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Show '...,...... Column FOR SALE SCHOOL Dkra- -x W& ! ; Weiner pigs. Call 14.3 :- - By DWIG; fimfXSiki .h Balanced Farming Helps Agriculture ' FOR SALE Chester White weiner pies. C. W. Summers. Phone 7.y-4. LOST Small shart haired red rat tailed Water Spaniel. Small patch white, on. toes. Round brass studs on leather collar. Reward. Notify Howard Bodily, Willard, Utah. WANTED Girl to wash dishes and help in kitchen. Otto's Cafe. tl. WANTED Girl or lady who will not be going to school this fall, to do housework. Apply at Leader office FOR SALE MrgHH-- P. Three varieties apples. Rasmussen, phone 65.a--l. ; Trout Hatchery, Brigham $150 In. tf. 6-- Fir God's Stiriii Fpnnd , Linked with the civilization centered In Egypt and. the Mediterranean 4.U0U i years ago relics of ancient sun-go- d j worshipers have been discovered in the Isle of Man. Here Prof. H. J, Flenre Manchester university has eica jvated a great stone monument which llns no equal west of Malta. Beside it jhave been found fragments of pottery whlch enable Its approximate date to I be fixed as about 2000 B. C ' -- SH RECENT BIRTHS Canning Chickens August and September are the most convenient and economical months for canning chicken in Utah because they are the usual months for culling the SixOuUfidw SESSIONS Mr. and Mrs. Thyres Sessions, of Bothwell, a boy, born August 5. The club and many parents athens, no tended the club outing in the Box longer profitable to keep, are ideal Park Friday evening. for canning, Miss EIna Miller, exten. sion economist of the Utah State Ag You need not care what say ricultural college points out Their so long as you are true topeople the best meat has better flavor and texture you know. after processing than the more tender delicate meat of very young chickens. Depart from evil and do good; seek Chicken may be canned successfully peace, and pursue it. Psalm 34:14. at home with a pressure cooker. BeNearly a million people have visitsides plain chicken, which may be put ed the Canadian quintuplets. You sure can expect the up with or without the bone, the home maker may can such specialities as chicken sandwichspread, plain chicken broth, and chicken gumbo soup. The chicken livers will make excellent can ned liver paste. But chicken canned in any form needs processing in quart jars under 15 pounds steam pressure for safety for 60 minutes, and in pint jars at 15 pounds pressure for 80 minute3, Miss Miller and other authorities say. Chicken requires a temperature higher than boiling for sterilizing. A pre-sucanner is listed as the first esis a sential piece of equipment for chick Chicken may be canned either in plain tin cans or glass jars is in sizes up to a quart. Sterilization will be more certain because of heat penetration at the center of the jar or can and the product will have a better flavor and texture because it does not have to have such in long processing if small containers are used. Because chicken may turn dark in the can if it has been prepared in sheet iron or capper utensils, authorities advise against using these two metals. Using stainless steel knives in preparing the chicken is recommended. Chicken darkens more easily than other meats. The USAC Extension Service will send free upon request Circular No. 63, which gives details for canning, Miss Miller said. 4-- H flock. The plump re . drought-resistant- s, drought-resistin- By DR. JOHN W. HOLLAND the opposite of noise. Think on this. The surest way" to break up a . flgbt is to drop it The horse is man's best friend until he begins to bet on him. A single tongue can start more trouble than a double-barrele-d shotgun can stop. When you get to feeling your own importance stop and ask, "What would I amount to without other people V S), wtatern Newiptpar Union. Poise is M"I ! ! t .t- H- t- ! 'I1 't- You'd be surprised ! Bright jcolors, novelty weaves, exclusive patterns, reliable qualities. NEW FALL FABRICS NOW ON DISPLAY When can I expect you to look over this new, comprehensive collection? OSCAR STRAND TAILOR I. m.m..t.M. In order to protect the company's proper- t.j,j.j... ........ ... ......i....... .... . ... ,. ....... ... frM"H"M''M'"M-W- ty from breakage and theft, men have been selected different communities to be on the outlook for anyone committing such offenses Safoty for Vacation Funds will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. MAKE GOOD OR WE DO Fronk Chevrolet Co. BEAR RIVER VALLEY Tremonton, Utah - Phone 28 SUBSCRIBE FOR THE LEADER TELEPHONE COMPANY PAUL HEITZ, General Manager NOTICE TO FARMERS We Will Call for and PAY CASH for DEAD or WORTHLESS HORSES & COWS Just Ring Logan Enterprise 7A SALT LAKE'S NEWEST HOTEL TS We Welcome All New Business We Also Buy HIDES - PELTS - WOOL About iy2 Mile South of Logan Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation $5,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor East of the Sugar Factory FOR ICE Beverages & Coal SEE BESSIN6ER BROS. TREMONTON, UTAH : 6: or accidental loss; BEAR RIVER STATE BANK CO BY-PRODUC- theft g. This is Our Private Long Distance Number the Operator Call. We for the Understands That Already Pay COLORADO ANIMAL Whether you go North or South East or Wen by boat. $tin, automobile, or air, much of the actual pleasure of tour trip would be sacrificed if your funds should suffer Travelers' checks, obtainable here, are a safe and content form of money while travelling. If lost a refund may btained. They cannot be cashed until countersigned by and they enable you to have cash as you need it. 30 HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE at RATES $1.50 TO $3.00 It's a mark of Distinction to Stop at this Smart Hotel ERNEST C. R0SSITER, General Manager 1? What's new this Fall in fashions? If apprehended, they OUR '1' ' New Fall Fashions r Farmers and other people moving high objects under telephone wires are warned misdemeanor to ruthlessly tear that it down the wires and interrupt communication. Such an offense punishable. . J 4-- H in DR. WILLIAM ELI HAWKINS CHIROPRACTOR Offices at RESIDENCE BOTHWELL Appointments Made by Phone CALL 7S5 Anna Marie Theurer Reporter, 4-- H if SOME FAMILY SKELETONS MOURE IMMENSE CLOSETS. The Chuckling Cooks club completed plans for a party for. their mothers up Brigham canyon, Friday. A good time is expected. drought-resistin- ' L The Chuckling Cooks club met at Verna Theurer's home, Wednesday. They prepared and served a delicious;' .' soup and salad. 2. FOR SALE 20 tons first crop alfalfa hay. Utah Auto & Imp. Co. r. CLUB NEWS long-continu- ed 493-J-- 2, Reverse Charge. 4-- H From all reports Russia does not tolerate graft in the expenditure of government money. If some one is caught pulling a fast one he is stood up before a stone wall and shot without much ceremony. The plan appeals to us as a good one, and one feature of the Soviet government that fectively. other nations, especially our own, "The total acreage planted to wheat could profitably copy. Whenever there and corn for 1936 harvest was 170 is a big sum of money to be spent it million as compared with 169 million seems to attract the grafters to as an average of 1928-3A consid droves. erable acreage of g crops was planted in 1936 as a subclub met at The Fourth Year stitute for oats which stand such the home of Phyllis Summers, Weddroughts as those of 1934 and 1936 nesday evening. A variety of beververy poorly. Among the annuals, soy. ages were made and business was dis beans are the outstanding cussed. The next meeting will be held among the biennials, sweet at the home of Gladys Newman. clover, and among the perennials, alfA large group of young people alfa. The acreage of these three comprising a Sunday School class and g crops has greatly club enjoyed an outing toTSgooTt increased during the last three years Monday. ; CASH PAID for dead and useless cows and horses. Call Maple CreeK . Agriculture is much better prepared this year than in 1934 to meet the situation created by drought, according to the Secretary of Agriculture, Henry A. Wallace. He points out that the drought of 1934 found agriculture in a state of unbalance and peculiarly vulnerable to its crushing effects. "The Government's first moves in 1934 were purely defensive and of an emergency character," said Secretary Wallace. "As soon as the worst phases of the emergency had been met, steps were undertaken by the Government to guard against the effects of future drought. In place of the unbalanced type of farming which had put agriculture at the mercy of drought in the past, the adjustment and programs sponsored by the Government helped to restore a balanced farming. "The 1936 AAA conservation program represents such an attempt," continued the Secretary. "This pro- encourages a shift toward crops such as grasses and legumes which produce nutrients even with, meager rainfall. Cultivated crops suffer more f rem drought than alfalfa--, brome grass, wheat grass, sudan grass, mil let, and sorghums. Through increasing such acreages, individual farmers and whole communities are placed in a condition to withstand seasonal and drought much more ef. - LAWNMOWERS SHARPENED the Ideal Sharpener. Prompt cer vice, work fully guaranteed. E. S, : Sercomb, Tremonton, Utah. ': -- gm on TOR SALE Big discount on credit on Dodge or Plymouth. quire at Leader Office. ng In Drought Battle : as a result of the pra grams of 1934, 1935, and 1936. "On July 1, this year, as shown in a survey by the crop reporting board of the Department of Agriculture, both cattle and hog numbers were mere nearly in balance with feed supplies and with effective demand; as ; a consequence, the country has not been faced with the problem of liquidating several million head within a short time. Supplies of cotton and wheat and com, while adequate, have not been so large as to drive farmers' prices to ruinous levels. The improved prices have placed'farmerlshnr' a better economic position to meet an emergency. In short, tDe drought has found the country much better prepared than in 1934." POOL DRAINED EVERY NIGHT . . . w |