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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH REAPER Bernard H. Ewer, Editor and Prep. SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 Per Year in Advance matter Feb, Entered as second-clas- s 8. 1929, at the post office Randolnh. Utah, under the Ac'tjaf Mar. 8, 1879. THE RICH COUNTY Los Angeles Boy Needed Help Leroy Young, 1116 Georgia St, Los Angeles, Is a regular News Notes It 9 a Privilege to Live In UTAH active in fellow, Apply Limestone Year in Advance . sports, and at the top at in his classes school. To look at VERNAL January 1, 1929, figures him now, youd think show there were 100,000 horses in had a he never days Utah, with a value of $6,317,000, and mother says : When ' 4000 mules, valued at $267,000. Leroy was just a little fellow, we found his stomach and bowels were ' AMERICAN FORK Production of weak. He kept suffering from con1928 amounted to in Utah in poultry with stipation. Nothing he ate agreed 1093 carloads, valued at $5,386,392.60. him. ' He was fretful, feverish and A total of 817 carloads, valued at puny. were shipped to points outWhen we started giving him Caliside the state. fornia Fig Syrup his condition Imand proved quickly. CEDAR CITY Building in the busibiliousness stopped and he has had ness section of Cedar City baa taken no more trouble of that kind. I have on almost boom town proportions the with California since used Fig Syrup him for colds and upset spells. He past week, several new business buildlikes it because it tastes so good and ings having been started in addition I like It because it helps him so won- to several still under construction that were started earlier in the summer. derfully! been has the California Fig Syrup PRICE Partial results of the teBts trusted standby of mothers for over on Carbon dairy cattle for conducted recom50 years. Leading physicians ' tuberculosis have been determined, and mend is It purely vegetable and, according to O. P. Madsen, counworks with Nature to regulate, tone ty agent, only one animal reacted to and stomach and strengthen the bowels of children so they get full the experiments. Fortunately the cow nourishment, from their food and had not been used by its owners for waste is eliminated In a normal way. dairy purposes. Four million bottles used a year VERNAL With more than $1,500,-00- 0 shows how mothers depend on it. Alinvested in the production of honey ways look for the word California on January 1, 1929, there were Utah in on the carton to be sure of getting of bees in the state. colonies 70,385 the genuine. In 1928, total honey production in the WIN A BBT! state amounted to 5,067,720 pounds, A small bottle that you can lay Sown but no one else can without the secret. Price SI. valued at $506,772. Beeswax producHastings Sales Co.,229 Prospect,Bellevue,Ky. tion the same year amounted to PRICES OF FEEDS WEIGHTY FACTORS Three Cow Menus Suggested Under Present Costs. Prices of feeds, and the nature of the feeds grown on the farm, are factors which will enter Into the planning of meals for the dairy cow. C. L. Blackman, of the animal husbandry department of the Ohio State university, offers three suggested menus, which are economical under present price conditions, when the various roughages mentioned are available. The first consists of: 300 pounds com and cob meal, or hominy or barley; 300 pounds ground oats; 100 pounds wheat bran; 100 pounds cottonseed meal or gluten meal ; 50 pounds linseed oil meal. This should be fed when alfalfa, with or without silage, Is available. When clover, with or without silage, !s available, Blackman suggests a mixture of: 300 pounds corn and corn cob meal or hominy or barley; 300 pounds ground oats ; 100 pounds wheat bran; 100 pounds cottonseed meal or gluten meal ; 100 pounds linseed oil meal. When timothy hay or corn stover, Use Hanfords with or without silage. Is available, the following formula Is suggested: 100 pounds com and cob meal or homAll dealer are authorized to refund roar money I or the lint bottle not suited iny or barley; 100 pounds ground oats ; 100 pounds wheat bran ; 100 pounds cottonseed meal or gluten Use of Tobacco Almost meal; 150 pounds linseed oil meal. ' Other high protein supplements Universal in Holland such as soy bean oil meal or distillers Holland is the smokers paradise. dried grains may be used to replace Is cheap some of the cottonseed or oil meal if Tobacco from the East Indies 1 have of ten seen and boys good. is In line, says the special- the price ' years puffing big cigars. A good cigar , iSt. costs 4 cents American, today, while before the World war. It could be Contentment of Cow Is bought for 1 cent The men are furious smokers. 1 heard of an old DutchImportant Milk Factor man who had smoked all his life. Id It is if well known fact that if a cow making arrangements for Iiis decease Is to produce to her maximum capacity lie directed that uil old smokers be inshe must at all times be kept quiet vited to his funeral; each was to reand contented. Anything that dis- ceive a pound of tobacco and a pipe turbs this condition of the cow will and was asked to smoke during the have u tendency to lessen production service. Then he arranged for his favand to form the habit of holding up orite pipe and a quantity of tobacco of milk. and matches to he deposited in his All influences which conduce to the coffin ; for, he said, One never knows quietude and comfort of the cow will what might happen. National Geoincrease milk production while the op- graphic Magazine. posite Influence will have the tendency to lessen production and also has the Not Financially Interested tendency for the cow to hold up What has your . Aunt Gouldbaggs milk. Any excitement or rougb hand' put into your business? ling of the cow will have a tendency Nothing, except her foot, once in to cause a cow to hold up a while, and at other times she sticks a cow has once formed this her nose into It." habit it is very difficult to break her of it Sometimes this vice is the reWe realize when a man has sult of the excitement when the calf "evolved far beyond us and between is weaned. us there is a great gulf fixed. There is no cure for this vice. All that you can do is to place the cow In the most favorable circumstances while the milking Is being done. A very good way to do Is to feed the cow some grain or mill feed while the milking Is being done. If the cow has not been fresh very long it will help if the calf is placed where the cow can see it When this habit has become chronic the best thing to do is to sell the cow to the butcher. it AS FIRST AID Balsam of Myrrh 1 1 - , ; milk.-Afte- r ' Cow Is Largest Manure Producing Farm Animal g The cow is the largest animal on the farm and while its excreta is least rich in fertilizing elements, the large volume places it as the most important manure produced in mixed and dairy farming. Horse manure is distinctly richer in nitrogen, phosphoric acid, and potash than cow manure but its open character makes . it. more liable to fermentation ' and unless carefully conserved it loses its valuable constituents quite rapidly. For this reason the best plan is to 'mix these two manures. manure-producin- : I i. f m A A Dairy Facts : r i - Supply the cows with water and salt .. . e Good pastures are almost as essential to successful dairying as good cows. i . ' t When the cream churns slow it may he due to the cream being too warm or too cold, or tQP thin and too sweet Seldom has any single act been of greater benefit to mankind than that of Dr. Caldwell in 1885, when he wrote the prescription which has 'carried his fame to the four ' r ' : comers of the earth. Over and over, Dr. Caldwell wrote the prescription as he found men, women and children suffering from those common symptoms of constipation, such as coated tongue, bad breath, headaches, gas, nausea, biliousness, no energy, lack of appetite, and similar things. Demand for this prescription grew so fast, because of the pleasant, quick way it relieved such symptoms of constipation, that by 1888 Dr. Caldwell was forced to have it put up ready for use. Today, Dr. Caldwells Syrup Pepsin, as it is called, is always ready at any drugstore. , -- $21,-115.6- 0. RICHFIELD According to A. Woodruff Magelby, chairman of the Monroe Lamh Feeders association, feeder lambs from all parts of southern Utah are being brought into Monroe for feeding. On account of the cold spring and the many losses incurred the lamb crop is 50 per cent short. More than 80,000 head will be fed. Those the feeders are receiving are of good grade. M T. PLEASANT Construction work on the new Maple canyon road was begun last week under the supervision of Marinus Larson of Moroni. The survey was made by forest service officials and provides for a road with passing places each 300 feet along the project A large percentage of the work is being donated by citizens of North San' pete. 12-fo- To get the most for our money spent for limestone for clover fields, growers should apply it at least a year in advance of seeding the clover or alfalfa. To do this, many farmers are applying lime this winter to land that will be used for corn next spring, then, in a year, they plan to seed their alfalfa or clover, reports C. J. Chapman, soils specialist at the Wisconsin College of Agriculture. . Mixes Lime With Soil. Chapman finds this a good practice, for the cultivation of the corn during the growing season tends to mix the lime thoroughly with the soil and puts the land in excellent condition for seeding the following spring. Some Wisconsin farmers are also applying ground limestone or other forms of agricultural lime as a top dressing to hay lands or pasture. Chapman says, but Its effectiveness when used this way Is negligible until the soil has been worked up the second time. Ground limestone becomes available only through reactions with soil acids. It is not soluble In water and in order to act with acids it must come in contact with soil particles, he says. When lime is applied on pasture or hay lands, it does not become mixed to any extent with surface soil. It is plowed under when the land is fitted for corn or small grain, and It is not until the land Is again plowed that the lime is turned back to the surface and worked Into the soiL Other Effective Agents. Air slaked lime, finely pulverized marl, wood ashes, paper mill sludge, and finely ground limestone are effective tire first year when they are applied in sufficient amounts and thoroughly worked into the soil by disking and dragging. The finer the limestone is ground and the more thoroughly it is worked into the soil within the surface six or eight inches, the faster it will react with soil acids and the more effective It will be in supplying lime to growing crops and correcting the acidity. Health Giving More than 150 fine art masterpieces from the French, Italian, Flemish, English, Dutch, Spanish, German and American art schools are being exhibited at the Brigham Young university by the Colonial Art company, according to Professor E. H.- Eastmond, head of the local institutions art department The exhibit, which is an outstanding one, has been open for the past several days and will be open until late Thursday evening. The public is Invited to witness the exhibit - HEBER CITY Weather conditions have been generally good throughout Utah during the past week and cattle round-up- s and lamb shipping are in progress, the weekly weather summary issued recently by J. Cecil Alter, meteorologist in charge of the federal weather bureau, showed. Sugar beets, tomatoes and apples are maturing rapidly and the weather has been excellent for harvesting alfalfa, hay seed, and for threshing grain and alfalfa seed. The alfalfa seed harvest is practically completed without frost injury., x . Good Hotela Touriat Campa Splendid RoedeGorgeou a Mountain Views. The teondwrfu ideaert rortof the Wmat Writ C r A GSmtfmy -- aim Spring CALIFORNIA Might Deceive the Eye Waitress The client CQmplalns that this sandwich is small. Manageress Put it on a smaller plate and take it back Gothenburg En Rolig Hal Timma. The Right Way to Fine SiNcs Redye Textile makers al- ways use special dyes for silk or wool. They know that is the best way. The makers of Diamond Dyes are the first to enable home dyers to follow this plan. . Next time you want to dye some of your more valuable articles of silk or wool, try the special Diamond Dyes tn the Blue Package . They will give these materials clearer, more brilliant colors than any dye. And they are just as easy to use as ordinary dyes. Like the white package Diamond Dyes, these dyes contain an abundance of the highest quality anilines. The blue package dyes silk or wool only; the white pack-ag-e dyes, or tinted any material. Either package; 15c, drugstores. , OGDEN Working fortes of the Amalgamated Sugar company are busily engaged in putting the Ogden factory of the company in condition for the seasons run to begin October 14. It is said that beet digging will begin in Weber county about October 10 and the factory will be put in commission four days later. The .crop in Weber county, is one of the heaviest in years, both in acreage and expected sugar content It is said also that labor conditions in Weber county are excellent but in Cache valley it may be necessary to import laborers for topping and digging. From 200 to 300 men will be needed in Cache valley and Idaho. Youll have to travel quite a ways these days to find a farm that doesnt have at least one gas engine on it. The trouble is that farmers do not use their gas engines nearly as much as they should. The main use they have for them seems to be pumping, with a feed and an occasional hooK-ugrinder, fanning mill or something of the kind. If one has a gas engine. It certainly will pay to keep it busy. It isnt necessary to operate the pump all the time on a farm; there are many machines fir which power can be used. se p Plan to Remove Supers and Keep Bees in Hive . one-wa- y Agricultural Squibs - only one-ha- lf per day. t i . Never wash eggs, unless you are selling them to a consumer for immediate consumption. , v - flocks of one variKeep ety. Breed for a profitable production of high quality eggs. pure-bre- d Jumps 180 Pounds type of sweet potato grown In the Virgin Islands achieves a weight of 150 pounds, but we suppose in the seed catalogues it is represented as' a good 300, at least. Hamilton Evening Journal. in w are dipped before shearing time, there Is too much wool and it costs too much. ; Larkspur is poison to cattle, and dangerous on ranges until it has passed the flowering stage and Is in . .. seed. , - at all Strain points; J Plus Extra Heavy Tested Denim in LEVI STRAUSS WaistOveralls Insure long wear -- - If the sheep ANEW PAIR, IFTHEY RIP . Exhausted and overworked horses and mules are liable to have indigestion, colic or diarrhoea or become foundered. , A When the time comes to remove the supers they ' will contain many bees, sometimes lots of them. The frames and combs can be taken out one by one and the bees brushed off, but the simplest way is to Insert the Inner cover between the brood body and the supers with a bee escape in the oval hole. The bees will pass down through the bee escape and in 10 or 12 hours there will be no bees' in the super; they can pass through the bee escape, but they cant get back Its a road. These bee escapes cost but a few cents and they save quite a lot of fussing. corn on pasture need gallon of skimmed milk 1 Winter Long on Various Farm Jobs full-fe- d i Marvel one Climate Keep Gas Engine Busy Pigs -- unnnslhmim k, AH 16-fo- PROVO The apple crop in Utah county is very light this year, according to County Inspector H. V. Swenson, and because of this condition growers will be faced with the problem of keeping them free from worm stings and limb rubs. Shipping of apples began in the county recently with the first carload leaving Spanish Fork. Other cars are being loaded at Snow and Orem. The apples are of' good quality and size. PROVO Has Better Chance to Be Available for Plant Use of Many Crops. Askfor Levis ReHab!eM2rchanciies!ncel853 W..N- - 11 Lake Cltv. No. 41-1- 929. ;; |