OCR Text |
Show i THURSDAY, KOVEMBEB W. 123 THE LEHI SUN. LEHI, UTAH TinmsDAY is Strandc PCgg :ing rides is no different from begging money. This it cat of cries of sdrertisements paid for fcjr your local (rtnsporlatioA company, it purpose is to discourage Motorist from girig lifts to "thumpers," or beggars of free fides. This practise as da su do motorists ana tost! io traMCittioa companies. Salt Lake & Utah Railroad On Utah County Farms With Extension Agents . POULTRY fiECORD PROJECT Forty five poultrymeo hav again signed tip is the record keeping project pro-ject with the U. A. C. Extension Service for the year 1932 and 1433, project beginning, October 1, 1932. A summary school wflj be field In tho county Mwember " to 19 to complete last years records, accord -in to tho following" schedule. Prof, Frischknecht and the Extension Agent will t In charge. Lent Memorial If all November 14 and 15, Monday 1:00 p. m., Tuesday Tues-day 8:30 a. m. Also afternoon and evening, American Fork City Hall No. vember 1, Wednesday f :30 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. New cooperators beginning this year are also urged to meet in their i respective committees according to the above schedule to get the detail of the work. , This project In poultry record keeping was the first ever started in the state Just a year ago under the direction of Prof. Carl Frls-chknecht, Frls-chknecht, specialist of the U. A. C. The project carries four main objectives. ob-jectives. 1. Detailed inventory. ? Record of all expenses, . 3. Record of all receipts. 4. Complete production produc-tion record compiled from daily pen record cards. A month ago Mr. Frischknecht passed out Tlw record rec-ord books so that the new yearly -words could begin October J, ".' - .. t o ... . ANALYSIS OK FARM BUSINESS PAYS "Utah farmers are becoming farm account conscious," says 'W. P. Thomas, economist of th U. S. A. C. extension service. "They are keeping accounts for the purpose of .analysing their business In order that they may be made more profitable. pro-fitable. Agricultural leaders who are giving the farmers the greatest assistance in farm organization and management are the ones who have this new interpretation, that account ac-count keeping is fpr the purpose of farm business analysis, and not merely a recording of Income and expenditures.'' Dr. W. I. Myers of Cornell University Uni-versity states: "The purpose of farm management analysis is to Increase the financial returns of the farmer. In order to make intelligent intelli-gent suggestions for improving the ' farm business, it is desirable to measure different factors that are kaown to be important and &mpre them with sowe standard. Of the masy factors inflecting labor In comes of farmer, the most import ant are ize of business, production rate's of crops and animals, balance and labor effictescy. Tho most successful farmers usually have: a business as large as, or larger than the average of the region; production produc-tion of crops and antotals as good as, or better than loesj averages; a business so balanced that labor, land, by-product feeds, and manure are used .in the most profitable manner considering the farm as a whole; labor efficiency above the average of the region. Labor efficiency usually is more dependent on size and balance than upon the management of the farmer. Feeding efficiency, capital efficiency and many other factors are import ant but usually are npt so Important as those mentioned aboye. Adaptation Adapta-tion of type of farming to conditions is very important, but real farmers seldom make serious mistakes in this." Lil!putia City A suburb of Berlin consists of a miniature city for miniature people. It la a town built and inhabited by Llllputians. Everything is on a small scale, "small houses with small rooms filled with small furniture," furni-ture," The Inhabitants are mostly stage folk. They like living together togeth-er where they are not continually remarked by people of normal size. The midget citizens have planned their tiny homes not only for their own comfort, hut to exclude person of normal height They have recently received official offi-cial recognition of their village by the postmaster general Be has given authority for the building of small post office to be called Zwergstadt, or Dwarf City. Jesuit's Great Discovery Rev. Father Hennepin, a Jesuit missionary from Frahce, writes of the discovery of traces of bituminous bitumi-nous coal on the Illinois river, above Fort Crecolier in 1C79. Beating Old Bill Gravity Since we're going It on two Instead In-stead of four legs, we need to build against gravity or loss. Certain exercises ex-ercises for health wlU keep the diaphragm di-aphragm domed and all below In place. ob Printing , J WW "VafAT" Lehi Sun Publishing Co. Prints any kind of a job you want when you want it Letter Ileads, Bill Heads, Statements, Cards, Butter "Wrappers, Envelopes, Dodgers, Booklets, Pamphlets. In fact . ,4 anything that can be printed, we do it GET OUR PRICES 4 Nun Office on Main Street rz 43& o o 'SofM&GICo q'o Lindhctst IT. F. S THE MAGIC ECC, A CLEVER TRICK TO 15 GLASS WITM f c An 1 VxATCO. till; tec wut m SlhlKTO BOTTOM. 1 m J tt '(A in lli'l 1 IJV1"'""' , i UPPER HALF OF IS CLEAR WATEft. LOWER HALF IS BRINE. EGG Will FLOAT ON BRINE. Xake two tail .glasses or mason jars, flIJ one unit halt till the other witu water, la th half-filled glass puur & tew tablespoonfuls of salt When the alt Is dissolved and baa turned the water into brine fill the remainder of the glass with dear water, pouring it U slowly down tha aide of the flass so es not Co disturb the brine. Then take the two glasses and n egg before your audience. Drop the egg In the glass of clear water and It will sink to the bottom. Drop It is the glass con-talnlns con-talnlns the trine and it riil float midway is the glass, supported by the brine. Both glasses appear to hold clear water and tt Is mystifying to onlookers as to why the egg should stop midway In one glass. Coritt. WlU U Lto4lMit - Hawaiian Plant Highly Prized bj Botanists One of the most interesting plants la the world, the Hateakala Silver sword, once abundant, has now become be-come so scarce that botanists eover every speclment of It that comes Into bloom with cheesecloth to protect pro-tect it from Insect enemies that would otherwise destroy its seeds. The Haleakala Silversword grows only on the Hm and in the crater of Haleakala, a great dormant volcano In that portion of the Hawaiian National Na-tional park located on the island of MauL When young the plant, known toHawailans as"poh!nahlna" or"ah-Inahlna" or"ah-Inahlna" from their word "gray," Is a beautiful silvery sphere of Incurved linesar leaves. The silver coloring is caused by the dense covering of hair which repels 6ome of the pen etrating rays of the sun and also guards the plant from too rapid loss of moisture. When It ftttains a diameter di-ameter of about two feet, the great silvery ball shoots up a magnificent cluster of flowering beads to a height of from three to six feet , Many Idle Speaking of unemployment, the average man has 12,000.000,000 brain cells. Exchange. Proof of High Culture in Sodom and Gomorrah The Inhabitants of Sodom . and Gomorrah reached a high ; state of culture before they were destroyed de-stroyed by . brimstone and Are from the Lord out of heaven." The people of the two cities lived before the Iron age, but they exercised exer-cised great ingenuity in utilizing other materials. The excavators found stone ovens In the lrrectanga-lar lrrectanga-lar houses. These are similar to ovens .still in use in some peasant parts of northern France, England, Eng-land, Wales, and Ireland. Traces of violent conflagrations were found in the ruins, tending to confirm .the Biblical story of the city's destruction. One excavator said that on the plain below the hill on which the cities stood there was a curious rock formation, about five feet high, which legend associates asso-ciates with Lot's wife, who, according accord-ing to the Biblical story, was turned into a pillar of salt at the time the cities were destroyed. The excavators penetrated twenty-six feet and dug through three cities, each built on the ruins of another. an-other. Underneath these three, they said, is probably a fourth. The ruins of Sodom and Gomorrah were found ta the top layers. BEVERLY HILLS. All I know is Just what 1 read In the papers or. what I run Into as 1 prowl like a envtiie. trotting PO! along looking . h - -1. - I Shoulders, to see f whats Eolne on 0 behind me. Yon "X know Ed Borein, tha great Cow boy etcher of Santa Barbara, Cat. Ed makes the best western &fi etching of, any-aa4f any-aa4f body. He is a real Cowpunch- er, and knows the California "Buck-aroo" "Buck-aroo" and the old Mexico "Vaquero" better than any artist livine. He has been in Mexico a lot, and In California a lot more. Old Ed swings a pretty mean loop himself and goes to all the Calf brandings around Santa Barbara, But What Mftfltti hie on all this W&s telling about what Ed told me. Ha said an Indian told him that tbe reason a White man always got tost and an Indian dident was because an Indian always looked back after he passed anything so he got a view of It from both sides. You see the WHIte man Just figures that all sldeB are the same. Thats like a dumb guy with an argument, he dont think there can be any other side only his. Thats what you call Politicians. Poli-ticians. So lately 1 been trying to look back over my shoulder like a Wolf, and an Indian. 1 Just been mak Ing a trip down through Mexico, Central and South America, and even in an aeroplane. I would look back. (Of course It was mostly looking back at the last place that looked like we could land if the en gine stopped). But I did do quite a bit of looking back. Now for Instance I looked back at Hollywood as 1 left. Now you would be surprised at Hollywood If you look at It from both sides. As you come up to it and Its people. you see the movie side, all the paint and glitter, and make up, and make believe houses, but as you look back at it, why a lot of those houses have backs to em, and people live In em, and they dont have any make up and they eat and sleep and fret and worry about work, and about their children, and everything Just like any other place. But you got to look back to see IL Yes sir. there Is a lot of pleasure in looking back. and peeping around and trying to see the other fellows angle. Every guy has au "Angle" on living, and on life, and on everything. Take the election. Now one side couldent or wouldent want to know really what the other side could do or really thought they could do. Both sides Just spent the whole summer hunting up things to cuss the other side on. That the other side might be right in a lot of things never entered their head, in fact they wouldent let it enter. A Politician Is not as narrow minded as he forces himself to be. Nobody is going to spoil the Country but the people. No one man can do it, and all the people are not going to do it, so its going to run in spite of all the mistakes that can happen to it. Sure everybody hasent got "as much, but everybody dont need as much. Flying along over Mexico, see all the little adobe huts, rals U5 a nine t4tu:il ptnWBMT of "Free Hollie P f Beans", a littla Li. patch of corn to mash up some meal into and make some "Tor KjQ ,l J - ... t Q'-A " ' tunas- (biscuits to you). Now at first you will say What In Crime and Philosophy Nerer in Conjunction Uo criminal, I a philosopher. Could he be, he wouldn't see any object ob-ject in being a criminal. The disadvantage dis-advantage of being too much of a philosopher is that one sees no object ob-ject in being anything; or even of doing a great deal. Philosophy, most of It, is the direct road to indifference. in-difference. People who philosophize persistently are In peril of minimizing minimiz-ing all material welfare and much that is. spiritual. It Is the prime Inefficiency of Buddhism Bud-dhism that it philosophizes Itself into a worship of nothing. It Is defeatism de-featism raised to Its highest de gree; accounting, no doubt, for the stagnation of two of the most numerous populations on earth. But that Is not why the criminal Ignores philosophy. Be does It because be-cause he can't or does not care to reason In earth's best way. Without With-out logic, applied in its higher forms, man is a dullard, and falls Into dull mistakes such as following follow-ing a criminal career. F. H. Collier la the St Louis Globe-Democrat Jimmy Quite Satisfied With Fairies' One Visit Jimmy was sent to bed one evening eve-ning with the promise that If he was a good boy he would find a surprise sur-prise in mother's room in tha morning. morn-ing. Jimmy awoke early and toddled tod-dled off to get hlg surprise which was a little sister. He looked at her earnestly and then sighed. "A baby?" he said. "I thought It was a box of chocolates." A moment later he asked : "Where did the baby come from?'' "Well," said father, "the fairies looked through your window and you seemed so lonely they decided to give you a playmate." Jimmy was silent for a time; then he said: "Well, it was very kind of the fairies, but I think I had better close that window. One's enough." Thought Rabbit Evil Recently when a rabbit was shipped to a British government official of-ficial In Abyssinia, Its final delivery was held op because the natives to whom this task was to be intrusted had never seen a rabbit before and thought that this strange creature that twitched its nose like a tarantula taran-tula and bad ears like a donkey and a tail like a goat, must have magic powers that might bode ill for them. Seeing that It was going to be difficult diffi-cult to shake this belief on the part of the superstitious natives, the agent3 who were anxious that the rabbit reach Its intended destination destina-tion admitted that the animal had indeed magical powers, but that they were used to work good Instead In-stead of evil. By this means they Induced the natives to undertake the rabbit's delivery and to give it good care en route. Siam's Clinging Customs Shaving the heads of men and boys In Siaro is a religious rite, and is performed In the temple by priests. Although the Siamese have an up-to-date king and numerous western ways are being introduced into their governmental life, they remain re-main at heart typically oriental and cling to the ancient customs of their ancestors. White elephants march In their sacred processions, maidens dance In tbe temples as they have been doing for centuries, the king is carried in a palanquin, and, save for the occasional buzzing of an airplane, air-plane, the visitor to Slam could easily forget that he is living in the Twentieth century. existence is that". Well now lets look back over the shoulder and see if we cant see a little more than Just the hut and the Mexican Family sitting In the sun. in the first place you never hear of one Jumping out of a window when General Motors drops ten points. What the Japs do to Manchuria is no more of his busi ness than it is ours. Only he dont worry about it A "Burro" In a lop-? is as fast as he ever went, and he thinks thats fast A passenget aeroplane at (maby) 140 Is as tat most of us ever went and we think thats fast But not to Doolittie o Hawkes. You see everything is by comparison. The old Mexican-sleeps at night Nothing bothers him except ex-cept maby a flea, but he can scratch him off. He knows how to reach him, but we dont know how to reach overproduction, unemployment sec ond mortgages, poor movies, and a thousand and one things that bite us and keep as awake at nights No sir the world has got a mil Hon millionaires that would give a million apiece tt the old Mexican to have nothing bothering them bin Just fleas, and other kindred spirits So Vivala-me-be-co. e t. Sydtcmtt. Int. Pigeons as Food Supply In their flights across the desert from Arabia-Felix toward the Euphrates, Eu-phrates, or from Egypt toward the southern part of the Red eea, it Is hot at times unusual for pigeons to alight In an exhausted condition, positively unable to go any further. Their flight Is with the wind, and night or morning light finds them piled together In helpless bunches, at the mercy of any enemy of their kind. At such times bands of Arabs make a great harvest of their ten der meat spreading them open upon the warm sand, for tbe sun to dry them into a state of preservation for future use. Geeses Boy's essay on a goose: "The goose is a low heavv set bird, com Dosed mostly of meat and feathers. His head sets on one end and he sets on the other. He cannot sing much on account of the damnness in the moisture in which he lives. There ain't no space between his toes and he carries a balloon In his stomach to keep from sinkine. goose has two legs on his running gear that they came near mlsslne his body. Some geese when they get big are called ganders. Ganders don't nave to set or hatch, but Just loaf, eat. and go swimming. If was to be a goose, I'd rather be gander." . ' If vo u.:. k "TtTi 91' Pfe I 1 TURKEY GROWERS , should bs ntereted in thefollinving: DOES NOFCO XX L loenu the 'percentage No. 1 aad Koa bird.f Practically cKroinateNo. J and Na. 4 birdi? Help nake the tame wcigM guns with teas 4. Prevent crooked breaatar 5. Shorten fialabing period? That's Different What an odd change a misplaced letter can make in a sentence. example, a literary advertisement stated the other day that "culture dreaders will like this book v-htrh en ahnnr th nnimslt. nf a.ho - - , ' . - 11 ' " ui nav meant vlz that the hook would ! liked by "cultured readers." be ; A fi n j . 1 Hlwludes4-HClllBu.-L The 2,000 IK FREE FEED Test has startd As sponsored by cndl advetttstd la November It iaraa of du IMPORTANT TO POULTRY MSN AND ... TURKEY GROWERS fills Is a FEED TEST NOT a Latter wVirin. r PURPOSB-to aatiaf, vourarff" u, o5 regarding NOPCO X result.. Then uTyouChl! Mnch ping papar, if you liU Form is of no cVriIeZ,rfern ""S" W f d FEED TEST wWhrTu "r - You can do as you please about that a iener or not. Finds by Archeologists Link Past and Present Some of the games children play during the evenings or at week-ends are very ancient Indeed, but possi bly one of the oldest of all is the Indoor Snakes and Ladders. A gaming board suitable for playing this game, or one very similar to it was discovered during excavations excava-tions at Dr of the Chaidees. A number of other Interesting finds have been made by archeolo gists. For instance, an old standard, stand-ard, carried Into battle by the ancient an-cient Egyptians 6.000 years ago, has been found on the banks of the Nile. The design was a white cross on a crimson field the Scottish St Andrew's cross. Then excavations at Jericho have confirmed absolutely the Biblical story of how the walls of the city fell to admit the Israelites under Joshua. Their collapse seems to have been due to an earthquake. This earthquake would also ex plain the Imagery of . one of the Psalms: "When Israel went out of Egypt . . . the mountains skipped like rams and the little hills like lambs.'' London Answers. Octopus Has No Terror for Daring Fishermen Few people would care to take liberties with a tiger, but still few er would tackle an octopus with their bare hands. Some of the fishermen fish-ermen of southern Italy have a method of capturing the "terror of the seas" which involves this, and seem to think nothing of it They grip the creature between the heaa and the body, and are able, by a peculiar twist, to turn it inside out, thus rendering it harmless. But the methods employed by some native divers in the Pacific are stranzer still. They will allow an octopus to put its tentacles round them until the creature is only at tached to the rock by two of them. Then the diver Jerks away the re maining tentacles, and he and the octopus come to the' surface to gether. ' Life ia the Middl. A.- In many way? the coming 0f til Germanic barbarian im- .v. era Roman empire meant 1 Ktbtcd uiueuj government and eennom-c eennom-c prosperity, and for art, science literature and , education. After a time, however, the vigorous north, erners absorhed tho fiinom-..i. , v .-uuuiucumuoa the classical civilization, and on ttd basis of a mixture nf niiw ..J er elements a political, social u economic system was developed which iMu a ennracter of Its own. The fairest way to look nt the mm die ages is first to study its charaJ teristic features such as feudalism,' the unity under the ehurrh r.MM architecture, serfdom and the ma t nor, and second to notice bowl these gradually developed into nor?! familiar modern forms, such as na-1 tional states, national literatures,! town life, and a jtrong mlddledasj unicago xriDune. Neck Yokes and Saboti Holland is a very old country, and is an odd admixture of ancient vA modern. In the town of Waarden- borg, for instance, the inhabitant! still depend upon the community pump for their supply of water. Tin housewife carries a pair of wooda shoes, which mark her as a tiro daughter of the Netherlands. Tie neck yoke as an aid to carrying burdens bur-dens is an instrument that goeshadt Into antiquity for its beginnlnf Many primitive people of the East Indies use the neck yoke in trans-Dortine trans-Dortine weiebts. In China the ned yoke has developed into a lonr bamboo pole that Is balanced on the shoulders and to tne enas which burdens of equal weight u attached. Thirty Cents' Worth The auctioneer held up a battered fiddle. "What am I offered for this an tique viollnr he pathetically . In- rmlred. "Look It over. See tne blurred fingermarks of remorseless time. Note the stains of tne nurry-Ing nurry-Ing years. To the. merry notes of this fine old instrument the brocad ed dames of fair France, may have danced the minuet in glittering Versailles. Perhaps the vestal vir gins marched to Its stirring rhythms in th roasts of Lnnercalla. Ha, U bears an shrasion perhaps a touch of fire. Why, this may have been the very fiddle " on which- nero nlnved when Rome burned. "Thirty cents," said . a red-nosed man In the front row. "It's yours!" cried the auctioneer cheerfully. "What ' nextr Cleve land Plain Dealer. " ' ' rC:tion of a Food a tnnA moo hA designated as Any which, when absorbed Into the blood, will nourish, repair waste and furnish force and neai tn the hndv without causing In- Jury to any of Its parts, or loss of functional activity; neither musi n call for constantly increasing quau titles of Itself. Grammar School for Girls school A lie uJtrii"rj v fe - for girls In Boston tn th year 1S20 was a most unusual and amar.ing thing to the Boston of those days. Tha Settler hr nature I settler. He settled on Bear Crea when all tne country m borhood was a howling wildemea When other settlers came he came restless and moved on to uev H's Gulch, which he settled. He was soon crowded om and sought other fields. . He became known as The w "sgavehlmanexa of. himself and from m f j he soon took xo ; f the whole -WJ , Kansas City Star. ' CobcW"" , Two club mene - ; oons& heated argument in the cm Every moment they ords more personal. Finally 0 Tou've enough tin in J uaka a kettle.- hwateIH "Mdrmfir was the reply-vour reply-vour head to fill too(j s yAtthataquietmr -And both or j- gastoboilitTt'e81 - from t!if r : -Who rtedUtl'bridJ throwing 'dshSentAj :-i- 0i-s a correspi rf Frenchwoman at me ff rfx at n coach MJM had Botfcrf blessing, u:" rton TH- Passage 12, 191- at t1 L end it th with fevertt Lehi ani iter n... ft MA? lain Caflfa silj ft iGrs 13, Ln.es3 s tl If 1 I ml is I las i fiel $ in i |