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Show 4 fr win iiiswi in iimwi iIsmts' ' i '" n""llil"''l"',,J i' i' I Oaf StoctalSBfs' Loumn Tn Blai will continue to publish brands binder FaUM nnbt In eaoh yearly ooatrou nominal price. The advantage 'to the stockraiBer t lamll larlzlag the pabllo with his brand and mark axe to well known to need attention. It is U ta stockman as valuable as an advertismai 17 A MATTERS OK AGRICULTURISTS. Hints About Cultiva tion of the Soil and Yields Thereof Horticulture, Viticulture and 'Some 1 .el)t). Vnff Up-to-Da- te EARLIER IN life a weed is destroyed the easier, and the smaller the damage it will have done. This is almost . "HE Address : Utah. Oasis, Jno Dewinp Upper slit la right, under silt la left ear Range: Cricket nli self-evide- -- j..j ! Jos Dewsnnp l slit Is Under . under rlg-ht- slJ( in left ear. Range: Crleket Mountains if ai Lower Sevier. Deseret, Utah Address, Join Y Smltb and DeaXa RANGE: an yrlei. i Oasis, Utah. Address, urerson Bros deaflrs La'short ! born Durhamt. Horses s s as brand On left thigh. Cattle-Up- per slope is each ear. Kang - Sy CI 1 j j j 4 t and mountain rJ..,,-station on the U. P. Ry and Learo between Mills' -- - ington. Address, Leamington, Millard Co., Utah Parley Alfred 25a Horses same brand on left thigh. Cattle-clo- ae crop in left and slit in rigat ear. K a n g e , Lower Sevier. Address, Des eret, Utah L on left thlgfcf same brand on left hip of cattle. Basse Willow Spring. Address, Flak Springs, Juab County, Utak. uji"iH.v double j on lext uiiza , swallow fork in left x Se- CWs. THospse Oasis, Millard Co. Utah. Mark, silt ta right aad two silts in ear. Same .--eft brand on left shoulder on horses P. N. Petersen, Addresa Oasis SSMS1 1 Same left on Horses. thigh Upper slope aad one under silt la left ear. and two ' TO4i,rt i Sims Walker Address, Oak City, Utah. MARTIN, well-grow- I SALT sic li M I Dealer la FRUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, Sggs, Poultry, Game, Veal Pork an r Beef, Smoked aad Fresh risk, V Flour, Hay and Grain. It will pay you to ship your goods to me. I eaarge 10 per cent, for haadllng aad remit as soon as goods are sold. Can give first-l- ass euatz7 references If desired.. I - Q. M i "W STEWARD, ... 60 2nd, South, SALT LAKE OITY P. 6. Hand Samplas BOX . --d-t; . ..$1.00 .. Iron Assay .Copper Assay... Bottle Samples .. 1.00 1.00 3.00 Pruning. Flowerlnjr Shrubs. One of the first requisites to success- ful pruning is to be able to correctly distinguish between shrubs which winter ought ; to ' be pruned in and those which ought to be pruned in summer. If a mistake be made in this connection, effects diametrically the reverse of those we wish to bring about will be the inevitable result. Another important requisite to Insure complete success is that the" various kinds of shrubs be pruned in the proper season. Owing, no doubt, to the pressure of work in the summer time, the pruning of flowering shrubs is too often neglected, and when ultimately attended to it is, as stated ,?above, generally left to persons who, from lack oi knowledge or through carelessness, cut away a quantity of wood, which, if left to the following spring, would produce a profusion of blossom. Let us take, for instance, such shrubs as forsythias, viburnums, grandiflpra, prunuses, many spiraeas, weigelas, etc., which flower in the spring or early summer. . The proper time to prune such shrubs is immediately after they have done flowering. If the plant to be operated upon be young and expected to grow larger in order to flll its place In a bed or elsewhere, all that will be found necessary ; , Frank (Law D, Hofobs, t'; Land S. Office.) Land 'griayKininer.; Attorney. Correi-- i cn'H'Tttf elicited. Twenty three years' eyrenersce. SALT J AKE CITY, UTAH; BIRD & LOWE, Rd tats 1 Aiioinevs, 'SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. al-the- as, KitcliensW,hin xne coxomai Kivn jr- h Aero. kancisco courts, and will If the most lasted In many ill undoutecL' i for small-pane- Rooms 4 and 5 Eagle Block, thex. Collarans Promptly Att Office, First. NatlonsJ SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. lteitt. FRANK WHITEHEAD' bank Bid., the chimney, and was never allowed to UTAS entirely die out. Banked with ashes in- fROVO, the evening, there was always supposed to be a spark to rekindle into new flames in the morning. Not long ago a woman died whose pride it was to say that, in the forty years of her wedded life the hearth fire never once Ho went out. If so dire a mischance arose a child was sent to the nearest neighGold Hill bor with a shovel to "borrow fire," and from, the 'glowing pine knot relighting was again possible. Along the walls were festoons of dried fruits and vegeTh Oasis and Fish Springs stage leaves tables. Hams and sides of bacon hung Oasis and Ibapah at 8 a. m., each Monday from the rafters. The: spinning wheel; and Thursday, and arrives at terminal points : stood in a warm corner. One utensil,: witnla 52 hours. -S3.00 was a long-- ! Oasis to Detroit, utterly obsolete 1 6.O0 " Fish Spr'ngs, handled covered pan, which was thrust; Hill " 7.50 and Gold Ipabah. deep into the hot coals j and withdrawn! JTare for transportation out and return ont when its savory contents were deemed! one-hafares. Address, and ready for the table. No such Johnny! F. DAVIS, Proprietor, cakes are put together now as were baked before an open fire; no such jellied Indian puddings, no such creamy "mush", as that sung by Joel Barlow. for Detroit, Fish Springs, and Ibapahl to-da- Profe w of Music. Will give IP8r-n- s on Piano. Oriran. Violin ito.j and teach Bands at lowoi pri.-card reasonable terms. s For furtber particularly Pddrt'tjp h FRANK WHITEHEAD, HINCKLEY. k 9- - UTAH 11 V I I 1 II f I 1 V 1 y, CAV ""v CAW lf Gh This Is Interesting:. The arrival in New York recently of a steamer from the Argentine Republic with a cargo of 120,000" bushels of flaxseed has brought to light" some' inter- esting facts. It seems that quite a trade has been going on in seed from that country for some time, far-aw- parks, and MININQ- - uLaw! :1WD There are men and women still living who vividly describe their glories, They were low, with heavy wind rafters, lighted by a for was those dows, days. glass luxury The chairs had narrow, high backs and rush seats. There was, besides, arude-l- y shaped "settee." The great wood fire burned its prodigious back log in ago. I Dr.G.S,Hvt Durrant is be trial te and more interesting in country houses mmf about fifty years ay about 500,000 bushels of the Argentine seed having already been sold there. mutilating that part of the shrub on Another which the flowers are produced. Win- to the onevessel with a cargo similar received, is due there soon. ter pruning is a comparatively more The flaxseed, although dirty, is reportsimple operation than Bummer pruning, ed to be of good quality, and the price from the fact that at this season plants is to $1.28 equal per bushel, duty paid, can be cut back tp almost any part, and the to 20 cents per latter amounting in the spring young shoots will break bushel. Crushers a rebate on oil get away and produce a profusion of blos- cake which makes the net exported, soms at the proper time. about $1.20 for the South price paid an effect from For shrubs having American article. is It interesting to their fruit or foliage, such as berberry, be of Theodore note that two years ago America exeunonymus, callicarpa, mahonia, etc., I ported large quantities of flaxseed would recommend winter pruning. If now is importing. she trimmed in the summer time it gives them a stunted appearance, which Hawaiian Soil. Recent investigamars the beauty of their foliage at a tions and experiments go to prove that time when it shows to the best advanthe soil and climate of the Hawaiian tage and is most appreciated. the It will be observed that in the fore- Islands are equally as suitable-foof as coffee are of ttie of production they pruning flowering going remarks is and if1 a it within a thaf predicted shrubs general sugar simply treated in of enmuch now few land the years Of course, it goes without manner. devoted to sugar raising will be be almost would tirely it that impossisaying ble, and especially in a short article like given over tp the production of coffee. the present, to lay down a hard and fast rule that would apply in 'all cases, Recipes. f for the fact is that in order to obtain Corn Pudding to be Eaten as a Vegethe best results, each species requires table Ingredient. One quart of grated of milk, a lump of special treatment, a thorough knowl- corn, one edge of which can only be acquired by butter the size of an egg, a teaspoonful practice and training. If, howeyev, t&e ,.of salt, three tablespoonf uls. of flour, hints given above be attended to, blun- three eggs, pepper. Mix all the in- -' dering in pruning, and the failure and gredients well together; put it in a butdisappointment consequent thereon, tered dish and bake an hour and a half can, to a very great extent, be averted, in not too hot ah oven. To be eaten as and many a shrubbery can be trans- a vegetable. Spread with butter, if formed from a chaotic mass into a thing of beauty at once pleasing to the eye and an ornament in the landscape. Sponge Cake. One cup of sugar, one American Gardening. cup of flour, three eggs, one teaspoonful baking powder, three tablespoons water. Stir yolks of eggs with sugar; Destroying the Hessian Fly. W. C. Latta of Purdue University add the water, then the flour with the gives the following advice: Owing to baking powder sifted in it and whites the prevalence and destructiveness of of eggs well beaten last. This makes a the Hessian fly this year, concerted ef- small loaf. It is well to double or forts should be put forth to prevent a treble the recipe. recurrence of itsjravages upon the next Cucumbers have an unpleasant repuwheat crop. In rder to prevent a seof the of causing indigestion. Here is ''the tation attack fly" rious following a recipe for preparing cu'eumber salad measures should! be adopted: 1. Thoroughly burn all which refutes this idea: Select very wheat stubble in which there is not a young tcucumbers; bury jthem in ice stand of young clover or grass. long enough to chill them thoroughly 2. Prepare vejry early a border, one through, or if in a hurry put them in a of two rods wid. around each field of pan with ice and salt with their skins wheat, and sow the same to wheat in on. Leave them until the very latest moment before using, then peel, slice August. 3. Turn this border under very late, them just just as thin as possible, and using a jointer, following with roll at the moment of serving kdd oil, vineand harrow, and then sow the entire gar, salt and cayenne. Dp not let them field. stand in the dressing, but serve at By taking thi3 course many of the once. insects which escape the fire will be border is buried when thp early-sow- n Farm Notes, turned under, ahd the; late sowing of With sheep, as with ether stock, the general crop) will avoid the earlier there is no breed that possesses all or attacks of any remaining "fly." If these precautions are carefully and only good qualities.? '.All5 have their generally observed by the farmers the detects. Good pasture makes flesh and growth Hessian fly will not seriously damage the next wheat prop. United effort is more rapidly than dry fbod does. Renecessary to be effective. member this, and when you are growing young animals. Few Suggestions. The Good sheep, fully as much as good mother will find this list of inestiwill always sell at mable benefit during the whole trying stock of other kinds, is scrubs and runts the fair It prices. season: To remove fresh fruit stains are to hard that get rid of. stretch the stained portion of the goods On many farms sheep shoulf be over a basin and pour boiling water looked upon sa auxiliaries in keeping through it until the mark disappears. To remove old fruit stains, wash the up the fertility of the land rather than stained portion of the goods in oxalic as a direct means of large profit. Indiscriminate breeding is one of the acid until clear.! Rinse thoroughly in causes of lessened profits with sheep wet with clear rain water, ammonia, as it unquestionably lowers the qualrinse again and; dry.' Grass stains should be rubbed in either molasses or ity. Breed as well as feed the best alcohol until, they disappear, and should shtmld be the rule. be washed as usual. Pink stains should Timidty is a characteristic of the with be soaked in lemon juice, covered sheep that should not be tampered salt and bleached in the sun. If they with. A wise sheepkeeper will use are on colored material they should be every meaDfi to calm his sheep and treated with oxalic acid in the same keep them so. way as old fruit stains. A mixture of : The true rule for the right quantity d of powdered alum to two-thir- to feed to animals of all kinds !s to of tartar is also jgood for obsti- giye them just what they will eat up nate Ink stains and others. .Ink stains clean no more, j You can only find out on carpets are Removed most easily ho w much tkat is from trial. with lemon juice; or oxalic acid. Wagon Every rule that has been tried during grease, tar or pitch stains should be the ages for breeding to get a particular rubbed well with lard and then washed set in live stock has failed. The conin the usual way. Colors which have clusion is that there is no certain faded under the influence of acid may further to determine beforehand orway to be restored by treating them , produce a given sex. and chloroform. Colors changed Our consul at Bradford, Great Britalkalies by may be restored by acid ain, complains that the American treatment. farmer does' not put up his products In as good shape as such ar The bicycle has destroyed the sale of put up in France and evenproducts in Canada, more horses than even the electric road ana inai tnerefore they sell for less has done. than those from other sources. , A. Gardner, WATCHMAKER, NEPHI, UTAH. Watches and jewelry promptly paired. Mail orders solicited. , tMIO, IrmUL IVIAKKS o. s our ..t rvion PATENT 1 I OBTAIN !A 9 For a immntiiiM . tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In. formation concerning Patents and bow to ob. tain them sent free. Also a catalogue Of median, ical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken throntrh Munn & Co. recelvn notice in the Scientific Amerirnn. anrt specialare thus brought widely before the public with, cost to out the inventor. This paDer . inmickri w? oniric olAfratif IvtUnnf.AtAisplendid i largest circulation of any scientific work to th sent Tree. z.ou a year. Siingle Building Edition, monthly. cnjPB cents. Every number containc hoiV.,. pies, a.5 tifu piates, in colors, ana pnotographs of new nouses, witn pians, enaDiing builders to show the MUNN & CO- - Ntcw yqhtc. XH1 R'UdwAt. re- ' Harness W.and Saddlery: GEO. WILLIAMS, ' . PAYSON, ' - - - - XTT-A-H- . - AND IMPORTER OF MANUFACTURER Harness, Saddlery, Buggy Whips, Nose Bags, Collar Pads, Hardware, Leather, etc. Fine Buggy Harness a Specialty. and Retail. "Wholesale Our goods have been extensively used in Deseret and vicinity, and hart given the best satisfaction. Mail orders will receive prompt attention. HEATED BY STEAM. ELECTRIC CALL BELLI r tea-cupf- fly-infest- L. HOLBROOK, ul ed ' , . Prop. Headquarters for Sheep, Gattle & Mining Men TME j s Leads All the Rest l! 1 Ti ti AWARDS. It 1r Support a Home State Fair II Gold 1894, Medal. 1r Industries 11 ..11 Three Cream Baking Powder Gold th and se Ta Medals. Uikt - 1 KCMM rw v th Keep . CjtOMK hnma -- on xurex Your Superior Quality Flavoring Extracts Gold 3e' Medal. It Money yo Ah To j long-sufferi- ng I -- te at Best Quality and Display of Soda Water. Ide Ia I Home. t : wh J ! , W. nt0nfot i inucn aepenas upon tne aestruction of the last weed. If 999 are killed and the thousandth one left to enjoy the superior advantages which the destruction of the others has given, it may be worse than if all had lived and struggled with each other through an n One Imperfect growth. and heavily-seede- d weed will leave a large legacy for evil in a rich field. It is the few weeds that are left' in the cornfields that, having had the best opportunities, do; the- mischief and continue the pests. . 7Weed seeds have a' remarkable way of disseminating themselves. One means in his every farmer, by power, roots out the cursed Canada thistle, while an adjoining field may be largely devoted to the propagation of this prickly pest. The thistle seeds are provided with miniature balloons, by means of 'which they are carried by the lightest winds and will find a favorable place to grow In the" well-tille- d field of the thrifty farmer. Therefore, in the extermination of these pests there must be an earnest and concerted action. under silts in ear. BANGS right :Oak Creak. ' ishment, says who has made a study of weeds and their treatment. This work does not begin until the young in the son plant establishes its rootsin the air and and has spread its leaves sunshine. If the weed is killed before this point is reached, a double work is done, the theft has been prevented, and the weed is killed. The germination of the seed has provided the condition for easy destruction that would not have obtained had the plantlet remained snugly enveloped by the One of the best methods of ridding a soil of weeds is to arrange for rapid wholesale germination of the weed seeds, after which the young plants should be promptly killedBut all weeds are not annuals; and if the soil is filled with those that live from year to year, other methods of extermination must be followed. Weeds get their living in the same way as other plants they need to have room in Soil f or their roots and sPace 111 the air and sunlight for the stems and leaves. Cut them off from these sources of food, and the means of performing the vital functions, and death sooner or later must follow. It is evident that repeated removals of the portion above ground will continually weaken the plant, and if to this is added an occasional upturning of the roots, the weeds must die. Some of them will stand a great deal of torture, but it is the only general way. There is no panacea for weeds, nothing that can be put on a field to kill them, unless it be a full and proper application of that which, for the lack of a better and neater name, is called This will not only kill the weeds, but also improve the cultivated crops. It is beyond reasonable expectation that all annual weeds will be either killed in the seed or soon after germination; some dodge the hoe, while others will be missed by the rake. The next best thing is to keep them from seeding. The perfection of a crop of seeds is 'the end and aim of the whole existence of a weed. If one, for example, removes the large cup-lik- e flower cluster of the carrot, there will soon be a half dozen to take its place and hurry matters, in seeming fear that they may share the same fate before the seeds are matured. If a weed gets a late start, it spends very little time on stem building, but blossoms almost from the soil, and puts all its energies into the perfection of its seeds and the continuation of its species. A "pusley" plant will, if left to itself for a few days, ripen a million seeds, and do it , F. J. Kearnej, Range,' Lower vier. Address nianf-a - Houi Mountainf Lower nf their nourProf. B. D. Halstead, - seed-coat- s. Horse Grower 1i a thief in the cultivated ground, intent on making a vigorous growth and robbing- Vi I v nt. A weed is Mnnntiilnii ajtrf AXwer oevier. &a2lB7$ZL Deeeret, Utah. Address, O. S. TO INTEREST Is to the merchant. Cbas. F. Mb garden. will be to cut away part of the previous year'3 growth. Special attention will, of course, have to be paid to the bal ance of tne plant, ana tne operator must, as far as Circumstances will per- mit, strive to give it a natural and graceful form. If .the plant, has at- tained the desired size, the old shoots can be thinned out and cut back to suit the situation and taste of the parties immediately concerned, and it will be found that young shoots will at once develop and be in the proper condition to yield a: 1 abundance of flowers the ensuing year, A specimen can thus be kept in gooa shape and form for many years without any apparent change in its si2e. In a mixed shrubbery this method is of great advantage, as it limits eacll plant to its allotted space and prevents it from encroaching on its neighbor, or obscuring from view many of the finer but less robust growing shrubs. Many people are under the impression that such shrubs as hardy azaleas, rhododendrons, etc., cannot be successfully pruned, but such is by no means the case. I have myself found it quite practicable, by judicious and careful pruning, to transform, in a few years, tall, gaunt, unshapely plants of the kinds just named! iQto beautiful and desirable specimens. The pruning of this class of shrubs sjaould also be executed immediately after they have done flowering, and it wijll be found, as stated above, that young shoots will at once develop and be in the proper condition to yield an abundance of flowers when the appropriate time arrives. Later flowering shrubs, such as hydrangeas, Roginia hispida, clerodendron, serotinum, etc., should be pruned in the Winter time. Summer pruning would indeed be highly injurious in this case, for the simple reason that by cutting away any of the young growths we would, in most instances, charity, - : ; ex-ochor- da I3 tie . MANUFACTURED BY anc SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH an cou BOX 633 tie all thei j ' i . ds one-thir- j with-ammoni- a Spices Pure and Ground Daily. tor mo JOSEPH A. LYMAN Has a full line . Genera.1 Wou fiyc neec "J, And is selling down.al Panic Prices for Pay Down. Either for Cash or Produce at cost. CI . am0 DS? "I ask 'A "V HAY, - GRAIN - AND - STABLING Highest cash price paid for Hides and Pelts. that tette Travelers and Sheepmen will find me supplied with .'frt be a, "A Don't forget JOSEPH A. LYMAN, OAK CITY, MILLARD ; one of- - Merchandise, COUNTY, glo her j . . . : "T ay. UTA |