OCR Text |
Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Friday, April 1, 1932 Sally Sez Intermountain News -Briefly Told for Busy Readera PLAN ROAD WORK. FREE OFFER ltiADE. CROP PRICE IS SET. RECEIVE FREE FLOUR. ENTER BAND COISTEST. contest sponsored by the Price chamber ot · comme-rce. The contest will be held in the near fu- ture. AMERICAN FORK, UT.-The teachers of the Alpine school district have proffered three weeks of free instruction to complete a full school ypnr and come within the state requirement of eight and one-ba If months. PROVO, UT.-Road projects In Utah county, including the Santa- ThQ' come from "•tu.tdy 1toc.k"• They're of a bar d;r, healthy ••Jeatlae:r" a The lnter-rnoant ain baby chleb, Bed: 1tand the mount ain weat her. HEWLETT'S Supreme Jam CHICKS CHICKS CHICKS All leadina varJetia. Don 't Bay Them BUd· Celded when tt is eo euy to 1ee t he ehiclta, th• esp and the ftoeka from whleh they eomft. Brother, protect tha t dollar u never befortt l White Leghorns, now onl7 lOe eaeh. BROODERS - The world~lamoua Sol-Hot. Coal. oil or ele<~trle. FEEDERS AND WATERERS lOondih, "The Pride of AU Amerlea.• Chicle. pallet and ben sius B.AMSBAW H ATCRERIES. Salt Lt.ke, Ut. Tl.MPANOGOS H ATCHERY, Pro?O, U t. Write, Wire or CalL YOUR WOOL CAN BE EXCHANGED FOR FINE WOOLEN MERCHANDISE WRITE Original Ut ah Woolen Mills SALT L.lrKE CITY • ' YOUR OPPORTUNITY lttil 111 Ex-Cel-Cis School of Beauty Culture 271-W SMtll Wtst TI•JII, Silt lW CIIJ, ltd •.-llllut ~·s l.trpst ltufy Sdlll wllil tM ll tnt aa lttaJaWL Jllll II trptlzltlll tlslt ISSifll JH I ,.-flltull ••st lrlttl.r ltft~WJUII. llflrL. .Ask You Dru.geiat For APEX Antiseptic Solution AN INTERMOUNTAIN PRODUCT All the world loves a lover--except when be and his sweetie are h olding up about forty cars behind them-Arkansas Gazette. Asl ror 'FOREST DALF··Potatoe Chips THIS WEEK'S PRIZE STORY ' lntermountaln Made Goods ~uy ~ahuble • tent~ three pqrpoeea: (1) The trade ma.rk of lntermountabl Made Good. auurea the eastomer of the • e.nuineneu of the artides parehased, f or It repres~nts a eerlain wd1·known et•dard 1D produeUon • (2) The price of lnlermoantain Mad• Goocb m llkc• them cconomienllt desirable by both the rich and poor, (3) The " home market., policy unites t he :people in the mutual weJl.fare of "hom.a a»roaperit)'." LEAH THOMPSON. Milford. Ut11lt, P LAN SPRING PLOWING •• • with use of ''Caterpillar" Tractor -oldest and leading track-type tractor. Prominent farmers owe success to these machines. Write for descriptive catalogs. Landes Tra1!tor & Equipment Co. Salt Lake City and Tremonton, Utah CLAUDE NEON LIGHTS ELECTRICAL PRooucrs ConPounoN 10&6 So. Main Salt Lake Cit,. -CO.: PORTER . .. ..., . . WALTON . Mountain ,·; Grown ·'-"• . ' '(' SEEDS'·,":'TREES ,. Sc.nd ForFree Seed ftnd Nunery Guide Book Addres8-Salt Lake Cit)', Utah. ''Mahatma" may be literally translated "great soul," but the word is liberally translated t o mean leader, master or teacher. Ask Your Groc.e.r For "TWIN PEAKS" BRAND PEAS - BEANS - TOMATOE S Roeky Mountain Packing Co. Salt Lake City, Utah PEPBB GASOLINE Packed With Power The reason why grapefruit continues to be popular is that there is more in it than meets the eye. $5 00 • per w~k will be paid lor. t11e btt!ft 50-word article on ''WbJ )'OD u~ lntumountaln made - Similar to abovtt. Send your atory in pro~e or verse to Intermountain Flroducts Column, P. 0. lJo:.: 1545. Snit LRke Ci11·. If :rour noty lt.PJitara i.n this • ealumn yl'a w1ll rcedve cheek tor ••• :hould Hoods'~ $5 oo W. N. U.-S. L. C. We<k No. 3214 ·fltTS· MILK'S HIGH PLACE IN FLOCK'S RATION PRICE, UT.-82 schools from three states have already entered the second annual intermountain band POULTRY quin project, were d1scussed recently at a meeting of tbe Associated Contractors of Utah wlth the Utah county commission and members ot the Utah state road commission. OGDEN, UT.-Weber county will be the first county In the United States to receive tree flour for d.Jstributlon to tlte poor, due to the et· t orts ot M . G. Pence, district man· ager of the Farmers' National Grain corporation, and L. W. Nims, local chairman ot the American Red Cross. ROCK SPRINGS, WY0.-$6,000 worth ot men's :fancy apparel, in~ eluding silk shirts, !ancy shoes, riding breeches nnd golf clubs, was stolen from Keith's store by burg~ lars who descended through a sky.. !lgbt. OGDEN, UT.-Tbe Utah Can· ners' assoclntlon and the Utah Cnn· · ning Crop Growers' association committee have agreed· on the following prJces to be paid for toms· toea this season: Grade No. 1, $10.M per ton as against $13 In 1931, and grade No. 2, $4.50 per ton as agaln.Bt $6 In 1931. '£he acreage will also be reduced tbls year. POCATELLO, IDA.-Fi<e days work was required to repair the damage caused when several hun· dred ton ot rock and dirt, loosened by spring thaws, hurtled down a mountain side two miles south of this city and swept away 100 feet of 14-lnch pipe which en rrles n portion of the water to supply the city re.servoirs. GOODING, IDA.-By voting a special 4-mlll tax levy to be applied on the coming yenr·s nssessed property valua tlons, the Goudlng school board will be able to finish the full eightwmonth term this season. BEAVER, UT.-Accordlng to the survey of the Sawtooth range between Beater and 1\Iilford now be. 1ng made by state and forest offt· cials, the deer nre increa.sing 1D spite ot the annual slaughter each fnll. PRICE, UT.-A celebration In honor of the miners of Carbon coun~ ty to be held September 5, sponsored jointly by the Price and Helper chambers of commerce has been ap. pro>ed by the Price bOdy nnd is now being considered by the Help-. er chamber. POCATELLO, IDA.-The sugar beet industry has bee;n responsible for doubling nnd trebling prices ot farm land J.n Idaho, Alma. Linhholm, secretary-treasurer of the Idaho Beet Growers' association, stated at the weekly chamber ot commerce forum luncheon recently. · PRICE, U'l.'.-Approxlmately 2,000,000 tons ot coal were mined by 20 Carbon county mines between July 1, 1031, and Janu:lry 1, 1932, ~cording to a report prepared by Robert J. Schultz, deputy state coal mine inspector. Totni tonnage for this period was considerably high~ er than that ot the preYious six montlls, according to the report. TWIN ~'ALLS, IDA.-A prelim· tnnry report on municipal finances by City Cler·k G. M. IIall ShOWS a prospective treasury balance ot $18,000 ot· ~10,000 at the end of the fiscal year, April 30, despite an esti.. mated reduction of about $10,000 1u fiscal year total receipts. This represents a $30,000 saring from the full year's budget. POCATJ'JLLO, IDA.-A total of $15,454.76, which Jncluded a sn"V"ings ot $10,2.15.50 out of opern.Ung ex.. penses allowed the Bannock county sherifrs of[\ce In Ure 1931 budget bas been returned to the county, ae-cording to the sheriff's annual report filed recenUy. SALEM, UT.-Ten barrels Jllled with large sized trout \'\"bleb hnd outgrown their quarters at the Springville 1'lsb hatchery, were donated to citizens o:t Salem recently and turned loose in Lnke Snlem. TWIN FALLS, IDA.-Cbarles Simmons, representing the state flsh commission nt Boise, was aldM by Bubl sportsmen recently in plant~ lng 1000 tagged rainbow trout at Salmon falls tn Snttke river, the Bnhl men locntlng Ute mcst suitable pools for the fish. Sl\IITHFIELD, UT.-Plans for a community beautlflca.tJon dny are being discussed by the city councU. The date will be set as soon as the wen tber pe.rmits. DRIGGS, IDA.-Tcton county el· ementary school wm finish tbeir wQrk nod clo~e its doors April 15, one month e!trly, on acconnt of Jack of fonds. REJ.Jl'ER, UT.-Extenslve plana are being formulated by the Jend~ ing cir1c orgnnizntlons o! Helper for the unique summer holldn) known as lleiper dny, June 0. Efficient Egg-Making Food at Present Prices. Milk, at present pri~es a relatively cbeap food, cteserves a place ln the poultry ration. declares P. B. Zumbro, extension specialist ln poultry husbandry for the Obi(\ State university. If liquid milk Is av•llable on tbe farm. this form Is the cheapest to use. For every gallon ot liquid milk fed daily to eacb one hundred hens, the protein conce.ntrnte In the mash may be reduced 5 per cent, he says. If liquid milk Is not available, dried milk may be used tn the mnsb. When llquld milk Is not available for the poultry rntlon, the following grain-mash ration Is recommended by tbe poultry· specialist. For the mash : gronnd yellow corn. 40 pounds: groun d wheat. 20 pounds; ground oats. 20 pounds; dried milk, 5 pounds; meat scraps, 15 pounds; salt, 1 pound. For the grain : cracked cornt 50 pounds; wheat. 40 pounds; and oats or barley, 10 pounds. A moist masb fed In tbe summer will stimulate the poultry appetite and result In Increased production. says Zumbro. The regu lar laying mash may be used In making the moist mash. For each 100 hens, 2 pounds ot the mash moistened with milk or buttermilk until !t Is In a crumbly con· dltlon, Is sufficient for a daUy feeding. It 1s not necessary to have special feeOers for this speela 1 moist mash : It mny be fed on top ot the dry mash In the dry mash hoppers. Alfalfa Urged as Best Crop for Poultry Yard In making a choice of all forage crops tor poultry yards. select alfalfa. advises a writer In the Prnlrle Farmer. Alfalra ls a permanent crop that wUI grow throughout the entlre season without cultivation and can withstand more bot. dry weather than almost any other crop. Bluegrass is good pasture. If you cannot have alfalfa you may wnnt to sow a temporary crop and we suggest oats tor the early part of tbe year and sudan grass ror tbe rest ot the season. Plow the oats during the later part of May or early ln June and seed the sudan grass. Farmers are getting away from tbe Idea of a permanent poultry yard for their fowls. They are mo,~Jng their houses each year to new ground. Many ot them ose theJr meadows or pastures tor range, thus gfvlng t.be birds ground that bas bo.d no chickens on It for one to two years. Grass for Chicks The barer the ground. the smaller the chance to raise good chlcks. So a good many yenrs of experience and experimentation have proved. Early ehlcks are always more desirable, becnnse they grow better. have less mor· taltty, the cocherels are ready for ma1ket earlier and hence bring more money. and the puiJets are ready to lay earlier to the fall aod winter when eggs are high. As to why bare ground doesn't help raise good cbleks, aothorltles point out that a good growtb of alfnlfa. clover, or bluegrass Insures a liberal supply of green reed. is much more sanitary thnu bare ground, and te an insurance against disease. Laying Hens Need Lime The 1mportnnce of keeping hens well supplied wll.h Umestone, oyster sheU or some other form of calcium carbonate ts emphasized by results obtained Ln investlgntlons. Where no limestone or oyster shell was fed. but tbe ration wA.s otherwise the same. the ln vestfgators observed that: The hatchability of fertlllzed eggs was dlmlnJshed, finally beeornlog zero. The percentage of luferille eggs in· creased. Fewer eggs were laid. The eggs became smaller. The eggs became lighter. The chicks hatched vrelgbed less. Feed for Pullets P ullets should use about 25 pounds o! feed per <lay. The proportion o! mash and scratch grain will vary from equal parts ot grain and mash op to two parts of grain and one ot mash. The total amount consumed is the im~ portant tltlng. Any attempt to Increase consumption of DJash by ellmi· natlng grato should be done cautious~ ly. It Is Important thnt hens mnln· taln their body weight, and rather beavy feeding of grain will help to do thls.-Amerlcnn Agriculturist. Flnd Stone Tools Tha t W ere Used by In d ians How the Indians of lhe Mimbres ,·alley lived and furmed 2,000 or 8,000 years ago Js shown by dtscoT· erles mnde in a great 125-roow pueblo or prehistoric apartment house by Paul B. Nesbitt, leader of the Logan Museum-Southwest expedition, spon· sored by Beloit college, Beloit, Wis. The ruins of the cultural area be· lng explored by Mr. Nesbitt and his students date, nccordJng to the archeologists, between 1000 B. C. and 200 B. - c. ln a statement to Science Service, Mr. Nesbitt snld: uone co.cbe o:t twenty·five stone hoes was found on a stone ledge n. tew Inches ahove the floor ot a room and another lot of forty-eight stone hoes was found in association with a male skeleton. Such hoes are rare and the number above represents a greater total than hns ever been found in any single ruin 1n the Southwest. "With another burlal was :found a copper bell, n product not manufac· tnred here, but brought by trade !rom Old Mexico. Only one other such bell has been found In this area. \V. BrndHeld, state nrcheolog· 1st ot Sautn Fe, in 1924 found one at Cameron creek ruin, near Hurley, N. M. The bell ls of great Importance, ns It throws additional light on the age of these rulns. "The early Inhabitants lived In pit rooms (entirely snbterranean); later the houses became semlsubterranean and finally were built entirely above ground."-Kansas Clty Star. 11 I just postp one it!" uNo, I don't have 'nerves.• You can't have them, and hold this sort of position. My bend used to throb around three o'clock, and certain days, of course. were worse than others. "Then I learned to rely on Bayer Aspirin.'! The sure cure for any headache is rest. But sometimes we must postpone it. That's when Bayer Aspirin saves the day. Two tablets, and the naggmg pru.n is gone until you are home. And once you are comfortable, the pain seldom returns! Keep Bayer Aspirin handy. Don't put it away, or put off taking it. Fighting a headache to fmish tlie day may be heroic, but it is also a little foolish. So is sacrificing a night's sleep because you•ve an annoyi!J.g cold, or irritated throat, or grumblinll tooth, neuralgJa, neuritis. These tablets always reheve. They don't depress the henri, and may be taken freely. That is medical opinion. It is a fact established by the last twenty years of medical practice. The only caution to be observed is when you are buying aspirin. Bayer is genuine. Tablets with the Bayer cross are safe. Precept-a of Franklin Should Be Remembered The proposed $5,000,000 Philadelphla memorial to Benjamin Franklin sbonld have some place In It calling attention to tbat American's 13 suggested virtues and precepts. on which the club of Washington and Sioux City, Iowa, patterned after the Junw ket club of Franklin's day, are founded, says the Pathfinder Magazine. They are: '"Eat not to dullness, drink not to eleYa.tlon. Speak not but whut may benefit others or yourselr, avoid trl:fUng conversation. Let all your thlngs have their places; let eocb part of your business ha\e Its time. Resolve to perform what you ought, perform without tail what you resolve. Make no e:xpen~e but to llo good to others or yourself, 1. e., waste nothing. Lose no ttme; be always employed In something useful i cut ofT n11 uunec· essary actions. Use no hurt£111 de~ ceit, think innocently and justly and, it you speak, speak ncc>ordlngly. Wrong none by 1!ofn~ injuries, or omlttlng the benefits that are your duty. Avoid extremes; :forbear resenting injuries flo much ns you think they deserve. Tolerate no uncleanliness in body, clothes or hnbttatton. Be not disturbed at trifles. or at ar· cld(.)nts, common or unavoidable. Be chaste. LnJtate Jesus and Socrates.'' FATIGU E? Iron R oad• fo r England A number of cast.Jron roads are to be lald In England, following successfull e."'qleriments with short section<::. The advantages of such roads are said to be that they are guaranteed to wear about twice a9 well as stone and three times as well as wood; that the short projec>tlons on the surface of the metal pre<ent skidding, and that British Iron can be used Instead of foreign ma.teriaJs:. The cost of building Iron roads ts reported to be the sa me as for the best wooden pnviog. The metnl ts laid not In long sheets, but by putting triangular castings on a cement base. "l{ewest Hotel HOTEL TEMPLE Nativea Firat "Were there good and clleap rooms in tbe resort where you spent your holidays?" uPienty of them ; but the natiYes lived in them.''-Ex.change. SQUARE 200 Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room. Dr. Pierce's Pellets are beet for liver, bowels a.nd stomach. One Htlle Pellet for & RATES FROM ~1.50 ]ll.d oppolbe Moracnt TaiNnusck lu.ative-three for a cath&rtic.-Adv. ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. All ehoald be taught to speak Scientists Fight Pests calmly and sensibly In public, but necessnrHy to be orators. not Pep without gump fs e.."'Cnsperating. With Natural Enemies Entomologists, It is reported, are gradually changing their method of wnrtnre a~Ainst our Insect foes. In· stead ot attempting to discover etfectfve Jnsectlcldes, they are now seeking methods of cnu~fog tnsects MEN and women find that those recurrent spring colds reduce to wn.r agninst each other. Fortu· real· ne,~er nate1y the trisect world Is their alerrness of .nUnd and body. To avoid such nnjsances, ly at peace at any tfme. The tredoctors W.....ise them to increase their bodies• store of Vitamin mendous reprodurti.ve powers of A. It is recognized that Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil this form of Ji!e are offset by tbe contains a wealth of this valuable protective vitamin ••• as bugs, ftles and birds which prey upon them. well as Viumin D, so indispensable for sound bonos and The hest wny to keep tbe coddling teeth. Children and adults find the emulsion ao easy, pleasant moth under control, it bns been way of raking cod liver oil. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N.J. found, is through a tiny wa~p and Sales Representative:, Harold F. R.icchic & Co.,Inc., New York. likewise the meally btl~ Is best kept under control by Its natural enemies. Instead of searching for insectlc1des, therefore, the senrrh ts for the natural enemies of the pest it is desired to combnt and these are then imported or fncJ•ensed by protection from lhefr natural enemies in turn. Food for thought Novela Oangeroua Giha Professm· Rogers of Massachusetts Tech thinks that It Is extremely hazardous to glve anyone a popular noveJ as a present. "'No one can possibly tell what may impress 'Great Awlt Elsie' as a snitable title." he expln.Jns. ''I, myself, when but te-n )~ears old, received a copy of "Under Two F(ags' from a relative who bad the Idea that the book would give me a tTulllful nnd interesting picture ot U1e Civil war. It was many years before I was nl· lowed to read the book."-Boston Globe. £otieura Talcum Soothes and cools Father's face and reruoves the after-shaving shine, comforts Baby's tender skin and prevents chafing and irritation, and gives the finishing tonch to Mother's toilet. Price 25c. Sold everywhere. Proprietor.: Potter Drua & Chemical Corp., Malden. Mass. 'fry Cuticara Shaving c.-.eam. MADE BY THE HAKEBS OF IVORY SOAP Constipation in Chicks Chicks that are suffering from con· stlpatlon will as a usuoJ thing stand In a humped position and are toactive. When emfttlng droppin.I.!S they stralu and often move bnrkward and mnke a ch£>t:!ping sound. When constipation Is noticed. give the chicks trom oneeia:hth to one-hair pound of epsom saJts for 100 chleks--depenrtln~ on age, In a mo1se mnsh. After l'hat. so the correcti'fll mny not ba't'e to be repeated. change the teed to correct the condl~ tton.·-Oklahomn Farmer. Salt Lake City's • Because it makea disbeB sparkle, because it makes SO% more suds, because it euts grease like a flaab,. because it lea-ves no eeum, because it aoftens water, because it is easy on hands, Ozydol ia he finest ooap in the world for diahwashing. Procter & Gamble • |