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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING APRIL 8 10, 1921. TRIBUNE TRAVELOGS PreservaUonof Elk Sound Economic . . Policy . many anxious ysars th TH weighed stone Bin herds hv In th belanc of conflicting public opinion. and because of tho tram anal lo whkh ha besnt of thought haa boon tlppod to and fro they ho vo boon found drootly anting many tlmoo. Aftr tho prolific Incroooo of tho oik lo o ok'iOooOaJon of facorabl years, thoy wanted for advocates to favor Iholr hv further mmpanry of tha valuable of neAnd after a aerie ver and prolonaad winter of llmltoil ran food, when early autumn anowa 10 by thnnaend aaalnnl have forced th of iho bunlera' una, and fh muzzl when tha ralf crop oa laraety 10 tho coyote bora ue of mother weakened hv atarvatlon, tha pitiful elk hove wanted for food end faithful friend Th oarlllotinn of th tilting acalo benm. however, ia bororein lea each year a la pained of the a bettor enrx-ep-t number of elk that deoerva to ha and aa o mora correct a pern of tha mnnelarv valu of tha wild life of tha weal la made. ,e J bn ' i , J 'I Box of Face Powder e , What Is Your Favorite k ran. -- I FACE POWDER? I yr ioaton little Winter Range Left. -- . w-i RirjG. :rr lmn pindidnt iih In tha 1I prnt hrla hot tndxv tharn ara district. ! than onhalf thla nurnbap following tha now lltia to tha aummlta. dux to tha raacaa af two aavara wlntara, a lawn gmsinc panjea and having to rtm tha gaitlat of tha huntara funa In daep nearly America (ord - a Dangerous Depletion ,of Elk. mco a irmiuiB by (h Atxiut ff xvourtd frIn totrnmnt 60.KXgxmklrx urn mw. Thaaa htingar humhlad anlmala have jtiat now turned away from their meager winter rangaa of the tiaJiatln, Hhnehona and Wind Rlvar haaina. and from the human hand that hate fad them through JJtf wjpter in JiM'kanp Hoji, find hava aat tlif forth tith hopfuf vaat and ample at panne of native aum mar range In tha high plateau of tha hark bona ef tha continent at thw Invite lion of a rapidly rare ding mow line and a widening tone of luerlou green feed Tha early aprlng migration of the elk from tha lower oountrv In aa old aa thatr love for liberty choice food and a cool aummer range above the realm of atlng-In- g Plea. Rut, whereae they once win fered luxuriously In the milder vglleye of Colorado. ltah and Idaho, now check ered with tha field of modem ajrrlcul lure, they hava been herded onto a few ratted remnant of unsuitable range in winter. Si . I The mnert, chic, woman of today finds a face powder her moiit exquisite aid in preserving the frebhnena and charm of a youthful -- plexion. From Svhramin-Johnson- a wide variety, comprising as it doea the products of the worlds foremost perfumers, the matter of selection becomes a real pleasure. Von will find .your favorite here. TA few suggestions!- 7Rice Pace , Melba Face ,tra Powder Powder...... (.ablarhe Powder anow-driv- atUr' aup-plla- a. Melha Powder...... Armands Kaca Powder... lludnut'a Face T'owder. rruo4, 6rfeafn8'rnchr epsrtt.d by THCtfUrtaC tfktObl-- ' "Top Th winter logical aurvay, Jackson Ho la, Wya. from 3000 to 5000 alk Ira fad aacN win. tar by tha govarnmant autherltlaa an tnia ranch by hay producad tharoan for thla purpaaa. Btiow Vallowaten a alk In faad yard. Jack son Hela, Wya. It la only by. providing supplement ary food In wlnlar that tha alk aurvlva. H. by N. are marketed from th valley. Much of thla is due to th presence of the elk, nd an estimate place the anprataal of a head A a them at a minimum of matter of fact, th sportsman pays fifty ttmea a muh for hi choite venison aa inal elk population, however, and are seldom encountered because of their small numbers With the general warnd ing of the challenging call of the elk, as they seem In severe winters to wending the way of the buffalo, there haa arisen In the hearts of the nation's sportsmen and lovers of wild life a countercall calculated to halt forever the decimating and endangering of theae valuable big game herds of the Yellowstone. The boater, the bighorn and the ante-tor- e are on the verge of existence, and the deer have been depleted far below any atual needs or rights of domestic stock. We would call them back again If we could, and multiply them by a hundred. or perhaps a thousand, to lead Interest and action to the mountainous west. For these reasons evary winter haa brought Its anxiety to the lovers of the elk and every spring a relief aa the herds scatter to the purple forests of the skyline. once-prou- rcss'i ha would pay for the same weight of beef. Abundant Summer Range. L Asurea, and Pompela I Face Powder Roger A Oallet .Vera Vlo. Harriett - f. Hubbard .r ' $2.00 $1.00 Face Hudnut'g Wee Sweet Levantine Cloth a Stationery 67c qutrs of paper, I quire of envelopes; gilt edge; best grade linen. 1 OcCraie CARDS autumn-passugewny- - pMennefT Vwistsor elJ wasatch 54 ' 14 4- - you can restore the natural color to .your hair by using Gray Hair Restorer It brings back the youthful Juster and life to the hair. Delightful to use-c- lear as water; will not stain the scalp and Is without odor or stickiness. Don't wait until It 1 tod late. Use It now. 11.00 bottle. pttflfrtsr;- cards. 34 envelopes; V 79c $1.49 Herpl- - J stor ige. of sheep and- cattle- - grazed on the national forests concerned. However, the stock allotments are rather small in ths areas considered desirable for the elk. and. as ths change would take place gradually, It la said it will be effected without serious harm to ths stock in- terests. Fixing Perpetuating Policy. out that cattle grazing has not generally affected the elk, exceptwhile both are on the winter ing only ranges, where they have been more or less crowded. Sheep and elk hava grazed together and do not conflict TrreRtly, though the elk are scattered and pre- vented from pursuing their natural ten- where herders, camps, dogs and other Interests and activities are common. No one asks for the restoration of the olden davs when In the springtime the qlk assembled In numberless phalanxes on a thousand rising ridges. But the and government, and slate . authorities 'Individuals the game associations and Interested, who have striven so faithfully to steady the tottering scales In which the fortunes of the elk have been neighed. Blncerely believe that a true and satisfactory balance can and soon will be established; that the Increases of Mav. and.. June may the calving time-ibe fatriv offset by the legitimate killings In the hunting seasons of autumn; that ths herds In about their present numand bers will become and that the - perils of neither hunger nor overkilling will again successfully cooperate with the malevolent nemesis that has so long pursued this royal race of Rooky mountain pame. It la pointed -- n Honors Are Awarded in Declamation Contest ' ts The Tribune. FOCATEMjO. Idaho, Aprtf 8 Adelyne Burrua of Pocatello, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher JR. Burrua. was the only 'WInntng In the dvt mation contest yesterday aventng at the auditorium. school Pocatello, high MeCammon and Blackfoot Downey, schools wees competing to choose the .Monday X flTT 29c 79c 45c 89c Special Me Hlllrosa de Quinine 91 00 Eau 29c 5& 89c , 47cHair79c A 38c 76c Sag Lucky Tiger Hair 42c 83c V. rRegular $1.23 fro1 - special Canthrox, apeclal ... Quinine Pandrrine just ths thing for short notes O-Ced- Tonic :t Hair Restorer.... Uob Plemel'a Remedy. special 01. Owb O fl ar OU G PolishMop and Tuei3a Special. winners of this section to go to ths stats meet at Boise. lltss Burrua won In the humorous section, Derondo Lowry of MeCammon won In the declamation section and Norma Farklnaon of Black foot won in the dramatic section. Other contestants In the declamation contest were Ruth Chapman of Blackfoot, Harold Newbold of Downey and Lawrence Crittenden of Focatelio. would have Judges felt that Crittenden made a better place If he had not been so unfortunate as to forget his oration at one point, Mary Murphy of Pocatello won second In the dramatic section. Others competing were. Mildred Owen of Downey and The am. Rufenacht of MeCammon. 0thei Contestants In tab humorous Dandruff tlon were Amelia Hanson of Blackfoot, V Clair Spldell of Downey and Francis Olrrad of MeCammon. The judges were Miss Dorothy .Elder-dicInstructor of expression of ' Idaho Technical Institute; Professor the J. H. Lewis, head of the education fth Institute. and Professor Crawford, principal of the w school of Idaho Falls. t. high e, depart-ment-o- Idaho-Technic- al , PHYSICIAN BLACKFOOT. Idaho. April S.OP. . Mitchell of thla city returned this, morning from Boise, where he attended a meeting of the state medical board, at vhlch he wa elected president of the board. IS HONORED. Glasses Reading here' another big special. Readin a ing glasses good strong frame, spherical lenses ground to order, a handsome ease, and a year s guar- antee of satisfaction, all for only Including Examination of Your Eyes 2 Busy Shops Special T - twice. as And look old when 69c 93c Wa-eate- While It 'Bennies GRAY Wyeth's Sulphur Cooper's Cedar Flakes . rWHY BE Correspondence - Paint Protects Orchbi $1.50 Farr nl 1 $1.00 Pompelaa , Beauty Powder . Good Hougaud'a Powder Powder... Ayer'a 75c $1.50 ;-d- 70 ...f....W ludnut'a Gardenia Face Powder .... ClI.UU e PJer-Kla- Coly,a L'Oiigan We Powder Face Powder, Treflr. Flora-m- y Plver'a' Face Powder 50c75c II. or Face Powder Ick. .. $1.00 $2.25 a Ik I'holorplia Three Mary Oarden Mavis Face Powder Oehmaln Face The summer rang for th elk la within the Yellowstone nark. In the adjacent game Preserve whlih th state of Wyoming haa provided to the- - southeast of the park, and over the five or ala national foreala near the park. In Montana, Wvomlng and Idaho. Mointur and suitable vegetation are abundant and during the short season at that altitud tha range ts sufficient for many mor animals that grass In the region. Thla high country ta not considered a choice cattle or eheep grating auction, and It haa been estimated that twice as many elk can be supported as domesPerpetuation Will Pay Profits. tic cows, because of the differences In The perpetuation of wild Ilf In Its the feed selections desired. The elk renative slate for observation and study strict and conserve their own range In aa an Important part of th old original an Interesting manner, by leaving tha wet la aa aaaenttal aa th preservation lowlands tor winter occupancy when of tha geysers, the waterfalls and the deop enow hides th plateau lands. forest of tha scenic center. Rut even scenery and wild life. Ilk art Paths Used by Drifting Elk. and music, must pWy for Its existence A recent census by the Vnlted States ml perpetuation and produce a profit service and tha biological survey over the cost of It own maintenance and forest In Jackson Hole ehowa that there are to offset the sacrifices oT Industrial and 8500 elk, where about 10,000 only senagricultural enterprises, Thu the were found five years ago. nesrly These anl- timent for saving the kouvenlra of th mala to the southern migrate old west must heed th demand of care-fportion of economic", fttnVA, auch atl trie elk. th In winter to the Snake, Oro Ventre and turns ar quirk and Important. Hoback River valleys, literally awarmlng Jackson Hole In sever winters. (Sportsmen and Tourists Pay. A herd of similar ala utilises tha Elk Herds Scattered.The recreational value of a region of northern part of the park in aummer and ftearulng from auch a fate the rholreat any sort In which wild life la abundant the adjacent national forest areas in animals procurable, hundreds of elk have la vastly enhanced. Increasing thousands Montana, drifting In autumn to th upper been crated and shipped to parka and of tourists and sportsman will pour Yellowstone and Oallatln valleys. 8om paddocks the nation ove and they have through tbe vallevs loading to ths Ye- uf this region le shared by a few eheep never failed to thrive and multiply. llowstone highlands If the elk and other In certain seasons, and some of th reThrough the national park service thla big game can be retained In proper num- gion has become difficult of utilisation distribution haa extended to other na- bers. According to a recent semiofficial by the elk because of tha ranch tional parka and to national parka in estimate, seven million dollars were spent, which affect the drift of the elk. fences Canada. A few thousand head use the eastern by tourists and sportsmen In this disThe United State forest service and trict last year. The wild game In th portion of the park In summer, drifting state certain game department also have pockets of the hills era thus like so much eastward Jn winter and down tha Shocooperated in scattering the larger herds gold in the pockets of the people con shone and trltwtary valleys. . Thee anithat the rest might live, and placing them cerned. , mals have abundant grazing range In all on a score or more of forests in the Many a tourist Party will go far from aeason of the year, and but for th fact western states, generally where the live- th beaten path and remain many days that the habits ef the elk In using the stock needs ana graxlng capacity would In the district If wild life la abundam. main thoroughfares seldom undergo a allow. The largest herd Is the Roosevelt and the average per capita expenditure change without good cause, these herds elk in the Olympic forest In Washington, In such a district Is between 13 and )5 would greatly Increase. which consists of several thousand speci- per day. The sportsman, who probably mens. A lew thousand head are scat- requires and pack ani- Government Elk Refuge. guide, tered over the forests of Colorado and mals, licenses and riding other necessities, mav The t'niled Stitt, biological survey Montana, and groups of a few hundred multiply these figures manyfold: and Kecpa motha away are in a doien or 'more weaterrr states, tha aummer boai dor. whose number la inntntalns an Hk asyTum known as the or wraps while In Utah having at present approximately legion at the scores of dude ranches In winter elk refuge. In Jackson Hole, con 460 head These are located on Mount the more Interesting districts, multiplies slating of about twelve hundred acres of good hay land. On thla ranch tbe h Neho. at Fish lake, on theCache. the tourtat'a sojourn manyfold. and Uinta forests eastward of HaTh nonresident In quest of an outing aurvey raises a rapacity hay crop, every season storea on the ranch and ber. gnd In the Uinta mountains. It and brings mors money Into Jackson Hole, It at other places for the IndiThese make but a handful of the orig la claimed, than do the livestock that gentconvenient In elk winter. Facilities are also provided to a limited extent for purchas--m- g hay and employing assistance In the more severe winters, besides the accumulation of hay not needed In the mild winters. Itr ordinary winters from 3000 to 6000 elk can be fed, but aa the severity of the winter and Its duration Increases the number of dependent elk and lengthens the period In which they need supplementary feed the effectiveness of th as- measurable and patience. Inconvenience sistance .on the herds as a whole varies elk to feed oh their In th mor never winters there are expense, allowed the clean up around their haystack sometimes twice aa many elk hungering meadows, of for hay aa the government wardens can yards and have contributed freely their own hay. take care of. extra expense Burh requires procedure1 These herds must be handled aa wisedomestic stock and ths ly and as carefully as so many cattle If for guarding premises and maintaining they we to be made Independent of farmstead a which hungry jelk usually disfences, grazing conditions on the winter ranges; ranchmen have at time Ths regards. and there must be ample Immunity on out of th valthe margin of the aummer ranges from Shipped their own stock or driven them to ranges not acceskilling In the seasons when early snow ley their so that to hay might go sible elk, drive the herds down during ths open to the hungrv elk. The fighting against season. shooting In preference done la Annual The thus the hungry elk painting of the woodwork of a to seeing his own stock starve, for the Game Laws Not Uniform. ' homo is an investment and an economy not cannot suffice for all. The game Jawa In th states adjoining hay merely an expense. are the not for Additional Range. Need expark uniform, and. while 0 isting conditions may be satisfactory in To render range and hay sufficient In a normal season, an unusual There is actual profit in painting tho home . of all seasons drift for ths needy elk, additional th elk at migrating time, due to th not alone because it makes it a more attrachay lands must be' acquired, according weather, either In time of occurrence or to .authorities, end addithe government In direction, may easily triple the legaltive place in which to live, but also because tional sanctuary regions must be proized killing of the elk. In such circumelk may graze In the life of tho structure itself is .prolonged. the claimed. where stance the laws favor the sportsmen and autumn In safety, - There .Is t rather than the elk, that In reality should spring for need uniformity in the be perpetuated by these laws for these also the great But this ail depends upon the selection of the attitude of state authorities concerned sportsmen. 'V the Yellowstone elk. Wyoming allows a hunter one elk. and with, right kind of paints. Our climate demands mad by the Inder - a recent program appropriates money for feed. In addition nationalforest service and the bureau staying qualities In paint. Bennetts Pure to providing more or less range by rebiological survey, cooperating, control Mixed Paints meet them. Their base is stricted hunting In certain sections of of acres would be acquired, of about 1 .10,000 n that js reported lead carbonate, giving covering iy pore Montana allows no range restriction, does Of land Tying Immediatelyof north- Isf th a! which In Montana, part no feeding as a state, kills two elk per park ity, permanence of color and durability in public land. hunter end haa been accused of en- ready elk this high altitude and dry climate. winter of the extension present The forcing the bag limit only on nonresiand , refuge in Jackson Hole ts Imperative, lO.OOfl dents. , the stated plan Is to acquire about of acres Consult our salesmen about your painting thousand Seven acres near : by. tilling Smetimes Excusable. land In the Gres Ventre valley Is to be problem. They are all qualified to render you The hunter may not always be to secured for emergency elk .ranch and blame, for he aske the pertinent Inquiry, refuge, and 40.000 acres In the valley, of 4 intelligent and valuable service at the counter why should he not kill an extra elk or th Hoback river; that Is. these areas two rather than stand by during the are considered essential for' th proper winter and see those same elk die of handling ef the elk, and the purchase or starvation? Tha ranchmen and farmers withdrawing of them Is recommended have ben accused of unfairness In sleep- under th proponed program. The Shoing on their havstacks with rifles while shone and Wind River herds can probths elk die of starvation outside ably be doubled without Interfering with fences. The unfairness would spem livestock permits. It Is said. . to lie In prohibiting the killing of such Much of tha lend the government proanimal at .times when feed Is extremely poses for enlarging ths elks winter grss- scarce and elk extremely numerous and Ink and feeding grounds wm ntoT ta br troublesome to the ranchmen. purchased from private owners; some or un- school Far from desiring td annihilate and railroad lands ran probably ' There would also be a duly reduce the elk herds,- the Wyoming be exchanged. ranchmen have. ea r after year, with un- - slight .reduction generally Jn th number Practically every cr of th originally winter ran available to former alk generations la nuwadaya da th crnaluroa In thnlr nld autumn drift by th fnca, farina and that choke tha valleia to tha ranch, foothllla Thua tha regular autumn horn, nomln of th alk la In many renperta a pttlabla rebuff, and thy ar thrown on . th morcy of scanty hay tha winter alk rfu ranch of th and th airmen!. ovrnmnt In the elk straits th hav learnad to brown Iho bunhea for leaved and twig. and to paw th enow with tholr hoof from th weed and grass wlapa nn th mor thinly clad slopes. Th windswept ridges replace for tha huddling hard their former la Wat Ion a In th sheltered valley. In mild, opn winter of abort dural Inn and light enow-fal- l thra wlndawapt ridge widen to accommodat tha prawn t alk population In fair eeourlty, aava only tho few weakened cow and the abort yearling calvea. A heavy enowfall In the mountains force all but the older, tronger bulla from theae milling dome are and they crowded onto the area of limited feed and are often pocketed by . fence ivnm ftew git an doe exist. Here they hava petiahad pitifully. Face , - ' ' zZZit 1 091jScu.Main 276 So. Main |