OCR Text |
Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEHI. UTAH 19 Sfesgr Wartime Protein Substitutes Tested Corn Gluten Mash With Linseed Meal Effective Using not more than four pounds the usual protein feeds in 100 of chick starter, compered with 12 to 16 or more before the war, University of Wisconsin specialists have ievised rations giving results comparable to those of prewar times. The basic wartime ration, which worked tolerably well, proved somewhat deficient in vitamins. It ground yellow corn, 45 lbs.; wheat bran, 15 lbs.; wheat middlings, 15 lbs.; alfalfa leaf meal, 5 lbs.; meat scrap, 4 lbs.; soybean Dilmeal, 16 lbs.; limestone grit, 1.5 lbs., granite grit, 1.5 lbs.; iodized salt, 0.5 lb.; sardine oil, 0.5 lb.; nd manganese sulfate, 0.8 lb. When the protein feeds were three pounds of a special fish meal, with vitamin content preserved, and 16 of soybean oilmeal, the results were as good as with prewar protein combinations. Th basis ration was improved by fusing, instead of sardine oil, from 1 to 2 per cent commercial vitamin D powder of a kind which contains whey solubles and fish liver solids, and which therefore carries B vitamins as well as vitamin D. Due to soybean oilmeal, it was found that part of the soybean oilmeal can be satisfactorily replaced y corn gluten meal and unseed meal, although a chick ration should not contain more than 5 per cent Unseed meal. One of the best protein feed combinations employing "substitutes for the substitute" proved to bff meat icrap, 4; soybean oilmeal, 6; meal, 5; corn gluten meal, 5. Although a chick starter carrying 10 parts of protein feed in 100 is atisfactory where pullets are to be raised for layers, there is an advantage in using more protein where last growth is highly important. In producing broilers it is well to use t parts of meat scrap and 20 of soybean oilmeal, instead of 4 and 18. of THE STOKT THUS FAB: Zorie Corey Is expected by ber employer'! wife, Mr. FoUome, to deUver thirty invitations to tea la person. She calls at her employer's home daring a riiay evening and picki ap the invitations. She hai a date tail evening with Paul Duncan, her tanee, bat lean she will be late for it. Utterly despondent about delivering the Invitations, sbe leans against a telephone pole and cries. Suddenly a man appears. Be listens to her story gravely, thea rips the invitations from ber band, tears them ap and tosses them into the train basket. He balls a taxi and instructs the driver to take her wbere she directs. Paul's uncle. Admiral Duncan, calls on Zorie. CHAPTER IV "What did you say?" he demanded hoarsely. "What did you say to McGonigle? Did you promise an endowment?" "I don't recall just what I said." his grandfather answered vaguely. "But it's all right." "It means I'll lose my job!" "What of it? I have better ideas for you." "On that plantation?" Paul asked hoarsely. He was breathing hard. "Yes. There's a fine opening for you better than the one I men- tioned." "I don't want it!" Paul cried. "Well, you're going to take it hm? You have just time to pack and meet us at the plane. Look at Miss Corey," he said, smiling benevolently at Zorie as if she were the final proof of something. "She's aU ready." Aunt Hannah's voice broke in, with sleepy irritability: "Ready for n -- lin-te- ed lip-stic- She said coolly, "What ing here?" are you do- water-p- 7 , roofing blue-eye- .... "Y-yes- ," dark-skinn- ed what?" She came down the stairs, holding her pink quilted dressing gown about her short, plump figure. "This is my Aunt Hannah Admiral Duncan," Zorie murmured. "Ready for what?" Aunt Hannah repeated aggressively. "Good morning, Aunt Hannah," Paul said in a sardonic voice. "My grandfather has just decided to take Zorie to Hawaii." Aunt Hannah stared. "What for?" "She's agreed to help me write my memoirs," Admiral Duncan answered. She stared at him, then at Zorie. "How how long will it take?" she gasped. "At least a year," said Paul. "It's a dandy job." "But what's to become of me?" Agriculture Aunt Hannah wailed. "I can't afford to run tftis house without the In the News the assistance that Zorie gives me." "Rent a smaller house," said the Bees' Importance admiral coldly. "Why should I?" she cried. Her More than 10,000 years ago man nose had become pink as it always was using beeswax in mummification and the coffins in which the did when she was angry. "Zorie is embalmed bodies were placed were perfectly happy here. She's quite made airtight by means of beeswax. satisfied. I I won't let her go. I've Before the war always sheltered her. She's never the main use for traveled. She's too too young too beeswax was in innocent. She's" "How old is she?" the admiral cosmetics interrupted. cold curtly "She's twenty - four," Paul ancream and rouge. Now its number swered. "She can legally do as she one use is for and pleases," the admiral said firmly. A protecting shells, "She is coming with us to the Isbelts, coils and lands hm?" "She cannot go!" Aunt Hannah machinery, as cried. "She has obligations! She well as airplanes. a very responsible position with has as 10,000 Today head" years ago the bee the"She resigned it," the admiral serves another very essential use, the pollinizing of flowers to aid in curtly cut her off. "You have no right coming in here the increased production of fruit and interfering in our lives!" and many forage crops. While al"You are," Admiral Duncan said ways recognized, the value of honey as a sugar substitute, has increased testily, "a meddlesome woman with nothing to say about it." materially during the war. "Listen to them!" Zorie marveled. Beeswax has played another important part in commerce, it h3 "Not one of them is considering me been employed in the making of art- or what I want. They're pushing ificial flowers and other articles of me around as if I were a puck in a art. Its present war uses, however, hockey game." Aunt Hannah at this moment uthave discouraged further developtered a. small scream. She was ment along this line. staring past the admiral at the stairs. The admiral turned and Hog Cholera Danger Paul was glanced at the stairs. With the large number of pigs now looking at the stairs. Zorie turned on farms increasing the opportunity and looked. for hog cholera anil other infections A man was slowly coming down. to spread, farmers in the In his left hand was one of Zorie's important pork - producing middle - western suitcases. The other was hugged states are immunizing their animals under his right elbow, while, with against cholera at an earlier age his right hand, he was balancing on than in the past, according to U. S. his shoulder her small trunk. department of agriculture reports. Zorie swayed. She thought for a A small proportion are reported to moment she would faint. have received treatment before The man descending the stairs was weaning, but veterinarians recomd the big, bronzed, young mend about two weeks after weanman to whom she had talked in the ing for the best and longest lasting rain. He was smiling mysteriously results. Immunization of pigs at at her, with one eyebrow up. He about ten weeks is expected to re- looked sinister. sult in smaller losses from hog chol"Put that luggage down!" Aunt era, as well as less danger of check- Hannah ordered. ing growth by means of the treat"Put it in the car," the admiral ment when they are older, and espe- said in the same calm but authoritacially while being fattened for martive voice he might have used on the ket. historic occasion, many years previously, when he had issued his hisLaying hens now average 142 eggs toric order, "When you have the annually, or twice as many as they range, Lieutenant Horton, you may laid 20 years ago. let those torpedoes go." The mysterious young man walked leisurely past Aunt Hannah and out Coccidiosis in Lambs of the door. Coccidiosis in lambs may be suc"Zorie!" Aunt Hannah bleated. cessfully prevented by the addition "Who," Zorie asked huskily, "is of ground crude sulphur to their that?" feed in proportions ranging from 0.5 "We'd better be moving." Admiral to 1.5 per cent of the the Duncan said cheerily, "We mustn't ration, U. S. department of agriculture has miss that plane hm?" determined by experiments in co"Who," Zorie repeated, "is that?" Thin operation with large feeding establipped," Paul answered: lishments. Coccidiosis is a "Let's just call him an evil force in parasitic condition that often has serious If motion. That is my brother Steve." not fatal consequences. It lc com"Zorie 1" Aunt Hannah whimmonly acquired from infected pas- pered. "Xou can't desert me like tures or feedlot. this)" ntLtAat in here. I paid for exclusive occi pancy of this cabin and I insist or having it." "I was supposed to have exclusive occupancy, loo," Zorie said meekly. Amber Lanning glanced at her with raised eyebrows. She said vigorously: "The person who's in here says she also paid for exclusive occupancy . . . What? Well, do something about it! I can't travel with another person. I refuse What?" For some time Miss Lanning listened with a bored expression to the explanation from the purser's department. She hung up the phone with violence, jumped up and said, with ges tures: "It isn't even a mixup. He says they're packed. He says the government demands somany cabins every voyaga for'defense workers and navy wives and such and that we're lucky to have accommodations at all. He says he'll try to do something about it. Well, he'd better." She tipped the three waiting stewards. She glanced at Zorie's worn old suitcases and her battered eld trunk. It was the size and shape of a modern field trunk, or foot locker. Zorie's father had used it on camping trips and it looked it. "Are these yours?" Miss Lanning asked. said Zorie. If there had been any other place to go, she would have gone. But there were no other places. Zorie sat on her bed while the girl briskly unpacked her bags and hung things up. She hung up dresses and skirts and gowns and nightgowns and lounging pajamas and coats and other things in both closets until both were full. Then she went about hanging things on hangers about the room until there wasn't a hook left. Zorie was sure she was hanging up a great many of these things needlessly; that she would not have a chance to wear a fraction of this wardrobe on the trip. The telephone rang. Amber fairly leaped across the room to answer it. "Yes?" she cried, on an ascending soprano scale. "Who? Wait a minute." She glanced resentfully at Zorie. "It's for you." Zorie tremblingly took the phone. She was relieved and happy at the interruption. Now Miss Lanning could shower or dress or do whatever she wanted without the feeling that every movement she made was being watched. "Yes?" Zorie said meekly. "Hullo, honey." It was Paul. He sounded in much better spirits than when she had last seen him, and she hoped he had had a couple of drinks, although Paul disapproved of drinking. "Make yourself beautiful," Paul said, "and come and join us in the admiral's suite for cocktails and dinner. We'll dance afterward. We're dressing. Will you?" "Of course," Zorie said meekly. on B "It's number Twenty-seveDeck," Paul said. "Make it snappy, darling, will you?" "Yes," said Zorie. When she turned from the phone, she saw that Amber Lanning had not taken advantage of her privacy at all. She was wandering about the room. Zorie was, she realized, caught in another trap set by her meekness. She did not have the courage to go about the relatively simple job of undressing, showering and dressing, because this girl, with her simple egotism, her unquestioning had her buffaloed. Zorie glanced at her It was almost six. Ten minutes must have gone by while she sat there, unable to move, frozen by whatever the word is for the exact opposite of confidence, sureness and courage. The bed on which she sat was shaking gently, but this was not entirely .due to the state of her neryes. '"Even as "Hhe wondered about it, the stateroom tilted ever so little, and she realized that, while she was sleeping, the "Samoa" must have left its pier, and that when Miss Lanning looked out of the porthole and made her ecstatic remarks, the last of San Francisco was to be seen, and that they were now at sea. Miss Lanning leisurely took from hangers and drawers the things she might or might not be intending to wear this evening. The telephone rang again and she answered it. "Yes, Uncle Win!" she cried. "Yes, dear. But of course, darling!" She seemed very excited. She Then: spoke rapidly in Spanish. "No! I'm sure. She's just a nice sweet little American girl. All right. I'll see you in about forty minutes." Zorie glanced again at her watch. Forty minutes! The time was now 6:28. More than half an hour since Paul had phoned. But she could not move. She was chained to her bed by her meekness. Zorie started to get off the bed, then relaxed again. There was very little she could do or would do until her roommate was gone. So she waited and perspired and Miss Lanning took a long fumed. shower. It took her foiever to dry herself. She came out of the bathroom, all pink and glowing, and sat down at the dressing table. Decatur Duncan and he was, Paul had told her in the plane, in disgrace. Steve had been living in His political sympaGermany. thies were very He had a rascally reputation. Steve was being taken back to Uluwehi by his grandfather, who, Paul said, was disgusted with him. "Steve is in the doghouse," Paul had explained, "and the less said the better." She slipped into sodden sleep. A series of hangings aroused her. Three men were in the stateroom and they were depositing luggage on the floor beside hers. It was beautiful luggage of all shapes and sizes, but all of a pattern, a soft faun color with bright bands about it, and all stamped in gold with the initials A.L. Zorie sat up and gazed at it. There were at least ten pieces of this handsome luggage. Then a girl came sailing into the room a girl of sbouV yilorie's age and size, and she was s'fimV dark and beautiful: She had brown eyes, and a dusky: lovely skin. She looked as if she ) might be Spanish or French. She hardly glanced at Zorie. She said coolly, "What are you doing in here?" She had the kind of accent that you associate with sophisticated people who have lived a great deal abroad not English, or B'rench, or German, or Italian, or Russian, but a smooth blending of them all. "I I thought this was my room," Zorie answered meekly. The girl glanced at Zorie again, then stared. Her eyes seemed to grow huge. Her lovely color faded. "Who are you?" she gasped. "My name is Zorie Corey." "Where are you from?" Confused by her, sharpness, Zorie told her. The girl stared at her a few seconds longer, then her color imShe laughed and said, proved. "We'll see about this. I paid for exclusive occupancy of this room and I intend to have it." She was, once again, sharp and vigorous and sure. She was the kind of girl, Zorie thought enviously, whom people don't push around. The girl sat down on the unoccupied bed and snatched up the telephone. She asked sharply for the purser. When she got him, she said vigorously: "This is Amber Lanning. Stateroom 221. There's soma ls pro-Naz- UPhillipr m i. red-and-bl- n, wrist-watc- -- (TO BE CONTINUKJU h. 4 THOSE NEW HOTEL RULES The War Manpower commission has come out with an order to hotels to cut down on service. Change the sheets only twice a week, limit the towels to three a day, hire older help and reduce room service 50 per cent, it commands. All of wh.ch proves that the members of WMC haven't been stopping at hotels for the past year or they'd know the hotel men have been ahead of them. "If I could get three towels a day I'd think I had political influence," declares Elmer Twitchell. "For the last year I've been bringing my own towels. And they cut room service practically out soon after Pearl Harbor. You not only can't get a hotel to serve breakfast in bed; it won't even guarantee it in the dining room!" "I used to phone a hotel and quibble about the room and the number of windows. Now I just ask for a room with two towels and an occasional sheet," said Elmer. The WMC has come out with one new order, however. It says hotels should limit guests to one bath a day, unless they want to use the same bath towel again. One bath towel per day is the new Federal limit. You can wring a towel out, however, and use it again without impairing the war effort. We met a man with two towels and some spare sheets over one arm and a box of lunch under the other today. He said he was going to one of the smartest hotels in the city and was taking no chances. - Mr. Twitchell came out with a few verses on the subject: If yon go to a hotel go No concern for service show; Ask for little, with a laugh, And be satisfied with half. SOOTHIMft MEDICATED rOwbE Feet Out in Burial w W.N.U. Zorie wondered at that moment if the three kisses she had bestowed on the brow of the cast-iroBuddha had anything to do with all this. When the two stewards had placed her two suitcases and her small trunk in the middle of the stateroom, Zorie Corey tipped each a dollar and wondered if it was enough. From their smiles and their thanks, she assumed that it was. Never having traveled, she was ignorant about such things. She closed the door. She took a deep breath and looked about the room which was to be hers alone for four days and five nights. It was a cozy room done in ivory and pale green. There were twin beds, each against a wall, lhere was a dress with triple mirrors. She wondered what Mrs. Folsome was thinking about the telegram she had sent her from Salt Lake City. She had been tempted to send one saying, "So sorry. Going to Hawaii. Your invitations in corner trash basket." The one she had sent said, "Dreadfully sorry. In haste of departure lost your tea invitations. Please duplicate and send me bill." And she had sent a telegram to Jimmy Hoffbrower, saying: "Your term paper finished. In drawer my typewriter table. Hope you pass all courses with flying colors." Her thoughts drifted to the big, bronzed young man she had met in the rain. Although she now knew who he was, he remained mysterious. His full name was Stephen ing-tab- le SsseW - GEORGE K WORTS ' saTSl - s OaaS MEXSANA Chinese troops fighting in Burma tinder General Stilwell bury each dead Jap with his feet exposed so their daily reports on the number killed, if suspected of exaggeration, may be verified by an American officer. J builds the economical die) flight True Pasicnger Car v Light Tractor tfPomr Wonf A Dab a Day keeps P.O.' away! (Underarm PwxpiraUon Odor) sn YODOItfl DE000RRRT CREflul -I- sn't stiff er sticky I Soft- -It apreads like face cream. is actually soothing! Us right iter shaving wilt not irritate. has llght.pleasant scent.No sickly mail to cling to fingers or clothing. will not spoil delicate fabrics. Tet tests In the tropics made by nurse pKve that Yodora protects under try-fa-s; condidona. Is tubt or Ian, 10c, McKmaoc Jt Robbiot, Do not grab the phone and roar, "Hey, what am I paying for?" Stow that old familiar yell, "Who caUed this a good hotel?" Bathe but once and don't get sore; Towels now have gone to war; If the sheets are not too white They've been in the global fight. Breakfast would you have in bed? Then for days you'll stay unfed; Want a bellhop P.D.Q.? if you do. It's a good trick ... Ask no beer as of yore Sent up to the 19th floor; With your kicks don't be too free. . . You COULD be in Normandy! QUERY FOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES Elmer Twitchell today demanded of aD candidates for President an answer to the following questions vital to American life: 1. What is your position on the proper ingredients for a wartime hamburger? 2. Are you for fewer stickers on windshields? 3. If elected will you do something about rose beetles? 4. Do you promise to work foi Federal operation of lawn mowers? 5. Are you for a ceiling on short dinners? 6. What is your attitude regarding the dirty towel so common to all soda fountain and quick-lunchroom- 2Sc, 60s, lac, Bridgeport Cons. Acid Indigestion Relieved In 5 minutes or double money back Wbea etonfeeh add painful, suffoeet Ins see, sour stomach and heartburn, doctors usually medicinee known for pnstribe the fasoiet-actlD- e' srmutomatic relief medicines likethow in Bell-an- a Tablet. No laxative. Beil-abring comfort in a Jiff r or double toot moner back oa return of bottle wm new at all druggists. as. SNAPPY FACTS ABOUT fe RUBBER Normally there are 20 per cent mere tire failures during the) summer months than others. Tests have shown that at a temperature of 90 degrees tires wear out twice as fast as at 60 de- grees and that at 100 degrees they wear out five times as fast as at 40 degrees. Even with production being restored at Far East rubber plantations and eur synthetic plants working at peak, authorities believe there will be a tight rubber situation for some time following the end of the war. 7. Do you promise to fight for the return of the second crab to the American order of crabs? 8. Are you in favor of some regulations that will make it easier for the radio audience to tell when the battle ends and the commercial besoft-shelle- d gins? 9. Will you take a stand for a limit to those boresome previews of coming events at picture houses? 10. Will you investigate the problem of what has become of portwo-minut- e EFGoodrieh ters at railroad stations? 11. Will you fight the idea being rapidly promoted among young Americans that the routine path to HOW TO "KNOW" ASPIRIN security is to make the round ol Just be mire to ask for St. Joseph the radio programs offering cash Aspirin. There's none faster, none Why pay more? World's largest prizes for answers to easy ques- stronger. seller at 1 0 1 Demand St. Joseph Aspirin. tions? 12. How do you stand in the mat ter of cleaning the washrooms ir WNU W 3644 railroad trains? 13. Will you do anything about making it possible to get spare parts for automobiles occasionally? 14. Are you for the return of cuff on men's pants? May Warn of Disordered 15. What is your position on womKidney Action en's hats? Modem lit with Its hurry and worry. Just about the time you decide that idiocy is on the decline in America you tune in and hear another radio musical jingle for a chewing gum, hair tonic or bun. Hitler must have a terrific yen these days to purge the fellow whe told him would win the war ts There are to be fewer turkeys foi civilians this year. The home-fropatriot may have to undergo thf terrific sacrifice of refusing a thirf helping. nt Irregular habits, improper eating and drinking its risk of exposure and Infectionthrows heavy strain oa the work ol the kidneys. They are apt to become d and fail to filter excess acid and other impurities Irom the ever-taie- blood. Yon msy suffer asgglng backache, headache, aisxineaa, getting up nights, leg pains, iwelling feel constantly tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signs ot kidney or bladder disorder are sometimes burning, scanty or too frequent urination. Try Poem's Pills. Doom's help the kidneys to pass off harmful nxceas body waste. They have had more tba half a of public approval. Are recommended by grateful users everywhere. As yew i;fc6orf eratury mmm |