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Show PIUTE COUNTY NEWS, JUNCTION, UTAH OMETH1NG TO THINK ABOUT (By F. A. WALKER LAXITY AND THINKING product in hand you realize Fruit Maturity Told by Tester THE CHANGING WORLD By DOUGLAS MALLOCH GUESS the world Is movin' on, how it Is, not all comparable with But, oh, the things a man 'll miss I substantial thing of which you A lot of good, old things are gone; VO U may sometimes look forward the You dont see thut, you cant have to the accomplishment of a long have been so long dreaming. Not this. a cherished piece of work with expecbeing philosopher you cannot Familiar things hnve passed away; tations of inordinate pleasure, but at accept defeat with complacency. The world keeps changin every day; Oh, critics, why have I failed? the final moment, when your task Is Each day they tell you at the store, The answer is simple. It applies finished, your heart turns sick in disto almost No, they dont make em any more. off set every failure may. against inconstant human endeavor where see A lot of joys have taken wings Everywhere you glaring defects, lack of harmony, imperfect values, be- thought was brushed aside to make That now youll look In vain to room for feverish k flimsy 1PHO SAID Pride and weakness are Siamese twins. RUSSELL author LOWELL, JAMES words quoted, is known to the American public and to a great section of the British public as a poet, lie is less known as an abolitionist, and yet his work in abolishing the slave trade in this country brought him more prominence during his lifetime than did his poetical work. Lowell was born in Cambridge, Mass., February 22, 1S19. Nineteen years later he was graduated from Harvard college. lie early joined the ranks of the abolitionists and his did a great deal Biglow Papers to take the subject of slaery out of the academic class and make it a pop- - fc) by McClure Newspaper Syndicate J 1S55 ( Y(EU, I DOriT GlT TtC TeiLVCO? I by the Unite. States Department 1 of Agi u ulture ) -- tsEacR. Got AtillAys W,VITD rest. DT Lif WfcS Tots AU. 1 GoT A SKISTeS , m o' pMQ. an' Some . Books Krnrr-- , AN' Tots & vnHAT SWeATEP. tor a bro JUHK iT- -I GlT I IN AN'--1 Individuality of Boars in Method of Feeding ied. B1K6.1 CT wouldnt 1 Kney I not I DURfl A A p R'.ae cor Tus I coevrcRTEfl. a NiGTENS t WAnTc I TotwS . ( M' AH A GLEP a ior o cahdT Aw' OSANSCS , 'ISC' When these schedules have been completed, the fruit grower will know at what pressure lie should pick ids fruit to enable It to stand the storage and transportation conditions expected of it. The fruit dealer will be aide to tost bis fruit in storage and determine tiie remaining length of time be can expect it to keep in firm condition, A copy of tiie circular may be obtained free of charge, as long as Hie supply lasts, by writing to the United Stales Department of Agriculture, Washington, I). C. I-- f'Jt fa () No Poor Among Parsee3 ' - Cl' i a r'ii ( mwmmAt The Parsecs are the most prosperous sect of the eastern world and there are no paupers among them. It would be a disgrace to refuse to assist a fellow of his creed in distress. The It is said, have worked out, to the astonishment of the western world, an ideal existence Adventure Magazine. Par-see- D UtHFORTOMMCS CTHE YOUNG 1 Ulomers Coo Every idle hand in this world com- spoonful of grated orange rind. Bring f pels some other hand to do its work. two cupfuls of sugar and cupThe need of the hour Is not more leg- ful of hot water to a the add boil, more is It islation. religion. Rodger softened gelatin and allow to boll Babson. Remove from tbe twenty minutes. beat, add fruit juice and rind. Strain SOMETHING TO EAT in a shallow pan which has been wet be served at least with cold water. Then cool, turn out on a board, dredge with powdered ONIONS should week in every family, and sugar and cut into cubes. Roll in oTtener will be better. powdered sugar. Onions With Nuts. Lemon Wafers. Cook the desired amount of onions Cream one cupful of fat and add one as usual, drain and cut up with a cupful of sugar. Add three crumbs, salt, knife, add eggs and three tablespoonfuls rich miik. of of a and cupful pepper, Add flour enough to lemon juice. Sprinkle the top of tbe dish with but- make a dough to handle. Roil very tered crumbs, add a half cupful of thin and cut into rounds or fancy chopped walnuts and hake until the shapes. Bake until delicately browned. buttered crumbs are brown. one-lial- well-beate- n d LADY ACROSS THE WAY All in all, tbe figures show dalrjing to be a safe business, especially the production of cream for manufacture into creamery batter, and taken over a period of years, it is not, ns a general rule, subject to ns sharp price fluctuations as other farm products because of a steadily increasing consumption, and the fact ttiat the increase in milk cows must of necessity be slow and tiie further fact that when other crops go up in price and feed is relatively high, many cows are not fed for highest milk production and many others are no longer milked, but turned into beet. These natural breaks in tiie industry against sudden increases tend to balance production against consumption, maintaining a fairly profitable price level over a period of years, provided always thut labor is well employed so as to keep up the purchasing power. A herd of milk cows included in general farming always provides skim-milfor hogs, poultry and calves and, or failure in lime of a Is of other crops. godsend to every farmer. well-beate- n po- Ilcnty of good, dean nests will dis- courage the habit of Clean nests menu fewer cull eggs. floor-layin- Are you allowing your children to or unsterilized drink unpasteurized milk from an untested cow or herd? Oat straw Is better feed than wheat straw and not ns good bedding. May-li- e ou and your neighbor can make a trade. Irairle hay and excelsior make the liens best nest material obtainable, cannot scratch It out of the nests like straw or shavings. Wheat straw makes the best litter for tbe scratching room. After two At tiie Washington Agricultural col- weeks In the henhouse It makes exlambs took 32 days cellent bedding for tbe stock in the lege grade-sirebreds to reach the barn and tbe fresh straw is better for than pure longer same weight. They ate 40 per cent the health of tbe flock. more food, and then sold for $2.83 less Tbe authorities a hundredweight. Refuse lime from the lime quarry conclude from these figures that a little besides the hauling and Is costs ram whethman pays for a pure-brefor sprinkling on tiie floor excellent or one not. lias er he Certainly, the scrub-raowner gives himself more after cleaning. It Is just as good as lime for tiie whitewash. exercise for considerably leaner red d first-grad- e one-hal- lf g 1 not too enrly to speak for Its tato seed for next spring, with the short crop last fall. Scrub Rams Come High n one-ha- Oyster shell Is good, but It wont take tbe place of grit for liens. k turns. Sponge Cakes. Beat three egg yolks until light, and add one cupful of sugar. Add three of lemon juice, Scrubs in Pure Breds tablespoonfuls teaspoonful of grated lemon rind, The average farmer or breeder who one tablespoonful of cold water. Sift to pure breds, should be will-inaspires one cupful of flour with one teaspoonto admit that there is some one ful of baking powder and who is able to advise him, and unless teaspoonful of salt, fold in lightly into The young lady across the way he is willing to learn and grow into tbe mixture. Add three stiffly beaten sajs the coal that costs tiie least Isnt the business gradually, he should egg whites and pour into buttered and always the cheapest and one should leave hands off. No one should for a Turkish Delight. floured gem pans. Bake In a moderate always Inquire for the kind that has think that because Just minute on of gelatin oven for thirty minutes. Soak five tablespoonfuls the most vitamins in it. Is pure bred and carries the pa( by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) ju one half cupful of cold water for o of a cuppers of registration, it cannot be a ien minutes. Mix cull. There are culls In pure breds to mov two have trunks If you ful f orange juice with three Mid there are culls in grades. as six. have well teaa and might it Union juice you 1926, Western Newspaper Union.) Graham Breakfast Muffins. egg. add one Take one f sour of teaspoonmilk, cupful ful of soda, tbe same of salt, two of sugar and one tablespoonfuls of u pi'u graham flour. Beat well, three tablespoonfuls of meltadd then ed fat and pour into hot, muffins. gem pans. This makes six large Feeding n boar is sometimes very simple, and then again sometimes It Is a rather lillicult problem. Boars show a good deal of individuality in the way they feed, especially during the breeding season. Some hoars will go along and feed very regularly while others will have to be coaxed to eat enough to keep them In good shape. Good feed for n boar that Is quiet and a good feeder would be a ration of about Id per cent oats, 30 per cent corn or barley, 20 per cent middlings and 10 per cent tankage'. The corn can be fed as ear corn or shelled corn. The oats can be fed whole or It can be ground and mixed with the shorts and tankThen tbe shorts and tankage age. should he mixed together and fed as a slop. A little skim milk or buttermilk used In making this slop is very desirable. If milk of some kind Is not nvnll-nldit Is desirable to use warm water when Hie weather Is cold. o, Figures .Show Dairying Steady Source of Cash by George Matthew Adams.) well-buttere- (Prepared Grow blooded grain, says the department of plant breeding at the New York Agricultural college at Ithaca. Live stock growers have long realized Hie advantages and the necessity of breeding, but comparatively few farmers have put Into practice the knowledge that plants respond to the same laws of heredity and selection, natural and artificial, that make the difference between a scrub bull and a blue ribbon winner. By selection, wheat can he made to grow tall and spindling or short and rank, hut neither of these extremes are wanted, and the plant breeders nt the state college realize that. So they have done some Investigating, and have picked out what they think are the host. Among red wheats, they say, Forward is undoubtedly the best ylelder, and should supplant oilier varieties of rod wheat. It Is beardless, resistant to smut, lias a stilT straw, and is of good milling quality. Honor and Junior No. 0 take tiie crown for white wheats. 'Ilie former is a selection from Dawson's Golden Chaff, and the latter is of Gold Coin type. Both nre stiff strawed and beardless, and are recommended as the highest yielders among the white kerneled varieties. Seed of all these vaileties lias been field and Idn inspected by tbe state college and certified by tbe New York Seed Improvement Cooperative association as conforming to Its standards of excellence. The department of plant brooding at tiie college can furnish information concerning it. fle.-li- j he was offered the post of belles-lettre- s at Harvard, of professor a post filled by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Lowell accepted the office on condition that he might have two years to study abroad. This was granted and after bis tour of Europe be returned to this country and assumed the duties of professor. The North American Review, which numbered many famous literary names among its editors, secured the services of Lowell in 1SG3. He held that position until 1S72 when lie resigned from tbe staff. During the Civil war he resumed his attacks on slavery and published a second series of the Biglow Papers in tbe Atlantic Monthly. Following bis resignation from the staff of the North American Review, Lowell again visited Europe where lie was well received. On his return he was appointed minister to Spain and Great Britain successively. His death occurred in 1S91. Wayne D. McMur-ray- . Plants Respond to Laws oi Heredity and Selection. Improved Type of Mechanical Pressure Device Just Been Invented. te.-te-r, ular matter. In Pedigreed Ancestry The maturity of fruit at picking time largely determines Its dessert quality as well as its storage or transportation possibilities. Allowing the fruit to become too mature on the tree results In a product which will not carry to the market, whereas picking the fruit in a too Immature find ; condition results in an almost Inedible of to lot lost a things, sight, Theyre product. And very nearly lost to mind. Pressure of the fruit with the Now, when you ask the clerk for one, He sort of smiles, your neighbors thumb to determine t lie maturity lias probably been practiced as long as son, fruits have been oaten by man, says of And says, Oh, them are out tin United States Department of Agridate; Heres something else thats simply culture, but tliis method is too indefinite for modern demands of fruit dealgreat. ers and handlers. This need for defiThe livery barn down by the crick nite lucking standards for cert sir. Is gone, theyve built a brick garage. fruits which will allow them to be Take even words: a tricks a trick. left on the tree as lung as possible But now they call it camouflage." and at tlu same time assure their The cracker barrl, the oyster can carrying through to market In satisWhy, I could name a hundred, man, factory condition, has led tbe United A hundred things you used to see States Department of Agriculture to That now are just a memory. devise an impioved type of mechanBut you whose whiskers now are ical pressure a description of is which In gray, given Department Circular 350 just is ued by tbe department. (The younger generation shave), Dont sit around and scold and say The pressure tester, is somewhat on That all thats old they ought to tbe order of an automobile tire pressave. sure gauge, is of convenient pm table I guess the world is movin on: size, and easy to use. A protruding A lot of good, old things are gone. plunger of the toiler, placed against But why be sad and why be glum? the flesh of an apple or ether fruit, A lot of good, new things have , recording the penetrates (lie come maximum pressure required to pene(c) by McClure Newspaper Syndicate ) trate the fruit to a given distance, thus giving mi indication of Its maturity. B.v means of the tester and storage experiments definite picking standards are being worked out for the various fruits. The rate of softening of fruit in storage and the firmness of fi nit in different singes of storage maturity are also being stud- haste. When at last you regain your normal mental composure and your eyes are no more blurred with tears, you see that you stubbornly refused to use your own brain. Impulsive emotions controlled your every act rather than calm productive thinking, which became Irksome. in love 01 in war, the fight cannot be won except by hard thinking, intelligent and patient maneuvering. You cannot rush half blind into battle without incurring risks which coolness and proper thinking obviate. if you will look Truth squarely in the face you will discover that many of our distressing failures are traceable to the common laxity of thinking. Every bungling act If hunted down to its hidden lair will be found ullilialed with beggarly thought. The man or woman who neglects to think things over will never get far from the starting point. it is the industrious, clear, persistent thinker who is changing the face of the world, making It better and blazing the way to a more glorious future. ing as a whole a crazy bit of patch-worthat humiliates you beyond endurance and rouses within your throbbing breast spirit of resentment. Yet you, yourself, are to blame. Where hard thought was required you gave light heed, and here before you lies tbe material evidence damp with tears of disappointment. Now that you have the unworthy Growing Grain With If roosters are kept over for the breeding flock, they should be wintered in a separate house and turned with tiie hens six weeks In advance of date eggs are to be gathered for hatching. one-eight- h well-grease- d ani-ma- d one-thir- d table-.oico- rf ( i' (, Now that cold weather is here make a practice of carefully collecting eggs and storing them in a suitable place. Eggs should be held at a temperature of 50 to CO degrees Fahrenheit. The storage place should be free from odors and not too dry. Ship eggs |