Out Our Wav By Williams / That wa-s Th BuU_\ / VsJ\-AEe ee -\ WHOOPEE ! MOW I o' Th* woods", he \ / mow I vmus’<=,o oonT get acl ^ ^ y-DA RA RAH y excited meF Horsemen Develop Cream Colored Horses As New Stock Type Capable Intensive Training BY DON ROBERTS Los Angeles — (NEA) — After years of experimental breeding, the California stock horse, or Palami no, has arrived as a type and : is being shown as such with the j view of establishing a stud book entirely for the breed. At recent shows here, and in cir cuit shows forthcoming at Palo Alto, Sacramento and throughout the state, the Palamino is a center ; of interest among stockmen. Even lay observers are struck by the distinctive beauty of the horse, which derives its name from the flashing cream color that is char- ! acteristic. Palamino is Spanish for “cream.” Breeding toward the type has been carried on in California and Oregon for many years, but it is only recently that experimenters | have reached the point where re- ; production of Palaminos is near a certainty. Originally an oddity among the wild horses that roamed the western plains, the horse was developed for an exact purpose in the far-western stock business. Marco H. Heilman, of Los An geles, and other wealthy men in terested in stock breeding, have confined their efforts for some years toward the production of the ; Palamino and are now confident of success. The designation Palamino refers tc color only, Heilman points out, and should not be confused with the breed, Stock Horse. With an ancestry traceable to Arabian and Barb blood imported in early Spanish days, the horse has been developed until it pos sesses a style and quality all its own, Heilman says. “There is no pleasure horse which equals the Palamino for safety, weight carrying and de- ; pendabilityHeilman points out. h IOWA UWUIO TAKEN FOR RIDE Farmers Reducing Flocks Sharply as Egg Produc tion Falls Off, Report Ames, la. — If egg production isn’t going to pay well, then Iowa poultry keepers evidently don’t in tend to produce so many eggs and many hens have "been taken for a ride” since June. The above situation is indicated in the reports of the poultry calen- ! dar flocks in Iowa, issued at Iowa j State college. The July report, just cut, shows the average size of the laying flocks to be only 138 birds, j contrasted with 183 in June, a de crease of 45 hens per flock. Another trend noted in the re ports—in all probability caused by the extremely hot weather of July, as compared with June—is the de creased egg production per hen, de spite heavy culling. The poultry calendar flocks averaged only 12.2 eggs in July, compared with 14.4 in June. In July a year ago the flocks on which records were kept aver aged 13.7 eggs per hen. The income from the poultry Much Spink County Grain Is Inspected More Than 800 Acres Qualified for Certifica tion, County Agent Says Redfield, S. D.-- —More than 800 acres of small grain, alfalfa and flax have been inspected for certi fication in Spink county, by the South Dakota Crop Improvement Four Palamino horses on the Marco H. Heilman ranch near Los \ngcles. ‘He is the ideal of handiness, har diness and adaptability.” Stock work, requiring as it does i ho’se capable of intensive traili ng in a multitude of utilitarian ; ines, has resulted in the type.; Bays Heilman: Gcod Stock Horse ‘‘The Stock Horse is as distinct md,definite as any known. It is itrong and sturdy enough to carry weight, with plenty of bone, well strung up muscles, a good back, a lig front and sloping shoulders hat he may be sure-footed. "These points are fundamental,” le points out, ‘‘in addition to an tgile brain, with which this horse as ability to assimilate the in continued low; in fact was about 7 cents a hen less, above the total expense, than in June. The June return was 19 cents per bird above total expenses and in July only 12 cents. The 10 highest producing flocks averaged 17 eggs per hen in July and the 10 lowest flocks 6.3. In re ceipts above feed cost, however, the high producing flocks made a trifle less profit than the low producers. Legge Says Farmer Is Wiiiing to Cut His Wheat Acreage BY FRANK I. WELLER, Associated Press Farm Editor. Washington— —The Ameri can wheat farmer, says Chairman Legge of the federal Farm board, is through with fantastic visions of "relief” and is ready to shoulder his share of responsibility in effect ing economic adjustment. This impression, he says, was gained by personal contact with iarmers during his tour of the win ter wheat belt. ' As proof of the farmer’s attitude, the chairman says acreage reduc tion has been pledged in all states of t>he winter wheat belt where association this season, Fred B. Willrctt, county agent, reported. Fields which were planted with pure seed include Ceres, Mlndum and Hope wheat; Velvet barley; fogold oats; Bison and Buda flax md Cossack and Grimm alfalfa. More than 300 acres of Ceres wheat was inspected and the yields being obtained indicate that Ceres s outyieldmg >nany of the varieties ilready in the county. Willrett aid. Flax inspected include 192 acres sf Bison and 116 of Buda. The acreage af small grain, al falfa and flax inspected this year would have bean materially larger tensive training necessary to ms education and perfection.” The difficulties in reproducing the exact Palamino were many, be cause no breed ever had cream colored offspring except inciden tally. There are several bands of the true Palaminos at present, however, among them a fine group owned by Heilman. ‘‘In these the tendency toward ether coloring has been almost eliminated,” Heilman asserts. “It is within the bounds of reason that within a few years a stud bock may be established to perpet uate this particular color of the Stock Horse breed.” farmers, following the lead of those . in the spring wheat region, already | are bringing the 1931 acreage more nearly in line w'ith the 10-year prospective demand for wheat. It is not the farmer, Legge says, who talks about the board taking vast quantities of wheat and dump 1 ing it in the ocean or giving it to China or selling it at a loss to ; European countries merely for the sake of getting it out of this country. The chairman says the beard has discussed at length the probability of selling American wheat to the Chinese nationalist government on a deferred payment plan, and has given up the idea. It has concluded that China offers no promising prospects as an outlet for American wheat. Nailing the theory that the board might “give” surplus wheat to China, Legge says the “board is not i in the gift business.” Anti-dumping laws in foreign countries, he says, would prevent the operation of any kind of plan 1 to sell wheat abroad cheaper than : it sells on the American markets. As for schemes epitomized by the one to dump wheat in the ocean, | Legge says such action by the board not only would conflict with the agricultural marketing act, but would cause farmers to make a bad situation worse by increasing pro duction. if price and weather conditions had been more favorable, the county agent explained. He said the in spected fields would help, however, to fill the demand for certified seed next spring. LAMBS SOLD BY CO-OP Sparta, N. .—(AP)—Sheep rais ers here are pleased with the re sults of a large co-operative sale of spring lambs made by the market ing committee of the Alleghany Sh**ep Growers’ association. For im mediate shipment, the'docked iambs brought 8 cents a pound and the ' I long tailed iambs 6'A cents. 1 Heroism Saves Crew of Sinking Liner Reporting that she had lost » '' starboard propeller, the S. S. Tahiti (above) of the Union Steamship Company, signalled far assistance eivintr her nosi tinn as 460 miles southwest of K%rotonga. She was bound from Wellington to San Francisco. (J,ower) Telephoto of the Mat son liner “Ventura” which - aruwered the call and enacted a thrilling drama in mid-ocean, saving pussengers and crew of the doomed liner. (lettrutluBl atwul Fight That 01.i'HMUu.niI vlina T «■» ii i '■! si—iwi■■rmiii n u — Tlie Lindbergh Beacon Light, < juat before it was hoisted atop of the Palmolive Building, Chi cago, 620 feet above the street. It is similar to those used in the fortifications on the Fa.fama Canal, and is equivalent to • half-inch section of the sun, be ing two-billion candle power. Airplanes flying at an altitude of 43,000 feet can see the Ugllt at a distance of 250 miles. /letareeHairal Waworeel' Female Enoch Arden Battles for 'lots Believing his wife dead (he identified the body of a suicide as hers) George Parkard, who la shown with his family re <> married. The other day his first wife returned to Chester, Vt., and wants him and the children back. The children '> are George, Jr., and Man Helen, seated with Mrs. Pack ard No. 2. (latarnatiaaal Mawaraa