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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER HYRUM. UTAH Small Wonder Charge Made Her Indignant I Angry , She Goes to Bed and Remains 40 Years NewoNoteo 0 (i a Privilege to Live in Montgomery, ! a 135,000 swimming city National park, including u- - nd lia Se- - I nd ns Va va 50. I od in- - At la rl, ru th in ira it-- L EDAR at Zion 'er treating plants, facilities for the reser-- r allation of a 100,000-galloZion and fifteen more cabins at some of the improvare Bryce ers to be installed by the Utah super-endeks company. F. E. Lesser, of the lodge and hotel servannounced. ogan Twenty dairymen of Hyde f p tk held a special meeting and de-- ' bull asso--ioj to form a cooperative consisting of three blocks. L. Lamb jl.a cuce, Willard Duce and directors of as temporary named re jw session will tr three blocks. Another or- held February 27 to perfect an also purchase bulls. and uization s meet- C. Reeder had charge of this Declaring til death, Mrs. Mary Bobbst has fulfilled her threat. She died here at the age of ninety-tw- o Her husband has been dead many years. A millionaire, you know, married a film star, and he found he could JOY I nt w- GROVE Utah ranked United States in the of cases of canned in 1927 and seventh in number of standard No. 3 cans, aces of twenty-fou- r ting to 'bulletin of the bureau of isus of the depratment of commerce e fact issued. From its thirty-threies in Utah is produced 1,018,562 es of canned goods and 792,264 of r No. 3 cans, in equivalent, Maryland led Lording to the report. list with 18,870,894 cases of can-e- : d goods and 13,137,042 of twenty-fir No. 3 cans. DELTA The framers of the Pah-- f n nt valley are making strenuous ef--i f. :ts to get away from the one-cro- p f in which has been in operation her f j r a number of years in the produci; ,n of alfalfa 'seed. The plan which jj now being promoted by local busi-ss men and farmers is to diversify tl e crops in such a manner that the riising of alfalfa seed will be incid-e- : tal rather than the main crop. OGDEN One hundred grown Chili se pheasants are soon to be brought fc )m the state farm at Springville and I iced on the game preserve in the v ?stern part of Weber county, under a agreement reached between D. H. I itdsen, state fish and game cominis-amer, and the Weber County Fish a: d Game Protective association. The a: uouncement was made by P. L. I ird, president of the Weber associ-- I LEASANT the ual number mIs produced equivalent Uth in nty-fou- t I n 1 ion. Railway and aerial asportation were allied when a imp of railroad men and shippers l istened the Gunnison airport and tended a meeting to arrange for nstruction of a branch line to West-!-w- , near this city. MYTON L. C. Potter, who resides ; the North Myton bench and wha ; ised 471 sacks of alfalfa seed in 1927, ipped his crop to Price, having sold during the past week to J. Sheehan, seed buyer for the Griswold Seed mpany of Lincoln, Neb. Mr. Potter L d the largest crop of any grower in I i3 part of the basin. Nine trucks i ire used to haul the crop to the rail-- r GUNNISON ( i id. DRAPER J. R. Rawlins, president the Draper Poultry association, t ites that 1135 cases of eggs are now t ing shipped each week from Draper eastern markets, and of these, 800 ses are the product of Draper hens, ops are being built in Utahs Peta-n- a this spring which wil take care 10,000 more laying hens. The in addition to this, is put-4- 4 out 17,000 sacks of chicken feed c ch month. GUNNISON Gunnison Sugar com-nhas added about 1000 acres of atract beets in Salt Lake and Utah unties and, with the local growers lintain the standard of planting ring the past few years, there is fry assurance that the 1928 cam-igwill be the biggest since the lory was built. MYTON Sheepmen who have their rds grazing south of Myton, in Pleas-- t valley and the Nine-Mil- e country r Green River, have begun feeding rn and expect to keep this up until :er the lambing season. is t distributing point for this Myton source of f Pply, and truckmen have been kept sy hauling the corn and groceries the camps. The sheep this season far are in good condition. j OGDEN Utah produced 1,018,562 Res of canned foods last year. This I ts it in eighth place among all the ites of the Union in the production this commodity.. . RICHFIELD Preparations for the the tabernacle are being shed. All the gravel is on the Pund and the hauling of sand will be nip eted this week. As soon as the ather breaks, laying of the founda- will be commenced. The building ucost approximately $80,000 and 11 be equipped for all requirements many years to come. It will have g auditorium, classrooms, a full senient and other apartments. y n p i .. Famine Victims in China Are Pressed to Desperation. Peking. A perishing people, hundreds of thousands of them wandering aimlessly abont the countryside seeking roots, bark, chaff and food, with their homes torn down so that the wood may be sold in order to secure money, to purchase grain this Is the picture of famine conditions In a portion of Shantung province near Tsinan, the .capital, which the China international famine relief commission sends to Peking. Three years of bad crops, merciless taxation, civil war, exploitation by bandits and uncontrolled armies, a locust pest and no rain these are the factors which have reduced more than 4,000,000 people In 70 counties to beggary. o Even the are poor today, for they cannot find buyers for their lands. So great is the glut of land thrown upon the market by the starving peasantry that farms which formerly sold for $200 (Mex.) an acre are now selling at $2 per mow, about $10 (Mex.) an acre, or onjy $4.50 in American money. But it is not only land that is being sold for a song. Young girls are being sold into concubinage, and worse, the price running from $4 to $25, according to the youth and comeliness of the girl in question. Parents with boy children are selling their male offspring to couples less lucky. Girl children, too young for work or vice, are often being killed by their parents. In Tsinan 25,000 famine district refugees are living and sleeping in the streets, enduring the bitter cold of midwinter, and existing on only one bowl of free gruel a day distributed by the four charity kitchens maintained there. 70 counties Twenty-tw- o , of these which are experiencing famine conditions are reported to be now entirely deserted by human beings. There is to be seen neither man nor smoke, is the way the official report phrases its description. well-to-d- . Members of the county city commissions held a joint cononce in the city hall recently in lard to the proposed paving of two etches to connect the city with pav-- i in the county. One stretch is on ison lane from the Twenty-fourteet viaduct to the line 1 the other is on the Harrisville road m Fve Points, also to connect with line. City and county smeerg were directed to make a the proposed type of pav-another details h city-count- y city-count- y allymirwaUs For sleeping rooms formal parlors and reception halls dining room and living room and for for the library public buildings. Properly applied it wont rub off. Write to us or ask your dealer for a copy of our free drawing The A labas-tin- e Home Color Book 'and a free color card. book for children Write to ns also for our beau- tiful free book Artistic Home Decoration by our Home Betterment Expert, Miss Ruby Brandon, Alabas-tin- e Company, 222 Grandville Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich. Alabastine a powder in white and tints. Packed in packages, ready for use by mixing with cold or warm water. Full directions on every package. Apply with an ordinary wall brush. Suitable for all interior surf aces plaster, wall board, brick, cement or canvas. never drag her away from the looking glass. There she'd sit, hour after hour, day after day, looking nt herself. Gosh, he said one night, stop looking at yourself, for goodness sake. If I was as conceited as you are Id But the film star interrupted him. Im not conceited ! she shrieked. Me conceited! Why, I don't think Im half as beautiful as I really am. Detroit Free Tress. All Right With Her In the campaign to obtain the 192S Republican national convention for Kansas City this year, Arthur Hard-gravpresident of the chamber of commerce, sent messages to members of the National Republican committee, asking suggestions. Through an error one was sent to Sirs. Frances G.' Farley of Wichita, Democratic committeewoinan for Kansas. This was her reply: Acknowledging receipt of your wire of the 24th. Respectfully advise that it will be all right with me if the Republican party fails to hold a national convention this year. Kansas City Star. SBESSSSSSScS Has Many Applications There are three different meanings to the word yankee. It was first applied to natives or citizens of the New England states, particularly those of old New England families. Then It was applied by people of the Southern states to all the people of the Northern states, in general. Lastly, it is applied by the people of other countries to all citizens and inhabitants of the United States. e, Long Silence Ended 50 years ago, James Slason of ' Jilted Great Canfield, England, made a vow to isolate himself for the rest of his life in such a way that he would never look upon the face of a woman again and never see or speak to any man except his brother, Thomas. The two brother, who is now sixty-eigh- t, years younger than James, vowed that he would devote his life to the hermit and guard him from intrusions. On two occasions recently Thomas relaxed his vow in order to permit James to be seen by a pension officer and a clergyman be sent for when James suffered a stroke. Pruning Border Roses Border roses should have little pruning, the removal of the dead wood and the cutting of the whole bush to the ground every five to eight years being bust for most varieties. Lucky Strikes are the Favorite Brand of Paul Whiteman- It was but recently, when I started to act as master of ceremonies with my band at theParamountTheatre,that I realized how vital perfect voice condition was to a I have always been a consistent smoker and fortunately, Lucky Strikes were my favorite brand. I like their toasted flavor and, best of all, I can smoke as often as I like, ivithout fear of irritating my voice, which is becoming a great f) . ct' asset in my work. performer. 66 Its toasted No Throat Irritation-N- o Cough. Dog Digs Up Plunder of Police Murderer Los Angeles. What police failed to do in three years a small fox terrier accomplished within a few minutes recently. Clawing a hole in which to hide 9 bone the dog dug up travelers checks, several hundred dollars worth of jewelry, an automatic pistol, and can of pistol shells half of a in a garage at the rear of the home of Mrs. Elsie Zubries. The discovered valuables, according to police records, comprise a quantity of loot which was cached by Philip Sloper, who was hanged at Folsom June 25, 1925, for the murder of a police officer in San Francisco. Sloper lived at one time, police stated, at the home of Mrs. Zubries. The checks, according to police records, were taken in the robbery of the Multnomah Commercial National bank at Multnomah, Ore., November 6, 1924. A quantity of the jewelry found was Identified by detectives, as having been obtained in the burglary of the home of Mrs. J. E. Schlessinger of this city, October 24, 1924. for so little money I the perfected Girl Hears Hubby Phone Other Girls , Gets Divorce San Francisco. Rules are rules, so Margaret C. McCarthy, sitting at the switchboard in the telephone exchange, would connect her husband with the other girls he called, just as she would for any other subscrib-- . er, she told Judge Sproul at the trial of her suit fof divorce from James J. McCarthy. But then some rules, maybe, are not so important, and Mrs. McCarthy admitted she listened in, which slip does not do for every subscriber. Id see the light from our house would flash on the board, be my husband, calling up some othei girl, she testified. "I had to connect him, of course, but I just could nol help listening in. No wife could. Judge Sproul conceded that it probtoo much to expect of ably would-b- e any wife that she would not listen In under the circumstances. He gave Mrs. McCarthy a divorce. and-ther- OGDEN cl Tobacco Crop it? n BARTER CHILDREN FOR FOOD MORSEL The Cream of the Mayor Thompson of Chicago, congratulated on the 65 per cent crime reduction that he effected in three months, laughed and answered: Why, boy, it's enough to make us all as conceited as the film star, isn't a fit of anger at her husband that she would go to bed and remain there un- Utah la Mo. 40 years ago. In I I Bar Stunt Flying Paris. Dare-devi- l flying and other kinds of aeronautical flirting with death must go. Such is (he dictum of the International League of Aviators, in which 20 nations, including the United States, are represented. $ 585 Redaction 140 New Low Prices Reductions at the Lowest Price in Our History A Quality Car sensational success of the perfected Whippet is due not only to THE remarkable performance qualities, but to the pleasing appear- ance of each of its body types. You will be proud of owning a Whippet and you will thrill at its liveliness. It will deliver you all the speed you want it picks up from 5 to 30 miles brakes will bring it to a stop within 51 in 11.5 seconds; its BIG feet from a speed of 40 miles per hour. Above all, it assures you transEconportation at minimum cost. It holds the A.A.A. omy Record with an average of 43.28 miles to a gallon of gas. Place your order now for early delivery. Coast-to-Coa- Saved the Train Swedesboro, N. J. Richard Overly, colored, thirteen, grabbed an old red tablecloth when he learned of a broken rail, tied it to a stick and waved an oncoming train to a atop. WILLYS-OVERLAN- INC. D, TOLEDO, OHIO st 99 |