OCR Text |
Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH sides Insuring a good supply of natural light and fresh air.. It is connected with the dining room by an open .doorway. The dining room is about the same size as the living room. It is connected with the kitchen at the rear by a swinging door and also opens into a side hall at ; the right. ...... The kitchen is one that will delight any housewifes heart, for it is small and compact, . but ample for every need. At ofte corner is a .small pan: try, immediately adjacent is tie washroom which can be used as a laundry, if so desired. The bathroom, modem in every detail, iqjpcbted-ofthe "hall wua.Ii runs from the kitchen to a rear, bedroom.' Off the main, central hall' running along the dining room is another large bedroom, 16 by" 10feet Ail of the bedrooms,' of. 6 inches. which there are three, have except tionaliy large clothes ' closets. The front bedroom,' ,12 by 13 feet, off the front reception hall, also opens out onto the sleeping porch, which is 9 feet 6 inches by 13 feet. This sleeping porch has window walls on three sides and should be an excellent place to sleep in the warm,, sultry summer L tile 99 pride of the bride and her guests. Wesell the world 8 bust; prices reasonable. hs S,LyE-t- Has BOYD Comforts and Conven- iences of City House. JEWELERS BOYD PARK BLDG All 160 MAIN STRUTT NO WASTE ROOM IN THIS v aN ,yv kJJiG : LEGION MAN D Michigans Newly Appointed Head of Is Division Service Nat or.al Equipped V, th Information.: AMERICAN ; for - This Department Supplied the American t.esr'on News Service.) by Copy POST GETS ARTISTIC RANGE , LILSj rrancis g LuKe - iciennjiccoiec General Manager of Honest Debts IllRooms Continental Bank 1 ..SALT LA Kt City. UTAH (5yZ months. A home like this should be the rule, not the exception, on the farms of the two-ce- nt ENGRAVED WEDDING STATIONERY Announcements InvitMlons-Call- in Cards. Your pr inter is our representative and has complete samples and prices Engraving Co Janntryf-Gottacha- ll By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to the subject of building, for the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as Editor, Author aiid Manufacturer, he Is. without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address all inquiries to William A. Radford, No. 1827 Prairie avenue, Chicago, 111., and only inclose stamp for reply. Keep the boys on the farm, ts the cry" from public speakers, magazine writers and welfare workers all over the country. , We must stop this wholesale exodus to the crowded cities etc., but in most cases these people overlook one of the fundamental causes of this drift to the cities. Farm boys would stay on the farm if there was not something radically wrong, and if you investigate the case- of the young man Who leaves his father and mother to live in the great crowded city, you Will almost invariably find that conditions existing about his home were .such that he could not help but leave. Very often it is the drudgery which he was forced to endure because of ' CLEANERS & DYERS. Quality. Service Cloches insured. Work guaranteed. We pay rotors postage. Price list on request. Myers Cleaners A Dyers. 114 E. Broadway. ' Dry Cleaning by Parcel Post Send your suits, dresses, coats, etc. to us for Master Cleaning and Dyeing. Salts Lakes leading cleaners. We pay return chargee. Regal Cleaning A Dyeing Co , 156-16- 0 E. 2nd So. MONUMENTS. Write for catalog. Standard Marble A Granite C., 117 W. Broadway. Fbr a real good placto-eat- , follow the crowds to SHAYS CAFETERIA Opposite- Post Office: Down the marble stairs RUBBER STAMPS & STENCILS. Seals and ear tags also made: Send for samples, prices etc. Salt Lake Stamp Co., 6S W. Broadway. country' today. Gradually this type is gaining a foothold and we look forward to the time when such a. thing as propaganda to kefip the boys on the farm will be unnecessary. Home comforts are being emphasized in both city and country because the importance of the home in community life More and better homes is recognized. are what the people want and this Is g certainly the case VAIN SEARCH in rural centers. FOR WEALTH Priest Braved - Death In Terrible Form In Quest of " ' Fabulous El Dorado. Spanish . Although separated from Mexico by the Rio Grande only, Texas was not colonized by the Spanish until the end hour cleaning- - and shampooing rugs. J9 7() au of the Seventeenth century, says Vacuum furnished free. $10 commission on salea. Dodge Bros., 66. E. First South, Salt Lake. John Chapman Hilder in the Ladies Home Journal. Prior to this time there CREAM BOUGHT. Send us your cream. Western Creamery Co.,. 244, W.. Fourth South. were two important voyages ..of discovery In the North, but such were the MUSICAL. INSTRUMENTS of every description on veep easy terms. difficulties and so great the distances Write Shit Lake. that they ended in failure. The first notable expedition Into the vast unConfetti, Balloons, Paper Hats, Novelties, Etc. Write for Prices. U S Wholesale Co. Box 2193. stay at home. A comfortable home known country that we know today as POULTRY BOUGHT. For best results ship would be the most powerful attractArizonat" New Mexico and Texas was poultry eggs and game to. Fulton Mkt. Correct offered. be thatcould the amazing journey of Fray Marcos ion -- weight. Prompt returns. Write for prices. That is why a cozy bungalow home de Nlza, between 1539 and 1541. He ' White Leghorn baby chioks from guaranteed of the type shown here with floor was sent by Antonio de Mendoza, then Daynes-Beeb- e, antiquated methods in the farm buildings, and very frequently it is the farm home that is directly responsible. Too often this important factor In farm life has been neglected, too 5ften it has been merely a shack or shelter with little convenience and comfort. If more farm homes were built on a modern basis there would be little need for propaganda, articles and speeches to exhort the boy to stock. M&y $11.50 hd. with order, balance CO. D. San Jose Poultry Yards, San. doseCaL Chicago Organization Acquires Use of t;. Famous World's Fair .Field "Museum Building. ser-a- n provost'marshal TEST EGGS AT LEAST TWICE assistant f Home of the Type Shown in This Design Would Stop the Wholesale Exodus of Young Folks to Crowded Cities. cop, a first a traffic and a patient in army hospitals: for almost-- - two? ' jears, Albert It' Haan of Michigan, newly appointed head of tlie American Le-- g i o n s national service division; is well .' equipped to minister to the I needs of ' The American Legion will, soon have the. use of a building known to millions in America as the embodiment of befiuty in art and architecture, the old Fine Arts building of', the 1893 The crack of army Worlds Fair. rifles will be heard in the fifmous structure, for it has been turned ovei to the Hyde Park post No. 34, of the Legion in Chicago, as an Indoor rifle range. The large edifice, known as the old Field museum after the Worlds fair, was evacuated with the completion of the new Field museum. Various organizations of Chicago Immediately besieged the park commissioners for permission to use tne building,, but the Legion post's request alpne was granted. ' Legionnaires now have a rifle range de luxe, one that will tend to erase the veterans memories of sweltering days, shivering days and cold, moist days spent in trying to locate the bullseye on the armys outdoor firing points. The building is so large d that a range was established without difficulty, along with the shorter distances. 200-yar- L GETS MONEY FOR W. A. A. Hungry Roo6ter Proves Gold Mine for Woman's Organization in Kansas.. . J liTifc i cfYws " . - ' lee men. Mr. Haan gain- - ed the rank of captain on the battlefield 'and was se- verely wounded .in action at Juvigny, France, while serving with the Thirty-secon- d division. In Walter Reed hospital, Washington, for more than a year, he found out what the government intended to do for the wounded by studying "plans and legislation concerning the subject. Discharged from the hospital last fall, he was made a special representative of the bureau of war risk insurance. . In army and navy camps he was instrumental, through the American in causing the reinstatement or conversion of $5,000,000 in war. risk insurance.' In Michigan last November, as field representative of the war risk bureau, he directed a cleanup of hospital, insurance and compensation claims that placed the state ahead of all others in welfare accomplishments. During the campaign he investigatmen in ed the condition of the state prlsrin at Jackson and the insane asylum in Kalamazoo. He worked with the Legions welfare department to cause the parole' of, 150 men last year to the Legion. He. obtained $300,000 in funds raised during the war and used it In settling claims, relief of the disabled and their dependents and in untangling insurance difficulties and remedying hospital conditions. ... Mr. Haan is twenty-eigh- t years old. Coming out of high school, he entered the United States navy as an apprentice seaman. He served four years on the U. S. S. Idaho and was discharged as a quartermaster, second class. He then became a motor and traffic, policeman In Grand Rapids, Mich.' :,ini'1916, he went to the Mexicali bhrder as a first sergeant In the Michigan infantry. Before he entered Ahetllpes In France, he was assistant, provost marshal at St. Nazalre as.afiyst lieutenant. Before the battle lri which he was wounded, he had served in three offensives.-- . - Le-glh- Piston Rings cure your motor trouble 15 Gill East Fourth South Gill Piston Ring Co., . t HEMLERS ; Add thousands f miles to weak tires ; 90 Uewout and puncture-proo- f. Easily installed Agents wanted. Write us for literature. WesRubber 134 E. Bdy, Salt Lake. Sales Co., ton . ELASTIC STOCKING MFKS Manufacturers abdominal. Maternity supporters. Trass fitters. S. H. Bowmar Co., Brooks Arcade. WELDING, AUTO RADIATORS & Machinery built and repaired. Beet and cheapest. Potteir Welding & Repairing Co., 651 South State. TYPFWRiTFS IlILnlUILlw JjMficc The Baby Fox weighs 8 Ho many grains of com will a terribly hungry rooster eat after he has missed his meals for five hours? The Bock in the photograph Plymouth tucked away 283 grains in record time and made $328 for the Women's Auxiliary of the American Legion in . Kan. The bird was placed in a show" window on the main street in the Kansas town. For five hours he scratched and crowed for provender, which was not forthcoming. Then 1,000 grains of tempting yellow corn were spread before him. Guesses as to how many grains of corn it would take to assuage his hunger were sold at ten cents each. In three hours Mr. Bock had gulped 283. kernels of Kansas corn and reBOOKS FOR DISABLED HEROES tired for the night Then be was sold Congress. Appropriates- - $100,000 for Reading Material- - .foV Soldiers Confined tc Hcsp.tals. . Cim-marro- n, , t KID FITTING CORSET PARLORS. Specialists in designing, making, fitting corsets. Hemstitching, embroidering, braiding, accordion and side pleating. Buttons made. 40 E. Bdwy. VULCANIZING A RETREADING. .Quality and Standard Tire Works, 361 So. State. service. Models Made. Key, lock and gun Knudson Novelty Co., 855 So. State. ' " YOUR LOCAL PUBLISHER Far loobe leaf binders, special blanks, records mt all kinds. He gives Quality Service. ATTEND UTAH BUSINESS COLLEGE Pbr Practical Business Education. Boston Bldg. Inventors repairing.- ns HOLER BARBER COLLEGE. Qualify as bar her us few weeks. 43 S. West Temple Street. ARTISTS MATERIALS C. R. 8AVAGK CO., 12 South Main. Artist, kodak finishing and enlarging. terials. picture framing, Fin. ma- kodaks and filma. ART CO., picture fram266 Main. ing. china painters and artist supplies. in small made TOWN OF YOUR mcr riPIK vnlVDiJ quantities from your own pictures, Street. Novelty Co., Si Richards nl imrair SPECIAL RUSH SERVICE secured if 70 seatiaa this paper when writing above firms. plans would be just the thing for many farms. It has all the conveniences of the city dwelling, all the comforts that make an ideal home and all the features that are needed in a farmhouse. 'Moreover, ' it deviates d from the tradition pertainIt ing to farm home architecture. eliminates the great waste of room which is so often found in farm homes ind which means so much extra and unnecessary work for the farmer's wife. There is as much drudgery connected with the poorly and improper- ly constructed home as there is with an inefficiently designed dairy barn. Unless care is shown in the arrange- -" ment and size of the rooms the house wife will find herself burdened with a mass of onerous work that could jusl as well have been avoided. With an attractive home like this on the farm the boys and girls have a real recreation center after the of the day, a place where the family can gather and enjoy the leis ure moments in real peace and com hide-boun- I fort. Mrs. Leiah. L. Klein, Cimmarroh, Kan, and the Lucrative Rooster. ' , twice, given back to the Women, and was finally auctioned off. In all, he netted $328, a fraction more than $1.15 for every grain of corn lie ate. Mrs. Lelah L. Klein, national executive eommitteewoman from the Kansas department of the Auxiliary, handled the contest. One of the most active workers for ,the Auxiliary in her state, Mrs: Klein was educated in Wellesley college and in the New England Conservatory of Music. Her husband, who was a captain .in the medical corps, was gassed in the A m PRODUCTS Disabled heroes of .the World war be without good books to read while they are figlif'ig to regain health in the hospitals of this country. Congress has appropriated in the civil sundry bill the sum of $100,000 for the purchase of books, with the result that, each of the 23,000 disabled veterans will soon have three or four new books to read. The American Library association, which still has charge of the libraries in the larger hospitals, has been embarrassed by a shortage of funds, and up to this time posts of the American Legion have taken' over the duty of supplying books to the disabled in hundreds of the smaller hospitals. The appropriation by congress does not mean that either the services of the American Library association or the American Legion ip this respect are to be dispensed with, but that they are to be greatly augmented and reinforced. ! gonne-Meus- ' y Fa-mo- liealth-produ- c J ' -- , f CREED OF THE DISABLED MAN Afflicted Fellows of Washington, D. C Post, Look on Brighter Side - v . f Things. I . This charming bungalow farm h orris good-size- d rooms and a sleep e offensive. which Ing porch, also a washroom, has come to be an essential room in ico City. the modern farm home. It eliminates THE AMERICAN LEGION GIRL Machine Reads Character. the tramping through the kitchen bj j nix-- I The phrenoscope is an the help after their days work. Tin chine by which your Individual char-- j Miss Margaret Sousa, Daughter of Bandmaster, Acquires' . acter and characteristics may be read, New. Title. These nourishing, It was shown before the members of ing dishes are def.nitely taking the nutDr. France of the less College more by recently of expensive, place Miss Margaret Sousa, daughter of ritious spreads. They saiisfy the The George Maingot, the inventor. John Philip Sousa, famous band direcappetite and please the palate. doctor snys: tor, has acquired Rigid inspection endorsed byesbthe our In of Each expresses gestures National Gunners Association-in-sura new title. She inwhat fashion is very incomplete tli purity and full measure. is known as the one us or in dividual Only gesture Ask for Pierces and you'll get American Legion notion Is wholly' unconstrained resthe best. Girl because " That was our first act in piration. her starring in oming into the world, and has always, a Legion motion estrained its spontaniety. : Therefore, z picture, Lest We ny observing it, I can tell positively a : a , film Forget, man's character. the depicting dis: struggles of If in 125 Languages, abled veterans to 'Expectation Dream, exterior of the house is quite pleas . If, the poem of Itiulyard Kipling obtain justice and ream that you expect some one ing with its broad siding, a sliest o; which Lord Kitchener included In unemp 1 o y m e n t ; comes denotes you are safe, en colonial of for instruction manual and fiuaint the roof military course you are pursuing, but shingle has conditions among those who escaped trance of. white. There is plenty o', his first hundred thousand, loes not come, then your coura Injury in the World war. window space to make the room; been translated into 125, languages, ise and you should change. of more the obscure many and including airy. light Reporting to Davy Jones. The entrance leads into a small re tongues as well as the worlds great of Treg. Great Variety Sam, on board the transport, had igs one side on languages. literary which hall opens tree ception 1 has a greater variety of just been issued his first pair of hobinto the living room, on the other into ,e whole of North America, and nails. reLast Resort a bedroom. At the far end of the One thing, suah, he ruminated. If emarkaby handsome specimens is married. Jinks hear I that the leading is hall stairway Ah falls overboard, ah certainly will be seen there. Many of thm ception knew in was he he? Is The living deeply with upstairs and to the cellar. tenshun. American Leje grown in this country iebt, but I didnt know he was des- go down at room is a large room, 21 feet 6 inches gion Weekly. From the New York Sun. windows on two, perate. by 18 feet, with triple has six F governor of New Spain, to seek seven fabulous cities, tales of whose wealth had reached Mexico City via the Indians. These stories were corroborated 1)y one Cabeza de Vaca, who had been shipwrecked on an island off the Texas coast and whq gaining the mainland a year later, only to be seized by Indians, finally escaped with three companions- - and, after years of wandering through the wilds found his way back to his own people. On the journey he had heard of north- era cities incrusted .with turquoise and paved with gold and silver, It was these that Mendoza expected Fray Marcos to find. Accompanied by a negro who had shared De Vacas experiences, and by some friendly Pinaa Indians, the brave friar jour-neyed through Arizona to the Zunl country. Stories of the treasure he might expect to find increased in promise as he progressed. But sudden-task- s ly. when lie thought himself within easy reach of the promised land, word ea me from ahead that his advance guard had been murdered by bostile Indians', packing support, moral or material, the friar became.discoitrnged and returned empty handed to Mex-- it nt. care and expense, if the eggs not fertile. nj-All poultry owners who raise chick should be thoroughly familiar with the An egg, method of testing eggs. whether it is fertile or not, Uis a small grayish spot, known as the germinal spot, on the surface of the ollf. As soon us a fertile egg is placed under a hen or in an incubator the development of the germ begins. All eggs in e -- should be tested at least twice during the incubation period, say poultry specialists of the United States Department of Agriculture. This is done preferably on the seventh and fourteenth days. The infer lie eygs, and1 Testing Egg by Use of Metal Cliimnc; , Tester. those with dead germs,' should the be removed. White-sheeggs can bf tested on the fourth or ' fifth day. whereas the development of eggs hav ing brown shells often can not be seed by the use of the ordinary egg teste until the seventh day. ; A satisfactory home-mad- e egg tester or candler can be made with a shoe box or any other box large enough to hold the lamp. Cut a hole a little ll larger than a piece in the side of the box, so that when the lamp is placed inside the box the hole In the side will be opposite the flame. Make a hole also in the top of the box large enough to prevent the top from catching fire from the heat of the lamp. When the chimney is long "enough, allow it to extend through the top of the box. This permits the heat to es- - " cape and avoids the risk of fire. Special care should always be exercised in using kerosene lamps in candling to prevent fire. To prevent further box may possibility of fire, a be used in place of a lfsteboard one, and, if desired, the opening through which the chimney extends may be , lined with tin or asbestos, Electric or gas lamps aiay be used in a box with a hole in (he same way that the kerosene lamp is used,.'- The hole which is- in the side of the box should be on the same level as the light. The eggs may also be tested by sunlight or. daylight, using a shade or curtain with a hole in it for the light to shine through.... tester or candler Testing with should bedone in a dark room. Hold each egg with the large end up, so that the size of the air cell may be seen, as well as the condition of the embryo or germ. An Infertile egg when candled looks' perfectly clear, the same as a fresh one; while a fertile egg shows a dark spot known as- the embryo, with a mass of little blood veins radiating in' all directions. When the germ is dead, and the egg has been incubated for at least 48 hours, the blood 'settles away from the embryo toward the edges of the yolk, forming In some cases an irregular circle of blood, known as a blood ring. Eggs vary in this respect, some showing enly a streak of blood. All Infertile eggs, and those with., dead germs, should be removed at' the' end of the first test. Eggs with dead; germs soon decay and give off a bad: odor If allowed to remain. The Infer-- , tile 'eggs make good feed for 25-ee- are not to All makes rented and sold. Utah & School Supply, 82 W. Second South St. D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE. of Efficiency. All commercial branches. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St., Salt Lake City. (Prepared by the United States Depart-- '' ment of Agriculture) It Is of little profit for a hen to sit patiently for 21 days If the eggs over which she fluffs her feathers are infertile or if the germs, in them have died.. . Neither does it pay to run an incubator for three weeks, with its at- - . lbs. School Make 'Inspection on 8eventh and Four teenth Days for Those Infertile k - or With Dead Germa. : . OLD3MOB.LE DISTRIBUTORS. Cars & tracks. Used car bargains. A. E. Tourssen, 447 S'. Main POULTRY FLOCKS j - - Disabled veterans of the World war, nearly all of them overseas veterans and members of the Walter Reed post of the American Legion In Washington, D. C., have adopted what they term, The Creed of the . Disabled Man, which, called to the attention of President Harding upon a recent visit to the hospital, was by the PresThe creed ident prounced fine. reads af follows: Once more to be useful to see pity in the eyes of my friends' replaced to work, prowith commendation At the second test, on the fourteenth duce, provide and to feel that I have a place in the world, seeking no fa- day, the eggs containing strong, will be dark and well filled! vors and- given none a man among men In spite of this physical handicap. up, showing a clear, sharp, distinct line between the air cell and the growCost of Living in Paris. ing embryo, while eggs with dead The cost of living in Paris is not germs will show only partial developexorbitant for an American, who Is ment and lack this clear, distinct oat- , paid in American dollars, according line. to a letter' from a member of the Paris The period of incubation for hen's Post of the American Legion. . eggs is 21 days, but usually some of Beware the big restaurants and the eggs hatch the evening of the twenduck into the side streets unfrequenttieth day. Sometimes It happens, howed by tourists, . the. veteran warns. ever, that the hatch will run over the "I had a fine meal today for 8.50 twenty-firs- t day, especially during cool weather. francs,, or about fifty cents, menu Included : Frijture de la . The. Loire, 1.80 francs; omelette chamWater Is Essential. pignons, 2.25 francs; ; Chateaubriand One dozen eggs contain about one (which is fried spuds and watercress), pint of water. Clean, fresh, pure wa2.50 francs; celeri bryise, T5 centimes; ter should be before kept macaroni, 75 centimes and fromage, the hens and shouldconstantly be renewed at 75 centimes. , least once dally, say specialists of tha And after the meal, cafe cognac United States Department of Agriculfor 95 centimes V , ture, ' - young-chicken- living-embryo- . - : |