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Show ' I f t I t " ) pbescriptioh. I ugtvjrr. ELABORATE STOCK BARK MISSOURI STOCKMAN Our ten dollar watch for Ratlier Is a wonder; nickel, jewelled, Structure so Built to Have All Animals Under Same Roof and Keep Each Department Separate. Odd-Shap- ed Tell us what you need. We are watch experts. - v j into pieces about one-inc- square. Put h of a pound of sliced bacon in a frying pan, and try out the lat. Dust the meat thickly with flour and one-quart- liK first day of spring Is due to q iirifra arrive if the talemlar does not breaiv down, about the twenty-firs- t of SSB-BtH- 1 March, when the earth turns the corner of Sun alley and starts for Summer street. But the day is not on the time table at all. spring It comes when it is ready. Henry Van Dyke, f Early Spring Vegetables. . Vegetables are the best of blood purifiers and tonics, and at this si ;v son of the year spinach and cress are plentiful and should be eaten freely. Spinach has been called the broom of the blood. It contains iron, which is needed to keep the blood in good condition. Lettuce, the cheap and green vegetable, is a crisp and dainty Eaiad green, which may be raised two weeks earlier than Is commonly grown If a bed is made and a frame about six feet long and three feet wide pressed down into the mellow earth. Bank the soil well up around the sides and sow the lettuce. Cover the top with thih cheese cloth, held in place by tacks on one side and end, the other by shingle nails over which the cloth may be fastened and removed to pick the lettuce. The sun and air has free access to the plants. If there Is a frosty night, the frame may be protected by a rug or carpet. Such a bed will well repay one for the trouble of planting and care. Lettuce With Peanuts. Sprinkle and drained lettuce with chopped peanuts and serve with French dressing. Three tablespoonfuls of olive oil, a tablespoon of vinegar, a half teaspoonful of salt and a few dashes of cayenne pepper. Lettuce served with orange Juice and sugar makes a very nice saiad for those who cannot eat anything containing an acid. Another delicious salad for the spring time is lettuce and a few carefully broken sections of grape fruit sprinkled with nuts and served with mayonnaise dressing. Celery Is another vegetable which Is especially adapted to combinations with other vegetables and fruits as 6alads. Served as a simple relish it Is perhaps the best enjoyed. Water cress with a French dressing Is a most desirable salad to use in the spring, as cress is a blood purifier as well as spinach. h POR m'P'YS P E PS h fArAR RH w STOHM1 A suspicious woman raises a large crop of doubts. always-ob-tainabl- Garfield Tea purifies the blood, eradicates rheumatism, gout and other diseases. What we are doing speaks with greater force than what we are saying. Royston. Constipation onuses and seriously aggra Tates many diseases, it is thoroughly cuied by Dr. Pierces Pellets. Tiny granules. sugar-coate- A Real d Treat. What are ye eatin? dimes worth o salt wid "A peanuts in it. some Judge. Much Easier to Handle. Mabel Fathers so glad you're a poet. Scribbler Ah, like yourself, he adores poetry? Mabel Oh, no. But you see poets cant fight. The last lover of mine he tried to throw out was a football player! Moissants Comparison. "The late John B. Moissant was a genial as well as a skillful airman, said a Chicago editor. "I remember well a visit he once made me, with drawings of an aeroplane of his own invention under his arm. I joked him a little about the machine it certainly had a heavy, awkward look. But he said with a laugh: " Oh, don't Judge even an aeroplane by its outside. What If the man who discovered the oyster hadnt stopped to pry open the shell? " Eggsactlng. Dr. J. S. Slack, the English food expert, said in a recent lecture in Duluth: The secret of health is two meals a day with an occasional fast. But people wont avail themselves of this superb secret. It Is too unpleasant like the fresh egg. A gentleman, after cutting the top of? a egg, summoned the waiter and said: Waiter, take this egg back to the kitchen, wring Its neck, and grill It for me. soft-boile- Tuberculosis in Japan. Japan is not lagging behind in the The tuberculosis. tight, against Japan Health association has over 200,000 local members, and carries on a campaign of lectures In the cities and towns of the country. Tuberculosis Is increasing In Japan, due chiefly, Prof. S. Kitasato of Tokyo says, to the rapid development of the factory system of Industry, the introduction of modern methods and manners of civilization and the increasing acuteness of the struggle for existence. Floor Plan of Stock Barn. The stock barn herewith Illustrated was planned for a Missouri stockman, writes J. E. Bridgman in the Orange Judd Farmer. The rather odd shape was adopted for several reasons: First, to have ail the stock under one roof; second, to keep each department All gutters are drained to this manure pit. The exterior and Interior are covered with matched sheathing, which i3 stripped with 1x2 Inch strips. The strips are in turn covered with metal lath, and the lath covered with two separate from the other departments; coats of Portland cement. All ceilthird, to reduce to the minimum the ings are treated In the same manner, amount of labor required for feeding except the sheathing is not used. the stock; fourth, to save and eco- The roof is covered with the best nomically use every pound of manure. grade of asbestos felt roofing, which The floor plan of the structure i3 makes it practically a fireproof barn. 34xlG0 feet from east to west, and The foundation is of native limestone, 34x134 feet from north to south, and for the reason that stone can be sethe two ells for hogs and sheep are cured on the farm at a very slight each 30x63 feet. The walls are 10 cost. feet to the eaves, and the roof is The silos, set on cement pits four which leaves a clear feet deep, are built with space through the entire loft for studs, set 12 Inches on centers; wooden hoops are bent around storing hay, etc. All partitions are eight feet, except over the south front, the outside, and are doubled, one bewhere they are 10 feet from the feed tween each door and one In the cenrooms to the south front. This Is ter of each door. The doors are 24x30 done to allow for driving In a load inches square, with spaces beof hay in stormy weather. - There are tween. The hoops are covered with 43 cow stalls, three bull stalls, two strips, and treated In the hospital stalls and three calf pens. same manner as the walls of the barn. The horse barn has eight single stalls The inside walls of the silos are lined and five large box stalls; the sheep with paving brick laid In bqrn has six sheep pens 11x21 feet a thin cement. All floors of the barn are of cement, each, and two lamb pens; the hog house has 12 pens 8x11 feet each, also with wood slats for the horses. The a feed and killing room 15x29 feet. horses have cast-irogutters, but the The south front has a tool room, cows have both the gutters and the engine room and a watchman's room. mangers made of cement, and the Stairways are located in both north mangers so arranged that they may and south ends of the barn. The feed be flooded with water. The, floors are rooms for horses and cows are so ar- all trapped with drain traps, and the ranged that the silage may be dropped entire barn may he washed with a down the small chute in front of the hose in a short time. The horses are silos. The door of this chute is al- watered at the cement trough located ways closed, so that no odors may en- north of the east feed room, and the ter the row barn. A small gas en- hogs and sheep are watered with a gine Is used for elevating the ground hose. The barn loft is supported on feed to six hopper-shapegas pipe, and all cow stalls bins, lo- three-inccated over the feed rooms. The feed are of wood, with wire guards on top. is drawn from the bins through small This barn is doubtless too large for many of us, hut there are many things spout3 as wanted. Bins for storing feed for hogs and to be learned from it. sheep are located over the sheep and Ensilage. hog barns. All feed is handled with feed carriers, and the tracks run Ensilage is one of the cheapest sucthrough all parts of the barn. All culent feeds that can be supplied to manure and litter is also handled with farm animals during the winter. It Is carriers, and when not spread at once, good feed, handy to deal cut and very Is stored in a cement manure house. much relished by all classes of stock. x6-inc- h h Ever rend (lie above letter t A new from time to time. The? ore Pennine, true, and full of huntna interest. one appear i h hard-burne- d n d .yvH ; v ETOND all wealth, honor, or even health, Is the attachment we form to noble souls, because to become one with the good, generous and true, Is to become In a measure good, generous and true ourselves. T. Arnold. h .Serving the Easter Egg. At a formal breakfast, all precautions should be taken to insure the freshness of the eggs. A conscientious hostess would, be much mortified if she served chicken out of its proper course. Easter Table Decoration. When using eggs for cooking, break them at the small end and save the shells after Use these removing the contents. dainty receptacles set in moss holding spring beauties or violets. They may be weighted with a little sand in each to keep them In an upright position. During the meatless days of Lent the egg is a favorite food and the following recipes may be suggestive to the busy housewife: Grandmothers Favorite Egg Dish. Put a tablespoonful of butter In an omelet pan, cover with fine bread crumbs. Over this lay thin siloes of cheese. Season a few well beaten eggs, the number depending on the size of the family to be served, and pour over this, cover closely and heat slowly. When the white of the egg Is opaque serve at once. Poached Eggs a la Reine. Cover circular pieces of toasted bread with sliced fresh mushrooms sauted in butter and moistened with cream. Poach eggs and arrange on the mushrooms. Pour over a white sauce to which is added a sprinkling of cheese, and brown in the oven. Garnish with parsley. Egos and Potatoes. Parboil three potatoes, drain and put a layer In a baklrg dish, then a layer of hard-- , cooked eggs. Season well, add a bit of onion juice and a layer of white sauce sprinkled with cheese. Repeat crumbs. and finish with buttered Brown In a hot oven. States is 1800,000,000, or an average When frying eggs, sprinkle a little profit of $36.36 per cow. If more atflour over the pan before adding the tention was paid to feeding and breedeggs. Allow it to brown before droping it should be easy to increase the ping in the eggs. cow one-tentto at least average profit per of the profit made by Sophie Nineteenth of Hood farm, which would raise the total to $1,240,000,000, an Increase of $440,000,000. I Another world's record has been broken. The new queen of the dairy Is a beautiful Jersey cow named Sophie Nineteenth of Ilood Farm, owned and tested at Hood farm, Lowell, Mass. She is the champion Jersey for milk an I butter fat production of cows between four and five years of age. ending During the 12 months December 31, 1910, on a test authenticated by the Massachusetts Agricultural college, under the rules of the American Jersey Cattle club, Sophie Nineteenth of Hood farm gave 14,373 pounds 3 ounces milk, testing 1,011 pounds 5 ounces butter or over half a An accurate account was kept ton. of her feed, and her milk sold at ten cents per quart made a profit of Customers for Farmers. It pays to go down to the city and work up a trade for the farm produce. Hunt up customers for the butter, eggs, apples, potatoes, cabbage and nil such stuff. Have a regular market day when you can always be found there. Folks will expect you and de(565.22. pend on you. They will pay you cash The United States department of and as good prices aa they would have igricultures estimate in round num-ser- s to pay at the store, because they get of he wealth produced each year better weight and measure and fresh22,000,000 cows in the United er produce. the iy 4I V AVXA dmaglne that they com- munlcate their virtue or vtr-only by overt actions and do not see thut virtue or vice emit a breath every V Some New Ways of Serving Seef. Beef, the old standby of the cook, may be given variety by the resourceful cook. Sour meat Is a dish which is a favorite among the Germans, and Is well liked by many others of the American nationality. Sour Beef. Cut two pounds of beef . SALT brown in this hot fat. When brown, a skimmer into the stew pan. Add two tablespoonfuls of flour to the fat in the pan. When brown add a pint of water. When boilirg, pour over the meat; cover and simmer gently for an hour, then add one small onion speed, one bay leaf, a of chopped pa. sky, a small piece of lemon peel, a teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce, and one of vinegar. Cover and simmer until tender. two Goulash. Take Hungarian pounds of beef from the round, wipe and cut in finger lengths. Put one tablespoonful of olive oil In a stew pan. Add an onion chopped fine and cook slowly until a golden brown. Add two tablespoonfuls of flour and brown. Stir into this one teaspoonful of salt, a dash of paprika and a pint of beef stock. When thickened and smooth add the meat, cover closely and simmer for two hours. Serve with potato balls. 170 st LAKE CIIY. UtAlt remove with f OS ft A POSITIVE and PERMANENT CORE FOR Crunksnness anJ Opium Diseases. Thr oo tJj l. publicity, ao oickne?. ladiei THE KrELr.I in their own homes. 334 V. Sooth Temple Street, Salt Uko IN-- $ City. table-spoonf- BEING THE ONLY SEEDSMEN In the country making thoro of Seed-- , w e lead fill competitors. I leld our for Write Big Free Catalog of PORTER-- ALTON CO., Silt Lake City 177 MAIN er., SALT LANS CITY PROFESSIONAL ANO AMATEUR PHOTO EXPERT KOOAK FINISHING SUPPLIES Breslau of Beef. Beat the yolks of three eggs until light; add to them one pound of cold chopped beef, one IllIITFn VSflFl til J1KN ANl) WOMEN to Learn BarberTraile ill KiKht Weeks. Tuition, witli set of tools, $n5. With partial set of tools, $13. With your own tools W3. Address Molar Barber Collega 13 Commercial Street, Salt Lake City, Utah. 1 cup of beef stock, two tablespoonfuls f of butter, cup of stale breadcrumbs, one-hal- f pint of cream, one tablespoonful of chped parsley, one teaspoonfui of salt and a few dashes of cayenne pepper. Bake in custard cups well greased and standing in water. When done, turn out on pieces of toast and pour around them a tomato 6auce. When the family Is small and one can buy only a three-pounpiece of beef, have it as chunky as possible. A long thin piece Is not nearly so one-hal- The Brides Edict. Here comes the bride, Maude Fulton, as a demure beauty and her proud, escort joined the supper party. she told a story on her blushing hailed young Then young friend. d I live at the same hotel with Ethel, said Miss Fulton, t.a sit at he same table with her. Yesterday morning she pouted at breakfast, suited at luncheon and at dinner was so cold that her adoring young husband was almost distracted. From soup to coffee he pleaded abjectly ti at least be told the nature of his offense. Finally Ethels Ups began to quiver and a great big tear splashed into her finger bowl. Jack, she burst forth, if I ever dream again that you have kissed another woman Ill never speak to you HEN the dwelling is cramped, the purse limited, the table modest, a woman who has the gitt finds a way to make order, fitness and convenience reign In her house. She puts care and art Into everything she undertakes. To do well what one has to do, Is not In her eyes the privilege of the rich, but the right of all. That Is 'her aim Youngs and she knows how to give her home a B3 long as I live! dignity and an attractiveness that the dwellings of princes If everything Is left to mercenaries cannot possess. Brief All Around. A young woman from the east, who Possibilities. 8 Seattle man, recently had t ricrrled In the minds of most people there a novel experience when she engaged is a prejudice anything against warmed over or served the second her first Chinese cook. she asked Whats your name? time. setTo the economical housekeeper the when the preliminaries had been tled. in a leftovers are great problem and said My name Hong Long Loo, these days of high prices great care should be used that nothing is the Celestial, with much gravity. And I am Mrs. Harrington Richard wasted. Meats being our most expenI said his employer. sive foods, should be purchased with Buckingham, care. The most expensive meats are am afraid I shall never be able to renot any more nutritive than the member your name its so long. I shall call you John. cheaper cuts. All light, returned the CnJnese, Corn Beef Hash. Chop corn beei that has been cooked with vegetables with a suspicion of a smile Your in a boiled dinner. Take equal parts namee too longee, too. I call yon of cold cooked cabbage, turnip, carrot, Charles." Harpers Magazine. and potato. Season with salt and pepOur Doctors. per and put into a frying pan, moisten with hot water. Brown well and fold The late Count Tolstoi loathed over on a platter like an omelet. Gar- physicians, said, at a dinner in Washnish with parsley. ington, a Russian diplomat- Victoria Chicken. Make a sauce ot You remember how Tolstoi ridia fourth of a cup each of flour and culed physicians in War and Peace? butter and a cup of chicken stock. Well, I heard him ridicule three of To this add a cup of mushrooms, a them to their faces over a vegetarian cup of drained peas, cup ol dinner at Yasnaya Polyana. tomato pulp and a cup and a half ol Physicians, he said bitterly, lookminced chicken. Add the seasoning ing up from a plate of lentils, may be necessary, and serve on toast. divided into two classes the radicals, Cook the bones left from the chick- who kill you, and the conservatives, en, allowing them to simmer slowly who let you die. several hours; add to this 6tock His Limitations. any gravy or stock that is left. When ready to serve add the peas left from George, said Sirs. Youngfathen the can In making Victoria chicken heres a story of a New York policeand half a cup of grated cheese. man who all alone stopped a band of When you have a little cold roast anarchists. Could you do or steak left over, cut it in fine pieces howling that George? sprinkle it over a layer of cold cooked cried Mr. Who, me? potatoes In a baking pan, add a little I can't even stop a Why, minced onion and a cupful of tomababy. toes. Season with salt, pepper and a howling And he resumed his walk. teaspoon of Worcestershire sauce and bake until well heated through. A Friendly Tip. Fruit Juice ruay be used with a litadvise Saplelgh Would you er tle gelatine to make a nice salad oi dessert. Pour the juice, thickened me to er marry a beautiful girl or v ith a little geatine. over any fresh a sensible girl? Hammersley Im afraid you'll nevcut fruit er be able to marry either, old man. Sapleigh Why not? Hammersley Well, a beautiful girl could do better and a sensible girl would know better. Exchange. A Kansas Proclamation. An Anthony man has Issued the fol What the Use. lowing proclamation: "Neighbor, am a man of peace I want no trou Optimist Yes, sir, if youll drink I want to make no trouble ble. foi buttermilk three times a day youll I have a wife and children others live ten years longer. I also and they need me have I Pessimist But whats the use of house, a lawn and a garden an living ten years knter if you have to about to put some seed In my gardet drink buttermLk u.ree times a day? beds. have bought a gun and som Judge. am not a cracl shells, and while A Misunderstanding. shot, I think I can hit chickens It li my purpose to try if any come around The following anecdote is related where my blue grass is struggling and of the late Lord Glasgow: my onions are showing their bald His lordship was traveling by rail bead3. in Scotland one day and tendered a fiver to the booking clerk for a Prisoners Do Valuable Work. ticket In England, at Dartmoor, the pri Put your name on it said the oners have been engaged In reclaim youth. ing the moorland, working even hi win Lord Glasgow Indorsed it Glaster. Agricultural prisons have beei as gow, established In England. New Soutl note back. requested, and handed the Wales. Prussia, Austria. Hungary Here, you old idiot! cried the Switzerland. France, Russia and Bel want to know who you are, clerk, glum. not where you aie going to. Left-ove- CHAMPION JERSEY FOR MILK COFFEE HEART Very Plain In Some People. A great many people go on suffering from annoying ailments for a long time before they can get their own consent to give up the Indulgence from which their trouble arises. A gentleman In Brooklyn describes his experience, as follows; I became satisfied some months ago that I owed the palpitation of the heart from which I suffered almost daily, to the use of coffee, (I had been a coffee drinker for 30 years) but I found it very hard to give up the beverage. One day I ran across a very sensible and straightforward presentation of the claims of Postum, and was so Impressed thereby that I concluded to give it a trial. My experience with it was unsatisfactory till I learned how It ought to be prepared by thorough boiling for not less than 15 or 20 minutes. After I learned that lesson there was no trouble. Postum proved to he a most palatable and satisfactory hot beverage, and I have used it ever since. The effect on my health has been most salutary. The heart palpitation from which I used to suffer so much, particularly after breakfast, has disappeared and I never have a return of It except when I dine or lunch away from home and drink the old kind of coffee because Postum Is not served. I fird that Postum cheers and Invigorates while It produces no harmful Name given by Postum stimulation. Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ten days trial proves an eye opener to many. Read the little book, The Road to Theres a Rea-eoWellville, in pkgs. well-washe- d 2x4-inc- h lx2-inc- stand- ard grade movement in either open r closed case; guaranteed for 20 ars wear. Otlu rs up to $00. r one-ha- I lf Young-fathe- r. I I 1 1 1 J |