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Show THE SUN, PRICE. UTAH EVERY SRXDAY. JIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1923 8. 195 LAMBS STANDARD COAL lOVAliff FlflY CENIS TO FOURTEEN IS U SEVUm-F- l He Wa a Man of Shipped Everywhere. . The Sun Special Service. Be- eember 1, 1021 22. Jan. au increase due to Mo., CITY, KANSAS in Colorado feeding was rush a there operations cause of light receipts and extern Nebraska and to increasfifrose and prices to buy hogs today ed supplies at feeding stations adjateen to twenty rents to within five of cent to Chicago. Of the two prineijial the highest of the winter packing sea-Tl- feeding areas, the corn belt states and the 11 extern irrigated region, the largtop was $8.55 and bulk of est increase was in the latter 40 per sales $8.30 to $82)0. Lambs cre quot- cent above January 1, 1022, as agaiust most-fiftto fifty cents 25 er cent ed up tweutv-fiv- e on December 1, best lightweights selling up 1022, above December 1, 1921. For the corn belt states the area east of the to $14.75. Trade in eattle was quiet at is estimated at 14 per eent weak to slightly lower prices except Hississipid stoi-ker- s and feeders and they were above January 1, 1922, and the area firm. Quality of the offerings averag- west at 12 per cent, as compared to an increase of ll) jier cent on ed plain, Receipts today were 17,000 indicated Decemlier 1. 1922, above Decemlier 1, as 4000 and sheep, eattle, 14,000 hogs for Uith areas. Although there compared with 17,000 eattle, 23,000 1921,' this indicated large increase over is week and a ago hogs and 15,000 sheep 1, 1 !22. attention is railed to 12,450 eattle, 11.225 hogs and 11.2(H) January the fact that sheep and lamb feeding Kansas City a prices sheep year ago. for l'at steers were relatively higher were oq a much restricted scale a year late last week than Chicago and today ago. Present indications are that the further weakness was reported at the supply of finished stock during the lake market. This eaused a slow trade first four monihs of 1923 will be almut same a during the same itcriod in at the outset but later demaud improv- the ed amT prices for the day averaged 1921. steady to fifteen cents lower. Quality Utah Well Represented. of the offerings was ouly fair and was finish of liv prosH-cia Encouraged for a with allowing nothing iri tin wool and sheep in shown. The hulk of the steers sold at jear $8.00 to $0.00 wiih a few hunches at dustry, six representative Utah flock $0.25 to $0.50. lrices for fat rows and masters left Zion last Tuesday for heifers were steady. Canners and cut- SMikane, Wash., to attend the annual ters lower. Veal calves and bulls were convention of the National Wisilgrow in active demand. Some choice feed- ers association, when they exect to ers Mild at $8.00 to $8.35. Stockers at receive equally paid news from tle $7.50 to $7.85 and were quoted fully sheepmen from many sections of the steady. The plainer claxses were hut country. These six will represent Utah slightly lower, hut found a ready out- organizations, while P. It. Marshall, let. Stock calves, stock cows and heif- secretary of the National WonlgruW' ers association, will hIsii be at the con ers were in moderate supply. Decreased receipts last week follow- vent ion in his capacity of a national ed by moderate runs at the oiieiiin officer. The convention oiened last this week put the buying side againsf Wednesday. The delegation selected supplies that were short of an urgent by the Utah Woplgrowers association need and prices rallied fifteen to twen- are Janies A. Hooper of Salt take ty cents. Demand was urgent from all City, W. S. Hanen of Logan, W. 11 sources. The top price was $8.55 and Tehbs of languitch, II. W. Harvey of hulk of sales $8.30 to $8.50. Packing Hehcr City and Henry Moss of Bounsows sold at $7.50 to $7.00 and pigs at tiful. Practically every sheepraising $7.75 to $8.25. The market will prob- section of the state is represented by ably show no further advance this this group. In addition to this number week as packers at all markets have M. A. Smith of Salt take City goes as lieeu trying to get the cost of droves a representative of the Uintah Forest below eight cents. (Irnzers' association.'). In most cases lumhs were up fifty cents, and the general trade indicates Helping the Range. that killers here are behind on their MANILA, Jan. 29. The January orders. Most of the wooled lambs sold thaw which struck this part of the at $14.50 to $14.75. Clipjied lambs at country a few days ago has resulted in $12.00 to $12.35. Few fat sheep were improving range condioffered. Some' feeding laniln brought wonderfully tions for sheep and stock in general. i $14.25. Many herds that were in the valley on Fairly lilteral receipts of horses and full feed have keen able to go out onto mules for this week's auctions are the range again, and stock in the fields meeting a very good demand at steady are thriving with a greatly reduced raprices. tion of hay. The roads also lie tween THE GOLDEN FLEECE," IS NEW here and Green River, Wyo., have been greatly improved by thawing weather FILM ON WOOL and trucks are running regularly once mo- more. "The golden fleece, a one-retion picture on phases of wool hand ling and marketing, haa just been re- WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF EASTERN UTAH leased fur distribution by the United ie . ? Properties At Standardville , Utah da No Dust, No Ashes, No Clinkers . i uw Unexcelled For Storage Purposes . ICE STANDARD COAL ' CO. SALT LAKE CITY UTAH General Officea ' Ninth Floor Kearns Bids. tor 'CARBON HOSPITAL New Manasement lldrea 'tab. avian ld(. Twenty Beds, and An lance In Service. Ambu- - t ? Modern Prld In Every Respect Utah. DR. W. P. WINTERS IE Proprietor PRICK UTAH 1 DC. Dr. Winters Will Answer All Calls. Day or Night RAT? y, s & I UTAHS Moods By MARTHA WILLIAMS en-lai- ed ffin.d iii Carbon Comity and PAGE SEVEN uvs-pero- us ? ? Y When he waa anything, glad, or sad, glad, aad or mad all or mad. he th over. Ilence all the Joy waa in his singing, as bis horse road paced soberly along the woods to the little log church. Never had there been quite auch a Sunday the all deep woods were still dewy and the spread of them scented with the rare sweetness of wild grape blossom. Birds sang, not too loudly, rather iu toft, broken snatches; lush young leafage made shadow marvels on the road earth and the sun rsys were true gold. Michael felt them shining In his heart the same as on his bare head for was he not one and twenty, free at last from a curmudgeonly guardian, five to speak out as became a man and claim hla sweetheart ? Helen of Troy A wonder-womathey had raved over at school had nothing on her, be w assure. Josefa Kenyon waa older than liluiself, but what did five years matter I Reticent also nobody knew more of tier than the happenings of two years since lie came to teach In the village academy. To be sure, she bad brought references of the highest and had reinforced them by a walk and way wholly impeccable. The most explicit of the references, with a bishops name at the foot, said she had lost a husband under most distressing circumstances six months after marriage. But she had not worn mourning. But what with all the current flitter of and married talk about Individuality, it passed for simple oddity; five years earlier It would have been rated mysteriously criminal. She had fine, high manners; the most critical could not gainsay thut, any more than her low. dear voice, tf Y Y HIAWATHA, ?Y KING, BLACK HAWK, Y Y fY ?Y We want to impress npoa yon the loot that one plumbing work la of a senior era do. That la the only khd that atanda the teat of time and aMnrea perfect satisfaction. Also, 0 want to remind yon that our are aa low as la humanly with work that la Orth paying for, lng Reed Plumbing and Heating If North Eighth ROGER TeL No. MO ESS S-- H fHOLESALE age CO Cigars Dry Climate, Fiancee, For-- , I tanndow- - Job hem. Osndy Assortment of Fenny Sturt, Bulk and Hve and Ten Cent Bara. Bacflera Chocolates, Bathing Girl Bank . Racks. Iwwar to Rarnmv, Now Cloned. Phono lM. Speed. Service, Silvagnl Bklg Price, I'tah FIELD INSPECTION WORK TO BE SHOWN ON SCREEN "Guarding live stock health," a new film recently released by the United States department of agriculture, shows the operations of the field inspection service of the bureau of animal industry. Attention is called to the large number entering all the big stockyards each day and the fact that many of these are returned to farms as slickers and feeders. Should some of the animals lie diseased they wonld serve to spread infection through the country. Therefore a thorough search for tretes of disease is made. Among the operations picturized are examination of railroad records to discoer violations of the twenty-eighours law ; examinatin for any traces of the foot and mouth disease, hog cholera, cattle mange, sheep scabbie, glanders and tuberruhisis; quarantining of rattle infested with the fever tick, and disinfection of pens and railroad cars that have held diseased animals. The film may lie borrowed from the department for limited periods or copies may be bought at the cost of printing. one-re- The era of free first-claland in the United States has passed, accordss ing to the United States department of agriculture. Nearly half that of conti-- nental United States is now in farms. Of this area forty million acres are absolute desert or too rugged to eulti vate, two hundred and seventy million arc occupied by forests and cutover land and six hundred million are d the West and suitable only K semi-ari- AS for grazing. I Shipments of grapes from California ve ,n,rewd steadily during the last reaching a total of approx- - Am mpv thousand cars this ,conl imately thirty-eigaccording to reports of the Unit r. w ht i at C. y. si te th y8.States department of agriculture. w t Don 't wear yonr heart on your sleeve except when it is broken. By doing then yon collect interest, sympathy and sometimes large damages from the jury. ht Industry Shorn Gains. .. ?ere 8 8 time and a place for al things, but too often we dont know CHICAGO, Ills., Jan. 19. There the one and can't find the other. were approximately 20 jier cent more sheep and lambs on feed on January 1, lik to dwell a,yeraire.?an upon 1923, than on January 1. 1922, accord of others. It enables him to ing to the estimate issued today by the ;tM division of crop and live stock esti.forget his own. mates of the United States bureau of By wishing your enemy a happy new agricultural economics. This compares you might convert him into with an estimated increase of 20 per eent on December 1, 1922, above De- - Sir able- - el T. A. Ring is buying np hogs in the Basin country for shipment to the outside. B. 8. Hammond, a Moab sheeman, shipied three hundred bead of feeder lambs from Thompsons to Kansas City some ten days ago. An organization of the small sheep-raiseof Uintah county has been through the farm bureau. A full set of officers are to be rhosen methods used to reand ceive better prices for wool and sheep. Shipment of feeder hogs from Uin-taBasinpoints to Salt take City eost less than two rents a xund. They netted $5.80. Three hundred and twenty-fiv- e were recently driven from Vernal to Watson and from there shipjied by rail. At the annuul meeting of the Manti National Forest Woolgrowers association held in Ephraim last week J. C. Mellor of Manti was elected president, Janies E. Cook of Fountain Green, vice president; A. C. Madsen of Mt. Pleasant, L. B. Xeilson of Ephraim, Lewis Nielson of Fountain Green and Frank Maylette from Manti, directors, and Janies Frost of Ephraim, secretary. Range conditions in seventeen West era States improved 1 per eent during last December, averaging 85 ler eent of normal on January 1st, compared with an average of 84 cr cent on 1st. Improvement was made in the range mnditiona of Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Montana, Colorado, Utah and California. A declining condition was noted in North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas, Wyoming, New Mexico, Nevada and Washington. Although there are actually fewer beef cattle in the United States at present than there have been in previous years, it is now possible to raise more beef each year than when there were more eattle. This somewhat contradictory statement is explained by lt the United States department of are, which shows that a larger proportion of beef cows are kept on the ranches and farms and beef cattle are slaughtered at an earlier age than used to be the praetice. More than a dozen live stock producers organizations which filed complaints with the secretary of agriculture under the packers and stockyards act against commission market agon cies. members of live stock exchanges in Kansas Citv, Omaha, St. Paul, Chi rago. Fort Worth and Portland, Ore., charging that unjust and discriminait was tory rates were being exacted, announced last Monday from M D. C., have agreed to submit their grievances to adjustment by arbitration instead of by formal meth- er agri-cu- ash-ingto- n, Continued on Fnge Eight) Married T 818 g ' Kenyon beside her. He recalled the fact only incidentally to his memory of Josefa. How he loved the name they would be Joe and Mike, one to another. In the big Bond bouse shut up since hie father died ten years beck. She knew what was In bis heart she must also know what was in hla mind. It must be she who had eent him twenty-on- e roses yesterday he had clutched them so hard, great baby that he was; his palm had been deeply pricked with There had been no savage thorn. card, but he fancied he caught a hint of the faint perfume all her belong Ings exhaled In the blue ribbon binding them. Faint as it was It thrilled him all through. He bad the ribbon, tenderly folded. In the pocket nearest his heart Which makes It plain that, In the language of adolescence, he bad it bad, very, very biyL Of course he wee chaffed, bat whit did that matter? Thrice Intoxicated with love and freedom, he wee reedy to laugh down aD the worlds laughing. Flinging his i Kearns Building, SALT LAKE CITY, reins to s black boy in malt for such harvests be all but ran alxmt the shaded grounds in search of the Downe carriage, only to fiud It empty. The driver, sprawled on the ground hard by, stirred sleepily to say: White ladles done gone ter listen at de preachin." The bouse was packed, hut somehow Michael crushed himself Inside, and for five minutes feast ed his aching eyes on the fare he worshiped. He saw It In profile, hence did not mark the change In It at first. It was not paler than usuul, but so tense It seemed gray. As his sight cleared he saw that she at aa might a wild beast crouch.nl for a deadly spring. Her eyes burned upon the narrow pulpit and the man within it He waa ascetic-looking- , tall, wasted, with cavernous hollows beneath eyes that gazed downward, and deep graven lines encircling a cruelly beautiful mouth. In a thrilling voice, low but resonant, trained in every art speech has ever evolved he waa beseeching, entreating all within sound of It to forsake the world and lte allurements, give np earth for Heaven, nil listeners, for the most part solid, stolid farmer folk, swayed and stirred like tftl grain In ruffling breexe. Amazement had begun the stir June meeting was no time nor place for revival But as the voice played appeals. upon them aa s master harper upon hla Instrument, they Inst themselves In the flood-tid- e appeal. ."Foot washing for humility, heart waahlng for cleansing of sin, soul washing for life everlasting," he ended suddenly, leaping down and almost tunning along the narrow aisle. Mrsi Kenyon, sitIn his ting beside It, arose wraith-lik- e path, clutched him, and said, her winds dropping like molten lead: "Tell us wliat washing can make a her soft, deft hands not over white but alluring to view and touch. She dressed with the exact degree of quiet trimness her position demanded, went regularly to church, made neither debta nor confidences and had bnt one ingle friendly intimate Sara Downe, the least promising of her pupils. She had gone home with Sara for the big meeting the Downe house neighbored the little log church. Squire' Downe was, indeed. Its prop and stay, aa became a ruling elder of the Primitive Baptists, who were still primitive enough to hold fast to the yearly June as the crown bf meetlnV Services began early eight o'clock at the latest Ilence Michael's Journey while the sun wee still young likewise his choice of the wood road. The big road waa certain to be thronged cars, carriages, even farm wagons, overflowing with happy, langhlng humanity and good cheer. Dinner on the ground wee ea much feature of the day as the footwashing. Sara Downe had made sure of Michael s her fathers guest bidding him over and over as she drove homeward In the ramshackle carriage with Mrs. y STEVENSON LUMBER CO. Pries, Utah Utah Coal Sales Agency t Thle Man Seven Years Back. foot-washin- Far Any of the Above Choice Fuels Can On nMVVVMMAWAMVVWWMAAVMVVVVVMWVUVWW 1 UTAH --u sovoir years Dact i a foolish young girl, bewitched by his eloquence. It was money money he wauted money I was due to Inherit from my uncle, lie died suddenly In an aeddent then It came out that he had been privately married to a pretty, poor girl, whom he had Imon ashamed to acknowledge. But she bad given him a child. As a late atonement he bad willed his fortune to the hahy with reversion to me if the little one died. It T fiihVned disappeared, nobody know how. Its mother grieved herself insane for It then my husbaml," her Tolre breaking over the wool, "moved to get for me what he culled my rights.' I defied him I knew he had mndo away with the child, though I could not prove It But I would not touch the money, not even when he threatened to kill me. But I told him I would accuse him ojienly unless he went out of my sight and knowledge and gave over his pulpit work. War came Juat then. He rushed Into It I lost all trace of him. Was It wrong lu me to pray that he had died? Kow I find him here I the bitterness of death In the word preaching faith and repentance to you clean-aoule- d people. Bay what does he deserve?" An Inarticulate roar as of a atomy sea answered her. Before it broke Into words the man fell In n crumpled heap at hla wife's feet Two gaapa, and ha waa dead. She looked at him with burning eyes but sighed : "Thank God for hla weak heart "Mine la strong enough to shelter you always, Michael whispered as he led her away. The birth of two bull buffalo calves during November waa rejwrted to the biological survey of the United State department of agriculture. One was at Wind Cave preserve and one at Sully Hill preserve. This makes a total of a hundred and four buffaki calves last season on the preserves, which are de- ignated as the National basin range, Nibrara reservation, Wind Cave and Sullya Hill. The death of one calf at Sullys is the only one reported of all those born. dean?" "The poor creature la quite mad she must be," he said, trying to flee himself. "I do not know her has she any friends?" "A hundred Tm only the nearest, Michael cried. He had rushed to Josefa as ha saw her rise. Theyll follow her you come with me ouP side. Well get at the truth no matOctober traffic through the Panama ter who It hurts." canal made a new high record with the "Let me speak It here In the house passage of two hundred and ninety-fovessels and from which tolls that of God, In the face of His true folMrs. Kenyon said steadily. amounted to $1,225,508 were collected. lowers, child-steal- -- I PANTHER. a H. Y rs per-fect- X X A A Y el States deiiartment of agriculture. It deals with the vicissitudes of a latter-da- y Jason, who finds in the proper grading of the wool he has to sell a solution for the problems arising in his particular quest for the golden fleece. Realizing that cleanliness and care in handling gives him no advantage under the old system with the itinerant junkman as the buyer, this Jason joins a woolgrowers organization and sells his on grade, thus getting a price commensurate with the high quality of his clip and learning that a clean fleece in its rightfnl grade is the true "golden fleece." At the same time his neighbor, Old Man Hidelwund, who thinks that cleanliness in handling wool is immaterial, finds lhat it is very vital and profitable when wool is sold on actual grade. This film includes closcup pictures of the tentative grades and an excellent series of scenes illustrating the use of the box recommended by the department fur tying wool. "The golden fleece" is a contribution from the bureau of agricultural economics. It may lie borrowed from the department for limited jieriods or copies may he bought at the cost of printing. V jv Y Siwlpx JMI, or McCIbi A man of uiooda waa Michael Bond. f BEST COAL er ur f I Best Real Estate Bargain In TYT f fr tT tf t Ninety frontage by thirteen and f Y half rods depth. Adjoins the Silvagni t on the south and building at t Y South Eighth street. Will dispose of of thirty feet frontage. f X whole or cut Is feet in Price a faces as a to lots A Part cash and terms. $ : Y ! ! t R. W. CROCKETT AGENT PRICE, UTAH ?ff fT t NEW QUEEN CITY CAFE OPEN DAY AND NIGHT First Door East Postoffice ttT PRICE, UTAH |