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Show I CACHE AMERICAN, LOGAN. UTAH Dust or Bait Is Army Worm Cure Slow Maturing Birds Are There are a number of method army worm. Dust calcium arsenate on crops not burned by this material; on other crops such as corn, beans and peas, apply lead arsenate dust to cover the plant thoroughly Small plants like alfalfa and crab-ln- g grass may be protected with plications of poisoned bait This is especially recommended where the worms have almost destroyed the cr0p. The bait can be made at home with one pound of pari green to 50 pounds of wheat bran. Add two gallons of molasses that have been thinned with water, and stir thor- oughly. Then pour in enough water j0 malte the bait crumbly, but not ,oupy. Jhty pounds o' bait is enough for five acreS- Apply It broadcast jn u,e evenings, and do not allow poutry or animals access to e(j fieds Smaller amounts of bait nijxe(j jn tiie same cjn t,on. jj desire(jj two pounds of calcium arsenate may be substituted for the pound of paris green in the bait. When the worms are migrating, thcy Can be ,rappcd bT PlowlnS deep furrow at right angles to their course of advance. Shallow holes dug at intervals in the furrow and filled with gas oils or kerosene will kill the worms. Whore it is not possible to plow a furrow, a thin line of coal tar placed a little distance ahead of the worms will keep them from in- vading neighboring fields, Best results are obtained from early hatched pullets which, at the time of housing, are graded accord-to hatching date, maturity, and condition. Knowing when the pullets were hatched makes it possible to discard the slow maturir.g birds, which are low producers. When housing pullets according to maturity, segregate the birds thatshow the same maturity as indicaUd by their comb development and body weight Pullets in poor physical condition, as evidenced by a dull eye, crow head, loose feathering and lack of flesh, should be discarded. Careful grading of pullets at time of housing results in more uniform egg production throughout the year. many poultrymcn do not mark the chick at time of so the pullet flock must be graded on the basis of maturity and physical condition. 1 rlanting - ns obtain-metho- heat-resis- t- Water Hemlock Poison Cicuta maculata, also known as While most of the changing and' water hemlock, is deadly poisonous remodeling of poultry houses oc- - to live stock. It has such a vile curs in the late summer or fall, one smell when the leaves or stems are( of changing the direction of the broken that one would not expect roosts is so simple as to merit con- - live stock to eat any of it, but cat- sideration at any time. The greater tie will at times, and with fatal number of roosts are still placed results, especially when the plant parallel to the back wall. In the is full of sap. Children have been' midwest, this generally means east poisoned by eating the fleshy roots, and west. Experience has conclu- - which taste a bit like parsnips. This sively demonstrated that this is is a vile plant, which should be wrong. If the roosts are placed at killed out or fenced in so thoroughly s to the back wall, the that no cattle can get to it. The flock will distribute itself over the Bower heads look a little like wild entire roosting area, with little if carrot, but are larger. Most farm- ers know this plant in localities crowding. Montreal Herald, where it grows, but many do not know its poisonous qualities. Rural Worms in Chickens right-angle- r. Unless there is a heavy infestation it is difficult to determine the presence of internal parasites, but where the birds are heavily infested there is usually an extremely heavy appetite, the birds are thin and often a leg weakness will appear. Where these conditions appear it is safe to assume that the birds are infested. When the birds appear listless and there is any doubt as to the trouble it is best to open up several of the subnormal birds and' examine the intestines for worms. For the Fanner Skimping on protein wastes other feeds, for The Triumph Over Death T the death on the cross was not the end of Jesus; In a profound sense It was rather the beginning. TIip Bible tells us how after thiie dnjs Jomis nro.se again from the dead, id bis resurrected body was seen in one place after another hy cer- t;,n of those who had followed him B; earth. tIh first waH tiat recorded appearance Magdalene at Jerusalem on the morning of the Resurrection day. That afternoon Jesus appeared also to Peter, and to two disciples who may have been hiding at a village called not far from Jerusalem. That same evening ten of the disciples were visited hy the spirit, and a week later all eleven disciples saw the resurrected Jesus (The twelfth disciple, Judas Iscariot, had Jesus to the Romans when they came to arrest him at and had afterwards hanged himself In shame.) During 40 days these various appearances occurred n Jerusalem and In Galilee, and at the end of that time Jesus ascended Into heaven with the solemn promise that soon he would return once more to the earth. And then a new sect of Judaism gradually arose In Jerusalem and Gulllee. It was not yet a new religion, for Its followers were strict and pious Jews who differed from t,v j,irv Geth-semati- their only In that they believed the Messiah had already come. They had no Idea of preaching their beliefs to the Gentiles, for they firmly believed that the only door Into their brotherhood was through the profession of Judaism and through the rite of circumcision. The converts, old and new, lived together as In one family. No doubt they were all very poor, and they shared In common the little which t,lpy possessed, They were firmly convinced that In but a little while their Savior would return, and the Kingdom of Heaven be established on earth, and for that reason they would not concern themselves much about earthly things, from Jerusalem by persecutors of the sect, he went up and down the countryside, spreading the tidings that the Messiah himself had ready come and was now waiting to come a second time. The path he followed Is traced on the map shown above. He halted In Cesarea, and there he remained some twenty years, no doubt conto spread the gospel all the pigs tinuing y time. A second missionary to dare to Noxious weeds can be most easily accept Gentiles Into the fellowship oP the Nazarenes was none other destroyed during weather that is than Peter, who had been chief of hot and dry. the disciples. . After the death of According to a recent study, Jesus he became virtually the head farmers commit less crime than of the little sect In Jerusalem, and he seems at first to have been men of any other occupation, opposed to the idea of preaching But after Turnips are largely used in Eng- the gospel to land and Canada for feeding of some years he went forth to visit iA stock. They grow best cool the little church which Philip had weather. established, and on this Journey he was completely converted to the Bone chewing in cattle is a sign 'policies of the Hellenists. At Ces- . deficiency in the ra- - area he formally accepted Into the phoshos on tinman rentnrinn mimo.. PeedlnS bone meal corrects sc, e con lon' non-Jew- Preserving Infertile Eggs Infertile eggs preserve better and longer. If fertile eggs are to be used they should be candled. Water glass solution is prepared by mixing one quart water glass to nine quarts' boiled water which has been cooled. container will hold 40 A eggs and 3 pints 10 ounces of the container has mixture. A a capacity of 200 eggs, using 18 pints of the water glass mixture. Best results are obtained when fresh, clean, infertile, unwashed eggs are used. rw n On an average, dairymen raise Avoid Old lurkey Ranges or purchase enough heiferr to re- to Many persons make a failure of place from turkey-raisinbecause they try to of their herds each year, raise them on old ranges. Chickens When the pasture becomes drier and adult turkeys carry organisms which cause disease, especially and the feed scarcer, the cow does blackheads, and these germs live not get as much to eat and addifor considerable periods in soil and tional feeding of grain is needed. houses. Turkeys cannot be successMaking soil tests in each field fully raised where chickens or turkeys have ranged or their droppings and then setting down the results placed for three previous years, of the tests on a map of the farm poultry experts claim. Pathfinder will give a permanent record for use in a soil improvement program. Magazine. - . . h g one-fift- h brnc. jr'NOLTON S act was the result of two years planning. There was g The normal decline in egg pro- duction which follows as summer advances can be checked somewhat by the use of artificial light, reports C. S. riatt associate professor of poultry husbandry at the New of Agriculture, Jersey College Rutgers University. Durtng the last two years he gays artificial light has been used,at tiie New jersey egg laying con- pamous Americans Urged tests. The result in both years has Of Red LlOVei been a slight increase in productionj over a period of two or three weeks just who brought the first red following the introduction of the clover to the New World is still a (question, but records in the United light. Lights are turned on at 4 a. m. states Department of Agriculture daylight saving time and turned off report that many men famous in at sunrise. Don't continue artificial Colonial history urged its growth. lights on old hens after late October. As early as 1633, Lord Baltimore asked his settlers to bring good Rubber Hen Raises Chicks stores of clover seed, but there Is no record that they did. William Among the new uses for rubber is that of serving as substitute for the Penn 10 185 tells of success in mother hen in the raising of chicks, growing English grass (red clover) The brooder contains an electric and that Robert Turner, a wealthy merchant planter sowed great and heating pad which warms the backs of the tiny chicks just as if they saU cloYerBenjamin Franklin, about 1750. were snuggling under their mothers he had seeded 30 acres breast A thermostatically control-- , wrote led heating unit maintains the tern- - to red clover in Philadelphia on the rd Nearly 25 years perature of the pad at an even 105 ,ater his August. Poor Richards Almanac-heof the to that equivalent degrees, breast. The chicks raise their toId.of An experienced method of backs against the under side of the sowing clover on barley, pad so that the heat transfer is ac- - George Washington in 1786 wrote d comphshed by direct contact This that seed of red clover was replaces the old practice of able on easy terms in Virginia, the d heating the air in the brooder. The It was in these years construction period after the Revo-in- g is made of special that extensive cultivation sheet rubber which offers a soft lution of clover began. nonporous and sanitary surface. Popular Mechanics Magazine. Crowding on Hen Roosts WMJ - propor-hatchin- CORDELL ft. WNU Service. of controlling the fall J C TAYI.OR F,ifn,inn PtmUrrmtn. Ktw Jrttrf ('"lime o Agriculture. W.SU Seme Turn on Electric Lights to Increase .0,5 ouppij McClure Kewipipti Syndicate. By C. If Brannon, P mention Fntotnologitt, North Carolina State College. W.U Service. to Be Discarded. Dy By STANLEY By LEWIS BROWNE Use Calcium Arsenate for Some Crops; Poison Bait for Others. GRADING HJLLETS FOUND GOOD PLAN Knoltons Crime The GRAPHIC BIBLE tion at the head of the Jerusalem but many of the brotherhood; members remained bitterly opposed to the new tendency. Conversion of Saul of Tarsus of all the certain Jew named Saul, or Paul, a native of Tarsus in Asia Minor. He had first come to Jerusalem to study under the rabbis there, for though he was from a Hellenized city, and though his father was a citizen of the THE greatest was a Roman empire, Saul was a strict Pharisee. When first he came to Jeni-alehe bitterly opposed the little group of Jews who believed that the Mes siah had already come In the per son of Jesus, and lie Joined In Harlot against them which entil'd In the death of one of their chief men, Stephen, and In the (light of many of the others. Even more, he sei out In pursuit of a number of the fugitives when he learned they were spreading their heresy In But on the way to that city he saw a vision of Jesus nnd beenme himself suddenly converted to the new faith. When he reached Damascus he Joined the fugitives and there he gan to preach tliolr own doctrine of the risen Christ. For a while he wandered In wlmt Is described as Arabia," but what was probably the desert region to the south of Damascus. From there he returned to Damascus, and thence to Jerusalem, where he was accepted Into the mother church. Then he returned to Tarsus, his birthplace, and lived la retirement for several years. Now after the first grent riot against the Nazarenes In Jerusalem, the Hellenized element In the sect was scattered far and wide. Some of Its members, as we already know, sought refuge In Damascus; others, like Philip, took to Cesarea; still others found a resting place In the Important Syrian city of Antioch. The persecution they had suffered had only Intensified their faith In their Messiah, and wherever they settled they continued to preach the gospel of his second coming. At first they preached In the synagogues and only to the Jews, but later they began to preach also to the Gentiles. When news of this radical development reached Jerusalem there was much concern, for the believers left behind In Jerusalem were all strict Jews. Accordingly they sent out one of their number, Barnabas, to Investigate the situation In Antioch. Barnabas was completely won over by what he saw, and Instead of returning to Jerusalem with complaints he remained In Antioch to direct the work. In a little while he felt the need of a and therefore went over to Tarsus, which was not far away, to persuade Paul to join lilm. Paul agreed, and from then on for some years the two men worked together In great harmony. Paul and Barnabas took with them on this first long journey a relative of the latter whose name was Mark. They went on to Derbe, where for a change they were allowed to labor In peace. . Thence they might have been able to make their way across the mountains to Tarsus without much difficulty; but they refused. The second missionary journey began with an unfortunate disagreement between Paul and Barnabas, and the two men parted company. Barnabas went with Mark to Cyprus, and Paul, taking with him a young man named Silas, or Sylva-nus- , set out for Asia Minor. Unfortunately the New Testament has almost no record of the work which Barnabas did. We are In formed only of the adventures of, Paul, and therefore we are able to follow none other. Starting from Antioch over land, Paul visited the churches of Syria and then pushed on Into Asia Minor. He revisited Derbe, I.ystra, and the other cities where he and Barnabas had found ed little churches on the first . m Jour-npy- e are not told the names of the new cities which he visited All we know Is that, after wandering for a time In Galatia, Paul and Silas, together with a third who had companion. Timothy, joined them at I.ystra, got as far as Troas, the ancient city of Troy. Hare they were Joined hy a fourth missionary, Luke, who later wro'e the Third Gospel and the Book of Acts. little chance that anything would go wrong. He had served as clerk at the lumber camp for two long year. And from the moment he first saw the payroll left unguarded in the office wh.le the bank guard went out and a camp paymaster came In from that moment Knolton knew that some day he'd steal that payroll and make a The day that Knolton had chosen for the robbery was not unlike a thousand others. At exactly noon the payroll car drove up. A guard stepped into the office and deposited the heavy bag by Knolton' chair. Knolton greeted him carelessly, nodded at the bag and bent to hia work. The guard went out The moment flic door closed Knoltons head came up. He listened intently. Outside he could hear the bank guard in conversation with Raymond, the camp paymaster. There wasn't a moment to lose. Quickly Knolton lifted up the cover of his desk, removed from inside a bag almost identical to the one on tiie flour and equally as heavy. He made the transfer deftly, unhurriedly. The door oprred and Raymond came inside. lie nodded briefly to Knolton, picked up tiie decoy bag and went out aga.n. Knolton slid fiom his stool, removed the payroll bag from his desk, hurried through a back door, and paused for a moment's reflection. He stepped outside and walked leisurely toward the river. Unobserved he chmbcd into the canoe which was hidden there, and pushed off. Knolton reached By a tributary and turned off the main stream. He paddled up tins smaller waterway for more than a mile and then turned his canoe toward the shore. He set the canoe adrift and headed inland, swinging southward. By dusk he had come to a virgin stand of timber, mighty monarch of the forest as yet unscathed by tiie lumbermans axe. His steps led him to a huge pine, larger than the rest, with thick undergrowth at the base. He parted the growth and pulled at a tuft of dirt. The tuft came away, revealing a shallow hole. Knolton had dug the hole months before, allowed the undergrowth to grow over it so that no trace of his recent visit would be in evidence. He deposited the bag in the hole and carefully replaced the dirt. That night Knolton returned to the river farther south. Here he uncovered a cache of food, and ate. He slept, huddled in a single blanket without a fire. It was a month before Knolton reached his destination; a tiny village hundreds of miles south of the lumber camp. Here he paused to rest with a friend. By now he had grown a beard. The friend provided dye, and Knolton changed the color of his hair from light brown to black. Six months later Knolton, now known as Carl Hedman, with no e clerk showing trace of the beneath his perfect disguise, rode leisurely back toward the scene of his crime. His heart began to pound a little as he passed one day along the trail that skirted the camp and came upon some of his old mates at work. The lumbermen gave him no more than a passing glance. Satisfied that he had not been recognized, Knolton followed the river to the mouth of the tributary. With pounding heart he mounted the ridge and paused to look. It was as if a hand had suddenly reached out and was squeezing him in a powerful grip. He stood rooted, mouth ajar, staring in stupified incredulity at the country below. With a sense of horror he realized what had happened. The entire area had been logged by the lumber company, swept bare of every standing tree and piece of timber. A pitiful cry escaped his lips. He started running. Down the hill he came, striking out frantically for the spot where he thought the great pine must have stood, hurrying from one place to another, mad with disappointment, crazed with lust for the money he had stolen. But every tree stump looked alike; none was larger or different from its neighbor. He surmounted great piles of slash, tearing at them frantically, hunting for the stump, the stump of the great pine tree. Thus unmindful of his direction he came again to the river bank. He crashed ahead, unheedful, his eyes on the ground, hoping for some familiar sight. And when at length he reached the top of another hill he paused to rest, overcome by fatigue. Too late he felt the slash pile beneath him slipping away. Too late he realized that the slash had been thrown on the brink of a precipice overhanging the river. He clutched frantically at protruding branches, which served only to hurry an inevitable fate. There was a great roaring sound. The slash pile gathered momentum and slid over the brink into the river below. Knolton, with a pitiful cry on his lips, went with it Far, far below he lay, a broken body on the jagged rocks there. His face was upturned, unseeing eyes staring at tiie blue of heaven overhead. n It Doesnt Pay- - ' Whats In a Name? a If in to child were come and Doing Favors for Others With say that her mother had sent for a can of maltreated milk,' what Thought of Return Disappoints would you give her?" asked the of his new assistant. 'T'HE older I grow the more I unappreciative. They are just not dairyman "Why, malted milk, of course." am appalled by the ingrati- punctilious. Frequently a kindFine! Our last man hunted all tude, the complete lack of a sense ness makes its mark but time over the shelves for a can of of obligation on the part of our passes before occasion presents cream. fellow human beings. itself to show appreciation, or to whipped With me the people who come reciprocate. After all, if we think Fulfilled first are always those to whom I enough of people to put ourselves Bill Have you ever realized have any obligation whatsoever. out for them, as our reader says, of childhood hopes? Anything that ts done for me is there must be a certain amount anyFete your when mother used Yes; 1 am of on faith. mind and my constantly on the lookout to repay. But look If we do things for others only to comb my hair I often wished I about you and you will observe because we want to do them and didn't have any. the most inconceivable indiffer- find a certain satisfaction in it, ence on the part of most other- we have nothing to lose. But the Collecting 'Em wise decent people to what they expected reward is something like Henry Ive a good mind to proowe to others. Indeed the code the watched pot very disappointpose to you. Mabel Oh, please do. I need seems to be to cultivate those ing. In fact, it doesnt pay. Dell Syndicate. WNU Service, one more proposal to beat my last from whom some advantage may be forthcoming and neglect those years record. to whom we are indebted. The answer to it all is to put yourself Sees Through It out for nobody; it doesnt pay." My Daddys so tall he can sea The above lament was received right over the garden fence." "So can mine when hes got by an international writer of note, who answers as follows. his hat on." i It must have been an unusually unfortunate chain of experiences Her One Thought that gave this woman such an un- There's a Difference He When are you thinking of But on human slant nature. A conservative puts two and two getting married? happy certain it is that favors done with together and so does an optimist, She Constantly. thought of return are bound to but the conservative has the two In this and two. bring disappointment. busy, hectic worlo, people arc Is charm What we call likely to be rather casual about founded on kindheartedness. You not does and That take. give can depend on that virtue. necessarily mean that they are In ruling, better be careful. Minorities have a way of suddenly becoming majorities. o tm JN I bar Brilliancy Amuses iwitfo lor baking aol luvt astd nitty brands No one has the moral right to talk cynical" who cant do it biMi ponder. I now os Clabber Gi.'1.extlBiIttly. brilliantly. When making bread and butter A boy bandit starts when there Mrt M. E. Rynercoa pudding, sprinkle each slice of is nobody to keep fool ideas out of Ind.ina SttttFok Manor bread and butter with desiccated a boy's head. coconut instead of currants, and There is a good deal of proteststrew some on the top. Tnis will the cannon foddet ; but ing make a change from the ordinary in by European cannon fodder will be will found and very pudding have to do better than that. tasty. We Have a Tale Japanned articles should never Every man, if you know him, is be washed in hot water, as the interesting. The only uninterestjapan is likely to wash off. Use ing people are those you don't lukewarm water and soap. know. Love of money is the root If you have no individual of half the evil and lack of money in molds, jellies may be molded the root of the other half. upside-dowmuffin tins. Turn the pan A hermit has learned that letplace hot, wet towel over ting people know what you think pan and jellies will slip out easily. isnt worth while. Aoclated Newspaper. WNU Service. o ILck PMO. " ' uZj mmm 'Warn n, one-tim- BOYS! GSRLS! Join Dizzy Dean Winners! Get Valuable Prizes e Grape-Nu- ts Send top from one package, with your name and address, to Grape-Nut- s, Battle Creek, Mich., for new membership pin and certificate and catalog of 49 nifty free prizes. Youll like crisp, deit has a winning flavor all its own. licious Grape-NuEconomical, too, for two tablespoon-ful- s, with whole milk or cream and fruit, provide more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal. (Offer expires Dec. 31, 1936. Good only in U.S.A.) full-siz- ts A Tt Pod Cereal ton Mod by General Pood IIm cwn! In new pockegt FREE! |