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Show r i: i THE -- r BEAV: PRESS, BEAVER, UTAH, FRIDAY, the ravages of the pest while others show no effect. Word comes from Millard County that they also, are being troubled, LOCAL FARM NOTES Prices on B Orioite Spray LEW MAR PKICE County Agent An - Beaver Drug Co. 1 fpca2 Happenings A i d, i; d, VACATION COACH wherever You Want to Go ar-hn- A Few Low Farts Tolton, Messrs. Ken Barton. Carl Ef-r- a and Neilsen H E. Howe, Warren Barton returned Sunday evening on the from couple of days fishing .. They Creek. -ui vnrtJi soum ior the followed and took saddle horses Mt. 0 foot the stream up to nearly water a little Baldy, but report the too high for good fishing. Pl::::z S3 York City Kckwick-Grcyhoun- 61.05 d BON TON Confectionery which comes to First Command." and Saturthe Star Theatre Friday W. 12 starring and day, July 11 Ri Fort at was taken, Bovd. It historical Kansas, one of the moi in the posts and picturesque cavalry United States. p I A. T. Sharp Sharp, son of resident of Mo- home in Salt Lake .City at thl. few day.' yI.U after jt0 day place. n,, . and are trying to control the with calcium cynide. There is no doubt that the bug can bo killed by this treatment, but the economy of the method is questioned. A general Infestation with chinch bug in the potato fields of Minersvllle would be disastrous to several farmers there who have planted from 10 to SO acres each In hope that a good cash crop can be started on a profitable basis. ' v-- .st Head Off Grasshoppers unusual number of calls for me formula for 'toselh In Bulk poisoning cutworms in has come in this the year, and apparentthere ly the . 1 Pint . 40c grasshoppers are becoming more numerous Him than usual. 1 Quart 70c The best means of StoSJ control of the kind 1 Gallon...- migrating grasshopper Is to head .......293 him off with bait. The pests are 7.50 5 Gallons said to be 0 iiapcf migrating from one field to another in th Place fc hatching grounds are discovered mey can be stopped there theft, by the bait. A poison belt a few feet wide across the path of the ' and soi pests will usually stop them from further proas a gress in destructive numbers. rs inch, The formula for the bait follows: To 25 pounds of wheat bran and foi add one pound of white arsenic or Paris nary us, green and one pound of fine salt. In m all J four gallons of water mix two quarts of the cheapest molasses or svrun ing but BUM obtainable and one ounce of banana nun ca( oil. (One half doz. finely ground lemons or oranges can be substitutfeed a ed for the banana oil if that cannot l. be secured.) Mix the home was dry and the lima Laura Shepherd ds, life Harry Diehl is improving his resiquid ingredients then seperately, Fourth. the dence property by the addition of a visited ,,, Provo for new bathroom and modern fixtures. thoroughly mix all together making e are dd a crumbly mass that can be broada Mo- Victor Price ha3 purchased s that cast over the field. The bait should & Son. of Neilsen Sport coupe Mr. and Mrs. Milo Baker left icess, M be sown in the evening to get best f resosij Wednesday for Salt Lake City and results. One to two bu. per acre, ncA Hodees and family, of Logan for a short vacation. to surf depending on the extent of infesta..... ralif.. . are here for a two dared . tion. with relatives. fjatcivi Douglas Robinson, who is attend with a ing business college in Salt Lake eratytf The Weed Mortgage Davis returned July 3rd Chalmer City, spent a week here with his par we, There are in Beaver County a been has he where California a ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Robinson. number of our si weeds considered to be ;jloyed for the past six weeks. ions ail and difficult to unusually persistent t Gus Fernley and family drove up eradicate once i livestj at- they have become es is who Kiss Lydia Robinson 1 to Salt Lake City to spend the tablished. carry Most common of this tiding school in Provo, spent the Fourth with friends and Is told relatives, group are morning glory, whitetop, in Beaver. ,irt to fail returning Sunday. and whorlel milk weed. Others of a nature that are very obnoxious Robinson Dare Pearce and Clark Jack Miller is now located In his very common are cockle bur and we down from Salt Lake City for new building opposite the city park burdock. Old infested areas, if 4th. and is well pleased with his change allowed to go unmolested will if. and Mrs. Arnold Grimshaw in locations for his garage business. increase in size, and new lands aw up from will become infested. Cedar City to spend In time pracMiss Ha Tanner spent the Fourth tically every farmer in the county fourth, returning home Sunday. CI with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. will be fighting some one or more of Joe; the son of Dale Tanner, in Beaver. Miss Tanner is these weeds if some vigorous mea received a Ser attending summer school in Provo sures are not taken to hold them in j at Manderfield, bs check. laceration to his knee on July H Mrs. Ada Frazer and children, of when he fell from a horse. The state and county have expres Los Angeles, Calif., are visiting old sed their willingness to cooperate Uarrliall Messinger and wife came friends and relatives in Beaver. They with property owners in the control from Monterey, Calif., on the expect to be here about two weeks. of these weeds. A machine for inn, for a two weeks' visit with spraying has been placed in the kiatlves in Beaver. Burnett Skinner, son of Mr. and county by the State Board of AgriMrs. Geo. Skinner of this city, with culture who also assists In paying for ir. and Mm. Frank Larsen and his wife, has moved to Delta, Color- the chemical applied to the weeds. p. Carl Larsen were down fiom ado, where he has a good position The county will see that chemical Is toLake City over the applied at the proper time if proper Fourth, vls- - with the Skaggs Safeway stores. Mr. w and Mrs. Jeddy Dean, and ty owners will Just make application Blickof and wife, Tanner W. ier relatives. J. for the spray. Little Miss Horm Larsen, who has been visiting foot, Idaho, arrived to spend the There Is a law requiring that all Vre since They will visit noxious weed's Including all of the decoration day, returned Fourth in Beaver. m with her here sometime with relatives and above named together with several parents. ' old friends. others be controlled, but Mr. Blaz-zarDlst. Agricultural Inspector, Abe Boyle has purchased a new who has charge of the work In this Ford sport coupe of Neilsen & Son county enough of the property ownthis week, while Orrice Murdock ers who have this weed nuisance BY purchased a sport coupe of Raymond will ask for assistance, so that the machine will be kept busy all during Hodges. . the season, and enforcement this ex- County Agent Lew Mar Price year will not be necessary. Those npets to leave Saturday for Logan to who spray weeds this year are sure attend the annual Farmers' Encamp- of assistance from the state. While on t iua fnmtiv is nlannlne in the future the property owners may have to bear the entire expense. accompanying him. Anyone wishing to see what the Gor- chemical will do to whitetop can do L. F. Mrs. Mr. and Born, to Mr. and so at the Haskell Earl place In Beavdon, Saturday, a baby girl. Mrs. Gordon are visiting at the home er. Two good demonstrations on of Mrs. Cordon's mother, Mrs. Lark morning glory can be seen at Grant Tolton's and Percy Beeson's. Erickson in Beaver. Requests for weed work can be returned either to Mr. Blazzard at CeMcShane made Little Norma where dar City, or to the county agent. Sunday from Salt Lake City the in weeks several had spent she an operaFalne Chinch Bug Makes Appearance hospital recovering from Pickwick in Is she The false chinch bug has made its yet Greyhound tion. While improving, In the potato fields in will take appearance delicate health. you there Minersvllle. Some of the crops are for less I considerable damage from Anna, Harry Hodges and daughterseveral suffering KcUid.Gr.yhound linos fU who. have been spending o anywhar. you want to 90 months In Monterey. California, T0 iny vacation tpot or eiy nn June 2nd. They were C0UnTrY- 'h modafw od of (raval cost lots. you accompanied by Miss Melba Hodges, " eomfortabla and ooabUt v. who had been spending a tuuy.c to raally taa tha J country. California. in for vacation weeks lugootiions. Sfgtie JULY 11, 1980. The Factor "Efficiency" "Down in Virginia a group of farmers got together in 1922 and decided to see what they could do to offset the changes in the tobacco market which had hit them very hard. They organized and put up the money for a thorough study of the situation. And then they acted on what they learned from the study. "As a result their average earnings rose from $773.00 in 1922 to $1,158.00 in 1927 an increase of nearly fifty percent. And that was dlspite the fact that dark tobacco fell about 50 in price during that time. Incomes of farmers In the same locality who did not get into the organization and follow the information discovered in the investigation dropped very materially." Increased efficiency produced a larger crop of a better product. We have many examples of such nearer home. In 1927 a field of alfalfa near Greenville owned and operated by Ethd Barrett produced ten loads of first crop hay. She saw what winter irrigation the winter be fore did in the Yardley field on the north and in the Davis field on the west. In December, 1927 she gave her field a thorough irrigation. During the growing season 1928 she gave the field the same treatment as usual. In June 1928 she harvested more than three times as much hay as had been taken off in the same crop in 1927. After the first test in our herd Improvement association this year, many dairymen cut down production costs from two to seven cents per . pound butterfat. George Parkinson and Mark havte proven the economy of keeping weeds out of silage corn; and a number of men have proven the value of good seed, especially potatoes. Good sires are no longer a questionable investment with our livestock men of any line. Individual efficiency both in production and marketing is the big factor in main taining a high standard of living on our farms. a Make Your Vacation Educational The program for the tenth annual farmers' encampment to be held in Logan July 14 to 18 includes competition in all of the following: Horseshoe pitching, Indoor baseball, livestock Judging, food judging, meal planning, textile identification, cloth ing judging, children . calling, and chicken calling. If you like educa tional competition, play, music, dra ma, lecturing, demonstrations, etc., the three days of this event will be filled full of pleasure for you. It is a good time and place to spend a . Capons brought Greenville men three cents more per pound than fat hens last year. They also grow larg er and make cheaper gains after caponlzlng. It pays to caponlze. fresh daily. Nice selection of seasonable Fruits and Vegetables at all Times all Beaver Fruit Market I will have an expert body and fender man here for the purpose of Repairing Damaged Fenders and Bodies If your car needs any repairs of this kind, it will pay you to bring in your car. Dented fenders and body dents removed and your car will look like new. DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY No Jobs Yet, at Boulder Imposing Review of 2nd U. S. Cavalry Dam is Warning Issued The Second United States Cavalry, organized before the Civil War as the Second Dragoons, and the second oldest unit of American mounted troops, is one of the regiments that takes part in the inspiring brigade review sequences' in "His First Command," a Pathe dialogue picture, starring William Boyd, which will be on view at the Star theatre on Friday and Saturday. Displaying on its colors battle standards won in every conflict in which United States has taken part from the Indian wars to the World War, this proud regiment of troopers, With the 13th Cavalry, appears in the first all color and sound scenes shot out doors for a dramatic picture production, the regiment is commanded now by Colnel A. R. Miller, while the 13th Cavalry Is In command of Lieut. Colonel William Overton. The colorful military ceremony of a brigade review, with dashing cav alrymen on spirited mounts, the flash of sabers, the brilliant colors of old glory and the regimental colors and the stirring martial music makes one of the most thoroughly inspiring spectacles ever seen and heard in sound pictures. This is part of the colorful background to one of the most effective stories in which Boyd has been starred in some time. There will be work at Boulder but not yet. This warning is sounded by the Las Vegas board of trade, which has issued a statement that while there will be jobs when construction actually starts, there is no work available now either at the dam or In Las Dam Vegas. A resolution adopted by the Las Vegas directors sets forth that It will be several months before employment will be offered in connec- tion with dam construction, and that no persons should come to Las Vegas at present unless they have sufficient funds to live on. 0 The department of commerce reports that more people are buying bath tubs than ever before. This in spite of the fact that most folks hate to be seen in one. MILLER GARAGE Across From the City Park Service With a Smile 0 Location notices for sale at the Press JACK MILLER, MECHANIC Office. ffiteffe'G.tafoe A young man said to a bank cash- ier, "I can't get anywhere by saving a dollar or two a week." And the cash- ( ier asked, "How far have you gotten by NOT saving a dollar or two a week?" a Supplementary feed given now to cows on pasture will tend to stay off the abrupt decline in production usually attributed to the work of flies. Experiments show that flies do not materially Influence the milk flow. ' LOG Think It Over and Come To See Us State Bank of Beaver County 0 THE NEW BUCKSKIN ROAD Messrs. Wm. Hurst, Ted Thompson and Jack Bowman made a trip over the Buckskin road to Panguitch Monday for the purpose of loglng the road and placing signs along the route. They report the new road in ex cellent condition. At Panguitch they met with mem bers of the Lions club and Commer cial club and discussed plans for making this a still better highway, 0 Leave order for all kinds of fruit and vegetables we get them Friday and Sstafey NOTICE Dr. E. A. Petty is leaving Saturday, July 5, for Los Angeles, Calif., where he will undergo an appendix operation. Dr. F. H. Petty will be in Beaver on Sundays and Mondays Call and make appointments with office assistant. DR. E. A. PETTY 0 We are told by the dietitians that watermelons contain vitamins A, B, C and G. Now to find something that contains D, E and F and go on a simple and Inexpensive summer diet. 20 to 40 per cent off on every article in stock that is the astonishing, welcome news for 930. Now's the time to buy furniture. 1 Mackerell & Cockett i |