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Show Tired Nervous Women Make Unhappy Hom boy had not understood. Was Moat WoePretty Phrase That fully Misunderstood. apThat the effect of a choice and lost sometime is. propriate phrase and ofttlmeg woefully misinterpreted conIs well Illustrated in an Incident a of Virginia death the with nected Make Hay While the Sun Shines And secure one of our self- - dumping hsy rskes, that will facilitate your work and tave labor and patience, Our McCORMICK hay rake has eo many improvement! to recom' mend it to the farmer, and it ao well made, that he will ice on a critical ex amination that he ia securing the beat value for hia money in thia line. Sole Agenta for McCormick Machine!, Bain Wagcni, Red Tag Twine, Eta, Writ or cull HftiUfaotorj trin tnd prlOM. Consolidated Wagon &. Maohine Company , Lssllnf 'implement Dealer! Utah and Idaho Ceorfe T. Odell, General Manaier at Salt LaKt, OJdtn, Lojan, Idaho Fall 4 and MonfatHor. JUNE BRIDES Should havo a fine Wedding Ring. Our rlnga have been celebrated for their fine quality and finlah for half m century. Made only In one piece of 18 k or 22 k aolld gold. 170 STS SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH ' lawyer. wires During the man's Illness the were disconnected which attached th pull knob bell to the door. on the front A messenger boy came to the house one morning and began pulling at There was no response. the bell. He continued to jerk the ancient knob A white-hairegentleman vigorously. hand finally appeared, who raised his said: and warnlngly My boy, the silver cord has been severed. the boy. exploded "Is that so? "From the way It acted I thought the whole darn thing was busted." N. Y. Times. ITCHING RASH 18 YEARS. &, T The telegraph instruments applied out the nation's cry for help. I Sto every city, village and hamlet went the rallying call to Columbia sons. A nation's emblemOld Glory-h- ad been fired upon. Flying from the m t head it had been met in a southern port by the ominous boom of defiant cannot-- . War, grim visaged war, had come. A conflict that was to leave its record of heroic deeds, of unexampled valor, upon all history. A conflict that was to pit brother against brother, friend against friend, each battling for the right as he saw the right From the farm and factory, the store and office, the pulpit and schoolroom came the answer. It echoed from ocean to ocean, from east to west and north: Were coming, Father Abraham, Five hundred thousand strong 1 The roll of the drum, the shrill notes of the bugle, marked the mustering camps, and into them gathered the flower of the nations manhood. From out these mustering camps there marched ait army clad in blue, each hero eager to perform that duty, no matter what it be, assigned to him. Southward, ever southward," was the battle cry. Southward to meet the foe man, an army clad in gray." For four long years the din of battle resounded through the land. For four long years there was an incessant boom of cannon, a rattle of musketry, the clash of steei upon steel For four long years the army in gray proved a valiant foeman for the army in blue. Sons of the north and of the south fell upon hundreds of stubbornly contested battlegrounds, and found a last long resting place side by side in nameless The prayers that ascended unto heaven from those battlefields were for graves. both blue and gray; one bugle's strains sounded the final "taps for the valiant sons of both the north and south. PATENTS Protect your Ideas they may bring you wealth. Patents, Caveats, Trade Marks and Designs quickly obtained. Information furnished Fret pon applica'ion. Harry J. Robinson ATTORRCt At LAW AMO SOLICITOR Of RAUHTS 103 HCRCARTIIC BLOCK, 8ALT LAM CUT, UTAH Delivered the Goods. The late Senator M. S. Quay, of Pennsylvania, kept all the lettera hta constituents wrote to him asking for favors, aays the Saturday Evening Post. He had stacks of them when his last great fight for the senate came along. Then he sorted out the letters, eliminating those from people who were dead and on the back of each letter wrote: "Dear John or Hill: Do you remember when you wrote me this letter and do you remember that I did what yon asked? . I want your help now In my fight for the senate. Can I have it?" The politicians In Pennsylvania say those letters matted to the original senders with Quay's request on the backs of them, had as much as any one thing to do with Quay's winning hla fight 'Marie Corelli on Baby Talk." When a man la born he at once displays that fractious and fickle disposition which ia ao often significant of Ida future development and woman baa to carry him up and down In her arms, talking nonsense to him, or, aa It Is called, "baby language." She knows she has to begin that way, because be would not understand sense. Were Superstitious, Too. woman who takes her super tltlona seriously started to enter a big department store one morning last week when she noticed a porter on a tall ateplndder that stretched directly across the doorway, aaya the New York Press. In spite of the fact that there were five women behind her eager to pass Into the shop she came to a sudden halt, looked up at the r and cried out, "Oh, I'll never walk tinder that." saying which she turned and strode away. Before she bad gone far her sense of humor rose superior to her fear of ladders, and sha look'd to see If her remark hnd had an, effect on those who had been within sound of her votco. Walking directly behind her were the five women who hnd heard her A lad-tie- Vulgarized Fashions. It seems almost hopeless now for a fashion of any kind to be really exclusive: fashions do not drift downwards gradually nowadays, but arrive simultaneously for rich and poor alike vulgarised and crude, It Is true, hut the type will bo found to be the saiuo. London Tatter. Near half a century has passed away since the disbanding of those two mighty armies ; since the victorious blue and the defeated gray parted with a handshake at Appomattox. The heartaches and pain of four years of strife swallowed up in the Back to the plow and the factory, back glories of peace and a reunited nation. to the store and office, back to the pulpit qnd school room, back to the du s of peace, to the work of repairing the devastations of war, went Columbias sons, north and south. As we gather today with spring flow, ers to do severance to the heroes whe have gone we must look back that hall a century to review those scenes ol conflict The cannon that then dealt death and destruction are today moss covered anc buried beneath the debris of the battlefields of old. ft wMmZi 'in Time has healed the ravages of war, and covered with a softening hand the evidences of that four years of warfare. But we have the remaining d veterans, and the graves of those passed away, to remind us of the valor ol Columbias sons. gray-haire- s. i The generation of today has not for gotten, and the generations yet unborn will not forget, the care due these final resting places of a nations dead. We scatter flowers upon them in token of our appreciation of their services to their country of yesterday, our c ntry of today. Whatever their place in life, whatever their station, whatever their fortune, they are deserving of equal honor at our hands. And unto them a grateful nation has dedicated this day; a day on which we, w ith freshest flow ers, pay tribute to the memory of the nations heroes. In the immortal words of him who called that army in blue into being; who directed it during its hard fought campaigns ; who hid the men that comprised it a God speed back to their homes when its work was done : " But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we cannot hallow this ground. Th brave men, living or dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our power to add or detract. The world will little note, nor long remember, what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here." Wright A. Patterson. M RS. GEO. A. J AtoEj MRS.NELLIE suffered ao 1 did not care what I on A nervous irritable worann. often me, and family despair; the verge of hysterics, is a source of covery. niy Physicians failed s, v!! who under, coiues to was urewi to try .Lydia everyone misery misand and unhappy Vegetable Compound aiul I w&ntw her influence, that It ha entirely curat me. I in erable herself. the finest medicine on earth VS is drive not only Such women to trwl1 it all mv recommending unfit from home but arc wholly Girl's Rash Spread and Grew Worse acquaintances. children. to govern Perfect Care Mrs. Geo, A. James, a lit. Under Specialist's The ills of women act like a fire of Fredonia, N. Y, resident Cure by Cuticura Remedies. nerves, consequently the brand upon Dear Mrs. Pinkham: s of the nervous prostra"I waa in a terribly mn down nervous despondency, the When my daughter was a baby she tion, and hail nervous prostration , had a breaking out behind the ears. "blues, sleeplessness, and nervous in fact i hail not arise from some female troulilo. since my children were born, TV The doctor said that she would out- irri'abilitv of women makham hns-ban- seven-tenth- grow It, and It did get somewhat better until she was about fifteen years old, and after that she could get nothing that would drive it away. She was always applying something in the way of salves. It troubled her behind the knees, opposite the elbows,, back of the neck and ears, under the chin, and then It got on the face. That was about three years ago. She took treatment with a specialist and seemed to get worse all the time. We were then advised to try the Cuticura Remedies, and now I don't see any breaking out. M. Curley, Sixteenth St., Bay City, Mich., May 20. 1906. 11-1- 9 Yale University Wealthy. Accordng to the Yale Alumni Weekly, the property of the university In New Haven which Is exempted from taxation, Is appraised at 19.43t.150, an increase of $255,000 over the appraised tax exemptions of last year, though this Increase does not necessarily represent actual additional values subtracted from the New Haven grand list. Of the total exemptions about $1,370,000 belongs to the Sheffield Scientific School. The old campus, as land. Is valued at $1,033,400, and the buildings on this campus at $2,483,500. The appraisals are high on many of the buildings, as compared to actual cost. The valuations are placed, and as they are exemptions there has been no occasion to appeal for their reduction. n t, , dition worked on my nerves and I ritaide and miserable. I bad remedies without getting nrarh iLI Lydia E. Pinkhnmtj Vegetable (wj brought me bock to health and rtnJ! has also carried me safely thmll Change of Life. 1 cannot too mi recommend your medicine." Mrs. Pinkhams Invitation Women suffering from female weakness are communicate promptly Pinkham, three patients." North Star's Brilliant Light. The north star Is estimated to shine with a light 199 times mure brilliant ihsa that of the fruo. any f( invite' with Mass. Fm at Lynn. s r eon 6 U! a Womans Remedy for Womessi Those who believe in quality use BAKING I POWDER - f- A T FIT THE GROCER Wife Made the Suggeatlon. A grocer has excellent opportunity to know the effects of speciul foods on hls customers. A Cleveland grocer has a long list of customers that have been helped In health by leaving off Coffee and Ublng iostum Food Coffee. He Bays, regarding his own expte rlence; "Two year ago I had been drinking coffee and must say that I was almost wrecked In my nerves. "Particularly in tho morning I was so Irritable and upset that 1 could hardly wait until the coffee was served, and then I had no appetite for breakfast and did not feci like attend-loto my store duties. "One day my wifo suggested that Inasmuch as 1 was selling so much Postum there must be some merit In It and suggested that we try it I took home a package and ho prepared It according to directions. The result waa a very happy one, My nervousness gradually disappeared and to day I A nil right. 1 would advise everyone affected In any way with nervousness or atomach trouble, to leave off coffee and use Postum Food Coffee." "There a Reason." Read, "The Road to Wollvlllc," in pkga. tebe l!y s Kir w It M :ido com Makes all baking healthful. Why pay more for inferior F0 i, n ittni powders? JAQUES Siamese Objeod to Walking. The Siamese, above all nations In the world, hate to walk; no such mode of progression Is tolerated by a Siamese .if he or she can by any means ride. A Venetian gondolier will walk sometimes; even a Hollander will rid on bis rough cart; but a Bangkok man not If he can help It. His family boat for him. Windsor Magazine. 1 ckftl materials. Oversight When Chappie got up the other moruing he wandered around his apartment In his pretty pink pajamas, the very picture of woe. What's the matter, sir?" Inquired hls valet. "1 don't know, Alphonse," he groaned; "1 passed a most unhappy night. Alphonse looked him over carefully. Oh, sir." he exclaimed. "I know what was the matter. The trousers of your pajutnas were not creased. You must be more careful, sir. Those I had prepared for you were hanging across the foot of the bed." The 1 Made from pure, carefully tested OUNCES :o oked 25 ounces for 25 cents MFC. Chicago BALLARDS SNOW LINIMENT Is a Quick and Permanent Cure for hal Rheumatism, Cuts, Sprains, Wounds, Neuralgia, Headache, Old Sores, Corns, unions, Galls, Bruises, Contracted Muscles, Lame Back, Stiff Joints, t,r?,S Chilblains, Ringbone, Pollevil, Bums, Scalds, and ALL THE ILLS THAT FLESH IS Hftt? TO. Three Sizes, 25c, 50c and $1. 'SFrAwla? f- - ALLENS OO i'2TCirIr 1 ' J FOOT-EAS- .1 1. 1, gold by all Dm F' T1r'd Hot Ach,na A SUBSTITUTE. 10.1 WATIRPROor aaa1 SSSk'sgs? Low in Hrlew Tt l'4 i S oo every bos. WET WEATHER WORK 7rt rtai This ilgnslnr E healthful ANtt pleasant IF YOU WEAR dt ixs b. mmm To Cf wtiituu F nw tin. g Left Him Pleasant Thoughts. Doctor Now, dont worry, v hatever you do. A man with heart discasn can't afford to worry. Avoid all company of any kind, drink nothing whatsoever, and on no aeeount touch meat and vegetables. By the bye, I won't te ablo to call again till Wed no lay, aa I have to attend the funerals of to V symptoms given, the trouble located and the quickest and m way of recovery advised. Outol vast volume of experience ia tur female ills Mrs, Ifinkhatn probt has the very knowledge that will; your case. Her advice 1b free Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "I was a wreck from nervous prostration . always helpfuL Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs and today holds the reconi the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any medicine world has ever known, and thousands of voluntary testimonials in file in the laboratory at Lynn, Mass., which testify to its wonderful n, Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compoand Desert Lands Made Fertile. According to official figures, since the reclamation law was enacted bj congress In 1902, eight towns have been built and 10,000 people have settled on what were desert lands. One hundred miles of branch railways have been built. 1.267 miles of canals have been dug. many of which carry whole rivers, and 47 tunnels have been excavated. It Is estimated that the territory embraced In what Is known as the arid regions of the United States covers 600,000,000 acres, of which about 60.000.000 acres are subject to Irrigation and can bo converted Into farms as productive as lands in the most favored sections. An organic derangement. Do you experience fits of depression with restlessness alternating with extreme irritability ? Do yon suffer from pains in the abdominal region, pel ns, nervous backache, bearing-dowdyspepsia, sleeplessness, and almost so, continually cross and snappy? Ifconyour nerves aro in a shattered dition anc you are threatened with nervous prostration. Proof is monumental that nothing in the world is better for nervous troubles of women than Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs. Thousands and thousands of women can testify to this fact. Mrs. Nellie Makham. of 151 Morgan St., Buffalo. N. Y., writes: A lllllfW Shd l " end her Shwilutrly (res Ot I'axiuq Willi iioii J"1 tl'Mi ami S'tiuln. tostinu your niuuo snd address uu PAira fsetlnns, siirh as tissid eaiun h snd hiflaimuuUnn mu. ills si,,, ryos so """III. by dlm't i iron utlvrf puw.r over lit. tri ordinal y.mt ,U,., i.. 1ih-i- 1 Imu .mills of Wnitii'U nimn.miiug it ev.ry ILL0?1" . V" tie iln) Ron NOTH I! 1'UIU.X llh, c |