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LMBBBBBBaB aw at da- - uitaaf Utafc. ara atack jxHihry iiiaiag. fry seat'v r ic XX Number BEAVER CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, FEB. 7 17, 1922 WHAT THE BEAVER BEN IS AND BREED OF POULTRY Three Claesea Specially : t the .1 ' United ELDER IIANZiOaE We have read of Maud, on a summer day, who raked, barefooted, the. new mown bay; we have read of the maid in the early morn, who milked the cow with thfr crumpled horn and we've read the lays .that the poets sing, of the rustling corn and the" flowersbf spring, but of all the lays of tongue or pen, there's naught like the lay of the Beaver hen. ore Maud rakes her hay, the Beaver hen has begun to lay, and" ere the milk maid stirs a peg, the hen is up and has dropped her egg; the corn must rustle, and flowers spring if they hold their own with the bam yard ring, If Maud Is needing a hat and gown, She doesn't , hustle her hay to town, but goes to the store and obtains her suit, with a basket full of fresh hen fruit; if the milkmaid's beau makes a Sunday call She doesn't feed him on milk at all but works up eggs in a custard pie, and stuffs him full of chicken fry; and when the old man wants horn, does he take the druggist a load of corn? Not much!, he simply robs a nest, and goes to town, you Bt&tea Depart-a- t of Agriculture.) no best breed of poultry. st. Is the opinion of men ed States Department of who tare been studying i for years, and have hud with all varieties of all To go among Vmerlca. and ask for advice about t chickens to start with out as productive of con- i as If you asked for help .aotor car or a typewriter. has his likings, and some asons for them, but In the 'nner will have to be the efore,the opinion of the specialists will be about Je: Keep only one vuri the breed 1, and select ur purpose best. Be sure 8" have a standardbred head of the flock. Such a prove the quality of the A mongrel male lally. no Improvement i i 1 the other presidents; th Arajrcan, other events will be the-Gre- nee at the Colonial Minuet the Colored Orchestra. Washington, Karl P, i Adams, J. F. Tolton; 1 son,. O. ; A. Murdock; R. Murdock; John , Samuel 0. White . Dr. McGregor; Andrew ph Hutchines; Martin iton; Wm. H. Harrison, ;te; John Tylor, Timothy wi K. Polk, Leasing r, J. T. Tanner; Milard Franklin . Fairbanks; s Gunn; James Cuchi '.on; Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Carl $ S. Grant, Frank Smith Hayes, Walter Tolton; 1J, , Raymond Hodges; hur, E. Lybbert; Grover ant Tolton; Benjiman kt Tanner; Wm. Mc-Farrer; Roosevelt, ;Taft, Welle Murdock; John n, Fatherlngharaj Harding, UnusualAccldent to Mr. Oakden rd Relief Society enter--1 Allvcrson at her home, with a bundle very large number pres-ak- o and ice cream was night and all enjoyed a 1 t 135 - FACTS Bone-Build- 4tt f today my thoughts get down '- 11 ml ' ' r i v t ii INTENSELY HUMAN HE HAS BEEN DEPICTED. Admittedly of Violent Temper, With Strong Powers of Naturally Melancholy. but Self-Con-tr- ol The Father of His Country would hardly have fancied himself In the role folks nowadays are of a dernlgooV-- as disposed to regard him. He was very human. When a young man, his hair was de ' cidedly red. At the age of fifty he was quite gray, and on occasions of ceremony his locks (done up In a queue) were freely powdered, as was the custom of the day. His teeth from early manhood gave htm a great deal of trouble. They were. In fact badly decayed dentistry at that period being an undeveloped art and this circumstance rather marred his good looks when be smiled or laughed. lie was also considerably pock marked, having suffered an attack of smallpox at nineteen years of age. hlle In Barbados with .bis Invalid brother. Those were days when most people had smallpox sooner or later, vaccination being as yet nnthought of. At (when Inaugurated as President In New York), be had lost nearly all of his teeth. He then wore a false set of hippopotamus Ivory, which made him very uncomfortable. In sitting for . hla . most famous- - portrait, painted by Gilbert Stuart his Ups were padded out with a wad of fifty-seve- n Cotton. He seems to have had little sense ef humor, and unquestionably was of a most melancholy temperament The . clear,-followe- , " ?V d County having gone thoroughly into Parowan played in St George Satur the finances, of the Beaver Couuty day night and doubled Dixies score of School District and figured the receipts 28, Cedar played here on the same and disbursements for the present night and won with a score of 35 to 28. school year, find there will be ample Leaving Parowan the honored and prize money on hand to maintain the schools team of ihe district They are no of the County to the end of the present scheduled for the State League. school year as heretofore calculated. - or-- some- - reason, - but are of you all and wish to thank each and every one of you for the love, respect honor and best of all, the help with donations, which have been rendered me,, all to gether 1 have recieved, fl98.10 from Beaver, Greenville and individuals, and I can say I sure da appreciate the' kindness that you have shown me, I cry for joy when I think of it I am getting along in my work just fine, the weather keeps me from this more than care to be, next Sunday evening I am to get my first chance to express my self, I am to talk in Sacrament meeting next Sunday evening, we have a member ship of about seventy in the Baltimore branch, and this year we expect to increase it very much, I pray that the Beaver County people and Men, War Mothers, the West ward tsisnops ana every one in Beaver City will accept my hearty thanks, and that they may pray for me while in the nissio'n field, I pray that God Bless ;ach and every one of you, and grant that His blessings may comfort those copies of the "Tonng Man's Companion," which was the guide of his boyhood. At Mount Vernon he had a very decent collection of books, but his reading seems to have been restricted mainly to works on farming and mill tary science. How he managed to evolve the classic literary style that marks Ills public and private writing is a puzzle not eay to solve. The discussion here attempted, 'however, Is not of Washington's many perthat needs it. fections, but of his human weaknesses Your Brother in the Gospel, to show that, like the rest of ut ELDER JOSEPH MANZIONE, he was far from godlike. This most admirable of men bad certainly a ter- 2821 W. North Ave. Baltimore, Md. rific temper. He could swear on occasions with alarming emphasis. A story, well authenticated', Is that he pitilessly beat an Alexandria butcher with horsewhip because the had ex(Ked for sale a deer Wm.B.Wood, age 72, and wife, Mary that was recognized by the master of Clemen 8 Wood, age 68, crossed the Mount veraon as killed on his own 32 hours. Divide stereotyped REAL WASHINGTON BY NO MEANS THE DEMIGOD ;T?5bB: ' ' h w.M fvt'ff tap-tappin- Parowan Wins League Game DAIRY I1A.WD , Mr. Will Oakden attempted to repair dinners he gave In New York were an electric wire, four milea from .the described by hla; guests as dull affair. Telluride ion the Deer Trail line, and re- As a rule, he sat silent rather sad of In the ceived a shock which rendered him un- visage, and taking little part conversation. While others talked, he conscious while he waa up a telegraph 'would g on the table- keep pole, Mr. Oakden held a coil of wire edge with fork or spoon a curious and the current from the live wire habit he had. He had a pronounced weakness for jumped into the coil, burning his hand and leg. He had fastened his belt to gambling though always held In another wire, thus saving himself a check by a reluctance to commit himself Imprudently. A born speculator, fall when receiving the shock. Mr. Oakden suffered but slight in he was constantly engaged In land deals. He subscribed to every lottery ' juries. and raffle that came along, and would spend many hours at a stretch with a Dairy Industry Making Progress pack of cards,' though usually a loser. Several meetings have been held re- To attend and bet on a horse race, he often went to Annapolis, or even as cently between the local creamery and far as Philadelphia. ' representatives of the Beaver Cotnty Spelling was by no means his forte. Dairymen's Association, as a result of To the end of his life he wrote "winwhich it now seems probable that the der" for window, "latten" for Latin, two concerns will get together and ar etc. Nor Is this surprising, Inasmuch rangements made to handle practically as his education was finished In a vilhll the cream at the Beaver plant lage school. The style of his penmanthe Commencing Thursday February 16, ship, so neat and no deductiona will be made, from cream delivered at the creamery, but a slight Bearer Board of Education be charge half cent per pound-w- ill Can Maintain School For Year made for the gathering of cream from the home. . The Board of Education of Beaver . BALTIMORE, - . Bundle Shower IN IS KOW. Per Year Baltimore. Md., Feb. 6, 22. FEED KEEPS UP MILK YIELD To all the people of Beaver and vi V cinity and Mr. Brownhill, Ordinary Ration Are Likely to Bs I have been going to write these few ' Deficient In Principal lines for the last week but could not Element;log Long-long.- bef know the rest He hangs around with the cliques and rings and talks of politics and things, while his poor wife stays at home and scowls, Saved from want by those self the reasons: Standard same fowls; for. while her husband roduce uniform products lingers there, She watches the cackling higher prices. hens with care, and gathers eggs, and ed stock and eggs sold the eggs she'll hide till she saves enough t purposes, brbng higher to stem the tide. Then hail, all hail to market quotations. ed fowls can be exhibit the Beaver hen, Tha greatest blessing of all to men! Throw up your hats, and compete for prizes. stock from mongrel fowU emit a howl for the persevering: barn ; for breeding purposes. yard fowl! Corn may be king but its wis are not exhibited In plainly seen the Beaver ben is the s or expositions. Beaver queen. . pose breeds are best for the Ladies Farm Bureau Arranged st farms where the pro-Poultry project by the project leader, r th eggs and meat Is most popular repre- - Mrs. S. A. Shepherd. this class are the Ply- , Wyandotte, Orpington, Robinson Brother! Snow Plow : land Red. Used on Salt Lake-Ogde-n Road reeds, with the exception ton, are of American .orIn Davis County, on the Salt Lake re characterized by hnv- kln and legs, and lay Ogden road the snowplow which or eggs. The Orpington Is lginally cleared Beaver County roads of heavy snow, is being successfully on the last page) i o used as a quick, economical way of orical Party keeping the paved roads in Davis oTiave the time of your County clear of snow. The device is attached with chains to Rent at the most edu the front of a truck and will clear if the season, be at the fallen snow, to the depth of newly dance ant and Friday ith. Come costumed to eighteen in hes, at the rate of 10 to J2 eriol from John Alden miles per hour. A similar device is .the Great World War. used on Salt Lake roads but of less the Boston Tea Party economy on account of turning the snow only one way. rge Washington himself, itsk Historic mount Uemon CAN DO HERE . to Production of Egg and Meat ' ; $2.00 (PreparM br tha United States Department of Agricultural Feeding cows for several years, according to the commonly accepted standard with little or no additional pasture, reduced the milk yield much below the optimum, It was found by experiments at the government farm at Belt8vlUe, Md. This condition may be corrected by giving the animal a dry period of two months, and feeding during that period a ration containing legume hay and grain with a high phosploms content, with three or four times the amount of protein re- - ' j i Double Funeral For Husband and Wife S ! V h ' : : meat-mercha- plantation. ' " In 1759, a few month after his marriage, he wrote: "I am now, I believe, fixed at this seat, with an agreeable partner for life; and I hope to find more happiness In retirement than I have ever experienced amidst the wide and bustling world."' Note, If yon please, that Washington years old. fas then only twenty-sevelet his attitude of mind was elderly, with a touch of sadness. On hla return to Mount Tern on, after the-wabe wrote to Lafayette r "I called to mind that I wnas now de scending the hill I had been fifty-twyears In climbing, and that though blessed with a good constitution, I was of a short-livefamily, and might soon expect to be entombed In the man sion of my fathers. But I will not re pine. I have had my day." Think of writing In such terms at fifty-twyears of age I a time of life at which men nowadays consider thai they have barely reached their hey day. Washington, as a matter of fact. had allU llfteeo years to; live, lght ef which were to be spent in administer Inc the affairs of the nation as Its within Great Mrs. wood contracted pneumonia, and after five day a illness, died at her home in Miners ville. At the time Brother Wood was about the house and premises. After Mrs. Wood had been laid out, he went in the room and saw her; soon after he became quiet and jeemed ill He gave friends advice to deal with the property and also his wishes in the arrangements of the funeral, Saturday evening he passed away just 32 hours from the time of his wifes death. ; Cow Thrive on Rich Pastures. ' quired for maintenance, and two or three time the total nutriment The milk yield In the subsequent lactation period may sometimes be doubled by this treatment The results of the experiments are given In Bulletin 945, Thos-phor- us The Jhfluence jof Calcium-and In the Food on the Milk Yield of Dairy Cows." In the case of cows of which the milk yield has been reduced by several years' standard feeding, as followed at Beltsvllle, a greatly Increased yield can be brought about by feeding "alternated rations with phosphate" during the dry period. This Is taken Services were held Monday; Cecil to mean that the ordinary ration are Baker and Frank Williams were speak more likely to be deficient In one or g er. Mrs. Fern Hall rendered two solos; both of the principal The end of a Perfect Day" and element than In any other constitu"Somtime We'll understand," A j re ent Bulletin 045, "Tng influence of Calfusion of flowers surrounded the cascium and Phosphorus In the Food on ket A blanket of roses 'covering the Milk Yield of Dairy Cows." may the had Mrs. no but children; tops. They be had upon application to the DiviWood is survived by two sisters, Mrs. sion of Publications, United States DeJohn Ryan of Salt Lake, and Mrs. Louise of Agriculture. partment f, Henrie, of Los Angeles, and one, ; MiC Cha,- - demons 'of Milford. Mr. Wood leaves three sisters,' Mrs. Does It Pay To Keep High Class Pedigreed Chickens? Rom Hamblin, of Lyman, Wyoming; : Mrs. Alice President .. ... " of Parowan; Bradshaw, But he was always a melanchly man or Minersvuie, and a In a recent conversation with Mr and For many years before his death the Mrs. Lucy byre, Abram of Minersville. Mrs. John P. Barton about the poultry Wood, prospect of his departure from this brother, ' (n a double industry in the Beaver valley they gave made was Interment been world seems to have constantly In bis mind. Whence, presumably, the grave in a steel vault People from, the the following very interesting data. From a pen of ten high class, pedigreat Interest, he took In the removal entire county; also Salt Lake, Parowan, of the old family burial vault at Mount Frisco, and . Nevada, attended the greed S. C White Leghorn pullets, ' Vernon, which was being undermined funeral. which they purchased some years ago, by an underground stream. they obtained the following results: January, an average of 26 eggs each; ' 1 Puffer I lonored Mrs. Floure. ; America's Predominant February, an average of 22; March, 23; One hundred and ninety years have Mrs. Addie .Puffer was the guest of April, 23, and Mayv 2J each.' ' elapsed since George Washington wan honor at a birthday party Tuesday is That what e breeding accomplished twenty-threhundred and born. . One at home. Invited guests were in the Leghorn family severs! years rears have elapsed since he died. He evening Mrs. A. L. and Mr. Fotheringham, Mr. ago. Practically the same results, in never saw a railway locomotive, steamboat or ah electric light But and Mrs. Marshall Levi, Mr. and Mrs. smalt pens, is being secured by up he stlU lives as the predominant figure Joseph Murdock,' Mr. and Mrs. Alex poultry men ell over the country, of American history and the annals of Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs. Silas Cox, and wetan do the same here If we try American stBtesmanxhlp record no Mrs. Jennie SUnton and Allie Cox. bard V enough. state paper that even approximately Games and muaie were enjoyed. A ' luncheon was served by Mrs. Fothering , compare- with his farewell address. Notice to tbe Public ham and Mrs. Murdock. Electric Light and Water will be collected for from the, first to the tenth Murdock To Celebrate ' I. M. A. of esch and every month begining Ward East date the Is 3rd. Program Marsh Friday, March 1st 1922., We also wish to serve aclected by the Executive Committee Reading, Clinton Baldwin; Vocal Solo, on all delinquent L'phta and notice celebra Murdock for the big CI eon e Maxwell; Retold Story, .Vie Academy users Water that their account must tion that Is to be the biggest and best Smithr Violin Solo, Grimshaw. John be March 1st. or their lines will In by off paid Beaver ever will County. class Senior discuss advanced The pulled thing disconnected. be Watch for particulars in, next week's the subject of music, which will be By order of .the Mayor ; and City paper. In the meantime arrange to be demonstrated by Geo. C Murdock. Beaver City. and Council, and bring your family present Splendid lessons for Junior Girls and HAITI E ASHWORTH, friend with you. Boys. City Recorder. COMMITTEE Trade at home snd thus aid in Tell others about the goodthlngs Invitation cards and envelopes at to be had in Beaver Valley, ' butldiug up your home town the Press office. n r, -- o . bone-bulldln- d o .bro--the- . to-da- te - |