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Show 7 - JUAB COUNTY TIMES, NEPHI, UTAH OFFICIAL. DIRECTORY. District. Kirth Judicial JoHiiua Ureeuwond. Attorney K. 11. Ryan. Judge, monographer W. 1 USES FOR SKIM MILK LIVE STOCK AIDS FERTILITY No USES HER "SOUL Diversified Dlstrlot One of Best Feeds for Both Young and Old Chickens. t Cook. State Senator J R. Ed?hleli. iState Representative Lawrenca BlacketL IJ. 8. Export In Charge Experiment BUtiou Mr. Jones. County. County Commissioners P. J. Fen e!l J. ',v. Whitmore, Terry B. Fuller Clerk Patrick J. Bonner. Recorder Will L. lloyt. Treasurer T. II. G. Parkes. Assessor Ray Newton. J. il. McKnlalit. AUorni.y Surveyor V. E. Ekloff. Sheriff Angus R. McDonnell. Judge of Juvenile Court T. II. Bui ton. Probation officer James E. Mem-mo- t mm lim mm n ma j Also Considered Excellent for Pigs of All Ages Valuable in Itself and Assist in Digesting the building Other Foods. Milk la one of the beRt foods for The Farming Calls for System of Rotation and la Best Insur- ance of an Income. On farms where live stock Is kept the land Is more productive thun on farms where exclusive- - grain farming Elderly Husband of Young Bride is followed. Where the crops are sold Sues For Annulment of on the market all of the plant food In contained those crops Is lost to the Marriage. soil. This practice will result without full In Impoverishment of the laud. Live-stocfarming is diversified BLISS FOR SIX WEEKS farming and culls for a system of crop rotation. It returns fertility to tho soli. Adds interest to the wurk of the people living on the farms and finally Wealthy Herman T. Asche Declares Is the best insurance of an Income. Proves Wife's Novelette She Married Him Only for His Money "Man of Mystery." k both young aud old chickens. cuselu, or curdy vart f the milk, largely xupplies the protvln necessary for laying hens, while for table fowl there Sum of $85,000,000 of Federal Funds Is nothlni' superior to milk for mukliig Made Available for Construction white. Juicy, delicious flesh. of Country Highways. The milk may bo either sour or aweet, and may be given us a drink By the passage of the federal nld or mixed with the ineul, or both. Sour l road bill the government of the I'nlted Hklin milk or buttermilk fed to chickSuperintendent County Infirmary Thomas Vlekers. States hus put Itself In the way to ens con lined to limited range keeps County Physicians Drs. Rees, Di reup greut benefits. According to the them In health. The ' ucld of the milk Kieeie Bailey, Jr. new law, the sum of $S.'i,tX)ti,(HM of fed-erthe lack of acid supplies vegetable funds is made uvulluhle for the they would obtain If running at large, Of and moreover It alas EA8T COUNTY MUNICIPAL OF construction of country roads. digestion. this amount $75,000,HMi Is to be exFICER3. I'oultry farmers living near a creampended for the construction of rural ery gladly puy for the skim and sour NEPHI CITY OFFICERS. arrange- milk, which can be bud at very reasonpost rouds under ments with the highway department able rates. of the various Mutes and $10,000,000 ' Furtu Kuirylug says: "Skim milk Mayor Alma Hague. Is to be used rouds and In, developing H. A. Councilman Is considered one of the best of foods Belllston, naThomas Bailey, James Garrett, Jr. trails within or partly within the for piss of all uges. It Is not only Splendid Beef Type. Hark Bigler. George O. Ostler. tional forests. valuuble la Itself, but It helps to digest Recorder A. V. Gadd. This luw Is proof of the national other foods uud so mukes them more ICvery farmer should make a business Treasurer J. H. Latimer. awakening to the fuct tbut our counvuluuble. Milk mukes a Arm, excellent of growing his own beef und pork a Attorney T. II. Burton. try Is lainentubly deficient In well us his own vegetables. lie should quulity of pork. Marshal Samuel Linton, Jr. The main highways. "About a gullon and a half a day grow his own protein feed for his Justice of the Peace Wm. Stout d for a I1'" Street Supervisor Jas. B. Riches. stock, aud stop buying bran, cottonbring economical results, or feeding at the ratio of seed meitl and other proQuarantine Physician Dr. T. D Rees. three pound of milk to one of meal." tein feeds. 7 I. II. Grace. Building Inspector Mixed milk and wheat bran make Chief of Fire Department N. A. the best ration for pigs and shouts SWEET CLOVER FOR PASTURE Neilson. iu connection with clover aud grass Superintendent of Water Works A. pasture. J. Cowers. Some Farmers Regard Plant as Weed I left Ail animals like a variety of food. Members of Board of Health Dr. T. nd Practically Worthless No one fiwd, however good It may D. Rees, Alonro Ingram, Wm. G. Orine Tilth of Soil. Bexton C. E. Bigler. will a answer. Give be, variety and only what will be eaten with a relish. . The value of aweet clover as a pas'Vl bat Mf ' ' Keep the feed troughs and feeding ture or hay crop Is much disputed. LEVAN TOWN. 4 -yards clean and dry. Some farmers regard It as practically No rancid food should be fed. Hotel worthless and consider It a weed, President Board of Trustees Alms Trv a refuse not is healthy food. while others apparently have hud good Palby. Trustees M. W. Mangelson. S. P success with feeding It. Its foliage has F CORN CRIB PLAN a bitter taste due to the cumarln it Taylor, Alex Peterson, George Neilson Marshal Neils Mortenaon. Contains and its stems have a tendenJustice of the Peace Nells Sehow Structure Will Aid Both in Drying of cy to become woody as they mature. Health Officer Henry Hendrickson. If Dot allowed to become too rank beCrop and Protecting It From Juab District Board of Education Rata and Mice. fore pasturing, or If cut for hay before I. H. Grace, President: J. E. Taylor, A. P. Paxmao, Clerk: the first blooin buds appear, these two The rural engineer bureau of the de- objectionable features may be avoided W C. Andrews, Treasurer, and John T. Kay. partment of agriculture will be glad to to a considerable exteut and very good tell you all about this crib that will aid feed obtained. both In the drying of corn and In proSince it is a biennial, tweet clover EAST COUNTY PRECINCT OFF tecting It from rats and mice. It Is may take the place of red clover In the CER3. really a sort of double crib, separated rotation on those lauds where the latby a driveway 12 feet wide und cov- - ter does out thrive well, but on the Mom. test lands It cannot compete with eithJustice O. O. Young. er red clover or alfalfa for bay. Health Officer N. W. Ellerteon. It is eOlcicnt as a soil renovator, by Nephi. Highway. reason of the large amount of nitro8 Justice J. Cooper. aUe to take from the air as Is It gen In Constable H. T. Knowlea. lines of travel the early days were well as the humus added to the soli Health Officer Dr. T. D. Reea. the shores of great waters fiTiil the when It is turned under or from the Levari. rivers and canals. The railroad buildof roots when the crop la hardecay W. era E. Peterson. followed close Justice ing upon the perivested. od of the river steamltoat and fur Constable Richard Worsen. these and other reasons the highways ADDITIONAL SPACE FOR HAY Modern Woodmen of America No of the land were neglected. Oi.e of the inot fwiwerful of the 10.700, meets every Tuesday evening at Woodman hall. Visiting Woodmen agencies now nt work for better ronds f Crib. Temporary Shelter May Be Obtained Is the automobile. The country owes welcomed by Placing Prepared Roofing CHARLES STEPHENSON. a debt to the motor-drivecar for mak- ered by a gable roof. The two cribs Materials on Poles. Consul. are 8 32 each thoua feet and hold demand for insistent by ing adequate J. U. LATIMER, Clerk. sand bushels apiece. As planned by highways over which to travel. When the rains make hay harvest The expenditure of the many mil- the government engineers the concrete wo unfavorable, as w as the case In 1915, I. O. O. V. No. 16 meet every Sat lions of dollars will benefit the ieople foundation Is put In for all the walls. It is inisirtant to provide suitable wrday evening In I. O. O. F. hall. Via very greatly by helping to convey farm Complete plans may be had from the rofs under which the hay may be Itlng brothers cordially Invited to at products to market and thus to some olliiv of Put. lie Koiids and Kurul placed as rapidly as It ran be cured tend. of Agriculture, sufficiently. While the srbstantlal barn extent It will make living cheniwr met HERBKRT ROBERTS, N. O. more comfortable, nuyn Cbli ao New Washington. I. C. , Is always first to receive consideration JOHN S. COOPER. Secretary. Moreover, the country with an iilonuf-ancit frequently hiipH-nthrt more or less of good roads within Its bounda- GOOD WAY TO MEASURE HAY additional storage Is do'rnhle. when In tunny case this additional space LATTER-DASAINTS' MEETINGS ries Is more easily thrcatem-from without. The bi-- t for hny may be provided at small Cubic Four Been Hundred Has Feet result of nil. tiowevt-r- , will be the by planting telegraph Found to Be Fair Estimate for jsdes Sunday School. 10:30. South ward of intercourse and Intelli suitable distances opart, connecting Ton Weight Will Vary. at High School building; Nephi ward quickening lheM with plates made of plank and t Tabernacle; North ward at meet gence and the unifying of this great mu.-tuition, willed ns yet Is given Somwittiew hnr Is sold In the mow on the, pi ii ten placing roof materials. log bouse. to xprawliiig physically and otherwise. iir the stack. When this Is dune It is Such a structure may be built in short M. I. A Sunday, 7 p. m. Soutt order and at small expense. Kami Ward Hiph School building; necessary to etlninte It. ward at Tabernacle; North ward at KENTUCKY FIRST TO IMPROVE It bs f'Sind that 4' rtible hitorers may even do the building. t If n HMre durable and larrer strucmeeting honse. ttt hy will be a fair 'estimate fur Primary South ward every Tuea Spent Money for Construction ef u ton. The actual weight of o cubic ture Is desirable there Is nothing suday at Tabernacle; Nephl every Ft! Roads Over Half Century Ago-- Had feel of h:iy. if cotire, will vary, as will perior to the plank frame bay barday at Tabernacle; North ward a the kind of hay. time of cutting. rrs. racks. Highway Engineer. meeting bouse every Friday. lion of the mow-- , etc. Ittit It will le Priesthood meeting every Monda) It Is often Mid that th ne of state a fair estimate to buer and sell- NEGLECT OF FARM MACHINES evening at the Tabernacle and Nortl money for the construction of ronds Is er to consider 4"0 cubic feef a ton. ward meeting house. of quite recent origin. Tb New Jer-seWhen you are lunklnr an estimate Some Cultivator and Hay Racks Ara Relief Society South wad first anc rt iiltifily together fh sriite aid law of JV1 Is wmictHit' length, brendlh Never Creased Keep All Wagon Calrd Thursday In each month at 1 to mow referred fi.ld as the of first the In itistnnce ot etack feef of height Axles Well Oiled. p. m. Nephl ward first and third The by 4 Nortt such ue of nfnfe funds In this- coun- and divide the Wednesday In each month. ward first and third Thursday In ecr try. As a matter of fsct. jitnti- money quotient will be the number W tuns. Th r.tUng or grejistng of no mschln. ssonlb, at respective; meeting bouses wns sictit for such ptirjH.- - more on the farm is so neglected as are rrr than 73 yenrs nrn. Ktit nek y paid FARM OF RIGHT PROPORTIONS the sxlesi of wnsrofis, bneelew. rakes, over out for road Improve PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. etc. An oil ran or box of cultivators, ments between and lW. nnder Records Sbow That Farmer Either stle is not carried along with grease the direction of a state hlghwny en- Too or Implements, and Has vehicles or Acres Not (he Many 10:30. school at 8snrlsy clneer, who drew ' xnl.iry of r4!!ng Is not heeded every ,ew Enough for Successful Work. n yenr, a very laree sntn for th-hours, this Is neglected. lays. The roods built then Were 21 The slate of butnes often has much frme cultivators nd hsy racks are to .TO f wide between the dlM,,.,. i t never ollod or greased, do toward th farm profitmaking pTsctlrnlly The atirfare were cnnstnictcd i,f br.i- able. Farm fnanngetnent records show when this should be attended to sffer ken Stone, and the iMiftorns were of that farms are often either fo small a stendy dsy or two of serrico or the Attorney at Law Notary large stones wedem together to make or too large for the most sucreswful Nothing but close atteneqntvsl"tit. what road b'lilders rail a felford four. Public and hnee-- will keep the tion to farming. lation. Aliif Vi1 business romlitoo There be few Sties oiled. as as too SS the trips of a few well well Office-- In R mmt 1 and 2 Ostler Bldg. may Ions In the country heenme had and A man may not have miles ewch day soon acetimulate and fhis w.irk stof.ped. When It was re. many acres. get rid of all of the grease. timed In 1W such a long tH.ri.nJ had enough land or he may be "land all his acres unthereby rendering fbe lapsed sinep earlier state aid SEVERAL RATES OF SEEDING work that ire? Is usually fixed as the profitable. Htsa'Tusrtara for Traveling Man. welrmlng of state roadwork In KenLATE FALL PLOWING EASIER Ohio ategaoUy appointed traom e44 Esperiment Station Finds Greattern, stsam seat, kalis, etc. Owe tucky. est Yield of Grain Secured From block autb aa5 east ef swart Cool and Stimulating Weather Makes Roads In Wisconsin. Kb owe tj. Eight Pecks to Acre bowse Work Less airTicuit for Horses-Ke- eps The good roads movement In Wis- Thern Strong. onsln Is oreanUIng In a wsy that Frperlmcnts cond'icted by the Ohio wetns certain to produce early experiment station during 17 years fall plowing Is much easier na snd Including eltht dlferent rates of results. the team than early spring plowing, seeding with ten varieties of wheat ns the weather Is cooler nnd stimti. show that eltht peck In the acre Autos Pay Best An automobile load going throngh Ipting. and tbef ran stand the work five the greatest net yield of grain. The Times from your nn'gKbof .he village spends more money there much better than they run next May. llmfM given In the station' htjll-ff- n when you can get U for leu thaa han a do7en train bsids passing the Presides, the work will keep thlr point fn general to a rradnsl In-rmuscles and vital orssns stronrer and In yield front the lepot. iofl roads pay. of thre more vigorous, so that they will tuA peeks to tilne pecks per hnf seedbevme fatigned at the advent of ing more thsn eSrht perks tn tke aeri Heavy Pork Not Wanted. Heavy pork Is not wanted a the warmer weather. bss DxH paid for the extra eel. fcsrket as in rears gone by. MILLIONS FOR BETTER ROADS STORY" IN SUIT i i vr high-price- d " v0 S1('Tvi RAT-PROO- Vice-Presiden- New York, A "novelette confession" entitled "Justice," alleged to have been written by nineteen-year-ol- d Mrs. Asta Asche, au esthetic dancer, Is the basis of a suit for annulment of marriage which has Just been filed here by her husband, Herman T. Asche, a weulthy importer, forty years old. The couple's marriage bliss lasted Just six weeks the reward of nine years' patient wultlng on Asche's purt, for he fell In love with Asta when, she was a child of nine years. Now Asche churges that Asta's heart never belonged to hi in, but burru'df In loyul love for a young artist. It was to the latter so far the "tuuu of mystery" In the strange case that the novelette coufesslou of the beautiful young bride was penned. In It she reveuls, according to her husbuud's Bttlduvlt, thut her marriage to him was merely a plot to get his money aud that she had been his wife only In name, so that she might return to the young artist as she hud left lilm. Marital Joya Soon Ended. On the day of the proposed wedweut to the ding the husbuud-to-b- e home of Asta's grandmother In Brooklyn. The dancer hud promised to be there, but Asche says he found she lind run uway. He learned from the grandmother that Asta "was too nervous," and not being able to stuud the si ruin of the wedding ceremony, hud gone to New Haven. The elderly lover motored to New Haven, found Asta, but was told she wanted a week to "find her mind." When she found her mind she decided to become Mrs. Asche. The pair honeymooned In the South for a couple of weeks and then returned to the magnificent apartment on Riverside drive which Asche had provided for his bride.- An affidavit Ocfc LJ 1 F LI ! i Rat-Proo- n Kngi-oeerln- e s def.-nde- d ti lth y i.i.itt Thos. H. Burton - rr,' FORREST HOTEL tu -- DONT BORROW sub-tantl- al re Three Cents Per Week st, Thaa th Jeweliy, Wstche. Clock sad Steewe tell. In ovei halt century we hive had the opportunity to teat them all to know them, to tell them. Poof thing! are quickly discarded. We sell the ware oi the world's great manufacturer! in gold and iilvef. Our modest piicet makt buying eay. ling Silver BOYD PARK 'OUNOCO iftM MAKERS OF JEWELRY 100 MAIN SIKLLf DRIVEWAY WU.T RIOT lAki CITY OF COLOR Seaside Road of Rio do Janeiro Is Ont of tho Most Famous In the World. Skirting the Bay of Guanabara 1 a seaside drive which seems to con. dense in its four miles the very es sence of beauty. It Is the Avenlda Belra Mur, the famous Avenlda of IU4 de Janeiro. The massive emerald mountains which skirt the bay makes a fitting setting for the seiulclreulal sweep of the drive, with its stately homes, its luxuriant gardens and tha blue and white breakers the beat lt flanks. The eye meets a riot of color wheis ever It turns. Overflowing the gai dens, covering the walls and falling In veritable cataracts from the houses, tropical flowers lavish themselves in a lovely abandon. Begonias and pinks. Jasmine and dahlias, azaleas, camellias and chrysanthemums are everywhere. Beautiful oytla trees, thousands of roses and delicate orchids abound. And all seem to be slnglug together In a chorus of brilliance and fragrance. With such an Inspiration it Is no wonder that human flowers also flourish along the drive, and one catches tantalizing glimpses of dark eyes and winlaughing red Hps In flower-frame- d dows. For all Its perfection, work on tha Avenlda Belra Mar was begun not more than ten or twelve years ago and completed In a few years a feat which Is little short of marvelous when: one considers the Infinite time and money and red tape usually necessary In the completion of any great publla work. Statistics are hard, colorless things applied to the Avenlda Belra Mar. One thinks of It rather aa an Idea of beauty which materialized somehow In a form far surpassing the expectations of Its creators. They bullded: better than they knew and the memory of what they built will linger long In the hearts of those who have seen and Idled along the most beautiful of driveways. . Two Casts of Mind. There are two casts of mind and two classes of writers which stand out In more or less marked contrast to W bamf each o'ber at all times. them "ceux qui Bgltent 1 monde, et ceux qui le clvlllsent," classical aod roffid&tM the men of clearness and calm and iftc men of Ragle and enthusiasm, the waited? la the broad" streets of life where ti fla PaJsces and fair prospects are, and toe stalkers In tha cl ccen where aquatnr -- i trlclty bug their IndepeBsVrnc. The one sort finds everyfking Interesting, even the ugly, and sosnetimes especially the ugly; the other averts Its eyes, es far as it tnsy, from disease and disorder, and ugliness and lira tlonsltty. That Is what Goethe meant when, with some Injustice to himself as well as to other people, he declared that the classlcsl was the healthy and the romantic tho diseased. d Electrio Fans. There Is now on the market an electric! fan which can be operated only by placing a coin In Its slot, w bereusn It operates for a certain length of time, according to the amount of current which the owner desires to supply for the money paid, says the Kdentlflo American Magazine. When a coin la dropped into the slot a clock mechanism Is wound up In the bsse of the fan. For a nickel, for instsnce, the fsn may operste one hour, either constantly or Intermittently, according to the wishes of the user. Several coins can be dropped In at one time. Insuring several hours' use of the fsn. Coin-Worke- N-p- h ti-r- n Better in the WorloT Lovs's Paradise Was Short-Live- by Mrs, Asche's lady's maid descrllxHJ how happy the ncwlyweda were. . But love's paradise wns One day Asta left her husband a little "farewell" Dote and departed for New Haven. The novelette "Justice" was written after Mrs. Asche returneil to New York and went to live In an apartment in Brooklyn. In the story, Asta, callri ing herself "Olivia Mandish," ' 's her own spearance and character so jsrfectly thst Asche declares he recognized her at once. As tbey had lived together In real life only six weeks, so had "Olivia Standi!)" lived with her rich husband, "Herman Kroger,"' only six weeks. Heroine "Played for High Stakes.1 The heroine is descrilwd as a girl not only besutiful. but "more thsa thst." Although "fully aware of the power of her leuty over all men, she retained an unsullied body because she realised that with thst aa an asset she could play for higher taks." "I get what I wsnt money," she says. "He (the elderly husband) gets In retnrn youth and woman. It seems quite fair to tne." P.ut she couldn't stand the bargain over six weeks. IWth of the principals are Mrs. Asche's fsthef. Andrew Connor, Is a noted ectilirtor. The Asche family Is one of the most prominent In Mcsr.dinsvla. Asche's father wss formerly postmaster general of Norway snd his brother Is at present chief , Justice of short-lived.- de-sc- d. JS'rt-way- Starts Fire to Try Tey. Tonkers. '. V. To try out his new toy fir engine, fhsrlea thmaldson, five, started a hti which nearly destroyed his hom. "1 con Id have put It otit with a real engiae," Charles said 'ek Strong Illustration. "I suppose they won't say anything new against drinking In the British srmy." "Why notr "Just look at the work of the big tanks are doing at the front." Difficult to Identify. r'A man should be content to let well enough alone." "Very true," replied Miss Cayenne, "Bet think how wonderfully wise tn an must be to recognise well enough when he sees It." Could Afford ft. TUd ymi ever inarch la a torchlight procession" "Yes." replied Farmer Comtossei. a lamp on a pole an" walked for miles. But gssollne an' that sort stuff was cheaper then." "I've put Modem Advantages. "Bo ron think a- young msa hat mora opportunities than he had some time ago." "In some respects." replied Mr. Cumrox. "A young msn now can start In with golf and motoring when be likes. I didn't have a chance at 'eta till I was well Into middle age." - Discrimination. did was to tell a whopper about how much be got foe something he sold, and still csndldstes. and even campaign managers, ar aj. lowed to live on. All old Ananlss i V. , |