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Doctors Said He Would Die i A Friend's Advice Saves Life J wish to sp'sk of the wonderful cure that 1 have received from your noted Swamp- Hoot, the great kidney and blad der cure. I-aat summer 1 wua taken with severe pains in my back and aides. 1 could not breathe without difficulty and waa nearly wild with the desire to urinate. Was compelled to do *o every ten min utes with the passage of pure blood with the urine. I tried all the different doc tors : from far aud near, but they mud it use to .doctor a* 1 w ould di X was at the end of my rope i;lj micerahle with paiu and the thought that I must die that woida 0 jt tell how X felt. One day a friend t. Id mo of the wonderful help the hud received from Dr. Kilmer's Swsiup-Uoot, She gave of your pamuphlets which 1 i ad no e anv n i way. M* can aie one *ml determined to try Swniup-Uuot. Ai , r taking half a bottle I felt belter. Have taken ten buttles and am Well a , 1 1 w,»h I tell all suffering people that have kid- | ney. liver or bladder trouble, that l>r. Kil mer's .Swamp-Hoot ia the beet medicine the market. All persons doubling this statement write to mo and I will answer them di Yours very truly, CLYDE F. CAMEUER, Kuan lie, Wash. I Subscribed and »worn to before me Uiia Ord day of July. 10 i>. VKRKE TOW WE, Notary Public. now -ver was, th-.nLs to Kwamp-llt ot. to on ; n redly. _ _* r«. »L-, . —t—. V T. Prove What Swamp-Koot Will Do For Yol Send to Dr. Kilmer A Co.. Bmgb. Ion, N. Y-, for a »ample bottle. It will , convince anyone. You will also receive * booklet of valuable information, telling all aluut the kidney» and bladder. When j writing, be aure and mention IbH paper. : For mile at all drug »tote». Price :.Uy »cut* aud onedolUi i Burglar Befriended Him. A burglar wan arrested for robbing \ '' a buns« up the state some time since ; anil the next morning the victim rust: ed wildly into the magistrate's office ! As soon as he could get bis breath to ! working again he told the official that lie had come to sec about the prie | oner. ''Glad you came down." whs the al fable response of the magistrate. "1 suppose you waul to appear against breaking i j him. Well, 1 guess not!" exclaimed the "1 want to victim with a glad smile kiss him on the brow am) give him 110. Among other things that be stole from tho house was a package ot love fetters that 1 wrote to my wife befor w« were married." Trying to Be Witty. They were sitting In the parlor with the lights turned low. The hour war pretty late. He and she had talked shout everything, from the weather to the latest shows He yawned and »he yawned, but be made no attempt to move toward home, and she was be oomlng weary. At tant she said; "I heard a noise outside Just now. I wonder If it could be burglars?" Of course be tried to be funny. ''Maybe It was the night falling?'' he raid. "O. I guess not." she exclaimed; ''guess It was the day (Hasty exit of he ) The Girl's Handicap. In her pretty n* w frock sister Mabel felt quite proud as she sat on the front ' step and watched some boys playing on the sidewalk. After s time one little boy came up I to talk to her and to admire, tu his rough little way. her bright shiny 1 ■hoes and pink Hash. "8eo my nice square-cut waist." ox ; claimed the girlie, "and my nice coral Don't you wish you wuz a heads! Ctrl?" "No slr«-ce." replied tho boy "1 wouldn't want to bo any girl at all ; because looklc how much more neck you haf to wash." WRONG SORT Perhaps Plain Old Meat, Potatoes and Bread May Be Against You for a Time. A change to tho right kind of food can lift one from a sick bed. A lady ln Weiden. 111., says: ''Last spring I became bed fast with severe stomach troubles acconipautcd by sick headache. I got worse and worse until I became so low I could scarcely retain any food at all, al though 1 tried about every kind. "1 had become completely discour aged, and given up all hope, and thought I was doomed to starve to death, until one day my husband, try (fig to find something I could retain, brought home some G rape-Nuts. "To my surprise the food agreed with me, digested perfectly and with out distress. 1 began to gain strength at once. My flesh (which had been flabby), grow firmer, my health Im proved In every way and every day. And In a very few weeks I gained 20 Pounds In weight. "I liked Grape-Nuts so well that for four months I ate no other food, and always felt as well satisfied after eat (fig as If I bad sat down to a fine ban quet. "1 had no return of the miserable •lek stomach nor of tho headaches, that 1 used to have when 1 ate other food. •11 my own work again, and feel that life Is worth Hying. "Grape-Nuts food has been a God •«nd to my family; It surely saved my •He; and my two little boys have thriven on It wonderfully." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the Utile book, "The Road to Wellvllle." In pkga. "There'a a renaon." Ervr read the above leMerf A new appears from tlnar to tint*. They *»• Irnulut, Brno, sod toll of bamjut I am now a well woman, doing For the Little Miss V Se > " % Bn A A . r k ! «* u Wy ÎT V % V 3 V v x % (5p [V \ -r 'i % a , '» * WUöss & A i n % r V L r '' ■ TCP 4* à f/ n Pf ■ \ 1 n Ry ' T HE little miss bus a much wider choice in hats than she had a few years ago. Hiuce It beta le the fashion to copy/shapes made lor grown ups. in small sizes, for young A wreath of small ribbon roses, set | n m uii n ery foliage and showing more | buds than blossoms. Is divided and placed part on the upper right brim ! and the under left brim. The design I is particularly good for girls who wear curls White Is the color chosen In | this model, but any pale tint is pretty, A light blue braid of straw covers heads, children s millinery has become much more Interesting to the pur chaser and much less taxing In ite demands on the milliner. The variety in shapes makes It possible, also, to suit the child's Individual style. Two good designs are shown here, suitable for girls from about 8 to 16 years old. They are made on the familiar bell and helmet shapes and only differ from these shapes made for grown people. In the matter of ilze. The bell shaped bat appears to be covered with silk, but would be just as effective In a braid. It Is cov ered with rows of fine-meshed lace, alternating with motifs In flower forms made of braid. Tho petals of each motif Is filled with a figured Oct. GRACEFUL GOWN. ; -,T»4k£ a V>' - Jtüf» £ / (J* agjfe.l «50, ' A V. v c A I I SUH Tà I u .'•al l\ . i j This Is of soft satin draped with Ninon de sole of the aame color, and trimmed with lace and satin bands The hat Is of legal straw trimmed with roses. Other Velvet Aceeesorlee. Velvet ornaments summer raiment In the way of Swiss embroidered or openworked linen, muslin or cambric often than not charm dresses, more worked In floral sprays and de that Mans, with mercerized cotton, looks remarkably like silk. A velvet sash and groups of small velvet but tons make an effective trimming, and complete a summer frock most daintily. the helmet shape, shown in the secom picture. A band of rose petals, made of ribbon in a slightly darker shade of blue, is laid about the base of the crown, finished with a flat rosette at (lie front, made of the same petals. A lustrous, light weight satin ribbon is used for the band. A short, fluffy, made" quill In dark and iridescent feathers is posed at the left front of the hat, and may be dispensed with when the hat Is made tor a very young girl. The same de sign is pretty with small Hewers set In the ribbon band at Intervals or with four rosettes like that at the front, dividing the band into four lengths. These little shapes stay on well and provide some shade for the eyes. Wide-brimmed Leghorns and other straws arc never out of fashion and probably never will be. Lace bonnets with simple outlines and fluffy lare hats are worn every year. The lingerie hats made of embroideries and of flowered fabrics like dimity and ere tonne are ideal for misses, made In simple, youthful fashion. The time has gone by when It was hard to choose a hat for the little girl or young miss. She is sure to be pleased among the many styles that the de signers of millinery have this season made for her. a GOWNS FOR THE SUMMER Wide Choice of Colors Is Allowed for the Costumes of the Pre vailing Season. Gowns of liberty satin are practical as well as effective, and quite as many colored as black ones are made, while the same ran be said of the soft-finished taffeta silks. Many of these gowns have jackets to match, but there Is always a waist to match the skirt, fashioned In such manner that the appearance Is given of a one-piece gown. This style Is per fectly possible on warm days as well as cool, for yoke and sleeves may he of transparent material. Extremely practical, also, are the coat-and-sklrt costumes for cool days In plain color, with trimmings of striped black and white, there Is quite a new model with which Is worn a lace waist of white over tho color of It Is of fllot and Irish lace It Is not necessary that the gown combined, real lace be used to carry out tho model satisfactorily, for there never time when so many effective was a Imitation laces could be bought at such low prices.— Harper s Bazar Restoring Faded Flowers. faded artificial One may freshen flowers by retiming them with water After they are tinted, curl colors. the petals again with the blunt side of a case knife. Notice how the petals curl back bfr loro tinting them and then curl in s similar manner and do not apply the paints loo wet or it will be impossible to obtain good results. This Is tho best home method ol restoring flowers that have become faded Tho New Gloves. French fancy which should reach here soon Is tho wearing suede gloves In the morning These The smart of gray or with all Informal costumes button at the wrist and are have one then turned widely over the hand Into a cuff which 1» lined with Empire green or Egyptian braid. It Is quite fashion of the moment to have this cuff of the glove carry out the color scheme of tho costume FOUR CHOICE RECIPES 1 I I HOW TO MAKE A CARROT PUD DING THAT IS DELICIOUS. Full Instructions for ths Concoction of Chocolate Creams, Baking Pow der Biscuits and Rye Gerne. Carrot Pudding.—Boll sound car rots until tender enough to mash to a pulp, mix three-quarters of a pound of this with half a pound of bread crumbs, four ounces of suet minced finely, one-quarter pound of stoned raisins, one-quarter pound of cur rants, three ounces of sugar, three eggs, one-quarter nutmeg grated, and add sufficient milk to make the con sistency of the mixture a thick batter. It may be boiled or baked. If to be boiled, put the mixture Into a but tered basin, tie It down with a cloth, and boll for two and one-half hours; If It Is to be baked, put It Into a deep ple dish, and bake for nearly an hour; turn It out of the dish and strew sift ed sugar over It when serving. Chocolate Creams.—Take three ounces of the best arrowroot, mix It with about three-quarters pint of wa ter, till it Is a smooth cream. Put It Into a lined saucepan, add one pound of white sugar, and boil for about ten minutes, stirring all the while, then take It from the fire and stir until it begins to cool and set. Flavor with essence of vanilla and roll into litle balls, first buttering the palms. Have some chocolate melted over hot water and dip each ball in this, using an ordinary hatpin to hold the bail. Lay each separately on a buttered paper or buttered marble slab to cool. Making Powder Biscuits.—Mix and sift twice two cupfuls of flour, four teaspoonfuls of baking powder and one-half teaspoonful of salt. Work In two tablespoonfuls of butter with tips of fingers and add gradually three fourths of a cupful of milk, mixing quickly with a caseknlfe. Cut out and bake In a quick oven. Rye Gems.—Mix am' sift one cupful of rye flour, one cupful of bread flour, one-half teaspoonful of salt ond five teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Add two eggs well beaten, one cupful of milk and two tablespoonfuls of mo lasses Meat thoroughly, fill hot but tered gem pans two-thirds full of the mixture and bake twenty-five minutes in a hot oven. Salmon Timbales. Mince very fine the while of six hard-boiled eggs that were put In Ice water as soon as they were done. This keeps them from darkening. It Is best to run the whites through a vege table press to get them fine enough Mix to a paste with six heaping tea spoons of fresh salmon, boiled, al lowed to get cold, then minced with a silver knife. Season the mixture with onion Juice, butter, celery salt and paprika, moisten with two table spoons of white sauce and stir up lightly with the whites of three eggs whipped stiff. Turn the paste Into but tered napkins, set In a shallow pan of boiling water and bake (covered) 20 minutes In a quick oven. Run a knife around the Inside of each nappy to loosen the timbale: reverse carefully upon a heated platter, pour a rich drawn butter about them and sift the hard-boiled yolks (powdered) all over them and serve. P^iAii Around IrnOUSE When making sweet croquettes add a little sugar to the crumbs in which tho croquettes are to be rolled. Celery can be much improved by soaking It for an hour in ice cold wa ter in which a lemon has been squeezed. Scratches on polished wood, if not too deep, can be removed by rubbing gently with fine sandpaper and then with a mixture of olive oil and vine gar. If you desire to serve a baked fish whole, and have It stand upright on the platter, put a carrot Inside the fish before cooking and it will remain In position. When making lemonade one of the lemons may be peeled and run through a meal chopper with a small piece ot the peel. This will give the lemonade a delightful piquant flavor. Sweet Milk and Soda. Many cooks look on in horror If you use soda in sweet milk, but in this recipe for devil's food it can be used successfully: One-half cup sweet milk, three-fourths cup grated chocolate, one-halt cup brown sugar. Put this on stove and let come to a boll, then pour it over one-half cup butter. Let this cool, then add one cup brown sugar and one-half cup sweet milk, two well beaten eggs and 2)4 cups sifted flour. Now add one level tea spoon of soda, dissolved In hot water. Bake 90 minutes. Soup of Rice. Put a half cupful of washed rice Into boiling water and cook for 12 or 16 minutes. Drain off the water and add a quart of white stock. Boil un til the rice becomes tender. Strain, return to the fire. Beat the yolks of two eggs Into half a cupful o^ cream. Add to the soup and stir for a minute, being careful that It does not come to a boll. Seres to lasts and serve U ones. pineapple sherbet n nice Instruction* for Making It In a Way That I* Not Only Eaay But Cheap. Pineapple sherbet la eaay to make, cheap and very delicious: Three cupa granulated sugar, two cups water Stir until sugar is dissolved, then boll five minutes. Add the Juice of one good-sized lemon and one large pineapple. If one has a vegetable press it will not be necessary to be partloular about peeling the pineapple Put It through the food chopper first, then press the juice out In this vege table press, in this way every bit of the Juice is extracted. The Juice from one can of pineapple might be used as well. Keep the mixture all together lu a large bowl standing In a vessel of cold water until cool, then pour Into freezer. When partly frozen add the stiffly beaten white of one egg and continue freezing. Let stand an hour or so to ripen. Any other fruit . , „ ma * be ; j8e ^ in8 ' ead 0 P'^pple « Purred. Strawberry la very nlce a 80 oran S e - _ Device of Silver Plate or Nickel That xhe soiling of table linen by the 3^ that runs down the sides of a ijcttle after each using can be pre vented by means of this drip cup. The :up , which is made of silver plate or nickel, is firmly held to the bottom | DRIP CUPS FOR BOTTLES Save» Table Linen From Be ing Soiled. (•lx //J b : i : - -t ' Protecting the Table Linen From Drip. of the bottle by spring clips, shape of the receptacle is such that a bottle tray be completely emptied of Us contents without the cup spilling any of the drip it has caugbL The Grandmother's Nutcake. Melt a teacupful of lard, add one pint of warm milk, one teaspoonful of salt, sifted flour to make a thick drop batter and one small teacup of home made yeast (a compressed yeast cake dissolved In warm water will do In stead). Beat hard, stand In a warm place, and when light work In two cupfuls and a half of sugar, four beat en eggs, two teaspoonfuls of ground cinnamon and flour to make a soft Knead lightly for five mtn dough. utes, return to the bowl and keep warm until very puffy and light. Roll out half an Inch thick and cut Into Let stand tounds with a wine glass. the board covered with a floured cloth for 15 minutes; then cook, half a dozen at a lime. In a deep kettle partly filled with smoking hot tat. j Drain on soft paper and when cold on roll In powdered sugar. Meat Juice. Shred very finely half a pound ol j raw beefsteak, free from fat and skin; j add half a pint of cold water, stii j It well together, add a pinch of salt ! salt and let It stand for half an bout In a warm place; stir again, then strain off the liquor through muslin and press it well so as to extract all '.he juice. This may be taken cold, or, before using the cup containing it may be placed in a saucepan of hoi water until just warm. It may also be mixed with a little cream or a beaten If given raw it should ?gg or brandy. be handed to the patient in a colored j wine glass, so that Its red color t> | not noticeable. I have Laundry Pad. If more housekeepers who laundering done in their own homes would provide their laundresa with a ; specially padded board for embroid-1 ered pieces there would be fewer oc- 1 casions for complaint when such ar ! tides come from the laundress' bands, Regularly fitted laundries are, ol course, equipped in this way. but the ^ housewife who uses her kitchen for laundry work often provides scant One of the equipment for this work, bosom boards that cost only a few I cents padded with several thicknesses of table felt makes an ideal board for i Beat the yolks of four eggs and two : of sugar together until very light. | embroidery. Lemon Pie cups Add Juice and grated rind of two lem and lump of butter. Last stir In Bake with ons the well beaten whites. It Is not necessary to top with meringue, as ths under crust. cover whites will rise to the top and brown. Ths above makes one large pie. Stir Gravy With a Fork. If the thickening for gravy Is stirred with a fork It will not he lumpy, but imooth as cream.—National Magaiins. Cueumbtr Cstohup. Grat« your cucnmbsrs, sweeten to taste, and cook 16 minutes in vinegar. Bottle up hot In alr-tlght Jars. A c arat Diamond $150 Guaranteed perfect cut, apotlnaa and flawless. Some larger and some smaller at the same rate. Come in and look them over. They are beauties. ,K 170 — ws mais n SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH Her Knowledge. President Caroline Hazard, at a re ception at Wellesley college, said, apropos of the girl graduate; "May none of our graduates have said of them, absent-mindedly, such a thing as was once said of a Western girl. "This girl. In taking leave of he» dean, murmured: " 'Good-by, professor, ed to you for all I know.' " 'Oh,' said ' the professor, 'pray don't mention such a trifle.' " 1 am lodebt $13,075.20 FOUND In tbc hoa*e of John Ualtln. who died In Sail Lake, the police discovered 113.075.20 in ca*b. most of it In a cook-atove. By keeping thii on the premise». Halfln while alive ran a risk of be ing murdered for his money. A fire Inadvertently Blurted would have destroyed the currency; the entire amount might have been lost or stolen. If HaJfin had placed the cash in a savings ac count. there never would have been danger to to the money. In 17 years and * months, at 4 per cent compound Intercut, he would have had S26.150.40—double the original amount. Do not hoard like H alfln, but save sensibly, and get the benefit of 4 per cent compound Intereel and safety. You can bank here by mail. Bend for illustrated booklet. WALKER BROTHERS BANKERS, Salt Lak* City I. Founded 1659 California VIA m N. E. A. Convention Rates On sale June 27th to July 6th, Inclusive, also July 7th. Salt Lake City to Los Angeles, returning via San Francisco, limit Septem ber 15th (On same dates Oregon Short L'ne and Western Pacific at Salt Lake will sell tickets in reverse direction, returning our line at same rates.) To Los Angeles. returning through San Francisco and Port land, limit September 15th ,*55.75 LOS ANGELES. Salt Lake City to Los Angeles and return, tickets on sale daily until September 30th, final limit October 31. 1211 For further information call on your local agent or write to T. 0. Peck. 0. P. A.. Los Aneeles, Cal, J. H. Maixierfield. A G P. A.. IfS Main Street. Sail I.sbe City. Utah. «05.75 940.00 A POSITIVE *><1 PER MANENT CURE FOR Drunkenness and Opium Diseases. Ladw« treated m in tkeir «wa kernel. THE KEELET IN Tkcre h ae poklidtf. ae ateke privately at j____ STITUTE. 334 W Soulk TcmpU Sire*. Sail Uke Gty. 177 MAIN 87., BALT LAITS O ITY NNONASSIONAL AND AM ATC UN PHOTO muR/*Lie s CKRtRT KODAK RtMiSHIRd WANTED MEN AND WOMEN to I^arti Barber Trade 10 Week». Tuition, with Bet of tools. 95ft. With partial sec of tools. $45. With yoor ow» tools JC5.» Moler Barber College 13 Commercial Street. Salt Lake Cits. Utab. Address Just a Safeguard. "George dear, Just one more quae tl 0 n and I promise not to bother you | R ny more during the game." she pleaded, according to the Detroit Free Press Is It now?" said I "Well, what George impatiently. 'Tell me why the catcher weers ; that funny wire thing on his face?" "Oh, sometimes the catcher gets 1 mad at the umpire's decision." said ! George. "Some day he might get too mad and bite the umpire, and as they don't want that to happen they muzzle ^ him." All In the Honor. I j 8 0 { t j, e man w jj 0 asked the president how he liked his job. Lin eo j n tlie q Ues tion reminded him of a man In Illinois who was treated to a coat ot tar and feathers and rode i out of town on a rail. He was asked : how he liked It and replied that If tt | was not for the honor of the thing he One of the best Lincoln stories told would rather have gone on foot.—Bos ton Record. - The Usual Result. "Tee, Charlie is as brave as a stack of Hons. Did you hear about his dar ing a policeman to arrest him?" "No! Gee! What happened?" "He was arrested."—Cleveland P)»l» Dealer. The Difficulty. "What's the hardest thing yen en countered In flying?" queried sh«. "At the present stage of the game," returned the aviator, tenderly rub bing a bump, "the hardest th'kg ws •sceunter tg tbs earth "—Puck