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:: II i : : :i; m !■ i n m : m This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mrs. Pmkham : " I suffered untold misery male troubles. My doctor said an opera tion wag the only chance I had, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. " One day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was better, and now I am en tirely cured. "Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." from fe FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, flbroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick women to write her for advice. She lias guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. ONE LESSON WHOLLY WASTED. Little Surprise Planned by Billiger McSwat Not a Success. "Lobelia," asked Mr. McSwat, who ■was rummaging in one of the closets, "have you done anything with that old coat of mine that used to hang on the last hook in here?" "Yes," answered Mrs. McSwat. •'! gave it to the Volunteers." "You did, did you?" Well, you'll be sorry to learn, perhaps, that thgre was a flve-dollar bill in it which I »ras going to give you if I found that état undisturbed at the beginning of March." "O, I think not, Billiger. I searched it thoroughly before I gave it away." "You're a pretty smart woman, Lobelia, but It didn't occur to you to look Inside the lining." "O, yes, It did, and I found the flve dollar bill. I spent it for the rubber plant in the front parlor that you have admired so much and wondered hew I managed to buy out of my allowance. You're a pretty smart man, Billiger, but there are times when you don't look the part." There being no further business be fore the house, Mr. McSwat adjourned without form. THAT OFFICE YARN. H 'it « öi Mrs. A. —I think offices are horrid. My husband is out all day and says he Is looking for an office. Mrs. Z.—How funny! Mine is out late nights and says he is detained at the office. A human act once set in motion flows on .for ever to the great account. Our deathlessness is in what we do, not In what we are.—George Mere dith. LOST $300. Buying Medicine When Right Food Was Needed. Money spent for "tonics" and "brac ers" to relieve Indigestion, while the poor old stomach is loaded with pas try and pork, is worse than losing a pocketbook containing the money. If the money only is lost it's bad enough, but with lost health from wrong eating, it is hard to make the money back. A Mich, young lady lost money on drugs but Is thankful she found a way to get back her health by proper food. She writes; "1 had been a victim of nervous dys pepsia for six years and spent three hundred dollars for treatment in the attempt to get well. None of it did me any good. "Finally I tried Grape-Huts food, and the results were such that, If it cost a dollar a package, I would not be without it. My trouble had been caused by eating rich food such a pastry and pork. "The most wonderful thing that ever happened to me, I am sure, was the change In my condition, after I began to eat Grape-Nuts. I began to Improve at once and the first week gained four pounds. . "I feel that I cannot express my self in terms that are worthy of the benefit Grape-Nuts has brought to me, and you are perfectly free to publish this letter if it will send some sufferer relief, such as has come poor to me." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Well ville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Eaetcr. *L JV) Now, while the dawn with tints of rosi Smiles through the gray skies, every. where. Softly about her morning cars The Easter mother goes. The little rooms we call the hours She gladdeneth for all And In their cradles gently wakes The earliest Spring how sakes; The dark hath somehow fallen away, For where she deftly hath uprolled The snow-white curtains, we behold The dawn of Easter Day. And with a cheerful song she gives The first birds welcome to her door. While all the Easter world once mon Rejoices that it lives. names and color. As he spoke to one after another, a tiny flower thought it self unnoticed and, fearful of being quite overlooked, it timidly pleaded: "Dear Lord, forget me not." The Cre ator turned sternly toward the little plant that dared to Interrupt him, then, seeing how sorely afraid it was he gently smiled upon it, gave it for its color the heavens' own blue, and called it Forget-me-not as a reminder that it had once been so foolish as to doubt him. —Frank Walcott Hutt. Legends of the Beautiful Forget-Me-Not "The sweet forget-me-not that bloomB for happy lovers," has more beautiful legends clinging to Its name than any other flower. They begin "In the beginning," with the creation. Aqcording to one beautiful tale, the Lord called the plants in the Garden of Eden before him to give them their It Is the Persians who have fash ioned a beautiful legend to tell how it is that those flowers are scattered over the earth as the stars are spread over the sky. According to them, one morning of glory when , the world was new an angel stood weeping outside the closed gate of Paradise. He had fallen, in that he had loved a fair w /-Ï4X 4 17/ r 'ySPBH .rspSgo •vn- i c V L ^ VJ < ÎA VJ l VOS v. "He had fallen. In that he loved a fair daughter of earth. Together they en tered In, for the angel's great love had lifted the woman to Paradise." daughter of earth, had rested on her as she sat on a river's bank weaving forget-me-nots in her hair, heaven and hls mission to earth were alike forgotten. Now he might no more enter In until hls be loved had sown all over the earth the forget-me-nots. He returned to her and, hand In hand, they wandered, planting everywhere the sweet azure flowers. When, at last, there remained on earth no spot barren of these blos soms, they turned again to the gate and found It open. Together they en tered in, for the angel's great love had lifted the woman to Paradise. When his eyes I Names for Good Friday. Good Friday Is called by some na tions Black Friday, by others Still Fri day. Denmark calls It Long Friday, In recognition of the long fast. This fast was undoubtedly the origin of eat ing "cross buns." In the thirty-sixth year of Henry VIII., an enactment was passed prohibiting any baker printing, the sign of the cross, the Agnus Dei, or the name of God, upon any bun or loaf of bread. Marvelous Easter Egg. A very precious Easter egg was once presented to the late pope by an English lady of high rank. The shell was made of finest ivory, and the white matter of the ordinary egg was represented by beautiful white satin. The yolk was a golden case wherein was a ruby set in diamonds. Wo are always ready to correct mistakes, yet our greatest care la In not making them. The smallest trifles receive the same care and attention from us as the mostly costly transac tions. ESTABLISH I k fees A 170 •- MAIN ft SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. How to Trade in Utah Stocks Is a Pamphlet Issued by CHILD, COLE CO. BROKERS 100 Atlas Block, Salt Lake City. Branch Office, Eureka, Utah. It is Worth the Writing for One WHERE AUBURN LOCKS ABOUND. Found in Great Numbers In North eastern Part of Scotland. Bed hair is found in distinct excess north of the Grampians, and especially in the northeast of Scotland. A sci entist who has made the question of pigmentation a special study, and has just been helped to conclude a color survey of the school children—over 50,000—of Scotland, announced thl« as one of his results. In most European countries, he said, there is a distinct predominance of one type over the others. In north Germany and Sweden it is the blonde type; in Italy the brunette. No such predominance is found in Scotland. Dark hair and fair are present in equal proportions. The dominant col or among Scottish children is brown, and it has to be shown how far brown is really a blend of fair and dark. The proportion of red hair through out the country is a little over 5 per cent.—high compared with the 'con tinent. One cannot overlook the ref ous remedies to restore to health a erence of Tacitus to the red haired Caledonians. Some curious facts brought to light suggest that red hair Is not entirely or strictly a racial trait. It may have some peculiar physiological if not pathological con nection. Funny Stories Cured Him. "Having vainly tried many gnd vari business man whom I know and who had fallen Into a morbid condition owing to years of overwork, a famous Baltimore physician at last persuaded hls patient to take a course of funny stories, one at each meal, with an extra two at dinner," says a corres pondent. "The patient, a solemn and gloomy fellow, at first rebelled, but finally falling In with the Idea adopted the course recommended and was In the end restored to health, the effect of laughter being entirely to change his mental and bodily condition. Laughter, in fact, is one of the cheap est and most effective of medicines, breaking up stagnation of mind and body and sending a healthy vibration through one's system. There is very little the matter with the man who can enjoy a hearty laugh." Cider Drinking In England. In the English cider countries all the inns still display the old legend: "Drunk for a penny; dead drunk for twopence." Older plays a notable part in the Christmas festivities. When Like Cures Like. "If you want to be forever cured of smoking cigarettes," said the woman who Is, -"have a cigarette fiend visit you for a couple of weeks. I inherited one recently. Now she Is gone. I breathe again. She was like a little chimney, smoking, smoking, day and night. I would wake at the sound of the scratching of a match, then smell the emoke. I shudder at the smell of the smoke. I used to come In out of the fresh air and find the flat filled with smoko and the smell of. IL I would throw up every window. I felt like throwing her out of one of them, Bitting there with the fiendish cigar ette between her teeth, smoking, smoking, smoking. Not any more cigarettes for me, I can tell you. I am cured."—New York Press. Inheritance and Environment. Inheritance and environment are not only realities, but are the most impor tant elements of the everyday life. The thought of yesterday fixes the tendency of to-day. The conditions of to-day are the background against which every life is projected.—Albion W. Tourgee. The Evils of Divorce. Not a few of the matrimonial fail ures are due to the fact that a good many women get married merely to keep the public from supposing they have never been proposed to.—Chica go Record : Herald. High Price for Rare Stamp. One of the rarest stamps in ex istence, the 20 centimes or 15 centimes of Italy, issued in April, 1865, has just been sold for £36 at a London auo tlon. The specimen Is known as the variety with dots and surcharge in verted. •Arj GoSfer î^ssefofiorj. ÂJkinAT a wonderful, beautiful story ZO '• m 'Jtely proclaimed to-dey : End $ Grouped round-the The roll of the organ, all breathing •f'HE peeping pink of Uta orabarda, .A TJm w of the waking beee. The promise of bloom m the 111 The glimpse of gr ee n 'moag r the something, within us.—reaching For a promise clear aad plain— a —Amls K.'Shiw. A LESSON How, by God's Way, Which Is Not Our Way, Easter Spoke Its Old Message of New i Life T was a sad Easter for Mrs. times Farnham. Three since the lilies last blos somed had death come to her house. Her mother, her husband and her boy had filled her heart. Lacking them, it was empty, and It ached with a strange perplexed grief, a confused question as to the purpose of her life, which now seemed to her a shrunk and withered thing. She went to church on Easter morn ing because her beautiful hoùse was intolerable to her, rather than because she expected to find comfort. The masses of white flowers, with the sug gestiveness of their heavy fragrance, carried her back to the funerals of the last year. The familiar words of the service sounded like mockery to her. "Let us keep the feast;" "Even so in Christ shall all be made alive;" "Set your affection on things above, not on things on earth." One by one she caught at the phrases, only to find each was powerless to help her. . % . The hymn was no better: The strife Is o'er, the battle done; The victory of life is won! For her strife was just beginning, and defeat instead of victory seemed her fate. She could not lift herself out of her personal woe far enough to apply the words to anything but herself. She left the church, avoiding speech with any one, and, with her heart like Ice in her bosom, she took an electric car toward her desolate home. A half block before her house was reached the car stopped with a sud denness which startled the passengers. Mrs. Farnham got off, thinking that she would walk the few remaining steps; but she saw the motorman with a white face raising a small boy In his arms from under the fender of the car. The little fellow was unconscious, and there was an ugly bruise on his temple and a deep cut on his neck. Be fore Mrs. Farnham realized what she was doing the child was carried Into her house, and she was enlisted with the doctors In a fight for his life. For a week the Issue was doubtful. Consciousness flickered and wavered, but would not come back. Meantime Mrs. Farnham had learned that the boy was nobody's child. He had sold papers since he was hardly more than a baby. He had lived wherever he could find a shelter, and had eaten whatever he could get. The fact of home was something he had never ex perienced. The grieving woman for got her grief in her devotion to the waif who had been cast at her door by the strange decree of what we call accident. The day came when the boy's heavy eyelids lifted and his childish curiosity at hls surroundings unloosed his tongue. To open to him the doors of new life was the most wonderful of joys for hls foster-mother. After his long silence it was as If he had come back from the dead. That he could talk and laugh and eat and love seemed like a proof of the power of life over death. Somehow Mrs. Farn ham came to believe that It was such a proof, and that It was sent to her in her desolation. Out of the boy's almost fatal acci dent there was wrought for him the miracle of home and love, and the op portunity for an educated and useful manhood, and for the grieving woman the springtime brought new hope as the lonely winter passed. By God's way, which is not our way, Easter spoke Us old message of new life.— Youth's Companion' The Eastertide's Leson. Since our existence is divided into two sections, the one under the temp tations and sufferings of this present life, and the other that which is at tained in the security and joy of eternity through Christ, so the circle of the Easter festival is divided Into two sections, the time before and after Easter. The time before Easter points us to the conflict of this present life, the time after Easter to the blessed ness which we can obtain through Christ. The Lord's pa.sion shows us the present life of suffering. The res urrection and glorification of the Lord shows the life which we shall receive. Custom Not Christian Alone. The giving of eggs at Easter is de rived from the old nature worship, and is not confined to the Christian na tions. The Parsees of Persia and In dia distribute eggs at the opening of spring, and in many other nations the giving of eggs at the commencement of spring is as common as New Year's gifts with us. In Hungary the boys sprinkle the girls with rose water and receive eggs In return. NO ONE CAN ALWAYS AVOID ■BiBBiiiwsmaiffli i Cj Hk o SS •j > I w I One Dose in * Time, Saves Nine. Pe-rn-na Pre vents Cate Cold. Many people persist in riding on the street ears, insufficiently protected by clothing. They start out perhaps in the heat of the day and do not feel the need of wraps. The rapid moving of the car cools the body unduly. When they hoard the perhaps they are Blightlv perspiring. When the body is in this condition it is easily chilled. This is especially true when a person is sitting. Beginning a street cat ride in the middle of the day and ending it in the evening almost invariably requires extra wraps, but people do not observe these precautions, hence they catch cold. Colds are very frequent in the Spring on this account, and ns the Summer advances, they do not decrease. During the Spring months, no one should think of riding on the car without being provided with a wrap. A cold caught in the Spring is liable to last through the entire Summer. Great caution should be observed at this season against exposure to cold. During the first few pleasant days of Spring, the liability of catching cold is great. No wonder bo many people acquire muscular rheumatism and catarrhal dis eases during this season. However, in spite of the greatest precautions, colds will be caught. At the appearance of the first symptom, I'eruna should be taken according to directions on the bottle, and continued until every symptom disappears. Do not put it off. Do not waste time by taking other remedies. Begin at once to take Peruna and continue taking it until you are positive that the cold has entirely disappeared. This may save you a long and perhaps serious illness later on. Bad Effects From Cold. Mr. M. J. Deutsch, Secretary Building Material Trades Council, 151 Washing ton St., Chicago, 111., writes: "I have found your medicine to be unusually efficacious in getting rid of bad effects from cold, and more espe cially in driving away all symptoms of catarrh, with which I am frequently troubled. "The relief Peruna gives in catarrhal troubles alone is well worth the price per bottle. 1 have used the remedy for Several years now." ing half * for little a as I to have can best Spells of Coughing. Mrs. C. E. Long, writes from Atwood, Colorado, as follows: "When I wrote yon for advice m little three-year-old girl had a coug that had been troubling her for four months. She took cold easily, and I 8TUDY NOT A NECESSITY. End and Aim of Woman's Life, as Un derstood by Rosie's Mother. In one of the Philadelphia public schools is a little girl pupil whose an cestors and coreligionists have ever held that the principal end and aim of the life of a Woman is marriage. This little girl is well up in most of her studies, but she has an inveterate dis like of geography and it seems impos sible to teach the study to her. The other day her teacher, made impatient by her seeming unwillingness to learn her geography lesson, sent to Rosie's mother a note requesting her to see that the girl studied her lesson. The 'next day showed no improvement, however, and the teacher asked Rosie whether she had delivered the note. "Yes, ma'am," was the reply. "And did your mother read the note, Rosie," said the teacher. "Yes, ma'm." "What did she say?" "My mother said that she didn't know geography, an' she got married, an' my aunt didn't know geography, an' she got married, an' you know geography, an' you didn't get mar ried." THE QUARREL. He—Farewell! Farewell, I said, thou jade! ! ! Too Free Speech. The allegations made during a trial for "blasphemy" raises the whole ques tion of courtesy and kindliness in pub lic discussion. Ridicule and sarcasm are permissible, and effective weapons in debate, but mere vulgarity and abuse or irreverence in dealing with subjects that are sacred to others, are not to be confounded with free speech and cannot be (Eng.) News. tolerated.—Lloyd's Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of G-ASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for Hants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Genuine greatness is marked by simplicity, unostentatiouBnesB, self forgetfulness, a hearty interest in others, a feeling of brotherhood with the human family. the human family. N. U., Salt Lake City. No. 16, 1908. Thoro In Only Ono "Bromo Quin fno ßß That la Laxative Bromo Quinine (MED THE WORLD OVER TO OURE A OOLO M ORE DAY. Always remember the full name, for this Signatare on every PL Look 26o. would wheeze and have spells of cough ing that would sometimes last for a half hour. * 'Now we can never thank you enough for the change you have made in our little one's health. Before she began taking your Peruna she suffered every thing in the way of cough, colds and croup, but now she has taken not quite a bottle of Peruna,and is well and strong as she has ever been in her life." Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Morrison, 88 East 16th St., ' Paterson, N. J., writes: "I have given Peruna a fair trial, and I find it to be just what you claim it to be. I cannot praise it too highly. I have used two bottles in my family for colds, and everything imaginable. I can safely say that your medicine is the best I have ever used.'L ^ DO YOU KNOW ^ THE WET WEATHER COMFORT AND , PROTECTION ■_ afforded by a \' 0\ W \lg j Tv T\ \] surf® SLICKER? \ \ i \ Clean -Light Durable rt Guaranteed Waterproof Everywhere V V / 600 Cut the cost V2, You can decorate your home with Alabastine year after year at one half the cost of using either wall paper or kalsomine. Alabastine The Sanitary Wall Coating comes in 16 beautiful tints and white that combine into an endless variety of soft, velvety Alabastine shades which will make any home brighter and more sanitary. Sample tint cards free at dealers. Write us for free color plans for decorating your home. Sold by Paint, Drur. Hardware and Gen eral Stores in carefully sealed and properly labeled packages, at 50c the package for white and 55c ( the packace for tints. See that the Eame**Alabastine"is oneach pack age before it i* opened either by yourself or the workmen. The Alabastine Company Grand Rapids. Mich. Eastern Office. 105 Water St, N.Y. City. READERS of this paper de- siring to buy any- --thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing all substi tutes or imitations. DEFIANCE Cold WaterStarch makes laundrv work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. 100.