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Show TOE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON, UTAH Shows March of Progress in Transportation tfTic News Notes DAIRY, It i a Privilege to Live In UTAH . v DAIRYING MUST BE SPEEDED UP MORE rious Economic Problems. il jeer 1 WASHINGTON The early Indian, the ancient automobile, a prehistoric bicycle, and the modern airplane formed this group at an exposition of the progress of American transportation held In Los Angeles. i Guardians of the Golden Gate at Practice Potato Flavor in Cream Not Caused by Feeding Tin common assumption Is that potato flavor in cream is caused by feeding the cows potatoes. This nntlqunt-e- d idea has been placed In the discard through experiments conducted by North Dakota Agricultural college. The trials with feeding potatoes to cows indicate that potato flavor in the cream ,s not caused by feeding the potatoes, hut by exposing cream to air heavy with potato odor. Potatoes were fed in varying amounts and immediately before milking time. The cream or milk that was stored tn a cellar where the air was heavy and potato odor prevailed took on a marked potato flavor In a few hours. Once the cream acquired the potato flavor it could not lie removed. No ordinary treatment, such as pasteurization. will remove potato flavor from the liutterfat Coast artillery from the Presidio at San Francisco shooting at a moving Machine gun battery of the Sixty-thirammunition 15 In f seconds. These Browning guns throw C95 rounds of for mile and range away target per minute. Accuracy is deadly. d 30-3- 0 one-hal- Heres the Chance to Buy a Cruiser CONDEMNED TO DEATH Satisfactory Ration of Roughage and Legume Hay . Heifers should have all the good roughage they will eat. Silage and any one of the legume hays make a very satisfactory combination. In addition to this they should have some grain, the kind and amount depending somewhat on the kind and quality of roughage supplied. If the quality of the legume hay is good, two to four pounds per head daily of a simple mixture, such as equal parts of ground corn, ground oats, and ground barley, is satisfactory. If the f flay Is not so good add part each of bran and linseed or cottonseed meal. For heifers within three months of calving the grain should be increased to from four to six pounds per head daily depending on condition. Sarah Powers of Macon, Ga., sevenyears old, is the oldest woman In the history of the state to be condemned to death. She was convicted of plotting the murder of James Parks to collect insurance on his life. ty-one one-hal- SNAKE CHARMER The D. S. cruiser Cleveland at the Charleston navy yard where it is being dismantled preparatory to being sold to anyone that wants such a vessel. It was commissioned in 1903. Harnessing the Father of Waters Dairy Hints Earley is a good feed for finishing calves. In fact It equals corn for gains. Any cream separator over cent of butterfat In the stealing money from the owns that leaves of one per sklmmlik Is farmer who it Grass seems to have a stimulating effect on dairy cattle, and It is a matter of common knowledge that --cows turned on good pasture Increase In production. Doris Carey of Fort Worth, Texas, a coed at Louisiana State university, who is winning renown ns a snake charmer. She Is shown with one of her pets. Miss Pasture grass is the natural feed for the cow, and It doubtless Is the best feed which the cow receives during the year, but too many dairymen expect too much of pasture grass. Any farmer sufficiently interested in dairying to keep 10 milk cows will find n silo profitable. Do not forget to provide salt for dry cows and heifers on pasture. There should also he a good water supply and extra feed when pasture gels short. v Grain rations adapted to pasture are relatively low in cost, because they need to carry only a small amount of protein, grass being quite high In this Important nutrient. TOASIfflES 3, (By K. L. HATCH, Agricultural Extension Service, University of Wisconsin Dairying It a business, a big and a serious business, botli for the p ro- and the manufacturer. The dairy farmer Is Just awakening to re fact that lie Is a business man employing both capital andilubor on no mean scale. Dairy manufacturers are realizing as never before, that their problem is one of producing an article that will please the trade anil stimulate, through quality. Us own demand. These are the big and vital problems that the dairy scientists must face are now facing. They are economic problems and must be faced with facts not now obtainable. Everywhere in experiment station literature do we find feed costs of milk production, hut rarely do we find labor costs, or dry cow costs, or depreciated herd costs, or bull costs, or capital charges, such as interest, taxes. Insurance and depreciation which 1 submit as the principal costs of milk dairy production on the farm. On the manufacturing side we are equally weak. We continue to use small. Insanitary and wholly Inefficient plants. Neither have we studied the demands of the consumer who makes our inavket nor have we made much effort to produce what will especially appeal to his tastes. And yet every other business of national scope, he it ever so small, has done all these things, and for the most part borne its own costs. A great dairy industry with nationally endowed research laboratories should do these same tilings must do them for the sake of the industry. IPOS LEHI In 1928 a prominent Utah farmer received a check of $18,900 for sugar beets raised on 150 arces. In 1928 a total of 690 DRAPER carloads of eggs, valued at $3,906,-61were shipped from Utah points. KAYSVILLE A total of 476 carloads of Spanish onions were shipped out of Utah in 1928, the Extension Division of the University of Utah announces. MANTI Beginning Monday, October 21, with three government and state veterinarians at work at Indlanola, Milburn and Oak Creek, turespectively, the county-wid- e bercular teat for dairy cattle In Sanpete will legln. Scientists Facing Several Se- Goiwals. under whose supervision the stabilization of the Maj. John Mississippi from the mouth of ttie Missouri to Cairo, III., was made possible will continue t lie enormous task by further harnessing of the river down to New Orleans The project, which up to the present has necessitated the expenditure of SKI.OOO.IXHI by the United Stales, will continue by converting Tin photograph shows Major a winding river into a controllable channel Qotwals at Ids desk at the custom house In St. I.ouis. Butterfly 5,000 Feet Up For the entomologist Mount Wash ton has long been a favorite collecting ground, says Nature Magazine. Pass ing through the rich Canadian fauna at the bnse, where the natural conditions have been practically undisturbed, we enter near the timber line where in August are the found the mountain fritillary and the wingless grasshopper, two of the more striking species of this zone At an elevation of above five thousand feet we reach the home of the White Mountain butterfly. sub-Alpin- e More helaheipTood s-- devasta- tion has been caused by foreBt fires the last summer than at any time since 1910. Reports from the United States forest service show $2,657,-E4- 4 expended on fire control from July 1 to September 20. Weather conditions were largely responsible for the great increase in forest fires this year. AMERICAN FORK Sugar beet harvesting commenced recently in Sanpete and Sevier counties, with every prospect that the harvest would total nearly 70,000 tons, double the output last year, W. H. Ross, president of the Gunnison Sugar company, Salt Lake, reported. The Gunnison factory will commence operations soon. RICHFIELD With the opening of the deer season, much speculation rife among the local sportsmen as to the prospects of getting your buck the first day of the season. The consensus of opinion is that the present fine weather will find deer well up in the hills nd that quick and early kills are unlikely. DRAPER The Draper Development corporation, formed to subdivide into small chicken ranches a tract of 113 acres near Sandy, filed articles of incorporation in the office of the county clerk recently. Capital stock of the company, which will have headquarters at Salt 0 Lake, is listed at $50,009, with shares at $1 a share. UTAH Big game hunters of Utah are cleaning their guns for one of the best shooting seasons yet offered In the state, according to J. Arthur Mecham, state and game commissioner. Licenses will be issued to 535 hunters of bull elk, while more than 6000 big mule deer are expected to be shot by sportsmen in a score of sections throughout the state. PROVO Fruit growers of Utah county, whose orchards are Infested with San Jose scale, are warned by County Inspector II. V. Swenson not to sell or ship any of their fruit to the markets, as all orchards of the county. Infested with this disease, have been placed under quarantine as provided for In the quarantine orders of the state department of agriculture. GUNNISON The season's shipment of turkeys from Utah to eastern markets will tatal more than 75 carloads, and will bring to the Btate approximately $1,800,000, Willardson, assistant manager of the Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative association, announced recently. The associations Thanksgiving turkey pool alone will amount to more than 45 carloads. UTAH Failure of duck hunters to observe the rules and regulations governing the shooting on the public shooting grounds near Corinne prompted J. Arthur Mecham, state fish and game commissioner, to again announce that shooting on the grounds is only allowed SunHunters days and Wednesdays. who have been going to the grounds on other days have been turned away. DUCHESNE Information by state road officers is that construction of two bridges and the reconstruction of another will immediately be put under way by the state, on the state road west of Tabiona on the upper Duchesne river. The bridge over Farm creek will be 60 feet long with three spans, and the bridge over Squaw creek will be 50 feet long, of like construction. The present bridge over the north fork of Duchesne on the Wolfs creek road will be improved by usstringers, the present ing bridge not being large enough to take care of high water. On the grounds SHOSHONE that the destructive fires in north central Idaho this summer drove great numbers of game animals out of their safe retreats toward the mere open areas which Hie directly traversed by traffic highways, sportsmen of Lemhi and Custer counties and ether sections of this part of the state have induced the state grime commissioner to close certain sections To hunting this fall. The petitioners insisted that to permit hunting under such conditions would annihilate most of the gams animals in the territory FOtt vCO01 pad ilYi i r. o. Encircled Globe in 77 Days letter started on an tour from Sunnyvale, CaliL, completed Its Journey and returned to Sunnyvale In 77 days. With some advance preparation and special attention, this record could have been beaten easily. It went to New York, Tlio Paris, Berlin and Hongkong. postage was 14 cents. A around-the-worl- d The Right Way to Fine Silks Redye Textile makers al- ways use special dyes for silk or wool. 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