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Show THE SPANISH ANDREW JENSEN, SPANISH FORK - FAIRBANKS RICHARD PRESS FORK Publisher - Mount Pleasant will very likely have a local Independent telephone system In the near future. A number of negroes of Salt Lnko : . . The William City have organized Jennings Bryan Colored Club." Preparations are being made by the different labor organizations of Ogden for the biggest celebration of Labor day ever held In that city. It Is reported that parasite which have . attacked the alfalfa fields in several sections of the slate have done considerable damage. A movement has been Inaugurated in Salt Lake City looking to the in augurutlon of the Dos Moines plan of government in the capital city. The excavation for the basement of Springvllle's new high school building Is now completed, and work has commenced on the cement foundation. There has been one divorce asked for to every six marriage licenses Issued In Salt Lake county, if the record from June 1 to dute may be relied upon. On September 23 there will be thrown open for entry a large tract of land in the region of which Morgan is the center. Coal lands In this area are not subject to entry. Salt lake druggists, backed by the druggists throughout the state, are making efforts to secure the national convention of the American Pharmaceutical association of 1909 for Salt Lake. Seized with a fit of coughing, little Earl Stowell, son of William Stowell, of Ogden, coughed up a nail which the child had carried buried In the muscles of bis throat for twelve days. A dispatch from Avalon, Catalina Island, Cal., announces that the worlds record catch for black sea bass, a fish weighing 240 pounds, was taken last week by Phil H. O' Mara of Salt Lake City, .The breaking of a pivot upon which a rapidly revolving extractor was turning in a laundry 1A Salt Lake City caused an accident In which two of the employes, Willis Gardner and Al. Iluber, were quite badly injured. . Unconscious from the effects of a hypodermic injection of morphine, Carl Shurtllff, 24 years old, was found In the rear of an Ogden saloon, and fled four hours later. It Is believed the young man had Intended suicide. The thirteen-year-oldaughter of W. 0. B. Orrock, of Richfield, while standing on a picket fence, lost her t stance and was precipitated on to the pickets, one of which penetrated Ir required ten stitches to close the wound. George H. Corse, a railroad man who had been stationed la Ogden for years, and one of the most popular officials ever stationed In that city, died last week after three years of sufierlng from a complication of d 4 ; - - - -- ? i) ' ru i . I) jr . v rtf" ) '?.. r;xr vr' V'? . - - . - V 1 j y V f .at Ctopyr a.iwni ixin iwi ight tijr Wtldon ttwiwit Charlea W. Fairbanks. Recent portrait of ton of EAT MUCH ON OCEAN PASSENGERS CROSSING ATLANTIC CONSUME BIG 8TORE. On One Line the Coet Wee 94,000,000 In a Year Beer by Half lion Gallons and 6.500,-00of Egga. Mil0 New York. It must be the gyroscope attachment on the modern transatlantic liner, or else the ball bearings on which they run, which has reduced the proverbial amount of seasickness among the passengers. Seasick passengers, no matter how many of them are carried, could not comfortably consume food of which the wholesale cost for one line alone hi 1907 was more than $4,000,000. This Is seen at once when It is noted that the total expense for coal on the same line was hut $7,000,000, gnd, of course, none of the boilers was seasick and their consuming capacity Is notorious ly greater than any passenger, no matter how good an appetite he has. .Before noting some of the figures of food it is pleasing to observe some of those relating to beverages. Now, ns to champagne, which Is said to be an excellent cure and for that matter a preventive of seasickness, passengers last year pulled the plugs out of only a few more than 61,000 bottles of champagne. When it conies to claret the figures jump so respectably that It Is seen that a man may raise a thirst somewhere west of Suez as well as east. Of that cheerful and ruddy beverage s consumed the passengers 129,209 bottles. That sounds pretty good, but the passenconsumption by the third-clas- s gers makes It appear a mere tipple by comparison, for those In the steerage joyfully drank not less than 121,297 gallons of claret, presumably of the variety known as petit bleu, about first-clas- five-sixth- d . , THINK 13 FISH 8AVED 8HIP. With More or Lees, Crew Says, Disaster Might Have Followed Accident Philadelphia. Thirteen awordllsh In the hold of the fishing schooner Dorcas, off the southeasterly edge of Georges, may have proved her salvation, instead of being the traditional unlucky number that is frequently blamed for getting vessels Into trouble. The Dorcas was about ready to sail for Boston July 23. A three-masteDespondent over the death of his schooner came along and Instead of wife less than a month ago, Arthur D. clearing the fishing craft lopped off a Adams, a bookbinder In the governpiece of her bowsprit with a glancing ment bnroau of engraving and print- blow. ing at Washington, formerly of Salt The crew of the Dorcas ascribe their Lake, took his own llfo, inhaling Illu- escape to the 13 swordfish. If they minating gas. bad had more or less fish the rhythm Laboring under the delusion that by of the Dorcas' rolling and tossing a process of transposing the letters to would have been different, they say, any given word he can talk intelligibly and she might have wallowed directly to any race of people regardless of the Into the path of the three-maste- r and tongue which Is spoken, George Grace, gone to the bottom with all hands. a well known painter of Ogden, has Capt. Lester Nunan of the fishing vesbeen adjudged Insane. sel reports swordfish scarce and wild, L. G., Henlnger, an Ogden restaurwith a large number of sharks ant man, was seriously Injured cruising ground. the bumps at Lagoon one WILD 8WAN SHOT IN MAINE. day last week. Since, his Injury, typhoid fever and other complloatlons have developed, which will Interfere Southern Bird Straye Northward with with his chances for recovery. a Flock of Geese. Churches, hospitals and charitable Kennebec, Me. A handsome bird, Institutions of all kinds In Salt Lake for this section, was brought to rare City wlU no longer bo given abate- E. D. Brann, taxidermist, at Ellsworth. ments of their water taxes. The city wild swan, which was shot at a is It council committee on waterworks, sit Hamlin Webbs of ting as a board of equalization of Waltham.pondItbyIs a youngKingman bird, pure water rates, has made this ruling. for Its black feet and Bids were opened at the treasury white, except bill and grayish shade on head and department on the 24th for the con- neck. The bird spreads six feet nine struction of a public building at Lo- Inches from tip to tip. gan. The bidders were as follows: These birds winter around the Gulf Northern Construction company of In summer In the Wapaton, N. D., 150.773; George of Mexico, and nest HlnchllCt company of Chicago, vicinity of Hudson's bay. The route Campbell Building company of of their spring and fall migration Is Salt Lake, f 15.570. usually along the Mississippi and the Success hi marking the efforts of great lakes; they seldom stray as far the state land commissioners In dis- east as this. This bird was with a posing of the remainder of the Indem- small flock of geese when shot. The swan Is credited with a speed nity lands. Every day new applications are being received. Since Augw of 100 miles an hour In flight nst 3, the first day of the sale, applicaWOMAN'S EYES ARE COSTLY. tions have been received for 200,000 acres. Two new voting machines will ar- Gypsy Maldens Spell" Loeee Fortune Seeker Roll of Bills. rive from the manufacturers in New York In a few days and will be InIt wasn't exactly Trenton, N. J. stalled at Huntsville and Plain City, eyes, but the woman certainly to be used for the first time In the goo-goNovember election. This makes a to- has got me golnV said Michael Unger tal of nineteen machines In Weber of Princeton to SergL McGowan In the Central police station when he recounty. Mr. and Mrs. A. Carr, of Salt Lake quested the police department to use City are evidently against race sui- its Influence In breaking the spell cide, their seventeenth child being which he said a gypsy woman had cast over him. born last week, a girl weighing 11 Unger said be wandered Into a gypsy pounds. They have thirteen sons livnear this city and submitted Mr. a In camp is cm lineman Carr the ing. ploy of the ' Western Union Telegraph himself to the wiles of a dusky gypsy maiden during a fortune tolling seance. company. Arrangements are in progress In Later he discovered that a gold ring Salt Lake City by the Manufacturers was missing from his hand and a roll and Merchants association and In Lo- of hills from his pockeL He told the sergeant the woman gan by the Commercial club for the was too nice to steal his money snd Is excursion which boosters It grand proposed to run from Salt Lake to I valuables, but he certainly would Cache valley on Loot day, Monday, like to know who got them." September 7. dls-case- LATEST PORTRAIT OF TAKAHIRA d VARIOUS MAKE THAT FOR COMFORT. DE.VICES whll-humpin- CttPTrfirht by Waldo fowcatt. Baron Takahlra, the new Japanese ambassador to the United States who declare that hie country has no better friend than the United States and wha says our American warships will be given splendid welcome to Japanese 1 canvas home has become so months popular during the summer that a decided advunce has been made In materials and outfits for camp life. Many of these devices are worthy cf attention, anil recommend themselves not alone to the lover of outdoor llfo, but to the practical housekeeper as well. The collapsible meat safe la made of English bobbinet, washable and extra strong. Circular bands of wire form a sort of cage, over which the bobbinet Is stretched. Suspended from tree or beam this safe protects all meats from Insects, while everything is left open to the air. The new folding camp stoves range from three to five dollars. There are no lids to this stove and the fire Is fed from a door at the end. The stove Is made of sheet steel, all edges wired and It sits flat on the ground, to 19 nnd its weight Is from 12 aluminum and bakers, Ovens pounds. which bake and roast when placed aguinut the side of the stove, are said An excellent to he satisfactory, over coals can be for conking grate bought for 75 cents. Made of heavy wire rods It stands about one foot high, and when not In use the legs fold carried or flat and can be easily packed. Pocket filters are useful, and their price is about ope dollar. When choosing awnings for the summer piazza select the shades that fade least and then take precaution to preserve them. Whether It Is best to roll up an awning or leave It down during a rainstorm is an open question. Many declare that if left down they become thoroughly washed, and the rain runs off, taking dust and dirt with It, while if left up the water settles In the cloth In little pools and afterward stains are apt to appear. Of course, during a windstorm ail awnings should be raised. Light straw awnings are very satisfactory used for a screen, but they seldom last more than one season. After they are no longer useful for the piazza they can be used to cover the glass on the hotbeds to protect young plants from too much sun. A house or apartment can have a cool appearance if everything Is removed that is suggestive of warmth. Instead of carpets and heavy rugs, cover your floors with either matting or rag rugs. Mattings can be easily kept free from dust by occasionally wiping It off with a damp cloth. At the windows have dotted Swiss curtains, and heavy hangings may be replaced with pretty cretonnes. AH heavy furniture should be covered. Have plenty of flowers or pots of ferns ibout your rooms. The meals can be served with no table covering except lollies. In the early morning have tho windows opened for an hour or two, snd then all closed, and the rooms kept lark until late In the afternoon. This will keep out the heat as well as dust. .The Several of. the Utah panic have been noun, count of the moving of . E , , tt!llt requirements for hanYjJ' their allowanco of :.ara for ore must be curtailed. A power plant for aik about to bo built by t 0 15 Alta operator. Little Cottonwood err! 4 mile below Alta and from 300 to 400 horsepoe R. II. Thomas, president oi York stock exchange, ha committee of five member, change to Investigate the of Btock on August 22, leged "matched" sale H I ' S hi' . 8 Bj , onlt ?Aba.rd.of. Stock and Mining exchin) S formally launched the carn , ? as? There are some valuable claim being worked in the country, near Idaho Fan,, lda J Carriboo country haa, In it, m" f.?u6 8reat Sld'Pro4uclij 'tfrll ifHi! J west, some kn It $13, cool! t 01 k, lne taken nut. Treasury stock of the Plata, Ing company, the latest Tlntl, D osltlon In which the Knight, prv terested, wa thrown npon the utltj ,itio and J last week, 200,000 shares at 15 ,beInf 8naWed P by an eager A1 ,1 runt !e A m mHW ntxx 3 J 8 frt tt irrlnt order. i(Hi Diamondfleld Jack Davl, u st first Goldfield man to reach the t ick gold find near Indian creek Dr I say that the big ledge In which ( 'f value are found cut the fomaa bei wr. of a quartz mountain, and reeei prir n th Delamar, Nev. The local mining outlook ha, a., 'irin been o good In twenty yean, m pHv, tho Hailey, Idaho, Times. Mu, tun Kill the mine that were then close! l K6f reopened, and the others will to! H t B les soon be, unless some unforew) rtilv cause Intervenes. din j The Uncle Sam Consolidate! kJ ofe Ing company has recently cleared c the United States smelter ahlpne Wb of three small carload of ore h!d will net the company approilmgii Ell! $10,000, the ore bringing a little te .11 ter than $100 a ton. A discovery ha recently beet tui he on Elk Creek, 14 miles northeast a to Idaho City, Idaho, that gives proud) ;jnd of becoming a very valuable wist ifVJ The ledge la three or four feet wilt We about 10 Inches of It being hard qta3 crli that will mill at least $70 a ton. psar The Alpha shaft of the Giroux flu 1st t solldated, at Ely, Nevada, has the 1 ,200-foA I point and tbs work The: cutting a large station there has begun. The expected flow of ttii licet has not yet been encountered. Tli til miners are still digging in the hi d body of ore than contains 17 per era re copper. nt A dispatch from Idaho City, Idiia in says It la reported that Leo Untereah cthe rer has made a valuable quart, t :elt, covery on the south side of kora ii creek. Hi creek opposite Twelve-MilIs the discoverer of the famous Hr Fork mines, and the new discorerj , ;e h about two miles southwest of tto an mines. at The Grutt Hill Mint lease at A hide, Nev., is receiving return, fro Hi aaete, and the rich ore sent to mill Ut one shipment putting the lease oartf sat n leaser, vet. For 80 tons of ore the th celved a draft for $24,425, and fro een of two bars of bullion the result Go mill run at the Gates plant, $1, tat 1 1 Killing Cabbage Odor. Cabbage may be boiled without ?mitting that objectionable odor by jlaciug a big peeled onion into the uldfat of the cabbage and on top slices of stale bread cut thick. Do not add too much water to the :abbage at one time, or it will 6oak .he bread and cause it to separate and nix with the cabbage, hut, rather, add eater from time to time in course of he boiling process. Upon the back of the stove, whe:e It will Just simmer, set a small vessel total of $29,025. ' containing vinegar and sugar. The bread and onion absorb the Twelve miner will put to tod Hlor. and the vinegar and soon in the tunnel of the Goldbut. sugar are a orerautlon to make assurance doubly one of the group of quartz claim, sure. Hay Fork bonded to Montana Ada county men by Leo and Antocw Unternahrer, says the Idaho Blackberry or Raspberry Vinegar, Cover two quarts of berries with World. This tunnel will be driven I ttrong vinegar and let stand two the Switzerland, which weeks. Mash the berries and strain to be on the same vein. the liquid over two quarts fresh berThe Gold Development companj ries. Let stand a week, is Just Inaugurating l Utah then mash greatest and strain again. To each of Marysvale district the ever under, the resultant vinegar allow quart of development a pound palgn f sugar, bring to the boiling point, en In southern Utah. It 1 skim thoroughly, and bottle while hot. expend Inside of the oext (w l.se new, sound corks. This furnishes month from $200,000 to $300,m a grateful and wholesome tramway line acid on hot power plant, opening Its extensive gold properu days, diluted with cold water. A quart A conference dealing with of this will suffice to j supply the needs condition of a good sized picnic existing In the Cj11 " party as a or two at most, will make a State and the great numberfCl talkies resulting from mine tlass of delicious "shrub." held In nttsbarg-thorougIs being of , Investigation Florida Loaf. 41 disaster mine recent For s' Persona: Get one and one Creek'' Jaroba W. Va., ha f pounds of good round-steak- , tongah, oue-hal- f and Fayette City, Pa., will be pound of salt pork, and The abandoned mine at Hanna, j r pund 8mokeJ ham. have same where seventy minors mot dwa al! elRbt ground together at the butcher's; also be visited, and about tW tW0 med,um 8lze(l will be spent la tho lnvestlg nlons one cup breadcrumbs; mix all this country. ,8redlen,8 Aether, roll In The Silver King Gold and CWj tissue paper, and bake one ha hour Mining company, which after same has been over for men taste! seasoned to working several on their group of claim lour Green Corn Pancakee. from Mackay, Idaho, are elal No. j f 8rated IT'1 one sacking ore from their a bob'130 which will not them o( mSlttV profit. The New England Gold at toe eggs separately add Mining company of Blngha the yolks to the coni, then the milk Ing preparations to resume flour and salt; beat well and stir in on a large Beale. Wires rt very carefully the , wh te. strung to convey power tor Uake on a hot griddle. sor and hoist and it la wh eoon large force of men will Honey Jelly. ployed. Take the parings of neck n The comparison of toe ofl Springs, Nev., and JPI,n. . I shows the value of the roc's table-spoonfu- l, $17,-BO- o Will Camping Idea for Car of Meat Practical the Be Appreciated by Awnlnge Houaekeeper for the Piazza. g Horace J, Stevens 0f Mich., copper exnrL .Ho,s higher price for coppor mc' " e on-th- e - L FOR THE HOT DAYS MIKES ANDMi 20,-O- UTAH UTAH STATK NEWS ' which there is song which the Tarli students alng when Inspired by it. this There Is something (observing nom Just as the Prohibitionists have Inated their ticket) rather appalling of to read that of the various grades consumed the passengers brandy bottles and 73,284 gallons. But these are after all trlfilng nips when we como to look at the figures relating to beer, for of that beverage more than half a million gallons wire the drunk, and it Is not reported that unusual police had any quartermasters duty to perform at that. Tho recent installation of tho a la carte system In the restaurants of the modern liners accounts for an amazing growth In the consumption of delicacies, such as were seldom found on even the best ships when the business of feeding passengers wua exclusively table d'hote. Restaurant diners on the liners whose figures are being considered consumed many, many thousand partridges, snipe, quails, pheasants, grou.;e, canvasback ducks. They demanded literally many hundreds of thousands of live lobster and crawfish, of fresh llttleneoks. blue polnta and softshell crabs. They consumed such a quantity of green turtle soup that the chefs had to use up 13.407 pounds of fresh turtle In Its making. Coming around to the more substantial articles of diet, It Is found that of fresh beef there was used pounds, and of pork and veal about 750,000 pounds each. mutton and Potatoes to go with these weighed In excess of 10,000 tons, a very fair cargo In Itself. The passengers seem to begin the day with hearty appetites, as well as going to lunch and dinner In the same blessed condition. They consumed of eggs, 6,500,000 and of calves' liver and bacon an approprfate quantity to supplement the eggs, and with their morning toast 216,503 tins of marmalade and other such sweets. As if these figures were not proof enough that Lloyd's should make a very low rate of Insurance against seasickness these days It Is noted that besides what smoking material passengers took on board with them 2,227,225 cigars and packages of cigarettes were had from the smoking room steward. It Is Interesting to note In conclusion that while the consumption of beer, wine and spirituous liquor indicated pretty generous living, figuring on the basis of all the passengers carried for the year, each passenger cons of a sumed, after all, only gallon of such cheering beverages, while the average consumption of mineral water was a full gallon. These figures do not Include 76,223 bottles of sterilized milk, which were dealt out to the children on board. Thinks Section Boss Magnate. Countees Wede Railroad Father Takes Her Man, Then Away. was the But and askod to come to Rome, where ceremony was to be performed. he said he could not get he Induced the Italians toaway return to America and meet him at Dustin, Okla. They arrived at Dustin In due time and the count became suspicious but while he was Investigating Into s wealth the latter took tho to girl a Justice of the peace and they were married. When the count discovered that Lalley was a penniless section boss he became enraged and spirited his daughter away. The girl claimed she only agreed to marry Lalley and that the must bo performed by a Catholic priest James is still a section boss and will notworking as spend bis summer In the Eternal city Muskogee, Okla. Louis Accassano, sn Italian count, and, his eldest daughter, Esther, were arrested at Weleet-k- a a few days ago, the former being charged with kidnaping his daughter, who but a few days before had been married to James S. Lalley. The arrest was made by Sheriff Smith, but after Accassano told hts story he and his daughter were released and are now on their way to t New York. They will sail for Italy In a few days. Tha Italian claims h's daughter was deceived Into marrying Lalley, whom i she believed to be a millionaire railroad magnate, but who turned out to be a section boss. Count Accassano was sent to Mexico In 1904 by his government to inBehind the Scenes. spect railways, and at Monterey he "Who Is your understudyt He la a and his daughter met Lalley. Lalley wooed and won the girl, and when broth of a boy." "Yes. he's a supe. Accassano returned to Rome a year later the couple were engag'd. Lalley American. Lai-ley'- cere-mon- y W1 rrie ine to HJ A if Bu It Isoc toe mat a.a an, !at Bu I, I ri atl Yi . one-quar- but-tere- d cii0nr Jir lMlwlul yg w well-beate- one-hal- f to"1 to $2.16. Good Spring lit! e oat tae lit k it i t a ice :dt U ant o, oa t 'pi ar tc He a Le l! I!C IM loll Kansas: Let |