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Show - H) irvt asp ry v"rrvTTy' irS TrTrTrtr K ttt--s. ! i i The Mark of Park - GUARANTEE- A 1 Are you goin to enduraf teyoarfsra--- : lly grtlug to live after you? Then ligve some tamtly jrwflry and uilver. Nothing is vslued. more than these UiinW, n3 gllt'.UL.titid. at in u nit y lor Kdiierations. It is ress-onsliatwl coxtsno moru thatltUp grdl-dar- y - and olber ills, due to an inactive condition of the Liver, Stomach and Bowel, say be ehtaiaxf taost pleasantly ami tiudh. most promptly by tuing Srup of Fig and Elixir .of Senna. It it not a new and untried remedy, tut ta used by I7r pictures, quite as much as, the art of. the singers, the must- clans,' the actors and actresses the that make for the enjoy- system whenever a laxative remedy is needed When buying note the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup printed on every package of the ment I Co, of present-da- Regular price SO per bot one tin oofr. for aale by all leading druggista. an evening at the Every man is firmly convinced that ha gets all the punishment he deserves also a lot that he. can't account for. y DIFFERENCE. Uncle Sam is a receiving ieuer ror mi Dante. the- - i:''-- -- S' ..riL'fiC I"'' ': w " "i" You' can do your banking business here by mail from ' L" anvwhtw. Krnd for booklet Uillinjr " how. Walker Brothefi Bankers Salt Like City Oldest Intermount&In may possibly have seen acting as good as any we may witness today, but as-suredly they never beheld the stories enacted before such marvelous backgrounds. . It is Indeed a far "cry from the days of long ago when the player folk, having no ' scenery; whatever, had to content themselves with dra- peries and common boards, to The current stage spectacles wherein it puzzles the spectator to determine what is real and what is artificial. Yet as a matter of fact, modern stage scenery, for all that it Is so important. Is only one of several factors in the creation of the masterly stage pictures of ' this age Quite as Important are the "proper-ties,"-thfurniture, the art objects and the thousand and one other things (not painted, but real) which have places In the stage counterfeits of gardens and, palaces and temples and prisons. Even the lighting facilities play an Important part. Possibly you can remember the time when the only "lighting effects in the theater were found in -' make-believ- . i i Try The Romancer When you have money, people will shake you by the kand The Philosopher When It's they'll shake you. altogether. gcmd e 'V" "w i : i&g&fi.'tlPj. v'la. -.- , Speclallzatiou means the ability to focus..all of. yout energies oa.'ona . Fra. thing.--Th- e .Time is a wound healer, but it's nc rood as a wrinkle remover. TO LIVE nd the Last Laugh Is Always the Best "Six months ago I would have laugh & at the Idea that there could be any thing better for a: table beverage than sofTee," writes, an. Ohio woman, "now laugh to know there la. "Since childhood I drank coffee fre GRAND ' , " y as did the other members of the fain-lyThe result was a puny, sicklj . irl; and as 1 grew Into womanhood lid not gain in health," but was at Uicted with hearttrouble; a weakanif al8ordered stomach, wrecked 'nerve I' ind a general breaking doy; 'I lasl winter, at the age of 38, I Bteuied tc on the verge of consumption. frlehds greated rue with 'How Stir Dad you look! Witat a terrible color! t , ft 5 aughly. discouraged. "r", ""Then, t gave up coffee and com menced Postum. At first didn't Ulu It, but after a fev trials and followini the dlrectionr Txnetly. it was trrand h ' ft was refreshing and satisfying.-- . Ix I noticed a greaJ l couple of weeks " ' change. , became stronger, my brain fr - clearer, I was not troubled with for etfulness vas In 'coffee times,. inj oower of endurance was more, thai x ' doubled.' "The heart trouble and IndigestlOi llsappeared and my- - nerves bees m - steady and strong. . begaCto take an Interest in thingi .. about' me. V Housework and home . making became a pleasure. My frlendi ' aave marveleij-a- t the change and wbei ' 'abour J. , ; f enflulrehat it fought t answer 'Postum, and nothing else li thejworldA"Name given; by Poatun Co.. Battle Creek, Mich.' ; Read -- the little Book; The Road ii Wellville," Ixi pkgs. There's a reason.' -- Etm " rq wsi !' ttrrt A lime ta ttw. i)fr from uranium, trn, 4 fall of t.- i- Tt-.- 1 the burning of "red Are" when Little Eva went to heaven. Now we behold elaborate systems of special lamps and colored globes that reproduce the effect of dawn, sunset," twilight and moonlight, to say nothing of the glare of the noonday sun. And, as has been hinted,-- : all thla challenging of nature costs a pretty penny. Indeed, the modern manager will often spend as much on a single "production" as would have sufllced to pay all the expenses of a theater for an entire year in the old times. An expendltureof sioo.ooo on palnted is nothing unusual ere the public gets so much as a peep at the gorgeoua array, and then when the manager undertakes to transport all this para phernalia from city to city he finds that he must seeds charter special baggage "carsp wilch adds to the expense. Then, too, much time is required to produce such stage pictures. The player folk and the" opera singers enjoy long vacations In the summer time, but the scene painters and the "property" manufacturers and the costume makers are never Idle. Why, only recently one big firm in New York spent three years In preparation for a stupendous stage spectacle and tney even sent their scene painters to the heart of the. African desert in orderthat they nalghOtudy the sand wastes they were to depict on canvas The painting of might berdeslg-natethe first step in the preparation tor $ theatrical oc. operatic production, as' it " Is, in point of magnitude, one of the most Important. The biggest undertakings In scene painting are those In preparation for productions of grand .opera as given in our largest cities. - The explanation- is so the are house simple grand opera stages much larger than the stages of ordinary theaters ry FaudltoriumshaMnntritelr""Kreater--expanse- "The doctors and patent roedlclnei lid me absolutely no good." I wbb thor they &z?la:sjV& . 7??27sc?aj; "zzpojzjprssas " d f' of canvas are necessary to All the space. .Why, Just by way of illustration It may be noted that the painted palace which is so conspicuous In tne feet long and thirty-si- x opera "Aida" is sixty-sifeet wide. The monster picture of the harbor of Nagasaki. Japan, which forms the background tor scenes In the operatic version ot "Madam Butterr fly measures 1,700 square feet, There are many preliminaries connected with scene painting for the managers and directors or opera and playhouses must approve of the de- x You are entitled to a Free Copy Mention this paper and write for it today .. of Bcene painting In vogue at'Tfie great studios which are maintained as adjuncts" of America's r leading homes of the drama and or munlc. one plan the scenic artists with their helpers and paint-mixerstand on what is known as a "scene" painting bridge." This bridge, hemmed in on either hand with a great expanse of canvas undergoing" decoratloL, presents, at first glance, merely the appearance of. a tong narrow room, butuponcJoser inspection., U is seen that the floor where the painters stand is in "reality a bridge supported at the ends Just as is any sus pension bridge. On cither side of the bridge one may look down nto a great well ahyss and it Oh Un-'de- w PORTER-WALTO- is 1 Hours Are Dollars In this busy ago. ' signs and color schemes of the stage pictures ere that f ec'ution ot tbe work, iforde that his Ideas may be approved , advancJ the dead BCene palnter -There arejnany supplementary operation s.too, prepares preliminary- - sketchesJnst as a portrait Including the delicate one. of sawing out the out. .painter suhmlta a rough outline sketch to' give his stone walls or roofs after the an Idea of the pose he has adopted. The .. line of foliage or 4 .subject been mounted 'en "'the wooden lias canvas painted first sketch of a theatrical scene or drop curtain -.frames. is executed in water colors on a sheet of paper . Extreme versatility is the first requirement of not as large as the original will the men who manufacture theatrical and operatic be, but It nevertheless gives an idea of the arand enables "properties," for they may be called upon atjsnort and the director, rangement colorlDg notice to fashion anything from the ''calf of gold" to indicate to the scene painter whether or not to a bunch of flowers or from a royal throne to a he desires any changes made in the plan. doll. Wood and paper and plaster are child's With his water color sketches duly approved employed for most of these stage adjuncts, for it 'the chief of the corps of scene painters proceeds is desirable that tney be or light weigm. mougn to construct a miniature Meriting model of the fairly durable.- The statues, etc., are all molded complete "set'l which he is to evolve. This model, in which is for all the world like the toy theaters plasterand Incldently It may be remarked that some of these stage sculptors are men of exthat are the delight of children. Is a big lm-..ceptional ability. The costume department Is aa provement over the water color sketches because other Institution "behind the scenes" that con It is in effect a working model and not merely a small-scal- e tributes to our modern stage pictures and the picture. The latter would be all right as a guide Jf the task in hand was the painting great opera houses now have not only dressing of a drop curtain or other flat surface, but a making establishments of their own, but Jewelry shops, armor makers, who fashion the helmets stage "setj" it will be understood, comprises not a uniform jBurjfacejafJth snpn.t.spJLma,Lk who are adepts in making the fancy shoes and anumber of different pieces, of scenery, of different types, which, are to be placed on the stage slippers that' ln stage productions reproduce the at different, angles to one another. There Is the' footgear of ail ages. Finally the eiectrl6fahs fend a hand In completing' the average stage picture "drop" or curtain whictvforma the background ot On the stageofanup.ifcd.ata--Cltytbeate- r there the whole picture and there are also ceilings and " arefiSlnftry as 6,000 incandescent electric lights, "wings" and mayhap even : or trees to be set out in the middle of the stage. , to say nothing of "spot lights," that resemble . searchlights., and this electric system must.be . Now it goes without saying that these different units' can be fashioned In proper relation to one supplied with different colored globes In order to carry ouf the effect of the white light of mid- '.another only when the scene makers have a tiny ' e to serve as a guide. day, the ruddy glow oftlTasunset hour and the ' There are two different "schools"' or methods . ple blue brilliance, of the moonlight - This pecially true Ts es- west, north or south by rail, you plan to get to your destination In the shortest possible ttme you want modem somfort, and you expect and requlr every possible measure of .protect lo... .Without thess features, travel is what General Sherman said war is. The Oregon Short Line Railroad - to 1 CO. N SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH scenery In the making Is lowered as the artists on the bridge complete the decoration of one section of the surface and are ready to turn their paint brushes to a fresh surface. The advantage of such an arrangement, It will be understood, is that it permits work on the largest expanse of canvass without the necessity of folding or rolling up the monster cloth something that would be disastrous to a coating of wet paint even if It were not objectionable Tor other reasons. The second plan of creating stage pictures Is known in the profession as painting "on the flat." Under this system the expanse of canvas is not suspended in mid air as is done before a "bridge," on , the floor (4- - the studio a but Is stretched ' specially constructed building with a floor more hundred feet In length, in wielding his than the artist literally walks over the brushes paint field of operations, taking care of course t6 complete the decoration as he progresses so that be will not have to retrace his steps.. Whichever method of decoration be employed the painting of the canvas Is only a part of the work of preparing scenery. t'rames of wood must be care fully and accurately prepared to support the vart a dozenTnTeTTlirTWThe while ous set pleces-an- d fbl4:! j .indlhIa...waa-iiot-very-eomforttn- i S re- -- Specialization. Just brimming full of information that means dollars to every user of anything in the lines mentioned g ligious' argument "Disputes of this kind," he said, "remind me forcibly of a little girl. " 'What - are thq. heathenf Jem y? her Sunday school teacher asked this tittle girl. " 'The heathen,' the child replied, 'are people who don't quarrel over a Poultry Supplies "lii ''T-'-' for sore throat, All druggists. Of Seeds, Trees and feerniiitomiRw.pJt 1 Bnk 1912 CATALOG Pe-shor- a Who the Heathen Be. Father Bernard Vaughan was a somewhat acrimonious -- OUR BIG See Riches in Swamps. The Russian department of agricul ture has ' founded at the ItigaToly technic a school for specialists in The North swamp cultivation. expedition worked many years with great success in"' the desert-sd- region of the northern swampsTBd proved that the swamps of the Archangel province are full of wealth, and that millions of peasants, devoured by poverty and hunger in their native places, can find food and shelter in the swampy regions after their cultivation. With small expense tba iwamps can be turned into land covered with rich grass. Ton-sol- etc. e 1 .i r te.r,H!.e.jQpera,arll moving picture hall ever bestows a passing thought upon the time and work and money"that is represented by . the setting of a pleasing "scene.". Yet it is In this rather than in any other phase of the en tertainment wprjdthajteflndtb! '.evidence of twentieth century prog-- j ress. Our - grandfathers and our HUSK It LAKE CI7X. UTAH. SALT entertainments. Yet It ts pretty safe to say that not one In a hundred of us who enjoys genuine - modern stage ami strengthen the A of perfection - and T ts the "beauty farailie through out the world to cleanse and sweeten million of - ' , " in connection with the Union Pacific, Southern " Pacific and O.-R. & N. Lines, desires td serve you to all eastern Coast points, to the Paclfl fend, locally. t7S, 000,000 Is belngr expended In double-trackinthese lines west of the Missouri Riverr ' the block signal system for protection; lsbeinK kpt af the highest possible state of effectiveness, and equipment ir5d service are continually being: Improved arid brought to the latest standards of qusj- - ttyr'Consult'ariy' V?" Oregon Short Line -- - representative" whsn ' you- are res.dyto . travels - . ArOSniVEsesfEK. MANENT CURE F01 BrunkeYnesjlnd Opium Diseases. TW. a m psUicUf , m aWksMt. VtMm ItmIW m is tW Usm. THE KEEUT IK. tTlTUTi. IM W. Tsasi StrMt. St Uks Ot, St WE HAKE IT EASY .. J m t(.it Tin smsP li - For you to own s PIANO sna will uti yen money natter where you lire. We guarantee safe delivery and em tire satisfaction. Write os. Our prices eaa alter will totereet yoa. no CONSOLIDATED MUSIO CO. Stlt Uke CIU. UUk WANTED MEN AND WOMEN to Uira Barber Trade. . Only 8 weeks reaulred. Tuition, lnoludlns' set ot tools, SSO. Instruction susrsjH Seed. Bsrbsrs in demand. Write Meier Berber U Cojninflmiai Btreetnan Lake Ctty. Oollege, STUDY SHORTHAND nail. Taught In 20 easv lessons. Send 50c for sample lesson. FKEE: Send S10 lor lull course and By tree. Address (tSlTSswritlnglnslrartioa book Salt Uke City, Utah The best way to get rid ,of to let It starve to death. fac-eimll- y TON-SOLTRY THROAT, CANKER, V DRUGQHT8. A Scientists Do Not Agree Divide Into Two Camps n the Ques- Mexico, were not aft Inhabited at one tion of History of the Earliest time, so they tell us.- - Most represent 1 Known Americans. more temporary stopping places where . migratory hands of a people supposed "Hov long were' the ruins of the to have been ancestors of the Indians southwel inhabited? and, now dense settled for a few years and then was the population In ancient times T moved on. .At the outside limit, so 8ome of the best arcbeologlsts have say these arcbeologlsts. the entire strongly Insisted that appearances are population tnever amounted to more deceiving. -- The hundfeds, andJtndeed I than; a few score .thousands, whose thousands, 'of sites of. ancient , villages civilization of, the lowest - and in Colorado, the Texan Panhandle, most insignificant type. Other jtu-detitan." .NewIexTco;"shdrlioika7'l fVeflif bOttlef thanlhe orthodox school, boidthat the- - majority; of ILsVKlftJtiaU ' o, the. ruins were all occupied at the same time and for century after century. . They say . that Tthe population of the arid southwest must have amounted to many hundred thousands decidedly more In.all probability than the country supports today. Furthermore, If this" were so, although the 'type of clvllliatipn may have been most' primitive compared with ours, yet it was by, no means so low as thsf of the modern Indians. It must bavTbeen of the same grade as that Of riyjabylonlarT:gypt, PalestTne; or Greece before the art of writing. was' ThvenTedrTTeopl"; IFfi cdiildd well peacefully JorVcenturies in Jarge.per fnanent communities, and could build great communal houses and long sys "no means unterns of canals, were-'tutored savages. Civil order and. submission to the will of the majority must have been as well developed among' them as among us. Such a view leads one to believe that, if only we could trace it, .the history of the would prove primitive Americans quite as interesting, and to us possibly more Interesting than that of the early oriental peoples to whom our scholars devote so much time and our millionaires so muc jnoney! Harper's Use salt and' water to clean"wllIow ware. Apply, with bnesh and rub dry - : slander-I- s FOR ETC. 80RE ALL b -- . About two-third- s tea - represent --- -' of the letters wrlt waste of time. ABATES T" ': To Provo Via 8alt Lake Route. Tickets on sale from Nephl.-Sa- lt" Lke and intermediate points, Janu2nd, 3d. ary z9th, 81str;rebruary 1st, all otber " pplht- s- January - 28th, Slst &nd 4tb. February 1st ""return ,. February ConventlonsBtate vfiortlcultur-si,- , ' ' :. Dairymen's, irtabDry Farmers. rraTaCttrrcTt- rJ; CONVENTION AND INDUSTRIAL - nd . - cxHromoN' vrpxxi? "' |