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Show f k ' THE SUV, PRICE, PAGE TWO M (mines or HAT AT FROM $12.00 THE TO $13.10 Tb 8un Special Service. UTAH-EVE- RT FRIDAY. rRIDAT. JANUARY 11. 1934 UTAH OF THE CONDITION OF THE PRICE COMMERCIAL & SAVINGS BANK ness On the Slat Day o t December, 1922. RESOURCES. Doans and discounts ..... Stocks, bonds and securities, etc. Kankinarhouse O titer real estate owned Due from federal reeene bank Due from other banks and cash on hand Federal reserve bank stock United Btatea bonds and certificates deposited in savings Total ..11,015,411.(4 LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid In Surplus fund Deserved for taxes and interest, and depreciation net .5291.470.29 Deposits subject to check Cashier's checks 5,181.24 Certified checks . 182.54 Dividends unpaid 451.00 Total demand deposits . 401,2(4.57 Postal saving deposits I 21.502.07 Tims certificates 25,598.80 Savings deposits IST.2T0.U Total tims deposit 444,221.15 United States bonds and certificates deposited In savings 27,280.00 KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 7. Cat-ti- e vi tat ion to deliver an address during receipt at the riiiial Western the convention. markets were liberal today, the result of moderation in weather conditions NATIONS GROWERS OF HEAT AT ZION THIS MONTH which have been retarding shipments for the past two weeks. Prices for fat More than a thousand delegates, repcattle ruled steady to fifteen cents lowevery woolgrowiug state in er, stockers and feeders were steady resenting and calves were down fifty cents to a the union, are to gather at Salt Like dollar. Hog prices advanced ten to fif- City January 22d to 24th, inclusive, in They will meet teen cents under an active demand. No national convention. vear this confident the future," of and laiuks were fully sheep arrived F. K. Marshall, secretary of the steady. lteceipU today were 22,000 cat- say AVoolgrowers' association. tle, 15,000 hogs and 0000 sheep, com- National the last two years the busiDuring pared with 11,000 rattle, 12,000 hogs ness has been in a healthy condition and 5000 sheep a week agr ind 1350 has contributed largely to the prescattle, 18,500 hugs and 8000 sheep a and ent agricultural recovery in the West. year ago. While many growers are still in debt, Total Though trade ia fat rattle opened .51.015.411.04 are being made and the fupayments Btate of County of Carbon Carl H. Msrcusen. being first duly sworn slowly with bids fifteen to twenty-fiv- e is bright. Present conditions and according to Utah, ture law, deposes and says that he is cashier of the above bank- cents lower there was fairly active delambs that the above and foregoing report contains a full, true and correct statement mand later and some kinds that suited prospects suggest good yields of of the of condition bank the said at the flow of business on the 81st day of De wool in 1924 with fair priced orders were steady and moat other and' for the camber, 1821. CAKL U. MAKCU8EN. convention include Topics classes were off ten to fifteen cents. Correct Attest: of improvement marketing, CAKLOS GUNDERSON. Some ordinary steers, especially the methods of finance and better utiliza- NEIL M. MTRENt dogie class,1' were twenty to twenty-fiv-e tion of H. B. GOETZMAN, Directors range forage. Among those eents down. The best steers offer Subscribed and sworn to before me this 7th day of January isi w ed sold at $9.25 to $ 10.00. but nothing w?ib CROCKETT, Notary Public Residing At Price, Utah. Seal My commission With much finish was offered. expires October 14, 1822. State of Utah, Office of Bank Commissioner I, Beth Plxton bank md heifers were quoted weak to fifof the state of Utah, do hereby certify that the la a teen eents lower. Moat of the offerSuccesi la Assured. true and correct copy of tha statement of the above namedforegoing filedfull, A medium to Of January. 1914. thla 2th Commissioner! office my Say PISTON, ings were plain Bank Interest manifested generally by the grt? good many rows were off of wheat assures the suncess of the atockgrowen fields. Choice cows were scarce and no Seventh Annual Intermountain Live THEY HAVE GREAT HOPES OVER AN OFFICIAL NOTICE finished heifers arrived. Yeal calves stoek.ahow to be held at the Balt Lake WOODSIDE SHOWING were fifty cents to a dollar lower. The Union stockyards April 1st to 5th, infair-lwas stm-ker- s feeders and ih trade 0 M 44444 clusive, in the opinion of R, N aa 8 50044444I 1 1 1 I Geologist for tha Utah Oil Refining active at steady price! except for maw-jr- e the exhihi- of There has BALT LAKE CITY, Utah. Dec. 0 company at Salt Lake City stated last the common classes and they were low- never been a time when a well balanc28. 1521. Wa desire that priest- Wednesday that the fact that water er, There wae a very good inquiry fur ed fat stock show was more in order 4 hood quorums and priesthood ac- had been encountered in the Woodaide buuches Several feeders. atlarge tlvitlee shall receive especial 4 test at about fleshy as an educational measure than next hundred and thirty-tw- o stackers at stake to tention the sold Texas 4 quarter- 4 $6.85 up of during Dr. Mead says. Cattle 4 ly conferences The feet did no consider that Janbe April," In seventy held 4 te they $7.35. industry is coming bark into its own. 4 uary, February and March, 1824. 4 this is a true test of that structure by Hog prices were ten to fifteen eents Prices for fat rattle of quality are 4 We recommend, therefore, that tha 4 any means, but that drilling would be presidencies of stakes set aside the 4 continued and officials higher than Saturday and back to the steadily on the incline. Cattle that are 4 of the company - 4j of conferfirst the 4 day quarterly high puint of the season. The top price fat, inclined to he heavy and with 4 encea for conelderatlon of work 4 are still hopeful of encountering ou waa (7 A0 and the bulk of sales $6.90 quality, will find the Salt Lake Union 4 pertaining to the Melchlsedek and 4 aanda. The snowing of salt waterwhich to $7.25. Packing sows sold at $6.65 to stockyards market the eqnal of any in 4 the Aaronlo priesthoods, and In 4 4 tha ease of stakes holding a one- - 4 ajqieared may be at the top of the Par$6.90, the highest in several months the United' States. There is much rea- 4 day conference only that arrange- - 4 ra sand, one of the obpast Stock hoga and pigs were ten to son for rejoicing, and the April show 4 ments be made to carry out the 4 jectives of the test, geologists of the to fifteen eents lower at $4.50 $5.50. is the time and the place to get togeth 4 priesthood convention program in 4 state, lint they also declare special meetings appointed for that 4 company Practically all the good to choice ones er and do it." A special intermonn-tai- n 4 4 purpose, if necessary, before or 4 that the outcroppings show several layand weighing more than two hundred class in which exhibitors from 4 after the conference day. 4 ers of shale in this and that it is Where deemed advisable, ar- - 4 ly possible that oil in the lower highpounds sold at $7.00 to $7.35, and the Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Ne- 4 choice heavies brought $7.25 to $7 A0. vada and the Western Slupe of Colo- 4 nuigements may be made for eep- - 4 could be shut off and 4 a rate for the sisters, to 4 Receipts are falling below expecta- rado will compete for prises will be a 4 be heldmeetings while the priesthood con- - 4 remit the water to stay at the top. tions. feature this. year. Tn addition, there 4 ventlon meetings are In session. 4 hia condition, they affirm, prevails No fat sheep arrived today. About will be the open to the world competi- 4 Tho program of procedure for the 4 in larger part of the Salt Creek priesthood conventions haa been 4 five hundred lambs were consigned di- tion for individual and rarload entries. 4 4 prepared by the council of the 4 (Wyo.) field; where1 water ia in the rect to killers and fifteen hundred Intermountain exhibitors may eompete 4 twelve with our full concurrence. 4 Upper Wall Creek sand and oil in tha 4 Signed), Heber J. Grant, Charles 4 second. The Utah Oil feeding were on through billing to in the world class. , Refining geoloW. Penrose 4 end Anthony W, Ivina 4 lots. The other offerings of four thouFirst Presidency of the Church of 4 gists frankly admit it is questionable 4 No choice sand sold at $12.00 to $13.10. 4 Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Woolgrowen Protesting. Saints. whether the water haa any significance handyweight lambs were offered. and state Suggestions from the state board of far from discour$011105 1 5W0000 aged. Tbe they arewill Receipts of horses and mules show- equalization to the eounly assessor of be continued, it drilling ed an increase over previous weeks. Utah that range sheep in Utah will bo IN is stated, and even if no oil ia found DISTRICT THE THE COURT OP The former were steady and mules sold found to have an average value of Seventh Judicial District la and For in the lower part of the present sand about nine dollars a head as of Janu- Carbon County, Btate of Utah, Agatha there is another eighty feet below readily at strong prices. Plaintiff, va D. O. Mourer, Deary 1st were nnder fire last Saturday Mourer, fendant. Bummona The State of Utah that will be tested. PRICES AT THE ZION MARKET when that body waa visited by a com- to tha Above Named Defendant: Tou MOST SURPRISING mittee from the Utah Woolgrowen.' are hereby summoned to appear withMrs. Roundtree ia a defeated candiassociation. This committee was made in twenty days after the service of this date in Georgia, perhaps because she Some of the very highest prices paid up of George Austin, chairman; E. J. summons upon you If served within the was not presidential timber. county la which this action is' brought, throughout the country were received Hearns and D. IL Adams of the tax otherwise within thirty days after servYour modern girl with cherry lips for eattle and hogs at the Salt Lake committee of the association, and J. A. ice and defend the above entitled action, and in case of your failure ao to and strawberry cheeks must be a reguCity Union sockysrds last Friday and Hooper, secretary. The net result was do will be rendered against lar sundae for her sheik. Saturday. Fat cows brought $5.75 and that it waa agreed that further hear- you Judgment according to the terms and dewhich ia considered the best offered ing should be deferred until early in mands of tho complaint which haa Georgia governor went hunting. He anywhere, while bids of $8.00 a hun- July, when the assessment will come been filed with the clerk of the above court This action is brought to killed eleven deer. Shot them instead dred were made for A--l quality top before the board as a matter under its entitled recover a Judgment and decree, dlZsolv. of talking them to death. teen, which ia said to have topped jurisdiction, when it ia equalising as- Ing the bonds of matrimony now existall the markets of the West A large sessments as between counties. ing between yourself and the plaintiff Camden (N. J.) boy went to school R. J. TURNER, Attorney For Plaintiff. shipment of steers purchased in the drunk and whipped his teacher. That Postofflce Price. Utah. Address, F. A. southern part of the state by . Yesterdays Markets. First pub, Dec. 28; last Jan. 26, 1524. was powerful stuff. . which was $7.75 a of for price Snyder, KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 30.-C- at-tle the waa received at paid, yards rertipts 300 head. Calves but 800. One of the hugest shipments of hogs F received at the yard waa handled the Beef steers generally at ten to fifteen same daya. The shipment consisted of cents higher; the best matured $9.65; seventy-tw- o rar toads, some of which short fed, $8.00 to $9.25; all she stock wen received from growers in South-er- a fairly active end steady to strong. ; Hogs Receipts, 11,000 head and at Utah, while tbe greater part were weak ten to rents , lower ship-pries ; from the eorabelt district of NebrasThe Sun Special Berries. ka. A few of the can were kept there per top, $6.95 to $7.00 bid on sorted ( WASIIINGTON,' C., Jan. 7- - The industry, courtop, $6.99; bulk of for local consumption, while the re- offerings: packer and faith evidenced age to $6.60 sales, $6.90. by the farmers of the nation durmainder were shipped to the Pacific head. 5000 the Lambs three Sheep are slowly bringing their reward. past Receipts, ing o year Lot went to can Coast. Thirty-twImprovement in agricultural conditions not as rapidly as to San Frsn-cise-o. generally steady to strong; Angeles and thirty-fiv- e Colorado, $13.15; other fed lots, $12.85 desired or needed nor as swiftly as deserved, but neverthe- $13.00; sheep strong to twenty-fiv- e it continues. The promise of the year has been ful"Instead of having all of these hogs to rents higher. filled. So we come to the end of the thinl year of post-wa- r shipped from the East, the farmers of Utah should be raising more them- STATE OF depression with a feeling of greater confidence born of betUTAH NOW APPEALS selves and securing the benefits which ter times already realized and with justified hope of still FOR SHALE LANDS are offered by these markets on the r com-miwlo- v. 8 Alt lev Permo-Carbonifero- us IVia t In Seasonable In this special January showing of Hat Styles you will Me maiiy attractive designs that will appeal to your sense of good taste as well as economy We welcome the opportunity to show them. Mid-Seas- . on WIHIIIHIIIIIlUmmiKnnniiHiHIHHHUi; I. Pacific Coast, J. II. Manderfield, the general manager of the yeards, says. Each week about a hundred ears of hogs pass through Utah to these points, Utah shonld be furnishing the greater part of them,' hut instead, most of those used for local consumption are shipped in. GRAZING FEES COMING UP FOR BROAD DISCUSSION 1; Important niattere to come before the annual convention of the National Woolgrowers association at Salt Lake City January 22d to 24th, inclusive, are forecast in the announcement of what is said to he the oustanding program. The grazing controversy between range users and the forest service, which sprang up with recent announcement of proposed increases by the letter, will be presented from the government side by CoL W. B. Greeley, chief of the forest service. On the the stockmen, Gov. J. Q. Crt of of Nevada will open the discussion on this question. Other subjects thst will be prominent before the convention and the speakers who will introduce them are Economic Conditions of the Sheep Industry Affecting Distribution and Consumption of Meat," Charles R. Brand, consulting specialist in marketing, United States department of agriculture; The Relation of Intermediate Credit and Joint Stork Land Banks to the TPoolgrower," M. L. Corey, the chairman of federal farm loan board ; The Work of the National Live Stock and Meat Board," R. C. Pollock. Howard M. Gore, an assistant secretary of the United States department of agriculture, has also accepted an in- - Apjxal has been taken to the secretary of the interior in the Watson (Utah) oil rase recently decided adversely to the atate, it was announced last Saturday by W. A. Hilton, assistant attorney general. The action now threatens to deprive the schools of any of the lands which may become valuable through nil extraction. The Watson Oil company sought to secure a potent from the government on a placer mining claim on See. 16 of Twp. 11 Sonth, Range 25 East The state protested issuance of patent on the ground that its title was valid. Commissioner William Spry decided the case apainst claims raised by the state. This ruled that even though lands may not be known to be commercially valuable for minerals, yet if it can be shown that they were chiefly valuable for mineral or a potential valne the state could not assert its claim as to title. Oil shale deposits are believed to he underlying a large part of the Uintah Basin lands and consequently the decision if allowed to stand might tend to deprive the state from securing title to any shale lands, according to Hilton. The attorney declared that if the interior department should uphold the commissioner the ease would probably be taken to the courts. ' t We don agree with the old saying that a fool and his money soon part Ours gets away from us in a heck of a hurry. We strongly object to being termed an idiot Four curved notches on the under side of a new hammer handle are intended to prevent a tool slipping in a workmans greasy or wet hands. further improvement in Bessie Kennedy , Millinery Main Street, Price, Utah. 1924. In general the crops of 1923 were good. Some sections in the coltonbelt and in the wheatbelt suffered from the ravages of weather and insect pests, but the aggregate crop production was equal to the average of the five g years. Considering money return we find that the values of most crops are greater than in 1922. The total value of all crops is 12 per cent greater. The values of the wheat, rye, rice, doverseed, cranberry, peach and pear crops are below 1922. In the case of wheat 11 per cent below. The values of all other important crops are greater. It is difficult to measure the production of live stock during the year, dependent as it is upon crops marketed in that form. In general, it has been a prosperous year for sheepgrowers, fairly good for dairymen, less satisfactory for producers of hogs and discouraging for growers of range cattle. Cattle feeders, however, have done very well on the whole. There are discouraging conditions still to be overcome: There is the burden of debt. There are heavy taxes to.be met. The cost of production and of what the farmers buy remains high. Farmers in the spring wheat territory especially are in sore straits from conditions largely beyond their control. Experience gained during these years of depression, however, together with progress already made warrant a hopeful attitude for the coming year. Gradually crop acreage is being better adjusted. The domestic market continues strong. The children keep coming, and that means a steadily increasing number of mouths to be fed. Those who stay by the farm and do good farming can look forward to better times as a reward for their years of toil and hardship. Those whose businesses depend directly upon farm purchases can find decided encouragement in the growing gross income of the fanner, for he will buy as his income expands. The year 1924 comes with the promise of continued improvement in the material prosperity of the farmer, and the fanner continues to be the material and spiritual backbone of the nation. . pre-cedin- . 'WWHOUIHW4HMHU5IHHH4H9HH455H55555 Bigger and Better Than Ever The National WESTERN STOCK SHOW Denver, Colo., January 19th to 26, 1924. Special Rates to Denver and Return via. Denver and Rio Grande Western Tickets will be cm sale January 17th to 21st At Rate of $30.08 Final Limit, January 29, 1924 STOCK SHOW FEATURES Call on Local Agent For Tickets and Pullman Reservations Shorthorn Purebred Sale, 10:30 am, Wednesday, January 23d. Hereford Purebred Sale, 2:00 pm, Wednesday January 23d. Aberdeen-Angu- s Purebred Sale, 10:30 am, Friday, January 25th Brilliant Horse Show Every Night. Matinees Thtmday, Friday and Saturday. ' THEATRICAL ATTRACTIONS Broadway Theater Blossom Time Denham Theater .. Bird of Faradiao" Orphenm Theater Vaudeville Empress Theater . Vaudeville ton II |