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Show - ij1 - IRE iOCKNAL, V LOU AN, CAQll-- MODEST MAIDENS LEWISTON DEPARTMENT , -- QUu-V- - Lets Make Hay 7T " The New Way f - By Prof J. C. Hogenson (Utah Extension News) Our main hay crop in Utah is alfalfa. No forage crop cultivated in the United States is utilized successfully m so many We produce ways as alfalfa. from two to five tons per acre. The number of cuttings obtainable ffom a field in a year depends upon the length of the growing season and upon the amount of moisture in the soil or supplied either as irrigation underground sources. From 30 to 40 days of good growing weather are, usually required to produce a sufficient growth lot a hay crop. MRS. GEORGE POND, Correspondent Lewiston The Lewiston lions pntertained at ladies night on. Monday night. The group con-- 1 slsting of about 100, motored to Crystal Springs where they en-,- to Joyed a swim after which a celicious luncheon, which had been previously prepared bv the Lions was served. Dancing completed the evening's enter-- 1 F r.v ' cock. This saves all of the leaves and prevents bleaching. WTe can realize the- - importance of this when we know that about TO per cent of the feeding value of the hay is in the leaves. Bleaching causes an additional loss of from 10 to 20 per cent in food value. , Alfalfa should be hauied to the barn or stacked as soon bs the hay has become sutticientlv dry. If a handful of hay is twisted as tightly as possible with the hands and no mmstura is squeezed out the hay is dry enough to haul. If, when twist-te- d, it snaps and breaks, it is already too dry. The least loss of hay results when alfalfa is stored in a barn or shed. The next best is to stack it in large well shaped DtptnuiLg vegetation is kept away Irom Hardening precis. on the latitude and elevation, their stems. 6. . been observed to brighten up September L i and take a new lease on life Excessive watering Ouving the when lower Vegetation that had growing months may (.'cause the been gradually choking them to soil to become soggi anfi S0OT- death, was removed from a dr- - frees will be unable to et cular area about two feet to ficient air, through the roots i diameter, immediately around and the foliage , wni usually the tree trunk. The weeds and turn yellow and fall permature-ly. grass should be hoed out to the an excess Damage d--je to spring and the ground should of moisture i s difficult to rembo hoed two or three times edy. and Vjiouid be carefully during the rest. cf the season. guarded against. trees of presents Irrigation There are 200 golf clubs in a proolem to almost everyone. trees true that is It require a and adjacent to Chicago. large amount of moisture. For that reason, they should be watered by means of open ditches rather, than by sprinkling. seldom Prolonged sprinkling wets the soil tq a depth of f' 'Hh more than ' four inches, and Sa wen topped offA more often the water falls to i fnuit go more than two inches below H'lUff the surface-- One thorough Irshed the rain and snow and rigation a, month should be sufsaves considerable alfalfa hay ficient to keep trees alive and from spoiling in the stack. growing slowly. Two waterings . . a month, for all but the very , species, should be amTrees Cannot Grow exacting ple, To make the watering most the ground around the Competition With elfectivei trees shbuld be thoroughly hoed Newly renovated Through- Weeds and Drought or cultivated after each irrigaw, ? tion, to .provide an earth mulch. 1 400 car garage. Watering should never extend By Charles M. Genaux The meeting place of Utah into the fall months. Woody Extension Torester f people. t growth needs a period of comLawn trees, as well as those parative toahtivity for harden- fpSLr SLtecotton ownM, In pastures' and fields, are apt ing before the first frosts Wishon, manager. to suffer from competition with ccme, and late watering stimr A weeds and grasses unless such ulates growth and prevents the t, . 1 .rss - with her daughter, Mrs. Valeria Taggart., Mr. and Mrs. Iva Hyer and Mrs. Caroline Leavitt motored Idaho Falls and spent the , week end with relatives, Mrs. Dilla Osmond who has been visiting in Lewiston accompan-,lad- y ied them, Mrs. Edith Cunningham tertained the members of the partya, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Lewis H Lure club at a dinner after-zonher home on Friday and two children of Mesa,Ari- - anoom TCie special guests were were Lewiston visitors ,Mrs. C. J. Van Orden, . Mrs. last week. Crochan and Mrs. Stan- Miss Maurine Hyer is visiting faTpartlcTarlyIThetn grown to wee hi with her aunt, Mrs. ,le ed to Mrs. Lawrence Poulsen . h,gh pne- joshut Brown. crop and Mrs. Harvy Crochaw. when the, hay is ed landr-an- d ATTEND REUNION to be fed to dairy cows, is just The following Lewiston people when it is beginning' to bloom. attended the Rawlins reunion Vast Gifts Made When cut at this time the hay at Draper on Saturday: Mrs. Eva pound for pound "has greater Leavitt, Mrs. Eulalia Taggart. nutritive value than If the crop Miss MisS Jeanette Taggart, Education Higher is allowed to stand a week or Mae Rawlins Mr. and Mrs. Ariel so Al-flonger. When cut at- the Rawlins, Mrs Eliza King, the however,earlier stage, Rawlins, Geo Rawlins, Char- Universities Granted Large the and weakened are plants les and Kenneth Rawlins and Sums in Furtherance crop begins to thin out , after the Misses Lilly and Leona Of Learning four or five years. Rawlins. In curing alfalfa hay, the to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Croc-shaThe Reporter According should follow the mower. rake Mr. and Mrs. Stanley in the Journal of Higher EduTwo men with torks can then pekett, Mrs. C. J. Vah Orden cation, gifts to higher educapile the windrows into small id Mrs. Harry Coley spent the tion during the past month cocks, one forkfull to size, so end at Burley Idaho, vis- -j elude the following:' the hay is cured in the that iting with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd j $7o,ooa..ta . Duke .. University 'from George C. Allen and Wil- Hogan. 'How mui'h Tor the puller? 'Mr. Warren Taggart and son liam R. Perkins for the installed Willows, Calif., are visiting ation of a carillon in the tow- from a 50 per cent increase in wlth Mr. and Mis. James Tag- er of the university chapel Cows Reduce Investment is a pretty good Dairy gart, ' to the University $2,000,000 bargain. There are a number 4 Mrs. Glen Pond of Santa of Cincinnati from Mrs- - Annie of general rules for feeding beef! On Diet who When has Rosa, Calif., Taft, relict of Charles P. Tafjt, dairy cows. An old one is to in Lewiston for the past publisher ahd feed Holstetos one pound of week for a left brother last month, of the late chief H is Net in grain for every three (pints) of Reduction But short visit with relatives in 0f Lbe supreme court, to bejustice the used milk produced. Jerseys are Profits From the Milk and Idaho Falls and Island Park, t0 promote the study of hu supposed to require one pound Not in the Weight of the Idaho.' inanities in an effort to balance over-lndulg-o, of gram to every four pounds Animal The misses Billy and Armlnta the funds being devoted beto of with milk, Guernseys attended : the annual bet-Hogan material and physical tween. lawn party given terment of mankind. Dieting for the purpose, of Cows are just as individual in a hasbecome 4he PrincetonPress reduclngwelght their eating as humans. - You SomeofMr&T EUerTccles at from50,000 great American habit, especially have Charles the Scribner, late tq study each cow and Logan last week. among the women folks. More Mr. and Mrs. Harry Croc shaw publisher, to Skidmore from the bathroom scales have been sold feed according to her produc$10,000 d and same source.- in the last few years than tion. You must also study the of food. Silage, Mrs. Stanley Pickett of Rio any period in history. combinations and during Presser from the $250,000 grains when hays Vista, Calif, art visiting to Lew- Foundation new A lot of harm has been done legume a toward fed to the dairy cow In the Mr. and Mrs. Harry iston with for the school of as the result . of unwise and " building the right proportions will produce Coley. music at Northwestern Univer- rigid diets. It is surprising willmilk at a profit. For every dol'C. B. Stoddard and C. J. Van number of people who are the Is upon contingent sity lar spent in feed you should reOrden," local Lions left on Sata to for risk health gracea like ing universitys raising ceive from two to three dollars to for the Denver attend ful figure. , to urday amount. An active campaign to international convention. raise lions Study your records, In the dairy industry we find weedmilk. that sum and $150,000 adout the poor onps and buy Mr. and Mrs. Harry Crocshaw ditional for as has endowment similar a situation although cows new to replace them. were visiting relatives at Ox- ust been started. The new a different reasomJrL the last Weigh your food and your mUk. ford on Wednesday. as Presser few years a good deal has been It known to be juildlng, is much safer than measurMrs. Ralph Bemhisel is at records. Hall, will cost approximately said about keeping this at least once a ing. . the bedside of her mother, Mrs. farmer month.Do Or $600,000. dairy Every modem better, yet, if you !.Mary Hendricks of Logan, who $425,000 is given to the Car- maintains an accurate check on do not already have a testing .1 Very ill. of Technology the milk production of his herd, association Institute negie to your, community, UNDERGOES and and also the cost of feed. Natfor the establishment a few herd nwjhfra together OPERATION of a coal research urally, to order to show a pro- get maintenance one. Thoh you can start under-iweand ,,jMiss a Alta Van Orden at a laboratory. Of this amount $50,-00- 0 fit all efforts are directed to- have an experienced major operation as an initial gift, and $25,-0- ward securing big production at visit your farm once a. month. L, local hospital on Friday. The a year for five years for a a low feeding cost, and there is S operation was the, result,, of programs of - pure research, is where the - trouble is apt to by Dr. fall some two years ago. the contribution of the - Buhl start. "Trre--MisseArmlnta and Billy Foundation of Pittsburg. $50,000 U.' S. J. C. McDowell, of the Hogan attended the trousseau a year for five years for the Bureau of Dairy Industry, tells Yale Given $100, 000 tea given by Miss Dorothy maintenance of the laboratory us that a study of the records at the home of her Is further assured through the of the half -- million dairy cows sister Mrs. L. D. Nesbitt at LoUnited on test in dairy of the Journalism Study Steel corporation, the gan on Friday. States associations has indicated Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Van Or- General Electric company, the that few dairy herds axe overden and children Gean and Koppers company, the New that quite a number are The owners " 6f important Arlon and P. E. Van Orden York Edison company, The fed, 'Coming events underfed and that many of American newspapers in Pitts Black-foot, Standard spent the week end at Oil, and the Westing-hous- e the herds are fed Injudiciously. burg, Brooklyn, ' Duluth, Mil cost their Idaho while there they atElectric Toledo Mr. - Take the case of the farmers wakee, Newark,-anbeforo" shadows tended the Van Orden reunion, Paul Block has recently given o' Miss Mina Leavitt returned is who feed all their cows alike, Yale (AB) Money Vienna a for $100,000 the of and size, age, University on Sunday from a two weeks scarce among Austrian law- regardless of studies in the field visit with relatives at Afton, yers. A young advocate recent- amount of milk produced. Only program accident will enable them to of Journalism. It is not planWyoming. Bishop Saul E. Hyer ly appeared to the district an ned that this fund will be used and Merle Hyer attended the court of Favonten barefooted make profits in most cases; But for the development of the vofuneral of jheir aunt Mm- Re- He explained to the judge if those same farmers will keep but It Is exBountiful on that his only pair of shoes an individual feed and milk re- cational tocourses, gina Hogan at be used to bring stucord on each cow, and sell off pected ' was at the' cobblers- I Sunday, the poor producers and feed dents, both graduate and un' Mr. and Mrs. George Villet Be moder ate-- be moderate in all thtng3,even in smok' remainder correctly profits dergraduate, to a better underand family are spending a few Ted Gullic and Red Badgro, the are to follow. Time after standing of the role of the press ing. Avoid that future shadow by avoiding days in Yellowstone Park. They regular outfielders for the 8t. timecertain has been proven that in the present day complex left on Ffiday. Mrs. James Laird Louis Browns, not two years cows itwhich if you would maintain that modem, eat the most in social and political structure. of Salt Lake City is visiting ago played in a class D league. dollars worth of feed produce figure. "Reach for a lucky instead. the most milk, the most butter Shearings fat, the greatest gross income and, most Important of all, the some kid gloves greatest average Income over forLady: I want my daughter, cost of feed. - CigA little study will show why please. Clerk: White kid? this is true, A cow needs food Lady: Sir. how dare you! for two purposes, to keep alive Pennsylvania Punch Bowl and to produce milk. Under normal conditions about half She was a maiden of twenty of the food is used for the summers win maintenance of the body and ters?". f and how t many the other half goes into the None. She lived In Californ milk,' But that does not mean ia. that if you increase the rations of S. Calif. Wampus tU. above the . amount the cow . ought to have, ; she wijl give MAID: THE PROFESSOR, more milk. In other words, NEXT - ROOM - IS-- FIRE I there is a limit. PROFESSOR: WHY WORRY A cow that is led too much month more Packard cars were ME? will produce the same amount ROOM?AM I IN THE NEXT 1AST to customers than in any of milk that she would if she Boston Beanpot was fed just enough. The ex- -' previous June in the history of the rH. cess food will be utilized in add' ..lima Yaladoffovitchskloffshy , Packard Company, Even' June of 1929 ing weight. That extra Weight So Ivan Ninespinskie died In Is of no value unless the cow battle. Yon he uttered my was surpassed, ; , happens to be preparing for a name as he say was dying? i period when It wilt be necessary Returned Soldier; Part of 1$ to draw upon a reserve. Over- He What a tribute to the Packard Bight in' did his best Drexerd ?,, releads to feeding, therefore, these times when everyone is weighing duced profits. $6.9(F Underfeeding also leads to revalues and buying a little more carefully t duced profits but from another To Boise and , than ever before! cause. comes 0 divisfirst always. That $7.30 X ion of food between what Is Remember it is still possible to buy a needed to- maintain the body To Nampa and Packard Standard Eight at a saving of and the amount that goes into 25th the production of milk will not $400 an outstanding value in the fine hold good when the cow Is fed From Logan via Oregon Short to little, for the simple reason Line Railroad. Tickets good car field. Come in and see the cars that that the body needs come first. only to coaches o;chair cars, record new for a are today setting When they are satisfied then and limit for retflfcn to home depublic production starts. Take a cow stination before 4 midnight of appreciation, weighing 1,000 pounds,, that July 28th. Ask local agent for produces 3 gallons of 4 percent further details. Your used far will lie sweated 4 fash and it Your-Thro- at butterfat milk when, fed nor-- . Advertisement) fatnaluation applied sgalasi - thedown and will produce that She mally. monthly payments on a Packard Eight. The same amount of milk if overAustralia (AP) Sydney, S Passenger Standard Sedan h delivered here with fed but possibly only half that Aquatic policemen have been ' "I have come to the conclusion, writes Sir Henry Thompson, M. D., F. R. S "that more than half the all and rover equip. nrressary amotint if underfed. The amount sworn in to arrest swimmers spare tire, tube, that embitters human.life is due to avoidable errors in diet. We do not represent that smoking . disease Initial payment $1060.00 j ment for $2350.06. that goes for body maintenance who go beyond the shark-promeats $64.37. remains the same to all three nets with which all of Sydneys monthly pa) jjj tutky Strike Cigarettes will bring modem figures or cause the reduction of fleshWe jfo declare thatwhen, u :cnce cases;: beaches have been" equipped. A study of thousands upon Offenders who maintain a modem, graceful form. I escape tho in things that cause excess weight and, by avoiding thousands of Individual records sharks are fined. shows, that a cow which proP duces twice the milk of another Picknickeri Youre not afraid TUNE IN The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra every Saturday and Thursday evening, over N.B.C. networks. cow will eat about fifty per cent of wild beasts, are 25th you? 447 Street, Ogden more than the second cow. A Picknickette: No, Dear. I "feel $ i9to, Tfe America Tofeccoo Min. ( Phone 453 100 per cent increase in volume perfectly safe with you. , rt !; VKS's; asiS$!hmL nkerS1iiTii In us w, in-vie- ek angele:s7v . a vis-fli- ng When tempted to we mid-summ- er j t , nt cow-test- er 00 4jad s For -- - over-indulgen- r ever-youthf- The Greatest June Business n PACKARDS History "V the finestarette you ever smoked, made ld Lucky Striker . i ON well-defin- ed of the finest tobacco The Cream of the Crop "IT'S TOASTED." lucky Strike has an extra, se cret heating process. Everyone knows that heat purifies and so 20679 physicians say that m Luckies are less irritating to Return 50-5- your throat; y Return -- July Protectionanainstirritationagainst.cough. t of Strong Motor, Inc. e, ' , j |