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Show 1 CHICKEN OF TOMORROW tah state and Western re-The re-The Utfl" Tomorrow con- -wnal Cfk ' t 8 will be : stfr Se Hotel Newhouse in '?i Sty rather than at the fjrgrounds, as Previously state flg carl Frischnecht, &nnoUnCnte'st chairman, said today. teri rations in handling" and pe Sultry will start the pro-m pro-m poultry Crygtal Pa'nf the hotei. room of "c Hprbert B. Maw and T,tinz about 3:au F"" Sffecht said. The chickens will Fnsc." .. hnv9 of 12 and pack- be soio es otJ.iu ia invited to attend J oroeram and sales. fte.PS Kirkham, formerly of , t secretary of Utah Hatcheries Breeders Association is a Member of the state committee Ranging thejontest. I APHIDS IX TOMATOES Miners and commercial have asked repeat, . ie black flies are which are damaging tomato plants. Dr G F. Knowlton, entomologist entomolo-gist of the Utah State Extension Service said that in nine cases out often, the insects are winged aphids aph-ids Most of them are winged forms of the little green peach Usually this tiny pest, which is g disseminator of several virus diseases of plants, has been blamed blam-ed for the unusually serious blossom blos-som drop. In the majority of cases this appears not to have been the case However, tomatoes and other plants are much better off without aphids. One dessert spoonful of nicotine sulfate and one tablespoonful of soap powder, will kill the aphids Ion of water, will kill the aphids on tomato plants, if thoroughly applied. In case nicotine is unobtainable, a rotenone spray, used at the strength recommended by the manufacturer may be used with good effect, Dr. Knowlton said. f FAMILY OF ANNIE YOUSG HOLD REUNION The children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of Mrs. Annie Young held a reunion July 27 at Liberty Park, with 75 persons in attendance. Dinner, games and visiting vis-iting were enjoyed by Mrs. Young and the following families: Mrs. Alice Degelbeck, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Vic-tor Mason of Bountiful, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Gray of Ophir, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Pett of Brigham City, Mr. and Mrs. James Young of Ophir and Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Le-Vitre Le-Vitre of Provo. HAND PICK HORNWOKMS Hand pick and destroy horn-worms horn-worms on tomatoes and potatoes in the early morning, announced Dr. G. F. Knowlton, Utah State Extension Service entomologist. In Southern Utah, manv farmers reported hornworm injury to both commercial and home garden potatoes, pot-atoes, as well as to garden tomatoes. tomat-oes. In large commercial fields, Dr. Knowlton recommended that the Potato and tomato crop be dusted with about 35 lbs of undiluted calcium cal-cium arsenate, per acre. This will destroy hornworms and any tomato tom-ato fruitworms exposed to the treatment. national newspaper week to stress public service NASHVILLE, Tenn. Observ-ce Observ-ce -of National Newspaper "MK from Otihor 1 Q th!c year will stress the role of the Press as a public servant, accruing ac-cruing to an announcement by om B. Greene Jr., Tennessee IZ Tr soclatln field manager and nnw rhoim, The SlflPan Or!rmfr,J Vc, trL 'Your newspaper serves .uuui uy serving you." rhe cornmittee with Greene " -"uvuu w imams, AjNi-A; ...... onian, Utah State Press juauon; William E. Canfield, "Hand Daiw Prc -45 ana Walter C. Johnson, Southern tinn ublishers associa- Johnson serves in an ad- y capacity; Vj , T SARATOGA PUCE OF v THORNToN FAMILY GlerandMary iran , "u'"wu, eariy Amer-SSpi0M Amer-SSpi0M wlU meet at annT,i AUgust 30 in their Hani amily bunion, Leo T. Th 1?resident announcing, the T JLenjoy the activities of j busw durinS the day with! later meetinS and program I Pirate Lairs Ficrure In Defense Planning West Indies Federation Raises Some New Questions. WASHINGTON. -The proposed federation of British territories ir the West Indies puts modern economic eco-nomic and defense planning Ut front in the affairs of lands once linked with pirate gold, slave traffic, traf-fic, and colonial struggle for ricfc prizes of tropical plantations. Great Britain holds a half-dozen colonies along the international island chain that curves out into the Atlantic between Florida and South America, notes .".'National Geographic Geo-graphic society. - In addition are two mainland areas-British Honduras in Central America, and, just beyond the island is-land arc, British Guiana in South America. On many of the islands, as well as on British Guiana, United States air and naval stations were set up during World War II as the result of the "destroyers-for-bases" exchange ex-change of 1940. There were bases on Jamaica, 1 Trinidad, and members of the Lee-ward Lee-ward and Windward groups. The scattered Bahamas, also included in the exchange, have remained outside federation plans. Altogether, the British West Indian In-dian territories cover about 110,000 square miles. Their combined area is greater than that of Great Britain. Brit-ain. So varied, however, are the in-dividual in-dividual fragments in size, population, popula-tion, and "local color" that each is like a different 'country. Some of i the smaller islands-green islands-green and coral bits under the blue Caribbean skies can be walked over in an hour. British Guiana, by far the largest single unit, Is twice as big as Ohio, with vast jungles, mountains, below-sea-level coasts and spectacular waterfalls. The estimated 2,800,000 people scattered throughout the British West Indies are a mixture of races and nationalities European, African Afri-can and Asiatic. Barbados island, often called "Little England," is one of the world's most densely populated spots. It has nearly 1,200 people to each square mile. Carbide Leads to Man's Rescue From Drowning MILLSBORO, PA. Water working on carbide in a can he carried in his pocket flashed an "SOS" which saved Ray Evans, 30, from death by drowning in Lake Lynn; just across the Pennsylvania Penn-sylvania . border in West Virginia. Vir-ginia. ' Evans was fishing in the lake at night with a friend, Ralph Hart, of Brownsville, Pa. Hart hooked a fish, and, turning to show it to' his friend, was startled star-tled to see Evans had disappeared. dis-appeared. - f t ' -ry-- Hart flashed his light on the lake's surface but could see nothing; until the , telltale milky bubbles of carbide gas rose to the surface. He shed his outer clothing, dived to the bottom and brought the unconscious Evans to shore. Artificial respiration revived him. Inhabitants Vanish,' Leaving Ghost Towns Behind in Ohio HILLSBORO. OHIO. Dotting Highland county in this state are 10 or more ghost towns whose inhabitants inhabi-tants and industries have completely vanished. If they had survived their founders dreams, they would have changed the whole pattern of the county. -- 1 ' '' Ten of the towns are to be found on old records at the Highland county court house.' Their names are unusual and; the records extremely ex-tremely meager. For example: Carlisle: Founded October 27, 1818, by" Benjamin Gilbreatb somewhere some-where on the east branch of a creek. It had a public square, a commons and streets. . Georgetown: Founded March 24, 1817, by John Davidson, somewhere in Whiteoak township near Buford on Whiteoak creek. John Davidson was the justice of the peace. The town had 81 lots, and. three streets. Sicily: Founded-June, 1848, by John Newton Higgins and named for its proximity to Sardinia in Brown county. Strasburg: Settled about 1848 by John Marconet and named for Strasbourg, a city in northeastern France. ; , .'. Temperature of 103 Degrees Causes Strange Things Here RALEIGH. N. C.-The heat did strange things in Raleigh. -strange i"s K..nine sun and It was loo " , , . there was a poisonous . , v husiest down- in the miaaie ToplTwho didn't believe it when they saw the snake changed their minds at the next corner. There stood three elephants. Th5 elephants could be explained. They were from a circus. But nobody could explain the snake-a tawny 20-inch moccasin. d?wo policemen came and looked Zed not to move the snake. It was too hot. Story ol Lost Dauphin Revived Pioneer Indian Missionary Claimed to Be Heir to French Throne. HOGANSBURG, N. Y. The remains re-mains of an Episcopal clergyman, an Indian missionary who had insisted in-sisted he was heir to the throne oi France, were disinterred in a small cemetery in this northern community commu-nity of New York. : For 89 years the body of the Rev. Eleazer Williams lay undisturbed in I its grave. Then without fanfare, the moldering bones of Mr. Williams were disinterred for reburial at Oneida, Wis., the place to which he led the Oneida nation of Indians more than a century ago. Out of the simple ceremony arose again an international riddle. Was Williams, as he persistently had claimed, actually the lost dauphin of France, son of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette? Rev. Norman B. Godfrey, rector of St. John's Episcopal church at nearby Massena, officiated at the disinterment. He explained that transfer of the body was sanctioned by the church. Dauphin Story Doubted. "The Episcopal church," said Mr. Godfrey in a statement, "has never offlciallv triven th slitrhtest credence to any theory of Mr. Wil-j Lams' antecedents, preferring to consider him a great Indian missionary mis-sionary and educator in his day." The rector pointed out that the Oneida Indians long had wished fori Mr. Williams' remains "that they might pay continued homage to his memory as their founding father in Wisconsin." The remains were wrapped, carefully care-fully in linen and placed in a small rough box, and the rector expressed hope that the "lost dauphin" theory, the-ory, as applied to Mr. Williams, soon would be completely forgotten. Historians never have, been able to decide whether . Mr. Williams claim was genuine. Some gave credence cre-dence to it; others contended he was an imaginative dreamer, and some held that he was an outright charlatan. Seized Real Dauphin. ' The real dauphin, named Louis Charles, was seized during the French revolution, and later confined con-fined to the temple prison in Paris. , Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette died on the guillotine. Louis Charles, according to historical his-torical accounts, died June 8, 1795. jBut rumors soon began to circulate 1 through Paris that the dauphin had been smuggled . out of prison, and that another boy had been put in his cell. It was the substitute boy, and not the dauphin, who had died,' according to rumors. , Mr. Williams, in his younger I riavs was known as the snn of Thomas Williams, a : half-breed from the Quebec village of Caugh-nawaga, Caugh-nawaga, near Montreal. There were 11 other children in the Williams family, and the birth of each, with the exception of Eleazer, was duly recorded by the Catholic church. Some say it was an oversight; others believe the lack of a birth record supports Williams' 'lost dauphin" claim. In his boyhood Williams spent eight years with white relatives in New England. Though reared a Roman Catholic, he embraced the Episcopal religion after the War of 1812. Widow Wins $4,000 Damages In Suit Against Farmer, 86 ST. LOUIS. An all-male Jury in Circuit court awarded $4,000 damages dam-ages to Mrs. Marie Brady, 41-year-old widow, in her breach of promise suit against 86-year-old Fred Neu-stadt, Neu-stadt, wealthy retired farmer. She sued for $25,000. Mrs. Brady, mother of four children, chil-dren, testified that Neustadt, her landlord, first proposed to her in January, 1943. "You will find me a jolly good fellow after we are married," she said he told her. He renewed his proposal almost daily, she said, and she finally said "yes." He then refused to go through the ceremony, she testified. Neustadt told the jury that Mrs. Brady "was all the time talking to me about marriage," but denied he ever proposed to her. "I'm too old a man for that," he said with a laugh. Neustadt, a widower, has seven grown children. His attorney said he would ask a new triaL Tombs of 300 B. C. Unearthed In India by Archaeologists MYSORE, INDIA. Dr. R. E. Mortimer, director general of archaeology ar-chaeology in India, said that one of the biggest archaeological excavations excava-tions ever made in this country had i 4nct Vippn pnmDleted. I The project, involving the exca-! exca-! vation of tombs dating back to 300 B C. and in some cases to about the first millenium. was said by Dr. Mortimer to have established previously pre-viously unrecorded links between the ancient civilizations of Europe, North Africa and Western Asia. The tombs, with their rich equipment equip-ment of potteries, iron swords, sickles, sick-les, axes and other implements of imported workmanship, are considered consid-ered one of the major archaeological archaeologi-cal finds in India in recent years. They were discovered in Chital-droog Chital-droog in Mysore. THE LEHI SUN, LEHI, UTAH TUBERCULOSIS IS NEVER WHIPPED Although veterinary science has gained the upper hand in its 25 years fight against tuberculosis of farm ar.imals.t livestock rais?rs Keep poultry out of tag range to prevent tuberculosis infection. should remember that this disease is never really whipped. For instance, cattle tuberculosis has been reduced to the point w'.itT-a nn rmititv In tho nation hn - ' " t , f : . xr ' f s , , ' ' tt&f No Fyotir PprfnmA MnfrrW 5 The Aroma of By BETSY NEWMAN WHAT are some of the most ap petizing aromas in the world! Why breaa baking in the oven, bacon or ham frying, colfee brewing. 1 bet if a young man hovering on the brink of matrimony went to see his current pirl friend and smelled those smells and discovered that she was wielding the utensils and mixing mix-ing the ingredients that produced them, he would quickly ask her to be his'n. No exotic perfume would have the same effect as those delicious deli-cious odors. ' Well tatfe a fascinating recipe called "Three-Way Yeast Bread" and try to produce a delightful fragrance in our own kitchen. Today's flleno Fried or Boiled Ham Parsley New Potatoes Creamed Young Dandelion Greens Carrot Sticks Pickles Three-Way Yeast Bread Rhubarb Pir Coffee Creamed Young Dandelion Greens Wash greens thoroughly and pick over; drain and put over slow heat to cook, adding no more water than cings to the leaves ; add Vi tsp. salt. When tender, chop in the saucepan, add 1 tbu. butter, a dash of pepper and more salt if needed, and k c top milk or cream. Bing to simmer-j ing point and serve at once, r, Three-Way Yeast Bread 2 cakes com- 2 tsp. salt pressed yeast 6 c sifted ,t. 2 c. lukewarm flour. ?- water 2 tbs. melted 1 M c molasses or shortening brown sugar 3 c bran ANIMAL HEALTH more than one case of infection in each 200 cattto. Yet, tne disease is not completely eradicated, and periodic testing of hord. must be continued for many years more. Last year, over 160 head of fine purebred cattle on a sine;la midwest mid-west farm were found to bo reactors re-actors when the veterinarian pave them the tuberculin test. When slaughtered, quite a number of these animals were found to have generalized tuberculosisthis in a locality thnt has been considered "tMberculosis-free" for years. Swine tuberculosis affects from three to five million market hojjs each year, according to packing house records. Swine most frequently fre-quently cent-act th? disease from poultry, and records show that more than ' per cent of all poultry flocks in many sections of the country Ere actively infected with tuberculosis. For the protection of human as well as animal health, every person per-son should do all within his power tj help win the final battle against the "great whit, plague," whether it exists in humans, in barnyard animals or in poultry. Constant vigilance on the part of every f rmr urlll hpln. Baking Bread ' si Crumble yeast into lukewarm water and stir until yeast dissolves. Add molasses, salt and 3 cups flour; beat well. Stir in shortening; add bran and remaining flour and mix thoroughly. Turn out onto lightly-floured lightly-floured board and knead until smooth and elastic, about 10 min- ites. Place in greased bowl, brush with melted shortening. The dough is now ready to be stored in the re frigerator if you wish. However, if it is to be baked at once, cover and let stand in warm place until It doubles in bulk. Punch down. Let rise 15 minutes, then shape into 3 loaves and bake in a moderately hot oven (375 F.) until done through and beautifully brown about 40 to 60 min. Makes three smallish loaves. Or make one loaf and store the rest until another day. Bran Raised Muffins Form one-third of above bread dough into balls; place in greased muffin cups. Brush with melted shortening, cover and let stand in a warm place until double in bulk. Bake in moderately hot oven (400 F.) about 20 minutes. Fruit Whirls Roll one-third of bread dough in. thick. Spread with c honey or com syrup, and sprinkl with 1 c. raisins. Or spread with jam or marmalade. mar-malade. Roll up like jelly roll, cut in 1-in. slices. Put on greased cookie sheet or in greased muffin tins and brush with melted shortening. Cover and let rise until double in bulk. Bake in moderately hot oven (400 F.) 20-25 min. Makes 10 whirls 2 ft inches in diameter. UTAH OIL REFINING COMPANY "TELL ME ABOUT YOUR OPERATIONS!" "It is encouraging to witness the new development work going on in the Tin-tic Tin-tic district surrounding surround-ing Eureka, Utah. Much new work is being done to sound out deeper levels of old producers." pro-ducers." METAL MINING INDUSTRY OF UTAH ft. y "e attctively i;. l s we pictures an THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1947 DE SURE TO TUNE IN The NEW Summer Electric Hour i Starring PEGGY LEE and WOODY HERMAN with DAVE BARBOUR'S . ORCHESTRA EVERY SUNDAY 1:30 P. M.-KSL Brought To You 6 UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. I I |