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Show 1 Utiiv of Utah sts of the Leading Agricultural and Horticultural Section of Utah-"The Garden of the West." A Weekly Newspaper, Devoted to trie I rat ere SPRIN G VILLE, UTAH, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1902. PRICE, $1.25 PER ANNUM. VOLUME 12 . NUMBER 27 Makes the bread more healthful. Safeguards the food against alum Alum baking powders are the greatest raciiacers to Health of the present day. ROvt M1!N5 WWq CO., NEW VORK. An Opera House Movement is on foot, b eincc agitated by tbe joint members of the .Maccabees, Woodmen and Foresters. Last Wednesday evening representatives rep-resentatives of those orders met at "Fraternity Hall'to take the initial steps, by discussing ways, means and plans. T.R.Kelly was called to the chair and Al. Packard to the secretary's table.- After some disultory talk, E. N. Jordan made a motion that "it be the sense oi the meeting that the three orders build a hall suitable for lodge and amusement purposes, which prevailed. Mr. Jordan was of the opinion that a joint stock company, comp-any, should be organized, in order that the work might be done surely and legally. D.C.Johnson was iu favor of hniMiner f an Onprfl House, one basemen?, seven or eignt leet in?, j j ' 4. A l. m.mr . rl i nnH o o m nn v toot - - ' out, .divided into four rooms to be used for lodge purposes. John Anderson, wanted it so stock couid be subscribed and paid in labor, and if so, he thought it could be built. A. O.' Packard's idea was fwr ah opera house and dancing hall j , J combined, for there is money giving dances. ' Win. Kearns believed if we built, we should construct an up to date opera house. ; E.N. Jordan favored the construction con-struction of an opera house first, with dancing as a second consideration. con-sideration. We already have a good dancing hall, but no place for a first class entertainment, David Brinton did not want the dancing hall overlooked, that it is a very important item. r Garnet Friel wanted a dance ' Jiall with lodge rooms overhead. E. P. Brinton, had listened to the gentlemen build castles in the air, but he proposed building build-ing a first class modern building with a good dancing floor below, and that could be used be used for any kind of a performance, and not cost more than $5,000. G.R. Larson would like to see a hall built with a banqueting hall in the basement., and; a dancing hall above. I Chairman Kelly said estimates had been made ranging from $5,000 to $10,000. He didn't! like the idea of lodge rooms in the basement, and thought that a dance floor in an opera house would be very troublesome. W.C. Cooper was in hearty support of the opera house proposition. prop-osition. Clarence Crandall also wanted the opera house it we felt able to put $10,000 into such a structure. struc-ture. At this juncture, a mo- tion prevailed, that a committee of three, one from each of the three orders, be selected to consider con-sider the proposition ! of what kind of a house would be preferable, pref-erable, also to ask for subscriptions, subscrip-tions, and to see in general what air the members thought about the scheme, and to report on Wednesday evening 19th. All the members of the three orders are urged to be present, when definite arrangements will be made to prosecute the work, if deemed adviseable. A good hall is one of the necessities nec-essities of the City, and the three orders, with a membership of 200 can do it easily if they will only decide to do so, and then proceed to do it. ... . The Vice of Nagging. Clouds the happiness of the home, but a - nagging woman often needs help. She may be so nervous and run down in health that trifles annoy her, If she is melancholy, excitable, troubled trou-bled with loss of appetite, headache, sleeplessness, constipation or fainting faint-ing and dizzy spells, she needs Electric Elec-tric Bitters, the most wonderful remedy rem-edy tor ailing women. Thousands of sufferers from female troubles, nervous nerv-ous ness, backache and weak kidneys have used it, and become healthy and happy. Try it, only 50c. Springville Dealers guarantte satisfaction. A Mammoth Railroading outfit. Killpatrick Bros. & Collins are one of the largest railroad contractros in the West. M. & M. Crandall, Joe Thorn, Newt and JohnCrandall and Will Mc- Kinzie, pulled out for Eureka ar nart of T 'rfh. -- i r ' , - , , teams, ann expect wuik iui u r . illnntoinlr Bros, do things on a magnificant scale. Their works and camps are lighted up by lectricity for a distance of twenty miles, and they have seven steam shovels i hat work night and day. The Crandall bovs are fond of the company. and consider the mem- bers honest, fair ana agreeable men to work for. ; The boys consider con-sider that they have a good contract and that they will be able to make some monejr. Uncle Un-cle George Mack, is out in Nevada Ne-vada looking for work with a view of taking out an outfit. John Averett, Richard Palfrey-man, Palfrey-man, the Harwood Bros., L. D. Crandall, Earnest Boyer and Bros, and Sumsion Bros., are strung along the road with their grading outfits. If this thing keeps up we will have more men and teams in Nevada tnan isv left in Springville. Its all right boys, when you come tmarching home, it is to be hoped , that all will have a goodly snm of treasure treas-ure to the credit side of your account. ' "A Good Excuse. , The Alger (Ohio) Gazette failed to appear during a recent week, and the editor in his issue for the following-week following-week gave the following excuse for the omission: "Born, to Mr. and Mrs. L. M." Richards, last Wednesday, a ten-j pound -baby girl. That's the reason the Gazette was not published last week, and we think it is a good excuse. We felt too jubilant after we found, out we were Dad to think much about work. ; We think our readers will for give the omission, we are not usea to being called Dad yet, but feel proud of the fact that we are." ;'. , Lockjaw From Cobwebs . )' Cobwebs put on a cut lately gave a woman lockjaw. Millions know that the best thing to put on a cut is Buck len's Arnica Salve, the infallible healer ofjWounds,ulcers, sores, skin eruptions, scalds and piles, it cures or no pay. lOnly 25c, at Springville Dealers. The Guns of Utah Batteries will be presented to the state of Utah, if the Hon. Geo, Sutherland, can prevail upon Congress to see his way. The following letter is self ex-planitory: ex-planitory: Dear Friend: I have your letter of the 29th, with reference re-ference to guns used by the Utah Batteries in the Philippines. Philip-pines. I have this matter already al-ready in mind, and shall do all I can to carry out your sugge-tions sugge-tions in the matter. I am in hearty sympathy with what you say, and note the pride and interest in-terest you have in the premises. With best wishes, I am yours very truly, Geo. Sutherland." .. It was suggested, in regard to those guns, that if they can be obtained for the state, that Springville be given the custody of one of them, as five of our boys did good service with them in the Philippines. For the Complection. The complection always suffers from biliousness or constipation. Unless Un-less the bowels are kept open the impurities im-purities from the body appear in the form of unsightly eruptions. De Witt's Little Early Risers keep the liver and bowels in healthy condition and remove the cause of such troubles. C. E. Hooper, Albany, Ga., says, "I took De Witt's Little Early Risers for biliousness, they were just what I needed. I am feeling better now than in years." Never gripe nor distress. Safe thorough and: gentle, ,The very, best pills. City Drug Store. Deal Bros, and Mendenhall, Last Friday, filed with the Co. Clerk, articles of incorporation. The. object is, to conduct a gen- construction with head-quarters in this City. The stock of merchandise mer-chandise and other property forms the basis of the capital stock, which is valued at $75,000, divided into shares of a par value val-ue of $50 each. The incorporators are, R.A. Deal, D.E.Deal, T.M.Deal, T.L. Mendenhall, Thos. D. Menden-hall, Menden-hall, L.D.Deal; John W.Deal, aud M.J E. Mendenhall. R.A. Deal is president, T.L.Menden-hall T.L.Menden-hall vice president, L.D.Deal secretary and treasurer. Surgeon's Knife Not Needed. Surgery is no longer necessary to cure niles. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures such cases at once, re moveine the necessity for dangerous, painful and expensive operations. For scalds, cuts, burns, wounds, bruises, sores and all skin diseases it is unequaled. Beware of counterfeits City Drug Store. ' : . It Pays to Advertize. A merchant in a northen town who desired to test the efficacy effi-cacy of printers ink, adopted the following plan. He owned two stores, in towns a Tew; miles apart, where all the surrounding surround-ing conditions were identical, each having a paper. Each store carried the same kind of goods, with "bargain counters" and other displays the same. In one town he advertized liberally, liber-ally, and in the other he did none. At the end of one month he had sold twice as many dollars dol-lars worth of goods in the town where they were advertized as he did where they were nbt advertized. ad-vertized. One surprising development devel-opment in connection with the affair was, people who lived in the non-advertized town drove to the other, to purchase the advertized ad-vertized goods, passing the store in their own town where the same goods were for sale and at the same price. ; Representative Sutherland's Speech on the Indian 'Appro, priation Bill has been recieved and after a careful perusal, there is no hesitency in saying that it is one of the best that was delivered on that subject. j The following peroration will give a good idea of its excellence, a ful! copy of which may be obtained ob-tained by calling at this office. "Now Mr. chairman, it seems to mo that the Indian tribal system, sys-tem, perpetuated and fostered by the Indian reservation system, is contrary to the genius of our civilization,' which is builded upon the idea of individual action act-ion and responsibility. A thou-sandjindians thou-sandjindians upon the Uintah reservation, controlling two mil-liou mil-liou acros of land, stand in the way of homes and farms for fifty thousand citizens of the Republic. Repub-lic. These indians contribute no revenue to the Government whicb: feeds, clothes and schools them. They pay no taxes to the State which protects them. The ordinary citizen toils every day in order that he may eat every day. These luxurious wards of the Government "toil not. neither do they spin;"but they: are. the steadiest boarders we have.- In a -nation of busy workers the reservation n I-ian I-ian is an aristocrat. He is the lnnjr, P:pnP of a nrincelv landed proprietor ot ;.a princely ; domain which he lias perpet- ually dedicated to the solitude of tha wilderness. ila!my judgement it is time j WZi?" r. -v Open t He r e s e r vatton s , nu deal iustlv with the indians . O : generously if you please -but open the reservations to settle ment, in order that labor may take the place of idleness, that civilization may replace barbarism, barbar-ism, that the hunting ground may give way to the farm, and that the desert silence may be broken by the voice of industry." Could Not Breathe. Coughs, colds, croup, grip, bron chitis, other throat and lung 'troubles are quickly cured by One Minute Cough Cure. It is not a mere expect orant, which gives temporary relief. It softens and liqufles the mucous, draws out the inflamation and removes re-moves the cause of the disease. Ab solutely safe, acts at once. "One Min ute Cough Cure will do all that is claimed for it," says Justice of the Peace, J.Q. Hood, Crosby. Miss.,. "My wife could not get her breath and was relieved by the first dose. It has been a benefit to all my family." Peoples' Drug Store. Oldest Man In Illinois. Frank M. Anthony of McLean county coun-ty claims to be the oldest man in Illinois, Illi-nois, and his friends say that he has the documents to prove the fact. Mr. Anthony Is now in his one hundred and second year, and there is every ordinary indication that his lamp of life will burn brightly for some time to come. The centenarian resides with his daughter, Mrs. D. C. Freeman, on her fine farm three miles south of Bloomington. He was born in Mayo county, Ireland, on May 8, 1800, and, consequently has been so. fortunate as to have lived in three centuries. At the age of 20 he emigrated to this country with his parents, who themselves them-selves lived to be over 80 years old. Mr. Anthony served as a Captain in the French rebellion of 1837 in Can.-ada. Can.-ada. He first came to Illinois in 1873, and was so favorably impressed with the country about Bloomington that he resolved to stay there. He possesses all of his faculties, and talks entertainingly enter-tainingly of the days when the republic repub-lic was In the beginning of its lif e. Freeport (111.) Journal. Cupes the Grip in Toao Days !No remedy equals Warner's White Wine of Tar Syrup for this terrible and fatal disease. If taken thoroughly and in time, it will cure a case in two days, and for the cough that follows La Grippe it never fails to give relief. Price 25 and 50 cents. There Are 2400 Disorders incident to the human frame, of which a majority are caused or promoted pro-moted by impure blood. The remedy is simple. Take Hood's Sarsaparilla. That this medicine radically and effectively purifies the blood is known to every druggist, known to hundreds of thousands of people who themselves or by their friends have experienced its curative powers. : The worst ' cases of scrofula, the most agonizing sufferings from 6alt rheum and other virulent blood diseases, dis-eases, are conquered by it, while those cured of boils, pimples, dyspeptic dys-peptic and bilious symptoms and that tired feeling are numbered by millions. Hood's Sarsaparilla 'Will do you good. Begin to take it today. Fortunes Accidentally Found. "In the sure knowledge that man does not turn to his Bible until he is in the greatest distress, I have placed $500 In notes between pages 141 and 142 Hamburg, 1879." The curious and welcome letter was found by a Hamburg shopkeeper when, in dire misfortune, he had determined to sell the family Bible that had been in' his possession for many years. Looking ; through it before taking it out of the house," he found the letter and bank notes. At such a critical time a fortune for-tune would not have been more welcome. wel-come. The shopkeeper had failed in business, his wife had long5 been ill, and consequently he was much in debt. The discovery of over $50,000 was the result of a game at hide-and-seek. Some children were playing near the ruins of an old mansion in !the Canton of Argoore.. Switzerland, when f them hiding from th others, found a large box partly buried. It was almost filled with money, jewelry jew-elry and other valuables. The father, on behalf of his children, claimed $5,000 as a reward. for their find. TTis claim was contested, however, and the .Swiss courts eventually awarded S50H To Cave a Cold in One Dayi Take Warner's White Wine of Tar Syrup, , the best cough remedy on earth. 25 and 50 cents. WE WILL PAPER . With a complete and w.ell assorted line of wall paper, and expert service in hanging paper. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Call and see , us'. .. ' - -; i - ? v-. ' . . Wall iPaper jDealers; R. A.DEAIi, President. H. T. REYNOLDS, Vice-Presi&nt. Spring " SPRINGVILLE, UTAH; Capital Stocls. $50,OQO. .Transacts a general banking business. Exchange bought and sold aud depot ;' v its received subject to check. , ' : ; ;. Four per cent interest paid on time deposits, compounding semi-annually Money always on hand. for shbTt time loans." r.? " Wife s UNCLE SAM'S POISONER. Man Who Poisons Exhibits or firo National Institutions. . .Ina little house In South Washiag-r ton is. located a federal institution without hvhich the Smithsonian Institution Insti-tution and the National Museum could not exist. It is the department of the chief poisoner, Mr. Joseph Farmer. The ofiice of chief poisoner was not unusual in countries ruled by despots, but it maj' be a surprise to many to learn that such an office is maintained by our own republican fotm of administration. admin-istration. However, Mr. Farmer, unlike un-like his contemporaries in Turkey, Spain, Arabia, otc, Is not engaged in putting obnoxious and exuberant statesmen out of the way, but in placing plac-ing the objects on exhibit in the institution insti-tution and museum beyond the reach of thieves, rust and cockroaches. Everything that is received by these institutions, whether it is a rare book a Filipino bolo, or a stuffed and mounted mount-ed animal, is sent to Mr. Farmer to be poisoned. He is an erpert In the preparation and use or preservative compounds. For stuffed animals and birds he finds that arsenical compounds bring the best results. Every object of metal receives a coating and something that prevents rust, while fabrics, basketry,, bas-ketry,, silks, furs, etc., are poisoned in much the same manner as stuffed animals. ani-mals. Even the shelves and cases of the museum in which tha objects are placed have passed through Mr. Farmer's Farm-er's hands and have been treated to a fluid that causes a bug, moth or cockroach cock-roach to think that he is walking over a red hot iron the minute he strikes their surface. By these means the museum is forever freed from vermin. New York Telegraph. : Winter in California. It is not necessary to dwell upon the manifold attractions of California, lor climate, recreation, recrea-tion, health or home, but if you wish booklets upon any particular particu-lar section or resort or industry of that congenial zone address the undersigued officers of the Southern Pacific Company at fean Francisco. Passenger Traffic Manager, T. H. GOODMAN, General Passenger Agent, d. R. gray, General Agent, v Salt Lake City, Utah. YOUR ROOMS EXESS & KEIiliY, ',' H. L. OUMMINGS, Cashier ville Banking ioi STANDARD MEAT ;.;:;;MarkK Wholesale and Retail Butchers. All Kinds of Fresh and Cured Meats and a Full Line of Groceries. tm 2wl. Minr Ss Einet, Propo I: |