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Montpelier examiner. [volume] (Montpelier, Idaho) 1895-1937, May 14, 1909, Image 6

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86091111/1909-05-14/ed-1/seq-6/

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PUBLIC STATEMENT
f * W ill
K T 21 .ill
By a Publia OlficisthrCounty Treasurer,
) | ! <jf GranbjUry, Texas.* f f
l'l it
A. A. Perkins. Cpunty Treasurer of
Granbury, Hood 'Co*, 'fcèxas, says:
. 'Tears ago a severe
fall injured my kid
neys. From that time I
was bothered with a
chronic lame back and
disordered action oT 1
gQgSgfat i:!the kidneypulieiped to
make life miserable
lor me. A friend sug
g e s t e d my using
, -Doan's Kidney Pills,
which 1 did, with the
most gratifying re
_ suits. 1 made a pub
lic statement at the time, recommend
ing Doan's Kidney Pills, and am glad
to confirm that statement now."
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
'Man
1
the
was
fort
that
to
but
but
of
of
Fattest French Soldiers.
Occasionally our Paris contemporar
ies entertain their readers with an ac
count of the tallest and the shortest
conscript. Now a journal has gone
one better and discovered the fat
test recruit in the French army, who
has been found at Corbeil. This hon
orable distinction belongs to M. La
verdit, the son of a merchant In the lo
cality. The young man turns the scale
at 268 pounds, avoirdupois, or rather
over 19 stone.
Gardens with Schools.
The school-garden idea has been re
markably developed in San Antonie,
Tex., which is said to have more
gardens attached to its schools that,
any other place of its size in the
world There are 949 of those culti
vated plots attached to the 29 schools,
the gardens varying from one-tenth to
one-quarter of an acre.
Certainty Convenience Economy
Never has there been known a case
where Mitchell's Eye Salve has not
given notable relief. A pure harmless
salve for application to the surface
of the eye lids; the simplest of meth
ods with wonderful results. The price
25 cents places it within reach of all.
All druggists sell it.
AMBITIOUS.
I T' ' ~
' ■
1
U H
1!:J
ru
u
e-J
..ir','. v
E mployer—What! want anotliet
raiSlp? Why, you're getting $5 a
montîiv —
Office Boy—Yessit'f hut I'm engaged
now, and my girl want;!—Ip he took
about
\
EVIDENTLY FOND OF PHRASE
- v
Or Youthful Sailor's Vocabulary V^as
Limited, Judging by His Con
versation.
He was a sailor boy of about 18, and
probably his girl
bis companion
cousin—seemed to have met him at
the station and to be conducting him
to spend some of his leave at her
home Evidently the hoy had been
to see his parents and was satisfied
with their general condition, for the
conversation went like this:
"And how is your father?"
"Oh, he's all right."
"And your mother?"
''Oh. she's all right."
"How did Lucy get on at school?
She must lie a big girl now."
"Oil. she's all right."
"Are the boys quite well?"
"Oil. they're all right."
There was quite a long pause after
this, and then the girl tried again.
"However do you sailors manage to
live on a ship?" she said. "You must
find it very monotonous." For the first
time tlie sailor smiled. He answered
the earliest part of the question by
shaking his head,
right,"
"Oh, we're all
he explained. — Manchester
irdian.
NOT DRUGS
Food Did It.
After using laxative and cathartic
medicines from childhood a case ot
chronic and apparently incurable con
stipation yielded to the scientific food.
Grape-Nuts, in a tew days.
"From early childhood I suffered
with such terrible constipation that i
had to use laxatives continuously go
ing from one drug to another and suf
fering more or less all the time.
"A prominent physician whom l con
sulted told me the muscles of the di
gestive organs were partially par
alyzed and could not perform their
work without help of some kind, so I
have tried at different times about
every laxative and cathartic known,
but found no help that was at all per
manent. 1 had finally become discour
aged and had given my case up as
hopoless when I began to use tlie pre
digested food, Grape-Nuts.
"Although 1 had not expected this
food to help my trouble, to my great
surprise Grape-Nuts digested imme
diately from the first and in a ,tVw
days I was convinced 4 liât this Was
just what my system needed. \
"The bowels performed their func
tions regularly and I am now eoinV
pletely and permanently cured of this,
awful trouble.
"Truly the power of scientific food'
must be unlimited." "There's a
Reason."
Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
Fver read the above letter? A bpw
one appear* from time to time. They
are liemilue, true, and full of huinnu
interest*
['I
UNCLE Of WH 1 TIA NOT
•;«.! » O . tu-.' * i. •«
'Man Sentenced to Life Imprisonment
for Kidnapirtg Says He Only Car
ried Out Plans Laid by
Another.
1
Mercer, I'a.—That which was in- 1
tended as the closing chapter of the
Whitla kidnaping case Monday night
proved to be the most sensational
chapter of them all.
First. James H. Boyle, convicted of
the kidnaping of Willie Whitla. wi'.s
sentenced to life imprisonment tty
Judge A. .1. Williams, of the Mercer
county court, and Mrs. Helen Boyle
was sentenced to twenty live years'
imprisonment with n line of $5.000.
Mrs. Boyle, though crushed by the
weight of Iter sentence, made an ef
fort to speak in conn, bill the judge
partly turned away. It is thought
that the woman intended at this time
to make the address which she had
threatened to do, exposing persons
whom she claimed had been connected
with this most sensational kidnaping,
but she was not given the chance.
Boyle, loo. tried to enter into an
argument with (he court, but he. too.
was not given any leeway and he left
the court house with a smile which
the people did not then understand,
but they did later.
Within Ihrpe hours James Boyle,
under the shadow of prison for -the
rest of his life, had given out a public,
signed statement upon the kidnaping
of Willie Whitla. In It James Boyle
accuses Harry Forkin', brother-in-law
of James P. Whitla. father of Willie
Whitla. the kidnaped hoy, of having
framed tile entire plot of kidnaping
and he tells of a sensational murder
which occurred in Youngstown. Ohio,
some years ago, and the convicted
kidnaper alleges in the statement
that lie has for years been blackmail
ing Korker in connection with this
ori me.
To Boyle's charges, both Henry
Forker and James P. Whitla have
made emphatic denials.
In
PRESIDENT TO COME WEST.
Will Attend Trans-Mississipi Con
gress and G. A. R. Encampment.
Salt Lake City.—A special to the
Herald from Washington says: In
conversation Saturday with a senator,
President Tafl gave the first definite
assurance that he would visit the
west during the coming summer. The
senator conveyed a message to the
president from the Water Users' as
sociation holding lands under the
Gunnison reclamation project, which
has been tinder construction by the
government for the past five or six
years, requesting him to preside at
the formal turning on of the water
upon the lands to be irrigated, tilts
event being scheduled for a date in
August next. The president said that,
he would accept the invitation and
be present at the opening of the en
terprise If the day could he set for
any date between August 15 and 20.
This acceptance is taken as assur
ance that the president will also he
enabled to attend Ihe Trans-missis
sippi congress, which convenes ' at
Denver August 16, and ' k c* ' Grand
Army at'the Republic annual reunion,
which will be held at Salt Lake City
about the middle of August.
a
at
her
the
to
Two Italians Use Dynamite Magazine
for a Target.
Washington, Pa.—Steven Page is
dying in a hospital here from injuries
received on Sunday when a magazine
containing forty quarts of nitro-gly
cerine and 150 pounds of dynamite
blew up. Page and Tony Morrette,
botli Italians, not knowing what was
in it. pinned a target to the maga
zine and began shooting at it with
their revolvers. Merrette was not.
'hurt. Houses a mile and a half away
were shaken by the explosion.
Methods of State Officials of Wash
ington to be Investigated.
Olympia, Wash.—Former Adjutant.
General Ortis amilton, charged
with embezzlement from the state
military fund, was arraigned on Sat
urday. He pleaded not guilty, waived
examination and was held to answer
in the superior court. Hamilton lias
been unable to secure hail in the
amount of $10,000. It is reported that
every si ate office will lie investigated
owing to the alleged loose methods
in the auditor's office, which permit
ted Hamilton's alleged embezzle
ments.
by
all
ot
i
go
suf
con
di
par
I
per
as
pre
this
,tVw
Was
\
func
eoinV
this,
food'
a
pkgs.
bpw
They
City Held Responsible for Pranks of
Charivari Party.
Topeka. Kan.—The supreme court
on Saturday decided that when the
members of a charivari place a bride
and groom in a wagon against their
will and (orcibly draw them up and
down a street, they are engaged in
an act of unlawful violence, and a
city is liable for damages. The case
was appealed from Montgomery
county and was brought by Minerva
Hawnian. whose son was knocked
down and injured by a charivari
patty some .years ago.
Body of Late Emperor of China Laid
to Rest.
Pekin.—The body of the late Kwang
Hsu, the emperor of China, who died
last November, on Saturday began the
long journey to the western tombs,
eighty miles away, for final interment.
The ceremony was one of unusual ori
Wuil splendor and dignity. It was
wuxfcessed by a large number of for
5 . The dowager empress will
tint erred until the fall. In the
e her body will remain in
ke United States was repre
BAlntster W. W. RockhJU.
ei gr
not
ini-ail's
Pekin.^
Bented bj
m HUNT IN THE
Boys in Blue Are on the Trail of
Noted Moro Murderer and His
Band of Cutthroats.
30.
1
Bandits Raided Rich Pearl Fisheries
and Murdered White Traders, and
Attacked Constabulary and Set
tlements Inhabited by Peace
ful Natives.
Manila.—An unusual man hunt is
In progress in the Sulu islands, a vol
canic group in the eastern archipel
ago, near the second largest of the
Philippine-Mindanao. For several
months a Moro bandit named Jikiri,
with a considerable following, has
been on a rampage, and the insular
government is making every effort to
run him down. The navy recently
lent to the authorities a squadron of
gunboats to search the numerous
small islands of the group, and now
another vessel is to be added to as
sist in the strange chase.
Several land detachments have
been sent out, and General Duvall,
who has gone south to inspect Min
danao, may take a hand in directing
operations.
Jikiri raided the rich Parang pearl
fisheries and later murdered two
white traders. His band also at
tacked the constabulary and a num
ber of settlements inhabited by
peaceful natives and a sprinkling of
whites.
LAKE STEAMER LOST.
Adelia Shores Goes to Bottom and
Fourteen Men Are Drowned.
Cleveland. O.—It is believed here
that the fourteen members of the
crew of the steamer Adelia Shores
have perished, and that, the boat lies
at the bottom of Lake Superior oft
Whitefish Point. The Shores, which
Is owned by the Manx Transit com
pany of Cleveland, passed the Soo,
upbound, on May 6. Since then noth
ing has been heard from her, except'
newspaper dispatches reporting the
finding part of the Shores wreckage.
The boat was in charge of Captain*
S. Holmes of Milwaukee. She was
a wooden vessel of 734 tons.
In
the
as
the
the
six
at
in
en
for
20.
he
at
Wheat King to Live in Denver.
Denver.—The Post says that James
A. Patten, the Chicago wheat dealer,
has decided lo make Denver his
home. He has made tills statement
in recent letters to friends at Golden.
Mr. Patten, it is asserted, will bring
his family to Denver as soon ?" the
press of his grain dealings will per
mit the move. The Ion™" strain of the
operations incident to the recent tre
mendous wheat deal has, it is assert
ed, so impaired his health that he
has decided upon this step, and this
is taken also to mean that Mr. Pat
ten will cease to be prominent in the
operations of the Chicago grain pits.
Mrs. Patten is a former resident of
Colorado.
Mox Executes Negro Fiend.
Jacksonville Fla.—Mrs. John Deas,
wife of a prominent farmer residing
at Camden, was attacked Sunday by
an unknown negro, who was later
captured by a moh of citizens and
lynched. The woman's screams at
tracted her son, who went to her res
cue, but the negro had escaped. When
the sheriff reached the scene the mob
had captured the negro, Mrs. Deas
had Identified him, his throat had
been cut and his body riddled with
bullets. The sheriff could gain no in
formation as to the Identity of those
of the mob.
is
was
not.
SULTAN LOOKING FOR TROUBLE.
Sat
lias
the
that
Moroccan Ruler Demands Spanish
Evacuation and Threatens War.
Madrid.—It is reported that Mulal
Hafid, the sultan of Morocco, has
broken off negotiations with Senori
Merry del Val, the Spanish minister
lo Morocco, who recently went to Fez.
to discuss Moroccan affairs with him.j
It is further stated that the sultan,
has written direct to King Alfonso de
manding Spanish evacuation of the
Rif country and intimating that he
would consider refusal to withdraw
as a declaration of war.
i
Smooth Plan of Smugglers.
Chicago.—In connection with the
arrest at El Paso, Tex., of three mem
bers of a dining car crew charged
with assisting in the smuggling of
Chinese into this country.
Stales District Attorney Sims stated
Saturday that between 200 and 300
Celestials had been brought from El
Paso concealed in a dining car. The
smugglers were paid $400 or $500
by each Chinaman brought in, and of
this $50 went to the train crew. The
scheme has been working for two or
three years.
of
court
the
bride
their
and
in
a
case
United
Women Will Aid Police.
Laid
Cliicago.—A real "beauty
feminine instead of
.been added temporarily to the police
force to sit on the I o'clock lid. Girls
squad,"
masculine, lias
died
the
ori
was
for
will
the
in
repre- pg geut out whenever the chief deems
and women have been recruited by
Assistant Chief Schuetler to act as
detectives In seeing that the
down order is obeyed in places where
their sex is known to be in search of
refreshment with their escorts after
sliut
midnight.
ing squadron." as they have no regu
lar hours or days for work, but will
They will he a true "tly
necessary.
HT SITS WTO US
Legislative Assembly Fails to Pass
Appropriation Bills, Leaving Isl
ands Without Support. '*
Washington. —President Taft
Monday, May 10. sent to congress a
special message recommending legis
lation at the present extra session,
amending the Foraker act under
which Porto Rico Is governed. The
president directs The attention of con
gress to affairs on the island, laying
particular stress on what he terms "a
situation of unusual gravity," devel
oped through the failure of Ute legis
lative assembly of Porto Rico to pass
the usual appropriation hills, leaving
tlie island without support after June
30. next.
Porto Ricans have forgotten the
generosity of the United Slates, the
president says, in the desire of eer
on
by
of
tain of Ihe island's political leaders
for power, and he adds that the
pres
ent situation Indicates that Hie United
Stales has gone too fast in the
tension of political power
Porto Ricans. He concludes that the
absolute
!X"
to the
power of
should be taken away from
who have shown themselves too irre
approprlat ion
'those
sponsible to enjoy it."
CZAR REMAINS MASTER.
Refuses to Sign Naval Bill and Or
ders Cabinet to Remain in Office.
St. Petersburg.—A solution of Ihe
cabinet crisis whereby Premier
Stolypln and his colleagues in the
cabinet will retain their ixists was
arranged at a conference between
the premier and the emperor, which
continued until 1 o'clock. Monday
morning
M. Stolypln returned to St. Peters
burg from Tsarko-Selo an hour later,
bringing the text of an imperial re
script, expressing the emperor's con
fidence in the ministers and explain
ing the moves loading to the rejec
tion of the naval staff bill.
oft
the
The crisis was solved in a manner
peculiarly Russian. The emperor re
fused to sign the hill providing for a
naval staff, because he considered it
invasion of his prerogatives. He
declined also to accept the resigna
tions of the cabinet and ordered the
ministers to remain at their posts.
The latter, after reiterating their rep
resentations of the impossibility of
nder
their
an
service®
useful
rendering
these conditons, decided that
Russian
duty, according to
denis, was to continue in their polit
ical offices.
pree
his
the
per
the
tre
he
this
Pat
the
of
SWORD GIRDED UPON MEHEMED.
With
Invested
Sovereign
Power by Head of Church.
T urkish
Constantinople.—The ceremony of
girding the sword of OMman upon
Mehemed V. the new sultan of Turkey,
in succession to Abdul Hamid, oc
curred on Monday in the mosque
Ayoub, the only sacred edifice in Con
stantinople which Christians are not
allowed to enter.
This ceremony corresponds to that,
of coronation in western countries. It
lasted only a few minutes, and the
ancient rite of the spiritual power
consigning the temporal power to the
sultan was witnessed by few foreign
eyes.
by
later
and
at
res
mob
Deas
had
with
in
those
Taft Gives Place on Bench to a Dem
ocrat.
Washington.—President Taft on
Monday sent to the senate the nom
ination or Henry Groves Conner a
Democrat, to be United States judge
for the eastern district of North
Carolina. The vacancy on the North
Carolina bench, caused by the death
ef Justice Thomas R. Purcell, had
existed for some months and has
been a source of much concern to
President Taft. Judge Conner was
for about ten years on the bench of
the supreme court of North Carolina,
and for a number of years before
hat was a judge of the superior
courts.
has
Senori
Fez.
him.j
sultan,
de
the
he
Roosevelt Kills Rhinoceros.
Nairobi, .British ./East Africa.—A
is the latest

hulky bull rhinoceros
prize wrested fiYdn the jungle by Col
onel Roasey^lt. From the ex-presi
dent's camp near Machakos word was
brought; down on Monday, May 10,
tjiht the luck of >he Roosevelt party
continued and that fifteen varieties of
including the big rhinoceros.
game.
had been bagged on the last expedi
tion. The rhinoceros was rushing Mr.
Roosevelt when the hunter fired. The
distance was fourteen paces.
i
the
mem
of
stated
300
El
The
$500
of
The
or
Killed in Explosion In
Kansas.
Four Men
Columbus, Kan.—'"mr men were
killed Monday evening in an explo
sion in the mixing room of the Laflin
Rand powder mill near here.
The dead: Joseph Stovall, Will Mo>-
Robert MacFaraland, James
ran,
Rood. The bodies of the victims were
blown into bits. The explosion caused
a fire which endangered ihe whole
building, hut which was extingu'shed
after two hours' fight by one hundred
men. The-loss is about $75.00(1.
Englishmen Can Shoot Some.
Washington.—British riflemen ini
the international small bore match,
just, ended demonstrated their super
iority over the Americans by scoring
nn overwhelming victory. The match!
friendly one with small bore
police
Girls
squad,"
lias
deems the grand total of 14,583 points out
by
as
where
of
after
was a
rifles on gallery ranges in the respec
tive countries. The targets were Is
sued by the British Society of Minla-,
t.ure Rifle 'clubs, were signed by the
respective associations, and inter
changed, and the results announced
by cable.
sliut
regu
will
"tly
The British team made*
of a possible 15,000.
Trw ÏT/X nrr.mn vm TCi W»
IDAHO S I A T h NK'Ab
__— and
and
No material damage to the apple or
chards In the vicinity of Boise was
caused by the recent heavy frost.
A rich gold strike in the Heath dis
trict, near Cambridge, has caused con
siderable excitement in that section of
"the state.
The thirteenth annual state conven
tion of the Idaho Sunday School asso
ciation will be held at Caldwell. May
18. l'J and 20.
President Taft last week informed
Senator Borah that if he made a trip
west this fall he would visit Idaho on
route to Seattle.
Ross Mcl-ain of Nampa was thrown
from a wagon during a runaway at
Nampa, landing under the
feet, being seriously injured.
The 18-months-old baby of Mr. and
Mrs. K. W. Kerris, living two miles
west of Twin Falls fell into an Irri
gating ditch and was drowned.
Dr. D. K. Pearsons, of Chicago, has
donated $23,000 to the College of Idaho
at Caldwell This is contingent upon
that institution raising $75,000 addi
tional.
The senior class which will grad
uate from the University at Moscow
this year numbers 39, larger than
has ever before graduated from the
institution.
In the municipal primary election at
I.ewiston, approximately 300 votes
were cast out of a total of 2,200 and
a .registration of 800. ■ Mayor Henry
Heltfeld was renominated.
William l.ayton has been convicted
in Lemhi county of murder in the sec
ond degree. Layton killed William
Verges, known as "Wild Bill,'' in the
Salmon country last winter.
Governor Brady, it is announced,
will at once take steps to organize and
carry out a plan for presenting to the
battleship Idaho an appropriate silver
service on behalf of the state.
All depositors of the defunct Capital
State bank, of Boise, will receive dol
lar for dollar within three months if
the present plans to discharge the lia
bilities of the institution are carried
out
horses
a
to
at
a
The saloon men of Harrison are en
deavoring to upset the plans of the
prohibitionists of that town and con
tinue selling liquor. A Coeur d'Alene
attorney has been employed to try to
nullify the village charter.
H. Herbert Anderson, late presi
dent of the Panhandle Smelting com
pany at Pondarny, near Sand Point,
Idaho, was acquitted on a preliminary
hearing at Spokane of the charge or
embezzling $1.750 of the company.
a
it
An application for the segregation
Owyhee county,
of 10.000 acres In
known as the Chow creek project, has
been filed at the United States land
office. The tract also embraces a
small area of state and private lands.
The information lias been received
from fruit raisers in and around Brig
ham City that 30 per cent of the
peach crop had survived the heavy
frosts. The apple crop was HI tie dam
aged in the territory, but pitted fruit
suffered seriously.
The Idaho Northern is making prep
arations to survey for an extension to
Horseshoe Bend,
the survey is to be made, hut claim it
is in order to hold the right of way
to that point., while some claim it
means more than that.
of
It
Officials admit that
The secretary of the interior has va
cated an order of withdrawal for irri
gation purposes for use in connection
with the Minidoka project, Blackfoot.
Idaho, land district, approximately
120,320 acres of land, and restored it
to the public domain.
A. C. Btggersiaff, charged with the
murder of Samuel Moores, au aged
the district
on
a
to
of
. was acquitted in
man
court at Weiser. The evidence was of
a circumstantial nature. Riggerstaff
and Moores had trouble a short time
before the man's death.
Judge O. E. McCutcheon. regent of
the state university, has announced
the appointment of the professor who
will be president of the new law de-
partment of the university. John F.
MacLane, assistant attorney general,
has been given the chair.
-'Because of the strenuous life Wal
lace pastors follow while doing duties
among the miners and congregations,
there are now only two ministers of
the gospel in Wallace, the Eipiscopai.
Congregational -and Baptist churches
being without pastors at present.
Over 300 people from Boise, Cald
well and Nampa attended the auction
sale of lots at Kuna on May 4, and
fully 30 per cent of them invested in
lots, some purchasing several. The
sales aggrogated 144 lots at an aver
age price of $100 each, or $14,400.
Mrs. Tim Wilson, who resides near
Grangeville, was attacked and badly
beaten by an unknown thug on two
different occasions last week, the at
tacks occurring at night, when her
husband was away from home. No
cause for the 'attacks are known to
exist.
Col
was
10,
of
Mr.
The
In
were
Mo>-
Structural steel for the
bridges to be erected by the Rapid
Transit company at points along its
line through Ogden canyon is on the
ground and the bridges will be thrown
together in short order by a large
force of expert bridge workmen in
the field.
The deep well that is being sunk
near the townsite of Filer is turning
out to be a hummer, says the Twin
Falls Times. At a depth of 575 feet
feet a new vein was struck and after
bailing at the rate of two thousand
gallons per hour they were unable to
lessen the flow.
A mysterious shooting case occur
red in Ogden last week, when Oscar
Gordor, a teamster, was shot through
the left leg just below the thigh at
the gravel pits near the city ceme
tery. No one seems to know who
fired the shot or whether the shoot
ing was intentional or not.
three
were
ini
bore
out
Is
the
inter
1
made*
W» believe that In making Jewelry
Itihould b» bullt fromthe ln»ld»,
and not msrely In an outalde finish.
This it why our goods ar# better
and we have made our reputation.
^-NytST/BUSHID,,
1862
r
170
fMAIN ST.
SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH.
Remington Type writer
for Sale
Serial No. 137,018
Style No. 6
1908 Model—Good as New.
A Bargain at $55.
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION
SALT LAKE CITY
HARRY J. ROBINSON
ATTORNEY AT LAW
304-305 Jud(« Building, Balt Lake City
Ingenious But Illegal.
Misplaced ingenuity has just brought
a railway crossing signalman of
Klrschwarad, In Hungary, within the
arm of the law. He has been arrested
for neglect of his duty under extraor
dinary circumstances. It was Ills task
to signal a
at midnight, but, not caring to sacri
fice his rest to his sense of duty, he
hit upon an ingenious plan to circum
vent his employers. He manufactured
a lifelike dummy figure resembling
himself, attached !o It a lantern, and
propped it up at his post while lie
slept, thereby conveying to the eyes
of passers-by that he was alert in the
execution of his duty.
,ain train which passed
$30 California Round Trip.
If contemplating any coast tour,
write at once to Kenneth Kerr, D. P.
A., Salt Lake Route, 169 S. Main, Salt
Lake City.
to
As to the Lungs.
The lungs are the life. When a man
can breathe lustily no ordinary malady
can kill him. I know an old chap
who was given up three years ago by
seven "able" physicians and one "able"
surgeon. Their verdict was: "He
can't last over three weeks." He is
still in the ring, while three or the doc
tors have cashed In their checks,
man can live 40 days without food, a
few days without water, and a few
minutes without air. The lungs are
the soul. A man can live without
stomach, bowels, heart, liver, kidneys,
spleen or brains—hut lie can't live
without air! The air cleans the blood.
Drink air by the million cubic feet and
you will never die. Don't wait for
the tank of oxygen to come along.
Drink deeply of the common ether.
Have it pure' and plug yourself full
every hour.
A
a
to
it
it
$30 California Round Trip.
If contemplating any coast
tour,
write at once to Kenneth Kerr, D, P.
A., Salt Lake Route, 169 S. Main. Salt
Lake City.
va
it
the
Medicine in the Sea.
The sea, according to certain scient
ists, can furnish not only nourishment,
but medicine. A distinguished French
practitioner prescribes the drinking of
sea water as a cure for diabetes, the
water being aerated in order to re
move its impurities and. to some ex
tent, Its nauseous flavor. It has also
been administered with success in
cases of bronchitis and pleurisy. Ex
periments carried out on consumptive
patients show that subcutaneous in
jections of sea water are beneficial, at
all events in the early stages of tuber
culosis. Bread made with sea water
is said by those who have tried it to
be most appetizing and nourishing.
of
of
de-
F.
of
and
in
The
two
at
her
No
to
Indian Baskets Tell Stories.
The making of Indian baskets is the
work of the women of the tribe. Un
honored and unsung, unknown even lo
the slaughters of lier daughters, Ihe In
dian woman basket maker passes to
her grave, leaving behind her a chain
of woven books, each a volume in it
self. The aboriginal basket maker puis
into every piece of work she turns out
as much of the history of her race
she knows and all of her own life, if
she can express it in the set pictures
or figures which have been handed
down to her since basketry began.—
The Bohemian.
as
$30 California Round Trip.
If contemplating any coast
tour,
write at once to Kenneth Kerr, D. P.
A„ Salt Lake Route, 169 S. Main, Salt
Lake City.
Any Banditti In Our Town?
Whenever numerous troops of ban
ditti, multiplied by success and Im
punity, publicly defy, instead of elud
ing, the justice of their country,
may safely infer that the excessive
weakness of the government ts felt
and abased by the lowest ranks of the
community.—Edward Gibbon.
its
the
in
sunk
feet
after
to
at
who
Easy Enough to Reform.
Stop grumbling. Get up two hours
earlier in the morning and do
thing out of your regular profession.
Mind your own business and with all
your might let other people's alone.
Live
some
dthin your means,
or sell your dog.
Give away
Go to bed early.
3 alk less of your own peculiar gifts
r -1 virtues and more of those of
friends and neighbors.
Fulfill your promises. Pay your debts.
Be yourself all you would
others.
your
Be cheerful.
see in
Be a good man and atop
grumbling.—Sheffield (la.) Press.

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