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Show V-- THE SAUNA SUN, SALINA UTAH DYSPEPSIA IS NOW THING OF THE PAST &DOY& SCOUTS (Conducted by National Council of the Boy Scouta of America.) FURNISH ROOM IN HOSPITAL 6t. Louis Citizen Eats Anything on the Table and Has Gained 8everal Pound In Weight Gives Tanlae Full Credit. George Stewart, Professor of Agronomy, Utah Agricultural College Beets ought not to be allowed' to suffer for water. Most of the beet troubles that caused so much damage By Famous The other medicines I tried before didn't even budge my troubles, but three bottles of Tanlae have fixed me n Up in fine shape, said H. Mohr, citizen living at 112 S. Fourth 6L, St. Louis, Mo. Two years ago my stomach went wrong and my appetite failed me. Gas formed from what little I would eat and pressed on my heart until it palpitated so I could hardly breathe. I wasnt able to do regular work, because of pains In the back, bad headaches and dizzy spells. But I have gained several pounds . fcow since taking Tanlae and eat Just anything I want without any trouble The pains and headaches never bother me any more, and I am only too glad to pass the good word along about Tanlae. It Is simply wonderfuL" . Tanlae Is sold by all good druggists. last year resulted either directly or Indirectly from lack of soil moisture about this time of year. The diseases such as seedling sickness and dampingw'hich reduced the stand so -off much with the blights and rots that wrought sudli havoc later in the season were caused by fungi. Unless or- ganisms are present diseases cannot; result Nevertheless, lack of moia-- j ture retards growth and weakens the beets, thereby making them highlyj susceptablie to disease. Studies by the Utah Experiment Station showed that in field after field during last season the diseases took hold only where the beets had been previously weakened by scarcity o( moisture. Loose seedbeds permit high Must Know Before We Order. evaporation and nre therefore unfarJ In tills respect as well as, orable. Ready-madlawns that come In many others fall plowing is advan-- , strips are now. being manufactured. tageous. Alfalfa sod or grass sod, But what wed like to know Is, can we have to be worked thoroughly or too send them back to the factory to be mowed? Boston Transcript. rapid evaporation takes place. Anything that retains moisture Important to Motharabottle favorable. Intertillage prevents loe of Examine every from the deeper soil but early in the CASTORLA, carefully that famous old remedy season beet roots are too short to de for Infants and children, and see that it rice much advantage from this treatBears the ment. Once the top soil becomes dry, of about the only thing that can he done Signature Over 30 Years. Use In for is to Irrigate. If heavy losses are Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria be avoided, water must be applied once. Unfortunately there is a curNo war was ever started by Intelrent Idea among beet growers that 1 ligence. water he withheld for a time th beet develops deeper root3. There Is Truth is always the strongest arno evidence whatever to support thta gument. Idea. Besides, the beets are mud) weakened and succumb to the first Never be In too big a hurry to be unfavorable condition that develops careful whether hot wind, blowing sand, in sect, or disease. One enjoys baby talk only when Tine first irrigation should be , baby does it plied soon enough to tide over the per. lod between the drying of the soil, Guilt fears Its own shadow. surface and the time when water tq ordinarily applied. Irrigation on sofls that are dry on top can scarcely coma too early. The application need not be heavy Just enough to connect with FAIL the moisture In the deeper soil. Some growers feel that It is suffL cient to irrigate only alternate fur Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Comrows. Tlds may be satisfactory in pound Often Does That Read soils that soak easily but in clays that Mrs. Miners Testimony resist the taking in of water, every row must bo irrigated. On slopes I was under the .Churubusco, N. Y. steej) enough for water to run rapidly doctors care for over five years for backache and had no sonking must be allowed. It Is usualrelief from his medly wise to use small streams in each icine. One day a furrow In order to avoid washing. told me neighbor Shallow furrows permit more rapidi, about your Vegetable Compound and I wetting of the surface where the took it. It helped me beets are. Just enough depth to InsoTflUCh fhat I wish sure the furrows carrying the water to advise without flooding is best. to try Lydia E. Pink-haLong distance between Vegetable is to be avoided as this wastes wa Compound for female troubles anl ter, as well as saturating the upper backache. It is a end of the field before the lower en great help in carrying a child, as I have Is sufficiently w'et to help the beets,1 noticed a difference when I didnt take Rapid and uniform distribution of it I thank you for this medicine and if water is much encouraged by short! I ever come to this point again I do not want to be without the Vegetable Comruns, from I give you permission to publish The Utah Expeiiment Station tliere pound. this letter so that all women can taka fore, urges farmers not to delay this my advice. Mrs. Fred Miner. Box first Irrigation of beets. Results all 102, Churubusco, N. Y. Its the same story over Logan point unmistakably to the de Women suffer from ailments foragain. years. of and th early irrigation sirublllty try doctors and different mediuse of short runs. Both time and They cines, but feel no better. Finally they beets may thus be saved. take Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound and you can see its value in case of Mrs. Miner. the MEASURE PROVEP FLY CONTROL Thats the truth of the matter. If you GIVEN are suffering from any of the troubles well-know- Boy scouts ot Terre Ilaute, Iud., liave provided the furnishings for a room in tlie new Uuion hospital of thut city. The Terre Ilaute Star in an editorial commenting on this good turn makes the following statement: The gift of the scouts is particularly appropriate since it represents an effort on the part of the various troops to enlarge their work. It lias meant a sacrifice on the part of the boys. To some it was merely refraining from contemplated pleasure in recreation to devote the time in earning money for the troop's contribution. Other boys have engaged in various enterprises to raise troop funds. They have adhered strictly to scout traditions and asked no contributions of the public for their funds. The gift means more to the hospital than the amount of money proIt has vided to furnish the room. brought the boys into intimate relationship with the humanitarian enterprise and their interest is such work will continue. They will realize the good their contribution has done and will be ready to give their efforts to other worthy causes. The gift is an encouragement to the directors of the hospital. It proves a larger public interest In the welfare work. It is an Inspiration and suggestion to other organizations that are inclined to assist in supporting helpful movements." Building Intertwined With History e i 1 ent time, but the delightful ancient state house), and the charming State All three are house of Annapolis. lessons in good taste, In positive beauty. And the Philadelphia structure Is the finest of the three. . . . The State .house is a beautiful building, alike in its mass effects and In its smallest details, In the views of It from the exterior or in rooms within.' Its facade Is exactly centered, and similarly winged and arcaded at right and left. It is beautiful and it is TROPHY FOR BOY SCOUTS MMmm 7 Ml! s$iU ri Automobile Club of Southern is offering a trophy to the boy scout troop, under the Pasadena council, which turns in the largest number of articles gleaned from the streets, which might be dangerous to tires. During the first six weeks of this campaign the scouts had turned in 81,849 pieces of glass, tin, wire, nails, bolts and so forth. The California A HISTORIC SCOUT HANDBOOK One of the many interesting stories related at the National Council meeting at Chicago, is the tale of the boj scout handbook told by Doctor Elson, of the University of Wisconsin. The doctor was stationed at one of the largest reconstruction hospitals and listened to the confidences of many wounded doughboys. In the course of a conversation, two of them told him how they "snitched" a boy scout handbook which they found on board ship on their way overseas because its contents appealed to them. Do you know, Doc," said one of them, we took that book ail through France? We carried It with us into the trenches. We had it with us always and we got more out of it than we ever got out of any other book. The doctor asked to see the cherished volume and the boy fished it up from under his pillow. It was muddy, thumb marked, dogeared, blood stained a disreputable looking affair, but like the wounded lad who loved it, it had done its bit. j Countrys A building of serenity and symmetry, of fine amplitude, a gracious, alluring building, rich in noble memories, yet touched also with a living sweetness; such is the beautiful old State house in Philadelphia, often referred to as Independence hall. And It stood here, and was even then a building of age and dignity, when Sir Walter Scott said to Washington Irving, with a tolerant condescension which he meant to be flattering, The vast nboriginal trees that have sheltered the Indians before the Intrusion of the white man, nre the monuments and antiquities of your country! Scott was quite ignorant of the fact that America had architecture ; to him, our country had merely trees, although this building, find some other American buildings, were richer In heaiAy and in noble association than quit a number of those in his own land of which he wrote with such en- thusiasm. Scott was deeply impressed by the thought of our illimitable forests. He longed to see one, as Dickens longed to see an American prairie. And had Scott come over here, and hqd he seen not only a forest but this State house, his imagination would have been fired, and he might hive written a great novel about America, rich in details of the Revolutionary leaders, with tlve picturesque John Hancock, in scarlet coat and cocked hat with black cockade, entering this building to preside at the signing of the Declaration. . . . Beautiful In Many Ways. The State house, Lleendence nail," was planned in 1729 and completed, except as to wing and tower, five years later; quite old enough, one I ?ees, to satisfy even a Walter Scott is that it not be must But it thought beautiful or interesting principally on account of age. Age adds to a beautiful building the salt and savor of time, the romantic patina, literal or metaphorical, that comes with the decades. But this State house is beautiful in Itself; It was beautiful when it was young and new; it will remain beautiful as long as it stands, with its traditions growing more interesting with time. After all, Philadelphia was the largest and richest Colonial city of Great Britain, and so it was natural that a fine administrative structure should be built here. And it was put up In the same period which saw the construction of two other admirable state houses, that of Boston (not the stately pillared building of the pres balanced. Viewed From the Outside. Seen from Independence square, which is a large open space, stone paved, with Intervening surfaces of trees, it is a towgrass and fair-size- d d ered building of brick, with white window stones, with smallish pillared doorway beneath a tower built outside the lines of the main building, and, over this doorway, a Above splendid Ialladian window. are cornicings, and a fetching, bulgd window, and above ing, tills is a clock-towesquare at the dimibottom and rising in eight-side- d d narrow pinnacle nutions to a which is topped by a trident-lik- e weathervane of gilt. Enter beneath the triple Palladian window, with its heavy muntins, and passing by the foot of the finest stairs in America, you enter a broad and brick-pavecentral hall ; and there comes the sense of a glory of white, with touches of mahogany and darkish green. The rooms are serenely beautiful; they nre dignified, large and light; there nre pillars and pilasters, there are charming cornices, there are panels; in every direction one sees beautiful corners or vistas or entrance-ways- . The views through the arches of the room of the Supreme court, into and across the Hall of the Signing, defined by those three pilastered arches, is astonishingly effective. At the foot of the wonderful stairs now stands the Liberty bell, upon which may still be read the Bible verse which long before the Revolution was cast upon it by its makers: "Proclaim liberty throughout all the land, upon all the inhabitants thereof." Problem Before People. There is abundant room for improvement, but the point is that improvement consists for the most part In adherence to the original plan, or at most in slight changes or modifications, such as have been made from time to time not all of which, by the The way, have proved to lie wise. problem is one of applying sound and well-trieprinciples to life, removing obstacles to the efficient working of tested machinery, and realizing in thought and act the noblest Ideals. From this point of view, the attitude of Americans should be appreciative and grateful, rather than critical. To turn for light from America to Russia is very like turning from Christianity to voodooism. To judge America or time-mellowe- bow-fronte- r, six-side- d d Americanism by the worst features of our national life, or by our failures. Is much as It would be to Judge Christianity by the lives of those who, professing a belief in It, have been traitors to It. There Is much to alarm and dishearten, but there is also much to cheer and give hope, and abundant reason and ground for faith. So we of all people ought to be able to "greet the unseen with a cheer." We are facing not the twilight with Its shadows, but the glories of the dawn. Therefore, the American Is, as well he may be, the most hopeful of the sons of men. Many Lovely Vistas. The stair mounts, ramp by ramp, within the great tower; a broad stair with broad treads and low risers ; and qji the second floor, as on the first, there are everywhere long and lovely And on the secvistas of distinction. ond floor is a great banqueting haJJ, entered through a delicately beVr flowered doorway topped by a beautiful fanlight, occupying the entire length of the building; and at each end of the great room is a broad fireplace, with the intent that the two shall flicker at each other with fineness of effect. A tung of especial distinction Is given to the admirable Chestnut street face of the State house by the unusually high keystones, of marble, which center the brick above each of the ample windows and rise into a band of dark gray marble that extends across the entire one hundred and seven feet of the buildings front; and by a line, above this band, of nine panels of marble, beneath the windows of the second floor. The quoins on the comers, and the fine wooden and balustrade, add still cornice further distinction ; nnd in all It Is a noble and distinguished building, rich in noble and distingushed memories. Robert Shnckleton in The Book of ... Philadelphia. Not a Meaningless Document It is the fashion among some today to belittle the Declaration of Independence as a meaningless document, as a mere gesture which those who framed and signed it did not Intend to be followed with deeds. Nothing is more false. Nor Is it true that in the essentials the evolution of the United States has departed from the ideal that was in that paper given expression. Those who signed the Declaration knew perfectly well that they could not create a nation by a mere stroke of the pen nnd were aware of the tremendous difficulties ahead, not merely those of liberation, but those of construction and organization. They knew that they were but taking the first step and that in the long Journey there would be depnrtures from the straight path. SCOUTS INVITE PRESIDENT 3 ! SUCCEEDS WHERE DOCTORS Iiead-ditc- well-prepar- hs bead-ditche- s. by Utah Agricultural College Soak a piece of bread about one and inch square nnd Inch thick in a little milk; then plaoaj the bread in a saucer and add a tea Bjioonful of ordinary formalin. Add suf ficlent wnter to raise the level of tbq liquid in the saucer until it nlmostj reaches the upper surface of the bread Sprinkle over the bread and liquid Material one-hal- f Furnished one-quart- er spoonful of sugar. This saucer should be placed on a window sill in the evening nnd th blinds drawn before all the window except the one before which the sauced Is placed ; this shade should be drawn two-thirof the way down. Early tlie following morning tlw houseflies will go to the w indow that is partially lighted and partake of the liquid the saucer. Within ten minute aft a fly lias taken the least sip of thsj Tills method liquid lie will lie killed. cannot be considered In the least to tlie children in tlie house as the taste is very repulsive to human tieings. If taken into the mouth of the child vomiting occurs but no serious illness. Poison fly papers and poisoned liquids commonly sold upon the market should lie avoided, us many cases are reported each year of children being dangerously id, or even losing their fives, through gaining access to some of these articles. If sticky fly papers nre usod, they should not lie placed where clothing, curtains, etc., can pocsihIy come in contact with their surfaces. It is far better to pin the fly paper on tiie outside of the screens and catch the flies as they seek entrance to the house, than to lijnlt one's self to destroying only those that have already gained admission. Women Made Young Bright eyes, a clear skin and a body full of youth and health may be yours if you will keep your system in order by regularly taking GOLD MEDAL ds Arco boy scouts having learned that President Harding might pass through Idaho in July, on his way to the Na- tional Editorial association meeting at Missoula, Montana, extended an invitation to their Honorary Chief to stop over and visit, under .their guidance, tiie weird Crater of the Moon" which is considered one of the natural wonThese same ders of the country. are promoting enterprising youngsters an active local tree planting campaign under the direction of the University of Idaho. One hundred silver maples are to be planted by the scotils at once. SMALL SCOUT GOOD dan-gero- TURNS Here nre a few of the long list of anonymously good turns reported from Milwaukee scouts during Boy Scout week last April : Worked an hour helping a man pet his ntito out of the mud." Helped my mother with her spring housecleaning. Stopped boys from teasing dog. Peddled a boy, friends paper routa while he was sicki" "Picked a broken milk bottle oat of the road. W Crowd Listening to the Late Senator Knox Deliver Independence Day Address, at Independence Hall, Last Year. The worlds standard remedy for Iddney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles, tb enemies of life and look. In uee sine. 1696. All druggists, three sizes. Look for the name Gold Medal en every box end accept no imitation Girls! Girls!! Clear Your Skin With Cuticura Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c, Talcum 25c. COCKROACHES Waterbugs ANTS Easily killed by using the genuine Paste Stearns' Electric H to rats and mica. Thnse Alim g V It E HEAT grea ust camera o t duease. They posts aro thef'voJ and piuprrty. lsinT butb HEADY FeR USE BETTER THAN TRAPS tu 16 lansuaii'-- in eenr Sox. Dirwlii-n8 01. si i&c. lj bU' U 61 MONEY EACH IF IT FAILS |