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Show THEJ ORDA NJOU RNAL .MID VALE ,UTA H • ····· ····· ····· ····· ···•• f I Ne ws Notes Professors Go to Big Pea ce Conference m Eur ope ~ Tran satl anti c Flight Plan e Nearly Completed It'• a Privil ege to Live in ..... .t ~ Utah ..... ..... ..... ~·· Myton .-The annual rodeo for My· ton will be held this year, Monday and Tuesda y, Septem ber 6 and 7. The followin g persons have been selecte d to formula te plans and arrange the program : S. A. Wells, chairm an; H. .. ~.~-:. ' L. Tucker , Gerge .E. Phillips , Arnold Draper, K. A. Reef, .T. B. Whitmo re, ' A. C. Marcha nt, Ralp11 Murdoc k, J. D. DeaYen s, and B. L. Dort. Under lh~ supervi sion of V. T. Rice, a brass band ~ill furnish music each day. Brigham City.-Arran~ements have been comple tPd by Peach Day 1\Iana· ger W. L. Hoist with Thoma s I' J.ba· wena anti a .:oll~mittee of \Vashak i In· dians for an Inoidn encamp ment near Brigham City during the Peach Day celebra tion here, Septem ber i 7 and 18, and particip ation by a few score or motors of the huge Sikorsk y plane Tndians in the annu.'\1 fruit festival , in· Rene Fonck, French aviator , nnd Sikorsk y stnndin g under the three giant eluding an fndtan group in the parade In which Fonck will soon attemp t a nonstop flight across the Atlnntlc , from New York to Paris. The plane is nearly In primati ve costu1u e a!ld war paint, comple ted nt Roosev elt tleld. a war dance and Indl:ln pony races. I The Indians will brin.g thelr ')Wn beer steer for a barbequ e. I . attend g from New York to Group ot univers ity and colleie profess ors about to sail on the Preside nt Bardin .-A three-d ay county fa1r, Beaver endow· ie Carneg the of guests WI Geneva , the first to be held in the county, will ~the confere nce tor Interna tional peace In Paris, The Hague and party. the ot n chairmn , Haskell B. H. is Inset t>e held in Beaver city Septem ber 23 ment. to 25. Commi ttees are busily en· gaged arrangi ng an extensi ve adver· Using program and definite ly arranging premiu m lists and enterta inment feature s. There will be exhibit s of farm product ;;, poultry and livestoc k. . I . 1 Bring The ir Ow n Sea ts to Crowded Rail way Trai ns Viking Vessel Sails Fro m Norway to the Sesqui Draper .-The T\\ in Peaks Cannin g com!Xlny began to receive tomato es August 20, and, contrar y to expecta · tlons, l<>arned that sufficie nt tomato es are ready to harvest , so that the rush The manage ment is already on. planned to r~ceive what were re.'!dy on Friday and then to close down fer three days before more would be ready, but the tomato es came to the plant in such quantit ies that it will be necessa ry to continu e to operate the plant until the season is over. j Salt Lake City.-M uch improv ement and ranges 1 can be seen in the lambs coun~ies other .And h Wasatc of Utah, by the commu ters at the Lynbro ok rams, recent the of the state since This is not a picnic party off for a holiday , but a demons tration staged often, so the dally travele rs of the George A. Scott, federal livestoc k sta· (Long Island) railroad station. It has been "All aboard for standin g room" too them. seats for tistician , reporte d on his return, from Long Island railroad took thls means of getting the road to provide a short visit to these seceion s. The cattle are also reporte d to be in good conditio n, but the farmers are a little KNICKERS FOR WOM EN fa1!. this market the about worried Most of the lambs have been con· ( tracted for at a price around 10 cents a pound which Is a !!ttle less than was VIking ship, which hai receive d last year. s picture, made at St. Johns, Newfou ndland, shows the Leif Ericson , a copy of an old al exposit ion in Philade lphia. Brigham City.-U tah's fruit move· ed the Atlanti c trom Norway to be put on exhibiti on at the Sesquic entenni m~ntment to eastern points was start· ed the first part of this week, when a car of choice pears from Provo was sent to Chicago , it was announ ced by [,, B. Heidke , intermo untain represe ntative of the Federat ed Fruit and Vegetab le Grower s' associa tion. The first cars of Utah peaches will leave the state during the next day or so. Provo. -Utah county will produce a normal crop of peaches this year, with the quality above the average , nccord· mg to H. W. Gore, county agricul tural inspect or. "The grower s of the coun· ty have talwn better care of their or· chards tlJ!a yea!"' than usual am! as a result thtly will prod nee a superio r quality of peach," Mr. Gore deciare d in discuss ing the outlook for the pns· ent season. Shippin g will begin about August 2G and continu e until Septem · ber 4. Salt Lake CitY.-· Bugar beets In lllvst ~e~tions of the ~tate are beginni ng to ·show benefit s of recent rains; grazing ranges general ly have been improvP.,\ by the ruins also, althoug h des Eo~ t ranges need more rain If fall and win· ter forage is to measur e up to the standar d of other seasons . Here i,; ~ly~r~ Y. Cooper of Cincinn ati, Republ ican ca!ldlda te for goY· Logan. -To coopera te with the ex· ernor of Ohio, In the midst of hls famlly. He is a builder of houses nnd has perime nt station s In the eleven westbeen married 28 years. ern states in making prelimi nary sur· vey of the dairy industr y In this re· gion with a view of correla ting tht> Miss Agnes O'Laug hlin Introdu cing results of the econom ic studies already the new Paris fashion of afterno on 1 under way, and unifyin g the efforts knicker s of chltron and georget te j Henry Ford with his flivver plane, which he exhibite d to a party of In similar studies to be inaugur ated II! whlch reach just below the knee nnd ~ ~ newspa per men on the occasio n of his sl.xty-th lrd birthda y. He says the little the near future, three meMbe rs of the are worn with a very short skirt. machin e is stlll 1n Its lnfnncy , but he expicts great things of It. United States depJ.rtm enc of agricul · ture have begun meeting s with the dl· 1 JULIU S ROSE NWA LD rectors and dairy special ists of thP experim ent stations . Brigham City.-S portsm en of the state who make a practic e of huntinl? in the marshe s west of Brigham Cit~· eaci1 year will find the ducks and wi!r1 birds in excell~!llt conditio n at the opening of the hunting seallon this fall hy reason of the care and attentio n 1 that t1as been glyen bird life •n this ' section durin~ the summt>r by Dep~1ty Game Commi sioner James G. Hull 1 ' I Can dida te Cooper With His Family . Ford Shows His Flivver Airp lane I ... He Makes Yellow Diamonds Blue I • "Mucilage" Riding "To mbs tone Kat e" This is Miss Mae Greene, twent1 years old, who was adjudge d winner of the Chicago beauty contest and w11l represe nt the city In the Atlanti c ~pageant. --- --The Reaem blance "Bow did you like Hon. Thomas Rott's speech last night, Riley?" .In· qulred Squire Ramsbo ttom of Petunia . "Be went from one subject to nn· • other pretty lively, didn't he?" "Yes slree I" replied old Riley Rezlf.dew. "Remin ded me of a juggler I saw In a sidesho w last summe r that kept a ball, a hamme r, a knlfe and a lighted lamp all In the alr at once, nnd beat and twisted himself every whicha-way while he wu doing so.''-K an1188 City Star. I Brigham City.-D righam City's El· tJerta peach crop is good this yr,ar, I and will be on the market quite early. I Grow~s will begin to pic:k in real ' earnest in a week from now, and the peak of the harvest ing will he reaehed before the end of the month. Salt Lake City.-A n Increas e of 19 per cent in wool consum ed in the first six months of 1926 over the amount r'Jnsum ed in the same months in 1925 18 reporte d by the departm ent of com· merce. In comme nting upon this an· nounce ment, F. R. Marsha ll. secreta ry •f the Nationa l Woolgr owers' associa tion. ~'<tat••tl that the figures \Vere of (•speda l interes t on accoun t of the numero us articles recentl y appeari ng in the press in nferen. :e to the ser· w trying ious decline in wool commm ption and "Tombs tone Kate," the world's meanef ' lwrse, Is shown here ~ &taied at the S~:=;qul· the rate of increas e in the US" of sub get rid of l'addy Hyan, alias "~Iucllage,'' ( stitutes for wool. centenn ial exposit ion at Philade lvhla. I .Julius Itosen" ·ald, Chicago merehnnt, has given $3,000,000 to ef!ulp u great Industr ial museum in Chicago similar to the famous Deut8c hes muIn 1\funlch. The project is ~eum bucked by other finn ncinl lenders of the <"ity. The museum will he In tha recon~tructed l'ine Arts building In Jackson park, whleh was one of the "\"orld':; fuir IJuildiJ,g . Dr. C. Everett Field, directo r of the Radium Inst!tut e of New York, nftm· several yea1·s ot e. perlnH: ntntlon In the field of "rndium el'l'ects upon dla· mond!;," has convert ed a yellow diamon d valued nt $100 to a blue one vnlueu at , iOO-hu t requirin g $8,000 worth of radium for the e::<.."'>eriment. ThQ durabil ity of the change Is not yet known. |