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Show Univ of Utah Independent A Weekly Newspaper, Devoted to the Interests of the Leading Agricultural and Horticultural Section of Utah ''The Garden of the West." ' VOLUME 11. NUMBER 50. SPRINGVILLE, UTAH, AUGUST 29, 1901. PRICE, $1.25 PER ANNUM. (0WPEH Makes the food more delicious and wholesome ROYAl RAWWfl POWTOR CO., NEW VOBK. The Ameiitan Missionary association associa-tion makes public a report from emu of its representatives in Nashville, Tenn., concerning the death rate among the negroes of the south. The report states that In the representative represen-tative southern cities for the past five years the death rate of the whites has been 20 in 1,000; that of the colored people 32, in 1,000. The south is said not to have shown much concern about the rapid increase of the negro, since the census of 1900 made It appear that In the ten years previous the black I ace increased 24 per cent and while 3.91 per cent. The death rate of the negro is greatest under the age of 15 and least at the higher ages. The race Is subject to a higher death late than the whites from the following bottles, she is entirely well, can eat anything. It's a grand tonic, and its gentle laxative qualities are splendid fur torpid liver." For Indigestion, Loss of Appetite, Stomach and Liver troubles it's a positive, guaranteed cure. Only 50c at Springville Drug Company. ."pses: 1. Conmimption ut all ages, ' between the ages of J 5 di.-easts of infants. ;'!.! too often does not : .-- of her infant. S - : . Scrofula and astounded The Editor. rS A. lirown, of Bennetts-, Bennetts-, v i, ,.iH'!' immensely sur-"h sur-"h lung MilTering ; s. my wife v;w'...- ;tui -uttered great distress from her stomach, but she tried Electric Hitters which helped her at once, and, al ter using four Lesion That Was Needed. A Philadelphia railroad contractor, who has recently returned from abroad, tells of an experience that befell be-fell him in Munich illustrative of the difference in prevailing customs. Armed with a number of letters of introduction in-troduction to European railroad officials, offi-cials, he made it a point to inquire into the workings of the various systems, sys-tems, ana ra-s treated with uniform courtesy. At Munich he thought he had ac(piired all the information he was after, and as Le passed out of the office of the man with whom he had been talking he put on his hat. He had scarcely been ushered out when it occurred to him that there was one matter about which he had forgotten t.i inquire. "I immediately retraced my steps," said thePhiladelphian. "and again entered the office, neglecting to remove my hat I saw the same official offi-cial with whom I had been talking, and, apologizing for taking up so much of his time, I put the question to him. Without, a word he reamed p, took off my hat and p'a e l It in my hand. Then he answeied my query and bowed me out. It made me feel rathei cheap." The - flongerfoFd - Academy will open September 3rd. This institution offers to the young people of Springville educational advantages equal to tliut of uuy similar school in the East, at a much iess"cost. We can prepare you for college, or the English Course off rs an opportunity to prepare for teaching in t he Puhlic Schools of the State. Tuition is !?!'.. r)0 and S3. 00 per term. Apply to Haddington G-. Brown. Principal ABOUT MEXICAN INDIANS. t'mler N,tturo' S. lectlou TUy Grow Vp to nt Our Superior. There is great hope for the Indian peoples of Mexico, says a writer in the Boston Herald. They are, for the most part, clean of blood, with a nervous ner-vous force which makes them, on being be-ing educated, go far. Many eminent men there are of mixed blood, and it Is worthy of note that the Indian blood gives gravity, mental poise ami great will pever. The Indian is loyal, a good friend, a tremendous enemy, and sometimes none too enamored of the ideas of the white race. Down deep in h's heart Is something aboriginal, abor-iginal, intense and sound. We have lost something in the United States by holding t-'e Indian at arm's length socially. Indian blood is good blood, and renovates the white race. You get good brains In the Indian because they are not vitiated, and are not too far removed from the strong old life that nature prefers, and in which she eliminates weaklings. Had the German Ger-man philosopher, Nietsche, visited Mexico e would have found Borne types of his "over-man," his natural superior being among the Indians. Nature Na-ture is a rough nurse, but she makes men and women who delight in living, and who live long. Our urban civilization civili-zation and daintiness and comforts destroy de-stroy real manhood and womanhood, and so do flourish dentists, doctors, faddists and milk-and-water reformers. reform-ers. Nothing but the sun and air, the free life of nature, produces the best in physique and in character. The Indians In-dians grow up without coddling, and their strength of body is equaled by their vigor of mentality. It is a great thing not to be nervous, to breathe deep, to have plenty of quick-moving blood. One is amazed at the power of application of Indians of culture; the.y get fatigued only after intense work. They have stamina. It is a goodly sight to see coming down Into warm-country valleys from the Sierras, Sier-ras, the Indian women, straight, clear-eyed, clear-eyed, uncorseted. Maidens with fine and eloquent eyes, walking as the Greek goddesses did; their every motion mo-tion graceful, and, if gowned in civilized civil-ized manner, fit to adorn a drawing room. Some of the tribes have many handsome women; you look at them, and all accepted civilized standards fall away. Contrast the erect and serene se-rene Indian maidens on the country roads cf Mexico with the parlor "darlings "darl-ings of civilization, under the care of the specialists, teeth yellow with gold, with a hundred arts of the toilet, and nerves easily tired and jangled. Cures the Grip in Tuio Days No remedy equals Warner's White Wine of Tar Syrup for this terrible and fatal disease. If taken thoroughly and in time, it will cure a case in two days, and for the couth that follows La (iriiipe it never fails to give relief. Price 25 and M cents. nmmmmnmn Suit Are always sold by A. pAfNEY, SpriijgVille I Style, Material and Fit Difficult Digestion Thai is dyspepsia. It makei lite miserable. Its sufferers cut not because they tqaiU to, but simply because they mutt. They know they are Irritable and fretful ; but they cannot be otherwise. They complain of a bad taste In the mouth, a tenderness at the pit of the stomach, stom-ach, an uneasy feeling of puffy fulness, headache, heartburn and what not. The effectual remedy, proved by permanent perma-nent cures of thousands of severe cases, Is Hood's Sarsaparilla liooD'g i'lLLD kre the best cathartic GIVE THE POTATO ITS DUE. ApatheonU to thn Humble Tuber That In Found on Every Table. A i writer in one of the current monthlies undertakes to enumerate the good things which America has given to tha world. He lists maple sugar, the turkey, the tomato, Indian corn, tobacco and a host of other thlnjs, but totally neglocts the potato, which Is in more general use than any). 'other vegetable. And this reminds re-minds us that one of the lesser encyclopedias ency-clopedias gravely declares that the potato po-tato Is a native of Great Britain and that It was "brought to the American settlements from Ireland" a half truth which is quite as reprehensible as a full falsehood. When the Spaniards Span-iards penetrated Mexico they found the natives eating, as one of the chroniclers chron-iclers of that day quaintly said, "certain "cer-tain roots or bulbs which grow at the ends of stems in the ground and which are called 'batata.' " The standard encyclopedias en-cyclopedias note that the potato is a native of South America, Mexico and other tropical American countries and that it made its first appearance In Europe when carried there from Peru by Spanish explorers at the beginning of the sixteenth century. It also was found in Florida and from there it was carried to Virginia and thence to England by Sir John Hawkins in lf.iia. A cfrntury later we find the Royal Geographical Geo-graphical soeiey laboring for Its in-troff'jtftlon in-troff'jtftlon Into Ireland on the suppo Bitkin that it would afford a certain means of forestalling famine, and a few years later it came from Ireland Into the settlement of New England a fact which gave rise to the encyclopedic encyclo-pedic error which we have noted. And this circuitous route from Virginia to Ne?, England shows how little there v?js w common between the "rake-hellies" "rake-hellies" of Virginia and their puritan neighbors on the north. The potato is probably dispersed more widely among the people of the earth than any other American product with the single exception of tobacco. Indian corn, now grown to be our greatest agricultural staple and one of the bret life-sustaiuers known, is little used by the world at large. But tobacco, with no llfe-RUstainlng qualities whatever, 1b known in every land and clime. Its widespread and enormous consumption consump-tion is one of the wonders of the world, for no drug, food or other substance sub-stance ever came into such general use in bo short a space of time. Kausaa City Journal. are Right luuiilUUUuuiuu To Save Her Child. From frightful disfigurement Mrs. Nannie Galleger, of LaOrarigc, (!., applied Pueklen's Arnica Salve to great sores on her head and face, and writes its quick cure exceeded all her hopes. Ig works wonders in Sores, Hruiscs, Skin Eruptions, Cuts, Burns, Scalds and Tiles, "Jc. Cure guaranteed guaran-teed by Springville Drug Co. For Sale. Property now occupied as residence by K. J. Yard In Springville, Utah. Location on Main street near Packard store, For further particulars particu-lars iuquire at premises. E. ,1. Yaiu). Parrot Coe Death or Mauler. Bome persons who have parrots for pets are fond of teaching the bird to take bits of food from the lips of its master. This practice has cost a postmaster post-master of a little town in Italy his life. A friend of the postmaster had returned from America, and had brought with him a parrot, which he gave to the postmaster. In time that official came to b exceedingly fond of the bird, and taught it the trick of feeding from his lips. Once In awhile the bird would give a decided nip to the man's lips, but nothing was thought of that, not even wen the bird began to show signR of illness. One day the bird nipped the lipR of the man a little harder than usual, causing a slight wound, and within a few hours the man died In agony of a strange malady that attacked his lungs, bronchial tubeB, heart and brain. Doctors were called in hastily, but they could do nothing for him, and even after death came, they could not tell from an examination ex-amination of the body what swift and terrible disease it was. Stranger yet, the man's wife and cousin, as well M the man who originally owned the parrot, were seized shortly afterward with a diseas which resembled exact-lr exact-lr that, which had boon th dpsth of the postniHster. New York Press Flies Carry disease germs from all kinds of decaying animal and vegetable mailt r, and distribute them through your homes Get ritl of the pests by STICKY and P oidSoN FLY PAPER SPRINGVILLE DRUG CO. T. TL. ISL oil y, rroprlotor R. A.DEA.L, Frosidout. a. L, CUMMINGS, Oashi.. H, T, REYNOLDS, Vioe-Prosidbnt. Springville Banking Co. SPKlNl'iVILLK, UTAH Ci3itni stools. srj 0,000. Pransacts a general banking business. Exchange hought and sold and depH Its received subject to check. Four per cent interest , aid on time deposits, compounding semi-annually Money always on hand for short time loans. Drugs. Medicines. Chemicals Prescriptions Carefully Cwnipvunded by Earl Tranchell, Pharmacist in Charge. . City Drug Store, VILJL O. IC. TUAXCHKI A Stationery, Toilet Articles, Soap, fP 'ie StOOl-Cigars, StOOl-Cigars, Confectionery, Musical" SupplicT " YOU Want j )d physicians East Side of Bank Bii callcd Yoti ki)oW fch TABULES niculous in its t formula pre-s pre-s lor disorders (little Tabules, "lick to act. This is the season of the yer0lllSIncSVi' J 1, Heart-Housewives Heart-Housewives desire new I'npnlling a Carpets. OUR STOCK inIail1 fx" 1 , . take. lines arc complete and our 1'rices Uc l ight. We also have a tine lino of I'aby Carriages. UNDERTAKER Oasis-Otis, OoIIlxxja, Hi linings, Ilandloa, H3to. And all kinds of Undertakers' (ioods. Special attention given to orders for home made Casket and Coffins of all kinds. Also have a Full Line of VVall Paper Samples. Walter Wheeler, Springville. Four Blocks Hast of Packard's Store. K. II. Heesley Thos. A. Beesley ! BEESLEY MARBLE AND GRAME WORKS, man oradk MONUMENTAL WORK MARBLE and GRANITE MONUMENTS, HEADSTONES, MARKERS, TABLETS, C0PIN6S, ETC., ET6. Wr all our Mnrhle and UritiiH In car load lots and can therefore glvr invent llilo prto. All work guai-aiitwd nirletly UrM. class In every particular particu-lar It will pay to wv our work and get our prtci. Provo - TJtli. |