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Show THE SUIT, PRICE, PAGE FOUR II Iut.IIsh-JiVcFriday lSy Sun Every One.' 11. XV. Crockett, Manager o. Subscription, 1hune No, $2.00 0. the Yrttr. E IN SHEEP STRONG ACTIVE We Prove All Claims in your om home AND SOME FIFTEEN CENTS HIGHER The Sun Pperlal Service, KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 24. Nft HJma. AND Mall MatWilli cattle receipts today the smallEntered a 8ccoul-Clu- s 1015. at Fuatulilce at lriee, est of ter, June liny Monday since the middle of Llh, Linder the Aft ot Murch 187W. August trade took a more active turn and prices ruled strong to l'iitccn ADVhHilMMi KAT12i of the fat cutper month, cents higher. Quality Duplay Matter 1ur Inch 1 o tle offered was rnthr-- plain, hut in 1 1.6u; bmtfitt lniue, Due. fcpeciul the stocker nud feeder classes there Blliull, 2i ltr Coni Addilioilul. was the usual good quality. Receipts LckuIu Ten Ceuta the Dine Each Count Six VVorde to Uie Dine, from now on will he moderate. Hog buiuiuone. I1Z.5U; Water Applicaprices lurried down owing to heavy retion, flo.uO; 1' Inal i'ruuf, liu.oo. thousEach Dine ceipts. Chicago with ninety-fiv- e Deadora Ten Cm la the Counl hix Worda to the Dine. and led the decline. Sheep mid lambs Dlackiace Tjpa 1'ilieeii Cento me were strong. Receipts remained modDine Each liiaorlion. erate. Thursday Thanksgiving will Obituaries. Curde of Thanka, lteaolu-lionlie u holiday at all markets. Receipts Du:., al Half Ducal Heading Police Kale. Count MU Worda to the today were 20,0011 ml tie, 20,000 hogs Dine. and 4000 sheep, compared with 33,000 For Sale, Fur llcnt, Found, Loat, Etc., cattle, 14,000 hogs and 4000 sheep a Two Ceuta per Word Each iaaue. No week ago and 15,75(1 cattle, 17,072 Charge Accuunta. 050 slice)) a year ago. and hogs Addruaa All Cuiuiuunlcatloiw to Lighter receipts than on preceding SI X I'l liMSlUNU CO. Irk'C, Llalt Mondays gave Ilia cattle market a chance to adjust itself to the changing Demand strengthened and season. Years prnetieully all classes of cattle fat enough for killers were quoted ten to fifteen cents higher. Had quality been better the general market would have was C. of Brother llclter W. Riving advance. Most of hit uaual popular musquerade duncea ahown a further shortfed grades steers were the killing town. at the ruilruad that old at $7.50 to $8.50. A few ahip-ped Mt. of lleauant N. 8. Xeilaou hunches that showed more feed Bold at out eight can of sheep from Price $0.00 to $10.00, but nothing prime was to Missouri river market. offered. Grassfat steers sold at $5.00 Mrs. 1L C. Smith and family moved to $7.00 and in aonie cases were twenty-feents higher. Cows and heif-er- s up to Caatle (late from Price, where ive Mr. Smith waa employed with the were strong to fifteen cents highUtah Fuel company. er than late lust week. The advanee Judge F. E. Wooda of Caatle Dale applied to ranners and cutters as well received word of the death of bin as to fat grades. Veal calvea were father, lion. Julius A. Wooda, at hie strong. Darker top, $8.00. Though home in Rochester, Vt. there was more activity in the stocker nml feeder trade here prices were not returned to Nichols M. W. Mrs. Price from an extended visit to rela- quotahly higher than Inst week. Qualtives in Missouri and where she also ity of the offerings was fairly good attended the Worlds Fair at St. Weather conditions remain favorable for marketing as well as the purchasLouis. of stoekers and feeders. A, D. (Sandy) MacLean of Price ing five Western markets received The business and was in Salt Lake City on was to make a trip to Nevada to ex- 153,000 hogs today, the heaviest run thousamine some Rold properties for Zion of the season and about twenty and more than a year ago. Of this owners. number 05,000 or 62 ier rent were in It was quite fashionable for Castle Chicago. The lake market was twenty-fGates younR people to ro to Helper ive cents lower, and to thirty-fiv- e Sunday afternoons and after taking here were down twenty-fiv- e dinner at the railroad hotel return rents prires with the top $9.00 and bulk of home on the evening train. sales $8.50 to $9.00. Packing sows sold Ernest Greenhalgh and Miss Hazel at $8.00 to $8.25. Stock hogs and pigs cents lower, at $8.00 Adams, popular young people of lro-v- were twenty-fiv- e were married at Salt Lake City. to $8.75. Trade in the sheep division was acGreenhalgh is now a resident of Helbusitive at strong to fifteen eents higher per and is engaged in the drug ness in that city. prires. Fed lambs sold at $13.50 to 1780 of natives $13.25 to $13.40, and had total $13.80; a Carbon county school children. Of these eight hun- rlipicd $11.00 to $11.80. Only, a few dred and sixty were Rirls and nine sheep arrived. Indications are that hundred and twenty were boys. The receipts will be light the rest of this colored school population of the coun- week. Moderate receipts of horses and ty was six three girls and three boys. mules sold readily at steady prices. Reuben G. Miller of Price disposed will lie light the rest of this Receipts thousand of his holdings of about five mounyear. the of land along seres lying tains to the west and south of Price BULL ASSOCIATIONS BRINGING to Perry I). Jones of Duluth, Minn., GREAT IMPROVEMENT the consideration being around Herds of dairy rattle in many parts Ferdinand Ericksen spent the early of the country are being improved at sires part of the week in Price watching a minimum of cost for the official count between himself through the medium of bull associaand W. D. Livingston for the judge- tions encouraged by the United States ship of the Seventh district which the department of agrirulture and the latter had contested. This resulted in state agricultural colleges. Not only the election of Ericksen by a majority have these made it iMiBsible for farmof ten votes. ers with small herds to obtain the This was considered a great joke services of sires with high production The knights of the ancestry, but they have stimulated in those days: cloth at Helper had been notifi- them to adopt better dairying methods green ed that gambling laws of the state and to improve their equipment. That were to be enforced. The faces of the the expense of securing good bulls is slot machines were to be turned to the often suprisingly luw has been shown wall and the roulette and faro game in the Douglas County (Minn.) Guerna thing of the past. sey Bull association, one of the oldest of the kind in the country, having PROVO BOBBERS GIVEN FINES been formed in 1910. In one of the IN JUSTICES COURT blveks of this association, known as the Belielin, the total expenditure fur Cutting women hair in a beauty bulls from the beginning up to and parlor again was construed os harbor- including 1923 has been $456.85. From ing last Friday when the city court at the beginning there hare been seven Provo permitted Bert Warren, who members in this block, and conseworked in a beauty parlor there, to quently the total roat to each, excluplead guilty to a charge of practicing sive of maintenance of the bulls, has 6 barbering without a license. A five been $65.26 or the small sum of a year. In this cost is included a days jail sentence was imisised, but was suspended on condition that he dollar a year membership fee since eease to work ns a bmsurial artist un- 1917. til he is legally entitled ns a barber by Recent rejiort from one of these asoccupation. The city court in Salt sociation in the Mesilla Valley, N. Lake Pity recently held that nien who M., indicates how some of them adcut women's hair are barbers within vertise the good qualities of their the meaning of the law. Xcls Hansen was the same day convicted in the city court at Provo on a chaw of practicing barbering without a license and was fined fifteen dollars. r a, Ago This Twenty Present Week o, $28,-00- 0. FRIDAY, NpVEMBER 28, 1924 FRIDA UTAH-EVE- RY And here they are: Washes faster a tubful of linens, silks or woo'ens in 3 to 7 minutes; 50 lbs. of dry clothes an hour actually twice the capacity of other washers. Washes more thoroughly no handrubbing necessary even on wristbands, neckbands or collars. Washes with greater care no pounding, dragging or water action. pulling. Cleans entirelyby hulls by exhibiting them at shows. of their animals wus first in his class and grand champion at the International fuir at KI Paso, Tex., and a yearling was given second place in his eluss. A hew association formed at S)siknnc, Wash., has decided that no bulls lie purclnihcd whose dams have production records of less than six linndred miuiii1s of fat in n year. An indication of the influence an association may have on the improvement of equipment comes from Farmington, Utah. This eleven block asocial ion has provided ten of the Id with snfekeeper liulljieiis, where he animals may he handled with the of danger and where they may lie kept in good condition. This new feature has attracted lunch attention and has helped to advertise the activities of the organization. One super-energtz- ed u-- I iiiin-imii- Well prove all this and much more or better in still, ss by lending you a with it next Wash Maytag. washday, or sooner. No obligation at all. Dont delay phoning us. own home Eight Millions Tested. More than eight million head of cattle throughout the country are under supervision for the eradication of tuberculosis. State and federal veterinarians are carrying this work forward at the rate of nearly a half million tested each month. A recent summary prepared by the United Slates department of agriculture on the work np to the end of September reports that 449,484 were tubereuline tested during that month. Of these 16,732 about the usual proportion were found to be tuberculous. Animals found to be diseased are immediately segregated for slaughter in accordance with regulations governing the of such animals which are source of infection. States most active in the current work are shown by the rc)Nirt to be Iowa, where during September 64,079 rattle were tested; New York, with 54,238; Wisconsin with 45,951, and Illinois, with 43,438 tested. The large number of who have placed their animals on waiting lists shows that the work is popularly supported. At the end of September this list included 2,681,-54The limited official forces engaged in this work are making strenuous efforts to eomply with the increasing demand for tuberculin tests. 9 Outstanding Maytag Features I Washes faster. cleaner. 3 -- Largest hourly capacity in the 4 7- Easily adjusted to year height. - Clothes B Most compact - washer mode takes floor space only 25 inches square. Cast aluminum can't swell, tub waip, rot, split or corrode. dis-iws- al can be put in or taken out with the world. 4- waaher running. 8-- cleans It- Tub self. drainboanL tsnt In tension ' release. All parts enclosed. Reasons for World Leadership 'Tr cuttle-owne- rs Gijrafoam Washer 3. C.WITH CAST ALUMINUM Striking Contrasts. An exhibit on' sheepraising and management under preparation by siecialists of the United States department of agriculture for display at the International Live Stock exposition in Chicago is expected by those in charge to attract wide interest TUB Some among raisers. The exhibit contrasts choice and common lambs and shows methods by which each is produced. Live animals and likenesses of corresponding eareasses illustrate the advantages of proper management. The exhibit shows also that the common Inmb yielded only 43 per cent of dressed earcass, while the choice one had a dressing percentage of 52. The common, the exhibit explains, was sirpd by a scrub ram and was probably infested with stomach worm. Inferior breeding and infestation with IMrasitea are important causes of inferior stock and how return. MAYTAG SHOP Phone 27-Price, Utah, With G & G Cleaners w I DUCHESNEJN ten cents and the retail price in small As he lay on his couch in his home containers ranges around fifteen cents at Springfield, Ills., recently and where he has been confined for many per pound. as an yean Henry B. Rankin, John Neighbor, a British beekeeper who read lawinvalid, under Abraham Lincoln and lecturer, was so engrossed and and worked in the great emancipainterested in his calling that when he tors saw his first moving office, died recently, provision was made for and it was the film version of erecting a headstone for his grave Abraham Lincoln, toward the prothat would perpetuate his memory. duction of which he had eontribnted Accodingly an actual beehive has been much in the way of information on Bet up as the headstone. Lincolns early life. Rankin is an on authority Some women and men, too are the last two Lincoln, but his condition decades had made it imconstantly thinking of something they possible for him ever to see a motion havent said, and saying picture until it was brought to him. It Isnt too early to place orders for Once upon a time a man went to a Christmas greeting cards. Bee The 8un a stock end samples. memory lecture and left his new hat. LEAD Quite the Largest Producer of Honey In the Entire State. Duchesne county still leads the state in the number of colonies of honey bees and beekeepers. Emery comes second and Uintah third. Duchesne has 7816 colonies, Emery 5883 WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF and Uintah 4816. This represents the EASTERN UTAH spring count and does not take into consideration the natural increase, The Idaho Wool grow era association says Dan H. Hillman, state inspector. ha set January 12th and 13th as the I have an idea that if an accurate date for its annual meeting. The count could be made now these figsessions are to be held at Boise. Other ures would be increased at least state associations throughout the two thousand. However, asbyit is, over West are meeting at about the same a third of the bees of the state or time in order to have their program to be exact are located in in shape for the sixtieth annual con- the three counties of Eastern Utah. vention of the National Wool growers Owing to the dry. season and association at Ban Francisco on Janof water for irrigation, the shortage uary 21, 22 and 23, 1925. honey crop of 1924 has fallen considUtah expend $1.29 per animal an- erably below the average for this nually for the protection of the stock state. A few counties have had a in the state against disease and infec- normal honey flow, many have had tion a Compared with three cents per better than half a crop, while in a liinmn for its protection against dis- few other districts not over twenty ease, David Ell rod, sanitary inspec- miles distant no snrplus at all was tor of the Oregon Short Line railroad, harvested although the bees gathered dcrlarcd at Salt Like City recently. sufficient winter stores. In Emery, He said that more consideration is for instance, the average per colony given to the protection of animals vield is only thirty pounds. All of than human being hy public health this was secured in the southern part work. of the county around the town of Em-- 1 cry and Rochester, while at Hunting--! Americans have won unprecedented ton in th(t northern part no surplus fame this year in international con- honey was secured at all. It i a test requiring supreme endurance, notable fact that the largest yield! skill and courage. Their great vic- come from the valleys that are water-- 1 tories in the Olympic games, in tennis, ed bv the larger streams of the state, polo and practically every deimrtment the Bear rives, Sevier and Duchesne. of outdoor sport have demonstrated The average colony for Du-- ! American snieriority a never before. ehesne wn sixty-fiv- e )or ponmis and six-- ! The crowning glory of their achieve- ty for Uintah. The good beekeepers ment was the successful completion who give careful attention to apical-- 1 of the flight around the world, which tnre get double and frequently three hu given their fellow citizen nn in- times this amount of honey. If all tne tense thrill of pride and lias won the bees of the state were put in the hand ; admiration of all the nations of the of specialist it is a safe estimate that earth. the honey crop would be increased by a third. I find that, ns a rule, most Near Altoona, la., is an old barn beeowners with only n few colonies that has become famous a a rainy are inclined to neglect them, with the night retreat for holms and other wa- result that they get biit very little! yfarer. It is on the old llagerty farm honey and some of them none at all. just outside the city limit. The ham By not having sufficient storage room was built years ago and a there was their bees become crowded and swarm, no concerted effort made to drive which divides the working force and trauqi out when they used it for a consequently not much surplus rest and re! rent it became it landmark With onr Tip Top, Turkey Red or for the knights of the road and the stored. The average per colony yield Seminole flour your cakes will be just community generally accept it as the state for 1924 is sixtv-twpound, about right Yon are certain of re- sueh without protest now. 2.942.396 for the of total a making sults, too. Our flour bakes perfectly rent of The numlier of pupils enrolled in entire state. About 60 per every time. ..Yon have only to try a the eonsuined within is amonnt this v sack and your reputation as a baker the public schools has increased nenr-I40 shipped out. n third during the last two decade. state and the other is assured. Phone ns and we will deAlthough the crop is abort the price to And still we hear some folk liver. producers i higher, which goes a long about race suicide. wavs to make np the difference. The Don't advocate giving the devil hi car lot price to producer has been Co. just due if yon believe there is any from one to two rent higher this Tear than last. Small lots bring Around 8ovth Ninth Street Price. Utah. danger of reaction. high-cla- well let you prove it yourself right in your m pie-tu- rs it two-fifth-s, $4.-6- rehearing asked In belinlf of the ibquirtnient of the interior and hIso the Indian service, Charles M. Morris, United States district attorney, filed a petition in the slate supreme court at Salt Lake City last Friday asking for a rehearing in the ease against the Upiwr Blue Bench Irrigation company. Through the proceedings the government seeks In have the higher court reverse its finding allowing the Blue Bench district out in the Basin country to exchange water rights in Kwk Creek for rights in Lake Fork held by the Indians. ' EXAMS FOR NURSES examination for The nurses will he held at the slate capital building at Salt Ijike City December 10th and lllli, according to an announcement made last Saturday by J. T. Hammond, state director of reg istration. Those who desire to take it must file applications for licenses ten days before tlm tost begins. M'!iii-anuu:- il win more victories with with rollingpins. tears than Women ! ; i ' , YULEIIDE GROCERY NEEDS ! Now that Thanksgiving Is over, it is time to be thinking of the big Christmas dinner. Fruits and nuts are always important items for the holiday dinners. Wholesome fresh fruits and a howl or two of the delicious unshelled or shelled Nuts always have a place. Plenty of both can be found here at lowest prices. ; ; Such Fine Light Cake o Choice Poultry For the Holiday Dinners It is not too early to order your turkey, goose, duck or chicken now. Iet us have your order now to be delivered when you say. ij fn i j O. H. WILSON SELLING CO. coni-pbiini- Price Commission j ' West of Postoffice. Phone 21 PRICE, UTAH J |