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Show SEED COMING IN FAST With eighty-seven threshing outfits out-fits at work on west Millard 'County's 'Coun-ty's record crops, seed is now coming com-ing into the cleaning plants rapidly. Some twenty-five carloads of alfalfa al-falfa seed have been shipped out, but the warehouses remain almost filled. The new warehouses of Pep-pards Pep-pards and Rudy-Patrick, just finished, finish-ed, are already half filled with seed. Stanley Folsom, manager of Rudy-Patrisk Rudy-Patrisk is enthused over the high quality of the seed raised here this year. He says he has never seen better bet-ter seed. L. M. Riggs of Hinckley, George Crofts of Deseret and W. E. Carlin of the North tract brought in some exceptionally fine seed this week. Samples of Mr. Riggs and Mr. Crofts seed have been sent to the International Seed Show at Chicago. Chi-cago. Many more fine crops are reported re-ported this week: C. M. Hickman threshed 600 bushels; W. J. Strick-ley Strick-ley got 370 bushels from 40 acres; Marion Killpack threshed 102 bushels; bush-els; Bennie Rosenbaum haa 600 bushels; Mrs. Lizzie Whicgker got nearly 700 bushels. Frank Colby has some very effective advertisinf photovraphs of stacked seed and threshing scenes taken on the two in Sugarville run. From the Leu-thauser Leu-thauser farm they got 470 bags or 1119 bushels, and off the Jaderholm place they got another 731 bushels. Andrew Eiszele reports threshhing 460 bushels off 40 acres; Elmer Green on the C. D. Pressnall farm got 174 bags of tine seed.' I y-i |