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Show Ifj. J ..t ' , ; 'f 'SxH? ''.w FSjV5, " - Jl , v '&!& ? PAGE TWO SHEEP CENTS OP AND TWENTY-FIV- E CLOSE AROUND EIGHT FRIDAY, Friday. The 8P. P&ififi. PEAh-eve- ry MODES SET PACE IN SPRINGS SELL1 KNITTED FASHION PAGEANT MARCS! - SEVENTY-FIV- E . The 8ut Special Sen-iceKANSAS CITY, Mo., March 5. Trade in fat steers tqiened slowly at weak prices, but later became fairly active and was fully steady. An urgent dcuiaud for stockers and feeders strengthened the market when killers tried to get half fat classes at lower prices. Calves, cows and heifers were steady, llogs were in active demand at ten to fifteen rents higher prices than last weeks close and twenty-fiv- e rents higher than a to thirty-fiv- e week ago. Sheep were twenty-fiv- e cents higher aud lambs steady, Receipts today were 14,(NM) cattle, 17,000 hogs and 10,000 sheep, compared with 12.000 rattle, 22,000 hogs ami 8000 5 sheep a week ago, and IflfciU cattle, hogs and 7005 sheep a year ago. The failure of Chicago to show an does and one rooster to hens. These figures show once the economy of beginning im- twenty-fiv- e twenty-on- e at provement in animal breeding with the use of purebred aim. The history of the nationwide movement for better live stock shows, however, that the use of purebred females quickly follows the use of such wales. More than a third of the female live stock and more than of the female poultry listed in the bet tenures campaign are themselves purebred. This promises much more rapid improvement in the quality of the country s live stock than if purebred sires alone were used. Perhaps you may think of Swift & Company as It really consists cf about two-thir- ds people, working together aim. common with a 45,000 of these own shares in the business. O ver 50,000 of them are workers in GvIfi : Company. 16,000 cf the workers arc share100, COO Contracts Large Clip. 12,-07- Many da affair. a one family MOAB, March 3. The Moab-Cisc- o wool tool has sold its clip, which will advam-in fat steers, caused weaker be around a hundred and tweutv-fiv- e bids to lie placed at the outset here. thousand Hunds, to a Boston, Mass., Later, however, the deniund broadened concern, for the flat price of forty-fou- r some and as the movement over the and forty-fiv- e cents. There will Scales increased prices strengthened be no discounts for tags and for wind. and closed fully slcady. Most of the Shearing of the fleeces will begin at steers killers took brought $3.25 to Cisco, April ltlth, and the estimate is fSl.UO and "dugie" and plain classes made that they will average eight sold at $0.50 to $3.00. Cows and heif- IHiunds. The shearing will be dune by ers sold rapidly at steady prices. Kill- machine exclusively. Sheepmen comers were more anxious for them than prising the pool are Don Taylor, Max for some time ast aud receipts were Taylor, II. O. (Ireen, V. P. Martin, D. moderate. Choice yearlings were very L. (Joudelock, I). 51. Cooper and Joe scarce. Veal calves were quoted steady Donnelly. A number of tli stockmen to weak. Top $10.50. The higher ask- nauied are also included in the Indian ing for South Texas steers suitable for Creek Cattle company. The price of summer grazing on Northern grass, shearing hus not as yet been determinowing to rains, have turned considera- ed usin between the owners and shearble demand to the local market. De- ers. Lust year the figure was ten cents mand for fleshy steers that can be giv- a head, hand or machine. An advance en a short finish is large also, and the payment of a dollar per fleece was made. prices ruled strong. llog JWelptS Mere below expectaruled ten cents high tions and pru-eTariff Faili to Check. er than last weeks close and twenty-fiv- e BVENOS AlItKS, March 3. Trecents higher than dictions at the new American tariff to thirty-fiv- e the low point a week ago. The top on wool, anich went into effect last price was $3.25, and the bulk of the September, would practically prohibit good hogs sold at $3.10 to $8.25. Pack- the exMirtation of River Platte fleeces ing sows brought $7.25 to $7.40 and to the United States have not been fulpigs around $7.50. Demand showed a according to an article in "Comconsiderable urgency and indications filled, ments On Argentine Trade," publishwill advance are that a further prevail ed by the American Chamber of Comin the next few days. merce here. On the contrary, says the Though receipts were fairly liberal writer, the United States has bought lambs held steady. Most of the light- more wool in this market than any othweight grades sold at $14.50 to $14.60, er country since the tariff of thirty-on- e and the heavier classes sold at $13.50 cents a Mund on clean content cents up. up. Sheep were twenty-fiv- e effective. the Choice ewes brought $7.75, highest price of the season. WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF Demand for horses and. mules conEASTERN UTAH tinues to show liberal proportions and As vet none of the sheepmen at Price offerings are being cared for at steady have disposed of their wind. It is said prices. most of them are holding out for fifty n t holders. Pages 19, cf our 11 SO c if S3 year Cco:c. jurt-- ': ::: .:r:l, or;.: r c r: who and win t ; : v V : in a way ihz-- ko-- ?. yen ir stand all indusky :r.v i ates, why it hr;fj ta operate k! juct w : : 5 : that vjiy. And it ,telis cf the that has mads 'Swiftr. Prerrinn Ham and Bacon, Brcikiicli Gutter - and Eggs, and Srockiield usage, household words for cxookcncc. Repo tf s handsome. Plaids, stripes, Navajo By JULIA B0TT0MLEY An imposing array of fascinating patterns interknitted of Bilk on knitted modes marks the advance of the plainstitch wool is very effective. spring fashion pageant. In the styl- The handsome suit here illustrated is ing of knitted apiarel creative art has in French toast color with brown and risen to heights of masterly achieve- ecru strijies knitted into the skirt and ment lioth in color and design. Imag separate slipon. ine, if you ideuse, a knitted skirt with Beyond description is the loveliness a wide border of interknit embroidery of the sllwhite two and three-piec- e inatclied with one of the smart short knitted silhoutte, such as are at this coats which also boasts a silken ul lover very moment a prevailing mode at Palm Beach, Fla., and other sunnysky embroidery pattern.' I f you are in a tailored mood you will winter resorts. 51 any of these show the find at your disjwsal handsome plain allover embroidery effects attained by wool knit suits collared, cuffed and intermingling silk floss in knitting. girdled with knit bands of pure or lus- Long knitted capes with fur collars trous filler silk. When the trimming will be the vogue for summer. Pearl details are carried out in contrasting ay and caramel Blmdes fof erejies, cents. color it makes for even greater effec- gf collared in platinum fox or Hill Cooley of Moab the jiast week tiveness. For instance, a sandcolored caracul, are forecast for the coming shipped to Kansas City six hundred wool suit with collar, cuffs and tie gir- months. With these simple onepiece head of limbs that averaged eighty dle knit of bright henna silk is very matched knitted frocks will be worn. pounds. They were winter fed on his Castle Valley ranch on alfalfa and corn. HOABTIES CIVDI STICK all-ov- er r o , pv'".Uf , i lie-ca- ENTRIES IN BIO SHOW DISCLOSE WIDESPREAD INTEREST The sixth annual Intermountuin Lave Stock show to be held at the North Salt Lake stockyarda April 2d to 7th, inclusive, ia expected to give Utahns and other stock and dairymen of this section of the West splendid opjiortu-nitie- s HERDER SLAYS LION for the purchase of purebred cattle for the augmenting and replenishing of their herds. According to those in charge of the forthcoming Tried to Get His Goat, But Shot Lays ths Beast Low. show there will be on exhibition pnd for sale the choicest individual animals in America, both in cattle and Awakened at an early hour in the dairy stock. It is hoped that those en- morning by a disturbance in his goat gaged in the dairy industry in the corral, George Kitzakis had an encounStates will take advan- ter with a mountain lion out on Fish tage of the opportunities to lie offered Creek, seven miles up in the hills from to secure sires and dams applicable to Wellington, about a week ago. Tracks their varied herds and that the indus- observed previously indicated the prestry as a whole will thereby be given ence in the locality of three of these great impetus. predatory beasts. The lion of this story In the dairy cattle division there will a female Imd jumted into the corbe exhibited and offered for sale on ral and seized one of the goats, and the auction block some of the cou- was attempting to get away with it. ntrys finest sHcinien of Guernseys, liitzakia, with a single slu t from his Jerseys and Holsteins, including sev- rifle, put the big cat to its death. His eral reeordbreakers in the production bullet penetrated the vital .orguns of of milk and liutterfats. Among these the lion. A heavy wind, carrying a are China Priiwess. the wonderful Jcr- - little snow, was blowing at the time, aev owned by a O. Smoot, of Provo j The herder was mistrust ful of lliodead She is the liudcteated dairy queen ot s quietude and put arniiplemorc Utah and baa just completed her years j bullets through its body before with n record of producing four-- , prunr-hinit. The prize measured vrrv teen thousand imunds of milk and nnd a half feet from tip to cn hundred and sixty pounds of but-- j tijj. Kitzakis was exhibiting the pelt ttfrfat. in a local coffeehouse in Price cnrly Announcement wns made following this week. It seems that just at this e meetings last week of the Zion the stHte has no funds for lioun-be- r of Commerce live stock committee, tv payment for these animals. Stock that entries for the allow continue fo:0'n the range in the vicinity of thekill-arriv- e in large numbers with practic-- i j11, has suffered considerably. A venr ally every section of the cattlcpmw-in- g ago one herder lust fifteen hend in states represented in the entries one night, and another reHirt tallies ferwarded anl assured. Among entries eventeenkincHl from one hunch received lately are those of stockmen in Ban Antonio, Tex.. 'and Ontario, IRACTOR MUST SHOW RESULTS Cana. These show that this years show TO BE PROFITABLE will surjiass all previous ones as to careful selection of exhibits as to tyjie. If the tractor ia to lie profitable on lbe and numbers. farm, says the United States dequality partment of agriculture, it should WHY GOOD QUALITY IN SIRES IS make jKissilde the accomplishment of at lenst one of these things a reducMOST IMPORTANT tion of the number of work stock on Although the sire and the dam con- the farm, a reduction of the amount of tribute equally to the heredity of an hired help required, the fanning of an animal, the influence of the former in increased acreage or an increase in the a herd or flock is much greater than amount of crops produced. With the v any one of the females because in prnc- - addition of a tractor to the farm all rases a sire is the parent of iment there will necessarily be some a much larger number of offspring changes in the methods of oMrating than the dam. Figures kept by the land perhaps a reorganization of the United States depart mint of agricul- - type of farming will be possible. Some ture, repiesenting the proportion of surveys of a number of places where males to females on nmre than eight tractors have Wen owned and operated thousand and nine hundred farms in have hern made hy the department and fortv-si- x states, show that the male show what changes lake place on the lias thirteen to thirty times more in- - average farm under tractor conditions. Ihicnoe than the female among all Farmers' Bulletin No. 12!'fi, Change-- , classes of animals in determining the! Effected Bv Tractors ( hi ('urn Belt has jn- -t boeji character of the "flspring. Timer With ties arc based on than a million ' the information set head of breeding stuck listed with th- itinii who to buy a department in the "Better Sire-Bter Stork." The figures that mi 'determine the average farm where pnrehri-dthe tnn tnr r The Moab high school basketball team lost its chance to compete in the state tournament, when it was defeated Saturday night at Huntington by the Carbon county high school team, says last Fridays Moab score wns thirty to twenty-five. The game is described as a foul pitching contest, the Price team making eighteen of its thirty points in free throws. The referee, Scegmiller of Huntington, is said to be still out of breath as a result of his whistle blowing proclivities. He culled twenty-on- e CARBON HOSPITAL New Management up-wo- rk sev-jn,.- 1) IKE DIRTY Send for a copy FREE Swift &.Ccmprny 1 023 V e.ir2ook Adtlrris: Swift & Corr.pcr.y, Public htiau. ; U. S. Yards, Chlwro U-- Swift OF IKE A personal fouls on Moab and thirteen on Price. Three of Moabe star players were thrown out of the game no one seems to know why and the local lineup was so badly crippled that they had little chance. At that they made more field throws than Price, registering eighteen in earned throws to twelve secured by Price. Local people who saw the game state that the 5foah boys were held back as firmly as if their hands had lieen tied. No sooner would they commence a play than the referee would blow his whistle and penalize the team fur an alleged ersonaI foul. The local rooters came home completely disgusted, and declared that the peo-pl-e of Huntington and 5Iohrland who saw the game also maintain the local team did nst have a fair sluike. Peterson, the center, Taylor, a guard, nnd Hector, forward, were thrown out of the game, thus further seriously crippling the Moab organization. The final score: ar Battoa-wi- ds & Company, u. s. Ak I u orfaniutiiii owned by mora tbaa 45)00 iWthsidin Vi m tax A As a prize for the township killing the largest number of gophers, Iindon won a purebred Holstein bull given hy Cavalier county, N. I)., in its 1!W2 They were well cleaned up, saving the county four hundred and ten thousand bushels of grain on a conservative estimate and ever? farmer in the township now has the privilege of breeding to the hull for a small fee charged.to help defray the expense of keeping him. The prize promises to lie of much benefit to the daily industry. cain-iaig- n. The American tomato weevil antha noeiva lea) has been (fc fooit. of Hie United States department culture to be established at a m ' of points along the coast of Mi ' pi in addition to the previous at infestation. It is now reported t five distinct places in Harrison if ' , ty, two in Stone, and one in This indicates that the original ic duction occcurrcd presumably earlier date than was heretofore f ,r- - ';Bd ' Id 1 WTA posed. ' A- - I. f St CAItBOV j Cham--fim- ) - Dont Miss This Twenty Beds, and An Ambulance In Service. Modern DR. MODEL C W.P. WINTERS Proprietor PRICE, UTAH Dr. Winters Will Answer All Calls. Day or Night I eqiiip-ticall- j , in-r- - It Lasts.... Tlie local team, which rctunied home today, were in four games while on its trip. 5Innday night they played a return game with the fast King Ivoal quint at Mnhrlnnd, and on Tuesday evening the Huntington town team, the locals being defeated in each contest. Moab was crippled by the illness of Lance and the fact that Peterson had sustained a dislocated thumb Saturday night. Lat night, a second match with the Cnrlion team was played at Frice, flic local hoys being again defeated to sixteen. Moab played all thirty-tw1hee games under a severe handicap. :due to Peterson's injury nnd Lnnee's i!lucs, and hardly cxjiecied to enmc out a winner in either contest. o $ Plumbing $ the kind that lasts at a price that does not hurt. The Alabama has the largest acreage in peanuts of any sjatc, to re-jirjs ot ilip I'n'icd States l,:irtiutit f .'igrienliuio. In IV.J atm it twuhnn- . di'c-,. rt- - iiovotcd lo sooner you call ns the quicker we will he there. r ' sta.r:i-to i'iw; ( one thine,, n ran: Ini early 'tv cue-- ; r twenty he aide e has - r J"- .. . ! o1ii,i.;-- vn!; i J., ill i IS Nonti I'iirliili T i : : 1 !lll o'-t'- P $ t; In II AulcyS&op ."Si Safefy Razor Sharpens its own blades RAZOR-- 3 blades-stro- p OttE DOLLAR jt.iv- t r l. liiiv tl.e I C. H. STEVENSON LUMBER CO. s !tl.is One Piece Or a UarloncP - J Tel. No. Du ii cl- Reed Plumbing and Healing VALET -- Ca Pa TO-DA- Y In Every Respect -- UMi.i'iirL' in . j ii ' ii ii It t is i.iv i, I tr-;-'- . shallow. : t Phones A 111 or 26, Price, Utah. 52SSS' |