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Show PROGRAM FOR FARMERS' SCHOOL Conducted by the State Agricultural College Under Auspices of the Bear River Valley Farmers' Protective Association, to Be Held at Box Elder County, Week Beginning Dec. 2, 1907. Monday, 10 a. m. The Purpose of the School -- Professor Lewis A. Merrill. Selection of a Site for Fruit GrowingProfessor Robert S. Northrop. Monday, 2 p. m. How to Increase and Maintain the Fertility of the Soil Professor Lewis A. Merrill. Care of the Fruit Plantation with Reference to Pruning and Thinning-ProfeRobert S. Northrop. ssor Monday, 4 p. m. Demonstration in Orchard Professor Robert S. Northrop. Monday, 7:30 p. m. The Farmer's Library Professor Lewis A. Merrill. Professor Ornamentation Home Robert S. Northrop. The Home A Social Factor Miss Blanche Cooper. Tuesday, 10 a. m. Treatment of Diseases in the Fruit S. Robert Plantation Professor Northrop. Utah-Prof- essor Forage Crops Suitable to Lewis A. Merrill. Sheep on the Farm Hon. W. S. Hansen. Tuesday, 2 p. m. Picking, Packing, and Storing Fruit Professor Robert S. Northrop. ' Apple Growing for Profit in the Bear River Valley Moroni Morten-sen- . Tuesday, 7:30 p. m. The Fruit Grower's Indebtedness to the Birds Professor S. H. Goodwin. Work of the State Board of Horticulture Hon. C. A. Hickenlooper. Wednesday, 10 a. m. Maintaining the Standard in Fruit Hon. J. Edward Taylor. Production Farm Drainage for Alkali and for McSurplus Water Professor W. W. Laughlin. Wednesday, 2 p. m. Essentials in Orcharding Hon. C. A. Hickenlooper. Horticulturists Utah Successful and Their Methods Hon. J. Edward Taylor, Secretary State Board of Horticulture. Farmers' Reservoirs Professor W. W. McLaughlin. Wednesday, 7:30 p. m. Farmers' Organizations Dr. E. D. Ball. Bird's: Their Relation to Grains and Grasses Professor S. H. Goodwin. I Thursday, 10 a. m. The Codling Moth; Its Life History and Method of Eradication Dr. E. D. Ball. Thursday, 2 p. m. Insects Professor E. D. Beet Sugar Ball. Sugar Beet Growing Hon. John P. Holmgren. Profit in Sugar Beets Hon. Mosiah Evans. Thursday, 7:30 p. m. Sanitation in the Farm Home-M- iss Blanche Cooper. President Education Industrial John A. Widtsoe. Friday, 10 a. m. Irrigation Problems Dr. John A. Widtsoe. Arid Farming Problems Professor Lewis A. Merrill. Friday, 2 p. m. Economic Feeding of Live Stock Professor Lewis A. Merrill. Breeding and Selecting Dairy CattleProfessor John T. Caine III. Friday, 4 p. m. School Stock Judging John T. Caine 111. Friday, 7:30 p. m. The State Agricultural (with stereopticon views) John A. Widtsoe. Breed and Type In Farm (with stereopticon views) John T. Caine 111. Housekeeping, Blanche Cooper. Canning Fruits Monday, 10 a. m. Miss Miss Hazel Love. 2 p. m. The Garden as a Source of Health, Profit and Pleasure Professor Robert S. Northrop. Place and Use in the Vegetables: Diet Miss Hazel Love. Monday Evening. General session. Tuesday Morning. In the Home Miss Economy Blanche Cooper. In Bread Making Miss Studies Hazel Love. Tuesday Afternoon. Bacteria in the Home Professor S. H. Goodwin. Foods: Nutritive Value and Cost-M- iss Blanche Cooper. Egg's and Their Use as Food Miss Hazel Love. Wednesday Morning. System in Household Work Miss Blanche Cooper. Meats-M- iss Chemistry and Cooking of Hazel Love. Wednesday Afternoon. Household Kntomology Dr. K. D. Ball. Keeping House- Household Finance hold Accounts) Miss Blanche Cooper. Wednesday Evening. General discussion. ( The Woman Suicide's Hat. An interesting contribution to the study of feminine psychology has been made by the Hampstead (Eng.) coroner. "Women always take off their hats before committing suicide," said he. Facts, Not Fancies. American manager who started for New York, said to his London "Now, after the agent in parting: play is produced, please don't cable me 'Great success.' Send money." An to the Bad. He fell in "Yes, it was hard luck. love with her at first sight, bought a ticket, and was refused on his second visit." Browning's Forty-Eigh- c4t rear of Hotel Kent, Babies Ambidextrous. of the babies are said to be ambidextrous. They develop in persons by the right and force of example. Four-fifth- s Comedy Sketch Team. Nevertheless and notwithstanding. r Two words that a newspaper uses when he can't think of anything else. Puck. para-graphe- River Nile's Overflow. The Nile overflows its banks from July to October. This is due to the rainfall of the Abyssian highlands. Milwaukee's Death Rate Low. Milwaukee ranks lowest in death rates among the lake cities. The Unconquerable Spirit. Morris Who rises every time he falls will some time rise to stay. Was Taking No Chances. A woman of an original frame of mind asked the managers of the New York street railways to provide each conductor with a mop and a dust brush with which to keep the seats of their cars dry in wet weather and clear of dust at other times. The superintendent has declined to consider the proposition on the ground that the conductors might get into trouble with the servant girls' union. More Cheerfulness. Heat of the Sun. It is not impossible to express the marvelous power of the sun's heat, but we can admit without shame that it is impossible to comprehend it. The heat emitted by the sun in each second is equal to that which would result from the combustion of eleven quadrillions, six hundred thousand milliards of tons of coal burning at the same time. - TREMONTON, - UTAH, MEW HORSES, NEW HARNESS, NEW CARRIAGES, A SUCCESSFUL SPECULATOR Brandt Walker, the speculator, who made $3,000,000 on Wall street in three months and is returning home to Chicago with $t.500.000 in his clothes, not to speak of 15,000 shares of stock he is keeping to scalp the market with, has no love for the "nest of gamblers" known as Wall street. A year ago Mr Walker was. in the language of the street, "down and out" and about a million to the bad. Mr. Walker is a splendid specimen of humanity physically. He is about G feet in his stockHis and ings, hair and his (lose cropped mustache are tinged with gray, anil he looks about 45. He has a cool keen brown eye and a frank smile. He dresses in the latest fashion, and is not at all averse to He is particularly attracting public attention. fond of a dull brown suit with a greenish stripe, and a waistcoat of English flannel with a white silk back, and a tie of lustrous dull gray silk, pinned with a great white pearl. His coat he discards In the office, Chicago fashion. His office is done in dark green, with green velvet carpet, green matting walls, Japanese screens, oil paintings and numerous prints. On his desk are six telephones which are ringing almost continually, and across the room are three more. On the center table is a box of cigars and numerous bottles and siphons. Wall street says it has seen comets before, and seen them come to earth, too, and that in the end it will get Mr. Walker's scalp, but although apparently not at all concerned at the threat, he has drawn out of the market, stuffed his millions and his 15,000 shares into a valise and is going home to tell his neighbors in the windy city how he scalped the scalpers. But Wall street expects him back, and can wait for him. Mr. Walker's father, Edwin Walker, of Chicago, is attorney for the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway. .1. Everything First Class and Up to Date. Reasonable Charges. Samuel Kent, - Manager. George Meldrum, House Painting and Decorating, deep-cheste- MILLIONAIRE SOCIALIST t and lessen the energy of their fellows; they are human ravens eternally College their "Nevermore!" like that President croaking dismal fowl whose neck the poet Animals should have wrung at an early stage Professor of his visit. We wan a prophet of of a dispenser cheerfulness; a Profession Kent's New Livery. broad-shouldere- Frenchman Clings to Land. There are upward of 8,000,000 separate freeholds In France, as compared with about COO, 000 in Great Britain, a fact which in itself speaks A Frenchman will part with volumes. anything rather than land. There ought to be a state prison for Professor those who destroy the hopefulness WOMEN'S MEETINGS. Each day the women have two sessions, one at 10 a. m. and one at 2 p. m. In the evening the men and women meet together for the general discussions. At the women's sessions Professor Blanche Cooper, with her assistants, Miss Inez Powell and Miss Hazel Love (who has been engaged especially for this work), will have charge of the work. Monday, Thursday Morning. What to Eat and How to Cook It-- Miss Blanche Cooper. The Chafing Dish (with demonstration) Miss Hazel Love. Thursday Afternoon. Reserve Power in Housekeepings Mrs. Effie E. Merrill. Contagious Diseases Dr. E. D. Ball Salads (with demonstration) Miss Hazel Love. Thursday Evening. General discussion. Friday Morning. Breads Digestibility Quick and Food Value Mrs. Effie E. Merrill. Baking Powders Miss Hazel Love. Bread and How to Make It Miss Blanche Cooper. Friday Afternoon. Domestic Science. An ODnortunitv for Girls President John A. Widtsoe. conducted Discussion, by Miss Blanche Cooper. William English Walling, of Indianapolis, who sister, Rose Strunsky, and Kellogg Durland, an American friend, of Walling, was arrested and placed in jail in St. Petersburg for a short time recently, because of their association with members of the Finnish and progressive party, is the son of Willoughby Walling, former U. S. consul in Edinburgh, Scotland. He is a millionaire and an ardent Socialist. Opposition to child labor in factories, which he first took up, made him acquainted with leading Socialists, who got him to share their other views. Since his marriage to a Russian he has devoted much time to studying conditions in Russia and this was his third extended visit to St. Petersburg. Walling returned to Russia a short time ago from Germany and France, where he attended Socialistic congresses. He is a friend of many leading revolutionists and was accused of having given their cause financial aid, although this charge was not the basis of his arrest. Walling is a grandson of the late Wm. H. English, who ran with Gen. Hancock on the democratic presidential ticket in 1880. Mrs. Walling and her sister are Russians by birth. They are both writers and Socialists and intensely interested in Russian political matters. Mrs. Walling is very well known by her writings. She once collaborated with Jack London. Mr. Walling met her in Paris and married her early in with his wife and his wife's FOR WALL PAPER. HEADQUARTERS Will Meet Prices First Claas Work. - Tremonton, - - Utah. You Can Get Concrete Building Blocks n any quantity and for any kind of building by calling on A. B. MANAUSA, Manufacturer, Garland, Utah. PRICES QUOTED ON APPLICATION. FAN LY UDUO RSTO Q. A. Woodward, Proprietor, CORINNE, UTAH. We keep the Choicest Wines, Liquors, Tobacco and Cigars. 1906. MANY-SIDE- NEW YORKER D August Belmont, whose name has f co figured so frequently In the New York traction scanman. dal, is a many-sideof American representative the Rothschilds, a firm which ranks high in the public estimation of honesty as any in the world, he is accused of "entering into an unlawful combination and conspiracy" to manipulate a public service corporation for his own ends. An ardent churchman, he has been condemned by his own bishop for his connection opcrjcoz io rn nn d with the state racing association, which winks law forbidding betting on races. He claims to be a democrat and is said to have financed the campaign of Alton B. Parker. The descendant, of the famous Commodore Perry of Lake Erie fame, and of that other Commodore Perry who opened up Japan to the exploitation of the world, Mr. Belmont is a business man pure and simple with a taste for the excitement of horse racing. He inherited a plethoric fortune, which he has added to considerably by Wall street methods. He inherited, also, a family tree which is a source of envy to those who are comparative parvenues In New York society. He is a member of 20 clubs, a director of so many banking and industrial corporations that he could not call off half of them at a pinch. He is a member of the aristocratic Sons of the Revolution and occupies a box seat among the Four Hundred. He was the promoter and backer of the New York subway, which lined the pockets of those who promoted it. He has been successful in practically every field he has entered. Mr. Belmont has been declared a benefactor of New York and a publl enemy according to the point of view. IB 1 5 g vWP o 5 S g o 9 jrj " 4l IT at the I I Hllla O 1 A Y J fZy Z ST e3 v g BRADY " GONE BROKE" mmmm' t John Green Brady, three times governor of Mwnwmww of the corporaAlaska, used to be the "tool tions" and accused of being in their pay, Those who believed the charges thought thai he was wealth, yet today he Is amassing enormous Women on French Juries. practically bankrupt, with not a dollar to his A movement is being made in cername, and he goes back to his old home in tain quarters in France to bring about Sitka "broke," as the miners say. He is 58 of women on the years old now, and he is forced to begin life the- - representation juries. It long has been felt that to anew, youth, health, strength, money and friends try women for crime before a court all gone as a result of a disastrous Investment, Where the jury is composed entirely Brady is the son of a longshoreman who lived of men Is an unnatural and unfair in a water front tenement near the foot of Roosevelt street, New York. When he reached his 8th proceeding. birthday he had sold newspapers, blackened shoes, run errands, carried satchels for traveler! and Fatal Four deaths are known to be direct- picked up junk. He slept in packing cases and to the hallawys, and in a packing case a policeman found him one night. ly attributable to exposure Young Brady was shipped to Randall's Island and in the summer of 1859 There is a mystery about he was one of a party of 27 orphans and homeless boys who were sent west undisease the being these cases, known to medical science, though it by the children's aid society. When the company reached Tipton, Ind., John Green, a lawyer, picked Brady out and took him home. Green wanted to Is believed to Involve some great prinmake a lawyer of Hrady. Brady wanted to be a minister. He worked himself life. ciple of through Yale and finally took a degree in divinity at the Union Theological seminary. In 1878 he went to Alaska as a missionary. Hypnotic Sunstroke. Soon business began to demand attention in Alaska and the A German physician who had a patient who could not afford to go to a Brady found himself trading at Bltka. He became manager of the Sitka Trading Co. By 1897 he was looked on as a fit man for governor and warm climate, thought he would acPresident McKlnley appointed him. He was reappointed by Mr. McKink in of same means result by complish the 1900 and by President Roosevelt in l!i"' In that year charges were filed hypnotism. The doctor chalked a picture of the sun on the celling, and by against him. He was accused of doing ImprppOf things in the interest of corbut was exonerated. Gov. Brady'g friends advised him to resign suggestion Induced the patient to be- porations, lieve It really wsh the sin and that after he was cleared, and on Feb. 14, 1100, his resignation waa put in the hands of the premium. Hut the patient it would cure Him, Meanwhile Gov. Brady has been iuteiested Iti the plans of H. I). Key soon died. When the doctor's friends nolds of Boston for the development of Alaska, and nil of his lias novel treatment the about him guyed in the Reynolds enterprises. On Oct. 11 it wa-- . announced he Indignantly explained that the pa- been invested the Reynolds bank at Valdez ha tailed. The downfall of Reynold U tient was getting along nicely and that f Brudy's present difficulties. cause the unexhe not would have got well had pectedly died of sunstroke. ni r- - pi o 'I Alilfjt 5g Vg pa " mls-ionnr- y e a yi 1 1 |