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Show uf; March 21, 1940 m urs stern Kansas Cattlemen Face Youthful Clipper Passenger g Menace: Birds ;f $- Pe$t Who Big Losses. j Fight Cause Cattlemen of learned to have t Kansas h Vith tero weather and are hitting them now, are faced this year with a aCe Kansas birds are KAN. bill-gtlc- j eat-jns- as cows. , Lamberson, a cattleman of two birds to the j, brought to show men of stockyards specimens of Kansfcs jurt of . irest pests.-.- l are alighting on the bird through the ( of cows, boring and literally starting to ?at ' , slive. of the birds Is an English similar to the kg; the other C state bird, the meadow lark, fieems that these starlings are Ug our state birds a few bad I was Lamberson said. Und raised In this part of the W, and never have seen any gi here before. Cows at Mercy. ' species have long beaks and jclaws. They alight on the i back. Just above the rump, the cow neither can shake oor brush It off with her Is y 245) Bd me t'sc ) - j 'am ctio ur attacking beet herds, but (doing most of their damage in herds, according to Lamber- are tAI To r Pi are finding It difficult to If they put out pests. meat, dogs and cats, the almost every farmhouse, eat iers the died t of they have tried die. So of wait until the sparbirds die from ef-- s of the poison, and then attack a, boring through the breasts of i i winged victims. 'a English starling is a dark are nearly black i heIts feathers on the spread but end, quill i i hey have a purplish dot Id books describe starlings as lather, they 's and other Uti f ; i M i t i OHi , ifunonia Pandnr, owned by Gene former pugilist, pictured best of breed of Iomondorocks at the Westmln-lo- g Vaey, being Judged by w w m a - m Reaches Home rr ( -- Cecily Williams Is shown in her London, England, home after she flew across the Atlantic in the Atlantic clipper. She made the trip with her father, Capt. Fox Williams, who returned home to rejoin the British army.' Baby Cecily formerly lived In Los Anreles, Calif., with a centenarian, who came to the United States her as a baby in 1840. Nine-months-o- ld great-grandmoth- Frightened Buster Bear Runs Away With Shiny Berry Pail By THORNTON question Is, did fluster Bear Fanner Browns BURGESS This was bad enough, but to make Boys matters worse Just at that very min- pail? To steal is to take something ute, he heard a shrill, angry voice which belongs to some one else. shout: Get out of Hi, there! There Is no doubt that he stole the there He didn't need to be told berries that were in the pail when whose voice that was. It was the be found it, for he deliberately ate voice of Farmer Browns- - Boy. them to the last one. He knew well Right then and there Buster Bear enough that some one must have nearly had a fit There was that picked them, for who ever heard of awful pail fast over his head ' so blueberries growing In tin pails? So that he couldn't see a thing. Of there Is no doubt that when Buster course that meant that he couldnt took them he stole them. But with the pall it was different He took the pail, but he didn't mean to take it In fact he didnt want that pail 1 show In New York. Be Is Miss Margaret Dorrlamm. When Buster found that big tin pail brimming full of delicious berries In the shade of that big bush in the Old Pasture hedidnt stop to think whether or not he had a right to them. Buster is so fond of berries that from the very second that his greedy litUe eyes saw that pailful he forgot everything but the feast that was waiting for him right under his very nose. He didnt think anything about the right or wrong of helping himself. There before him were more berries than he had ever seen together at one time in all his life, and all he had to do was to eat and eat And that is Just what he did da Of course, he upset the pail, but .he didnt mind a little thing like that - When he had gobbled up all the berries that bad rolled out he thrust his nose into the pail to get all that were left in. Just then he heard a little noise as if some one wat coming. He threw up his head to listep, and somehow, he never did know Just how, the handle of the pail slipped bw;k over his ears and caught there. so frightened himself he might have recognized that second yell as one of fright, for that is what it was. You see. Farmer Brown's Boy had Just' discovered Buster Bear. When he had yeUed the first time he had supposed it was one of the young cattle who live in the Old Pasture all summer, but when he saw Buster he was just as badly In frightened as Buster himself. fact, he was too surprised and frightened even to run. He Just stood still and stared after that second yell. Buster clawed at that awful thing on hia head more frantically than ever. Suddenly it slipped off so that ho could see. Ho gavo one frightened look at Farmer Brown's Boy, and then with a mighty Whoof! he started for the Green Forest as fast as his legs could take him, and this was very fast Indeed, let mo tell you. He didnt stop to pick out a path, but just crashed through the bushes as if they were nothing at all. Just nothing at alL But the funniest thing of all is this he took that tin pail with him! , Yes. sir; Buster Bear ran away with the big With a mighty whoofl be started for the Green Forest as fast as his legs could take him. run away, which was the thing of all things, he most wanted to do. You see. big as be is, and strong as he is, Buster is very shy and bashful when human beings are around. He growled and whined He tried to back and squealed. out of the pail and couldnt He tried to shake it off and couldnt He tried to pull it off, but somehow he couldnt get hojd of it Then there was another yell.'' If Buster tho dessert course be. ierted at the table or placed on the individual dishes in the kitchen and brought to the dining room f Thank you. -- MRS. HOSTESS. to Answer The general rule' but the at aalad left, plate place the a. considered,. It if the guest 4s is much easier for him to have the salad at his right and be able to eat it without reaching over bit main plate. Of course, if a bev- crage is served withthe main course, then the apace to the right of the dinner plate is occupied and tha salad plate will have to go to the left If the hostess Is respon-sibl- s for the cooking ss well ss serving the dinner, then whichever way is easiest for her to serve the dessert is the right way. It seems quite natural if the hostess bis prepie or a pared a luscious-lookin- g if as It were looks that pudding picture-take- n she. tO'have4ts V lie EaiKnl GttW pMiaMUrr M PbiUilpbU, ready A gosrd is shown will wish her guests to enjoy looking Left: cells. from discovered were prison two leading convicts, dog by of the underground passageways. Right: The opening where convicts would have made good their at It and hence will serve it at the was dtacev-- table. Detectives,' armed with machine runs,-- were rushed, to. the, penitentiary when the plot v pifyliu 'Belmont. WNU Ssnrlcw One of the suspected Inmate plotters committed suicide, 14 4o-b- Pt, S8-fo- ot H 7 A fleet of more than uto trailer dark rooms, fully pupped to develop and print aerial ichffe in the field under actual Broe conditions, of the United X will soon be a States army air more than two years, the sir 'jP has experimented with vari-- 7 jpes of trailer coach dark perfected by auto trailer oufac turcr x. As a result of those TO ADD 150 TRAILER DARICROOMS protracted experiments, army"" ficials will build the fleet The new portable photographic laboratories that Is how the army inofficially describes them sra of the to the take place tended field dark rooms, which were more or less stationary because they required tents to be erected, equipment and materials to be packed old-sty- le Into trucks, followed by unpacking, and too much time before being put Double Trouble Then things started to go wrong. Pollard suffered a broken leg In New England. He spent several months In hospital and then went to the California ranch of Seabis-cult- s owner, C. S. Howard. He waa Joined there by hia old pal, Seabis-cul- t, who had broken down In cheap race testing himself for the 1939 Santa Anita handicap. From then on the horse was Pollards special charge. Aa horse and Jockey recuperated, Pollard helped Trainer Tom Smith bring the Bis- - i Young fighters who wouldn't have been even remotely Products of the farm have mor 7 considered as op- - than 400 nonfood uses in industry., ponents for him are For example, corn is used in maka J ranging themselves ing adhesives, potatoes in laundry against him. John- - starch, soybeans in plastics, cattle J al- ft ny Paycheck grease in antifreeze mixtures, ' V has been ready grape-see- d oil in soaps, buttermilk - Xv. i matched with him. in and eggs in leather-dressin- g paints, Lee Savold is being processes. readied for a shot ' at him. Only a BABY CHICKS, TURKEY POULTS week or so ago Louis BABY CHICKS through 15 rounds HATCHING DAILY with the rough and Whit,, brows and buff Lrghornk, KmU, j . into operation. D. D. Arehart. president of the Palace Travel Coach corporation, which built the first portable photographic laboratories for test purposes, said the vehicles are conmetals and structed of built to be used in sny temperature or weather conditions in the world. They are Constructed so ss to traVcl at high speed over rough land and open ditches. Arehart said. non-corrosi- . $ faltered clownisi Arturo Godoy, the South American threat. Tli is doesn't mean that Louis is ready to be taken and that the time is at hand for some strong young ellow to rush In, belt him out from under his crown and rush off to gather In a million dollara or so. lie still can hold these young fellows off he should be able to, since he still is a young fellow himself. BUt it meant that he has entered tn a hew phase of his career. lie and Itarrtd . Rocks, nd 11 Irailtns lUmp-hirm- .Whit Huff Orphlnftona vw-tl- tl. TURKEY POULTS Ponltry milpmtnt, rlrrtrie sod Onfti), If hroodm wafa-rvr- (ra, !, st. Call and a a rral mtxUrii chick tbrnttjr hospital. Vhttora always wwUsoma. -- RAMSHAWS UTAH PIONEER HATCHERY ItST Ba. Stats Salt Lak City Persons Read This Ruptured -f Raptar Csatrsl th Cllat la raaraatssd Is hold yaar Raptor ssfsly and with psrfsrt Caafart. Thsnaaada ( SatlsSsd Catlsnts hars hssa hsssStsd hr Maay rspart bstae rsHsrsd sntlrsly. Writ fsr Msassrsnsat Blank or coll la porooa si th OStcs of th Cliais. Tk fsrtsd Mstksd by Just the heavyweight chamnd not s bogey man. The lightning still crackles in hia fists and he still ranks aa one ef Caalta!la fna the greatest fighters the ring ever National Hernia Clinic has known. But he no longer frightKKRBERT DKANR. M. Ik. ipslM SIS Mas Bids. Ball Lak Clip. Utah ens hia opponents out of their wits. There sre no mere ranllnoe dying WOMEN! Relieve Trying Days is the training camp or Levlnskys room. by taking Dr. Pierces Ftvonte Prein the dressing dying scription over a period of time. Helps build physical resistance by improving A Terrifying Appearance nutritional sssimulation. Adv. Schmel-ing Once nobody save Max thought of getting Louis off That Which Reigns At 20 years of sge the will la pion now reigns; at 50,. the wit; and at the Judgment. Grstian. 1 40, fcdted GOT SOTO FEMALE COMPLAINTS Cfpsaal IfcsatsaOsl Nlp4 Tern wona t4r 4s as ksss sf(0 at 11 troab Sltyb yoa's aoti4 Lrdta E.PIakkama VsestaMo Mss JRStUfstUn rsstlsss, woody, jrour work too much lor yoa Tksa try Lydia E. ptskhsai'B Vctable Compound to kip qulst pnstrunp fsiUvt monthly pais (cramp, baekscha, ns dacha) and wsk dlny lalntins spall SO du to functional disorders. For hua-drsyaari Pinkhamt Compound has holpod of thousands of Wash, niadova vous wonts. Try tl 8srfisd law y osr Truth and a Sunbeam Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam. Milton. 1 JOE LOUIS GREATEST MONEY WINNER Seabiseuit with owner C. S. Howard with tho main course f To the right or to the left oj lho dinner plate ? Should IBICAGO. -- What to D TT71LL you kindly tell mo where tha of- Although most creatures have ft definite growth limit, othera continue to increase in size as lonfc as they live, among them being narrows circle The CHICAGO.1 Louis and Ifie con- - trees, fish, oysters, clams,! tenders come into clearer view. shrimps, crabs and lobsters. that single track on which he travels so fearsomely. That was in the time when to be matched with him meant certain destruction. BY PHYLLIS BELMONT t-- Must Go On t WNU Servtcs. rV salad should bo placed when eaten .IRMY AIR CORPS Iersatite Product He didnt want it He would have given anything to get rid of it But he took it because he couldnt help to the it And that brings us back steal Bear Did Buster question: Farmer Browns Boys pail? What do you think ? T. W. Burgess. I Continuous Growth tin pail of Farmer. Browns' Boy! you see when it slipped off, the handle was still around his neck! i prisoners Nabbed in Daring Tunnel Escape Plot kee IT FADFRS of pulp magazine ot. will recognize It's a story of a racehorse and a Jockey. Both of them were saut to be through, all washed up. They had been at the top of the heap but time had taken its toll and both were spoken of in the past tense. Then fame the last desperate'ef-fort- . The big face. The one the horse had lost by a nose the two previous years. This time fortune smiled and the valiant pair was victorious. The horse and Jockey are again topnotchers In the struggle for turfdom'a gold and glory. Youve doubtlessly recognized the main characters .by now.. Theyre Seabiseuit and his Jockey, Johnny Pollard. The latest chapter in their combined careers was written at California's- - Santa Anita racetrack recently when the Biscuit won the $100,000 handicap and established himself as the world's money, winner, It wasn't so very long ago that the end of the glory road seemed just ahead for both the Biscuit and Johnny Pollard. Their comebacks are closely related. Two years ago Pollard was rated one of the top riders of the country. lie rode Seabiseuit to many of his early triumphs. fle-tlo- hadnt been THE . Ily UOHF.RT McSlIANE Released by Western Newspaper Union Strange Facts the-pl- -- . Speaking of Sports. Same Old Plot, But Seabiseuit Molernizes-I- t Old-time- rs You see, It was this way: X x intelligent and carnivorous. While there is sriftw on the ground, seeds are plentiful along hedgerows, but the birds prefer to attack the cattle. Eat hfore Than Grabs. " The other bird resembles a meadow lark but is Somewhat darker and more husky than' the ordinary species. here say they have often seen birds land on the backs of cattle, but only to eat grubs which grow under the skin of the animals, rather than the animals themselves. Lamberson says that the type of boring the starlings do is different and that they eat more of the ani- -" mal than Just a grub. The starling is a member of the grackle family, the same family to which crows and blackbirds belong. There, are thousands of crows and Hia'ckbirds in Kansas all through the year, but they never have been seen to attack cattle. Until they learn to cope with the trouble, many of the cattlemen are keeping their dairy herds in sheds. At the same time they are hoping they will find some way to fight the pests because the Kansas climate is so well suited to breeding of the grackle family that there are likely to be thousands of them in the neighborhood in a few years. at alL Champs Champ shi mo evi mo - - put-fo- ot poisoned seeds. sparrows and other birds that X in this part of the country grain. The 'jj eat the poisoned to touch refuse .lings, however, j n Beef-Eatin- Difficult yt Find It -j-XA, wm cult back Into shape. Ha exercised the horse and saw to it that ha had the best of care.' Then, last faU, Pollard waa ready te ga back la tha racing ware and Seablscnlt was taken U Tanforaa Is resame training. They werked hard, bat their first two races at Santa Anita were disappointing. S disappointing, in fact, that onlookers suggested that tha hone be returned to1 the pasture and that Pollard forget about riding. The recent San Antonio handicap changed the complexion of things. In this test race for the Santa Anita handicap Pollard madt a perfectly judged ride on the Biscuit, and the to victory in record time- seven-year-o- horse-gallop- ld ed Kayak Finishes Strong The rest is history. Ita doubtful if the turf will ever produce a race that can match, for sheer drama, the one in which old Seabiseuit went thundering under the wire at Santa A crowd of 73,000 fans cheered their overwhelming favorite aa he led his stable-matKayak U. across the finish line. The clalmThas been made repeal edly by these who saw the race that It waa rigged for Seabiseuit that Howards other entry, Kayak II, conld have nosed eul the winner if he hadnt been held back. It is true, of course, that the How ard stable had publicly "declared to win with Seabiseuit If the luck of the race gave him a chance. By declaring to win with any specific horse Jn its entry, a stable records its intentions of,"'usIhg"thfc'other horse, or horses, as a sort of policeman, to be there to rescue the vie tory in ease something happens to the chosen one. is equally true that However,-i- t not for a score of years has a thoroughbred sped over the mile and a quarter derby route as fast as the Biscuit did' to win. Seabiseuit, to date, has won $437,730. In winning bis latest race be replaced Sun Bean (with a $378,-74- 4 e total) aa the greatest winner. Other money great money winners of the turf Include Equipoise, $338,810 r Phar Up, $132,350; Gallant Fox. $328,183; Zev, $313,639; Mato, $301,810; Twenty Grand. $26U Anita. e. -- "They contain all the delicate equipment and instruments for modern They ' are photography. and furnished with drying equipment for high speed printing and developing. They are equipped with their own power plants nd are capable of operating in any'loca-tio- n and give high speed and accuracy in developing pictures during field . operation under conditions of warfare. 790; Blue Urkspur, $272,070, and aB-ilm- Victorian, $253,423. CONSTIPATED! Gas Crowds Heart. Men took matches with him for tho money alone end then almost Immediately beraa to regret their greed. There was something mysterious and inscrutable and terrible kappas whoa yon ar sonatipatsd. FlRsli lie Aosumuistsd about his very appearance. wastes swU up bowala and ia tha dinstjv trust. was. It seemed, greater than any prss oa bsttss diaartsd food starts to dsasy Tartly of tho fighters who had gone before formia CAS, aftsa bnneinf oa soar stoma ah. iadi nation. sad haartburn, bloat ing'you up him. Do was invincible and the niuntil you somatlUM yasp for Adlan luk emetion shewed that he ter lack ef sirs doubt mM with IXJUBUJ ACTION. BALANCED idlsrtk sostsisine thro made him terrifying. Meet ef hie and St aarmiusUT rsbmrsa STOMACH si moat a oae. It oftaa sUars bowals fights were wen before he laid a GAS la Ism tha twa hours. No (ripm. M sftW glove ea hia opponent. The psycho6 sots, Just quick ratulta. was tremendous. logical advantage Sold at 0 drag storm Schmellng, in, their first fight, demonstrated that Louis had no deWisdom Is Songht fense against a cunningly launched Wealth may seek us; but wisright hand and knocked him out dom must be sought. Young. Louis came back from that knockout a better fighter because it fired him with a new determination and taught him a valuable lesson. He Wa( I magnificent fighter the night he knocked out Jim Braddock to win lOuaa YS Snob" App Tuata tho title and again the night he took I t sum HU SS'J JUST A his revenge on Schmeling. ftfl MKil liftfNIl DASH IN FtATHRS7 6LO-UN- hr-a- tk. ss mi-tlr- , -- The Scene Changes But the scene la which he moves has been changed. None ef those pressing closer about hips now-- is capable of beating him but they know that he can be beaten. They know that in hia last two fights he knocked out but actually didnt come even cloae to a knockout because neither Bob Pastor nor Godoy can punch. Naturally, this Is stimulating to tho young heavyweights around the country. Two years or so ago there was no real Inducement to any young heavyweight, beginning to throw his punches in some remote corner, to hit tho trail for a title mstcir because- there was bogey man at the end of the tyaiL' Now every young heavyweight is rushing to Join tho circle that has been formed about tho champion. - Sharpens Our Skill Our "antagonist Is our helper.-Burk- Salt Lakes NEWEST HOTEL -- Rugged' and Willing The boys are coming out of the bushes out of the shops and off tho docks and down off the trucks and out of tho Jungles. The old lurt Is there again the chance not only to grab some money to stay the limit, perhaps but to beat Louis and win the title. This should bring about some exciting action. Louis, at 28, is rugged and full ef health and not yet bored by his title or given to the usual soft way of living. rntFLE cnuArj -' Crpsas r-- . ZZLT liis x C- tZZZZZ Connor-::- ) r-i- cf tf" rtf 'll:-- " ZZXZ--f C. 1 . 1 if J e. |