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Show THE TIMES-NEW- iiiesii The county seat of Juab Til county, Utah, the greatest dry farming section of Utah, owns its own electric light plant, water works an 1 8 miles paved sidewalks. Two J banks, lumber yard, plaster mill, fine schools and a modern hotel. : r NEPHI, UTAH. S, 1 ome Page of Live Topics for the Farmer and the Department of Agriculture prepared for the people of East Juab County. Ift fheLimeli,i Too Many College Students? John Grler Illbben of university litis appointed a commutes of the faculty to devise a enrollment at the plan for restricting ' university. In a recent statement lie said : "We wish to limit the enrollment to Hint number which we .an properly accommodate and still maintain the character of our Princeton life and educationul policy. We have always believed In the greatest possible amount of direct contact between teacher and student, and likewise in concentrating the life of the university We do not feel upon the campus. that we can maintain the university's traditional policy and our present educational methods if we allow ourselves to be drawn Into a policy of indefinite expansion." This is unusual, to say the least. The general public had'an idea that there was no little competition among educational institutions to secure the largest enrollment. The enrollment In several Is very large. Princeton has 1.852 students and 181 Instructors. There are more than 70 colleges with a larger- attendance than this. Columbia leads the list with 25,734 students and 1,500- instructors. President Hlbben's, action opens up several interesting questions. What i' ought a state, as a stntc. to do? Oram n jf' : T5ne AMERICAN LEGION Present Princeton, : : (Copy for This the American Department Lesion Supplied News Service.) fcy law and order did not Imply that the police were Inefficient, but that there was recognition that an abnormal situation existed under which the Legion was pledged to act If It wished to live up to the principles of Its constitution. KANSAS FLOYD MEN CHOOSE Arkansas City Man Selected as Chairman of State Americanization Committee. EAST JUAB COUNTY invites the stranger within its gates to investigate the possibilities afforded here before going elsewhere. The famous Levan ridge is known throughout the world. Two railroads pass through Nepht. : : by specialists in Short stories about people of prominence in our country Housewife, Suggestions T SUMMER ANNUALS ARE MUCH ALIKE Cowpeas, Soy Beans and Velvet Beans Have About Same Climatic Adaptations. numerous theli varieties furnish, earlier pasture. For the production of seed, the soy bean has many advantages over the The soy cowpea and velvet bean. bean matures all Its seed at one time and can easily be handled by machinery. Aand picking Is most commonly practiced lu gathering cowpeu seed, although machinery can be used It Is necessary to pick velvet beans by band because of the abundant, tangled mass of vines. The seeds of velvet beans, cowpeas. and soy beans are all excellent feed for cattle and hogs. Cowpea seed, however. Is rarely cheap enough for feed, but It Is extensively used, especially In the Southern states, for hun seed. In addition man food. to Its value for feed, is vnlunhle for the production of oil and meal, nnd Its use for human food is Increasing. The cowpeu will undoubtedly continue to be one of the most important leguminous crops in the Southern states. No other crop sovn under-suca diversity of conditions or receiving so little attention in soil preparation and cultivation succeeds Under the most varied conditions forage, soil improvement aud human food jtre obtained. Kansas members of the American have selected as chairman of COMPARISON MADE OF CROPS their state Ameri canization commitof Men Three Identified Ware Fighting tee John R Floyd With Home Erected in Hoquiam, of Arkansas City, Among Important Points in DeterminWashington. a prominent insuring Value of Legume Are Its Value ance man and third for Forage and Its Ability With the recent completion of the of vice president to Supply Nitrogen. American Veterans' building, a war the United States memorial to fighting men of all AmeriJunior Chamber of can wars, the city of Uoqulnm, Wash., (Prepared by the United States DepartCommerce. ment of Agriculture.) has added to its architectural attracwas Mr. Floyd tions a and artistic velvet beans and soy beans Cowpeas, a commissioned edifice. The erection of the home was are summer ail unuuuls. agriculturalfirst lieutenant at made possible by the activities of ly much alike, aud for the best results officers' the second members of the American Legion, are to nearly Mie same retraining camp at gions.adapted United Spanish War Veterans and A comparison of these crops at served Fort Sheridan. He Camp Is not so much a mutter of determinGrand Army of the Republic. struc- Grant, 111., Jefferson Barracks, Mo.,h ing which is the best crop as It Is a The building Is a three-stor- y Eighty-sixtture. In the downtown district. The and Camp Dodge, la., with the climatic careful of division and at various times as and soilconsideration andtheir the special SEEDLING GROWTH IS ground floor will be occupied by a adaptations athand ordnauce insurance, signal, uses- - of each on the farm. Among the letic officer and as judge tdvocate. points that determine the In 1913, Mr. Floyd was appointed Important RETARDED BY BRUSH value a of leguminous crop are its district manager for a well known in- value for both In quantity and forage, surance company with headquarters as hay or pasture; Its 1 at Arkansas City and in the year fol- quality, toeither additional nitrogen : Close Spacing Desirable to Proability supply lowing his discharge from the service and the value of the seed as a cash duce Best Timber. wrote the largest number of applicaor for Its utilization on the farm. tions ever written In his' state in one crop The bean ha suboul the same year for his company, and ranked climaticsoy as corn, and When Tops of Trees Begin to Interadaptations has He In fifth the United States. much more exis therefore Its culture served In various offices in Arkansas mingle and Crcwd Each Other tended the cowpea of either than that Some of Them Should Be Cut City post and as a member at large or velvet bean. The velvet bean Is est of the Legion state executive commit pecially adapted to the Out for Best Results. d 1 tee. portions of the Atlantic and gulf by the United States Departcoastal plain areas, while the cowpea (Prepared ment of Agriculture.) iVHEN TO WEAR THE UNIFORM can be grown successfully not only When land is planted in hard-woo- d it may happen seedlings, Be to Former Service Men Inclined a will for that natural bushy growth Too Modest in Appearing in u few years outgrow the planted trees, Army Togs. overtop them or crowd them, and thus " Interfere seriously with their develop""""I1111"" I too modest are men ml Former service iw W ment. To insure the proper developto appear In uniform on special occament of the seedlings, forest special- a sions, according to a letter from ists of the United States Department Veterans' Building at Hoquiam, Wash. member of the American Legion. of Agriculture say in Farmers' Built The follows: letter on a bank and the other floors are tin IIL'3. "Growing and Planting "Armistice day brought with It some large rest room, a lodge and Hardwood Seedlings on the Farm." It on the fled that a voUi'l.l'r lm new of revelation? viewpoint and a ladles' rest room. Is necessary to cut down the brush In accounts of the ceremonies the at jbeen found Among the speakers at the formal wearing of the uniforminasmuch for two or three years. When oh! as as In 'Bethlehem Steel corporation of the memorial was and celebrations, and, dedication g trees with crowns' Schwab's "personal expenses," $100,-00Robert A. LeRoux, field organizer of the future we must confront the probthreaten to shade the seedlings so I believe the lem of which was charged to the govtime after time, national headquarters of the Legion. they will not develop properly, the ernment for ship construction. question should be settled now, one bulletin suggests that such trees be I am neutral on the W)S or other. the way Subsequent testimony proved that IN AMERICANISM IS LEADER few years after the new the $209,000 was really charged to subject and am willing to do as the tins been started. planting "bunch does. the that $100,000 "general expenses," To produce timber, rhilip R. Bangs of Grand Forks, N. D.. was not billed against the government "Since their discharge the majority Vice Commander of His Also close spacing is desirable. When the men have enlisted officers and that Schwab had never collected both of and State Department. tops of the trees begin to Intermingle a cent from the federal treasury, not even "his dollar a year." shown more than a little hesitancy In and crowd each other, however, they on for special back the uniform putting One of the leaders In Americanism iiecome like overcrowded vegetables in The true spirit of the LeIn the Northwest Is Philip It. Bangs occasions. a garden. A Growth Is stagnated. in Is not manifest any parade of Grand Forks, gion good gardener will pull some of the when the majority of the men appear N. D., who was In civilian clothes and a handful march that have vegetables In a garden elected vice com- In uniform. On such occasions the unireached this condition. When trees Arlstlde Briand, who has held evmander of the formed man Is in an embarrassing pohnve reached a similar stage, some of er ul cabinet positions and was premier North Dakota de- sition, and he vows: 'Never again!' 1 them should be cut out. In both cases in 1913, is again premier of France, fel the result Is the best development of partment of the think modesty is responsible for most f Johnson Grass. and Cowpeas the fall of the following American Legion. meu's preference for 'civvies' on formal Leygues cabthe remaining part rather than a poor inet. The Briand ministry has preAs a doughboy I know that some argue there, but throughout the cotton belt development of the original number. but occasions, sented to parliament Its program. In and a scout in the that they do not want to be In uniform and the lower half of the corn belt Thinnings nre usually necessary which disarmament of Germany takes secbecomes twenty Intelligence a bunch of men wearing officers' The velvet bean and cowpea are quite when a plantation with first place and the payment of reparation of the Thirty-fsensitive to cold, whereas the soy bean years old. sometimes sooner. The uniforms and Insignia. tions as provided for In the treaty In openings In the crown-cove- r ifth considerable frost withstands of the division. "I am sure there Is not an of Versailles second place. The proMr. Bangs served In the Legion who would not willingly spring and falL Cowpeas and velvet stand made by removing trees should gram contained a significant reminder overseas. He was discard his Insignia If It operated as a beans both succeed on poor soils bet- not be too large to prevent the growth that France has the force to Impose wounded by shell barrier to hnrmony. But let's have a ter than' the soy bean. For soil Im- of the remaining tree tops from covexecution of the undertakings signed fire In the right shoulder during the standard rule either civvies or unl provement the velvet bean Is, In gen- ering the gaps In from three to flve ' J TV. by Germany and would be able to use Argonne-Meus- e offensive. eral, superior to either the cowpea years. forms." It If necessary, although, true to her or the soy bean, although the cowpea Mr. Bangs was adjutant of the LePruning of tree branches Is usually Republican traditions, she wishes to gion pmt at Grand Forks, state chair- PUT ON PAYING POST SHOW succeeds under a greater diversity of unnecessary, and, because of the cost conditions. bring Germany to fulfill her obligaman of the Americanism committee, of labor, undesirable. If a tree Is tions by pacific methods. and d member of the national AmeriThe soy bean Is to he preferred for pruned too far up It may become W. Dralle, Casper. Wyo., Suc Fred and easily broken by severe Referring to the relations of canism coinml"slon of the Legion. A forage purposes on account of its upcessfully Served as General ManFrance and the United States, M. BriThe cowpea and velvet winds. The ratalpa, ash and black graduate of the law department of the growth. right of ager "Stampede." and declares that the imperishable bean nre vlny plants nnd therefore cherry are known to have suffered University nf North Dakota, Mr. Bangs bonds formed on the battlefield in Is now engaged In the practice of law from this, and It seems likely the same W. Dralle Fred of Casper, Wyo. more difficult to harvest and cure. the war will "guarantee our union In Grand Forks. As a grazing crop for cattle and Is true of many other species. If. chairman of the state executive com in peace as In war. We are sure our of wide spacing, pruning Is necmlttee of the hogs In fall and winter the velvet beana row-pethe American frliuds wil! give ns for the reparation of the damages we sustained it should be conducted In lute excelled. be However, cannot LEGION MEMBERS AID POLICE essary, American Legion, the same support that decided the victory In the great war, In which we deand soy bean can be grown over winter or early spring, and should not national gained fended together the cause of civilization." Former Service Men in Various Cities fot a more extended area, and some of be overdone. recognition home-tow- n Lend Assistance In Combating his Crime Wave. post of tire !e' DEVICE FOR CLEANING GRAIN duce a device by which 7oilous grains gloTi, as general may be cleaned, cooled, dried and the stand for In conformity of manager Improved, which Is simple In law and order which the American "Stampede" which construction, ensy to make and carthousnnds of Gilbert K. Chesterton said, after to legioncost Legion takes, $31,000 ries no mechanical parts to get out of lie had been here two weeks lecturing naires are nssfstlng the police 'n urn-batistage and which or require lubricating. order, of on such subjects as the "Ignorance the crime wave, which has tu added $3,0 menaced life and proerty In lamer the Educated" and getting oft a long the post treasury Crowding Ewet Is Bad. succession of Interesting and often cities all over the country, according Mr. Drulle taughl Where bred ewes are permitted to at received national to legion school at Butte reports striking paradoxes: crowd, a great many times it results "The American audience I find headquarters. Mont., and later was superintendent ol In the unborn hiinli being killed, whieh I find the mass New York department lend(inrters Lwhools nt very responsive. Roundup, Mont. He wrvec" a grent many limes will iuij.h h movement here much more marked promptly offered to put ft.fn to veternn r for a term as clerk and recorder ol death of lht mother us well. on the strpets to nsslM t!i police vhen Musselshell than In F.nglami. By that, I mean county. Mont., and Is now the orgy of murder and robbery was an officer In the Standard Refinery ol t that when an audience laughs, It lu. if Weak Chicks Will Result. the while Christat Its height, l I during t f laughs as a whole. I used to marvel Casper. Neither a hen nor uu Incubator will a memnumber of Legion mas season at the way you Americans' put jver whei old 36 was he years hatch strong chicks from eggs conbers aided In eliminating holdups In theAlthough your liberty loans. Now I understand. United States entered the war. Ml taining weak germs or from those . the shopping district by serving as Dralle enlisted In the Central Machlif Si 4 When you do things, you do It vlth have not received proM?r care. which In retail stores and large guards that 'altogether Spirit." Gun Officers' Training school and wa a t.:'..-wholesale houses. 'T-iThis facile master of the paradox Oa, at Hancock, stationed Camp Burn Diseased Fowls. Five hundred St. Louis rame to warn us agnlnst the danger Bum or bury at a distance all fowls assisted the police In patrollng the of believing things 'that are not so; A Vertical Proposed Oregon Law. Longitudinal Section of the that die or are killed as a rdesult of city nnd rounding up suspicions to tell us of the untrustworthlncsa The option of a $2,000 farm o Weak constillonal Mucks are Cleaner, servAt St. Paul. the roup. Minn., of the things which. In common with compensation a The Scientific America!. In Illusfrat-ni- t always troubled with colds and roup. ices of Leelon members were volun- home loan or cash the rest of humanity, we have bevn of a fo service and describing an Invention of C. Kill them (iff and try new blood. teered In the formation of a series of the rate of $15 month accepting as truths. He Is not Inter-esteOregiHi veterans of the World wa Mettler of Menno, 8. D., suys: network patrols. in a paradox ns such ; he Is will be granted. If a bill sponsored b This Invention relates to a device Cutting Cover Too Low. legion lenders explnlned that their the tritrresfed In stating what he lielleves to tie truth In such a ny as to IikH legion la th Ut legislature I servin the of cleaning, cooling and drying grains Many farmers have killed sweet c!o volunteering organization hi- !' enjoyment of disbelieving untruth ices of Its members for maintaining passed. jy sir blasts. The object la to pro Ter by cutting the first crop teo low. VETERANS' WAR MEMORIAL Legion Soy-bea- "ss well-draine- J jaTMTIliinLil cut-ov- ball-roo- wide-spreadin- 0 rV? clean-bodie- d J Briand Again French Premier 6k Lj C top-hea- se Chesterton and the Paradox olh-erwl- se if y.A: ?.)J 'l' har-scters. , - .j |