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Show Tin; JIKKA 1U0 PACE LD-JO- hinting program of t he high watersheds of the state the generating pro- - have been covered with a of th power fomfany and work of courses which are nicAS-- f a I'tr ohm avion ptogram ured each spring at the end of the r jm ip i!it re ipitation season These snow be-- s of tne HO per cent (surveys form the seasonal forecasts id the run off for April-Heptutor, imlosrve, in 1 tab in tl mul from preeipit.tUon Still s.ys if it isn t vilioh f IU on the high water-si- n on thirg it mother Most di hi th form of Know vents warm spring weather I hs t iiMiul.it t! prM ipil.ition has i hum .1 a sudd, n runoff o iv In hh asiired in advance I. IV i summer rig l.Mle i. . hi ytar th. oppo-it- e is true 7 In snow is milling slowly bn is tl The Herald-Journ- al Liberty thru all the lend.' BelL 3, or water-suppl- folk! II. .will, -e (iti l.-.- r wns Bill journey to ( mi da thm hummer to clip.. the ian ftirucrv, now that Ih. enjoy the sumo kind of m i h er nl home for in ,i a g! is - j Only short t tun. held ba. k by . old, ill. merit And wi ither o, lust, ad of di lining into the nv. rs as it in. 't s to. snow is dr urneg into tin ly making ott an inlc'i national tuiienivY rl !m wot Id is mu. ill (mini'll 870 dilfeient Kind ol inoiicv ness t now, foil., tjrlt t ami lod.i1 lor us to wips out tliiM vvilh vvliuli we tiv to do busi- i. l5C I SITTING ATOP THE WORLD VrTII JIM MARSHALL. is grant-- , mnliu of Urn k, Vrilville, Ark, whore tiny no grafters because Ih. y Du! hill lo graft JM), - The ontructor demanded his (lough in a.lvnn, e owing to not liking my fuce He sitld any man who would eon.eal hm fire he hind Arkansaw foliage like mine must be afraid to let it come out Into the open - and then a sin geezer drove up and told me to hustle a permit lor the sewer connection and I discovered 57 other varieties of fees and licenses to live, breathe and suffer in your midst Mint am I I have just migrate.! fiom our old home town Yellville. Arkansas to your great and glorious state -- In the land of the free and the home of the brave and taxpayer k here on my Yellville hog larm-whamt paid taxes sinie Grover Cleveland s d ly - I just couldnt understand So I made a down payment on a piece of your ilimute a sub- about handing him the cash bedivided thicken farm -- and the fore I got it but he said it was real estate agent was so enthusias- an old state custom so I saluted tic he dura near sold himself the him and come away from there patch instead o' me So I begin to see that in your Then I gov taxed for a building permit before I could drive a state a homcowner would be hit nail an awful, wallop below the "belt And I had to buy A director- by the Lax pirates" and the fee ship in the water company before grabbers theyd let me have some H O -- - They got some of my dough -and the gas company made me dig but I saved enough to load the old deep into our Arkansaw cash to flivver again and head back for guarantee we wouliln t skip wth good old Arkansaw where our ofthe meter ficials aint grafters there being nothing left to graft k razor-bacsome You taxpayers of more Then my AND, LISTEN: to as had out west here ought to apologize hog money go tribute to my respoasibiluy for for living -- and then pay a fee for volts, watts and amps dying and get yonr money's worth out ... HILL BILLY OGDEN WOOD LORE F. M of Tigard, Ore., asks me a couple of i Uf ries that are interesting I didn't know the answers, but I hunted up a couple of old tlmeis out here in the hills and between us we worked out the problems F. M asks. "Why are a lot of these second growth stumps, cut four year.s ago, rotten enough to pull or grub easily, while others are as tough and green as the day they were cut? All of them were cut after the sap had started to flow; all are located on the same kind of soil and w.th the same drainage, but always there are groups of stumps, always in groups, that are three times as hard to remove as the rest. I have cleared stump land m several sections of Oregon and I have always found tins situation A few fellows say that stutnps t ut in the dark of the moon rot quicker If you have any dope on this it sure would take a lot of hard work out of land clearing to get the dope " Okay, brother, here is the answer: The Oregon red fir rots, the Oregon yellow fir commonly known as bastard fir dots not rot The red and yellow fir- mix, you will find patches of yellow fir in the red It takes an expei t Woodsman to discover the diffeien.e in a young tree, the gram of the wood is the keynote I have a yellow fir on my fust hi nth' , 1 have a lot on the second ' be m h ', theie is an acre on the upper bench that was slashed 1,5 years ago, and the durn aire would take two stump pulltrs and nine boxes of slumping powder to lear Also, do you happen to know any way to cut and p. el fir poles that will prevent them lrom ra in seasoning, winter cut poles track least, but still they do t rack That one is easy, paint the butts of your poles when you cut 'em; stop the evaporation through the ends and your poles wont crack. c cut polls to peel in the winter; cut em in the spring when the sap conics up and then use a spud and slip that bark off like peeling an onion. Hope this helps you out, F M I discovered a couple of things I didn t know about woodcraft in getting the answers John Williams, 60, colored, whs stabbed by Sara Mann. 50 colmtd in New Orleans in an argument over which had charge o( a church wbc;n the congregation was away. a to Auckland. N Z, explained a long about as their bD k and white new Tonga 'eomoulsory prosper-bodie- s which are specxled withliy law which now Is effe. tu, t on the island. He said that red The fins are marked in t ous colors, resembling a butter that each mile u Tong -; and tin ha II,, la"::,feeleis extending upon readying the age of it, antennae like reives ficm the state eight ,m. from the central fin' Litie is known of the life hab- - quarter acres of land Eight a. r. its but it is kiown that hiwe are brush land that must be . I, they are so brilliantly marked ed and while the mb, jth'v depend upon quickness en-of .quarter planted, acre furnished by th sense and motion to escape as a home site is for tb jtown emies All are c.irmvorous building of a home When the min d.es his land I stead of going to another membt r of the family, reverts to tm of Tonga crown It is given preferably to t Maybe the little m die South Seas has the right member of the de'eased s fanuh If a mar. undt r this system b, At least a idea. reported by 1remier 1 ugi Tonga big shot, .Mines poor ami starving 't Is pi-bad' He be.omes m out. .s' to. it sounds ftll right Premier Tugi on a re. ent visit and is classified as a criminal ches long two-thir- ri-- , NATURELAND The rare and little knoun but tcrfly fish of the penes panto don' has made its first appear ante as an inmate of an Ament an aquarium at New ork City Four of these little fresh water fishes, captured in Central Africa have been placed on display and h tve attraited u good tltal of at-- t tilion hey have tails about two in 1 j m-- Todays Oddity ,' , , TNTBODirPlNfjJ young husband Yes, dear, it stems n.utvi!nu mu h that anybody could knou as you do about rnonov without h tving any AKKiAII, Thr r nome don't A 111 KsA! f OGDEN, May U. S. Planes Carried 1,016,983 Passengers United 'I Pi aircraft carried a total WASHINGTON, States civil of 1,046,983 passengers during the last six months of 1932. according to Col Clarence M Young, assistant secretary of commerce for aviation This number contrasts with a total of 1,384 621 passengers carried during the same period of 1931 The civil planes flew 70,720,568 miles, while in the latter half of 1931 the total was 78 255,582 Of the passengers of tne 1932 period, 241,727 rode on regularly Of the other s. heduled flights. paid for their groups, 535,767 rides, while 219 489 flew witnout charge (luFervo 1ie e(bnnmy fspoiliIit Hally round King Cotton. Turn trying times into cotton buying times! Heres a compe- and lling Now you can look your best at any hour of the day! . . . Youll even welcome the unexpected guest! . . . Bright, new, washable prints, trimnk'd with organdy, ruffles, sheering, pipings. More than 5,000,niHj,fMKi sin ks uf chewing gum were sold this country best year. The parkin' sexto under problem drugstore counters 2s growing a ute 111 A golf ik ore is about tomorrows happy buying throngs for proof of dollar Youll marvel at the fine tailoring of these very dressy mode Styles and sizes for everyone! Come in and see these new wash frocks whether you buy or not. the only thing that becomes inure worthless the higher it goes above par Dump no rubhi.sh here. In Bloom (or Penney s Cotton Carnival! Hell-- o Everybody Romdlo HOYS Oxhide Overalls saving supremacy AT PENNEYS! Ben GREEN BAY, Wis (OP) Ysebaert, a restaurant owner here, his first spent profits from the sale of the new beer on a suit of clothes for a newsboy. Two years ago when the boy tried to sell Ysebaert a paper, the restaurant man said When you can sell me a paper that says good beer is back, III buy you a new suit of clothes Y.o baert was the first customer the newsboy sought recently when his papers tarried the headline lit er is hack " I Men's Oxhide OVERALLS Pirniratts :sic yard The prettiest plaids, stripes, dots, and posLast colors, 36 wide. ies imaginable! Had up on M'orge It. desk at the I vtt day while he explained a few things about this business of snow covers, watersheds, runoff, irrigation and w hat not. Vknow, theres more to tli.it than you or I realize. It is getting to be an extremely miMirtHnt jon and farmers, dependent on those high, snowehul peaks for their summers irrigation water, are beginning to rely more and more on tile reHirt. Wizard SHEETS iny f.s't Clyde's For instance, shortly after Irof Apn1 Clyde (uirpitttd his annual summ lry, the wiittr sup ply was found to he far Ik low that of last year but npproxim itt ly 75 per cent of noim.il m ullur words, a suffi.ient wattr supply for a normal yeir if caret ally used and barring abnorm il summer drouth A wa headline twisted put over the story pre.u. ti.ig a water shoitage during the summer. .7. I day long, C7y.li s farm, is phone was ringing, calling up to find out what is whuh what only gots to show you that vou have tu make an error to find out if people are reading the piptr 1, when same comloit as All si?es. Hell e proud of a pair of these! DRESSES yrs- - 1230 49c Unusual workman- ship, styling and detail Value you II appreciate! sheet that will give lung satifefm tory serxice CASKS. lo4 In fnl t e.l iiht avy larpe roomy pockels. serv it Buy a good supply at this low Price! MENS Fancy Shirts ealile weai Make Your Own Rugs 8 pi oval. Frames Canvas Work Gloves Twill Flannel! Full Sized' )z 1820 . 27x . 10 Yarns 10c4 Patterns Mens Heavy our whole heat ted approval. Smart-- ! cut. Full sizes. Fabric that the laundry will he pleased to wash. 4 With equipment that is better and costs less. ait of crochetinfr hooked lugs is becoming more The and moie fascinating. The fiarnes, patterns" and a beau- tiful assortment of yarn is here awaiting your ap- - 2lx.5f that win Will Five ! 1821 Colors tliinm at points of wear; Sheer Cotton 5 Note the price of these hlan-k- i ts The qu ilitv comfort, nt veivite is then Ixlra wmk-niarislii- p, d.uls. ,81x54 -- Anyhow, the lmpoitame of the work is explained in an intro duttion of the annual watet bulletin rteently publish, d by n the experiment st it ion This Sump material, .same 2610 w 19c stit-ve- y Newsboy Benefitted By First Beer Profits of array - money savers! Read Come See for Yourself! Join or .1 Numismatists are puUd coin that is perfectly smooth mid Tin y tint plain on both sides make heads nor tads of it hvestnik reports for Tuesday, as , iioy K T!S A ( ON V KMh Money eau't buy happiness, i hats nil there is alnud it; Still, u h things are now, I gutss You eaiinot do without it it made by the USDA, are as follows Hogs - Receipts, 674, im lulling 397 for market; steady; top, $3,80, on several lots best driveins, few lots, $3 75; sizeable package heavies $3 85, mixed weights Nebraska down; load hogs, $4 On; few out at $3 50. Cattle Receipts, 207, Including 153 for market and 64 to Oakland packers; steady; about load good drlvetn steers. 1083 pounds, three heifers included, head $4 75. bulk common and medium steers apd heifers, $3 00 &375; few good to $4.25; off grade dairy types, $2 50 down to $2 00, bulk slaughter cows, $2 25(0 2 65, common dairy types and cutter grades, $2 00 uown; bulls, $175(6 2 50 Sheep Receipts, 18,050, including 2029 head to St. Joe market, 1083 to Omaha packers, 3204 to Omaha maraet, 3205 to Denver market, 1131 to 4859 to Chicago market, Chicago packers and 1939 to NeCaliload braska feeders; fornia lambs, $510, few ewes nut, $2 00. Betty Brooks u 1011 -i- 4s The trouble with some Ft th prizefighters during the past m a m b son was that they weigh fore their fights, but fail d to wade m during their fights LIVESTOCK 3 i AN0THBR NFW LINK OF WASH I women lirag about huslmmls their is that t h e y' r ashamed to brag about nothing. nh -- dont na-e- ti L t I've got a hard-luttale that heats anything in the Far West romance we used to rend down in So I called on an old sixty per them thar Aikansnw hols .enter at his bank -- and he promIn a moment of foolishness I ised to let me have $50 if Id decided to build a sluu I. for my repay the $5(1 in advance together with interest for three years family he taking and we found gieut sol.u e in a moitgage the the prospect of lea. lung old age ninth or tenth, I forget which Also, snozzle, that aage of Syrafor cuse w ho has .i.e: the past six month in the slide of lireen canyon Says he: Can jou Imagine the Pilgrim Fathers, when they landed on the ll mouth rock, saying to each other, My God, we have no job!? v , i it n r 1 in our own dunm tie amongst yona guys .! , , trank .1 o 141. Hi 41IIMI I (MIM 4sl M-- Why fliti'uld iiiti i n.it inn.'il l.u Jims-- In loiied tu ll.tde in n and a muddle of doll. it lu. guilder-- linur, iiouml , heaven know ; wluit Wily should biume lm lumd to take a lo evtuv tune '-it sells or buys anv thing abioad7 Wliy should the moneyt ran diction J for a toll everv lrom jmifoiming get changers 04 a useless service? There ought to lie wot ll ui cm iieihups extending the Wr I ik plmtKMn tit inlroiiui iimi our dollar as a stand. ml; pel haps inunting some critirelv new Otnur Y. Kill ii u p rt vvouthmimn, who pfdnU .to un money, to get away lrom national piepidues. Mr Kar nhl suiitim r. Then, mu tom or orm lull would be negotiable anywhere. MHimliy huso his fom ist on III Dill It There would lm tio loss (n Iradejx, no loss to touiists. f:ut lint faiiuil- husks uro llmkir It is just as silly lot the wmld todaj to have all these Ilian the) h:tv fusn in If urs muddled monies as it would be ioi our 18 slates each to Mime mt Whitsunfid. have its own system of (mivruv. 'Im giuij your so The wot Id today is itady to throw away a gie.it many HWcethiart, bv all ths hhjmsm1 plim i outworn .systems. Its momtaiy syj teni wliii li is leally a lions I hfiv btm giving you ihout the goid httmdard, infiaiioii uni lack of System ought to be levised. the financial s stern, uni th by ruin i bruns , tThix column t Inst got u coiiiiiiiint. alinii from irof. ssor O (, Hhut.i- - until you will Pain wlutli.r th. lett, and radisho. .. m ynni you uit wdild, why shouldn't theie lit d. n w i. n islpl.nt.il tirl mins or true 'njaGiiirj pH. wtffAH' y e Humor JKIH WIIV NOT INTICItNATIONAI. MONHY? nt -t Member United J'rtsa, NEA Hervice, Western Features and 'lhe Hoilpp league of Newspapers . net-gri- c pp-oi- et Proclaim of the Hrnitr m Pu LUilied every weikdiy i.H'IIhM'O byl I lie Cm he r Ptreet, Valley Nmwhp or Co, lit 75 West C 'I t lephnne 50 Login, Utah Prne 5 r.ntx a ropy By mail, in Cache Vulley, $25n a year, out tde Cailie Valley, $500 a year Pv earner, 40 leal, i month, $5 50 a year Knte-eas - i olid i la ,s mailer at tlio posloffii e at Logan, t'lili, utid r the ait of i onyress, Mari h MAY KNAL. J.oGAN, UTAH, WEIIXIASDAV, f a-i- part In Utah, ngrnultuic Is ! pi n dent on irrigation and the int.ii economic un.l soi la) structure of the people is built upon th. ad. quaey and reli ihility of the w If thi re is any truth in supply the saying th it to be forewinu I is to be forearmed, th. n i hum edge of the prob lhle w it. r sti ply in advamt of its o.iuir. in. is of great value in mining tin most compute utilization of tin water when it (onus Water sup ply forecasts piuude this il vanie knowledge and form tint dr LUNCH CLOTHS Wool and Kug Tex, per skein . ... Automatic Rug Needle Hest and Strongest Rug Needle Made 29c1 Shuttle Needle ... . Sv Thumb Tacks, box 5s WHITE Outing Flannel 27 int h Hood Quality 89c Colors. Ya.d Fast "cr Y 6C |