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Show t lEHI FREE PRESS, LEHL UTAH John's Mother Praises Doctor There Isn't a mother living who won't agree that no half-sicchild should be the subject tor an with experiment medicines of uncertain merit. When your child la bilious, headachy, half sick, feverish, restless, with coated tongue, bad breath, no appetite or energy, you know that nine times out of ten It's a sign his little stomach and bowels need purging. And when you know that for over fifty yeara leading physicians have endorsed one preparation for thii condit'on, there doesn't seem to ba any reason for "trying" things. Rich, fruity California Fig Syrup clears the little stomach and bowels gently, harmlessly and In a hurry. It regulates the bowels, gives tone and strength to them and to the stomach ; and beipa to give your child new strength, energy and vitality. Thousands of Western mothers praise It, Mrs. Joseph W. Hill. 4306 Bedford Ave., Omaha, Nebraska, says: "I'll never forget the doctor who got me to give my baby boy, John, California Fig Syrup. Nothing else seemed to That was help bis weak bowels. when be was Just a baby. He suffered a good deal before I gave blm Fig Syrup, but It stopped his trouble quick. I have used It with him for colds and little upset spells ever since. I consider blm a Fig Syrup k Mr boy." Insist on the genuine article. See that the carton bears the word "CaliOver four million bottles fornia.' used a year. Scientists on Trail of Fire Secrets of Indians One of the oldest scientific mysteries, the reputed ability of savage priests and medicine men to make themselves immune to fire, is to be lnvestlguted this summer by agents of the Smithsonian institution. Dr. Truman Mlchelson, of that Institution, has been studying the sacred beliefs and folk lore of the Fox tribe of Indians In Iowa. Among this lore he found the habit of medicine men conducting certain ceremonies to plunge their bare arms Into boiling water or to take up and handle burning firebrands. Educated members of the Fox tribe ascribe this trick to the previous bathing of the hands and arms In the Juice of an unnamed weed which grows profusely In the prairie country. The Juice, It Is believed, protects the Rkln temporarily against hent Pathfinder Magazine. Why Not (or Daddy? To Held there is no one quite like his daddy. Thus when a surprise birthday dinner for his father was In progress Reld was extremely Interested In every detail. "And when are we going to hang out the flag, mamma T he asked. "What flag, dear, and why?" "Why, the flag for daddy's birth- day!" Paper From Pine Pulp Paper thin enough for newsprint has been made from pine pulp, the experimental laboratory at Savannah, Oa., has announced. The laboratory Is experimenting with pine pulp as a means for making paper, to assure a paper supply from the great southern pine lands. It takes a good deal of lt to undertake to reform others. AT THE FIRST SNEEZE use itiii f NIGHT ANO moaning i' H'lm Y L'jS'l tr. Essence of MiStfcl r ON YOUR HANDKERCHIEF AND PILLOW IT'S NEW Salt Lake City's Hotel "Wpvest tf mmm irrjNtfsiirfjJl i owty lit HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM flJO Jutt oppaitit Manm 7Wfteraact ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. I wiry aaaiifr positions In nulio.eleo- aea mierpti7 ft, vrtuai jreeilxe to Mm mi lion I'rsrtlml Training for SO tears Westera electrical CaBefo, 113 Regent St., Sett Lake WANTED TOK'-J- TALES OF THE Editha CHIEFS L. REBUILT O BLACK HAWK When, in 1804. the Sauk and Foxes all sltne.1 tlie treaty surrendering their land on the rfTi.5.C Si ytff&k nfr.-.fe" ' - rr "j - Freneau quoted : "What flend could thui disturb tha peaceful dead? Remombrance pointing to what last he Raid: 'Prepare the hollow tomb, and place me low, My trusty bow and arrow- - by my aide; For ions the Journey la that I muit (to, Without a partner and without a suld.' " (0. 1JS, Western Newspaper I'nloa ) Pensive Comment "Some day you expect to go to heav- en?" said the earnest friend. "Of course," answered Senator Sor- ghum. "You deserve to he serene and happy at last." "let It will be hard to shake off the habit of a busy life. I'm not sura there won't be more Interesting ma terlal for Investigation In the the place." In ewes Losses frequently occur are confined in close quar t,, iters during the last two or threeU weeks of pregnancy. This disease called "before lambing paralysis, acidosis. preparturient paresis, and ewes The disorder generally affects seT-- ! occurs and lambs carrying twin a few eral days before, or within most Is likely It weeks of lambing. v.--.. best to appear in flocks receiving the ewes showing of meut Treat feed. nas symptoms of this disease usually usually and value they no of proved However. If normal lambing die. should take place In the early stages of the disorder, the ewes may recover. v 4A , , ' vX-. Ewes affected with pregnancy disease usually have no appetite, seem a to be In a stupor, and walk with later In stages the staggering gait. to be they are unable to rise, appear and lapse their teeth, blind, grind Into a partial or complete coma. The the a Tokyo Lane. temperature and respiration of ocDeath normal. about ewes remain used, in proportion, and simplicity and curs in two to ten days after the onset the almost exquisite cleanliness. of symptoms. They Cling to Their Clogs. Losses from this disease can be preThere is no doubt that Japanese vented by causing the ewes to take clothes are more comfortable than No new cases will develop exercise. ours, except that the foreigner would In a flock after eierclse has been proalways be worried by the shoes. And vided for one or two days. It Is thereyet It is these wooden clogs to which fore recommended that the hay or fodthe people seem to cling most tenascattered on the ground a few Shoe shops are everywhere der be ciously. shelhundred yards from the place of and are among the most Interesting ter. for a foreigner, since here are footSonie investigators have suggested gear for men and women, for girls and that pregnancy disease may be premaidens and staid married women. vented by maintaining a proper calof the the with Shoes change age balance cium through feeding roughwearer as much as with the purpose nature or other for which they are worn. Always of ages of a leguminous In calcium Walrich feeds relatively wood or straw, their trimming changes in color and material and shape, so lace's Farmer. that In a shoe shop you can study the fashions as they have been ordained on Clean Pasture , , ' - III Strolling Down by Nailunal Owxrraphlo Society, Waahliictou. U O. WNU Service. OXK who witnessed the destruction wrought by earthquake and fire in 1923, returned to Tokyo to- Frepered IF he would hardly recognize Japanese capital, for on the former debris strewn site has risen the new Tokyo. Rebuilt Tokyo is a city of broad the day, streets, of many splendid buildings, of spacious parks. For the tourist It has lost much of Its charm ; but, after all. It belongs to the Japanese, not to the tourist. Old property lines were obliterated to widen and straighten the streets, because bitter experience had proved that broad streets serve to prevent the spread of fire, and because hygiene taught that knowledge the public health demands light and new of air. The buildings of the new Tokyo are solidly constructed, to resist both earthquakes and fire. The parks are spacious because the people have taken to athletics, because they still want gardens to wander In, and because huge parks make forever Impossible that horror of 1923, when 30,000 people, fleeing with their possessions to a small open square, were caught there by the fire and burned to death. The old wooden bridges that spanned the many canals of the city have been replaced by modern stone or steel and concrete bridges, which, If less picturesque, will not burn and will carry safely the busses which go to all parts of Tokyo. As most foreigners in Tokyo stay at the Imperial hotel, that Is the natural place to start a cursory inspection of this strange new-olcity. Directly opposite the hotel Is Hiblya Its great athletic field Is almost constantly In use. Actually the boys begin to piny baseball there as soon as dawn makes It possible to see park. the ball. Reyond the azaleas Is an artificial lake, with a great bronze crane and a wisteria arbor and dwarf trees Just what we think of as typically Japanese. Still farther along, there are playgrounds for children and tennis courts and on outdoor gymnasium, with parallel bars and all the usual paraphernalia. This part of the park Is always crowded. You see some athletic stunts and can watch excellent tennis, and you begin to wonder whether the artificial lake Is not meant for the tourists and the tennis courts for the Japanese. first-clas- s Girls In School Uniform. More of Hiblya park Is devoted to the new Japan than to the old; so, also, among the crowds of people In the park, more are dressed in European than in Japanese clothes. The young men playing tennis are In flannels and sweaters; the old men watching them are generally In kimonos and heavy overgarments. The girls, who so eagerly take part In some of the milder sports, are generally dressed In the blue uniform characterictic of the schools a uniform which would he appropriate to any American school. If American schoolgirls cared nothing about fash-IoIf It Is raining, as It so often Is. these schoolgirls carry ugly black alpaca um!rellas. Their mothers, on other hand, who are dressed In Japanese clothes, carry lovely, paper umbrellas, gay In color and at the same time serviceable. If you look down from an upper window on a rainy day, the street seems strewn wilh lovely fiat flowers. The clothes In Tokyo are always InMost of the people one sees teresting In the main business section are dressed In Kuropean clothes, and a large proportion, especially among the young people, throughout the city; but there seems to be no hard and fast rule. Yon will see a man dressed exactly as he would be In New York talking with a friend who Is entirely American as to clothes, except for wooden closrs ; and perhaps the third member of the group may wear American shoes, a kimono, nnd a bowler t lie broad-spreadin- hat. what do these people who have adopted Kuropean dress do when they go home? Perhaps the answer Is in the architecture of the better class of recently built private houses. The rich man has his European house, but this European house almost Invariably has Its Japanese wing, where there are no chairs, but soft white mats on the floor; where there is no clutter of furniture and pictures; rather, a gn. gle picture, n single spray of flowers, a lovely, low. red lacquer table, and pence; where the beauty of the room lies In the satin texture of the wood Rut lbM;o3fi i Black Hawk burned. In an old account of Black Hawk's life, we find the following lines by 1 ' 1812. Keokuk, the oily trouble maker, declined to Interest himself in the matter, and with many of the people, moved across Into what Is now Iowa. Black Hawk, however, declared that he bad been deceived regarding the terms of the treaty of 1804, and, with He his followers, declined to leave. tried to interest some of the other tribes In the region In an uprising, and managed to create so much trouble that the militia were sent against hlra. lie and bis people were forewarned of this move, and before the militia had reached his village. It was deserted. The empty lodges were burned as a token of the white man's displeasure, and a fortnight afterv ward, at a conference, Black Hawk signed an agreement to keep the peace, and to Join his people on the other side of the Mississippi. Tbls was In June. The next winter was spent In negotiations with tribes In every direction. Black Hawk had signed the peace treaty because he must. Now he was trying to start war If he could, and because he did not understand the white man's ways, he felt himself justified In his conduct. Spring came, and the Sauk chief began his campaign. Had the whites remained In Ignorance of his move ments a few weeks longer, so that he could have recruited more men from the other tribes, perhaps the story of the Black Hawk war would have been different, but four days after he crossed the river Into the eastern territory again, he was discovered. The settlers were warned, and troops were mustered to pursue him. The militia which assumed this duty was not the sort of troops to send against a man like Black Hawk. He routed them Ju an engagement on May 14, 1S32, and then turned his attention to the settlements along the frontier, killing and burning, while the soldiers were almost powerless to do anything against the formidable band. It was not until July that the Sauk suffered any great loss, but volunteers under Gen. James D. Henry overtook him on the 21st of that month, and defeated him, with a loss of (58 warriors. This was the turn of fortune for the great Sauk leader. He retreated, but was overtaken by the troops, who again attacked him so determinedly that 40 of his men were captured, and 150 driven Into the river. Those who crossed were cut off by the Sioux, who were their enemies, and the Insurrection was definitely put down. Black Hawk escaped to the north, but the Winnebago, whom he had endeavored to enlist In the cause, followed and captured him, and he was made a prisoner of the United States. He was held for more than a month at Fortress Monroe, Virginia, and then was taken on a tour of the eastern cities, where people crowded to see the fallen warrior. The United States Literary Gazette of Philadelphia, wrote him up In enthusiastic style: "Black Hawk was sitting In a chair, and apparently depressed In of midspirits. He la about sixty-five- , dling size, with a head that would excite the envy of a phrenologist one of the finest that Heaven ever let fall on the shoulder of an Indian." In 1837 Black Hawk, with Keokuk, again went east, and on his return he settled near Iowavllle, and died there on October 3 of the next year. The valiant Sauk was not allowed to rest In quiet. Ills body was stolen, and the bones prepared for articulation. Perhaps the skeleton would have been displayed to the curious as the living man had been, but the governor of the territory protested, and the bones were restored to Iowa. They were placed among the collections of the Burlington Historical society, whore they remained until 1855, when the building containing them was Sez Sally to Exercise Recommended Reduce Danger. Watson side of the ecst It flcid.cii.iil iHitr was not clearly un derstood by the entire people that they were giving up this part of the country. This was because they were allowed to remain there until after the War of Disease of Ewes at Lambing Time There are no London tailors as they please. dress does not year, but only Little boys are ors, little girls Pigs who set the fashions In Japan the cut of change from year to from youth to age. dressed In sober colIn the very gayest of flowered kimonos. Then, as girls grow up, they adopt plain colors, subdued and lovely In tint, set off by elaborate obis, or sashes, of heavy brocaded silk. The most famous shopping street of Tokyo, the Ginza, was utterly de- stroyed by the fire and earthquake. It beautiful is today by no means street, its buildings of uneven height and of every kind of architecture. Here are the great department stores, comparable with similar stores In the United States, often similarly arranged, displaying their goods attractively. They are rather more expensive than other shops, but carry only good quality and have fixed prices. For this reason they are popular with the Japanese and seem always to be crowded. Bicycles Are Numerous. The Ginza is banal except for the people; and, after all, It Is always the people who make a street. There are very few streets in this world worth remembering empty. The Ginza is always crowded. There are trolley cars and buses and taxis, a few private motors, a rare jinricksha (generally containing a tourist), and countless It seems as if most of the bicycles of the world were In Tokyo, and that most of those In Tokyo must be In the Ginza that Is, until you go into another street. And there seem to be more trick bicycle riders In Tokyo than In all the circuses of Europe and America, only In Tokyo they perform on the street and do not kuow they are performing. Not only can a man on a bicycle wind his way unconcerned through crowds hurrying in all directions, but he can do It carrying aloft a three-tieretray filled with bowls of soup. One goes to the Ginza again and again, partly because it is the place one naturally goes to buy anything, from fruit to a Mikimoto pearl or an umbrella; but principally because It is a wonderful place to get a n of the life of the city. The Imperial palace, with Its vast walled grounds. Is the heart of Tokyo. 4.10 vF.iiuaiij iu3 (liliute 01 lue shoguns, who as war lords, felt they should be well protected. They built, therefore, a tremendous mont around the palace grounds, a length of perhaps two miles. Outside of this, several hundred yards from the Inner moat, was another, the outer moat, and between the two no building was permitted. Business Buildings Look Western. In front of the double bridges leading to the palace is a broad expanse of land, a relic of the open space decreed by the shoguns. It Is not cut by boulevards, but still sen- arates the. palace grounds from the Marunouchi, the important business section of Tokyo. Here are the railroad station, the great office buildings, the Imperial theater, the banks, all solidly built, all Western In architec ture, hut all with that subtle and In definable touch which makes thm Japanese. ine Marunouchi, the Nihonbasht, adjoining districts of the city might be a part of Chicago or New except that, on account of earth- - i quane conditions, no skyscrapers are permitted, one or two of the great banks are as fine as bank buildings anywhere, and In the vaults of the Mitsui bank It seems that much of he wealth of the world might be stored ' and safely stored. The new American embassy la a handsome building, on a hill about a mile from the palace, but very near the Galmusho, or foreign office. Application of the sanitation system developed by the United States Department of Agriculture and which Is In common use In the Middle West, Is resulting In the production of more and better pigs In the southern states, according to reports reaching the department. One grower In Tennessee raised six litters of pigs on clean pasture where no other pigs had been allowed to run since the pasture crop was planted. At the age of three months the pigi were uniform and thrifty, averaging about SO pounds. Three other litters raised on ground previously used by hogs averaged less than 30 pounds per pig at the same age, the pigs being unthrifty and rough-coateHeavy losses at farrowing time and on pasture also commonly occur when pigs are raised with no attention to sanita tlon. evia" Ail whe knew where te luj aei prices te pay. PATRONIZE HOMS LVDUg De yeT Old American Bible Profitable Inoculation Orchard Pollinization Beekeepers and apple growers have a common Interest since large orchards provide a plentiful supply ol nectar at a time when It Is needed to build up the colonies and the trees require bees for proper pollination. There are districts where there an enough apiaries to ensure that the apple bloom will be visited frequently and everybody Is satisfied. In some cases, however, trouble has arisen through poisoning of the bees by spraying while the blossoms are still open and the beemen have given up. Agricultural Squibs The gardener can always make us of his compost pile. e e e e 1776. ASK e e Agricultural extension work, as car . , , mrougti county agents and ufiuuusirauon agents, develops boys and girls in leadershln and or- ganized work. 1 e e Legume hays of good quality are high in protein and calcium. They are the best source of calcium and If are usually the cheapest source of protein. home-grow- e Most k AN INTEBMOUNTAIN that an earth' rotation, which reflecsver to the right in the northern a it sphere and to the left in the !;erg ern hemisphere. lDIT imou lie, y save Per THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STPtei rhiti ised uriiom The harveit time is with as barns, bins and cellars are beinitfiAr with the good things produced farm. Now when so many thinnlUnd te be bought for school and repks our household supplies is a toot a think of another harvest, thst 1 Eel satisfactioa and savings made by t of Intermountain Products. J k, 1 Alfalfa meal, when used as a substitute for green feed for nnnitr. have a rich green color, says the United omu-pRnment or Agriculture. Yellow color Indicates old meal, rain damage, or poor curing. Alfalfa-lea- f meal Is better than ordinary alfalfa .km if PENDLEKj i be Branch of Metallutgy j Metallography is that branc!J(j j metallurgy which pertains to w 0 structure of metal3 and their loys, as revealed mainly by?20 croscopic examination or polii? " or etched sections and by th'tp" hint pearance of the fracture. Vo In UTAH WOOLEN Trade for BLANKETSpe t th Your Salt Lake City, Utak 1 Wool Excellent for is Values-Sen- d er O Sreel Little Change in Glass jmfl Glass dating back 1,400 ije r B. C. has been found in Egyp qD( toombs and this glass has f. tically the same chemical cos Udo sition as modern glass. -- CigtN ft, JOSEPH WM. TAYLOR, Btah's Laadhif Mnrttc'aia tier, Funerals on Time Payment H si desired Sift Liki City. 'Fiiii Utaa IW( ?r Sanie -- 00. Mr Zoo's Distinction The Washington park zoo inUrv waukee, Wis., is said to only one in the world where p,uy bears have been successfully ' Mr maturity. Jid mmr em ier he f imei I An v MOTOR OIL Sold with a Money Back Guanand 'eft Police !W Clubs Policeman's billies are ma cocus wood, usually, the wo0 the granadilla tree, u a speci which pomegranate, Brazil and the West gro1 Indies Tfly "GRAINS OF GOLD" ! THE WHOLE WHEAT CEI Aio "Makes Cream Taste Bcttf't th? Oa sen Western Made For Western Ask Your Grocer d vestmenl ,n a Rood ram Is oue of the t0 c"t Pro,1uptIon costs dpr fresent conditions and to Ira- e rm nnoR flt tne same time, bPSt wnV9 P PRODEr Ne Natural Law Fennel's law is to the effect rt If g body moves in any dinout on the earth's surface, then! the deflecting force arising fromichec e oeneve ' TOUR DRUGGIST FOI APEX A?a e Hog cholera Is increasing In the Middle West, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, e 41 Bible in a EuroDean lanruatrn in c was the Germantown Rihl lished by Christopher Saur be NEW The wheat yield of Hungary will be 58,800.000 bushels, or 10,000,000 under last year. i First edition of the ELEANOR Inoculating his soybean seed with a commercial culture increased yields 3 bushels an acre for J. D. Duffy, Piatt county, Illinois. The first year Mr. Duffy used commercial culture he tried It on six acres and got 200 pounds of extra seed an acre. Th culture costs 15 cents an acre and the extra beans produced were worth Mr. Duffy, who grows from 200 $5.80. to 350 acres of soybeans a year, had not been getting satisfaction when inoculating' with dirt so he decided to use commercial culture. Capper' Farmer. cross-sectio- tree-dotte- d Give Profit to Raiser Paris dressmakers or r folks ef acUea, aacceatf el, tn4 ttih Whe Hre for tetMrraw a veil ae te The senee wb bndcet exaeBiei j v by custom. "Jv .1..'. he Living Merely to breathe freely ( ask not mean to live. Goethe. I pli ' $5.00 phc JJ ( Intermesntsia " Similar te aboe. rout story in prose er rerse termeuntain Products C "lm";. should ase Goods" Hoi 15.11 Halt star? appears er &35 Ika CitT. ra column eetoo cheek for taeaL We get 3U1 she |