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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH. UTAH LIVE STOCK FACTS LICE MENACE Amazing Success Achieved by Celebrated cine Not Only Phenomenal, But Unprecedented rOver 20,000,000 Bottles Sold in Six Years Foreign Countries Clamor fer It. Medi- - Never befpre, perhaps, in the history of the drug trade has the demahd for a proprietary medicine ever approached the wonderful record that is now being made by Tanlac, the celebrated medicine which has been accomplishing such remarkable results throughout this country and Canada. As a matter of fact, the marvelous success achieved by this medicine is not only phenomenal, but unprecedented. The first bottle of Tanlac to reach the public was sold just a little over six years ago. Iis success was immediate ami people everywhere were quick to recognize it as a medicine of extraordinary 'merit. Since that time there have 'been sold, throughout this country and Canada somethin: over Twenty Million (20,000,000) bottles, establishing a record. which lias probably never been equalled in the history of tlie drug trade in America. Fame Is International. The instant and phenomenal success which Tanlac won when it was first introduced has been extended to practically every large city, small town, village and hamlet in North America. Its fame bus become International in its scope and England, Japan, Mexico, Cuba, Hawaii, Alaska, Iorto Rico and many European countries are clamor-lufor it. From coast to coast and from Great Lakes to the" Gulf, Tanlac is known and honored. Millions have taken it with the most gratifying and astonisli- g ing results and' have pronounced it the greatest medicine of all time. Tens of fhousaiuls of men and women of ail ages in all walks of life, afflicted with stomach, liver and kidney disorders, some of them of long standing, as well as thousands of weak, thin, nervous men and women apparently on Urn verge of collapse, have testified that they have been fully restored to their normal weight, health and strength by its use. sour, gassy stomachs, ASPIRIN Get Back Your Health Youthful Envy. was entertaining his young aunt's caller until she was ready to appear. The y. a. entered the room as Billy was saying: You dont has to wasli your knees you wear long panls. Are you dragging around day after day with a dull backache? Are you tired and lame mornings subject to headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stabbing pains. Then theres surely something wrong. Probably its kidney weakness! Dont, wait for more seriGet back your ous kidney trouble. health and keep it. For quick relief exercise and of and sleep get plenty use Doan's Kidney Pills. They have helped thousands. Ask your neighbor! An Idaho Case J. A. Castile, carpenter, 800 Second St., N., Nampa, Idaho, says: I was laid up with kidney trouble. I had to he careful how I stepped. Any sudden jar caused sharp pains in my back, sides and hips. I got Doans Kidney Pills and in a short time was cured and the cure has proven perma-- nenL Billy To Have a Clear Sweet Skin Touch pimples, redness, roughness or Itching, If any, with Cuticura Ointment, then bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse, dry gently and dust on a little Cuticura Talcum to leave a fascinating fragrance on skin. Everywhere 25c each. True to Life. Golf feaehes me one thing." "What is that? That no matter how well a man plays he never succeeds In playing aa well as he should have. A Feeling of Security Sou naturally feel secure when you Know that the medicine you are about to take is absolutely pure and contains no Karaful or habit producing drugs. Such a medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Sookidney, liver and bladder remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained in every bottle of Swamp-RooIt is scientifically compounded from vegetable herbs. It is not a stimulant and is taken in teaspoonful doses. It is not recommended for everything. It. is nature '8 great helper in relieving and overcoming kidney, liver and bladder troubles. . A sworn statement of purity is with very bottle of Dr. Kilmers Swamp-Hoo- DOANS great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a ample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper.--. Certainly Not. Irate parent While you stood at the gate bidding my daughter good eight, did it ever dawn upon you The suitor Certainly not, fdr! I ever stayed as liate as that. nt live-stoc- k Hogs Infested With Lice Cannot Thrive. gross infestation. In an attempt to relieve tlie intense itching the infested animals scratch themselves with their feet and mb violently against any convenient object. The frequent rubbing destroys tlie hair In patches and often causes wounds in the skin. The lice congregate around the abrasions and thus cause further Irritation and annoyance to the animals. Lice may attack hogs of any age or condition, and if allowed to spread the infested anhnals suffer and .the owflgr loses in the increased quantity of feed consumed per pound of gain, arrested growth of young pigs, and shrinkage in weight of fattening hogs.. When young pigs become infested at an early age from the brood sow and the lice are allowed to remain on the animals until the hogs are ready for butchering, the loss caused by the parasites is a considerable item in the cost of producing pork. Estimates based on observations and limited experimental data fix the direct money loss in such cases at from 2 to 6 per cent of the market value of the hog. The indirect losses caused by lice are seldom taken into consideration, because on casual observation they are not so apparent. Hogs infested by large numbers of lice suffer a lowering of vitality and a generally unthrifty condition which renders them more susceptible to attack by other parasites and by contagious diseases. The damage and losses caused, by hog lice are of sufficient importance to warrant the application of treatment for their eradication. GAIN FROM PURE3RES) SIRES d Three-Year-Ol- Yearling Steers Outweigh in Nevada Feed Co&t Is Same. My steers as yearlings go over the Country Without Scenery. scales at from twelve hundred to n When the projected line from Oodnndatta to Port Darwin twelve and a quarter. The ordinary is completed the traveler on it will scrub steers go out of here as weighing from eight to nine be .confronted with what will be probably, the dreariest railway journey hundred." With this comment in a The greater part oi letter to the United States Department in the world. the route lies through a desert region, of Agriculture, a stockman in Elko practically devoid of life, and utterly county, Nev., points out tlie benefits which he has derived from the use of uninteresting. purebred sires. In my opinion," he adds, even in this country everyone should breed some purebred strain. Nevertheless the scrub bull dominates even in the face of facts and figures. The average ranchman does not take into consideration that it costs no more to produce a good animal tiian it does to produce a scrub, and the purebred is cheaper in the long run. trans-Australia- three-year-ol- Sure Relief 6 BE IkETFOR Bell-an- s Hot water Sure Relief BEET MOLASSES IS VALUABLE Worth Twice Its Purchase Price When Fed in Limited Quantities to Steers and Lambs. LL-A- NS INDIGESTION The value of beet molasses is not as generally recognized as it should be. Fed iu limited quantities to steers or lambs at the present price of feedstuff.? it is worth more than twice Its purchase price. It is especially valuable when fed in conjunction with wet pulp or corn silage. New Shoes Old Shoes TiflhS Shoes all feel the same if you shake into them SALT FOR SHEEP IMPORTANT some ALLENS F00TEASE The Antiseptic, Healing Powder lor the Feet fresh- Takes the friction from the shoe, ens the feet and gives new vigor. At night, when your feet are tired, sore; 'and swollen from walking and dancing, In the E Sprinkle ALLENS h and noy the biles ol feet FOOT-EAS- 'foot-bat- an ache. without Over 1 ,600,000 pounds of Powder for the F&et were need bj oar Arm; and Nay; dur- ing the war. Ask tor ALLEN'S FOOT-EAS- E , 1921, by MeCiUr Newspaper SyuUioate.) Whos coming? asked George Forrest as 1)2 glanced at tlie fourth teacup. Margaret Ellis and Diana laughed. Dont grow excited, George," said Diana, she isnt your style, at all; looks like the outskirts of the smallest town iu tlie smallest state in the Union. She is so embarrassed if a man speaks to her that she is apt to fall into her teacup; she is the one woman in tlie world I could swear has never had a Jove affair. Margaret here added- her voice to She blushes in horthe description. rid red spots, too. Im afraid you wont be at ail intrigued, my dear. I had to ask her because shes Aunt Sarahs, adopted daughter and Aunt Sanih stands for ail the riches of Croesus. George Forrest smiled urbanely. Urbanity was one of his strongest points. But he thought to himself : May the good Lord protect me from society cats like these! For real humanity give me a nice, kind bush-iraiof .South Africa or an bdfcpitulfle South Sea Islander. Im' going to make myself so agreeable to this maiden who blushes in spots and looks, like IokpviHe, Delaware, that they never can say no one ever flirted with her, at 'any rate.- The doorbell rang at this moment and into tlie room came the girl. Her skirt was too long, her ears showed, her lips were not scarlet but natural all this George took in at a glance. And she seemed lar from her ease Vi hen she greeted. Diana and Margaret Ellis. As Jiad been predicted, she blushed violently, 111(1 becomingly, when Diana offered her a cigarette. Diana winked at George, and George noticed that Miss Townley saw the wink and that she turned her face away as if to hide the hurt expression that spread over it. Good or you, Miss Townley, said , he, drawing his chair close to hers and putting into his gaze the Intensity and for you alone look which had made him famous as the best little Why womlady killer In New York. en think it Is cute to have .a cigarette dangling from their mouths every minute in the day, I cant see. I am glad to meet a modern girl who can refuse one. But I am not a modern girl, Im afraid, faltered Miss Townley. There was something very appealing about her, and her eyes really were rather beautiful when she looked straight at one. George began to find the game Interesting and it pleased his sens of justice to see Margaret Ellis and Diana fall back in their seats in helpless amazement. Better and better, smiled he at her quite unnecessary admission ; if you tell me you dont toddle Ill want to kiss your hand. I dont. laughed the girl. And when George put his words in action she blushed again, only not unbecomingly this time. Ellis smiled somewhat Margaret frigidly as she watched the scene. Dont let Mr. Forrest deceive you, You cant believe Isabel, she put in. one word he says, you know. Hes' Ananias' and Snpphira rolled into one the truth isnt in him. Isabel Townley looked quite seriously at Forrest and then back again at Well, as our old gardener Margaret. up in the country used to say, You cant always be pleasant and truthful at the same time. And he is awfully pleasant, isnt lie? George Forrest laughed with a spontaneous ring to his voice that was not usually heard in the drawing rooms he frequented. The girl' was great she wasnt dull and she was so absolutely naive. Yonve said a mouthful, queen. he quoted as he took her empty cup and put it down on the table. "If you dont toddle and you dont smoke, what do you do ail day? asked Diana. She thought shed better make some effort to be agreeable as long as George Forrest was leading the way. She did wish, though. Margaret had not asked Isabel today of all days. She wanted Forrest's attentions herself. Oh. Im quite bns.v with the housekeeping in the morning ordering and all that and In the afternoon mother and I always go some place together, driving or to the theater or opera, ami In the evening I play chess with faWere chess fans, father and ther. I. she said, looking at Forrest. "Jove! thats great!" he exclaimed, Its the real enthusiasm in his voice. ' best game going. We have a chess team over at the club and piny wildly Again George every Monday night. and Isabel were, conversationally, alone in the field. How splendid ! Father taught me to play when I was only eight years old, and ever .since weve been the greatest pals. When two people sit opposite each other at a chessboard, somehow it makes a difference in age, or In upbringing, or in anything else. Just disappear, dont you think? Mother says dad and I are. both of us, Just celebrating our seventeenth birthday Why was It, she when we are at it ! man Wondered, that this didnt frighten her or make her It must be because they both liked chess! "I sav, it must be great to see you," said George, I don't suppose youd n Well-Bre- FOSTER M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. t. If you need a medicine, you should have the best. On sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if. you wish first to try this (Prepared by the United States Depart-meof Agriculture.) Hog lice occur more or less frequently on both domesticated and, wild hogs in practically all parts of the world. The parasites are prevalent in all parts of ihe United States where hogs are raised, and growers generally recognize them as a pest that causes considerable loss to the swine industry. In obtaining their food the lice puncture the skin of the host animal and suck blood and lymph. A new puncture in the skin is made each time a louse feeds. A single puncture causes considerable irritation and itching, ami as each louse feeds at frequent intervals, the irritation and itching is almost constant in cases of Get Doans at An; Store, 60c a Bos t, t. Swine Growers Suffer Loss in Arrested Growth of P,igs and Shrink, age in Weight coated tongues, foulness of breath, constipation, bad complexion, loss of appetite, sleeplessness at night and of ternblj dejected, depressed feelings, state that they have been 'entirely relieved ol these distressing symptoms and restored to health and happiness by the use of Tanlac. Tanlac is sold by leading druggists everywhere; Ip his companionship. INDUSTRY Still others, who seemed fairly well, yet who suffered with indigestion, headaches, shortness of breath, dizzy spoils, Yen' Just Cant 'Always YeiJ 1 Rsstored to Health! Took Everything in Sight. Consistency. A certain darkey extra appeared Oh, doctor. I am suffering so much You did perfectly on tlie Hal, E. Roach lot one mornI want to die! right to call me. American Legion ing a picture of woe, and he insisted upon telling his misery to that popWeekly. ular film actor, Harold Lloyd. You dont mean to tell me that the furniture movers took everything, do you? asked the film star after listening to the tale. what ah do, Mistah Lloyd, Name Bayer on Genuine was"Ats the answer. They took everything but the sidewalk an they promised to come back San Francisco Chronicle. fo that. Warning! Unless you see the name "Bayer on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for twenty-on- e years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bayer package for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxas of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salieycacid. HOG let me come over some evening and watch a game?" Isabel beamed at him, her eyes bright with friendliness mid pleasure P Best Plan Is to Keep Abundant Sup .' ply Before Them at All Times During Year, Furnish the sheep with salt at least once a week, or, better still, keep il constantly before them in the forn of rock salt or a medicated stocl brick. Sheep require a great deal o salt, and if it is not supplied a gen era! unthrifty condition Is the result ' good-lookin- g 'Do come," she said. Come to our next seventeenth birthday party tomorrow night. George uns booked for the Gaynors dance tlie next night and Diana knew it. It was rather mutually understood that lie was to claim her for at least five (lances out of every ' ten. Ills reply to Isabel Townley was as unpalatable as it was unexpected. Come, of course, Ill come. Will you have a birthday cake?" Yes, indeed," laughed Isabel, radi7 In your honor, with seventeen ant. ' . candies on it." .She rose, to go and for tlie first time in her life addressed Margaret Hills without awkwardness or I've had such a nice C'od-hlime. she said. and to Diana so glad to have seen you again. Like an echo came c.eorge Forrests Gt voice after hers. lie was I've had a perfectly bully saying, time. And together the flirt in New York, and the gill whose skirt was too long and who Was about as modern ns tlie left Margaret Ellis home. Well, what do you think of that? gasped Margaret, as she and Diana found themselves alone and beaulcss. He really seemed to like her! Diana didn't . say a word as she y od-b- best-know- n threw her cigarette into the fire and fit another. d OLD FOREVER BAYS PASSED Cimarron Bill, Bad Man, Couldnt Get Loot Now in What Was Once Texas Desert. - ' Who cannot remember the time when as a child. he sat behind a bale of hay iu fathers barn and Clandestinely read with wildly beating heart and bulging eyes the thriller about how Cimarron Bill, tile bad man of the cow camps, became lost on the Staked Plains of Texas how he stumbled forward under the heat of the blistering sun, falling now and then to the surface of the treeless plain to dig frantically with his bleeding fitgers for water; how his tongue, parched and swollen, hung from his cracked lips because there, was no longer any room inside his mouth to contain it ; how he espied now and then on the horizon, iu the very midst of the idly shifting strata of heat waves, a beautiful lake, surrounded by green trees and grass; of how he cried aloud with fierce joy at the sight and feebly plunged forward once more to dip his lips into the cooling fluid, only to have the blue water, as he approached .nearer, vanish as suddenly as It had appeared; of how, at length, he fell fainting by the wayside and recovered consciousness only to find that he had been picked up by the beautiful daughter of a passing emigrant wh now held to his mouth a dump, cool gourdful of that precious I quid water. And of how he traveVd on Into Santa Fe with this emigrant and his daughter, fell in love, go: married, had eight children n every' king like that? Who doesnt remember it? Everybody does, of course. Well, gentle reader, those old days have passed forever. Today Cimarron Bill couldnt walk very far without bumping his head into a windmill. The great Llano Estacado has petered out as a logical place to transport a man in fiction if you want to get him into an awful mess from which only Providence or a facile pen can extract him. Where once barren wastes extended for miles upon miles, today waving blankets of echeloned wheat fields greet the eye of tlie wanderer. And where once the snail-lik- e prairie schooner wended its weary way to tlie Golden West, today motor cars scurry about with a snort and a roar - and take prosperous-lookin- g business men wherever they want to go before they quite realize that they have started. Edward M. Dealey in the Dallas News.. Always Shelter in the Soul. Men seek retreats, houses In the country, seashore, and mountains, and thou too art wont to desire such things very much. But this Is altogether a mark of the most common sort of men, for It is In thy power whenever thou Shalt choose to retire into thyself. For nowhere either with more quiet or more freedom from trouble does a man retire than Into his own soul, particularly when he has within him such thoughts that by looking into them he is immediately in perfect tranquility. Marcus Aurelius. Concrete Fused. of concrete has been noticed after, some fires in reinforced concrete buildings. The tests by the United States bureau of standards have shown that some small specimens of concrete may he fused by a temperature of about 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit, which is about the melting point of manganese an considerably below that of nickel of iron, but it is supposed that the fusing temperature varies with tlie kind of sand a&d cement used. Fusion Just a While. Whats going on here?" Another international wedding." Eh? , An American heiress is going to be a duchess for a while. Birmingham . Why Not Do Our Best First After we have done our best, why not let God work.The S'ludard. FIND ASPHALT BY ACCIDENT in Switzerland and Used for Purpose of Extracting Valu- ' Discovered able Bitumen. Asphalt, though covering thousands of miles of roads in all countries, was In the discovered quite by accident. middle of the last century it was found in Switzerland in its natural state, and used for the purpose of ex- - ' trading the valuable store of bitumen it contained. In time it was noticed that pieces of rock which fell from the wagons, and were crushed by the wheels, formed a very fine rpad sur- face when half melted by the heat of the sun. An experiment was made and a road of asphalt laid in Paris. It was so successful that tlie new road material became adopted through all' the big J ' ' - towns of Europe. Ail sorts of materials have been tried since', from rubber to seaweed. It is very likely, in fact, that In the future the streets of our big cities will be paved with some form of rubber mixture which will be practically, noiseless.,. Very extensive experiments have already been carried out with ' such a mixture. Iu New York several streets are paved with steel, and a steel road has been in use iu Valencia, in Spain, for the lust 20 years. Perhaps the most curious material for a road is sea- weed. Tliis compressed into solid blocks, is used to pave the streets of Baltimore. These seaweed blocks are bound with wire and dipped into boiling tar before being put to use. DESTROY ROADSIDE WEEDS Because 1. They act as centers of weed Infestation for adjoining fields. 2. They may be carried for many miles by passing vehicles and animate, 3. They harbor harmful insects and 'plant diseases. 4. They create insanitary conditions, 5. They are unsightly. Methods for destroying roadside weeds, approved by specialists of the Weeds Along Roadside Harbor Injurious Insects and Various Plant Pis-ease- s. United States Department of Agriculture, are : , B- y1. Mowing twice a year while they are in full bloom, usually in June and August. 2. Utilizing the roadsides for grow, ing hay. 3. Grazing with tethered animals. '. Converting weedy roadsides into i lawns. GRADE ALL ROADSIDES SO THE WEEDS CAN BE CONTROLLED. 4. . . WIRE MESH GOOD FOR ROADS British Army in Egypt Used Chicken. Wire in Building Temporary Routes in Sand. The British army In Egypt has used chicken,-wirin the construction of roads. Loose sand was smoothed and leveled and then covered with ' chicken-wir- e, e which was firmly pegged down. The passage of troops or motor transports seemed to affect the road very little, while the passage of -drawn vehicles damaged the Improvised road badly. However, It was possible to make repairs quickly and the road was easily kept In good con' dition. Of course this road was purely a temporary expedient for the military. The old Romans still hold the palm as the champion of tlie world. Many a foundation of the roads they made Is still In use in Europe, tne surface alone being modern. . animal- wire-mes- h road-make- . Bad Roads In Way. The planter the farmer needs to reduce the cost of transportatiqn ; the laborer to provide homes and. cheaper living; the merchant wants the coun? try air. What opposes? Roads bad roads. Dr. Seaman A, Knapp. ; Line Highways With Trees. Now Is a fine time to make plans for lining the highways In your town--shl- p with trees. Dont plant them too thick; fifty feet or more apart will do. -- |