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Show Ji . v IbnpvSfA RICHFIELD, UTAH, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 25. 1902. lobdc wcbflcU evenlaf Mouiiuy and potash away. Beeta are a very bard crop on land aud exhausts it quickly unless it is fed, and barnyard manure is the beet common food for DISCOURSE TO FARMERS IjOO 1 Mwr Nolii'drut'iipr. Secretary. 9.1 5 Huttof I LAWYER jte and Mining a specialty - JtLY. UTAH. I E. HOFFMANN, Lawyer. Commercial A Savin. Dank. JENNINGS, 13. f' Lawyer. Utah ID, HENRY N HAYES. u0KSEN. KSEN & HAYES Attorney 'Jousk, Richfield, Utah. ERT R. BEEBE LAWYER ,o civil and criminal practice, 4lea, makes abstracts, draws con yU kinds of let al document. UTAH 'NOTION, SB GRIFFITH, M. ysician and Surgeon, tteution to diseases of tha Eye, Ear and Nose. ft Commercial & Id, Savings Bank, - Utah - CLASSES Sued FITTED J. J. BUSWELL. SPECIALIST. 4ALMIC LOCAL EXPERIMENT STATION. All during the course of his address the professor brought up points in favor of a local experiment station. He shovted that the one in Logan was so periment Station Favored. far north and the soil and moisture so different that we could not always Profs. N. W. Huit end L. A. Merrill of production. Germany finally led abide the results. Thus an experi-nt station should he established were here Friday evening and Satur- out in governmental experiment sta50 years some place in central Utah. day afternoon lecturing to the farm tions, opening tile first one era. Each attendance was disgrace ago. The idea spread rapidly, so that NOTES. fully email, so we publish an extend- every state and territory in the United Wheat roots sometimes go down ed synopsis of their talks: State, Alaska and the Philippines in- four or five feet in dry land, and dryProfessor Qutt began his talk upon cluded, now has one. It is generally wheat must be deep rooted verithe value of our Litermountain sun- thought that these experiment sta- land shine iu maturing fruit and he told tions must be in connection with an ty. The experiment station in Logan is bow much better the Ben Davis apple agricultural college, but such is not now trying to change the macron! is hern tbau Id the eastern states. He the case. wheat. wheat to fall dry-lan- d advised against planting large orchTHE ONE IN UTAH, ards in any looality till it bad been Utah's experiment station was esJURORS FOR 1903. proved a good place for fruit. Then tablished 13 years ago, and the governto make a success of an orchard you ment has now on epent nearly $200,000 Greenmust have the right kind of a man the station. Professor Sandborn in List Drawn By Commissioners to take charge of it, wood Kirkman. and bis early work tried experiments in AIR DRAINAGE late and early cutting of lucerne crops. The names of the following persons There is a difference in the temper- It was by these experiments ascerature of air current at certain places tained that early cutting gave more were drawn last week by B. H. Greenwent on the leoturerand a fruit grow- bay and also more digeetable matter wood and John Kirkman, as jury com er wants to select an orchard site in the hay. Thus the early cut hay missioners, for the year 1903. ACBOBA. where the breezes will keep off the was found to fatten cattle better than H. William H. Palmer, D Cloward, that cut later. frost, P. H. Madsen, C. G. Christensen, J. H. USE LOCAL STOClL TIMOTHY V8. LUCERNE. Kennedy, jr., George Holdaway. In planting orchards always use Those in charge of be experiment ANNABEL!,!. local stock for it is adapted to the station had often heard that timothy William M. Spufford, Samuel Kay, olimatio conditions and is more Bure hay was better than lucerne for Byron Hanchett, R. H, Barney, J. W. of growth. horses. They thought it well to as- Fairoanka, Herbert Cleaves, W. L. A nurseryman ought to be the certain whether this was so or not, Parks. most honest man in the world for he BUBBVILLE. and tried it back and forth for a percan do more barm by selling poor iod of three Henry Knight, John A. Winward. years on various horses trees then anybody that does bnsiness. and the CENTBAL. experiment showed plainly Always raise a crop or two on the that lucerne was always the better S. R. Gray, Hartley Greenwood, Hoground to get it livened up before you feed, while the alfalfa-fe- d animal was mer Hyatt, W. J. Porter. plant any trees. ELSINORE not hurt io the kidneys as some fearD. W. Woodard, P. K. Christensen, ed he would be. PLANTING TREES. Antoue Johuson, William Bell, Hans HORSES. Always cut the roots and tops both .Tames Sorenson, Chris C. Borenson, back. Each place you cut, a root is often the case that a man who Jensen, Henry C. Larsen, D. P. JenIt forms a callous and a number of small is going to make a hard drive with his sen, Ctiris Johnson, Axel Franck, John feeding roots issue from each collous horses feeds them a little extra in the B. iy.au a?n. It is the small roots that feed the tree. morning just before he leaves for his GLENOOOD. A big tree usually dies in transplantwork. This has been proved to be S. J. Short, Christian Peterson, ing because most of these are cut off. wrong as a horse has more to digest Frank Anderson, Joseph Hendricksen, Always trim the top with objeot of and more work to do at the same time. F. H. Bell, P. O. B. Pe Peter Johnson, shading the trunk so the sun can not He should have been fed all he wantterson, Powell Johnson. burn it, yet allow sufficient light so ed the before and very little or night jossrH. be Never can on. carried cultivation none that morning. O. T. Baker, Andrew Ross, John leave over four main limbs when you Carter, John A. Parker, Andrew ShelSUGAR BEET RECLAMATION. plant a tree or you will have too thick ton, George T. Farnsworth, James H. a top. The experiment station has been John Ross, A. Moore, A. C. Wells, A woody tree will not produce fruit. trying to reclaim mineral lands and H. Jackman. L. Shipp, It is the nature of a tree to reproduce for this purpose it took 40 acres west KOOSHABEM. Pself either by buds or seed and it of the Jordan river in Salt Lake counIsaao B. Hatch, WilE. G Ericksen, will not do both. ty. They tried tile drainage on it and liam C. Burr, Albert Long, Samuel D. caught all the mineral that was carri- Brown. SMALL FRUIT FARMS. ed out, and out of the 40 acres got 60 MONBOE. Professor Hutt was unequivocal in tons of the alkali in seven of days Niels Johnson, Samuel Collings, recommending the establishment of irrigation. Steven Pope, O. C. Andreason, Richard small fruit farms. A person with four The culture of sugar beets has ex- Johnson, O. L. Ttift, Yergen Yergen-sen- , acres could thus raise strawberries, isted in Europe for over a hundred John Andersen, J. E. Magleby, currants, raspberries, cherries. aDd years and Napoleon did much to stimNielson, Lorenzo Farmer, S. Brigham hare a steady income, besides one of ulate the The first beets 0. industry. Andreason, O. P. Washburn, C. A. the most cheerful places in the world contained bat six , cent, but the Winget, Thomas Warnock, G. A. per to live. beet culturiBts kept selecting those Walter Jones, John A John IN ANSWER TO QUESTIONS. beets that contained the greatest per son, Ammon Hunt, F. B. Goold, J. E. A large number of questions were cent of sugar and used their seed un- Swain, Andrew Larson, George Swinasked of the professor after the leo til now from 18 to 22 per cent is oom-mo- dle. Utah is an .extra good region BEDMOND. tore closed. His answers will ex' for raising Bngar beets because it has J. O. Nielson, Andrew Anderson, plain: Grasshoppers are evidence of poor so much sunshine. The experiment Martin Jensen, Christian Jensen, jr, farming. It is a sign that part of the station took sever 1 flats of land and Erastus Peterson, Charles Jensen, jr., land is not cultivated. The hoppers tried sugar beets on them applying F. C. Snow. do not lay their eggs in c ultivated from 2 to 40 inches of water, and RICHFIELD. W. T. Ogden, Martinas Christensen, land, nor yet in wild land, tufc along they found that the amount of sugar deteriorated rapidly with all beets Niels O. Cnristiansen, Michael Nielthe edges, snch as ditch banl:s. Catching the hoppers is the only that get over 12 inches of water. son, Martin Jensen, John H. Enoe, G. W. Blomqnist, P. E. Westman, Thomas way to get rid of them. When a farm- FACTORIES BUY WRONG er cats his hay if he goes arc.und the HanThe farmers dont cars whether the Cgden, Otto Farnsworth, Fred L. ChrisSoren piece he can drive them to tb e center beets have 14 Simon sen, Christensen, per cent or more, for the as they keep going in. Jnst before he same price. The fac- tiansen, Alma Enoe, 8. G. Clark, John the pays foctory cuts the last they are most all gatherA. J. Poulsen, to blame in this. They Meteer, Paul Poulsen, ed on it and that is a good place to tories are I. K. Wright, J. C. L. P. Christensen, should buy the bulk, paying for the catch them. ' Poulsen, John W. Orrock, L. P. Jenamount of sugar there is in them. Coal oil, if you can get it on a grasssen, N. P. Nielson, Andrew Jessen, H. TO FIND WATER NEEDED. hopper, will always kill him. J. Hansen, August Nielson, jr., F. M. Grapes ought to do well cn the warm The station is gathering data to Dorrity, Peter Jensen, Martin Chrisside of rock walls, but they must be find how much water is needed to pro- tensen, E. C. Poulsen, L. H. Outzen, chilled and thus prevented from leaf- duce certain crops on an acre and to Albert Pollett, Amaea Hansen, Joseph ing out too early In the spring or the find oat some farmers are using more E. Borg, Oke Salisbury, jr, frost will kill the fruit, as they will water than is needed tv prodace the SALINA. bloom too early. D. E. Stevens, Thomas Simpers, crops, so that the courts may stop the Do not trim trees during freezing waste of water and thus develops more Hans Christensen, Charles Rasmusweather as it kills the tender inner land. sen, W. H. Brown, Oscar Anderson, bsrk. It should always have moderDaniel Olsen, Andrew Dslsrnd, John FARMERS SHOULD DO MORE. ate weather to heal the wound. W. Phillips, August Ericksen, James Proceeding as the theory that fact- Bird, P. C. Scorup, Samuel Jorgensen, A covering crop is a good thing in a young orchard. I would recom- ories should buy according to the H. P. Wright, J. A. Johansen, Cbarlerf mend hairy retch as it feeds the value of the beets, the farmers should Carlson, Simom Hugentobler, E. W. use more discretion regarding the ground." Crane. seeds they sow. They should also SIGCBD. EXPERIMENT STATIONS. drill their own seed, as they can then Frank Nebeker, John Daetrup G. A. Professor Merrill in his Satnrdayaf-ternoo- n put the seed In when the ground is Potter, John E. Gledblll, Jacob Gott- -' talk, began by pointing oat ready. fredson. the vslas of experiment stations. Ha VENICE. The farmers must feed their soil said experiment etationa originated by and the most convenient F. Ford, John M. C. John O. Cowley, of way doing large agriculturalists having scientific that is in keeping cattle. Lucero will Kirkman, William W. Buchanan. men to atady their methods of farm-I- n feed it nitrogen, whloh it gathers from and that find ways of saving eoet the toll, but it takea Carptnters'tools, ICsteer Brest pboiphorlo aoid Stoves TO BURN Deseret News Building, Salt Coa! or Wood. The Value and Care of the Orchard One of the Themes Sugar Beet Culture Another Topic Local Ex- HEKTING, COOKING m Utah ID, 1 A. C. VAN MARTIN, , 111 Farmers sometime complain because they are compelled to pay for 15 pounds of sugar beet seed to each acre, when many of the plants L ee to be pulled up, but this is better than not getting a good stand. Interesting Talks by Professors Merrill and 2S10NAL AND BUSINESS. " it I NQ. 4 v AMD Any i s Kind You Want at any Price. METEfiR BROS., Leading Hardware Healers of Sevier County. iT-I- H Our Stoclc of I Clothing, Dry Goods, Notions, jf Shoes and Groeceris, Is better and jnore complete than ever, and we can give you as low prices as any house. 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Ther ir r.h: sioo.ooo loing neither one. :tr- fV w i - r't . copy send 10 cents to PRINT. 10 Spruce St. New York City. v - Highest Market Price paid for Produce in exchange for Merchandise, Our Motto I TINTING )VEWY KIND REAPER OFFICE is Small Profit and 1 i QuickC ' p-.- i OGDENS Who Expects tjCatch a Whale in their Mothers Pail? P oy Chris-tiaasen- UR BOUGHT. n:aV We carry the leading stock of Z. C. M. I. Shoes a complete line. a big lot of something for 1 vv i l i, T ling? tell you that we give goods away; but wo do meet We do not n. all competition on Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries, etc., and then GIVE (YOU 5 PER CENT OFF FOR CASH. Jensen, Christiansen & Co. Richfield Hardware Co. DEALERS IN- - I Hardware, Stoves and Ranges. Bicycles and Bicycle Sundries. Guns and Ammunition. j J V A LAROE AS50RTMENT in OF PAINT, OIL AND GLASS. We are agents for the Consolidated Wagon & Ma. Co. Any kind of Vehicle or Implement you may desire Ldl N ji CALL AND EXAMINE OUR LINES. - JOHN CHRISTENSEN, ALL KINDS OF JOB PANTING Proprietr. . AT THE REAPER S' jjjjj s |