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Show THE PAYSON CHROMH E. PAVSON. UTAH Keep Close Track of Farm Expenses STOP RHEUMATIC PAINS WITH HEAT OF RED PEPPERS old Nature Las put into red peppers a marvelous therapeutic hrat that gets right down to the source of trouble and almost instantly relieves the pains and ac hes of rheumatism, stiff joints, lumbago and neuritis. 1 housands have found it the one safeguard against chest colds, too. Now this genuine red peppers' heat is contained in an ointment that you just rub on. In less than 3 minutes you feel relief coine. It is called Rowle 9 Red Pepper Rub. Safe. Will not burn or sting. Getaamall jar from your druggist. COLDS CAUSE LOSS IN POULTRY FLOCK Can Be Greatly Reduced by Precaution. Losses due to Unusual Request , wlio died last July, leaving 17,. 7!),'!. MBs Bain 01 k (invited her executors to have the oil palming of tier late fattier burned before her funeral and that no one should be al lowed to ropy It. to get Now easy eoiil-- j In the poultry reduced by gu irding against overcrowding, imiuoper ventt latlon, dampness, insarntatnui, und drafts from crevices In Die walls tick of the perches, according to It. 11 lUg lngton of tiie Ohio agrieultuial evperi ment station. Mr. Udgington said tb.it wide vuria tions in temperature between nigld and day, long periods of cold, dunp weather, and rapid changes of environment are other contributing causes re suiting In colds. The disease may affect birds of any age but is most likely to develop In young birds that are in overcrowded quarters or heavily infested with Intestinal parasites, lice and mites. The first symptom of a cold is a clear, watery discharge from one or both nostrils In u few da.vs tills discharge becomes viscid, yellowish or gray In color, and resembles pus As tiie disease becomes more advanced the discharge dries oil the nostrils and Interferes with breathing. Tiie a fleeted birds frequently sneeze, appear droopy and may have a watery discharge from the eyes. Treatment of tiie individual fowl affected with a cold usually Is Impractical and rarely profitable unless ttie bird he of exceptional valu Attempts to administer medicinal agents In the feed seldom are successful owing to the lack of appetite possessed hy the sick bird. Fowls affected with colds are best removed from the flock, and If the disease Is In an advanced stage It Is best to destroy them. In attempting to control and prevent colds It Is necessary to discover the reason for the low resistance of the birds and then to remove the enuse. flock Out of tin1 .tr.uigi'.-ii reqm-- ds evei mil'll in h will in contained iu that of Mins Rosalie Bn knoll li.ilxotk, used I.ng-lund- rid of Gray Keep Hair Naturally Dark Now without using dangerous dyes you can datken gray hair naturally, quickly restore its original shade by the worlds finest, safe way which is now keeping millions of heads young looking. Benefits the hair as it darkens it to the shade you want. As simple as blushing. Try it. Pay druggist 75c for a large bottle of WYE'l US SAGE & SULPIIUK and just follow easy directions. An Inkling Polly Does your husband understand you, dearie? Molly I think lie's beginning to last week he opened another charge account for me. rDorit Neglect Your Kidneys Ileed Promptly Kidney and Bladder Irregularities If bothered with bladder irregularities; nagging backache and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling due to disordered kidney action or bladder irritation, don't delay. Users everywhere rely on Down's Pills. Praised for more than 50 years. Recommended the country over, may be Laying Age of Pullets Matter of .Importance More than 100,000,000 pullets are needed yearly to take the place of the mature hens retired from the (locks and marketed because they have passed their prime as egg producers. It Is estimated thnt there are more than SIX), 000, 000 hens In the United States on farms and In poultry plants, or an allowance of nearly three hens working for each man, woman and child In the country. In particular, farmers and poultry specialists are urged to batch chicks early In order to bring pullets to the lnylng nge In time to supply the autumn mnrkct when egg prices are highest, that Is, between lute August and January 1, after which tiie general run of pullets and hens are laying and prices drop to what is usually the low point of tiie year in April. Tiie use of the Incubator and brooder Is recommended as the most economical and labor-savinway of reproducing the flock, and also the most certain means In Insuring an early hatch. Exchange. everywhere. Do&nS ills A DMRETX FOR Use of Cod-Liv- Oil er When using cod liver oil with tiie scratch mixture or poultry ninsh, the quantity usually recommended Is a 2 per cent by weight, that Is, for 1XI pounds of grain or mash two pounds r oil should be used. Tills of is a simple amount to apply, as a quart measure may be used, a quart being approximately equivalent to two pounds. Feed treated with cod liver oil should be mixed in comparatively small quantities so ns to Insure Its entire consumption before the oil has a chance to become even slightly rancid. A few days of hot weather may result In losses of feed value through this factor. Because of Its vitamin content, which makes it something of a subeffects of stitute for the henlth-glvinr oil has sometimes sunshine, been referred to as "canned sunshine. Idaho Farmer. cod-live- the mm's Attributes of Frida Onp thing pride has, which no oth or rice that 1 know of 1ms: It Is n enemy to itself, and a proud man cannot endure to see pride In nn other. Felthntn. Reform yourself and It helps you' neighbor to reform - and In the bos' way. g NEWHOUSE HOTEL inter Rates cml-llve- Figuring Flock Profits Write for reso r ervations, when register-- j ing ask for special A Rates. FI AN A- - $7.50 Person Two duya. one night room meals; Rnrogos theeter ticket or cnbnrct dance. 3 God VI AS tl week-end- only. s S Person Two days, rwm garage; dinner, lrcaktheaters. luncheon; Good n: one night any time Fuithtr detail opon request. HOTEL NEWHOUSE I'tl Lk Salt W. fi. Snltcn City, C. W. ritmt TjT? - I- If a - JMW J, Form Is Imperative for Good Management. Good of Bingiteld, Surrey, U JhAf Sez Some Simple Budgeting Relieves Almost Instantly seventy, Sally j If you want to know whether your laying flock Is paying Its way divide the feed cost per RX) pounds hy t hrf price of eggs per dozen, multiply tiie result hy three, and you have tiie answer In per cent of egg production necessary to pay tiie flock's feed cc't, states Oklahoma Agricultural college pouUrymen. With this Information, says the Prairie Farmer, you can soon find If there are any eggs left for profit and to pay labor costs. Back Yard Poultry Keeping Rn;k yard poultry keeping has eral advantages which make it worth attention at a time when every family Is being urged to produce as much of Its own food as possible, save the United States Department of gricul ture. Back ar,t poultry keeping provides recreati.iu und ooeupation for adults and chi! b mi prov !cs ( that are strUtlv tro-f- i futN'os an l ih'iken neer mi, t t is an ou'let for I itctieri nul girlen waste or as vv ell as a s u u of gaj j, p tot sev- i isia-siona- i Moving Freight on Shanghais Bund. hv NiU nal U l. ) zxhliiKrn GirrTphic WNU Nrv e. vvlmli because oi became the SHANGHAI, interest as tiie in v m year got under way, gie-tvitably to lie tin- most important common ial city in China. The lust important factor in tills growth was the city's location near the mouth of the Yangtze river, Asia's greatest natural trade artery, A second reason for growth was the fertility of tiie surrounding region, tiie Yangtzes delta, which has been called China's garden spot. Finally, Shanghai 1ms had time In which to develop, and wv. stern guidance; for It was one of tiie first Chinese cities to be opened to westerners and western trade, one of tin live original established in Treaty Iorts (Priiand - 1842. This designation of Shanghai as a 00 years ago has resulted In the dual character which tiie city now possesses. For there are two Shanghais: the closely-built- , teeming native city, and tiie foreign concessions with their wide streets and avenues and their solid, western-typ- e buildings. British merchants were tiie first to move In after tiie opening of the port In 1812. They obtained a concession to manage their municipal affairs in their settlement. Tiie French and American residents joined in tiie arrangement, but later tiie French set up a municipality of their own which Is maintained separately today. Residents of other nationalities have thrown In their lot with the British and Americans, and today about twenty nations have arrangements with China In connection with trade and extraterritorial rights in Shanghai. The entire urban group Chinese, French and International that bears the name Shanghai, lias a population In excess of one und a half million people. By fur the larger part is Chinese but tiie concentration is not greatest In tiie narrovv-streetedirty, smelly native city. So well have tiie foreigners governed their concessions that Chinese have flocked to those sections. Tiie international city is especially a favorite residence for retired Chinese ollicmls from other parts of the coitn-- j try. It has become a model, too, in tiie matter of street pavements, drainage, sanitation and police methods, and since tiie revolution has been copied extensively by Chinese cities In other parts of the country. Not on the Yangtze. Snanghal is near the mouth of the Yangtze river and dost to tin Brand canal. Around it for many miles stretches Intensively cultivated gardens. 'Fliis strategic situation has made tiie city not only a greit commercial emporium but as well one of the gieatost Chinese industriil centers. In sense, however, tiie city is it is not direitly on tiie Yangtze, but on a tributary, tiie Ilvvungpoo (Whunpoo) twelve miles from the great river. The meeting place of the two rivers is called Woo-sunThe largest ocean steamers cannot ascend to the city, but must anchor In the Yangtze estuary near Woosung and transship passengers and freight to steam tenders. Smaller ships can cross the bar, however, and tiie war vessels of many nations are constantly on duty off the Bund. As one approaches the city from YVoosung, tiie villages, graveyards and anchored ships of all kinds become more numerous as he draws near the wharves. Tiie hum and roar of factories and cotton mills in peace time belie the real atmosphere of tins metropolis of central China. It is not until the heavy, half sbkemng smell of bean oil, Incense, opium smoke and of human beings penetrates tiie nos trlla that the true Asiatic flavor of tiie city Is revealed. Although the quaint Kiangsu junks are rapidly disappearing, the vargo junks, sampans, and speedy si pper boats still vie with the motor launches of huge steel and wooden vessels from every port on the globe. Shanghai, like Venice, is a city built largely upon piles suuk far into the soft black sand and saturated clay upon which the city rests along the banks of the Hvvangpoo river. Huge reinforced concrete rafts are buried ,n tins clay, and the foundations of tiie buddings are laid on them. The foreun settlements arc d gM fiillv m 'dern, vvth plcntv of !'i(e, a t ami air. and arc as (.cm ami or-t ti e t on. 'lie ; m h t v as tveid. cone own t inn.M t't.r i o i t nt' ir.di rf f 'll it i, g iv or; ",s t t si w .Fa tin .r liter two-'p'wti', treaty port t " j i i v own in gouge and tiie rm qinls" and oi in r signs tv picul u! the iniine-l.iiiGay City in Peace Times. of Shanghai a city (f both Fast and West is In pi ice tn ,os vv Ii.it many a traveler linds Faria is suppnst d to Ik tmt isnt: perpetually lie hybrid cdy gay and Americans, carefree. Europeans and fori ed by business or government assignin' nts to live there on tin oilier side of tiie world in a none too kindly climate, seem with one accord to have determined to make the expet lenoe as pleasant as possible. White men's working hours might have been framed by a visionary Socialist for tiie year 2O"0. Many oflices open at ten o'clock, grant a rest period from twelve to two, and close at four so that harassed merchant, and banker and clerk may hurry away to club or casino or tennis court, golf links or houseboat, for what Robert Louis Stevenson called tiie real business of life. Tiie Bund, tiie waterfront thoroughfare of occidental Shanghai, is normally crowded with prosperous, unhur- ried westerners; and Bubbling Spring road of an afternoon is thronged with stvlishly dressed men and women of leisure and fashionable equipages that would do credit to Fifth avenue, the Champs Ely see or tiie Ring Strasse in the days of Viennas glory. Tiie city Is thoroughly cosmopolitan. Perhaps no other city of tiie world surpasses It in this respect except Cairo. Every western country has nationals in Shanghai, anil there are besides representatives from all parts of Asia. In the Old City. In striking contrast has been the old Shanghai, whore most of the Chinese live. Going through the gates of the native city one passed into another century. Old temples, cramped courtyards, where flowering peonies and chrysanthemums could be glimpsed la passing, and an endless succession cf narrow streets, hung witli rococo banners of Chinese characters, and filthy and reeking with a thousand odors, differentiated it at once from Us smaller modern cousins but a short distance away. A tea house set in the middle of a stagnant pond is one of tiie breathing places of the old city, where sellers of jade anil cheap jewelry, letter writers, fortune tellers, cobblers, menders, peddlers, jugglers, and others of Shanghai's polyglot population gathered over teacups or chattel td endlessly in voices, 'tin Chinese theater is another native oddity. The want of scenery, tiie din of tiie orchestra, and tiie piercing intonations and gaudy costumes of the a t"-- s furnished a piit aide, which, while not always pleasing to western t Wi s, was always colorful and unusual. Shanghai's soluiquet, "I lie Fat is of tiie East 1ms refened more to tiie gaiety of its social life than to any external resemldam e to tiie French capital. It is not nearly s0 picturesque as Bong Kong, or that queen of oriental beauty, Eooi bow. Shanghai cannot set out a thousand lanterns on a dozen hills 1,800 fet up into tiie night, as Hong Ixeng can, but her more intimate house and garden decorations have been famous. There were lanterns everywhere, eerta n types were used as shop signs, and with their nonsputtering cold tallow eiruUes tiiev shed a perfect light. Along Rubbling Wei! read in hippier days a panorama of tiie city's life passed In review. Once tin resort of closed broughams ami fine cars of foreign dignitaries, it has lately echoed to the rattle of anything th it can go on wheels, and tiie rukshaws and wheelbarrows of tiie natives, darting in and out among the carriages, taxis and limousines, have furnM ed a gay and motley speeta.de all div long. Shanghai is net only a grvat commercial emporium, hand ,ng nearly half the foreign trade of China, but it tins also become, in re. cut years, one of the greatest Chinese industrial centers, with a large laboring popula tion. Cotton and s ik cneoon winding mills employ thousands of workers In addition there are hrge numbers of smaller factor es, lev rTn luring more Organization of the farm for use the and economical management of a budget to determine the needs and income of the owner are two items to be considered by every North Carolina farmer in 1982. This thought was developed by committees on farm management and reorganization at tiie regional meetings extension held hy the agricultural college. State tiie of service form of budgeting ts A simple recommended for farm and family renext year. ceipts and expenses for the This budget should savs tiie report, consider first tiiose items which the farm itself will produce in the living of the family and should include such items as feed, seed, food, and fuel. Second the budget should consider those items which must he purchased such as fertilizer, taxes, hired labor, clothing, medical care and the like. After tiie minimum cash needs of the farm have been determined, the farm business should be studied so that cash enough to meet these needs might be produced. By using average yields per acre and production figures, every farmer can approximate what he may expect from his land and live stock in one year, says R. II. Rogers, farm management specialist at the State college. Cash crops should be restricted in 1982 to meet the budget requirement of minimum cash for the year and even further If it interferes with producing the entire living at home. The coming year Is also a period when many needed physical Improvements might be made in the farm equipment. Much terracing, ditching, repair work and other improvement might be made at little cash outlay. Mr. Rogers says the coming season will not offer much in the way of cash Income and It is Imperative that the suggestion of the farmers committees be carefully followed. Good Farmer Will Not Allow Manure to Leach Farmers wtio would not think of piling commercial fertilizers out of doors do not hesitate to throw manure out into open yards where It is allowed to remain for months subjected to leaching by every rain, states R. M. Salter, Ohio agronomist. Ten tons of fresh mixed manure from horses and cattle will contain about 90 pounds of nitrogen, 45 pounds of phosphoric acid and 75 pounds of potash, he says. To carry an equal amount of fertility It would require 5G0 pounds of nitrate of soda, 225 pounds of 20 per cent superphosphate and 150 pounds of muriate of potash. A test at Wooster, Ohio, shows that four tons of manure applied to corn In a four-yea- r rotation has given increased crops per rotation worth $8.05 at present farm prices, while nn equal amount of chemical fertilizers gave additional crops worth $9 98 per rotation. f Because of the nitrogen and phosphorus and nearly all the potash are soluble in water, farmers should protect manure from leaching and get it on the fields as fresh as possible. Irairie Farmer. "T , 1 ts marv lous-th- tsw Of fields and gardens, The sunshine males ZS a kings, With beautiful and tasty thi If you desire to do your Towards making growing pan s things start Kind natures help is all oner And home producers magic ' st Ask Your Crocrr Var TWIN PEAKS BRAND PEAS BEANS Rocky Mountain - TOlIATCZi Packing cY Salt Lake City, Uuh success to these machine Write for descriptive cai Caterpini! Landes Tractor Salt Lake & Equipment Ct City and Trrmontim, lid PERM GASOLINE Packed With Power CHICKS CHICKS CHICK! All leading varieties. Dont Bay The folded when it h so eay to ee thttazb the eggs and the flocks fromwhuhtnqcaou Brother, protect that dollar as never befw White Leghorns, now only 10c sct BROODERS The Coal, oil or electric FEEDERS AND WATERERS The Pride of All Amelia1 Klondike, Chick, pullet ard hen sizes RAMSIIAW HATCHERIF3 SALT LAKE CITY UTtH TIMPANOGOS H VTCHCRY PRO Write, O, tire UTAH or Call. Ask Your Druggist For MILK OF MAGNESIA AN INTERMOL'NTAIN PRODICT one-hal- Rye m Pig Feeding high-pitche- Covering a feeding trial, 75 pigs fed on coarsely ground rye and grazed on alfalfa pasture gave a return of 51 cents per bushel on 205.7 bushels of rye, according to C. II. Flnth, superintendent of tiie Hettinger substation. Tiie hog feeding trial witli the John Monroe herd of hogs was completed recently as a continuation of the ground rye trial that was conducted a year ngo. The gains in pork during this trial were 2.00 pounds, making a feed requirement of 408 pounds of ground rye with pasture free choice to make 100 pounds of pork, Tiie market value of tlds grain at $8.70 per hundredweight amounts to $105.82, making the value of the ground rye 51 cents per bushel. While this feeding trial was In progress all pigs were thrifty and In good condition, and apparently w.ere well satisfied with their ration. Dakota Farmer. Lime for Steers Tests conducted at Kansas agricultural experiment station over a three-yea-r period Indicate that the feeding of pounds dally of ground limestone to a steer was more beneficial than the feeding of two pounds of alfalfa daily. The lime-festeers netted $0 00 per steer over feed costs, while the alfalfa-festeers netted only $2.81 per steer. Both groups In each test were fed a basal ration of corn, cottonseed meal and silage. The lime-fe-d steers gained 2.84 pounds each dally, while the alfalfa-festeers gained 2.25 pounds each. d d Clover With Alfalfa Alfalfa and red clover are sown together for hay mixture by Steve Woz-ni.iPorter county. Indiana. He sowed two parts red clover and one part alf Ufa, 12 pounds an acre on 20 acres Bariev was as n nurse hp first fill tie mixture was crip. fissured with d dry vows Tin next Ibie Mr Wo ei,,k ,m 2s lo els of ex ' '!T buv M Wozniak tops tbe u-- el i ' a - t i oug1 11 I'm,, r t o seem q b v vv s !; r s v e ir r ft r for 270 SO. WEST TEMPLE Everything in Canva Good! THIS WEEKS PRIZE STOH Business and Gossip have o' iiture in common tiry shot th be kept at home! Don't ur money do your travelings u. Buy at home and do J IseCoir1 iveling in per-onse. "investigate the resort fa your own communityand kf Git buv ountain. urself, and remember lps Them That Help T' Ives. EVALYX MaeQLTVET, IS WON SUE endelh Mi FUN Return of Youth be" sw York's CosmetiiM Abso'u 4 I roams m l y lu-- t Tissue tu Me rs.j amoves & Prevents Wrinkles Lay for 11.00 jar. tcB P V rents wanted evo- -j vtie-WON Sl'E FlN. 423 Judgs Salt Like cay. eanser. |