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Show Thursday, May THE LEADER. Trtmonton. Utah 24, 1951 .i frVile : Northern Utah SOIL CONSERVATION DISTRICT NEWS COLUMN A group of six farmers from Coalville and Henefer led by Owen Robert, supervisor in the Summit County Soil Conservation District, spent May 11 examining soil conservation practices in the Northern Utah soil Conservation District. They were especially interested in the alfalfa-graas part mixture of a rotation in a contour strip cropping system at Beaver Dam. The graded and seeded waterways also took their eye. They were Intrigued also with the ss Setting the pace for Utah Poultry industry with more profits, more ser- vice, more convenience. UPFC leads as it has led today for 26 years. f manure sweet clover green crops, stubble mulch, and contour strip cropping they saw on the Homer Kotter, William Roberts, Fuhiman Brothers, and Ralph Bishop farms. The gullies that were graded in this spring and seeded to grass and alfalfa are looking good. With all this recent rain they should get a good start. Horace Hunsaker, Wallace Simmons, B. P. Johnson, Glen 'W. Ft Potter and Leland Hansen are among those who worked on their waterways. More than three miles of gullies were graded and seeded. This work will help out in contour farming as well as stop the gullies from washing deeper. Have you noticed all the strip cropping along the Beaver Dam section of Highway 89? Mark Jensen of Collinston intends to get some dryland pasture for his farm flock of sheep in addition to improving his soil. He planted about 15 acres of his dry farm to crested wheatgrass and alfalfa, and a similar acreage to intermediate wheatgrass and alfalfa. Since the intermediate wheatgrass is from 2 to 3 weeks later maturing than the crested wheatgrass, this should extend the grazing period further into the summer. This will relieve his irrigated pastures and allow him to cut a crop of hay from them. Both dryland and irrigated pastures e rotafit well with his tion for building up his soil. Oleen Josephson at Plymouth is working. out a good rotation with sweet clover as a green manure crop on his dryland. He will be plowing about 50 acres as soon as it has made a H to 18 inch growth. You can readily see where Mr. Josephson spread nitrate fertilizer on his wheat Bus-enbar- TT- - . i ! Cor-inn- e. k, long-tim- We know that the subsequent better and irrigation will be easier on the fields where a leveling job has been good done. new The , . M," j EAST j j in the LONG RUN Here are a few TIRES more farmers Clarkston on Sunday they trip Mr. and Mrs. Eph Peterson Mr. oc- - and son4 Rex, Claland and Peterson were Ogden Godfrey's Rodney a good pasture stand spent the afternoon with their farms this spring: and Mrs. Leo Godfrey. The on acres, Leland Woodruff-1- 5 acres, Elmer Woodruff 5 acres of Tremonton; Earl Peterson of Bear River City-1- 5 acres; Percy Knudsen of (Marion Orchard Farm)-4- 0 acres. A good pasture well managed is one of the most farm can profitable crops a have. It is really a soil conditioner for subsequent crops in a systematic rotation. Many farmers in the valley having irrigated pastures on good cropland are not grazing them to the best advantage for optimum feed yeilds. The rapid spring growth is getting ahead of the cows. A good solution is to fence off the part not needed for grazing immediately and cut for hay. Keep the cows grazing on small sections of the pasture in a sequence so they will continually be getting to each fresh plot at the most desirable stage of the vegetative growth. ALscf, too many of the pastures are becoming heavy with Colen Petersen-2- 0 -- Cor-in- ne JOIN NOW! I Silver was business visitors on Wednesday. birthday anniversary. Shaffer R. returned Mrs. L. home from Southern Utah with Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Chistensen Don Shaffer. Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. family accompanied by While there she spent two days his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. at Enterprise and two at St. Christensen visited at Salt Lake George with friends and rela City on Sunday with Mr. and tives.. They also visited the Mrs. Carl Skidmore. Zion's and Gande Canyon. Bryce Canyons. Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Fred Gephart, while at Don Shaffer returned to their Salt Lake cn City last week, spent home at Sun Valley four days at the Tribune cookschool. She was accompanMr. and Mrs. Wayne Grover ing ied on Wednesday by Mrs. Harry spent the weekend at West Woodward.Point. The Grovers were in Salt Lake Levi Dodd of Chicago spent City on business on Monday. from Friday until" Monday at Flo and Marie Grover, Pauline the home of Mr. Mrs. Lewis and Janice Peterson, LuArin A. Dodd. Their and and daughter Lewis Christensen Shaffer and her husband visited on them were in Ogden on Sunday. in honor of Mr. Dodd's Sunday Mrs. Wildon Grover enter tained on Saturday afternoon Birthday. to honor her daughter, Rhea's birthday anniversary. Games WART, THE SPEED COP were played and refreshments served to 9 guests. Mr. and Mrs. Amos Hawks of Ogden visited during the week at the Lafayette Grover home. Mrs. Orval Grover and daughter, Joan, are at home after another session of teaching school at Grouse Creek. Lyn Larson was a Logan visitor on Wednesday., Mrs. Dorris Peteraon had as guests on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Harold Olpin and family of Salt Lake City. Mr. Olpin is a medical student at the Univer cassion Mrs- When it's value that (MM iiiifli counts, the final answer to tire value is how many trouble-fre- e miles a tire delivers compared to its cost. Get long-milea- Goodyear quality and find out for yourself why more people ride on Goodyear tires than on any other kind. to And remember . ; . give longer trouble-fre- e mileage, every new Goodyear tire deserves a new Goodyear tube. - !!!!!I!!WI!!!iM O.K. RUBBER WELDERS 53 Dial 3941 Tremonton BY BURNICF. HUNSAKSQl W0atO'e Complete FERGUSON Line HUNSAKER IMPLEMENT CO sity. Sidney Sorensen was in Plain ll69 &ninuArc ih who have sarsz :: rr -. pastures irrigated Take it home and enjoy its use while paying for it. r-- , ugan visited relatives here throughout the District are and JoAnne accompanied, Mr. after returning from a ten day's coming through in fine shape. and Mrs. Nephi Westergard to to California, where All National Advertised Brands of Silverware Can be Had Now On Our Budget Plan ire wtm Mr. and Mrs. Filbrun Johngrasses and light with legumes. City on Thursday where he at-Mr. and Mrs. Garrett ParfC of clovers tended the Stock show. The son and greater percentage Lee Lake of Salt visited their Gary City spent Sunday of the volume Sarensen Brothers had seven up to about 60cc hex Mr. and Ids. Mrs. on Ned with Law inparents, daughter, without head of cattle on exhibit, will boost the yield of W. A. Adams. at Idaho. Pocatello, danger bloating. creasing the and Mrs. Daie Gardner Sunday to stmiluate;and Apply phosphate Qf n visited chiWren the clovers. One can re d l cognize the pastures Uut have;Tom Mn Gardner whQ GET been properly fertilize d by the Weber College was attending a and balcolor good rich dark recentl presented a beautiful ancea iuiai-lut,iiuci wrist watch as an award for and the legumes. an "Outstanding Athelete." Mrs. Eph Peterson and Rex' GARLAND were in ogden wnere tney witn Mrs. Bill Cole and children watched the Army Day parade, Mrs. Epta Peterson They spent the remainder of the Mr. and Mrs. Roy Oyler and day visiting relatives and son, KOger, accompanied Ethel friends Me.rlin anri northv on Sunday Rogers to Sandy Fielding returned home with visited with Mr. them where they were jomed later by and Mrs. W. H. Rogers. m Mrs Wayne Fielding Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Johnson who spent the night and return-an- d children spent Sunday at led to their home in Clearfield Pocatello. Sunday evening. A continue using this commercial fertilizer until he gets his sweet clover-gree- n manure crop rotation going. More land leveling is to be done yet this spring as soon as the surface dries enough after the stormy weather is over. Some cooperators that have helped by the Northern Utah Soil Conservation District in land leveling recently are: Glen Sev- erson of Fielding-1- 0 acres; Fred acres: Ernest Nye, Garland-- 4 City-- 9 Huggins, Bear River acres; Grover Harper-1- 0 acres, Sirell Nelson-- 3 acres, Edward Nonnan-2- 4 acres in West PARTS - REPAIR - FIELD SERVICE Dial Chest Plan M' lia ! ' tin. r)r: ( Th. Styldliw D Swkm rConlinuofiaa of ilondord tqvipmwrt md trim Uhmr It Pldrnf wt milabwtr St tain 4.3 I :A -- .00 L America's Per Week sets your table with your most-love- d pattern 4 in America's Finest Sil J verware tonight . ; .... 1847 1 ROGERS BROS. " ... largest and Finest Low-Pric- ed that extra length measuring 97V inches from bumper to bumper. You can set and feel it in the smoother ride! It's HEAVIEST tipping the scales at 3140 pounds. 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