OCR Text |
Show CACHE AMERICAN, LOGAN, UTAH word la law. Ha averages decisions a day for 154 days of tha year. The careers of scores of other men and the Interest of millions can be swayed by his judgment. His decrees must bs delivered Instantly. He has been doing it for 31 years. I asked him: "Bill, do you honestly believe that you never called one wrong?" The man leans forward. A heavy, twice almost pudgy hand beat against his left breast In the neighHe speaks borhood of his heart. earnestly, slowly: No, never have I missed one here. 1 try again. Kill, dont you think that It Is Sew York post WNU Service. possible that you could miss one? forward. Again the man lean Hit eyes are small, of a faded blue. They are not eye that flash. You might call them expressionless, yet somehow they express the intensity of the man, hit calm certainty. Once more the hand is raised against the left breait friends said old Johnny I could miss one, maybe. But was stubborn. You could never from here. guess that from the slant of his The man Is William J. Klein, vetJaw. Strangers blurted that he was eran National league umpire and a fool. You knew that was wrong by generally credited' with being the the gleam from the best In the business. I defy any shrewd gray eyes. man, he says, to prove that I ever ball Yet, somehow, you called a foul ball fair or a fair could not blame foul. It the strangers. Braggadocio? Vanity? A Gilbert did seem foolish and Sullivan character? No, not if for this trainer to you tee the man and talk with him. It It the terse, simple challenge of keep Insisting that Jim Dandy would one who it right with himself. win the Travers Bill, how do you know that yon stakes. Everyone never missed one? knew that the old"If I had missed one I would est of American know It here. The hand comes a turf classics would be back to the breast. race. - Piece by piece the man la not ImHidden by Earl Sande, greatest He le stocky and slightly of jockeys, William Woodward's pressive. overmedlum height, Gallant Fox would be the favorite. but his bowed legs They could gain only one dollar make h I m seem for each two bets on him, but a smaller. His ears full half of the 30,000 who swarmed are large and stick through the gates here on August out. Ball players 16, 1930, were eager for this call them loving Thn others waved $5 bills cups, referring to which would earn six more If Harry tha handles of euch Payne Whitney's Whlchone. trophies. But the It was no place for an ordinary never call them horse. With Sonny Workman In that In front of Whlchone's saddle the two greatest Bill Not an Impressive colts and the two greatest Jockeys would be dueling. Jim Dandys figure. But watch him out on the owner knew It so well he remained baseball field. There Is a stubbornaway from the track. The bookies ness, a dogged certainty, a sincerity laughed as they raised the odds about that rigid frame that Is comto 100 to 1 against the chestnut pelling. colt. "Bill, they tay that you aro tho stood best umpire In the business. NeverSo old Johnny McKee alone. Perhaps the trainers close theless there are arguments at shaven jaw stuck out a bit more times. Some of tho player must grimly when he noted the odds, but really think then that you have he thought his own thoughts and missed one. What about It?" was silent When the bugle sounded he whispered to Jim Dandy Just All Tough, once and stood there alone among Theyre to 30.000 the watching the parade According to Mr. Klem the post A flash of tape, a confused roar, The man leans forward again. He two smoothly gliding machines Itlght points with a stubby finger. move to the front I The duel is here on this field 1 said that a playeven as they dart past the cluber who nmde a dive for a ball In house turn. There, Sonny Workthe outfield didnt catch It But he man bends closer to Whlchones came up with It in his hands. He ears. said he caught It. They believed Whlchone goes to the front, but him." There Is a pause. But two Gallant Fox is not to be run off months later he told the truth." his feet as the Whitney stable hopes. Nothing more. Earl Sande croons songs of the Klem umpired In his first World western plains to his mount and series In 1908. He has been in 17 At charms the music has its today. of them all during his 31 years in furlong pole the Fox draws even the major leagues. No other umagain, at the quarter he gets his pire has ever been in as many. He neck ahead. is not boasting. He It stating a It Is the high point of the race, fact or so they think. Now that the Fox Bill, what was the toughest dehas taken command he never will cision you ever had to make?" be headed. The heavy shoulders tighten. They are all tough. Smart Guys Forgot "Bill, suppose another umpire About Jim Dandy overruled you?" He it almost startled. They couldnt do It" Yes? You have forgotten Sonny "Suppose a manager disagreed Workman and the brown colt which with you and thought that another was king of the Clods umpire wSi In a better condition to of mud catapult under frantic see the play?" hoofs as they fly to the far turn. "He could ask, but only if I give Whichone moves up, is a scant head him permission." The inference it in the lead. that the permission would not be Tou have forgotten something given lightly. else. "Suppose you have some doubt next to the rail, where about whether a ball Is fair or foul? Inside, the mud has not yet been churned Suppose another umpire Is In better Into glue, a horse Is slipping position to see It? Wouldn't you through, sailing past the leaders. ask? His chestnut coat is spattered, I never ask. I know." for a moment you do not know him. When Klem was a young minor But old Johnny McKee has known all alcng and yet the white creeps league umpire the star of one of the under Che florid mask of his face teams was known as an One day Bill made a deand thlc finger tighten. cision which went against the stars Is a he false only Surely alarm, team. The star came running over breathe the 30,000. Surely he canBill walked forward a wrathfutly. not outrun the greatest colts of hie spiked toe the year. Walt a second, he will few steps. Then with he drew a line in the dirt, directly ahoot his bolt and then drop back. in the path of the star. He stood It is a long second and then even behind that line. believe. must doubter the DayThere was a hush. The crowd light grows between knew that something was about to Jim Dandy and the happen. The player halted. Klem ampions. Sande stood there calmly a moment The sings to Gallant Fox player returned to his position. All and pleads but it umpires do that when forced to exis no use. Soon tremes. Perhaps it was Bills move Whlchone slows, that marked the end of seems to be in Jim Dandy He originated a new school of umis six lengths in piring. Each decision Is made clear front, merely galto the crowd. There Is an emphatic loping. He still is wave of the right hand to denote a there at the wire strike, a toss of the left hand for while his jockey a balk Hands are spread palms looks back and Workman grins, wonders what has become of down and moved parallel to the the champs, who had led. ground If the man Is safe. An upof the right arm IndiJohDny McKees gray hair bristles ward perk In triumph, the red is back In his cates that the man Is out face as he comes to the Judges "A man It safe or he le out IP stand. He pats Jim Dandy behind a ball or a strike. Tha players the ears, whispers to him and they should know. Tho people whs pay listen to the roar of the crowd. ahould know." Uncommon Sense HIS m By JOHN BLAKE Service &. umpire-fighter- II SCRATCHING HENS DESTROY GARDENS Several Rians tuberculosis and other deadly must pay many physicians and their assistants, whose services might be used in other fields. Ignorance Is one of the most expensive evils that cities have to "There combat. It is true that a family of five or more people, all dwelling In two or three tenement rooms, can hardly be expected to keep the premises sanitary and well ventilated. One Bright Spot in My Life. Theres a Little Dog Next Door and Sometimes He Walks Clear Up to the Capitol With Mo." Fruits of Victory1 By James J. Montague FRIEND Blodge had aspired so long to become one of the nation's lawgivers, and had been bo delighted with his election, that I supposed I should find him In a state of exaltation when 1 called on him In his office In Washington. From early youth he had been enthusiastic about politics, bad been active in debating societies, and later In primaries and local campaigns. To me he seemed to be foreordained to the career of a statesman. So sure was I that even after two months In the service of the people he would be already so busied with their affairs, that I expected, when I sent my card to him, on the floor of the house, that I would be asked to wait for half an hour or ao. Instead he answered my request for an Interview himself, and Instead of stowing me away In the gallery till the weighty matters In which be was taking part had been settled, he took me by the shoulder and steered me to the elevator. Come along, he Bald, I want to talk to you. Ive simply got to talk to somebody beside my secretary. Hows everything In the old home town? Building any new houses? Is Denny McMorrow getting ready to start up the old place again if beer comes back? What do the boys at home think ahou. the beer business, anyway? Will there be a modification, do you suppose? Why, Blodge," I said, you're right down here where that's being settled. You don't mean to tell me you dont know " MI What does anybody know here? What do I know about anything? What do you suppose anybody tells a congressman about what Is goln on? As soon as we arrived at his office he motioned me to a scat, told a lonely looking secretary that she could have the afternoon out and proceeded : Gosh, Im glad to see you. I'm glad to see anybody I can talk to. I could have talked to the horses on the street when I first got here If there had been any horses that had the time on their hands to listen to me. Horses at least look But somehow I can't sympathetic. talk to automobiles. They're no more responsible than the congressmen Ive been trjlng to talk to. But theres been one bright spot In my life. There's a little dog that belongs to the family next door to my boarding house, and sometimes he walks clear up to the Capitol with me, unless he happens to meet some other dog. But listen, I said, you ought not to feel that way. You've achieved the ambition of your life. Youre a big nmn now, with a voice In the settling of big measures. You're the first man In our party that ever got elected from our district What's gone wrong with you?" "Say, dont Joke about a voice In the settling of big measures. Do you suppose anybody lets me In on whats happening? Today la the first day the doorkeepers haven't stopped me when I started to go Into the house and asked me who I wanted to see and what was the nature o my business with him. The first day I was here I put In eleven bills, and now I can't find out what committee has got them If any. I think I'd have gone back home before this If one of the page boys didn't feel sorry for me now end then and talk to me in the corridor about the hockey team he's playing on and his hopes to grow up and be a lightweight prize fight er. The first day, before I knew much about congress, 1 said that with his opportunities to learn about I should think his ambition would be to go to congress. Iltr Just looked at me a minute, and then said, Aw quit your kidding, mister. For two weeks now Ive been trying to see the chairmen of the committees my bills have been sent to and always they sent word out to come lo some other day. And by tha time I ever get a chance to g But if they were made to understand how their lives and those of their children are menaced, they would pay more attention to the advice of the visiting nurse as to what should be done to guard against epidemic diseases. see them the session will probably be over,- - and then It will be too late. Yes, 1 know some of the fellows In the same delegation, but theyre on the other side of the house, and so they cant do me any Some of them are sociable good. enough, aud even say that when they have some bill that Isnt partisan they will let me know so I can vote for It, which I think Is sort of decent of em, don't you? But the men In my own party dont seem to have any time to give me. if I go down to the restaurant for lunch and draw a chair up to a table where three or four fellows are eating, the conversation they were carrying on stops right away, and they begin to talk about the weather, or ask me what kind of a climate we have In our state, and If I think Notre Dame will have as good a team this year as they has always been a Ignorance stumbling block In the way of progress. Happily, enlightened city governments are constantly finding new ways to combat IL This Is being done In almost every Important city In the United States by education. Time was when tenement dwellers taken from Infected flats and sent to a hospital were terrified because they believed that sooner or later they would be forced to drink from the black bottle and would never return to their homes alive. The desire to care for the 111 and the unfortunate Is a fine trait In human nature. am beginning to think better I used to of listless aud often Inconsiderate human nature. 1 did Inst. I don't know what the folks at home are going to say If my name don't get Into the local papers pretty soon. You know all the promises I made, about retrenchment and the than foreign debts. 1 sort of let folks think that as soon as I got down here I would take those matters up right away and fight em through In the face of opposition. Well, Im here, and Im ready and eager to fight, but how are you going to fight when nobody will give you a And If chance to say anything? you dont say anything how will the bovs at home know what you are doing or rather why you ain't doing anything? 'Td been down here before 1 was elected, but I was a constituent then, and was looked on as Important, and I had no trouble In seeing anybody 1 wanted to see. But now! The other day I sent my card In to one of the house lenders, and I heard him say to his secretary: Yes. What is he. a congressman? sir, sajs the secretary. Well, tell him Im engaged with the speaker and can't see him till Friday week, was the answer. No, I ain't getting downhearted or despondent exactly. I guess If I stay around here for five or ten ears that I mav be somebody, and now and then get my name Into the A man I know who used papers. to be In the house told me the other day that he was here for four terms before the speaker knew he wasnt a doorkeeper, so mavbe I oughtnt to be discouraged. But believe me that fellow Robinson Crusoe couldnt have been so lonesome ns I am, for he did have a colored boy to talk to, and besides there wasnt nobody hack home siftin around nn wondering why he wasn't a national celebrity, and making good on all his prophecies of a brilliant and useful career for himself." As I made a move In the direction of the door he laid a retaining hand on my coat lapeL Dont go now," he pleaded. Come up to my hoarding house and have dinner with me, or go to a restaurant If you would rather. I want to tell you of some of the things Im going to do when I get a chance. So yon really think yon will be able to get something done? Well, the fact Is, I do. They all do. If It wasnt for the Illusion of hope about a third of the members would burst out prying the middle of the first week they were here and take trains for home. Rut were a hopeful lot. and by the wav. Fd like to read you that last bill of mine. 1 begin to think that maybe It will make my reputation here." e, Bll Syndicate. WNU Service. Annie Laurie maiden, Annie who has been Immortal-IzeIn the romantic song bearing her name, was not a creature of Imagination, hut one of whose ancestry honorable mention Is made Her fathei In Scottish history. was Sir Robert Laurie, a baronet of Dumfriesshire. Annie, who was born In 16S2, grew to be the most beautiful Dumfrlessian lady of hoi time and attracted the attention of the lyrical poet, William Dongles. She rejected him as a suitor, how ever, resulting In his writing the song that has made her charms m mortal The f.anrle, fair-haire- d d The world may not be getting better very rapidly it has still to make a war on uar but it is improving in thoughtfulness for its fellow creatures , and willing to spend money to rid the world of plagues and pestilences. What the world may be like a hundred years from now I naturally have no guess. But I am sure it will be free from most of the pestilences that now decimate the population. And In another hundred or perhaps two hundred years It may get rid of the worst pestilence of all, which is war. breaks" You will get fortunate as you go along, and unfortunate ones. Rut your suc- Luck and cess dePend3t n Superutition on you, ontslde circumstances. If luck comes your way, take It But, after you take It, use It as a starting point. Dont figure that It Is going to seep right on helping you out If you do, you are going to get a very unpleasant disillusionment before long. If you have good intelligence, enough to teach you to keep at what you have started, and a real desire to be something more than just average you are, in baseball parlance, as far as first base. It depends on whether you get to second base or third base or home or not. There are capable basemen on each one qf these. Their business is to keep you from where you are trying to go. It is your business to outwit them. Make yourself worthy of trust Life Is a competition, and there nre plenty of entrants. If you are going pretty welt you will attract attention, and some other fellow will be after your position. Don't let him take It away from you. Dont waste your evenings wan- dering aimlessly around hunting for something to do. Bear In mind that today there are more trained and educated people In the game of life than there ever have been before. But remember all the time that in luck is belief in superstition and that superstition is disappearing as men grow more intelligent and be-li- more ambitious. If you haven't an education get one. There are many ways to get one. The country Is filled with schools and colleges, there are chances to take special courses after you have knocked off your regular job for the day. Whats the use of being In a live modern Intelligent world If you are not going to take advantage of your opportunities? Keep thinking about the future. Keep learning. Get Ideals and keep them. Jlayhe It wont be always pleasant at the time. But what counts U the future. So forget Old Man Luck and go to work and keep at work. And you will be surprised, after a year or two, how much fun you are getting out of existence. Recom- mended to Halt Trouble. Ills, cities H'S r. SyndlcaUf-WN- U ten In Had Right Dope On Ilis Horse umpire-fighte- Bell Because only thinking and educated people know anything about their bodies and how to keep them fnct nf in health, drejs 0f doctors ojjst do work that they ought not to have to do. Because great numbers of peoples la great cities do not understand that huddling together In closed and 111 ventilated rooms results top of- Johnny McKee two-hors- e The High Uintah Primitive Area This U one of a series of Articles to appear In this newspaper, sponsored by the Salt Lake Advertising Club, associated civic clubs of southern and central Utah, and chambers of commerce; part of a program to point oat Utahs resources so that local people will Know Utah Better By AMOS JENKINS Only a few years ago Secretary of War George H. Dern, then governor of Utah, headed an exploring party through the Haydes canyon trail out of the canyon of the north fork of the Duchesne river into the lofty, unknown region east of the junction of the Wasatch range with the Uintah mountains. Last year in late July, Mirror lake, now gateway to this region, resembled Liberty park on a holiday. In the meantime, by presidential proclamation, the area, beyond the last cow or sheep trail, has forever been set apart as The High Uintah Primitive Area, early domain of tha kind In the state. Every year the trails penetrate deeper and deeper Into this region. To begin with the forest service a decade ago built a forest development road to tap the ripe lodge pole pine that blankets the mountains. Later recreation funds, a new appropriation for the forest service, became available and the road was made a high gear automobile highway to the lakes at the head of the Provo river. ' Finally came the New Deal and with it the big and beautiful CCC camp on the Soapstone, s were established on both sides upper Provo. From this camp of tha Bald mountain pass. New switch backs were made to lift the highway around the shoulder of Bald mountain. The road offers now only a wonderful trip of a few hours from Salt Lake to Mirror Lake, tributary to the Duchesne river. The CCC boys also dug foot paths and built camp sites on trails leading into the wilderness from Mirror lake. The trail, first blazed by the Salt Lake council of Boy Scouts from Mirror Lake to the lake group, was improved and graded. The Boy Scout council acquired as a permanent summer home another lake two miles np the Bald mountain morain from Mirror lake, now known as Scout lake. From Kamas the highway to Mirror lake proceeds up Beaver creek, a Weber tributary, then over the Shingle creek divide and onto the north fork of the Provo near the junction of the fork with the main river. Crossing the north fork bridge, the highway soon meets the main stream of the upper Provo, with Its alternate rapids, falls and deep gorges, and proceeds on an easy grade to near Lake Tryol. From this lake with long, easy switch backs, the highway climbs to the Bald mountain pass. Here, if ever, comes the feeling that one Is residing on top of the world for the world appears far below. At the summit on the divide between the Provo and Duchesne which Is also the Great Basin divide, a trail is marked which leads to the forest fire t station on top of the Bald mountain. From this station on a clear day most of the Wasatch range and Uintah mountain system may be seen. The road then quickly drops down to the shores of Mirror lake, almost a summer town now. This lake at the feet of the Bald mountain occupies the same relative position as Jenneya lake under the GramJ Tetons. The mountain Is reflected under the crystal water. Eastward for over 25 miles the giant peaks of the Uintahs mark the northern boundary of the primitive area. Geologists say that the entire region was once much higher, possibly thousands of feet higher than the loftiest peak. Erosion that has carved out the Uintah basin has left the peaks. Precipitation is greatest at the west end where the mountains have the first chance to condense moisture from westerly winds. From this end water erosion has been a little greater through the ages and this probably accounts for the difference In elevation of over 1,500 feet between the Bald mountain, a western towner of the area, and Gilbert peak, northeastern corner which Is 13,422 feet above sea level. Reid peak, Hayden peak, with Its pass to the Weber river, Mt. Agassiz, La Mott peak Tokewahna are the land marks on the north of this primitive area of abont 225 square miles. Those who have soared over the region In planes report that the lake basins of the northeast comer under Gilbert peak. Red Castle and ML Wilson are much larger than the Granddaddy group. Farther south on the east side, probably 50 small tributaries to Lake fork of the Dnchesne as well as streams that flow to the Uintah river, have their noses In mountain lake groups, large and small. The western and southern boundaries of the area are known to many who go beyond the automobile highways. The north fork of the Duchesne Is roughly the western boundary. The Brown Duck lakes are In the middle of the southern boundary. For many years fishermen, starting from the end of the road at Moon lake, Duchesne county, have packed to the Brown Duck lakes. A forest highway Is now approaching year by year, from the transcontinental highway at Evanston, Wyoming, eventually to arrive at Mirror lake, giving a entrance to Salt Lake City through th tops of the American Alps. Last year the first appropriation was made for a cooperative project of the forest service and the bureau of fisheries and survey begun to determine the life adapted to these high lakes and the kind of game fish that will naturally Increase in them. Also it Is proposed to join the barren lakes to those with outlets and eventually to stock the lake groups of the entire area. Some trout fry were packed In last year. This year large appropriations seem certain for development of the recreational use of the forest The program of trail building and survey and of fish and game culture will no doubt bs greatly enlarged. Dont be surprised, said one government official, if landing fields are built In the Ottoson basin, on the Dead Horss pass and Anderson's Then as the trails push farther Into the primitive area, Salt pass. Lake fishermen may angle for the big fellows that made their first journey to the high lakes by airplane." There are now no trails te hundreds of the lakes and over most of the vast region no human foot has ever pressed the mountain loam. Forest rangers have followed the tributaries of every stream and mapped the location of lake groups and estimated the timber stands. This primitive area will eventually have at least two gateways from the Utah side. In addition to the Mirror lake entrance, there is little doubt that a highway will be built from Moon lake to th Brown Duck lakes in the middle of the southern boundary. The road to Moon lake Is now being Improved as It must be used In construction of the million dollar dam and canal system, now under way. The route from Moon lake to the primitive area would be rather easy in comparison with the road built to surmount the Bald mountain pass.' Th's would give Uintah basin counties, particularly Duchesne, now know by the rather desolate stretches of the transcontinental highway, a chance to show the world the matchless grandeur and the recreational facilities of the high Uintahs. Grand-dadd- y look-ou- and-loft- y Mr. Reader: Do yotr part te advertise ltah. Please send this article Is some friend or relative or business associate out of tho Slate. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. All with the Home applications Owners Loan corporation in the state will be in the hands of the legal department by September 15, meeting the deadline set by Washington, D. C., according to an announcement by the Utah managei of the HOLC. BOISE, IDA. A brain disease epidemic that has taken the lives of about 400 horses in Idaho in the last few weeks is reported as being on the wane. The disease is appearing in Ada and Canyon counties and has been prevalent in Gem, Washingtr and Payette counties. Hens, like children, like to go Into places where they are not wanted. Gardens are especially attractive to hens, although the flower beds In the house yards are equally enjoyed for dusting and preening. There Is probably no program that is 100 per cent effective la keeping an ordinary farm flock where It belongs and out of places where it Is not wanted, except confinement In the henhouse or a perrun. fectly chicken-tigh- t Keeping the flock confined until ten oclock In the morning, except In extremely hot weather, says a writer In Wallaces Farmer, not only reduces the annoyance of having the chickens scratching aronnd where they nre not wanted, but also simplifies the egg gathering problem. There are several Items that aid In keeping hens from getting over fences Into places where they are not wanted: 1. Clipping the feathers on one wing as short as they can be cut without Injury to the skin. Clipping both wings Is much less effective. 2. Putting the braces on corner posts on the side of the fence which Is away from the hens. If the braces are not so located, the hens use them to get np to a spot where they can squeeze through or hop over the wire. A piece of poultry netting should be stretched from the corner to the anchor post, to prevent the hens from hopping on the brace anywhere along Its length. 3. Post tops furnish station stops for the lighter breeds on their dally Journeys from outside the garden to Inside. Steel posts are the Ideal garden fence support, since no good landing place Is available; but two or three laths nailed on the outside of each post, flagpole fashion, are effective In preventing the hens from getting over. 4.- ' Wooden fences of ordinary height are simply an encouraging Invitation to the hens. The only cure Is to top off the fences with 18 Inches or more of poultry netting. If this Is put on by means of extensions, such as 2 by 4s, at an angle of 30 degrees or more from upright, sloping away from the forbidden area, the fence will approach 100 per cent of effectiveness. two-fo- Get Rid of Loafing Hens and Save Added Expense Catch the loafers "with the goods Is the advice of by culling now, Miss Cora Cooke, extension poultry specialist at University farm, St, Paul. Culling need not be a long, tiresome task. The early culling can be done merely by taking the loafers off the roosts at night, or picking them off the floor by means of a wire catching hook. The culls are easy to recognize In early summer. Their combs are shrunken and the beaks are beginning to turn yellow at the base. They may be yellow to the tip. If beak and legs are both yellow. It Indicates that the hen has already been a boarder for several weeks. A hea whose comb Is shrunken and whoso pubic bones are drawing together Is so near through laying that It Is wise to cull her at once. If tho pubic bones are drawn tight together and If the vent Is yellow, she shows that she has already ceased laying. Every flock should, of course, bo given a thorough culling before housing for the fall, says Mlsa Cooke. Much feed can be saved If this Is done. Eggs an Important Food Seasonal Increase In egg production through the summer with corresponding reduction In egg prices affords a chance for the average family to catch up on their egg consumption. Not only does Increased consumption help the ponltrymaa bnt eggs are an Important source of food material. Only fish oils exceed egg yolks as a natural food source of vitamin D. In addition eggs are a source of valuable minerals and proteins and can be adapted to any meal of the day either as a dessert or the mala dish. Most of the egg Is edible, only 11 per cent of Its weight being shell. Pathfinder Magazine. Poultry Hints Fresh eggs become stale In a day or two of hot weather. Cockerels that are to go to market as capons next Easter should be caponlzed as early as possible. Englands National Poultry council declares the importation of Chinese eggs is a 'menace to health. of all the baby chick hatcheries in this country are located in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Iowa and Minnesota. One-thir- d |