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Show I'., THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH Making One Ijree s&liUEilLMTUISl NEWHOUSE HOTEL DAIRY RECORD QUITE USEFUL Profitable Practice to Keep Daily Tab on Cow Where There la No Teat Association. 400 Keeping daily records of the milk yield of each cow, where there Is no cow testing association, Is a profitable practice! This Is shown by reports on herd records received by the United States Department of Agriculture. An Instance where a herd has been greatly Improved without increasing its numbers (by more than one cow) is found in a report from Oklahoma. ROOMS MOST 10DEKN 30 Roms Wtt 70 Rum 125 Raaos 100 Raaaa 75 Bam HOTEL Brlk-'- nt Bath- - Oat Willi VEST OF CHICAGO perm $1.50; Tw penan $2.50 pm 32.00; 32.50k Twa pma 33.00 Taa pnaaa 33.50 ptraaa An pama 34.00 pama 3100 0m praaa 33.00; With Mb With BaA-- Oaa Twa 34.00; pars Popdar Priced Coft Slop aid Dims Headquarters BOYD PARK By CARLILE P. WINSLOW. Director, Forest Products Laboratory. 1920. Address at Decennial Celebration, July OREST products laboratory is a fed- JEWELERS y . herd-recor- n j d WISCONSIN ' BOYD PARK BLbG 160 MAIN STREET eral institution under the forest service bf the United States Department of Agriculture, and is located at Madison, Wis. The results of the experiments made at this institution are open to the public, and on any of the subjects treated briefly in this article may be obtained in detail from the laboratory free. This is the only large institution of its kind in the world, although a number of other countries are now planning to adopt the idea.' Rudyard Kipling once ' wrote: Twelve hundred million men are spread About this earth, and I and you Wonder, when you and I are dead What will those luckless millions do? If we change, the closing lines of this stanza to read: And I and you, Wonder, when all the trees are gone, What will those luckless millions do? The kindly sarcasm of the Kipling humor disappears and we are confronted with a question of vast importance for our consideration and action. The importance of the broad problems would possibly be more sharply recognized if we view the situation from a somewhat less altruistic and international standpoint and consider only the one hundred million people within the borders of the United States. Consider for a moment the exOZ52T OF fMX 2&aZCJ3ZZZ22ZZri5& tent to which forest products enter Into the comforts, conveniences and pleasures of many, if not and direct such organize, correlate, day, and an annual sales value of over $15,000,000. all of this vast multitude of people. effort must in the long run, bring greater progImproved methods of turpentining developed by You rise in the morning from your wooden bed ress, in less time, with' lesvxpense and , with the forest service resulted in increased yields and woodand walk about on the wooden floor of your ' less injury to timber with net savings aggregating greater saving. , en home; you bathe with soap probably containWork of this character requires the services of $4,000,000 per year.. in or with a from ing produced product part highly-traine- d These few samples alone show combined annual specialists along widely varying wood, anoint your face with a lotion containing" lines. The foresters knowledge of tree growth is Increases, in production and decrease in waste alcohol very likely produced from wood waste, put necessary to the engineer studying the mechanical aggregating $30,000,000. They should serve to on your hose manufactured from wood fiber, step for you the value and importance of properties of various trees In order that he may crystallize into your leather shoes requiring tannin from wisely select for study those species which are, or industrial research. Results, of course, cannot wood for their manufacture, and then proceed to ' be obtained may become, available for use. The engineers Patience is required and overnight. breakfast where you sit upon a wooden chair, in efforts are not always quickly crowned with suc-- . knowledge Is necessary to the physicist engaged front of a wooden table and read the daily news In problems of drying wood In order that the effect cess, but it cannot be doubted that over any reareceived over telegraph lines supported by woodof such treatment on the mechanical properties sonable period of years, economies resulting from en poles from a paper made of wood pulp and The pathologists knowlmay not! be overlooked. organized research so greatly exceed the expense ' printed with ink manufactured from a forest Involved that there cany be no question of its deedge is necessary feoth to the engineer and product. If reasonably prosperous, you now jourphysicist in order to determine the ejfect of decay sirability. ' ney to your office in an automobile with wooden on the properties under investigation and equally The Lumber and wood-usin- g industries represent spokes in the wheels, probably travel at least part is his knowledge necessary to the chemist pursome of the greatest and most Important manufacof the way over a wooden pavement and finally suing his work on the development of durable turing and industrial developments of the country. settle yourself in your office surrounded by wooden Of the nations industries they rank second in glues, on preservatives to prevent trimmings and furniture and dig into the daily invested capital, first in labor employed, and sec- decay, and on prevention of decay in pulpwood letters and reports which are again dependent and wood pulp. The knowledge of the dendrolond in annual value of products. The forest prod--uct-s upon the supply of wood pulp paper. H, by ogist is necessary to all in order that the identity laboratory is the. only institution of organchance, you have occasion to travel, you board of the species under study may be determined with ized research engaged upon the problems of these a wooden railroad car (or at least one made io certainty, and in order that peculiarities of their industries, and those problems yet untouched and appear like wood) and travel over tracks supstructural anatomy may not be. overlooked. Imporunexplored are many and of The food which you An organization of such men provided with ported by wooden cross-tietance. What, for example, of the possibilities eat, the clothes which you wear, the materials which may result from the development of perproper equipment,, materials and facilities for and supplies necessary for the comforts of your t work cannot in the long run fall to secure results glues or admanently durable and water-proo- f home and the conduct of your business, all are of value. It is such an Organization that we hesives and their application to the use of mareceived in containers, some of wood and some have attempted to develop. I shall make no atterial too small or too poor a grade for other servof fiber, but practically all of forest products. ice? What of their application to forest economies tempt to describe it in detail. Suffice It to say These accustomed comforts and privileges of Wat prior to 1917 it comprised a personnel of through the increased valuer thus given to small etistence are dependent upon a very wide vasecond-growt- h material? approximately 80, expanding during the next 18 months to 500, and at present includes slightly at of the sulphite-pul- p riety of industries, dependent to greater or less liquor problem involvdegree upon forest products. These supply useless than half that number. The aggregate exing the possibility of utilizing the 55 per cent of ful and necessary occupation to some million or the wood fed into the pulp digesters, and now period are in penditures over the entire ten-yemore people. They include 20 per cent of the the neighborhood of two million dollars a yearly lost in the waste sulphite liquors? What of the 276,000 manufacturing plants In the country. average of about $200,000., This Is but an inproblems of packing, boxing and crating of vaThe future of these varied and tremendous inrious materials and commodities for shipment and significant sum when the breadth of the field and dustries Is dependent upon a supply of raw mamagnitude of the problems are considered. The transportation when conservative estimates show results of much of the work cannot, of course, be terial; their ultimate and greatest success dea possible theoretical annual saving to the counpendent upon the wise selection and most effquoted in dollars and cents. Certain other retry of three hundred million dollars? What of the icient handling of this raw material. This means need for Improvement and the. method of treatsults, however, enable the use of such a yard, that authentic knowledge of the properties of the ment and handling of piling and dock timbers In measure, and a few of them will, I am sure, material and how to most efficiently utilize' them . serve to convince you that organized industrial water Infested with marine borers which destroy is, in the long run, essential to their continuation research is-paying proposition., the piling within 18 months after placement and on a sound economic basis. cause an annual replacement aggregating millions , The building and construction trade, for exThese considerations inevitably lead us to the-- ; ample, uses annually approximately five and a of dollars in the various harbors of the nation? half billion feet fer structural purposes where What of the waning supply of hardwoods and the forests, and here again we are confronted with a Is This demand and necessity for knowledge of the propmaterial is need for authentic knowledge of the properties worth important. strength o'f South American and other foreign woods as' erties and possible uses and utilization of the Investigations at the forest roughly $200,000,000. many available species of trees. Without It, It is compared to those of our own country for which products laboratory on the mechanical properties of American woods has given knowledge permit- impossible to know which trees to cut or which they may ultimatelybe needed as substitutes? to grow, what is their value, how beat to utilize Slight progress and success applied to only a ting a 20 per cent increase in allowable working stresses in structural timbers. This means a possmall per cent of evn the limited field above them, or what to do with the enormous quantity of waste material. sible saving of $40,000,000 annually; if results are suggested, will result in annual, savings greater It was such broad conceptions as these that than the total expenses for the entire forest prodactually applied to only 10 per cent of such maperiod. Such ucts laboratory for the past ten-yeled to the development Of the forest products terial, the annual saving will equal $4,000,000. not from reresult In will 1910 established was to loss which of for and course, only claims the The commodities damage by savings, laboratory of confines the but States the the United within laboratory, of railroads Department service. search Agriamount forest in shipment actually paid by ' will necessitate the dissemination .and application with the university of to $100,000,000 annually. Proper nailing develculture, In of these results in. industrial service. Wisconsin. Federal appropriations maintain the oped and recommended by the forest products The log yard shown In the photograph reprolaboratory, and adopted by the National Associaorganization and provide necessary supplies and duced herewith has probably held more species tion of Box Manufacturers, and through them by equipment The university provides the buildings of wood than any other in the world. The logs . and light, heat and power. many companies and shippers, if conservatively 1 save cent of Inis this to called loss but ,, an means are cut by an electrical sawmill. forest laboratory estimated The per products Another photograph shows the main building a total saving of $1,000,000 a year. stitution of industrial research. Its object Is to and useful on and of the six needed to house the experimental disseminate Work apply plywood for glues knowledge only acquire, uses and methods of on carried at the utilization the the laboratory during of equipment of the laboratory. properties, airplanes The third photograph gives a glimpse of the war emergency alone saved the War department of all forest products. . This is a broad field of almost unlimited scope ; the surface has been but ; $6,000,000 in the procurement of such material apparatus used in making cattle food from saw,. dust. The sawdust is being raked out of the .during a 12 months period. partially scratched. Fifteen minutes cooking in treating cylinder. Investigations carried on at the laboratory durIt has been said that research Is primarily a this cylinder with dilute acid under steam pres matter of men who work upon the frontiers of ing the past year regarding the use of. hull fiber sure converts a part of the wood into sugar 'and Recotton linters for pulp and paper, and second-cu- t knowledge, conquering the new domains. the remainder digestible. Feeding experimatter renders fact for as of this done tons a is made available done has be search may purpose, 200,000 ments are now in progress and show that the and has resulted in the establishment of large Individually, separately, disconnectedly and progsawdust ration. cows thrive on a 'one-quarte- r ress of some sort will undoubtedly result But to plants with potential production of 300 tons per infor-matio- and Recording Milk. The dairymans cream checks for a given month amounted to $78.42, the cream being obtained from a herd of 27 cows. One year later, after doing work, he was able with a herd of 28 cows, just one more than he had at the earlier date, to sell cream to the value of $223.60, or nearly three times as much a pretty good return for care given to culling the herd and improving the management. While the current prices for butter-fa- t have Increased somewhat, they have not trebled in a year, so it is obvious that there has been a large Increase in the productiveness of the herd. HAS FINE HERDS Ranks Third Among States Active in . Eradicating Tuberculosis Is First. Min-neso- ta . r - Recent field reports on official tuberculin testing in Wisconsin show large gains in the number of herds in that state accredited as being free from tuberculosis. In the month of May Wisconsin made the largest gain of any state, with an Increase of 47 accredited herds. Although all reports have not yet been analyzed, the June records are expected to show Wisconsin, with a further gain of 92 accredited herds, still making the most rapid progress. Although last year about eighth in rani compared with other states active radicating bovine tuberculosis, the ledger state has recently forged to third place. Minnesota is first with 500 accredited herds, and Virginia is second with 337. On July 31 Wisconsin had 302 accredited herds. The figures are from records of the federal bureau of animal Industry based on field reports up to July Si, 1920. water-resista- nt : s. Practice in Some Communities Found to Be Economical Cattle Eat More of Stalk. , ar Many of the dairymen who have more than 15 head of cattle would find it profitable to get a grinder large enough to grind alfalfa or clover, especially if they expect to feed mamThe practice is general moth clover. in some communities to shred the stover and feed this to cows. The cattle will eat more of the stalk and the remainder makes very good bedding when mixed with the straw. " IN FAVOR Results in Greater Production of Milk and Butterfat, According to ' , Specialists. , ' , Fall freshening results in greater ' milk and butterfat production than spring or summer freshening. The dairy husbandry specialists at the Iowa agricultural experiment station who have studied many records say that fall freshening gves about 10 per cent greater production than either spring or summer freshening. . , DISCARD UNPROFITABLE ar COW water-resista- . j ' Better Than an Empty'stall Providing She Is Producing Offspring Better Than , Herself. The unprofitable cow does not deserve any defense nor should she be allowed to fill a stall In the barn to the exclusion of a better cow. But she Is better than an empty stall pro- vided she is given a chance to produce offspring better than herself. she is fulfilling a purpose. Then ARTIFICIAL LIMBS FIT WELL ARTIFICIAL UMB CO. Write (or catalog. 135 W. Third South, Salt Lake City. AND DYERS CLEANERS : SERVICE UAL1TY OTHES INSURED WORK GUARANTEED We pay return postage. Price pat on request. ; MYERS CLEANERS AND DYERS 1U-11- 0 Salt Lake City East Broadway MONUMENTS STANDARD MARBLE AND GRANITE CO. Write for catalog. 117 W. Broadway, Salt Lake.' TYPEWRITERS Distributors Corona Portable and Royal. All other makes sold, repaired -- ml exchanged. Utah Typewriter Exchange Co. Salt Lake FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS- -, MORRIS FLORAL CO. St East Second South Street Salt Lake City. 10 MILLER FLORAL CO. Salt Lake City E. Broadway. ART EMBROIDERY CO. Machinery Embroidering on Ladies Apparel. Out town business solicited. Room 201 Brooks Arcade. RUBBER STAMPS AND STENCILS Seals and Ear Tags also manufactured. Send for samples, prices, etc. SALT LAKE STAMP CO. West Broadway, Salt Lake City, Utah. 05 ALT LAKE BUSINESS COLLEGE vSave lodging; work afterschool; enrollanytime ATCWT 300 percent; $1 apkg. Everybody buys. nllLillld Sample Free. Dodge Bros. Salt Lake. CREAM BOUGHT Best prices. Western Creamery Co. 2M W.4th So. yULCANlZIVG Vulcanize it now. Retreading. Quality, Service. Standard Tire Works, del S. State St., Salt liike. WELpiNG. AUTO and MACHINERY Auto Radiators built and repaired best and cheapest. Potter Welding and Repairing Co. 551 S. State Street. Salt Lake City, Utah. ; GRIND ALFALFA AND CLOVER FALL FRESHENING people A GOOD ALARM CLOCK costa so little, yet so much depends upon its service; we guarantee each one wp sell. Reasonable prices. (Xwi5 i&zz&vpazrz&zsixj&r' Weighing Rom for Utah", Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada nt : OLDSMOBILE DISTRIBUTORS Cars and Trucks. Used Car Bargains. A. E..Tourssen, 447 S. Main Street, Salt Lake City. RUBBER HOSPITAL We cure injured rubber articles Boots, Shoes, Hot Water Bottles, Tires, Tubes, etc. Satisfaction guaranteed. Return charges prepaid. Western Rubber Sales Co. 134 East Broadway. PIPE AND MACHINERY. Western Machinery Co., Judge Building. QUALIFY AS BARBER in few weeks. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE, 43 S. W. Temple, Salt Lake CANCERS, Tumors and Eczema Removed. A. M. Freebaim, 203 Utah Savings & Trust Bldg. THE VANITE SHOPPE Marcel permanent wave. Color restored to hair by scientific method. Switches and transformations. 339 S. State Street, Salt Lake City. Hemstitching, Pleating. Machine and Hand Embroidering. Buttons made. Expert Bead Work. The Embroidery Shop, 334 Clift Building. DAYNES-BEEB- E MUSIC CO. Salt Lake City. Everything known in music. WALKERSBEAUTY PARLOR Switch transformation or hair by mail ; cut sample from center of head. Switches worth $7.50 for 35. Transformation worth $12 for 38.50. L. D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE All commercial branches. School of efficiency. Catalog free. 80 N. Main Street, Salt lake City. KID FITTING CORSET PARLORS Specialists in designing, making, fitting Corsets. Hemstitching, embroidering, braiding, accordion 40 E. Broadway and side pleating. Buttons made. Iron Ore Formed by ' Bacteria. Geologists are realizing more fully as they extend their studies the magnitude-of the work done by plants and animals In building up and tearing dowa parts of the crust of the earth. Even microscopic organisms perform a large part of this work, 1'asteut long ago showed us the deadly power of bacteria In disease and their- efficiency In promoting fermentation, but. their influence on the fertility of soils and their work in expediting rock decay are atill subjects of scientific - study. . Felt He Wasnt Wanted. My young son had been telling me about an occasion on which he had felt greatly wound up by saying; Mother, I never felt ao unnecessary In all my life. Chicago Tribune. Eugenie Invented the Crinoline. Among the late Empress Eugenies numerous claims to fame not the least Interesting was her Invention of the crinoline skirt, which she Is said o have been the first to' devise and wear a few months before, the birth of the Prince Imperial. - . i j t 'v New Ferrule for Crutches. A new ferrule for crutches, wood- en legs, or canes Is tipped with rubber and contains a coiled spring Inside of tubing so it revolves as well as being resilient v |