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Show MCKIE, THE PRINTERS DEVIL S(m O11H1 f v, CR? NQSV( fcTZWSS'D V o? to. u usr vox seftuw. pt o? CAJZ& GW V 77ic Imp Almost Takes in Some Money -- fWMX.SGt 0P -- tax, co uctMKsss cvo rUVJK3 fiW fcic 'u goc sauu' tov A. C094 , US OOOCDVK ' - and waterworks. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Webb, Born to Mrs. I. unit .audio, Mrs. W. J. CowMr. and Jlrv ('harlot NalJer, who ENTIRE board held its regABSENCE OF SCRUBS ami Mrs. Golden Adams ular meeting Monday night. But lit- ley motored, leave on to take up residence in tle business was transacted other than to Uhi and Ulearant Grove lust Ohio Breeder, Recently Enrolled for Nevadi, entertained about twenty-fivday. They report a very enjoj able considering ordinances. Better Sires" Keeps Nothing guosts at a farewell party at trip and a pleasant visit with friends But Purebred. There will be an e their ome last Friday night. Games, dance, and relatives. e with music and social talk helped to make ' With the gradually Incrcaulng enrollmusic, at the LaTonia hall on Thursday evening, January 27. Deputy Milk. Inspector Burke is In the Better Sires" movement, up a merry evening, and the guests ment A big time and a big crowd is the active there days at the United States department of agthe Mr. About 25 per eeht of all departed at a late hour wishing riculture notes umiMinl Interest In regorder. platform. the milk tested i3 found to contain and Mrs. Nalder health, wealth and istration of sires. Many enrollment blanks on which breeding stock Is reMiss Itha Layton entertained at a an excess of dirt and foreign parti- happiness in their new' abode. ported contain the name and registry dinner party at her home Sunday in cles, and consequently is refused Lenumber of stink, although such InNo. La American ton Tost 87, honor of Mr. Merle Jackson of Bounformation Is not specifically asked for. gion, held a special meeting in the A recent enrollment from a live stock tiful, who leaves soon for a mission A. H. Green, who has been employed board room of the to the northern states. First National bank at the Con. Wagon & Machine ComAt the meeting Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas pany in Layton, will be replaced on Tuesday evening. for a series of were perfected plans Kilfoyle, at the Dee hospital, Ogden, February 1 by Mr. Earl McTeague of The first of these entertainments.. a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Kilfoyle j American Fork. He will reside tem- will be a musical program which will reside at Red House, Nev, where Mr. porarily at the home of Mrs. W. A. be under the personal management of Kilfoyle is in the employ of the El- Dawson until he can find permanent Frank Adams and the date selected lison Ranching company. quarters. is February?. The second entertainFOR SALE $33 cash, Model 11A, ment will be an athletic carnival unDavid E. Layton has been appointed der the management of James Morgan Remington to fill the vacancy on the town board standard grade, and will be held on February 14. Folbarrel, shotgun; caused by the resignation of Senator lowing these will be a dance at ClearfRufus Adams, The attorney general half pistol grip, stock of American under the management of Orlow Waulnut, long, 24 in. drop at ield, delivered a decision whereby j has date not yet announced. The Brown, heel, 1 in. drop at comb. This gun n ator Adams could not hold both in good condition both as to is post is listed for $75.25. Call or write ' fices. The Layton town 4 fxatcdJn th midst of fertila fields. K 4 rgcais in tna production of milk, tom- 5 ua and aujtar beeU. H the .factory cannery. f th Layton Sugar company, creamery and is on the eon- IX roller mills, Good road. opportunities .& Crete Stats those seeking suburban acreage for ; for fruit growing, truck gardening, chicken ji 5 raising and dairying.- On the lines of ft X the Bamberger Electric, Oregon Short & X Line and D. A R-- G. Has electric lights uvsvtfu 24 LAYTON J mai ucm w , daughter. Norma Layton and Miss Mary week-en- d guests Streeper were last of friends in Logan. , Miss Arthur Anderson has returned home after a year's service in the United States navy. Mr. Anderson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Anderson. It is thought beet cutting will ter- at the Layton Sugar complant on the eighth of February minate pany and the plant will shut down as soon is made. This is the as the clean-u- p longest campaign in the history of the and more sugar Was made ' In any other year. , - e 1 old-tim- old-tim- milk-loadin- auto-loadin- ' f y of-$4- S. R. Davis, No. 96, Kaysville. membership and finances. Mr. F. N. Tumure of Denver, Coln visited a few days this week with his sister, Mrs. J. B. Cooley. Lot For Sale ' " n. Miss Josie Layton spent the weekend in Bountiful with friends., i lot for sale1 6x264 west of the new Bamberger A depot The best location in town. For further information call or write to One-ha- lf An Ohio Purebred Shorthorn Bull. Frank Jaquea, son of Ml and Mrs. FOOD VALUE OF CORN SILAGE John J. Jaquea, was operated on for appendicitis at the Dee hospital In Crep Is More Easily Harvested and Put Into Silo Than Rye, Cowpeae , Ogden the fore part of the week. He be can er Alfalfa. as well as is getting along i Mrs Elizabeth Davis, Gibson 1 P. 0. Box 96, Kaysville. Almost any green crop can be made Much care, 'taken be must to' however, expel tho air 'from such plants the small cereal grains by cutting fine and packing firmly. Other crops, of which legumes art examples, art deficient In the fermentable constituents needed for palatable silage. . On the other hand, a few crops, aucb as the saccharine sorghums, have so much sugar, that unless cut at a more mature stage they have a t tendency to prodace sour silage. In most parja of the. United States more food material can he obtained from an, acre of com as silage than from an acre of any other. crop that can be grown. Cora Is more easily harvested end put into the silo than Into' silage successfully. hollow-stemme- d y ORPHEUM THEATRE . to ., - 4 h v , f v v at - , f i Next i Mem Sunday w ' i , i t " 0 - : ; W ednesday T Monday, uesdayand ' ' :r At2sl5and8Jl5P. M.j The Sensation of Ogden 'Theatrical Year. Full Metropolitan Production of -- . , ; 20th CENTUR- llA magnificent production . Charles Dana Gibson "A Work of Superb Art. Brooklyn Times LlWortA $10.00 a Seat . New York Herali An EIGHTH ART and Music Combining DraiMf Painting, Poetry Famous A THRILLINGPRODUCTIONEmbodyingr-th- e Dramatic Story of the same title, accompanied by a Selected Orchestra of 20 Symphony Players and iron bound c retracts, Way Doan East will never NOTF Owing to cost of production Theater Prices. except at . First-Clas- VL53. l14cl4c. , t - DENVER te Wasted In a Elio. ng Hiki- crops like rye, clover, cowpens, or alfalfa, and when Cut for atlage the maximum quantity of nutrients la preserved.' Experiments tavr shown that corn, when siloed, lost 15.8 per cent of the dry matter, against 23.8 per cent when cut for fodder and cured in the field. Moreover, there la less watte In feeding silage than la feeding fodder, since good silage properly fed la all consumed. When corn la cut for silage the tand Is cleared and left ready for another crop sooner than whra the corn Is shocked or Is busked fro rn the standing stalk. Corn can be put Into the silo at a cost not above that of shocking, husking, grinding and shredding. - Farmers' Fulfetfu' 578 on the Making . and Feeding of Silage may be had by addressing the United States department of agriculture, Washington, D. C. steers; $?JOO(9.O0; cows and heifers, $5.007J)0; calves, $10. 00 12.50; - , tockers and feeders, $6.008.00. Hogs Receipts 500. Market steady. Top, $100.00;-bulk- , $9J159.75. Market Sheep Receipts, 2,000. steady. Lambsr $8.50 10225; feeder lambs ,$8Jie9.50; ewes, $3A05.0O. f ' SUPERIOR FOR HOGS ' With the present extremely high prices pf grain It fa profitable to substitute, as far as possible, forage crops for grain feeds. A saving o: 15 to 25 per cent of the total trooun of grain and supplements may be expected through the use of forage. Pas- 2.50; goid Moilt,; bulla, $4J)04AO; bolognd bulls, 3.6o3.78; light veal calvei, $3i5l0i(J0; good cowg and heifers, $4.005J)0. Ilogs Rpcelpa, .20, Market ateady. Good demknd.' ,'ChoIce grade hogs, 175 to 206 Ml, $9.259J5; bulk, $8.85 9.15; 'feeders, $8:i08. 0. Market Sheep Receipts, 607. Chalce fat steady. Fair demand. lamba, grain fed'n49A510.I0; choice crops, when combined with grain feeds, will produce the cheapest rations for both breeding and fattening girtin', fed, $6JI57J5; fat hogs, and the cost of gains will range yearling!,' wethera ed, $5J56J5; fat grain' to cheaper frotp A dry in fed la ewes, when the fed, grain than $3.6Q4.10; feeder grain lamba, $7J358J85.' lot. It may be possible. In some cases, with an abundance, of good forage, Miss Edith Coles, youngest daughto obtain fairly satisfactory gains for ter of Mrs. William Coles, was taken time on such forage alone, but the to the mental hospital at Provo last greatest returns have been' obtained for treatment. , Thursday when grain was fed In addition to three two to the forage at the rate of When you want results advertise in per cent of the weight of the hogs The Reflex. It pays. per day. ture one-sixt-h one-fourt- h All Seats Reserved Irsttcct, Possibly. ay that n? Ice tiav. f! f3 PRICES: Matinees 25c, 50c, $1; Evenings 50c, $1, $1.50, $2 at Reduced Prices - r This lot of high quality shirts must go. We are offering them at prices remarkably low. t $1.45 and $1.85 Each WATSON-TANNE- R be s sax Denver, Colo., Jan. 26. Cattle Receipts, 700. Market steady. Beef DRESS None of Corn Corp they ib - 'AVH t at tofriiri a! wars r;ck S,-i- t Mr.-- r. '' er support slight. Lowest prices yet this season were touched by future deliveries of corn and oats, Bears made much of the liberal receipts of com and the big stock of oats h- Y- "Finest Vve ever seen" Howard Chandler Christy presented anywhere FORAGE , m. cliff. UNEXAMPLED WONDER OP THE 3c owner la Athens county, Ohio, shows ' that all, his sires a Shorthorn bull, a NORTH SALt LAKE t Berkshire boar, and a Delaine ram LIVE STOCK MARKET were registered stock of good quality. North Salt Lake, Jan. 26, Cattle-Rece- ipts, Io addition he kept a registered collie ' Market steady. Good B2T. dbg. Furthermore, his Rhode Island Choice demand. . standard-bredweighty steers, $7.7$ Red poultry were all 8.75k, Rood rftWrt, $7.00 7,75 J feedThe result of using purebred sires la shown . by the entire absence ef er ateera, $6i2fcff.25i choke cows and scrubs on the farm. All the female heavy heifttg','"6.008.75; fair ta animals listed were grades, close bred! ( cowg anil heifers, $4.005JK); ' ' or pura brads, . 's cutters; iLOOOOjcanners, $2.00 -- 8:15 P. M. exported from Argentina without encountering a surtax led to sharp declines today in wheat prices here. The market closed heavy, to 4c net lower, with March $1,634(0)1.634 and May $1.53 Corn lrjpt c to lc, and oats la provisions the outcome varied from 35c decline to 7c advance. Denials that any important export business between the United States and France had been done yesterday operated also as a depressing factor in wheat trading. Furthermore, aside from 200,000 bushels taken for Italy, export buying today was scanty anil-oth- 14-i- n. Sen-tompa- v- ;0ne-hal- f 28-i- g g DECT INKS 'SHOWN IN HIE FRICK OF WHEAT Chiiago, Jan. 26. Possibility that as niuh as 73,000,000 bushels may bo SHARI CLOTHING CO. See Us First |