Show r t v i DocforsSaid He Would Die A Friend’s Advice Saves A knockabout watch Life The Man Who Got Even I wish to speak of tho wonderful euro that I hare received from your noted the great kidney and bladder cure Last summer I was taken with severe pains in my back and sides I could not breathe without difficulty and was nearly wild with the desire to urinate Was compelled to do so every ten minutes with the passage of pure blood with the urine I tried all the different doctors from far and near but they said it was no use to doctor as I would die anyI was at the end of my rope and way was so miserable with pain and the thought that I must die that words cannot tell how I felt One day a friend told me of the wonderful help she had received She gave from Dr Kilmer's me one of your pamuphlets which I read After and determined to try Have better taking half a bottle I felt now taken ten bottles and am well as I ever was thanks to I wish to tell all Buffering people that have kidney liver or bladder trouble that Dr t is the best medicine on the market All persons doubting this statement can write to me and I will answer them diYours very truly rectly CLYDE F CAMERER Rosalie Wash Subscribed and sworn to before me this 23rd day of July 1909 VERNE TOWNE Notary Public Lrtitr U Dr Kilatr tj it By f So RESULT USUAL Stockbug has been on CARL JENKINS had owned and run John Singleton a factory for 40 years Those who dealt with him in a business way called him an eccentric his employes denounced him as a skinflint and robber No one could say that he to charity had ever given a cent When sickness came to one of his men that man was bounced right out without a word of sympathy Appeals He had started didn’t go with him In life with the feeling that the whole world was down on him and In being what he was he felt that he was his Bghtlng the world and bolding own At the age of seventy Mr Single-tosold out his business to retire When he left the factory for the last time the workmen appeared at the loors and windows and sent a chorus of groans after him and the street beggars took it up and passed It along He reached home — a home presided over by an aged sister— to find that a woman who bad walked the streets for two days without food had sat down on bis steps to weep and rest He called the police and had her reA man loafing on moved the opposite side of the street when the occurrence took place estimated that Old John as he was best known at had been the means of sending a year to least twenty mendicants the Island It was natural to believe that after the old man had retired from business on a competence and had nothing to there might do but saunter around have come a change in him for the better Nothing of the kind hapHe was still scrapping with pened! the world and he was still aggressive Instead of sympathetic One day he halted on a corner ready to pick a fuss with anyone who brushed against him A young man In the dress of a workingman leaned against the lamp post in dejected attitude Two men came out of a saloon and began to fight "Good!” chuckled Old John He the world hamliked to see mering the head of the other The police came running One of them seized the young man of the de- Will Do For You Prove What Send to Dr Kilmer & Co Binghamton N Y for a sample bottle It will You will also receive convince anyone a booklet of valuable information telling all about the kidneys and bladder When writing be sure and mention this paper For sale at all drug stores Price and THE the street has he? What Is he speculating on?” “Just at present I believe he is speculating on how much longer he if be on the street” ECZEMA GONE BOILS CURED “My son was about three weeks old on his when I noticed a breaking-oucheeks from’ which a watery substance oozed A short time after his arms shoulders and breast broke out also and in a few days became a solid scab I became alarmed and called our family physician who at once proThe litnounced the disease eczema tle fellow was under his treatment for about three months By the end I Of that time be seemed no better and as I had became discouraged read the advertisements of Cutlcura Remedies of a great and testimonials many people who had used them with success I 'dropped the docwonderful tor’s treatment and commenced the use of Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and In a few days noticed a marked change The eruption on his cheeks was almost healed and his shoulders arms and breast were decidedly betseven he was about ter When months old all trace of the eczema was gone his teething period his “During head and face were broken out In with Cutlcura bolls which I cured Surely he must Soap and Ointment have been a great sufferer During the time of teething and from the time I doctor’s treatment I used dropped the the Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura two when nothing else and years old he was the picture of health His complexion was soft and beautiful and his head a mass of silky curls I had been afraid that he would never be well and I feel that I owe a great Remedies" deal to the Cutlcura (Signed) Mrs Mary W Ramsey 224 E Jackson St Colorado Springs 24 1910 Colo Sept “Good I” Chuckled “And the young was Unnecessary “Do you tell your wife everything you do when she is away?” attend to that” “No the neighbors — Houston Post “No Dr Fierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach liver and bowels Easy to take tiny granules as candy Led by the Nose what Is a ‘leading woman?”’ woman my son" — Boston Transcript ONLY ONE “BROMO OrtNINE" mat Is IAXAT1VB KtlOMO Q171MNK loo fn! W UKOVt Urn slffTiftture of lieti tbe Wurli Cold in Une over to Cure 1J It Is better to lose to gain by self seeking In loving man you brought In not doing anything” “What’s that? What’s that?” exclaimed the captain of the precinct as he came from his room “I’ll pay you out for this!? “Threatening an officer eh? Rush him!” ' “I’ll get even with you If It takes a hundred years!” Old John and the young man were locked up together until It should be time to take them to the night court For ten minutes the old man fairly raved Then he calmed down and said to the other: ’You didn’t say a word What’s the matter?” They seem way is slicked and paved to miss the one great essential thing In every success — the struggle days when everything looks as though one Is about done for and ready to cave In “Any Old John Jected attitude and mopped the sidewalk with him and then started for the station with him “Good!” chuckled Old John again He liked to see folks get Into trouble An officer reached out for the fighters but they dodged him and ran away Then he turned on Old John and whacked him on the head with hla stick— seized him by the coat collar and shook him — lifted him up and cracked his heels and then bore him off In triumph When he had landed his prisoner In the station he preferred a charge of drunkenness and disorderly conduct “But I’m not drunk” protested the prisoner “Shut up!” That Essential Struggle There are men who go through life without ever getting what one would or a call they never get to know what it means to Their face rough or tough weather “Pa 4J A cu :an wear on to the minei or out on a hunt in with a view o( hard rough Q A good watch (or a boy If you loit one you wouldn't than ' use A cop’s word goes and have neither pull nor money It’s the island for 30 days for me Mebbe you can pay your fine" “What! Will they fine me? I was I was only standing doing nothing there I’d like to see them line me! Say they flon’t know me but they will when I’m through with them Oh I’ll get even for this!” At the night court the officer who had made the arrest got up and mumbled something or other and his honor announced flO fine or 30 days at Blackwell’s “What for? What for?” demanded Old John as he danced around 10 “Keep quiet or I’ll fine you more!" you hear me when 1 say "Judge I’ll get— ” But he was hustled off He went out on the street raging He would ImHe would peach the magistrate He would have break the captain the patrolman arrested and tried for he had world In his little perjury bossed and bluffed and been the law It came hard to put up with the new order of things The old man was headed for the office of a lawyer when he saw a young woman In a doorway crying He forgot himself for a moment and turned aside to ask the cause “I was just In the court down there!” she whimpered “Oh Then you eaw how I 'was ' used?” "Yes sir and my Jim with you He was fined $10 and I've only five to He’ll pay go to the Island” “Was Jim the one arrested with me?” “He was sir We were to be married a month ago but he lost bis Job Jim don’t drink sir and I’m sure he wasn’t fighting Yes sir we were to be married and now — and now — 1” She fell to weeping while Old John paced up and down the walk and did some thinking No one’s tears had No one’s ever affected him before sorrows and griefs had ever been listened to If one had started In to tell them he had called them fakes and liars and turned away “Come to the house with me” he said after a while In an hour his plans to get even were laid The law did not enter Into them were tricky fellows Lawyers and the law was uncertain While the young woman went one way he went back to the police station and standing before the captain he said: 1 have been “I am John Singleton and locked clubbed arrested up fined” The captain had heard of John Singleton and he began to protest and ’ apologize “And I am going to get even!” continued the caller "Yes sir— get even I’ll make the whole lot of you wish Don’t try you had never been born any soft talk on me for It won’t go I’m a hard man sir —a hard man and I'll have satisfaction for this outrage!” And when he had departedtain and sergeant wore very serious faces Old John would go to a lawyer —to the alderman— to the police commissioner — the mayor He was an old bulldog and he had been clubbed and misused The and humiliated sword of Damocles be suswould pended for the next month Old John was seen on the streets with a young woman He was seen In furniture and hardware stares with her They were even seen to go Into a bank together Those that knew him winked at each other and said that tbe old boy was going to take a wife Three weeks passed away and then as the magistrate of tbe night court was sitting and chatting with the police captain during an interval Old John Singleton appeared “Sir” he said to the captain ”1 vowed to get even with you I have kept my vow” “Sir" he continued turning to the “I vowed to get even with magistrate I have kept my vow" you also Is this?” asked the magistrate as be recovered from his surprise “A young man was arrested at the same time I was He was innocent of any offense He was also clubbed and locked up and you sent him to the I have paid his fine island I have I have got him a job I got him out have seen him married to the girl he I have rented and furnished a loves flat for them and put $500 in the bank In her name Sir I am even with You don't you! I have beaten you! amount to shucks!” “And I?” asked the captain "Sir you will have to pass that flat You will see the wife’s every day You will see a goat at happy face one window and a parrot at the other You will see flowers on the stoop and a poodle dog on the steps And you will grit your teeth sir and your heart will throb anQ ache and your conscience will accuse and within a year sir you will hang yourself and be no more! Gentlemen Old John Singleton Is a hard man to beat — very hard man!” coin only I Time 'main radical Many poultry ratsere make mistakes In changing their fowls from They do summer to winter rations the not appreciate importance of the proper proportions of maintaining feed in the winmeat and succulent ter ration and above all of supplying to the birds Immethese constituents of cold diately at the beginning the birds weather During summer of grasscatch and eat an abundance hoppers and In addition have a large avail" supply of green food constantly able so that all their wants are satis fled Just as soon as extensive ranging Is prevented by cold weather the feeder should begin to supply succulent feed such as alfalfa roots and clover hay and beef scraps In the ration so A Hopper for Grit or Dry Mash Nawipapui mash The main advantage of thh method Is the extra labor Involved Ie a house when a drj mash Is fed In hoppers one man can feed 2000 hens In about a half hour As ordinarily fed a wet mash for 2000 birds requires at least two hours for mixing and distributing the teed Roughage for Hena Where alfalfa meal is fed the demand for a succulent roughage Is decreased Even In this case however the addition of succulent clover or alfalfa hay is beneficial Root cropn play an Important role In the dietary of poultry Mangels may be fed entire once a day In troughs Cabbages are best fed by suspending them by cords to keep them clean An additional advantage Is obtained hero through the extra exercise necessary for the fowl to secure the feed Whero available sprouted oats can be fed Carrots In small amounts are very palatable and tempting to the flock Clover chaff can be fed wet or dry and Is a very economical egg producer Begin to feed the green stuff and mangles as early in the autumn as possible Clover Good for Poultry Steaming clover hay Increases Its If free from long palatablllty greatly fiber clover is an excellent feed to mix with bran table scraps or with a regular mash A convenient way of handling the poultry flock Is to thoroughly bed down the house with straw In the fall and then to add a forkful of clover or alfalfa hay every day until the Utter begins to get dirty The house should then be cleaned the straw replaced by clean litter and the dally forkful of clover or alfalfa continued The Importance of litter cannot be overestimated as a means of compelling the birds to exercise In obtaining their food A generous allowance of corn mixed with the litter works out excellently for winter feed- Corn may be fed Ing or on the ear— broken Grit for a Dry Mash Feeding Front Prevents Waste gives the “underlings” plenty of chance to eat and lessens the possifowls bility of the mature stuffing The dry mash has the themselves same composition as the wet mash the only difference being that it is fed In a dry form Where ground oats and barley are plentiful they can be added to the dry mash with excellent results Green bone Is an excellent constituent to use In the ration for egg production' It must be fed In about one ounce per hen moderation three times a week and then gradualuntil one ounce Is suply Increased plied dally to each hen Several prominent poultrymen have recently attained remarkable success by using a combination of wet and dry mashes Tbelr system Includes a wet noon feed of a light mash and then during the afternoon giving the birds free access to a dry 170 st A Fortune Alaska in Has been often made in the past New strikes denote more in the future The finds In quartz mines predicts a new growth Prospectors Mining Men and Investors are needed to make the country a Mining busicomplete success ness and agricultural Opportunities of new For full Information map etc write to districts Alaska Steamship Company Seattle Waih Plant Dimes — Harvest Dollars - - IN IDAHO 4 Irrigation hai made this pouibje Land opened under the Carey Act at $2550 to $60 per acre later worth hundiedi of dollars 'An acre ia worth the interest it will in value of crop' Have you any Iiroduce It it being absorbed Idaho? rap- There idly values are continually rising but is still much land open for settlement it will not last many years You Should go There Nowl Cerrit Fort Pass Trat - Omaha Idaho D E Gen Sals Mgr Nob Burley Pass Agt Lake City R R Co Oregon Short Line A POSITIVE and PERMANENT CURE FOR Drunkenness and Opium Diseases 1Wt Iadisu treated as as publicity as slclasss THE their sun hones priratelr South Temple Street Suit Lake City BEING THE! In the Field Test Write line either shelled Into small oountry making thoro we lead all competitors Big Free Catalog of ALTON PORTER-- Salt Lake City CO STAMPS RUBBER Ves- ONLY SEEDSMEN ol Seeds tor our Rubber Type Outfits and euppliea In atock Mail orders receive prompt attention LAKE STAMP CO 8alt Lake City SALT Same Old Bore Reggy— Ah there Is a time for all things but some Peggy (yawning) — Yes pieces don’t seem to notice the clock It Is of great Importance that a things little grain be left In the litter overTommy and the Worm of were night so that the hens have someThere only two pieces thing to eat immediately after leaving cake and three hungry boys upstairs their perches In the early morning throwing their clothes on In the race This accounts for the generous allowto get down first Tommy' won out ance of grain which Is absolutely necand rushed into the dining room essary In the litter If no grain le breathlessly left In the litter the birds should reThe “That’s a good boy Tommy ceive their first feed by daylight for Take a bird gets the worm bebt returns A very detrimental prac- early said the mother tise on the general farm Is to finish all piece of cake” Tommy looked at the cake quizzicalthe morning chores before feeding the Inspecting It from all sides poultry Tbe hens as a result remain ly "What’s the matter Tommy?” on their perches too long so no Inhis mother “What are you tryasked centive urges them to get down and exercise This common mistake Is ing to do?" “Say ma which piece has the worm one of the fundamental errors which in it?” he asked soberly — National results In a diminished egg tion Slatted Cllt For descriptive literature write any Commercial Club or address hour How to Feed Dry Mash Tne dry mash Is not so palatable and accordingly can be fed to the hens at any time although the stock usually eat more and thrive more rapidly If allowed access to this feed for three to four hours each afternoon This it (or Union that It will correspond as closely as The possible to the summer feeding feeder should not wait until after Christmas to begin this system of feedsoon ing but should commence It as as the fowls are off the range Feeding a Wet Mash Changes In the system of feeding hens should never but be abrupt should be very gradual slowly accustoming --the birds to the variation In their ration Where a wet mash has been fed to the young fowl It Is preferable to continue to feed the older birds with this variety of mash Although a wet mash Is more palatable than a dry ma£h It Is also more trouble to prepare and has to be fed more There Is always a danger carefully of It scouring or freezing A wet mash should be thoroughly mixed and lowed to swell and expand This mash should be uniformly In the spread so each that bird troughs receives an equal allowance Otherwise the stronger birds will gorge themselves while their weaker mates will starve An excellent wet mash ration consists of one part alfalfa meal one part wheat bran one part middlings one part cornmeal and one part beef scraps If possible these concentrates should be moistened and mixed with skim milk and allowed to stand for several hours before feeding Five per cent of oil meal Is used advantageously In this ration due to Its value as a laxative and general tonic and stimulator The wet mash should be fed once dally In amount never to exceed what the birds will clean up readily Two Views of a Simple Drinking sel for the Small Hen House In ten minutes preferably at the noon Trough Joke on General Kelfer Recently a box addressed to Gen J W Kelfer was delivered In the office of the House Committee on ApproWhen General Kelfer openpriations ed the box he beamed On top of roses American a card was Beauty paying the roses were from old friends In Ohio “There” said he proudly as he lifted the rose “I may have been but by George It gives a defeated man some satisfaction to be remembered by his friends In this fashion” "There seems to be some other message for you" said a member of the committee the bottom ol examining the box General Kelfer picked up the box and read this Inscription: “May he rest In peace” Back to the box on the floor went went the flowers the card and out the door went the while the members laughed general at the general’e failure to recognise the handwriting of a fellow committeeman by Wunturu mind (or all railroadi LAKE lyio trips urage Guaranteed $200 impectora that Copyright rough the produc- for the flock should be furnished by putting a load of gravel In the house each year Oyster shell should also be constantly accessible for the flock It may be placed In an Inexpensive hopper where the birds can easily reach It Charcoal Is another article of Indispensable value around the poultry house Clean pure water in sanitary dishes Bhould always be available for the fowls Feed a Generous Ration An essential faqtor In poultry feeding is to furnish a liberal correctly balanced fattening and growing raTo merely supply the flock with tion a maintenance ration is not sufficient Besides maintaining bodily vigor and health the hen muBt produce eggs and on this account requires an amount of feed in excess of that required for mere maintenance Where a wU balanced ration Is supplied In abundance and where the flock have plenty of exercise the birds will not become overfat but will maintain good thrift and will produce a quantity of good quality eggs Monthly EIKS EXCURSION February 4 1911 TO Via Route LOS the Salt Lake on sale at Salt Lake City good returning February 4th only until March 7 Via the Salt Lake Route rates reserFor full information Secvations write A W Raybould retary Elks Club Salt Lake City Ut Tickets Endless Occupation "A reformer’s work Is never done” Bald tbe sincere citizen "That’s right’’ replied Farmer “No sooner does he get Into office himself than he has to get busy reformers keeptn’ people that ain’t out” — Washington Star Consistent “So your daughter belongs to Peace and Amiability Universal ciety?” “Yes and she’s rapidly fighting way to the front of that society” the so- her |