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Show THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1932 THE LEin SUN, LEin, UTAH te imp urn mmM V - l-V I .11 t, . (-. I,. J. .LI , 4 I I I WW A-'" ' A rwf EKPAV Save the Highways for your pleasure trip. Keep the truck "Road Hogs" off the Highway by rout. iag your freight, both carload and Less-Carload s Via the ;r.:..:'' Salt Lake & Utah Railroad On Utah County Farms With Extension Agents Utah County farmers should remember the- Ogden Livestock 6how January 8 to 14. This collection col-lection of livestock Is one of the finest '.in 'the nation. TWa great educational exhibit will be a real revelation aa to modern methods used In production of high quality livestock. These drastic times demand efficiency. ef-ficiency. Tou will find a splendid exhibit of -4-11-Club and 'Future Farmers liventock. The youngsters part of corn and three parts of wheat, in addition to approximately tKe same amount of mash should be desirable at this time of the year. . The use of lights and wet mash containing a little extra protein are, of course, the only two things the poultryman has at his command to stimulate production and once the birds get up in production it Is a good thing to discontinue these practices gradually In order that they may be used again during Br a liPenlntr abreast of the times. Disease problems need be called rme'' to attention of all farmers. Some - that f poultrymen would livestock has been lost from Black n ,ugp. "v" i may uo vi neip 10 inexperienced inexperi-enced poultrymen and to remind the experienced poultrymen the care which they should take of their flocks. "One-Dish Mes.lt" Last vnck rwf,lntii dii rln . ..u .i .,, - ' " ..v. uunng vn.s co.u w-n.c. - for one.dl)h mea,3 Here ftre roore have at the present time it Is rather ;thftt WI, glve dellgnt th) e difficult to keep poultry """f and taste and will shave a little properly ventilated and the "cJor the food budget and yet keep dry. IYof. Carl FriscnKnecnt, th f bud as attractive, whnla. Leg. Toung stock should be vaccinated early. Get in touch with your local veterinarian. Dr. C. L. Jones is now testing for T. B. tn the county. Watch for your notice. AssiHtant roultryman has given the following suggestions to help crowd hens thru the molt and to give proper ventilation. These are the statements which Mr. Frlsch-knecht Frlsch-knecht gives: A number of poultrymen are ex some, and adaquate as before. 5-minute Cabbags 1H quarts shredded cabbage, 1 cup cream or rich "milk, 8 cups milk, 2Vt tablespoons flour, 24 tablespoons butter, teaspoon salt. Derlenclng difficulty at the present " . n S to get their hens through the 'h cu l Add the ZX and into production. About "ur blended together, e only things that can be done to h rapidly M oniy tnu.Ks , tor 8 to 4 minute. Serve with bread bring inem uuu Is to first be especially careful with the way and manner In which they are housed. Ventilation is extremely ex-tremely important at this time of the year and if not especially cared for the coop becomes either too cold or else damp, stuffy, and uncomfortable. un-comfortable. The shades in front or toast with a little graded cheese. Onion Soup with Chess 12 medium sized onions, chopped find, cup cold water, cup but ter, salt to taste 1 quart boiling water, pepper, 2 quarts meat broth, loasi, -i cup nour, to 6 cups cheese, finely grated. Cook the of the coop should be ruised and chopped onions In the fat until lowered according to tne cnange,)rvv, nun iu o uui waier, ana which take place in the atmosphere, simmer Tor 20 minutes, or until n,.MrdlPss of how birds nre fed, if' tender, Add th? meat broth, plentf the housing conditions are unfavor-, the flour and cold water, add some able the birds will fall to respond t of the hot liquid, mix well and stir as you would like, to have them do into the soup. Add the salt and so. It Is a mistake to crowd birds-pepper, and cook for a few mln-lnto mln-lnto a poultry coop. The minimum ' utes. Pour th soup into bowls or amount of space that should b' oup plates, place on top of each a allowed for a bird is three square' slice of toasted bread, sprinkle the feet. The litter should never be cheese over the bread and, aoup, . ViAnmA damn, neither and serve at oncT Serves 10 to should the ventilation be so regulated regu-lated as to permit cold drafts to Real Purpose 5erredl J by Cultivating Hobby If more people had real hobbles thera would b fewer cases of nervous nerv-ous breakdown, according to Dr. II. r. Kllander, writing io Hygela, tit Health Magazlna Hobbles keep children out of mischief and they relieve the monotony of routine life for adults. It is well to be able to lose oneself for an hour, an evening, eve-ning, or even for a day In something some-thing that Is not related to the dally tasks, this author related. A desirable hobby should furnish enjoyment, pleasure and gratification; gratifica-tion; It should require a minimum of equipment and expense, In Doctor Doc-tor Kllander'f opinion. Many hobbies hob-bies may be distinctly educational. Literature, musie and astronomy are examples of that type. Physical as well as mental health may be Improved Im-proved by a hobby; sports are jf disUoct value. Many hobbles are started accidentally acci-dentally wlthoot forethought It is well, however, suggests Doctor Kllander, Kll-ander, that parents and educators should plan Indirectly to guide children chil-dren In certain desirable Interests In order that their leisure time may be wisely spent. Recreation has become a necessity, neces-sity, writes Doctor Kllander. The trends of the times Indicate that the schools must include more training la the nse ef leisure time aot only for the years that the stndent It la school but also for the time wbea he Is an adult. i Old Hand-Woven Linen of Marvelous Fineness Twelve dozen of everything that was the Quantity which the proper continental bride of a century age received In her trousseau. It sounds lavish, but it was actually common sense, because our great-grandparents bad a grand laundering only once every three months! A relic of those brave days appears ap-pears on special occasions now, In a smart New York home. The linen damask cloth was woven by hand in the days when George Washington Washing-ton was more than a memory, and hand woven so finely that linen experts ex-perts of today marvel at it Narrow Nar-row looms compelled the weavers to make their cloth In two strips, which are sewn together down the middle of the table. An Interesting feature of this setting set-ting Is that the ancient damask creates cre-ates a background of harmony for the latest silver, whose design Identically Iden-tically matches the china. Coffee in 1634 As to the precise date when coffee cof-fee was introduced into England, authorities differ, and very little of real value on the subject can be found, wrote Edward R. Emerson la "Beverages, Past and Present." Sir Ilenry Blount visited Turkey la 1034 and in one of his letters says: "Tna Turks have a drink called 'cauphe,' made of a berry as big ss a small bean, dried In a furnace and beat to a powder of a sooty color, In taste a little bitterish, that they seethe and drink, hot as may be endured. en-dured. It Is good at all hours of the day, but especially at morning and evening, when to that purpose they entertain themselves two or three hours In 'caurJie-houses, which, In Turkey, abound more than inns and alehouses with us." Jm one!" 0WE TrilNGS IHtf til CAN EXPECT TVUS fAOUTHV. r. . ', 1,11 s 1 iAOtU)GE'. -TWIRI WU 5,000 DOO. WORK mrj WOfiW.RW H STKXTCH THE TRUTH 1 - AkolUKOUsT A fOCH Xti L-JHVS W heu 1 V r 1 f W4tW WD OPOP j Explaining Ghost It Is said by some llml the haunting haunt-ing of ruins' by ghosts, which appears ap-pears to hnve been a universal superstition su-perstition in ancient times, was due to the belief that a ghost preferred pre-ferred a house to haunt If it could obtain one, and that It selected a deserted or ruined habitation because be-cause there were no longer amulets or charms to keep it out. o - Rare Musical Gl-f t Absolute pitch is the gift ef being be-ing able to pi tea a musical tone exactly ex-actly without having as instrument with which te compare It. The gift Is rare. Many people may possess the talent of relative pitch that Is, be able to calculate the pitch of any tone having heard a note. A for Instance, sou a tied oa aa instrument. Painted Siatuea Marble buildings and statues of ancient Greece were not the white objects that they are sometimes thought to be, but were painted in bright soft colors. Real Test of Size The size f every man depends upon the height of his Ideals, the depth of his convictions and the breadth of his sympathies and la terests. G. K. Chesterton. Go-to-Bed Machine An apparatus which, when attached at-tached to a bed, registers when It Is entered and left and whether the occupant has slept quietly, bas been patented. Sport Only for Wealthy A private yafht under 80 feet In length costs to build about $1,000 per foot. Over that length the cost runs np to approximately $4,000 ier foot. . - ' O ' Took Name From Castle The name "Hohenzollern" is derived de-rived from Castle Zoltern, the nn-eestraf nn-eestraf home of the family The name literally Interpreted, therefore, there-fore, means High Zollern. . o Germas Term for Nobility "Von" la a German name liter ally means "of." It Is to be found In the surnames of families of noble birth. 12 people. : Vegetable Soup ' 1 v 4 pound dried , lima beans, 8 ounces chopped onions, 1 cup "Water, 1 No. 2 can corn, 1 cracked soup enter the poultry coop. A good way to check on your ventilation is to step into the coop and watch the birds. If they are bone 2 of 8 pounds, H tableepoons huddled together, the coop is like- salt Itt Quarts water, pepper, 1 ly too cold and over ventilated. fo. 3 can tomatoes, teaspoon Soak the beans overnight in the cup of water. Wash the soup bone. where as a damp, stuffy, uncomfortable uncom-fortable atmosphere would Indicate under ventilated conditions After paying careful attention to .cover with the 2H Quarts of water the housing conditions of yourj birds. It is then desirable to check j on the feed that you are using. The use of lights during the early hours and the feeding of a wet mash once a day has been practiced prac-ticed by many poultrymen and has been found very successful in stimulating- production among the hMi Sometimes a lltttle extra and simmer for 2 or 8 hours or until the meat is very tender. Remove Re-move the aoup bone from the broth, cut off the meat and, fat discarding discard-ing the gristle and bone. Try out the meat fat and cook the onions in It until slightly browned. Com bine with the drained beans and the tomatoes and add the mixture to the meat broth. Cook until the protein In the mash helps to stlmu- beans are tender, then add , the late egg production. This might oe omer rB"". i added by mixing a little dried mim In the mash or by wetting the mash with liquid milk which is a good source of protein. If your birds are in fair body condition they should be given about the same amount of grain as they consume of mash. It is desirable to have the heavy feed ing of grain at night so that they will have something to digest during dur-ing the time they are on the per ches. About twelve to fourteen pounds of grain consisting of one has been chopped, and the sea sonlng. Cook and stir a few minutes min-utes to blend well before serving. Recipe yields S quarts of soup. i 0 Maay Race la Fraace franca is made np of a unified number of different races. Besides the main stems of Ganla and Germanic Ger-manic Franks there are Normans, Flemings. Bretons, Germans. U-gurlans. U-gurlans. Catalans, even Basques md Arabs, within the French frontier. Corn's Many Products Not much more than half of the great corn crop of the country finds its way to the dining table. The remainder re-mainder goes to the refineries to be made np Into a large variety of materials. ma-terials. These Include the "sparklers" "spar-klers" which do Fourth of July duty, explosives, face cream, soap, artificial arti-ficial rubber and silk, varnish, tanning tan-ning extracts, radio batteries, tex tiles, paper carpet, mucilage, salad dressing, simp, cooking oil, vinegar and milk acids. Some considerable success has attended the manufac ture ef paper from the stalks, and It Is probable that at no distant day a profitable use will be found for the piles of corn stalks which ac cumulate each year on the farms of this country. 'J r- J& Famous Diaotaar Skeleton . The dinosaur on exhibition at reabody museum of Tale university is nearly 74 feet long, 16 feet high, and the skeleton weighs six and a half tons. Its estimated weight when alive was between 37 and 40 tons. The specimen was discovered by William Fveed In Wyoming in 1SS1, and the bones were brought to Tale under the direction of Prof, Othnlel C March, whose research resulted In this type's being known ts Brontosaurus excelus. At Tale's bicentennial In 1901 a portion of the skeleton was mounted and exhibited. exhibit-ed. Lack of space prevented the erection of the rest which remained la storage. A few years ago the mounting was begun anew, the hall f reabody being especially con strmcted to house this one animal. Slow Starting Med era machinery often requires a considerable time te get under fflelent working speed. A new 13V ton fyrostablliser, described by Col lier's Weekly, has a 55-ton rotattna wheel powered by a 200 horse power sot or, and reqnirea almost aa hour f attain Its working speed ef 1.'. rerotatloDa per second. It runs en tt avm momentum for two hour- after the current la ebat off. EEVERLY " HILLS.-Well all 1 know is just what I read in the papers, or what I hear as I keep the old long ears to the ground. Bare the other week before I started out on this Chinese Roundup, why out to my house one night to pay us a visit and break corn bread with us was a mighty i a t e r e b t lng couple, Mr. Tom Campbell and wife. Now right offhand off-hand If you are not a Farmer, er a buyer of farm products, you might say, "What Tom Campbell?" Dont you remember a big wheat nas np in Montana that was drafted y the Soviet Government ot Russia te go ever there and show them bow to put .their big wheat Farms on a big mechanical farming farm-ing basis? Well he is the man. He aew lives over n Pasadena. He dont belong to a Heover Commis sion, but he advises them after they are appointed, that is If they have anything to do about Farm-log. Farm-log. He had in, np there la Montana, Mon-tana, Si) thousand acres of plowed ground. He would rotate the crops, and have about half that ia wheat each year. I remember seeing pictures pic-tures of it where there would be eight and ten Combines running ene right behind the other. Tou town Waddles know wha a Combine is? Well to tell the troth I dont either. When 1 was the best farmer oa the west bank of the Verdigris river. Binders was Jost eoming la, and we was lucky te get te see one of them. As a Kid I used to ride the lead horse, when we used fire head, three behind and twe leaders. Then those Combines come along and tkey just rounded ap a whole "remuther" fall and altehed oa all they had harness for. I think fires sons of those I letures I have seen of em i la those Northers States they had s whole Carry ef horses, thirty or forty head. New they got these Tractors, treat big oaes that poll the thing. Bat yet I aareit told yea Radlater talks what a Combine is. Well here is all It does Just one auchiae and ia one trip ver the greaal Oa the frost ead ef It Is aa arraagetaeat that makes a deal te Uke ever the ground (frost the ask that ts holding the preee&t mertf age). Then right behind that radget e this big machine Is a thing that grubs np the Roots aal Berts. Another thing right behind grinds up the Roots and- Herbs into' "Easwa" Indian. Medicine,, which; is' sold by a White man who says he was adopted into the Indian tribe. Then just a few feet behind that, all connected with the same machine, are the plows that plow the ground. Then right In the furrow fur-row is the seeder, then another plow that plows the furrow back where It was in the first place. Then comes the fertilizer, and then the sickle that cuts the grain. Then Its carried along a little platform Into the Threshing Machine where It3 threshed, then out and into sacks, and into a big Grain Elevator Eleva-tor that is fastened onto the thing. Then on near the back end is a stock Market board where a bunch of men that dont own the farm, the wheat or the Combine, . buy it back and forth from each other. That Is it you have threshed a thousand Bushels why they see each other a million bushels of this thousand bushels- which- was actually threshed, then they announce to the farmer that on account of supply and demand, the wheat Is only-worth only-worth two bits,. (25C), Thata what you call a Combine. Well this Campbell fellow la mighty Interesting, He thinks that the Farm Board is- a, mighty good, thing. But he does also think that they hare had a pretty raw deal from the whole grain trade, and the banks. You see it looked Ilka the farm Board with its Co-oper stives and various vari-ous other things to do away with the middleman just turned them against the whole scheme. The banks knew that the Farmer would start borrowing from the Government at low Interest instead of them at 10 and 12. He says that Mr. Hoover knows that its been a scheme oa an their parts to discredit the Farm Beard, so w wondered, he and I, (him furnishing the Idea and me doiag the wonderinrl t Ur tt.. aivu v ci The Only Difference There Isn't much difference between! be-tween! parties, except that they blame tho Inevitable on different things. San Francisco Chronicle. c . : Woman' Increasing Fewer , America now ha the most feminine fem-inine civilization-, since ancient Epypt Woman's- Home Companion. Inferior Ses AH women harbor toward: men a calm sense' of superiority. Woman's Wom-an's Home Companion. o ' Danger Both. Ways There is not as much danger in blowing out the gas- as there Is in stepping on It. Janesvllle Gazette. Exchange Equipment ' The New York Stock exchange has 70,000 miles of telephone anrt telegraph wires. o America Y Opportunity America. ls 8' fortunate country. She grows by the follies of oar European Eu-ropean nations. Napoleon. dident Just come right out and tell the people what had happened. We "gured that If Mr. Hoover west di-rect di-rect to the people and told thea the real lowdowa that he wonla have them with him. But o course neither one of ns holds office, er ever was elected to anything. I Kuess the troth caa hart yo weree ia an election than about aayUIig that eonld happen to yoa. My thoUgical j Deity.. Janus was the two-headed deity of Roman mythology who presided over highways, locks ana gates. Because his heads faced both backward back-ward and forward, the month Jan-nary Jan-nary Is named for him. - Tt! , Thethickne;;"!1, f coins Is . V',, rfti(4 0" Incb f::Sl nickel is wnt .013 inch. H called the Ji.V the South,- J, granite boul.lt , 01 K records 0f the s . ... ' Hun H, u. "Every )an "-l, own opinion.-but opinion.-but dar tin- an t. "I yon own id ft. " rs i V ought ficiiuuHQ flat's T v road tra- tms .fthtti1' tha r i 0atl idBiinl wen he ZllU solemnly svvear ."': 1 will faithful;! 1 President of tbfSft Will, fn h. k... .m State Court.,. It pays to be politi reward Is nothing i?" own personal pleasure rv lowship should tuted for personal gain. YJ tonus t. k ? . Wff uuiera just . ure of being trL Man Judge. Him.Jf Public opinion Is weak J - --r " uur own - oplnlon. What a man ti4 """"'j luul is wnicn detera or rather Indicates, hi, fe Thoreau. Greek Church Celelntio. ' The feast of the Three I (Epiphany)- Is celebrated i. Greek Orthodox church by to-: a cross ann a live dove m tit ter, to bless the water. Valuable Tropica! Fool Plantain (Musa paradisiac species of Banana, the ft which Is a staple article of M tne tropics. It Is Inner Bias ordinary banana, ureenisli tend color, Ies9 sweef and more Si'i It s conked In various mux - Sound Carried by Cirilen! Usually a carillon can be N at best advantage I, (Ml x i feet from the tower. The l be heanj at considerable dtoi depending upon the wind,' lit of tower and possible obstrr: Often, tunes can be distingi; at a distance of three miles. Woman Served u Generil A woman once received tit f of general for personal service merit During the campaign it Philippines General Ageji ri pommisslnn in the revolj!l,,: army, organized a force of tt men, and led them in a mntef actions against the Spamaras Remarkable Sene of Snel The sense of smell is verj ly developed in the apteryx et Zealand. In proportion to ro ' this bird has the largest oU, nerve of any bird, probably finding the worms bow ground by means of smeii.- City Times FL' Wonderful Et The greater part ofj a fly Is occupied y scrineu a w"":- , ttattl a .ru nd near tu J lw ,J r"fl view him to w- interessandvewn tion wun TMCKSo. THREAD SUPPORTING RING CAN BE BCKW j STILL SUPPORT RING LT Willi. i A piece of thread must be prepared rtl j manner: A small glass Is filled with water, two are added and the water U stood tmttl & tV& thread Is dropped Into the water, left toV app7ftl1 taken out and thoroughly dried. Tn fv ths tbrei" "yjj udlenca.borrow. -3S5fe th.fi it,nct. thread brims. It w"..1-. foreW j to hold the ring. This la explained by bl, gtrtf r' mi J!. t y-r 1 |