OCR Text |
Show Capt George Fried t ings have been added TO URGE BETTER RANGE UTILIZATION IN TEXAS I - 7 : Story of His life (Continued From Pago Nine) again given in detail. I was put on a train and sent back to Worcester , I was not missed at home, for I was only away the greater part of a day,meand it was nothing to be absent over unusual for when the fellows went on night ' a long cruise on North Pond lake. My first experience was an absolute failure. Being without funds, reluctantly I went back to work and tried varloua Jobs in factories and farms and contin- ued to remain in Worcester until about 1896, when I was prepared to leave home again. This time I headed for New , York with my pal, Johnny Fisch- Httie money, er. We both had enough to see us through for a time. Our departure was delayed for a time until Johnny of his bicycle. This time we made sure to get on the rignt , train. As soon as we arrived in New York we located a lodging house where we got a room for ' $3 a week. . To conserve on funds we ate free lunches, but were obliged , to buy a glass of beer every time. ate a regular , Sometimes we meal, but that was only Sundays or holidays or some similar oc-- ", caslon, and finally we got a Job. ! I ' ! i ! 1 I an -- 1 r 1 j j r s ( ! ) J t ! t ! the gettmgintothe (Continued - on page fourteen) Puretest Line s Registered range bull (upper left) is an animal of type the . San Antonio, Tex. (AP) with International Exposition and Livestock show at San Antonio, preservation of pasture a watchthe Tex., will encourage in the southwest. Production of goats and word in the southwest, Exposition and Livestock domestic rabbits has entered the new system of diversified live- Show at San Antonio March lwlll stock production. digress from cattle sufficiently to Xmer-natlon- Talks'll parents LEARNING TO TALK helping him to talk she ac- -i tually retards his development. As the child grows older and attempts the pronunciation of words it is important never to laugh at him. The child is ten very sensitive about his speech and feels keenly any de-hof his attempts. If he senses the laughter as a form of loving approval, as it sometimes is, he may retain his infantile speech as a method of getting attention. When the child confuses syllables in the pronunciation of an unfamiliar long word he should not be made to repeat it correctly, one syllable at a time. To do so only leads to further Of By Alice Judson Peale Children brought up in even the best institutions do not learn to talk nearly as soon as who are brought up at home by a mother who hears in babys most incoherent ble ail sorts of words and mean- ings. The mother who listens to her baby and then answers him quite as if she expected him to understand, who talks to him while she bathes and dresses him. is doing the very best to speed the actual development of his speech. The very little baby lying in his cradle is responsive to the sound of his mothers voice, since it is associated with the most pleasant experiences of his life. for words and He learns to feel them as & kind - of friendly response. This is an- important link in the process of learning to talk. Unfortunately, the mother who is charmed with her babys babble is the very one who is likely to imitate his own baby noises instead of speaking language to him as she should. Thus instead ; bab-jrisl- se er Glean Sweep of Seasonable Merchandise and Broken 1 Lines Bargains Galore . (fay a P a r ir h o n N o y m e L a w T IT n 0 1 1 P e t r a P e r i e . s K a n H D t u s 1 k a k P B p b e r b r . f IS. u m e 7 G ' i o K d 1 s e n z o J o B n r t' e u s e v h e C r e a m E 1 8 e c s h IT - t ; ijt tif i IBaOo A Company i c A When In Salt Lafee Stop at tha EVERYBODYS PEERY HOTEL - 'That Home like Placed Clean, Respectable, Modern to the Minute. Rates Reasonable ' 125 to 3.00 .FREE GARAGE West Temple and --Broadway IntSeE9 o ISjDL'tlM 59 West Center z: Logan . e x P ffJJF r a r ,vA rr y m e Edenton, N. C. (A) In family life among anopheles mosquitos, the kind that spread malaria germs, the wives and daughters have much the best of the bargain. When cozy resting places in houses and sheds are available, its the female of the species who does her resting there, and most of the males are left to shift for themselves in less desirable nooks. Conducting an investigation along the Roanoke river in Bertie county, during which more than were captured, 5,500 mosquitos Dr. Henry, W. Kumm of the Rockefeller Foundations international health division station here made this observation: Of anophelines captured in side houses all were female; of in mule anophelines captured sheds' about 99 per cent were females; of anophelines captured under houses, 717 per cent were females and 28 3 per cent males; of anophelines captured in hollow trees, 20 4 per cent were females and 79 6 per cent males. A number of the mosquitos were stained and set free In an effort to find out how far these pests can fly and spread their poison within one generation of their brief lives. Some of the stained ones were recaptured 04 mile from the point where they had been marked. Other investigators, Dr. Kumm points out, have measured mosquito flights by the same method and showed they were capable of traveling as much as a mile. Sislfl6 C e e Appear Henpecked .UL5-- al encourage systematic diversification in livestock production. There will be exhibits of sheep. Angora goats and domestic rabbits and hares. The swine show is expected to be twice as large as last year. It is pointed out that goats are able to make a good living on certain types of browse range where other livestock would go hungry. The same holds true lor other types of animals finding favor in the cattle country. Economic exhibits will show the advantage of utilizing great areas of forage that are not adapted to cattle, and keeping stock that will flourish on it away from land that will pasture a maximum number of beef animals per acre. Interest in the San Antonio show has grown so rapidly since its inauguration a year ago that buildings have been constructed to house more than two additional acres of exhibit space. Because the show drew such large crowds last year the city has purchased and improved the property under an agreement by which the exposition association may use It Two new reinforced concrete build Male Mosquitos When we joined the Hartford we began to appreciate the lot of all, still rookies. Returning to the deck made matters worse, for the heat caus-j ed the tar between boards to be- -i so that come soft and sticky, whereever we walked we suffered intense pain, as it was absolutely impossible to keep the tar from open-- .wounds. Paul Wadsworth Chapman (left), Chicago banker, who purchaaed State Lines, which own the Leviathan, and the American Merchant Line from the government for 16,300,006, Joseph E. Shetdy, former vice president of the Merchant Fleet corporation, will manage the new company. the United Orderlies Navy- - a sailor working under the most In tropical trying circumstances. waters the heat was intense, and only once in a while were we rain cooled by an occasional storm. Climbing up and down, the rigging caused the skin on our feet to blister, for we were after o y ! 1 "BUYERS OF,.UNITED STATES LINES us dis-.pos- ed Chapter II Johnny Fischer, my pal, and I were in New York for a while . digging trenches for a street car company which was electrifying Its system, eliminating the horse Car. In our spare time we were always along the waterfront and I once or twice were privileged to go aboard sailing ships to make a very careful inspection. This i only made my yearning for the j sea greater. t One day we ventured aboard a passenger ship. With muddy Shoes we walked through the J dining saloon Just after white runners had been laid , canvas i We had only gone a short dis- tance when the mate shouted at us. We ran and he followed. We , dashed through companionways up and down stairways and lad' j tiers and finally located the gang plank, which we crossed. Just out the reach of the mate. We i of t concluded then and there that J we had better remain away from J ships for a while. . war be- -i The Bpanish-Americgan about this time. We started-, for home, having developed museularly in the great city. Fellows : were enlisting. Here was an op-- I bortunlty, I thought, to get out (l into the world, andI enlisted in the Second artillery, Company M, l at Wlathrop, Mass. The artillery ! was not desired for some reason or other, and the result was that j t we became an Infantry regiment. ! However, we saw no service and j returned to New York the early i summer of 1899. t To Havana and return was my t first experience at sea. The days ! and nights on shipboard did not I seem long enough, and while 1 was in Cuba I always longed for the time I would get back aboard j a transport. Having had my first i experience with Father Neptune, I wanted to get back to the sea, but when I returned home I found, for financial reasons, that I I had to go to work once again to get funds to resume my trav-- i els. Eight months later I started again with a companion for New York to enlist in the Navy. I had decided that it must be the Navy, i Much to my regret my new I pal failed to pass the physical , examination, and he returned to t Worcester, while I was assigned ' to the Hartford, Farraguts old I flagship, which was then in Ven t ezuelan waters. I took passage on t the old Buffalo and had my first encounter with Neptunes wrath. I For a day or so I was not quite sure that I used good judgment in enlisting in the Navy, but the weather cleared and the seas , moderated, and I could once again enjoy life on the bounding main. I In 1900. I started my real ser- vice with the Navy when I be- -' gan swabbing decks, learning and gunnery and seamanship other drills. Being a full j various a gobs unl- l fledged sailor with form, the same one which had ' previously inspired me, I had of confidence, and it (plenty long before I had my fight. One day while aboard the Buf-- ! falo I was bathing myself in a on the deck when j tub of water t another sailor passed and called ' me a rookie. That was an insult, and enjoy-- i j All the boys watched ed the bout. I was victorious, for- tunately, and afterward learned J that this fellow had only enlisted weeks prior to my entering f two to the plant each of which contains more than an acre of floor space. Stock farms from all over the United States will exhibit this year, and cowboys from all sec- -, tlons where there still is range to ride will take part In a 10,000 rodeo. A number of new sections have been added to the official prize list, including classes for Aberdeen-Angcattle, rabbits and best hares, and prizes for the community exhibits. Sheep and goats, both profitable animals In the south west, will occupy a large J section. Fine horses from the army posts m Texas and from breeding farms in the state will be entered in the horse show. Seventy head of wild horses and a dozen saddle horses already have arrived, for the rodeo. There will be auctions in both the dairy and beef cattle divisions. The show is largely, a Hereford Hereford show, sponsored by breeders. They are advocating a new practice of feeding herd bulla grain mixtures while they are on the range, to maintain their virlU-tand condition. i Writes Interesting . Wednesday, February 27, 1929. THE JOURNAL, LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH PAGE TEN w d . r t ('Our Customers Come Back r First Aid Plasters Gauzets I e o |