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Show FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1929 THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH UTAH TO HAVE NEW MILLION-DOLLA- East and First South streets in Salt Lake. R The new HOSPITAL St. Marks hospital replace the old institution which has served the people of all creeds and colors in Utah for the past sixty A pioneer in rospital work, years. St. Marks was established in 1872 and for many years was the only hospital in the intermountain region. The humantarian and non sectarian policies which have endeared St. Mark to the people of this state for more than half a century will be continued in the new institution. Leaders in civic and industsial life throughtout the entire state are behind this new poblic enterprise. They I can mal delivery on the New Ford Car NEW shipment of new Ford cars has just arrived, enabling us to make immediate delivery to a limited number of customers. Better come in soon and select the car you want. All orders will be filled in the order of Tudor Sedan, $575 Phaeton, $460 Coupe, $525 Coupe, $550 Sport Coupe, with rumble teal, $550 Fordor Sedan, $625 Pumpers WHETMAN MOTOR CO Payson, Utah . NOTICE! We have Several PLAYER-PIANOand STRAIGHT PIANOS that we have had to take back and and we will dispose of them at a SACRIFICE. We will sell them on very reasonable terms responsible parties. Write Mr. Thos. Holland, in care General Delivery No. 1 Payson, Utah S 3T LOW. Summer Excursion FAKES aily to Sept. 30 Commencing May 15 May 22 West - - East EXAMPLES OF Low Round Trip Liberal Stopover Privileges Return Limit, Oct. 31 PAYSON Plan your summer trip now to take advantage of the reduced rates to practically every eastern and western point. Your choice of return routes. Stop over anywhere. Final return limit, October 31. TO Denvkb Zion National Park, Grand Canyon, l.OS AKOKLKH Bryce Canyon side trip at slight additional cost. Visit Denver and Rocky Mountain National Park mt no extra railroad fare. Lnxurious comfort and unexcelled service are features of Union Pacific trains. Make pour vacation a memorable event this year. Fares from 836. 7H Omaha 864.83 Kansas City .. 864. s. 873.33 Chicago New Yohk 8136.73 New Oki.kans . ess. is . 1OHTl.AND Boston Washington . 848.00 831.13 8142.70 $13.8 tikisr.t for farther detail 1. S. SPKISCEK General Pna.enaer A Kent Salt I.nke city Union Pacific THE OVERLAND ROUTE Institution Founded by St. Benedict Will Observe 1,400th Anniversary. Rowe. From the height of Its lofty peak, rising 1.5u0 feet almost perpendicularly over the ancient town of Cassluo. the famous old Benedictine Monastery of Monte Cussino, from which throughout the centuries missionaries have departed to convert the world and savants to enlighten It, where numerous popes, In simple gnrb, received their first, lessons in ecclesiastical discipline, smiles upon the surrounding country. The eye ranges over gently undulating fertile country to the sea, 20 miles away to the westward. In the calm and peace of the monastery the observer feels outside and above the world and Its hurry and bustle. The peaceful quiet of the Monte Casslno monastery has been rudely shattered this year by the preparations for the forthcoming celebration of the fourteen hundredth anniversary of Its foundation by St. Benedict. The celebrated Benedictine order, the followers of which converted England, Germany, Holland, Denmark, and Scandinavia to the Christian faith, has invited the whole world to share its joyj on tills festive occasion and has pro- moted a series of festivities which wili-lasa whole year. Added significance! is given to the occasion by the report' that Iopo Bins XI, on his first the Vatican, intends to visit, the Monte Cussino monastery, accompanied by his court. Celebration to Last a Year. For a year Monte Cassino will be the goal for countless thousands of pilgrims who will climb the steep road to the monastery in order to partioi- -' pate in the special spiritual Indulgences granted by the church on this' occasion. The monasterys famous library.' containing a unique collection of treas-- ! ured ancient manuscripts, will be: thrown open to the public and Its ar-- S tistie wonders will be visible to all.. Solemn religious ceremonies will be! held In Its beautiful church. Thousands will kneel In worship at the high altar, beneath which lie the relics of St. Benedict, founder of the order. The town of Cassino will share In the celebration with an exhibition of art Work Is now in progress to prepare everything for the inauguration date. The road winding up the steep mountain to the monastery is being Hotels and restaurants are Improved. getting ready for a tremendous influx of pilgrims. Monasterys History Varied. Since its foundation, 1,400 years ago, the Monte Cassino monastery has had a history full of ups and downs. Seven times it has been destroyed and seven times rebuilt. Longohards (Lombards), Saracens and the French, earthquakes and fire have laid it waste time and again, hut always the monks returned and rebuilt their house around the relics of their founder. It went through periods of great splendor. Not only did the Benedictines spread the Gospel to the furthermost corners of Europe, not only did they powerfully contribute to the cause of learning In the peaceful quiet of their cells, but it is chiefly owing to their effort that a great part of Roman thought and civilization was saved for later generations. It Is they who preserved the germs of Italian social, intellectual and artistic life through the darkest centuries. The world owes them an incalculable debt of gratitude. The Ronedictine order was founded by St. Benedict in 529 A. D. Ills history, though deeply overlaid with legend, is both interesting and picturesque. lie was born at Nursia (now Norcla) in Umbria in 4S0, of a good old Italian family and was sent to Rome to study, but the vices of the capital drove him into solitude while he was still a youth. Flees From Wickedness. Young Benedict fled from the wickedness around him and abandoned his literary studies, preferring to be wiseHe took refuge in a ly ignorant. grotto near Sublacum (now Subinco), which he did not leave for three years. A neighboring monk during this period supplied him with food let down into the cave by means of a rope. Here he was tempted by the evil one who took the shape of a beautiful woman, but Benedict, summoning all his fortitude, stripped himself of his vestments of skins and rolled among thorns and briars until the impure flame was extinguished. His fume spread until the monks In the vicinity chose him as their head, but Benedict applied such severe rules that the monks soon regretted their offer and attempted to poison him, the story runs. The cup containing the poison no sooner was taken into Benedicts hands than it burst asunder and Benedict, after reproving them for their ingratitude, again retired into solitude. Benedict's reputation for saintliness attracted many disciples until fully 12 cloisters rose round his solitary cave. This, however, caused lealousv among the rival orders of monks. Fresh attempts to poison him were made, but he was again saved by divine Interposition. The jealous rivals sent seven lewd girls within the precincts of the monastery to seduce Benedicts monks. ct How to df Raise Poultry By Dr, L. D. LeGear, V. S St. Louis, Mo. Dr. LeGear Is a graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, 1892. Thirty-si- x years of veter- inary practice on disease of live stock and poultry. Eminent authority on poultry and stock ralslng.Nadonally known poultry breeder. Noted author and popular lecturer. Editors Note This is another story in a series of 52 stories on poultry raising written by the well known national poultry authority, Dff. L- - D. LeGear, V. S., of St. Louis. The entire series will appear in this paper. Our readers are urged to read them carefully and clip them out' for future reference. A ROBBER IN THE FLOCK s Hoovers Will Ride in Their Own Automobiles Washington. Weaving In and out of Washingtons tangled traffic maze in the near future will be two shiny motor cars, the property of Mr. and Mrs. II. C. noover of 1600 Pennsylvania avenue. They will be smart and expensive, and altogether In keeping with the wealth of the Pennsylvania avenue family, but they will bear no distinguishing insignia to Indicate to the public that their occupants ane none other than the President of the United States and his wife. In effect the Hoovers have decided to maintain two Incognito autos In which they make their informal and personal trips in and around town without attracting the attention which the official White House limousine invariably does. There will be no Presidential seal on the doors, the bodies will not be custom-buil- t and the license numbers will be far removed from the tell-tal- e 5 serials which marked the official cars. The usual secret service car will, of course, follow behind if the President is out riding, but it Is figured that without the well known limousine this will fail to occasion any considerable notice. The regular autos will be maintained for use on more formal occasions. These belong to the government under a yearly contract.. The decision to maintain two personally owned cars will bring the total number In the White House up to nine an increase of four over the Coolldge administration. trip-outsid- Roadster, $450 and tpara tire extra.) WILLJHEBRATE t their receipt. (411 pritts f. o b. Detroit, plus charge or freight and delivery. OLD MONASTERY will Utah is to have a new million-dolla- r hospital, one of which the entire state may well be proud, according to announcement of the board of directors of the New St. Marks hospital building fund, in Salt Lake. Half a million dollars is to be raised in Utah and the other half million will be available in eastern centers from philanthropic friends of the E piseopal church. An intensive campaign to raise Utahs half is about to be launched, says Bishop Arthur W. Moulton, president of the board of directors. are enthusiastic over the prospect of The proposed new institution will be having a new million-dolla- r hospital, nine stories in height ad will be the the assertion that half a land over in modern hospital and operlast word dollars will be raised elsewhere ating room equipment. The ground obtained been match the money donated in Utah. has at Fourti'jto ready Business Finally, Benedict decided to abandon the neighborhood and journeyed southward to Monte Cassino. Joins Forces With Sister. He demolished a temple to Apollo still existing at that time, which was an object of worship among the Ignorant villagers, and erected in its stead two oratories, one dedicated to St. John the Baptist and the other to St Martin. Iu later years he was closely associated with Ids sister, Scholastics, who also had forsaken the world and founded a nunnery near Monte Cussino. Benedict died standing after partaking of the communion, and was buried in the church of the monastery under tiie high altar by the side of Lis sister. The Benedictine order soon spread over Europe. The order was based on a set of rules dictated by St. Benedict and founded on labor and discipline. It is the distinction of St. lien-edithat he not only organized the moDks In communities, but made manual labor a necessary element of their life in contrast to the mere meditative seclusion which previously had been the custom. It led to the high intellectual fruitfulness which has been the glory of the Benedictine order. Wherever they have established not only themselves the Benedk-tinemade the wilderness into fruitful fields, but also became a center of intellectual life. Civilization owes them a debt greater than many know. Roup May Wipe Out a Whole Seasons Profit If Allowed to Gain Headway, Says Dr. L, D. LeGear, V. S., of St. Louis. Mo. there is canker deposit of yellowish matter on the tissues of the mouth and throat. It is easily removed, row-eve- r, and should not be confused with a deposit of similar appearance which is a symtom of diptheria. As soon as any fowl is known to be sick, put it at once to itself as far from the flock as possible and salts to remove cold and fever from give it one full teaspoonful of epsom aalts to remove cold and fever from the system. If the bowels have not moved the following day, repeat tre Give one roup pill night and dose. morning. Wash the affected eyes, nose and mouth once a day, with a solution made by mixing one teaspoonful of dip and disinfectant in one quart of warm water. Souse biad, eyes and all into this solution each time. Roup will often yield to treatment if caught in time, but each case must be handled individually and more detailed instructions are required than the space allowed for this article will permit. As a measure of protection for the balance of the flock, after infected birds are removed give epsom salts in a wet mash. Give one pound of epsom salt for each 100 fowls of or for ecah 75 of the lighter heavier kinds, and repeat in one week. A saline purgative such as epsom salts is invaluable at such a time. By caus-in- g the prompt elimination of matter, this Simple remedy on the may keep many a good layer without interruption. job But, after all, theres no remedy like the one quoted at the beginning of this article. I do not claim that roup and kindred diseases cannot invade the premises where sanitation and other precautionary measures are always observed. I do not hesitate to say, rowever, that the flock where such measures do not obtain is infniitely Furtmore liable to suffer infection. the properly managed hermore, if flock does become infected, the damage will be much less than among fowls not so well cared for. The old maxim, An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure may be well worn from usage, but it is still a3 true as it ever was. (Copyright, 1929, by Dr. L. D.1 Legear, V. S.) s ger-ladde- The best way to cure roup, sage- ly .remarked an old timer in ry game, is never to have the poultit. That sound like weak a may attempt very to be fonny, hot it is gospel truth. Contagious diseases such as soup do not fall willy nilly from the heavens on some whimsical freak of fate. The way is usually paved for them by the lack of adepuate sanitation, improper housing facilities, incorrect feed ing, failure to cull out weaklings, the weakening effeit of parasites, or by some other form of neglect. Healthy, robust fowls, properly fed and housed in sanitary surroundings, will almost always throw off the germs of disease. Even when they do not, however, their rugged constitutions make the success of treatment practically certain. Acting on the idea of prevention as the best cure for roup, I never add new fowls to my flock until they have been kept in quarantine from two to three weeks. Even if it Is practically sure that the birds come from an uninfected flock, this is a wise precaution. They might be carrying the germs of infection which would mature later with disastrous results. If this should happen before they are added to the flock they can be destroyed or treated as the case may demand without danger of spreading the disease. Watch young and delicate birds very closely as they are most susceptible Bricks 5,000 Years Old to the deadly roup germs. The same Show Fingerprints is true of fowls suffering from com Chicago. Bricks taken from walls mon cold or catarrh. The throat and of the ancient city of Hr of the nasal passages, being already sore and Chaldees, made 5,500 years ago show- inflamed, are easily infected. Sick ing the fingerprints of the makers, birds, no matter what the ailment, . were displayed at the American Ceshould always be isolated. They can ramic exposition here recently. In contrast, more tham 250j000 be much more effectively treated when worth of the finest American china-war- e, away from the flock and thy cannot glass, pottery, stoneware, tile contaminate the healthier ones if the terra cotta, brick and other ceramic disease should prove to he contagious. wares were shown. Should any of pour flock begin to One of the exhibits was a new mystery material, as yet unnamed, show symtoms of roup, no time should which it Is claimed, is so light and be lost in starting measures to preyet so strong that it may be possible vent further spread. All houses, pens, to build structures which will tower soops and run3 should be thoroughly 125 stories high. It will not break cleaned and sprayed with a solstrong down at a temperature of 3,250 deution of coal a good tar dip and dis grees and Is an excellent insulator infectant. Droppings, litter and trash against cold and heat. of every description should be removed and burned. All unnecessary equipTwo Missouri Farmers ment of kind should be removProfit From Muskrats ed fromevery !ihou$s hbp ardp. 3Evry Greenville, Mo. Missouris first piece of equipment for supplying food muskrat farmers, Frank and Ellsworth and water should be scrubbed and Barrow, have found the business profdisinfected. All this sounds like work itable. Last August they fenced an acre of and it is, but the saving is decdedly ground, which included a lake, caught worth the work required. a few muskrats and started in. They As the inroads of this deadly dishave more than a hundred head now. ease have been known to wipe out Their fence was built of galvanized as high as 95 per cent of a flock, 36 sunk steel, inches in the ground, with a three-foo- t extension above and every owner of a poultry flock should learn to recognize the symtoms. At barbed wire on top. The muskrats have been fed pota- first they are much like trose of a toes, pond plants, cabbage, celery, simple cold or catarrh, but more fever, clams, crawfish and corn. dullness, prostration and loss of appetite. First symtoms are a watery nasal discharge, difficult breathing with wheeze sound and constant shakPlan Jungle Airports ing of the head to dislodge accumufor African Service lated matter. SoutJi Africa Johannesburg, After two or thret days the dis Jungle airports are being laid charge from the nose becomes thickout in Africa in preparation for er and gives off & characteristic ofthe air service from Cairo fensive odor. The nasal passages then Thousands of trees have had to be felled and become so clogged that the bird must their roots dug up to provide breathe through its mouth. A dislanding spaces. AnNrdlls have charge will also run from the eyes. been removed, in many places, This discharge gradually becomes by hand, as no other means was available. Some of then thicker, causing painful swellings bewere more than twenty-fiv- e low or in the eye wrich often destroy feet in height. Experimental it. As it hardens, this discharge flights are to be made next sumcause the eyes to be completely may mer as a preliminary to the shut and may gather in such pasted regular sendee. The whole journey of tkOOO miles will take quantities that the head is swollen to five or six days Instead of two twice its normal sp!ei. ( Quitje fremonths by existing means of quently trese deposits will press down transport the roof of the moujth so that the fowl connot swallow., In some cases n 100-10- f NEW FORD MAKES TRIP. TO ATOYAC, MEXICO A new kind of machine was seen recently in Atoyac, Mexico. Natives of the Pacific Coast town viewed this modern invention with a great deal of curiosity. It was an automobile. General Rafael Sanchez, commander of the state of Guerrero, drove a Model A Ford phaeton across country from Acapulco to Atoyac, over land so rough that none had made such a journey before. He sent this wire to R. Z. Martinez, Ford dealer at Iguala: For your pleasure please be that the Ford car I purchased from you is the first automobile that has ever reached this town, over a difficult country where there are no roads at all and the land is strewn Motor with rocks and soft sand. in perfect condition after terrible test. Small native towns along path regarded first automobile with positive wonder? ed WANTED: Party to help put-u- p of alfalfa, to be ready to start June 1. For further information see M. H. Daley, 494 South Main St., Payson, Utah. 100 acres There is only one Duco du Pont Duco Apply Duco yourself. No trouble or delay. It dries quickly. It will itiot "print, See us about the new color schemes now: DUCO . dries quickly . . . easy to use CKiw Lumber Sc Coal Company Phone 127 Pavton, Utah J , |