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Show THE PAYSON CHKONKT.K. PAYSOX. OUR COMIC SECTION ITU! Good Chance Now RELIEVES HEAD; CHEST CoM of Well-Bre- d Stock vites Investment by Breeders. tv the Cn!tt1 Atm, u'tur ) - M In- Stainless. "Rub In" and inhalant unsurpassed ,, in preventing and relieving cold congestions SOLD AT ALL QUALITY McKesson gRobbiks SINCE 1833 DRUG STORES , " Department hertLe Tins Is an cun lient time to replace inferior Pulls or females with well-Itci- I stoik, says E. W. Slieets, of the Iniled Stales Department ot Agriculture. It Is now possible to buy the best at prices which are but little aboe the usual commercial values of two or three years ego. In fact, there Is far less spread as a rule between the best and Inferior breeding stock than formerly and there arc cases where pure breds are to be bad at bar- HAVE LOST THE PAPERS 'ujHERE. Yf VEP GOWTA Be: ItN A f gone. Officialdom, In both the motherland nnd In the colonies, seeks to revive Wintering beef calves Is Important Nebraska, and at the station grounds corn fodder as part of the ration has been under test two years. For the second consecutive year ground corn fodder, full fed. supplemented with one pound dally of cottonseed cake, proved to he the most economical ration tn wintering the beef calves. With ground corn fodder valued at $10 a ton, alfalfa hay $10 a ton and shelled corn 42 cents a bushel, the ration utilizing corn foddor and cottonseed meal produced gains at a cost of $4 SI for each lHf pounds gain, as compared to S.1.4S where calves were allowed alfalfa, full fed. and shelled corn, three pounds a daj. Although the calves on a full feed of shelled corn and alfalfa produced gains at a cost practically equivalent to that of the ground fodder lot, an acre of fodder produced gains nearly double to that secured by feeding the grain only, It u ml New Yorker. Good Time to Build Soil of us apparently are stumbling around, wondering what crops to put in which field the coming season. to assure the most profit during the period of low prices. Why not more alfalfa? The seed Is cheaper than it has been for many years, lime Is cheaper, and should we run Into one failure In securing a stand, the toss of the use of the ground during the time would he so little, figured In terms of cheap wheat, oats nr corn, that it would he a low cost loss. If a good stand is secured, there should he four or five years of good alfalfa crops to follow, then some renewed land to plow up that will grow real crops of corn when corn prices will be better. We hear considerable about r three and plans for farmers tn follow to help us out of our present mess why not a build up of our soil by the alfalfa route, hv using cheap seed cheap lime nnd cheap hor on 2." per cent of our cultiv atnhle acreage? Who lias something better to offer? Kansas Farmer. five-yea- the featherheads Help! Help! Buttermilk Best The Missouri station has Ju- -t completed a comprehensiv e stmlv on the value of different supplements In the poultry ration for egg production A basic grain and mash ration was fed to seven lots of In ns from November 1 to September 150 In addition to this, one lot received cottonseed meal and rock phosphate and produced an nverage of 125 eggs each. The sicoml meal and lot received coilonsced honenieul nnd produced Flo t ggs p.u h. The third lot received soybeans nnd rahoneineal In addition to the b tion and produced 111 eggs e.o !i. The fourth lot received soybean imal aid honetneal nnd produced 122 eggs cm li. The fifth lot received tankage and these hens averaged 12fi eggs eadi. The sixth hd. which received In addition to the basic ration. averaged Kill eggs each, while the seventh lot. receiving an addition of dried buttermilk, led all groups with HO eggs per bird Successful Farming. 1 meat-scrap- s Seven Lean Kine The old story about the seven lean k'ne that ate up the seven fat kine Is being reenacted in the Ended States, of siys the Fnited s'.itestoDepnrtrmtd r cows rds po. In sonic Agriculture are eating up the prot.ts d the good ones, as shown bv tie txpi nonce of one d Ir.v Filin' r w Jh a In rd of f.ent itss,,,'-,- . 'I he her ill (,, it sow n of th t on showed records (lorn were proVn'do. for they aver aged Fit Ft. wh b the losses from the oihfr seven averaged $20 01. 1 vi Highest Happiness in Labor Well Performed English-speaking- in Some GRIP A hundred years or more ago Englishmen were sw arming to every corner of the earth, taking over and populating vast stretches of new land, until It was possible as Indeed It may still he possible to say that , there were more peoples thnn there were those of any other tongue. In the lust generation or two there has been a change. Britain still controls much of the vast areas of the eurth. But Englishmen are no longer filling them up. Australia, despite Its continental extent, remains a sparsely populated land, with most of the people concentrated In a few cities along the eastern const. England proper teems with men and women unalde to find work to do. but the old urge to get out and try what a new country can offer Is Economical Ration in Wintering Beef Calves X relatively few of them are of profitable size and quality. In the comparatively warm seawater of the Mikirnoto pearl farms millions of small oysters, tiatched naturally, but under a certain amount of supervision, float for a while and then attach themselves to sman stones strewn on the bottom. There they remain for three years. Then Japanese diving girls go down and get them. No Longer Feels Urge to Settle New Lands. The farm production of beef calves for market Is being practiced Id many sections throughout the eastern slates as well as In the corn belt. In connection with general farming or other stock raising, says Mr. Sheets. Farmers with ample pasture and no more than enough grain for their breeding stock and hogs sell calve9 as feeders. Others run spring calves with their dams during the summer, fatten them during the winter, and sell them the next spring as fat yearlings. A more recent practice Is the forcing of well bred spring calves with grain from the time they will first eat It until ready to he weaned In slaughter condition In early fall. This system produces more beef of choice quality than any other plan known to the Industry. Calves fattened In this manner usually meet the latest market demand for tender beef, which Is sold tn handy-weigh- t an kages. This system, however, calls for carefully selected breeding stock sided ed for early maturity und high quality. A Needed Explanation . BRITON SEEMS TO gain prices. THE FORCE BACK COLDS; to Improve Herds frri'Dnrr.J FINNEY OF and the old swarming spirit. But with small success. The story published In the morning papers Is typical. Nearly lnn.fiOO Englishmen who had been persuaded to move to Australia have petitioned the British government to repatriate them. They charge that they were Induced to leave their homes by mischievous, misleading arid untruthful propagan da circulated by paid agents of the Australian government ami they tell a sad story of disappoint inont, starvation nnd despair. What Is probably more suggestive, they tell also that many of their numbers have become mentally deranged and that suicide Is frequent. On this point Warren S. Thompson, In his famous hook, Danger Spots In World Population, has n stimulating discussion. At certain periods In their history nations tend to swarm." like bees, nnd the facts Seem to show that only swarming agriculturalists with a rather low standard of living can aetually settle a new land. But an Industrialized people, such ns the English have become, gradually censes to swarm. It censes to he able to settle and develop new lands, for the rity life to which It has become accustomed renders it unfit to master the soil. Such people, says Thompson, can exploit certain of Its accumulated resources, but . . . they are like the people of the fabled Island who lived by taking In one another's washings." The troubles the expatriated Englishmen are having In Australia nnd the similar troubles some of their fellows have had in Panada are sim-jileases In point. If the new lands nominally under the control of the British empire are soon to he filled. It will probably he with other folk than Englishmen front the Industrialized mother country. Baltimore Evening Sun. Today the most welcome word that can come to millions Is a promise ef employment to have a share In the world's work. The song on which many of the older generation were brought up urged one to work In the morning hours, to work 'mid springing flowers, to work even through the sunny noon, nnd then on till the last beam fadeth, fadeth to shine no more." But It was a joyous Bong, and the only unhappy note In It was the one that suggested the oncoming of night, when man works no more." The most fervent prayer that most men make, especially those who have not much goods laid up against days of ease, come from ancient times: .May I be taken In the midst of rny work. So far from work being a curse, Carlyle speaks of It as the grand cure of all the maladies and miseries that ever beset mankind." It Is the le.--t physician. So In seeking to find employment for those out of work, the problem of misery Is attacked at Its root. Skill In labor Is man's highest vocation, but it Is through labor f some sort, whether by hand or brain, whether of one's choice or by compulsion, whether as a vocntlon or an an nvouitlon, that lie finds bis way to bis better nnd best self. (living n man a Job Is the best form of helpfulness, If he Is still able to work. It has been often said that there la no good obtainable without labor; but It Is better sat'd that there is no good that Is to le put above the ability and the opportunity to labor. Kansas City Times. Salt Lake Citys I Newest Hotel tsir S3 i L HOTEL y Japanese Pearl Farms Prove Good Investment i SQUARE 200 Tile Baths 200 Rooms Radio connection in every room. 1.50 RATES TROM By leasing nhnut 40,0'KI acres of warm salt water tn various hays along the shores of Japan, planting 8,000 000 small oysters - know n scion martens! tifieally as each year, perfuming a m.alor snr glcnl operathn on each of them, the pat'enfs tenderly then fni-dfor seven years, an average of $2,00(1000 worth of Japanese culture pearls Is prodmed for world markets annually. The originator and controlling factor In Ibis si range Industry Is Ko Mlklmotn, known as the pearl For 22 years he king" of Japan. before opented nine pear! farms , ft profitable crop. Now-though raising by means of ti e scientific methods he developed hr- nnd his thousand assistants rate for T.OOn.OOO pearl oystei s constantly, nnd the raising of culture pi aids has (eased to tie an expi riniMit. writes Fail Chapin May In Popular Sop-mMonthly. All pea Is nre prodmud by Irritated ovsuus. A wild, natural or vlr-g'pen-- l results v. h n a bit of sand, n rnmu'e crustacean or some other tit ,y foie'gu substance accidentally gets Into t lie oyster's body. If It Is not Hide to eject the Intruder, the oyster surrounds It with layers of a substance which. In time, becomes a The giest value of natural pearl. pearls U due chiefly to the fact that fg hl-r- - t Just opposite Mormon Tabernacle ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. Tin Mdval Vacation Land Sunshine All Whiter t.ontj Splendid roads towering mountain ranges I Ugliest type hotels dry air clear starlit nights Californias Foremost Desert Playground Cr A : i i Chaffay FWrttm fdpiriiig Durit Earthquake! Oddities g the great Tokyo earthquake of 1!)25 nearby coal mines were not affected, and a recent Texas earthquake which was felt within a radius of bovei.il hundred miles had no effect on the Carlsbad caverns, within the earthquake zone. n No End of Variety Deadbioke "I hear you have all Id mh of money." Badly bent "Yeah, pennies, nickels, dimes, und quarters." Boys cun be kept on the farm aft- er they are of uge. If they can liuva $25 a week to spend. Every time you wash your face and hands use this delicately medicated Soap and note how it not only cleanses but also protects the skin. Made of the purc-- t ingredients, tufaeura Soap is ideal fur daily use for all the family. Soup & 2 O.ntrnrnt 2rc S K 1 lrop nuns Ioitir Hfutf lu mi cil C 01 p., Maliirn. Mush. SJGT Iiy the new 1ut.iurs L Miav mg Lrt am. i |