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Show BUSINESS DIRECTOR Molen & Caffrey, Furniture, Slate ret. G. E Anderson, Photographer. State 8 1 root H. T.Reynolds, gaaeraj merchandise. State street. Fred Carter, conbrthetor and builder. Monroe strce Peal Bros. & Mendenhall, general merchandise, State street. Win. B Roylance, harness, dealer in haraess f xiures. State st G. S. Wood Mercantle Co., wholesale and retail dealer In ireneral merchandise. Win. M. llovlmice, wholesale frait, produce, seeds and rain; bicycles, Htucicbaker wagona, State street. George Selvvyn, Dealers In all kinds of Meats and Green Groceries. State street. The Independent. The local newsnauer Subscribe for It and read It. It will do you good. Job Printing Print shop Ik north side of Statu si red. t . This signature is en every box of Ihe gonuini Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet. the remedy that cures cola la one day Wanted Active man of Bond character K deliver and collect in Utah for old estab lished luauufaeturinir wholesale nouse. I) a year, sure pay. Honesty more than experience required. Our reference, any bank in any city. Knclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Manufacturers, lliird i'lotir. Dearborn St.. Chicago. Wanted Trustworthy Men and Women to travel aud advertise for old established house of solid financial standing. Salary. 1780 a year and expenses, all payable In cash. So canvassing reciuired. Give refer eaces and enclose self-addressed stamped envelope. Address Manager, ii.w C'axton llldg., Chicago. Professional Cards. p DUNN, M. D. 'physician and surgeon. Office in Rank Building. Room SPWNGVILLE, UTAH. C JEO. SMAET, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. Office in Rooms 6 and fl, in Bank building. .OfBce hours 8 to 10 a. m.. 12 to 2 and 5 to 9 p. m. SPRINQVILLK, ... . UTAII. D. C. JOHNSON, ftttomey-at-baca and f4otaty Publie. Sprinciville, Utah. James caffrey, ' NOTARY PUBLIC SPRING VILLE, UTAlL' ; : Dr. N. II. PACKARD, DENTIST Extracting; Filling, Crown and Bridge work, and, all kinds of dental worn uone in a professional manner, OFFICE AT KESIDEMCE One block south and 1 east of It. G. W. dept Springville, Utah. Societies. - K. 0. T. M. Springville Tent No. 9 meets in re gular review every Saturday evening at 7.30. Visiting Sir Knights made welcome. D. C. Johnson, Com Elliot N. Jordan, R. K. DOMESTIC STEAM LAUNDRY ; PROVO, UTAH. first class work in all lines. Fam ily washings a specialty. Laundry taken Tuesdays and returned Thursdays. Thurs-days. Sprlngvllh agency at Jordan's hook Dtore. The Meat Kept at Is Always the Freshest, Sweetest, Best! A Fine Li ue of Fresh and Cured Meats., Lard, Pickles, .Canned Goods, Vegetable. J-'lsh and Game In Season DUR PBICKS ARE REASONABLE If You want to dispose of all your VeaU. Chickens and Hides for cash, call oo Austin Roylance, t;x)TmwUc, Cub. SeWsIeaiWei The Independent. WM. F.GIBSON - Publisher. Entered at the past office at Springville Hah. for transmission through the walls as econd-class matter. Issued every Thursday morning. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. jne year. Six months, Three months - - - 11.25 .10 .40 AdYsrtisinz Rates Made Inowa on Application. WISE OR OTHERWISE. Envy is the lowest known form of jralse. The virtue a woman boosts of she leldom postscses. A woman 8 Mom forgives until ifter she forgets. The beauty of some photographs lies in the background. The man who invented work ought to have flaished it. Brilliant falsehoods dazzle more eyes than gems of truth. A man who wants to be mean never wants an opportunity. A man Is not wholly bad If his dog has confidence In him. By stopping to think a woman gives her tongue an occasional rest. It la easier to protect on:'s self from an enemy than l orn a fool friend. But one thing Is greater than success, suc-cess, and that is another effort after a failure. We read of the seven eges of man, but one age is ample for the average woman. When a couple marry under the rose they usually walk on a path of thorns ever after. Saying mean things Is the one bad habit cultivated most assiduously by the average woman. The young man on a salary of $6 a week is apt to think his best girl dear er than he can afford. The wise girl always rearranges the parlor furniture Immediately after a young man has called. When a woman marries a man to reform him the poor fellow is up against heroic treatment. Every time a woman reads of a man committing suicide she wonders what other woman was at the bottom of it Pennsylvania Grit. HOME-MADE PHILOSOPHY. The caterpillar and the glutton live to eat Don't try to flefy fate with in emp ty stomach. -! ' : Great men are only one out of the many millions so are we. It takes a wise s n to te'l whether his father Is a fanatic or only a sanctified sanc-tified fool. The man with the most means is very often the meanent man In the neighborhood. The hope of being elected to public office has saved many a politician from the penitentiary. The studied hypo.rl.sy of men has driven me to doubt everything but man's simple Ignorance. The desires not gratified on earth are the p'gaunts with which men paint the skies of their heaven. We tremble at the Immutable; are awed by the inscrutable; aggravated by the unsu'table; but are obliged to bow to the Inevitable. There would never be any rain were it not for the Bunshine, never any sorrow sor-row were it not for our conception and enjoyment of pleasure. I feel for the great men Just as they feel for me. If any one asks more of me, he Is a fool; If he pretends to feel more than this himself, he is a liar. Hypocrites wl 1 weep with you, laugh with you, pray with ycu, sing with you, and be the s'ar witness against you if you are ever dragged before the court. - . Men who assist co-poratloni to rob the public will themselves rob corpo rations at the very fhst safeopportun-tty. safeopportun-tty. FInnickey Finnuk:n In Pennsyl vania unr, WITH THE 6AGE3. One who has observed the course men for many years s iys that success In life depends up n s'aylng power. The reason for fat u e In moft cases is lack of perseverance. Men get tired and give up. J. R. Mllbr. Why cannot we, slipping our hands into His each day, walk trustingly over the day's appointed path, thorny or flowery, crooked or straight, knowing that evening will bring us sweet peace and home! George McDonald. To educate Is to give the mind that freedom, that disposition, and those habits that may enable the learner to obtain any part of knowledge be shall apply himself to, or stand In need of, in the future couise of his life. Locke. Certainly at fcnme hour, though per haps not your hour, the wait ng waters will stir; In some shape, though not perhaps the shape you d, earned, which your heart lovel, aud for which it bird, the healing horald will descend. Charlotte Bronto. There Is only one way of serving mankind. That Is, to brcome better yourself. "Let your light sj shine before be-fore men that they, may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in H?aven." A man cannot sit whUi ataading la tis airs of sia WRTICULTa A , p as for Cld B tora ;-. A valuable bulletin on cold storage for fruit, prepared by Professors Fa-ville Fa-ville and Hall has recently been published pub-lished by the Kansas Experiment Station. Sta-tion. The following instructions are iven for the picking and packing of apples for cold storage: Attempt to store nothing but first-class first-class fruit. Have barrels at hand and arrangements made for shipment be-tore be-tore beginning to pick. Pick the crop as soon as it is grown and has Its color. This is while it is still-hard, two weeks before ripeness. Use no fruit that is not picked by hand. Sort carefully, throwing out all fruit that tells below the grade and all that is uot absolutely sound'. Choose good, .vell-colored specimens for the first ayer of the barrel and place them all oy hand, stems down. Do not crowd them. Place the second layer by hand either exactly, apple for apple, on the Jrst or else turn them on their sides, ulush down, breaking the Joints of the Hist layer. After this pour in the fruit gently from the basket, firBt lowering the basket Into the barrel. Shake the barrel frequently and fill it up, using the same grade and variety of apples every Inch of the way. Pack the last layer of the barrel by hand as evenly as possible, with the stems up. When this Is in place apply the press, with a padded head, small enough to At into the barrel, to settle the fruit Release Ihe pressure, place on the barrel head, force It Into position, drive down the boops and nail them solid. Turn the other end of the barrel up. Label on it plainly the variety and grade of the fruit and the name of the grower. There must be absolutely no movement move-ment of fruit In the barrel. Ship without with-out delay to the storage house. Ship in the evening if possible. If the distance dis-tance is great, or the connection poor, use refrigerator cars and see that they are iced several hours before putting la the fruit. Go with the fruit if possible; pos-sible; if not, have your commission man apprised of the shipment and send him the bill of lading. Trust the commission com-mission man, but never lose track of the apples. The man who attempts to carry apples ap-ples through cold storage in a less painstaking way than this will never succeed. Unless the grower and shipper ship-per can clear bis conscience by this standard he cannot wholly blame the warehouse men for hla losses in storage. stor-age. In the storage houses of the Armour Ar-mour Packing Company, Kansas City, during the season of 1837 and 18D8 were thousands of barrels packed by apple speculator, the shrinkage on which averaged less than 2 per cent. In the same room were apples packed by farmers, some of which shrunk as high as 80 per cent. Now, they re? celved exactly the same degree of temperature, tem-perature, dryness, etc., so that the fault was not with the storage room, but with the quality of apples and the way In which they were packed. Cold storage cannot improve the condition of fruit. At best, it can only hold It at something near the condition condi-tion it has when it Is put la. It can not save from decay fruit that is im perfect or unsound. A few decaying specimens soon ruin the whole barrel Sound fruit is the only kind that will keep In cold storage. Hort enli oral School at Maiilson. The accompanying illustrations show scenes In the horticultural school at Madison, Wisconsin. The upper picture pic-ture shows the students of the class In plant life at work In the laboratory studying the development of plants from Beed. The lower picture shows a lesson in tree planting in the garden house. The lessons in plant-life take up the seed and its germination, the nutrition nutri-tion of the plant and its development from the seed to complete maturity; how plants are affected by heat, cold, moisture, dryness, parasites, soil, climate, cli-mate, fertilizers, etc. The laboratory work embraces practice in seed -testing under varying conditions of heat, moisture and oxygen, the planting of seeds under di.Terent conditions, with a study from living plant specimens of the formation of roots, leaves, f.uits, flowers, etc., and the parts of the d w er, with elementary work in cross-polllnatlon; cross-polllnatlon; also tranRp'nnting and pruning, the use of the spraylns p.inip the compounding of insectlcld s, and fungicides, winter pioto.tlon of plants piaklng of hotbeds and cold frames tree protectors, berry boxes, etc. Additional lessons embrace the cilt! vatlon of the various trv.e of our ell mate. Including the marketing an preservation, with the culture an adaptation of flower-arden plants also the principal Injurious inscu an, methods of preventing their rava e The laboratory Instruction embrice practical work In grafting, buddl ic the growing of plants from cuttings forcing vegetables, etc. A case of smallpox recently on Lake Ontario steamer running between Alexandra Hay and Oswego, n Y caused a paulc amon.j the 600 excur. lonlsts aboard. It was reported or! the boat that an effort would be made 10 quaraiiuuH mu steamer and the p. curstonisls were so terrified that a rush was made at Obwego to get off. MHny women w-fre crushed and there were many nairow escapes from drowning so eager v ere the people to get off the boat. BEST FOR THE BOWELS If to ii liaven't a 1-t-irular, healthy movement of th bow t'ist every d.ay, ou'i- ill or will b Keep your . tKweloHn,aili well- Koree, in the shape of io- Lnt. niivutf r till txtiHOii. it daitireroutt. Tlte smooth est, easiest, iimal ortwt way of kaeping the bowvtw Clear ana cie" w CANDY CATHARTIC EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY fMpaftant. FaUtattlA. I'uttont. Ttite (iood. ?oOod Jiever Hickcn, Weaken, or irii-, 10, S, and M rents per box. write iur iree cam pit-, auu mtofcie on faeutii. Adtlieitfl 433 KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAN WORTH MORE THAN SILVER. Colorado's Fields of Alfalra Exceed Her Sllne Id Value Great as is the wealth of the state of Colorado in silver she has a far more valuable product In the royal purple alfalfa that supplies fodder for the innumerable herds that roam the plulns and feed in the valleys. Last year the value of the alfalfa crop was placed at $10,000,000. yet that does not represent its contributory worth. In 18G2 the Introduction of this grass into the state solved the problem of forage which up to that time had puzzled the. pioneers, who had not been able to ralte ur-cpssfully any other form of forage. Alfalfa made possible the great stock growing industry of the state. Last year the aggregate number of horses, catttle, hogs and sheep, according accord-ing to the asse;s jrs' returns, was 4,003,-000, 4,003,-000, valued at 115,000,000. Excepting the range sheep and cattle and some horses in the cities alfalfa formed the greater part of the food of all these animals. Thus dairying, a new but rapidly developing indusf y, depends on the alfalfa. The great grain farms and potato ranches need this product as well. Alfalfa is peerlefs as a soil renovator ond enricher. Its long roots, penetrating to a depth below the surface sur-face that other plants cannot reach, gather the needed elements and, decaying, decay-ing, liberate them for the benefit of future crops. The Colorado farmer h3s learned that rotating crops of wheat and alfalfa make the averags yield of wheat in Colorado 25 bushels to the acre, while the average for the whole country 13 less than 14 bushels. The same rotation has produced the famous Greeley poiato, as inimitable in its way as the Rocky Ford melon. The Colo rado stock raiser has discovered that cattle may b fattened at home with out sending them to corn states, and that alfalfa produced beef, not tallow Me has discovered that pigs turned into the alfalfa patch during the summer are ready for market In the fall, and that "alfalfa mutton" brings the top price In the east. The small rancher knows that his chickens, geese, duck- and Belgian hares are finer for th alfalfa that forms part of their daily food, and that his alia fi honey equals if It docs not excel, the delicious white sage honey of California. Tot Causes Mglit Alarm. "One night my brother's baby was taken with Croup," Mrs. J. C. Snider, of Crittenden, Ky., '-It seemed it would strangle before we could pet a doctor, so we gavo it Dr. King's New Discovery, which gave quick relief and permanently cured it. We always keep it in the house to protect our children from Croup and Whooping Whoop-ing Cough. It cured me of achronic bronchial (rouble that no other remedy would relieve." Infallible for Coughs, Colds, Throat and Lung troubles. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free at Springville Drug Co. Didn't Mean It That Way. The attempt of the small boy to be polite ended rather dl a?trously, a", though not through r.ny intentions! omission on his part. He had been li the habit of supplying the evening pa per to a politician, a man of cDrreit business habits, who discovered one evening that he had not the penny for payment. "That's all rl.ht." said the boy, "you can g ve it to me tomorrow night." "But, my boy," interposed the gentleman, Impressively, "I may not be alive by tomorrow night." "Never mind," answe-ed the b . cheerfullv 'It'll be no great loss." A shadow fell ccrots the sla ejman's fare, and he Is still wondering whether the boy de spite his look of Innocence, was thinking think-ing solely of the penny. Youth's Companion. Com-panion. A llnnrh of Onion. In the quieter section of a cemetery ? near Evansvllle, Wis., Is a stone known as the "Onion Tombstone." Drooping gracefully over one corner of the. slab as if Just pulled and laid there Is the marble semblance of a bunch of young onions. Beneath is the date of the birth and death of the woman who sleeps In this peculiarly marked grave. The only explanation the sexton has to offer Is that Aunt Betsy liked onions to eat better than anything else, and often SAld that she did not want flowers flow-ers or verses on her tombstone, but Just a bunch of onions. Detroit Free Press. Ilr!let'i Company. "Bridget, were you entertaining company In the kitchen last night?" "Well, mum. that's fcr thlm f say, Oi was afther doln' me blst." Phlla- ilflphls HiiKetln. REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR. No man's destiny can be Judged till destiny has ended him. It takes a coward to stay wrong when he knows he is wrong. We get old trying to stay young, but we do not stay young trying to be old. Age ever looks backward; youth forward; so the two never see the samf scenery of life. New York Press. Stepped Into Live Coals. "When a child I burned my foot frightfully," writes VV. H. Fads, of Jonesville, Va., "which caused horrible leg sores for 30 years, but Bucklen's Arnica Salve wholly cured nu after everything else failed." Infallible for Burns, Scalds. Cuts, Sores, Uruises and Piles. Sold by Springville Drug Co., 25c. Flrt Aid An to for Fir - Consul General Guenther of Frankfort, Frank-fort, reports that the Eagle velocipede works of that city, which built an automobile au-tomobile for Are departments, which will be exhibited at the Berlin exposition expo-sition for flrcextinguishing and life-saving life-saving apparatus. The automobile, adds the consul general, carries four men, has a speed of about eleven miles an hour and will be used to render first aid in case of fires. Stops the Cough and the Cold. Works off Laxative liroiuo Quinine Talilcts cure a cold in one d:iy. No Cure, no Pay, Price 25 cents. Guaranteed Salary of $900 YEARLY Men and women 'if good address to represent us, some to travel appointing appoint-ing agents, others for local work looking look-ing after our interests. ' $!)00 s:ilary guaranteed yearly; extra commissions and expenses, rapid advancement, old established house. Grand chance for earnest 'nan or woman to secure permanent, per-manent, pleasant position, liberal income in-come and future. New, brilliant lines. Write at once. STAFFORD PKESSS 23 Church St., New Haven, Conn. Wall Paper! YoU ki)oW that V' This is tjheason of the yenr when Housewives desire new Paper am! Carpets: OUR STOCK in theso lines are complete ami our Prices urn ri-ht. We also have a hue line of Baby C11 rriajes. Get Married in Our Our welding rings are lucky riris, and the bride who lias one of our rings on her linger is wedded to a reliable man, because he came to a reliable store, bought a reliable riim at a reliable price-straws that indicate that ho will make a reliable husband. BECK'S JEWELRY STORE. PROVO, UTAH. Fine Watch Repairing. w J" I Salt Lake: Springs W h i t o Sulphur Baths HENRY 1 t's YourJbiVer! rS11fH MllPlOff our appeiite is poor, JUI JL11SZI your heart " flutters." you nave headaches, tongue is coated, bad breath, bowet3 constipated, bad taste in the If not all of thess svmDtoms. - j -r , some or them? It's your nver. any or all appetite and spirits i IT 1 I I II fill 4 .sk Si r A. A. BROWN, Tonsorial Artist For an easy Shave and an Artistic Hair Cut, call on him. Xj a. dies' - and - Children's Haircuts a specialty. Agency for Troy Steam Laundry, Salt Lake. Parlor 1 door north of Reynold's store SPRINGVILLE. H.G.WOOD, onsorial Artiste All work done in the Highest Style of the Art. One Door' North of Dr. Peterson's Drug Store. Agent for Provo Steam Laundry. The Well Dressed Man Wants hi Linen very carefully looked after, and all Laundry work well and neatly done. Tlml' the way we do our work. PROVO STEAM LAUNDRY J. M. G CLICK, Prop'r. PROVO, UTAH. 0. N. PARSONS & CO., -DKALEUS IN- tate ana Mines Negotiate Farm Loans, liny and Sell Farms and Lia riches. Promote Mining and Inigation F.n-terprises. F.n-terprises. Cor res po nd e n ce Solicited. OFFICE IN Walker Bros. Hank lihlg. SALT LAKE CITY - UTAH Rings. Real Es Private Baths Large Pool for Men BARNES, PROP. r ... . mouth? then KJ is a natural vegetable remedv. containing no mineral or narcotic poisons. It will correct symptoms, make your health. good. At druggists, 50 cents. |