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Show UTAH - LIBRARY TV The Utah Statesman Is Endeavoring To Give a Comet Record of Public Affairs Without Regard to PartySneB WE 1 mm Ite mm V Vol. no. s. no. is. Future Policy of Land OA Board Hinges On Audit River Bed Title Pending MI HE 91 Geologic Inference Proposal of Government Jolted Western States. Has Much Valuable Mineral Land As Revenue Getter. (Last of a series of (our ticles dolling with Utah land ' art.) The policy of the atata land board In tha future will be one de termined on a strictly business oasis. Tne slates of the west received a Jolt some few years ago when the government Invoked the "geologic inference" policy in land R rants. In other worda If a state was getting soma land from the government and geologic inspection' indicated that there might be wmi mineral on the land the mineral rights were withheld. Also an effort was made to prove that certain school land, now known to be highly mineralised, waa known mineral land at the time the grants war made. If thie could be proved the title to the mineral would automatically rest with the federal government. Utah, aa well aa other atatea In the west, waa forced to defend Itself against thla policy and succeeded. A dectaion supreme court a couple of years ago settled Utah's ownership to a lot of thla mineral land. The mineral wealth affected by this decision Is estimated to be about fifteen million dollars. But Uncle flam's attempted raid upon tha school land had a good effect. It showed the states Just how valuable and precious these landa are and proved the need of properly safeguarding the rights of the state In these matters. Leasing and public sales have. to m certain extent, displaced the of-th- e 'IS ' f i s .i and purchase, la slated to succeed John T. Oldroyd as ecutive secretary of the atata land board, according to rumors at the capltoL Federal Control Of Utility Holding Companies Urged Federal Power Commii-sio- n Favors Prompt Action by Congress Legislation providing for federal regulation of the interstate activities of electric power holding companies and the interstate energy deliveries of the operating companies was rroposed by the executive secretary of the Federal Power Commission, O. C. Merrill, In an address March 30, at Yale University. This regulation should be undertaken, he said, before the situation has developed to a point where the correction of evils that may have arisen might require such drastic remedies aa seriously to injure the industry as a whole and to bring the entire holding company movement regardless of ita .benefits, into disrepute. Interstate BnslncMS. Mr. Merrill pointed out that at present the holding companies S.K!r.r5W!!W; i " r political prestige. Tha trend Is tu tighten up still further In thla matter. Utah still haa the right to about a million and a half acres of land which will come to the state aa soon as surveys sre made. There is still almost one-ha- lf of the etete which Is not surveyed. Utah still has valuable mineral lands wiilch will net the state considerable rev-tnif properly handled. Utah right now Is fighting to proveColo-Its ownership to the bed of the rado river and tha Ban Juan river. The case la In the supreme court, and If settled favorably to Utah will mean that Utah will get a goodly amount of revenue from oil wells if the Colorado river country contains the oil which geologists say it dees. Then there Is to he an audit of the land boards. The state legislature appropriated $11,000 for a apeclal audit. Thla will be the first general sudlt since 1920 and the second since statehood. Thia audit will bring out the minute details of tha land board poliry and will ahow whether thla policy haa been all that It should be. If not. the state land board will then he In position to take stock of Itself and make readjustment. Next there Is a matter of choosing an executive secretary for the board. The land board, which la composed of the governor, the secretary of state and the attorney general, may choose ita own secretary whenever it desires and make any other changes in the personnel of tha office. The completion of the board waa changed by the last election but the majority members have not yet made any Indication of what they chooae to do. Tha governor's effort to have a new land board created made up of full time persons displacing the ex officio members, waa defeated in tha last session of the legislature. The board members ran give only a portion of their time to land board work. Obviously they must accept the Judgment of tha secretary and the sppralsers for the bulk of their Information. The land board, however, is responsible for the decisions, and can not escspe crltisivm If they make decisions on imperfect information. Thia la one of the little questions tha land board muat straighten out before It ran get into tha funda- T. V. Mendenhall of Spring-vill- e, now executive secretary of the state 'board of supplies The Real Place to Meet Her uyaaq ternal revenue. Ijoes of Receipts Anticipated. When the revenue act of 12S was enacted, the Joint congression al committee on Internal revenue and treasury experts were agreed that the provisions which broad , anspnrarnsy ...mpim.. -- .ductlon in tha rata nf corporation tax would mean a substantial lose In receipts. Thu Mi .... u mi. cio.iriB Pwtr iiiuusiiy. Under all circumstances of the business which they carry on, lie Is to be doubted said. It hardly that they are engaged in interstate commerce and are therefore subject to regulation to such an extent and by such agenclea as Congress may direct. federal Trade Commission fig- urea were riled by Mr. Merrill to show that holding companies in 1014 controlled more than 75 per cent of the electric power Industry of and that more than four-fiftthe total was controlled by eight groups. State Control Difficult. On the general subject of reg ulation, Mr. Merrill, who ryoke on "The Administrative Problems of Superpower,1' said that one of the rniei difficulties lay in securing new or the State legislation amendment of existing legislation so as to provide: First, for com missioners or thoroughly compe tent individuals free from politic al Interference; second, for adequate staffs and appropriations sufficient to enable the commission! to perform their functions; third, for romplete Jurisdiction over tha activities of operating clertric utilities. Government ownership, he explained offered an alternative to monopoly and prohibitive cost, but It would seein to be the part of wisdom "to perfect the Instrumentalities we now have and to give them a real opportunity to prove their worth before rejecting them, and substituting something entirely different." COLORADO provision' waa expected to result In a lose of about $11.- 000.000 on collections from corporation Incomes for 1ISI, while a loss of flZ3.000.000 was expected to result from the one-haof one per cent reduction in the corporation Income lax rate, Mr. Bond said. On the basis of present figures, therefore, that lose, totaling will have been made up by hlrher receipts over the year. The possibility yet remains for tne total receipts of the month to go above the receipts for the corresponding month last year by approximately $75,000,000. exemption lf $135.-000.00- 0, Record Number Of Treaties Signed Secretary, cluded Kellogg Con SO Compacts In 4 Years. Eighty treaties have been con cluded between the United States and foreign countries in the past SALT LAKE CITY WILL four year, the sccrctsry of rUte, HAVE ENOUGH WATER Frank B. Kellogg, ataled orally The most abundant water supply March 21. (A list of the treaties of the past decade was sssured bait waa published in tho issue of Lake City for this year by the March 5.) Mr. Kellngg'a announcement was heavy snowfall of Saturday and Sunday, according to H. K. Burton, made on the occasion of the sign' superintendent of the city water Ine; of two treaties with Rumania, department Monday. The atocm, one of general arbitration and one The treaties and which was general over the state, for conciliation. in the haa also guaranteed farmers a wa- conventions consummated ter supply equal to or greater than four years' period, arcordlng to any they have enjoyed during the tho department, constitute the largest number ever signed by any past ten year. Twelve inches of new snow fell serrelarr of state. The treaties which Secretary at Brighton Saturday, SuperintenIncludo 21 dent Burton said, and an addition Kellogg haa concluded nrbltratlon treaties, 13 conciliation al three Inchea fell Sunday. This brings the total depth to 81 Inches. treaties, s'x treaties to aid In the The only years of the past decade prevention of smuggling alcoholic seven treaties oi which compare with the present beverages. one are 123 and 127, when there friendship, commerce and consular mental. rlrnts, six extradition treaties, with waa 13 Inchea at bilateral miscellaneous Tha fight against "geologic In- water content of Brighton, on nine 30 inches Bienan. IS miscellaneous mul In rerent Is treaties told ference" the I. nial report of the land board, aa April The new snow, according lo Su tilateral pacts. follows: Under the Enabling Act, Sec- perintendent Burton, has a water OFFICERS ELECTED BY tions 3. 10, 32, and 30 were grant- content of .5 of an Inch, RAILROAD BROTH ERBOOD ed and title paased to tha state w. n. FORMER were not frrrniw. the sections Officers were elected Monday at providing KANSAS GOVERXOH. DIES the close of tho two day session of known mineral lands. At the date of tha granting, 111, there waa TOPEKA. Kan. W. R. Stubbr. the trlannual convention of tha no question of law as to what con of Kansas from 10 to Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen stituted "Known Mineral Land" governor died here following an ex Steamship Clerks. Freight and Ex There must be an exposure in plsca 113, and Station Em of valuable mineral within the tended Illness. He waa 70 years cress Handlers ployea of the Union Pacific system. boundaries of the section in order old. held at the Newliouse limn. to defeat the grant. No lnferenre Retting fire- to the wood, a fre R. C. Brinker. of Portland, Ore. as to continuity of a valuable de of In. certain fluent part practice general chairman; into from adjacent territory posit the south at this time of year, is Ltlllam Nusbaum of Omaha.gneral a school section was considered. re uneconomical often and r; usually Leon Cunningsecretary-treasureMany years later the theory of In direct money loss. Timber ham of Omaha, first vice chalr- geological lnferenre waa applied by suits Is a valuable asset much too val mn: M. fc Perry, of Pocatello. aec tha department of the Interior and uable be destroyed or injured by ond vlre chairman! R. S. Osbourne, tha sUte's tills to practically all Tire. to snd trees with Well storked of her school sections which gave of Denver, chairman of the board nf southern arre an unhurned. pine premise of Immediate op near fu $00 board feet of of trustee. tare Monetary return, waa attack' will growa 300 snd Wagea and working conditions meana $3 to which timber year, of the Tha 4 major portion were discussed and a committee State's common school fund was $4 net yearly income, or in totim-$ will meet with tha employing rail' ber and turpentine, from $4 4 road officials later. fCoptlpued Oa Fftt Four.) iwv. HAS BLMK , Income tax collections for March now promise to reach 1590. 0C,-00- 0, It was stated orally, March !1. by tha Assistant Secretary of tha Treasury Henry Herrlck Bond. If expectations of treasury offlclala are borne out, be said, collections in March will exceed those for the eame month last year by at least $75,000,000. Tabulations by the collectors of Internal revenue still are going on Mr. Bond explained, and the department of i he treasury haa .no wa of knowing at the moment whether the indicated increase over March, 1(2$. will be maintained. Keceipts for March, 1$2. toalled $515.5(1.000. Surplus Assured. Mr. Bonds said that, as the sit uation now stands, a satisfactory surplus at the close of the fiscal year is assured. Its else cannot be calculated, ha said, bees use of the possibility that additional appro priations requiring expenditures in the current fiscal year may yet be made at the extraordinary session of Congress. Included in this list of "possi bilities," Mr. Bond said, is an Utm of 141,000,000 for increase pay ments to railroads for transportation of the malls. That amount would make a considerable reduction in funds In the treasury available as surplus. In event the ap propriation la made, Mr. Bond said. The treasury s tentative estimate of tax receipts, however, afford much satisfaction, according to As sistant Secretary Bond, who lias supervision over the bureau of In $1.00 A TEAR .SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, MARCH 28, 1929. Mendenhall May Suceed Oldroyd J. State Still fatt 0mmt UTAH W A grazing bill haa been Intro duced Into tho Colorado legislature which might have soiiis effect on sheep raisers In eastern Utah. The Grand Junction Sentinel carries the following article regarding it: Utah State School For Deat Began as Part Of University of Deseret More Than 500 Pupils Taken Care of by Institution in That Time. Governor Puts on Signature 5,227,341 Bill Blind Students Have Had State School for Past Ths biennial budget appropriating $5,237,341.24 for tha aupport of tho state government for tho fiscal bltnnlum beginning next July 1 waa approved Tuesday by Gov. Geo, H. Dern. Coupled with other appropriation measures this budget reached a figure far In excess of ths estimate first sub- .Years. Thirty-thre- e For the third or fourth time, haa the Colorado legislature paaaed a measure for ths division of ths range between cattle and The state of Utah may bo llateel The latest bill is sheep men. aa a pioneer In the matter of car d called tha graalng measure. It waa sponsored by ing for Its deaf and blind and Senator Claude Rees of Garfield established a school for ita deaf ' mitted to the legislature by county and Representative Reuthe chief executive. It also away back In 1334, twelve years ben Gldland of Klo Blanco county. appeared for a time that some before statehood. The school for At one time there waa supposed heavy cuta would have to be to be an agreement between cattho blind was eatabliahed 34 yami made by Gov. Dern to keep tle and sheep men on ths proviago. Both of thess institutions the budget within the estisions of tha measure, but at the are in Ogden. revenues mated for ths last tha aheep men objec'.ed moat A brief hiatorv nr aai. itiBfiti.J strenuously. Not alone did Colotlon la carried in the lata biennial Recent advances in ths rado sheep men object, but they report. It follows: prices of metals led the stats were reinforced by sheep men board of equalisation to beThe general education) aiamt from adjoining states. Ths measlieve the taxable valuation of ard of the Utah School for tha ure is past both aenata and houee metal in mines 1(30 particula superior to that of a few Deaf and haa been aigned by Governor will be materially larly, yeara ago. Improved methods at Adams, making it a law. estimatgreater than at first instruction are bringing mora satPrevious measures attempting ed becauae of the larger net isfactory results in ths use of Eng. the same object hava been deearnwill be which proceeds llsh, and tha ability, of tha nhiM clared unconstitutional. Tha presed. also board estimatThe to ent measure la modeled after an speak and to read the lips. Tha oleoon ed tax excise that the muaum. Idaho law which haa stood the constant uss of the Moth-- er margarine would yield $200.- -. Utah' haa a atata parks commission, but ud to tha nresent time test of the courts. Tongue id all class rooms and 000 and accordingly It now said commission has done nothingto tell the world about. It aeema in all communication la giving our While it does nut appear to be raises Its estimate on revenue time now that tha commission began to function. The governor haa entirely clesrer, Senator Claude deaf children a clearer understand, to accrue to the state to a mentioned In his message that tha commission hesitated about setRees has dictated tha following ing of language and Ita use. This of $5,225,303. figure stats because area thia for aside mean would some parks statement In regard to the new that ting added knowlcdgs makes It possitime in tho future appropriations would have to be made. meaaure. ble for ths pupils to grasp tha Tha Ltah Statesman suggests the following to the nark commis In their next books with. "The bill gives the district thoughts sion: teas amicuity and, as a conseover courts eras the jurisdiction ' There are certain areas In tha atate which ahould forever he left quence, progress fsster. lands of the state and provides a wilderness. It would not coat tha state much to arrange for auch aing means Since the school's eauhiishmane whereby landa can bo t paries. classed either as cattle or aa In 1334, as a department ae tha Second Tne stats should movsto protect soma of the beautv snots grazing landa, and providessheep that University of Deseret, five hundred of the atate. making It possible for eity folka to go out into tho hills, wnen- aucn classification la made and aixty-tw- o children have been pay someone for camping priviowners of both aheep and catenjoy an ouung, wimoui naving io the aamiuea. Eiiminatlnr ths under. leges, a condition which obtains in soma states today. tle muat the classification. respect graduates, those who have been Third The commission ahould outline ' a general plan, arranging "It doea not discriminate in fa considered feebleminded and not for concessions where advisable ana withholding concessions when vrr of tha residents of the atate. permitted to remain, those wha advisable. , but It will prevent outsiders from have moved to other states and on cattle land and running sheep those who hava died within tha cattle on aheep land. there remain about three Canada's standing army had an school, "Tha history of tha fisht aver nunarea and twenty-fwho have) e or ts otremith-fnrhactus!" thsf last stattf ilseal crasmrianns' pest- from Blig U! Il'leen year jar well known to all. Fart of that yenr of 329 officers and 3,139 oth acnooL Of this number, one bun. history deals with the troubles be era. That has been Ita approximate dred and fifty-twor forty-fiv- e tween the cattle and aheep men of per cent, have finished the gramColorado, j'art or it deaia with the average for a considerable . per mar grades; forty-nin- e, or fifteen troubles with the cattle and aheep iod. Officially It la known, as the per cent, have Through its extension service the ed group there are those who work men of Utah and other states completed ths high Militia. Permanent Of Active the who cnooi course, ana ten, or three New Tork State College of Agri- with energy and those whu las run their stock on our militia, tho vol grazing hav. gone through col. culture at Cornell is conducting a oenina. lands. Thla bill puts the entire unleer forcea under the control of per cent. ner cent, at lege. Thirty-thre- e "To begin double slant are matter In the hands of the diatrict the central government, 27,503 those campaign among tho farm chil erected si tnewith, finlshlnr ths eighth grade far end of the fluid were trained during the year and dren to stimulate their interest in wnicn give tho children their di courts for adjustment and compels of have from hlra school. graduated these only 7,114 went to cum pi. of that adjustment. reforestation. The Four H Club rection- - Tne tioya and girls are dl recognition Twenty per cent of thoss finishing rest Whenever were The local come at land trained be has to provide tho means of reaching the vlded Into crews. Eaeli crew is used for cattle grazing, men can headquarters, which meana that high school have graduated from composed of a mattuck man. into the district court snd have they had a tew hours' drill at night college. boys and girls. Field workers gat tree and a tree carrier. Be go Tou will find It Intereatinar ta it adjudged as cattle grazing land. during a llrrlted period. In touch with I he members of ths fore planter a la stretched rope planting, aame Is true tor aheep land. Tho Royal Canadian Air Force, note that during the first twenty, club and tell them of tha .Im- across tha field at the starting The will entitle ad- a permanent body, had at the iat four yeara of tho school's history. Small red flags are tied lo One year'atograzing ge uvs stuoents complete portance of turning idle and ap point. eat reports 13 officers and 375 airnu be made. justment at cor it These intervals. courses. This waa previous to useless lots into profitparently "If a dispute arlsea before the men- The volunteer air force num the time respond in position with ths mark. ws land. school a 200. bers less than provided high bearing era at the other end of the field. adjustment Is made, there la a proTne young people ere laugui The Royal Canadian navy haa course. During the nast twenty nrellmlnary demonstration af vision that an arbitration commitwe have graduated yeara that the most profitable farm the Amethod new two forty. destroy. acquired torpedo tee can be uf planting is made so named to determine management consists in tne wise cm. These obsolete ae nine pupils from high school. Of x urn af all the land on their farms. that tho youthful foresters may whether It shall be used for cattle st rovers. Onereplace twenty-sihava continued theee, two know how to proceed. When all is or aheep land. That la, if the disdestroyer and education In Galludet College, They are informed that land that in readiness the crew is lined up pute srlses before It haa been used mine sweepers will continue to op. their will grow annual craps iiruumui; behind coast and i tha National College for tha Deaf, on Pacific erate the the rope. The mattock man for either or If both hava been usor maintain pasture is considered takea hla size, will repre in waanington, it. c. or in otnerby a red flag. Be- ing It. After it has been used for fleet of the colleges snd universities, ten havagricultural land and shouldareabe hind him place Canadian navy on the At. inn stands the tree planter; one or ths other lor one season. sent the cultivated. received their degrees. lantlc- Tha last recorded personnel nc in turn la lowed tree lo' the men u can by be nf Into slopes, taken consist the ridge, steep It is a genuine satiafactlon to courta and made permanent for of the navy showed 70 officers know areas of poor soli and "back lots" carrier. the young deaf men and and 445 men. With tho advent of womenthat 'The rope is firmly attached to inai ciaaa oi use. loo far away io worn. who have trained at the new destroyers this is to bs Thla land which doea not now the waist of end guides and the is one other feature of the are "There school todsy Industrious hon Increased. There Is a naval earn enough to pay taxes can in man In tha renter. The mattock the mil. f a grazing section la slightly reserve of 450 of all ranks and a orable, useful and happy citizens, tha course of fifty yeara do mao man places the point of his imple- fully stocked, the ownera the volunteer naval reserve of approx. a credit to their alma mater and to produce approximately lies ment on the ground directly under atocK can go Into court andof nre to tho State of Utah. They are to the flag where the hole is to be vent any other owner of the same Imately 1.000. made up of detach do round in many wains worth of lumoer io an acr. of life, menta cared at points. for) and separated widely made. la a pause. All la in There properly planted of stock from adding any Tha re Amdng them are teachers, chemand the navy far an Initial outlay of $3. r, This readiness. The director blows his class permanent mora numbers to tha range. It serve have the of train' ists, surveyors, carpenters, printers, sum will purchase 1.000 whistle. The guides move two thus protects the priority owner Ing periodically advantage operator, shoemakers, with tha British linotype dressmakers, old seedlings or thus the forward, pares advancing housewives, painter, officers or Atlantie squadrons-Yearltransplants from ths State Conser rope six feet; the mattock men dig against poachers." snd laborers, all of whom ar do. vation department. tools their into ExpeiMlltnrc. the earth and then well. Rome 750 children ranging be- take their places behind the rope. Total expenditures on navy, Ing Utah School For Tha Blind. DRIVE ov AiiAnovvn tween tha agea of 13 and 1 the for force and year air I army UORStiS" "While TO Tha Utah School for the Blind thia tree BKGIN tha happening APRIL S were tnln.ri tha service's project In the which included la now In Its $15,077,573 thirty-thir- d year. planter places the tree in the hole. The first year tha undertaking has The Uintah more cadets commission school county trainlnecast af tree carriers Instantly step for- era have decided to eliminate Since ita establishment, one nun which entered ita second yesr were of care from the for than $1,000,000 o sixty-twblind young people dred set ward and make the soil firm about the open range all "abandoned means that 750,000 trees Canadian soldiers' graves on the hsvo been sdmltted. Of this num. The whistle is blown every 20 out before the plan had reached It. noraes," a drive will be Inausu crest war battlefront. part cost fifty-on- e seconds. hava crew thla rate each At completed the ber, Ita first birthday. rated to round up auch horses, and of Canada's own war memorial in hava grammar grades. twenty-seve- n plants three treea a minute. Some- steps to permanently coun part is taught rid tha Every child taking of the Flanders and finished high school and five hava how to plant and rare for hi" one in authority follow the ad try of them will follow. Tha drive same unsettled war adjustment claim. defrom with lino college graduated criticising the work. win De conducted under the dlrec ,'reea. Their responsibilities do not vancing The stand lntr army came Into grees. cease when they have "heeled in advising aa to now deep the trees tlon and supervision of tha com. Of the total number of blind Each Individ shall be aet in ha earth, and test mlssloners. ownera of auch horse exlstenre many years sgo orwhen it,. ,.mir iwinifvra. tno children entering the school, to see whether they are firmly on tne open range are Canada undertook nodefense ual must make detailed report of ing running British army in which embedded In the soil." per cent hava flniahed tha warned to file with the county country now his work to tne county ciuo maintained, imme- eighth grade, sixteen per cent have commissioners a The second year the course Is car-afull description unite are consideration was given tu finished high school and three per rim a .mi further and consists of prior 10 April a or tne animals. diate r: TO artillery. cent have gone through college. and the DAM CONIY-RKNwith brands or other sunnlvlns: experienced together study uf the leaf, thj twig kind HKLD IN BE of K L mams or identification. mrn and encineera for the fortress Twelve others hava continued their fruit of fifteen different ana or eduiatlon by taking apeclal courses to Atlantic on devoted Halifax the is of Thla class of stock, masquerad trees. The third year A seven atate conference of the under the designation of Esnuimslt on the Farinc: tne so In college end universities. th Improvement of wood lot. ing basin atatea be will Colorado river the Dr. J. A. Cope, who is connected held While blindness handicaps consumes lutlon was the enlistment In the "abandoned horses in Salt Lake for the purpose range with tha extension service, beforage Intended for ths sub. ranaitlan active mllitls of the earning capacity mora than deaf, lieves that the work done by tne of mapping out the development slstence of legitimate stock and British soldiers then there, under r.esa does, we sre mors than reVaur II hava and sirls in rrfores program contemplated In the Boul- few of the useless horses add terms Including pensions and tha paid fnr our endeavor to find that tatlon will grow rapidly. Thla der dam bill, when and if the three cent of revenue to the county iik gubseatientlv trained cana a good proportion of the young num. lower basin statea work out a derived funds ha is convinced that the from livestock dlans began to take the place of blind men and women leaving the year haa. i.r iras asi nut will be more tsxes. They constitute sn enrum id, time expired men- A second Utah School for the Blind are eithagreement at the than doubled. Former members conference which will be recon- bra nee. a destructive element, and major function of the regulars er partially or wholly III nlanllnK and thslr -.... . .., lunniu at Santa Fe, N. M i April 17. for economical reasons must be was that of instructing the non- - Ing. All of them are happier bemanv ..w anss will loin in the vened cauae of the training they have reMrnumrnt militia. This Information was officially work nf raforeitatlon. report What has developed In Canada ceived at the school. Wa President Hoover EDUCATORS FAIL TO Dr. Cope, whose activities have transmitted --toWard r a la in 1st yeara. therefor, with a sense of satiafactlon the i2d Bannister of hrnusht him into contact with Monday by AGREE ON TAX PROGRAM ular force which a our we has very have high graduate, among that manv valine foresters school chll Denver. Colo., counsel for Colorado efficiency. successful attorneys. Instructors of Aa no definite program waa out- standard nf military to dren. Boy and Olrl Scouts and In tha river compact, according soldier Ita both a business to men, a field agent, nolle That music, lined of the finsnce by members and iMnhtri of other eliihe snd organ a United Press dispatch frm Wash- committee role, stenographers, piano tuners of tha Utah Education duty side and the instructional '' isations hss evolved a simplified ington. Mr. Bannister told the presare profitably Ft" who others headniiarters as many to met which a association, Saturday and efficient manner of handling ident that there Is every promise of i.ir Ran. If. C. Thacker. C. B.. C. employed in factories and at home. large gronup of children when an agreement on the project In ths discuss taxation measure which M- G.. D. 8. O., is a be should been announced haa they trees. brought Ills plan men. i $11.01.1 COIXECTHJ ON planting near future. organisation oi sained up at the proposed special session number so successful that It haa been PERSONAL PROPERTY TtX nf them have spent period Par-rat- t, of Utah D. W. the legislature. adoped by tha Slate Conservation KIXU RKTTOXS FROM in British and of study training meetMore than $11,013 in personal another secretary, said, department. rmv staff ealleces and manoeuv- at CALIFORNIA CO.NVEXTIOJf ing will be held soon. The most difficult thing." stated of proiKfrty taxea were collected matters In the er. particularly Assessor Joseph II. Preece's office Dr. Cope, "is to make a group of Salt ana of tha clerk mobilisation transponsuon. George King, two of tha and months bova and girls plant evenly during the first Tha Main Obk-ctivCity board of education, re- DAYLIGHT RAVING T.BLFJ work In unison. That la why I de Lake year, according to the re One result of their observations Is current from Hollywood, IN CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE turned Monday sysrone of an audit made to the counwhistle and veloped my port of the Cali concentration In attended the seen tha ha r.Hf vhin tem. One af the secrete of good commission Monday by Auditor SACRAMENTO, Calif. A day- past few yeara upon the training of ty state publlo school business James H. Sullivan. Tha auditor rePlanting la even spacing. Aa a rulo fornia ana in meaaure niricers providing young specialists light savings officials' annual convention, Jting agreed trees sre set six feet spart either ported that the assessor hadcollected advance of the Hock the various kinds of arms and to the convention ns presi- fur a account for revenue way. You ran imagine now ami1 attended I 1 waa tabled nf true 1 mechanisms. This per to of r from Association dent May the National Sept. treasurer to tha month cult It would be to get a company each county force nate msnent and vote of the of 25 or 50 children to cover a Public School Business Offlclala. to by an not later than the 11th Oi Ue guft. committee. Organized large acreage evenly and rhythmic which nest he waa elected lost judiciary seeding month. On Four.) Fage (Continued labor It, opposed select year. : aUy. In aa ladUcrlmlnatcly Rees-Oldlan- P Caiiada Spends $15,0773730)1 - Military Forces . m - Taught Use of Waste Land o. , col-le- six-fo- ot ant two-yea- three-year-o- ld y thlr-ty-o- ne C aub-sldla- - trl-sla- te self-supp- - ll-to- -3 -- nt .via f |