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Show Friday, January 22, 1932 THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Jy, are two very useful assets nnd Developing Powers of each derived to a certain extent from Observation in Child observation. BEST TO LET COW FRESHEN IN FALL Several Excellent Reasons for the Practice. Usually the cow bred during the latter part of January or in , Feb· ruary wlll freshen In early fall and will produce more butterfat tbrougb a twelve-months period than when bred to freshen to the spring. "The cow that freshens in the taU does not sufl'er from hot weather and Salt Lake City Directory Teach a child to be observant ot CRJSliON & NICllOI~S 'Vhen there are decisions to be everything around him, and you give ronde. it is possibJy the man or wom- ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS him one of the sounrlest stnrts In nn who has been taught to ohser,·e Office and Laboratory 2!!9-2~U s. WeRt Temple St., S:alt Lake City, Utah. P. 0. llfe. for observations are very rarely from childhood who stands t11e best Box lGSG. Malllng envelopes and prices furnished on reQuest. WRSted. chance ot making happy ones. The Japanese are a race who appreciate to the full the value pf obOptimistic Doll servation, and their babies are One of the most popular noveltl~s taught it unconsciously almost from their cradles. They learn It as a diHplayed at the Leipzig tnlr last fall gsme. The Jnpane,se mother will was a fortune-telling doll which angive her child 11 tray of obJects to nounced hopeful prophecies of Gerlook at tor a :t'e\V minutes, then the many's future. An ingenious device tray is taken away and the child made it possible for the doH to distells her all about lts contents. It fs play cards announcing short but "l{ewest Hotel quite a thrWing gnme when here are pertinent opinions in n highly oplots of th1ngs to remember, and chil- timistic splrJt. The doll was named Madame Lenormand, after the fadren take to it \·ery qulcJ:;l;v. To be able to observe swiftly and mous fortune-te11er. accurately will often help one '?ery When one is old he can get a kick substantially In Hfe. To take to one•s out of annexing $10,000 and out of surroundings quickly. and to be ahle to sum up characters fntrly accurate- very little else. - Salt Lake City's Illes during the period of her heaviest mUk flow as does the cow that freshens in the spring," suggests A. 0. Kim.t"eY ot the dairy extension office at the North Carolina State college. Annual Cattle Show of Buenos Aires. fascJnattng. Paris~like ~bop windowa; arc light$ glaring on wel1-dre9sed E world's largest market Is mldnlg\lt crowds In brllllant Calle anned tor a five-block tract in Florida; cafes, casinos, high-priced uenos Aires. Argentina. The restaurants and hotels, all packed market will have access to all with chattering. laughlng people. l!lndrailroad& entering the city and also less places ot amusement, including direct communication, by tunnel, with tbe great Grecian Colon theater; and, the city's port. on billboardst many names famtliar to No city In tbe United States Is so Broadway: Tltta Schlpa, Cballapln, important to us as Buenos Aires is Splnelll, Mlstlnguette. "Pellculas to Argentina. It handles four-fifths Parlautes," they call the ••talkies." of all Argentina •s trade, and houses And still it grow~. Here lands the 20 per cent or all the nation's 10,000,- Immigrant stream. Bearded men in 000 Inhabitants. All Its 2,000,000 peo- boots, carrying bundles: wondering ple are either Europeans or of Euro- boys and girls, chattering in strange pean descent. This ts true of only Slav or Latin tongues; bewildered one other Latin American city-Monte- mothers. their heads wrapped In video. shawls, hard-handed women bent from Three times as big as Spain's larg· work, carrying babies and still more est city, modern Buenos A.ire&-as ex· bundles-you see them aU come slowpa~;~ded and rebuilt In the last 30 years ly down gangplanks fl.-om European -is conspicuous In all tbe world for ships to stand a bit on the busy wharf Its magic growth. and stare at Buenos Aires. The whole 25.000-mlle railway sysArgentina needs these. · She has tem of AJgentlna has Its focus here- one-third as mucb land as the Unitthe finest railroads tn Santh America. ed States; but only as many people No great motor highways radiate from as live In and about New York city. the city, because the vast pampas af- Or about one and one-third per square :tord no road-making materiaffi. But mile, as against 490 in the British by rall f!._n. d dver Buenos Aires han- Isles. dles "\\re tban halt as much freight Italians, Engllsl1, Spanish. French, as the port of New York, and the net Germans, Swiss, American, all mingle. tonnage of shlps calling each year ts So cosmopolitan Is the city tbat lts equal to all that passes through the great papers-La Naclon and La Panama canal. Prensa-must serve news from every· Not trade alone maJ::es it great. Its where. Their circulation Is enormous; social, artistic and political attrac- their advertising huge. The quality. tions rank it llDlong the world's most completeness and accuracy of whn.t dazzling capitals. To 1t flock the they print challenges the thought of rich, tbe tnlluentlal, the Intelligentsia every visiting journalist. Their abot all Argentina. "Our country as a sorbing Sunday rotogravures. their whole would develop taster," said one feature articles on sport, travel, inprominent banker, "it more of our ternational affairs. science, literature best brains would stay in the prov- and art-many by world famous writInces." ers-astonish the newcomer, at first. Stock Farms Are Enormoua. Then he reflects i this Is a great world Yet, although so many land owners city. It thinks like any other; and live Jn the clty, the swift, prodigious acts as Paris does, or Berlin, or New growth ot herds and farming on the York. vast 'tampos ls an economic pheModern but Exotic. nomena in thJa comparatively new Italian workmen with power drills co.untry. In Europe the Argentine vis- tear up good pavement9. New builditor Ia noted among hotels, resorts ings rise hlgher and higher. Air stu· and shopkeepers tor the freedom with dents stunt at Palomar field, and which 't be spends money. These lm-. Yankee free-lance flyers come pedmense Incomes are mostly from the dllng new planes. A man in fancy soli. gaucho dress, as obsolete now as old One Estancia tn Santa Fe province time wlld west cowboy gear, colls a. runs 50,000 cattle, and boasts of prize live snake about his neck and hawks bulls costing $10,000 each and up- patent mediclnes. A communist tries wards. There are 25,000 hogs, 1,200 to harangue a crowd, and police lead horses, a creamery making 4.000 him amiably away. Children ride pound& of butter daily tor e.."t'Port to tame llamas in the parks. A weazened England; a private telephone system, little man stru,ggles through traffic a rambling chalet set In an artificial with a huge basket of coconuts, and forest of Imported trees, swimming offers them to a world whicb seems pools. tennJs courts-a princely estate to spurn coconuts. 1:hat w~pld make even a Texas cattle Around the great Diagonal of the king dUmb with astonishment. Sfml- financial center grim, towering banks lar ranches lie near Buenos Aires; suggest \Vall Street. Sub·ways, long others are fnr away, on the pampas. suburban train~. screaming newsboys, Their number, slze. and money-mak- 50,000 football fans jammed before a ing organization amazes the tourist- loudspeaker on Avenlda de Mayowith se'hool-book memories of wood- you see this a city-greatest in Soutb cuts showing a ha.rd-ridJng gaucho America. swinging a three-balled lasso over his Its fog suggests Sun Francisco. Its head and chasing a longhorn steer- flat expanse Is like Chicago. The or an ostrich. vast plains beyond. with endless Nature ts kind to Buenos Aires. Up league~ of corn, wheat and cattle. tbe Patana are the majestic falls o:t conjure up Kansas, or the Illinois lguazu, and Ouayra, solemn and stu- pralr1es. And mules I Fat, with good pendous, ranking with Niagara and harness. they compete with trucks.. Vlctorla In Africa. Up the Andes and You see a team draw aside. to let a nnder the shadow ot Aconcagua- luxurious motor lorry pass hauling highe.st mountain In the Western glistening race horses out to the track werld-runs a cogwheel railway that ot tbe Tiajuana-like Jockey club. An lltts you in a few hours from green nnrumal organization this is. Its plains to Alpine heights and snow- downtown club-house, gorgeous as a drlfts 20 feet deep, where Argentine senate chamber, domJnates all others. 11oldiers train on skis. Winter' hotels A member may ask you to hunt are here now-a new St. Moritz. And partridges at a great estancia on the there Is ancient Cordoba, historic Tu- pampas. For many interesting hours tuman, the ramous baths ot Roeario. a train hauls you past queer big corn· And aa melons and oranges rush to cribs shaped Uke tanks; wind mllls i our East !rom Cnlifornia n.nd Florida, high-wheeled pampa wagons; endless 110 Argentina's fruits flow into Buenos rlders In flat black hats, baggy Aires. It lives well. Whole trainloads breeches, short bootst flying ponchos. ef fresh grapes come :from the .famed riding with short stirrups on clumsy "Vineyards ot Mendoza-and many saddles covered with sheep's wool reach our own markets. New York is Leagues of wire renee stretch far at one end, Buenos Aires at the oth· as the eye can see, aqd artificial er, ot a busy trade route. Now both groves of imported trees dot the pamsea and sky shJps senre It. And ships pas. You stop at a lonely prairie aYe "ceaReless shuttles weaving the station-for all the world like Kansas ta.brlc ot international commerce and west of Dodge City-where you are good wlll." to hunt. Partridge are plentltul; so ~merican 1nvestments Heavy. are ostriches. Mutual trade has brought huge Riding back to Buenos Aires yon American Investment!!! to Buenos take the day coach, to bear cowmen AlreP.t notnbJy ln. packing houses, pub- talk. It ls like rl(llng, In old days, lie uHHtles and banks. Two Yanl.:ee in the caboose ot a cattle train from conqerns alone control more tbnn 100 Texas up to Kansas City. Everybody light and power units In Argentina. talks herds, horses, foUder. calves, Here. too, you see the new policy ot branding n,nd market prices. Mention great American corporations applied, hunting. "Our boys never waste a by which now their Argentine em- cartridge on a partridge," says a cow. ployees are encouraged to become man. ''They use a horse-hair noose at<><:kholders. on the end of a pole-they Just ride Youth, vitnllty, sheer enjoyment o! the blrd down and loop that over hls living. they are the attributes ot neck, And, anyway roasted armadillo Buenos Aires. SWnr new motor cars; Is better tban partrld&e-not so dry."· (Prepared by National <Jt,ogra.nhJa 8oolet7. Waehlnatoo, D. C.J-'WNU Service. TI uThe rush of the summer work Is over 1n the fall. and the owner has .· ~ It's common sense HOTEL TEMPLESQUARE WRBN doctors all agree that your body needs Vitamins, it's common sense to see that you get ~hem. Scott'~ Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil contains both. Vitamms A and D 10 guaranteed ~tency. Vitamin A builds resistance: to winter colds. Vitamin 0 aids growing children m the development of bones and teeth. This emulsion bas no fishy flavor. Mea an~ wom711 find it a pleaslng, palatable way of taking cod laver ~il. Scott Be Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. Sales Rc:prescotatlve, Harold F. Ritchie 8c Co., Inc~, New York. more tlme to care for tbe cow during this heavy producing period. Then, too, the prices for butterfat are usually better to winter than in summer. December butterfat often sells tor 10 to 12 cents a pound more than May and .June butterfat." Mr. Kimrey finds that a majority ot the creameries LD North Carolina 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. RATES FROM ,l.SO Co""' tM &oct & BOWM radio J'TOQYCIM "Ad"Wftturiny witll "" Lud:Mr" on Stendav nig.U ac 1:30 JO. M . oNr Statton• KBJ Loa A.~a. KOTN Portland, KFRC Sa,. Franoiaco, LlsTEN TO bas a surplus of butter dnrlng the summer months but a scarcity in winter. This means that much of the product must be consigned to the large central markets at a sacrifice tn price. In winter It lo bard to supply the local demand. Since tbe pay· menta made to dairymen tor thelr butterfat are based on tbe price which the creameries receive for thelr rnanutactured butter, lt seems only wise to try to sell the most fat when the best prices may be obtained, Mr. Kimrey snys. A little more attention by dairymen to the breeding period ot their cows would make possible a greater annual income per cow. be suggests. J.ut opj>o1itc Mormo• T111bcrn4clc ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mp. KOL&ractZ.,l(VITaeoma.aMKFPYSJOoko~ Not Hard to Deal With Feed Shortage Problem Recent feeding Inquiries from certain sections of tbe country indicate a shortage of feed for dairy cattle. Under such conditions as these, owners of dairy cattle are confronted with the problem of buylrlg some feed or of reducing the herd. They are. as a rule. reluctant to reduce the berd. U they can only get the herd through tbe winter they feel that they can then carry on to better ecooomlc advantage. It Is not very good business to buy feed, even at tow prices. and then turn around and sell 1t to tnherently poor producing cows, says Hoard's Dairyman. The first step tn an intelligent solution of this teed shortage problem Is to find out whether one has any inherently poor producers and 11 so which ones they are. The next step Is to actnaily get these cows otr the farm-sell them to the butcher. An empty stall or two will make more money than a poor cow or two when one must buy feed. The tblrd step Is to make ond feed good rations to the remaining good cows even if some of the feed must be purchased. Quickly Real Rashes, Eczema and All Forms of Itching, Burning Skin IrritatWns. Vacation Land All Winter '-ong Bathe with the Soap, anoint with the OtntJnent. Relief comes at once and healing soon follows. Splendid roads-Lowering mountain ranges-Highest type hotels-dry in· rigorating air-clear starJjt nightsCalifornia'• Foremost De1ert Playground & Clt•"•Y P ahn8prin2 CALIFORNIA Query "I say that the world owes me a • een ve HASING YOU • mt es. • • • to tell You • • • • • • You've Lost Your Oil" stays up in your motor and never drains away. Only Germ Processed Oil actually pene• trates and combines with metal surfacea. Two cars raced along the highway east of Abilene, Texas. The second driver finally -ertook the leader and signaled to stop. "'I've been chasing you twelve miles to tell you you've lost your oil," he called J. W. Bell. You need that extra protection durin3 the starting period, when almost half your motor wear occurs. Oils not Germ Proc• essed drain away, leaving parts unpro- tected. Germ Processed Oil stays on the Mr. Bell found that a rock in th" road had knocked a hole in the job to cut down starting wear, giving crankcase, allowing the Conoco Germ your motor longer life, with fewer repair Processed Oil to drain out. bills. It is the safest, surest lubricatioD 10 But examination of the motor showed you can buy•• no damage done. The "Hidden Quart" bad protected the motor! Change to Germ Processed Oil now a& the sign of the Conoco Red Triangle. Only Conoco Germ Processed We neither encourage "dry crank· case" experiments nor guarantee success under all conditions. But unsolicited letters from motorists, now in our files, tell of this and hundreds of other runB with empty crankcases but without damage. Oil offers the extra protection of the "Hidden Quart" that Benefit of Drinking Cups We understand some tests were made In tbe Iowa State College of Agriculture and as a result, cows given free access to drinking cups produced about 6 per cent more milk and about 12 per cent more butterfat than cows turned outside to drink at a trough. As near as could be de- termined tlle cows dr'lnk about 18 per cent more water from the buckets than tbey did from outdoor troughs. They drank about ten times eveey 24 llours.-Amerlcau Agriculturist. s Cultivate apathy. It Is better than llving." A statesman can't afford to have "llow are collections?" letting things get on your nerves. new ideas until they are popular-. Since the educatlona1 work of the There is a continual fanning mill action going on in all walks of lite blowing out the ineffectual and lnefflcfent. Just as you clean the chaff from your seed grain, you take out the cripples from your dairy herd. You must go further, however. There are many cows that look Uke cows, pretty fair CO\VS, that are fool· log you. Only tbe keeping ot individual cow records will show you these cows. They are the "Blue Cows." U yonr herd 1B to be as profitable as It can be they must' be found. Not only the fanning mill to weed out the cha1r, but the sieve of production records such as are furnished by the Dairy Herd Improvement associations and the statewide cow testlng association are necessary.-Mlnnesota Farm Bulletin. Wrtt• Cre• I:t you fear mal;::lng a mistake you 'When a man is going to be tried won't make It, Mistakes are made by a mb:ed jury of men and women, when you nre not thinking of them. be Insists on a clean shave. dairy council bas been under way, but- Keep Fanning Mill Going Sun8hlne Soap 2Sc. Ointment 25c. and GOc. Proprietors: Potter Drug & Cbemic:al Corp.,. Maid~ Maae. Butter Consumption ter consumptlon bas stendJiy Increased throughout tbe United States. At present. government reports ot July 1, 1931, based on production and storage holdings. show 24.000,000 pounds more of creamery butter were consumed the first six months of this year than last year. ThJs ls three ounces per person throughout thf! United States. lf this increase bas been maintained for the last six: months of the year, It will be an Increase in cnnsnrnptlon of 20.000,000 pounds more than tl1e total surplus holdings of 1929, which broke the price ot butter 12 cents a pound. Other causes have doubtless helped, but this educational wor"k has been ot out· standing value at this tlme.-Hoard'a Dairyman. The Ideal THI HIDDEN lti'AitT ••• THAT NEVER DRAINS AWAY CONOCO GERM PROCESSED M 0 TONRAH 0 I L |