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Show i ; UTAH STATESMAN ij News Notes ; I It's a Privilege to. Live in I! News Notes (' a IDAHO CALDWELL Idahos Turkey Growers association sold Its clean-upool of birds recently, the Central Poultry corporation of Caldwell again making highest bid. No. 1 toms brought S cents; cents; No. 1 hens brought 33 No. 2 birds, 23 cents and old toms, 29 cents. Thd pool represented about 230,000 pounds of birds, BOISE Production of flab at the states ten hatcheries In the past three years has been sufficient to supply the heeds of the state for stocking Idaho streams, R. E. Thomas, state game warden announced. Ae a result the state has not had to buy fish from my cource, although some fish have Imen traded the federal government snd other statue tor different species, (he warden says Idaho Is the only state In the union to produce sufficient fish to supply stream stocking needs. p 1-- 4 Privilege to Live in Utah NEPHI Nephls second annual spring livestock show will be held at tha Juab county fair grounds Saturday, March 31, according to Albert E. 8mith, county agricultural agent. The show Is being sponsored by tha Nephl High School Agricultural dub and the club boys, with the extension div4-- ision cooperating. LOGAN The annual conference ol agricultural extension service workers will be held In Logan January 15 to 21. All of the county agricultural agents, the district home demonstration agents and spedallsta of the state extension service, as well as representatives of the extension division of the United States department of agriculture, will be VERNAL Due to a number of No mother In this enlightened age cases of scarlet fever In Vernal and would give her buby something she schools and central the vicinity, high UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO The for-vs- t will nut reopen for a few daya. The did not know was perfectly harmless, refirst season of 1927 will long disease has appeared in a mild form especially when a few drops of plain main a pleasant memory for the forest and seven homes in the city are under vCuKtoria will right a baby's stomach protective agencies of Idaho. Loea quarantine. The county physician has and cud almost any little 111. Fretful-nes- s and fever, too ; it seems no time in 1927 were the smallest suffered in also caused the suspension of Sunday twenty years of record, according to schools and ordered children under IS until everything Is serene. That's the beauty of Castoria; Its Howard P. Flint, district forest inspec-tor- , years to remain away from the movie gentle Influence seems just whut is writing in the current Issue of the theatre. Idaho Forest bulletin, quarterly OGDEN Some 31,776 sheep in Utah needed. It does all that castor oil of the University of Idaho were inspected and found free from might accomplish, without chock to school of forestry. The cost of fire scab In December, 1927, according tc the system. Without the evil taste. control for the year was correspond- a report of Thomas Redmond, chief It's delicious! Being purely vegeta-ablyou can give It as often as ingly small. state sheep inspector, to the state there's a sign of colic; constipation; Utah-Idaho IDAHO FALLS Sugar board of agriculture. The report shows company field forces are holding a that 6087 sheep were dipped once in diarrhea; or need to aid sound, natseries of conferences In all districts compliance with the regulations of ural sleep. Just one warning: It Is genuine served by the factories of the Snake the department. These were sheep River valley with a view to Increasing entering Utah from Colorado for graz- Fletcher's Custoria that physicians the acreage of sugar beets. ing purposes. The sheep were dipped recommend. Other preparations may be just as free from all doubtful drags, BURLEY Work is now in progress in Uintah county. LOGAN Reports from the office ot but no child of this writer's Is going on the new bridge between Burley and to test them I Besides, the book on Heyburn, and the men in charge state the registrar at the Utah Agricultural rare and feeding of bullies that comes it will be continued until the job is college Indicate that 153 new students with Fletchers Castoria Is worth its winter for entered the quarter. done, regardless of weather. Prac- have In gold. weight for this total The of all quarter for material registration completion tically the work is on the gruond on the Mini Is already far above that of the fall doka county side of Snake river. quarter, which had the largest attendREXBURO Dairy men of Madison ance for that quarter In the hiBtory of and Jefferson counties hare organised the school. Attendance at Ogden's OGDEN a cow testing association with the follivestock show Is averninth annual W. Smith, lowing officers: President F. 5000 dally, according to Jesse aging Rexburg; vice president, G. A. S. secretary. More adults Richards, treasSugar City; secretary and ever urer, D. L. Bolingbroke, Madison coun- are attending the show than haveof the been present and hotels before Wilty agricultural agent; directors, liam P. Fuller Roberts: William Jones, city report a greater number of visitors than hare been present St. Anthony; II. E. Smart, Thornton. for similar event. any The tester will he a graduate of the Wise Bird SALT LAKE Although there are of Illinois. University a Tiny, pet canary, flew out of hi 35.000.- 000 more people in the United CALDWELL People from all secMr. and Mrs. It. U. King wliile cage States now than twenty-fivyears ago. tions of tlie Pacific northwest attended there are about 22,000,000 fewer beef of Kunsaa City, Mo., were driving at Hie second day of the seventh annual and swine to provide night through Lawrence. Kan. The show of the Gem State Poultry associ- cattle, forsheep to Dr. J. R. Kings sHiit hours searching fur Hie meat them, ation here. More than SO birds are en- Mohler, chief of according bureau of animal bln, then dreve towuril liouie. The the tered and it ia claimed that the exUnited States department of next night they returned to Lawrence, hibit by far surpass those of previous industry, There are, however, about hoping to find Tiny In Hie moriilng. shows. The first session of the poultry agriculture. Wliile Mrs. King visited a Lawrence 8.000.- 000 more dairy cows, so the net institute wa held in the L. O. O. F. loss In the number of newspaper office to advertise for 'lie temple and was of an educational char- animals is about 14.000.000 In twenty-fiv- e lost bird. Tiny flew through the o.ii-acter. Ten years ago tbe corn window of the newspaper's coiintlnr LEWISTON A two-mil- e ice jura in fields years. about 107,000.000 room and ullghrcd on tlie slimildei of the Clearwater river is playing havoc acres. aggregated This year they amount to less nn enqiloyee and was cauglit. with railroad traffic across the Idaho than 98,000.000 acres, according to the The Cleurwater reached latest panhandle. estimates, representing an av- When You Feel a Cold Coming On. flood stage with the melting snows and of nearly a million TaketoLaxative BROMO QUININE Tablets work off the Cold and to fortify Is out of its banks, forcing residents to erage shrinkage acres a year. the system against an attack of Grip the hills. While some cattle have been MYTOX The winter range for or Influenza. 10c. Adv. lost r.o persons are yet reported missand Green river in the Nine-Mil- e sheep ing. south of Myton, is being utilPreferred to Wait districts, MALAD--Effectivwork was done ized the following sheepmen, who by Porter (on ulr pul I man in Ri.'dt) hy tlie snowplow used on the road on have bands in that locality; Crystal Lft me brush you off, sail. the divide between Malad and Iiowr.ey Brothers. J. Thomas. Coleman Brotha glume hclowi anil the road is now in first-clas- s shape ers, Lewis ft Rons, Murdock Brothers, NoPassenger (with you don't. It's an eighth of a udlc for automobile traffic. Tito north and Knights Investment company, Han- down if it's an Inch. south highway is rinsed between cock ft Goodrich, and Ray Diliinan. Fritvale and New Meadows, and the The number ranging in that locality Payette highway is rlo.xi.-- from Rolso owned by these men totals about Hymn Rcvls'cn to MrUttll. according to reports issued What Is that tunc?" asked Mra Several bands hare been brought hy the state bureau of highways in from the opposite direction. The Cnnirox. The Goose creek road from McCi.il problem so far this season is water, "Old Hundred. to New Meadows is still open, accord- which is being hauled with ice for Hie "I shouldn't think of singing it. ing to the report. un Old Hundred while the sheep use the snow Make it nt rumps, MOSCOW-Min- ing In Idaho prosThousand.' to quench their thirst. Washington Star. pered during the year 1927 and prodne-lioCEDAR CITY Drilling for oil In increased in spite of the fact Hnt Cedar vulley within the next thirty lower prices were received for the days was assured hy Miller Robert metals, aeording to the annual report Taylor of Kansas City, president and of Stewart Campbell, state mine in- managing director of the Quad States spector. Holding and Royalty corporation, if MONTPELIER During the past enough acreage to warrant drilling can week the national forest officials of be leased In tlie meantime. According the Wyoming, Minniduka and Caribou to Mr. Miller, who met citizens nf the forests, together with Ogilcn district valley at a mass gathering recently, officers, have been in session In this approximately 20,000 acres have alcity, canvassing matters pertaining to ready been leased by the Cedar Valley these forests, and outlining the work syndicate. of the coming season. SALT LAKE All the state! west of t MOSCOW Rains and warm weaththe continental divide had fewer sheep er the past three days have settled tha and Iamb on range January 1, 1928, two feet of snow until there Is now than a year ago, according to a report only ahout ten inches on the leveL of Stephen Bray, local representative Temperatures ranging from a few de- of the market news service of the Throw Heavy Burdens grees above freezing to just freezing' United Siatea department of agriculon the Kidneys. has so far stopped the snow from melt- ture and the Utah state department of ing fast and floods have been averted. agriculture. The decrease for the enextra burdens on our alLDS putWhen POCATELLO Plans for the expen- tire area west nf the divide was about tlie kidneys slow s up. impurities remain in the blood diture of about of a mil150.000 head, the report said. The arid ara apt to make one tired and lion dollars for the improvement of largest decrense was In Utah, where achy with headache, dizziness and the state highway from Pocatello the number still on feed January 1 often nagging backache. A common south to the Utah line during tlie com- was about 60.000 lcs than List year. warning is scanty or burning nerret ion. were made known here hy Doan s Pills, a stimulant diuret ic, inPARK CITY It Is estimated tlin ing year P. B. Wilson, district engineer of the Utah contains 515 billion tons nf high-grad- e crease tlie secretion of the kidneys and aid in the elimination of waste slate highway department, following bituminous coal. Utah's cnul impurities. Are endorsed by users a tour of inspection nf the road be- industry furnishes employment to everywhere. Am your neighbor tween Pocatello and McCammcn, about 5000 men with n payroll of fro.-00with a representative of the United per day when the mine are runStates bureau of public roads. ning full capacity. MOUNTAIN HOME -- Wool estimatVERNAL Flocks nf Rifted quail, A STIMULANT DIURETIC KIDNEYS ed to total 400,01)0 pound lias been driven from their brush refuges hy tho Co Mfg them. Buttsls. N V. contracted by Mountain Homo sheep-- 1 heavy snow on their feeding grounds, t.ien fur spring delivery. The contract have Invaded farm yards, where they prices range from 31 to 33 cents, with are fraternizing In friendly fashion the big majority being sold near the with domestic fowl. Shelled coin Is higher figure. The contracted wool rep-- : being furnished so tliul the birds may resents only a small portion of that he tided over the winter. which will be clipped in this section REAVER Snow readings nt various Qsfc Ktlitfl A plrmaat, rffectlv during the coming spring. Large points in the Reaver mountains, given d see Ami nf 1928 the .re IMSO-- ilin. quantiles clip will bo sold. for December 31, 1927, show a depth of IWrml dual Srlvr, He It Is expected, ut the annual Mountain ten inches ut Cope Hollow, twenty-siHome wool aules, which attract buyers Inches at Thompson Hides; twenty-sigh- t from different parts of ths United Inches at Smith Fork, and twenty-W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. States. six inches la Merchant valloy. pre-ren- t. pub-lisatl- e, ymj, TAZTXttmnxr By ELMO SCOTT WATSON N JANUAItY 20 carnations will adorn the buttonholes Nearer , My Cod, to Thee! of thousands of Americana who will thus be carrying Nanr, m. Cad, ta That, on a unique tradition In Nssrer to Tfcaai honoring the memory of a E'aa though a ha a croaa " ' Irealdeut of the United That raiiatb awi Still all BIT aoB ahall ha, Suites. Fehruury 12 and February 22 Naarar, aw Cad, to Thaa, are set aside In our patriotic calendar Cad, ta Thaa, Nearer, for reverent tribute to the iininea of Naarar to Thael Llncln and Washington. Octoltcr 27, Thaugh like the aranderar, Roosevelts birthday, Is often obTha eua fooa down, served as Navy day, thus recalling Darhaaaa ha ever Be, bla part In building up our first line Ityr rest a atone. Yet la my draama I'd ha of defense. Rut January 2!) Is a (bite Naarar. aiy God, to Thaa, for remembering not so much those Nearer, my Cad. ta Thao, elements . of statesmanship which Nearer to Thael twice made him Chief Executive of Thera let tha way appear. bis country ns it Is for remembering Slaps unto heaveal the simple, kindly soul that was the All that Thou send'at to me man named William McKinley. Therela mercy yivam fore this simple tribute of wearing Ids Angela to beckon am Nearer, my Cod, ta Thao, favorite flower on Ills birthday Is Nearer, my Cad, to Thra, singularly appropriate. Naarar to Thael Ro swiftly has the world moved in y the lust quarter reutury that, to the Than, with my wililai thnughfi 0 Bright with Thy praiaa. present generation, at least, the iiume Out at my atony grists comof the twenty-fourtIn 1resldent Bethel I'll rat raj Ills fame Is paratively unknown. So by my aruea to ha overshadowed dominatthe Naarar, my Cod. ta Thaa, greatly by Naarar, my Cod, ta Than, ing personality of his iiniiu'dinte sucNearer to Thra strenuous American, cessor, the and by s still later strong ersouality Or H an Joyful winy of quite another sort, whose fortune Cleaving tha shy. Sun. moon and stare forgot. It was to lead us In the greatest wur Upwards I fly. this country has ever known. Rut to !dl Still all my Bang nhall ha. a of those previous generation the .4! Naarar. my Cod. to Than, it name of McKinley has a very definite Naarar. my Cod, to Thaa, Nearer ta Thrvl meaning. uJ -- MRS SARAH F. ADAMS Its mention recalls to them that iiil In L September day In 1 a 1 when the word : ..srjaxiB.iaa.Uii was flashed all over the count r that an anarchist laid shot the Iresidi-ilutlon, decliiriug wur between the ns he stood In Music lia'I at the Ran United States of Amerlcu and the American exsisilfon In RittTalo N. Y Kingdom of Siuiln." It marked the end greeting the long line of his who filed past him to shake of Amerleu's "splendid isolation." the wlih extei-uiihis liati'l. They reiuemlier. ton. how iH'giiining of Its eoiK-efor t!ie next week the whole nation affairs and its assumption of a place watched Ids valiant lh;ht for life; of importiiiue in the congress of nahow lie uni pled the in- - tlahle with tions. Sn the historical importance of Wil the historic wolds. Thy will, not ours, be done and Imw, when the end limn McKinley is that he wux a guidcuiiic on September 1 1, his favorite ing force in turning the Amcrlcun hymn. Nearer. My I tod. to Thee!" ship of state from the unmet lutes troubled waters of nationalism into the wun the requiem of sorrow of thou waters of Internetlnn-r'.istsands who mourned the loss of Wit In which it seems destined to Ham McKinley, the Rreshlont tint sail henceforth. What wasHie historic more the passing of William McKinley, the mail, whoso "perfect doMiiion background of the man cast for this to his Invalid wife had cxclti-- uni role iiml hts prriaratlou for his task? Not In the least flic kind fliut vered admiration." So America added a third name to a prophet would have called appromake its trinity of marly red 1'rosideiiis. priate for the result to lie ntiained Rut It was apparently the kind tlint Mild ns It diil sn little realized that It was definitely writing to sn only a democracy such its ours could tiad era in American history. I. lute wonproduce. For the man whom der that the present generation has selected In he leader of the nation almost forgotten him and his times! at lids turning sdut li. the relation For In at least one Important respect, of the United States to the outside the day of William McKinley is ns world was mi (Milo school teacher remote from the present as is the day Mini lawyer who hud served faithfully Imt with no esxcliil lirlllimiee in of Ahrahnm Lincoln or even of An The year R.nni was the t'ivll war mid who taul risen hy drew Jackson. more than tire "tuni of the century" the successive steps of prosecuting atfor the United Slates. For 1 ! years torney, congressman, mid governor to oncerned with Its the l'reshh-nry- . Emphatically not a America had Isx-In leader," write Cart Russell own Internal affairs, with tin proli loins of forming a union out of a Ids volume, The Ruth of Umpire. In the Yale University Press' "I'limn group of jealous and wrangling colfrom freed onies lately Eunqicim ides of Amerlei." mid continue: r passed In his dsniltiatioti. of eonqnerlng a wilder "lie was, however, until day as n reader of .iihlie opinion mid ness uiol extending westwi-ri- l to lie that of the land hunger of Its people was sat l.e believed Ids fiiin-tioNor Isficil. of preserving t In nation from interpreting the national mind disunion anil holding the wounds of did he yield Ids opinion hi n grudgelvil strife. Rut when on the 2ilti of ing manner, lie graqd broadly the April. s:i. emigres passed a re.- consequence of each liev position ; i h 1 fellow-citizen- s l evcr-tiirhuln- it n nil-n- 1 - Land in Dispute Cook's Croft," made fiimoii hj lick Turpin, I the cause of a ill ol pute between the Rrlllsh ministry Fawk-humof the and rectvr agriculture The land has two England. owners, yet in a sense I no man hind, because It I In no parish, and the rector refuses to collect any tithe from It. Purt of It has boon sold ami the ministry of agriculture wishes to reapportion It for tithes, hut llie rec tor claim that ii It lias ucvci Mn nppori limed It therefore cannot he reapportioned niui no one can claim It. In 17'ft. the spot wii called Three GaliV because ot three gale Hull 1oiiiI under an old tree In Hie lonely spot. Turpin stood under Hie trie when In- - robbed the iiruvcM,inl coach Famous Dreed of Cattle entile were incut limed b tlie Kouiuii historian Tacitus a being of Importance a curly a the year 2S A. 1 1. of thl early Pcrliiii Frh-xini- i which the public assumed and he was s muster of securing harmonious for a desired end." Of him another biographer baa written : President McKinleys course during the many exciting events of his administration was marked by a degree of tact, prudence and foresight which surprised even his friends. Ha surrounded himself with able advisers, maintained cordial relations with congress and steudily grew In popularity with the country at large. He possessed to an unusual degree the faculty of forecasting public sentiment." In the light of these estimates it would appear that McKinley, even though lie did not have that training in statecraft which might be considered esKcutlul to a situation Involving intermit lonal relations, was apparently nn Ideal lender for a people once they had entered upon a war which was to he so momentous In their history. It was a wur which he was to and during all the ueguUa-tion- s with Spain, that preceded nie actual outbreak of wur, he repeatedly am! counseled restraint. patience EVcn after the destruction of the Maine, when the country was In a wldte heat of ludlgnntion a gainst Spain, he held fast to his purpose of securing a iieaceful settlement of the dispute between the two countries over the Cuban problem. Finally, convinced that Spain would not accept Amerleu's proposals and assured of the conviction of the American people regarding their duty to the Cubans, the President reluctantly took the decisive step. Not only did the Spanlsli-Americuwur, the highlight of McKinley's administration, result In America's coming into possession of colonies In the Fur Fust which brought the country into the reulm of international but during tlint administration were taken also the other steps which iildcil In furthering her Interest In world-widaffair. It was McKinley's secretary of stale, John Huy. whose open door" policy In regard to Chinn made the United States an active factor In tin future of the Orient and it was McKinley himself, whose proposiil In isiiti for a congress, who made the first overrun for a better understanding among the American republics. North and South. It was to popularize the Pun Amcrlcun Idea that the exposition. where the President received Ids death wound, wns arranged, and It w:i Juki after lie hud set forth his views on the lies which should hind I lie two ronilnent (hat lie wa shot. a magnificent memorial Today Ktnnd In Ids home city of Clinton. Ohio, as the tribute of tlint state anil the lint hn as well to a Moved leadHistorian of the future may er. as the to Ids administration I it tit most Kignlfiennt turning point In all American history, and as time gives a better prrsieellve for evnluiitlon of III Importance, President Wllllnm McKinley may loom larger and larger in tlie gallery of American notable. Rut for the American people, whom lie understood as few President have, the best tribute that they can pay him is t lie simple tribute on .Tanimry 2!l if each year of honoring his memory favorite with ii simple thing-- hi deep-seate- Children Cry for Pin-coc- n e g d n mll-tic- 30,-00- e n Winter's Colds and Chills three-quarter- 0 flower. start, or DOANS r,&s by reason of the favorable location of the province In regard to Industrial clllc of northern Kunqie. Friesland farmer have grown through many years of furnishing their neighbor with hr, tier and cheese. pms-imro- fireirr-Milhur- ii Presidential Bodyguards The use of bodyguard by Iretd lent of Hie United Stnte date hack to Andrew Johnson who wii the first American President to go n round guarded. ' i ' "'Itc fe S |