OCR Text |
Show HE FRIDAY, THE BUH. PRICE, PTAH EVEaiT FRIDAY, PAGE TWO SPRING LAMBS SELLING AS HIGH AS $17.50 AT THEM Sub Special Berries. ItKANSAS CITY, Mo., state of half the feea for this year April A asked with full exemption in With cattle receipts about normal for was Southern Utah, where occasion justithis season of the year trade showed fies that they be exempt of all their a stronger undercurrent and prices fees. The state board of equalisation cents higher was asked to take steps necessary to were firm to twenty-fiv- e steers sold reduce the assessed valuation of eattle western fat Heavy today. np to $11.25. There was a consider- for 1925 to ten dollars per head or able supply of South Texas ones and less, that eattle may not be assessed n good run of Panhandle s tuckers, for more than their actual value. A llog prices were steady at last weeks committee visited the state board of extreme advance. Receipts remained equalization on this matter in regard meager and packers are falling short to assessment of grazing land. The on their orders. Spring lambs were present rate of assessment was class- Performance Why is it, thnt you can drive n Rickenbacker Sis at 50, 55, or 60 miles par hour for hour after hour, day in and day out, and the motor, hum out a never over-he- at a seize or piston? bearing, You know you can do this, because Cannon Ball Baker has been doing it right along In hia sensational feat of breaking the fully steady, but the feds and sheep ed as exorbitant and entirely out were weak to lower. Receipts today of proportion to the values placed t n were 15,000 cattle, 4500 hogs and 8000 other property. sheep, compared with 15,000 cattle, In one resolution the convention ex7000 hogs and 8000 sheep a week ago pressed itself as not satisand 11,700 cattle, 15,375 hogs and fied in all eases with entirely the way for8775 sheep a year ago. est officers hold cattle off the reTrade in fat cattle opened early at serves. The resolution cites instances cents higher called to our attention in which eattle strong to twenty-fiv- e prices. Activity remained throughout have been held off the spring range the sesaiou anT - god clearance was until all streams have dried up and msiTa gjjne prime ste?? m! grass and browse become but ecofrom Western Nebraska sold at $11.-2- nomic loss. The association feels the extreme top of the year for that in most eases cattle ean be heavies. Several bunches of good 1050 turned on the range fully thirty days to brought $11.00 to earlier than they now are without in$11.50. Prime handyweights would jury to the range and giving great have sold at $12.00 or better had they benefit to the industry. It also was been available The bulk of the fats the belief of the assoc la liou that the went for $9.00 to $10.75 or back to the forest service should be very liberal high point of the season. Only light in granting bolduver permits to perin audit fur the rest of thU- mittees in distress and not to scruruns art. week. Cows wefe In active demand at tinize too closely sales made under strong prices. Most of the fat ones forced liquidation. A resolution was sold at $5.00 to $6.50. Veal calves adopted favoring a national poliey were steady. Top $10.00. Trade in ooking to regulation of the open pubstock and feeding eattle was active to lie domain so our resident taxpaystrong. In some eases better grades ers may not be robbed of their rights No were quoted up ten to fifteen cents. by transient herds and flocks. There was only a small holdover sup- method was suggested for bringing week this about, except that a government ply in secondhand from last and traders bought freely on orders. survey should precede any action. High protective tariff on lard and Hog prices held steady at the sixty cents advance that oc- dressed beef, hides and all byproducts to seventy-fiv- e curred late last week. Other markets of beef was advocated. Tbe convenshowed a moderate decline, but there tion pledged its support, in with the farm bureau and state were hardly enough here to go around. The top price was $13.40 and bulk of board of agriculture in the creation sales $12.90 to $13.25. Lightweights of a live stock marketing association $12.50 to $13.25 and ligbtlights $12.00 in Utah, eventually to affiliate with a to $12.75. Packing sows $12.00 to larger Western regional organization. $12215 and stock liogn and pigs $11.00 Other resolutions favored steps to secure return tramqiortation for all to $11.00. Native aiiriiiff luniln and the first shippers who take one ear of stock to this season brought $17.00 to $17250. market, praise to President Macf&r Arizona sold at $16.00 to $16.5 or lane and Secretary Redmond for their twenty-successful years work for the assoSteady prices. Fed lambs were eents lower at $14.75 to $15.00. ciation and to Gov. George II. Bern five and other speakers on the program, Few sheep were offered. the tress of Halt Lake City and to Saints University Glee GRAZING, RANGE CONTROL AND the Latter-da- y TAXATION' PROBLEMS club. the Three Flags records. and other Tell you: Steam turbines in large ships Dynamos in electric plants, turn up 30,000 to 40,000 revs" per minute. Do it 24 hours a day aeveral days at stretch. That is possible because there is of oil between the always a thin film and its bearing. shaft revolving rapidly I for if a second, that because, Always vital film of oil were not there, the bearing would run hot and the whole thing trans-continent- al, long-distan- ce 1650-poun-d 5, 1200-pounde- rs Election of officers or rather the STOCKMEN OPTIMISTIC AT THE CLOSE OP BIO 8H0W of officers named a year close ol! ago last Friday marked the a Tester feeling of optimism the two days convention of the Utah With has than been shown for many months, association. and Cattle llorsegrowers among the cattlemen, the ex J. M. Macfarlane of Halt lakeof City CHjtceially the hibitors at the eighth annual enters his third year as chief Live Stock show at the Salt association with Thoniai Redmond, state sheep ins lector, secretary ant Lake City Union stockyards, began treasurer. J. M. Orecr from Spanish to prrn&re for their return home last Fork is first vice president; John Saturday after five of the most sucBlack, Escalante, second; James E. cessful days ever evidenced at a simWrathall, Granlsville, third, and L. C. ilar exhibition in the West. The excellent prices which were paid for the Montgomery, lieber City, fourth vice ex- prize winning fat entries, especially new the of Members president. ecutive committee are J. A. Scott, in the rattle divisions, are said to Monticello; W. H. Thain, Logan; Wil- have put a new hope in eattlemen afliam B. Mathis, St George, serving ter many months of depression. From with President Macfarlane and Red- all indications everyone was satisfied, claiming it to be the best ever staged mond. Resolutions adopted were almost entirely to the grazing, at the Zion yards. High praise was range control and taxation problems. given to Dr. R. N. Mead, manager of The association registered opposition the show, and J. II. Manderfieid, tbe to a raise in grazing feea with stress general manager of the yards, by the eommereia leading stockmen from all of the imed opposition to the the forest portant markets of the West and by used by recently theory for basis s as making a reap- the officials of the Salt Lake Ob amservice The resfolu-tio- n ber of Commerce for the efficient values. of forage praisal also contained a recommendation manner in which the exhibition was that the Phipps bill or some other handled. Despite the activity of the similar measure be enacted into law show the increased business of the at the next session of congress. This yards was earned on in orderly manembodies the grazing control and the ner. With the ens and barns full o: show stock there was handled severs range fee points generally favorable thousttud head of ho"K, eattle ant to stockmen. It passed the senate at the last session, but time prevented its sheen for the Utah and Pacific Coast packers during the first few days. On being considered by the house. The attitude of the forest service Friday last there were more than was explained to the convention by K. throe thousand head handled. These 1L Rutledge, district forester; Ernest Winkler, assistant, and F. S. Baker, in charge of publie relations with the Call Us Up service. In the second resolution the convention registered appreciation for the attitude of the district and the Plumbing local forest officials in fheir fair with the cattlespirit of men. The convention urged more atWhether yen need plumbing for an ea tention to the recreational and educa- tire hem, apartment building, gang, tional features of the service program, factory or store or just a sinzto Job of we're always at your serrleo. this to be brought to the attention of repairing as yoa bare every assarance Ky the young folks of the state through thatnmlni year work will be efficiently done On the schools. quespublie and high tion of the association's stand on elk and deer being given free reign on the BEAM CO. forest reserve there is no doubt This PUCE PLUMBING J. I. MAHE, Mgr. expresses it: North Ninth St, Phene Ml Whereas, Elk and deer have been Pries, t'tsh placed on many forest reserves of the state and since they are serving no practical purpose except the novelty of the beasts and add no wealth to the state, besides being a detriment to Ik crops of farmers and have increased in numbers until forest grazing permits have to be reduced to make room ire la the Business District for them, now, we favor action being and Staamheatad taken against these nuisances looking 7J0 Par Month toward curtailment. Acting on a bill passed by congress, Also exempting grazing permittees in re(At tha Comstock) gions seriously hurt by drouth from associathe payment of grazing fees, William Comstock, Propr. tion urged leniency for Utah. It was 87 North Ninth St. pointed out that the cattlemen of PRICE, UTAH Southern Utah suffered particularly An fur whole the exemption heavy. Inter-mounta- For Expert t tt Apartments to pieces. Rich-enback- er. In this case, the maximum peed of the crank-sha- ft is 3500 R. P. M. at which the car is going 70 miles per hour; 50 pounds 500 in the pressure here, is equivalent to other case. This force pump this lubricating eystem of guarantees you that precious film oil all tha time so long as there is any in tKe reservoir. Sustained speed full power with open throttle, hour after houi is possible only when the motor has a perfect system of lubrication. This is only one feature in which the new Rickenbacker is supreme. Drive this Rickenbacker Six yourself it will be a revelation to you. SILVAGNI MOTOR CO. & in eon-fin- ed Work go That oil film is kept always the same by a pressure of 150 pounds or more pumped positively to each bearing. And that la just how it is dona In the The main idea in buying is not to Somebody has invented a eorelesa . Soma folks may never be a hunreceipts ronxisted of twenty-on- e to but When may we expect the neck-- 1 but they ean at least be regulv see that spend money, you e apple. get dred and eightv-firhead of hogs, less chicken f ling late. throe hundred and nine cattle and something. nearly five hundred sheep. Should Be Courted. Southern California, with a population of over two million people, should lie courted more energetically by Utah as s market for live stock and farm products. So spoke J. A. vice president and general manager of the Los Angeles Union stockyards and a visitor at the Intermountain Live stock show at Salt Lake City last Friday. This territory of which McXaughton speaks requires daily fifteen hundred head of cattle and calves, two thousand of sheep and lambs and two thousand hogs. The Ijos Angeles territory produces no surplus of any agricultural product, says McXaughton. Quite the con- trary, Southern California is a heavy the most imjKirtcr, and Utah, perha accessible large scale producing region, should take advantage of this condition. Every year the Los Angeles territory sjiends in the neighborhood of $441,000,000 to $50,000,000 for meat and Utah, one of the leading live stock states, should go out fur that Utahs Leading Fuels j A Nil business. WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF EASTERN UTAH The taxation committee of the Utah Cattle and llorsegrowers association held a second meeting with the state board of equalization on Monday last, seeking a definite decision on what the board intended to do to reduce live stock assessments. It refused to take any stand on the ground that it rotfld not make equalizations until the assessments are rejiorted later in the year. Both board of directors and officers of the Salt Lake City stockyards were ' for the present year at the regular stockholders meeting on Mon-day last. Tbe directors consist of M. K. Pomona, Fred J. Leonard, F. B. Cook, George Austin, G. S. Wilkin, all of Zion, John W. Thornley of Kays-vill- e and J. W. Clyde of Hcber City. The new board met immediately and as the yards officers for tbe year M. K. Parsons, president; John W. Thornley, vice president, and Fred J. Leonard, secretary and treasurer. Assignment to Utah of two additional veterinarians to aid in the eradication of tuberculosis from live stock is announced by Dr. F. E. Murray, in charge of the Salt Lake City office of are the most satisfactory coals on the market. They a heat, burn freely and slowly and are two of Utah s leading fuels popular for economy and satisfaction. I These coals are ideal for Spring because they burn as evenly in keeping a low fire as with a hot one and keep tne house comfortable and at an even "temperature with little or no trouble. j (Continued Oa Page Four.) Ask Your Dealer UTAH FUEL CO, Judge Building Salt Lake City QSiaMttiSflaH |