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Show FRIDAY, OCTOBER THE BOX ELDER NEWS, PAGE TWO Dr. LeGear is a graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, 1892. Thirty-s- i years of veterinary practice on diseases of live stock and poultry. Eminent authority on poultry and stock raising. Nationally known poultry breeder. Noted author and lecturer. As everybody knows who reads the newspapers, the criminals of our large cities run like the wolves their natures resemble, in packs or gangs. Singly they would do com- paratively little damage and would soon be put out of business. Work- together, however, they cause un- told loss of life and property with a freedom from, danger to themselves that is truly amazing. A rather striking parallel to this disease of society, the modern criminal gang is to be found in all too many poultry yards. I refer to the, alarming prevalence of worms in every section of thq country, of which there are some varieties known to veterinthirty-si- x ary science. Only three need be mentioned in this article. Of these, tapeworms will be treated in a separate article. The other two are thei large round worms which are found in the small intestines and the small round worms or pin worms which inhabit the caeca or blind pouches. The former is from one to four and inches long when full grown; to the latter measure only s of an inch long. Both young and old birds are commonly affected. When very young chicks are wormy, growth is usually stopped. This Is the most common cause of runtiness. Laying hens are sometimes infected to such a degree that laying falls off materially. There may be an unthrifty condition, dullness, drooping of wings, loss of weight paleness of face, wattles and often lameness. comb and very There are also many cases which show no external symptoms. The only positive way to detect worms is by a post mortem examination. When fowls are killed for table use or marketing, the bowels may bd examined by slitting them open from end to end. Any fowls that die, shonld be examined in the same way. Then If worms are present, proper treatment should be given. The necessity for prompt effectivei treatment of wormy fowls cannot be emphasized too strongly. Infection spreads from one bird to another quite rapidly and the longer the infected ones go without treatment, the harder it la to restore them to normal condition. Worms cause a twofold damage. First of all, they grow and thrive on food that should go to the birds' growth and to make eggs. In addition to that, they throw off a poisonous substance which pollutes the digested food matter and is absorbed with it into the blood. This causes digestive disorders, loss of flesh, lowered vitality and loss of ability to' resist disease. I am convinced that, directly or indirectly, at least 75 per cent of all diseases and losses among chickens are caused by worms. The most practical, cheapest and most effective remedy I have been able to find, is nicotine.- It is most accurately and beneficially given to mature and nearly mature birds in the form of pills. Feeding powdered tobacco in the mash is no longer favored by most competent authorities as many of the fowls which need treatment worst refuse to eat it and the others may suffer from nicotine poisoning by eating it In the case of serious worm in fection, as with most other poultry troubles, sanitation is a most effective one-ha- lf one-ha- lf three-fourth- - Electrical Wiring FARRS weapon. The eggs of round worms are laid in great numbers and passed out With the jopping3.- - Other fowls. eat them with food and water, then they hatch and grow in the intestines, These eggs retain their ability to hatch for many months. Strictly itary conditions should be maintained in house and yard, Lime should be spread over the g yard, turned under, and a ing grain planted each month. Houses should be thoroughly sprayed with a strong dip and disinfectant solution, Droppings should be removed every morning, or dropping boards should be protected with wire mesh. Feeding troughs and drinking vessels and the like should be arranged or protected in some way so fowls cannot roost above them or get Into them with their feet. Dampness and wet spots in the chicken yards should be eliminated. If possible, baby chicks jhould be raised on new ground or on ground where no chickens have run for two or three years. One of the chief benefits from raising chicks on floors of inch wire mesh is thq prevention of round worm infection. If they must be raised on old ground, they should be given some poultry worm powder containing nicotine in the form of powdered tobacco after they are from four to six weeks old. (Copyright 1929) san-sava- ge quick-growin- j j i one-ha- lf It Gather A rolling stone may Harmony Aces Dance Orchestra Now Open for Engagements. Phone 430 Before 5 P. M. or See Monroe Petersen 57 South, 3rd East; Brigham gather no moss, but It gathers a lot of what most people crave speed. Arkansas Gazette. NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estates of Joseph L. Bowen and Edith E. Bowen, also known as Edith E. Hawkins, deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at his residence, Beaver Dam, Box Elder County, Utah, on or before the 10th day of January, A. D. 1931. CLARK S. BOWEN, administrator of the estates of Joseph L. Bowen and Edith E. Bowen, also known as Edith E. Hawkins, deceased. Date of first publication, Oct 3rd, A. D. 1930. ' WM. E DAVIS, Attorney for Administrator. NOTICE OF HEARING BEFORE THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION OF AJTAH. In the matter of the application of American Relief was given by the JOHN McFADYEN and L. B. DEN-- ( in six the year NING, for a certificate of Convenience j Red cross during ro ranging disasters and Necessity to construct, maintain, ejgn nations in PHONE 430 an and operate gas distributing plants a tidal wave In Newfoundland, in France, of gas earthquake in Pei da. rioods or systems for the supplying for light, heat, power, and other to help the refugees from Russiaan purposes to the Counties of Box prevention of a smallpox epidemic in Elder and Cache, the Town of Perry, Costa Rica. and the Cities of Willard, Brigham, contribution Co, The $5,000 Red Cross Wellsville, Hyrum, Logan, Richmond, the tidal following Newfoundland, to and Smithfield, in the State of Utah, lives and twenty-siSen ice Above AH and the inhabitants thereof. Case wave, which took and fish ng homes Was. 2462 destroyed many No. 1195. NOTICE OF HEARING. from an outside Phone, Salt Lake City, 423-Notice Is hereby given that the boats, was the first distressed Phone Brigham City people. the application of John McFadyen and country to reach to the was given ?3.000 of sum The L. B. Denning, for permission to Brigham City Branch of the Mennonite relief the for fund and operate gas construct, maintain 145 South Main St. of German descent, who had distributing plants or systems for the refugees new for Russia determined to leave Ask any family we have served. supplying of gas for light, heat, About 13,000 passed through lands. to the and other purposes power, the German Red Counties of Box Elder and Cache, Germany, whereRed Cross societies of aided by the Town of Perry, and the Cities of Cross, manations, helped them. The Willard, Brigham, Wellsville, Hyrum, other are being transported to new jority Logan, Richmond, and Smithfield, id countries in the western world and the State of Utah, and the inhabitants American Red Cross has transmitthereof will be heard before the! the contributions from individuals in ted Public Utilities Commission of Utah, country. at Logan, Utah, on the 6th day of this When Costa Rica was menaced by m. at 2 oclock p. November, k smallpox epidemic, the American By order of the Commission. Red Cross sent fifty thousand tubes of Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this vaccine. In two airplane loads, un27th day of October, 1930. from a doubtedly saving the country F. L. OSTLER, (Signed) serious disease. dread (Seal) the of outbreak Deseret Mortuary NORMAN Lee Bonded Ahtraeto, REAL ESTATE, IVSTtr,. S No 7 est Fore8t Street Brigham City, Utah REAL ESTATE - FIRE LOANS - SURETY BONN'S Notary Public x Secretary. W appyyr. I Will E.H. Office MARBLE, D.D.S DENTIST First National Phone Brigham City, Bank lr C. A. w H Utah MUNNSJU? dentist Suite 31-3- , . 6 first National Telephone No. Bank Bit 43 JOHN W. PhIllIpT ABSTRACTS - BONDS INSURANCE Accurate Work, Prompt Adjust and Liberal Settlements, REPEJ0LICAN C0LUf.HI DEMOCRATIC COLUMN For Justice Supreme Court - EPHRAIM HANSON For Congressman from the First District DON B. COLTON For Representatives to the State Legislature HORACE L. RICHARDS WM. C. HORSLEY For Commissioner, Term For Commissioner, Term ISRAEL HUNSAKER DAN PETERSEN J. For Clerk A. JOSEPHSON For Attorney A. P. LEISHMAN For Treasurer HEBER W. PERRY For Sheriff JOHN H. ZUNDEL For Recorder MRS. LOUISE SECRIST For Assessor IRL B. WARD For Surveyor For Justice Supreme Court C.H. BRYAN, JUDGE GEO. CHRISTENSEN For Congressman from the First District DENTIST First National Telephone No. JOSEPH RIRIE Room 22, For Representatives to the State Legislature 0. L. BROUGH Brigham JAMES JENSEN For Commissioner, Term For Commissioner, Term D.D.S. Bank B'i 31 City. Utah OUR ADS ALWAYS GET RESULT T. L. DAVIS GEORGE MAY For Clerk WILLIAM T. DAVIS For Attorney LEWIS JONES For Treasurer AMOS P. HANSEN For Sheriff JAMES J. THOMPSON For Recorder MRS. J. D. CALL For Assessor HYRUM M. BOOTHE For Surveyor LORENZO W. ANDERSON W. H. GRIFFITHS (Paid Political Advertisement) (Paid Political Advertisement) The foundation of American business is the independent busi ness man . . . we must maintain his opportunity and his individ ual service. Ford Digs Two Mile Tunnel for A Billion Gallons of Water a Day a billion gallons of water more than is used by of Detroit, Philadelphia, Cincinnati and Washington combined will be the capacity of a huge tunnel now nearing completion at the Rouge Plant of the Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Michigan. The tunnel will replace the present water intake system which supplies tha Ford plants with 500,000,000 gallons a day. At the same time the company is remodeling its power house td greatly increase the power output. Both Improvements, costing several million dollars, are beiug made to enlarge the production facilities of the Ford plant. Sixty Feet Under Ground NEARLY constructing the waterway, the largest of Its kind ever undertaken by a single business concern, the engineers are burrowing sixty feet under ground for a distance of two and a fifth miles. They have gone under main highways, railroads, street car tracks, bridges, a cemetery and a creek. One of the most difficult tasks was that of tunneling under Baby Creek at a point which is crossed by a railroad bridge and where also a large sewer is under con?- uctlon by the city of Detroit. The piles that provide the foundation for the bridge and those driven by the company constructing the sewer formed a network on each side of the creek. It was the task of the Ford engineers to burrow under the creek, sewer and bridge, going between the piles without striking or weakening them. Boring of the tunnel is accomplished by means of a shield a large steel cylinder fourteen feet long and twenty- - Those were the words of Herbert Hoover when he waS Secretary of Commerce. He was speaking, be assured, in terms of the welfare of the masses of American people. No one knows better than he that business must remain unshackled, free from monopolistic control, if the indu-on strial and commercial progress of the Nation is to go unchallenged. The Chain Store System is a challenge to that progress- -a challenge to the basic welfare of you and yours, of your neighbor and your fellow townsmen. It is moving strap toward the goal of monopoly. It succeeds only by stifM the independent merchant, by curtailing his service, down his trade. Its ultimate aim is to eliminate m cut-in- entirely from the competitive field. And then . . ; Well, you would be at the In - Jewelry and Electric Speed 3! Y Electric Wiring and Supplies Petersen Electric How to Raise Poultry By Dr, L. D, LeGear, V.S.; St. Louis, Mo. Of the Chicken Yard SEMI-WEEKL- mercy The Chains. . Stand by your independent merchant. He has built to business on the basis of fair prices and obliging service the kind of service you yourself have prescribed. pnees are as good as any. He doesnt try to foolF The head cf one of the sections of the Ford tunnel showing the maehincry used to burrow through the ground, in the foreground is one of the concrete blocks used to line the tunnel which has an inside diameter of fifteen feet. one feet in outside diameter with a solid steel shell or skin two and .a fourth inches thick. This shield has a bulkhead which is made fast near the front end. There are four openings through which the mud streams, like toothpaste from a tube, as the shield is shoved forward by twenty powerful hydraulic jacks. When the shield has been pushed forward sufficiently concrete blocks two and a half feet wide and five feet long, each weighing 3,420 pounds, are placed to form a ring around the circumference of the tunnel. One of them acts as a keystone so that the lining of concrete, which Is eighteen inches thick, withstands the pressure orthe earth. After this steel forms are set up and filled with concrete to form a solid inner lining which is also eighteen inches thick. The present intake system of the Ford plant has a capacity of 500,000,000 gallons a day. The new tunnel will be1 able to carry 913,600,000 gallons. with trick merchandising schemes and deceptive leaders. He is fair and frank in all his dealings. In m0Sl cases he is your neighbor., Buy where you see the Liberty BclP symbol displayed. Its your protection. UTAH ADVERTISERS ASSOCIATED" Kearns Building Salt Lake |