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Show TIPS FOR LOVER OF FLOAERSl : i .v r Plant Sweet Peas In Trenches Sli Inches Dee? Chrysanthemums Grow From Seed or Cuttlnge. Plant the sweet peas early io trenches fully six Inches deep, covering but lightly at first, drawing the soli around the plants as they reach up. THINNING OF This will give better root by which FOREST TREES to withstanding the dry heat by and by. Plant as soon as possible Mult Hava Abundanct of Sunlight and Air to Product Beit Remit How to Cut. Thy If we want strong, healthy trees In the woodlot It la Just important that we thin out the trees a It is to thin out the young fruit. The pictures how wbat may be accomplished by Root room in fair soil is all the beautiful white Day Lily asks. It Is perfectly hardy, likes moist situations, A plant hut will do with little water. for the busy housewife. may be raised Chrysanthemums from seeds or from cuttings and sprouts from old roots. If the seeds are sown early In boxes and trace planted the plants will bloom the first year. There may be many poor ones from seed. Do not forget the hardy everbloom-tnInclude roses when ordering for vines some hardy Dowering screens for the porches, back fences and summer arbors. Prairie roses woodbines, evergreen honeysuckles, clematis in variety, wistarias, bitter sweet, trumpet vine and the harmless wood Ivies are all fine. GETTING CLEARING SAGE BRUSH OF Much Curious Customs Observed Different Countries. in Cheapest and Best Way Is to Use Gang Plow. Roumanla Holds a Fair for Cupid In Japan, If a Lover Jilts His Sweetheart, She Prays to Family God to Kill Him. Leveling Land for Irrigation Is Next Important Step Preliminary Survey 6hould Be Made to Determine the 8lope. Roumanla. They way with a maid, is always a thing worth noting; also the various methods of courtship which prevail In different parts of the world. According to the nationality of your best girl, your courtstilp system should be organized. In Roumanla once every year a fair of marriageable girls ie held. The girl with her relatives, gets Into a wagon, which also contains her dowry linen, furniture, and household Land cotered with scattering aage brush cau be cleared In several ways If the soli is soft and not too stony, the cheapest and best way Is to plow the sagebrush out Take a riding plow- - a gang plow Is better remove the mold boards and use only the share and landside of the plow. Keep the share sharp and In sharpening It draw the point down a little so that It will bold well In the soil. This plow will cut off most of the brush without turning It under, because the mold boards have been removed After the soil has been plowed, the next In tep Is to rake up the sagebrush. this case the rake need not be so made as for use on land which has been railed or dragged Oft-a strong sulky horse rake will suf- Constanta, of a man fice. t l ? i If the land is level and a hay crop is to be seeded, no further plowing Is Ground 3hou!d Be Forked Up and Well Mellowed and Then Covered Two Inches with Manure, accessary, although It generally pays the long run to plow after clearing, if economies of time or money do not Interfere. In any event we would give a disking and a to fine the surface. Land covered with short, scrubby sagebrush Is cleared most cheaply by grubbing out with a mattock or grub hoe. A mattock drawn out thin and wide on Its hoe side Is preferable. has Sagebrush only one main or tap root and the blow should be so directed as to strike It about an Inch under the surface where it will out off easily. It Is a simple matter to rake up the brush cleared by hand and an ordinary hay rake will do the work satisfactorily. Land cleared by hand will be difficult to plow because all the roots have been left In the ground. The plow will have to cut them off and the roots will later inconvenience the rancher by clogging up the harrow. There are other methods of clearmachines ing sagebrush and many have been Invented for the purpose. A number of these are successful, but the ordinary man who has a limited acreage to clear finds it Inexpedient tq tie up too much of his capital in machinery of this kind. It costs $6 or 18 an acre to clear and plow sagebrush land. Leveling new land after the agebrush Is cleared off la a hard process to reduce to adequate description, as the leveling depends up-athe nature of the tract and to give the general rules about the work would be only touching the high places. However, there are a few salient features that can be laid down as general axioms. Tbe first of these is that water will not run up hill and the second Is that It will run down hill. This seems simple but is not sb ilmple as it seems. Water turned Into a ditch that has too much fall will cut the soil away and will pass through so rapidly that It will not scrape out well on the Idea. The whole proposition In leveling Is to strike the happy medium between these two extremes. Small lumps should be taken off with a drag jr float. This Instrument is generally made of two 2x6s or 2x8s, thirty feet long for eide pieces, placed on edge ten or twelve feet apart, to which is attached three cross boards, one near each end of the side pieces, and the The boards third near the middle. near the ends should not extend below the edges of the side pieces, while the middle board should extend an inch jr so below the side pieces. The portion of these erase boards will depend' upon the soli as they must be arranged so as not to clog nor dig In so ieep as to make It Impossible to pull. Four to six horses will be required to haul this drag. The small knolls and bumps having been emoothed down, the next step across the Is to decide which way land the water is to be run. It Is not possible to determine this with the naked eye, and a preliminary survey hould be made to determine the general slope. In leveling with the drag there will not be excessive hauling of dirt If tbe tract Is to be leveled to the draw, which means that the natural contour of the land will be adhered ta ss closely as possible. The laterals will not run straight with the compass, but the water will be taken out of the bead ditches along the crest of the ridge and turned Into the small ditches which, running at the proper fall, will take the water over the land and discharge it Into the waste ditches after the soil has been watered. I ! i Spring-plantefruit and ornamental trees and bushes should have tke ground forked up and well mellowed and then covered two Inches deep with long manure, straw, corn stalks, rotted leaves, weeds or freshly cut and Strong Straight. grass. This mulch will keep the soil thinning. They are from photographs cool and moist. If the summer la hot taken by A. F. Hawes, state forester and dry give to each tree one or two buckets of water. Apply the water of Connecticut In Fig. 1 the trees in the center of late In the evening, spread It slowly the group are strong and straight, but around the trunk of tree so It can the smaller ones form a mass of foli- reach the roots. If the water Is age, the removal of which helped the dashed against the stem most of It others. This Is shown by the trees in will run off the hard ground and It Fig. $. The trees left standing are will be of little benefit to the tree now exposed to the light and free from the sapping by the mass of foliage and small trees which have been removed and will grow into strong, tall trees. In cutting mature timber the chief concern Is to secure satisfactory reproduction as soon as possible. The "group method" is generilly the best Garden Cart and Wheelbarrow. adopted tor farm woodlot. Select a f an average fully On of the spot, or several spots, If one will not supply what la wanted, where the for- trees that die the first summer could have been aaved bad they been propest crop is ripest possibly overripe and clear, with due care for young erly mulched and given a little water growth, a hole In the forest, taking when needed. care that the diameter of this hole is Young trees planted In exposed ponot more than two or three times the sitions, where they are liable to heavy wind and rainstorms, should be staked height of the surrounding trees. Gradually widen these holes by cut- and the trees tied to the etakee with ting in concentric rings about them a rye straw or canvas band. An old nntii the whole area has been cut sail cut into strips makes excellent bands. To keep the roots from being ewer. It should be borne in mind, however, loosened, where ground la soft, place that if in any one year more wood la four or five large stones on top of the mulch close up to the stem of tree. Two of the most bandy implements on the farm lor general, wheelwork, are the barrow and cart one-hal- three-wheele- A Masa of Foliage. Cut than grows on the whole woodlot In that year the necessary wood capital Is diminished. ! Ready for Young Trees. While the stock is coming,, prepare the ground. It will not be necessary to add new soli as the trees have been selected with reference to the kind found where they are to be planted. Dig very large holes and fill them in. The trees always do better In filled ground than they do In that which has not been broken up. If the land Is sod, It would be well to plow the entire strip, as grass Is a great enemy to newly planted things. When the trees arrive, take them at once to some friable land near where they are to be planted and heel them In. Nursery stock is orten injured by being kept too long In boxes. After the plants srs heeled In It wtll be safe to transplant them to permanert placea any time within a week or ten daye from the um of their arrival. Planting Orohards. When planting an orchard we must remsmber that it Is a permanent Investment. and no pains in the preparation of the land or rsasonabls expensa of the purchase of good trees should be spared. Never buy treea from a RUIT VINES traveling salesman unless he produces FOR MULCHING credentials from a nursery that you Practice Prevents Growth of Weeds, know Is all fight. Moisture and Adds' Retain New Orchard Land. Needed Humus to 8oll. In preparing land for a new orchard, A successful West Virginia raspbertake Ume to plow It all very deeply ry grower gives the following reasons before a tree is set, and If there Is a tor mulching: hard "plow sole" or a tight subsoil, It prevent the growth of weeds. loosen It up with dynamlta. It retains moisture in the soil. It adds humus, ona of the necessary laments. It keeps the fruit clean and prevents mud at picking time. It saves labor, the cost of mulching in acre with forest leaves or straw Evergreens ought to be planted as sot exceeding $15. early aa possible. It prevents deep freestng. The currant must not be cultivated It makes the fruit more solid for deeply, for it is a shallow-rooteplant tultivation and better for shipping When buds begin to swell the time purposes. la right to It prevents the baking of the soil Prune sparingly and a little every used by tramping at picking time. year, is the best plan. It has the disadvantage of encouragJust as soon now as frost is out, tbe ing mice and establishing a surface ground will be ready for tree planting root system. However, we have not it is best to do top grafting on a noticed any serious damage from ei- mild day, if possible, during showery ther of these effects. weather. The cost of growing raspberries by In that order for fruit trees, you 1 to like call it. cant go wrong by putting in a few nature's method, as Is not very greet. Picking is a nice Jonathan apples. ob where there la no mud, no weeds The era of the haphaxard and care- tnd where the canes hsve been prop- less horticulturist and agriculturist erly pruned. has passed away. Dont leave any old canes standing s For orchard spraying a In the field. hose la best, and In :r , lengths of 50 feet. Ground for Rose Bushes, Soil for strawberries should be a A heavy loam or clay and gravel, deep, rich loam, capable of bolding a well drained, is suitable soli for rose good deal of moisture. hushes. A trench at least three feet It is not a good plan to plant tree deep should be dug and filled with al- while the ground is wet and soggy. commanure and ternate layers of Let it dry out a little. post and well worked up before the Any tendency to fancy shaped Sower roses are planted. beds and fancy flower stands and such After the plants have become well grlmcracks should he firmly supstarted they should atill receive ma- pressed. nure, and this should be applied every Do not expect satisfaction from bordeaux mixture that has stood foi spring in liberal quantities. Do not be afraid or giving your rose- j aa much as 24 hours. It deteriorate bushes a soli too rich. The richer It j quickly. is the more vigorous will be the When done spraying each day. r growth of your plants and the more seme clean water through the pump beautiful will tbe color of yojr flowers to wash out the array mf'-ururn1 avoid corrosion of the parts Where the whole area it cut over before the part cut first had time to grow to maturity a period will have to lollow during which the woodlot will top paying dividends f d top-gra- three-eighth- hall-inc- e f vw, More Needed for Ultimate Sue- - ceet Than Mere Planting tion of Ground Important Selec- FOR YOUNG TREES ATTENTION READY FOR ORCHARC In cross-draggin- g Peasants In Sunday Dress. goods and all set off for the fair. When they arrive, the girls are all drawn up In one line and the men In another, with their parents behind them. Then,, if a young man likes the look of any particular girl, he steps out of the line, goes up to her, and enters Into talk with her, while his parents and her parents compare notes as to their possessions and circumstances In Ufa. If all Is found satisfactory, the couple are married then and there, and the bride Is driven away by her husband to her new home. The custom In Russia Is very much the same. On Whitsunday afternoon, the girl, dressed in her best clothes. Is taken by her parents to the winter gardens In the nearest large town, where she meets a number of young men walking up and down on the lookout for wives. The girl carries in her hand a silver spoon, a piece of embroidery, or some other valued household possession, to show that she Is a person of property, and the young man brings with him as many roubles as be has been able to save. If tbe parents see that a young man la attracted by a girl, she Is promptly handed over to a woman who Is a sort of marriage agent, and whose business it Is to introduce the couple, and make arrangements about the dowry. In Japan It Is not wise for a young man to neglect the maid he 1b courting. When a Japanese girl has been slighted by her lover she avenges herself accordingly to the following quaint custom: In the dawn of the early morning she rises, puts on a white robe and white clogs. Round her neck she hangs a small mirror which falls on her breast, and on her head she puts a metal crown with three points, each point bearing a lighted candle. In her left hand she carries a email figure of straw or rags supposed to represent her unfaithful lover and this she nails to one of the sacred trees surrounding the family shrine. She then prays for the death of the man. vowing that, if this comes to pass, she will put out the nails which are hurting the sacred tree and make offerings to comfort her family god. Every night she comes to the shrine, strikes in two more nails, and mrfes the same prayer, her idea being that the god, to save hie tree from further Injury, will kill her lover. GROWS FOUR LEAF CLOVER Brooklyn Botanist Knocks All Novelty Out of Good Luck Plant by Grafting. New York. After 19 years of experiment. Max Schllng. a Brooklyn botana "good luck" ist, has developed clover plant which produces four leaves on every stem Instead of the traditional three. The result was obtained by hybridisation from the a species which had three leaves like the ordinary clover of this country, and aVd at time five. Nature was finally trained to systematically add or subtract one leaf until the desired quartet of leaves ap pears In every plant. The plant Is taller than tbe ordinary clover and the leaves are banded and have a graceful poise. ox-all- n Selecting Sheep. The time to determine what sheep to keep is during shearing; then tbe jwner. by directing and overseeing operations, can cause to be marked luch as are light shearers, aged in sheep, poor condition, without In the ordinary lambs, etc., and d be sold, flocks, allowing that it Is more than probable that the vals ue of the remaining, the flock to be kept, will bring as good in Income and be. In reality, worth is much as if tbe Inferior sheep remained to lower the standard of the one-thir- two-third- Paderqwskl Is Peeved. lot Cape Town. Ignace Paderewski, the pianist, had some unpleasant Keep Up With the Work. things to say about South Africa beIf you will make it a rule that each fore bis departure. Paderewskis tour day you will do some work along the was not a financial success. i line of Improving conditions on your poultry plant, it will not be long beBoys Shoot Men. fore things will take on a changed Jersey City, N. J. Two men are appearance- - Letting things go Is a dying as the result of the rife prac- sure way to mar the good appearance tice of two Jersey City boys. The vic- of either farm or poultry planL t Antims are Anthony Salpine A t place is an indication tonio St. Pterre. of thrift, but a plate littered with of machinery, etc., boards, pieces 74 Applicants Win. shows carelessness that speaks of Seventy-fiv- e Minneapolis, Minn. management Get to work and candidates for barbers certificates poor olean and make it a practice day took the state examination and only after up, day. ona applicant "flunked." -- well-kep- Te Prolong Big Debt Berlin. The Prussian government has decided to prolong tbe entire 4 per cent treaa of short-terory notes payable la July Sell Fertility. Besides keeping more and better animals, more attention should be paid to such crops as restore the fertility of the solL The chief among these are clover and alfalfa. The nursery soek la beginning to arrive for the new orchard plantations and it would seem that the usual number of fruit trees are to be bet out thin spring In growing a commercial orchard. the experience is much and tarled. There are so many condition! that close and diligent prevailing study Is quite essential To grow a good orchard, much more Is --needed that the planting, says the Denver Field and Farm. We must flrst familiarize ourselves with the character and nature of soil and trees, the prevailing winds as we call them, tbe different altitudes and last but not least, tbe perplexing problem of cause and effect the last of which embodies natural lawa In their simplest form. The first step Is the selection of the ground. The first choice Is a northern exposure, the second, a western, and the third an eastern, and last a southern. To prepare the ground, clean, plow and level It thoroughly In such manner that there will never be high and low spots In the direction of the Irrigating furrows. All plowing and preparing ought to be done In summer and fall previous to planUng. A broad deep furrow Is made with a large lister or two single plows, a left hand and right hand bolted together. Attach four hoi sea and go several times through the same row in opposite directions, but not all the same day. Just before planting go once again In tbe furrows to pulverize the soil. All this can be done very rapidly. The trees should be so planted that In after years they will be accessible and convenient for all purposes. This means that no trees should ever be planted on a square. By having the trees wide apart the way tbe Irrigation furrows are to run always gives ample room to cultivate. Irrigate, pick, spray, haul out, etc. It tbe land Is so that the Irrigating furrows run north and south, tbe wide rows should be from east to west and close In the row north and south. This occurs most frequently In Colorado. By this means the sun gets full action on the ground and trees on tbe east side In the morning and on tbe west While the disside In the afternoon. tances may be varied, the most convenient for apples are 16 by 27 feet, 16 by 32 or 16 by 28; peaches, plums and cherries, 14 by 20 or 16 by 20 feet; pears, 16 by 24 feet When the rows are furrowed out the wide way, rig up something with a team, to cross the furrows, and by driving straight to stakes, make the marks for two rows at one time and tbe work la quickly done. Then It Is a very simple matter to dig out the tree holes at the Intersections, and if this is done In the fall or early winter so as to catch later frosts so much the better. Under Suspicion. The late Marvin Hughitt, presiden of the Norths eateru railway vyatem, called his audi'or to his office one day and asked: man named You have a young tunnigham in jour division, Lave ou not? "Yes. sir. replied the andi-o"Well, keep your eje on mm What for? Ho one of uy best men. "tVell, he ought to he. I smv him and his wife depositing money in a savings bunk the day before Christ- Woman Ask a anl ay that fhe camu.i havi- - luo table A a g.ft tin Uj she u h rh tr hihr fF her in certain to please Mt'hku1 an ample Mippljr of Stt-rlgotj t brand net htn it ol Omimutiu more than triple plated aud guarani..-for i) yeans. a SALT HAIM ! st LAKE CITl UTAH a A Girl With Determination. claimed by Dr Karl Franikr "No, Annabel Green. I . anuot marry the German scientist, sheath skirts . you. My rich bachelor uncle declares make women They aW he will cut me off with a nickel if make the men cross-eyed- . wed without his approval. ' Very well,-- replied the determined I will go to your uncle. What girl. 4 $1 Is his address?" compounded annualh, the cried "Dont go, Annabel, will amount to $(il 1,527 him would "It prejudice only youth. 4 .'111. Ho in 500 years. still more against me. $1 a week deposited in j You mistake my meaning, Clarsavings account at 4 ier If said the girl. ence Proons, cent interest, compoundcant marry you Ill marry your ed will Cleveland Plain Dealer. uncle. amount to $1,014 in '.o knock-kneed- 1 at per cent interest, 1 semi-annuall- years. Put compound inThe Wise Lion. terest to work for you by a savings account Tunw Paul Rainey, while showing priopening vately in New York the wonderful cinematograph pictures of the African Walker Brothers Bankers Salt Lake City lion hunts, told an amusing story. A Tower of Strength Founded IHTtf. "A man, he said, sat before his tent, when a magnificent lion stiffened for the spring, leaped and missed Many a womans affection is but the man, misBed him by jumping three increased by receiving a check ' feet too high. It then slunk back in Jndge. the forest, thoroughly ashamed. "The next day the man came unexpectedly on the lion by a stream. -Hospital a log of wood and It had Salt Lake City, Utah was practicing low jumps. Judge Mercy d Affront. of the Amalgamembers Striking mated Skirt SUtcbers were holding a conference. Where is that tall, thin girl who joined the union last week? Inquired the walking delegate. The secertary arose to reply. She handed In her resignation thiB morning. What was her reason? She took offense when she was Judge. called oo to act as a picket. A Personal Department Maternity For tbe care of women dur Just Opsnsd. ing and after confinement. Largest and ben IV equipped Maternity Home in tbe west lightful bomedike accommodations. Stru-t!ethical Kates reasonable. Phone or write Mother Vincent, Suit Lake City. Utah POSITIVE sad PERMANENT CURE FOR A Drunkenness and Tkm M m pallidly, aa armtalr m ia Aar aw STITUTE. U4 W. Saatk Opium Diseases. dduw. LoJia. trnlj It Loa. THE LESLEY IN. Taaala StnaL Salt Lak City Weeder. I understand that our friend Hunter," said Joakley, is working on, a scheme to remove big weeds. The idea! exclaimed Coakley. "I didn't know ho took any Interest in gardening. He doesn't. Hes merely laying his plans to capture old Bulllonist's pretty widow. A A True Friend. Attorney General Ben Griffith says that It Is not only physicians who get complaints, but that lawyers get their full share of them. "A woman came to me one time to complain of her treatment by another he said, and asked me to lawyer, take the case. What is the trouble? I asked. New Wrinkles. I told him I wanted an' absolute He replied that An Irishman desired to become na- divorce, she said. turalized, and after the papers were as an old friend of my husband and Deep Plowing Pays. signed the judge turned to him. Now, as a favor to him be would take the James L. Riddle of Windsor. Col- Dennis, he said, you can vote. case. orado, writes: So many dry farmers Will this ceremony, inquired the Mosess Choice. In this vicinity are doing shallow new citizen, hilp me t do ut anny On that they or asked which manner oi disking, merely being plowing, I better than Oi have been votin' for death he thought was preferrable, belaugh at me for plowing deep, but Sun. York New tin th lasht years? was one of the few that had any ing killed in a railroad wreck or wheat last summer. I did not have A Natural Conclusion. drowned, Moses, the colored servant, what very much, yet enough to show promptly replied: I am looking for an honest man, Is possible In good years under the Railroad wreck. remarked Diogenes. methods advocated by Parsons and We asked him why he preferred Well, replied the cynical observothers." er, a man who has as much diff- railroad wreck and he made the foA letter received from E. R. Pariculty in finding an honest man as llowing rejoinder: been has sons, who for many years If you is killed on de railroad, you have must have shown mighty one of the most interested and sucdar yo is, but if you is drowned In in picking his friends. taste poor Colocessful dry farmers in eastern de ribber, whar is yo. There isnt a single man Washington Star. rado says: In my county (Douglass county, ColA Reminder. Clever. orado) who raised .a bite of anything I guess youre gettln a good Schmitt Der Oder day my house Lady this year who plowed less than eight thing out o tending the rich Smith wass on fire, und I hat only der Inches. choice of valklng downstairs or burnboy, ain't ye, doctor? Doctor Well, yes; get a pretty ing up. Where the Hog Originated. Braun Veil, vich did you choose? good fee. Why? The hog existed In a wild state on Well. I hope you wont forget Der latter? Lady the continents of Europe, Asia and that my Willie threw the brick that Schmitt No, I valked down der Africa, but none In Australia or hit im. Scribners Magazine. I could not find a latter. stairs; Th pecAmerica. North and South In A Dark Deed. Placing the Blame. cary is a hoglike animal existing a wild state in the two Americas, but Two chorus girls were heard talk"I admit without hesitation, said the true hog was Imported to this ing. One of them, a brunette, said: the man who tried to conceal bis selfAll known breeds of hogs country. Masle, I believe Ill lighten my esteem, that whatever I am today ia are descended from the wild forms hair. due to the influence of my wife. and are the result of the skill of the Oh, kep It dark. said Masie. That's right, replied Mr. Grow-chebreeder. Kansas Farmer. You bet I will if I do, came from Always blame the women. the flrst girl. New York Telegraph. Washington Star. Alfalfa la Perennial. Insulted. Why la It? Alfalfa Is a perennial, a clover-lik- e A city visitor heard a farmers wife and oblong-shapewith leaves, I have often wondered, says the plant a tap root which often extends 8 or say that she got up at 4 every morn- Hon. Alex Appleby, why It Is that The more ,feet downward. plant ing, and the city visitor said: You lta always the fellow way back In grows to a height of from 2 to 6 feet, must go to bed with the chickens to the crowded elevatpr who wants to and its blossoms are purple in color, he able to do that. get off at the first floor the car reaIndeed, I have a nice house of my ches. Teleborne In long, loose dusters. New , York ' Morning own, was the indignant reply. graph. money-makin- g 1 r. d LiveStoc Notes Change the hog nesting frequently. It is not wise to let tbe lambs shift for themselves with older sheep. Use a scrub sire and your herd will soon run all to nose and bristles. Sheep delight In eating sweet clover, andTt keeps them in a thrifty condition. A runty pig Is more tbe result of neglect by its owner than of breed or birth. Have a care how you feed corn to hogs on full feed that is considerably wormy. Do not be In too much of h hurry to force a horse's coat to shed in the spring. their If the horses do not shed heavy coats before hard work begins better clip them. Regular, systematic feeding should be practiced with hogs. Just the same as with any other stock. Brood sows require a mixed diet and one containing plenty of protein and not too fattening quality. Though hogs are proverbially dirty anlmale, they enjoy clean drfnking water as much as the other stock. A big. hot bran mash, with a pint of flax seed jelly, once a week will help the horses to shed their winter coats. A chilly hog takes on fat very slowly, his rations going toward maintaining bodily heat instead of producing flesh. Sheep should have salt by them all the time. Keep salt in a box in the pen or pens, and keep salt in it all tbe time. If deprived of salt they might eat too much when a freeb supply U given. Pianos at your own price EXCHANGED PIANO SALE ,past ,wo months, we have sold an unusually great number more than twice 88 many as any six f nosaccumulation previous months. KLSLLT An of the greatest collection of standard makes of pianos taken in exchange, ever shown in this state, such as CH!CKKR,N'G. ' EVERETT, STEINWAY, ax tEJv&. 8C,HAEEEER, KIMBALL, KINGSBURY, CLARK' WINTER, SINGER, SOHMER, CONOVER. RUDOLF, WiEBER. CONWAY, P 2S OUGHLy OVERHAULED.000 RANGE FROM $86, ?0ND,TI0N $94, HA $110, $125, $148, $168, up Greatest Values Ever Shown We prepay vour nearest Railroad station. Satisfaction guaranteed. the freight to 5 CASH AND THOR-PRICE- to $300. in Used Pianos LOOK AT THE TERMS $ BEEN Order at once. Send in your flrst payment, PER. indicate price to MONTH you want and leave pay, the selection to us. VSE THE COUPON Daynes-Beeb- e Music Company. Ust of your Pianos. changed U is understood I am to have first chance for Piano selling p?mnt about $ (nrovided mr request reaches you before instrument is sold). ENCLOSED-TD8-!nfnrfieSCiPliV- W NAME ADDRESS DATE REMEMBER THE ADDRESS |