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Show PAGE SIX THE PROVO POST iand the Practical Working of an r,lAliy SUBJECTS UP AT (irrigation Project Dr. Seymour Baking Helps IB. Young, past neer Irrigation; president, PioProfessor Lewis Salt Lake, -- Dairying and Stock Raising on Irrigated Farms; C. S. Kinney, Salt Lake, Beneficial Use as a Basis for Greater Uniformity of State Laws Governing Waters; II. N. Ilayes, county attorney, Richfield Early History of Irrigation in Utah; Professor Richard R. Lyman, civil engineering. U. ,of U., Mensure IRRiGATIOfi Lcara lo Begolate the Ifeat of Your Otea - J By Mrs. a net Me Ken z ie HUlJ'.ditor oj the Boston Cooking School Magazine There is just one way to make your cakes rise high and keep ail even surface. Have your oven moderate at first,-unt- the cake is il fully rizen; then increase the heat, so as to brown it over quickly. Extreme heat stiffens the dough, se-ofW ne n ml ater st i ffen'the outs id e of the (Brown, drainage engineer. cake before the rising is complete, tjve list of speakers for thejjkp Watey Logged and Alka- - you stop the rising process. Then Twentieth National Irrigation, line Irrigated Lands; Senator the leavening forming inside, gas, Congress which meets at Salt Heed Smoot, Provo, Liberalizing will bulge the where center, up LakeUity September iJO to Octo- - Our Land Laws; Dr. J. A. Widt the dough is still soft, and spoil 'her 3, 1912. Governor William mm. Utah Agricultural College. .the shape of the cake. . 38 . Rational IV of Water in IrrigaSpry will deliver the address NOTH Bimmits or other Meleome to the delegates on behalf H"i parries, address, former Governor made from stiff dough, that are cut mtaf of the state and Mayor S. C. Park j Artliur L. Thomas. fof the oven, bake in allot oven. ahapes will render a like sen ice for thej Under the direction, of Chair This is because the cut surfaces of the city, Other residents. of Utah Kai George A.J8now.of the Utah dough do not sear over, but rather Mho have places on the program Board of Control, all these plans leave the pores opeu, allowing the leavening gas to escape and the heat to are; Major Richard W. Young, are rapidly approaching perfee penetrate readily, Small ovens cool chairman hoard of governors, turn ami on September 30, Salt quickly; therefore they should lie made several degrees hotter than a larger George A. Snow, chairman hoard Lake City will inaugurate the oven, and the less the door is optned most ami of control. Securities greatest gathimportant Irrigation the better. Do not attempt to bake ering ever brought together to bread and pastry togetlier. Bread re celebrate irrigations progress and quires prolonged, moderate baking , pastry the reverse, discuss ta mestauzzssmji -U- -yoiT I ( SPCIAL For Saturday r September 21st. From 5 p. m. To 10 p. m. Clothes Brushes worth 35c . . . -- questions pertinent to its future development. from a - Any Shirt in the house worth . . $1.25 bors. C Baking PowCo., Chicago, - infantry acted as a guard of hon ' or. Representatives of the special foreign, envoys who came to attend the funeral of the late Japanese monarch and the resident embassadors-an- d Enormous Crowds Attend Funeral of Count and Countess ' Nogt , i. The Demonstrator from the factory will be here and Lower the -- Worlds Record for Fast aqd Easy Washing. n. 1 GIRL TAKES ACID FOR DESPONDENCY OVER LOVE AFFAIR Young Womans Mouth, Face and Arms So Badly Burned Police Believe Someone Tried to Force Her to Take Poison. , The Most Interesting, Practical; Labor-Savin- g Hou sehold Necessity The Least .Noise, Shop, Labor and Time . SOUVENIR FOR THE LADIES -- ministers-participated in the procession; -- which numbered upward of 50,000 persons. Marching behind the coffins were great numbers of relatives of soldiers killed at Port Arthur while serving under General Nogi in the spring of 1904. The special embassador of the United States, Philander C. Knox, did not participate, being absent at Kioto, where he went to visit the grave, at Monoyama of Emperor Mutsuhito. Mr. Knox was John J. represented by Brig.-Geof the Pershing special embassy staff. "Mr. Knox. sent a magnificent wreath. ' . JAPAN PAYS LAST ' TRIBUTE OF HONOR TO NOTED SOLDIER All For can of K 25-ce- nt SPRINGS, Sept. der to the Jaquks Mfg. sudden by two Aroused deaths within' the last eighteen months, superstitious farmers in the neighborhood of Chico basin, about twenty-fiv- e miles southeast of here, declare that the ranch of Joseph Raff is haunted and one or two are laboring under the hallucination 1haU"theyhave seen what they call a death angel hovering over the place. Mrs. Ella Raff, wijEe, yf the rancher, dropped dead frbm heart disease yesterday while walking in the yard. She was alone and her bodywas not found until three Hours, later, when her husband returned from the fields for lunch. Eighteen months ago a young man, Leslie Shifflet, was suffocated in a well on the ranch, foul air overcoming him after he had lowered himself into it. Raff himself, who is an intelligent man, does not believe the superstitious theories of his neigh18. f Have a strong underheat for baking powder preparations, especially pastrj . These, art? only a few at the many NEIGHBORS DECLARE . baking helps found in the K C Cook's DEATH ANGEL SEEN Book a copy of which may be secured OVER RAFFS FARM by sending the colored certificate taken COLORADO FROM 2 ZTILL.5 OCLOCK SATURDAY, SEPT., 21 , BARTOW & BLAKE Mifflffi the line will be extinct. His wife is also mentioned as a legatee of HOWS THlSr . We offer One Hundred Dollars Rethe property. Donations to friends ward for any - case of Catarrhthat and several public institutions are cannot' be 'cured ' by Halls Catarrh made. Cure, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. A baby girl was born to Mr. and - We, the undersigned, hare known F. Mrs. Henry Jones yesterday morn- J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and ' believe him perfectly honorable In all ing. The mother and child business transactions, and financially doing nicely. able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. ANOTHER HUSBAND WARDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, WANTS TO QUIT HIS Wholesale Toledo, O. FAITHLESS SPOUSE j Halls Catarrh Druggists, Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood Janies Armstrong has brought and mucous surfaces of the system, suitfor divorce against Minnie j Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c per Armstrong on the grounds of the bottle. Sold by all druggists. defendant having committed a Take Halls Family Pills for .consti, statutory offense with George pation. i , Store will be CLOSED Saturday 21 until 5 p. m. SCHW TOKIO, Sept, 18. The double funeral of Gen? Count Maresuke Nogi, supreme military councilor of Japan, and his wife, the Countess Nogi. who committed suicide on the night of September 13, just as the body-o- f passed out, of 'Tokio on its way to the imperial tomb at Monoyama, was held today with impressive ceremony at the Aoyama cemetery, in the presence of enormous crowds. The funeral cortege left - the Nogi residence in Akasaki, a 3 oclock this afternoon and passed through the streets of thecapital. The body of Japans great warrior was borne on a gun carriage, while the at PUEBLO, Colo.. Sept. 18. Lucerio, 19 years old and Bruee, the keeper of the belle of Mexico town, near the drink parlor at Tucker. Fer-mini- n the soft Bruce is arrest for violating the Pueblo smelter, attempted to commit suicide this morning, by drinkliquor law at that town. ing carbolic acid. Someone notified the police soon Chili at Spencers Cafe. afterward and when they arrived they found the girl in a state of now-unde- r - A Beautiful Drama by . a, nothing of the circumstances which brought about her condition but said that she had attempted to take her life because of despondency over a love affair. She will AND as -- t JAMES LATIM0RE HIMROD MRS. ANNA ADAMS GEN. NOGI WILLS BODY TO COLLEGE TOKlO, Sept. 18. The will of General Count Maresuke Nogi, e who, with his wifercommitted the moment the body of the late emporer started on its journey to the tomb, was published today. In it he suggests that his body be given' to a medi,caIcoL' lege, requesting "that only his teeth, hair and nails be buried in V Mother of Maude Adams the grave. rovo upsra nouse Friday Night SEPTEMBER 20 POPULAR PRICES The will says that the general follows the emperor because hfs services are no longer required ?n this world. He had often sought to die, he adds, and chooses as the occasion for his. departure from the life the present national calf amity. t The document bears the date of the night of Sept. 12, 24 hours previous to the taking of his life, and it indicates that the death of the countess had not been decided upon when the instrument was - The Very Latest Styles prepared. u It says that while his wife lives the house of Nogi maybe main-itainy- d but that after her death 2 Prices the Lowest When Values Are Considered. We Make Long - Time friends with our policy of Small- profits arid many - sales. Yours For Trade . Drug. Co. furnish cream for all social occasions. Sutton-Chas- e ice sui-kid- ' an All Star Company of Thirteen People led by I e have just received a car load of the famous John Deere Plows, and Manure Spreaders. We invite the public to call and get some of our literature and look over our great stock. Every article is absolutely guaranteed. We also have the famous Buckeye Cider Mills. Call and see our Beet Plows, Beet Pullers and the latest model Potato Diggers. We solicit a trial on your farm. CONSOLIDATED WAGON AND MACHINE COMPANY. 255 West Center Street, -Store Provo, Utah. holiday '- uHers Secret of Plows Sam Schwabs Clothing will remain closed on Saturday until 5 p. m., it --being a Jewish1 recover. The girl-wso badly burned about the mouth, face and arms casket containing the body of the believe someone countess was carried in a hearse. thatthepolice tried to force her to take the acid The pallbearers were, chosen from and a further investigation is thejiighest ranks of the Japanese r r made. army amUnavv. One regiment of The young woman insisted no one Was to blainlTbut hersel F. 99 A Car Load With her was George Men-doewho is believed to have sent in the call.T He said he knew coma. CO. |