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Show THE UISTAH EASTS FAE2SEE i DBasiM FARMER t Eztablhihsd 1924 Published 1st and 15th of Each Month. at Roosevelt. Utah. Entered as second-clas- s matter at post office at Roeeevelt, Utak, nnder tie act of Congress of Starch 3, 1879. Official organ of the Uintah Gbunty Farm Bureau Office: Roosevelt Standard, Bees-erei-t, Utah. Telephone 39. Sf ene year Price, Subscription tie Editor George H. Handera Violet IZarriaofi Busiaoss Manage Sweet Clover Grazing Is Most Profitable For Local Dairymen On soils that contain lime, the most productive grazing crop that is known today, is sweet clover, according to the experts in forage crops in the United. States Department of Agriculture. They point out that a good stand of second-seas- on sweet clover can carry two heal of cowg per acre from early er and cases spring until are known where four heal did not keep it down. Get the stock in early, they ad vise, when the clover is 5 Inches high and put cattle enough on to keep it from blossoming; with only one cow to an acre the clover gets old too fast.. For continuous grazing, they point out, two fields of sweet Clover are necessary, one that has first season's Just passed its growth. Turn cattle on the older field in the spring and keep them there until July 15-3By this time the sweet clover will bloom and get too woody to he oalatabl and the clover on the new field should be 6 to 8 inches high. The new clover will carry only about half the stock the old field carried, and allowance must be made for that by having double acreage or by having other pasture. An excess acreage in the fall is not .a bad thing, as any field not needled for grazing the rest of the season can be turned under the next spring for com with great benefit to the corn. After grazing stops on the older field the clover will make considerable growth and this can be plowed under in the fall with great benefit to any succeeding crop. There is less danger from bloat with sweet clover than with hut cases have been known usual precautions should the and mid-summ- 0- other-clovers- be taken. By the U. S. Department of riculture. Ag- Dairy Cattle Breeds (Continued from page one) Rump, long; broad with roomy , and smooth in the brisket; broad between the forearms; full in the foreflanks , Barrel,. long;; deep; well rounded; strongly and trimly held up nearly 9 2 , Flanks, deep; fun Thighs, wide; deep; straight behind; wide and moderately full at the outsides; twist well cut out and filled with development of udder; escutcheou well 2 defined tortuveins. Mammary large, ous, entering large orifices or double extension; with additional developments, such as branches and connections entering numer8 ous orifices Udder, capacious; flexible; tbe quarters even and of uniform texture filling the space in the rear below the twist, extending well forward; broad and well at14 tached Teats, well formed, plumb; of convenient size; properly placed 4 Legs, medium length; clean; wide nearly straight; apart: and firmly squarely set under the body; arms wide, strong, and tapering low and loose TOTAL COMING ATTRACTIONS Wednesday, February 20 Glenn Tyron in THE KIDS CLEVER Also Chapter 6 of THE TIGERS SHADOW Admission 4 ,, Hair and hide, hair healthy in appearance; fine and soft; hide of medium thickness; mel8 100 r Bean Blight Is Serious Disease plete Eradication of the Dreaded Ailment, Thursday, Feb. 21 China Night Eddie Quillan, the Quillan family, Albert Vaughn and Theodore Roberts in NOISY NEIGHBORS Tarkingtons pen The growing of string beans for either seed or canning purposes has been seriously handicapped for years because of a disease known as bac-terio- ld Admission Also Collegians 25c and 15c sis or blight, which affects stems, leaves, pods and seed. There are no methods known for eradicating the disease completely, and accordingly, control measures offer the only relief. As the infective agent is doubtless carried from season to season on old vines, these should be raked up and burned. If allowed to remain on the land, they will be plowed under and serve as a source of new Infection should beans be planted on the same field the next year. Don't Spread Manure. Where the beans have been threshed for seed and the straw has been used for bedding live stock, the manure should not be spread upon land intended for beans. So far as possible plant beans only one year on the same piece of ground without an intervening crop. Avoid cultivating the beans while the foliage Is wet as this tends to spread the disease. The planting of two or seed Is recommended as the most promising method of controlling bacterial blight. The selection of disease-fre- e seed, and pods gives dlsease-frp- e while this procedure Is tedious, it affords one means of getting good seed. All Varieties Susceptible. All varieties of the garden bean, Phaseolus vulgaris, are susceptible to bacteriosis, and attempts to obtain entirely resistant strains have been disappointing. Seed treatment and spraying have proven of no value in the control of the disease. Walter G. Sackett, Bacteriologist, Colorado exthree-year-o- 25c and 15c Lights and shadows, magic and might, tears and laughs, love and hate combined in this breezy entertainment from Booth No Method Known for Com- laterally; full above the thurls; carried out Straight to tail head Pin hones, wide between; near- 2 ly level with hips 2 Thurls, high; broad through at Tail head and tail, strong setbase without coarseness; the long, taperting well back; tail switch 2 full a to ing finely periment station. filled j Chest, deep; wide; well pelvis; 8 Friday, February 22 By Popular Demand THE COVERED WAGON The greatest picture of all time has been reissued and will be shown for one nisht only Also Comedy ALL FOR GERALDINE Admission 25c and 15c Saturday, February 23 HOMESICK With Sammy Cohn You II laugh till you cry at this picture - Also KING OF HEARTS . And TARZAN THE MIGHTY Admission-- - 25c and 15c Sunday and Monday, February Special Feature 24-2- 5 Give And Take |