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Show THE SUNFLOWER AND Discovery Made That Plant Yield Splendid Febrifuge. a An eminent Spanish professor has made the discovery that the sunflow er yields a splendid febrifuge that can he used as a substitute for quinine. More than ten years ago Moncorvo reported to the Therapeutical society of Paris with reference to the same subject. Accordingly the sunflower should not only by Its growing exert great effect, but also yield a product which Is used advantageously In all fevers. The common sunflower Is an Amerhome Is Its original ican plant. stated by eminent botanists to be Peru and Mexico. The Russian peasantry seem to be convinced that the plant possesses properties against fever, and fever patients sleep upon a bed made of sunflower leaves and also cover themselves with them. This use has recently induced a Russian physician to experiment with a coloring matter prepared from sunflower leaves, and It Is stated that he has had good results with the coloring matter and with alcoholic extracts from the flower and leaves. With 100 children from one month to 12 years old he has, In the majority of cases, effected as speedy a cure as otherwise with auinlne. fever-dispellin- Borrowing Trouble QUININE. g Now, ths very worst things that might happen, you know. Are the things that dont happen at all. We fidget and worry, lamenting and sorry, In the grasp of expectancy's thrall. Apprehensive forebodings encumber our souls. Depression weighs down like a pall, So we wear a long fuce will) a very poor grace And then nothing huppen at all. When we prophi-ustorms It Is sure to clear off. When our money's gone, something comes in And the thoughts of those hills which have given us chills, , , Every month shouldn't make us grow thin For they fly down the past like the leaves on the blast. We settle up, somehow,, and why Do ws bother and fret over what we forget Before many days have passed by? W were not carried off by that terrible cough, And In fact, 't wasn't much, come to think All our pains and our aches and our dreadful mistakes. Why, they too have slid over the brink Of the gulf that forgets; yet we still wring our hands. Predicting some ruinous fall. disaster we hall as' our Approaching master And then nothing happens ut all. Elliott Walker, In Spare Moments. NOTICE! jrms-nviL-vrjoHQ- Mount Holly, N. J. Many a mother has saved her child from death. Here la a child who has saved her mother from death death under the grinding wheels of a locomotive tearing along the rails at 60 miles an hour. The child is Katie Johnson; the mother, Mrs. William Johnson. If it hadn't been for little Katie Mrs. Johnson would be iu her grave now and Katie a motherless little schoolgirl. But Katie kept her wits( where another child might have lost ' them. The train was the five o'clock .mall from Philadelphia. It was behind The engineer was trying to time. catch up to his schedule, so he pulled the throttle out to the last notch. He took a chance on the curve near thia city and was about io take the bridge at top speed when he was horrified to see a little girl standing on the tracks, not 200 yards away. She was tearing along toward the train, waving something. It was red. The engineer knew. Stopped Just In Tims. He threw over the throttle and jammed down the brakes the child's signal meant dauger. The heavy train came to a atop with auch a shock that all the passengers were thrown from their seats In the coaches. The pilot of the locomotive wasn't 20 feet from the little girl when the w heels stopped grinding along the rails. What's the matter? cried the engineer, jumping down from hla seat In the cab, followed by his fireman. The passengers piled out, too, curious to know. There In front of them stood a little girl, waving her red muffler still, right In the path of the giant locomotive that would have ground ,lier to plecca had It gone two rods further. Quick, come quick!" she cited, for answer. Then she started to run back over the tracks, followed by the train crew and scores of the passengers. Whes they got to the bridge they knew what the matter was. Woman Caught Between Ties. There on the bridge, which the train would have crossed In live seconds more, they found a woman, badly hurt. She had tried to walk across the bridge and had slipped, falling between the ties. There she was tightly wedged. Her head and ahoulders protruded above the ties. Any locomotive that crossed would have decapitated her Instantly. And she was so tightly stuck In between the ties that had any train passed over, there would have been no chance for escape. It wae Katie's mother, I fell, ahe gasped, while Katie and I were crossing the bridge on the way to town. I was caught fast. Gently the train hands and aome of the passengers pulled Mrs. Johnson o AND GUARDIANSHIP out of her perilous position. Then they PROBATE found that her left leg had been fracNOTICES. tured. She never could have helped Consult County Clerk or the respec- herself; she would have been killed tive signers for further Information. Instantly. In the District Court of the Fourth Katls Not Excited. Judicial District of the State of Utah, The women passengers turned to litsitting In and for Utah County, Pro- tle Katie, who didn't seem to think bate Division. had done anything out of the orIn re estate of George G. Halos, ahe dinary. There ahe was. standing on deccused. Creditors will present claims with tho bridge trying to comfort her mothvouchers to the undersigned at the er, who was suffering Intense pstn law office of A. Saxey, at Spanish from her broken leg. The women covFork, Utah, on or before July 9. 1907. ered her with kisses, which Katie DIAL B. HALES. didn't seem to relish, because she ass Administrator. excited over seeing that somebody A. Saxey, Attorney for Estate. would get a carriage to tako bar mothFirst publication March 7, 1907. er home. to-wi- t: to-wi- t: to-wi-t: - More Proof SCRIPTURE. IN COURTSHIP . jams JOfcs5crr& . The carriage was called and JnJured Mrs. Johnson was taken home, glad that she had suffered only a broken leg. But after they got back to the cars the train hands began to tell stories of old railway men who had forgotten to wave anything red when to do it meant saving lives. Katie is a slight child with flaxen hair, cold steady blue eyes, and clear waxen pink complexion.'7 She has about her an air of one who thinks and acts quickly and with fear'ess . resolution. How Accident Occurred. We all had been to Philadelphia' that day," said Mrs. Johnson. "I Lad with, me a little boy, Herbert Durand, and Katie. When we got back to Mount Holly I was pretty tired and thought I would walk home the shortest way. This led me over the bridge near the station. Thechililren were ahead of me hut a short distance, and were getting over the bridge nicely. We walked on a plunk that runs across the middle of the bridge. I was about half way across, I think, when my foot slipped off this plank and caused me to fall, knocking down little Herbert, and nearly rolling him into the creek. After I bad put him on his feet I started to get up, and In doing so made a misstep that plunged both my feet and then my body between two ties, until only my head and shoulders were above the bridge. "I saved myself from dropping Into the creek below by spreading out my arms when I felt myself going down. Child Thought Quickly. I screamed as I fell and this attracted the attentlou of Katie, who was a little distance ahead of me. She came running buck and taking hold of one arm tried 'to help me up, but I could not lift myself enough to get out. While I was thinking what to do, whether I should drop luto the creek below or try some other means of gettlug loos. I found Katie had left me and started for the atatlou for help. She had gone but a few steps when I heard a whistle, and saw Katie, white as a Bheet. with big tears In her eyes, give one look at me and then turn about and fairly fly across the bridge up the track toward the train that was just visible around a curve. I could not understand what Katie Intended to do to help me, but somehow I had absolute confidence that the child would save my life. Ths Mothers Agony. Hardly had ahe gone off the bridge than she snatched front her neek a red muffler that she wore and waved It frantically at the engineer, at the same time planting herself In the middle of the track, apparently with the belief that If the flag did itot atop the engine she would. When I saw this I looked at the engine for an luatant, and not being able to ace that the train waa slowing down my blood turned hot and cold by turns, and I shut my eyes, determined that I would not move, for I knew that If the engine ran past Katie and her signal It meant that death had come to her, and might Jut aa well come to ms. In that moment I lived over a good many year, before I reallxed that the train had stopped and I was being lifted from danger. I remember thinking of an accident which I saw aevcial years sgo on this very bildge, when an old man was killed there by s fast train. 1 re four-year-ol- fjpoo That Nothing Is 'impossible to Cupid. A If this story had come from Topeka, we should have been more readily Inclined to believe It. because Topekas Is familiarity with ail things Biblical proverbial. But It is a good story, even if it Isnt Its first appearance on earth, and It is told thus by the Jewell County Monitor: A young gentleman at church conceived a most sudden and violent passion for a young lady, In the next pew and felt desirous of entering Into a courtship on the spot, but the place not suiting a formal declaration, the exigency suggested the He politely handed following plan: his fair neighbor a Bible open, with a secpin stuck in the following text, ond epistle of John, verse 5: And now I beseech thee, lady, not as though I wrote a new commandment unto thee, but that which we had from the beginning, that we love one anShe returned It with the folother. lowing, second chapter of Ruth, verse 10: "Then she fell on her face and bowed herself to the ground and said unto him, Why have I found favor In thine eyes that thou shouldst take notice of me, seeing I am a stranger to you? He returned the book pointing to verse 12 of the third epistle of John:, "Having many things to write unto you, but I trust to come unto you and speak face to face. From the above Interview the marriage took place the following week. Kansas Cltv Journal., o with you? Does Coffee disagree Then try Dr. Probably It does! Health CofShoops Health Coffee. EFFECT OF WOMEN VOTING. of fee is a clever combination parched cereals and nuts. Not a grain in Dr. British Writer Tells of Conditions in of real Coffee, remember, New Zealand. Shoops Health Coffe, yet its flavor and taste matches closely old Java New Zealand was the first British and Mocha Coffee. If your stomach, heart, or kidneys cant stand Coffee colony to adopt women's suffrage Coffee. It Is as far buck as 1893," says a writer In drinking, try Health and satisfynourishing, wholesome, the London Chronicle. "The New ing. Rs nice even for the youngest Zealand woman was given universal child. Sold by World Drug Co. adult suffrage. Though she had not osought It, she Immedlatetly used It. Stung Out of 140,000 women 109,000 had What would your father do If He In placed themselves on the register I told him I wanted to marry you? a few months, and 90,000 voted In the Hed refer the matter to me. She general election of November, 1893. He (hopefully) And what would you They voted peacefully and In order do? I'd refer the matter to She during the day while the men were the young man who proposed to me at work, and left the booths to the and was accepted while you were trymen in the evening. They have voted to make uo vour mind. ing with similar regularity and orderlio ness ever since. How do the women Piles are dangerous, but do not use their powers? Very calmly, by submit to an operation until you have all accounts. Roughly, women make first tried Man Zan, the Great Pile very much the same use of the fran- Remedy. It Is put up in collapsible chise as do men. The result has not tubes with a nozzle that allows it to produced either a new heaven or a be applied exactly where it is needed. new hell. Men have not been de- If you have Itching, bleeding or protruding piles and Man Zan does not There has relieve, prived of their rights. refunded. Soothes and been no disorder or unseemly behav- cools. money Relieves at once. Sold by ior no strange revolution In dress or World Drug Co. manners. Enfranchisement has led o neither to divided households nor diInvented Eau de Cologne. vided skirts. Families, aa a mat.The Inventor of eau de cologne was ter of fact, generally vote on the an Italian, Giovanni Farina. Farina same side. But on the other hand, offered vainly to sell hla recipe for there la a general agreement that fam3,750 In 1903, but a few years ago It ily life has become brighter, that huswas sold by his heirs for 8200.000. bands and wives have more subjects o in common to talk about, and that Nurse Maid Poisoned Child. women are really aetting themselves A nurse maid In Irkutsk. Sibera, to study and watch public affairs. poisoned the child given In her care The effects, in fact, have been rath- to get rid of the trouble of watching It er social than political. Women seem lo be treated with more real respect and not merely at election times. There has arisen between the sexes that sense of equality which Is perhaps the only permanent and enduring TKDRSDAY, APRIL 25 social basis. Speaking generally, they have simply become citizens, whose part In public affairs Is not sharply distinguished from that of men. New ...DIG... Zealand women have simply stepped Into equality. And 14 years of polib PRODUCTION lea! life have shown them equal to that equality. Working side by side with man. woman still keeps hei place not like to like, but like In difference. "The word pictures or which colon lets used to have so many given them of domestic discord, of children for gotten, husbands mica red Tor, dinners A Western Melodrama by Hal Roid uncooked, dresa and appearances neg lected have already almost passed from memory. It Is the commonest sight to see husband, wife and grown i anti up children walking or driving cheer ,, fully to Ine polls together. The head of the faintly has become a more Important factor In polities than vt 4 old. 1 " Notice Is hereby given that ' a meeting of the stockholders of the Spanish Fork South Irrigation company will be held at the City Hall In Spanish Fork, Utah county, state of Utah, on Saturday; April 20th, 1907, at 2 oclock p. m.. for the purpose of voting on two amendments to the Articles of Incorporation of said company. The articles to be amended are as follows: Amendment to Article VI of the Articles of Agreement of the Spanish Fork South irrigation company of March, 1906. of Article VI of the Articles Agreement of the Spanish Fork South Irrigation company of March, 1906, to be amended so as to read as follows, ARTICLE VI. The business for which this corporation Is formed Is the location, construction, and (repair of canals, ditches, lateral ditches, dams, reservoirs and all other means of preserving, diversing and conveying the waters of Spanish Fork river onto lands in Spanish Fork, Benjamin and Lake Shore precincts. In Utah county, State of Utah, for the purpose of maIrrigating lands; propelling chinery; for domestic use, and any other useful purpose for which the use of said water could be placed. Also for the purpose of controlling, managing and distributing the water to the persons entitled thereto. Also to make necessary assessments upon the owners of land using water from the several ditches and laterals, and to apportion the amount to be paid according to the several Interest of the parties using ditches, laterals, or otherwise. Amendment to Article XIV of the Articles of Agreement of tho Spanish Fork South Irrigation company of March, 1896. Article XIV of the Articles of Agreement of the Spanish Fork South Irrigation compnny of March, 1896, to be amended so as to read as follows, ARTICLE XIV. The kind and description of property to be conveyed to the corporation as payment as capital Btock, are A primary right as follows, In and to the waters of Spanish Fork river, situate In Spanish Fork, Benjamin and (or) Lake Shore precincts, Utah county, state of Utah, and all the Interest of the undersigned In and to the canal, ditches, laterals, reservoirs, dams, flumes and gatcB, used aa a means of diverting and utilising said waters. Also all the rights of the undersigned In and to the use of such waters for domestic purposes, Irrigation lands, and for propelling machinery, or other useful purpose. Also all rights, easements, and appurtenances thereunto belonging. LARS NIELSON. President Spanish Fork South Irrigation Company. First publication, March 28, 1907. Last publication, April 18, 1907. A 1 The News No Pure Drug Cough Cure Laws- would be needed, If all Cough Cures were like Dr. Shoops Cough Cure Is and haB been for 20 The National Law now reyears. quires that if any poisons enter Into a cough mixture, It must be printed On the label or package. For and others, this reason mothers, should Insist on having Dr. Shoops on Dr. Cough Cure. No poison-mark- s Shoop's labels and none In the medicine, else it must by law be on the label. And it's not only safe, but It Is said to be by those that know it best, a truly remarkable cough remTake no chance, particularly edy. with your children. Insist on having Dr. Shoops Cough Cure. Compare carefully the Dr. Shoop package with others and see. No poison marks there! You can always be on the safe Bide by demanding Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure. Simply refuse to accept any other. Sold by World Drug Co. O membered that his heart' had fallen right near where I was standing, andIt that aa I looked at it I could Bee beat two or three times. The memory of this night came flashing over me as I waited for the train, and I think for a moment I must have fainted. Realized Child Bravery. I did not open my eyes until 1 heard Katie's voice at my side and felt the strong arms of the trainmen lifting me and carrying me to the station. And there 1 wept, I guess hysterically, for I then realized Just how brave the child's act was, for I knew that when Katie started up the track waving the muffler she never intended to get off the track until she had stopped the train. All that Katie would say about her part in averting a tragedy was: You see, the engine bad to stop, for I had You know a red signal. that alwayB stops a train, and waved it at the engineer because I didn't know anything else to I couldn't do to make him stop. lift mother out ana so I just had to atop the train. I don't think there it anything funny In that. No, I wasnt afraid. What should I be afraid of? Didn't I have the red muffler? Dont trains always stop when the man at the flaghouse waves a red flag? Well, then, what should I be afraid of? Thats the kind of a girl Katie is. She knew no fear. She had absolute confidence that the red flag controlled the motion of the wheels of the ponderous Iron horse and made her mothers life perfectly safe. SPANISH FORK Of THE CATTLE RING UNDER GAHVAS '" Hit..' V' T Ths Horse Doctor. Little Mattie flew into the bouse last evening very late for nursery tea. and hurried to her mother's chair. Oh. mother," ahe cried, don't scold me, for Ive had auch a disappointA horse fell down In ment! tbs street and they said they were going to send for a horse doctor, so ot course I had lo slay. And after I waited and waited he came, and oh. mother, what do you think. It was man!" Harper's. only Children Should Eat Fat. Fat Is essential to the proper growth of the tissue of the nerves and brain, and Is peculiarly Important to children, as the brain eulargea rapidly during childhood. Next to butter and cream, bacon Is one of the most palatable forms In which It can b given. It should not b as then too much of the fat la fried out. Botuetlntes bread soaked In bacon fat will be eaten with relish. over-cooks- h xrrzrr 61 No. 65 march, im theh 111 - .stance t 1 Sai Miss NORTH-BOUN- No. a D For Provo. Pl.Orove, ,- 62 a; For No. 66 Provo. -i- f enjof "Nephl A &s. ..H1 Salt, "r.uke sS Petti -I- n ret . way o intermediate No. For Provo, haltpoint LakeiiuH11 intermediate points Palatial trains are now runnln."7 tween Salt Luke and the Pucltle UTAH COUNTY Is in taS great cities Beet local train J. H. Bliim,SK. District N. Pktkkskn. Depot TSStSiT1 the Inti (re hut11 64 .tie and s in tbi S iSewM J Arrival and departure of trains tmB No. 7 For SnrlngvIlle.Provo.Salt tw, Y ' and nil point enKtand No. 29 ForSprtiwvllle Irovo.Slt iv, 41 xiirt all points eat an-- wet No, I For Eureka, Mammoth and Sil.l . verfity No 8 For Kuroka, Mammoth andgii! ver CUjr Connection made In Ogden Union i,,! all trainaot southern Pantile andOittut Line. OFFERS CHOICE OF t 1 H FAST THROUGH TRAINS DIET AND THREE DISTINCT SCENIC reneltl vice. For rate i, fol Aer, etc P. K. . I Inquire of Hrr k L A. BENTON,hiq, O. A. P. D.,SnUbCS Tick Ai- NO. Spanish 14-- s recel dinn ge in i 3ut mg to )vn hit tom i!t intry, I pillion, st Bea G. O. EIRIKSSO TELEPHONE could i I Pulman Palace and ordinary Sleenlu, Denver, Omaha. Kansas city, bt, Lonu I Chicago WliUUUkCURUKB, Free Reclining Chair Cara; PereoniIlJ ducted Excursions; a perieet Dlaing Cut p N ;htly a 3 kston 1 the Hr Fork. Ie hau ppodroi the i Cash Dealer in rchaserl I! It it Cheapest Prices on In the State. fori v raea h perf face t Groceria ri tl of irnblai 'The Scrip People Don't LiktR ut ie sent 1 Eczema and Pile Cir Free KnowingFRF.KthatOF itCHtSs suffer. I will give to any afflicd a positive cure fork ma. Salt ltheura. Erysipelas. Pitot Skin Diseases, lnstaut relief, fc suffer longer, Writ F. W. WIMJii 400 Manhattan Avenue, New York. En lose Stamp. agus him not re hec came eyed silre ni i eich had I I IDAHO with id of ie file What's the malterfl to ?e Knt s ice, Thousands of acres cf lands beeu reclaimed tocultiuw dirt irrigation in that tftt the past 10 years. Tbouw more will be reclaimed vi the next lOyeare. This opeaiug for mafly tho1' I of homes. Hive You Investigated It has been truthfully IDAHO! termed Land of Opportunity A Land of Homes The Oregon Short Line KailrosdJ will be pleased to send ucscripti?1 ler regarding Idaho's resource. Jj to D. K, Burley, G P. A- - or D. P. A., Salt Lake Chy. t cer, A. - (. B. H. BROWN, Livery it' f; "S-pQQ- : d Stable. Hack Meets all TrI 5 'PR OKI NO. 11 Bpawlsk fori, t mg to ht her l 'h to !DO0d Spanish Fork A P1' for 114 Angeles .... ForPavjton. Suntaq'uln'snd No. bis ade SOUTH-BOUN- For Payon, Santaquln Lo No. EILERS KING Sail Miss IX Jioor Ie ba "it hi Co-Operat- no, h, ive I At IOUg . 30 PEOPLE Band and Orchestra 16 Acting Parts-1- 4 Uusldans Ventilation by Columns. Vcutllatlou through Iron columns Is an Interesting feature of g mill at This production will bt superior lo all ths Eiter Shows heretofore-Corr- ect Co Jtumet, l'reston. England. Air Is drawn In st forced Stage Selling, olc.-- The fans ground level, by Negro, Irish through a water spray, healed by colls lo the nan, Dutchman, Chinaman and usual way and then distributed from Farmer will keep you iihdurta below the basement level to Laughing, the different rooms, the Iron columns having register near their tops. Flues In the walls provide for the escape of air from these rtsuns. ONE NIGHT ONLY ''URTAINATi h hr Institution, Peelers tlmi plr 1Trer In Oear General Merchandise Flour, Grain O ,Dd Produce. tell ir kno r Are not Harness, f't 0 Boots Shoes. JOHN JONES, Fork - - i It Ibatiftoturerl of Md V thi bre I uni o or er - t) -, |