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Show up Agai- n- and practically penniless, took his tale of woe to a prominent divorce attor ney in Chicago, and concluded with this: "I'm too poor to iay much for a divorce, but my wife make- my life miserable. After I get home, at six o'clock in the evening, I get no peace until I go to Bleep. What would you advise?" "After considering all the facts in your case," eald the lawyer, "I would suggest that you get a lob which you to work all night" The Popular Magazine. Bui we have nifficient upply at the old price to make it intetesting to you for aom time yd. Size liora pin head up la dim. Several glide, but each on guaranteed. SALT LAA I How Shocking. "The money young A Significant Notice. father left him won't last long." Richard Crocker, the day of hla de Slobbs. "Why. is be such a for hla Irish home, said to parture pender?" Blobbs. "Spender T Why, do you a New York reporter. "It la the desire for freedom that know what the fellow ia doing? He's Kenda bo many Americana and bo hla Income tax." actually paying many millions of dollars abroad every Philadelphia Record. June. The Puritanical laws of Amerl-c' These laws, with enslave ua. their total misconception of freedom and of enjoyment, are well exempli I once saw in a fied in a New England park. This board said: " 'Pleasure Grounds. Notice These methods it grounds are for pleasure only. No means ;ames or play allowed.' " GOOD COFFEE. Mil-yun- 'a u Fresh Roasted and Steel Cut notice-boar- d up-to-da- te uriAi rtT'C I IINFTA A Deduction. Say, Pa," said little Johnny, after in hour or two of deep reflection, "If 1 put a lemon and some sugar in a Kill o' water would that be lemonade? "Yea, my son, yes of course It Aould," replied kr. Squlgglea from liehlnd hla newspaper, brand is the only coffee on the market that is FRESH BOASTED AND STEEL CUT. Ask your grocer for LUNETA then." continued Johnny, edgtoday and enjoy the best coffee on ing"Well, the door, "if that's the toward the market. ;utie I suppose If I put a piece of artillery and some gunpowder la a bar-e- l Tha Glance of Scorn. of water it would be a cannonade, at me wouldn't it?" Harper a Weenly. "The way that waa moat Insulting." Buay ' Daya. "Did bo atare?" these aeem to be buay "Well, Dobby, then once and "No; he looked turned away na If I were not worth Jays," aald Ilarkaway. "Yes." said Dobby; "Mrs Dobby Is noticing." London Opinion. busy from morning to night trying to make up her mind where to spend the man looked Over 1,000 Gallons Per Hour iuuiiuer." "And you?" said Harkaway. "Oh, I m busy from morning to night trying to gather together enough to enable her to spend what she'll have . x spend while spending it," said Harper's Weekly. Dob-jy- Tables Turned. Alfred had so often been asked by admiring strangers "Whose little boy are you?" that It was perhaps no wonder that he finally turned the tablea on his elders. Thia he did one evening by Inquiring, very aweetty, of a young gentleman who waa calling upon Alfred's slater, "Whose papa are you?" Harper's Weekly. i$5022 beUolt. Wia. ,: A Slight Mistake. Fr Catalog No. MHTS &, Co. Fairbanks, MorseTJUh Salt Lake City, KODAKS MaUordera eiren tompiiif attjek ol "I don't believe there ia anything In that talk about itarlow being hard -Why' he's up," aald Little Dinks. a footman blossomed with forth just on bis motor." "Footman?" echoed Jlnklnson, deThat risively. "Footman Is good! isn't a footman; it'a a deputy sheriff in charge of the car." The Rivals. Rlggs Singular, isn't It, that neither of your stenographers wants a tels attention this year? f.bu euptuiee vacation raer Hardware Co. Grlgga No; It Is easily explained. riotmae-P- a ferric prompt. halt recently took a good looking young man Into the oTlce and neither of the ?lrls is willing to go away and leave the field to the other one. Boston C.tf I Before sending your toy sway to a boarding school, investigate Transcript ALL HALLOWS COLLEGE forty-three.- gas-mete- Cetalofvo B.nl Free M Aealleetlaa . J. O Hi nan, Preaia'aot K-- rr- FOR CURE Crunkeaness and Opium Diseases. 1 Maar a Maw. THE KlU.lI ftnTUTL, at1Mkaaii. V. Baaaa Taaaala Saraaa. Safe Ua Than k ear Defense. "Ye say ye haven't trarlled faater'n fifteen miles an hour," said the constable, "and yet this here speed reg" ister o' yourn p'lnts to Dohba, pleasant "Oh, that!" sm-.ely. "That lan't a speed register, sir r, how that's my showing much gasoline I've consumed since leaving home." Harper 'a Weekly, v Very Small. "Uncle Joe" Cannon, condemning to a group of reporters a certain clause or the reciprocity bill, said: "Why, the aplrlt of that clause la aa malt as the spirit of the msn who demanded a half price ticket to a moving picture ahow on the ground be bad only one eye." SALT LARK CITY, UTAH MANE.NT aa afctaaaa. I. '- -' OM. lDONtXulMil ' n Kicht Kkii, Very Peaceful. "Are tk you troubled much around With Wit fmi Hal 4 of St. era-the race problem?" asked the here by now aj. Aaidrrae ea4r Collage U Uaarntl a Lake Citr. t!lak man who was seeing Kentucky, "Well. no. sun. Ah can't say that C'..r-f- . Kxlk we Finl.Mag ah," replied Colonel Pep per aon . rrwwHMill nif ttnaa aa a mattub of fact, we vt rr f tinaa. Pa ka an1 ie "Why, suh, Ok pH-- a nl ai' ""'la. bad three "f only tynthln's been the laat TUB JOHNSON CO., Utah. fob months." tvii au. a. Lke MEM WANTED HarWf Tr knot. . a a Htra-a- t, llf-d- Wr-l- tnf'.f-rnattm-i. Savings Department Opened April 1, 1911 Savings deposits July 25,1911, $100,331.82 'h,n WAt.Kfn PIlOTIfF.na enmmere dcid-to 1 lskir, dj.armf d rtf tj yr BANK TIT?. a Svnen lPirn-nt- , fpn for 'I .inking I y Mall." arrnwlh at I tory of anraaful and latar la tha dlra-rtor-s but the re aatahllfth a atrial forward In a eatiaf all tha-lof the fuWIr has ex'-d-st.pitatin'ia. lnr hxv roma from aa far nf a Nir nraariii ari-tl ifpo11m avh'l Arizona, filiforn1, 'ov1a H mUM. 1 4a ha eth for.iarn an4 have rttrtlniKt haTilr to the amount given abeve, aa vrtll . to the rofnrnerplal lepoH. Tha total fpa.!iir-a- s ef the bank are hoar approslmately $3.409.oo an4 ma eiefldtlf srmwlpf;. i lo the The effl-eand rltrwlor wlaft to th!r aul)li v lmpoH the ro(-nai- t aealn Ih'r ptiw att tntft--arkTmrI-v th a hair ermfldence has which an thirn cf the worthy In It for er half a cetitwrv. rj-a, r..P iiilR fa "f!btn t?l,l)llf and cati'lotl With .trertfra. mtilMwla," thT hne to hti'ld p thia lntliitlnq t frda ptnrtrir r a- -d In tha entire fr,r l!l crt-I'a tfr.irtloi Intermoi.ntain ra'rcm. In whlfh It ia the Hotieer hank. tnnka-- d Critical Time for Crops in North- western States. Two Causes Lack of Sufficient Molature and Injury Done by Warm Winda. The critical period for crops In the northwestern states Is not usually when the crop la sown, nor during the early stages of growth, but later; that Is. toward the period of maturing. It Is easily poaallbe to carry a crop on that la big with promise until it comes near the ripening period, and when that stage approaches, the realization of what was promised earlier Is not attained. In some Instances, It Is so far short aa to amount In a sense to failure. The result referred to more commonly arises from two causes, says the Dakota Farmer. One la the lack of sufficient moisture to carry the crop to maturity, and the other la the Injury that may come from warm winds that blow for successive daya and Interfere with the filling of the grain. It might aeem at first thought that the farmers are at the mercy of the elements, and can do nothing to prevent the Injury referred to from either of the causes named. But such Is not the fact. It la true of course that the farmer cannot make It rain, and It la also true be cannot command the winds. Nevertheless he can do much to ward off the injury that would otherwise result from either should It threaten. The soil may be prepared for the crop In a way that will hold the moisture that falla tor a period sufficiently long to bring some relief to the crops, should they be threatened with a shortage, or with Injury from undue heat. The preparation called for may In character. It may conbe sist of keeping In the moisture by surface cultivation, or It may mean the atocklng of the land with humus. These may both be accomplished In one season, but more commonly they are resorted to In different seasons. The stirring of the surface soli InInvolves bringing the summer-falloto the rotation or the growing of some crop that calls for cultivation during much of the period of growth. Which of these metboda is to be chosen must be determined by the attendant conditions. If the soli is Infested by perennial weeds that are difficult of eradila to be cation, the aummer-fallochosen. The same is true of any soil that wants cleaning. If the farmer la not prepared to utilize to advantage the cropa that may be thus grown. Where he Is so prepared then the cultivated crop Is to be preferred to the bare fallow. Humus may be put Into the soil by Introducing any kind of a grass or clover crop into the rotation. When the aod of any of these la broken, a large auppty of humus Is put Into the soil In the form of roots and stubble or top growth. The Increased power given to the soil by this process Is very couclderab'e. It la specially helpful .when hot winds come, for there la then a reserve, as It were, of moisture In the soli that would not otherwise be there, and Its presence may te able to carry the growing tbrotiRh a critical period where It would otherwise fail. The two procesres may be csrrted on the same season, as for Instance, and then the land Is one or two crops are burled during the procena. This may easily be done by making one of these winter rye and the other some quick growing crop on top of the burled rye. The necesrlty for giving attention to these methods Increases with the wearing of the soil. When land Is Brat broken It la usually well aupplled with humus. Each grain crop taken from It lesneas the supply. The result la, finally, that the buraus supply la eo low that the soli Is not well able to re!st the Influences of drought. Wherever the ratnfsll la short In a normal season, and wherever hot winds are liable to prevail, close attention should be given to both thoae methods of warding off crop failure. two-fol- Mlc, wr-atln- - d w summer-fallowe- g Marketing Butter. A amod way to market batter when one has no Ice, Is to psck the rolls la a boa lined with white paper, having a tight cover. Wrap the box In several thicknesses of newspaper and enclose It la a larger box. Tacked la this way but'er can be taken several miles to market In wsrtn weather without showing any s!n of melting. Use ef Nutrients. Protela. fat, nitrogen, free extract and ash are termed nutrients on account of their mission In building up new and reittotlrig old tlatipa. Each of these nutrients has a certain work to do la promoting the growth and maintaining the animal body. Sh"p Have Te AllmeMs. Rome farmers raise the objection to rslMng si)ecp on the ground that they are subject o disease. Tbla is a great mistake, because when prophave fewr ailerly cared for, ments than any rather farm animal. !:p he-e- a, lr're tf rd WALKER DROTIIERS BANKERS ant Stare ay an ail. alt Lake City Terpentine for Warms. TttfpaasMne HOLDING MOISTURE IN U highly recom ma-nde-d as a retnody to free piss from lnte-tloa- l worms The dose Is one for each M to 109 pounds of P'f. glvea once a dsy for three days la succession, preferably In milk. SOIL Evaporation Can Be Prevented by Cultivation and Keeping Surface In Fine, Loose Condition. (By A. B. (SKA HAM, Ohio State versity). Short Yield Commonly, Arises From summer-fallowin- A Resourceful a positive OF MATURING - MAIN ST CITY. UTAH Blobbs. PERIOD A New Antidote for Happlneaa, A young man, unhappf-- j tnarvted Diamonds Have Gone Uni- If every farmer were compelled to haul and pour over each acre of hla farm over 200 barrels of water per day, he would gain some conception of the amount of moisture evaporated from an exposed, uncultivated soli, at thia season of tha year. This evaporation varies according to the kind and condition of the soil, weather, location, etc., but under average conditions the sun and wind are rapidly drawing from the soil that will moisture be needed later In the season for crop growth. It Is Just like drawing dollars from the farmers' pockets. Now Is the time to prevent this loss. Soli moisture Is valuable. Past records show that an Inch of rainfall in July meana $5,000,000 worth of corn to the atate of Ohio. While farmers cannot make an Inch of rain fall In July, they can carry an Inch of soil moisture over from May until July, and that means the same thing. An inch of rainfall means 113 tons of water per acre. If thia la allowed to escape at the rate of 200 barrels per day, It will require only four daya to lose the entire Inch. Every farmer who falla to prevent thia evaporation la losing Ua ahare of that $5,000,000. Are you one or the losers? How can this evaporation be presented? By cultivating the soil. Keep the surface of the soil In a fine, loose condition. Follow the plow with the harrow. Harrow the cornfield before the corn Is up; after It la up, cultivate often enough to keep a good aoll mulch. Don't be atlngy with the use of the cultivator. The amount of moisture In the soil this spring Is below normal Mola ture ia essential to maximum crop production. Conserve your aoll molature. Do It now. NOTICE TO WATER USERO. PASS FARMERS FREE LIST BILL Measure 8ald to be Under Prealdent'a Ban Approved by Senate and Goea Back to Houae. State Engineer's Office, Salt Lake City, tan, June 17. 1911. Notice Is hereby given that W. C. Boley, et al, whose post office address Is American Fork, Utah, have made application In accordance with the requirements of the Compiled Laws of Utah, 1907, as amended by the Session Lawa of Utah, 1809 and 1911, to appropriate ten (10) cubic feet per second ot water from Granite or South Granite Creek, Juab County, Utah. Said water will be diverted at a point which bears south 77 degrees west 10,070 feet from tho southwest corner of section 7, township 12 south, range 17 west. Salt Lake base and meridian, from where It will be conveyed by means of a flume and ditch for a distance of 35,000 feet and there used during the period from April 1 to October 31, inclusive, of each year, to irrigate 1,280 acres of land embraced 12 In sections 27 and 34, township south, range 17 west. Salt Lake base ind meridian. This application is deeignated In the State Engineer's office as No. 3797. All protests against the granting of said application, stating the reasons therefor, must be made by affidavit In duplicate and filed In this office within thirty (30) days after the completion of the publication of thia no- free Washington. The farmers' list aa it passed the Senate on Tuest to thirty, day, by a vote of so nearly conforms to the bill passed by the house that it is generally expected the measure will be promptly concurred In by the lower chamber and passed on to the president. This la tbe bill which ia supposed to offer compensation to the farmer for the alleged Injury which he will suffer It puts on the through reciprocity. t'ree list a large group of articles which are In every day use by the agriculturist As amended by the senate, leather, boots and shoes, cement and lime will be admitted free and there will be free meat and free flour from Canada if the reciprocity bill passes. Though there Is a view among a wide circle of congressmen that there is much more chance of this bill being tice. CALEB TANNER. approved by the president than the State Engineer. wood bill, the free list measure reduces Date of first publication June 30, the duties on articles which the tarifl 1911. Date of completion ot publicaboard is investigating and seem to b tion July 31. 1911 under the president's ban. forty-eigh- CHAS. PYPER RAILROADS TO RAISE RATES. Transcontinental Lines Considering Plans to Overcome Loss. Chicago. A step by which transcontinental railroads hope to offset th recent reduction in commodity rates to western points ordered by the in terstate commerce commission is expected to be taken at a meeting ot the traffic and executive officers ot transcontinental lines to be held here August 7 The plan now under consideration comprises tbe abandonment of tha present method of meeting water competition on the Pacific coast, so far as class rate business la concerned, and a substantial Increase In rates. Since the interstate commerce commission Issued its new ruling In the Intermountain cases, reducing rates to Intermediate Spokane and other points, the roads are said to have been seeking a meana of overcoming the loss of revenue caused by the cuts. Everything Electrical See me on any electrical job for an estimate. House wiring a specialty. All kinds of Electrical Supplies. Tantalum and Tungsten Lamps. One block west of Court House City Meat Co. Helping Out Scant Molature. M angelica At Carren, Piopticton The best safeguard against drouth, at thia time or later on, la to keep the All Kinds of Home Cured cultivator or harrow going. By thua and Fresh Meats atlH-inthe surface soil the capillary tubes are broken, a mulch Is formed the depth the cultivator goes, and thus Refrigerator Kept in the moisture In the soli below is preon Business run cash basis, being vented from evaporating. It la amazenables us to sell at very ing how much water can thua be re reasonable prices. tained In the aoll, compared to ground not ao treated. It ia Important to fol Courteous Treatment to All low thia practice at once to conserve WORK TWELVE HOURS DAILY. the present supplies of soil moisture Moisture during the growing period Men Employed in Steel Planta Have I Will Wear Twice as Long. of May and June la even more Impor Little Time For Rest. tant than during July and August. Nagle ol Washington. Secretary Crops well started can withstand a TT Ask any farmer if our hanJ-Zlater drouth.' wbereaa planta with a the department of commerce and la made on harnesadoesn'twpar twice in a bor, report special Tuesday, feeble start have a poor show against a long as the factory harness. to tbe senate cn conditions of emthe dry time In midsummer. We make it and guarantee it, ployment in the iron and steel IndusPring in your old harness, saddles, stated I'nited that in tbe States, try Save Soil Moisture. etc., and nave them repaired good as low. Remember that tbla may be a very "out of over 30.000 employes covered out?ttrs whips, bridles, in the tbe Complete working customary reiwt save all the year, dry consequently spurs, Navajo blankets, and everyaoil moisture you can. As soon aa week of one third of them w?s a sevenin harness and saddlery. thing not differing week, Sunday the rlowed land la fit give It a good -day harrowing. Double disk the corn from other days, and approximately C& of the 90,000 worked eighty-ground and harrow It afterward. Should heavy ralna come In early four hours or over per week, which spring harrow after these ralna aa in effect means a twelve hour day soon aa the aoll la fit, every day in the week, including Sung up-to-d- 3i R ememDer i day." Secretary Navel's report was the result of a special Investigation made in reaponse to a resolution of Senator Borah. It covers practically all tbe lroii and steel plants In tbe United States. The Berry Cropa. Keep the fruit of straw terries cool until the time to ute or market them. Never pick berrlea for market when tbey are wet. Beware of red ruat In blackberry or blackcap butbea. When teen, promptSIMON WILL LEAVE COUNTRY. ly dig up and burn the lnfeted plant, a to careful not scatter tha being President of Haytl Expected to Abddust over healthy busbea. icate Before Rebels Capture City for Scours. Port au Prince. The capital has Remedy The following remedy la suggested been completely Invested by revoluby a Canadian swine breeder for tionists, and It Is probable that they scours in young pigs: Take balf a will refuse a delay of three days ask gallon of oats and boll for an hour cd for by PreMdtnt Simon to perfect and a half. Allow to cool, and feed plans to secure the capital from pil to the sow, giving nothing elae for lage, and will enter the city Immed We hours. r build R osenvaii s Blacksmilhing and Machinery lately. It Is probable that President Simon who baa consented to leave tbe counThere Is only one way of telling a try, will be obliged to embark tot fertile egg and that la by Incubating some foreign port. It for at least four daya, and thea There are enough soldiers la the testing It with a good egg tester. capital to maintain order and the peo pie here feel aafe. Tne French, BritLIVE STOCK NOTES. ish, German and Cuban ministers. nc went out Tueaday to confer with the Look for the wea that ahow good rebel commandera and exact from there breeding. a promise that Port an Prince will Tbe bow cannot produce something be occupied without oisorder, have cut of nothing. No animal on the farm will try not yet returned. baMer lo keep clean than tbe bog. PERISH IN ASYLUM FIRE. Hogs greatly relish mixtures of chanocU, wood ashes, salt anJ tbe Eight Patients Dasd and More Fearlike. ful Loss of Life Narrowly Averted. If a horse must be kept In the barn Hamilton. Ont Eight Uvea were In hot weather keep all tbe windows lost and many persona Injured In open. The Importance of plenty of ebsde fire which partly destroyed one of th daring the bot days of summer r sn- main bnildlnga of the Insme asylum on the side of the mountain southwest oot be overeat) mated. Pena and pastures through which of the city early Tuesday. There were tbe drainage from swine Inclosures 800 patients In the building when the fire was diacovered, and It was a well higher up runs should not b une l. Old hog waliowa are frequently trained corps and splenbreeding botes for cholera, hence tbey did coolness and bravery among tbe should be filled and clean places made nursea and attendants under Dr. En? fur I hem. lish that averted a mure frightful loss Reduction of feed so that the sows :t life. show loas of Sesh bsa a marked effect Steamer Capeixed, Seven Drowned. of the litter and la the cause of Massena, N. Y.- Seven persona heavy lo?e. A good pair of draft mares will per ere drowned In the St. Lawrence form more work cn the farm than a river when the ferry steamer Sirlus I'gbt team and at tbe same tim grow trnfk a shoal eight miles below this a good air of colts. city. cspl?.!n? and hurling its Where many horses are kept In a passengers Into the water. barn It Is well to whifewssh the InPostal kill of to Saving Bank In Chicago. the stable frequently terior dlsesne grms affecting horses. Chicago. Chic?o a first postal sav-'acA little rape may be sown on the bank opened for business Tees tbe-waotif-o- f places on the farm for 4a Two hundred depositors stoo the begs, and It will pay better than la line. Four thousand dollars wer the weeds which uawtlly (Vow on suck rteposltet luring the day, the first plavet I Jepositor tv'og a boy. New Machinery, make Harrows, Cultivators, Wagons and Scrapers. We can save you money See us First fun-gou- twenty-fou- ALLEN OSTLER one-fourt- h Repair Shop Telling Fertile Egg. WHY PAY EXPRESS To send your laundry to Provo or Salt Lake, when you can have it done right here at home for less Imoney? Expert Laundry-mainewest and latest machinery. Phone 67 and our beautiful new wagon will call at your door. Patronize home industry and try d, 1 "Bob's" Laundry g - y T I hai T I 4 afTS - tStrVTOM l.i. raajaai. UTAM T ,., af I ft. A a falmMaf, Sf tataf. , a -- I -- 1 " P.adaft:. tit r!tf T t DONT BORROW The Times from your n?nghbof when you can g:t it for leu than ITuee Cents Per Week |