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Show CACTIE AMERICAN. LoCAN. UTAH Feed Value Found Dorothy's Mother Proves Claim Among Farm Pests Children dont nr dinanly Ok to lelnra hut here' one 11 of thm that t loro. shouldn't ho rstlct! a medlritio st nil It's oor ik n rich n4 Live Stock Made Gains on Russian Thittle and Bean Straw. If ' I'ttlMl fVMrt1 (prPfHef tv AftiMiit KW H' ItUHxIan thUtta, a truultltotu weed In th Wret, bran straw, and flaxseed were anise of tbo little used plant and crops found to have conslderthl feeding value In lamb and series of pig fattening experiments by the Colorado agricultural experiment station and th 1 ry land agrirul tursl field station of th I'nlted State Department of Agriculture at Akron, For on bit of 20 lamh. Russian thlstlrs, on of th common "turn ble weeds" of th western plains region, were ground fln and fed with shelled corn and cottonseed 00 day Soma of the cska thistles wera raked out of fence corners; others wera cut green and cured for ths rx;ierimrnt. Value lng tha corn at 1U cents per bush cL tha cake at 22 per ton, and thr ground thistles at $5.50 per ton, tbs gains of tbs lamb cost It 27 per 100 pounds lira WelghL Thr results from feeding a lot of cull lambs Indicate that If tha thistle ara cut green and mad Into hay. grinding Is not necessary, as the lamb consumed the whole thistle Just as readily. This thistle experiment, believed to be the first to plae a definite value on thla weed aa a feed. Is Important to the dry belt, tha bureau point out, bemuse the thistle usually thrives In drought seasons when other crops falL When bean straw, valued at S3 ;er ton, was fed with corn and cake to lamlta at the Mm rate and value a In Ute thistle lot. the galna cost $3.C6 per 100 pounds. In another comparison cut sorgo fodder waa fed to one lot of lanths and whole sorgo fodder to another lot Tha Indications are that the whole aorgo fodder at S3 A0 per ton la a mors profitable feed than the cut fodder when It costs S2 per ton to cut It flaxseed screenings Although have been known to poison live stock. In the Colorado experiments of a pound a pigs fed a day of unscreened flaxseed home grown protein feed for 00 days a a supplement to four pounds of ground bog millet showed no 111 effects, but pigs fed 0 pounds of ground bog millet f pound of tankage and one fourth pound of flaxseed dally gained almost twice aa much. Ground flaxseed meal at S30 per ton was a less economical feed than cottonseed cake at $22 per ton. The flaxseed meal lot made considerably smaller gains and re qulred somewhat more feed per unit of gain. vl. fr SCOTT By ELMO n WATSON IKN the legislature of (he etete In 1019 designated the of JlKi-fourth Irlilnf In September ai Iniliun ility and (he gov- V' eriu r of Illinois on July 23 of that ji'.r approved (he mcnaur, ' V the day ai a Mate t f ' liolld. long official rv' , (lie y. It on " K V 4 slop taken toward paying a Junt tribute to a race nlilrh luia great ly enrobed our luHlonal heritage. Since that time the event ha 1 f been observed annually In lllinola I Imlmn tlay ha spread of and the . .1 r to other alal--- . Although It tin not jet become elilo-a a holiday or a day for gen eM.iMM.nl e throughout the country. It I oral ol. aulliclently a ell known to remind Americans of the present day of honor due to the "original American" mid, on American Indian day, there may p iki before us a jwigcnnt of those who played a (.art lu making the history of this nation and who richly deserve to be remembered for w hat they were or what they did. "The mark of our contact with the Indian la uMn us Indilildy mid forever," writes Norman R. Wood In Ills Live of Futuous Indian Chief." lie has not only Impressed hltnself upon our geography, lc.it on our character, language and literature. Ihmcroft, our greatest historian, la not quite right when he says. The memorials of lli dr former existence are found only In the names of river nml mountains. These memorl. als hate not only permeated our poetry and other literature, hut they are jierpetuated In much of the food we eat, and every mention of potatoes, chocolate, cocoa, mush, green corn, suc-- J cotiiKh, hominy nud the festive turkey la a trib-ute to the redmnn, while the fragrance of the bacco or Indnn weed we smoke Is Incense to tliclr memorv "On one occasion, according to Aesop, a man and a lion got Into an argument as to which of the two was the stronger, and, thus contending, they walked together until they came to a statue representing a loan choking and subduing a Hon. There, exclaimed the man, that proves my point, and demonstrates that a man Is stronger than n lion. To which the king of beusta replied, When the lions get to be sculp-- ; tors, they will have the lion choking and over coming the man. "The Indians are neither sculptors, painters nor historians. The only record we have of many of their noblest chiefs, greatest deeds, hardest-fough- t battles, or sublimest flights of eloquence, are the poor, fragmentary accounts 1. Sitting Bull, the great Indian patriot and recorded and handed down by their implacable medicine man of the Sioux, who Is the subject whites.1 enemies, the of ona of the Important biographies of the year. If ever an Indian painter, sculptor or historian 2. A modern miss gets Instruction In an anto of of achievements the full tell the rises story men and women of Ids race through the medium cient art. No Water and Young Skunk, two old of expression which he chooses, what a mngnlfl-- j Sioux warriors, show Miss Ellen Gunderson the cent record he can set down ! In It will be the correct way to use a bow and arrow. 3. A procession to the medicine lodge on the story of such patriots as King rhilip of the Warn-- J panoags, Pontiac of the Ottawas, Tecmnseh of Blackfeet reservation, Glacier National park In the Shawnees, Black Hawk of the Sauk and Montana. Few of tha present-daIndians pracFoxes, Osceola of the Seintnoles, Sitting Bull of tice their ancient customs for other than comthe Sioux, Captain Jack of the Modocs and mercial purposes. Tha Blackfoot Indiana, howStanding Bear of the Toncas. In It will be the ever, still cling to many of their old customs, story of such great captains as Cornstalk of the among them the ceremonies of the medicine Shawnees, Little Turtle of the Mlamis, Red lodge. Cloud, Crazy Horse and Gall of the Sioux, Chief 4. A survivor of aboriginal days looks at a Joseph of the Nez Perces, and Dull Knife and modern Invention, No Flesh (left), Little Wolf of the Cheyennes. As for orators, he Sioux warrior, hoM a cigarette lighter can set forth the names of Logan of the Cayugas, which he has Juat lighted the pipe of Eagle Red Jacket of the Senecas, Satanta of the Kiowas, with Thunder (right). and Running Antelope of the Sioux and be sure that they will compare favorably with those of any other race of men. sun, and we shall soon see the results of their The speech of one of them has hecome immor- love! Every seed Is awakened, and all animal tal. For It was Ixigan who sent this message to life. It Is through this mysterious power that we, too, have our being, and we therefore yield Lord Dunmore of Virginia : I appeal to any white man to say If he ever to our neighbors, even to our animal neighbors, this vast entered Logan's cabin hungry and he gave him the same right as ourselves to Inhabit not meat; if ever he came cold and naked and land. Yet hear me, friends! we have now to deal he clothed him not. During the course of the when our last long and bloody war, Logan remained Idle with another people, small and feeble now great In his camp, an advocate of peace. Such was forefathers first met with them, but 'enough, they have my love for the whites that my countrymen and overbearing. Strangely to till the soil, and the love of possesmind Is the I ns and said, Logan pointed passed have friend of the white man. I had even thought to sion Is a disease In them. These people but the rich break, the rules that may many one have lived with you, but for the Injuries of in which man. Colonel Cress p, the last spring, In cold poor may not! They have a religion blood and unprovoked, murdered all the rela- the poor worship, but the rich will not! This nation Is like a spring freshet; It overtions of Logan, not even sparing my women and children. There runs not a drop of my blood runs Its banks and destroys all who are In Its In the veins of any living creature. This called path. We cannot dwell side by side. Only seven on me for revenge. I have sought It. I have years ago we made a treaty by which we were killed many. I have fully glutted my vengeance. assured that the buffalo country should be left For my country I rejoice at the beams of peace ; to us forever. Now they threaten to take that but do not harbor a thought that mine Is the from ns also. My brothers, shall we submit or Joy of fear. Logan never felt fear. He will not shall we say to them; First kill me, before you turn on his heel to save hia life. Who is there can take possession of my fatherland!" to mourn for Logan? Not one! A similar patriotic declaration, made under Although Sitting Bull of the Sioux Is better even more dramatic circumstances, should preknown as a warrior and medicine man than as serve the name of Chief Dull Knife of the an orator, on one occasion he made a speech Cheyennes lmperishably In our history. After to his people In which he voiced a protest the surrender of Dull Knife and his people dur, they against oppression and a plea for human rights ing the Sioux and Cheyenne war of that deserves to be placed beside Patrick were sent to Indian Territory to live. The Henrys Immortal "Give me liberty or give me Cheyennes were mountain Indians, accustomed death It was before a council of the Sioux to the clear, pure air of the high altitudes, and held on the Powder river that Sitting Bull stood in the lowlands of the south they rapidly sick s of their number ened and died until before his people and said: Behold, my friends, the spring Is come; the had perished. Again and again Dull Knife apearth has gladly received the embraces of the pealed to the government for permission to .1 fj Anu-rn-n- al if1 .4 ! ;A flr-i- t rA vv.,7 ft ?V' 1 b!-- A'., Ai.n-n.u- S5 ' A- - V v,1 ' r nr . I I J ; 3 j - ' v 0 . , i j ' . - j i t y 1S7G-77- ! two-third- lconreutrslcd fond bolntom, Srct to thr list sad sweet In your childs UtU stomach. H builds up sod strength f It'S pure, w Weak, puny, underweight chit dren, makes them eat heartily, brio gr ths races bach to their cheeks make them playful, energetic, ful! of life. And no bilious, headachy constipated, feverish, fretful baby oi child failed to respond to th genii Infloeneo of Californio Fly Syrup on their llttl bowels. It starts lnty bowels quirk, cleans them out thoroughly, tunes and strengthen them so they contlnua to Oct Dor mally, of their own accord. Million of mothers know about California 11 Syrup from expert enee. A Western mother, Mrs. J. G Moore, 119 Cliff Are., Kan Antonio. Texas, says: "California fig Syrup la certainly all thats claimed for 1L I bar prored that with my llttl Dorothy. She was a bottle baby and Her bowels wart very delicate. weak. I started her on Fig Syrup when aha waa a few months old and It regulated her, quirk. I biro used It with her over sine for colds and every little set birk and her wonder ful condition tells better than word bow tt helps." Dont b Imposed on. See that th Fig Syrup yon buy bears ths ntma, "California" so youll get tbs genu Ine, famous for 60 years. eti Bt Sugar The first fnclory for the manufnc lure of sugar from beets waa erect ed by Edward Lee Church at Northampton, Mass In 1833, and tha following year It produced lr'UA pounds of sugar. A few other fac torlcs followed, but all wera fall urea. In 1870, E. IL Dyer erect ed at Alvarado, Calif, a factory which becama successful In 1879 and marked tbs beginning of the mod era from stigar beets sugar-makin- Genius begins where rule by Western Newspaper Union. a Temper M sufferer from Protruding, Bleeding. Itehlng or Blind Piles, ran now get relief from very first treatment by tulog build ap her health by its tome scucin. Q.R.Pile Ointment a R. (Quick Relief) Pit Ointment la a new remedy for th treatment of pit sufferer no matter bow loug afflicted, goar anteed to gtv satisfactory relief or mooey refunded. Before placing thla pits ointment on th market for taloi. It waa put to tho ocij test to both mild and severe cases, never fall Inc to produce wonderful re- sult. If yon are troubled with pries, experiment Get Q. It Ill Ointment If your druggist does nt carry It In stock, Sail Lake Gty Directory ttiRvon km mu A53AYEK3 AND QltMISTS m4 tMrisrf tt HI l Lh nr, lit r u Msiilaf Mvslbri m4 lM M smisbo4 Ik. at $wthX. Used Pipe Fittings & Valves UimM mS ewfO4 fer 0 yur1 a, Msassy Irwa and Mstal Co. MKhS Mas On Ink nty, FWh kvwly ENJOY A TRIP TO SALT LAKE AND do not UEWHOUSE till out tbo black below aod mall It to R. OINTMENT MFO. CO. 73 South 6th Cast Salt Laic City, Utah a i V- - t ! .v-!- Q. It. Co, Gentlemen: Inclosed flud $1.00 P, O. Money Order for tin tulm of Q. It 111 Ointment to b mailed prepaid to " V - .1 i - 1 V Name P. O. Address, On conditions that If I ara not satisfied with results obtained, I am to receive money back upon returning tubs to your MX. J. W. U, Salt Lak City, No. fC fJ 32. $250 Leaves your shin velvety smooth and wHk hath BALT $250 CITT. UTAH PARKERS BALSAM HAIR ... You cill like it, everybody does. sunHarfallN UwuwCalgrnS so Gray uni FvSW Hah Bwrir us Sue vnO Si Price 23c. Protirietow: Potter Drag A Cbmiol Corpw Maiden llau. Try Cutlcnra Sharing Cream 9 lf CMn 0U14 NEWHOUSE LAII Cuticiha Talcuji one-ha- TWO PKKftONA THE HOTEL imparts a delightful fragrance e WATITM. rnw Mar. 400 Baths $100 to $4.0 Family Boom 4 or I rersoas C W. N. . a SUTTON. 400 Room 3 1 lime-ston- fnsuwi ft L PILES self-fee- d Les Flying Into forty-eigh- full-fe- tiy Touchy , , . ImuWel Everything spans her Shir nmla Lain R. Ptnkhsas s d return to their old home In the north, but his appeal was all In vain. Finally lu desperation Dull Knife and Little Wolf, the Junior war chief, resolved to leave their hated reservation. In the fall of 1S78 they started north and although six lines of military barrier were thrown out to stop them, they cut their way through three of these lines before Dull Knife and a part of the Cheyennes were captured In Nebraska. They were taken to Fort Robinson, disarmed and Imprisoned In an old barracks. Army officers, acting under Instructions from Washington, Informed them that they must be returned to Indian Territory. Then, In the words of an The old Cheyenne war chief, Dull Knife, stepped slowly to the center of the circle, a grim, lean figure. Never when riding at the head of hundreds of his wild warriors, clad In the purple of his race leggings of golden yellow buckskin, heavily beaded, blanket of dark blue broadcloth, war bonnet of eagles feathers that trailed behind him on the ground, necklace of bears claws, the spoils of many a deadly tussle never In his life did Dull Knife look more a chieftain than there In his captivity and rags. He said: All we ask Is to be allowed to live, and to live In peace. I seek no war with anyone. An old man, my fighting days are done. We bowed to the will of the Great Father and went far Into the south where he told us to go. There we found a hyena cannot live. Sickness came among us that made mourning In every lodge. Then the treaty promises were broken, and our rations were short Those not worn by disease were wasted by hunger. To stay there meant that all of ns would die. Our petitions to the Great Father were unheeded. We thought It better to die fighting to regain our old homes than to perish of sickness. Then our march was begun. The rest you know. Tell the Great Father Dull Knife and his people ask only to end their days here In the north where we were bom. Tell him we want no more war. We cannot live In the south; there Is no game. Here, when rations are short, we cannot hunt. Tell him If he lets us stay here Dull Knifes people will hnrt no one. TELL HIM IF HE TRIES TO SEND US BACK WE WILL BUTCHER EACH OTHER WITH OUR OWN KNIVES. I HAVE SPOKEN!' Die fighting some of them did a few days later. But others escaped to their friends the Sioux, where they were allowed to remain. Among them was Chief Dull Knife and It Is a pleasure to record the fact that eventually he did return to the land he loved so well and fought so hard to regain and there he spent the end of hfs days. Keeps Skin Young end. Presidents Related Symbolic Phrase There have been several Presiphrase Agathoclcs pot" (a dential relationships John Adams, of Syracuse, 3G1 B. 11. C.) is a the second President, wa the fabe which phrase might Almost all farmers recognize regarded as symbolic of bis power. ther of John Quincy Adams, the skimmilk as a splendid suppleWilliam Henry mental feed for pigs, because of Its He was born the son of a poor pot- sixth President, ter and himself learned that trade, Harrison, the ninth President, waa high protein value and Its mlnerul content Sometimes the question but as the fisherman evoked the the gramlfuther of the twenty-thirPresident, Benjamin Harrison. Zaeb powerful Jlun out of his pot, eo comes up as to how much skim-milevoked from his one of the ary Taylor, the twelfth President, must be fed to balance the Two most powerful reign of any tyrant was a second cousin of James Madgrains fed to growing pigs. Marrying an heiress ison, the fourth President. to three pounds of undiluted milk of Syraeusa wa a help to him. for every pound of grain In the raMario Anioinottos Aga tion will furnish all the porteln Mormon Legend Marie Antoinette, that gay little Three and minerals necessary. Lehl, according to the Book of queen, la usually thought of a quite pounds of milk to one pound of Mormon history, was the leader of young, when she met her untimely grain usually Is the most desirable a colony of Israelite who left Je- death, but she was almost proportion. More than five pounds years old. Playing In the gorof skimmilk per pound of grain rusalem about 600 B. C, and after much Journeying reached the westgeous palace gardens, with the lausually gives much less economern shores of South America. Their dles and gentlemen of her court, she ical returns. descendants, the legend sets forth, has left for posterity a picture of One of the best ways to be cerhard to think of her tain of the proper balance Is to spread np Into North America. youth and It d the grain and give the From these Israelitish people the as a woman of almost fifty. Cleveland Plain Dealer. pigs all the skimmilk they will American Indian are descended. consume. Buttermilk also Is about Detroit News New Yorks Lower East Side equal to the skimmed product In Tha lacalculable Chinese While Its fame Is world-widonly feeding valne. It Is best to guard The Chinese are to all other peo- few people know exactly where New against changing from sweet to sour milk, as this often causes ples an Incalculable nation. Again Yorks Lower East Side is and pigs to scour. There Is some dan- and again throughout their history, what Is Its area. What Is officially ger of scours In pigs from one in the midst of crushing, and some- known as the Lower Blast side Is one and miles In area, month to three months of age If times by no means creditable deon milk In rainy weather. feats, they have suddenly turned reaching from Brooklyn bridge to street and from the upon their opponents and fought Fourteenth Wallaces Farmer. with astonishing courage and per- Bowery and Third avenue east to the river. tinacity. The Press, Hong Kong. Believes in Limestone of user The champion limestone Flag Collections Interesting Historic Fact Illinois, It may safely be stated, It is a curious and little known There Is a exhibit of difsays a writer in the Prairie Farm- ferent Unitedpartial States flags since fact that Napoleon narrowly eser, Is D. M. Hardy, Monroe county farmer, June 4, 1777. in the Arts and In- caped being born an Englishman. dustries building of the United France and England hid long been who last year applied 3,400 tons, wrangling about the possession of or approximately 85 carloads, on States National Museum In WashD. O. The United States Corsica, and only a few months be1,000 acres of land. While he ad- ington. fore the birth of the great Napomits that this Is a sizable order he Navy department a No has a valuable collection, but the flags In this leon In 17C9, the matter had been with My experience sajs: one antedate rather than follow the settled In favor of France. running over several years 1777. year one Is of been It the high that has Knowledge est paying farm practices that has Title Too Common Knowledge Is a commodity availbeen developed for modern In the LTnited States the title able in abundant quantities to all of Honorable Is used loosely, being us If our mood Is receptive. We do not have to seek it, for It Is to by courtesy to almost anyone Champion Indiana Litter given who holds or has held Important be found on every hand. Most men W. to of J. Schwab According It Is especially be- lack knowledge not because It Is public office. extension the animal husbandry stowed on members of congress, govscarce, but because they are too Purdue university, Ardon ernors, state staff, or too prejudiced to acquire It of lazy, legislators. Judges Mosser, Adams county, won the higher courts and Grit high federal Hoosler Ton Litter contest for 1931 with 14 pigs that weighed 3,240 Danger in Animal Bitea pounds when six months of age. Firearm Restrictions Nonpoisonous snakes, such as In contest third the and Second The owner of a firearm cannot leball snakes, blue racers and garter were litters entered by Erwin F. gally give the weapon away, even snakes have fangs and can hlte; Fuelling of Allen county. One of to his best Their bite is no more dangerous friend, in Pennsylvania, these litters. 13 pigs In nnmher, according to state law. The law re- than that of most wild animals. In weighed 2,892 pounds; the other, stricts distribution of firearms to general way It may be said that 12 pigs, weighed 2,832 pounds at who must report there is considerable danger In beISO days of age. Hoard's Dairy registered dealers, each sale to state authorities. ing bitten by any animal or reptile. xd&q. Amount of Skimmilk to The Balance Grain Ration tyrant F.lercolizedVax dr o vr one-hal- 1 ' s'; t glad b I tlreupb being iTcaideiit of Irene. U asys that th worl primmer under lock and key is far freer thss h who rulco France. Eea tho duor ho lesvt-ho rntera are and tho selected for him by bl bodyguard and every siltch of clothing be wear on mrb and every ocrala I laid out for him. "Itut 1 never argu." nay tha Httlo man with a smile, "My motto hao always been ; "Never light ncgotlst." IVittiiM-rgu- e four-flrih- a to-f- f Iorbtp FrUae M ..M OrawIM. T SHAMPOO Ideal lor OM In eon Mr Uoa with PsrkfriHsifRilwiH.MsltsitM bur oft nd fluff? 60 cent by mu) or at dm gistM. Uhftoox Chainical Worfc fsuhoim MS Skull Beehive The old Greek Historian Herodotus tells ns a story of a pirating buccaneer named Stilus who Invaded the Island of Cyprus, but was slain by the Inhabitants of one of the cities, who Jubilantly, and aa a warning to others, fixed bis head over the gateway leading through the walls. As the flesh dried away a swarm of bees took possession of this skull and filled It with their honey. ' Music of Kindness Kind words are the mnslc of tho world. They have a power which teems to be beyond natural causey aa If they were some angels song, which had lost Its way and com on earth, and sang on undylngly, smiting the hearts of men with sweetest wonnds and putting for awhile an angels nature into us. F. W. Faber, J Finnish Athletics Organized gymnastics did not known In Finland until th late 70s of the last century. Tho most popular branches of athletic are skiing, running, and several other track and field events and wrestling. Recently rifle shooting and a game adopted from American baseball have achieved popularity. bo-co- Babies Bugging Bobby, aged three, had been 111 and could not have his nsual outings because of that and Inclement weather. One day he looked out of the window, then turned to me and said wistfully, "There are two mammas bugging their babies. Two neighbor women had passed with their baby carriages Chicago Tribune. Glaciers Disappear The evidence Indicates that hundreds of small glaciers have disappeared altogether from the National park during the last half century. The first living glacier discovered by John Muir In 1871 In the Sierra Nevadas now has ceased to exist, it is reported. te Potent Rhinoceros The rhinoceros Is thought by tho natives of Nepal, India, where tt lives, to possess wonderful medicinal qualities. Every part of tho animal Is used for medicinal purposes, the horn being thought to be particularly potent as a cure for certain 111st |