OCR Text |
Show THE TIMES-NEW- NEPHI, UTAII S, Tike Times of Live Home (Ttt NEPHI. county teat of Juab ll county, Utah, the greatest dry (arming section of Utah, owns its wn electric light plant, water work and 18 miles paved sidewalks. Two banks, lumber yard, plaster mill, one schools and a modem boteL l t Page JUAB fflEAST invites the Topics Suggestions for the Farmer and Housewife, prepared by specialists in the Department of Agriculture for the people of East Juab County, t : t Short stories about people of prominence in our country MORGAN TYPE IS RAISING SILVER FOX USEFUL ON FARM Estimated That $8,000,000 Is Invested in Industry. Horse Is Gaining in Favor In Southwest Because of Many POPULAR NEW ENGLAND BREED Stallions L'0"t-.Mw- 5 hat Arc Being Uf Head of the National Woman's Party Problems Met Require Knowledge of Species, Treatment, Sanitation, Diseases and Parasites, Handle Wild Animals. Sterling Qualities. of Apiculture.) Morn fur rnrniura n ro I n fro trerl In jtfitlve raising foxes than any other Animal fur-bear-l- animal, according to reports to the biological survey of the United States Department ef Agriculture. Observations made In the field by rep resentattves of the survey Indicate that at least 500 ranchers are raising sil- - Satisfies Ranchers' Chief Demands. Preparad by the UnBed states Department of Agriculture.) Because of Its superiority in activity, fcardiuess, and stamina, the Morgau liorse Is Increasing In popularity la the Southwest where stallions of the breed are being used to Improve the saddle iiorses on the range.- - Used on the native light tnares they produce a useful animal that satisfies the ranchers' lcmunds. Good Show of Breed. At the Southwestern Exposition and Fat Stock show, held at Fort Worth, Tex., March 11 to 13, this year, there was a particularly good show of the breed. Sixteen horses were exhibited and there was a strong class of aged stallions. Iled Oak 5249 was the best aged stallion and champion Morgan. This horse, sired by General Gates, was developed at the United States Morgan Horse farm at Mlddlebury, Vt The Morgans were placed by one of the best known horse judges In the country, who described the champion as one of the finest horses he bad ever seen. Useful American Breed. As a result of the efforts of the United States Department of Agriculture In Improving the Morgan and in stimulating a renewal of interest in this useful American breed, good A ' . ' i " (Copy th Fur-Beari- Julius II. Barnes of Duluth is the ver foxes, and that there are between new president of the Chamber of Commerce of the Unite ' States, succeeding 12,000 and 15,000 foxes In captivity. It Is estimated that about $8,000,000 Joseph H. Defrees of Chicago. Mr. Is Imested in this Industry. Barnes Is prominent in the wheat and The Industry of breeding grain markets and served as president animals has grown because of the of the United States Grain Corporarapid development of the modern fur tion. In 1019 he was decorated with trade In the last twenty-fiv- e years. the Order of the Crown of Belgium The United States is the largest fur and was made an officer in the Legion market and country In of Honor of France. the- - world. According to the retiring presiMany Inquiries concerning fox farm- dent, the chamber's board of directors It Is drawn from ing are sent to the biological survey. numbers forty-six- . The problems met by fox and otner all parts of the country and meets six fur farmers require, as In the case limes a year, with intermediate meetof other live stock, a knowledge of ings of an executive committee as species, temperament, sanitation, dis- called for. It maintains branch ofeases and parasites. . In addition, fur fices In New York, Chicago, St. Louis farmers are handling wild animals In and San Francisco. Its service by captivity and not domestic stock. A bulletin, letter and word of mouth knowledge of pelts, particularly of reaches to over l,4O0 commercial and values and market requirements, is trade associations situated in evpry aM3eeMiNM-e'-a- l mumii .uj-essential .to success from the business state, territory and dependency and M standpoint, and this ordinarily means American, chambers in foreign countries and to over fourteen thousand firms, to visit personally warehouses, man corporations and Individuals composing its association and Individual mem ufacturing furrltrs, or sales of furs. bership. Its magazine, the Nation's Business, has a circulation in excess of As breeders cannot always do this, seventy-fiv- e thousand. This Is the Type Being Used to Breed representatives of the biological surRemounts. Army vey are corttnntly bringing before them all possible Information relating breeding specimens are now found In to the fur Industry In all Its phases. many parts of Ihe country. In order to obtain suitable remounts for the service the army has placed Morgan CLEAN OUT ALL FENCE ROWS Here is a photograph of the wife stallions In Kansas, Missouri, Montana, of Glfford Pinchot, Kepubllcan nomi Nebraska and Texas. A few nre owned Such Pests as Grasshoppers, Wirs nee for governor of Pennsylvania, Worms and Cut Worms Can Bs privately In Illinois, Missouri, and Controlled. snapped as she was speaking In behalf Iowa, but the stronghold of the breed of her husband's candidacy. She made remains In New England, particularly Insect pests, such as grasshoppers, many speeches and lays his success In Vermont, where it was first dein no small part to the women's vote, wire wnm and cut worms, can be veloped. Pinchot carried the rural counties of controlled to quite an extent by cleanthe state, while Philadelphia and Pitts BETTER TILLAGE FOR FARMS ing up the old grass and weeds on the unused lund along fence lines and on burgh went against him. Now he is K. A. Fenton, to land waste consulting concerning the fall can According Mors Is Profitable Small Acreage Iowa State at paign with his defeated opponent. At college, entomologist When Properly Cared for Than harbor such pests, end these lot. i torney General George Alter., Large Tracts. Pinchot says very decisively that by cleaning them up early, many will be killed before they start he is not grooming himself for the A small farm well tilled will give presidency. "When a man gets the better returns than a large acreage work. Where pests have been prevalent on presidential bee buzzing In his bonnet more for. on If red fanners poorly It's all off," he said. "I've seen too would lenrn this lesson, which the any area, rotation of crops will often starve out the offenders. This Is par muny good governors ruined that way. gardener learned long ago, we would I have no ambition to be President." wire worms, cut worms have better farms ami Iheownef would tlcularly true of and corn loot wor . The governor Job will keep me busy." likely have more ready moWy. "I'm going to put the budget syst'ady. associate horticulturist. UniverInto effect," he said. "And I don't Alfalfa. tem Pasturing St. Paul. Farm. sity Intend to lose any time about It. Alfalfa may be pastured to nil kinds of live stock, but this Is rarely done Within s few weeks 1 will uppolnt n volunteer committee of men and women, Take Care of Pigs. nf rare the spring crop In regions where the hay commands a the best equipped In the state, to examine the situation and suzcext a finanTake good to the legislature next January. We'll work all of pips- - If the signs don't fail this good price, except when the field has cial plan than can be submitted summer on this Job." become weedy. Is the year when "pigs is pigs." fur-beari- Off Presidential Poultry Industry In Wisconsin Under State Regulation Certificates Are 3lven. The Wisconsin poultry hatcheries m-thi only ones In ths United States nblch sre tinder state regulation and to Information rollectd by the Unlfred States Depart-rnrn- l Because of the of Atrrlciilture. menace to the poultry Industry through the sale of young chicks nf Inferior quality and breeding, the slate "tcpnrtmi'nt of markets and the poultry department of the University of Wisconsin have established reptila-Hoand requirements for hatchery nd those flocks and for hatcheries. that fill the requirements and live tip M the reeutslhins will be known ss "Wisconsin inspected and accredited A butcheries and hatchery flocks." Hal of the accredited hatcheries and Dorks has been prepared and punished. Chirk purchased from list cileries on the list bear the snarfe of the faarketa, which a1va tfepartnwnt asuranc thai taey srs standard hrrd r n strains. Inspectors Issue certificates to owners of hatcheries and flocks that fill the requirements. BEES PLAY IMPORTANT PART Especially Valuable to Orchard Owner During Rainy Season in the Blooming Period. Bees play nn Important part In the production of frnlt In cross pollinating and fertilizing the flowers. They carry Prof. W, A. and distribute jiollen. Trice, entomologist at Purdue, snjs bees lire eseclBlly Important to the orchard owner In rainy, backward during the blooming period When It Is rainy the files, butterfles, and the wind, pollinating ngents, may hot function, but the bes work between showers oikI sre often responsible for the sin reus of the fruit crop. scs-son- s, Enemy ef Gardiner. One of the worst enemies c tha vegetable grower has been he maggot which attacks cabbugs and radish plants, North Carolina ancl Its State Bee n Here is a new portrait of Governor Cameron Morrison of North Carolina, who has announced a program of road building and rural development through a bond Issue. W. C. Hammer of North Carolina put In the ConKreesiomil llecord the other day a Npccch by his colleague, K. W. Poti, at the state convention at Ilale'gh, In It occurs this: "The State of North Carolina does riot now levy a single cent of tax on the property of the state for any state purposes whatsoever. The state ts collecting Its entire revenues from taxes on Inheritance, Incomes, franchises, Insurance policies, and licences. From Its funds' collected from these sources It pays the entire ctt of the state educational work. Including stste colleges and the speclnl work conducted by the tjrlriteridcnt of public Instruction', and nppnrprlHle the entire equallzlug funds of something over $70U,WXi, weaker counties la the state to equnlis their schools Dining TO THE RESCUE OF THE FLAG Ma Owner Hotel Apology to Legion for Plying Emblem Upsidedown. Disgruntled Before 2,000 people In square a hotel man of the public St. Augustine, Kla, hoisted the American flag, saluted it and made a public apology to tha local post of the American Legion for flying the flag upsidedown, as a protest against the pitching of a carnival company tent near his hotel. In Littleton, Colo., two steeple Jacks Irom the local Legion post climbed the dome of the court house and rescued . ft i zzzi i " 9 f ' f sr Ajaesv: e Hoisting the Stars and Stripes. national a tattered and weather-stnlne"American Legion" flag. The post had protested against of the Munson lines, sailing between such treatment of the flag. The county New York and Buenos Aires with an commissioners had replied, "If you American Legion crew, now bears In want that flag replaced hire a couple steeple Jacks yourselves." Its main dining saloon a bronze tablet d t he steamship RETURNS TO THE FOOTLIGHTS David Gardiner, Former Doughboy, After Months in Hospital, Resumes Theatrical Work. W0y t' , "i tiuiet Miiiititft tu y We.iwt lava i i U'l I uit'ei ikb tun- - a lcu rtc teutt ttotm it lift.? t UCt'Ml. .K'l) K tttu K hi. hm. itrtntu- - UV 11 M . UUX a 1 I'll'V ', H. c KM. 0 "American Legion' Steamship Tablet engraved with n dedication signed the national commander of the Lcgli of t The formal presentation tablet whs made In the presence the Npw York and New Jersey ofliclall of the Legion and two hnndred guesta I From matinee darling to doughboy. step. From government hospital to Broadway vaudeville Is u step fully as In the trenches Is a loa tact n& lib (tutadv. ttvt in.wji t "tvt im.ioit iw.tt.'iuiMii win uit uuutice v'ttit l2iiti llUtt 6(H&.XCt U' tU. vtetnfKfd t'iLUi Taxes which is glveu to tha I Saloor Engraved With Dedication by National Commander. e I)em-ocartl- the continent the recipe has beenj found. Mr. Roberts is now ready fori the eminent guests of the Legion at' the New Orleans convention next Oc--' tober. TABLET GRACES LEGION SHIP Bronze Piece In Main long. David (innllner pf the on 3 Hundred and Fifteenth Infan- try achlexed them both. A veteran of Chateau Thierry, St. Mililcl and' the Argonne. Gardiner was wound He has ed and gassed In service. peut Id months In hospital ss a result. On the morning of his release he slirned for a membership In the American legion and for a theatrical engagement in New York. Send Diseaied Poultry to France. The Germans are Inoculating with cholera the fowls they sre delivering the French under the reparations agreements, according to French blolo- -, gists. It as noticed that the poultry The Best Policy. sent In from Germany soon died. lawyer Now, be perfectly frank I'r nipt Imprests on the dead fowls with me. Are vou Innocent or guiltyT disclosed the cholera germ. The Paris t'lient I am gul'ty. Matin, one of tha greatest French I nn man honest Ijiwyer Ah. newspapers, rslls fof a goserniuei-.- t loA alisll be eble to anjolt you. nierlraa ves! I pit loo. Irglua Weekly- - , get the recipe for a certain angel foodV" cake that was handed aboard thai Foch train. j Since Mr. Roberts finished with thai y .tiu-a.-. - tlngulshed guests,! f the pastry. cooks of North' and South Caro-- I Una shadowed forj - ts anil from reasonably good br Is the last wish of a soldier dying battle more to be respected than legal forms decked out with sealing waxT The American Legion thinks It is. Recent cases before the courts have brought the ques tion to the front. According to Federal Judge Neterer of Seattle, the wish of a soldier killed in battle Is higher law than any departmental regulation. According to this decision Agnes Claffy, sixteen-yea- r old niece of Clarence Swank, Is awarded the residue of Swank's estate, amounting to $9,000. Swank was killed In France. Departmental red tape cluttered up the case on account of the death of Swank's mother, the original beneficiary. In handing down his decision Judge Neterer cited precedents extending back to the days of Caesar and the legionnaires of ancient Rome. The latest case Is that of Miss Elenore It. Knapp of New York, whoss claim to the estate of Ernest Charlton Mason of the One Hundred and Sixth United States Infantry has bees In s contested by Mason's uncle. muddy ' dugout before a general ad, vance against the Germans, Mason told his buddie, Oscar 'Westgate, the story of his engagement, and added that he now felt that in this advance he was slated to "go West." "If I don't come through this," he said, as they started over the top, "I want to have all' my estate." Mason, among others, was cut oR and captured by the Germans. They were taken to the same prison ramp. For ten days, a bunkie testified, Muson lay 111 on the ground with Influenza. Then he was taken away in- an ambulance and his death reported. Eventually a death certificate was issued by the United States government. But the attorneys for Mason's uncle contested the case to the extent of arguing that the "proof of death" was unsatisfactory. The Justice of the soldier's latest will has been uphetd In startling fash-Ioby the highest courts of England An English major of recently. died alone In his lodgings in London directly nfter the armistice. He left no legal will. Across the front of a photograph of his fiance he had hastily scrawled: "All to her." The case was brought before the high est tribunal of England and .he "will stood. ) STATE INSPECTS HATCHERIES Supplied has fallen for tha habit himself. Al-- 1 ton T. Roberta of Marquette, Mich., chairman of the : American Legion committee for the, on the field of i Pinchot Shoos TXprtmnt News Bervlc.) leirlnn S The man who made a "cake-eate- r of Marshal Foch during the marshal's1 tour of America;' Judge Neterer of Seattle Holds Re quest of Soldier Killed In War Demands First Consideration. Barnes Heads U. S. Chamber of Commerce AnIndustry of Breeding imals Has Grown Rapidly in Recent Years. for This American CAKE-EATER- Alton Roberts, Chairman of Legion Committee for Reception of Quests, Lands Choice Recipe. REGARD FOR HEROES WISHES "house-warming- MP " "S', ; Here Is an photograph of Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, president of the National Woman's party, which Is now officially at home in Its new Washington headquarters. This Is the historic old mansion which a century ago served as the capltol while the caplto burned by the British was being rebuilt. Mrs. Belmont, It is reported, gave most of the money which made possible the purchase of the .vflr. headquarters. " At the .official the official prayer ended thus : "I pray that heaven may bless our headquarters and the cause to which it is dedicated." There seems to be some difference of opinion as to what that cause is. Some think there will ultimately be a woman candidate for president, appealing to all women for support. The immediate purpose of the partv, however, is to- campaign for an amendment to the federal Constitution which shall bring- about the exact equality before the law of men and women. The proposed amendment Is opposed by the larger body of women the National League of Women Voters. This body fears that If the amendment Is passed woman would lose special privileges now conferred In many states upon her because of her sex. It prefers to work In the several States with reference to conditions In each. jej READY FOR THE 'Che. American FARMERS ENGAGED IN COUNTY jj stranger within its gates to investigate the possibilities afforded here before going elsewhere. The famous Lev an ridge is known throughout the world. Tw railroads pass through Nrphi. : t |