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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER Utah, under the Act of Mar. 3, 1879, $257,00 Superior Plan for Setting Out Garden over. others are quite hardy and may he planted as early as the ground can be prepared. The following list ot vegetables are hardy and will resist a frost after stirouting: Pot uroes. parsley, onions, , lettuce, kale, endive, peas, salsify, rhubarb, tyidish. parsnip, spinach, turnip, carrot, cress, celery, cauliflower, cabbage, beets and asparagus: Vegetables that are injured even by a slight frost and that should not be planted until all danger is past are: Tomato, pumpkiu. cucumber, pepper, sweet corn, benns. eggplant, horse-radish- I iiiuskmelon. sweet Most of okra, squash, po- tato and watermelon. the lattei list should be started growing earlier than the Inst frost. The seeds may he planted in hotbeds or in window boxes. in Form of Epidemic Pear blight appears periodically in the proportions of an epidemic The Intervals may be 7, 10 or 15 years, the hist serious outbreak occurring in 1914. Iear blight is reduced as the vigor of the tree is reduced. For that reason it is necessary to avoid exten sive pruning which stimulates young growth. Use of nitrogenous fertilizers instead of stable manures should he avoided while blight is active or threatening. It is also .ise to reduce the cultivation of orchards and seed them instead to grass, clover or some cover crop which competes for the fertility of the soil. The disease is commonly called blossom blight, twig blight, fruit blight, body blight and collar blight. Its in fecfious virus is frequently carried by insects. curl,"--thoroug- When the corn was cut to put in me silo early this fall! more than twice as much" fodder was" fufind on the teitilized than on the 'untreated - ' . world. New students are enrolling each week. A position is secured for every graduate. 367 calls were received for office help during 1930. Visitors are always welcome at Henagers Business College, 45 E. S. L., and inquiries Broadway', promptly answered. Call, write, or 'phone for full information. Stetson Took the Bow They have colorful productions n hut there are few as colorful producers as some of the Then was, for example, John B. Stetson, who once, by the way of novelty. produced Uncle Toms Cabin with two Uncle Tom's and two little Evas. They recited their lines in chorus . Stetson had a manager named Sharp. One day, walking to the theater, he saw a pign. over the door: Matinee at two oclock sharp. He ordered it taken down and changed to read : Matinee at two oclock. Stetson. Indianapolis News. ! . , 'Distance Lends Enchantment .Mrs! (lushing My daughter has' wonderful musical talent. Where; would you 'suggest sending her for, voiculture (new neighbor across the hall, speaking very quickly) Oh, by ail means, sent) lief abroad !"' Mrs.-Gnashin- - Agricultural Hints';. Kitchens Laugh Last tfhe kitchen used" to 'be" a place to. cook meals. Today' it is a place to en-- ; tertain guest, to, eat your own meals and ,t point to with pride instead of viewing with, alarm. American Magazine. , , - . A small potato or a cut piece should weigh at least one ounce to support life of the new plant. . ? ; j Since small potatoes cannot he certified one has to rely on the honesty of the dealer selling him seed, to know it 'is good. , ' The Cairary-Qag- e House , Those huge old front )orchds on i bungalows instantly dodm any possi-- : bility of sunlight entering, and destroy any pretense to privacy for occupants of bedrooms facing' n Magazine. " . -- "vttiem.j-!A,meri-c- an (Prepared rockv , ", OGDEN-yjmre- is Three candles! And each one represents a year of joyous living. This is Carolyn Babush, of 800 Downer Ave., Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her mother says: My mother used California Fig Syrup, and when Carolyn became constipated we got some. .It relieved her constipation, sweetened her breath, made her well and happy. I have since used it for all her upsets and colds. It has kept her strong and energetic. For fifty years, mothers have used California Fig Syrup to overcome a childs bilious, headachy, feverish or fretful spells. Doctors recommend its soothing aid to keep bowels clear in colds or childrens ailments; or whenever bad breath, coated tongue or listlessness warn of constipation. It assists in building up weak children. The genuine always bears the name California. All drugstores. " . and bots. The first step in the program recommended by the department is the use of drugs to remove parasites from the mare before, or soon after, breeding. The mare is then kept on clean fields until she foals, so there will be little likelihood of reinfestation. The young foal, thus given a start in life free from parasites, will remain reasonably free from them if kept on pastures free from infected animals and away from the insanitary conditions usually associated with and favorable to - Ut am EIGISMRUE LAXATIVE-TONI- parasites. The us" of a similar plan in raising mules in Louisiana and Nevada was followed by the production of healthy and vigorous animals in place of inefficient mules of low vitality that were subject to colic and various other disorders. for CHILDREN C No Happy Ends Ishbel MacDonald, a great reader, was discussing books with a girl reporter in New York. In the past, she said, a book had to end happily, or the publishers wouldnt publish it. IIow absurd that was For nothing ends happily. Look at life it ends in death. Miss MacDonald shook her head. No play has a happy ending either, she continued. A play runs on and on, and at last it ends trage town, with ically in some the entire road company stranded, and without the pried of a sandwich among the lot of them. Miss ! Mixed Bred Steers of Uniform Type and Size Steers fattened in carlodd lots will sell best if they are uniform in type, size and color markings. Carloads or smaller lots of fat animals of various weights, types and colors always sell at a discount The man who feeds them doesnt get what they are worth, even when the market is strong and active for all grades. . Aberdeen-Angu- s steers, being black, hornless and generally uniform in type, often sell at a premium, as feeders or as fat cattle. Hereford steers, which are one-hors- WOMEN SHOULD LEARN USES conspicuously uniform in color markings and adhere closely to the same type, also catch the eyes of buyers at the markets. Shorthorn steers may sometimes sell at a disadvantage in carlots because they tnay be red, white, roan and red and white in color. Experienced buyers, however, are fair in their bids on Shorthorns, and this breed produces a high percarcentage of the market-toppinloads. OFJVIAGNESIA To women who suffer from nausea, morning sickness, this is a blessing. Most nurses know it. It is advised by leading specialists: Over a small quantity of finely cracked Ice pour a teaspoonful of Phillips Milk of Magnesia. Sip slowly until you are relieved. It end3 sick stomach or Inclination to vomit. Its properties make Phillips Milk of Magnesia quick relief in heartburn, sour stomach, gas. Its mild laxative action assures regular bowel movement. Used as a mouth-wasIt helps prevent tooth decay" during expectancy. or anti-aci- d Feeding, Cubes to Live Stock Is ; Wise Method Feeding cubes to live stock (a common practice in England) is on the increase in this country. Why? With the feed pressed into cubes there Is less waste. The cubes can be fed on the ground or in jthe trough. The cubes do not blow away nor sift through cracks in the feed bunk. Various concentrates are used in making the cubes linseed meal, cottonseed meal, bran, tankage, molasses, etc. Either a supplement to homegrown grains, or a complete ration.1 can be had. Sheep and hog cubes are about one half inch each way; steer cubes, nbout an inch each way. If you must feed on the ground, try cubes. The cubes will work in too. - Roth sheep and steer cubes have been found good on ranges. . Remarkable Record Quite unparalleled in the history of longevity was the record of a, .Brazilian woman whej has just died at the age of one hundred and fifty. She was the mother of 18 children, all living, in good health and all over one hundred years of age. Among her descendants are 124 grandchildren, 230 . . n, 14 The oldest of her is thirteen. n - Live Stock Facts Sheep are economical in their util! zation of feed. - They will subsist largely upon bulky feeds. , (t i I -- Grandmother's Remedy i , Mail Speed Compared In recent tests of speed in the transmission of messages the Navy department found that it took a. message 4 days and 30 minutes to reach San Francisco front Washing-- , ton via ordinary mail, 3 days and 30 minutes via air mail, 14 tot 21 min, utes by commercial telegraph lines,, and only 4 minutes by naval radio. Tea (Garfield WasYour Feeding the brc"d sows some potassium iodide in their slop several weeks before farrowing will prevent hairless nt For every stomach and intestinal ill. This good herb home remedy for - Proper feed, care, and management ' of the boar are the essential factors in the production of healthy, vigorous pigs as far as the male' side of the1 . family is. concerned. S Du-chcs- The person who hfis consistently raised sheep or, followed tlie practice of buying and feeding western lambs over a period of years has almost Invariably profited materially therefrom. . . 1 , h self-feeder- - sum of q $257,000 available fey''atlyl,.rp!td work in the intermbuAtjHWwrost service district, for which details.are being worked out, according to Regional Engineer J. Martin. The improvement"! work is . to be carried out where most ' needed and where" there are a goodly ntimber of men needing work. Projects are, to be worked out in UJaji . in,, the improve-,meof the forest" highway between T Vernal and1 Manila and between and. North Fork as far as the Savage ranch, which is headquarters for outfitting tourists with horses and camping equipment for summer travel in .east central Utah ; the roadway and Cedar Breaks; the Fish Lake route and Weber canyon forset highway between Oakley and Holiday park. , Lucky Day bv the United States Department of Agriculture.) An ounce of prevention for colts at the tender age is worth more In raising strong, vigorous farm horses than a pound of cure after the horses are mature, the United States Department of Agriculture finds. A study conducted in Montana by the department showed that the most effective, and likewise tlie most economical, way to raise healthy horses involves a series of sanitation measures beginning before the colt is foaled and continuing until it is laige enough and vigorous enough to withstand the ravages of stomach worms, intestinal round worms, pin worms, blood worms, C . ; This is the partial feport of a trial at fertilizing corn for silHgd in Worth Kit t. The- - report ' .county. Iowa, in continues. The corn on .the fertilized' soil had large vigorous stalks and was well matured, while the nru on the unfertilized' ground showed little growth'-- ' The i soil ' 'ype; containing some al kati.;-vatreated7 wit h a commercial fertilizer containing 20 per cent each of pho.sphateJarn1 potash. ", s lf old-timer- s. land. 1 1 one-ha- d Words of; Wisdom M. Hutchins, president of Chicago university,, is being praised for his recent epigram, The purpose of higher education is lo unsettle young mens minds. President Hutchins is a young man himself his age is thirty and he said at a luncheon the other day: Some folks object to young men in important posts, but I well, I remember the anecdote. 'Young men lack experience, a septuagenarian once objected. ' Pshaw, said an octogenarian. Thats tlie good, after all, of knowing what the weather was like the day before yesterday? ot One spraying he made in the fall aftet the leaves drop, or in the spring before growth sums." in the 'control of peach teat curl; it is imperative That the work be done before the buds swell in the spring: FOr both San Jose scale and spraying peach leaf cannot lie emphasized too strongly Uuspniyeii 'or 'partly Sprayed buds may show the scale and curl. Fertilized Silo Corn Found Best in Iowa The present enrollment is the largest in the history of the school. The new addition recently acquired has been completed and is now being used for office practice and .finishing work. This adds additional space, making approxiacre floor space ocmately school. Few schools the cupied by in the U. S. are so thoroughly equipped to train their students for responsible positions in the business one-thir- Begin Measures Before Colt Is Foaled and Keep On. 19-2- 9 Robert is effective. aitd it may r Miss Prebble had had no previous commercial training, prior to enrolling with Henagers Business College. This, however was no handicap. She finished her Secretarial Course one month under schedule and was placed in a position by the school at $85.00 per month to start. X-r- If San Jose scale and peach leaf curl must both be combated, these troubles may be controlled by using a 2 per cent lulu ica ting oil emulsion with burden ux. made according to the formula. Wfiere Am Jose "scale is not present, the hordeaux alone ot lime-sulphu- PREBBLE CATHERN SANITATION PLAN TO RAISE HORSES SPRINGVILLE A drive to kill rodents is being vigoriously waged in this city. TOOELE Buried in ore, Charles A. Peterson, 60, once a fancy skater on a vaudeville circuit, was suffocated to death in an ore bin. SALT LAKE The silver output decreased from 17,592,396 ounces in to about 12,940,2G0 ounces in 1930. MAGNA From 16 schools in the Granite district including 5685 children, 592 are listed as unsatisfactory in the second term work. This number in eludes, besides grade failures in junior and senior high schools as well as elementary schools. AMERICAN FORK Shipments of fruit from Utah county during the season of 1930 practically doubled that of 1929, according to records of the Utah county agricultural inspection department. More than 1161 cars were shipped during the 1930 season as compared with 681 during 1929. SALT LAKE Utahs allotment of $926,521 from the presidents emergency appropriation bill for road construction wTill be made available immediately as the result of a request submitted by the state highway commission to Thomas II. McDonald, chief of the United States bureau of public roads. This is Utahs entire share of the $80,000,000 appropriation made possible by the emergency measure. PROVO Dr. T. L. Martin, professor of agronomy, and Professor II. Grant Ivins, instructor in animal husbandry at the Brigham Young university and Lyman H. Rich, Utah county agent, will give lectures daily in the farm division of the tenth annual Brigham Young universitys leadership week January 26 to 30. inclusive. MANTI Resolutions, which favor Incorporating the highway from Aft. Pleasant to Maple canyon, four miles wrest of Moroni, into the state highway system, wTere adopted by the Sanpete county commission and a copy of the resolution presented to each Sanpete legislator. PROVO A resolution to present to the state board of agriculture and the Utah state legislature ftn amendment to the present fruit law to permit canneries to use Utah cull apples for canning purposes, was unanimously adopted at a meeting of the Orem chamber of commerce agricultural committee and repreesntatives of the various fruit growing communities. SALT LAKE Utah remained first in the United States in the production of silver in 1930, but ranked third in copper after Arizona and Montana, and third in lead after Missouri and Idaho. The custom flotation mills at Midvale and Bauer International, were operated the entire year and ore receipts at Bauer, chiefly from Nevada and Utah, were distinctly Increased. The dividends reported paid by mining companies in Utah in 1930 amounted to about $18,630,000, exclusive of $2,558,102 paid by one company which controls mines at Eureka and Bingham as well as mines in other states. VERNAL The geology and commercial possibilities of a large deposit of bituminous sandstone in asphalt ridge a few miles southwest of here, In Uintah county, are discussed in a report just issued as Bulletin S22-- by the geological survey, department of the interior. The report is accompanied by a sketch map showing seven localities along a strip of outcrop about eleven miles long in which the thickness of the bituminous beds was measured and their relative richness estimated. Analyses show that the biturar en content of the sandstone ranges from about 8 per cent to a little over 15 per cent by weight. On the basis of this data and the assumption that the mining can be carried back one and a half miles from the outcrop, it is estimated that the whole area examined should contain about one and one quarter, million, cubic yards of bituminous scratch, said the army doctors. They bound up his leg and young I'incus returned, after a brief interval, to duty. It was not until last summer that his leg bothered him. A doctor said that if was neuritis until an picture was taken. Control San Jose Scale and Peach Leaf Curl BIN IN ORE UTAH FIRST IN SILVER OUTPUT TO FRUIT LAW AMENDMENT FRUIT SHOWS GAIN Ended His Neuritis Simon 1'incus, eighty-six- , of Brooklyn, a veteran of the Civil war, was doing very nicely at the hospital after an operation in which a doctor had removed a Confederate bullet from his right Teg a bullet . he had harbored, without knowing it, for more than sixty-seve- n years. Mr. Pincus was a boy of nineteen when he found himself in an engagement which developed into the battle of Fredericksburg. He was carried off the field, wounded, but not very much. Just a Pear Blight Appears AVAILABLE SUFFOCATED Leave Space Between Rows So Horse May Be Used. The best plan for planting the garden is to have the crops in long rows, not' In beds! Lay out tle rows the longest way of the garden, preferably north and sourh, and have the garden long enough so that a horse1 tuny be used both in plowing the soil and in cultivating the crops. Plant the rows far enough apart to allow the use of a cultivator draWD by horse power. Much more profit may he derived from a garden cultivated with a horse. Too much hand weeding and hoeing is not only tedious and irksome, hut too often neglected besides being more expensive than horse labor. Stone garden plants are very tender and must not he planted in the spring garden until all danger of frost is XT Buy Sugar is Plan Nov SUBSCRIPTION 1.50 Per Year in Advance Wra. E. Marshall, Editor and Prop. matter Fot Ented as second-cl- a 8, 1929, at the post office Randolph, - ed c onstipation, stomach ills and other ments derange- of the sys--, tem so prevalent these days is ih even greater favor as a family medicine than in yoqr granducthera , day,. j . . , |