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Show THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOLPH. UTAH Indigestion and Dyspepsia LIVESTOCK . FACTS ' .!, - , Yellowstone's icentennial 4 ifW ui5 P.KjJwi ;n TB&. FIRST ' . ' A r'v? :)f :f sem- MARKS ITA5THE Victims of stomach trouble, indlgee-tip- , comdyspepsia and their allied ever-rea- d an Tanlac find Dandelions and Other Plante on Court- plaints source of relief and comfort Thouhouse Square Eagerly Desands of people have refoand the joys voured by Animals. of health by Its nse after everything failed. United States Department else they tried bad (Prtptred by th of Agriculture.) "Tanlac helped me wonderfully, The courthouse lawn In Elbert conn said Mrs. W. H. Hocker, 84 Rose Ave ty, Colo., like many other lawns, was Clifton Forge, Va. For over a year badly Infested with dandelions. The I suffered tortures from Indigestion, county agent suggested killing them and had to live en the simplest foods. by pastaring rather than plowing un- I became almost a nervous wreck. der the sod. According to reports re- Tanlac restored me to the best of " ceived by the United States Departhealth." ment of Agriculture, the test was apTanlac helps the stomach digest Suffiproved by the commissioners. the food properly and eliminate waste. cient hog wire to fence the lawn was Soon the whole system Is built up, the purchased- and two pastures 100 fee t blood Is purified and the entire body A long and 80 feet wide were made takes on new tone, vitality and enJarmer living near town furnished six Get a bottle today and start oa old ewes, which were placed in one ergy. road to health. For sale by all the pasture May 14, when the dandelions Advertisement. were at their best. A week later four good druggists. more were added to the flock. She Changed Her Mind. The ewes were changed from one Cleveland woman, A gentle-minde-d pasture to the other at in New York one day, gave arriving dandeThey soon had the the porter at the station a dime. The lions and grass eaten down and kept in a fury threw It on the porter It down. They ate blossoms and buds ground. The Cleveland woman picked It up. At the same time she explained V , I gently that this was the only coin she happened to have In her purse, and in parting with It for a tip she bad condemned herself to walk two miles to her hotel Instead of taking the bus. This explanation mollified the porter. In that case, lady," he said, Til take the tip. No, never mind, said the Cleveland woman In her gentle way. I think Iffl Cleveland Plain take the bus. Dealer. - - OF NINETEEN GREAT SCENIC v PLAYGROUNDS OF THE 1 AMERICAN PEOPLE 1 e SHEEP RID LAWN OF WEEDS i K v? Overcome , , one-wee- k m ti-a- rur jf, 2 i hocky TtozariZz; A ' ' ' CAimm,JLRZZOA An interested Onlooker. Have you seen Zeke Dawdle late- ctyoisADO ly? Ml ,-- I ,iir -o &i ,;sr1' I IfCS 'N "8- - dandelion plants close to the ground. Better results would have been obtained had the sheep been put in earlier, but the experiment proved quite effective In ridding the lawn of v -- Caurfcyof thatefroiraf Airh A2:j4YTtfJZ ZmKtr&lH 4 - By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN IFTY years of National Parks Yellowstone has been celebrating Its s this summer. When it was established by act of congress in 1872 it was the first public playground of the people created in all history. Now the United States has nineteen and several other nations have followed our example. Yellowstone is a land of wonders and Its early history Is in keeping. kJ Our third president, Thomas Jefferson, bought the Louisiana Purchase the unknown land between the Mississippi and the Rockies from Napoleon Bonaparte in 1803. In the spring of 1S04 Jefferson started Lewis and Clark westward from St Louis to see what we had gat for $15,000,000. They went to the mouth of the Columbia and returned to St. Louis In 1806, after being given up for lost Both going and returning they passed a little to the north of the Yellowstone, but heard nothing of It i John Colter; one of their men, turned back before reaching St Louis to trap beaver on the ihead waters of the Missouri. He discovered the Yellowstone In 1807, returned to St Louis in 1810 and told about the geysers and other marvels. St HjouIs refused to believe and laughed at the Yellowstone as Colters Hell. Gen. William Clark, Colters commander, was apparently the only man to believe; on Clarks official map of the Lewis and Clark expedition you will find traced "Colters , 1 semi-centenni- al . route In 1807." Jim Bridger, one of Gen. William H. Ashleys lieutenants In the Rocky Mountain Fur company, rediscovered the Yellowstone In 1827. Bridger was as good a mountaineer, plainsman and guide as jthls country ever saw. But he was a practical Joker along the line of monumental lies he was the Inventor of the obsidian cliff, boiling spring, alum creek and echo canyon stories which have been Western classics for nearly a century. So jltls report of the Yellowstone wonders was set down merely as another of Jim Brldgers big yarns. In 1842 and again in 1862 men reported the wonders of the Yellowstone. Nobody would believe Washburn-Lang-forIn 1809 the Ihem. expedition from Montana succeeded; in get- ting a hearing. But It was not until 1870 that a special federal government expedition established the existence of the Yellowstone. Thus It took sixty-thre- e years and more than six discoveries to put the Yellowstone officially ' on the map. Cornelius Hedges he has deserved well of his In country September 18, 1870, by a camp-fir- e the Yellowstone, proposed that the Wonderland be made a national park a public playground set aside for the peoples use forever. The Idea took. Congress established the Yellowstone National . park March 1, 1872. , The United States now has nineteen national parks containing 10,859 square miles or 6,949,760 acres. Chronologically In the order of formation they are as follows : 1832 Hot Springs, Arkansas, .911 acres, originally a reservation, made a national park this year ; 46 curative hot springs. 1872 Yellowstone, Wyoming, Montana and Idaho, 3,348 square miles; geysers and other volcanic exhibits, Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, large lake, great animal preserve, i 1890 Sequoia, . California, 252 square miles; ,12,000 big trees over ten feet In diameter, and 'some over thirty-fiv- e feet and 5,000 years old. 1890 Yosemlte, California, 1,125 square miles; ! semi-offici- al d - , , Jeryce PREVENTION IS BEST REMEDY o White Scours in Calves and Piga Is Caused by Infection Treatment Not Promising. - (5U White scours In calves and pigs Is caused by Infection ; ' virulent ' colon bacilli are mostly responsible. Treatment of Infected pigs is not promising; the main thing is prevention. Do not feed too heavy a grain ration for a period of two weeks before farrowing. Feed bran, roots and alfalfa, y.- V a light ration of corn or barley, and be sure to psovlde opportunity for faioir Courtesy VSbrst Jerricc these things are to provide for the enjoyment of the same In such exercise. However, manner nnd by such means as will leave them of little consequence after infection appears. Keep your sows with little unimpaired for the enjoyment of future genera pigs on the ground. In individual hog tlons. There will be more national parks. The policy houses. This will be safer than keepof the national park service, as set forth In 1918 ing them in the same old pens, which These hog may still be Infected. by the late Franklin B. Lane, then secretary of the houses should be kept out In a field Interior, Is that the national parks of the future should be justified by "scenery of supreme and dis- and well scattered. This gives opportinctive quality or some natural feature so ex- tunity for exercise and lessens the of Infection. Provide a small traordinary or unique as to be of national Interest danger and Importance. The national park system as now amount of litter or bedding for each house. Use disinfectants freely. Vetconstituted, should not be lowered In standard, Department, Colorado Agrierinary dignity and prestige by the inclusion of areas ' which express in less than the highest terms the cultural College. particular class or kind of exhibit which they rep SHEEP REQUIRE GOOD SHADE resent. The national park movement Is now nationwide. There is an arrrfy of enthusiasts. These Plenty of Right Kind Returns Big Dividends One Tree Is Much enthusiasts are preaching that the mission of the Worse Than None. national parks is manifold; that general nse of them by the people will bring physical, mental, moral and financial benefits. Plenty of the right kind of shade Tills national-par- k transcontinental tourist traf- for sheep returns big dividends, farmfic by private car is getting to be a big thtng, with ers and sheep raisers say. Only one or tremendous possibilities in dollars. The Scenic two shade trees In a pasture are worse West was literally full of motorists this summer than none at all since a place to which on vacation trips ranging from two weeks to the the sheep come day after day soon whole season. All sorts of estimates have been becomes a hotbed of parasites, they made of what this means financially to the country add. The construction of small shades to have this money spent at home Instead of Ir which can be moved from place to sightseeing abroad. It Is purely guesswork to estt place is solving the difficulty for many mate what the million and more visitors to th farmers. national parks this summer paid out in money. An arbitrary minimum estimate of $100 each gives a ARTIFICIAL SHADE FOR HOGS ' total of $100,000,000. The national pnrk enthusiasts have formed an Protection of 8ome Kind Should Be organization of their own the National Parks asProvided In Pasture Where It was formed by. unofficial friends of sociation. Trees Are Lacking. the national parks to enter a field of the movement which the federal government apparently Where there are no trees In the hog docs not intend t occupy. The present policy of pasture to provide the d It ho? any national park policy Is shade congress-- If the summer months, an during merely to provide for the protection, maintenance artificial shade Is a most Important and development of the parks, leaving It to the part of the summer equipment. A people to determine the nse they shall make of good shelter may be constructed by them. The association is an organization of the setting short posts in the ground and people themselves to enable them to nse effectively building a roof of light boards over these public playgrounds. At present the enjoy- these. Windstorms should be" guarded ment of the American people of its national purka against by nailing the boards securely. is largely emotional. Among its many other activities the association purposes a campaign of education to double the enjoyment Of the people It says In effect to th by adding understanding. LIVE STOCK NOTES ! American people: Our national parks are natures great laboratories and museums. They are not merely .wonDo not lose sight of the good ders and scenery. They are exhibits on a mighty coal-ta- r scale of the processes by which nature has been dips, which are certainand is making America. You may double your ly valuable when applied according to pleasure In these exhibits by comprehending thelf directions. meaning through intelligent study. Let us Ses America first! But let us also know AmMcnl Shade and a wallow for hpt weather, Let us know its natural history as well bs Its end wood ashes, charcoal 'and other national history. - Let us differentiate, distinguish stomach rectifiers, are necessary If the nnd appreciate. Then we shall really know. Hieil tnga are expected to do their best. we shall really enjoy. !Ls5: - :v V - -- AZVSteTCOTr XJ?OF2& JIT. Yosemlte valley, high waterfalls, three groves of big trees. 1890 General Grant, California, four square miles ; big trees. 1S99 Mount Rainier, Washington, 324 square miles ; Mount Rainier with forty-eigsquare miles . of glaciers. 1902 Crater Lake, Oregon, 249 square miles; lake In crater of extinct volcano, with sides 1,000 feet high. 1903 Wind Cave, South Dakota, seventeen square miles ; cavern with many miles of galleries and chambers. 1904 Platt, Oklahoma, 848 acres; medicinal ' springs. 1904 Sullys Hill, North Dakota, 780 acres ; wild animal preserve. 190G Mesa Verde, Colorado, 77 square miles, prehistoric cliff dwellings. 1910 Glacier, Montana, 1,534 square miles; mountains, lakes end glaciers. 1915 Rocky Mountain, Colorado, 897 square miles, heart of the Rockies, Continental Divide, peaks up to 14,255 feet. 1916 Hawaii, Hawaiian Islands, 118 square miles, three famous volcanoes on two Islands, tropical scenery. 1916 Lassen Volcanic, California, 124 square"; miles ; only active volcano In United States proper, . other volcanic exhibits. 1917 Mount McKinley, Alaska, 2,200 square miles; highest mountain in North America (20,300 feet), great wild animal preserve; not yet accessible. 1919Grand Canyon, Arizona, 95S square miles, gorge of the Colorado river. 1919 Lafayette, Maine, 5,000 acres; group of mountains on Isle of Mount Desert .1919 Zion, Utah, 120 square miles; gorge of the c Rio Virgin. Many volumes could be filled with photographs scenery in these national parks. The of first-clas- s photographs reproduced herewith were selected for these reasons: Yellowstone Is the oldest, largest and best known of our national parks. Rocky Mountain Is the most popular. Grand Canyon is the greatest natural wonder In the world. Lafayette Is the only national park east of the Mississippi. Zion is the newest of our nineteen. The remaining picture, a scene on the way to Rocky Mountain, is typical of the American people at, play in the national parks. The Visitors to the national parks In 1921 numbered 1,007,335 ; the private automobiles numbered 175,825. Rocky Mountain led with 273,737 visitors and 57,438 automobiles. Hot Springs was second with 130.90S visitors. Yosemlte was third with with 91,513 visitors and 18,947 cars. Yellowstone had 81,651 visitors and 15,736 enrs. Appropriations in 1921 were $1,031,549 and revenues were $396,928. Eventually the national parks will be practically The net of 1916 creating the national park service, a bureau of the Interior department, sets forth that the fundamental purpose of the national parks is to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild Ufa therein and ht -- . much-neede- r high-grad- his spoil dandelions. aj&K No," said Squire Wltherbee, but Zekes making his headquarters down where theyre puttin up a new store. Is Zeke working at last? No, It aint that serious. Zekes kinder superintenden th Job, along . with several other gents whose wives Sheep Keep Lawn Clear of Dandelions run boardin houses. If th workmen and Weeds. were to lay a brick or raise a girder readily, and the hearts out of the without Zeke seeln It done It would e Birmingham day. Freshen a Heavy 8kin With the antiseptic, fascinating Cutl-cu- ra Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented, economical face, skin, baby and dusting pbwder and perfume. Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cntlcura Toilet Trio (Soap Ointment, Talcum) . Advertisement Wanted the Cheapest. How much vna dose collars? Two for a quarter. ; , How much for vun?" ' ; S" Fifteen cents." "Slff me de odder vun." Yale Rec, ord. , - - Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of OASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletchers Castoria Net Now. When I was young, girls were taught to darn their own stockings. ' "Yes, Grandma, but In those days It was possible to place a darn where It wouldnt show." Life Dont expect to grow heavenly wiags by your name on the fly leaf of the IHble. None of the lamentations for corn bread ever brings back. lt Even when a man knows exactly in what defect failure lies, he eeaTt It help Dont think for a minute that there Is nothing in spiritualism. Seme me- diums are wealthy. The difference between a It r compH-me-nt and flattery Is whether you get somebody else. Being diplomatic may seem expensive at the time, hpt in the long run it pays. Suspicion always hannts the guilty mind. Superstition is the religion of Liberality is not giving largely but wisely. It wen. Is a cunning art to play the fool A soft, speech may have a subtle poison. Music that moves you Is not neces- sarily divine. Faasse trouble and then you can be about It oiai VRm e'Morninl Eyes eepYour- Healthy - Cara Saak Clean far fraa Clear Wri-t- t Cyt Nuria Ca.OiiaSa,aA |