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Show ' PAGE NINETEEN JOURNAL, March. 5, 1908. jfcursilay. rest Reserve Order r fy r 5ipprvisor Woodruff Issues a Circular Con- - ?,' 04 i taining Rules For Grazers. It t i KUUII ' I 'kia- I , Following Arc ? 11 The Instructions to The Users of The Bear River Forest Reserve. 1" - ij- To. the Public : - . , In hopes that may ofjbenefitjind assist in securing a clear understanding of the Regubeen lations, the following circular of instructions to users of thTBear RiverJational Forest 'has Je prepared. Grazing Seasons. Cattle and horses will be admitted to the National Forest on May 1st, and will be allowed to remain until October 15th. j allowed be 1st remain and will to admitted on until October 15th, except be will July Sheep be will 2 of the where end admitted the June 15th. on south Forest, they in District No. All stock must be counted by a Forest Officer before going on the National Forest,., and no owner will be allowed to go on the Forest with a single head more than his permit calls for. When an owner is ready to drive onto the National Forest, he should notify the Forest Officer nearest to the grazing district he is to oc,cupy, and as there will be a great deal of this work to attend to, the owner should give at least lO days notice to such officer. This is important, for the reason that if your animals go on the Forest before they are counted you will be in trespass. Forest Officers will meet your herd at tlie time and place agreed upon. r . -- j If it is necessary to build counting chutes tojmt lheep,o wHerswill be expected in such building. Forest Officers are located as follows: District District District District District District District District District District District No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. 1 2 3 4 5, 6 7 8 9 10 11 .Providence, Utah. . Wellsville, Utah. Wellsville, Utah. .' Providence, Utah. Mink Creek, Idaho, or Providence, Utah, . Paris, Idaho. Mink Creek, Idaho. Mink Creek, Idaho. . Malad, Idaho. Malad, Idaho. Malad, Idaho. to-as-- sist 7' Bisben Creek, Earleys Dip, and Hills Dip. Danish Dugway. t Green Canyon. Green Canyon. , Green Canyon and Riverdale. 6. Co-o- p Creek, Emigration Canyon, St. Charles Dry Canyon, and St. Charles Green Canyon. District No. 7. Riverdale Canyon and Cleveland Bridge Trail. District No. 8. South Fork Canyon and Bailey Creek. No. No. No. No. No. No. 1 2. 3. 4. 5. trailing along any entrance way as above described, owners of sheep will keep their flocks on the high- ridges and will not allow them to graze or bed along the stream or in the bottoms of the gulches and hollows. The flats, bottoms and land bordering the streams are reserved for cattle In - grazing. ' . In ho case should it require more than one day to cross the cattle district of this Forest and ' arrive at the sheep range. All stocks owners arerequired tqbury the carcasses of animals that die on the Forest. On arriving at your grazing ground you must not thereafteralIo w your flock to grazeoutside the lines pointed out to you by the charge. The owners of sheep Will be held matter as, well as in all other matters. responsible for the actions of their' herders in this If any sheep are sold during the grazing season and the owner desires to remove them from he Forest, such owner must have a Forest Officer count them off, or he will ' not he allowed to bring in other sheep to replace them. Every owner oft cattle or tiprses which are grazed on this Forest will be required to put out at least five pounds St salt for eacfh animal, at such time and place as the Forest .Officer in charge shall designate. Forest Officers will see to it that sheep are salted regularly and at such places as will avoid injury to any part of the range. Forest-Qfficer-i- FAMOUS NEW ENGLAND NOVEL ON THE STAGE Ki-ro-prak- n are warned against leaving any camp fires before they are out. Always cover the camp fire with earth or throw water upon it before leaving camp. If a smoke should be observed rising from any part of the Forest, indicating that a forest fire is threatened, it is the duty of the man in charge of stock grazing in the Forest to go to it at once, and to see that The fire is put out. Your grazing contract calls for this assistance to be given. Please report such fires to me. Sheep must hereafter be, bedded where night overtakes them. Sheep owners will not be' allowed to drive out from camp in the morning and back in the evening, for the reason that too much forage, is wasted and the surface of the ground too badly cut up by such action. The method suggested is to have your herder prepared to make his camp with his rhe may be. In no case must sheep be bedded within 300 yards of any running t stream or living All sheep herders, campers, etc., Jand,-whereve- spring. ' Forest Officer in charge of a grazing district has authority tp give instructions as to how shall be handled on any district, and to ehange the boundaries of any district assigned to any person, if circumstances warrant it. The object of this rule is to provide sufficient feed for all stock, and to . guard against waste of forage. All users of. the Forest will he. required to comply with instructions issued from time to time V the United States Bureau of Ahimal Industry, and the State Stock Inspection Commissioners. The stock stage production of Adams the Quincey 'Sawyer Felessential features of Charles ton Pidgin's famous New England novel oLthe safhe name been followed, and they are, said to have been handled to extremely clever advantage. It is a distinctly enjoyable piece, . both iu itself and m the ingeniously work of the people present ing' it: The production to be seen here for a night at the Thatcher opera house on Thursday evening March 5th, by the .way, is the same in every detail of scenic production and cast as seen during the New York run recently at the Academy of Music. There is a laugh almost everywhere, despite the tender seriousness pertaining to Alice PettengillY. pathetic feature as the much loved blind girl and to her value as the central feauture of the love story. It is a most entertaining picture of rural life, and presented on quite a different-plan from any other bucolic drama. Its features and typical characters are said to be exceptionally well presented- .al - SAVED FROM BEING A CRIPPLE FOR LIFE Almost six or seven weeks ago I became paralyzed all at once writes Mrs. with rheumatism, Louis McKey, 913 Seventh Street, Oakland. Cal. It struck me in the back and extendedfrornthe-hi- p of my right leg down to my foot. The attack was so severe that I could not move in bed and was afraid that I should be a cripple for life. About twelve years ago I received a sample bottle of your Liniment but never had occasion to use it, as I have always been well, but something told me that Sloans Liniment would help me, so I tried it. After the second application I could get up out of bed, and in three days could walk and now feel well and entirely free from pain. My friends were very much surprised at my rapid recovery and I was only too glad to tell them that Sloans Liniment was the only medicine I used. , Very truly yours, ' t MARK G. WOODRUFF, Supervisor. kSan Utah, Feb. 28,1908. - Logan, Utah.- - Is the latest and most scientific way of REMOVING the CAUSE of 95 pe cent of Acute and Chronic diseases, without ' i'L i e or Operation. 1 Every genuine .Chiropractor adjusts BY HAND any one or more (as necessary) of the 300 articulations of the skeletal frame, more especially the 52 of the Spinal Column, thereby REMOVING pressure from IM- PINGED nebves, allowing a normal supply of Life Force to constitutes healths every orgaa-au- d part oT4.hebody-whicWhatever your ailment is, there is hope for you through Chiropractic. Consultation and Examination Free. DR. J. F. PETRITSCH, Chiropractor. (Graduate of Dr. D. D. Palmer). Office: 42 Bell Phone 129. Logan, Utah. "rt7 I Jf Drug-Medicin- h. Headquarters for Poultry Supplies... WHEAT, SCREENINGS. BEEF SCRAPS, OYSTER SHELL, CHARCOAL, BLOOD MEAL, & SPICES. WE ALSO CARRY FULL LINE OF GRASS & CLOVER SEEDS. POP CORN, SWEET CORN, BALED HAY, OATS, MILL STUFS, POTATOES, ONIONS, SALT AND SEAMLESS SACKS. , CORN, T. J. Poulter Produce Co- - 130 NORTH MAIN IND. PHONE 145 A. BELL PHONE 144 R. IN THE OLD SMURTHWAITE STAND TO JOURNAL SUBSCRIBERS. AS WE UNDERSTAND A RECENT ORDER OF THE POSTMASTER GENERAL, WE WILL BE FORBIDDEN THE SECOND CLASS MAIL PRIVILEGE IF WE DO NOT HAVE A PRACTICALLY PAID UP SUBSCRIPTION LIST. THE ORDER WAS TO HAVE BECOME EFFECTIVE 1ST, BUT IT WAS FOUND NECESSARY TO GIVE A LITTLE MORE TIME TO PUBLISHERS TO GET THEIR BUSINESS ADJUSTED TO THE NEW CONDITIONS. SUBSCRIBERS TO THE JOURNAL WILL KINDLY TAKE NOTICE THAT SIX MONTHS CREDIT IS ALL THE RULING ALLOWS US TO GIVE, AND ADJUST THEIR ACCOUNTS ACCORDINGLY. IT WILL BE NECESSARY FOR THOSE WHO ARE OWING TO PAY UP FORTHWITH, AND THOSE WHO ARE NOT OWING TO AVOID LETTING THE ACCOUNT RUN LONGER THAN SIX MONTHS. JAN-UAR- . CROOKS ATTEMPT ESCAPE Edward Carroll, one of the four alleged crooks who robbed two railroad men in the Clift house, Salt Lake, and Morris Sullivan, serving 30 days for drunkenness and trying to break into a house where his divorced wife was living, while working with the chain gang, made a break for liberty, The Salt Lake Herald THE BEST PAPER IN UTAH TELLS ALL THE NEWS EVERY DAY. ns. running in Sullivan - was recaptured after a chase of many miles, but Carroll opposite-directio- -- 7 made a clean getaway; BURGLARS LOOT SAFE. At a comparatively early hour in the evening in the very heart of Salt Lakes business district, burglars entered Rowe & Kelley s 4 south house, Mjain street, wrecked the safe by the use of nitro glycerine andstole $300 in cash, certificates for $8,000 in mining stock, and other valuable papers, besides a watch and afgold ring. At nine oclock the robbery was discovered. clothing 85 cents $10.00 A A MONTH T SUBSCRIBE TODAY YEAR. 1 A' 132-13- ' $44.00 FROM PARIS - ' IDENTIFIED HOLDUPS C. A. Gustafson, a miner, called at the city jail in Salt Lake and identified Edward Carroll r and W. G. Apperley, two of the men held for the Clift House robbery, the men who held him up and robbed him of $75 several nights previously. f a , - . Each herder in charge of a band of sheep must have the blue identification card in his possession at all times, and be prepared to show 'it to Forest Officers. These cards will be issued at the admitted to thForest, sheep-ar- e -tik In the , Trails by which' sheep majr enter the National Forest have been established. The Forest Officer in charge of the district will send you to the entrance nearest to the district or part of the district you are to occupy. The trails are as follows : District District District District District District PAGE TKHE3 na-tur- t, , LOGAN, UTAH . STOCK COMING UP. The stock of the Sunnyside Mining and Milling Co. is coming up, and Is now 25 cents a share The prospects will justify a much higher figure. Eigftty feet down 'and the ore body almost in sight. A few shares, 'still obtainable Send orders to E. D. Miles, Paradise,- Cache Co., Utah. We collected $44.00 for the Wood River Times, Hailey, Idaho, from a . gentleman at No. Rue Pomereu, Paris,- France. The draft was written in French. Nobody hut our client, Mr. T. E. Picott, could read it. It looked good to him. We can collect some for you if ' you turn in your claims. Red - Streaks of houesty exist in MerchantsProtectiveAssociation . . JCIENTIFIO COLLECTORS OP HONEST DEBTS.-Sev- en Rooms, Fifth Floor Commercial National Bank Bldg. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Some People Dont Like Us Francis G. Luke, Genl Mgr. Y |