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Show Sally Sez CHOICE OF CHICKS IMPORTANT FAUiuR . f. '.m High Producing Stock Best Guess for success. Along the Concrete Our Pet Peeve ', : i . II I I a l I t.vmr riff 1 1 Ji ViM of ex wx; 1 i, ill l,Ll l I K-v ws, . i rwmmmtMMiMMMi r& A mr Md masmmmMmm mEx ar, w -i ... ! .-..vx , 'iii n iv M"r . . as v 11 isBrreww't" swt : THE FEATHEIUiEADS Br Oaborn ISUY TrtAT MACMmS S VAKUHr, Fi-IK J1 50f T FOW ALMOST A SON9-- AMD Ychj kmow ixa calbvs amp urrtBTbviS UUC ONI JUfT II . h """-"W, a r iiiiim mil . mm I I j WHAT Trl r WjHBN I WPO(. Vou THA.T OliK. ,. f,AM ACCOUNT OVERDRAWN JJ Oh, the Neighbors Wrla te-l woprR MllIiillllMII VV6 CANT J BB CAUSE THB If VJ AH JUIiimmilll SAV MOW? rJ6li-HBeRS ARB " V J S xf ALWAYS TWINS- OR. -7' 7 VBAH-Voil I J GBT-flMG- SOMETHIMG- ? THOUGHT J ti CANY AFFORPj- FINNEY OF THE FORCE Or a Piece of Pie 't-Sh- II herb vet ft fc-I set vitzJl oi bjet , A IsSr s Jap c?r Tu'r Jill. t "-.'rm m.-yl JI.: ' " II t wij'iL J J SmTTCR POP- Weil, Well, Is That How It Happens? By C M. PAYNE ily tf rzFBsSzri wukijj "ii1 irrn hoMaxv, om t4'- l fstAXi v4at Aiore? L M V fCeiSTAiNW ALA Ert f vf i r :? ThtBBSrnchtM Ik.) BOBBY THATCHER Two Cups Of Sugar... By GEORGE STORM THB IDEA OP RUNNING "TO THE NEIGHBORS BORROWING JUST AFTEF5, ') WIQ'INU IHIO THB HEICHBOHHOOD -. AMD I'D MADE UP MV MIND 'D HA.V5 VECjy UTTt-E "TO DO WTH THAT WOAAAH ---.YOU MARCH RIGHT T DOWMTOWU, CBT THAT SUGAR, AwO 1 TAKS IT BACK TO HER... S I 3 By Prof. .V. . Bcott o t " rlcuiiurai WNU Bervlc - . irnmor whn bought healtny chicks from high producing stock ..ton fhn Initial step toward making money in the poultry business busi-ness this year. If your flock has produced well with a comparatively low death rate, take a 101 i w yourself for having done a good job at feeding, cleaning houses and yards, and keeping up the health of flir. hut also elve a lot of credit to the hatchery which supplied you with chicks, and put in a repeat or der. nils should be a fair year for nmiitrvmen who know how to keep down expenses and at the same time to keep up good production, and the selection of the right kind of chicks Is an Important part of the problem. In addition keeping the chicks healthy by means of clean brooders, brood-ers, beinar sure to never overheat or chill them, and not cheapening the quality of the feed are important impor-tant . - About 110 chicks for every 100 hens now on hand are needed by the poultryman to provide for nor mal production next fall There Is no good reason for not buying the usual number of chicks; more money will bo made with houses filled to their normal ca pacity. With storage stocks below aver age, there should be a brisk stor age this spring, which should prevent pre-vent a serious slump In prices. Tells of Green Crops Best for the Turkeys Forage crops are essential to the steady health and development of turkeys. Enormous quantities of green feed are consumed by them. Several of the green crops that are suitable as forage crops are alfalfa, sudan grass, rape, bluegrass, red clover, oats or barley, rye or wheat, and wild lettuce, advises a corre spondent In Successful Farming. Alfalfa Is considered the front rank forage crop on which to run turkeys. It is perhaps the most widely used. Sudan grass Is a good dry weather crop and Is suitable for areas where dry summers are frequently experienced. Tender shoots are constantly forming and this provides the growing turkeys with ample green feed when It Is usually scarce otherwise. Rape is sometimes used as a sup plement green feed when turkeys have the run of a cornfield. It Is sowed In the field. The chief ob jection to it is Its tendency to be come coarse too soon. Bluegrass is good but It does not contain as much forage per acre as does al falfa. A good bluegrass pasture, however, will solve the green feed problem. Clovers are also desirable, desira-ble, except sweet clover which be-. comes tough and fibrous too quickly. The four grain crops oats, barley, bar-ley, rye, and wheat are good as early forage crops. They ripen soon, however, and thus become useless as a source for green feed. These crops are spring-sowed. Wild lettuce Is excellent where enough of a crop can be raised to amply supply the birds their wants. f AUNT IDA MAS COTTA I AMGHT 6B A COCO ID TO BORR0l I SHB ACTED KlNDA UKH 1 WAIT TlU, I CST BACK FROM "TVS TWO COPS PROM THQ WOMAH II I $HE DtDtfT WANT A LEND IT l . OOWMTOWM WITH riVS POUNDS OF 1 Mevr noOCT...... SHE ALWAYS - I I r,, eu1 . -.i I I. I SUGAR S6& LIABLB TOPUTCfP RUNNIM1 OUT AMD MOUXRtH' VjJ FlMO OUT WBteH The f,l MAKIKi'TMAT BATCH OP RAlSld AT MS WHEH WHEH I CUT H,MO THAT BR'MCS C- 'i HnTT' COOKIES TlU. TOMORROW ACROSS HER YARD) CO'K'tO THB J J THINGS RIGHT BACK J III UhhM M7.1 ' I. iii , i SwiMMlM HOLE. BUT WfilRS I V .. , ... -S llljr'.l' VVOy il II iic.riinnca WlTVt HER i ' II . . A , ,i i j y vs ju r,M. i i l jutL . "KEEPING UP WITH THfc JONESES" It Sound, That Way! SN Sir i2SW15- AvSST ACOBflHTS 1 1LPFt.ff--a. A J09 - I TAST I 1 MANO AROONO "THB TEA 1 A y y New York Farmer Gets Mass Egg Production L. A. Hazard, a farmer living near North Evans, N. Y cialms to have found the secret of intensive egg production. He says that he frequently gets two eggs a day .from a hen and that he has reduced the cost of operating his plant to about 8 cents a dozen eggs. His method is to confine each hen by Itself in a small cage, about 16 Inches deep by 12 Inches wide. The hen is provided with ample food and water, but is never released. All the 'energy which the fowl generates Is devoted to egg-laying. The hen Is kept from exposure to any of the numerous contagious diseases of fowls and from the fatal quarrels common to hen yards. As no exercise Is permitted, the fowl neven toughens Its muscles, and even as an old hen still provides pro-vides tender meat for the pot when It no longer Is profitable as a layer of eggs. New York Times. Feed Potatoes to Hens Feeding of cooked potatoes to nens Improves the ration by providing provid-ing variety and palatabffity. They encourage consumption of feed and thus Increase egg production. Unmarketable Un-marketable potatoes can be nsed advantageously for poultry. Raw Potatoes are not satisfactory for bens. A good way to feed the potatoes po-tatoes Is In a hot potato mash. By steaming or boiling potatoes nntll Hey mash freely, they can be mashed and mixed with equal per-ons per-ons of laying mash and fed to the hens while warm. Six to ten Pounds of potatoes for each 100 Jiena will be sufficient for one feeding feed-ing a day. which can be either at wn tr clghLPralrie Farmer. Our environment ha mich tot WUh our hapiuneu, thii who!, jf,TLi So why not try to do our bit Bem.mberin we're a part K, AND PATRONIZE HOME BiDCSffi a mi i i a nity-tnousana-year-oldfatift has been found in thn 'i - wu France. Utah High School of Beauty 3rd Flow C1IH Sldj., Silt Uki Cj, M III leant Culture Profissioi Imaim Ym t M lun ante! Hit IB uti m far Hi rttttl row dart ilSavwMaDbiia, anrn a w put, arnuiHitaanwiiaia nmi w writi l ur cjultjn. Ukam NAME ! ADDRESS.. THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STOEI Two tramps itopped thii mtrains asked for bite to eat: I gar. 'em INTERMOUNTAK. INTERMOUNTAIN lun, 1NTERMOUNTAIN homt-jron w INTERMOUNTAIN Jam. My biscuits were eonstrnctej From INTERMOUNTAIN flon. And now I see them doint Ten or fourteen mUes an hoar. They tipped their hats whea pmi( 'As gentle person should. Anyone can feel this gratefil Using INTERMOUNTAIN ii Sincerely yours, hrs. gene mm, - WiUer, to P. S. The followlnc incident mJj W pened this morning. m f 1111 iiD tils for i it tha .in i Suite sues, 4acc s"plea wll, IftllM her fas s ii of SPERE TENT & AWNING R Tents Awnings Csmpinj 8pp6 "Everythinf in Canru Getii" 270 S. W. Temple Salt hit & One-half million believen m fess Christianity in Sjrii, tei due to the French. I Jjchil its ( e imi fiild I to ASK TOUR DRUGGIST FOJ I r COLD AN INTERMOUNTAIN PBODOTi APES The trouble with getting ": ' troubla ia that the exits are wji hard to find when you want to h out. J mmmm, In Trade For Your Wool UTAH WOOLEN II'! BLANKETS Salt Lake City, Write for CaUlomMM-i GASOLINE Packed With Pogj Z BEETSUS; THE ONLY H03lESI!GAjj Although Lithuania jrodaa7' silver its coins in the me141 " lace vame oi ?iw,uva Place Your OrderKJj hr VaiflnMns. It, litb , rroiattMi Iris mt IcdMuUi kr4,7usK;li dick tntn j at us sistsMU m Htn Ik . , 3MIIi:totittiAS3--I FIREWORK; Everything For 4tn o t3?.. Priced write iu W H . BINT r " . . rei- ITU Ji 1 II I . 71 Int. yr awy lroJss Kery appers M u: cesrv clwca Week Nat S31 fU serf telai 1eai ft jo E ire, aj 'B I 8a J he: jsen 4 w! "A tl 'ra thin lerj i!or the Sght I cot I !hoc iirj, tact ! -3mse Phe ieip. ' They ."tea lie , '-:o d ires' tlea iK s Italj f for E lb " inl Hw -I i flea t -ft I J :ed |