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Show KAMAS, UTAH THE : 800,000 cases, or nearly 20,000,000 Mrs. was crease With Have You Think The only test of —Time,—Lite. _ well as farm values, show How to Remove poetry and women. Superfluous ‘Hair —Do you realize that one of the most embarrassing defects that can effect women who value their personal appearance is a growth of hair upon their face,neck and arms? Many a woman who would otherwise be beautiful is marred by this annoying and prominent disfigurment. The Mary Mack ©o., Box 993, Dept. H, Salt Lake City, is compounding the Marietta Superfiuous Hair Remover in a two part treatment which they are selling for $2, post paid. This preparation is based on gcientitic principles of chemical action, and is guaranteed to gradually and positively remove every offending hair without the use of face masks, electric needles, or drugs taken internally. Mailed in plain ‘package. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Communications confidential. “Write today. PARCEL POST ORBERS SOLICITED cae Neate ies : eres Caeee ee OG Sees es SOMO AO a LOAN ruigtnenonenenntoarattesnSeeoeence 5 eee Caen ee ; ©OAs ee Py eran aT IP: ee Netatets -,Se <> Ke ees OOK Sea Send ATES Postal Card for ice ee uw KODAKS YOUR Vor MAIL DEVELOPING AND FINISHING Best equipped plant in the west. Quick work by experts. Full Hine of all supplies. Write for catalogues and developing prices. SALT LAKE 159 Main Street PHOTO SUPPLY ~ co. Salt Lake City. : OUR LATEST ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. Explains how we pepe patron trade in eight week or write ee MOLE R BARBER ‘COLLEEGE Commercial Street -:ALT LAKE CITY 18 His Manifold Aspect. Small Boy—Mummy, is it true that the devil has horns club foot? The Mother—Ah, my dear, times the devil appears in. the of a very handsome young man. Ree Small my! boy and really and a someshape charming (pityingly)—Oh, mum. you’re thinking of Cupid.—Punch. The Maid’s Leave. “Jt wish to leave at once, maéam.”. “Leave at once? And how do you think the meals are to get cooked today 1° “I shall be pleased if you will eat at my expense at the restaurant.’— Fliegende Blaetter. No A Glasgow less of Joy-Visit. journalist his personal who was care- appearance was assigned to write something about a show at a leading Glosgow theater. He presented his ecard at the bax-office. The manager came out and looked at the disheveled visitor dubiously. “Did you come here to write something about the play—to work?” he asked. “Do you think I’d come to your theater for journalist amusement?’ as he stalked Pressing An English proached by a some advice. asked. the out. His Luck. bookmaker was apcolleague who sought A bettor on the races had paid the man who wanted the advice twentyfive pounds on a wager, and next day, in a fit of absent-mindedness, had paid the bet a second time. “What shall I do?” asked the distressed bookie, “Awsk the him for it other. —Saturday Might Seem a Widow—I wish to Mr. “Here Boozer’s fest pavisad Evening Post. Reflection. have tombstone poor words, lies.” Cutter—Will you have Latin form, ‘Hic jacet?” Widow—No; would on the like I the don’t it think in John ‘‘hic.” — You have Why, you know marked ad- vances, following the improvement of roads, . Among the illustrations cited by the department are the following: In Lee county, Virginia, a farmer owned 100 acres between Ben Hur | and Jonesville, which he offered to sell for $1,800. In 1908 this road was improved, and although the farmer fought the improvement, he has.since’ refused $3,000 for his farm. Along this same road a tract of 188 acres was supposed to have been sold for $6,000. The purchaser refused the contract, however, and the owner threatened to sue him. After the road improvement, and without any improvement upon the land, the same farm was sold to the original aa chaser for $9, 000. In Jackson county, Alabama, the people voted a bond issue of $250,000 for road improvement and improved 24 per cent. of the roads. The census of 1900 gives the value of all farm lands in Jackson county at $5.90 per acre. The selling value at that time was from $6 to $15 per acre. The census of 1910 places the value of all farm lands in Jackson county at $9.79 per acre, and the selling price is now $15 to $25 per acre. ‘Actual figures of increased value following road improvement are shown. As the roads in no way affect. soil fertility or quality of the farm, ad- vances are due essentially to the de crease in the cost of hauling to market or shipping points. produce Farms are for now business regarded of as farming, plants and any the reduc- then’ in their profits. {hroug snneges\-parily heavy costs for hauling on bad roads naturally reduces théir capitalization into values. With reduced costs for hauling profits are increased, with the result that the farm plant shows satisfactory earnings en a higher capital valie. The automobile, also, has begun to be an important factor in increasing rural values where good roads are introduced. Immigration is particularly marked where road conditions are favorable; in fact, the figures of the department seem to indicate that good roads indirectly increase the demand for rural property; and the price of farm land, like that of any commodity, is ruled by the relation between demand and supply. Auto and Good Roads. The auto has come to stay and there is no use fighting against it or trying to penalize the owners for destroying country roads. There is no doubt that an auto will wear out a dirt road quicker than a team carrying 3,000 pounds, ard while the latter are penalized in some states, all efforts to give the same medicine to the owners of autos have failed. The only remedy is to build roads that will stand the wear and tear of heavy wagons, autos and anything else and then take the penalty off everything. Duty of People. The making of good roads is one of the most important duties of the American people and their prompt repair and careful maintenance is essential. There is probably no sub- ject in which the progressive farmer is more deeply interested than that of having roads connecting him with his market over which he may be able to haul greatest possible load. Good roads, like all other good things, are expensive to build and of too much value to be neglected. Good Roads. ‘The making of good roads is one of the most ‘important duties of the Ameican people and their prompt repair and careful maintenance is essential. There is probably no subject in which the progressive farmer is more deeply interested than that of havirig roads connecting him with his markets over which he may. be able to haul the greatest possible load. Good roads, like all other good things, are too expensive to build and of too much value to be neglected.: the Reciprocity, Mother George? Practical Fashions accepted very well that I don’t approve of him. Daughter—That’s all right, motien Neither does he apprave of you. Time to Drag a Road. If the traffic is very light, a good time to drag the road is immediately after a rain. However, for ordinary traffic, the best time to drag is when the mud will not stick to the drag but will slide along the edge, the drag taking places 31008. a slice of earth off the ‘high and filling the small depres. at her Mt. fail- Miller across home Moore, 86 Og- Sit the accidentally right hunting. cover. lung by It believed is died who at was plains, shot CAPE years of the pioneers’ the EVENING ro years, in one LADIES’ cans. 75 den last week of general debility. Leonard Sheppard, aged 15, of Lawe, through a companion he while will Brie re- The three days’ celebration by the Wards of the Wizard of the Wasatch at ‘Salt Lake last week was attended by thousands of people from all over the state. Ivy Rowland, aged 12, died at Salt Lake as the result of burns sustained when a can of turpentine caught fire It Over not? dead aged by her daughter. Heart the cause of death. Agnes walked Ever Are you one of them? -If so, why Mrs. Impcovements. The direct effect that changing bad The fool who ‘used to rock the boat. roads into good roads has upon land value and the general economic welevidently left a 12-year-old son who fare of a community is shown in sevdrives an eighty-horsepower auto. eral concrete illustrations gathered by | the United States department of agriculture. The department has just issued a statement on the subject, based upon a mass of information Noticed the difference between gathered by the office of public roads, FRESH and STALE Butter? | which is making a special study of the economic effect of road improvement in the country. According to data gathered, where good roads replace then compare the difference between bad ones, the values of farm lands the STALE Coffees on the market bordering on the roads increase to and HEWLETT’S Fresh Roasted such an extent that the cost of road Steel Cut Luneta Coffee. improvement is equalized, if not exThe coffee lover knows the difference. ceeded. The geenral land values, as found Jensen, of age, and Department of Agriculture Collects Data Showing Land Values In- MAI CITY. UTAN LAKE Elna Pleasant ure was ROADS PAY FOR THEMSELVES SALT UTAH BUDGET Weber county canners estimate their tomato output this season at or doesn’t keep accurate time, send it in and one of our experts will make itgo like a new one. We absolutely guarantee our work and give your time piece all the attention as if you brought it in person. clea ; COURANT, GOOD SILAGE WILL PRODUCE MORE MILK IF YOUR WATCH DON’T GO | KAMAS ro ] THE sat See | sceemmmamnn and was | threw spilled on her by a boy the can August The silo In winter, affords and a most economical means efficient and palatable food of assuring to supplement a succulent the dry food pastures in summer. (By R. B. RUSHING.) Am I ace as well with my cows as I ought? Am I producing milk as economically as I might? Is it possible, with such feed as silage, my cows may be kept in a more healthful condition, because this feed having in it the natural juices makes it more /easily digested and a cow is able to do more Many and better work? farmers who have recently built silos and many who did not build are asking themselves the above questions, and well they may. Those who have built and have good silage are now getting their eyes opened, and those that have no silos are now be ginning to see “the handwriting on the wall.” A natural feed of this character which has the natural juices all retained in it keeps the digestive organs of the animal in a cool, laxative condition and permits us to feed more heavily of other feeds, and thus, we are able to inerease her capacity for producing milk in a far greater degree. Experience. has taught me many things about the silo. When I put up my first one I was taught that almost anything would do for a silo, and that almost anything could be put in it. The first year I planted a late-maturing corn that grew and grew as though it had all the time in the world to get ripe in, and when the time came for the silo filling it was scarcely in good roasting ear condition. What was the result? A watery lot of stuff in a very acid condition that had to to be fed keep the ‘getting off in a very cows from feed. This limited way scouring and was certainty discouraging; but a man who makes a suecess with cows must have grit enough to meet discouragements. ~T found out thet year that to have good silage I must plant a kind of corn that would mature early and get it out in time so that it could mature —that I had better sacrifice some on. juantity and have better quality. From that year the silo has been filled with the same kind of corn that was raised for field purposes, and there has never yet been a single failure. There is no secret having good, sweet silage—just plain, common sense, First the silo.-must be made in such a way as to exclude all the air. Then too, the foundation must be good, to prevent settling and cracking. The material used may be either wood, stone, brick or cement. Iron or steel cannot be used, as the moisture acid in the silage would soon through. All stone, cement, brick silos, must be reinfor¢ed with and rust etc., wire or rods to insure strength. A wood silo made rough is, of course, strengthened by the hoops, and that is the only kind that would be built of wood. The size of the silo, of course, de- pend on the amount of stock you wish .to carry, as a certain amount must be fed each day to keep the top layer from spoiling, and the deeper the better, as each added foot gives added weight to the silage and helps to make it more solid and exclude the air. If a silo is made too large in diameter, and this I believe to be a very frequent error, one of two things will happen—either the silage will be moldy all the time, owing to the inability to feed it down rapidly enough, or else the cows will be fed more than they should have, in an attempt to keep ahead of the molding. I strongly favor the use of good silage in summer to hold the cows to their work and not allow them to shirk in the milk flow during the short pas- ture of July and August. I think many cows may be made to add 25 per cent. to their year’s production by tiding them over this period. I have tried soiling, but never found anything so cheap, so good and so convenient as a well filled silo. A few feet in the bottom of a deep silo will go a long way for summer use and there the conditions are most favorable for the preserving of the silage, as the enormous weight of the silage in a deep silo has compacted it, and its being down near the. bottom away from the circulation of the air helps very materially in its preservation. The quality of the silage may be materally bettered by using ware in taking it out. Don’t put the fork down five or six inches deep, as though ly as ordinary roughage. The cows 29 marked anniversary who a garage. the of golden wed- Bishop George Romney and Margaret : A. Thomas Romney, the couple having been married in Salt Lake fifty years ago. in eating will sometimes throw some out of the mangers and some may be scattered in feeding unless you are very careful. If this is allowed to remain there it will soon cause a bad odor. The man that uses the broom freely along the feed alleys is the one that has a sweet smelling stable—a condition worth while, for milk takes up a foreign odor with surprising rapidity, and unless everything is sweet smelling the milk will tell it, and eventually. the customer will find it out and take his trade elsewhere. Joseph Jeremy, aged 45, narrowly escaped death near Salt Lake City, when an automobile he was driving overturned and pinned him in a pool of water. It required all his strength PECULIAR POINTS— OF A FANNING MILL the There Are Many Profitable Advantages Gained by Operation of Machine. (By M. COVERDELL.) The mere separating of weed-seeds and other foreign objects from small grain should not be regarded as the single benefit derived from the use of the fanning-mill. This is essential, but there are other profitable advantages gained by the operation. Cleansed grain will present a much better appearance on the market, and also command a higher price, since it actually delivers more pounds of good, pure grain than does a like quan/ *“y of uncleansed, just as it came from ‘the threshing machine. Uncleaned grain contains more dust and other non-nourishing material than most farmers suppose, and the fanning-mill removes these, making the grain actually healthier for stock feeding purposes, and consequently better adapted to nourishing and the’ tissues of the body. developing : Grain that has not been cleaned by the fanning-mill, but fed to the stock just as it came from the threshing machine will pass through the animals with a part of it remaining unchanged, and where there are weed seed impurities, these are transported back to the fields in the manure as it is hauled and spread for fertilizing purposes. Many of these seeds do not have their germinating qualities impaired by passing through the animals, and by being scattered with the manure, they find a rich seed bed in which to sprout and develop a bounteous crop of weeds the following season. The use of the fanning-mill would avoid this seedingdown of the farm to weed pests. Ranking still above the importance of cleaning grain to guard against seeding the farm to weed pests, comes that of improvement in both the quantity. and quality of the crops produced. The sowing of carefully selected see grain from a supply that has been passed through the fanning-mill will, if persisted in from one year to another, work wonders in the small grain crop. It will mean a plumper, heavier and solider grain for seed—one that will possess strong germinating qualities and propagate a sturdy, vigorous plant. Under such a system, it will require much less seed to sow than if light, weak seed were sown. Neither will the shriveled, split and broken grains be sown and waste the ground by not propagating a good stand of plant. It also takes a less quantity of seed grain to seed a field; while the stand of plants is sure to be of uniform size, vigor and productiveness. NOTE.—The screenings secured from cleaning grain should be carefully saved and stored away for the poul- try, since it contains such a variety of seeds and grain that it makes a fine ration for them, being either scattered in the scratching shed for the layers to scratch around for, or worked into their mash three times a week. Where there is a considerable quantity of streened seeds and small or shriveled grains, these will make a good feed for the live stock, as most weed seeds are not at all injurious to the animals. Of course, if the weed seeds are in excess to the refuse grain, advisable to feed them, as again establish the danger the fields to weed pests. it is not this would of seeding you were pitching manure, but use a fork with tines close together and skim off the top, only loosening what you need for the day’s feeding. Keep the surface level, and perhaps a little lower near the outer walls. Silage cannot be handled as careless- ding from Orchard Must Have Care. Many farmers pay little attention to the trees until time for the harvest, and then they wonder at the unsatisfactory crop. No orchard can be expected to produce results without good care. for two hours position to George to keep breathe, Maynes, flocks have his until sheep been head help in a came. owner, grazing on whose the Tim- panogos ranges of the Wasatch national forest, sold lambs last weeek weighing seventy-one pounds’ each. This is considered unusually good weight for lambs at this sseason of year, Lightning struck the barn of Hyrum, Fuhriman at Logan, tents being burned. the barn and con- All schools in Payson will begin active work September 8. The buildings are being renovated and repaired. Brigham City will probably have a municipal telephone system to add to her already extensive public utilities, Crops in Box Elder county never: were better, except for one cutting of hay that was spoiled by an untimely rain. For the evening there is no wrap a8 __ convenient as the cape and as it does not crush the dress it is doubly desir- able. week has been one much anxiety son, aS three To procure this to “Pattern Write name sure to give the entire fullness NO. pattern send 10 cents 6313 SIZ Bos Sons tosee wees NAME TOWN of town just Department,’’ of this paper. and address plainly, and be size and number of pattern. STREET AND pO STASE 2 to the people of Gunnt- | cases of smallpox have broken out and been exposed. has The cape pattern, (6313), is cut in sizes small, medium and large. Medium size requires 5% wees of 44-inch material. The people of Park valley are planning to hold a-big fair on September 20 and 21 for the. purpose of exploiting that rich section of Box Elder county. \ past model or silk. A new fish. hatchery, the fourth under state supervision, will be established in Uinta county, according to the state fish and game commissioner. The This enough for comfort. At the neck there is a hood collar, which can be made of something very light and slipped over the hair. Crepe de chine, brocaded faille or messaline will make up nicely in this style with lining of chiffon ee : BOYS’ has SUIT. The big ditching machine at Corinne is helping to put the land into condition to bloom, since the ditches are .being ‘tiled and Bat is being eradicated. Florence Thomas and Albert Os- death when for the borne, narrowly escaped serious injury at Murray rooming house sleeping was in which destroyed they by were fire. Members of the Mormon church in Mexico are no longer molested, according to a message received at the first presidency from Ray lL. Pratt, president of the Mexican mission. Brigham City will probably be chosen as the distributing plant for a large eastern lumber company that is contemplating establishing wholesale and retail lumber yards in Utah and Idaho. 3 Following an illness of three months, Isaac L. Clark, head of the I. L, Clark & Song company and pioneer merchant of Ogden, died August 26. Mr. Clark was born in Ogden in 1858. Joseph Gurr was seriously wounded and F. A. Wade and Miss Patsy Mease slightly wounded in a shooting affray which took place in the lobby of the Orpheus theater at Vernal. Gurr began the shooting. Nick Foco, a bartender in a Bingham saloon, took four shots at Percy Cornford as the latter ran from the saloon. None of the bullets did any damage. It is said Cornford attackec Foco, who then fired at him. This suit is for the summer boy and he will be sure to appreciate it. It consists of a coat and trousers. The coat hangs plain and straight, fastening in the center of the front. It has a handsome collar to finish the neck. The trousers are cut on the new lines, with the leg open at the knee. They may be made to match the coat in material or they may be of linen while the coat is of flannel or serge. The pattern (6314) is cut in sizes two, four and requires to wounded. . Norman Wold of NO, fish by the peace, Samuel Morgan last Francis, week. of was ar- Wold The Uintah basin fair this fall, to be held at Fort Duchesne September 18, 19 and 20, will excel the extensive exhibits of last year, and the sports other attractions will this pattern Department,” and size Medium of 36-inch send of size material. 10 this cents paper. address plainly, and be and number of pattern. 6314 SIZE sco TOWN ” SPREE LAND NOk-c..Jontesascna eee ctes STATE What “What,” become Has asks of the Become of Them. a correspondent, “has women who used to bleach their hair?” A large majority of them are, we hope, trying to teach their grandchildren to be what they seem. county justice rested by a warden in Morgan county. This is the first sentence under the new fish and game law. and six years. yards NAME was fined $100 on a charge of dynamiting vrocure “Pattern Write name sure to give John ‘Sparchevich, resident of Bingham for only three months, was shot and mortally wounded in the Copper King saloon Thursday. Eli Churvich, owner of a boarding house at Highland Boy, is in jail, charged with the erime. Lewis Marango, a Mexican miner, was probably fatally stabbed in a fight at the Dennis boarding house at Bingham. The name of his assailant is not known. He escaped, although it is said that he was also severely To two be bigger and better than ever before in tion with a fair in that basin. connec- Usual Experience. “What'are: you going to do money you made with the speculating in stocks last fall?” “Nothing.” “I should think you could find some. better use for it than letting it Nie in. the bank.” “lm not letting it lie in the bank. I speculated in some more stocks with i 33 ; Poor Satisfaction. The man who is thoroughly satisfied with himself isn’t with anything else — |