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Show paste jewels.. IN WHEAT SELT. CHANGES L Sharp speeches 1'iji lrii'inlsliiig. THE HAND OF LINCOLN. Vermont, Once the Granary of New York, Falla Far Behind. is a Mattery bird uf gu plumage. Vermont was once the granary of New York elty. It now produces only There s a rotten branch in moil one bushel of wheat to more than 2U0 Ilf .luuli,iin I .ft trees. Till Mibju.'l uf llilo Iiuinl family , n lilnsti-- l ll in In Minnesota, the banner state. I lie uM iiijiIi-iloitlum In the Nalbui:il Muiteiiiii at XVasliln Iftun- Allan. turnnliiiK uf tin- - c.irtli imii-il- . Ac- whh n in. i n ,u, whom- ahiuilders llie whulu Rochester was once known as the -, u Poor Charity, art not tired of flour city." Now It is called the runlliiff in I hr liilile. Auak wnn the ancestor of r.i.- ,r (mmbeing for used a cover nnnnn. flower city . But New York still uo raises as much wheat as Wisconsin. There are times when it is better to OOK on thts cant, and know Hu- - ha ml Maryland produces more than either, be blind than beautiful. Texas nearly twice as much and That lxirs a nation In Its huM; From this mute witness understand three times as much. Pennsylvania Romance is sweet sixteen; Religion What Lincoln wan how large of ns mid Only eight states surpass PennsylIs sixty. If she's a day. vania In wheat raising. Kansas produces nearly as mnrh The man who sped the woodman's team. Many a sturdy oak has been supwheat aa both the Dakotas, which are And deepest sunk the ploughman's share. ported by a clinging vine. much more often mentioned aa wheat And pushed the iadtn raft astream, atates. or .ate before him unaware. And Wisdom sits in the market Only a trifle more than half of the place and cries because she is wise. wheat crop grows west of the MisThts was the hand that knew to swing The axe since thus would freedom traiu sissippi. Illinois, Indiana and Ohio still It Is better to be pretty than Her son and made the forest ring. produce 8u.0o0.000 bushels, which Is pious' If you have designs on the preacher. more than And drove the wedge, and toiled amain. any far western state, and over of the whole crop. The cleverest girl is the rne with Little Delaware raises more wheat Virm hand, that loftier office took. a bump of horse sense. than ail New England. Virginia. West A conscious leader's will obeyed. And. when men sought his word and look. Virginia, Kentucky. Teunessee and Push and Pull are the heavenly North Carolina raise 35,000,000 With steadfast might the gathering swayed. twins that get a man located in Easy bushels. street. New York Is the second No courtier's, toying with a sword. tenter In the United States, though Nor minstrel's, laid across a lute; A woman's idea of perfect happifar behind Minneaimlis, which can A chiefs, uplifted to the Lord ness Is a secret sorrow that every grind 82,000 barrels a day to New When all the kings of earth were mute! one knows about. Yorka 14,000. The hand of Anak, sinewed strong. Money talks, but It takes the sensl THERE IS JUST ONE SURE WAY. The fingers that on greatness clutch; tlve ear of the rich man to understand Yet, lo! the marks their lines along Dodd'e Kidney Pille build up Runwat It Is saying. Of one who strove and suffered much. down People. They make healthy Kidneys and that means healthy People said that the young artist For here, In knotted cord and vein. was bright. Some even went so far as people. What Mr. and Mrs. J. L. I trace the varying chart of years; to tell each other that he was brilDuffey say: I know the troubled heart, the strain. liant. But nobody thought to tell Nora, Ind., Feb. 6th. I Special) The weight of Atlas and the tears. him. as lie sat up in his garret nlgnt That the sure way of building up n after night, so bloomin' lonesome that men and women is to put Again I see the patient brow he envied the sick man next doer their kidneys in good working order ie That palm erewhile was wont to press; whose wife quarreled at him because shown by the experience of Mr. and And now tis furrowed deep, and now he wouldn't take his medicine. New Kirs. Joseph I Duffey of this place. Made smooth with hope and tenderness. Roth were weal, and worn and Orleans Picayune. They used Dodd's Kidney For something of a formless graee Pills and both enjoy the best This moulded outline plays shout; RULES FOR THE SICK ROOM. of health. A pitying flame, beyond our traee. I was very weak Mr. Duffey says: Breathes like a spirit, in and out. In a sick room open the door I tried almost and past everygoing. promptly without rattling the handle. thing which people said was good but The love that cast an aureole got no benefit til I tried Dodd's KidRound one who, longer to endure, A growing with scentless plant Called mirth to ease his ceaseless dole. blossoms is a pretty gift for an in- ney Pills. 1 They helped me in every way and am strong and well now. Yet kept his nobler purpose sure. valid. Mrs. Duffey says: "I was so bad that if anybody would lay down a Lo. as I gaxe, the statured man. string I felt 1 could not step over ft. Built up from yon large hand, appears: Since taking Dodd's Kidney Pills I A tyiie that Nature wills to plan can run and jump fences." But once In all a people's years. Healthy kidneys insure pure blood: Dodd's Kidney Pills insure healthy What better than this voiceless cast kidneys. To tell of such a one as he. 81nce through Its living semblance passed Endurance of Locomotive. The thought that bade a race be free! A locomotive owned and operated by the Loudon & Northwestern sluce 1882 bad up to 1902 made 2.000.000 working miles. The time out of service for repairs averaged 12 per cent of the working time credited the locomotive. Pl;otao-rapl- ;r BY EDMUND CLARENCE STEDMAN. i iMH-i- - - one-eight- h flour-millin- g run-dow- to-du-y flbCBfl HARDY ai)d Landscape Portrait $100 Reward, $100. The (oade I of Ihla pa par will be p Isaacs to lean la at leaal dreaded dlaeaae that aulenre baa been able to cure la all lie eiapea, aud that la Catarrh. Hall' Catarrh Cure I tlio only pualilv euro ouw knowa to the Birdh al frelemlij. Catarrh belns a nwitliutlunal dlraM. roqulrv s ennaillu-tlona- l treatment. Ilall'a Catarrh cure la Ultra upua I he blued end luueoua aurfaere uf the system. thereby diwtruylns the hiundatlnn of the dUeaer, mod fdvlnp ibo patlrul at react h hyballdlax up the eunMIiutlua aud aaclat-la- g nature In dtdnii Ita work. The proprietor have ao murk falih In Ita curative puwrra that they offer Ooa Hundred Italian fur any raw that It tall to Send fur Hat uf teatlmoalala, ear. Adilretw K- - J CHF.NKV Lit., Toledo, Sold lie all Iinimtlata. 7S,-- . Taka flail'a Family illia fur rouatlpatlM. tbit there Out of door work a Specialty. Portraits made on cloudy days as well as on clear days. Call and see out our samples. Prices low ; good work, promptness known. UTAh BOUNTIFUL BARNES Notice. The Hirkstown Debating society as Its subject for next Friday night, Which is the hardest, to make a small boy go to bed at night, or to make him get up in the morning? Cleveland Leader. TEA BANKING The differences in tea are compANV CAPITAL S 25,000 SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS, worth your attention. The differences in dealing are worth your attention. Tour ffrnrrr return, your money If yon dual SPUTTER. Lincoln Said to Have Denied Widely Prevalent Belief. The Boston Republic lately printed some reminiscences, of the Hon. John Conness. U. S. senator from California from 1863 to 1869. and the sole survivor of the eight pallbearers at the funeral of Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Conness. who is now a resident d of Boston, attacked one Lincoln was not a tradition. he said. "He once told me he never split a rail In his life. "I recall distinctly the occasion on which Lincoln told me alxut the I was at the White House one morning by appointment, discussing some official matter, and by degrees our conversation drifted Into other channels. John Hay, then the assistant secretary, came In for a second with some papers, among which were one of the weeklies of the day with some picture or statement referring to the 'Illinois 'Do you know. Conness,' said Mr. Lincoln to me. 'there Isn't a word of business, truth in this not a word; and yet what am I to do about it? The day after I was nominated I was standing on the front porch of my house, and the people were coming up to congratulate me, and parading by, some of them actually carrying on iheir shoulders the was supposed to have rails which split. I was much confused and troubled. and did not know exactly what 1 could do about It. My impulse was io tell them, hut then. 1 thought, here were masses of men taking their own means of expressing their pleasure at my nomination, and I asked myself if I should dampen the ardor of my supporters on the very threshold of the campaign, or let it go on and treat It as a means or incident in our election. "Then all of a sudden there occurred to me a little atory about an old farmer who lived up near where I did when I was a hoy. He was an old bachelor, and didn't have much of a farm, and was a peculiar chap. Farm-hand- a didn't like to work for him, and be used to have a lot of trouble getting them. Finally he got one, a good, hardworking fellow, who was a great help to him, and who stayed longer than any of the others. This fellow had only one fault, he used to love to sing. He sang all the time about the house, and when the was working in the wall-roote- ," Rail-Splitter- .' S 40,000. John R. Barnes, President t Lewis S. Hills, R. W. Barnes, Cashier John R. Gailey, Ass't Cashier. DIRECTORS John G. M. Barnes, Peter Barton, John W. Gailey, las. II. Larkins, William Blood KAYSVILLE, a NOT A RAIL UTAH Impromptu With a Sting. has been lately recalled of a duchesa who had entertained a famous literary man for a week and then produced the Inevitable autograph album with the request for "something Impromptu." In vain the author protested that the mere sight of the book paralysed every one of his ideas, ao at last. In a frenzy of despair, he seized the pen and wrote: If 1 was a dook I would have a be Tableau. ter cook. A quaint story TEA Through Train Service TO THE EAST NORTH AND NORTH EAST AND SOUTH EAST Millions hats heeu spent by the Union Pacific in the fmpmmneiit of its line, end all human Iwnuitjr hu been adoptt. ed to protect ite patrons against The lina U renowned for its fast train and the general aupcrioritj of its service and equipment. aeri-den- THE UNION PACIFIC RUNS Trains Daily to the Fast, It trains arriving ninny lionri ahead of all competitor Three Through Full information etieerf ully furnished application u. D. E. BURLEY G. P. & T. A., O. S. L. R. R. Salt Lake City. N There is good tea besides ours, but not better; and ours is safe; no other is safe; no no other is moneyback. Go by the book. Tour irrarwr rataraa year nmwy If y--n Hko BrUllltoff-- Baal. don't English Patrol Boxes. The box or cabin in which a telephone la placed la called in England a "telepbonium or "phonlum." TEA Who sells Who sells Who sells Who sells the the the the best tea best tea best tea best tea Tour nwor rcturoa your money If yon don't Hko Mrblllina'o Ural. Rest for the Eyes. The eye requires an much rest as any nth-- r organ. Green is the most restful coler. g 1 John went out and tried silence for a couple of days, but one morning the old farmer found a note for him Have goue to hoe where 1 saying: can aing." So, Conness. I just thought I'd let 'em sing.' " The real value of the tradition lies in Its clear assertion of the fart that Lincoln was one of the humble people who grew to high estate. That Is true, and because the tradition put the truth In a form that every one could grasp. It has survived. Emerson on Lincoln, The president Impressed me more favorably than 1 had hoped. A frank man, with a sincere, lawyer's habit of mind, good, clear statement of his fact, correct enough, not vulgar, aa described; but with a sort of boyish cheerfulness, or that kind of sincerity and jolly good meaning that our class meetings on commencement days show, in telling our old stories over. When he has made his remark, he looks up at you with great satisfaction, and shows all his white teeth, and laughs. He argued to Sumner the whole case of Gordon, the slave trader, point by point, and added that he was nut quite satisfied yet, and meant to refresh his memory by looking again at the evidence. All this showed a fidelity and very honorable to him. When I waa Introduced to him, he Faid. Oh, Mr. Emerson, I once heard you say in a lecture, that a Kentuckian seems to say by his air and manners, Here am I; If you don't like me, the worse for you. Diary of It. W. Emerson In the Atla'itic. well-meanin- g Can You Improve This? It Is not very well known that in the hall of one of the great colleges of England there hangs a frame in- closing a few sentences of which Abraham Unr in is the author. They are considered the hast English that You or I might was ever written. read them over and call them very simple indeed. And they are so simple that any child who reads at sll can read an understand them. That fa one thing that makes them great. It was his being simple and plain that made Lincoln himself great. Now, here Is a little paragraph by Llncoln which he made a rule of his conduct. Suppose you try to write it over and sec how much you can improve It. See if each word is the right one, and try to find a better word for the place. Notice how simple this is; all but two are words of a aingle field. syllable: hound to win, hut I nin "By and by the old farmer got so "I amto not he true. 1 am not hound ! hound that the singing disturbed him So he called up the man succeed, but I am totiml to live up lo snd said; "took here, John, you must the light I have. I must stand with atop this singing. H'b really more anybody that stands right. stand with 'ban I can stand. Don't let me hear him while he is richt. and part with him when he goes wrong. you again " Early in October there was held In touis. at the Hall of t'ongreases, iu connection with the World's Fair, the American International Congress of Tuberculosis, which consisted of representatives gathered from all parts of the American continent, to discuss the best means of preventing and curing this dreadful disease. Special attention was giveu to the subject of prevention. The congress was in session three days. Many important questions were discussed and committees were appointed tor the purpose of carrying forward an active campaign against this most terrible of all the foes of human life. The committee ot publicity was charged with the duty of organizing a proper educational campaign In connection with Chautauqua. conventions, associations and fraternities of various sorts, for the purpose of placing In the hands of the public information relating to the best means of preventing and combatting this scourge. Those who are Interested in this phase of the question should address for further information (he American Congress on Tuberculosis. Committee on Publicity, 28 Thirty Third Place, Chicago, 111. St. covery, the heat method is training. Weak muscles must be trained to act with energy. Weak nerves must be toned up and steadied. The weak stomach must he trained to normal activity and the whole body must be brought In harmony with the force which make for health. Buttermilk for Consumptives. Butlermilk is an exceliert food fur tulierrular patients. It may lie taken In the quantity of one to three quarts a day. according to the amour t of other food taken. The patient may take two meals, three meals, or four meals a day, according lo the quantity of food taken at each meal, and the kind of fixid. A safe rule Is never to allow a consumptive to go hungry. He should eat whenever he has appetite, o that the full digestive power of the stomach may he utilized In furnishing the body with constructive material. Wanted An Appetite. to without one. Why go to the dining mom under protest. Dont try to buy appetite at a dollar a bottle. Earn it. One should enjoy eating and he will. If he has a natural appetite, such as conies to one who works for it. The outdoor life creates apiietite, Movement to Suppress Tuberculosis. Science has drinniiKi rated beyond and a eohl morning Hath awakens the question llial pulmonary tuberculosis brain, lungs, heart, liver, stomarh and An lee hag over the or cniiMiimplion of tin; lungs is both a the apHtlte. preventable aud a curable disease. stomach for half an hour before meals This disease is prodn by germs Is a good natural appetizer for a bedithirli find ilieir way into the tody ridden invalid. Another method is a hot application through abrasions of ibe skin, through over the abdomen for five minutes, folt lie iiiiirniis membrane of the nuiuih or the intestines and through the lowed by au ice rub over the same lungs. Tlie germs ol the disease are parts for one or two minutes. This found in the sputum of imtsoiis suf- not only produces an appetite hut fering from tuberculosis. The germs stimulates tlie flow of the digestive .re also found in tilt; lloli and milk of Juices and thus furnishes the ability animals suffering from the disease. to digest. The germs are in mid nearly everyDiet for Tuberculosis. where. These germs cannot live in Tlie tubercular patient needs pro the tissues of a thurnuglily foods, hut only Mrson. as tint cells ot the body are tcids. or capable of destroying tin. gernts, lull just the amount which can to aaslmk luted and utilized by the tody. Any when the body is weakened liy indigestion, by the habits uf breathing excess must he treated like polaons, and hence must to a burden to both foul or Imd air, by anything which impairs the health, the tissues lose iheir liver and kidneys, and a waste of vital (lower to destroy germs so llial when energy. Proields must lie taken, not only in they enter the Isidy they find lodgemoderate quantity, but in the purest ment, grow and develop and tuberculosis of the lungs, bowels or of some form possible. The vegetable kingdom present proteids in combination with other part is the result. Statistics show that at least lfiii.OitO fats in great abundance, and In nuts, persons die of this disease in this which cfcn he made easily digestible country annually. Four or five times by thorough chewing or by proper that number of persons are sick all preparation. The yolka of eggs afford also a comthe time with this disease. Tubercu-losl- s kills more than any other mal- bination of fats and prof elds which (a ady. Experience has shown that the admirably suited to the tubercular padisease is not incurable, as has been tient. Milk, especially rich milk, la generally supposed, hut is a very cur- another food adapted to this class of able malady if taken in time, and if patients when it does not produce through the right treatment is applied. Not "biliousness" Indigestion. less than one hundred thousand lives Many tubercular patients have dilatation of the stomach. Such cases could he saved every year by the must avoid milk. Nearly all can take of proper means for preventnuts if the right kind is selected and ing aud curing this terrible disease. great care la taken with the masticaDanger in Alcohol in Cold Weather. tion. Pecans, hickory nuts, almonds" When the skin Is warm it Is red or and Alberts, plnons, or pine nuts are pink in color. The cold air of winter the best varieties. Half a pound of causes the skin to become whiter in nuts may be taken dally by the eon- color. This is due to the contraction sumptive, not only without harm, hut of the bhxxl vessels of the akin. The with great benefit, if combined with amount of blood passing through the other foods. A diet collating of nuts, brea and fruits Is a pefl--' skin is decreased, and the amount of lieat thrown off lnio the cold air is feet dietary for the tnbereufar patient. likewise decreased. If a glass of wine The yolks of a dozen eggs may be' " or brandy Is taken the skin becomes used in place of nuts. red. The sensation of warmth proWHOLE80ME RECIPE8. duced is delusive. The victim Imagines himRelf warmer. Indeed, the Lentil and Nut Loaf To one pint of skin is warmer, but at the same time a great increase Is observed in the rather dry lentil pulp add one cup of heal thrown off from the skin. The grated Brazil nuts and sufficient stale result is an enormous loss of heat to breadcrumbs to make a stiff mixture. Season with salt and sage If desired. the inside of the body. l)r. Parkes, the eminent English Press Into a bread tin and bake In a All observers con slow oven one hour or longer. .anitarian, says: Fruit Soup Into one cup of warm demn the use of spirits, and even uf wine or beer, as a preventive against water put one rounding tablespoonful cold." The names of Dr. King. Dr. of sago and cook in a double boiler Kane, Capt. Kennedy and Dr. Hayes one half hour. Then add two or three cup may also he cited as holding to this whole cooked prunes, opinion. In the last expedition in stewed raisins, two tablespoonfuls search of Sir John Franklin Hie whole stewed cranberries, one teaspoonful lemon juir and sugar to auit the crew wen: teetotalers. Prof. Miller states that, the Russian taste. Allow it to heat until the fruit military authorities "interdict its use is hot, and serve. Vermicelli or pearl absolutely in the army when troops barley may lie substituted for sagot are alsiut to move under extreme and dried rherrlea. with strawberry cold, pari .f the duty of the corixirals ami lemon juice, used In place of the being to sineil carefully the breath of fruits mentioned. Snowballs with Prunee Steam rice each man on the morning parade, and to turn hark from the march those one hour or until tender, then form who have indulged In spirits, It having into halls, witli one large or two small been found thttr melt men are pe- prgnes in the renter. Serve with a hot culiarly subject to he frost bitten and xx r made lay warming for a few minutes one-hal- f cup of meltose, to otherwise Injured." Dr. Carpenter is authority for the which the juice of one lemon has been statement that, ihc Hudson Bay com- added and a little prune juice to make it of a consistency to pour easily. pany has, for many years, entirely Banana and Nut Salad Peel three spirits from the fur countries of tlie north, over which they have bananas and slice thin; add one-hal- f exclusive control, to the great im- cupful broken (not chopped) walnut s cup provement.," as Sir John Richardson meats. Pour over this otiKcrvcd, "of the health Hnd morals of the dressing and mix well. Serve of ilieir Canadian servants and of the on platters garnished with lettuce leaves. Indian tribes.' Peas Croquettes Boil until thoroughly done two cupfuls of Scotch Health By Training. Health-getting- , for the chronic in- peas. Rub through a colander and on eggs, a little valid. is imply a matter of training, of add two well-hea- t health culture under favorable condi- minced parsley, a small grated onion, tions. whirl inrltide the discarding sail to taste and dry broad enimba of nil OisMu"'Irodueing linbils, siirlt enough lo make quite stiff. Form Into us tlie iis' of tobacco, ten, coffee and croquettes, roll In beaten eggs and til! initiititig. indigestible and disease-iroilnein- g breadcrumbs and hake in oven about ten minutes. A cup of chopepd walfluids. nuts will improve the croquettes. foods flesh Is no use e of Tlie ft' doiiiii. a ciooe (if liver aud kidney Savory Lentils Cook two cupfuls of as well ns of s,o:n;o li disorders. lentils ii n i il well done. Rub through Tl.e uric arid of flesh tonii is al-'- o a a colander ami add salt and HBge to . To serve, heap in the center of c:iiim of rlii'tl mu l ism ntoi gout, at; well the dish and pour tumato satire us non ousnefs and raciilies. For M.ii'tiint !:il ami permanent re around it. esM-ciall- Don't y 1 tissue-buildin- well-toaste- d one-fourt- two-third- dis-cas- ta:-te- |