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Show THE COALVILLE TIMES, COALVILLE. UTAH cth tur ail bovs 'lie ml ii m to ii .u-- uutd Growing lioys should b allowed lo'DvrX religion I kind and of their ovu should not be foretd to adopt the same sort a their mothers and sifters. A masculine religion good for Siunhiv n the ivh- to he retoinmeiuled for tin with "ready-mad- e funii'h lo religion will fail, Ih H ihcv U HTimlteiJ to lies flop their own uti'l.i - ho well n- i.ttcM ot I m in ) v a i and inm-itio- IF YOUR WATCH DONT CO at doeen't keep eccuteie time, tend it ie end oae of out ex petti will make it go like a Dew one. We abaoliXe-l- y We in religion. guarantee out work and give your time piece nil the atteotioa ai ii you in brought peieoe. HENRY HOWLAND Xohe ilmrth. ii LOST SALT are d wruering that nord ng to the old idea, a pai kage of relig-i.md twrtone was effted to find tin mo now that rthgion miK te individual CJT-- r, UTAH Unless a than possesses some wisto realize dom be will never be able what a fool he is. the Mint a mens, and the laiys the adult mans. A hoy s rthgion thing. 'In demand the same n w r he same us g.on will in w r he should fa an mdiwdonl and niinpi iiligon of Ih- - a- - of olnrs H iin h a soiiiihh lie hov is not interested loligiOii lia it rt a in i: j i aU to tan hood ts of religion. inttlliiiu.d in the life to i onn nor mjhe ii'pei . Bet w is n the a i of lifuiii and ghtun u.ire the hov is more of an 1 iei st Burn h w d mi he again. Jljli siiddnlih he Iss miles . ollsi mils to he indit ulna I. t - .,n I, . 1. the if; ,n a in Iim.is' T1 i Inn i1 i .n B a r only, hut uUo for t hi io ii a r ir iMindai r LAKI o . , i HORSES AND MULES mdi-iijt",ii- r.xl of not o i.'. reiidwi.idf je i Inndid out to nidi sane thing m (in .,i. k tgt Womens itligion will his 'I ABOUT INFORMATION I PARCEL POST OKDEES SOLICITED I ! , fdoud.n , -- t i. ie ti iii for the I up aftir i unug ii Ino in In legion with the Imre Ii l! r . o. i He lui- - I mil foi ii. Nut ii f l.i v aitirno.'i of mg on 'satnrd in night. muling t s uligem is iti li idinl ho that mi .it ion in 1. is- in -- I -- n ' in, ad haset-h.d1 - tie l lir-- i to plan hr ii n I' a hi rs ultra live to Ians through iisk lilting First Prize i What do you think of the man whom The gteilt question now (olluTtlf you see driving a horse with bia tail I hat is the (piea- - docked to seven Inches, perfectly what we lime to how for t! voik of our Ian- - (luh- against the attack ot flies during t Sill ll tilths are V t on hi he'll h si out leoMimlit hot days? these lea'll , Tins ii.e hlllg out to ei t t!.i Ian, and tin l'iy sho dd " the hodv There is a great deal of humanity ts hind I lie arms In axle grease. Have you ever noticed that the first We are fading In atl.eh tin- hot to th i liuri h. The (luh group-Hhoiil- d your horse does when you turn thing do should trid-lie turned into (he t of tin iliurih. The (hurt'll him out of the stable In the morning more than develop muscle. It must make the hoys allaround Christians, is to go straight to the watering lhns must Is' shown how to make their r ligion manifest In hiking and trough? Contrary to the general belief, It Mooting, Imt the Inns' depa rt tm nt must lerlatnly he more than a gym- does not hurt a horse to give him nasium flats. water In moderate quantities even Let the Ians foil that the are h'lping to run the churth and make when he Is very hot, providing the them ms (hit the thurth is interested in them. Work up a masculine water Is not very cold. Never salt the horse's feed In the Make the l.ovs,' drpai Intents look and feel like going conn rns religion box Place a big tump where he ran reach It and he will take It when be needs It sufft The farms are ring The long baiter strap In the stall for lack of laborers and it has been the cause of permanent injust makes me tired to look jury to many animals. A "cheap harness ts really about at these1 fellows loafing around the parks of New the most expensive thing on the farm, as it sometimes costs life. York when they might he earning good monty in the -(miiiin. Most of them are aldi bodied men, who will tell you that they VALUE OF POTATO have hunted a job until they are worn out in hody and in spirit. TO FATTEN PIGS Mayl-they lime, lull their horizon is bounded by the two rivers about tins island and Fourteenth street. Why dont they go on thefarms? there. k They wouldn't have to ask twice Expert at Eastern Oregon Ex1 m the the farms dont iiman west, but the farms near New No, periment Station Gives ReYork. What the farmers want ia help to care for their crops, and they sults of Test. ami able to pay for it. Mnj of these fellows loafing here would be glad to get jobs at $2 a (By ROBERT WyTHYCOMB of tutors Oregon Experiment Button.) day so long as they could stay in the city. Farm labor pays quite as well, Ad experiment to teBt the feeding if not .hotter thnn that, besides offering other advantages. value ot raw or steamed potatoes as days in Say a limn gets $2 a day in the city ahd works twenty-si- x supplementary feed with a grain rathe month. That makes $.V2. Out of this he pays car fares, at least, tion has been carried on with Inter-eatin- g results. wlmh riduces his income somewhat. Deduct further his house or room The hoga In the experiment were diand whole lot a nnd hi left for clothing there isnt rent and fond, savings, vided tnto eight lota and records ot or wjx'i'dings, whichever he may incline to. It will cost him at least $G the different teed given each and the month proportionate gains made were kept a week, or $26 a month, just to keep himself, leaving him $26 carefully Each hog In lots 1 and 2 fur o' her purposes, ate an average 'ot 170 IS pounds ot Any farmer is willing to pay from $.". to $10 a month for a hand, barley and 609 53 pounds of raw potesido Itoard and lodging. You don't have to be a mathematician to tatoes, making a gain In weight of SO 70 pounds. Those in lots 3 and 4 figure out the advantage of working on a farm, financially, over working ate 110 30 pounds of barley and for $2 a (lav in the city. But there are other advantages as well. 663.75 pounds steamed potatoes, and The him! help eats with the farmer and his family, so there is no made a gain of 70 60 pounds, while those In lots 6 and 6 ate 188 60 question about the quality of the food, and everybody knows that it is pounds barley and 564 80 pounds better than tho average table of the laborer in the city. steamed potatoes and made a gain ot Instead of working m the dust and dirt of the streets or in the con- 78 10 pounds. Lots 7 and 8 ate 300.10 fined air of a shop or factory the farm laborer is out in the open all the pounds barley without potatoes and made a galu of 69 6 pounds. lime, building up his breathing apparatus while his muscles are keeping we re used as a check on the others in good shaK. lie has plenty of milk, fresh vegetables galore and solid meat for his how more definitely the proportl ate value of the potatoes. At meals, instead of a thcese sandwich and a glass of beer. There is no stuffipresent market value of 7 cents ness about the place where he slccjn, either, nnd he doesn't have to lie pound live weight, the hogs ted bai on the fire eseae on hot nights to get enough air to keep him from made a 27 87 gain, which makes G2 to the fa barley feeding value suffouiting. dred Ixits 1 and 2 fed barley and potatoes at the rate of three pc You are stronger than of potatoes to a pound of harley, vou know. Only you cant a $4 25 gain, which gives the a feeding value of 29 get at your strength to use potatoes to th hundred Lots 3 and4 r it as you want to. (No, ing six times as much steamed this isnt an advertisement. toes as barley, made a 14.94 the steamed potatoes a fe.. 1 ts a brief tale of what yoO giving value of 47 cents to the hunt might do but cant.) Lots 5 and 6 fed three times as 1 these are some of the things steamed potatoes as barley, tna machine electrical an were If vour bol) 25 47 gain, making the feeding t i on Id is, if all tho heat ami the muscular energy cxpondei of the potatoes 42 cents to th show would it electrical units, b an average man were ((inverted into dred kilowatt hours of electrical energy It Is noticeable that those fed (list lie umxI up about two and one-ha- lf times as much potatoes as grain in the con ph? of a woihing day. not make the gam made b) This amount of olettncitv may not seem great, hut when one eon- - others, butquite it required sr 25 p .b re the things that can lie done with it the result is a tritle startling. less barley to make this gain, sc hours of kilowatt electrical energy you could difference in feeding talue With two and one-ha- lf counted for i for houijs. or run a stwing machine motor for heat an electric flatiron It is also noteworthy tha the s 100 hours; heat an electric toaster for four hours, run a large fan for potatoes are worth H cents tno thirty-twhours, or warm a chafing dish for six hours and n electric the hundred than raw for feedln shown in the companion of the curling iron for 100 hours. of animals fed the Jto-- l ration All Bos is bc omphalic d without voluntary effort and merely comes work and doe not represent the energy anc in the course of. the day -- III ts, - 'll ll.o- - I help-lee- s -- l I I - Stallion. Clydesdale it The well bred draft horse 1 do--th- 1 o' man. Really it is an astounding revelation o machine. human the of the efficiency a w fat man or an unusually large woman strugNow hen one see he can realize a little gling along on a hot day and panting pathetically, and think of the many all (he electrical energy that is being generated things to which it might be applied. Though probably if the fat man and the Urge woman, were aware their of ability as electric dynamo they would jonly wish they could use th ducklings vermin proof. E ir to hot sun Is fatal There to run a huge fan to keep them cool. them tlways be a partial shade to th uni u ranee of , r Ducks Are Hardy. Pucks a a rule, are hardy, do not have the gapes The we part of a duck is its legs Indige i apt to show itsAf in the you the coarse sand is omitted in the Is It always best to put a hand! sand in a pail of mash food mix thoroughly. This will aid dige Th oily nature of the feathers m a laboring 1 ., . In Case of Elephantiasis. Alex. Keneaiy, editor of the London Daily Mirror, which is a daily pic- always the most rroflt in horses The patient mule is not much ture paper, learned the newspape trade in the United States. One day he needed a bit of advertising, so he bought a couple of baby elephants, Jumbo and Jimbo, and set them parading about at the summer resorts collecting funds for a charity the Mirror was supporting, thereby getting many pennies and shillings for the fund and, quite incidentally ot course, a good deal of advertising tor the paper. Jimbo was delicate and often sick. Keneaiy was in Paris a time ago and he received a frantic wire from one of hiB elephant keepers: Jimbo is dead. What shall I do? After Keneaiy telegraphed back: mature reflection I advise you to bury Jimbo, (Saturday Evening Post. for speed, but he keeps going, and usually arrives on time. A mule never seems to be really frightened at anything. When he A year ago I used to see Her walk beside him to the train: runs away he does it through pure Their fingers were entwined and she love of mischief. Waa very beautiful ah me! A mule scents danger almost as I sighed to be a groom again The lovelight danced within their eyes. unerringly as the elephant. parted with heartfelt Ever know a mule to step In a hole They And, turning back her lonely way or venture upon an unsound bridge To wait and wonder through the day. Her tender bosom shook with sighs. of his own volition? No white man can ever get on as At length he went alone twas oer! good terms with a mule as the negro Their bltasful days forever past: can. She fondly clung to him no more What Joy would lover have in store The average mule will do as much might always last! work at two years old as the horse I Ifsawhoneymoons him go day after day will at three or four. And missed the glad looka and the gay, Bweet laughter and regretfully Never tie a mule up In a stall overRecalled artless graces she night. The open field for him always Had shown the along the happy way. Some English farmers are paying as high as $400 per pair for American This morning t beheld him close Aloor behind him and descend mules to send to the Argentine ReThe steps that gleamed In marble rowa. public. good-bye- CAUSE OF GAPES IN THE POULTRY e for-tfor- Is in demand, and the fanner who breeds it constantly in the one who makes s, And then he turned! Ah, Cupid knows The honeymoon is not the end1 She stood Inside the window there And held with Sweet and tender care A baby up, that he might see How glad a world thla world can be. How good ito waya are and how fair. MERE OPINION. To Eradicate Disease Birds ffected Should Be Isolated - i bird, Some men are more anxloue to be heard than to be respected Few people tinder the age of forty and Treated. (By JL L. KEMP8TER tion.) Cape A- of Missouri Sta- are satisfied with the names their rent gave them. pa- man has a gift of some kind, ii a disease affecting certain bntEvery the trouble with most gifts la that' and chicks fowls, particularly one to four weeks old. It is caused by a small worm, called Oh gape worm, which attaches itself to the windpipe of its victim. 'The symptoms are frequent gaping, sneezing, a whistling oough, with discharge of mucus and worms, weakness and drooping of wings. Dead birds will show forked worms attached to the windpipe. The adult female gape worm ts much larger than the male, her body being filled with eggs and embryos These embryos appear in the dropSo the pings or ere coughed up. trouble le spread by contamination water. of runs, feed and drinking Embryos are often found in earthdump-Isbnes- worms. To eradicate the disease. Isolate affected birds, treat drinking water with potassium pennanguate; burn to dead birds, and remove chicks fresh ground which is not Infected. Cultivation of infected ground is said to eradicate the worms in three years. Individual cases may be treated in one of three ways: fly confining the chick for a short time in a box which has lime on the floor. The lime is said to cause the worm to release Its grip, and the chick to sneeze It out Stripping a feather, ieavlDg a small tuft, moistening with turpentine and Introducing Into the windpipe, care being taken not to lacerate the wind pipe or suffocate the chick. Two horse hairs tied together, the knot trimmed, run down the chick-- : en's throat, and removing In a twisting manner, will also remove the worms. Gape worm extractors are also on the market they have no market value. Nine men out of ten would rather find 8400 worth of gold in an old pot than to have written Paradise Lost. woman never can understand why a man boys a new derby hat that, as far as she can tee, le Just like his old one. The woman who worries over leaving her children to the care of a nurse doesn't get very far Into society nowadays. DIFFICULT TO GROW Good, Rich Soil Is Necessary for These Handsome Flowers They Sell Well. These 'handsome stalk flowers are easily grown. Good, rich soil ie necessary The flowers always sell readily and ship any distance without injury. Bulbs also sell well. Sort hera into three sizes and make the price' Plant in-- a sandy soil accordingly. about five inches deep. A space in the back yard, 'i'yafd wide and two .yards long, will produce a dozen fine stalks that will provide hunlreda of flowers. Keep the plant moist at all times to secure Choice flowers. alL No this town? Its You that's It takes & lot more nerve, confidence and optimism to be an employer than to be an employee. You never have to lie awake nlghta thinking up schemes to get even with a crook. Let him alone and he wOl get even with himself. HIS MADNESS. Why do you keep on living In d TUBEROSES ARE NOT IN Uncle Abner 8ays. The feller who Bays he kin stop drinking any time he want to aever want to. In a few years there will be enough different brands of breakfast food se that every feller kin have one braad for himself. I never saw a newspaper man wke wasn't loyal to his paper. . If ke wasnt loyal he want a newspaper man, A man who can alt and fish for six hours at a stretch without a bite would get all out of patience if he had to mind the baby ten minutes. METHOD Logical Youths. Raymond, according to a recent story, had been playing hard all aay and came to bedtime thoroughly weary. In fact he was so sleepy that he wanted to omit saying his prayers. "But, dear, his mother remonstrated, you must be a good boy and thank God for all His, goodness to you. Just think what a nice time you've had all day playing, and remember all the other little boys who have no nice home or nice clothes or mother to love them. Raymond's ejfea opened a little drowsily, and out of his relaxed mouth came this protest: But, mother, I think thems tha fellers that oughter do the prayin'!" Chicago Record-Heral- Joy-Vis- it A Glasgow journalist who was car less of his personal appearance was assigned to write something about a show at a leading Glosgow theater. He presented his card at the box-offic- all my bus-hand- 's I fault The came out and looked can't get him to at the manager disheveled visitor dubiously. move? into a city Did you come kere to write som that's up to date. about the play to work? ke see he wants to be where there thing . asked. are lamp posts to hang Xo white resting on his way home in the mornings. It makes me sick the way some people who pretend to be American slop over whenever anybody with a title happens to notice them. Why should we take any more Interest in a duke or a prince or a duchess than what's that crowd running for?" To see the duchess of Blnglewash, I guess. I heard she was to ride past that corner at about this time. Hey, where are you going?" o see the duchess. Come on. When a Baby Comet In Handy. The drills with which mosquitoes bora. But seldom trouble me; I o to sleep at night to snore As cnlmly as can be. Let other worry if they must. And to destroy them strive Our tittle baby's plump and just The sweetest thing alive. -- Diogenes Luck. After all, Diogenes was lucky." Why?" If he we v living totjay how could he hope with that old tub of his to keep out of the way of the automo biles? As Ueual. "They say he has ao much money he doesn't know what to do with 1L" "Yes. And he Isnt doing It "Do you think Id come to your theater for amusement? asked as he stalked out Father and Son. The son hasn't tho father's brains. The old man could run a shoestring into a tannery any time. "And the son?" "About ail he can do Is to run aa automobile into a telegraph pole. Kansas City Journal. The Reason. "So your viol.n?" daughter is studying the "Yes. replied Mrs. Clyminwell. "Has she unusual talent? I havent observed. But there's no question about her possessing a remarkably beautiful forearm. Washington Star. Particular. What you need, said the doctor, is an operatiojj, "Very well, replied the patient "Which operation are you cleverest at? Detroit Free Fress. " Accidental. Professor. Can you tell the class the name of the belt north of the equator?" 16 Cant lr." Professor, - - Correct" Tale Re-ro- d. , t |