OCR Text |
Show ft Murray Eagle, Murray. Utah mm The Nation's Greatest 1U fllfr " I i co'dandk 3 S ' "V x mmm X WILL PAY RAISER TO GRADE PULLETS --Vfr- Weaker Should Be Given a Fair "Break." i want. Geti; a xW-: . A :--4 - witt. wer. but eeder to t1 t0 destroy llW overed HE'? Hull I 11 uie grassh Jly Infcsti sur or driJ k ' 1 s Aa , ,M JSi ;V3 ! of Kthe Just beet street. III W-- 111 e What i CTi g Show. in Protro r Blind 'i from using if . i f - x ' n Salt Lake City's r; A i Opinion on Matter of Heat in Poultry House Ttlt portrait claimed by him to hav been Washington, hifhlr prized poMskm of Marshall Solbarg, Chicago, y Gilbert Stuart It bear th year 1794, and is signed by tha master in an inconspicuous way. Some have thought that "rl'c' "Stuart Washington" was painted in 1795, but such is not the case, for John Jay gave Gilbert Stuart a letter to 'iiCtorv rf"''nI,on which Stuart delivered while congress was la session in tha year 1794 and Stuart refers to this In correspondence with It was then that one of the three sittings occurred. There were many portraTLs of George Washington painted by Cilbert eavaft, but there were only throe sittings, so that many of the portraits were copied by Stuart from either completed pictures or l9 pile ( hassles. It was, of course, not entirely unusual for great painters to make preliminary sketches of their subjects, although they did for fair Many occasions entirely complete their paintings at sittings. This latter procedure was followed, it is thought, by Cilbert Stuart tPSt In i Ci portrait. If this is so, H stands unique among the "Stuart Washingtons." ccoraing TO m volume in, mr. jomeri ummrj, uumn i)iun aaimrea mis picxure so nuca vnai ue reuinea ii mmuu ana a, never f" 'vea4 not part with It (or many years thereafter. When it landed in the hands of Congressman Cilbert of western New York he mUerfol it so much that he asked that it might be the last object for him to gaze upon is this Ufa, oi Geoff 1 eiJe. with your In ilJasliinton, ii Man, Patriot, ' 4 r-- i v and MFG. East Statesman Utah pOrHAGB, physlcnl and moral, as a purt ' ,l13 D(lture! and' 0. Q. K 'ftwtlicr Id battle or In the midst of Mo:'"' 1 excitement, he was fear- f dunger and regardless of Ki to himself (Sparks, Jared fIht Ufe of George Washington, I'reraf&polnr con-tttne- ;i 458.) tlmcs an5 a,lllJ 011 conJt" Washington rnng true to the c' a fl'It'ndid manhood. Hypoo ir labo.-i1 nd a trafficking In expedients or popular applause do more mtch rlth lils life than the crime of inur-te! He had little of the captivat-vha- t ttyle of Fpeech or manner but J lani'.jeurd for the nobility of his cliar-sli- e btalnedAt ?aclt 011 c aat 0 and go home to live in luxury, but Btayed to endure privation with them. Only be who reads his letters written during these trying times can appreciate his troubles and anxieties. (McLaughlin, Andrew t. History of the American Nation, p. ICS.) SHARED MEN'S SUFFERINGS Behold hlra (George Washington) In 1775 taking leave of his family and his home, and hastening to the relief of a distant and unknown part of America. See him transforming and cementing a band of rustics Into an army. Follow him to the Held of battle, and see him first In dunger and last out of it Go with him Into Valley Forge and see him sharing the hunger, the cold, the fatigue of every soldier In the WASHINGTON S ARMS r. dtcter, rather than any rhetorical art kept wavering lines from re-In battle and from mutiny privation and Buttering to K'9 which our neglect hnd exposed the Ctoldiers of the Ivevolutlon. (Under-- i Vwood, Oscar The Career and the SjWords of Washington, p. 12.) (StatenjSoetety of Cincinnati. Phlladeljphlm. Pa., February 22, 1012.) HIS PERSONAL TRIUMPH Then came the horrors of Valley Forxe and of the winters In Morris 'or r coont'r- - Those were the days whenoewmons were many anu cnnstis. neott were few, when Washington ;?u'e dtrtd not give open battle and there was bnrdly left to hlra place for Then came the Conway n ii' conspiracy, and the ambition of Gates, and the cowardice of Lee and the treason of Arnold, and a ' 50 ""rt1 Persecutions so petty, so jrt, Xta TEL imld t Was there ever such fortiWas there ever tude In adversity? such moderation In the hour of vic(McMaster, John B. History? tory of the People of the United States, Vol. I, p. 403.) .'3 evi iiiuniiutil, mill ; Vllivi how inem. survived WASHINGTON'S VICTORY tog Washington IbcsW It Is easy for tis as we read these On only one point did there seem erents In the light of the Issue to to be unanimity and accord. That .00 keep up our courage and understand was that the dogged prosecution of the triumph that finally came, but It the war and the ultimate victory Uresr very different thing for Wash- must be credited to George Washington. Congresi was weak, tned-tfio- ington. Others had fought valiantly and vacillating. The and endured hardships and fatigues were raw, undisciplined and and gnawing suspense, but without omefimes mutinous. There were him, who never wavered, they could IE JstlO'i.tloi and libel and forgcrlrs not have gone on (Thayer, William an4 slanders almost beyond our ItGeorge Washington, p. 128.) The American revolution from a prearnt ability to believe. , . . When I recall Washington's calm- - military point of view wus a group . BesTi the midxt of exasperating of Utile wars rather than single annojlncc, b's unselfish loyalty war. The only Integrating force when surrounded by cupidity and was the person of the great commander, but George Washington i jciour7 unit mured, ins lauu iinu P"t courage Info the hearts of men held the nrtny and the cauc togethst f wha mnrched hungry and left er by his exhnustlesg patience and In the snow; courage rather than by any compreWoody footprints "hen I remember how after eight hensive plan of wur. (Muzzey, Da,frV, of this nnd more he rmerged vid S. History of the American cnlm In victory as he People, p. 110.) had born serene In defeat, I do not To Washington no duty, howWonder that Frederick the Great Is ever obscure, was unimportant, and Xihl to have pronounced George no deviation from duty, however TTisbington's campaigns In the Jer-- I trifling, was possible. (Hoar, George t the most .brllllnnt In military F. Washington, p. 31.) (Chicago, I tatMils, (Harton, William II Febninry 23. 100.1.) jf:.org( Wnstilngtnn.) Washington was an Incorruptible 'flshlngtc did not leave bis men patriot He was one cf the few "AH-retrea- ' til sol-&- fkt-'rloiis- ..." - rs T S0 1. and BACK COLDS mm lift Stainless !'Rub In', and .in)aan unsurpassed in prevennng ana reieving coia conyeiiiuna QUALITY SINCE 1833 ' TEMPLE SQUARE SOLD AT ALL. McKesson dRobbins DRUG STOMS AMBASSADOR HOTEL J art Wp from 200 Rooms tits sojlnrsi etnUr. Quiet and Homelike. HOTEL ? Pep-al- sr 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM fl.50 Juil oppotitt Mormon Tt resets rich men who was not a Tory. A pries: steals. Rates 11.11 sni as. very large proportion of the men of ERNEST C ROSSITER, Mgr. large means elded with the British Comatrclsl Rites crown; nor must we too hastily condemn them. But Washington, Service Csrstt la PARKER'S who had more to lose than almost Cennectien. HAIR BALSAM colIn man thirteen other the any gsnwrei Uudni Stops Uatr taUlad ana Imparts oofFaded onies, was not blinded by vested JOE II. I'EITER. Manaper Hair and Beenty to Grey It Ml .1 Ini.ellll ttmwA nor Utah Lake conservative bound to 3965 Salt I'hone Was. 145 So. 5th East Interests, City, ipi.,W T action by his wealth and station. Salt Lake's Only Family Hotel LinulvhiM QM AMPkO IiImI fur ties la eonnertiun with Parker's Hair Balsam.Makes tha PUT PATRIOTISM FIRST Inspection May Help hair soft and fluffy. M rents by mail or st drugIf you don't get what you want gist, In looking over some poultry iiisooz Chemical Works, I'atcbogiie. N. Y Temptation and conscience often For the sake of the country s want whut here's you a you'll and hoping have cracks few a small houses temptation debate; ago, Innudays which he loved he suffered Think of ease but work on. get. conscience. merable hardships, was stung by In- were discovered In the back of the over Think roosts. house the Just gratitude and hurt by slander, but he stood Drm In his loyalty to the of the enormous amount of heat cause he had espoused and was 'that Is lost from the house. Also faithful to the end. (Barton, WI1 consider me larce amount oi cuia air that will drive In frvo the liam K. George Washington.) There Is a life that is worth liv- north. That crack may appetr perIt may be ing now, as It was worth living In fectly harmless and yet the former days, and that Is the the source of much trouble later. honest life, the useful life, the un- Chickens can't stand that kind of selfish life, cleansed by devotion to a draft The colder temperature as an Ideal. There Is a battle that Is a result of the presence of cracks worth fighting now, as It was may not Influence egg production, worth fighting then, and that Is but It Is very apt to, nnd It Is best the battle for Justice and equality. to giro the chickens fresh air la To make our city and our state some other way where the crncks free In fact as well as In name; are small. Patching plaster Is very to break the rings that strangle helpful, but with the layer more real liberty, and to keep them strenuous mensures must be emto chunk up broken; to cleanse, so far as In our ployed. The moral- Is cracks. the our power lies, the foundations of national life from polltlcnl, commercial, and social corruption; to Creosote Kills Mites teach our sons and daughters, by Chicken mites cannot stand the precept and example, the honor of odor of creosote, J. J. Stegmaler. An cnormouj new racket has grown up in the past few year serving such a country as America Tippecanoe county, Indiana, has the bootlegging of gasoline to escape payment of the state tax. that Is work worthy of the finest found. Now an alarming amount of gasoline is being sold without pay manhood and womanhood. . , . "I creosoted the floors In my The well educated are those who brooder houses to make them easier mcnt of lawful tax. see deepest Into the meaning and said to to clean and prevent decay," the necessity of that work. Nor Mr. Most motorists who buy bootleg gjsolinc buy it unknowingly. Stegmaler. "I didn't know there nor be labor for their nansht shall was a chicken mite In the brooder But know it or not, they are being robbed by the gasoline rackc the reward of their sacrifice fall house. After It was crersoted I tccrs every tin; they buy from them! For high In the firmament them. closed It up tight and let It stand a of human destiny are set the stars few days. When I opened It I found The gasoline tax you pay belongs to you, and you should get it of faith In mankind, and unselfish dend mites strewn by the thousands back from your state in the form of good roads. VC hen you buy courage, and loynlty to the Ideal; over the floor. It pays to use American-Isand while they shine, the bootleg gasoline, you pay all or a part of the tax, too but the of Washington and the men racketeer pockets the money. You never get it back! And rewho stood with Mm shall never, member if your state received all the money paid as a gasoline never die. (Van Ivke, Henry Hens Need Lime for Egffs The Americanism of Washington, For a hen to produce economtax, it could well afford to lower the gasoline taxi pp. 70 72.) ically she most be supplied with all Know ing tin's, you naturally don't w ant to buy any bootleg gaso-linMAN OF FIRM FRIENDSHIPS the Ingredients necessary for the To be sure the money you pay as tax goes to your state, buy The chief thought that runs completed eggs, plenty of good balfresh water at all through all the sayings Is to prac- anced food with only gasolines sold under dependable, familiar brand names, tice self control, and no man ever times. She must also be supplied at backed up by reliable companies who make sure the state gets the with plentiful supply of displayed that most dltllcult of all times tax. By sticking to familiar, reliable brands, you'll help banish virtues to such a degree as calcium (lime). This lime Is needfor shell formation but racketeers. George Washington. (Iulze, Henry ed not only A good C. Washington (American States also for body maintenance, limestone grit will supply Ibis lime men, Vol. I, p. M.) Is Indeed. the lnt qual- efficiently and economically and at Si'lHnde, aid In grinding the CONOCO Gitioline is hrMiJcJ gasoline you tan that at) Intelligent student of the same time ity food. bis career would ascribe to him. uilb sajdj at the' sign oj the CONOCO Red Triangle, Dignified and reserved be wns, undoubtedly; and bs this manner was Water, Water, Water natural to him, be won more true Is by no means to be con Water OIL friends by ulng It than If he had as a pnrt of the egg least sldercd disguised Mmelf In a forced fa balhow well ration. No matter mntarlty and worn Mi heart upon anced Ihe mash, the hen cannot But first from last sleeve. lo his best use of It without a be was a man who did his work In make Ihe If hens won't deal of water. great bonds of who the companionship, wet the mash and drink enough, trusted his comrades In the great make them lake water that way, at enterprise even thouch thry were time providing plenty of not his Intininte. and who neither the s.ime water at a temperature that will Inrmr emia lonely sought occupied An egg Is C3 duce much drinking. nence of unshared glory. (Van Don't stint water. or more cent Dke. Henry The Americanism of per on It, and reduce your egg supply Washington, pp. 4 5.) Nebraska Farmer. I out-talk- THE - ft ' A friend of ours Interested In the ventilation of poultry houses asked us recently If we thought the temperature of the average household refrigerator was too cold for a hen to do good work In. We replied that we thought It would be too cold. He, having checked up on the mnt-te- r, reminded us thnt the optimum temperature for a poultry house Is 43 degrees to 50 degrees F. and that the average household refrigerator Is seldom lower than 45 degrees F. nnless It be an electric plant set to freeze Ice cubes. This leads us to believe that If one can keep the temperature of his poultry house from going much below 40 degrees F. In the winter time, the egg production will not be disturbed very much, provided, of course, the hens are properly fed. Hoard's Dairyman. RELIEVES . HEAD, CHEST GASOLINE RACKETEER IS ROBBING YOU non r charm of personal nddrecs on bis 'f- J. fl ef) Pile C, lC(y for Sufferers Dieted, r '. Directory 129-23- 1 Jy It Lake SKIN WELL - :e good p. time. Ji i One of the easiest mistakes a poultryman can make Is to grow a lot of good pullets and then upset their usefulness for some time by 1MADK wrong handling when putting them BT TDK MAKERS OF IVORY SOAP Into permanent laying quarters, says hid. u.t. SAT.brf. I The Vermont the Rural station gives some excellent and timely advice by emphasizing care Richer, quicker sutls 50 more 6mls that's ful selection In making op pens why the IVew Oxydol does so much souks The about equal In development on clothes fresh and clean without harm to hands the slower maturing pullets left range will then grow faster because or dainty things. Never halls up, rinses clcun, they are not bossed by the more maeoftens water. Great for dishes,' too. ture ones. Being chased about and pecked prevents these smaller birds Salt City from getting an equal chance at the feed and apparently even breaks NICHOLS miSMON their spirit so that they take for CHEMISTS AND ASSAYERS granted that they are underlings and S. West Otnre an4 Laboratory never fully recover. Another point TVnile St., Salt Lake City. Utah. P. O. Jtox 168, Mailing envelopes ana yriew the Skin For Daily Care of great Importance Is that the perlurulahed on request. and clcansrt manent quarters should be as nearly at The Soap thoroughly Used Pipe, Fittings & Valves like the range conditions as practha same time protects tho elm. Leals unexnot will that so Ointment Newly threaded and coupled for all purposes. that the pullets ticable, or ana feel "strange." Going about, cran into Monsey Iron and Metal Co. peciea pimpio, 700 80. Sni Meat - Suit Lake City, Utah. irritation. ing their necks and trying to make up their minds where to roost Is a Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50c. Prnnn,tnnl' Pntter Draff & bad sign. They should feel happy Chemical Corp., Maiden, and at home. As the birds on range Mass. have had airy houses, they should Try Cutlcuro Shaving Cream. not be closed in too tightly at night. As Usual Soma Help "Newest Hotel Of course there must be no drafts Caller Is the professor busy? Is cold." food the "Walter, on the roosting places on cool nights "Yes, sir; shall I close the win Secretary No sir, just but ample ventilation that will presir?" vent any feeling of "stuffiness" Is dow, needed. New-Yorke- r. ;"er some 'verrun ?tiiods check CHnuo Gr? CUM) Qd CDnnIb am - y & gist : ? mo III: 1 iir7vr;; i mm Son camp. As Well As Your State e. hj CONTINENTAL COMPANY f w |