OCR Text |
Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI. UTAH Sea Disaster Heroes Receive Medais ' m : " J Tf - I V TTTtVj e w jr Less Mlk Used When Not Fresh - v ? . Adequate Cooling, Bottling, Supply of Trifles to Occupy Attention Will Tend to Will Cause Cream to Make Visit Enjoyable for Both Caller and Rise Faster. Hostess, and Please the Child. Mr Br C Klmrr. Exteulon Dalmus. Carolina lull CvllM. WMJ ic. The rapid souring of milk handled carelessly has been given aa a chief reason why milk consumption la low J1 m-- v 1 VI ill on many farms. Unsanitary and slightly soured milk la not palatable and it is eay to see why farm families whose milk Is not cared for properly do not use aa much milk as they should. To keep milk clean and fresh. It should be strained through at least three thicknesses of fine cheese cloth immediately after milking. It should then be poured In standard-sizquart milk bottles and sealed with standard Illll'lliMlillliK e Members of the crew of the fishing boat Paramount saved 65 person when the llorro Castle was burned and for their heroism were awarded medals by the Jersey City Rotary club. Left to right: Clayton Weller, engineer; Capt. John Bogan, Jr., owner of the boat ; James Boygan, pilot ; and Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, pinning a medal bottle caps. Then the bottles should be placed In the coldest water available and allowed to cooL The water should be changed as often as necessary to bring the milk rapidly to the temperature of the water. On farms where Ice Is kept, the milk should be placed In the Ice box after It has been cooled by water. Where Ice Is not kept, the milk should be left In on Bogan. Italian-America- Boys Entertained by Ii Duce n " .jy-t;- v ii nf " ! cold water until It Is to be used. The cream can be poured from the bottles and kept for churning or other purposes. The rapid cooling of milk in bottles will cause the cream to rise more quickly and completely than is the case when milk Is not cooled and where It Is stored In large vessels, such as buckets or cans. Milk thus handled Is completely sealed from dust, odors, or other form of contamination. It will be found much more convenient for the housewife to handle in bottles than In the usual way. OB in (tew.; jnd ! . A North lllllli -- . Jft Grading, Packing, Adds to the Tomato Profits inf Careful grading and packing of tomatoes may mean the difference between profit and loss for growers, says J. W. Lloyd, chief in fruit and vegetable marketing at the College of Agriculture, University of Illinois. Some tomatoes may look much alike on the vine, but their appearance after reaching the market may be quite another thing. In fact, It Is not unusual for and packed tomatoes to sell for twice as much as ordinary stock on the same market. tomatoes Furthermore, deserve careful handling and packing, points out Lloyd. This vegetable Is a tender product, easily bruised and crushed. The Juice Is likely to spread over others In the pack and make the whole package unsightly and unsavory. This reduces the market value. To avoid crushing, tomatoes should be placed only In shallow packages, preferably those in which the tomatoes are packed only two layers deep. These Include the shallow "tomato box" of about cne-thlr-d bushel capacity, the tomato flat formerly used extensively In shipping early tomatoes, and the shallow splint baskets used in shipping hothouse tomatoes. The excellent appearance of the tomatoes after reaching the market has popularized these containers. Lare groups of Italian boys who live In America are visiting in Italy. Some of them are here shown at Camp Dux Where they were entertained by Premier Mussolini. e of man light HAS PENSION PLAN Oil Man Tests Securities Act :rnor well-grade- d )RY Amusement for Small Guest A By LOUISE R. MARSHALL, National Kindergarten AaaocUtion, New Tork City. When friends have called on yoi and brought - along their cuildren, have you often fell shocked at ihelr lack of manners because they would not sit down as stiff as automatons and keep quiet while you and your guest chatted of things that held not the least Interest for Item? However, If a child has not been "well brought up" he la very apt to prowl from one thing to another until you are ready to scream from thinking every minute he will tip over that vase of flowers, surely break Into the bookcase with the glass front, or explore library table drawers, the contents of which are frail and precious. We can eliminate nervous apprehension on our side, overcome "snooplness' on the part of the little visitor, and tecure peace and quiet for his mother and ourselves In which to enjoy each other's company If we have a hospitable disposition and do a little planning beforehand. We take particular delight In showing some treasured piece of art, a new lunch cloth, or a recent book to make the mother feel we are happy to have her come Into our home and want her to share In our latest possessions, so why should we not exert ourselves to display a like hospitality to her youthful companion? With that idea In mind 1 secured a large cardboard carton In which I store, In boxes, trifles that are Bure to amuse young minds. I give out one or more boxes at a time according to the need. In the collection I have drawing books and a box of crayons, some large cardboard dolls with cutout coats, dresses and hats, a bag of marbles, a set of tiny chairs that were left from a parlor suite my own children used, a pair of kindergarten scissors, and a smaller set of paper lolls and clothes to be cut out if the player chooses, several rubber ducks and fish for very tiny callers, a toy truck, and a small wag on, a tin ten set and an aluminum baking set, a fuirylike stove, a fair- sized doll that has seen much use, and a box of clothes for her, a top, some puzzles, and dozens of other trinkets. I am always running across something new to slip Into one of the boxes of my "treasure chest" Nowadays so many pretty card and novelties come home In the way of advertisements that one need not go to the effort and expense of buying elaborate games and articles, because all these will be new to the little explorer and different from his supplies at home. I endeavor to put Into this bos only toys and trinkets that do not create confusion, for if drums, horns, pianos, trains, rifles and the like were Included the purpose would be frustrated there) would still be as much clatter and tumult as If the youngster were scampering from room to room helping himself to whatever took his fancy. In the collection are boxes of toys that appeal to the boys and others that charm the litle girls, or, If thers happens to be more than one child at a time, two or more boxes furnish Just the things needed for s session of school, to play housekeeping, or some other Interesting game together. If you show thoughtfulness for the little guests, they will enjoy coming to your house and not have' to be dragged protestingly along Just because mother wants to go. My chest has served not only as a safety vim during calls valve for pent-uout nas aiso provea a drawing cara as well. Many of the boys and girls come to "visit" with me by themselves, for they realize they will receive a hearty welcome and Ond a sympathetic understanding of what little folks need and like. p Powerful Reflector Use of aluminum and magnesium leu lu li io uibcuvcij ui a iiiuixaa oy which It Is possible to make a mir ror that will reflect as high as 04 per cent of light, Dr. Hiram W, Edwards of the University of California (sputhern branch) physic de- t partment, announced. well-grade- d rpoM i t. t T f,ys? 'VI - iroiwi a will Main. I. iff Ill x yy;'7 lg Idaho ph ' - . er ; four-bask- A t :& i I Xt-:- f pa- - jau of istanco :reases Above is Dr. F. E. Townsend of Long Beach, Calif., proponent of the "Town-senPlan of Old Age Pensions," by which all citizens above the age of sixty years would be retired upon a pension of $200 a month and would b required to spend the entire amount of the pension within thirty days from its receipt within the confines of the United States, ne would provide the means of meeting the pension roll by the enactment of a universal sales tax or a transaction tax. d rnment should poorest Aldrich Blake, Texas oil operator, was the first to test the scope of the Securities act when he sold a share of stock In oil lands he has leased in Texas, although forbidden to do so by the federal trade commission on the ground that he is marketing unregistered securities. The photograph shows Mr. Dlake (right) Belling a share of stock to Harry II. Craig (left) of Washington, D. C, for two dollars as Paul I. Waters, attorney for securities and exchange commission, looks on. ES LEAGUE PRESIDENT k. - A I berth f I , - 1 x V I' - 2 The soy bean growers have a new outlet for their product, for It has been found that the bean Is valuable In the mixture of paint Manufacturers of paint have found that a certain amount of soy bean oil can be blended with linseed oil In the preparation of paint and excellent results obtained. It has been found that soy bean oil makes the paint film glossier, tougher and more durable. The bean oil Is semi-dryin- g. Horse Has 40 Teeth Wf - - t, v jj MyA "Z. Berry Likes Acid Soil The huckleberry, of which 40 varieties are known in the United States, goes also by many names which Include tangleberry, whortleberry, blueberry, farkleberry and others. Usually It Is found In an acid soli, In fact, treatment with acid results in a crop of berries often approaching the cherry In size. Because of their tendency to soften under weight and warm temperatures, the huckleberry does not find Its way to market as readily as other types. The berries, If kept at temperatures around 50 degrees, will remain fresh for several weeks after being picked, however. Soy Beans for Paint Gen. Booth Welcomed at New York Igdcn, a Sm et In order to help the purchaser of horses to determine to some extent the age of the animals being bought, the Department of Agriculture has Issued a bulletin which illustrates the shape and condition of the teeth of the animal from the milk teeth on to the i.rf 'ii, age of twenty. The male horse has Richard J. Sandler, foreign minister 40 teeth If equipped with hla full comof Sweden, was elected president of plement, while mares for some reason the League of Nations assembly. He have four less. Is one of the strongest leaders of the Socialist-Democrparty In Sweden Agricultural Matters and has held many important govern ment positions. are being organized among cotton growers In China. Reward Mother believed In appealing to her Horses that sweat freely, authorities children rather than punishing them. say, seldom suffer from sunstroke. One day when Tommy had been particularly fractious she said: Farmers own and operate 20 per "if you are going to be naughty, Tommy, you'll make mother poorly, cent of all the motor trucks. and she'll die and be taken to the Of every steer weighing 1,000 cemetery." Tommy hugged her. "May I sit be pounds, 875 pounds Is used side the coachman?" he asked. Concourse of Sweet Sounds as Pigeons Fly Long before the radio was dreamed of the Chinese had "music on the air," according to Dr. Berthold Laufer, curator of anthropology at Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago. This they accomplished by means of small reed instruments resembling pipes of Pan, which they attached to the tail feathers of pigeons. Whole flocks of pigeons are thus equipped, each bird with whistles producing different notes, and as the birds fly the wind strikes the apertures of the Instruments, setting them to vibrating and creating a concert. pleasant open-ai- r The Chinese explanation of the practice is that the sounds of the whistles are Intended to keep the flocks together and to protect the birds from the onslaughts of hawks and other birds of prey. This rationalistic interpretation, however, Is not convincing. It Is doubtful whether such music makes any Impression on either pigeon or hawk, and since this music constantly fills the atmosphere year after year the unrelenting foes of the pigeon would gradually become accustomed to It and disregard it even if it had kept them away at first. It seems more plausible that thl3 quaint custom has no rational origin, but that it rather Is the outcome of purely emotional and artistic tendencies. It Is not the pigeon that profits from this aerial music, but the human ear. On a serene day one can hear this concert In I'oklng nil day, even In one's house. jp QUICK STARTING with cleaned spark plugs Remove Oxide Coating with ths AC Spark Plug Cleaner and Your Motor Starts Instantly only $c a plug ' No spark plug can escape oxide coating the chief cause of hard starting. But a thorough cleaning by a Registered AC Cleaning Station is a "sure-fire- " remedy. Have your plugs cleaned every 4,000 miles. Replace badly worn plugs with New ACs. took forth JSC THE 0UAUTy PIUO SPARK "Plug-in-thTv- POOR COUPLEXIOBS pirrtples improved la a few days by Resinol Soap and the eilcctive medication ot 71 dogged pores, Obeying Orderi "Say you love me! Say it! Say it" "You love me." Kesinoi THE MEWEKDIUSE JHKDTEIL 1 A Distinctive Residence iWvfi . tcifit Iroad agf" On- Lake i't ffsi-- K X il Skill cal skill V A : -- ry... L ' U its eff:; feeling. . be pW ' rord itrttri Sim"" Evangeline Booth, elected the commander chief of the t'ri tloa Gea Army at the meeting In England, la shown here as she was greeted new In (Millets wayor r. a. iauuardla (right) board the S. S. Leriathan. 00 It Uk " In Snlvaby at the New York city hall when she returned ' An Abode. renowned Mrs. J. H. Waters, President Throughout the West Salt Lake's Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES SINGLE $2.00ta$4.00 nouiiiE 12.50 toS4.50 400 Rooms 400 Baths the ; Motel Ncwlaoisse W E. SUTTON, CIIAUNCEY General Manager W. WEST Aniit. Cen Manager i |