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Show I 1 . v THE RICH COUNTY REAPER RANDOLPH. UTAH ONE OF THOSE DAYS Pennsylvania Bossy and Her Triplets Intermountain Hews more auto licenses By DOUGLAS MALLOCH - t . REDUCE INJURY LIST CAR SHIPMENTS GROW FEAR TYPHOID FEVER BUILDING BOOM SEEN i of those days we just recall heavy labor of it all, Behold our task with downcast eyes We once uplifted to the prize. One of those days we look too near The task to either see or hear The beauty of it darkly gaze And say, Its just one of those ONE BLACKFOOT, IDA. Sale of license plates to automobile during 1936 incounty Bingham creased more than $10,000 over 1935, announces Harrison Ison, county assessor. Total receipts for days. L One of those days the things unkind Come quickest to the weary mind. Forgotten all the joy we met, Remembered all we should forget. One of those days we see the past As something good that could not .IDAHO FALLS, IDA. From a time high of 255.50 per cent losthours injuries per, million man under the CWA in 1933, the accident rating on government- pro-to cut jects in Idaho has been 18.25 per, cent under the .WPA. Lester Roberts of Pocatello, statesafety representative for the sixteen southeastern Idaho counties, reports. In 1935 under the IERA the rating was 99.24 per cent . RUPERT, IDA. Farm products in car lots shipped from Rupert in 1936 numbered better 2070, bettering by 215 cars the same class of shipments at the Union Pacific freight office in Rupert show. Potatoes topped, the 850 shipments both years, with 1936. cars in 1935 and 1040 in This, of course, does not represent the seasons potato shipments in either case as the potato year for seasons shipping terminates in June. BUHL, IDA. Chlorination of rural water supplies between Filer and Buhl is urged by Dr. L. A. Lambert of the state health department after a survey. Occasional cases of typhoid fever' have been reported in the area recently and water should either be boiled or treated before use to insure against further spread of the disease, the doctor points ! - ' . ; ' ' ' .last. The future something that delays Too long, and' say, One of those ' . . days. ; , , 1 f - One of those days. We know not why; A cloud will yisit any sky, But this we know,rthat not a one Has ever overcome the sun. One of these days we yet shall learn If nights descend that dawns return, And with that thought our souls so raise ' ; . ' The proud mother, a Holstein cow, owned by Nathan Folk, farmer of Stony Creek Mills, near Reading, Pa., is shown with her three babies. Although triple birth to a cow is distinctly rare, all .three calves are normal. , We never know one pf those days. Douglas Malloch. WNU Servlca. Two Princesses THE RATS START A FIRE T) ATS are born thieves. They not only steal food, but they carry off many other things, things for which they really have no use at all. Now it happened that, one of the young rats in the farmhouse found some matches and took them to his nest under the floor of the shed. There, having nothing else to do, he nibbled at them to see what the queer stuff on the ends of them might be. His sharp teeth caused one of them to light, and of course that instantly lighted all the rest of them. With a squeak of fright the rat ran away, for like all the little people of the Green Forest and the Green Meadows a rat fears the Red Terror, which we call fire, more than anything else. Now that rats nest was made chiefly of chewed up paper and old rags. Nothing could have been better for the Red Terror. It blazed instantly. The floor just above was of very, very dry wood, for the boards pf that floor had been there many years. Jn no time at all that shed was afire. All the rats under the floor fled in terror into the house. Smoke began to pour out of the open door of the shed. The farmer at work in the barnyard saw it and ran as fast as he could to try to put the fire out. For a while the farmer and his wife had a hard fight with the Red Terror. They pumped water as fast as ever they could and carried it in pails to throw on the fire. At first it looked as. if the Red Terror would be too much for them and their house would be burned up, but after a while the water ! ! was too much for the Red Terror ' and drowned it out. Whew! exclaimed the farmer as he and his wife sat down to rest for a moment. That was a narrow escape. How under the sun could that fire have started? I havent the least idea, replied his wife. I was upstairs at the time. There wasnt a thing in that shed that could have started it. Do you suppose anybody could have set it? . The farmer shook his head. No, said he, that fire started under the floor. Then a sudden thought came to him. I know how it started! It was those he cried angrily. pesky rats! It was those pesky rats as sure as I live. They must have found some matches somewhere and taken them to a nest under the floor. Then while they were nibbling at them they set one going. Weve got to get rid of those , out. POCATELLO, IDA. A noxious weed control plan for 1937 is being urged by local farm co- operatives. TWIN FALLS, IDA. Bank deposits in Twin Falls, hovering just under the five million dollar mark as the year closed, showed a 35 per cent increase during the year, annual statements ' show. BOISE, IDA. A residence construction boom in the smaller Idaho towns is predicted by Harry Whittier, former Moscow .. Those who are fortunate enough to retain their shirt in the business of a day, says pertinent Polly, return home only to find the laundry man has lost it for them. WNU Service. rats or we wont have a house left over our heads. I dont know how were going to do it, but weve got to get rid of those rats! T. W. Burgess. WNU Service. with Priricess Olga of Yugo-Slavher youngest child, Princess Jelisa-vet- a, in a recent photograph which was the first to show the two to. gether. ; ia ! FEEDING THE FAMILY to be the principal THIS seems of at least twenty million housewives, but feeding the family on the proper food is not a light job to be undertaken with no thought. Food is not necessarily nutritious in proportion to its cost. The high-pricfoods appeal to the eye and imagination, so they seem most desirable. Going marketing is a wonderful education as well as a great developer of will power, or resistance to temptation, for it takes real to pass by the crisp ard green cucumber or the box of strawberries, when the price is beyond the purse. The mother of a family should, of all people, understand food values, for she is in a position to build up or tear down bodies and ruin digesBad habits ruin life as do tions. weak bones the body. foods such as meat, : The protein eggs, fish, cheese and milk arfe the most expensive .and complex!. Carbohydrates are the starches and sugars; potatoes, rice, macaroni are our principal source oi starch and the sugars we get from various from fruits and sources honey such vegetables as beets. An excess of meat is very bad for it clogs the system and causes as mixed. Substitute rice and macaroni for potatoes, not serving any two at the same meal. Western Newspaper Union. i tiie LnrjGunGE u I op tour nnrjD OBy 68 Leicester K. Davis Public Ledger, Inc. kM f i KNOW THYSELF by Dr. George D. Greer - 1935. ed Sophisticated self-deni- Brain workers and the young as well as aged need easily digested foods. Active muscle workers need coarse foods, which are better for 'fX ! Amethyst satin is molded to the gure with extreme simplicity in his sophisticated dinner gown. The acket and the decollete are of self ording. , al' g. their needs; however, all need roughage to give bulk and increase the intestinal activity. The growing child needs milk, butter, eggs, green vegetables and fruits to supply all the food principles and the vitamins which promote growth. The diet should be varied as well banker and head of the federal housing administration for Idaho. In the years 1935 and 1936 most of the home construction was in the larger towns and for homes costing in the neighborhood of $4000, he said. Indications are that 1937 will see heavy construction in smaller towns and for homes in the lower price brackets. BOISE, IDA. The bureau of mines estimated the value of gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc produced by Idaho lode and plac- er mines during 1936 at $26,981,000, compared with $19,522,704 in 1935. The gold output decreased about 3800 ounces. The output of silver increased from 10,240,-95- 3 to 14,400,000 ounces; copper to 2,850,000 from 2,095,867 pounds; lead from 158,040,250 to 180,400,000 pounds; zinc from to 92,500,000 pounds. BUHL, IDA. Postal receipts set an all-tihigh at the Buhl office of last year, reports Postmaster L. P. Runyon, who lists a total of $18,728,64 for the year, or a gain of nine per cent over . . A S YOU progress' in your under-standi- ng thq revelations of the hand, you will become more and more impressed with how well the builder of our destinies has given us each a preponderance of those qualities required to offset .what otherwise might be a . disastrous temperamental deficiency. of DO MOST PEOPLE KNOW WHY THEY BUY THE THINGS THEY DO? 5 YTERY few people know why they buy this thing or that thing. They often rationalize afterward, and give what they think to be the reason, but the true reasons are always in the subconscious mind in the instincts says Dr. Donald Laird in his valuable book What Makes People Buy. Clothing and personal adornments are sold on the instinct to be admired, and to attract attention; . insurance on the instinctive fear, of death; travel tours on the instinctive craving for romance; and . automobiles on the instinct td show power and exhibit it through possessions. Everything we buy has an instinctive basis for its appeal, and most of us never realize this. An intelligent salesman studies these, instincts and makes use of them. WNU Service. Thumb as Index of Logic vs.' Will The first two joints of the thumb, as you have learned, denote the balancing qualities of will and logic. One often is found to offset completely an almost hopeless deficiency in the other. For example, you may find a short, flexible nail joint denoting impulsiveness, extravagance and other undesirable reactions to environment quite neutralized by the length 6f the middle joint. 1 Or the reverse may be shown, in which case a naturally tendency to let things go because of mental laziness is stung to action and kept in working order by a stubborn will which refuses to submit to a temperamental defect. greater-than-avera- WNU ge Service. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Ac- tions to prevent a widespread influenza epidemic in Utah have been taken by the State Board of Health, following reports that a number of cases of flu, are in Salt Lake City and that the disease has hit epidemic proporState reg-- ( tions in nearby-state- s. ulations pertaining to the prevention and control of influenza were broadcast aqd arrangements made for local health officers to notify the state department of aggravated conditions.'. SALT LAKE CITY, UT.- -A ten million dollar market for homes awaits enterprising members, of the building and allied industries in Utah during 1937. This was the statement of national and state Federal Housing Adminis- Ration officials, recently 'assembled in Salt Lake City. - SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Total anticipated state resources by the close of the fiscal year, June 30, 1937, will amount to $3,396,456.14 it was disclosed in a report issued to Gov. Henry H. Blood bv E. R. Miles, director of the budget. This figure includes a cash bal- -, ance of $1,375,000 on hand July . 1, 1936. , . SALT LAKE CITY, UT. December proved ' a profitable month for the State Liauor Commission, it was disclosed in a recent report. During the month a total of $75,000 in profits was acquired for the state. This total, the largest monthly remittance ever made by the commission, brought the total amount, naid into state coffers during 1936 to $400,000. An additional $100,000 was realized in sales taxes from the years liquor business. -- t |