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Show THE UINTAH BASIN FARMER PAGE POUR Farm Woodland Will Utilize Waste Spots ' are you a Since the loss by cotton growers on the 1926 crop, due to over production, midwest congressmen and senators favorable to the surplus bills are said to cherish hopes of an Supplies Timber Requirealignment with southerh members ments for Various Jobs. 1924 Established of congress, with the view of obtainPublished 1st and 15th of Each ing a majority for the measure. United State Department President Coolidges stand will (Prepared by the or Agriculture.) Month at Roosevelt, Utah. not likely sway any congressmen A permanent woodland is an essenbill the for stood surplus have farm, says tial part of a matter at who Entered as second-clas- s first the from his because position the United States Department of Agritfiepost office at Roosevelt, Utah, to this legislation . culture. The home forest, in many under Yuc act of Congress of March soand the a is sections of the country, supplies the It vexing problem not-W- HY? ., 1879. lution seems 'no nearer than when it timber requirements of the farm for Official organ of the was first considered an ailment that buildings, fences, fuel, repairs of all Uintah County Farm Bureau might be a fit subject for treatment kinds, and many other things. FurOffice: Rocsevelt Standard, Roos- by congress. thermore, a surplus can often be sold in the form of standing timber, saw 30. evelt, Utah. Telephone 1 Gates Tires - Cole Batteries BOYS AND GIRLS CHOOSE LET logs, posts, poles, crossties, pulp wood, 50c Subscription Price, one year fuel wood, and blocks or billets, barIn order to avoid stratification of and excelsior. rels, .Editor classes, there would be the freest George H. Harrison. Trees improve the soil. The leaves, Violet Harrison....Business Manager possible movement between city and small twigs, and other tree litter decountry groups, said Secretary Jar-din- e compose and form a layer of dark-- . H Authorized DODGE Dealer g in a recent address. The boy colored mold, which en- H A vegetable SOME 17EW YEAR ADVICE good line of Good Used Cars or girl who has the qualifications riches the soil and stores up soil Call or Phone 160 should life urban and the desire for Dont wait for the wagon while be encouraged to make his career moisture. By meaus of this layer of of the soil by the mold, the the walking is good. in the city. The boy or girl who. roots of thebinding and the resistance trees, Dont grieve over spilt milk while in the other hand, has the onrlifi- to of the the trunks rapid flow of s one cow there left in the pasture. catj0ns and the desire for rural life Owner C. F. TUCKER Don t say the world is growing should have every stimulus to make water, the woods prevent floods from gullying or destroying the land by ero- li!llll!fUlllilll!llIlllllli!l!!!!!!lli!!!n worse when you are doing nothing his career in the country, sion, particularly on steep slopes. to make it better. By and by, said the Secretary, we The farm woodland can usually be Dont tell the world your troubles wjij find that, given the right j on land unsuited for cultivacant borrow ten dollars on ditions and a real understanding of locatedsuch ASK YOUR MERCHANT as gullied or very rocky tion, them. the situation, the average ccuhtry land, barand FOR swamps, steep slopes, Dont let the grass grow under boy or girl will find the country small ren corners and soils. Unused your feet. The cows ca'nt get at the more satisfactory place in which uncultivated spots about the farm are it theie. to uve or er jjfe useful good places for New Years is a grand, an in- .,tr , FLOUR for reason economic chief trees. The spring occasion, for it is always Is to on the timber farm growing saturated with hope. We are wont Agricultural Scientists utilize the land for the crop that will MILLED BY to scoff at and deride it as a day Theory Popular the to net Disprove the profit bring largest v nn men make good resolutions The rather popular belief that hay owner. only to treak them; when they Millpf. Co. turn. over new leaves, as it is cures more rapidly when the leaves to the Roosevelt. Utah e''Bd. they merelv turn them hack are retained on the stems, due as act leaves the pumps that theory In Germany In Sight again. They want, they hone to be Fellowship draw the moisture from the stems, New York Twenty fellowships in be!3, and but few cf them pr-s- o isto not so well founded, says the United German universities for the academic They determine to advance, n"(i Exare to be awarded pill if they do advance they slip bek. States Department of Agriculture.to de- year of 1927-2tensive tests with alfalfa hay Tlmir failures are many, are American students, it was announced and often excit laughter termine whether or not any appreTINGLEY & SONS by Dr. Carl J. Friederich, director of ciable amount of water passes off the American-GermaexBu( it is worthier to determine student the leaves after the hay Is The German universities have decline, to hone and be disappointed through BUYERS OF stems from change. harvested established than not to determine or hope at which the showedhadthat th$ fellowships as an interbeen picked lost leaves al. Determination and hope' add to t heir moisture even more readily than national exchange for similar follow-ship- s established by American Seed, Wool, Honey, Pelts our content, or at least diminish when allowed to cure in the natural German for students. our discontent, and they are bon! and all lawfully state; that Is, with the leaves atof New Years. The Rrcat need of; tached. j caught furs. Rate Hearing Gets Under Way human life is consent rnver attain-- ! The assumption that the leaves are 'ed, never attainable. And through! Sioux Falls, S. D. Hearings got unimportant factors in the curing procUTAH Now Years we are deluded into he- -' ess is in MYTON, der way here before an interstate comresponsible for the part lief o? is possibilities. Therefore P. O. Box 54. advice to cure alfalfa In the merce commission examiner on Smith welcome bo Now Years, rot for' windrow or cock so that the leave Dakotas request for reduction in twhat it gives, but for what it will be retained In a living conditioi freight rates on coarse grains from and continue to draw water from the this state to eight western states. Expromises to give. stems. Curing hay In the windrow aminer William Cheseldine heard evi- k COOLIDGES FARM STAND or cock Is still good practice, how- dence to support the states contention Mercantile ever, because of the saving of the that South Dakota producers and ra Wong Sing The pronouncement by President leaves for their additional food value, shippers are unable to get into the with a complete Coolidge in his annual message to and because hay cured In this man- markets In Colorado, California of line , Utah, g vthe congrs. arv farm re- ner lias a better color. and other western states because the fl Groceries and Provisions, Dry t won'd put the lief legislation rates are t"o high. and If Goods, Notions, Ladies government ino the busiss of proThe real reason why the man who if Gents Furnishings, Boots and duction, marketing or price fixing milks a few cows makes money Is jtj Shhes, Furniture, Hardware, Lower Postal Rate Demanded Hto because he harder. Is works on farm products f ves. Thrift r HgM Ranges, Harness, and prrsngs Washington A demand for a down- yj Saddles. over the mirstion and probably almost always rewarded. ward revision of postal rates has been You will profit by trading means the defeat of anv farm legisfiled with the sub- -' fee here. The smut odor and tiny smut specks committee on congressional joint lation at the short session. postal rates. Postmaster 3 FT. DUCHlSSNE, UTAH be flour cannot removed from made and senators from Congressmen General New and Director of the Bud-it- l the middlewest, with few exceptions, from smutted wheat. The millers yet Lord by John W. OLeary; p evare committed to a bill similar to are, therefore, Justified In docking ident of the United States Chamber of for smut. The farmers remedy la to Commerce. ' "The chamber believes u'liiiinoiiiiiitiiK hill which the Haugen-McNar- y defeated at the last session. Thoi'i trat his seed wheat, hat definite action should be taken ou .fi W vU U KAuli ri O HI 6 farm constituents belelve this Is the postal rates in the present session of'Sj sitIf for the of distressing remedy Mr. only Exper-'congress, said OLeary. Industry by patron- uation in rural communities. in! IN has ionce the rates proved present inin Foes of the principle Involved In IZmS the 0ne3 V0 many respects to be uasattstactorv." M the proposal for the government to already have. take charge of the surplus farm pro- MSIN FARMER, reader of The Uintah Basin Fanner well-equipp- -- if jj I RED FRONT GARAGE 13 - J Vernal, Utah j con-Yo- ( rapid-growin- UINTAH GEM g, Roosevelt 8 j 3 n uni-veritie- s H g I oft-repeat- ainst . v-- the value tural crops ducts and hold them for 0 favorable market abroad, Instead of dumping the surplus and pulling down the domestic price, honestly belelve 1h. such legislation is tartnmount and therefore to orlce-flxin- g a 1" agricui Pj Utah crease as much the next generation as it did the last, the states production in 960 should have a value of at least rs d n:rc "3 n a N rj ! it ti . UINTAH CREAMERY 13 COMPANY 1 A building that Is worth building h planniug. I 'orth C. NEOLA 03 J. Nelson,' Mgr. UTAH t 1 |