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Show r t , .; ' , - ' .' ' : U r ' .... , . ;.: ' . . . ' s : - ! - v - . . . 1 HE : iNDEPENDEN I Univ of Utah V Weekly .Newspaper, Devoted to the Interests of trie Leading Agricultural and Horticultural Section of Utah-'The Garden of the West." VOLUME 12. NUMBER 30. SPRINGVILLE, UTAH, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1902. PRICE, $1.25 PER ANNUM. , " i x " 1 : ; i : 15. Mm'otes sufficient delicious to tea Royal Baking Powder as directed. di-rected. A purev true leavener. Fish Hatchery for Utah. There seems to be good prospects pros-pects for Senator Rawlins' .bill, for a state hatchery to become a law.' If, it materializes, the peo-ple'of peo-ple'of Utah countv should en-deavor en-deavor to secure it for this County. The best place in the State is.in Spring creek, between Springville and Pro vo. - Here we have a fine, large, warm . stream,, opening directly into the, I a ke y t h e 1 a rg e s t f r es h w a t e r body in' the state, and the spawn can be transfered thereto ; direct from the hatchery, doing away: w i t h t h e t i n ca n p p r t age a s 1 1 e re . tofore. . . ; ; Utah county papers get into line on the above proposition . and the hatchery can be secured for our. waters. It is by far the best natural location in the State. ' , C ar thage Jail . ' The following to Wm. Reast and published in the "Ogdeu S la ifda i I " w i i iHb e rt -t iwtzL ifs-our ifs-our readers "as it comes directly from J. M. Browning who owns the jail where the tragedy was committed. He says; "James A. BroVning has requested re-quested me to advise you if the blood stains are still on -the'floor of the room where Joseph and H3'rum Smith were killed. In reply will say that the stains showed very plain when I got the property and moved therein in the fall of 1870. There is still a slight stain on the floor, but repeated scrubbings from year to year have made it a light color and almost effaced it. The same old oak floor is in the room. The bullet hole of the first shet which killed Hyrum Smith and was shot through the walnut door is still there as the door has never been removed. In the year 1839-40 when the jail was first built, no pine lumber was shipped into this county and all floors made out of sawed saw-ed lumber were oak. The inside base boards, stairs and doors are of walnut in the building and the door and the window frames are of oak. Different sightseers or visitors have asked me to sell them the door, but I do not want to use it for mercenary purposes and would not sell it. The house is unpleasant for old people for a dwelling on account of the throng of visitors. When our children were with us we did not mind it,butmy wife and I are both aged and feeble and cannot stand the annoyance very well." Very Resp'y, J.M.Browning. A Nearl j Fatal Buna way-Started way-Started a horrible ulcer on the leg of J.B. Orner, Franklin Grove, 111., which defied doctors and all remedies for, four years, Then Bucklen's Arnica Ar-nica Salve cured him. Just as good for boils, burns, bruises, cuts, corns, scalds, skin eruptions and piles, 25c Springville Dealers. give you most biscuit using Homes For Homeseekers, Summerville, Oregon, is; in the Grande Ronde Valley fifteen miles from La Grande, ith two h u n d r e d i n h ab i t a n ts .1 It ha s a store and general implement house, K where everything can be purchased, cheaply, ' that the settler requires; also a barber bar-ber shop,', livery stable, blacky smith shop, post' office, to churches and a fine school house where, a good school is taught, and one of the finest creameries in the state. The climate is very temperate, no extrems of heat or cold. The surrounding country coun-try is well adapted to the raising ef grain, sugar beets, stock, and daryiug, and we do not have to irrigate. "A pure, clear stream of water runs through the town furnishing water for 'culinary purposes, and power to run a fifty barrel flour mill. 'The land here produces the best of fruit in abundance, .while garden products, pro-ducts, of every variety "grows ple.uji f ) lyNea r MJ,r--Af4W most endless forest t of choicest timberwith saw mills sufficient to furnish ; lumber very cheap. The summer range is excellent, near by, where stock thrive and make the best of beef, and can live on the range until the middle mid-dle of November. Good farms can be purchased from $15 and up, orchard land $5 and up. There are still excellent bargains bar-gains here in land, and to my Springville friends, who wish to make new locations, I will say, you cannot do better than to come out and take a look at the country here. N.A.GroesbecK. The Students Society-Met Society-Met at the Central School on Friday evening April 4th. The honors were adjudged to Katha Groesbeck. Next Friday evening the following fol-lowing students have been solic-ted solic-ted to speak; Lucy Wood, Frank Roylance, Alta Haymond, Milan Straw, Mary Whiting and John Williams. A parents meeting was held Wednesday evening April 2nd by the Primary grade, and many parents were present, who enjoyed enjoy-ed the exercises. At chapel B. T .Blanchard, Jesse Mendenhall and Leo Waters Wat-ers were the speakers. The school was visited by Supt Brown of Utah Co. and Principal Coomes of the Salt Lake schools and they were very much pleased with the work the eighth grade were doing. do-ing. Ella Deal, Harvey Groves, Sarah Whitney, Rafael Roylance Roy-lance and Joseph Reynolds, members of the Acorn and Century Cen-tury classes visitedithe school. Stops the Coujrh and Works off the Cold. ; Laxative lirorao Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No Cure no Pay,; Price 25 cents. , Council Deliberations On Monday evening the City Council met in regular session and transacted the following business": bus-iness": D.W.Bird asked that the Irrigation committee assist in locating a .water way in the West field, and the matter was referred to said committee. W. K. Johnson being a member of the Irrigation committee and interested in-terested in the said ditch, asked to be excused from acting in the matter, which was granted and Child was appointed in his place. Brown "and Hatmer petitioned to ;be permitted j'to keep their si aughter-house- at its 'present locality and promised to keep it clean. rThe ; request ' ' was ' not -granted 'andthe i Committee, on health- Was instructed to have it, removed.? The committee . on' Irrigation reported haying meas-; ured- Spring ? Creek Canyon stream at the ford and found . - - . ' ' ." , ' ' -.-"-. 100 inches of water; and below; near "the mouthbut 60 inches, and recomended that the stream be taken out ot its old channel The Irrigation committee was instructed to ascertain' the cosif of sufficient pipe to convey the the 'Spring Creek . water - from the ford to the mouth of the can- The following bills were allow--' ed: J.E. Weight Supervisor, $fl; J.S.Boyer Justice, ' : $3 1.5. J J.E.Hall, Marshal, , $05.QO. M.G.Harmer, Police, ; $7.6 C.H.Clark y " ; ;i $13.00 T.E.C hild , services a nd committee commit-tee forf three months. :$15.5). P.E.HouIz, Recorder, r;:t; r"J Luella Haymond, Treas. $lrerl J.E. Weight, hired help, $fteirl fa fT T ttvnnld salfirv.etfi. 25X-0.i: City Attorney. $50.00. Wields a Sharp Ax. Millions marvel at the multitude of maladies cut off by Dr. Kings New Life Pills-the most distressing too. Stomach, liver and bowel troubles, dyspepsia, loss of appetite, jaundice, biliousness, fever, malaria, all fall before be-fore these wonder workers. 25c Springville Dealers. Voltaire as a Play Writer. A French journal recalls tne story of Voltaire, who, under a fictitious name, offered to the Comedie Francaise a play entitled "La Droit du Seigneur." It was promptly rejected as badly written writ-ten and poor in rhyme, but when he offered the same manuscript a second time under the title "L'Ecueil du Sage" and signed "with his own name It was accepted with enthusiasm and universally univer-sally declared admirable. Cufes the Grip in Toao 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. Banking: In Canada. The banking business in Canada Is on a different plan from that in this country. The headquarters of most of the banks throughout the Dominion is In Ontario, either at Hamilton, Kingston King-ston or Toronto. Each bank has its central office, generally in one of the cities named, and as many branches as it cares to maintain In different parts of Canada, some of these branches being be-ing as far distant as Dawson. A Doctor's Bad Plight. , 'Two years ago, as a result of a severe cold, I lost my voice," writes Dr. M.L. Scarbrougb, of Ilerbon, Ohio, "then began an ob?tinate cough. Every remedy known to me as a practicing physician for 35 years failed, and I daily grew worse. Being Be-ing urged to try Dr. King's New Discovery Dis-covery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, I found quick relief, and for the last ten days have felt better than for years." Positively guaranteed guaran-teed for throat and lung troubles, by Springville Dealers. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottles free. VV.K. Johnson, Gom.,etc, $46i4j5. THE CHIMES OF NORMANDY To be given in the Provo Qpera House Friday evening the 11th, will please all lovers of opera.' The Salt Lake Opera Co. are always greeted with a full house. "At the performance of the Chimes of Normandy" last night was even a greater Siiecess than on Wednesday eve-ing. eve-ing. Every seat in the Grand theater was occupied and the warm greetinig each of the ply-rs ply-rs received added largely to the spirited performance. The opera ope-ra went with a swing and a dash that was very enjoyable, ihe members of the company each doing their share of the work in keeping with the high standard the people demand rom the company. Telegram. . , Walks Without Crutches. 1 was much afflicted with sciatica, writes Ed, C. Nud, owaville, Sedgwick Sedg-wick Co., Kan., "going about on crutches crut-ches and suffering a great deal of pain I was induced to try Ballard's Snow Liniment, which relieved me. I used three 50c bottles. It is the greatest liniment I ever used; have recommended recom-mended it to a number of persons, all express themselves as being benefitted by it. 1 now walk without crutches, able to perform a great deal of light labor on the farm, 50c and $1.00 at the Springville drug Co. . Dignity of Schwab's Coachman. President Schwab of the billion dollar dol-lar steel trust says that he was driving through a little town near Pittsburg the other day with his colored man seated beside him, when he heard one woman say to another: "There's the great. Mr. Schwab." "Which one?" said .the other, evidently Impressed with the colored man's dignity. Beauty and Strength Are desireable. You are strong and vigorous,, when your blood is pure. SS, ''.rT zzzzt e, sallow, thin and weak, while ce brightness, freshness and beauty etc - . .. . .' -. .... .i tneskinana compaction aepan,. Remedy this unpleasant evil, by eating eat-ing nourishing food, and taking a small dose of Herbine after each meal, to digest what you have eaten. 50c at the Springville Drug Co. BAKING A TURKEY. An Expert Saj' It Is Generally Done In a Wrong Way. "Ninety-nine women out of every one hundred; ninety-nine cooks out of every one hundred, will bake a turkey tur-key with the back to .the pan," said a New prleans man who keeps in touch with the kitchen, "and this is a mistake. mis-take. I said ninety-nine out of every one hundred. Rather should I have said that the mistake is almost universally uni-versally made. But few cooks ever think of cooking the turkey any other way. There seems to be a demand for well-browned turkey breast. But in browning the breast they sacrifice the sweetness of this part of the fowl. The best way to prepare a turkey is to bake it wii.h the breast down. I learned this lesson from Mme. Begue, whose place down in the Old Quarter near the French market has become famed all over the country. She never thinks of baking a turkey with the breast up. The breast is , turned to the bottom of the pan, and instead of being dry and tasteless when it is served is richly rich-ly flavored, and as sweet and juicy as one would care to have it. You see, all the fine flavoring of the turkey, the juices of the dressing and all the daintier dain-tier touches flow down toward the breast of the fowl, and when the white meat is served you get the full benefit of every flavor added during the processes proc-esses of preparing and baking the turkey, tur-key, in addition. to the distinctive taste of the fowl itself. Inconvenient and awkward? Not at all. It is just as easy to cook a turkey in this way as in any other way, and the result is infinitely in-finitely more satisfactory. It is no trouble to arrange the fowl In the pan. If you decide to place the fowl on the table before carving it you will find that it will look quite as well as it would if baked in the usual way, and i certainly It will taste much better than it would if you, baked the breast until it was dry and flavorless." New Orleans Or-leans Times-Democrat! Where Sedan Chairs Are Still Used. ' At Orleans, France, especially on Sundays at the hour of mass, the classic sedan chair, as it was known to the gallants of the eighteenth century, is borne through the street by robust carriers, its occupants being aged people peo-ple and invalids, to whom the jolting of a carriage is intensely disagreeable. The Irrigation Committee. The appointment of a com mittee b' the Irrigation Conven tion last week, to investigate the water question in all its details de-tails and to frame a bill to b9 acted, on by the next legislature, is a step in the right direction. Thelaw makers have not time during the sixty days to formulate formu-late and pass such an important act. Representatives Gardiner and Johnson ' of this county strove in the last legislature to have such a commission'appoin-ted, commission'appoin-ted, and endeavored to get such a bill passed, introduced by the former, whose duty its hould be to carefully investigate theques-tion, theques-tion, secure data from all parts of the state, look into the needs of every section and then draft a bill that would cover the entire en-tire question and present it to the next session of our lawmakers. lawmak-ers. The bill was voted down. The water question is so complex com-plex that it requires just such a committee to go into every part WE WILL PAPER 1 With a complete and Irell assorted line of wall papert and expert service in paper hanging, WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION Call) and see us. a o X I Z R.'A.DZAJj, Frssident. H. T. REYNOLDS, Vice-President. Springville Banking Co. SPRINGVILLE, UTAH Ooitixl StoclJL 300,000. Transacts a general banking business. Exchange bought and sold and depca its received subject to check. Four per cent interest paid on time deposits, compounding semi-annually Money always on hand for short time loans. The People's Dimcj Store X "W r of the state and study the qm B-tion B-tion minutely in all its details when a statute can be recomended recomen-ded that will do justice to all sections. Methods of an EDglish Cartoonist. F. Carruthers Gou.d, the celebrated cartoonist of the Westminster Gazette, has been giving some particulars regarding re-garding his system of work. "As a rule," he says, "when parliament is. sitting, I get to the house of commons at 3:30 or 4 o'clock in the afternoon, and take up a position either in the gallery or the lobby according to what is going on. I would go to the lobby if I wanted special details of an incident or portrait from a particular member. At about 7 o'clock I make my way out of the house with notes and rough outlines, and proceed to the National Liberal Club, when I prepare pre-pare my drawings. An ordinary sketch takes me about twenty minutes." Onre Sat iu That Chair. Queen Anne was once surrounded by a host of gayly d 3ed courtiers, and in; the throng was an old man of 83, wearing the plain dress of a country farmer. "Have you ever seen such a si jht before?" asked a looker-on, and tl e throng was startled to hear the old i tan say. "Never since I sat in her chair!" I' was Cromwell's son Richard, Rich-ard, who went into retirement on the : estoration of King Charles II. - 2 5 r Wall Paper Dealers" H. L. CUMMINGS,- Cashier DO YOU DESIRE A MEDICINE PURE AND RELIABLE? . . . . , 3L71a.o reoplcs' - fc . . , . Xxus; Store Carries the best line of DRUGS and CHEMICALS. Physicians Prescriptions receive the attention of a Pharmacist with twenty years experience. PRICES - - THE - - LOWEST CONSISTENT WITH PURITY "W.C. Cooper Ph. g. Prop. STANDARD MEAT MARKET Wholesale and Retail Butchers. All Kinds of Fresh and Cared Meats and a Fall Line of (Groceries. . ML. -A.. Miixer, Ss IP. Miner Props. ,1 i V |