OCR Text |
Show n fHE SAUNA , SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Expert Outlines Care of Poultry were furnished by the U. S. Navy (Continued from page 1) . ' rear, of the poultry coop. Many poul trymen have made their coops warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer by insulating the sides and ceilings of their coops. It is impossible for hens to lay well if they are infested with parasites. Since lice and mites thrive well and multiply rapidly during hot weather, the hens and roosting quarters should . be examined frequently to detect their .presence. Creosote or used crankcase oil thinned sufficiently with kerosene and sprayed thoroughly over the roosting quarters, is an efficient way of killing the red mite which is so troublesome to the hens .during hot . weather. Licb which- live- continuously on the chickens and- feed chiefly o.n the scales and scurf of the skin and .the base of the feathers can be killed by placing a small amount of .Black Leaf 40,' nicotine sulphate, along the center of, the- perch with a paint .brush or oil can at night, just before the hens, go 'to roost. . Since flies are the- intermediate hosts for the tapeworms which live parasitiqally in the intestinal tract of the chicken, every effort should be made to discourage their propagation around. the poultry coop., during hot . summer months. . . Since feeding during the summer months essential for good mash arid scratch should both be fed and as long as the birds .are in good condition they should be encouraged to eat more mash, than scratch, which may tend to stimulate egg production. Hens-- that.' might otherwise molt can often be held in production hy feeding, a dampened mash once .every day. . . : A constant supply of fresh, clean drinking water, is. .also important at of the year. The containers should be kept clean and free from that slimy coating which Collects so ' readily during hot weather. Chronic setting hens and individual birds that have started to molt time of the year should be culled out and either sold, eaten, bottled, . given , away, or else killed-- as they will like-J- y be on vacation during the' entire summer and early fall. It costs about 15c a month to feed a bird and unles? they are eliminated now they, may consume more food than they are. worth before they start to lay again. Extrveffort should also be. made-- to maintain the qualify of the egg after it is laid by keeping the nests dry , and .dean, by gathering the eggs fre-- quently, by storing them in a cool, . moist place. These details must be adhered to If the poultryrrien of our state are- to produce eggs .profitably .under, the present low' paying prices for eggs.- ' . . - - - - , this-timf- e - at-thi- s Misses Rosemond, Lucile and Dora Gribble, iriotored to Glenwood Sunday and were guests at the home of Mrs. Arlo Hendrickson for the day. Re- cruiting station at Salt Lake City: The U. S. navy has a ship 135 years old still in commission. The U. S. S. Constitution, Old Ironsides, launched at the Boston navy yard October 21, 1797, and recently rebuilt, is now cruising the porta of the United States. A new record for the fastest run by an ocean liner between Yokahama and San Francisco is claimed to have been set by the ' new Dollar liner, President Coolidge," on her maiden homeward crossing, which was made in 12 days and 8 minutes, or an average of 19.5 knots. This is four houis and four minutes faster than the record established some time ago by Yusen Kaisha liner, Asama i j . Miss Marie Froyd, who has been a guest of her sister, Mrs. Doyle Curtis, Don the past month, has returned to her home in Cedar City. Miss Blanche Mattsson is. spending the. summer vacation in California. She is a guest of her aunt', Mrs. Laura McQuillan, and plans to return at the opening of the school year in early I ' fall. ' . Miss Mable' Willardsonwho ! ha3 been an instructor in .the kindergarten and a. guest of Mrs. Morse Burr, Maru.. left Monday for Idaho. She will visit at the home of her parents. Mr. and enIn a recent examination- for trance to the naval academy, 23 per MrS. W; S. W.illardson, at Preston. cent of the appointees froin civilian ranks passed the. examinations, while Mr?. Lymi Nielsen was visiting for 64 per cent of candidates from the several days of this week, at the enlisted, ranks of the regular navy home of her parents, Mr.' and Mrs. W. were successful. ' . L.. Thompson, in Aurora. . . Some fifty-eigof the graduating class' of 1932 of the naval academy Serictra Silva Paula has lived all of were appointed from the ranks of the her reputed 120 years jri Bahia Blanenlisted personnel of the navy and ca, Argentina,- but never until recently-. marine corps. . had she seen a train, telephone, ; On June 20,- 189'8,. the' Island of street car or electric light. Guam was taken by the U. S.. S. Charleston following a. weak resisA 'news item in a. paper in Archbold, tance." . Ohio., led to' the reunion, of Peter During the war, the U. S. S. Penn Stouff and hi's brother, Theodore, who sylvania was the champion of the At- had not seen or heard from each other lantic fleet in baseball. But this was for 55 . . yeare. not much of a surprise, as practically the entire Boston Red Sox team, inShowing his disregard fog the surtact, was wearing the uniform of this ' geons knife, Alexander W. Blain of ' ' ship. sat up in bed and smoked a .Detroit; .The biggest man who has ever musa few minutes after rin operacigar tered on any in the U. S; tion .had been performed to slave his was Tiny Forrest of the Pennlife.' . sylvania. Six feet, ten inches, was his height and he weighed just a few pounds short of the three century, ' mark. : named Great Britain, has a warship the Sandwich; Italy, one called the Bologna; Germany, the Hamburg, and the United States, the. Turkey; Quail - - - . ht - - - . i 3 . mari-of-w- ar ... , . AT- - j ; " rind Teal. . . .. The first Steamship to cross the Atlantic was' the the Savannah, 320 tons, and it took her 25 ' days to make the trip. . The American cruisers for French and Itai-- . ian ships have phenomenal speed, and the Japanese appear to have combined bo that the expense-o- f of the U. S. From, the spar-dec- k Frigate Constitution,, now: at the Washington navy yajd, on June 9y a nation-wid- e broadcast of the navy band was .held. This is the first time in the history of the famous ship that a large' band played on her decks. ' ' The U. S. S. Chicago Is living up to a certain reputation for. gunnery, the name Chicago will always have. LatIt is all right to say that prosperity est reports indicate the Chicago as a is just around the comer, but the av- - shooting ship. erage man want3 to be convinced that An ' Unusually important' embezzlehe is net riding on a ment case of inore than a quarter of We doubt whether Andy. Volstead a century ago was recalled by the would have gotten' many votes if a death of Frank G. Bigelow, once been taken of the poIThad galleries president of the First National Bank in .either the Democratic or Republi- of Milwaukee. Bigelow began his can national conventions. ' career, is a bank runrier, rose to its presidency, and lost a million and a Since Coftgressman E. E. Eslick of half of its funds in wheat speculation. . Tennessee, dropped dead on the. floor Convicted in 1905, he sensed six years of the House a few days ago while in Leavenworth prison, and since livspeaking for the bonus bill, a search ed in retirement, dying, at the age of the records reveals that only once of 84. ' before has such a thing happened, and Neil Roberts OBrien, that was 98 years ago. On February 11, 1834, Representative Thomas T. baby of Springfield, Mass., sufBouldin of Virginia, fell dead while fered only an elbow bruise in a window. fall from a third-stor- y making a speech to the House. r, gun-powe- r; . . - - merry-go-roun- d. fe-ce- nt ' DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, United States Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, Serial No. 050229. NOTICE OF , OFFER OF CC)AL LAND FOR LEASE Notice is hereby. given that pursuant to the act of February 25, 1920 (41 Stat. 437), and to the regulations thereunder,- approve ed April 1, 1920, Circular No. 679, the Secretary of the Interior on petition of Charles L. Rollins has. designated lot 4 Sec. 3, lot 1 Sec. 4, T. 24 S., R. 4 E., S. J M., as coal leasing unit No. 1001-- , Utah No. 140. The. lease of said1 unit will be made at a royalty rate of 15 cent3 per ton, mine, run, an in'tial irivestment of $1,000 during the first three years of the lease, and a minimum production of 550 tons per year commencing with the fourth year of the lease arid otherwise, substantially in accordance with the lease form Eet out in paragraph 13 of the regulations. Said' lease will be sold at public auction in this office on the terms set forth to the qualified bidder offering the highest bonus on the day of August 23, 1932; .at 10:00 oclock A. M. Any and all persons - having adverse or conflicting claims to said land or any part thereof are hereby notified that they should file on .or before August 23, 1932, their protest or objection against the granting of the lease for said land; otherwise, such claims may be disregarded in granting said lease. ' ELI F. TAYLOR, J22A1$ Register. . U . With all that the name implies in proved performance Cubic Foot Moraine Model now only . . . Prices Greatly Reduced on all Household Models n n L t Sham Battle Pioneer Parade Program at Park Horse Paces Baseball Game Street Dance . i , Fireworks and Dance -- ! i Telluride Power Company n n; be , 4 the AT : - |