Show ’( THE SAUNA CALL SALINA o 47 N J Parley Bates and Magleby LAWYERS Court House sF 0 Richfield Ut BULLOCK - - DENTIST- - Office Over Salina Meat & Supply Company’s Store SALINA Utah In Office to 30 15 of Mo The White House I garber ghog j H F Jensen Proprietor J First Class Tonsorial Work 5 SECT NEW 4 ACCESSORIES at Salina IN AN OLD TEMPLE I tk Hf Co op wm tor the Otto Q Olaen work Ephraim Utah W have In atojk an Cofflaa of and Casket aid llna aoaaasorlaa Salt Laka or any modern oitjr atylea We deal dl root with manafaotarar a ad oan tar a yon mlddlaman and salsa Wo bars good to Ban’s profit plena averyone’a purae Call on mi Wo ean pUaae yon The Agent WVl IS 4 Mm smmtmwwwwuHWi A sect called the “Sons of Men” Baid to be of Tibetan origin has been since 1906 In the prehisworshiping of Stonehenge Engtoric land generally believed to be a temple of the sun This fact is thought by some archaeologists to corroborate the solar temple hypothesis of Sir Norman Lockyer the day of the summer solstice having been chosen by the new sect to pay their homage to the great luminary The pilgrims to this ancient temple are mostly Hindus Arabians and Persians and their sect Is Increasing rapidly in numbers Who’s Your TAILOR? Who repairs and cleans clothes? August Ericksen p Store at the Co-o- ACCIDENTS AND THE WEATHER certain railroad has made an Inwhich shows teresting investigation that on its system the number of accidents was greater In the summer months than in winter It was also that the number of engine discovered failures was affected In like manner A OVER es YEARS EXPERIENCE On thig railway special efforts had always been made to prevent failures during the severe winter season and the men were kept up to a high pitch In their efforts to reduce them to a When tne warmer weather minimum set in and the elements were more it was found that these effavorable forts were relaxed with the result that failures and accidents followed Special steps were made to overcome tills tendency and it is now the practice as early as January and February for the officials of the mechanical engineer’s department to put in hand a guarding campaign against failures when the warmer weather sets in and become more the operating conditions It is said that the results favorable of this action have been remarkable: the failures and accidents now recorded being much fewer than for the of period previous corresponding was done in years before anything the matter Trade Marks Designs Ac Copyrights and HaaorlptlAii may nrlfnf a Bkt Afon asoartaia fra whaetiar an oar Motif ts probably patoniabl' Commuatca Ivvantlna on PaianU hMAftrtoUroonndafillal OMrt acfty for MurtacpateiiU aal fra Pataata takaa tfcrimti Muun UrsMlrs without chart lutb hfartol not Sckniitfc Jfinerican hnJoro!f ta Tarveat waaktf lllnatratad A O'arma ianiUlc Journal a nteUon of any vaars four month $L hold by all nawadaalara MUNN & Brauoh Co38Brd"- Offloa F - New York 8L Washington D C ANIMALS Just Think of It? tFHEE OUR Machine Sewing ThfnK whot thl rneanal 0 ft means—thai If roa break tha whole aching any past (itaodla bell sr attachment ate) ll will ba ttplacod ta you without charge j jj nd for our booklet “In the Day’s Work’ Sewing Machine Co Chicago III fell Salina Co-o- p DON’T NEED EYES Animals do not depend upon their evi sight in the same way as human Cats and dogs could get along beings A eat can very well without eyes find her way with the aid of her These are the same width whiskers and connected with her as body nerves which cause her to feel the slightest touch guided by Dogs can be entirety their sense of smell Blind dogs have been known to scent and find their Inaccessible places way to almost Their hearing is also pretematirrally sharp Rats can see very little and depend noses muscles upon their chiefly and hearing In the case of touch most animals the senses of smell and touch are more highly developed than that of sight and they do not require to depend upon their sight nearly as much as do human beings in regard to safety The Free Sowing Machine i for five yr a rs against accident breakage wear fire tornado lightThis ahowa our ning tod water faith ia Store Ancient Indian Treaty Tree CEMETERY TU First State Bank r"' United -- : Depositary for Postal Savings Funds H B Pres JAMES FARRELL CRANDALL Cashier Vico Pres DIRECTORS CHARLFS1 LA MMERSDORF Capitalist Salt Lake City JAMES FARKELL Director National Copper Bank Halt Lake C and SCOltUP Farmer P Stockman CHRIS JORGENSEN- Farmer H S GATES Earmer and Sheepman W H BROWN Manager Salina H B CRANDALL Director Pay son Exchange Bank City IHIMI LUMBER SSL LUMBER Nephi Plaster fine a Doors Manor near New York It being careThis great chestnut tree at Philips fully preserved though It le dying for under It was made the last treaty beIt Is said too that In Its shade tween the whites and the native Indians Headless wrote Horseman" The tree It more than "The Washington Irving twenty feet In circumference at Its base and before long will be covered with trailing vines TO DINE ON BOOKS OLDEST CHURCH IN ENGLAND With the exception of minerals it is difficult for one to find on the earth’s surface substances that do not tempt the appetite of some sort of animal The list of queer articles of diet includes the earth which Is munched with satisfaction by the clay eater and the walrus hide which the Eskimo relishes as much as John Bull his joint of beef It is not generally known however that men as well as mice and bookworms have eaten dinners that have consisted only of books comIn 1370 Barnabo de Visconti pelled two papal delegates to eat the which they bull of excommunication its with had brought him' together As the silken cords and leaden seal bull was written on parchment not The Church of St Iiurence Brad was founded in the sevpaper it was all the more difficult to enth century by St Aldhelm a bishop digest genAmerican an There was also of Sherbourue and a service is held eral who had signed a note for 2000 annually in it on the anniversary ol and when It fell due comflorins St Aldhelm’s death Thd sacred char taracter of the building had been forgot pelled his creditors to eat it The tars when books fall Into their pos- ten but was traced by a former vicar may eat of Bradford This is the oldest place them that they session acquire the knowledge contained in of Christian worship in England them writer the author A Scandinavian of a political hook was compelled to RAINCOATS MADE OF GRASS or being beheaded choose between In certain provinces eating hlB manuscript boiled in broth of both the Isaac Volmar who wrote some spicy Philippines and Mexico grass rainsatires against Bernard tuke of Sax- coats are commonly worn by the naIn both countries the volume ony was not allowed the courtesy of tives the kitchen but was forced to swal- of the rainfall from the tropical showlow them uncooked ers Is difficult of comprehension for Still worse was the fate of Philip people In the United States The rain a Jurist of great renown descends In almost solid sheets and Oldenburger eat to not only who was condemned ordinary umbrellas are of no use whata pamphlet of his writing but also to ever These rains sift through the be flogged during his repast with best umbrellas in a fine dense mist orders that the flogging should not and soak the user as effectively as Not so cease until he had swallowed the last though he were uncovered with the grass raincoat Although apcrumb parently light and'' airy the grasses ROD are so cleverly woven that the water ON A SALMON SEAGULL never penetrates to the inside of the mesh These grass coats give the na“I have sometimes read accounts of tive wearers a shaggy appearance birds taking the fly of a fisherman" which baffles description By reason Field the but of a correspondent sayB of their “natural” color and appearheand of I do not remember having ance they also enable the hunter to anyone catching a seagull when sal- successfully stalk game mon fishing before This happened at Hunkeld and the lady who was fishing not only hooked the seagull but after OF DREAMED PEARL GOT IT playing it for a quarter of an hour landed it The lady was harling for near La E D Wermuth salmon in the Tay just below Dunkeid camping Wis dreamed he saw a large bridge— spinning with k minnow fronl Crosse a boat— when the seagull swooped pearl lying on the bottom of the river flew much so was off by the with the 'He impressed under the water and minnow The gull made very good vision that he dived into the water play and it was only owing to skill- at the point where he had seen the ful handling that it was eventually pearl in his dream and brought two ‘netted’ It was of course taken ofT large clams to the surface In one ol the hook and flew away none the thfm he found a pearl worth $500 and In the other one worth $30 worse” line of Portland Cement and Builders Hardware Windows Moulding Phone 16 Black ARNESON LUMBER CO JOHN aeac not say Hello to them? Why friends all want to talk to you over Better have it put in Your the ’ohone With Salina telsphoas in your hems yon ean rnn errands ge skipping do baaixaaas sts with to t leaving home Yon will enjoy the eon vssitso Why pot have itf Oat eonneeted this toning week SAUNA TELEPHONE COMPANY ac YOU CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT GR0C1ES MEATS And the very Best Place to buy them is at Th°White Front wher IDMO’O imh o In sSVwfTtr THE Magazine that Fact LSIYour than Fiction “WRfTTDI YOU imDtMTAND IT CREoBtiaii A Progress which any time and which forever ia running Story ol the WorU’a reading at yXiwillmayholdbegin your interest Printing ia Popular Mechanics Magazine Are you reading it ? Two million of your the favorite magazine neighbor are nd of the m tnouund American homas It classes — old and young — man appeals to and know and thoaa who want to know 280 MOM PICTURES MONTH 200 OF GENERAL INTEREST The "Shop Note Departmmt pages) to make gives easy ways useful article! for end shop repairs etc "Amateur Mechanics page) tells how to make Minion furniture wirelna outfits boats manic and the thinga a boy loves engine MR IS CENTS SINELI Niwsdsalsr la mm r WRITI TODAY PMK SAMFIK it ia beat who If it is worth doing at all it’s worth doing well to do home all i0 POPULAR MECHANICS Wulntei St CO First class work at all times is our motto Let us figure with you on your next job Counting Your Money K H about that printing you're in need of? OW job MEXICO Probably the smallest bit oj real estate owned by the United States is located in the midst of the City ofMex-cit is the American National cemetery established in 1851 by congress ind designed chiefly as a resting placj br die bodies of more than 700 who died in this vicinity during I u war with Mexico of Salina States LAMM ERSDORF CHAS FORCED Caket UTAH WEAR OUT The answer Is giver as follow! In a recent Issue of the Outfitter (London): Most people would reply through friction when In wear and the when not In wear but these are not the main causes according to advanced Ideas It is believed the greater cause of the damage done by dirt la due to- minute plants called bacteria The acid In the perspiration gets much more than Its due amount of credit An American writes: “The real destruction comes from the fact that the grease from the fat glands of the skin together with the perspiration rubbed off on the clothing form a fertile soil In which these microscopic bacteria flourish" Some of the bacteria develop powerful acids — that class that makes sweet milk sour and converts wine Into vinegar These fibers of wool and Bilk or the vegetable fibers of linen and cotton and weaken them so that the fabric falls to pieces Of course clothing can be and ts destroyed by laundries that use chemicals too strong which act upon the fibers of the cloth Clothes that cannot be washed should be bruBlied and aired frequently as this tends to keep the germs out to a certain extent If clothes are allowed to accumulate dust in a shop or fixture they get rotten and tear easily owing to the bacteria getting In with the dirt They should be frequently brushed and exposed as much as possible to the air Coffins Caskets AND CLOTHES OUR WHY In and see es abont at your Ural opportunity Don't wnlt until Iba very last moment but give aa a little time and weU show yon what high lrde work Pom It to the South Pole are The survivors of Captain Scott’s tragic expedition being feted and honored In England and the public Is crowding to see the relics which have been put on exhibition The Illustration shows the actual tent in which Captain Scott and two companions died Guarding it art two itiftmbersof the exploring party be caa tnra eat will occupy your entire time when you become regular advertiser In THIS PAPER Unless you have an antipathy for labor of this kind call us up and we’ll be glad to come and talk over our proposition |