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Show teriT . Legal Notices - - COW TESTERS HANDBOOK ISSUED BYT. S. DEPARTMENT handbook for cow testers has been prepared and published by the United States Depuarment af Agriculture which will be of considerable value tp the men engaged in the work of testing cows for production in cow testing associations. Many testers are not especially trained for their particular-workbut by folthe lowing suggestions of the handbook and the standard methods advised, they will make their records much more valuable to the dairymen, more useful in the various studies by the department based on such ' reaords. ' Every tester should nave one of these handbooks, they are- printed in a convenient size for carrying ip the pocket. The. handbook, not only .informs the . tester just how- to do his work' in the most) valuable way, but also informs. the owner of the herd just what he care expect of the tester. A thorough knowledge of(thp duties of t.he tester by both" the tester and the owner of the herd should aid materially in promoting harmony and better cooperation in cow' testing A to water users notTue ' . State Engineers Office Salt Lake City, Utah, June 17, 925. Notice is hereby given that the Maple Springs Power Company, with its principal place, of business at Salt' Lake' City, Utah, has made application in accordance with the requirements of the compiled laws of Utah, 1917, .as amended by the Session Laws- of Utah, .1919, to appropriate' Twenty Sec. Ft. of water froth (20) North and South Maple Springs Creek in Millard County "as fol11 Sec. Ft. of water will be lows: diverted from. North Maple Springs Creek at a point 438 ft. N. and 1550 ft. W. from tlifc S. E. corner of Sec - - M., 32, T. 20 S., It. 2 W., S. L: B.-and 9 Sec, Ft. ' from South Maple Spring Creek at "a point 2450 ft. S. and 235 ft. W, from the said 'S. "E. Corner of Sec 32. The water, from North Maple Spring- Creek will be in a conveyed aproximately 3000-.-ftpipe line to a junction with the.watef .from .South Maple Spring. Creek, which will be" conveyed approximately From- the 3000 ft. in a pipe. line. junction of the two pipe lines the water will be conveyed in a single pipe line a further distance of 9200. ft. and there used from Jan: 1 to Dec 31, inclusive, of each y?ar to produce power .for electric lighting and propelling machinery in Sevier, San Pete,' 'and Millard Counties, and elsewhere as .market demands may require, After having been- so used, the water will channel at . be returned to the natural a'point'North 2075 ft. from the N. W. comer of T. '2i: S.; R.' S. L. M. These applications are designated in the State Engineer's office as FiLe Nos.-900and '9007. ' '. All protests against the granting 'of said application, stating the reasons therefore, must be made oy. affidavit in duplicate, accompanied wifh a fee of $1.00, and filed in this 'office with-- . in thirty (30)- days after the completion of the publication of this notice. ' , GEO. M. BACON, . . . - ' . . - , and-als- - ' work. ' . ; .: A copy of .the handbook,' which is (called .Miscellaneous Circular No. ,25 . (nay.be secured ' upon request, as long as the . supply lasts, from-thUnited States Deupartment of Agriculture,- Washington, D. C.' THE PIONEERS IMMORTALIZED . . I . . The newspapers, of .the United Sta tes ' are handing compliments to the late Herbert Quick who. has recently passed on from his .brilliant career as a fiction writer to the relm of the- unknown.- .... He was .to Iowa and the middle west such ' a' chronicler of its true life as was the late Emerson Hough, who wrote the covered wagon and im . ' mortalized the conquerors of the far State Engineer. west. . Date of first publication June 27, Both Hough and Quick were both 1925. Date of completion of. publicaall round Americans, and sympathe tion July 25, 1925. tis with the struggles of the pioneers who made this nation a reality. Butter- wrappers, printed' at- this Their stories are clean as the fine winds of the Iowa prairies, wholeffice. orders- Here. some and invigorating as the lives they depict, leaving no excuse for reWedding announcements. The.'Sun producing degenerate literature for "Office. Qijick service. American families to read. . - . - S.end.-your- , . YHE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH LAW MAKERS AND LAW BREAKERS Secretary Jardine Spepks On the Power Problems H. M. Atkinson, who is Chairman of the Board of the Georgia Railway and Power company declares we have become a nation of law makers and law breakers. He says: What we need is fewer laws on the statute books, more respect for law and more regard for justice in the minds and consciences of men. I do not mean that we should take less interest in goverment. On the other hand, we should take more active interest than ever before. The greatest trouble is that too many of us have pursued the even tenor, of our way and left the affairs of state to the politicians and soap box orators. The result has been that ,the highest offices within the gift of the people have been brought into more or less disrepute and are seldom if ever sought by men of marked ability and high principals. We have defaulted in our obligation tions to society and need an aroused public conscience .with particular reference to our duty as citizens as it relates to the affairs of state and conduct of our government.' W.M. Jardine, Secretary of AgrL there is. not a household task but that THE MISFITS WEEDING OUT General Harboard, president of the Radio Corporation of America say that the day of cheap, amature apparatus will soon pass, when respectwill come into able manufacturers their own. It happened so in the automobile business where a few year ago there were hundreds of cars, some of which became orphanded every day; now the business has settled into a comparatively few, strong, capable hands that put out a reliable product that can be guaranteed to give good service. The radio has passed the toy stage it is a real necessity. Its been lots of fun to build our own radios; it has kept half a million active boys opt of the bad list by giving them something to do at home that absorbs all their spare time. But its big days are yet to come, aa President Harboard knows. culture, and L. J. Taber, Master af electricity can lighten or brighten. the National Grange, before the 3rd Much of the farm work wilL yield general session of the National Ele- better to electrical power than to any ctric Ehht Association in San Fran- other. For The milk cisco, June 18th, made rural electri-catio- q water the machine, pump, require one of the outstanding fea- ing elethe that that even, steady power tures of the 48 annual convention. so and cheaply sup The desirability of the electric ctric motor easily light and power service for improv- plies. The seasonable tasks like ening conditions, reducink production silage cutting etc.,' requires an abund costs,' and bringing to agriculture ant and certain power. Thus we can other benefits which enevitably follow the copper wires as outlined by see the limitless opportunity that these two great leaders in agricul- opens before us. The home is the ture fields, was echoed and heart of the farm; interfere with the Convention the prothroughout rural home, lower its standards and Good Old Bookt Stay gram but such leaders of the electric you deal a blow to American farm In the world of The old stand-bylight and power industry as Franklin life. If Oriental standards of EuroJane Austen, books literature by associaof the Griffith, president George Eliot, Thackeray. Dickens and tion, Martin Insull, chairman, of the pean peasant '.standards should ever William James rarely are allowed to Public Policy Committee, and G. C. come into our homes we would de rest for long on the shelvea of the Noff, chairman, of .the Rural Electric stroy a great potentinal purchasing New York public library, according to Service Committee. power; we would injure the Repubthe head of the circulating Secretary Jardine pictured power lic and still the heart that warms, A German scientist declares that as one of the .dominating forces in blesses, and brightens the open counearthworms sing and that the rythm agriculture development since. 1850; try. Speaking as chairman of the How Unfortunate is something very much .like jazz, reviewing briefly man power, animal Rural Electric Service Committee, Legal language needs working on power, steam gas power areas. lie G.. C. Neff recommended that elec- and they certainly have the jazzy wig Some laymen can understand It yet showed tha.t from 1890 to 1924 the tric light and power companies de- gle to go with it. Duluth Herald. primary horse power on farms doubl velop sound, comprehensive plans ed, while the area of farm crops only for stimulating agricultural developincreased 50 per cent and pictured ment, especially urging on this inHeart With Spine The case of Eugene Butermelster, a electricity as the next great source dustry .the necessity of employing deaf mute who hears music through of energy to make its contribution to men who understand agriculture and hts spine, Is puzzling Swiss scientists, He stated who are sympathic to agriculture. agriculture development. butermelster attended a concert at Dentist electric and the that, light power Mr. Neff strongly recommended that Berne recently and found that he At Gunnison:- - Monday, Tuescompanies of the United States devel utilities starting on rural electrificacould, hear" and enjoy the music, not op more electricity than do all the tion programs, the importance of day and Wednesday. through the ear but through the other nations of the world combined. creating a rural department which At Salina:- - Thursday. Friday pine. His spine seems to be a kind More than one million nine hundred tvould specialize on this work. of lightning conductor, be explained. and Saturday. thousand new customers were added He can hear almost no other sound Dr. E, A. White, Director of .the to the lines of the electric light and Committee on the relation of elecexcept Instrumental music, however. power companies during 1924. A re- tricity to agriculture, brought out. the cent statement by the United States magnatitude tof thip undertaking II Bureau lof Tabor .statist ids (shows which he showed to make electric ,hat the average cost of electricity service effective on less than 25 per is 8.6 per cent less than before the cent of the farms of the Nation, it wair, while the cost of all other items would require a capital investment in the family budget has increased of one billion five hundred million on an average of 65 per cent. It will dollars; four times the amount of be seen that under regulation with money required to construct the Paincreased cost of ipaterials labor the nama Canal. electric light and power industry has He urged to insure expenditure of been able to keep the cost of elec- this in your home town newspaper and get capital and avoid exploitation of cost. Sec- the farmer, that the research work tricity below the pre-wresults that canhot beattained through that on. the application" of electricity, to retary Jardine further said: the most serious difficulty connected agriculture now being undertaken by h the advertising methods with the distribution of electric en- seventeen states, be vigorously press ergy to rural communities seems to cuted, Je to get the average customer to use sufficient current to give the cenxn. 3 tral stations a reasonable return on iH their investment, without making an unreasonably high- charge per unit of energy consumed. In most cases when a rural line has been erected, the farmers have availed themselves Cyrena Van Gordon, prima donna of of it for supplying lights to their the Chicago Opera company, believe In tha flapper and m houses and barns and perhaps for gai her privileges. Sb the operation of a few small machiPi In th believe nes requiring little current, but they to your local newspaper and read all of thla of practice have hot extended .its use further. I c u a ed much-the news that is of vital interest to you Obviously the central service staperson In wearing In tions canno-- be expected to invest a a corset, money in rural service extension unwearing Inabort less they receive' a reasonable return skirts, going for athletics and outon their investment. On the other door life and la hand it must be recognized that agupsetthoroughly riculture cannot utilize electrical enting the theories ergy extensively unless its costs and and practices of the returns from its use are such as her mother and to make the practice profitable. The grandmother. Mis Van Gordon, farmer has a keen understanding of who la, In private relative power costs as they apply life, Mrs. 8. Bogart to his conditions, and he employs onthe wife Munns, ly those practices that yield a large of Doctor S.. B. Munns, say that all profit. of these things are woman right and Mr. Taber took the subject of Eleare necessary If a woman la anxious ctrical Sunshine for Agriculture; pay to keep her youth and beauty. But ing particular attention which this exercise Is not the only thing that desubject afforded for improving, living necessary for the woman who conditions upon the farm. Particular sirous of being attractive. She muBt watch her diet and be careful not to ly he emphasized the need of equipmenwlll,-lany way, be t-adapted to farm use in the fol- eat anything that fattening. A most important lowing manner: There are certain dishes to which must be that made point clear to both Miss Van Gordon Is partial and to the power companies and the. manuwhich she gives the credit for the refacturers is, that the experimenting tention of her beauty. These dishes, Snd investigating must take place beshe prefers to prepare herself and. when, on tour with the Chicago Opera fore sales are made to the farmer. Should the power companies and the company, she carries a small electric ' stove In order that she will not be load the equipment manufacturers of the food she deems neces-- ' farmer with material unsuited to his. deprived sary. These dishes are easily prepared needs land that Hater will beco'me Miss Van Gordon uses for junk, they have not only injured agCelery and Cheese Casserole. riculture but have injured ' 1 i cup cheese tbap. butter True in the end the users: of eleI cups chopped I cup cooked spa(hettl buttered ctricity will be compelled to pay for tt celery, V4 cup cop evaporated this investigation but it will be more bread crumbs milk water H tap. salt cup efficient, and more economicially act tbep.' flour complished if it takes place before She makes white sauce of milk, wasales are made to the farmer, rather ter, butter, flour, and salt, and mixes than after. The farmers is likely to It with all Ingredients except crumbs. of Animal Industat 7 A,- M. Veterinarians of complain little ofthe costs of current She then places It In sn oiled baking Beginning but much about the cost of equipment dish and covers with crumbs, baking The ry and the State Board of Agriculture will be in attendance. and mechanical appliances: to make In a moderate oven until brown. Chicken a la King. the current serve him. The manufacFee is 25 cents per head. 1 cup evaporated "bold I clip! not have as yet fully turing group milk diced sensed the great possibilities that are I chicken, 4 lb. mushroom tbep. butter It is the duty of the owners to bring! the cows to the corral 1 cup chlckea I tbep. flour before them. Continuing, Mr. Ta7 broth Vt green pepper. ber said: The Electrical Sunshine 1 "7 ehredded r yolk designated, or be liable to quarantine. . Vt Balt and pepper or rather, the power, light and hea' pimento, hredded that electrical energy so easily furCook the peppers (also mushrooms, nishes, means more to agriculture If they are used) In the butter for 13 to than almost any othe r industry. minutes, keeping them covered .while SIGNED The bright lights of the ci;ty that, atslowly. Add the flour and seatract our youth; the oil lamp and the cooking sonings, p.so the milk and broth. Stir dangerous lantern at the bam, have to a smooth sauce. Put chicken In a depressing effect on ruUal life. The sauce to heat, and Just before serving, drudgery of household cares are al- stir In beaten egg yolk. Cook In double so heavy in the .farm honie and yet boiler to prevent curdling. ' Dr. F. 0, . s Bullock . Advertise ar j f J j J B, B J . i- J J J j - . word-of-mout- As for You, it means Best Buying As for lis, it Means Best Butchers Youll Buy Best from from the Best Butchers in the . . 4 Subscribe . B. B. SHOP ' Watch Your Diet, Says Prima Donna - . d t Versions of the Popular : New jabot Frock , You must have your dairy cows and heifers tested for 1 1 The day for Salma is . Tuesday July 14th . . s : 8305 This dress is especially materials. bordered fuijmsmJiinc gi'iJe.virludcJ with the '.StjuXnd'- - Designer .The Srlrobe shows you the the Pattern for tln-yon . professional way to attach band the and trimming. inth- pictures. Jww to ni alfe it: jabot '8300 ThiDelrrhe, a wonder-- ' ' suited-t- dvess-show- After you buy your Standard Designer. ' Pattern including Bclrobe, risit s counter! . our .. . piece-good- . Here you will find 1; the new. summer ma' first consult your terials on kind and amount pattern envelope for the of material to use. The Bclrobe shows you with pictures how to lay out the pattern on the. least possible amount of material. dr-fliy- ' .' i- -it Fair Mercantile Company At E. W. Cranes and Railroad Stock Yards - the-Burea- ' ly The Committee |