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Show TIIE ,SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1924. ..... . By j. cecil lWIi..siiSsi.iual-.- "in IWWiuip TRIBUNE TRAVELOGS A j TO --Ss- alter " ii Unequaled Values in f.l entire stockSf living room furnitiire at 30& discount; every uite in the store included. Never in the history of this store has such a beautiful display of If you intend buying within the suites been assembled, all' colors and styles are represented. of A' deposit will hold g this next six months, by all means take advantage great money-savinopportunity. purchase for future delivery. Starting Monday and for I 1 P. ;t Living Room Furniture Higji-Grad- e onje week only, Madsen's offer their te- m,Ph - v i ' - 7inmiffr Ti " r F. A. Whitney - .. OVERSTUFFED MOHAIR SUITE j t i; 1 Baby Carriages Seeing is believing and we want yorf to come and see for younself the wonderful rallies we are offering. - Just think a mohair suite, with deep luxurious cushions and quality construction 1hrtughout. Bf Regular price, $4."0.00. ,. price Special high-grad- an opportanity fared to gat a car ww are doi riage, going to 25 discount on any earriatro give in tha store and 40 discount on oiled samples. Tha one shown above for $Z 3.95, while thsy last. Seldom ia such of- - i bigh-grad- e "" 1 al . a LUXURIOUS nien-grsa- f' ii ., 1 , . Jl SUITE ia Special price ' OVERSTUFFED extraordinajT vaJuea like theso tbai are tnaUn? friend for thisstore every day. Ths aaite shown above is Bade by tba famous Karpea factory. las loose spriniMuiea cumuods saa npnoisterea w e veiear. neguiar price, bowaiu. It $2iaco ............................... 1 ,,1 53 PENINSULAR RANGES During this we,ek we are going to give 23 on all ranges. Our line includes enamel coal ranges, combination coal and gat, also a complete line of heaters. Come in daring the week and have as explain the mazy advantages of the Peninsular. SPECIAL VALUES IN BED DAVENPORT SUITES 'ihe notable features this week will be the showing of a complete There are overstuffed styles and period line of bed davenport suites. These handsome designs, with a wide variety of upholstery fabrics. suite give double service a beautiful living "room suite and with a tim-pl- e bed. The one shown above motion converted into a Regular price?, $393.00. Special 1 One 0 full-siz- $23 Onat Basin Rflg ExjMriarant projact. perimeoul area, vtU nuxkincs. Livestock Trails to Better Range Stockman .r tokt nmtlr t th rreat bacln (1) Tin meteorologKxl station. Uon; aa that Mantl canyon acquired tha ugly habit of belcbinfr ruin onto Mantl city. isn to prevent the destruction of thair homes the stockmen luntajrlly, as a unit, withdrew all (rasing hards from that particular canyon In nd slowly the scars on tha mountain began to heal orer with tissues of useful foliage. FOREST SERVICE BEGINS WORK. then came the naChronologically, tional forest service, which found tha Mantl national forest, when created, about the most wretched, yet the most coveted and needed, of aft westers ranges. Kor eighteen years the forest service has striven to furnish forage to the needy flock and herds, and at the same time to conserve, protect and Improve tha range for and especially for use duringposterity, the occasional dry years which malic Hk. pestilence now and then among tha I Imwtock Interests of the west Striven, yes, often with the men themselves, to keep them range from ruining their own' range, endangering their own future and squandering i viiuuiKiii in A nnnn ' of rainless skies, The guardians of the national ranges were engaged , solely In "saving the stockmen from themselves," as William lis lie v. atork- man of jMcphl, so aptly phrased It. inus wnen m 1S12 the firsr program was made by the government far aa exhaustive lnveftigation of range management problems the Mantl national forest was selected an the most appropriate and the most desirable location for tha range experiment station. So varied has bees the project program developed out of ad-vl- ad-Ti- c, tii . note-hoo- 1 ( tir m-m- pol-lol- ai-- w,a i7 v 1 ' - ST. PAST- FIRSTr: SOUTH rr. !i.T -- LJne hJOme y ure-iim- ABLE. Two native I'tah grasses have not only bean fouad to have the greatest nutrient value but can most easly be the propagated-natne- iy, Western dislrlbukxs mountain grass and the violetean wheat hram .. far has ai jirrianlru (other national forest and other regu lated ranges,. wherever applicable; and it Is proinisea tv those in charge that it will be carried likewise to the desert of thf sped . .iuBu ment station. In cooperation with the Hiirnnrem coiicgn l"tah Airriculturai station, expects ro oe mc jo p.""' duce Ihe seeos in The grass stand, and ths stands of tities at reasonable prices. The violet other perennials remain about the tn wetland dry seasons, though same meto the zrowitiK season, is adopted they do not produce forage so abund..-...- .. teoroloiricai conoiiw"a tn dry years, and are not aided i.iuuu antly the lUan mouniams. bv nearly aa many annual plants eeed proliflcally etehty Pounds pet which have failed to seed and grow m. oy uhu. acre in of moisture. When the peri for want whu ram, is srass. or each hardy vaconditions. ennials,as particularly Utah to eaualiy atlaptedsee.l and wheat graasea, the rieties ITLd if riven are thinned brome is a safe producer, oat overgrarlng, the an opportunity. The cost fljrures at chief forage la thaby stand of anneals, are "" tained over much wider exotpenmesmij . . vet commercial y which varies tn nee a wet years bund from tremes, to 39 cents. These to almost nothing la dry years; eeed sells for and trasses are Blah In pelataolHty, ex when such annuals as rabbit brush be- ' a i wwiux l" cept rienifleeh come plentiful, the nock man reads all stares at are fine producers The wheat rrass Is flnia on the original range. of development. The gospel of better range managebest for the hlrtier, steeper slopes and practiced on and wlntlv summits, as the brome ment, as preaebed does and the Mantl. has bean carried to an needs a little mora moisture nari tn the proict.oi an ST- - Whitney Baby Carriages Tht Newest Pattern in Solid Silver How often have you searched and searched for something with the feeling that you hare seen many things that were good, brt none quite up to the ideal yon hd set! fc We believe that in the field of sterling silver abletwart wc haTS found just what will please you most completely in tfiia ehoice new Ixmia XIV pattern, SERVE YOURSELF AND SAVE a ? When wo do so it ly such artistic awit and for years to come that stock for many, many "We do not add a new pat tern to oar stock very frequentis only because we believe it ha will b so pleasing in the horn , we will want to carry itin par years. Ths delicate ornamentation on the Louis XiV fairly sparkles wijh rippling light. Its proportions and outline fine that we want to ask you to make a friendly are call jo at our store just so that yoa may tee this beantiful pattern befor you make yonr final purchase of flat tablo silver. - dust-smo- , I i riii iiii'i i nm ti II 11 111 IJII!!'rl IiiijjlllliiiMlillll)imMllllllnlsuilJM))llll'llHMlliiiWlliii ... win. -- J B OYD PARK , SILVERWARE YOUR MNTHV WITH C6NTHAL MARKET QUALITY GROCERIES a ehar ef rawpanarbfltty for WMny a nouaewtfe's rwimsatlnn for fin cooking. Trial's veraaae reaaonaMe prices at whieex they're tha and of thair superior quasMy sold. Remember ; Yeu ceald scan aad hunt ths city aver and ever, but yen eeuld est find better Meat and Grocery Values for kss money than In aur Oroaesia Department. Or'hav your seeds delivered frem eur asrvies Meat aad Oraeery Dspsrunent. Two deliveries daily to all parts e tbs city. VUK (VfiyCTFmiim can claim Vgood . S3 EAST rtRST SOUTH WASATCH BOYD PARK BLDC 100 MAM STSOT. ' eait WfeaC-- MO . wx . 1. ...... ffi i iiu atj 1 I may be finally realised. Mn not only increasing the livestock allotments on I all tha public ranges, but in increasing the fattening qualities of an the for- age fostered. LOUIS XIV ' - $179.53 r crop-ping- ' i f winter In Utah. Already some work has been done on ahadscale, white sage and other winter desert range plants and moch more is contemplated, ranges, where most stock subsist in so that the alma of the range men s. f a EAST FIRST SOUTH 1- -57 rurnnurc e best seme what lower a the Tavines. 4 sir? isr wisjwr sjjssiu w uiuiiid though both are reaneded readily by the action of the sheep In passing over It. The ! brome is a rood turf or sad former; while the native wheat grass Is very axrreseave, crowding out June grass, Russian thistle aad other plants to the great advantage o the range. Both, however, must be riven a chance to develop and re seed, for cattle will rrase f rom 00 to 7 per eent of the stems at'one cropping. Moreaver, since the range Is stocked or. allotted for average years, the dry years become on the grasses, exceptionally hard since growth Is lsss and trampling s. more to due freqaent greater now growing ... thereon, or which have i i thimlnli -" IWBH v i" v....,., fnnwn before beTng annihilated by intensive (.razing. NUTRITIOUS VARIETIES AVAIL- gs a4 eeatsse bpeeial price crop-pin- gs money-maker- SUITE Ei (2) Tlu Manti rtatton. (3) For a long time the stockmen gulped the impression that this gre-carpet wis yprejuling ahead of the livestock through the simple expedient of holding the sheep at the czpsiimcnt station telge of the national forest while the r.f more waya of locnaaInK tbalr range got a Jlart. but the range experimenters vyerf yoon sole to demproflta than uaoall, ara (Hren to onstrate scientifically that It not taking paopl; aad rinea tha onl a detriment to the livestock to allow them to follow the snow up tacked by aevara) yaar the slopes. Hubistirg on the soft aad dataoaatratioa eiparimentation and nonnutrlllotis grasses and plants, by fedaral aolenttata. and fry tha but that plants ro grazed soon weakatateoiaiita of stockmen ened and then died. wh had alrsady takaa a few amaJl Thus too early grating was as rioacs of tba advtca, It would scam harmful as ovsrgraxiniE and. tbat incraased profits osa aa takeft The reason Is I At the as aa advlra. aaar tha juol first few leaves of the plant lar spring Belaff only- a waathsr man, without gain their food from the materials lamfc, aalf or colt on the rann. I can stored In the root cystem the preonly pasa along; tha Information that vious autumn. These early green fall from tha lips of tha various n- leaves then the hr.thln The peakara Into my notebook. of or the the parntus fsctrv plant, ran re experiment station, by tha way, In Is much of which the food digested la like many other enterprises In tbat ana sent to viirions parts of the plant It liveai moras ajwi baa tta ta for tissue building. If the leaves, tha weather; and thua It has been therefore, are cropped too early the fortified, defended and assisted In ita plhnt. if it survives, must draw again war on a depreciating range py taree . on the roots to make another start: TerwildaDIe batteries ot meteorological but (he root svstem rmy not have instruments located at different eta- an adequnte food supplv and never vaUona In differamt forage types. sufficient for .1 prolonged withdrawal, STOCKMEN SEE EXPERIMENTS, fo that it does well to survive the k Trurs I waa on hand with my season, maturing y,jth but a weakwhen Dtreotor C. f). rVreling, ened and scanty seed supply. hka a mascaline hell-wthis experience a yens or hsr, led the two finally destroys the plant and visiting stockmen and range s;c1al-lat- a from six western atataa like a the place where It once stood knows K no mora. The solution is to withbrowsing band ot woollies into his first experimental plots In the elahold grating until the principal forsge tion nursery, seven miles east and a in that locality, plants specifically Utah. half mile up from Kphralm, the brome and wheat grasses, have Ik muu! nf lb. hIblIam T tfcnaicrhr of attained a Inches or six height i '""""" I knew aomethlng about grazing. But Mann; so nevwns more, at which time Is new Ideas tell Into my notes so fast and elusive, yet so successful have functioning property sndthehasplant a root I may not ha able to decipher thera been the solutions, of many of these system keen to It enough large :' so many have been ths all; and if by transcribing them I do problems someone an injustice, I trust I may developed on the Mantl. and so thrifty. EASILY PLANTS KILLED. Intensive have been the experiences toe absolved through claim of inabilforesters on tha MantK that 'The However. If the plant Is grater! ity to read, cold, what was written of Mantl" has become ti byword, even off too In tha heat of intense interest. frequently and too oe it an epithet. In the minds of foresters .; Tha range lands of the Mantl national forest, wherein Is situated the striving for a place In the snn for cannot survive, no matter how large the root system; thus artificial range experiment station, have a their own forests elsewhore. atrenuona history. In the early days IMPORTANCE' OF MANTI FOREST. at various stages of nil plants of the Sanpete valley settlements the have the answer la the quesA finally be- tion: ylekled adjacent mountain aides were grazed cameMantl forest permittee How often and when should without restriction. The forage was suffereddistinguished as one who had grasing be allowed? Four close graa-tnmuch and gained much, havan plentiful that tha milch cows and a year over aa area will soon ing been transformed frhm an Impovwork oxen multiplied into great drove., erished kill out n.ost of the more valuable of oattle, and tha few sheep that were Into a and uncertain herder of aloe mountain forage siwoies. Two graa-tasuccessful livestock" of man led- into the valley by the pioneers at per season, the first at time of many parts; and a Mantl forest offithe and of a tether multiplied Into cer or when the grasses became one who was a veteran range readinees, countless hands of six Inches In height, and are around TTi.ce was no restriction of the range of many service stripes. If not scars the second six or eight wee' later, experience. Indeed, at Teast three except that exacted by the herders on of affect the forage of the country's best authorities on c'oes not sertonsly one another at times. on (he perennial plants, prcductlon range management had iheir chief RANGES BADLY OVERGRAZED. seed production and resultant 11 and on Dr. Arthur though Thus soon ths grass waa thinned W. Sampson, inthacharge spreading of the plants Is ten inter of range manwith the close gras out and tha nutritious flowers and agement In the University rupted, especially weads were killed out so that tha nia; William R. taiapllne. ofIn Califor- tng and sharp trampling done by charge sheep. Mantl mountains became one of the of graxlng studies for the country, Therefore tha deferred and rotamoat overworked range In the west. of Washington. D. C, and Krneot tional graeing systems have been deKo great were tha bare spots comIn Winkler, district assistant forester cover veloped and are now practiced sa that the pared with tha forage cf rr&aing at Orilen. l"th nractlcalfce ths entire Mantl forest. location aad movement of the various charge served of having with a along genre obthis being a system of dividing the mountain sheep herd could be prominent range men on ths sllotmnts to the several permittees served from the distant valley by other Into about fonr each to be the columns of dust they raised! And Mantl. range. Hire a stand grazed differently. tracts, One of ths tracts was from a veritable of A forest grazing tha oannot eevne-hac- k a make Umber, conflagration on the range, for the In a few- - yearn after once being de- each year must ha allowed ts seed sheep soon replaced nearly all the pleted: and this Is tha most signifi- unmolested by livestock at seeding : cattle, the latter "being practically cant fact so far developed on the time, the stock nelng entered, and and their trampling atasvea out Thus, while a steady Improve- their grazing As these stalking columns of dust MsntL harvest ard scatter the seed ment has been noted fog eighteen tenda nto- work It into the soil for ; aonverged toward better grass it years, and much of the 80o,fKH acres has The usually meant a war of wits. If not a spresdlng the forage cover. a long convalescent period to cover next tract ta allowed another clash of arms, in order to effect a yet year In Its orfclnal strength t reaeed attaining In division of tha spoils. Herders would before this until manner, stature, a indicated by the scat- four years tha entire allotment has stealthily spy out smaQ tracts of pel and cheek plots, ungrazed and under been so masagea aa to nave naa ter grasa or browse (when they could tered find them) and then rush their fn- - fence, Hat of the wniwres fut raw com plats- reseedlng. Ishing sheep thence with the first tnrntinatheofstory GRASSES BEST. NATIVE Mantl. the tha gray streaks of dawn, only to find waves.of which restorative havehelpful The fondest hopes of both range approaching dust columns or sheep to the far eowflnes of every other sped na users and hardly have experimenters hands toward tba same spot within tional forest In the muntry where ap- been realized tnat vama-oiforage a faw hours. Not only did the sheep perennial verities could find) scanty fare of limited varietv , plicable Is a story of the Great Basin Plants of In the waste plarss ef the are ftmiwlni this the Ranga Experiment etatlnn very large bs planted of the sot big remits yielded by the aaeceeeful forest, tha story their herders frantic In Quest ofi1! " la that in Is extensive the experimental experimentations edible plots projects morsel. every nenv native the as told the story plants found on the by tne forest only FLOODS ARE RESULTANT. : riff leers to the tailing ranee man and tract are suitable for restocking. ImFollowed then, as an Inescapable range specialists on a recent snia day ported plants seldom do well, and are ' consequence, the dashing floods after on the mountain. Surelv th msele hard to get started, the expense often tha summer showers. Without foliage wand of the range experlmeater has being prohibitive and the mountain short. Thns the gresteet to absorb and retard the water, tha peen lifted, and the carpet of Ihv season-tofloods aesaesaaa tit steep slopes, ear-- prcved re owe l beginning- ta snroU Laueetiom has been turned toward ths of destrucths range from ths plant and debris mountain serosa the soil, rocks, reseeding slopes. rying rac CO CANE AND MAHOGANY Good furniture need not be expensiTe. This offering . proves th suite shown above has loose cushions, four fact The three-piec- e pillows and a roll. Regular pnee $300.80. rWl |