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Show lunmruinmt conver.ieoa - ,f TeU Bert Bumtaer AU the News of -- THE EMPIRE OF EMERY" An of th CASTLE DALE, is puss 11 IB DEER AND ELK ARE WEST LeNT'S CAMPAIGN FOR RE' C ON CONCENTRATE 'm.CTFUL WEST tTl0N. iiNW'Nw j Term Drive Under Begun Mt;on of Attorney Daugherty; Kroniomn Is Issue I.. ,tonThe the "winning of te the ursi oujecuvc D,jimr' rnniDaiun foi re- definitely which has been L I ... uic ovormtive'a close DOllti- Lrfite, Attorney General Daugh- will I.. v, . fld- nnlitlral r here to nave are understood a Republican led that to attain in 19:' 1, the great bulk of the the middle and far '.west carried. In this respect, tne jepresiueui .,,! hia ... lie ttta uama nnljMp.fll employed by hia pre- 8S j Wllion, Who, in .llir, Woodrow mei out Charles E. Hughes by mi vv:-- west. the iag MP AJ MOD IIII1U RUMGR S HAVE VERY EASES Nearly every class of game is Bhow- ng a satisfactory increase on the national forests of Utah, says District Forester R. H. Rutledge. The annual game census just completed shows, that there are within the national forests of Utah, 14,613 mule deer 1,189 elk, and 118 mountain sheep" There are alyo some deer elk anc mountain sheep outside of the nation al forests in the moiee elevated parts jl tne state, unese animals seem to je multiplying very well, an increase of about 3,000 head being estimated in 1922, in spite of a kill of 517 head oy hunters and losses of several hundred head by predatory animals. Although a good general increase is noted, it is beelieved that on the Minidoka forest, on the Utah-Idah- o line, and on he Powell forest in southern Utah the deer are decreasing in numbers. On the Kaibab forest, just jver thee Utah line in northern Arizona, it is estimated that there are JO, 000 deer. The areea is a federal game preserve. The elk, most of which have been introduced Into various parts of the 3tate within recent years, seem to be establishing themb'elves excellently, the Ashley forest in the eastern Uinta mountains being alone In reporting a decrease. For the state as' a whole an ncrease of 309 head is reported for . line 1922. A few mountain sheep, estimated at the 118 in all, are found in the high Uinta for the preeident's ijal reason mountains on the Ashley and Uinta aummer. forests. oatlnental tour this They seem to be about sta nut wish to mako an in numbers, In spite of com tionary tour following his ra-- plete protection. Over one and a half million acres ijttion in June, 1924, and there-feel- s Utah have he must get record of his of national forest land jeen designated as state game refuges. isistration before the weat thia Thes'e refuges have done much to A study of the results of the oring about steady increase of deer resiional election last November noted during the last few years. winced the Republican politt Elk Deer Forest 50 1350 hiefs the party muat ba Ashey 210 450 i- ia the west if it la to succeed. Cache 1750 0 Dixie of the eastern state, where 128 3636 Flshlake iliition is still an 0 issue, the R- - Las. Sal 275 are "drier" than the Demo- - Manti 381 1825 0 200 asd this, according to Borne of Minidoka 0 1800 0. P. leaders, will jeopardize Powell 410 1500 strength there, although it may Uinta 10 827 Wasatch Iivorably westwari. The Ashley forest reports 68 mount ain Sheep, the Uinta forest 50. nod to Investigate Sugar Sale swinging the west Into the Republican standard is of id exten-impai- ,;S gn 1 th-a- most l.cana !. General Leon-WooManuel Quezon, president the senate, and Manuel Rosas s ol the housa, left Monday island of Negron to investi-th- e advisability of selling- the centrals BW operated un ite management of the Phillp- bask. The proposed f national la line witn th governor gen i PuiltT te get the government si nusineoa aad keep It out It Glared that th hnnt'i i,ioi, !ti organization men years ago been more than 587,000,000. This Wared, has hindered govern activity in public instruction, works and other Important ' toodhounds Hunt Led MhW ues&orre, Pa. Deep down 'ae streets of Wilkaebarrtj ia 153 'hi of the Ktahnit ml Is searched for Jamas Kowott?, Mturday. Ha was mta ft I" ft helper Saturday and tnafr ' part of the mine wrJss stran-- f hiwai e to him it Nered into a disused drift aSl w ay. Miners hunted for Bhn Sunday. Then 'M witn bloodhounds B!LL atata th wer BOOSTER SAYS 3JjssMOGorwoe 0F BEMeRCSI CLUB"; j UtTUj JjlMS oa'JI- - cadi HELPS NOO! JUST PLAce nru , OA SPREAD -- CAUDAL, TWttii vmn Bir II FORES! NOTES Ranger Thursby and . TT'Ulw. nt'fifO ate nographer, made a trip to the top ,v clriia ffr the ..-,of rpose of taking snow measurements. On March 1 J The iouna me snuw u v. ms-m-- v me ijtreu.1 dmih station, and 56 inches1 deep at the Alpine station, a ycu ojju 1 the snow was 54 inches deep at the ot..n..n on.l fifi Inches at lilJCIll. cil.fli.,". the Alpine. However, mc ten is' practically the same for 1923 13.10 as u was in 1000 station on inches. at . then Experiment flA i..VAC3 at tVlp anuI to io.su iu" viarcn t, isza, V. r Ante TllO minimum during Febtemperature recorded below ruary, 1923, was 16 degreeswas 44 zero, while the maximum degrees above. At the recent grazing meeting held forest officers' from in Ooden, Colorado reported that in that state lit was estimated that oeavei in pei creased at a rate of about zaconditions. annually under normal..VW' mllllfP Beaver are now uw"""6 numerous in many uofia the western that t mouiano n states, in state under are trapped if beaver . navft- an ltceitse, once me rMrta will be revenue been stocked, a sufficient to provided to the state the fish and after look thoroughly game for the entire state. are A few of the local stockmen rtoniractina- - lambs' for fall delivery at 10 cent per lb. ' ForeSt Kanger on March 18, left for, Orangeville Anuer- .m ,uit Utinirers wnere ne win construction son and Howard in the i. of the Rock canyon uuui.uw of the reconstruction and in the Dale teleplione line Mphrainn-Caatl- e returned Humphrey Supervisor On he 16. March on from Ogden City Lake Salt in previous day, while of Tic J he supervisor visited the the state fish and game commone meeting and made arrangements for the east with the sportsmen along bete en time Kome side of the forest the purple of April 1 and 15, for , At a u", '"""" ,.-- .. ,.., fie-nre- -- considering establishing the auva r locai who eh.pM feeders steer Mayfield con cattle to Ogden on March U, tracted their .took to be weighed" they left the cars By P shrink amounted to 11. re 3 lbs. per niu to amounts This Wppe steers on shrink than the : 1. IT AH. SATlKfiAV. LITTLE w 24, Use 1823- - StM BLIZZARD SWEEPS FOUNDATION ililf STATES 0VE There have been a good many with little, or no foundation, apparently, bearing on the reported disappearance from Green River of McKinley Rhodes, about 26 years of age, grandson uf Mr. and Mrs. William Higoy, and a former student of the Emery Stake academy, later entering the service. According to Mr. Higby, the latter received a letter from thuir nki Mrs. S. K. Peak of Green River," stat- ng that McKiifley had left his home :he night of March 11 a cola, stormv night without coat or hat, and hasn't been seen since though search has been made for him, by members of the family at lea.t. ThiK same letter is unuers'ood to have said that there vas some talk of some connection with a couple of girls but n lnt,. :he same party said there was nothing 10 mis last story. Rhodes was married something like a couple of years ago to Mis Hulda Porsman of Green River, the ceremony having been performed at The couple later lived Farmington. in Salt Lake, where a babe, now fifteen months old, was born. Later they lived at Sunnyside and other arbon county camps, and finally located in Green River, where a second ?hild was born four days previous to Rhodes' disappearance. Sheriff O. W. Sitterud dispatched i telegram to Deputy Sheriff Harry Bennett and the latter, in reply, acknowledged receipt of same and added :hat Rhodes' had disappeared March 4 following some kind of a "scrape" and had not since been heard from. Absence of telephone facilities between Ireen River and the rest of the county s' a serious handicap to efficient communication at all times. A TKJL3 Robert L. Wflliama in United States Mioses Jennie and Grace Lam ph. dstriict court here Saturday following have returned to their work in Salt their pleu of guilty to a charge of Lake City. stealing a pad of blank postoffice money orders from the Haskell, Okla., postoffice in Jauuary. EMERY rs ONE DEATH CHARGED TO STORM, PROPERTY LOSS AND DAM-AGWILL. BE HEAVY E Automobiles In Streets Are Turned Over by Gale; Many Buildings Of Pueblo's Business District Damaged For some time past members of the police force have visited the sergeant and his' changing condition has indicated his ultimate recovery is a matter uf grave doubt. The Sergeant was known on the police force as a man of courage. In :he raid on the Nord hotel, in which i bandit and Detective Sergeant dreen B. Ham by lost their lives, Serjeant Pierce showed his' usual courage iti running up the stairs and exposing limself to the fire of the bandit gang n order that their capture might be more readily effected. It is the belief of members of the e lollce force that the s'ergcant was to draw his gun when accosted iy the two highwaymen on the tonight the it November 27, 1922, owing fact that it had caught in his clothing. Both bandits are in prison and wll )e tried for murder if Sergeant Pierce dies within a year and a day from :.he day of the shooting. Assailant Wounds German Leader Cologne. Joseph Smeets, the well known German separatist leader, was seriously wounded Saturday by an unidentified assailant, who escaped. Ills secretary was killed in the attack. The assault occurred in Smeet's office. For several years Smeets has been a strong advocate of secession of the Ithine from Germany. Identified as Escaped Convict Chieas'o The mutilated body found burio.i in the snow near Geneva, 111., a month ago, was positively identified Saturday as that of Edward Mcltrtde, gunman, bootlegger and escaped convict. Mcl'.rUle was last officially reported when he' jumped from a train while being taken to San Quentin He was penitentiary In California. wanted as on escaped convict. Ruhr Train CrashSerious Berlin. Forty French soldlors are reported to have been killed in n train wreck in the ltuhr valley. According to u dispatch from Frlermer-shela French troop train collided with a freight near that city. In addition to the forty soldiers reported dead, many were injured. Body Denver Colo. -- hashed along by wind that ranged from forty-fivmiles an hour seed in Ienver to 100 miles an hour in velocity at Corona, Colo., at the "top of the world" on the continental divide, the worst blizzard of e the winter Saturday swept Colorado and the Rocky mountain region. Snowfall was general throughout tha region, accompanying rapidly descending temperatures. One deatli was attributable to the storm, which caused damage estimated at hundreds of thousands of dollars in Colorado. Arthur Gullett of Brighton, Colo., was killed when he was run down by a coal cur t Corona during tiis height of the storm. At Pueblo, Colo., plate glass windows In the downtown district were shattered by the wind, and fire, starting during the storm, destroyed every building at the Pueblo stockyards in twenty minutes with the exception of a hotel. In Denver a number of automobiles were turned over in the streets by LITTLE HOPE IS HELD FOR the gale, but their occupants escaped unhurt. The tram service was mainWOUNDED POLICE SERGEANT tained here and railroads reported trains operating practically on schedule despite the blizzard. Police Sergeant Nepal P. Pierce, On the Denver & Salt Lake (Mot-fat-) member of the Salt Lake police force, railroad, which has been blockadaha was s'hot by George Allen and Arthur Hayes while walking on Main ed since Wednesday, the snow was drifted fifteen to twenty 3treet between Fifth and Sixth South reported is reported to be gradually at Holy feet deep. One snowplow was buried Cross hospital. Mr. Pierce's wife is a Saturday under a snowshed and ansister to Mrs'. Andrew Nelson of Fer-ro- other was stalled in the drifts near in housfe. ' E. H. Jacobscn and Leslie Collier have returned from Sigurd with plaster. They brought in with them a big cur which they found stalled in a snowdrift in the canyon, It havinsr mdased the road. The inmates of thu car were a man and woman and four children. They are still here waitinsr the arrival of n ring pear for their car. Mr. and Ms. Wilford Broderii k were here for a vbdt last week. Sand la being hauled for the plaster work in the tfehool house. Another play Is betng prepared by the Emery Ward Dramatic company. It is to be presented March 27. Kind to learn that our We are telephone rystem lf back In working ord'-r- . Hilly Allen's dog and monkey creu Mondav (rave a j chow and dance be'-- nluht after Priesthood meetlntr. Thev connection with have a very large audlewr, hut their dance was fine and greatlv enjoyed. Thee show people had heen held here for two or three rtnvs did on t in !oiHtty fom by. CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL The Junior prom, scheduled for March 31, promises to be the biggest The class la event of the season. sparing neither time nor money to make it an elaborate affair, They have a number of real surprises arranged. The C. 11. S. Dramatic tlub played tJaptaia Bob at.Mohrland Monday night. I Fate; cold weather, or something is helping pur school. We btill have one hundred' per cent of our enrollment In attendance. Last Sunday our seminary class the speakers for the tfacrament meeting at Castle Dale. The speakers showed that they understood their topic.'. Expressions from the peopl , fur-llsh- that it was one if the beat meetings ever held here. ' of Castle Dale showed The first class series of fieW events was held Thursday. On Friday track tivents will come of at the fair grounds Locals D .fc HO'TIXGTON MALE CHORUS TO APPEAR IN CO.M'UiUT early Edgar Beal, March 15. A. M. Sorer.son and some other boys have been to Sigurd and Sanpete county after cattle. Several tdams are on their way to Sigurd for plaBter for the new school 1 i,.iv nized boy was born to d Mrs'. alibi. Grove, Decatur county, Ia., shortly Several of ocr cow men have been 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. on the desert lately. riding The fireman was instantly killed and out on his ranch Peacock Elmer other members of the crew badly at Ivie creek working, hurt. Mr. and Mrs. Fdgir Sorens'on and children and Sidney Borcnson wont, to Huntington Monday for a visit with Mrs Sorenson'a parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ififa Brinkerhoff, and family. We are having some cold windy wpf.ther here, which Ik hard on the stock. Cleorfie Waraham and Ray ReM the other day brought in some hnw which they had tradod to George Mortensen and we notice that, odell Is breaking the hordes to the saddle. D the winter with the following officers: i E. Johnson, director; Amos waae-i.K.,,in,.. manaeer: W. J. Green, Arley Marshall Jr., seeretary-treasuewens iuCu, Wakefield, Clinton board. Perry Wakefield, adfisory be The concert Sunday night will the firpt of a series of entertainment! to be given In neighbor Kig towns during next week. twelve-poun- and after un-ibl- fpho T.vrip Hnrmonv Male chorus, directed by A. E. Johnson of the t Huntington high school music depart-m.,a concert Sunday will evening. March 25, in the Huntington . ward tabernacle. The cnorus, ram-,nt !s voices, will be assisted by Prof Bert Lietz, violinist, and Mis's Ann Leonard, soprano. A Mr. suspicion FlremanKlTled TnWreck Th' In Huntington, burglary Omaha. l?urlington passenger sheriff and Attorney Peacock waii'i train No. Ill, running between St here and Searched their enr and bebut found nothing inJoseph, Mo., and Charlton, la., was longings, The people proved an wrecked twelve miles west of Garden criminating. The storm extended into Arizona and New Mexico and in Wyoming CLEVELAND fears were expressed that the loss of livestock would be heavy if the snowMrs. John Brys'on of Hiawatha is fall continued. visiting relatives here. The Relief society last Friday was Train Bandits Captured one grand succeHt;. An excellent dinTacoma, Wash. Two of the three ner was served at noon followed by a men who held up a Northern Pacific-trai- very spicy program in the evening:. The ladies bought the tickets and at South Prairie Saturday were chose the partners., showing the men later of west Enumclaw. captured knew how to keep things that they They were badly wounded. The third went home tired man escaped in the woods. The two moving. Everybody but feeling they had had the time of were brought to Buckley, closely their lives. Over $17 was cleared atten. guarded, and given surgical expensed. tion. The automobiles used by the Mr. and Mrs. John Richards are bandits was riddled with shot from entertaining a fine boy at their home. the revolvers and rifles of the citi- All concerned are doing nicely. Mrs. Gertrude B. Johnson has been zens of Buckley as the car passed very Kick but Is now h'omewhat imthrough the town. proved. The M, I. A. presented their play 10 Years For Post Office Theft to a very large and appreciative audi. Okla. Edward Thomp- ence last Tuesday night. Muskogee, rHE FARMER IS NOT ALWAYS TO BLAME son and Samuel Doekter of Los AnThe lower grades of the school have geles were sentenced to ten years in organized a baseball team. 4" farmpr who was carrviner home the federal penitentiary by Jv.'!-- i order house. iwaspackage from a amaillocal mercnni. accosted by 'Why didn t you .buy mat dih oi "I riu me?" he asked. could have saved you the postage, and besides, you wouiu nave ueen patronizing a home store, which helps pay the taxes and build up this " With pharncteristic frank ness, the farmer replied: "Why don't you patronize your home paper ana idvertiee? I read it and didn't know tho ennds t have here, nor do I ever see your name in the paper nvitiing me to come your store j Joe Sykes is now one of our leading advocate for building a hard surface highway LOST AND FOUND FOUND A piece of hard coal on fain street. Will return same if ownership proved. Box 177962. 'f H r; a talking v deoart- obligingly was half . nm Kir!t- JlCanwis City, where -omrnodatea oy the j before b,eins weighed, whereupon stock jar fill after reaching the following joyous conversation took y recent seems that the report letter. news Pls: this you, Cyrus?" out in the Manti Yes', dear." that effect the gteer9 their "Are you happy? cattlemen had contracted j ::H;rpypieraPPtLndeawhen you were at 125 per 'disadvantage to the operated me?" with really -, Much happier, dear. of the stock owners "Ain't heaven just grand? now to the effect that in hell. I'm for "I don't know, dear, ateem had been contracted head. per 127.50 delivery at -- MARCH EMERY COUXTT OITER4 THE CAP1TAUOT Thousand of Acre of Flat CoaJ Laada, PresiMaff OU Prospects, InetftawTttMa Sup ply Beat Timber, Ideal Tsrri-tor- y lor tsugar Beat Factories A who desired widow, '.!.!. v, Tetter RADIO NEWS and Mrs. Winklebee were elated yesterday on receiving a code . Mr. message from Station COOP. 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