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Diamonds Have Gon up Again ie Bel we have ■ sufKcirnl supply si ihr old prices Is make it mteiesOug lo you (or _ic line ysl. Sirrs (torn e pin heed In a dime. Several grades, but each guaranteed. up ,f A in h si SALT URB CI1 UfAft How Shocking. Blohbs—''The money young Mil yun's father loft him won't last long." globba.—"Why, Is he spender?" IHshbs.—"Spender? Why, do such h you know what the fellow is doing? He's actually paying his Income tax."— Philadelphia Record. Fresh Roasted and Steel Cut means up-to-date methods ir good coffee. HEWLETT'S LUNETA brand is the only coffee, on the market that is PEESH ROASTED AND STEEL CUT. Ask your grocer for LUNETA today and enjoy the best coffee oi the market. The Glance of Scorn. "Tho way that man looked at me was most insultIng." "Did ho stare?" "No; he looked once and turned away na if I were not wortli noticing."—Ixmdun Opinion. then Over 1,000 Gallons Per Hour jrrrr I m|iI $ 5052 ? P. O, FV Factory BeioiL Wie. P Engine end Pump Jack Complete Î \w m F re« C.telof No. WH T • Fairbanks, Morse & Co. Balt Lake City, Utah KODAKS PSK'-Î 1 "* '.'♦mg'. Complets stork of photo •uppum Holmss Parksr Hardware Co. Hervlce prompt. •perlai sttmtlnn : Nall Lake Oil) Before sending your boy away to a boarding school, investigate ALL HALLOWS COLLEGE • ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Catalocu« Sant Fraa on Application Rav. J. J. Ouinan, Praaidant A POSITIVE .nd PER MANENT CURE EDR Drunkenness and Opium Diseases. Tkar* k pallidly, aa gickaaM. I a-Üm fraatel •« THE KCE1.EY IN IU W Sou lb 1 ample Mratl. Sail l.aka City. pt tv•I el y ( IxiTiirt M •« ibeir owe loan WANTED MEN AND WOMEN to l.onrn llurberl'rsdc In Rixtit VVt-rk-. Tuition with ki-l of tool». S-> with ptrUitl *rt ot tool». Sift. Willi ,uur own Mol, six A'llIrrM Molar Barbar Collai» IB Oomuicrclal Street, Null Luke cay Ulob. (Inrefnl Kodak Kiiiinliin£ Prompt, khllfnl. Mull your Film» to u». Kn'«h Klim», Pin k« end »up pilon ol nil kind«. Writ.- tor Inter nation. THE JOHNSON CO., •Suit l.nko Oily. tUuh. Box wki. - Savings Department Opened April 1, 1911 Savings deposits July 25,1911, $S00,331.82 When WAI.KKR BROTH BUS BANK FRF. after r.2 yenre of "uccessful commercial hanking, derided to open a N.n ing" l>l |,ll « r , 'IV-'' the"dlrectorg establish a speelsl department fer 'îheàe t.î tneitrs but Urn ?" lookoii forward lo n salhifartory wrowlli of IhoB« «»ram 1i«a, l»ui ■potiHo of thn public has exceeded all Ibelr cxm*»i in -. , , Deposit« have cotno from «« far off .«m NbaraKda jdaho other forolRM point«, while Arizona. Cnllforaia. * * * H ^ ove n9 and Wyomlnif have contributed beav«ly to tho amount nivtii well a« to the commercial deposit« . Anrt The total resources of tho bank nre now approximately $!t.40«.000 and are steadily growing. The officer« and director« wl«h to expre«« lliolr f-Vv*»mooHed public and to aeknowlodffe iifraln their *on«o °f th, ' l . r l , *' ' .^ w hicli' ha« been on them to keep tli h bank ever worthy of the confidence which has be reposed In It for over half a century. _ r.y continuing to "comhlno ngc, oxpcrlcnco. uîlï' 1 |n»U uU 0 ll tO modern projçre««lve method«.** they hope to build up »hl« entire «till creator proportion« and Inorea«« It« power for Rood ln tho entlr« Intermountiiin region, In which It I« the pioneer bank. WALKER BROTHERS BANKERS •alt Lak« City Bank h«r* by mall. A Nev, Antidot« for Happiness and nrorM* if 080 ' ° nh *»P 1| y marri* of . * penniteM ' »ook hin talc „„, ?! *? h , R ,,romlBe ^ divorce attor thla- Chlpa eo, aud concluded with "I'm too divorce, but miserable. boor to much for » my wife makes my life Atter i got barne, at six ltK lt ln tbo evening, I got no until 1 go to sleep, advise?" peace you What would "After considering all the facts your case," said the lawyer, "I would suggest that you get a Jot) which quires you to Popular Magazine. In re work all night-*'—'The* A Significant Notice. Richard Crocker, the day of his do parture for his Irish home, said to a New York reporter "U is the desire for freedom that sends so many Americans and so many millions of dollars abroad every June The Puritanis-ii f . y a enslave . « Th , "T ' heir , 7 . f laWS ' Wltb Ih.lr total misconception of freedom ■mil of enjoyment, are well exempli fied in a notice-hoard I once saw in a New England park. '' Pleasure Grounds. 'rounds are for pleasure only. ;araes or play allowed."' A Deduction, bay. Pa." said little Johnny, after m hour or two of deep reflection. " 1 put a lemon and some sugar in a mil o' water would that be lemonade? "Yes. my son, yes—of •vould,' replied k,r. Squiggles from behind his newspaper. "Well, then," continued Johnny, edg ng toward the door, "if that's the •a-se 1 suppose if 1 put a piece of ar illcry and some gunpowder in a bar cl of water it would be a cannonade, -couldn't it?"—Harpers W'eealy. This board said: Notice—These No If course It Busy Days. Wcl! Dubby, these seem to be busy lays," said Harkaway. "Yes," said Bobby; "Mrs I)obby is busy morning to night trying to make up her mind where to spend the summer." "And you?" said Harkaway. ' Oh, 1 m busy from morning to night trying to gather together enough tc enable her to spend what she'll have u spend while spending it." said Dob >v.—Harper's Weekly, Tables Turned. Alfred had so often been asked by admiring strangers "Whose little boy are you?" that it was perhaps no won der that he finally turned tho tables on his elders. This ho did one even ing by inquiring, very sweetly, of a young gentleman who was calling upon Alfred's sister, "Whose papa are you?" —Harper s Weekly. A Slight Mistake. "I don't believe there is anything In that talk about Harlow being hard up." said Little Hink«. "Why' he's just blossomed forth with a footman on his motor." "Footman?" echoed Jinklneon, de risively. "Footman is good! That isn't a footman; it's a deputy sheriff m charge of tho car." The Rivals. Riggs—Singular, isn't it. that nei ther of your stenographers wants a vacation this year? Griggs—No; It is easily explained. I recently took a good looking young man into tho office and neither of the sifts is willing to go away and leave the field to the other one.—Boston Transcript. A Resourceful Defense. "Ye say ye haven't traviled faster'n fifteen miles an hour," said the con stable. "and yet this here speed reg ister o' yourn p'ints to forty-three." "Oh. that!" sm..ed Dobbs, pleasant ly. "That isn't a speed register, sir— that's my gas-meter, showing how much gasoline I've consumed since leaving home."—Harper's Weekly. Very Small, "Uncle .loo'' Cannon, condemning to a group of reiiorters a certain clause of the reciprocity blH, said: "Why. the spirit of that clause is ns small ns the spirit of the man who de manded a half price ticket to a moving picture show on tho ground he.had' only one eye." Very Peaceful, troubled much around "Are you here by I ho race problem 7" asked the man who was seeing Kentucky. "Wall, no, suh. Ah can't say that Colonel Pepporson. we ah." replied "Why. suh. as a mattuh of fact, we've only had three lynchln's heah tho last fob months." - W I /\ InT I 11 W VX^M^l N ' ' ' ' 1 53 r>; '-I', * * Vj tm >1 -J, TRAINING THE TOMATO VINES p r ,- fl „ . . _ . Pra ° t,ced b * Fevv ' but if Done in Mid Summer It Will Greatly Increase Y ' e ' d ^_ Fruit ' v—, . mb f amateurs practice trim mlng tomato vines, but If this is done ,n «»'»-•«mn.er the yield of the fruit 18 vep y ereatly Increased. Extensive experiments at various experiment stations have developed the fact that the increase duo to trim Sul ■ r . ¥ 33 r j ,31 / * rc\ % ! v & 7 ' ,hls hlcrease reached as high as 50 ,,er cent ' and the gain in w «'ght was very marked. In one instance reaching 08 per cent. The plants were grown under ordi nary field culture and they were start ed in the greenhouse. April 1st, plant ed in the field June 1st and headed back July 2-lth, August 8lh and Sep tember 5th. Of course in milder climates this work should be done earlier. At each trimming the leading branches were shortened about six Inches and most of the side shoots be low the first clusters were removed, the others being shortened, and the sunlight was thus freely admitted. Training tomatoes on wires to run from five to ten feet high, is becom ing common practice. This method Increases the yield, as the sunlight reaches all the fruit and makes pick ing much easier It is not difficult to train vines In Single-Stem Training. At the Maine station ming is great. this ordinary garden by means of wires. ■ ay. and it can be done in any HERMAN 0 NNES HAS ARRIVED Farmer. Measuring Seven Feet Two. Is Here to Look Over Ground— Going to Northern States. It looks as though the original of the term "tall farmer" had stepped Into the limelight to prove In the flesh the spirit of a Jest. One Herman Unnea. a middle-aged farmer, arrived on the Holland-Amerlcan Steamship Noordarn. recently docked, and. ac cording to the ship's carpenter who jSfsLiP 'S r JLty m i âji ti' i The Tallest Farmer. did the measuring with the lead line. 0tl)8 j n height. The farmer is pro- cccdtng to the Northern States to look over the ground, and it Is suggested that he need but "look" around to ob- tain an opinion as to tho land In sev- eral stales at one time. Farmer Omies modestly claims but seven feet two. represented little less than two falh- Reasonable Care of Garden Crops. Don't use all your land for hogs nnd corn and other general products Raise fruit and garden on part of it and give It the same careful atten tion that you do your prize stock. You may ho surprised to find that It is tho most profitable part of the farm, and the part that gives the most sat isfaction. Cultivation Forestalls Drought. Do not neglect to cultivate tho sweet potatoes. Keep up the cultivation nnd maintain the mulch. If this is prop erly done they will stand a terrific drought and develop potatoes when the late summer rains come. CABBAGE ALWAYS IN DEMAND One of Most Universally Grown Crops and Finds Place In Home Gar den and Truck Farm. Cabbage is one of the most uni »er sally cultivated of our garden plants Although It is one of the coarser vego tables it finds a place in the home gar den as well as in the market garden and truck farm, the United States cabbage Is sively grown as a farm crop. According to the last census New York state grew more than 25.00C acres of cabbage; Pensylvanla, nearly while Virginia grew about The three states men tioned outrank all otters by at least 2.000 acres. No adequate estimate can be placed on the value of this In some sections ol exten 11 , 000 ; 10.000 acres crop, as it fluctuates very decidedly both In acreage and In price, from year to year. Early cabbage is practically all con sumed as a green vegetable. The late crop, on the other hand. Is handled as a fresh vegetab'e, as a storage crop and for the manufacture of sauer kraut. Cabbage is always in demand and under present conditions it Is always available, either as the prod uct of a southern truck farm or northern farm, garden, or storage bouse. a The group of cultivated plants which has been derived from the wild cabbage presents a greater diversity of form than that derived from any other single ancestral type. Wild cabbage is a robust-growing broad-leaved plant enjoying the low, moist areas near the seacoast of southern Europe. The most closely allied form now in cultivation Is the coilard. The wide variation in the group is illustrated by the diversity of form shown In coliards, kale, tree cab bage, marrow kale, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts. It is almost beyond the bounds of reason to believe that all these forms have been derived from a common parentage, yet such Is the fact. no truck crop does the character 1 of the seed count for more than in ; cabbage. It is very essential that the j crop come to marketable maturity early, that the heads be uniform in ' size and character, and that they ' mature so that the whole crop can be harvested at two cuttings. The small ! saving made by the purchase of cheap | or inferior seed is usually paid tor a hundred times over in the lessened value of the crop. A grower can not Ïn ^ SHa afford to risk his crop for so small a saving. The best seed that can bs !dm ■ m y y y MB Charleston Wakefield Cabbage. obtained is none too good, and any thlng short of this is not good busi \\ ithout highly viable seed of a good strain, true to type, the best results cannot be expected. Cabbage is a crop which is grown b> every market gardener located within wagon-hauling distance of an important center of consumption. The statistics of the distribution of the cultivation of the cabbage clearly Indl cate the fact that this is one of the most important crops grown by market gardeners. 1 ne counties near each of the Im ^ _ ness portant centers of population of the United States are almost universally credited with a considerable of cabbage, thus showing that the gardeners of these regions have given considerable attention to the produc tion of this crop. acreage -v c. V't: jÿyâg 1 / r e\ < a:' The side-delivery rake has the edge on the hay tedder. Do not forget to cultivate the trees set out this spring. Straight corn rows are the trade mark of a careful farmer. Shallow cultivation conserves the corn roots ns well as the moisture. An early rape patch full of hungry pigs Is the most profitable spot on the farm. Treating small grains xvith formalin is too important to be overlooked by farmers. The essentials of a good road nre good bridges, a dry road bed and grades as low ns possible. Never cultivate your land deep Shallow and frequent cultivation is always besL Make the top soil ns line as possible. That final cultivation may mean ten bushels more corn to the acre and less pigeon grass seed in the farmer's shoes at husking time. Get ahead of the season In all gar den work. By and by the rush of otner things will come and u part of this work may be neglected. Plant a succession of beans, sweet corn, radishes, lettuce and all other qatek-mat tiring vegetables so that they may be had for use at all times. The garden soil is too expensive ma terial to lie idle for half the growing season when It Is capable of pro ducing large crops through all the growing season. ! SUFFERED AGONY. • Backache, Headache and Dizziness Caused Untold Misery Henry J. White, Ü6 N0. 3rd St., Ft. Smith, Ark., says: "I suffered every thing but' death from terrible kidney trouble. I did not have a moment's peace. The urine re sembled blood and left a red stain when it touched the linen. When could not have burned more. I had awful mMjf headaches and dizzy ir speiis and my hack began using Doan's Kidney Pb"s after various remedies had failed to help me and was completely cured. I have had no sign of kidney trouble since." Remember the name—Doan's. For sale by druggists and general storekeepers everywhere. Price 60c. Foster-Mil burn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. passed, fir© v HE WAS HUNGRY, TOO. »V •» 'TET K \\ t baby's hair all came out! - "When my first baby was six months old he broke out on his head with little bumps. They would dry up and leave a scale. Then it would break out again and ft spread all over his head. All the hair came out and his head was scaly all over. Then his face broke out all over In red bumps and r iL re W' i c. cctfwee Mrs. Justwed—There's nothing in the house fit to eat. to my mother. ,i„ I m going home Mr. Justwed (broke)—Wait till I get my hat, and I'll go with you. it kept spreading until it was on his hands and arms. I bought several boxes of ointment, gave him blood medicine, and had two doctors to treat , . . . ^ He had It about sU mouths when'a friend told me about Cuticura. I sent and got a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment. In three days after using them he began to 1m prove. He began to take long naps and to stop scratching his head. After taking two bottles of Resolvent, two boxes of Ointment and three cakes of Soap he was sound and well, and never had any breaking out of any kind. His hair came out in little curls all over his head. I don't think anything elso would have cured him except Cuti "I have bought Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Soap several times since to use for cuts and sores and have never known them to fail to cure what I put them on. Cuticura Soap is the best that I have ever used for toilet purposes." (Signed) Mrs. F. E. Har mon, R. F. D. 2. Atoka, Tenn.. Sept. 10. 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold everywhere, a earn pi e 0 f each, with 02-page book, will be ma iled free on application to "CuU cura ** Dent 16 L. Boston * y • cura. A woman's idea of a good figure de pends on whether she is thick or thin. GASTORIA k jrrflfrTtT: «v V»? For Infants and Children. tt 0 The Kind You Have Always Bought ■ » I i;: v ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT j AXogctablcPreparation CorAs similat ing the Food and Regula- T^optkj fTia ictl bug the Slomachs andBoveels of JJCdiö ullvl »> Ü » Signature m T Promotes Digestion,CKocrful nessand Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphinc nor Mineral Not ~Narc otic Krr.pt e/* OM OrSÀMV£l/rrÛ£* f^urryrlun " dix Sr ff m • ÄbtAr/U Sa/ts •• Jnu* • A ßger m imi - Hôrm Seed - tfmkrytrtm '/Virfcr Apcrfecl Remedy for Constipa tion . Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep « of 1-; & !!0 : A; «: In % 6 Use r.c! hi É * For Over Thirty Years Fac Simile Signature of II Tke Centaur Company. NEW YORK. 5ÎÎ 2 *^5 *0 ^Guaranteed under the Foodanÿ Exact Copy of Wtmppe*. SAVED FROM AN OPERATION n . n , , Lyfllcl b» PiriKnam S Vegetable Compound fa^w' r-——jdies have done for | me. For two years j I suffered. Thedoc t-~ —^ gjeJnF..] tors said I had tu /y W| j ™ or3 >. an< ^ tJ 10 on b ' / LoiiÆfe^ M? WilUk JT mother bought me y Lydia E. i'inkham'a ®vegetable Com i£ r 'r' pound, and today I am a healthy wo man. For months I suffered from in flammatlon,and your Sanative Wash re lieved me. Your Liver Pills have no equal as a cathartic. Any one wishing proof of what your medicines have done for me can get it from any drug gist or by writing to me. You can use my testimonial in any way you wish, and I will be glad to answer letters."— Mrs. Christina Eeed. 105 Mound SU, Peoria, 111. Another Operation Avoided. New Orleans, La.—"For years I snf f^red from severe female troubles. Finally I was confined to my bed and the doctor said an operation wasneces ry. 1 gave Lydia E. Pinkham's Yeg ctable Compound a trial first, and was saved from an operation."—Mrs, Lily Petrous, 1111 Kerlerec St, New Orleans, La. m h ; i- iWH'l —-,, __ _ . _ 1 he Wretchedness j - ^ , , Ol V^OOStlOätlOR ! Ca n qu i c kly be overmme by rARTFR'S IITTI F * nvcR PM 1«: ^ ( p , |_ ; gently on the A 1 liver. Cure Æ i i The great yolnme of unsolicited tes timony constantly pouring in pro yes conclusively that Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound is a remarkable remedy for those distressing feminine ills from which so many women suffer. i (Carters ■ ITTLE flVER S pills. ; Biliousness, i Head- i ; : 1ZZ1 ~ _ ; ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SM ' LL P1L . L ' SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. I (jCnUine must bear Signature j j I ' 1 DAISY FLYKIL^ER plM*d isrek,ra, it> tracts aud kills all Lie*. Nest, clean. Lasts all 'Jor tajore anything. || CuvaotKil fBtv> itr*. Of oil iNrtnci scat prr r»ai'i lor 20c. HAROLD hOlCU IM> Ue Kalb Avo. ilroakiya, > » _ _ . I flOltlDSOIl S V- J 1» W ^U0 VV 8 T G F Gh~.«i<k,*u«ru.j<iTriiMuJ;k,...t, i HOWARD E. BURTON A8 chemi 8 t ND • «nrelopes and în 11 price list b**ni on •ppiicatten. I Oontboi an<l umpire wtvrk solicited. l.eadvLil*, ' I Jo' IU*f erer.ee. (Jartxjnate National Bank. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM nMinsca and beautifies the haiz. a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Beste re Gray Hair to ita Youthful Color. Cure# Mate drteaae« Jt hair falling. 50c, and $1IX) at Dmrcirtt 'iv 1 ne f~ ~" " - 1 W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 31-191L