OCR Text |
Show THE SAUNA SUN. SAUNA. UTAH Johnny Jones Is Mushing Again A f News Notes Its a Privilege to Live J I Utah a in 1 ' RANKS ELEVENTH, BUT FORESTS ARE FAR REMOVED FROM RAIL CARRIERS a- fr Hyrum. A public meeting of all farmers of the Hyrum district will be held In Hyrum Wednesday evening for the purpose of organizing a drive to rid the district of squirrels, according to an announcement made by R. L. Wrlgley, county agricultural agent. Squirrel drives have proved to be very Utilization of the Huge Timber Are In Ashley and Uintah Forests in the Uintah Mountains JDepend on Developments Ogden. While Utah ranks eleventh in the list of the states in the amount of national forest timber, the stand of timber inThis state is rather far removed from railroads to mqke utilization of it an important industrial item, it is shown by .a compilation of the forest service here. Utah has 5,225,335,000 board feet of national forest timber which constitutes 95 per cent of all the timber in the state. Most. of this is found in the Ashley, Powell and Uintah national forests,. with the Powell forest having the greatest timber stand with board feet. The Ashley and Uintah forests have each mure than 1,000,000,00 board feet. Utilization of the huge timber area in the Ashley and Uintah forests in the Uintah mountains depends largely upon the railroad developments into the Uintah basin, forest service officials point out. The timber on the Powell forest is also a long distance from a railroad point. Marysvale is the closest station and is 100 miles from the heart of the timber region on the Aquarius plateau. . This is exceptionally good timber, the forest ser-- , vice says. 1,544,-600,00- 0 effective In the past In ridding the district of the rodents, and as they have become numerous again it has been thought imperative to conduct a drive. Who has not heard of Johnny Jones, or' of bis finding the lost American balloonists in 1920, when he guided them back to civilization at Mattice in northern Ontario? Johnny bus joined the mushers at Red Lake in the hunt for gold. The picture shows hiifl Willi his outfit. Cost of White House Growing About Eight Millions Spent on Mansion New Roof Needed. luuiu-previo- al prac-for'ileal- ly $39,-816.9- apiwo-priatio- Entries Are Received Utah. Many entries Fork, Spanish have been received already for the Utah County Livestock show to be held here April 7 to 10, it is announced by Manager G. C. Taylor, Friday, the the third of the show, has been designated as Governors day, and Governor and Mrs. George H. Dern and a party of state officials have assured the manager ihey would attend. The annual show banquet is to bs held the evening of Rprll 8. Many From-1- 91 3 to 1924 tiiev mansion. Include only such appropriations ns are charged to "repairs, fuel and so forth, extraordinary lighting, & c., rt pairs. They do not Include sal aries of servants and in many instances the cost of repairs to the grounds, as these were included uifler certain War department expenditures and were hardly separable from other District of errtxrnibia items. grounds at all wdint thpyhave since President Harrison found the White become. In spite of the fact that a House and Mrs. Harrison great deal of money was spent on had the floors removed, in places to them from year to year. The grounds, rout them from their At runways. like the' residence, had to have a one auction of old White House fur"great deal of care, the sum oMF 1,420 niture of the earlier periods was sold being spent in lsfit fdir the bringing a rat trap which Lincoln himself used of Potomac water ever to the; grounds to catch the rodent that had ruined for Irrigation purposes. This, at the his best of clothes. suit time, was considered a remarkable Im- House The White Washington. needs a new roof which will cost. Commission Signs Statement of St. It is estimated, about $.500,000. The home of the President has come Ranch Project St. George-Andersoto be looked upon so much In tlm . . nature of a perpetual national monu- provement. In 1 SI 4 the P.ritisli reached WashSalt Lake City. Initial steps to- ment that Hems of upkeep are usually ward the construction of21.7 miles of a matter of surprise to individual cit- ington am burned nearly all the government buildings. Including, the federal aid highway between St. izens. . While from which President House, ranch were, Andersons and The figures, George Treasury department taken when the state road commission- nevertheless, indicate that the olli-ci- Madison had fled only a few to their arrival. The fire did ers signed the project statement. The residence of the President of the tltal cost of this project is estimated United States has cost the taxpayers not wholly destroy the mansion, but at $375,000. It Is not expected that the of this country, from the time It was left it in such a state that it was necessary to reconstruct it $S, 000,000 entire project will be constructed at built, approximately to attic. Some of the from cellar and availvarious become as funds building, care, repairs this time, but And this does not include wails were found to be in good shape able the first section, between SL at va- and tints It was rebuilt virtually ae- George and Harrisburg, will be built, inore than $1,000,000 expended to the original plans; the aras a cooperative agreement to this ef- rious times for a variety of other pur- cording chitect of the first building was, In miscellaneous Include these To poses. fect has been signed with the Washfact, in charge of the rebuilding. summer, last amounts, refurnishing This commissioners. ington county Some White House Figures. and 4he repairs now under considerais estimated to cost $160,000. cost of total the would tion, bring y nigh-waRebuilding required several years. of the The project statement $10,-00In 1820 the commissioners made a from Echo to Kimball Junction, the Presidents house to nearly 000. report in which they stated that the via Coalville, was signed also. This Become Obsolete. work was far from complete, as It Furnishings In and its 24.6 miles Is length project added was not possible to furnish the inside. lias President every Nearly estimated cost ls$ 100,900. A cooperThis The report of the commissioners to the furnishings. ative agreement, covering an eight materially was not because, In the mum, the far-- , showed the following expenditures on mile section of this project between nisldngs were not adequate, but be- the White House: Wanship and Pages ranch, has been cause of wear and tear. Then, too, at signed with the county commissioners various times in its history the fur- From the beginning to January X, 1820 Electing the Presidents of Summit county. Under this agreehouse 333,207.04 nishings have become obsolete In the will bear $24,000 view of the various mistresses of the Repairing the Presidents ment, Summit county house 246,490 00 of the estimated total cost of $96,000, White House, and this has brought Total the federal government to bear the about many alterations. $379, G97 04 balance. As decade followed decade, It Is not do not take into acTliesefigures A modified agreement on the federto he wondered at that such sums count I lie salaries paid the architect al aid rood from Richfield to Elsinore have been expended. The nation's and other effldaK but do Include the wus signed by the road commission. eyes are constantly fixed upon the wages paid to laborers and mechanics. The new contract, with the bur.eau of home of the Chief Executive and From the day that the White House public road3 increases the federal ap- thousands of citizens every year make was again ready for occupancy con3 pilgrimages to the real seat of the gress began appropriating annually propriation for this project from This great large sums for its maintenance. Somenational government. to $44,484.65. horde of visitors makes it imperative times the house needed refurnishing; that certain of t lie rooms he completely sometimes the occupant felt it did not Idaho Urged To Widen Market Salt Lake Clty."Signiflcant Indeed refurnished and redecorated almost suit ids large or small family, as the ease might be. One and all simply are the changes that have taken place every year. made by asked congress for the The firs appropriation In Idaho farm production In the last money to reInfurnish tt in accordance with his own ten years, writes Harrison C. Dale, congress or the White House was a general fund of $200,000 special tastes. Practically every Preshead of the economics and business cluded in const ruction of public build- ident who has occupied the house has administration of the University of for the ings at the site selected by the first purchased new tableware, chinp, silIdaho, In the last Issue of the Idaho President. Part of this sum was to.be ver and cut glass. The bills for these Economic Bulletin, a publication Isused for the construction and furnishoften ran rather high, or so some sued by the college. "The customary of an adequate residence for t lie thought ing practice of comparing physical voume nations Chief Executive. The n The following table shows the exof yield and crop values from year to was not made until some time by periods since the early penditures year, however, sometimes falls to give in 1790. days; a true picture of fundamental producThe first sum set was almost Immetion changes he says. "A rise In the diately demonstrated to he Insufficient From the beginning to 1858 $1.816 858 87 general price level, for example, ac for the purpose, and it was not ninny From ISIS to 1870 1,222,537 03 companled by improved yields per months before congress was nsked for From 1870 to 1907 3,335.934 27 1007 to 1913 348,000 00 acre, may indicate an Increased atten- additional funds. These also proved From . From 1913 to 1924 952,965 52 tion to some farm product, which In to he Inadequate, nnd It was several $7,676 295 69 point of face, Is actually of declining years before the residence was finally .Total Now Dale furnished. Professor these figures, Interesting nnd Importance. presents This early White House was far large ns they are, do not include a tabulation of crop acreages In which he notes that despite the supposed de- from being a pretentious uffalr. It smaller sums of money that might be cline of farming in Idaho, the total looked like a giaut box. Nor were the charged against the upkeep of the crop acreage represented by basic commodities has steadily Increased In Dairymen to Organize Cream Pool Rupert, Idaho. Sixty members have been signed up for the purpose of organizing a cream pool to be known as the Minni-Cassl- a Dairymen's association. Directors elected for the new organization were George Rreazeal, Rupert; S. W. Reck, Rupert; C. C. Nelson, Heyb.urn;. Joe Walker, Dcclo; Ben Edwards, II. C. Polly and J. G. Nord-struBurley. . Salt Lake City. Flans are well under way to make the annual Black and White day at Richmond, April 29 one of the greatest dairy events of the west, it is announced by C. Z. Harris, president of the Utah Holstein This Friesian Breeders association. event, while sponsored chiefly for the dairymen of Cache valley, is open also to dairymen outside the valley. Mr. Harris announces that all cattle will be fed and cared for the night before and the night after the show without' charge. t Salt Lake City. Interest In dairy expansion in the intermountain territory is evidenced by the number of Utahns who are in the dairy states in the middle west purchasing young foundation stock for use in Utah and Idaho, according to C. C. Gignoux, assistant supervisor of agriculture of the Union Pacific system, who was in Salt Lake Wednesday- ea hi3 way to Portland. Mr. Gignoux stopped in Salt Lake to visit the livestock show Ogden. Construction work on ths elaborate passenger station to be built by the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad on the companys property on Twenty-fourtstreet will be under way within sixty days,-- President J. S. Pyeatt of the company said here. Salt Lake City. The intermountain livestock show received a generous drenching Wednesday the closing day. Despite the unfavorable weather Tuesday, when the auction sale of fat stock wras held, attendance at the show exceeded that at any previous exhibition, J. H. Manderfield, manager, declared. As to the quality of the stock entered In (he show, there was no comparison between this years and the eight that d ROAD BUILDING SEASON LOOMS the last ten years.. The enormous building Ogden. campaign of 1926 in Ogden was given Impetus and additional volume with the decision o$ the Weber county board of education upon a site for the new Weber county high school. Taxpayers of the county have voted a special tax, which will provide $300,- 000 for the site and building, and as the price of the land was but a small percentage of the amount, the building .s expected to represent a construction value of approximately $275,000. The new White House roof which will cost $500, 0M) will replace the. pres-oelaborate one of copper. It is likely that the present sleeping quartets now located on the roof will he preserved, although not used by the President's family. These were added by President Taft for the benefit of servants. New York Times. j ut - j h Princeton Man Revives Cold LiglitSn Dead Fish Princeton, N. J. Returning to his Princeton laboratory after an research tour in tiie marine laboratories of Naples and Messina. E eight-month- s Newton Harvey, professor of physi ology at Princeton, disclosed new in formation about his theory of cold light before the Biological seminary. Cold light Is the popular term for the rays emitted by certain animals, such as the firefly, without ap- preciable heat. Among the experiments have gone before. Salt Lake City. A direct automobile truck service that will speed up express and freight deliveries between Salt Lake and Uintah basin points will be inaugurated within the next thirty days, it was announced at the chamber of commerce. The line will be operated by the Sterling TranspolTiU" tion company, of which A. E. Shaw of Price is president, and will conduct daily service to and from the basin, making the trip in a minimum of one day's time when necessary. conducted by Doctor Harvey while abroad was work in restoring luminescence to dead fish by the use of the ultra-viole- t ray. lie also reported observations on a squid which emits a type of deep-se- a luminous substance when pursued which, he said, takes the place of the inky fluid emitted by the ordinury cuttlefish in (light. In discussing animal luminescence, he declared that he believes it results from oxidization In animals, as In or- The heat, thus dinary Illumination. produced Is so inappreciable that it cannot be measured, not exceeding, iti the opinion of Doctor Harvey, one- thousandth of one degree. ' ' Layton. Superintendent D. D. Harris of the Davis and Weber Counties Canal company will soon hare that part of the canal between the tw-bridges on the state highway and of the road concreted. This stretch cf the canal is located on sandy sail and the concrete lining will save a great amount of water. ' o Beaver. Ten teams and men left a carfor Milford Friday morning-fo- r load of seed peas contracted for by the local farmers. This is the first year the farmers of Beaver have signed contracts to raise seed peas. It is believed the venture will be a success, as soil and climatic conditions are favorable to such growth. NATIVE ILLITERATES IN THE Louis. Baltimore. Trenton, New Orleans and Milwaukee. This grand. total of more than ) adult students Is the most significant proof of the strength of the would Insure a marked reduction of adult elementary education movement in the United States," continues the illiterates in the census of 1930. In May,. 1925, tiie federal commis- report. Despite waning of public Interest in Americanization and the sioner of education sent a questionnaire on elementary. education in Eng- serious retrenchment policy in public expenditures, the school programs for lish and citizenship for adults to eve,-.state superintendent of education, in uative illiterates and adult foreign tiie United States. Returns were re- born have studily improved during ceived from 44 of tiie states and from the past five years, and the general for the nation Is most promisAlaska, the 1 irgin islands, (anal Zone outlook ing. and Hawaii. The 1920 federal census sjiows (hat The returns showed that the students enrolled in classes for adult il- every state in the Union has more adult and naliterates and adult foreign horn In Ihnn 10,000 foreign-bortive illiterates. Thirty-fou- r 25 states numbered states to approximately 2SO.OOO in 1921. date have recognized the Importance programs In addition to the 28(1,000 students and the need of public-schoo- l recorded officially from the 25 states, for adults needing elementary civic there are undoubtedly 50.0M) adults instruction nnd have enacted legislaenrolled In classes In the larger cities tion favoring this work. Financial aid To local communities of those states, which have not provided state leadership for tlds work ; conducting adult classes Is provided for example, Chicago, Detroit, SL by 27 states." UNITED STATES TOTAL 3,034,733 This is the Number Recorded In Last Federal Census Challenge to Education. Washington. The native Illiterate population in the United States, according to the 1920 federal tonsils, was; Native white illiterates, 1.212,-572- ; native negro illiterates, 1. 812,101. The native illiterate group repre-on- ts G4 per cent of our total national il literacy problem, although tiie total number of native illiterates in 1920 shows a marked decrease as compared with tiie number in 1910 nnd 1900. That the 3,000,000 citizens of the United States who are unable to read and write constitute a challenge to American education Is the contention of the United States bureau of educa-- l tion In a recent report, and that the immediate extension of adequate programs of adult elementary education 330,-(MX- v n Is your work wearing you out? Are throbbing backache you tortured feel tired, weak and worn out? Then look to your kidneys! Many occupations tend to weaken the kidneys. Constant backache, headaches, dizziness and rheumatic pains result. One suffers annoying kidney irregularities; feels nervous, irritable and worn out. Dont wait! Use Doan'S Ptlls a stimulant diuretic to the kidneys. Workers everywhere recommend Doan's. They should help you, too. Ask your neighbor I A Utah Case F. L. Jensen, Eureka, Utah, says; Sharp, twinging mepains over caught my right hip and through the small fsTWi of my back. There.-tf- V was a sore spot lnicjSleS my back and l" -had trouble witharJ my kidneys actingh,'! too freely. I gotfci.Ld a box of Doan s Fills and they rid me of the backache. Doan's also put my kidneys in fine condition. e DOANS Z STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS Foster-MilbuCo., Mfg. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y. British Racing Grows Interest In horse .racing In England has been, increasing greatly. Statistics issued by tiie Racing Calendar show that during the last flat racing season 4,090 horsek ran under Jockey club rules, this being the greatest total on record. In 1827 only 1,100 horses ran during the season. Builds up weak bodies General break down forced tne to quit work. Tanlae toned up my whole system, banishedthe nervous strain and i i iti ' gave me back the health of twenty years ago. N I strongly recommend Tan lac.' ' F. J. Messmer, 2, t So. Plinth A ve.t 1 Turlington , Iowa. From Mother Natures storehouse we have gathered the roots, tarLs and herbs which are compounded, under the famous Tanlae formula, to make Tanlae. If your body Is weak and undernourished, if you cant sleep or eat, have stomach trouble or burning- -. rheumatism, just you see how quickly Tanlae you back, to health and strength. Dont delay taking Tanlae another day. Stop at your druggists now and. get a bottle of this, the greatest of all tonics. Take Tanlae Vegecam-he- lp. table Pills for constipation. Honor American Woman Mrs. Carl Akele.v of New York, wife of the African explorer, has been hon-- i ored by the Canadian government which named a mountain after her. Mrs. Akeley is the former Miss Mary I,. Jobe, explorer. A peak in the Canadian rookies will be named Mount Jobe. Lift Pain! Off-- No Ogden. Five thousand trout finger-ling- s were planted Monday in the water of upper Ogden valley by Deputy Game Warden W. H. Anderson. Ogden merchants, members of the Weber County Fish and Game Protective donated the use of trucks to haul the fish to Weber county from the state hatchery in Springville. ' Stone Age City Found on Edge cf Moscow Moscow. Russian archeologists have discovered on the oup-kiit- s of Moscow tiie remains of an ancient city, believed to date from tiie Fiffh con- tury before Christ.- - when stone tools were just beginning to be replaced by ' metal implements. Iron arrows, knives, glass bracelets. bone combs, nnd gold and silver Several jewelry were . unearthed. examples of primitive, pottery bearing designs for textiles also were found. Themain occupation of the inhabitants, the archeologists say, was cattle breeding, bunting having played a minor .role. Traces of an ancivnt Kremlin also were excavated. Is Your Work Hard? . Salt Lake City. Chinas Sophie Tormentra, a young producer in the Jersey herd of W. A. Nuttall of Provo, has "met all requirements for the American Jersey Cattle club .silver medal .by jmoducing 492 88 pounds of buterfat and 8120 pounds of milk in 303 days and carrying her calf for 176 days of this time, it is announced from club headquarters. She made this fine record on two milkings per day. Brigham City. Comparatively little damage was done to the fruit crop of thts section, according to many of the leading orchardists and fruit dealers. While the thermometer registered around 22 degrees above zero the coldest weather here in several waaks a good breeze swept over the country, which aided materially in saving the tender buds of the early apricots and cherries, which were partly In bloom. It Is thought that the crop was thinned down a little, but not to any great extent. Doesnt hurt oheTUfT Drop a little Freezone on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or irritation. Cuticura Soap and Ointment tiie r cajp Clean and Healthy Promote Hair Growth Kp Conversions Fruit .Declaring she had been converted at a thurcli revival meeting, a pretty divorcee of Sacramento announced at the same time that site bad dropped her $25, (MM) heart balm suit against a local merchant, because it conflicted with her religious convictions. sure Keiiei 6 Bell an s Hot water Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 25$ and 75$ Pkgs.Sold Everywhera . |