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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Friday, January 6, 1928 ----------~-- American Gobs Get First View of Bangkok ... ..................... Page Three Only One Hol(r From a Blooming Orange Grove N-ews Notes It'• a Privile11• to Liv• in Utah ....................... PRICE-Expansion of the plan to 1 build a ,7,000,000 pipe line from Wyo- I mlng natural gas wells to Salt Lake was reported recently. The Hope gu. glneering and Supply company, it was j said, had started negotiations with the , Utah Oil Refining company tor the 1 purpose of gaining control of the gas produced at the Utah company's gas I well, located about ten miles from Vernal. Uso of this source of supply would necessitate the building of a branch line Into Utah, which would 1 connect with the main pipe line extending from B!l.xter basin, Wyoming, to Salt Lake. OGDEN ~ Representatives of the Utah-Idaho league will attend the an· • nual confab of the Pacific Coast league clubs at San Francisco, January 16, the Coast league session tieups witb. President Fred :\1. Xye announced. At various clubs of the circuit will be perfected with teams of the U -I organization. BEAVER-During the year 1927 the This photograph shows automobiles snowell in at the hC'adqunrters nnd gateway of the Los Angeles County Beaver valley creamery has replaced pari( in California. '.fhls winter resort is up on a mountain only an hour's drive from tbe orange groves in the valley practically all of its old machinery ~ ~ 1e 'l'hirty-nlnth dh·lsion of tile American Asia tic fieet, comprising five destroyers under Commander Smeal· with new. The mo~t recent improve· below and only three hours from the famous bathing beaches of Los Angeles. lie, recently nrrh·ed at Bangkok for their first visit there. Photograph shows a group of gobs taking In the sights. ment was the installation of a large steam engin& KAYSVILLE-Former State Sena· tor John W. Thornley reports that the recent snowstorm has been a great benefit to the sheepmen who have flocks on the west desert. Previous to the storm drouth conditions prevailed on the desert ranJ!es, and it was necessary to sh 'p water to the flocks in tank cars. OGDEN-Special improvement taxes for the new stree~ lighting system on Washington avenue and the resurfaced pavement was levied by the city commissioners by an ordinance passed recently. No protests were made during the period in which the city commis· stoners sat as a board of equalization and review. ROOS.o!:VELT-·U!ntah b~sin grazes 60,000 head of cattle, 200,000 heud of sheep and 15,000 head of other livestock. Improved farms count 100,000 acres, while 560,000 acres of irr!gable land produce a large shart of the w~>st's alfalfa seed; 50,000 stands of bees provide honey by the carload. UTAH-Increase of approximately This map shows the ;·oute chosen by Colonel Lindbergh for his good wlll flight through Central America aud $164,371.24 In the amount of the gaso· When President Coolidge goes to Havana to attend the Pan-American congress one of his first formal acts to Ilav,at~a, Cuba. The famous aviator'g best portrait Is at the right. line sales tax collected in Utah in 1927 will he to vi~il the monument erected to the memory of ti;o~e who lost their lives when the battleship IIIalne over the amount collected in 1926 Is was blown up In the harbor. A view of the monument, mH!ergoing repnll·s, Is given above. Indicated In data compiled by Charles TRADE COMMISSIONER Heiner, gasoline tax administrator In the office of H. E. Crockett, secretary of state. Estimating the tax to be col· SIGNAL OFFICER lected In December at $100,000, the records in Mr. Crockett's office show a total of $1,457,686.97 in gasolin'll tax '., collected this year, while the total \ amount tor 1926 was $1,293,315 .73. OGDEN-Three cities already are making overtures for the 1929 conven· lion of the National Woolgrowers' association, and several more are ex· pected to have their Invitations In when the 1928 convention meets a.t Ogden next month. San Francisco, which was host to the woolmenln 1925, would like to have them back. Den· ver Is back with another Invitation for 1929, and Phoenix, Ariz., also would like the chance to have the sheepmen tor a few days next year. VERNAL--A new record was established In the Vernal post-office on De· cernber 23 In the volume of outgoing flr6t-class mail, in receipt of first-class rna 11, and In receipt of mall of all other classes. The old record for volume of mall of all·cla8sea received in one day was established last year. SALT LAKE-Approximately $8,200,000 in taxes were collected this year by the Salt Lake county treasurer's otfice, according to Acting Treasurer ly posed p·ortralt of GarWalter A. Day. Although the check of laud l;'erguson, Democrat, from the books is oot yet complete, said Mr. North Carolina, who has been ap· Col. George S. Gibbs, ti new chlet Day, It has been estimated that not pointed a member of the federal trade signal olllcer of the l: riteil State11 more than $600,000 of the total sum ex· commission by President Coolidge. army, rntered the army ns a prir at'\ pected to be collected under the 1927 In 1898. levy will remain uncollected. POPULAR DEBUTANTE MANTI- Articles of incorporation The battleship Texas has bePn selected to carry President Coolidge TO RULE ANNAPOLIS &.nd his party to Havana, Cuba, where tlle Pun-American conference will have recently been filed with County Clerk Ernell J. Mortensen, whereby be held. The res I was placed In dock !It Brooklyn for minor repairs and the three big poultry institutions of redecorating. So a gobs at·e seen at work cleaning up the decks. this city, the Apex hatchery, the Manti Mammoth and the Imperial Poultry Bow view of the battleship Texas, flagship of the fleet, which will carry Breeding farm have been combined Prt>siilent Coolidge and party to llavana, Cuba, for the Pan-American congress. and incorporated for $100,000, and is to be known as the Manti Apex Hatch· eries. BINGHAM-For the year ended August 31, 1927, Utah-Apex Mining Com· pany reports net Income after deprecf· • atlon, but before depletion and federal taxes, of $367,202, equal to 70 cents per share on $523,200 shares of $5 par outstanding. For the 1926 year income on same basis was $781 ,986, equal to $1.48 a share, and for 1925 was $1,05-!,762 or $1.99 per share. PAYSON Crop census for 1927 for the high-line division of the Strawberry valley project has been completed and the total crop value for the year shows an lncrea•e of about $90,· 000 over last year In Payson and vicInity. The total area cropped was 13,'l'h) favorite portrn it of Alice B. Capt. 'V!IIiam H. Standley late In 130 acres, with a crop yield of $324 .870. na,·is, daughter of the secretary of communll of the superdreudnaught The acreage per acre was $2,1.74. war and :Mrs. Dwight F. Davis, who Callforulu, Is to succeed Rl'nr Admiral PAYSON-At the last meeting ol s nne of the most popular debutantes Louis ~I. Nulton us commandant and the board of education of Nebo school o{ this season in the nation's capital. superintenden t of t he rn ited State~ Xavnl nen<lem ) at Annapoh~. district it was decided to commence ~-- ..... at once the construction of a junior Didn't Understand Twin• Whi&tlir.g Barred on Ship ~Iu~h had been snid about the high school In Payson. The b 1ihllng 'l'o w!H stle on llourd a sall'ng s hi!) of; ltbors' twin granddmlghters, age 1 ls to be ready for school at the open· is he!tl to be rPry had forte· -forbldtGree months. One day when they : lng nBxt September. dPn, in f o<'l, ~ x ccvt t0 tlr'l.-<e in a utllOI'v;.lre brought to their grallll]lnrent~. LOGAN- Hans P. Anderson, secrefly be("nuse In sal!.1r belief to wh' stle the li~e boy next tloor wos culled tary of the Cache county Holst&in Is to •·1i~e a breeze that may prove to ~eo them. William Hickman Is here shown In court at Los Angeles where he Breeders' association, reports that a gale. Bnt if there' Is n tle~d culm, He sun·eyed them a moment, thPn The boclieg of the late Pregitlent Harding and ~Irs. Hardh•g being place<! the q~nr te r'l1a,ter will ~o!Pmnly wlrlswns booked for his atrocious crirues of ki<lnnping and murderinr little plans are being completed for the exlooking ar·cmnd nud seeing their· mothin the r•err,•nnent white marhle mausc,Jeum built for the purpo:;e ut )!arion, tle for a wi' d, whieh alwan comes.Marian Parker. The photograph was transmitted over the wires of the hibltion of the county herd at the Og':!, he askE-d~ "\Vhere's t•1e other 1 4en Livestock show, January 7 to 12, Ohio. 'l'he dedication of t11e mausoleum probably will be next June. American TelerJhone and ·'l'elegrupb company. moU, I! ' in tlme.- "Gns Loxie" *luslve. I I .. President Will Visit the Maine Monument Route of Lindbergh's Central. American. Flight Cleaning Up for the President Texas Takes President to Cuba Hickman Faces Court for His Crimes Hardings Placed in the Mausoleum . ~ The Whitman Malla,,a M rcu~ Whitman, pioneer and lend· er the colonization of Oregon, was cred by Iotliaus at Wnulatpu, Ore., togetl>,~r with hls wife, two adopted children and ten other set lera, November 29, 1847. .... Fairy Story Once ur.on a time there was an Icc· pick which was never used as an awl, leather punch, mllk bottle opener, olive remover, skeleton key, or In tact In other cupnc!ty than picking Ice. ITEMS WORTH REMEMBERING Every wall and every pillar Is paint· eel with pictnr.~s In nus. Ian churches. Granite Is the lowe~t roc!; In the eurth"s crn8t. It Is the bed rock of tbe '1\'orlcl. In the new desi~;n fur the money of the Irish Free State nppear a l•en, a sow, a hare, aud a sallllon. More than 45 per cent of win1· mills of Holland ha\·e rmnoved or demol!shed since 19::!G. Cultivation of corn on a large scale Is planned ln Germany. Keeping one rat on a farm costs the farmer $2 a year, government scientists state. The Dead sen, which lies 1,290 rect below sea !e,·el, Is tile lowest w·nter surface <'ll the earth. \\'lwn f'rst In trod Jccd Into EnglanJ by t~e Dutch, nbout HllO, teo brought from ~ 10 to $:!0 a pound. ( Rather Inclusive A fair share of the world's borea Include those who brag about their ancestors, those who brag about their children and those who brng about themsel>es.-Fort Wayne News-Senti· nel. Same Species "Paw, what am a mlllennlomr• "Donn you know what am a millennium, ch!le? It's jes' about de same'a u centennial, only It's got , . legs,"Pas.dng Show. FROM All. OVER THE WORLD A !"tork eats more than a pound of fish, lnS"ects und frog~ in a chy. One bundre<l stations cqulppP<I ror the study of earthquakes nre being established In Soviet llu;sia. An atlas which was gi\·en to King Charles II of Euglantl in the Scn•n· teenth century Is t~rller than a man. Aztec aut! :llaya cunings show t1•:1t a wi le varl<tv or fun · were u<ed by tbese Ind',.ils in ancient times. The l.'niled States has 287 rivers classed as navi:,'llble. • ·ew York is [lluutfng about :,,000, 000 trees c•n the state forests each year. '!'he Ccnver City Park zoo is said to huf{J ihQ fine~t collection of .North .\merle: n ani'Uals In e:s:lsten~e. 'l're\!s In California prune orc·hardF frc,q, ,;ntly !.lear so hc>nvi.y that tl:!e U1ubs must be supp(lrted witi· props. Can't Escape the Neighbor& \\'h en you make up your mll!d to do anything wrong, Include ntlmlsslon .thut tLe neighbors will know about your bod conduct. Tb.ey are a hun· dred to one: you can't escape th<'m.1~. Yf. llowc's lllontb!y, Parliamentary Nickname The "Devil's Par!in~cn•" was a nlclm:tome gil'en to the English parliament which md at Col'en'rf, Eng· lund, In 14.i9. It ottnlnte(l Uo11 Jn&dln.t.: l" orkisls. |