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Show ERGATIS AS YET UNKNOWN TO FAME, . from Philosopher? Louie UTAH are now at work at the site of the new Harriman depot in Salt Lake City. The annual convention of the health officers of Utah will be held in Salt Lake City on April 2 Two free soup kitchens have been opened in Salt Lake City for the ben efit of the unemployed Not a bank in Utah received awards of Panama bonds under the recent issue for the relief of the money market her death. NOT ALWAYS WELL TO BUTT IN. ! “After the crash,” imparted the first hospital surgeon to the sé ond, “I ran over to where it lay on the pavement A Greek who has been working at Lakeside was caught underneath fa!ling rock one day last week, and had ind when I raised it up were ence that its ribs both legs broken A coroner's jury at Lehi exonerated Officer Trane for the killing of Roy Johnson, a brakeman who was shot by Trane while resisting arrest while a gaping A bill to enlarge the Grand Canyon game preserve has been introduced in the senate by Senator Smoot. The preserve was created in the last con gress by a bill offered by Senator Smoot. to pieces. While attempting to couple some ears of the Oregon Short Line near Hot Springs, a few miles north of Ogden, Patrick M. Stiles, a brakeman, was painfully injured by having his hip crushed. w I saw at smashed I No Food Commissioner of Any State fell—oh! But For, w ν r six hours do not cease that Has Ever Attacked the Absolute Purity of Grape-Nuts. bray?- unconscious lay. weep though it gives the show away, ry truth to say ian, in Royal Magazine: AND THEN THEY CLINCHED, Hie used to rise at early dawn just for the sun and air; argued that we needed all of that there was to spare But now he rises oft at night In anger and despair, And goes without a lot of sleep just for First Landlady —I manage to (shriek) keep my (shriek, shriek) boarders longer than you do. AMBIGUOUS, the family pet. | Robert Orman @ Salt Lake team- || ster, Wa Cunght underneath a wagon| | Second Landlady—Oh, I don’t know (shriek, shriek) you keep (shriek) them so thin that they look (shriek, eked with cement, when the vehicle shriek) longer than they really are!!! overturned as the result of the horses becoming unmanageable, and so ΜΠ Ously injured that he may die. Mother Goose a la | men of the intermountain west, an But a society shark Found she was a mark— organization has been formed for the | purpose of, within the next five) months, providing Salt Lake City with And —Chicago Daily News. Times Change. @ summer race track one mile long. Steve Bobich and three other Aus- Trembling Attendant (nineteenth century)—-Your majesty, 1 somehow got a little scratch on your third best trians, charged with riot at Bingham, {3 May, 1907, were discharged last | f week. It was claimed that a number of witnesses had left the country and it was considered impossible to con- crown. The Czar (furiously) —Off with his head! Careless Attendant (twentieth century)—Your majesty, I fell and broke your majesty’s magnificent gold and diamond crown all to pieces. “viet the men, At a meeting of the board of park commissioners of Ogden, plans for beautifying the city were discussed by the members. Final arrangements were made for the planting of trees and shrubbery in the city hali square and at Lester park. won all her cash ere ‘twas light. Trembling Czar—Oh! Is that all? I feared from the noise it was another She—Who's your fair friend? bomb.—N. Y. Weekly. He—I really forget her name, only a bare acquaintance. The Union Pacific railroad has dis- | She—Hardly that. She had her continued the operation of the Ogden opera cloak on, KNEW IT. and Coalville Jocal train because the company claims that the cost of oper: ation is in excess of the revenue derived from the number of passengers | handled on this branch. A concerted movement, the avowed purpose of which is “to make Salt | Lake a safer place for boys andgirls,” | has held It is will grown out of recent meetings in the interest of social purity expected that hundreds of women engage in the work. §. W. Riter, a member of the firm of Riter brothers, druggists of Logan, died of heart failure, while on his way to the postoffice. He was 78 years old, and was one of the pioneers of the state, having crossed the plains with one of thefirst parties in 1847. The Cook's Question. The Little Brother Again. Bobby—My sister will be down in a few minutes, Mr. Softly, she’s upstairs rehearsing. Mr. Softly (who has come prepared) —W-what is s-she rehearsing, Bobby? Bobby—I don't know, exactly, but she's standing in front of the mirror, and blushing and saying: “Oh, Mr. party has come into power at Green River, and the new eity council has passed an ordinance raising the saloon licenses from $400 te $800 a year and made the license law stricter, notably in requiring that there be no tables or seats in the sa feons and no wine rooms pdéssibly supply the deficiency. “The ills arising from too rapidly consuming the gray matter of the brain cannot be overestimated. “Phosphate of Potash, is to my mind, the most wonderful curative agent ever discovered by man, and the blessings it has already conferred on the race are many. But ‘what shall the harvest be’ when physicians everywhere fully understand the part this wonderful salt plays in the processes of life? It will do as much as can be done through physiology to make a heavenon earth. “Let the overworked business man take it and go home good-tempered. Let vhe weary wife, nerves unstrung from attending to sick children or entertaining company, take it and note how quickly the equilibrium will be restored and calm and reason assert her throne. No ‘provings’ are required here. We find this potassium salt predominates in nerve-fluid, beginning and to supply the in molecular furnishes it in To sup- ply deficiencies—this is the only law of cure.” Please observe that Phosphate of Potash is not properly of the drugsu0p Variety but is best prepared by “Qld Mother Nature” and stored in the grains ready for use by mankind. Softly—er—this is so sudden.”"—Royal Magazine. Those who have been helped to better VERYORIGINAL. reform when nervous symptoms arise, due to the fact that the nerve-fluid has been vegetables, fruits and grain. The Star Melodrama. The Heroine (wildly)—The empty home in Ogden, Mrs. C. F. Robinson hills, the empty valleys, the— | Jones (to old gent who is staring)— The Villain (gloomily)—And_ the Excuse me, sir, but do you find any. died a few hours later from a fracempty house.—Chicago Daily News. ture of the skull without ever regain- | | thing familiar about me? ing consciousness Just how the de-| Old Gent—Yes, my umbrella, plorable accident happened is not Like Father, Like Son. known, as Mrs. Robinson was alone at the time Boy—Grandpa, I wish you'd buy me a pony. J. E. Pettit, state coal mine inspec- | Grandpa (α philanthropist)—My tor for Utah, has filed a report with | son, think of the poor boys who can't during | the governor showing that even get bread to eat. 1907 the fees collected by his office Boy—I was thinking of them—the amounted to $378. Healso states that poor little boys whose papas have all mines in the state have installed the latest appliances for the preven| ponies to sell that nobody will buy— tion of accidents Royal Magazine. The Good Roads association of OgRespecting Their Slumbers. den has filed articles of incorporation “Then when you havefinished your with the secretary of state. The oblecture,” said the professor of elocuject of the organization is to promote| tion and deportment to young Dulle, the building of good roads in Weber bow graciously and leave the plat county, but the co-operation of other form on tiptoe.” counties in the state will be sought “Why on tiptoe?” queried Dulle, in the movement. “So as not to wake the audience,” James Halvorsen of Richmond, who replied the professor.—Royal Maga‘was beaten iato insensibility by Glenn zine. Lewis there two weeks ago, following The of affinity, all things needed to manufacture the elixir of life. Therefore, defined symptoms. The end of the matter is lacking principle, and form, exactly as nature After falling from the porch at her| a drunken quarrel at a dance, still fies in a semi-conscious condition in a Salt Lake hospital, with no apparent | ehange in his condition. His recovery is uncertain as yet. “Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve-fluid, but potassium phosphate is the chief factor, and has the power within itself to attract, by its own law and that a deficiency produces well- He calls here every night; I wonder—are his calls inspired Bylove or appetite? —Royal Magazine. His Scheme. “And how are you going to make ; any money out of your magazine?” | “We shall print the pictures and Jack—That man who has charge of | biographies of all the prominent men, the pond is very original. And they wiil buy up the whole edi- Jess—How is that? | tioa.” Jack--I told him not to allow any | “And distribute it?” corpulent people to skate, so he put up “No — destroy it” — Cleveland ‘sign: “Thin ice for thin people.” , Leader. smelting The new modern 20-stamp mill of the Bagdad-Chase Mining company, at Atlanta, Idaho, commenced crushing ore from the Petit mine on January 26th. The big machinery started off smoothly and everything is running satisfactorily. health by the use of Grape-Nuts are legion. smelting plant which will be remodeled and enlarged sufficiently to handle all the smelting of that district. citizens of the far northwest in their American Smelting & Refining company of Salt Lake has a representative in the local field, inquiring into the probable future output of ores, and seeking to line up the producers with that institution as regular patrons, says the Fairview (Nev.) News. ; th¢ Farrel end of the Seven Troughs district is more like Cripple Creek in its formation than anything he has ever seen in Nevada and, while there has not been enough work done there yet to prove anything, he is decidedly of the opinion that it will surprise the natives. The production of copper in the state of Utah for the month of January is estimated at 5,780,000 pounds. This compares with an output of 8500,000, in round figures, for the month of Incember. The falling off is due to the closing down of the various smelters by reason of the fumes sit: | | A new strike has been made ht. Ne | vada, in the range back of Sand Springs. The strike was made on a group of claims owned by Archie Graham, formerly of Fairview, and the samples taken give assays fror $1,700 to $2,100, principally in gold: The ground on which the discovery was made is entirely new. Little is heard about the Consolidated Mercur, at Mercur, Utah, although those who are familiar with the property are authority for the statement that the company is now sending gold bullion to the United States mint at the rate of $70,000 per month, and with everything promising a steadyincrease in precious metal production Flattering reports are being received coneerning various properties in the Fay-Gold Springs region. Some very promising gold ore is being disclosed in the Trenam tunnel on the Indiana claim, south of Deer Lodge, and a fine showing is being made on the Fawh claim. is expected that the Utah Copper company will have its njnth section at Increased by Proper Feeding. the new Garfield concentrating plant A lady writer who not only has done good literary work, but reared a famfly, found in Grape-Nuts the ideal food for brain work and to develop healthy She writes: “I am an enthusiastic proclaimer of I for- merly had no appetite in the morning and for 8 years while nursing my four ready for operation. The machinery for the same is now on the ground and work is being rushed forward as fast as possible. The third 250-ton section of the Boston Consolidated company’s big mill at Garfield went into regular commission on February 6, and Engineer A. J. Bettles, who is now spending every moment of his time at the plant, states children, had insufficient nourishment | that it would be impossible for a new mill to behave better. for them. “Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint The cross-cut tunnel that is being later, and would go to the pantry and driven in the Mint mine at Pearl, eat cold chops, sausage, cookies, Idaho, to intersect the ledge is now in doughnuts or anything I happened to a distance of 1,243 feet. The formafind. Being a writer, at times my head felt heavy and mybrain asleep. “When I read of Grape-Nuts I began eating it every morning, also gave it to the children, including my 10 months old baby, who soon grew as fat as a little pig, good natured and contented. 300,000 125,000 150,000 50,000 Indications point to the early passage of thebill. The president of the United States commended the exposition to the careful consideration of the congress in his official message delivered on December 4, 1906, and also in his message delivered on December 3, 1907, the latter mention being in the following terms: “The courage and enterprise of the with the smelter trust the operators of southern California have already gone so far as to purchase an old uation, 200,000 75,000 75,000 * Total ...$475,000 $700,000 $1,175,000 *Included in cost of general government exhibit. It is announced that in the battle BRAIN POWER Grape-Nuts as a regular diet. Alaska - 100,000 Hawaii 50,000 Philippines 75,000 Fisberies . 50,000 is the fourth hole that has been put in to drain the 4,500 gallons of water in the shaft. The water is falling at the rate of three feet a day. A prominent mining man says Total Governm’t $200,000 $359,600 $ 550,000 By the last of the present month it “There's a Reason.” children. Exhibit Installation and Purpose Building maintenance ent of the smelter trust. A new22-inch hole has been driven from Shaft No. 3 to the drain tunnel largely I wonder if his heart js fired, high rates exacted by the of the Ontario mine at Park City. This exhausted from any cause, the phosphate of potassium is the only true Newport. iwi: ‘pemedy, because nothing else can Tittle Miss Muffet Sat on a tuffet Playing “bridge whist” all night; United States at the exposition has been introduced in congress, and will soon come up for consideration, The bill is unique. A clause is contained in it which states that the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition will not ask, expect or accept any loan of funds from the United States government, nor will it ask, expect or accept from the government any appropriation other than tlhe appropriation which the goyernment may make for its participation. This policy on the part of the exposition management is meeting with the aproval of congressmen, publie officials, the press and the people of the country, The bill that has been introduced In congress requests an appropriation of $1,175,000 and provides for the representation of the United States government, the non-contiguous territory, and thefisheries industry, as follows: ent of the trust. The movement has been indorsed by the American Mining Congress as the only solution of “When the medical profession fully understands the nature and range of the phosphate of potassium, insane asylums will no longer be needed. “The gray matter of the brain is controlled entirely by the inorganic céeli-salt, potassium phosphate, by the addition of oxygen creates nerve- —Judge. | | says: fluid, or the gray matter of the brain. the son and heir Kopp of Salt Lake from death by nre one night recently, the family escaping from the burning building in tketr | night clothes after being arensed by| | AIN ST. ' SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH One of the largest Boston stockholders in Utah Consolidated says that J B. Risque now has the property in shape for economical handling, although he found the mine in a most Our claim that it is a “Food for | deplorable condition when he took Brain and Nerve Centres” is based | hold about a year ago. Plans are under way to assemble upon the fact that certain parts of Wheat and Barley (which we use) con- the principal mining interests in Colotain Nature’s brain and nerve building rado in the next few weeks, when the {ngredients, viz.: Phosphate first steps will be taken toward’ the ash, and the way we prepare the food accumulation of enough capital to bemakes it easy to digest and assimilate. gin the smelting business, independ- “This salt unites with albumen, and He A cat saved the family of Philip | Every analysis undertaken shows this food to be made strictly of Wheat and Barley, treated by our processes to partiaily transform the starch | parts into a form of Sugar, and there-| fore much easier to digest. Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on “The Biochemic System of Medicine” Changed His Hours. | Backed by some of the wealthiest er night I fell—now, pray, sid interruptions stay; sneers are cheap! And in it t PURE FOOD, All Tastes Suited. 97 beaten Good progress is being made on the plant of the Be se (Idaho) Ore Testing Ore enough & Cyaniding company. for a continuous run of six months has | already been secured. } trust. THE STORY OF A FALL. New Clerk—I notice some of these barrels of apples are marked X and some Z, Are they different kinds? Dealer—No; same kind, but differ- | ently packed Some customers want | a barrel opened at the bottom and some at the top N. Y. Weekly. Ira BE, Hayden, 27 years old, an em ployee of the Boston Consolidated mill at Garfield, while filling an oil cup, was caught in a rapidly revolv literally hole For “Pardon me, doctor broke in the medical student, who had caught the words as he was about to pass by into the consumptive ward but if you have no objections, I'd like to take a few notes on that ¢ cident case.” He pulled his note-book from his pocket “Was the case a child?” “No,” the surgeon informed him, to his embarrassment. “I was speaking of my umbrella.”—Judge Charles Smith, a member of Salt Lake City’s chain gang, attempted to escape one day last week and was shot by a guard. Smith was not seri ously injured and opera Socrates that Xantippe didn’t keep a diary to be published 2,000 years after left hand shaft Grand His brother, a it may be a blessed fortune for John Sullivan of Park City was splitting wood when the ax slipped and severed the forefinger from the ing the A number of Ontario, Oregon, citjzens have decided to form a company for the purpose of exploring for oil About $4,000 was subscribéd and gas PLANTS, SEEDS, Bes: on earth, at a recent meeting, and that much | bree catalog. Intern'l Nurseries, more promised. lenver, Colo. Agents Wanted. Secretary Callbreath of the Amert- | INTERESTING INFORMAments of silence he gave vent to an- can Mining Congress says that during SOME TION | the conference in Helena the Montana other sigh and said: $100,000 to “Well, as de old philosopah says: | mining men subscribed ‘Ei yo’ ain't got nothin,’ now’s yo’ build an independent smelter on the | Regarding the Alaskan-Yukon Exposi| tion to Be Held at Seattle, | co-operative plan time.’ During 1909. Jones is still wondering who the | Mine operators generally are pland philosopher was.—Indianapolis News. ning to establish smelters independA bill for the participation of the A brass band is being organized at Willard, the instruments being alteady ordered men of The big mill for the Monarch mines |}at Atlanta, Idaho, is nearing comple | tion and W i seon be in operation colored man, usually in good humor, ! had ‘em, too. Neither knew just why| he had ‘em, but they had ‘em just the | same. They talked of the weather, | the times and a dozen other gloomy subjects. .There was nothing sunny in the soul of a patron or a barber. Finally both sighed in concert and a silence fell over the shop—yes, over a barber shop. The colored man was | the first to speak. After several mo- | An epidemic of smallpox has again broken out at Hooper, Weber county 300 Jones house had the blues. UTAH STATE NEWS Over Can Any One Place This Quotation | tion is changing rapidly aud the manager is convinced the long looked for vein which made a good showing at the surface is not far away. Word was received in Salt Lake last week that the Gunn-Quealy Coal com- pany, whose properties are operated by the Kemmerer Coal company, will “I wrote evenings and feeling the on March 15 begin shipping coal from need of sustained brain power, began | its two new mines at Rock Springs, eating a sinall saucer of Grape-Nuts | Wyo. These two mines will have a with milk, instead of my usual indi- capacity of 2,000 tons per day. gestible hot pudding, pie, or cake for John McGee of Montana, and asso, dessert at night. Golden the elates, have purchased “J grew plump, nerves strong, and Mr. McEagle mine at Neal, Idaho. when I wrote my brain was active and Gee announces that it is their intenclear; indeed, the dull head pain never tion to lay out a broad plan of develreturned.” opment for the property, as they have POSTUM CERBALCO., Ltd. full confidence it will justify the work reeded to open it up at depth. Battle Creek, Mich, projected Alaska-Yukon-Pacific exposition, to be held in 1909, should receive liberal encouragement. This exposition is not sentimental in its conception, but seeks to exploit the natural resources of Alaska and to promote the commerce, trade and industry of the Pacific states with their neighboring states and with our insular possessions, and the neighboring countries of the Pacific. The exposition asks no loan from the congress, but seeks appropriation for national exhibits and exhibits of the western dependencies of the general government. The state of Washington and the city of Seattle have shown the characteristic western enterprise in large donations for the conduct of this exposition, in which other states are lending generous stance During the past year honorary commissioners of the exposition visited Great Britain, France, Germany, Holland, Russia, China, Japan, Italy, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Canada, Mexico, and the Central and South Amerrean states, and have received assuranees from prominent manufacturers, shippers and commercial associations chat the interest in the aims and purposes of the exposition in those countries is sufficient to justify that measure of participation on their part as will be in keeping with the scope of our exposition as we have determined it. In addition to Washington, which appropriated $1,000,000 for its representation at.the exposition, the following states have made provision to participate: Oregon, California, Pennsylvania, Nebraska, Missouri and Utah. Assurances have been given that fifteen other states will also participate. Work on the grounds is in an advanced stage. The aveaues, circles, plazas, and courts have been graded The and the building sites cleared. administration building has been occupied by the executive force for manufactures The months. many building is well under way; the auditorium, fine arts palace, and machinery building, permanent structures, agriculture The ttave been started. building and several minor structures are beginning to rise. Oregon and California have their plans in preparation, and will soon start construction. \ conservative preliminary estimate of the probable paid admissions at the exposition is made at 2,500,000. This will be larger than the attendance at any previous exposition ever} held in the United States, with the ex- ception of Philadelphia, Chicago, Buffalo and St. Louis expositions. The probable number of visitors from east approxiof Denver is estimated at mately 400,000. The World’s The mines of the 6,000,000 persons, and third of them are in Miners. world employ more than onethe British em- pire. Nail Wounds. One who has tried it says that the most successful treatment that he has found for nail wounds in horses’ feet is to clean out the wound and pour full of hot tallow or iard. This seems to give very little pain, and one treatment generally cures. Cold Day in Billville. “Coal is too high for us,” says the Billville Banner, “and the timber trust puts wood out of our reach, but we have a few extra bales of cotton with which we can feed the fire.” lla ... How can you tell what a reasonable price is for a piece of jeweiry or silver, unless you see what our prices are? Our goods are absolutely guaranteed. | } PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY P. SIORIS. SALT LAKE CITY ‘MINES AND MINING |