OCR Text |
Show JULY THE JOUKNAL 2 The JOURNAL I In of residents the interests of the Davis County, at Layton, Utah. A weekly newspaper published matter at Entered as second-clas- s Act of the under Layton, Utah, March 8, 1879. Published By INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 of the rights of the executive on one hand and the legislative branch on the other, the Utahn said. The senate has spent a vast amount of time on important issues such as the authority of the president to act in the Korean War, in the matter of sending troops to Europe and in the steel seizure. His stand on all these issues has been taken without proper authorization from congress which is elected he must remember to express the will of the people. LIVESTOCK SITUATION LOS ANGELES only fair. Medium and good yearlings sold from $25 to $27 with a few bunches of calves up to $32. sold all the way UNION Plain stockers down to $22. STOCK YARDS CO. July, 1952 Hogs were active with packers Lighter receipts of livestock gave a slightly better undertone to the receiving a much smaller supply market here this week and most of midwestern offerings. Most of quotations are closing strong to the more desirable weights sold a little higher. Most advance has from $22 to $23 with a small pack come on, hogs and cows for supplies of both of these classes were Non-Tox- ic greatly reduced. Packers also re- ported a better market for dressed meat and coolers were well He said too, that this senate cleaned up. seems to have been an indepenAs the week closed steers yearratSTASSOCIAHON UTAH STATE dent one, having taken several to and heifers ruled 12, 1952 age up to $24. Heavier kinds sold down to $20 with a few big weights at $19. Packing cows figured from $10.50 to $18, Sheep and lambs were steady on light numbers. A few old crop lambs sold at $24 with odd head of ewes at $7 and under. New crop lambs were absent. Chemical New Revolutionizes Insect Elimination 9 NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Natl Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service. 222 No. Michigan Ave. Chicago, UL Subscription: $1.00 Per Year Payable in Advance. In combination with The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year. Lloyd E. Anderson Editor Manager Mary B. Bowring News Editor J. V. Woolsey Display Advertising Manager What They Are Saying in Washington .Sen. Wallace F. Bennett ' (R-Uta- h) WASHINGTON, July 5 With a mailing deadline to meet, we still have no assurance that the 82nd congress is, as yet, history. Since the House closed up shop late Saturday, it is expected that the Senate will follow suit still later (even if it means turning back the clock), finish off the last of the conference reports and adjourn. until January. There are many observers in Washington, however, who predict that a special session may be needed in August or September particularly if the steel strike has not been settled. In any event the nations legislators vacated the capital Saturday, with the first order of business to be the Republican National Convention in Chicago. Sen. Wal lace F. Bennett (R., Utah) and Mrs. Bennett were among those to entraii for the Windy City. lings steady stands in direct opposition to the strong with best action on fed administration. offerings. Bulls and stockers and I should like very much to feeders were steady, but calves work with a new congress next declined from $1 to $2 per cwt. on year that will be able to join in liberal offerings. Hog prices are supporting the program of a new up about $1 while sheep and lambs are mostly steady. president, Sen. Bennett said. Several loads of average choice Meanwhile, he was busy in his own right during the final week steers scored a top of $32.75 this of the session. He appeared on a week while the bulk of good and half hour television show in re- better grading kinds sold from buttal to Sen. Estes Kefauver(D-Tenn.- ), $30.50 to $32. Medium grade kinds a Democratic presidential sold down to $28.50 with the bulk hopeful, concerning whether or of grass offerings at $25 to $27. not the Democrats had brought Some plain grass cattle sold to the nation real or artificial pros- killers at $23. perity; he pushed through an A light supply of heifers sold amendment to the "Veterans Pre- from $28 to $31 with plainer ference Act which assured the wide a in range down grades retention of a 1951 pay raise by from $26. Good fat beef cows sold several hundred defense workers in a limited way at $22.50 to $23.50 in Utah who would otherwise have while the buljt of medium grade been in danger not only of losing figured at $19.50 to $22. the raise but also of even refund- offerings Canners and cutters sold from and, $15 to $19. overpayments ing their finally, he helped kill in committee A few heavy sausage bulls sold clean government a at $30, but the bulk went at $29 bill which he thought highly inand less. Odd head of vealers adequate. reached $33 while most calves Of course, Sen. Bennett sta- sold at $32 and under. Quite a few ted, Im all for cleaning out the calves are now selling down from corruption that some government $30. people have allowed to creep inStocker and feeder demand was to their work, but the Moody bill wouldnt have done the job. I it wholeheartedly. think that the whole issue is far He said a parting tribute to the too important to try to push through in the last day or two of staff members of the committees a session and Im glad the com- of congress with which he worked mittee went along with me. When and left the office noting that it someone introduces a good bill has been a long, hard session but that we can study and then can one the senate can look back up- fit into the legislation already ex- on with a great measure of pride isting, youll find me supporting and satisfaction. so-call- ed BAKES XAICE FOR HER CANDIDATE Perhaps you have read, as the industry is reading, of the successful application of AUTOMATIC LINDANE VAPORIZERS in controlling the common chicken louse, eradicating all existing poultry lice and serving as a constant control against reinfestation. This information was carried in many poultry publications as a result of tests conducted recently at the University of Massachusets in which a total of 3,900 chickens, including six different breeds ranging in age from eight months to eight years, were used. It was found that electrically operated devices dispensing lindane vapors at the rate of only one gram every 24 hours in areas up to 20,000 cubic feet gave successful control of poultry lice, not only eliminating all poultry lice but also preventing reinfestation and all this without apparent effect on the health or egg production capacity of the chickens. Eggs have been incubated, hatched, and the chickens raised to maturity and eaten with no indication of ill effects or off flavor. AUTOMATIC LINDANE VAPORIZERS are, from the standpoint of quality materials, construction, safety and fire hazards and price, the ideal Lindane Vaporizer for the poultry industry. Toxicology. Laboratory tests show practically no dermal toxicity on skin applications. Its chronic toxicity is only Uth that of DDT, yet its potency to insects is approximately 10 times that of DDT. It is one of the few materials that will kill DDT resistant flies. It is used in pharmaceutical preparations for the control of body crabs and lice on humans and a vanishing cream containing 1 Lindane is on the market and provides an excellant control for human scabies or itch. Unlike DDT it does not have a tendency to build up in the fat deposits of the body. It is rapidly eliminated and completely disappears from the body within one to two weeks. The maximum accumulation in the body is no more than the concentration contained in the food or air at the time. Vaporization of Lindane. During the experiments in 1942 and 1943 it was well established that minute traces of Lindane vapors were effective for insect control and it was this surprising discovery that lead to the development of the automatic Lindane vaporizer for the continuous control of flying insects. It was found that the constant evaporization of Lindane at the almost infinitesimal rate of 1 gram in 24 hours, depending directly on the average frequency of air changes, was sufficient to kill every flying insect entering or remaining in an enclosed area of from 15,000 to 20,000 cubic feet, yet without the slightest trace of toxic effect upon humans or warm blooded animals, regardless of how long they were in the room, and without the individual knowing of the presence of such vapors in the room, and without the slightest impairment or change in taste of any food products I-- exposed in the room. Not only has Lindane vapors been found to be fatal to flying insects which, while they stayed on the wing eluded all other types of insecticide, but it likewise was lethal to ants, bedbugs, lice, roaches, spiders, ticks and many other plant, animal and household insect pests with which it came in contact, especially where rooms could be closed for a time, such as over night or oyer the week end. The vapors enclosed in a room for a time (depending on the size) without ventilation or drafts will not only kill all of the insects with which it comes in contact but also the minute vapor particles, as they float against ceiling, walls, floor and other objects, begin to recrystalize and build up a residue of atom-size- d particles so thinly and evenly distributed that they are absolutely invisible, yet so effective that they are sure death to any insect coming in contact with them. cold-blood- ed For further information on how to obtain this for your insect problems write . . . wire ... or phone collect. PHONE SUITE 515 BEASON BUILDING SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH (Paid Adv.) Before his departure, Sen. Ben nett told newsmen that he did not expect the intraparty struggle bet ween Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower and Sen. Robert A. Taft (., Ohio) to leave any wounds too deep to heal. He said that such heated campaigning as we have seen during the past few weeks is not uncommon when there are two such outstanding and hinted that it candidates might, indeed, be a good sign of the partys vitality and will to win. From where I sit ... How Nervy pre-nominati- on Con a "Tenant" Get? Sen. Taft has said that he will support candidate chosen by the convention, Sen. Bennett noted. I am quite sure that the other candidates will take the same stand and will unite for final victory in November. . -- He had much to say, too, about the historic session just of congress Sen. Estes Kefauver, candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination, samples some of the icing from the cake presented to him by Merrily Carol Baird, 8, of Merrick, N. Y. She said she baked the cake herself. Kefauvers 49th birthday is on July 26, week of Democratic National Convention. (International) IN NEW YORK, concluded. pre-birth- We can look back upon a sion which has been marked primarily by a fundamental battle ses- Joe Marsh day Harry the Hermit dropped in to see Judge Cunningham the other day and started complaining about that dilapidated house he lives in over near Greenwood Lake. Whos my landlord? Harry wanted to know.Whoeveryoupay rent to, says the Judge. "Dont pay any rent, says Harry. Moved into that house twelve years ago and nobody ever came to collect.' Well, says the Judge, looking mystified, what do yon have to complain about? Plenty, replies Harry. Rains pouring in my living room and if someone doesnt fix that roof, Im moving outl Now Harry was only having little joke, but from where 1 s sit Ive seen people act just about as nervy as this sometimes eeriously Like those who enjoy all the rights Americans have worked for, and yet would take away some of those freedoms from others for example, our right to enjoy a friendly glass of beer. I say these leaks of intolerance have no place in the home of liberty. Copyright, 1952, United States Brewers Foundation |