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Show r '4 1 V enters ml Baal bee. or Baalbek la the name given a ruined city lying In anclen forty-fiv- e miles northwest ol Damascus. There Is nothing particularly remarkable about a ruined city being found In the locality mentioned, but the sire of the blocks of stone used by the ancient builders of this particular city Is something that haa puasied the modern engineers since the day when Baalbec was first made the Mecca of the Oriental traveler. There are Immense stones on every side of the visitor to this ancient pile of ruins, but the three moat remarkable blocks said to be largest ever used In the construction of a building are In a wall back of the V SLEEPS ONCE IN TWO WEEKS. if it Tea is better tresh bnt, whit does the grocer Mean by telling you that he has some tea just come Haa To Hksas Mle la a Unary Barden. To sleep but once In 14 days, and then only under the Influence of opiates, seems a cruel enough condition. It Is only part of the torture which M. B. of Bradford, Clearfield Cowdrlck county, PaH has suffered for the past 11 A from abroad? Fresh doesnt mean just picked; it means just roasted. Schillings Best is roasted as fast as your grocer wants it no faster In San Francisca years. SPEAKING TO THE DEAF. A Hints ball Often Made la Trying la Knauelato Very Plainly. Many people, and I am sorry to say some teachers of the deaf, fall to realise In practice at least that speech Is not as clearly risible to the eye as It is audible to the ear, and think that by speaking slowly, word by word, and opening their mouths to the widest extent, they will render the task of the speech reader easier. As a matter of fact they ren-dIt all the more difficult. A child In school may learn to understand a teacher who mouths his words In this manner, but this ability Is of no value to him when he leaves school. Indeed perfectly natural, deliberate speech Is easier to understand than the exaggerated form of articulation which people are apt to use the moment they know they are talking to a totally deaf person. People who depend entirely upon their speech reading for understanding others have requested me, when Introducing them to strangers, not to say that they were deaf, because they And It easier to read the lips when the person speaking Is not aware that lie Is being understood In that way. I have In my acquaintance a young man educated wholly by this method who travels a great deal and picks up acquaintances on the steamer or on the train just as people do who possess all their facul ties. I have In mind also a congenitally deaf girl of 14 who Is not considered unusually bright, yet whose speech Is clearly Intelligible to strangers after the first ten minutes, who Is Intelligent on the topics of the day, and whose larger and more conversational repertory Is much larger and more entertaining Ilian that of many young ladles of ao and over that I have met In metropolitan society --John Dutton Wright In er Century. The Hjrnterjr of Mffe. The questions, What Is life?" and "What is death? have often been asked, but have never yet been answered In a manner that was entirely satisfactory to the biologists and other Investigators. Years ago It was asserted that the mystery was on the eve of solution, and that the pursuit of the vital principle was about to end In discovery of Its various workings. Three or four years ago the British scientist announced that the discovery of the cellular principle of all life has been discovered, and, If the conclusions of the most eminent thinkers are to be takenlnto consideration, the great secret of life Itself Is -- about to be disclosed-- " About the same time a London cablegram asserted In recent years that the chemists will soon be able to compose the neccessary parts and conditions of a living thing and create life Itself!" It Is not neccessary to Inform the host of Intelligent readers that the necessary parts and conditions" of living thlnp have never as yet been mined In a chemist's laboratory. Until this Is done the "mechanical theory of life," to which so many biologists adhere, will remain unproven. The nay Haters. In several localities In the South In the mountainous regions of Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina In particular, there are families or even whole communities, which use clay as a part of their regular diet. In Northern Alabama (In Winston County), there Is a bed of this peculiar edible clay ; and, of course, a community of This queer clay is of clay eaters. ghastly white color, of an oily nature and, according to chemical analysis, It has extraordinary nutritive property, If considered only as a variety of earth. Persons who have visited the clay eating communities say that a steady diet of this white, oily earth has a tendency to turn the skin a pale olive green. Some medical writers claim that this deathly pallor Is caused by the presence of a large per cent of arsenic In the clays composition, but this can hardly be when the clay eaters live as long or longer than their meat, grain or vegetable neighbors. The teeth of the clay eaters often remain sound and white to beyond the seventh year Mrs. Brown I've secured my divorce from my husband. Mrs. Jones Then what are you looking so glum about? Mrs. Itrown The judge gave him the custody of' the family tandem bicycle. Judge. It is officially announced that the deaths from the bubonic plague In Bombay for the week number 470. Use Three Crown Mr. Cowdricks life during that time has been one of such unending agony that nothing but the state of the damned can be worse. Human Ingenuity never devised such cruelty. He would be In good luck If he could change places with a victim of Turkish or Chinese legal torture. Hla pain, which Is unceasing, Is just as plain as It can be without depriving him of life and putting him out of hla misery. It Is thus the most appalling form of suffering' which the human mind can conceive. Eleven years ago Mr. Cowdrlck was attacked by pains which he thought to be rheumatic. They soon caused him acute Buffering, and he consulted n local physician. This mania treatment was tried for some months, and had no good results. A second physicians was consulted, and again without effect. Mr. Cowdrlck then went to Philadelphia, where he consulted a well known specialist In the treatment of rheumatic disease. The exact nature of his complaint was a mystery to the practitioner. He experimented with various remedies without success. The physician visited In succession three other well known Philadelphia physicians. Not one of them was able to relive him. One of them recommended pine baths, and these he also tried without success. During this time the disease had steadily been growing worse, until Cowdrlck was In the condition he still finds himself. The pains were Incessant and he had to spend his time sitting helpless In an easy chair, squeexlng his racked limbs. Natural sleep became Impossible, and only opiates brought this great reliever. After physicians he tried patent medicines, and on these alone he spent over Before hla Illness he was a $3,000. man; now he Ison the verge of poverty. Eleven years ago hla condition necessitated a heavy use of opiates. The Initial dose soon became powerless, and had to be used very rapidly. Now the quantity that will give him relief Is so great, that It means a further weakening of his shattered health. It Is not possible without endangering hla life, to put him to sleep more than once In two weeks. Night and day he sits In hlfe Invalid chair, shuddering with pain, wringing hla hands In hopeless supplication, waiting for (he relief that never comes. His once strong frame Is reduced to a writhing skeleton, but still resists the attack of the enemy that never relents. Sleep Is posslblh so seldom that It Is no more than a drop of dew to the tongue of a man dying of thirst. Medical science can do nothing for him, and as long is his strength holds out he must live a life that Is worse than death. New York Journal. well-to-d- Baalbec Ccrle-Syrl- Temple of Baal. These Immense stones are respectively 64, 63 and 6a feet In length, and each la 13 feet In thickness, but the moat wonderful thing In con. section with tfiiih Is the fact that they are at a place In the wall 35 feet In height from the ground! How these Immense blocks of gran'te were eyer raised to such a height Is a question that has never yet been answered. Ex. wu considered wonderf&l, not only from a geological standpoint, but from an athnologlcal point of view also. While the convicts at the Institution were unearthing tome huge blacks of stone, they discovered some peculiar Indentations In one of the slabs. Closer Investlgatlen proved that these queer marks were the tracks of some gigantic beast of antediluvian time perhaps a maatodom or a mammoth. When the startling Intelligence was announced to the prison officials they had the sandstones slabs containing the marks care tally cleaned, whereupon another wonderful discovery was made, la the same pieces of stone, sometimes at the side and sometimes between the tracks made by the great prehistoric beast, were a human footprints, which serley of proved conclusively that man and the mammoth lived not only at the same time and In the same age, but that the huge beast and the man had passed that way during the aame year, and perhaps on the same day. The wonderful relics of a bygone age, were found In a quarry IJ feet from the surface and had previously been covered with a stratum composed of hundreds at tons of stone the accumulation of ages that had Intervened between the date upon which the tracks were made and that npon which they were revealed to the scientists. Expert geologists who have since passed an opinion on the matter say that at the time the tracks were made that which Is now hard sandstone was a "mucky" deposit of soft sediment, probably the bonier of a lake, where the man had been fishing and where the mammoth had come to bathe and drink. , -- s- . o fh toning a Preftoeelea. It Is not enough today to say that this or that boy Is absolutely trustworthy In order to get him a position In a shop, or In a law office, In a banking-housthe leather or the toy business, lie must be trustworthy.. It Is taken for granted that he Is honest This Is not undervaluing honesty In the least. Quite the reserve, In fact because If a boy Is not absolutely reliable nobody wants him, no matter how clever he may be. But there are hosts of honest boys . In fact almost all of them are straightforward. Bt to get a place In any establishment much besides honesty and reliability Is required, and hence the good old Sunday school story type of boy who made millions because and only because he was honest h unfair to the average boy reader, since It makes him think that success Is at hand If he Is only honest That Is the mistake many a fine, chap makes, and when after awhile he does not go ahead, In spite of his honesty, he grows melancholy and disgusted. When you get a place as boy in a store, or as assistas clerk In a banking-house- , ant In a professional office, you must take things Into your own hands. 'Naturally, you want to 'advance yourself! but the quickest way of doing this Is to let your own Interest drop for the time and study out . what li your employer's Interest Having found this, try every day In the year to see how you can Improve, suggest, push forward his success. Pretty soon he begins to notice you, to think over your suggestions In time something comes up, and he wants a man for a certain purpose. Ten to one he will think you are the only one for It because you have been keeping yourself before him ao mnch In a way that helps him. And not long afterward you are the man he relics on. That Is the beginning, and, like all good, thorough beginnings, It Is more than hall the battle. Harper's Round Table. e, The Jerks." Do you remember of ever having heard of that remarkable physical disorder which accompanied a religious movement which swept over the United States just prior to the war of 1813? It was In fact a contagious nervous disease, which, for the want of a better An early name, was called "the jerks. New England writer who saw several cases refers to this most remarkable manifestation as follows: "The jerks' took their name from the fact that the whole body was affected, and that In a most singular fashion, too. The arms and legs would be thrown about, apparently by a force beyond control of the affected Individual Sometimes the head would be thrown backward and forward with great violence. Occasionally the entire body would be affected and la such cases the victim would fall upon the ground and flounce about like a fish out of water. The disorder soon became epidemic, frequently attacking a whole religious assemblage at one time, making no distinction between the Impious and the pious. The only relief was to grasp something and hold fast until the fit passed off. The disease, If such It may be called, usually left Its victim badly prostrated, and In more than one Instance death ensued during the attack, usually from broken necks or violent concussions and constuslons during the convulsion. The disorder lasted from about 1810 to 1818 and .then gradually' disappeared from the land. Shopping by Mail Did you .are any money last year? If you did you should deposit where It will work fur you this year just as you worked for II last year. Zion's Savings Bank and Trust company of Salt Lake The modern facilities inaugurated liy im in nur mail older nyMi'in lias on made Interest cent. 5 any City pays per shopping hy mail an easy and naiisfactoiy mailer, enablin' ladies' amount from $i up. Start an account living at a distance from Salt Lake Cily to dress with taste and elegance, and ness the feeding. Yet the lightning-lik- e now and add to It as often as youJ,can. enjoy the advantage offered by our great stocks w ithoiu visiting town. In this department many clerk are cniixtanily employed in cutting rapidity with which the reptile Write for any information desired. seises Its prey produces a powerful ImWili-ukU'ixiukiikp ta President aud yards of new goods into samples, matching good-.- , arranging and filling pression. order and sending tlicin to customers all over the oumiry. So much cukgb M. Cannon, Cashier. in person. Kleven Tlam Aranas tbs Karlh. pain are taken to till orders as if the customer was Wkrn The Nun Ulll Burn Just think of It! "Eleven times beIs That the sun slowly but surely ADD It TO C'iTAMIGI'E around this globe of ours In the space ing consumed by Its ow n fires there Is I'FOB AriLlUATIOV I of 60 seconds Can you Imagine any- hut little doulit. No one can tell, thing that moves with such remarkable however, tu a certainly whether It Is or speed? Sound travels ouly iijf mile-pnot. Astronomers say that its diameter minute, and a rifle ball III Its speed could be reduced 3 feet per day for -- Mantlon This 3oo were not diminished by resistance) 6 before the finest Instruments years miles. Light passes through a distance could detect the fact that any reductions equal to 1 revolutions of the earth In have taken place. GRAND OPERA HOUSE asso one minute, but electricity travels J. B. BOtiKMt, Bgr. tonishingly fast that it Is able to com1 times the of earth V THE E. circuit S. DEAN GOMPAKY. plete the WEEK OF JANUARY 29th, In 60 seconds! l. jin-m-h- llll.E A1 Of Papr 1 1 Bpeona. If you desire to know about the scarcity of really reliable data on the history of spoons, lake down your handbooks and encyclopedias and see If It doesn't take you a long while to learn anything, concerning their origin, "nativity," etc In fact, the antiquarians do not pretend to give us anything of value In that line It Is admitted that they are "very ancient, but just exactly how old they are and by whom and where they were first used are points upon which we are left completely !u the dark. Creighton says: "Spoons must have been a very ancient Invention, for a Saxon spoon of perforated silver gilt, ornamented with gems, was found In a grave at Sarre, Thanot. When forks were unknown, spoons played a very Important part at the table. Spoons of the thlrteeth century, and even later, had handles terminating In a knob, knot, acorn, or other odd and cumbersome devises. About the period of the Restoration, of which ao much Is said in English history, a great change was made In the forms of spoons. In some of the nnlque patterns the "spoon part was divided Into two, three and even four parts, and the handle always split or twisted and turned up, Instead of down and back. Spoons of that period were all blunt, Instead of being pointed, as In the forms generally seen at - present They continued short and blunt down to the time of George I- - when thdy were first made pointed and had the handles turned down lustead of up. About the year 1 joo what were known as "apostle spoons" were Introduced. They were so called because they had the figures of the twelve apostles carved upon their handles. They were generally given by sponsors to children, at the time of baptism. The wealthy presented the entire twelve, those who could not afford to Indulge In such ex travagance giving one or mor, according as they felt able. The moat curious and remarkable spoou In the world, perhaps, Is a "coronation spoon" preserved among the other royal relics In the Tower of London. The bowl Is of gold and the handle silver. The handle Is split down the middle anj set with all kinds of precious stones. The relic Is valued at about tiofioo or upwards of $100,000. HrCFahrwejr Big Book, Of "biggest books In the world" there Is no end, but It Is believed that the blank book of the greatest weight, 'xe and bulk belongs to an eccentric physician of Baltimore, one Dr. Fahr-aeIt was made In Chicago In 1891 It weighs exactly tSo pounds and 7 ounces, and has leaves made of the very best rope manllla. The cover of this giant of books weighs 50 pounds, and Is supplied with two complicated padlocks. The book cost the doctor $65. Brllrn of Bwddhn. Within two hours ride of Yokohama, Japan, the traveler may see the most wonderful statue In the world. It Is sealed Image of the god but It Is built upon suchglgantlc proportions that IU height Is 63)5 feet. The total weight of the metal In this great statue Is 450 tons, 500 pounds of which Is pure gold. Near the statue are several shrines of Buddha. In one of these the visitor is shown some of the bones ot Buddha and the table vessels Hillloon of Tears. which he used during hla earthly carHava you any idea what a wonderful eer. In Ceylon there Is a Bvddhlst thing a kaleidoscope really Is? Did you ever catch yourself wondering how shrine which contains one of Buddhas eves. many different kind of patterns could be formed by the little bits of colored I enfreen Cannes He Carve glass which the Instruments contains, bj Insal appueatleoa, as they eauunt reach and which adjust themselves with su;h the diseased portion of the ear. Thera Is ' remarkable facility when the Instru- only oae'way to sure deafness, and that la ment Is turned In the hand? A calcula- by asnsMtutioaal remedies. Deafness la tion has been made by a noted mathe- sensed by an Inflamed condition of ths lining of thellualeehlan Tul.es. Whan matician which we are sure will aston- this tube geta Inflamed yoa hare a rum Ming ish our readers. He shows that a kaleid- sound or lie perfect hearing, and when it la aluasd deafness is the result, and oscope containing twelve bits of glass entirely anises tho Inflammation sen be taken out maybe easily turned rapidly enough and this tuba rastored to its normal ,' to make ten changes a minute day and hearing will he destroyed forever; nine saasa for out tan e of one eaueed are ulght by eatarrh.whlrh years and forty-onninety Is nothing hut an Inflamed condition of the days without exhausting the dlffer-rn- t musuus surfaces. combinations or the possibilities of We will give Une Hundred Dollars fur any a new figure on the next turn. getting of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that W, A. Harris will succeed Peffrr of If the number of pieces of glass be In. saanot be cured by Hall'aCatarrh Cure. Seed Kansas for senator. creased to twenty, a calculation shows foe circulars, free. The house of the Texas legislature F. 1 CHKNBY A Co . Toledo, Ohio, that 4638099,576 years would be necold by Druggists. 71a haa passed a bill prohibiting Sunday to all of the changes Hell's Family Pills are the bast. essary go through baseball. of which It would be capable, the holder of the Instrument turning all the Thu Bine LohalrrS la Karr.-Oneo- l while to as to get ten changes a minute the very rarest ot all .marine and working day and night those milthe "wandering fish" not excreature, I of lions years cepted, Is the crustacean known as the Indigo lobster During the yoars 1890. What Bis Bnakee Rat. 91 the lobstermen ol New London, Conn., The learned professor of the Paris caught hvc of these wonders, two of Museum of Natural History, Leon t, them In the Fisher Island Sound. Lobdescribes the diet, of a serpent sters of that variety are so exceedingly more than twenty feet long, which has rare that It It not known that more than been on exhibition at the Jardln des two of that kind had ever been captured Plantes since the month of August, before In the history of the world. The 885. Up to the end 189$ this rep- capture of two blue lobsters oil The tile had eaten fifty times. The largest coast of Maine In 1894 was reported, but number of times In one year that the on good authority It It sal that the retnake look war Insq port was never verified, 9991 t Dla-bots- u, A IneerpeValed Capital gldNMMMto. Dividends paid to Salt Lake City BRILLIANT .... on ,$50.00 deposited September 1st, l&A on our pyramiding BY plan: Proxy depositors amwps, COMEDYg) 133 1 S In 130 days $jo has earned $69.14 This Is our Special Order Department, where our Customers have never failed to get a dividend every 15 days lor alx aud years. Call or write for Information. The E. S. Dean Atlas block, Salt company, Nos. one-hal- paid an Having Comnouudad Four Yearly, by rtfcit m SALT LAKE CITY.UTAH - MAItYS ACADEMY. Hotiki and fleu Utah Commercial ami Savings Bank f St S A. K. nBKGK A CO HAIr I.AKN CT'. V. Deposit. f) 2i UT. lutenut I 0 W. EituMifilinl. I'niktr dirutlun erf thi Kitting f rho Holy Trowi. On if tbs unit prumlix'iit Kdumtioim liiititiitiou of lli Wt. Young lad leg ir part'd to any gplier uf lit tu aliirbthsr inuy barullad. Thorough knowUtlg of lei trg gi'imu and art. inusie In alfilg bran chon, ag tauirlit in 1 lit" Imt clamrii'Ml cougar vatiiriagof Euro. Smi run Paotfpacffua. September .sfh, dividend paid .$ 5.40 October ikI, dividend paid 7.93 October 15th, dividend paid 930 The famoui uumatly byCharlns Kleiu will November 1st, dividend paid 9.45 be prvwnted hr the full vtrwigth of ike . , November 15th, dividend paid... 7.83 Grand House Company Opera December 1st, dividend paid 11.73 December 15th, dividend paid... 9.36 Trim, . . . Ur, Me. Me Balluee haturdejr Us 8.14 Jan. 1st, 1897, dividend paid iirapald o dni out of uara Parlodl.-a- at Pulilbi.ra ina-tlir- a Titiar IS-i- . lUnii'-iliii- " aui-.U- a tu Itruvrw. It awoulJ take a whole ii;euf the Realt Lake City .Utah. public to riliiluui- - all thr queer superCity, Utah. stition a out (in- - heard anJ the curious The Madrid Correo announces that vwriiBnnnBitaff iniii Bna in laws '.hat have liei-enacted lor Its proupon ihm mo fgvormhlg terms the minister of finance la preparing a amduala onaiatmt with safe and aouaarvalivs bank-In- c tection. Ru.-sihad xu old law by Write for Information. revision of the Spanish customs tariff. Frel Praaldaut which one who pulled but a single hair Hrariroug r. W. Nidmi TltePteldmit from anuihers beard might be fined J. leJaaniusa Ckafater four times as much a If he Lad cut off Joseph C. Willard, owner ol the wel I one of his enemy's fingers. The Turks known Willard hotel, Washington, D. Live Stock have always believed that a beardless CM died at his residence in Washington 33 and 34 East a First South Street, 316-2- 17 Commlsalc aged 80 years. man would never be admitted to paradise, and the Russians, although they do profena to despite every. hing Turkish, declare that n'A beardless son of Adam can ever enter heavru. If you weald hare post'd, writ tor Informatloa. Prompt rapltu. Qalek ntaraa. FKED A. SEARS, McCobbitx Block, witts whisTtuTEisTni I In ushMyruix Tames ti niiin. Hirfd hr rtnwKlsfs. HALT LAKE CITY. ut Optician Hale Is a conscienceless monster. At Andre du Poirier, France, there Is ALEX. Z. WYATT, halt Lake City. a coal mine 3,083 feet In depth. Is this examined free. Eyes the derpest coal mine In the world? Jewrlrr Wutrbmnker, Ad3!I2!3ri J. l.a.amjh. P. Uonuonaav. J c"tto 1 C. FARRINGTON . W. T. Mel C.J. LANTRT. nth. a. Khnep Salesman. J. T.Mkukbuy, HogKalMUM T. J. Kauaa, Oflae, C. W. llsi-- a, Itook-luaiie- r. The Kansas City Live Stock Commission Company an B IiooinaI!?7tAlB2C and DKlock FiUJifnig, Kansas City Stock. Yards. Coaaiai-OBDaiic- a OmiMeaMaeve Boi.icrrap. Rood Fanner Capital. Twaazv Y baas' Aonva Kxrauaaca. Kali. Uabskt Rikwm fui laru Km-awa- Do You Know that tha . ' SIEGEL-SANDER- S DR. G. W. SHORES. The Oldest SgeelnlM la tkn Live Stock Commission Co. Week NOT ONE DOLLAR NEED BE PAID UNTIL YOU CURED DR. O. W. HHORlca, alwnyn eaaktag to help Buffering mankind, nlwnye tulng to oonvince peeple that he glvee value iw eeived evary dollar paid htok has deukled to give euwckary, fraud and bn. pus ion Its tout Mew, and yratont the the itspleable Buffering oleaese trom methoda of quenks and ohartotaau Stott uffarsr frasn te the ouly Kanaaa CltyTHouaa that maintain! Hrriwh Offirov Deuvor end PuriiloT WKITK TIIKH. IAIK OKO. lunger, Kuiu SIEGEL- - II. W30TT, Praairieut. . LOST ss eeuiuNl by gkut, no consult DR. A W. BHORML'tha Man w I10 haa given hla IMP to chronic disease, and .he vleed. treated and him one dollar until the cure to The doctor rsearvwe the right, however, to refuse any laourahle enoe-lhe eanri cure yen he don't want yew Ihonay. uch aa offer wee never hirers mode hr a responsible phvsicinn, and Dr. A Bheree la only able to make tt he poaiavrir curse these Slews am Deal weete another cent an eusetSsoahle dew . but commit the "Old Deetori aud BUHUtEM SACREDLY CDN- - It IDt&NTlAls Dr. Q. W. SHORES Lock Box I68S, Salt Lake City, Utah ID. City. BUDHALL, OLENIMNNING. Geo. M. Bruch House, Sill Ltii H. 8. KUMFJKLD. Hoaruinry. audlreas. 1 Seminal Weak ms, Variooacli, ITjh .into amal W ttohu ypbUia. Oooorrfaoea. and all ethar private ' t falflahiL They are Reliable and will live your bualuoa ntteutkiu all along the Una. Scott & Co (INCORPORATED.) IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Hardware SHEET STEEL PIPE' BAK AND IKON, ACENTS Buffalo Scale Company, Atlas Engine Works, Dodge wooden Pulleys, California Powder Works, Celebrated Anchor Brand Cylinder and Engine Oil. Howe, Brown A Co., Drill and Tool Steel, FOR Detroit Stove Cu., John Van & Home Steel Range, Cole Heaters, Air-Tigh- t Worthington Steam Pump, Revere Rubber Co , Dodge Injector. Leviathan Belting. Miners Tools, Stoves, Tinware, etc,, And a General Assortment of Mill Findings. STORE 168 MAIN STREET. WAREHOUSE 135 SALT LAKE CITY, W. SECOND S. U'(AH mu-so- a Bilk puna o WTVinerxrmrwrey V'lTMakesow's INTCirf A 8YOU ssr,lit yo can make everyone in EmKBiarVMnX$7rX n house C ths happy by buying eondl-Moa- RANGE: MAJESTIC It will cuok ajdlnuer lit tur a llii and It never gels out of order. The only iaiill we lure In find wllh It Is that It lasts loo lung, ll will uutlire two For further partietuar apply jtn nur aent:; Frank Andrew! .. 1nrk Il'r Nnphl liwi C.k Kvaarllla W.O. A h A I'n. ..Hi. I'lravanl ( li. T Fatiln I II. Klnm A To. .... A. U. Han A (to .Knnhnre ... liana K. JmnlMHt Bl. Anthony II. Mwril I'mvnHnrdwaiel'u. ... From Moroni Muroal A. H l.nnd Kphrnnu H. W. Curd UUrklrjot l Cix-it-- r Baking Powder- - I Salt Lake Hardware 1 Hewlett Bros., Salt Lakfi City, Utah I WALKER BROS DRYGOODS CO er Haa and the Hamnsoth. A remarkable discovery wav made a few years ago In the sandstone rock at the Nevada State Prison. The find musky saved in ij&. ale seven times. Nearly always the food consisted ol the flesh of goals, old or young. Three times, however, the repast was composed of rabbits and once of a goose. The feeding of the serpent, which will eat nothing but u list Is alive, offers an uncommon spectacle, and many persons request to have notice of the times when the creature feeds, so as to wit- Vl'HlMkllS VUICtf AR IfAJEtiTIC fAMGE, STSKL AND ABOVE COT 42 MALEABLE ,$59 60 1 AND 44 (to-u- p Co., WENT SECOND SOUTH ST SALT LAKE CITY UTAH |