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Show DAILY I Profit Sale Sharing Makes Large Saving Housekeepers Now On 340 TWENTY-FIFT- Is LAYS I 251 EGGS A YEAR 170 PER CENT. utler SPORTS! more Rattling that he will do Neloon ha battle with Corbett next month. In a few joung will nink completely bel.nv veeki But ,orUon ,f he doea ,Mt puBHll,tU! department. hli publicity miprovc demine of since the hy go Vhole du)u managerial opportunities unrrfiyo name appearing without the Battler -- rint and without a presa agent ggttier aceompllahea little. Unless hia new ktpt before the public by be will drop out of right af-m gut more whipping. Sullivan ls thinking of fighting JfeTlK elongated Irishman baa not u a serious fight in some time, who have seen him hang private think that he is Just aa u ever, and that he will be ableLgtke some of the lightweights hustaking the beat of care gpike -g bl ie and la doing light training, gt does not care to go againat the rrarka at first, but doea not mind third-ia- ti ffftnt hia aklll with any of the 1 in. Rut they .Vfiiiii f,M- new fields to gruzze In and new pustules to gambol over, and the "big town" the "great white roadway appeal touuj them. From New I ork they expect to invade the Klevp.v 0r I'eniisiylvaMi.i, metropolis Where they expoi t 1,0 difficulty i curing matches. The two lads left Milwaukee in a somewhat crippled condition. Al.iuro was injured by a foul blow delivered unintentionally by Willie Muck in their fisht of December 23id. Aurelio sprained hia hand in ids tight with Kid Sayers recently. Neither one of the lads will be in shape to fight for a month. Hiul In the meantime plan to visit cities that are strangethey to them and to take a rest. The Herreras have done well in Milwaukee. Aurelio has shown that he la by no means a dead one, and although the best he did with Bayers was to draw twice, still that proves nothing, and If he behaves himself he should regain the position he held some months ago. 1 are arbitrary umpire nowa- but not one of them aucceeda in taring hia own way all the time, aa g our old friend Tim Hurat," aaya One day in PhilaXapoleon Lajole. delphia, four or five years ago, when tie temperature was close to 100, Dick Cooley tried to get out of the game. He called Hurat all kinds of mean mbim and made himself generally obnoxious. but Tim never said a word in Xbete 'Finally, In going after a fly, Cooley fell down, and. pretending to he hurt, ky perfectly still while the batter completed the circuit. Tim even refused to call Aa time. Cooley came up after the half no finished, he said to Hurat: "You think you're pretty smart, isn't Nothing else made Pop Anson so hopping mad us to be made the victim of an unexpected play - said Buttons" He was a great ball player, Briggs. but he stuck hard and fast to the rules of the play, seldom, if ever, springing any surprises on the public. One day down in Boston the score was 2 to 2 In the tenth, and, with Anson on third, another man on first and only one out, Chicagos chances looked rosy. Nichols made two or three fplnts to catch the runner at first, and every time Tenney, who was on first for would come running In to meet the ball. Finally, us Nichols shot the sphere toward first and Anson started up the third base line, Tenney came charging in. He didn't stop when he grabbed the ball, but kept right on toward third. Anson was put in the air for fair. He started hack, stopped, started again, but by this time Tenny had reached him and touched him out the first and only time I ever saw this play Ibis-io- n, reply. you? I don't think lam .No, said Tim. mart I know It smart enough to be and to keep ap to your little tricks made. you In this game until it's over. Anson was the maddest man In sev- The Herrera brothers have left MU- - enteen states. He abused the umpire, niikte and are on their way to New the batter, the coacher. the boys on Tort If they have not already arrived the bench and everybody within hear-tbeThey did not leave the city of Ing of his voice. One of the boys toweries because they dislike it, for, started to tell a story ns our 'bus ntart-o- o claim ed for the hotel, but Anson froxe him the contrary, they Is h for with a look, and not another word was town the best the fight game they ever were spoken on the trip. ra HSMI((fMtS(tStSIIS(lttMMSIMSSM(t(SMMSSS Washington Letter (By Our Regular That there is no Correspondent.) possibility of at this session is con-by those familiar with the legless situation. The senate leaders hre craftily brought about a situation vhch precludes the possibility of any htartant legislative enactment before To accomplish this end jjreh 4th. T once more made a tool of the ever lng Junior senator from Indiana, Beveridge. Senator Beveridge was Wd to bring in the statehood bill, and the leaders would help him pass A, although they never intended so WntMr. Beveridge, never loath to me a role which makes him the wntr of attraction, gladly responded, Jjd tor days and weeks the statehood JrJ dragged its weary way through acnate. Mr. Beveridge believing he making progress, while the lead-owlm-ethat nothing could be one until the statehood bill was and all the while were hlng in their sleeves. Now it has rmeh evident, even to Mr. Beveridge, cannot pass his bill, but he 2e not even now know that he has n made the catspaw of the leaders. on W - V d dls-of- ," which congress fixes the salaries. The clerks In h11 departments are being transferred to the statutory roll, so that their salaries cannot be increased except by congress, and those who actually deserve and to whom their chiefs would like to give increases, must appeal to members of congress or go without. Another Instance of Mr. Cannon efforts to defeat the wishes of the president recently came to the attenThe tion of your correspondent. president extended the civil service classification to include some 600 employes appointed aa laborers, but doing clerical work and having served several years. As long as they were "laborers" they could not be paid over ITS per month. Several secretaries wished to promote the more efficient of these employes, and to that end asked the president to include them In the classified service. He did so, and Immediately the house provided that clerks so classified should receive a maximum salary of $75 per month, thus defeating the Intention of the president and demonstrating to the clerks that they must acquire "Influence" with congress if they ever hoped to better their condition. he best policies of the president more specious friend, no more Instances Trrt enemy, than Speaker Cannon, cited where ae president recently declared that "T government employe who exerted with n,,':l'brs of congress to ohufn, .n Increase of salary must he 41 c arged- This did not please Mr. w10 an arrant spoilsman, snii !!"' Bnmediately passed the word th. umPfunds" must be abolished, m so they Hre being. "Dump funds for ?,pr,I,riilt,ons made ,n lump sums wv,riil departments, so made tv.. respective cabinet officers , may 'heir discretion, reward ), - wth Increases of salary. t0th,! "1,,IT1P fund Is the roll." ihnt Is a list of places for - em-POp-utn- TEA How can Schillings Best better than other good tea? Same as with everything Men differ; th,ngs differ. S WSB, g mens g,., lifc, rJ 2. 1905. PAGE THREE. 1 PROFIT YEAR AFiAi.LINu GROATH AMERICA. In- Ti- - Just 1904 Ta n of Unhappiness Ahith is Almost Impossible to .i Because OF EVlJL IN1 a cwi'.il Comprehend. iiuK-- - Once orn FEBRUARY OGDEN After i. vr year f'Megg IfflU THURSDAY. HEN What May Be Dona in Breeding fluence of Heredity Strong in Poultry, 8 to Help You STREET. H JOURNAL WONDERFUL Ear,y Great American Importing Tea Co. Our 100 Stores Help STATE MAI Come T Sale UTAH of careful breeding regardless of all ." t''Un-is t!i-- - Sli!i'ili .il.i! one hen which has laid 2rl eggs within twelve months, ilius heating all previous reported records in egg yield. This hen, known to the records as No. lil 7, is a small Plymouth Bock of pure strain, though not shajied according to the stand, iril type, she is not "lily under the size demanded for perfect Miecinii'iis of tin- luv d. hut her w nig Irirring ,s impcrii-cand her neck i. in slim fur hT liu'iy. In spile of Iut ilcfc-i-- , as viewed from the s'.ii.ilp.imi of tic fancier, she is In urinal performance tic- - most lien in tiic world, being capable, under average Maine conditions, of returning to her ow'in rs a net profit of 1 Tt! js'r cent a year. The figures, whiili have been passed upon and approved by expert bookkeepers. are deduced from counting the average cost of food nid sulistractlng the average cost of food and subsistence from the Income derived from eggs at the average price paid In Maine, which is IS cents a dozen. Professor Oinvell has devoted himself almost exclusively to breeding hens for a specific purpose for the last five years. Beginning with 1.0U0 hens divided into thicks of about twenty hens and tw-- cockerels to n pen, he has employed trap nests and been uble to get at the exact performance of every bird. The first year the best record was 220 eggs, laid by a Plymouth Rock pullet. There were eleven other Ply mouth Rock hens that exceeded 200 eggs each the first year, though of the 500 White only three Wyandotte g class. reached tlTe The next season the most prolific hens in their resjiective classes were put In pens together, and eggs saved from these were kept for hatching. Again the Plymouth Rocks outstripped the Wyandottes In egg yield by great majorities, so from that time on until the end no further attention was paid to the Wyandottes. Having hatched mate and female chickens from the eggs of his hens of greatest nbility to lay eggs. Professor Oowell mated the selected stork and waited for results. At the end of the fourth year he had produced twenty-si- x hens that had laid more than two hundred eggs each in a year, and one hen that heat all previous hen records by laying 238 eggs. Again making his selection of breeding stock from the most prolific in his pens and mating the hens to' cockerels from the same strain, he at last secured the most prolific hen in the world. No. 617. In speaking of his labors. Professor Gowell says that the problem of developing a flock of hens that will beget chicks to maintain or outstrip the ancestral records, Is beset with many difficulties. After reaching a certain the physical point in inbreeding, stamina of the fowls degenerates and the birds die from a too intimate mixture of allied bloods. The hen known as No. 617 ls vigorous and apparently healthy. She is active beyond the usual conduct of hens, and blda fair to live for years. From her and two other hens, each of which haa laid 246 eggs in a year. Professor Gowell ls saving eggs for the hatching of still more prolific fowls. What the limit la going to be he cannot tell. He hopes to arrive at the hen which will lay 300 eggs in a year and yield a net profit of 200 per cent, though he Is not at all certain that the fowls are capable of doing so much without physical collapse. It will take four or five years longer to decide the question either way. Meanwhile, he thinks he has originated a breed of fowls that Maine farmers and poultrymen can keep with an assurance of profit. - val-uuli- le 200-eg- WATER A PLANT COPIOU8LY. Sprinkling Every Day Not the Best Way to Get Reeulta. Improper watering la often the cause of failure with plants. The usual plan Is to sprinkle a small quantity of water daily in each pot containing a plant. If those who watei plants In this manner, as most beginners do, could see the florist water his plants they might fear the plants were being drowned, but they would learn a lesson in plant culture that would be of much benefit The florist waters his plants (with few exceptions) cither dally, every other day or twice a week, according J ;n;iy Tln-n- In-i-- i Is i hi this h'Mt i u - iii why it i hr".:kf.ii fmi iiuwN' iiiun that is hard to is railed . ' dim thiius.niil ;s in. nit ary i,, it fniin whi.il illtir.'ii. The ;l' .Itistu w ll i liive jilsl . i!i .ft.:iisr tile ill'll of sul I il oi'i'i in AuitTW ,i for the ' toil ,i t ilo of unli;i'iilioss !i ti.inl to i hii.ii i iieiul. SI'1 a eiiiiiiiliMtiinents, Professor l' Oeurue M. (iowell. .igiiiullur.il expert tn: it il'" I 'i 'Tally uf Maine, has succeeded i:i iiiitaii'ing lr.ore Unui forty ci'' Ileus that hat e ielded more than 200 P1-- ' eirgs aiicce in a year and has produced wl without number could he congress has covertly defeated the efforts of the president to establish an efficient civil service, where merit should gain promotion and political Influence prove or no avail, where the faithful and trustworthy employe, rather than a political henchman, who never fails to go out in his to the weather, and when the water district ai.d hustle for the ls done the soil about the plant is of his congressman, should win recog- ing saturated. The pot being completely reIncreased nition, promotion and muneration. Usually these tricks of well provided at the bottom with material usually broken congress are too obscure and too com- drainage plex to make It possible to expose them pieces of pots the surplus water The public passes off, yet the soil Is so wet that In a newspaper article. does not understand, rarely can he the roots can absorb from it all the made to understand, and, too often, moisture required for the best develdoes not care. "It ls none of my busi- opment of top growth. ness. anyway, and It Is too deep for me Dne of this kind a week I havent the time, will do watering to understand. vastly more good to the plants good the average anyhow." says than the daily sprinkling so generally and he goes his way. entirely oblivious of the fact that what the presi- practiced. dent I trying to do by means of civil Startling Mortality. service reform is to rhenpen the cost of the government to every citisen of the Statistics show startling mortality United States by making It an object from appendicitis and peritonitis. To to the government employe to render prevent end cure these awful diseases, Just one reliable remedy, Dr. the most and best service of which heIt there isNew Life Pills, M. Flannery of King's In capable. Of the average cltlxen to Kip- 14 Custom House Place, Chicago, says: with apologies be said, may They have no equal for Constipation ling: and Biliousness." 25c. at Ogden The worst of it la he did not know. And never could understand. cltl-sen- i. i s Urol hers' lVory Constitutes a large part of what is earned in this age of propress. Why not begin to nr today?. It is early in the year and may he pay day with you. $1.C0 wi'l open a savings account It will help you to cultivate hers. economy, ; ' tun- - tilo Koliot'.il U'OS-I- ii ooiiniry tins sol.loin Iun ii ei .i lu loio. iil'ii wlioii the polii'i'.il go-- : oxislm- - should In- - fruitful Of uroiiliT li.iipiiii.ss in: Hi no ill .iliil homo ot tin- Aiiiel'k'iili i i"; - there seems lo lie a I. lie of wild! - si itisiies of xuiciile ii ml divotve lii Mill 'll w Of him1 rend the w'o mu-- s .did ir:iy for tilings. I: Vincrii.i iilonn in '.ii4 there werei 9.JIH siiii ides. About all nver: ige of 21'" til fiii'li slide of the Ameiieiin! union. Wli.it ;i record! it even puts! .1'. of t lu- Ogden State Bank w ' - Wheat . - ' h- oli-iii- lie.-n- t r to sli.inn- - tlie ghastly reooril of the year liefiire. w hen K.r.!7 persons took their own lives. Despite our boasted Christianity suieide Is steadily on the In. reuse in our eountry. There were fifteen times as ninny suloldes in l!ii)4 as in ivsl. Buster than our population in proiHirtion grows the silent host of those who liy their own hand take their lives. Above every suicide's grave may lie unfurled a lsinner bearing the word ruliappiuess," for tn this cause can be traced every suicide. What caused the unhappiness is another question, hut the direct cause leading up to every suieide is long drawn nut or temporarily acute unhappiness. The record of the divorce courts lit Unit is no less alarming and discouraging than that of the lists or suicide. In discussing the matter of divorce, one of our religious exchange says: ''Some startling figures have recently to the been published in reference prevalence uf crime in this country. One of the lending magazines printed some statistical tables showing the number of murdPrs and homicides In the United States from year to year. They increased from 1.266 In 1881 to 10.6ri2 in 1896. The number of this class of horrible crimes was' nearly nine limes as large in 1896 ns It was fifteen years before. There has been a steady increase year by year. Since then there has been a small decrease. There were 8.976 homicides in 1903 seven times as many as twenty years ago. With the Increase in the number of murders there has been a corresponding increase In the number of suicide In this country. In 1881 there were only 605 suicides; in 1908 there were fourteen times as 8.597 more than many. Every year, with only two or three exceptions, the number has been greater than the year before. There has been a similar increase In the number of divorces. Before the civil war the number of divorces was very small. A divorce ouse was the occasion for columns in the secular papers. In some of .the stales there In was no provision for divorce. others It could beonly obtained by application to- - the legislature. But lax laws have been enacted, and this evil has been fostered until now there are probably twenty or thirty thousand divorces granted every year; that many families destroyed; that many homes ruined, under the forms of law every year In this country. years from During the thirty-tw- o 1869 to 1901 less thnn three hundred divorces were granted in the Dominion of Canada. During the same period nearly seven hundred thousand divorces were granted In the United States. The population of the United States is about fifteen times as great as that of Canada, but the number--ndivorces has been not fifteen times as large, nor a hundred times ns large, but more than two thousand times as large In the United States as In Canatimes as many da! Two thousand families have been destroyed by this evil, two thousand times hs many children deprived of the comfort and iblesslngs of a home. In our country as in the sister nation on the north. The evil has been rapidly increasing for a generation, more rapidly in the northern than In the southern states, but at a rate that gives grave cause for apprehension. There Is not one of the southern states, with the exception of Virginia and North und South Carolina, but grants more divorces every year than England and Wales united million populawith their thirty-thre- e tion; and In the northern states. Michigan furnishes six times as many, Ghlo eight times hs many, and ten times ss mnny divorces In any given period as England and Wales combined. 2 liis. i.u knee tip ollici' fi'ilow's t out-- , at aiiiiisl Kiimc (he price. Ail Grocers sell It. Riverdale or Phoenix Flour Peery Brothers DOCTORS WILL RECOMMEND Milling Co. our flour for ito healthful qualitieo when mode into dolieiouo white broad. Try it and you will novor use any other. It givoa hotter satisfaction than any other on the market. MADE BY OGDEN TO ALL (morch Suppers Notes Optical It to and $ociety dimem y la time ynrr e'en cbufc you pain, or do not iilloiv to rend' with ease by artificial light. Mpwks My specially ground lenara correct all defects and . make reading a pleasure. EXAMINATION FREE. WITH PURCHASES OF J. T. RUSHMER EXPERT MPG. OPTICAN. AT THE BIG 8PECK8. FOR SALE BY EDGAR JONES CO. Both Phones 124. 338 Street. Twenty-fift- h ni Its of a particular dreoear is hard to reach if you try to force on him collaro, cuffs or shirt that or tha product of a poor laundry. Bettor send your work to us and let us try to roach your heart by doing it in the right way at all times. or attend danee theaters or to catch a train in a hurry if you remember the number-pho-no To 22. OGDEN ALLEN TRANSFER COMPANY. STEAM LAUNDRY ALBUM ALI.KN, MGR. Phone 22. 412 25th St 'Phono 174. 437 Twenty-fift- Thro pounds of lard Fiv pounds of lard Ten pounds of lard Deafness Csnnot Bs Cured By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one way to cure dearness, and that Is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when It Is entirely closed, Deafness is the. result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which la nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. CO.. Toledo, O. F. J. CHENEY Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Halls Family IlIIs for are Rushiner If imported Japanese f na MILLING & ELEVATOR COMPANY J. E. Dooly', President. Horace Peary, Ralph E. Hoag, Cashier, A. V. McIntosh, Assistant Cachicr Vico-Preside- UTAH NATIONAL BANK of OQDIEN, UTAH ACCOUNTS POSITS. AND h 8treet 35c 60c $1.10 Ballard &iRincKers 331 TWENTY-FOURT- H STREET. |