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Show ! fEEDAY, JANUARY 9, 1925 THE SUN, PRIOR UTAH EVERY FRIDAY. PROFESSIONAL SHOP RUT i CHARLES RUGGEBX, JB, M. D. Pbyslcta S3 . nw OF IE WEEK, and Bwgeaa 70 tflce Phous II Rssidsnou Silvagni Bldg., Prloo. Utah. i CMS JWflUV-FH- E D2.B.H. JOKES . Tha Sun Special Service. Physician and Surgeoa KANSAS CITY, Mo, Jan. 5. CWlilrM. Trade in eattle opened slowly, but laipbatatrlca and Whmm ! w fOiiioB, Silvagni Block. Prte Utah. ter became fairly active today. Price, were about the same as late last week, though there were spots both above fall and below last weeks average. In a. ?. .? TtlaphoM lllw.and general way killers are beginning to Savings Commarclal jPtflM Prica broaden their inquiry for fat steers Bank Bldg., Prica. Utah. . and there is a fairly good shipping deDR. S. B. GOETEMAN mand. The hog market of last week i,. Dentist closed in tha highest position of the Extraction. Tha Prioa season. Today there was a moderate r.pw work and pommsrelal Bank Bldg., Price. Utah. decline. The setback is regarded hero as only temporary. Sheet nd lamb DR L R EVANS eents with prices were up twenty-liv- e Dentist renewed activity in the trade. Re0 Office, Silvagni Building ceipts today were 18,001) eattle, Bldg, Price, Utah. hogs and 4000 sheep, compared OoOO GLENN WILLIAM RICHARDS with 13,000 rattle, 8000 hogs and sheep a week ago and 14,120 cat lie, Dentlat 12,900 hogs and 5700 sheep a year ago. y. Nitrous raa In Attendance. Receipts of fat eattle were moderOxide and Oxygen. ate fur this season of the year, but Miles Building, Office Tel. 2U9. Res XITw. Chicago had very lilteral supplies that PRICE, UTAH caused local buyers to bold back for a time. Later, however, the run there DR SANFORD BALLINGER was ignored by the demand here mid Bentlet trade Itccame active. lriccs averaged Service, with last weeks close. A few OtElca. Second Floor Silvagni Building. steady hunches of the handy weight sliortlVd PRICE, UTAH. steers at 99.25 to 99.50 looked a little iiXJ BRAFFET A PATTERSON higher, but they were taken on orders. Lawyera The bulk of the fed steers sold at $7.-5- 0 to 99.25. Rome good brought $9.50 .vern Building, South Eighth St. to $10.25. Nothing prime or in the P1UCE, UTAH Iougfed class was offered. Cows and OLIVES K. CLAY of medium to fair quality were heifers Law At Attorney in liberal supply. The good to choice Suita I OB, The Electric Building. classes were scarce. Prices ruled quite PRICE, UTAH. steady. Demand for fat butcher cattle will increase from now on and the L. A. McGEE market should improve. Veal ralvex Attorney At Law and bulla were steady. Receipts of B Rooma and 0, Silvagni Bldg. f thin cattle hare showy a material dePRICE, UTAH. crease in the past two weeks and the H. L. PRATT movement now is about the smallest Attorney At Law of the season. Prices are holding very 1 firm. Demand for fleshy feeders is BOB, Tha Electric Suita Building, PRICE, UTAH showing a moderate increase. On Saturday hogs sold at $10.50 to HENRY RUGGESI the highest of the winter nick$10.85, At Law Attorney to ing season and generally thirty-fiv- e Office at the County Courthouse, shove eents of level the the prefifty PRICK, UTAH. ceding week. Today Chicago reported B.W. DALTON ninety thousand bugs at lower prices. 5, This resulted in a ten to fifteen eents Attorney At Law decline here. Receipts at all markets )fflce at the County Courthouaa, in the Southwest were light, but were PRICE, UTAH. heavy at Northern and more Eastern FERDINAND ERICESEN mints. The top price today was Attorney At Law the hulk of sales $10.25 to TIT Judge Building, , $10.70. Packing sows brought $10.15 11 SALT LAKE CITY, VTAIt to $10.25 and nigs $7.50 to $8.25. Trade in the sheep division was acBEN BEAN cents higher at fully twenty-fiv- e tive General PsluUng Contractor than last weeks clow, but still juices Phone 188m. a dollar under the high point a week PRICE. UTAH. ago. Today liest lambs sold at $19.85 GEORGE J. CONSTANTINE to $17.25 and fat ewes up to $9.95. Wethers are quoted at $10.00 to $10.-7- 5 Attorney At Law and yearlings $13.00 to $14.00. ts II, Silvagni Bldg., Formerly increased receipts for the aucWith Occupied By Prloe A Fouta. the trade in horses and mules retions UTAH PRICE, mained active. Prices are firm with DR W. F. WINTERS indications that.the outlet will be very Physician and Burgeon large this month. Carbon Hospital. Phone WOOLMENS CONVENTION NEXT Proprietor Carbon Hospital. PRICE, UTAH WEEK PROMISES MUCH GANNON A FETZER Eastern Utah floekmasters will be by Salt Lake City on January 16th in at i: equally Building, piston numtore. This is the date for large a CITT, UTAH The tlie meeting of the Utah State can Institute of association gathering. Those hltcta. present are expected to discuss very 5 15,-00- X-Ra- " f X-R- ay ) $ ft $10.-75-et- ld ft Wool-growe- rs many things pertaining to their businumerous resolutions and the be offered. But getting down from a million to a million hundred thousand fleeces or eight to ten milions of pounds of wool J.E. FLYNN have been contracted for in this state UoenaMl Undertaker and for this year at an average price of Kmhalmer eents a pound, according to forty-fiv- e Telephone 19. announced Inst Friday by estimates PRICE, UTAH. James A. Hooper, secretary of the asAmbulance Service sociation. This states estimated proWALLACE A HARMON is 18XM),(MH1 pound. duction this ikcrs and Lluemud Embalmed Under the year present contracts growers received advances from the buyers of Block, Ml West Main Street J Fitzgerald from $1.00 to $1.25 per fleece without )Slco Phone IBS. Rea Phone ilBm interest The gross annual income any 4 PRICE, UTAH from the sheep industry will vary E. BERTOT PAINT SHOP from $20,000,000 to $30,000,0110 each Me and Home Fainting. Signs. year, Hooper estimates. This gross is divided about 40 per rent wool and fBl Main Street Phone Sit. 60 per rent for lambs. Strength of PRICE, UTAH. the sheep industry in 1925 is attested CONCRETE A STUCCO 00. to by the unusually early contracting Engineers and Contractors of the elip at higher prices and the outlook for good returns for lambs. A f f SB West Seventh South Street . J Salt Lake City, Utah. considerable number of these have hens Waaacth IBIS, Balt Laka City been contracted in and around Beaver 187m. Price. Utah. .'4 fit ten and a quarter rents a pound for I ness and like will to facts, and two largementa. Second Floor Commercial and Savings Bank PRICE, UTAH , r i J.W. HAMMOND October delivery. Licensed Abstractor of Tltlea Hheepmen have generally reduced of title furnished to an their herds so that the very choice and J or tract In Eastern Utah. Fire ewes remain. These are report written in tha beat companies. prime ed to be wintering very well. Early etc. Bacond floor of Mnagn! Bldg., Price, Utah. contracting marked the purchase of the 1925 clip. While the average paid rents, has been guaranteed forty-fiv- e the verv highest guaranteed price is fifty. Under the elean content basis of contracting some of Utahs light shrinkage wool may yield as high as The early contracting and fifty-fivYou seed the aexrices of aa interest placed the without advances who knows his business. financial condition, in re are at good growers your aerrico In any and Hooper expects reoordbrenking rgency which may arias attendance at the annual convention. when plumbing is The various local associations in Iron, jut tonethe teat Our repairing Kane and Garfield counWashington. Si' J? Wo right. guarantee convention attendance ties, through Estimates on now work itOf ,ladly given. campaigns, are urging all sheepmen to attend the convention. - Some predatory, animal bill will be Plumbing and Heating worked ont at the convention for presentation to the legislature. The drafting of the proposed measure, to be discussed and submitted, is practically complete. The convention discussion 'adding announcements. The Sun. on this snbjeet will be led by H. W. e. dnr-weath- er feed I EH PAGE SEVEN HIM IE January BACK EAST Hardy of ileber City and discussed by representative stockmen from many parts of the state. Another matter of considerable interest to be presented is the question of federal control of winter ranges. I)r. Frank E. Murray, in charge of the bureau of animal industry of the 1 nited States department of agriculture at Salt Lake City, will talk on the lip and leg disease. BIG ATTENDANCE Sale of ! SHOES The Talkways FIGURED ON FOR COAST MEET SAN FRANCISCO, Cala., Jan. attending wool manufacture obleius ou the Pacific Coast, the curbing of predatory animals that cause an annual loss of $30,000,tHK) to woolgrow-er- x and other matters affecting their industry are to he discussed at the sixtieth annual convention of the National Association of Woolgrowers here on January 21st, 22d and 23d, according to preliminary plans an- of the telephone are found in open wire and aerial eables, on pole lines and in cable conduits under the streets. Thousands of miles lie out of of sight, sharing the water mains and with city streets gas and the electric wiring w hich supplies light and power. nounced today. Approximately one thousand delegates are exected to attend from all parts of the country. According to statistics announced. California, Nevada and Vtah shijj by ruil twenty million jsiunds of wool annually to San Francisco to be sent in turn by water to New England mills. The Western contingent of the association believes that the time has come to encourage a greater development of the manufacturing facilities of the coast. California is credited with being the third largest wool producing state in the union. Tlie depredations of wolves and of bobcats on sheep is to be thoroughly gone into. During 1924 congress ap$274,lki0 to combat this scourge, while thirteen states, mostly propriated in the West, appropriated a total of $285,090 for the same purpose. The way prices have been reduced on scorn of shon in our stock affords an opportunity to boy at a great saving just now. Good, substantial, strong school shoes for finishing out the year may be had much below the regular price. And, many men's and womens are priced so that they will sell rapidly to make room stock. Those who i for spring come early will profit. The famous Peters line and others. sub-surfa- . Evanston Store Company W. L. JENSEN, Mgr, Scofield, NewWordt! NeuWorda! thoutandt of tkam tptEtd, pronounetd, and defined in Factories are working day and night to provide the sheathed cable and copper wire which when finished becomes a part of the telephone system. WEBSTERS NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY Tha 'Supreme Authority Cat the Best Here are a few samples ! soviet abreaction cyper rotogravure Air Council cskari capital ship mud gun sipplo mystery ship Ruthene sterol irredenta shoneen paravane Flag Day Red Star EethonU megabar & P. boot overhead Blue Cross aerial raacada Materials are high now but the Job cant wait Every new demand muBt be foreseen and promptly met by the installation of adequate agrimotor hot pursuit Stock Doing WelL Jan. 4. Caltlemcn of Moub Valley reM)it that, while cows and steers had a hard time of it during the extremely cold weather when the mercury went down to eighteen degrees below, they are doing well now that weather conditions have greatly modified. No losses are anticipated unless another sudden drop occurs. From six to eight inches of snow covers the valley ranges, but, as it is not packed and is heavy in water content, it is of benefit to the herds being wintered on tlie lower ranges. From Colorado reports are received that the snow in the watersheds of the Colorado river is far in excess of that of a year ago. In some places tea feet, as compared with three a year ago, is rejxirted. In every section of the mountains located in the waterched of the stream a considerable amount of snow above normal has fallen, and this condition persages extremely high water in (he Colorado river next spring. Usually the crest of the high water passes Moab about June 10th. MO AD, girl It thia Storahoaa On Pulley of to all Dittctti Oat IjrMa Caivtntl Stnrict Information Solving You? Sttttt Strait 2700 Pern SOOO Dluetrstioua 407,000 Words awl Phnaaa CuetteaT and Bwaraphical Dictiowur for a sample pugs of the WRITE Now ' Word a, specimen of Regular The Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company and India Papers, FREE. G. & C MERRIAM CO. Springfield, Maia, U. S. A. hWe'EelieVeJiiifUtSm RICH AND DISTINCTIVE torney For Administrator. First pub., Dec. It, 1924; last Jan. Do You Know That we are well stocked In thefollowing lines; 9, 192B. Kodaks, Leather Goods, Cut Glass, China, Musical Instruments, Fountain Fens and Pencils, Jewelry, Witches, MITICK OF . APPLICATION FOR United State Patent Mineral Application Serial No. 024606. United States Land Office, Salt Lake City, Utah, Dec. 11, 1924. Notice la hereby given that A. C. Gillette, B. Murray Peyton, Frank E. Parker, G. Herbert Jones, Richard M. Selwood and lleber L. Hartley, all of Duluth, stato of Minnesota; C. D. Veils, Thomas P. Pease and Arc ha E. Wilcox, all of Minneapolla, Minn., and F. Van Uuren of Superior, Win, through their authorized agent and attorney In fact, Edward 1. Dunn, whom postoffice address is Salt Lake City, Utah, have v, Pare Eiatit) Epsom salts, comparatively harmless in the stomach, is a violent poison in the veins. Exports of ostrich feathers from Very much distinction belongs to the South Africa have amounted to beautiful coat pictured here, which in a single year. manages to evade fashions straight-lin- e edict without sacrificing slenderness. It is a graceful aristocrat with Many people claim that their corns luxurious collar and fur emplacewarn them of any approaching weath- ments on fur the sleeves and is made of er changes. suede velours. $15,-000,0- 00 AUTHORITY COES OVER UTAH Science is. on the way toward extending the human life limit nine hundred years or so, it is said. That will rROBATK AND GUARDIANSHIP be a long time for lots of folks we Consult County Clark Or know to be bored. Notice Respective Signer For Further Information. ESTATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS of Samuel Allen, Jr., Deceased. claima with Creditor will preaent vouchers to the underalgned at Room on or 6, Hilvagnl building. Price, Utah, before the 10th day of February, A. D 1125. WILLIAM HAMILTON, Administrator of the Estate of Samuel Allen, Jr., Deceased. L A. McGee, At- spring was made here Thursday when Salt Lake City buyers purchased an aggregate of ten thousand head from a pool of Moab sheepmen. Represented are the Indian Creek Cattle Don Taylor, Max B. Taylor, Tom Taylor, Boyd Hammond, James Somerville, A. M. Robertson and the Allred Sheep roinpany. The price paid is ten and a half cents, delivery to be made in the month of October out at Thompsons and Cisco. The price last (Continued On camp-fir- e Bell System First Deal In Lambs. MOAB, Jan. 3. The first deal in Grand countys Iamb crop of next rom-jwn- Utah ce SIMTION Reports that recent heavy snows have been a detriment to live stoc! in Utah and in Idaho are exaggerated, and it should be known the storms have been a boon to the industries," said Frank J. Hagenbarth, president of the National Woolgrowers associp! last Saturday. "The woolgrowers will benefit directly by the heavy snows. When the ground is covered with it the wool is clean and there is a lighter shrinkage, bringing a much higher price per pound." Hagenbarth pointed out that every winter it is necessary to place sheep on feed and that this year it is cheap and abundant. He said there are large quantities of hay and cottonseed that may jjg shipped here from Texas and California at two and a half cents a pound freight paid. He said the seed insures the grower against losses. More than a third of the United States wool clip for 1925 has been contracted, representing 80,000,000 pounds and bringing from forty to fifty cents a pound, according to grade, he said. Tlie highest prices are given for that of high spinning qualities and low shrinkage. The average for all was between forty and forty-fiv- e a pound. These prices give a fair profit to the grower. A large per cent of the lambs for summer and fall delivery have been contracted for at prices ranging between ten and ten and a half delivered at shipping points, he declared. He says that generally the outlook in 1925 for sheepmen is extremely good and that wool production will be heavy and prices high. Approximately ten million pounds of the Utah 1925 dip has been contracted, announces J. A. Hooper, secretary of the Utah Woolgrowers' association, who says that the Utah sheep industry will receive an income of between $20,000,000 and $30,000,000 for 1925. The gross will be divided about 40 per cent for wool and 60 for spring lambs. made application for patent for the Miller, Miller No. 1. Miller No. 8, Miller No. 9, Tasker and Tanker No. 1 placer mining claims, comprilng the north hair of Sec. 21) and all of Sec. 21, Twp. 11 South, Range 9 East, containing 902.18 acrea. The notices of location of these claims are recorded with the county recorder of Utah county at Provo. Utah. I direct that this notice be published in The 8un, a weekly newspaper published at Price, Utah, for the ierlod of sixty days. ELI F. TAYLOR, Register. Edward D. Dunn, Attorney, Salt Lake City, Utah. First pub., Dec. 12, 1824; last Feb. 8, Diamonds, Pearl Beads, Silverware, Pyralin Toilet Goods, Mesh and Bead Bags, Umbrellas and Van Briggle Pottery. The Elite Jewelry'Co. Price, Utah Coal Is Beet Appreciated Where Moot Used. Hl-He- at 1926. the Ktw Valley of Kansan seed e potato treatment for control of diseases lias been found to bring Ylien agricultural increased yield. extension worker began demonstrat-tioing approved methods of treating the seed in the growing communities very few farmers used this preventive measure. Method demonstrations weie followed by the growing of test plots tuber-born- Carbon Fuel Company n, l,cj!llti1eafIendj the direction of extension workers. These plots gave such farmers and their neighbors an oiqiort unity to compare the results from the use of treated and untreated seed. The number of Kaw Valley acres on which treated ones were planted has increased each year, according to reports to the United States department of agriculture, from practically none in 1918 to more than six thousand acres in 1924. was Our prohibition agents seized five thousand two hundred and fourteen automobiles last year. But statistics are lacking as to the number that escaped. Good sailing is ahead for industry because there is not much warm air from political prognosticators. Birth announcement cards. The Bu Mines At Rains, Carbon County, Utah Miners and Shippers of Lump, Nat, Slack and Assorted Sizes of COAL Of the Very Highest Grades Best For Furnaces, Household and Other Uses. General Offices, Clift Bldg., Salt Lake City. L F. RAINS President and Genera Mgr. Ht-He- at - Goal Is Bee Appreciated Where Moot Used. |