Show 14 TIIE SAW tAKE TRIBUNE MONDAY' MORNING MARClt 16 i93f 1 Agricultural News of the Intermountaiu Region DAIRY BULLS CENSUS SHOWS OFFER PERIL COST STUDIES TO FARMERS FEWER FARMS IN COUNTY AREA U Agricultural Agent Not many months ago the writer walked Into a dairyman’s barn Just in time to see him untie a Holstein bull hand the rope to his 10 or son and ask him to lead the bull to water It was the first time the writer had met the fanner and he probably thought it was impudence but the blood pressure was too great and the boy was stopped The father I believe was grateful for the Interruption when Je considered the situation thoroughly It Is without doubt safer to tamper with the wild beasts In our parks even though they are loose than It Is to tamper with a dairy bull Farmers often say they have handled bulls all their lives How can there be any danger? This Is just the trouble Bulls are trusted too far and It Is usually the tame quiet bull that kills his owner and it seems even though a man’s neighbor Is killed the lesson Is not Hdriven home except for a short time POCATELLO Idaho— A oensue on farm In Idaho released from the bureau of census In Washington through the local chamber of commerce here Tuesday shows the num ber of farms in Bannock county to have decreased 466 or 21 per cent In the past five years The statement reads: “A farm for ensus purposes Includes all land which la directly farmed by one per on either by his own labor alone or with the assistance of members of his household or hired employes" Plots of land owned by one man but tenanted by a manager cropper Or renter are considered as Individual farms Between 1920 and 1926 a decrease In the number of farms In the state Is attributed to abandonment of land by dry farmers because of exorbitant prices In acreage according to Paul V Nash secretary to the local chamber while the general up ward trend between 1925 and 1930 during the years of 1926 ‘ especially 1927 and 1928 is attributed to In creased population In the state lower prices of property and better returns on produce The 1920 population recorded 431' "Aw go lay an egg" they told this 866 In Idaho while the 1930 census was 445032 or an increase of 13166 White Leghorn hen — and she did — 317 Parma have Increased In number with the Increase In population In of them in one year a new world’s rec most counties It la reported and where the farms have remained constant or decreased cities In the localities have shown an Increased Fluctuations of farms population In Idaho counties In the last ten years are as follows: rjtlme Good Sized Yard Should Bo Used Bulls should be provided with a good sized yard or pen a small shelter and a breeding chute Either a space in the barn connected with the yard or a three-side- d stall may ord She is owned by Mr and Mrs Wil- be provided for shelter so long as Is free from draught and Is dry it liam Whiting of Canada and answers to A manger may be so placed that it Is never necessary to enter the pen the name of "No Drone J at feeding time A breeding chute merely consists of an extra panel which connects with a swinging gate so as to allow entrance of the dairy sire without the owner entering the yard 8uch an arrangement Is also an added prevention In spreading 6Taxrstuc f disease When a mature bull is by taken from the yard a staff should DENX UTAH AGRICULTURAL be used The bull pen should contain FREEMEN around 2000 square feet It may be foundation which is not shared by A solid 20x100 feet or 40x45 feet Men began only a short time ago other peoples We are getting pretty to express In government their In- close to a great world cleavage along PORT KELLS British Columbia fence la a necessity Piping poles or may be used but should be herent right to freedom of thought this line It la the most fundamen- Canada— Mr and Mrs William plank vision and conscience In 1776 the colo- tal difference between men and If Whiting are very proud of their so constructed as to allow fullanimal of the surroundings by the Ad 255 S1S tltl nists largely farmers told the King It assumes militant proportions will champion egg laying hen 59 97 one of Admi tat In end is often Water placed of England that they had certain be the greatest catastrophe of his174 Bannock 8he 'Won the Canadian competi- the jrard and feed Hit Hl in the other so Bear Lakt tory Sit 1 939 whloh very Important rights they tion established new and a as to encourage exercise which is 539 Brnaw 477 579 called natural rights meaning rights And while we In America protect- worldrecently 9317 JI9 Jltt Blnaham by producing 357 eggs most Important to which they were entitled as they ed by two oceans watch the world In 365 record 984 989 Blalno t79 days Bmaa 904 931 lit 1107 were entitled to air and over which ferment we have dangers of our own Each of the eggs Bulls Sold 1411 produced bv the Many Bonner 7051 government had no Jurisdiction which assume large proportions We White Leghorn was of standard size Because Vicious 1844 3484 Bonneville 167 45 90t 979 whatever About the same time a bid fair to violate the principle of or better than standard weight 90 Boundary Moet bulls go td the butcher be3 4 981 Camaa 384 Danish king by edict liberated the freedom under pressure of economics 9375 9145 9384 Canron Whiting Is a soldier settler the fore their value can be determined common men and women of Den- The political and moral right to life Canadian 971 Caribou lei )8I estab having good percentage It le safe to Bay 141 1380 1589 Cala mark who up until that time had liberty and the pursuit of happiness llshed himgovernment as a chicken rancher on 9 sold because they become vi137 ISO Clark 904 If we Invalid Is are to a in been held in bondage and sold as bondage Clearwtttr 454 til 431 his return from the war cious and the owner takes no chance Cunler 987 939 were cattle and horses with the land supereeonomte power which virtually 979 so gets another The safe breeding rimore 930 447 109 our limits exercise the on and which thought worked they 1131 1011 14 oen gives opportunity to keep the Franklin of conscience The to earn a 1034 7307 S Fremont 1103 EMERY-FARMright These developments In America herd sire longer particularly if conOem 789 34 77 comno our value In u of If living and Denmark were two out of many 37 nected with' a bull association so OoodJne 01 74 7MI 137 Idaho 3897 of the new times about to be plex machine organisation we keep that the daughters may be tested signals honest men 1089 Industrious 7189 out of and Jrltrreon 1071 ushered in The rights which the Jobs and compared with their dam’s pro788 8 enk Jerome freedom And economic and colonists insisted upon were not only 374 Kootenai This Is Important to the duction 1997 Latah life and liberty but also the pursuit greed In America have encouraged dairyman of the future for In the Lemhi to extent an crime constitutes which of happiness That meant control a serious “proven sire" Is seen the advanceiTnroln 'HI 33 to government 939 of taxes decisions as to war and the We have challenge ment of the future Madiaon 1079 the 81 become least In decreased farms Emery county maintenance of armies and navies To those keeping the dairy bull a Minidoka IMS 49 of the civilized nations Ours In number from 787 In 1925 to 758 last modern Bei Fere the right to worship Ood as they lSli 1185 pen will add safety conIs diffihowever the less 74 1019 Oneida year according to a tabulation Issued venience- better control of disease desired freedom from Interference America 78 7i cult of the adjustments many gov- by the bureau of the census with property or with personal lib?Oeyhea Sli 784 encourage the keeping of the are facing because we have Acreage and value of land and and 679 794 best of siren to an age at which their erty by public officers except by due ernments 179 Bhnehona the In HI Inheritance attitude and also 122506 decreased from buildings true value Is known process of law and the elimination 487 39 In 1925 to 115067 acres and from thought which la driving us to Tain Falla 9784 9489 bulletins on the “bull 97 111 of the other vexations and Interfer- solution ana No Valiev need fear to that 1st dur93383350 value Ill In $3147182 ences which until that time the king pen" from agricultural colleges are: Weehlntton 1091 103 11 had visited America turned five-yehas will march and 1820 the From ing period station bulletin Missouri upon the people If he backward to 1925 the farms Increased in hum-be- r No 275 experiment Columbia Mo Wisconsin personally so desired AU In all It These cenof from 759 to 787 acreage growing extension circular No 236 Madison principles the legacy was a great victory and the world has fed for over one hundred and turies of struggle In order to ex- from 105268 to 122506 though valua- Wt! Cornell extension bulletin No In themselves this press of land and buildings decreased 177 Ithaca N Y Michigan exten tion effectively fifty years upon the principles an new age must be worked out In terms from 53414541 to 13385550 No 62 East Lansing slon nounoed In the Declaration of Inde' of taxes profits wages Jobs hours Farm machinery and Implements Mich bulletin extension circular pendence and the constitution of labor and conditions of labor gained In value from 6256410 In 1926 No 163 Oeorgla Oa Athens Now we find that this very free- rates for power and transportation to $260736 last year though the 1930 dom which It required centuries to coet of goods equalization of educa- value Is below that of 1920 which was PENNIES 156 YEARS OLD establish Is being used by evil In- tional opportunity keeping sources $283605 fluences to destroy ltaelf In Italy Of Information CONNEAUT Ohio (UP)— Myron the chickens for milch and Except particularly Is owner of two pennies a dictatorship has been set up be- schools and the press Independent oowa livestock has generally de- Allen 150the cause people had so abused their and clean nearly yean old One was coined from In disease creased in number the In protection county Plant Yonr Garden Now I freedom that they were destroying the preservation of Individual Ini- 1930 there were 34398 chickens com- to 1784 bearing the profile of Benjathe Industries of the country and tiative In face of a threatening sowith 34356 in 1930 Milch oews min Franklin and the other a Ta Intura kueceaa plan undermining the Integrity or gov- cialistic bureaucracy social rewards pared increased from 1542 in 1920 to 2475 In Massachusetts penny was minted In BAILEY’S TESTED SEEDS ernment Itself And while Russia thus to be based individual 1930 Horses decreased In number 1786 could boast of very little freedom or abilities and sacrificeupon -- ompltte Stacks af— not doled out from 4869 to 8319 the ten happiness for oommon people under to all alike and the preservation of years mule from 199during SEEDS to 160 cattle esar new the autosoviet Is the as conscience In a world BOSES mad on from 21381 to 14626 and hogs from cratic as any king who ever ruled profits and a standard gone 4252 to 2131 of living BULBS are allowed to do only what State and national governments Russians as Crops showed average Increases SHRUBS the organisation In power decides they struggle with these difficult from 1924 to 1929 except for com Now ready far yonr ael action they can do Natural rights as we Emblem Jhls year and Indefinitely Oats Increased from 92766 to 136561 Balley’a 131 free catalof la brim-fu- U understand them do not exist In to come can take cour- bushels wheat from 78382 to 121412 af Valuable Information ta Russia neither do they In Italy age from the fact that they are par- bushels bariev from 2826 to 19615 very Hama Farm and Ruck deal A of the future great history In a world old battle to es- bushels hay from 27991 to 30622 Owner of the world will be determined by ticipants tablish Justice in the earth If they tons and potatoes from 32704 to Bailor’s Umal Cath and Carry our or lack faith of these faith In bushels Cora decreased from accomplish only a little It will be a Frtcaa au rights If we hold them to be eacred great deal If It Is righteous 26624 to 14608 bushels GRAIN— FLOUR— FEED and have the requisite courage we Most In farms the county are from POTATOES will maintain them If not they will 20 to 174 acres In 1930 there were more or less A alarming pass away nine farms of less than three acres & small Is a fact of that the Co only part Increasing from three In 1920: 15 of world so far recognises such rights three to nine acres In 1930 decreasing and Nordics Retail Eton SI bat tad tauth from 24 In 1920 Farms of 10 to It only the Anglo-Saxoand fringes of the rest bt the world acres Increased from 30 to 25 during Warehouf Sib So and rd Waat Those who do believe in natural the 10 years 20 to 49 acres from 152 Fhona Rat Ml to 158 In number 50 to $9 acres from rights base their belief upon a reextent some to moral and a ligious ELY Nev— There are 18S farms 182 to 193: 100 to 174 acres decreasIn White Pine county according to ing from 319 to 194 Ranches of more 1000 acres increased from eight the report of the census bureau and than to ten In they average 6621 acres each In area Of the number total acreage In the eounty Land and buildings on them were 36364 acres were used for crops last valued at 12187187 and they were 30762 being harvested with equipped with machinery and lmple- -l year 1859 acres having crop failure and ments worth 1276436 more 5743 not being harvested There was Forty farms were less than 100 little change In the crop aoreagt from acres 47 were from 100 to 175 acres To grow smooth and vtlvety your 1920 Pasture land Increased of that 49 from 175 to 500 acres 22 from 600 to 'lawn must be fdl Give it the ten 32698 the re from to 18226 yea to 1000 acres and 25 farms were acres square meal foe plants— 4 lbs of - Vlgoro per 100 larger than a thousand acres Ownsqft Results will ers of the land managed 154 of the amass you of former head the poultry husbandry farms tenants ran 22 and seven were If yon have r&bbiti you want to dispose of— Vlgoro complete scientifically department of the Utah State Agriunder managers cultural at the meeting- - He balanced is the largest selling oollege were' any breed or color— call on us at once and in- wheat oats Principal crops urged poultrymen to hold their plant food for lawns flower barley potatoes and hay vestigate our offer Whether you have only chickens and they would see high egg shrubs and trees Clean odorless soon prioes several rabbits a small herd or a large herd— eazyjto use—and insxpeaaivet OMer Vlgoro today from your this invitation applies to you Call at main garden supply dealer ' H" WAD VETERAN’S ITiQMlits oaRuraijLife BIRD cLi4 SETS NEW LAYING MARK PROVE FEWER of pioduclng potatoes per acre vary to Idaho districts from $9125 at Shelley with an average yield of 100 6acks per acre to $13992 at Kimberly with a yield of 168 sacks per acre according to a tabulation by H E Droblsh secretary of the Pacific northwest BLACKFOOT Idaho-fcos- ts potato committee It Indicates that farmers of Shelley must sell their potatoes for 91 cents per 100 pounds to order to break even on the costs while Kimberly farmers must obtain 85 cents per sack Costs and yield per acre ta seven Idaho districts are as follows: Locality Kimberley Filer Buhl Castleford Aberdeen Blackfoot Shelley am TWIN FALLS Nicholsen Flier Martin Meier Twin Falls and Vance Naylor Hansen had the best producing dairy herds for February according to the report issued Wednesday evening by Walter JGerlach official tester for the Pioneer Dairy Herd Improvement association Nicholson's twenty-fou- r grade led the large herd division of more than twenty cows with an average of 935 pounds of milk and 309 Meier’s eleven pounds of butterfat registered Jerseys led the middle division of ten to twenty cows with an average of 656 pounds of milk and 299 pounds of butterfat while Naylor’s eight registered and grade Guernseys led the small herd division with an average of 574 pounds of milk and 399 pounds of fat The highest Individual producing cows were a grade Quemsey having 1411 pounds of milk and 706 pounds of butterfat a grade Holstein giving 1760 pounds of milk and 68 6 pounds of butterfat The 479 cows In thirty Idaho-WllU- Great Care Should Be Used in Handling Animals Survey Shows Production Expert Declares Expenses in Various LtMAN RICH It By Spud Districts Utah County Figures Give Ban' Decrease of Twenty-nock one Per Cent Hol-stel- FOR - Rancher’s Work HERD TESTING NOW COMPLETE S U S Cites Utah TRIO LEAD IN IDAHO POTATO QUICK - Cost of growing and marketing an acre of potatoes was divided Into three processes Based on the Black-foaverage yield of 125 sacks per acre growing costs were $4210 digging and storing In cellars basedhan-on 121 sacks $3375 sorting and $9925 dling $23 50 making a total Ofwas diYield of 125 sacks per acre or 31 cent culls vided Into 25 per sucks: marketable potatoes 94 sseks 1 of which 60 per cent would be No grade and 40 per cent No 2 grade potatoes SION CAUSES DEATH LOS ANGELES (UP)— A ’’Stop’’ here end sign flashed at a boulevard Frank D Lovett 61 brought his automobile to a halt When the “Oo’’ sign came the Lovett car failed to move Other motorists honked horns for a time and then Investigated Lovett had died from heart disease Pest Control A Utah rancher deposed the prairie settlement dogs from their on his land last spring and produced on part of this land Its first crop valued at $19000 according to a U 8 department of agriculture report He was only one of many ranchers participating In a rodent-contrcampaign under the leadership of the biological survey of the United 500-ac- ol States department of agriculture The prairie dog had dominated tract and prevented any this utilization of it until last year Last 160 summer acres of the land bore a luxuriant crop of cantaloupes valued at $14000 and 73 acres yielded a $5000 crop of tomatoes A poison bait recommended by control leaders of the biological survey eradicated the rodents Thousands of acres In Vtal1 heretofore kept cropless by the prairie dog came Into bountiful production for the first time last year as a cora-palresult of this rodent-contr500-ac- re gn ol t three herds had an average of 582 pounds of milk and 24 pounds of butcows each produced terfat 8ixty-tw- o forty or more pounds of butterfat GROWTH-L- ET HEALTHY US SOLVE YOUR CHICK BABY ot ns I11 PROBLEMS USING Quality Veed PAX MASHES insure a steady growth add life and vigor to your chicks Thousands are using PAX FEEDS due to their quality Ask your dealer There’s a Dealer Near You INTER-OCEA- N I ELEVATORS Manufacturers P 0 BOX 1079 SALT LAKE CITY UTAH FN OToCBAKQ) ovm -Y- m OURS FOR THE MAKING ar Here’s the chance to have your dreams true— to have an attractive home beautiful grounds smooth velvety lawns a gorgeous garden and beautiful surThey are yours for the makroundings have the home the soil a faYou ing vorable climate and if you already haven’t the experience you can gain it There’s health beauty and happiness in making a garden come SEEDS BULBS SHRUBS ' Let The Tribune and The Telegram ’ Show You the Way k 9 Census Accounts For Farm Values Sens C::!:y IN THE TRIBUNE daily and Sunday understandable articles on gar- practical den building and home beautifying by Maud Chegwidden Intermountain Authority on flowers and flower gardens Weekly a garden clinic to solve your garden problems In Nevada County Feed lawn a Square M eal WANTED: Your Rabbits! I IN THE TELZQRAM every day except Sunday read “Your Garden” a comprehensive and authoritative series of articles giving timely hints on the best flowers to plant where and when to plant them - k KEEP INFORMED THBOUOH 1 ' Neplii Egg Grading Plant Has Busy Opening Weeks office building for details We Need Salesmen— Apply at Once I :3ii08t7 tel! 1101 South f ‘ Main St Phone Hylaiyl Salt Lalie City NEPHI— The first three weeks of the newly opened Nepht egg grading plant have been aettve Carl F Moyle manager said at a meeting of of east Juab county Friday evening During the first week 554 cases of eggs were graded 584 In the second week and 400 last week he said One day saw 126 cases candled he stated Poultrymen who stay In the business until it again gets on Its feet Will profit said William H Warner DA3Y : Write or phene for prices Tfcs 17 1117 SrJIb First South Salt Lake Citv Phone Wasatch 2432 38 West (Every Morning Including Sunday 90c a Month) 1 c::!c:cs MIGORO V Chick time is here and the wise poultryman who broods now will reap the benefits In high prices this falL poul-trym- en 1614 mmu fljc J&tlt A CompUu plant food product af Swift ft Company (Every Evening Except Sunday 15c Week) (Every Evenirig With Sunday Tribune 29c a Week) U Go Pcrt:r-7d!e- n General Dlstrlbators 49 West 1st So I— Was 46 Salt Lake Cit) A MAKE YOUR HOME A BEAUTY SPOT CLEAN UP— PLANT A GARDEN 3 - |