OCR Text |
Show or wrat. 1 P . - THREE .. . , JIL. , , ,, W 1.14 V ALI '...11. , . . - SECTION L; ILA aL., ..cA. . -- XAI NI --1- TRVTII AND LIBERTY. , ,,,: .. ' 28 1916 SATURDAY OCTOBER ING SALT LA 1C. reragtent. ' 11 IL'A uTAtt E CITY sod conftimen kJ, 'n V V I I yo . .. EIGHT s . Isudxu in adtertiontn In the Netts still ker.') you the ritets aide of the ledger. PAGES, 1! L 4 , . 4 44: 1' Gold Mines of Alaska or ,ft . U. Rusk Expected When United States Railway Is Finished. el; Is? u; .d or. ied tro ",ot It my I:S Pg. nds 1'41 sot he. 'ors ors 'or ,r. hr. IT In se !I o. ry ,.. I Frank O. Careen- - branch of the lanoko. about led miles .Trurbt. act:thetat of Fort McGrath. The gold ter.) I. found in the beds of the creeks. he completion of A ,..sAIRBAKKg.--Tgreat part of the output is that of SIMI'. 11.111Vai will bio til the Yukon Gold company . which in Code "I era in the working the creeks with dredges beginnIsS of a mite of Alaska. The driven by gasoline or electricity. There minion camps several hundred men access to men, are easy there. Common bibortre areemployed a wid give getting 11.w terri- - 111 itt day and board. ut raii" Agana square Another rich regions through district is at placer pees sill I bna known Gobi; Otos to the Yukon. It produced -- metals .2., tno precious a milhon in &Mare ,ef telt and has lit cross the Kenai Ps...87 different mines which are operated indat It ell' with gold and during lb. In the Mot glummer. a wittch Is Pet)Pcred bot mins. sorkiwir ditnriot. spring,' which to,uLtos ilea mbar the tick rim first gold found Tanana river between Fairbanks and -Ave and quartz. there in 104 Fort 'Gibbon. tit tulles Alaska Sr. operin the ated. and not far away arebeing engineer. but. Tolo- the wns I guw,an canilt the '1,dint, - vane and other new gold fields. irgisIT e ti,e discovery forgotataPo'' a6C0 Wtorklibie PiAC 1N ill of theme t. ,- ow goideregion., th e output Part I . ot, the, northern .. se, depends on fuel to operate the ma- Ldr, not tar from where .,... pe, and to general(' the 'dean' now runc and they are chinery e Ittite..,1 The total output of- needed te. th..w the masa of frozen there. "drag I the neigh- grAvel arid tee In which the gold lies. orth The gold may be 60, or even 110 feet .6,',014n'at..f ts., small a Port of ths: below the surface. it has been held vid and only or there in its frozen vault fur thousands been prospected off, na. heat is the only key that Itched. lolvultil., ---aniti the door and let the gold in done tuts been IN le.1 pork ubOut kairbanks they to the Ile tvuu!ry running north been paying 115 and upward a from c.trd for toe wood from the sorties .otts valley. About 4e miles Willow creek mines. birch and cottonwood tress nearby. the i.re ,hr2gs taken Out This wood is sat and of small heating .", they have, recently thousand dollars' value. two cords of it being equal to ,etal h6r4ted with a little only one tern of soft coal. When the ,.... ,f ,,,,stz gold creek is about 17o railroad la ftnishsd the niiners sill get imp natl. Wil'os and perhaps coal for 16 or ilt a ton. and this sill of ttettard. ,.., ,,,,rtb Fairbanks-- Three represent a heating value for which o tr.Ves from now. and they are now paying front 110 to 132 ,mee are insrklog there coal from It will ghe then a clean saving of 125 acre si;1 be more when the in the coot of their fuel. This saving ..it.Ourk3 fi.rido can be brought in by, 'alone means big dividendsI:: road.. niinee that are now wavering.. between ,ro....ev.rmbic12, ,..,:. ., .,, ., took Illtude'Tmollt and ...yea tt, moult eine at an ores -- ,, altoat :::,00 feet, Pliver-loaHE coal fur the Fairbanka mines ,r.erepased. and a little further north of I will come front the Nenana coal , the Bornif,e1,1 chetrick consisting 3,d ii,teeeo shich have already yieldthrough which the railroad will' Ard then there n.id, i ,,,,,.derable metal. These are the lamella in the pmts. mines. Yetna and tbe gkeema t where basin of the Yukon. They have many .,4 af the Talkeetna river. out of the veins which run up to 20 feet in thick- ey ,..,,,, !hawing placer gold . EA to th north and wst. le the nese. and there eItle one that chows by - at,tual meawire feet of coed There. ,stiabra mining district. which con- lo an area of more than 40.000 acres .,,, lo: "r!V gold. but antimony. le be that known to underlaid by thla has risen in price. Pim Arton, and rout tit found here and there and I: is Ilita, coal. i in r.,iroi,e. Vet. 384.etie acres. Many or tti out- !rih ',oases)) hundred dollars a tom - cropping. hve not yet been tested. and ,,,...ber vamable mineral which Is ho- no MVO hag estimated now much coal tal scheellte. g maid mar Fairbanks there may he. The Nenana coal is not la a kighrmgraile trireten used in- lag. Ma-ae comes which gond that from enveire of ammunition. The conbut it is a lignite with good ,atraie to now eeiting for over 23.(0o ;tan.snueka; qualliles. and it wiii be of ,:en great value to th gold miners. Al to the Fairbanks district itse.' tbro:rh a rold county,' Traveling hael man) gold mines. both plaoer lik this make. o rtlafikeer'sgenti'dus . Everv- elluarta. The most of the gold so one old. con- he . route from the placers. the nidering their prieee at the ieetanad. ptoduct antounting to more than I might almost say. eats and dritiko Oso,,010. Kul& You see an much gold in the mint.' and the banks, that you feel like killE plan is to extend the railroad the beggar boy with his nose flattened i by a branch line to the Kuskok- - againet the glass, window of the candy snore. There to pierty to he had were ea region. This will gtve cbo,p tuti v It not for the barricr berween and - Ttlartre area of terri- - the of th taking. At the clean-up- e ii0iisel will make the Innoko. Mita- I Ilse, handled gold nue eto as cameo. and other plecer mine-much handles shelled corn. and at the me aceessible. There are 26 or 30 onit frees I have held up 210.000 MOW" picts now operating In the Kuskok- worth of pure gold in one brick. While ea Sarin. most of which are tribu at worth of Dawn I B&W $200.000 ta, to Fort McGrath. which will be on a truck. such de terminus of this branch of the bricks wheeled aabout "as find fan at railroad you country tzbeed. Hort The bricks were hesv ro' Ile Innoko dist-lhas 2S or 20 They were gold On0 115 worth from 'meow working The gold output 230.00ft apiece. At the sante laro timt Iditarod to saw a ton of litnitigant consisting of amounts annually 11.0116.00 and upward. The placers oilickeilver mixed with er.old whIrli wi! Ist Si or near the Iditarod river, a be shipped out to be reduced to gold , Ina My as and , tol, Is re lIt Ins Ft, Inr i ar 4, I I - at d . 1 , 4 I- , -- g I s re. I -- .'s , , 1I ,.7,!71 : . e- - 1 '1'. ' 7- - t :' " 7' the amount of pure golI In 1,r 1010 to,rit. and there axe tables ro,itor -- - : 4Es ' ' : '''..."';': , I- . ,, , II i . , ' ' , ,. ' - tt.. U. . r t :, I Jett lot 1!1. i, ' iliPt gt!I tot,. I n.t ! iseler to. h, rtel.er think of the kal 40 hate. been woritilig In gold ski tong thet the ,1 t;.,t stuff seems to me just 'Use ,oril .r oats in the hands of a farmer t,s .nItt t,t , , ''' io'h replted ' , ;t ,' fil;P1 - , . , 3 t., Volt 1,: rolI ett wl., like the raw material tined t at I Pbtaurt r ery. It was different snot, ftt, I...liad rie,tr tan to assay at Daws.,n O. .!t the seen gold duet end nagget .c. quality I W,.1 I Pa.,11 before and I elnikalit !! tn. r,,,i i boaght sent to t!.. lik1 the lo ik of the gold and (rag). nuggets and had gold pine r I chatt. made of thcin. I WOM nagget as a ti,TAIr..)., NEtre!tol rwitt I e krftun end had nugget cuff buttot.e. htte the It.10,:0 ..f Al....A a time. I grew tired of thetn .the rae ter );riteit ft then i away." jaiI 'eked Mr. fieraud ahnut his earlv' Th.. rip .ft. Dawson. in He detkrited ,...t speriencee ir.t the those days whom fortunes were made r go.r Ve loiiit tn a week. detailing nine of the ik taittiox (melt heti tie travagances of the miner.. Said he. et.itt ItEtAtiY thAt thry ) rat.tr "Th. gold MUM ,Ioar Itintiite Kt almost threw it about. The miners In role i.f th nief 111,e, 14,.."4, iooll rnI,K would go with their gold from ,.r the .t.11,! to saloon treating the crowd. and Wh., lit, tiov hititet01;14 We throwing the poke to the bartender to weigh out the amount of part' treat.: t11,,e$ fitr,e o,r titrkve and It'os' ' niiitte to the titatkeie They tier. so careless that a men f ir as tii iiiit otio, on then, tietio-tatt.. might take out double the quantity and not be detected. A miner might hex. n thousand dollars' worth or ',id Tner):ipon :111;g10,1 tioo. orntie in hti ttie rnae11.11. and spend it all to an that i the t uth nt..1s. !h. h.. nnd then one would come by drbellfiC Into a data, hall. and taking his swat itui.iirh melted pitch. sind In the ga.'i.i.. tell one of the giri . to 'hen gh e:tnit The &Ind otuek stand under him white he poured gold their fee: an4 Ka them a pair of dust int. her hair A dance hall girt hard shoes ere Wil erten I ISO in a finale came to the innlike and save the high might thus clean-uAeee Kettirgr for poultry. shampoo. I remember a miner named prices Hamlett. who fell in love with It fortune by girl e.,,,,hid,1 k from outside. end got her to marry him by bo'init bringing' In lite i.tahti in gnid d let I l',ft he iiAmp end sent to beattic her hat eh 400 , hIckene and 64 ft hro c..hit.steppel on the ...tales and ki o e, he beam ut I them f, a Weather a :140 ounces. tablet'. tnouitati Itt miles 1.,Cohliard to' leyest.' eughed an ounce. c st him over $ri. an4 from there tient the chicken '. by St I Ono.. svg,n ovr th pass Tile turkeys I drove. as fi trouble seept t hey I M1LA ext ra agancea prevailed would i,erii.st in stopping at nigpt. You ,C A anon titeNert here at l'atrhat.its hen the camp tutky fromI going to trid it, Mn- - roost a he,' the .in sets. h g I tint the 'tirkev would jump up nri the. ,,1 Its e'36 :rile taillow hea4t IT roi nosht posh them off. but ks, munttv lik this is, far more charitable would go cn a few steps and then thy of a than country. get up again To Inal long story Paid Mr. I. T. Erwin. the United Stater, short. I finiii!v rto them over Mit marshal at Faihanka, to me the other retire. and 4 Lahr' 1.eristric I tools tt.'on by boat into Dam, is)-whre The people here are the -erntill on earth. It la no trira to mire u puce,' How i11 As to the WO to send a Eck man or woman baler notaida. toliv a few morth ago a Pot hnd to IPMril how man was taken outside with a tralnd to 'Very sell them. There woe a great comnurse. and enugh money Ives sent petition among the provtatim men ag along to pay his hospital expenaes It, to having fresh ,a1s. and eery on. Seattle. I have lived in Alaska Ig wanted to corner the and market yearn. and in all that time I have not 'crowd 011I the other.. When I enterseen one person begging. I ed the ftrst store and told them had ., IV. have. you know. many untrueturkeys and Sad chickens'. the cemtful men.- - the marehal continued. stighty saw fttro he fell. for that hi dealers "Mining ire to a large extent gambling. could not m,,ropoliso such an enorms !and where one man succeeds there are ,up prt position I chatirod mr as that hundreds who fall. I remember an bimy mouth shut shout the stance of a man who Mtn. to Pair- - plan. kept and l'essn to peddle them out bank, t o make his fortune. leavmg hi'. supply I cot $20 apiece for In numbers small wife and family outside He found no from SS to SIO for turkeys. und gold and finally fell Pick and died In the I store to went from a tabin, on one of the ereko. Whon the chickens. and restaurant to restaurant. Unthe miners looke4 over his papers store had but sold all twenty turkeys they found a letter that had just come and sixty chickens. These I got rid of from his wife. who lived in a little man at 1t per turkey and, The letter to one town in Massachusett Altogether, I tot wee full of news about the baby that It per rhi,ken. had been horn since the father had $3.A0O nut "t my rhikena and $2.0ii left and inside it oar, one of the baby a front the turkeys. on that my gross the trip scere 15.0no." stocking.. The miners stood around receipts for FRANK G. CARPENTER. I the dead body In the cabin aa the let - t..i I I ' 1 4110 ftoni et,k et: r c reo- it 7 tilJet At- k I - 1. - 0 I P "'..go t4Z 4 'LI:2 -,,,nott ' II li 4 4, )Lo5';;;TY ,' , It !.: WA ' ,a4r ,,164);2, 7.. ri;-,n- g 1 $, -- i - fr 1,01;,:k 4 , ;,!,ztit ,,V,P420. , 1111111111111 A.11,gx.-- , RESULTS OF ALASKAN MET here at Fairtpcnics a mall who has melted more than Viiii.iionAvo worth of gold d.irt and nuggets. and to the who ifl nOW making amount of $3,060.00a p year. This ts :qr. G. Benito'. the itswiyer of the First N4t lOnit I bank. lie is a ehemist end metallurgist of note. and was the governmint aw:ayr at Imason when they were getting out gold by the millions. All of the isinks hpre buy gold. and each hits its melting pots vilere the dust and nuggets aro turi.cl into bricks for shipment mitside. You see these gold bricks On the tuit i;. couttem rriin are as small as a eake of sweet chocolate and others are large that if one fill on your toes it would crush them to Jelly.. The assaying and melting I, Onlaily done outside the bank. Mr. lierauil chop is a rude zinc shed not much better than the portable how...5 used for autornoidlew It contains a litt!e furnace and the arinua implements "CLEAN-UPS.- " IvAt it PA& and t. itieluding molds, The ',wale's. PC4A 1 b 10.11 ) hone-as- h lel are I Fri THE -- (II I 1,1''-,','4- , I S. w.,,.. t '....S4A ? kg" if4 - i 'tA . I - , .....1 p ed Dy melting In A ,t iong-setti- ' 11 ; 1 it is assa5ed---tha- t Mr Her-anI. it mtent tApted is melted and its gold The assay is ramie after the itold cast no bricks. Front each brick a z I tr...1.74 er eorner is cut off with a chisel. tht amount taken being f bOtt t I he size of it marrowlat pea. This is hammered out on an anvil and run through rollers until it is as thin as the news- paper on which this letter IP printed, A little 'trip of this it "Ili lesAr Is then taken off and weight d on the fine scales Abney opokvn of. it Is so tre.tt . il dust lo trought In to the hnits by the noners In bort of buckslan as big arouml as your arm Such hags itnd about a foot long are called pokeu. T;to bauaer take', th,, poke slat our the !nets.' out on CRICK. and then either pays milt th outright for the gold according to weight or gives the niiner a credit slip which entit!ts him to ita actual vii!ue after it has heen turned Into bullion. The gold dup., is of different with ',Over and values Some is is not worth more than 113 &II wine-tithgold dust may be worth 12t an ounce. When the dust COnie. the , ,..e. if Ft011 1 Ti .(1, ) delicate that they wtil weigh a period !hark on a sheet of fin thane paper or a single siiity hair of a baby, - f.,441' or 1 Not foztr; amayees office in Fair. d COrtgrINOWILLEI Wickerhank at left. of the '.411 Co) I pen and "poke." Be banks. Avoirer Bellied in center an bullion. ThP amalgam is put into hi furnace, a gallon or eo at a time. An This heat is turned On. intenaci. melts the amalgam and turns the quicksilver to a vapor. which pasiies off into a coil where it condenses and The runs out am quicksilver again pure gold alone reinitiate in the furnace. - Ii- I II Abovo---Goi- t IV ' ommoomommomp.P..000 i :. ' he Atorking flown their 4,thotI tta tifid to, ASKED the assayer whether he ,tht pttlto a,1 rort the metal he handict lie 16!ail t,,,gct 1 hot .,- t. te tt.,k .., - e . dollarm and retAkt lI hen v. 41 11 tie .UU . ---,. 0- 4. - , , ;..,'. 1 , - ..' ,: : -. , ' : , , C l',,, . ; I. :' - . it ,4,-,,,, t, I, Ia ' , ; f I ' ;' ,' , ' - ' ''- '" ,,, , ' AP,;,IZA1111;17,1)4- . 1 I w,,ia I !'magg , turn2ce that the I tekett out atol :t little inpurities button of pure go;d le left Tbitt button le etghed end I:e weht i,. hubtrit,!ed front the et eigt,t of the .tr.p ,te Wei, I The reaud befre il, , It'tl ii I i , .h i , . , . NEWS AND , tepees! Correspondence.) GOSSIP FROM ;.I.. ! I nthan those from any other 'this work the country agent returned IMO. A few years ago the county Effective work is being done by the .Lota'aitto r'kette lOgn ltt of the George 'Washington, i spent $4.000 in ineffective methods of In control. universities. Hughes support- the lam twoGeorgetown e:s claim schools the the bele of greateet number. Mem- How Rolling Helps. these piatitutione belonging to around County. lig- - has tested the National Collette It. th germination edits campaigning in VII' effect of rolling on and broadcasted. oats. both drilled of IY land. Students at their on e have toured the rolled part lit' the germination nearby automobiles. making stump of the broadcasted field in the demonA 11,11Anj distributing literature. stration is counted as 100. the average u of Utah.men are connected germination of the unrolled strips was with-7;Roland organization. only 67.3 per cent- - In the drilled fields Wiwi.. C. Mich Ibelong to the the unrolled check strips showed a at A. G. Georgetown. Job ,gerrnination of only 12.6 per cent to thl Rualles hoee "Mt: ;Zit ortal,a "...: Goorn-17- the H. is president of thg club at that on the rolled part. truhington university and at Farm women in Ashland county. ,Zws!laat WIWI Logan Morris' I). Witt. who were induced hist winter A- c. Mackay. J. C. Fehr to batch early chickens for the broiler Crabbe are members. market found a sale at 60 cents each Try Oat He ---t Methods. 2 Here are a few Ibbtld euetvisful kinks Itried out and by county agents in the north and aid of their ainitrianitatioins: west, In ..Cettain tanners of Clad' County' itteit.:found that petato standardise- 1.1,;11 erere Para. Those farmers Plant- weds In plats of from ono to five att 7"11 They used only seed true to send ;plenty . free from 711 b carefully 'treated the seed The plants were . -4 t and ell diseased hills reu"),'et .r.7 it their Ple4 of thee. farmers mit Potatoes , , -- in'4- tor 1106 , I to for all their chickens weighing pounds the weight. in Houghton county, The agent Mich., reports a way twoviding out. take flues for barn ventilation: 'The out of flue are built like silos, matched strips of inch lumber. and homey the hoops are made offrom old light Iron with tires or similar bands a tightening, bolt at the ends. The flues extend shove the highest part of the roof." The provision of a limestone path . will save to in Albany county. N. on the farmers in one yearwill211.260their get 1.100 tons of lime- - They Virile at. MOO per ton in bulk. .oction of $1.26 por ton for time at Y-- WASHINGTON .. 4 A iz IN a VI 1 i $ V $ ts - ! 1 :: i - I : I r ' I a '6 $ ti 4' ,, : i $ k t, a Non-Essenti- --- idn.t, rI - ,, , , , ,., " . - ,--- - .!: f it t :1 :.., i A '! .z. :''''. - .: it i : 11 r- 1 , 1) i 1, 3 , ', ., i,,,' ,t . ,i ' i t , 41 ,' 1 l 01, C - t, I : O 1 , f. ,,,, - - I high-price- d tr r 1.. 1 0 on : , 4 , ; IT .11'. ri IM indi-eCo- ' $' ; ! -- i i .,. , . ' t1 . l ,., 1 ( '. i R . ' ' 1, mit-eer- I i a sii , , - : I k , ., , trial training and the other half to Pin in total alue of tIon and in and the insact may gain entrance !arc. area is tilt Med ha, Irrigation academic studies. Every effort is di- valua of tabia waters.proallt waa Ca lifm-mLthe crevices.. if wood must be The mineral production include solo. rected toward training the Indian boys first and indiara was ae(und In vaine through tamer copper, toad and tune. Tboutplaced in contact with the earth. only and girls for fficiont and useful lives of medicinal waters.' treated with some puch pub- put .4 14,114 in I VI3 sr,. ritalu4 at $13 timbr SG 013473 under the conditions which they must Aga that of siher at cretiaote should lio, laiance aip coal-ta- r 111 meet after leaving school. Other subp.pulation or !litho In 110 waP lulled, Cellar floors of concrete phould a curve in jects to which this course directs spe- Fighting "White Ants." in walla guard ;Join th cial ttention are health, rnothertwod of coMbating termites. or lagainot cracluv if buildings a re con-- I Niethod and child welfare, civics, community .white cellars the wooden Protective Device. without 'pirated and ants," guurding against lie raloed &rpm. meetings and extension work. their destructive activities in wood- - f1rvp NM,uldterrniteo are discovered! Exosions and firem in thrshIng For a great many years the offi- work. books, stred paper'. and other the groaol, If neu- - machines. due 10 Male of the Indian otfice have felt material. trees. grain dit. hay. neen stock and ear- In pi.,,,,twork It will be necepoiary remove the iipmaged Maven. 0.'eurring in eontdderst,le nurvilterA ths need of a standard and uniform dim and field crop' are explanied in lolly course of study for the Indian schools Fartner!' bulletin 755, recently pub-o- f and r..blace t hty, 1.v atone or brick during the preset,t threshing II III rethe country. They saw that such tithed by the department of agrieul- sork or treated wood The sround a NPS t., report Ork. ace.rding or a course would have to he definite yet tote. or the entranr peewits lth apProxinrc ,f chernisdrY the S der ic ulture. f sufficiently flexible to make It adaptaThe insects which are not ant and Ithe insect at.,t at:ly earth tlibe, 1,g, ,rft, it y ble to local conditions in an area as 'only s nartv-olarld trrs h,,, vh,o1 te drenehej resen,t,le them. soperfir'ally extended as the United States. After primarily 1., the tiastrn iii III., ataelt woodwork and cause ker .P.ene t end other torvS their long course of search. ttie ex- greatest dsrisce by weni, r.:,,g or de. do.of thre,,h,g ',,rnt. .1vt!of VI. 1" On., rt have in- perts of the Indian office. who have labroying portion of 1,t;IVItoKs and material ear :. 11!;r,1 :roe ttireol nitatV been in the closest touch with this other woodri structures in contact i,v keel that tht,,ther e,1,,p1,,,,s were rs:I r it ion work. say they came to the conclu- with the ground. On reccr,!ly cleared cToM warm I. 1,ers ,1 o,reg,n1. sion that the economic needs of all land or aby other soil cocooning de- Wooden C0t7airo.tA. The t!.ser!. Outy 1.. Lute,. ,,h,,,,t!on. of the Indians especially caying wood however. the) niay prove driven from ror:1 material i.v ,q.readThe ex;,:,,s,idis the ,,,,...rr,rn citizenship, this course strongly peopleand demand that the schools provide for destructive I. growing plants. P m phasizelt The Ing it in the eqn U ail conneeom be- ktid 1;re,, in t,,,:cdet inV.t.rii in ii vocational training. The whole system. recently devised. has Instruction along eininently practical insects also eat into numerous article" tween the e,raire place rind &imp tsi!ly ,arat,,1 f !LP c,..tntrY. been tried out and found not wanting. lines. To this end the Industrial otOred on damp. Wo(len ht,Ivest or un- earth is cut the inee,tm sill rot re-- ; Nd In 'h.. 1, whhh have The course is divided into three di- schools were established. in which the der conditions otherwise attractive to turn. rt in still ,,,:.n., Lu stnring visionsThe find is the beginning culture value of edt.ration Is not neg- them. Articles attacked in this way .t. the depart-Wsubordinated rather lected. but to books. the docaments. obJecus Include the second the t r stage, a r fro.' that 4,,Anro find'ing stage. or wood twin. Facts About Idaho. and the third the finishing stage. The practical needs of the child's environ-- , made of paceboard f hre.t.h lic nisehtne an! cloth. clothing. leather products and in Idaho training. during the first and second ment. of :n who remniber tin .t,,,,11 tu.. ,ntry those To ---food substances. periods. is domestic, and Industrial acas a strot. the:r itt!ention rAlled 1,, tn.. danger cause damage about the school gencrsvrtee Termites may tivities center around the conditions Minerd r h. V fac. kfl Pike h nar thtelten ne!t ;: tiern and Springs in U. S. the home for long pet vnis ultimo" the; block.earn.nitped essential to the improvement and h h 1,1 ,ot !.. n t A.Ken by t h., be of it ma of the owner. They live In ins; knowledge the proper maintenance of the home and 111 ,, !O h tch 4o 110o :4.10,4 The number .1 active mineral colonies in dead tlr,,tte,ti o n or in other de- - Ithle state. farm. The course outlined in the stumps of constellation to the mar the Flitted States in 1916. wood and etthr the woowork divisor' is unique in that in springs in to raying larse is r,nn,1 al the figure' compfled by flag. nearly of building' under ground where tiro- 'the addition to the regular academic" nub- according United States g, ,,, tgicor do- rant& and Ohio eombired nr d jects boys are required to take prac- pertinent of the Interior. was entailer Ithrough in contact a tth the toll on Thresher Dust Explosions. in concrete. cracks Ural courses in farming. gardening, and the They, was tem. though !often of the in-- 1 Marytano toctuneo ,Ur It o' portion. 'h., large destroy dairying . farm carpentry. farm blacks- the valueproduction co!:igetioco, it,e IS dtvld.d than In Vito 13 coun,:rs. farm engineering, farm ma- Statistics was gre,ter mith's-lg. pillars and other Wit0,1,r1 mem-of maltert ol,,thincs con from 11211 oorrunr- - terior without which is hnif i3 Lire., ,,!101. of reported ' or Hilt And the farm rt and rt,t111.,-,her, shoo and giving sonry. painting k. show that the total pro- ,. harness repairing, and girls are requir- cis.' springs ds and r .r ,I .r- ti presence. When teriul,es Arel the state of Rhode tin was 64.3i 460 gallon.. val.. their be preset., it Is tisuall) largest greater than ttm rol,t,,ced ed to take courses In home cooking, duction eon LiClUr Ili i roe 1,.,13,0k,i1,1,. The decrease in found to tied at $3.1493.32. and of 1,11aesachio,tie area the eitrust toerge notieing n on IV, ti,i,i through mewing laundering. nursing. poultry production ass 2.441.142 111111Ine or 4 of the Idaho covers an area of ki of th, .;,!onv at membeis c !,,- fl)ing I. raising and kitchen gardening. rat, hc The increea in value or . mOe.dr ceoinnalt. time In the spring The &Vlore nines, divided pln4 lp.,14,4 xi,!,:on, or tr., ,- waters w's 1M6" 11144 In 'warming of emergence should be rotett. Hp, 11,o'ffl the Rocky mountitin 1,,,1 place Ow rLnr of value of table waters $1115.1110; this indicates the approximate hoe the ('oIunt. Eliminated. the pneI. oti,y s ,t 141: 1140,A. ,it Arling'on. thug the total increase. in value of tion of the infeeted timhers. The part. in the Routh4.ast corner of he Va ,t th. to operate mtThis course helps the Indian youths sales VOA 1144.166, or I percent. The presence of small branching tubes of !nate lying in the Crest Moon In F. A441 ree,nt e, cry ,ortl. increase in business la slightly less earth On stone or metal serving as pas- - ittion above yea level the g,,Co- lAnotett to find those activities; for which .1111 an ,...1,t a tFIS Ith than the decrease In Imports of for. saaeways to wood. may be another in from 'L. feet. kt 1,ewieton. 12.,7k are best adapted and to which they they ohm n ,Irt! tlhcrn should apply thenuseivee peak definitelI the waters. ofand this coupled with dicotion that termites are at work in feet al the eutrmilt of tin r o of Ito,. fft, e At It Is drained mainly to price per gallon front a building. during the vacational period, the char- ll Increase to 10 cent". indicates Increased sales rr,.; r.f..icr,gperring. acter and amount of academie work pu!1., rIlio and iv., ',cawEither pre entive or combative through Snake le these domestic measures niay be taken against the! tirp and ham an annual ramf.441 of hive ,L,eee being determined by its relative value of moderately w,th lend importance as a means of solving 'water, that have become valuable Inroad., of termites. In all new build-I,reshing 111:W11111PR. hoot I I Inched,. the range to ths in waters or fir. ect;ried substitutes for the problems of the fanner. mechanio previously int. ing operation'. care should he taken )ear at different places being fro'. ex110lore and 1101,M1 t ,t th,, and houeewite. it also prepares them 'ported., The induetriek no untreated timber is in contact to SS Inchce, that I 'Vint. stock for industrial efficiency. ei.erv cane were promptly New York led in number of corn- - with the ground or is set In wet con- Mate are chiefly agrIculturok - --- are eliminated. One-ha- lf Merelal springs to quantity of MilleTLI crets. condition is not a raining. and mining. Hay, whoal. oats, latter The (Continued on entge two) of each day is given to Indua. Sold and Was second tO Wiscon.leollon. since the concrete often cracks I and- potatoes are tatt principal crope, I boehel when the their railroad station. and they will pile for the ordinary lwiie Fifteen also a haul of S miles. equal to Oct. !run of potatoes wars 4b cent's extra spent for seed for to !another I I 'f time. 25.An interesting dollars a profit of VS 011 acres returned Fureau associations in La Farm feature of the cam- farm. !Plata and Nitmtesuma counties. Colo.. Iis the Oneida county. Wis. is growing po- have saved 1300 by purchasing bind-lin- g paten activity 111( tato seed in more than carload loi. twine in 10.000 pound lots. They of college men- e eit TO were contracted for !are now considering buying grain show iTwenty-fivStatistics :at 70 cents a bushel and an option tak- otacks in large quantities. there are more col- - en on It cars more at ibis game price. men in the Thia same seed was sold to local buylege Indians. trenches er previous.y for from 30 to 40 cents Training political a bushel. For second the time the children of than ever before. to be- the Coulee crickets threatened original Americans are this year krealtege la claimed by supporters of come Fremont starting destructive in very a course of study which will led nominees. According to s Ind 'county. Ids. After consultation with give the Indians the beat vocational tete Putlic a short time was the bait 'entomologists. following offered by any school sYltraining ago. the used: Brass. lb pounds; whits arsenic. item in the United Plates. under the littSes Nat,onal Colleire learns lies , I factory molakeee. 1 gal- direction of tint United States Indian pound. 'user 11014 more then 40,00 graduates of Ion. Fifteen to 61 dead crickets to the office. department of the interior. As liken all over the United States & square foot were found. which. it is es- these schools. located in various secand the ehtroliments Cr. still timated. represented not less than IS tions of the eountry. must train Indian cent of them. Out of an atidei- youths of both sexes to assume the duname in by the hundreds. Harvard per rt ipriation of 3100 made by the county ties and responeibilities of 7,toOtegra.hatee at work in this commissioners to the farm bureau for and ASHINOTON. 7 i .:...-- , . ', , 1.1: I - 1111111101 1 ,... ;; That Brought $5,000. N -- Its! And the Baby's Stocking 1916. by i ., .. Written for the SaturcLiy News by Frank G. Carpenter. . 4 : What Cheap Coal Will Do for the Gold Output and Wbv How Gold is MarketedMiners' Extravagances It. ,y I 4"; i rijj nro .-. ; t; l''', ( |