WRKLEYS OLIVE
STOCK
THE G ATE C ITY JO U RNAL
KING WALL FINISH Mean,
EV ERY
SOWS ON PASTURE
NEED SOME GRAIN
Probably one
reason for the
popu larity o f
W R IG L E Y S U that It lasts
•o long and return« such
great dividend« for «o small
an outlay. • It keep« teeth
clean, breath sweet, appetite
keen, digestion good.
Fresh and fu ll*flavored
always in its wax* wrapped
package*
i
*
Conation
Albeis
Mush
Count on Carnation Mush not
only for a better breakfast but
an easier'tO'get breakfast. Five
minutes........and this delicious
whole wheat cereal is table-ready!
Champion w ill render
b e tte r s e rv ic e fo r a
much longer time. That
is why it is outselling
throughout the world.
Champion X fo r For da 60c. Blue
B oxforalloihercara, 75c. M ore
than 95,000 dealers sell Cham
pions. You w ill know the gen
uine by the double-ribbed core.
Champion Spark Plug Co*
Toledo, Ohio
W indsor, One., London, Pari*
After the sows have weaned their
pigs and have been re-bred for fall Ut
ters, they can be easily and cheaply
handled on pastures. While upon pas
ture they will consume about one
pound of grain to each 100 pounds of
live weight. Brood sows will manage
to lire upon pasture without grain,
but It Is a mistake to graze young
pregnant sows on pasture without
grain. Both the sow and their pigs
will be stunted. How much grain and
when to feed It requires good feeder
Judgment. Young sows and sows thin
In flesh need more grain while on pas
ture than do mature sows and sows
that are strong and In good flesh.
The kind of grain Is not so impor
tant If the sows are in good pasture
like alfalfa, clover or rape. Many suc
cessful hog men feed one-quarter to
one-half pound of tankage dally to
each brood sow before farrowing In ad
dition to the grain and pasture. The
addition of tankage Is more necessary
If the sows are upon a pasture like
blucgrass, bromegrass, rye, etc., which
are not legumes.
About ten days to two weeks before
the sows are due to farrow, they are
removed from the pasture to the place
where they will finally farrow. This
places them under closer observation
of the feeder and he can feed them
especially prepared rations which are
both nutritious and laxative.
Such
management makes for more vigorous
pigs and It puts the sows In better
condition for farrowing and for the
care of their litter.
Now Is the time to plan for your hog
pastures.— B. W. Fairbanks, Extension
Service, Colorado Agricultural College.
Bovine Tuberculosis Is
Fast Being Eradicated
With 89 counties on the modifled-
aecreditcd list of the United States
Department of Agriculture July 1,
eradication of bovine tuberculosis
from the country Is showing unusual
progress. A place on the modifled-ac-
credlted list means that the county
has completed a test of all the cattle
within Its borders, that Infection was
less than one-half of 1 per cent, and
that all reactors were promptly re-
moved and slaughtered.
The 89 counties show a noteworthy
Increase over 53, the figure on the
first of the year. Besides the county
wide testing, an increase of approxi
mately 12.000 In the number of ac
credited herds occurred during the
same time. Coupled with this prog
ress Is the removal and slaughter each
month of from 10,000 to 20,000 cattle
found through systematic testing to
be tuberculous. The removal of those
diseased animals greatly reduces the
menace to healthy stock and also to
people. According to a summary of
the work up to July 1, Just Issued by
the bureau of animal Industry, United
States Department of Agriculture, a
total of 1,120,536 herds of cattle were
under supervision for the eradication
of tuberculosis at the end of June.
The continued popularity o f sys
tematic tuberculin testing under state
and federal supervision Is evidenced
by a waiting list of more than 400,000
herds ready for the test as soon as
the veterinary Inspectors can reach
them.
Separate Pen for Sheep
A
NEW
W A Y TO H E A L T H . H A P P IN E S S
A N D SUCCESS
W rite today and tell me what you dealr«
mostly. I can help you as I have helped
many others.
Positively no ch arge; am
fu lfillin g life ambition
Stamp for reply.
P A U L JACOBSEN. R IV E R D A L E . C A L IF .
L. D. S. Business College
S C H O O L O F E F F IC IE N C Y
A ll commercial branches. Catalog free.
SO N. Mala SL
SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH
CKIN IRRITATIONS
J
For their immediate relief and
healing
1
doctors prescribe
Resinol
A t A ll D ru g rete
T t o H m M U t C . .. Plttabwavh, P s.
HOSTETTER’S
CELEBRATED
S T O M A C H B IT T E R S
SAVE
YOUR EYES!
C*e Dr. Thompson's Byswmt
w.
N. U., Salt L a ic City, No. 40-1*2*
The ewes that are to lamb soon
should be separated from the rest of
the flock and, if it can he convenient
ly done, each ewe should be kept In a
small pen by herself. After the lambs
are a few days old the ewes with
small lambs may be allowed to run
together. The ewes should be given
a small allowance of grain, which may
be increased up to about a pound
apiece a day after the lambs become
large enough to consume the milk.
Live Stock Hints
Good pastures are essential for
profitable beef production.
• • •
Ewes should not be allowed to get
wet, for a drenched fleece dries very
slowly.
• • •
Tests show that scrub hogs require
20 per cent more feed than pure
breds to make 100 pounds of gain.
About the same per cent la required In
other farm animals.
• • •
Since the floors o f many sheep
barns are usually about on the same
level as the surrounding ground extra
precautions
are necessary during
thawing spells to keep water from
running Into the bam.
• • •
T o Insure a strong, vigorous lamb
crop the ewes should be fed one-half
pound of grain beginning about one
month before lambing time.
.
e .
Wheat Is shoot equal to com for
feeding swine. Oats, If ground and
hnlls sifted ont. Is one of the best
grain feeds for little pigs.
s
.
.
Hog oilers are very good, but often
times fall to reach all parts o f s hog's
body. Clean, dry. well-bedded sheds j
will aid very materially lo preventing
•kin parasites.
Low Cost— Easy to Apply—
tastefully decorated and rtaCy clean
rooms, It leaves no streaks or spots,
and It’s so easy to apply that any.
one can do it. Just mix it with
hot water and It’s ready
for use.
$1.00 buys enough
n_
21
17
the most attractive color combi
nations — and the laat word In
sanitation. Those are the
rfiinga you get when you
^
decorate with KINO
W A L L FIN ISH .
Isn’t It worth in.
vestigationl Write
today for name of
nearest dealer and
Free Color Chart,
showing 19 beau,
tlfu l c o lo rs to
choose from.
le c o r a te an
average size room.
Write today for
FREE 1 9 -C o lo r
Chart.
22
30
26
32
31
36
37
39
44
40
149
W a ll Finish
TH B C HICAGO W H ITE LEAD Si O IL CO.
13th St. A S. W u t.ru A ve., C h ic c o . DL
‘Distributor
Salt Lake Glass
1— F in a n c ia l e s t a b lis h m e n t
4— B lo w w it h o p en han d
®“ T o o
i o — P r e c io u s a to n e
Ia — A p a ce
13— A « h a r p h lo*v
IS — H o w o r r a n k
17— T o p a ck
1H— H e a l »
20— T o lo o k a a k n n ce
22—-A aon o f N o a h
22— T o e n c ir c le
2S— P lsr’a re s id e n c e
2 «— U pon
27— T o o t t e r In w o r d a
2H— Y e lp
SO— K o y u l o b n e rv a t o r y (a b b r .)
31—- T o d ravr fo r t h
83— D e fin it e a r t ic le
33— T o f o r g i v e
37— D e v o u r e d
88— S ou th A fr i c a n fa r m e r a o f D u tc h
d ea ce n t
80— T o « t e a l fr o m
■10— In c lin a tio n
12— P r e fix d e n o t in g p r i o r i t y
43— A r r o g a n t
45— P u b lic n o tic e (a b b r . )
48— 811111 in It
48— 1T u rk is h g o v e r n o r
4 »— T o w a r d
so— T e a r
&2— .Sea n y m p h b e lo v e d b y P o ly p h e m u a
55— A a lig h t tan te
88— A H e b r e w p r o p h e t
68— D e n lt o u t a c a n t lly
50— F r u i t o f b la c k t h o r n
60— T o m e r it
82—
P o in t e d fa s t e n e r
83—
F r o n t p a rt o f l o w e r l e g
84— P e r io d o f t im e
08— T o a lid e
87— T o b o x
68— A jo u r n e y
Co.
Salt Lake City, Utah
( C o p y r ig h t , 1921.)
Horizontal.
ÔC Paint
18— W e e p
ID— T im i«
21— P e a s a n t o f In d ia
23—
S c o ttis h f o r “ w o e *
24— O rg a n o f h e a r in g
27— O d o r
- P e a r e ld e r
32—
S h o sh o n ea n In d ia n
33—
A to y
34— B e fo r e
36— N o is e m a d e b y a c o w
40— W e e d
41— D o m e n tlc a n im a l
<8— A v e g e t a b le
44— T o d r u g
47—
T o s tu ff
48— A r t ic le o f fu r n it u r e
51— B e seech
S3— C u t o ff
54— A n u m b er
65— S lip p e d
67— G re e k g o d o f w a s
50— S a ilin g v e s s e l
01— S h o rt s le e p
03— D e v ic e f o r w a l k i n g o n a n o w
85— H o y a l a c a d e m y (a b b r .)
86—
S e n io r (a b b r .)
T h e s o lu tio n w i l l a p p e a r In n e x t issu e.
Solution
of
Last Week's Puzzle.
New Sun Dial Accurate
Although sun dials have been satis
factory In a general way for giving the
hours, a new one has been Invented
that tells time to within 80 seconds.
Hands are geared to the dial, which
has an additional part through which
a ray of light passes. The dial Is Im
proved also to correct for different
positions o f the sun during the differ
ent seasons, allowing for the equation
of time o f the amount of time the sun
Is ahead o f or behind Its average po
sition. The Inventor Is Prof. W. E.
Cooke, an astronomer of Sydney, Aus
tralia.
James Monroe, for two full term.
No town grows so big that the peo President of the United States, re
ple don’t feel a personal Interest In a ceived a hall In the shoulder at th .
fine new building.
attack on Trenton.
enuine ^
Vertical.
t— M o v e d r a p id ly , as a ir
2— S e rp e n t
3— N e g a t i v e
5— B e h o ld !
0— S u ited
7— B u c k e t
8— M in u te p a r t ic le
» — F u r n is h in g a
11— D r e g s
12—
T o re d u c e to a a tn n d a rd
13—
R eg ret
14— F o n d le
18— C o n d ig n p u n is h m e n t
17— F o o t c o v e r in g
Ö w R m d
D E. n
E. R u L E
5 T L, R N
HOW TO SOLVE A CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
W h e n th e c o r r e c t le t t e r s a r e p la c e d In t h e w h it e s p a c e s t h is p u z z le w i l l
« p e ll w o r d s b o th v e r t i c a l l y a n d h o r iz o n t a lly . T h e fir s t le t t e r in ea ch w o r d is
in d ic a t e d by a n u m b e r , w h ic h r e f e r s t o th e d e fin it io n lis t e d b e lo w th e p u z z le .
T h u s N o . 1 u n d e r t h e co lu m n h e a d e d “ h o r iz o n t a l” d e fin e s a w o r d w h ic h w i l l fill
th e w h i t e s p a ce s u p t o th e fir s t b la n k s q u a re t o th e r ig h t , a n d a n u m b e r u n d er
“ v e r t i c a l ” d e fin e s m xvord w h ic h w i l l fill th e w h it e s q u a re s to th e n e x t b la c k o n e
b e lo w . N o le t t e r s g o In th e b ln c k sp a c e s . A l l w o r d * u sed a re d ic t io n a r y w o r d s ,
e x c e p t p r o p e r n a m es. A b b r e v ia t io n s , s la n g , in it ia ls , t e c h n ic a l t e r m s au d o b s o le t e
fo r m s a r e In d ic a t e d in th e d e fin itio n s .
O P T IM IS M
By THOMAS A R K L E CLARK
HINGS nre seldom as bad us we
think they will be.
I read, some years ago, Miss Mildred
Aldrich’s “On the Edge of the War
Zone." Miss Aldrich was living In a
little house on the hank of the Marne
at the beginning of the late war. She
was an eyewitness to the heroic strug
gles of the French army when the
Germans were driven back from their
vantage ground In that vicinity. She
went through all sorts o f discomforts
In a climate that nt Its best In winter
Is disagreeable. She was without coal
when snow was on the ground and
the temperature was bitterly low. She
was shut In, restricted In her food
supplies, and often In actual danger;
yet she never complained. She says
she really never suffered, and that she
was never so well in her life. Even
when she was without fuel she didn't
entch cold, and she objected very
strenuously to being pitied by her
friends. She was sure that things are
never so bad as we fear they may be.
She tells of many of the sddiers
whr came back from the front for
“ reps*," some of whom were quartered
with her.
They had been In the
trenches, surrounded by all
the
wretched conditions o f which we have
read, more wretched, perhaps, than
we dream ct. They had slept out In
the snow and cold, or, what is even
worse. In the mud and rain, yet they
were rosy, healthy, thoroughly fls, and
cheerful as school boys. They tug' not
found the conditions of living In active
war service yearly as unbearable as
they had supposed they would be.
The crape hanger and the pre phet
of evil almost always make ti ings
worse than they are.
The case o f a neighbor o f mine vjien
{ was a boy in the country conteq to
my mind as 1 write. He was constant
ly obsessed with the thought of
drought and flood, of pestilence *pd
famine, of cyclones and devouring in
sects. He invariably took the glooaiy
view. He constantly courted disas er
and predicted calamity, and he looked
forward with melancholy reslgnat-on
to the time when he would be quar
tered on the county, his home and kls
friends gone. Yet he regularly ptos-
pered. his crops always matured, prices
were much higher than be had antici
pated, the yield of grain was satisfac
tory and he got on well. He extended
his possessions regularly, until he Is
now one of the solid, substantial farm
ers in the community In which he
Jives. Rut he Is not happy. Today be
la looking for trouble, though moat of
T
the things which have made his Ilfs
miserable during his sixty yenrs have
never happened.
I know n young mother who lives In
hourly terror that something will hap
pen to her baby. She sees genus on
everything that he touches nnd on
everything that touches him.
She
looks forward to the time when he
will have broken bones and a frac
tured skull. It Is true that he has
fallen out of bed and tumbled down
stairs, but his little soft body has been
scarcely the worse for Its contact with
the floor. He had a few bruises and a
little discoloration, but he was gur
gling In complete happiness fifteen
minutes afterward. He was not hurt
half as badly as she had supposed.
She Is constantly dreading measles
and mumps, chlckenpox and whooping
cough. She cannot be mnde to see
that nature Is truining his body to
resist the inroads of disease.
She
weighs him every Sunday, anxious for
fear he may have lost weight or may
not be quite up to Doctor Holt's
standard of perfection. All the time
he Is henlthy and happy and hilarious
ly unconscious o f these dreaded hor
rors which practically never come to
him, or If they do come prove to be
Insignificant.
Yesterday morning I woke with the
thought that I had two extremely dis
agreeable tasks to perform during the
day that Involved the saying of tilings
that would not be pleasant to me nor
to the person who had to listen. I felt
like running, I shrank back from the
disagreeable duty. I wished that I
might shunt It upon some one else.
But I found when I faced it count
geously, wliet I went to It straightfor
wardly and kindly, that most of the
disagreeable part disappeared. I got
through rather easily.
And so I have found that most of the
objectionable and disagreeable and
trying experiences of life are worse on
anticipation than on realization. The
irouble and privation and the sacri
fices that we look forward to with
.tread either never come to us or prove
far less trying than we anticipate.
Even the dreaded specter of death 1
have no doubt, when we come to meet
him face to face, will have lost his
terrors.
Most people whom I have
seen go have done so courageously,
fearlessly, painlessly and often with
out regret. Who knows hut that tlu-
hereafter, which we sometimes shrink
from, may not hold for each of us
more Joy and greater opportunltle
than does the present? It may not h
so dull and monotonous in ho.iven ;■
we fear, even If we are given a h-
to strum.
i *
i m
w m iit d
- .
SAY “ BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST!
Unless you see the "Bayer Cross” on tablets you are
not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe
by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years.
DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART
<
5
^
Accept only “Bayer” package
which contains proven directions,
Handy “ Bayer” boxes of 12 tablet*
ttles of 24 and !00— Druggist«.
A lso
Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetlcacideater of SallcyllcaclA
Farmer» in Hard Luck
Oil Tractor»
Farmers of Spain, in the last five
Nearly forty makes of gasoline and
years, have not received sufficient kerosene tractors were exhibited at th*
prices for grain to pay for the pro annual exhibition of the Itoyal Agri
duction.
cultural society of England this year.
Looks 20 years younger
say his friends
McDonald had heartburn and dizzy spells;
now thanks Tanlac for perfect health.
" M y health was slipping,” writes •Charles McDonald. " F in -
ally I became so run down and weak I couldn't hold my body
straight. M y back ached like it was
breaking in two.”
H is appetite disappeared and
ajter eating, heartburn and short
ness o f breath brought extra hard
ships. Finally he tried Tanlac. I t
added 1 0 pounds to his weight and
left him feeling so well and strong
that he now "faces lift with a smile.” ,
'Authentic statement. Address on
request.
Tanlac revitalizes the liver, tones up the whole digestive sys-
tern, and benefits the vital organs o f the body. I t is Nature’s
Greatest Tonic and builder. I t puts new life in your veins.
Tanlac is absolutely free from harmful drugs. The famous
Tanlac formula contains only roots, barks and curative
herbs brought over the seven seas for your health.
Don’ t gamble with your health a minute longer. Get a
bottle o f Tanlac from your druggist today. After the very
first dose, you will feel better. You will soon enjoy refresh
ing sleep, be able to eat heartily, and feel the full pleasure o f
health regained.
Nora: For Constipation, take Tanlac Vege
table Pills, Nature's own harmless laxative.
TANLAC
FOR. Y O U R H E A L T H