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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH ln!t the fable of STEPPING ON IT 88 lu k i,. i clokge ads t ) n M' Group of parked lulu They mere out ami they were going fr I'.ii: !:.iatiori it ly whizzing to a 1011.1 to then turning j ,. ill. a ut and ariuii.il 1"! iM'iil ng It lan k home, landing which, It la mild y.t Il.al I', .p e live longer than they K u tin-r- mure Seeker OVi Motor Gar. li v' .. I" l -- lo on re Captain ime was the high priced 1ji at t o Wheel. who thought that of Good Itoud was f,,ry feich urt ol Hu- - Indianapolis !ieeday. The other Mr. Henry Glhhle, who.e llu.luiid h.iil paid for the Car Just dandy Queen Anne Ivtue whit t''llac would have rust before Mr. Glhhle thought II,unlT ioe up. fuptulu but be waa ol!) Ha- ( .ihin Hoy. They wouldn't eveii hi h .in hold the llond Map, H.e iii.ir who bud embarked arre three In Nuuilier. a follows K.d'l f. oiilv daughter of the Gib-Mthe Worlds Itecord aim f..r Xhm' Dabbing 473 times In one jii.ft' 'K.,,r,l i ni-i.- t - Day. I'olmleater, supposed to engaged to Ete!Ie he looked Aristocratic and a as heavenly IToofer, even If be an on salary. Slis Ieevy, unmarried abler of Mr. Glhhle a Uosltlve Character who held bark nothing her True Age. TI..it m ole six in All and any good M ml lleador might have discovered that no two of them agreed not even Evolution. on anything f ur hiManee the Cliauf felt that whcu he was doing less than 03 be was dulling the Tires. Confidence and Ignorance. e always said that 80 mile an Ilnur was a reasonable Clip. Mr. IoIinh'Xler said that when be traveled above (10 he could feel bis llrain turning to JelL As for Mrs. G. she couldn't see tny sense In doing more than 30 because her Heart bad not been the same since she carried on her long but victorious Eight for the reorganization of the Woman's Club. Mr. dibble would have stayed around 40 all the time If be bad been permitted to give directions, which he wag nob Miss Ieevy hnd read a good deal about Motor Accidents. Every time she crawled into a Hurry I'p, she expected to be killed before she got back. Cp to the present time she had been disappointed but, Just the same, she allowed that all those who exceeded 30 were taking their Lives Into their own Hands find, as for her. It made her feel as If she were continuing on her Way while the Stuinmick was loitering some Six Feet In the IhrliTl be almm-- t ex-ce- Suh-tan- d J pm Itenr. The Law said that any one who traveled along at better than 25 Miles could be yanked up and tried. Through the Towns the Limit was 8 Miles an Hour. A man on Crutches can do 8 Miles an Uour. lie that as It may, the Gibbles and their two Victims got away at 9:05, which was almost on Schedule. The Starting Time had been set for 7 :03, so that they could get to Bald Hock In time for the Noonday Luncheon. It seemed that Estelle had some Trouble getting her s to match and Mr. Poindexter sat for an Hour, in a Brown Study, looking at his Collection of Ties and trying to make a Selection. The one that he Anally decided upon didnt look as if Anybody had spent an Hour in picking It out After the Old Folks had sat In the Car, silent and motionless, for what seemed to be a Couple of Days, taking the Morning Sun In the Eyes, the two Jovial Juveniles appeared and hoped that they hadnt kept anyone waiting. How lucky It Is that Looks cannot kill I It was a Hot Morning but, as an extra Precaution, five of the six Tourists had their Feet snugly covered with Suit Cases. Just as they crossed the Town Limits and passed Into the Agricultural District, Mrs. G. asked, In a 111 always that Mr Poindexter hud no way of knowing about lha NVw Slone between Jericho and Whidingdule or lha De lour made neii wu,ry by the Bridge teb.g out between Milton 'a Gro.e and Saninfrm Ridge. At the very Monjrnl when liny TO MAKE HENS LAY ibould have been unpacking the Luncheon Basket under ihe IN SUMMER SEASON tre at Bald Itoek, while uierrv Ijvugh-leechoed through the Glen and good haiun-- Quip leu pod from Lip Wet Mash Suggested by a to Lip they were, a Mr. G.hhle aftNew York College Man. erward deserlU-- It, hellwardl between Fronrevllle and Saeketia If th pul ry Cock lays few egg Corner, on a Dirt Itoud that hadnt In lat sutun-e- r, n a Scraper since the Civil feed a mash, War, A far a I lie Eye could reaeb thrre dunes L. IL Hurd tif tl, New Vork Ftuls College of Agriculture. waa a verdant Expanse of When kltnml!k is available, ue It For the first lime In month the Car wa ( toning (lie Law. It to wet the regular numb, or use keuilsolld butlerunlk at the rate of wa doing lei than 25. It came out. while they were Expound to the hundred. Tha ploring, that Mrs. Glhhle bad want- crumbly wet maab may be fed late ed to go via Milford, but Mr. Poin- In the afternoon. Ju,t befor the dexter bad talked ber out of It At night grain feed.ng. Tha bent for Mr. Poindexter, he kept repeat- should have ouiy what they can eat In twenty wlnutes. ing, over and over, They told m Another plan useful when no thl waa ttie best Way to come," available. Fill a pail which, under the Circumstance, was mlik full of dry oat and then fill Just the same a no Conversation at to the top with water. Let the oat alb If the Noonday Luncheon Served stand from one afternoon to the promptly at 3 p. m. carried the gen-er- a next and add enough of the regular Gloom of a chllda funeral It dry mash to absorb the remaining Feed the same amount was because Mr. and Mr. Cibble moisture and Mina Peevy could not find time and at the tame time a tha milk to say a Word. They were too busy mnsh. Wet mash feeding usually begin hoping that Estelle would never In lat July or August. Mr. Ilurd marry Mr. Poindexter. Everything Fell Flat Even a Tire. suggests: No change In quarter or It la said that the Trans Siberian In feed formula; provide an abunRailway, running half way around dance of tender green food; have fresh water at all timet; furnish the Globe from Kowrhurk to hade; and do not allow red mite la the longest straightaway Road In the World, but the to attack the flock. He also adding two pounds of tobacco Glhhle Expedition, In proceeding from Bald Mouutnln to Lake Waha-lia- , dust to each one hundred pound of where they puroed spending mash to aid In controlling worm the night at a Resort and coccldlosl. which are thought Hotel which serves everything to contribute to paralysis. The tofresh from the CVin, got on a plainly bacco dust should be guaranteed to marked Highway and remnlned contain 1 per cent nicotine sulphate. there for Week and Week Mr. Glhhle will always Insist that Hen's Offspring Best be wrote for Reservations and be Indicator of Ability thinks that he mailed the Letter. A hen may be a good egg layer, Nevertheless when the but thnt ta no guaranty that ber and red eyed Outcasts found themselves grouped In the Hotel Office, daughter wilt bo good layers, even when she Is mated with a sire whose like a Huddle of Lithuanian Immifemale was a heavy layer, grants, the Unpopularity which had a three-yea- parent r experiment by the been lavished upon Mr. Poindexter wa transferred, by a vote of 4 to L United States Department of Agrl culture Indicates. to Henry and he didnt have Progeny testing that Is. the test Come-BacIn Ida System. Ing of the laying ability of a hen's Finally, about an Hour after the Dance was over, the Women Folks daughters Is the most reliable guide to that hens ability to produce good were shown to a Cottage on the Hill while Mr. Poindexter and his never-to-b- e layers, the department found. The common practice of attempting to Father-In-Laoccupied Cota Improve egg production by selectIn the laundry. When they started for Home next ing breeding stock on the basts of cannot he depended A. M. It was Mrs. G. who gave the egg production to bring the desired results, orders and so she waa to blame upon the experiment, made by Dr. Morley when the Speed Cop got them Just A. Jull, department poultry specialoutside of Jimpson Heights. They bad six Witnesses who testified that ist. shows. The department tested 793 single they were creeping along at about comb White Leghorn hens, the 15 tulles per Hour, so the Justice of 19 selected sires and soaked them $28, and after they daughters 135 selected dams, at Its animal has were out on the Road again, the bandry experiment farm at Belts Miss and Peevy developed Engine vllle, Md. The tests showed: That a Knock. the egg production of a sires dam It had to be one of the new Tires had little significance In determinthat went flat The man In the Gaing his ability to produce good for It had 12,000 guaranteed rage progeny; that a given sire mated to to Miles, which Explanation seemed given dam may produce good satisfy every one except Mr. and but that the same sire Mrs. Glbble, Miss Peevy and Mr. progeny, mated to another dam may produce Poindexter. that the same was The Shades of Night were falling poor progeny; for sires and a given true differing Bus passed fast when the dam; that full sisters mated to the through a quiet Village which was same sire frequently produced di50 Miles from a Bath-Tuverse results; that the average egg In the Sky The Moon was smiling production of a group of full sisters when the Bodies were removed from could not be used as a basis for the Car, but the Moon had a pracJudging any one of the sisters for tical Monopoly of all that Smiling breeding possibilities. i- Ilull-rush- to 1 one-hal- f travel-staine- g StufT. The Chauffeur had been fired, once more, and if you think that Estelle and Mr. Poindexter were holding Hands on the Back Seat, then you must be Crazy. No one had anything to say to any one Else except that Mrs. Glbble was handing to the Mental Defective who paid her Bills, and what she said cannot be Inserted herewith as the Newspaper using this Article Is limited to Space. MORAL: Automobiles can eliminate Distance, but Not Human Connecticut for Turkey Turkey raising In Connecticut Is Increasing, the total on farms In 1932 being more than double 1929. and with a farm value of about $200,000. A better understanding of has made Id turkey sanitation creases In number possible, and a sound marketing program brought added profit The state, through Its agricultural department, has es tahllshed grading, labeling and ad vertlslng of Connecticut turkeys giving them market standing not be fore possessed. Rural NEW WORLD RECORD cigbtslSew'York y Bridal Veils in Versatile Mood Madrid. Which cam first, tbs hen or th egg? A Fpanlsh eugenic expert, lr. Roberto Novo Santos, claim to Intve found t aululton to this timeworn problem. Neither the ben nor the egg, but th rooster. TLst I what Dr. Nova Santo told an sudlence at the University of Madrid. "God made tha mala first and then the female," be tald. The addreaa wn part of tb first of a aerie cf confer-vnrr- s on eugenics resumed after bavins been ordered discontinued during tb dictatorship of Prtmo de Rivera. hvLLSTE VINSON earned of three to the old badger game ou the atrvru of New York. A In eavb Instance, til method ued wa the Fork avenue Incident may tnuie. be cited. The nmnufaeurer of n known children's Internationally remedy, accompanied bjr another manufacturer, wa being driven up that avenue. A trade Ugh; Hopped the far and well drrated, attrse-tl- v woman Ojxtied Ihe door nd got In. T(ie o manufacturer looked t her In surprise. "Imnt you remember me? the atked. It was down In Miami well. Ive won another twlmmlng championship Inc Ive seen you." It bapened that neither ocengint of the car bad been In Miami for quite acme lime ad so they told the lady. It wa ber turn to look surprise-T mut have made a mistake," she tald, ap"I'm parently contused greatly. orry. But yoii'r going my way. may I ride along a few hunk with you? Im upset really I am." Which Came First, Hen or Egg Solved I work Rig Jack Torrrnce of th Loula tana State university tn.k tram brok the world record by burling distance of &2 tb 10 pound shot feet 6'4 Inch. Tb record was 52 feet 7!fc Inches. B CIIERIE NICHOLAS ages, expressed regret that It wasn't In bis power to seDd blm to Jail for fire years. The affair received wide publicity end during that season, more than a million Scott paid admission to tbe xoa see Reports from vartoui sources Indicate that tbe bicycle Is coming back. Sporting goods store and dehad hern restrained from killing partment (tores report Increased him. Tudor tent the two keeper A sales. So do those who sell cloth the car continued to roll upto the hospital, and they town ehe recovered her composure accretly Ing and shoes that go with bicycling. Identified th Injured Many wheels that's what w used and was Inclined to treat the whole positively aa the man who bad tires the man to call them anyway are bought by matter a a Joke. Finally aha exthe needle bun. Which, Tu- resident! of tended an Invitation to visit her elephant Long IsUod, Westdor bold, la proof that th ele- chester and other suburbs. A New Her apartment and bare a drink. phant never forget. York newspaper reports that bitechnique wa excellent but ber was refuted. At the next cycles are replacing second cars. Incidentally, the victim cf Taul'a Instead of sending a servant for the traffic atop he got out and took up ber station on the corner. In an- revenge brought suit for damage. mall, laundry or on errands to s other Instance, the car owner, rec- Tudor sprung bis two surprise wit- small car, benda of country estates reare urging handymen to learn to ognizing the racket at once, ordered nesses, tha victim'! carefully bla chauffeur to stop the car and hearsed testimony blew up, and pednL assist the woman out But she didn't the Judge, Instead of awarding dam- 6 lilt, BU irodlcata. W.VU Sarrtcw watt for assistance. ess sss Henry E. Tudor, who was formers ly manager of the late Frank animal show, told me of an Incident In an amusement park xoo, of which be waa the manager, In Glasgow. Scotland. Among the animal was a gentle Indian elephant known as IauL One Saturday afternoon, Tudor received a nurry call and found Taut In a w ild rage. The big animal wa pacified only wltb the greatest Uilliculty.-- Investigation disclosed the fact that a visitor bad fed blm a bun In which there wa a large needle. Two of the keepers had seen man who hid acted suspiciously and Tudor ordered them to keep watch. But nothing happened during the rest of the season. Bos-tock- 15 Per Cent of All Americans Are Found to Be Feeble-Minde- d mal children are enrolled In special Disclosures Made in Sage classes Tbe survey shows humanitarian Foundation Survey. Early the next summer. Just after the zoo hnd reopened. Tudor received another hurry call Paul had knocked down man with his trunk and only with the greatest difficulty New York. Fifteen per cent of the total population of the United States I Intellectually subnormal or retarded. More than 1,400,000 persons In America are These startling figures on mental health are contained In a report of a survey Just completed by the Russell Sage foundation covering the work of organized social forces of the country. To help meet the problem of the , 44 states maintain state Institutions for their care. In 200 cities of the country subnor- - Homemade Finances a Factory e Money Town in Kentucky Secure Important Industry. Paducah, Ky. Construction of a factory to employ 1,000 to 1,300 persons Is being financed here with homemade money. Recently a large firm handling shirts previously made In the state penitentiary announced Its products would be made outside the prison and that It was seeking location for a factory. Paducah business men got busy. They found the factory could be brought here If they financed a building costing $G5,000. They got cash and signed notes aggregating that amount Leading business men met with the mayor and decided to raise the funds through Issuing of scrip. Printers were set to work running off $25,000 In Certificates of Pa ducah Industries Committee. The plaD Is simple. The certlfl- feeble-minde- feeble-minded- entes are printed by the Paducah Industries, a body organized to supervise operation of tbe plan. They are distributed through a fis cal agent of the committee An employer signing a contract In the plan purchases to a certain number of the certificates each week, paying $1 each for them. He then pays his employee half In scrip backed by tbe city, and half In legal tender. Here enter the stickers. Before an employee can spend his certlfl cates he must place a one rent stickThe sticker on each certificate. ers are printed and sold by the Paducah Industries. The second person who receives the certificates uses a two cent sticker. The third person handling them is required to affix another one cent sticker. When these stickers total four cents the certificates may be cashed for $1 at a bank. activities of various charities and the new work added to their burden by the depression. Tbe last tbree years have also marked Increase In the shown number of centers where birth control Information Is given, In accordance with the laws of tbe respective states. Over 1U0 such centers are reported In operation a Mrs. by Sanger, Margaret reagainst approximately ported by ber to 1929. Efforts to preserve tbe values of borne life for tbe child where the mother bas been widowed or the removed otherwise are represented by mothers aid laws which have been enacted In all states except Georgia and South Carolina. Homes Involving 256,000 children were so aided In 1930. For mothers who must work, more than 800 day nurseries bave been established in cities all over tbe United States, charging a nominal five to cents a day. There twenty-fivhave also been set np 4,178 child health centers. In tbe fields of recreation and the park movement has grown until recent figures Indicate 11,686 city parks representing property value exceeding In addition to the $2,000,000,000. city parks there are state parks In forty-threof the states, covering 7,000.000 acres; national parks covering 10,000,000 acres and national forests, most of which are open to recreational use, covering an additional 150,000,000 acres. Excluding the national forests, which are set apart more particularly for economic than recreational purposes, the remaining park acreage is nevertheless larger than the combined area of Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont fifty-fiv- bread-earne- r e COURSE every OFbride Is supjiosed to look ber loveliest at ber wedding. Which Is perfectly good reason why the right choice of the right veil end headdress ta to vastly tmpor- or mar the picture. The fact thnt designers, when It comes to bridal veils, are In s parmood ticularly tide season Is It good omen. means that modern brides are being veiled to type rather than following prescribed rules. The group pictured shows bow brides very versatile present-daare being veiled. The exquisite ensemble on the seated figure at the top bespeaks a recent gesture among designers toward crowning the bride with little beret fantasies which depart from the regulation fitted lace or tulle cap versions. The circular flare of tulle about the face and at the back Is perfectly charming. r The veil with Its rounded silhouette Is an Innovation. Not only are these beret arrangements In vogue, but some of the most fashionable brldee of tbe season are wearing the most ravlBhlng little hats of tulle with visorlike brims, also of tulle, a wreatblet of orange blossoms encircling the shallow crown, the veil draped with consummate art to fall over the shoulders en train. Then, too, In tune with this new theme of tulle hats with a brim, little sets are offered at smart shops, which cater to brides, which Include enchanting flower toques, either of roses and petals or of orange blossoms and buds, with muffs made of the same, the newest Idea being for the muff to be The voluminous veil Is worked to fall In graceful billowy masses over this flower headpiece d three-quarte- heart-shape- weed Is correctly defined as a plant growing out of place. If ever a flower springs up where yon dont want It, like a dandelion or a wild carrot on the lawn, It Is a weed. If elsewhere it Is admired or cherished, then It is a flower. Nearly all our valued flowers are, or were, weeds somewhere. We take great pains to cultivate the poppy, the Escholtzia, which covers lavishly and spontaneously hundreds of thouBut sands of acres in California. there are certain other weeds which, we feel sure, will never be regarded as flowers anywhere the devastating pigweed, for example, or the rag weed, or the murderous witchgrass (which, nevertheless, hag Whether a a very pretty head). plant Is a weed or a flower, depends entirely on whether or not to the farmer or the gardener It Is classed as pernicious. And In the Dakota harvest fields the most exquisite wild roses are distinctly "pernicious. A Tone suggesting that she wanted either Information or an Argument, Bell, what Root are we going to take?" Mr. dibble crossed his Fingers and looked at the Road ahead. He had learned his Lesson on previous Outings. He knew that any poor Goof us who takes the Responsibility upon himself and guarantees any particular Plan of Action is thereafter blamed for every Pebble in the Road, for Engine Trouble, Delays at Railway Crossings and Red Ants In the Sandwiches. He knew, also, that the Good Woman never asked for advice except when she wanted to hang a Jinx onto the Party of the Second Part A Sad Meal. Mr. Poindexter, bursting with Confidence and Ignorance, said thRt he had heard, somewhere, that by bearing over toward Mutehburg nnd following the River Road through Ransom and Woms, yon would come out Hurling Down the Dope on State Road 23 "Where have you been for the Inst and get a direct hoot to Bald Rock ; where they four years? would hare Luncheon, If At college taking medicine. any one would be And did you finally get well? speaking to any one else I'.v that time. College Life. Our Pet Peeve e d Designers Now Are Using Plain and Printed Linen night POULTRY GLEANINGS There Is a new Jersey which has all the appearance of being The very dress pictured is made of this JerIt has been sey, In bright blue. given a very attractive styling. It Is adroitly tucked about the hips so as to achieve slenderizing lines. neckline Is an outThe standing touch. The little rope strands form the girdle which is fastened with a wooden buckle. hand-knitte- g Yearling hens, or older ones, In flocks, are 20 times as likely to have tuberculosis as pul lets. corn-bel- t A Tyrrell county (North Carolina) farmer reports building a brick brooder for his baby chicks at a total cost of 60 cents for stove piping and 20 cents for lima, He gays It works fins C 1931, Western Newspaper Union. The coming summer season, as well as this spring, will see the success of ensembles composed of contrasting coats and dresses, whether the latter be In plain fabrics or In prints. However, this new type of ensemble will be entirely different from the combination which has been so much In evidence this last season, and which usually consisted of a plain coat lined with print and matching the dress worn beneath. The new coat will not only be In a contrasting material and color from the dress, bnt will be treated as an entirely separate item. Patou has short pearl gray coats dresses. Jenny worn over raven-bluhas a vivid green and carrot-recoat, which she places over black rayon lacquered satin dresses. Sleeveless coats are sponsored by leading dressmakers to give more Importance to the full contrasting sleeves of the dress. Scrap Food for Chicken One poultry farm In Kent county, Michigan, sold an entire carload of hens for market duo-veil- SLEEVELESS COATS, CHIC ENSEMBLES Beet tops, turnips, carrot and on ton tops, rinds of various kinds, po tato parings can all go to the birds and be returned In eggs or In chick growth. Moldy stuffs of any kind, however, should not be given to them. It causes serious bowel trou ble with birds as with humans. Ba nana and orange peels are also taboo as they have no food value for poultry and forever clutter up the pen, Inviting molds to develop. Feed the table scrap at noon or Ohio ranks fourth In poultry pro duction with 24,954,000 chickens. d e New-York- Weed Really a Flower Growing Out of Place and the long train of the gown. The Inspiring thought about these lovely flower ensembles is that one need not take the responsibility and burden of working out these beguiling fantasies at home, for they are available at most any millinery shop or stores which make specialty of outfitting brides with veils and headdresses Flower bats and muffs In different colors for the bridesmaids complete tbe picture. The alluring fitted lace cap st.d veil posed on the s anted figure below In the picture Is dream of Just such as brldes-to-bwhen they plan tbelr trousseaux. The distinguishing feature abont this veil is that the rarely beautiful lace Is Inset, Instead of the usual border arrangement There Is something very Interesting to tell about the veil on the bride standing to the left The veil Is made In two sections, so that after the ceremony the bride can remove the long train, If she so desires, without Interfering with the youthful capelike portion which so becomingly envelops ber shoulders In a mist of tulle. Thus she can move among her guests after the ceremony with perfect freedom. The better shops are shows this season. ing these For the bride who dotes on the unusual, the veil on the standing figure centered to the right should It la novel beprove an attraction. cause of the high Medici pleated collar which so handsomely defines tbe neckline. draw-strin- g Satin Evening Gown, Printed satin In large, floral designs, makes handsome evening gowns for summer. There already has been discussion about the Importance of the printed crepe Jacket, worn with the monotone crepe dress, and of the printed crepe accent Repeating this Idea, but giving it a fresher appeal, designers are now using printed linen. The dress In solid color that Introduces printed linen as a trimming is also In summery mood, the linen light and bright, the dress In crepey or heavy sheer. These are practical as well as smart fashions, since the linen Is washable and the trimmings are usually detachable. Linen Suits in Vogue Linen suits are going to have an Important place In summer wardrobes this year. You now can buy linen suiting that Is uncrushable and It comes In dark, practical colors, Including black. |