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Show Submarine foreit. By means of glass bottomed lost It ha been discovered that the tot-.tor- n of Monterey bay. Cal., !s a beautiful submarine forest of sea oranges, green ribbons, horse tall, sea pompons, etc. Some of the plant are thirty feet In height. Advancing the Farmers Interests. Traveling agents and salesmen are now 6cnt from the home offices of the Chicago packer into all South American and Asiatic countries. They are going Into every land, no matter what language may be spoken or what money be used. They will exchange their goods for cowries or elephant tuj-kan thing to sell the product and get something in return convert! hie Into money. It may seem odd to aome folks, but traveling men, carry Ing cases with samples of American meat products, can be seen In the desert of Subaru, the sands of Zanzl bar or in Brazil, where the nuts come from." Great Is the enterprise of the ITankce merchant. The greater the market, the greater the price and stability of the price of the product and all that goes to make it In Its various s stages. Learn Science of Smiling. To the woman who wishes to make her path through life an easy and agreeable one, the science of smiling Is a most necessary study. Like acting, or art, or engineering. It Is a thing In which only practice can make one perfect. A little theory may go a long way, but It Is enough to remember these two rules: First, the honey of a smile catches more hearts than the vinegar of a frown or the pepper of a sneer; second, It Is not the mechanical beauty but the significance of ,&$ smile' that Is attractive. Ex-chang- e. Came Near Finding Out. Among examples of American humor recently given In the Nineteenth Century and After Is a story which a bright ornament of the English bench Is said to have told more than once, i A speaker in a Western town had started out to show that there might be great differences between national and local reputation, lie had said, "A man cant always tell what his jnelghbors think of him," when he was Interrupted by one of his hearers. "I came mighty near knowing .once, said the man, with a reminiscent look, "but the Jury disagreed.' 9 xrrm oLconnx GUNNISON, Ha Distinct Benefit Apart from Its Flavoring Powers. Salt is perhaps the commonest con dlroent of all and )et man radically star.da alone among animals as a regular consumer of It In the more or lets pure state and ns a definite ad Junet to his food. Salt U present In mott foods, but the amount In the majority of cases would not appear to satisfy man needs or he would not Instinctively add more. Moreover, salt may not necersarIJy exist In the frre Hate of food of natural origin, hut may be loosely combined with or panic constituents. There can be lit tie doubt that salt plays a greater part than that of a mere condiment In the body, for It possesses solvent powers which, besides "drawing out" the flayer of food, facilitate the absorption more particularly of proteids and thus Increase th.,ue raetalbollsm. The of pleasures feeding would be very decidedly diminished If salt and condiments were banished from our tables. It Is noteworthy, moreover, that among condiments, roost of them, while flavoring the digestive processes, are antiseptic, so that their action tends to counteract any disposition to undesirable fermentation. son. UTAH, The Socialists of Park City placed a munic ipal ticket In I ho lUuton Cob, a veteran of tho war, suicided In Ogden, taking a hav field civil dost of laudanum. vi-Twent marriage licenses were Issued in Salt Lake City during one day last week. . an Ogden boy Raymond Morrlst-rwa seriously injured in a bicycle col lislon Saturday night n The total attendance at the state fair was f.S.SOO. Tho receipt wero 25 per cent larger than last yenr. There Is a probability that the city council of Ephraim will make a gen eral raise In salaries this year. W. W. Cluff of Coalville, had his left hand badly Injured by being kicked by a horse lie was leading to water Dr. P. A. II. Franklin, one of Utahs most popular and influential mining operators, died In Salt Lake on Wednesday of last week. Salt Lake won first prize in the baby show at the fair, Esther, th6 daughter of Mrs. J. C. Squires, of the capital city, carrying off the gold medal. William Anderson of Park City and G. Strecker of Pooa figured in an exciting runaway in Salt Lake City, tho vehicle being demolished and Mr. Anfive-months-o- ld derson badly bruised. Utah mineral exhibit in the Lewis and Clark exposition at Portland will become a part of the state fair next year, in Its own building, and this will bo a permanent feature. At the present time between 400 and 500 tons of beets are being used daily at the Ogden sugar factory, although the capacity of the factory is supposed to he but 350 tons. W. Von Gilden attempted suicide Blind Do Not Smoke. cutOne peculiar trait of persons who at his home in Salt Lake, Sunday, are blind is that there are scarcely ting his throat with a razor, while any smokers among them. Soldiers crazed from drink, but failed to cut and sailors yho lose their sight while deep enough and will recover. In action sometimes continue to Charles Farr, aged 40, accidentally smoke for a short time, after that his rehimself while shot great calamity overtakes them, but as volver at bis home incleaning Salt Lake City, a rule they soon give up the habit left side, but hl6 the bullet entering altogether. it is believed he will recover. "GOLD GOLD." Stockmore, one of the new' towns in "Good He Says, "But Comfort Bet- the Uintah valley, appears to be ter. growing, a new hotel nearing comple "Food that fits Is better than a gold tion and a temporary postoffice and a mine, says a grateful man. general store having been erected. "Before I commenced to use Grape-Nut- s Albert Keetheler, who killed his food no man on earth ever had in Salt Lake City, attempta worse Infliction from catarrh of the ed suicide last week, drinking a quan stomach than I had for years. "I could eat nothing but the very tity of insect poisoning, but only suo lightest food and even that gave me ceeded in making himself very sick. Al. Hardin, a gambler, suicided ii great distress. "I went through the catalogue of Salt Lake last week, taking a dose oi prepared foods but found them all morphine. He ha4 been drinking more or less In(except Grape-Nuts- ) and was In an irresponsible digestible, generating gas In the stom- heavily the ach (which In turn produced head- condition when he committed ache and various other pains and deed. A boy aged 12 and an aches) and otherwise unavailable for use. my babe, children of John Ballantyne oi food I have found "Grape-Nut- s Riverdale, were accidentally wounded easily digested and assimilated, and last week by a stray shot from the It has renewed my health and vigor who was shooting and made me a well man again. The gunt of a hunter catarrh of the stomach has disap- quail nearby. There Is a movement on foot peared entirely with all its attendant now which Grape-Nutfils, thanks to among some of the Salt Lake business is my almost sole food. I want no men to organize a State ManufacturName given by Postum Co ether. ers association. The object of the Battle Creek, Mich. association will be to boom the proTen days trial tells the story. ducts of the factories of the state. There's a reason. son-in-la- s, VALUE OF SALT IN FOOD. GUNNISON GAZETTE. w NEURALGIA AWFUL Mr. PorterThought He Should Go Med But Dr. Williams Pink Pills Cured Him. It seem like it miracle that Dr. Williams Iiuk Pill should have cured my neuralgia," said Mr. Porter. "They are certainly a marvelous medicine and I urn always glud to recommend them. "For t)voyeai," ho continued, "I had suffered ulmohtuui-niluruUjains In my head. They would start over my eyes aud shout upward nioht frequently, but they often spread over my face, and at times every jwirt of my head and face would bo full of agony. Sometimes the were so inteiue that I actually cared they would drive me mad. My eyes nehed constantly and there was always a burning sensation over in r furebead, but the other pains varied, ometimes they were acute, aud again they were dull and lingering. I could not sleep. My temper was irritable aud o 1 got no pleasure out of life. I tried remedy after remedy, but finding no help in any of them, I became ft dej airing man. Even wbeu I began to take Dr. Williams Pink Pills I had no great hope of a cure. That wa iu December of 1M3. To ruy surprise, r change in iny condition took place right away. The pains grew less intense and the acute attacks were further apart, ns I kept on using Dr. Williams Pink Pill. The improvement began witli the first box, and when I had used six boxes I stopped. My cure was complete and has lated ever since. Mr. Charles II. Porter lives at Raymond, N. II. He is one of many grateful people who have found that Dr. Williams Pink Pills will cure diseases of the nerves that have stublwrnlv resisted every other remedy tried. Not only neuralgia, but sciatica, partial paralysis and locomotor ataxia yield to them. They are sold by all druggists, or may be obtained directly from the Dr Williams Medicine Oo. Schenectady, N. Y. Best In the World. Cream, Ark., Oct. Sth. (Special.) After eighteen months suffering from Epilepsy, Backache and Kidney Complaint, Mr. W. H. Smith of this place Is a well man again and those who have watched his return to health unhesitatingly give all the credit to Dodds Kidney Pills. In an Interview regarding his cure, Mr. Smith says: "I had been low for eighteen months with my back and kidneys and also Epilepsy. I had taken everything I Thousands of miles of southwestern knew of and nothing seemed to do me with primeval forAlaska any good till a friend of mine got m6 ests of are covered yellow cedar and white spruce to send for Dodd's Kidney Pills. I find fir. balsam and that they are the greatest medicine In the world, for now I am able to work and am In fact as stout and strong as before I took sick." Your grocer has also our Dodds Kidney Pills cure the Kid Cured Kidneys cleanse the neys. excoffee baking-powd- er Pure blood )lood of all Impurities. TEA means good health. The ice Industry began in Boston in 805, when a man by the name of Tu- dor shipped it to Martinique. DONT FORGET package Ited Cross Ball Blue, only large cents. The Russ Company, South Bend. Ind. A ' When one of the great generals of ancient Greece died the soldiers of the whole army shaved their heads and the manes of their horses. TEA tracts spices and soda. All alike as to trueness and goodness. Schilling'! Beet tour grocer with. 1 good Panic Caused by Eclipse. In Egypt, In the eclipse of 1882, soldiers had to guard the British camp from the excited Egyptians who would have invaded it. As it was, their wild shrieks as the sun became overcast were sufficiently disturbing. TEA Think of the cheer in a It rouses new cargo of tea. Caligula, most cruel of Roman em-leror- s, to mttnre foot-ru- le life and al- most satisfies hunger. boats three its celebrated and niles iong at Baiae Coral is very expensive, the finest of his opening by throwing many tints are worth from $400 to $600 pei quests into the sea. ounce. built a bridge of TEA Is it tea that unlooses the wings of thought and the bands of the tongue? Our statute mile, 1,000 paces, used also in England, was fixed in the time of Queen Elizabeth and has not since !)een changed. TEA It is easy to brew a good pot of tea. There are two ways: one is to do it; the other is not to. Is rrery package of SchlHLng Bert Tea ie a booklet i How to Hake Good Tea. Pi6o's Cure Is the test medicine we ever use4 tor all affections of the throat and lungs. Wa ). Esdblit, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 19, 1900. Europes Largest Fig Tree. The largest fig tree in Western Europe is the one at Roscvoff, Brittany. It Is In the garden of a Capuchin convent, and its spreading branches, supported by scaffolding, are said to be capable of sheltering over 200 TEA How many letters are there in tea? One, two or three, as you like: t or te or tee or tea. The popes slippers are legion, each pair being made of the finest velvet; the right slipper, which is kissed by to the and other pious visitors, sold their offspring parents pilgrims bears cross of gold. a of them. who slaves made Irish, |