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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAII Aquaplane Winner Gets His Trophy r er. X pK SERIOUS FEEDING TIME FOR TURKEYS rk Raisers Should De Putting Pounds on Birds. ttf I. F (llR, l'onfrlf Allucultutal t .iniittm UhiiIlM of Srr.it Turkey growers who want to make profits at the business are putting the pounds on their birds as fast as possible these duys The four or five months of the summer feeding period ore the most vital to making profits. The first six weeks of the tui key's life is a very critical period, but little weight is put on. The finishing period Just before marketing the birds is also important. but in it likewise little weight Is added In proportion to the large expense for feed But during the In between period, according to Cline, the rapidly growing turkey adds pounds economically because it converts, at a rapid rate, large amounts of a relatively low priced feed Into a high priced commodity to grace the table during the fall and winter. During this fast growing period a relatively small proportion of the feed given is needed for maintenance while a for large proportion is available growth and profits. When the average turkey is two months old it will weigh about 2 5 pounds This weight is put on at an average rate of 2 15 pounds of feed per pound gain In weight A month lHter the turkey will weigh 5 pounds, and will be gaming one pound for approximately each three pounds of feed eaten. At the end of the fourth month, the turkey should weigh at least 8 25 pounds and is turning feed into turkey meat at the rate of 3 5 pounds of feed to one pound of turkey. Good gains may be made also during the fifth month, but thereafter the ratio of pounds gained to feed consumed declines very rapidly, until it takes 5 6 pounds of feed to produce one pound of turkey in the sixth month and approximately 10 7 pounds of feed for one pound of meat in the seventh month. After that the feed often costs more than the net price which will he received for the additional pounds of turkey. While feeding in adequate quantity is very important the composition of the feed is equally important. The two must go together if the most pounds of tuikcy are to be put on. n v'Nhkj. Paris stew was resistance Dunlley, ings The animal from which the meat had been taken was killed on toe banks of the Niger. The meat had been transported to Paris in cold storage And just to make the luncheon as exotic as possible the following unusual items appeared on the menu' CikI Antelope fillet, roes. Japanese sea weed, grilled caterpillars and mango seeds hum Basel on the Rhine Now an Important Switzerland City Improved Navigation Fa' cilities Help Commerce. One corner that Washington. prosperity is Just around Is tlint elbow crook In the Rhine at Basel. Switzerland's second largest city. Improvements in navigation facilities are bringing more and more steamboata 'round that bend, and opening a chapter that bids to be one of the most important in the city's 2,000 years of commerce. "International traffic is heavy at Basel, where boundaries of three Intersect Switzerland's countries northwest corner being wedged between France and Germany. says a bulletin from the Washington, D. C headquarters of the National The mere Geographic society. Maintenance Ration and Laying Ration Different years, the minster Is as unblush-inglblush colored as when admiring Baslers rouged its paler stones with a touch of red paint Victor Hugo was shocked at its color, and compared its spires to carved carrots ' Health Lured Great Men "Tins 'shock inf' church nevertheless appealed to one of Europe s the Netherlands greatest minds scholur Erasmus, the lour hundredth anniversary of whose death was recently given world - wide recognition. After touring Europe he consented to settle down in Basel as adviser for its budding printing industry. "Here recognition was accorded to the German philosopher Nietzsche: he became professor at the University of Basel when still young enough to want staid apparel to Impress his eight students "Again Basel combined hospitality with profit when French Huguenots were given refuge fiom religious persecution and encouraged to establish the ribbon, satin, and tapestry industries for which the city soon became famous. "Across the Rhine from the gabled confusion of Basel s older l half, the modern subuib is an lndustiial section of wide streets, warehouses, regular roofs topped by tall factory chimneys, and fidelity to the city's longstanding reputation for c'eanliness Its industries produce aniline dyes, synthetic Indigo, and laundering and tanning preparations. From related chemical plants come dismineral infectants, anaesthetics, acids, saccharine, and other drugs "Raw materials for local and national industries enter here, making Basel Switzerland s most important port of entry. German and French railroads, terminating here, rival the Rhine in transpoitation. "The improved Rhine, however, gives Basel direct access to the North sea, and a Swiss navy need be no longer a joke or a dream. The city is progressing in the traffic tradition established before the dawn of history, when a palisaded village developed here in connection with a primitive ferry across the Rhine. Because it was on the logical military route into northern Gaul, it was augmented with a Roman colony. By 374 A D , Basilea had become important enough to be fortified as the temporary home of the Roman Emperor Valentine Asia Tins was the thirty first luncheon given by the society and If the increasing number of persons who attend them yearly may be taken as indication, lliey might well result in more exotic menus enlivening the ordinary menus of Pans restau- y rants. NEW REAR ADMIRAL g high-grad- e hurry thrice-plague- d m Naps Hours, Works 22 The trouble with Bronto, Ont. this world is that it sleeps too much, William Young, sixty years He works 22 hours old, declares a day, sleeps two hours, and boasts he can "keep most young fellows stepping. 2 Pans The Catacombs, the great undei ground cemetery of Paris, which is termed the ' creepiest place in the woild" have become a tourist attract.on and were visited by 5 9a0 persons last year The Catacombs date back to the Gallo Roman period and for many i years were the hid ng place of s and murderers Throughout the centuries they have been used as an ossuary, and historians believe that the bones of Danton, Desmoulins. Lavoisier and Robespierre are hidden somewheie n the daik, damp caverns Today the Catacombs aie open to the public every Saturday Candles are provided at the entrance and each visitor receives a metal disk which he must retuin upon leaving thus providing a the Catacombs check that no toun-- t has been left behind in the dark until the Catacombs are leopend the following rob-be- week V lf d j ! n - j fM i i u't i ITII the talkies celebrating their tenth birthday, film fans salute Warner Brothers, who back in 1926, helped the screen to find its voice. Re-- ( member the Vitaphone? That was the new invention that j'ust one decade ago changed the entire course of the movies. And remember Don Juan? That comc wMt h YOU F ' loomo rox synrhromzed (core. John Barrymore starred in it, but he did not talk The only speaking on that pioneer program was done by Will Hays, cinema czar, who predicted a brilliant future for sound motion pictures. It wasn't long after this, that movie theater owners dug down in their jeans to equip their houses to for the projection of "talkies. treat Uieir patrons to the new thrill And it wasn't long until all the big companies were busy on sound productions. So, many happy and returns of the day, "talkies here's hoping your birthday cake has ten nice candles on it. Those In the 'know say that if Bette Davis will get over her mad with the studio, she can have a starring vehicle in "Danton, Terror of France, a tale of the French revolution and the Reign of Terror. Max Reinhardt is scheduled to direct the pro duction which is expected to get under way in October. Bette has been on the suspension list since she made an exit from Warner Brothers studio when they failed to meet her salary demands and her request to be permitted to work elsewhere once a year. It is said that Charles Laughton is wanted for the role of Danton. " Bing Crosby i known as a man Most everything of individuality. he does has an individual slant to it. An example is his incorporation of Bing Crosby, Ltd , Inc The of- fleers are Bing's dad, his two broth- ers and himself The corporation gives them all jobs and keeps them busy handling the com which rolls in from Bing's advertising royal- ties, his radio contract, screen sal- Whenever ary and investments. Bing needs a little extra cash over and above his income from the corporation, he simply calls the officers together and declares a special dividend. Simple isnt it? k Theres one actress who can walk nearly a mile along her own private beach in Hollywood. Shes Kar- 4 N. Y. a short was regarded as a form of needlework to be utilized and reserved for luxurious intimate apparel, robes, negligees and such. The thought no longer holds good. The from emergence of e boudoir environs becomes a event the dawn of a new era for this exquisite needle work. That faithful perennial clothes problem is with us again. By way of a new and interesting approach to the subject suppose we talk about the perfectly fascinating hand quilted sports coats and evening jackets such as are now pridefully showing m shops that make boast of being ever first in fashion. Tuck away one or more of these cunning and chic hand quilted garwardments m your robe. Wear em on the campus and to parties and proms and you will excite the admiration and e. vy of the whole college. If you think this is an exaggerated way of putting it, please take one long look fashiors here at the pictured. The argument is closed, n'est ce pas? Hand - quilting really dates back to early history, some of the oldest pieces originating in China and India. In the general art revival of the Renaissance period Trapunto quilting came into exisetnee, the same accomplished by quilting the design m double lines, raising the space between into a bas relief effect by drawing through wisps of soft wool to form a padding. Women especially in north of England and in northern Italy created unusually artistic and original Via the pieces 'of English route the art of quilting was brought over by the English UPtimeTO agocomparatively handquilting hand-quiltin- high-styl- e hand-quiltin- Bt CHERIB g d 2 " Hi1": Sistie and Buzzie Datt, grandchildren of President Roosevelt, vis. ted the Texas Centennial exposition at Dallas in the company of their father, Curtis Dalh They mingled with the thousands of other children along the exposition's long midway, munching popcorn and ice ream round, w.ule their They are pictured above, riding on the merry-gfather, on the left, seems to enjoy the ride himseX settlers whose descendants, farmers wives, living in the mountains of Kentucky carry on the work today. Visioning the possibilities in this attractive handiwork, current style creators have put experts in vogu-is- h costume design at the service of native workers and thus is added to garments now showing in the shops. The new sport coats and evening jackets now featuring in the fash ion picture are made mostly of linens, cottons, smart satins, sheer woolens and damty challis. There are flowery prints, geometrical designs, cheeks and plaids as well as plain colors in flattering combinations. The stunning swagger coat in the picture is made of hand blocked chalks in brilliant plaid. It is lined with plain linen. Just the thing for campus wear or to stroll about town on an early coolish autumn day. model to the The right at the top makes an ideal knockabout country club coat. The original was done in brown lines. The pronounced vogue for satin this fall bespeaks the appeal of a coat thereof fashioned in like manner. The sports cardigan "set shown in foreground is of bright monotone fabric lined with a gay print, the complementary waistcoat being of match-colo- r pique with silver coin buttons to add to its lure. The eve' nmg jacket (m panel) is in a Trapunto design on linen with contrasting lining. This model comes in exquisite Chinese colorings. A perfect accessory to complete an autumn campus frock is shown to left above. This roundabout jacket is reversible and bas contrasting lacing. NICHOLAS Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. r tt hand-quilte- d si y hand-blocke- If you feel... --ru- rr n-down th -- nervous -- out of sorts b( usually a definite reason THERE Iscomplaints. . .so, now lets g reason sensibly. Dont try to get well In a day. . .this Is asking too much of Nature. Remember, she has certain natural processes that just cannot be hurried. Therefore, If you are pale, tired, lack a keen appetite, hare lost weight and feel rundown... a frequent sign are weak, with a that your blood-celtendency towards anemia then do try In the simple, easy way so many millions approi e by starting a course of S.S.S. Blood Tonic to feel like yourself again. o S s.s. c& hand-quilte- d ls 4 I br la M I rsfii b: lo tr th hi wl Sh ab th qu yo d Western Newspaper Union, v; tired -- LOOKING AHEAD TO COATS FOR WINTER TAILORED SILK co ini Deceives, Then Betrays The zeal which begins with hypocrisy must conclude in treachery; at first it deceives, at last it betrays. Bacon. i sid tin c tic cai sh inf oni k J ' ter? W ;t Lloyds Don Araeche, Freddie te-i- ; :U $? S l r Bartholomew, Guy Standing, Virginia Field and C. Aubrey Smith are in the cast. Freddie will play Don Ameche, as a boy. Lloyd's will be the Incidentally, fifth film in which Loretta has V s 4 p ' x 3 V I V V !' 7 f 4 1 vs' is on the tailored Emphasis theme for pajama costumes. The pajamas pictured is typical. This e is tailored of gray silk to shantung with glove stitching give it fine finesse. This model is not only good to wear at a resort or at countryside, one may even drop In to see a friend and wear this conservatively styled pajama nrniirietv KnciurriA urifh two-piec- wa up Those who prefer to ignore the heat by focusing their thoughts on the winter and fur coats will find sufficient different styles in the shops to keep them guessing for hours as to which is the most ImIf theyre wise theyll portant. choose the most becoming silhouette and forget about the others. Outstanding in fur fashions Is the flared silhouette, the width of hemline contrasted with the slenderness of the waistline. A coat of this type is obviously dressy, so the busy woman may prefer to pass it by m favor of a straightlme "topcoat model which proves serviceable from morning until night. 4i -- y as colorful a picture, as quaint a verse, as this. You'll find it a grand way to use up scraps of cotton or silk floss, and a design that works up in no time, for the background u plain. Wouldn't it go beautifully in a young girl's room? Perchanca that Young Miss will want to da this easy cross stitch design herself! Pattern 1187 comes to you with a transfer pattern of a sampler 12 4 by 15 inches; color suggestions; material requirements; illustrations of all stitches used. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, when it offers Loretta Young had been planning on a nice long vacation but now it seems that she'll have to postpone it for a few weeks. Shes to be starred by Twentieth Centu- ODDS AD EWDSShirley Temple makes $ 10 etery time her pet uhite rabbits are used in a film by Twentieth Century Fox . . . Katharine Hepburn uill mention for seteral weeks in Iew York and return to Hollywood for filming of Quality Street Dai id Selzntck is carrying on a country-search for a perfect boy type wide to play Tom Sawyer . . . Claudette Colbert caused a mild sensation when she appeared in a cafe in a pair of those new high boots which are becoming all the rage . . . Jean Hersholt has trekked north to Collander, Ontario, to meet the Dionne quintuplets for the filming of Reunion . . . ff heeler and K oolsey hate returned from Furope and u ill make a picture for RKO Radio, entitled A Pair of Sixes . . . Martha Rase is still so young that her Paramount contract has to be appro i ed by the courts . I Western Newspaper Lnion. a espec-dail- Back from distant shores, Elissa Landi has been signed by MGM on a long term contract. She will have one of the leads in the forthcoming production of the Return of the Thin Man which will star Myrna Loy and William PowelL in WITHOUT MMXNina OF No en Morley, who has played the so convincingly in many a screen production. She and her husband, Charles Vidor, own an ocean-sid- e ranch which covers 42 acres. London. com Pattern 1187 matter what the Season sampler's always fun to do, was the first film to have a fully played this year. ini Ofc? VIRGINIA VALE of Fr 3 By ry-Fox & 016 MOKMIWJ 4$ hand-quilte- d Sistie and Buzzie at Dallas Fair S- A Century-Fox- . Paris Catacombs Added to Tourist Attractions com in int JVtNlNfi F Rear Admiral George I Petten gill is pictured at his office in the Washington navy yard where he He relieved Rear took command Admiral Josepn 1 Dcfrees who has been placed m command ol the Rear Admiral submarine force Pettengill is in his thirty eighth year of servire tod has been cum mended for conspicuous service as far back as the Boxer rebellion. Keep You Occupied couf in Tut Kate Smith has Joined the parade of radio stars who have moved their program westward to Hollywood. Her broadcasts are scheduled to start from the film capital almost Immediately. Incidentally, Kate Is to have another fling at the pietuies. It is rumored that she will probably appear in the next Shirley Temple product.on at Twentieth Klein-Base- Poultry is fed chiefly for one or more of three purposes: growth, egg production, and maintenance. A maintenance ration differs from a laying ration, not in the ingredients, but in proportions, less animal food, or protein, being used. Whether feeding for growth, egg five production, or maintenance, classes of foods are necessary for poultry, asserts a writer in Hoard's Dairyman. 1. Grams, for energy, heat, flesh and egg forming materials. Usually fed in two forms: ground, called "mash" and in the kernel, called "scratch feed. 2. Greens, as aid to digestion, for and growth protheir health-givinThe Maharajah of Mysore, one moting properties. of the richest rulers in the world, 3. Animal foods, rich in egg- - and materials; the most shown In his suite in 'he Dorchester hotel, London. This is said to essential as well as the most expensive and most frequently lacking be the first time the Maharajah has sat alone for a posed photo ingredient in all laying rations. 4. Mineral matter, as an aid to digraph. gestion and to supply material for egg shells and bone structure. Exrelimestone grit, name is a document in foreign amples: west bank of on Bale the lations: oyster shells, and charcoal. Keep the Rhine where the city extends these accessible to the fowls at all toward the French frontier, Basel times Feed a small amount of table on the east bank below where a line salt in all mashes. of poplar trees divides Switzerland 5. Water. Quenches thirst, regufrom Germany. lates body temperatures, transports Medieval Stronghold wastes. and eliminates nutrients, "Forewarned that it is unattractive, travelers usually Picking Out Feathers through the city and remember it The trouble with chickens picking only as the spot in out their feathers is caused by a whose railway stations they ensmall mite that gets into the skin dured the customs inspections of near the base of the feathers and three nations. But dignified Basel causes irritation. To get rid of tins does not bid for the hasty approval of transients. This was the medimite, according to the North Carolina State college, the poultry house eval home of Europes merchants should be thoroughly cleaned and de luxe; it prospered on the shrewd sprayed with a solution of three' policy of giving nothing away cheapparts of crude petroleum or carbo-lineu- ly. So Basel does not shower its and one and parts charms on the passers by, but reof kerosene. Dip the birds in a tub serves them for the keen-eyeseekcontaining two ounces of flowers of er who peers through lacelike sulphur and six ounces of flaked wrought-irogates at regal mansions encrusted with carvings; who soap to five gallons of tepid water. to the climbs shadowy narrow streets to Be sure that the solution gets skin. the sudden sunlight of a little open square with a sparkling fountain; who relishes the local tradition of Chickens Need Water fostering intellect as a business asHot weather sends the poultryman set to the well many times during each "On the hilly left bank of the of cold drink day for a refreshing green Rhine, where the town behis water. He must remember that cathedral lifts its gan, the rose-relayers get just as thirsty as does he two towers high above a jumble of and they need water Just as muen sharp roof peaks crowded together as he does or even more because in planless medieval confusion. The of the body functioning which he cathedral has been called the minexpects of them. The water supply ster since the Reformation, and in the summer henhouse should be stripped of many decorations which hot for weather is it extra clean matched the cheerful color of the always abundant, cool and fresh. sandstone and the gay root of Cleanse the water pans every mornwhite, and red tile. In spite green, ing and again in the afternoon. of the earthquake, fire, and reformNever let the supply run dry. ers' zeal which have assailed its Rural Gothic dignity within the past 900 New-Yorke-r. of fered at the annual luncheon given here by the Societc National d Acclimation. Eaten fresh and served for the first time in Paris, the stew was a great success and even though several members and guests weie a bit reluctant at first, there were several requests for second help- winner of the spectacular cross channel aquaplane to Hermosa Manhattan beach, on tiie shores of the Southern California mainland, receives his trophy from the hands of lametta Turnbull, famous feminine speedboat pilot, who was at the controls of another contender in the same event Bub Hippopotamus the exotic piece de Quaint Sampler Will i Movie Radio J j Epicures Are Delighted With Hippopotamus Stew tare from Santa Catalina island r one-ha- 1 m. m Nwlll Fashions STAR DUST Denver Radio crooners have at least one appreciative friend among Denver radio listeners He is Charles R. Manners, superintendent of the dairy herd at the National Jewish Consumptive Relief Society sanltori-um- . The pure bred bovine In the society's bams produce from 5 to 15 per cent more milk when radio is being played during the milking period. Manners reported after extensive experi ments. I ? Flair for Radio Helps Cows to Give More Milk the tiv IN UTAH tim ter to tha ant AND boc IV cal "Ai fori Fall Hosiery to Glisten cus stai in Bright Copper Tones A penny or rather a copper for your thoughts if youre thinking of colors that are good in hosiery at the moment. The copper tones are important shades that glisten with the bright bronze of a new penny, or of your burnished copper teakettle. The copper casts will continue into the fall, the fashion makers tell us, because they consort so well with the new autumn colors in fabrics and shoes. New taupes and grays are also coming Into the picture. Wine Tones Are Popular in Fashions for Autumn The prominence of wine tones, grapes and vintage greens in the first fall fashions springs from the Exposition Vinecole at the Tuileries in Paris. American women have already caught this Bacchanalian note in fashion. Evidences of its presence are seen In clusters of grapes worn in the hair for evening, wine colors in the first fall hats and leaf motifs m trimming. THE up! qui snii sidf T HOTEL BEN LOMOND Ogdens Finest . . One of Utah's Best 350 Rooms 350 Baths $2.00 to $4.00 ver Air Cooled Corridors Grill Room Coffee Shop Spacious Lounye and Lobby Courteous Service Every Comfort and Convenience will be found at Delightful Rooms gra THE HOTEL BEN LOMOND OGDEN, cha he UTAH COME AS YOU ARE W. WEST, Gen'l MOB. CHAUNCEY WNU W 36 37 complexions - improved, and smooth skin often READ THE ADS able pillc pillc the DIOTCHY.ROUGH r ope ens squ sho apa und re- 0 chol wait mon Mig Dav coul top and my Mi |