Show -- 'j&Z STOMACH UP&ET SOUR? THIS WILLCOMFORT FOWL M§ s Don’t let sour stomach gas digestion make you suffer And don’t use crude methods to get relief Just take a spoonful of Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia In a glass of water It Instantly neutralizes many times its volume In excess acid It will probably end your distress in five minutes Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia Is the perfect way to end digestive disorders due to excess acid for men women children— and even babies Endorsed by doctra used by hos( pitals Your drugstore has the 25c and 50c sizes Insist on the genuine POX QUITE SERIOUS DISEASE Carried by Common Variety of Garden Mosquitoes:’ Fowl pox in chickens la not chicken to Prof Roiiert Math pox according eson of tbe New York State college of agriculture who explains that tills troublesome Is carpoultry disease ried by mosquitoes Fowl pox appears as warty nodules or lesions on the orders at Monroe comb wattles uud skin of the heads u are 'way behind! of fowls he Bays and causes a decidbut lt'a Old ed In more of egg laying lessening n on serious cases It kills her In Spencer from the Cornell univerSpeaking radio station Professor Mntheson nlel climbed up Into bla sity states thut while the specific cause ot Pal It’a do or die!” the disease Is unknown Investigations rued hia lever threw bla at the Rockefeller Institute of medical open show that research and at fly’ ylng "Watch Old the disease is carried by mosquitoes climbed up Into his Brannlel In any Whether be contracted may - cabin other way has not yet been deterAt his throttle he made a grab insects when Other And he pulled over Johnson's mined Junction besides marsh mosquitoes and the He was leaning 'way out of the cab common garden variety of early spring that hatch In April and mosquitoes Steve Brannlel turned to his brave litlive all summer may carry the distle fireman Saying "Shovel In a little more coal to the ease from Infected poultry e There's a grade round Whitlhealthy ones Apparently a mosquito ow Mountain which has become Infected will conYou may watch my drivers roll" tinue to be a spreader of the disease Steve Brannlel turned to his brave lither natural life The male throughout tle fireman mosquito is of course harmless Said "Jack throw In some more coal Due to the heavy losses that result And put your head out the window boy from fowl pox a reasonable precaution roll!” And watch my methods to prela to use It's a mighty bad road from Lynchvent mosquitoes from breeding In the burg to Danville It Is a Immunizagrade vicinity of poultry plants on the ‘Twas grade Steve loat control tion against epidemics of the disease of hit but this can be assured by vacclnaton So you see what a jump he made is expensive for the commercial poul He was falling down grad at ninety the present price tryman considering miles an hour for eggs The whistle began to scream He waa found In the wreck with his hand on the throttle And bis body all scarred by steam Management of Turkeys i engineer ' nothing bum IDA— Idaho’s BOISE! debt has decreased from $5213500 81 1029 to $4247300 on March on March 81' 1031 a reduction of 000200 according to the statement of the state treasurer MOSCOW IDA— The right date to shrubs espectnl-- j plant ornamental Is just about the ly the evergreens time that growth starts says the at the of horticulture department University of Idaho Too long delay since might result In lost shrubs the after to transplant It Is harder Oa the other sap starts to flow hand too early planting some times wenkened the already subjects wind plant to extreme weather like atoms or too much or too little before the root system moisture can adapt Itself to the new location first dry UT— Utah’s of the Carbon at Farnham dome near here harbtarted to make the navel refrigeration product at the rate of six tons dally Dry ice which Is many times colder than ordinary ice Is made from Carbon dioxide gas secured at the well a IDA— A Winslow MOSCOW has Boston mining man wealthy presented to the University of Idahis personal ho school of mines of the complete set ef transactions American Institute of Mining and The comEngineers Metallurgical plete set comprises almost a ton of bound volumes which could not be dnplicated today The books are described ss an invaluable technical metallwork la mining reference urgy and geology WTO — President CI1BYENNH Hoover has Informed U 8 Senator Carey that he hoped to decide by the middle of May whether he Invitacould accept Wyoming’ tion to spend a part of his vacation in the state this summer MOAB UT— Road work is now In full swing In Bun Juan county employment for practicproviding ally all men formerly without work on roads In Crows are occupied Dry valley Devil’s canyon and Peters’ hill MANTf UT — Cooperative agreements which bad been prepared by tbe state road commission have beca accepted by tbe Sanpete for county commission providing the oiling of three road projects la Sanpete county during the present miCE lee plant that company year NEPHI UT— The local aheep corral la expecting to have thousand head to clip nd the Jericho corral will handle while over one hundred thousand the Rocky Ford plant has an estimated list of seventy thousand IDAHO FALLS IDA— One hundred women from aH parts of Idaho will gather hers May 12 and 13 for the annual state convention of the Idaho Federation of Women’s Clubs Mrs 8 W Wilson of t president of the federation has called the convention — 81x IDA BOISE prisoners were removed from the penitentiary recently for transfer te the Blackfoot all of them having been asylum adjudged insane hearing from RICBT IDA — Contracts growers are expected to result la the sow ing of 28000 acres to sugar beets this year or approximately tbe same amount as last year LEIII UT— Two hundred men Will be employed In the extension work of running natural gaa lines from Midvale to Utah county cations BEAVER celebrate Its the 22 23 24 r UT— This city will 73th anniversary on and 23 of July r ie prob- - trnvvVered "Oh you yV — “For Casey Jones mean Tv“"ef the ruilroad men a nickbe was on him bename thaX® fastened cause he wasVfn near Cayce Ky pronounced it In and down there tm "Oayce” two syllables— Jones soon became “Casey? Jones abl r° on Casey started his railroad)! Mobile St Ohio late In the He put In several years as a frfiijht and passenger engineer on the Illlnovl Central between Jackson and Water Valley Miss and then at the age of he was put at the throttle of “the Cannonball’’ Already he was locally famous for his peculiar skill with a locomotive whistle Ills method of blowing it was a sort of a It was a personal note beginning softly then rising to s shrill moaning blast finally To dying sway almost to a whisper people living along the of the Central in Mississippi and Tennessee It was a familiar sound At night they would He in their beds and listen for a sound of one locomotive whistle and when they heard It they would say “There goes Casey Jones I” as the train roared by and Casey whistled for the next crossing Not only was Casey by the other railroad men but he was the Idol of Wallace Sanders s negro at Canton Miss who became an engine wiper In the round house there about the time Casey first "mounted to the cabin” of “the Cannonball” Wallace was sccustoraed to brag mightily about the prowess of "Mlatah Casey" and caring for his engine was s labor of love for the colored man About ten o’clock one Sunday night April 29 1000 Casey and his fireman Sira Webb rolled Into Memphis from Canton and going Into the checklng-loffice were preparing to go to their homes when somebody said “Joe Lewis has just been taken with the cramps and can’t take his train out tonight" “All right I’ll double Lack and puli No 633 was aid 038” said Jones Lewis’ locomotive It was s ralnydeight as No 638 with Sim Webb in the cabin and Casey rolled out of the station and rumbled through the South Memphis yards “Wonder what’s the matter with Lewis" remarked one of the yardmen to another for the switchmen "knew by the engine's moan that the man at the throttle was Casey Jones" Through the sleepiug countryside of Tennessee and Mississippi roared the train and more than one fanner said to himself “There goes Casey Jones" as he listened sleepily to the long moaning whistle of old No C38 It was four o'clock in the morning on April 30 as No 033 swept around a long winding curve just above the litWhere the tle town of Vaughn Miss curve ended a long sidetrack began and Casey Jones peering out of his to see If the lights ahead cab window were green or red yelled across to Sim Webb “There’s a freight train on Sim nodded and kept on the siding" with bis coal shoveling Knowing thut the siding was a long one and having passed many other freights on It Casey didn’t reduce his He didn't know that there speed were two separate sections of a very long train on the sidetrack that night and that the rear one was too long to get all of Its cars off the main line on to the siding The freight train crews had figured on “sawing by"— as Boon as the passenger train passed the front part of the train it would move forward and the rear part would move up thus going off of the main track Rut they hadn’t figured on Casey's speed — It was mors than 50 miles an hour Within a hundred feet of the end ( the siding the startled gaze ot fhe whistle Casey’s “I remember A1 Casey held down the ong piercing scream I bust have had In mind to arn the freight conductor In the caboose so he could jump" They took Casey Jones to Canton w’here a committee of three of his fela low worker Edward O’Malley machinist William Bosnia and Ilomer English two locomotive engineers took charge of the arrangements for sending the body of the dead hero back to his home in Tenn where his widow the two sons and s daughter awaited his lust homecoming than their Scarcely less touching sorrow was the grief of Wallace Sandora at the news that his idol would tai't “the Cannonball" out no more Several 'ays after Casey’s funeral ‘'Irrt ’': Sa nders going about his duties singing a song about the deeds and the death of It was a simple melCasey Jones about ody but there was something It which caught the fancy of those who heard It and the words of It — there were only six verses In the original— Soon they were easy to remember were all" singing the negro engine wiper’s tribute to his friend One day s year or two later a professional aong writer passed through nd heard the song MlsaJackson He saw the possibilities and resung wrote tbe song retaining however the name Casey Jones and some of the cidents of the original story although In changing the locale considerably the original song some changing verses were Injected Into It which friends of the heroic engineer resented bitterly and they forbade Its being Their protests however sung at all did not prevent the song from being published and the song writer who rewrote it Is said to have made a fortune from It more than ten million copies having been sold not to menrecords and piano tion innumerable rolls “The term rounders used in some of tbe verses and also other terms applied in various parodies would crethat he was unate the Impression stable and reckless” wrote Edward O’Malley Onsoy’s friend In a letter to Adventure several Magazine yeais ago “Such w as not the case Sober reliable loyal and friendly with everybody and of a smiling pleasant disposition which won him friends wherever be went — such was my friend An gentleman” InterCasey Jones esting aftermath of the Rong was a lawsuit brought by Casey’s widow within recent years against a Hollywood picture company for alleged exof her and ploitation of photographs In connection with a her children movie that had been built around the famous exploit of the engineer Immortalized by a song Although “Casey Jones" Is the most famous of all railroad ballads there are others which are not far behind It In widespread popularity For stance there Is “Old There are numerous versions of this but the song following according to R W Gordon an authority on American folk songs Is a composite of three different versions and a representative text: on a mountain one cold I waa atandln frosty morninir I watching the smoke from below: It wae curling from a long atralght Way down on the Southern Railroad It wae Old the faatest The South had ever seen And It ran ao fast on that fatal Sunday That the death list numbered thirteen It wae Old Ever run And Ijhen She waa over arived the fastest the Southern Itne at Monroe Virginia minutes behind Steve Brannlel waa the engineer The fastest on tbe line He ran Into Monroe to set hie orderi And be got them on the fly No he never he ever pull InT pulled In Though his train was due at ten for hours ar d hours the switchmen lay waiting For the that never pulled Did And In The newt ran over the telegraph wires And this la what It said— That the brave engineer that left V”" roe this m'nlrg is iflng at North Danville dead all you young ladles and take warning Take warning from this time Never speak rash words to your sweetheart— He may go and never return Come The song also has an aftermath of a lawsuit as shown by the following dispatch to the New York ‘World last year : — An effort to estab"Camden N lish the right of the author of a folk even though song to collect royalties he never put the song on paper has been made here by attorneys for David Graves George picturesque and former railroad brakeman “George U suing the Victor Talking Machine company which sold records of the Bong phonograph "The Wreck of Old 97’ Through his attorneys Robert S Nase of Flushing I L and Mlnatree J Fulton of Richmond Va George declared he had derived his Inspiration for the song on September 27 1903 when the’ crack mail train No 97 of the Southern railway sped past Franklin Junction Va and Jumped off a trestle “Numerous fellow the atare ready to testify torneys stated that the song Ceorge originated which later became a favorite “Nathan Iiurkan of New "York and Louis Le Due of Camden attorneys for the company asserted the Victor company already has paid royalties to one other company and to three other persons who have represented themselves as authors of the aong “The trouble it appears began in 1927 when the company announced In a Richmond to paper according George that it waa looking for the author of the aong in order to pay him royalties From fur and wide in the hills the authors appeared “In 1922 the company sets forth Prof R W Gordon of Harvard set out to collect American folk songs and found that both Frederick Lewey of Lynchburg and Carl Noel of Va claimed authorship of ‘The Wreck’ The company compensated both and also Henry Whitter of and the General PhonoLynchburg which had gotten out graph company records of the song before the first Victor records appeared on Angust 13 1924 “Burkan asserted the plaintiff hillbilly had copied ths song from phonograph records between 1924 and 1927 when he read of the offer “George’s suit is not brought under law since he never the copyright wrote down the song hot under the common law dealing with property J rights” Almost as famous as the foregoing Is the combination ballad: “The Wabash Cannon Bali” which has the following chorus: We h‘er lha merry jingle The rumble and the roar As she daehes through the woodland And comes creeping on the chore We hear the enirine'a whistle And the merry hoboes' call Aa we ride the rods and On that Wabash & W eeterm Mevigaaer Ualoa) HANFORD’S Balsam of Myrrh Salt Lake City’s west IS HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE 200 Powdered Skim Milk Is Fine for Laying Flocks Powdered skim milk has given such good account In the rations of dairy calves thnt Is use might well be creased In the rations of laying hen flocks It makes a valuable protein It constituent of the laying mash may well take part or all of the place univerThe Cornet of meat scrap 100 sity laying mash Is composed of wheal pounds each of wheat bran middlings yellow corn meal ground heavy oats and meat scrap plus three cent cod per pounds of salt and liver oil If no liquid skim milk Is fed 125 pounds one may well substitute of the powdered skim milk for the 100 pounds of meat scrap Where one has the liquid skim milk available from the separator on the farm It could well be used as the only source of drink In which case the meat meal of the mash mixture could be reduced f Grain for a Hen The amount of grain a hen will eat dally will depend upon the quantity of other feed such as mashes or table The birds scrap that Is available should get just what they will clean up nicely without leaving any In the litter Fresh ground bone Is good for hens If not fed In excess about half an ounce per bird per day Is sufficient warm Authorities do not recommend It Is preferable milk for laying hens to allox the milk to become sour before feeding Keep Houses Clean Neglecting the removal of Utter and manure Is more commonly the rule than the exception during July and August Clenn'ng really la very Important but not pntlrely because of the nilte situation If the house has been painted or sjnryed with an effective coal tar preparation within six months Accnmu-- ' the mites should not bother lated manure breeds file and attracts them Files sre an ever present menace as spreaders of tapeworms s very Injurious parasite Rooms 200 Tile Baths Radio connection in every room RATES FROM $150 Not Well Understood are management problems Turkey by the probably as little understood as are any of tbe average poultryman with any of the problems connected domestic fowls Tills Is especially true froo the time the poults are hatched until they reach a marketable age during which time they must be carried through the summer In a manner that will ennble them to reach the market in favorable season Tbe first problem is that of broodMany investigators ing the poults have found that turkeys can be raised with greater success In confinement than on unlimited especially range where chickens have been raised on the same farm Chickens are susceptible to the cecum worm which is host to the blackhead germ which In turn Is the greatest single cause of turkey losses Because of this good demands that ponlts be management raised on fresh ground and away from old turkey or chicken yards or runs The Nebraska station gives some very valuable pointers on turkey production Poults will thrive best if One square foot of not overcrowded brooder space per poult Is recommended Units of over 100 are not recommended except for those who have had considerable brooding experience Hotel Jmt opportto Mormon TobrnmcU C ROSSITER ERNEST Afgr Firo Statistics Fire statistics reveal that the total annual loss by fire Is approximately 10000 lives and the ratio of deaths to injuries Is 1 to 2 While only a portion of casualties occur in fires It has been estimated thut more than 60 per cent of the total number of fires Involving damage to property each year take place In the home and according to statistics there Is a home fire every four minutes Defective flues chimneys and hedng plants and sparks on the root vre reported as the “kuown originating causes largest fire losses" during 1929 J During the same year the national loss traceable to property these sources was estimated at jf WOMEN OFTEN PAY A DOUBLE PENALTY foe wearing this gag of unselfishness or silly fuse pride Pro- or suppressed menstruation ' 4 ”v ' should never be considered neces- sary Painful pc-riods are Nature’s warning that something it wrong and needs immediate atten- Suffer In Silenc tion Failure to heed and correct the first painful symptoms usually leads to chronic conditions with sometime fearful consequence Dr Piorcs’t Favorite Prescription la for women’s own peculiar ailments and can be obtained at any drug store Every package contains a Symptom Blank Fill out the Blank and mail it tv Dr Pierce’s Clinic Buffalo N Y for FREE medical advice Send 10c if you want a trial package - - Help! Blinks — How do you suppose a man feels when he la made one of the knights? Jinks — Probably goes around In a daze Matrimonially Speaking Marriage Is a great Institution But so la the penitentiary — American Magazine Run-Dow- n Weak Nervous? To have plenty of firm flesh and the ability to do a big day’s work and feel “like a at night yos must relish your food and properly gest it If you can’t eat can’t sleep can’t work just give Tanlac the chance to do for you what it has done for millions Mrs Fred Westin of 387 E 57th c Portland Ore says: cured my stomach trouble comIt pletely after three years suffering built me up to perfect health with gain of 27 lbs” Tanlac is wonderful for indigestion — gas pains nausea dizziness and headaches It brings back lost appetite helps you digest food and gain strength and weight No mineral drugs only roots barks and herbs nature’s own medicines Less tLan 2 cents a dose Get a bottle from your Your money back if' it druggist doesn’t help St North W N Salt Lake City No r |