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Show SUE inCUD IlK-eoAlumni of the University of men and women, graduate and is, ' m . s ss .jt mm s m w m mr m .m m m bsbm m m m m m m from Utah, Idaho, former student and Nevada, will Montana Wyoming, silt Lake August 28 to shak kuda with George A. Huff, director ot athletics' fiw the university, and coach. ., Robert C Zdpke, football w mi HANDY THINGS Ovr toilet piece. lnl or la teU: lit cum or in roll, fur trevetiu or 4rain tebl. BOYD PARK JEWELERS Mrs. Alice Collin, national historian of the Service Star Legion; Mrs. E. If. and Mrs. Glenn Conroy as delegate felt ur alternate to the national iw Um nr. Our prion fAWt BLpo BOYD M MAIN STftXEJ con-eoti- to be held to Cleveland, Ohio, will reSeptember 13, 14. 13 and 10, Star Service Legion present the 0dea - issued iccordinp to announcement Wednesday. of . In- ternal revenue Wednesday received confirmation of the appointment of T. of X. Calliper as chief field deputy tne naii district Mr. Callister succeeded I. N. ninckley wheo the local coloffice was taken over toy the new 1. lector August a a After a twelve day's tour of YellowJac stone park, returning by waj ion's Hole, 236 Boy Scout of t lt Lake reached home Wednesday afternoon la All Ugh spirits and good health. hard-iWagreed .hfc. in spite of some as the result of trans, one portatiun dlffiraities, the trip was to be forgotten. Bever IfTkHi UCUiT Uualit. CloUua ratttra Urm BUBBEB aar the West to be Toada to A report started, according a! public at Logan, Utah Thursday, been prepared; having complHint against Ernest R. Woolley and othen directors of the comnny seeking re covery of $4(30,000 alleged to be due la coni.K'tlon with tlie sale of augar. ut I i twenty-eigh- t Lightning destroyed aheep t Tooele during the past week, according to the weekly weather, crop and range bulletin for Uttth, Issued by The' the Salt Lake weather bureau. showers! states recent the that report have been beneficial to growing crops and the lower ranges, though some damage and delays were reported In the hnrevst fields. Some hall dsmge occurred, "Franemse and right to do business In the state of Utofi and capital as Sugar company at $5,000,000, It has been decided by the county sloners of Salt Lake County, and they have nske t the state board of equalisation, in ord r that a hearing may be feeld on this matter. When an assess o after having; once requires that the interests aftssed shall have the pri. vilege of entering protet . ' It was announced bv D. TJL Madsen.' state fist and game commissioner Wed? newiay that the department proyoaes to build a ftsft hatchery at an expense of apprpxlmately.15000 at some spring near 01 en wood, In Sevier county, six miles east of Richfield. The hatchery will have a capacity of 2.000,000 eggs, and should be ready for operation by November 10. Arrangements have been made with tb fellurfd Power com. Pay which owns the land and alee certain rights on the stream. It U aured, according to the commissioner, the rights of the town ? Clen-rr- (' nd or farmers In the water of the springs will not be Interfered tft . e e e .'' , All alumni and former students ot the University of HHnola have b invited to attend three daT celebra tion in SaH Lake 28 CHy, August when George Ar -- 0.-) Huff nnd B. C ("nob") Zuppke will be guests of o- nonor. Huff, director of athwtica t University of linnet for nearly thirty yean, tod Zuppke, famous football fsch aad mentor; are representative :'" Illinois' mrpraaacy- In athbilcc "y are Just eoropletlnj a toor of - "ie united 8tatee during which the "imni of every section have renewed weir acquaintance.1 V a feature to the celebration, a '""ner at the Hotel Utah has been rrnngti by the executive committee innosed of Eddy O. Lee, 18 J H. W. Jaum, to; Wesley E. King, W, and c- - U. Rrooks, 17. . Ail -- IHlnlIn this section ,r requested residing to communicate wTTB Wesley King. .TOt So. Main - 8t . s"'t Uk,. cityi utlnt Aether or it rlit be ixwilble to attend. nt e '. , Weber county commissioner , tr Wn to build a mile of hard aurface road In the western part of the county to'r yetr, according to the announcement mtde at their meoUng Wednes-y-. when bids for tho work wore e1 The highway will run north nd south from Ogden sugar fsctoa the West Weber district. The road ,Jf ont of the principal rotes nsed by fanuerr of the county In haajnt f1" beeu and canning crops to the re-lT- fctorlea. huarta. War rovutMi W v PrtM llat XT pMtae. r a Drrm. lit E, Br w. CI ettalo. W. StaxUr Broadway. a raaj cood plaot te aal, follow tha trvwwi tr BHAYf CAPBTIBU Dowa Mm ntarbl atair Opposite Pol Offlaa. . with. DYKES. for involving ment Is thus raised, oeen tlxed, the law 4 MONUMENT. Write for Marble Granite Ca--, lit HenKng of tre petition of the- BamLake Salt the Electric railroad, berger Utah road and the Utah-Ma- n Kortlwmi road for an investigation by the public utilities commdsloa of the methods used by the power companies to measure electric energy, which wmi achduk'd for hearing Wednesday, waa j postponed until September 17, , sets" of the Utah-Idahwill be assessed DMALMAS SAXT IAKJK CITY. UTAH CLEAN EE ' Another suit hrd. 43 tmi'sVMd94. BSSBMBBSaMBBBBSBBBMBBBVBBBMtVil W Sl-t- ps Cache Sugtir company FORD Tfclak WfcaaYatiTU t a a ' ' ; w, James H. Anderson, collector ' y&m ate. Up Salt STAUrs j STENCIL. Baala aal aba aiaea, Ban far aaalaa, set Lak Stoma Co., W W. Broadway., C. Wastera Crtamary By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN. HE renter of the lumber Industry, within the lifetime of many persons now living, has moved from New England, to Pennsylvania, to the Luke states, to.the Gulf states. The Southern Ptne assoeiatloa- reportfl that within eight years S.000 big sawmills will be Junked und that the output will be reduced W) per cent That leaves ns the virgin forests of. the Pacific roust. Already ihe Pacific toast lumber, with a 2,000 or 3,000 mile haul. Is to be found In the larger cities of the East So the lumber Industry has made Its Inst Jump. The United States Bureau of Corporations gives us sixty years to use up all the log lumber at the present rate of consumption. . When the Pacific coast lumber begins to run hort, we con Import lumber or we can do without It, If we don't like either of these alternatives, we can grow some more timber and pulp wood and roopernge and box stuff and trees to yield tuen-lln- e and resin and tannic and acetic add and wood ilcobol and airplane propellers and lend pencils Hid clothes pins and ax handles and such things which come from the forests and nowhere else. Whenever we get ready we can grow all the timber we want. Growing timber Is a simple affair If we go at It right ' We can put It another way and soy that originally there were 800,000,000 acres of virgin. for-?s- ts In the United States. There are now only 200,000.000 acres, or 25 per cent of this, left The 00,000,000 acres that are gone were depleted In Ihe last seventy years. Unless something Is done about It the United States will some time be a treeless land Its vast riginal forests laid low; those of Its Industries which depend upon timber for their existence, trlppled or broken. There are heslthy signs that a good many people are of theoplnlon that something should be tlotio about It. "And one of the things to be done tliout It would seem to be a practical and comAlt Interests prehensive policy of reforestation; seem to agree on the necessity of reforestation. Thrre are now two reforestation bills before congress. One of these la the Capper bill an4 the Hher Is the Snell bill. The former aims at federal enconmgement of state action. The latter provides federal regulation of forestry In the states and the next Ave years to Increase the propooea-fo- r rtrnmcnt's appropriation for forestry, to flOV t Ti-j- 0LD8MOBILE DISTRIBUTORS. Uaod ear bargain. A. X. Tow-nan- . n 111 trattar Can 447 B. Mala. trouble PlMoai Rinf a cor roar Oiil Put u 4Un ext.. U Eot Fourth Soutk ELASTIC STOCKING MP. Manafaeteran abaomlnaL aUtomity opportero, Trva attar, a H. Bow mar Co.. Brook Arcada WELDING. AUTO RADIATOES Machlnory BPt P"4te? botlt aad ravalrod. Bait aad Waldln A Ropatria Co, Ml Boata State. J V i-r 1 Ml 'Vswab ssT 1 TYPFU'CriTP Offlct Tha Babr Fa welh I lb; AU aakei ranted and M.Utefe SL School Supply, at W. Soeoad aoath L. D. . B. BUSINEti COLLIQC. School af Effietevcy. All aomataraial braarbaa, . - - sr. t; j&t&rwDQLizor "Taxation is a big factor la this problem. If we exempt certain timber lands from taxation, as they have seen wise to do In some of the older countries. It will encournge the seeding of that land to timber. As It now stands millions of acres that might, and really should, be yielding timber, are sown to other products and bringing a niggardly return. "This Is simply because this Is timber land and timber should be on It The farmers, however, consider that since It Is taxed they must sow something which will bring an. Immediate return. There are 5,000,000 acres of nontlllable land In Illinois alone. -We .have In the United States 81.000.000 acres of what Is called denuded land, and more than 400,000,000 acres of what we call cutover land. Denuded land is land on which forest fires hive occurred and where the fire has eaten Its way so '."deeplnto the soli as to destroy the seedlings that - . . . might spring up. "Cutover land k laad from which timber has been taken and on whkfe second growth la possible and often times springs up. Such land wtn make forests In s period of some forty years If It la' taken care of. Taking care of such land Is another phase of the forestry problem." The National Forests, created In 1905, now contain 155,000,000 acres of forest and gracing land. 900.000 a year. .; They are managed by the forest service, a bureau ' Another Indication of the general feeling that . of the agriculture department. Col. W. B. Greeley something should be done about It Is the hearings la forester. Presumably he Is well Informed on held la various porta of the country by a "national forestry conditions. Here are some figures he forestry policy committee" appointed by the' gives which show how the changed and changing United States Chamber of Commerce. This comconditions have affected a particular part of the mittee began operations la New Tork. It then country. Says Colonel Greeley: went In succession to Chicago, Minneapolis, Spo"Chicago Is the greatest umber market In the kane, Seattle, Portland and San Francisco. world. 8!nce 1800 an average of over 2,000,000,000 Da rid L. Ooodwlllle, a Chicago box manufacfeet of lumber has come Into Chicago every year. turer. Is chairman. The other members of the In 1920 the figure was nearly 2500,000,000 feet 60 ' committee are Charles 8. Keith, president Central per cent of which went Into local construction and Coal ft Coke company, Kansas City. Mo.; f. G . manufacturing Industrie. la 1900 the average Knapp, president Peninsular Lumber . company, paid n lumber coming Into Chicago was freight, , -ComCurtla, Ourtls Portland.' Oregon r'Oeorge' $3 per thousand feet ' 'Since that time than Jess panleVIncncilnton. Iowa; John Fletcher, vicelocal sources of supply for this territory" have the president fort Dearborn National bank, Chicago, been exhausted one after another.. Lumber shipPL; Charles F. Qulncy, president Q. and C. coro-ments have traversed greater and greater dis' New York dty ; Dr.v, Henry ft. Drinker,', tances, and (he average freight bill paid by the Ciny. Station. Pa. ; Dr. Hugh P. Baker, secretary distributer has steadily risen to more Chicago ind treasurer American Paper ft Pulp association. $12 per thousand feetf than Bos-IoNew Tort city; HarvT N. Shepart attorney, "In other Words, the Increased transportation Mass.; Jnnhn II nrowne, vie president charge on lumber shipment Into Chicago, as a reLuraler nmipnuy. New Vwk city; Dr. W. Bl sult of the exhaustion of the, forest regions sur--. llelnemann, president B. Helnetuiinn Lmulwr comrounding it represents a toll of $22,500,000 anpany, Wausan. Wis.'; W. Dua Brookings, secre- And while this has happened there bare nually. of Commerce of tary Of the committee, Chamber In the central and lake states nearly accumulated the United States, Waahlngton, D. C f acres forest land which Is 23.000,000 In a Tt committee has gone Into the subjectbefore , producing neitherof logged-offarm nor timber; broad wsy, seeking to get every viewpoint ' hlch the wood-usin- g tax Inla the yearly can a It Is hoped policy making a report on which and home builders, supplied through Chibe formulated. ; The chairman appointed several, dustries cago, pay for the Idleness of a large part of the subcommittees of the original committee to deal soil In the surrounding states which should fur, the general-under, coming with specific subjects nish the natural supply .for this district This sum are heading of forestry. 8ome of these subjects would plsnt every yesr 1.500.000 acres of land with Individholdings. government regulation, private forest trees. ual versus public right fire protection and ex- "This Illustration may bVextended t cover the foresrsur-vey- , national of land, penditures, acquisition foor states of Illinois.- Indiana, Wisconsin ' and and taxes and taxation, ntlltxatlon of wood ' Michigan. These states consume annually beforest conservation, reforestation and national tween 4.000,000.000 and 5.000,000,000 feet of timber ' forests. .. In furniture factories, sash and. door mills, fsc-"As an example of how serious a problem our tories manufacturing agricultural Implements, forestry problem la, let me point to the well known wood-turninestablishments and other wood-usin- g saw-mil00 cent the of, seven In per years fact Ihst Industries. Sawmills are excluded from this estiof the 8outh will be out of birsloess." says mate; also the requlrementa for general consfmc-Mr. Goodwlllle. "What this means Is better rea-- . ' tlon and bom4og, and the consumption of lumber llxed when we consider that the sawmills ot the ' , , on" farms. 80 cent lumber. all the of now per South produce "The manufacturers referred to represent an nsed In the country. .Theae meetings are simply to get at all the . Invested capital of 5700.000,000 and enroll 250,000 skilled employees. This great manufacturing. Infacts, to give us a thorough grasp of the problem When we have of us scope. Its, Inform to fully dustry wat bullf up on- the aofrwood forest of the recommendslake states and' the hardwood' forest of tho Ohio-andfinished we will make a report and ' of aatf eliambei the directors of board upper Mississippi valleys, whose product tlons te the were- - available' at lowfra asportation cost to ther wfJl consider whit action Is seeyeary. ; -- -- t . t ..... n. Ps-clt- lc . $22,-500,0- - -- ls Lak. or baa raanlta ant rOULTBT BOUGHT, poultry, t and came te Pnltoa MM. Corraaf woia-h- t Write for Prompt rotarn. i3rAir f FowrU Boata, 144 W. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS of over dwtrlpttoa on Write Daynaa-BaabBait g these four states enough forest land to supply la Catalo froa, N. Mala St, Bah Uk City. full the needs of these Industries now stands Idle." KID FITTING CORBET PAR LOB. BpocialMtt la aatlrnlng. maklae. aula aarte. Concerning the general situation he says: ambroldariaf, braldte. aeaordloe "We are cutting our timber probably four times Bamttteblne. aad ida pkaUa. Battoaa aiado. 4 B. Bdwy. as fast as timber Is being grown. It Is useless to VULCANIZING at RETREADING. Quality and decry the generous use which American Industry aarrlea. Standard Tm Work, Ml Bo. Steta has made of our forests. It haa contributed pow iBTaatort' Madab) Mad. Ky, Wck and oa erfully to the Industrial development and com repairing. Kaadaoa Woalr C.WIa Slate, mercial supremacy of the United State. The forYOUR LOCAL PUBLISHER estry problem does not result from the liberal use BER Kmsm laaf bladara, aportal blank, racarda of our forests, but from spur failure to us oar Par aU klada. , Ha Qanwtr Sorrloa. , af g land. There Is an, ample area of COLLEGE. MOLEB BARBER Oaallfy a ban land In this country, which Is not tillable, to supbar la fan-- waoka. dt S. Wa Tomal Straat, port all of our timber requirements, all of our wood manufactures, all of our home building and agricultural use of lumber, Indeed an even larger export. trade than at present If that land con be kept at work growing timber. "Reforestation has not been taken seriously by the average business man In' the United States. -Reforestation has been looked upon as a fad quit i Llijkremoved from the practical Interests of the manufacturer, as something more concerned with parks or shad trees or rose bushes. Nevertheless, reforestation has now become a commercial necessity of the ..United ?tfit?s," ...t noie. mellow, eily ! Here Is now, a particular state Is. affected says digest Baled with a sestful sauce a thousProf. P. S. Lovejoy of the Forestry faculty, Uniand Joys In every dish, : versity of Michigan Rigid Inspection Insure "A third of Michigan virtually Is bankrupt purity and full tnea. to pay Jts way with schools' and roads, get ur. Ing poorer Instead of richer from year to year, producing less and less of value. This third of Michigan eakes 10.000,000 acres or so, the most of It being La the northern part of the Lower Peninsula, The balk of the rest In the Upper Peninsula. these bankrupt lands were originally In pin for" ."The ReaMi est From 1S70 to 1900 Michigan led the world to the quantity, quality and rain of It timber Little Jo was at grandmother's . house for dinner. Today Michigan I a tremendous exports. Although' fried of timber and other forest products. This chicken and ether mighty good may is unusual but not in Itself a proof that anything things were on the table, Joe did not Is radically wrong. Ohio, also, was covered care to eat mach. Thaa grandmother originally with timber and 1 now a great began to cons tdm. One thing aftet and Is, nevertheless, prosperous and thriv' another she brought to his notice. ing. "But In the case of Ohlot the removal of the Finally h said: "Here's my home seede sugar cookies. Aren't yoa going forests was followed promptly by Intensive agricultural developments ; the land ' went from a te try soas of them, dearr Little 7 lower to a higher kind of use. "Jo4pattenptednFstnllerriw "Michigan-grow- n hemlock, ahlpped 200 miles, U the matter," h expUlned. "I tritxl sells at the same price In Detroit aa doe fir grown too many of them before dinner, grand on the Pacific coast and ahlpped 2,000 miles. The bul" Indianapolis News. hickory for the wheels of Michigan automobile la Arkansas and The oak from Mississippi. coming Libera House a Movie Theater. for Grand Rapids furniture is being cut In LouisiThe govenunent of Liberia rent th ana and Tennessee. Michigan doe not even supply itself with enough telephone pole and railroad chamber of too bona of reprssentav Uvea In Monrovia for a twice-weeklties, but Imports poles from Idsho and ties from metloa picture show. The admission Virginia. Much of the paper on which our newsIs from Canadian made are price 1 M cents and the president' being printed papers s are being, shipped In from of the republic has hi own resened spruce. Pennsylvania and Arkansas and California. The seat' state Imports much more timber then It cuts and Knew Source of Pictures cuts much more timber than It grows, constantly tea more. cuts sod and Import constantly "grows Ouy was out calling with his mother "The freight bill on Imported lumber alone la when he saw a picture of angels en a' wall tn a home where they were costing Michigan around $2,000,000 a year, and, each year the freight bill la due to Increase greatcalling. Calling his mother's stten tlen to this picture, he said: "Mother, ly aa the sources of supply recede with the steady devastation of the forests of the South and West somebody must bsve taken a kodak ' Meanwhile Michigan continue to support 10,000,-00- 0 to heaven with them." S. seres' or so of Idle lands which a few years Handicapped. go were producing "the most generally useful "Ah wouldn't say MacTaviih canns kinds of timber the world ever had. White plae lumber practically Is out of the market There la learn the gam s'd Ssndy rvutlous-l- y In to his golf partner, but what with the state which does not not a town of 0,000 from the Gulf both religious and tongue tii-ststee," ptn being Import yellow ' Forest fires M the United States annually de- It will be deeflcult sye, verra deen. stroy more than . 2.000,000.000 feet of timber. colt" More than 100,000 forest fires have occurred In Most Intelligent Animal the United States during the past five years, 80 ' SdentisU say thst the chlmpaosee which were of due human to cent and per agencies a to any ether an!mal exsuperior therefor preventable. These conflagrations burned In order comet the Next seres an area greater than that cept man. ever The orang-autanthen the a gorilla, locradeeTi within the states of Ohio and Pennsylva-aiaad destroyed $35,700,000 worth of Umber gibbon, still another v.triety cf s;aj ' .cemes fourth. property. forest-growin- The Dish . Supreme . on-ab- le fan-por-ter . y Box-board- k ( |