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Show THE GUNNISON GAZETTE NtPMI GUDHIIL V 80N. A OUNNItON UTAH With ia ih trO hl? Ml It )ri imitilt Ihtw tutuli) In VI nil Inr f is Im min It f ll of Iturktllli, I hl I null ha Rial (or imiu1-iI- ftattiw on mikhi I ( - av Daw Niim. Ii alt. It a a iii iiii. Icglln lull U Imi in l., 5 Ihiik tf - 1 a li - la 1 Va v - By Belle E. Eumviu. A In mini rnn.tiit i ha mil ih' dlM!mn.. n all tin lun v a rtiix'Hir Cl. Ill llu tuvriilur Itat , cV.K i ol.I- - 50 only lit ihx "lltl irn. ( J,v .tr? r? :) ali-- ! i !nt-- i zr l'hiiei a (omnhiii hat Tlit lo U I j- Hih oil-- lo r li(il A 11111 III i lo n l Tho dansh'or o( I sunlit omi I to lo lliia ronn'r) in Oii'l on on nutv V 'J't la ilaiiliil. olhr f'iln liu'hr j,nnii (ha Inn I ninths In MHv mir z'.-.y- T .. Il' lr I ha I1, iV AV-V . i :,'r fc'Hv ni .V t'H,1 I III J vr yj . ,t mmb 0 il'L 7, !: t 'I'!' J )- ;r'M f? All tb amlt ial lo a.JmiM tha tai of In man ho MU In lo with a young woman ari l manlnl hi bacauna th lhankit Mm a Ion l a an I atom lio imn bar bin and aat down "h r aM and alilti die not a(nraia." 1 't thlla.illila man h fl l.l iun In law 50 allh ahlrh lo Inn a rnH to hnn hlniaalf Tha iH.iwflrlar a ill raih-- i probably forro iha boqni than comply alth lu mn.llilutiH. but It I certainly a terrible tale lo coin from tha Cltv of Utoihartv - sxft ?N. 'rvv K.h- rs - YtA ' h 111 1! i I T as- -l r vw- - i;!l !!' j'T'l ' T A o-nl- a Mlk 45 lva. prof D C. Jarkoon of Ilia Ma- bn rhuaciia InMIima of larhnolo bean retained by the )Iiimi 1ihm,ii highway roinnilMiion lo n.nke a irpon ' 'll I oil:: yfrW n I 11 1 V. ft j h'li ; t.i rmsmi gM -- - tr'Tr't f, hiVrJ i fhrl i rS v'X v -- wilt him 1 i,.,"ru t .ik lo til h) lh ri.iiil in. I in for in oi aln lO ll.lll Whirl nil.. i li j..i a.-.-- 1,1' !l " I'lllriiii ; i'i I aliu-- c l!ln Ihiii want II "ili Of iiiiiim ilial ai-r lo apt II. Iml Im! an t mil i.f a an 11 f II llii.lin.-.- l '.I i, it J S . tail) tinullv I lit innii uimtliir of man I aim ai cuius lhai 1) 1. I So $ '4-- . regarding t In lalepluma hliuailon with apecial referenre to ilia piartbabllit of a redurllon In rale and a hirthei Ice efficiency of m-- 1 The official denial of the Xbrtuzi Cl kina engagement will bhuiler a ro tnnnre In alihh two cniilinenla were deeply iuiereaied, and many will re use to give up the lioe lhai llie path of true love may jel lie smoothed foi the roval lover and (he lie.iiniful Anieilcan ghl of liU lieni I. 'k, I X A of 'N ;v v 'v The recent refiiKerntlon congieas In ha reminded a aiudent of his tory that Francis flamn made the firsi experiments In the use of snow for thr l. preservation of meat The people 01 ' Nw Zealand, who have been largely derndenl on refrigerated meal. Iiav ' shown Ihelr appieeiatlon of Hacon'p. discovery hv erecbiw waffld'T'r'Tiiii Ruroe V rc-i- ; c At the'.recent dedication In Bath o a tablet to Edmund Buike, Whltelaw Reid spoke In behalf of Ameiicans it honor of their best Mend in Grea. Britain. Burke has become almost national beio in America, and it wai he who phiased most eloquently manj principles that are part of our tradt tion. His? "Speech on Conciliation" ii a difficult' piece for schoolboys, but I 'ought always to be a part of the pre scribed reading of young America. . , coal The yM . ? m ..X of . . 2.T0... The president of the University ol Illinois lias announced that dismissal will in future, be the punishment ol hawing, "which jie denounces as a violation bfthe rght of individuality, provocative of public disorder, in its milder forms nonsensical, and m its coarser forms vulgar, brutal, always demoralizing and sometimes dangerous. ' Hence, he says, the university cannot countenance or tolerate it. Such a stand in the opinion of the Indianapolis Star? generally imitated, will soon end. the practice. Jmrglar broke into a and, took eveiy thing but the temperatures, we piesume. A Chicago Rents AX I 1 - .eudum amor g the .leading u! this co- - il,y on the ".s A is your eptnion of the lr,(' t et'i yi h'i ? Ajihji , Sromv rC.L; a Europe anc) X pi erica ? as "follow,' Washington Me the .greatest favor-ewne ianti bah i - flBrutne, .. - jj . 4 M J - 7A I XA A ' 'I, .y ,, ryi&r f .r ' y, - ro t- 0 . 5 - - . X V s 'y ,? lefS 1st ,c& Sfc' 'Y y- - iXrx&eg? ' J 1 surrounds foik-lorist- MJEW y JJVO CAZAAEZj PAfCESj bage. Silesia is a province which has especially earned a reputation for succulent dishes. Some of the most renowned of German gastronomies! authorities have lent additional luster to the place by being born there. At Christmas time the dish most in request among the Silesians is a smoked pigs head with baked fruit packed in it, and also generously spread over the whole dish. This dainty rejoices in the name of Himmelsreich (the kingdom of heaven) In North Germany the pigs head is not as prominent as in the south. Here there is more miscellaneous Christmas eating, hearty enoug put altogether in variance with America tastes. Cakes of all sizes and shapes are'aVo h,.ked and eaten, and some of these have and a hardness of jLouchness to tleir- - . gran re. These'eakes take the form of ICoechrt tV gutta-perch- I I T :;h TSeSVl5VJ! GERMAt C7R6TrtA3 MUMMERS lines of sui passing beauty, before a person's house they are geneially rewarded for their pains with gifts of lard, bacon and eggs. But with all the mysticism andultra sentimental ways of regaiding Christmas the German never forgets it is eminently a season of Pork in every form and beer good cheer. usually take the place of roast beef, tui key, and stronger drinks. Then they also have the boar's head with a lemon impaled between its Ot course this delicacy dates gi inning tusks back to Wotan's day. Tradition says Wotan was fond of the boar's head, hut it is not easy to. see wheie the lemon comes in, as the god was certainly not familiar with this tart fruit, in Biandenburg and the Uckermark any, pigs head will do (the stock of hoars heads would not hold out), and round this animals head are garnishings of sausage and green cab- that the German his Chiistmas with more of an clement of mysticism than does he of It is any other nation. piobably a survival of the his far back days when painted ancestors celebrated their mysteiious rites, at Christmas, under their daik groves of forest oaks. In nearly every district of the fatheiland theie still remains the quaintest and queerest of Christmas customs, whose origin is lost in the hoariest antiquity. They have all in the process of time assumed a Christian character, more or less burlesqued, s but the will tell you that they date from the days of Wot an and Frey a. The peasants of Silesia, the woodmen of the Black Forest, and the hilismen of Bavaria, happily know nothing of the origin of the queer pranks they play at Christmas; they only know that they have been handed down by their fathers, and that they in turn will hand down the immemorial customs to their children. In Germany the old custom of mumming is still kept up. From house to house these mummeis go. The shepherds, especially, are enteitainicg. They aie the comic men of the troupe who, in a half grotesque and half serious way, represent the events of the nativity Theie was a famous company of Christmas mummers, a couple of years ago in Bavaria, t with 'a magnifies .lookin 4ifbi shepherd, wjio minibtcs 1,-) k.'tg fm at t, ' E ARE told V. i " U OESEAMPmCE cOACZM. i X . THC vilf pc.'. y XA. RA nvo v isacv, i. k tX 0 ! h 1 . 1 xm JriX Xi 'T t, ConVera 'Jj. , n 'Q f r- X T 5. 0 yVT .ye, 1 --X i)Tp3'' tradet is one of the 'which persists greatest single movements of cargo ir. "From Pittsburg to New 'Sthe Orleans .Id 2,000 miles, all downhill ' Coal in 1.000 ton barges is rafted Into - fleets and-- towed down this distanev .;by,j)Owerfal steamboats at a cost o less than 7 5 xents a ton, against 1 rate of about four dollars and . Pittsburg to Mem fifty' cents--fro' phis for 43 cents, against a rail rats : i-- ' 1 -- - X:,-'-- capita A'fnlnisler recently lead a paper be fore a Congregational church confer enct in Boston In which he called at tention lo the fact that In the mem bership of fc6 churches in that vicimt) only, one child to each chinch was bpm during llie year. His conclnsior was that Congregational families an ceasing to peipetuate themselves am that Pui itan stock is dying out. Presi dent Boasevelt ought to look Into this S- - a Ruprccht. nr Nikolaus, angels and other Christmas novelties. Some of these are flavored with honey, some pepper but all are of such consistency that no ordinary grown-uperson could enjoy a surfeit of them and survive the feast Onlv rhildien seem to be able to eat these kontgbueken and live. Thuringia boasts of another curious Christmas delicacy which only the initialed can truly appreciate, this is boiled suet dumplings and herrings. One cannot be Warned for asking, why this mixtme? Was the herring also favored by Wotan? The hening, as a Chiistmas dainty, is also favored throughout Saxony, but there takes the form of a salad, and is eaten with smoked pork, and a delicate kind of sauerkraut, in which caraway seeds are prominent. The Saxony peasant's Christmas table is invariably decked with these dishes on Christmas eve, and remains thus spread out during the night. His idea in doing this is that angels, possibly weary of nectar and ambrosia, may condescend to visit his humble abode while he sleeps and regale themselves wdth Saxon smoked beef and herring salad. It is interesting to watch the transformation of a German village at Christmas from its usually treeless appearance into a town laid in a forest of firs. Wagon loads of these trees are sent from the hills of Thuringia, the Hartz and Silesia, and aie put up in even rows in the streets and squares of the town. There is nothing like it in any other country. Por a fortnight before the great feast these long avenues of Tannen" are crowded with eager purchaser, men, women and children of all ages, and of eer station in life The great desire of each is to get a symmetrical tree, and as few trees are literally perfect in shape, it is the business of the tree merchant to supply branches and thus give the tree the desired roundness. It is the tree that is the atti action of every German home from the kaiser's palace down to the humblest peasants hut, and around it lesin-scente- d the German's best and kindliest thoughts center. The tree is not for the Geiman simply a convenient cluster of mere houghs on which to stick candles and hang presents It stands for the most sacied and mobt dread of all tees, the one once erected on Mount Calvary, and has thus become the sign and seal of his Christian failh. A Christmas Decoration. When the children have tired of even their new possessions (and haw- - soon the new becomes jld) and it is too early for the sandman to pay his nightly visit, try this simple amusement: Suspend a wreath of holly or ever- gieen from a doorway and give I each child an equal quantity of nuts, paper-- lapped candles or favors that stand ha idling, then see who ran throw the most artules through ihe wieath into a basket placed to catch them. Give a simple reward to add zest to the game. In the same manner the game of twos" is t conducted. Take a large napkin or piece of j v stout paper. Place a lot of nuts or hard can- dies in the center. Let a child take hold of each corner and give three vigorous tossei, singing; Goodies, goodies, dance, my Christmas good; Up they go, down they go; dance, my C mas goodies Then theie will be a lively scrimm. who can lecover the most. These little devices will make to the happiest day in the dren. Put them t6 bed with ing in their ears. Everywhere, everywheie, C Chiistmas where snow jieal white, Christmas where the com bright, Every w here, everywme |