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Show FOR HAPPY LIFE LIVE SFOOi Effie Shannon Lay Down Rule Worth 'Consideration. wj ' Effie J I- Married " if sf Shannon hag Jurteen rules lor the man supplied mho to, quired how he could be happy, though married, or, In other word, what he was to do to gain and hold' the love 0 his wife Miss Shannons with unhappy marriages on the stage is wide, and likely she could formulate twenty-sirules quite as a til as thirteen, but she stopped at th odd number , Here they arecouBidejate of her In small things. Small things make up a womans life. 2 Remember always that everywhere iu the animal kingdom kind ami not sef makes difference iu ' 3 Need her and let her brain. know it. Women understand best that it' is more blessed to give than to receive. 4. I at her feel before, and partie-u'arlafter, marriage, that she is more important than your business. You wouldnt care to be supplanted m htr thoughts by co"Hant musing over that, $3 17 that slipped through her hands yesterday. 5. Before marriage kiss her as though she were your wife afterward kiss her as though she were your sweetheart. ti. Never abi- e.her confidence. Her faith in you is capital, which ypu w.Il lave to invest many times. 7. Compel her respect. Respect is the mother and admiration the fathet of loe. 8. Take an interest in her affairs. You would be hurt If she took no in terest in yours. 9. Detote at least a quarter of the thought to entertaining her during a lifetime that you would devote to entertaining her pretty sister half on hour. 10. Dont "nag."' Men nag as much as women, and vaccination, the slow scraping away of the skin, pains more than the quick incision of' the surgeons knife. 11. Remember that she Is the better half of yourself, and toYhlne own self be true. 12. Be generous, not lavish. When she Is your wife she Is your partner. Never compel her to ask for money. A woman feels dependence as much as a man would, 13. I have devoted as much attention to the subject of w inning the woman you have won as to winning the woman yon haven't. It is more Important to keep the love of your wife than' to create love In the object ef Eternal vigilance is your attentions. the price of eternal affection. Never say to yourself, Ive caught'the car. You may fall off. L. W'im - & i- - VTaL .. eype-nonc- .i The Thoroughbred Dairyman. takes the thoroughbred dairyman to produce a good herd of dairy cows. This is because ihere is no rule that may be laid down by which the work of dairy herd producing luay be unerringly accomplished. The work Is not one that may Je cut out by machinery after some particular pattern, but, to use a common phrase, we must cut and fit. .The whole thing comes back to the" quality of the man 'that does the cutting and, fitting. We have bad a verv small number of thoroughbred dairymen In the past, and dhat is why we have so few really good dairy herds.. Fortunately the state dairy schools and the progressive dairymen In i all the "states are now laboring .ttrliroduce a large number of thoroughbred, dairymen and we tave reason, to" Ttopev that In the fu ture the tribe will not be as it has been to the past.-The thoroughbred dairyman is always trying . to educate himself In dairy knowledge; Me finds this a hard task tylth the present sources ot information; for the information itself is but just being accumulated. Much he learned yesterday' he is compelled to let go Of and some part of what he learns will have to be discarded But the thoroughbred is not discouraged by this sate of things. He' is not only not satisfied with the amount of information that he can get from others but he sets to work to do some experimenting on his own behalf. He finds enough to keep him busy in trying to solve the problems that are yet un, solved or that have been solved in a very imperfect manner. This kind of dairyman .is making his impress on the country because he is a worker and knows how to intelligently direct his operations, whether they relate to the work of his dairy or to the experiments he is conducting. - The thoroughbred dairyman learned long ago to control his temper and to be gentle with his dairy animals. . He also insists on the other men having the care of the cows being gentle He has learned perhaps by instinct that a rough manner or a boisterous voice does not increase the milk flow or the production of cream. Gentleness is one of the things that marks him as distinct from most of his fellows. ' It y .. ,? , , - i : Jj - Nettie Blackmore, Minneapolis, Miss , how any young woman may be permanently cured of monthly pains by taking Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. tells I had frequent headaches of a severe nature my eyes, and at my menstrual periods I suffered member of the lodge advised me to try Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com pound, but I only scorned good advice and felt that my case was hopeless, hut she kept at me until I bought a bottle and started taking it. I soon had the best reason in the world to change my opinion of the medicine, as each day my health improved, and finally I was entirely without pain at my menstruation periods. I am most Xsttie Blackmore, 28 Central Ave., Minneapolis, Minn, patefuL Youno Women : dark spots before nntold agony. A Painful Periods ve quickly and permanently overcome by Lydia E. Pinkliams Vegetable Compound. The above letter is only one of hundreds of thousands which prove this statement to le a fact. Menstruation if it is painful something ha severe strain on a womans vitality, is wrong. Dont take narcotics to deaden the pain, but remove the cause perhaps it is caused by irregularity or womb displaee-tu- e development of a tumor. Whatever it is, Lydia Compound is guaranteed to cure it. case about is If there your anything about which you would like special your letter aa strictly in America can speak adrice, write freely to Mrs. Pinkham. She will treat confidential. She can surely help you, for no person from a wider experience in treating female ills. She has helped hundreds of health. Her address is Lynn, Mass., and her thousands of women back-tsdrice is free. You are very foolish if yon do not accept her kind invitation. Details of Another Case. Dear Mrs. Pikkuam: Ignorance and .. M I , Vi V--y I I Wmm . DIDNT KNOW THE carelessness is the cause of most of the sufferings of women. I believe that if we properly understood the laws of health we would all be welL but if the sick women only knew the truth about Lydia E. Pink hams Vegetable Compound, they would be saved much suffering and would soon be cured. 1 used it for five months for a local diffl-culty which had troubled me for years, and fop jvliich I bad spent hundreds of dollars in the vain endeavor to rec-tify. My life forces were being sapped, . knd I was daily losing my vitality. it Mr. Rice was reminded of a little story of the days when he worked foi t the Central Vermont. The roadused to' receive freqvent that out he," said complaints, freight trains were in the habit ol stopping on a certain grade crossing in Norwich, blocking travel for long periods. Our superintendent sent on! orders several times to stop this blockading, but still the kicks cams in. Finally the super decided to InHe was a vestigate personally. midget In size, and ery excitable. He went down to the crossing, and there sure enough, in defiance of orders, was a long freight anchored squarely across it. A big brakeman, who didnt sat comknow the superintendent, placently on top of a car. " Move that train on! sputtered the little super' to the brakeman. Get it off the crossing so people can pass. Move It on, I say! The big brakeman surveyed the tempestuous little man from head to You go to blazes, you little foot. Youre small shrimp, he replied. New York enough to crawl under. Times. Shooting With King Alfonso. When the King of Spain was at Xeres be greatly admired a horse beone of the longing to Senor Rivero, notables of the town, who at once presented him with the 'animal. The King refused the gift, but the other day, at the pigeon shooting at the Casa de Campo, near Madrid, a match was arranged between the King and Senor Rivero. aThe stakes were, on the King s aide, gold piece of 100 pesetas, and on Senor Riveros Like a skilful a souvenir of Xeres. courtier, Senor Rivero lost, andsent the King the horse which he had so much admired as a souvenir of Xeres. The King could not refuse to accept, but he at once sent the senor one of the best horses In the royal stable in exchange. CATARRH mU all wbU dimMi I thi mt mh, throat lun Jt, tfom mK. liver. howtU. kidney, bladdar m4 all ebrtaie. iMr?a and pmita diaaaaaa I both him and diaaaa af chiidran. t. Boat Trmtmant Carat- - Writ for fraa symptom llat If yon en-o- l sail. Consultation Frw. DR. 0. W. SBORVIU lnor-DoCatortanataa, of both aexaa, who art suffertn from Private Dlaeasa- a- whether ranwd by azoeaa or eontagloo bava always baaa looked a poo m lejfli lmte pray by the oharka ana DBS treatment. Chariataot who poaa aa Bpaoiallaia and rob tha sufferer for worth ess USLEdd BH0BK8 DO MtTaSK YOU TO PAT TBSH ONfl DOLLAH UNTIL CUHKD TOU WISH TO TOllRMtl ff DR8 8HORB8 KNOW THIY CAN CUR AND DO CURB PRIVATE D18KA8B8 IN BOTH BBZBS PERMANENTLY. they treat and and to PROVE their skill In thia clasa of aUmenia, who prarer. rack cases before the patient It required te pay Drs. Shores' one dollar. Or asrt THIS HOaai ay pay tha fee in small weakly or monthly Installment aa the core progresses. who PLAN OP LEALtNO WITH THB AFFLICTED deals a death blow to the Quack and raiir Did you ever hear of a Fakir ref uedi of a demands all Caah, In exchange fornoempty promises. cannot lose your money If you don t pay it etiu penny to a doped patient yon Taka chase OF MEN1 are simp y tn "suit of enlarged or WBAKNS88E8 of so oalled Inflamed PR08TATR GLAND-D- r. Shores' new LOCAL TREATMENT for such oasesjN VAIU ABLY CL K Kg ask 0h3r Doctors how many cases they cure under the o.d Md Maatment for this trouble. Wa cure LOST MANHOOD. Seminal WwkoeM. Sparmatorrtioea, GONORRHOEA, VARICOCELE and ktodred troubles in lesa time and orroriem SYPHILIS. we never use a name Deiray money, than any institution in tha west, every ease is confidential t1 a secret Consultation, Examination and Advice FREE by mall or T OFFICE HOURS: Sam to bp m; Evenlugs tod; guilder anl holidays IU a m to tM o0 DRS. SHORES 249 & SHORES. Expert Specialists, SUPER. friend who came in on a Shore Line TREAT and CURE Special Offer in Private Diseases Milking Machines. Of the various makes of milking machines that are being sold on the train found a long New York express standing between them and the New Haven station. As they climbed over .hWEi.i. IHOBM. - Brakemans Retort to Railroad Official Proved That. Walter L. Rice, traveling freight agent of the New Haven road, is known all along the line as a good story teller. The other day he and a Lydia E. Pinkliams Vegetable Compound cured me completely, and I am now enjoying the best of health, and am most grateful, and only too pleased to endorse such a great remedy. Miss Jennie L Edwards, 804 H St, N. W, Washington, I). CL Mrs. Pinkham, whose address is Lynn, Mass., will answer cheer-tal- ly and without cost all letters addressed to her by sick women. . A. 1. to-da- ,i aruWifo Jacks Advice to His Friend. seaman: and may Why, Tom. thou'rt a , . every wind That thy wishes can prosper, and that , each port Still sit In thv find. thou mayat shall guide thy behavior: While honor true and hearty, the stays While good, mind of thy thy duty, Are . sleadilv btaoed by to king, wife and friend, thou art ennetant and kind, sorrows of thou driest up the onl, beauty. S CDKEB HID DIPHTHERIA VfoW.W.r.2: jBldpri-lBdsorStut'fi- .(EVER Hits-K:Y.l:.V.- But may all thy tackles, grown rotten, may leaks fairly flit her: all splinterd, qo rope to Thy timbers' bcls v. Broke thy compass, and shatterd thy In the winds are the sails When shook heart. of thy And thou'rt false to thine honor and kins wife and friend thou Whenfrom would-- t basely depart. sorrows of at the mock'st thon And 1auty' Charles Dlbdfn. REMEDY f.r Gftnsrai Agents. Salt Lake City, Utah One Difference. like to know whats the difference between a guesser and a forecaster, said Mrs. Wonder, puzzling figher mind over the ures In one of the papers. "A guesser, explained Mr, Wonder, simply lumps his figures, and is either right or wrong at once; while a forecaster arranges his figures In a table of statistics and makes you wonbe anyder how on earth thing exeeot right. "Id ante-electio- assats. reliable Gold nd fl,lr-. IeB Vr .TS " unirt silver tapper 1 S M ATTENTION. Tf ItlVB PROW PT KW Arap.lio. 8u De.r.r, Ogd.li Awy C... Colo. Colts and Nutrition, Without doubt the size and vigor of colts depend largely on the nutrition of the mare ' before the birth ot the colt. .. A mare will bring forth a vigorous colt, if the colt have a perfect tation he will develop into a strong horse. Bad nutrition is the cause of physical nnd mental Inferiority In the human family and the same Is true of the equine race. The mentality as well as the physical force of the horse Is governed by the food It is certainly true that question. some or the animals that are dependent on man are more poorly nurtured than they would he if turned, out to hunt grass for themselves. Who has not seen brood mares worked so long, on poor- food that they were merely skin and bones, to use a common Yet such animals In such expression. condition were permitted to bring forth colts. The prenatal Influences of such animals are against them. They will be backward in physical development and will be to a considerable extent more stupid than other colts that have been born under better conditions. The mare must be well nourished If a good colt U to be secured from r her. will need to stqdv the Jaws, of nutrition a little Ifhe Is to get the best results. Too many of our brood mares are given only corn and timothy hay, which Isa very bad ration for an animal expected to increase the 'horse population of the world. Where timothy hay is fed, oats should be substituted for oorn. That is, the 'protein element in the food should be supplied. When timothy hay and corn are ted the protein Is painfully deficient. market the Thistle seems to stand at the head, though it has few friends In. the United States. " We hear from it however from time to time In EngIn and Australia. land, Germany those countries it is being tested quite extensively, with varying results so far as making itself friends and enemies. In recent testa In Germany It has been used continually for a year or two but. the cow q where It is used are not kept for milking purposes beyond a year and a half. Then they are sold to the butchers and new cows purchased. It has been asserted that the milking machines dry up the cows and reduce the length of .the milking period. With cows that are only to be milked to the end ot one milking period It Is impossible to ascertain the truth of this.- - A few cowq purchased would not allow themselves to be milked by the machine. Some of the cows bad to be stripped by band after the machine had done what It could, but the cows were milked clean by It. It seems to be evident that it we are to have milking machines we will have to develop a special class of tows with teats of a certain conformation and with milk ducts that easily and quickly give down the milk. hard-milkin- easy-milkin- Improved Dairy Cows. Mdst of the dairy cows in the country are without pedigree, that is, they are grades. The day of the just cow" has passed. The distinct breeds have been used so widely over the country that their blood is to be found It has in almost every community. been said of the beef grades that a good feeder Is the one that shows most of some distinct beef breed in him. Of the dairy cows It may be stated as a general truth that the best dairy grade is that one showing a large proportion of blood of some breed noted for milk production. This truth is not put at naught by the fact that many of these cows without pedigree show Shorthorn blood. There is the milking Shorthorn wnose blood is quite generally diffused over the country. The great trouble with It Is that no effort has been made to keep It distinct from that of the beef Shorthorns. Dairymen should take the hint from this fact and get as high grades If they buy a bull to as possible. place in their herd It should be a pure bred bull and not a grade. , Cow With First Calf. The cow with her first calf la not generally a large milker, and often she does not give enough milk and butter fat to pay for her. keeping. This Is no proof that she will not be a good producer of butter and milk Doubtless many a In the future. good cow has been lost by reason of the owner passing Judgment on her when she was a heifer. Some of the most renowned milkers In the world were small milkers with their first calves. The same cow at eight years of age may be worth double what she was at three, and may give twice as on the same much milk and butter-fa- t amount of food she consumed when a heifer. v - VAST CAVES IN ENGLAND Investigation of Those the Mendip Hills. Scientific BBEAKS THE RECORD In OENTUET FLYEB Df THE MEDICAL FIELD. A TWENTIETH cave Is scientific Spelaeology hunting. . There Is a society for that purpose with headquarters In Paris which recently Investigate!! the caves In the Mendip bills In England. These caves are of vast extent, perforating two masses of limestone,, lying on either side of a core of old red sandstone, forming the center of the Socib are swallet holes," absorbing rivers, others stalactite caverns. One, called Wooke.v hole, marks the emergence, In the form of the river Axe, of two streams swalsome miles away. One of lowed these swallets Is iOO feet'deep. Another cave, called Swlldon's hole, is draped wtth W'esths and festoons of Lalf. pure white stalactite on the northern side of the hills. Is the most 'magnificent stalactite cavern In Great Britain: while adjoining W jokey Htole another chamber has just been found with 1,200 stalactite pendants, all of dazzling whiteness. The famous sprirt which gives Its name to the town of Wells Is believed to come through hidden caverns front the Jilgher parts of the Mendips. IthennifttUm Rapidly and Radical! Cured. Quick Work of u Fauiou Remedy. Convenience, comfort, safety speed are demanded by the traveling pubho in oui rapid ceutuiy ami the keenest intellect constantly ut work on these problem are nmkiug wonderful progress in th construction of the steamship and th locomotive. Like results are sought in medicines and Dr. Williams rink Pilli for Pule People are astonishing the world by tho triumphs they are Winning itl tin rapid cure of obstiuuto maladies, such at rheumatism. With speed they combim convenience, perfect safety and cheap uoss. Here is fresh proof of (heir concentrated virtues ; Mrs. Margaret Gtuila of No. lo27 Bodomnu street, Burlington, Iowa, is an industrious German woman, who ulmut two and a half years agf found herself in danger of losing liei power to work altogether. She says, I got rheumatism which made my knee nnd dhows very stiff and painful I had difficulty in inisiug my arms and I could hardly lift my feet over my doorstep. I ought to have gone to bed, NAMED IN ODD MANNER. but I couhl nt afford to do that, so 1 forced my If to work in spite of the pain Origin of Pint Judy Pint on Rhode and stiffness. After suffering for about Island Shore. six mouths, I was told about Dr. Point Judith, Rhode il hums Pink Pills for Pale People by to known the natives of that neigh. frieml, who said she hud been cured by borhood as Pint Judy pint. Once tbuiu. On lier advice, I bought one box upon a time, the story goes, an old BUi ia two weeks after I began to us sea captain of Nantucket or there.' them I was well ami I liavhad noueed aoouts took his wife with him upon a to use them now for nearly two years, voyage along the roast and, being Dr; Williams Pink Pill are a good nied. enveloped In a fog, he made her look- icitio and if I ever have rheumatism out. After awhile the woman piped again I will get a box right away. I our, Land! "Whar away?" bellowed have told many friends what they did her lord. Why. right over there. Just for me and I tim glad to have everybody the other side of all those ropes, she know. Tother ride o annwered, excitedly. This is valuable, nows to all who suffl ".Jlestlcks!" roared the Captain. fer from rheumat ism. These pills hav Cant you tell mo In straight talk, also cured stubborn rases ot loooniotoi Now It happened that ataxia, partial imralysis, St. Vitus dance, whar away? the captains wife was unacquainted sciatica, neuralgia, nervous headache, with nautical terms and while she palpitation of the heart and all forms oi could do many useful things she could weakness in mule or female. , no more have boxed the compass than They are sold by all druggists, oi she could have flown. So the captain will be sent directly from the Dr. Wil snouted to her: Pint, Judy! Pint! llama Medicine Go. r Schenectady, N.Y., Then Judy plnted and the shore she on receipt of the price, fifty cents pe had discovered and indicated was ever box; six bnxesfortwo dollars and a half. Look for the full name on every box. afterward known as Pint Judy plnL Big Hairpin Factory. The greatest of tbs world's manufactories of hairpins Is at Painswlck. a village In the Stroud valley, at the Do you make it right . foot of the Cotswolds. There are no Do you make it right fewer than three hundredpersona employed In turning out these trifles o Do you make it right the boudoir, and hundreds ot automatic machines are in constant operaDo you make it right tion transforming miles of wire into ' n tons of finished pins. London E p&rkur ot SrhltllDf beat Tft I Men-dip- J The-owne- . Fattening Sheep for Profit. Where possible the farmer should fatten his own sheep. Recently we heard about a community of farmers where a great many sheep had been raised but had been sold to men that inade a business of fattening and fitting 8neep for markeL The men bat did the finishing In this case took their sheep only a few miles away and began the work of putting oi flesh and fat They came back from time to time to buy the clover and corn fodder of the farmers and even the grains they had raised. But principally they purchased the rough feed that every farmer had in abundanco. The finishers made money out of their The question, naturally enterprise. comes, why didnt the farmers them' booklet: How to Mali f lood Too. gineer. selves have the enterprise to keep the rough feed at home and not let go Horn. of the animals to consume it. They The little resting spots of men would then have retained on - their - Tbat creep along Times wall, farms the manure that was lost to Like shadows In the noonday glare You like good tea, and them. In some cases the farmers In Are kindest after all. ' the locality mentioned hauled hay and When wearied by the morn of toll. you like the effect of it. other roughage fifteen miles to sell to Burned with ambitions flame, I Whose? the men doing the feeding. It looks Tib sweet to seek the humble spot . If much as some our farmers ef yery someone breathes your Where ? Whose have not figured the different opera1 " name. tions down close enough to know what Your In Smith Good frocr return jour munej If joa float Livingston -- TEA TEA like BonUlluffB Item. wllh prove profitable And what will Housekeeping. . . not. ,We need the work of the pencil Worlds Most Beautiful Things. more In the problems of the farm. Mother Crays Sweet Powders for Children, The three most beautiful things In Because a certain method of doing Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse has become the vague Is not a proof m the Children's Home in New York, cure the world are roses, white butterfilei that it Is the right thing to do or that Constipation, Feverishness, Bad Stomach, and a woman's heart. move and regulate the it is the profitable thing. Ultimately Teething Disorders, Worms. Over HO.OOO tesIt will be found that it pays the farm- Bowels and Destroy At all Druggists, 26c. Sample er to follow all the operations of sheep timonials. FREE. Address A. S Olmsted. Leltor.N Y. breeding, feeding, Including finishing We Americans think we on his own farm. Great Britains Shame. were are smart; but tea is too If the paupers In Great Britain Cattle Breeding. arranged In a procession, four abreast, much for us. Cattle breeding Is not the easy It is computed that the procession science that it seems to be. It is would he nearly 100 miles In length. We are the worst of buyfraught with problems that the strongthe Favorite David Remedy, Tr. Kennedy's est minds have studied and have not Groat Kldiiav and Writ Dr. ers of it; so they say. l.ler Cura. World entirely settled. Among them are the KnadX Bom, Houdout, h. Y., Cur traa aaiupl botU. Your groeor return joar moaoj If joa floof and great questions of Ilk kckUlinf Beat. Median Age of Negroee. la one of the atavism. The median age of negroes Is 19.4 obstacles we place in' the way of Lord Mayors 8pecial Menu. that is, half the negroes In the years aniof atavism, that Is, the tendency The that age. below are Not States United long ago the lord mayor of Ixy mals to revert to the primeval type.-Thlmedian age Is four years below that of don, when sympathy for him was Is one- that matter of a difference on the number of dinners h must be handled In the most careful the whites (23.4 years), connected with the high birth was expected to eat publicly In hit manner, though it Is not as necessary closely rate of the ne- year of office, explained tbat he had s , now as it was in the early days of rate and high death special menu, and ate only courses tb the breeds. Then it was used as a groes. ingredients of which were known tq means of securing continuance of type floottiln Syrup, Ifrts Wlmtow'i him. and the quality known as prepoPot children tccthlnK. nftco the K'ira, rrduoM - TEA s tency. It is an encouraging thing that our the agricultural colleges exhaustive study they are of the science of breeding. It Is more encouraging to know that the experiment stations are hacking up the agricultural colleges by carrying on experiments to set at rest some of the great controversies of the past The world has benefited greatly through the work of the men that founded the leading cattle breeds. That benefit Is to be increased by the work of the stations In fixing the lessons that are to be taught. The whole tendency is to stop the methods of bad breeding that have done so much to deteriorate the stock A minister recently of the country. said that many men know what Is right, but tbat few men do what Is right. We may say the same of cattle are-maki- breeding. More men know how to breed right than do breed right The Clean Stall. It Is a useless piece of advice pert haps to say keep the horse stall Yet we have seen horse stalls clean. that were always dirty. Moreover we have seen white and gray horses kept In such stalls. When they came out ot them In the morning it was a good task to get the dirt and stain off them. They were unsightly In spite of all the washing that could be done. A are too much good many farmers afraid of wasting bedding. Sometimes too they shake out and save not only the dry straw but also much of the wet straw. The horse is not a dirty The Goat and Disease. animal and there is little use In JetOne thing In favor of the goat la him dirty. If the stall la that it is iittle subject to disease. ting clean get work will be saved. Whether this is true of all of our kept common diseases we do not know Farm buildings should be given a Doubtless the goat is subject to some over before the cold of the going Is It asserted least that winter comes- .- Too many cracks in disease. At the- goat does not have tuberculosis. the bam may give abundant ventilaIf this! so It Is 'a strong fattor in tion, but they give more too Its milk should. In that drafts. Ventilation Is health,njan7 but it). favor. 'used more and more, and be case, drafts are the opposite. It does not new and better breeds ot milk goats cost much to stop up cracks, and If We are supshould be developed. one kind of material cannot be seposed to have about two million goats cured for this work another can. in this country. A physician says tbat we should have twenty millions - As a general thing the grat a vine. just to supply milk for the babies of yard. should be given 'clean cultivation vary year.' the country. japimatlnn gllayl pain,, CUflB WtndOOUU. 5C UjtUM Little Used In Russia. Notwithstanding the large production of petroleum In Russia the use of Illuminating oil In the country Is small. It has been limited by a tax on refined oil. Recently the Baku refiner TEA Oil have petitioned the government tq abolish this tax on refined oil for bomq consumption and to substitute for It a tax on all crude oil produced. TEA There is good and bad tea; there is good and bad tea cookery. Which have I ? It Would Arouse Her Suspicions,noi careful to hug his wife as If he thought she was somebody else s. New York Press. . A C.t'AR tVTI'li) t'lKK FOR FILES. Duiiuif Vnr JlktMltjitf or IrAPitllnK . A man should be very -- Tell your friends if you like it; if not, tell your Bilotl, dniKkldt wtil refund tunty If lAZt) 01.N1HE.NC lull iu cure yuu lu 6 to H day, froc. Whgt Hens Wouldn't grocer. Tour Rrocr return, your money U you tfoot s 4k. Schilling. Deft. The Japanese Coiffure. In Japan a womans tge may be told by the way she arranges her hair. The style of coiffure also announces whether she Is married or single. The hair of a maiden of eighteen is dressed In the "butterfly style; that with many loops and bowknots. tween twenty and twenty-five- , triple coiffure is worn; this consists of three loops only. Eat A city woman who had decided that she would keep some hens as a profitable amusement during her long summers In the country asked the farmer of . whom she bought them what they could eat. The man looked at her In silent amazement a moment before he replied. "It would; take me ye what the rest o my days to last, "but they can eat, he said,-a- f It won't take long to tell ye what they cant. You avoid feeding of em with salt fish and cobblestones and I guest vou wont have any trouble. AAA.A.14.i.A.U.U.AAA.i.A.AAi.U.i.lA.ii.tUAA.A Penetration is the cardinal virtue of St. Jacobs Oil I t - IfTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTtTTTTTfTYTTTTI i.'&lThompsons Eye Water When Answering Advertisements Kindly MeiCn his Paper, V t t dime foe nimirate Everybody rend ,Wonderful, practiced booklet "llow Mario CorelluvaluibK). VlbrocliorJ Co., 3.19 Cue Are., St. Couli. FmHu Hmi W. N.AJm Salt Lake-N- o. 49, 1904. |