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Show TWO THE PROVO POST FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1920, 3 c MRS. V. STAPP HAS GAINED DAVID HEDENBERG 30 POUNDS DIED III CALIFORNIA If YcjlHcr A FEW FACTS ABOUTUTAH t w ? E believe that it i3 always well to give our reader facts of interest concerning our state or the com- munity in which' we live, especially if these facts reflect credit on the industrial life of the community.' We have before-u- s some-ne- w and some old facts concerning our state, which show the wonderful resouces thereof; and when we compare these facts with facts concerning other states we are justly proud of the comparison, which throws J Utah conspiciously in the limelight. The word Utah is of Indian origin, meaning dwellers of the red sand hills. Utah was organized as the territory of Utah, September 20, 1850, and was admited as a state January 4, 1896, the forty-fift- h state of the Union. Utahs area is approximately J4,00Q square milesi the extreme breadth Ueing 285 miles, and its greatest length H it I H'- - " 345 miles. Utahs population is approximately There are in the state 22,000,000 acres susceptible to agriculture; of that number only 5,000,00 acres are under I" i , cultivation. I - t hr' I - k $ ? arce-fee- s f i I y , r I . t - . ... The state university was establised in 1850, three years after the arrival of the pioneers. - . Eighty-eig- ,4 ft .1 i f : t . 4 if :il- - i I i ', a. 4 r ? 5 - gold. .".V, a'-- - - suffrage. of cord wood is found in its vast Nearly acres. timber sections, which cover an area of over The 'developed water power is estimated at 75,000 brake horsepower with more than 600,000 yet to be develop$20-000,00- 0 J r- -- t i ed. N - don; England. :r , There are more than 1,200 manufacturing plants in the ' slate and we make practically everything. There are approximately 35,000 people employed in the industries of the ' Utah shoes were worn by many of your sons who state served with the A. E. F. ... Utah produces enought evaporated milk each year to make an unbroken line of cans from Salt Lake City to Lon- r. f ' Utah is the center of scenic America. We have Zion National Park.' which is considered to be the equal of the Grand Canyon for scenic beauty, the colorings of its rocky , walls surpassing even those of the Canyon of the Yellow--stoner- -; Brices Canyon, beautiful Ogden Canyon, Big Cottonwood Canyon,' Provo Canyon, ' Emigration Canyon and innumerable beauty spots not so well known.' Our great Salt Lake or Sea of Salt is one of the wonders of the world, its waters being so heavy that a human being can float on top of it like a bar of patent soap floating in a bath tub. Try to recall another spot where in an hour you could .flit from the warm, sands of. the, sea, to,, the perpetual snow- capped mountains, where in another hour or two you could visit a typical western mining camp where hundreds of men ahd scores of steam shovels yrench 30,000 tons of copper ore from the' naked sides of a mile-hig- h mountain every ' twenty-fou- r hours,1 wher e in another hour you could reach a beautiful canyon, alongside of which you could rest beneath a giant pine and lure the sportive Rainbow and Speckled trout from his liar.' . IT CAhTONLY BE DONE IN AH. uf hw8ji - u, shoys iesuto mat in ten no V of A Theres a Reason . , me.---Wh- y," Tonight 8; 15 San Carlo Grand Opera Co. well-know- n Madame Butterfly -' I - - V ts named, ;agiri MARV' ' Up to 1919 the mines of the state had yielded nearly $1,500,000,000, with dividends aggregating $2000,000,000 Utahs vast coal beds, estimated content 196,458,000,000 tons. Less than one-ha-lf of one per cent has been extract: ' ed. : Some of the finest building stone in the world is found in Utah. Granite, sandstone, and varied shades of marble together with onyx and travertine are found in abundance. Almost every cereal known can be raised in this state. The average yield in oats is 50 bushels per acre, barley 44 bushels, , In the yield of potatoes Utah stands second. - , ,, w Utah was the third state in the Union to grant womens - i ht - -- ea $160-000,000- 1, IF - per cent of the states revenue is expended for educational purposes. The percentage of illiteracy in the state is but 2.5, for whites it is only 0.4 per cent. The annual death rate is 7.5 per thousand. The yield of our farms per year is nearly- - $6,000,000 r of our livestock, $20,000,000. . Our manufactured products yield the state each year . the handsome sum of Utah ranks second in the United States in the production of silver, third in lead, fourth in copper And sixth in i U ; . quit burial. The services will be held A next Sunday In the Bonneville meeting house at 2 oclock. Friends may view the body at the Berg undertaking parlors from 12 to 1:30' oclock on the day of the funeral.' Mr. 'Hedenberg was '42 years of age. He is survived by six sisters and two brothers. 'He formerly lived in this city, but two years ago appetite at all anJ when I managed he went to the coast with a hope of to eat k few bites I couldnt digest regaining his health. . . ,!l ,anA. it would., make me deathly sick, and as I could get no lays trial strength T. or nourishment I fell off twenty-fir- e BA comfort there as&'and with gain pounds in weight I got so faint and 'SECRETARY OF STAH is loss . pleasure. , at times that I would hare to sit down and wait ttntU the attacks wonderful table drink, pure, health-passed orer. For the past twenty ; years I hardly knew what It was to advance ful, economical, delicious! be without a headache and I had terrible pains across my kidneys. All price.. my life I hare been constipated and everydayfor. years I hare-bato take a laxative, and my tonge was always coated and I had a bad taste In my mouth all the time. Night after night I hare .lain In bed Made by Postum Cereal Co., Battle Creck, Mich. rolling And tossing, for hours unable to get A. wink of .sleep and-o- f mornings ' I felt so bad I could hradly get up. - The statements In the papers J Origin of Popular Flavor, Dally Thought about Tanlae seemed so sincere that Tho feurful unbelief Is unbelief Id Vanilla flavoring Is obtained from I made up my'mind to be fruit of an orchid.' ' ' yourself. Carlyle. T . glre It a trial New Balnbridge Colby, York as but ererythlng else I had taken lawyer, former Republican ana for twenty-fir- e years had failed to supporter of Roosevelt In organisation of the Ball Moose party, is maESEESBGHB help me I had little faith In Tanlae. the new secretary of state But, sir. It began to help .me so In President Wilsons cabinet to suc(julck that It was no Ume before I ceed Robert Lansing. His appointhad changed my mind about it now ment faced a light in Congress I think It Is the greatest medicine md was a big surprise. to both I hare erer heard of In my life. I democrats and RapubUcanscan hardly realize what a wonderful ."A Proro Institution chsnge.baa come .orer I am able to eat Just anything I please LEADER JOINS" WOOD w,th.?.ba1 effects In. the least, and flare actually gained thirty pounds Speech of Opponent Turns Dakotan'S In weight I harent had a headache Beliefs or dizzy spell in so long that I hare almost forgotten about them and the Aberdeen, 8. D. State Senator fl. IN pains in my back hare left me en- P. Hill, one of the most tirely. My constipated condition had Republicans In pnnfh rktn. hn. nnbeen rellered and my tonge la never nounced be will support l.eonsrd Wood for coated and I dont hare that bad - 1 was presidential nominee. originally for Over nor xw-dtaste In my month any more. ,Y of Illinois," Hill explained. "hut sleep nine to ten hours erery night, after hearing biro speak at Mitchell SATURDAY can do my housework with ease, and the other day I have decided that Evening 7:30 -- 9:15 I Just feel fine all the time with this Wood Is a much stronger man, from new life and energy abont me.' I every standpoint, for president of this nerer lose a single .opportunity to nation. We need an administrator, MOL PR 711 HO R a man capable of glgantle organisapraise Tanlae, for It has certainly tion, and I believe Leonard Woods tr been the .. greatest . blessing of ray mendeus governmental experience life. v makes him the logical choice of all Tanlae la sold In Droro by Proro ow In the field." Drug, co., and by the leading arug-glsin all towns. w 8,000 Different Ffsh In the Nile. It Is believed the Nile contains a ORDINARY TUBES MIS- - greater variety of fish than any other FITS IN CORD TIRES river in the world. An expedition sent by the British museum brought bock Mr. J. H. Durrant. manager of 8,000 specimens. -Durant Auto Supply Company has T an interesting blt ot Jlnner- - tube news for local motorists who ara. Also Helen Homes in Fata! Fortune Snub Comedy using cord tires on their cars. A new and different inner tube, especially made for use In cord tires Is now being, handled by Durrant " one-six- th $30-000- tissa - started - taking Tanlae funeral 'services and but ypsterdajfof, ' now all my troubles .'are gone and I feel like a young girl again,- - said Mrs. Virgin! StApp; of 18f Valencia St., San Francisco', Calc For the past twenty-fir- e years I hare been In such, miserable health, continued Mrs. Stapp. that I was beginning to think I would hare to be content and,, bear my troubles as long as I Ured. J had almost no , v Nearly 500,000acres have been entered to be cultivated under diy farm method, and there are two or three million acres yet to be entered under the enlarged homestead act, J which permits any citizen of the United States to enter 'Upon 320 acres of land in the state. .Utah produces more sugar beets to the acre than any s Pther state, the average yield being 13.5 tons per acre; also the saccharine, or sugar, content of the beet is greater than in any other known locality; estimated value of the 1919 sugar crop will be slightly in excess of $15,000,000. There are 50,000 acres planted to orchards, over 50. per. , cent of which is in apples and 25 per cent in peaches. Utah produces of the alfalfahay raised in the United States and seven and one-ha- lf per cent of the sugar beets, ranking third among all the states in this respect.' Four per cent of all the sheep in the United States are found in Utah. There are 35,000 goats found in the state yielding an annual clip of 85,000 pounds of mohair, valued at over 1 troul&s, prices cr durcca coffee snd tef to tea d . t. -- ToHrfng died-at-th- Tin States, extending in may localities to a depth of 40 feet. Utah is the birth place of the great modern irrigation system. " Utah has expended more than $25,000,000 for the development of irrigation. 550 reservoirs, 6,000 miles of main canals and 2,000 miles of laterals have been built. The stor- age capacity of its reservoir system is more than. 650,000 - until ty No . Utahs scih are the deepest and richest in the United ; Iar diy 600-000- . i Ban Francisco Woman Hadn't Been The body of David H. Hedenberg, e A Well who home- - of' hl3 c!s'e-Mr- s. Fire Years J. A. .Woods at Newport BeiclC California. March 3rd, after a- - proIt's the honest truth, ' I : hadnt longed Illness extending or er a' numseen day In twenty-fir- e years ber of years, was brought to this city r MONDAY and TUESDAY Auto Supply Company, . K Many motorists are not aware that cord tires require special Inner tubes, but such, la the case, because - ' ordinary tubes are made for fabric tire and are unable to withstand the greater friction exerted by cord tires. The softer a tire Is run, the hotter It gets, due to friction between' the layers of fabrie and friction between the Inner tube and the casing. The construction of cord tires overcomes this friction in the casing but It twen the Inner tube and the casing. Because ot the lower air pressure used in cord tires, tubes in cord tires are doing virtually soft tire duty all the time. Ordinary Inner tubes cannot stand this. Their thin side walls are stretched still thinner to fill the 20 percent bigger air space in cord tires. That is why they wear, become porous jand blow out so much sooner in cordtires. This new tube handled by Durrant Apto Supply Company was designed especially to remedy this condition. It Is 50 percent thicker than the ordinary inner tube, lta walls being laminated rubber made of nine-plinstead ot six. It is made ot rubber so free from Adulteration that clippings from It will float on water. It Is so toughened by special treatments that one cannot break. a .hand of It the width of a wedding ring. This great strength prevents those destructive tears orten found in y blow-out- s. ' This new and different inner tube will glre local cord tire users a remarkable freedom from tire troubles and will treble the life of the tube, according to a statement mads today by the local deaier, Mr. J. H. Durrant. , . Matinee Daily 4 p, m. Evening. 7:30 - S;t5 roesnis ... in |