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Show fHE HERALD, FRIDAY JUNE 9, 1922. SAVE MONEY BUY FOB CASH lion SAMUEL446.KOPP Phone Lowest WEEK ENDING JUNE 10, 1922. 10 lbs. Sugar 3 lbs. New Potatoes 13 lbs. Old Potatoes 3 lbs. Sweet Potatoes 3 lbs. Pacific Nut Butter (Oleo) 3 dozen Strictly Fresh Eggs pail White Syrup Picnic Hams, per lb 1 Salt Bacon, per lb Smoked Bacon Squares, per lb 3 lbs. Swift's Silver Leaf Lard, bulk 3 pkgs. Armour's Corn Flakes 3 pkgs. Corn Puffs 6 cans Mission Brand Sardines Large can Libby's Roast Beef Large can Pork and Beans '. Gallon size can Catsup Gallon size can Pineapple Gallon size can Cherries 460 West Center. 10-l- b. A-N- o. 2 lbs. Bishop's Cocoa 20 bars P. & G. White Naptha Soap 3 cans Old Dutch Cleanser, including bank 22? 22 22 50 28 20 35J .45 10 45 75 75 35 $1.00 25 We guaran- tee satisfaction on all Hinds Kodak AT SNELSON DRUG CO. Springville, Utah. WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF KODAKS AND SUPSERVICE PLIESAND GIVE YOU ONE-DAON ALL KODAK WORK Y E.M..:.:::::::::::::!::!::::::!a:::::::i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.: We Close Wednesday Afternoons Hi & Hi AT 3:30 DURING BASEBALL SEASON H5 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Best Mill Run lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. lbs. Run Bran Wheat Mill Whole Yellow Corn Cracked or Fine Ground Corn Barley Oats Mixed Chicken Feed $1.75 $1.65 $2.15 $1.70 $1.80 $1.75 $1.85 $2.00 ijj WASATCH PRODUCE Phone 480. 425 West Center. I AS rbliw isvi f 'JWA. a . . m. HAT- - t . W& Mllfcfc WW ITS DOHTMWTHIMK YTfiKSET they come from duction. Profits and satisfactory of - W A I OUYl.'UAT a . a mm-- i ii UM H I P0RGCflD r nmawi TOM I WAMT& w n Pct, l?y"JZ--. weave. large and economical production; on the basis of making profit over and above cost of feed, care and management. The test at the Louisiana Pur chase Exposition, at St. Louis, in 1904 (the greatest public dairy cow was ever demonstration that staged), was participated In by the Jersey and other breeds under the most rigid supervision of the U. S. department of agriculture. For 120 days cows of tbese breeds labored under conditions that taxed their producing proclivities, their strength of constitution, and especially their profit making ability, for all feed was charged against and them, and their milk, butter-fa- t skim milk was credited. The Jersey JI 0 J ' . Well MecTor, S Hope outz acT 30S5 OVER BETtgR I S63 pounrs of butter-fa-t at 12 years and 7 months. The most remarkable progeny record of any cow is held by Financial King's Interest (a Jersey), which has 19 registered calves In 20 years, and her latest record of 7,302 pounds of milk and 400 I I Not for one day during the entire test was a Jersey cow out of the race on account of indisposition, or sickness indicating lack of strength, constitution, vigor or ruggednefm. Of no other breed competing can this be said. Once and for all the Jersey convinced the thinking man that she above all breeds was the cow that could stand up under hard persistent work against adverse conditions. To imany this had long been for It Is well known, however, known that on no spot on earth are cattle diseases so nearly absent as on the Island of Jersey the home of the Jersey cow: By her persistent performance, coupled with her inherent power to produce largely ana economically of milk rich in butter-fat- , and other solids which make skim milk valuable, the Jersey cow won the most enviable decision that has ever been publicly awarded. Of the first thirteen awards the Jersey not only ranked at the top but won twelve of them. The Jery herd as a whole produced 127 per cent profit over and above feed costs. This was not the first, but It was the last great national public test of the breeds on the basis of large and economical production; on the basis of net profit produced by dairy cows. The Jersey yet wear the laurels scattered and none has successfully disputed the bands of dairymen throughout the state of Ohio were her right to them! 131 cows But the achievement of 1904 tested in competition with breed. The of a large, merely solidified the standing of the Jersey cow, for in 1S93 at the Jerseys won! At the close of this comparative Chicago World's Pair she competed with other breeds wtin equal suc- test the Monthly Bulletin, Vol. II, cess where butter-fa-t and other No. 10, Ohio State university, pub In milk constituents were considered. lished thl9 official statement: When the test ended and the economy of producing butter-fa- t awards were distributed it was offi- Jerseys have a decided advantage." Jerseys produced 52 pounds of cially proclaimed "The Jersey is from 1000 of feed while the most profitable breed for all butter-fa- t their competitors produced only 38 purposes of dairying." Thus where the spirit of rivalry pounds of fat. This bulletin also shows that an has entered in and where the impartial stamp of official govern- other breed per thousand pounds of mental decision has been required, live weight "averaged but 63 per cent as much fat during the ten the Jersey has stood supreme. But how about her status under months, and as to economy of pro practical conditions; in the hands duction the Jerseys consumed only of the farmers who actually milk 75.3 per cent as many pounds of cows for profit; for lifting mort- digestible nutrients for each pound gages; for building farms and of fat produced" as the other breed. The low cost of maintenance and homes and for providing the happiness and independence of life? The the high' production of the Jersey answer is the same: The Jersey is what makes her the profit cow. The fact that it costs so much wins! One hundred and fifty Jerseys in more each year to feed a large e : THAT'S onc op 4 8, 9. 9, 6. 11 For a profitable and lasting vesimem ine jersey nas no eqi m More muz, more ouiier-tat- . calves, more profits is the invi ble rale. sscssoa 33C - won 15 16 17 No tire without Kelly quality could have maintained the reputation for and service which has enjoyed for twenty-fiv- e years. lie-a- Kelly-Springfie- Cord. 30x3 3jr3V2 animal makes the Jersey a bigger The scale of points for Jersey profit producer than a "dual pur- cows as approved by the American pose" cow. As the Ohio Bulletin states: "In Jersey Cattle club is as follows: Head, seven points; neck, four determining the true economy of production the maintenance re- points; body, thirty-sevepoints; quirements must be included." udder, twenty-sipoints; teats, IN TYPE AND CONFORMATION. eight points; milk veins, four The Jersey breed's type and con- points; size (which calls for mature formation represents the highest animals to weigh 800 to 1000 development of the dairy cattle pounds) four points; general apbreeder's art. pearance, ten points, for a total of Her symmetry of form and equal one hundred points. A comparison of the Jersey breed balancing of parts have won the admiration of all who admire iwth other breeds brings out the fine dairy type of the Jerseys. Judge beauty in a dairy animal. As every piont has a bearing on by comparison at your state fair or the functions of production, repro- county fair; see them at work in duction and elonomy of production your own county; note the particuit is easy to see how the eJrsey has larly udders and gencome iby her combined beauty and eral productive type. A pure-breutility. The Jersey "pattern" is iJersey sire used on mpractical as it is beautiful, and U. j grade cattle will improve producgreat and growing popularity of tue tion and increase profits, and at the breed is due to its inherent attrac- same time will produce uniformity tiveness as well as to its outstand- and dairy type quicker than such ing position in producing a high results could be obtained from any quality product, economically, per other breed. Wonderful results sistently, and over a long period of are often secured in the first gen By CONDO time. eration. n x 30x3 32x3 31x4 32x4 33x4 34x4 ...... 32x4ft.. 33x4ft. 34x4ft.. 35x4ft., 36x4ft., 33x5 34x5 35x5 37x5 . . . , . . . , "And now ge ld Fabric Tubes. $12.90 $2.15 2.70 3.25 2.90 3.35 3.45 3.60 3.70 4.65 4.75 4.95 $18.95 '14.90 25.90 29.80 32.75 33.75 34.95 42.40 44.00 44.30 45.45 46.55 52.30 53.30 54.40 57.45 "21.66 24.00 27.50 28.50 29.75 "5.00 ae 5.25 6.00 6.10 6.25 6.65 it costs NO MORE to bay s well-forme- d KeDyw d " Morrison Bros. 107 West Center. Provo, Utah. Turkish BEAUTIFUL, DISTINCTIVE DIFFERENT BUTTE! WRA you stop deterioration you stop waste; when you stop waste you increase When your savings, anymore saving means creased earnings. Bennett's Paints' are the best that science can make." We offer you the best in quality and the lowest in price in Wall Paper, Alabas-tinVarnishes and Brushes. We both lose money when you fail to call and see what we have. . in- e, MAIDEN PAINT & - NO HOL-- tJONOcS.f$ IT as ?'J ss i AS m l YOU t izzz : Wrappers That Make a Demand for YOUR Butter New Century Printing Company 10-3- 2 CO. ione. 160v ,j s, IN LONGEVITY. was compIetJur pounds of butter-fa- t The American Jersey Cattle club wnen she was over 20 years of ui 0n Another splendid example of often receives reports of Jerseys that are producing profitably at 20, Jerseys can do at advanced age ifWta 21, 22 and even 24 years of age. The milking period of the average buuwu uoiuw iu me record of Pottf cow that started dairy cow is eight years. In the Irene 2d, a case of the Jersey breed it Is ten first official record at 14 years u) to twelve years. compieiea ner last ai nearly The world's record for cows years 01 age: Age 12years old and over is held by I Grace Darling of St Mary's (a Jer- Yrs. Mos. 0. 9, sey) with 14,515 pounds of milk and 14 The Wandering Minstrel CLEANLINESS PRESERVATION OF SURFACE IMPROVED APPEARANCE OF HOME 't. u J P ! s pro- production that Is '.c once large and economical. To concede this la to grant the Supremacy of the Jersey as the profit breed, for on all occasions when put to trial she has success fully competed with all comes in' public test, at the experiment sta tion and on the farms of this and other countries on the basis of Li-- Center. l .J pi -- that are certain sre derived from We Highly Recommend W." w I rroflU do not accrue from largeness of production alone, neither do INVESTMENT 272 I profit. THose. GLASS :. J WHV IT CvWj "WOf 08 HE -. MRS. DA1LIY - , : : ,: The true purpose of the dairy i profit. Aii that enters into breeding, feeding, milking, care and management of the dairy herd Is provided for the sake of success, based upon expected and Justified EVERETT TRUE AN OUVIA? : cow heavy-milkin- TERMS CASH I 41,TT; iniu iki : . YOU PRESS THE BUTTON WE DO THE REST Your Film Are in Safe I IE Prices 73 25 25 25 65 50 62 jersey! THE T 2rJ a"" DOINGS OF THE DUFFS East First North Street Provo, Utah ' . i |