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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH SECOND WIFE GIVES UP EXPLORER LIFE Hubbard's Cride Succumbs to Jungle Terrors. Tl. P.t!in. sprit nf Dnrt.rrt li!. It wr.-rlAfrim" the ffrrt marital venture i,f Wirnirn I, Hub t.nril, fi rin.-Harvard mar fiaithutl lni-r- . ihi .it II el. H.m over III mhhiihI aitimpl, li v a learned her when li wa ai.iii.uiiifil H u lil'ii nl and In .rwijr l.rid of a year have Marled fur him. frun their r bmiey-Iiiihi- Jut mM n JM..ii,'ei.li. I ,'ii iiin'ier IliiMmrd and rtmru jprl hrld announced tn lh world that ltn-- were aelilns m a lin imr lioiirymoon. f.'rih In ilia Jungle ahlrh would h and on Ilia veldt. Now rmne ilia nw that lha rontla hail abandoned all nf martial Ml and conlcnimenl and ara trekking to the African mart. Iliwtnn bound. The former Mr Hubbard, with her Iwo children, on a of ahum ant Mirn In th African buh, wajr aril hav anillrd alien Maliel Mcnzlra. late of a niulra! Comedy, Informed Interviewers Inrt aummer that alia and Wyu planned to build their love Conner anions lha fmnd and Rhodesia. rrrefier of fn'iihern Iliera to dwell ten Ions year. She, I (mi, bn d MiNipled Africa allh Wyn." and ulna .veer of Ilia mm blnatlon led lo lli divorce court. Siia and tier cl.iMren hav fine been nuiklns Ibeir hotna with her inottier, Mrs. Prank M. Carson, at Greenwich, Conn. Hubbard's colorful career aa foot lit hi'f fr dar ball and African explorer bad occupied front puce and maca-lind u rill K lb past ten year. Only lha fact of Id dlvorc and aarly anurias l lb dancer. Ialal Mentles, rwnprd th eve of fnna, wild followed hi mote from lb tlm '.a ns tl.a storm center of tho Harvard Princeton athletic dloputa. Ha mi married to Marsaret Carson In , while he was a Junior at Harvard. Tlc-- had met In I a lira dor mhera they were working wlih the Orenfel niKslira. After hi (raduatlon from Harvard, tlu-set out for Africa, carrying along Wynant, Jr, who bad been boro to theta In lb subzero clime, r where loctor Grenfel and hl rt carry on their work. They crtatdlidied thrmnelve In southern Rhodesia. and thera another baby wu horn to the former e Hub-har- d P-l- -- 1 a 'i Iherninm 1M Jegree In tb Mtade. They returned lo th I'nlt r d Mate after three In the then tragedy struck. I.lnle tt'yuuni, Jr, fell off a dock and drowned at th muple'a summer horn In I'rovlncelow n. 7h African Idyll and th muple'a return to this country led to a aerie of magazine article and . Sforlea hy both Mr. and Mr. Wynant continued hi writing, climaxing Id literary effort wlih tb oft condemned and praised arllwiea charging Princeton with playing dirty football. The furore which arose ha never Princeton and Harvard quieter. ceased meeting each Ollier on tb football field and lluhhard and bla new wife went to Africa again. Put Ilf In an African mud but mid deserting caravan Mack. pythons, lion, tiger and lb ret of tb dark continent's back drop murt bav been aever on tb woman half of tb Hubbard exploring and experimental com. blnatlon, for now comet Hi new a that the Jungle honey mooner are beaded for tb dlvorc court. tuh, Although w watched It lisa, alory by story, and although It la only a comparatively abort distance from where we live, we never unlll recently visited lb tower of the EmThat I, of pire Slate building. course, bemuse we hnppen to dwell In New York. There are many thing In lb city which no resident know half at much about at doe tome visitor from thousundt of mile away. Nor la that e- - Sharp Disk Harrows of High Importance WASHINGTONS Vtktfirld, RrLuill by ill Mt Hub-hard- uiu-d- ftJJKK Wakefield Made Shrine Worthy Its Memory ef Th blrthplac Washington long remained a desolat and deserted apot on th bank of th act In tb moat beautiful environment of nature, but with no on there aav a few aim-p- i aegro folk and ghost of the part, to tell Its algnlficanc. In th part tli (It baa not been easy to aom 100 miles south find. of th National Capital, Wakefield was not shown on th maps Thera ' w little or no Information avU-'bl- e about this historic spot where Washington was born and where ha spent th greater part of hla boyhood. Known by few. It wa difficult to get to except by water. In the Colonial era, civilization followed the waterways, and the homes of the plantation owner along the Totomac were built upon some Inviting spot close to Its shores. Tb broad river was their artery of commerce. Wakefield burned before railroads and highways supplanted the river. It wa never rebuilt, o when highways came they passed Stamp Out Tuberculosis Once having reached the top of the Empire State, we were eorry we The federal appropriation for the bad not gone before, from street work of bovine tuberculosis eradilevel. New York Is a pretty Im- cation In the past yenr was $6.t'.KV From that tower. 0"0, of which 11,1110.000 was allotpressive place. It looks like something a child has ted for operating and expense constructed of block. The trans- $.'.000,000 for paying Indemnity to atlantic liners, lying at their toy owner of cattle slaughtered aa a docks, are little boats one might result of this test. The combined sail In e bathtub. And man raised state and county appropriations that building beam by beam end amounted to more than $13,500,000. tone by stone. It was something The plan for the work now In-- 1 of an achievement. elude (1) the eradication of tuber-- ! culosls under the accredited herd You may any that Mt Everest Is (2) eradication under the area plan, almost twenty-fivtimes as high. plan, (.1) eradication of tuberculo-- 1 Man did not raise that and from sis from Investigations Its peak the Empire State might not relative toswine, (4) Interstate shipments, (5) look like much. That Is true enough, tuberculosis In fowls, (fi) the control but men In airplanes have been high- and eradication of John's disease, er than ML Everest Considering called pnratuberculosls. properly that only a short while ago, as time The retesting of cattle In modified Is measured, the highest tnan ever accredited areas baa resulted In congot was to the topmost limb which clusive evidence that bovine tubercould bear his weight, he has done culosis can be kept at t minimum pretty well. If he keeps on, he may provided attention Is given to the Wakefield by. So the birthplace remained, negget somewhere. necessary sanitary measures, states lected and forlorn, until only a few Yet, looking down from that tower the United States Department of Agyear ago when the Wakefield Naot the largest city on this continent, riculture. was tional Memorial association at the cars which look like a proformed with the purpose of buildcession of crawling ants, and the peWhen Buying Cattle ing on the original alte a exact a e destrians who look like fly specks, makes man feel a bit bumble, a little more doubtful of his Individual Importance to the universe. They say that, even from (the top of the Empire tower, the stars still look pretty far away. With respect to the kind of cattle to buy Professor Gamllch, writing In the Nebraska Farmer, has this to say: In recent years the lighter weight good quality feeders hav usually proved to be the more profitable, although under present conditions It may be possible for some Visitors with whom we ascended feeders to realize a profit on the in the elevators evidently expectheavier kind. Rome feeders furthed to feel the ascent One pasermore are finding the lower grades senger opened his mouth and put of cattle selling at prices which may his lingers to his ears, but we be attractive and In the end return could discover no sensation due to profit the ride. The elevators run so The marketing of grain through smoothly Hint you do not realize live stock Is very advisable at presthey are proceeding rapidly upward. Some of the men who run ent, says Professor Gramllch. Under current circumstances grain should them told me that they never had 10 to 20 per cent more experienced any feeling of rising bring when fed to live stock than when a to height. suddenly marketed ns grain. Seth W. Richardson, assistant attorney general, who was appointed The attendants at the top admitby Attorney General Mitchell to ted that they answer hundreds of Windbreak's Value conduct an exhaustive Investigation Visitors usually daily. Windbreaks will attract lnsectlv-erou- s of conditions In Honolulu, to deter- questions wish to know whether the tower birds to nest there. The birds mine whether the machinery for the and ask concerning the wind will sways keep down destructive Insects. administration of Justice In Hawaii velocity. There are instruments In Windbreaks will provide some wood and the territorial laws of the the tower which measure both these removed In thinnings. This wood will are adequate. Mr. Richard h j things. serve for fuel, posts and repairs. son left at once for the Islands. 1932. Bell Syndicate.) WNU Service. Windbreaks will Increase the yield of field crops In the protected area, enough to make up for the loss of land devoted to trees. Windbreaks add Interest to the home; it Is Interesting to see the trees grow. Several rows of trees constitute a shelter belt, a glorified windbreak. I (. Our Pet Peeve Agricultural Notes Millet hay should not be fed to horses for any length of time lest it Injure their kidneys. Last year there were only six states that did not ship outside their borders at least 250 cars of apples. Go over the farm machinery some time before spring to make repairs. It may save buying some high-price- d equipment next summer. Careers of potatoes, like those of poultry and dairy cattle, are now checked to see what returns come from using certified seed. a Vance M. Rucker of Manhattan, the extension marketing specialist with the Kansas State college thinks now Is a good time to buy feeder cattle. In any business, the' worst kind of competitor is the one who does not know his costs. The time necessary to keep cost accounts Is about that needed to care for one horse, a very high percentage of the fertility value of manure Is lost through leaching during the spring and summer. The way to stop this loss Is to get the manure out on the fields in the spring. A fy Jewess cot production rather than quantity production ran da much to put agriculture on n more stable and prorjicruus basis, says D. It, iHidd. extrusion specialist In soils snd crops at the Ohio State university. One factor that costa nothing and usually figures very largely tn low cost production, be point out, It fnrm manure. Crop yields of, of 50 bushels of corn, 23 bushel wheat, and two ton of hay per acre, rotation of corn, obtained from whrat and bay. If fed on th farm or used aa bedding, w ill produce sufficient manure. If saved, to make an eight-toapplication each year on of tb crop land. Bora long lima Ohio experiments show such manure to bav a production value of 23 bushels of corn, ten bushel of wheat, and L3W appounds of bay for each eight-toIt Is very common explication. perience to find that only of th manure produced In available at the tlm U la lo b applied lo the land. Unnecessary manure losses ranging from n few ton lo 60 or UK) Iona per farm ara to b found In every aectlon. Figured In term of crops this means from 23 to 300 extra bushel of corn, from 10 to 123 bushels of wheat, and from 1.300 pound to eight tons extra bay from the earn acreage without additional cash outlay. The practice of supplementing manure with superphosphate alone on additional sere has Ilk possibilities. When used In this manner, 320 pound of 10 per cent superphosphate has produced on tb average over a period of over 30 year, ten bushels of corn, six bushels of wheat, and 800 pounds of hay. If corn snd whrat be figured at 23 cent per bushel and bay at $3 per ton, the Increased crop yields are sufficient to pay for the superphosphate and leave 100 per cent gain on the Invest meat j a i SENT TO HONOLULU Nation) Mem rial AmocUiUm. Sally Scz One Way to Cut Cost of Farming Unnecessary Manure Loss May Be Eliminated With Due Care. i granddaughter of Queen Victoria, and niece of King Edward VIL The deficiency of the Spanish crown Jewel was made up for at the time of her marring to King Alfonso In KkJ by regal presents from King Edward and other relative and sovereigns. BIUTIirLACK Tkr field Blunt Edges Will Not Do the Work Required. atxiut farmer are rarcle burro Mmrp keeping their dii-viiough to do good Murk. I'nle the disk tyv sliarp knlfellt edge, they cannot cut cornrtalk or gran rool the property nor pc ground to do good Murk. teel The newer type of and extra hard disk hold a good cutting edge much longer than thoe . hut even the liould formerly he gone oxer every spring to keep them in firot-clcondition. Instead of taking their dirk apart and taking thera to the blurksnillb to be sharpened. many farmer now sharpen thera at home. tine way I to sharpen thera lit the Add hy retting lever oxer the disk shaft or axl and with the lever bold a hardened steel cutting edge or a rough grinding ston against th disk edg until It Is sharp. Another method I to damp the dink on a heavy frame, Oi a hinder or other Inrge wheel on a shaft with a Socket to fit over the end of the disk shaft, turn this with a belt front a small pulley on a pi engtn biddrullar to this portion of the coun and then sharpen the disks hy the or steel ing grinding culling We met a man the other day. try. who ha lived for year In Seattle stone against the disk edges. Oklaand never has seen Rainier park. homa Firmer Stockman. We know Chicagoan who never have been Inside the Kicld museum. Plan Further Work to Lights of New York dt CROWN JEWELS OF SPAIN WERE MOSTLY MYTHICAL Alfonso Madrid, Spain. XIII lost considerable property of value b a result of the confiscation of lilt good decreed by the cortea when lie wna demnstituyenlea clared an ou'lnw, hut In so far as Jewels are concerned he ha rela lively Utile to worry about. The "question of the Spanish crown Jewels," or the "mystery of the Spanish crown Jewels," bobs up every now and then In the press of Europe and especially In Prltlsh newspapers, hut the whole thing la not aa complicated ns all of that. As a matter of fact, for all prnc--1 cii I purposes, there are no notable American Spanish crown Jewels. tourists, who cross to Europe and gaze In astonishment at Prltlsh crown Jewels In the tower of with equal amazement learned upon arriving here In the days of the monarchy that there were no Spanish crown Jewels to be seen. They could go to the royal armory and see possibly the greatest collection of medieval armor In the world, nnd If they were lucky they might manage to see the throne room at the palace, which Is as gorgeous as anything of Its kind Put Spain never has anywhere. had any jewels to show off. When Hon Alfonso left Spain last April 1 he naturally left his crown behind. Put that was only a small thing, with a few pearls and diadems. lie wus crowned with It In 1!M2, but never wore it after that, nnd on formal occasions It remained on a cushion with the scepter. While the Spanish crown nnd the king had no exceptionally valuable Jewelry, the queen personally did own many Important jewels of various sorts. Queen Victoria Eugenia was the Princess Victoria Eugenia of Bnttcnberg (Princess Ena), Vassar gradual eler replica of the bouse In which Washington was born a painstaking research and tedious study would enable It, and to restore the vast acre of the plantation to something more of Its condition In the days of Washington's boyhood. House a Mansion. To reconstruct the home was a task of no easy proportion. For many years very little relluble Information was obtainable as to the size and character of the old structure. There were a variety of opinions extant. Some contended It had been a cabin; others, a mansion. Some thought It was made of wood ; others that it was of brick, and still others that It was a structure of combined wood and brick construction. After considerable study, however, experts of the association arrived at what they believe to be the truth that the structure was of Colonial brick of home manufacture. Excavations on the site established the nature of the construction and the type of brick used. The bricks for the new Wakefield are being produced from the original clay pit on the Wakefield estate. Research also established that the house was a mansion of considerable proportions, after the style of the big Virginia plantation homes of that period. Old Colonial Family. Many of the original furnishings, saved from the fire, are still In the hands of descendants of the family, remaining In the neighborhood of the old mansion. These have been turned over to the association. The state of Virginia has constructed a road to the site and the federal government has been asked to dredge and Improve the harbor and to reconstruct the wharf In order to accommodate visitors by boat from the Potomac. The Washington family first settled at Wakefield In 1605, a full cenCol. tury before the Revolution. John Washington, of the President, had come to Westmoreland, Va., In 1656. He died and was burled there In 1076. Maj. Lawrence Washington and Maj. John Washington, his sons, succeeded him. After their marriages the family lived on separate parts of the Wakefield estate until the house In which was born George Washington burned. After that the Washingtons continued in other houses on the same land, and descendants still live on part of the same Wakefield estate a continuous possession. In whole or In part, for 204 years eight generations. Mount Vernon Estate. It was at Wakefield, then, that George Washington was born, February 22, 1732. Between three and four year later th family tuovtd t their eatata ot 2J100 acre which embraced U present Mount Vernon. There Washington passed bout four years ef bis boyhood. Then bla parent Augustin Washington and bis second wife, Mary Ball, a member of another early Virginia family moved to an estate la King Georg county, about two mile east of Fredericksburg. Thera bis father died, lo 174a His half brother, Lawrence Washington, with whom Georg wa great favorite. Inherited Mount Vernon; another half brother, Augustin, Jr, received Wakefield a bla patrimony and Georg was to bav still another farm when he grew up, Mrs. retained th Washington King Georg county estate. A there was a good school near Wakefield, and non near hit mothers estate, Georg spent much of his tlm at Wakefield until b was sixteen year old, when h returned to Mount Vernon, Lawrence, upon bis death, having left blm th ertat. Incidental to th restoration of Wakefield ther baa been a better appreciation gained of tha circumstances of Washingtons family. Much of our own American story has grown out of tho old Weems biography, published shortly after Washington's death. That gave ns the cherry- tree story and other Incidents of bla life, many of which were doubtless true. It pictured Washington as springing from a lowly lineage and having that sort of a cultural background welt calculated to produce a man who would lead th revolt against monarch! al oppression. Family of Aristocrats. Tha truth of the matter as these researches show. Is that Washington's forbears were Intense royalists and closely allied to the bouse of one-ililr- one-hal- f drams roar." Dont taka a headache "os lha chin." Intermountaln L Right Kind of Roughage Must Be Given Heifers The nature of our feeding Inquiries Indicates that many dulry farmer are without legume hay this winter. Such dry roughages as corn fodder and atover, millet hay, Sudan grass hay, and the grain sorghums are frequetly listed In Inquiries. In most case the Inquirers ask for rations for the milking herd. At any time we want to put In a good word for the yearling and heifers on dairy farms We have some evidence to Indicate thnt nntnmis of this age will make fairly satisfactory growth on roughage nlone provided It Is the right kind of roughnge, such as silage and good legume hny. If dairy farmers undertake to carry heifers through on roughage without gain they will not get satisfactory results. roughage should be supplemented with three to four pounds per head dally of a grain mixture containing about 16 per cent crude digestible protein. Hoard's Dairyman. e e NEON LIGHTS CLAUDE Fa tcTVirxL 14 P sootier of Monument Erected et Wakefield Sacred in t to Mark Spot Stuart. In fact. It was their close adherence to the royal household and the consequent oppression of the Cromwell followers that forced Col. John Washington to leave his rich estates In England and flee to the shores of Virginia. Thomas Washington, an uncle of the founder of the American family, was attached to the court of Charles L which gave the family a secure social standing in England. He accompanied his sovereign to Spain, where he died and was burled on the grounds of the British embassy. A brother of Thomas, and father of the man who fled to America, was Rev. Lawrence Washington, proctor of Oxford university, one of the chief royalist strongholds In England. As far back as the family history goes In England, the Washingtons belonged to the aristocratic landed gentry and were fervent supporters of the throne. So, too, with the American branch. At Wakefield, In Washington's youth, the stables are recorded to hax-- held upward of thirty riding horses. The restoration of Wakefield gives the nation another Washington shrine second only to the beautiful home to which he retired after his years of honorable service both In war and peace had won for him the title, Father of His Country. Kansas City Times. e The first Maryland Holstein to exceed 1,000 pounds of butterfat and to produce more than 30,000 pounds of milk In one year Is Llscomb Fobes Homestead Irene, a mature cow owned by C. II. Anderson. AcAscording to the Holstein-Frieslasociation of America, she produced 32,412.1 pounds milk, 1,011.1 pounds butterfat to be the one hundred and Holstein to exceed the fat mark and the one to exceed hundred and twenty-firs- t 30,000 pounds of milk. She ranks one hundred and thirtieth among the breeds fat producers and twenty-ninth for milk production. was bred by T. F. Llscomb Dolan of Wisconsin and Is the twenty-first Badger bred Holstein to exceed 1,000 pounds butterfat In a year. Hoard's Dairyman. n sixty-fourt- h 1,000-poun- CoeoTio Belt Lake Cite So. Mela THIS WEEKS TRIZE STORY home product, practical; To keep money at home, that's beneficial; To aav freight cost, that's economical; To provide work for unemployed ....that's beneficial; To increase local payroll, that' reciprocal; To build more factories To B thats To enlarge local market!, thats commercial; To use Intermountaln Mad Goods, that's all! MRS. J. C. BELL, Boise, Idaho. Seed for FRFK CARDEN BOOK Contains 100 paves full? UlostratedL Address Salt Lake City, Uuh YOUR WOOL CAN FOR FINS HE EXCHANGED WOOLEN MERCHANDISE WRITE Original Utah Woolen Mills 8AI.T LAKR CITY PLAN SPRING PLOWING . .. with use of Caterpillar Tractor oldest and leading track-typ- o tractor. Prominent farmers owe success to these machines. Write for descriptive catalogs. Holsteins Good Record Grounds Aspirin. Trust Not th Failure Ilazard not your wealth on a poor man's advice. M anuel. e d Pedestal Mad thats Industrial; - AT HIS BIRTHPLACE Dont try about th night before," When headaches mak your ear Caterpillar Landea Tractor & Equipment Co. 8H Lak City snd Tremonton, Utah Some astounding jumps, not down in the record books, have been made from the frying pan into the firs. Florida Times-Unio- n. Aik You DrozrUt For APEX ASPIRIN AN INTERMOUNTAIN SPERE TENT 7 PRODUCT & AWNING Co. 80. WEST TEMPLE Everything in Canvas Goods Can Control Leaf Spot GASOLINE Cherry leaf spot has caused much tree loss In cherry orchards In recent years. To control this disease the most Important sprays are FITWELL ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. the one at the time of the fall of the Trasses Artificial Limbs Braces k petals nnd the two following Arch Supports Crutches Elastic Houcrf Extension Shoes intervals, according to William Established In Salt Lake In 1908 F. IMckett, Kansas State college. Ph. Was. 264 Satisfaction Guaranteed used at the rate of 135 W. Third So. Salt Lake City VU five pounds to 50 gallons of water one or liquid lime sulphur, gallon to Life is just a continual business 35 gallons of water gives control of of losing sleep over matters that the disease. Addition of lend to the you wont be able to remember next spray helps control plum curculio year. San Francisco Chronicle. which causes wormy cherries. Packed With Power two-wee- Lime-sulph- Wax Gloves for Safety 55 AA VlJiUl Per week wil1 paid for the best article on Why you should use Intermountain Goods Similar to made above. Send your story in prose or verse to Intermountain Products Column, P. O. Box 1545, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this column you will QS AA receive check for Gloves, made slippery hy rain or snow, are a menace to power Heres a way operators. to treat them to prevent accidents: Melt two pound paraffin over a slow Then with a fork dip all the fire. Praise of Agriculture gloves needed, palms downward, As showing his attitude toward taking care that the fingers are Immersed. The wax, farming, Washington Is quoted as thoroughly becomes adhesive in saying: Agriculture is the most when cold, healthful, the most useful and the moisture, and never gets slippery. most honorable employment of Sufficient gloves for the season can W. N. U. be treated for a few cents, says man. Capper's Farmer. S. L. Week No. 3208 |