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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LulIAN. UTAH Broatifsl The L&si Ye &p of jleliWolipKotl s NO REVENUE FROM MALES IN FLOCK Wi Poultryraan Will Get Rid of Rooster. Tt only object of keeping mol bird I lo get net batching and that seaw.o I part. Tht former should remember that tbo rooster la eonautning ford which neo trail let lha profits from toying bra. A mill more Important dlttlnt of lha malrt If tha IV a . production of infertile boar a great deal about egg qtjal-itjr- . Tha bout way to Improve egg Infertile egg. quality la to Fertile rsra do not hoop well Five per rout of all egga marketed lara a Mai loa because of chirk Reside a largo prodoTolopmeni. portion of rut la dua directly to cblrk development bring retarded. Tbo object of a hen In producing If eggs la to reproduce herself. malca ara present and tbo egg la frrtillted. lha embryo atarta to develop within tha body of tbo ben. When a proper temperature la again maintained this development continue, Thera will ba a alow growth at any temperature above 70 degree Fahrenheit. A temperature of 84 to W degrera Fahrenheit for three da will produce aa great a derelopment aa one day at a temperature of M3. A temperature of 104 to 110 for one day will produce an embryo aa far developed aa threa day at a temperature of 103. Production of Infertile egg to eapeclally advantageou during tbe aumtner. Such egg do not develop germ, aland shipment well, withstand heat, ar easily preserved, alow to decay and cost less. The hen will lay a well or better with no male present In the flock. An Infertile egg can thus he produced and. If unwashed, may keep Indefinitely. A large percentage will dry op before they will rot. Missouri Farmer. fr re-o- fr -e Daniel oone The Blue Licks Monument By ELMO SCOTT WATSON CTOBLR. 17S1. Northward through Maryland, through Pennsylvania, through New Jersey, New York and New England speed horsemen, and sleeping Tillage and awaken to listen wonder-Inglto the cry that rings through the night: Cornwallis to taken Cornwallis Is taken 1" So the struggle for freedom Is end- od and George Washington and his ragged Continentals have triumphed at last The Revolution la over I Such Is the picture which the sehool histories have painted In our minds. But the Impression they have given us that the surrender at York town meant the dawn of peace and the prosperous beginning of a new nation Is only a True It Is that 17S1 was the lnt year of the Revolution In the main theater of war the Atlantic seaboard. But there was one people In the new nation who were to know another year of the horrors of war aneh as their eastern neighbors had never known. To the scattered border settlements west of the Alleghenies there had rot yet come winged Victory with smooth brow laurelled to teach us to forget the holocaust. Instead, the year 1782 was to he a repetition of 1777, the year of the bloody sevens, and again, virtually deserted by those governments to whom they had a right to look for aid, the pioneers in the Ohio valley, especially those In Kentucky, must crouch behind the log walls of their stockaded forts with the savage ringing in their ears and a shower of Indian arrows and bullets whistling over their heads. So In Its sesqul centennial year, we Americans should not forget what these ancestors of ours who won the West for us suffered and endured In 1782, the last year of the Revolution. It opened with an affair which must ever be a blot on our history, the massacre of 96 of the Moravian Indians at Gnadenhuetten, Ohio, by a party of Pennsylvanians, led by Col. David Williamson. Maddened by the slaughter of their brethren, the Delawares rallied to their aid the Wyandots and other Indians allied with the British and waited for a good chance for revenge, which soon came. Id May a body of 480 Pennsylvania and Virginia militia gathered at Mingo Bottom on the Ohio and prepared to inarch against the Wyandot and Shnwnee towns on the Upper Sandusky. The commander of the expedition was a Virginian, Col. William Crawford, a personal friend of Washington, who had won a reputation as a brave and active oliicer in the Continental army but who was utterly unfitted for leadership against such an enemy as the tribesmen he was ordered to crush. Crawford hoped to surprise the Indians but enemy scouts discovered his force soon after he started and Indian spies followed every movement of his army. On June 4 Crawford reached one of the Wyandot towns hut found it deserted. He marched on to find another and encountered a small force of Indians and Canadian rangers, under the command of Ouptain Caldwell, which had been sent by the British in Detroit to aid the Indians. There was a sharp skirmish with neither side gaining any advantage, although Crawford had the superiority in numbers. The next morning, instead of forcing a battle and crushing the enemy, Crawford's army lay idle. Caldwell also was willing to delay proceedings for he was expecting reinforcements. They came In the afternoon in the person of 140 Shawnee warriors. At the sight of this, Crawford's militia began to waver and Crawford decided that the only course left for him was to retire from the field. That night his force began a hurried and disorderly retreat. In the darkness the troops became scattered and when morning came there (Yi-e- The Burning io Col Crawford 4 Border Lif "Incident an eld fnrm-hous- e y 1 half-truth- 1 engraving Weight Important Point in Breeding of Chick 47 An advantage not often mentioned, that early hatched chick hava OTer late one of the American and English breed, to the weight This to no little consideration when the hens are told after a year's lay with a cut of 25 to 40 per cent In price for hena under f four and pounds. The Massachusetts experiment station has compiled record covering elx years' work with Rhode Island Reds. Each year, tbe flock waa made op of two hatches, eight week apart, one In March end one In May. The chicks were out of the came matings, fed and cared for At alike as nearly as possible. twenty-on- e weeks of age, the average weight of the March pullets was exactly five pounds; the best year, they weighed 5.18 pounds and the poorest year 4.83 pounds. The May pullets averaged 4.27 pounds for the six years, 4.42 pounds being the best and 44.10 pounds the poorest The comparative weight! remain about the same throughout life. Wallace's Farmer. tha tprlng which lay outside the fort and who, gambling that the Indians would not spoil their chance for a surprise attack on the fort by molesting them, went singing down tbe path as though no enemy were near, although they knew that savage eyes looked out at them from every bush along the tralL Included In It, too, la the story of young Aaron Reynolds. When Simon Girty tried to get the defenders of the fort to surrender by assuring them that reinforcements with artillery were on tbe way and that no quarter would be given If the savages stormed the fort, Reynolds sprang to the top of the walls and replied to the renegude, telling him that the people of Bryan's Station feared neither their reinforcements nor artillery but that If Girty and his followers gnlned entrance to the fort Reynolds and his friends would scorn to use their rifles but would drive them out with switches. After the fuilure of attempts to set fire to the fort, the enemy withdrew. Meanwhile messengers had been sent to the other stations asking for help and by the evening of August 17 a force of 180 men had assembled at Bryan's Station. From Boones Station came That famous Kentuckian at the head of his men, among them his youngest son, Israel; from Lexington and McConnell's and McGee's Stations came the men Turkey Losses Checked under John Todd and from Ilarrodsburg came Trials conducted at the North Da those under Colonel Trigg and Majors McGarry kota Agricultural college show that and Harlan, More were reported coming from 63 artificially-hatcheturkeys that Llncdn county undor Colonel Logan, but the were on clean ground susKentuckians decided to follow the Invaders at tained placed no losttes from blackhead; once without wniting for Logan. while 45 turkey poults hatched Then began the pursuit which was to end in from the same hens as the other the famous Battle of Blue Licks, fought on the group and allowed to run with the banks of the Licking river on August 19, 1782. mother hen on ground previously There the rash counsel of a officer used by chickens sustained a loss prevailed over the wisdom of Daniel Boone and of all but four with blackhead. Two precipitated an attack which ended In disaster. of these four poults at the time of For the flower of Kentuckys manhood fell that marketing showed characteristic day out of approximately ISO men, 67 killed blackhead lesions when killed, leavor murdered as they lay wounded and ing only two of the original 45 to outright seven captured of whom four died at the torfrom disease or parago "scot-freture stake. sites. For a time It seemed that Kentucky could not The rotation of yards, preferably recover from this crushing disaster. Then on alfalfa range, Is the simplest George Rogers Clark, who had seemed to be method to follow out the sanitation suffering from a strange lethargy during this program for turkeys. Dakota critical year, was aroused to his old time energy. Farmer. He sent out runners to all the settlements callmen to rally for a blow ing upon all Band the Pullets at the Indians. Again the magic of his name Mark the precocious pullets in orasserted Itself and in a short time he had gathder to Identify them definitely from ered together a force of more than a thousand late beginners next year, when mounted riflemen. On November 4 he left the the draws to a banks of the Ohio and started north. On Novem- the pullet laying year close and the question of keeping ber 10 he attacked and burned the Miami towns. over stock for breeding purposes The loss to the savages at the beginning of conies up. Use a blue celluloid leg cold weather was very great, writes Roosevelt. band to mark the early starters. To were cast down and They utterly do this Involves knowing the dates at such a proof of the power of the whites, of each hatch and the identities of coming as it did so soon after the Battle of the pullets in each. The simplest Blue Licks. The expedition returned in triumph, means of identification is a differand the Kentuckians completely regained their ent toe punch for each batch of and though for ten years long- thicks. Exchange. er Kentucky suffered from the inroads of small parties of savages, it was never again threatReduces Flock Costs ened by a serious invasion. One way to red ace flock costs Is So the disastrous last year of the Revolution to cull the year-olhens and reended in triumph. But even more Important them a year, states a Unithan the fact of triumph over savage foes was tain of Illinois poultryinan. Such the importance of the events of that year to the versity hens have gone through their most future history of America. For when it came are time for the peace commissioners to make the expensive depreciation. If they well bred they should make good treaty which ended the Revolution it was the another year, though conquests of George Rogers Clark in the Old producers their egg yield may not be quite as with his expedition In J782, Northwest, ending as pullets. Keeping old hens hleh strengthened the hand of the American high the hazard of disease, and Increases ommissioners in demanding that the western It is desirable to where 'oundaries of the new nation should be the brood apossible new lot of chicks and reMississippi river any! the Great Lakes and place the flock with pullets. merlca was assured cf her Inland empire, ' one-bal- six-yea- Simon. Girty were only about 300 left together In one body. Crawford was among those missing and Col. David Williamson, perpetrator of the Gnadenhuetten massacre, who was second In command, directed the retreat If poetic justice had been at work it would have been Williamson who was missing and Crawford who was to lead the disorganized remnants of the command back In safety to Mingo Bottom. But Instead Colonel Crawford, Doctor Knight, the surgeon of the command, and nine others were captured by the Indians. All, except Crawford and Knight, were killed at once but these two were taken to a Delaware town for torture. Crawford was burned at the stake and Doctor Knight was forced to watch the sufferings of his friend. Crawford is said to have appealed In vain to Simon Girty, the white renegade among the Indians, to end his sufferings by shooting him, but Girty either could not or would not heed his plea. Later Doctor Knight managed to escape and after wandering in the woods for 21 days reached Fort Pitt in safety. Encouraged by their success the Indians appeared in large numbers on the Upper Ohio and fell upon the settlement of Hannastown, Pa., which they burned and captured or killed 20 of Its Inhabitants. Then the partisan Captains McKee and Caldwell assembled a force of 1,100 Indians, the greatest single body of savages brought together during the Revolution, for an attack on Wheeling. But while they were march, ing thither they became alarmed by a report that George Rogers Clark was leading his Long Knives again to attack the Shawnee towns. So McKee and Caldwell marched to meet him but upon reaching the Shawnee towns discovered that the alarm of those Indians was groundless, it having originated in the appear at the mouth of ance of an armed galley-boa- t the Licking river. Most of the Indians, showing a characteristic fickleness, declined to go any farther on the expedition but Caldwell and McKee managed to keep together some 300 Wyandots and Lake Indians and with these and their Detroit rangers set out to invade Ken tucky and to attack the five small stockaded settlements in Fayette county. On August 15 they appeared before Bryan's Station, the northernmost settlement in Fayette county, which was defended by less than 5f men. The story of tiie brief siege of Bryans Station Is one of the classics of Kentucky his tor.v. Included in It is the story of its herob women who took their lives in their hand to bring pails of refreshing water drawn from KtrltnU Karlaruba, Ih capital of Baden, beautifully situated In tha upper Ithetdsh plain, within easy reach of tha Black forest and tha llaardt hill, to a great favorite of America touring vacationist. Wild I Mirk (a Ih Ilaardtwald la to the north, alt mllt-- away to beautiful Boll, an Island In tha Rhine. d e ladies Family Record Tha totem pot to a pole used among North American Indiana to exhibit tha totem figure. Tha totem pole la composed principally of half human, half animal figure, seated abort one another, above which appear tht particular totem, or symbol bl 1662-172- Craad Caayea Wrodert The chasm of tha Grand canyon baa a length of 217 mile. Ua great eat vertical depth to about 6,QtUfet and It width, at the point to which visitor ar conducted, 1 13 miles. A hundred Yoartnlie might lie alIn Ha Immense most on; reaches. Famala Skalt Bel Geld When examining the skull of animal to determine whether they belong to known or unknown aperies, Ih Information obtained from female akulta to aald to ba mtirh more reliable than that obtained from male akulta. Tb Foaad Small! Unit great star Antarea, diameter miles, to believed to be the largest thing, and tbe smallest known trait of matter, tha atomerg, waa discovered by Dr. E. K. Tlyler, of tha University of North 420.0n0.000 Raia Caarod Frog Ftagao rain In Lentou, EngFollowing land, hundred of frogs from tha canal Invaded tha town, causing In their women to taka refug home and buasea and other vehicle to travel with difficulty. t Only Advantage Jud Tunklns says the only good thing about having your none to the grindstone to that It helps you to keep It out of other peoples business. Washington Star. Hiht-Flyin- g Bird The Egyptian goose, which ha been observed at an altitude estimated at 35,000 feet, la the highest flyer. Cranes have been known to fly at an altitude of live miles. Light Waves Sansatioaa The shortest light waves give the sensation of ruddy color red, to fact. When they ar mixed thoroughly then cornea the sensation of white light Average Brain Weights From human brains 11,000 weighed, Topinard finds an average weight of 1,361 grams for man and 1,290 grama for women. Ailmant Aa a general thing, the region a here the population la too thick 1s Just north of the ears. Los Angeles Time. What Better Proof Than This Could Be Wanted? Edward A. Fllene, the Boston mer chant and economist, had been proving at the Cosmopolitan club that innss production Is an incomparable benefit to mankind. But why keep on with these proofs? he wound up. The thing Is as evident on its face as Smiths marriage. You say Smith is married, but what proof have you? an employer asked. Well, sir, said an employee, 'I last saw Smith pushing a Sunday morning, and there was a young woman on one side of him and an old woman on the other, and as I passed, the young woman said, Youve come home in that condition eight Saturday nights running, you cad.' And then the old woman chipped in with, Do, for goodness sake, Ethel, make him put another thousand on his life before his livDetroit ers gone completely. baby-conc- News. able-bodie- d panic-stricke- n Saaa Dltra-VURay The light of tb sun contain ultraviolet raya to a greater or lesa Protect the Galdfiuck degree In all localities on which It The American goldfinch has few shior. Tha amount of radiation equal a weed destroyer. This The plump fluffy little bird of sulphur depend upon tha weather. percentage of ultraviolet raya In yellow axcept for a circular black sunahlna to greater at noon and In cap on Its head and a few marklocalltlea where the aun'a raya ar ing of black on Its wings and tall more or teea direct a In the tropica la especially fond of thistle, ragweed, wild lettuce, wild tunfiowar FUV May Be at Leaf and dandelion seeds South Florid baa a lak named which tUalocopatrheciachoochee, China Student Cr.'bhW should tusk tha fish about aa dirty A silk handkerchief preseuted t Aa for who thla ar reading at yon the Field Museum of Natural Hisyou, who havo tha fishing Itch, you tory, covered with thousand of Chiwight try Itrhturkoe river la tha ne character, waa Identified as sam at to, having been used aa a crib to an-aa Chinese student of the Kang-h- i Egyptian Miser's Heard to pass his period Coin dating bark to tha Fourth civil servic examination. century were found hoarded In tha tomb of an Egyptian mummy, who Flame Without Match probably aient bla time on earth To makt a fir without matches h a time about what thinking good scrape a fin lint from a piece of would hava with them torn day. cotton cloth. On thla focus tha sun Ivtrolt New. through tha crystal of a watch or compass or tha lens of a pair of Catering I ladiaa Caste spectacle and tha lint will aoon Water to carried. In the Indian start to glow. Blow this Into A army in leather bags mad of goat-aki- Cam. to aceommodato tha Mohammedans, who could not drink from Cathedral Restored Speyer Hina hag tnada of pigskin, and the Tbo completion of the work of redus, who would be unable to drink storing the greater Speyer cathedral, from one of calfskin. Germany, which was built In tha year 1030 to 10CL Is reported. DurWorld's Firot Botaaut ing excavations a Roman sacrificial Theophrastus, a native of Lesbos, stone altar with inscription waa to called the world' first botanist found. I He died about 300 B, C, and with him died the aclence of botany, for Bird Had Troth we do not hear of a single new disThe first birds, which developed covery In that subject for more from the flying reptile, all posthan 1,800 year. Aa they progressed sessed teeth. Into tbo later stages of bird evoluNot Wasted There tion, however, the teeth were lost, The Wade Ethnological expediand there are now no living birds tion has discovered a savage In cen- with teeth. tral Africa with a reach of approximately nine feet but w dont car China Had Papar First aa long aa we don't have to board In 100 A. D. China had already at the same bouae a he doea. Invented and waa naing paper of A Boston Ilerald. high quality. Thla discovery, carried through Central Asia to Persia, Beautiful Canadian Park Egypt and Spain, finally reached Banff National park In the CanaEurope, 1,000 year later. dian Rockies comprises an area of to a miles. It game 2,585 square Carror of Husband sanctuary and contain some of the the woman who pick a Anyway, In moat beautiful mountain scenery husband Instead of A career has sa North America. easier time running what ah gets than the other woman does tho Lucky Looters business ah get. Cincinnati Bandits Invaded the business office of a newspaper. They were very fortunate, aa they escaped with Prefer Originality to Fact every cent they had brought In often proves entrust Genlu with them. Santa Monica Evening worthy," sold HI Ho, tha sag of Outlook. Chinatown, because It la natural for It to prefer originality to ordiRise Tie Rapid nary fact" Washington Star. Writing a foolish song that Bella 3,000,000 copies to not climbing the First Workable Submarine ladder of success. It to taking the David BushneU aa elevator. Terr Haute Tribune, American Inventor, brought out a successful submarine, a tiny craft Tb Affections with accommodation for but on Hearts may be attracted by aa person. In the year 1775. auraed qualities, but the affections are not to be fixed by those that Emblam on Coin are not reaL De Moyse. The American eagle aa an emblem appeared on the first coin IsAnd Sometimes Alimoay sued by the United States In 1795 The parsimony In matrimony and on a majority of the subsequent causes much of the acrimony. FL coins. Wayne Intelligence nonsense. h v ' (1754-1824- ), News-Sentlne- To Water Deiert Land The great dam at Assouan across the Nile river and 551 miles south of Cairo, Is now being heightened for tbe second time. When completed In 1934, tho capacity of the Assouan reservoir will store five billion cubic meters of Nile water, which will be utilized for the year around Irrigation of thousands of acres of land In the northern delta. Camp Hath The troubles of a camp cook are real ones, Cornelia Alexander shows In "Hashin It in a Construction Camp, an article in Ilygeia Maga zine. Entire engineering projects have been abandoned when the crew decided to strike for different food, refusing baker's bread, and calling for pie at every meaL One More Wonderful, the things that are vented horseless ears, wireless power without smoke One thing more is needed. What Is that? tests are usually all Dowry without a bride. Province. In- Salt Lake Citys fewest Hotel HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 20 O Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM 1.50 Just opposite Mormon Tabernacle ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. Women said- - d ( by Western Newspaper Union ) BUT they hadn't tried the New Oxgdol that makes 50 more sods Richer, longer lasting ends thats why the New Oxvdol can safely float dirt out of clothes and hold it out so no rubbing is needed. Oxydol suds don't collapse and let the dirt fall back on the clothes. Rinses clean, softens water. Fine for dishes, too, Procter & Gamble HADE BY THE MAKERS OF IVORY SOAP mo. u.e.pAT.orv, |