OCR Text |
Show I I CACHE AMERICAN. LoUAN, UTAH f7 Get Best Quality Hay From Alfalfa to 'clc ; fi l ? ' ,?7 2 A-- lJ in fwar3 Oayni as a,J)Sut. t , -- -. .""V . , " ; f, f 1 I 1 J ! ; : , - . . j . f man to spend weeks and months (tty It P. LEWIS, Atrlrulterel Fee. rieli. I, Ohio mete Chiverelty.) recording tha peeulsrlllca of apeeth MJ Svvvlra, lan of an aged Indian who recatla With between 43 and 30 pef rent guag which will vanish completely of the aeaeons alfalf hay producith that person death. That lantion obtained from th first cutting. guage Is completely outworn. Tha It Is advisable to make every effort deoerndanta of those who used It are to harvest high grade hay from this now speukinc English or Spanish. To cutting. the uninitiated. It la the mere recordIn raking, loading and storing al- ing of useless gllilterlsh. falfa It la be to use 0eed that Council of Yet the American 111 he consistent with obtaining f yarned Societies reports with pride well cured bay with the largest poe that one research worker baa nearly slide (erreutitje of leaves. Ove- completed records of tbs Southern rdoing Id the raxth, too large wind- Caddoan language, that another la row a, and tha um of a rako when piecing together a record of the nearthe hay la extremely brittle, are all ly vaulahed Mohican dialect of the dangerous practices and may re- Eastern Algonquin and that still ansult lo poor quality hay. After the other has found that a handful of hay la first wdted It will cure more Indians In Oregon still speak the rapidly la soul) windrows than In Cayuoe language, which It waa tha swath, and will he more uniform thought vanished M years ago. In color end Ira 3 new. Such work is more than a pastime The second crop may turn yellow, or a hobby. To archeologists and due to the presence of n little In- other Interested In Americas past sect known as the leaf hopper. It Is of vital Importance. Native These leaf hoppere puncture the language form one of the most restem of the alfalfa and each out liable means of tracing movement In the Julie. IWs use of their artiv-It- prehistoric America. Pottery, weapduring tb first half of July, It on. Jewelry, basketry, design and la best to male the second cutting architecture 11 are clew to event between July 24 and 3L If the sec- In that forgotten peal But language ond cutting la made in the middle a thread running through them aiL are acof July, wbee Ancient America, the two contive, they cause the new third tinents, bad no fewer than 150 langrowth to he dwarfed and the guages, each fundamentally different from the other In grammar, vocabuyield to be reduced. The last, or third cutting, will not lary and phonetic. Moat of them weaken the Stand If It I properly bad dialect. Some even had septimed. Experiments at Columbus arate forms for the use of men and show that two cuttings of alfalfa women. IIow complex this wa and averaged 5.520 pounds of hay, hut bow great an aid It can be to the three cuttings yielded 2,700 addi- delver In may be realtional pounds of cured hay. This ized by remembering that Europe and of Asia combined have only about 25 cutting Is best made the wo September 3 to 10. language stock. In tracing the movements of ancient Americans, scientists can make Alfalfa Draws Heavily uncannily accurate guesses from evion Fertility of Land dence they dig from ruined villages. So much la said about alfalfa getting Its nitrogen from the air that It mineral requirement la freAs a matter of quently overlooked. fart, alfalfa Is one of the most exhaustive cropa as far as mineral fercrop tility la concerned. A fonr-toof alfalfa hay removea twice a much phosphorus as a wheat crop, or somew hat more than In contained to both the grain and stover of a 75 bushel corn crop. In potash removal, four tons of alfalfa hay la equivalent to over 500 bushels of potatoes or 30 tons of cabbage. Poor growth and vigor of alfalfa la frequently dua to phosphate or potash starvation. Few crops respond so profitably to adequate fertilization ai does alfalfa. A good time to fertilize alfalfa la right after the first cutting. The fertilizer can be broadcast, and then disced or harrowed In. The cultivation will not Injure the alfalfa, but on the contrary, may be beneficial In reducing or eliminating grass. Not less than 200 pounds per acre of a fertiliser high In phosphate and potash Is recommended. On soils that are particularly potash deficient, larger applications may be necessary. Missouri Farmer. VV cc V K PAST HISTORY ALL Proper Methods in Cutting Why Archeological Work Will Increase Value It Important. of the Crop. Ta soma It may oeera foollih fur - 'V : CLEW TO OcRut there are many open link casionally the student of native language ran close those links. Whether the pottery shards show It or not. If Inhabitants of Idaho lanmoved to Pennsylvania, tb guage will show It, If tb language ran be studied. If the language of tbo Mound Builder of Ohio were available for study, for Instance, It might reveal almllarillc to the language of the Mayans and the Altec to prove a relationship which many archeologists hat suspected but have never been side to prove. Tlila Interest In Indian language Is not new. The Spanish priest gathered Indian word In Mexico early as 157L Roger Williams studied Indian language to New England In the BLUa. John Eliot hi famous Indian Grammar Thomas Jefferson In Begun In 10 17.il made an effort to rescue vanishing Indian tongues and when he sent Lewi and Clark to the Pacific he told them to study Indian languages. But only In recent year havt scientists taken up the task In earnest ss a phase of archeology. McrcolizctlVax Keeps Skin Young one-tim- UiomCj cfweetffiome lOOjfct LANGUAGE he'Dar Jiomo.dwtttJiomt f 77MsWt :vj Salt Lake Citys ' si4;- ; at liJ rlNf pro-pare- New Target Cave Seer Marksmen may learn their score Instantly from a target recently Invented In Germany. When a bullet hits a nuiulaered ring It correspond-Innumber appears automatically st the side of the target The rings are of steel and a standard paper Numtarget I placed over them. bers run from 10, Indicating a bulls eye, down to 1, on the outer ring. J--e HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Room Radio cBnnevtio 1 ' A'VV ' 7fc ')tZJtfiamplon, 21. 1 Jfou&t u tdicfi Inspired "Jicmc, SotcctJfomen vs By ELMO SCOTT WATSON T WAS jud uiie hundred years i ago ho bad made the One cM.i(T near fame, Sweet Ofmt Home, Sweet Home" Iw phrase Vl'-vmortal came hack to bis homeland, f For It was on July 2.', 1832, that them Washington Irving, were able to secure John Howard Payne returned from hi freedom from bis British jailers. his selMmimsed exile In Europe. Soon afterwards Payne was Introduced to Sir There the aplendor of success bad John Kemble, the great English actor, who In in dazzled Tala fur there, truly turn introduced him to a Mr. Whitehead, chairhis triumphs, be bad also man of the board of managers of Drury Lune Ini' known extreme poverty and theater. As a result Payne made his first stage for debt So his homecoming was priMinnieiit appearance In London in Douglas on June all the sweeter because he came back to bis 14, 1813, and scored a triumph similar to the native land to receive the acclaim of bis fel one he bad scored in the same role in Amerwho honored the penniless com ica. He also acted In other English cities and poser with great festivals In New Xork and In is said to have established a record by performBoston. ing for 106 consecutive nights, taking the party Since that day a century ago the fume of of 26 characters. John Howard Iayne has spread to all corners Early in 1814 the new manager of the Drury of the world, for the song which he wrote, perLane theater sent Payne to Taris to write Enghaps more than any other ever written, has of French plays and this lish translations universal appeal. It has been translated Into marked the beginning of his career as a play every language and sung In every country unw right The first play be wrote was Accusader the sun. Simple of melody and homely of tion" a melodrama in three acts. Successfully words though It may be, some of the greatest produced, it had a long run, but the theater singers of all time have been proud to include was already In financial difficulties and the upIn it their repertoires, for It Is the one song was that Iayne not only failed to receive shot which Is sure to reach the heart of mankind, no a penny for his work but actually lost $2,000 matter under what color of skin that heart cfltcmument Payne's which be had Invested In the production. beats. OaA Jfil! Cemetery, 'WasfcngtonJXS. Undaunted by tills experience Payne arC IwtMllw Because Paynes fame rests so securely upon with the Covent garden to write and act ranged this one song, Americans are likely to forget In Boston the elder Payne was a teacher of In Adelglrthn at Bath. Soon afterwards he If indeed they know, at all that be had other for Edmund Kean, a popular claims to distinction, any one of which would elocution and the son inherited and learned all wrote Brutus" who was then beginning to deentitle him to a place In the list of American that the elder Payne could offer. In bis early English actor The play was a remarknotables. At the age of twenty he was durling teens Pajue constructed an amateur playhouse, cline in public favor. 53 nights and paying That New Fence of the New York stage, a young actor who had assisted by a friend, and they went in heavily able success, running for Its producers thousands of pounds, but Payne of replacing an old Thinking leaped into fame overnight But the fame of for private theatricals. Master Betty, actor of old England and then received only 200 pounds for his play. fence or building a new one with Payne, the actor, was no greater than the fame Once more he was sent to Paris by the Drury three strands of barbed wire? Betof Payne, the intimate friend of such literary In vogue for his interpretations of stage charnotables as Washington Irving, Sir Walter Scott, acters, became Paynes idol. It was his ambl Lane theater under the management of Charles ter consider woven wire topped by Lord Byron and Thomas Moore and of such tlon one day to win even greater acclaim ; and Kimball. It was then that he wrote Clarl, or barbed wire, so the fence will turn statesmen as Henry Clay, Daniel Webster and the parents viewed this growing love for the the Maid of Milan, which, as has already been bogs and sheep as well as cattle and stage with alarm. It must be stopped, and so, stated, gave to the world his Immortal song. horses. William L. Marcy. the fame which this song brought him, The use of woven wire makes It ne might have been remembered as one of at thirteen, Payne was packed off to New York Despite was soon In financial difficulties and the great playwrights of his time, for he was to work in a counting house where his uncle, Payne possible to supplement dairy farmdisastrous venture as producer and manager ing with hogs; to clean up fence the author of no less thun five operas, nine until his death, bad held a desk. Such an occupation held little Interest for landed him in debtors prison. He paid his way corners and stubble fields with farces, 21 dramas, six comedies and eight tragedies. But the chances are his name would have Payne. Perfunctorily remaining at work, he de- out with playwriting done while in prison and sheep; to harvest corn and small se- finally returned to America in 1832 almost pengrain wltb these animals. passed into oblivion had it not been for a song voted his spare moments to publishing in niless. Mirror. as a the known t cret fences have made It posThespian paper one of his operas. That song which he wrote for For once the saying about a prophet being sible for some farmers to do away As the name indicates, it dealt with the stage, was Home, Sweet Home. In 1823 Payne, who was dividing his residence and the bright and clever reviews of dramatics without honor in his own country was proved with special pasture for swine. The to be found In It caught the interest of New untrue. For New York turned out to honor him hogs graze the same field of alfalfa between London and Paris and traveling all Yorkers. William Coleman, editor of the Evening with a benefit celebration at the old Park thea- that Is to be cut for hay; they over the Continent, wrote a play which he later the Journal, and Paynes se- ter where he had scored his first triumph in run In the small grain until harvest converted Into the opera called Clarl, or the Post, investigated was out. the role of Norval. The performance, with Ed- time, with very little damage to the Maid of Milan." The music was written by cret A Nebraska farmer Why, tis a boy of fifteen! excitedly com win Forrest as Brutus and Fannie Kemble also grain yield. Sir nenry R. Bishop, composer and director of In the cast, brought $7,000 to the man thus reports barley yields of from 30 to music for the Theater Royal In London, but it mented those who had wondered at the Identity was Payne who gave Bishop the idea for the of the Thespian Mirrors editor. Literary circles honored. Other benefits were given In differ- 45 bushels from fields where hogs lionized him, and so much success for one so ent cities for Payne, who was truly back in have possession continuously from music. Sweet Home. But he did not return the time It Is nicely green until It The song was first sung by Anna Maria Tree young naturally began to go to Paynes head. toHome, was out of his life, and his Is ready to harvest. at the premiere of Clari" at Covent garden in Interested friends decided that he must receive nextthe theater. It to And whats Just as important, enterprise was in behalf of the CheroLondon on May 8, 1S23. The song was an in- more schooling, and a patron was found kee Indians, whom he desired to save from op- good fences make good neighbors. stantaneous success. More than 100,000 copies finance him at Union college, Schenectady. National Farm Journal Up the Hudson he went and began a new pression. were issued by Its publishers in London within The Cherokee Indian work, which brought less than a year after it was first sung there phase of life; one that lasted only two years. and It yielded them a profit of more than half He lived with the head of the institution, one much unjust censure on Payne, took him into a million dollars. And yet the author of the Doctor Nott, and enthusiastically began another political fields, and he was much in evidence Even though the bottom of the as Pastime, which was an Im- about Washington, where he contributed to the song received only a mere pittance from this paper, known has almost been reached, sum. The publishers did not place his name mediate success. But poor Doctor Nott con- "Democratic Review, with Whittier, Hawthorne, hog cycle economists believe that there rural Emerson and to Never unable his himself fessed his Bryant. a finances discipline affluent, quite even him send on the title page nor did they In a Payne often disappeared for at this time were not an exception to the rule, will not be very large increase complimentary copy of his song which was so pupil properly. the next three soon to become immortal I But this was not an days at a time and was otherwise unruly. He and his problem was solved by an appointment bog production during For was handsome; his talents had been recog- as United States consul at Tunis, In 1842, un- years. unusual experience for the composer. nized, and he was eager to begin his stage ca- der President Tyler. He was recalled in 1845, successes and of series a been had life Payne's Better fertilizers are secured but sent back In 1851, and died there less than reer. and affluence of combination failures, a strange when dolomitlc limestone Is used two in 1853. of his came death the years later, after This opportunity poverty alternately. The body of the man who had sung so sweet- for filler rather than some Inert when his father fell into financial diffPayne was born at 33 Pearl street In New mother, like says North Payne left college and returned to ly of his native land was buried at Tunis, be- substance farmerssand, York city in 1791, the sixth child of William iculties. who have tried Carolina In the theater. In 1809, neath a slab sent from America. But the a role New York, seeking was the mother His story Payne, a school teacher. at the age of eighteen, he appeared as Norval of Payne was not finished, for 30 years later the new plan. daughter of a Jewish family, named Isaacs, who In Master one famous coffin of was his to the United Douglas, Bettys States brought and lived in Easthampton, long Island. It was this Experiments at Cornell university entombed In the Oak Hill cemetery at Washand achieved astounding popularity. that fanners can produce peaceful Long Island community which was roles, indicated wished success father this But Paynes despite ington, through the efforts of William H. Corbrightly-coloreHome, Sweet nome to Payne during his boythe man and the the coran. young stage hood and there today stands the house which him to give up the demand by that markets onions wishes. He consented A monument was erected there, and two othIs said to have been in Paynes thoughts when acceeded to the elders adding copper sulphate to the fera was dismal financial but it school a to found er to monuments his this of ; fact memory stand one In the tilizer used on the onion fields. he wrote the song. As a matter so again Payne turned to the stage, shape of a gateway at Union house was not owned by Paynes father but failure, college, the other In Boston drama and In Shakespearean bronze bust in Brooklyn, N. Y. But the real was rented by him, while he was principal of acting Inoculation of alfalfa has always In 1813, accompanelsewhere. January, Finally monument in the hearts of his countrymen Is the Clinton academy in Easthampton, from the ied by his brother, Payne sailed for London to the house on the village green at Easthampton, been regarded as an aid to a good continuous was posin that a Mulfords, But it is even more than family a stage career there. But an unexpected Long Island, where the bronze knocker on the stand. session of it from 1731 to 1910 when it was seek that Hay from inoculated plants debut abroad. theaterical Enghis event delayed door tells thousands the of York who visitors of New come sold to Gustave II. Buek city. and America were then at war and Payne to this memorial every year that this is Home, .contains more protein per ton than While John Howard Fayne was still very land that from plants not Inoculated. into a thrown and as arrested was spy prison Sweet Home! young the family moved to Boston where his his before weeks two was friends, among ( It by Western Newspaper Union.) formal education began that tlie man ,A s dltte in Hog-tigh- Around the Farm tough-skinne- d READ WHAT 200 Til Bath la every eons, RATES FROM J W. N. $1-5- 0 htvilfc OfMii Mtrmm ERNEST 1 .,.i Revest Hotel C ROSSITER, Afgr. U, Salt Lak City, No. Plaa Beat Pigeons Platiaaai Mist A speed competition between airplane and 12 racing pigeons, ah Platinum Is caused to evaporate tha like water by a discovery announced first of Its anrt ever held In Great from the California Institute of Britain, resulted In victory for tha Technology. This precious vapor, machine by a quarter of an hour. The course waa 80 mile, near Nop. protmbly the world highest-pricemist, condenses Into unimaginably wlch. Tb plan waa operated by thin films upoa a wide variety of ma- a squadron leader of th Royal air terials It coats them virtually per- force and tbe pigeons bad a 15 minmanently. Smoother than dew It will ute start. cover fibers, converting them Into pliant, filmy threads that seem made Whippet Oaly Sprinter of pure platinum. For a short distance, op to a hundred yards, a whippet can run fastA man can be generous to a er, but for longer distance the bora superior. fault If It Is bis own. d ' 1 ai 50 BABIES TAUGHTTWO SCIENTISTS OF COURSE, you want your baby to be a rosy, healthy baby i ; ; taking his food contentedly ; i t putting on his ounces regularly; Yet youre hoping even more, perhaps, that hes building now for future health. Building hard bones, good teeth, strong muscles, sound nerves to make him fit and fine in the years to come. When mothers milk fails, can any other food build such a baby? ; ; ; Read of a recent scientific test. clinic makes feeding test two baby specialists made a Recently, test with 50 average infants. Into these babies bottles month after month went a food famous for 7 5 years as a baby builder. Millions of healthy citizens are living testimonials of its benefits. Yet never before had such a thorough, modern test of this food been made. This food was . ; : Eagle Brand Milk. Throughout the test, it was the only milk World-famou-s these babies received. The usual supplementary foods were used. And how those babies were studied! pictures of bones were taken.T ooth X-ra- 29-11- 32. y formation was watched. Blood counts were made. Weights and heights were charted. And at last came the report. By every known test, these babies showed themselves splendidly nourished. This simple diet Eagle Brand, with tbe usual supple- - FREE! BABY BOOKLET THE BORDEN COMPANY Dept. WN-5- , Borden Building 330 Madison Avenue, New York, N. Y. P!ese tend me new edition of Baby's Welfare. ?l CXJ (Please print dime and address pUinly) "JPjf zrCr |