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Show g-T-jLi- j Li " !.. GUNNISON GAZETTE. REWARD FOR GOOD SERVICE. Kinsales Earls Had Privilege of IJy KEDII GLLDIIILL GUNNISON, - - & SON. UTAH. UTAH STATE NEWS. Eight houses have been quarantined fit Mill Creek on account of smallpox. Mrs. Thomas West was badly in- injured in a runaway acident near Chester. Citizens of Manti have begun an active campaign against the removal of the county seat from that place. Fifty thousand head of sheep are being shipped from Marysvale to the Kansas City and Chicago markets. John Hunter had his leg so badly crushed in a cave-i- n in a coal mine at Sunnyside that amputation was necessary. There is a great demand by the public school authorities of Salt Lake City at present for substitute teachers in the grammar grades. Highwaymen beat and robbed Parley Garfield, the stableman at Wings livery in Lehi. They got but 75 cents for their pains, however. The Salt Lake route has reached the Vegas ranch, 116 miles from Caliente. The Vegas ranch is but forty-seve- n miles from the California line. More business has been done through the Utah custom house- - during the past month than in all the time before since it has been established. It is now almost certain that the big railroad shops andt iron foundries which it was announced some months ago were to be built at Ogden are to be erected. ' Death has claimed the oldest citizen of Richfield, if rot of Sevier county. At the age of 90 years and G months, Mrs. Ruth H. Hayward has passed away at Richfield. A dispatch from Mexico City says representatives of the Mormon church of Utah are negotiating for the purchase of a tract of 300,000 acres of land in the state of Tabasca. Nick Smith of Ogden is lying at the point of death in an Ogden hospital as the result of his revolver dropping Horn his pocket and exploding, the bullet passing entirely through his body. A fruitgrowers union and a canning factory are the remedies suggested for the glut of the fruit market in Utah in a report adopted at tb3 meeting of the Salt Lake County Horticultural society held last week. A curiosity was exhibited in Salt Lake City last week in the shape of two strawberry plants with buds, blossoms, green and ripe fruit. The plants were grown indoors in cans by a farmer of East Mill creek. An escaped lunatic, armed with a revolver, terrorized part of Salt Lakes residential district one night last week. It is believed he is the same man who attempted to murder Miss Burton on Main street. Considerable horsestealing has been going on in the vicinity of Marysvale recently. The last flagrant case occurred a few days ago, when a team of heavy draft horses belonging to Albert Potter were stolen from a pasture. A free night school has been started in Salt Lake City for boys and girls who are unable to attend the public schools. The school opened with an enrollment of seventy-threpupils between the ages of 12 and 19 years. Rev. Elmer I. Goshen, pastor of the First Congregational church, has charge of the school. Be- ing Covered Before King. Paris has caught the habit of going hatless and many stories connected with hats and their history are recalled. It was once counted a privi- lege to walk, not bareheaded, but covered, before a king. The earls of Kinsale had this dubious distinction e as reward for an service. Seven centuries ago Philip of France summoned that cheerful hero, Englands King John, to mortal combat. John thought he would rather not, but offered De Courcey, earl of Kin-salfreedom from the dungeon where he lay if he would take in hand the De Courcey, commission. spoiling for a fight, agreed, and John and Philip sat together to see somebodys head cracked. The French champion cried off on seeing the size of the Englishman, whereupon the untried conqueror playfully stuck bis helmet upon a post of oak and drove his sword through it and so deep into the wood that none save himself could withdraw it. He had purchased his freedom and his reward he heard from his magnanimous sovereigns lips: Thou art a pleasant companion and heaven keep thee in good beavers. Never unveil thy bonnet again before kins or subject. old-tim- e, Could Get No Rest. Freeborn, Minn., October 17 . (Spe- cial) Mr. R. E. Goward, a man here is rejoicing in the relief from suffering he has obtained Dodds Kidney Pills. through using His experience is well worth repeating as it should point the road to health to many another in a similar condition. I had an aggravating case of Kidney Trouble, says Mr. Goward, that gave me no rest day or night but using a few boxes of Dodds Kidney Pills put pew life in me and I feel like a new man. I am happy to state I have received great and wonderful benefit from Dodds Kidney Pills. I would heartily recommend all sufferers from Kidney Trouble to give Dodds Kidney Pills a fair trial as I have every reason to believe it would never be regretted. Dodd's Kidney Pills make you fee) like a new man or woman because they cure the kidneys. Cured kidneys mean pure blood and pure blood means bounding health and energy in every part of the body. Human Foot Grows Smaller. It is asserted by a sculptor that the human foot is becoming smaller. The masculine foot of twenty centuries ago was about twelve inches long. The average mans foot of is easily fitted with a No. 8 V2 shoe, which is not more than ten and inches in length. well-know- n Comprehensive. "If I wrote on till I told you everyso ran the closthing, Mavourneen a in certain Impassioned ing paragraph young Irishmans love letter-- -I u still be having a volume to tell you, New Orleans Picayune. darling. TEA We export millions on millions of wheat and pork, and take in exchange a few Are we cargoes of tea. losers ? World's Fair Visitors. Persons attending the great Exposition' should secure a room close to at St. Louis the Fair and In a safe brick building. Hotel Epworth has all the conveniences of a s modern hotel, within four minutes walk f Convention and Administration entra i. Hates $1.00 per day and up for lodging. Meals at reasonable prices. From Union Station, go to Olive street, nve Delmar Garden ear. going west to BfOO. Our boys meet all cars. first-clas- Characteristics of Parents. Children soon learn that it is father who has the money, and mother who has the disposition. Allens Wonderful Remedy. Have tried ALLEN'S FOOT-EASand find it to be a certain cure, and gives comfort to one suffering with sore, tender and Foot-Eas- e, E, swollen feet. I will recommend ALLENS to my friends, as it is Phonographs for Sweat Box. certainly a wonderful remedy. Mrs. N. In Vienna the answers made by H. Guilford, New Orleans, La. prisoners in the sweat box will be Burn Garbage by Electricity. recorded by a phonograph, so that there can not be subsequent doubt of Cologne and Dartmund burn their the statements made. garbage by means of electricity. FOOT-EAS- E TALK ON ADVERTISING By C. W. Post to Publishers at Banquet at Battle Creek. The sunshine that makes a business plant grow is advertising. Growing a business nowadays is something like growing an apple-tree- . You may select good seed, plant it in good soil, water and work with it, but the tree will not produce fruit until another and most 'powerful, energizelement is brought ing and to bear. You must have sunshine and lots of it. Can you expect to ripen apples in the dark? Can you expect to grow a profitable business plant nowadays without the sunshine of public favor produced by advertising? This Postum plant is a good illustration of that law. It seems but a short time ago when I put a few men at work in the carriage house of the barn you have seen where we Postum coffee. began making The seed then planted, less than 9 years ago, was a new kind of apple seed and it was not altogether certain how the people would like the apples. We did our work thoroughly and plenty of it. We knew we had a good life-givin- g to-da- y, Some thoughtful man might say that if what you manufacture has merit, once you get a trade established people will continue to purchase, even if the advertising is stopped, but to act on that conclusion would be a fatal mistake, for there are always bright men on the lookout to steal your apples, and if you give them the chance they will come In and take the fruit, sure. Right here let us drive a nail, not a shingle nail but a forty penny spike. Your article must have merit, far and away beyond the ordinary unadvertised thing. It should be the very best that human intelligence and ingenuity can produce. Then you have a foundation to build upon that will not slip out from under when the building grows heavy. There are persons ignorant enough to believe that a poor article can be advertised into a success. It cannot and any one who tries the experiment will pay heavily for his experience. Critically examine any well known and advertised article that has been years on the market and to-da- y seven-sixteenth- s TEA Which do your family think most of, tea or coffee ? Your ScM&mgi freer return. your money Bwt, if you do! Tragedies of Love and Life. The end of love is a tragedy, just like the end of life. Both are facts in nature, and must be accepted in the same spirit. A person is no more to be blamed when his love dies than when his body dies. New York Times. Pisos Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds. N. W. Samuel, Ocean Grove. N. J..Feb. 17. 1900. Traces of Ancient Villa. There have been unearthed at Bury St. Edmunds, England, traces of a Roman villa, yielding fragments of Samian and Romano-Britis- h pottery. I Went Home to Die from Grovel Trouble. Favorite Remedy Doctor failed. )r. David Kennedy Mrs. C. W. Brown, Petersburg, N. Y. cured me. e Nothing Truer Than This. What a man can do depends a good deal upon how much faith some good woman has In him. The Chum. Pure Food Factories that Make Postum and apple tree of fine quality hut how to develop our work and turn the apple tree into a productive and profitable tree was another question. It needed sunshine and the kind of sunshine that is spread by the newspapers and magazines. It is an absolute certainty that without the publicity thus given in other words, the sunshine the business never would have developed. y You have seen factory buildings thirteen or fourteen in number covering many acres of ground, employing hundreds of workpeople, producing food and drink in an aggregate of four million packages per month, which goes to every civilized country on the globe, and yet the entire enterprise is less than 9 years old. We have found it necessary, inasmuch as the tree has grown and the apples matured by hard work and sunshine, to continue the work and the sunshine day In and day out, month in and month out, the sunshine appropriation amounting to approximately a million dollars a year for advertising, for experience teaches that if you mature the tree under strong sunshine, and bring it up to a thrifty and healthful state where it produces profitable apples, you erv npt withdraw that sunshine else the tree will gradually die. to-da- Crape-Nut- s. it will be found to possess exceptional merit. In ancient days newspaper publishers considered an advertisement an evil but a necessary evil, and that it should be hidden away as carefully as possible, so that no one would discover that the paper was trying to make a little money by inserting public announcements. A paper run that would fail. way The most successful exponents of the new plan of doing business with ink and paper are using every possible means to make the announcements attractive and sought after by the to-da- y readers. It is safe to say that thousands of wromen read the newspaper not the telegraphic page, bnt the pages containing announcements of bargains In stockings, skirts, hats, gloves, pianos, furniture, food for the table, etc. You have been invited to visit Battle Creek for the purpose of viewing one of the most unique advertising buildings in the world, also to look over a large business built up, sustained, nourished and kept active by sunshine, and, at the same time, have an opportunity to see one of the most thrifty, active and prosperous towns of its size in the world, built up largely by the same kind of sunshine. |