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Show Rial TOE Eatered as COUNTY second-clas- s REAP KB matter FeU at the past office Randolph. Utah, under the Act of Mar. 3; 187ft Wia. E. Marshall, Editor and Prop SUBSCRIPTION 81.1 Per Tear in Advance 8. 1929. Our Recreations your Recreations be and moderate, seasonable is lawful; the use of recreationand to strengthen your labor sweeten your rest. But there are some so rigid or so timorous that and they avoid all diversions, dare not indulge lawful delights for fear of offending. These are hard tutors, if not tyrants to themselves ; whilst they pretend to a mortified strictness they are and injurious to their own liberty Maker. the liberality of their Steele. LET WATCH STANDARDS OF COD LIVER OIL Potency for Rats Does Not Apply to Chickens. Spend no more time in stating the qualifications of a man of virtue, but endeavor to get them. Supplied by the United Statee Department WNU Service. of Agriculture. Any source of vitamin D that is to be Included in mixed feeds intended for poultry should be purchased on the basis of its guaranteed potency for chickens instead of rats. The potency of commercial sources of vitamin D is customarily measured by tests made with rats vyhich do not react to the different sources of this vitamin as do chickens. The poultryman may obtain vitamin D from oil, sardine oil, other and fish oils, and irradiated oil, products. In the case of new standards have been adopted, and if it is to be sold as such it must now contain at least 85 international vitamin D units and at least 600 international vitamin A units per grain. Any oil that does not meet these requirements must be labeled The designation oil, not U. S. P. Poultry U. S. P., has been used recently, but it is misleading and its use is not official. Until some satisfactory chicken unit of vitamin D potency has been estaboil may be purchased lished, on the basis of the number of tional vitamin D units it contains per gram. All other sources of vitamin D should be purchased on the basis of the minimum quantity, expressed as per cent of the feed, required to protect young growing chicks against rickets. Although the official method of stating vitamin D potency is to give the number of international units per oil gram, some carriers of are still marked with the number of units per ounce, and often the unit meant is not the International unit. The purchaser should remember that all units of vitamin D potency are not equal and that an ounce is more than 28 times as heavy as a gram. cod-liv- Prepared by the National Geographic Society. Washington, D. C. WNU Service. annual spring rush of to Washington is op. In Nations Capital even the perennial visitor is greeted with something new to enjoy. This year new buildings, recently opened, in and near the great triangle between the Capitol and the Ellipse, will be a feature of a tour of the city. Gaze down upon the modern Washington from an airplane. As always, the simple grandeur of the White House, the Capitol, the Lincoln Memorial, and the towering Washington monument draw the eye and make the heart beat faster. But near them new wonders have appeared. Quietly and steadily, with so little fuss that residents were hardly aware of it, thousands of carloads of stone and metal whole mountains In the aggregate have, been hauled into the city and reared Into monumental build- THE er fish-liv- cod-liv- er cod-liv- er cod-liv- er cod-liv- , cod-liv- er Sour Skim' Milk Good Beverage for Chicks Sour skim milk is an excellent beverage for baby chicks, according to Dr. W. C. Thompson, professor of poultry husbandry at the New Jersey College of Agriculture, Rutgers university. It Increases their appetites and is a readily digestible and highly nutritious food in Itself, he says. The rate of growth is stimulated by feeding sour skim milk to chicks during the first six weeks, and the beverage also acts as a regulator of the birds digestive systems, Doctor Thompson points out Commercial poultry-me- n are using this food in increasing quantity lately because It helps to produce good broilers quickly and aids In getting young pullets properly started. Fresh milk may easily be made sour by using a small amount of sour milk as a starter and adding fresh milk to It each morning. If this is set In a warm room, the souring process will take place rapidly. Feed the sour milk in a thickened condition, but first break the clabber by stirring so that the whey as well as the solids will be consumed. Baby chicks may be started on sour milk during their first day in the brooder and need be fed no water during the entire six weeks, provided there Is plenty of tho milk on hand. This forces all the chicks to get the sour milk consuming habit. When feeding sour milk to chicks, It is advisable to use earthenware or enamelware containers Instead of metal rff eptacles, as the lactic acid In the sour milk may have a chemical reaction on the metal. Poultry Cullings If the turkey is to be dry picked, the work should be begun immediately while the feathers are loosened. It costs approximately a year to feed a hen, whether it is a good layer or a poor one. 80 eggs Farm flock records show that those who brood early chicks make more profit from their flocks than those who brood late chicks. ings. Acres and acres of old, unsightly structures have been razed on Capitol Hill, around its base, and along broad, historic Pennsylvania avenue. In their place stretch parks, wide boulevards, or long, handsome houses of government i In the angle formed by the Intersection of Pennsylvania avenue and the new Constitution avenue, beautiful s or Rue de Rivoli of Washington, rises a mighty wedge of Federal Trimasonry, the famed angle, eight blocks long. In this single group is the jnost collection of government amazing bulldiDgs that the world has seen. In They make their own weather. hottest summer the air inside is cooled to the temperature of a fine spring Champs-Elysee- day. , Massive and Beautiful. In sheer size the cluster of buildings is staggering, even from high above. It Is as If half a dozen ? or more of New Yorks tallest skyscrapers have been laid on their sides, formed Into a blunted arrowhead, and cut and twisted to make courts and wings. One unit the Commerce department Is longer than the Chrysler building is tall. But it is not merely an impression of bigness that one has in the wandering plane. Long ranks of ma- jestic columns, graceful arcades, a wide plaza, and solid rock walls give a beauty and simplicity that make these enormous newcomers fit companions for the classic White House and Capitol. The airplane turns, and far off in the distance, beyond the Capitol dome, appears a gleaming white marble temple, comparable in beauty even to the noble Lincoln Memorial. This is the new United States Supreme Court building, the only real home of its own that the nations highest court has had. For the first time in American his- tory a citizen now might gaze upon the separate, permanent abodes of the three branches of his government-legislat- ive, the Capitol; executive, the White House, and now, for the judicial, long sheltered in the old senate chamber, this temple whose dignity and impressiveness match the majesty of the law itself. Suspended in History. As you cruise about, other splendid white buildings appear, new jewels in the familiar setting along the Potomac. Beyond the Lincoln shrine the new Arlington Memorial bridge links north and south. Down the Virginia shore of the winding river a wide Appian way, the Mount Vernod Memorial highway leads to the home and tomb of the Father of his Country. From the steps of the Capitol all the way down to the river, two and a third miles away, sweeps a broad stretch of park land. Gone is much of the mushroom growth of temporary wartime structures. Their removal gives new beauty to this Mall, pain feature of the grand plan conceived by the Revolutionary soldier-artisMaj. Pierre Charles LEnfant, ' Lighting will help to hasten the moult of old birds, and get them back into laying condition quickly. Shatterings of alfalfa (largely leaves and the finest stems) that accumulate under hay drops and in front of the mangers, are excellent feed. tree-dotte- d t, in Washington. when he laid out this city with broad, sweeping, prophetic strokes to be the capital of a vast country. ' Hanging between earth and sky, you seem suspended in history, halfway between the past and the unfathomable future. How would the city look a hundred years hence, or twenty, or a thousand? The Senate Office building, off there at the left, has had its face lifted and a handsome face it now is, with a long row of Roman Doric columns. A street car line that once marred the scene dips discreetly underground. Be neath a broad lawn is a subterranean garage in which 270 senatorial cars can be parked. Supreme Court Building. But to look upon the latest crowning glory of Capitol hill one should stand on the front steps of the Capitol, where Presidents are inaugurated, and see the new Supreme Court building, its beauty heightened by the green of trees and grass. It occupies a historic site. Early patriots in powdered wigs forgathered at a. famous old hotel run by William Tunnicliff on this spot before the War of 1812. After the British burned the Capitol in 1814, a building erected here housed congress until the marks of the torch were erased. In Civil war times it was used as a military prison. Everything about the Supreme courts home is on a majestic scale. Look at those blocks of marble, one at each side of the steps. Each block weighs 45 tons. They are two of the heaviest marble blocks ever brought into Washington. The two bronze doors weigh 3,000 pounds apiece. The eight Corinthian columns are 51 feet high. The pediment above them catches the eye, not alone for its size, but for its interesting sculptures in which the features of historic or living men are Recognized. Inside the massive bronze portals a main hall lined with 36 stately columns each tnade from one solid piece of stone leads to the courtroom where the nine justices sib At their own request, the room was made only about 60 per cent larger in floor area than the old Supreme court room in the Capitol Behind the courtroom are the offices of the justices, each of whom will have about as much space as all had together in the crowded Capitol. Only three had offices there at all, and most of the members of the court do much of their work at home. To assure the Justices privacy, the new buildings corridors can be closed by big bronze gates. Wonderful Libraries. In the Folger Shakespeare library, down the street, reposes a fine collection of books and Elizabethan treasures, even the supposed' corset of Queen Elizabeth, solemnly stowed away in a vault and shown only to a chosen few. Behind the Library of Congress an annex almost to double its capacity is being built, although already it is the largest library in the world, with more than 9,840,000 books, pamphlets, pieces of music, and other items at the latest count. Down from Capitol hill, past a shining new House Office building lately reared beside the first one, the trail of the new Washington leads to Pennsylvania avenue. Halfway along The Avenue, between the Capitol and White House, there stretched off to the left in the early days of the city a dreary swamp where Washingtonians were wont to shoot reedbirds. An energetic government hit upon thi3 location as a key point in its building program. Here would rest the tip of the Federal Triangle. Wrecking operations began. Scientific Pied Pipers from the Agricultural department disposed of the rats, which at first devoured the workmens lunches. On this unlikely site now stands a structure In many ways unique the National Archives building. black-robe- d .. ... x ... Dainty Collars and Jabots to Crochet SfAR DUST Federal Triangle ODDS AND ENDS . . . These Three that you can't afford to miss . . . Toby Wing is actually going to make a picture at last . . The Trail of the Lonesome Pine is such a success everywhere that all studios are go. . ing in for outdoors pictures . Leslie Howard's son Ronald has been working as an extra in Romeo and Juliet" . . . Shirley Temple has learned to ride a . bicycle and shes crazy about it Little Lord Fauntleroy" is a grand of the famous book, although Freddie Bartholomew had his way and does not wear golden curls or a velvet suit . . I Incidentally, his father and mother are still trying to get part of his earnings . . . Paramount will make four And Twentieth pictures in color will film Ramona " the Century-FoFirst thing we know, same way black and white pictures will be on the shelf with the old silent ones. is a picture MOVIE AND RADIO BY VIRGINIA VALE Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE who sees in Follow the her Fleet or hears, sing on the radio with Ozzie Nelsons band ought to meet her as well; shes decidedly worth meeting. To begin with, she is much prettier in real life than in pictures. And to see her as the demure music EVERYONE teacher who, as Ginger Rogers sister, falls in love with Randolph Scott, gives you no idea whatever of what sort of girl she is. She is magnetic, delightful, charming. And she is one of the few girls who have had a career thrust upon them. She never did want to go on the stage, but she had to earn her living. And when she was very young her mother pointed out to her the fact that its better to train for a profession that pays well than for one that never will bring in much money. Better a dancer at one hundred a week than a stenographer at fifteen, said Mama, or words to that effect So Harriet became a dancer. She appeared at one of Broadways big movie houses, and on the road in musical shows. And she worked so hard that, at nineteen, she had to stop. . k Did you hear the recent broadcast of Paul Whitemans birthday celebration? Of course, it came at a bad in hour the morning, Eastern Standard time; NBC kept its line open after midnight for It. The Paul Whiteman alumni staged it and what n a list of people once worked for Paul ! Morton one-thirt- y Pattern 1136 High time to be thinking up fresh accessory notes for spring wardrobe, Isnt it? , Then what better than these airy, lacy collars and dainty jabot for giving last years frock a lift and changing this years so it wins recognition! Theres an open front collar in a square mesh design, a triangular collar that closes in back, both easy to do in petite boucle. The soft, flattering jabot of mesh with "nosegay of Irish roses is made in cotton. Pattern 1136 comes to you with detailed directions for making the collars shown ; an illustration of them and of all the stitches needed; material requirements. Send 15 cents in coins or stumps (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle, NeeJecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y. BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes. Adv. Real Magnetism are magnetic without using their power to gyp others. Some men well-know- Downey, Bing Crosby, Jane Froman, Ferde Grofe and George Gershwin, the composers, and Mary Margaret McBride, whom you Inay have heard on the air as Martha Dean. k And, speaking of Morton Downey, hes sailing in May to keep concert engagements in England and Ireland and how he loves to go to Ireland! A FAMOUS DOCTOR A5,,a practiced medicine in Pennsylvania. His prescriptions met with such great demand that he moved to Buffalo, N. Y., and put up in ready-to-uform his tonic. Golden Medical Discovery, which will eliminate poisons from the intestines, increase the appetite, and tone np the digestive system. Buy nmot Tabs. 50c, liquid $1.00 ft $1.35. se weU-kno- PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Boom Dandruff-Stop- s Hair Falling Imparts Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair and $1.00 at Druggists. fLVgtQHlMnT peo- Dr. R. V. Pierce Dr. Pierces Pellets are best for liver, bowels and stomach. One little Pellet for a laxative three for a cathartic. Adv. Real Condolence In condolences, It is not what ple say, but how they say it ' young man the Cham. Wts.. Patehogne.N.Y. FLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for use in connection with Parkers Hair Balnam MaVaa the hair soft and fluffy. eO cents by mail or at dm gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchotrne, N.' THE RHEWIffldDlUSE Bfl (OTTER, A . Distinctive Residence An Abode renowned Throughout the West Salt Lake9s Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 DOUBLE $2.50tO$4.50 400 Rooms 400 Baths 'THE Hotel Newhonse W. E. SUTTON, General Manager CHAUNCEY W. WEST Assist. Gen. Manager ' |