H 12 THE DESERET FARMER 'Saturday, September 5, 1968. I H THE SCENIC LINE H Coonectinc at Ogdcn Uatoa H Depot with all H SOUTHERN PACIFIC AND OREGON SHORT LINE H TRAINS. M Tb Only Transcontinental H Lint Patting Directly M Tbrouch Salt Lakt City. J I BflMdicUy Equipped Faat Jfc Train Daily between J Ogden and Denver f Via Tkrce Separate amd 11 I Dietfec; Sceaic JtoUs. W H THROUGH PULLMAN AND H ORDINARY SLEEPING CARS, DENVER, OMAHA, KANSAS CITY, ST. LOUIS H AND CHICAGO WITHOUT H CHANGE. FREE RECLIN- ING CHAIR CARS. - - -H Personally Conducted Excitr m sions. DINING CAM, SERVICE A LA CARTE ON ALL THROUGH TRAINS. m For ratee, folders, free HI m trated booklets, etc., Inquire of H your nearest ticket agent, tpecl M fying the Rio Grande Routt, or 1 address H LA, BENTON, ' G. A. F. D., ftak Lake City. I ; A FARM TELEPHONE J B ( ' Will save enough horseflesh M and time every month to pay ' , m its cost for a year, and in H , emergencies, when time is , 1 the big thing, it may save B 1 your home and your life. i ? 1 , Thousands of farms in this i B ' country are now equipped H with telephones and you H could not persuade one of Hj these farmers who has prov- ' H ed its value to allow his tele- ' H phone to be removed. ' Hj It helps to make farm life H pleasant and saves money. ' H You owe it to yourself to ' H have a telephone pn YOUR ' ! ' farm. Call on the nearest ' ; manager of the Rocky Moun- m tain Bell Telephone Com- H pany and he will tell you J how you oan get it at small B , cost, or address the General M Contract Agent, Rocky W H Mountain Bell Telephone H Company, Salt Lake City. C : Rocky Mountain Bell f Telephone Go. I i DR. W. H. STROTHER, O. D. Authority on Eye Troubles Broken Lenses Duplicated By Mail ALL WORK GUARANTEED Call, or Write to Me if Your Eyes Trouble You. Examination and Consultation Free Wi th C. E. W. BOWERS, Jeweler 73 Main St, Salt Lake City ery ; He Who Travels I ea VIA THE I B ! PASSES THROUGH THE 1 , BEST DRY FARMING f ' DISTRICTS IN UTAH 1 ' AND NEVADA. 1 FOR INFORMATION RE- 1 i GARDING RATES AND 1 1 LAND WRITE OR CALL I ON I , J. H. BURTNER, D. P. A. 1 ' xfe Main St, Salt Lake City. 1 ViBjWP" $ OFFICIAL DIRECTORY UTAH BEE-KEEPERS' ASSOCIATION. President, E. S. Lovcsy, 355 Sixth East Street, Salt Lake City. First Vice-President, R. T. Rhees, View, Weber County. 'Second Vice-President, W. Belliston, Nephi. Secretary, A. Fawson, Grantsvillc. Asst. Sec'y, Jas. Neilscn, Holliday. County Vice-Presidents: Salt Lake W. C. B ergon, Mill Creek. Utah George Hone, Payson. Wasatch J. A. Smith, Heber City. Davis H. J. Butcher, KaysvMIe. Box Elder J Hansen, Bear River City Juab. Thomas Belliston, Nephi. Washington J. L. Bunting, St George Cache Nephi Miller, Providence. Morgan T. R. G. Welch, Morgan. Emery Chris Ottoson, Huntington. Carbon. W. H. Horsley, Price. Sevier R. A. Lowe, Austin. Sinpete Walter Cox, Fairview. Weber Mrs R, X Rhees, Vievt DeBouzek-Huntze E EngraYera and Electrotypes 'Successors to DE BOUZEK ENG. CO., 37-3$ W. South Temple St SALT LAKE CITY ENTOMOLOGY j Edited by Prof. E. G. Titus, State Agricultural College. -WHY WE NAME THINGS. There exists among all animals cer tain characters which arc not pos sessed by plants or minerals. Hence we first have three divisions that arc known as the Animal Kingdom, the Plant or Vegetable Kingdom and the Mineral Kingdom. By far the greater number of Natural objects that we have occasion to notice wc can readily place in one of these divisions or Kingdoms. In the Animal Kingdom there arc so many forms presented to our view that wc find it necessary to have some kind of a classification in order to study them properly. It has been es timated that there arc now living up on the earth more than a million and half species of animals. The immen sity of the problem may now be real ized and t is not to be wondered that a system of classification had to be built up as the years went by in order, that wc nvoy properly place the dif- 0 fcrcnt forms that have been recog nized and described. Some animals arc so simple in form and have such slight changes in tjicir life-history that they arc considered as occupying the bottom of the list. These arc animals composed of a sin gle cell. A cell is a minute mass of substance known as protoplasm, hav ing life, and the ability to reproduce, to feed and usually to move. The next members of the group have a more complex structure, but arc still very simple and so there -are arranged groups to contain animals having some characteristics in common; each group as we pass up the list having more and more complex "characters; in habits, in form, in its methods of life and in its relationship to sur rounding things, than the one just be fore it. It is impossible to limit these groups absolutely because there are often animals in each group which are either a little too highly developed to be put in the next lower group, or, on the other hand1, are so much more complex than the majority of the members in the group in which they are placed as to be almost (but not quite) plaGdd in the group ahead. Over half way up this list placed above the true worms but just below the true shells, stands the group to which the Insects belong. They are only one of several lesser groups that belong in this large group. Some bf the others arc almost as well known to most of us as arc the insects, for here belong the crayfish and lobsters, , the scorpions, the spiders and mites (red spider), and the centipedes and millipedes (thousQnd-lcggcd worms). i All of the animals belonging to this group have the common character of a body composed of several more or less similar rings, some of the rings having upon them jointed legs. If you will examine a crayfish or a lobster you will find that it has at least five pairs of legs, rarely more, never naturally less. A look at a scor pion will show you four pairs of legs, i a spider also has four pairs of legs, but its front pair does not grow large !j strong claws or pincers as do thc crayfish and the scorpion. A mite, our brown mite or red spider, for in stance, has four pairs of legs and is I very closely related to the spider. The ticks belong with the mites. The cen tipedes have a single pair of legs to each one of the segments or rings of the body that bears legs, While the j millipedes, or thousand1 legged worms, 1 have two pairs on each ring that has any legs. The centipedes arc really j bcifcfvcial since they feed almost en tirely upon insects and other minute animals that live under bark, stones or logs. Some of the centipedes have poison glands which open through the claws of the first pair of legs and can really indict, a rather serious injury, 'but those species which are large enough to cause much trouble nearly all live in warm regions. The thous- nL and-leggcd worms arc never poison ous, but sometimes cause injury to plants by feeding upon the young and tender shoots. It can readily be seen that we can not continue on down in our divisions of the large Animal Kingdom without something more definite than the term group, larger group and smaller group; hence, to each one of the di visions of the kingdom has been ap . nUgd the term branch and each - branch given iTdistinctive name. The ontt to whioh the inseGts spiders,