i rv $3WlrVV'WVVU'M Opening of the Great Uintah Indian Reservation Ujw,'',,'V',""' Prosldcnt Roosevelt on July 15 signed tho proclnmntlon providing (or tho opening to homesteaders and townslto entry of the unallotted lands In tho great Uintah Reservation in Utah. Tho Reservation contains 2,446,000 acres, but tho Military and Forestry Reserves and such Mineral lands as have to bo withdrawn under existing laws will leave 1,069,000 acres avail-. ablo lor entry. Registration for tho land will com- tnenco August 1st and close August 12th. Registration may bo mado at Grand Junction, Colo., and Vernal, Prlco and Provo, Utah. Prospective settlors may register at any ono of these places from 9:00 a. m., Tuesday, August 1st, until 6:00 p. m., Saturday, August 12th. To obtain registration, each appll cant must appear at ono of tho regis tration places and show himself duly Qualified to mako homestead entry MAKING OF BOGUS PEARLS. Most Extensively Imitated of All the Precious Stones. Among all precious stones few arc so extensively imitated as tho pearl. Tho real article is a silvery white. Iridescent gem, ' extracted from the pearl oyster. Tho genuine pearl Is really an unfructlflod egg of tho oyster. Its Imitation Is arrived at by a chemical process. Tho liquid employ ed In the manufacture is called "es sence d'orlent." Tho baso of this compound Is prepared by throwing in to water of ammonia tho brilliant scales of a small river fish called the blay. Tho scales are first carefully wash ed and put to soak in water, when the pearlyliko film falls away and forms a sediment at tho bottom of the ves sel, tfhls sediment is worth to the manufacturer $25 an ounce. White wax of mucllago or gum ara ble forms part of the mixturo proper tor the moro important and expensive Imitations, such as those mado tojml tato tho rare oriental pearls whlcb fetch fabulous prices. Tho emerald Is another stone which Is cleverly Imitated. A perfect omer aid is the rarest stone in the world though tho "trade ranks It after the ruby and tho diamond. The best em eralds come from P.eru, the imitation? from France, and a few from Birming ham. The real article becomes elec tric by friction and heroin lies the dif ference between it and the imitation. AT THE LAST MOMENT. Thoughts of Great Men Immediately Preceding Dissolution. There are few sayings of great men half so interesting n3 the words they utter before tho curtain is rung down for the last time. What, for Instance, could bo sweet er than this picture, of the last mo ments of John Richard Groen, the his torian? He had spoken tho last sen tences of tender farewell and grati tude to those around his bed, and then, placing his forefinger on bis pulse, ho looked up at the doctor ntooping over him and with a smile uttered tho one word, "Stopped." Phelps' closing words were the most dramatic ho had spoken on any stage He was playing Wolsey in "Henry VIII," and had Just spoken the line "Farewell, a long farewell to all my sreatness," when ho staggered and was led off the boards w,hich he was -. rever to tread again. Many of the kings of tho earth .have never been nobler than in the con- eluding moment of their lives. Rich ard I, Just as he was breathing bit last, said to Uertrand de Gourdon. whose arrow had killed htm, "Youth, I forgive you," and then turning to his attendants ho 6aid, "Take off his chains, give him a hundred shillings and let him go." A curious fancy possessed Garibaldi Just before he died. Two birds came flying to his window and alighted on the- sill, and to Garibaldi they appear ed like tho spirits of his two dead children. "They have come," he said tenderly, "to see theh" father die. Be kind to them and feed them when I'm gone." Thomas Carlyle's death was not easier or happier than his life nd at the last he remarked, pathetic ally: "Is it not strange that these peo pie should have chosen the very oldest man In all Britain to mako suffer in this way?" sup op thbv Jr y 5LY-r-"v I Vt"" f ' (1Gi acres) by written application to bo mado only on a blank form pro vided by tho Commissioner of tho General Land Offlco. Registration cannot be effected through tho malls or by an agent, oxcept in tho caso of honorably discharged soldiers or saliora, who may present their appli cations and duo proofs of tholr quali fications through an agent of their own selection, having a duly executed power of attorney, on a blank for that purposo provided by tho Commis sioner. No person will bo permitted to act as agent for moro than ono sol dier or sailor, and no ono will be allowed to register moro than onco or in any other than his truo name. Tho procedure necessary to secure lands In this greatest of government reservations Is outlined In detail In a pamphlet just issued by the Passen ger Department Denver & Rio Grande Railroad. Writo to S. K. Hooper, Gen'l P. & T. A., Denver, Colo. Fcr Larger Lives. In Heaven, they say, ts undisturbed and perfect peace; a.d yet Alone our heartstrings, even there, a tremor of regret Must sometimes wander Into pain, If memory survives A grief that In this good, great world wo lived no larger lives. God moves our planet gloriously among tho sturry spheres. And nobler movements for our souls, through these our mortal years, In widening orbits toward Himself eter nally He planned; Wo creep and rust In treadmill graved wo will not bo made grand. ...... Yet souls that win Immortal heights un closed with self must move! Tho only thing that wo can tako from earth to Heaven Is lovol To mako us great like Thee, O Qodl Thy Spirit with us strives! Enlarge our lives to take Thco Inl O, give us nobler lives I Lucy Larcom. Waste of Nerve Energy. So many people needlessly and recklessly waste their nervo energy. They drum the chair or tho desk with their fingers or tap tho floor with their toes. They hold their hands. They sit In a rocking chair nnd rock for very dear life. If they write or sew they get down to it with a vengeance and contract their brows and wrinkle their foreheads and grind their teeth. If they havo an unusual task to do they contract and contort every mus cle of the body, making themselves tense and rigid all over, when tho work perhaps required but ono set of muscles or perhaps tho mind only, as tho case may bo. The 8un's Heat. "The sun's heat?" said tho astrono mer. "Well, let us say that tho value of tho sun's heat is $25,000,000. Now, what proportion of all that value do you Bupposo warms the earth? Only two cents' worth. "All the rest of tho sun's heat is wasted In space. Of tho $25,000,000 the earth only gets 2 cents. "With coal I can give you another idea of the sun's heat. Suppose that the earth was to contract to heat the sun. Do you know what tho result would bo? All tho coal upon the earth would suffice to maintain tho present solar heat for just one-tenth of a sec ond." Sober Second Thought. A farm laborer who was getting married found that he had not enough money with which to pay tho minis ter's fee. Ho promised, however, to pay him in potatoes when they wero ready for digging up. Tho minister waited for somo time, but no potatoes were forthcoming; so ho called upon tho roan and inquired the reason. "Well, to tell you the truth, guvner," was the reply, "I'd like to give you tho potatoes, but she ain't worth it" Harper's Weekly. That glow of good feeling tradition ally believed to follow a kind act is dampened whon ono Is not exactly sure whether or not be has been proved an easy mark. When a man talks about giving hon or to tho Most High ho needs to bo suro that ho' has some of his own In stock Henry F. Copo In Chicago Tribune. it some men knew as much as they pretend tq know they would Know ever so much more than tho majority of men. A woman can tano a veil, a couple of ribbons and a smilo and beat all the work that nature ever performed for human beauty. New York Press. BATTLESHIP MISSOURI IS FASTEST IN AMERICAN NAVY ":. ' ii i ,tw , ii.J The battleship Missouri, which de feated other vessels of the North At lantic fleet in a race from Newport to New York, is ono of the new ships of tho navy, having been In commission only slnco tho autumn of 1903. She is a sister ship of the Ohio and tho new Maine and has a displacement of 12, 300 tons.- Tho vessel Is Ivsavily ar- w FOR USERS OF AUT08. Fine French Boulevard on Which They Can Speed. In Franco automobllo building has reached Its highest development, though our manufacturers aro fast closing tho gap that separates them from their Gallic competitors. Not only Is tho machine made In Franco, says Everybody's Magazine, but roads for It to do its best on aro provided. Biarritz Is constructing a 90-milo boulevard on the coast at Arcachon for tho excluslvo use of fast motor cars. On it there will bo no bpeed re strictions, and every man nnd woman ambitious to break a record or a necic will havo a froo llcenso to do sq. Lum bering trucks, family parties drawn by old Dobbin, nurse-maids with per ambulators will not attempt to cross tho bows of 70-mlle-an-hour devil wag ons. Solid walls will lino each sldo of a 70-foot-wldo cement boulevard, and any accidents thnt may enliven a day's sport will bo confined among tho Bpeoders themselves. Llko tho course of Ormond, Fla., this Freifch raco track will bo on tho beach, where in terlopers will have small excuse to go. Tho construction of tho course will cost $1,600,000, a comparatively small amount when the magnltudo of tho automobllo business Is considered. Fishers and Suckers. There aro those who claim that "a sucker Is born every minute." And It may bo stated that tho birth rato of those who mako a business of fishing for suqkers Is also largo. Tho sucker fisherman does not stay long In ono place. If the suckers nibble ho per mits them to swallow bait, hook, bob, lino and sinker, and then, wise flshpr man, ho goes to anothor place, spits on his bait and tries- his luck again. Warn tho sucker of his fate? You would as well try to admonish a pig. When tho biting season Is- on it Is his Instinct to nibble. "A fool and his money aro soon parted." And tho cynic will Insist that the only way to mako a wise man out of a fool Is to part him from his money. Atlanta Journal. Few Catawba Indians Left. Robt. Leo Harris, chief of tho Cataw ba tribe of Indians, which has a tiny reservation embracing only ono square mile near Rock Hill, S. C, on which aro eighty members of tho tribe, lately visited Raleigh, N. C, seeking in the stato library for all Information pos sible about tho Catawbas. These In dians wero, oven after 1700, a power ful tribe, and touched tho Chorokees, who wero in tho North Carolina moun tains and in tho foothills. Chief Har ris says that there are only 150 Cataw bas In tho United States, while in 1700 tho, tribe could muster several thou sand warriors. Ho Is anxious to havo tho tribe put under federal caro and educated by tho government. Left Sermon to Catch Burglar. Rev. R. B. Scott, pastor of tho Bap tist church In Falrmount, Va., Is evi dently a believer In muscular Christi anity. In tho midst of the service Sunday night a man named World en tered the church and Informed the minister that his (World's) hbnso was being robbed. The pastor mado tho announcement from tho pulpit, cut short tho closing exercises and the congregation rosolved Itself at onco Into a sort of posse committee to hunt burglars. Upon reaching World's houso it was found that the burglar had fled. Diner's Ready Promise. After a recent banquet ono of the diners having tipped the table waiter, the wlno waiter nnd every waiter within sight, was confronted by still another of them. "You'll remember the waiter?" was tho murmur. "Let mo see: what have you dono for me?" "Toothpick, sir," was tho reply, as tho waiter lndlcatod tho horrid and unused Implements. "Remember you!" exclaimed tho diner, laying a genial hand upon his shoulder. "I shall never, never forget your lovely face." morcd and her guns aro in proportion, aB sho carries four twelve-Inch guns and sixteen six-inch guns, with n num ber of smaller weapons. Tho Missouri has two submerged torpedo tubes, and her complement Is 551 officers and men. In tho rnco Just won by the Missouri tho averago speed was 18.22 knots. INDIAN CHIEF IN TROUBLE. Though Off Reservation, He Wanted Old Customs Kept Up. Jim Big Heart, a wealthy Indian farmer who lives at Pnwhuskn, I. T., got Into trouble In Kansas City, Kan , tho other day by having too much money. Having sold two car loads of cattle, ho proceeded to display some of his eccentricities. Officers were called to a rooming houso, whero Big Henrt Insisted on sitting on tho beds and making hlmsolf perfectly at homo. He explained to tho ofllccrs that on tho reservation he was accustomed to go ing where ho choso and that tho homes of his people wore open to him. Ho was taken to tho police headquar ters and $1,500 wns found in his pock cts. Big Heart Is well educated and speaks excellent English. Ho owns a 700-acro farm and several hundred head of horses and cattle. Chicago Chronicle. Famous Swiss Cheese. According tda report by United States Consul Hlggiua of Berne, there aro 700,000 cows In Switzerland. Thoy averago C25 gallons of milk a year por cow, a total of 402,500,000 gallons, val ued at $44,000,000. Forty-two por cent Its used for homo consumption and tho rest for condensed milk, cheese and butter. Although representing but one-fifth of tho entiro milk production tho cnecso market dictates tho price of milk to all Switzerland. Tho cheose Is mado In about 2,000 small creamer ies, somo of which nro owned by cc-oporatlvo societies and others by Independent cheese makers. Summer cheeso made from milk dur ing tho tlmo tho cows nro In tho pastures commands a better price than tho winter product mado when tho cows aro stabled. Tho averago price for cheeso In 1903 was fifteen cents per pound. The total export In 1903 was 53,000, 000 pounds, valued at $8,000,000. Only Self-Made Man. Tho only self-made man In the world, Dr. Mdry Walker, now has an opportunity to rejolco and bo exceed ingly glad. Sho Is vindicated. A wise judge in Pasadena, Cal., has rendered a decision to tho effect that ho finds no ordinance whereby women shall bo prevented from wearing trousers If they choose. Mrs. Mary Johnson, lead er of a cult In Pasadena called "back to naturo," raised the issue. Thoro Is a colony of these pants-clad ladles In that city, nnd they may parade tho streets at will, trousered llko papa, ir not boarded llko a pard. Let us hope thoy will go ui that grand street called "Millionaires' Mllo" and pass by tho homo of Bob Burdetto, who may find material In tho scene for n new lecture entitled "Tho Rise and Fall of tho Skirt." Portland Oregonlan. America's Great Iron Fled. Tho best-placed field for the produc tion of Iron In North America or, save that In northern China, in tho world, Is In tho central section of tho Missis sippi valley, mainly between tho great river and tho Appalachian system of mountains and northward beyond the gret lakes to the headwaters of tho streams flowing Into Hudson's Bay, tho physical conditions on tho wholo being favorable for tho cheap produc tion of tho metal and Its ready trans portation to tho principle markets, it Is a question, however, if tho store will supply the demands of tho future. International Quarterly. Auto Was Very Useful. Frank E, Gleason, a farmer out in Warren, Is ablo to see somo good In automobiles after his experience of Tuesday. Mr. Glearon had a big load of hay Just ready to go In when ono of his horses balked. A thunder show er was about to begin operations In tho vicinity and ho was in a quandary when a man who is visiting him rode Into tho field in his auto. Quickly making fast a "hawser" to tho axle of the hay rack, the load was snatched into the barn In short order. Boston Globe. TO CHRI8TEN LARGE WARSHIP. Daughter of Governor of State Will Name the Kansas, Preparations for tin launching of tho now battleship Kansas aro nearly tfom iloted and tho monster war boat soon will glldo down tho wayB at tho New York shipbuilding yards at Camden. Tho Kansas, which will bo tho larg est battleship In the American navy, will bo chrlBtened by M!bs Anna Hoch, laughter of Gov. Hoch of Kansas. This suporh addition to tho navy will jlvo ground for encomiums oven great nr than thoso Prosldcnt Roosovelt hoapod upon It whon, after rovlowlng tho squadron from on board tho Sylph, ho characterized it ns "n most power ful flcoL" Miss Hoch, who stands sponsor" for tho Bhlp, has Just passed her mnjorlty. Sho kcops closo to her father in all if hlB ndmlnlBtratlvo duties, nnd It la said ho consults hor almost dally. Tho keel of tho Knnsns was laid on Feb. 1, 1004. Known ns n 450-foot battleship, tho Kansas Is a sister ship to tho Connecticut, tho Minnesota and tho Vermont. Sho will havo accom modations for 800 ofllcors and men. Sho will bo required .to mako a speed of eighteen knots. WERE FAMILY OF GIANTS. Last of the Lltto, Famed Far and Wide for Strength, Is Dead. Tho Inst of tho Lilts family, ono of tho most romarknblo in Now York, has gono with tho passing away of Thom as, who died in Montlccllo. Ho died suddenly from tho effect of tho ox tromo heat whllo at work In a Hold near his home. Ho was 80 years of ago and for tho last half contury had been ono of tho most commanding nnd prominent figures in Sullivan county becauso of his slzo and wonder ful strength. Ho was sorgcant in tho 143d regimont of New York volunteors nnd was tho strongest man In tho reg iment. Every member of tho family of ten, flvo males and fivo females, was as strong as a giant and the won derful fcntB of strength performed by thorn won for them almost national fame. Thomas Lltts, whllo attending tho old-tlmo logging and haying bees, on dlfforent occasions has boon known to pick up a barrel full of cider nnd drink from the buughole. A brother carried a barrel of pork on his back, a mllo without resting, on a wagor, tho pork being tho wager. NEy YORK HAS BLUEBEARD. Frederick E. Carlton Declared to Be a Much-Married Man. Tho latost wife of Frederick ,E. Carlton, Now York's Bluebeard, was Miss Wllotta Sherwood Bird of 422 Wost Nineteenth street. Sho was married to Carlton on April 2G, 1904, when ho went under tho name of James Edward McCandless. Ho gave his age at that time as 23 and his FREDERICK C. CARLTON. homo address as Moberly, Mo. What has como to bo called Carlton's court Bhlp ammunition has been turned over to tho inspector by Miss Eleanor Van deventer, with whom tho man lived beforo his arrest and whom ho says ho will marry when be Is free, It con sists of a lot of fine jewelry and trin kets and pieces of feminine finery. Laughing at London. It is only In London that Buch a misuse of so splendid a position as Trafalgar square would be tolerated as It has been for more than two gen erations. The National gallery, with Its squat facado and pepper-box domes tho laughing stock of the intelligent foreigner makes a fitting background to tho Sahara of asphalt, which no one ever crosses, the muddy fountains guarded by meaningless lions, and the towering column surmounted by a di minutive figure of Nelson. Times of India. sssHBnGrasittBiiiiiH sttHSS&raiHa&'s-LIIIIIH TWENTY YEARS OF IT. maclnted by Diabetes; Tortured with Gravel and Kidney Pains. Henry Soulo, cobbler, of Ham mondsporL N. Y., saya: "Slnco Doan's Kldnoy Pills cured mo olght yeara ago, 1'vo reached 70 and hopo to Uvo many years long er. But twenty years ago I had kidney troublo so bad I could not work. Backacbo was peralstont and It was ngony to ilft anything. Gravel, whirling headaches, dlzzl nnofl nnil tnrrlhlfk urinary disorders ran mo down from 1C8 to 100 pounds. Doctors told mo I had dtnbctcs nnd could not llvo, I wns wrotchod nnd honolcss when I .began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but thoy cured mo olght years ago and I'vo boon well over slnco." Fostor-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For salo by all dealers. Prlco, 50 conts per box. Tho tonos of human voices aro mightier than strings of brass to movo tho soul. Klopstoclc. NO 8LEEP FOR MOTHER Baby Covered With Sores and Scales Could Not Tell What 8he Looked Like Marvelous Cure by Cutlcura. "At four months old my baby's faco and body wero so covcrod with sores and largo scaloa you could not toll what sho looked llko. No child over had a worso case. Her faco was being; oaton away, and oven hor flngor nails fell off. It Itched so sho could not sleep, and for many weary' Lights we could get no rcBt. At last wo got Cutlcura Soap and Ointment Tho sores began to heal at onco, and she could sleep at night, and in one month sho had not ono goto on her faco or body. Mrs. Mary Snndors, 709 Spring St, Camdon, N. J." Sympathy goos a great way toward creating a feeling that con bo mis taken for lovo. Bvery person thinking of visiting th Uintah Indian reservation In eastorn Utah, to be opened for settlement August 28th. should nave a Homesaekers' (luldo and sectional map. It tells everything. Bant Sostpatd for 60c. Address W. II. Km ions, 700 17th St., Denver. Colorado. Tho bottor tho reputation the hard or is it to socuro tho rowards which really belong to it. Here Is Relief for Women. Mother Gray, n nurso la Now York, dts covered a pleasant herb remedy for women's Ills, called AUSTRALIAN-LEAF. It Is the only certain monthly regulator. Cures female weaknesses, Backache, Kidney and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mail Mots. Sample mailed FREIi. Address. Tho Mother Gray Co., LeRoy, N. Y. Masqueraded as Criminals. Original was tho Idea of a Berlin doctor who gavo a ball at which tho SuostB woro obliged to masquerado is well known criminals Naturally algh-born malefactors of history, such is tho Borglas, In that they afforded most scopo for artistic costumes, woro chlofly In favor, though ono of :ho hits of tho evening was mado by in Englishman, who, got up as Charles Pcaco, tho notorious burglar, mingled with tho aristocracy of crlmo. Care for Pauper Children. Tho plans of maintaining tho chil dren of tho pooi- or such as may be tn tho poorhouses or "unions" in cot :agos and homes of that character, is Qndlng a very general adoption la England, no less than 128 "unions" sow maintaining the children away !rom tho pauperizing effects or poor iouso association. Tho county of Los don paid out 72 conts a head of Its population for tho half-year on poor account Chlrography Was Puzzle. Harvey Walters, on expert on pat 9nt cases, bad occasion to write Rufusi Choato on somo important question, Mid when ho received tho reply was unable to read a word of It so took' tho missive to Mr. Choato and asked him what ho had written. Mr. Choato replied: "I never can read my writ Ing after tho Ink is dry, but if you will tell mo what It is about I will tell you what I havo written." And ho did. BABY'S INSTINCT Shows Ho Knew What Food to 8tlck To. Forwarding a photo of a splendidly handsome and healthy young boy, a happy mother writes from an Ohio town: "Tho enclosed picture shows my f-year-old Grape-Nuts boy. "Slnco he was 2 years old ho has eaten nothing but Grape-Nuts. Ho demands and gets this food three tiroes a day. This may seem rather unusual, but ho does not care for any thing else after he has eaten his Grape-Nuts, which he uses with milk or cream, and then ho is through with his meal. Even on Thanksgiving day ho refused turkey and all tho good things that make up that great din ner, and ate his dish of Grape-Nuts and cream with the best results and none of tho evils that the other fool ish members of tho family experi enced. "He Is never sick, has a beautiful complexion, and Is considered a very handsome boy. May the Postum Com pany prosper and long contlnua. to fun nlsh their wholesome food!" Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek Mich. There's a reason. Read the little book. "The Road to Wellville," In p ery pkg.