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Show THE SUN, PRICE, PAGE TWO -- t. Vnx In rnrlNni ('timmiuiifflfor) There in one field closely relnt-- l to agriculture that should exTiere a substantial growth as a rasnlt of tlic new nKrirultural development of Carbon county. This is the dairy industry. All agriculturist agree that the moat profitable tyie of farming is to feed all the produce upon the farm. Much more money is to he made by converting tho hay and grain into meat, eggs and duiry products than by selling these products themselves. The second advantage is that these commodities have a ready market and a more staple value than have the raw materials. A third advantage is that all crops take out certain elements from the ground. If these are not replaced each year the ground stain becomes deficient in plant food. It becomes "run out" as the funner terms it. By feeding the crops uhui the fann this plant ftaxl is returned to the soil in the form of munure. Instead of diminishing, the nitrogeneous elements of the soil are increased and the fann becomes more productive. The dairy business furnishes several articles of ftaxl that we cannot do without. Milk, butter and cheese are needed in our daily menu. If we cannot get the real article we use a canned or vegetable substitute. We very often are willing to pay a very high price for the real article in preference to using the substitute. Let us see wlmt the dairyman feeds his herd and try and ascertain if possible, whether or not Carbon ran a dairying county. Cows, like human beings, need a balanced ration. By that I mean that they must have foods that contain Foods that are rich in and fcxxls that have a high protein content. Each of these elements build up certain arts of the animals body. Ask your teacher to explain this to you. Now in order to obtain this type of a ration the dairyman must feed the cows grain, hay and some kind of nil-lie-co- carbo-hydrate- 19, 1928 10 BRIERY ABE (Ofornf FRIDAY, FEBRUARY priday utah-eve- ry s. hydro-carbo- amounts to $19.38 the herd shows a profit to their owners of $25.42 a day. This amount would net the Millerton jH'opIo $762.00 per month or approximately $$9151.20 a pear. Distributed us an average1 for each cow we find thul the yearly profit is $320.88. We of course must realize that the dairyman must have good barns and equipment costing many hundreds of dollars. That lie is entitled to a reasonable rate of interest upon the money, invested. Considering ull of th1! facts we cannot help hut see that the dairy business is one of the best possibilities tlikt the residents of Carbon county can invest in. Before closing this article there ia onejMiint that 1 want to stress. There is money in raising good jmtatocs. There is no money made if the potato's are poor ones. This same rule applies to the raising of any product. There is no money to be made by the farmer who raises "seruli" anything. Dairy cows are no exception. In fact better animals are the foundation of real successful farming. The farmer who raises the "scrub" never makes a real success. It takes very little more to raise a purebred than to grow a "semlistitute" and the profit is amusingly greater. When the Bmkcs fail or when the steering el dives outWHo Dividends Regularly for 40 Years Constant war on waste Products of first quality Uninterrupted dividends Stability of earnings The life history of Swift summarized. & -- represented by Equitable Real Estate and Investment Company Small profits per pound on large volume Second Floor Silvagni Bldg. PRICE, UTAH Companys operations is thus briefly The chemical laboratory and the constant search for improved methods have reduced waste to a minimum. They have also enabled us to improve greatly the quality of your meat. The strength and sturdiness of our n being undermined by it reduces the value of your food, improverishea your blood, weakens your whole system. Take HOLLISTER'S GOLDEN NUGOET TABLETS for constipation. You ll get results every time. lriee Trading comIHKiple is roe damages? If your cor is not insured You do-- If ibis Wedo The Home InarurcmceCo pays Above I eonsti-patio- Thrift and conservative policies have made it possible to pay dividends without interruption for 40 years, although our profits have averaged only a fraction of a cent per pound of product. Swift & Company thrift has benefited others beside Swift shareholders. A portion of the gains resulting from thrift is passed along to the producers of live stock and to the consumers of meat Competition sees to that. pany. ns In Well, it's an awful world. are charge Guthrie, Ok In., fifty-fiv- e ed in a murder ring. This will make Chicago jealous. Swift Nice tiling ulsiut the present steps is you can't tell if the dancers are & .Company drunk or sober. Over goo Cntnes LaM Ceimeffette Sttureetts Last!; Yeas? Everything Else the kind customers luck. When yon can buy the best for less with ns why pay more? When yon want eatables of the right quality at the right price with the right service come to one of our atom. Remember that good eating makes happy faces and that discreet hnying makes the dollar last longer. Wearing apparel for the whole family. One merchandise ia that brings Carbon-Emer- y Stores Co. Hiawatha, Heiner and Wert Hiawatha. GEORGE HcDERMAID, Superintendent Spring Canyon Coal Co. The reason for this nation-wide age. By silage I mean some sort of forage that has been rut before it lias ripened (usually euru) and rhopped lip fine. The finely chojqied material ia alowed to stand in a huge bin or silo until it ferments. The fermen tation makes the corn more palatable and adds certain elements tliut are needed to iwlauoe the ration (meal) of the cow. The dairyman has found by experimenting tlmt certain foods bjive a tendency to cause the eow to give more and richer milk. Coru is one of these foods and it is more effective when siloed than when fed as a grain. In addition to these feeds I have mentioned the dairyman must provide a pasture of some kind or green forage. Clover is one of the best of pasture fix'd. There are several tyjx'S of clover all of them good aa milk producing feeds. The one most suitable to the soils of Carlsin, from the writer's viewpoint, is the sweet clover. It has a greater ability to withstand the alkali soils that we have than any of the ulher varieties. It ia not the best of the clover family as a milk food. The alsike red and Dutch clover are better dairy feeds, but raniiot withstand an alkaline soil. Unless the dairyman is able to supply green )Misture during the summer months he must feed his herd hay and grain tho year round. Mr. McKinnon of the Millerton Dairy has furnished us with the following interesting data, lie states cows that are that the twenty-eig3 milked daily at the ranch produce month. milk This of icr gallons is equivalent to 87.6 gallons a day for the herd or an average of 3.13 per The best row produced 2490 eow. pounds of milk or 311.25 gallons in a thirty day period. This was an average of 10.3 gallons a day. The coat of feeding the cows varies with the market price of hay and grain. At the present time it costs the Milerton people about 43 rents for feed and 26 cents for labor (milking and earing for the cows and milk), making a total of 69 rents per day for each cow. At 12 Vi rents a quart for milk the Millerton herd produces $43.-8- 0 worth of milk a day. Less the total expenses of feed and labor whieh ht 23,-P0- popularity of concrete street pavement is the fact that it is HEAVY SNOWS St. Gorge as well as that from N'rphi to Kamil) a long as tin show does not become ton heavy to be bandied villi Ia Travel Highway Faralyzed By the 1n cipiipmint tlie commission iia on Recent Storms. IlilUll.. Miners and Shippers of the Celebrated 1 Thirty road crews fully supplied with siiow rciiinvul money can buy, and gives greater service value per dollar Now that America lias two women apparatus were in diplomatic service, we supimse there winking mi tlie Mate highways CHi'ly Wednesday bucking huge drifts variously rMinintrd at from two tn eight or ten feet deep in various localities, says Wednesday ' Salt I .tike City putter. Nightfall will sec the reopening of many of the state roads serving traffic litt ween communities, accordin'' to advices received by llir state mail commission. ttcort to the office are that the snow has been drifting Iwtdly in tunny of the canyons a well as along the valley ridges. The Spanish Fork Canyon and Weber Canyon traffic will lie virtually n susx'iideil for the balance of the due to the main roadbed being badly torn up during construction. The Strawberry Valiev road has been blocked for the year with heavy iu the valley and in Daniels Canyon and this road will also remain closed for the balance of the winter. The road to Park City via Parleys Canyon was dosed Wednesday, nut road crews were bucking drifts with big snow plows on trn"'ors and if the drifing censes the road will be rxiiicii-e- d in n reasonable length of time. In scores of places on the Pa -- ley's road the drifts are rcHrtcd to lx several feet deep. Provo Canyon as far as llelicr will lie oiened to vehicle traffic shortly unless some snowslides occur. Two crews equipiHxl with caterpillar plows are also working to open up the Sardine Canyon eonneetion into Cache atValley, (tgden Canyon is also tacked. Bad drifts occurred on the Ogden to Salt Iaikc, the Salt Lake to Magna and the Salt Lake to Provo highways which are being removed by maintenance crews. It was i.xiKxned that the Salt Lake to Ogden road as well as others in the Salt Laic.1 Basin will lie opened by night. The state highway department is undertaking to maintain open the highway from the Idaho state line to will lx no danger of any secret treaties. s Unjustly gotten wealth is like anow sprinkled with hot water. A than any other type. free booklet on "Concrete Streets." Ask for your copy. benefactor. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION United States Fuej Go. McComick Building . SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH A National Organization to Improve and Extend the Usee of Concrete OFFICII sen-so- snow-slid- Coal Mines at SPRING CANTON, UTAH General Offices, 817 Newhoue Building. Salt Lake City, Utah All of the facts are in our satiated mouth soon forgets the ANNUAL SEED GRAIN SHOW IS HELD AT URBANA Spring Canyon IN 30 CITII8 a es The tongue of woman is her sword, Regulations covering the extension f the federal warehouse art to field which never rusts. "Largest Producer! of Domestio Coal In Utah." Producing the Famous KING BLACK HAWK HIAWATHA and PANTHER seeds surh as timothy, rlover, red top A good rat will not eat the grain in public wareand alfalfa-sto- red houses are being prepared by the near its own hole. Tinted States department of agriculp ture as a result of requests from growers in Illinois,1 alfalfa in South Dakota and other field in Utah and Idaho. These are associaorganized into tions whieh lielieve that the federal licensing of warehouses whieh store L their rrojis would farilitate more orthem to derly marketing by enabling negotiate loans on the basis of the Highest efficiency. GovcraaMS federal warehouse receipts. Investiequivalent SIM lbs. Unequalled fa storage. Will not tlsrk. The bei gations by the dcartment indicate for steaming and heating qnslitlw that extension of the law to field seeds would lie practicable. FollowINDEPENDENT GOAL A ing preNiration of the regulations the COKE COMPANY The fanners who arrived by train detriment plans to submit tentative and automobile recently when the An- drafts to various interested parties to mi"m Kenilworth, Utah. Goa-rOffices Walker Bank Build lag nual Illinois Seed Grain show opened gain tlie views of producers and the at the college of agriculture, Univers- trade liefore putting the regulations SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ity of Illinois, at Urbana, found a into effert. to decorated reeeive gayly rity ready News from Spain. Heavy damage them. Photograph of llenry W. Brok No matter how great a range the of Naierville, Ills,, who was crowned done by storm. Real windstorm, not new phonographs have, the one in the "Com King" of 1926. a bull bragging. just fighter kitchen sounds better. rad-to- COALS seed-growe- rs at |