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Show I . the deck, by meats et whlej the ymng mas scrambled aboard, Uarlcg the sailor in the boat with ready rifle. There was no ene visible bet the man who had thrown the line, and to an inquiry for the captain he replied by Jerking hla thumb toward the after Marriott knocked on the dosed door, and then pushed It open. Two men were seated at the canto Temperature of Churning. table. One was evidently the caj Many a farmer's wife spoils her tain; the other was Mr. Q. C. Why- butter by churning at too high a ard of New York! , temperature. Th result la that the "What does thla mean, yeang nu product of her churn is greaay and boarding a peaceable ship In aa armed poor in quality and keepa for but a boat? It's an act of piracy! roared short time. Some people also put hot the captain. water Into the cream to make the butThen Whyard stopped him. This ter come quicker. The result of thla gentleman' all right, captain. If yon rlae In temperature la to deatroy the don't mind Id like to talk with him a grain and at tbe tame time Incorpofew minutes." And the shipmaster rate with the butter a great deal of retired. sulkily casein, which la the part that goes "Well, my boy," he relumed at to make the body of cheese. Thla butlength. In as parental a manner aa ba ter la Increased In quantity also by could commaad, "I didn't !ofc for yoa th of an unusual incorporation quite so soon, perhaps I; ought to amount of water. If the butter la have told you at once in tew York made when the temperature of the that I am tha American representa- cream la at, aay, 80 degrees, the kind tive of a combination that iractlcally of a butter will result that if It came control's the world's supply of plati- under the eyea of United 8tates dairy num. The tons of It you talked of put Inspectors would be excluded from the ting on the market would ruin tha market and the sellers thereof fined f for selling butter with n water conprice, you see." "Thanks for th hint." replied Mu tent above the legal II per cent The rlott, dryly. "It really hadn't occurred woman that wants to make good but. to me. I think you need not fear ter must do her churning when the that your own stock will depreciate cream Is at a temperature - of not that la. not very much. . But I shall above CS degrees. ' It would be better have to trouble you to see that your to churn at as low as fifty degrees, men do not I dad my property Into the but this la rather hard for people wrong vessel" that have to churn by hand. The people that try to work the When Marriott waa married to churns frequently have to Edith, some three months later, ha raise the temperature of the cream waa president of the Magellan Plati- to about 80 the degrees before num Mining company, and tha bride, results that have been getting advertised. as her father beamed upon them, won- That la, the time of churning la regdered that hla dislike for the groom ulated to some extent by the temperahad been so quickly overcome, but ture. Every maker of butfer should abe will never know anythlag of tha have a thermometer. One can be purlittle drama, so Intimately concerning chased for twenty cents, and, this beher. played In that lonely Patagonian ing Aha caae, there la no reason why bay. every person should not have the advantage of knowing the temperature Dlaaatlafled With tha Times. of their cream at churning tlm They were talking about tha feeling of unrest and dissatisfaction that Cream in the Pantry. pervade certain sections of the eoua-tr- y It Is common In our farm housea to up at the Yale commencement, Frank F. Dole, who la famed aa the set tbe cream In the pantry or In the owner yt the Edgewood Ktcnel of cellarway, where all kinds of food bull terrier dogs, listened attentively are also kept It Is safe to aay that and tuddenly broke up the whole con- cream cannot be set In such places and give good butter. Some people ference with hla remark: may like butter that taatea of dough-nut"Ernest orTbomp-aon-Setoplea, cookies, llmburger cheese, or whatever hla nam hapcinnamon, pens to be this month, was p look- onions, celery, doves, ing over my kennela the other day. oranges, apples and the like, but most You know he la strong on this new people '.like to have the aroma that fad of pature study, and be wu re- belongs to butter rather than to the marking on this rame spirit of unrest pantry. Probably the one greatest obin the animal kingdom. Says togs are stacle to getting good flavor In farm-mad- e butter is this one of the setting Just as dissatisfied aa rain and skunks. Claimed he could understand of milk to rise in the pantry. It la their complaint and while chatting such a firmly settled custom that it will be with difficulty broken up, in carelessly flung a bit of dog biscuit at of the fact that much such butEdgewood Monarch. The dog snap- aplte ter has to be sold to the poorest marit It up, spat ' ped ' out, ajdxthen ket and at not above ,ten cents per growled. pound. The nose of the housewife is There! exclaimed SetqbTbomp-son- , so accustomed to the smells of the or whoever he may be, did that she neve? thinks of them pantry I tell you? That d6g said plainly, when she is putting her milk away to "Tafat half so good blscul a my Undergo tbe process of cream raising. mother used to give me." Cream in the pantry should be abolYork Time ished, and la its place should come cream In the cream room, a place set The Train Waited., aside for this operation and sealed T was traveling up In Caada, Just against the entrance of all odor that over the border of New York State, will give the butter a disagreeable thla last summer," aald the broker, taste. The woman that doea that la "when, just aa. the train vaa about very likely to get a great reputation ready to pull out of tha station, n as a maker of fine butter. negro ran up excitedly. f " 'Hey, there!' he shouted to the Wheat Bran For Milk Making. conductor, who was singing out 'All Men frequently misjudge the value aboard,' Mr. Martin saya would yon of feeds by their density. Thus there hold the train till he kin change hie la a strong opinion among farmers clothes, and he'll be along la a few that cornmeal la better lor milk makv mlnutesf than bran. ' It la heavy and baa a "'For sure,' aald the conductor. In ing beautiful color and the cow owner asa matter-of-fac- t way. Aid we waited sociates It with rich cream. But the for five minutes before Mr, Martin fact la, bran la. In the main, more valturned up In hla Sunday raiment' uable for milk making than la corn-mea- l, in spite of the attractive apAll In tha Cams, biwltli pearance of cornmeal. ' The stomach Hour of midnight, Mnkra tbs of the cow la better suited to take Poker gam, Quiet glee. Bet la raised Quarter) care of bran than of cornmeal beRather tarn. Quarter mere cause it is more bulky. The cow was Been then raised First man ante. Second stays. Bam as be ora made tor the purpose of using up Just Dealer promptly Dealer stubborn, such waate products as bran would Names a rate. First man drops, Second hand lust be without farm animala to consume Age considers. Then makes good; Calls and stop. it And bran cannot be judged by its Second trails as hand? PtWhat a bluff! lightness. The question of nalng or Player should; Pair of queens to Ag draws thrra not nalng bran la one that must be Ckrd to pair. Win the .tuff. Twrw-ar- d decided on Its price, compared with 19 Second holds up draw Kicker there. Rakes la the pile the prices of other Uke feeds. At the Dealer plays Sevens ns wer same price as corn it is far more V'ards neg dealt Worth hi while. Walla until his First man silent profitable to be used for the making Pulse la felt, Not g frown of milk. Its protein content la high, ksan who drew two Thre good deuce Cards to three H threw down. but not so high that th digestive apNew Torn Time. paratus of the animals will be Injured by It American fanners should not of , Haight Comradeship. a bran to go across It la part of ay business to keep permit poundof but should buy and feed the waters, apace wltb current slang," said Oscar pound of it thua not only makHammerstein, and I dont think much every the profit that may be made out of ing that la new gets by me. The other but saving the fertility for their C it day I waa la a rural part of Connectithe fertilising qualities of for land; cut looking after aome property. The bran are considerable. , farmera daughter said htr mother waa In the-parltalking to Mrs. The Hand Separator to Stay. 9 Barnes. baa been war between the C There Whatever yoa hare to aay to ma. men that believe In band explained the girl you might as well lor farm use and the men separators that believe 0 tell before her. They're never apart milk ahonld be hauled to the Q all that all day long, them two. The latter declare that aa O What. I exclaimed, are they no creimery. cannbt be made train butter good thick as all that? gathered cream a from the cream "Thick!' repeated the girl; wby. taken from fresh milk brought in. ao thick they both eat out of This they're be ao; but one ttilng should C may one egg.' New York Time. not be lost Bight of, and that la that 3 the hand separator haa come to stay, Illumination. and the argument of whether It la a C Drkv rumfik Blh y seal knew till good thing may ga well be disconwifi be better A ,hlB and tinued. The time spent k'J Imprisoned the upon if that have questions put A bU not th1 ad any come with it Every situation haa Its tmi!1 9 A heact alt bare of loves Rlurr'-Bam. own problem and every new inven C .wltt tlon brings a lot of new problems it 57 ktadlin klsl-t-hat nr was only natural that the hand sepfuel for 'if own. H; A, strowa arator should have Its new phases and C f . To OTlJ th ItPM Ificrpj he a a 8 j And Its' new questions. Some of these are ih her an 4 th ,r,r ,h hard to settle - The hardest la tbe one relating to the freshness of the Cj hr blow-;- ' o n.r autumn cream when delivered toJhe bntter-makeTills rrov4em will be settled Tt g and th f1 ln: th 9 a have ell f'-'-f h wth me st.U nichfy kt5 . Werai Starr. Ferris U,trttTj Wtr OOO OOOOOOOOOO-OCXXOOOOOO- The Song of a Bird. . TAxlvlt; JiMt Mttl bit .r fratfee And Ilf. tad ion, .11 held loittlur brat. by heart iibm( too mail And cobweb wins, aod twtnkllnff Irak la Where, a body aa anail aa thla, Dora h ator. th. paazloa et Joy tad deck-hous- t. bliaa Of nr. in Ha atmoat raaUay, Which hla llitl. throat pour, out t mat No ahadow of frar hla brart cm know. Or that perfect niuaic could not flow So a wee l, eo clear, ra oxultinyly, A a Uaht m th. wind, aod aa wild' and free. 8a la aurely th. brart of th. lunmw w anther Ufa, Joy and rang, la Wxp : EDI 1 EON Bm m& oucxr g4KE ' Copyright, IIH, by The Bhortatory Pub. Co. (Ah rights res erred.) There la a llttlo taxidermist's hop now I can support her as you would M Fourth areou. which la g curt out desire.' I have property worth eight place, It la very dusty anil very full hundred thousand dollars," he added, of strange low), tucked In, one behind modestly, "and I have a practical certhe other, on ahelvea that cover all tainty of more than tea times aa of one side of the room, and on the much." other a wlaened little old man site all Whyard wheeled hla swivel chair day long beside a pile of moet evil and looked the'young man In the fact smelling aktna and dispenses words with very evident amazement of wisdom to whoever cares to listen. "Ten times eight hundred thousand Obb day when Marriott ran Into th dollars!" he cried. Incredulously. shop before dinner he found the old "What Is this property of yours?" man In ecstarles over a new hlrdskln "Platinum," said Marriott "You that has Just been brought In. It was see, air, he went on quietly, "I ran large and dirty and eiceedlngly ugly across a sample of dust from' South and It had a particularly evil smell; America last winter; nobody else but It waa rare, and Marriott looked knew about it so J went down at once and discovered the place. I only It over respectfully. "Where did you say thla bird came brought up a few thousand dollars' from? Abe asked. , , worth, but I have ball a ton in dust The old man stopped washing the and nuggets all ready down there, and hlrd'e lege and began to recount Its tha rivers are full of it But what's history. The skin bad been brought the matter, air?" to him by a be said CapWhyard had turned pale, and sank tain Tourjee, of tbe Mary And Salters back la hla chair. He boused himfrom South America. Yea, be waa self, however,- - and questioned the euro he wee tlll In town; would Mr. young man quietly enough. "In wbat Marriott like hla address f Mr. Mar- part. of South America la that?" said riott, it appeared, would ilka It very he. much indeed. He took It down care'Southern Patagonia, not far from fully, wrapped the lump of dirt In hie Magellan Straits and near the coast handkerchief and walked swiftly away down the etrcet, leaving the little taxidermist staring after him with wondering eyea. Reginald Ernest Marriott, not long since graduated as a mining engineer from the College of Applied 8clence, Ifcad hie own way to make in the world and nothing to make It with but brain. It la true that he came "Bf BtrimnenftBumy, otiose Haimsweir survived Its prosperity, and that Able connection let him Into aa much New York society as waa good for him; but nobody felt called upon to assist him In any more practlcakway than by Inviting him to dinner, and thla, ,as It happened, was a very serious matter, for there was a woman In ,the case. It was Edith Whyard, tbe only daughter of Mr. 0. C. Wbyard, who lived oo Madison avenue and had an office on Broadway and waa reported to ba a multi millionaire. Though no one seemed to know exactly the source of his income, hie style of living bore out the assertion, and on In hla swivel chair and lockthe strength of It Mrs. Wbyard was Whtalad ed the young man In tha fact. tmaking aa attack upon the portals of society. Naturally, when It became. But will It be all right about Edith, " Apparent to her ' maternal eye that sir?" her daughter waa allowing her "Well, I guess I might as well give In, Mr. Marriott," he aald. "Aa yon jtions to drift la that unprofitable any, things have changed. Call oa she looked with extreme upon young Marriott, and Edith If yon Ilka. , Aa soon aa yon how your mine la aa rich aa you say jher husband had for him tha contempt of the practical maa it la, aha can do aa aha likes about tfor the man of schools and theories. marrying you, but not before. He held out hla hand and Marriott Matters were In this atata when , .the young man paid hla visit to the grasped it gratefully. The three weeks ha was obliged to taxidermist's shop and saw the bird fwtth the mhddy feet That night he pend turning hla pounds of platinum (worked bardNn th small laboratory into ready money and negotiating for he had fitted tip In hie room, wrote a a coasting steamer for the return to Setter to Edith, packed hie possessions Its treasure passed like a pleasant and paid hla bills, and the next morn- dream. He spent part of every day ing at daybreak he sailed out of New with the Whyard and although he York harbor In a south-bounsteam-;r- , aaw no more of the father, who, he with hope In hie heart, n wisp of waa told, had beea suddenly called blonde hair la hla watch-cas- e and 4 away from town, he nlwaya saw Edith, hump of black mud In hla coat pocket. and ha waa more thaa content When, It was a year after thla and the after tha three weeks were over, he igraaa was green again on Madison sailed away again in the tramp steamsquare before newt was heard of him. er Montevideo, which he bad chartered and manned especially tor the voyage, he was already counting the day before he could return for her. He carried a plcked crew of twenty men, and In view of the wild region to which they were bound and the valuable return cargo, shipped a few Winchester rifles and plenty of ammunition. . Aa the Inner bay came ta sight there waa n cry of surprise, for there, anchored close inshore. lay a small steamer. Marriott examined her carefully through a powerful binocular. Her decks seemed but natives could be seen swarming around the vessel canvas tents pitched on the beach and men moving about among the rocky hillocks where the platinum waa concealed. It not already discovered. It waa in great danger. Marriott stood on the bridge, anxious but determined. There waa evidently a good deal of hurry and bustle on shore.-bu- t tbe strangeria deck remained empty and the Montevideo's salute remained unanswered. Appar"Where did you say this bird cam ently she had been left at anchor and . from?" , ler crew disembarked for work oa fTheo, one April morning, he present- rbore. Marriott thought be bad best ed himself at Mf. Whyard office oa Inquire first on board for some one in Broadway. authority, and he had a boat lowered Marriott asked after Mr. Whyard. &sd manned. As It approached the fAcd Mias Edith?" he aald eagerly. strange steamer a face appeared at a "Tou remerob-r- . Mr.' Whjdrd, that I f re ard port fc to. lerv "Throw us a line!" cried Marriott, her, that I lope to marry her join day. Last jtar I was poor, but tut a iirontly thrown from -- pro-jfoun- d gray-painte- d 3 AT THE' WASATCH - m &iwm 1 GOA -- . bit of feather. Nlootto M. Lowatar. t O MINE; Ocr coal b tbs best there cteun and domeatic purpose AT THB JUNE THB b for till PRICES - LUMP $2,50 2jOO STOVE Pgtnmlzi a Rr) Iriistry. two-minut- e ;.WEBER COAL CO 00000000000000000000XXXy Do You Want Some? Toes of DRY GOODS a, Seton-Thompso- an to aaad n AND i GROCERIES Oo to Km CASH BARGAIN STORE COALVILLE. UTAH f Good Job Work..... Is whnt people wnnt and at Time office is Just tHe place where you can get it at prices that will suit everone. , ...All Work Promptly Executed 1 C-- -rl GRASS CREEK COAL AT GRASS CREEK PlKIES e We havt the very best Coal there on the market for domestic cr stoa y c , or c 9 purposes. f '' CO OK O WELL SCREENED DOMESTIC LimP r b AND STOVE MIXED "-- g 3 r. iff lat-ur- c . . There b no we have a thort-n- g SPECIAL CHUTE cr as FOR LOADING teams .GRASS CREEK COAL 60. |