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Show - THE BLADE. -- . r t.-k-,- Published Crery Saturday at ' :- JPm, v.. ; , " ' - r - : - TJTAIL TIIE PIIIECTQRY. TJ..S. Senators. J Frank J. ' , Cannon. JArtaur Brown. ; ......... .C E. Delegate to Congress. Allen. g. - f STATE OFFI CERS. . .ttpxf xt . WpIIr Oovernor. ...... J. Secretary of State. . .. .James T. Hammond. Treasurer. .James Auditor., .Morgan Richards, Jr. General.... A C. Bishop. Attorney apt. or Jf nolle Instruction... John It. Park C. S. Zane. J O. W. Barch Court Judges of Supreme J J. A Miner. Judge Fifth Judicial District. .E. V. Higgins Senator, Seventh District. James P.'Driscoll Member Lower Ilonse Adelbert Cazler Bryon Qroo, Registrar Receiver Land Office Frank Harris. Chip-man- . -- . i Land-Offic- , Selectmen.. DIJ W.apoell k haxres , RHrtflp (A. 1 Cltik anda4 ILfao'fir ColJbctor Asewjaar -- - .. Jac Sullivan D. W. Oazler JL :..idwar4 y......7.7Tr. BrvXx. WXJ ,iTeaar. T. Miller MILLARD COUNTT DIRECTORY. Saperintendent Schools Prob-- t. .rWeTSot. '"BSKiSner. Holbrook. J.-- ,. Belectmen. Sheriff... and take his sister-in-la"The girl arrived in due time, but she was so much prettier than the unmarried brother had expected that he was loath to accept his brother's cast-owife. Finally he married the girl and then refused to compromise the breach of contract by paying what his brother had expended in getting her to this coast. A quarrel followed and the guide pinked his brother in the shoulder with a rifle ball and landed him in the hospital for three months. The other vowed vengeance and they do little now but watch the mountain trails, fully prepared to renew hostilities at a w. - Alma Greenwood. .A. A. Hinckley Calliater Tho. p. Jno. M. Hanson. Wlllard Roer. J epn D. Smitn Sidney. Teplea Assesaor Collector Clerk and Recordtr. Burve?or. . . .V. .7. . . Treasurer. . Coroqcr. - Only tbe wicked are anxious to prore that the devil la a myth. Marriage makes different men of fellows and Indifferent men of others. - iae swift that it overtakes second's notice." and yet so slew that anytrerybody, can one catch It. LIFE NOT WORTH Death , ff D. C. Calll&ter Superintendent Schools Is- - I i TEN CEW T& It Dy a Man Who Pat Upon is to be Was Saved from Drowning-Mr. Wintam Aster will bo able From Ithe San Francisco Post: A to secure that coveted title. fat man carrying a gun and leading a dog made a dash down Market street The brohtesa man who advertises for ferryboat. He could kasn't any time to worry a.bout the havethe Oakland he had walked quiet if it caught CucAuatlons ef the goM. reserve. became he but excited, and ly along old Tim commenced having fun with It is very much in Healer Schlatter's him: The dog would run on the wrong favor that he doesn't have to be driven side of ;the telegraph poles and hyhe locates. rat of any Uwn drants and tangle up his chain in the of pedestrians. By the time spent oza people seem to overlook the fact legs in apologizing and untangling the dog that there is such a thing as keeping he was delayed until the little gate cool an4 patriotic at the same time. closed injhis face. Then he ran around to the bfg gate, dodged around a mail Canada is disposed to emulate the ex wagon, and made a run for the boat. axapie of the agnail child who cries for The deck hands raised the apron and the cole purpose of inducing some one the boatjmoved slowly out, but he was to coax it to stop. determined to catch it, and, gripping his gun knd dog chain a little tighter, beer of $1 per made a irun and sprang into the air. By increasing the price were Barrel it looks as if the brewers The boai was only six feet away, but ' preparing to go to the rescue of the the dog balked the apron. The hunter united states treasury. stopped in the middle of his leap, II abase of Small Value re-war-d4. . ana w-fer- e I j his feet jflew out toward the steamer, to Poet Laureate Austin will hare and he dropped Into the bay like a reel off some very soothing lullabies if load of (hay. A small boy who was he can make the British lien feel happy fishing from the wharf dropped his pole, when his tail is full of kinks. splashed Into the water and towed the fat man .to a pile, where he clung till a 'i The distressing feature of Kaiser boatmanj pulled him out.1 "My boy, you saved my life," he exWrjhelm's impudence in making faces at his dear old grandma is the fact claimed (enthusiastically, as he kicked the dog jand tried to wring the water that Wnheiza is too big to spank. out of his shotgun. "Let me: reward The retirement oi Hichard Mansfield you." He thrust his hand into his clammy may take frost the stage a star, hut th apparatus for. producing thunder and pocket, knd fished out a wet lightning and moonlight is still there. piece. "There, my boy, take that; but don't spnd it foolishly." The people wanted clear headed, "No, sir; I can't take it, sir." The boy American men on the Venezue- pushed ihe generous "hand aside. "I lan commission, and they got thecu didn't earn it." Now let them act wisely and promptly. ."Why, you saved my life, boy." worth "Yes, I know it, sir, but it ain't ' A man in Houston, Tex., wh d 10 cents.?' his wife, was 'sentenced to taa penitentiary for ninety years. Such a Tne Wholesale Poisoners of London. T fellow should have been senWneed for The wholesale attempts that are con: ") life.'tinually jbeing made to poison the Londoners are well shown in the annual Since, a man who committed suicide report of! Dr. Saunders, the medical offhas been Identified as J. L. Good It la icer Stockralsers of health for the settled that suicide is not a sin. If it sent up ast year nocity. less than 430 ton trere the suicide would not have been ofidlseased meat; that Is, excluding Good. Sundays as the hospital points out, worka ton and a half for The Schomburgk line is now said to about of the year.; Now, every a ton and a day be worthless. This can hardly be the ing remeat and diseased putrid ease if it has been the means ef teach- half ofto! duced pounds, consists of 3,360, and ing Britain the danger of making its as each pound is amply sufficient to poi. .Eon play the hog.. son its man, woman or child it follows that our cousins In the country are will.Germany seems to have a kind to poison Londoners to the tune of Monroe doctrine of its own. It is a lit ing 3,260 perj diem, or, excluding Sundays, tle harder to prooeunce, perhaps, than at the rate of 1,051,630 per annum. In TJiirfe Sam's, hot it i3.11kely to answer other words, if all the diseased meat the p expose in South Africa. which Is received would be eaten it would not take more than four or five The Society, of the Cincinnati after years to! accomplish the poisonlngof years of debate has decided to erect a every man, woman and child in Lon monument to Washington at the Green don! street entrance to Fairecnt Fsxk, ! j 10-ce- nt - j pa-trtt-tlc ; f : xanr-dere- . . - ' e 3 e--f : ; Fhilidelpfcla. It is to cost :3,Ct3. .Senator Quay is encorciS tha Pittsburg reform aoveaeL As Crii ilae is the man the referraeTs exe after it will be seen that Mr. Qsy la n$t a reformer for prrpte ; caly. re-a- na . ' Breton Statuef. to Three statues are about be erected to famous Bretons In Brittany. At Ploermel, known for Its "pardon," It la Dr. Guerin, who introduced the transfusion of blood Into modern practice, who will be honored; at Lesneven it is General Le Flo, Thiers' minister oi war, and at Dlnan the Cometable whose memory Coquelln and Deronlede have revived, is to be represented' on horseback The money for a monument to Renan at Treguelr haa ' not been raised. How people love foolishness! ; Du-guescl- Uncle Sam can tray the island ef 7L Thomas from ;Dcnmark "low izr cash cr country, produce." The quectian la. Does he want it? It is an island thirteen miles long and has a perfect land lacked harbor. 1 When the revised version of tha New Testament was completed, It was as news to Chicago. When it found that hell had not been transited out of it, there was much disappointment. Men leading bad lives ar always unbelievers in future punish intnL The language of their heart! i3: I hate him because he doth no! prophesy good concerning me, trt ctH." tele-sraph-ed AND GARDEN. The First Printer. The corporation of Mayence has lnj de- - hundredth sided tq celebrate the GutenJohn of of the birth anniversary of inventor the printing, with berg, great pomp and eplendor. The celebration will take place In 1897, though it is not agreed whether he was born in 1297 or ,ln od of the three years folfive" lowing. - ' , ownership of farm lands. It Is, a fact open to general observation that the farms of the country are gradually dropping into the hands of tenants; and in our opinion it is that much worse for the country. No one will dispute that the farmer has many advantages in working land owned jby himself that can never accrue to him while the land is owned by another. One of the leadr ing causes to be assigned for this state of things Is the fact of a desire to overreach one's self in the possession of lands.. To make use of a significant Western expression, 'it comes of biting oft more than - one can "chaw." We have long advocated as the best policy for. farmers to pursue in this matter-thaof cutting down their possessions In lands, rather than that of extending them. When the farmer makes up his mind to this order of things It will be some time before the sheriff closes him out. In the course of the next ten. years we look for a stronger pressure than ever before brought to bear upon this matter of reducing the size of the farm. A new style of farming is gradually to come into vogue that will necessitate it. The extensions of irrigatibn systems and the growth and expansion of the subsoiling idea are destined to lead in the direction of intensive farming in the West We are aware, that It used to be fashionable to spread one's self out over a large area in his farming operations with a view of reducing the cost of production of crops. This day has passed. Things have changed andv if the farmer of today expects to continue to own hie own land he must give more attention to each individual acre and see that it does its share. Nebraska Farmer. Bite of a Hog. It is a serious thing to be bitten by any animal, for even though there may be no poisonous glands, the saliva in the mouth of animals that bite is always more or less poisonous. The bite of the hog is more apt to be serious than that of any Other domestic animal. It requires skill and activity to handle large numbers of hogs without endangering those who hold them. The hog is an omnivorous eater, and is not at all particular about getting particles of dirt or excrement with its food. Old hogs, which are most apt to bite, often destroy mice and snakes, and though they get no venom In their mouths, it will poison wherever such saliva reaches abraided skin. No one who has a sore on his hand should be called upon to assist in butchering hogs, as he may be infected from contact with the saliva without being bitten. In all cases of bite or cut a wash of some anti septic should be applied. Diluted carbolic acid in the proportion of one "to fifty of water is good, as is also a weak dilution of corrosive sublimate in proportion of one of the poison to one or two thousand parts of pure water. These poisons thus diluted do no harm, and they will prevent poisons from working in cuts and bruises of any kind. American Cultivator. Price of Smutted Wheat It was not pleasant to the millers to have the public know that they were making choice milling wheat of that branded 'rejected" by the inspection depart ment, because it was even slightly smutted, and at a cost of not over half a cent a bushel, though they were buy ing it at 6 to 12 cents below what would be its market value if not smutted. The disclosure of the scheme seems to hate had one good effect, it has already brought the price of smutted wheat, if otherwise good, up to within 5 cents a bushel of the same quality if not smutted, and there is an evident desire on the part of millers to. buy the form er, at the narrower margin, which is not strange, all things considered. Much of the smutted wheat is otherwise of very fine quality; it would seem that smut, like death, "loves a shining mark," and selects the choicest wheat for its victims. If such wheat can be bought for even 5 cents below its true market value, and can be made pure at a cost of half a cent a bushel, the com- -' petition for its possession will, naturally; be sharp, and the margin of price between smutted and unsmutted will naturally grow smaller and smaller. Farm, Stock and Home. r MATTERS . OP, INTEREST AGRICULTURISTS. TO . Some Hints About Cultiva tion of the SoU and Yields Thereof-- . Up-to-ra-te Horticulture, culture. Viticulture and Flori- j . BULLETIN FROM the Indiana Experi ment station says: Young fruit trees are very apt to be injured during the winter by mice and rabbits gnawing the bark. This Is especially true if the orchard has been neglected dur j i e COUNTY ProbftteJi FARM m wn ' M S1NQULAR FEUD. who FeU Cat About Mam- monlal Arrancement. Tne queerest feud I ever heard of said M. C. Allen the well-Tnosportsman, to a Minneapolis Journal man, "is one that I encountered while rnmtine in southern Humboldt county. I noticed our guide carried a repeating rifle, a big revolver and a knife hair as He proceeded with the long as his-leon greatest caution and appeared to be were guard continually. I knew there no hostile Indians In that country and my curiosity was aroused. Finally I asked him what the trouble was. " 'Oh,! i yoost look out for some fellow,' he replied in his Swedish dialect. " 'What's the trouble, anyway?' I inquired, " 'O nuttin much. Maybe a big man mit a goon watch me pretty close, too.' " 'Who is he? " 'Oh, he is my brudder. Las' time I fix him plenty, you bet. He come back now und maybe he fix me.' "Inquiry developed the fact that the brothers had settled in Humboldt some years ago and. our guide, who was marin ried had left a pretty sister-in-la- w matSweden.! The brothers talked the ter over and finally agreed that the married one should send for the girl, and when she reached this country he would give his old wife to his brother SA ing the summer season. A heavy growth of grass or weeds about the trees makes excellent nests for mice during the winter, and where rubbish ; heaps have been allowed to accumu late in the orchard, especially if it Is near a forest, rabbits will almost in variably congregate. Under these con ditions the young trees will almost cer tainly suffer from the ravages of one or both of these pests. It is Important, therefore, that this matter be attended to at once. There are various remedies recom mended for these evils; the first and most successful of which is clean culti vation. If this has not been followed then remove all loose mulch, dead grass and rubbish; of various kinds from the Immediate vicinity of the base of the trees. This will destroy the nesting places of mice, and will go far towards protecting the trees from Then, in addition to the injury. a smooth, compact mound make above, of earth, a foot high, about the base of the trees, just before the ground freezes. These two precautions will be all that is necessary to insure pro tection against mice. Rabbits are not so liable to injure trees where there are other small plants, such as young grape vines or nursery stock In the immediate vicin ity of the orchard, as they seem to de light in cutting off the young tender branches in preference to gnawing the bark of older trees. It is always safe, however, to protect the trees, and a favorite method is to wrap the trunks with closely woven wire screen, such as is used for screen doors. This may be cut into strips eighteen Inches to two feet in leneth and wide enough to completely encase the body of the tree These may be 'tacked on or the edges woven together, and if they do not fit too closely may be left on for sev eral years. Instead of the wire screen, ordinary roofing tin is sometimes used. Sheathing paper is also used with good effect, placed on the tree In a similar manner. If one is located near a slaughter house, a very convenient as well as effectual method is to wash the trunks of the trees with blood or ran cid grease. This, however, is liable to be washed off by rains, and would need renewal several times during the winter. These and doubtless other remedies will . prove effectual if properly applied. By giving this matter imme djate attention, much damage to the young orchards may be prevented. Jas. Troop, Horticulturist. Education on the Farm. The farmer's profession can be eie--. vated above its present standard only as the children improve upon the meth e ods of their parents. President of the Massachusetts Agricul tural college 6nce said that the way.for young men to rise in the world was to stand upon the shoulders of their fath ers. We miss half the wear and tear in life when we acquire the faculty of profiting by the experience of other men. It proves nothing, that some fine ly educated man has failed in farming, or that some uneducated men have suc ceeded. Education-wilhelp a man, but it will never make one. When it can be proved that a majority of educated men upon the farm are failures and a majority of the uneducated successful. we shall all begin to question the pro priety and value of education for the farmer's profession. But: until that is proved we shall believe that the farm er's business stands upon the same basis that supports all other kinds of business, that the general education which is useful doctor, the lawyer, the man upon the board of trade is just as valuable to the man who tills the soil,4 and that profeWonal training in schools of agriculture will have the worth upon the farm that the knowledge and discipline of the law school has in practice before the courts. One thing more.,; The circumstances of a farmer's ;llfe are such that he Is brought into closer, because more constant contact with his family than men engaged in other pursuits. His partnership with the companion of his life Is In a business sense, certainly a very close one. Side byi side they often perform the same kinds of labor, and the Chad-bourn- l ; PENCUINBAB1E3 QUEER, "Well, Wallace, you seem to be pretty nicely fixed here on a farm which, when I left the country ten years ago, was not considered worth much. You don't mean. to say that this nice house and all there is in it, and those two extra barns and all the numerous other improve n ments grew out of an old farm, do you?" VCan t say ,that they exactly 'grew out of it, Uncle John, but they were dug out of it by hard work, coupled with good management and thrift. As you say. the old place was all run down, and many of my friends saidi was a fool to settle down on a western New York farm in such shape as this when I could go into the far wes and get hold of a prairiej farm which woud be so much easier worked. Bu Martha did not like to go very far away from her old father land mother and besides, I thought that I saw possi bilitiee here of success, and so I re solved to try it. The farm was encumbered with They Cause Their Parents So En a ef Trouble. From Young Idea: You will not! that the penguin baby i3 very fat l looks as though he might be extreme) good for eating, but if you could epI run-dow- ', , How One Farmer Sacceded. ; t I i . d its mortgage for I took possession - the price, last of February, and after looking sl oyer pretty, thoroughly, I staked oft four acres, lying, on a sunny slope and prepared to devote this plat to maxke gardening. I went to the city and en gaged a gardener, and with his aid pu p the ground In shape with fertil izers, as soon as it could be done, and started plants in cold frames and ho beds that I might be on hand with the earliest of the early vegetables. You should ihave heard some of the dolefu predictions of my friends and neigh bors. My extravagance at hiring gardener and paying him considerably more than an ordinary farm hand could be got for was only to be matched by my folly in supposing that I could dis- pose of; such an acreage of; green truck if T ftnP0pripfl In rnlsiTTf it You see market! gardening was not carried on then as much as it is now, and eight miles from market was considered a Y serious; obstacle. "To icut the 'story short, the first season my garden paid my help and my househ&ld expenses, put a new founda tion under my barn, and did some tile draining. This left my hay, corn, po tato and such crops to be sold toward reducing the mortgage. But oh, how worked that summer and the three, or four following! Every other morning In the week I had to get up at 3 o'clock and start off to the city wjith a load oi green stuff and it Would be! noon before I could dispose of it and get back, Then, after a good dinner and an hour's rest, I'd plunge into hard work again and keep at. It as long as I could see, But I was young and strong as well & ambitious. My wife was my best as sistant. for no matter how hard a man works outdoors, if, the household mat ters are not manaiged with thrift and economy, he can't get ahead much. She had a strong German girl to help her, but Martha was at the helm, early and late, to see that things were going right with nd waste. She was never lacking in expedients and tact" "I see," said Uncle John,! admiringly, "you struck a scientific track getting out of the ruts that our fathers and grandfathers jogged along iti." "You're right Though I was brought up on a farm, I didn't think myself so wise that b6oks and papers could not teach re anything. In addition to two good rural papers, I procured every other help I could, and as you remarked at the outset, have something to show for 'book farming,' combined with hard work. Now we're in circumstances to take it easy and see something of the a one-thir- l i tip-to- I j f . . superfluous flesh for the' time has vanl Ished. Baby penguin has a nest The mother tucks the eggcurious away ' softly and safely among her warm feathers and even moves slowly and with gjreat gravity over the cliffs, carry. Ing the egg, while father penguin goej fishing. Mother, penguin looks as tat during this' time as the baby does now but When the egg Is hatched she goei fishing, too, and soon grows as tkin as father penguin himself. You notice the funny little wings just beginning to start on baby's shoulders. Well, mother and father penguin have longer ones but they are still more like fins than wings. Nearly all the time is spent in the water and fins are more useful "to them than wings; when on land these little half wings are used as legs, and the birds are often mistaken for as they run over' the ground. do not seem to be troubled with They Insomnia, V When asleep they can be kicked several ' feet and never ' even wake up. There Is a variety called the jackass penguin, from Its habit of throwing back its head and making a loud, strange nolee that sounds like the braying of that animal. The king penguins have regular towns, where every inch of ground is measured oil In squares for nests. The young bird! are arranged in a certain locality, the molting birds in another, and the clean birds quite apart from all these. So strictly are. they all divided that If a moulting bird should accidentally stray near the clean birds it would be in stantly put out. In the Falkland is- lands and In Patagonia these birds abound, They.are also very numerous in certain islands of the southern Pacific ocean. On some of them 30,000 or 40,000 are constantly landing or going to sea. quad-rupe- ds ? :o ;iev : Says the Grocery World: "Soml pie say that advertising is all a! matter of :luck; that you cannot tell what advertising is going to do, or whetker or not it is going to pay. This may be true; but it is very strange that tfce man who gives intelligent thought to his advertising, and does it In an Intelligent earnest, straightforward way, usually has the luck on his side. He la lucky in his advertising because fee reduces it to a science. Aslvertisiag it just as certain as paying rent Advertising is governed by the same coiaaaoa-sensbusiness lines that govern buya of tomatoes or codfish. " lot ing .50 3C i ;e a M e "I i 6 "i OSTLER & 0CKEY, i .al :ei f world.". The writer's only excuse in prepar ing this sketch Is that it is written from life, anq the farmer described is jnot yet 40 years old. Helen L. Manning in Farmers' Review. . Wholesale and Retail "E be Buitclers, OXJI-Q- BEEF MDTTON I3 POM MEATS -- n VEAl ALSO- Butter, Lard, Sausage OSTLER & 0CKEY, NEPHI CITY, UTAH. We have just heard of the following Free delivery to any part of the city. facts in connection wim the use of tuberculin, says the Rural New Yorker. Three cows were tested spveral years ago and gave the usual reaction. They R. E. L. COLLIEK, C. E. were taken out of the regular stables and put in sunny box stalls and given the best sanitary conditions. The fol- Engineering in all its Branches, lowing year they were tested again, aiid again reacted. The next year they were Land and Irrigation Work a Specialty-Engineeagain tested, but failed to react After for Centrsl LaDd and Irrlgatld they; were slaughtered, an examination Co., Clear Lake Cu Land BDd of the liings showed that th disease had Fillmore Land end Irrigation Irrigation WbW Co. and been stopped the scars or marks show- Mountain Land and Irrigation Co. ing hoW far it had gone. Thistsuggests Office: Court House, Fillmore, Utal. two things: Sunshine and a perfect sanitary condition is the best "consumption cure." Many herds are undoubtedly weakened and made more liable to THE DESERET DAIRY CO, the disease by being kept in dark, filthy and poorly ventilated stables. Another HAS FOR 8ALE thought is that while tuberculin may FULL CBEAJNl CHEKISK. prove an accurate test for the presence of the disease, it does not follow that Deseret is noted for the fiDe quality every cow that shows" the reaction should be killed at once. A cow 'may of its Milk, Butter aDd Cheese- - Gin have the germs of the disease in her o ur product a trial. system land yet be so well cared for N. S. BISHOP, that she will entirely recover. IR; Use of Tuberculin. Clover and Alfalfa for Hogs. In most of the soils in the Central West red clover must be relied on chiefly for the green food of growth. But where the soil Is very deep and porous alfalfa does finely. On such soil alfalfa will supply forage for 15 to 20 hogs per acre for the season. This is specially fine for pigs and growing shoats. It has been found that pigs will gain 100 pounds each dur ing! the season from May to September, and 100 pounds of pork cannot he Pro duced so cheaply on any other feed. The pigs will come out of the field in autumn in capital condition to fatten with corn or small grain. The alfalfa in a hog pasture could be mowed once or twice during the summer, or whenever it begins to get hardy and woody. This will provide plenty of young and tender herbage, which is more nutritious; weight for weight, than forage from the Scouring Wool With Naphtha. The older plants, and if the swine are proBuenos iAyres River Plate Review vided with this food in its' most nutrisilent partner , not unfrequently ' bears tious condition, their growth will be "In a new method of scouring says: wool the heaviest burdens. Many of us in most rapid. -- Ex. is as the naphtha employed cleansing the rush and amid the distracting cares substance. By means of a pump the of our business, forget that woman's Blood Tells. Recently 308 American naphtha is forced through and through strength is not man's strength, that a beeves were sold in London at 7 cents the wool, extracting all the natural oil. ceaseless monotdny, of toil takes laugh- per pound, an average price , of $97.58, It is claimed that the does not ter from the lips, roses from the cheeks the; herd bringing the snug sum of $30,- - injure the fiber of thenaphtha wool, as alkali and health from the body. No sensible 054.64. The Polled Angus in this ship- cleansing, but leaves the fleece In betman would desire that farmers wives ment brought full $100 each; the Here- - ter condition than when cleansed by should be transformed into useless orna- fords came next, and next the Short any other process. A further valuable ments; but it should be the aim of farm- horns. The average weight was 1,360 feature pf the new method Is that after ers who would do honor to their profes- pounds. These beeves, it is said, reached the grease is extracted from it the sion to make their; mothers and wives their destination without loss and ac In a pure state, thereby beis naphtha and daughters something more than tually in better condition than when coming valuable as a medical agent or mere household, drudges, to give them placed on shipboard. This shows that for a the into saponificator purest of an opportunity, as far as means will per- the cattle were carefully managed up. Is claimed that a plant folsoaps. It mit, to satisfy those fancies and tastes, to the day of sale, and that the breed- lowing :this method scoured 500,000 to cultivate those graces and those tal- ing, and treatment were profitable. pounds Df wool, and saved a product of ents that are the beauty and the charm H. B. Gurler thinks the first move 80,000 pounds in pure wool oil." of true womanhood.H. C. Adams. for a dairy farmer who has not tested his cows, should be to have them tested, Happiness is not found in getting the Farm Ownership. become and acquainted with them Indi world, but in giving it up. It does not require the compilation of vidually. Weed out all the figures to show that there is a change ones. Then select a bull unprofitable In proportion as we live for others, from lUiiiw ' i; gradually working ilteelf through the dairy breed, vill we ,find life worth living. to-th-e father and mother penguin Just now you would find them uncommonly thi The care of the baby has so worn unon their minds and the trouble of findin enough fish for three to eat, that ril ie. A- -i c :ec! ft We 'fat; r e i; sal J to fy i ask t wg ::-- 'lea "I i -- th . 85 s ; SUPT. , -- a 5 "Of! U , , , - . I "id -- e s DESERET HOUSE Etfiiarten Gtr and aonntr for MfldHQ US NavaoADert from iU F Or IMalffldm frnn where. D-ir- 4 c -- oft Etery thing BSSFEOTABLJL 4 ' TJim BUREST WATER i'v 4j 'ill ON BAA Ca t-- Pnmites. Tbii Watoi ! ANTEED CURB for all Diseases of the Kidneys and 9t Bladder TuUxnoai&la on Application. J. P. GIBBS, Prop. UTAH. DIZSEItET, - |