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Show ,44'444, - ' , ' - ortws Matta:MS TBZ,BLT,. Tex - zwa reladic rit SIEEISL noBara. ' 7 ., - : .. ,SERET-t.-,,,-.- , 4 . . , ' . ----- --. '' h . THREE - :' ' . , ' " 1'4:I I's ti Trra ufluRTy. .. - : G NE , ,,., . Advertisers Who Know the Local Field co. S. ,a CITY i . ' '- t 1 , i " I s I i , : . UTAH TEN PAGES .' ,: ,, . DIAN . , ; I , . .' ' ! i . Thirozhkenur-,.,4!Nrew.A.70,an- , : 4 . - . SATURDAY JUNE 28 1913 FALT LAKE . ' - , , t , w '''''.1r; - , - . : 410.00010M..010iMMEIMEIMM,IMMPI4,MOMOOwm, - . ' , ' , SECTION ; ' - t Numbers Millions and For th e Gereat Problem of the Future Republic (Special Correspondence.) Cora5. ,,f whrorn 6nly ahr,ut 2.F,Od r red ,mws WI100 CITT.--Th- e T,,:s- - 111,tlani. ,t!a:m to has a moire sericiturprobleni in Maio-k- b Imalt'. f.rc,nt a n.d they hlok not lir,rt-atfthan the black man lir in the 'rtto: navo fPaturee :;ki. zz,t. This cotmtry And they Trilled States ) irr,IL:h .,r th,,rr s :,,,.ver than the, bas ever 16,000,000 perpie, and of 1; ',,, these less than 1.000,000 toe white& worn.Prd There are about 1.000,000 pure Indians Th! 7, nmet, at r ;ibr N LC. and 6,000.000 more who, are red menn, nsAngary. and. more ler less crossed with the white.. they 1N The pure Indituis are practically unoNG : AN educated. and this is largely so of the Frel,-r- . mired breeds. The irreater part of theta .i, !hat there In were for years in little more than,debt ;: ckAin, I portslaverY.and today some millions of them rr p. Parr...111an . are mere hewers of wood. and drawers tt., sAt- here was ,' " of water I. on the estates of the rich a great ',, 1111 i'','j Tara, ,r s!y ,IUncle he hatiendadoeo: Some work in the towns by the ri and ethers itvain villages, maintaining Wrete tipazr many of the customs of centuries ago. v told of th, Within the past few year& lir. Fredf'sr which , erick Starr bas been making studies or ,' the Mexican Indiana He has traveled trim here acroas the country down to .m.. ,,,,.m.,mbd NI, Guatemala City, visiting the various the Chi- I: , anl troduced r, . i and taking measurements of their ., tribes for The, News G -Prank r Sreurdaytakzi by slPrest Carpontor. Photogrtphs -which head& baste ILDO of other parts of their tt.e w:rg, t humming bird ar,- - P!!.; Tlra.,-ando figures. :He has photographed thouit , thou- - memu,h the sands of them and has made plaster At the keen. two Indiana from era Cruz., relit t terthis frwr illi rg a hords of - casts of MAW- A Fart of his travels with a baby, Man LakilIK the grvitter burdenthe t. Niesico, ,'r, iilferent: was through the mountains of southern enter are "wen some ,,1.1ng Azteea a der child. I r ,if every shape kinds, Meki-o- 's and csoor. f!cm sea green to Mexico. Where be found many Indiab Vi ab vital part taken futurtstheiL'Snap-In- a 7 and e:raar color to a fiery villages. each tillage being a little reby Mr. car nter at a railway sLation. The pteture on the TfA. -- A red- new found tribes He I and I he many child of publia The Tacascans right, Mr. rpm ter labela, tradition which of the ancientd also cactus." ta our ;;A Their Noah 11.1pmm rt was tati,d Tespi. ami shen the floods '' peoples who inhabited Mezieo during P. came he a made boat and filled it the dere of Montezuma. It is through grat w:th tint111,A and b1rd5 As the waters his researches. and those of other t).. F FJr111 a f,Irth but vulture, ethnoloirists that the autliorities here already given Mexico some of tta ablest a ITrae, irtiteh lt .,. on the weot toast. suiton the dead .ay. are suubing the great political prob- men- - Benito Juares, for rears the rounded by Ja1190. DuraLgo and Stria- ta h tnen eovered the high!eine which confront them. low. liere live the HuiLholea, whom the lands president of the republic, waa a tont was sent flhally a hurnt-'-- g Mexicans tail the barbarians Zapoteca and President Por- !I I They fv,rth. Fifty-on- e Aztecs Different of an k with a leaf in LANGUAGES- rErry-ON- E Many firio Dias bad have little to do with the present trou- :ts mowli 'item blood In his ble. and do r,ot want anythirg but to They now know that there are scores vein& These trtbes are now found on am tiod brie! most of the Tarascans From Whom Juarez the In be let alone They have their homes In of different Indian tribes in Mexico and the southern elopes of tlie central nrS1.11140iF. and that every You May itree them In of the mt,untatrut and are. firmer has one burled in that each has its tiecttlarities. In Mt plateau& the lestnesses Indians of Northern Mexico !go A'artike that ;t was a hundred years I eactr:lield Girls of one of the chief scientists of the re- Pueblo. Oaxaca. Guerrero.suid More:t 4111 keep the birds vth that th, mia, were abie to ,onthe publln, Don Manuel Orozco y Barra., los. It Is saki that thelLionceinors Spantards thievel the crops. from ,hsr aw!ty Idols. and Their Lived in ( i confound that there were 51 different In- date back to. The time wen quer them. They are th.rs r th,, are Cathblice, dian languages, and. in addition, about Xochicalco and Zaachle were built. verted to Christianity. but they are mak i,V.grtmaget to the ftyOrtr,s lang He divided theee languages' The Zapotenaa were never subdued by 0 dialects. praotioally barlarlane and ar. said to MdTlY cf them come to be tbristlans only when favors arA- to into II different families. and it wasi the Aztecs. and they are now growinie to worship. According to later ehown that nearly all of these In- in Independence right along tley are fond of gold jewelry 41 like' orations of Mita make you think of Similar homes are to be found in tho bA obtained Y,lary of th.nt are him thetr o;,d prayed to the dians had used Ideographs and em- are a great many of them In Oaxaca, a especial ty ornanaents made of Pnerk Pompeii. Same of the floors are In S.lerra Madre mountaIns. the entrances and snare In nets Fouth,rn ,1,1S1. and taoked upon the sun de.r the) cam twentr-dolla- r ployed them - communicating thought. ortate whose population la fully iris! mosaica . and many of the structures being protocted agiiinst tin weather str, t, bed le t pulAl, as their father. Today they object to gold elecel Indian Some are to be found may be One of the best known of the Indian seen thus miring i are wonderfaiiy carved reminding one and wild beasts by stor,e or mad wails. , S.nle of th fluviro-0,0lo,k twich likt toir g business aftcr sunset and are frequently on Isthmus of the Tehuantepec, where a smell fortune in gold doubli eaXieb.1 of the crumbling temples and fort at Some of tho caves are vry large. and :tt-- chMee,--- and tl,:,, reM!mis me that I !errifooi races is the Aztec. It was the ruling at the time el an eclipse, race at the time Cortez came and the women are noted for their pic- although their feet may be bats. are roached by ladders. or by stairDelhi in India. Se,31 maw JaPanese, and wh'.11, they &v.. will sive one theIlaarethere are millions of It on the plateau tureenueneee and for their Independent wa;s cut out inside the house Others faoes among, th. Mexican Indians It :.ip. miTLL STRANGE LVDIANS THE RUINS OF NORTHERN of the houses are of stone, and ware be that a part of the an,l.ni tan,u-today. The Aztec civilization has been ways. Th Tares .ans In the evil eye,, so pictured by Prescott- that many are of adobe. with roofs of thatch 'alum drifted ,,N.r from, Asia a. toes !ant hey carry h,1:ete THE GIRLS OF TEHtANTEPEC. ME IX The mote ta2l1Loi1a ruina of hi tribe harms to ward off its of race the It about is think that only WnnWn and Hering strait, am. earn,. (low n here effects bOtti Taratramares. The do eauthweet not lie like the to within miles to be photo--. They Z of the Indeed the girls of Tehuantepec sire Some of the most Indians in Mexico. The truth is that through our vountry Th. kluieholes graphed. ivad a null Oaxaca city. They are about ,I4 Mexian tribes live interesting tether have III the ncrthern mem, aro rusted for their long nowing the most of their antong the beauties of the North of w hieb Is sot a wit Aztecs ker htlt.,, 'Ake ehair all and out Tho hair. nien pun just strangers say evil things about the tig from the Toltee .. whom they con- American continent- - They are as miles south of the qie.x.ican IlLPital of the country. Chihuahua haa, now th nee. a nd ,vhildr.n than good thins. lees than pirt the hairs from their ta, es. They say the c hinese can go there by train The same for instan:e. the Cassia Grarides, hick' that quered when khey came here from the straight as s. royal palm tree and their one !t tr, then' cere1th., .ritploy si.kedness. of aro at hotels of some of the people of Palestine. a truo teltglous whiskers are a There sign go fairly on day. the. way from north- - They got their religion from forma are beautifully rounded. They raltroad lie the net 171.1V monies Af he thnt It ructom and they behove that tho devli has Caoaa them and also their calendar and ar- -. hove ohve skins black hair and eYeli Oaxam. and from there o n ChM orreach Q 'EE R CUFTOM.R. OF LOVE AND 1 have mAn. elx Juarez to Terrazas. ,Thwie long Fitch., whl,-1a heard These people are sald to wearing chitectIms. The Toltec' built the Pyra- and teeth as White aa lime freshly the ruins by ssirriage in live to an re SPOnd Someik-ha- t to the homes of our el .,mme. a!st, from lion. MARRIAGE. and on re, oni, runners hint, own be ta.ln the he Or hours. by greatest go cave dwellers, save that they were midi of Mexico. and either they. or a slaked. Their ordinary costume is a Th lInt,b,,',.--- aro about fiv ard on.- I Jacket and shirt, the former having Pabio in an hour and a 10.lf and stoP built on the )eve and were of vast instanees aro known of shore men half har stories about the mar branch of this reCe, known as the strange sr..1 feet WOMPT-th.tr. with-are tie case 170 Met; miles stopplos Listoms of these Indians. They ans. constructed the wonderful eltIPS Of, short sleeves and cot very low at the at the hotel there. In thektter extent. They were. in short. the first have run a slow rood loeking They wear short are said to ts4ieve in love trot, &IA keep it up !ver Yucatan and those of Guatemala as neck, so that It expores their beautiful will be right at the ransin end can apartment houses on record. 'rho chief The," go on The charms, and !.1tIrts arid Whirs of .of ton lot!!! whb-women an run as faet moving building is 840 feet long from north to for tours. weIL :hink the dried litt.e firiger of a, dead I bave already written of the shoulder and arm. The jacket reach- easily soce3d a day or Io men b.Y weave Upon their own looms Th. both men. and the as and as well i an WO to ruins of Quirigua In the Motagua es, almnst to the waist and a strip of about through them. wide west luck. from It takes feet i eurely south, and The ruins are thooe e the ancient east. covering an area of almost live and women have moonlight races and 10,4;;e, are left bar. and the skirt la the place of thebring rabbit foot of the valley.' not far from the Caribbean sea bare eitin treolly shows between ft and In at the waist hby a gIrdie. The ex'eauKht es of sometiroos r r t Ire oth,-it of Mitts. athletie sports. They Fouth. Near Lake Patacuaro the chief They city in Guatemala. which our archaeologists the sklrt, P'.,:r.15.4 to have conststel temile, like the obt of Japan. As more place of that under acres. It are now excavating They are the recourtship Is at the spring. and The aldrt makes one think of that of tent. and the Indians say 9rh'frIn am of three separate plies, united to lower rac.s, by torchlight. thltri any oth.r part of the drese. the !,,,tly in found are who lover watches for his sweetheart in Indians. Pima the Mayans.. the Burmans It consists of a strip of them he the chambgs mains of temples buile-by 'The The varied apartments !buildings women wear ar-Th. Ean.cklacee. o0 the ancient they to go there to bring water. 1,Then he who are supposed to have gone there red ci.th several yards-longsizo, and the walls in places were SO th, sam .lo City, are much like the have bead!, tn thedr ears. This is stored the treasures Some Of the ruins are on 50 feet high. Indicating from Mexico centuries ago- seep her he est2hes hold of her rebosa that the Tcrahuinaros arai the Tepehusnnes. around the hips and Poteca kirgs wrapped the Ilonoliths, Tim, hole The houses of The Hall but contain ea,b tribe shawl and refuses to let go until he their seven strtking The Aztec caned themselves Mex- - tucked in tthtIy fingor let These or six stories An2.thr nearby at the watert In addition to for Instance. has el S lire feet thick building has nnf rooro and tho entran'se Is low and ,oaye yes. If she does co. he smashes fashion. In Chinese. loans sad it is from them that we get this every woman of and nada in toe, the time ruins grow, at were has a buipil for build;ngs The erormous sire. miieh like of of columns that the Eskimo !glen, ill., jar of 'water which she has on her the name Mexico. Their descendants' Sunda7.6 and feaat The huipil is and SpanishConguest, and very little is They say that cuttttig off the nails are the are :numerous today. but &re largelYi a lace decoration days. and that If a Th. houaee are elroular and they are head. eo that it far.s over her. and her Nwill produce blindnese, known of the people who :built then of enortrbous else. lintels over the enognous entrances feet made Of stone srlth thatched roofs,. of solid blocks eighteen long. or sten, x deer her some to the them peons whal work for the whites. It date backbone Is a worn suppose as girl friends thereupon give her a new which sort of headdress ttr' t,tirka although from them that the rank and file of It closes the face or It may extend four feet high arid five feet thick. and ba,k to the Moguls. heir,. will row :urved and she will The itola ItTA kept in ellVeS in the hills. i jar with which she can carry the water 14 feet These are the make rising beautiful are pettple the soldiers are nbeitlitad. blankets home. The next day the man takes a pillars - po'phyry around the neck or hang down from have the backavile. The tribes it ts sal& SOME CAVE DWIZLERS IN MEX- noted They load of wood to the door of his sweetfor their chastity. those who fall and they tin fine embroidery the hack like the war from the foot- aridIt ex tendthg. irg MIZTECAS AND ZAPOTIVIAS. the headAr atComanche ' ex below They are as big rnenr tray. feet ruatoms. switche4 Marrialres queer TOO. heart's home, and !f this is accepted from On chief. drew being grace publkly plumes i are barrel.. a as wtlisky by the parents. The babies the mitt h She then come, Among the other Indians who have occasions the stria wear &leo full around Tarahnwe the to have not ehihauhau In Ht7ICHOLEF TEPI(7. Monobut THE to be reckoned with. m the Mexico to' skirt& which are often heavily innof tr nu the salon ,reep to his Negt this is too they crawl about and he eves her a boulive! whom still of ali 1:ke mares &Me h N'i fours a COM are and Indians, feet feet 1V, until whit-monkey long Lye the Zapoteoes &rid the M17- .- broidered with lace, is !iellow liths. they flowers,. Which color is quet AMArtir the least known Indiana of aisle to stand. tobelki. Moth of thette races are noted; The women do much of the week wide. Its walls are 10 feet in height, in caves. and who are sometimes' braut luck. ,surp,-,4.dwellers.' sorne Mealco an Cave American Not terrItor7 from as the far the known for their intelligence . and they have'. They are thrrty and accumulattvc and it has a ficor of cement. The dee Tillieriles lir" the 17P.ANIC G. CARPENTER. , ,..;A!- St,x,-,r.- - h,,s-- , , 3 c. p ' N14 - ik ' tf , 1114 f 1 , - i7 A frt ! 4 I fad nts , ern-r- . rt 771 ralni A People Ra 's LanguagesThe 1913Amon SprungThe Zapotecas, ehuantepecStrange Giddy Who VesThe Tarascans - - The t- I nine-tent- s , ,tf or - , eh-Bi- t- ..ano,-hei- r I - 1?- - , , - ; ul i i h 11 V6 , e C Lo-s- i ., NEWS AND of cangtruction of the project shall be charged against the land withtn She AS...coTIINnGtiTOnurn.s Jutnbee irrigable limits. The phrase is ns ex-- 1 pressiy defined. and being tre,atral in has policy which it its terms is not necessarily limited to . from the building. Mit triky tnclude the proserv-- ; pursued ation and malistetience of what has t For example. a statute; been built recwitlerstilia:Itneciron8t:rrotrvo:che authorizing a levy of a tax to conit. struct a sever was held to empower, all government irri- - the city to levy taxes for its mainitation projects an tenance" After reviewing the history of the annual charge, per tassage of the reelamation act the acre. for Maintenance and operation. supreme court said: -OYer and above the per acre charge With a view of making the arid tor agricultural our-- ) tote eonetracion. the United States su- Lands variable of public an expenditure preme Court baring sustained the ya- poses by VMS it proposed that the promoney. hdit7 of the maintenance and opera- ceeds arlainc from the sale of all pub tion ssesement. Tido charge, it is lic Lands in the 14 atates should conknderatood, will be asset.sed from the stitute a trivet fund to be set aside for time water is. turned into the ,canals use in the conetruction of trrigation until the projects are turned over to worksthe cost of each project to be the settlers. so the law contemnate& that land irrigated. assessed against There has been general' complaint and as fast as the money was paid by the trust. it was owners bark into among settlers the the against paying ' maintenance and operation charge. but again to be used for the conteroction sot until D. P. Baker, a settler on the of other works. Thus the fond. withkunnyside project in eastern Wash out diminution. except few small. and Mirton took the matter into court. WILS negligible sums. not properly chargethe payment of this charge absolutely able to any particular project would refuse& Baker retteted to pay. and the be onotinuanY invested and reinvested reclamation service shut off his water.' in the reclanustion of arid land. He went into the,lederal court with a, 'The contention that the maintenLill against the reclamation service, ance and operation charge could not and that court sustained the right of be assessed against the irrigated land the reclamation serviee to asserts and la based upon the fact that-- , sectino collect the maintenance charge. 8 authorizes the secretary to make the amounting In the 'Sunny Side project. estimated cherges with a view to reto ile neat& per acre per annum. Baker roYing the cost of construction of the then appoaled to the circuit court of project' But an analysis of the act appeals at San Francisco. where, by shrews that the charges Were not lima divided court, he won out. on17 to ited to the building of the dam or the have the government appeal to the digging of the canals. but included the .United states supreme court. where purchase of land needed for reservoirs the rechunation service earns out the and everything chargeable to 'the cost final victim', and thus was the right to of conetruction of the project' Which over 4,7 anti collect this charge litnally project wee later to be turned ownoetermined by unanimous opinion. The as a going concern to the land States United grounds upon which the court sus- ers. The cost of the tained the validity of this charge are represented not only the expenee of set forth in the following extracts building. but of maintenance up to the frtM the &pinion,. reed by Justice La- time It was surrendered to the water, mer: ' And ao the government colusers. "The statute provides tbas the cost lected no Interest the result would be 4, . Net11-04er- at ' ' :j , le-2- I l- one-ha- if , 46. ' lot Nrgs adds to the diptance from which given to different , !asses of animals I cost of maintenance was them melt IMIOS ; and to allow every bog time t "1 t is argued that though theee ex- 0.ggs must come. and makes the rate larirs with the length of time not returned. there would be a condrnK his fill. and (c) care Is exercised 1906 show tbat Congress. In :shipment of this valuable food prod- feedings and the of the ani- to oletribute properly through each stant and heavy diminution c,f the pressions uct more and more resential. mals For each :4 bouts the ration of ear deck sufficient shelled corn. or lta reclernation fund. That fund was not and 1417. thought that the cost of mainthe reclThe bureau of chemistry regards the horses and cattle houl4 he not less 'equivalent fcr the tenance was chargtab.e under Intended to be diminished m ear corn or other grain. effect no of of the methods of ematici-fl withthan one and a (mailers pounds flt hay for each hng t. hivestigation yet but. benefit of any one proJec Inr animal: for egg breakage as particularly tn each hundredv,,e;ght out Increase by interest and undimin- FhouN be given to such legislation auUNIMAPINil PENS, the many millions .heeri not leen than one and ished by local expenses. was actin to terpretation. since Congress is notfunc- important because -!dozens of eggs now broken in shipment pounds of hay to ett,h hundredweight Al be, used for CO notructing other works. thorized tei exerelee the judicial Pens Into wh animals are exnaturally tend tn keep the price of this of animal; and for hogs. not iess than !unloaded must The cost of surveying those projects tion and has On power to construewere adequate favaluable food higher than if there were onA pound of shelled corn. or its equiv.- - cIw fnr feeding ant watering and which were not developed and the ad- i listing statutes. But theee acts his no breakage. or breakage were Inaaisni in ear rorn rr other grain. to each !eultatie spar ,ahleh the animals mintetrative expenses not chargeable pastel before Raker applied forcases reduced. The are 1909. ; and in there terially forof i bureau, Pe through !hundredweight sinimni. For periods can down comfortably resting,. to any particular project mient not water rights he provided for be repaid. but these sums were P., .arbn would support a holdtrig that the food research laboratory., if TIPW greater or 1M,P, than 4 hours, the rafn weather." sman as to be negligibie as against itht language. as to future transactions, !engaged in shipping eggs handled in tion should he greater or lens. in the m" pronort ion legislative in character ard incO- i!different ways on long journeys tn d,fthe fundamental idea of the bill. that LIVE STieK AND MEAT. provisions Into the origi- ferent points In the United States, and the proceeds of public land as a trust rporated UNI4OADINr; on is their to condition Tlai howover. act refer rioting We tn- the them. carefully and Th, intact fund should be kept again supply of meat-- . -at their destination. Shippers, The only practinahle method for In the Irnited States Invested and reinvested for the con- ii,,, Fhnwing the related and practical receipt men. , COMMilkSinn men and are railroad the has been given 'railroads transrort animals. other te,.re,teg struction Of new irrizAtion works. But construction stitch prmounced. heartily with the inveatt- than hogs. swhotit unlaa,lIng durtng the country le If It etiould be taxed aitn cost of statute from the beginning. and in the of the their water robare gators of a government, f through as many each mere reriort hort rho which ay. rresmnher light stature .r rights maintenance. it folons production 01 committee composed of for test! water ani feeding. ire in meat In :h.- r,nra there haA. granted and many hundreds of joint conference from nuttier of mathematics that the reRutthe National !representatives Of ' dollars for mairtenance or almliar stOck cars and with of over 8 'pals rPr rent In tbab otanuttion fund wou:s1 te grently de- ibe,n 1'43d to the government as a part of ter. Egg and Poultry association. the emigrant nnalts There, axe eases In nurnhpr ,atte In 1 the collntrY., pleted if not entirely consumed end "th-, cost df construction of the pr. iTraffic of association hllManagers an be the the 'rousewhir)) u',a::)r. domain of egiortional the proceeds Pie public ' and the United States depart- with the law makes unloading,m,inplymg This practiearinterpretation by meat have increased. unneoes117'M "a n thus diverted to the payment of local Iris situation of ment The the A agriculture. san for inatance te, ,etmatee of the depart-conen?ss and the aircretary of Pq11!pr.,1 expenses. ! nee cattle In w k!srter accords with the provhdons nf the growing very acute. because the epr eoro, eying ntmais rI 'If there could be any doubt as tors :act are their nh' roads that damage claiming in n: 19n7. numbered its eoe'atmIn stork. taken the turh &sap-pearases blon(id entirety. the meaning of the statute. it as such to make the carrybe taken to observe the Isw 71 The decree of the circuit court ef 'losses are eeInning of the in the light of congressional ccmTv Irrttur was t unprofitable rOMMelretill In all Ca'. antmals are nnt gn- pre,nt only 24,, strnctlon which may properly be ex- appeals is reversed, that. of the distrit ing of eggs an The conand loaded. all shippers to is affirmed." proposition. suttlyient spaee permit amined as an aid In its interpretation. icourt Vlan tho meet on:winced signees have large sums of money tied animals to Ile down ix, the ears at the The secretary of the Interior annually SAVING THE DOGS, in thP up In claims and litigation with the same time must be providold SZatst Is alaughtered made reports to Congress In 'which of watr-r,-restIf the ashen!. te& A deHews may re an department !MT.:JIM). To reduce the enormous breakage of !roads. uni,r these charges of maintenance and operas it hopes to do. In tie- P4, without unloading. provhied (a) ereas f ,,,r 13 per cent Is shown in ation trete shown No sAverite action !eggs in transit. which yearly ,nuses a ture succeeds. Im'wr the ears are loalet so as to allow a't arlmals killed under was taken as to these assessments by ictaa of millions of dollars to producers. vising a successful method of rhipping n the first thmis Importantly to the arimats to have sir:IN-leth!p insyeetion the secretarit: On thel contrary Con- and raises the prtce of eggs for con- - trews. It aril) contribute In the idtle which of .10 doa'h at the Marne tlint. ib) this year ae compared with, he the United States department the poultry industry. gress In several instances showed that a half hem rnr food worth laet y.er This tirre areqatilikri-esnftterent of Trains produces period gray through its bureau !n the same way. I'sinners. It conetrued the a"n-frmt the the watering troughs to be pre ars flgures; is conducting extortive ex- ',billion &tilers annually. This distinctly,oppears in statutes proSTOCK IN TRANSIT. viding' si. method by which irrigable i pertments to determine the safest Man- i ' At Fir three ands in Indten reservations might be nor Of packing eggs for long and short After n extended Tots!. of Cattle rslres Hoss Invertigation of Sheep within I shipment by rail. The waste Item the opened to entry and 3.440 : ........... Ig.(01.661 te.144.,e0,, ....... 3., brouitot. In breakage of eggs tn New York city the feeding. watering and reetlilg of 15112 the limits of an 5 8.48:AA 13.91014 1413 .1.Mte5,93 the alone in lfae was oreraot.804.7gt Pus. nettle. sheep. SWIDe and other anirrale theme cum It was tram,nourre of Interstate of a while In the 7 proton taking np such land should- pay or over Illa IndusMS.74! !S.C.'S animal of 124a bureau toskrzi the 1901) 15829 in rieeresse , of IZVi.gtel portation. . the amount dee the Indiana In addi- total coneumption an : tion to the chartea for construction dogmas of eggs. tii other srord. it,lout tryr announres ita eqneinsions so ef stee,111 of a htrh cattle (rIstn Tho ,ear 1912 ,wris of the &partyear and maintenance of the irrigation sys- I Per eent of all eggs received in Nevi thdication of the views :ow for,1911..or ...1 as en $7 s of ciabs-Acalne: ce food f all 4., ,r ...tmit minimum am to ti prik the were cracked. and of there a large ment of arriculture tem made payable into the reclarmttiop teresse n f l.'ll 31 per oent . while the, taw Th-- g as is evidenced t.,:. the gre,,th. were undt for food use. The requirements of the fund by the provhdons of the reclamasz s.,trance in rarte steers was still treat., 11e all la to (tedse4 average prt:?'es of lit e,st t of 'announcement inte.reat of suPPIY : large title. and tion act!'" tr,ar-..e. o: the rLts: ropresentatite hes to come from a ntoek .hipper n of'the west. It ahmulft Other as to Indian lands is the country. Thus, the average prkt I ' ,(Continueri on VIM tWaL) 'The amount of feed which distance- - Increasing conatunrion cited to the same effect. The opinion that if the tflpecial CorresporidenieL.) Wr GOSSIP FROM WASHINGTON i , i l the ng s hesc-r- i , e.-- ; sho-)I- i i I i ; li'l i ha at ap,t-- TTI,c , x i , 'Zle- 1,763.4-FC- 1.036-&- ..1, ile-- rt :r.-- 1 11-o- New-Yor- 'hic-tgo- '" fr ! , I |