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Show THE SUN, PRICE, FACE TWO ARE TOLD (George A. Km In Curism oinmunirHrnr) There is one field closely related to Agriculture that should exnrience a substantial growth as a result of the Mir agricultural development of couutv. This is the dairv industry. All agriculturist agree that the most profitable tyje of farming is to feed all the produce uNn the farm. Uur-bo- u Mach more money is to be made by UTAH E VERY TRIDAY, TEBEPaJ PRIPAY BIFLY to &1U.3S the herd shows a owners of 825.42 a day. their to profit This amount would net the Millertoii month or approxijxiiple 7ti2.iil a pear. Distributed mately us an average lor eueh mw we find We that tlic yearly profit i of course mut realize that the dairyman must have good hanis and equipment costing many hundreds of dollars. That he is entitled to a reasonable rate of interest upon the money invested. Considering all of fact we cannot help but see that the dairy business is one of the. best possibilities the residents of Carbon county van invest in. Before closing this article there is niieioint that 1 want to stress. There is money in raising good potatoes. There is no money made if the mta-toe- s are poor ones. This same rule applies to the raising of auy product. There is no money to be made by the amount )r When IhcBnfe or when the diet wheel divcAotii pay roe dan converting the hay and grain into meats, eggs and dairy products than by selling these products themselves. The second advantage is that these commodities liate 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 soon become deficient in plant food. It becomes "run out as the farmer terms it. By feeding the crops unni the farm this pluut lVuid is returned to the soil in the form of manure. Instead of diminishing, the nitmgcncou elements farmer who raises "scrub anything. of the soil are increased and the farm Dairy cows are no exception. In f&et liet ter animals are the foundation of becomes inure productive. The dairy business furnishes several real successful farming. The farmt-articles of food that we cannot do who raises the "scrub never makes without. Milk, butter and cheese are a real success. It takes very little needed in our daily menu. If we can- more to raise a purebred than to grow and the profit is not get the real article we use a can- a "scrubstitule ned or vegetable substitute. We very amazingly greater. often are willing to ay a very high The strength and sturdiness of our price for the real article in preference to uaing the substitute. IMMiple is being undermined by constiLet ns see what the dairyman feeds tution it reduces the value of your bia herd and try and ascertain if food, improverishea your blood, weakwhether or not Carbon can be- ens your whole svstem. Take HOLcome a dairying county. Cows, like LISTER'S GOLDEN NUGGET TABhuman beings, need a balanced ration. LETS for eonstiiiatiun. You'll get reBy that I mean that they must hare sults every time. Price Trading foods that contain Foods that arc rich in In and fluids that have a high protein Well, it's an awful world. content. Each of these elements build Guthrie, Okla., fifty-fivare chargup certain jurt of the animals body. ed in a murder ring. This will make Aak your teacher to explain this to Chicago jealous. IfjwirgristtotbJ You do If it is the Dividends Regulavly fot tlt The Home insurant; represented Constant war on waste Products of first quality Uninterrupted dividend Stability of earninga Small profit per pound on large volume Second Floor s. e 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. Above 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. Everything Swift yon. Now in order to obtain this tyie of Nice tiling about the present steps a ration the dairyman must feed the is you cun't tell if the dancer are cows grain, hay and some kind of sib drunk or sutler. & i Onr merchandise that brings customers When you can buy the Company leas with ns why i veur foods nd it is more jftive hpse when siloed than when fed as a effec- grain. Iu addition to these feeds I hare mentioned the dairyman must provide a pasture ot some kind or green forage. Clover is one of the beat of pasture feeds. There are several types of rlover all of them good aa milk producing feeds. The one most suitable to the soils of Carbon, from the writer's vifWKint, is the sweet clover. It has a greater ubility to withstand the alkali soils that we have than any of the other varieties. It is not the liest of the clover family as a milk food. The alsike, red and Dutch clover are better dairy feed, but cannot withstand an alkaline soil. Unless the dairyman is able to supply green pasture during the summer months he must fet'd his herd hay and grain the year round. Mr. McKinnon of the Millcrton Dairy has furnished us with the following interesting dsta. He states cows that are that the twenty-eig3 milked daily at the ranch produce gallons of milk per mouth. This is equivalent to 87.6 gallons a day for the herd or an average of 3.13 per cow. The best cow produced 2490 pounds of milk or 311.25 gallons in a thirty day period. This was an average of 10.3 gallons a day. The cost of feeding the cows varies with the market prire of hay and grain. At the present time it costs the Milerton people about 43 cents for feed and 26 cents for labor (milking and caring for the cows and milk), nuking a total of 69 cents per day for each cow. At 12 cents a quart for milk the Millerton herd produces $43.-8- 0 worth of milk a day. Less the total expenses of feed and labor which ht 23,-00- - Cmirlesy Ciirhun Cmnmumciitiir. HEAVY SNOWS St. lie irge a well s list from Ncplii tn Ivanidi a lung a tl.c imv .Inc, u- - t In- liiimlV.l become ton heavy iil, Highway Travel Is Paralyzed By the the mi- eipiipliiciit the comm:--in- n Recent Storms. . Im ml. I i IiiIIn supplied with npiuinilu were uniking mi the tatc highway early Wednesday bucking huge drifts variously estimated at l'n mi two to eight or ten feet deep in various localities, Sjilt Lake City pa.ay Wednesday pers. Nightfall will see the reopening of many of the state roads serving traffie between coimmiiiilic. accordin'' to advice received by tile state mad commission. IcmiH to the office are that the snow ha drifting badly in many of the canyons a well as along the valley ridges. The Sinnib Fork Canyon and Welter Canyon traffic will lie virtually usieiided for the hnlanee of the season due to the main roadbed lieing badly tom up dining construction. The Strawberry Valiev road lias been blocked for the year with heavy snow-slidin the valley and in Daniels Canyon and this road will also remain closed for the ha I a nee of the winter. The road to Iark City via Parleys Canyon was closed Wednesday, nut road crews were bucking drifts with and if the big snow plows oil tra-'o- rs drifing ceases the road will be reopened in a reasonable length of time. Iu scores of places on the Parley's road the drifts are riKiite.l to lie several feet deep. Provo Canyon as far lleber will lie ojH'ned to vehicle trr.ffie shortly unless some snowslides occur. Two rrews cquipjied with caterpillar plows are also working to open np the Sardine Canyon connection into Cache atValley. Ogden Canyon is also tacked. Bad drifts occurred on the Ogden to Salt Lake, the Salt Lake to Magna and the Salt Lake to Povo highways which are being removed crews. It was upceieil that the Salt Lake to Ogden road e well as others in the Salt Lake Basin will be opened by night. The state highway department is undertaking to maintain opmi the highway from the Idaho state line to la-e- Now - that America lias two women ill diplomatic service, we -iippiae there will be no danger of any treat-- 1 ie. Unjustly gotten wealth i like snow sprinkled with Imt water. A at'nteil mouth soon forgets the ANNUAL SEED GRAIN SHOW IS HELD AT URBANA y GEORGE I- f HcDERMAHLY f .y; i Superintendent, m ; Spring Canyon Last Yeair n-wide . pay Hiawatha. Cities ILaiM Cosiosrefe Streets -- if-joa- Stored Helner aud Is . Hiawatha, 20 The reason for this f rX When yon want eatablsi gf Vjj ' right quality at the rigkt pf with the right service cm one of our stores. Renal :v that good eating makes kq faces and that discreet hp makes the dollar last kq Wearing apparel for the li family. , Carbon-Emer- ruiwl crew nnw removal m Else Nearly 36,000,000 square yards of concrete strut pavement were placed under contract in 1925 Thirty i vi Led 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 hydro-carbo- age. liy silage I mean some sort of forage that has been cut before it bn ripened (usually corn) and chopped up fine. The finely chnpicd material ia alowed to stand in a huge bin or silo until it ferments. The feriiien tation makes the corn more palatable and adds certain elements that are needed to balance the ration (meal) of the cow. The dairyman hns found by experimenting that certain foods hare a tendency to cause the cow to give more and richer milk, (urn is one SUrxgni PRICE, UTAH summarized. e, M1LLERT0N DAIRY NEAR HIAWATHA 'A Equitable Real Estate Investment Comp The life history of Swift & Companys operations is thus briefly r carbo-hydrate- 40 Yeats I Coal Co. natio- popularity of concrete street pavement is the fact that it is the finest looking pavement money can buy, and gives greater service value per dollar than any other type. Miners sad Shipper et IM Celebrated Mtrtini j Itingbi Spring Canyon ' Coal at Mlnee CANYON, UIAI t General Office., 817 NewbW Building. SPRING Balt Lake (Sty, Utah All of the facts are in our free booklet on "Concrete Streets. Ask for your copy. United States Fuelft PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION McCotnick Building SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH A National Organization to Improve and Extend the Vtet of Concrete 1 'Largest Producers of Dev Goal In Utah. Producing the Famous OFFICII IN 30 CtTIBS KING BLACK HAWKf HIAWATHA 1 and PANTHER es The tongue of woman is her sword, of the federal warehouse ar to field which never rusts. seed such as timothy, clover, redtop A good Tat will not eat the grain and alfalfa stored in publie warehouse are being prepared by the near its own hole. United States department of agriculture as a result of requests from p growers in Illinois, alfalfa in South Dakota and other field YELLOW in Utah and Idaho. These are associaorganized into tions whieh believe that the federal licensing of warehouses whieh store with their crojw would facilitate more orderly marketing by enabling them to H) BAND negotiate loans on the lrnsis of the federal warehouse receipts. Investigations by the department indicate that extension of the law to field seeds would lie practicable. Following preparation of the regulations the deiartment plans to submit tentative drafts to various interested parties to . . gain the views of producers and the trade before putting the regulations into effect. Regulations covering the extension red-to- seed-growe- rs ft COALS lie fc PENCIL m the The farmers who arrived by train and automobile recently when the Annual Illinois Seed Grain show opened at the college of agriculture, University of Illinois, at Urluna, found a gayly decorated city ready to receive them. Photograph of Ilcnry W. Brok News from Heavy damage of Naperville, Ills., who was crowned done by storm.Spain. Real windstorm, not "Corn King of 1926. just a bull fighter bragging. 4s "EAGLE Highest effleleaey. OotiofJ equivaleat 104 lbs. Unequalled f storage. Will net Mack. TbeJ ter ateaming Bad beat lag qnaK INDEPENDENT COAL COKE COMPANY , j Mlnee at Kcnltwerth, Utah. Jg eral Officea Walker Bank BulM BALT LAKE CITY, UTAJj I No matter how great a rang new phonographs have, the one i kitchen sounds better. |