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Show FAIR UTAH. Could some of the Eastern farmers farm-ers take a trip through Utah's valleys val-leys and see the magnificent crops of grain, says the Tribune, it would advertise Utah's resources and capabilities in a way that nothing else would do. Some of the drouth-stricken drouth-stricken farmers of the East, who have been farming with a cloud of calamity overhanging their farms, would be very likely to exclaim: 'Vhy a fanner ought to be happy here! He knows that he will have a good crop, or it will be ' his own fault. He can bid defiance to drouths and cyclones, and have the assurance that his labor and energy will be rewarded." The crops 'of the Terrilor' are indeed magnificent. The Kansas Experiment Experi-ment Station raised about six bushels bush-els to the acre of wheat the present season. Thirty and forty bushels an acre will be a common yield in Utah. Attention is being directed to the value of an irrigated farm this year as never before. |