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Show IfEN M Prompt Courteous g W r s i Telephone Service is what everybody wants. Get it by using "The Phone that talks.' 0 m s , "I TOLD YOU SO." Utah Independent Telephone Co. M 5 THE OLD MKV talk of the mlllenl- urn, u must Ideal hour Where lambs an'l Hons friendly lie anil serpents lose their power. Hut whll I Ik-- M.I)!c prnph- eslcs are wonderful, I know IM much prefer a state where none would say: "I told ynu no." They picture u off SEATTLE, WASHINGTON Daily 55 September 30th To Daily September Portland and Return From All. Stations in Utah Via Salt Lake Route Tickets good via Los Angeles and Salt Lake City. Ask local ajrcnt or write Kenneth C. Kerr, D. 1. A., Salt Lake City. Dr. C. O. SCOTT Slogans Office Phone No. 43- - NSSIDINCI NO. Of PICK NO. Spanish Fork, Vtah Ma dun e Sewing mm lighter than any other. CFPICH HOURS 10 TO 1t A.M. 41. 8 TO 4 P' tt INO. PHONE 43-- DO. A. G. STCDDAQD IN lasts longer than any other. W. O. CRESR BUILDING SPANISH PORK, UTAH beautiful than other. any is more Dr. W. E. Warner Quarantine and City Physician Office at City Drujr Store Spanish Fork Nieht calls answered from Creer Bldg Next to the Bell Telephone office. . Dr. J. W. has less vibration than any other. is easier to operate than any other. Hagan makes a more perfect Office at World Draf Ca. Baildiag Spanish Fork, Utah Residence Wrrd. at Jas. M. stitch than any other. Creer's, Second Independent Phone 42-- 1. is the test of all combined in one. Dr. J. Fred Potter FREE SEWING MACHINE CO. CHICAGO Optician EYES TESTED 0 LASSES PROPERLY FITTED Office Phone, Ind. ILLINOIS it SOLD BY at Residence SPANISH 33-- 'c, Cooking on Sunday. Ihe liffhman says: "Sunday cookin' Fho.ilu be done on Saturday," And thU Is trui', for everybody's sake. Sunday is the day for extra good meuls, to lie sure, but in summer they need not be heavy meals and they thould be of a nature which can be prepared on Saturday as nearly as possible. The potatoes can be boiled the day before, and creamed for dinner; even vegetables are many kinds good If warmed over. For the leading meat dish, and for the dessert, there are many satisfactory cold dishes. I tolled salmon is excellent; prepare the day before and serve with mayonnaise. As Lotus." "The There is a society In Japan with this flowery name. It is built on the lines of American sororities, but having for Its especial object the advancement of the home interests, and the culinary art in particular. Much attention Is paid to domestic science In the seminary at Tokyo where this society originated. Moon-Kisse- DENTIST W. O. Creer Bldd "Mankind In brim to trouble," upward lly thf rp.irkH, And on my record, 1 will own mistakes hnve left tliclr murks. But failure's liittciiieHH Ih womo when folks bcijln to crow. And my tileiil slute Ih when noun say: "1 told you m" ORAN LEWIS FORK. d To Preserve Green Corn. Put the corn after husking into a rmmmrnrnmanmama Teacher of PIANO, ORGAN AND THEORY OF MUSIC For particulars apply at the home of MRS. THOMAS CREEK ! JESSB fm a A ( u i4 L Am ESTIMATES GIVEN FREE SAMUEL CORNABY KQTAQY Pl'KLIC Money Loaned on Irrlfated Farm lew Intcrea peclal op tlunSOl purtt.il piTiticut Ofiioe at rctldeuce, on. ul"Ok east ot Sl'ANISlt 1'OKtf. UTA1L Co-o- p, ATTORN Building PhOVO Telephone TXX IzzJ tezn IkTj R. M. Spanish Fork, Utah mm JEX-FLORI- ST I'nwti I'lnirer Kiinoliiul for all oc.ra. ilon. Funeral desigus kept ou hand and lilled ti order. All kinds of Furniture Unpaired. Reside iiee two blocks North of Foundry .Spanish Fokk. Utaii vzk vi imm FASHIONABLE One Block North ol Sank, Held. lie, tnlw old neglected bed, Is tilled with ghosts of drivers dead. Aspic Jelly with Eggs. This Is another good substitute for meat, and can be prepared on Saturday. an aspic Jelly by uaing any well seasoned while boll-In;To every two quarts of stock add Add lemon Juice, a box of gelatine. and pour half of the jelly while soft In a pan. Add som3 eggs counting noses as to number poached in boiling water which Is rapidly stirred before ihe eggs are dropped in. This will preserve the shape of the egg. After the first layer of aspic is stiff, add the eggs and then pour over them the rest of the Jelly which has been kept warm and liquid. The layers should be each an Inch thick with the eggs In thu middle. Serve in squares with an egg in the center of each. On lettuce leaves, with a garnish of pickle this Is a delicious and a filling dish. .Make rich Ktoek, ;. Scotch Woodcock Salad. This is a combination of walnut meats (one cup), one-hal- f cup celery, (cut fine), and six large olives. Cut all up with sharp knife, and add one-hal- f teaspoonful of extract of beef; serve with the following dressing: One large tablespoon butter, one of flour, one cup hot milk, a cup of teaspoon chopped cheese, one-hal- f parsley (chopped), and salt and paprika to taste. Mix the butter and flour to a paste, add hot milk, paprika and parsley. Then the cheese, beef extract and salt. Pour over the nuts, olives and celery, and serve on lettuce with a garnish of radish Her mouth was full ot clothes pins, when nclxhlHir answered me And said: "These clothes are In my way The sky I cannot see." then The spirit live that thing Inoorporal? All of the sentient joy of life and spring Concentred In these leaves, my Ko Is: The proof I live, what matters, then to me. The essence, If this glorious form Is dust?" on Codfish, The early discoverer, Goswold, In 1C02, declares in a tetterVrliten to a friend back fn England: "Here in this new World our ships are pestered with Cod." And then, and since, the waters of New England teem with a wealth greater than gold; greater than furs; a wealth over ready for the poorest, ever ready for" use and sa!o codfish. In the west, thre Is a sort of preju-dicagainst codfish. It Is rarely served fresh, and we do not appreciate the value of the salted cod. It mm be cooked in a variety of ways, preferably thredded into a cream l"so shredded sauce, cod, niliilm equal parts of- diced (cooked) potatoes. Mix this with tiny good brown sauce, udd chopped parsley and serve. Codfish Balls. Ro'l Into oval or Imll't li apt h and mix with vkiz yolks and mashed poei-toM In ciiicker-crunihand fry In deep fat. The palted fUh should always be soaked In cold water. s MX-vrr.'X'f- j-- LORENZO THOMAS TAILOR T gathering In tur Klvftlun My And so It Is with most of us Our trouble: petty strife. And Mil the small anxieties They hide the Joys of .life. We stand tun close What though the We cannot see: nil The clothes upon to wrrous. Heavens shine? blinded by the line. A Really, the game looked desperate. Something had to be done at once. but what? Maud had used all the little wiles she knew of to make Henry speak the words she longed to hear. She would have been perfectly willing for him to say them again and yet again. woman Does a "You'll Have to ever tire of those Run Fast." aim pie words? Maud didn't think so. At any rate, she was willing to risk It if only Henry would say them. But Henry didn't. Henry had the reputation of being bashful. .Many of Maud's girl friends had sent words of encouragement out to meet him half way. but to no avail. Maud's brother told her it was no use for her to set her cap for Henry, because Henry was wary and exceedingly light of foot. Therefore Maud hnd declared that any girl could lhnd him If he didn't realize that ho was being landed. "You'll have to run fast If you get him, Maudie," said her brother. How surprised Henry had been to find her In that place, so carefully selected by him because of the fishing! His surprise, however, was small when compared with Maud's astonishment to see Henry coming up the narrow walk with his suitcase in his hand. She had wholly forgotten that his sister had told her where Henry was intending to spend his vacation! Well, it was all over now and tho3e pretty summer clothes had been wasted, for they could not be converted into business gowns for the broker's office where Maud did the typewriting. On the other hand, they woitld have been just the thing to work Into a trousseau. Ah, well, life is made up of disappointments. She might have to pull George out of the discard only Maud hated to have her brother say: "I told you so." . It seemed a century to her since she had first planned her wedding trip with Henry as leading man. Sometimes it was to Niagara, sometimes to New York. Once when quite desperate, she had even thought of taking him without any traveling coupons. Again, Just after she had succeeded in getting him Into a discussion on the cost of two living as cheaply as one, and was feeling that he might be coaxed further, he said: "If I dared to take a flat with one of the fellows!" Then Maud felt that anything would do for a first trip. New Henry's vacation was over and no announcement cards were in Fate was playing tag with sight. Maud's heart beats on this last evening In the shelter of the porch. Henry would depart and Maud would remain only long enough to conceal her real reason for going home. Perhaps George would be better, after all! "It's our last evening together," sighed Henry. Maud sighed for a di3erent reason. Deep in her heart was a little resentmenta feeling of "What's the use?" The stage setting was Just right to catch even a man as shitty as .Maud's brother said Henry was. Maud, bow-evewas blinded by her resentment and couldn't see the stage setting. She was thinking of her pretty summer clothes going to waste! "I wish It was longer," lamented Henry. "1 can let It out after It Is washed though It will never be as pretty," mourned Maud. "What do yod niein? I was speaking of the evenlrg." "I was tliin!:'rg or this pretty wlite dress." She was careless now of what he thought. "It la pretty. Simple and yet stunning." Maud thought: "He is no judye of clothes or of their rest, but it I doesn't matter now. might, have broken him to t'.te simple drcs.wj and their price, "This Isn't the first time I've worn It, Henry," she said, discouraged that her cFctts bad been wasted. "1 thhU I'll go and write some letters now." From t!i! you cr.n ijuens bow dls cotirrrjed t he wns. "Write letters!" evrlaimed llcr-- v "On n n'l'hL lil:o tMt! smoke r.iid keep t!i ?;m. away. r, i svno? World Drue Co. TIME TABLE SOCTH-flOCN- No. j "A !:ilnn .(i-'-- 'Wit" to co';s'".t Iter A I i.e .tti I ; i: g ;i ;!e. 3!,e th. y ti'iultd in Ij'i t nd Pyon, Ssntsquln Los Angeles... No. W For Pityson, Mantl NORTH-BOUN- tad Neptai .... S:8S P : D For Provo. Pl.Orove. American Kork, Leal, Mercur, ....II:!? o Halt Lake No. St For Provo, Slt Lake and J Mbmi InterniHillste points PsUtlol trains are now running dally between Salt Lake find ton PaelHo Coast UTAH COUNTY U in dirwt touou with two eitlei. Hest leoal train service. (real J. H. HURTSin. District PanKengnr Ageal. N. Pctskssn, Depot Ttoket Agent. No. . . k.i n i i i r 9 f , inr.nti!riFVtftSliK'l Arrival and departure of trains from Depot: No. 7 For Snringvllte.Proro.Salt Lake 8:10s m and all points esstand wet No. 29 KorfipriiiKVille Provo.Hali Lake and all points east and west.... 8:42pm No. 8 For Kuruka, Mammoth and Stiver City :Srfrm No. 28 For Kureka, Mammoth and Silver City 8:l5m Connections made In Oi'den Union depot with all trains of Southern Pacttio aad Oregon Short Line. OFFERS CHOICE OF 3 DAILY FAST THROUGH TRAINS . SCENIC ROUTES AND THREE DISTINCT Pultnan Pataee and ordinary Sleeping ears to Denver, Omaha, Kansas City, St. Louis and Chicago without change. Free Recllnlr.g Chair Cars: Personally conducted Excursions; perfeet Dlulug Car Service. For rates, folder, etc.. Inquire of 11. T. Matthews, Ticket Agent, or write L A. BENTON. UA. P. D.,Salt Lake City. F. C. C. CRISM0N J. NICHOLS Crismon & Nichols Assayers and Cbsmlsts Office and Laboratory 229 S.W. Temple St., Salt Lake City, Utah Reference: National Bank of Republic P. O. Box 78 Both phones What's ths niaiterQ IDAHO with 5 Thousands ot acres of land have been reclaimed to cultivation by irrigation in that State during the past 10 years. Thousands more will be reclaimed within the next 10 years. 'Ibis means an opening for many thousands of homes. Have You Isveshoated IDAHO? It has been truthfully termed a Land of Opportunities A Land of Homes The Oregon Short Line Railroad Co. will be pleased to senduescriptiTe mat. ter regarding Idaho's resources. Write to D. K. Buriey. (. P. A or l. S. Spencer. A. i. P. A.. Salt Iike City, Utah. Benjamin Hughes Lteery and Feed Stables HACK MEETS ALL TRAINS. B. H. BROWN, Livery Feed ASS Hack Meets All Trains 'PHONE NO. 12 Spanish For Utah :im hm-- Nu Yirk ycsteit!av." N" v .Pai will huv "Lucky d"s! a bo ne. What wouid yea s.iy, M.u; if D For 1 If" . -y A. B. MORGAN, fatrht A straiiRers. I, mysetf withering; dying; And what boots tt e and Builders of Com plcte Koines Contractors s. Old Time Utensi.s. porringer, as we now understand it. Is a small, t hallow basin. The old Butter Paper Day English term signified a deep cup, snd with a cover. They were In many sl:es and usually of If your order is metal, pewter or silver. Children usually ate from them. Wordsworth, In placed before his "We Ate Seven," says: "And often, after sunset Sir, When it la livht that date your and fair, I take my little porringer and cat my supper there." The Warinlne, Pitti- .- Tlila sounds as paper will be if it were a kltflitn utensil, lust our ready Saturday forefafhiTH used It to warm the ice. cold beds of i be poorly heated bouses at 4 p. m. of a century !i;,i. The wavuili'H pan w:is of circular t. metal, about a foot In diameter and nrm xr. three or foer Inchon deep, it hnd n long, wooden handle, and a perforated brs'is or copper covr. It : kept hanging by the fireplace, and at bedrida the swfifem of i ra il Cook with the Clock. time tilled wt'h hot cos Is. Then and don't wor- thrust lack ami forth within ihe bod, Set the alarm-clock- , by acting as a cathartic ca ths bowels is ry any more as to whether or not the ntildly, to prevent scorching tho ioe, ,vlil !i,ittt, tli" cake will K A or tlk roast baked too In'ijr. rZH3 t.Tl'Ji f was a long handled A bread-peet nits mi tor iiiw tlwe whn tIi.- shovel on which bnad was placid; fcja cr.ke should be done; this will ret'.. ind It was then thrust on the' coal. The you to take it out of the oven. If yo i brend-pte- l was to our pioneers a have tunas on the stove, and tiar symbol of domestic pence and plenty, you will forgt't to replenish th? wa- and was always conspicuously placed ter, net Ihe alarm for a time t r aa an emblem of good luck. when you think they will require at- tcnthm. Thus will you be saved the Tomatoei for Salad. strain of having the cooking on your To Insure cold pointers for salad, mind. scald them some time before they ure wanted, but do not peel. Put them . Two Clothes-Carsback on thu Ice and when needed they This Is a g'Mid suggestion; on Hens is the original laxativ. couith syrnp, may be used for the clothes which will peel easily and still be thoroughcontains no opiates, gently moves the are in chilled, perfect order; the other for ly how.lt, currying (he cold eft through the those which need buttons mending, natural channels. Guaranteed to give on, etc. This will save unnecessary satisfaction or money refunded. lortlng ard handling. of Each Week is Johnson & Braithwaite E. S. Saturday tleur-de-ll- kettle of boiling water. Remove and cut the corn from the cob, spread in shallow pans and dry either in the sun or in a slow oven. Put away in Teaching Boys to Cook. paper bags, l'ofore using soak It over In most of the Norwegian schools night. Do not omit boiling the corn about three minutes as this sets the they are teaching the boys how to cook and prepare meals. They seem milk in the cob. to think it is quite as necessary for them to learn the art as for the girls, MY DYING VINE. and indeed, many an occasion might I'U'CKED a dylnn vine arise in a man's life when he would from off the wall. be glad of such a knowledge. It ramu relurtnnt. and "Wherefore" I said ON THE LINE. "This clinKlntt to a life half one with death? Thnu'lt live hKuIn In CALLED out to a nelghbot then grwn shoots clothes upon Hunglng the line. "The weather's lovely. "Alns," the vine replied Isn't It? "theae are not I. The sky Is clear and These other growths areflue." A Word Miss Agnes Engberg Of hnppy days of long ago! Of those dear hands of hers That tended, faithful, lovingly. The crocus, and the Now weeds and grass are growing where Was rose and lily's yield. And lief fair hands ar. ; Exposition flower-be- d' What memories it stirs tTtopl.i time we linil? social When .the lih'Hl (lute our good descend-am- s reach t wonder, will "t told you no" bo stricken from their speech? Resort . N OLD neglected wliire every one Ix kind Hut will they say: "I told yru so," when that kihhI Alaska-YukonrPacif- ic FLOWER-BED- As a Last you" Spanish Fork Co-OnorativQ "laud'n s'i g,;!h heart gve u hnu while sha tt re the laa- m her hawl'i-vchf- i f. "Askid tae w. ; - , Institutio- n,- I'cnrv." what's a koihI Invt r tt a ie'low ;.!: irojoy You tlrs from year tiif !i..-- . c.en't ymTipt, ImJcd; jStoc'.,!', Imtids dogs' toils, t: ..mi give- Her;-,- ' a tip t!,!'t vnv.'d Jar Kim "invest In it home, voa silly boy i rd see what n line make," she laughed. his Henry threw awn;."Maud." he said, "you've spoken ' x j( l:o what I've In i n trying to Your b 'other told n for months. I'd never huvo the cnurngo to pr pose to you and now I've done It!" I.ate that night Maud wrote or letter, hut It was a special delivery u lreBSi'd to her brother. "A; !ted ir yi. Dealers in - General - Merchandise ? O Flour, ' Grain and Produce. Kaanfaotnrers of Harness, Boot3 i and 0 Shoes. JOIIM JONES, SupL Spanish Fork . . Tjtan |