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Show -r t -r THE WOMAN'S RIGHT The grent majority of the farming villages of the Stato of Utah have now installed or are installing water systems. This is a tremendous step onward both from the health and In-bor In-bor point of view. Tho next step now will bo for tho men to see to it that the water which In most Instances, Is piped to a hydrant Just outside of the house, is piped Into tho house and that tho women are given water In the kitchen and proper drainage of the whste water into cesspools. There Is no reason why In this In telligent age when the question of income in-come and outgo both of money and of energy is so well understood that the heads of farm households should persist In compelling womoi ' waste tlmd, energy and the1- hea. Ill en tying water Into the suse ' csr I rylng tho wnsto water out uga.u, evti'i I though the water may bo drawn from a hjdrnnt Instead of from the old j fashioned woll. There aro man) mod ern comforts thar should be enj .-by .-by the fan! as well as by the -i i I who lives i. '.a city. Chief timenj these, perhaps, Is the bath room In tho house: possibly also tho indoor toilet. Whenever water Is piped In the houso It becomes u comparatively comparative-ly 8!mp e matte biuld In the ho.i8 or against ho ho.is a bath room and a toilet an' i connect the water with the kltchc 've In buch a way thar hot nnd cu.,.- tn may be had r.-w r.-w il both for ba' ' and cooking purposes. The head of tho household sbou'd glvo Immediate attention tu these conveniences Ono letidlng men Jf the Btnto hn-i Just built a houfat- on his farm in a i ilnco -xhero piped water Is not available, avail-able, he Is so convinced of tho value of having somo of tho materia' comforts in tho houso thnt ho h.tn connected his woll with a pump that drives the wat " through pipes Into tho house. In a .ouse ho bns a small bath room nnc1 -'her conveniences, convenien-ces, such as may bv ,'inil described In the bullet'n on "Lauor Saving " vices" by Mrs. Leah Widtsoo nnd published recently by tho Utah Experiment Ex-periment Station. Women hhvo rights nnd men must respect them. Every labor saving, energy saving and temper saving contrivance con-trivance thnt the man uses on the farm is needed Incounter'-irt In the house, tin man's work complete unless his ifo Is doing ner work in as satisfactory manner hs ho noes his. A splendid typo of man, an old pioneer pio-neer of this state, who has served the stato long and well, sa'd recently, as he stood In his old homo, before his wife, who had shared Ufa's Joys and sorrows with him, that he felt that IiIb life had been qulto successful, that ho had accomplished much and tliat he was enjoying his old ago, but that as ho looked back ovpr tho years i of h'B life his greit regret was that 1 ho fo t thtit thol"idons of tho women of rils household vl been heavier i thaVi his. This , llio reeling of ft j true man, and a '.eellng that finds j echo no doubt, In tho breast of every I truo hearted man. Now thnt tho first i ploncor agonies have been met and i vercome, nnd wo can think about I somo of tho comforts of life, lot us not forget that for first consideration i and of first Importnnco aro thoso con- rlvancoH of tho household which mnko tho dnliy labor of the women of household easier, lighter and more iiesirablo. I Tho shades of tho builders of the pyramids might havo been Intorestod onlookers tit tho sight or Iron girders gir-ders wplghfng forty-Blx tons ench going go-ing up nineteen stories to tho top of 1 a biil'dlng being orectcd In Now York City TUs Is said to be tho first time that girders of this weight have been !f ed to such a hotght, |