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Show r 4 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, THE BOX ELDER NEWS, 181. WHEN Somehow or other it is a genuine pleasure to compile statistics on the dairy industry. Dont suppose the time will ever come when we will not be interested in listening to dairymen tell of the achievments of their cows land also in running the little barrel churn at home everytime the cream jar gets full. 'Habit is a wonderful 'thing and a habit that is established (by ten years of constant application is pretty apt to remain with a person for a long period of years. Here is a story that was' told only last Saturday and the facts therein presented, are vouched for by a truth'ful man and his good wife, The fam-fu- l man and his kood wile. The tons of alfalfa owns a cow. jiy hay were purchased at 20 pel- ton; 20 was in vested in beet pulp and the man of the house estimates that this amount of feed will kept his cow in every Toes Semi-Weekl- FACTS COW 2ljr Snx Elder SJema Published dav and Friday. HE BOX ELDER NEWS COMPANY VICTOR E. MADSEN, EDITOR. I Office at Brigham City, Utah, as Second Class Matter. Entered at the Post NATION WIDE PROHIBITION. While the friends of the saloon and intoxicating liquor generally predict national ruin as a result of the ratifistates of the notcation by thirty-siion, of the amendment to the national constitution to forever prohibit the manufacture, sale and use of intoxi- eating liquors in the United States, .here are journals of national reputa lion which hail the eighteenth amend- ment as "the most important measure of social and economic legislation ad- opted since the Republic was formed." These are the words used by the Phi la- delphia "North American" in its characterization of the amendment. In the last issue of the Literary Digest, this same journal goes on to say: x - fam-Tw- o - condition for five monts. Dur- ,ng the summer( the anlmal is p1at.e(i on g00(j pa8ture for ?2 per month for a period of 5 months, making a total of $10. To keep the cow for ten mon tjjg pa8ja Up0n which these facts (were conducted, the man paid out 470. The animal came in fresh five monfh8 aS and each month th family as 80 817.85 worth of milk besides havinK aH the milk, cream and butter they need for the house. For five months the milk sales have amounted to 189.25,. The owner estimates that I18 cow willcontinue to give milk tor another 5 months but he does not good It means a conservation of national wealth which within ten years will equal the colossal costs of the war. By ending a wasted expenditure of 12,000,000,000 a year, it will divert that sum to the satisfying demands for nec- essaries and comforts of life, creating incomparably the greatest new market any legislation could open to America It will multiply the man- power of the nation and enhance the of its workers, giving America substantial advantage over those countries which continue to carry the alcoholic burden. It will conserve vast stores of foodstuffs and other raw materials, ease the strain upon transportation, end a tremendous waste of fuel, and release scores of thousands of woikers for productive It will relieve industry employment. and labor of a heavy load dse to in-- efficiency, costly accidents, working time. j tend that the animal will keep up the present production. In order to Imate the future production conservat-ively, he just cuts it in a little more than half and places an even $40 as the amount of milk sales for the next five months. This will make the total milk sales for ten months 8129 25. The cost of maintenance was 870 so the family cow will yield a net cash profit of $39.20 in ten months. Ther remains two months to be reckoned in the keep of the animal but she herself has more than provided for that by producing a calf and a lot of good fert-ilizer. And this is a city cow, mind you- and yet 80 many fartner9 pass up the dairy department with a shrug of their shoulders and the exclamation that there ,s nothing ,n est-ski- ll a 1 lost and ; 1 These are but suggestions of the economic benefits in the social aspect the change will Immeasurably reduce the evils of vice, crime, illiteracy. insanity, preventable disease, and It will lower the cost to the Over In Cache valley the farmers community of private and public char- - have made dairying their profession ity, policing and court administration, Hnd farming a side line. A brother to the upkeep of jails, almshouses, and our worthy townsman, Mr L. S. Pond, asylums. It will do more than any;who resides at Lewiston, is milking other one thing to eradicate the slum twenty head of cows and his milk from cities and rural districts. It will check last month amounted to a few remove the deadliest single source qt dollars less than five hundred, disease, the effects of which are eran-ad a en acre farm today- I de emitted from generation to generation, it and whatever credit I had mortgage standand thu3 will make for a rising lefL to buV a dozen good cows. Then ard of national health. Ide just settle down, so far as worry- It will have a radically beneficial ing about making a living is concer- effeet in politics, especially in large mjSfer wolf to howl ne( an(j tejj 0 cities, .where the saloon and the liquor jlig ,jarndest vote have been the mainstays of mac hine despotism and corruption. And in States like Pennsylvinia is will emOVER-ACIDIT- Y ancipate the judiciary from a function which not only was degrading to the of the stomach has upset many a courts, but which led to the selection nights resL If your stomach is of men for the bench because of their dissolve two or three - i 1 - d, advocacy of the traffic. Beyond all these things there will be gains not to be computed in the liberation to new life of moral and spiritual forces and faculties which have been benumbed by the crushing weight of this evil and the hopeless struggle against it. And who shall measure the value it will bring in hope and happiness to homes that have been shadowed by want and despair? on the tongue before retiring and enjoy refreshing sleep. The purity and guaranteed by goodness of SCOTT & BOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTTS EMULSION situ, Heavy, impure blood makes a muddy pimply complexion, headaches, nausea, For babys croup, Willies dally cuts Thin blood makes you and bruises, mother's sore throat, indigestion. Grandmas lameness. Dr. Thomas weak, pale and sickly. For pure blood, Eclectic Oil the household remedy second digestion, use Burdock Blood 30c and 60c. adv tf. Bitters. adv tf. at all stores. 81-2- Anrt 53C .iamrnifiiiiifi YOUR DOCTOR 81 YOU HAVE HAD wHEN HIS he knows PRESCRIPTIONS HE POUNDED HERE BECAUSE - KNOWS that COM- FULL i WELL THE SUPERLATIVE QUALITY DRUGS AND CHEMICALS AND THE OF OUR CAREFUL AND SKILLFUL WAY IN WHICH WE COMPOUND PRESCRIPTIONS, AND HE HAS THE UTMOST CONFIDENCE IN ALL MEDICINE WE PREPARE. THE WOMEN Ogden, January 29, 1919. With the Bit of Ancient Chinese History That Is minimum basic price for hogs retain Decidedly Interesting Coming ed for the month ef Fpbuary, no upJust at This Time. ward or downward change being pro In the World Outlook Welthy B. vided, livestock men belive that farmIlonsinger gave this entertaining bit ers and livestock raisers of the entire of ancient Chinese history. It only will continue the policy of goes to prove, once aguin, that there country finishing their hogs before they ship, is nothing new under the sun. In olden times, when, as Barrie tells them to packing plants, realizing that ns, the world was so young that in this finishing there is the very best pieces of the original eggshell still ad- profit. hered to it, long before the Tai Iiugs Grain prices have lowered somewhat or rebels ravaged this part in the weeks since the armistice was of China, the two provinces of Flang'd are prospects of furand Fukien were quarreling. The men signed and there all grain excepting in reductions ther went out to fight and left the women for hogs, as well the As wheat. prjcp at home, even us we do today. The women did not know anything about as for cattle and sheep, has been planting crops or puddling rice fields. maintained at the former figures, the At first they Just let things slide, profit for the livestock raiser is rel hoping the men would soon return. atlvely better. But the feuds grew fiercer and more Meat products from Ogden, as well men were called out. The fighting as other packing centers of the toun-trreached the Kan and Ilsia Klang. are now being shipped to many Finally all the strong men disappeared from their ancestral halls. In the swift Europen lands. The markets of the years that followed the women found, world are open to the meats of this to their surprise, that they could make country. This demand can not be the rire shops prosper. More junks satisfied by the shipments of one week, were suiliug up the river 4han in for- one month, or one year. Until the depmer days and clean little houses lined leted heards of European stocks are the shore for long distances. America must supply But although everything was going the great law of meat. Under this beautifully and the women were makand demand, this will mean ing more money than they ever had be- supply of good prices for livecontinuance fore, the feeling gradually grew that no town eould be complete without stock Surplus grain stocks in various husbands. lands, together with grain planting A vote was accordingly taken and this year, will solve the cereal problem the majority decided that husbands and through this same law of supply should be imported. and demand, cause a price reduction Enter husbands from a neighboring will be clan. The women hating conceived for grain feeds. The result stock feeds who his the farmer the seiieme, winked it out logically. that hara double will his with reap crops Husbands were soon given to understand that they were husbands only, vest of profit. and imported at that. With this in view, livestock men "We shall still he managers of our farmers should arrange their declare, lands and rice shops. We will run this so as to raise even more cattle, plans town and see that no harm befalls the and hogs practicularly the sheep You are to look after the protinee. this latter year. So the dictum ran and the children. men subsided into mere men ami became useful to the community. So the women managed with a high hand In Ilsia Klang, just as our men did in the Flint age. And the women NOTICE TO OWNERS OF DOGS. In Hsia Kiting have kept ou munngiug Notice is hereby given that all just as our men liked to manage a e world eeu to the present owners or keepers of a dog in Brigham day. City, must make application to the City Recorder on or before February Maine Producing Flour. 15th for a 1919 license tag, male dogs Flour mills, once fairly numerous In 81.00 female dogs 83.00. Any owner hut largely eliminated by Maine, of to comply with this a fails who dog Western competition, are being restored through the operation of the regulation, will be fined 810 and the war, the shortage of transportation dog will be killed. The matter of secfacilities, the Conservation of wheat uring a license tag is strictly up to flour and consequent food regulations, the owner or keeper of the dog and if and the increased acreage of wheat in he fails wilfully or by reason of forgthis state, says the Lewiston (Me.) etfulness, the penalty will be the same Journal. Maine people will once again John H. Burt Marshal. have the opportunity of euting bread made of Maine flour ground In a Maine mill from Maine raised wheat. The increased wheat acreage in Maine this PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP year has been simply astonishing. And NOTICES there is a big demand for all the flour that can be ground from all the wheat Consult County Clerk or respective raised in Maine this year, lt Is estimated that In rural Maine every year signers for further information. there is consumed about 170,000 barrels of flour, which has been shipped NOTICE TO CREDITORS. into the state from the West. The of Erastus Christensen, deceai-ed- . Estate sating of cars for transportation for other conninilities Is therefore a very Creditors will preset- - claims witn large one if the flour used could be raised and ground in Maine. Brewer, vouchers to the undersigned at the for instance, has an flour office of Nels Jenson. Brigham Qity, mill which Is tHndng out 40 barrels Utah, on or before the 22nd day of of flour In 24 hours. The mill, up to March, A. D. 1919. a year ago, was a saw mill. The w heat EMMA CHRISTENSEN, storage capuclty ls 5,000 bushels. long-haire- A 20th Century Drug Store. f JAGE Y LIVESTOCK LETTER. TAKE CHARGE yv(l Your Living Room ough if. I is the one room in the hoi where the need of comfort ai conveniences is greatest. He the family relaxes. Ilere t folks really live. Is your livii room really liveable? Bibli 1 ef- . Less Cement Produced. Statistics of the cement industry In the United Stages in 1917, prepared by the United States geological survey, Indicate that the total shipments of Portland cement from the mills amounted to 90,703,474 barrels, valued In bulk at the mills at 8122,745,088. This represents a deerense in quantity of 41 per. cent and an increase In value of 17.8 per cent compared with 1910. The production or Portland cement in 1917 was 92,814,202 barrels. Compared bestt ns ! with. 91,521,198 barrels in 1916, an increase of 1.4 per cent. This produc- tion holds the record, the next highest output, 92,097,131 Imrrels, having been in 1913. r A SOI tie la Abral jeDai diiidr ifroni toad a large overstaffed sofa tin. will be popular with every on some charming floor and tall lamps. At moderate prices yo can select from our exteusiv collections articles that w i heighten the hospitality of you living room. little Yep, Itll Do the ResL Dear me, observed Mrs. Languid, lazily, as she settled herself in her steamer chair and gazed leisurely about her through her one-holorgHow wonderfully convenient nette. thee ocean steamers are, to he sure! Why, we wont even be troubled to punish little Algernon when he Is have to do Is to naughty. All lay him across a coll of rope In one of those spanking breezes we read ao much about ely roosed Israel High. beta, i prof nine mart! n of - Bi A(U li Stohl Furniture Co. ami .r mi him houi'l i nay to a and s of unci Cmd THE MOST uklin DANGEROUS human body are so important to health and long life as the kidneys. When they slow up and commence to lag in thuir duties, look out! Find out what the trouble i without delay. Whenever you feel nervous, weak, dizzy, suffer from sleeplessness, or have pains in the back wake up at once. Your kidneys need help. These are sign to warn you that your kidneys are not performing their functions properly. They are only half doing their work and aTe allowing impurities to accumulate and be converted into uric acid and other poisons, which are causing you distress and will destroy you unless they are driven from your system. No organs of th DISEA Get some GOLD MEDAL Haarla Capsules at once. They are an old preparation used all over the wor centuries. They contain only old toned, soothing oils combined and system-cle- i herbs, well known and used by cians in their daily practice. MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules ai ported direct from the laborjitor Holland. They are convenient to and will eithir give p.ompt rei your money will be retunded. A, them at any dTug store, but be s pet the original Imported MEDAL brand. Accept no subst In sealed packages. Three sizes strength-givin- g riming Time NEGLECTED ARRIVED. WE PRODUCE THE HAVE PRUNING IMPLEMENTS GOOD BEST ON THE MARKET. ALSO A GOOD S3 TIME TO OIL HARNESS AND REPAIR THE FARM IMPLEMENTS. Administrator Jan 28, IPATED WE HAVE ANTIC- EVERY WANT ALONG THESE LINES. A. D. 1919. Leroy B. Young, THE FARMERS FRIEND. Attorney for Administrator. armers Cash Union WE ARE THE FARMERS FRIEND. i BRIGHAM AND TREMONTON. 8 Attorney for Administrator. TO CREDITORS. Smith, Sr., deceased. Licensed Embalmers residence or to LeRoy B. Young, Attorney, at his office, on or before the Attorney for Administrator. th .id rou I Date of first publication A. D. 1919. LeRoy B. Young. Li of i with FRUIT. 28th day of March, A. D. 1919. ARTHUR P. SMITH, Administrator of the Estate of William Smith, Sr., deceased. Date of first publication January 24 libr to A he TREES CANNOT present claims with undersigned at his I8 wo rl of E We have some big easy chan that will make it more invitin' Nels Jenson, Attorney for Administratrix. NOTICE Estate of William Creditors' will vouchers to the 1 1 itbeh HAS 28, A. D. 1919. W. J. LOWE. n on rij Our Furniture Will Increase Its Comforts A. D. 1919. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Charles L. Kempton, deceased. Creditors will presfent claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Naf. Utah or to her attorney W. J. Lowe First National Bank Bldg. Brigham City, Utah, on or before the 29th day bf May, A. D. 1919. JANE L. KEMPTON. Administratrix of the estate of Charles L. Kempton. deceased. Date of first publication January d .pa, u W Date of first publication January 2i, NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estate of Sadato Fujiwara, deceased Creditors will present claims wiMi vouchers to the undersigned at his residence, or Leroy B. Young at his office in Brigham City, on or befote the 1st day of April, A. D. 1919. BRIGHAM NELSON, li 4 umn-mml- j shir , ;ln Legal Notices Soy Bean Crop Important. The soy bean wus introduced into the United States as curly as 1$04, but It Is only during the last decade that it has become a crop of much importance. At the present time lt is most In nmnj largely grown for forage. sections, especially southward and in some parts of the corn belt, a very profitable industry has developed from the growing of seed. During the past few years the acreage has Increased to a very considerable extent. The huge jield of seed, the excellent'qual-it- y of forage, the ease of grow Ing aud harvesting the crop, its freedom from Insect enemies and plant diseases, and the possibilities of the seed for the production of oil and meul and as a food all tend to give this crop a high potential Importance and assure its greater ngricntttirnl development in America. a Hid y, 1 0 tit d ss Pharmacy SEMI-WEEKL- v" Administratrix, Ki-moi- t SATISFIED 1'' - 's, ...and... Funeral Directors D. R. Young, Brigham City. Utah. Day Phone 29. Night LADY ATTENDANT Phone, 279-j- - Pru 'he i nu Unix 5.527 |