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Show Mr. Dalton remained whil. i Scb faragonah News ' w J ;o rl, " r,...j V ' - l; .fc.s II. II! I f; -- - " t - cement Bt,t " k' ntibe " ml bet K JVrry , W wp t I ' Many of lownipeopU drove 5t- - Georg to et the ba.ket between the Parowan j bll gam and Dim high achoo! team. Among them were Mr. and Mr. Mr. and Mr. Samuel Abbott, Revere Robinton, Mr. and Mr. D. Amaia Stone, Mi Helen Stone, Mr. and Mr. William S. Boarman, Homer Boardman, Jim and Ritchard McBride. Stone the cot in hi id. t" ' i n vv I t it D e.ir I .i ! i i.r it I'. iw ij iif r.s ! c.m vy mil it nut cook It teninei.iture There Mi.il y in one lurge ro.ist one:, I lo'nove scorch h can I smooth rough, U te In fote painting It1 pitti d i A- - M.ir.e a ).iste of glycerine II I eliry h ad ulde and apply it i. i'!i a pu't knife This paste also e i. si i to i.itch crat k around I'et.tn - i:i coi, rrete laundry tubs Q - have a tall, naTUW house Is theie an v way I can make it look shorter A I'se a dal roof Asphalt sii't.gles, the most popular ' 'i e tooling, .no made in numer-u- s colors and U stores and oiler wide variety from which to Q y I Finest Facilities 1 ror EVERY Family ' that all the privilege of a fine ib the lowet priced room, o alto do nine the In folrl go way 1,0 ISC can blown sugar be kept from growing lumpy? A St ue it in the refrigerator r keep it in t tichtlv closed glass iw ir of aervice go to tho.e familie advantage ill the I lirin lent. sis have devel-I- , washing clothes wilt, so, mu Suptisomc frequen i a s s..,ki it. which is tn.xeii w u. s .. (j my to pi event the dirt t.oi. UK r.g to the clothes again , s land wave is shut olf. ii I irlrct our lo who nt hi. 'wounds (.lean priced aervice. e I .i, a mo-- si , imi of , SERVICE AMBULANCE No 673 MORTUARY ENSEN MAIN 25b SOUTH - "Of all the mate- CEDAR CITY ST. ple to make objects that fill their needs sit ... ly Joe Marsh. or add comfort and convenience to From Sheepskin to Sheep 8'ft school into farming. that! Hut I admire ans bke Dick New comb . . . '23, but going to college under 1 M Bill of Right-,- . cj 4 tore Intends to but a better-md- i farmer sheep more scientific farmer, know-ho- ttferans like Dick interfere. arent tt hat little ttion they allow themsel.es form of needed e among the most Seems as if, just by having their education postponed, theyve put a higher value on it . . . and on things like temperance (that glass of beer, for instance), understanding, and good citizenship. And from where I sit, when Dick gets he wont have lost his sheepskin much time. Hell be an even better farmer than his Dad. (Exactly what Dad wanted !) barm in AtSl substances are books, or conversation and an occasional glass of beer with friends. aren't too many college diates in our tow n. (iimd honeit Outgoes. ..but most f Us went high their life, mineral is difficult to obtain." oe tytUufll exercise, or METAL MINING INDUSTRY OF UTAH Cujiynght, 1918, United States Brewers Foundation umpus Rooms Give Chance ' inonchi1l-l- e 0f a om, for family lecreation Only in the last a, ?xatln nas the rumpus room be- op Ihe ,part average house, m6c Was PIdctu'ally non-- 1 edrlv 20s, but to- ..,tne Jae!s of the style of the ruieation room j'. jS5p,arate possible if rooms vaiy from home d r;"Pending upon the h bar. Ceiling, cream Walls, knotty Floor, brown linoleum with black insets, or painted to imitate such a covering No curtains, drapes, rose figured Front of the bar, glass brick Bar top walnut with burnt umber and Game room: Ceiling, light gieen stained varnished Furniture, some light ImiWalls, slightly deeper greenWoodrose some green red tation fireplace, brick General purpose room: Ceiling work, maple stain Venetian bunds walls canary yellow. Wood-wcov-at windows Floor, coveied with and k, golden oak stain Floor u.le red linoleum with blacn linoleum. black and maroon ng, and insets Tenn's t due in 'me. eYt an blinds, same as walls, gieen. Furniture i ;p tore and mirror, bright red. forest giee; ,n e irames, black , Rumpus loom ie...m Drapes, light green. Floor painted to mutate tile in black and orange, with one or two large red diamonds house, and the painted like an inset in tile. Card rumpus roorri or tables and chairs, dark oak or elopn.ents in modern home in'11 recent ye.irs have seen in' .e acLcePtanL't' of the single for ingenuity pine-natur- fcv .es tt fc t tftS Generally speak-- 1 !tr,s'acofatlVe scheme in tae purpose of the it k yn lJwing are pTrnnilee)?f uh the Prm Eari room runiPus room-' CetlltlK, ci earn with olaVa nd ttiDliCeof bPd,es stenciled ' , lighting fix- enTn. adla,n,'n'1 dnd heart ar opposite cor-Sc- J of Ye r ri0?1 lrlt;, and a single 'rLr,.lY ste! filed in black Point the i toYej r":n,rs d f jrners Walls, V ,f t- St nciled in all- J o black over a ;0", J ' T ,ind the entire 3I,r ln huint umbei r e i : tvn C4ANIV into vlEWSswli T HATS WHAT WE All WANT, IN OUR HOMETOWN YOU CAN NEWSPAPER HELP BY CALLING IT1N. COTTON MO iSTHE QUIZ 1947 A7f- - HCoW& v i brunette HllDA CANNON, OF VERNON .TEXAS, WA5 NAMED 1947 INTERNATIONAL COTTON QUEEN AT THE international convention SAN FRANCISCO. UQNS IN BARNWARMIN QUEEN Utah. By Earl Rhinrhart District Conservationist CHAPTER XV Many discouraging times were felt by the farmers at Kanab in providing the essentially needed water for irrigation. Kanab Creek, the only peernnial stream which goes beyond th Vermillion Cliffs, was their source of water. Even this was not sufficient for a large scale agriculture. Until July 1883, however, water was easily taken out through canals. On this date the lowered th great washout creek bed between 40 and 50 fret below the intake of th canal diversions. Many dams had to he build, one of them 60 fee high. They were destroyed by repeated floods. Some years the farmrs were unable to get any water to their fields. One well designed and constructed dam, build in 1890 when it was washed out by an even more disastrous flood than the one occuring in 1883. The present dam was built in 1910-1- 1 and had to be worked out with a system of flumes and rock tunnels for spillways. days they were able to get a mall amount from a spring in nearby Toms Canyon" - some inferior quality water from wells but more from settling basins ditched from Kanab Creek. A spring in Hog Canyon was tapped with a pipeline built in 1909 1910, but again ths source was found inadequate. Now the people of Kanab pipe water fromj Cave Lakes Springs some seven miles distant. Stockmen who range sheep and o cattle throughout this part the county and Northern Arizona all live in Kanab. Fredonia is the New Town in the Kanab Valley which was established in 1886, many years after the more favorable sites were taken up. Both water for irrigation and culinary purposes are scarce in Fredonia. Culinary water comes from rather dis tant sources. CHAPTER XVI The Upper Watershed of the Kanab Creek The following story on the ravages of erosion of the upper watersheds of the Kanab Creek was written by Clair Ford of eKanab, Utah, in 1935. In the upper basin of the known as the El ho Dam Sitet the creek divides into what it known as the Upper Kanab Sink Creek and the Valley Wash. Each of these tributaries follow through this area and head under the Vermillion Cliffs. TRUCKS is 533 2 Ion to 10 Ions GREATER DRIVING POWER GREATER DURABILITY AND DEPENDABILITY SUPER DELUXE CABS : CEDAR MOTOR CO. 145 North Main Street tv he ,,mMih,re .1 the -- Pf? Lf'fwm bfh!s unique 1 SrtiSWSitEo furnishings. ship-styl- e Cedar City, Utah decomivelff! " "'UM Telephone ' W. In the last few years, both Fredonia and Kanab have benefited from their geographic lo cation. They are, both supply points at the beginning of a 200 mile stretch across the Colorado River to Flagstaff, and a gateway to the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. FE III: It A I. 1-- hV44M ,! Centennial Slury of Southern Utah Culinary water has also been difficult to obtain. In the early Mitt 1 i i A i k Separate the with a black Aide No t ui tains. tout AvN (All LETS GUARD WHAT IS LEFT At we move into the new year we move into the peak season for the twenty seven hatcher and many poultrymen who maintain breeding flocks for th hatcheries that are serving th people of Utah and the country by supplying baby chicks and turkey poults This group is known as the Utah Hatchers and Breeders. For nearly twenty-fiv- e years this group has ben organized for the purpose of breeding and hatching better Utah produced chicks and poults. The hatcheries are located from Logan on the north to St. George on the south. Before the national PoulPlan was Improvement try breeders had a Utah adopted, plan of their own that was operating on a voluntary basis. Many of the men and groups who initiated this policy of better chicks and poults aro still active in Utah today, Through the years they have more than kept pace with the times, and today Utah hatcheries in buildings, incubators and equipment are on a par with those to be found in any state. We have exclusive turkey hatching capacity for 1,000,000 turkey poults and 2,250,000 capacity for baby chicks. The state has plenty of capaand modern city, incubators equipment, men of experience and ability, breeding flocks of quality to supply most of our needs. Support of this state industry will bring many new dol- - rn k I M t'-- MiDK'AL Into Peak r .V1 UTibtr & to Probe , I... S3 A personal investigation will be made by Governor Vail Pitt man, relative to misleading highway signs in that slate said to be responsible for shifting motor tourist trafficc through Nevada to Salt Lake City on Highway U. S. 93 instead of via Highway U. S. 91, 112 mile shorter. The sign was instituted by the P. I D., who pointed out that touri traffic through St. George had declined 18 per cent because of tbe misleading road sign. Word ha. been received from tbe White Pine Chamber o Commerce at Ely, Nevada tha they had nothing to do in th matter of placing the sign i question, nor do they know who put the sign up, but they will cooperate in every way to cor rec ly inform the tourist. lars - Road Signs. Utah Hatcherieo IS SO Celebrate Nevada Governor oi w i 7- ei -- f1 17 Oregon i planning a stale wide celebration neat year to mark the centennial of its establishment as a territory. In thr meantu sltf ormans are preparing to celebrate 1949 A 1950 as their centennial years. Unethical an1' 19 4 t Sdtlsfdctory f, To 1 ,4 1ANUAIT Th Nttonl PrU Service i de votmf UnglKjr prrtt re!ee o publicise the Bouthwrst prt of the U. S. at a intri major vacation spot. Couf Sfafn .0 MONEY AT WORK Southurtt Pufttnif( pref-r-f3v,!n- lh(v are designed rrn' thcy are not lnl T?nventunal decorative ais lsTone room in which ie:?ects maV be used ' t 4 Sam inter-mountai- rials used by peoJdirtUtmiHt From where I MARCH OF DIMES Seaton charge within Iron County. TELEPHONE I UTAH ( 1 The Spotlighting lothing muon june. applied I' A mit c 1 rin ! i -t .cu sf.ni.n.ige is dn to keep a shrinking in sie iJii i.,it W itre.it s"ul Mr. Edwin Williamion ha ll,f frem SB ill at hi home been eriouly Da Ion wen tkr d Mr has j,ad U(, jer(, fight . r(IJin( ol with .J iKi but i improv- pneumontt, r r Hit daughter Mrs, " lowly. ! Dora Whitney of Parowan hat ycf f il trr tti imntrd',ry been here to in caring for ! mMMm A-- red X. k I to taken lnd luitamed a Cedar Turkey pi"' ,n took several ' Uir ihr y and Mr. Arm ru"i, ,lr Slake Sunday Sthoul ho.rd were guests of Mr and Mi William Ikoardtnan 'brn fey v,. ted Paragonah Ward Sunday .school and Sacrament M.el.ng Jan. Hth. m 49 Mr Helen Stone iited tchuul in Cedar City on day latl week hile Mi Mary Mae Mitlian took her place her in the school room. - ,hr j,,! barto Ml. Conn.r barter it vi.itmg ber grand, rrnt, Mr, Mrs. MrI li.it, in, ), atartrd ... d .t r.. , High, Mt d- be ling lrfkkcd a u"i, ,bt ,rr' b, nhile him. rrtfield, California. UJ ,hr, Ik.w , hr rJ. bn brllrf ll' in,m for visiting with hi family far Boyd Robinson left on Jan. 10th to return to hit work Hi immediate d.tlmaliun was Balm Ul' g M u;1' PAROWAN TIMES PAROWAN UTAH JANUARY 2i. Aftr ,r" u, - to 1080 Southern belle Martha Strong looks pretty tickled as she wear the crown that shows she's Queen of the 25th Annual Barnwarmin at the University of Tennessee. Martha, chosen by agriculture students at the University, wears a billowy dotted Swiss dancing frock in keeping with the King Cotton theme of the event. ' Near the head of these two streams first settled some eight or ten ranchers. Dairying, and the growing of a small amount of grain and potatoes was carried on. The natural vegetation consited chiefly of underbrush, such as the scrub oak. Service and Alder berry bushes, etc On account of th roughness rcked , by the nunirrou. In that loon incrrB(! !r ,1 t' : capacity of thr frrd pi !n this banin ihr winter btiv fall it from four to t t ft dept. The frost goes down n u 'I ground very derp. Ihr l.y on the ground mn until the late ipring moiith'. the th aw comet each om t! tYc sheep trails have linumi a conveyance for a small sir. am of water; and when e.n h c nl'- -, li at the bottom, a ru.'im - s'c, ,m ,of water is the holloas c,. well loosened by the ir,t is o.-- i, easily picked up by t!,r and is soon laden ti its c,.p . ty. Later as the washes hen- - developed, large hanks lone rased eff into the streams. The-- have been carried along in a comphie lump, which is soon grown a round ball by continuous roll ig. Some of these mud hall, hive been deposited along the n ek bd her at Kanab as lar',e as twelve feet in dian.etrr, later they have been pick.- I n by a larger stream and earned o i. - f, e t The above inentiontd w. c are now to deep, they i ed as dividing lines for slu cp .in-geand in some instances it is miles between crossings of The ranch within this aea, whch is known as the Seepm ler Ranch, a few years ago pm laced feed to winter a held of A flood of water two sheep. years ago gutted the mead ws and covered up the rest of so now it is deserted and usV,s. This same thing will hajjpi to others, one cloud burst can n ,w do a lot of damage. Fve years ago, under t! o direction of the CCC Depa, nt some erosion control was d But today hardly a trace is left on account of the s ity of the storms and floo A dam at the Llbo may , the silt from flowing int , Colorado River, but this needs wi ' protection as needs better range control etation encouraged to grov dams put in the washes lh deflect the severity of the v, This will make of tin one of Kane Countys of resources. s, . t-er. What has been mention ' in the above statement can ! plied to another of the tr.l ies of the Kanab Creek, v ir known as the Johnson . We nvite your atlent.o the necessity of erosion cn of this area, and trust t will be gven the proper j . eration. MARCH OF DIMES Cont. the d isease. There must Lc may strike in Last summer drove home one but undeniable fact that i knows no boundries. Our t o stationed in Europe and the cific were stricken, as v children and adults m F Akron, Los Angeles, and o centers of the 1947 ouJ For some areas, the 19 17 demic was the first in for others, it was consecutive. 1 |