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Show THE HERALD Page Four Highly Infectious Many Vegetables Early Seeding of Live Stock Plague Oats Is Favored Injured by Pests D FLvrLL Warning Issued Against Diseases and Insects Must Crop Develops Best in Cool Foot and Mouth Disease. Weather and Frequently Be Fought Until Crops fey tho United State (Praptj-oDopaxtmeat f Agricultura l Is Hurt by Heat Are Harvested. The live stock a highly-Infectiou- (friptnl h Cnlt.il lutM Department ( Agriculture.) s plugue known as foot and mouth disease has broken out In California. In the vicinity of Oakland. The United States Department of Agriculture Immediately quarantined three counties, and a few days later six additional counties, to prevent the spread of this disease which Is prevalent in many foreign countries, but has been entirely absent from the United Ststes since Ms- - 1918. Tha In cted cattle, hogs and goats la tha quarantined region are being slaughtered and burled In deep pits. This action la necessary to protect the nation's extensive live stock Industry from this foreign plague. Suitable Indemnity Is paid to the owners of the animals destroyed. Department veterinarians believe the outbreak Is now under control, but owing to tha highly- Infectious nuture of the disease, It Is well for all live stock owners to Know the symptoms. Sranll blisters appear on the mem brane of the mouth, on the tongue, In- Wilbur of California mm Afrf-cultnr- e. rPreparsd 7 C. j home-garde- (11s-eu- Mrs. Woodrow Wilson Checks Publishers I y dry-ltin- Year's - three-fourth- Roberts, Special Counsel in Oil Cases ARM TkZTStP . AW, WHAT'S THE USE f S - JP ( II TIT I UED MliEEE KIDS TO kNOW HIM WHEN AT GEE , HE WAS A HUSKY DEVIL TmEM COLLEGE HE WAS A jAT 15 OQ -- THE LIFE OF ALL WHDA EEZENED That ME 5 GETS 1 what Sin PumiSheS -- Ml ITSELF YOU Edward ThE COMMITTED V The SiGht TC yr B. McLean and the Oil Scandal Edward B. McLean, who has figured prominently In the oil investigation, seems to be guiltless of everything except being caught In telling an Untruth at the request of Albert Ii. t til to help the former so re!ary out o. tight place. He !s a rich man who enjoys playing the host to notables nnd is famous for his hospitality. He Inlieriled a larce fortune from h"s father, John R. McLean, which included the Washington Pest ami the Cincinnati Enquirer. He married Miss Evi elyn Walsh, daughter and heiress of a rich Walsh of Denver, Thomas very mining man. lie bought the famous Hope diamond, one of t lie world's must n.ngr.ificent gems, for ills wife. IPs first born son. Vinson Walsh Mol-e.tr was known the and no child was ever And so watched over and protected. then, one morning in Washington, t lie hoy broke awav from his governess. r r;in Ir.to tie street nnd was run over and fatally injured by a driven by a perfectly respectable old ward school teacher from Vermont. So Ned McLean has long hen in the public eye. During the last few years he was prominent as the Intimate friend and host of President Harding with whom his friendship began when the late president came to the senate from Ohio. Mr. McLean asserts that he never had any financial Interest. In or any connection whatever with the oil leases, and he owns up to telling an iintrutk about those $100,000 Fall checks. w ONLY WA9 A Sight seeing Trip & Then married ' 1 FOB being so gat STuFF.' WHEN HE MACQiED THAT HUMAN C.LAVE HE MUST HAVE MET HER ON DRIVER , UT .iN EVEI2 mMti MiMpr Unioa.) i Search for Latent Genius Among Poor Doing easily what other find difftalent, doing what la lnip. lble for talent Is genius, said Aniiet icult Is bis dimming and (nslv Journal Perhaps bo more true and trenchant definition has ever been coined. Tb practice that makes perfect Is the path of progreu followed by talent; but tha wind of genius blowetb where It Ustetn. The logic of promise kai conclusion, the law of cause and effect, always apply In U development of talent ; wltb Inn genius there U always tha' suggestion of the Intervention of a miraculous element. Talent, tt Is true, becomes the tool of genius, which must be tempered by time and sharpened by work. The almost Infinite capacity for tremendous effort and tireless toil shown by every first rate genius has given rise to the popular notion that inspiration Is only a hlgbfalutln' word for perspiration, and that Carlyle may have been right wben he said that genius means the transcendent capacity for taking trouIn Hatnmondport school annoyed wltb the mot influential member of the school board because je would not agree to the Installation of a physical training teacher. They would have called him an old fogy, but that appellation seemed out of place in a man of such modern attraction. . Easily David' Freeman was man In the township; the also, be spent part of eacb year in tlie metropolis, where his business concerns led him. David, wben questioned for bis reasons against the athletic teacher, replied firmly that be was tired of the Independent strong youug woman of the present, whose picture In bathing suit, or scant running costume, graced first pages of the newspapers. The influential member of the board ble. Directors of a settlement bouse on continued stubbornly In his disagreement. He was thinking the subject the lower east side of New York have undertaken to make a systematic and over as be strolled townward one sunpersistent search for latent genius bis as And summer shiny morning. among the children of the poor. It is time was somewhat valuable be decidtheir belief that Gray was right about ed to take the short cut through Wells' the many flowers that blush unseen womdid a So certain young pasture. an out from the adjoining city for a and waste their sweetness on the desvisit Sh was a happy young woman, ert air, and If there Is anything they who went singing along her way, and ran do to prevent it there will be no the scarlet flannel Jacket, modishly more mute Inglorious Miitons of the sleeveless, she wore over ber snow-whit- e slums whose potential contribution frock, was vastly becoming to her shall be lost to the world for want of piquant beauty. The young woman's opportunity. The Idea of the patron, an Indishoes were white, too, as was also the rakish little hut she wore When she vidual or an organization, whose timereached Wells' pasture she viewed ly aid will promote talent and encourage genius Is, of course, not new. But longingly the vista of wood beyond. It would be a delightful spot In which the suggestion of a society whose chief concern It will be to seek to to read the book she had brought with her. To get to the wood she discover and then develop potential must cross the pasture lot. It was genius Is something of an Innovation. well fenced in with a stone wall. But, as a matter of fact and record, At the far end of the field was a the history of genius would seem to Indicate that along with the special huge bull. He bad, apparently, made gift Is usually born an Indomitable his truant way from a further Inclosed part of the pastures she could see a will which enables the genius to overgate behind the animal. ride all difficulties of environment, all She realized instantly that It was the want of opportunity, and arrive at last at the destined goal. Philadelphia scarlet of her Jacket which was atAnd Bulletin. tracting his excited notice. though Miss Nancy was now on the safe side of the stone wall, she neverLatt of the "Longhornt" theless hastily removed her red Jucke: the The day of the "longhorn," and tucked it beneath hei arm. StandTexas steer famed for Its breadth of on a stones she small of ing pyramid horn and lightness of body, Is past. watched with Interest the great brute there Is not a real longhorn In Today angrily tossing his bead. the whole of Texas, not even In Pecos The young woman was trying to gain valley, where it made Its last stand courage to replace the bar of the gateagainst the blood of high breeding way when a second surprising thing as practiced by the Northerners who A man entered the bad gale happened. have converted Texas from a raising which she opened and was walking ground of horns and speed to a home calmly, all unconscious of the bull's of real beef. The genuine longhorn As she proximity, across the field. weighed but from 600 to 700 pounds; watched, the man saw the bull, made and could race with a coyote.' It had a desperate effort to get back to the descended from the early cattle of gate knew that he might not reach the Spaniards, who were the first It In time made for the solitary tree settlers of the Rio Grande counwhite Instead, and swung nimbly from one lands of the the and try twisted limb up to temporary safety. Southwest. It has been years since a The angry animal was at the base of real longhorn has been seen on the the tree, his red eyes glaring threatplains of Texas. But the greatest of eningly at his prisoner. all longhorns was not killed by man. It considered whether mlit Tills Nancy steer, a maverick, a lone outcast on to to hasten be possible for her his herd, who lived and roamed from the farm house In the distance before fell prey to wolves In the the huge brute should bend the tree alone, River mountains years ago. Devil's with dead was which trunk frail, are now In San Angelo. horns nis boughs above, or succeed, perhaps. In feet from tip Then she These, measuring eight his victim. dislodging to tip, were found by cowboys. attractof the of thought opposite plan ion. Nancy could run ; she did run to the farthest end of the pasture, and Ai'n'f Nature Natural? climbing on the stone wall she forced a view possibly to guiding the With franticalwaved the boughs aside and cook's mind to a quieter summer hat ly her scarlet coat. In one of his mad seawhirls the beast saw the flag of battle, than she had worn the previous of a small-towMrs. wife son, Smith, low, held it stared Nancy daringly. The animal came bellowing to the plumber, spoke of some violets she In a milliner's window, says attack. Nancy's shrill voice called to had seen the prisoner in the tree: "Run to the the Hardware World. "They're almost like those In our gate! Bar yourself out!" The bull exactly she said. "You've seengarden, those was uncomfortably .near now. Nan Mary," "Indeed I have, mum," reoften." to safe the her from perch slipped turned Mary. "I was after waterln' side of the wall, replaced the railing them this very mornln". Ain't It wonof boughs, saw the man running bederful, mum, how natural the Eord can yond that outer barrier toward her. make them?" "The gate?" she questioned breathlessly. Boxes "Closed all tight and safe." the Photo Trayt man told her. He dropped on the Developing trays for photographic grass to wipe the perspiration from work can be made In an emergency his forehead, and smiled gratefully up from shallow wooden boxes, such as at the young woman whose wit had cigar boxes, or even cardboard boxes. saved him from an embarrassing pre It Is necessary merely to coat the Indicament at least. side of the box with hot paraffin wax David freeman was a or black asphaltum rarnlsh, Popular Science Monthly. young man; Nancy at once became aware of that fact. he exclaimed admiringly, "My!" "You can run. How you ever got to the end of that pasture in two seconds, " David nnd back again at the exact laughed, "at the phychological mo To assure prompt service and alrk returns ment." to these advertisements mention the name of "I was," Nancy remarked proudlj this paper. "the record runner at college." BUSINESS COLLEGES The Influential board member stared. L. D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE. "KtMiiH r':" he questioned; "you go In School of Efficiency. AM commprcial branches. Catah free. 60 N. Main St, Salt Lake City. for utblctics?" "Teach it," Nancy replied. She was BOOKS AND SHORT STORIES putting on her scarlet jacket; it was PflfllfC Any K,k ymi want by mnil. C. O. D vastly becoming. "That is why I am DUU1YJ upret l ot,k (:,lp u bai Temple in iiimuiondport. waiting to put in an SONGS ft SHEET MUSIC application as training teacher in the school." nml old. All kind. Sheet music by mw SONGS mail. COD. BVcsli y Music Co. S7 S Main David asked. "Waiting?" The girl nodded "Until one disapCREAM WANTED SHIP DIRECT proving member of the school board Direct Cream Shipments Pay Most Money limy be converted to approval." Send a trial can David arose, stood smiling down at Blarkman ft Griffin Company, Otden, UU her. "I am the unruly member," he CLASS PINS said, "and I am converted." ! PINS When In need. "Don.t forirrt us." That evening Nancy wrote her fam- fVLrtJJ II11J We make At repair all kimlnof jew ily that she Intended to stay on In elry K. 1. Lclff Mflr., Jeweler. Ill Main. I'pstair. until school oiiened. Hammondport She had won her contract to teuch. With But Nancy never accepted the position. Nancy married David Freeman Fresh Cut Flowers at All Times She says that she thought instead. he needed protection. While David Hobday's Flower Shop insists that he married an Keith Emporium Bliig. Salt Laic s'.rl after all with curiosity ai wide-open- semi-dese- rt n at good-lookin- g VW ? Oh LKi OFF TmAT REAL CRIME HE r ' yi W best-dress- hitch-aud-ktc- : !!, of THE firls much Succeeds Denby V I J THE CONVERTED BOARD MEMBER By JANE CORDON tha (Jailed Stalaa Dwf1aM I Agricultural The first essential for tl production From the time the seeds of garden The first cabinet member appointf maximum yields cf oats U early crops are put Into the ground until the ed by President Coolidge Is Curtis seeding. In most sections otts should crops are gathered, diseases and Insown ss early as It Is possible to Dwlght Wilbur of Los Angeles, who sects that must be fought may apwill succeed Edwin Deuby as secreget on the land to prepart seed ted. pear. Vegetable troubles are due to This crop develops best In cool weathnumerous causes. Including unfavortary of the navy, lie is chief justice of the California supreme court. lie er and frequently Is Injured by few able soil conditions, too wet or too Is alMi a graduate (1&S) of Annaphot days during the ripening period. dry, too rich or too poor, lack of humus For this reason early seeding is pracolis If you doubt It, go to the gymor of Hiue, whether unsulted to some nasium of the Naval academy and crops, cureless ue of fertilizers, or attically always advisable, according to look at the bras tablet which records the United States Department of tacks of fungi or other parasite. The that Midshipman Wilbur did a record adoption of the best horticultural prack of S feet and 1 inch. tice crop rotation, the careful apThe date of seeding largely depends Judge Wilbur has four children of plication of fertilizers suited to each n the locality and season. In the his own and is a leader in the boy crop, adequate cultivation, the plant-- 1 corn belt the best time usually Is darscout movement. Every ounimer he lug of all crops In their proper xeuson ing the latter part of March or early takes a group of youngsters to the is Important for the successful grow April. In the more norths oat secFeather Ulver country and teaches ing of garden crops. tions seeding usually Is not possible them to camp and fish. Moreover he Special Treatment Required. ontll late April. In backward and unThe control of diseases due to fungi. says; "There bus alwn, been some favorable seasons the seeding rosy bucterlu. und other enemies requires thing in my blood that espouded to have to be delayed until early May. the calling of the sea und a love for a additional spectul W treatment, Plowing Not Favored. the sea; for ships, for salt air is s the duiuage caused by Insects. A new Where oats follow corn, potatoes, or And, finally, part of my makeup." bulletin the Issued been hug Just by other cultivated crops, the land should don't forget that the appointment of These Lulled States Department of Agricul on the side the and lips. cheeks, not be plowed as a rule, but should ture, as Farmers' Bulletin 1371. Dis- Cull i. .nia main Is good Coolidge politics. So, altogether, the appointment be disked and harrowed sufficiently to blisters contain a yellowish, watery simeases and Insects of Gurden Vege would seem to he a happy selection. Soon fluid. afterwards eruptions make a loose, friable seed bed about Secretary Wilbur was born In 18C7 In Boonesboro, la. In ISS.1 the Wilbun mouth appear tables, the purpose of which Is to on to ilar those the 8 Inches deep. Spring plowing usually moved to Jamestown, Dakota territory. After resigning from the navy Secrelamecause about for the tha feet and may prehent briefly control measures results In a less satisfactory seed bed, Wilbur went to California and practiced law. he has been on the state tary similar cows most often have ness. and Insects Important Dairy fungous as there Is not sufficient time for the n supreme court bench since 1018 and chief Justice since 1022. A brother, Dr. on the udders nnd teats. Af- und bacterial diseases of the toll to become well settled before seed- blisters The new atBay Lyman Wilbur, Is' president of Leland Stanford university. when show fected animals pain vegetubie crops. ing. Further, spring plowing Is more Is a known bs Jurist. their secretary disease-frenationally e The use of seed and tempting to eat and may refuse expensive, and thus adds to the cost feed, yet the animal may open and plants, says the author of the bulletin. of production. shut Its mouth with a smacking sound. Is fundamental to all Insect and It always is good practice to sow the As the disease control. A modified application progresses, strings of best seed obtainable. Usually homefrom the Hps. in- of the principle of crop rotation can saliva ropy hang grown seed of a standard variety Is ternal organs may become affected be mode even In the home garden by better than seed brought In from a and, In such cases, the disease Is the rows of each vegetable to moving Mrs. Woodrow Wilson bus deciddistance and therefore of uncertain quickly fatal. In the present outbreak unother place each year. Mnny dis ed to avail herself of her legal rights be should seed All secadaptability. In California one cow died on the eases and Insects live over winter In the to check of selections from cleaned and graded. Animals most susceptible soil and will appear on the plants her late publication ond day. husband's letters and manuSeeding with the grain drill requires to foot and mouth disease are cattle, again next season If they nre In the scripts until she can determine In what less seed than broadcasting, Insures a swine, sheep and gouts. same soil. Furthermore, since mnny manner the war president's papers will In more even distribution of the seed Help the United States Department of the pests of closely related crops be given to the public as a whole and space and In depth and, as a conse- of Agriculture to stamp out this malig nre the same, such vegetables should In nn authorized way. Examine your not be planted In succession. Vine quence, a quicker germination and a nant disease quickly. It Is Mrs. Wilson's Intention, as more uniform stand. Satisfactory stock and report any suspicious cases crops, such as cucumbers, melons, executrix of the war president's estate, yields usually follow. Under the mors to the nearest veterinarian, state live etc., should not follow one another, nor either to have his letters and manuhumid conditions, particularly In the stock official, or notify the United should cabbage, coullflower, or related scripts assembled and published by corn belt, where a good seed bed Is States Department of Agriculture, crops follow one anpther. some one who will act on her authorprepared, the usual rate of seeding Is Washington, D. C. Numerous Important diseases are ity, or to gather them Into a collection "x- d from 8 to 10 pecks. In the carried In or on the seed and cannot of Wilsonia and make It available to 4 to 6 pecks usually produce sections, such be controlled the Is the seed Growth treatment, by public probably by depositing Second the most satisfactory results. and papers In some national Institution as bean anthracnose, pea pod-spSeed for Clover Best Grow Mixed Varieties. and mosaic. It Is there- such as the Library of Congress. potato leaf-rol- l In a survey of oat varieties made by Mrs. Wilson has been advised by The second crop of the second year's fore essential to secure the most diseathe Department of Agriculture a few erowth of sweet clover is the best for se-free her family attorney that as executrix seed obtainable. of Mr. Wilson's estate she has legal years ago, It was shown that a large seed purposes. Sometimes good yields In presenting the methods of conpercentage cf farmers still grow are obtained from the first crop of the trolling Insects and diseases the bul- rights In the publication of his letters mixed varieties, or "Just oats." With second year's growth. It may be har letin discusses them under two head- and manuscripts, not alone under the the Increasing number of selected and vested with a grain binder. Yields or ings, "Treatment" and "Prevention." law and authorities, but under an Improved varieties on the market. from two to eight bushels per acre may Under "Treatment" are discussed the amendment to the copyright law, now part of the revised statutes of the Unit'. . , there Is every reason for growing be expected. methods of control which may be ap- ed States. Since Mr. Wilson's death some of his letters have been published; some these In preference to mixed or unSweet clover should be cut for seed disease or have Insects the after plied s of the have been offered for sale, nnd still others were In process of publicaadapted varieties. The Idea still Is about the time appeared In the garden, such us the others prevalent that any variety of oats un seed pods become dark. Avoid han use of poisoned bait for cutworms, the tion au4 widely advertised, until Mrs. Wilson determined upon her action. der favorable conditions will produce dling when In a very dry condition, as hand picking of insects, and spraying as high yields as an Improved, well It will shntter badly. Bind and shock for disease and insect control. Under adapted variety, but this Is not borne like a small grain crop. Thresh when "Prevention" are Included all measures out by the facjs. thoroughly dry. of control applied prior to disease or For the northeastern states such Insect appearance which will tend to varieties as Coraewell, Lincoln, Silver-min- e, hinder or stop the development of disWhen President Coolidge selected and Swedish Select usually proeases and Insects or prevent their overOwen J. Roberts of Philadelphia to an duce the most satisfactory yields. In wintering to attack the next season's with former Senator Atlee Pomerene the corn belt enrller varieties are bet crops, such as planting disease-resistan- t, of Ohio as special counsel In the Tea, e and weevil-frevarious disease-freeKherson the and ter adopted. seed, A washing soil gathers no profits. pot Dome oil Investigation, not one selections developed from It, such as treatment of seed to kill Insects and member of the senate public lands or planting crops on parts of Albion, Iowar, Richland, and States diseases, committee had ever heard of him Is good for sandy soli. It helps Lime recommended. For to be are from the pests. the garden free I'rlde, and the members had no cause to fci'l A copy of the bulletin may be se the oat section Immediately to the hold It together. It is said he was lonesome, either. north of the corn belt, such midscason cured, as Ion- - as the supply lasts, from recommended by Senator warmly "There Is virtue In the cow. She the United Stntes Department of Agrivarieties as Green Itusslan, Swedish W. Pepper of Pennsylvania. George of Burroughs. Is full goodness." Lin and culture, Washington. D. C Select, Silvermine, Victory, Mr. Roberts Is forty-eigh- t years coln, usually are preferable. In the old. His early education was obtained be covered should A good garden southwestern spring-oa- t section, InGood Protein Supplement at Germantown academy. , After that once a year with manure If It can be cluding Missouri, Text's, Oklahoma, he went to the University of Pennsyloil meal is more Unseed slightly and Kansas, the Red Rustproof vari- procured. vania, receiving his Bachelor of Arts cottonseed meal aa valuable a than eties are the best adapted. Kanota, a and should be degree in 1S95. In 139S he received an Use fertilizers, but use them as a protein supplement strain of Fulghum, has beepme very L.L. D. from the same Institution. In place of It If the prices are not used and to good farming Is attractnow supplement In Kansas, and popular From 1S08 until 1900 he was a felA combination of same. the about for a substitute farming. good as ing attention In adjoining states. For low and instructor in the University Is desirable In any profeeds '.he two the Pacific Northwest and Irrigated of Pennsylvania law school, and served pounds Besides being profitable, being a good portions and not more than 2 sections nddseason white strains of live weight per day as professor of law from 1901 until the Silvermine and Swedish Select farmer is an object lesson to others, per 1,000 pounds 1918. a balance such to rttion. Is service. a necessary and therefore community types are the most suitable. For three years, 1903 to 190G, he served as first assistant district attorney of Philadelphia county. It was there he got his first training in criminal cases. Since then his work has been confined mostly to civil trial and court work. During the World war, however, at MfllLUE FIC.H Si WFE ACE o0ME FUNNY Goodbye j the request of the attorney general he represented the government in the prose( GOODBYE cution of cases arising under the Espionage act in the eastern district of PennMATCH A GCEA.T BIG BUXOM BABV Mpfj FISH sylvania, and was made special deputy attorney general for that purpose. Dur3AP AND HE SUCH A LITTLE ing the war, also, at the request of the United States Housing corporation. I 0)0 TV 1 i 3 IT ,'.' long) Mr. Roberts represented this body In Philadelphia. by I i ''liundred-miUion-dolls- slow-goin- g iliv-ve- Salt Lake City Firms "Say it .ilrt Pandora's. Rowers" |