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Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA UTAH Sure Relief m ii in n n mi FREEDOM FROM LAXATIVES FOR INDIGESTION D lee every by if A Scientists Hee Replaced Pills and salts give temporary relief from constipation only at the expense of permanent Injury, says an eminent medical authority. Science has found a newer, bettor way a means as simple as Nature itself. In perfect health a natural lubrlcani keeps the food wuste soft and moving. Hut when constipation exists this natural lubricant is not sulikfent. Medical authorities have found that the gentle lubricating action of Nnjol most closely resembles that of Natures own lubricant. As Nujol Is not a laxative It cannot gripe. It is in no sense a lurdidne. And like pure water It la harmless and pleasant. Nujol Is prescribed by physicians; used in leading hospitals. Get a bottle from your druggist today. Bcll-an- s water Hot Sure Relief 75 1 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE AND 25$ RESCUED Kidney, liver, bladder and uric add troubles are most dangerous because of their insidious attacks. Heed the first warning they giye that they need attention by taking Latin an Aid to Business. Persons who wish to become LATH FLOP'S pro- ficient In bu tineas English should study Latin, according to I r. J. Iuncan Spaeth, professor of English at Princeton university, because the study of Latin gives the necessary training in the fundamental laws ef syntax and grammatical structure. It also serves as an introduction to word structure Doctor Spaeth ami word derivation. believes that a business man slieud have a knowledge of from 130 to BOO Lntia words and their derivatives as the basis foi good business English. The worlds standaid remedy for these disorders, will often ward off these diseases and strengthen the body against furthcrattacks. Threisizcs.alldruggista. Look for tb nom. Cold Medal on every boa end accept no Imitation SWAMP-ROO- FOR T in Agriculture. The state agricultural experiment stations are studying 1,770 rpecific rubious relating to the agricultural Industry of the country. I.roadly grouped, there are 1 ,1)00 projects de.ib ing with agronomy subjects, Including field crops, soils .ml fertilizers, or about one third of the total ; botanical and horticultural problems are under Investigation; animal industry bubjoils, including dairying and dairy products, comprise about of the total, leaving three-eight- s of tiie jwojects for all other ihlects. Mississippi Valley Maga-- zine. There is only one medicine that really stands out at a medicine fer curable nimumta ef the kidaeys, liver end bladder. IT. Kilmer's Swamp Root stands M Iddieot for the reason that tt has proven to b just the roinedjr seeded m theuaands oases. opon thousands of distressing Swamp-Ueo- makes t friends quickly its mild gad immediate effect is soon realized in most eases. It is a gentle, healing compound. Sold at all once. dm? stores ia bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if yon wish first to test tbia great preparation send tan cents to Dr. Kdmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing ba sure and vegetable Start treatment at mention tins paper. Advertisement. Cutlcura for Pimply Faces. pimples tind blackheads smear them with Callcura Ontment Wash oft In flvo minutes vvllh Cutl-eur- a Soap and hot j liter. Once clear keep your skhi clear by using them for daily tniht purposes. Dont fail to InTalcum. Advei tlsuneuL clude Cuti-u- ra His Appellation. old aoul asked the seven To remove A kindly children of nil acquaintance to tea. The youngsters ages rangtsl from throe ye.ua to fuuitecn. As they stienmed Into her drawing room, her brain reeled, and their Christian names fulled her. Life Man Leads. And which one are you, denr?" she Nipp Do you believe men uro de- a shod a solemn hoy of seven, helpscended from animals wny buck? lessly. Tudk -- Not so sure nhout that, but Mo?" said he, importantly. Im lots of us scorn to have a dogs life the one with the spectacle." hero, nil right. I'ilMmrgh Gazette-Times-. It takes a horn diplomat to appear to lie interested In other peoples trouGet a Bookkeeper. bles. He- How long luivc you been enDo you mean bow or More nieu die of Idleness Umn of gaged?" She before ?" hard work. - v, 1 a .kvt. Contents 15Flu! 1 if rivi'H ;Mvti For Infante and Children. j s!l y? Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria - VsJfl ri j ALCCaOL-- 3 rEK Cf&f . '?'UrimilaUnoEby-- j Alway3 Bears tho : ; tin (1 them tenuclA arid t TherctyftaaoW Signaturo neither Onium, of 1 ChcctitacssanKeACadJ, MineraLNoT NahCQT A"1". , fn pZZLza ' i Use f'vcV-.- c; LOSSOFEEf I ; For Over H f reAftoreffonLSir Thirty Years irIis;4Lof Exact Copy of Wrapper. THK q 'uMpru'""""1 i VASi.lLZ.iVS iW--'. UwnoypiDanarutf FtopliirViM"? niK vt Restores Color am) - sO Bo. eod -. A - C ' Its Pcwti-ta- Hk T IVmowt iVcnfi, Ck.U stor ei I ensurm coralurl to 1 Bifikts ki lot; rcv. 1 ty mu I or at lrair Lisuxt.twiu4eet Werka.1 aSUevfftieeiw X. . at tfc.l M4(.1It bwrM.lwre It ftw (o(s shuv.Sonhow 6tli .lino(ortiuickly. hvtXiSlr, Honey uml w. I unpuu-ll'-li- ovri-- t tuirtdr. Imiaedlatel. N. U NIW VK CUTY. Uuditess lltiuiun ctuelty. usecliuci j HlHDERCOftNS ektv. Mk 'jur eCNTAVR COMPAMV. n; HAIR BALSAM V. Whil. t. O.., L.auHIU, Salt Lake City, No. S1-1- a2. WU. Talkative men talaers. bp great SI self-ent- er Mormn Eyles IxeepYour Clean - Clear Healthy Vnn for fro QUESTION l C Car Borit NialM Ca.(Mgw over and yawp list old Alphabetical Here I can get s canIs visionary. ning factory and nobody sets the goods; I bustle up a woolje factory, and the community qr'8 wearing trousers ; I build for lm a streetcar line to haul them to and from their palatial residences, and wliat s do the sun baked human do but all jump off the log Into the water and hide from them cars like thf'y were chariots of fire? Yvhat this town needs is not factories, nor railroads, nor modern improvements Old Alphabeti.nl can get them but the next great scheme I go Into is to go down the river, get some good red mud, and make a few thousand men who will build up a town." It lias been fifteen jears and over snce Coloni Morrison put on his long coat and high hat and started for the money maikets of the East, seeking whom he might devour. At the close of tho eighties the Colonel and all his tribe found that the stock of enstem capitalists who were ready to pay good prices for the fine shimmering blue sky and bracing ozone of the West was running low. It was said in town that the Colonel had come to the end of his string, for not only were the d mrs of capital dosed to him In the East, but newcomers had stopped looking for farms at home. There was nothing to do but to sit s with other down and swap land agents, and as they had taken most of the agencies for the best insurance (Otnpunles while the Colonel was on dress parade, there was nothing left for him to do hut to run for Justice of the peace, and, being elected, do what he could to make his tenure for life. Though he was elected, more out of gratitude for wliat he had tried to do for the town than because people thought he would make a fair judge, he got no further than his office in popular esteem. He did not seem to wear well with the people in the daily run and jostle of life. During the forty years he has been In our town, he has lived most of the time apart from the people transacting his business in the East, or locating strangers on new lands. lie has not been one of us, and there were stories afloat that his shrewdness had sometimes caused him to thrust a toe over the dead-lin- e In the of exact honesty. town he never helped us to fight tor mud-turtle- 1 WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE . ........ . riiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiinmiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiic 5 Copynaht, 1922, by tha Hacimhaa Co. JlOlUtlSON had throe COLONEL so the town naturally Mr-lisoAlphabetical and dropped the Colonel. lie came to our part of the country In an early day he used to explain that they caught him In the trees, when he was drinking creek water, eating sheep-sorre- l and running wild with a buffalo tail for a trolley, and that the first thing they did, after teaching him to eat out of a plate, was to set him at work In the grading gang that was laying out the Cottonwood and Walnut rivers and putting the lime-ston- e In the hills. lie was one of the original five patriots who laid out the Corn Helt railroad from the Mississippi to the 1acific, and was appointed one of that committee to take the matter to New Yoik for the Inspection of eapitulNts, and be It said to the credit of Alphabetical Mortison that he was the only person In the crowd with money enough to pay the ferryman when he reached the Missouri river, though he had only enough to get himself across. Hut In spite of that the road was built, and though It missed our town, it was because we didnt vote the bonds, though old Alphabetical went through the county, roaring In the seliool-bousebellowing at the crossroads, and doing all that a good, honest pair of lungs could do for the cause. However, he was not dismayed at his failure, snd began Immediately to organize a company to build another road. We finally secured a railroad, though It was only a bianeh. Over his ofilce door he hnd a sign Land Office painted on the false board front of the building In letters as big as a cow, and the first our newspaper knew of him was twenty years ago, when he brought In an order for some stationery for the Commercial club. At that time we hnd not heard that the town supported a Commercial club nor had anyone else heard of It, for that matter for old Alphabetical was the president, and his bookkeeper, with the Miss dropped off her name, was secretary. Hut he had a wonderfully and alluring letterhead printed, seemed to get results, for he made a living vvli'le his competitors starved. Later, when he found time, he organized a real Commercial club, and had himself elected president of it. lie used to call meetings of the club to discuss things, but ns no one enred much for his monologues on the fu- -' ture ef the town, the attendance was often light. He Issued circulars referring to our village as the Queen City of the Prairies," and on the circulars was a map, show-lathat the Queen City of the Prairies was the tallroad axis of the West." There was one road running Into the town; the others old Alphabetical Indicated wllli dotted lines, and explained they were In process of construction. lie became possessed of a theory that a canning factory would pay In the Queen City of the Prairies, and the first step he took toward building It was to Invest In a high hat, a long coat and white vest, and a pair of mouse colored trousers. With these and his theory he went East and returned with a contract. The canning factory went up, hut the railroad rates went wrong, and the factory was never opened. Alphabetical 'blinked at It through his glasses for a few weeks, rnd then organized a company to turn It Into a woolen mill. lie elected himself president of that company and used to bring around to our paper notices of directors meetings, and while he was in the ofilce he would Insist that we devoted too much space to idle gossip and not enough to the commercial and Industrial Interests of the Queen City. At times he would bring In an that he had written himself, highly excitable and full 'of cyclonic language, and If we printed tt Alphabetical would buy a hundred copies of the pnper eon'amlng It and send them east. IPs office desk gradually filled with woodcuts and zinc etchings of buildings that never existed save In his dear old head, and about twice a year dm Ing the boom days he would bring them around and have a circular printed on which were the pictures showing the Imaginary public business buildings and theoretical thoroughfares of the Queen Citv. The woolen mill naturally didn't pny. and he persuaded some eastern capitalists to Install an electric plant In the building Rnd put a street-ea- r line In the town, though the longest distance from one s'de of the place to the other was less than ten blocks. But Alphabetical was enthusiastic about It. and had the governor come down to drive the first spike. It was and Alphabetical pulled It In up and used It for a paper-weighis office for many years. Rnd It Is' now the only reminder there Is In town of the street railway, except a hard ridge of earth over the ties In the middle of Main street. When someone twitted him on the failure of the street railway he made answer: Of course It fniled ; here I go pawing up the earth, milking out the surplus capital of the effete East, and building up this town and what hap-- i rens Four thousand old Silurian fos-- I alls comb the moss on the north side j c em, with mussel shell, and turn gold-rimme- d edl-torl- MJ ;K 1 s, KIDNEY AILMENTS Problems n n n mi n n n OF CLIMATE Them, C 1 1 1 1 gold-plate- t 1 jack-knive- ef hoard building at the end ?he street But every day for Uie past been com'ng to our ,pn rears he has of old newspaoffice for his bundle (1 reads carefully. he pers. These him sometimes what he reads inspires on to write something for our paper though tte future of the Queen City, retrosare articles his much oftener Is the president of the He pective. cr Settlers society, and once ,1,1 an in obituary he brings a year twice of which he' has written for the family some would One would think that an Idler on hut, a in busy place, nuisance a he Alphaold we all like the contrary, For he Is betical around our office. sour. not has who grown an old mnn been His smooth, fat face has not wrinkled by the vinegar of failure, hts and the noise that came from subsidIs old In the days lungs jnsty But he has never forgiven Gen-eiiDurham, of the Statesman, for savins of a fight between Alphahetcal and another land agent back in the sivties that those who heard It pronounced It the most vocal engagement That is why they had ever known. he 'brines his obituaries to us; that boris why he does us the honor of Is rowing papers from us; and that to likes he dull a on nfvmoon. whv, swlvel-clml- r ait In the old sway-bacIncrease of his the us tell theory nnd in the rn'nfall, his notion about the Infieenoe of trees upon the hot winds, of hip opinion of the disnppearance whv is that Also, the grasshoppers. we alwavs save a circus ticket for old Alphabetical, Just ns we save one for il ing. k each of the bojs In the office. One dry he oame Into the office In humor. lie picked up a country had a paper, glanced It over, threw it down, kicked from under his feet a dog that had followed a subscriber Into the room, and slammed his hat Into the waste-bask- with considerable feel- ing as he picked up a New York paper. Well well, what's the mntler with the judiciary this morning?" someone asked the old mnn. lie did not reply at once, but turned his paper over nnd over, apparently looking for something to Interest him. Gradually the revolutions of his paper became slower and slower, and finally he stopped turning the paper and began reading. It was tea rr srf ttv mdcfrs' zm tegEgse zZm;--- ' The Stability of Dairying By Geo. B. Caine, Prof, of Dairying, U. A. t The past two years hava affortsg splendid opjiortualty for tho farmur of tho country to se wliat plumes of production are the most profitable aa substantiil. When one stops to eon. sider the demand and price of all tho farm yields the Dairy Cow and her products stand far above them all. One of the list examples of tho of dairy farming was shown in the Salt R ver alley ia Arizona Th war made such a demand on cotton crops that the people of the valley wl already had a'fa'fa fields nnd predated cotton. With the end of the war ame the end of the high prices for this crop. The people have the cotton on their hands and in most cases are unable to pay the eoet of producing tho crop. As a result of this Coditlon the banks nnd business men ef the community ins giving financial support nnd urgng the farmers to go hack Into tho dairy business, knowing that they will surely pay their bfils if they have some good dairy cows to eat op the feed nnd market fckelr crops at home. Another good example of ehowimg the va'v.e of Da by Covrs and product is found in comparing the deposits la hanks of dairy sections with those in communities are Mount Yernon, Wash Idaho; Lichfield, Ingten; Nampa, Darrel, Cokato, and Grove Cit7, Minnesota. Tho towns around which fruit, grain, sugar beets, nnd potatoes were grown are Kamas, Washington ; Rexburg and Miiiad, Idaho; Moore-ltoa- d, Trncy, and Marshall, Minnesota, The deposits are as follows: Per Cup ta Deposits ?1,2S8 78 Iniry Towns $17,335,I4 478.09 Grain ect Towns This large per capita deposit is made possible due t the regn'ar monthly allowance provided by the sales of milk, cream, or butter. iSome of the men engaged in dairying at the present time seem to think hat they are being badly treated due o seemingly low prices in butter frL Careful ohserv ation shows that the dairymen hold an enviable position in -- sta-bilit- y the fanning operation during re adjustment periods Brices for the finished products such as Butter, Cheese, and Condensed Milk have had a derided set back the last year thru decreasing the price of butter fat to thfl The farmers cost of proproducer duction is lowered enough this year compared with last year so that his margn is greater and more sot stnn-tiaWe cannot ride almg on the peak of prices for any length of time nnd keep In proper adjustment. Most of our common dairy feed stuffs have decreased 50 per cent or more while the prh-oof butter fiat lias only decreased about 42 per cent. Tha dairy cow is the most economical producer of all farm an'muls, her product is the most essential of all iuman fool she gives marketable returns tomorrow for what she eats today; slje leaves on the farm, eloiuente that make sail more productive because she has been there, she is the great home and farm builder. l. s Rural Sanitation J. E. Greaves, Professor of Bao terbdegy nnd Physiologic.. I Chorale-try- , Utah Agricultural Collage By It Is quite generally believed that giod he iltlt is favorably the accompaniment of rural life. Do we not find in tlia country district the nrch'ns who seem to be bubbling over with life and whose and worksh'ps are the field and tho fore-49They live in homes quite isolated and they have an abundance of fresh air and sunshine. Their s of the fresh fruits, txid and a llieral supply of r'lk which 1ms beea praduced on t&a farm nnd lienee has net had to ru the gnnnt'et of infect'on ns does the nty milk. The vigorous ok arc Iso in the open air is conluove to goud health, vad do not we often hour it stated that "X'he populntmn of the city must be r from the ountry every fourth or ffth generation. Such ar the ordinary beliefs, but what are the roey-cheefc- Hs Likes to Sit In the Old Swayback Swivel Chair and Tetl Us Hie Theory of the Increase in the Rainfall." those tilings ef which the town is really proud: our schools, the college, the municipal ownership of electric the public lights and waterworks, library, the abolition of the saloon, and all of the dozen small matters of public interest in which good citizens tike a pride. Colonel Morrison was living his grand life, in his tailor-madclothes, while his townsmen were out with their coats off making our town the substantial place It is. So In his latter days he is old Alphabetical Morrison, a man apart from us We like him well enough, and so long as he enres to tie justice of the pence no one will object, for that Is tils due. But, someway, there Is no talk of making him county clerk; and there Is a reason In everj body's mind why no party names him to run for county treasurer. He has been trjing hard enough for ti n .'ears to break through the crust cf the common Interests that he has so long ignored. One sees him at public meetings a rather oking, chubby-face- d old man on the edge of the crowd, ready to be called out for a speech. But no one culls his name; no one cares particularly what old Alphabetical has to say. Long ago he said all that he can say to our neonle. The only thing that Alphabetical ever organized that paid was a family. Iu the early days he managed to get a home dear of indebtedness and was shrewd enough to keep It out of nil of Ills transactions. Tow headed Morrisons filled the 8choolhoue, and twenty jears later there were so many of Ills girls teaching school that the school hoard had to make a ruling limit ng the number of teachers from one family In the city school, in order to force the young Morrison girls to go to the country to teach. In these days the glyls keep the house going and Alphabetical is a notary public and a Justice of the peace, which keeps his office going in the little e wistful-lo- minutes before he spoke. put down the paper Ills cl erubic face was beaming, and lie said: Oh I know Im a fool, but I wish the Lord had sent me to live in a town large enough so that every dirty-face- d brat on the street wouldnt feel he had a right to coll me Alphaheil-cal- ! Dammit, I've done the best I could! I havent mode any alarming success. I know it. There's no need of rubbing It In on me. He was silent, for a time with his hands nn Ids knees and his head thrown hack, Almost imlooking at tl.e ceiling. perceptibly a smile began to crack his features, nnd. when lie turned his c.ves to the mnn at the desk, they were darning with merriment, as lie said; Just been rending a piece here In the Sun nhout the inllueine of climate on human endeavor. It says that in northern latitudes there Is more oxygen in the air and folks breathe faster, and their blood flows faster, and that keeps their liver goTrouble with me has always ing. been climate shurgWh liver. If i t.a Just a little more oxvgen floating round in my system, the woolen mill would still he running, the street cars would be going, nnd this town would have had forty thousand Inhabitants. My fatal mistake was one of latitude. But and he drawled out the word but I guess if the Lord mockingly hnd wanted me to make a town here lie would have given me a dCerent kind of liver!" lie slapped his knees as he sighed: This Is a funny world, nnd the more yon see of It the It gets." The old man grinned com placently at the ceding for n minute and before getting ont of his clmii kicked his shoe-heel- s together merrily. wiped his glasses as he rose, put Ids bundle of papers under Ida nrin and left tho office whistling an old old fashioned tune. or fifteen When he ed play-grmin- vega-'j.ble- s, facts? In the face of all these natural advantages recent surveys made In number of cities and rural districts d.sclcse the fact that premature, preventable donths are more nnmerou In the country than ia the city. That typhoid, dysentnry, and other intestinal d senses are the dangers of the The country an not of the city. smoldering embers ef cur cinmtt-ic-thl- e dsense3 which at times are Canned lat- - real epidemics exist in the ootmry t a greater extent than in the city. Tultercnloss, tb.it d sense which ts cvirubie by fresh air, sunshine, and a nourishing diet, exists ia some country district to a greater exteat than it does In the city. f Why this difference? The law sanitvtioa, which when applied to Panama have transformed it from The white mans grave to one of the nr 'st healthful spots on earth, are forced in the city but negiarted in the country. The city has Its spectaEsi who see to it that the milk and water are not polluted. There ere laws covering the cons ruction of houses, cess, poos, nnd sowers. Garbage must be properly disposed of, nnd cases of casts 1 nuiieable es must be quarcuu tinod until they are not a danger he the community. |