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Show UTAH THE EPHR4IM ENTERPRISE- - EPHRAIM. Daddy 4&eiiig STOCK GRAIN PROPORTION. LOWER IN SUMMER fairy Tale made ita Salt Lake City. Death the Utah at dramatic entry HOLES second Fair accompanan as DOUGHNUTS grounds THE State to roundup thrills, when Roy iment Her KIvett a rider In the steer roping Melly loved to make doughnuts. killed Crullers them. to devoted was dtuliB contest, was almost Instantly them. KIvett culled him. on he when bis horse rolled Melly didnt quite is the man who shot and killed Harry know the differEdward Bowles at the first frontier STOCK Factor in Life FOR EVERY FARM Big Is Desire for Home PURE-BRE- D Although equal part of mash and grain are often recommended. It la not desirable to hold to any such arbitrary figures. It la desirable, boa ever, to know what proportion Is being consumed so that production may be somewhat regulated. During warm seasons the proportion of grain should naturally be lower than In winter as less sugars, starches and fat are needed for body warmth. When egg production and health are satisfactory It la wise to let well enough alone regardless of whether more grain or more mash Is being consumed. If production and consumption of mash are both low, the trouble may lay In too much grain being fed, or In an unappetising maah. If the birds are poor In flesh and subject to colds, the feeding of more grain Is usually the correct procedure. Feeding wet mash Instead of dry maah la occasionally practiced with success by skilled feeders. Because there la considerable risk of overfeed-Inby this method, and because no better results are secured for Die time feeding is not expended, recommended as a substitute for hopper feeding of dry mush. Wet mash In addition to hopper feeding throughout the year la usually and dungerous In the unnecessary bands of the average feeder. This practice Is probably desirable and to be advocated from July 1 to September 1 to postpone the moult, and on pullets In the fall. Three quarts before wetting to 100 birds Is sufficient. Feed mash at noon, so that It can be gradually discontinued when the desired results have been secured without upsetting the regular feeding CL ehedule.--- 0. Krum, Extension Service, Colorado Agricultural Purebred live stock on every farm will home day be the rule In the United States. It will coins through the use of registered sires ; then the addition of registered females, and finally by the struts. weeding out of pedigreed The pedigree is an Index of quality, for like begets like or the likeness of an ancestor.' But pedigree is not absolute proof of exceptional quality not In the United States, It isnt, saya Farm and Breeder. It can be made no In time, and breeders are urged to bring that day to pass by culling every animal whose Individual characters and the chances Of passing them on to its offspring do not match up with lu royal llneuge. In the past there has been great reliance on the herd book. Animals have been sold for reproductive purposes because they carried the Hood of popular sires and dums. Many of them should have been sent to the block. It Is bad enough that less than 10 per rent of the live stock In the United States Is pure bred; It Is worse for the breeding Industry that shortsighted men see only the dime In front of their nose and not the dollar a few g wet-mas- h years off. In Europe the culling of animals for breeding purposes Is much more rigorous than In our own land. Over there pedlgreea carry a guarantee of Individual excellence, because It hug been the custom among breeders to animals. register only outstanding That's what we will come to In America. A pedigree should stand not only for the presumption of Inherited characters and prepotence; It should also represent high quality In the Individual Some day pure-brelive stock on every farin will Indicate hlgh-clufarming In fact as well aa In theory. g d as Promoting Chick Growth by the Use of Sunlight Direct sunlight as an essential In Is Quite Economical promoting growth In chicks and In preweakof venting the development leg to Let Swine Pick Com ness has been proved by recent experiIn this age of efficiency, when everyments Just announced by tbs poultry one la trying out lubor-savlndevices department of the State College of economical and may systems, you N. New J. Brunswick, Agriculture, On thousand chicks kept under have overlooked the fact that in handling corn you may simply open h glaas weighed only pound at the end of 12 weeks, whereas 200 the gate to the field and let the hogs Under the help you In your work. chicks of the sum age, but kept outdoors In direct sunlight averaged one old system every ear of corn had to be bandied at least three times. The and one-hal- f pounds each. eer la first pulled off the stalk and Cod liver oil ha i for some time been thrown Into the wagon. Then It la stimuconsidered an effective growth from the wagon Into the crib. thrown lator and preventive of leg weakness, After the basket Is filled at the that Investio the truth of this was alao corn carried to the bog-perrlb the and gated by the experimenters. Of the chicks under glaas 800 were fed varyThe hog not only reduces the numing amounts of the oil. At the end of ber of handlings but eliminates them 12 weeka they were no more thrifty All that la necessary La than those receiving no oil After the completely. to open tha gate and drive the hogs fifth week leg weakness bgnn to Into the field. They clean up the corn among all of the birds under with lesa waste than If It were harglass, whether they were being fed vested by men, and they also spread cod Uver oil or not In contrast with the manure over the field. this the. chicks kept In direct aunllght In sections where the seed will mashowed no leg weakness at all ture, cowpeaa, or soy beans, sown The combination of direct sunlight broadcast through the corn at the last and cod liver also was tried by the cultivation, produce a large quantity experiment station. Using 200 chicks of feed In addition to the corn. The and feeding oil equivalent In weight beans, being high In protein, balance to 1 per cent of the ration, It found the ration and make almost an Ideal that an average weight of one and feed for hog fattening. The hogs eat a pounds per chick had not only the beans themselves, but been attained. Tills was much of the green vines. Itape la anmore than tha weight of the other excellent crop to broadcast In chlcke getting sunlight but no oil. the corn at the last cultivation to help It was found that chicks kept be- out the Bum total of hog feed. In hind glass and developing leg weak- 'some Instances It may be advisable exness could be cured by a half-hou- r that a part of the field be set off by a temporary fence and the hogs not posure to sunlight on four days. allowed to cover too much ground at one time. Limestone and It g one-fourt- n. ap-pe- three-fourth- Value of Oyster Shell for Hens Health Hints for Live Stock in Summer Months According to Maryland Bulletin 244, "a ctushlng test of eggs laid by oyster-ehcll-fe- d limestone-fehens and showed no appreciable difference In the strength Of shell. There was practically no difference In the thickness of shell of production In the limestone pan. The consumption of limestone per bird was much less thun the consumption of oyster shell even though there was a greater egg production In the limestone pcu. This test would Indicate that limestone can be safely used as the sole source of supply of material for eggshell making with laying hens." During the summer mouths one of the most Important factors In maintaining the health of live stock Is to see that they have plenty of pure drinking water. Overheat or sunstroke may be avoided, especially during harvest time. If the horses are watched closely and watered two or three times during the hottest periods of the day. A small quantity of water In a pull given to the team will Increase the amount of sweating. Evaporation of moisture from the body acts as a The smull amount of coollzyg agent. trouble Involved in getting plenty of water to work animals will be repaid by their ability to stand more work. A good aupply of pure water Is Just as necessary for cattle and hogs as for work horses during the hot weather. Where young and adult cattle are pastured together, the young onee are sometimes skimped on water on account of being crowded away, and the water riled and muddied by the larger Iu some Instances this can auimals. be avoided by Increasing the tank space and having more water available when the herd cornea to drink. d When to Fatten Turkeys During the summer and early fall turkeya can And an abundance of feed on the average farm. About October 1, It la advisable to begin fattening them for market, giving only a little feed at first and gradually increasing this until the birds are marketed. The marketing season for turkeys Is very short, running only from the middle of November to the latter part of Culling Sheep Flock Kill Lice on Fowls ' Cue either sodium fluoride or blue ointment to get rid of lice on poultry. Of the former It will require 1 pound for each 100 hens. Use the pinch method, which Is to take a pinch of the powder and rub Into various parts of the body. The blue ointment la applied In similar places, being robbed Into the skin well Mix the ointment with equal parts lard and divide Into pieces the size of a small garden pea, Keep away from children, as It Is a poison j As the laiub crop gives the best return It is given the first .consideration when culling. A good type la Cull out the ewes most desirable. with weak hacks or saddle backs. Ewes with long legs, shallow body and weak constitution are off type. When It comes to wool production all sheep that produce light, frowsy wool, lacking density, or those producing wool with too much variation In the alxe of the fibers should be removed from the took. The longing for s home has always It Is and always will he the one universal desire of mankind. Around your own fireside abide tender memories within the seclusion of your ence between home are new desires awakened. and It Is the one place where a welcome doughnuts awalta you, where you may hide from crullers, or whetha busy world and rest, where you may er there was much difference. forget for a time, the trults of life and But feast upon the pleasure of living. anyway Wherever you may be, wherever you she knew hew to make them may return to and that place spot Is somewhere some resort of love and They were light Joy and peace and plenty, that you and delicious when may return to that place could be no Melly made them. other than home. They never gave Deep in the heart of every man Is any one Indigesthat unsellable desire to be the master tion. They were of his own home. The American will with sprinkled never he content as long as he consugar powdered tinues to dole out his monthly per- When She Was Just as they came All Through. centage to the ever ambitious rent colsteaming out lector. on the brown rented the hot fat and I let u re. If you can, the typical Amercool. were until they ican paying rent. Can you Imagine paper were round doughnuts with They Lincoln, tlarfleld, Hayes or McKinley holes In the center. Sometimes Melly door meeting the rent collector at the tried to drop one Into the fat so that every month with the rent? Imagine It would come the shape of a figure 8. his Theodore Itoosevelt scratching make Usually, when she tried to head and wondering where he will they a shape them good particularly move next, as he has Just received nocome out so well as now and didn't tice to vacate. Detroit Free Iress. again they did by accident. Itut they all were excellent to eat Beauty of Home Lies and they all were pretty good shapes. in Factor of Dignity She used to cut out the doughnuts, the mixture was all finished and The beauty of any home lies not in after when she had rolled them out on the Its acreage, or Its surroundings, but board In the kitchen, which she had covrather In that vague Intangible which ered with flour so they couldnt stick, may be called atmosphere." Tills Is with a round top of a tin which she made up of a feeling of quiet, dignified hud washed carefully first. simplicity and a love of quality which Then she had the top of a little tin is too Infrequently encountered In this which she used to make the hole In day of elaborate decoration. Concessions to modern Ideas are re- the center of every doughnut That was splendid and she loved the sponsible for the use of overdeoorated with their round homes. Each home owner must solve big doughnuts holes. the problem of his own home and IndoughThey were sunh fuse Into Its arrangements distinctive features which portray his own artis- nuts. They were such delicious, light doughnuts. tic tastes and personality. Rut then she almost liked the holes floors are In them-eelve- a best of all. a thing of beauty, while d Of course, perhaps they should not walla Bhaded by colorful effects In lighting arrangements, and simple be called the holes, as the holes in and tasteful pieces of furniture make the doughnuts were the real holes. any room comfortable and restful. Per- There was nothing to eat where there Of course not That was a hole. haps In no other type of Interior decwas absurd. orating can there be found such a display of taste and thoughtfulness as In The doughnuts were plenty big the real old New England colonial enough without being solid. The holes homes. They reflect the best of the made the doughnuts Just right colonial days In simplicity and But the parts she had cut out with the smaller tin she cooked In the hot fat after the doughnuts with the holes had been cooked. Remodeling Pays She called these the doughnuts Ilouses, like clothes and customs, get out of date. The needs of the holes. They came out round and family grow as well as the means of chubby and as cunning as could be. New conveniences She sprinkled these with powdered satisfying them. and equipment come Into vogue and sugar, too. ideas of household use and arrangeWhen she was all through there ment change. To meet these new were two huge platters covered with needs and fashions It is not always doughnuts. necessary to build a new house, espeOn one platter were the doughnuts cially If the old house was built of without the holes. wood ; for It Is one of the great merits On the other platter were the of wood that It Is adaptable to changes holes T In taste and style. Wood Is like the Yes, what had been taken out of goods from which clothing Is made, In every doughnut in order to make the that It can be cut to suit any fancy. hole was now a delicious little doughThe rejuvenating of homes that do nut Itself. not fill the needs or notions of the Quite different in shape to be sure, owners offers sales opportunities where entire houses are out of the but extremely good to eat! How pleased her father was on question. For all practical purposes How he did ask for doughnut day. the same ends can be achieved by everv donghnnts night from then until on, the Freak Homes Not Wise were He who builds a house does not doughnuts all gone. build for himself alone. A house Is How he complipart of a community. As such It Is mented her upon subjected to continued scrutiny and the way she could The builder of a comparison. make them. find beautiful home becomes No one, he a recognized as person of good taste said, could make and sound Judgment. Artistic e(Tet delicious Is very much to be desired also from such do u g h n u t s. No the standpoint of the owner himself. one at all" It adds to property values. In the exHe liked terior design of the home it Is well to little ones. the too. reliance place upon well established He alwajs called types of architecture and not resort them the little to the unusual or the untried. Odd or fellers. How Pleased Her unusual designs often become tireCite me ansome; they are likely to be expensive other Father Was. little fel- and inharmonious as well. ter, Melly," lie .ould say. And Melly would give him another one. Care of Trees Proper But she never called them In the cure of ones yard caution else but the doughnuts holes.anything should be taken against irregular And sometimes she thought they growth of trees and means adopted to were rectify any fault In the trees growth had pretty smart, even though she helped them so much, to come at the start. Many trees are Inclined as such good things to eat when out to lean In a certain direction they through had, in a way. been merely holes. being forced Into that position by preYes. she really thought a great deal vailing winds from the opposite point, of them and, unless braced while young, it win be Impossible for them to grow upright as they should. It Is well that Conundrums a sufficient space be spaded up around crocdUe the most deceit-ni- l the tree, and the ground kept worked of all creatures? and properly fertilized. been Well-finishe- d soft-tone- d 1 nnnT6 the Mennonites in Canada More than NewsAllNotes Parts of From UTAH shoW3 Rn P act of taking you In. ft 10,000 Mennonltea from JVhen is a little girls hair like the Europe have already settled In Canada and 23,000 more are expected, according to Col. John Stoughton Dennis, chief commissioner of the department of colonization and development of tha Canadian Pacific railway. Colonel Dennis has gone to Europe to up the tide of Immigration to Canada Trom Northwestern Europe, for which Canada Is waiting. About S.OOO.ooo acres of farm land await these Colonel Dennis said, upon sail-la- x In March. When It is In waves, within 200 roundup, August 29, 1924, A large killed. was he yards of where as the on looked of crowd spectators s KIvett of end steer came to the a in headlong steer the rope, throwing time horse Jerk, while at the same and rider sprawled in a cloud of dust, KIvthe horse rolling completely over and neck crushing his breaking ett, his skull. Bettled Logan. A question thought when City Judge Prescon sustained the demurrer in the case of the state vs. George W. Thatcher, B. G. Thatcher and William Specker, charged under an obsolete state law as owners of the Capital theatre, with conducting picture shows on Sunday, was revived when Judge Harris of the district court rendered his decision on appeal, reversing the decision of the lower court and reopening the case for prosecution. Logan. A special meeting of the board of county commissioners has been called to consider the error made in the county tax levy which was brought to light when state officials notified the commissioners ssas; Com, Los AngelesTcIu j much praise to Lvrii.pfot heart was affected, sndffi tot. The doctors that I would have to w? 5,5 I thought I go round. When is a gale like a When Its bear' (a bru'ln) ft new-come- W1at ooly tiling that can the midst of fire? niece of coal Uve In A V th T'8 ;0PSIS btsti ln t Zabolr ,r. o f tf oi men w e to the opeS PinkhamsS.1 bdieve saw me after that I looked so well 5ft take methane occ&sioiuli,'! always keep a couple of ftS 1 r clot tit the h j by the be Black e meetlm e particl hment ai they Hack I recommend it to women me about their health. Ik..,! your Sanative Wash bRJ much. Mrs. E. Gocuftt Side Boulevard, LosAngcl (v Many letters havebmiw women who have been health by Lydia E. PmlhtrtTi ble Compound after openV been advised. - 2.05 mills for general fund exceeded the state it of 1.8 .Sooth ina the ten-da- y Salt Lake City. Gasoline taxes oa July sales have already been reported to the secretary of state, H. E. Crockett, totalling 8133,333.13, and It is anticipated that the total collected for the month will run about 5140,000. One of the larger companies still has to report, as well as a number of the smaller distributors of imported Salt Lake City. Executives of the National Wool Growers association predict this years national ram show and sale, August 31 to September 2 at the Salt Lake Union Stock Yards, will constitute the finest lot of flock sires ever assembled In the United States. The show this fall Is the 10th annual event Payson. The final step for the better lighting of Main street has been taken and the White Way Is now assured. At the meeting of the city council last week, from one mile of property affected but one protest was registered, and that protest covered only nineteen feet of ground. Salt Lake City. With a rating of per cent normal, Utah ranges generally are better than usual at this season and stock on summer ranges are in extra good shape, observes George A. Scott, regional livestock statistician with the depart-meof agriculture, stationed at Salt Lane, in a report Just issued. Last month, the report notes, the condi-io- n of ranges was ninety-siper cent and a year ago seventy-threper part ling Sir nee. or of c heara fr sent to t befere, t id been d and h Drummo lohneton and the an uni under oste le i a, dlrec Oinh? mills. Salt Lake City. While there was some interruption in the honey flow In Duchesne county this year, with the result that R will not be quite so large as was anticipated, that in Uintah county has continued steadily throughout the summer, It Is reported by D. H. Hillman, state apiarist, who has just returned from a trip into the Uintah basin. He reports the proportion of disease among the bees diminishing, though not yet entirely eradicated. Condensation ind. does London stran is , Most people love si which in, andHtilij Household lim- m A tboleff i , that the levy of i ftw IntSfife first right and had Di see platitude Joys are wings; sorrow Za rummont i In politics experimenu lotions. Disraeli A foreslghted man alibis beforehand. t rglarlze nee. PTER again alwnjij liste noi No one ever became all at once. Juvenal tha Igned, own ;hat f Drun Some make an affectation absence of affection. ;aln. of There is no love of food. that h iat It was die c Kill a mans vanity and jail the whole spirit of the man. Of two evils the Rear wont Kempli 3 Sometimes many and Its the man hesitate who gets Not the family id bother you Women talk for few. a, lice a large noises and front lesser li ill Thomas a be chosen. imp- th thr ly r all ind een low No girl appreciates I unable to hold his own. a plw erty he takes a fresh hi aa whs lost If a man th of love sheerer! G. B. Shaw. When faith Is lost, when ho the man Is dead Whittier. grip lets he JA i rol 105 n' x e cent Is the Matrimony course of a woman's edocitlA post-g- r ;roo en He who discusses Is to who disputes Is In the Rulhleres. d Ida' ond b A nonsinkable ship has ed by a New York state mtt withstood his model has tests. V W Salt Lake City. Herman Witter of Columbus, Ohio, director of the Ohio department of industrial relations, was elected president of the Association of Governmental Labor Officials the closing session of the twelfth annual convention at the Hotel Utah. He succeeds George B. Arnold. Eureka Llewelyn McIntyre, a min-- r engaged at the Empire Mines of Mammouth, is the hero of the hour m the TinMc district for a display of nerve seldom heard of outside of fle-t!- tfeel loutty Take care of your itosacbi preserve your health " HOSTETTERS Celebrated Stomach Bitten tone ap tat i digeativeorgwni.itlmnUt the appetite and promote I l. L feel tug of pbyiiealf fitoeaa. AtaUDnts- fituMeJ. n. Mr. McIntyre was alone m a part of the mine working some distance from the shaft when he drilled In a missed hole. The usual explosion followed and he received the full force of the blast He was thrown some distance from the face of the workings and was blinded and cut erri ly. in spite 0j these wounds and the loss of his sight he made his way to the shaft alone and unaided crawled onto the cage and gave the signal to be hoisted to the B of wIhesses, bringing the total interrogated to more than the Carbon county grand Jury, In session here since July 28, rested ith the investigation of the "issssQ -- saw- the, whom? Jern 1 9445 IBIOIUI ep sode on June 18. The lynching jurors did not return a single true bill, report-m- g to Judge George Christensen that despite the most diligent effort, they fonHnable t0 8eCUre 8ufflcient in aS"ln3t any per8on- - or d wn? t0 ha en Dr Tbnmpoon ftrenctl them, i liM Tr Troy. With participation. lOKNaiaM affair to charge hem E M Wrtta .,2 per-rwrr- nncan e foi FREE surface. Prlce.WUh the examination 0. "hy does a cook never make s square pudding? Because she wants It to fSttfHT 3El DC& bomW fithteyiy flat KEEP a lo fo; he L D. S. Busing ftnslot SCHOOL AO aommaiotol they kind |