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Show THE WASATCH WAVE, HEBER CITY, UTAH WINTER WHEAT ON Dttf LAND LITTLE THINGS COUNT Best Preparation of Soil for Crop Is Summer Fallow or Cultivated Crop aa Corn or Potatoes. Illustration Is Easily Constructed and Will Pay for Itself In Very 8hort Time. English Farmer Profits by Keeping Detailed Records. The most essential single thing on dry land la soil water. Winter wheat Is one of the best adapted for dry farming because it grows so as to Ram Is Kept Separate Until Ewes Are make the beat use of the Boil moisGathered for Inspection, Thereby ture and moisture season. The best in Avoiding All preparation of the soil for winter Running Around. wheat is the summer fallow or a cultivated crop as corn or potatoes. (By E. H JAYNES ) Plowing for winter wheat on tbe Nothing Is more discouraging than dry land should be done In late June a lot of 'smba of various ages, uneven or early July, when summer fallowed. in size, running with a flock of ewes After a grain crop It Is unwise to that would, had they been given the Is If it plant wheat most seasons. have lambed at tbe same done the binder should be followed by opportunity, For the past month or two the disk double disking by lapping period. the ram should have been In a lot by half as done. This treatment himself and eating all tbe nice Juicy weeds growing and prevents the be desired. soil becoming cloddy. Flowing should grass The value of such a grass plot can be done Just as soon afterwards as be It gives Is possible. The plowed land should hardly the ram a tender bit of picking, causbe pulverized and packed immediately him to sufficient exercise to after the plow. With favorable fall ing him Intake tbe best of trim. keep rains such a seed bed will start the Supplement this with an abundance crop off In good shape and will raise of fresh water, a little salt and a trifle the crop when poorly prepared soil of oats, and we have a combination will produce a failure. to give results In the line The soil for all, spring grain crops guaranteed of a big, strong, vigorous sire. requires much the same treatment. A practice that is common with Where fall plowing can be done it Is which our to be preferred where properly com- English breeders an farmers must eventually follow Is the after With the pacted plow. spring hard coupling of ram and ewes. plowing the land should be double The American farmer turns bis ram disked early In the spring and plowed as early as possible, compacting Im- with the ewes and trusts to luck tx He does not bring him a good crop. mediately after the plow with the disk Is safely setand harrow. The use of the corru- know whether the ram the ewes or not gated roller ie good. If such a tool Is tling Too often the ram abuses himself, available. to the detriment of the latter part of After cultivated crops, such as beets and potatoes, plowing may be left out the crop. Then, too, the exertion from running around, as a ram in a bunch apd a desirable seed bed produced by of ewes usually does, undermines his the disk and barrow. Early preparation of the sdil gives better results. vigor. Compare this with your English The land may be plowed deeper and farmer . The ram Is kept to himself thus be better worked. For sugar beets the land may be all the time except when he Is led best prepared by the fall plowing with out to the ewes. He gets his allowance of grain and his bite of grass, no mata deep tilling machine. In lieu of such a machine the soil should be ter how hard pressed the farmer Is fall plowed, plowing to a moderate for feed, for he knows too well that a handful of grain given to the ram Is depth. Thte plowing should be packed as good as one given to each of the by a disk harrow or the corrugated ewes. roller. Then as early In the spring as When evening comes, the farmer possible the land should he replowed. This plowing should be very deep, 13 leads hlz ram out to where the ewes Inches or more. Following the plow are gathered for the Inspection of the the same half day should come the ram. The lead Is , loosened from hisdisk and harrow, and corrugated rollor. halter and be quietly proceeds to inThe absence of a roller will make harrowing necessary. The illustration shows a milk cooler FALL PLOWING ON DRY FARM one and will repay its cost many times over in a seasons use, says the Independent Farmer. A box form is constructed of the size you wish the outside of the cooler to be; the inside is made in the same manner, only about eight inches smaller, so as to allow for a four-incwall to the tank or cooler on all sides. The concrete is mixed, one part Portland cement to1 five parts of sand and gravel, and the bottom of cooler laid first;' this or four may be three and one-hainches thick, as you desire; the box form for the inside is then set upon Work Can Be Done Early Without So Much Danger of Bringing Up Too Much Soil at Once. REMODELING THE DAIRY BARN Redeeming Feature of Prosperous Looking Red Building Is Big Loft Gutters Lacking. Only Over-Exertio- n There are many big red barns that well from a distance and that give the farm an appearance of prosperity, but a disgrace to dairying. 'They hare but a few small windows, o gutters, no stalls, no feeding alleys, no ventilation. Their big lofts are about the only redeeming feature they hare. No wonder the boys leave the farm and hired men won't milk. Cement is not expensive and any man who is at all handy In building can put In cement gutters and walks with a little study on the subject Any of the cement companies advertising In the agricultural papers will send a book of instructions upon re- 'look quest Make the gutter 4 feet 10 Inches from the manger for medium-sizecows, IS inches wide and 10 Inches deep. It is not necessary to make the whole floor of cement The forward half of the stall may be left without cement, although It is desirable to make the whole floor and manger of cement when It can be afforded. Make a feeding alley in front of the mangers where the feeding can be done with the least work and time. Make the bam convenient Take a day off, or a week If necessary, and visit places that hare modem bams. Convenience In a bam Is the cheapest part of the building and the most important Ideas dont cost anything if you look for them. To put them into effect may take years, but it lightens the work to know they are to be. To wait until you can afford a new bam before making any improvements is folly. Fix up the old barn this fall so the work can be done better and with less hardship this comd ing winter. MILK COOLER One 8hown i , OF CONCRETE In -- pro-vent- s HOW ONION SMUT IS SPREAD Thanksgiving? Why should I be thankful? Ive no million plied away; People do not gladly cheer me; I have little time to play; Other go to view the wonders to be found across the tea; But I toil through all the aeazone there la little rest for me. All that I can earn la quickly claimed by thoae wno lie in wait. Overcharging me In order that their profit may be great. whole piece becomes affected, and tbe be thankful, brother? What I have Ive had to get Through the hardest kind of digging; I have paid with honest sweat; I have pushed ahead unaided, Fate and Fortune Ive defied; I've refused to let them crush me, though theyve often grimly tried. Why, therefore, should I be thankful? To my strength and to my will Im Indebted for permission to keep striving onward.still. la great Why should I be thankful, brother? I that hav to strive and sweat Earning doubly, yea and trebly, all the bless- ings that I get? marched ahead unaided, though my strength has oft been tried, I have kept my tout unsullied, Im entitled still to pride; I am thankful for my courage, thankful for an I have f V Iron will. And the buoyant hope a thousand bitter ures could not kill. ' fail- 25-3- 3 CUSTOM HAS lf self-mad- h 20-ac- h snr-fac- e , , : high-clas- d mission paid0whi?eU'learam!Uon11 required. Call or write lor part?rai!?M alog. 13 Commercial btreet. Bal? Lake Willie Knew the Game! Willie finally persuaded his aunt to play train with him. The chairs vZ In arranged line, and he issued or-dera: Now, you be the engineer and be the conductor. Lend me your ni watci and get up into your cab. Then hurried down the platform, tdmenJa In hand. Pull out there, you headed, jay!" he shouted. Why, Willie! his aunt exclaim in amazement. Thats right, chew the rag he re. torted. Pull out! Were five minute late already." They have had to forbid hig psy. lag down by the tracks. pie-face- d "Oh, does It? 700-acr- t, E!IE! replied the woman, Well, you see I untying the bag. never had any experience in measuring grain before I was married. I aEverybodys. lways taught school. h well-grow- n - bush-eL- College- i Liquor and Drug Addictions Teaching Higher Branches. One day Mr. Smith went to buy bushel of buckwheat for sowing. The man who sold the wheat was away, but his wife undertook to make the sale. She found a peck measure ani they went to the granary. She filled the measure twice, pour, ed the contents into the bag, and began to tie it up. But, Mrs. Lawton, said the man, "it takes four pecks to make a " ALWAYS BEEN his fellows who have prospered better than he, it disinclines him to give Popular Error Holds That President thanks. Another theory is that although we have meager possessions Lincoln Issued First ThanksFARM MANAGER IS VALUABLE others have less, therefore we should giving Proclamation. be thankful. This Is a mighty meaD Splendid Opportunity Offered for (By M. R. PORTER, Superintendent Tbere Is some discussion as to the way to do. Its one way of crowing -Trained Demonstration Farm, North Dakota.) Men, With Scientific origin of the present national custom over your unfortunate neighbor, and ie Fall plowing should be done as early Knowledge of Farm. of observing Thanksgiving day. It the quintessence of littleness. Anoth. as possible, as more weed seeds are was held by a large number of people, er way is to Blank God that your neighx ) A. WILLIAM (By FRFEHOFF.) started in early plowing, the stubble until recently, that the custom was bors are no better off than yourself. busiThe ran I across a other day decays better and more nitrates are e ness man who owned a farm. first established by President Lincoln This was the case of the old lady when formed and other plant food liberated He was looking for a manager. during the Civil war. Examination of the frost caught her garden truck. In' larger quantities. Early fall plow1 was paying my last one $3,000 a the records showed that this was a Still another is to take advantage of A Prize Winner. ing can be done deeper than late fall A number of the presidents your neighbor and then return thanks mistake. a he he wasnt but year, explained, plowing without so much danger of e and successful. flock.' One Is found In heat, big enough man for the Job. I want a who preceded Mr. Lincoln Issued that you are bringing up too much soil at once from epect the Thanksgiving proclamations, the prac- And yety another way Is to do your below. Early barley stubble can be she Is served and the shepherd quietly $5,000 man now. This farm had many departments, tice dating back to Washington. They neighbor ere he does you and then removes her while the ram continues plowed to good advantage before the as horse, dairy, fruit, vegetables, bad been desultory, however, and there give thanks, as David Harum would such hla Inspection. general wheat harvest A gang When all has been served the ram hogs and several others, a foreman had been no regular repetition of the say. And there are those who profess plow traveling 18 miles a day will is removed and a record is made of being placed at the head of each de- proclamation until after it had been Is- thankfulness because matters might plow five acres. In a week. It would be worse. And that brings up the sued by Mr. Lincoln. the ewes bred, the date and anything partment. turn over 30 acres of land. custom of observing a day of query whether matters ever are so bad The of was The The the needfuL else be best that equipment may If there Is any delay In thrashing The pure bred owner takes tho ear buildings were scarcely to be equaled thanksgiving and prayer is as old as but that they might not be worse. If or stacking the grain due to wet the civilization of the country. It was not, then one might find an endless weather or high winds, the gang plow tag number of his ewe and her date In the state. It was a farm on which Inaugurated in New. England very chain of thanksgiving if one could should be started, even If the shocks et breeding is put down on his flock good work could be done. owner not the did owner shortly after the arrival of the first really be thankful to a being who The Still, record. particularly sheep grade are on the fields. They can be set He care to make on the some In ewes English Immigrants, and It gradually would so dispose or order events as to his money marks place. conspicuous over on the plowed land with little difA Concrete Milk Cooler. All these was rich enough as it was. His es- became the day of all others In the produce so much misery. manner. ficulty by the operator of the plow. lawn was suf- year, for surpassing Christmas In the notions or conceits are more or less For Instance, the first week he uses tablishing of a this floor or bottom at an equal dis- From 75 to 126 shocks will have to be enthusiasm and universality of Its ob- crooked. evidence for that tance from the outside form on all set over a day, or from four to seven red paint placed on the hip, the sec- ficient I want things different, he con- servance. In the southern states, prior on the back, the third on the week ond four sides, and the concrete for the shocks per mile the plow travels. in his explanation. For in- to the Civil war, It was quite general, Thanksgiving Prayer. A shock can readily be set over In shoulder, etc. Different colors of paints tinued walls placed and tamped down. At the horticul- though there was no common day of For days of health, for nights of one end the wall is slightly lower in from 60 to SO seconds, tbuB making being used, If possible to know by the stance,to Ivhaveno ordered The celebration. comof to attention the the turist governors pay quiet sleep; for seasons of bounty and center to provide for an overflow, as from four to ten minutes per mile. The mark on her back just when she will mon commercial I want ap- states Issued their proclamations with- beauty, for all earths contributions to lamb. apples. shown. The tank should be high horses should have this much time When lambing time approaches ples on my farm I am not able to buy out reference to the dates set by the our need through this past year, good enough so that when filled with water to rest, so there Is practically no lost there Is no governors of other states, and it not Lord, we thank thee. For our counquestion about when a on the open market. it will be within two or three Inches time in plowing land before the shocks ewe ehould lamb. This the keynote of the management Infrequently happened that the cele- trys shelter; for our homes; for the the records. has He Is removed inconare It an of the top of milk can, and as the simply All the work is ex- bration would occur In Maryland on a joy of faces, and the joy of hearts that A glance and be has the whole story of such a farm. water Is constantly changing the milk venience for the operator of the plow, A sharp contrast to the perimental; everything goes to satis- day different from that which was ob- love; for the power of great examples; him. before can be cooled in the shortest possible as he has to stop frequently and set served In the neighboring states. There for holy ones, who lead us In the ways former who has to tell by guess fy the owners whim. time; it may also be built slightly a grain shock over on the plowed about when a ewe Is to lamb, and who of Buch farms were commonwealths, are hundreds There prior to the of life and love; for our powers of larger to allow for ice to be packed land. Set tbe gang plows going as consequently looses a high per cent, being layed every year. There would Civil war, where no proclamation was growth; for longings to be better and as and you can, around the milk cans, when it is de- early keep them gobe more but for the fact that capable Issued, and there was no observance do more; for ideals that ever rise of his crop. ing every day you possibly can until sired to hasten the cooling process. whatever. above the real, good Lord, we humbly to do too this? much Is It trouble managers are not to be had. the fall plowing Is done. The proclamation of Mr. Lincoln thank thee! For the blessedness of A Bplendld opportunity for college corn too much to Is trouble it your get A gang plow ehould average FEEDING THE YOUNG CALVES five acres a day, or 130 acree a month. planted or to harvest your oats when trained men, with a scientific knowl- seemed to electrlfythe country and to service and the power to fit ourselves edge of farming, is thus opened. But cement the states In their observance to others needs; for our necessities to On lands that are not inclined to drift ripe? It requires men with a good deal of of Thanksgiving, though there were work; for all that brings us nearer haris season Your your lambing Be Should Early Accustomed to or pack down hard a Bection of a harThey tact to handle a dozen foremen who commonwealths which for some years to each other, nearer to ourselves, of time but the awaits It vest you, row ran be hauled after each plow to Eating Grain, Grass and Later afterward selected a different date. near to thee, we thank thee, O our Faalso are Is to birth college graduates. lambs) In Fall Alfalfa Hay. harvesting (giving very good advantage. These men will have a chance to do This gradually ceased, until now the ther! Selected. uncertain, unless you know by your much individual work; they may apply celebration has become a boroughly records when to expect It. Calves dropped in the spring and Loosening Soli Surface. to the utmost. national and universal event. For a their Is knowledge It little these Blessings Enumerated. Brother farmer. A tew days loosening the soli early summer should be growing As a nation we individual citizens restricted by the lack of while It eclipsed the Fourth of July, the mark Scarcely count that They will be well spent, because it not things nicely by the time they are in their and not the necessity of and In New England today it far sur- of the United States have reason Winter quarters. They should be only puts the land In condition to re- difference between the progressive funds, the farmunder as a whole pay large passes Christmas In interest With above all other peoples for the giving or making and shiftless the Indifferent, farmer to accustomed early eating grain, ceive all the moisture that falls but dividends, they may devote their time the disappearance of sectionalism, of thanks. Where others have within grass, and later In the fall, alfalfa also gives a good chance for circula- between the business farmer and the to breeding up herds, grains and fruits. however, the Fourth of July has as- the year been menaced by war, by dohorse the between work money kind, or clover hay. It is poor economy tion of air, which is Just as necessary sumed its normal place In American mestic disorder, by revolution within success between the and maker loser, to limit their supply of roughage, as for plant growth as water. holidays, and Is not likely Small Fruit Matter. again, or enemy without, Americans hav6 of We ub either are all and failure. , it develops large frames and barrels the fall and winter Is a good through any combination of circum- been at peace at home and enjoying During or one other. the and give the appearance of vigor, Disking Worth While. time to begin preparation for tbe set- stances, to lose it peaceful relations with all the worm. and nothing will aid this more than Disking the fields intended for Our government has been honored ting of tbe strawberry bed next Rot of Tomatoes. hay. and clean, may delay plowing Some crops spring with the leadership In a movement for Appropriate Thoughts. spring, or those bush fruits that The grain ration is necessary for seeding a short time, but it Is well This disease often attacks plants should The general Idea is that when we the limitation and eventual be founiT in every garden. ending of noIs A It not Is first beration to are that do this work, especially that worth while steady growth. sprayed. Late fall plowing Is advantageous. It have an abundance of material good war. The broad principles of demoticeable as small, black or brown spots tends to the we ing recommended, and one that has If the season should be dry. should be thankful. Of the cratic course, destruction of Insect life. government upon which our reon the leaves or stems of the plants, Fall been found satisfactory in the north-wesconverse Is equally I rue. And as this public rests have been an plowed land is, as & rule. In a inspiration is a mixture of barley three on and lower first the older The Dairy Pasture. is a matter of occurring interpretation for each to lese favored peoples even In the workable condition In tbe spring The dairy herd should be taken leaves; but with favorable weather It ahead of parts, wheat bran one part, and aland as he sees individual, most of backward many land. unplowed quarters of the earth. falfa meal one part When it can up early In the fall. so as to allow spreads rapidly until the plant is deThe action of, tbe elements wtf be obtained an additional one part of the last growth of grass to afford foliated, and the spots on the stems make the soil more friable. Becaust oil meal or soy bean meal may be to the roots during the win- have coalesced Into Irregular, blackish of these two points gained, the moisrectly understood for national and Individual humility. nsed, as it gives tone and finish to ter. patches. If a piece of bark with these ture, contents and conserving power the calves, which are desirable. The spots be examined under a high power of the soil will be Increased. No Lover of the Bath. grain should be given in two feeds, microscope, Innumerable small, crescentCorrecting Acidity of Soli. For Which We Owe Thanks. bodies Land plaster or gypsum Is not equal -shaped may be seen. morning and evening. Swinburne evidently found baths That we have much to be thankful From Rabbits. Protection Regulate the amount of grain to to limestone In correcting the acidity These are the, fruiting spores of the Young apple trees can be easily pro- for no one doubts or denies. It is not a source of inspiration, for he told the individual calf. No grain should of tbe soil, but it Is better to mix fungus. Spray with Bordeaux mixture. tected from rabbits and mice by strips necessary to rehearse details. We Edmund Gosse that Baudelaire" was be allowed to remain in the mangers, with barnyard manure. of wire netting. These may be rolled know that we are a happy and favored written in a Turkish bath. Doctor where it will become musty, as diSelecting Pullets. around a broom handle to make them people. We are rich, prosperous and Johnson, on the other hand, regarded will result. disorders Ground Essential. It Shelter with them gestion At the Maine experiment station, they cylindrical and thus keep their shape free. Our problems, great as they are, suspicion. When an old A common error of the inexperioats and bran are valuable suppleselect the good layers by picking up when sprung on the trunks, getting are as nothing compared with those Lichfield friend, showing him over a in milk to skim a to ments ration, as enced feeder is failure provide good the pullets which soonest Bhow red 24 inches wide Is large enough. If that are distressing the nations of the house built specially for him, dilated they contain a large amount of mineral shelter. Lambs cannot make good combs and begin to sing, as pullets do the netting is galvanized and if the old world. But the things which we on the advantage of the bathroom, substance necessary for good bone. gains with wet feet or soggy fleece. when getting ready to lay, and put- strips are made large enough to allow regard as blessings, and for which we the doctor said: Sir, are you well? Quite well, thank you, doctor, them In a flock by themselves. for four or five years growth, no fur- are supposed to give thanks, are blesswas ting a Lice. Herd. Dairy Building Application for By picking out these early layers they ther attention need be given the trees ings only as we use them right, and the reply. "Then, sir let well alone. A strong brine with a little soft Buying cows and selling them as got a flock which averaged 180 eggs after once inclosed. The cost Is only only in so far as we humbly acknowl- I hate immersion. fast as they stop milking never built oap mixed in makes a good applic during their first laying year and a a few cents, but this is Insurance, as edge that they are the gifts of God. s no a The lion for lousy cows and calves. Bui flock of that kind is good enough for the time lost in replacing a tree la to The danger is, not that we shall atdairy business Hope and Fact. tribute too much to the divine power, city milk producer is not a true dairy- keep the animals indoors or undef anyone. Hope, according to Bert Miller, be considered. 1L more a in a feeds shade for time after applying speculator man; he is but that we shall take too much credit "looks for a dime In the vest to ourselves. This has always been of last winters suit. Fact pockets and cows. Heavy Producing Oata. recovers Keep Drainage Grades Even. Slow Churning. In some Ontario experiments the true. Far back In Old Testament times two toothpicks, a match and a piece In laying tile be eure the grade Is Too much cream in the churn wfll were the Capacity of the Cow. warned against think- of lead pencil. people made even enough eo that the water varieties of oats producing an average Forcing a cow for a short period mean slow churning. Half full Is can flow through at a uniform rate. yield of mere than 90 bushels an acre, ing that they themselves had got the be cannot always accepted as the enough. On the Form. they enjoyed, and were Thla prevents sediment from being de- based on the results of five years, are wealth which was God who had given legitimate measure of her capacity of Wife "That pudding I have New Zealand, Yellow Russian told that it loung will happen when as Banner, fiat posited, Butter Fat High. them the power to get wealth. The just made for you is a poem." any breed, no matter bow well auHubby grade follows a steep one. Be sure and Peerless. Scar boro produced the old Feed will be high this winter, but thenticated any great performance And I suppose I m to be the religious idea, therefore, rather 3.27 tens of straw, Is bottom of being ditch yield the the largest perfectly 1 will buttPr be. fat. new than If the may , one, makes it is coran acre. level. that is very easily constructed by any- - 4PEI71 manint cure fob I Thanksgiving! I am truly thankful, though I still mutt work away. Though there are no crowd to cheer me, though Ive little time to play; Other men may look for pleasure, from the cares of duty free, Others know the Joya of leisure, but theres little rest for me; Yet how weak la he that sadly sits complaining at hla fate; I have thanks to render gladly for a vigor that five-yea- A POSITIVE INSTITUTE, 134 W. Why ehould THE OPTIMIST. smutted the order of planting had been clover for two years, corn one r rotation will not, year. A from the experience of growers, eliminate the disease. It appears reasonably certain that tbe disease is not generally spread by the seed. It may, however, occasionally be Introduced with seed from an Infected locality. It is also certain that the smut is spread with plows, weeders, harrows, rakes and hoes, by spores clinging with Infected earth to the Implements. When soil Is known to be affected one pound of 40 per cent formaldehyde to gallons of water should be applied with a drip attachment on a seed drill at the rate of 600 to 700 gallons of solution per acre. This has been used with success by several large growers. In one Instance the treated part of a field yielded over 500 bushels per acre, while the untreated plot yielded only about 100 bushels of Inferior onlone to the acre. Plated .liver knives, fork., lancy pieces, and also with corre.o,!, ware In tea seu, coffee sets, di.nen at We also have Sterling. THE PESSIMIST. pears at first In isolated spots here and there in a field, and from these spreads in all directions until tb Smutted Onion. 7 Oneida Community WORLD During the last five years this die ease has spread rapidly, the smut probably being conveyed from field to field upon farm Implements and with ma nure containing smutted onion refuse as discarded onions are Usually deposited upon manure p?es. In some sections the losses resulting from thlr fungus have been so great that the growers. In some cases, no longer find the crop profitable. The severity of tbe disease in different localities is variable. It ap cultivation of onions upon It has U be discontinued. Short rotations dc not materially diminish the amount ol smut; in a particular field badly uo not wait until TOO lr ri h bur leaver. equip your table nun TWO VIEWS Disease Is Conveyed From Field tc On Field on Farm Implement Remedy Used by Growers. It Made No Difference. Two women were mutually confiding their troubles. You cant think how the high cost of living- - affects us, confessed one. Why, my bills for clothes alone are more than twice as large this year a they were last year. I Mercy!" gasped the other. see how your husband can afford It! Thats the answer he cant, said the first. "But he couidnt afford it last year. So whats the difference! Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegrap- Insult Added to Injury. Well, did he pay you? asked th wife of the dentist who had been to collect a bill for a full set of false teeth that he had made for a man almost a year before. Pay me! growled the dentist. Not only did he refuse to pay me, but he actually had the effrontery to gnash at me with my teeth! Prattle. Dont you enjoy the merry prattle of little children? asked the sentimentalist. Yes, replied Mr. Groucher. I like to hear them prattle. It seem a shame that so many of them are going to grow Up and drop this innocent chatter In order to discuss tbe tariff. - Not Taking Chances. Madam, eaid the doctor, "what you need is more exercise. Why dont you walk four or five miles every day? , And have people think weve bal to sell our automobile? I guess not' Would Empty It. Well, said Mary, who prided herself on her singing and range of fill voice, 'do you think my voice will that large room tonight? No, eaid her cruel brother. 0 the contrary. Very Weil. He had Just given her a check for her first monthly allowance. I think, she said coyly, I shall , have this photographed. 'To preserve as a memento? w asked. f No, so 1 can have it enlarged. Perhaps He Was. "This electric treatment benefits your system, said the doctor. who Yes," murmured the patient, was paying five plunks a visit, 'but there are times when 1 feel Im Ter' charged. Off the Water Wagon. Aladdin rubbed his lamp and tie geni appeared. It my first eight of a djlnnpbiz. sighed Aladdin. wagon- And he rolled off the water Judge. Man Ingredients. her Alice, aged five, was helping room. drawing the mother dust w was hidden beneath the piano her mother heard her exclaim-Oh- , dustnw mother, there's enough man. a make to God der here for After Lunch. certainly Mr. Smithe That woman did glare at you. w. Mrs. smithe Yes. I ve either ed to her when I dont bo else I know her and haven t her, k" He Won. When the agent paid the amount of Insurance her he asked her to tak had carried, |