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Show r f 4 ifcani'hiiiiawiAiii f Friday, April 12, THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH 1929 SOMETHING TO 4 4 4 Bring color to your home IrJT V S 5 N Coup; By F. A . W ALKER a beautiful closed car quickly, easily with 4 THINK ABOUT MANS LITTLE MIND v DUCO the ED WN (fiMAIM use Duco iia yourself 1 here is no v.a.tirv; jo trouble. Du. dries so every room with f r;t hr, i.iocei.i Duto colors. See u, ftoec color schemes i.ow. YOU DUCO ing mechanism, a durable and Lnotter these are just a few more features youll appreciate. You never saw a machine more carefully and ruggedly built to do a first class joband keepond6ing it until the first cost is repaid many times over. Comeinand let ussliowyounext time youre in town. Fast service always. DJt Harrow! Cultivator! Crain Drill! Crain Binder! Com Binder! Rake! ' Hay Looders A Payson, Utah Full line note includes B quickly sdte How OSBORNES GRAND DETOUR BARLEY, POPULAR CROP of the Agricultural College, say that barley is practically as good as corn There is quite an increased interest for feeding livestock and poultry, and in barley planting throughout the vari- that it shohld be grown more extenous parts of Utah County, according sively than it now is. to seed being purchased thru local BULL ASSOCIATION committeemen, and thru inquiries comPROSPERING ing into the County Agents office. Jacob Hansen of Palmyra last year Last week, all the bull association grew 5888 pounds of barley or 6 acres or almost 100 bushels per acre. Oth- bulls of the County were visited by ers in the county have had similar County Agent Thayne, and local dairy yields showing that it can be raised committeemen of the Farm Bureau more economically than any other and Bull Associations, and all of the grain crop, under Utah County condi- bulls were found to be m unusual This accounts for so much condition. tions. The different caretakers barley grown in Cache Valley, Idaho were taking good care of them, and and other large poultry and dairy feeding them properly and the bulls sections. were found to be well developed. Last week, three new bulls were Poultrymen and dairymen in Utah are getting as good results shipped into the County, two of them county from barley as corn, and because of for new blocks one the Palmyra in the large yeild and the good results the W. II. Nielsens district, and one from the feed that is considerable at Springville for S. J. Boyers block, interest in barley, especially in the j the third one to be a replacement Trebi variety. bull in Evans Andersons block at Le- All three of these bulls were There are thousands of acres of hi. bottom land in Utah County that from Hollywood Farm at Washington, should be growing this Trebi or some and all of them have a record of other barley and prevent corn from approximately 1000 pounds bhtter fat. being shipped into this state at a All of the bulls were vaccinated for black leg because of jhis disease being high freight rate. Professor K. C. Ikeler, and Profess- prevalent in the different parts of the or Byron Alder, Heads of the Animal county. Husbandry, and Poultry Departments The care-takeare very enthusias- - WHETMAN MOTOR CO Payson, Utah ! f i OCXrOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO THE DECIMAL SYSTEM o GIRUGIGP We Have a Complete Stock ABOUT SECRETARY BIRDS posed to VT OU were going to toll me some gillie , said thing about jou.-.-ilf- , Brownie to the Secretary Bird in the zoo. All right, said the Secretary Bird In none too pleasant a tone of voice. Billie Brownie was atr.iuus to hear what he had to say thougn be did not particularly care for the manners of the Secretary Bird. My feathers behind my head are the reason for my name said the Secretary Bird. They m.,ke me look like a secretary, so tiny say, or so they used to say. Secretaries used to go about their work with feathered pens behind their ears nnd it was at that time, In days gone by, that tliev gave us a man, aaya who would rather fighting for their them. (Copyright) sk.v' .I? O 'v , The lack of vegetation In Iceland Is attributed largely to heavy winds. Are Made Impressive You Have Us Put In Your COAL You will smile for several reasons. The bill will be less. The quality of the coal better. The promptness with which we handle your order, the care with which we deliver will please you. Phone 10 for this better coal service. MUTUAL and STANDARD COAL PAYSON & COJIlIL COMP AMY 5CJE l Mom !il 0 e twei-ty-fi- Tbe real truth is that the human measures everything by comparison. The child, when you say something is so large, immediately asks Is It as big as I am the question: or is it as big as our house, endeavoring to establish a comprehension by comparison. The wise and sound tiling is to establish the right basis of comparison. Get our basic units of size and distance and action right and our comparisons will be to a great degree freed of distortion and error. And if we do this we will not overestimate ourselves. We will appre-elate and hold constantly before us the truth that we are little men with little minds who should be seeking honestly and earnestly to make the most of our little selves and our limited intelligence. mind There le man; Malverna, have the women righta than with In France, planting trees beside the road la as much a part of road building as the surfacing. What it means can be appreciated only by those who have ridden through those long green tunnels. Yihen the necessities of war the trees along the roads or they hail to bo sacrificed for military operations, the contract between this region nnd southern France was pathetic. Rut one of the first works of reconstruction undertaken was the replanting of the trees, and how one can see between the closely cut-of- f trunks of the old trees, winch were over a foot in diameter, the new sap ling- - alieady seme 10 or 12 feet high A le.-should be beautiful as well as t - f il. and the esthetic work should go hand in band with the praetieal. Ear lest E. t.ili.uis in the Atlantic How Cow Sweat Unlike horses, which have sweat glands all over their skin, the cows sweat glands are nearly all on the muzzle, so that about the only sweat you can see on a cow is on the end of her nose. CJTvyT? 5y How French Highways , How to Keep Cut Flower Flow ers must be taken care of by the purchaser. When you open a box of cut flowers from the florists the stems have air in them. So it is not enough that you put the flowers immediately into a vase of water. Cut olt about half an inch at the end of the stems and immerse the stems in warm waiter till the flowers are up to their necks in the liquid. Then the water passages will soon be filled and the flowers are ready for the vases. Jean Newton (Copyrlaht W diffl-ciitt- It Started F) ASED upon the ten fingers used In primitive counting, the decimal system Is a method of counting or measuring in which the standard unit it divided into tenths, hundredths, etc., for the units above it. It is the basis f the metric system, which Is interna tional, and Is particularly useful in reckoning for keeping accounts in our money. For to divide by ten we have but to move the decimal point to the left, for multiplying, to the right Not only the monetary system of the United States but that of almost every civilized country except England is decimal. The working out of the decimal sys tem dates back several hundred years and is credited to the famous Fifteenth century German astronomer and mathematician, Regiomontanus. Ills real name wus Johannes Muller, lie collected and translated the old Greek mathematicians and with his own work in the various branches of the science, notably in arithmetic, trigonometry and algebra, made a remarkable and colossal contribution to modern mathematics. Regiomontanus was on a mathematical mission when he died, having gone to Rome at the invitation of the Pope, Sixtus IV, to revise the calendar, when he ended his labors. 'ey I. rs Youll Smile Too, When extra.) Si 0000 cyoooor, t,7L Rower is worth nothing without understanding. Niagara was worth nothing as a source of power although the power had been there for thousands of years until man gained the knowledge of how to harness and direct it The greatest intellect the world ever knew would have been of no more value Hum the braiu cells of a 4 infant except for the knowledge that that intellect acquired by study or observation, or both. Ye owe it to ourselves to cultivate our minds, to enlarge our knowledge, to increase our understanding in every way possible. An excellent piece of advice to be borne constantly in ndnd is that width James, the brother of Jesus, wrote to the twelve tribes which are V Humble yourscattered abioad. selves, was his message. y But if you sbouid have any in humbling yourself give a im.ute consideration to little mans little mind and liovv limited and d are its possibilities and attainmei Do you ua'Ize liovv little the human mind is ; V to comprehend? Ye live .i i globe called the earth. Ye know Hi.it it is twenty five thousand mile- - in circumference and a .. ;o a scientist by a new few mont method ol determination found that it weighed 6, 000, 000, 000, 000,000, 000,-00tons. Now try lo Imagine an object thousand miles in circumference and weighing six sextillion ton?. What is the result? Your i.ind absolutely refuses to It cannot picture comprehend it. such an object. It is entirely outside your conception. Then when you have failed to imagine the earth us an object detached from yourself remember that the cubic contents of the sun compared with the earth is 1,303OdO times greater and if that is not enough, consider that in the constellation of Orion the one star called Betelgeuse is 27,000,000 times larger than the sun. Where is your mind now? Totally lost in the immensity of a single one om of the billions of star inhabitants of space. d . unu 1 TIPTON IMPLEMENT CO. B-- 2y ID I. g 0 tic about the way things are working out, and are helping to organize new cks. By 18-- J Cc cl "ks . vibration-absorbin- e V.oiticss Coupe, 5525 Coupe, $55 0 ible seat, $350 Sport Coupe, ni i ordor Sedan, $5J Jit and detirery. Bumpers (All priiJi O b. Detr it ( as 1 ui'v or Chase Lumber & Coal Company Phone 127 Payson, Utah Flows Com and Cotton fJontnm . . . . . Combine! Hay Baler! Silo Fitters ng c-- Rc-ne- w ed Phone ... six-brak- sure-worki- edge. two-wa- y Case-Osbo- , THE new Ford Coupe L distinguished by its low, fleet lines, its fine coachwcrk, and its outstanding performance on the road. A beautiful closed car that you will be proud to drive anywhere. Your choice of a number color harmonics. of 35 to 65 Other features are quick acceleration miles an hour . . . smoothness at all speeds . . . four shock absorbers . . . Houdaille hydraulic glass windshield . . . fully enTriplex shauer-proo- f closed, silent system . . . eba-si. lubrication . . . . . Akitiue s engine support relmLility, economy and long life. Call or tele 'tone for demonstration Tudor Sedan, $525 Roadi r, PhactJtt, '.'60 too 5. teims of power. Omnipotence all power is the to width we give the greatest thought and for width we have the iloept't reverence. But there is another attribute of Divinity f..r greater than Omnipoall knowltence. It is Omniscience it. two-ton- e "KTOU CAN PICK UP the down grain clean as a whistle with the famous Hinder because the platform can he set to shave the ground and the reel can he lowered to pick up lodged lever grain. A single spring-assistlowers or raises the reel and moves it forward or hack to take care of all conditions of grain theres ease of handling for you ! Tractors Thrashers Light draft, exceptionally sure bind- 711EN we thick of the Creator we usually estimate him In I Dare Attack Snakes and Them, Too! I Kiii the name of Secretary Bird, and the name still belongs to us. I think they rially should change it now. They should nil us some other name and they should hunt around for a bird or a lie st tii.it laid something which looked like a type writer sticking out from its head and t lien call it a secretary biid. For secretaries nnd stenographers ami writers nr.d all sorts oi people if-tvpewriiers ihe head keeper down at the end of this path has one in his office. It clicks along. Yes, they should go hunting for a bird with feathers or wings or soni part to it that looked like a type w riter. That would be impossible, said Billie Brovnie, "for I dont Mieve there is stub u mature. Ive never hoard of a bird with any feather or parts width could possibly be sup e look like a typewriter. So you'll have to keep the name, and then, too, it isn't the way to change names all the time. You cant change names with the fashions." Of course I have another name said tlie Secretary Bird, and too, that is Archer. You see I have such long legs and they used to say that when we started to move we looked like gentleman about to go forth with bows and arrows for the sport known as archery. "When I am angry my feathers rise up just as a persons eyes will blaze w lien they look mad and as a cat will arch its back. My home used to be in Africa and when I was a baby I stayed for quite a long, long time In the home nest before I started walking on my long d long-legge- legs. I'm famous as a fighter and I fight with my feet. I can run fast but I do not run away from anything because of fear. No, Im brave enough. I dare attack snakes and I kill them, too! "Theres young Crowned Crane, a beautiful creature with handsome plumage. Crowned Crane is fond of frogs just as I am, and he has long stilts for legs ! Sandhill Crane dances about and makes quite a show of himself at times but Crowned Crane is the most beautiful of all. Yes, he has such a fine tuft of 'feathers spread out on top of his head that is his crown. He is as fine as a king, you see, ns he has a crown, whereas I only have feathers because Ini like an secretary. But maybe a secretary is happier than a king. There's no telling. Surely a secretary doesnt have to dress up nnd bow and think of others as much ns a king has to do. Not that Crowned Crane thinks of others so much, ne thinks of fish-- hut to eat not to bow to, dear me, no ! Oh well. I'm not in a temper now, so I will not complain. And I dont feel like fighting. I think I will e a verse to you which I made up tliis morning. Do," said Billie Brownie. So the Secretary Bird recited this v erse : re-lit- I'm not so wise as you mipht think, I ve never even dipped my feathers In ink Ard if I did I'd have nothing to say, Now Hill e Trow me. that's all for to-i So 1 ! hi lie afternoon. Brownie said a polite good (Copyright.) V ( by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Why Mixed Diet I Bet That there is a connection between the kind of food we eat and the n of our teeth is a n fact. Those foods that are richest in calcium or lime are necessary in the diet of growing children if enough of this element is to be provided to build strong teeth and bones. Milk, most of the green leafy vegetables, fruit juices, nuts and some of the other vegetables are the foods that should be used liberally, in Order, however, for the body to make use of the lime provided, phosphorus mast also be present, as these two minerals depend on one another for the proper functioning of each in the body. Oatmeal, whole grain cereals, nuts, cheese and lean meat are the best sources of phosphorus. This simply emphasizes again the need for a mixed and varied every day diet. cpn-ditio- well-know- Why Zoo Pet Are Costly Sunshine is at such a premium in England that valuable reptiles in their new house at the Zoological Gardens of London are supplied with the artificial variety. In addition to the electrical supply of ultraviolet light the cages are equpped with heating apparatus controlled by automatic thermostats so that the current is shut off when the temperature arises above S3 degrees Fahrenheit nnd Is turned on again when it falls below 77. Glass separates the public from the cages and helps conserve the summer atmosphere necessary to the health and happiness of snakes. As if this were not luxury enough, windows made of glass that admit ultraviolet light help the big boa constrictors and formidable brethren enjoy life when the real sun shows his face. th-'I- TTTL J |