OCR Text |
Show CONDITIONIF COWS AT WELLSVILLE HHj Wellsvlllo, Utah, Feb. 28. Tho BflJ Government and Stato Inspectors HH of Cows have been in Wellsvlllo for HJ about threo months Inspecting our HH cows and your correspondent mado HJ tho request that they furnish a full HH and true report ot tho conditions as HHJ thoy found them. Tho report follows: PBJ Wellsvlllo, Utah, Fob. 22, Dear H Sir: As per your request I submit HHj tho following report ot the tubercu- HHj losls Investigation In Wellsvlllo. vH Number ot cows trco 917 HHJ Number ot cows condemned ... 19 IR9 Nnmber of cows susupiclous .... 7 iB? Grand Total 913 Km Percentage ot Tuberculosis cows 1H two per cent. HB This Is a remarkably low porconU HH ago and speaks oxcc6dlng well for flfl tho health ot tho milk supply of your Iflfl community. Howovor tho methods of ;HH cnrlng for tho dairy stock and hand- 9VH ling tho milk aro vory antiquated Wfl and tho breed ot the dairy animals HH Continued on pso 8, HHJ CONDITION OF COWS AT WELLSVILLE Continued from Page 1. low. Tho later Is the most urgent need, very fow animals aro eligible to register and most of them defended de-fended from pedigreed stock. With Improved methods of stabling nnd caring for tho stock ami moro sanitary sani-tary wajs ot handling tho milk and Impioved breeds, tho milk output could bo at least doubled and very probably trlblcd which ot course would mean a corresponding incrcaso in monetary returns and this could bo acompllshed with tho sumo rations now bolng fed and with tho same amount of labor expended. Very truly, JAMES M. LAWSON. U. S. Inspector. has hitherto been the exclusive pos-po&slon pos-po&slon of the mastor class; then to establish a system ot Industry In which all who wish to work maj do bo without dividing the proceeds of their industry and giving part of It to an owner of land or machines. Prl-vato Prl-vato ownorshlp of tho means ot production pro-duction must fit' tolUlfl tnd collective collec-tive ownership established so that the wurkcrs mny own their Jobs und not bo under the .iccosilty of working work-ing under an ctnplo.ver'n terms. Tho immediate program of tho movement Is to Bcciuo every advantage for tho workers nnd foie r-vory concession from tho capitalists that can bo done without compromising tho ultimate program. Hy what moans and methods do you expect to get hold of tho land nnd machinery of production? Uy much tho samo means as the irpubl.ranB got hold of tho ncgioe-i when they wished to chango them fiom idives to citizens. It may bj tint the wotkerb will prcfor to pay bomrthlns for audi property, Just us there wis n sentiment favorable to tho purchase of the chattel slaves before be-fore the war; but whether this Is done mtti-t depend upon clrcumstnn-cos clrcumstnn-cos and tho attitude of tho two classes class-es whon tho majority declare In fav-oi fav-oi of tho chango. Whon a majority decide that wago slavery shall be t.o more, tho way thoy go about Its abolition ab-olition must depend upon -tho manner in which their demands aro met by the opposition. If tho capitalists refuse re-fuse to abide by the expressed will of the majority, It will become1 nece3. sary to dlbclpllne them and teach them how to respect majority rule. (To bo Continued) |