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Show Effect of Fertilizing on Per. Our Stockrai33fS 10 uran. No fruit3 respond so rapidly to good Th Blad will continue In each nabi fertilizing as pears, and where old vapublish brands under yearly oontrsets at i rieties seem to be running out a new nominal price. to them by apply. The advantage to the stockraiser o 1 famfl lease of life is givenand bone potash, says a larlzing the pnbilo with his brand and mark ing ground are to well known to need attention. It Is u1 writer in the California Cultivator. the etookman as valuable as an advertlsemea Without doubt these are the two esla to the merchant. sential constituents of the soil that the pear trees exhaust, and when they can no longer draw them from their sursalroundings they refuse to produce F. ieH exof able fruits. After many years of all that perience I can safely say j can .V- t orchard an old the pear trees of fcyvA W,J' be revived almost beyond recognition ' Lower Sevier and !'. the annual application of potash by Sink of Braver. and ground bone. The process I have Address : found the most serviceable is to apply Utah. Oasis, about 400 pounds of muriate of potash with 800 pounds of ground bone per of this mixacre each year. One-ha- lf the other and in Jno Dewsnup is ture fall, applied 4 half in the spring at plowing time. Crimson clover seed is sown with the Upper silt In fertilizer in order, to give the necessary right, under slit sucIn left ear. nitrogen. This repeated years in cona to cession brings the orchard up Range: Cricket dition where excellent crops of pears ' fountains and can h depended upon every season. Lhwer 8evler. Lately many of our standard pears Deseret, Utah. have been degenerating, and even upon good soil they fail to produce the payJos Dewsnup' ing crops that they should. The fruits are small, tasteless and apt to be knotty and poor generally. Our fall fruits are Under slit is poor and insipid and if better right, sunder ill unusually be produced at this time of could pears in left ear. the year there would be a better general Range: Crick' demand. Our fall and winter pears are Mountains a susceptible of higher and more deliLower Sevier. cious flavors if we only give them the Deseret, Utah right cultivation and fertilization. The comparative difference between the fruits of the same variety of pears Joim T SBiU taken from two orchards is sufficient to convince one of the truth of this remark. Not a few are so poor that one Horse Grower and Deal'' can hardly believe that they came from the same stock as the other delicious RANGE: specimens plucked from trees that Hou? Mountain have been fertilized for several years. and Lowef Sevier Herein lies the difference. It is a crying need of the times that Oasis, Utah. orchardists should get out of the old ruts, and educate the public up to a love for'' better fruits. In this way the utbboh Bros will increase. We can consumption Breeders and do this by abandoning the idea dealers in Short only that apple, pear and bther orchard trees horn Durham Horses Bam will take care of themselves. They brand Dn left will not, and never did, They properly. Cattle-Upthigh. slope is need cultivation and fertilization just each ear. Rang as as do vegetables, grain or othSevier rlvei er truly m if q farm products. Fruit growing reand mountain y-' between ililis station on the U. P. Ry and Learn quires as much scientific study as grain lngton. Address, leamington, Millard Co., Utah growing or cattle breeding, and the sooner this is generally recognized the Alirtd better it will be for the industry. Parley j t (M ! INDUSTRIAL CURRENT NeWs OF INVENTION AND DISCOVERY.. ! Scale Tbat Will Work m Revolution In jtiie System of Weighing as It Places Goods Sold Directly Into Money. A Computing . ETTING TYPES machine - Which . promises to eclipse all former efforts by Inventors in this line is to be given a test trial In London shortly. Father Calendoll, a young . if- Ji f If ' ' i . I per -- i i . ii- -t , same Horses1 Close Planting of Varieties. The Idea of mixed and close planting of varieties may be carried too far and in the wrong direction, unless a study is made of the secondary effects. My at- brand on left thigh. Cattle-cl-ose crop in left and slit in right ear. Range,, Lowe? Sevier, Address, Utah. Des-re- t, tention was first attracted to the possibility of influencing the size and quality of plums by the use of the right pollen by the following fact, which alone is accountable for in no other way than except by the direct influence of foreign pollen: A chance seedling was planted on my grounds, almost under the leaning top of a tall Weaver plum tree; for several years the fruit was a large flattish, oblong freestone of good quality and very productive. The plum being so! much better in quality than the Weaver, the Weaver tree was cut down the next season and ever" since the fruit has been smaller, nearly round and a perfect clingstone. Last spring I applied pollen from the Weaver to a few blossoms, and the fruits clearly showed the effects of the Weaver pollen. C.- W. Heidman. ' L on .left thigh t same brand on left hip of cattle. Range Will:ow Springs. Address, v j . F: J. Kearny, Fisk Springs, Juab Countjj Utah. f G T.on left thigh, double swallow fork In left ear. Range, Lower Sevier. Address & Chris. Tbompso Oasis, Millard Co. Utah. - Mark, slit la right and two slits lneft ear.an brand shoulder Bams left , on horses P. N. Petersen, Address, Oasis Utah, Bangs, Lsw er Sevier. Sams left thigh Horses. Upper slope and one under silt la left ear, and two under slits In ear. BAUGHS light :Oak Creek. On Sims Walker Address, Oak City, Utah. O; S. Leaps of a Mountain Sheep. The mountain sheep does not leap from great Jieigths, and land either upon his hdrns or his feet. He knows, the strength of his materials too wellsuc-to try it. His horns and skull might cessfully withstand the shock, but the weight of his body would break his spinal column in two or three places, to say the least of it. It is true that when hard pressed a herd will sometimes plunge down a terribly steep incline, sliding and bounding from point to point, until they plow into the slide-roc- k below; but as to leaping over a sheer precipice, I never saw any one who even claimed to have ever witnessed such a thing. The old rams often fight by butting each other terrifically, and often splinter or sometimes break off ends of their horns in that way. W. T. Hornaday, in St. MARTIN, SALT LAKE. Nicholas. alConissioiiHoretal 1 Currant Worm. The European curworm is on hand and, if he. is let rant Dealer la alone, will destroy the currant crop eventually kill the bushes. This ;FHUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, and worm is of a greenish gray and about i Veal Pork and an inch long, and is usually found on 2gg, Poultry, Game, Fresh Fish, the under side of the leaf close to the 9 I J Beef, Smoked and Flour, Hay and Grain. edge, often several on one leaf, and eats the whole of that leaf and then he It will pay you to ship your goods to km. I as goes to the next, until nothing is left. charge 10 psr eent. for handling and remit s soon as goods are sold. Can give Look carefully at the lower part of if references desired. country the bushes,' for the worms generally ' 4 s. start there and work upward; turn the aim s bush feo that you can see the under side of the foliage Use White Hellebore, which is most easily applied with the ordinary insect powder bellows. There need be no fear of poison, as the rains will soon wash the powder off, and besides it loses all its quality soon by exorncti posure to the air. Some say that salt C3 V. 2nd, South, SALT LAKE CITY about two tablespoonfuls to a pail of water will kill them. Ex. P. O. COX -Moles. Moles are enormous eaters i Hand Samples $1.00 and the worms and the undeveloped Iron Assay 1.00 matter they consume, it will tire any 1.00 one to feed them. I have often traced Copper Assay.... 3. CO them to a hill of potatoes when eviBottla Samples dently they turned off with disgust after destroying any animal life near the potato; hence I consider them a blessing in the garden 'instead of a curse. They are strictly an animal eat(Lair latter V. S. Land Office.) er and will starve to death with the most tempting vegetables around Land and, Mining Attorney. them. A. P. Sharp in Ex. twenty-thresolicited. CorreFpcndence Sioux City Stock Yards to Be Sold years experience. Orders have been made in the federal court for the sale of the Union Stock SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. yards at Sioux City, Iowa, to satisfy mortgages to the amount of over $1,000,000 in favor . of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Trust company and the Boston Safe Deposit and Trust company, trustees, and A. L. Stetson The priority of the individually. in the order given established is siui Agents & Attorneys, claims Yards Stock company is aland the to settle them all ten lowed only days The yards will is made. sale the before Sioux the in City Stock bid be by SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. an organization fards company, formed by the unsecured erectors ho protect their equities. monk Sicilian of the Dominican order. Is .the inventor of this most in- genious piece pf mechanism. It. is alleged the machine will readily compose or set 50,000 letters an hour. It is doubtful If the quickest typesetter will average more than 2,500 letters in the same time, which would give the new machine a working capacity equal to that of almost twenty compositors. Like most of Its predecessors. Father Calendoll makes use of a keyboard in working his machine. Each key or button represents a letter which responds to the touch of the operator. As each key is struck the corresponding letter slips out andjls automatically arranged ready for Justification. Here the similarity between Father Calendolis new machine and those now in use ceases. The typesetting machine has each letter but once on Its keyboard, and consequently the operator has to touch the button just so many times as a tetter is required. On the new machine there are numerous repetitions of the same letter, which follow one another in series like the octaves gn a piano. And as the performer cn the piano can with one movement strike a cord containing a number of notes, so can the operator on this new machine compose entire words in an instant by the simultaneous application of the fingers of both hands. This is obviously an enormoiis advantage over the machines in present use, which require that each Individual key be struck with a distinct move. The question naturally occurs: How is the word,1 the letters of which are struck simultaneously, correctly composed? The secret of this is that so long as the fingers rest pressing on the keys none of the mechanism is put Into motion. It Is! when the .fingers are lifted from the keys that the composition Is done. Thus, for instance, in the word sea you strike it with 6ne movement of the left hand. Then the fingers are lifted as the word is spelled. The ring finger releases the- letter s, the middle finger the e, and the index finger the final a, whieh completes the word. This Is, of course, done with lightning rapidity by the person accustomed to its use. The type used in the new machine is considerably lower than the ordinary jprinting type. The foot of each typ1 is perforated by a slot by which it is slid on a movable T rail of steel, thus being held absolutely secure from fallipg out when oncejln line. The d type is supplied from vejrts3l after the fashion of organ pipes. At the foot of each tube Is a bolt which, old-fashio- ned - tubes-ap-range- when open, picks up a type, which a narrow channel when the drops belt Is pushed back. The tubes containing the types are arranged in four series adhering to each other. All these tubes communicate through an ingenious electrical device with the keyboard governed! by the operator. As the composition goes on the type slips down over a bent rail and is arranged in long standingj galleys, which are removed as soon as filled up. Justification, always a soured of trouble with the old machines, has been made a feature by Father Calendoll. He has succeeded, by a simple but effective device, in accomplishing this by the working of pedals ulnder the machine. The operator knows Just exactly how long a line he wishes, and can justify it to a nicety In the twinkling of an eye by pressingj the pedal with his foot. Calendolis new invention looks very much like a Somewhat exaggerated upright piano, tie sayc it can be made for considerably less money than1, any of the machines now in use; also that its sm Is so simple any person of ordinary intelligence will comprehend and use it iff a couple of days. As the type is now arranged on It, it may be taken direct from the galleys and loeked up for the press, thus dispensing with stereotyping. The copy is qion always in sight, rer.der'.n0: IntQ -- Frank , l fW., D. Hobbs, I e BIRD & LOWE, - 2,450-hor- se Rooms 4 and 5 F.sgle Block, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAI1. ui TY?E PASSING TO GALLEYS. practicable on the spot.1 This and much more In the way of pending Improvements is promised by the Inventor for his new machine. It sounds very well and if it passes the trial test under the eye of practical printers it must indeed be a great invention. It is scarcely necessary to say that the invention has been covered by patents In all countries. A wealthy stock company has an option on putting it on the market if proved a j success. Wood Pulp Production. amount of wood pulp now proin Scandinavia Is reported to be enormous, and, besides the many wood pulp mills, there are a large number of native cellulose and sulphite works, the former supplying more than one-ha- lf the wood pulp production; next to these come jthe sulphite niills, the wood pulp mills exporting barely half their: production, or considerably less in jquan-tlt- y than the sulphite and cellulose. Alma st all the paper exported from! Swe i ( t rs !A Valuable Invention. A Chicago bank clerk who is regarded as being exceedinglj by his clever in making any calculation inco-work- ers Ho for Detroit, Fish Springs, Gold Hill volving complicated figuring, had an experience recently that now causes him to wonder If he is really the experi his friends claim. An acquaintance took him to see the operations of a nee computing scale, now In use In many The Oasis and Fish Springs stage leaves stores In Chicago. The machine r was made to weigh all kinds of groceries In Oasis and Ibapah at 8 a. m., each Monday and Thursday, and arrives at terminal points pounds and ounces at prices involvingIn within 52 hours. all the fractional parts of a cent and each Instance gave absolutely correct Oasis to Detroit, 3,00 oi hand as Fish as the cost and fast 6.00 weight "j Gold Springs, Hill and Ipabah, 7.50 the operator could move. After seeing that it was impossible for it to err oi Tare for transports Mon out and return emt to permit of any dishonesty he left de- and fares. Address, claring that as an expert in fractions F, DAVIS, Proprietor, he had been outclassed, and that by a dumb. machine. As appears in the above cut there ars In addition to the ordinary: weighing beam- - two graduated bars operated by a lever. The lower bar marks the price in pounds and ounces and the uppei one the cost in bulk. The Impressive WATCHMAKER, feature it will be seen is found In the UTAH. fact that odd ounces or fractipils In the Watches NEPHI, and jewelry promptly reprice are given with thesame accuracy solicited. Mall orders paired. and Ibapahl one-ha- lf . G. A. . FRANK WHITEHEAD Gardner, V r of Will gire lesions on Plano. Orat. Violi lowest prl-jetc., and teach Bunls reasonable terms. For further partkularp, addivhi s Jt FRANK WHITECAD, HINCKLEY, - . - UTAR S fla gat in gat AOLmarksV J COPYRIGHTS. V. CAVEATS R OBTAIN A PATENT? answer an Ur cv er Fora. and honest opinion, write topromptN CO. who have bad nearly fifty years? ol UN In experience the patent business. Cotumtinioa. tlons strictly confidential. A Handbook of JiL formation oneeroiniz Pn tents and bow to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive-specianotlceinthe Scientific icnn, and thus are brought widely beforeAiuci public without cost to the inventor. This the paper Issued weekly, elegantly illustrated,splendid has by far the largest circulation of any scientific work In the world. Single- fca ihr wh lov thC Sh the he l xr-- no' - beau tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO. New York, :? Phoa d way . , new-house- IP! - IUf JlCii Harness and Saddlery GEO. W. WILLIAMS, IF the for jai pie AJYSOUST, ;i: rul MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF th p Harness, Saddlery, Buggy Whips, Nose Bags, Collar Pads, Hardware, Leather, etc. Fine Buggy Harness Wholesale a Specialty. and Retail. .u! Our goods have been extensively used in Deseret and vicinity, nd hare given the best satisfaction. Mail orders will receive prompt attention. : .... ..nnn.:!-:- ", f HEATED BY STEAM. ELECTRIC CALL BELLI to : and readiness as If each were an integral figure. Its commercial value Is apparent In many ways. It saves the merchant and the buyer gets 'every grain he pays for. It is also a time saver. It will undoubtedly revolutionize the present system of weighing as It places all goods sold directly into money. VS .an eel t s las a i ir-- a thi CO) Petroleum on Steam Cars. Engineering science will doubtless be benefited by the experiments so successfully made with petroleum on the .Reading railroad by, the Baldwin Locomotive works, using one of their Vau-claicompound engines having an unusually long, narrow firebox, as that was believed to represent the most unfavorable conditions for burning oil. Three sets of tests were made, the locomotive being . changed somewhat foi each set, so far as concerned the arrangement of the firebox. The total weight of the engine was 133,300 pounds and the weight on the drivers 98.65C 120 inches long, pounds; the firebox was 34 inches wie, and 56 inches deep al the back, sloping down to 73 inches al the front, where the tubes ''began. In what proved to be the most effective arrangement in this series of trials the burner was placed below the fire dooi Just above the mud ring and adjusted so as to spray the oil Into the firebox, the brick arch being also lowered In order to secure more space between the crown sheet and Its top. Now, a preliminary trial of about six miles having demohstrated the exceptional advantages possessed by such an arrangement, a run' was made with a train o. cars weighing some 66 twenty-seve- n run the quantity of watei On tons. this at 212 degrees pei and from evaporated was twelve as of recorded, oil, pound boiler the press and one-ha- lf pounds ure was about 170 pounds and there was not only a complete absence ol smoke, but none of the trouble due to shoveling coal and tending fires. er L. HOLBROOK, , Prop. "A he - 1 ho n German papers, the substance being composed principally of infusorial earth mixed with various binding and coloring dngredients and spread in layers over a wooden core; on the mass becomor blocks, ing dry, it is cut into sheets been differenthave and, if the layers section prely colored; their irregular sents an effect resembling that of figured wood. For Its expeditious production a machine is arranged by which two wooden posts, thirteen feet high and about five feet apart, are made to revolve about a vertical axis, each post horizontal branches has twenty-fou- r and these branches from it, radiating 'Sls well as the posts revolve easily about their own axis. In the process of manufacture the horizontal branches are first covered with paper, to prevent any oi the composition sticking to them, and then painted with the mixture of earth, coloring- matter, and gum. The branches attached to one of the posts are first painted with one coat, and the machine is then revolved so as to bring the other post near the operator; by the time the branches oi the second post are coated, those of the first are dry and ready to be revolved into position for a second coat. In this manner, the painting goes on continuously, until the branches are loaded with a coat of composition nine or ten Inches thick the color of the coat is made alternately dark and light, and .the thickness of the stratum is varied, so as to imitate the varying thickness of the annual rings in a tree. When all is thoroughly dry the cylinders of composition are slipped off their wooden cores, and sawed or cut Into veneers. Because in keeping whole your own Youve broken all the rest. r so un evl THREE tn PO iW IT Leads All the Rest- rc r.a - 30i tio 1 1 to AWARDS. til Support per I he; the Home State Fair 1894, Gold Medal. tef vh kl Industries Three Cream Fit ure to: and Baking Powder Gold Medals. he: ter f loo Keep rc Ur Your . CVf t Medal. Money air ear far the he at Best Quality and' Display of Soda Water. Home. Vo! to t Tin rou Dec- - he I at riu .... MANUFACTURED BY h H EWLETT - OALT LAKE CITY, UTAH i i BOX 533- - Spices Pure and Ground Daily. tha tha Cot PVc JOSEPH A. LYMAN General Merchandise, Has a full line pp She j- - To s Cold Beauty. Of all the hearts that you have won Of none are you possessed. so He lor In-sori- &l , Ilk Headquarters for Sheep, Cattle & Mining Men PROVO. XTTPI. - ' W. Q.M STEWARD, ASSAYTSR, t LAND and MINING Law. at Attorney Superior Quality a oi new kind of Flavoring The production veneering material is noticed in the Extracts Gold 9 I fifty-fi- of these the aggregate power, usually water. Is reported to equal about thirteen thousand horse power. The mosl important of these are thus enumerated: Those of Ornon, Tralhatton, power, with twenty-foCollections Prcmptlj AttMdts. horizontal and two vertical mills; tha of Munkidal, Uddevalla, 1,250-hopower, with ten horizontal and one verOffioe, First National Bank Bldg;, tical mill, and Tossefors, Ottebal. power, with seventeen horizontal mills. There are twelve natron cel- fROYO, UTAB lulose works and seventeen sulphite A New Veneering Material. first-clas- j SAMUEL A. KING. . i j establishments, and for vi G. W. PARKS, 900-hors- e t J I den Is said fb tW made from wood pulp A recently published account of this, industry shows a total of some ninety-fiv- e ; 2- WORLD. of- - Lr.j tlie kn ut I h neirr All th And is selling down at Panic Prices for Pay Down. Either for Cash or Produce at cost. : hlo 'I Travelers and Sheepmen will find me supplied with t HAY, - GRAIN - AND - STABLING. ! Highest cash price paid for Hides and Pelts. Dont forget JOSEPH A. LYMAN, OAR CITY, MILLARD COUNTY, , UTAH |