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Show PA ROWAN TIMES. PA ROWAN, UTAH o ,0 rLllSWi - - -, , :fcirriXT Com i j cs IRUIEGS Cy 41 Per Cent of Land In U. S. in Herbage Grass Top Resource, Cattlemen Assert nie of llu- greatest re- ' ! hp itiiiii. In the Untied Jinrls 11 I i M..t A. - v i v heie h .tie approximately of lirni which will c ii t ..it ii.; hut h.iv. grass tiiul i " i r tuihige unfit for hull "i i tuple m it ' 11 pi r H .in. ii it i it t i I ' ... t! , h repiesents tinge total land of the n r lent of the At i.t tt in 'he 1 it i .1 States are i.il.e h ,t ate used also to pro-'- I ui .i ' oe. h i nr forage mips. It .oi le n i huled. therefore, 'lt J r lent of the United th 'I 'I stat s wi i... I not tie used tf it were not for n i it annuals i 's I l' A .T'j -- wwy CONT you TAKE Th ATOnEY V SPEND ON HlS MUSIC LESSONS AND BUY VOuRSCLF SOME NEW CLOTHES ?" fjENHY and BtNNyJ 1 ! n rettj rs. a s h lta!-j- t for bt; i 'J' g t ' NEXT DOOR llwill In Unifil far By Gluyas Williams (u..rv U i MAKE STRANGERS.. DATES WHAT'S WITH NAME YOU R MiEH YCiiR isiilPY Where N?323 CN Td6 STREET IS RELAYED BY A Shall bcy who opened the poor and then disappeared, swrts one of ? 'THIS ONE IS FOR FOLKS WHO RIDE BICVCLES" 1ilC6E TAMIIY HEATED, MUTT HAVE m I REALLY Scut know! show You, AYVTHIN6 KSlRSlD A Tr AS To WhEThER DOWN OR THREE j tf5 CORNER HOUSE OR HlE SECOND A DOZEN YOiCES.PRf TV NOTSuRE THAT THEY EVEtf KNOW YOU'RE ThC AND PRETTY SOON JOINED IN, AND YOU'RE There and yet you AND JEFF lOJT BASEBALL' ARGUMENTS H0U5CTA0 Blocks hat dost gufe uke just to walk otf into the hJicht By Bud Fisher SAY HAVE IM SORRY I DONE BACK HOME AGAIN By Ed Dodd SOMETHING 4S3s t v Lj ' j This little fellow, obviously started in life, Is symbolical of what good pasturage ran mean to cattle and Just how mui h rattle depend on grass. In the United States there are approximately 779 million airea of land width cannot grow anything but hay, grass and other herbage. Of Hie total feeds consumed by beef cattle 78 7 per cent is grass, hay and dry roughage. A minimum of grain is needed to bring feeder steers from 700 pounds to 1.000 pounds when the principal part of the ration ts made up of hay, ensilage or other roughage. The process of producing beef cattle normally involves the folo wcll lowing steps: 1. The purebred operator who produces the sires and females which are the foundation of beef animal production. This bratfth of the cattle industry is one that requires heavy investment and efficiency in management. 2. The commercial breeder who produces the calves which are the offspring of commercial herds of female and purebred sires. 3. The pasture cattleman who grows the animal from the weaning or yearling stage to two years old. taking his profit from the poundage gained on grass and hay. 4. The feeder who finishes the animal from grass stage to slaughter condition, disposing of a large percentage of roughage. Crop Rotation M I i -- u& m WO' 0 wa at Jitter wna i By Arthur Pointer nted Sllrf1 MoltW cows :r ;0R(l, Crop rotation with legumes, plant food and good management methods are the "gas, oil and lubricants that keep your soils crop producing machine going on high. Each of these has a job to do. Each needs help from the others. They all have to work like a tem. Valuable as a good rotation is in balancing legume row crops against crops, it has to be backed up by wise land management methods. Cropping in even the best rotation drains the soils supply of phosphate and potash. And even if your good management program puts back every scrap of barnyard manure, plows under the legumes and returns straw, corn stalks and crop after-mat- h deep-roote- ?, jt- I - Bn j nyside D S I1Td,MRS CB0EN. Tell him by Clark p: S. Haas SILENT SAL1 YOUR WIFE BILL WANTS YOU TO BRING HOME AND A QUART A LOAF OF BREAD OF MILK WHEN YOU COME HOME. HI, GUESS IT'S TIME TO CLOSE UP By Jeff Hayes d I r 1 g to the soil, you still ship away hundreds of potinds of plant food in the grain, beef and milk you sell every year. andma By Charles Kuhn 7 GOSH, AFTER ALL THAT HARD L WORK, IM ALL TUCKERED OUT I GOTTA GET HOME AN REST f3; A SPEL- L- Good Pasture Increases Dairy Herd Production j rj With 2.5 million fewer cows on farms now than in 1S45, possibilities for profit In dairying are greater if high value pasture is the center of the production program. Good pasture can increase ? V . 1 labor-savin- 4 04- tit Jlllt -- it & milk output and cut production costs. That means a bigger profit margin. Getting bigger pasture yields is a matter of feeding the soil plant nutrients so it can feed legume grass mixtures. t |