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Show THE MIDVA LE JOURN AL Intermountain News -Briefly Told for Busy Readers LABOR IS EMPLOYED TURKEl': CROPS LARGE CillLD WELFARE MEET ALFALFA BATTLE PLANS INDIAN SUMMER PUZZLE How to train BABY'S BO WE LS Babies, bottle-fed or breast-fed, with any tendency to be constipated. would thrive if they received daily half a teaspoonful of this old family doctor's prescription for the bowels. That is one sure way to train tiny bowels to healthy regularity. To avoid the fretfulness, vomiting, crying, failure to gain, and other ills of constipated babies. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is good for any baby. For this, you hcme the word of a /amous doctor. Fortyseven years o practice taught him just what babies need to keep their little bowels active, regular; keep little bodies plump and healthy. For Dr. Caldwell specialized in the treatment of women and little ones. He attended over 3500 births without loss of one mother or baby. DR. w. 8. C-'LDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor's Fami{JI Laxative The Array of Jan! "You can study chemistry?" "No, this is my wife's dressing table."-Woc henshau !Essen). F SORE THROAT IVE minutes after you rub on Musterole your throat should begin to feel less sore I Continue the treatment once every hour jor five hours and you'll be astonished at the relief. This famous blend of oil of mustartl, camphor, menthol and other ingredi· ents brings relief naturally. Musterolo gets action because it is a "counterirritant" -not just a salve-it penetrates and stimulates blood circulatioll and helps to draw out infection and pain. Used by millions for 20 years. Recommended by doctors and nurses. To Mothers-M usterole is also made in milder form for babies urul small children. Ask for ChU. dren's Musterole. The Rea1on ''I think I'll name my last story 'Boomerang. ' " ..Yell, then it's sure to come back." SALT LA.Klll CITY, tJT.-It Is e..~:pecte~ that the Utah turkey shipment this year will total over 20 car loads. BOISE, IDA.-Educa tors, social workers, medical men and public spirited ci Uzens from all parts of Idaho will convene at Boise, Nov. 24 and 25 at the call of Gov. C. Ben Ross for a state White House ronference on child health and protection, following the work of the national conference held in Washington some time ago at the call of President HOOVP.r, MORONI, UT.-Despit e very cold nights, the summer days are swel· ling the buds on the trees at Moroni. Gophers frolic near the railroad tracks, and many of the migratory birds, already south in other years, seem undecided as to where to make their winter homes. CEDAR CITY, UT.-Poultr y men of this section are being urged by specialists from the Logau college and the county office, to begin a meat chicken business, rather than compete with other sections of the state and the west in egg producing. The climate here was said to be Ideal for fattening birds, with plenty of feed available for that purpose. Pays to Add Wheat to Ration of Pigs Clean the Spray Rigs Before Winter Storage HER OES Pew are free from 'the occa•lonal constipation tba"t comes from Irregular eatJnQ aa.d burrled llv· in&. To release yo-urselt promptly from -the heaYlaeu and &lut&Q:hhoess that: comes oow and 'thendclnk a cup Oil:' two of Gftr- fteld Tea.. IU a.ctloo fa natural end ·C ert:alQ. completely harmle40. Spleaclld, too, for <:hlldreo. At )JOur nearest drusr 4t~ Clever ''Your daughter is very handy with a fly-swatter." "That's the result of tennis, m'boy." iserab le with Backache? I A Jolly Old Tar and Brave A MEHJUANS remember Stephen Det'atur as a brilliant American naval officer, and as the man who offered the famous toast "Our coun· try! In her Intercourse with . foreign nations, may she always be In the right; but, right or wrong, our coun· trY!" But if tt bad not been for a brave American seaman Decatur might never have uttered those patri· otic words. It happened during the war with the Barbary pirates. Decatur, at the head of his men: had overhauled and boarded a Tripolltan sblp, the captain ot which had ~reacherously murdereil Decatur's brother after surrendering to the young American. In the desparate hand·to-hand fight which followed, Stephen Decatur singled out this captain for his victim. De..:atur lunged at him with a boarding pike. but the barbarian parried the blow, caught the weapuo and, wrenching It away, lunged at the American. Decatur had drawn his sword and as he parried the bow, his weapon broke off short at the hilt. The Tripolitao struck again and wounded the American In the chest and arm and a moment later the two were clasped in a life-and-dea th strug· gle. At this moment another Tripolit~.tn came up from behind and raised his long curving Moslem blade to strike Decatur on the head. It was apparently all over with the American commander for there was none of his crew within reach except for one man, a seamau named Reuben James. .James had been In the thick of the fiJJ:ht and both of his arms were disabled. But when he saw the predicament 01 the officer, .James did not hesItate for a moment. He leaped in and with his bead caught the blow aimed at Decatur. But Decatur's troubles were tar from being over. The two men, locked tn each other's arms fell to the deck. Wrenching one arm free, the Tripolitan drew a long, keen knife. But in the Bash of a second before he could plunge It into the body ·of the fast-wea\(en ing Amercan, Decatur managed to draw a small pocket pistol and shot the barbarian through the heart. So terrible was the wound which brave R~uben James suffered from the blow which he bad taken to save his commander' s life that his comrades felt sure he would die. Happily, however, he recovered and lived to serve his nation in the navy for more than 40 years. • • • • A nagging backache, with bladder irregulariti es and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling may warn of certain disordered kidney or bladder conditions. Users everywher~ rely on Doan's Pills. This time-tested diuretic has been recommended for 50 years. Sold by all Jensen ELMO SCOTT WATSON FAIRFIELD , IDA.-Only one pound under California's 16-pound· Idle spray rigs are deceiving. Most er-about which there bas been so persons believe that such machines much publicity-a 15-pound baby wear out in use, but Prof. M. F. Barrus has been born to Mr. and Mrs. of the New York State College of Ag· Orville Manwell. The babe, a fat riculture says a winter's stnr!ll:'e. when and healthy son, is believed to be the machine bas not been cleaned. may one of the largest- if not the largdo more damage than a season's spray· est- ever born in Idaho. Its In g. The -easiest way to dean a spray weight Is over twice that of the rig is to flush It with water and then average ~aby at birth. fill the pump and pipe lines full of old BOISE, IDA.-Work on the crank case oiL A better way, Profes· Owyhee dam is several months sor Barrus suggests, Is to remove the ahead of schedule, the department plungers, valves, valve cages and the of the interior, bureau of reclamalike; scrape and clean the parts with tion, anounced recently. The ir· a wire brush. Remove ail sediment rigation project is 88 per cent comfrom the Inside of the pump and apply pleted with but 71 per cent of time a thick coating of cup grease to the elapsed. surfaces. The parts should be put. IDAHO FALLS, IDA.-Despi te bac'k t"n place so •hey will not be lost seasonal declines, Idaho's labor sit· during the winter, be warns. uatlon has shown a comparative improvement of late, according to Cleaning Work Harness Thomas McDonough, state labor director. McDonough said that To overhaul and clean a harness It southern Idaho harvesting opera· ill best to take It apart and make tions and northern Idaho increasl'd such repairs as are found necessary. mining activity had tended to abAllow the harness to soak thoroughly sorb the surplus brought about by in a washtub three-fourth s full of decrease in lumber operations and warm water containing a handful of the laying off of 400 men utilized sal soda. As each part is removed, in forest fire control. s~rub tt well with a stift' brush and lay It aside. A scrubbing board will SALT LAKE CITY, UT.-The alfacilitate cleaning. While the harness falfa wilt disease is to be battled In Salt Lake county. The county Is still wet, apply harness oil with a A Lost Crave in Poland will secure a 1Q-year lease on two sponge or a cloth. Rub the oil well OME 20 years ago there was Introtracts of land, one at Union and Into the harness. As the water dries duced into congress a bill approthe other at Sandy, both of which out "'f the leather the harness oil will priating "the sum of $5,000 or such are now heavily infected with the work ln. As the parts are oiled. place part thereof as shall be necessary • • • bacteria. On these tracts 30 dif· theru in a pile so that the surplus oil to bring back from its burial place ferent varieties of alfalfa and the may drip from the top pieces to the in Poland . . . the body of Joel Ba.r-same classes grown in many differlower pieces. Use harness soap or low. . • •" Despite a favorable com· ent parts of the world will be plantdressing to finish the process. mittee report on that bill, it was al· ed in patches. Under natural condl· lowed to die and so o. last chance was tions the most resistent variety lost to play tardy honor to a forgotten Sugar Beets would survive if any did. The propatriot who sacrificed his life In the America consumes ever more a11d fessors hope by close observation 11ervice of his country and the site of more of sugar per capita; tn 1910-11 to determine the best variety and whose long·neglect ed grave in foreign the most healthy plants and by seed she used 79.7 pounds per person; In soil !s no longer known. selection to develop here a type of 1929-30, 110.2 pounds. The country Who was Joel Bftrlow? He was a alfalfa that will starve the bacteria does not produce the bulk of this native of Connecticut, a graduate from to death. Salt Lake county bas sugar. Its cost represents one of the Yale in the class which included Noah 30,000 acres of alfalfa in jeopardy. heaviest drains from our national Webster, Oliver Wolcott and other fupocketbook. With rising consumption SALT LAKE CITY, UT.-The ture notables, a chaplain during the of the commodity per capita. and with state road commission spent $621,Revolution, the editor of the American fewer horses to which to feeG grains 335.04 during October, of which Mercury of Hartford, Conn., and the in the industrial and port regions, the $140,000 was for maintenance , author of a famous national patriotic question is. what lands In our national $18,000 for equipment, salaries and system of agriculture can be devoted epic poem, "The ColuiLbiad." general expenses, and $463,000 for A friend of Washington, Hamilton, to sugar beets rather than cereals so general construction work. Salt Lake· county saw the expenditure that our country will support more .fefferson and Madison. Barlow was of $127.000 of this latter amount; Am~rican growers and fewer Cuban sent by President Madison in 1812 as Utah county, $57,000; Carbon, $45,peons, working not for themselves but an envoy to Franre to warn Napoleon 000; Kane, $37,000; Iron, $29,000 for the great sugar planters, to whom of the grr.vity of the situation created Tooele, $22,001}; Uintah, $33,000 we also pay our heavy tribute?-Ida ho by French depredation s upon American shipping and to demand that they and Washington, $17,000. • Farmer. cease. After waiting in Paris for sevOGDEN, UT.-The orders for eral weeks without seeing the emshipment of wheat to China is peror, Barlow was finally told that greatly improving prices in the west according to local grain Timothy has been found to make a Napoleon wished the conference transdealers. good addition to sweet clover in the ferred to Wilna, Poland, where the e peror was directing the march of pasture. WENDELL, IDA.-Move ment Is his legions into Russia. So to Wilna underway here to erect a swim· • • the American envoy went, a trip of ming pool and skating pond. A sharp increase In hog production more than 3,000 · mHes, muct of It in Colorado Is Indicated, says T. H. IDAHO FALLS, IDA.-W. Y. over a bleak country of bad roads and Summers, extension economist in farm Cannon, Idaho manager of the Utah management for the Colorado Agrl· few Inhabitants, and It took him three Idaho Sugar company, announced weeks to make it. cultural college. that $1,250,000 will be paid grow• • • He was accompanied by his secreers for beets delivered in this The most desirable veal carcass Is tary .md nephew, Thomas Barlow, and season. about six weeks of age and weighs scarcely had they arrived In Wllna FARMINGT ON, UT.-A 11 orfrom 90 to 120 pounds. The flesh than they found that Napoleon had chardists are advised by H. P. should be light colored. Too high col· I pa~:~sed them on the road in the night Mathews, district agricultural inor Indicates age and that feeds other 1 and that ~h.ei: trip was in vain. spector, to clear the weeds from im· than milk have been fed. There was nothmg for them to do but mediately around trees to prevent • "' • to take their weary way back to Paris. damage by rodents. Last year White birds should not be "finished But on the way back the elder Bar. much damage was done as a relow. exhausted by the cold (most of off," as the saying goes among Eng. sult of r:eglect and many trees wet·e the ime It was 14 below zero) .and l!sb fanciers. by feeoing yell ow C(}rn completely gilded. Much of this the hardships of the trip, fell ill and or yellow cornmeal. for It gives the could have been prevented had died on December 26, 1812, at Zarnosurface plumage a yellow or brassy proper precautions been taken. wlec near Cracow.. His nephew coloring. planned to bring his body back to SALT LAKE CITY, UT.-Range • America but Fate intervened. Napoleon water supplies are scarce in Utah Cull potatoes, steamed or cooked, was retreating with forage generally dry anrl from Russia and the may be fed In limited quantities to Cossacks were ' short, making the hauling of water following fast In his hogs. • • • and the trailing of sheep necessary wal1e. So they buried Joel Barlow In ln some sections, according to the Charles A. Scott of Topeka, secre- Polish soil and the younger man bare· range, weather and livestock retary of ~he Knnsas State Horticultura l ly made his escape from the Cossacks port of J. Cecil Alter, federal society, derl11res that Kansas bas and finally reached Paris. meteorlogist in charge of the Ralt raised 3.000.000 bushels of apples tbls i Bad congress acted on the bill lntrof,ake weather hur!'n n. year. I duced In the Fifty-first congress, Joel • • • · LOGAN, UT.-Record s at the Barlow would not now he a forgotten local plant of the Utah l'onltry asUorn and wheat have about the hero. But the ravages of the World sociation show that during the pu st same fePding value In a ration for war erased every trace of hie grave and year bu~iness increased 3"> prr lambs. Alfalfa hay as a feed for lambs America's debt to him is still unl·ent OYer the fi.gnr!'"' ,r ln~t yPar. prorlnl'Pt1 gu ins at about 10 per cent paid. lf'SS Of'r )()() puunds than SUdan bay. (@), 1931. Western Newspa.per Union.) Agricul tural Notes -ny .. I S Feelin g Stale? ' Sally Sez For gott en Investigation Proves Value of Such Feeding. I Evidence keeps piling up as to the many ways In which wheat can replace other feed grains in rations. Wheat can be converted Into pork more rapidly than Into any other meat, although It can be used In al· most auy live-stock ration, according to investigation s at the Colorado Agrl· cultural college. Wheat Is equal to corn In feeding value, pound for pound, many expert· ments have shown. wblle several ex· periment stations report that !t Is even more valuable than corn In the hog fattening ration. Shriveled and shrunk«>n wheat is usually richer In protein than plump wheat, and If not too badly damaged. is fully as valu· able for feed as sound wheat, It is stated. Tankage should always be added to the wheat ration for maximum gains and econumy of produ<'tion, the report states. "Wheat is somewhat richer in protein than corn, but It requires the addition of protein to balance the ra· tion fur pigs fed in the drylot. "Wheat snhuld always be coarsely ground Of" rolled for swine. Experi· menta Indicate that this type of prep· aration saves 15 to 20 per cent of It!! feed value. lf grounil too floe, wheat becomes a pasty, indigestible mas!! when fed. Soaking wheat may in· crease Its value slightly, but not enough to justify that practice." Friday, Noverm ber 13, 1931 It's no fun to have ice all around you and no job. Help to insure winter employment for yourself and your associates by Patronizin g Home Industry. These Brands Are Intermo untain Made And Deserve Your Suppor t ... '! ~ ,,, •': ' ' . HEWLE~Tt~S ·?~ :. . ·· -sup~e~e ~·:J.;~~Jr ./ ;;:~ . ....· ,..,, ' ' . Insist on Pure Virgin Wool Blankets :E IZK:f·B R'A:N D' ·.·.... : .·rn·/,.·I:· . -.s·..·· · .. a· ·K· L .E ~-- · 'PE PB B Made In the GASOLIN E Intermounta in West ORIGINAL UTAH WOOLEN MILLS Salt Lake City THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY Our wOol is shipped East and made into cloth, Then built into clothes and sent back here. The same journeys are taken by grain and hogs And even the hide of a steer. Our rives are running with power potential, Our forests and mines furnish fuel; We live in a climate that hasn't an equal, Still we follow the old, old rule. Oh! Boo!!it for the West, you fel· lows with brains, Build mills and factories here; Quit sending our produce 'cross country on trains • Develop our West land so dear. MRS. A. F. SMYTH, Nampa, Idaho. Packed With Power • WANTED: Names of Agents to sell~ mas Cards tn 1931 through your printer. Plans for 1931 being made •· w. Send in your name for details which will make your selling easier without the troubles, mistakes and dela~s you bad In representing eastern faetories. Write W. N. U.-P 0, Box 1545, Salt LakejCity. CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS ELECTRICAL PRODUCTS CoRPORATION 1046 So. Main Salt Lake City What's Past Is Gone A person's a fool to go digging into the past.-Wom an's Home Companion. 'ON OUR 2DAY VACATION' FIT-WELL ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. Braces Artitl.clal Limbo Trusses Crutehea Arch Supporu Extension Shoes Elastic Hoiaenr Established ln Salt Lake In 1908 Ph. Wu. 6Z64-Satisfaet ion Guaranteed 135 W. Third So. : Salt Lake City, Ut. Come to Salt Lake City on This 2 DAY Ask Your Druggist For APEX· K- HAND LOTION AN INTERMOUNT AIN PRODUCT Mummies of dogs that were pets of Indians 2,000 · years ago, were found during excavations in the Southwest. "GRAINS OF GOLD" THE WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL "Makes Cream Taste Better'' Western Made For Weste.rn Trade Ask Your Grocer ~s tl' • 00 paid per week will be for the best 50-word article on "Why you should n s e Intermounta in made Goods" - Similar to above. Send your story in JlrOse or verse to Intermolln· tain Products Column .P. 0. Box 15-!5, Salt Lake City. If your story appears in this ~:olumn you wiU receive ehet:k for·-·· tl' • CL!5 00 "AU Expense" Rate 2 ~E!S~N~ $10 -All For- Ineluding room accommodation s meaJe:, garage, and special eatertain• ment as described below: l, Front Room with bath One night %. Full course dinner First night ll. Breakfast and lunch Second day 4. Car storage One night B. Two theatre tickets First day 6. Two theatre ticketa Second day Good Week day-Week end-Holida)'ll When possible write for advanee reservations and mention ~·All Expense,. plan. Card will be mailed you. Otherwise request card when registering. *'Cheaper than staying at home~~"• HOTEL NEW HOU SE W. E. Sutton C. W. West Gen'l tt\gr. Ass't Gen'l Mgr, Salt Lake City, Utah Would You Pay the Small Balance Due on a Fine NATIONA LLY KNOWN BABY GRA ND PIAN O IN YOUR LOCALIT Y? The Credit Manager o} a large piano firm will sell this instrument for the smllli balance due on lease, rather than bring it back to their warerooms. Just continue small monthly payments. This piano is almost brand new and offers exceptional value for someone. Prompt action essential ••• must be moved within next few days. Write G. G. SHURT LEFF, Auditor CONSOLID ATED MUSIC CO.. 121 S. Main St., Salt Lake City • • Correct Little Tommy had just started to school. When he got home his unele was there, Tommy told him he had received 100 in arithmetic. His uncle said to him in a teasing voice, "How much would .seven roses, three roses, and two roses make?" Whereupon Tommy hesitatingly replied, "A bouquet." Plant That Floats The water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) is a type of water plant that floats on the surface and sends out roots which contain air sacs, thus e abling the plant to float and not depend on an anchor. 'l;he flowers are blue or lavender and resemble the flowers of the hyacinth-h ence the name. Bombing planes have been used with much success in combating malarial mosquitoes in the Panama Canal ZQne. The St. Chapelle in Paris is considered the most perfect specimen of pure Gothic architecture . It wa1 built by Louis IX In 1245. |