4 THK COOLIDOE EXAMINER

Better Handling: 4k 1: * «: r; ic 2. a Southwestern Briefs Let Our Motto Bo of Horses Urged : GOOD HEALTH Lawrenc* Howe, of Phoenix, was I BY DR. LLOYD ARNOLD |\ I ProfrMor of Hai tenoUf y *nd Pre- , recently elected president of the Mari- Mrdione, I vrnlivf Univtnityof ~ Old Dobbin Now Staging copa County Bar Association. | lllinon. Collect of Medicine.

'• Comeback; Cost of Keep Charles R. Osborn was elected pres- C ' ¦’ ' • ” ident of the Temperance Federation of Important HEARTS OF THE TEN-TO- Item. Arizona at a meeting In Phoenix. He Riley TWENTY-YEAR GROUP B? E I- Sauer, Farm Management Spttialitt, succeeds W. Geary. Uniterm? ol Ultnon.— W.N'U Service Relief administrations of New Mex- The ten to twenty year group of Hortus are staging a comeback, ico. Arizona and Utah will provide young people show up remarkably but tome of their value a* a source stock feed for flocks of Indians within well in the ruor- of economical farm power will In? their borders, according to an agree- lost unlots they are handled effi- ment reached recently. ciently. Next to man labor, the The Maricopa County 411 Club fair cost of keeping work horse* l* one commission has decided to Include a of the largest Item* of expense on horse show and a fourteen-mile carrier many farms. Thla Is often not pigeon race In the annual fair to be realized because are usual- horse* held at Tempe, Arir., April 12 and 13. ly fed on farm grown grain* and “Mountles,” roughages and no cash outlay Is Indian with full police necessary for their feed. power on the huge Navajo reservation in New Mexico and Arizona, are mak- How widely the worth and ex- ing a record for themselves in stamp- pense* of horse* may vary depend- ing out nil kinds of crime. ing upon their management Is A special shown in a study of coat account course In scouting has erally. been started at the University of New records kept hy 33 fartuera In co- This does not mean that no at- under operation with the farm manage- Mexico, the direction of Dean J. tention need be paid to the phys- C. Knode, of the university ment division of the University of faculty in ical condition of the hearts of this cooperation Illinois College of Agriculture. The with the university’s group—the emotional tlutterings of scouting staff. net cost of keeping a work horse the heart common to this period are for the year varied from $24.33 to An Increased enrollment at the Uni- of course beyond the scope of this $“<1.98, or an average of $10.58. versity of New Mexico is expected article. But physically this decade HI is . Tsi The number of hours of work with the opining of the second semes- Is the most Important in the life performed by the horse* ranged ter, February 4. The enrollment for history of the heart It Is so very the from 300 to 1.244 each, the average first semester reached 1.208. the easy to do damage to this organ in in being 705 hours. The cost for each largest history. the adolescent years—damage that hour of horse labor avernged O.G Beautification of the road leading is not particularly felt then, but cents. Thl* varied from 3.0 cents i from the state highway to Camp Luna. that will later manifest Itself as on the lowest cost farm to 18.4 New Mexico, has been started under serious heart disease. the FERA project according to j cents an hour on the farm with the setup, If a boy or girl can go through highest horse power cost. The information from the office of the the adolescent years without impair- adjutant general, cost for each hour’s work was close- Santa Fe. ing the health of the cardiac region ly correlateer cent, de- with the Arizona Pioneers' Historical At the same time that the heart preciation 5 per cent, harness 4 Society. Is growing, the hones and muscles [?er cent and veterinary, shoeing l'af-nt* of Nogales students at the are also growing. In quite a few and Incidental costs 2 per cent Arizona State College at Tempe will young people, the growth Is so rap- be welcomed on the college campus ages From these figures It Is evident id between the of twelve and for a parents’ day program. March 22. fifteen that the that the cost for each unit of body seems out of horse designed power on farms can be reduced hy to entertain fathers and proportion—lt looks gangling, and mothers of college students throughout the is and clumsy; : cutting down the maintenance ex- youth awkward the state. he has poor pense* and hy Increasing the hours posture and a slovenly Damage from fires the of productive work done by each in Coconino gait. His or her body features are National Forest was held to only taking on the distinctive pattern * - [is s horse. The feed given the animal* Si is Si's! $1,362. although greater they carry through life. MH si.ii and the labor spent In caring for there were a will number of blazes than in previous them must be gov ernet I by the Inside the body just as important years, a recent survey showed. Fires By ELMO SCOTT WATSON j chamber a year later after tbe Roosevelt land |j from the Union In 1v*t. in 1965 he was one of work done. If horse power Is to be changes and growths are going on. during the past year totafed 530 and O ngn-**man Jos* ph W. liyro* slid# bad made the Texan vice president. (the Confederate j»-nce commissioners who met economical. Depreciation costs may The sex glands are developing, and *“"JIKN party burned 680 a£res. heart, kidneys HVT; of tb< iiomm district vti j To a Pennsylvanian, Frederick A. C. Muhlen |j with President Lincoln and his at Hampton be reduced and an appreciation In the liver, and other effort war. Last year was organs are their « ;«-• *.-

'«• j*t Mexico in the past patterns. If we could look b t rfitOM-nutb*** the ojwn I speaker of the house of representative* und *r the J After Hunter came another Kentuckian, John ing colt* for replacement purposes. forty three years, j ent » * lug «f (be SoM-nty fourth cotigress. | new government established by the adoption of White, then another Virginian, John W. Jones, and also the fifth driest on record. It through the skin, we would see J revealed In differ !t «ra« another caw* of "history n* the Constitution on September 17. 1787. and It* ! snd after hirn Indiana » first speaker, John W. was data complied by Erie that the Insides of bodies I each other just i-atlng Itself." For II «u Juat lU< 1 ratification the next year. He took office on I Davis. The next njM-aker wa* Robert C. Wlnthrop Plague of Warts Cause L. Hardy, meteorologist of the local from as much as pattern lWr jlfly »«-sr* ago that another Ten no*war. j April 1. 17f4». and served two years, when he was j j of Vlaaaa« huM-tts who. the year after his election, of Heavy Potato Losses U. 8. weather bureau for bis annual the outsides do. The' of wJjßjfif aa* t**lng elevated to that position succeeded by Connecticut * lone contribution to was tbe chief orator at the laying of the corner- f climatological summary. one person's heart or kidneys Is as Wart disease, which In the Inst certain show weakness at i he wa* d»**tined to have the tbe history of tire speakership. This was Jona- stone of the Washington monument on July 4. were 3,451 j to in early few years has reduced to poverty There more licenses is- wHBm unique distinction of klnf the only than Trumbull, the friend of Washington in the 1848. Thirty seven years later congress adopted sued life as the pattern of another per- J j vast potato growing areas In Scot- by the New Mexico state game speaker of the house the highest Revolution who gave him the nickname which Is a resolution inviting the former speaker to department son’s eyes is certain to require JJflnyy Joint land and Ireland, is caused by a for the nine months ending l(r* oft Hal In the legislative branch of one of the symbolical names for the United perform a slm.iar rv ice when the monument 31, 1934, than there glasses at an early age. The shape parasitic fungu*. scientifically Dec. were for a our government, to become Ureal Slates—“ Brother Jonathan." Wlnthrop then seventy-six chris- of the heart In a child will follow was dedicated. was tened synchytrlum endoblotlcum. It similar period of 1933, according to dent of the , the highest officer in After Trumbull, Muhlenberg served another years old and after preparing bis *j»eech became the family pattern as often as the Is capable of lying dormant In the Elliott S. Barker, state game warden. the executive branch. two-)ear term and was succeeded by Jonathan s victim of pneumonia and was unable to attend Receipts that shape of his nose will. *oi! for at least ten year*, patient- were $15,080 more for That man in James K. Polk. who became Dayton of New Jersey who served two forms. the ceremonies. But whether the pattern of the ly awaiting It* prey. The only ef- period, Mr. Barker said. speaker in 1835 and who, ten years later, was Dayton's chief claim to fame is that in 1807 he In , j heart is weak or strong, there Is an 1849 Georgia's first speaker, fective way of countering It, notes Arizona bank deposits Increased elected i*resident —the first “dark horse” candi was arrested for complicity tn Aaron Burr a trea governor ] Increased burden on It during the was elected. He later became of his a writer In Tlt-Blts Magazine, Is to $1,347,675.12 In 1934, according to Y. date. Folk was not the first Tennessean to suitable conspiracy but he was released on ball state, again became period, as great, If not served in congress, then produre varieties Immune from at- C. White, state superintendent of growing become shaker, however. Hl* immediate prede- and never tried on the charge. Theodore Sedge greater, than there is in adult life, secretary of tbe tn-«-,ury under President Bu- Hut It Is one thing, labors banks Deposits on last Dec. 31 to- John Hell, who presided over one session wick was Massachusetts’ first *|>eaker, a veteran tack. for, remember, body attains its cessor. chanan. During the War Between the States : tory the congress (IKM who later theology workers at Uothamsted experi- taled $53,957,231.03, as compared to of the house in the Twenty-third of the Revolution, studied and Cobb was a major general In tbe Confederate growth at about sixteen years, while of that commonwealth and made tbe latter his mental station are discovering, to $45.309,555.1l on Dec. 31. 1933. The 35) wax also a citizen the law profession. He army. He was succeeded on the rostrum by Linn the heart does not attain Its growth So election of makes the third was the first speaker to serve In the new capital Immunize varieties, and another to i banks* resources in the same period the Joseph Bjrrns Boyd of Kentucky, wno r.fter two terms, was fol- until four years later. Sports and from the who has of Washington, tbe bouse when It Insure them giving good domestic increased from $52,409,300.42 to $60,- rej>re*entaUve Volunteer state > presiding over lowed by Nathaniel P. Bank* of Massachusetts, physical activity are very good for wielded his 17, yields. j 751.350.23. the gavel over congressional col first convened there on November 18UU. A whose career rather closely paralleled that of the normally healthy young person, leagues. few later he was North disease was originally de- Honoring the late Gov. George W. P. weeks succeeded by of Georgia. too, many years in Wart but too strenuous exercise can de- Cobh He. served Hunt, who died recently, the Univer- Although James K. Polk was the only speaker Carolina's first sjwnker. , who congress, was governor of his state and a major tected in Britain In 18!*S;-it Is vari- velop what Is known as "athlete’s held tbe chair from 1801 1807. called Scab," sity of Arizona library has prepared w ho ever became President, at least five other* ( to general in the War of 1801-35, although his serv- j ously "Black "Can- i heart." This Is not so serious In it- a special display based upon Ills life. have aspired to that high office. Three of the After Macon came another Bay Stater—Joseph ice was in the Union army. ker." “Fungus," and "Stag Head.” self, If the person learns how to in the display are newspaper five came a* near to It as winning the nomlna Bradley Vamum. a Revolutionary war veteran. It attacks the tubers and low-lying Included live with It In his later years. But Following Banks ns tqteakcr came James L. photographs, magazine ar- tion of their parties, only to be defeated in the who was re-elected, then was succeeded by the stalks of potatoes, never their roots, clippings, parents should insist that the gruel- ¦ Orr of South Carolina. of ticles and an affidavit certifying bis election. -Mill Boy of the Slashes,” of Ken covering Infected parts with knotty ing physical training that often ac- New Jersey, Galuxha A. Grow of Pennsylvania Outstanding among these was Henry Clay, tucky. Clay was first elected speaker tn 1811, warts, which damp soil quickly election as governor of the territory companies participation In competi- and of Indiana, one of the two of Arizona in 1910. whose record of repeated bids for the Press he was reelected in 1813. resigned from con converts Into ugly black festers. tive sports, as football, track Miieakers who l»ecame vice president. Then came such dency and being denied It was matched only by gress tn 1814 and was succeeded as speaker by Occupiers of land, discovering the According to recent reports, efforts and rowing, should be done only the “speaker for a day”—Theodore M. Pomeroy un- . Clay tried for It and Langdon Cbeves of South Carolina, who presided disease In their soil, are required are being made in Portales to locate der the of competent of New York. who was elected after the resigns- ! supervision lost in 1824. 1832 and again In 1844. over the Thirteenth congress. But the next con by law to notify the ministry of an experimental station in connection tion of Schuyler Colfax and presided during the ; coaches. The speaker to aspire to the Presidency gress found Clay again In the house and again agriculture at once. • w ith the Eastern New- Mexico State The injury done the heart in- next closing hours of one session of congress. by was John Bell of Tennessee, who was the candi sjieaker. lie was re-elected In 1817 and again In Junior College. Farmers of the I’or-; fectious diseases Is far fre- Blaine, more date of the Constitutional Union juirty In ISflu i 1819. but resigned once more In 1829. James G. the "Plumed Knight” and the tales valley are facing a seriouß condi- quent than the injury done by over- unsuccessful Presidential candidate, ruled the Clover Hay Good in the election which sent Abraham Lincoln to i John W. Taylor of New- York (the tinst from Feed tion in regard to the nimetode, which J exertion. the White House and to his Immortality. that state) was the next *|>eaker and after him house from 1569 to 1875 when be was succeeded Clover Is good feed. On the stock works on sweet potatoes, tomatoes, The heart heats normally 72 another Booster, M. Kerr, who was fol- farm clover can he for The next was James O. Blaine. ’"Blaine ot Philip P. Barbour of (also first from his by C. used hay or beans and a number of other truck times a minute. After each heat It lowed by Samuel J. Randall, a politician who Maine.” whose record as a "perjietual candidate** state). In 1824 Clay was back In tbe bouse pasture. Clover hay contain* near- crops. I has a moment of rest when Nature was something of an anomaly—a “high-tariff ly nitrogen, closely approached that of Henry Clay. He tried ! again and again elected *|**aker, this time serv- twice as much 50 per Seen as a real step forward in the Intends that It shall recuperate Democrat from Pennsylvania" and j In D76. IVO and 1884 and lost all three times ing his last term in that office. For now began who served cent more phosphorus, and four to advancement of intercollegiate athletic ; from its preceding moment of work. three consecutive The gpeuker although winning the nomination once. his repeated attempts to become President Fall terms. next was six times as much calcium as tim- competition in the state, the recently So when a rise in temperature another Civil war general and Ohio's first speak- one of the most picturesque figures who ever • ing the first time, be was made secretary of state othy hay. These are the important organized New Mexico conference, con- makes It beat 90 to 100 or 120 er—J. Warren Kelfer. He was succeeded by held the speaker"* chair was Joseph Gurney Can in the cabinet of John (Juinry Adams, which bone and muscle making elements. sisting of five schools, lacks only the times a minute, then necessarily the G. Carlisle of Kentucky, one of the ablest These differences are non of Illinois, the redoubtable “Uncle Joe" who i caused the adherents of whom John characteris- ratification of the authorities of one rest periods are shortened. This is men who ever sat in the chair, who ruled the house from 1903 to 1011 when the re Adams had defeated to renew their anguished *i>eaker's tic of legumes and non legumes. Institution expected shortly to be in why everything be done to rest the ‘ held the office for three and later became volt of the Insurgents’* ended his reign. In litUS i cries of ‘"Bargain and corruption !** The implies- terms The Oklahoma station compared actual operation, according to Dr. Leon heart while the disease Is in prog- secretary of the treasury' under Cleveland. Cannon received 48 votes for the Presidential I tion was that Clay's portfolio in the Adams cabi- more than 300 samples each of Bower of Silver City, secretary-treas- ress, and also wdiy it is important nomination at the Republican national conven- net w as his price for throw ing his Influence to the When Thomas Brackett Iteed of Maine took legumes. They found that the leg- urer of the organization. that the patient should remain quiet Chicago but got the White - Massachusetts man when tbe of 1824 the speaker s chair in 1889 a new era in con- umes averaged nearly four times as tion In no nearer to election Del Strong, editor of the Coconino for several days after recovering House than that. was decided in the bouse of representatives. Un- gressional procedure began. Heed changed the much phosphorus, and more than Sun, Flagstaff, recently donated to from a disease. “Uncle Joe's" Clark ’ able to use the speakership as a springboard to rules so drastically that the Democrats dubbed two and a half times as much nitro- the successor was Champ of Museum of Arizona Pioneers Histori- In the states in the Great Lakes Missouri who probably came as near to winning ; the Presidency, Clay was again elected to the him "Czar" Reed and he ruled like a czar from gen as the non-legumes. Legumes cal Society at the University of Ari-' ! basin, It is common to encounter the Presidency as any tpeaker who ever : senate, in which be remained most of the time 1889 to 1891 and again from 1895 to 1899. are an Important source of miner- Just zona a photograph of the late Col. \ goiter in adolescent girls. These missed a. At the Democratic national convention i until his death in 1852. having in the meantime speaker als for both man and animals.— In between Reed's two terms as was Fred S. Breen, pioneer journalist, and girls are usually very intelligent, in Baltimore in 1912 he led the field for 29 bal- made two more unsuccessful attempts to get to another Georgian, Chales F. Crisp, who served Rural New-Yorker. for many years editoi of the Coconino making high grades, and they are lots and had a clear majority on eight But the « the White House. four years. After Reed's second term the next Phil Contzen, usually thin and nervous. They Democratic two-thirds rule prevented his nomlna After the Kentuckian's last term as g|*caker. was David B. Henderson of lowa and he Sun Tucson civil en- *!>eaker Prevent Pig Parasites gineer, gave the society a photo- have rapid pulses. tion on any of the eight. Then the vote swung : John W. Taylor of New York served another wus followed by the renowned “Uncle Joe” Can- to 1 Is easier, , graph of father, Contzen. who to of New Jersey and he was term. He was succeeded by Andrew Stevenson. non of Illinois about whom a whole host of It much according to his Fritz Parents and teachers should see i Arizona in 1854 with the boun- nominated. If on any of those eight ballots Clark : another Vlrglnidn, who after two terms retired legendary uiles clustered during his four consecu- the specialists at the Department of 1 came to to it that girls with adolescent goiter dary survey. could have mustered two-thirds of the votes, and later became minister to England. John Bell tive terms. of Missouri also served Agriculture, to prevent small pigs should not exercise too strenuously. he would have been President. was the first speaker from Tennessee. He served four consecutive terms and was followed by from becoming Infested with Intes- An American oligarchy, 300 years They should be out in the open air, they should engage in But If speakers of the house have not fared I only one year when he was succeeded by James Frederick H. Gillett of Massachusetts wi» had tinal parasites, such as the round- old, crumbled as Henry Caspar, mid-1 but not hard play. so well In aspiring to the Presidency, they have . K. Polk, the future President Bell later was three terms, as did his successor. Nicholas Long- worm. than It is to rid the pigs of dle-aged Indian progressive, became been somewhat more successful In reaching the . secretary of war in the cabinets of Presidents worth of Ohio, probably the best-liked man who 1 them once the parasites have be- governor of Zuni, N. M., largest North ; Nature meant that all young ani- second highest executive office. Two of them i William Henry Harrison und and In ever sat in the speaker’s chair. come established. The parasites are American Indian pueblo. Gaspar was mals should be active and frolic- have been vice presidents. Schuyler Colfax of I 1860 the unsuccessful Presidential candidate of After Longworth s death in 1931 "Cactus Jack’ ,; quite easily controlled by the use elected by a show of hands in the vil- some as they pass through the Union of Indiana, after a six-year service as speaker, was t tbe Constitutional party with the famed Garner of Texas was elevated to the speakership a sanitation system which should lage plaza as heirs of the Cities of period from childhood to physical Grant’s running mate In 1960 and. as vice presi- as his running mate, as the result of the Democratic congressional vic- be started before the birth of the Cibola acted for the first time under maturity. When young people are dent. presided over the from i The Twenty-sixth congress elected another tories in the middle of the Hoover administration pigs. Clean farrowing pens are es- the self-rule provisions of the Wheeler- healthy and do not overtax them- sential and IS* to 1873. The next speaker to vacate the > Virginian as sjieaker—Robert M. T. Hunter, who and when he became vice president In 1932 the the sow should be thor- Howard act. Formerly the governor selves In competitive sports during rostrum of one bouse of tbe national legislature i bad bad a long career in congress and who, on gavel went to Henry T. Rainey of Illinois whose oughly washed before she Is turned was appointed by six high priests and too long a space of time, they come John • occasions, had declined Into the pen. to mount to the other was Nance Garner two the office of secre- death last summer paved the way for the ac After the pigs are served for life or during good be- out of the adolescent period with Texas, speaker by tary He senate born they of elected the Seventy-second I of state. was elected to the in cession of the new speaker, Joseph W. Byms. should be kept In clean havior after receiving the Lincoln ¦trong hearts. congress 1932, only move over tbe > and until his pastures until they Newgoaoer Union. In to to senate 1847 continued there state seceded C by W*si*ra Newspaper Lulon. are abont four cane, of A buffalo wastern vnnr'+he old emblem authority. feast marked the installation.