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Show - J f.fc THE RICH COUNTY NEWS, RANDOLPH, UTAH Siiniamniiiiiiiiiinimiiiniiiiiiunnnug THE 5 1 I! DOLTON GIRLS I PROPOSITION - - - II WILLIAM it s$ ALLEN - - WHITE fliitiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiimiiiiHiiimuiin HicnUlu Co. she said she would like a position jvlth our It was all over between us. After that we knew that She was at least highly Improbable If not entirely impossible. But then we might have expected as much from a girl who called herself Maybelle. There Is, 's however, this much to be said In favor: she was persistent She did not let go till it thundered I We could have stood it well enough f she had limited her campaign for a Job on the paper to an occasional call at the office. But she had a fiendish instinct which told her wbb were the' friends we liked most to oblige: the banker, for Instance, who carried our 'overdrafts, the leading advertiser,' the chairman of the printing committee of the town council and she found ways to make them ask If we couldn't do something for Miss Bolton. Shr could teach school; indeed, she had r place In the academy. But ,she loathed She had a I why s felt that, If she could once get a start, she could make a name for herself. She had written something that she called A Critique on Hamlet, which she submitted to us, and was deeply pained when we told her that we dldu't care for editorial matter; that what our paper needed was the names of the people in our own country town and county, printed as many times a day or a week or a month- as they could be put Into type. We tried to tell her that mtore Important to us than the influence of the Celtic element on our national life and literature was the fact that John Jones of Lebo that is to say, red John, as distinguished from black John or Jones the tinner, or Jones of the Possum Holler settlement was in town with a load of Other papers," we explained hay. carefully, while she looked as sympathetic and Intelligent as a collie, other papers might be interested In the y of uranium X; they might care to print articles on the psychological phenomena of mobs to which she snapped eagei; agreement with her eyes others, with entire propriety, might be interested In inorganic evolution and she cheeped with feverish Intensity "yes, yes "but in our little local paper we cared only for the person who could tell our readers with the most delicacy and precision how many spoons Mrs. Worthington had to borrow for her party, who had the largest number of finger-bowl- s In town, what Mrs. Conklin pa!8 for the broilers she served at her party last February, and the name of the country woman who raised them, and why It was that all the women failed to make Jennie's recipe for sunshine cake 'work when they tried it. Such are the things that Interest our people, and he, she or It who can turn In two or three columns a day of itetns setting forth these d things In a way, so that the persons mentioned will only grin and wonder who told it, is good for ten dollars of our money every Saturday Copyright, 1831, by the WHEN May-belle- school-teachin- - the list of officers nor the names of the choir because they were pll people wbo lived here and everyone knew them. Then we explained in short, simple sentences that the sermons were of no value, and that the names were What we desired. She dropped her eyes and said meekly, Oh! and told ns how sorry she was. Also she said that If it wasn't for a meeting of the T. T. T. girls that afternoon she wonld go back and get the names. When she went out, the Toung Prince, sitting by the window with his pencil behind his ear and his feet on the I bet she can make the table, said: And such lovely grandest ; fudge angel food, put In Miss Larrahee, who was busy writing up the Epworth league convention. Miss Bolton's name was always among the lists we printed of the guests at the Entre Nous Card club, the Imperial Dancing club, the Giddy Toung Things club, the Art club and and Shakespeare club. , But when she came to the office she was full of anxiety at the frivolity of society. She said that she longed for Intellectual companionship ; that she felt sometimes as If she must fly to a place where she could find a soul that would feel In unison with the Infinite that thrilled in her being. Far be It from her to wish to coin the pulsations of her soul, but papa and mamma did need her help so. She accented papa and mamma on' the last syllable and leaned forward and looked upward like a shirtwaist Madonna. But writing locals someway didn't appeal to her. She wondered If we could use a serial story. And then she went on: Oh, I have some of the sweetest things In .my head ! 1 know I could write them. They just tingle through my blood like wine. I know I could write them such sublime things but when I sit down to put them on paper something always comes up that prevents my going on with them. There are dozens whirling through my brain begging to be written. There Is one about the earl who has Imprisoned the young princess In a dungeon, and her lover, a knight of the cross, comes 1 . meet that Maybelle had used five hunn dred yards of pink and blue and white and yellow In her trousseau, and that she was bestowing the same passionate fervor on her hemstitching and tucking that she had wasted on literature; that she was helping papa and mamma by shouldering the biggest wedding on them since the Tomlinsons went Into bankruptcy after their fireworks ceremonial. Miss Larrabee said tltat Papa Bolton's livery-stabl- e was burning up so fast that she wanted to call out the fire department, and that Mamma Bolton e made her think of the testimonials we printed from "poor tired women. The day of the wedding the blow came. A very starched-u- p little boy with strawberry juice frescoed around bis mouth brought In a note from Maybelle and a tightly rolled manuscript ribbon. In the tied 'with baby-blu- e note she said that she thought it would be so' romantic to write up her own wedding recalling the dear, dead days when she was a neophyte In letters. We handed the manuscript to Miss Larrabee, from whom, ns sbe read, ! Drawing-rooHuh I came snorts : Music-rooHeavens to Betsy! Peculiar style of beauty I Oh, joyl Looked like a in the morn. Wouldnt that saturate you! The Apollo-lik- e beauty of the groom. Miss Larrabee groaned as she rose, and putting her raincoat on the floor by Do you her chair she exclaimed: people know what I am going to do? I have got to lie right down here and have a fit! patent-medicin- wood-nymp- Absent-Minde- d h Lawyer. , 1 con-w-ntl- iV Larger She le Grey.er Will Be Her Capacity to Conetime and Turn It Into Milk, ' Pigs Grown snd Fattened on Alfalfa Pasture Will Do Beat When Given Protein. To get the best out of our dairy cattle we must grow the heifers out and develop them well, because tbe heifer of today Is the cow of tomorchief of row, says J. P. tbe dairy division, who states that tbe majority of tbe dairy heifers In South Carolina are undersized. The dairy heifer is a future milk producing machine, and the larger she Is the greater will be her capacity to consume feed and therefore to produce milk, other things being equal. The question often comes up in 'feeding heifers as to whether they are making a good growth, for their How big should a age. heifer be? Wbat should she Normal growth for Jerseys, weigh? and Holstelns, dairy Ayrshires Shorthorns have been worked out by the Missouri experiment station. For rapid and economical gains use a If yob are growing and fattening pigs on alfalfa pasture, they will do best when self fed on grain and some protein supplement Selffeed shelled corn and meat meal tankage, and the pigs will make heavier, faster and more economical gains than If a limited feed of grain only Is fed Unless yon see the name Bayer on on pasture. package or on tablets you are not getFeeding torts show that the pig will ting tbe genuine Bayer product prebalance his ration economically when scribed by physicians over twenty-tw- e years and proved safe by millions for Headache Colds Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism Earache Pain, Pain Neuralgia of Aspirin Tablets Accept Bayer only. Each unbroken package contains proper directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. , Drug;, h' gists also sell bottles of 24 ana 169." Asperln Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of ' Advertisement Salicylicacld. PORK ECONOMICALLY self-feede- - . '' Cat Ate the Canary.' Our canary died a natural death So? Yes, the the other day. ate It. Michigan Gargoyle.; ' at DYED HER SKIRT, Machines in Operation g the self feeder is used with the above feeds. If alfalfa Is good, and the sh'otes pastured at tbe rate of about 20 head per acre, a pound of gain can be put on with approximately three and one-hapounds of shelled corn s and of a pound of tanklf four-tenth- age. For Best Results Young Animals Should Bo Fed in Stanchions. At this rate, with com at per hundredweight, and tankage at $3.50 per hundredweight, a gain per pig can be secured at a feed cost of $8.40. With $10 hogs, this leaves $6.60 per head, or $132 per acre from tfie gain alone to pay for alfalfa. With only 20 head per acre, a fair cutting of hay may also be secured. E. J. Maynard, associate professor, animal husbandry, Colorado Agricultural college. $1-2- d old For Instance, If a twelve-month- s Jersey heifer weighs approximately 460 pounds, sbe Is making normal growth ; eighteen months old, 675 A Holstein heifer, on the pounds. other hand, should weigh about 660 pounds, und at eighteen months, 690 pounds, The weight of an animal is not the whole story, however. The height at the withers Is also an excellent Indication. The normal Jersey heifer at six .months should be about 37 Inch as, at the withers; at twelve months 42 Inches, at eighteen months, 45 Inches, and at two years Inches. Holstelns at the same 47 age are higher at six months, 39.7 Inches; at twelve months, 44.8 Inches; eighteen months; 47.9 Inches; and at two years, 49.8 Inches. OF MILKING MACHINE VALUE Sitting by the Window With His Psnelt Behind His Ear and His Feet on tho I Bet She Can Make the Grandest Fudgel " Table, Said: home from a crusade and Is put In the note to him and gave him directions cell next to her. A bird that she has how to deliver it. Turning away, still been feeding through her prison win- feeling In his pockets, he found the dow takes a lock of her golden hair glasses, which he had overlooked hi to the window where her lover Is his haste. He hastily recalled the boy looking out across the beautiful world, and, adjusting his glasses, took the not knowing that she, too, has fallen note and added, Have Just found my into the earl's clutches. And, oil, yes! glasses In another pocket. Then be there Is another about Cornelia who bunded the note back to the messenlived In a moated tower, and all the ger and said, Lose no time? see Mrs. dukes and lords and kings In the land Anderson herself and wait for packhud laid suit to her hand, and she age ; bring to me here and ask for Mr. could find none who came up to her Anderson at the door. highest Ideal, so she set them a task Canceled Check as Receipt and, oh, a lot more about what they This Is a banker's answer as to did; I havent thought that. out but anyway site married the Red Duke, whether a canceled check is erldence Wolfahg, who spumed her task and of payment. took her by night with his retainers A check Is not a payment It Is away from tbe tower, paying her love merely an order to make a payment was his Holy Grail and to get her was An Indorsed and canceled check la the object of his pilgrimage. Oh, it's valid legal evidence that payment has been made, provided there Is no overjust grand. No, we don't use serials and when coming evidence to the contrary. If It Is made clear that tbe receiver we do we buy them In stereotyped plates by the pound. This made Miss of the check has not, in fact received Bolton droop, with another disap- payment, then the endorsed check, pointed Oh." The grain of the world marked paid, Is hot, In fact, acceptable seems so coarse when one looks at it evidence that payment has been made. When a bank pays a check It goes closely. We did not see Miss Bolton at the on the assumption that, tbe man who office for a long time after the duke receives the money as well as the man abducted tlie Indy in the moated who draws the check Is responsible, grange, but we received a poem signed and therefore, if the check proves to M. B. To Dan Cupid," and another on be not good, the man who received Also there the money Is held responsible. He, of Fire." My. Heart caine an anonymous communication In In turn, must look to the maker of the strangely familiar fat vertical hand- check. writing to the effect that some people In this town tldnk that if a young Indy Belated Knowledge. has a gentleman friend call on her The preacher was Scotch, and ol more than twice a week It Is their the old school, who believed In a business to assume a courtship. They physical hell, and he was preaching should know that there are souls on one of the good, this earth Whose tendrils reach Into sermons. With awethe Infinite beyond the gross' material- inspiring gestures and appropriate pulity of this mundane sphere to a destiny pit pounding, he brought a particularAt the bottom of ly fiery discourse to a triumphant beyond the stars. the page were the words: v Please done with something like the followt , publish and oblige a subscriber. ing: And on the last day there yell The next that we heard of Miss Bolton was that she was running pink be, all ye wlckut sinners, up tae your n And blue through her necks In the sea of brimstone, and the white things, and was expecting a linen flames'll be roarin' round ye, and yell shower from the T. T. T. girls, a silver no hae a drapple of water to wet your shower from the Giddy Toung Things," parched throats, and therell be wall-iand gnasliln' of teeth, and ye'll be s handkerchief shower from tbe Entre Nous girls, and a kitchen shower from crying out unto the Lord. Oh, Lor-rthe Imperial club. Miss Larrahee, the we did not know we did not know! And the good Lord. In the society editor, began to bate Miss Bolhate which all mnlrcy and compassion of His loving ton with the White-ho-t will say, Weel! Ye ken the society editors turn on all brides. Miss hoar-rt- , London Oplulon. Larrabee was authority for the state- - noor baby-ribbo- n d, DRESS, . SWEATER AND DRAPERIES ' WITH DIAMOND DYES" , good-nature- - Say "Bayer and Insist! MAKING He called a messenger, handed the PTocld t- MUST KEEP HEIFER GROWING A prominent and successful lawyer in Virginia afforded his friends much amusement by bis absentmindedness, On reashing the court bouse one morning he failed to find his eyeglasses In their accustomed pocket. He searched hurriedly and then as best he could without them wrote to his wife: "Please send my eyeglasses by bearer. I think I left them on the table la living room." -- Maybelle thought it was such Interesting work, and her eyes floated in tears of happiness at the thought of such Joy. If she could only have a chancel It would be Just lovely imply grand, and she knew she could do Itl Something in her innermost soul thrilled with a tlntlnabulation that made her quiver with anticipation. Whereupon she went out and came back In three days with five sheets of foolscap on which she had written, an article beginning: When Memory draws aside the curtains of her magic chamber, revealing the pictures meditation paints, and we see through the windows of our dreams the sweet vale of yesterday, lying outside and beyond; when stern Ambition, with relentless hand, turns ns away from all this to ride In the somber chariot of Duty then It' Is that entrancing Pleasure beckons us back to sit by Memorys fire and sip our tea with What it was all Maiden meditation. about no ono ever found out; but tho Toung Prince at the local desk who read it clear through said that sometimes he thought that It wasa report of a fire and at other times it seemed like a dress-good- s catalogue. It would ' have made four columns. As he put the roll back in the drawer the Toung prince rose and paced grandly out. At the front door he stopped and said ; Toull never make anything out of her shes a handholder! When a girl begins to get corns on her hands, I notice she has mush on the brain But Maybelle returned, and we went all over the same ground again. We explained that what we wanted was short Items two or three lines each little references to home doings i something telling who has company, who is sick, who Is putting shingles on the barn er an L on the house. And she said Oh, yes! so passionately that If seemed as though site would bark or put her front feet on the table.' One felt like taking her, Jaws In his hands snd pulling her ears. The next time she came In she said that If we would Just try her give her something to do she was sure she Could show us how well she could do It. On a venture, and partly to get rid f her, we sent her to the district of the Epworth league to write the opening meeting. About noon up of the next day she brought in three jermoM, and said that she didnt get U C) . radio-activit- night Aspiraa baby-ribbo- No Doubt of Important Part It Plays In Development of More Profit- able Dairying. There can be little doubt now of the value of the milking machine and the Important part that It Is playing In the development of more profitable The contention that milkdairying. ing machines are harmful to cows, that they tend to tear down the udder and render the cows 'useless, has proven to be generally untrue. Tbe recent Improvements, that have been made on the leading makes of milking machines have made It possible for the practical farmer to invest In one with a comparative certainty of securing beneficial results provided he gives the machine care. The right use of the milking machine Is- - just one more step toward more profitable dairying, more contented dairymen and more wholesome mflkj H. IL Lascelles, In Indiana Farm Guide. Separate the cow from the herd several days before calving date. In summer open pasture and In winter clean dry stall are Ideal calving conditions. Feed a bran mash for first four to six feeds after calving. Feed a light grain mixture, such as equal parts oats and bran, until swelling is out of , After udder Is normal, start milk ration at four to five pounds daily, and Increase gradually one pound every other day until natural milk flow la reached. Continue feeding according to production. t . . ADDING TO VALUE OF LAMBS Docking and Castration Should Be Done in Morning Many Males Should Be Marketed. Lambs should be docked and castrated In tbe morning If possible so tbat they can be looked after during the day time. In case of excessive bleeding as a result of docking, the tall .should be tied with a cord. It is best to dock first and castrate a few days later, but if the flock Is a large one and a second handling Is not desirable both operations may be done at one time. Too great emphasis cannot be placed upon these two acts of proper flock management from the standpoint of success In raising the lambs and the higher market value.' Many males are used for breeders when they should be wethers fattened for market. - The proper place to dock is abont tbe third vertebrae or about one inch from the body. Tho skin should be forced forward so that It may later fall back and cover the stump. For docking a sharp knife will serve well. Many nse a hot plncber or chisel for this operation, but the henting,of Iron consumes time and the liot Iron is used only in cases when lambs cannol be watched afterward, as In range flocks. Phil A. Anderson, division of animal husbandry. University farm. WINTER RYE WILL HELP OUT Keeps Hogs in Thrifty Condition While Others Forage Crops Are ' Being Sown and Started. Care at Calving Time udder. ' , . A field of winter rye upon which the hogs may be turned early In the spring and on which they may feed while the "'her forage crops are being sown and rtarted, will help out wonderfully In the amonnt of grain food required to keep them In a good, thrifty condition. Purebred Are Important Purebred Uve stock on every farm is greatly rmeded, for purebred stock make bigger returns for time and feed Invested. 8owa Produce Big Litters. , Sows that are fed well abont ten' days before breeding will produce larger litters than tf scantily fed this time. at Each package of Diamond Dyes contains directions so simple 'any woman one , dye or tint her worn, shabby dresfees, skirts, waists, coats, stockings, sweaters, coverings, draperies, hangings, everything, even it she has never dyea before. Buy Diamond Dyes no other kind then perfect home dyeing is sure because Din- mond Dyes are guaranteed not to spot, fade, streak, or run. Tell your druggist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, sottoa er mixed goods. Advertisement, - Only those wbo have no worries can afford to look worried. DOCTOR ORDERED mi OBEYED Took Lydia EPinkliams Vegetable Compound and U Now Well : Chicago, Illinois- .- Ton surely gave women one good medicine whep you pul EL 'Lydia Pinkhami Vegetable Com- - on the I had my baby I was all run down and so nervous . it kept me from gaining. My doctor did everything he could ' to build me op, that he ordered me to take Lydia E. Pinkhanas Eound Vegetablehis Commed pound with icine and I am now a new woman.! have had three children and they are all Lydia B. Pinkham babies. I have rec- -' ommended your medicine to several friends and they speak highlyof it You are certainly doing good work in this Mrs. ADEITH ToMSHECK, 10667 wsrl d. Wabash A.ve., Chicago, Illinois. There is nothing very strange abont the doctor directing Mrs. Temsheck to trite Lydia B, Pmkharaa Vegetable Compound. There are many physicians wko do recommend it and highly appreciate its value. Women who are nervous, ran down, and suffering from women's ailments root and should give this herb medicine a trial. Mrs. Tomahecke experience aheuld guide you towards health. - well-kno- No Soap; Better ' For Your Skin- -: tr Than Cuticura Imp 25c. Otntmnt25 aid 50c, Talon 25c. A & hVOSUmY3A u jf ; r t Si , uzn LACUPPE3K35 'smart saonamC WH-Htu.e- e. Yourlloirra miektr to all Iw oriftaai At.UfMraMiSe,a HUM. DIO. qiall. lanrtnM. KWH t Proving the Proverb. . Distance lends enchantment to tod view,-- . some poet says", v tlhats fight. At any ratvlt't easier to admire a girl when she's well off." r . Boston Evening Transcript. ; . Milk With Cloan Hanoi. Th milker should always milk wltl dry clean hands, it Is a filthy habit to say the least, to milk with we hands, and It fa a mistaken Idea that milking with Wet bands makes milk tng easier. Whole Milk for Calves. tVhole milk should be fed the cal' until It Is tbre weeks old. At thi time skim fnilk may be substituted fo part of the whole milk. Make gradually. ' the ' i ' Bfftoient J dent? ,, , Is your new typewriter J gM effl- -' , . Four proposals already, Tm : inEwes, After the breeding season the ewes formed." Louisville Courier-Journado not require grain until three weeks R'rfht Ml Unrated- before lambing. If good clover hay end WftN Hoorn hf roots are fed. . If they Tire, ItcH Smart or Burn, if Sor Make Success With Sheep. Irritated, Inflamed er Success with sheep meant careful tUri Granulated, use Murias am Saothti, Refreshes. Safe for weeding, breeding and feeding, and at ao time Is this more Important than la SnfanterAdult At all Druggists. Write for Treo Eye Book. Ratal Ep MNlfCaCBoisi tho fall Food for Breeding t v? , Consumer of As a consumer of hog has no rival.' f' i i l. Liu) - r, r t a - |