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Show FRIDAY, OCTOBER THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSONUTAH 4. 1929 individual installed have light soon and paid for them out plants of their increased profits. In ordinary houses, 16 to 18 feet deep, one bulb every tea feet is suffitt cient, but in deeper houses a double row is needed. S V. D. L. Dr. LeGear, By The most favored time to light up St. Louis, Mo. is about 4:30 a.m. and the lights Dr. LeGear is a graduate of the are allowed to remain on until natOntario Veterinary College, ural daylight reacres full strength. years of veter1892. 1 hirty-bi- x There is, however, a growing tendinary practice on discasesof live stockanJ poultry. Eminent auency to light up from 6 a. m. to thority on poultry and stock full daylight and again In the evenknown pouland author Noted breeder. ing until 6 or 7 p- m. This provides try popular lecturer. a 12 or 13 hour day and is undoubtwhen autoedly more convenient matic control of lights is not posDAYLIGHT STRETCHING sible. Whether or not the latter time is as effective as the other can FOR GREATER EGG YIELD only be decided by further experiment. When the lights are turned on, Increasing by Artificial Lighting hens jump down from the roosts the liens Day of Working Length and at Production begin eating the food that has Greater Egg Brings Times When Prices Are Highest been provided, drinking and often Some poul It the hens of this country ever laying before daylight. time both use a for lights trymen morning and evenrng, but I refer Editor's Note This is another story to have them turned on at about in a series of 52 stories on poultry 30 a. m. and let run until daylight. raising written by the well known Whatever system is used, be sure national poultry authority, Dr. L. D. that the light is directed on the LeGear, V. S., of St. Louis. The entire scratching floor and it should be series will appear in this paper. Our bright enought so the hens can see readers are urged to read them care- every particle of food material. It fully and clip them out for future will help considerable if the interi reference. ors of artificially lighted houses are whitewashed or painted white. When electric lights are used, they to there start a is union, manage little doubt as to wrat will cause not only require very little attenthe first strike. The ever growing tion, but usually cost less to operate Furtherpractice of using artificial lights in than any other systemthat so be more, the may to they arranged excite renhouses cannot fail ire of walking delegates and a de- lights are automatically switched on mand for shorter hours is sure to and off at the proper times a wonAlthough the followHowever that may be, there derful convenience. artificial of value is no denying the amazing effective lighting may be when electricity cannot be ness of artificial lighting or turning questioned on brigrt lights in poultry houses had I think there is no question but to lengthen the day luring the fall what it is of decided value if electric Certainly, unless and winter when the days are short. lighting is used. is exorbitant, a of cost current the It not infrequently increases the winis almost sure to .result ter egg yield from 25 to 50 per tidy profit cent with a corresponding increase by boosting egg production when in profits. prices are at their peak. (Copyright, 1929 It is doubtful whether lighting L. D. LeGear, V. S.) Dr, by causes a material increase, if any, in a fowls total egg yield for tre There is no question, howyear. ever, about its causing a decided increase just when an increase is most profitable. There seems to be some misconception about what artificial lighting .really accomplishes as such Next tp the hearth, the fan Is the expressions as making hens work oldest Instrument of comfort .humanovertime will show. kind has had, points out the Holland A hen eats primarily to keep har Institute of Thermology of Holland, Mich., and It remains today one of own body in proper condition. Certhe most potent sources of heat relief tain elements called carbohydrates available. go into the fatty portions of her Only, Instead of being an exquisite body, other elements called proteins fabric worn as a personal adornment, make up the lean or muscular tis- or an elegantly decorated plume sues, while mineral elements such saved by a slave, or a punkah" kept as lime and . calcium keep the bony moving by a coolie on the veranda of an East Indian bungalow, the presenframework or skeleton in repair. t-day fan used for cooling purposes When enough food ras been eaten Is an efficient mechanical affair, run to take care of the hns body, any by electricity, and Installed In the surplus, if of the proper ingredients, heating system. Operated during a summer hot is converted into eggs. The carbo this type of air propeller spell," become then the white, hydrates egg currents moving through strong keeps the proteins beome yolks, and tre all the rooms of the home. This air minerals make up the shell. Plainly, motion, according to the engineers of therefore, the more a hen eats of the Holland Institute, cools the bodies the proper food in excess of what is of the occupants by two methods. First, moving air brushes off, so needed to maintain a healthy body the more eggs she will lay. Of to speak, and conveys away from the body more heat than still or stagcourse, this cannot continue indefinant air can do. This process is nitely, as there is a natural limit to known as convection, and it helps the hens ability to consume and di- How to Raise Poultry raising-Nationall- y - - - Novel Use of Fan Bans Heat Spells food- gest Understanding this theory of egg production makes it much easier to comprehend what artificial lighting Naturally, really does and row. after daylight is over the hen can no longer see her scratch grains and - mashes. Having no incentive for exercising she does the only other she can do, goes to sleep. does, What artificial illumination therefore, is to provide light so that hen can eat and exercise before natural daylight comes. More feed ing naturally means more eggs if the right materials are supplied. is doubtless there Furthermore, some truth in the theory that the her original ren has inherited tropical ancestors a digestive system that is tuned to days and nights of equal. In temperate regions, however, days are much shorter during fall and winter nights, so that fowls not enjoying the advantage of artificial lights are forced to endure between long waits unnalju rally of use The proper feeding times. lighting, therefore, accomplishes a twofold result. It lengthens the effective feeding time so fowys can g take more nourishing and the eliminates also foods and it waits over of effects long m egg-makin- disturbing between feedings. houses To give big results, as as they brightly should be lighted electhis For purpose, are by daytric lights aare so far superior to all other kinds that I hesitate even to be suggest that anything else can farmIn a number of cases used. ers not close to regular electric linees 6l' Cooling Currents Make for Sleep. materially to lower the body tempera ture during hot weather. Also, moving air has a greater capacity to evap orate perspiration from the skin. Evaporation causes coolness, so that the air motion Increases the comfort effect by this means, too. So, merely by installing the electrified propeller in a warm air clrcu lating heating plant, and without the addition of expensive and complicated refrigerating or dehumidlfylng machinery, a distinct cooling effect produced. In winter, the function of the propeller is to distribute warm air from the heat generator In the basement rapidly throughout the home. Thus equipped, the home heating plant runs on the principle of a large volume of moderately warmed air moving at steady velocity rather than a small volume of superheated air reaching the rooms In a hot blast. This makes for greater health and comfort, more uniform temperatures In each room, greater heating efficiency and ample heat In every room, no matter how far distant from the heat generator in the basement It may be. DONT CUSS MOTOR. i ITorr.a Swearing Outside CHRONICLE PAYSON IT MAY MEAN JAIL THE J. II. MOUNTFORD, Publisher Is ' Violation in England. London. Under one of I tie Intent r a rulln-S frictions, to write or new current v f the on uny stamp notes is an offense punishable by fine. As no such obligation existed In It Is d.Hi regard to ptevlous In lai.f notes when handling cult, numbers, to avoid violations of the new rules. This, by no means. Is the only tot that Is likely to trap the unwary la recent cuve at the Middles! x pnlue court, two girls weie fined for selling artificial Dowers without a Ihen-- e Had the blooms been real no sm I regulation would have been ueies-ar- y The law rt luting to life on the rud bristles with ditlieutties. For Instume. while one may beg for cold water to ask for hot Is a inisdeineanoi. Firth er, although It is permissible to swear with Impunity In jour own house to do so out of doors Is to Invite ihvi-- ti r The law relating to the owneislm. of fallen trees also Is likely to tup many. If they are unsound or rotten, they are the perquisite of the tenant, hut if the timber in them is of good quality and worth selling, they he long to the owner of the I. .nd. , Another act aujs an egg to he must be an egg laid in England no matter how long ago; or that, while one may sell loganberries at any hour, to offer for sale green hgs after 8 p in. Is to render one liable to a fine. But perhaps the easiest of all laws to break is the one regarding the leia perature of workshops wherein men in Kent, the otli are employed, dais of a concern were summoned because the temperature of the works was not more than six degrees higher than that prevailing outside. P..v giving an assurance that they would see that their employees enjoyed the warmth required by the act their case was eventually dismissed after payment of the costs. Published every Friday at Payson, Utah, a city of 3,500 loyal, progressive and contented citizens. o One Year ..... $2.00 c Probate and Guardianship Notices Consult County Clerk or respective signers for further information NOTICE TO CREDITORS TY. the Matter of the Estate of Deceased. E. CHRISTENSEN, Creditois will present claims with vouchers attached at the office of R. VV. McMullin. in Payson, Utah, on or before November 15, 1929, Attorney for the undersigned administratrix o the estate of Amy E. Christensen, De In AMY ceaed. NOMA CHRISTENSEN e, Administratrix R. VV. McMULLIN, Attorney for the Administratrix, Payson, Utah Frst publication Sept. 13, 1929 Last publication October 4, 1929 it, FOR SALE CHEAP II. P. Gasoline Engine and Grain Chopper. Inquire of VVdford Johnson 8 tpd Santaquin, Utah. 6 In hunting party Winnipeg. search of the rare and elusive gyrilo hlatta has left for Moraine lake. Is the of the cricket and cockroach The who lived during the Ice age. hunters are Miss Marjory Ford of Ottawa, Ont., Miss B. Hamilton, lec turer at Toronto university, and MK A Lililh. East Indian student at Toronto university. The gyrlloblatta Is a primitive and abnormal form of Insect life that sur vived and adapted Itself to the Ici age when tite continent was buried beneath glaciers. Upon mossy logs at the foot of the glaciers it has lived ever since, and today its haunts are about Moraine lake, whose beautiful glacier is one of the attractions of the Rockies. It dies of heat If exposed to n temperature over 10 degrees above freezing, and thrives in subzero vveath er. To be preserved olive it must be taken away In pans of cracked Ice and kept In a refrigerator. The peculiar habits of this etjraolog leal marvel wore discovered by Hr Norma Ford of Toronto university and the Insect Itself was first found by Dr. F. M. Walker of Toronto some years ago upon Sulphur mountain near Banff, Alta. There are few specimens In existence, and Moraine lake Is one of two or three places tn the world where they can be fouud. A All-Blac- Suits Sound k New Nole of Elegance y FOR SALE The Federal Land Bank of Berkeley, offers far Sale the Elmer T. Daniels farm consisting of 38 Acres located about 3 miles north of Payson. The land has no drainage charges. The water allotment is 2 acre feet for 31 acres. Price $2000.00. Small cash payment will handle the deal. Balance payable in 20 years at 6 percent. Write: Wm. M- - Howell, Director Federal Land Bank, 300 Deseret Bank Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. 3tpd. Autumn modes highlight the hand suit of aristofomely furred cratic mien, in either broadcloth, duvetyne or velvet. Caracul, briodcloth, Persian land) and similar flat pelts vie with rich lynx or black fox for trimming, and with a muff If you please I k To Be Modish Hats Must Reveal the Brow sentence of three He was placed on pn role for two years on bis prom lse that he would not drive his car during that time. Doctor Keith was arrested in Wilmington, where he was not months. known. THE PAYSON CHRONICLE WHEN YOU Lumber is the ideal building material to use ooooooc pended SAFETY Headquarters Build the Home of Your , of the forty-twBerlin. Twenty-nin- e students enrolled in the newly opened German Music Institute for Foreigners are Americans, according The reto a recent announcement maining students come from Eng Holland, Hungarj, land, Finland, Romania, Russia, Sweden and Switzerland. Classes are being held in the Char lottenburg castle in the western section of Berlin. Special rooms In the castle have been set aside for this purpose by the Prussian minister of education, one of these rooms being the famous golden gallery which was for the first time opened to the pub lie during the recent Berlin festival Wilhelm Furtwaengler Is president of the Institute. hats for fall. That's the message The whole trend of millinery is in the direction of these high brow" effects. Not only are the shapes themselves manipulated to reveal the brow, hut the vogue is accented by young girls who wear their hats hack on the head. Felts by the way, are taking on a higher-qualitstandard. Handsome soleils are outstanding. Contrast color effects, as pictured, are important Forehead-revealin- 1 y Enlivens the Party When we are entertaining friends on a sweltering summer evening, according to the Holland Institute of of Holland, Mich., all we need do to get relief from the heat for the party is to turn on a switch in the Tlier-molng- (respected citizens and he left here almost thirty years ago at the time of the colonization at Raymond, Canada. Some years ago he went from there to' Los Angeles. He greatly enjoyed visiting with his relatives and old friends and in visiting the old land marks in his native city. Mr and Mrs. George Wride and son of Los Angeles have been visiting for a week in Payson with Mr Wrides brother, Lewis Wride and family and his sister, Mrs Minnie Perkins. Mr. Wride was one of Paysons former 29 Americans in Newly Started German School him. He is badly needed In Fred erica, he said. The towu will suffer greatly If this man Is sent to Jail. There is only one other physician, an aged man, and Dr Keith does most of the w ork " Jndge Lynn fined the plijsi clan $200 and gave him a sus D out-of-to- IN THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DIS TKICT COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH, IN AND FOR UTAH COUN Hunters Will Seek Rare Gyrlloblatta Del. The Frederica, large number of sick persons in tlds town saved Dr. Claude Keith from a prison sentence for driving an automobile while intoxicated. Joseph Cross, president of the town board, pleaded for v high-soundin- Advertising Rates on Application. new-laid- Town Needs Doctor, Judge Sets Him Free THE boost it, and if necessary, fight for CIVIC LOYALTY IS A FINE- SOUNDING PHRASE it. Loyalty reproduces a reciprocal effect in all with whom a loyal person It is a fine, phrase A man who is in contact- Civic Loyalty; it makes a good text comes friends, his family, town, to for a lot of oratory and columns up- loyal and oyal to his God will country, on columns of newspaper editorials, be troubled with disloyalty on but after all, there is no difference never There is no real between Civic Loyality and any oth-e- r the part of others. without oyalty. success kind of loyalty. Whatever Civic Loyality is, it isnt Whole books have been written on knocking your town, buying mail orthe subject; any number of sermons der, or going to the next neares preached on and about it; hundreds town to purchase when you can buy of speakers have put thousands of peo- the same things at home, and usually ple to sleep talking about it. Still for less money. what is it or perhaps it is better Spending your money with to say: What isnt it? peddleis is not only disloyalty foolhardiness, if you The city in which you live is YOUR but down-righ- t city; its institutions are yours; its Value your money. life your familys and your children's; Bragging that you bought it in the and besides, YOU are a part of it, in city and that, therefore, it must be fact, YOU are the city. Such being better, when you could have purchasthe case, you naturally do not want ed it from a local dealer, is not mly to be disloyal to it, for the worst of disloyalty, but it is flaunting your all is disloyalty to ones self. The LACK of loyalty, besides taking a man who is disloyal to his town is chance on being LAUGHED AT bedisloyal to himself and to all that is hind your back by people who know. This looks best in him. He is his own worst When a stranger says: town chara like his he undermines you have for good enemy, pretty Oh, and you reply and say: acter and. thus deprives his efforts he-or of that incentive which is the most 'yes. its all right, if you like some other derogatory remark; or powerful of all factors. (when you hear some unthinking natYour loyalty or disloyality makes and you the place where you live what it is ive ridicule your community, a joke, that is not only as off it turn or what it is not, and you can not 'disloyalty, but darned poor business. pass the buck to George, the weato others what they Preaching ther or prohibition. should do and then doing the oppoYou expect your city to be a good site yourself is disloyalty, so Try place in which to live, in fact, you The Home Folks First. het-u- p cometimes and DEget Copyrighted, 1929, A. D. Stone, ReMAND that it be such a place. But it is a good place, only if YOU your- production in whoe or in part. self do that which is necessary to This Town Doctor Article is publsh-e- d make it so, and to do that you have by The Payson Chronicle in coopto be LOYAL to it, stick up for it, eration with the Payson Lions Club Entered at the Postoffice at Payson County, Utah, as second-clas- s matter. Utah p ya homo you have always wanted to own and live in. And no building material will so satisfy your home needs as wood none so easy on your pocket-boo. k. o Lasting comfort . . . enduring low cost are all posbeauty sible in the lumber-bui- lt home. Only lumber can give you lasting oomfort for generation after generation. Only wood has the friendly warmth that makes for enduring beauty and satisfaction. ... No matter whether you plan a modest cottage or a magnifi- cent mansion you will find it worthwhile to talk your building plana over with us. You will find our yard completely stocked to meet every one of your building material requirements. We suggest you call at our offices or ask us to call on you. Take advantage of our ctRiimo v centuaju building knowl..WOOD.. mtv, edge and see for yourself the type of service we have for Home Build- - p y kitchen, connected with the electrified air propeller in the most modern type of warm air circulating plant. This will Immediately set In motion air currents through the rooms which will produce a comfort cooling effect equivalent to a temperature drop of several degrees. Chase Lumber and Coal Co. PHONE 127 PAYSON UTAH "American Standard Lumber from Americas Best Mills". |