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Show w$Mm Meat Inspection In Chicago. made ter, Private dairies can still be high-graDAI11Y AND POULTRY. to of really Inspection of all American meats is pay in the production Mas$. butter. Ploughman. rigid and close at foreign ports, but no case of actual disease has ever been detected. There have .been complaints, it INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR Clover Bloat. catis but I will go on record as astrue, for arrived OUR RURAL READERS. The time has nearly that none of these complaints tle td bloat when turned on rank clover serting were ever sustained. The fact is our in Goodrich C. fP. writes How. Successful Farmers Operate This pasture, foreign trade is largely a matter of polFarmer. Soon farmers Michigan naDepartment of the Farm A Few stockmen and dairymen will be itics. Men representing different will tions and get together say: If you the agricultural through Hints as to the Care of Dire Stock asking our in we will admit your let free cattle sugar their with do to what papers and Poultry. beef, efc. In case of failure to make a when they bloat on clover. . I know this there is retaliation, and this is trade In so so for it is every year. will be all is to It. there there last Wisconsin year DISPATCH FROM places in was in these words P. D. Armour It says were serious losses from this cause. At answered Washington the charges that the federal a institute gentleman divione farmers that a dairy of bureau animal industry is not doing dairying in sion has been creat- read an excellent paper on trouble of work its and inspection properly. So far ed in the bureau of which he mentioned thisto be assured as assertion the that diseased animals animal industry; of said he would give $500 meats and is It rejected for export are put the agricultural de-- - against loss by it in the future. on the for home consumption to market trocar the advise using partment, and that all right to in is Mr. Armour denied it concerned, but cases, frequent. . it 111 be organized bring relief such to the work of and referred the fr discovered not vigorously is about" the 1st of- ly the trouble in bureau the this under and fatal time in charge of not city Comment- remedy is applied July. Dr. Melvin. follow. ing on this a Chi results Up to three weeks ago there were the audithis gentleman jind told I cago paper says: - but I do not three distinct systems of inspection of preventive,The purpose of this division will ence of aI sure ever ge that $500 for he live stock and meats in Chicago. The be to collect and disseminate informa suppose will he lias the whole future to federal inspection was confined to anition about the dairy industry of this claims whether or not I am right, and mals and meats intended for export, a depart- prove country. The wisdom of such when we that is a long time to wait. Be that as and a force of inspectors was constantment cannot be questioned to the read- ly kept at work in the pens and consider the wonderful development of it may, I will tell my way slaughter houses where this branch of Farmer of the ers In gratis. the ddiry industry in this country the trade Is handled. The state kept When I first turn my cows out in the the last twenty years. Its growth, and several veterinarians at work solely spring, and that is after the clover in development have been so phenomenal the live stock for the purpose of pasture has got a good start, they among that1 it is almost impossible for dairylumpy-jawe- d animals ensil of feed age, condemning men to keep track of it and secure the are given their regular with the of exclusive Then first. meal and stamping object statistics necessary to show the produc- clover hay, bran t when they go out they are not hungry, out a contagious disease and not for the tion of butter and cheese. of keeping bad meat off the The first creamery in Illinois was es- and they eat but little of the green purpose market. In addition the city had a At not 1870. and that clover night greedily. tablished at1 Elgin in the year of force fed officers whose duty it health and stable the in are good put Two or three years later the agitation they was to see feed animals were condemned a small and clover the again. grain later and hay was, begun in Wiscconsin, are to warm and turned make frequent rounds destroyed, they movement spread to Iowa. The first If the weather is of local cool if to seize and tank but markets they again for the night, butter; from the Elgina1 creamery sold in out down d bad after and This meats.,1 the Chicago, at 10 cents pdund above the are kept in during out night, division of labor in the all worked turned fed . market morning, right so .price. Before that time Illinois being as far federal in the stable for are cows iffy export was inspection always put obliged to send to New York hadjben well some cured stock live nice the but fed cut; concerned, and her exchange early and other eastern states for dairy ration, officials found certain sharpers who had products. In 1892 the number of pounds clover hay, and a small grain of butter sold on the Elgin dairy board twice every day all summer, no matter been making money by trading in ot trade was 30,496,284; the number of what the pasture is. They always eat diseased animals could not be stopped this practice by any ordinary methods. Asa result pounds of cheese, 7,116,735; the ?ash re- some. Since I commencednever I have had the the exchange adopted stringent rules ceived for butter, $7,725,725.28, and for many years ago of of clover were least reprebloat, while which brought about a symptom cheese, $589,560.94. There sented on the Elgin dairy board ,in 1892 my neighbors who give their cows noth- the state, city and stock yards Officials, trade is now well 300 creameries, leaving 266 creameries ing but pasture have at times suffered and the lumpy-jawe- d in the1 state not reporting their sales badly from bloat. My cows do better under control,, with every prospect of f in giving milk on account of the feed being completely stamped out. there. Illinois of the Recently the federal authorities the they get in the stable. It is also econsummary Taking land with found of escape worth the from I for there was a loop-hofor, for omy, 1892, think, prepared dairy product an for of to is dearer acre, pasture $100 $50 worlds fair, we find that the value unprincipled men in the handling of bad meats in other states. For inthe milk was placed at $21.024,000 i the feed than feeding in the stable. If one has young cattle 'he does not stance, the dealers who succeeded in value fof condensed milk, $1,022,000; Illinois milk sent to St. Louis' $402,960; want to take out of the pasture and put getting diseased animals away from butterl and cheese sold on the Elgin in the stable to feed, a good way to do the yards could ship them out of town board of trade, $8,315,286.2; creamery is to have a stack of clover hay in the with little fear of detection, as the inbutter: and cheese sold outside the El- field where they can have free access spection of meats was confied to the exgin district, $6,927,519.06; dairy butter, to it. One will be surprised to see the port and local trade. Out of this has of skim mflk for feed- cattle leave the rank green clover two come a new system of by , $31,000,000; valu ing purposes, $7,000,000, making a grand or three times a day and eat greedily which the federal, state and city int&Jtal of $75,691,765.35 for the annual a few minutes from the stack. Cattle spectors all work! together, and the dairy product of this ptate. Jt was fur- know something, frequently much only trouble now known is that the ther1 estimated in that year that' there more than we give them credit for, and rigid watch has driven the disreputable were 1,600,000 cows in the state of Illi- will take care of themselves pretty well dealers to smaller towns where there is no inspection. Of the work. Dr. Melnois,; and tha t the dairy industry repre- if given a chance. sented. a capital of $336,000,000, with-- , Even a straw stack where they can vin, the federal veterinarian in charge out including condensing factories or. come from the green clover and get at of the Chicago office of. the bureau of manufaetoiies of dairy supplies. it, will help some. If the pasture has animal industry, says; The importance of these figures can a variety of grasses, such as timothy, I am sure there is no ground for be seen by comparing them with the blue grass,' wild grass, etc., aside from complaint sc ar 'as Chicago is conreport, of the state board of equaliza- the clover, and these in abundance, cerned. The new system is working tion, which shows for the' same year there will rarely, be any trouble from nicely, and it is well-nigimpossible 324 stock companies, aside from rail- bloat. fpr any diseased animals or meats to road corporations, that represented a I wish to say again that a sure pre- get out. I have twenty-eiginspeccombined capital of $115,210,045, or ventive of bloat (it may or may not be tors continually at work in the yards d of that invested in the the only sure one) is to put the rattle looking at live stock before it is sent about of in the stable twice a day and feed to the abattoirs. Then I have six vetsingle' industry 'dairying.) In W isconsin W. D. Hoard estimates them all the good dry hay preferably erinarians and twenty assistants at that there are 700,000 cows, producing cloverhay they will eat. Do thi3 and work in the slaughter housesjJhe 350,000,000 gallons of milk annually you can turn them into clover at any state has, I believe, five inspectors. and representing a capital of from time at any stage with perfect safety. How many the city employs I dont-know- . to $150,000,000. We all work together. If one of The income from the dairy Industry in that state is my men finds diseased animals or Shipping; Coops for Fancy Poultry. about? $31,000,000. Wisconsin regards H. B. L., writing in Tennessee Fan- meats he reports to the state and city the industry so important that it has cier, inspectors, and there is no let up until very sensibly says: This is a very the established a state dairy school at a Important bad stuff has been condemned and item in shipping fancy poulcost of $40,000, which has about 100 We into the rendering tanks. try, as there is a great deal of kicking put houses the watch the pupils. pens, slaughter on express charges. You can very The exports of butter from the United I and and dont think any the gates, substana neat and make nice, easily Stated in 1892 were' 15,047,246 pounds, tial out. or meats animals bad get coop of pine boxes picked up about and of cheese 82,100,221 pounds, with a stores, by splitting slats say about 1 combined value of $9,835,000. The Am- or 1 half inch thick, tacked Does It Pay to Exhibit Fowls? ericans! were rapidly securing the Lon- to y2 inch wide, then cover with Cheap bottom, is very evident that it pays- our good It don market for their cheese until some and open top domestic, and leaving best tacking largest breeders, or we would of the dishonest exporters .began ship- on after slats putting your not see them at so many shows in a ping filled cheese and sellifig it for full fowlsenough to from them keep jumping single year; but do they detive the cream cheese. This deception has been out. AJn on this coop necessary pattern greatest benefits? No. The person who a severe blow to the American cheese in would a of fowls to not' hold trio a few birds, none of them ever weigh Europe. The English statistician, Mul-ha- ll over three or four pounds net. I re- has onlybeen scored, is sure of getting places the total annual, dairy pro- ceived a trio of S, L. Wyandottes a few having more than benefit any one els. Why? duction of the world at 1,946,000 tons, a in from to more ago them thanlthe cost they Georgia; is point worth days It and that of the United States alone at stout a and in arrived coop what to their birds will large of know one-thientry or 610,000 tons, about of the sized hogs score, and did they win a prize, it is to three good enough ship entire product. in; it was about 2V2 feet square, made hard to estimate what the benefits will But these figures only indicate the of green oak and green plank 3 inches be. It will depend somewhat on the importance of the dairy industry in wide of an inch thick, covered number of birds they have for sale, as by this country and the necessity for some coffee and weighed net they will be ablp to realize nearly with sacking, of the government that can 22 department The y2 express charges on double the amount they could have pounds. give especial attention to it and pubbeen $1.50; the done had they not shown hny birds. I would have alone coop lish reports that will enable the public on the and three birds might say they will be able to do this, coop to secure an intelligent knowledge of charges as I paid although they did not win any prize. as was or much $2.50 its production, as they have regarding for the trio. nearly is I have in my mind an old of kind This shipping the general condition of agriculture out of the Question and is enough to who bought one sitting of gentleman and1 the animal industry, eggs last any one from ordering fancy year because his wife was bound to keep poultry any distance off. They can, in raise some chickens. Dairy Butter That Pays. most cases, pay for the fowls, but to He entered nine of these birds, four Market quotations and notes are lia- think of paying from $1.50 to $10 per cockerels and five pullets, from this butter-makble (to mislead the .would-b- e on old gum planks hatch in the Chattanooga Poultry show in one respect. He observes hundred pounds out. them knocks at the cost of $3.5f- for entry fee. They that the highest quotations are for at are rates Express enough high choice creamery grades, from which he being about seven months old, and in to would and advise best, shippers concludes naturally that the private strong competition, of course he won as as but make coops possible, no light out is of date. Yet,1 notprizes. However, he has since sold wholly dairy stout and nailed. Express two of these cockerels for enough more securely the withstanding general market quoas to handle messengers, try a he asked for them before the show is than arule, fact it that the highest such class of tations, as pos- to pay for entry, and has disposed of as freight roughly are received for prices private dairy when it would be very little more two more at a very good price, giving butter of fancy makes, which never sible, and trouble for them to handle him a nice profit on his investment. work reach the wholesale trade at all, but are care. with to He not being in the chicken business, consumers. sold directly an am I and e express agent myself, his neighbors were inclined to laugh For these brands the price how know will throw do; they they just at him for presuming that he had any obtained is often surprising. As an ila or fowls of at of basket coop eggs the butter fine chickens, consequently, he gives from Millwood lustration, to out than you, rather it you. hnd for sales to the poultry show. in credit the sold is to Framingham, Mass., farm, Boston private customers at eighty Be careful to make' light coops, but at cents a pound. This is one of the lar- the same time substantial; it will pay Big Poultry Farms. Dr. Green, on gest dairy farms in the whole region, you in the long run. Long Island, Lake Winnepiseogee, New keeping about 150 cows to supply conBan Francisco Egg Supply. Poultry Hampshire, has $120,000 invested in the tract trade in fancy milk and butter. and eggs to the value of $2,500,000 are business, and $115,000 of it represents The butter cows are all high-grad- e consumed by the people of San Fran- the accumulated returns from an origiGuernsey, including some of the best cisco each year. Strange as it may nal investment of about $5,000j He has stock in New England. of this consumption, 15,000 laying hens, 4,000 laying ducks seem, To get this fancy price great pains as to quantity, is supplied g capacfrom the and thirty incubators of have to be taken with the product, be- east, chiefly from Kansas, Nebraska ity each. of chickannual The product ginning with the care of the cattle. and Missouri. Think of it! A million ens and ducks is from $120,000 to $140,-00- 0, very clean and are card- dollars going out of the state annually They are kept The and the buildings and yards are food is given not so for what might and should be ed regularly. very extensive. Gov. Morton of New much for quantity as quality, consist- ably produced at borne! And San profitFran- York has $60,000 invested in the pouling of choice hay and Indian ameal. No cisco is by no means the only place try business, and Havemeyer the little old in California consuming eastern eggs sugar king is another large producer other grain is given except process linseed meal.- - The milking and poultry. Every city and large of poultry. They both find it a profitmust be done in a cleanly manner, after town in the state contributes to the able as well as an interesting business. which the milk is strained through no revenues of eastern producers of the There are dozens of other large plants less than seven thicknesses. The same same commodities. It is safe to say scattered through the East. The busiextreme care is taken in the whole that the extent of thi3 ridiculous conness has been reduced to a fin system, process of making the butter, so that tribution of California to eastern pro- and has been rid of the unpleasant feathe big price is in part offset by the ducers is not less than $2,000,000 a year. tures that characterize the ordinary additional labor and bother in the va- This, at lecxt, i& the estimate of an slipshod methods in vogue among farrious details of the manufacture. eastern expert who has carefully in- mers and others who have not studied There are many private dairies, thou- vestigated the subject. Pacific Rural it up thoroughly. Ex. sands of them, which make a grade of Press. butter that soils to a trade for To prevent the possibility of contamore than the best private The of Italy gious diseases spreading' through the creamery. It is capacity only the ordinary grades which find exceeds that of any other nation. It is use of the telephone, Paris physicians their way into the general market and six hundred and seventy-fiv- e millions recommend the use of a specially determine the quotations for dairy but of gallons annually. pr' pared antiseptic paper. de , THEY DRAW PENSIONS AS THE WIDOWS OF REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS. Eight Interesting Old Women Drawing Money from Uncle Sam Husbands Were Patriots in 1776 The Eldest Ninety-fou- r and Youngest Seventy-Nine. I O ST PERSONS think of the war of the revolution as such an ancient affair, as we look back upon it now, that it seems incredible that there should still be living among us any j i j three-heade- one t who is 'able to give personal recol- historic days. lections of those Yet in the report of the commissioner of pensions it appears that there are eight widows of revolutionary soldiers who are living ahd drawing pensions from the government, and none of them Is extraordin arily old either. They were clearly old mens darlings in the early years of the present century, as they were all many years younger than their patriotic husbands. They tell wonderful stories of. the great war whifeh gave birth to the nation, and never tire describing the hardships of their respective husbands. To them the war of the revolution Is something real, not an event to be read of In books, says New York World. None of these living revolutionary widows is as old as the century, a fact which shows that their husbands were well along the milestones of life before their wives were born. They also show that the revolution had beaus who after the war were conquered by feminine youth and beauty, for each one of these dear old ladies will tell you wanted us to know was that the childs name was Washington. I was married to Mr. Cloud In, I believe, 1S36. My oldest child was a girl, born In 1839. Mr. Cloud left me a good home and a right smart bit of property. He requested me to educate Washington, and thought he would make a useful man. I tried to d6 so, and sent him to school all I could. He was the best boy I ever say. He was always kind to his mother, but he has been gone years. He from me about twenty-fiv- e me to wanted is practicing law and come to him and sent me money. I preferred to stay with my daughter, who is married and Jiving about a mile from where Mr. Cloud died. I had a hard time through the late war. All the money left me was exhausted before that, for I had to educate my two children. The hardest s on trial was when I had to give up mycreat to go to the war, and then my troubles commenced. He was wounded and taken prisoner, but he said they were mighty kind to him on the other side. I had to sell some of my property, and now for seven years I have not been able to do anything. NANCY CLOUD. ' Widow or William Cloud. Mrs. Cloud Is now living in the vilVa. lage of St. Paul, Carroll county, Just Her son Washington, who was born when his father died at the age of 92, served in the late war in the confederate army. The family has been quite wealthy, but was Impoverished by the war. . Mrs. Asenath Turner is another of the Revolutionary . widows who likes to talk of the great war times. She has written a very Interesting little story of her life, in answer to a request. She married again after the death of her soldier husband, whose name was Samuel Durham. He belonged to the Connecticut troops who did great work In the battles of Long Island and along the banks of the Hudson river. Mrs. Turner is now living in the town of Manchester, Ontario county, N. Y. Sur- - Our. s Stockrais-d- ! lounn. TK Bpad will wmtlnur Id n.bJhj publish brand under contract nominal price. Tb advantage to the siorkial-- f r of ft' Urizlag the public with 1 1 brand an I tctU are to well known to nee attention. It the stockman an valuable a so advertise a, la to the merchant. iiry 9 1 1 Cta. Vi. F. RANGE Lower Sevier and jj : Sink of Beaver. $ & Address: Utah. Das la, 1 i ,..u ' Jna Dewsnnp In tipper slit right, under tilt la left ear Range :Crioket and Mountains Lower Sevier. Address, T, , ' k If T"r' jDfeeret, Utah. Jcs Dewsmii Under m right, under it In left, ear. i !? H Mountains Crlek. -- . Djrseret, Utah Address, fotin Urse I Suit! Grower Bud Deals RANGE: IouBt' Aiounuiaj and Lower ic?.er. Oasis, Utah. Address, ion urerson Era Breeders le f -- m ' T--, between ilills station on ibfl Ing ton. Addierns, I eaimrgtori tT. Millard Oo ' i L on left ttifh; same brand on Uft hip of cattle. Range Willow Springs. j 1 f I Fisk Springs, Juab County . one-thir- i -- 0 T on left thigh, double nwnllev fork In left GMS. TtOHIKl Oasis, Millard 1 " - gilt-edg- two-thir- ds 600-eg- 1 wine-producin- g- Ce. Utah. Mark, slit in, right and tw sAts in eft ear. Sana brand en )sft shonlder on korsse P. N. Petersen, J t,if if.ijt5 Address, Utah, seriously that she was considered a great beauty in her day, and that she had plenty of admirers, young and old. Mrs. Patty Richardson is the eldest of these interesting widows. She was born ninety-fou- r years ago, and her husband was Godfrey Richardson, who fought and struggled with the New York troops. The old lady is now living in the little town of East Bethel, Windsor county, Vt. Her husband fought under Schuyler, Herkimer and Arnold, and helped those warriors to beat off Bur-goyand his Indian allies. Mrs. Richardson tells many stories about the war, as her husband was in the thickest of many big battles. The youngest of the widows is Mrs. Mary Snead, who Is only 79 years old, and quite a handsome woman Her husband, Bowdoln Snead, was a Virginian and fought with the troops that Washington loved best of all. The old lady is now living In the small village of P&rksley, in the county of Accomac, Va., not far from where her husband was born and raised. JMr. Sneads husband was a commissioned officer in the revolution, and was probably born in 1750, although his widow was not born until 3,816. She was not married Until 1835, and at that time the revolutionary hero was old enough to be her grandfather. Mrs. Nancy Cloud, another of the widows, is very proud of the fact that her husband was one of the men who risked his life to establish the nation. The old lady is a Virginian. On being asked by the Sunday World to give an account of her life, she kindly wrote out the following: My husband, William Cloud, was a I have often revolutionary soldier. heard him tell of the hardships he went through in the war and how he walked and marched for miles on Ice and snow; how he waded through rivers, and how his feet would bleed. I have heard him tell how they would come so near starving that they would go into a cornfield where the British fed their, horses, and there they would pick up the scattered grains to keep themselves from starving. I think he said he was at the surrender of Yorktown, and marched four days without getting a mouthful. My husbands age was 92, as well as I can remember. Mr. Cloud was a fine, sensible man, and was well respected by all who knew him. He was a business man, and was chairman of the court for forty years. He was high sheriff of the county when he died. Until on his deathbed he was strong-mindepert and active. "He died in 1842, on the 8th of February, and my youngest child, a boy.was born the same day, about half an hour before Mr. Cloud died. He was In his senses and named him Washington, after the father of his country. The house was crowded. He repeated his wish over and over. I told him that all fee ne to-da- y. d, Oasli Law Rang, b er Series. - - er Is-Tie-r. Address t j ear. R&Dge, Lower $130,-000,0- 00 f- Address, ijF. J. Kearny, ! ht 2 Utah. Horses same brand on left thigh. Cattle-cl- ose crop In left and slit in rigat ear. li a n g e , Lower Sevier. Des Address, ret, Utah. ht . each ear. Kan Sevier r!v and mountain I Ky and LeamI Parley Alirii ion rd t4 dealers In Short bom Darbsmi, Horses s s n brand Dn f 'U thigh. Catfl- -. Upper slops is I i i I 1 Same left thigh rounded by children, grandchildren and on Horses. great grandchildren. Upper slope ta& one under slit la She is ninety years old, and was marleft ear, and tw ried .when twenty-on- e to Mr. Durham. under slits in right This was' in 1826, when the nation was ear. BANGUI :0 a Creek. Y fifty years old, and when Mr. Durham was considerably colder, Her interestSima Walker ' , ing letter follows: ak City, Utah. name a when was Asenath My girl Gurley. I was born and. brought up in Connecticut (Mansfield). JMy father died when I was two years old. We Were poor, and, as the custom was in those old, hard times, we children were bound ' SALT LAKE. out. I was quite a young girle when I married Mr. Durham, my soldier husband. He was a pensioner when I married him, but only $25 a year because he had a little property and the country Dealer!I id was poor then. We lived In the same was where I neighborhood brought up for several years, had two children, FRUITS, VEGETABLES, BUTTER, both now living; 'then we cane here into Eggn, Penl try, Game jYeal Pork and York State when the country was new Beef, Smoked and Fresh. Fisk, and very sickly, with plenty of woods Flour, Hay and Grain. ' j and log houses. Excepting a very few ! will to It pay you to m. I ship your goods Years. I have lived in the same neigh10 per cent, for handling and remit M borhood that I came to over sixty years charge oon as goods are sold, Can give rst-U! I , O. MilRTlNj S. I I I I ago. M know I ought to be able to tell a great deal about the old war, for hardly a day passed but what my husband told me some incident of the war, but Could 1 f not write it to have it read anyhow. I presume the children could tell more than I can. The daughter lives in West Creek, N. J. (Mrs. Leigh). The son lives In this town Almanin Durham, There are quite, a number of grandchildren and all descendants of the old soldier husband. I do not think there is such another Instance in the whole country. I have had no pictures taken since I was seventy years old. I am now in my ninety-firyear, and very feeble. I do not leave the house. My husband served two terms in the war. Once he was drafted and once he enlisted, but I have forgotten how long he served each time. Yours respectfully, ASENATH TURNER. Mrs. Alary Brown is now Id her st 5 ear. Her husband, Joseph Brown, fought with the Pennsylvania troops all through the war. The old lady is now living in the city cf Knoxville, Tenn., and can tell many stories about the hardships her Revolutionary husband encountered. There are two Revolutionary widows living in the little county of Windsor, Vt. One of them, Mrs. Patty Richardson, has already been referred to. The other is Airs. Esther S. Pamon. widow of Noah Damon, who fought with the Alassachusetts troons. Airs. Damon lives in the old town of Plymouth Union and is comparatively young, being only eighty-on- e . years of age. ewnntzy references if desired. w. d. M STEWARD, assaver, . j great-granchildre- n, , st nine-ty-fir- I i OFFICE I i , ( j 63 W. 2nd, South, GALT LAKE OITY P. O. BOX 1 Hand E&mples Iron Assay II . .. .11.09 1.09 . 1.09 , Copper Assay . Bottle Sample Prank (Late . 1 , 3. CO D,u, Hobbs, Land Office.) j ,!- - Lsnd iv.i V.:nire . Lorrefj cnee i.cf years- - Attorney.. r . trcitcd. exjoinu Iventy-thre- e SALT I AKihdj y, UTAH BIRD & itLOWB, V Lend Aprils Attorneys. . SALT LAKE C TY, i UTAH. i |