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Show f ! t YOLUME XV KAYSYILLE, LAYTON AND FARMINGTON. hcl ir.ur th.r.:r,. in i dent? n'i. tvi.il -- i - JL l a' iir thought ti' A i t j r v l t .r Wamcsr in u,' cu.Hi Paw- - t . 't !v I . ji t t. ,k it s . t s. Iririrk'frfctrtr&'kAir'Zi: barker all-s- Z rir?A: wx ui akd i Gi-otg- , a. j e g-i- .-h. te GIRLS LEAGUE HOLDS MEETING A meeting of the G.rls league was last Thursday afternoon in the assembly room. The program was given by the senior girls, under the held direction of Miss Dons Thomle.v, senior representative. The abbreviated skirts, Mary Jane slippers and hair ribbons caused quite a lot of fun among the girls. The junior girls will have charge of the next meeting. tea JORDAN 27; DAVIS 12 The Davis eleven lost to Jordan on the Jordan field last Friday. Th field was in excellent condition and had the D boys fought as hard in the first quarter as they did in the West Side game there is no doubt but that they would have won the game The two touchdowns scored by Davis were made by Glen Layton, who made a spectacular run of 30 yards for the first tocuhdown and another run of f0 yards for the second score. The work of interference by Shorty" materially helped Layton in making these big gains. The splendid Led-ingha- m tackling of Captain Barker was a feature. Gardner and Park starred for Jordan while Barker, Layton and Yank" Harvey did the stellar work for Davis. 7 .13 0 Jordan 727 6 0 TRY-OUT- ' 6 0 12 S THIS WEEK Much excitement has been caused by try-ouheld Monday and Tuesday of this week for the various parts in the sparkling comedy, Peggy, to be presented this winter by the Davis Dramatic club. The were Miss Majudges for the try-oMiss Smith and Mr. Robinson. son, Four casts were used in the tryout, which included about eighteen students. In the case that more than one student successfully passed the test for one role a later tryout will be . the ' "if j I wu- - - all-sta- DRAMATICS ! . ts ut j P food- - tu .ui. -- at Look .. o 1,1 -- . lui ' C V i'i o 0 I .1' i tv huge fine, p.uk fumh t ui', h . i h h ' , i , 1" - in m. n t i - o r i b-- ol .Hi a i ( O'. i .!. Ho b.m in a Ik ' cio-il- ,i i . -- i ! . in l st on i - nov c r ng ch of, u.r j - 1 1 1 j n, m ive-tii- k, k, 1 two-hundr- anti-freezin- g, bac-cill- over? This material was deposited in holes the silage, at various heights as it was thrown into the silo. The first observation was that active fermentation had commenced one week after the silo was filled about a third of the usual period before that action begins. Doctor Daines In Layton Auto Co. Phone S3 . kli tf v i A i -- TgT Ml ''T "!i i t n . . I. ,u i - ii i i c , ! W , t i U si s t i ,lh o m a w i i 1. I t W .1 I u spo- ilr t hied .1 t i ol I ft um i i I er i n i I I t Uilli.il ilie ef iu i a ri s V ( I h e ng I 1 -- -- .mi pu- v 1 Tile alp j I'l has I e pur-- b in Mrs d f l, i t 'i w -i .Mia ef u fmm the Easton ihurch e iiMii fer i. tm! pur !.u tta t'l'. uri hi ' . ih; i A n old w ati ml. on tin i.i. i rigot a qtian- - ll' nii at wgonn st ttion wa Mown of .iKahol Now, when the new act oss tin trail, and lot sciird limit , t,i had fennel ted dist.lbd sain Olds the until tl.nk imlld he use d..j.e i 1. . iMi.il tune.- - ami tould not get it - ii polled that the tool oi the d he a lime oT alcohol and h at mmgton s, hoolhouse wa Idown iiiih wuv all liuie, as mtait us w In n the coin had bei n put m. We Lm i awaj, t'litnplfUh ill mol .s)rng tic hulling the full feid values nf the house Lmkily tliete u.i-- - m one hat mateiial jlml tin same as if it m the hoii-iat the tune. had bein fed m the field, lnsluad of J. HLL IS l() HE ttting two third- - of it get away in ihe shape of alcahol, vvhnh ha- no LAID ID REST IN OGDEN nod value whatever. 'Ihe funetal of A. J Hull, late juesi conoboiates all Mr, ingston of the Ituh Piukiug eompuny dent that In an lntuview, he said that hm and pionnnent m the eunning industry fm i mm weighed all feeds, that acof noil director in the Davis and Utah Mount- - and data wire accurately kept, Weber Counties (anal company, who an i that the silage umli r the new of dud pneumonia in the Dee hospital, pToeess was worth fully fifty per cent held wire ye.sterd.iy afUrnoon frmi more in feed value than any corn the Elks eluh. Father Iaigau silage they had ever fed lated. Doctor Dames saym: It is necessary Burial was m the Elks plot of the to have bacilli in oidir to produce the Mountain View lemeterj. Members of lactic acid fermentation. Other ferthe Elks club, the Weber dub and mentation may be caused by other other of which Mr, Hall organizations classes of bacteria, which Mr, Riley was a member attended. roughly calls wild white yeast; but teathose fermentations, though they may WHATS A FARMER evolve alcahol to a greater or less exA is farmer tent, do not prevent decay. A And the alcahol resulting from the capitalist that labors. A man who works eight hours a day sugar and starch content does not, twice a of course, possess any appreciable day. A man who has every element of food value. Consequently a large proportion of that sugar and starch is nature to combat every day in the lost. year. A man who is a bioligist, an econoLactic acid bacteria, however, we have found do not make alcahol. The mist and a lot more ists. Who gives more and asks less than fermentation caused by them results iii pickling, as in sauerkraut, and all any other human being. Who takes unto himself for his the original feed values are preserved. It is true that silage materials may own sustenance and that of his family possess some lactic-aci- d bacteria, just those of his products that other peohow much has not yet been deter- ple will not utilize. Who gives his boys and girls to the mined; but in order to be sure of the cities to infuse red blood into a big the pickling only true preservative of that is constantly decadent Bociety is sufit desirable to in add silage ficient quantity the proper kind in and whose only salvation is the virorder to overcome the action of all ility that draws from the rural sections. the undesirable organisms. Who is taxed more and has less As Palatable as Breakfast Food. than any other Amerifactic the acid acid representation also Evidently citizen. can or bacnullifies' other destroys any Who is caricatured on the stage and teria which may have been present in the material siloed, for continual mic- in the daily papers, but who can come roscopic analysis and other tests have nearer taking hold of any business failed to detect, in quantity, anything and making it go than any other but the lactic-aci- d bacteria which had American alive and in captivity. Thats what a farmer is. been added. Drovers Telegram. In May I drove out to the Livingston ranch to look into all this, seven months after the silos were filled. The KICK1E SAYS original silo built in 1917 was nearly emptied of its contents the second filling which had tested out in every OUtK TvV VMCl.FteVtT.H as had the first. V.S.T ftOWItftOOS KUf4 Kt um respect This JOfcNoa. hm &otf a at A ' second silo, which was built in OCUVtRCD ON TltAC Yt CAdl 1918, of the same design and capacity VS art VtR NO fM OOOftt tHMi two hundred tons stood alongside entNt , otrvtN out vjwt&s the, first one and its contents had Jxen, PRINTIN' ON TlWit. n o'couwst thfe brightest, cleanest and mosHpalat-abl- e THtRt'S aOfsAc CUs&$ our printin IN t NVU&Nt flROrt - TW sots Toot Mr. that the ranch silage Crosby, MO T' fcRtNCr CK TH MONtX foreman, said he had ever seen. I ma. joavMOR. eicuz. could fully agree with him on that, and TRCA.N CRSH. Ive Been a good deal of silage. It had been put in fully matured, and the kernels were as bright and of as good color as when harvested. Biting itno them, their brittle hardness was found to be gone, but they were unbroken and sound clear through and palatable enough to use as a break- -' fast f6od. There was not the slightest odor of I pi. I id i i I.Ih- - ill bi f 1.1 after i , i bl ibe uij . in; ai ot t!a i a' ; tel im into all a el I'.i Hi! i e . ,nl i i i Ml t I IM I i "'p into the 'lage mat t he W u ok s u.j.ies fiom at least tm n (iTTl. e 1 if m he g i am i. ml aha it gi f t hi ; t I ill i sisted that this was highly desirable. He knew that both grain and stalks gained a large amount of feeding value by being allowed to mature; and though Livingston handles a dozen silos on the companys various ranches and had never before filled them with anything but green fodder com, Go to it, Riley! he still said; The filling brings us to the lactic acid. Doctor Daines furnished the necessary material for the experiment a two ounce vial of bacilli culture, which wTas ample for the entire two hundred tons of silage and with his advice and assistance Riley prepared two or three barrels of the culture, i. impregnated with the necessary self-starti- ' i -- I thi' mi' i.i ' ! l i i r i i i I. - V.l . A one-inc- The Ford Sedan, with electric and lighting system and demountable rims with tires front and rear, is a family car of class and comfort, both in summer and in winter. For touring it is a most comfortable car. The large plate glass windows make it an open car when desired, while incase of rain and all inclement weather, it can be made' a most delightful closed car in a few minutes. Rain-proo- f, dust-profine upholstering, broad, roomy seats. Simple in operation. Anybody can safely drive it. While it nas all the distinctive and economical merits of the Ford car in operation and maintenance. Wont you come in and look it ' , 5 bu i a. ' m, ! .1 -- - THEJINIVERSAL CAR .1 I 1h oi. j n v i , O' . .and bac il'us a' the rigid agetit for i i.i " . i page Never to m k "vcllllgt1 , sir! w'i-ml I've the lmmcd.uU .li.swir. been looking n t into tin matter foi pas " neatly a "if uU lIin obtain a siki for the penments, Mr Ki!e; , ou m.ij rely on I1H. for esory :,ndaH'matc rial that fee an can ,u n sh. tense mUre.-- t u. tin- -, as I see just jwhat it means p, thi- - great new de- velopment of wmtci fied for stock." the Riley went tu D.m I.iving-toI bead of the l.iv lug-tany, of which be ami Iauh- - McCor-nicone of Salt ake's biggest bank ers, are the chief proprn toin Mr. Livingston m on the the class of men who will try nnylhing once; and before Riley had talked fifteen minutes to him, during which time he had touched upon a certain defect in the building of ordinary silos, the stock-- ( man said: Let's jump into my car and drive up to the university and see the doctor. If he corroborates you youll not have to talk any more! The doctor corroborated Rileys theory on curing and pickling, and the stockman right there exclaimed: Go to it Riley! Go out to our Lagoon ranch, build a silo and see to the filling. Weve got plenty of corn nearly ready now. Follow your own plans and charge everything to us! And suppose, demurred Riley, that I spoil all your silage? Go to it! repeated Livingston. Im too good a sport to be willing to bet only on a dead-sur- e thing. Youll never hear a single moan from me if it doesns pan out right!" A ton silo was built at contended that, once. had Riley hollow was a long step wall a though he wanted dead toward air spaces. With hollow blocks, ordinarily made, there is a circulation of air from the top to the bottom of the wall, and when a silo is half of more emptied, which usually occurs in mid winter, the upper half may be very cold while the lower half, because of the temperature of the silage, is well above the freezing point. Hence with dead air spaces, that surprised to find that apparently sci- warmth is kept where it is needed, entists and agricultural authorities round the silage, instead of being distributed above. This result was accomplished simply h concrete layer by putting a at the bottom of each hollow block, all of which, by the way, were made right on the ground. Though the work was rushed the com matured and ripened before the silo was ready. However, Riley instructions one iota today to make corn or, any other variety of silage for stock, except that you substitute a one or two hundred ton concrete eoiila n- or for the barrel. Bt the results are apt to be quite Sauerkraut is truly piekelod whereas in tho ordinary silage for stiK-it may be pickled or may not, ac- to well heres where Ill in-- J Produce Mr. Camden Riley. This gentleman, a Kentuckian, has had many years experience in distilling and, as a side line, has been a feeder of thousands of cattle, sheep' and horses. Six years ago he moved up to Utah for the sake of his invalid wife, and retired from business, but his old interest in livestock caused him to watch what other men near by were doing. Although he had no previous experience with silage, he soon became a keen observer of its feeding values and, accustomed to very close analysis and delicate testing in his distilling operations, he went pretty deeply into observations, experiments and deductions. He soon found that ordinary silage was seldom thoroughly pickled sometimes hardly pickled at all with the result that round the edges and tops there was in almost all silos a certain amount of decay, extending into the mass according' to the delay in feeding out. , He well knew from the start that bacteria of some description, or yeast, were the agents in producing fermentation, and the freaks of the elusive bacilli had long been familiar to him. He knew that the universal cause of decay in any vegetable or animal substance was what he calls wild white yeast," which originates from one great class of bacteria, while another class,- producing lactic acid, arrests and prevents decay and pickles thoroughly; and it is due to the natural prevalence of this latter bacteria in the cabbage that sauerkraut cures so well and keeps so long. The logical procedure seemed exceedingly simple to him, and he was t d ll ied me, Mr o ii U.k tirt.l tea y and lit it fument. looked inio. ,! rtl, cover up You dont have to change tho e in iu- - i i lit, r1 i. ' t , 'I " o i .iihei i i . i urn 1 . 1 hi-- i t hi e i'iv ' w f h i I v .. t" u kaut lour ' fun.d.i i i - - 1 i in-- bt . t ti'nut i'.ui- - ' :h - i Til I 1?' 1 t ' 1 all-stat- Davis . Pt' to ho 'lC 011 u i i lit '.i.e 1,1 ciiu A . uU Albert A. Dialer o: .'bid t selecting the Haiti" pites Captain 1 lachoice for is mnd . selection I,..rker 'tarightly in every play from the fust to J last game of the season. His showier linemen on all opposing teani-wa- s V against His playing thrmi notable. V was consistent. season the time that a Pacis is first the This selected for been ever has man honors. I all-A- i . - -- i J, n i v ' l the ' ' - l t i t r.: it i t n c wldmir ouch and i!enli i fir the w tof the jouih of ooorv i, :,k 11 tin. ( oh H . H la Kavvi!ie. v entire countv. An aM f'i . t 1. Y by I co J. Muir, Ji eij the etudie-t-- t t i ts- hi 1 i. ( e . t i i i NIMHCR Ilf ''lilt. JIO t ' Ill x v" e iK Ie 1 lH THURSDAY, NO F.MUKR 17. H, t hi o i t tho-- e i V si! .l.igy -- v hu. h . if i ,i j.-'-t uri ('! i r th I F re-i- I ( Dirkm of the l.aston Druj bus purchased n site for cninpanv huMim-bouse just outli of the prea-- i The piupeit.s Mas tit urug Toi. .V Adams Sun from i. bused pun Nest pring Mr, Ihrhtn Iii eiict si new home f"t his li.i-t- . ties- - on the propotty. Kiibi r! s com-put- ex-pe- -- C FARM IN ETON laU - 1 laulia ! I fttroofi tleitrw Imn - of-f- I -- . mustiness just the t slightly sour smell of a very mild pickle. - And the stalks were soft and sweet. Pieces from the butts of those stalks would crush easily between the finwas present at the first examination gers; and in the feed troughs of the and found the bacteria were penetrat- corrals not one scrap of the new proing well through the entire mass; and cess silage could be found, though in not a week passed thereafter without adjoining troughs, where very fine, the doctors going out to the ranch leafy alfalfa hay had been fed, there and making thorough examinations was much remaining from the last and tests, or having samples sent to feeding. -- u i- the ifsoil hhU rf im1 the river of ih fnmoue lln wuteiwork end ub-A fine place for Muaouit cu tint ieitre 6 iWYiMiHfc'Aifc MISSION riONKF.it HONORED Samuel lavi Gregory, born in Wilkes county, N. (!., soenty years ago, and for eighteen years a resident of Farmington, was the happily surprised guest of honor at a most enjoyable birthday celebration and missionary reunion held at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Linnie G. Richardson recently. Amohg the forty or more guests were several returned elders and emigrated Saints from the southern states. Elder J. Wells Hess conducted the Tho assembly opening exercises. Joined in singing Come, Come Y& Saints," led by Elijah B. Gregory, the only son of the guest of honor. A. B. Richardson made tho address of welcome as host of the occasion, David C. Hess spoke in. tender, yet rousing terms of Mr. Gregorys char- acter, stating the circumstance of his standing off with his old shotgun a mob, who sought the live of two humble missionaries, blood-thirst- y David C. Hess and Melvin 0. Miner, near Honey Grove, Texas, in 1896. Councilor Joseph Coulam, Eleventh ward bishopric, Salt Lake; J. Wella Hess, Farmington; Bishop A. LxvCIark Farmington; Presidnt J. II. Robinson, South Davis stake; Mrs Martha R. Aaron, Salt Lake all spoke feelingly concerining Mr. Gregory, and recited many event in the life of the man. After refreshments were served Mr. Gregory played a few. tunes on the old violin.that had seen service at many a Texas entertainment and dance. Contributed. tea.PARENT-TEACER- - MEETING S There will be a meeting of the Par association at the Kays ville public school building, Friday December 5, at 4 oclock p. m. An interesting program has been ar ranged and the presence of all'parenti who have children attending the grad' school is urgently requested. H. J. Sheffield, Jr. will address thi meeting on an important Bubject. Mis Anderson, instructor of the Fourtl grade will give a demonstration ii reading and Miss RemArom will furn isb music. An inseptcion of the new schoc building has been arranged for a sub jeet of interest to all, will be brough up for general discussion. Every par ent in Kaysville is urgently and cor dially invited to atend. . ' -- r i FOR SALE 40 Buff Orpingc: pullets and 5" cockerels, purebred Robert Simmons, Layton, Utah, Phon ent-Teache- - 53-2- n-1- 1. 2t S, Colemere Park lunch room on block west of Ili.--h s hord. Rton able prices. Call in. t ' - of rich n! fertile ( ottnty Home of the Miller Huntl cam Cijiiitly peny, whowc trreenhoimt'e nr the Urffeet . Send The Ref The cost is but $1 x to jour tr. n A via jr |