Show L sit NEW talmapk'oFj ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL BAnLE OF BACTERIA “1 ho Gleam of a Moonbeam on the Water" Germs - This is one description of a diamond the most beautiful jewel on earth $15000 per carat will buy” a cut flawless diamond now perfect Stock Is limited Advance certain Assortment of sizes Each stone guaranteed in Distinguished Surgeon Claims the Hu man Span Might Be Extended with the Large Intestine Removed 170 SALT LAKE CITX ire UTAH Hallows College SALT LAKE CITY BOARDING AtID DAY FOR BOYS Class begins Wednesday September 8 Classical Scientific and Commercial Special department for little boys under the care of a trained teacher' and Military Drill Gymnasium under the direction of special instructors For terms and information apply to coorses Photograph copyright by CUnedlust W R Harr recently partment of justice by cases for the government t I Very Rev J J Guinan S M President DRUGS W&sblugton C the appointed an assistant attorney general He has handled many important President Taft and has great ability as an international lawyer in AND de- PLANTS - HARRY J ROBINSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Judge SWIFTER Building THAN Salt THE Swallow Easily Outdistances ions In Flight Between piegne and Antwerp Food Products — All SCHOOL Found Constantly at War Man’s Internal Organs LakoCIty PIGEON CompanCom- - A citizen of Antwerp has put to a test the celerity and homing instinct of the swallow as compared with pigeons a 'London correspondent of the New York Sun says He caught a swallow In its nest under his roof at Antwerp made a red mark on its feathers and sent the bird with a consignment of 250 carrier pigeons by train to Compiegne In northern France a distance of 147 miles The birds were released there simultaneously at 7:15 the next morning The swallow without the slightest hesitation made for the north and like a flash The pigeons circled laboriously around before deciding which direction they should take " The swallow reached its nest in Antwerp in 67 minutes while the pigeons took four hours and seven minutes to cover the distance In other words the messenger of spring flew at the rate of nearly 132 miles an hour while the speed of the pigeons miles an only slightly exceeded 35 hour the trees the garden Is a Among Effect of Chemicals on Vegetable comphor tree raised from a cutting of one of a grove of camphor trees now Matter of Philadelphia Society Experiments to Add Much to Our Expects Relative Knowledge of Strength of Stimulants Philadelphia Pa — By means of extensive experiments to test the relative strength of drugs on 2000 varieties of germinating plants and also a number of animals in the botanical roof gardens of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy Dr Henry Kraemer professor of botany and director of the microscopic and botanical laboratories Is compiling tables of values which when completed will probably work the greatest change In the nature and quality of drugs used as stimulants that has taken place since the days of Hahnemann Since the establishment of a botanical roof garden two seasons ago by Dr Kraemer primarily for the purpose of supplying the college with authentic drug material of the rarer the garden has outgrown varieties Its original mission to Borne extent and has become an Important arm of the research work of the college fea! “Bill Possum” Is an important ture of the gardens All unconscious that he is adding to the supply of useful knowledge as well as furnishing Never Let Go diversion to visitors “Bill Possum” We hear much about forging to the shielded from the rays of a summer front takihg time by the forelock sun by the foliage of plants almost seizing the bull by the horns and the priceless In- their and basking like and also that the man with the in a breeze made rarity cool by the waters tail hold is entirely Ignored Nine men of the “Jersey marsh” reigns supreme out of every ten wisely follow and high above the buildings of the city succeed where one does who charges The gardens cover the roof of the colaround at the front all the time If Guinea pigs frogs and lege buildings you miss the forelock seize the tall conchickens though unconsciously It is the hanging on more than the their share to the progress tributing hold that counts The man of science are less particular perimportant will go Just as fast and nearly as far sonages by far In this novel little who has hold of the tail as the one world than “Big Bill Possum” on to the horn besides he hanging The vegetable life of the gardens is can hold on' better ahd ls in less nourished chiefly in a well watered danger Young man don’t be too anxAs little as possible of sol! of sand ious to get rapidly to the front but the usual soil elements is introduced hang on to what you have and you so that the plants may receive as far will get ahead in the wprld just ha as possible without interference the fast as you deserve — Columbia (Ala) effect of the chemicals fed them durBreeze ing the test The effect of the variVersus Plano Playing ous chemicals on the plants Is thus Cooking A distinguished man said the other In this garden clearly discernible day at the opening of a new school are growing different series of the of domestic science: “Though I speak same plant under influences of widely not from but different chemicals personal experience A series of like putting myself in the position of a age will differ so markedly that some working man who married I would will be In magnificent bloom while Infinitely sooner be certain of eating others In the adjoining garden will be a good dinner than of listening to an yielding a profusion of beautiful leaves Indifferent pianist It seems to me without a bud And among those in there is often more emphasis placed bloom will be found some under the upon piano playing than there is on chemical influence of a particular the more homely but certainly more flowering in an abundance of healthy useful offices of domestic life” Per- red while others fed from another fectly right good sir but you won’t chemical will bear a blue or a white convince Conservatory pupils or the bloom aspirants for "culture” in the outlyOne of the most Interesting of the ing districts that good dinners are of collection of plants brought together the least consequence compared with by Dr‘ Kraemer Is a specimen of the their music lessons-- Boston Herald original licorice plant brought from Spain by the late Henry R Food for Pet Owls of this cijy At that time this Young ’owls are easily raised on was unknown in this country variety of four to the meat fresh age Up commercial a as product and after or’ five weeks beef and mutton finely it as such Mr Rittenhouse chopped make a good food After that built up a fortune from its sale There jmlce rats and English sparrows Is also a specimen of the famous poiserved whole are in great demand son hemlock of Socrates the same and come nearest their natural food species from which was made the fatal These if not too large they will swalpollon low whole — St Nicholas of growing wild In Florida Forty years ago these trees were set out as an experiment by the department of agriculture and later their cultivation was given up as a failure It is now thought that the camphor industry will take the place of the culture of oranges In Florida In the “Jersey bog” a huge garden of novel plants receiving their nourishment from water air and animal matter are varieties not often seen in this country There are the Dresora or Sundews which after clutching any Insects which land upon them digest the animal matter forming thereby a valuable drug The Sarracenia or pitcher plants form a bottle shaped s may yaally cot® prison in whlcti never to be released The Venus fly tray is also a meat eating form of plant life which can be seen in the bog Hydrangeas roses carnations rare varieties of violets swamp pinks blue flags and orchids can be seen in various states of cultivation and evolution giving the place an element of great beauty Digitalis which when compounded with strychnine and morphine forms the basis of medicines used in the treatment of alcoholism can be seen in all stages of cultivation and the result of experiments with this plant has given sufficient data to warrant Dr Kraemer making public the statement that strychnine produces the same effect as a stimulant as does alcohol The results of the experiments conducted by Dr Kraemer in the botanical laboratories and gardens of the college will be given to the public as each is completed Many of them are hardly begun and will take years for completion To Raze Noted Bridge Washington — The old - Anacostla bridge over which John Wilkes Booth sped his horse to escape from an infuriated city the night he shot Lincoln Is to be torn down soon It is over half a century old The district commissioners will receive proposals on July 31 for the razing of the landmark a new structure connecting Washington proper with the suburb of Anacostla having been completed London The theories of Prof Metchalkoff of the Pasteur Institute that man would live longer and be healthier without any large intestine are being put to proof in an interesting series of experiments now taking place at Guy’s hospital Dr A Distaso Prof Metchnlkoff’s assistant who has been sent to London by the Pasteur institute to conduct the experiments explained his progress “When studying cholera a few years ago” the doctor said “Prof Metchnlkoff discovered that the Intestines of the ordinary healthy man always contained a great number of varieties of bacteria Some of these were found to be dangerous because they formed poisons which were harmful to the body when absorbed into the system and others are beneficial because they hinder the development of the harmful germs “In the lower large intestine it was found that the harmful germs greatProf Metchnlkoff ly predominated therefore concluded that If a man’B were removed he large intestine would suffer less from the intestinal bacteria poisons which according to Prof Metchnikoff’s belief cause the common diseases of degeneration of the internal organs of the body and generally bring on premature old age The difficulty was to find patients without large intestines on whom to test these theories “Dr W Arbuthnot Lane the well known surgeon of Guy’s hospital has solved our difficulties by placing at my disposal some 30 or 40 patients whose large Intestines be had removed forthe relief of chronic intestinal obstruction These patients have been going about alive and well for periods varying from a few months to five years since their large Intestines were cut out “In the short time' I have been working I have proved beyond doubt that In Mr Lane’s patients many of the harmful varieties of bacteria are absent while those still surviving are In much lesser proportion than in normal individuals? J' All animals (Including babies) when born have per recti y sterile digestive tracts — that Isr there are no germs growing in the Inte'stlnes Prof Metchnikoff believes that if we could preserve this freedom from intestinal bacteria we could greatly prolong life because the greatest cause of old age —the absorption of bacterial poisons in the intestines — would be nonexistent “That it Is possible to exist without providing a culture bed within one’s self for the development of these poison producing germs has been proved at any rate on animals “By feeding a pteropus an Australian variety of bat from birth on abfood I have kept solutely germ-freits intestines free from all bacteria for the four months of its existence It is therefore absorbing none of the poisons which ordinarily are developed in the intestines of these creatures and I firmly believe that bar it will live to a much accidents greater age than its fellows” Dr Distaso made the following list of harmful and helpful germs found in the ordinary person’s intestines: Friendly Bacteria — Bifldua Lactis HarmAerogens all Lactis microbes ful Bacteria — Putrificus Perfringens Coli “It Is Interesting to notej’ the doctor concluded “that no bacteria of putrefaction (the variety which Prof Metchnikoff considers most active In bringing on premature old age) have been discovered so far in any of Mr Lane’s patients whose large intestines have been removed” in Jersey Milking to Music in the machine It saddened Montclair N J — There was a time when the farmers and dairymen in this section thought that gras hay long fodder turnips and an occasional hot mash were proper and profitable food for milch cows but they are to drop all that and feed their milk producers on music Now the pioneer in the movement is Steever Smith a farmer near Great Notch When he wants his cows to give milk he places a phonograph out in the barnyard and starts ' the music going From that time on It as much as he and his men can do to set the buckets under the cows fast enough to catch the milk Smith has discovered that the kind and quality or music also has an important bearing on the milk supply The first day he used the phonograph he placed "The Heart Bowed Down” the cows and they gave scarcely any milk He then tried “I Stood On the Bridge at Midnight” on them They walked over to the immediately trough and gazed pensively into the water It was a pathetic sight When the sweet strains of “The Nun’s Prayer” broke the silence all the cows got down on their knees It was not until the phonograph began to play "The Old Oaken Bucket” that the animals manifested much interest They looked at Smith so accusingly then that he took the record out of the machine andsmashed it “I guess they want something quick and devilish” Smith said He slipped “The Sailor’s Hornpipe” "Rory O’Moore” “The Irish Washerwoman” and “The Arkansas Traveler” in the in quick succession phonograph Ubbyo Vienna Sausage It distinctly different from any other sausage you ever tasted Just try one can and it is sure to become a be served at frequent to necessity interval Ubby's Vienna San 8300 just suits for breakfast ia fine for luncheon and satisfies at all of is care- Like dinner or supper Libby's Food Products it fully cooked and prepared in Ubby’a ready Great White Kltohen the cleanest most scientific kitchen in the world Other popular Pure Foods are:— Libby fLooked Oornod Beef Peerless Dried Beef Veal Loaf Evaporated Milk Baked Beans Ohow Chow Mixed Plokles Write for free booklet— “How to make Good Things to Eat” Insist on Llbbyfs at yow grocers Ubby McNeill A Ubby Chicago YOU NEVER KNOW YOUR LUCK She — Yes they are engaged know she refused him twice but the third time he proposed she accepted him Her Husband — Served him right The Force of Habit One of the campers had done something peculiarly Idiotic and the dean said: “Dick reminds me of Thomas' colt” “What about Thomas’ colt?” asked Dick cheerfully “Why” the dean responded readily “where I lived In Maine when I was a boy an old man named Thomas He once put out to raised horses pasture a colt which had been fed from its birth in a box stall and watered at the trough in the yard “The pasture lay across a small river and in the middle of the day the colt swam the stream to go up to the for a drink of water”— Youth’s Companion “To Orient” and as its etymologj Primarily shows the verb to orient means to set an object in exact adjustment to the east thence by a natural corollary to set it true with all the cardinal Then In the points of the compass derivative and topical signification il is used to describe the attitude of a mind duly adjusted to any standard oi knowledge morals or life Every package of Post Toasties Contains a little book— “Tid-Bit- s made with Toasties” A couple' of dozen recipes Of fascinating dishes A help in entertaining Home folks or company Pkgs 10c and 15c— At grocers ’ 7 |