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Show s1 THE RICH COUNTY REAPER. RANDOLPH, UTAH SLOW TO CHANGE NAMES OF CITIES Americans Not Prone to Make Alterations. RATION COW NEEDS DURING MILK PERIOD Matter of High Importance in Milk Production. It has been demonstrated edly repeat- that It does not pay to have a -- dairy cow freshen in low condition. She may produce less than 70 per cent as much milk as she would produce had she freshened in good condition. This fact has led dairymen to say that their most profitable feeding Is done during the dry period. The cows own physical condition is one of the best guides to the amount of feed needed during the dry period. If in good flesh, she will carry along all right on legume hay and silage or pasture and a small amount of feed. The ration should be light and laxative. If you have a good quality of legume hay,. a ration madejup largely of corn and oats or barley and oats will be satisfactory. A mixture for a ration might contain 400 pounds of corn or corn and 200 pounds of oats, 100 pounds of wheat, 100 pounds of wheat bran, 100 pounds of linseed meal, oilmeal or soybean oilmeal. Where only poor roughage such as timothy hay, oat straw or corn fodder is available, it is advisable to increase the oilmeal or soybean oilmeal by 50 per cent. It is especially important to take good care of the cow at calving time. Confine her to a good clean box stall about a week before freshening, change the ration so that it is very light and laxative. This may mean withholding corn and feeding only oats, .wheat bran and oilmeal. Permit the cow to take exercise in a pasture or in the yard. Soon after the calf is dropped the cow, should be tied up. In this way the dairyman will observe whether or not the afterbirth is delivered. If the afterbirth is not delivered normally and within hours, the cow twelve, or twenty-fou- r may need some medical attention. Wisconsin Farmer. cob-mea- l, Since the nonstop aviators from this country landed by the Golden Horn it has dawned on most of us for the first time that the Turks have been changing the name of their great metropolis. We may have heard of Stamboul, but never dreamed we would have to say Istanbul. We learned pf It as Constantinople, the name the Homans gave to what the Greeks called Byzantium, and in our secret thoughts it probably always will be Constantinople. After the fall of the Russian monarchy St. Petersburg became Petro-graonly to be later sovietized as Leningrad, all of which was to be expected from the mania of the Bolsheviks for uprooting everything connected with the old regime. Then the Norwegians changed the name of Christiania to Oslo, that of the old national capital across the bay. China followed the fashion, and when the capital of the republic was transferred to Nanking, Peking became Peiping. In spite of our reputation for change the United States has displayed a surprising permanence in this respect. Our 'urban nomenclature, derived not only from the English, the French, the Spanish and the Indians, but from the classics d, , n sr hard-learne- d Frown on Lion Hunters Killing From Airplanes Hunting lions from airplanes Is distinctly out, in all parts of Africa where the British writ rules. The open veldt of the great African game country offers great possibilities for coursing in automobiles, and easy landing for airplanes. Hence, sportsmen have been rather overshooting iions,. This is regarded as bad for several reasons. It threatens the sport with extinction, but their anxisportsmen are joined-iety by zoologists, who do not wish to see another splendid wild animal added to the list of extinct species. Conservationists and animal ecologists also see in the lion a useful regulator for the numbers of antelope and other grazing animals, which without some natural check might increase too rapidly and overgraze the range. Only in thickly populated districts, where lions become troublesome stock killers and potential menaces to human life, is exterminative hunting tolerated. cross-countr- y Salt Lake City Headquarters Under the Beacon of Hospitality, in Your the center of things, this hotel offers the rare combination of n service and cordiality and comfort. 400 rooms, each with bath, $2 to $4 single. Cafe and cafeteria. ultra-moder- HOTEL NEWHOUSE W. This Machine Age Studies of how machinery causes unemployment by replacing man power have been made from time to time during the past fifty years. The latest study of this kind, made for Colliers Weekly, reveals a razor-blad- e machine which takes the place of 500 men, and a railroad switching device which supersedes 168 men. Machines have now displaced 9 out of 10 shoe workers, It is shown. E. Suttoa C. W. West Genl Mgr. Asst Genl Mgr. More Than a Hint think is the radio lots of comI pany, declared the ruditors wife. Suspicion Yes, nodded the tired hostess, Mrs. A. I met your husband toand you dont find it standing in day and he was telling me how much the doorway an hour before saying he was in love with his work. either. Mrs. B. Was he Indeed? I shall have to take a look in at the office. Boston Transcript. Mamie Art a Did you visit the art galleries when you were in Dresden? An air castle becomes a hot-ai- r casWe didnt need to. Our daughter tle when its creator begins to brag Der Brummer. about it. paints. good-nigh- t, Life-Sav- er isnissiF ,otu values totfoog Car OWNERS have shown their appreciation of Firestone extra values g business. During May, hy giving Firestone Service Dealers a Dealers and Service June and July more car owners came into Firestone-ServicStores and bought more Firestone Tires than in any like period in history. Firestone Tires with two extra cord plies under the tread and the patented g with uniform quality and the process of Firestone name and guarantee on every tire give greatest safety and greatest values at no higher cost than r special-hran- d tires, made by an unknown manufacturer who takes no responsibility for your safety or your service. Firestone control every step in tire record-hreakin- Doesnt Pay to Neglect Gum-Dippin- Cow Early-Fresheni- ng and any other stray books that might have been read by our more lettered city founders, has persisted with little modification. Sometimes the. names were difficult of pronoun-ciatioor calculated to inspire levbut the original christening has ity, generally held. We might, have renamed New Orleans for Thomas Jefferson St. Augustine for Andrew Jacksdn, as the English altered the name of New. Amsterdam to New York when they drove out the Dutch. During the war we even resisted the patriotic pressure to give'tbe capital of North Dakota a name less suggestive of Germanism, though we yielded on the point of sauerkraut, at least for the duration of hostilities. But Bismarck remained Bismarck, and sauerkraut again became sauerkraut after a spell as liberty cabbage. However it may satisfy the exigencies of nationalism or local politics, we hope for the sake of our storfi of geographical knowledge that other countries, too, will leave their city names as they are. New York Herald Tribune. The cow that freshens in the early fall is apt to have a hard time of it. She comes into production at a time when the farmer ' is rushing around with silo filling and late threshings, followed by fall plow and root harvest. There is very natural tendency to get through with as little chores as possible and cows are usually bred to come in after the rush Is over. If a cow does freshen, she takes the same treatment as the rest of the herd. As a matter of fact, she is usually considered a nuisance. But this is the time when milk comes easiest and a cow responds most profitably to extra feed and care. The fresh cow now should get a proper grain ration, fed in proportion to production. She should not be out at night when the nights get frosty, tf she is milking in excess of 50 lbs. milk daily she. will respond profitable to milking. If she is not properly fed and regularly milked, she will be a poorer cow right through the lactation period. mail-orde- -- making with only one small profit from Plantations to Firestone Service Dealers and Service Stores. i Drive in TODAY and equip your, car with Firestone the safest, most dependable tires made. Listen to theVOICE of Firestone every Monday night over N.B.C nation- Gum-DippedTir- es wide network COMPARE three-tlmes-a-d- CONSTRUCTION and QUALITY Wheat in Dairy Ration Wheat proved a better grain than corn in a ration for milk cows in an experiment conducted recently at the Ohio experiment station. In view of the bumper crop of this grain in Ohio this year these results are of interest to Ohio dairymen who are looking to feeding wheat this winter. The grain ration for these cows consisted of three parts wheat, three parts oats and one part each of corn, bran and linseed meal, which was fed along with silage and hay. In comparison with cows fed this ration except that corn replaced wheat these cows produced more milk and butterfat but the cows on corn gained a little more In weight. Four cows on the wheat ration aver-- " aged 50 pounds of butterfat a month while those on corn averaged 48 pounds. Ohio Farmer. (4 Special fBrmtUF tire U made by a manufacturer for distributor! such as mail order houses, oil companies and others, nnder a name that does not identify the tire manufacturer to the public, usually because he builds his "best quality" tires under his own name. Firestone puts his name-oEVERT tire he makes. Guarantee DoubIe Every tire manufactured by end carries FireFirestone bears the name "FIRESTONE stones unlimited guarantee and that of onr 25,000 Service Dealers and Service Stores. You are doubly protected. DAIRY HINTS milk house is icient dairying. A a great aid to tve You Money and Serve You eff- The national dairy exposition will be held October 10 to 18 at St. Louis. If whole milk is sold, it should be strained as soon as drawn and then cooled. Accredited herd work has grown in 4 California. Last year a total of tuberwere In 341 herds animals culin tested for accreditation in that 25,-07- state. . Copyright, 1M1 Tbg Firestone Tirt A Bobber Ca. Better |