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Show Quick Relief for an upset stomach, Hc coughs, a sick hcadachecon. ' stipatcd bowels, or a bilious ; attack is secured by using I BEECHAM'S PILLS Sold CvcrrwKcr. In fcoi lit. S. he rood.roolem: j Congress is investigating the increased cost or living - so are State Legislatures, Chambers of Com- ' merce, and other organizations. But while the statesmen are talking, your meat U bills and grocery bills are climbing higher. The "food problem" is an easy one if you know MIMPEl mm. (J It contains more real body-building nutriment than : j q meat or eggs, is more easily digested and costs much . O Y less. Always the same price always clean al- : : n ways pure always the same. Your grocer sells it. i g Shredded Wheat Biscuit made of th J? ' f whole wheat, steam-cooked, shredded J C f -. 7 an baked in the cleanest, finest food " Qi3;----rr y' f factory in the world. It is ready-cooked, "tw'v' "ni i J ready-to-serve. Two Shredded Wheat Pf'S Bbcuits heated in the oven to . restore . ?JySSN crupnc and with a little hot ft milk, and salted or sweetened to suit the U jr taste, will supply all the energy needed U 1 4&i- Zrp for a half-day's work. If you like it for 0 '?w!??vTvr?' breakfast, you will like it for any meal 'S ''-''P in combination with vegetables, baked . 'tsgiltt apples, sliced bananas, stewed prunes or other fruits. ALL THE "MEAT" OF THE GOLDEN WHEAT n MldnlgM Doctor ar th most unwrlceroe TMtorv--ea th Ljctor Llruelf cure th luck thm coia-r'Ul coia-r'Ul Lim U lcavo LL corafor'l'lo b-U Sappo9o joa try ur inethO'l, and V.-'p a ti Xc hcuU of Porry VnrW Fnia-killr Fnia-killr In thu Lous, n-l lot th Doctor tU fcn tod and tnjoy hiniwlf. V ----- - ... - -- l ',,. i V k In Every Home at one time or another the need of a good, wholesome ttimulant it , ' felt an absoloto necessity. For juit this purpoM Sunny ErooK !' TOE PURE FOOD l Whiskey m I on account of its tlghly developed medicin.1 properties " ia especially adapted. It is ths concentrated csseoco of tbo .-'; '.-, richest of golden grain and tho purest cf eparkliog spring 'rV, water, scientifically distilled, and mellowed bv many years ' r-1 ; ct oscIor. Under tho "GREEN GOVERNMENT y.. STAMP" it reaches the consumer in its natural purity, with yrV v' i-'-'i Un delicious flavor and health-giving strength onimpairpd. fff .fi-!?''' Th SECRET or the popularity of SUNNY BROOn Th trPrlL-A iv PURE FOOD Wbitlcey it INSIDE of tho bottle. fTHT 1 SUNNY BROOK DISTILLERY CO., Jtfltnon County, KENTUCKY I , : All Domlmrm Hmndllng QQOO Uqaorm Smtt It, ic.W UaOT 1' i'y: F. J. K IBS EL CO., Gen. Distributors, . COLDS CAUSE HEADACHES LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine, tho world wldo Cold and Orlp remedy, removes the cause. Call for full name. Look for tho signature- E. W. GROVE 25c i THE-POWER HOUSE P The JifV of nn employe in the electric power house is mou- clonortfi, excepting in (he event of storms or line interruptions and accidents. Tin? continuous never-ending magnet hum of the dynamos soon tire the nerves which arc eonstnntly listen- 2 I ing for a change in the pitch or tone; as a piano tuner would Fay when tightening or loosening a string; and at tho moment whenever the magnet tone or hum does change, the trained I 1 ears of the man in charge tells him of impending troubles ,i It may be that a bolt of lightning has struck the high power R '. line and started an arc aeross the lightning arresters. If the '(j discharge is heavy, it may reach into the station to the sec- t- j end arrangement of lightning arresters which are usunll 1j . placed back of the switchboards. The room may be filled . with the well-known bluish liquid fire, but the men nre at the f throttle wheels to prevent the big dynamos from bursting fi in the event that the man at the switches has suddenly thrown jj j the load off of them. This is done to prevent the lightning Y, I from melting the wires on the dynamos. The water running fj through nozzles is traveling at the rate of two miles each ! 'j minute of time, and unless it was quiekly turned off at the H wheel, the big magnet' or armature of the dynamo would b- : running at a bursting speed of two miles per minute. Then ' again, there are times when no electrical storms exist, the K weather is clear, and the tune of the dynamo suddenly ; changes by what is called a short on the line, which causes ' 1 the current to suddenly increase which instantly heats the r, wire coils in the dynamo to the burning point. Line troubles are always a source of anxiety to the company and the men ? in charge. ; An extra machine can always be started and cr.t in when- .: ever Anoth.T one gives out, but the lines of wires stretching far away over the mountains and hills are quite another mat-j! mat-j! ter whenever some unavoidable accident happens. .About six vears ago, two eagles were playing in the air ' about twenty miles from the power house near Orovilb- Cal. j They struck a three wire (10,000 volt line, their wings being at ;j least six feet across, formeil a short circuit from one of the ; wires to the other and about 10,000 horse power passed : through their bodies. In less than a fraction of a minute, one f ' of the transformers at the power house boiled the oil over and set it on fire, and it was only on account of quick action i that the building was saved. II On another occasion a crew of men between Pctaluma and Santa liosa were moving a tall hay derrick wanted to pass under the high tension wires, but found the derrick too high. I One of the men said he. knew all about electricity and ventured ; ' to raise the wires with n pitchfork. He had nearly completed his dangerous undertaking when one of the bystanders, tak-i tak-i ing hold of a loose guy wire, attached to the fop of the der- rick, thought to assist the man upon the top with the pitch-l pitch-l fork. The next moment, the derrick had touched the wires and the grass began to burn under the wheels of the wagon. The current was grounded, or f-horted ns they call it, and these :; two cities experienced what it means to be without electrical service for a few hours. I The public of today demands a continuous and uninter rupted service. The success of business and uc of power and light rely largely upon this modern magic energy. UTAH LIGHT & RAILWAY CO. j D. DECKER, LOCAL MANAGER i i Pay Ycot Siabscripffioe; J IN ADVANCE AND GET A If to Hi tellflliM In order to clean out premiums left on hand. We offer the following inducements induce-ments to pay your subscriptions in advance: OQOOOLVFOOyTOFTOWSOOSOHSBERS If you will pay your subscription for the EVENING STANDARD in advance for 6 six months you can take your choice of a Cook Book, the book "American Lecturers and Humorists," a "School Dictionary," the book "Wonders of the Universe" or a "Porcelain Painted Plaque' " If your pay one year in advance we will give you your choice of the Book Photo "Scenes Christ Visited While l On Earth," the Lightning Doctor," the th Great "Horse and Stock Book," or "Dr. Gunn's Medical Works" or an Alarm Clock Every one of the foregoing Premiums are worth from $i to $3 and the offer is good only as long as they last. Above Premiums are only offered to out of town subscribers and not good for Ogden City subcribers Drop in the Standard office and take your choice: DON'T COMPLAIN IP YOU COME TOO LATE 1; The Evening Standard $3.00 .'for : j J 6 Months;- 86.00 for 12 Months ' When a Grocer o've you Burnett's Vanilla voluntarily, rcA assured he is high-" high-" class grocer who is look- '' - - - ing out for your intereit. Burnett' Va--, . nUla u at superior to ordinary vanilla a rich . creasi is superior to skimmed milk. Remember t a ask for .it and cc for yourself. Burnett's Vanilla m I mil i;, n, i ii t Follow this advice. Quaker Scotch Oat is the best of all foods; it is also the cheapest. When such menas Prof. Fisherof Yale Univ cr-sity cr-sity and Sir James Crichton Iirowne, LL.D.-F.R.S. of L.ndon spend the best parts of their lives in studying the great question of the nourishing and Btrenjrtheninz qualities of ditferer.t f '-1s, it is certain that their advice is 4Jlutely safe to follow. Professor Fisher found in his ex-periments ex-periments for testing the strencth and endurance of athictr that the meat cateu ere exhausted long before the men who were fed on such as Quaker Scotdi Oats. The fowers of endurance of the non-meat eaters were about eight times those, of tU meat eaters. . . : .Sir James Crichton Browne HF t eat more oatmeal, eat plenty vl it and j eat it frequently. ' Buy it in the regular patkafe.orinher-metiwJly patkafe.orinher-metiwJly sealed tins for Let carnaie. |