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Cites Many Cows as Unprofitable 4x0 Pv Prof Stock Best -patching Obtain. ji try - I'-- ' III .11 ti- e- wrer than " V f Wj ul'e This l.V the In " the thick ; fact obi ried er e required time to related is erectly Those from 14 itteM?rrel4 to IS hours those unusual r i eii?bt dOs- - we' re low Slw in batching revealed. it was :,L J Only cent tofthefirr the fir eight died in on the other tf last the hand. .4 per cent to hatch same leng th of 10 the during de- - temperatures materially, Sud- gwnmer hatch ly the in temperature sharp drops hatches four and fh :J Sowlnfr Eg? laid durln were of cold waves r ,wk jLe the expense of getUnj the canse udon to determine hatch Is usually too joor tor Incubator opera stock from obtain to and follow tlni families practices, and management uj should be .itching eggs below the temperature Is advisable they should results eight days. than i re-- 4 .ti experimental findings dur-i- e that high eg? production months and winter spring batehabillty. Eggs producing hens hatched harm aet h'gh . ,i than those from low produc- lls the Oit- - hese plonwr ed. Sever! rbert , hatch-v- improved m breeding ie, however from one Ken days before setting did not re- Scantly Influence hatching Turning eggs held Kai' rie Mother' 3 to becooe Greens to e Advise Poults, Experts Turkey conducted by the ge of Agriculture In California the fact thut d developed about twice as much A as do Leghorn chicks This m is the one which influences ib and la most abundant In n feed, and In the alfalfa meal used In chick mashes. In non to the turkey mash, plenty rwis should be fed to poults in r to keep them growing proper-Ti- e experiment a Dew eo duty Bum-iwas ripe e set tort s loveliness ird home ti ness of her oofed huh ay's tnid;s tur-nee- vl-i- ji will, In addition pplying vitamin A, tend to keep tosels In order and supply the er hulk that turkeys require In greens even know meal w king range feed ci low Ing ie the cr; as compared with chicks, a poults are confined to wire ' and sun porches, It however, the greens very especially when the poults are 60 as to keep them from wing big pieces of greens, stems, and choking. After jenlts are a month old or moi e can be trusted with larger to cut VKsary inltted and 'served tfa nursed her aer already her croon ! ng! of d ended it greens. remeffl- 'iine Prevents Rickets chicks id saTagei ests were old at the t the pub burn, iried then f receive a minimum mtes daily of direct the of sunshine spring months, says Dr. ''rs'ty of Illinois, ratIon that ,s com- - cept the antiadtlc fac- revery unlikely to dev el-- f .mptoms of rickets. This a Is the result of an at Ithaca. N. Y of ran-a3- t J prevent rickets. at It,laca showed a mln,mu"n b : ST P0--e.Sl tes that that receive the least o;JJ?ft,type of Poultry lTttarDdld advantaKos on VdT ir of lr ght those sons t armed ;e and accordllK to a tla.n! Da'ryman. It ' keenlnTtt? 8lW ClmnKe of 5wrmltAe,h0USe dry and siro! t rerudellng of r Thegahip? to uns tvpef rlKinaI rf P ur-- bPst honse. hut the 18 k.r, adapted ifVl.more for the dairyman. One of the large costs of keeping dairy cows Is for the maintenance, which all goes simply to keep cows alive. It takes Just as much feed to maintain a cow that produces only 2,000 pounds of milk In a year as It does to maintain a cow of the same weight that proWhatever ration Is fed, the maintenance of the cow must first be taken care of before any milk can be produced. Furthermore under average farm conditions a cow must produce at the annual rate of 4,000 pounds of milk containing 4 per cent fat, or 100 pounds of fat, to pay for all overhead expenses before there Is any milk or fat left for profit. This means that only the better producers that are properly fed can pay a good return to the herd owner. "A.nlfrenCe hlgh-protel- Drouth-Resista- 0f recent 4 to potatoes are cooked or fed raw to cattle. It Is well to take the precaution. however, of slicing them to avoid the danger of choking, as cattle are apt to swallow potatoes or roots whole. Potatoes will not be quite as useful as turnips, though In small amounts they may replace the latter feed. Cows In milk should not be fed over 20 pounds per day, larger amounts tend to make poor quality of butter. Potatoes are not usually satisfactory horse food. Deep Furrows year. Tement lss,ed New York onera'0P:aldR1''. "-- In as- AWltlre '5latma;eR(' ,i i L: C;:: ,rfaAP B than Ule and ess have vr Coniuiis,ion- - hutaiichtiy classed as la-T- eni gas actually killed hut three IN THE NEWS 1 Latest porof King George and Queen Mary, specially made for the twenty-fifth anniversary of their ascension to the British throne on May 8, 2 Palazzo Borromeo on Isolo Bella at Stresa, Italy, where the premier and foreign ministers of Great Britain, France and Italy met to plan for European peace. 3 BceDe In western Kentucky when the Green river flooded Its hanks. trait CUBAN DIFFICULTIES Uv bLMNKR WKU.I 3 Assistant Secretary of State. Planning a Flight Around the World solution of their politi difficulties lies now solely in Cuban hands. We ''JrtlK have abrogated the Ilatt amendment. We have renounced the rights of Intervention which we had previously secured, and we lmve untile It emphatically clear that this government would Interfere neither directly nor Indirectly In the Internal concerns of the Cuban people. When any people has suffered economic coincident prostration with a political dictatorship, and the dictatorship Is overthrown by popular uprising. It Is almost Inevitable that for a period of time that country will pass through varying stages of political unrest. Honor 25th Anniversary of Coronation All Britain ls looking forward to the silver Jubilee celebration to be held this year on May G, com- PENDING RAIL LAWS Itv W. W. ATTCnilUllY President Pennsylvania Railroad h PROPOSED The average farm In Idaho has 21 acres, or 9 2 per cent of Its area, In woodland. In the leath- Most of the breakage er parts of harness starts from cracks. Well oiled leather will not crack. Creston, In southern British Columbia, boasts of a hog which weighs 449 pounds and when slaughtered gave 00 pounds of lard. legislation, 1 enacted, would place an supportable burden if in- upon the luilroads without advantages to the employees. Any treatment of their Clyde Pangborn, left, and James problems which omitted consideraMattern are here seen discussing tion of the overhanging threat to the flight around the world which the Integrity of the Industry, would they are planning, hoping to break he tantamount to the destruction of Wiley Posts record of seven days. efforts looking toward recovery In the field of railroad transportation. They will use an Uppcrcu-Burnell- l plane built for them at Keyport, Such legislation would mean ultiN. J., which will require only three mately less employment In the railrefueling operations. These will be road industry rather thnn an InIn Moscow, China and Siberia. crease In employment, as contended hy the sponsors of this Lawmaker Continues Ilis Farming ONLY PASSING PHASE By ANDREW W. MELLON PRtsbnrgh Banker. one does not EVEN atthe80,gift of prophecy, hut I look forward to seeing the return to normal conditions uguiu within my own time. America ls going through a bad quarter of an hour, hut present conditions, however distressing, especially In terms of human suffering, reflect only a passing phase In our history. New generations are coming on and new Inventions and the adwill vance In human Intelligence solve many problems that now seem Insurmountable. OUR TAX BURDEN By MARK GRAVES New Turk ComniUsloner of Taxation and Finance. 19 29 the national income IN while last year it had fallen to about Mrs. Rebecca Lipscome White, photographed at the home of her mother In Washington, after her return from Russia, where she divorced her husband, Lieut Thomas D. White, United States military attache, In the Soviet courts at the cost of approximately 10 cents. $90,000,000,000, $13,009,000,000. The tax burden In each year was approximately X)0. I believe It should be obvious that we are suffering today of our because Dearly Income ls taken for taxes of one kind or another, direct or Indirect, whereas the share was only about one ninth of our Income at the be- root-cutting- Feeding Potatoes to Cattle 1C We don l t the number "f deaths from chemicals to be materially greater than In the last war. The military effort nqulrrd to B v chemicals tij.nnst cities ls Mkh that It Is doubtful whether military commanders would feel Justified In threat in? men and mateiials to that puriio.se. Hie progress made In thw eloping gases since the Woild war has not been as gieaf us the genet nl public has been led to fear. Those who point out that one ton of mustard gas ls capable of killing fiO.iRHi.ooo people run dead up against the fact that In the World war a ton of this Plants After searching the deserts and foothills of Russian Turkestan and most of Turkey for plants to conn. L. Westover trol and C. It. Enlow, plant explorers of the United States Department of Agriculture, have returned after seven months with nearly 1,800 seedlings. Among them ls a desert grass which, uprooted by the wind, grabs hold again when It lands. Another, a kind of sedge, ls propaLitgated only from erary Digest de- - betwoen ice arfire next war is not much more likely to he fought on . a chemical basis than the 1 n nt cuTAix o j riMtrit v I'hemltal flower. In 1921 New York farmers used 134.000 tons of soil liming materials. By 1930 this had climbed to 191.000 tons, bnt since then the annual lime tonnage has declined rapidly to 95,000 tons, partly estimated, In 1934. Economic conditions explain this severe drop in the use of lime. n, R eKSS ls wh,tPS- - USE OF GAS IN WAR i annimemorating the twenty-fiftversary of King George's accession to the crown. One of the most unusual projects to commemorate the event ls the Use Generous of Urges acquisition of a new forest which Lime for Alfalfa, Clover ls to be known as The Kings ForSome 0,000 acres will be The time has come when much est" larger use of lime for clover and al- named after the monarch, who refalfa can no longer be put off, ac- cently gave his permission. In the beech avenue cording fo Prof. A. F. Gustafson at forest a three-mil- e Cornell. To do so, he said, would will also be planted. It will be result In failure or low yields of called Queen Mary's Avenue. these hay crops. Clover and alfalfa are Important aids DLAIE DIVORCEE In maintaining yields of other feed crops and In economical feeding of dairy cows. Even the ancients knew something about the benefits of lime on certain crops, and It Is not a new practice In New York state. The soils of a large part of the state need lime at the present time for good growth of red and alsifee clover, and for such crops as alfalfa, sweet clover, cabbage, and cauli- Nearly 100,000 people have settled on farms In Canada lu the last three J Srtnnes, CURRENT TOPICS BY NATIONAL CHARACTERS high-price- It makes little difference whether Siio5u7 House CLARK W J Fraser, Profoaor of Fnrv UNU University of lllluula er had u of By GRANDMOTHER Farmlp. g.rvlce s of the dairy About cows in the United States are too thin to produce milk and hutterfat at the most economical and profit able rate under present feed priees. In some sections as high as 90 per cent of the cows are too thin. With feed as scarce as It ls now, dairymen should do Just the opposite of what many of them have been doing. Instead of milking more cows in an effort to bolster a scant Income, dairymen should get rid of all but their better cows. If the cows that are naturally poor producers were sent to the butcher and the .feed thus saved given to the underfed cows, they would produce so much better that the herd profits frequently would be doubled and trebled. Yet many farmers continue to feed their good and their poor cows alike, even with feed scarce and The fact Is that the fewer the number of cows required to produce a given amount of milk, the lower the cost of maintenance for the whole herd and the more profit duces 8,000 pounds. freezing. not be kept and above rfg HIGHLY POPULAR FAN RAG RUG COMMENTS ON three-fourth- to Pi "QUOTES" to Earn Feed OFEGbS AGE England Plans Jubilee Celebration Expert Asserts Majority of Dairy Herds Too Thin period on PAYSON. UTAH of North Representative Usher L. Burdick, from the Bad Lands he maintains Dakota, ls shown here milking a goat on the HO acre farm in Maryland, 17 miles from Washington. There he carries on as a farmer In the Intervals of representing his people In the house. ginning of the depression. ARMS FOR PEACE By ADOLPH HITLER German Chancellor. FOR in this hour the German renews before the German people, before the Unique Hospital Ship Takes Plunge entire world, Its assurance of Its determination never to proceed beyond the safeguarding of German honor and freedom of the relch, and especially does It not Intend In rearming Germany to create any Instrument for warlike attack, but, to the contrary, exclusively for defense of The St. John's Guild," hospital and thereby for the maintenance ship, left, ls seen sliding down the peace. ways Into the water at Camden, FOR CCC PERMANENCE N. J. An elaborate arrangement By PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT of 25 water-tigh- t compartments IS my earnest hope that makes this craft the true nonslnk-nbleShe ls 181 feet, 4 the work carried on by the type. inches In length, and has a beam of Civilian Conservation corps will d Accommodations are 49 feet find a permanent place lu our govfor 1,300 persons, and there ernment are special arrangements for chilOnly In that way can the nation, dren. The upper terraced deck can through future generations, enjoy l.e converted Into either a dance the full benefit of what already has floor or a theater, and there ls a been acco.nplNhed and the full P) foot promenade all around her measure of all that ultimately will de k that Is glas enclosed forward be achieved. WNU Swvlos to provide a sun deck. I 1 This Fan" rag rug has attracted a lot of attention and to our knowledge quite a few home rug makers have made one or more like It. It must be seen to be appreciated. Made up In brilliant colors, the panels In alternating light and dark shades and the center of dark green and red, this rug ls bound to catch the attention of anyone upon entering the room. This model measures 58 Inches across and 30 Inches deep, and requires about four pounds of material to crochet The ten panels are made first and then crocheted toThe center half circle ls gether. made to fit opening for It and In turn ls slip stitched Into spnee. This beautiful rug ls one of the twenty handmade rugs shown In colors In rug book No. 24. If handmade rag rugs Interest yon send us 15c for this book of nigs with Instructions, and you will receive it hy mall postpaid. Address 1IOMK CRAFT COMPANY, Department C, Nineteenth and SL Louis Avenne, SL Louis, Mo. Inclose a stamped addressed for reply when writing for any Information, ea-vel- oe Worlds Oldest Bible? The director of the German Institute In Cairo recently discovered In an obscure Cairo bookshop what ls said to be the world's oldest Bible, This Bible which ls thought to have been written In the Second century, contains only the gospel according to St. Matthew, the letters of St. Paul, nnd portions of tho Old Testament The oldest Bible known previous to this find was written In the Fourth Varieties There are demagogs that are clever and others that Just get up and howL Manufactured by baking powder Specialists who make nothing but bak- ing powder under supervision o expert chemists. ALWAYS Same price today as 44 years ago Z5 esacti for 250 FULL PACK NO SLACK FILLING MILLIONS 0. ROUNOSHAVILtltN (iDierioui Unsightly Complexions blotchy and red relieved and improvod with safe, medicated Rosinol. muddy-Iookin- g, SALT LAKES NEWEST HOSTELRY Radio tor Ivory Room 200 Roomy 200 Batha Builders Launch Unusual Vessel at Camden " pro-wile- IT I HOTEL Temple Square Rata 9 St.SO to $3.00 Tho Hotel Temple Square has a highly desirable, friendly atmosphere. You will always hnd it immaculate, supremely comfortable, and thoroughly agreeable. You can therefore understand why this hotel is; HIGHLY RECOMMENDED can also appreciate why: of distinction to stop fts e mark beautiful at this hostelry You FRNEST C. ROSSITFR, AI?r. WajflUMWiraWi.MH 1 t t ; II i |