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Show Wood "U II WASHINGTON RES DENTS HOPE FOR A M O I HER TRIAL. Fine Groceries according to an authority on the Few people realize how subject. little fertility is nee led to produce forest growths, but the fact that Cole Banking Company, Prof. Langley's "Burrard," Now In the Smithtcn.an Institution at the Capital May Prove the Wished- Fcr Success. Corinne, Utah. That we are receiving fresh from the best markets when 200 pounds of wood is burned less than 1 per cent will remain in o ' of our choice line of o Every Week D and sell at D Live-and-Let-Li- ve prices. Men's and Boys' Furnishings, riais, anoes, uioves, lic. y P. LE 1 1 one-fift- D per cent, or one pound out of "00. All the rest of the substance came out of the air or out of the water in the ground. This will explain the mystery of trees growing out of small crevices 1 J Jensen, on the sides of mountains, At J. C. Gates'a old stand, MAIN STREET, TREMONTON. I Sid To All Our Subscribers. A crev-- ! turies a few pounds of dust have The Great been blown into the crevice, and this has been added to by minute particles of disintegrated rock pried from the solid rock bv the rains and O y LIQUOR A BIG OFFER ice is formed in a lodge on the In the course of cenmountain. o i American Farmer Indianapolis, Indiana frost. There were but a few pounds plant fool in this collec-- ; tion of dust and sand, but a pine cone fell into it. The rain nourish- - j of mineral G. A. Woodward, Proprietor, CORINNE, UTAH. Wc keep the Choicest Wines, Liquors, Tobacco and Cigars. j ed it and the seed shot out into a seedling. The free air supplied the carbon and several other elements, and the tree went on growing. Be For the Next Thirty Days We Offer Our Subscribers Two Papers For the Price of One. ing a pine tree it required an ex- ceedingly small amount of mineral plant food. EH! EEED and SALE SUB will-wage- In the years it developed a trunk twenty inches in diameter at the base and having Good Rigs and Careful Drivers furnished at any time a height of eighty feet. It had a at reasonable rates. Will Buy, Sell or Exchange Driving or magnificient spread of branches Work Horses. All stock guaranteed as represented. Your and was the wonder of observers, who could not reach it, but viewed W. T. HUDSON. Proprietor. patronage solicited. it only from a distance. Its total of and branches had trunk weight But of reached 10,000 pounds. Utah's Big Popular Priced Daily, Toe that entire weight there were Us-thacourse of many gives all the news. INTER-MOUNTAI- Subscribe for the PINEULES Church Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Aftehsoon FOR ALL KIDNEY BLADDER RHEUMATISM usu-all- BACKACHE By Tremont Mercantile Co. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Skkvichs All services the Methodist church. Ht on arc invited. Baptist. MOKXIKG $BR ICRS : 1!:00 Sunday School A M Prayer Meeting Wednesday night at H. L. TUCKER, Contract r and Builder, TREMONTON, UTAH. Plsns Furnished and Estimates Made on sll kind of work. Your patronage jolitiied. B. C. mH"J DrsiGNB rnvnif.,iis A r I i.0p.in. '2:'M p. in !,rr'ncliin!r ;:n. PINEULE MEDICINE CO. CHICAGO. U. 5. A, For Sale l lit H:O0 p. m. y at bed time relieves the most aevere case before morning. A dose RA DC Anyone nendlug asloloti and dcsrrlptloii mT HilrklT ascertain our opinion free whether u rnranuofi If probably Mtantabt, Communim. tlontstrtrtlf conndmit.ll. HANDBOOK on PUcnu eiit fre. Oldest tMDef for securing pstenu. t'ssent tben through Munn k Co. recelrs pttial nulUt, without charge, tn the CALL, Lawyer, County Attorney. Practices in all the Courts. ( irricE CounT House, Brigham, Utah, P. O. Box 972. fioth Phonei. S. F. CHRISTENSEN Scientific American, Scientific Optician tindeomelr llttlstratfd weekly. I.sniest of uny eeltntlflo VurnKl. Terms. S3 a ear: fourniontbi.fi. Bold byall newsdealer. MUNN & Co.36,8rodwar New York Branth Offlie, 621 K HU Washington. 11. l EYES TESTED FREE With L.C. Christensen and Sons it v , I'tah rlrisrham A . NEBEKER, HART S NEBEKER Lawyers Suite TRADE-MARK- ui muoui S who im. pronipCty "buuuj obtln.d In rminra THAT PAY, adverii u.m Uiorougiuj, kl qui :.ns. and bslp you te euoewss. Sand svi... pLoto or sketch for FREE report SO co potaatahlllty. years' pnnfcs SUM or frsa Cruld. PASSING REFERENCESBook on Profitable Patante nte to S03-S0- S Seventh Street, P. O. WASHINGTON, rjornmercial Block I.ogan Li all. 5 and fi P.O. Phone 70 BROTHERHOOD OF These under the workmanship of the sun and the wind had produced a magnificent giant able to hold , auainst all blasts that roared around the mountain. SF.nvicEs. Evening pounds of potash, less a than pound of phosphoric acid, about fifteen pounds of lime and a it. How long It will be before the trial little over a pound of magnesia. is actually made is a question. However the machine Is Ptill there, and in The air had contributed the rest the principal thing lacking 1b some one the form of carbon or of the ele-- ! with the nerve and money to rlr.k the ments that go to make up water. Initial trip. his own Preaching every Sunday unday School AND LUMBAGO hdSH Directory. Methodist. 30 DAYS TREATMENT FOR $1.00 TROUBLE, ' REPUBLICAN, Salt Lake City, Utah. N AMERICAN Hox M VOEMA This fact shows how easily our waste places may be clothed with forests if time be given for the de- It needs only protec- velopment. tion from fire to make some of our barren mountain tops shaggy with forests. It explains why it is pos-- t sible for great forests to exist on tops of almost bare mountains. France long ago began to take advantage of this fact and clothed Hull. 'I rcmontoa. P, llu-n- s Correspondent j j labor-savin- Speaker in Jovial Mood. Speaker Cannon returned to Washington with a face of such blazing hue as to excite wonder among hie friends So small is the amount of soil re- This Is the result of constant exposure to the aim In tropical waters. "Yes. quired for some trees and so small my face is red." ho acknowledged, the amount of fertilizer that it "but It's because of my youth and been plowing the would seem very easy to start trees good health. I've haven't had a pain Spanish main and on any barren mountain top. A since 1 left here that Is, except K., and he doesn't count." bushel of soil and a few cunts worth Screuo Advice for "Uncle Joe." of chemical fertilizer produce the A postal card addressed "Cncle Joo, basis of a future tree. Crevices Care Uncle Sam. Washington. D. C." The can be found or made in which the arrived In the capital recently. sent post office authorities promptly roots of the trees can obtain their it to Speaker Cannon. The writer, a citizen of Columbu O., urged the support. speaker to "give us fewer battleships In France the government sent and railroad wrecks, smaller salaries and mileage bills, briefer congreshion men onto the mountains to do this al records, more jxistal routes and jWHtage. very work. They placed soil in one-cen- crevices where it did not already exist, and in some cases they built minute dams across the crevices to prevent sudden rains from washing the soil away. -- Southwest BUILDING LOTii. Two good build lug lots for sale cheap fenced snd some II. U. Hart Eon ma a, rets on them 50 by ISO feet each. Call at Ui'n oft) : t r p ir'.ic ilar. W. II Cap wall, TlmM on sc. Fewer Vlsltora in Washington. The cutting off of free passes hag made a difference In tne number of Th hotl visitors Ul Washington. keepers note this. Millions for Carrying Mail. The government this year will pay to railroads JTO.OOO.OOO for carrying the malls. This la a Upure. Secretary CortelyouTrea-sur-a Hard Worker, Cortelyoa Secretary of the orkn more hours a day than ny mem her of the cjr'net y Wk-e- See particulars in another column. THE TREMONT TIMES, Tremonton, Utah Do You Use a Phone? If not, you are missing one of the necessities of modem life. LET US SHOW YOU. BEAR RIVER TELEPHONE COMPANY, Utah. JOHN S0MMER, Manager, Tremonton, O. S. L. TIME TABLE. MALA I) VALLEY BRANCH. DEPART ARRIVE NO :ia. No. No. 32. 81 a No e. 84. ft. t record-breakin- I K I Resourceful Capital Newsboy. "Verily, this is the era of roller reskates in the uational capita!,'' and the marked an old resident, whirr of tho wheels in In the air. Al though I am not In it myself for physical reasons, I take pleasure in the evident enjoyment of those who are. The saying that there are queer things on skates is true. The other day I saw an enterprising newsboy He put hla skates to a novel use. had a big bundle of papers to .serve to customers at a distance from the too office. The bundle was really heavy for him to carry without great exertion. To meet that difficulty and save carfare he had In some ingenious uiRnner fastened it to a pair oT skates and waa rolling It along the smooth pavements at a good pace. It was a device sure enough, and showed that the youngster wa3 capable of putting to practical use articles usually employed only for her mountains with forests of trees requiring little plant food, but able to produce fuel for the people. Hear Kiver Valley Homestead No VM meets the 2nd and 4th Saturday evening of each month at 9 p. m., in the Fraternal The American Farmer Both One Year for $1.50. five It Is mailed every morning for 50c a month in advance. The Tremont Times and Main Street, Tremonton. INTERMOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, Personal Responsibility, $50,000. Paid up Capital $10,000. great deal of Interest has Icon Accounts ami OorrespouuYuee Solicited. aroused uot only In Washington but all over the country by the announce All business with us will receive prompt and ment lhata C M Mauley, the eueln cer who did the mechanical designing careful attention. of "The Buzzard." the late Prof. Interest paid on time deposits. Langley's great airship, la expecting to give the machine another trial. S. N. C'OLK, E. M WYATT, At a meeting of the American Academy of Sciences last December then, Cashier. President. was a paper read by Alexander Ora ham Mel! on his wuik up In Nova li Scotiu with the tctrahedra) kite, was a genercl contribution to the subject of aerial locomotion, :;s well. Mr. Mauley was present at tho meeting, and in the discussion that followed Dr. Hell's paper he i;ald it was the general belief that tho aerial experiments of the Smithsonian instil ut ion had been dropped This, he r.rtid, was not correct; that they had been mere ly Etispcr.dod: and he hoped l:i thf not very distant future to take on the big airship and give It another trial. The situation with the big airship In the Smithsonian is rathe:- complicated. The war department has some rights in it. bavin;: furnished the officers and had the supervision of some of the expenditures connected with it. The machine is the property of the Smithsonian Institution in point of possesThe Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation, sion, and from the fact that it was made by Prof. Langiey, the former Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. secretary. The government, not being much In touch with the subject of aerial navigation, has little faith in the machine, it is stated, and it is regard ed as a certainly that there will not be another dollar appropriated for experiments. The scientific world, on the other hand. Is almost wholly convinced that the machine is all right, and If it were ;i snorting proposition the scientists reliably would be of five to three lug to make a that the ship i odd fly the next trial, Mr. Manlev, as slated, Is the en gineer who built the airship. When the subject of a lightweight engine was under discussion Prof. Langiey went personally to the most expert engine builders in this country and in Europe Rnd tried to get an engine built on the general lines he had laid down. None of them would undertake the contract, and the result was that Mr. Manley. then a young man In Prof. Langloy's employ, did the work himself, and produced a We make this offer to all new subscribers, and all old engine at considerably less than five pound? weight ones who pay all arrears and renew within thirty days. per horsepower Manley stipulated but one thing, and that he should have the honor of navigating the machfue on her first trial. This was granted him, but the attempt was a failure, and now he wants to take another try at A t le form of ash, shows that per cent is all that came out of the earth. There are cases where the of h proportion of ash is but j Also a large stock of 1 IN AIRSHIP Wood draws by far the greater part of its material from the air, We Invite Inspection I b 0 EUFVE Comes From Air. A. M. 9:55 10:10 10 22 10:87 10:31 10:87 10:52 :20 6 2S 6:8 0:38 :44 114S 12:01 7:.X8 11.82 11:84 Hrlrham 8:10 8:48 8:56 7:07 7:10 7 20 1120 A P. M. H.'M 100p.m. Tic mixed train CorlOM Waukegan Evans Honita Central TREMONTON Garland Riverside FleMlnp Plytnetita Washakie Mulal on ttite Branch w daily except Sunday M 9 40 9:80 9:07 9:0J 8:56 8:50 8:45 8:40 8:23 8:21 H.15 7.52 7:18 P V 4:65 4 So 4:18 4.05 8:58 8:00 8:25 255 252 845 2 I 25 |