OCR Text |
Show THE PAYSONIAN. PAYSON. UTAH, AUGUST 25. 1922 THE 5 LIVESTOCK NEWS (), 1922, Western FACTS SHE COOKED Newspaper Union.) Lord let me Mve while I can gee The beauty In the blossoming tree, ' The message In the wayside flower. And love It tor .lte one ghort hour. N. I. McClung. HOT WEATHER DRINKS If we have been forehanded and last summer and fall provided for the hot ' days, by putting up va rious fruit Juices, we will always he prepared for the warm weather. Of course there Is the i 1 ever-prese- e m o n, Is Tect Made by Department of AgriculWith ture in Alabama Station. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) That there Is a limit to the quantity of blackstrap molasses which can be added with economy to a ration of 5.4 pounds of cottonseed meal and 4(1 pounds of corn silage for fattening yearling steers was sltown In a test made by the United States Department of Agriculture in with the Louisiana experiment station. Two lots of nine steers were fed for 112 days. Forty-sipounds of silage per steer per day was practically the limit of their capacity. Lot 1 was fed 5.42 pounds of molasses per steer dally, while lot 2 was fed 8.07 pounds of molasses per steer dally. As lot 1 gained 2.48 pounds per steer dally, while lot 2 gained only 2.41 pounds per steer dully, It is evident that 2.05 pounds of molasses was wasted dally per steer In ot 2. The results In lot 2 might havt been more favorable to the use of so much molasses had the cotton- d x d A . ss eed-mea- ticular Don't think you have a corner on the trouble market I could mention everal varieties you've never even heard of. What you need la the philosophy of cheerful endurance. Then you will begin to accomplish. Lloyd, TID-BIT- 8 A delicacy to serve with a cup of tea Is round, crisp crackers spread Benefit. Why do hogs root? Will rings or ether means of prevention have any detrimental effect on the health and progress of the animal 1 Experts at the Nebraska State College of Agricul ture say rooting Is just one of the natural proclivities of swine. While It probably does help make muscle, It la otherwise of no special benefit and has no particular significance. The fact that hogs show a strong tendency to plow up alfalfa fields or tear out foundations of the buildings Is no Indication that they are not getting proper feed. There Is no basis for the statement that rooting results from lack of mineral or protein In the ration. Hogs root for worms, roots and other food, but they seem, to thrive just as well when's chet la placed on the extensive ns.e of their snouts They also root to make a cool bed on a hot day. There la no reason why rings should not be used where hogs do material damage rooting. with cottage cheese and a marlschlno cherry placed In the middle. Gingerbread cut In small rounds may be treated the same way. A small square of apple jelly may be used In place of the cherry, ' If desired. Another cheese cracker which Is not very common la prepared aa follows: Take the fresh crisp crackers a third longer than wide and lay them side by aide In a dripping pan. Cut thin oblongs of cheese slightly smaller than the crackers, lay on, and over this place halves of pecans, four or five to each cracker. Place In the oven and melt the cheese. Serve with crisp EFFICIENCY OF WORK HORSE stalks of white celery. Rice a la Creme. Wash one-haof Chief Factors During Hot cupful of rice and cook in water until Qtit Woathsr It Quantity and Quality partly done, then add milk and simmer of Food Received. until the milk Is absorbed ; season with a little salt. Dissolve one tablespoon-fu- l One of the factors that materially of gelatin In a little water, add to affects the efficiency of the work the hot rice, sugar to sweeten and vanilla to flavor. When cold add a half horse especially la hot weather Is the feed he receives and the manner In cupful of heavy cream whipped, pour which he receives It. In order that Into a mold and serve with fruit as a a horse may do a full day's work regugarnish. larly throughout the summer months Htad Lsttuce With Roquefort Dressand yet maintain a presentable coning. Arrange the heart leaves of letdition he must be fed Just about to tuce on the salad plates. Sprinkle bis full capacity. In order to do this each with a spoonful of finely minced and not Injure his health, care and roquefort cheese, then add a Judgment must be exercised in the and serve. The selection mayonnaise of feeds used. cheese may be stirred Into the dressfeeds The best suited to form the ing. If desired. 4 of the ration are components principal Huntington Salad. Chop very fine good bright clean timothy or upland enough white cabbage to make two-thirprairie hay and bright, clean, sound of a cupful, add one softened cream cheese to the cabbage, mix well, oats. The average horse weighing 1,500 pounds will require about 20 season, roll Into balls and sprinkle of hay and 22 to 24 pounds of with paprika. Arrange on lettuce and pounds oats a day. serve with French dressing. Pea Salad. A cupful of fresh cooked peas will make a most appetizing Add two tablespoonfuls of salad. LIVE STOCK HINTS grated cheese, six sweet pickles, chopped, and one small onion, also chopped. Moisten .with mayonnaise Work horses sliould have an oppoa Iresslng and serve on lettuce. to eat all the salt they care for. o tunlty Ginger-adTake a table-spHarvest ful of powdered ginger, mix with Keep the live stock supplied with four tablespoonfuls of sugar and add three cupfuls of cold water. Stir well, water during the hot days of summer. add a piece of Ice and let stand for a There Is a wide variation In feed few minutes before serving. requirements of different horria of the same weight lf d highly-seasone- ot PRACTICE LIMIT TO USE OF MOLASSES a good old standby, and one of which we never tire. Add a beaten egg to a pitcher of lemonade two, If a good-sizeto the value of the It adds pitcher; drink as a food and makes it a different drink. This will be a good tip to mothers who want the family to eat eggs; In this way they go down with little protest. With the addition of a sprig of mint or a section of lemon the delicacy and attractiveness of the draught Is Increased. The Juices of any of the berries make delicious fruit drinks. Itaspberry shrub Is especially well liked. This Is prepared by adding vinegar to the berries, let stand for a day and drain, sweeten the Juice, cook and bottle. Grape Juice Is one of the most popular of all ; this may be bought In any town, but when prepared at home Is of much belter quality and less expensive. Cocoa or chocolate for those who are fond of b these flavors may be prepared In a sirup and kept for weeks. Iced coffee and tea are both refreshing and stimulating. Iced Tea. Take two teaspoonfuls each of green and black tea; pour over a pint of boiling water and cover tightly, let stand five minutes to draw. Take a large piece of Ice, pluce In a granite pan and pour over It the boiling tea. When well chilled add water to taste and All glasses. Garnish with sections of lemon and serve with loaf sugar. Fruit Shrub. Cover the berries, using half as much vinegar as berries, let them stand for three days In a iteers Grazing on Pasture in South. cool, place, then strain and add four more quarts of fruit to the Juice and ) ration been reduced to 3.5 vinegar; again stand three days, drain or 4 pounds. In the test, lot 1 conand put into a preiervlng kettle with sumed 1,880 pounds of silage, 218 a pound of sugar to each three cupfuls pounds of cottonseed meal, and 218 Boll and seal In bottles. of juice. pounds of molasses per 100 pounds Blackberries, loganberries, or any fruit while lot 2 required 2 per cent gain, may be thus treated. more silage, 3 per cent more cottonFrozen Beef Tsa. This Is a novelty seed and 54 per cent more mowhich will appeal to the invalid during lassesmeal, to prodace 100 pounds of gain. the hot weather. Take a thick cut of round steak, broil It quickly until the juice begins to run, place In a BOOTING NATURAL FOR HOGS vegetable press and extract all the juice. Add a pinch of salt and serve While It Probably Helps Maka Muacla frozen like mush. It la Otherwise of No Par. which TASTY WORN OUT AFTER DAIRY The World Is the Same Everywhere John Bassett Moore Is the American delegate to the International Court of Justice at The Hague. He Is one who thinks that human nature must be made over before there can be permanent universal peace. He OF PASTEURIZING Dealers Know That Milk So Treated Better and Prevents Keeps Spread of Disease. A MEAL Took Lydia Vegetable (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The practice of pasteurizing milk Is growing rupidly in the cities of this country, as shown by figures collected by the United States Department of Through pressure of Agriculture. says: health departments and through volunThe world Is the same everytary action by milk dealers, plant after where. Human nature Is the same. It plant has been switched over rrom raw Is this same human nature which milk. It Is now generally recognized balks the passage of peace. So long by those who have studied the probas we love glory, so long as we worlems of milk supply, that proper pas ship bravery, so long as we thrill at teurlzation does not Injure the chemithe cull of battle, so long will we have cal or nutritive properties of milk, and war. that It does destroy all bacteria that In the great span of life we make may produce disease. Milk dealers Just so much progress in each genknow that milk so treated keeps beteration. We creep forward a little, ter and satisfies customers, and that make our seemingly Important strides it prevents outbreaks of disease which In progress, when a new condition might cast discredit on their product arises, and back we slump ten, twen and Injure tlielr business. ty, thirty years. With these facts In mind M Is easy The work of years of science, the to see why the practice has grown. In efforts of the laboratory, all are lost 1915 only 77.8 per cent of the cities In the answer to the cry for justice. Mothers may say they do not raise their with population of more than 500,000 sons as food for cannon, but when the call comes these same mothers will reported more than half of their milk be the first to answer. pasteurized, while In 1921 every city Conditions change, life changes, the rules we may make this summer In this class had a milk supply more may be as outgrown next as our last years clothes. Life Is fluid, ever changthan 50 per cent of which was pasing, and we cannot prophesy or plan. teurized. In 1915 more than 10 per cent of the cities of 75,000 to 100,000 people had no pasteurized milk, but during the past year all of them had some part of the supply pasteurized. The Increase In pasteurization In small cities is particularly striking. Take, for example, those from 10,000 Secretary of Labor Davis, who to 25,000 population. In 1915 about played the clarinet In the town band 40 per cent had pasteurized milk, but In Sharon, Pa., many years ago, Is adin 1921 nearly 61 per cent had It. Even vocating the creation of a federal buIn cities below 10,000 population pasreau of recreation for the development teurization Is becoming more common. of Instrumental and vocal music, the drama, the theater and athletics. To my mind, the labor secretary KEEP CREAM DURING SUMMER said, "there Is no greater Influence for community and social good In the if Cooled to 50 Degrees Promptly American small town of today than After Separating It Will Keep the town band. Some of the pleasSeveral Days. antest recollections of my life carry me back to the djiys when I played The dairyman must figure a way to the clarinet In the Sharon band. keep the cream In good condition durPresident Harding preserves as ing the hot weather months. There is one of his proudest recollections the always someone saying cream cant memory of his association with the be kept sweet very long during the Marlon (O.)' band In the days when summer months," but It has been he was Just beginning to develop the proven that cream cooled to 50 decharacter for accomplishment which grees shortly after separating can bs bore him to the White House." kept sweet for several days. It Is Secretary Davis Idea to have To accomplish this. It is necessary the proposed bureau of recreation to have a cooling tank. Such tanks with the states and the Individual communities in developing may be bought from the dairy supply home and community music. houses, but if only a small quantity As to music I would adapt the Eisteddfod Idea of Wales to America," of cream Is produced a homemade he said. That means the organization nationally of instrumental and vocal tank will do the trick. This tank Is music. This national organization must begin In the Individual community. made as follows: I believe that all municipalities should have recreational leaders. 1 Take a water barrel and around tt would have every form of recreation, so that the humblest citizen could make a box about 3 feet square by readily take part and enjoy It I would have community competitions, from about the height of the barrel. Insert which the winners would go to county and state competitions and finally to a a pipe leading from the pump Into the great national gathering." ities jjgfoyg j tooic Lydia E. Pinkham BS Will rsdaca IsflSBtd, Strained, Swsllen Ten-dsn- s, or Muscles.Ligaments, Stops the lameness and pain from a Splint, Side Bene or Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair gone and horse can b used. (2.50 bottle at druggists or delivered. Describe your eeia for epectel end intereeting baree S A fTM. TueeU St. SfclMi.llM. BOk mmmm W.F. T0UNG. kb. J10 Explains Decline of Oratory. "On reason why we dont hab mo greater oratory," said Uncle Eben, is dat so many of our best talkers Is turnin delr attention to salesmanship. Summer Find Yea Miserable? Ie a lame, achy back torturing youT Does the least exertion leave you tired, You should find weak, all worn-out- ! the cause of your trouble end try to correct it. More than likely its your kidney. Miserable backaches with headaches, dizzy spells and annoying urinary disorders are common signs of kidney weakness. There is danger in delay. Begin using Doan's Kidney Pills today. Doant have helped thousands. They should help you. Aim your neighbor! An Idaho Cbm " As . Mrs. Eva Logan, 40 South Fourteenth St., Boise, Idaho, says: "Mr kidneys were in a had condition and I had nag-zin- g pains across my back. I couldnt rest at night and mornI Ingn I felt tired. bad nervous, dizzy headaches and my Doans da complaint" Gat DaWb el Any State, Me a Bm DOANS Cooling Tank for Cream. barrel extending to the bottom. Ab overflow pipe Is then placed on the opposite side of the barrel leading to the outside of the box. This overflow pipe should be placed as high as the neck of a large cream can. The Intake pipe from the pump should extend to the bottom of the barrel as the warm water then rises and overflows. The space between the box and the barrel Is. filled with sawdust or other Insulator and the box finally covered to the ed;s of the barreL A close fitting lid Is then placed over the top of the barrel and completes the tank. When a partly filled can Is set down a stick across the barrel above the can will help to hold It down. A Miller, In the Farm and Home. METHOD OF RAISING CALVES Most Economical to Maka Us of Good Calf Moal on Farma Whara Whole Milk Is Sold. Persistence, Thy Name Is Sir Thomas Where whole igIk Is sold, undoubtthe most economical method of raising calves is by the use of a good Calves that have been calf meal. raised properly on calf meal make Just as good cows as those raised on whole milk or skim milk. -- Com Vegetable pound. M y back pained all the time and I was unfit for housework. I was worn out if I cooked a meal, and was unable to do my washing. My girl friends and my sister told me if I would taks yourVege table Compound and liver nils I would be relieved. After taking the first bottle I felt better, and neglected it awhile, bufc found I could not do my work until I was stronger. So I took the Vegetable Compound again and now I am th mother of a 19 months old boy. He is fat and healthy and I am sure I could never have carried him if it had not been for your Vegetable Compound. I recommend your medicine to all women although I am young to be advising some Mrs. Christ. Petroff, one older. 818 W. Liberty St, Cincinnati, Ohio. Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound contains no harmful drugs and can be taken in safety by any woman. kidneys didnt act gulariy. were Kidney Pill recommended, so I need some. Doans zntlrely cured me ot ley, Ohio. Sir Thomas Llpton, who has failed four attempts to win the America's cup, the blue ribbon trogjiy of international yacht racing, la coming here in September to make what he terms a final effort to get the bloomin' mug. Sir Thomas, who has monopolized the challenging for the historical cup over a period of 23 years, and whose sportsmanship has won him the friendship of thousands of Americans, wants to win the cup before he dies. It Is his hobby in life. After hla Shamrock IV was defeated by the Resolute, the American defender, In 1920, the Ulster tea merchant said: I probably have more cups than any other yachtsman In tin I have sailed In Germany world. France, Spain, England, Scotland an Ireland, have won prizes In all part of the universe, and 1 am mighty prnu of them, but I'd swap the lot fo that cup I've trlvd four times to get.' With Just wftnt kind of a craft the Irish sportsman will elect to clmlleng Is not known, but It Is said he want-to change front a sloop to a schoonei I suffered for a Cincinnati, Ohio. Europes Back Is Against the Wall In the Result year with nervous troubles and irregular Davis Lonesome for His Old Clarinet Europe la fighting today with Its back against the wall, economically," said Myron T. Herrick, American ambassador In Paris, who arrived In New York the other day on a leave of absence from hla post. This Impending peril does not chill mens hearts as did the slaughter of the battlefields, but a loss of this battle means a nullification of the victory of 1918. The same prompt, unselfish mobilization of all forces Is required In this battle as In that other one In order to win. Political alliances cannot prevent economical destruction. Ambassador Herrick praised France's efforts toward reconstruction, saying that It la only the reticence of French bankers and business men about facts and figures that has prevented roost Americans from knowing that the nation has spent 03,000,000 francs on restoration work while awaiting reparations payments. France has nu unemployment problem and is hard at work, he said. "France's strength is In her farming, and the crops this year, while under the bumper wheat crop of 1921, Is turning out better than was expected. American tourists In France see the undaunted spirit of the people who defended their beloved soil patiently restoring soil and homes. Ambassador Herrick planned to report to Washington on the events In France during the past year, and then to rest on his farm In Chagrin val- Pinkham EL Compound-R- ead POSm-MOJUt- N CO BUFFALO, M. Y. BETTER DEAD Life is a burden when the bod . is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. To bring bock the sunshine take CCLDIIDAIC'- -' a The National Remedy of Holland for over 200 years; it la an enemy of all paint te-Bulling from kidney, Bver and uHcadd troubles. All druggists, three sizes Leak far tbs uem GaM Medal eu ovary has edly When Cow Holde Milk. When a cow persists In holding her milk, a common remedy Is to attempt to divert her attention from the operation of milking by providing some tempting food. Drawback to Dairy. Perhaps the greatest drawback to the dairy business Is that a cow wiU produce a little milk, no matter what she Is fed. Too many dairymen are satisfied with that little bit. Methods Woi--k EvrrJar Freckles Positive b .sswved Mm condnrian. You, 4! dniri.t o. by mU3q,end fo, free booklet. It.C.1IwttC..Z17I k, niblll Otatmeor. bcewtful Bl-- A BAKI Well. The methods aren't the same, but one works as well ns the other Ing hens and culling cows. cull Be Regular With Calves. Ef regular the various operation 'Sfformed In caring for the calves In BOYS SenJ for .ur list of The !et obtainable; easiest work;premium; you can gel anythin on the Hat In a few hours; w gtv cash commission if spnd votirnam HO SFT rvpn. M.VIA HAIR BERKELEY, CALIFORNIA. WANYKl), FROM OWNER. FARM OS RANI II. ill trade nd assume. Write full particulars to O S. Raj nor, Fort Collin, Colo. dlrd; COM-PAN- f f |