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Show ARM AND GARDEN. nt. bud is to be placed, crossways, and also lengthways, just a trifle above the crosscut and enough under said cut, so as to be able to shove said bud under the bark, which has to be loosened from the wood carefully so as not to injure or tear it. Then push the bud under the bark, and cover with wax so no air can get at the bark. For the wax, take three parts beeswax, two parts rosin and one part tallow. Put all in a kettle and boil till all is melted. Then pour the wax into a pall of cold water, where it will curdle. Then rub your hands with a little lard or oil, so as to keep the wax from sticking to your hands, and take it out of the water, and work it like dough or putty, so as to take the water out. This wax will not crack in frost nor rrr j Grrt'ftnf - WHY WIRES GO OVER HOGS AC. fi o i,., U i (From the Fanners Review.) - I I i in 14 'I J.f In t t! It Ckcc. C, Cornett, Jefferson County, Oifc it Ion OF INTEREST TO MATTERS Indiana. Beets grow wsll on any good - :, "It is strange how little pieces of misAGRICULTURISTS. garden soil, and the richer the better. ' y f!'nrr-allbo will and information travel The land should be plowed deeply, and A v a be will raid jewbelieved, they if it to sutcoiled, so much the better. Cam T7p- Hints j About Cultlra-tlo- n eler the other day. 'Ter Instance, This puts the soil in good condition for some of the Soil and Yields Thereof t Mi r ' newspapers started a little parabi the In the seed in row3 as drill. Drill . J i C:II::!i:u . I, ij Horticulture, Viticulture and to the effect that it was imposearly in the season ns possible. Stable graph culture. to sible InXi telegraph a message through manure is cur general fertilizer here, cn Hoosac l the : Fitchburg tunnel, : , and 'we cultivate ns we do almost any the Ofte, i bn Kti' Hlbtz.z r- went ,T tho (From Farmers Review Special Re-- : ::i;iro;; and this railroad, paragraph ether farm crop that is drilled Jn. i in of rounds newspaper port) We are unatla to give the name of nearly every UTj fVOVO, HE .Round Up tho writer cf ths following: Beets the country. I had traveled on tho A I AOtho Farmers Institute, and had through gone should have a deep, rich, sandy loam, Fitchburg, of the Michigan with clay subsoil. The land shpuld be tunnel. I knew it wa3 lighted by elecseries, opened at plowed in the fall and harrowed in the tricity, Incandescent lamps being used, was Ho Grand Rapids, Feb. spring. For winter beets, we sow the and I couldnt understand wrhy itwork, 11, with a full atfirst of June, about nine pounds of seed impossible to make the telegraph o so I wrote to an official of the road, askGold Hill to the acre. We fertilize witb barntendance, largely run In heat. OCI:riYT 05 were is if trees the The best time for newspaper paragraphs budding composed of dele yard manure. We plant In rows and ing to 15 to from March if It were to give the reason and 1, vathe true, according May between the from cultivate gates occasionally .nd llEPlll CITY, UTAH. for the failure. I received a reply sayrious county insti-- , weather. If an early spring start about rows. The rows are two and one-ha- lf T1 OWi I r - j Free delivery to any part cf riah Iprirps j tutes and other so March 15, and keep on. Jf a late spring, feet apart, and .the plants are thinned ing that there was no truth In the paraMewere 8 W. 0 a E. wires tad strung We t. the allow. rows. will the " n., Itspsh it way the weather to six Inches apart in the graph, but that cieties, and contin tad tunarrlrts t terminal fete at Thursday, isi the cf a instead over f - r mountains with the t tied until Friday night, February 14. Thiemann, in Farmers Review. in harvest October, digging 3 tear. within r. is There of matter a as economy. The nel off the tops. The exercises of the main section spade and then cutting Detroit, Selling yiorse too cheaply. obstacle In raising the crop is so much dampness in the tunnel that Dish "to Fih yere divided between fruit, stock, greatest ' M Cpr-ngcout wears of a week us wires on last A gentleman told the harvesting them, it being a good deal of the insulation gnd general farming, one day beGold Hill 7.C3 and Ipabah, draft horse (weight 1,700 pounds), work to dIg them with the spade. We so fast that it is cheaper to run the line ing devoted to each. In addition large a Ttx fcr trtEEportiIca cut tzl return ci It was at utilize the crop here by feeding it to over the mountain. ,cA7EAlSJH.;.DEt,!.!,k.3. cus-bithere was held a womens section, upon which was sold for about $30. and fires. Aircrs, to was an animal and auction the another disposed noticed I when have thinned paragraph be should Beets cattle. each afternoon, and a mechanics secF, -- JAVIC, Prcprittcr, the impression that he would young and kept free from weeds. Soak the effect that there is one red diamond. CAN I ORTA IN A PATENT ? rcr r tion was open each evening, at which of under to be sold for what he would the seed for twenty-fou- r red are have lukeTTAV LATAH" 8P5 In h0Rt oinm on. We a there matter As of many fact hours Ij ft topics relating to mechanical engineerCO., who have had nearly fmv t all to was be in said The animal are the patent business. Comruil' L diamonds. They warm water before planting. rare, especially bring. ing were discussed. tcirrienefn tons M riotly confidential. A llnnSWck cf InInIn and only six years of age. The seen are C. B. but right fioa concormns: Steward. America, County, frequently l?rc.j G. W. PAKKS, and bow to r Z Pntrnt During the noon intermissions the report seems incredible, and we can diana. Beets shouldJasper n tbm sent freo. A No ta a ox ZLe.' has catalogue on Mahatma, White be dia. the deep t Baldwin, planted and scientifio books sent free, ic!Patents exhibit room was thronged. "Here, in but believe that we have not heard all of taken & a Munn Co on land throneh number or rerf'v., W, addition to a large assortment of spray- of the story. It does not seem possible loam, with gravel subsoil, land should a couple of red diamonds, notice in tbe Ncientihc Amei ,rnn tyeoial a He are bas one. thus bronsrht ones a well drained. The and is that before miM.cvb tbe widely green pink out cost to the inventor, ing machinery, orchard and garden that a horse of this kind would be be well manured in the fall-ansoNiN-rkW deeply white ruby, paradoxical as that may issued weekly, elegant ly i !!utajns rated, bas t v f , . tools and seeds, was a complete workunless circulation of any bc wont in t i largest parted with for any such figure, not harrowed seem. But a stones name depends on plowed at that time a year, world. Rooms 4 aad 5 Eagle Block, con'es sort fie ing dairy, where" 1,000 pounds of milk there was some good cause for it. This down. done be a v(ar. Building Bdition, mmtbly, The harrowing should its composition and not its color. His was each day separated and made into is I', very number cona rr t'r'i copies, i cents. be of horse of all others in the spring. When the crop is to be diamond Is not an emerald, because it the kind just in tiful and colors, plate,, photr,rrcTiris of r( 7 butter. The dairy operations were un- that is in demand now and probably used with mcr enahl houses, SALT builders to show t LAKE CITY, UTAH. plans, for tbe fall market the seed should Is green, nor is his ruby a diamond bedesigns and secure contracts. jM dress iafet der the immediate charge of G. H. always will be. He is a kind with & iiUNN Nrw of but CO, Yoke, 301 "koapwat. be put in about the 15th day May, cause it is white." Buffalo Times. True of the Agricultural college. which the market is not glutted. When where the beets are to be used for feedThe leading papers presented at the from the great teaming com- ing purposes, June first is early enough. ONLY A SCORE LEFT. Institute were by gentlemen who had buyers are traveling through the coun- In planting, drill in the seeds about panies attended the county institutes. About try paying $180 each for heavy horses three inches Annihilation of Snake Iilve In and thin as the apart, one-ha- lf dlans Beftan In 1863. of them were from the Agricuof pure blood a man should hesitate beWe use no fertilizer grow. plants ltural college, and the others included fore he lets go of a really good horse where the land is Capt. Jim (not the Bannock captain), moderately rich. In some of the most successful farmers for almost nothing. accompanied by Camas Jim and two cultivating, we use a garden horse other -and fruit growers of the state. The Snake river Indians, paid a visit IP TJTLA-EL- . and a small harrow at first. As to plow, The local were discussions for led by to Gov. speakers other the McConnell Coming Apple Crop. day of harvesting, that will depend The apple crop of the past year has time largely. MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTER OF g on stock to which the the purpose of receiving information as Somewhat The first topic upon the program of proved a valuable one for the apple beets are to bethe a to laws and the game soliciting square fed. If they are to go the third day of the Michigan Round growers, as well as for the merchants. to the Boise the Buggy Whips, Noso Bags, Collar Saddlery, Statesman, Tha late" meal, says we do not harvest till sheep A. We, are Informed that the men that In the with Up was on "Water In the Soil," by fall, and then we plow them out. governor gave them a document, forth C. Glidden, of Paw Paw. He has a thebought apples last fall and stored them The greatest Pads, Hardware, Loathor, otc. trouble with growing beets a flaming ribbon attached, setting ory that the water in the lower depths In cold storage at a cost of 30 cents is to get them started and keep the law and stating that It applied with Fine Buggy Harness a Specialty. Wholesale and Retail. of the soil becomes vaporized and in per barrel have made from 50 cents to them free from weeds. We then our equal force to white men and Indians. raise at where that form rises to the surface, $1 per barrel. The question now arises, beets only for feeding to stock. The ;The visitors are members of a remnant which Our goods have been extensively used in Deseret and vicinity, and ta? Is the soil, condensed it to is be what the for by the apple crop night of a small tribe of Indians that have indark we the red, is raise large variety is generally several degrees colder than coming year? We wish as many of our and we consider habited the Snake river valley for no given the best satisfaction. Hail orders will receive prompt attention. it good. that of the lower depths. readers as are engaged in raising apP. J. Barry, Polk County, Wisconsin. one knows bow long. Tbe tribe was so This idea was disputed by R. M. Kel- ples would examine their trees and see Beets do well on a light, sandy loam, small that the government never placed logg, of Ionia, who ascribed the up- if the fruit buds are strong and well well manured. Plow in the spring them on a reservation. There are only ward movement of the water in the developed. This would show whether dress with good stable manure twenty of the tribe left. The annihilsoil to capillary action and the ad- cr not the growth after last July was early, and plow again We sow tbe seed the ation of the band was commenced in hesion of the water to the surface of enough to ripen the fruit and develop first cultivate with a gar- 1863, when four men who lived at the the particles, in this way passing from the buds for the coming crop. We hope den of May. WeWeare killed Salmon falls with not troubled something ferry plow. a moist particle to one that is drier. I there will be a general response. drouth so far as this crop is concerned. like fifty of them. One of the men, a Prof. F. S. Kedzle then talked upon We the crop by the first of October, fellow named Beach, had a shotgun and Commercial Fertilizers: Is Their Use Will the Plum Return? We remem- lay pull them in windrows for eight to ten discussion arose as to its efficiency as Profitable for the General Farmer?" ber with a feeling of sorrow mingled J days, and then put them In the root an Indian killer. To test its merits a AWARDS. After explaining the nature of the three with pleasure the plum orchards of our house. come sand In boxes covered with very band of Indians was induced to Support elements nitrogen, potash and phos- youth, before the black-knhad made dry. We have good crops here, but they Into a narrow of house near the pass needto be phoric acid that are likely its appearance. Every little hamlet In are not planted in large quantities. the men, when Beach opened fire and ed by plants, he showed the amounts the eastern and middle states had its T. W. Stanford, Kandiyohi County, the buckshot fairly mowed them down. Homo and values of these elements in stable plum orchards. There were many vaState Fair Beets do well here on a Minnesota, the was made an Later attack by commercial the and manure, average rieties and all seemed to thrive. It clay loam, with clay subsoil. I have men on an Indian 1894, Gold camp and twenty-si- x Medal. fertilizer." The manure is rich In nitro- was a delicious sight in the morning tried no other soil. I deep in the redskins were killed. gen and contains but comparatively lit- to see the great purple ones glistening fall and harrow in theplow I plaiiC spring. Industrie Since then disease has played hayoo tle phosphoric acid, while the reverse with dew. (The little black ones on the the seed from the first to the 10th of of the and with the tribe .hut twenty Is true with commercial fertilizers. The big trees, and the green gages on their or as soon as the soil will work Indians remain. They live on the value of one ton of stable manure, smaller trees were a constant delight. May, Three Cream and well. I have had no experience sowing game and fish fall the based upon Its analysis and the com- Will those days and those orchards more during caught Baking use. For for than family enough and spring. mercial valuation of nitrogen, potash return? With the Powder Gold barn-yar- d d use I fertilizer and phosphoric acid, is about one dollar habits of the black-knMedals. and with the manure. In cultivating I use one horse and twenty-fiv- e cents, while the value assistance of the spray pump, we hope on a cultivator that run3 about one inch of the average commercial fertilizer, that our children will see what we all of my garden cultivate and estimated in the same way, is about have seen in our youth the plum trees deep, same at the time. There vegetables dollars. While they might in all orchards laden with the most are twenty-fiv- e Your Superior Quality no drouths here that injure the beet be profitable for the fruit grower and delicious of fruit Flavoring i crop, but there is a small bug here that market gardener, the speaker was of Extracts Gold I As is It when them very dry. Churn Often. Churn once in two or injures the opinion that commercial fertilizers MedaL a small in beets raise way, in harsummer only three once in and in Mousy days three could not be profitably used upon the I pull them with my left hand or in four vesting Use winter. days To any good farm. substantiate this general Carefully oompoutideil. tops with a knife held view he showed by a chart the amount churn that is easily washed. In winter and cut off the Mail or express orders promptly atteaed ta obstaof fertilizers used in various counties warm the cream before churning to in my right hand. Our greatest Stsck at Salt Lake price. Large at of insects Best degrees by setting the can cle here is the depredations in the state in 1883 and 1833 as given sixty-fiv- e are quite small. SOUTHER!! TRADE Quality and of hot while the beet plants in the census. Except In Kalamazoo of cream in a deep dish-pa- n SOLICITED. to I have what In beets, sell, my Display of county, where they are largely used by water (not boiling), stirring the cream I selling Hornet Coda Water. to and take sacks in them put them MNAlLY Si LUNT, with the paddle; secure the right temcelery growers, the amount of commera market, which, however, is limited. cial fertilizers used was from two to perature by bolding a dairy thermomN. Richardson, Morrison County, NEPHI, .UTAH. four times as large in 1883 as In 1893, eter in the cream. Color the butter in to Beets do be best Minnesota. should which indicates that they have not winter if it- needs it, by putting carrot the top soil to be a been found profitable for ordinary farm juice in the cream at time of churning. on a clayofsubsoil, sand and clay. The land Cotton seed oil and aratto butter color- mixture MANUFACTURED BY crops. Tlic First National Bank, for be will been beets if first has it good H. I. more customers of is but the Butterfield, convenient, Secretary ing State Board of Agriculture, spoke ujjon are liable to detect a flavor In butter seeded to clover and timothy, and used The Present Standing of Ensilage as so colored that does not belong to pure for a pasture for two years at least. NEPHI, UTAH. on run Then the let in pasture sheep a Food fcr the Various Kinds of Stock. butter, which they will not do when CALT LAKE CITY, UTAH BOX 6 2 place of cattle. Turn over the sod and CAPITAL He spoke in general upon the advancarrots are used. Ex. pulverize well before planting in the tages of the silo and the merits of the Spices Pure and Ground Daily. Tuberculosis in Illinois. The ques- spring. Plant the seed in the different forms. The value of ensilage for different kinds of stock was then tion whether cr not there be tuber- spring 3 soon as danger from frost considered and the amount that could culosis in Illinoisseems to have arizen. Is over. We do not use, fertilizer on be fed to advantage. The paper was One party claims that the disearo is ti da here, but use old pasture. We put BANKING discussed by II. J. Martin, of Vermont-vill- e, widespread, and the other party seems the seeds la rows eighteen inches apart GENERAL to six Inches four and in frera the to to desire apart , prove that there i3 pracit The first paper of the afternoon was tically no tuberculosis. Both sidc3 pre- rows. They are not s fleeted by drouth In All Its Branches. if in as mensuch proper soil, reU. of planted to I. cn tend found tho their opinions Cowdrey, by Ithaca, upon Geo. C. Whitmore, J. H. Ericksojt, tu Growing Potatoes." He preferred a ports of the state veterinarian. The tioned above, but on sandy land without President. 5 W. v. Armstrong, Cashier. fact is, there Is a good deal of the dis- a clay sutcoil drouth affects them badlight, sandy loam, although a Old land become has that exhausted clay loam would answer. After ease in Eome localities, where herds ly. DESERET, UTAH, plowing deep and thoroughly pulver- have been slaughtered, a large per cent and is very weedy i3 totally unfit to cn. We tecta harvest about he grow about the first of cf Hay. them being found affected. On the planted izing (One mile from O&sia Station,) . . . Caution wa3 given about leaving the other hand, taking the state as a whole, October first, and uso the crop to feed cccd uncovered after it is dropped, for there is comparatively little, when to catE 3. SALT LJJZJJ. any length pf time. Within a week he compared to areas of like size In the Raiss Come Celery. Every farazr 3?irst-ela,s- s geos over the field with a smoothing east. that has tha proper soil should raisa a harrow, and after that uses a weeder. i Free Seeds. We hear a great deal email patch cf celery for the uso of his Tho cultivation is kept up at frequent stncL ZSTepKi about free eeed3 from the department family. It would not to advisable for Intervals a3 long as poeeiblo without of Dealer la a great many farmers to go into raising agriculture, but we have yet to find disturbing the tops. lie uses a a farmer that has any interest in the it fcr market because it requires rjecial FfJUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, digger and picks Into boxes that matter. Most cf the horticultural so- conditions to make it a commercial sucheld one bushel. The Freeman i3 his ) RATES I!! llAPr.OliY WITH THE TIMES. ; Tezkry, Grae, Veil Fork cl condemn the expenditure as a cess. If you are not accustomed to favorite variety for home usa, as it i3 cf cieties Emcked axd Freh Fisk, it, study the matter up. The famEf,Flczr, szcrllznt Quality, but wTkcn some other UiOlcss waste cf the peoples monny raise Ray end Grtia. a art will produce 200 bushels per acre The seeds being distributed do not ad- ily will fully appreciate tha delicacy this It will js j you to tip year gc: It ta tr. 1 We have a well of tbe famous It cnly yields ICO bushels. He advised vance tho interests of agriculture in fall. 13 ektxffe cent, fcr tMdlia cad rrnit ts Doicrct LIthia Water on the prcmircr. Variation in Ben Davis. Ths Ben at tho full cf tho moon, fco- -r tho least, so far as anyone can ego. oa es ffooi iclJL Cam give Crst-olplanting is which euro a and u ' 3 you can ego to work longer at Tj3 money could Lo far Letter spent, Davis appla varies la appearance and if guaranteed rferrso csnatrjr dtslrei. if it mirt to spent, in sending skilled In F fcr D rights and all diseases cf the to tha locality lirLt to plont, but had no faith in horticulturists salability according to fore! pa lands inin to Is which it grown. This fruit when a threrlc:. Kidncyr, Bladder and all ether urinal troubles vestigate Loth their productions and produce! in Vlsconsin and Iowa is not In order to chow our faltb In this tha methods there employed, to detirablo cn the market as when ,Tct Ii.Il- - Arpl Tre-esG . 1.1 following propo water, we mahe-thin southern Missouri, Illlnsis I rr tic 3 in tho IU3 cf February 1C, Tho Carnation. That the c a molten grown ms tion and In liana. It a-If anyone afflicted to require a 11?, an Inquiry cn to budding is a popular favorite cr n not I "i - lor.'ar sen and mere heat to grow it with any of the troubles above tre Take a email branch cf ti octettes extet with us qu' elite r to onrxcri enumerated are not relieved la c'" ;! trro and cut tho lark crors-s- , object but the development and Uu- - tie n.p rf cticn than eras ot.hsr verb; 3 7. And, Couth, CALT LAKO OiTY little above the bn I, thn cut provemrnt of this beautiful fiov, er, month and cured in three month ;n r r o charge will be made for board. alt of tho bud about three- - Tho American Carnation reP. O. l:of (Jho top- hrjr oil o or meal cal 5 i f an in.rU an 1 cut R it off. hop-- cently held its annual convention. la i'Uu vihnlp f l i a 'f II help U 'n t lil.e a w riling 1 ' n. Cn.ro New York City. This show tb lln-o- f to j i. a in r U iMroR v h- n Ilr.r. 1 C ample 3 I !C! i zre t,b : i the p 2Zar i.i ? i? fas JDcsirtt House ts f,nt-clx$- s in every particufa' n fon i j ' I . 1 ! modern progress, a continual divid- V( Iren 1 3 Y."lX .. 3 ' R ? :if live of a r 1 w np Um r r : :r- - I Thun In" up cf tho zrcit verk cf invc.tb 1 r i r re the Ur in this t J to-Da- te , :! iJuU-klT- P-- i! . Attorney r . - -- Buber, Lard, Sau for Detroit, rich Springs, OSTLER ibapci t-- i : l , I , -- lf copyrights. .- C--c 1 - LAND and MINING d tV ci-t.f- 'Z-- Harness and Saddlerv GEO. W. WILLIAMS, AITSONj . ; Harness, he mi Leads All the Rest- ot better-understo- od well-rotte- ot McNally & lunt, PRESCRIPTIONS , - .... HEWLETT . SURPLUS 350,000 337,500 Jt3T THE T)a,CiO.T('3(0 ed O. S.. .0180 j Vice-Preside- nt well-drain- MARTIN, . Is ttie Only Between Hotel M!ilfor4: ona-ItGr- -3 rr m v W. . STEWARD, e to-wi- " t: -- s- - ? 1 1 v-il- l li-g- - I 1 1 1 1 Aty . r.-'y- kr v I, IRS. - J. F. GIBBS, Pronrietor. |