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Deseret farmer. [volume] (Provo, Utah) 1904-1912, April 17, 1909, Image 13

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m Saturday, APRIL 17, 1909,. THE ftESERET FARMER 13 H
H(' off into pig pens, damp and foul;
K here and there is an abortive effort
K at sheep racks, and out in the middle
H of the gloom is the hog-picked skcl-
B cton of a horse, and strewn about
m arc the vertebrae ribs and skulls ot
M countless sheep that have been
ft gleaned of flesh by that forced tobc
m filthy scavenger, the hog.
m What a foul unwholesome blot
m what a waste of material and money
jRf what a lesson in misdirected effort 1
JH The State ought to own that farm
W and preserve it just as it is, that it
X might be visited by our agricultural
m students and there have indelibly
stamped upon their minds the lesson
! of effort misdirected and means mis-
tk applied.
I had heard of another place that
was worth seeing. It was said to
be quite different, and I hastened
there. I hustled my horse though
the roads were rough in places but
I I wanted to get away from that thing
j that was stifling the beauty of the
day that misshapen monstrosity
shaded under 500,000 shingles, every
one misplaced, and I hurried to the
farm of Alexander Lee over into
South Western comer of Taylors
villc. Mr. Lee was there and with
, -. hm Mr. Hcmcnway, thc successful
apple -man from Granger. They were
looking over the young trees that
had recently .been planted. Fences
up, gates hung and painted? yards
neat and cloan, trees carefully prun
ed and protected from every intrus
ion of the stock. Some trees about
I the yards being individually fenced.
1 I Everything carefully iplanncd and
I placed. Out in the field, properly
I fenced for their protection, were a
' huii(frcd ibcauliful ewes with their
m v early lambs. Some of these spring
lambs had already been sold at $5
M per head. In another place, biting
S at the young grass, were twenty or
M twenty-five thrifty shoats and on the
s. sunny side of proper buildings, thor
oughly enjoying life, we found sev
eral brood sows with prolific litters
of white and spotted pigs. Each lit
ter in a pile that separated with
frisks and squeaks as we poked about
to see how many we could count.
Upon a rising swell of ground and
backed by a young orchard, which
from 'ts fust bearing season, last year
yielded 400 bushels of ganos, is the
site Mr. Lee has selected for his
farm home. Look around. There
arc some evergreens, placed accord- f
ing to a well marked out plan and,
over here is a row of lilacs, wc can
tell by the buds the varieties. Sec.
here is the tender green thatiarks
the kind that bears the white flower
and there is the da"rkcr .bud, real old
fashioned kindthat used to grow in
grandma's graden.
Mr. Lee is a well-raised English
man, loving order, admiring beauty,
and with an Englishman's love of
sport. On the north side of the
granary is nailed a collection of
skulls, skulls of coyotes, captured
on the Western range by Mr. Lee's
wolf hounds, with which he some
times goes out for a chase and these
hounds arc beauties, well bred, well
behaved, well kept and cared for as
is everything else about the place.
Here is the antidote for that horror
I saw a few hours before, and when
I think it over, let mc say to anyone
who ever visits that other place, be
sure and take the antidote, go to
Lee's, and you will still sec it is
worth while and you will think: "Yes
i life is worth living."
- ..
AGAIN.
1ICI hear Miss Chatter is talk
ing "oTgctjing married again."
He "Didn't "know she was ever
married." "V
She "She wasn't; I" said she was
talking of it again." ComicCuts.
Z
1 " SEED OATS FOR SALE
IK Why not get your Selected Seed Oats from the Utah Ex-
m periment Station? The Central Farm at Lehi has the following
w . V varieties For Sale: Sparrow Bill Danish, Twenty Row Colora-
W do, White Tartarian, Sixty Day.
f ; NVrite CENTRAL EXPERIMENT FARM
I LEHI, UTAH
M&Bmn fmMuMt cJC
bw yU-luSi Vy Canton Plows, Harrows 1 fl
AjjOTftK5 iU Panters Listers, Cultivators H
mJr )Mln5dStalk Cutters, Potato Diggers H
If L MlilililllWry I 5fl Beet Implements, Carts H
lii aJfcj ftM-tSiW TfBBHHkVw Garden Tools, &c. H
ll ffflwTniW if7S??l i-WSP f 67 Years of "Knowing How" Hammered !
IS H JWIJ Into Every One of Them. M
y Jy YEV W 0vcr 11CM) Dlfforont Stylos nnd Sizes, to H
WC-r-" ySi . r"-. ,.W weet nil conditions In nil kinds ot soil. Noted H
3W 7CS-w Tv9w,rbtrcnKtli,buni)lIcity nnd Enso of Operation. H
r y&k mSmSff lyv&WeSsP, ' nro tno originators of many of tlio best H
" MSrai J J. .I'vTVnx JIKS known implements made, nnd tlio exclusive font H
W,iVfcilKrurcs nro protected by patents. Whon you pay out jH
g& Aw A JsCr yur monoy cct (bo best Experiments nro expensive. H
" Bw yi Insist on ijcttlnjr 1. & O. implements from your dealer. H
,. ,, , ,i3Sc:J-C; A Uoautifuliy Illustrated Pamphlet, nnd n 1. & O.Catnlotr, H
will bo mfiilcd frep on request. Romomber P. & O. Canton Implements lmvo been In the lead foe B
over tw-o-tuirds ot a century nnd aro backed by an unqualified tuarantcc. Ask forCataloz No. 41 H
' Parliri & Orendorff Go., Canton, III. JM
UTAH IMPLEMENT-VEHICLE CO., Agts., Salt Lake City M
A 224 EGGS TO A PULLET I
jf m gjk IN 9 months I
KpHfl ?,C. Brown, Silver Duckwing M
SjWj LEGHORNS I
WfiiS Eggs for Hatchinr One-Day-OId Chicks H
lyBMP Write for CaUloguc I I
'IplPllB- CRAWFORD BROS. I
eA'cf5mA,2S?h Poultry F Arm MimU,UUh 1 11
STOCK FARM FOR SALE.
320 acres, first-class hay and farm
land. Continuous flow of 24s ins. de
creed water. Situated in Southern
Idaho. Price with improvements,
stock and machinery, $12,000. Write
or Phone.
C. W. PARKE, Riverside, Utah.
Kindly mention tb "Dfrt Far
mer" whtn writing to or doing burf
nrefls with ow advtrtiiws.
OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
UTAH BEE-KEEPER!
ASSOCIATION.
President, E. S. Lovesy,
35S Sixth East Strec, Salt Lake City.
First Vice-President, R. T. Rhees,
View, Weber County.
Second Vice-President, W. Belliston,
Nephi.
"Secretary, A. Fawson, Grantsville.
Asst. Sec'y, Jas. Neilsen, Holliday.
County Vice-Presidents.
Salt Lake, W. C. B ergon, Mill Creek.
Utah, George Hone, Payson.
Wasatch, J. A. Smith, Hcbcr City.
Davis, H. J. Butcher, Kaysville.
Boxelder, J. Hansen, Bear River C5ty
Juab, Thomas Belliston, Nephi.
Washington, J. L. Bunting, St. George
Cache, Nephi Miller, Providence.
Morgan, T. R. G. Welch, Morgan.
Emery, Chris Ottoson, Huntington.
Carbon, W. H. Horsley, Price.
Sevier, R. A. Lowe, Austin.
Sanpete, Walter Cox, Fairviaw.
Weber, Mrs. R. T. Rhees, View.
A FARM TELEPHONE 1 I
Will save enough horicrlejk M H
and time every month to pay m M
hi cost for a year, and in M M
emergencies, when time ii M H
the big thing, it may save B H
1 your home and your life. M M
ThoiMandi of faroe im tkk W
cewntry are now equipped M
wkh telephone and yon m M
ceWd not persuade one of M M
these farmers who has pror- M
1 4 its ralue to allow hit tele- M
1 phone to be removed M
It helpe to make krm life 1 1
pheasant and save money. 1
Yon owe it to yourself to H
have a telephone on YOUR H
farm. Call on the nearest ' M
', manager of the Rocky Moviu '
tain Bell Telephone Com-
pany and he will tell jom
how you on get it at small 1
cost, or address the General ! M
, Opntract Agent, Rocky H
- Mbisouia Bell Te4epho ,
Oeor UK Lafcc Oty.
A I
: Rocky Mountain Bill
Tilipfeue Go. I
I WE CARR.X EVERYTHING IN THE ELECTRICAL LINE. WRITE US FOR D"IX- f- I OMO qATT T ah-tj- m I
1 . - ANYTHING YOU. WANT v tUUI.Lt A, SONS i,?r Y" I
H "' A AH. pH
1 .' AAr.-,- - ' ' V ' ,HllMjt . A -
r "vv IJJJJJ

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