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Show c ESAR RXVSl VALLEY UEADCSt, THURSDAY; OCfOSSl Deduced Meat Supply Director Peterson points out, would have been much greater and more se vere on consumer;, if the adjustment programs affecting meat animals had not brought about an advanced reduction of hog numbers and thereby saved millions of bushels of corn and other feed for use last fall and winter when livestock feed was greatly need- Result of Drought That the temporary shortage of neat supplies and current reduced numbers of livestock on farms are the direct result of last year's unprecedented drought is pointed out by rector William Peterson of the Utah State Agricultural college extension service.'. What many people, city consumers in particular, fail to realize is the close relationship that exists between neat supplies and livestock feed Director Peterson says. ""jmers have been easily mis-opposed to agricultural believing that current lUstmf J JitA m J, niTi'x vfbe hi m 11 . .M. Will All , UUgB 1a uc mllKlralAil utaiobw Clf hflQ iHai vvw weights this winter than a year ago; and larger marketings of gram-fe- d cattle are expected on the market during the first half of 1936 than dur ing the corresponding period in 1935. It is anticipated, therefore, that the mine shortage in meat supplies will terminate by next spring. "little the f. " , ' coming to number of livestock a ii..H.iTlirri uvcowu ana i marae!. suppuva m yj A xei, .j 1 xl E IV 1 .denend largely upon the Quantity and r wnen che&Dness of feed available, By Phyllis Roche the harvest of feed is small as was the case last year the numbers of Big livestock going to market the follow- Wednesday, Ofct. 16. Free raze w oe ing year is always small. given to best costumed couple. Mont This is especially true with regard Melody orchestra. Good time ror au. to hogs, Director Peterson continues, " and Mrs. Ed Harris entertained for each year hogs consume nearly Mr. chicken lf supper Thursday evenof the nation's com crop. at a laid for' Mr. and were a cut Covers was corn ing. crop Last year the UtOaa bushels by one of the worst Mrs. Leo Nelson, Dorthy Hadley, HarCharles MCNeely and droughts in the history of this coun- mon Piersort, hostess. and host the in the reduction the hence sharp try; n Sunday evening mutual conjoint hog population and the small market. to of hogs how going meeting was held. The following proThe production of bats and barley gram was presented by members of dropped more than 60 percent, and the BothweU ward: Reading by Wanthe total supplies of feed grains har- da Anderson; comet solo by Junior vested in 1934 equalled but 60 per- Anderson; a talk on "faith" by Dr. cent of the average for the five years Ell Hawkins ; song by Beverly Sumfrom "1928 to 1932; Hay production, mers and Dorthy Mills. upon which cattle depend heavily for Everett Johnson and Golden Adams winter fed dropped over 40 percent motored to Salt Lake City to visit average, and in with friends over the weekend. from the many sections pastures failed com- , Everard Roche, Leo Nelson and pletely. This great reduction to feed Vern : Roche motored to Standrod supplies can only be attributed to last Sunday on business. year's drought, for the harvest of hay , Bishop and Mrs. T. E. Adams, Mr. 'emergency crops and crops plant and Mrs. Jos. Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. ed on the 36 million acres held out of Jos. Ray, Mr. and Mrs., J. C. corn, wheat, cotton and tobacco more Mrs. Aaron Chris tianson, Mr. than equalled in feeding value the and Mrs. Wm. Watt, Mr. and Mrs. Alamount of corn that may have been bert Johnson and Mrs. Melvin Durfey raised last year on the 13 million attended conference in Salt Lake. acres held out of com. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Jeppson, Mrs. As a result of greatly reduced R. G. Watt, Mrs. D. E. Adams, Lois crops of feed' grains, hay, and forage Watt, and Ross Coombs attended the by the drought last year, large num- Payne reunion at Kaysville Saturday. bers of liver tock were sold to bring Mrs. Ethel Jenson returned home about a balance between livestock and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence feed supplies in order that remaining Reeves after visiting with them at animals on farms could be maintained their home in Centerville. through the winter and spring and Rulon Davis of Logan visited at the until a new crop of feed would become home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Anderson available. But this forced liquidation, last week. t II A TfiUPD -- i . H4rT4Dmtcbjd one-ha- num-"ke- five-ye- ' Recent government reports, however, are encouraging: the number of sows to farrow this fall will be about 20 percent higher than last, ar . . s " Chris-tianso- n, - . " Hum year. "writer supplies li 11 have resu ' pig progrf 1834 coriK drought KvetrJki 185 IfADVENTURERS' ed. Livestock and slaughter supplies will continue short throughout the s, sup-pBe- 10, . a s Hostilities between the Mormons tary of War. In this he said "The and their opponents continued to gain Mormons are a bad and deluded sect, intensity and hatred until the climax and they have been badly treated; but was reached in the expulsion of the I suppose very correctly, yet they do former from Nauvoo in the winter of not believe so, and under the treat1846. The picture of hundreds of fam- ment they nave received, if they are "Death Seeks Its Mate' ilies crossing the river in February not enemies, both of our people and! and establishing a temporary abode in a.sss wv www, By FLOYD GIBBONS guTvi uutvu Iowa is indeed a pathetic one. Christians and purer patriots than Famous Headline Hunter. What feelings must nave rankled other denominations, a thing your chairs, boys and girls. Here comes Stanley C their hearts aa they faced the wintry nobody in the West can believe." HANG onto thriller from the days, back in 1911, blasts and icy waters of the Missis-- 1 To counteract such rumors with a when the American troops were mobilized on the Mexican border. sippi and turned towards the far off assurance of the loyalty of the V western country where they were to moos, Elder Jesse C. Little wfw There are a lot of "ifs in this yarn of Stan Bosley's. " a new asylum remote from the Pres. Polk that the "Mormons aa weu been If Stan hadn't killed a snake, there would never have any seek centers of civilization! When they ' as myself are true hearted Americana, before the bugle looked for the last time upon the true to our country, true to its laws, story t ill. If he hadn't awakened early one morning, Stan hadn't been a quick thinker, capable of beautiful city of Nauvoo which their' and true to its glorious tostitiitloh," Jleljjg. someMfast tcltfon pinch, his story might have had a different toil and industry had built, bitter in- - and the High Council at Nauvoo pubdeed must have been resentment lished a greeting to the Saints and to -- VV-';--. ending. Infantry, camped against those who were the cause of whom it may concern, a circular let-; In August, 1911, Stan Bosley was with the Twenty-eightat Leon Springs, Texas. The camp was a temporary one just-- few shacks their misery. Not only could they ter in which- - occured the following: and commandeered houses for the brass hstsaand row after row of pup tents find no abiding place in Illinois, Mis- "We also further declare for the satis where the enlisted men slept, two to a tent Stan wasn't a brass bat, so he slept souri, or Arkansas, but apparently faction of some who have concluded nowhere within the confines of the that our grievances have alienated ur la one of tartest be and another fellow, r One afternoon while out walking, Stan earn upon abuse rattlesnake Now, United 8tates, the country they loved from our country, that our patriotism rattlesnakes are no picnic anywhere you flad tbem, bat la the Southwest, where and whose constitution they revered has not been overcome by fire, by are rteog- - as devine. Hence their eyes were be- sword, by daylight nor by midnight there are mew than In almost a killed and Stan killed bsnf and menace oti sight.! this; oat, deciding ing turned in the direction of a re- assassinations which we have enduralsed aa a that he'd Uke.to haw m skla ftr;so)wenlrYe w a string around the snake mote region then belonging to Mexico. ed; neither have they alienated us To be Sure, the definite locality was from the institutions of our country." and dragged it back to canjp, f tari hadikeown more about the habits of rat- somewhat Nevertheless the saints were directvague, but the Great' Basin tlers, thongn, he'd haveftft jtbjt WptBSw stress lie right? where it was. the When Stan got eampj he aklnr ;Thn, nsver s or Salt Lake valley had been discussed ing their course to a land belonging favorably for some time. Still inciden- to a foreign country. , dreaming that VI act misfit nave ferrlbte censeeuence, he stretched the Another article of this aeries will eut to dry en the aole that'lteW up the treat of Ms pup tent tally other plans 'were toyed with. In a thought Ha fact, letters were sent out in various appear next week.) tTnat night," TStahjirent to bed tnW girlng the snake-ski- n said good night to hli partner In. the feat, doppefroffitfr sleep, end slept soundly. directions asking for help. One such As a matter of fact, he slept so soundly that night that he woke up earlier than was' written to Governor Thomas S. GETTING QUITE INCLUSIVE Drew of Arkansas.' He refused reto Oregon, fuge, but urged emigration Wevnderstood uat japan was run California, Texas or Nebraska. No aftairs in Manchuoko but the fov but to offer seemed in ning security place some isolated region in the Rocky lowing SBOBLthe Pathfinder is an Mountains The people were gradually opener: "Japan will not tolerate being prepared for just such a wilderness trek. In the Times and Season lishment of a Communist gov! there appeared in 1846 a notice to the in any portion of Ohina,'but saints throughout the world that "The independently to destroy sue: Exodus of the only true Israel from gime," said Maj. Gen. Rensuke these United States to a far distant military attache of the Japanese region of the West where bigotry and bassy at Peiplng, in an interview, insatiable oppression will have lost its added significantly there were "o power over them, forms a new epoch, organizations" in China which "muk not only in the history of the church, be exterminated." How would you like to be ygov- but of this nation." This statement signed by Brigham Young and the emment official in China JJaesVdays, Coiled on Top o? the Canlxts Vas a Rattlesnake. apostles is in accord with declarations wny Drag mm up; ttaanKSgivmg the leaders, quoted in previous isn i. ibt air. vnn ran iw aunt nr nv he too. If Ik tbera iliil, hadn't, wt ofarticles. 'anal the next morning, a gontl JhU;g ing something to be Uiaskful Ichave been another endln. to. this, yarii of Ills. Such declarations coupled with var g Stan Makes a Discovery. ious extravagant rumors led to the 'v' l l l l i .. .; l ' M ont erawled u&e He belief when that and Star Mormons that morning. up the clear was cool . It perhaps Dr. Don C. James willY be ' bis blankets,' Slid 'without giving, e'W s6 much as a look at his partner betid j would go West and in case of war here Monday, October The can to rted reveille house. wash the him. took hir soap and towel and hi join England or Mexico against their Make Appointments had not blown yet, but it would sh tly, and Stan wanted to get his washinf own country. One basis for this belane before the rush started. He tik islied his morning toilet with still a few lief was a letter of Governor Edwards of Missouri to Wm. L. Marcy, Secre- minutes to go before the bugle was di e to blow, and went back to his tent JEWELER i. ui nartner wt still asieeD when he aot back. Stan crawled half Vf scalp-tingli- ng ' . re8lefUf . s r - h a t ;- ilta, , . - - ; A Reading Lamp and a Philco Radio l'' SBBBSSwaaan ... QBssaaBSsaB 1 In a flash, Stan's mind caught the situation told him what had happened hat snake skin, drying on the tent pole was the answer. The mate of the deaf, j rottler had come to find him, and there she was, lying on the blankets that cov j ered bis sleeping partner. But that wasn't all that Stan's mind caught In thati:i same moment he realized that he had to act quickly immediately if he wanted f jj to save his partner's life. For almost any minute now, the bugle would sound the reveille call and wake him up. And if he moved, even so much'as an inch, that rattler would sink his poisoned fangs into the nearest exposed part of his body. , and Buy by Comparison s j - Ogden, Utah I Stan crawled back out of the tent, ran around to tne oacK wnere ine guns were kept, and grabbed his rifle from the stack. Slipping a shell into the breech, he ran back to the tent again and poked the muzzle as near as he dared to thov snake's head. Far down the company street the first notes of the reveille call came swelling from the brazen throat of a bugle. Stan had not been a second too aeon. As his tent partner began o stir drowsily, he pulled the trigger. '. The tent echoed with the crsek of that Shot SUn hadn't foreseen what would happen next His partner came out of his sleep with a Jerk and saw Stan bending over him with a smoking' rifle in his hand. He didn't see the dead snake, lying with its head shot off on the blanket e beside him, but maybe he had heard stories of soldiers going In the hot weather and shooting their tent mates. Anyway, ho dldnt - stop to ask questions .just jumped on Stan and flung him to the ground. By that time the sound of the shot had brought a dozen They ) pulled Stan's partner off him, and held him while Stan explefoed what had hap-- : pened. Then they dug into the blankets that Stan's partner had bunched npj when he threw them off, and there, in the folds, was the rattler his head shot clean off, and deader than a doornail. We Ask You to Inspect Our Merchandise A Peters SHoe hay-wir- - n Downstairs its a snoe,K,r farm, dress, or school wear, youHT 1 . . . ,Z . . .nere . a at price to suit all. it .Women's and 'Growior OuuC. ' fl ffo ntr as . v . rf . . 1 . men-rentiin- g. Those yho are careful where they t The officers and teachers of the II Primary association held meeting at lose it the home of Mrs. Alma Jenson, Thursday afternoon. After meeting refreshIf you in uat use a hammer build ments were served by Mrs. Jenson. Mrs. A. W. Bergstrom visited at housed' the homes of her daughters, Vaudis and Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Stone last " fiwisST) ret Rwty- ave ak week. !rr ' Mr. and Mrs. Archie Toyn of Grouse Creek! visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. LiHarrklbWednesday of" last week. . ""enibers of the Relief Society lield their opening social for the winter quarter Tuesday. An interesting program was rendered, after which lunch eon was served.' Four of the officers were presented with water sets. Mr. ana Mrs. Albert MitcheU-an- d childrerf ttt Clinton were guests of Mr. ftnd Mrs". "Roy Anderson Sunday. " " ' FATIGUE ' Harmon Pierson, Vern Peterson and tired? No time to rest? Are you Johnson Eddie spent 'Saturday at ' a Then for Every Purpose IN THE NEW - v. Men's and Boys' N $1.95 to $3.95 . yOQP CAEl . looms IE b9i.'ERi IBAELGAHNS n- - Broil. m&OKb pickup E9jJ8 bollnXJ rii 5o1iOTtjftOefilri HTfVI TD mo qvi tjU3 xc7m. H ,flOjjyj 111 .bncl 9riJ oJ vr!r-,aiS- K oHM 9.0 81 GV5. fcb QHZ.. -- Dual Wheels m Toh Trucks, Dual Wheels Pnceo, tor, Quick sale, we iHrffsff!,w --cheap used cars we will sell as is with fcaoane no down 1 wa- - ' try " refreshing, sparkling drink of Take for Colds, Add Indigestion, Headache," Neuralgia, Stomach Gas, Mus- cular. Rheumatic and' Sciatic Pates."' Pleasant, effective, eco" n o n -nomical, ' habit forming does not depfeas Alka-Seltz- 't " .is i.'.;i.".fr!Off r' r I .Mf.-.r.'Fr-.t- IT,. ... THAT'S A LOT OF POLICEMEN , One realizes how far from being under police control are some of the tribes In Britian's far flune- Emnire 'when be reads that it' took 80.000 Bnusn soMiers recently to crush a revolt of Mohajnand tribes. A revolt was put down month bu , - AS;?. 0 '.I'. tnt jol-die- rs .(infitolno isnjo crorrrv to? NOW ban ,1k;,iih. m recently- - Road preparatory bVaipijr' flsndb Wulvknr'wSr Nahkl Pass for another drive." non-Iaxatr- ve, thsTieart Si mm em '" " la Me sad Sse- anaa ai.uM sewi em VI is -- to $2.95 '. $1.9- 5- little MintN Will Make Your Home Ji!) er. Alka-Seltz- er 1r-- $1.00 A. Earlr Bird Sale of discon tinned styles for women 275 pairs, formerly $2.95 and $3.95 " tfW arp lut Children's lf A . lo PTrucRs i iW193(UGhev. . - 'litLqVMi "SRBSLpR SEDAN f - ''' Wn fmm LRSflmUGLS ; Rattler's Presence Calls for Quick Action. and Beautiful i HHi-H- way into the tent to put back his soap and towel, but as he did so, he saw something that made the skin crawl all over his body. Colled up on top of the blankets that covered his sleeping partner was a rattle snake as big, or bigger than the one he had killed the day before. Let Us Help You Make Your Home Inviting r . A Comfortable Chair 01 Sofa COMPLETE RELAXATION - EFFECT OF HOSTILITIES Hair-Raisln- Consider This ' ft Ji; "I or Business House Beautiful and Inviting LET US ESTIMATE YOUR CONTEMPLATED PAINT JOBS ' All Kinds of Painting, Decorating and Paperhanging ALL WORK GUARANTEED AUGUST NUSSBAUM Phone 7341--2 ; ' |