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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER ADVISES HEAT OF RED PEPPERS FOR Intermountain News Briefly Told for Busy Reader RHEUMATISM HEAVY SNOW FALL. VISITORS ARE MANY. TEACH TnE JOBLESS. POTATOES ARE MOVING. REDUCED SALARY LOOMS. Brings Almost Instant Relief When the intolerable pain of rheumatism or aches orneurti or lumbago drive you nearly mad . . . don't forget the marvelous heat Nature put into red peppers. For it i this penetrating heat that relieve all pain as it soothes and gets down under the skin, seeming to clear up inflammation instantly. It is this genuine red pepper's heat that is now contained in an ointment called Rowlea Red Pepper Rub Asyourub it in you cart eel relief coma. There's nothing bet ter f or b rea king una danger ous chest cold, either. All druggists sell Row lea Red Pepper Rub in convenient jars. Cashew Not a Nut unknown a few Comparatively years ago, the cashew nut now rivals the walnut and pecan In popularity and may be bought In almost any drug: or grocery store. Last year this country consumed more than 5,000-00- 0 pounds of cashews. The cashew "nut" Is not renlly a nut, says T. Ralph Robinson, of the United States Department of Agriculture, but the seed of a fleshy fruit borne In clusters on a large evergreen tropical tree. Curiously, the seed Is attached to the outside, at the lower end of the fruit The cashew tree thrives la Porto Rico and other West Indian Islands, and a few trees hare fruited In Florida. " 11 n mi HOURS WITH STOP Yfil !D - ? IN , "" ,6 reaxs a cold irr o hours. "'Orivei it away in 12 hours. D H HejdacheNeuralgia-ain- 4 Modern Appreciation "Oh, Bertie Listen to that mar relous Jazz!" that's classical music "Why, 1 they're playing." "Well, It sounds good enough to be Jazz." Stray Stories. Watch lour Kidneysand Dont Neglect Kidney Bladder Irregularities If bothered with bladder ir- regularities, eettine UDatnitrht and nagging backache heed promptly these symptoms. They may warn of some disordered kidney or bladder condition. For 50 years grateful users have relied upon Dean's Villi Praisfl fh rnnntrv over nSold by all druggist Do&n's ills A DIURETIC It Works Visitor (at farm) There doesn't seem to be any work to do, yet I see you have a sign, "Farm Help Wanted." Farmer Oh, that's better than dog to keep the tramps away. Keeping Moving ness? Second Watchmaker making a go of it. busi- Oh, I'm still COLDS Musterole well into your chest throat almost instantly you feci easier. Repeat the Musterole-ru- b RUB once an hour forfivt hours hat a glorious relief! Those good colJ rem- ediesoil of mustard, menthol, camphor are mixed with other valuable ingredients in Musterole to make it what doc- because tors call i"counter-irritont- " it gets action and is not just a salve. It penetrates and stimulates blood circulation and helps to draw out infection and pain. Used by millions for 20 years. Recommended by many doctors and nurses. All druueists. Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and smalt children. Ask for Chit' arms aiusicroic. To Mothers gates assembled at the American Legion chateau recently for the first annual convention of the Second division, comprising Weber and Davis counties. Delegates were present from Ogden, Kaysvllle and Layton. InKAYSVILLE, UT. Special struction for the unemployed will be given In the Weber county educational centers. IIAILEY, IDA. During the past month 50 inches of snow fell on the Sawtooth national forest watershed. This Is the heaviest December fall ever recorded. CALDWELL, IDA. Members of Idaho-Orego- n Seed Producers' association will meet here to determine whether or not they will form a permanent organization. NAMPA, IDA. Bonds to the total of $9000 were retired by the Nampa highway district this past year, and it is expected that the district will retire $15,000 more of Its outstanding bonds by July of this year. IDAHO FALLS, IDA The past few weeks has witnessed an Increase In movement of Idaho potatoes from cellar to market, according to the U." S. department of agriculture. the NAMPA, for oc- WE CAN SELL AT GOOD PRICES 500 horses and mules every Monday alter January 1st, any kind, any age. Writ or win for information COLORADO HORSC A MULI CC. Stock Yards Osnvar, Cola, W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. Two hundred lo- Fifty-si- x of those present signed up as party members and elected chairman and other officials. a JUNCTION, UT. The 1932 budgby the Piute counly commissioners totaled $17,796, and U $5100 more than the 1931 budget PRICE , UT. Due to the fact that Idaho has dropped Its annual state band contest Idaho high schools are planning to enter the Price chamber of commerce contest April 14, 15, and 16. VERNAL, UT. Supervisor of the forest Ashley National reports twice the amount of snowfall In the Uintah mountains this year, compared wltn last year. MOSCOW, IDA. Cassia county is a possibility as a phosphate source, according to the bulletin written by Dr. Anderson of the University of Idaho school of mines. Dr. Anderson wrote np the bulletin after making a survey of some 2000 square miles in the county. EVANSTON, WIO.-T- he Uinta County commlslonors set the 1932 county budget at $G9,255, as compared with $72,255 for 1931, a reduction of $2405 dollars. BOISE, IDA. Idaho county will inert hero to determine In great part, the rate at which many classes of property will be assessed for taxation punoses. TWIN FALLS, IDA There have been fewer arrests and lower receipts In fines nnd costs for law violations In the last few months than for any other period in recent years. CASTLE DALE, UT. The Emery county 1932 budget calling for an expenditure of $00,015 has been adopted by the Emery county commission. This Is $15,289 under the budget LEWISTON, money." "Yes, to get back what he'd given her!" Sober second thoughts usually cur the next day. IDA. cal people met at the city hall recently and formed the Liberty party In Idaho, affiliated wth the national organization of W. H. Harvey. 1931 Matter of Business "They say Dave married Gladys dele- et adopted FOR First Watchmaker How is OGDEN, 25 IDAHO FALLS, IDA. County school trustees have adopted a resolution that school teachers' contracts for next year will carry salary cuts of 15 to 25 per cent Rural school sessions will be reduced by one month, all married teachers Whose husbands are employed will be discharged and only Idaho women, will be employed. TWIN FALLS, IDA To maintain high standards, the South Central Idaho Holsteln Breeders association la a meeting here reaffirmed a stand condemning the proctlce of selling young dairy aires without records or pedigrees. MONTICELLO, UT. A 40 mile per liour blizzard raged In the high altitudes of San Juan county until the roads of the county were completely blocked. . I)- -.- . About IDA. The North Idaho Horticultural society held tt annual meeting here recently. ST. ANTHONY, IDA. A report from the Targhee national forest supervisor's office here, showed that 219,243 sheep-inJ0875 eattla were grazed In the Targhee forest during 1931, and that lasses were lower than In any other year in the past decode. TALBOT, IDA. The Oregon S. I railroad has applied to the public utilities commission for permls slon to abandon the nine-miltrack leading from Talbot Junction to Talbot, where the Tetot coal m'nea re located. d e SILKS AND TUBS Green Feed Always Matter of Importance. The way In which the breeding stock Is fed and cared for from now until the hatching season will de termine, to a great extent the hatch ability obtained from the eggs. Experiments indicate that exposure to sun shine, green feed and milk are conducive to good batchablllty and strong chicks. This means that the breeders should have free range, except In stormy weather, where they will be exDosed to a maximum amount of If there Is green feed on sunshine. the range, so much the better. Between now and the batching season brightly cured alfalfa hay, clover or so? bean leaves will provide adequate green feed or If preferred from 5 to 10 per cent alfalfa leaf meal may be Included In the laying mash. If milk Is available on the farm the breeders should be placed In the preferred class to receive it If supplied In large quantities It may take the place of one-hal- f of the meat scrap given In In addition one the laying mash. should not forget to feed liberally of yellow corn and oyster shell, or some other equally satisfactory source of shell making material should be provided. In sections of Missouri where the amount of sunshine Is not abundant It may be advisable to feed cod liver oil at the rate of 1 per cent of the mash or 1 pint to 100 pounds of mash. Missouri Farmer. Pays to Add Milk to Hens' Regular Ration Milk, at present prices a relatively cheap food, deserves a place In the poultry ration. If liquid milk is available on the farm, this form Is the cheapest to use. For every gallon of liquid milk fed daily to each 100 bens, the protein concentrate in the masn may be reduced 5 per cent If liquid milk Is, not available, dried milk may be used In the mash. When liquid milk Is not available for the poultry ration, the following grain ration Is recommended by the poultry specialists. For the mash: around yellow corn, 40 pounds; ground wheat, 20 pounds; ground oats, 20 pounds; dried milk, five pounds; meat scraps, 15 pounds; salt one pound. For the grain : Cracked corn, 50 pounds ; wheat 40 pounds; and oats or barley, 10 pounds. A moist mash fed In the summer will stimulate the poultry appetite and result In Increased productloa The regular laying mash may be used in making the moist mash. Ohio Farmer. Valuable Pullet Plymouth Kock pullet In State college flock laid 301 eggs In her first year of production, E. W. Callenbach, of the college poultry husbandry department A Barred the Pennsylvania reported. No. 2S11, as she is known to the poultry plant workers, started laying September 16, 1930, when she was only 163 days old, an unusually early beginning for a bird of the Barred Rock variety. Her eggs average 25 ounces a dozen. Four sisters of the new Penn State recordbreaker laid over 200 eggs each for the year. Their production was 210, 234, 262 and 264 eggs. The dam of these pullets laid 227 eggs in her first year of production and 165 eggs the second year. Poultry Notes It Is possible to Influence the turity of chicks by the amount of ma- pro- tein fed them before ten weeks of age. Rough handling may loosen the air cells In eggs and cause them to lose quality quickly, even though the eggs are well packed. s Research at several agricultural colleges Indicates that young chickens develop more rapidly than do olden ones, and that It requires less feed to put a pound of weight on young chickens than on older ones. Hens eat about six pounds of grain a month. To fced this much grain to hens that do not lay eggs Is simply wasting the feed. Green feed of some kind snould be supplied to laying hens throughout the year. s s Crowding In a corner enjsea the birds to sweat; this. In turn, makes them susceptible to colds, chkkentox and kindred diseases. Many good pullets have been ruined In that way. The western states have a turke crip this year about 0 per cent smaller than last Sevcrul of the discuses that attack growing chicks ari definitely traced to a luck of vitamins In their rations Pennsylvania poultry yielded prod during the year, a total of $I.ihxi,(0 greater than the nearest competitor. Ohio. A reiri Inshowed l,7tH!.(KKMHK) eggs pro the state during the yer-lined utts valued al xi2.737.000 wmji in Him iiHijjiiii ii I mm mm p.''tn'D' i i !. ii ii" uinMumiuiijui w By DORIS M. THOMPSON ( SOME POINTERS ON CAKE OF BREEDERS UT. Due to better LOGAN", roads and traffic conditions, travel In Cache national forest in Utah Increased by more than one hundred per cent In 1131 over l!).'i0, according to report compiled by the officials. Visitors totalled 258,000 In 3931, while In 1930 only 107,420 traveled through the forest. UT. POVLTRy mm by McClur Newapapw IWNUttrvIn) Syndic!. Xjl-firjf,- straightened up from the tub soapy water and shook a hand free from the warm suds to brush some scraggly bair off ber face as she watched a sedan come up the road. Then she wiped her hands on the side of her apron and picked up the basket of clothes to carry to the lines strung across the yard. She was tired and In a few minutes Bee Williams would be there with an other new silk dress and more tales MIL of her wonderful life In the city. Already the car was turning Into the lane. Mil surveyed the wash flapping on the line; heavy flannel shirts, col orless aprons and bouse dresses. No silks there. Her eyes were bitter as she turned to greet Bee. "Hello, MIL Why, honey, what's the matter? You look as If somethln terrible was goin" to happen." Mil shrugged-- "Nothln' now could happen around this here place." "Aw gee, Mil, why don't you come back with me? We'd have a grand time In the city. Frank could find a Job for you easy." Mil's eyes looked almost hopeful, but she shook her head. "Oh, I couldn't take a chance. I'd never get away without pa knowln' It and If he did . . ." she shruddered. But he won't have to know. You can fix things up on the sly and slip off during the day when he and Eric are In the fields. Pa will lend you money enough to get there. I know what I'll do; when I get back Frank and I'll look around for a place for you and let you know when to come. How'l! that be?" Half afraid to agree, Mil nodded as- .wttti: "I must be gettin' back with the car now. Don't forget to come to our party tonight We're going to have the Baxter boys over to play," she called as she walked back to the car, her cheap red silk dress blowing around her knees. Mil remained seated awhile looking over the barren areas of Dakota farm land which stretched on every side. Scrubby bushes poked up here and there. She pictured without turning about the scene behind her. A three-rooshack, hideous and unpainted, four rooms, If one counted the place above set between the rafters which served as a place for Eric to sleep. Shfc thought of Eric and wondered if be ever felt as she did. Her thoughts passed on to her fa ther; hard Hank Hanson he was called. For thirty years he had clung to his claim, thirty lonesome years of hard labor for his women folk. First her mother, whose more genteel rearing, unable to stand the grind, had Mil to made her leave twelve-year-ol- d carry on her work. Now after sixteen years of It . . . Mil rose as she saw her father approaching from a, nearby field. She finished hanging the wash and went into the shanty to prepare the noonday meal. Her father entered but she did not look up. "Sorta late gettin dinner, ain't ya?" "Yuh, I guess so," she answered listlessly. "Suppose Bee Williams kept yon talkin' all mornln'. Saw her car from the field." Mil finished the supper dishes early. She had nothing nice to wear to Bee's house but she wanted to go. It would be her first party In three years. When she put on her old voile she looked clean, nothing more. Her father watched her preparations. "Hope you ain't plannln' on takin' the horse any place, MIL I've got to go over to Simon's to borrow his harness." She turned without a word and reentered her small bedroom. Every day she waited for word from the big city In the bordering state and always she was preparing for her departure, little things at a time so he wouldn't notice. Finally a letter came. Hank Hanson met the mailman himself and brought It In. "See you got a letter from Bee, What's she up to now?" Mil went to her room to read it "Come as soon as you can," she read. "We have found a lady who will wait for you." Bee had planned everything. The next morning Mil sent a note to Mrs. Williams with the mailman saying that arrangements were all right for the following afternoon. Everything was on the table at sharp noon the next day. Mil tried to appear calm but her eyes had a really anticipatory look for the first time In years. At 1:30 she was ready to leave and taking a last look at the only place which had been home to her she set out for the barn. Halfway there she was stopped by an excited clammerlng of voices near the road. A group of men were huddled together as If they carried something. "Your father's hurt, MIL He was out by the road when Henry Crabb't team of runaway horses caught hlun Will yon get a bed ready?" She stood as still as stone. "Don't take It so hard, Mil. I know It's a shock but maybe he won't be so bad off." Simon tried to console her. the hut "I'll Sie turned to fix his cot," she said In a toneless las. fir: Tbat night Mil went out to the barn, lifted a straw suitcase from the rig nnd brought It Into the house. Hank Hanson's eyes gleamed across at her In the lamplight as he lay on his cot near the wall. The doctor said he would He there the rest of his lite. - it. m ', A Cold Colds are common because people are careless. Prompt use of aspirin will always check a cold. Or relieve your cold at any stage. And genuine aspirin can't hurt you. Take two tablets of Bayer Aspirin at the first indication of a cold, and that's usually the end of it. If every symptom hasn't disappeared in a few hours, repeat. Bayer Aspirin does not depress the heart. Take enough to give complete'relief. And if your throat is sore, dissolve three tablets in water and gargle away all soreness. In every package of genuine Bayer Aspirin are proven directions for colds, headaches, sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis. Millions who used to suffer from these things have found winter comfort in aspirin. Rar AYF R tMii la 'v Ya AS SCIENCE VIEWS ADVANCE OF MAN m voice. - wnviv.', x . sent y fj ? wow w,vai' Erect Position Put Him Above Beasts. From a single fossil skull discovered In the desert wilds of Central Australia, Sir Colin MacKenzie deduces the fact or at least the conclusion that "the erect posture dominates man's Intellectual system, and shows that all intellectual development has a muscular basis." At first glance it Is a little difficult to perceive how a skull which is not a whole skull, but only a portion of one, and which Is supposed to be, and probably Is, a relic of a primitive kind of human being, can teach the scientist all that. It takes a good equipment of imagination to understand It. We must first Imagine the creature from which man is descended going on all fours. He had not yet assumed the erect position. He was then like any other beast of the jungle. Any bigger beast might tread him to death under its feet. Mastery was a matter of size. But one day, the beast, groveling in the tall grass, through some accident, or freak, or the help of a stump or a rock, gets npon his hind legs. In that position he sees above the grass. He Is enabled to observe the approach of the possible mastodon who will grind him to death, and to hid: from him. With his incident, this groveling creature's relative advance begins. From that time on, he and his species struggle toward the maintenance of an erect position. They employ craft; they learn a superior mode of physical progression, and thereby they attain a superiority over other crea- tures. step surely resulting from this point. Is the liberation of the creature's forelegs from the function of progression and their gradually Increased usefulness In providing easier means of subsistence. With practice, now, the creatures' front paws become hands. By development, one of the paw projections which once were mere claws becomes a which by repeated thumb, use becomes opposed to the other claws now fingers-s- rt thnt the creature can seize and hold any nrtlcle. Now the anlmnl who Is on the road to become a man has achieved a point of superiority to the ape. all of whose "fingers" are' In a row who does not possess the opposed thumb. Counting by thousands of centuries, the new "mnn" now gets beyond the ape by leaps and bounds. Without the opposed thumb the "mnn" would have remained In the half erected, or only occasionally erected position of the ape. Together, the posture and the opposed thumb A Pacific Salmon Unlike the Atlantic coast salmon which spnwn several times, the Pacific salmon ppnwn but once and die Immediately thereafter at the river spawning ground. All the five varieties of Taclflc salmon are members of the same one family but show Interesting As PIRN i mill made man the master of his own evolution. Of course at the stage noted the "mind" is yet to come. But it Is now an inevitable thing, for the improvement achieved makes the newly developed species gregarious. Superior individuals learn to dominate their fellows. Communication becomes necessary. Language is developed from grunts and squeaks. Society is organized. Thoughts are expressed. Thus from the bones and muscles of the legs, from the bones and muscles of the hands, an "intellectual development" has been evolved. The great thing was to get started, and the start was the erect posture, "Quod erat demonstrandpm," says the professor. But of course all this is not a demonstration. It is only a Sir Colin MacKenzie's speculation. notion about the dependence of intellectual development on muscle Is Lamarck was pure Lamarcklanism. a French naturalist who was born in 1744 and died in 1829. He was the forerunner of Darwin, who accepted his doctrine of "acquired characters." What Lamarck taught is concentered in his account of the manner W which the giraffe acquired his long neck. An ordinary antelope who lived in a South African region where, from Increasing aridity, food for the antelope on the earth's surface disappeared, could graze only at the tops of trees. Such individual beasts as had the longest necks could reach food and survive. Those individuals survived when their shorter-necke- d fellows perished ; it was they who propagated their species, which The became Increasingly primitive man, getting on his feet In the tall grass, Is practically doing the same thing that Lamarck's giraffe did. Sir Conlin MacKemsie's deductions from the discovery of the skull In the long-necke- d. Australian desert demonstrate that Lamarck Is coming to his own In the field of evolutionary science. demonstrate nothing else that yet Boston Transcript. They Is, as Muddy Water The city of New Orleans gets Its water supply from the Mississippi. In filtering this water an average of 3.0 tons of debris and mud la taken out of every 1,000.000 gallons. Yet after this Is done and it is chemically treated the water Is made safe for drinking and other domestic uses, thanks to modern science. Capper's Weekly. Candle Fish fish native to Alaska and known to Alaskan Indians as the ""candle fish" Is used In the making of a crude sort of lamp. This species of fish Is said to be so oily that a pith or bark wick passed through Its dried body and lighted at the exposed end will burn for a long time. A Tidal Phenomena There is only one high tldo and one low tide In the Gulf of Mexico enr-day. The diurnal Inequality has become exaggerated to such an extent as practically to extinguish the tide in the Inner parts of the gulf, giving high and low water only once dally. Normally there are two high nnd two low tides every 21 hours, but there are numerous variations in tldnl phenomena In various parts of th semi-diurn- al differences In length of natnrnl Ufa span. The pink lives only two years; the coho, three; the chum, four; the sockeye, four to five, and the spring, six or seven. world. |