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Show Saturday. January 29, 1910. LOGAN. UTAH. TEE t - Jhe states epst of' us are fast breeders of America. A paper by methods of President Waters of Kansas, on adopting western the Effect of Nutrition on the packing and spraying fruit, . At Chicago, Dr. iBall lectured Form of the Animal, which gave each day before the United States a summary of many years oex-- . Land and Irrigation ' Exposition perimental work at Missouri, was on Utah and Her Resources. especially noteworthy. Dr. Shull to revelations a paper on coni breeding in were read Such lectures the' ten to fifteen thousand people which he showed the possibility the exposition of Increasing the yield - of corn who - attended daily. Thy immediately showed fifteen to eighteen per cent by interest and began, to asx jques-tion- s certain oreeaing metnods. t His and after looking at the paper was a post valuable contriwhich was the most bution to science.-Th- e exhibit Utah association diversified and most tastefully ar- decided to issue a monthly maga- HEAT OF THE BODY The normal temperature of a human being is generally given as 98.6 degrees, but the statement must be slighly qualified. It is the normal temperature when taken by placing the thermometer ' tinder the toBgue or in the arm- ; 7 pit or the groin;-The surface temperature of the head, hands1 and abdomen varies from 96 degrees to 93 degrees or even lower. That of the internal regions may go- - up - to -- 102.2. degrees, Jhat being the average heat of the blood Circulating in and-some other or- he--liver : -- -- -- gans. But 98.6 degrees is called the normal temperature of a human being, and it doesnt matter whether he lives in the desert of Sahara or in 'Greenland, according to a writer in the Technical World.-Awakor asleep, "at work e or just loafing, a mans d level. When it varies more than the fraction of a degree it is because the heat regulating mechanism is disarranged by disease or by abnormal conditions of some sort. Excessively high measures, of heat may be borne for several minutes by an individual without raising his tempeiature more than a fraction of r. degree. Persons who sometimes .are styled human salamanders have given exhibitions of their ability to stand high temperatures. There is an authentic case recorded of, Martinez, the so called French salamander, a baker by trade, who exposed himself to high temperatures from boyhood. ITe remained in an oven erected mnv in utes when the temperature in it was 338 degrees. IPs pulse on entering was 76 a minute and he had reached 130 when he came out. He often duplicated this performance. Chamouni, a celebrated Hussion salamander who called himself the incombustible, used to go into an oven and stay while a leg of' mutton was roasted there, not coming out until the meat was well done, ne eventually lost his life in .me of the.-- e performances. Fever is a rise of temperature above the normal level. This rise istseldom beyond 106 degrees. Mental and' nervous influences m4 so act for a time as to disorder the control of the thermotaxic nerve center and cause fever. It js interesting to, note some of the. high temperatures which are ol medical record as having actually occurred in certain diseases. UGuys hospital in London recordslthe case of a hysterical woman afflicted with tuberculosis of one lpg who showed 120 de. A Romance of Newspaperdom NOVELIZED BY FREDERICK R. From the Much Talked About Newspaper Play by and Harriet Eord Realistic, Thrilling, True to the Life of Today At a meeting of the association of American physicians in 1895 Dr. Jacohof New York reported Silt is awond(pful for all ages of manfood-medici- ne kind. It vill make the delicate, sickly baby strong and well wH give the pale, anemia girl rosy cheeks and rich, red blood. It will put flsh .on the bones of the tfred, overworked, thirl man, and will 'keep .the ed-man or woman in condition to -a- resist cojds or pneumonia in the winter. FOB BALE BT ALL CEUQGX8T8 Bend 10o., nuns of paper and thljj ad. for oar beautiful Baringa Bank and Ohildafhketch-Book- . Back bank contain a Good Lock SCOTT & BOWNE, 409 Pearl 9). New 'York the-mo- st Authors of The Fourth Estate t grees. ranged exhibit on the grounds, their, wonder grew;- - The showing Utah made- - did an immense amount of good in that it educat-ed'th- e terthe people "oMhe-Eas- t possibilities of the West, especially to those of the Beehive State. The most strikng part of our exhibit was the apple display. Utah apples jvith clear skin and deep coor were kept highly polished and the throngs of visitors would constantly gaze at them in wonder-ranadmiration Many ; Utah were surprispeople present ed at the remarkable improve-- ' ! ment that has been made in the of Utah grade and packing apples in the last two years. The most surprising thing to those in charge of the exhibit, however, was the fact - that out of sixty boxes shown, not a single wormy apple was found. To the housewives the exhibit" of'potatoes and cabbages was almost equally attractive and the constant inquiry was, IIow can we get such The same was ask-e- d vegetables? with reference to canned goods and. condensed milk on exhibition. Here indeed is an opening for anyone who is so disposed. Ship choice canned goods east and compete with the eastern prices. It can be done for choice Utah products far outclass those of many other states, as was well demonstrated by the exhibit at Chicago-- - One man even wj'ent so far as to say that he alone could TOOMBS handle ten car loads of Utah asparagus. That is sufficient in itJoseph Medill Patterson self to cite many possibilities. While in Chicago, t)r. Ball also vsited the International Livestock Exposition, and to him gratifying feature of this expo' sition was, of course, the fact that Senator Seely of Mt. Pleasant, Representative Hansen Of Collin-stoW. D. Candland of Mt. Pleasant and J. R. Allen of Draper were buying the very pick of the wonderful exhibits of horses and cattle. These will be brought to Utah. Then Dr. Ball returned to Omaha where he attended the National Corn Exposition which was much more than the name implies. It was a general exposition of agricultural products of the different states, as well as one of their educational features. 'A number of the Experiment Stations of the surrounding states FREDERICK R. TOOMBS bad exhibitions of their work and results of their leading experiments. More than this, demonstrations in cooking and sewing were given daily. Taken as a the whole, exposition was the DR. BALLS TRIP EAST most tasteful and educational America has ever seen. Its prin--eipDr. E. D. Ball, Director of th object was to encourage the Utah Experiment Station, return- breeding and production of corn ed recently from an extended and as such it did an immense trip east, where, by attending good. It served also an educaseveral large meetings, he ac- tional purpose, in that it dealt quainted himself with the very with all lines of advanced agricullatest experimental practices, and ture. Utah, should, if possible, as a result of this, Utah will be arrange to be represented, at n least in a small way, at the next bettered agriculturally.. An iew with Dr. Ball was obtain- session of the Corn Exposition. ed and the most important fea- There was, further, a program in tures of his trip are herein re- which many noted men took part Dr. Hopkins of, the University of lated : He first attended the National Illinois gave a masterful ' discus" Horticultural Congress held at sion of the problems of soil ferOmaha and there he read a pa- tility at one joint session, while per on the Codling Moth and the all the different societies in sesbest methods of spraying for its sion at Omaha united to hear an destruction. The scientific facts address, by President James J. therein presented have since re- Hill in which he gav a clear-cu- t ceived much favorable comment. survey of the- - possibilities of The most striking feature of the American agriculture. National Apple Show was Iowas ' A meeting of the American excellent exhibit of boxed ap- .Breeders Association was next in ples. This was indeed worthy of order. This brought together a comment and it demonstrates that large number of plant and animal JOSEPH MEDILL PATTERSON HARRIET FORD zine which will be the official organ of the society and which will deal with the late developments in plant ,and animal breeding. This" magazine wHEald largely In increasing the membership of the Breeders 'Association, as no one who is interested in the production of better plants and animals can afford to be without such 4a publication. Dr. Ball hyper-therm- ! y gradual fall. Low temperatures are always dan serous, and unless a reaction quickly ensues,- - by aid of relief measures, a fatal termination may unexpected. The lowest recorded during life that may be regarded as reliable is one reported by Duffy in which the thermometer registered 84 degrees F. Death ensued the following day. a The body, however, can withstand extreme coki more readily Ilian it- can Vxtrpme heat before the regulating center becomes disordered, and so other things being' equal, freezing to death is l.ot as common in cold climates as sunstroke is in warm. - Many persons find Affected with a themselves persistent cough after an attack of influenza. As this cough can be promptly, cured by the use of Chamberlains Cough Remedy, it should not be allowed to run onjmt.il it becomes 1 troublesome. -- A & . confident that advertising which through the and"' Utahhas-recently-receive- d"" because of the vast acreage of unclaimed land which she still maintains,' it will not be more than five years before many sections of Utah will experience what Twin Falls, Idaho, has experienced in the past three years a rising from the desert to a " city of eight thousand inhabitants. State Reclamation projects and the like will do wonders for Utah in the next few years . People east of us are inquisitive about Utah and are anxious to settle in the Beehive state where they know, through demonstration, that success, especially along agricultural lines, is a certainty. Deseret Farmer. OUR FRENCH DRY CLEANING This method removes dirt and all disease germs from every portion of the fabric. Ladies Dresses and Clothing of all kinds, Mens Suits, etc., etc., can be cleaned and made to look like new. No extra charge for call or delivery. Give us your order. Both phones. AMERICAN STEAM LAUNDRY 46 East Center St. n. awa ElmvdSewva Clecavscs the System EjfectuaWy Dispels colds awd Headaches &ueo CcwsYqpaYvow; Acts waVavatty, actstmXy aLaxawe. McwVomew Be3t To as audCud aad 0d. reu-J- om get VVs We Will Begin Publication of this Story Tuesday Next a patient in whom fever reached the most incredible figures of 148 degrees F. This case occurred in r hysterical fireman who bad suffered a severe injury from a fall. vliieh folIn the discussion lowed the report of this case among the members of the association Dr. Welch of Baltimore referred to a condition of that had come to his knowledge in which the temperature was recorded at 171 degrees F. Of course sueli exceedingly high temperatures are of only short duration or death would ensue. Fever is not the only disturbance which may alter temperature. Certain conditions, especially those due to diseases like acute alcoholism, tuberculosis, melancholia, convalescence - from fevers, poisoning from various drugs, and so forth, may cause the bodily warmth to become subnormal. Injuries and surgical shockr also originate the samef-fect-. Starvation always jnduces -- bervcJVtxcd ejects. Otways ray ttis Gevmvcve, manufactured by the CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS one size only, regular price 50 per bottle. al in-te- 4 mt d mm- 1 - MONUMENTS -- 1 C White Bronze is the only material guaranteed to withstand the ravages' of the elements' of all lime. Call oji on write to TIIOS.aLLSOP SMITIIMELD t''..: 'UTAH i |