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Newspaper Page Text
r aval Baj I 6 TMI DBBJCRKT FARMER SATURDAY, OCTOBER 31, xpo8. saaB MMManii i i The deanest.Ughtest P J rt . 7pT and most comfortable V 1?IV8vi POMMEL rlSKMi sucker sWPf At the some tlmeK "-' a 'if cheapest In the I 1 HST j A end because It I J MM F JIM wears longest A i JfK LfjyL I l355EYr,ywkreill fffS Every garment '(I flWiili'i guaranteed r f f ) J, J waterproof Catalog frf J 900 laH A J TOWCRCO. OOSTOM.U.5A. "I TOWCW CAMAPAH CO-UHITCD. TORONTO CAN. I FOR SALE H Boiwtll Winter Oati, Btswell Winttr Barley. H Write for particular! I STEPHEN BOSWELL I HBPHI - UTAH I National Field and Hog Fence H irt T I -r tt Y" rf-rrr- S wriw yn kii B " v" m1 ir tT u '" T - 'r?-1 glrcubcRtnorTlco.lAiitMlonKOMtfCAUPrinotroultlr. Don't uy a fenco until you Imvo written nbout thin, our RAN60? I HUMANE ar:n:; aafl r " Ltt -- - uh what you requlru umt teYOtVWG l6ARf MW&r ",,cc,, H DsKalb ranee Co., DaKatb, III. Kansas Oily, Mo. H Have Your HARNESS, BUGGY TOPS AND CARRIAGES H Dressed with M AJ. D CHAPVIAN'S HARNESS AND CARRIAGE DRESSING M Guaranteed to Preserve Leather and M Make it Look Like New. H Whoesalc and Retail by H Z. C. M. I., Salt Lake City. Wmrrmntmdtm mivm JMfoterfto Qombaulf Caustic Balsam 41 amKHBllllllHB His iMltitors lit Nt Coipititirs. fata, Bpaady and Fosltiro Cure for kb. fallaL Iweeay, 0aae4 Xeek. vrataea Teadoas, founder, W1b4 Taati, aad all laatatM from IbktU, XtafMae aa4 ether bear tumors. Im all ekia jImuh er rarailte. Threes, Diphtheria, RemerM all larnekw freea Bene or Cattle, gyraW nSorftTawat, te.tlt JeuWaiCil Wr fcottle of Oaaetle 9km. te WarranUA to arlra ntleAOHa. rrtoe fLM car feettte. Belt! ay druraJnU, r cent Bj. lines, starves ri with rail dtreetKtw me fas . BvfMfxl far 4eerttlTe olrealeA, tMiWnnnWits, eta. Address .Die Lawrence-Wllllamt Co., Cleveland, 0. HBsa""''''BaaaaBa",,aa"saaaaaasaaa,"aaHI FAP PERFECT g& " 'TtsaaaSEyHaaaaaaaaal T A R Q 4tWSp3S IHUO 8,mpt9 Frl1iaiiiii"'"wi ATTACHED INSTANTANEOUSLY Nam and Addreia. Numbered if Dealrad. LEG 1ANDS for PoultryPlgeona, Turkaya ALT LAKE STAMP CO. Salt Laka Utah. BIG BARGAINS in Registered Duroc Jersey Swine. Remember I am the State' Pioneer Breeder axial will -pay express. F. R. PEART. Cornisk, Utak FOR SALE. Registered Duroc Jersey &win. For information, write or phoftc CALVIN WHEELER. Collinaton - - Utah a B& R 6 fl I N ! A pair of Registered Jerseys, Bull and Heifer, for $105.00. They are beauties. JOSEPH BARKER, Ogden, Utah. R. D. No. 3 I EXCELSIOR STOCK FARM SSiK H d. R. ALLEN &. BROS., Proprietors Baaaaaaaaaal 99aalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalalaUB aCJwafjTIfLaaaaaaaaaaaaa alaiaiaH aaaiaiaialaiaiaiaiaiaBiaiaVaWaiaiaia lWBIBmKfljmjtmti' H Breeders and Importers of Percheron Horses, Short Horn Cattle H and Cotswold Sheep. We now offer the trade i,ooo, 100 to 150-lb. Ram H Lambs; 300, 200-lb yearling Ram3; 500 Ewes. All pure-bred Cotswold, K 'all-in the very best condition. Our Cotswolds lead the -world; one of H '.our Rams, bred and reared oa they are, is worth three brought in from M f dnMt orthti East Flock haadera a specialty. WB SAKDLI QOOD 9TUTF ONLY. aaaaaai I -- j aaaaaa k , , . , 1 . .. , ,, , , , L1VBSTOCK SOME CONCLUSIONS OF FEED ING EXPERIMENTS AT THE UTAH EXPERIMENT STATION. 1. Sugar beets and beet pulp for dairy cows -arc nearly equal in value. 2. Sugax beets and beet pulp had a value of from 90 cents to $1.00 per ton. 3. Milk from beet and pUlp'-fcd cows was a triflo higher in butter fat, the increased percentage being very small. 4. Milk flow and dairy yield of but ter fat were maintained as well with out beets and pulp as with them. 5. In feeding 1000-pound steers all the alfalfa and beet pulp they would bake, larger and more economical gains were -secured by adding 4 pounds grain to the ration per steer per day. 6. In a ration of alfalfa and pulp with steers, limiting the pulp one fourth to one-half with all the alfalfa that they would take, increased the gains and reduced the cost of .produc tion. 7. In a ration of alfalfa; and pulp with steers, limiting the alfalfa one half, with all the pulp thait they would take, increased the cost of production and decreased the gains. 8. In feeding 80-pound wether lambs ciill the alfalfa and pulp they would take, 1 pound of grain added to 4he ration per lamb per day, in creased the gain and also the cost of production. 9. One-half pound of grain per lamb per day compared with 1 .pound of grain gave lower gains and aJso lower cost of production. 10. One-half pound of grain per lamb per dayj with all the alfalfa and pulp that the animal would take, com pared with no grain, increased the cost of production but not the gain. 11. In a ration of alfalfa and pulp with lamibs, limiting the pulp one fourth to one-half with all the alfalfa that they would like, increased the gain and decreased the cost of pro duction. 12. In a ration of alfalfa and pulp with lambs, limiting the alfalfa one half, with all the pulp that they would take increased the gains vand decreas ed! the' cost of production. 4v 13. In feeding a ration of alflalfa and beet pulp to sheep and steer better results were secured in every instance when cither the alfalfa or the pulp was limited. Larger gains and cheaper production were secured when the pulp rather than the alfalfa was limited. 14. Sugar beets fed to steers with alfalfa and 4 pounds grain per head per day, had a value of $2.36 per ton. 15. Sugar beets fed to eight months old lambs, with alfalfa, and 5 pounds grain per head per day, had an aver age value of $3.41 per ton. 16. Beet molasses fed to pigs, with green alfalfa, skim milk and shorts, had a value of $1.12 per hundred. 17. Beet molasses fed to pigs, with shorts and beet pulp, Jiad a value of 84 cents per hundred. 18. By substituting 1.1 pounds mo- I lasses for 1 pound shorts with pigs I fed shorts and on alfalfa pasture, the consumption of the latter was in creased, the daily gain .per pig in creased from1 .5 pound to .72 pound and the cost of production per hun dred reduced from $4.99 to $3.18. By further adding 6 pounds skim milk per pig per day to the ration, the daily gain was increased to 1.13 pounds, and the cost of production per hundred reduced to $2.78. 19. For swine, sugar beets had an average value of $3.52 and pulp $2.57 per ton. 20. A's high as 20 pounds of pulp was fed to horses per animal per day without any apparent injury. In a ration of alfalfa hay and oats 9 pounds of well fermented solid pulp saved 1.5 pounds oats. 21. Pulp fed to sheep did not pro duce a weak bone. 22. In feeding dairy cows a basal ration of 4 pounds of grain ( shorts, bran) and twelve pounds hay, 13 pounds good alfalfa hay fed along with it was nearly equal in value to 11 pounds of grain. Thirteen poundte of alfalfa,' fed in connection with the basal ration, produced .6 pound of milk and .08 pound of butter fat per cow per day less than did 11 pounds grain when so fed, but the co3t of 100 pounds of milk was reduced 30 cents and of butter fat 5,7 cents. 23. In feedfirtg alfalfa to cows, milk and butter fat were produced cheappr on 4 pounds of grain per coy per day than on 8 pounds. The daily