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Show 1 AWFUL VALUE KEURALCIA Air, Porter Thought He Should Go Mad But Dr. Williams Pink Pills Cured Him. 'It seems like a miracle that Dr. Williams' Pink lills should have cored my neuralgia, mid Mr. Porter. They are certainly a marvelous medicine aud I am always glud to recommend them. "For two years," hs continued, "I luid suffered almost nueuilurabld pains in my head. They would start over my ryes aad shoot upward most frequently, hot they often spread over my faue, and at times every port of my head aud face would be foil of aguu y . Sometime the wains were so intense that I actaally feared they would drive me mad Mr eyee ached constantly and there ras always a burning sensation over my forehead, bnt the other paiua varied. sometamea they were scale, and agaiu they were dull aud lingering. I coaid not sleep. My temper was irritable aud I get no pleasure oat of life. I tried remedy after remedy, but finding no help iu any of them, I became a desjiairiiig man. Even when I began to take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I had no great hope of a core. ' " That was iu December of 1903. To my surprise, a change in my condition took place right away. The pains grew leas intense aud the acute attacks were farther apart, a I kept on using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Tna improvement began with the first bos, aud when I had used six boxes I stopped. My cure was complete and has lasted ever since." Mr. Charles II. Pinter lives at Raymond, N.H. He is one of many gratef ul people who have found that Dr. Williams Pink Pills will cure diseases of the nerves that have stubbornly resisted every other remedy tried. Not only neuralgia, bnt sciatica, partial paralysis aud locomotor ataxia yield to them. They are sold by all druggists, or may be obtained directly from the Dr Williatua Medicine Co., .Schenectady, N. Y. In the Frozen North Oceans Were Once Jfoine d SALT IN FOOD. Has Diktmrt Benefit Apart from Its , Flavoring Powara. Halt is pci Papa the com mouest condiment of all aud yot man practically , stands alumamong animals as a regular consumer of It la the more or less date and aa a definite ad- -' unet to bts food. Sail Is present ia most foods, but the ainouct in the majority of cases would not appear to satisfy man's needs or he would oot Instinctively add more. Moreover, ' ialt may not neeetaarily exist la the state of foods of natural origin. but may be loosely combined with or-- . (tanlc constituents. There can be little 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 tbs flavor of food, facilitate the absorption ( more particularly of protelda and thus f Increase ta.ue metalbollam. This pleasures of feeding would be very decidedly diminished If salt and condiments were banished from our tables. It is noteworthy, moreover, that among condiments, most of them, while flavoring the digestive process-- ' es, are antiseptic, so that their action tends to counteract nny disposition ' to undesirable fermentation. - (Special CorresjymdenceJ At the reception to Capt. C. F. Hall New York city. Just before he sailed on his last arctic expedition In 1871, Henry Orinnell. the promoter of the expeditions for the search of Sir John Franklin, unfurled the worn and stained flag that Wilkes had carried to the antarctic In 1838 and that later went to northern polar seas with De Haven, Kane and Hayes, and placed It in the hand of Capt. Hall. Now, 1 give It to you. sir," said Mr. Grinnell. "Take it to the north pole and bring it back In a year from next October. A day later Hall sailed on his laut voyage to the white north, where he had passed so many years in exploration. He and the ship Polaris that carried him never came back. He was about 500 miles from the north pole when he died, but he had taken his ship farther north than any vessel had ever been before; and now Peary Is sailing from the same port, to follow the same route through the Smith sound channels, with a steamer ten times as fit as Hall's sailing vessel to battle with the pack in those narrow, waterways. WUl he win the prise- - that has for centuries eluded men as dauntless as himself? Never before has the quest boon undertaken with a ship so strong and under leadership so experienced. If Peary has good luck he will win. This Is the opinion of Cyrus C. Adams, a dose student of the subject, who contributes the appended information about previous expeditions: In Europe's Largest Fig Tree. The largest fig tree In Westerr. Europe Is the one at Roscvoff, Brittany. The Barents Expedition. It ia in the garden of a Capuchin conThe English. Dutch and other marivent, and Its spreading branches, sup- time nations were very rurious about ported by scaffolding, are said to bo these great unknown northern regions capable of sheltering over 200 per- and they heard a true and wonderful sona story of them after the Dutchman Barents and his crew reached the north end of Kovaya Zcmlla in 159G and passed the first arctic winter ever f Your grocer has also our faced by Europeans in a hut built of driftwood. "Here we were forced in coffee baking-powd- er great cold, poverty, misery and grief to stay all the winter. Those who and soda. spices came back (and poor Barents was not among them, fur he had found a grave All alike as to trueness In the midst of his discoveries) told of their terrible sufferings in the long aud goodness. winter night It was Europes first r coad SoHito M . SridlUm's Bwi ia conception of the dismal darkness twr frg,rwus. that enfolds the far north during the Panic Caused by Eclipea winter months. Ia Egypt, in the eclipse of 1882, In 1871 the Norwegian Csrlsen soldiers had to guard the British camp rounded the north end of Novsys Zem-11- a from the excited Egyptians who would and saw that but, 278 years after have Invaded IL As It waa their wild Barents had left It The roof had ahrleks as the sun became overcast fallen In, but he dug out the snow were eufllclently disturbing. and recovered some seventy articles that the explorers had left behind on their retreat There stood the cooking pans over the fireplace, the old It rouses new life and al- clock against the wall, the arms and tools, drinking vessels. Instruments most satisfies hunger. and books. Most visitors to The Hagne now go to the museum to see The Arctic Region. the Barents relics. The. arctic region consists of a deep But It was a long time before the polar ocean nearly surrounded bp nations gave up the idea that' It might laud, with a flow of Atlantic water in- In some seasons be easy sailing to the wards on the Siberian side, and out- north pole and that, as like as not, It wards down the east roast of Green-- ' would prove to be really a fine route in good years to the Orient. So the land. British sent out Henry Hudson in Pino's Cura Is the beat mMllcIne we ever used 1607 in a wretched little craft of 80 tor all attecUoos of the thrust and WX lung' manned tons, by twelve men and a IWMl O. Ewmut. Vanburen, ImL, FeU, 10, boy. to find a passage across the pole to Japan and China. He skirted the Effect of Wall Paper. When papering a room remember pack ice far east to Greenland, but that. large- patterns and dark colors found no opening where he could enwUl make it appear smaller, while a ter it, and, bold sailor though he was, plain or striped paper, if a light hue, be would scarcely have dared to enter will give an impression of increased the ice, fifteen feet thick, if he had found an opening, for common sense also. told him that he would never get out of a boat. So again In his he went home. But he had made two great discovHow many letters are eries. and one of them was worth far (Special Correspondence.) There is n spot in the United States degrees. 810,000; to 87 degrees, e 815,000; to 88 degrees. 520,000, and to of Onlombia where a ditch 89 degrees, 125.000. This act Is still wield connect the Atlantic ocean S3 the historians authority for the reHe declares markable observation. that a "gentleman now (1826) In this city (New York), who resided twelve years in Colombia and who has traveled over every part of the route (tom aea to sea," was the source of information. He further states: "The utmost confidence may be reposed In his statements; he has. moreover. constructed a map in which the entire tract of the county ia accurate- ; ly laid down. In 1821 this geutlemaa j applied to the government of C'olom-intj hia fur permission to open this com munlcuilon a his own expense, with exclusive privilege for 1UU years. Congress passed a vote iu favor of the application, but it waa objected to by lloltvar on the ground that it might afford (Mcilitles to the enemy. "Tlie arplieant. however, was requested to renew his pruixiwul for a term less than 144 years, which he ts now about to do. and uothlng, we believe, will defeat bis object but the fact of (he government undertaking fire-mil- among the laws of England, but not a cent's reward has ever b&n claimed, for the farthest north toitlah ship up to this time Is $2 degree 85 minutes and the highest north by any ship is the Fram's record of 85 degrees 57 minutes. Not long after these rewards were offered polar travelers reached a weighty decision, and that was that It was useless to attempt to reach the pole by boat alone. They had never found an open sea and were at last convinced that I was futile to think of forcing a sailing vessel '.hroush that terrible tee. To reach the pole, they said, they must go by ship as far as possible and then take to sledges. This opened a new era of polar endeavor. and Parry, in 1827, was the Inthe waters of the l'sclflc. a spot there, in the pnvtro of Choco, where a little lame-madcanal did exactly this tleg over a centruy ago. It Is writ-te- i la history aud ran be fouud la forgotten tomes, that passed In their ramies from the veers of the Atrato to the Rio San Juu by means of an artificial cut. Th Atrato flows north and finds Its the Atlantic; the San Juan floes south and empties into the radio. wife dent, there is by-fen- y e wB-nlg- h na-ttw- e o i TMs ef Old Canal. ' In author and scholar living la in many Francisco interested dberse subjects and working In a large private library well thumbed ran Into a paragraph a few days ago in The ai old book printed lu 1826. Ixok la called "A View of South Anertca and Mexico," by A Citizen Sag .f: ex--.tra- cts TEA egg-she- ll there in tea? One, two or three, as you like: t or te or tee or tea. . ! - View from Duck laland Beach (Greenland In Distance.) Writes Goad Verse. The queen of Rotiinanla, known In ' first to try the new plan. North of the literary world as "Carmen Sylvs , Spitsbergen hn landed on the pack Is not the onlyfor the Colombia. Cathedral at Esmeralda, Ice, loaded his heavy, clumsy si edged king of Italy's beautiful consort writes with supplies, and twenty-eigh- t men the United States, and the para- i ue liiihiueha itself, which Is uot probreally charming verae. Queen Elena . tugging at the ropes, tolled painfully able.' was: speaks English, French. German and , . northward. I!e got as far as 83 de- ifcpli The native historian who takes so Italian, but her poems, whleh srs seemed to have designed grees 45 minutes when he made a dis place for the passage (referred much pains to conceal everybody's shortly to be published by a German oorery that ended his hopes. He was t the ravine de la Raspadura). The Identity then tells of the organisation firm, were written In Serb, her native . losing every day more than half the tildes are here for the moment and' in New York of a company of mer language, from which they have beea distance traveled, because the ice un bat translated Into German. . ,and seem to have defiled that der him was drifting southward. His mmmorce march from the old may TOO FAR FROM THE BOWERY. supplies would not hold out against! vorld to the new.". such odds, and so he drifted back to The reader pricked up his ears and the open sea and went home, but hqj lead on: New Yorker Would Not Build House had recorded the highest north am In Canadian Woods. . ,MIt Is a fact no less curious than his record was not broken for a hal Wrue that a canal wae New a He exist Yorker such did, formerly typical n century. la this spoL About the year 1745 a gentleman did not get his franchise it at he seemed strangely out of place Then came Kane In 1858, wlt of Cltlra. with the assistance from the Colombian states; the asso- - n the queer little lumber village way most romantic and thrilling Journeyn priest Indiana, opened this same com-- 1 elation of New York merchants did np In the Canadian woods where his up the. Smith sound channels, '"5 implication known, as the Raspadura not take up the canal; weeds of duties aa a lumber inspector called known as the American route to theJfcanal, ditch, him. And hla talk, which was ever of through which loaded canoes neglect covered the priest-bui. while forgetfulness cobwebbed the the ponies" snd the race trank, passed. Here Was certainly a bit of some-- . memories of those who knew, sejmed even more incongruous la a great impetus to attempts to reach tlitns new out of something old. The . And so It has happened that gener- - place where the white men talked of shorts" and "outs," "two by twelves" book la the readers band was pub-- : atlons have passed until In this month William Morton, one of his men, Hahed In New York in 1826. and the ' of the year 1905 an g anJ ailoa" and all the rest of the antiquarian, a cliff, snw Kennedy channel it recounted were those of a fng for knowledge In musty books, Jatgon of a lumber mill. One day the i l urns stretching away, perfect (v ice free, and a moldy page and reads what superintendent of the plant, who had Bni B half ago. ntury he thought he saw beyond It the wat- J taken a great fancy to the young New become of this canal? has here been reproduced, ers widening out into an open sea. He asks himself: Why did not the Yorker, and who apparently loved to . was its history? Why did not An open polar sea beyond this sou. the world know of It? These are some Cotomliian government permit the cut, listen to the Inspector's stories of how , of Ice was Kane s theory. What Mor- tte QUetions which the paragraph which, while It might divide the coun-- he won three hundred on Itosoben" ton saw was only a strip of tempor- try, would also serve to knit It In and other profitable operations against ,nted m ! m aiium uintos ltn( I mo ffn i4im in searching the ring, told him he ought to invest A careful perusal of preceding pages commercial interests? of the volume dlsclueed much which j fe an answer he found out the source some of bis winnings in' a piece of of original Information concerning this land near the mill, build a collage r".d only added Interest to Interest. The anonymous chronicler was de-- ; forgotten Raspadura canal. bring his family up there for the summer. The New Yorker looked at him bribing that portion of New Spain Peary's Advantage. In alienee for a minute. Then he eject nown as New Granada. His words Mentioned by Humboldt. Peary's special advantages on the ere: An authority no less than Alexander ed a long stream of tobacco Juice and present trip arc that he lx believed to The next most Considerable river von Humboldt, the famous traveler ejaculated alowly, "What, build a have the best ireship ever built on the left Is the Atrato, which falls and geographer, seems to have been ho me here! Say, when I build a cotwhich to fight his way to the Arctic to the gulf of Darien. This stream, the sponsor for the statement. In his tage it'll be at Coney, and tt won't be ocean; that he has better appliances sether with the San Juan, is said to INdlllcal Essay on the Kingdom of far from the track. That's as straight fur traveling over the sea ice than any : ford the beat route, for a canal to New ) " Spain, published in translation a tip as yen'll r enr':er explorer In this region, and i lite the two oceans. A communlca-- l in 1841, there is this statement: Learn o.ience cr Smiling. "In 1802, when Spanish commerce in can be effected by making s canal Vas harassed by the English cruisers, To the woman who wishes to make 'a great part of the cacao was carried her path through life an easy and - 4.. a cross the kingdom of New Spain and agreeable one, the science of smiling ' S''.-.-' embarked at Vera Crux for Cadlx Is a moat necessary study. Like actThey preferred the passage from Guav ing, or art, or engineering, it is a aqnll to Arapulnii and a land Journey thlug in which only practice can make of a hundred leagues from Acapulco one perfect. A Utile theory may go a to Vera Crux to the dancer of a long tong way, bill it ia enough to rememHorn and the dlf- - ber tli navltpiMim by C::-two rules: First, the honey of a smile catches more hearts llau ruliy id xiriigcMiig with the current nloni: the cikisih of Peril and Chib.. the vinegar of a frown or the peppet This example proves that If the con- - of a sneer; second, It Is not the me striieiiun of a ruiml the Is'b-- ' rhauical beauty but tho sicnificunce of nuts of Panama abounds with too is attractive. Exlie smile that many (lililniiii"s. from Mi multiplicichange. ties of sluices, the commerce of AmerGOLD GOLD. ica vmilil ciiin the important adrnni-'icetroui good from rr to tho Kuiimreai'ero de Good He Says, "But Comfort Bet la Crux, mid from Panama to ?' ter." Tin- - introduction of samel FOod that fits is better than a gold would be still n surer moans of dimine," says a grateful man. minishing tie- - expense d the carriage. "Before I commenced to use Grape-NutThese 'land ships,' as they nre called food no man on earth ever bad liy the Orientals, hitherto oxtsi only a worse infliction from catarrh of the in the province of Caracas and were stomach than I had for years. ' . here front the Canary islands "I could eat nothing but the very Iceberg. by the Marquis of Toro." food and even that gave me lightest that - Is the best sledge traveler on Native Bamboo House, Thus did Spain plan for a commerce distress. great record. fr n the headwaters of the Alra'o. a which was destined not to hv hers "1 went through the catalogue of Only a few of the most onnsplcuona fi. . navigable river falling into the and an extension of power and glory foods but found them all prepared attempts to reach the pole have been m ' of Darien, and the river St. Juan of which shtt has been stripped. more or leu In(except Grape-Nuts- ) mentioned here, and merely the names de ChlramLrla, which fal's into a bay A hint of the secret of why Spain digestible. generating gas In the stomof some of the Important Journeys of of lie same name in the Iacitlc has fallen front her throne of supraon ach In turn produced headthe more recent period can be given, TIi point of Junc'ure would lie alaoit rtcy ntuy lie found In her attitude to- ache (which and various other palm and as those of Kobieway, De Ijong. Nan- 4i.'- miles from the Atlantir and about ward this ranal. which was offered to aches) and otherwise unavailable for sen. Wellmsn. Jackson and Ziegler. 2C miles from the Pacific. About fif-ther. An anrlent historian tells why my use. miles of the At into, nr rat In-li(: Spain refused to permit this enterpris food I have found Grape-NutPen Portrait of British Premier. to complete hla easily digested and assimilated, and t)u o. which finite into the Atrato. Inc "gentleman" Premier Balfour Is not like his por- w Id require few locks, aa the cur-re- : 1 projsut. Thia ia the statement, referIt has renewed my health and vigor traits. His fare Is not so well modelof the stream is in the dry sea.-ring to the tiny Raspadura canal: and made me a well man again. The ed nor so pretty as the artists bavn on! about one mile an hour. Only "lint t'nt! yealotta pollry r.f the Spanish catarrh of the stomach haa disaplw lty miles of the Him Juan would government caused it to be closed and conspired to draw It. His face is peared entirely with all Its attendant It Is have the cheeks not ns ire locking, leaving an iiiterven jowled: prohibited under severe penalty any ills, thanks to Grape-Nutwhich now so refined. Looking at the head en Inc space of lewd land of four n:ile attempt to reopen It. The remains of s my almost, sole food. I want no the ranal arc visible to the present other." Name given by Postum Co., ani a half to be cut through." profll, there is eomelbing disconcert' hour" 11818). ing, froglike, shout the eye. Ills daitle Creek,, Mich. H Is the Cecil head, long, narrow, Gone Over Route. Ten day's trial tells the story. a has limit can which hs Imiuuci il. follows first the Modesty paragraph perky; the There's s reason. res and the account continues with overstepped without Intention crown far hack. poet-quee- , - . -- . lt . . i . delv-sellin- . . . . 1 I , . The pope's slippers are legion, each pair being made of the finest velvet, the right slipper, which Is kissed by pilgrims and other pious visitors, bears a cross of gold. Best In the World. Cream, Ark., Oct. 9lh. (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 hla return to health nn-- , hesitatingly give all the credit to Dodds Kidney Pills. In an Interview regarding Ills cure. Mr. Smith says: "1 had been low for eighteen mouths with my back and kldneya and alao, Epllepay. I had taken everything I knew of and nothing seemed to dome any good till a friend of mine got me lo send for Dodds Kidney Pllla. I find 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 1 took sick. Dodd's Kidney Pills cure the KidCured Kldneya cleanse the ' neys. Pure blood blood of all Impurities. means good health. , TEA TEA C ' 11 I Do It Now. are about to make a trip any where, let me know, Pleased' to glvt you fall information as to low rates plenty of em this summer train service, etc. "The Santa Fe" trade mark Is the sign of safely, speed end ease. If you s : : C. F. WARREN, Genl. Apt.. A. T. & S. F. Ry., Salt Lake s . City. Utah. To.-.iuu,- r ortn-Iti-lio- Dering the last fifteen years France has expended more, both in time and money, in the investigation of submarine navigation than any other country. TEA , s Specimen more to the world than though he had pointed out a royal road to the Indies with a supply station at the north pole. He had found the east coast of Greenland, and he had discovered no end of whales and sea When one of the great generals of horses, and the stories he told about ancient Greece died the soldiers of the them brought the great arctic whal-erie- s whole army shaved their heads and Into existence. It is no exaggerthe manes of their horses. ation to say that In two centuries the arctic industries that grew out of Hudson's voyage yielded products to the world that were worth $1,000,000,-60This vast source of wealth was Tea is coarse or fine, tea discovered by a man who was huntor weed, harsh or smooth, ing for a road to the north pole. Is there a better way to iceep the family longer at. table, to keep it together? TEA keen or soft, heavy or bright ; but words are empty. 0. Unclaimed Rewards. In 1818 the British government passed an act by which the first British ship to sail to 83 degrees north was to receive a reward of $5,000; to li-- , ! . ; er s ; mallet-s- haped. 1n |