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Circulation of this issue - - 1000 Watson. & Moore, The St. Anthony Druggists. I'heTeton Peak. Official Paper of Fremont County - - ST, ANTHONY, FREMONT COUNTY, IDAHO, THURSDAY, MAY 7, 1Ô03. r 2 e Çh ::■ !}; A. K. Steuncnberg. President. <* K. Bowerman, Cashier. W. First National Bank ( Charter No. want your banking business nul offer you every 4 facility consistent with good business methods. i Money to loan on approved security. Liberal advances made to those wish to purchase cattle or sheep. Office hours i'rom 9 o clock to 4 . $ pr THE ONLY NATIONAL BANK IN FREMONT COUNTY. WvW? lii SMîL 51« .52*. awswsfe51c51©,-. ! .5Jr.>?: e.;,.g; ira ■ JgM^,J8Uia'Ljyi T . The St. fliffiiooy Banking Co. I Accounts of.^ga^. S? j; Kormers, Stooknum and ]Mox-chants | 1 . , „ ,. , Solicited. rfj . j A Oener al nanking and Collection business trans- p, acted. Interest paid on time deposits. Every accommodation extended, consistent with Sound Banking business. A portion of your business respectfully solicited, i G. C. Baker, President. ' G:' - ff : :T: WtTTu'V'tS • UT ■•?. ■ ^TOSWvrf % Si BIG BARGAINS I Saturday, Way 2nd. Monday May 4tl). the H U B 9 •-a a 3 eins string beans 2 5 K. C. b'k'g powder 3 cans corn 2 5 25c size 20 3 cans peas - 5 K. C. baking powd 6 cans tomatoes 55 1 5c size two for 2 5 all table fruit per can 1 5 K. C. baking powd Alaska salmon " 10 toe size 3 for 2 5 Raisins 3 lit 25 1 ). C. Soap ö bars 25c Currants 3 IDs for 2 5 \Yh 't Russian Soap Curtis' jams per can 1 2.1 0 bars for 2 5 c Schilling tea per pk 20 Silk Soap 6 bars 25C ! )rv ( loot Is 13 c p-|. All calicoes per yd 5 C Zapher Gingham Ail our 10 and 1 2c per yard 8c All amoske; g Ging 7c Specii 1 S; 1 1 * < » j 1 Shoes < )ne pair of hose ant pair hose supporters free with every pair of chile Irens shoes One pair of ladies' hose fr ee with every pair of ladies slioes. One pair men's fancy hos ■ free with every pair men's shoes. One hat free with cv cry suit of clothes. Remember we are doin y a cash business, therefore we are in a position to give you these prices as we ê ê f : ë S' 6? À 6? ë ë ë ë have no losses to figure edit accounts. HARRY GESAS, Prop. j Notice. The next examination of Eighth brade pupils will be held in St. An thony, Ruxlmrg, Rigby, Market Lake ami Edmunds on Thursday and Friday, May U and 15, l!)0;l. Pupils from out Ivhig points please report at the most convenient place named above. Address county superintendent for other information. Wt. Anthony, April 29, lilt):!. Grace M. Taylor, __ Co. Supt. of Schools. é&JL ^J** s signature is on every box of tbo genuine Laxative Bromo=Quinine Tablets * ho remedy that cures « cold in one day 50 YEARS' ITXPERIENCE Patents TRADE WIARR» Designs ... Copyrights Ac. n ,*,PT. ono sending a Rketrh and description may g!.. .? ascertain our opinion free whether an Knn Is probably patentable. Conimunien ' Rt r 1 c M y coiill d ont I al. HANDBOOK on Patents f nt free. oldest nirency for »••«•unng patent«, »'atoms taken thromrh Muim & Co. receive sprutti notice, without c harg e in the Scienfilic American, Alumila.vncir ninstrntrrt v-rcklv. •••irsost clr „i* 11 ", 1 "< liny setemmo i-mt : kl. 'l'tTiu.-. »1 .1 uïiuîk >>r jl. So'tit by all nettrsdonler*. tVlUWN & CO.aCIrfroad^y fjgyy Brunch Onice, & le' gt„ WasMctctoa. U C Andrew Jackson's Love for Ilis Wife Jackson's wife died suddenly just after lie had been elected president. It was a great blow to him, and he was never the same again, though his strength of will and his desperate cour age fought wn i this indefinite pain For the rest of his life he lived as she would have had him live, guided his actions by the thought of what his wife Hying would have him do—loving her still, with the love that passeth all understanding. As the years went by, this love be came almost sacred. Every night before he retired lie read her prayer book, with her miniature, which in* always wore in his breast, placed beside it. Ho was a lover still at seventy-eight, for just be fore lie died he said, with lingering tenderness, ''Heaven will be no heaven to me if 1 do not meet my wife there.' He declined the sarcophagus fit for an ■mperor, that he might be buried as a impie citizen, in the garden by her side, lis last words wen ted upon her to his bed.------ ; the dark, the vision of her brought him peace at last.—May Woman's Home Companion. _______ See tlie new line of corduroy suits at Thompson's. 1 '.uarantec my work and the shaping of patterns in cutting to he of the latest designs. If you want any tailor-made clothes, don't get your measure sent to a ready made clothing firm outside, a îeauy j B r u > P lingEK. ; of her, his last look portrait, that liuyg First in Importance Said Senator Heyburn A Wallace special dated May 2nd says: United States Senator Heyburn, who lias recently returned from the east and who leaves for San Francisco tomorrow to look after two important mining suits, said yesterday in regard to Idaho's interests at the national capital. ''One of the most important questions taken up was the adjustment of the forest reserve of the state, to the end that the boundaries might be estab lished by tlie conditions existing on the ground and not fixed by map, when those looking after these matters have no knowledge of the exact conditions. The boundaries should conform with the natural watersheds from which water flows to the irrigated regions of our state, and to the end that no land in Idaho may be tied up or withdrawn from settlement. "I am working for tlie extension of the survey of government lands so that as much as possible can he made avail able for settlement. I regard the rights of tlie home maker as first importance, rather than those of tlie people who come into the state to enjoy tlie resour ces, and then carry the products with them beyond the state. I do not regard this as the development of the state of that which should go to the home maker and the resident. My efforts will be directed to securing such development of the state resources that they will leave within the state the largest possi ble portion of tlie profits obtained from such development, whether it be of our j mines, timber, or other resources." In touching the proposed repeal of the timber and stone act Senator Heyburn said he was strongly opposed to such action. "I believe in a rigid enforce ment of tlie law so as to prevent the acquirement of large tracts of the tim ber land through 'straw' entries, he said. "The greatest prosperity of our timber lands can only be derived from tlie individual ownership within the limits of the law and the establishment of sawmills in such sections that the in dividual can sell his timber to tlie mills or have it cut by custom contract. This system would destroy what in effect amounts to timber trusts and that en allies the control of the market, either for the purchase or tlie sale of our tim ber lands."—Pocatello Tribune. a a at to Augusta Holmes. In tlie June Delineator there is an in teresting'sketch of the life and work of Augusta Holmes, the noted French composer who died recently. Percy Mitchell, an intimate friend of the com poser, contributes the article. Mile. Holmes granted tlie interview and sat for the photographs that accompany the article, only a few days before her death, of which there was no premoni tion; so the paper is in a way one of her last testaments. A poet of great power; the possessor of a fine voice, an excell ent] pianist, and, without doubt, the greatest woman composer of her time, she was, indeed, a remarkable woman. During her active life, her salon was the center of tlio music and art circles of Paris, and almost up to the day of her death she was engaged in enriching the world of music with her contributions. Mr. Joseph Pominville of Stillwater, Minn., after having spent over $2,000 with the best doctors for stomach trou ble, without relief, was advised by his druggist. Mr. Alex. Richard, to try a box of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. He did so, and is a well man today. If troubled with indiges tion, bad taste in the mouth, lack of appetite or constipation, give these Tab lets a trial, and you are certain to be more than pleased with the result. For sale at 25cper box by all druggists. The Wastes of the Body. I Every seven days the blood, muscles and bones of a "man of average size loses two pounds of worn out tissue_ This waste cannot be replenished and the health and strength kept up without perfect digestion. When the stomach i and digestive organs fail to perform their functions, the strength lets down, health gives way, and disease sets np, Kodal Dyspepsia Cure enables the stouv ach and digestive organs to digest and assimilate all the wholesome food that may be eaten into the kind of blood that rebuilds the tissues and protects the health and strength of the mind and body. Kodol cures Indigestion, Dys pepsia and all stomach troubles. It is an ideal spring tonic. Hold by Watson & Moore. Serious Cutting Affray. In a drunken saloon row at Driggs last Sunday a man by the name of \\ il liams was seriously stabbed in the left side by Lorenzo Jeffs. After sobering up Jeffs gave himself up to the authori ties. Williams is in a very critical con dition and grave doubts are entertained as to his recovery. of In the Ancient City The President at Old Santa Fe Yesterday. President Roosevelt spent three hours and twenty minutes yesterday in Santa Fe, N. M., whose buildings and monu ments seemed to be of interest to him. great pleasur New Mexico, from which territory more than half the members of liis regiment came. A stop was made at San Miguel church ithe oldest church edifice in the United States, and at the cathedral where Vicar General Anthony Four cliegn, baptised the son of Geo. W. Amije, a sergeant in the rough riders, President Roosevelt being the god father. The child was named Theodore Roosevelt. " was a great pleasure to him to come to TOO MANY LOBSTERS I BANGOR MAN ASTONISHES VISIT OR FROM MINNEAPOLIS. Native Made Him Believe the Crusta ceans Were Go Plentiful They In vaded Lawns and Porches—Fur nished Proof in Plenty.. A man from Minneapolis who had been spending a few days at one of the Maine coast resorts came to ltan gor this week and in conversation with a friend in a hotel cafe here re marked that he had enjoyed his \ Ait to the shore, but that he had . et found lobsters as plentiful there as had expected. ' Lobsters? Why, that's queer," re sponded the Bangor i»an. "Why, the woods are full of them, so to speak Come down to my place at Hancock Point and I'll give you your fill of them." "Many down there?" queried the Westerner. "Many?" The Bangor man regarded his questioner with surprise, reply ing; "Why, man, lobsters are thick down there that they've got to be a nuisance. Have to go out morn ings and sweep them off the paths— even climb up on the porch. Beastly nuisance when you don't care for them, you know." The man from the West looked dazed, but promised to accompany the Bangorean to Hancock Point next day, there to help repel the invasion of lobsters. The Bangor man went to the telegraph office and sent this mes sage to his wife at Hancock Point: "Buy all the lobsters within ten miles, and scatter them about the lawn, paths and porches." Next day, when the joker and his guest arrived at the cottage, the whole place had been planted with green and squirming crustaceans, and the fun began the minute they entered the fun began the minute they entered walk. The Bangor man kicked some thing out of his path. "What's that?" asked the guest. "Oh, that's one of those confounded lobsters," was the calm reply. A little further on more lobsters wriggled over the walk, and the cottager tie clared, in disgusted tones, that it was pretty tough when a man couldn't get into his own house without climbing over a lot of slimy lobsters. The Westerner's oyes started from their sockets, hut when he got to the vino covered porch entrance he nearly fainted. Two enormous lobsters were cling ing by their claws to the trellis, and, grabbing one of them, the host re marked : "They'll bo in my bedroom next— here, this one will make a good broil for you!" The big lobster was broiled, and the man from Minneapolis ate it with keen delight. Next day he ate others and when he got back to Bangor ho declared solemnly: "I never would have believed it had 1 not seen them with my own eyes." —Bangor (Maine) Correspondence. Leigh. Leigh, Fremont Co., Ida., April 29. The weather continues cold and stormy. The valley is white with snow that fell yesterday, but it is fast disappearing. Very little seeding lias been done yet. There is a good depth of snow in tlie mountains, and the Snake river will be very liigli this season. Hay has been very plentiful with u:s this season: about 15,000 head of sheep were wintered in the valley. The range between this and the lower valley is as hare as a floor, and if the weather doesn't warm up a little there will >e great loss of sheep. An effort was made to unite the two school distincts and build a schoolhouse on the townsite and have school, but it didn't work Sister Lydia Jarman, who has been ill some time, is still bedfast, hut is in: 1 proving — Deseret News I graded To Oür Castonjers. I Those holding premium tickets £r will please present them as we have a new line of premium g oods be Givet? fluiayl 1 0, 'H '•"<«*>•. «*«>> Gr " d <r H icy ?& , 1 'Y' J > MVe < )llC ^^t With each $1.0 ) purchase. For further Y particulars call on undersegned THE GOLDEN RULE STORE. * The |;| Ice Cream Soda Best & Is now Served at our Fountain. We use the Famous MONARCH Brand of Crushed Fruits only. C AMMANS' ONFECTÏONERY. ^ THE ANCIENT COPTIC FAITH. Egypt Now the Center of This Form of Worship. In Westminster abbey, after tho coronation of King Edward, a silver votive cross was left by the Abys sinian envoy, Has Makonncn. It. rep resents tire faith of the Coptic church, lie most debased in Christendom. Egypt is the center of this faith, tho patriarch of Alexandria, as he is called, living at Cairo. Not oven the priests understand the language of tho services, essentially the same as that used by the Pharaohs, with a mixture of th((i tongue of Homer. In its ritual is found an admixture of ancient Egyptian and Jewish cere monial together with that of primitive Christianity. Here ordination is con ferred not by I the laying on of hands, but by breathing and the universal kiss is interchanged among the con gregation. Children may act as dea cons and may receive the sacrament —bread dipped in wine. In Abyssinia the Jewish ai|d Egyptian ritual is car ried still further to excess. Tho ark is the center of worship, which in cludes dancing. The J< wish Sabbath is observed. I Distinction is drawn be tween clean and un. -lean animals. Polygamy also has lingered on. So extreme is their belief in " a, .1 ; .... : eu I tie great festr of tho year amounts to an annual captism of the whole na tion. They have even canonized Pilate because he washed his hands and said: ") am innocent of tho blood of this just Man.' Any work Jdone at my shop has the style and neatness of first class tailoring. Cleaning ani^repairing a specialty. J. B. Ripplinuek. Delinquent Notice. Last Uhsinco < mil Co., Limited. SI. Anthon -, Idaho. There is delinquent upon the folio v ' in g de serihed stock) on account < f an as sessment levied April 1st, 1M03, the scv< nil ana tints set opposite the names of the holders.asDollows: respecti ve share Name. | No. of shares A mount. K M Hopkins ~ >17 50 Fouis Stoddard •* :t 00 J.C.Grapo ■1 40 H. Taylor, L> W. Lue us i 5 15 Jos. Drown ! 00 tlie be u:s as >e two in: H. Vf. Jack i;. F. Fk'tcli H. H. Smith Kirk Finney S. Jack' Tho.« K. Ha Jos M. Wot k . Crapo euzo Co I J. H. Dayle Jus. F< ton I). W. Luci J. K Remin J. J. Remington And in uepordan«' f each par 3 t*k ; 1 of st oldlat the lu at St. Anthony, Fremont liith day of M ay. 1W-. at ■ day. to pay| delinquent K ether w otm costs 7 Ü0 T SO law many shams may ht; m-o.-ssary eot Thos. It. Hamer 'utility, hlahn. on the o'clock 1 ». m. of such nssment thereon tu rlisine and expense . Miller, Jr., Secy., Parker. Idaho. Notice. s, 'wilford. Fr .ssossiner.t Twin lirovja < am,I 1 ' inetpa) place of I ■ounty, Idaho Notice lsJhereby mven. t.iat at directors, held on the nth d Hind, an nsift ssment of oUpersti paid to this secretary. Any stol'k upon whkdi this as., semen mains unpaid on the JOth dj;,o, Ma .. P -. he delinquent -and advertised ! auction at d unless payment is date will lie sold,I one an tut ft to assessm-Jit. together with tit tisitii! an) expenses t publie IiUde beforetliut pay delinquent cost ,,t adver of sale. Henry \V right. Soe st. Anthony. Idaho First date of Pub. May - Pi: vp Irrigation. In our western country and even in some localities in tlie central west, considerable irrigation has been done by the means oi pumps. Some de clare that irrigation by means of pumps can never amount to much. But we know that, this practice Is as old as civilization, and this mode of irrigation has been employed in some parts of the world successfully for centuries. There are many qjlaces In our western states, where from five to fifteen acres of land are Irrigated by pumps driven by wind mills. Doubtless the future will see the further utilization of the pump, whether driven by wind or by other i jrce. Fat-Tailed Sheep in Siberia. Vast tracts of natural pasture In Siberia are considered ideal for sheep raising, says the Live Stock Journal. The fat-tailed Tartar sheep is the best. At present these sheep are reared for the fat on their tails. The fat grows all through the summer and a year ling will give 20 pounds of tallow. In the winter months the fat gradually disappears; it is one of tlie provisions of nature. When no more food is to be l;a<l because of the snow the sheep derive sustenance by absorbing the tail fat. If housed and fed in the winter, the fat remains. This fat tailed sheep Is not a great wool pro ducer, and an Inferior breed is kept for that purpose. Dormant Bacteria. Bref. John L. Sheldon says: "Like Borne weeds, bacteria may remain dor mant for long periods. When the con ditions necessary for their growth re turn they immediately become active. Seeds of the cockle-burr, ragweed and sunflower may lie in the ground for a year or more without germinating, but when tlie soil is stirred up and they begin to feel the influence of the sun shine and air, the seedlings burst from their seed coats anti push their way tip through the soil, apparently all the more vigorous on account of their long rest. New Zealand Bacon Shipments. For some years the New Zealanders have been trying to ship bacon to Eng land and get it there in good cou il tion. Until recently they have met with little success so far as getting their product to market in good shape was concerned. The bacon generally came onto the market either tainted or discolored, due to the methods of freezing. Now a method of chilling and freezing has been invented that is : aid to make it possible to put the bacon onto the English market In as fine condition as when it came from the New Zealand factories. The food and drink of hogs should be perfectly pure, if a pure product Is desired. City Council Meeting* The city council held their regular monthly meeting in the council rooms last Monday evening. There was uot much of importance to attend to. Dr. Middleton was appointed city physician; Wm Broadbnrst, street commissioner; and Jos. lvershaw was licensed village scavenger.