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Show THE PAYSONIAN, PAYSON, UTAH. JUNE 16, 1922 OUR COMIC SECTION 0 WHENA$TftAN6ER ViQOtf CREATE PROM A A LOT NtmdOQiHb Of INTERES- T- COUNTV ANP HOW (Corfiui Alas, Poor Hank! Fly Killiog Had Your Iron Today! Cacpaignj Th Utah Agricultural College Emphasises tha Necessity of Killing Thoaa Dooaaao Carriers Now, Til Department of Entomology of tli Utah Agricultural College la urg-in- g most insistently Just now that an energetic campaign bo waged against the common house fly, or typhoid fly it should be called. It la most Important that flies be killed in early summer. One female killed In June muy mean millions less to be killed In August. Special care should be given to the breeding places of flies, and ail possible breeding places should be cleaned up. The bouse fly breeds readily In aU most any decaying vegetable matter, but not in animal flesh as la so often Horse manure Is the favasserted. orite material. selected by the housefly for egg deposition and supports the growth of perhaps ninety-fiv- e per cent of nil housefly larvae. Lacking horse manure, the fly usually seLx'ts h excerta of human beings, poultr vflshwater and refust thrown out the backdoors of many homes sometimes afford a convenient breeding place for flies. The danger of the spread of contagious dlset it by the housefly can be greatly reduced by a wide awake cam. palgn against this dangerous pest. When the adult fly emerges from the mpas of filth In which it passed Its life as n maggot, It"comes literally covered with the dirt, filth nnd genus in which It lived. The hairs on sides, back, legs and feet have countless thousands of genus. If these germs ure of a kind injurious to mankind, is any argument required to convince one of the dangeie Incurred In allowing these nauseating Insects to alight on our face and hands or upon the food your children eat? Sometimes give the fly more than a passing thought when It comes near you. Watch It. If you are In a public building ,for Instance, see it bur.l away from the dust of a window sill or the adgS of a cuspidor, or some other place you would never think of touching yourself, and skim lightly to the face end neck of some acquaint- Never Mind Re-vitali- ze UET ItV&AmMhe 'more need then for keeping the vitality up to par. Vital men resist heat easily. Languid ones are floored. yourself and you wont mind the weather. Get new energy in little raisins. 1560 calories of energizing nutriment per pound in Little 75 per cent pure fruit sugar. Wonderful because this sugar 'doesnt need, and, therefore, doesnt tax digestion and thus heat the blood. Yet energizes almost immediately. food-iro- n Contain fatigue-resistin- g also. Try a box today. Re-yitali- ze Sun-Maid- s. Little Sun-Mai- ds Between-Me- Raisins al 5c Everywhere ance. It $ f s in Little Red Packages Is admitted by medical men gen- erally that the housefly may be the carrer of many Intestinal dlsese. Typhoid, chloera, dysentery, diarrhea in Infants nnd tuberculosis are some of the principal disease curried by this Insect. If your family or your neighbors familf Is quarantined because of a ct.se of some one of the above diseases, of what value !s the quarantine find, provided the excreta from the patient is allowed to become the breeding place for a number of these dise&se carrying houseflies? MILK AND DISEA8E By J. E. Greaves At the Paris Exposition In 1900, one of the most significant of all the food exhibits was Uiat of .American dairy products, particularly of milk and cream. European authorities were as tcsUiied; they simply could not how it was possible for milk and cream, raw and in the natural state to be shipped from America and be li good condition upon its arrival and to remain pure and sweet as milk frtsli drawn from the cow. The milk was free from bacteria. But bow about the milk that, sours so quickly and tie souring we blame to the weather, particularly the thun derstorms, overlooking the real culprit the little microorganism which enters from not quits sanitary buckets, from the dirty stable, from the unkept cow and possibly from the un. dean hands of the milker. Then the milk to not coded quickly and the bacteria multiply as only bacteria can. More chance for contamination, and more time for growtta are offered when transferred to the vender's bottles and so It goes on until sometime when It reaches the consumer It contains as many microorganisms ns does sewerage. But It is not the number alone that count. There may be mil lions of bacteria present and these harmless, but if one of tha organisms whtih causes typhoid and diptheria found its way Into the milk this also would multiply. And while nn individual may receive one or a dozen of these organisms without being Injured not 10 with thousands, which would develop after they had grown in milk for several hours. Then we bear of that dread disease 'ops unption, which claims so many deli us each year. In 1890 Professor ilaug, of Copenhagen, demonstrated tin; presence of the germs of this dl. soa--in the milk of apparently healthy cows. It is possible for us to receive thes organisms with the milk, but worst of all they are fed to little children who science has shown are much more susceptible to this disease tthun Is the adult. Now can any one fed cat roly blameless when a little child Is caused to fill nn early grave, or some one's carelessness due t tl.ongliCesmess. NO! For se'enee has nhdwn us how to protect the milk from the germs and even taught us how to differentiate between the healthy and lick cow. And It Is a very conservative estimate when we st te that thf Infant mortality from tuberculosis alone en be out twenty per cent It Te will but heed the teaching of iJwe. le Use silk, wmi and Cotton Allot thoSamoTl mo Cion Putnam Fadeless Dyes lOc racket 1 Dyof What Figures Are For. What good are the figures set down In these railway time tables? asked the sarcastic and angry would-b- e passenger. Why, explained the genial station master, if it wernt for them figures we'd have no way of flndin out how Garage. Chicago Plans Among the latest noveltils of automobile conveniences is a proposed automobile garage of 25 stories, In ChiXlter the cago, to cost $1,200,000. owner or driver deposits themr In the building, an elevator carries iifupstairs and stores it In its allotted space. All this work is accomplished by a woman operating at a keyboard qn the first A Preference. We rather hope It will turn out that the dead cant really speak to us after all, as we have a number of deceased friends who wed rather believe are pleasantly situated as long as we can. Ohio State Journal. floor. late the trains are' y. I The Tie That Binds. Krlss Is the marriage contract Kross Yes; Upkeeps a binding? man strapped for life. New York Sun. - Continual cheerfulness Is a sign of The highest mountain lessens as we climb. wisdom. ,Whnt we have done makes us what we are. No two grains of sand gre exactly alike.. EACH IS A GENUINE GOODYEAR Each of the two tires illustrated above is A genuine Goodyear through and through. One is the famous reliable 30 z 3 y inch Goodyear Tread Clincher. Its companion is the popular 30x 3 inch Goodyear Cross Rib. The Goodyear Cross Rib is built of the same high grade Egyptian cotton fabric 'that goes into the Tread Goodyear. It has a but differently designed tread, and sells for less money. More than 5,000,000 of these tires have been sold in the last five years. Their fine performance has demonstrated the folly of buying unknown and unguaranteed tires er er long-wearin- g of lower price. Ask your Goodyear Service Station Dealer about their advantages. Wuuti aili fat W 1 1 r Ttilt1 , |