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What Am I Worth kk « Put that question to yourself. Most men are worth only what they earn. If they don't work or can't work, their money value drops to zero. If you are in that class, put every ounce of your strength and ambition to the task of getting out of it. to do it is to take part of your earnings capital in a savings account at the A safe and sure way regularly and build up TWIN FMIS BANK & TRUST («. TWIN FALLS, IDAHO City «f Twin Falls L« Great Shoshone Falls ROUND TRIP 40c MEEK DAYS SUNDAYS Leave 0. S. L.ttDe't 9:30 A. M... 1:00 P. M.. 3:30 P. M... 7:30 P M. Leave Sho. F 'Is 10:00 A. M. . 1:45 P. M. 5:00 P. M. 9:30 P. M. Leave Leave 0. S. L. De't 1:00 P. M. 1:45 P. M. 3:30 P. M. 7:30 P. M. Sho. F'ls 5:00 P. M. 9:30 P. M. SPECIAL BATE of 35 cents round trip will be made each Sat urday on all trips. SPECIAL BATE of 25 cents round trip will be In effect, good on the 7:30 P. M. and 9:00 P. M. cars on DANCE NIGHTS at Shoshone Falls. The 9:00 P. M. trip leaving city will be made only on DANCE NIGHTS. Betnrnlng wlU leave Falls at 12:00 M. June 12, 1915, in effect until farther notice. 4 R. R. SPAFFORD, Secretary. CUT THIS OUT FOB BEFEBENCE F. P. BRACKEN, President. DR. C. R. SCOTT, Vice President URBAN TRACEY, Cashier. The Idaho State Bank Of Twin Falls, Idaho CAPITAL $50,000 INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS DIRECTORS DAVID BROWN F. C. SMITH C. R. SCOTT P. F. BRACKEN james McMillan C. FAHRNEY URBAN TRACEY TWIN FALLS CAFE KOTO BROS., Props. Best Service and Popular Prices Try Our Big 25c Dinner PRIVATE DINING ROOM FOR LADIES OPEN DAY AND NIGHT 4 PHONE 238 CHECKING ACCOUNTS The First National bank invites you to open a checking account with it. It is best attention to all large or small. our policy tc give our accounts, FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF TWIN FALLS HOME-GROWN STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM Cooling—Soothing—Nourishing—Very Beneficial—Easy to Take. Doc. Recommends It VARNEY'S i 189 Main West Phone 888 Removal Notice THE BRIZEE SHEET METAL COMPANY Has moved its offices and factory from the Brizee building on 2nd Street East to • > Mil is* 302 Main Avenue South V BOYS' AND GIRLS' CLUBS Objects and Methods of Movement to Muke Jtural Life Fuller. The primary object of the boys' and girls' clubs, which are being organiz ed throughout the country with the assistance of the department but in co-operation with the state colleges of agriculture, is to aid young people to become more efficient and more con tented farmers and home builders. By cultivating in boys and girls habits of industry and thrift, the possibilities of farm life are revealed not only to them but to their elders. The best methods of handling farm products and preventing waste are demonstrat ed. the spirit of co-operation in fam ily and community is developed, and the dignity oi the farmers' vocation enhanced by presenting it as a skilled occupation, capable of returning ade quate reward to the competent. Fi nally, the school' life and the home life of the boys and girls are brought into closer relationship and the rural school teacher aided in the task of making agricultural instruction a vi tal thing. The clubs may be organized under the leadership of the county superin tendent of schools or any of the teach ers under him. If Ute educational au thorities of the county are not yet alive to the possibilities of these clubs the county demonstration agent may take charge of the movement, or if there is no demonstration agent in the county such organizations as local chambers of commerce, the Grange, women's clubs, etc., may assume the leadership. The names and addresses of the boys included in the clubs are collected and sent to the state agent, who will furnish organization and cultural instructions upon request. Experience has shown, however, that the difficulty is not in organizing a club with a large enrollment of mem bers, but in inducing these members to complete their work and to report on the results. The test of efficiency is not so much the organization of new clubs as continuing interest in those already formed. The leader's duty therefore is to keep in touch with the members of the club, encourage those who need encouragement, and to see that once a project has been start ed it is carried on to completion. To assure this continuity of inter est various schemes have been evolv ed to make the club work progressive Thus in the case of the boys' clubs a number of rotation systems have been devised. In the south, for example, there is a two-year rotation, in which corn is followed by a winter cover crop of oats or rye with clover or vetch to be turned under. The sec ond year cowpeas or soy beans or pea nuts are grown, followed by a winter cover crop which is turned under and followed by corn the third year. In Alabama and Georgia there is a three year rotation which consists of seed cotton, corn and oats, or cowpeas. In the North, cron is followed by forage crops, alfalfa, and clover, and a club project in poultry, pigs or baby beef is added. Such systems as these, however, are not practicable in every locality, and state agents sometimes have to resort to unusual methods to interest the youngsters in useful work. The state club agent in Washington, for example was confronted with a rather difficult problem in the vicinity of Bellingham, north of Puget Sound. Much of that country is owned by the federal gov ernment and by large landholders, and is mostly covered with large for ests. Here the problem of giving the boys interesting and educational work was solved by means of the angora goat. The large estate owners are pleased to have goats forage in the forests as they clean out the under growth and the state agent contends that this kind of club is the best for that part of the country. Another example of agents adapting their plans to circumstances is the canning of Salmon in Washington and Oregon, mainly along the Columbia river. There thousands of tons of salmon have gone to waste annually. At present 25 clubs of about 20 mem bers each are cannig salmon, turning what has heretofore been wasted into a well-preserved article of food. In the girls' clubs Dew members grow tomatoes only. During the sec ond year they divide their gardens in half and grow tomatoes and a few other crops. The third year they have more crops. Some of the combina tions are tomatoes, beans and beets; and tomatoes, peppers and okra. Af ter these have been mastered, the girls begin to fill their gardens with per ennial vegetables and fruits, in this way by the time a club girl is ready for the high school or college she will have started a permanent garden or orchard. The effect of this club work is by no means confined to the members them selves. Many of the county agents have found that it is the best possible introduction to the home of the mem bers' parents. In practically every club it has been noticed that some of the parents and neighbors of the mem bers invariably adopt the methods of the boys in their various projects. The yields and profits that the boys obtain are the best possible demonstration of the value of their methods. It lias been said, for example, that a single corn-club boy in one community did tnore for sound corn culture in his country than five years of public lec turing could have accomplished. In the same way the success of the girls with their canned products has paved the way for women county agents to demonstrate simple useful lessons in cooking to the mothers. It is an easy matter for an agent who has gained in this way the confidence of the farm family to secure the introduc tion of a number of simple but import ant improvements in household man agement. The new movement of organizing mother-daughter home canning clubs in the North and West is an Instance of this, for it is an outgrowth and ex tension of the work already done by the girls' canning clubs. The club project is confined entirely to the canning of fruits and vegetables, and these maye be grown by the club mem bers—the mother-daughter team—or by some one else and purchased for canning purposes. It Is designed pri marily to teach better methods of home canning and to aid in the utili zation of waste products of the farm, ^orchard and garden. Among the oth or aims of the clubs are to cultivât« closer co-operation between and daughter in home interests mother j and activities, to teach economy and thrift, and to furnish helpful ideas for the di rection of girls' work in co-operation with mothers, in the home during their v»action periods. MYSTERIOUS GIRL RIDER Best Performer With Nells.Kioto Cir cus Ink no nil. "I'd like to join your circus." She was young and childish appear ing and she stood smiling Rhyly into the face of Fred B. Hutchinson, the general Circus manager of the Sells-Floto and Buffalo Bill's Original Wild W'est, in Denver last winter. The manager, busy with his looked up. "That so." he asked. "What circus es have you been with?" "None." "Oh. "Hide." contracts. Well, what can you do?" "Got any pictures?" The general manager had lost a great deal of in terest at the confession of inexperi ence. Many and many such applica tions come to offices of a circus. But the girl before him was insistent. "I haven't any pictures," she an swered, "but if you'll take me to the ring barns, I'll show you what I know about riding. I think —'' and she smil ed a knowing little smile—"I can just about outride any equestrienne in America." The general manager opened his eyes. He rose from his desk and fif teen minutes later, ordered a hostler from the ring barns with one of the ring horses. The girl sliped a pair of "bareback" siloes from a pocket and road them. Two minutes later the general manager of the Sells-Flo to-Buffalo Bill reached somewhat aimlessly for some thing to lean against. The shy little girl had performed the turning of a "flip-flop" on horseback. But that was just the beginning. She leaped from the horse's back to the ground. She leaped back again. She stood on her hands as the gorse galloped. She balanced as lightly as the breeze it self, she did every trick known to equestrianism—and then some more she had invented herself. That night a young girl, the general manager and the owner of the Sells-Floto-Buffalo Bill circus had a long conference and a contract passed between them. And as a result of it all, when the Sells Floto-Buffalo Bill circus comes here Monday, June 14th, it will bring as oue of its chief features Rosa Rosalind the "Maid of Mystery." For the circus has learned just one thing about her since that day of the meeting last winter, and that one thing is that she can outride anyone else in the business. Where she comes from, what her real name is, how she learned to ride and why she never before appeared in public—all these things are unknown to the circus. The rider lias simply announced that she desires to be known as Rosa Rosalind and that's all the circus can learn. But one thing it is sure of—that she is the best equestrienne it ever dis covered. Miss Rosalind is to appear in both the performances of the show when it comes here. And of course her per formance is included in that which can he seen for the general admission price of twenty-five cents. circus gasped and ADVERTISED LIST. List of letteis remaining unclaimed in the Twin Falls postoffice for the week ending June S, 1915. calling for these letters will please say "advertised June 8, 1915." Cole, J. N. Daly, W. F. Johnson, W. A. Kemper, Arthur Lawrence, W. T. Lawrence, W. T. Magoon, Miss Marie Martin, T. C. Furniture Co. Fetters, John Ramsdell, Mrs. Minnie Stevens, Miss Bertha Sparks, C. B. Wallers, A. E. Welch, W. T. Ziegler, H. F. Parties ue on above letters one Letters remaining at the cent each. uid of fourteen «iays will be sent to Hie dead '"Her office. M. A. STRONK, Postmaster. A new edition of the list of govern ment publications on the subject of weather has been prepared by the su perintendent of documents, and will be sent free on application to the government printing office. The list fills 35 pages with titles of works on various subjects ranging from aerody namics to conditions in the Yukon. r r x A, ÖL 4: Who's Your Baker Do you know him and his bake shop so that the bread and pastry you buy has the proper sanitary guaranty to insure your peace of mind. You want to be sure that every precaution 13 taken that the bread is kept pure and clean until it reaches your table. You do not want the taste of the pastry upon the table seasoned with a grain of doubt as to its cleanliness. We have the pure food products which will make your appetite increase. Give us a trial. Call in and inspect our sanitary bake shop. The Royal Bakery Phone 277 Û j A docs'nt sc e in u Û important enough to make much fuss about. Û Û u Still —if you hud overheard the remark as we did, ''By jollies, that's a yood «fate—that farmer's up to scratch—bet he has a «food farin''—then you would probably look around and see in what shape your own gates were. I.ittle things like that certainly do a lot toward making ar up-to-date. The lumber does* nt cost much—and ours is the right kind—makes a good substantial job. Q n n r\ u Û a place look shabby .. » n Û d 8 Gem State Lumber Co. <* 30 Summer Excursions East Union Pacific System VIA Very low rates to Denver, Colorado Springs, Kansas City, St. Louis, Memphis, Omaha, Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul, and many other points from local points on the Oregon Short Line. I Remember the Union Pacific System is the Direct Route to all points east Through Cars SALE DATES, May 15,19,22, 26, 29; June 2, 5, 9, 12, 16, 19, 23, 26, 30; July 7, 14, 21, 28; August 4, 11, 18, 25; September 1, 8, 15. LIMIT, October 31, 1915. I STOP-OVERS; DIVERSE ROUTES. Consult any O. S. L. Agent for rates and further details. v" A s : \ » \ i i \ lo Tlie greatest economy of Ford cars is not in the low price but in the low after cost of operation—less than two cents a mile—in city and country, signed and built to They are de serve and save; to bring the luxury of pleasure and the sturdiness in business work—this is why there are more than 700.000 this is what has made the Ford the versai ear—these are the merits sent why you should buy a Ford. ^ Buyers of this car will share in profits if we sell at retail 300,000 new Ford ears between August 1914 and August 1915. Runabout, $440; Touring Car, $490; Town Car, $690; Coupelet. $750; Sedan, $975; fully equipped, f. o. b. Detroit. notv in use— uni we pre On Display and Sale at WESTERN AUTO CO., Twin Falls Idaho L. F. Roberts Auto Transfer Prompt Deliveries to All Parts of the City Phone 275 NOTICE OF PUBLICATION Notice is hereby given that I, Jose Arceo, was found guilty of the crime of grand larceny, on the 12th day of July, 1914, in the district coart of the Fourth judicial district, in and for Twin ■ Falls County, State ot* Idaho, and sentenced to the state penitentiary for a term of 1 to 8 years, will moke an application to the honorable state board of pardons, nt its next regular meeting after the legal pubUcation Of this notice for an mbnolnte pardon. > (Signed) JOSE ARCEO, P. O. Box 88, Boise, Idaho, May 28 June 4-11-18 Riverside Bento to Beton. Follow the rad arrow« from Buhl to Riverside, the only good road. Bint class accommodation. Oaragt, stora and good meals. RIVERSIDE FERRY, I Mareh 28 it.