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Show THE LEIIT RUN. LEII1, UTAH THE FEATHERHEADS By OJbamt vk HkiT NOT At I HAVIH Hta. HAWJO- - . fieiL THAT '4 W6L S W6 6WBU Up THB " HELLO. M0RT.' A I I WOT OMLV OF NtoU ANO MOW f . CAR SMOKIM-OUR. IT UBeLY A HDW'3 TH.M$? U StNT HER- VoU'R. WOKKlM- 7 Ve- IT W tLBCTR.C RBFW&RAToR. I ' fT ) .-HtARVoU I BEKrSD. J WAV THROUGH T -CUT OUT tAOMlBS- I DT. L MMT VOUR. 1 HER To. Co! V SCHOoUv -.l -,LoT P . I AND CUT P0WM OW AB t Lesser of Evils FINNEY OF THE FORCE ByTVJOlougMln 0 WMM tlfl U And TupIar Trees Toy O H MAEHIM6- . 4T--"-: Tt WBZ. MRS. SMOOP.' PO VB STiLL HAVfc fes THAT CUR WHICH f 1 vbz. tSoT last ponY you I WtEK ? PARC CALL ) I'LL. HAVB VOU KNOW YHAT DOGS ARB VERV NOBLE ANIMALS wny ' EVEN IN YH BEAUTIFUL WORLD OF BOTANY. CAMIMES HAVE LENT THEIR. WAAE$ TO THINGS !! -0.RT2 VBZ TALKlN' L I ZfVuiT PLAKITS AN' FLOWERS? II uplcn ciiu DOrtwuv-wn I .H"K" II COIUE F10.VER. "Ss I J ncl OtAlPtfo " I AND THEN- II TOOl ' Ml - I . n 1. a Ml 111 1 1 1 UN I III II I III HI III I rr f A 1 HirtUl Z- 5. - 11111111,111 n, things-! -uv n rr'i pm, h i m. uni Along the Concrete Our Pet Peeve ftVTrWrt It T) cmijH, W. N. ) BOBBY THATCHER A Party To See You... By GEORGE STORM C06Mi IVB BEEH AWA &0 kUNU ky ' I6K BUT VASTS AMY TIMS CBTTIM' BACK TO THE HOTEL, TO SEB l" M. PITTS MAS V-p AHV MAIU TO GO Ort -7 NUMBER rOUR.... j M6VBR MIND THS ArtA.IL.... THERE'S SOMS fOUKS IM TO SES YOU..- THEVR6 SHTTINT IN THS &ID9 PARLOR IP WAS utt ir-v 1 tin A. BIT Ym" 3 Km 1?m (rwrlfht, IMt. W Tt Ml Sm 1 tut e 7' V -7 COULOUT BH THB CONSTABLE TO 6EB WB ABOUT THAT BIG 'WINDOW W THB RrunOL HOUStS... F HE'D A SUSPICIOWEO AAE at ALU HE.O A COLLAK6U AAB IM THE LOBS'..., 4 MAYBE THAT V'NILLA EXTRACT I WAS AROUMO SELLtM'TO GET THE FIELDERS AAITT OIDNT TURH OUT SO COOOm". IF THERE AIKJT TOO MAHY OP 'EM I'LL. TELL. 'EM I'LL. GlVS N- TM THEIR AAONt BAS-K." S'MATTER POP Probably Wisbed To Use It For Attack By C M. PAYNE 075. r ( tJlf?; J C ATiOUT Te WAV ) ( Su6&eST,OMft MAW. V Mm. , f I COUlT i GEORGE WASHINGTON'S TRAVELS By jame, w. BrookT -.m hs, I I j j -Hl.A'jrtT .-,"" II M. By CALVIN TADEK -i i Y&SHINCBH vXX)CNVtO FBoM SbadTcw To T PEATH6E0 Of HS STEPSON, custb, w new ur cownv, viaaHiA. AurHxoH wiitvM tvxao THt.viowi. inp'i OF "JVC CPMLLnfctl rf A h.tt' nurd TUist aoc I vtn si- n J Off CU55C. tlCiW THt W'.KTtC AFTEfl, MjtW&WH HE WAS BAOi. tS KtW Sbbii WITH HEA00CACTb2ft 4T liMeuCMI. Ll eeiV u rAru kl- E ti oc.iwk,., tMOHCt't TAVtE LATHI PATt. 111 . ! rsl i i n w w ' MEH, I HAiE. OCOWM GwV AKt AM Alwyw! I tl'iflll t ll li Tl U T . Kteouw u Trit moTihY ended. rL if U rl 2A . : - 1 1 j'jm ii YAC HAVlNfl FlNJLLLV FNOFO WtAJiuWI Dim- .1. At FAECES -OvtCN m HEW YDOi. fet A5CEME CE IHMOQALOBJ IN Wto MMO& KKH TENDEELY EMBRACED TH05t 6ATtSSaWe7 ttecan9. -They uita bape h.m gowpeEo at the ftx w he left J Lost Spud Find May Bring Growers Gold Development of the Peach-blow Peach-blow Colorado's Hope. By a H. M.tg.r, Asaocl&t. Hortlcul-turUt, Hortlcul-turUt, Colorado Agricultural College. Colorado potato growers may Increase In-crease their Incomes at least $100,-000 $100,-000 yearly .within three or four years as the result of the finding and development of an almost extinct ex-tinct strain of potatoes known as dark red Peachblow or Red Mc-Clure. Mc-Clure. . The lost strain that Is believed to have originated 30 years ago was located on the McClure farm at Car-bondale, Car-bondale, from which It took Its name. It was a eport or seedling of the Peachblow potato. Although this potato was produced pro-duced in 1908 at a farm near Car-bondale, Car-bondale, all trace of It disappeared until 1927 when the college in connection con-nection with Its potato improvement program, collected 250 varieties of potatoes for comparative tests. In this collection was the dark red Peachblow. It had been obtained from a Teller county rancher. Later the same strain of potatoes, which commands a premium of 10 to 15 cents a 100 pounds on the market mar-ket because of Its attractive color, was found on a farm in El Paso county and a ranch In Teller county. Farmers' Institutes Are Crowd Bringers in Ohio Although community funds for farmers' institutes have shrunk from $38,000 to $23,000, or 40 per cent, the total attendance or number of persons served has continued to increase, in-crease, a rise of 14 per cent In the last two years, according to J. P. Schmidt, supervisor of farmers' Institutes In-stitutes for the agricultural extension exten-sion service of the Ohio State university. uni-versity. . Funds, he says, have decreased but requests for help are greatly increasing. in-creasing. Costs averaged 8.3 cents per person attending in 1931-32, of which the state paid 2.3 cents. The total attendance was 709,395. Institutes, which are open to any citizen In the community and which have been publicly supported since 1S80, were held In all 88 Ohio counties. coun-ties. Wayne county, home of the Ohio agricultural experiment station, sta-tion, had the largest number of Institutes In-stitutes and highest attendance In 1932, 16 Institutes with a total attendance at-tendance of 37,760. Eighty-four per cent of the 89 members of the present regular farmers' institute staff, Schmidt pointed out, are farmers. The average aver-age person In this group rates as successful in some farm enterprise, college trained, or a master farmer or master homemaker. Twenty co-operating state agencies agen-cies furnish some talent at no cost or for expenses only. Among these are the state department of agriculture, agri-culture, the Ohio agricultural experiment exper-iment station, farm organizations, state department of education, Ohio Bankers' association, state department depart-ment of health, Commodity Marketing Market-ing associations, and the Ohio Council of Churches. Spray While You .Prune The home fruit grower can do much while he is pruning his trees toward lessening the number of Injurious In-jurious insects he will have to combat com-bat during the succeeding growing season, says a writer In the Rural New Yorker. The close Inspection of Individual trees necessary for this work makes it impractical for the commercial orchardist, but It Is a time and labor saver for the home grower with a few trees and little spraying equipment While prun ing keep a sharp lookout for egg masses, larvae and cocoons. Amonz the many things to look for, the following may be mentioned: The gelatin-like masses of eess of the tent-caterpillar, which are usually placed on small twigs: frothy eee masses of the tussock-moth; the coccoons of the codling moth which will be found under the loose bark of the tree trunk; pear psylla, minute mi-nute Insects which often hibernate under the rough bark on the trunks ; twig-girdlers may be controlled by burning all twigs found on the ground. Sod Saves Soil A heavy rain at the soil erosion experiment station near Tyler, Texas, Tex-as, recently washed from cotton fields more than six tons of soil per acre. At the same time only one and one-half tons of soil was removed re-moved where the land was planted to lespedeza, the slope and soil being be-ing the same. No soil was removed from fields of the same kind sodded to grasa. These rates of soil loss were determined by actually meas uring the eroded material. Agricultural Jottings The value of all cows In Twin see was $17,005,000 In 1930. Use the self-feeder for sows unit pigs to save labor, time, kn faa cleaner and make cheaner raina with hogs than under the hancT-feed- lng system. More than 200.000 bushes of th common barberry have been destroyed de-stroyed In Ohio since 191& bniin they scatter black stem rust to wheat Some have been found In every county In the state. ""AUJNQ 1t:- The use of llbr, h. i Beading, 'ZcZ li evening The nu 1L rowed In New York V ' from 48,000,000 volum about 60,000,000 ln J H' for serious books ! if ' H tory, political sclencT? various trades and prof!! V Increased beyond pronom " L. Tolman, direc&H T y vision, education dnr; ( York State library rarS,r (j " I v. AYl CHILDdti don't gain don't grow sfro;; don't keep wel j The stomach Is nottoblsJ a child is finicky about fJjJ every sluggish girl pated. Instead of a lot of give a little pure sym.l You'll see a change in hours! In a couple ofwtth l youngster will have the a young animal l It's true, mothers, for it'. J California syrup of figs jp health for the little onea. Pale, sickly children vhoseh' are always coated, and never really hungry, are & from stasis. That means a fc colon; a colon clogged via They need the "Cajifornlj i ment" You can give this tre-c yourself, any time, anrwhffit simple. Every druggist hast Bia syrup of figs all bottled full directions for a babe $1 years or child In his teem licious taste makes it delist use; no child ever tired of li) Start tonight, giving wz' cleanse the colon of every k" poisonous waste. ThenaiK or so, every other day, mil child's appetite, color, weigt;! general health tell you all sl ness or constipation has bee:-, quered. When a cold or severe six has sapped a child's strati stamina, remember Califorcia i of figs. I If you Kant to get reolroi get the real California syn', Do not accept any oottle Bk i not say CALIFORNIA Sjinipo! And Then Ho StwU An intellectual is one who 15: tlon that he can't enjoy at L Cough... Mi Pueblo, C, "My husband is time was coc run-down ait? grippe. He lo' steadily, coup quently, in t cough waj i that he coul:-1 sleep at V ittA nA inn:;. could scarcely eat a thine O. H. Toler of 226 B. IW "A friend recommended Dt.b Golden Medical Discovery. It is month until the cough disappei" he felt like eating. He gains ' and strength and seemed tobe' as ever." Sold by druggists ew Writ, le Dr. Plana', dlnle, Bnffakr for fre medical .dries. i "Ye ton c "Or "Ye I VI. r Head COLD! Pat Mentholatum in tht nostrils to relieve I congestion and clear the j breathing passages. -. ENJOY A TRIP Hf SALT LAKE B I NEWHOUSE I 4 I & 1 j. t , I j MBS. J. H. WATEKft n e nITTTON. W1 400 Rooms-400 B $2.00 to $ ; e f- Family Rw j; O 4 or S Person Bm wit Bt THE KOTO NEWHOW ALT LAKB v.. y |