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Show THK PAYSONIAX, fAGE TWO PAYSOX. UTAH, FEBRUARY 18, If'?!. Expert Shows Throughout the Northwest States How to Butcher Festive Porker to later dropped to moisture Agricultural Outlook Is Good Range, feed urn) 25 Advances oomli 50 and only freight and a small percentage of the value of the wool was advanced on the last uf the clip to move. Trading in wool has been inactive since May, 1920, and very little wool been of any grade lias moving. n the New Englnnl Woolen mills and Philadclpliit districts have been closed or running on part time only, and the demand for cloth has been However, the late December light. wool movement was heavier than it has been for many weeks and owners, dealers and consignees were making Mill no futher price concessions. stocks of wool aro reported as much lower than usual and garment makers aro holding only small stocks of cloth at the present time. Curtailed production is resulting in a gradual decrease in the amount of stored stocks of canned milk, but the slow export market and tho reduced domestic donrnnd make the process a slow one. Many in this district are handling their usual supplies of milk for tho account of the producer, but portion of the milk which formerly went to tho condensaries is now reaching the market as butter and cheese. at country Increased production points nmj nn unusually early season in the dairying districts of the Pacific coast states have put large supplies of fresh butter on the market and prices during December wero generally lower than in November, The 1919. 1929, or in December, better grades of butter have been in active demand, but cold storage goods and undergradcs are moving withdrawals Cold storage slowly. at the four principal markets of the district were 159,315 pounds less in December, 1920, than in the same An additional facmonth in 1919. tor in the market for storage buttor was the arrival of 792,000 pounds of New Zealand butter on December 20, but, in tho face of low prices in tho district, much of the foreign product was shipped to eastern markets. Cold storage holdings continue below (hose of last year in all markets except 1,08 Angeles, but, duo to the heavy holdings in the latter center, the total district holdings on .Tanuary 1, 1921. were 156,319 pounds This is in greater than a year ago. line with the holdings of the country at large, however, as a preliminary rejiort dated January 1 places th, ro'd storage holdings of butter in the United States- at 58,600,000 53,737,387 pounds, compared with cents r pound, lions continue favorable in practically nil sections of tlio twelfth federal is livestock district and reserve In as thriving. reported generally ihe Pncfic northwest there has been little snow or severe weather and Stockmen have not hud to buy much In the winter hay or feed. country there is a layer nost of the winter of snow over feeding area and cold weather has made considerable feeding necessary in many sections. Hay is plentiful, In however, and the price is low. California green feed is abundant exIn cept in a few southern counties. the hitter section and in southern Arizona, water has been scarce for some time and livestock conditions Cold weather preare only fair. vailed in northern Arizona during December and some feeding ha been The snow has replenishnecessary. ed springs, streums and water holes and stoek is benefiting accordingly. Receipts of all kinds of livestock at the stonkynrds of the district were lighter in December, 1920, than Tho peak of the in December, 1919, heavy marketing movement seems to have passed and fewer unfattened animals, young stoek and breeding A reanimals, appeared for sale. newed interest in swine breeding is also being manifested and in tho Pacfic northwest there have been numerous inquires for brood sown. With only an average supply of animals on all markets, and a good demand, trading was active Docembcr mol prices were generally maintained levels. at November Top steers brought from $7.00 to $9.0q a huu dred weight and top cows ranged from 75 eents to $1.75 a hundredTho prices. weight below these declined sharply in priee of hogs late December, but rallied quickly and is still $1.00 per hundredweight over the prevailing price in middle western markets, where top hogs are sidling at approximately $10.00 per The sheep market hundredweight. iheid its own easily in tho faco of light receipts and top lambs continued to bring $9.00 to $10.00 a hundredweight. The majority of the 1920 wool clip of the twelfth federal reserve district is still in the hands of the sheepmen and held for them, on consignment, in Boston, 1hilndolphia, Chien-rand Portland wool warehouses. Early advances on consigned wool, made when wool was selling on a 55 to 00 cents a pound basis, were from 5.5 to 45 cent per pound, and competition for business was strong. pounds on January inter-mountai- - 1, 1920. San Jose Scale the Worst Pest Found In Utah County Orchards Jose scale is the worst pest of the orchards of Utah county, according to Dobor J. Webb, county-croand pest inspector, for it kills young trees in two or three years, and old trees must be sprayed Mr. to keep it in control. Webb 1ms issued the following valinformation coneorning tbe uable sprayed or out out furnish an ideal incubator to give n fresh start of this I test each year so thnt it is essential for the fruit grower to spray to keep it in cheek anil see thnt his neglegent neighbors with a few unwieldy large apple trees or home orchard do likewise. Limp surphur has long been the commonly used spray and should be applied at the rate of 1 gallon liquid commercial lime sulphur to 8 gallons of water, if trees aro at all badly infested. Dry lime sulphur is successful when applied at tho rate of 10 pounds to tho 200 gallon tank Miscible infested trees. On badly oils such ns sonleeide are also very valuable in cleaning up the scale and some other troubles sueh red as spider and uiihatohed eggs of other insects, blister mite, etc., but should be used only every third or fourth vears between. trees fruit Large willows, and other useless seedlings, breeding hosts should be cut out and destroyed as rapdily ns convenient. San p pest : terrible is the attack of this that it often kills trees or shrubs before those unfamiliar with It also feeds it detect its presence. on tho fruit. At this time of year tho scales are found on the branches and twigs, which, who,, badly infested have a rough ashy gray appearance. nth these scales are tiny yellowish soft juiev insects with their beaks inserted in the bark of tho trees and sucking the sap therefrom during grow th. The female scale is small and vaving from whitish to grayish and blackish in color according to the stage of development, with a yi'itoe i 1, or reddish convex nipple, These females become matured in the ln'tor part of April or first of May and about a month later begin giving birth to bring and continue to do so for about six weeks. These young scale run around for a few hours then thrust their beaks into the bark or fruit and if females do mq move again, but loose legs, eyes and head except a suckWhite waxy filaments ing beak. art execrated which in two days entirely covers the body as a soak- - for They nro carried about protec' ion. by wind birds, other insects, etc. At Washington, D. C. it has boon estimated that tho progeny of a single female would number in one season if all offspring survived. They keep on producing offsprings until stopped by freezing. At- - Washington there are four and five .generations a year. The males are seldom scon as they have wrings and neve about mostly at night. It foods mostly on all common fruits, such ns peach, jaur, plum, apple, quince, apricot, bush fruits, willows and shrubs, but not so much on cherries. It is useless to attempt to destroy this insect during tho growing season without injury to the tree. Therefore it is absolutely essential to spray during the dormant season. The willows or seedling fruit trees bottoms, along creek beds, river eatml banks, fence rows, or corners, aro never and fruit trees which Ho pest Hem-- cir-cu'n- UNIVERSITY GIRLS OFFER MUCH SOCIAL SERVICE call for social service is ever unmet by the girls of the University of 1'tah, according to Miss Lucy Van Cott, dean of women. Individually and through organizations many types of pervipo are rendered by the women students of the state institution. Classes aro taught at the Neighborhood . house Old clothes and the Y. W. C. A. Mus are eolleeted and distributed. ieal and dramatic programs are given without charge. calls Emergency for cooking, sewing and nursing aro . Trained answered renders visit hospitals and orphans' homes. Money is given for all relief funds ami to local charities, also. One group provides correspondence courses for some of tho men at the state No 3,216,-080,40- -- prison. Stand Back I Dont Crowd1 to (preparing jump small brook) If I sprain my ankle how would you feel about it f She He Oh, Dodger. go on now. Wash Sun Youll never miss the promoter till the well comes in dry. Minneapolis Better Way. -- lazy man is no worse than a dead one, but ho takes up more room. Delphi (Ind.) Citizen-Times- . A During the first week in February A. Anthony of the States Rein in tions acrivco, an exjx-rmeat Fti.1i cutting and curing wns in teaching the Utah farmers how to cut up hogs, cure hams and make Ifp gave his first demonsausages. strations in Ilyde Dark, at the fur Here he demon of George I.amb. struter his method of cutting up the The remarkable part of the hogs. demonstration lies in the cutting of the head off just back of each ear and then the head rolls off as easily as the human head rolls off the In order to remove the guillotine. hams and shoulders he cuts just beneath tho joints, cures them and puts the meat in the barrel small end G. t m UTAH NEWS REVIEW MASTER The iiiit'al slop- - toward the orcan-izatloof u Klwaiiis club in l.o. nil was taken last week. It Is asserted that there aro 150 men an I women in Sait Lake City who are on laved to the di'iiu lin'd!. Should emigre-- - appropriate for road building. as now seems assured, Utah would receive n $1.1211,575. Willi. .m Wrigley, Jr., the chewing gum magnate, has hern elected to head the hoard of directors of tin Gunnison Valley Sugar company. Jim Georgiins of Curium county has applied to the public utilities fur permission to opeiaie a' stage line hot ween Unit on and Scofield. War ii xm minors frequenting pool halls Is helng carried on by the police at Ogden, and jail sentences and fines are being urged in cases brought into court. Charles II. Wilson, 77 years of age, was found dead in liis room in a Salt Lake rooming house. It has been dedown. Besides showing too farmers how cided that death was from natural to cut tip the hogs he showed them ci uses. Officers went to Alpine last week, the method iM vogue in Maryland ami Virginia for curing the meat. where they raided a small still and who is Nash, In those states hams can be kepi in arrested Claretn-excellent condition for two or thiee charged with having liquor in his years whereas in Utah our farmers A big building boom for Irlce Is to are out of tlu-icured meat by tin Tho following is be started If the plans contemplated end of June. his formula for curing 100 pounds of at u meeting of the l'riee allied chamber of commerce, held last week, are meat: 8 lbs of salt 2 oz. of pulveri ed salt pot re, 2 oz. of red pepper, successful. While digging a pipe line at Irovo, 2 oz. of black pepper, 2 Vi Ins. of molasses This, Arnold leay dug tip the skeleton of a (not corn syrup.) after bong thoroughly mixed, is ap- man. It is thought from all appearances that the skeleton had been there plied to the cut surfaces of the for many years. in meat and then they are placed C. B. Mowers, aged 72, a printer, bo must a barrel. for left They dead on the platform of the dropped two days for qaeh pound of meat. . While the salt in the mixture us- Bamberger electric station at Kuys-vllleA was decided death that jury ually draws out the moisture and flavor the molasses furnishes more from natural causes. Joseph Clark, while hauling Ice at Mr. Anthony also recoin moisture. Iuiigiiiti-hslipped 'from his wagon, mends hams after curing smoking landed on the side of Ills face and them. He gives also the following form-u'- was rendered unconscious, lie Is still iu a .serious condition. for 1200 pounds of sausages; Charged with having taken two girls mixed in tho projairtion of 65 tbs. lbs. of from Salt Lake to Denver on Decem.lean and 35 tbs. fat; 1 ber 18, Derwood B. McLohron, 24 years stilt, 4 oz. of black pepper, 2 oz. of age, and Jack Beckett, 23 years of 1 nut-nooz. of of garden sage were arrested in Oklahoma City, age, The nutmeg blends with the other Okla. spices and produces an unusually I'repurathms are being pushed vigflue flavor. by the entertainment commitorously A very unusual feature of the tee of Logan post No. 7 of the Ameriwas in held fact Utah the meeling can legion, for the first annual milithat in most cases very few, if tary hall to be given at Logan, FebCan it any, women were present. 10. ruary bo thnt our Utah women know all Following the shooting at Salt Lake about curing hams or dont they do of Detective G. Ik Hamby and the killMr. Anthony reportit any more I of his slayer by police officials, ing ed that in other states women were 100 men and women have been neatly his most eager hecklers, both during driven from the city as undesirable As and after the demonstrations. citizens. he gave his demonstrations only in It has been decided by the city Cache, Box Elder, Weber and Hum to hold the homecoming at council in it counties, he probably will return from September 5 to 11, Ianguitch counin tho visit to other later year both dates Inclusive, the occasion being ties. the fiftieth anniversary of the town of Ianguitch, HOW TO MEASURE A RIVER Principal branches of the agriculThe United States geological sur- tural and livestock industries of Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana and Nevada vey, department of the interior, f ro- will meet at Ogden, February 17 and quet nly receives letters inquiring for IS, for discussions of the labor probsome simple method of determining lems of the coining year. Ralph Reese, 31 years of nge, was approximately the flow of creeks or to a Salt Lake hospital from taken Tho following instruc small rivers. Soldier Summit, suffering from burns tions may be of some value to those received when a hot stove In the D. & who wish to dotcrnine rough ty the R. G. roundhouse at Soldier Summit velocity or the volume of a stream. fell on him while he was sleeping. Utah canneries will reduce the pack Choose a place whore the channel is straight for 100 to 200 feet and of tomatoes tills year, and the acreage and devoted to tomatoes will he cut about has a nearly constant width depth; lay off on the bank a line 10 per cent of the normal, according 50 to lot) feet in length, marking to II. L. Harrington, president of the each end; then throw- - small chips Utah Fanning company of Ogden. An Americanization school Is being into the water nnd allow them to float downstream, noting the time conducted at the Carbon county high students the chips require to travel the dis- school at Price, twenty-fou- r The registering at the opening session. All tance laid off on the bank. surface velocity in feet per second of the students are under 4 5 years, nnd may be found by dividing the dis- some of them have attended school in their native county. They are residents tance in feet passed over by in seconds the chips take to of Price. The average travel this distance. Suit to restrain the dissemination of of several sueh determinations will Information that the American and give ihe mean velocity of the stir Gent theatres are unfair" to organized The surface labor has been filed in the Third disfaco of the stream. 0.80 gives trict court by the Swanson Theatre velocity multiplied by very ueury the average velocity of company at Halt Lake. The musicians the whole stream from surface to formerly employed at these theatres are on strike. bed. A change in the national guard of To determine the nrea of the cross section of tho stream, stretch a tape Utah Is planned by Lieutenant Colonel from shore to shore and take the W. G. Williams in the converting of depth of tho stream at intervals of me of the troops of cavalry in Salt 2 to 5 feet. Compute tho average Luke to a battery of field artillery. of (hose depths in feet to determine T.s will make a battalion of field This art tilery in Utah, and the adjutant the mean depth of tho stream. total genera! hopes soon to develop this Into the nveraget multiplied by width in feet will give the area I regiment. of the cross section of the stream in Marry C. Harper, aged 17. a Boy Scant of Salt Lake, .has just received square feet. The discharge thnt is, the quan- a handsome bronze mod tl awarded hj the nation d court of honor because ot tity of water flowing in tho stream ami quick action in savis found by multiplying the area h's com-'gof the cross section by the average or the life of a five car old hoy dash-:n- g velocity as determined by means of .vho was in imminent danger of to liis over an embankment the chips, the result being the dis chnrge in second feet, or, in other in nn automobile. 13 years of age. a the number of cubic feet Irene F.t words, flowing past the point of measure pupil at tbe Murray sebonl. lost the A cubie foot ends of lmr four fingers of her right ment every second. hand at the second joints as the re-contains 7.48 gallons. of tl,e edo'iU of a percussion Lady in grocery store, smelling a op will which she was playing on the Give me a dime's si bool grounds. roquefort cheese: worth of this, please. F. A. Do, k, firmer mayor of Salt ne hoard lias filed with the My dear madnmc, Grocery Clerk: Town Topf pardons a petition f r parole from youve already hail it. ics. where he is serving the state an Indeterminate term as a result of Enemies of jazz music say there is liis eonfc's'.ia and coin lotion "f h n ing svn in syncopation. Saginaw used to his own ends $12,000 of the city's money. i , -- Our stores are planing on using TEN CARLOADS of this wonderful Coffee this year. We have just unloaded our second car, and to our. thousands of old customers we need not tell them of the high quality of OLD MASTER, as they are satisfied and nothing could change them. To our newr ones that we are adding each day we can assure them that OLD MASTER is a blend ot the highest priced Coffees the world knows. If such were not the case ou could net persuade places such as the Hotel Utah to use OLD MASTER as they do exclusively. It comes to us in the bean, with all its original freshness and the moment you say OLD MASTER to one of our clerks, you begin to smell the wontieiful Aroma, as we grind it to your fancy. We want OLD MASTER to be a common household word in every home in the city, and we are doing our part by as only adding a very small profit to the manufactures cost, I saves his you many pennies we buy direct from them. oadded-teach pound. being OLD MASTER will sell in all our stores at the following low prices: OLD MASTER COFFEE Can OLD MAS1 ER COFFEE Can OLD MAS I ER COFFEE Cn 65c--l- b. $ .85-3-- 1 lb. $3.00-5-lb. -- LAY IN YOUR SUGAR NOW Chesse, Butter and but Sugar lias advanced, our Buyer has been able to procure a limited amount at a better priee. Butter Substitutes J00 ft 5 in 5 ,55c 10 Bars Crystal Bars A. B. Naptha 3 Bars Creme Oil 12 Bars Creme Oil 10 45c Ikg Star Naptha Pkg Tiux, 2 22 ,25c lb pkg 35c 5 ft Hoodys Peanut Butter Salad Oils 3 ft Can Crisco ft Can Crisco 6 lb Can 9 lb 1 30c 29c 2 lb 20c 5 1b ,20c 15c Blue Rose Head Rice ft $1.39 Can Crisco $2.09 Pail Pure Lard lb Pail Pure Lard 20c Lima Beans Pure Lard 63c 45c ,40c pt Can Mazola Oil 69c ft ,69c or .25c Sego Milk 2 for Tall Can Borden or Sego Milk, per case $5.95 Small Can Sego Milk 4 cans for 25c 20c Lima Beans ft $1 95 85c qt. Can Mazola Oil 15c Tall Can Borden .29c 15c Navy Beans, 10 98c Canned Milk 89c ft 43c 85c qt Can Wesson Oil 15c Blue Rose Head Rice ft ,73c k 45c ft 25c Crisco 10 lb Pa1 15c Blue Rose Head Rice 20e Pink Beans 10 $1.29 Lard, Crisco and Rice and Beans 5 69c 30c Per Pound 40c Sugar Cured Bacon per slab, per ft 30c F resit Salt Pork Per Pvquik1 tin-tim- Foodys Peanut Butter j95c 40e Sugar Cured Bacon 2 29c 1 ,25c Per Pound 10 30c Butter 69c 40c Sugar Cured Hams 5 ,35c ft Hoodys Peanut 1 Bacon and Hams 2 45c per ft 35c 45c Pkg Sea Foanu 15c 65c 59c Soap Creamery Butter per ft Ranch Butter per ft 40c Pacific Nut Butter hit e Soap 10 Bars Polar White 27c ft Lots per ft 60c Skaggs Washing Powder Soaps,' AY Full Cream Cheese 40o ,95 c lb 30c Per Bound $9.15 lb Bag K) 40e Full Cream Cheese 85c 98c FRESH MEAT Do your shoping'earty Saturday morning and get a nice Roast or Boil for your Sunday Dinner. Roast, per lb. Boiling Meat, per lb. . . de-it- Wyoming u 1 . ' No Gas There. mild winter. )Ve see uadi ru ear advertised a Mr. the editor of the Mclvory, 'Riage paper, wrote, concerning the fatal accident at the rialrond cross stalk'd his car on low, and is tag. row supposed to he on high. Motor Nows. Harveyviile Philippine in the dailie.s (Kan. Monitor. Better price for calf hide, says publication. Probably duo to scarcity. 5 ou seldom see calves It looks as though we are to have (hide more Sun. I)e-rit : fam j now.-Balti- w |