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Show ( Devoted VOL. II to the Progress No. 16 ROOSEVELT, Devouring I 0 r g anizations Pests COVERING FORTY-ACR- E FIELD, CLEAR AREA OF GRASSHOPPERS, BUGS BIRDS, inie Qra&t Uinbali Basin FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR. 1, 1926, Report of Wheat of World Is Given Reputation for DISCUSS PLANS Heads of UTAH, SEPTEMBER Sea Gulls Retain FARM LEADERS i & Development qf Agriculture MORE TUAN HALF r By r Agricultural Department WOOL CROP IN WEST BUREAU SEES LITTLE DIFFERENCE IN 1926-2- 7 CONDITIONS Sixty Per Cent Production WASHINGTON Wheat growThe foIltoWing article from the Consider Program, to Present Credited to Eleven GaPeetz (Logan County, Colo.,) ers were advised by the department to Legislature, Western States zette, will be of interest to Utahns. of agriculture that the world marPerhap the birds that did such good ket situation confronting them probPERMANENT BODY FORMED TO service for Logan County, Colo., ably would show little change from TEXAS, SOUTH CENTRAL GROUP, farmers are descendants of the ones the present in 1927, and that they TAKE CARE OF AGRICULLEADS NATION BEE HIVE that saved the craps icf the early should not expect conditions simiTURAL INTERESTS STATE IS FOURTH pioneers of the Salt Lake Valley. lar to those prevailing in 1925, of the Peetz Gazette, when orices (wiere on a domestic mar The edtitor LOGAN, What tihe farmers and stock rais- Frank J. Pulver, spent several weeks ket basis. Utah, Aug. 31. iSixty in of summer the Lake Salt during ers cf Ctaihi will expect from the Does not seem likely that the pt'r cent of the tlctal wool crop of 1914, and was intensely interested iworld market situation for next the United Slates is produced in the state legislature at the coming ses- in the history and points of interest he materially will different 11 Western States, and in this group year sion was discussed at a coinference in and about the city: from the the present. department Utah holds third place, being outThis week thousands of seagulls of presidents of agricultural associastatement continued, as there is fields in visited the the ranked Wyoming and Montions and leaders in other allied or- against little indication icf any material ex- tana.. by onlyfacts Hofmann of are disclosed by the George These ganizations, held at the headquarters vicinity in 'acreagle outside t.hle a pansion 11 miles of Peetz. south wool special report recently subhere of the Utah State Farm Bureau, farm, carry-ovUnited iStateg and the came The such in numbers Bureau of AFederal 'birds and so much progress was made tonext July is not likely to be large. mitted by the covered a field of Ecenomics to Professor gricultural ward agreeing upon a program as to that they literally such William yield, unusually high Barring icf the. a and slcme director acres, Peterson, presented forty what shall be presented to the legas occurred in 1915 and 1923 over a Utah Stabeautiful sight. islators that the conference was of the world. foreign com- tion Agricultural Experiment large part came West from and the and the They Agricultural College made a permanent working organwill be about on a Extension Service. first alighted at practically the same petition probably ization. par with the present year. included! in the South Texas, Present at the meeting were spot swarmg of the birds visited last out If American farmers carry Central group, still ranks as tha Ephraim Bergeson, president of the year. i3 tin: winter their increase exintentions, feed almost wo'd It said state of the Union, they leading State Farm Bureau; R. J. Evans, 14.4 and cent., wheat Inacreage per 19 26 on and her clip totaling 25,804,-00- 0 grasshoppers president of the Utah County Farm clusively and yields are averabandonment to seem care for sects little and but Wyoming, the pounds;, Bureau; Harden Bennion, state a of around wheat winter age, crop Western leader, follows a group of agriculture; Albertus grain. would be bushels pro573.000,000 do on occasions rare with these close second 24.132,000 Only Willardsen, vice president of the nine which would be about duced, as to sea inland is birds Montana far credit. visit pounds points Utah! Poultry Producer Associain cent harvested than that Iesg per a 23.100.000 with and Colorado, third, Lcgan County, pounds, tion; David F Smith, president of 192(5. With this average yield next Utah fourth, with 20,322,00. Then the State Board cf Agriculture; Ed year there would be a surplus for romeg Idaho, with 19. 4400.0(10; OrHansen, president of the Davis Diversified Crop Farmers in and additions to carry over of egon. 18.400.000; California, Association; J. County Utah Escape Hardships export around 200,000,000 bujshel. New Mexico, 12,325,000; I. Atkinson, president of the Milk be nlct misled should Farmers by Nevada, 8.853,000; Colorado1, Producers Association; GeOTge A. Utah farmers who had a diversiHolt, president of the Canning Crop fication of 'crops this year will net an the relatively high prices received 7,950,000; Arizona, 7.006,000, and Growers Association; J. R. Bens, income that will he at least normal, fbr. the wheat crop harvested in Washington. 4,714,000 pounds Ohio is the only state outside of 1925, when prices iwjere on a domespresident cf the Weber Central Dairy and only those who are depending tic condiTexas and the Western group leadnormal and under basis, Association; Charles Groberg,, pres entirely ion one or twio: crops will suf1927 ers that in tions should may be considered a high expect prices ident of the Weber County fer to any great extent due to unsat- more in line world with prices. pr'ducing wool state, her 1926 clip Association; C. C. Edmunds, isfactory growing conditions, it to 16,044.000 which in sections Farmers amounting Pronormally pound. was announced by M. S. Winder, secgeneral manager, Utah Poultry of corn Each other N' rth Central should the a bave acreage Winlarge ducers' Association; M. Shirley BuFarm of State the Utah retary a less than 8.000,000 der, secretary of the State Farm Bu- reau, ott his return to Salt Lake from also keep in mind in making shrift States produced one of the in that wheat them, Nebraska, present pounds, acreage reau; John M. McFarland, president a tour of northern sections of the corn is 1,500,000 situation unfavorable not flry barely exceeding poupds. of the Cattle and Horse Growers state. In lowest The state to next rsyool be year. producing repeated likely Association; Martin P. Brown, presiFcr the most part the crops are this the should farmers smallest wag state, Asyear production dent of the Weber Canyon Crop dicing well, and there sems to be planning sociation and vice president of the sufficient water for most crops, ex- consider also what producers in com- Rhode Island, with a total of only The highest produc6.000 p:unds. peting countries are doing. farm bureau; Harry C, Parker, pres- cepting sugar beets, he said. in the North Atlantic state coming Buin in sown wheat The arms ident of the Cache County Farm Fruit this year is abundant, and New was with. 3,818,-00group York, of of outside reau, and Dr. William Peterson will afford a good incime to the peting export countries, In the South Atlantic group, the Utahi Agricultural College. farmers. Peaches are plentiful and Russia and the Danube countries, ex- the state was West Virginia, highest (war1 the Committee Appointed, panded considerably during the demand is expected to be good. with 2,117,000 con-pounds; ;w,hile Kenor maintained been and htave Mr. Winder was elected chairman j The first of nearly 50 car loads of the conference and B. J. Evans, of tomatoes expected to move lout of tinued to expand since the war. With tucky led the South Central group with 3,177.000 pounds. secretary. A ommittee was ap- Weber County, was shipped to Texas, average yields, foreign competition The total United 'States clip for bemaintained and will may probably pointed to start immediately upon Tuesday, he reported. Tribune. 1926 ig given by the federal statisincreased. be slightly the preparation, of a tentative proticians as 269,054 pounds as against and gram of iwhat (appropriations High quality labor leads to proKeep your mind on today, devote 253.907.000 pounds for 1925. a dif- what legislation are desired by miction. the hours of today to the work of (Continued on Page Eight) over all each morning. today Begin life (Continued on Page Four) er v j iwji-t.- com-missi'cm- er br 18,-189,0- ve 0 o 0. I J -- jwVa |