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Show f ' J V I asBaa anMaaaaMaMMaaaaaaaaaaBasaaaiaasBsi" MBaa-"- ii NEW STRENGTH FOR BAD BACKS. Those an M . SOME PROMINENT SPEAKERS RESEARCH OF THE HOUSE DRY FARM who suffer with backache, bauHted I scarcely dress. Much secretions terribly annoy Inn end my feet be- came so swollen I coma nui wfur my snoes. Notning helped me until I began using Doan's Kidney Pills. They gave me prompt relief and In a short time I was entirely cured." Remember the name Dean's. For sale by druggists and general torekeepers everywhere. Price 60a Fnster-MllburCo, Buffalo, N. Y. n EASY. 1 Money Appropriated for Investigation in 1911. ShoftiHow Interest In "New Thought" NeAgriculture Has Advanced braska Leads All States With f 100,000 for School. could The kidney were Dry-lnn- aiV""J"t (wo How does Jessie to Sue mauuge win vo many guessing contests? Joe Her father Is la charge of the local weather bureau, and she gets him to predict the result of the contest, and then she guesses the other way. Serenity. "The true religious man, amid all the ills of time, keeps a serene fore-heu- d and entertains a peaceful heart. This, going out and coming In amid All the trials of the city, the agony of the plague, the horrors of the thirsty tyrants, the fierce democracy abroad, the fiercer 111 at home the still saint, the sage of Athens,-wathe same. Such a one can endure hardness; can stand alone and be a rock amid the waves-lon- ely, but not moved.' Around him the few or many may scream, calum1! niate, blaspheme. What is all to him ' ! but the cawing of the seabird about s that solitary, ii Theodore Parker. atone?" deep-roote- d The Fly. "Where on earth do those flies come from?" la a frequent and question. They may come down the chimneys, If the fireplaces have tipping dampers. These should be tightly An appreciable closed In in their number will result falling-ofIf the chimneys have not the tipping damper, a screen such as Is used for a window can be fitted Into the fireplace; or, eaaler still, a bundle of paper may be stuffed up the chimf ney. Kither method Is successful, and no trouble Is too great to get rid of these summer pests. , Vacation Scheme. ""I have gotten a great deal of pleasure from anticipating the trip." "More pleasure, possibly, than you'll get from the trip Itself." "That's what I think. So I've decided to stay at home and save the . money." J '1 He who fights and runs away doesn't always have to buy a return ticket. I AT THE PARSONAGE. t Coffee Runa Riot No Longer. "Wife and I had a serious time of it t while we were coffee drinkers, jj "She bad gastritis, headaches, belch-in- g and would nave periods of sick- iu kh, while I secured a daily headache became chronic. i without avail, for it Is now nlaln enough that no drug will cure the dls- - eases another drug (coffee) sets up, as the drug (which causes the trouble Is continued. i "Finally we thought we would try leavirig off coffee and using Postum. I " noticed that my headaches disappeared like magic, and my old 'trembly' nervousness left. One day wife said, 'Do i you know my gastritis has gone?' "One can hardly realise what rost' rum has done for us. to to we talk others. "Then began j vWife's father and mother were both Their coffee drinkers and sufferers. 'headaches left entirely a short time ) after they changed from coffee to 1 Postum. ) "I began to enquire among my parishioners and found to my astonish-Intethat numbers of them use Post-SuIn place of coffee. Many of the ('ministers who have visited our par- nonage have become enthusiastic cham-- ! pions of Postum." Name given by i Postum Co., Rattle Creek, Mich. t. Read the little book, "The Road tr Wel!ville,"lnpkgs, "There's a reason. read tht above letter r A time. The apprnra from time to (rue, and full of buma arnulnr, tr I' la (treat. I particularly, so long If . , nt m I) 1 !. 4 Kr . i . FALLOW AS AN AID Is Thorough Enough to Be Treat Land While Idle Will Able to Sscurt Annual Croi. Who am not an advocate of umroel In regions fallowing for wheat except of very scant rainfall In most years and In moBt wheat growing sections a the rainfall Is sufficient to) produce Is propgood yield when the ground bo Is thorerly hundled. Tbe man u good sumconduct ough enough to mer fallow will give bis soil proper preparation for annual cropping, says a writer In the Kansas Farmer. There are exceptional seasons when the rainfall Is Insufficient to grow a crop of wheat. The land can bo thoroughly prepared early and If at seeding time conditions makj It Inadvisable to sow, seeding can be put off and the land can He fallow for tbe season. Land that bas become very weedy, seeded with mixed varieties, or where the volunteer crop becomes seriously detrimental, may be summer fallowed to advantage. In some states, where the average annual rainfall Is ten Inches or less, tbe rainfall of a single year is sela dom sufficient to produce even There the small yield of wheat farmers sow wheat once In two years, giving the land thorough tillage during tbe fallow year. This results In a yield of 20 to 40 bunhels of wheal In alternate years, making tbe cash returns In each alternate year much more than twice as great as In many sections of good rainfall, where wheat is sown annually. Alternate crop ping and fallowing collects all tb moisture that can be saved from two years' rainfall, greatly Increasing tb available plant food la tie soil and doubling the efficiency of this mole I one-tent- w d h Bay Good$ with i RepuUtiJ from a Home with RepuuiJ We sell Oneida Silver, III, jTl Alarmn. Simmons t:hnin. vvfi.r" and Kljfln Watches and all '5 advertlwd brands of goX?" 11 our antl-bellu- - e d sub-statio- d d n fee VV..I- .- lino, Before, sending your boy away to a boarding school, investigati ALL HALLOWS COLLEGE ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Free en ApptUitl, CataUgue Rev. J. J. Oulnan, Prailatnt Cash Reserve $1,350,7865 Whro s tUtrment wti ImI ctIM (or brU 27 this bnk hid rniuM rrUry of (tato-Ju- ly lily more thin twice i much cib rmn,t to the proportion Hn, deponlti rftqiifrod by to ihow th ein in4 u Ii merHf in lion with which thi Innt'tutinn'i mmuron M hiuilH. Tnli biuk hai UcilltiM nr lirgtma. fnirclil lecounw. It eitendi eonj w lronii to tha prraon who w(bri tuopa, SI. with account laving! WALKER BROTHERS BANKERS, Lika Cit, Bank hre by Mill. It. Ini.-ld- lf tilt WANTED MEN OUR B. A T. TRUSS TO TRY 8. At TrtiMoi, RhouMir Kricei, Abdnmlntl Elaiitlo Herniary. The kind that pleu,. porti-M- , Wl Fit guarantee! or money refunded. UiU orfa given prompt Attention. REX DRUG CO. Cor. Third 80. and Cut Rate Druoiit, Wet Temple. Salt Lake On positive mi ra. mi ii aMANENT CURE r m FOI 135B Thm riraif), Drunkenness lid Opiium Diseaset a Mttdtr, a 334 W. Uhm aWkawa, trmW kn. THE Stk TmvU Sin. Salt Ukt 0 b tW K RELET Careful Kodak , Finiakiaj Prompt, ikllful. Mill your tim oi. Freiih Films, Packs and tutvm ol all kind. W rite for itifnmutiak Bog THE JOHMSON - CO. Salt Lake City, CIS S63. lalnii Hjllumir. in wen Dy jmi. . Vice-Preside- i uhat SUMMER Dry farming, the "New Thought" In agriculture, received more attention from legislators and more money was In appropriated for Investigations 191M1 than ever before. This demonDry strates how tbe International was organwhich congress, Fanning ized Ave years ago, and which meets st Colorado Springs In October next, has advanced Its propaganda. States that a few years ago never hoped to have agriculture now are organizing farming commissions and establishing experimental stations In some of the states having dry land, that Is where farming must be done with less than 20 Inches of rain fall In the growing season, the legislatures did not meet This was true of Arizona and New Mexico, which were Thomas B. Reed. Champ Clark. statehood. Dry Farming, expecting Cannon. 0. Joseph the official magazine of tbe congress, Charles F. Crisp. Gen. J. Warren Keif sr. ' bas gathered tbe following Information: talents such as his, of Tbe United States congress made A CHANCE FOR GRAFT Commanding course, brought In big fees, and he the following appropriations for 1911 was soon In easy circumstances. Rut and 1912: not a penny of the estate Inherited toil. wil In- HAVE by his belrs when he died a few Pry Innrt agricultural ANY COULD SPEAKER "0.000 $31,730 I vrntlgatlnnw months ago came out of the public Crop ptiymolony Invratiwt- MADE BIO MONEY. or . from box ... . of a the strong treasury n vii V j ti 17.000 SO.000 problem .'. congressional lobby. AikMii ana arnueni remn ant plant liretdlng (live- Why Thomas Urackett Reed quit 17.B06 , 18.140 llinllnna ture. Place Where Cash Might Follow Nod congress and the speakership at tbe train inveallga-nui- U.0UO 21.000 While this plan has teen frequently very height of his brilliant career Is of a Head But Most of Our M advocated for much of tbe winter and well known to all readers of newspa Retired Have IS4.230 $13,140 Speakers Total He wheat a bad and his pers. spring territory, I believe that family family Poor. California appropriated $15,000 to better results are obtained here by were seeing him grow old under con ditions that would not permit bim to be devoted to fundamental work In proper handling of tbe ground under Champ Clark has come forward as a methods of grain an annual cropping system. I do not defender of the civic virtue of his save anything for them or for himself. tbe Improvement of A firm of New York lawyers offered production and gluten qualities of believe summer fallowing is necesbrothers In office. land farm- sary In anything but an abnormal to This wheat to him dry a applies $100,000 year. This guarantee Mr. Clark, has rebut the money cannot be applied year in any section where tbe anwas of he what ing, could have occacently taken work. t nual rainfall is above 15 inches. sion to repudiate commanded ' from the lobby, but he re- to demonstration farm Colorado's appropriated and to removed legislature signed Manhattan, Idea the popular of agriculto fttttt m that all public men where, so perverse Is fate, be died be $8,000for the state board but BENEFITS OF DRY FARMING fore he was able to accomplish bis ture farming experiments, dry To are HlllVlVhill) corrupt tbe governor cut down the sum to prove his conten- purpose. Charles F. Crisp of .Georgia sue $3,500 before signing the bill. The Methods Rapidly Galnlny In Popular tions he cited the ity in Regions Where It Is Imposbe able to continue tbe small worldly es- ceeded and preceded Mr. Reed In the board will sible to Irrigate. staWells work at He sense had chair. begun Cheyenne enough tates of many tor-ne-r speaker's not but to will undertake out tion, of ex anything after the keep politics speakers ofthe piration of his brief tenure Dry farming Is erainlne around ran-by virtue new. A careful bouse. because where it Is impossible Idly, an make to failed of a election until be accumu Oregon appropriinvestigation of the lated special to irrigate, dry farming methods must taken have counties a but tbe up ation, . competence. personal history of David n. Henderson, who came be experimental station work. Harney be followed In order to conserve moisnil the speakers from the fore Cannon, also quit congress, and county has set aside $1,500 for such a ture. period down to the present seems to For sranll grains I double disk the like Carlisle and Reed, to station and Crook county is about to prove fairly conclusively that Speaker removed, land immediately after harvest, says n same. New do the his sole and York, only object ('lark Is by no means without good The sum of $10,000 waa appropriat- writer in the Orange Judd Farmer. material on which to base bis claims being tbe rehabilitation of his for ed his but health failed and he tunes, by the state of Nevada to con If rain comes between tbe time the that they did not grow rich in office. went back tinue Iowa to die. to tbe experimental station work I around la disked and nlownd. it la Indeed there are many facts avail In Elko county. Tbe law reorganized well to harrow to maintain a dust When one considers that all these able all going to Indicate that the vast state board of control, placing the mulch. After this the ground la the men In could have earned life private majority of the speakers at least have In charge of two practical farm- - plowed and the use of tbe subsoil work refrained most abstemiously from cor- many times the amount drawn from era of tbe county and an agricultural surface packer Is practiced. In some furand Is the when It government, ruption and to their everlasting credit cases grain fields are simply disked ther considered that there Is always college teacher. be It said they have done It In circumas soon as tbe crop la cut and then Kansas for an $970,000 alert at the to appropriated lobby capltol ready stances that makes even honesty a adopt the weaklings and fatten them agricultural school purposes, of which left undisturbed until the next spring, special virtue. with pelf, the foregoing record Is one the dry farming portion may be said either In May or June, when' It is Any one who possesses even a su citizen has to be as follows: Kansas station. plowed about eight Inches deep. It perficial knowledge of the Ins and outs of, which every American to' plow old, $44,500 for the blennlum; branch at may not be necessary of Washington official life cannot but reason to be proud. ' land to this depth. where the 3,500-acror dry farm Is of The the British Hays, house speaker be aware that no other man In public I do not believe In the disk of which $27,500 Is to plow. ;ife Is In so good a position to feather commons receives 125,000 a year and located. $46,300, This be first Implement has been tested In the house year. spent live to when a, moreover, In; 41s own nest as Is the speaker of the Nebraska did best of all, setting some localities and does not seem to be lays down his gavel he ta elevated bouse. aside $100,000 to establish a school of have given the .. satisfaction that the to a receives the pension. peerageand his head he could make . By nodding His reward, compared with the reward agriculture In the western part of the old style moldboard renders. After the every session worth a cool million to himself and the public at large would of a Crisp or a Carlisle or a Thomas state and $15,000 to establish a sub field Is stirred I generally disk twice. station In the western part of the Sometimes one disking, Is all that Is be none the wiser. And yet our speak- Brackett Reed, la Indeed great state, contingent upon the location of necessary. My general practice Is to ers have almost Invariably quit office the college. For maintenance and Im- disk once before plowing and once poor. Half a century ago Galusha A. already lo- after. The surface Is worked careGrow of Pennsylvania presided dur- SENATOR WARREN A BENEDICT provements at sums cated were set fully five or alx times with the harthe following ing the first two years of Civil war. when there was something of a riot of Takes a Bride In the Person of Mlsi aside: At North Platte, $30,000; Val row before seeding. entine. $16,000; Scott's Bluff, $5,000. Potatoes, alfalfa, winter and spring Clara Le Baron Mop- - ' graft In many departments of the govA bill waa adopted In Utah provid rye, Bugar beets and barley are all ernment, 'but be laid down the gavel gan. ing an annual appropriation of $5,000 grown successfully, according to dry with clean hands. His successor, Schuyler .Colfax of Indiana was unFrancis E. .Warren, United States for dry farming Investigations. It Is farming mewods. Tbe agitation about, fortunate In some of his associations, senator from Wyoming, was married to be continuous. Also an annual ap tbe conservation of soli wter:-o- r the becoming mixed up, after his election recently In New York to Miss Clara propriation of $10,000 was made for application of dry farming principles,' to 'the with the Credit Le Daron Morgan, of Groton, Conn., extension work by which tbe results nas orougnt about a great change In of dry farming are to be carried to farming. In fact, dry farming and Mobeller scandal. Impartial students whose uncle Is Justice of history, however, concede that Col- Brown, of the United States Supreme tbe farmers. This was done by unani good farming are synonymous with mous vote. us. fax was a guileless Instrument In' the There was no direct legislation In bands of cunning men. An able statesWashington for dry farming, but the man Is not necessarily a ahrewd busiA Green-FooRack. board of regenta of the State Agricul ness man; Indeed some of the ablest A skillful device for furnishing tural college set aside $5,000 from the green feed to have made ducks and drakes of their poultry consists of a maintenance fund for such own affairs Daniel Webster, for inframe made several Inches high and stance. Colfax died covered with netting. Oats, or any a board of preferred crop Wyoming established poor. may be sowed and the farm commissioners who are to direct rack with After Colfax came Blaine. If bis ponetting placed over it when or dry of suitable size and the experiments In sition as presiding officer of the house fowls then or lands. The sum rarmlng $5,000 was turned loose. afforded certain opportunities he was seem to delight They appropriated for the work, of which In walking about on the tain to grasp them without going technetting and $2,000 Is for the salary of a director nically against the statute. snipping off the green blades within of experiments. Also the sum of reach. After Maine came as speaker MiYet, they cannot get at the $8,000 was appropriated for the ex- roots to scratch chael C. Kerr of Indiana, who died and stations located near a chance to renew the plants have perimental tfter serving a few months. Kerr had their growth thus Cheyenne and New Castle. aved nothing and bis salary for the pruned off. and the fowls are continull year, voted to bis family, was most ually Mdlng fertilizing material. For . Allowing Lettuce to Head Up. acceptable. poultry kept on close range as a Lettuce is at Us best when the means of Samuel J. Randall, tolerant of others furnishing food the plan Is snd sympathetic with the weakness of plants form- head, as does cabbage, certainly commendable. was all of sternest thU to do the and humanity, they must have room. Tbe most satisfactory way to get a ludges when self was at the bar, and Training Young Trees. no dollar ever passed his Angers that fine head la to scatter a few of the Training the young orchard Is had not been honestly acquired. seeds of a good variety broadcast. more needful than pruning, and then when the little plants have put nhould consist A million .dollars would have been in shaping the mostly out their second or third leaf trans- - trees or paid to keep William R. Morrison off keeping them In form anr" them a with he ways and means committee. Ranlittle plant earth at- properly balanced. Very often the tacbed to tbe roots In a bed, setting side dall made him chairman. Continuousopposite the direction from mem until time of 1858 In office the from aooui incnes ly eigni apart each which the prevailing winds come behis death, almost, Samuel J. Randall way. come, heavier than the side court. Miss toward Morgan spent a part ol The Job Is best lone during a snell the wind and iccumulated no large estate. the of Kelfer served a each year with her uncle In Washing- of wet weather, though It can be done the brnnohPB nnn removal of some Gen. J. Warren h..ji m or oth ton and It was there that her friend- in tbe evening, and tbe '""4'n5 single term as speaker and then temnowly get ers becomes necessary. plants given a good watering. Let- porarily retired from congress so that ship with Senator Warren began. Warren Is 67 Senator years of age tuce Is a succulent plant, and requires 1e might lay up something for old age. Pruning the Tomato Plants and has been In the upper branch of abundant motBture during the growSaving acquired a competency he Go over the tomato 21 He patch occasion-allIn years. served to the bouse, of which be is. congress the ing period. and prune the plants to remove civil war and now wears a congresnow a member. , sum us ernwth h . Oldest Churn In Country. John 0. Carlisle, speaker for six sional medal of honor for gallantry Train bearing. the plants to one stem ... A citizen in Sheffield , Mm, . ears, United States senator and sec- In battle. Of his two children by his uu,, vwiib with small symmetrical lattorals. retary of the treasury, removed to first wife, one Ja the wife of Rrlg. the oldest churn in the country. It was s'ew York after quitting the cabinet Gen. John J. Pershing, now stationed made during the war of 1812 for tbe Mice In Orcharda. 'n the Philippines. Mrs. Warren Is a purpose of churning gonfa milk on n order that he might recoup his ebat-ereIt want tn . you " was al young and charming lady who fortunes. Mr. Carlisle imp uuuru. 11 uus two amau barrels mice and Insectsnli. two crop of hi In v that behind wood a f in until. will little which popularity her great during vays just plungers are oper-e- d iei me weeds nm! ild age he resumed his law practice. journ In the national capital. by a ort of walking beam. trass lie thick"oca, on the ground. i 1 . Man headache, dizziness and that constant. dull, tired feeling will And comfort In 'the advice of Mrs. C. S. Tyler, Cando, N. Dak., who says; "My back became sore and terribly la mo. I was tired and restless and would arise so ex 1 " .l I....... ncnoor til fear. n rite ior miorniaiion to c.v.uitii, ma. 17AIITE0 MEN AND WOll to EN Um Birher Trade in feifht W wkt. Tuition, with t of 100b tSk. With partial let of looli, S4S. With your on tool! KU. Add real Molar Barker Clle u voninerciai Direei. Bait Ullf . una. lae KODAKS JBfffiS" Mall orriri flven ipeciil ittrntioa. Complete itock of Photo buppllet, MlMa-Park- f HarJwtn Ck Serrice prompt. Halt Lake City The Editor's Drawer. Mayor Speer of Denver was talking about a bill of which he disapproved. "Why. a bill like: that,"- - he said, would soon put the city In the con dition of the Cinnaminson Scimitar. "Tbe foreman said to the one day: proprietor , "'We need a drawer, boss, to put these blocks in.' '"We haven't got a drawer that's net in use, said the Then he paused and added, 'except the cash drawer. You might as well take that" 'Chicago Inter Ocean. . editor-proprieto- Staving It Off. The street piano waa out our war the other night and our neighbor didn't like It "Here's a nickel" he" shouted to tbs grlnder,'if. you'll go away at' once." "Beg der someboda wat ees seeckr asked the grinder. "Not yet," answered our netghbo- r"hurry!" Cleveland Plain Dealer. next-doo- r Overworked. "You want something to eat?" asked the woman with the gingham apron l at the back door, of tbe man. "Yes, ma'am," was the reply. "But you look pretty healthy to begging. Haven't you any trader "Oh, yes, ma'am: I'm a trade, but I've worn myself out working at It" "What is your trade, pray?' seedy-lookln- "I'm a ma'am!" , - y daw Golf and Kisses. "SaaHhnra rrlf DMUUUI nMim amniintS t " " fw,l II. said Chandler Egan, the much,", golf chamnlon nn th Whealnn Hn"SeaBhore golf always sngRests to m the dialogue between Jack and Jill- - "'Oh, Jack. dear, don't! whisper1 Jill. 'The carldln will ana lift.' "'XO. ho ann't cat. I Innlf 'III too busy looking for the ball, and V In my pocket.'" . A Cure. Judge Whv dlii vmi steal tleman'g purse?" Prisoner I thought the would do me good. the g"- - cbang Star. Washington n Eye to the Future. j Wife Whv 1lrt vm Tf.fime to g1 that man the rooms? . Husband u 1 nnlfArl Bit I was afralfi r aimuiii suitim08 "P courage to raise his rent later Fllegende Blatter, - . r.ur The Test. "Ho you see that nice looking over there? I That's my favorite m14 V thor." "What have you read of his." . w"1 "Nothing. Rut I dancod twice Mm Inst night. Fllegende Watte'- |