OCR Text |
Show ilk !$ ' " ' Jt- - ' -' a " VOL. XIV. RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY; UTAH. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1910. 'filX'-.V' ' V m -- SrA EB OFHJEEK l.-r- - t 3r; ; r- - ?C S NO. 41. President .Taft has prevailed upon UTAH John Embry to withdraw his resignaOF FALL IRRIGATION WATER FOR ALFALFA UTILITY tion as United States attorney for OkI $ lahoma and to remain in the office. Twenty-onWaUrlsg of Ground In Wlntor Often v boys are now Inmates ol Elijah Bfdal, a Persian student In Froducaa f Lund to Thr-- . detention home at Murray. Crop Thrlves Best in Soil of 5. COI1DEIISEO ' the University of Maryland, at Balti; .. ; Fourth of Ten of Hay. A TOTAL i I' Thera have been 800 applications STEAMER ALASKAN , more, shot and killed bis sweetheart, ' Semi-Arifor positionl as census enumerators i 'Arid and d Regions. LOSS, BUT PASSENGERS Miss Mary Lewson of Portland, Me., Thr value of wlnfer irrigation has 4Jrom Weber county. REACH SHORE. a student in the university, and then been set foyth on mpy occasions. Th National i Copper bank, a new Government Ha Publihd n Bulle- Many are '$9 sltuaUd that f ACCORD OR THE IMPORTANT committed suicide. they can,M."W.OOO Institution, began business in tin Form Results of extensive not do any winter Irrigation because., Estelle E. Gibbs, a negro girl, 14 EVENTS TOLD IN BRIEFEST Lake on t City Wednesday. the water Is turned off from the canal Investigation years old, received the first prize, a Six Members of Crew Perialrln Atf Salt mad.. In MANNER P08SIBLE. Lake is to have a new Orph , Number of States.' after the growing season and not gold medal, at the graduating exerJ oat theatre, to coat $250,000 and have tempt to Obtain Relief for Pacises of the Hoboken public school puturned on again until Irrigation U to ' Picked Up V aeatlng capacity of 1,800, the new aengers Who Are Experience in the growing of al- begin In the spring. - , : pils. There are 10,000 white pupils In 3 I building to he completed by October falfa for mor than 2,000 yearS.boWs .'Natures by Pasting 8hip. of breaking up and wy Happening That Ar Making HI (tor) the schools and only 15 negroes. ? I net. that It thrive beat In the soil aSd cli- disintegrating the solids In the soil la William Ruckhetm, a farmer, aged Information Gathered from All Huntsville City, in Weber county. mate of arid and 35 four wife his regions. by freezing and thawing and our dry and il. Quarters of th Qleba and en fWheorporated, the people Th abundant sunshine, the warmth, soil does not freeze children and shot himself at Parkers Seattle. A cable, dispatch from Sm very much. Every Given In a Few Lints, tkat they will be In and .the deep, rich soil prevailing farmer know how loose and easily The Alaska Prairie, Minn. He was found dying ward, Alaska, says: Soverned as are other villages throughout th western half of the worked is the poll after the ground when his son went to the farm. Ruck-nel- Steamship companys steamship Far-United States sepm to be well a idted thaws out In the . . av Sot been incorporated. had suddenly become insane. allon is a total wreck on a reef neart spring, and how often According to the Salt Lake Herald, to Its requirements, and over half a they wish they could keep it that way W. Gould Brokaw's defense of his Illamna bay, and six members of her centurys experience has shown that all summer. But la everybody doing Suit for divorce has been filed at wifes separation suit is estimated to crew are believed to have perished In th historic Amelia Palace" in Salt Lake City has been sold there Is comparatively Uttle cultivable all possible to promote this condition? Reno, Nevada, by Mrs. Beulah Stubbs have cost him 175,000, while the an attempt to obtain relief for the The passengers and mem- to fiUttrn capitalists, who intend to land In the west on which Ifliannot be Winter irrgatlon will help very mateSunderland, daughter of J. C. Stubbs, courts decision will compel him to the for mammoth department house grown. One finds the same varieties rially, The effect of late fall irrigv bers of the crew arrived here Sunday, general passenger agent pay the former Mary Blair $1,250 a flourishing in Imperial vafiey. Callfor Uon on alfalfa Is very noticeable. system, and wife of John Sun- month alimony. His lawyers are un- aboard the steamship Victoria. Jay lorfS )4te ,c nla, 100 feet below sea level, and main- Ground irrigated In the winter often which they were rescued February 3, derland, Democratic national commit- derstood to be preparing an appeal. sulphuric poisoning, . a jtttrdy growb on the Sh produces f teeman from Nevada. to of a after Bpending nearly a month enYr'nsadsfWabox taining WASHINGTON. Luis plahw; of .Colorado, 7,500 A to more at the flrBt cutting and In deThe coroner's jury Investigating the 40 hay weather i'vey- HILatk, frequently the higher, William C. Lovering camped Representative .vVduring the past summer the first cut-- ; death of three persons ad serious in- - of Massachusetts, is dead at his home grees below zero. iE.. M. and 0n H00 well overestimate tT of alfalfa from winter irrigated The Farallon ran to her doom on .jury of a fourth in an automobile ac- in- Washington, at the age of 75. He Importune c( to western farfi &hCras a high as three and f cident In Denver, returned a verdict was serving bis seventh consecutive January 6, during a blinding snowHeld and the alfalfa ten. Gif 'acre. The effect on nil other storm. The passengers ' and. crew er charging criminal negligence against term in congress. of bis staek provkU'tb belt W TTP meffa of 4 Morris Mayer, who was guiding the to get ashore and went into v; wife groci'fi quite, noticeable-- our dry ' believed to have wa3 criticised managed Ballinger Secretary stock enormous Isctlng isatait ' kwzta at aprtagsA machine. tor dhe mental weakness on the floor of the senate on Thurs- camp, some supplies and clothing beby Urvktlo dhea the bxeeUealjT'-turag- K4 With lea, dry winter and iprlng up h taken ashore. Mrs. Mae Talbot, on trial at Reno, Herbert ing of V to for communication klacksnritir,: a day sending avaable throughout the gxt On January 7 the second mate and ,0deti,,jjfbo ba4 'beovent to- th state tfjberitrtf of May with: but . Uttlf v Nevada, for the murder of her hus- the senate inclosing a bill providing of ef th either part three year fafi five sailors started in a small boat for (.olCJr pe would suppose that there band, was acquitted, the jury claiming for an insane asylum for Alaska. jMntajospltjd, . drought in jnldsumf :f, gr ThlV il0uU N AO difference between the Kodiak, where they expected to conshe was justified in shooting her husTXbfll ktrpdn; That the United States congress is nect with one of the other vessels of covered Uh deep t 1 id mlii M gTeu 1 Irrigated and that not Irrlgat-- r band because of his cruelty toward thesfcuti y of . Carey A;alpgl ton'rt attr i.talf likely to pass a prohibition law apply- the Alaska Steamship company. Since jtttee L hj.t fb crops on irrigated ground ' ' her. 4 atooKkAr" ing to Hawaii is the belief of an at- then these men have not been heard Tie much quicker and make at Louis Paulhan, the French aviator, torney who is representing the liquor from, and there Is practically no hope w1Ufn,the limits of'.the former .UUtfak ef t. during periods urtfft during the Dk-lifailed to make a flight in his biplane Interests of the Islands In Washing- that they are alive. reservation la Utah : ''.Ueatber,Alfalfa Oaksgl H ' -- vr., tarhapa is befr d id" any forest jpat Denver on Tuesday. The crowds ton. 1m prepargbery crop os.:u MAN ONE ESCAPED Inr We broke onto the field and greatly aaaukl tneeU. Stabs ItLlt nave long been President Taft, announces that unprodu.;v.Ta.rsi' terfered with his attempvs to get his T be, bald Likewise, It I j'yritftrsr not consider an amendment 1 th of j malntrjia fevCUy in Mine Jtesulted-iExplosion 'oCf ; DeaihJ machine in the air. U1' "1 natufTv rt-- h,;-.Tf- 'J?i the corporation tax law necessary of Eleven. . !4I '1 m a Representatives Mondell and Wyo- order to prevent rival concerns frof "r :i Indiana, Pa. Ten Hungarians, ar4 ming and Taylor of Colorado charge obtaining information as to the privat t wslblet' .Vr, i'.r.fl mu death In a gas ey--i seandalous extravagance of adminis- affairs of comDelltors. tration of the affairs of- the ft ' :ry .That there has been a general urday In the numerow U.V Furnace mine, of the I , department,' but despite their crease In the wholesale and ret v m A, Clearfield Coal compel the house has failed to rea any j prices of food between 1899 and 1 STATE NEWS III C i e P One-Ha- lf ? , 4 vV - " , semi-erl- vf d years,-murdere- j- - - m f t 1 - INTER-MOUNTAI- prop-ert- y pa-senger- s. Har-rima- r n f- V' If: ? one-hal- - - s alaa a l three-fourth- 5 one-hal- 7 1 e - 1 If: f; -- t;e J v4 e- 1 f 'rfea 4 i -' -- ' " ,kairar - c kt - -- 4 p 1 ' ' - .av -- r v, T ' ' - ,ms1-tio- n of forestry. t v 7 - Domestic. - Worls on the new Arkansas capital at Little Rock is again at & standstill, this time because of a strike of 175 union laborers. The Rpv. Dr. Richard Lewis Howell, known as the richest preacher In the United btates, is dead at his home in New York. He was 55 years old. The Joint wage conference of the bituminous coal operators and miners of Ohio, Indiana and Pennsylvania has adjourned without reaching an agreement. t After long resistance, the feudists, James Daniels and his five sons, who are charged with murder, have surrendered themselves to the Kentucky senate by the department of Com- merce and labor. In order to permit the arrival la Vvashington of counsel for Secretary Ballinger and to allow counsel to become familiar with the case, the investigating committee has adjourned its hearings until Friday, February 11. Concessions by both the United States and Germany have averted a threatened tariff war. Negotiations have been concluded between the two countries which settle the question of minimum and maximum rates, with the exception of the cattle' and dressed meat Issue. The final appeal for a motion for a new trial was made before the supreme court at Washington on Thursauthorities. A bill designed to strengthen the day by General Luke E. Wright in beRobin Cooper, existing laws prohibiting the sale at half of Col. D. B. and of former Annapolis of liquors to midshipmen of convicted of the murder the naval academy has been Intro- United States Senator Carmack and to penal, servitude for sentenced duced In the Maryland legislature. n miners twenty years. The lives of 100 The house .has passed the agriculwere endangered by. a fire that detural appropriation bill, carrying nearat hotel the Lead, Campbell stroyed a net Increase of more $13,000,000, S. D. The management of the hotel ly than $400,000 over last year. This Indeclares the blaze was Incendiary. serC. A. Farrar, an aeronaut, commit- crease was chiefly for the forest addition the made necessary by ted suicide in San Francisco by thrust- vice, of 25,528,439 acres to the national foring his head into the envelope of a ests. small balloon into which a stream of FOREIGN. Ill Illuminating gas was poured. Former Senator ' Clark of Montana health led him to take his own life. to the Lacking the means to maintain the has sent a check for $1,000 personal political organization essen- floods sufferers of Paris. deThe Nicaraguan government tial to success. Senator Frank P. Flint of Los Angeles, Cal., announced Sa- clares that It has discovered a plot by turday in a statement that he would the Conservatives to precipitate armed to Intervention by the United States by not be a candidate for firing on an American warship In the the senate. The establishment of a series of harbor of Corinto. Roosevelt and party municipal dance halls in New York City, where young men and women arrived at Nlmule, Africa, on Februcan go without being subjected to se- ary 4. on schedule tlm. All the memrious temptation, has been promised bers are In excellent health. Before by Mayor Gaynors new park commis- leaving Rhino camp in Belgian Congo, sioner, as the Tesult of a report re- the hunters shot three more white cently submitted to him by a commit rhinos, a bull buffalo aud other game tee on amusements for working girls. not before reported. Seventy bodies have been taken The tenth anniversary of the death of William Goebel, who was the cen- from the Paulau mine In Mexico. This tral figure in one of the most stirring represents the total list of the dead some of the twenty Injured chapters In the. latter days of Ken- However, hospital may die. tuckys history, ' was observed at who are now in the of is all out The the mine and the ungas the 3, by Frankfort, Ky., February Not veiling of a marble and bronze monu- exploration has been thorough.' ment above the grave in the state an American was hurt. A new press bill, designed to sup cemetery at Frankfort. Mrs. Max Shapiro was badly beaten press the dissemination of anarchistic In her home In New York City by a literature, has been Introduced in tb stylishly dressed burglar who she council at Calcutta. The measure does caught in the act of robbing the bouse. not create a censorship, but provides She fought the burglar hand to hand the deposit of cash bonds by all news from room to room until he over- papers and job printers to enable the government offcials to control theli powered her and escaped. The retail price of diamonds is to utterances. The second Central American con be raised from $5 to $10 a carat,, because of an advance of 12 VS per-- cent Terence, a congress of representatives in wages just granted by the Malden of the countries of Central America Lane diamond merchants to members to promote peace and better commerof the American Diamond Cutters Pro- cial relations, has convened at San Salvador, the capital of Salvador. An tective association made at this session to As a result of wireless telegraphy, effort will be revolution in Nicthe settle present men of the steam the crew of forty-sier Kentucky were taken off that ves- aragua. An explosion of gas in a coal mine sel Just before It sank oft Capejlatt-eras- . caused by The Kentucky's operator wired at Las Esperanzas, Mexico, a Mexican a miner cigarette lighting Alamo for assistance aud the steamer the came to 'the aid of the men on the in forbidden territory, resulted la sixty-eigh- t men. death of sinking ship. non-unio- x h TareOru w'S tffy One of these, Andrew Of a mile a tlon, and there were 172 discharge1. eaped by crawling quarter on his stomach to evade the noxious last .year. Two miners were Instantly killed gases. One hundred and ten men working in the sulphide tunnel of the Bostcn In the same stope escaped through Consolidated at Bingham on Wednesother headings, although, they were day. The victims were Yoso OslcU held hack for ten hours by the black and Boza Saborn, and Austrians, damp, until a rescue party reached cousins. had drilled Into a They them. missed hole, and both were badly Expects to Scale Mt. McKinley In mangled. In view of the burning of the Kays-vlllBalloon. opera house, owned by the ec"H3L. Louis, Mo. Captain John Berry, it has been decided aeronaut of many flights. Is ready to clesiastical balloon his way to the crest of Mount that the present meeting house shall and McKinley in Alaska, in search of the be converted into an opera house the at is it as amusement present hall, records Dr. Frederick A. Cook states he placed there. Berry hopes to set- Inadequate for" Sunday school and tle once and for all the question ol other purposes. The report of the state treasurer whether Cook ever scaled the highest mountain on the continent, or bust" ihowa that the balance on hand JanuIn the attempt. Captain Berry says ary 1 was $599,756.68, and the receipts that the venture will cost him $50,000. for the month were $711,601.50, makA St. Louisian will accompany him. ing a total of 41.31 1,358.18. The dispictures will be taken as primary evi- bursements were $501,012.10, leaving dence of the trip. a belanc on hand at the close of month of $810,346.08. the After Grafting Officials. Thd engineering force of the SouthChicago. Four true bills, charging ern Pacific is now engaged in preparcity hall officials with conspiracy In difficult for the piece of work ing plans connection with tue $45,000 shale western end to on be the undertaken rock scandal, were returned by the cut-of- f The of Lucin this the spring. men county grand Jury Saturday. The miles five to for Is be trestle raised indicted were: John Erlcson, city enwaters to above the ever-risingineer. Michael H. McGovern, con- of kep lake. the tractor. raul Redleske, former dep While attempting to start the flyof public works. uty commissioner Ralph A. Bonnell, former assistant wheel of a gasoline car that had been stalled by the snow on the Malad city engineer. branch of the Oregon Short Line, Marines That Cannot Swim, James A." Jones, a machinist apprenWashington. Attention is directed tice, had his foot so bodly managled in an official report by Rear Admiral that amputation was necessary at the Schroeder, In command of the Atlantic Ogden general hospital. fleet, now engaged In practice mt Dr. Anna Frances Rhies, recently neuvers in Guantanamo bay, Cuba, to confirmed as city physician of Ogden, than fact that mote the remarkable assumed her new duties a few days 2,500 men in the fleet cannot swim. Dr. Rhies Is a graduate of one In a brief report of the fleets opera- ago. of the leading medical colleges of the tions in the last week, the commander east and Is said to be thoroughly comsays instructions were held for , the petent to fill the duties of her office. men who are at home on the water. Hal C. Drummond of Salt Lake has Child Died in Her Arms. received . word from Washington to Pueblo, Colo. Crazed by, the die the effect that his application for a daugh- patent on a milk cooler and aerator covery that her A company has ter was dead in her arms, Mrs. has been granted. frantz White, wife of a rancher of been organized In Salt Lake to manuFillmore, Cal., tried to throw herself facture and distribute the appliances from the car window on the Denver & and several are already in operation. Rio Grande California limited train . The theft of a pickle by Wong King, as It was coming into Pueblo. Mrs. s Chinaman, the demand for 6 cents White, accompanied by her three chil- payment by the proprietor and the dren, was returning home from a visit consequent assault upon the Oriental to her mother at Camargo, 111. She when he objected to the exorbitant was nolding her little daughter in her price, were the features of the police arms, and, stooping over to kiss the court trial In Ogden of George Hinkle, charged with assault. Hinkle was child, discovered she was dead. fined $5. District Judge J. A. Howell of Og Charged With Brutal Murder. O. That Cincinnati. Jesse Van den holds that an applicant for natur Zandt killed his wife and that he alization papers need not have reachchoked and tied her before placing her ed the age of 21 years at the time he on the cooking stove in their home files his declaration of intention to States here Is the belief of the Cincinnati po- become a citizen of the Uniteddecisions contrary notwithstanding delice, who say bis act was due to a which have been filed by the courts sire to wed Miss Agnes Berry. They of other states. say that they already have sufficient the moving picResolutions evidence to convict him, even though ture shows in against Lake have been Salt it Is but circumstantial. Van Zandt adopted by the Parents' class In the and his wife are said to have quar- Seventeenth ward Sunday school, Is reled over the pending divorce pro Salt Lake and the public has City, ceedings. His wife asserted that ht been to aid in a fight against requested was madly In love with Miss Berry the worst sort of shows. and wished to marry her. 1 e g three-year-ol- d I-- i favorable climatic condlUona and plop er treatment are combined. Seven tons of cured hay at three cuttings are obtained from the best fields of Montana, while frequently nine tons In five cuttings are harvested In California. This large tonnage, together with Its high feeding value and the fact that it is consumed by practically all farm animals, makes It not only a convenient and useful crop to !h grower, but a highly profitable one as well. Notwithstanding Its present importance and great value In irrigation farming, the profits on the area now In alfalfa can be greatly increased If more care and skill are exercised in growing it. The western Irrigator has seldom been able, financially, to dig his ditches and prepare his fields In Bucb a way as to insure tbe most efficient Irrigation and tbe highest profits. In consequence valuable water Is waste fully applied to land that Is In no fit condition to be Irrigated. On the large acreage in irrigated alfalfa this amounts to an enormous crop, tbe rapidly Increasing area devoted to Its growth and the large number of arineis who gre settling in the west and who will be for years dependent in a large measure on alfalfa for a livelihood, would seem to warrant the collection and publication of any Information designed to improve the present practice. It has warranted the collection and publication by the government of a great deal of very valuable Information secured to Improve the present practice of Irrigation. This has been done In Farmers Bulletin No. 373 and any one who Is interested in tbe Irrigation of alfalfa may procure one of these bulletins .ree of cost by writing to Samuel Fortier, chief of irrigation Investigations, United States department of agriculture, Washington. D. C. . M' '- - A vi " a b 4rllgw. (51sJLr-riirme- r. Is for - Th condition of the soil during the growing. Reason in regard to the amount of water. Its freedom from clods, its mechanical condition on most of our soils have as much to do in making the crop as the fertility of the soil. Of course we must have both to grow big crops year after year. The soil must be loosened to good depth to allow the water from heavy rains to settle awajr quickly and not stand on the top to form a crust; to take in more water when Irrigated and so make less In number the Irrigations with less chance for the ground to bake. - Have a Separator. We have a cream separator and keep five cows at present We think the separator Is a paying machine, writes D. D. Mitchell, In the Journal of Agriculture. Every farmer keeping three cows should have s separator. It will pay for Itself In three years, and then you will have the use pf it several years for nothing if taken care of. It pays. You get all the cream and more butter, and betmake ter butter, and tbe cream is easier churned. It saves tbe cost of labor because there Is no milk to freeze and you dont have to dig tbe cream off with something nor do you have to wash crocks or milk pans. If you want to raise calves you dont have to warm the milk. It can be separated and fed to the calf with the natural heat from the cow. one-tblr- d Cementing Irrigation Dltche. Water Is so valuable in the Irrigated country that the people there have begun to concrete the ditches so as to save seepage. California has led off in this with one water company lining Its main canal and laterals with concrete varying In thickness from two four inches. It Is proposed to begin the same practice In Colorado. Buckwheat for Poultry. Buckwheat Is both stimulating and heating, which renders it an excellent grain for winter feeding, but it being of a fattening nature, should be fed in moderation. It contains more protein material than does corn, but the percentage of digestible matter is not so great, buckwheat haring about 62 per cent, and corn 81 per cent. Buckwheat contains 7.8 per cent, of protein and 54. 8 per cent of carbohydrates and fat, having a nutritive ratio of 1.7, and corn 6.3 per cent, of protein and 75 per cent of carbohydrates and fat, and has a nutritive ratio of 1.12. Is a This proves that buckwheat Irrigation Experiment with Onions. slightly better egg producer than corn, Comparative tests of the furrow and being more evenly balanced, but it flooding methods of irrigation at the must be fed in larger quantities to Texas Experiment station reiulted In gain that effect. estimated gams In yield per acre by Overhead Irrigation. the flooding method of 4,200 to 7,000 The Skinner system of overhead irpounds of onions. The increased yields secured from Irrigation, as com- rigation Is gaining In popularity pared with dry culture, Indicate that among all classes of producers. It Is irrigation Is profitable even in sea- being installed on large; areas in vasons when the rainfall is sufficient to rious states. Now Is the time to m , produce a good crop. it In ready for us next spring. The Foe of the Chestnut. terrible enemy has wrought havoc with tbe beautiful chestnut forests on tbe French slopes of the Pyrenees during the last 25 years. It is a kind of mushroom, which seems to poison the trees. Three years suffice to reduce a beautiful tree to a hollow, branchless, broken stump. Tbe contagion first appeared in the lower Pyrenees In 1883-4- , and It has since invaded the central progressively Pyrenees, where whole forests of chestnuts have been destroyed. The only effective remedy thus far discovered is liquid sulphuret of carbon applied to tbe roots of the trees, but tbe cost Is almost prohibitively high. A V v- - ' r |