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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOLPH. UTAH (MSI inaigEqHax?o33B DAIRY HINTS - BEST WISHES TO THE BRIDE Her wedding ting, jewelry and eUverw&re should come frouj this store. Ressoneble pmoeseuse the way. Both 'Profitable and Practicabla .Know for 'Certainty the Full Value (Of Cows. JEWELERS y MAIN STREET . FOR HER BREATH MILK RECORDS AID DAIRYMAN BOYD PARK BOYD PARK BLDG FORCED TO FIGHT to (Prepared by the United States 'Department ot Agriculture) Reports coming to the United' .States KJ Department of Agriculture often of the surprises .which cow .owners meet with when they start keeping records of itlieir cows producg tion. For linstanoe, in .a Missouri association there was a' man who. when be entered ithe 'association, did not appear to hawe a very good REVENUE FOR ROAD BUILDING Nashville Artist Tells of Terrible Suffering Experienced by Registration and License Fees in Amounted to $102,034,106 , Increase in Cars. HUSBAND (Prepared by (be United State Depart- -. ment of Agriculture.) A total of 9,211.295 motorcars, including commercial vehicles, were registered last year in the 48 states and District of Columbia, according to figures compiled by the bureau of public roads of the United States Department of Agriculture in a study of revenue Incl- ude--stories cow-testin- His Wife. 1920 GOES HILL DOWN Finally Both Decide to Put Tanla to Test and as a Result Have En- Joyed Beet of Health for Paet ' J Three Years.- - Both my wife and myself have put Tanlac to the test and we. call It available for. medicine in the world, said purposes. There were also registered a total of J. T. Montamat, li23 Third Ave 238,146 motorcycles. The registration North, Nashville, Tenn., artistic sign ant( license fees, including those for painter for the Cusack Company. Mr. chauffeurs, operators and dealers, Montamat has lived in Nashville for amounted to $102,034,106.26. ' As comnearly thirty years and is highly re- pared with 1919, the data for 1920 repspected by all who know him. resent an increase of 22 per cent, or Before my wife took Tanlac she motorcars. This increase Buffered so badly from gas on her stum- 1,645,849 alone lacks but 4 per cent of being nch and heartburn that she often said equal to the total registrations of the she felt like she was smothering ' She United States six years ago. actually had to sit up la In 1920 In the state of New York bed to get her breath, i alone the number of motorcars regisWell, in a short ' time after she- tered, including commercial vehicles, began taking Tanlac her trouble disappeared and she was like a different person. Seeing the gopd results toher case, 1 began taking the medicine- had me feeling like myself and a brand new man. Up to that time I had been trou- bled with indigestion. 1 had no appetite and the little 1 did eat seemed to do me about as much harm I felt so tired and languid' I bated to move around, and was getcondition that ting in such a ' it worried me. Tanlac acted with me Just like it did with my wife, and1 although that was three years ago we have enjoyed the best of health all along. However, I keep a bottle of Tanlac in all the time, and when I feel myself getting run down the medicine-soohas me feeling all right again. I am convinced that Tanlac is without an equal. Our friends all know-boIt helped us and I dont hesitate tell anyone about It to Roads DelivFacilitate the Improved Tanlac is sold by leading druggist ery of Mail to the Farmer. everywhere. Adv. exceeded the total cars registered in Encouraging. the whole of the United States in 1910. Kathryn I Intend to marry Billy Furthermore, the revenues derived Bullion in Bplte of all opposition. from registration in the state of New Kytte If Billy sees youre real deYork in 1920 were about-equa- l to the entire registration revenues of the termined, I dont think hell oppoee. you so very long. United States, for 1913. The use' made of revenues has changed with the passing of years. In 1906 the total registrations were approximately 48,000 cars, paying a gross revenue of about $193,000. (Arizona in 1920 paid approximately this amount.) By Using In 1906 the gross registration revenues thB Gwuilne three-tenths of were, equal to less than 1 per cent of the total, rural road and bridge expenditures for that year. i ELECTRIC PASTE The registration revenues in 1920 mee, Oockfoechfl gnarantoed killer" for were equal to about 25 per cent of the The Ante end Waterbnes the RU, grakteet known c Triers disease. They destroy both food and property. of and total rural road bridge expendi- Steams Blectric Paste forces these pests to rtts tures for the calendar year 1919. Iq from the building for water and fresh air. bbadt fob use BETTBB THAW TBin e 1906 practically none of the Directions in U languages in erery box. 86o and 11.60. Bnongh to kiU EQ to too rata. Two Bites, was to road revenue? applied U. S. Government bnya It. maintenance or construction', while in 1920 96 per cent, or a total of $97,997,-160.6The Beau Brummel of the Plain. was used for this purpose. The Big Bear, the head of the Sioux remaining 4 pqr cent ,not applied to road work was expended very largely tribe, is said to be the best dressed for number plates and in carrying out Indian in America. He recently paid a visit in full regalia to some of the the provisions of the motor vehicle registration laws in the several states. larger cities in the Middle West. Of the total amount applied to road Cutlcura Soap for the Complexion work 79 per cent, or $77,531,582.57, was expended under the control or Nothing better than Cutlcura Soal supervision of the ' several state highdally and Ointment now and then an needed to make the complexion dear, , way departments. scalp clean and bands soft and white. FARMER AND GOOD HIGHWAYS Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Cutlcura Talcum, and yon have the Cutlcura Toilet Trio. Adv. Make Roads Farm Improved Only a Suburb and Land Has Increased It makes a man sure he has bnllB Greatly in Value. when he happens to get something 1$ luck. The biggest booster for good roads in the country today is the farmer. Men do not hold women dear who A few years ago he felt that the porthemselves. cheapen tion of his taxes used In the construction of permanent highways represented a benefit only to the motoring tourist and the city automobile owner. The farmer argued that he wai paying for their pleasures, aud the result was a superstition against the good roads movement, which, unfortunately, has not as yet been entirely overcome in some sections of the epuntry. Now, however, when the farmer finds that his land has trebled in val6 Bell-an- s ue; when the merchandise for which Hot water he has telephoned in the morning can Relief Sure be delivered by noon of the same day; when the market for bis own produce LL-AN- B is brought hours nearer; when the winter and its following spring thaw possess no terrors for him --all- this FOOT-EAS- E because of the improved highway which makes his farm only a suburb, THE FEET as It were, of the ' nearest city he naturally becomes a one or two Allens FootEaso Sprinkle g enthusiast for good powders in the Foot Bath and soak and and rub' the feet. It takes the sting out of roads. Leslies. . ' road-buildin- g Sc i ent ijic Collector? - f HonestDews I sllRoomsContinentalBanKB'ia;Si'f?MIi General Manager y aSALT Lake City. Utah (punixfj EKGRAVED WEDDING STATIONERY Amiouniement8 Invitations Calling Caids. cur printer is cur representative and has ' complete samples and pi ices hhANU tiL' Order by Mail. KOOF CEMENT A Home Product Beautiful, Permanent, Economical, Easily Applied. For thlngie1, Composition or Metal Roofs Alaskan Herder With Reindeer.' UTAH ROOF CEMENT CO. Templeton Bldg. r' y ' ' Salt Lake City THE UTAH OIL BOOM Milk Should Be Cooled Immediately After It Is Drawn. CLEANERS ft BYERS. Quality. Service. Cloches insured. We pay Work guaranteed. return postage. Price list on r request Myers Cleaners ft Dyers, 114 E. Broadway. ' herd ; but among his cows was a cripnamed pled, Jersey Goldie. Old Goldie led the whole association, with an annual production MONUMENTS. Write for catalog. Standard of approximately 9,300 pounds of milk Marble ft Granite Co.. 117 W. Broadway. and 026 pounds of fat, and an Income b or a real good place to eat, follow the crowds to over cost of feed amounting to $267, ' SHAYS CAFETERIA Opposite Post Office. Down the marble stairs in spite of the fact that when the test started she had already gone RUBBER STAMPS & STENCILS. Seals and three months since freshening. The ear tags also made. Send for samples, prices etc. Salt Lake Stamp Co., 65 W. Broadway. amusing part of Goldies record Is that her owner tried to sell her Just kur cleaning and shampooing rugs. $? 70 ?n Vacuum furnished free. $10 commission on before she went on test, for $75. Six sales. Dodge Bros., 66 E. First South, Salt Lake. months later he refused $275 for her. The whole herd of which Goldie CREAM BOUGHT. Send us your cream. Western Creamery COr, 244 W. Fourth South. was a part averaged over 360 pounds of fat for the year. In contrast with MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I of every description on very easy terms. this was another herd of 37 cows In rite Salt Lake. - , , the same association, which had been a -- y X Confetti, Balloons, Paper Hats, Novelties, fftc. Veputed to be the best in that part ot' Write for Prices. U S Wholesale Co. Box 21&I the state. Yet 14 of these were sold POULTRY Bought. For best molts ship during the year as unprofitable, and poglfry, eggs and game to Fulton Mkt Correct it seemed likely that more of them i . Daynes-Beeb- e, jj Prompt returns. Weight, Write trOLDSMOBILE DISTRIBUTORS. for prices. . . Cars & trucks. Used car haVgains. A. E. Tourssen, 447 S. Main. Piaton Rings dll Mlll curb your motor troubles. King Co., 15 East, Fourth South ELASTIC STOCKING MFRS. Manufacturers abdominal. Maternity supporters, Truss fitters. S. H. Bowmar Co., Brooks Arcade. would be. Similar stories come from other The dairy division has been giving a great deal of time to the extension of associations throughout the country, and there are now nearly 500 associations in various states. asThe man who joins a sociation never runs the risk of selling a $200 milk producer for $80 because her appearance is poor, nor of wasting his feedstuffs and work on a cow because she looks like a good milker. It is both profitable and practicable to know for a certainty the worth of a cow by weighing her milk. A man g association has the in a milk of eveify cow weighed and tested once ft month, from which it is easy to calculate the total for a year. He saves the trouble of doing it himself by having the cow tester do it. The tester also weighs the feed, and figures out the cost of the milk ; so that at the end of a year the owner of a herd of cows knows exactly what each one has given, what she has eaten, and how much income over cost of feed she has brought him. states. cow-testin- g cow-testin- g WELDING, AUTO RADIATORS ft Machinery built and repaired. Best and cheapest. Potter Welding ft Repairing Co., 551 South State. V i- - The Baby Fox weigh 8 lbs. TYPPWBrrm 1 lILnlUlLAJ rented and sold. Utah aji makes 3 W. Second South St. Office & School Supply, i L. D. 6. BUSINESS COLLEGE. School of Efficiency. All commercial branches. Catalog free. 60 N. Main St, Salt Lake City. KID FITTING CORSET PARLORS. Specialists in designing, making, fitting corsets. Hemstitching, embroidering, braiding, accordion and side pleating. Buttons made. 40 E. Bdwy, VULCANIZING & RETREADING. Quality and service. Standard Tire Works, 861 So. State. Inventors repairing. Models Made. Key, lock and gun Knudson Novelty Co., 855 So. State. SEE TOUR LOCAL PUBLISHER For loose leaf binders, special btnk& records of all kinds. He gives Quality ServiM. MOLER BARBER COLLEGE. Qualify as barber in few weeks. 48 S. West Temple Street ARTISTS' MATERIALS cow-testin- C. R. SAVAGE CO., 12 South Msln. Fine kodak finishing and enlarging. Artists ms- -, terials, picture framing, kodaks and films. N ART CO., picture framing, china painters and artist supplies. 866 Main. HELP DEVELOPMENT OF CALF Sin of OmiMion. Golfer Confound you, boy; you made me miss that putt! Caddie I didnt do nothfn, air. Golfer Yes, you did; It was your blooming hiccough. Caddie I didnt hiccup, sir. Golfer Of course you didnt. Ita tbe first time youve missed, and I allowed for it, you idiot ! Stray Stories- Hi s , : To Keep Them Growing Rapidly Furnish Plenty of Good Hay It Aide Digestive. System. The young man was telling hia sweetheart 'how he had been attracted to her. "You were a lovely flower and I I was a bee, ie explained to her. Was a mouse and you were a piece of 1 cheese. And then he wondered why she rose and left the room. , . ' - It will consume. v ' i Roma Is On Board Vessel Genoa. American naval , officer, fcav completed the work of placing on board the United States transport Mars the airship Roma, recently pur-- . chased from Italy by the American The transport will sail government. States. United the soon for Rioting Renewed in Belfast Belfast. There was reived rioting Jn East Belfast Thursday. Unionists were the aggressors, evidently in reon the servlet prisal for an attack gnens demonstrations Wednesday. , NEEDED FEED Silage Made of Corn Crop Planted Too Lata to Reach Mott Desirable Maturity. Good - A silo Is an Insurance. Very often the season is so late that the corn crop cannot be planted In time to get fully matured. Com can be planted as late as July 1 and yet make good silage. A , The Important thing is to keep the calves growing as rapidly a possible and to see that they qre provided with plenty of good hay. This, more than any other one feed, will help develop the calfs digestive system and should, overlooked. be never therefore; Even if the calf is on pasture It should be given a chance to eat what hay SILO INSURES .Fatal Metaphor. extinct. . - Fom the outset the deer thrived, and as the number increased, other herds were formed from the mother herd at Teller. Roaming the frozen wastes north and south, from Point Barrow to the Alaskan peninsula, there are today more than herds, aggregating about 160,000 deer. It Is estimated that during this period more than 100,000 have been killed for food and skins; so that in less than thirty years the increase has been more than two hundred fold. Although the Alaskan reindeer industry is still in its infancy, it is rapidly becoming firmly established. The reindeer is not, however, highly prolific. The female deer usually gives birth to but one fawn a year, and if there are twins, one of the young is likely to die. Reasons for Rapid Increase. The rapid Increase is due to two facts: One is the remarkable hardihood of the fawns, which only a few hours after hirtli are strong and fleet of foot. The contrast between the reindeer fawn and the colt or calf is weak, knobby-kneestriking and has much to do with the tendency of reindeer herds to increase rapidly In spite of a low birtn rate. As the social worker would say, the Infant mortality is slight. The other factor in the rapid Increase, and an illustration of the fact that early fecundity Is not entirely a tropical trait. Is the remarkable fact that yearling reindeer frequently reself-relia- d SPECIAL RUSH SERVICE secured If yon mention this paper when writing shove first. y- - (Prepared by the National Geographic So ciety, Washington, D. C.) A new meat has been reaching American tables during the last few years, a food that as yet comparatively few American palates have had the opportunity to compare with their familiar roast beef, mutton and pork. It is the meat of reindeer, and it comes not from a foreign country but from our own Alaska. Within a single generation, Cupid and Comet Vixen and and those Prancer, of ruddy Saint Nick companions which spring into action with tho very first remembered syllables of the famous Christmas poem,, have become the staple live stock for the Far Northwest of the American continent. Santa Claus may use a motor truck or even an airplane in making his city deliveries, but in Alaska the reindeer Is coming into Its own. In Europe and Asia the reindeer was domesticated in prehistoric times. Not s6 in America, 'where this species of the deer family, the Cervidae, were known as caribou, and are still so known, to distinguish them' from the domesticated and imported animal. The first Importation, consisting of, only 162 reindeer, was landed at Teller, Alaska, on Independence day, 1892. During that year and the decade following, 1,118 more were imported from Siberia and landed on the shores of Port Clarence bay. The reindeer imported from Norway in 1898. were all draft animals, steers, and are now . The eyes of the world are upon us. Are you letting your chance go by. Opportun lty knocks but once. ' Will you delay and regret afterwards. Write to us today, we wdJ bend detailed information. H. A. McCOLLEM 319 So. Main St. Salt Lake, Utah I i , . Engraving Co. JcTscirgs-Gottrcha- ll . . Feed Cows a Variety. A dairy cow should havp plenty to eat of a combination of feeds, so bal- anced as to meet the requirements of milk production and body mainte' nance. : Balanced Ration for Cows. is not Injurious to feed a cow a properly balanced ration In proportion to the mk she gives. Usually the It results from underfeeding are a great deal worse than overfeeding. produce. The reindeer has been aptly named. Of all ungulate, ruminant, and gregarious animals, it Is one of the most particular In the selection of Its food. It pastures during the summer on tender mosses, lichens, mushrooms, algae, and grasses. Its typical home is Lapland. In the Lapp tongue the word reino means pasturage, so that the word reindeer means an animal that pastures.' During the long winter the deer subsist entirely upon moss, which abounds on the vast tundras and hills of Alaska, so that the deer-ma- n has almost unlimited grazing ' land for his herds. Moss of Plenty .It has been estimated that there are 200,000 square miles of this dry; coral-lik-e moss In Alaska enough grazing land for 5,000,000 deer. This class of pasturage ,1s suitable for no other animal except, It may be, the musk-ox- ; hence these thousands of square miles of Arctic Alaska, were It not for the reindeer, would prove practically valueless and could not be permanently Inhabited. There is only one drawback to this .calculation : Inevitably the reindeer seek the coast In summer, to escape the swarms of mosquitoes and to lick for-Foo- up tho-s- alt deposited by tire ocean waters. The Lapps have a' saying that mosquitoes make the best herders in summer time. ; It is believed; however, that if salt can be supplied in sufficient quantity inland,, and if the deer can be taken to the hills, where land breezes will serve the same purpose as the sea winds in blowing away the mosquitoes, the animals can be persuaded to overcome their inbred instinct for a seaside excursion in summer. Eskimos Own Most of Them. Eskimos own approximately 70 per cent of all the deer in Alaska, and the bureau of education has been much handicapped by the smallness of the $5,000 annual appropriation granted in recent years to care for the Industry, Instruct herders; and administer general supervision over herds which cover a stretch of territory more than a thousand miles in . extent Of lattr years the Industry has been taken up by a number of white men as a private enterprise. No objection to their entering the reindeer field has jdeen raised on the part of govofficials, as the development erning of Tmsldt:' rfiarEets for reindeer meat will thereby skins,' and be promised ; ' but, in, order to protect the Eskimo, a rule has been established that female - deer may not be purchased from the natives. . . A number of Lapps, originally employed by the government to teach the Eskimos the . occupation of herding, were permitted to borrow not to exIn five years ceed 100 deer each. they were to return a like number, keeping the increase. From one such loan in 1901 a count of 800 was made in 1908.- During that year 800 animals were equally divided into two herds, one of which now numbers not less than 10,009. The meat of the dear is not gamy and yet there is a suggestion of venison in its flavor. It has been aptly described as having' the Juiciness ot beef and the delicacy and tenderness of venison. The animal is butchered by modern methods, after which the carcass is frozen with the hide on and shipped to distributing points in the states, principally Seattle and There it Is kept in cold Minneapolis. storage until sold for food. Female deer are seldom killed. t)f the males a certain number are set aside for breeding purposes and the rest are fattened as steers." The average life of a deer Is about 15 years, but steers are butchered when three years old. Camel of the Arctic , Region. , The reindeer has been called the camel of the Far North. It serves as a beast of burden, and Is to the nomad of the north what the camel la to the nomad of the southern desert. Like unto its southern brother that the reindeer lives, on Its hump, draws on Its supply of fat in times travel the of want. For Eskimo prefers the reindeer to dogs, as the former finds Its own feed; not so the dogs. Surprising records have been made travel and also in In speed tests. .Indeed, for short distances. the deer can outrun the dog or horse. The usual rate of travel on longdistance excursions should be from 25 to 35 miles a day, if .the welfare of the deer is considered. Even then the deer can only be employed continuously In that fashion for 15 to 17 days. While traveling It has no chance to graze. When compelled to do this at night It loses sleep. In consequence the store of fat which encases its body and furnishes reserve food and strength becomes ex. hausted. Tire Eskimo never prods or crowds the deer after It indicates its desire to quit the journey. He unharnesses It and leaves it to find its way back to Its herd, which It usually succeeds in doing. If It does not succeed In this, It Is likely to join another herd. The ownership of reindeer Is indicated by By marking the ears (he reindeer of the various herds are distinguished, and annually there is a general reassignment of anlmah to their owners. ; - long-distan- , long-distan- s. run-dow- n . the-bous- e KILL RATG TODAY STEARNS motor-vehicl- 0, , Sure Ml LJfor indigestion ALLEYS FOn hard-worki- hard-votin- HIGHWAY COSTS ARE HIGHER Expense of Road Construction in 1920 Twice as Much as In 1917, ; According to ExpertT Every kind of road cost about twice as much to build in 1920 as it did in 1917, according to the chief of the bureau of public roads. United States Department of agriculture, and highway construction suffered more than any other class of work through railroad congestion, strikes, labor troubles air material shortages. Corns and Bunions and smarting, aching feet. Then for lasting comfort, uiake Afi tens Foot Ease into your shoeB. It take the friction from the shoe, rests the feet and makes walking a delight. Always use it for dancing parties and to break in new shoes. Over One Million Five Hundred Thousand pounds of Powder for the Feet were used Dy our Army and Navy during the war. Ak for ALLENS FOOT-EAS- E d, Tobacco direct to user by malt, leaf or chewing and smoking. Price Hat tree Randolph Tobacco Farm. Paducah, Kjr. V N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 23-19- 21. ' |