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Show a GARDEN AND jjjl to of interest aTT eBs Hoeing 3 times Posts for support, 62. L . Stakes for support of jvines, 300.. Wire for support, 300 lbs. No. 12.. CultivaAbout Hints to.pate Labor on support '"" Soil and 'Yields Thereof Laying and covering for winter . . hnltore, Viticulture and Fiorl- - Use of tools, j AGRICULTURISTS. I L-- a long time the OR question has been discussed whether the vine; could be without manured -- A y altering the quality of the wine pro-- , "'d. Li.y duced, and wheth- - manure the er be should put dithe rectly .into or first yineyard, the" compost .heap, in however, been c found, and be can proflt- safely vines manured with fresh animal drop- which should be dug or plowed tsdeeply as possible, as soon as the the manure is .ge is over. When or as early as tlie autumn, oiled in after the harvest, it will have all its soluble ingre-;t- s e to decay, and will be evenly distributed lugh the soil by means of the rains, u therefore it will become accessible all the roots of the vine the following Lijg. As soon as the ; soil can be - S- I- VCf; an 'k- -- - i n,- "6r . 7 -- 3.75 ; Plants and resetting missing hills . . , . Nipping and pruningi Mulching and manure, . ... j. . . 8.75 2.50 25.00 4.00 6.00 9.00 3.75 5.00 4.00 ' . l Total for two years. ...... $150.00 In favored localities, Something may be saved on cost of manure, labor, omitting winter protection; etc. But any attempt to reduce amount of labor, fertilizer, mulching, etc!, will certainlyre suit in reduction of both quality and quantity of fruit. J Sparta, Wis. I M. A. Thayer. , Orchard, Grass. The orchard grass has many' good qualities, boath as ja grass to cut for hay and as a pasture grass. It is rather coarse, if sown thin. It must be cut early, or yoi 1 lose a reat deal of value. It will usually blos$om about the middle of June, and ought to be cut at that time. Some complain' that It does not hold in the soil as (well as some other grasses; hut this depends upon the quality of the land, and whether it is well adapted to it or not. It has the quality of starting earlier,! after being cut or grazed off by cattle, than most of our other grasses. It is apt to grow in "clusters; but this can be avoided, to a very great extent, jby good cultivation of the land, and by sowing it thickly. It requires to be sown thickly two or three bushels of seed to the acre, if sown alone; but a liberal mixture of other species will give ja better result. I ; up after- autumn rains best time to spread the be 2 thus covered ure, as when deeply no beneficial to the vine can be it There is, however, An some in inces, an excess of ammonia in the C. L. P. and manure present, and this will' roduce a rank growth of wood or vege-!;- e Lettinw In tlie Light. A firmer faith in the capacity and matter, and also influence the Ait, ind thus give to the wine bad value, of the soil is the need of the hour; dualities, affecting its taste and lasting and will give to our youth; that charac- - ily: turned ' in--edie- nts j il ary. lA A kAAA A A j Where Forests Cea. The limits of forests upon the earth are determined by , climate, and more especially by two principal elements of climate, heat and humidity. The na ture of the soil is of only secopdlry importance. There are trees Tor all kinds of soil, even for the most un -- grateful-so- me accomrdoda-t- ; them-i-selve- con-Aition- ever-ncreasi- a AAAA A A Sik ifk. L Charinw mrii, t.a iea "L t- -S aaa IT:at3 Pf Lii. 'tTJ t.t. l-- w - v wk- 1 Lit i-- trd- j j.. - j , Biiti;rf O b i "f ill fe Einijit irati h & 4 -- e Gold was discovered there in 1886. Finished or in progress are 3,700 fre. of fore- & for . sal-Bg- I.'DT! x Arenac 1 Tel. iSii riLlextr TS&.3 A I i- - THE LIMIT OP FORESTS IN THE EXTREME NORTH. 1 Larimer iJ il'AGa HJDELt C. ntioo. ALE LOVES Ik' nr. The vignerons at Argenteuil, ar Paris, have been for years in the t of manuring their vines" with the scrapings, with excellent results. GLASS a.r.. L i & Waaee. Lftl E JH t XB rxE.3 r EC w?)l '4o lla:s lh- - V yy Co. Berry Bulletin. growers of berries for market Thayer j (Tie :ald Bdofi IWrairei realize that ordinary not sufficient. farm e meth-sar- V V y V V ter which is sure to come by patience and perseverenbe. We do not hear the discouraging word uttered without recalling an interview with an intelligent man from New York.y whose grandfa- ther conceived jthe idea of reclaiming a tract of land larger than Green Harbor marsh; going to work with courage, he ; n- i . cannot be grown and market- easily as wheat, corn and pota- - Berries rvcms,- i ; be-L- et ; ' i ;! i l . ex--sn- ee : 5 ready Colorado, composed entirely of all facts and dates or male plants; and other patches : ; reference. wxre j or feTien one acre has been mastered, composed entirely of pistillate, facing one or two hundred bushels male plants. Now, the pistillate plants e must get their pollen from the fruit, then acreage may'' be may be at some disr plants, which Was Few at first supposed that realize the actual cost of bring-acr- e tance off. It different were species, until the of bush berries to a good they one grass was that ' discovered was fact agebe careful. or male a may a plant; and safely estimate, that after simply staminate, female or plant, land in a high state of cultlva-- 5 the other a pistillate, Of same to the species. every acre; of good small fruits, both belonging J on missing hills filled in and course, the seed is produced only to a bearing age,; will cost from the pistillate plants. he to, stam-inat- e, oopiete record of , i etam-inat- k-z- 30B a'. WANT STEEL tsd 0 w- in-jas- t ;,! 5 !; j, ed. 5 'j '-- ag t, sj-- ';t In well earned dollars or $150 ,Jequiyaien in honest work at $1.25 'e following estimates of one acre ackberries is made 2 s Perlenqe on The after many Thayer Fruit times... ... 2.00 1.00 30.00 5.00 7.50 and indicates methods adopted: lani .... ..$ 1.50 4 fry r ALSO- Bui'or, Lard, Sausago ' Free delivery to any part of the city. COPYRIGHTS'!4;. J-- CA1V OTtTATN A PATENT f For an Lowest opinion, write to prompt answer and PlUNN A; CO., who hare bad nearly fifty years the patent busineas. Coninmnica. experience in confidential. A Handbook of Intions strictly formation eoneerninf? Patent and bow to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue Of mechanical and scientific books sent free. , Patents taken ,t.hroneh Munn & Co. receive and ppecial notice in the ficlentllic Americnn.withthus are; brousht widely before the public out cost! to the inventor. This soendid paper. Issued weekly, eleeantly illustrated, has ly fjir the of any scit ru die werk In the largest Circulation world. i$.t a year, simile- eopiea setd. ifoe. a yca-tt:mg1e Buildiog T;dit iontnioj)iiily, copies. new in and of tiful plates, colors, nhotogrerhs houses, with plans, crabling builders Ato riio-- the latest designs and secure contracts. Tloada-AV(iimn. MUMfi & CO Kkw Vcuk, - I 1 TJVAJi. t MANUFACTURER AND IMPORTEn OF. Harness, Saddlery, Buggy Whips. Nosu Bags, Collar Pads, Hardware, Leather, etc. Fine Buggy Harness a Specialty. Wholesale and . Retail. Our goods have been extensively used in Deseret and vicinity, and have given the best satisfaction. Mail orders will receive prompt attention. Leads All the Rest- - gin? & Home 1 Industries' and laying out . CO. S plants, 41 lnS 15 5 tlree! 20 .................. times........ ..... times. 375 loads for mulching.. 15.00 plants, for winter...... 2.50 JSg exPcnse, first 3 covering. g 15 .. year. v. . . . .$68.25 ..... times............ 2.50 7.50 Another class of grasses may is, called the monoecious grasses; that flowand pistillate where the staminate ers are on the same plant, hut in distinct positions, separated from each other.: The most familiar example of Every that Is our common Indian-coflowstaminate the that farmer knows n come on the top, ers of Indian-corcalled the tassels; while ontheanpistilaxis late flowers iare arranged the ear; called along the main stalk, the staminate from and that the pollen Its way through the flowers must! find are the silks, attached pistils, which io the ears, as everybody knows before fertilization can take: place. Flint. havs Several patents for roofing glass taken out In the last few year.. , m. bn sterility, is limited by an undulating line, which runs over Scandinavia between the 70th and 71st degrees of latitude, cuts at an average of 68 degrees all the northern shore line of Siberia as well as that of North America, and descends in Labrador to the 58th degree. Below that line the forests appear and extend over all the earth southward to the limits of the continents, which do not approach too near the antarctic zone to prevent the growth of trees. However, these forests are broken here and there by mighty plains, such as the steppes of Russia, the prairies of the United States, and the pampas! of the Argentine Confederation. There are also the great plains of 'Australia, the desert of Sahara, the sandy; plains of Persia and of Chinese Mongolia, the latter like great leprous) patches upon the face of our earth. BroUers. j Fatteningsubscriber wishes to A Pennsylvania to fatten broil- know how: long it takes ers, and how to dress them Philadelphia market. We give r quiry below: I have a lot of young chickens four to six months old, and want to know-jushow long it will take to fatten them up in the quickest time. Also how to dress for the Philadelphia marv ; ket.; to matter an not fatten is easy It As food rather makes them the broilers, of Then, fattening, grow Instead again, to force them, may result in leg weakness, bowel disease, etc. Do not begin to fatten until they are eight wreeks old, and then allow two weeks for them to fatten! Feed three times a day and scatter a gill of millet seed between meals. Here te an excellent fattening), food: Melt one pound of crude tallow in half gallon of boiling water. While boiling thicken with a sufficient quantity of the following to form a stiff dough: ' One quart of corn meal, one quart of ground oats, one quart middlings, one pint ground meat, lialf pint linseed meal, one tablespoonful of salt. Am. Poultry Keeper. Improve the Farms., y Benefits resulting from experiments upon unproductive tracts of land are very apparent; and any, improvement advancing the value of farms is of pecuniary benefit, not only to the actual owner of the soil, but to the community as a whole. No prosperous business can be ' carried on, which confines the ad? vantages to be derived within a narrow circle, as success in one branch of business assists another. Each a.cre of land now unproductive, that is made to produce any description of crop whatever in paying quantities, adds so much to the general welfare of the whole, and should thus be recognized. L ' , McNally lunt, & PRESCRIPTIONS Carefully compounded. Mail or express orders promptly atteoed to. Large Stack at Salt Lake prices. SOUTHERN TRADE MNALLY SOLICITED. & LUNT, - NEPHI, - UTAH. Baking Powder Gold Medal. Keep Your Superior Quality Flavoring Bxtraeta Gold Medal. V at Beit Quality and Display of Home, Bode Water- - 1 MANUFACTURED NEPHI, UTAH. CAPITAL SURPLUS . $50,000 $37,500 - SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH . BY - BOX 683. 8pices Pure and Ground Daily. GENERAL t BANKING In All Its Branches. j . and Three Cream y y VV cleared off the pushes hn$ trees, opened drains at considerable expense, letting - Sortj as in light, receiving much in retura. X Box 3L though-not enqugh to pay the expenses. til 3E Berry growing, like market garden-- i The property passed into the hands of Lines3 f or 3 concentra--a relative, who, with commendable requires, the greatest wee, $ of good soil, labor and thought. harsiyx spirit, prosecuted the work, already om you. (Too. much land is the bane of most gun. usf have more light, said dc lardi it as Does as he. well the farming. growing property pay now? we BOND? Success would be more certain if acre-- 8 asked. Yes; the net profit ' is ten STOCKS 3 were thousand dollars every year. G. J. divided, and fertility, prepara-3 Street, and Peterson. 23. ilail cultivation increased, .tteaS&n uitensifled concentration and farming Flittllate and Staminate Grasses. energy are the diamond drills that The grasses differ in their floral out success.; uuy-- ,V structure. Bake They are not all uniform in counsel from books, papers, and set. !as4 a Li.010. letical growers, but let It be tem-?e- d their mode of x growth.! We have with your own best judgment and class that may be called dioecious grassesf that Js, grasses in which the Lrience. .. Actual female, or the staminate knowledge and practical organs of the flower are should go hand in hand. entirely distinct plants. the beginner commence mode- With only a very limcase is the That fii7, and go slow. Do only what can What Is called well done. the best ited number of species. but Nothing which' uduct win grows in the the buffalo grass, K pay. and inj Colorado, and generally tse a limited variety of best plants, South, on the plains, is one of that kind. I ,ucing large, firm, attractive fruit. 2ave a note book and make have seen patches of buffalo grass in - pja- -- I A harngies a, VEAL -- f j Preparation for war will not cease unAWARDS. til there is certainty that the highest, a call resort not to for force. will duty But a growing sense of that highest duty will steadily restrain the nations. In proportion as they rise to more of the State Fair Christian spirit, from mistaken con- 1894, Gold flicts which lower motives prompt, but Medal. to which the best sense of duty does not call. New York Tribune. - MUTTON GEO. W. WILLIAMS, - ST, A.-5TS03- Principle and Force. r- -f Jt&ftd k FOR U THE LAND OF THE BOERS. A.blrr ?. yr k5 V 1 i LAND and MIKING of Dutch descent. r caa. BEEF one-ha- lf . ni .- j ds U, CXTE.3Drj OSTLER & 0CKEY, Springs and Ibapahl (NEPHI CITY, UTAH. miles of telegraph. Country has been enjoying its independence since 1852. In 1884 a convention at London recognized the republic. Two-tbirof the Christians belong to the Dutch reformed church. Transvaal means across thte Vaal, or the country north of the Vaal river. The largest town is Johannesburg with a population of 15,000. Pretoria has 5,000. There are about twenty thousand farms, wheat and tobacco being the chief crops. It is there that the famed tsetse fly, whose bite is death to oxen and horses, is most prevalent. Population is 679,200; the white number 119,128, and abouh half of these ax a a. ers for Detroit, Fish ng . Wholesale and Retail at s 1 OSTLER & 0CKEY, - s to pure sand'others to compact clay, others to thAsteep: and rocky sides of mountainsothers to the depths of the marshes. Bujbiio tree can pasa beyond its of humidity or of heat. .It is necessary for this great vegetable to have the heat of a summer of: at least three months duration, to permit it to develop its foliage, to blossom and bear fruit; to push out buds destined to expand the following year, to add a new layer of wood to the thickness of its trunk charged with the support of an summit. And it is necto essary for it have .water, a great deal of water, to convey without ceasing-thnutritive substances from the roots to the leaves, where the sap is elaborated. When, by reason of too little rainfall, the soil dries, the alimentation of the tree ceases, and, as a consequence, its growth. ; Thesq requirements bring about the results that in the arctic zone where cold reigns almost continually all the year; where the oblique rays the sun never succeed in melting more than tha mere surface of the soil, of which the depths remain frozen, the conditions necessary for the life of the tree cease, and we find no more forests If some birches and willows appear ih that desolate region, they are unable to develop. They creep on the ground, draw themselves to some protection or are twisted and gnarled. They are hardly able to surpass in height tie humble stature of the mosses and lichens that surround them. and That zone, doomed to hoar-fro- st UNION AND SOUTHERN NAVIES. SAMUEL A. KING, Second Volume of the Official Iiecord Comes from the Press. The second volume of the official records of the Union and Confederate navies In the.wai) of the rebellion has just come from the press and will soon be ready for issue by the government. The Collections Fronmtly Alt nisi t: publication is distributed through congress, and not; from the navy department, although it is prepared there unOffice, First National hank Bldg., der Secretary Herberts direction by Lieutenant Commander Rush and Rob. . . TTTAV ert H. Woods. This volume takes up rnovo, the story where it was left by volume I. and covers the period from Jan. 1, 1863, to March 31, 1864, and makes a stirring tale of sea warfare, covering the opera-- , Ho tions of the celebrated Confederate cruisers Florida, Alabama and Georgia, Gold Hill and the chases made by the federal cruisers. One chapter extracted from the log of Commander Semmes, on the AlabaThe Oasis and Fifth tip ring stage Ieayf ma, tells how he enticed the United O asift and Ibapah at 8 a. m., each Monday States steamer Hatteras, a steajner of and Thurftday, and arrlTt at terminal point almost equal armament and strength of within 2 hour. crew, away from the blockading squad- ' C3.0CI Ofttis to Detroit, ron at Galveston and sunk her in a des, Fish 6.00 Sprngs, Gold Hill and ipabah, 7.CC perate engagement. Then there are the stories of the escape of the Florida Tare for transportation out and return om and from Mobile, the seizure oL the Virfare. Address, ginia, the escape of the Gibraltar (forFg UAVIS, Proprittor, merly the Sumter), the cutting out of the United States revenue cutter Caleb Cushing, the Johnson island expedition, . G. VV. PARKS, and the Chesapeake affair. fine picThe volume is embellished by tures of the famous craft Georgia, Wy oming, Wachusett, Rhode Island, Sabine, Vanderbilt, and finally the famous Rovra 4 and 5 Eagle Block, old yacht Ainerica, which was taken into the Uhited States naval service as a 'dispatch boat after her great internaSALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. tional victory. Exchange. J. H. Erickson, Armstrong, Cashier. Geo. C. Whitmore, President. W. W. -; THE Vice-Preside- nt DESERET, UTAH, i O. S. j MARTIN, SALT LAKE. FRUITS, (One mile rom Oafti Station,) Is tlie Only II Dealer ! i RATES III HARMOIIY Peultry, Game, Veal Pork ant Beef,. Smoked and Fresh Fifth, Flour, Hay and Grain. It will pay you to thip yonr goods to me. 1 for handling and remit as charge 10 per oon aa goods are sold. Can glre firit-olaoeumti? reference if desired. eat aa We have VIJH THE TIMES. a well of the famous Deseret Llthla Water on the premises. and which is a guaranteed cure for Brights and all diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder and all other urinal troubles. ; In order to show, our faith In this waterj we make the following proposi- W. G. M STEWARD, tion orncxi , t' 440, ............ - ..$1.00 1.00 1.00 If anyone afflicted t: montli and cured in three months, no charge will be made for board. 68 W. 2nd, 5outh, SALT LAKE CITY P. O. BOX Hand Simple. Iron Assay Copper Assay Bottle Samples to-wi- with any of the troubles above enumerated are not relieved In one ; Bcorn mind the Baer et MRS. J. . IBmee i, firet-ela- a GIBBS I and Milford. BUTTER, VEGETABLES, : t t ,.. Hotel First-clas- s Bett25ree n NeptLi im : in every particular. Proprietor. . ! ' |