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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOLPH, UTAH JN YE OLDEN TIME Hoop were Bldrta worn by those who first asked the druggist for, and in- sisted on having, the genuine iGolden Me d i o a 1 Discovery Put up by Dr. Pierce over fifty years Dress has . . The Bitter Truth. Joseph Hergeshelmer, a writer of fiction, dined recently with a friend at ture, and said: In true art money should never be ' an object- At . this point in the converse Jon the waiter brought in his exorbitant bill and , Mr. Hergesheimfer, scanning the document sighed and remarked: : It Is true that in art money should be no object but It should be no objection, either. In these times. . The Soviets Transformation. into some- "We have been organized changed very much since then! But Dr. Pierces thing that looks like remarked the Bolshevist. medicines contain the same de- discipline,' We have, answered the Red. pendable ingredients. They are We cant transact business unstandard today just as they were til we" hear from theanybig boss just fifty ago. where we get onto a subject and - Dr.years Pierces Golden Medical where we get off. for the stomach and Quite so. ' Discovery blood cannot be surpassed I Well, lets kill time somehow. by any move that the meeting take up for remedy today. Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescrip- -: discussion the question, When is a tion for weak women has never Soviet Not a Soviet? been equalled for the distressing Halls Catarrh Medicine complaints incident to womanThose who are in a run down condihood. What others say: tion will notice that Catarrh bothers Los Angeles, Cal. In I suffered them much more than when they are This fact proves that while from nervous prostration for several good health. disease, it le greatly Catarrh is a local ' by constitutional conditions. years, trying various remedies fur- Influenced HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE is s nished by the doctor. At last I tried Tonic and Blood Purifier, and acts through mucous surfaces of - ago. defence a New York restaurant ' The novelist was condemning the prevalent commercial spirit in litera- hard-boile- d . -- Doctor Pierces Favorite Prescription, together with Doctor Pierces Golden Medical Discovery, at the advice ol a friend who had used it and had been cured, and my recovery was prompt and permanent. Hose Faulkner, 832 South Grand Avenue. SHIP US YOUR the blood upon the the body, thus reducing the Inflammation and restoring normal conditions. All druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney ft Co.. Toledo. Ohio, In the Interest of Quiet. Mistress Norah, I rang for. you four times and you didnt come. Im getting tired of tt. Maid So am I ; thats why Ive, come. Boston HORSES AND MULES Transcript Important to Mothers and you will get highest market prices. Examine carefully every bottle Ol New firm; 25 years experience in horse And mule commission business. Sale every CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that It Thursday. , Bears the DENVER HORSE & MULE CO. dJnion Stock Yards Denver, Colo. Signature of In Use for, Over 30 Years. - PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Removes Dan Restores Celor end and Faded Hen Beantyto Gvty at 60c. and $1.00 Pragrgists. HIrcox Chem. W kg. Patchogue, y. Y. HINDERCORNS . Removes Corns, Cal-looses, etc., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the 'feet, makes walking eauv. 16o. by mail or at Drog tglsts, fiitcox Chemical Works, Patcbogne, N, X. E. Coleman, Patent Lawyer, Washington PATENTS Watson D C. Advice and book free Rates reasonable. Highest references Bestsorvlcei Lachrymal Test. Was the wedding a success? ' Indeed It was. Why, women wept Mtteriy who didnt even know the Jrlde. Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria A Texas Iconoclast , Our guess is that when the bride promises to love, honor and obey she is just as earnest as when she kisses the bridegrooms folks. Dallas News. Covering the Situation. I hardly know what to do Native I sugwith my gest that you put a hat on it. Visitor week-en- With poison gas and submarines the glory of war begins to totter. Maybe it was time. P Is Unless you see the name Bayer on tablets, you art .not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years, and proved safe by millions. Say Bayer SAFETY FIRST! Accept only an unbroken package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Aspirin, which contains proper directions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few cents Larger packages. trtdi mark of Bayr HtnuiMtw of lConoacticcldeater of 8UeyllMM AflStrta Is thi No one Is so utterly desolate but some heart, though unknown, responds unto his own. Longfellow. Im a. Introducing Himself, little stiff from, lacrosse." Oh, Wisconsin? Lampoon. Kill That Cold With CASCARA0 QUININE AND FOR Cold, CoRfh l Grippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous ' Tain no rhsnrss. Kssp this standard remedy handy for the first aoMn, Breaks up a cold in 24 hours Relieve, Grippe in 3 days Excellent for Headache t Quinine In w form does not affect the bead - Cascara is bast Tonic Laxative No Opiate in Hfila. ' ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT Why Are Skin Diseases necessity promising flu qreatest results. JOHN BARTON PA1JNE NATIONAL Conference on Parks the first in our history was called December 1 last for the second week in January, 1921, In Des Moines. The suggestion came from John Barton Payne, secretary of the Interior and ex officio head of the national park service. Gov. W. L. Harding of Iowa issued the call. The conference was called because, as Secretary 'Payne says, it seems a national necessity. It was called to meet In Des Moines because Iowa has become a leader among the states in park spirit and work. More than 3,000 invitations have been sent out to Individuals and organizations known to be actively Interested. And Governor Harding also announced that the attendance was not limited to persons specifically Invited, for everybody interested in the park movement would be welcome. The conference will discuss matters of all kinds pertaining to national, state and local parks. President-elec- t Harding was in Denver March 10 last long before the Chicago convention and said, among other' things, in an address before the Mile High club: I like the slogan See America First. In these days of the motorcar we might revise it and say Motor in America First. This Is the automobile age. All America is motoring and leaving a golden' trail behind. I want the golden trail in the United States and the education and pride in the country which attend. We are no vast, so varied, so physically beyond compare, that tt Is good to think of America first and know America first, and do the practical things which prosper America first. I shall never be content until I can motor from Washington to Denver in comfort, and from this gateway motor safely and rejoicingly over a circuit of our national parks and know the inspiration and rejoicings that ever must attend. Tills is the keynote of the Des Moines conference. But the slogan of the conference goes still farther and declares : It should be made possible for a citizen of the United States to travel in his automobile from the Atlantic to the Pacific and camp every night on public ground fitted up for his comfort national, state, municipal and local parks. I have observed that from time to time, says Secretary Payne in his letter of suggestion to Governor JEIardjng, suggestions are made for the creation of national parks out of scenic areas that for .definite reasons should be taken up by tlie states themselves, and there are undoubtedly many parks suggested to the state park atithorities that should be taken up by counties and municipalities. Recently there has been a widespread desire on the part of state park authorities to confer among themselves and with the national park service, not alone on this question but regarding the possibility of securing uniform state park legislation throughout the country and the discussion of park problems in general. Tlie, requests for such a conference have become so insistent that it now seems a national necessity, promising the greatest results to the participants and the states they represent. Secretary Payne suggested Des Moines as a meeting place for the conference because of the extraordinary results in the field of state park creation and development achieved by the state of Iowa under its public park act, from which the delegates can learn much. Governor Hardings Invitation to the conference contains the following: with the Honorable John Barton Payne, secretary of the interior, and in recognition of the Importance of the public park movement throughout the United States, the governor of Iowa- - has the honor to Invite, you to a national conference on parks, to be h61d in Des Moines, inclusive, 1921. A program will January be presented of addresses and discussions by eminent leaders upon the necessity of the establishment and maintenance of national, state and local parks; upon legislation, administration and use of these parks; upon harmonizing and . find upon all allied subjects. The' truth qf the situation is that what may be called the national park movement has grown so big that it must be organized, regulated and standardized. That is what is to be read between the lines of Secretary Paynes letter. The nationwide national park movement is one of tile Uvest' national causes of today. Its success and its increasing - Influence have created an enthusiasm throughout the country for parks of all kinds . national, state and local. There are. for example, more than a score of national park .projects. Washington has three, including the Yakima valley. Iowa and Wisconsin ark the establishment of Mississippi Val!e.y National park. Indiana, Illinois and Michigan want n national park in the dunes at the head of Lake Michigan. Kentucky proposes that congress pur- chase Mammoth cave and its environs, and so on. Are these properly national park or state park projects? It Is the 'same thing 'with state of park projects which there Is no end. Illinois, for example, has just finis h e d through a s e m and com- stantial relief you must treat them through the blood. The best remedy for this purpose is S.S.S., the fine old blood remedy that purifies the blood of disease germs, and thus restores the skin to a normal and healthy condition.' Begin taking S.S.S, today, and write a complete history of your c5e, and our medical director will give you expert advice without charge. Address Chief Medical Adviser, 161 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga, . r cAzrozfzizQzrAz,FARK: mission a scenic survey of the state, and that body says It finds much state park material and much that Is mere properly local. A scenic survey of all the states, made by the General Federation of Womens Clubs, shows areas suitable for national, state and local parks. The conference will wrestle with this embarrassment of riches. Jt is hoped and expected that out of Its deliberations will come a classification and standardization of park areas and a draft of a standard state park law, which can be amended by the several states to 6uit local conditions. When Senator Harding declared, All America Is motoring and leaving a golden trail behind, he said something, as the tongue of the day has The official national payks attendance figures for 1920 give a hint of this motor travel. In 1916 there were 356,097 visitors to the national parks and probably a large majority of them went by railroad.In 1920 there were 919,504 visitors, and more than 65 per cent of them were traveling in their own cars. In 1917 private cars were recorded to the number of 54,692; last season, 128,074. These cars bore the license plates of every state In the Union. All conference roads lead to Des Moines because it is the capital of a state that has the real park spirit and is doing things the right way. The Thirty-seventgeneral assembly created a state . tt h board of conservation.' The Thirty-eigh- t assembly endowed this board with $100,000 a year'and otherwise empowered it. The members of this board, who serve without pay, are: Dr. L. H. Pammel, Ames, chairman; Joseph Kelso, Bellevue; John F. Ford, Fort Dodge, and Edgar K. Harlan, Des Moines, secretary. The Iowa state park law is a working instrument. The state board of conservation, with the written consent of the executive council, has the power to establish public parks in all suitable places and to improve them and make them accessible from the public highways. The board has power to purchase or condemn lands for both park and highway purposes. Secretary Harlan, who Is curator of the state historical department, delivered an eloquent address July 24, 1919, before the Des Moines The state has published it with the title, "Iowa Law, Policy and Proceedings Upon a System of Public State Parks and Reservations. In Iowa, says Mr. Harlan, it is but a short He goes spin from prairie lands to fairy lands. on to enumerate some of the beauty spots and places of historic and scientific interest in a country of farming land worth up to $500 an acre. But, he says, you cannot go swimming, boating, fishing, camping nor play ball, unless in cities, After sketching the situawithout trespassing. tion from the viewpoints of both recreationist and owner, he says In part : Recognizing these conflicting truths, respecting these Inharmonious interests, the state set out to open, acquire and preserve some of these areas. Due compensation shall be made to private owners. Appropriate provision will be made that the healthful may resort to the open air with safety, without contempt of fellow citizens and with full Areas unique for scenery will be acquired. Those embracing objects and materials useful or interesting in scientific study will be reserved. Grounds will be bought whereon Occurred important scenes in early and recent social life; where prehistoric works exist ; where lie the ashes of our great, where shafts that speak of all these facts should stand. Shore lines of lakes and rivers; reservoirs; steeps and slopes deforested In early days will be secured. Some will be replanted, In time, with useful and attractive trees. Small roadside, areas on streams, In shade, will be provided where families touring may camp overnight and rise in the morning without passing cars having filled with dust their bed and breakfast. All this, in time to come, is the states objective. Chairman Pammel, who Is a member of the faculty of Iowa State college, reports tlmt in the two years' of the hoard's existence it has secured 14 . -- self-respe- . So Difficult to Overcome? When your skin breaks out with itching eruption, tetter, rash, eczema, psoryasis, or other terrifying disorders, temporary relief will do you but little good, for soon all the itching and irritation breaks out afresh with renewed fury, and you soon realize that local remedies such as ointments, salves and similar treatment will never rid you of your trouble. These troubles driginate in the blood, and if you expect real sub li now seems a national J tracts for state parks. Public-spirite- d citizens have assisted the board In the purchase by over $100, (XX). A score or more of areas are under consideration. It is the hope of the board to have at least one park In each of the 99 counties of the state. Popular opinion is strong for the law . Grand View, pictured herewith, Vs a scene Ifi one of the prospective parks. It gives a hint of Mr. Harlans fairy lands, with which the Hawk-ey- e state Is abundantly blessed. This delightful scenic area is near Decorah, Winneshiek county. The deliberations and action of this first national conference on parks should interest the whole country. It is expected that both Secretary Payne nnd Director Mather of the national park service will attend. No program has been announced at this writing, but the call is broad enough to Include all phases of the park movement, of which the following national park features are attracting public attention : Assaults of commercial Interests on the national act and necesparks under the new water-powe- r sity of amendment to exempt national parks. The Grand Canon scene pictured herewith is at the west end of the national park, where there are magnificent waterfalls. Application for power permit has been filed here, as in Yosemite and Sequoia. Irrigation reservoir right of way bill, already passed by r.enate, covering Falls River basin in Yellowstone National park, and the entering wedge for many other Irrigation projects In this and other parks. Diversion of water as proposed would spoil the Yellowstone falls, the crowning glory of Yellowstone gorge. Readjustment of national park appropriations! Example: Roky Mountain National park, with 240,966 visitor last summer, had $40,000; Yellowstone, with 711,777, had $278,000; Yosemite, with 68.906, had $300,000; Mount Rainier, with 56,491, had $40,000 ; Glacier, with 22,449, had $95,000. Thus Rocky Mountain, with 13,343 more visitors than the bther four parks combined, had an appropriation of $40,000 as against $713,000, with an offset of about $250,000 In revenues produced. On the basis of the 1922 fiscal year estimates the discrimination against Rocky Mountain will be still more marked next summer, as It will have but $150,000 as against $1,615,337. Colorado will turn over to the national park service next season the Fall River road over the Continental divide, through the Rocky Mountain National park. , It has been under construction by the state during the last seven years at a cost of approximately $162,000. It is the crowning touch of a automobile highway circuit from Denver, which declare to be the most magnificently scenic on earth. Its Importance to the tourist and the national park cannot be overestimated. The oldest part of the Fall River road (shown herewith) is in deplorable 'condition. It is unthinkable that it should not be put in shape early next season. And the cost of reconstruction will have to come out of the Rocky Mountain National park appropria213-mi- le globe-trotte- tion. The public campaign of the Agricultural department and the forest service to wrest control of the national parks from the Interior department and their exploitation of the national forests created for lumbering and grazing as recreational competitors of the national parks. Federal support of the National highway, an automobile circuit of 5,000 miles connecting the principal national parks. State parks and local parks of all kinds, from New York to California, offer a multitude of interesting and important topics, specially if considered in the spirit of the Iowa plan. In just three centuries we have discovered this land, marched across it And made it ours. The old days have gone. The time has come when we must give thought to the ways in which we can get from it tlie most good. One of these ways is tlie creation and development of a nation-wid- e system of public parks national, state and IocaL Park-to-Par- k |