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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM. UTAH Feel Achy All Over? To ache all over In damp weather, or after taking a cold, Isnt natural, and often indicates kidney weakness. Uric acid causes many queer aches, pains and disorders of the organ?. Well kidneys keep uric acid down.' Tired, dizzy, nervous people would do well to try Doans Kidney Pills. They stimulate the kidneys to activity and so help dear the blood of Irritating poisons. An Idaho Case Mrs. Sarah E. Reed, Mountain Home, Idaho, says: 1 had an attack of kidney trouble and it grew serious In a short time. The pain came on suddenly and my kidneys seemed to out, give entirely. Doans Kidney Pills on acted my kidneys at once, strengthening them and ridding me of all the pains and aches. 1 have had no sign of kidney trouble since." Get Deans at Aey State, 50c Bex DOANS-VSFOSTER-MILBUR- CO N V BUFFALO. N. Y. Playing the piano by ear might not sound so bad If we didnt have to listen to It In the same way.' GOOD FOB HUNGRY CHILDREN Children love Skinners Macaroni and Spaghetti because of its delicious taste. It is good for theip and you can give them all they want. It is a great builder of bone and muscle, and does not make them nervous and Irritable like meat. The most economical and nutritious food known. Made from the finest Durum wheat. Write Skinner Mfg. Co Omaha, Nebr., for beautiful cook book. It Is sent free- to mothers. Adv. - ' Mikes Foolish Question. The talk 4opig at a recent social session turned to the propensity that some people have for asking foolish questions when this happy little Incident was recalled by Harry Fox, the STATE UTAH IDS Ebenezer A. Williams, a Resident since 1853, died at his home last week after a prolonged illness. Fire, believed to have been of incendiary' origin, destroyed a barn at American Fork belonging to Reuben Chipman.' Fred W. Kelly, a laborer, dropped dead in his room in Salt Lake from leart failure, superinduced by in alcohol. More than 400 Sunday school workers attended the AJpine stake Sunday school convention held at American Fprk on February 18. Fire originating from defective wiring damaged the machinery and contents of the Salt Lake planing mill, at Salt Lake, to the extent of 32,500. Canntw goods are today the nations staff of life," was the keynote idea of Kaysville ever-Indulgen- struck at the meeting of the Utah fruitgrowers held at Salt Lake last week. Johanna Peterson, 92 years of age, at one time an employee in the home of the late President John Taylor of the Mormon church, died February 16 at Salt Lake. According to reports received by the Uintah forest office, the snowfall in the back mountains this winter has not corresponded in depth with the fall on the lower levels. Joseph H. Mellen, 68 years of age, who was born in an emigrant wagon at Winter Quarters, Neb., while oh the way to this state, died February 16 at hi3 home in Salt Lake City. murder is charged in a complaint 'Issued against William O. McNair. He is alleged to have killed Edward T. Williams at Salt Lake on February 14 by shooting him with a DOUBLES EGG HARVEST of Yield Per Acre Can Be Greatly Increased Thereby. Work Can Be Done In Late Winter or Early Spring When Time Otherwise Would Be Lost Simple Tester Described. The use of milk in feeding chickens will double egg production, according to the poultry section of the Nebraska experiment station. The hen never lays an egg until all the ingredients necessary for the complete development of a chick are present. Since the egg contains protein as well as carbohydrates, any amount of carbohydrates fed In the form of grain will not offset the necessity of protein. Milk given Wjhe birds, either as a drink or In the form of wet mash, will double egg yields. Commercial meat scrap Is of equal value, and may be substituted when milk cannot be obtained. Farmer, is your time an hour? That sounds like a scheme, doesnt it? Well it isnt. J. C. Hackleman of the Missouri college of agriculture figures that you can make that much testing seed oorn. The average Missouri farmer acres of corn raises about twenty-si- x each year. He fails to test his seed corn whereby he loses $1.50 (this Is a conservative estimate) an acre. Mr, Hackleman says that about ten hours of actual labor would be required FARM MACHINERY Mr. Average worth .?4 , Birthdays mark the milestone our life. Make the occasion memorable with a gift from our store. A piece of Jewelry, a watch, a nd-constant and lasting pleasure. Our modest prices make buying diamo- easy. BOYD PARK FOUNDED 1003 MAKERS OF JEWELRY 60 RUSTS OUT More machinery rusts out than wears out. More machinery Is thrown away on account of a few parts giving out than because of the wearing out of the entire machine. Who pays the bill? Who keeps the many large maThe chinery concerns In business? fur-lined- . judgment e . -- Theres a ie Twenty-fiv- e years ago there was a much golf played In the United States as there Is baseball played In the central villages of the Fiji Islands. Which Is to say, practically none whatsoever, writes Grantland Rice in the New York Tribune. Yet facing 1917 there are 3,200 golf courses, covering more than 300,000 acres, Inhabited by something like 900, 000 players of both sexes, from twelve to eighty years of age. In the broad span of a sport no one can recall such a development as this In so short fli time. The change from 1890 to 1917 Is al--j most beyond belief. No one knows earlier conditions better than Jack n Clark, the professional al the Madison Country club, Madison Conn. Ill never forget, he says, when 1 brought my clubs from Scotland through the custom house In Boston back In May, 1890. The custom houssj officer first thought they were a pe culiar brand of walking stick. He insisted they could be nothing else, and my Scotch brogue was too much to make him understand. My brotheg e course al Bob and I laid out a West Medford, Mass., and when we started playing the" entire community) laughed at us. The kids In the next field were playing baseball, and thejj thought we were crazy. But .a few of them consented to try It out, and lm took up the game when theyj found it so much harder than it looked. "The trouble in the early days, continued Clark, was loaning golf balls and clubs. When we lost what few balls we had, we had to send back to Scot land for more, and wait six weeks, aq we couldnt buy any over here. Til never forget when I walked Into a big sporting goods store in Boston in 1911. I told the salesman I wanted a golf club. I know what you want, he said, and soon returned with a shinny stick. You cal, it golf over there, he told me, but we call It shinny over here. And it was all I could do to make him understand the two games were not the same. I farmer. When other lines of business are slack or dead, there Is practically no decrease In the manufacture of farm machinery, because the farmer Is a steady buyefc and always In the field for another machine or for some new type of farm machinery. How waste may be stopped:' L By more careful selection. 2. By buying from reliable dealers and manufacturers. 3. By keeping machinery in repair. 4. By sheltering machinery when not In use. well-know- six-hol- BUILDING FOR FARM SCALES n next-doo- Un- Years Ago. I er Sheltering and Keeping Things in Good Repair. Ra-pol-e, OF GOLF IS VOGUE Many Americans Now Play Game known to Them Twenty-Fiv- e Much Waste May Be Stopped by Prop. pistol. Upon the showing made in the ap plication for commutation- - Orazio the young Italian who murdered Amos B. Neff of Mill Creek, has had the death sentence commuted to Ufa SALT LAKE CITY MAIN STREET AMAZING -- First-degre- e imprisonment. actor: A perfect automobile highway, 100 One Sunday morning last summer miles long, from Lund, on the Los Anthe weather was so exceedingly hot In & Salt Lake railroad, to beautiPats happy heme that he took him- geles Zion canyon in southern ful Little self out to the back porch for his will be completed in May or Utah, Sabbath shave. announced. is it While Pat was performing the oper- June, The organization of bands of mercy ation of amputating his bristles, his the children of Utah Is to be among r neighbor, Mike, sauntered with vigor, according to Mrs pushed on out the back porch adjoining. D. Pitt 9! Salt Lake, who is Tom remarked Shure, Pat, pleasantly state superintendent of the mercy deMike, leaning on the partition railing, how comes it thot yez aire shavin on partment of the W. C. T. U. As ar result of striking a missed the outside this mornln? Begorra, Moike, an how can 01 help hole in the Gold Chain mine at MamIt? responded Pat, his eyes merrily moth, Wilford Simpson, a miner, 26 twinkling through a mass of lather. years old, will lose the sight of one Do yez, think for 'wan minute, thot eye, in' addition to other injuries from which he will be maimed for life. Oim EvePhiladelphia ' . Saloonmen of Salt Lake are already ning Telegraph. preparing for the statewide prohibition Orders Are Orders. bill which becomes effective August 1, The new doorkeeper at the museum and as a result methods are being turnstile had learned a book of rules adopted looking forward to the ridding by heart before taking over the job. of their places of the stock of intoxiHere, sir, you must leave your umcating liquors. brella at the door, he said to a visitor Word has been received that Clinwho had failed to hand over that artiton Ray of Salt Lake, who was aboard .. cle. . the steamship Turino, torpedoed by a But I havent an umbrella, the vissubmarine, February 14, is in care of itor pleaded. Furness Withey steamboat company Then go back and get one, said in Liverpool and is being given the the keeper. No one Is allowed to best of care. pass in here unless he leaves his umwith un By hitting the bulls-ey- e brella at the door. erring skill from the standing, kneeling or sitting positions, Charles W. Sadley of Salt Lake City has qualified as marksman in the United States mar rine corps,- - ccording to an official bulletin from Washington headquarters.Information, that Harry Wood, convicted by a Jury on a charge of as saultwith intent to commit murder, confessed his part in the attempted street car robbery of October 30, 1916 to Charles Chambers, another prisoner in the county jail at Ogden, has been made public. Ogdens 1919 Golden Wedding anniversary celebration, which it is planned to hold in commemoration of the completion of the Union Pacific, the first transcontinental railroad in the United States, will receive the combined with hearty support of the states representatives at Washington. good By a vote of nearly four to one repcitizens from all parts of resentative counts in business Utah county, who met with the counnow-a-day- s. ty commissioners at Provo to discuss miles of conthe proposed sixty-threcrete pavement, declared in favor of bonding the' county to its limit for Grape-Nut- s permanent highways. Although slot machines of the usual FOOD type have been banned in Ogden for some time, the police department and balanced sheriffs, office are considerably supplies aroused over a new trade stimulanourishment for tor which has made its appearance in more than thirty Ogden stores, sturdy muscles and say they will have to go. The Delta Commercial club, with and active brains. of the Salt Lake Comthe mercial club, is now engaged in forReason mulating definite plans for advertising the Greater Delta" country and Ao change in price, quality making a concerted effort to get as many settlers as possible Into the disor qf pacKptfe, trict to farm the many now idle acres. well-know- Annlvoroarioo TEST ALL SEED CORN Good Manner of Protection Is Shown In Illustration Shed Is Built to Side of Barn. A good way of protecting the farm scales Is shown In the accompanying diagram. The shed, .which, is" 20 feet long, 14 feet wide and 14 feet high at the lowest side, is built to the side of Corn From Tested 8eed. a barn. It 'is also used for to test the seed for the 26 acres. By storing buggies, et.c., writes Silas Funk such testing the yield can be Increased of McLean county, Illinois, In Farm and at least $1.50 worth. Hence the time required to test the seed is worth about $40, or about $4 an hour.. The more corn a farmer grows the more money he can make by the test. The man who raises 100 acres can Increase his earnings at least $150f This is practically clear gain since testing is done during late winter or early spring when the time would otherwise be lost. One of the simplest testers Is the sand box or sawdust. It consists of a Shed for Farm Scales. box about 4 Inches deep and 30 inches two about Inches of sand with square, or sawdust In the bottom to hold the Home. A hole 6 feet square Is cut in i moisture or to keep water from stand- the side of barn near the roof to per- mlt of loading hay on the scales so the ing around the corn. A piece of old desired amount can be loaded. The absheeting or other cloth that will sorb moisture, but will not allow It to large end doors are 10 feet wide by 12 stand on the surface, should be feet high. The small door opposite the stretched over the surface and marked scale box has a window In It. There Is also a door for driving stock on to off Into squares. Put six kerscale from the cow barn. The the nels from various portions of the midscale, being always In the dry, is never to be tested Into one dle of each ear of these squares and give the ears and out of balance. squares corresponding labels. , Cover the box to prevent drying and keep it SWINE CRAVE FOR MINERALS at room temperature about 70 degrees Fahrenheit for six days, then find the Supply of Coal, Wood Ashes and Charears from which kernels failed to gercoal Should Be Kept Before Animals at All Times. minate, throw them into the feed box and retain those that showed a good k Provide plenty of stone coal, wood strong test. Figures, based on the acreage and ashes and charcoal for the swine. yields in Missouri during the last eight Youve seen the sows trying to eat the years, indicate that the losses incident soft stones they root up. to neglect of seed corn testing will You have heard them cracking someamount to about $11,000,000 this year. thing they found in the ground. They That amount Is worth saving. want minerals and especially lime. I 60-fo- ot i SOILS NEED MUCH DRAINAGE WOOD LOT VERY CONVENIENT Results Given of Surveys Made by Important Feature of Agriculture and United States Department of Worthy of More Attention From All Farmers. Agriculture. meae Learn to Use Both Hands. So far as many of the victims of war are concerned, It would cer-the . alnly J?eem that, ambidexterity would a blessing, remarks the have Medical Record. A man who can use both hands In his work Is much less helpless when he is disabled than one who can 'use only his right hand. When a man has been bereft of his right arm and has to earn his living, the question Is raised In the vocational homes whether to fit him with an artificial hand and teach him to use this or train him in the use of his left hand. A great deal of success has been attained already In the training! of disabled soldiers in the use of tho left hand, and unless the objections brought against this can be sustained by more conclusive evidence than any, that has yet been brought forward It would seem to be decidedly preferable in the majority of --cases to, train the left hand than to make the cripple dependent upon an artificial hand. . '"v Youth and Old Age. have a theory that old age Is In better touch with youth than middle age. The grandslres and grandames of all time are evidence. Through a beautiful foresight of nature the old folk are living their young days over again In memory, and yet have lived lohg enough to see .hat f youth is full of Joyance and age oi car the care Is a mat.er of no reat ccot .t while the Joyance was the rich reward of life. Robert M. Gay in the tlantlc. I Every farm should have admail Forestry on the farm is toan feature of agriculImportant day ture and ought to receive considerate attention from farmers. A wood lot Is very convenient to have, not only as a source of fuel in times of scarce and v .Why? d coal, but to furnish fence Why does the sound of a bell cease posts and timber for various uses and When you touch it? Because sound is to add beauty to the landscape and to waves in the air which strike due afford and shelter and shade, premises, comfort to a large extent for all the the drum of the ear. When a bell or gong Is struck It vibrates and produces occupants of the farm. waves In the air that reach the ear. When you touch the bell the vibration Cleanliness of Milk. . is stopped and there are no more sound The cleanliness of the milk depends waves. Plant American Mountain Ash. to a considerable extent upon The American mountain ash should the barn built so the cow willhaving keep be planted for their red autumn fruits. herself clean. Many Birds Lost ' Birds also are fond of these. Every spring the lights of. the lighthouses along the coast lure to deNeglect of Machinery. struction myriads of birds en route a notebook Do you keep for record-gi- g What would the fanner think matters of Interest about the farm manufacturer who neglected hisof the from their winter homes in the South to their summer nesting places in the ind orchard? the North, j "According to the soil surveys made by the United States department of agriculture about 65 or 70 per cent of soils here need drainage, said ProOf this amount from fessor Crabb. 23 to 30 per cent Is badly in need of drainage and from 40 to 50 per cent would be greatly benefited by drainage. Orchard surveys that have been made by the New York state department of agriculture show that from 25 to 30 per cent of the orchards are only fairly drained1, 10 to 12 per cent arepoorly drained and 2 to 10 per cent are badly lq need of drainage.- - -- Wood lot. high-price- , |