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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH THE RICH COUNTY REAPER Bernard H. Ewer, Editor and Prop. SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 Per Year in Advance matter Feb, Entered as second-clas- s 8, 1929, at the post office Randolph, Utah, under the Act of Mar. 3, 1879. I LL The Very Best Time ltr Privilege to Live in 1 organs into healthy action and builds up needed flesh and strength. Read this : Un. H. V. Hansen of 825 So. 3rd St, PocaI have had a lot of tello, Idaho, writes: Considering six major farm estimated prices to Utah products, 6.8 per cent were in growers February trouble with my stomach sort of catarrhal conthan for February, 1928. higher dition. It would be sore and aenaitiye to the RICHFIELD Dirt is beginning to touch, my food would not dicest caused me a lot of distress, but the 'Discovery' has given of the new munon installation the fly ever have medicine me more I relief than GREEN FEED FOR any taken. I can recommend it for this ailment'' water system, to cost $25,000, icipal dealer. Large bottle, liquid $1.35; TabGOSLINGS HELPS letsAU$1.35 were voted last talk bonds which for 65 cent and EPHRIAM Garfield Pattenghe and Ask your nearest druggist for Dr. Pierces Discovery, in tablets or liquid T. Cook, representatives of Frank Tender Grass Should Fill or send 10c for trial package of tablets Bond and Sons of Albuquerque, N. M., to Dr. Pierces Clinic, Buffalo, N. Y. were in Ephraim the first of the week Write for free medical advice. Principal Part of Ration. nd again contracted for 1300 rams from the Ephrair- - Rambouillet t s An Important Item In the care of sociation. young goslings is to keep them warm AbaorUnn " Will roduea la OGDEN Weber county farmers will and quiet for the first few days and JUmsd.rwoIloniointa.Bpraina. out two new crops this year, it was try brulsaa, soft bunchea. Quickly an equally important item in their baala boils, poll evil, quitter, announced by County Agent A. L. feeding is to start them ' out on green fistula and infaetadaoraa. Wifi, One hundred and fifty Christinansen. feed, preferably tender grass. not blister or re move hair. You will be planted in beans of acres can dry work horaa while using, For about two days after hatching 8.50 at drvggista, or postpaid. the bean industry to establish effort an to show little do inclination goslings Send for book S isea. five clover seed will acres red and of anything but keep warm and quiet. Vroas aurffiset "fistula ready to in be similar a planted purpose. font. Never saw anythiuAeld They may come from under the hen RICHFIELD To stimulate produe and nibble at whatever they may see tion of sugar beets in Sevier county in that is edible. They are most partial to grass and tender plants, but will 1929, the Gunnison Sugar company is take a little mash If It Is offered and cooperating with the Sugar Beet aswill dabble their bills in the water. sociation in this territory, and the After that the gosling begins to take Utah Agricultural college is a sugaf more interest In affairs and will feed beet production contest to be known as The Farmers Twenty-Toindustriously for short periods, always Sugai ; tender and Am Nall Wounds Beet club. grass short, preferlng Rusty weeds for Its diet, with mash and Ivy Poisoning, etc. LOGAN Testing of dairy cattle for other substantial feed that may be tuberculosis began in Cache county Try Hanfords S&lsam of Myrrh offered in small amounts. A common Afi lulei an iiddal ta nini recently, according to County Agrijvn snq (er the first battle II eel sailed. mistake is to feed green food as an cultural Agent Robert L. Wrir-leyaccessory to grain feed wl en it should The work of testing Cache countys Salesmen Wanted wits car, to sell shock form the principal part of the ration 22,500 dairy cattle was in charge of absorber of great merit, low price, good diswith mash and grain as an accessory count. Apply Factory, Superior Rebound three state and federal government Control, Inc., 2905 COth St., Kenosha, Wts. to the green stuff. Cattle in Cornish and veterinarians. CRUISE Juns 29 Goslings may be brooded with hens Lewiston districts was tested. Jfif a. UNCASTmA" or In small colony brooders or with MANT1 Forest Ranger S. Illertor, CUNARD LINE, 82 days, $600 $1300 geese. In the latter case they will to the Mammoth ranger made a trip to old the well left if Spain, Tangier, Algiers, Italy, Riviera," get along very the for station purpose of measuring Sweden, feed a Edinburgh, soft Norway, tlie birds, keeper supplying Berlin snow. He the Rhine, (Paris, London, reports 68 inches of of grain once or twice a day as the etc. mcluded. Hotels, drives, fees, content of 18 with water etc.). a snow, dictate. of the goslings may appetites Moditarranaas Cnilaa, Jan. 29, $600 up inches which is approximately 3 inches This is true only when the range Is Frank C. Clark, Times Bldg., N. Y. greater than the average water conample and furnishes good grazing. tent at this time of the year at that The geese which are mated with one Have Islanders station. broods raise their Ranger Anderson reports two Fiji will usually gander snow of in Lower Joes valley. watchfeet in one group, the gander being Little Need to Work ful over Ills whole family. HYRUM Lions club and farm buFiji islanders have a pretty easy reau are When the goslings are brooded by making efforts to raise the little work and no rent to pay. bean time, close hens or brooders they require from 90 to at least 125 acreage The placid life of the islanders attention while small. They should be acres before the planting season beconfined for the first few days In pens brightens the heavy reading of the is feared that, if the necesgins. It which will keep them near the hen or annual colonial report for 1927, which not is subscribed, the acreage sary brooder. These i?ns can be made of has just been issued by the British local bean cannery will not operate narrow wire netting or boards and government. Labor conditions do not exercise this year, which would mean the loss placed on sod. When the goslings of a payroll to farmers and employees clean off the grass they should be any considerable Influence on the of about $50,000. reFijians as a whole, declares the moved. Forest Supervisor C. . FILLMORE from additional port, apart affording social amenities. Every Fijian is a A. Mattson and Assistant Supervisor Habit Among g member of a unit and has C. J. Olson of the Fish Lake forest Hens Hard to Control the right to use a portion of the reserve returned recently from a trip, tribal lands for planting crops for lasting a week, to Fillmore and habit is usually food The and profit, or for raising cattle. Holden. While at Fillmore they held a hold of caused by the hens getting he remains in his village, he Is a conference with If Rangers L. A. Robegg that happens to be cona with of house native provided L. ins E. and Jensen regarding forest dropped on the ground somewhere in struction, built by the community of districts It to plans for Scipio, Kanosh and rolling plain sight. They get which he Is a member. Beyond perElsinore and the It, ranger districts. The plana about, finally breaking forming his share of the work done outlined in" detail all recurrent work trouble has started.. The next thing for its own benefit by the community to be done each and the amount is to get it stopped. Sometimes it as a whole, he pays no rent either for of nonrecurrent year a work that should be be slight by making may stopped his land or his honse. break in the side of an egg, running a peroid. completed in the next OGDEN Acreage of tomatoes in part of the white and then inserting a Echoes From Space Utah will be increased about 800 acres good dose of cayenne pepper, closing on the wandering of wireless Light the bole with adhesive tape or waves through the ether is claimed by this year, it was announced recently Drop this out among the Professor Stoerm'er of Oslo to have by George Shorten, assistant secretary of the Utah Canners association. The guilty ones and see what they do with been thrown by experiments underit and how it affects them. Another taken in increase will be general over the state, conjunction by Norwegian way is to heat an egg to the boiling and Dutch wireless stations. The with about 100 acres increase in Weber propoint, crack slightly and place out fessor states that echoes from these county. Estimated planting for the for them. waves have been clearly distinguished. whole state will run about 6000 acres, ' In case neither of these work, a He puts forward the view that the Weber county will have about 2500 C plan that will be effective is to put a waves are thrown back to earth when acres. false bottom of burlap In your nest DRAPER Construction The In Draper space far bethey reach a point box Just a few Inches from the real has been awarded the genermoon. company the yond bottom, tacking it around the sides, al contract for the building of the then cut a cross in the center of the Good market, according to the at growers' Drawing i burlap large enough for the eggs to How is your son making out as an architects, Ashton & Evans. The first drop through. They will go down out artist? unit will consist of a market for of sight and trouble. It may be that overdrawn at the bank. Hes trading and also two new adat the stftart of this dirty work you ministration buildings, which will cost may b able to locate one leader, and The balance of $210,-00- 0 about $66,500. out to herself the trouble taking be spent for a warehouse a will in the flock will be ended. block long with two stories and a basement.' TOOELE Poultrymen of Tooele county, led by Hugh Hurst, Tooele county agricultural agent, inspected three big hatcheries of Salt Lake counKeeps On Taking Lydia E. Pink-ha- ty recently, according to V. L. Martin-eaKeep hens ridded of worms. Salt Lake county agricultural Vegetable Compound agent. Most of their time was spent The air in a chicken house should at the Community hatchery, Draper, be continually moving at a fairly slow Philadelphia, Pa. "I always US where about. 150,000 chickens are berate. ComLydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable is by far the largpound before and ing hatched. This of life the of weeks The first three after childbirth. I est hatcher in Utah and ranks in size am a mother of with any hatchery , of the United a chick is recognized as oue of essenthree children two States. tial importance. little girls and a SALT LAKE Presentioultry prosboy. I would baby full a will crop chicks digest in Utah indicate a baby chick Baby pects nervget of mash in from two to two and a ous, dizzy and weak production of nearly 3,000,000 for 1929, half hours and are then ready for ansometimes so I bad double the 1928 figure, C. C. Edmunds, other feed. to lie In bed. I manager of the Utah Poultry Prowould take the ducers Cooperative association, deComThe breeding turkey should receive Vegetable clared in a report recently. The expound as a' tonic a good laying mash along with scratch is borne out by the fact that pectation and I always saw grain. an improvement after taking the first already commercial egg production for it to be a good tonic. 1929 has increased about 15 per cent The turkeys should - not be , fed bottle. I found recommend I your medicines over the same period in 1928 and may always steam straight alfalfa meal or alfalfa to my friends and I cannot speak too be expected to increase more as hena ' to be too is it bulky meal because highly of them. Mbs. Anna Loudibt mature. handled by their d'gestlve systems. 8acx. 1607 8. Front? Street, Pbllft Ffc UTAH 7-- For Poisoned Wounds n . ITTTnnm? AjUstvir Tros-sach- s, . Egg-Eatin- land-ownin- egg-eatin- soft-shelle- g g d five-ye- ar court-plaste- r. . all-ye- hr Poultry Facts ar FIRST BOTTLE HELPED HER ms u, run-dow- n, THE 1 Utah to take Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery is now. This herbal alterative imextract makes the blood redder proves and repairs your system, rouses It May Be A TTTfTS Newo Notes IMPROVEMENT OF THE DAIRY HERD . Records Create Friendly Competitive Spirit. advantages of Dairy association work are listed in a summary of the results of the associations activities for the year ended July 1, 1928, whlck has just been published by the Colorado Agricultural college. records kept by the association enable dairymen . to cull unprofitable cows, select heifers for the young herd, determine the worth of the bull and intelligently conduct feeding operations, the report states, C, A. Smith, fieidinan for the state dairy commissioner, prepared the summary, which states that the ftssfr create a friendly elation records competitive spirit between dairymen,, which tends to raise the production of the herd and makes for more efficient management. He adds: association records are becoming mors and more necessary to the successful sale of surplus females. The man who Is going into the dairy business today wants animals with authentic produc tion records behind them. The dairy man who has such records on his cows can command a premium price on his sale stock. The association work also presents an opportunity for a community to make a name for itself as a center s stock of a particular for breed. The cow testers records show that the man who fed a balanced ration according to production had a succulent winter feed, took the chill off the water in winter time, supplemented pasture with grain had the larger return above feed cost Copies of the report may be obtained from the extension service of the state agricultural college. Numerous nt Cow-testin- g nl high-clas- When your Children Ciy for It Castoria Is a comfort when Baby is fretful. No sooner taken than the little one is at ease. If restless, a few drops soon bring contentment. No harm done, for Castoria is a baby remedy, meant for babies. Perfectly safe to give the yopngest infant ; you have the doctors word for that! It is a vegetable product and you could use it every day. But its in an emergency that Castoria means most. Some night when constipation must be relieved or colic pains or other suffering. Never be without It ; some mothers keep an extra bottle, unopened, to make sure there will always be Castoria in the house. It is effective for older children, too; read the book that comes with it Newspaper Namea Limited There is a great sameness in the titles of newspapers In the United States. Of approximately 2,400 daily papers, only about 300 words are recorded, and only 50 of these 300 words Let Dairy Cow Market are necessary to identify 2,000 of Home-Grow- n Grain Feed these dailies, according to a survey of How Newspapers Get Their Names, The dairy cow furnishes a better market today for feed than ever be- made by the Inland Printer. Twelve fore, says H. It.. Searles, dairy spe- name words are used for 1,368 newscialist with the agricultural extension papers, the order of numerical importance being: News, 298; Times, division, University of Minnesota. Mr. Searles has been comparing 191 ; Journal, 155 ; Herald, 142, Trib79; prices and finds that while the prices une, 108; Record, 80; Republican, Gaof dairy feeds have Increased 24 per Press, 70; Star. 67; Democrat, 59; cent since 1914, butterfat prices have zette, 67, and Sun, 52. mounted about 70 per cent in the same Great Carrying On period. Mrs. Newbride My dear. Im so In 1914, with butterfat selling at 30 cents a pound, the cow worried. Our cook is carrying on returned $90 at a feed cost of $45, or something awful. Mrs. Oldbride Mine did the same a return over feed cost of $45, says Mr. Searles. In 1927, with butterfat thing. Carried away enough to start a small grocery store. at 51 cents a pound, the cow returned $153 at a feed cost of Generally the Cate about $56, leaving a return over feed How did you find that cheap house cost of $97. This cow, then, in 1927 returned $52 more over feed cost than you bought? Very expensive. she did in 1914. Translated into terms of return over feed costs, the increase In favor of 1927 has been around 115 per cent It pays to feed grain to good cows. For the man who has the cows they are a better market for his feed grain than the elevator. If he i$ short of grain he can afford to buy it at present prices. The proper grain ration fed with roughage will greatly increase his Income for the roughage he is selling through the cow. Cow testing association reports show that as the production of, butterfat Increases from 100 pounds per cow to 300 pounds, the price received for the roughage the cow eats increases from $5.50 per ton to $39 per ton. 300-poun- d 300-poun- d . . JhenFood Outdoor Exposure Quite Harmful to Dairy Cows Tests at state experiment stations show that a dairy cow drinks about four gallons of water for each gallon of milk she produces. This means that a cow giving five gallons of milk a day must have approximately 20 gatlons of water. Dairymen have observed that cows compelled to drink at an unheated outdoor tank in cold weather do not take as much water as they need. They also consider outdoor exposure harmful to the cows when the winds are cold and the weather stormy. Members of dairy herd Improvement associations often find that the installation of automatic drinking cups in their barns Increases the production of their cows 9 or 10 per cent A Minnesota dairyman says that keeping a constant supply of fresh water before his cows in drinking cups saved him an hours labor a day. He con lders his Investment in drinking cups one of the Most profitable be ever Made. Sours Lots of folks who think they have 'indigestion have only an acid condl tion which could be corrected in five or ten minutes. An effective anti-acilike Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon restores digestion to normal. - Phillips does away with all that sourness and gas right after meals. It prevents the distress so apt to occut two hours after eating. What a pleasant preparation to take! And how good it is for the system! Unlike a burning dose of soda which is but temporary relief at best Phillips Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many times Its volume in acid. Next time a hearty meal, or too rich a diet has brought on the least disd comfort, U try Milk ofMagnesla , |