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Show Murray Earle, Murray. Utah SPREAD POSSIBLE FEVER OF YELLOW WMMM Some good points IN POULTRY HOUSE Ventilation One of Biggest Problems. Better insulation has brought the greatest improvement of all to the says Successful poultry house, Farming. Insulation reduces the harmful effects of the extremes of cold and bent and makes the house more comfortable at all temperatures. The "straw loft" house became popular because it provided a cheap and efllclent roof Insulation, a point largely neglected in the earlier houses. The type of house was never very successful because It lacked Insulation in the roof and was consequently a cold, damp house In winter and a hot one In the summer. Many of these monitor houses have been greatly Improved by the addition of a straw celling. A similar insulating effect can be secured by some of the insulating boards now on the market. Ventilation Is another Important problem In poultry house construction because of Its effect on dampness and the Inside temperature. The only way to remove the excess moisture In the house Is by ventilation or change of air. Air movement should be very slow, so that no draft of cold air Is noticeable. In the average run of poultry houses the hens probably suffer more in severe cold weather due to too much ventilation rather than too little. Both the Nebraska and Iowa experiment stntlons have found thnt bens show no harmful effect from tightly closed quarters during the winter. While neither of ttmse stations recommend a tightly closed poultry house, their findings Indicate the Importance of air purity may have been overemphasized in the past. r v Milkman In Seville, L by tht National Oeog-raphl-e Wanhlnxton. D. C.) ty. the revolution a matof history. Seville, which Sn.nWitv of visitors who wn from Madrid and np lz call "The Most Spanish has settled Uown to I "'' ''' ii:iln," now scintillating, ipy, U discovered a Spain e centuries here on slopes, the city lias duiu I a dwelling place of traill- they are not a high wall It Seville takes about. U l tier glorious past, treasures iii'S frankly arrogant about ft tL s; hut her chief love is life livilie of ll- Bar churches she Ida iviohite. Not one cobweb 9 bo removed, nor a single erum-- b Mock of hand hewn stone he a well-N- j atortarod; hut, neros avenue, a building must incorporate Vf convenience of the modern Oder's art. Lades donkeys may, and do, wan- willy-nillthrough every down-thoroughfare, hut the driver a Qinousine must keep his eyes L1 fcr "oie-wnstreet" signs and fCirs alert for the truffle ollker's t It I f tti lichen-covere- a y tulle's history Is as colorful as the silken shawls that drape seno-Cii- " ttjfulders of her dark-eyevaried ns the moods of her a.i Interesting as any story Tell he that depicts the of a town which has lived tZZ$i the rise, glory and decay of :I3jdozen nations. clty'ii actual genesis Is lost, I by the obscuring veil which $s much of the remote past of I I jMiierranean. and which was ? Rightly torn aside by the ad fun riioenlcluns, and later by d :j Tfc MJrrior-merrhnnt- of Carthage. s ,11 there was a Koman Seville. ancient period definite I remain. Some of the crum-'all- s of the city were built !the direction of the Caesars. fMg'rths. following the fall of western empire, lingered for three centuries Id Seville, wg, too. from behind Pvyjin. Jfcmie here to have their home,1 ) tp positions of power, endured persecution, passed, hut red memories of their stay. Cyp.iei Still There. the gypsies came here. - W re they yet remain, crowded .! r In noisy Utile and big fain-ZTrlaiia, the ragged suburb of if -- I r!se CTn the Uundatqulvlr. the Moors possessed Seville. 1 ti ust say finally because the Jjemnliu today something of a town. Saint Ferdinand 3P 'I within the Christian fold -; eenturlej ago; but all Khl culd not wlpo out the S p!'nre.(ue .Seville, Crux Its narrow, dls-M''- f with "1 streets and iilnnnhle houses, hns chnnged lu,, In Inst thousand elty's famous and Mwfii nirnlda Is today T the same as when a Moorish wmpletpd it, n ihvt, Rml h.bcd fllowrrl of H UM-- it mlnHrpt from lo rail tl,c flll(hfu ,0 mjvT. Bit Seville dwells not overmuch "liiUcenn.. She revere-- , her ff ohlcn tUw. but It the t),nt occupy her '"Nhetrsi.nprrt, Annually 'voi.-- , mnn, holidays to obe. herore Bllrrtl, h bn , d J 8r Klrp " ,fur w"n her '! after are spent In nnrn.w streets to acrapidly incrcnsln mo. c "m " ''Uildlng steel snd nihee hulldlng, wherein to - I?;"" m her evereanjing nnner. M 'blert,riiH.i, H,u,t' h.rr1. to where 0f ,ht Ncw KwWt In the m J'"?"1 "'""-eTh". w'l bart-l- a stone s eleetrlc cranes mrlve U Mg , taM wg,iin (o , ir. m ?" 1'n.ve!, -- r1" it,, .U f 0 to km rlh-- u,e turies ago; but Immediately across the street the new Alfonso XIII hotel transplants one straightway to the luxuries of Paris, or London or New York. Those fortunate individuals who come to southern Spain armed with letters of introduction to high officials and wealthy families go away s with glowing accounts of the of life, of the lavish hos pitality accordel visitors, and of the very modern manner of living In this only superficially modernized city. Other earnest seekers after local color who visit Seville and. In their desire to know their Spain, live among the Sevlllanos, endure the Inconveniences of modest Spanish homes, spend long hours In crowded cafes to engage In endless discus hab sions with the itues, attend frequent festivals and bullfights. These folk carry away a vivid, glowing picture of a Seville en fiesta colorful, rather noisy, highly picturesque. Average Income Is Puny. Only In rare Instances does the foreigner come to know the true home life of the Sevlllano. There Is not much money per enpita in Seville these days. To be sure, certain of the city's families are Im mensely wealthy and live In the style of oriental potentates and occidental plutocrats, while foreign residents are lorceu. for appear ances 8n ke, to struggle along at a similar pace. Hut such folk are a statistical handful. Fully three-fourtof the town's population lives and has Its being and Is wholly happy on an Income of around a did lar a day per person. In ninny cases this Income must cover the needs of an entire family. and some of Seville's families need Uut somehow there Is al much. ways enough left over for the men folk to afford a few hours each eve ning with convivial friends In a fa vorlie coffee shop, and to secure a seat "In the sun" at the Sunday bullfight; and for the numerous children to purchase penny sweets, as occasion demands, from the howling huckster who passes the door each morning, accompanied by congenial donkey laden with sticky lusclousness; and for the women of the family to have a new Imitation tortoise shell comb, a cobwebby lace mantilla, and a holeless pair of silk stockings this last because the weaving of silk hosiery hns In re cent years become one of Spain's leading manufacturing Industries. The people of Seville blend past and present In their dress and In many of their customs. The high finish comb and lace mantilla of olden times are still worn here, per haps more generally than In any other city of Spnln. Hut the comb Is more often than not perched pre cariously in modernly bobbed hair, while the mantilla covera beautl ful head filled with decidedly feminine thoughts and Ideas. Olives and Cork. Seville Is an industrious cltt, Many of the city's activities revolve about the production and shipment of pickled olives and various grades of olive oil, for It Is the central point of distribution for the richest olive producing area in the world, There Is an ancient local saving that the only genuine queen olives produced on earth are grown within seeing distance of the Clralda tower, the soil and climate of this region being particularly well suited to the full maturing of (his class of the fruit. Much of the cork Insulnllon found In our modern electrical refrigerators and niRny of the cork disks In the metal caps of ginger ale and other hollies were shipped from the port of Seville. The world acknowledges oo wrought Iron more artistic than that fnshloned by the gypsy families of Trlana. Seville's industries, however, are not permitted to Interfere too radically with her moment of rest and rein tat Ion. F.very coffee shop (and there are scores of them in Seville) Is a noisy stamping ground, humanity-choked, from wirly In the after mon until long after midnight, indeed, one may pas at any time during the day or night and see gesticulating knots of men crowded about cop cluttered tables, talking, sump-tuousnes- iiniK'sinc nast. nor set of ling present; It Is an Indlsauhi-thor Dotu. uilngling r,J)r ,u.ndor of the r Andsluslaq kings, wmslns th ssme as It was seven cen e Foresee Danger From Airplane8 Experts A "new aviation peril." said to be sensational In Its possibilities, came up for discussion at the annual conference of the British Medical association. Sir Malcolm Watson called attention to the likelihood, almost the certainty, of "aircraft carrying Afyellow fever from West to East rica." If that happened, he claimed, there was nothing to prevent It from spreading to Asia, from completely paralyzing Itself. Other physicians !at the conference undertook to show how alrolanes might be the means of "propagating plague, cholera, small And Sir George pox and typhus." Buchanan stated that, as there was a possibility of aircraft Introducing new types of Influenza and cerebrospinal meningitis into England, the subject was engaging the attention of both the air ministry and the ministrv of health. For himself he regarded It as "an Important matter reaulrlng measures In the yellow fever rones to prevent the spread of the disease," Almost simultaneously with these deliverances, though wltiiout any sort of connection with them, came an article In the London Times set- tine forth facts regarding the trans mission of cholera over the world after Its appearance at Calcutta in 1817, and asserting that by 1831 It had become certain that no country was secure against the Inroads of the disease. Appearing succesa'vely at Bombay and Madras, It reached Ceylon in 1819 and spread thence and from India over eastern Asia and the Islands of the Indian ocean. By 1S23 Syria was reached and Europe threatened. It disappeared from Turkey, but began to push north and west again after ravaging Persia and tie lands south of the Caucasus, In Rus sia more than 200,000 human beings died as the result. In Cairo and Alexandria 30,000 were swept away In 21 parts of their bodies will not be painTHINKER HAS GOOD fully pierced. All of this, of course, WORD FOR THORNS is merely another form of a most days. And the alarm In Great Britain "Increased enormously" in June, 1831, when Londoners received the news that the cholera had reached Riga, where "700 or 800 sail of English vessels, loaded chiefly with hemp and flax," were waiting to come to It was then, after an orEngland. der had been Issued for the quarantining of all ships from the Baltic, that "the plague established Itself In England for the first time. Yet all through that period, beginning with 1817, there were none of our modern airplanes in existence, and no possibility of the cholera being carried by them. Are they In any way specially fitted for the conveyance of contagious diseases, for stimulating to special precautions, and for thus alarming the world? Must It not be assumed that there Is a like risk in the trips of our ocean steamers and sailing vessels that have been so long connecting the continents, the latter for Introduced many centuries past? dlsense, whether Imported by airplane or steamer, is dangerous in any case. The call Is to prevent such importation so far as that can be done, but especially to continue the fight against disease in all the countries which are affected or serve as Its breeding ground, so that there will be as little as possible of It to export And this is the task at which the scientists and the physicians are working in their campaign against that enemy of man, the poison Serve to Keep the Individual Within Bounds. "The rose culturlsts have accom plished so much In the development of blooms that I have often wondered why they have not been able to do away with the thorns," said Mr. Cato Nlnetails. 'Terhnps It Is impossible, or perhaps. In some instances, they have succeeded, but the roses of the garden BtUl have thorns; and vicious enough they seem to the amateur, who, when he prunes his bushes or his climbers, should be sheathed In plate armor; even the experts do not escape unscathed, I understand. I have sometimes had the feeling when I was applying an antiseptic solution to my lacerated arms and hands that roses shouldn't be allowed at large, but that their cultivation should be wholly within guarded boundaries where they could do no barm. And yet, a rose In bloom Is a rose In bloom! And as long as such blooms are produced It seems highly probable thnt we'll endure the thorns. "In horticulture rose thorns are menacing: In literature they are monitory. Many of the classicists, for many a century, have recorded the which has been made by so discovery many other people that there is no rose without a thorn; and then, with their usual Ignoring of facts, the metnphorl8ts talk paths as the ways of delight, and beds of roses as couches of luxurious com fort. Fellow amateur, who ha done some of his own rose pruning, would you like to walk along a path or He on a bed of roses? You needn't answer. I'll answer for you. Certainly not I "Let us, then, bear all this In mind ns we contemplate the superior bless ings of our more fortunate fellows. Those whose ways lead along rose- strewn paths must often find them rather painful to the feet, and those who He on beds of roses probably have a good deal of difficulty In ad Justing their posture so thnt tender tf Sole Voter Leavei Precinct The city of New York will save $400 next primary election day, four men will be out of work and Manhattan will be minus one election dis- Jack Mail Route The carrying of the malls has progressed so rapidly In late years that the airplane now speeds across the country with mall In only a fraction of the time required by trains of a few years ago, yet in spite of all the progress there Is one mall route which goes on unchanged In the 80 years of Us operation. In Edwards, Colo., W. II. Wellington, a veteran of the mall service, has the contract for transporting the mail from tha post office to the railroad station, and thrice dally for SO years be baa driven the mall back and forth In a buckbonrd wagon drawn by a Jack mule. Ills Is believed to be the only conveyance Id the federal mall service. rose-strew- rose-strew- n trict, because Ceorge Schrader has moved. Mr. Schrader for two years has enjoyed the distinction of being the only voter In the Thirty-eighth district election comforting philosophy a comprehension thnt there are flaws In the advantages that are enjoyed by tha most enviable. " 'Buck,' I said, referring the sub ject, as I do most puzzling questions. to a man who has ideas, 'don't you think that, with all the advance horticulture has made, the experts ought to be able to develop a rose without a thorn?' " 'Perhaps,' lie responded ; 'but why should they? " 'Why, because thorns hurt people. They are bad things thnt serva no good purpose. " 'As usual, you are wrong," he declared. 'Thorns serve a very good purpose. They keep people within bounds. In fact, they ought to be on a good many other things than rosea. InAccelerators, for Instance,'" News. dianapolis You can't talk i bachelor out of bis time tried though often eccen tric ways of enjoying hlr self. Do you choose your friends or do they choose you? la Agreement "How Is your boy Josh getting along with his employer?" "Well." replied Farmer Corntossel, "they have come to an agreement at Inst Josh said be was goln' to quit an' the boss, he said so, too." You can be tolerant of the foolish, but how about being tolerant of the Intolerant? Break Up Broodiness by Feeding Better Rations "Broody hens should be cooped the Crst night they stay on the nest, as any delay will Increase the brooding period," says Miss Cora Cooke, extension poultry specialist, Minnesota University farm. "Iu breaking up broodiness, the saue way Is to give the hens humane treatment and feed them well, so as to get them back to laying as soon as possible. The case is one for hospital treatment, rather than punishment, such as starvation, or torture In solitary confinement." says Miss Cooke. "Build the hens np to laying by good feeding. Instead of starving or scaring them out of broodiness. After all, what Is wanted are eggs. "Confine broody hens In a slatted or' netting coop, placed in the shnde. Supply dry mash all the time In a feed trough, feed a moist mash once a day and feed scratch grain lightly. Under such treatment, hens will soon go back to laying If caught the first a kM'UHiinn night Don't stop with this, however. Breeding broodiness out of the flock Is better than treating birds for the ailment. Band a ben every time she goes broody. Omit from the breeding pen hens wearing such bands and In time the trouble from broodiness can be reduced to a minimum." COMPARE PRICES rif. Tin. rif- 014. CM lH TIM Light Yolks Preferred Poultry producers find thut many buyers in the large cities, especially the New York market prefer d yolks, the eggs with United States Department of Agriculture say. Certain materials such as green feed and yellow corn produce dark yolks, but when eggs are candled It Is often difficult to tell whether the dark yolk has been caused by feed or becnuse the egg has been exposed to heat Thus, although buyers prefer llghl yolk. In order to be on the safe side, dark yolkt do not neeessiirlly mean that the eggs are Inferior In quality. Feeds such as white corn, wheat buckwheat and onts result tn rges having lichl yolks. To be clnssed as a quality product, egx must be uniform In color and size, and light yolkt make them more desirable In many light-colore- tea tax III AS Wl ! TrM II Cu M Orim tut im U4 tm C rrtM rm Firestone ft r4 tlMl Trm tlMt Cxi rim tm Tiai Tm ca II lira WM am a H.llrfc-- Fattl 1.40-2- 1 Chin. lit. I i.9d 4.f 50-J- d. 50-2- to.ao 4.7 .60j .7S KM..... 4.rdnru it. 10 1.8.1 lUtliad. t5.64 1 ( h.rrolM Mar man 4-- Pr UMl'b kf f .hry .Ire. I I.I 4) tlaln f.4ai-.- 6 blp.l ri; ... Ol.l.hl. 4nlf . Jordia.. 4. -t- raaklla. IliuUoa Ik Ml.IOrMfMtf 11.14, 1 1.1 j I.Hl IU Packard . rtMiif trat- I Jlaia ajillaa. - PlMtU ll.) I Ma,' ... 1 i Mo 7.1 l4.o .00-- 1 OUa'bla.j a.uk .23-2- .lott..0i .I7 1 S7I J 1)6.3 d Brar 0.00-lR- U iA.OO - Mo. 7.H 7.5M If-J- 8.7 17.00 Pair 8.M i7- - 1.11 1.2ft ai.7 1.4 f tl q 11.10 24 U.4T 11.47 il.) 0 21 It.of! U.6TJ lt.0 0 f trattaa OH Viaa ea) Sat hi.... ..... lt.7 7.17U.S: 41 a! too.),. COMPARE IMf; 13.4' tf.Sf IS. lo.to CONSTRUCTION antf QUALITY 4--7 end BUS TIRE. TRUCK ill mile Tread insure long, safe, un these Onl FircatoneTlrea give you age. values. extra equaled Consider talue$ only not tricky oalea talk or mhleading claims. Compare sectiono of Firestone and Special Iirand Mail Order Tlrei check every statement oce Firestone extra raluei for yourself. The Firestone Senlce Store or Service Dealer near you hao these sections. See him today he will save you money and serve you better. In 11 16.00. 16.00- Non-Ski- c rrtat ear tm 1 r.-ta- rd t.o .40 5.50-19- ' 17-0- 1 10.71 i.o 11.11 4aaatl Ball wrtm lira I Imxat M4.00 S2.3 01.70 JL'). 7-- 10.00 BraT ka aaaaa- lira fparlal In dtalnkalnra a Mr la aa an ail ardat fcanaiat, aal fariMr mm tkal ama aa4 Mapaaba and atkara, tdvaatir tha lira aaanafartaraa? la tha paklta, ataaalla hat "aval ajwatlla llraa aadr hfca vara, aaaaaaia ha balMa aaaa. FlraataM pla hta a a ma aa M I R T lira ha aaakaa. it A la C;aratFT .tght i 1 TVa aaatarOa, 17.01 "Zt?!?:?? .658 .60$ .$98 J61 Mors trrpth, -- .181 .230 .2 5 0 a . a $.10 frlco.. $6.6$ rM.S .Yrftrar 16.10 Si 1 j 4.7 $ 5.20 l lrrtlnnp i rrry Monday .Xaifmtrid . ,;r,.J.,!:.. Sara, $4-8- $ 4.: I MM T Ji df'l Uh QfO If OaajrTht,lt.TWri 17.80 TrJ.a f .V. 18.00 Mortlliral'DJcr ur aaaaularaar-- 4 ha rlraalaata ra tha aad aaMrva l ira. aaaa - I H I T laaa'a allmlladl ftaaraalaa a)4 thai ataat IS .009 Wah; i. ah r a aad aitaa Star. 1 aa mrm atamhla ajaalaalaal. Ihm t'efr tJln loOrer . ot "0, 1 DtifcU "l0 nor. Noi-?kt- Sanitation Pay Illinois poultry men who Used sanitation and otherwint practiced good management got a return of 31 cents an hour more for their labor Inst year than Rock owners who did not use sanitation, according to a aummiirjr of I heir records by II. II. Alp, poultry extension specialist of the University of Illinois. He rites thl as further evidence that the differenre between u'(cn and failure In poultry raising I largely one of good management, since sanitation I alnns part of good maiinseiiient Flock handled under the recommended sanitation system paid their owner a return rf 70 rent an hour for labor, while nonsanltntlon farm paid only 4. rent an hour. Indiana Farmer's Oulde. Tiro Htm, tJ.i 21.T3 13.23 M "" CIy You Tr " - trouble-fre- e rrtaa 7 larala b.oo. wnir-- k .00-2(- II Cut "..SO Haa'axkl Flaraa.a I)SIS Umt Traa ltd Tm Fair Ptlr at It. Ma atal OK- - Cum- Dippcd Cords, two Extra Cord Hie urtucr d the trend. Scientifically Designed fir. Fir. - exclusive feature '6 C |