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Show THE LEI1I SUN, LEIII, UTAH I too0 f J Mil I f ond in. livlslon t : 'in the pi "J. that "tie. t arching mud l- r"; to I Hundred jl Pportv li tanLs u," 3 was j, :t've tiif all corl artel opened Six of and da-fhe da-fhe ret.; ired. L id his lost In I the on he rent d his and if threw ilflpiis'- efense the r iniedu earj k ! thai tu bnirk'J ours, f OneH:; In etj Tills (r and ftE the oo,' the!"' Hon' n. ft iranl & In de , 3 scMi inired eir fc'j da.nr" 'ersii iOD no p metf ntarf Ing li nts i'f taf he- Cti'tf mtff ibacr' JIB'" letii-; i tK It iWS I !" pM JI-' .I i iff 0ETRY Vr'TER FEEDING " NOW NEGLECTED ?jt E-:pment in Poultry House listed ',1 " 1 -r n f ton firkin cr. -i vw. tJ C -'te frequently poultry owners nt-Mont nt-Mont to po thronsh the winter with Vlent feeding and watering )m 'I'.ipment In the poultry house, c tlf"! WeeU of ld enther during the Inst; fl.k n 'lately unless attention has . 7i b.-i- kIvpii to feeding needs. pT'"'! '.Villi the advent of mash feeding, , kil t V being fed In many Instnnces on , ,nHsli ration alone, masii nosers in , f- winter house become practical iy n necessity. Tliese noppers num rge enough to rare for tne masn j of the flock for at least two t e; t ' I. : r ' r i to save labor by less rrequeni I A good rule to follow In Juilg jlie flock needs for definite time j allow for a consumption of t three pounds of niasli per bird, month. One foot of feeding space Id be allowed for every ten birds riie flock. The hopper should be nged so that the fowls cannot f t pm i on the top. rltere scratch grain is fed. it should mMj te fed in the litter, either In the 1S v e or In the scratch shed or room. To facilitate the feeding of this Brum l l ..Tin.. n S 1 Orilge oox in rim ii tvi net 'i 'lerlaif house that will hold enough mr.tch grain for a month of winter f - ;ing will prove to be a valuable a- small investment. Boxes should Bl-Vbe provided and kept filled with gr'i and shell throughout the winter. ,'ny drinking fountain that can be c ,'ty cleaned is good. Automatic f, -ifftalns, If they meet this require-p:.':it, require-p:.':it, are to be recommended and if a gel f-hea ting fountain Is available C t- can be kept well cleaned. It will p! ! ; in keeping up egg production f jugh the cold winter, months, f As should never be forced to drink It ? water, even though such auto-B" auto-B" ) flc heiiting equipment is not instiled in-stiled in the house. C lect Breeding Stock i Early in the Season Poultry raisers who contemplate hiitt'liing their own baby chicks should he the breeding pens or flock mated st feast three weeks to a month be-f be-f "-is tiie eggs are saved for hatching. Success in raising the bnby chick 1! cfe is in a large measure estah-P estah-P .ted before the baby chick 1 relied. Vigor od vitality naturally cwe from parent"" stocks that are 1 -jng in these qualities, says 0. C. 4 ord, extension poultry specialifit, ' orado Agricultural college. 'One should use only males that vigorous, mature and weH-de-ioiieil. When possible, secure these r les from breeders who can furnish ' 2!ii from high producing hens. A i' ile from high producing stock ? wild never be used, however, unless 1. has vigor and vitality. "Hatch Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Is-if Is-if qd Reds, etc, not later than April. A very good time to hatch or buy Leg-li.ijrn Leg-li.ijrn chicks Is during the latter part of March or the first week in April Chicks hatched later than May 15 are ury seldom profitable." 4 ' ; Poultry Facts Candle the eggs on the seventh and "-'iirteenth days. .$ - 'ihe estimation of a bird's prospee-e prospee-e breeding value Is the acme of ie breeder's skill. i Inbreeding to make an establisb--wnt of any point should always be ' Pltroached with caution. t'ock birds usually produce excel--nt quality chicks, but sometimes ?le poor fertility early in the season, i . fif a farmer keeps chickens at all. r't can afford a comfortable poultry rouse. The old poultry house may se remodeled urn! madfe more com-, frtyi,e nt very little expense. j foww infested with round' worms W'y be treated by feeding them dry 'sh yiuuiuing one pound 2 per nt nicotine tobacco dust In each 50 pounds. The medicated mash siiould fed for four weeks. . It i I io secure the best 'flock fertility. nuca breeds as the Plymouth s. Rhode Island " Redi Van-?ttes Van-?ttes ana Orpingtons with one male w every i2 t0 15 females. For the natter breeds, such as the. Leghorns, J "'ale to every 12 to 15 females 851 n be used i Most varieties of tapeworms hnve sirTiia,e ,,osts- Tn is. ir- in ,i . the ,aPewonu's life la spent j'the bod, of an insect or grub and t'li.t riu ga'ns "trance to the . only when (lie chicken I f,,e nern.edinte host.. than 0n"8, ""evenion Is better nd rT1?" TLoronSh Iaily cleaning will Dr7 distosal of droppings lnc inT'ent the ,nses from becuui- i ,M for the chickens to nL M.-; Wfl a4:? ai Here is an unusual photograph witch doctors. Cleveland 1 M 1 1 11 "" 1 - . - '. - .. ' 1 . ' ' J.,'.ufy HWf3jtWMtVWWW-iy mini fc..v ywwiii"'v Jw...w. v. ..y. WM,.--j,.,lm.n Tilr f " s r v - -----mx lji1f " ZL; ..." ,111?' gpr mw fss-r56 VI Hi J& hVi frf TfrYrJ rPVi?' W m ft gr i2&f ILiMy f JT JIT HT This architect's drawing shows howCleveland's $2,500,000 municipal stadium will appear when completed. The eteel is now being erected and the stadium, which will seat 80,000 persons, is expected to be completed in July, 1931. , Giving Santa Claus a Helping Hand .X i ft : . ; l! v p Jiflvl Guy Ewell (left) of Washington, and Fred Moreria of McLean, Va., making mak-ing Christmas presents at Children's hospital In Washington. The Christmas spirit is already rife In the hospital, where cheery smiles and busy fingers are not affected by .bodily ailments. Winter Doesn't Stop Gold Seekers Ice and snow do not deter these gold seekers as they erect a new camp In the Matachtwan district near Bannockburn, Ont, where operations will be centered In following ip the gold strike discovered by Bert Ashley and Bill Carrey. King of the Ivory Coast and His Cabinet ill I"1" llllli i ii urn mil i in urn - im ii ii" niiMii w showing the king of the Ivory Coast, Africa, seated with his ministers and . Is Building a Municipal Stadium i '1 C - t w NOW CHIEF OF STAFF i . iii. W i-T' irr Maj. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, new chief of staff of the United States army, posed for this portrait photograph photo-graph on the day he took over hi new duties. CAGLE TURNS PRO 7- :t -x Christian Keener (Red) Cagle, former for-mer star of the army grid team and later coach of the Mississippi A. and M. football squad, is now playing with the New York Giants, professional grid team. Wj of Wei A colored girl emplu.vitl in a downtown down-town Indianapolis restaurant, spoke pleasantly to a white man seated at one of the tables. "Howdy do. sir!" she said. "Oh, hello f the customer responded. respond-ed. Ton don't know hlmT another waitress said. "Yes, I do. Say, I used to work tl his home. lie's a glad man with j icees wife." Indianapolis News. s It;- lr ft I- St. ' : I " , ' : . . . .. IIVE STOCK "m NEWS FEEDING CHOICE ' CATTLE IS BEST Buy Fewer and Keep Them Couple Months Longer. If you prefer to feed choice grades of cattle, why not buy fewer of them and feed them a couple of months longer? This Is a question that Paul Ger-laugh, Ger-laugh, chief of animal industry at the Ohio agricultural experiment station, puts to farmers who query him about the relative udvantages of feeding lower grades and choice grades of cattle. Don't make the mistake of buying the grade that is selling to best advantage ad-vantage when you purchase your feeders, feed-ers, says Gerlaugh. During the summer sum-mer and fall 1 months well-finished, corn-fed cattle usually sell at a relatively rela-tively high market price, when compared com-pared with grass or feeder cattle from the range. But by winter, he 'continues, the runs of grass cattle almost disappear, and the number of cattle coming from corn-belt feed lots Increases, until by spring the plainer grades of cattle are found selling dangerously near to the price of choice grades. The lower low-er grades of fat cattle Invariably show more margin for the feeder during the winter feeding season than do the choice grades,-although they handle feed less efficiently. The summer market Is generally higher than the spring market for fat cattle, and a longer feeding period is required to bring out the good qualities of choice grales of cattle Because, of these market trends and feeding facts, Gerlaugh suggests that choice grades of cattle be fed longer, long-er, to carry them over Into the period of higher prices In the summer and fall, rather than feed loner grades and sell them on a glutted spring market. Stockmen Probably Save Through Feeding Wheat Nevada sheep and cattlemen may be able to save some money this year by the purchase of wheat Instead of corn for emergency winter, feed. This is the opinion of I'rof. V. E. Scott, agricultural economist of the Nevada agricultural extension service, following an analysis by him of the comparative feed value and cost of the two grains. If wheat Is used, he states. It should be purchased in carlots and rnusf be fed the animals In troughs. . Reasearch has shown, according to Scott, that wheat has a greater feeding feed-ing value than corn. Since corn weighs 56 pounds a bushel, he says, and wheat weighs GO pounds, a bushel of wheat, even at the same feeding value, is worth more than a bushel of corn. "Experiments carried on by the United States Department of Agriculture," Agricul-ture," Scott states, "have revealed that when corn is worth $1 a bushel, wheat is worth $1.07 when fed to poultry and sheep, and $1.12 when fed to hogs and cattle." Cattle Should Have All Oats They Will Clean Up Cattle should have all of the oats they will clean up good in two feeds per day, after being gradually worked up to a full feed In about four weeks' time, and should have about one pound of linseed oiimeal per head per day. This can be fed right from the beginning. By feeding your steers oats in this way for a period of five to six months, especially if you have enough hay of fair quality to use along with the oats, you should have your cattle in pretty fat condition, fat enough to just about suit the packer buyers when they reach market Live Stock Facts Skim milk, good quality alfalfa hay. or clover hay should be fed to furnish protein. A bog can stand much abuse and neglect, but negligence and indiffer ence do not make for profitable pork production. It has been found that often sheep will drink very little water If they are on good soft green pasture that is very high In water content during the spring or fall months. . While the swine Industry la on the decline In this country a larger number num-ber of bogs than a year ago Is reported report-ed in most foreign prodsclng coun tries, particularly In Europe. If mange breaks out la hogs, dip the hogs and clean up the quarters before the disease spreads through the herd. Pumpkins are 90 per cent water, but In spite of that they are a very good feed, the dry matter running about 15 per cent protein. Wheat, properly handled and prepared, pre-pared, is a suitable feed for prut-tlcall) all rhiKsea of live stock. Kxcepf foi chickens, Ii must be roKed, crushed pi ground before being fed Horse injured? Reach for AltSOIlRINE Absorb! ne it the dependableUnimcnl when gashes, bruitea, threaten lay-upi. Fast to ease inflammation and guard against infection, it'i a quick healing . aid. Muscles and tendons strained by pulling, too, respond to this 38-year- old liniment. No blisters nolost hair horse can work. A real economy All druggists $2.50 a bottle. W.F.Young,. Ino, 510 Lyman Su, Springfield. Mass. PILES Pile sufferers from Protruding, Bleeding, Itching or Blind Piles, can now get relief from very first treatment by using Q.R.Pile Ointment " Q. R. (Quick Relief) Tile Ointment Oint-ment is a new remedy for the treatment of pile sufferers no matter how long alHIcted, guaranteed guar-anteed to give satisfactory relief or money refunded. Before placing this pile ointment oint-ment on the market for sale, it was put to the acid test In boii mild and severe cases, never falling fall-ing to produce wonderful results. re-sults. If you are troubled with piles, do not experiment Get Q. It Pile Ointment. If your druggist drug-gist does not carry it in stock, fill out the blank below and mall It to ' ..- . Q. R. OINTMENT MFG. CO. 373 South 5th East Salt Lake City, Utah Q. It Co., Gentlemen: Inclosed And $1.00 P. O. Money Order for One tube of Q. It Pile Ointment to be mailed prepaid to Name P. 0. Address........... On conditions that If I am not satisfied with results obtained, I am to receive money back npon returning tube to your laboratory.. labora-tory.. AH That One Observer Could See in Mirror Max Epstein, philanthropist and patron of the arts he has Just given Chicago university $1,000,000 for an art gallery said at a dinner at the Blnckstone: "Because fool novelists, stealing their Ideas from Freud, make out that we have abandoned virtue us a mistake, a lot of people really think" - that virtue bus been ttbandoned. A1k surd! ' "People who think that way are as far from the truth as the men in the anecdote, "It's an anecdote about a woman who went to a sale and bought a handsome mirror to hang above her bathroom wnshstand. The mirror was large but not heavy, and She decided to carry it home. So she boarded a trolley car, and sat with It upright on her lap. Naturally she couldn't help looking Into It now and then, arranging her hair, you know, and maybe powdering her nose and so forth. "All the men in the car were very much Interested, and one of them was heard to say; "'Well, you never can tell what's coming next. It's the latest fad, I suppose.' " No, I'm All Right "You admit that you put a lead nickel into the complainant's cigar vending machine. Don't you know that that was cheating?" reproved the Judge. "Did you ever smoke one of those cigars, Judge?" Portland Express. America Far in Lead One-third of the world's mail is handled by the United States postal system. Wise is the wife who has only small wishes to be granted. KILLS 103 RATS ON NEBRASKA FARM A Nebraska farmer killed 103 rats In 12 hours with K-R-0 (Kills Rats Only), the product made by a special process of squill, an ingredient highly recommended by the U. S. Government Govern-ment It is sure death to rats and mica but harmless to dop, cats, poultry or even baby chicks. K-R-O is today America's most widely used rat and mouse exterminator. Sold by druggists on money back guarantee. Sunshi tne All Winter Long At th Foremost Ovtart Rasoft of Hi Wt inarvolous dimatswana sunny days clear starlit nights dry invigorating air spUndid roads gorgeous snoontatn sconas llnt hotels th ideal winter homo. Writ CrM A Cftlty PALM SPRINGS California LIFE AND DEATH So tiunn noli ran afford te t without then nrw farts of lire tht "Ml n. ver know u-iful rontrdi-tion. It describes death from eirlnr. imd ! no esart dscrlp! Ion of the human aoul. An Hnl Christmas itlft. Br mail ool. tl ee. cloth bound n BI ISinM. co 8th ti San iHreu. ul:f- lent. B. W. N. Salt Lake City, No. 49-1930. |