrep erous Indians at St. Regis, one Indian was killed, two were seriously wound ed and four arrested. For April the government receipts were #41,611,587 and the expenditures. Including the payment to Spain, were #65.854,000, showing a deficit for the month of #24,243,421. News lias been received of the assas sination in Van Buren county, Ark., of the son of Hugh Patterson, who was murdered in December, 1807 by Lee Mills and Hugh Hardin. The American interests in Bluefields, Nicarauga, alone now aggregate fully #3,000,000 in gold, and the state de partment is demanding that they shall be protected against extortion. Charles McCulloch, a farm laborer, was shot and killed by Mrs. Eunice Brown at her farm, south of Canton, . O. The woman claims McCulloch snulted her aud she shot him in self I defense. The Baptist Church in Atlanta, the largest church of that denomination in the South, but recently constructed, was entered Sunday night and consid erably damaged by vandals. The pas tor hud denounced the recent lynch j s Boston celebrated Dewey day by'a display of Hags over the national, state and city buildings nnd prominent busi , . , . , , , m ss houses and also by receptions held by patriotic societies. Tn many of the j public schools there were appropriate as I exercises. An application of the Edison Elec tric Light company for an injunction against the Imperial Electric Light, Heat and Power company of St. Louis, to compel it to desist from using the three-wire system of the Edison pany has been denied. coin Dr. Klcanor Lawney, a prominent j larly physician of Denver, was fatally burton Fifteenth street through the reckless driving of an nknown man. j His vehicle collided with her buggy, I throwing 1 her violently to the ground, fracturing her skull. rai Kautz, U S. .W, interpreting it Berlin newspapers, commenting on the latest news from Somoa, satisfaction with the attitude i express 'f Admi as a sign that the United States govern snle with (.er arrested in the vill henceforth many in the trouble. ment A man wh Comedia theatre, Madrid, vas vith a re er and dagger on his person, aud who was suspected of having designs I igent, is an ; array veterinary named < tiameon. on the life of the queei The Philadelphia commercial muse ms are now sending letters t< merce. hoards j trade and similar bodies iu all parts of j J the world inviting the attending of j representatives at the international j commercial congress to he held there ! next October. I o ve r TfK« eharnhers of e. if *fr. Tripler'* Liquid Air. From a Washington Letter: A Mr. Tripler has obtained a patent for pro dueing liquefied air by Intense cold. .. . ■ * . . , , , . ,. . . It is a gravish-looking fluid, and each „ . . ' , . gallon represents 800 cubic feet of or dlnary air, so that Its expansive paw , . , _ nn rt nwr'in hnndlntr lY^and It I« no danger in handing It. and It can be easily confined in jars or cans of Iron * a Vfw ctlarrsas 7 ,,..« u Woo or steel. A Mr. btearne of Zurich has , . . . _ _. - . . obtained a patent for reducing carbonic .. _ * .. * . ! acid gas to liquid form, and he pro ~ a il i* „„mi i poses to sell it to the public in little steel capsules, small enough to be , . , _. r .. , carried In the vest pocket. By this , . . i Invention every man can have a soda ,_. „ha.«, — w 1 fountain with him wherever he goes. . . _ _ _, k . „„ , * .' for by unscrewing the capsule aud dropping Its contents Into a pitcher or bottle of water the liquid dissolves In to gas again and charges the water like apollinarls or soda In a fountain or a siphon. A company Is being formed for the purpose of making capsules and charging them with the liquid gas. It is proposed to put them up In little i boxes, to be supplied to the public through druggists and grocers and fur nish them to hospitals, steamship«, armies and navies In quantity. rines, and most of them are so easily cultivated that they appeal to th« veriest novlc« or the busiest house w | fe j n p i anb j ng you may bave al j 0 f one kin d or choose many varieties, 1 i j I : I Doubled their money last wook. Write or Wlre Andrew & Lombard, Stock Brokers Salt Lake, Utah. Two Farmen Vine* es Deeuretloa*. Vines, Indeed, may cover founda tions, bare walls, unsightly board fences, and unpalnted sheds, etc. Vines may serve as screens, »nd giv« I privacy to the yard; vines may assist In making a shady nook, remarks a oontrlbutor to the Woman's Horn« Companion. But above all, vines may make houses homes, adding grace and beauty to even the stateliest mansion. There Is such an endless variety of For quick efTects over balcony, fence or «creen the morning glory, moon Joww . nasturtium, Cobaea scandeni and cypress vine give most pleasing I effects. For slower and more perma nent results are the Ivies, woodbines and honeysuckles. A lIouNetiolil NfcPMlty, Erery home nhould ht» bo* of Cascarets Candy Cathartic fuardian of the family health. All drugiCst«, lOo, fco, 50o. handy for use a little a perfect Th* Round Tower* of Ireland. Hundreds of years ago, as far back as the sixth and not later than th« twelfth century, It was the custom in Ireland and other Christian countries to build tall narrow towers close to many of the churches. It Is not known for certain why they were erected,but it Is supposed that, besides being used for religious purposes, they afforded shelter for priests and people In times of danger. After bells had been intro duced they were sometimes hung In these towers. The round towers wer« mostly from eighty to a hundred feet high, and usually crowned with a peaked roof. They wero lighted by small windows, and the ascent from story to story was made by mean« of ladders. As a matter of safety, th« door was placed at a considerable dis tance from the ground. Above a hun dred of the«e towers, more or less per fect, are still to be found In various parts of Ireland. cotn P an y with $100,000 capital to loan mon * y ln smaM sums on colla ^ r »l se - curity at a fair rate of interest will be | hailed with Joy by many poor people, eomo of whom are now obliged to pay , at th« rate of 120 per cent a year for small sums of money. The movement i , . . ... . ; to prevent the necessities of the poor j being made the profit of usurers began. ^ ar as ibis country is concerned, in Boston ln 1809. The original assocla Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. Price, 75c. Lemon flath a* a Refresher. At a recent reception of the Profe* 8h>nal Woman's League, a well-known actress was telling some of her asso ciates in the profession about the lux ury of a lemon bath which she tried while on a recent trip to the West In dies. She said that it Imparted a sens« | of cleanliness and freshness to the skin that made a Turkish bath look like thirty cents. Several lemons or limes are Bliced and allowed to soak ln the bath water for an hour until I all the Juice Is extracted. A handful . , J of bran or two, and the preparations j for an unsurpassable refresher are complete. Karthly .Iojm, I work and wait the whole week through For Saturday and Sunday. Then, while I wonder what to do, They're gone, and it is Monday. —Christopher Valentine, in May St. Nlch 0 l a9> j Hank« for the Poor. Th« announcement that the Mer chants' Club Is about to establish a tlon is still in existence as the ( ollat- t eral Ixtan Company, 158 Tremont At 1 Beacon : street Loans are made as low as fifty ! cents. The rate of interest charged Is U4 per cent a month, street, Boston, is the Workingman's Loan Association. This association ; charges interest on its loans at the rats I of 1 per cent a month. It reports that over four-fifths of all loans made by it | are repaid, and its losses are compara- I tively trivial. Both th<wie associations, j though originally started as char!t!#s, | pay an annual dividend of 6 per cent to stockholders. In New York the first , start in this direction was made by the St. Bartholemew Mission and the various church settlements. With the last few years, however, a number of wealthy men have organized compa- | nies which loan money on chattels at fair rate« of interest. They also have are j i f0llnd tb9 investment profitable. In many European countries there pawnshops conducted by the govern ment « ALABAS I Alabastln*. the only dumMe wall coat ace of acaliriK kalnomlnes, paint for wall». It can b* Int. tak< a the pi wall paper and | ttaeu au piaster, brick, wood or canvas. GERMAN STOMACHS, Uanntr rvhirh th* French PaM ta» indemnity in mm _ ... , , . „ ' „.iso,. The ease with which France paid the . ,, , . great Indemnity exacted by Germany .... . ... . ,. 7n at the close of the war of 1870 aston 1 ished the world. The same ability to discharge a forced obligation WES Wlt nefl ■ th cl0S9 of the Napoleonic , .. ... , wars, when the allied armies occupied _ 1 _ . , . .. France. Savarin explains that the ease , .. . ., . ! was made possibly through gluttony, ... _ _ . Ä which, he says, France alone can thor ' , ' , B , , y ' ,, th _. treaty of peace, It was estimated that ... ... , ., i that nation n various ways paid to „ „# , rnn nnn nnn 1 conquerors the sum of 1.500,000,000 . .. . francs. It was feared that these forced i In 1815, after the 1 payments would bankrupt the coun try. Subeequent events proved that these fears were chimerical. Not only i the original amount assessed against the French came back to them, but very much more, through the gluttony j of their vanquishers. The foreign ar I mies that Invaded France brought with them fierce voracity and stom achs of uncommon capacity. Once they : had tasted of th« delights of French I food, their ordinary rations were re jected, and the great sums of money that had come Into their possession of fered a means for the complete sat lsfactlon of their appetites. Paris be came, on a sudden, an Immense refec tory. The invaders ate everywhere, In eating-houses, ln cookshops, inns, tav ernB, drinking dens, and In the streets. They gorged themselves with flesh, fish, game, pastries, fruits, and truf When they drank It was with avidity and of the most expensive wines. The purveyors made fortunes. One Mme. Sullot, who had shop in the Palais Royal only 12 fest square, sold 12,000 petit pates every day. To the rank and file and most of the officers of the Invading armies I fles. a little the delights of French cookery were a revelation. When they returned to their homes their tales of epicurean I bliss excited thetr hearerB. This led to a great pilgrimage to France of civ ilian gluttons from all parts of Eu rope, and made of Paris a gastronomlo Mecca for a quarter of a century or more. It was estimated that through this pandering to the stomachs of strangers France not only regained the original amount of the Indemnity, but as much again. That experience, so far as eating Is concerned, can never be repeated, for from 1815 to 1840 the French culBine was at Us period of cumulative achievement. The indem nity exacted In 1870 has been returned to France mainly through the pur chase of decorative equipment by th« women of all nations.—Sun. Mi lie l-ollte.' General Manager Underwood of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad has ie sued the following general notice to Btatlon agents and trainmen: "Your especial attention ie directed to the treatment of patrons by employes of the company. Complaints have been made from various sources of discour tesy to freight and passenger patrons on the part of our agents, or their representatives, at several of our sta tions, and also inattention of conduct ors and brakemen to properly care for the comfort of should be no cause for plaints. It is a part of your duty to see that our patrons arc treated at all times with politeness and courtesy, not only by yourself but by employes un der your charge. One of the valuable assets of a railroad company Is uni form politeness and courtesy from all of Its employes to its patrons, and this capital must not be encroached upon. It is proper for you to under stand that advancement does not de pend wholly on your efficiency, but In other directions also, and will measured in a great degree by the treatment accorded to patrons." | , . , , , . ? ( rompt , f * k U of translatl °"' and P° r - i ,.° ns ? ® D ° W es anlen n es * ; than four tongues are ln preparation for the Pbll |p p | ne8 Tbo flrgt three gogpels and the acU ln Tasa i 0 g, the passengers. There such com be ! Unusual Kruukuoii, First Populist—1 tell you, these trusts are gettin' more shameless and | __wbat has happened? First Populist unblushln' every day. Second Populist —There's one bein' formed, an' the president says it ain't to help the con sumer, but jes' to make money. I T Are Yo " u, ' n * A11 ""'• Foot - E "" T _ U > s the T1 on cur ® ^ SwoHen, j Smarting. Burning, Sweating Feet, j Corng and Bunlona . Ask for All9n . a Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken Into the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25c. Samplo sent FREE. Ad- ! dress, Allen 9. OlniBted, LeRoy, N. Y. I m0( ^ eru Greece the language of fliowers Is developed with much detail, ! 80 8 enera ^y understood that a j lover and hls sweetheart sometimes I*AUgl ige of Flower». carry on an Ideal correspondence by means of clusters of loose blossom». BIBLES FOR FILIPINOS. Translated Into Four Languages for 1 rs of the Natives. Recent events have stirred the Brit ish »nd Foreign Bible Society to som« language of the dominant native rac« there, are actually printed; St. Luke'* t g 0apa i j n Ilooono is nearly finished, and f be sa m 9 hook ln Bicol is ready These renderings, it ap pears, are largely due to the energy of : the society's agent ln Madrid, Rev. R. ! , or igaue. o. Walker, who secured the collabora ; tlon of some exiled Filipinos. Almost I th« whole testament has been trans lated Into Pangaslnan. Another nota | bl« undertaking Is the printing of 8L I John's gospel ln Lusoga, for use in j thoss districts east of the Nile. This | version has been made by Rev. F. Rowling of the C hurch Missionary So , °lety, and is regarded for many philo logical reasons as an interesting addi tlon to the 400 or so ot languages and dialect» ln which the sacred ! joks are I circulated from Queen Victoria street, | i Nmt Kallreljr lndrp*ml*nt. "Runniag an independent paper now, aren't you, Johnson?" "Er-sorter. j don't seem to be quite independent of i Ike libel laws. 1 have found out al ready."—Indianapolis Journal. . . # ; AlabaMln* can b* u**d paper, paint AlaUuitine. over paint or paper can be u»ed over Buy only In five pound pack* properiy labeled; take uo MubstUuie. grandmother f casant influença în tlie house in a delight.' in good health ! RBF.R, St. James, Mo., writes: *<i t 00 ^ i Vegetable Compound during change of sed through that I suffered for CHARMING What a p ful old lady Mrs. Mollir B/ Lydia E. Pinkham': life, and have pas critical period safely, years with falling cf the womb and female weakness. At times could hardly stand on n y feet, also had leucorrhœa. I tried several good doctors, but instead of getting better, grew worse nil u 18 time. A friend advised me to try Mrs. Pinkham's Compound I did so and after taking six bottles, was cured of both leucorrhœa and facing of womb, I am now enjoying good health and feel very grateful f or the good your medicine has done me. I would recommend iP&k it to all women suffering as I was." A HEALTHFUL OLD AGE j||SV Mrs. N. E. Lacey, Pearl, La., writes: "I have had leucorrhœa »fil for about twenty years WHI womb by spells for ten years, and my i'iliiM blafl Jer was affected, had IBJJ backache a great deal, W/J I tried a number of doctors. They would re lieve me for a little while, then I would be iÿSàtî'* worse than ( « O V ( r A fi j 2? ml m ever. then thought I would Vf try Lydia E. Pinkham's y* Vegetable Compound. Eleven bottles of Com pound and one box of * Liver Pills cured m me and I am now sound d me through the change of life period. I old." and well. It helpe Ain fifty-five years The women of advanced years who are healthy and happy are invariably those who have known how to secure help when they needed it. Mrs. Pinkham will advise any woman free of charge wlu] writes about her health. Her address is Lynn, Mass. "DIRT DEFIES THE KING." THEN SAPOL O IS GREATER THAN ROYALTY ITSEL F* jiiight as well be safe You in your tea-drinking, and enjoy it more besides. Try Schilling's Best your money badk if you don't like it. 1« s »ritî'teiiAÎ PENSION IF lilt It* < HID, W i»»IiIiir:oii 1 I). f lif; j will receive quick replies H s t M N.H. Vols Staff 20th Curpb. Prosi'cuting Claims since 18 7 8 You will never know what Good Ink Is unless you use Carter's ! It costs no more than poor nk. Funny booklet " Bow to Make Ink Pictures" free. CARTER'S INK CO., Uostlon, Mass. HKi Spalding • IXAGtUySfiwV OFF CIAL ° .League 1 all 1*0 . - jffrek I 1« the only genuine ifcZ IiSwmL Nuthmal League ,■ Hall,andIncertlfled rSPSli to as such by Pres K.Young. ident N. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES If a dealer does not carry S] athletic goods lrj stock, send y< and address tous (and hls.Uxuf of our handsomely lllust rated n A. C. SPALDING Sc B^OS. New York •alding'H • ir name >r a copy talogue. Chicago • Denver *tsg brW M ; SLICKER WILL KEEP YOU 1)RY. Don't I'e failed with n in.ickintf or rubber coat. If youwantac that will keep you drv in the ha est st* Slicker. If sh >at i buy the 1 ish Hr; nj not for sale in your •own, write f.»r catalogue to A. J. TOWEU, Boston, Mas*!. il * S ometimes when y lame back and feel ou have poorly, you stop working for he day. and on rtoht tn ir j*' !, * ,, ** " ° u .°' ' . e symptoms quiet dowr no wa y to head off a disease that fastening upon you. Stop the first you lose the ship, —^ III»* ■ I l*» j H Wj/e I ArinV Dl.U.l 1.1'lV* LCQil J I • I/, I D I Liver&KidneyDälm he rest n when That terrible I its grip leak or i quickly cure* tl; se first Irrcgularitiei and tfiu* repels Hright's Disease, Dialn-t; -, Khtumatlsm, Jaundice and Female Truufil; v Druggista have it, ,i.oo a bottle. THE DR. J. H. MCLEAN MEDICINE CO. ■ T LOUIS. MO. Every church and schooihousa coate.l only with Alabastlne. of tons uchmI yearly for t'nU woi Ino Alabaaluu) does uot rub aud should be Hundreds lenu scmls oil. A SALT LAKE CITY DIRECTORY. UTAH IMPLEMENT CO, SALT LAKE tin. Mitchell Fan »ml Sprint; Witgoiia. Ilford itirm Wag nd t'i Hi II. 'y Hnggl Moline SI i 1 IMowil m: < iiliforniu Kork IhIi Rest Steel llttrroM »«I Steel Plot Writ.- for I'rloM •Maile. DRUNKENNESS MORPHINE AND CIGARETTE HABITS CURED No conll lid t v. no } nipt shut! F - y •nn nt, no pul) IT*ring, no ab nr cf either >rphine. v. cley In Stil ute, or Lock Hox lift Suit Lake City, Cuh. •> Aifilri-ss Till We Belt The World! ) nr Slid health mat H I P A-51 nut - < h*mtc*i ■ itlinasMt WANTED win .. :. 1 Ken (I ft uent . for IU sample i > 1 : WHEAT ®|p 4 | WHEAT WHEAT "Nothing but wheat; what you might ■as laid call a «ca of'wheat." Is what by a lecturer speaking of Western Can ada. For particulars as to routes, rail* way fares, etc., apply to Superintendent of Immigration, Department Intt iior.J^ tawa. Canada or to C. J. Broughton, l»-* Muiiadnock Block, Chicago, 111. ACETYLENE GAS. THE NEW LIGHT. 1-0 lirlllMt Cheaper lli; Coal Oil, hut Kleot riedty. . . . . . tin SEND FOR CIRCULARS. Rlonarcli flc?iy!eoe Gas Generator d. OMAHA. NEBRASKA. YOUNG MEN! ha try all 12 ■ 2 , 7 . ht If "S* 1 ■ .j »ire buy the inj layo(f) Hut If V« ly «afe »ml which m-v. ,,iv »i«>4 uninSB* di b ' 2 fn i In • of 1 m y t**. tf«t "PABST'S OKAY SPECIFIC" No case known It has e\ er failed to IruffW i W i» Nothin* Ilk« It. and nil who have Lsh the <1 milt* i bmlurM. Frii r<l frvt Fur ■ •llotilo tin , plainly Ipt of price by PABST CHEMICAL CO. i AJ0.IU. Dirculor iiioilcti »'■•j'p -t. CURE YOURSELF! I M- Hi- .J f- r «nualurJ di.' lim.'••«, ..••JSJS or i.b «frutioo* of m ii cou « cou tofloo« "aiïiïi® and . ! "ktriO ,MV H tE»AH8CHCMI0ALC0. «''»«t • r p')l#un< u«. CIHClHNATI.O.r—I Nolil *».▼ nruttw* K. O. S. a. / PpT^'nt In plain L'aaA r CUBES> In 1 to 6 <I«y«. ; ; KS ' by . ! »t . v> ciliar « ' I Alalmslln«* packages have Ddl in | lions. Anyone can brush It on a r C- rJl " d- Hler for lint card. ' A .aba j' free. Alas basil n© Co., Grand Bapin .