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Show THE OGDEN POST 6 Friday, April 22. 17 in part to the increased quar.'-theld for planting on the farms grown, the quantity being hld that purpose being approxinattl 000,000 bushels against j; bushels last year, and 26,00y,0oo bnA els two years ago. I Friday; , WEBER COUNTY FARM BUREAU "Don .1 Juan, More Spuds on Farms r Frosts Effect Slight Half of Apricots in Damage to Apricots Weber County Frozen This Year, Says Report LEAVING STATE; Frost destroyed about of Slight damage to early fruits, chiefThe total quantity of potatoes on Must Dispose of ly apricots, resulted from the frosts the apricot crop of Weber county, but Warner Drnn. Picture Ins. crsen play by Besa Meredyth, starring John Barrymora, la a Warner Bros. pleturlzation of thla novel. Copyright, CHAPTER 1928, one-ha- lf the men holding their prancing horses In line behind (heir master. The greatest lover In There was a clang of the great world" they railed him, the Iron gates as the last one passed toviously, the women admiringly. through. And little Juan, sent To him It did not matter. You back to the room In the tower by mother, had heard It, and had might watch him at a banquet bis known that his father was gone. table, paying as little altentlon(to Once more he and his mother the women In their crimson and would be alone except for the green and yellow brocades as he servants, as they so often, were did to the pomegranates heaped be left alone. hoped that his mother fore him In a bowl of turquoiseKuw come back to him, In the rlass from Syria. Their 'TTWim where the firelight danced shoulders apparently meant less to over the delicately woven old him than did those of the monkey tapestries. But she did not come. Ha could Imagine now how she had perched on his shoulder. They wondered, all of them, why stood there on the balcony, wait he waa ao Indifferent, and whether Ing, waiting, until she heard a It was true that he was cruel to signal from the Shadows below, women, that he had no faith In and bent forward to call softly In them, and never gave hla heart In reply. He could Imagine what bad hapreturn for the ones bestowed ao recklessly on him. Women had pened then; how the gay, gallant died for him. It waa said, and he young Leandro had climbed the smiled that mocking smile of tower wall, easily, grasping the hla, and taken another In his arms. cornices at Its edges, quickly They could not know, these ex reaching the balcony, and followqulsite women who sued for his ing Beatrix De Marana into the favor, of' what bad taken place room. when the handsome, cynical man He had looked np .at them, the waa a child of four, nor could they little boy, hoping that the man know that1, whenever a woman would alt down and play with him lifted eyes heavy with love to his, on the hearth, as he sometimes the memory of events long dead did. He sat there, holding In his rose before him, making her less hand a little figurine that the man alluring than the ugly dwarf that had given him, a tiny statue of a stood at bis shoulder at many a man In armor. But Leandro was holding Beatrix tight In his arms, banquet Juan could remember as vividly holding her as Don Jose had held as If it had been yesterday how ha her only a' few moments before, had sat In a round stone room, be Only now she seemed not to be the I of Tuesday and Wednesday morning, according to a symposium of reports gathered Wednesday. It is doubted, htowever, by observers if the loss-- has been sufficient to justify a forecast that the 1927 fruit crop will be reduced proportionately. Onlv in a few regions are peaches and cherries to the stage of growth where damage would be possible except from a frost of'extreme severity. Damage so far is regarded by most orchardists as merely a thinWith ning of the surplus blossoms. removed and the the excess-bloohardier one left unhurt, the fruit that develops on the tree is larger and of better quality. In rare instances, confined almost entirely to the lowland region where frost damage always is heavier than on the higher sections, losses of 15 to 20 per cent in apricots were reported. These percentages, however, refer to blossoms, and few agriculturists Wednesday held views that losses of this degree would affect the fall crop. Wind Wedneday morning was the. ial factor in what damage oc- eurred, in the opinion of J. Cecil Alter, m did not touch peaehes or cherries, it farms March 1 was about 86,948,000 was estimated tonight by LeKoy bushels compared with 68,709,000 Marsh, Miitrict agricultural inspector, bushels a year ago, and 131,088100 who, with A. Lb Christiansen, county bushels two years ago, according to agricultural agent, conducted a survey of northern Weber county. Plans are made for a meeting of fruit growers of Weber county Friday night at 8. oclock in the federal building, when lectures will be given on prevention and spread of insect infestations. This is to conform with the law passed by the legislature a few weeks ago, which provides that no fruit may be shipped which is infected with an insect disease. Heretofore such fruits have been sold for reports from crop correspondents of the bureau of agricultural economics. United States Department of Agriculture. The figures include potatoes being held for food or seed, and for sale. Stocks are reported to be heavier than on the same date last year n all states except in the drought area extending north from Nebraska and Colorado. Stocks appear to be much below what they were two. years ago in all important late potato states east of My Business $200 Cash will buy this going business, including car. Splendid business for middle aged man. Call44R3 Dr. F. H. Stevens, state agricultural Colorado. i increase 'stocks The in potato inspector; Dr. I J. Pack and Heber J. Webb will lecture on prevention compared with last year is attributed methods. Office Marsh, district agricultural inspector for Weber county, will be established at 253 Twenty-secon- d street this week. Mr. Marsh has outgrowif the quarters in the county clerks office, he said today. The office on Twenty-secon- d street will be conducted in connection with s Announcement Iter received during the day reports the of slight losses as far south as sin-- farme than other places because places Jli1,1 -- SSSShitS osh, but did not regard any as alarm-- 1 ing. Atmospheric temperature reach- - ror ed 31 dec Wednesday morning. I When this figure gets dovra to 21 FlVC Million Game degrees, he said, then there is plenty I of time to talk of losses. 1925-2- 6 Licenses Fruit men are nervous and will continue so until the present cold threat. . More than 5,150,000 hunting licenses passes, out during the season 1925-2- 6 nesday afternoon indicated no immedsportsmen by throughout the Unit- iate hope of departure of the ed States, including Alaska, and the wave. returns to state treasuries amounted With fruit losses generally scouted, to more than Although it appears that most damage was done data are lacking$6,800,000. defrom four states, to flower gardens within the city. Sev- tailed season for the figures compiled eral instances of- losses of early flow- by the biological survey of the United ers of the more tender variety were States Department 'of Agriculture reported. show increases in the numbers of licenses issued and fees received over GAME ANIMALS KILLED IN two the years preceding. In the 1923 BY SLOW FOREST EVEN 24 season, the- licenses numbered GROUND FIRES 4,395,038 and the fees paid were Like the exile who brought about $5,594,982. One year later 4,91)4,740 his undoing by yielding to the desire hunters paid for their licenses a total to return once more to his old home, of $6,190,863.94. During the 1925-2- 6 the instinct of wild game to drift back season the license figures were 5,168,-35- 3 and the fees paid totaled $6,872,-812.5- 9. to their range following a forest fire Pennsylvania with 525,045 often leads to their destruction, aclicenses and fees of $646,467.25 headforto evidence gathered by cording ed in licenses and returns the both list esters of the United States Departto the state treasury. ment of Agriculture. While a forest fire, unless k is crowning, or traveling in the tree tops, Srdinarily does not travel fast enough to overtake the fleeing game birds and Animals, the homing instinct is said to bring them back to their haunts frequently before a fire has subsided. Sisemore t- , - & Garr Ladies Exclusive Hair- - in - . Cutting Parlor Now Open for Business in : Don Joie de iiarana vent away at laa t, after emlraclnf tilt mall to. huge fireplace, playing with same woman. Her arms were around Leandros neck, she lifted her face to his. Instead of drawing ' back, as she had with Don Jose. After a moment she left him, gently fleeing herself from his BEEF TO BE GRADED AND arms, to slip between the gorgeMARKED AT PACKING HOUSES windows white moonlight, white ously embroidered curtains that In door between this the minded. as a skull. Juan had not hung The grading and stamping of beef He could dee all he wanted to, his outer room 'and her bedroom. It so rememthat consumers may nave official was his Leandro then atom that and man, father, a tall, evidence of the quality of the meat is mother, whom he worshipped. She bered little Juan, and knelt beside to begin about May 1 at Chicago, New was worthy of worship, for hers the boy, to give him another little wobeautiful a had York, Philadelphia, Boston, Kansas was a marvellous beauty. lie fignrlne, that of looked np from the hearth at her, man. He set It on the floor, and City, St. Joseph, Omaha, and Sioux over so did knocked as the he with fig his as she stood with City, according to an announcement father, made by Secretary Jardipe of the dethe . white moonlight streaming nre of the little man in armor. over her face, and over the purple But neither he nor Juan noticed It; partment of agriculture. The stamping will be limited to two they were too Intent on the figure' glory of her gown, Not nntll long afterward did of the woman. grades of beef, choice and prime; the Juan could Imagine what was Juan know what the man and wograding and stamping to be done by man were saying to each other, taking place behind, the curtains, the government meat grading superhow the beauvisors of the bureau of agricultural that the man was saying farewell, now; he could-seeconomics located in the various marbecause his king had summoned tiful Beatrix must have unfastened two brocaded her gown, .Impatiently, In less than that bnt ket centers. Secretary Jardine anhim, weeks he would return and again and tossed It aside, and eanght np nounced that there is a demand for stand in this stone room, high In a crystal Jar of even with perthe service from St Louis, St. Paul, the and Cleveland, but that these markets thej pld tower of the oaatle, and fume, unsatisfied his beautiful wife In his arms. great beauty which she was offer-nwill have to wait until funds are availher lover, and tried to enhance He :dld not know till later, either, able for the work at those points. of the suspicion that made his . by scenting her hair and throat and softly rounded shoulders with father look so earnestly at his cniNAs production" so the perfume. How beautiful she face her EGG PRODUCTS DECLINE mother, searching there In the cankeenly with his eyes as If he could must haveIn been, her clinging undergarsee into her mind and learn dlelight, The egg freezing plants at Hankow : whether the rumor that she had a ments. and Nanking Have been closed, and Into come the other out had She lover waa true. only a minority of the drying plants'ac-in and Leandro had leaped to Don Joes de Marana went away room, the interior are still in operation, email his feet and gone to her. His arms at last, after embracing his cording to a cable dated April 4 from moved had slowly they son and turning to kiss his wife around her, Agricultural Commissioner Nyhus at the toward the bedroom. oneJast time. He had closeddown eon what Peking. .The present .condition and hls told had Jose Don door: behind him, and gone outlook support a prediction of a proto was happening below, long after the circular stairway that lad the of egg products this year in duction could underthe when hoy ward, And the courtyard below. of not more than 50 per cent China own all hla described He bad stand. beautiful woman and the handsome of last had he output. the and way years suspicions, a onto balcony, child had gone out on the moonlit suddenly, stopped, on the hand womans boys the An attachment has been invented road, and sent hls men on without shoulder, and stood there watching fctxn. He had come back then, and enables a piano to broadcast that to Don Jose cross the courtyard whom the hunchback, music questioned hunchback by radio without the use of a little an ugly when man had news the the hated for he microphone or to be used as a loud held his horse, w given him, and gone slowly, rethe remember clearly speaker in receiving. could juan staircase danced luctantly. up the circular way the moonlight had and room. the that led to the tower ever his father's armor, It was an old tower. Older even harnesses decorated and cloths gay the castle itself, and the stone than of those and of hla father's, horse staircase was crumbling. the of his retainers. He had not caught Under Don Jose's feet it had flaked hla between the look that passed and blta of bnt ho off, despite bis care, father and the hunchback, a step or down fallen had stone had seen Don Jose turn In the sadBo that Beatrix, pausing In two. balthe toward dle and look up the doorway of the bedroom with cony for a long moment. The lifc her lover, heard them, and terrifal scene, that loved had tie hoy knew what had happened. In the ied, the vivid color that glowed walls Leandro beard too, and would moonlight, against the dark wave! have rushed Into the bedroom, bnt had He of the courtyard. Beatrix prevented him, and ran to to hla father, bnt somehow, young the balcony, hoping that the way he was. ho had known that to the courtyard waa clear. But ' though saw him. hie father hardly below there her, In the moonlight, Don His mother waved, too, and acknotledg-Bien- t. stood the hunchback, looking up In head his bent Jose C The hunchback movei at the balcony. (To bo continued) away. The cavalcade moved away. ALL KINDS OF METAL The British government is spending Less than two per cent of the arid CASTINGS WELDED sections of the United about $40,000,000 in reconstructing the and semi-ari- d nation. main roads of the RADIATOR REPAIRING States have been irrigated. fore a little Italian greyhound. There was no light In the room but that of the leaping fire and a few tall candles In their Iron holders, and that of the moonlight which streamed In through the narrow 1 t t . 1 . Washington Ave. Entrance ' locomotives have been Japan is utilising only 40 per cent to a considerable exreduce to found estimated of the 7,882,000 horsepower to be obtainable from ita water tent the wear and tear on railroad rails. courses. Oil-elect- ric 5 h b' A I - ' I t-- . ! i. . i. a A racing automobile built in EngAustrian scientists have invented broad- land and brought to the United States radio which with apparatus casts are received and recorded on for testing and to seek records is 220 miles magnetized steel bands for preserva- designed to make speed of an hour. tion and reproduction. AND REBUILDING Maw Welding Works Phone 1422 2260 KIESEL AVE. Remember the New Address Werner ip. Thei beenso $2JX titles ti inf sod h Specializing in all novelty styles If bens most bcens as well as standard styles No at standard prices. soy dobs blank Th 5. denti $7 (Not Get the Most for Your Money $1 fishi good $1 Used Cars Painted With Duco cm The McLaughlin Way fish are worth $50.00 more to the buyer than an son $2 ' ordinary painted car. U inf inf THR FINISH LASTS" reft M g - thslei of musk-scente- . 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