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Show IUAB COUNTY TIMES. NEPHI. UTAH WIRED MAN the Youngster ' ' . i FRIENDS Dexterity on First Bess Surprised Until They Learned Mors of HI Csrctr.' HI ' - KNEW THE GAME .In the American Magazine Hugh S. Fullerton writes an article entitled "The Making of a Hlg Leaguer." It li the story of one of the greatest bail players In the United States as told by himself to Mr. Fullerton. This player was a country boy and, ot course, began to play the game early? He tells the following story about an incident of bis boyhood: "Father bad a hired man named Ned, a tall, quiet fellow with a pair of blue eyes that seemed always about to laugh, but seldom did. He had been with us a year. He got 'drunk periodlcally, and after each spree father hunted him up and brought him buck to work. We asked blm to play with us, and be laughed and said he reckoned he would try to play first base if 'paw' would let him off. 1 fixed It with father, and Ned played first burehand-ed- , and slops that making catche filled us with astonishment Also he made Ave home runs, two Into the railroad pond and three Into the barn lot back of left field. Walking home that evening be told me he had played ball professionally, yet it was not until two years later that 1 learned be once bad been a famous outfielder with a great team." - TERRIBLE ITCHING 1 ,j V LIMB ON It. F. D. No. 3, ClarkOeld. Mtnn.- -; "My trouble was- of long standing. It started with some small red and yellow spots about the size of a pin head on my leg and every morning there was a dry scale on top covering the affected part and when those scales were falling off the itching was more than I could stand at tiroes. The first year I did not mind it so much a It was only itching very badly at times, but the second year It advanced all and tbe itching was around niy-lc- g terrible j bad toie very careful to "my clothing around the affected part very loose. At night time I often happened to scratch tbe (ore in my sleep. Then I had to stand up. get out of bed and walk tbe floor till tbe spell was over. "I bought lots of salves and tried many different kinds of medicine but without any success. I got a cake of Cutlcura Soap and a fifty-cen- t bos of Cutlcura Ointment and. when I had used them I was nearly over the itching. But I kept on with the Cutlcura Soap for six weeks and the cure was complete." (Signed) S. O. Corden. Nov. 20. 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each . Skin Hook. Address postfree,with card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Uostoa." Adr. 32-p- Knew What to Expect. Husband tat 11 p. ni,) Well, good ti! Kill, you fellows. I am going home to a vegetarian supper. "What do you mean by that? asked one of the company. "Well, my wife said that If I wan not at borne by 10 o'clock she would give me beans." Stray Stories. No Dubious Situation. "Do you assimilate your food. Jones V "No. we don't. pot." 1?V WlnalnW ttikir, auftrn Mr. We pay cash on the Root bin h immaraa mod fjtriin far Cfalldre rrur Inflamm-tmn.alla.r- Some spinsters advsnc s UHtl.al eifc-.SV- a step by step Until they become stepmothers. A man Isn't necessarily a coward b cause he la afraid of consequence-- . WOMAN TOOK ; FRIEND'S ADVICE in Lydia E. PinkKam' Vegetable One Plant Made Exceptionally . Growth of leafy Stems Soil dl.lon Important. Feathered Creatures of GfeMect Benclit to Farmers. ' FRUIT; TREES AND Pine the gauntlet of a hundred thousand Every Songster That Lives on Insect Life Is Worth Us Wslght In Gold Should Bs Encouraged In visitors, many of whom examined the pods, "to see if the seed bad filled," and being shipper three time acrors the state by a local freight or express, and then traveling over nearly all the railroads of tbe state with the demonstration train, yielded 92.3 grama ot clean seed, equivalent, to 314 ounce of seed from the one the Gardens. Few persons actually realize the treat good accouiplltihed by many ot more coimuou varieties of Insect ii'btroying bird. Every bird that lives ou insect life la worth Us weight in gold to mackiud, declares Harper's Weekly. In mobt localities these useful birds have betn so destroyed as to be almost exterminated, and the increase of destructive insects that frequent the field, orchard and garden is appalling. Something will have to be done soon or mankind will be confronted with a very dttlicuU problem. The natural means of exterminating these peats are by far the best. The birds are. the natural enemies of the life that destroys and injuries the various rous. Why not asslat the willing birds in this work? We can r easily do so if we but stop and for a moment Iustead of depleting the flocks of bluebirds, wrens and purple martins, encourage them to Inhabit your lawus, gardens and orchards. Erect home for the birds. The little common bouse wren that Is always busy either In winter or summer In catching thousands of Insects or feeding on their larvee will greatly appreciate a little effort on our part to provide tbera shelter. Tin cans, old coffee pots or small wooden boxec fastened on fences, outbuildings, ar bor or trees, and provided with entrances about the sUe of a half dollar, will make cozy homes tor the wren, an tbe number of young Latched and fed with tbe pests iu the garden will Insure a greater quality and better quality ot fruits Bud vegetables. The bluebird Is another enemy of the buudreds of limccts that get In their wicked work In the early spring and summer, whm bloom and tender fruits are exposed to their ravages. They can be induced to remain about our borne if provided with suitable roosting and nesting boxes. Tbe type ct home may vary, but Iv ahould not bj loo large, and more than one should bu erected about the home, especially In tbe orchard. A box not more than twelve by elichtc-eInches, divided In-four rooms, aim an opening into each room and a narrow ledge or slichtlng board. Is the most easily pro vided. It should be placed on a pole about twelve or fifteen feet high. It o lght be well to have tbe pole at tached to a f nee post or some other handy place, by a blare so the box can be lowered when It Is neceary to el'-aIt out or remove tbe Kngllsh l par Tbe purple tr.artin la one of car greatest secllvorous birds. It Is visitor, arriving about tbe first at April. It never nests In trees. It prefers some well ili llrr d home, and ane that is Cut of reach of the cats. Many years ego martin boxes were finite common, and great colonic were seen each Ircarjf Hut during the last quarter of a century the martin has been neglected, and one can travel for miles without seeing a blrdhouse. Every farmer, and. In fact, every wner of a home, should assist In reclaiming these birds. Erect homes for them. A great variety of bouses ran be built. Any one can secure a box from the grocer, cut a couple of mall boles In It, and place it on 1 pole not far from the house. Many li pretty designs can be built that will lot only serve a good purpose, but make tbe b.me more attractive. Tbe curtia loves to be coticed and talked one for bis i. at.d It will repay rrcuble la Its cheery warble, and In ilme It presence will be shown In s .be quantity and quality of tbe injured by the Insect pest. ;h field was sown In 1911 tn twenty-Incrows for seed production, the Meld wae not Irrigated during the year 1911, and was left to grow eeed, tbe seuson was favorable for seed yield, and the field averaged lesa than fifty pounds of seed to tbe acre, yet this one plant, In the midst ot the Held surrounded by thousands of plants under the same conditions which fulled to produce seed satismade an exceptional factorily, growth of flue leafy stems and set such an enormous yield ot seed. Sixty grams of the seed from this plant have been used to seed a tenth-acrplot for increase at Itocky Ford, and also a row la the comparative nursery test that comprises other choice selections. Thirty grams of the seed have been sent to the station al Fort Collins to test out In that section of the state. The work of eeleclng choice Indl vldual plants is resulting in a decided Improvement of the type of alfalfa, not only for seed alone, but One quality and a largo production ol forage. The question of eeed production seems to depend on more care in selecting soil conditions adapted to regulating moisture supply so a to make a alow dwarfed growth, yet Insuring moisture to set and fill tbe seed. 1 ' A MACHINE FOR CRUSHING OATS Feed Bill May Be Materially Reduced by Use of Device Operated by Electrlo Motor. 4 The feed bill of the rr.au who keeps or more horses can be mafive, terially reduced and tbe animals kept In better flesh by the use of an oat crusher to prepare this part ot the horse' fare, Is the assertion of those who have tried it, ay tbe Popular Electricity. The machine shown win clean and crush 2.209 pound of cat per hour. tt-n- , l r II Oat Crusher. enough to feed 125 horse eighteen pounds per day. The crushed oats retain their original moisture when prepared as used, and are more completely and readily digested and tbe look and condition of tbe animal are better w ith lea feeding. It I claimed that a fifteen per cent caving is made over the old way of feeding whole oat, which. If a horse were srtus-tomt-d to a diet of eighteen pound tit whole oat per day, would amount to a bout 30 bushel a year using rruahed oat. Tbe crus'jer is operated by electrlo motor power which Is, therefore, easily applied and abut off. MIXED DIET FOR THE HOGS Compound. do-w- J i e ne-vr- h-- d ff te f" It h-- hr oa-m-r- , llBtt-ner- h ro. t.f vt J&Jf . The plant was found in a field of Ilaltic alfalfa, grown at the experiment station ut Kocky Ford, the con-lue- Com-f-oan- ft plant USEFUL DEVICE FOR GARDEN if PROFITABLE (By P. H. DUNN, Colorado Agricultural Collego.) A fine alfalfa plant, after running -- (. Mt ARE Con-- x Corn Alone I Not Nearly a Good a When Supplemented by Some OthElective Ho'dse for Hose May Be er Protein Food. of Constructed Out One Piece WndTtn, Karma. " ! had a displac of Strong Wire. fnent which caused Madder trouble and The Investigator at the Missouri I was m miserable prove again This sirr.pla and effective holder college of aptriciHure 1 didn't know what what good feeder already know, that for Is a the notr.l of hose garden to do. 1 suffered nade of one piece of w ire. The looped corn good com is a goodI feed for from bearing no need any animal and that there pains, my eyes) hurt of withholding It from any animal vm I me, needing food. At the same time. It I J dizzy" and IrregTilaT shown that corn done Is not nearly and had female l A so good or profitable a feed as corn weakness. I spent supplemented by some protein food, money on doctors such as tankage, linseed oilmeal or I rut trot Wonte all soy beans. the timn. In hoe fed exclusively on com the "A frioTvl toll mm animal oeromes very fat and chtibbjf s 1 ahout the "PinVham rem3:-- and took 1 and does not d!Telop properly; the d. Q hytjii E. rir.kham's Veg"tle bone are brittle and easily broken. tri-I csnnot cured. was 4 anj Sixty-fivhoes were used in this ymr retnwllr enenough for I V Tirm I r Nozzle Holder, experiment and they were divided into would have we:l If I had Dot tken lot of five each. Twelve different K" Miss IIapX A. Horke, Route l th flprr end I so shaped ratines were used with corn alone In l.'o. 2, Box 41, Windorn, Kansas, hat the nozzle can be set securely two of them and corn supplemented t any ar.el. Ifi fti? others. with some other fe-Ccmlt-- r Trll This A1tIv hoe fed on corn and linneed The from Ko wnmnn tvlferSrg form oilmeal and those fd on tankagn Packing Small End Down. f f"fn! tmnMc should lor hor5 tin-- til An authority says that if the teg Is gained the most; those receiving cora she hfts ffivett Lydia K. IV.kheni'i slarfd on th sid fr large tnd, the alone were most unpa'i? factory. Vegetable C'ompoartd a fair trial. paty yolk will settle to the bottom This funon remedy, the Twfirirmt ff nd rrsm In rn'sft with shfll, Salt for Cows. fTedients of which are derivd from stitS S'lmits the sir. If it Is placed When cows are salted only once a hn frit tiie small end, it will always have wefk, they est too much at a ratine roots and herbs, rter7 time, of wbite bet seen it and the and It causes looseness of the bowel. f orty year firwed to be a most vaiua laer 1 !e toiiic and Invijrorator of lr iholL Thoy will eat a little salt nearly every Women tra'e orfrenisrn. day if It is krpt here thy can get to the wrorf ol I ear willing r Overlooked, at It. especially when tbe grass Is e I. 1'inkbara's Vegeta-Lia f H irVJ yd. rs-is- e It is a lny time of f ar we fresh sn1 shnndanL Compound. UtM f.n tjoTid the most to ire A Jf jnn Wanf rrrli1 4tW wrll t'ifiip-eiei:t ttt two of r Confidence Essential. I f 41 F. l iskli-!- ! MsiHse ifsf). a sti'4 a triors the top Th cow cannot d.i r brl nnlpi Iftur will d.ntiJl Itbsi. 1s . she has sv4ecce In a rssd and sswsrM te nnxf. toaSJ-xa- . cud Iidd la strirt tt9tnf.il " COWS Change Hsr Mind. "I used to think Gus Simpson waa as nice young man, out t just hate hisa now." , "Why, what has he doner "He treated' me shamefully." "In what wayt" "Why, the other evening at a party I said to him: 'Iet's play the old gamo If I bay "Yea" or of "Questions." "No" to your questions, I owe yon at box of gloves; and if you say "Ye" or "No," you'll give mo a box.' " "Then what?" "Well, after the- party he took m home, and all the way there he talket us sweetly as could be about love, antS that man should not live alone and all thut, and when we got to the front gate he said, 'Fannie, will you marry me?' I, of course, answered, 'Ye,' io a suppressed voice." "And what did he do then?" Inquired her eagerly. "He just chucklud and said. 'You'v Then lost, Famile. 1 take No. 9a. luughid with all his might tbut'st what lie did." " No wonder she hated blm! . 1 pro-luct- Atd Found Health large alfalfa seed yield OF MANKIND I. -- "Jt I I ht - - i- " . ! - ' Fin ,. .cvi i.x!!.' Important to Mothers cf see that It Examine carefully every bottle 'i CASTOHIA, a sr.fe and sure remedy infant and children, and Hear tbe Signature In TTse For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Flctchera Cactorist Old Apple Orchard. View. HI "Do you eat tbe same kind of grub you feed the summer boarders?" "1 do," answered Farmer Whiffle-tree- . It I a matter of business economy lo There are days, and even weeks, buy them. when the fruit grower, even with a No farmer need be afraid to buy feed small orchard, if be be a true orchard-1s- t for his dairy cows provided be know lias his hands full and running what to buy and how to buy them t He must over. At such times be finds It have those feeds that con to obtain sufficient help to take tain the elements lacking In the home care of hia fruit and must needs de- feed, and then again, be must own pend upon such boy and girls and cows which will make the best us women and non-cope4ent men a he of the feeds "he buys. This means the may be able to gather from the hedge scrubs must be kept out of the herd (By C. M. BCH1LTZ. and Dairy farmers on a small place must The small orchard alone will not per- buy bran, oil meal and barley, and he mit the employment of competent help must at all times study tbe question all the year around, but when combin- of feeding as carefully as any other ed with dairy or poultry raising tbis branch of the business, because upon difficulty Is easily overcome, aad the this proper feeding depends very large owner la In the much better position ly the auocvi of his dairying. to. take care of bis fruit aud make a " Hut no matter bow much good feed he would than out better profit of it will produce, nor bow much be If conducting tbe orchard alone vlth the farm owner may be willing to buy from the Insufficient help. the market, he will surely fall unless Orcharding la of course, tike dairy- ha own the right kind of cows. Have ala ing, specialized line of endeavor, to do with beef blood. Stick so is dairying and poultrylng. There nollilug to the two dairy breeds. Perhaps no are not enough people In the business other subject has so much written and who realize this, but tbe fact Is slow- talked about at the dairy meetings a ly beginning to make Its way upon the the dual cow. Some farmer purpose In It. Intelligence of tboso engaged Imagine that they can produce an anDairying Is a man' Job and so Is imal that will make good beef an en poultry raising, although the latter can ter a It 1 needed. Never wa there be conducted and In fact, is now, be- a greater mistske. If we are going ing conducted In thousands ot places In for dairying let us use cows that by women who find it more profitable are bred for milk and butter and not and healthful than Indoor employ- for beef. If we are going In for beef ment. we have no use for the wedgc-ehapcA large farm Is not necessary for bony big pauncbed dairy type of cow dairying. While pastures are needful I.et us select the breeds tbst best to a certnln extent, it Is a fact that pli axes our taste, providing it is a true dairymen are becoming lesa dependent dairy breed, and then stick to that Ry upon tbem every year. A dairyman of the use of pure bred bulli any careful my acquaintance near Danbury, Conn., man can, within five or six years, build but year plowed up T5 acres of posa herd that will produce the very ture and put It all Into corn which was up beet reaults and a great deal lets ex later turned Into tbe silo. He now pense than he could by going into the has two psstures, each of about 40 market and buying pure bred at tbe acres, and one of these will go Into stut corn this spring and tbe other will felWe believe that tbe right way to run low next year. This man ssys be baa Is to grow up with the cows. demonstrated that be can produce a dairy beet calves every yesr, and more milk with greater regularity of Select the by tbis we mean those from cow that i flow by the use of silage than on pas produce tbe greatest amount of milk ture and at less cost and butter, use nothing but pure bred On an orchard farm where there I bulla and by up this process ay, 40 acre of fine land, a dairy of of selection akeeping man will soon be sur10 cow could bo maintained without rounded with a herd of wblcb he miy Of course pasture could not be difficulty: proud. be depended upon, but specialized In selecting calves from the br-s-t feeds must be used. Good corn land ill turn Into the silo 25 to 25 tons cows, guess work Is not to be thought of the very best kind of feed per acre, of. The ttabcock tester Is tbe detecand no pasture on earth has ever yet tive that spots the worthless cow evbeen able to produce such an amount ery lime and the test must be carefully made In order to know Just what of product t doing. There are thouTwo silos of, ssy, a total capacity of the herd 75 or SO tons, will hold sufficient en- sand of rows In every state today that are not giving enough mi'k to pay for silage for six months' winter of 10 their . there are thouacds of othcows, and also provide plenty for sumers are not psylr.g for one half of thst mer use. Ten cows at lesst csn be maintained on a farm of 49 acres ex- their feed, yet their owners go on. year anclusive of the orchard, provided the after year, caring for these sortless hide able are imal to because they highest cultivation Is followed and the work Is specialized. Of course if the thilr shortcomings In the product of cow are to be allowed to run over tbe general herd. A farmer may own six cow tha( large area of pasture Ibis cannot be done. While a little pasture must be will produce every yar a profit of used, mainly for exercise snd to give from 7S to $100. but If he has. In d that Variety necessary to dairy feed, ditlon. six others that do not pay for tbe main support of the dairy must the feed lby consume, he Is simply come from thn silo and from green trying to lift himself with a boot crojFS, especially grown for them. strap and is working against himself Of course, on a combination orchard all tbe time. and dairy, farm crop rotation Is absoThe Usbcork tester Is now an easy matter to tell exactly Just what each lutely necessr.ry. We must hsve cl ver, we must produce corn for the silo cow In the herd is doing, what It prond some for the pigs, because the duces every day, and bow rich the pro-pics are necessary to use up the skim-mil- duction Is In huitrr fat The. young and the nets and cow peas i beifers must lo b tooted. At first should always have a place In the ro- many of them will not prove profitable, tation. but n the true dairy blood works it-- j Ten or a dozpn cow th their self Into the hi rd, the per cent, of non--j will grow smaller. calves and the pigs and borse neces- profitable on sary lo work the farm, will produce Thrre is e'wlu'ety no use n the tuffidpnt manure to drer.s the land small fa.ei. or any other for that mat- fairly well. If this manure Is applied ter, for the cow that will not pay brr to clover sod and this Is turned down ownr from I7. to $100 net profit annum for the corn It will produce a tremenWe know of a farm of 41 acres near dous amount of succulent feed to t is kept a herd Into th ello. Rlfcin. Ill , on whir-A farm of this size should also have of from nine to 12 cos. Nine cows ' a'fatfa snd let no man be- - are now bWng milked and the regular-- j Js fl'ld s If sir Is to be confined to ly monthly gross lncom- - from thse eve arid rerions of the west. Some j nine com runs from 1115 to I2 per I tt the fnent alfalfa I now grown on j month. The work Is all done during t,ie New Kngland hills In places the winter by one man. a young Ger raised for man who Is a good dairyman, and who where little lse have nahf resrs. while on the rich corn runs his place on rscientific principles. he hires some itids of the middle west, alfalfa Is During the Siimrn-, tra help, but laments the fart that be to as much a finture as the corn The orchardist wifh only 40 has no orrhard or enough small fruit of fr land at his command will to enable him to keep a man all tbe haV to buy some concr-ntMt-feds year sround Ail f'tht. M hJ-buy Ihfm. He will J'oultry raieinc Is the true adjunct Cud U tay ''I Imirylng is strict- j of dalryirg snd oiipht to b? hitched frti:t T?isir,g on tvry farm mhere and li ly a Tnap'.ifactnrir.g to orcharding is not a striitty con rrer--: rirrfi- r tt materials er necessary n t- -t r,t',:t fr'-- those gro-- at ho ma. clal business. Its Proper Place. "Where did you get that ored rig?" " got It at a fire sale." r Speech may sometimes be enigmatic, but silence keeps more people guessing. A yard of rope is worth half a mf!e of c ympntbv to a drowning man. Uelicacie3 tm. sy Dnrt Rf. Hvkor 1 Harvoa i Iayaab-a- aWa ot LaUVi MV llnlla rU aitaw akn al tsaad. pm aaa I'm-- PWaka. ' Caw kfriai - aaia1 Ma v am pi pataW a Libby, Libby, McNeill aaaram. Cbic-- ce i Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief Permanent Carta CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PlLLS-ncve- r fiL Purely veareU- me act surciy jf our Frouy on ihe liver. moo alter a nncr cis cure trc HCartfrsT jf y-- indiiTetion." improve the complexion, brighten the yoa SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL FR1CE. Genuine must bear Signature fT DAISY FLY KILLER T. aaaas. wwat. aaataaaiiartss Ti lajsr - . I fr of inm , rT Wlr ,ti 4 It- - rs KSWIitt E. .' ! f 11Hn Tl Ut. U J ffan V is. (. ft- - - I I "Mt turf.m Hlff-f.- f, r HwK, ritoU Iff j, - N , - 4At Iv-- HtiM . awi mA. L 91 1 --W-. J frviti ''m - sataa, t; r.r , i aft- 'HMfUUC Av9r, Iv,,. im iwa A mm i n up-sii- W. H. W M Wm ffpT. vf ij r iM. -- .ve-T- M im pr.'m Hrt ft?ili SCEKTS f 7 Hm- ttT'tM)p W rir.nilII. ( n4 BURTCH " trir-t- eis'i.pr- ntvin4 lot's-hTi.re .,m ML BALSAM e wr Hmmwmi J -- a- : We, mtmm . flwa Nkf Wtmmtmt fc MIR 1 p-- ,,ti pi'f PAMKtW'S v. w f I sji'" T' r a. m. mt r(a f em. '"vr - 99 ItsiiaMtptisatsst, ? fv wtn, Hi far slsw. 4 tnr" f)ent tes I ar an sasttiav. araasiT. . $10,000,000 aw f r.fiJiH, b"mlh!n rrftri.r4 vol art sum- 1 asci.a seHtas, it ! s 1 5m.Ii Mi nta cImks Savor S41 van nN msaaasMV. Vmm Sssr-r- Ml mN lot Krd He. M coM Sum C Irs SWsi avrwd it m ttSw Vv. sre4 wk cwwi hmmmi aad Cm a IUn'iVmaiuwaUt. tcfM, lawriiwM. mawm moot fM-d- f. flamo-ew- S Judging from tht-l- action, sometimes wonders If his friends not enemies iu disguise. mllk-glvin- J tst ain't "A farmer's life Is a hard one, It?" renponded the city man. dim-cul- bJin, for Salt Lake City, No. gJ-tt- tl. v |