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Show IMPORTANT THAT PUBLIC SHOULD KIDNEY REMEDY , you coraci The testimoniali J sm to give lwv .it-: worn jiwlieitca. i and at timet was lumbago for ten years nnabls to Und erect. A Mr. Dean of tliia u gvarj city, iaw me n my couuihuu ind inquired the cause. I tuM LJju that I lumbaio. lie replied 'w you cot l.j t, tell - i,.t I you to. you need not We it." I fid I would tako anything ft erute. II mid. "Yon et two bottles of Dr. Kiland take it, and if it mer'! Swamp-Roo- t ina not fix you 0. K. I will pay for the well uutiffina myself." I did so and am man. For five months I bare been aa well Before I took your Swamp- u could be. constant Rmt was in pain day end night. Ibis may look like advertising, but it seems to me most important mat me public should be made familiar with this treatment at it is the only one I know which i an aDsoiute cure, i owe ft great and am deal to Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root- , anxious that others situated as I was should know and take advantage of it. Hoping that this testimonial may be of am beseut to some on J. A. HOWLAKD, 1731 Humboldt St. Denver, Cot, ) State of Colorado City and County of Denver J personally appeared before me, s Notary Fuhlio in and for the city and county of the State of Colorado, J. A. Howiand, name known to me ae the person who is subscribed to the above statement and upon bis oath declares that it is ft true and correct statement. .ucg -.- i Lurt Sr. ailsar Ebflmtoa, DANIEL H. DRAPER. Notary rublic. Cfc T. Will Do For Tot Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham-ton- , N. Y., for ft sample bottle. It will Prove What Swamp-Ro-ot Send to anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, tolling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. For aale at all drug stores. Trice City-cenconvince ts and mo worm wun salt without ever on, and the only way to get thess missing any; then then are the to things Is to advertlso. In this day paz, talc, alabaster, amethysts, asbes- and ago, the merchant who has a tos, and nearly a hundred other me store full of good bargains and never tals and minerals that I might men tells the people about them, never tlon, which but await the efforts cf advertises, is soon In the relegated RESOURCES AND OPPORTUNITIES mnn to extract them from this great hands of a receiver. Just so with citWHICH AWAIT COMING OF CAP. Nature's storehouse. ies and states. If they oo not In some ITALIST AND HOME BUILDER. The mineral output of this state last way attract capital and men, they year was more than $33,000,000, and will rapidly decay, and will be lost In its mountains been this present day race of keen compehave only k scratched on the surface. The, tition betwen communities, which are A State Rich In Possibilities, With industry produced a little over bidding for the borne builders and Products That Go to Satisfy Every s of this amount, and Its captains of industry. The progress of Human Need, Which Has Room manufactures about half. And al a community, as of a person, consists and Lands for Thousands. though our farm products produced in looking for opportunitcls with which an amount equaling that of the min to make a still greater progress. eral output, yet in view of the fact Thanks to the last legislature, a bill BY JACOD COLEMAN. that we have twenty-twmillion acres was passed which allows cities and Salt Lake City. At the Quarterly of arable lands with only about one counties to appropriate money for adand only vertising and publicity purposes. The meeting of the Utah Trees Association, tenth under cultivation, under irrigation, people of every community should neia in this city April 10, the follow- about ing address was delivered by Jacob with the new enthusiasm for the soil, take advantage of this, and should Coleman, editor of the Juab County in the future, out agricultural and aid the Development tongue, first to horticultural interesui will be many advertise tho resources of the state Times: Mr. President, members and friends times greater than all of our other fur and wide to create the inquiry; various lines of Industry put of the Utah Tress Association: and, second, to send the Inquirer booklets and literature I atn asked to tell In 10 minutes explaining This state has room and lands for truthfully and accurately the advanthe resources of the state of Utah. Why, Mr. President, it would take hundreds of thousands of settlers. It tages the different' districts of the bomcscekcr all slate have to offer the prospective more than ten minutes to enumerate can offer the would-bthe different products that can be the essentials for a homestead that homceccker. Right hero, too, is where raised on one of our city lots where he is looking for. Utah has an Ideal the local newspaper may be a power I live at Nephl. And as for the temperate climate. According to the for good. It Is surprising the way the state's resources, it would require a recent report of President Joseph F. home paper is mailed to distant book as large as an unabridged dic- Smith of the Mormon church, the friends, and hundreds of people have tionary to list the thousands of Utah's birth rate Is 38 per one thousand, the thus' been Induced to settle in the difproducts that go to satisfy almost highest in the world, and the death ferent towns of our stato. A communrate 9 per one thousand, the lowest ity is largely judged by the up-to-every human need. dated ness, newslnees and enterprise Ours is a magnificent state. It Is in the world. It has a soil that has excellent fer of its newspapers. It reflects the an inland empire within whoso boundaries of nearly 85,000 square miles, tility, and, as Professor Merrill told progresslveness of the locality It repsixty-sevestates liko Rhode Island, the Callfornians recently, ours la a resents. The editor should never or two Ohlos and one Delaware could much deeper soil. It goes without say- overlook an opportunity to sing the be more than comfortably fitted in, ing that our Irrigated farms can pro- praises of his town and exploit its and would not cover its vast area. Be- duce much larger crops than the fa- attractive resources. Not only should hold its majestic mountains, whose mous wheat fields of the Mississippi tills be done for the effect that it may 'and even our dry farms with have on the possible snowcapped crowns rival in grandeur valley; Pike's Peak of Colorado or the Alps the new scientific methods of cultiva- reader, but for the education of his tion, can produce yields from 25 to 40 home readers. Your community may of Switzerland. Nowhere in the world, except the per cent larger than the average be rich In resources and yet no matinnermost recesses of Russia, can crops of Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, and ter bow much outside advertising It such beautiful coloring of mountain Illinois. The doubt as to the success gets, if the home people are unappre-clativof dry farming is forever dispelled. indifferent and ignorant of the foliage be found as during the autumn in possibilities of their district, it will was which driest for the last year, our dells. in Where canyons and days on the globe, except In Utah, can a the history of this new agriculture, have a tendency to discourage the lake be found where the bather can there was not a failure recorded new settler who has come to this methods of cultivation state, and frighten away the proswhere dreamily float on such buoyant wa- were proper The people who are pective one. employed. ters? While attending school we kinds these are, in three years, Let us then as members of the studied of the wonderful natural bridge farming for the purchase Utah Press Association realize that them pay making in historic Virginia, but our state can show the .Virginian four such bridges, price, cost of breaking up and cultiva the future development of this state 80 cent to is more or less in our hands that with which his would appear as a tion. You can proditce cost less than 2i) a community is judged largely by the a of dollar at wheat medium sized culvert in comparison. bushel cents per character and appearance of its newsAnd the metals and minerals of The alfalfa raised on our irrigated paper; that it is for us to lead the Utah what an endless variety! I of people of the towns we have It on good authority that, "Of lands is recognized as the greatest represent to all the metals and minerals In human all forage plants, and with butter at a discovery of the hidden treasures 40 cents per pound, with $50.00 not that He in the mountains and valleys use, tin is perhaps the only one not a of our prolific state. We must forfound In workable quantities within an uncommon price for the meat of beef of with extremely hog, prices ever decry Indifference and pessimthe borders of Utah." Let us briefly high, as a consequence, Utah people ism and exalt local patriotism and run over a part of the endless list Alum is found in Utah and Salt are fast recognizing that fortunes ;an optimism. Let this be ever our unLake counties; aluminum In Davis and be made la these industries. failing duty as we labor band in hand Then, too, wihat state can surpass with the Development League for the Morgan counties; antimony In Box If you upbuilding of this great state. Elder, Piute, and Garfield counties; us in fruit raising? Name, snow mac or mat a lana can, mui agates In large quantities and great Edward Taylor, has The Splendid Optimist beauty in Emery county; arsenic in horticulturist,offJ. the not carried prizes and troWashington and Iron counties; bisScott Bond, a rich Arkansas plantAlbuat At Sacramento, muth in Juab, Sanpete and Morgan phies? at the recent convention of eald, er, we all were Council Bluffs, querque, counties; copper in Juab, Millard and National the unNegro Business league, to the of tributes the paid Salt Lake counties with Bingham as proud in New Yotk: as our and of excelled fruits, quality the greatest copper producing camp "The places are the places in the world. Utah's great quantities with grape nuts, there is a reason. for you, open the farm lands. You won't VH states: B. Y. Mr. of the Smart, of coal and Iron, while now conserved be sick out there, and the ground in out of the way places removed "There are five fundamental reasons will love you like a brother. the of states sister Utah and her why from a railroad, could supply America am an "I optimist for my farm and fruit for 500 years to come. Oil Is found arid west can raise superior brother. I know he must succeed. fruit become a to destined are producIn San Juan, Uintah, and other counAnd any argument you bring against ties. Mr. Charles D. Dickensheets, a ing center. These are: First, soils his success I can answer optimisticaland in rich potash comparatively recognized oil expert of Los Angeles, ly. In fact, I'm liko Calhoun Washwho has just completed a thorough phosphoric acid; second, a water supthe control of the orchard-1s- t ington, who said bravely, no matter investigation of the Utah fields, stated ply under the key note in the intelligent what misfortune happened, 'Well, it the other day, "Utah will, in my judgfour might have been worse.' ment, approach if it does not excel, production of fruit buds; third, "But the deacon thought he'd get which months of continuous sunshine, Pennsylvania as an oil producing means the best of the optimist, Calhoun, and rood maximum production state, as well as In the development in so he said to him one day: " 'I had a dreadful dream last steel manufacture. through the foliaga and high color atof iron and a clear the fifth, dry, fruit; and, There are almost inexhaustible deI thought I saw the bad place. night the most potent fungicide was a great lake of boiling, posits of iron and coal in Utah. We mosphere, There will soon be callipg Pennsylvania in existence." Because of these fruit blazing pitch, and we all were swimand producing qualities In our soil The Utah of the East.' " all our dis- ming in it you and I, and In Iron county there is an idoal com- climate, our farmers are rapidly near we'd the And when friends. get and of alfalfa bination for the manufacture of steel. continuing the growing and are rais- shore and try to climb out, imps with One of the most remarkable deposits cereals for $25 per acre, to $1,000 per acre. horns and tails would jab redhot of iron ore in the world is stored here. ing fruit from $500 into our faces.' It would take an hour or more to pitchforks " "Well, well,' said Calhoun. He Experts declare tbat the; e are 500,000.-00- tell of the clitons in sight And to smelt the a moment, then he added: mate of Utah's Dixie, her cotton, her thought iron and manufacture the steel, there have been worse, eh?' It But might and her " 'How might It have been worse, are In this same county, veins of coal figs, almonds, pomcgranltes, will be and vegetables that 100 feet in thickness. A railroad is berriep you fool?' shouted the deacon angrily. by tho new railroad to our brought ' 'Why,' said Calhoun, 'it might now being constructed, branching oft weeks earlier than Calbeen true.' " Louisville Times. the Salt Lake Route at Lund, and go- - markets three have ifornia can supply them. The magto Utah's Iron county through ig orchards and berry patches Dixie. We, therefore, expect to wit- nificent Bret Hart a Was Dubious. Utah of valley, the endless variety of ness a great influx of capital and popDavis and Box Elder Harte at one time used to Bret in raised ulation to this region of mineral mir- fruits new apple orchards of plunder people from the rostrum in tho counties, acles. of others that tne way of lectures. During a But this Is not all carbonate of Cache and hundreds state out in this over circuit he are the being planted Pennsylvania trip soda by thousands of tons is found in is king and tho found himself one evening in a small Jonathan the where in Salt Lake county; quicksilver Elberta is queen all might be de- town, the very atmosphere of whica Sanpete county; garnets In Tooele scribed to you, but even then only a was depressing. Turning to the county; gold In Salt Lake, Juab, small fraction would be enumerated committeeman who awaited on him at Tooele and other counties; granite almost exhaustless resources his room in the hotel, Harte said: "Is in Salt Lnke, Juab. Sanpete and every of the "Deity-mad- e storehouse." of this this a healthful climate?" other county in the state; gypsum of the Press AssoWashand But, gentlemen "Passably," responded the commitSevier in Juab, Sanpete, we might as well not have teeman. In ciation, at that Nephl, will I say ington. endowments and latent "What's the mortality of this city?" Jutib county, we have a solid moun- these rich we are going to keep these "About one a day." tain of gypsum; one mill is grinding wealth. If our "hide and ourselves to "About one, eh?" said Harte. mill another things out 200 tons per day; a bushel." If we could Come this way a minute," and he is being planned the coming summer, light under care of all of our products, this drew the committeeman into the reand we have mountains enough of it take inmight be well; but the present popu- cess of the bay window and then to keep five or six mills going lation and capital in this state could said to him solemnly: "Is the man definitely. of utilizing in a thousand dead for today? I am going to lecdream not thero counties Kane and Garfield In untold resources of this ture here tonight and it would be are millions of feet of good timber years the to vast empire. As well might an ant a great relief to me to know that I awaiting the advent of a railroad are murble attempt to remove the bricks and could get through alive." San Franhaul it out. Mountains of dwelling cisco Chronicle. stones from a dilapidated also found. On the Salt Lake Route of thouhundreds need We ownhouse. the at Mills, not fnr from Nephl, re- sands of population to help "tickle A Fresh Clerk, ers of a mountain of marble have be our soil that it may laugh bounteous to ceived assay tests showing it low Customer Have you got Italian mar- harvests." We need capitalists to shoes? equal to the Vermont or our use to a factory, establish glass bles They are installing machinery, Clerk Yes, sir; we marked our lots to silica sand, which is 90 per cent pure; and preparing to ship carload entire stock down yesterday. Boston to factories starch and of cereal ns plants Mounta eastern manufacturers. finest In the consumo our grain and potatoes; Transcript onyx, adjudged to bo the woolen mills to manufacture the Just Like Him. world, are found In Utah county. sul- twenty million pounds of wool annusilver, opals, oolite, our nitre, Mica, Man Is never satisfied. As soon as world In ally produced; plants to handle phur enough to supply the counties. mountains of sulphur, potteries for he finds an ideal woman be wants to Millard. Beaver and Utah our clay deposits, and so on and so marry her. Ireat Salt Lake could also supply UTAH'S ADVANTAGES UntAT ABUUI KNOW r. GONE UP. live-stoc- two-third- o one-fortlt't- h e n non-reside- e, Blnks Hella. old man. you're ft 'ght, you look as though you'd been fired from a cannon 1 Where Is your utoT ,, .v Jinks I, don't exactly know, I don't think lt'8 come down yet Good Definition. A New York judge, it will be recently declared unconstitutional the new law that an having run over a pedestrian, must stop and leave his name. The judge said that the automoblllst kad a perfect right to run away and leave the mangled victim to bleed to death alone for the reason that, In criminal cases, no man is obliged to sear witness against himself. James Halden Wilkes, president of the Defense Society of Atlanta, discussed this legal decision at the society's last meeting. "And that," be cried re- membered, auto-mobills- t, Well, inhotly, "Is called Justice. deed, was a search after justice once defined as a blind man looking Into a dark room for a black hat that isn't there." Bloodless Battles. "What we want," said the peace promoter, "Is a system that' will per nit candid discussion to take the place of actual conflict." "Don't you think," Inquired the man who was reading the sporting page, "that our professional pugilists have come pretty near solving the Youthful Criminals. One of the most distressing eases be has ever bad to deal with faced a Liverpool (England) magistrate recently, and one cannot wondor at bis exclamation, "Wbut can I do with these babies?" as he gazed upon five tiny prisoners lu the dock. The youngest was only seven years old, aud the oldest eleven, yet the quintet for two months have carried out thefts and other depredations with such skill and cunning that for two months the police and detectives have been trying in vain to find out who were the thieves. No fewer than 40 charges were brought against the children. The child was the ringleader, and quite an adept at thieving and planning thefts. seven-year-ol- Poor Tom. Makes a 50-cc- Good Breakfast Bett- erTo kave some Post Toasties with cream or milk. For sprinkle a pleasing Post change, Toasties stewed fruit, then add cream and you have a small feast ver fresh or "The Memory Lingers" WSTUM CEREAL CO.. Ltd Bull desk, Mleh. - SCHOLAR THE OUTDID Msybe Sign Was Not All Good Latin, but She Translated It Without Difficulty. , Jack returned borne from college, where be bad won high honors as a student of ancient languages, but he pleaded Ignorance one day when hi young sister asked him to translate a sign she had seen of an optician' which read thus: "Con sultu sabo utyo urey es." Jack struggled manfully with It for several minutes and gave it up. "There are some words In It that are Latin. The others aren't, anyhow.' It doesn't make sense." "That Is what I said," replied hi sister. "But cook translates It without any trouble. She saya It meant , 'Consult us about your eyes.'" very youthful and entirely unknown musical composer read some verses by the renowned Thomas Moore A woman's mind enables ber to which be liked very much. Forthwith reach a conclusion without starting. the buzs of Inspiration circulated next through bis brain, and the thing Garfield Tea, invaluable in the treathe knew he had evolved a tune which ment of liver and kidney diwaNes! went right prettily with the words of No man becomes a jailbird Just for the Irish poet Much elated, the very a lark. took to the youthful composer product a publisher of popular songs and sang it to him. The publisher shook bas A . 1 v: !,! Household Remedy bead. "The music's all right," he opined, "but the words are bum." Taken In the 8prlng for Years. Ralph Runt, Willis, Mich, writer "Hood's Saraaparilla has been a house bold remedy in our borne as long; as I I have taken it in the draw can remember. fur several years. It ha no spring poison equal for cleansing the blood and expelling the humor that accumulate during the winter. Being a farmer and exWho so neglects learning in his posed (o bad weather, my syatern ia often youth, loses the past and la dead for affected, and I often take Hood's Sura pnrilla with good result." the future. Euripides. Hood's Sarwiparilla ia Peculiar to Itself. Thero is no "just as good." Nature's laxative, Garfield Tea. Get it today in nual liquid form ot coiiHtipatina and in ideally suited to .chocolated tablets called Saraatabs, tone up the system in the Spring. . A pin seratoh may nnw blood s rtitr riail rut ia very apt to Hamlin Wlard Oil uard at one put all infection and tnakea blood impossible. poison, do so. over-com- es MAHfS SORC EVC9 Most women would be very uninteresting If they couldn't talk. WELL EATS WHAT HE LIKES AFTER TAKING FREE SAMPLE Tt will be welcome news to dyspeptics to learn of a remedy that, in the opinion of thousaads, la an absolute cure for Indigestion and all forma of stomach trouble, and, better still. It la ffuaranteed to do ao. The remedy Is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup pepKln. We all know the value of pure pepsin In Indigestion, and add to this aome ex- Pepsin and Is now cured. Hundreds of others would gladly testify. It Is a guaranteed cure for Indigestion, constipation, biliousness, headaches, ga on the stomach and similar complaints. A bottle can be had at any drug store for fifty cents or a dollar, but If you wish to make a test of It first send your address to Dr. Caldwell and he will supply a free sample bottle, sent direct to your address. You will soon admit that you have found something to replace salts, cathartics, breath perfumes and other temporary reliefs. Syrup Pepsin will cure your permanently. For the free sample atddress Dr. W. B. Monti-cell- ceptional laxative Ingredients and you have a truly wonderful remedy. Mr. T. W. Worthy of Forsythe, Oa., got to the point where he could not even eat or digest vegetables and after many year ot seek In he found the cure In rr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Mr. Rudy Kasner of Mollne, III., waa in the ame bad pre- Caldwell. dicament wltn his stomach, took Syrup ill. His Limit. Joshua' had made the" sun stand still. "Fine, but we bet you can't make we cried. Willie Jones do Herewith' be acknowledged bis limitations. Harper's Bazar. If 201 Caldwell building. o, Constipation Vanishes Forever Promit Car Rclief-Pema- aeii I CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS a lao. Important to Mothers Examine PsselyvtfaU act sorely but geauy oa las avsr. able carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It Ttenra th Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. UUAfirfflfiftfJ! Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria 1 1 IrJTFDsl liiTTLirl Wishta in prove die eoaiplwriea fior tae eyes. Saul ML Saul Dese, Sett! hie Genuine Evidently Deeply In Love. Cbedomlr Milkovltch, a Belgrade policeman, committed suicide after his sweetheart bad informed him she could not leave ber situation to follow him on his new beat. BUt Signature A COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS in New York City. Best features of country and city life sports oa acres Dearths Hudson ED GEKRS, "The grand old man," he school park of 35 Course Primary Clasata is called for he is so honest handling River. Academic horaes in races. He save: "1 have used Graduation. Upper class for Advance 1 Kl'OIIN'S DISTEMPER CURE for 12 Special Students. Music and Art Writa years, always with beat success. It is the for catalogue and terms. only remedy I know to cure ail forms of Khi tun mi Shi Ibltta. thtrtik iwsse, twBW S,ot It distemper and prevent horses in same stable having the disease." 60c and $1 a bottle. All druggixts, or manufacturers. Spohn Out-of-do- t Medical Co., Chemists, Goahen, Ind. To be conscious tW ant is a great step to you are ignorknowledge.-Benjami- n Disraeli. 0 First Set Own House In Order. How unconscious we all are of out own faults and fallings! As we see ethers, so others see ours. It is our own faults we nave to correct first before we tell others where to get off d COOK latrti'frX'i1A'xHJ Yonr DrnKRlat Will Tell Yea Murine Kye Itomedy Kelleves Sore Ryes, Weak Eyes. Doesn't Smart, KtrenKtlien .Soothes Kye Pain. Try It In Unby'e Eyes fur Scaly Eyelids and Granulation. It is In the minor acts of our dally life that our character is revealed. Lee. rAfcKER'i CfatuM 40S fcitintf th hale mmAa a latwiiM frvwui. Tails to Kaatore Orajr Dar Cww toalp il ns,i..K Ud. SIvm Welcome Words alk nUtl to h.ir tailing. water Eyo Irriutlau mmmt c unwien Mtllliwn nvnaiiu bi Dimmit fcj tat, tm rwta4 ASSAYER AND t n Uo.ct, SUrer, prices(told. Surer, t6u; (.old, Mrs .'no or tXipiwr, II. il;Vailing envelopes and 1.V. prim Hit lent oa application. hpeolmi-- MM Some women are like some old hens et In their ways. mui a Thompson's lira. Wlnalow's Soothing Bjrup for Children softens lbs sum, reduces Inflammation, allrs pain, cure wind colic, Ko a buttle. To keep the blood pure and the skin clear, drink Garfield Tea before retiring. BALSAM MAID teething-- , The ship In which many fond hopes go down Is courtship. tl and nmplra work lto(arbca, Carbunal ollrlted, I.eaUvUlo, hiauuaai Bauk. W. N. U, Salt Ltke City, No. 17-1- 91 to Women Women who suffer with disorders peculiar to their sex should write to Dr. Pierce and receive free the advice of a physician of over 40 years' experience skilled and successful specialist in the diseases of women. Every letter of this sort has the most csrcfal consideration end is regarded as sacredly confidential. Many sensitively modest women write fully to Dr. Pierce what they would shrink from telling to their local physician. The local physician is pretty sure to say that be cannot do snythinf tI 'i without "an examination." Dr. Pierce holds that Liati faliiiliitf ' Sin Jill' these distasteful examinations ara rfenerallv need. leas, and that no woman, except in rare cases, should submit to them. Dr. Pierce's treatment will cure you rfcht In tba privacy of your own home. His "Favorito Prescription" bas cured hundreds of thousands, some of them the worst of cases It Is the only medicine of its kind that is the product of a refularly (raduated pbysiciao. The only one food enough that its makers dare to print its every In.redient on its outside wrapper. There's no secrecy. It will bear examine-tio- n. No alcohol sod no 1 dnis are found ia it. Some unscrupulous medicine dealers may offer you substitute. Don't take it. Don't trifle with your health. Write to World's Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y., take the advice reoeived and be well. S.-- v habit-forming- -- , 3 f. |