OCR Text |
Show Unlv of Utah Devoted to the Interests of the Leading Agricultural and Horticultural Section of Utah-"The Garden of the West." A Weekly Newspaper, SPRINGVILLE, UTAH, THURSDAY, MARCH 13. 1902. PRICE, $1.25 PER ANNUM VOLUME 12. NUMBER 26. The Finest Gake Is made with Royal Baking Bak-ing Powder. Always light, sweet, pure & wholesome. Fine Silk Last Thursday, Mrs. Elizabeth Packard and her daughter Sophie So-phie finished winding their last years product of silk, and a first class article it is. The production produc-tion wf silk has passed the experimental exper-imental period in Utah, and is proven to be an industry that will be, not only profitable, but very desirable, in that it will furnish our young girls profitable profit-able and interesting employment. employ-ment. The planting of Mulberry Mul-berry trees, should be looked after, and attended to, by all land owners, who have vacant pieces of land. If the odd bits of land, that is put to no use, and all partition lines between lands were planted to the Mulberry Mul-berry tree, it would lay a foundation found-ation for an industry that would in a few years, bring, or save a million dollars to our state. The silk industry will do for the farmers' wives and daughters and indeed for all the womem of Utah, what the sugar beet cultivation does for their fathers and brothers, and something to -: keep tho-c; vis bus vr and - at - h- J'same time make the labor light, pleasant, interesting and profitable. profit-able. Thirtyfive years ago, Geo. D. Watt, took a grent interest in seri-culture, he made a tour of the territory speaking in all the settlements in its interest; he became quite enthusiastic, and tosuch an extent, that in Spring-ville Spring-ville some one said, after the Siik meeting; "Brother Watt you have silk on the brain." Watt quickly replied: "Yes! and we must all get silk on the brain, before we can get it on our backs!" So it is along any line, before a success is made in any new undertaking, somebody must "get it on the brain," which simply means, get sufficiently suffici-ently in earnest and enthused to take a proper interest in the matter,. when success is assured. Ups and Downs Ceo. R. Whitehead had quite a thrilling experience last week while digging a well. A horse was doing the work of pulling up the bucket. As George was in the act of getting in the bucket, buc-ket, old Dobbin got frightened and started to wind up very quickly, when the digger caught the edge of the bucket with his hands and was pulled up to daylight day-light as rapidly as was Davy Crockett, out of the hollow tree at the tail of the bear. When the top was reache,d his hands struck the boards which covered cover-ed the top causing him to loose his hold, and drop to the bottom, bot-tom, 27 feet, more quickly than he ascended. Fortunately there was water in the bottom and no injury wps sustained. Mr. White-head, White-head, now fully realizes, that there are many ups and downs in life, and which is the more trying on the constitution, the ups or downs, he has not as yet decided. Home Culture Club Election. LastFridav the Home Culture Club held its election and the following ladies were chosen to fill the various positions for the year to come: President, Mrs. Lydia M.Johnson; Vice Presi dent, Mrs. G.P.Thompson; Secretary, Sec-retary, Mrs. Miriam Crandall; Treasurer, Miss Hattie Lee. An Educational and Art committee com-mittee was elected, consisting of Mesdames G.P.Thompson, S.J. Konold and Mrs.Frank West. The Club met at the home of Augustus Cox arid were entertained enter-tained after the regular exercises exerci-ses by Misses Plympton and Roe. The Vice of Nagging. Clouds the happiness of the" home, but a nagging woman often needs help. She may be so nervous and run down in rfealth that trifles annoy her, If she is melancholy, excitable, troubled trou-bled with loss of appetite, headache, sleeplessness, constipation or fainting faint-ing and dizzy spells, she needs Electric Elec-tric Bitters, the most, wonderful remedy rem-edy tor ailing women. Thousands of sufferers from female troubles, nervousness, nerv-ousness, backache and weak kidneys have used it, and become healthy and happy. Try it, only 50c. Springville Dealers guarantee satisfaction. Trie Possibilities in' a Boy. I have a profound respect for boys. Grim7, ragged and tousled tousl-ed boys in the street often attract me strangely. A boy is a man in the cocoon vou do not know what he is going to become his life is big with possibilities. He may make or unmake kings, change boundry lines between states, write books that will mould characters, or invent machines ma-chines that will revolutionize the commerce of the world. Every man was a boy it seems strange, but it is really so. Wouldn't you like to turn time backward and see Abraham Lincoln Lin-coln at twelve, when he had never worn a pair of. boots? the lank, lean, yellow, hungry boy, hungry for love; hungry for learning, tramping through the woods for twenty miles to borrow a book, and spelling it out while crouching before the glare of the burning logs. - Then there was that Corsican boy, one of a goodly brood, who weighed only fifty pounds when ten years old, who was thin pale and perverse and had tantrums and had to be sent supperless to bed or locked in a dark room because he would'nt "mind!" Who would have thought that he would have mastered every phase of warfare at Wentysix, and when the exchequer of France was in dire confusion would say "thet finances? I, will arrange them," Distinctly and vividly I remember rem-ember a squat, freckled boy who was born in the "Patch" and used to pick up coal along railroad rail-road tracks in Buffalo. A few months ago I had . a motion . to, make before the court of appeals at Rochester. That boy from the "Patch" was the judge who wrote. the opinion granting my petition. Be patient with the hoys. You are dealing with soul-stuff, Destiny waits just around the corner. Be patient with the boys. The Philistine. For the Complection. The complection always suffers from biliousness or constipation. Unless Un-less the bowels are kept open the impurities im-purities from the body appear in the form of unsightly eruptions. De Witt's Little Early Risers keep the liver and bowels in healthy condition anu remove the cause of such troubles. C. E. Hooper, Albany, Ga., says, "I took DeWitt's Little Early Risers for biliousness, they were just what I needed. I am. feeling better now than in years." Never gripe nor distress. Safe thorough and gentle. The very best pilis. City Drug Store. Good Sense. Here is a thought from the Richfield Reaper which is not without merit, "It is all right to punish liquor dealers who allow boys in their places of business, but there should 'also be a punishment pun-ishment for boys who lie. to saloon sal-oon keepers regarding their age. The selling of liquor to minors must stop, but punishing the saloon man alone will not do it. The other offender is. the lying boy and his penalty must be added to rid us of the evil," ' CouIcZ 'ot Breathe. Coughs, colds, croup, grip, bronchitis, bron-chitis, other throat and lung troubles are quickly cured by One Minute Cough Cure. It is not a mere expectorant, expect-orant, which gives temponry relief. It softens and liqufles the mucous, draws out the inflamation and removes re-moves the cause of the disease. Absolutely Ab-solutely safe, act! at once. ''One Minute Min-ute Cough Cure will do all that is claimed for it,", says Justice -of the Peace, J. Q.-IIqk r Crosby. M iss'JMy. j wife could not get her breath and was relieved by the first dose. It has been a benefit to all my family" Peoples' Drug Store. Completed Proverbs Before you run in double harness, har-ness, look well to the other horse, but see to it., that the other horse doesn't have a chance to look well to vou. Pity is near akin to love, but kinship does not always signify friendship. It is hard to pay for bread that has been eaten, but not so hard as to get bread to eat that has not been paid for. Only that which is honestly got is gain; the rest is velvet. Labor overcomes all things; even the laborer. Employment brings enjoyment; enjoy-ment; when it brings the means to enjoy. . A wise. man is moved from his course neither by force nor en-treaty, en-treaty, but the same often applies ap-plies to the mule. Possession is nine points in law, and frequently all the profits. prof-its. Every man for himself, and the devil take the hindermost, is the crv of those who are well in front. In matters of taste there can be no dispute, for every man is so firmly convinced that there is no standard by which his taste can be measured. What e'er is best administered is best, for the one who administers. admin-isters. Ignorance is the mother of impudence; no father is named. A man who will not flee, will make his foes flee, but what if his foe 'be made of the same metal? Let a child have its way and it will not cry, but its parents will The Era Can't Afford It, Men are making the claim every day that they cannot afford aff-ord i to join an order now, but assert their desire to do so in the near e future, not realizing how near that future may be to the brink of eternity. You cannot afford to await the coming of better times. Whether times are good or bad expenses must be met. There is the butcher and the baker, the merchant and the tax man to be settled with. Surely and rightly, but if you do with a little less and take a little insurence you will be on the right road and will probably have quite enough to eat and wear, and then if anything happens hap-pens to you, those left behind are provided tor. Lockjaw From Cobwebs. Cobwebs put on a cut lately gave a woraan lockjaw. Millions know that the best thing to put on a cut is Buck-len's Buck-len's Arnica Salve, the infallible healer ofjwounds.ulcers, sores, skin eruptions, scalds and piles. It cures or no pay. sOnly 25c, at Springville Deaiers. Protection and Promise. Keep shy of the man who tells . you that you do not need protec- ! tion, or urges you to drop the protection you already have in ; some g,?od Fraternal Order. He is not your friend. The step he advises will not only affect you but reaches out to your loved ones. Take no such step thought- j lessly, you need protection." During the years of life's activities, activi-ties, disease may step in and lay hold of you, and remove you from theainlytree and stop its support. ProtectionolTa better than a thousand promises prom-ises for tomorrow. Thd Sword of Washington. The exhibition of the sword presented to General Washington Washing-ton by Frederick the Great, now at the executive chamber, was attended by a peculiar incident. When the will of Washington was read it was found that he had bequeathed his five swords to his five nephews, with the proviso, "that they should not be drawn from their scabbards unless in defense of the country." The sword of Frederick has been strictlv in its scabbard, in com-pliance com-pliance with the provisions of the will. When it was handed to Prince Henry he drew the blade from the sheath. Of course he did-not did-not know the provisions of the will, but he had innocently violated viola-ted them. No mention of the occurrence was made to the royal roy-al visitor. . An Enjoy ale Social. Was held at the residence of R.L.Mendenhall last Friday evening. ev-ening. The honored guest of the occasion was Elder Arthur Mendenhall of Idaho, who in returning from the missionary field remained over torvisit his cousins Mendenhall and the other Mendenhalls. The chief game of the evening was Cro-quetnot, Cro-quetnot, punctuated with anecdote, anec-dote, story telling, other fads and fancies. The prizes, for the best playing were taken by Thomas Mendenhall of Mapleton and Nell Sumsion, the "boo hoo by" prizes were bestowed upon' Will. Harmer and Mrs. Miriam Mendenhall. Men-denhall. During the pastimes copious quantities of confections were absorbed by the revellers and all went as merrily as a Mendenhall family gathering. Spring Humors of the Blood Come to a large, majority of people. Probably 75 per cent, of these are cured every year by Hood's Sarsapa-rilla, Sarsapa-rilla, and we hope by this advertisement advertise-ment to get the other 25 per cent, to take this great Spring" Medicine. It will sharpen your appetite, cure all stomach troubles, relieve that tired feeling. Its strength as a blood purifier is demonstrated by its marvelous cures of Scrofula Salt Rheum Scald Head Boils, Pimples All Kinds of Humor Psoriasis Blood Poisoning. Rheumatism Catarrh Malaria, Etc. All of which are prevalent cow. HOOD'S Sarsaparilla Will do you a wonderful amount of good. Be sure .o get Hood's. Woman (Juaker Preacher. Mrs. Jenkins, wife of Governor Jenkins Jen-kins of Oklahoma territory is a Quaker preacher and is noted for her charitable charit-able acts. She fills the ulpit of the local Quaker church every Sunday and visits regularly the United States jail in Guthrie and ministers to the material ma-terial as well as the spiritual wants of the prisoners. Cures the Grip in Tuxo 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 cough that follows La Grippe it never fails to give relief. Price 25 and 50 cents. ' Couldn't Stand a Slinwl. When Sir John Tenniel, the famous cartoonist, was asked why he had never married he replied: "Well, if I had married a girl she would always have wanted to be going about all over the place, and that would not have suited me, while, on the other hand, if I had married an elderly, lady she would have worn a shawl, and that I could not have stood." To Care a Cold in One Day. Take Warner's White Wine of Tar b.vrup, the best cough remedy earth. 25 and 50 cents. on I White Pine and Tar & will not cure consumption. It is 1 not a patent medicine. But as a specific in all affections of the throat and lungs resulting from - colds it is unequalled We g guarantee it. f SPRINGVILLE DRUG- CO., 3 T. R. KELLY, Propr. S- . R. A.DEA.L, President. R. L. OUMJIINGS, Cashier H. T. REYNOLDS, Vice-President. Springville Banking Co. SPRINGVILLE, UTAH C2CLTtEkl. Stocli. 350,000. Transacts a general banking business. Exchange bought and sold arid d epos its received subject to check. Four per cent interest paid on time deposits, compounding semi-annually Money always on hand for short time loans. . J 'if Keep the Cows Clean. This is what the Salt Lake Board of Health has to say about the meek and mild eyed cow: ( "A cow should be brushed curried cur-ried and cleaned the same as a horse, but a majority of the dairymen simply take their cows of a refuse pile in the morning, and without brushing her or making any effort to remove the tilth, simply milk her, and the truth of the matter is, that the milk we get is simply a solution solu-tion of filth and milk. If people peo-ple only knew what they were drinking in this milk they would rise up in arms, and I propose pro-pose that they shall -know, and that these conditions shall be changed.1 To Cure A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo. Quinine Tablets, All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signatuie is on each box 25c Blast Furnace Gas Motors. It has been found in Germany and other parts of western Europe that the gases from blast furnaces may be advantageously used in running motors. The motors are employed for actuating air-compressors and electric generators, and it is said that they effect a considerable saving in the cost of founding. Winter in California. It is not necessary to dwell upon the manifold attractions of California for climate, recreation, recrea-tion, health or home, but if you wish booklets upon any particular particu-lar section or resort or industry of that congenial zone address the undersigned officers of the Southern Pacific Company at San Francisco. E. O. MCCORMICK, Passenger Traffic Manager, General Passenger Agent, d. R. gray, General Agent, Salt Lake City, Utah. STANDARD MEAT MARKET Wholesale and Retail Butchers. All Kinds of Fresh and Cured Meats and a Full ' Line of groceries. - i .. 2&. Miner 3s JsL. B. Iwlirxor-, JSPriaa f. w i 'A |