OCR Text |
Show (fltrtftt wi IMwftft n.rnjiOTin THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON. UTAH Thc STOCK UTAH BRIEFS Consumers New four room school building will be erected this summer Murray A public wading pool foi small thlldreri is installed in the city park Wellington -- A new school building is to le constructed. Tooele Nnlurul gas heuting is to be installed at the loial smelter. Provo--Th- e Utah County Fair will have a large premium list this year. Provo -- A new reservoir, to cost In Hie neighborhood of $75,000 will be commenced In Hip near futuie. Price--Wo- rk is being rushed oh the new federal building. Fillmore A thoroughbred colt show will be belli here July 25th. Bingham Canyon Child riincs for young ilnldren are being held Grove A Pleasant cooperative brooding association with headquarters in Provo is "being formed. limpanogos Ten thousand persons are expected to join in the hike to the tieak of Mt. 'limpanogos on July 19th Ephraim Plans ate under way for a new Irrigation project. Leld The white fly pest, which has caused so much loss to t he sugar beet raisers, is now attacking the tomato CURE FOR SHEEP FALSE FOOT ROT Hoof of Animal Often Be- comes Much Swollen. When sheep become very footsore they are not always affected with foot-ro- t. When hut one or two sheep are severely lame, it may be that false foot-ro- t Is the cause; hut true foot-ro- t quit kly affects an entire flock. is the term applied to False foot-ro- t that diseased cond Hon in which the lining membrane of the canal at ttie top of the hoof, which secretes lubricant to prevent friction between the toes, becomes infected so that pus forms and burrows. The opening of the gland will be found In the hoof head, just above the juncture of the toes, and is surrounded l.y stiff, upstanding hairs. It sometimes happens that dirt works into the canal and causes irritation; ttien pus germs invade the affected part and the pus proceeds to undermine the horny wall and destroy the tissues. The hoof head In such cases becomes intensely svvoolen, hot and painful and the sheep carries the affected foot. When an examination is made, one finds an abscess containing stinking pus which first fills the glandular pouch and then forms a much larger sac. If taken In time, cleansing of the part, free opening of the sac, liberation of pus and swabbing with a 2 per cent solution of mereurochrume may soon he followed by healing and recovery. All loos", rotten or under-ruhorn mud also tie cut away. In severe eases amputation of a toe In ordinary cases, may be neces-arafter treatment consists in keeping the wound well covered with a mixture of equal parts of powdered boric arid, oxid of zinc and subnitrate of bismuth, on sterilized cotton hound on Hie part with a clean, narrow bandage, and to he renewed daily. Give a sheep Immediate treatment when lameness Is noticed. 1 Statu of President Jame Buchanan which was unveiled In Meridian II111 park, Washington, and accepted by Preaidant Hoover for the nation, 2 Great civic banquet held at the formal opening of Cleveland's magnificent Union Terminal. 8 Kenneth Hunter making adjustments to the plane City of Chicago while he and his brother John were breaking the refueling endurance flight record at the Sky Harbor airport, Chicago. NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Congress Finishes Up Much Legislation and Ends the Special Session. By EDWARD W. PICKARD In the new commission applications for power plants are to be placed in the hands of five $10,000 a year men who, the act stipulates, may have no other occupation. Nor may they have been connected in any way with, or hold any stoek in, power companies. At present 70 applications are pending with the commission. A radio address to the governors conference which met in Salt Lake City, President Hoover announced that federal, state and local governments had spent or contracted to spend a total of $1,700,000,000 for public works during the first six months of the present calendar year. This fig0 ure, lie said, exceeded by over that of the boom year of 1029. lie advised Hie governors Hint there is still need for continued serious effort In every state and community to bring an early business recovery, and to reduce unemployment. Several of the western governors delivered addresses scoring the federal government for its Invasion of states rights, especially with regard to the public domain, unappropriated lands, and mineral and oil rights. IN bring the special Determined ato close before the Fourth of July, congress was very busy the first part of the week, clearing up the pending legislation. Taking up the new World war veterans bill passed by the house, the senate again showed its utter disregard for President Hoover's views and its keen desire for votes next full. It loaded the measure down with amendments, chief of which was one Increasing the pension rates to the Spanish war level. Another would permit veterans who contracted venereal diseases during their war service to obtain disability allowances. The bill was seDt to conference for was enforcement PROHIBITION elimination of the features that would transferred July 1 from the Treasbe most objectionuble to the President. ury department to the Department of Among the hills passed by the house and Attorney General Mitchell Justice, was the Wlekersham commissions became the commander In chief of the border pntrol bill designed to help in federal dry army with Col. Amos V. curbing the smuggling of liquor from W. Woodcock as his chief of staff. It Canada and Mexico. It establishes an was understood in Washington that enlarged and unified border patrol the governments limited staff and apasunder the ervlce In the treasury propriation will be devoted hereafter sistant secretary In chnrge of the to detecting larger commercial coast guard, increases the number of while the effort to obtain misa entry stations, and makes It by the states will greater demeanor, subject to $100 fine, to cross be expanded. Many changes have been an the border except at entry station, made already in the force of prohibiwith certain exceptions. the most imtion administrators, The senate passed the house bill In the metropolitan areas portantbeing which authorized the President to In the of New York and Chicago. and governmental former Maj. Maurice Campbell rewar veterans. activities affecting the signed when ordered to Boston to take charge of alcohol permits and gave SECRETARY of the Treasury out a statement attacking "United that the fiscal year States with political aspira190 closed with a surplus In the treas- tions, attorneys and Treasury department offamount Tllis repury of $1S4, 000.000. icials who have not been sincere in resented the difference between reefforts to enforce this law. The and public expenditures. ceipts He declared bis experience had led debt was reduced during the year by him to the following conclusion: a net balance was There $740,000,000. soluIs not the Prohibition logical In the general fund at the close of the tion for temperance under .our form of $318,000,000. year of government, and I now publicly adWhile the surplus was substantialvocate the repeal of the Eighteenth ly the same as In the fiscal year 1929, amendment before the nation Is conIt Mellon out that Secretary pointed sumed In the fires of Its conseincluded the abnormal sum of $76,000,-COquences." in by governments foreign paid Col. John H. J. Herbert became the June in cash Instead of In securities cf the American government and also enforcement boss of Illinois, Indiana Included abnormal customs receipts, and Wisconsin, displacing E. C, who remains in control of aldue to anticipation of tariff legislation. cohol permits In that area. JOHNSON of California, SENATORS New Hampshire and RobE. E. DENISON of inson of Indiana filed with the senate CONGRESSMAN Republican who their minority report from the foreign was Indicted on a charge of Illegally relations committee, setting forth their because of a leaking reasons for opposing ratification of possessing liquor suitcase, escaped being tried when the London naval treaty. These rea- Justice Gordon of the Supreme Court sons are already well known to the of the District of Columbia sustained public and need not be repeated. a demurrer and held that the indictDispatches from Washington said ment failed to the charge that the national defense committee against Denisonparticularize sufficiently to enable of the American Legion had made a the latter to frame a defense and report two weeks previously recom- plead an acquittal as a bar to a submending that the Legion declare for sequent Indictment. rejection of the treaty, and that nothing more had been heard of the matstrobe of midnight on ter. One rumor was that administraWITH the 30 the last of the French tion Influences had succeeded In bringing about the pigeonholing of the troops of occupation departed from the Rhineland and Germany was freed report. from the Incubus thnt had rested on Over In London two of Englands most famous naval commanders, Earl It for almost twelve years. The GerBeatty and Earl Jelllcoe, made hot at- man people celebrated the event with tacks on the treaty, asserting that by the ringing of bells, with great parades of singing men and women, with the signing it their government was throwsea power by which the playing of bands and with fireworks. ing away the British empire came into being and Especially impressive was the jubilee In the town of Speyer in the developed into what it la today. Torches and Hares lighted the across the Rhine over which hoover has named bridge new federal power marched the town's police force of commission Lieut. Gen. Edgar Jadwin, 600 men as thousands along the wawho In his service as chief of army ters edge and in boats sang Deutschland Ueber Alles. engineers gained a thorough knowlof the The final phase of the military evacof the country. waterways edge His nomination, with those of the other uation began in Wiesbaden at 9:30 four commission members, will be sent o'clock In the morning. The inter-allieRhineland commission, which has to the senate In special session this summer for confirmation. When two headquartered at Wiesbaden since Sepmembers have taken office the new tember when the headquarters were commission will supplant the old one. moved from Coblenz, closed shop. A battalion of French troops lined up on which had as its members the secreKalserstrasse In front of the commitaries of war. Interior and agriculture, and which, since 1920, has super- ssions building where three flags floated 0 vised the expenditure of about Belgian, British and French. The regimental band broke into the for power development $200,-(00,00- boot-leggii-- Pala-tlnnt- President d $350,-00,00- Brabaneonne" and the Belgian flag slowly descended. Then the military band played God Save the Ring and the Union Jack slid down the halyards. It was a tense moment us the strains of the .Marseillaise'' burst Into the air and the tricolor floated down. High Commissioner Paul Tirard and the other officials crossed the Rhine bridge in motors and a thousand French soldiers in lull war panoply marched to the railroad station and entrained for home. A proclamation by President Von Hinder.hurg said: After years of hitter distress, after the acceptance of impressive burdens, we have regained tor the Rhineland a freedom that vve shall prt serve for t lie welfare and future of our father-land- . over Inti legistered for the first half of the slimmer course. Eureka Tintic district metal ship incuts show an inciease for the first six months of 1930 over 1920. State Capitol The Utah state treasury Inis a balance of ovr 2 millions of dollars on hand. Kaimh IJIversi.y of occupations is being mged for the Indian tribes. Mill (Vek A water shortage for Salt Luke City is forecast hy recent reports. Midvale Sixteen peisons were killed in null) accidents in Halt Lake City for the first six months of this year. Echo The dedication ceremonies for Echo dam have been indefinitely post- n y. Therefore, In this solemn hour, let ks he united in the pledge, Deutschland ueber alles. outside world ALMOST before theabout It, ttiere anything was a sueee-sfu- l revolution down in Bolivia, caused by tbe alleged efforts of Hernando Files, resigned president, to regain Hie office of chief executive and hold It in perpetuity. Troops led by Gen. Carlos Blanco Galindo occupied La Iaz, the capital, after a hot fight, and Siles and his friends fled qr took refuge In foreign legations. The military junta took charge of the government and announced financial and other plans for the Immediate restoration of the republic to its normal condition on a constitutional basis. It was understood that free elections would be held and a new president designated In such a manner that he cannot perpetuate himself In office. The populace In La Pnz was delighted with the success of the revolutionary movement, and great crowds surrounded the Brazilian legation which sheltered Siles, demanding that he be given up for trial by the courts. Gen. Ilans Kundt, German chief of staff of the Bolivian army, who was accused not only of aiding Doctor Siles, but of Prussianizing the Bolivian forces, fled to the German legation. General Galindo took steps to protect all the former oflicials from violence. Britain is taking Great measures to end the crop. Centei field 1 H Calf club makes a tour of members projects. Irovo B Y. U. sunuiur school has poned. I.ogau Woolgrinvers hold their annual summer meeting with a large attendance. Ogden Utah will be represented at the national convention of Gyro clubs at Tacoma, Washington. Ft. Douglas Citizens military train Field Peas Found Quite Profitable Hogging-Of- f ing camp will close August 3rd. Ogdey Buildings deemed a fire me mice will lie removed by order of the city government. Tremenlon Local Lions club spun sors community celebiution. Ogden Water shortage requires a In a series of feeding trials with field peas, experiment station workers of the North Dakota agricultural college have found that the peas make an excellent pasture for hogs and offer considerable opportunity for lowering the costs of producing pork. August 15. eight pigs weighing 113 e pounds each were turned onto a three-acrfield of Chang field peas sown in rows six inches apart at a rate of two bushels per acre. In addition to the peas each pig received a ration made up of one gallon of skim milk, one pound of ground barley and oats in equal parts, and free access to a green pasture of mixed tame grasses. November 3. after Hie pigs had been on test three months, it was found that they had made a total gain of 1,085 pounds. This is an average gain of 1.5 pounds per pig per day. In the tost 3G2 pounds of pork were produced from one acre of peas, 240 pounds of ground feed, 240 gallons of skim milk and the grass pasture. After deducting the cost of the other feeds from the value of the pork, It was found that a return of $22.94 per acre had been made from the peas. strict sprinkling of lawns regulation. Iiyrum Dr. EhvooJ Mead, U. S. Commissioner of reclamation is to clunk up on the local irrigation project In the near future. Fpriugville Many car loads of clier-rie.- s are sent to the markets. civic oiganlzations Provo Loeal sponsor construction of a stairway lo the Bridal Falls. Pleasant Grove Utah county posts of the American Legion will Luck the construction of a hospital at Provo. Manti Sanpete count is with the state In weed eradication campaign. is celebrated Nephi "Wheat Day for tenth year with elaborate Hpiingville Water shortage Is the cause of strict sprinkling legulations. Moroni A new mail schedule with better service 1ms been efmblished. Pleasant Grove 1930 rheiry crop is large anil with good quality of fruit Tooele Weed spraying is begun in southern end of Tooele county. Brighum City Auto accident injures four persons seriously. Logan A water shortage is being forecast for this city. Park City Parleys canyon highway is to be resurfaced. Murray Municipal power plant Is to be improved. Midvale A large colony of chicken plants will be opened in the near future with all members buying supplies colllectlvely. Orderville A great crowd with representatives from all parts of Utah and most of the other states attended the dedication ceremonies at the Mt. Carmel tunnel. Lehi In connection with the encampment of the Sons and Daughters of the Pioneers and tbe Indian War Veterans which will be held at Lehi for four days commencing, August 12, Utah Sugar Beet Day" will be observed according to present plans. Fillmore The old state capitol located here has beeu repaired ond conditioned for a state museum by an appropriation from the state legislature. state house The building was the erected west of the Mississippi river. At one lime the structure was the capitol building for much of the territory that now embraces all of tire State of Utah together with parts of Arizona, Idoho, Oregon. Colorado, Wyoming, Calofrula and Nevada. The building will be dedicated on the 21th of July. Sudan Grass Useful as Emergency Pig Pasture Sudan grass makes a very good emergency pasture for pigs provided one makes successive seeding1 of it about six weoks apart so that It may be grazed In prime condition. The cost of seeding sudan grass is less than for some other crops. The chief objection to peruvian alfalfa Is that it does not go through the winter satisfactorily when the temperature fails helow 10 degrees below zero. It has some promise as an annual forage crop because of its rapid growth. Sweet clover proved to he the poorest forage compared. The rate of gain was slower, and feed required for 100 pounds gain grenter than for other forages except sudan grass. All-Ind- Save Young Pigs 22 AMERICANS of withcountries Frenchmen to commicelebrate the France-Amerlc- a ttees "week of American nations, heard Raymond Toincare, former president and former premier, take the United States to task for Its new tariff law. M. Poincare presided at a dinner to national delegates. "There is a crisis in the friendship of the two nations which if not remedied promptly will grow worse," he Countries that try to antagsaid. onize other peoples will find Hint they are attached to those other peoples by bonds they cannot break. ; Many young pigs would be saved each year if the mothers were given good cnrei before farrowing, according to Dr. R. A. ?rn!g, Purdue university. den yards, colony houses and plenty of exorcise with n good balanced ration will enable the sows to farrow good, strong pigs that will live. It is often noted that sows following cattle do not farrow strong pigs. Farmers should hear In mind that much depends on the care the sow gets as to the kind of pigs she farrows. feats In aviation marked the First Roger Q. Williams with two companions made a nonstop flight from New York to Bermuda and back in the Columbia, the transat- lantic Bellanca monoplane, in 17 hours and 8 minutes. Second, John and Kenneth Hunter of Sparta, 111., smashed to smithereens the refueling endurance record over Sky Harbor airport north of Chicago. They refused to come down until the motor of their plane was worn out. 0), lilt, Wwttra Newspaper i.nlua.1 Paralysis of hogs is often caused Ity constipation, also from not receiving the right kind of food. When corn is fed alone, it is advisable to give 10 pounds each of tankage, ground alfalfa, and oil meal with each 100 pounds of the corn. Also let them huve access to charcoal. wood ashes, or slack coal. Give ' I tine taldespoonful epsoni salts daily until their bowels are in a laxative condition, then often enough to keep them so. Big Mistake to Overlook Grain in Dairy Ration. New York dairymen who do not feed grain to their milk cows iu suttumr while they are on pasture are overlooking a sure method of Increasing their net Income, sajs F. B. Morrison, head of the animal husbandry department at Cornell university. It Is surprising, he sn.vs, that many men who take much trouble in providing their cows with excellent rations during the ham feeding period of the year, depend blindly on Dame Nature In summer. Pasture alone was satisfactory for In enrly days, when even the best of them yielded an amount of milk we would now consider too low for profit. By skillful selection and breeding, the modem dairy cow has been developed, with a capacity for producing milk so great that any ordinary pasture will not furnish her enough feed both for milk production nnd for body maintenance. The proper feeding of milk cov. on pasture is much simpler than during the winter, and. says Professor Morri-- j son, doubtless this is the reason why so many fanners, busy with their crops, fail to give their herd the nec-- I essary attention in summer. Often t He .cows are merely turned to pasture after milking at night and morning, with no further thought ns to the supply of feed actually available for them. It is no wonder that vvlmn pns-- j turnge heroines scanty in midsummer, tiie cows run down in flesh and fall off decidedly in milk yield. Even if starts fed liberally when in the fall, quite commonly they cannot then he brought hack to normal and usual production. It Is especially important to feed grain liberally rvhen pastures become short and parched. Tins is Important any year, and of particular Importance this summer, when every farsighted dairyman desires to do his share In providing sufficient milk in the New York milk shed during the shortage period next November. Under typical pasture conditions in the state, lie says, experience shows that It is best to feed a grain mixture containing about 18 per cent protein, at the rate of one pound of grain to three pounds of Jersey ami Guernsey milk, and one pound of grain to four pounds of Holstein, Ayrshire, or Shorthorn milk. cows g j barn-feedin- i ! Smithfirid Logan roads canyon have been garveiled ond roads is bnid to he good. Nephi The city closed the fiscal year with a large overdraft In the general fund. Salt Lake City The State Fair will have a large division devoted to the horse shoe pitching feature. Iiyrum Nearly 20,000 acre feet of water has been suscrlbed for in the new Irrigation project. Cedar City Utah wool dip for 1930 apporiimates 20 miiiiou pounds and U valued at five million dollar. ' Increase Profitable Butterfat Production The following are essentials in profitable butterfat production, according to H. H. Kildee, formerly of the dairy husbandry division of the University of Minnesota. University farm St. Taul. Proper shelter in a wnrm. light, well ventilated barn. The leeward side f a barbed wire fence Is an expensive shelter for milk cows. A knowledge of the herd through the use of rnifl: scales and the Babcock test. Corn silage nnd clover or alfalfa hay as patriotic, profitable, palatable feeds. A grain ration in proportion to milk and butterfat produced. Fall calving as a means of increas- Ing production as well as price at a time when more labor is available. A bushel of grain fed before calving rather than two fed afterward. Prepare the cows for the milking period. Water of moderate temperature. lee water Is not conducive to greatest milk production. A milking machine in case of labor shortage. with the neighbors tn associations organizing and purchasing feeds in carlond lots. cow-testin- g Grinding Roughage for Cows Saves All Waste Three members of the Bedford (Pa.) dairy herd improvement association are grinding roughage, Tester Williard Straw reports. This practice does away with practically nil waste, says he. Soy bean hay run through a feed-milplus a commercial dairy feed used In connection with silage and grains, enabled Carl herd (Kendall county, Armstrongs Illinois) to place second in the testing association, with nn average of 747 pounds of mine in a month. George Smith (also of Kendall county), the following month, secured an average of 706 pounds by feeding a 34 per cent commercial dairy feed along with ground dfits and ground barley, clover hay and silage. l, home-grow- fit Pigs Paralyzed TWO COWS IN SUMMER oere-monie- pas- rebellion in Indln. The latest of these was the arrest of Pandit Motllnl Nehru, a Hindoo and acting president of the national congress, and Sayed Mahmud, a Moslem, secretary of the congress. They were tried Immediately and sentenced to six months' These arrests created Imprisonment a great sensation throughout India and a hartal or cessation of all work was proclaimed In protest In Bombay a "boycott week was started and housewives were urged to refrain from buying British goods. The spirit of the Nationalists seems far from broken. In many cities the school students, both boys and girls, have Joined the movement, quitting their schools, holding parades and assisting in the picketing of British shops. sive IT PAYS TO FEED J , n Ask Blood Test Many states require the Mood test on breeding cattle entering them, about fifteon In all. North Carolina was the first. Now we find in this list Georgia, Alabama. Arkansas. Mississippi. Oklahoma, Indiana, Iowa. Ohio, Texas nnd West Virginia. Ohio is practically surrounded by states requiring a blood test on shipments of breeding nninmls. Minnesota, New Jersey, Pennsj vanbi. South Dakota nnd Oregon prohibit entrance of positive to the blood test. aul-ma- ls 4 1 |