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Show THE RICH COUNTY REAPER, RANDOLPH, UTAH TEE KICfl COUNTY REAPES Entered as second-clas- s matter Feb 8. 1929. at the Just 4 The new maid was no find" as far Her mistress was finding' the task of training her somewhat arduons. At breakfast she showed her an glass. This runs for three and a half minutes, - Bridget, sh& said. You can boil the masters eggs with It. Five minutes later the maid came into the dining room. Well?" asked her mistress. ' "The eggs Is done, madam she replied, but I have my doubts about the Answers Magazine. glass. as Intelligence was concerned. g IN FOR LIFE A doesnt pooch sprinr cletninit. but we do. Thats why we know the valne of He has no sense of Values PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY. HEWillETiKS THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY Its fine to know the things we need. Can all be labeled "Guaranteed to please, to satisfy and aid. Its fine to know the things we grow. Can all be nsed at home, and so Wo ask for Intermonntain made. Protect home grown products by asking for Intermountain made goods. JAMES ABPLANALP, Vernal, Utah. LEAKS BEAUTY CULTURE at the wests finest school. Call or write for free catalog. 0 BEAUTY Main & Broadway Say, ne must be some tough yegg the way they keep him penned up all the time. Sizzling Ice Cream The colored preacher was describing the "bad place to a congregation of awed listeners. Friends, he said, youve seen this here melted iron running out of a furnace, aint you all, white-hosizzling and hissing? Well The preacher pointed a long, lean finger at the frightened crowd. Well, he continued, they use that stuff for Ice cream in the place I been talking ' v She Cant Complain Egg Peddler (to wife) Sufferin snakes, Florabel, you sold the wrong eggs to that last woman. Wife How so? Peddler You sold her some of that lot we dated September 10 and Its only September 1 now. Country Gave Up Easy Joan I hear you have given up Mabel. . John Yes, I thought she was perfect, but last night I found something about her I didnt like. What was that? Bills arm. ' The Dread of Obscurity Do you think It possible to love our enemies?" Not exactly, replied Miss Cayenne. Yet many of us ought to feel rather grateful to our enemies as the only people who take a real interest In us. Inconsiderate Aloofness Do you think radio promotes proper eloquence? answered Senator Sorghum. No, It puts a man in a room by himself and leads him to forget how the audience may be suffering. SURE ENOUGH SCHOOL Salt Lake City T Oysters Safest Food A city health officer says that oysters may be considered one of our safest foods, because spoilage in oysters is so easily detected. NO W ON SALE REAL BARGAINS UTAH WOOLEN MILLS 24-3- t, Richards Street 0 ' Gasoline Does Not Freeze Gasoline has no freezing point but acquires a stiff, wax-lik- e consistency at extremely low temper, atures, say 90 or 100 degrees below zero. At 400 Utah Oil Refining Service Stations in Utah and Idaho Fish Swan Great Plains , Fishes twelve feet long swan in the sea 90 million years ago, where the Great Plains now spread. Utah Certified Pullorum Tested Chicks White Leghorns, Rhode Island Reds, Barred Plymouth Rocks, for immediate delivery. Headquarter for Hart Gas brooders, for natural, artificial, or tank gas. can be nsed anywhere. Also the new Radiant. Phone, write or wire for prices and complete information. Sol-H- ot RAMSHAW HATCHERIES S87 South State Street C. C. No. 546 Salt Lake City, Utah TIMPANOGOS HATCHERY 20S South 7th East C. C. No. 1206 . Provo. Utah . VMTEI lady sr (cMlra,. to reprtitm Sad lake Mfg. taatam Is yaw city, laferaaca required. Sly proHta to right garty. M cunning. WeOpportunity, Signified bualneu, Small Investment, train yeu cur eipente. (100 In (300 pur monib (enured. yeur prulltu. (. A. Maya. 828 iudgu (ldg (all lilta City. waaanjaadoaiaooaja SUPERFEX uvSSbw REFRIGERATOR V Works Anywhere! THE BREAKFAST CHAMP ! ! by burning a little kerosene for an hour or two a day a full year of refrigeration for less than $10.00 1 Peggy All April fools are dead easy. Reggie How do you make that out? 'Peggy Take yourself for Instance. Impetuous Imagination . What became of that pretty mantel clock you gave your wife?" I hid it, answered Mr. Meekton. Henrietta gets Every now and then she mistook it for a microphone and made a speech Into Servioe. Carefully controlled feeding tests have shown that early feeding of chicks does not Interfere with yolk absorption almost a traditional belief. Have food and water or milk ready for ' the chicks as soon as they are received from the hatchery. A good starting and growing mash should contain 18 to 20 per cent crude protein, not more than 7 to 8 per cent crude fiber, and should be ground finely enough that particles are no larger than half a kernel of wheat Also, the chicks should be given nothing but milk to drink for the first seven to fourteen days, to maintain the proper content of protein in the ration. Or, the pouitryman may mix 10 to 15 per cent of dried milk with the chick mash for the first few days. This need for more protein in the early diet, the first food of the chick after hatching, Is yolk, which contains about 33 per cent of protein. Milk, the first food of mammals, also contains about 33 per cent of protein. Birds and fowls in the wild state are fed largely on worms and insects for a time after hatching. This sort of food has a higher protein content than FULL O PEP egg yolk .or milk. , Therefore, It 'does not seem logical to change the ration of the chick suddenly from egg yolk, a 33 per cent protein food, to a mash that contains 18 to 20 per cent protein. Some form of milk in the ration, to supply additional protein, is essential for the first week or two. High-Producti- UN-DE-FEAT- ED YOU CAN'T BEAT IT Birds on Happy, and Good Eaters Early rising and late retiring are good signs in a flock of poultry, since they indicate vigor. Hens with these characteristics should be selected for a breeding flock on farms where chicks are hatched, says a writer in Prairie Farmer. It is easier to get a small flock of good hens together and mated with roosters from flocks than it 4s to increase flock production by hatching eggs from the farm flock. The birds used in the breeding flock should be the super-bird- s of the entire flock. They should be selected for breed character, vitality and constitutional vigor. Birds that have these will be bright-eyehave glossy plumage and lots of energy, as indicated by the way they move around and scratch for feed. Birds that are physically strong have good appetites. High producers will be found most frequently at the feed hoppers. high-produci- Once you taste Grape-Nut- s Flakes, youll cheer tool And it not only has a delicious flavor, but its nourishing. One dishful, with milk or cream, contains more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal. Try it your Flakes is a product of grocer has itl Grape-Nut- s General Foods. d, Cross-Breedi- A TIME OAVEEl Prepare biscuit or muffin dough when convenient. Set in cool place and bake hours later i you wish. You save time in using Poultry ng of purebred fowls for the purpose of securing greater vigor and vitality In the first generation of the progeny, and of making it possible! to distinguish the males from the fe- males at hatching, has become a meas-- f ure of considerable popularity within recent years. Both Increased vitality, leading to greater gains in weight In the male chicks kept for broilers, and better production in pullets kept for laying are claimed as a result of such crossing. There Is more question of the validity of the latter claim, however, because of lack of evidence In sufficient volume to. lead to positive conclusions. Rural Cross-breedin- g New-Yorke- White-Creste- All Double Tested DAD Double Action POWDER GatncPr ice Today as 44 Years Ago 25 ounces Cor 2$o You can also buy ' A full IO ounce can for SO Sf ounce can for ISO r. Black Polish d fowls have a common Black Poorigin. The lish was originally more common than any of the other varieties. ' They had but little crest Those with beards, might be described as having a few feathers growing the wrong way beneath the beak.' The recent development in the Black Polish began about 1880, at which time fully of the crest was composed of black feathers and most of them grew In front Since that time, improvement has been made in form and plumage color, avid their crests are more than twice the former size. Montreal Polish White-Creste- d O THE RIIE WHflflDlU E UndDlTIEIL White-Creste- d CHILLS FOOD AND EVEN MAKES ICE WITH HEAT, absent-minde- . ty By A. R. Winter, Professor of Poultry Husbandry, Ohio State University. HARD BOILED about SHOUT AND STAMP Protein Content Up to Right Point Necessary. , , WNU egg-timin- athletics, inter-universi- MILK IS ESSENTIAL, IN CHICKS RATION Little Smi nd boxing, swimming shooting, and there will be InterchamBefore long all German students school and one After student a year to pionships. will sexes take have both of course of sports and gymnastics for will be examined for a sports diUnsuccessful candidate the first three terms of their aca- ploma. careers. ' The obligatory will not be allowed to begin their demic course will comprise gymnastics. fourth term. GERMAN ATHLETICISM Poultr Sally Sez pst office Bandolohi Utah, under the Act of Mar. S, 187a ffm. E. Marshall, Editor and Prop SUBSCRIPTION tl.H0 Per Year la Advance For Farms, Mines, and Remote Camps Write for Catalog and Prices LANDES TRACTOR & EQUIPMENT CO. . Distributors 245 West South Temple St. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH one-fift- h Avoid Overcrowding Fifteen feet of nests for every 100 hens Is required to avoid crowding. Some commercial poultrymen generally dislike straw, hay, excelsior, shavings or sawdust as nesting - material". .They much prefer rice hulls. New England poultrymen use shavings and sawdust very generally. In some parts of the East peat is rather commonly used. In the corn belt, straw is the standby, though excelsior is used more or less by those who try to produce clean eggs. A Distinctive Residence' An Abode. ..renowned Throughout the West Salt Lakeys Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 DOUBLE $2.50 to $4.50 400 Rooms 400 Baths THE Bttotel Rfewlioiise E. W. SUTTON, General Manager CHAUNCEY W. WEST Assist Gen . Manager |