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Show THE flTT Page basis and that It is usually the smnller niul poorer farms that nre rented for cash, but there are some owners, often those living at a distance from their land or those knowing littlo about ON farming, who find the cash arrangement the best, even though the farms limy be good enough o attract the best tenants. However, the condition of Government Bulletin Takes Up the buildings and fences on many farms and the dlfllculty of Details Entered Into by handifor betterments arranging Owners and Tenants. cap the dairyman on such places. Some land owners who rent for cash encourage better tenants and better farming by leasing a herd of cows MANY IMPORTANT QUESTIONS with the land, but there are very few who follow this practice. A copy of the bulletin may be had Much Depends Upon Interest Landby writing the Department of Agrilord Takes in Development of Herd culture, Washington, D. C. and Disposal That Is Made of Various Products. RaorieMed Abotdr RENTED FARM Julius Kruttschnltt (portrait herewith), chairman of the board of theSouthern Pacific railway, with $UK),000, is the highest salaried railroad executive In the country, according to reports to the senate interstate commerce committee In the Cummins Investigation of revenues and expenditures of carriers. The report showed executives were paid $75,000 or eight 'SJr more for the year ending June 30. A. H. Smith, president of the New York Central, who received $92,580, was second. His salary the previous year was $100,000. These chiefs received $75,000: Robert S. Lovett, Union Pacific board chrlrman; Carl K. Gray. Union Pacific president; C. H. Markhara, president Illinois Central; E. Pennington, president Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie; Hale Holden, president Chicago, Burlington & Qulncy and affiliated lines, and William Suroule, president of the Southern Pacific company, making a total of six. Dunlel Willard got $07,500 ns president of the Baltimore & Ohio, while L. P. Loree received $37,500 as president of Delaware & Hudson and $35,000 as chairman of the Kansas City Soutuern. Gone Are All of Their Eighteen Lives herself beneath the chairs. v STOP Middle Name Is Sharp; So's His Tongue - if V.I T MS The Profitable Pig Is One That Never Stops Growing. milk. As soon as they are wenned the f igs should I kept on full feed, either or by hand. Proper feds by und exercise furnished to vigorous pigs of projier type result In hogs of mar ket weight at about eight months of Prince Caetani age. Ire Is not a luxury on the fnnn. hut n necessity. This at least is true n the ore that "The profitable never stop growing from fnrrowlns tn market" Is a good slogan for every hog raiser. pig Is Corn In Every State. Corn Is produced In every state In the Union, production ranging from around 30,H0 bushels n year In Nebushels In vada to over Iowa, according to reports or the United Stutes Department of Select Eggs foi Shipping. selected for shipment should tie clean, true to color and evenly traded n to size. Most of the markets now prefer i. white egg ranging from 24 to 20 ounces per dozen and 28 to .10 ounces per dozen In size. Col. Smith W. Brookhnrt of ington. In the new United States t. senator. Is a farmer, soldier and lawf , yer, lie Is n rugged, physically powt years old. erful man. He Is i weighs more thru "JKO pounds and Is 0 feet 10 Inches tall. He never tasted liquor or tolmc-- o find never swears Asked how he i'd It. the morning following election, he snld : "Visiting the people In every county. Spending no fabulous sums for Individuals, farm organizaposters. tions and labor organizations supported me nt their own expense. My election H .; V was a victory for the farmers, labor, soldiers and mothers of Iowa." One of the colonel's favorite wallops throughout the entire campaign was: "Seven billion dollars of watered stock must be pumiicd out of i 7 . The repeal of the the railroads." was the art biggest transportation plank In his ptntform. Colonel Brookhart Is president of the National Illfie Association of Amerwar. ica, lie served In the Spanish-Americalifty-thre- SERVICE eral S'.at'ons. The United States Department of Agriculture maintains a hntler- - nspec-Ho- n e on the Boston. Chicago, .New York. Philadelphia, niul San r'ran-riseof markets, and at the shippers or other fhianchilly lulereslpd parties mnkes ofllclRl Inspection of butter offered for Interstate shipment or received at Important central markets designated by the secretary of Perspective View of Wooden Icehouse, agriculture. With Milkroom, Insulated With Sav-flus- t or Mill Shavings. Fill the Egg Basket. really want to help Mr. a farms wbere dafry protlncts arc If yon Biddy Oil ib egg basket, teed the bird. land led and proTuWona should t YORK. i "On the Banks of the Wabash, Far Away" Paul Dresser, the author of "On the Banks of the Wubasli," will sleep forever under the sycamores of the dreamy river he Immortalized. Immediately after Taul Dresser's death, when the society was Informed that the author of their favorite song was to be burled In an unknown grave In St. Louis, a movement was started to establish the bard's lust resting place on the Wabash. The consent of the relatives, how ever, could not be obtained, but the original plans were altered, and the poet was burled In Chicago, his grave being next to that of his father and mother. Pending the negotiations for a more appropriate resting place the grave until recently remained unmarked. Then, one rainy Sunday afternoon, a little band of pilgrims from the Indiana society, headed by Carroll Shaffer, Its president, visited the cemetery and dedicated a bowlder brought INDIANAPOLIS. from the Wabash to the memory of the poet. The bowlder, however, was regarded only as a temporary marker, and it was still hoped that the poet might sleep finally somewhere on the banks of the river he had known In his boyhood. Governor McCray of Indiana at last received a note signed by five of Paul Dresser's brothers and sisters, giving their consent to the removal of the body. The rival cities of Terre Haute and Lafayette both are contending for of providing a memorial park for the poet. the-hono-r at Nothing Stops Hungry Wolf Pack follow fouud him. the trail until they About two miles from the settlement the Indians found a spot pounded down in the snow. Bits of dog harness toin to shreds were scattered about. In the midst of them the Indians found human bones. They hastened buck to report their discovery. The lure of the bounty on wolves, however, urged the Indians to take the trull again. They sped behind their dog team into the woods, us the villagers waved goodby. They did ONT. A great not return. POUT AltTIIUIt, Then a new searching party departband of hungry timber wolves had devoured three men, ac- ed. They found another patch trodden cording to meager reports sifting in in the snow ubout two miles beyond from the trails of the the first. The two guns the Indians had carThese reSturgeon river country. ports told of a losing battle fought by ried were lying in the crimsoned snow. two Indians after a white trapper had Scattered about were bones, bits of been downed and killed. clothing and empty shells. The carcasses of Hi dead wolves, An elderly trapper left his cabin In the woods 70 miles north of Ignnce sot:ie half eaten, lay Mrctrhed In a lo mush down to the settlement for circle about the remains of the two his mall. He arrived In safety. There Indian hunters. Most naturalists hold that wolves was no mail, however, and the old man said he wohhl come back the next rarely atlmk human beings. Old however, claim the! a puck rooming. At noon he had not arrived. wood.-meThe postmaster sent two Indians to of hungry wolves stops at nothing. if111 j! snow-covere- mM d n, e .' K n - This Is the storv of of Mr. poosty Persian Trim, a seventeen yenr-orat belonging to George M. Moore, In dentist. No. i.'0'.'T Grand nvenue. his eighteenth year. Poosty became eninciaH-dlie refused to eat. Mr. Moore discovered upon examlimtiori that I Most y was no longer a respectable tomrnt, but hud developed into a miniature saber-toottiger. His eyeteeth had grown so long that the unable to close his mouth, cut had nnd the points of the s:.brr-toei!- i ring Into the opposite Jaw and caused MILWAfKHK.Wash- of Agriculture Will Mak Examin.it on of Froduct at Sev- servl-- Three policemen tn n riot call sent in after a cat, believed to have been stricken with Jealousy, ran amuck In a Brooklyn home. It required IS bullets to dispatch the animal. For three years Meow, the cat, had been the constant companion of seven- year-ol- d Margaret Johnson. Margaret became ill a short time ago. Day after day, during the critical period. Meow lay beneath the child's bed. purring constantly and refusing to eat. Marguret got better, so a bed of chairs was made for her. Meow es NEW tablished The little girl was so pleased she remained all night. Then her mother, Mrs. Hannah Johnson, started to carry Margaret back to the bedroom. The cat snarled and leaped tinon her, clawing and biting her legs. Then it turned on the little Invulld. and gashed her arm with its claws ami teeth. Meantime the father rushed With a poke- - and a on the scene. heavy plate he stunned the maddened cat. Finally the mother escaped und alarmed the neighbors, who In turn called the police. Billings, Mont. Thomas Patriarch.; the oldest cat In the United Stutes und probably in the world, is yeaw dead here, aged twenty-tour- , and three months, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Sample. Thomas was born In Northfleld. Minn., In 1S0S, and for a long time was mascot on Northern Pacific trulns between Mandan and Glendlve. Owing to the loss of his teeth he ceased to bother mice and lived on condensed milk durlne his final year. Brcckhart a Live Wire and Dead Shot Second ICittenhocd cf Mr. Pcocty Prim a sufiii-len- t mipi ly hot months of summer. On many farms he inn he secured from rivers, hikes und ponds for the rust of harvesting. If it does not have to he hauled or n long li.tance, the cost of putting it up Is not lurge. INSPECTION Stranger Here J I'pL' BUTTER Is No Prince Celnsio Caetani, the new Italian ambassador at Washington. Is no stranger In the United States. More over, his mother, the dowager duchess of Sermoneta, Is nn English woman. Soon after obtaining the degree of civil engineer In Home at the age of twenty-fou- r he turned toward Amer ica. He entered the mining school o Columbia university, enrolling himself as Mr. Celaslo Caetani. After completing his course he went West to the mining country. The prince then spent some time In mining districts between Alaska and Mexico, alternating manual work ' V,; In with designing and agriculture. Alaska he held a Job as constructor He spent one Ari'le and engineer. winter In a hut on the Gulf of Taku. After years of experience In prnc-tlcn- l mining he founded a firm of engineers who specialized In the construction of shafts and mining plants. When Caetinil was nt the r.enitli of his mining career war broke out and he returned to Italy to serve his country, self-feed- NECESSITY mnip for housing for use during t' e Erpecially Important on Farms Where Dairy Product'. Are Handled Cost Is Not Great. V John Sharp Williams (portrait herewith), who has served eight terms In the house and since 1908 in the senate voluntarily leaves congress March 4. His tongue is eloquent at times persunslve and occasionally all that his middle name Implies. Well, of birth to maturity. he certainly started something the Even before the pigs are wenned other day not so much on the floor selfIn they should have access to corn of the senate as in the cloak rooms feeders as a supplement to the sow's by saying In debate: -I hesitate a little to say Chris tianity,' because I know that In the r 6 s bottom of your hearts most of you V """3 do not believe In It at all except In a perfunctory church way; but there 4 ! S Is a Christianity which proceeds from 7. VP the philosophy of Jesus, and that Christianity consists in making ourselves our brother's keeper. I have no patience at all with the utterance of Cain and the utterance of modern American progressives after Cnln. when they say, 'We are not our brother's keeper.' You may think you are awfully sranrt when you advise the American people to take care of their own interests and to let their brethren In Europe go to hell. You may think all that; but you are not awfully smart when you sny It, and you are not awfully good when you say it. You are Just common, selfish, mean men, and sometimes you will be swept away lik V faV dZ(f7616 ff'QJft PROFITABLE PORKERS EIG STORIES' d m stranger within its to the possibilities investigate gates afforded here before going elsewhere. The famous Levan ridge is known throughout the world. Two railroads pass through Nephi. : : Railway Presidents Get a Living Wage United States Department (Prepared by the or Agriculture.) GROWING NEVER Kent era and landlords in loculit'es where the dairy business is now coming iulo prominence, us well as ninny of those in the older dairy regions, will Essential Points for Growing Chid many useful suggestions in a new Pigs Economically. Farmers' Bulletin, No. 1272, Iteming A. Howard Turner, Dairy Farms, by Just Issued by the United States I)e One Thing Often Neglected Is Necespartment of Agriculture. It takes up of Keeping Young Animals sity iu detail the arrangements that are Thriving From the Moment of commonly entered Into by dairy farm Birth to Maturity. owners and tenants in some of the older dairy sections of New York, New the United State Jersey, Mlchlgau, Illinois, and Wis- (Prepared by of Agriculture.) Department consin. In an exhibit entitled "Fork ProducSince the contract Is a simple one tion," shown by the United States De when the farm Is rented for cash, this partment of Agriculture at the Internamethod requires little attention, anil tional Live Stock exposition, Chicago. most of the discussion Is given over to the department gave the essential the renting of dulry farms on which points for raising swine economically. the landlord gets a half share of the reGood breeding stock, proper muting, ceipts. Most farms of this class are and careful feeding of the brood sows rented on some sort of share basis, are ull Important, but a point In hog but there is a great deal of variation, raising that should receive more atten depending upon the financial situation tion, because it is often neglected, is of the renter, the condition of the land, the necessity of keeping the young pigs the Interest the landlord takes In growing continuously from the women: SUPPLY JUAB COUNTY (JJ.EAST invites the Suggestions for the Farmer and Housewife, prepared by specialists in the Department of Agriculture for the people of East Juab County. : : : Short stories about people of prominence in our country DAIRY PROBLEMS ICE NEPHT. TTTAH Time of Live Topics Home county, Utah, the greatest dry farming section cf Utah, owns its own electric light plant, water works and 18 miles paved streets. Two banks, lumber yard, plaster mill, fine schools and a modern hotel. : : the development of the herd, the disposal that is made of the uiilk and other dairy products. Many Problems Brought Out. The renting of farms on which dairying is an important enterprise, ays the author, brings out problems that are hardly known where only such crops as corn, tobacco, cotton, anil small grains are grown. Buildings and fences become Important considerations, and also the division of land between pasture and feed crops. Questions arise concerning the size, quality and ownership of the herd. The very nature of the business makes It necessary that the landlord take nn Interest In live stock und the crops and conditions necessary to make It profit able. The practices In the old dairy districts that have been developed after years of trial should be of assistance not only to men newly heroine landlords and tenants In these districts, but to those engaged In the same business In other districts. Vexing problems may be cleared up by experience, consulting this bolled-dnwi- i which includes such things us the ownership of the cuttle, the furnishing of man labor, supervision and assistance by the landlord, machinery and tools, work animals, the division of receipt from swlno snd poultry, the rental of pasture, and the keeping of nccounts. Another Interesting feature of the bulletin Is the part dealing with the practices that have been worked out to satisfactorily handle the situation when the tenant leaves the farm the division of Jointly owned live stock, payment for feed left on the farm anil for winter grain, fall plowing, manure hauling, and Improvements made There are nWo discusby tenants. ion of the length of notice given of Intention to terminate the lone. the length of the lease period, and the ar rangements that have been f.mnd when farms lire rented on crop shares to tenants Inning n few cow and cetting ull of the Income from them. It was found that most good dairy farms are rented on some fori of share S. flue NEPHI, county seat of Juab cash-rente- TIMES-NEW- . - w-.-is Ulcers. Poosty Journeyed downtown to lector Moore's office In the Matthews building under his master's arm. While litl obliging neighbor held th the dentixt proceeded lo crimi down the teeth, remove the nerv-s- . nod fill the resultant cavities. No anesthetic was administered, but Poosry uppeared to realize bis master was doing something for him. and did not object with tooth and claw aa most rats wm;ld. Back nt home, the aged Mr. Prim attacked the remains of a roast of beef a postponed In a manner evldent-in- tusks appetite, wielding the with hungry lcor. Now, Poosty Prim Is nt one and tha time the wonder and pride of The Moore new tin neighborhood. nlled ii(fn daily lo display the cut with the filled teeth. The old tomcat has entered upon a second kittenhood. Doctor Moore nursed Poosty through nn attack of bronrhlnl pneumonia yenr ago after a veterinary surgeon had given tip tha rase as boDelm. new-fille- d |