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Show TEE SUV. PRICE. UTAH -- EVERT FRIDAY page roux un LIBS FIFTEEN TO Every Elite? By 8u Puhlinhia (1ml) B. W. Crockett. Miuiw. Tear la Advaaca. abMripttan, 1190 Offtaa Phoaa No. 8. Baehtaaca, No. 1 mi. s? TWENTY-FIV- E DOi FIRST OF TOE WEEK 14, lfg , V Antoinette, Her Antiques i ( By LUELLA CORDON (CotsTttat.i UiQ Matter, Ike Sun Special Service. raven was be KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 10. Ac- grazing, which theory has always been 4, U1&. at tea IWoffice at Priaa, wtiv was alwaya 1878. of March 8, Act tea conto stockmen by tive demand advanced cattle prices strongly objected Hta, Cadrr new fumy. Her gods were a chasing ten to fifteen cents on the average cerned as well a by other careful never the name gods for long at ADVERTISING RATES from last weeks close and spots as students of the administration of na- time A few years gu she had been Per lack Par Monte, DMii Matter This gain added tional forest affairs. The secretary enthusiastic to her as twenty-fivmuch LM; Sinaia laana, 40c. Transient, ,60c. finger tipa for oh1 Bltaaial Position, 25 Par Caat Addi- - to the substantial advance last week of the interior bas delegated William furniture. took the market into the highest int- Spry, enuuuiiitiioner of the general Now she was golf mad. Site ..a. Inser- uition for some time Legalo Tra Caata the Liu Each past. Receipts land office, to represent the interior accumulated a house full of anthine Six Word to tee Lina tion. Sjnry were moderate. Hug prices were ten department at the convention. chairs, table, beds, high ami low SuwaonH. 112.50; Water Application, to fifteen lower, but the market clos- will probably give the atockmen the boys, spinning I15.U0; Final Proof, $10.00. wheels, carved chest' a interior dejiartuient interpretation and sideboards. And there they aeit. Raadaro Tea Centa the Lina Sack In- ed active aud in a stronger position sertion. Count Six Word to tea Lina. than at flic ojeiiing. Both packers of the provisions of the public domain BluAfara Type Twenty Caata tea Line and shipjiers bought freely. Lamb section of the grazing bill now under neglected, despised almost by thdr owner now that site bud taken to Each Insertion. consideration in the senate. were fifteen to twenty-fiv- e the golf greens. Obituaries, Cards of Hanks, Resolutions, prices alThe secretary of agriculture has Im going to have a ale," ahe Bm,. At Reading Notice Rates. Count lower than last week's close and Bix Word to tea line sheep were steady. Receipts today so accepted the national association announced to her mother. Im tick coninvitation the Butte to address For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc., were 16, 0IH) cattle, 17,000 hogs and and of tired thia gloomy old, dismal, Two Csuta Par Word Lack Issue. No 8000 sheep, compared with 17,000 cat- vention. HI boyhood spent in furniture. . CbarH Accounts. the intennountain 6000 sheep a week country. tle, 10,500 hogs and Youre aa fickle as the wind, my Addraas All COnununiration to ago aud 15,500 cattle, 14,225 hogs and dear. answered her parent It waa SUIT PUBLISHING CO. 7350 sheep a year ago. Yesterday's Quotations. merely the fact that your grandfather KANSAS CITY, Jan. 13. Cattle PRICE, UTAH The steer market was strong to left you his old hermit house back on 4HK) head, (,alveg 7(H). Fed the otber lot that put the Idea Into e last cents Receipts than twenty-fivhiglioe X want mourning without The Son; weeks close, mostly ten to fifteen up. steers fairly active, fully steady; all your susceptible head. I knew youd X stood np and cried is the congregaThis advanre has taken priees fifty choice mediuuiweight $11. (Ml; the best tire of It And tion Job, 80:28. above a week ago and leavies $10.40; hulk desirable grain-fe- d Yea I know what yon art going to seventy-fiv- e $8.25 to $0.75; she stock strong to to say, mother. Yon know I am too the highest for some time past. There eents higher, cutler un- busy to aell It off myaelf and that 1 was an active demand in all divisions twenty-fiv- e choice were changed; heavy heifers $10.UU; am going to ask yon to attend to it aud early clearances reported. Medium and strongweight steers are short fed $7.00 to $9.00; butcher cows One of the first persona to ask to being regarded mure favorably than $5.25 to $6.50; reaiers and calves un- see ths antiques waa a fragile but Misa Jotiie Filzgerald of tea was in preceding weeks. Good strong and changed ; top veals $12.(K); Mockers wistfully woman. Sha beautiful named by 1L C. hoith, county clerk heavyweights sold at $9.60 and light- and feeders unchanged. seemed to be looking for a certain and recorder, aj his deputy. Hogs Receipts 11, 0(H) head and aort of drop-letable. She had a weights up to $10.00. None showed Thomas F. Kelter came down to the much finish. The bulk of the fed slow. Early trading light and bulk lovely voice aud Instead of leaving her to the mercy of the salesman Bounty seat from Scofield and assum- steers sold at $8.50 to $9.50 with meal mostly ten to fifteen lower than Weded his duties as sheriff of Carbon. and hullfed grades $7.75 to $8.75. All nesdays average; lightlights steady; who had hem put In charge of the The 3 years old daughter of Mr. rows and heifera were ten to twenty-fiv- e top $12.00 on 140 to 170 pounds; bulk business, Mrs. Raven walked alumf And Mrs. Dan Harrington of Castle up and back to the high point of desirable 180 to 230 ;mundg $11.60 to with the stranger herself. Tucked hack In a corner f nn ante Gate passed away of throat troubles. the past month. Most of the offerings $11.75; no heavies sold; packers bidon choice medium weights; room was a table of the klud de $11.65 ding medium were cows that $5.50 brought W. C. Broeker from Helper was at to $6.50. Veal calves were steady. All lacking sows $10.25 to $10.75; stock acrilted. The two women came uxm Ely, Nev., looking over that Mion classes It Just as the fading light of day was stock and feeding rattle pigs steady, $11.50 to $12.25. ci the eountry lor a business loeation. were in ofactive Slice) lieceiits 6000 head. Lambs nluylng on its imlished surface. demand at strong to J. It. Sharp was in Price on his way twentv-fiv- e cents lower; t)li." exclaimed the little woman higher price. Weather fifteen to twenty-fiv- e to Salt Lake City after a trip through condition remained the top $12.25 "Thats the table I want. Let no favorable fur the mostly twenty-fir- e off; the Duchesne tuunlry. He reported feeding operations and tended to in- and others $7.60; wool skinned $8.00; look at It, plcase. the snow out that way the heaviest in crease demand She felt It ; site almost caressed It for thin cattle. The top feeding lambs $12.35. many winters llien. nienlng up. one of the drop improved demand for heavy fat kinds J. W. Loofbonrnw, retiring county is increasing the call for good quality WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF leaves she bent down and looked he half-faEASTERN UTAH treasurer, turned over soma neulh as If to see what aort of nupisiri steers. t in money to A. V. Horsley, liii sucIt bin! When she raised her head of 17,000 head were Mt. Pleasant shipped out twenty-nin- e cessor. Carbon county was at the time theHog receipts hei exquisite gray eyes were again the but this of of year, largest carload of lambs on January brimming with tears. in better financial condition than for number disome four thousand were 9th. A considerable portion went to reara. Sirs, lirven did not know wlmt ! rect to packer here from other mar- laeifie ' (ost markets. Carbons commissioners grnrtinl nn kets. This large direct movement inay, w hn l io ilo, where to tnrh. Via information In to out sent an ales trie lighting and power irx:i( liise dicates that felt like sanctum. Intruder h According pnclfcrs can buy at a sufThen, In u moment, having itrleii $o T. IT. Fitzgerald of the Hah Irrificient price margin elsewhere and from Ogdeu.lTah received $54,616.77 more the from national forests last oke. Ile the eon-eerand n Power tears, the stranger This gation company. ship here for slaughter. The market built the present Carbon Water ruled ten to fifteen lower than last year than did the federal government. sorry hut that table whs mice mine It wus the first thing we honglit nftei company canal to the south of Prise. weeks close, but late priees were Total receipts were $152,794.49. We were lioih Approximately $27,956 was paid by we were married George W. Wruekloff, a mining en- stronger than early sales. The 140 to for a preen rt wrote we holli the young; state bounties in Some last yeur. gineer of Denver, Colo., was in Price hogs sold at $11.40 to $11.-7250 to 300 pound $11.30 to $11.-6- five thousand and sixteen skins were ins living and when we sold enough visiting his cousins, Mrs. J. A. Crockof our stories to buy a bit of furnltiin ett and Miss Moniiua Kennedy (now packing sows $10.25 to $10.75 and accepted for bounty ami the sale of Mrs. U. W. Crockett). He was on las stock hogs and pigs $11.25 to $12. (Ml. these brought $12,895. Included were we clipped them out and pasted then on tin' table, or chair nr whatever li forty-tw- o hundred and sixty-si- x coyLambs were fifteen to twenty-fiv- e way to Nevada to examine some proprents lower. As soon as the decline otes, seven hundred and ten lmhrats, was. There. (mlnllng underneath,In erty. mountain lions, fourteen "la a part of an article we aold Don C. Bobbins, George M. Miller was established trade became active. twenty-thre- e And William Howard, all of Eidciy Sheep were scarce and in active de- Wan and three tiinehr wolves. Box order to buy this table." And your husband? Jlrs. Raven Millard, Tooele and Beaver county, apjteared before a federal mand. Good to choice lambs aold at Elder, was moved to ask. timidly. lead iclt in number taken as of the $12.00 to $12.40, fair $11.50 to $12.00 grand jury at Salt Lake City as We that la we do not live to counties. classified lambs by and to $11.50 $12.35. in some alleged coal land fraud feeding now. He took e night Job gather cases wherein the Freeds were living Fat yearlings brought $10.00, Navajo Practically 50 per rent of the feednoi er land) in the Riverton district in on a newspaper and we beganhome hauled up by Uncle, Ram. The hold- ewes $5.50 and breeding ewes $8.00. little somehow. Our lo agree, Salt Lake county, amounting to aping! were in Huntington Canyon. was I've got on my feet 3. A. Crockett tendered his resig- COMING MEETINGS FIND WOOL-ME- proximately ten thousand head, have dnee. spoiled. and I've looked every writing, ADVANCING been marketed. The rutting out of nation as manager of Town Hall at where for this table. Could I bnj lanrtw is and it continuing, Price and (ieoige Downard was namAnnouncements regarding business "ready ia expected that February 1st will gee Itr she asked, wistfully. ed in hia place. The financial rejxirt at the numerous conventions I'd like to give It to yon, said of all of the lambs disposed of the treasurer showed receipts durMrs. Raven. to be held this month indi- practically of. feeding has been profitable ing the year of $15,314.32 and expen- cates great progress in the organisa- to The farmers Rnt the stranger Instated on paying The in distrirL the many ditures of $14,713.88, leaving a cash tion of the In comparison lamb that have thus far been sold for the tnhlr and left her name and balance the first of the year of $600.-4- 6. with other industry. lines of agriculture the were disjmsrd of on a twelve cents address when she paid for It. 8l iIMilnglred again for her weakness. eheepraiser has fared reasonably well Unrle Sam began an aetion in fed- during the last two or three seasons. mafket, giving the feeders a rent and The footsteps of e mysterious fan eral court at Salt Lake City to recov- Developments of last year, howrever, ain half spread, together with the gain led Ned Weahhiirne to the Hie el weight. er a large acreage of coal lands to the have made it plain that material imfurniture In the old hermit lodge of north and east of Price from Stanley provement must lie effected in the Ranger Ollrrtnn rejMirts making a late citizen of the town. Wlin' snow measurements on the CottonB-- Milner and others. More than five he whs Imiklng for, aside, perlmpr marketing of Western lambs and won thousand acres were involved. The if there is to lie sufficient stabiliza- wood and Gooxelierry watersheds. On for color for a story he wee writing twenty-seJanuary 4th he found the snow value was placed at 100,000 or there- tion of he enuld not have told yon priees to protect the range-me- n ven inches deep at the forks of abouts. Samuel C. Gilson was also indemoralized markets and Mr. Raven met him and took Mn against volved. the necessity of selling below the con- Cottonwood with a water content of about. He took desultory notice oi Mrs. Delilah King Olson, mother tinuing high costs of production. eight inches. On the Gooseberry the the furniture Itself hut In the stnrle? snow was thirty inrhes deep with a of W. P. and E. K. Olson of lricp, While action has largely of certain hit-hwater rontent of eight inches. To his behind the acquisition allowed vivid Interest. passed away at the home of a daugh- been discussed in this connection, the he found the snow extremely ter at Salt Lake City from stomach woolgrowcrs recognize that their surprise And this table waa aold yesterday loose and the soil muddy underneath. troubles. She was one of the very greatest need is for the more orderly The to one of the lovelleat little womei settimbrrmrn snow had say the first school tesehers in Utah. The re- offerings to the eonnming trade and I have ever seen. She hid had a mains were sent to Fillmore for in- for the more uniform distribution of tled at least 56 ier cent in the twelve trngnly In her life If the breaking so that possibly some, terment. That plaee was her early lamb shipments among the different days previous, up of her home end the lorn of hei markets. Whether or not actual con- of the moisture has gong into the husband could he days home. tragedy to thi time. in that modern woman," Mid Mrs. Raven Senator Reed Smoot called with trol of the selling agencies is neces- ground Appointment of J. F. Walker as This table had been earned by hei Freston C. Nutter on the secretary of sary to accomplish this end is yet unthe interior at Washington, D. C., in certain, bnt it has become quite elcar consulting specialist for special work voting husband and herself In thrli an effort to have the latter permit that for the range states as a whole on wool marketing in the division of early married days and." turning nr marketing of the bureau the leaf to display the bite of pH in patents to issue for lands which Nut- there should be a better ter and others were interested in and plan and closer working relationships. of agricultural economies for the com- still clinging to the wood, here h upon which the final proof had been These problems are scheduled for ser- ing year to eighteen months has been lie story they wrote together. Ned Wnsliburne had gripped tali made. These were in the Nine Mile ious consideration at the various state announced by Chris L. Christensen, iied-pomarketfor support Ills head wav meetings and from which delegates head of the new section and also cast of Hunnyside. Commissioners Lehi Jensen and F. will go to the national convention at ing division of the department of ag- whirling. Mrs. Raven stood aghast Butte, Mont., January 20lh to 22d. It riculture. Appointment of Walker is Why IL Merriweather bad drawn these has dif- the first step to undertake studies in at the white face of the man. keen shown alrcadv that from from PePrice for the year. jurymen ferent states proposals will be made thus marketing of wool. Walker has He raised e kindly hand and put I) ter Anderson, J. C. Berglund, J. O. for centralized selling control of all been secretary and field manager of on her shoulder. That was nj B. F. W. H. Fausett, Bryce, Western wools. The officer of the the Ohio Wool Horsley, wife. This la our table." growers ( IL Empty, R. G. Miller, )L B. national association have arranged association since 1918. He has had Come Into the house." begged Mrs Horsley, J. IL James, William Lords, for wide anof differnet and Raven. in representatives experience production J. W. Lnofbourow, Orson Lowry. J. A. of the wool industry as a means marketing of wool and has thorough The man followed her arross th Mathis, George Robb and Sercn Olsen. gles of placing before the membership the knowledge of the business. garden ami Into the comfortable II he told her what the Apportionment of the state district fullest possible information in adQuite a decided decrease in viola- hrary There school and the land interest and rental vance of the discussion of any par- tions of the law, which prohibits the little stranper of the preceding da) did not funds to counties for educational pur- ticular plans. confinement of animals in ears longer had told her and more. He Some important phases of the quesli'nwelf. pure poses on a population of 143,054 was than twenty-eighours without feed, After an hour of auggeslons, plans received at the state auditor's off:ce tion of the grazing binds are still un- water and ivst, is announced by the a to what could le done runsettled. irmises Legislation regarding the last Tuesday, amounting to $1,040,. bureau of animal industry of the Mrs. I (men was smiling when alie 064.94. The compilation, which i:: ning of live stock on the national for- United States detriment of agriculId gootlhy. made through the department of C. X. est lands and also upon the public do- ture. There were hut two hundred Net I Weshhurne and hi still he Jensen, state superintendent of pub- main is pending in the senate and will 8ml twenty-seve- n eases of alleged viowere to tiegin hiitjKlcecpIng the neit convention attention of alfe lic instruction, shows a ier capita rot occupy lations the fieal year ended ni-with the same old tHhie they of $15.13 and of which $13.61 is taken speakers and members of committee June 30,during with four 1926, struggled to buy. from the district fund and the bal- that will formulate recommendations hundred and two eonqiaredthe during preceding An mb I res, a telephone converse ance of $1.52 from the land interest for submission to the convention. and nearly seven hundred cai-- e ion. !i,hw- - glad laughter and nn ult And rental account. The aport:ou-men- t There is also the question of charges year in 1924. The decrease shows increassoul in the person of to Carbon is $77,420.21, Emery for forest grazing which is scheduled ing compliance with the transjiorta-tio- n ntiiin'Mt'a mother, hnd brought $35,464.72, Duchesne $43,604.66, San for final consideration in a conferand regulations and ilto'Ji the reconciliation. Juan $13,722.91, Grand $8280.70 and ence with Secretary of Agriculture an evidentquarantine desire of companies and Jardine to be held at Salt Lake City "So, you see, mother," Uintah $46,499.10. Antoinette their employes to improve the condiu Id that night when she had heart I op January 24th. The recommenda- tions under which domestic animals In Tibet it ia the custom of the nat- tions now pending before the secrethe story, "even if I do chase rain ives when meeting friends to stick out tary are based on the principle of are handled in interstate commerce. Imiwh there le aometlmee a pot of gold . their tongues aa a mark of respect. commercial valuation of the forest Birth aaaoaaccmnt carta The it the end for antm-one.-" Baterad a FRIDAY, JANUARY Saetmd-Clae- a Antoinette lu! e. Out FRONTIERS u Twenty Years Ago This sage-dott- Ii af ed Tlie Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Go. 5; r Exchanges from cattle to slteep at Ephraim, Spring City, Mt. Pleasant, Six Mile, Lake Shore, Huntington and Orangeville will likely be made for the coming season on the Manti reserve. Practically all these are at ration that should improve grazing conditions on those ranges. Approximately one hundred new words an added each year to the English language. wit-ness- es rs REED PLUMBING & HEATING CO. YOU DONT NEED ANY NEW RECEIPT This Is tha tlma to have fnrnaes repaira tasked sifter befsre celd weather seta la. Dont wait util yea are ready to start yaur fnntare. Everyone la tryins to fit repair at the bom Uea Wa as work that wiU stand tha test. Sea aa aa North For baking pies the old one is good enough. In fact; couldn't be improved on. Just so with our flours, Tur- key Red and Tip Top. They are both good, bnt it ia doubtful if anyone could find one that ia any better. Why not decide today to order a sack? Ws wiU deliver if yon win call us up. Hay, grain and general forwarding laour specialty. HI sheet effletaaey. tlevswsft equivalent StM CaaqaaOed tar aterasa. WIB aat alack. TMataat for araaartBg and heattag gaslit lea 8t INPEF1NPBNT GOAL COKE COMPANY Price Comissii Co. South Ninth Street, Prioa, Utah at KeaDwagth, Utah. Om-ar8fftaM WaUarBaaik BaUdtag Mines SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ht In. iak a V. more extensive, moos rnioiwraI more efficient.' It has grown because growth has been one of the obCga-rion- i of service. It has created a nation-wid- e network of fadfities for communication by the spoken weed be-cause nothing less could have satisfied America's re (juirements. (JThe obligation of telephone growth is one that must continue as long as national growth creates hew national needs. This obligation the Bell System has undertaken. It has dedicated the efforts of the years to come to the reaching of the futores new frontier 0; wool-growe- ; st Present Week 250-fmun- ... T meet g) IVILIZATIONS separated by emtuns and mingle when the Telephone first comes to the Boeder town. Indians whose ancestors watched in wonder the coming of die steeldad Spaniards unite interest in the raising with frontiersmen in keen-eye- d of poles and the stringing of wires. Where Coronado once marched, the telephone crew is establishing an out-poPresendy their wock is done. The isolation of miles of desert is swept away. The Telephone has reached a new frontier. (Jit is thus that the history of the Telephone in America has been written and is being written today. Each social or change, by creating new telephone needs, creates a new frontier. For fifty years the Bed System has been meeting these, needs, has been pushing forward to these new frontiea. Year by year, in response to the v-- Aj The above photo shows the entire varsity rifle team of Maryland University, Md., who are trained and ready to start their seasons competitions with other colleges. This team last year won many honors and much is expected from it this season. The girls at the college now outrank the men students when it comes to hitting the bullseye. al |