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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH I CLEANLINESS sfs iNiew IS IMPORTANT After Every lleai In work or It play. the poisegives and steadiness that Reduce Source of Contamination and Insure Cleanest Possible Grade of Milk. mean success. Unclean and Improperly cared for kelps digestion. Mays thirst, keep. ' Iks Bsoslk cool moist, tkc throat milk causes more disease and death among Infants during the summer than any other one factor. But why wait nntll summer before taking action? msscles Use the cooler days of spring, say and pMaat and Iks dairy specialists of the agricultural nerves at ease. to reduce the sources of colleges, milk contamination to a minimum, and thus insure the cleanest possible grade of milk during' the critical summer season. CleanMness is the first of the two "Cs of the well-kedairy. Milk from the time it leaves the cow until It is consumed is always in danger of Infection from some kind of bacteria. These bacteria are constantly present on the body of the cow, in dusty, Impure air, in bad water. In unclean utensils and on the hands and clothing of the helpers, Good milk can be produced under BAK ordinary farm conditions by observing the following points : 1. Have the bam well ventilated at milking time and see to It that no EYES SORE? &&S&, EYEWATER operations are going on that will stir a reliable and peedr remedy elnee 1796. Buy 6 or John L. Thompson Sons ft Oo, druggists up dust. Feed hay and sweep after b liifar Street. Troy. M. T. BOOKLET EKES. relaxed l 1 I 4t y 4. M v - S' i - ! mM'S f 2. ? m p&--: g 'a I i ' ; fr - x f- a .a 0 milking. 2. Be sure Falsehoods Many Faces. that at least the teats and udder of the cow are clean. If falsehood had, like truth, but one 3. Use a small-tosterile milk pall face only, we wftuld be upon better end have all other utensils clean nnd terms; for we should then take the sterile. If possible use steam ; If not. contrary to what the liar says for certain truth; but the reverse for truth boiling water. As the bacteria that get into milk hath a hundred figures, nnd Is n field are dormant and Increase slowly at Indefinite without bound or limits lower temperatures, but will Increase Montaigne. rapidly ns long ns the mills remains warm above 50 degrees F.. the second Cutlcura Soap for the Complexion. C in producing and handling wholeNothing better than Cutlcura Soap some milk under average conditions daily and Ointment now and then as Is cold. The fourth point then to be needed to make the complexion clear, considered Is that of cooling the milk scalp clean and hands soft and white. os soon as produced to a temperature Add to this the fascinating, fragrant below 50 degrees F. and maintaining Cutlcura Talcum, and you have the that cold temperature until the milk Cutlcura Toilet Trio. Advertisement. Is delivered. Possibly. Get into the habit now of following these simple practices. It will insure ' Fanny Just a hat are Italian George "At a venture the pnblic against sonr milk and unJudge. wholesome infant food in the hot days I should say garlic. to come. Looking on the bright side of things never caused any one to become ICE CREAM MAKING IS EASY forget-m- e-nots? JlolSoo OTATT 0 DTT Mums DflQPKOET By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN MERICAS feeding of starving Russia has introduced a new word into the vocabulary of that famine-stricke- n nation. This feeding of Russia Is the biggest piece of philanthropy In all history. Doubtless It will affect the history of the future. But whatever its effect In the years to come its immediate result has been to add a new word to the Russian vocabulary that Is said with heartfelt gratitude by the peasant masses and shouted joyfully by the children. It is a household word among the masses a word to conjure with In Soviet Russia today. Ahra is this new word. It Is the native pronunciation of A. R. A., the initials which symbolize the American Relief Administration and Its manifold works of relief. Leon Trotsky, to be sure, Is saying that the "American bourgeoisie are glutted with the blood and gold of Europe; that "when the fire of the European revolution Is lighted the American bourgeoisie will be consumed; that punishment nnd revenge await the American bourgeoisie from the But the Russian proleEuropean proletariat." tariat cry Ahra just the same. When we visited the feeding kitchen In the old palace of the czars at Tsarskoe, said E. M. Flesh, the cl ildren jumped to their feet and shouted In Mr. Flesh, identispontaneous greeting, Ahra! fied with the A. R. A., the United States grain commission and the purchasing commission, hud just finished an inspection trip of a month through famine districts. This was In December, 1022. lie said further: I think the back of the famine is broken, though well have to keep on feeding the children. We fed one and a half million people at the peak of our activities. That number is being decreased now, and henceforth we will care for just the orphan children and the sick. The American medical program in Russ'a Is one of the biggest things ever done by one country for another. Wed go Into hospitals and see absolutely empty shelves. Then an order would be Issued and in would pour supplies. The gratitude of the people was touching. Doctors came to us with tears in their eyes to express their thanks. But best of all were the kids. It made you feel good when they shouted Ahra. To them It Is a word of salvation and tope. Here Is another contemporary description of the situation : You are from the Ahra? Their eyes open nnd they gaze as they might do on a king, and as often s not they fail on their knees and kiss your hand. And then I wish all the people who talk so loudly of letting the Russians take care of themselves could be present. They would be properly ashamed. Russians, particularly the Russian peasants, would much prefer to live on their own food. They have Do desire to sit down and wait for a nation, howto come across the sea to their ever tried to tejp. They want their own corn. Theyhorseflesh gow It, even when they were living on for food. . . . They thought even God had forgotten them, and then the Ahra appeared. It fed their children first, several million of them, nnd then It fed them. It fed their sick. It supplied medl-fclntheir hospitals with unheard of stocks of off to ward arms In their It put something wliich from diseases other and cholera dreaded fM kind-hearte- e. they have suffered so many years. The Ahra did this on behalf of the American people. Why did the Ahra do it for trade or political advantage? They have got neither, though they arc in Russia neatly a year. They must have done It then for pure love of humanity. A wonderful nation, America, big. generous, strong, kind, disinterested! There is no word quite capable of expressing what America is. That is how the Russians feel, and they will remember. How does America feel? If I were an American I would feel very proud and very humble. America has built np a tremendous amount of good will for herself among the Russian people through the relief work In the famine districts, said Preston Kumler, a Chicago attorney, back from a years service with A. R. A. Prior to our coming the Russian masses knew little of America. Now the United States Is the best advertised nation in Russia. The soviet government has shot robbers whenever it captured them. Still there nre many bnn-d- it gangs which roam at will, living oft the country. In several instances A. R. A. workers were captured by these bandits and were turned loose with apologies as soon as their identity was established. It actually appears that these bandits never Interfere with the A. R. A. activities. Here Is a story that comes from the Bugachof district 'of Samara, In which a bandit organiza- -' tion of over 1,000 men with horses is operating. The bandits sacked the government warehouse In Balakova while the A. R. A. storage house, next door, bulging with cocoa, sugar, canned milk and other good things to eat, was not touched. As an illustration of further consideration by the bandits of the famine sufferers, it is related that some of the gang last summer rode up to one of the A. R. A. village kitchens, merely tasted the food bring prepared for the children; pronounced It very good, chucked a few youngsters under the chins, wishing them good appetites, and then went their way to the home of the village treasurer, which they looted. An Interesting feature of the A. R. A. work is the springing up of hundreds of new villages. American corn built these new villages, which sprang up practically over night last spring. The same thing is expected this spring. Edward Fox; A. R. A. supervisor in the Simbirsk district, tells of it thus : moveThere has been a genuine ment, an exodus from the cities, where panicky thousands fled w hen famine camd. Racing against the brevity of the summer season, fighting time to plant the unfertilized fields, groups of weak and weary men have dug earth houses to cover their heads and those of their families, wasting no time, home. merely tossing up a make-shiTaking Into account the famine sltration, the local powers had quite prepared themselves for an increase of the refugee movement with the advent of spring. With the Issue of corn the flight from the villages diminished, nnd by the end of April had completely ceased. May even saw the return of many of the villagers to their native villages. Farmers returned to their former occupation singly and In whole batches and colonies. As an example, the village newly formed in the Simbirsk Ouyezd, called Pestchany Ozero, may be pointed out, where 130 adult farmers, having first assured themselves of a corn ration, settled on land given them, hurriedly dug themselves earth huts and seeded their land with all they could obtain, so forming an entirely new village." Just what is being done now in the way of relief and what will be necessary next spring nnd summer Is difficult to say. It seems probable that the A. R. A. may be able to close Its work nfter the next harvest, except Insofar as the 1.500,000 orphan children anil sick In hospitals are concerned. Estimates place the number of Russians now receiving help at 8,000,000 from the soviet government, European relief associations and the A. R. A. ll ft Mrs. A. A, White Small Manufacturer Relieved of Work of Putting Milk and Other Ingre- dients Together, (Propered by tha Unlt.rt States Dapartmant of Agriculture.) The creamery at Grove City, Pa., which Is operated under the supervision of the United States Department of Agriculture, during the past year adopted the practice of supplying ice The American relief of starving Russia may b thus recapitulated in brief ; n The first station of the American relief to feed Russian children was opened in Petrograd In September of 1020. Three hundred children then received the first American meal.' Originally Herbert Hoover, in response to an appeal from Maxim Gorky, and with the help of the American people, planned to feed 1,000,000 Russian children. The work grew until in August of 1921 no less than 4,171,411 children were receiving daily meals from the A. R. A., and a daily corn ration or its equivalent, was going to 6,257,958 adults, a total of 10,429,399 individuals. The original program had been multiplied tenfold. The adult feeding, not Included In the original Intentions, was made possible by the appropriation by the United States congress of $20,000,000 for the purchase of corn in America. This product began to arrive In Russia In February of 1922. From that time until the lasf carload of corn was slipped to the interior districts, the railroads of Russia from the northern nnd southern ports to the famine areas were taxed to their capacity. The delivery of the food became the greatest problem which the A. R. A, was called upon to face. Warehouses were filled nnd emptied and filled again. Barges loaded with corn were sent up and down the Volga river and up the Kama, Biela, and Vlat-k- a rivers. Horses and sledges, camels and wagons, wheelbarrows and peasants backs carried the grain from the river ports nnd from the railroad stations to the distant villages. By August 1, 200.. 407 tons of com and other products had been distributed to the districts for adult feeding. In the matter of distances nlone, and n view of the lack of sufficient railroad connections, it is significant that the work of the A. R. A. has not been limited to the easily accessible areas. And even this covers only a part of the work of the A. R. A. There are the food remittance division nnd the medical division, each of which has handled something over $7,000,000 worth of supplies since the beginning of their operations, and the clothing remittance division. Col. William N. Haskell, U. S. A., took charge nnder Hoover In September of 1921. He Is a West Pointer and has been awarded the D. S. M. for brilliant service In the World wnr. He was In charge of American relief In Rumania and the Caucasus. He Is now also In charge of American Red Cross relief In the Near East. Rev. Dr. (Charles) Theodore Benze has Just gone to Moscow as commissioner for the National Lutheran council ; he Is also commissioned by the A, R. A. He Is a theologian, author, college president and a leader In the board of foreign missions of the United Lutheran church. It is a question whether the charity or the of the Americans the more astonished the Russian people. Anyway, their new word Ahra expresses theli feelings and it Is a household word from one end to the other of their unhappy land. The Appealing Charm of Perfect Health I was sick for two Siloam, Colo. years, could not regain my old timo strength after motherhood, had no appetite and was so nervous I could not sleep. I lost fifteen pounds in weight My friends all thought 0 had lung trouble, I got so thin and pale. All the medicine the doctors admln-lstiatlo- y u a reau aooui r. ricrces uoiaea Medical Discovery and decided to try it Creamery at Grove City, Pa., Operated Under Supervision of the Dairy Division of the United States Department of Agriculture Here Are Tested Under Commercial Conditions Findings of Investigators. Cream manufacturers with ready-mad- e mixtures for making Ice cream. Tills method relieves the small manufacturer of the work and trouble of putting the milk, cream and other ingredients together In proper proportion, and Is proving very popular. The mix" Is ready for freezing when received by the buyer. HIGH PRODUCING DAIRY COW Animal Yielding 8,250 Pounds of Milk Yearly Uses Half of Ration for Maintenance. A dairy cow producing 8,250 pounds of milk a year a common production must use one-haof her ration for the maintenance of her weight and to keep her In good condition, and has, therefore, only one-ha- lf of the ration left for making milk. I got a bottle right away and after the first few doses I began to feel better. I took four bottles and it certainly did wonders for me. I cant 6ay too much for this Medical Discovery and always recommend it to Mrs. A. A. White. my friends. When run-doyou can quickly ick up and regain vim, vigor, vitality y obtaining this Medical Discovery of Dr. Pierces at your nearest drug Store in tablets or liquid, or send 10 for trial pkg. to Dr. Pierces Invalids' " Hotel, Buffalo. N. Y. Grippe Physicians advise keeping the bowels open ae a safeguard against Grippe er Influenza. When you are constipated, not enough of Natures lubricating liquid is produced in the bowel te keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant nnd thus secures regular bowel movements by Natures own method lubrication. ifmj.i is a liMmi me Old er laxative ee eaaaet srtre. Try It teftar. . lf I A LUBWCANT-M0- T A LAXATIVE 3 WARM WATER FCR MILK COWS HURT? Cows Will Not Give Maximum Flow of Milk If Given Cold Water for hr bemhw er Ml, Mo. Jid U nllm influniH. HnntNKMuw IditelMS Drinking Purposes. Cold drinking water given to dairy cows will result In reduced quantity of milk., A cow which yields a large quantity of milk must drink lots of water ; she wont drink much from an icy tank. Water tanks can be provided with heaters, or hot water can be poured "- -' the tank. isaaraJt- t- U.W aJgayTL Hair Thin ? p-- Ae reete eeft ease M, felMea -eut eyete reyMIj. Try III At eU It -- jlallMfl tile tag |