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Show clone Published DESERET, Every - Wednesday at UTAH. By The MILLARD THE Delegate to PUBLISHING DIRECTORY. Congress..... Frank THRRITORIAL Governor Secretary ‘Chi ef Ju stice Nn J. 5 INDUS- The Use and Abuse of the Bicycle— Lighting a Skating Ground—Are Ocean Steamers to Go Faster—The Cost of Electric Cooking. Cannon. OFFICERS. rr. : : may exert, according to its use ock.. MILLARD COUNTY DIRECTORY. Judge..........Joshua Greenwood. Andreas Peterson. Selectmen..........-.....|John Styler. James Gardner. Sheri flr ccss0seocics se0discies Ou Ce OID Assesso! r Hiiteiscceesc. Alma Greenwood. an persons, A. Hinckley.| LE sosrcrcsecesceeessA, 0. Benen oe pes 2 Sarees Roe “cSwillard Rogers.| eyor.. Supt. heart hompson, Schools.........-...Orvil and secondly, in the case measurement and lung the been extremely difficult to look A Boston printer has captured an heiress. Instead of trying to set up a eertain number of thousands he will soon be looking around for ways of pleasantly spending a few. Advertising eommercial - should be schools. im business metic, and often more taught in but capacity, all It is as necessary that wears is horrifying to hear that a y ene RE tah sl te pat sur Siiners. te A ud icing age ; According to an Omaha decision the penalty for killing a pugilist in the ring is two years in the penitentiary, put the business will never flourish as it should till the penalty is abolished and a suitable reward substituted. heaith will form g which run it will Where women who are have frequently employed been in Current events in considerable Spain and popular till the shaky Axe to the the dis- discontent monarchies. of Southern Europe will have to hitch along a little to make room for another republic. One of the most striking things in the truly remarkable eastern war is the suc- eess of the medical and .surgical treat- ment of the Japanese troops. The surgeon-general reports a death rate of only 4 per cent among the wounded whe were brought under the care of the gurgeons. riders who had world. There was and go on their way. A conside! of equal importance with the meg eal and electrical efficiency of th’ tem is its comparatively low cost, cost of motors for a canal boat w" by the trolley system would, in | the ridden excessive’ lads, many themselves the the world, from and undermining of whom coming chaminjuring their their cases, the more boat than equal in which they the valpel were pi Be. hire its motor for the trip, or Ea tow with others, and requires The tra equipment. The. cost of OT ,i¢! these motors is about the sam,’ of a first-class pair of mules yi) | that | it has the great recommendati¢ at: not “eating its head off” in the)ne# | ter time. thy consti- Riding is an Adthe ENGLISH American An great abuse eae Electric she gives a sportive but ple dissection of declares that her own character, while she does not love him, no she feels repugnance. hi Foot-Warmer.,.; about all manner of things, first of her youth, suitor’s But concern- how passion. can she Past hope to soon the marriage? would cease to love her, If so, her be tears—a sorry and only one, her keep regret resource indeed, foot-warme electric The exercise is advisable in heart | guest, ‘Do | of The Ard he | sacnioned out of asbestos clott which there are three layers. middle layer is first stitched backs ana forward with a fine wire. ¢yyee layers are then stitched to) pther, and fan ancy the cover. whole A is simple inclosed device , en: ples connection to be made readily¢ gith the source of electric supply, anj y the the : hess o at passenger can modify alike pleasure. This looks to Americar end.; ‘The at the wrong eginning pore practical way would seem; 5 be to warm the car through and say? the Ocean Steamers to Go Faster? necessity of The Influenza, \ The statement recently made that The epidemic of influenza w ich is now passing over England an ; other the next decade can not possibly match the increase in ocean speed re- Buropean countries is so seve © that the British Medical Journal h,s pubeorded in the past ten years has been | lished some popular instruct) /ns for much discussed in England, and many its prevention and cure. egular prominent authorities have expressed | life, plenty of open air exerciie short ‘their views on ahe subject. Sir Thom- | of fatigue, a proper number & hours as Sutherland thinks that, although| in bed and regular meals of g¢)d, simthe limits of sea-going speed on long | ple food are among the best! prophylactics. The use of an antisept® mout yoyages are apparently reached in the Lucania and Campania, the tendency | wash several times a day wi in there of the day is towards larger ships and | is exposure to contagion sibuld be higher speed. New material or new | adopted, and the advice so oftin given, applications of existing appliances | not to despise or attempt to’ ight the may come in to solve this exeremely | disease when once it has begz2, must difficult problem, but in the meantime, | be repeated and insisted upor | it was Sir Thomas thinks the only way to | said last year by many exfsrienced get faster ships is to build them big- | physicians that the best cul} for inger, and put bigger machinery into | fluenza was two days in fed in a them. This, is the present conditions warm and well ventilated yor; and of things, means larger and deeper ports and docks, as in Hngland the limits of existing accommodations in passed through his fifth. this respect are almost reached. tack of influenza, says he derived the celebrated firm of shipbuilders believe | greatest possible benefit from mixing that improvements in the immediate | fifteen grains of citrate of potash in a of future depend upon increased working tumbler of water, adding the juice pressure and increased revolutions of one lemon, and sipping e decoction engines, by which lighter machinery during the day and night. will develop equal power from the | The Electric Candle. adoption of lighter and stronger ma- | terials. This, with the substitution of | The electric candle is in great rewater tubes in the place of ordinary quest in Hngland for the lighting and marine boilers, will reduce weight, other tables. decoration of dining and and consequently give increased speed, | An ingenious device for lighting the “put how far this will be carried it is provided by plecing small will impossible to tell.” Another \ candle under the tablecloth and taking equally eminent authority says: “Some pads current from them by means of reduction in weight there will no doubt | the pin points in the base ef the canbe as higher steam pressures, water- _ two candles, of course, are The dlestick. tube boilers and improved material | on being taken from the are introduced but the price which | extinguished relighted when they are has to be paid for any inereased| table, and are position. They sroper Post i proper the f in i replaced is i passage and speed above that at which All | are so arranged that tie bulb, ae made is almost prohibitive.” | glass imitation of a wax tandle ean be these people seem to have ignored the can be candestick the when | removed, fact that Mr. Tesla has already given When endle. ordinary any to the world a machine called the os- used for of coored silk the cillator, which will before long rele- i used with shades makes ore of the pret: gate the present eumbrous and expen- | electric candle dinier table thai give machinery of ocean steamsrips | tiest additions to a : to the scrap heap. an oscillator-- | is possible to imagine. they think I need protection but trucks, of success? Is it not Miss One company had and are connected are into compartments, and a tained from each of confidence arising from excessive self-esteem? A brigadier-general pro~ tecting the heads of the. government! I don’t know; but sometimes this ridiculous self-reliance leads me to the point of believing everything possible which this strange man would have single corridor, its length doors, as which itself has to well permit as of on March 2 the bridegroom received his bride’s dowry in his own appointment, on Carnot’s motion, not on that of Barras, as chief of the army of Italy, still under the name of Bonaparte; on the 7th he was handed his commission; on the 9th the marriage ceremony was performed by the civil magistrate; and on the 1ith the husband started for his post. In the marriage certificate at Paris the groom gives his age as 28, but in reality he was 27; the bride, who was 33, gives hers as not quite 29. Her name is spelled Detascher, his Bonaparte. A new birth, a new baptism, a new career, a new start in a new sphere, Corsica forgotten, Jacobinism renounced, Gen. and Mme. Bonaparte made their bow to the world. The ceremony attracted no public attention, and was most un- ceremonious, no member of the family from either side being present. Madame Mere, in fact, was very angry, and foretold that with such a difference in age the union would be barren. TO Whe HOLD UP YOUR SKIRT. Most Graceful Way of Accomplishing This Necessary Action. The prettiest dress clutch, many think, is the plain, everyday “perpendicular grip.” The arm is allowed to hang straight down by the side and the dress seized. In this grip there is no wanted, make two WATCHMAKER, on are of the car through doors speedy the are CATARRH Proper IN frem the along scenery. on. use Cars on some CHILDREN. obstructions catarrh and from the Best caused habit, RB: E Gy. COLLIER, nursery and the ©. E. pdt sete ee Ser EE Lk Ae t \ Lar“) and Jrrigation Work a Specialty. = } ——— Engineer for Central Land and Irrigation Co., Clear Take Land and Irrigation Fillmore Laud :rd Irrigation Mountain Lauu and Irrigation Co. . Office: Court House, by Fillmore, Co. te Utah, THE DESERET DAIRY C0. HAS FOR SALE CREAM CHEESE. for the fine quality of its Milk, Butter and Cheese. Give: o ur products a trial. N. S. BISHOP, SUPT. Frank D. Hobbs, (Late hegister U. 8. Land Office.) Land and Mining Atterney. Correspondence solicited. ‘Twentythree years’ experience. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. young children breathe through the mouth. If parents would make it an axiom of the ree fngineering im ail its Branches, ingress Breathing Is Certainly afeguard Against I Both incipient ‘ NEPHI, UTAH. Watches and jewelry promptly paired. Mail orders solicited. Deseret is noted seeing but G. A. Gardner, facilities design the sound, THH FULL for of Received! and egress. The windows of the corridor are extra large and afford excellent of-similar except, W, A Keysor, Proprietor, continental railways, but the English do; and with his imagination, who newspapers give full credit to the can reckon what, he would undertake?” “American idea’ of their cars. They This letter, though often quoted, is so} say that these compartment corridor remarkable that, as some think, it may carriages give all the safety and conbe a later invention. If actually writvenience of the American car, with ten later, it was probably the invention many added comforts and conveniof Josephine herself. ences. All the cars of both classes are What motives may have combined to handsomely finished and upholstered. overcome her scruples we can not tell; proclaimed; chords AT me perhaps a love of adventure, probably an awakened ambition for a success in other domains that the one which advyancing years would soon compel her to abandon. She knew that Bonaparte had no fortune whatever; she must have known likewise, on the highest authority, that both favor and fortune would by her assistance soon be his. At all events, his suit made swift advance, and by the end of January he was secure of his prize. On Feb. 9, 1796, their bans were are through compartments accessible from the exterior by all that passageway compartment The is Miss They OCCIDENTAL SALOON a side, and each third-class compartment is made ito séat’ six “persons. There are in each car one compartment for smoking, one reserved for women and children, a lavatory for men and one for women. There is a smal compartment in the middle of some cars intended for storing the hand baggage passengers. she says not made. Pure Wines, Whiskies and Brandies ends Hach first-class of whistlers,” be born, Just persons, proof defiance of the old of her ability before “Clever “must the voeal compartment four of there is a different position of the mouth that modifies it. A whistle has timbre, quality and soprano and mezzo range, but the whistle of the. two sexes is so much alike that it is impossible to dee tect the fine grades of difference be» tween them.” : the length of the train. seats { More course, application—it is an art that must be taken seriously. Whistling resembles singing a good deal. Indirectly and the or must have cast-iron lungs, sound health, a favorable mouth cavity formation—sounds gruesome, doesn’t it?—and perseverance. The strain on the orbicular muscle alone is considerable. And they must even have good teeth. You can see in my face already the whistle lines. They run in the formofaninverte ed V from the nose to the chin. Mrs. Shaw has them. The points I have mentioned, with a lack of nervous affeee tions, a good ear, and the ability te strike the notes you want on the piano a number at Judd Judd, in compartment, Score Siffleuses. a sublime received. runs alongside one side of the car. All the compartments open into this corridor, and thus communication is ob- to suc- a single WOMEN. a tradition concerning whistling women. Their teacher is Miss Gertrude Judd, who took a course of training under the world-renowned : siffleuse, Mrs. Shaw. When a young woman applies to Miss. Judd for admission ‘to her classes she has to undergo examination and eriticism scarcely lesssevere than that which Mme. Marchesi’s pupils experience. The would-be whistler has her musical ear and register tested and has to satisfy by vestibuled platforms, but, instead of being entirely open inside, with a gangway down the middle, they are divided ceed? Some day they will be only too happy if I give them mine. My sword ig at my side, and with it I shall go far. What do you think of this assurance ing with of third-class cars built on the American model, but even the third class pas: sengers wouldn’t ride in them, and they had to be reconstructed. The corridor coaches differ slightly in construction on different railways. They are only used yet on the principal through trains between the chief cities of the kingdom, as between London and Glasgow or Edinburgh, or on the southern routes for the continent. The twe classes, first and third, are still retained, and are likely to remain. The| second class has been abolished in recent years. The new coaches look almost exactly like ordinary American ears from the outside. They average sixty feet in length, run on two bogie for herself that “violent tenderness” which is almost a frenzy? Would he not the objection. ing which he talks equally wetl; the ‘quickness of his intelligence, which makes him catch the thought of another even before it is expressed; but I confess I am afraid of the power he seems anxious to wield over all about him. His piercing scrutiny has in it something strange and inexplicable that awes even our directors; think, then, how it frightens a woman.” The writer is also terrified by the very ardor prefer Has Fair CARS. Are Being Adopted Construction. Francisco The young women of San Francisce have thrown aside their mandolins, have hung up their tennis racquets, have ceased to wave their hands in Del« sartean style, have given up singing “A-a-ah” in all keys, and have thrown themselves, heart and soul and lungs, into whistling. No less than twenty 6 the city’s daughters have formed a class to master the gentle art and are work- will pay much more to have one compartment reserved for two or three persons than for seats im a parlor car with all its comforts of freedom of movement and privileges of smoking and reading rooms. The new corridor ear retains the seclusive feature of the compartment. Pullman dining and sleeping cars have also been tried, bu} with indifferent success, so far as the English travelers are concerned. The “wholesale herding together” is the merci- less and RAILROAD Ideas ‘heir San As much as twenty years ago Pull: man ears were introduced into Eng: land and have been run on a few trains on one or twe roads ever since, but they have never beem popular, and have been used mainly by Americans and other foreigners. The English peo- can she meet his wishes or fulfill his desires? “I admire the general’s courage; the extent of his information With the cable haulage mewicc '°) oldest and most dilapidated boast de- and parents and use their authority widow, a foot-warmer for' ; pach This idea will proba} ay be a the and it is also a pleasant recreation, | carried out before long ch many for the mind; and that in many forms | principal English lines, and tly zelecof disease, when used cautiously and | tric foot-warmer does not see¢ 3 desunder medical supervision, it will of- | all 4 5 tined, for railroad purposes / ten be found of inestimable benefit. events, to be long in vogue. with the present condition of affairs in thage countries. It may not be a great while at The bicycle used moderately, is * an ad” & i and its val- | mulsable Chute (On ue in gout and diabetes has been demonstrated. After an exhaustive investigation of the subject Dr. Hammond concludes that bicycle riding for a healthy individual is one of the | most excellent forms of exercise for maintaining health, retarding disease | and strengthening the constitution, | tried with Italy by each other and exchange maar of the biget said of the cardiac cases ADhas plies been equally to pulmonary ailments. results not satisfactory to either side. The affection that is to last through life must have a better beginning. elese To affections, there is no better way Of | obtaining it than by the wheel. By slow and gentle exercise the heart | What | may be greatly strengthened. an in- not pay use for still the only one. “Barras declares such speed as to return home thor- | As arrangements are being madna that if I marry the general he will seot mg aan eat eeaP bpd IS, Bae Poh Fah SURES ee PN ate Ren aca P EET OAT £“4% cure for him the chief command of the | a rere HS ear SOI Soc OTA IS Thyerrous; ioe army of Italy. esterday Bonaparte, | OUsy ESA ASTEN BS and if continued it may bes seriously ‘lish lines by electricity, it is props speaking of this favor, which, although so. Persons suffering from cardiac ‘to adopt the same means for hed not yet granted, already has let. his individual foot-warmers, affection should net 1ide a wheel un- | the | colleagues in arms to murmuring, said: deh | less advised so to do by a physician. | which any one can be supplied og lis The armistice between China and Japan will leave Japan in readiness for an active campaign should the negotiations fail. Campaigning in North China is not nearly as comfortable before the middle of April as afterwards, and it is probable that this consideration weighed at least as much in bringing about the armistice as the Japanese emperor’s indignation because of the assault on Li Hung Chang. long bicycle | The rise in the price of silver is accounted for on various grounds, but it is no doubt chiefly due to Germany’s change of attitude. Perhaps half of the highest possible price of a precious metal is due to demand for use in the arts. The rest is coinage value—as will very clearly appear if Germany, France and the United States get together on a bimetallic basis. In the the induce. of the? A feature which strikes the Aith; of the wheel which can not be too can traveler in Hngland as peculier severely condemned. In the excit3the foot-warmer in the railway eat} ment of “century, runs,” where a hunOn the ordinary car there is no pr 7 dred miles has to be covered in a lim- |ion for heating, even in the depfoi ited number of hours, riders are apt | winter, and without the ubiqiwy to exceed their strength, and even for | rug and the foot-warmer the parece shorter distances they may ride at | gers shiver in helpless wretchedali% Ohio is to follow the example of Pennsylvania in establishing a state colony ef imbeciles. Pennsylvania has proved on its idoit farm at Elwyn that proper- imbeciles said tutions by overexertion. distances at rapid speed The law, the church, medicine and literature have been the four great professional fields to which the student's attention and energies were bent. And now advertising—an offshoot of literature—looms up as a large and independent field for brainy boys. ly attended to consider pions of British Columbia, although living next door to freedom all its life, doesn’t ‘seem to have profited by the association. The tyrannical government up ‘there does not even permit the bicycle igitls to wear bloomers—horrid old thing! ‘ dustrious and self-sustaining colony, the advantage of all concerned. which is to prevent young women gO expense establish Indifferent Him Describing Cahn oe \ Boos ag of the spine tremely injurious, physicians should Diplomacy, as signified by the utterances of the Spanish minister at Washington, is the art of shooting off one’s mouth to the least possible advantage| “te one’s reputation for good sense and | aR to eycle racing lifting and the goods found concealed in their big sleeves. We trust this is not true. It must be some terrible mistake. eon the yelopment of the muscles of the thighs and abdomen, but no deformity of the spinal column. HExcessive work on the wheel is, for the average man, ex- have been arrested in Boston for shop- aa at further and faster than almost any one else—all men celebrated in the erown,” but it will not be a circumstance to the uneasiness in the head of a woman who does not wear a new bonnet. It sufficiently professional But what is the use of spoiling a good nap when a man has such a wife as that? , head leg © “ can be taken with ease at full Uj First If a motor gets out of order nt ~, need be wasted for repairs, as a="! motor ‘can be at once procured — the motor station. Among the. tions brought against the trolle,, 7 tem for canal haulage are the | sity of steering the boat so as tc 4 the trolley on the wire; the dif? a of two boats going the same wa the rear one passing the fron J. the fact that on becoming disco; ed from the trolley the hind boating her suitor as anxious to become a its power, and cannot forge ahe ra} father to the children of Alexandre de the boat in front of it.» In el =~ cable haulage the boats simply # & “Dwuharnais and the husband of his truth of this vexed question, Dr. Hammond examined caiefully fourteen paper condemns a man to be,asleep while his lies the the controls the movement at Matried Letter Sentiments. The meeting of Napoleon and Josephine was an event of the first importance. His own account twice relates that a beautiful and tearful boy presented himself, soon after the disarmament of the sections, to the commander of the city, and asked for the sword of his father. The request was granted, and next day the boy’s mother, Mme. Beauharnais came to thank the general for his kindly act of restitution. Captivated by her grace Bonaparte was thenceforward her slave. A cold critic must remember that in the first place there was no disarmament of any-~ body after the events of Oct. 5, the only action of the convention which might even be construed into hostility being a decree making emigrants ineligible for election to the legislature under the new constitution; that in the second place this story attributes to destiny what was really due to the friendship of Barras, a fact which his beneficiary would like to have forgotten or concealed; and finally, that the beneficiary left another account in which he confessed that he first met his wife at Barras’ house, this being confirmed by Lucien in his memoirs. There are hints, too, in various contemporary documents and in the circumstances themselves that Barras was an adroit match-maker. In a letter attributed to Josephine, but without address, a bright light seems to be thrown on the facts. She asks a female friend for advice on the question of the match. After a jocular introduction of Brie canal. The operating mot¢ on a cable strung along the cang yy ries a seat, from which the of | development of the muscular system. Next, as to the peculiar malformation wife got up and captured two burglars. “Uneasy of First Hauli-y 3] Perfect command of the boat ways insured, and the sharpest ) Was Probably venture—Her spring oe great ¢ | the recent state experiments riding as an exercise inducing general as reading, writing or aritha good knowledge of it is profitable than all three. A New York who pretended muscles Boat However, and ods which have been proposed; © months ago an electric cable ¥ logging was made public, and | much favorable attention. Thy; 9 | tem has been applied to cani#s= towing, and it is claimed that four purpose it is in many respects s!_ to electrical propellers designed VJ principle of the trolley, many: | disadvantages of which were sh¢ of the rest of the body. This is net so. On the contrary the muscles of the back, chest, arms and abdomen are employed a great deal, not to the same extent as the muscles of the legs pleas- Canal .N© MISTAKE ABOUT HIS REGARD FOR JOSEPHINE. She, WHISTLING dislocation of the shoulder or wrenehing of the arm to get hold of the dress too far back. It is found that it is j as effective and much more comfortable to keep the arm perfectly straight. This dress clutch is especially adapted to the stout. If the arm goes too fararound it is not only tiring, but it tends to spange the centre of gravity, and the woman wabbles along somewhat like the soft-shell crab scooting for twe places at once that are at opposite ends of the earth. It is the same principle that causes a boat with two oars on one side and one on the otther to deviate from a straight course. Then there is the pose with the left arm akimbo— same attitude as your cook assumes when she says she won’t stand it any longer, but will leave at once, except that she does it with both arms at once, In this pose the left hand with a little pit of the dress rests on the hip, pressing closely against the side. The elbow sticks out into the middle of the stree’ sweeping all comers before it. Lon steps often accompany this pose and the poser walks very fast. It is some times thought that the pressure upon the hip will relieve the agony of tight lacing. © tion of the merits of the many~ * of ean judge with accuracy the amount of exercise which is most conducive Cuba will not get over the revolution | +5 healthy physical development. habit till it is annexed to the United As a general rule, however, after a States, and there is no absolute cer- fair amount of experience, the avertainty that it will get over it then. age individual should be quite competent to determine his own capabiliIt appears from semi-official reports that there are still 80,000 elephants in ties and requirements. Dr. Hammond investigated the cases of fourteen existence, not counting several that the amateurs who had ridden the bicycle American people have on their hands. from 8,00 to 27,000 miles each, in from five to thirteen years. Their ages The reported appearance of an imMense sea serpent in a Florida river in- ranged from 24 to 45. In every case dicates that the failure of the orange he found the heart healthy and the ¢rop has driven the Floridians to drink. muscular system well developed: It is often claimed by those who do not A man was photographed in Georgia know, that bicycle exercise develops ant, NAPOLEON LOVED HER if a+) a ly boat haulage systems. © : path, as on the street railway, # of the mule is over; and th adoption of electric haulage |. waiting on the results of the 4 ments in progress for the demi; adviser, who by studying his physique eos SORE Dele eaeee eaieae eeeene roner,.. nee 2 Electric The opening ef the will be signalized by or those diseased. He found it was good for both under certain conditions. Wach individual must formulate rules for his own guidance, and if he can for one reason or another,” do not, this, he should consult his medical engi. on ¢ such that power to drive Q steamer across the Atlantic. | ility to dispense with the spa 7 occupied and the weight now } ‘ by ponderous machinery whed { eertainly, very materially affe future consideration of the ¢ of faster ocean stesmships. ; *| abuse, Dr. Graeme M. Hammond’s recently published paper on the infiuences of the bicycle in health and in disease is ef real service and value to the public. Dr. Hammond set out to learn whether the bicycle did harm or good; first in. the case of healthy Probate. is a dynamo and but each working pendent basis—effects ous economy of power a national has become Bicycling Smith’ | pastime, and in view of the immense He - | influence, for good or harm, which it Co (a J scn TREES ne ees i Bee e INFORMATION CONCERNING Y AND SCIENCE. Ay CO. which bined, Sits The Willard Co, Blade. SCIENTIFIC MATTERS. playground, BIRD & LOWH, “Breathe through the nose only,” the cure would be well begun. Let the lesson be repeated, enforced and insisted upon until it with the child. with the daily becomes second nature Let it be more familiar routine of exercise and as necessary as the meals. Set it as a part of th e child’s education that he shall walk a certain number of rounds at the playground at a rapid rate with his lips tightly closed. Make the opening of them a demerit and the completion of the task in accordance with the directions a merit. Increase the distance and the speed daily. When a boy or girl can walk at a rapid pace, or better, run three hundred yards breathing only through the nose, amd repeat the performance thrice during the day, there need be small fear off chronic nasal catarrh. Hyven when the disease has become seated in a young person it may be eradicated by persistence in this exercise, which as everyome knows, increases the lung power and benefits the circulatory system at the same time. It is a very simple remedy, but, persevered in, it is a perfect one. In persons of any age a very efficaciious remedy often curative, if used regularly, is salt water snuffed into the nostrils night and morning. A strong solution of sea salt (or even common table salt) in water should be kept im a bottle, and when needed a sufficient quantity diluted with warm water, so that the liquid will have only a slight salt taste, A large glassful is sufficient, and the salted water should be used at blood | heat. It can be used at any time, though it is best to take it before retiring and immediately upon rising in the mm ° ing, but never before geing oors. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. HUFF HOTEL, / OASIS, UTAH. Contiguous to Railway Station. fare. Rates reasonable. Good JOHN B. CONK, Whose name should be famillar te every one in this locality that weara boots or shoes, has opened for the man- "TOOTS AND CHOES QOTS' AND. \HOES QOTS AND “HOES Shop just east of the Cash MRS Store. M. HUFF Is still to the front with seasonable merchandise at bottom pricea, for cash, OASIS, -s UTAH, sai |