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Show THE WASATCH WAVE. HEBER CITY. UTAH. QUEEN OF ROUMANIA NURSING THE WOUNDED I MAKE THESE FOR CHRISTMAS There are thousands of fanners at this time who are planning to set apple trees next spring, eucouruged liy the bountiful crops or fruit of Inst summer. And this is a work which ought not to be undertaken hastily, but to Mvnid oostly errors there should be some knowledge of varieties, their season and quality. First of all. earnestly resolve that you will not plant any of the early tuehess anil Yellow In a good fruit year you may get nil you need of these sorts Just for picking them up of your neighbors. Why should you grow more of the unsalable kinds? This is said under the supposition that you are planting an orchard for home use chiefly, says Iowa Homestead. Of course. If you are planting n commercial orchard, or have facilities for shipping to u Idg city market, that alters the case, and you may make good profit from the early varieties. But as mutters stand in our rural communities it would tie better if two-varieties, like 1 Transparent. opinion of any writer as gosel, but visit some orrhurdist who is near to Basket your place and has similar soil conditions and ask him about his experiBaper rope is put to many uses, and ence. 11c can give hints of very greut any number of tlirlstmas novelties are vulue. made of It. It Is bought in bundles at And do not plant any crabs. Forty tlie paper dealer's and woven over years ago it was the fashion to plant wire, and it may be bud lu several colvarious kinds of ernlis and before ors and white. were plentiful they did have some In the picture a work basket made of But we huve passed by the brown rope Is shown with Its lid revalue. crab age. There are still some house- moved. After tlie basket has been keepers who want n few crabs to jell, pickle, etc. If your wife Is one of that class and you want to Indulge her do not plant more than one tree. Tin question is often asked: How tunny trees should be planted for a finally orchard? That is one of those general questions which requires u variety of answers. Some families use many more apples than others. It may tie said ten good trees, when they come to full fruitage, will supply an ordinary family in ull good fruit years. Some would say that five trees were, enough and others would Increase the Work and Tray 8 shirred ribbon, but for a man this frivolous touch is omitted. Everyone needs several pairs of shoetrees, so they are always sure to please those who receive them. They may be made In sets of three or four pairs. up-pi- Something for the Baby The hath for the youngest member of the family is an Institution that all of them enjoy, and nothing can be better in the way of a present for baby than a bath basket. A pretty one is pictured above. It is big enough to hold Lis outfit of clean clothes, and Is fitted with all the things he needs for Ills hath nnd toilette. Iiuk paper rope Is woven over wire to niuke this basket, but s ready-madwillow or bamboo will answer the purpose. Pink satin ribbon Is threaded through the sides and ties In a how under the handle at one side. Bags of ptnk satin ribbon are sewed about the basket on tlie Inside to hold baby's toilette articles. One of them holds a soft sponge, another a box of talcum jsiwder, a third takes care ol a piece of fine bland soap, and opposite this his tiny comb and soft brush ami-whit- e e V r who is l.eing lueky. Unit .iisunrt.on would In- - thrust on this If a Miiunilt'il soldier could he considered wldrh lias Ifeen turned into a iiospiial. aiUtl on l.y Queen Marie of Roumauia in the royal pul ice at Riteharesi, '- woven it is varnished with shellac. Tills Is a gift every woman will love. A serving tray is made with a pnper bottom covered with glass and sides and handles of brown paper rope woven over wire supports. A spray of yellow Jonquils Is pasted on the heavy cardboard bottom before the glass Is placed over it. This is a good tray for almost any purpose. - PRISONERS TAKEN IN THE BATTLE OF FLEURY rvjx kfi Easily Made Lunch Set lunch or brenkfust set of doilies the easily made gifts that will They are please every housewife. made of heavy printed cotton with floral patterns on white grounds or they may he cut from dainty patterns lu flowered cretonne. Three or four sizes In circular pieces will serve to dress out the table prettily and they Include one large piece about 18 Inches in dlumeter for the center of the tnble. There are six smaller pieces, about A Is among W V' ' Av' s A Si kvoW wore sent to llu roar ot the French hues to tin battle of Floury still rap'd those (iorunm imum.-itransportation to the farm lands of France, where they were put to work in the holds. Vhil wait winter. Plant Ben Davis, N. W. Greening, Salome, Minkler or Black Annette and you will have fruit which will keep until you have time to sell it. But take another hint do not take the INSECT PESTS EASY TO KILL IN WINTER Destroy Trash and Utter Where ever It Has Accumulated Cut Out Dead Limbs. the This is Ituth Law, foremost woman viator of America, who established n American her nonstop record by Chicago to Hornell, N. T. planning a flight across the confluent in three jumps. flight from She is City of Memories. The most Interesting spot in Cracow little hesides a mass of memories of mat past the old church with Its mbs and monuments to dead kings nd dead heroes. Here lies the great Caslmir 'vllom the Poles idol-, because he was a fighting mon-rcand led a fighting race to victory, ore lies Kosciusko, whose monument broods over WeRt Point on the Hudson, and whose memory has been in bronze and stone In a dozen ther places in the United States, w is the monument to King John, K"r,,pe and Christianity m the Moslem when he took his ro,es and hpt back the thnt ha(J drlven the Aus ;'n,th,ir cal'Ital. It must be pleasure t0 the Pole of 0 " alk unong those memories of uie past. h pre-wve- d 1Z' V"00 toJrh"'y Headed for It. their JoSivecar.,WirWay S khiZ aod Dew eI SiKn dear she Rald to pot out of the car flashlight on the board. on the rgbt road? she Z bed" his , iskZ 'Z Y the poorhouse. Were on the Aghro., ',e anfvpred. we didn't know it Rare Case. llat you have neTer joined ynr!! 'I the reform movements itoreahnutso'- Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Coster Emmet of engagement of their daughter, Miss Jennnle Emmet, to William Barton French, son of the lute Seth Burton French and Mrs. Mary Walker Fearn French, who served as a Red Cross nurse in the Serbian war. Mr. French is a grandson of Walker Fearn, now dead, who was American minister to Greece and Serbia. He recently became of age and inherited the greater part of his fathers money. The first tldng he did with his money was to purchase the French estate at White Sulphur Springs, Va., for $100,00(f. garden and orchard. Burn out the fence rows, destroy the trash and litter wherever It has accumulated by burning It or plowing It under. Cut out SHACKLETON AND HIS CAPTAIN the dead trees and limbs in the orchard and make them Into firewood. This cleaning up about the orchard and garden will destroy a dozen or more of our most destructive pests. For example, the plum curculio Is now beetle In the wintering as a trash and litter along the fence rows or about the trees; the codling moth will bn found In the worm stage within a silken cocoon tucked away under the shelly bark of dead trees and dead limbs; and the fruit tree bark beetles or shot hole borers will also be found wintering mostly as adult beetles In dead or dying trees. Under the old stalks and rubbish In the garden and about the borders will tie found the adult asparagus beetle, bean-lea- f beetle, harlequin cabbage bug, flea beetles, the striped cucumber beetle and the chrysalis of the cabbage worm. If you want to kill these pests, pile and burn dead tomato and pea vines and other remains of vegetation in the garden and along the border. Deep fall or early winter plowing will also destroy many insects. This is especially true of the cutworms, potato beetles, white grubs and wire worms which are now hibernating in the soil. Late fall or early winter plowing will turn these insects up near the surface and expose them to an atSir Ernest JMiackleton fright) and Cupt. F. A. Worsley, photographed tack of birds, poultry and other aniFrancisco, where they were preparing to go on a fourth trip to rescue ten mals. At this season of the year tlie members of the Shackleton antarctic expedition who were marooned on an insects are in a dormant or semidor-tuan- t Island In Ross sea. Captain Worsley was in command of the expeditions condition, and' when brought up steamer Endurance, which was wrecked in the Ice. full-grow- n m.. - Z1 to modest. a' Dunsense! Z'- 1 spend '"n iVol,m; ' h8Ve - flushing Wratd to , so much time that Im enoueh coloring tluvi, fur ail my neighbors." Where He Goes Lame. Bells to Frighten Wolves. Omar Bright is a man who usually One of the most serious problems in the cattle business on the open range knows what he is talking about. Heiny Yes ; hut there Is one drawarises from the depredations of wild back. animals. Wolves destroy many hunOmar Whats that? dred thousand dollars worth of stock Heiny He never knows when to on young annually and their attacks quit talking about it. calves are particularly frequent. One progressive cattleman finds that the A wolf is frightened by the jingle of a Omar There goes an cowbell and he is putting hells on all Heiny Doesnt he fight any more? his young calves soon after birth. This Omar Oh, no ; he was beaten at his season he used more than 2,000 bells own game. with good results. Has-Bee- Tan Te, M M 'lsng an Hint Oidgirl read c!a ul hut she fine print dont. (By T. J. TALBERT. Missouri Agricultural Experiment Station.) Take advantage of the bugs In their winter quarters, the remnants of old plants, the trash and Utter about the number to twenty. Get good, thrifty trees and set them 25 feet apart. The ground may be planted with corn or potatoes or some other hoed crop for the first five years. If you are planting simply for home use. not Intending to market, one tree of the Wealthy Is enough. If the Jonathan and Delicious succeed In your neighborhood by all means Include them in your list. Black Annette and Salome are good keepers and are hardy in tree In the north middle sections of apple growing; and they are also very good apples in quality. Then, with the N, W. Greening and the old reliable Ben, you will be sure to have fruit, if anybody has fruit. equipment. Wide, soft satin ribbon, or gauze ribbon like the pink In the basket In color, Is tied In a generous bow to each side of the handle and the bows are Joined by a length of It They make a beautiful finish to the best of presents for baby. Catchalls for Bedroom Every bedroom needs some sort of receptacle to hold anything that Is to be disposed of temporarily. Here are two bags conveniently open, inviting to an orderly disposition of smnl articles. Either of them will serve the purpose of a waste basket and one of them the bag at the bottom of thd picture Is designed especially for a mans room. They are both very easy APPLES DISPLAYED AT ILLINOIS COUNTY FAIR. thirds of our early apple trees were cut out for firewood. The Wealthy Is a standard apple for early fall, but unless you have facilities for cold storage do not plant It largely south of the latitude of southern Wisconsin, central Iowa and central Nebraska. North of that It has some keeping quality and the farther north it can be grown the better It keeps. Even In central Iowa If picked in early maturity Just as the seeds turn brown it will keep until mid- are held by bands of ribbon. Even a teething ring finds a place In this In dlumeter and six little ones three and one-haInches In width. The smaller sizes are for the plates, and cups and saucers. Some sets contain four dollies a little larger than the plate size for other dishes. All are finished with an edging crocheted of colored mercerized cc'ton. The edging may be made separately and sewed on afterward or It may be crocheted through the material. In any case a very narrow hem. Is to be turned down all around each dolly before the edging Is put on. seven-Inche- s to make. At the top, a bag, which may be of silk or cretonne, Is made by gathering a square of the goods along the hem. A brass ring Is sewed to the bag (formed by the gathering) at each corner. This bag Is supported by a standard made of four rods of wood fastened by screws to a small circular block of wood. The screws moke the rods movable, so that the bag may lf neur the surface of the ground they era unuble to go deeper In the soil or to construct new cases or cocoons and they are killed by being subjected to excessive weather conditions and to the alternate freezing and thawing. Fall plowing and cultivation will Slippers and Shoe also enable you to have vegetables a week or ten duys earlier next spring, Cozy bedroom slippers will make because you will be able to plant their many recipients happy and Ynore earlier on ground. comfortable this Christmas, as they have every Chrlstmns for years without number. They are among the SWINE IN ORCHARDS gifts thnt are always welcome, and every member of the family, old or CAUSE MUCH INJURY young, counts upon a pair of them as among the bounties of Santa Claus. Never Safe to Permit Hogs or There are some new developments among knitted and crocheted slippers. Cattle Among Fruit Trees UnA pair of beautiful ones shown in the picture Is knitted of gray yam and less Grass Is Plentiful. get on to soles padded with quilted In rose color. On the toe there Is it satin The question Is often asked, a set is knitted rose, and two safe to let hogs run In an orchard? roses like pretty It are placed at each side of It will be safe If you will watch two the where an extension of the or three Important points. One Is to back heel, of the slipper turns down. At not do be sure and see that the hogs d a bow of the satin Instep get to rubbing the trees hard, as In ribbon is slipped through a knitted the process of scratching themselves. Sometimes when hogs have lice they will rub against the trees and thus cause considerable damage or Injury to the tree. This damage inay finally end In collar blight of the apple, and by this means the hogs also aid In spreading the collar blight or rot which is far the most serious disease of the apple tree. Another point to watch is that hogs do not root out the roots of the young trees. If there are white grubs In the ground close to the roots the hogs may root there to obtain them and by tearing out the roots they woulif of course Trees rose-colore- do considerable damage. The last point is the possible dam age to the lower branches or fruit, hut if such injury is observed at the beginning it Is easy to prevenl it from going further by removing th' hogs from the orchard. In general, it may lie said that it If never safe to let hogs or cattle run lu any kind of orchard young or old, unless there is plenty of pasture or food therein. When the food supply run low, look out. be folded up and made to occupy a small space when not In use. The bag at the bottom of the picture Is also made of a square. It la of printed Japanese cotton, lined with plain silkalene. When the two materials have been sewed together the four points of the square are turned over the smaller of two oval embroidery hoops, and the second hoop Is placed over It. A Japanese tassel, on a silk cord, Is plnced at each side. The cords, caught between the hoops, form the hangers by which the bag Is suspended from a hook or from any con-- ; venlent support. Japanese prints come in designs of Strong, bold colorings, and are artistic and attractive. Still Popular as Ever. Science, theory and the schools have But united to abolish Santa Claus. children are loyal, and today, saint Is as popular ns ever, and it will take a wrench of more horse power than has yet been discovered to tear his existence as a fnrt from the heart of childhood. , g g For the Home MarkeL strap. This is an alluringly pretty Have you any copy on hand, dear? in he made other tliut may slipper asked the humorist's better color roinliinations to suit It to older But two-third- s, or younger wearers. A second pair is knitted of light brown yarn uud lias eiderdown lined soles of lealher. Quite a deep extension is knitted at tlie buck, which may Arrange Crop Rotation. "Dry Farming. In farming lands that are Inclined tc be turned up about the ankles. These Dry farming is the science of agriculture as applied to farm operations wash, the crop rotation should be sc are appropriate slippers for men as In regions of limited or uncertain rain- arranged as to keep the land in some well as women, und are decorated fall. growing crop practically the year with small silk pompons. s makes A pair of wooden round. a most acceptable gift for either men Next Year's Garden. or women. In the picture the spring Broken Gate Is Inviting. Now Is a good time to make up the is covered with yellow A broken gate invites the stock to of the shoe-tre- e list of vegetables and the quantity of satin ribbon shirred over it. The ribenter the field. each wanted for next years garden. bon is tied In a small how at the heel of the tree and the toe is painted with Farm Cleanliness Procram. Tomato and Bean Seed. If tlie trees are to be gold paint. Dont let up on yoor Practice seed selection for tomatoes a woman three tiny chiffon to given ness urogram corn. do and been? i you for or ribbon ruses may be set on the shoe-tree- he replied. why do you want to know? Chrlstmar Well, she explained, will soon be here, and I will neCJ some chestnuts to stuff the turkey-withI believe so, Trimming. . Tm won ripring how wed better trim our Christmas tree this year, remarked Mr. Orowcher. Why dont you consult your wife?" Shed be sure to Im afraid t suggest Russian sable or something equally expensive. Pretty Nice. Mowd vou like to have a O l.tIMV . |