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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH i ;; !; j: j; ;i will take a personal interest in you when he learns that you are saving some of your pay? Start a Savings Account With Us 1 your employer !; !l !; j: 1; a ii ii ThriftStamps By Doing Business With Us. The popularity of our business is based on two things. The Superiority of our work, and the saving effected by doing business with us. Then too, we have the largest and perhaps the best equipped office in the country. We want to add you to the ever increasing flow of clients into our office. Come and be convinced that it pays, and that if it is service you are looking for, you get it here. Drs. Ensign and Smith Logan, Utah. GOOD LUMBER IS AT THE BOTTOM of success. Low price smay help some, but its the fine quality of our lumber that biings our customers back time and again. It' pays us to sell good lumber. It will pay you better to buy it. It lasts longer and is more satisfactory to work up. Try us with an order and youll come back when you mant more. Smith Bros. Lumber Co. LOGAN AND HYRUM, UTAH. Subscribe For The South Cache Courier JOB PRINTING fought, defeat threatens. Hungry men cannot fight at their best; nor hungry nations. France, England, and Italy are going hungry unless we feed them. Wheat Savings They must have wheat. It is the best food to fight on. It is the easiest to ship. We alone can spare it to them. By saving just a little less than a quarter of what we ate last year we can support those who are fighting our battles. And we can do it without stinting ourselves. We have only .to substitute another food just as good. The Corn of Plenty- - Corn is that food. Theres a surplus of it. Providence has been generous in the hour of our need. It has given us corn in such bounty as was never known before. Tons of corn. Train-- ; of corn. Five hundred million bushels over and loads , above our regular needs. All we have to do is to learn to appreciate it. Was ever patriotic duty made so easy? And so clear? Americas Own Food Corn! It is the true American food. The Indians, hardiest of races, lived on it. Our forefathers adopted the diet and conquered a continent. For a great section of our country it has blong een the staff of life. How well the South fought on it, history tells. Now it can help America win a world war. al Muffins. Biscuits. TO BUY $1.50 a Year in Advance. us face the facts. The war situation is critical. LETUnless the Allies fight as they never yet have corn-brea- Save Money 85 North Main. FACE the FACTS . STATE BANK Dumplings. Griddle cakes. Waffles. !; j: i; !: ;; Gingerbread. Fruit gems. HEARTY DISHES Corn-mefish balls. croquettes. corn-meand dumplings, j Tamales. Italian polenta. The recipes are in Farmers Bulletin 565, Corn Meal as a Food and Ways of Using It, free from the Department of Agriculture. Corn-me- al al Jleat ;; al - i ;; ? ? Annual Financial Report of Hyrum City i For the Year 1917. Tim Purebred Poultry Pays Well on Farm Learn Something Corn! It isnt one food. Its a dozen. Its a pereal. Ita a vegetable. Its a bread. Its a dessert. Its nutritious ; more food value in it, dollar for dollar, than meat or eggs or most other vegetables. Its good to eat; how good you dont d know until youve had properly cooked. Best of all, its plentiful and its patriotic. Corns Infinite Variety How much do you know about corn? About how good it is? About the many delicious ways of cooking it? And what you miss by not knowing more about it? Here are a few of its uses: There are at least fifty ways to use corn meal to make good dishes for dinner, supper, lunch or breakfast. Here are some suggestions: DESSERTS HOT BREADS Corn-mebrown bread. Boston molasses cake. Hoecake. Apple corn bread. and youll soon be getting ahead in the world. Money means opportunity for you. HYRUM m Purebred poultry on the farm pays in both satisfaction and profits. Taking it as a whole, standard bred farm flocks are giving better results than are mongrel flocks, because they are receiving better care. The original cost is greater. It seems to be human nature not to give much care to stock that costs little or nothing. When a farmer is proud of his flock of poultry one may be sure that it is receiving good care. This is In itself reason enough why the standard bred flocks give better results, but it is not the only reason. Since the numerous laying contests of recent years have turned interest toward egg production, many breeders of standard poultry are devoting their attention to Increasing egg production of flocks by careful selection of mating. While it is entirely possible to get good production with mongrel flocks there is probably not a poultryman who is carrying on breeding operations with mongrels for increased egg production. Although a considerable proportion of the standard bred poultry has not been carefully selected from the standpoint of egg production, the number of constructive breeders in productive lines is constantly increasing. These breeders offer to the farmer his only opportunity for improving his flock in respect to production. Recent experiments seem to indicate that a pullet inherits high productive qualities from her sire. This means that the way to increase the productivity of a flock is to obtain, standard males from reliable breeders who are selecting for high production. It must be understood that breeding for high production is comparatively new and has not been brought to' so high a state of perfection as breeding for high milk production with dairy cows. Not every cockerel which its reliable breeder sends out-cabe guaranteed to sire nothing but high producers. The farmer can get more money for poultry from a uniform flock when sold to a first class commission man than he can for a miscellaneous mixture. It is possible to build up a fairly uniform and attractive flock by buying purebred males each year and mating them with the descendants of a mongrel flock. A farmer will do better, however, by purchasing a few standard bred females along with a good cockerel of a high laying strain, and thus build up a standard bred flock, than by trying to grade up a mongrel flock. It should be understood that one cannot have satisfactory production without great physical vigor. The pullets must be active and vigorous. A dozen standard bred pullets purchased at $1 to $1.50 each will form a nucleus for a large purebred flock which will more than repay the initial cost, if they are from vigorous stock. W. A. Lippincott, in Utah Farmer. A Warning! The following letter which explains itself, was received by Marshal Iver Albertsen: Logan, Utah, Jan. 18, 1918. Information has come to us thru the State Council of Defense, that the I. W. W.s have planned to use concentrated lye and roach powder for killing cattle and hogs this winter. It is .said that lye on rock salt causes mouth sores, ulcers in the stomach and rots the feet, and many people will think it Foot and We are further Mouth Disease. advised that muratic acid and nitric acid fed in bran will cause ulcers on hogs stomachs causing death which symptoms closely resemble Hog Cholera. J. H. Barker, Sheriff of Cache County. Park City output was $110,000 in the past week, ned here. |