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Show FRIDAY. THE SUN, PRICE, PAGE EIGHT CATTLE AND " taw EVERY UBS NEW PRICES HE DIB UP ON 52 TRIP! t $70.00 $350.00 LOWE & nt To effect lower To add to quality is one thing. motor in cars that were lS another. But to do both, unmatched in performance appearance and value, hj achievement without parallel. Tnis is just what Oakland has accomplished ia its w. cars. More than a hundred improvements have beet Bodies by Fisher, Air t leaner. Oil pj ed, including new refinements and the Ham; Brake tn ARE $70 TO $330 LOWEfi PRICES YET Balancer The Oakland Si was outstanding before. Now it rub above and apart, literally compelling preference. Ttie 6 an Special Service. KANSAS CITY, Mo, Aug. 17. Trade in fat cattle opened early at strong prices, and remained active must of the session. Steen ruled very strong, cow and heifer and stockere and feeder were higher. Receipt showed a material reduction compared with a week ago and ayear ago. Moderate runs are esjiected the rest of the week. The 5W8) northwest gras fat cattle received in Chicago caused lower prices on all except the full fed kinds. Hogs were ten to l'itteen cent Four-Whe- $1025. .(Old Price.$m 1095. .(Old Price . i?J5j Coach Landau Coupe. . 1125. .(Old Price, 1195. .(Old Price. i545j Sedan Landau Sedan. . 1295. .(Old Price. 16 Touring Car lower than Saturday, Trade retained Laud's were twenty-fivcent higher. Few sheep arrived. Receipt today were 26,01) cattle, 7iH)0 hogs, 10, INK) sheep, rum Mi red with 35,600 cattle, 5500 hogs and 12,000 sheep a week ago and 34,200 eattle, 11,250 hogs and 8850 sheep a year ago. Demand for fat rattle was ceiive at strung priees. Butcher classes verc ten to fifteen cent higher. Lighter receipts than a week ago eonU'nod only a few load that showed any material amount of feed and they auLl largely at $14.00 to $15.00. Tin $15. 00 price wsa paid for heavy weight Steens. Sales at $11.00 to $13.50 were fairly numerous, and moat of them were the short fed kind. Wintered steers sold ht $0.75 to $11 75 and straight gras fat steers $5.00 to $10.00. There was arnne weakness in the plainer classes of grass fat steer. Cow and heifers were in moderate supply, and with the range in good condition it begin to look like small run will prevail during the fall months. Moat of the grass fat heifers sold at $5.50 to $7 A0 and grass fat cows $4.25 to $5.50. Fed cow were lacking and fed heifers scares. Yeal calves were steady, top $12.00 A broad demand for stock and feeding cattle prevailed at strong to twenty five cents higher prices, fleshy feeders which met a alow demand late last week shared in the advance. Can-moto fair quality itockers sold slowly Notwithstanding moderate receipt hog priees hers wars lower in sym by with eastern declines. The loss was quoted at ten to fifteen practically all classes sharing the netback. The top price $13.60, d was paid for choice hjg The bulk of the 150 to hogs brought $13.15 to $1330. Packing sows sold at $12.00 to $12.35, and stock hugs and pigs $12.75 to 913.7& Indications are that receipts will remain light, but no substantial ra'ly is expected in priees. Lamb priees were fifteen to twenty-cents higher nod sheep were five in moderate supply at strong prices. Native lambs sold mostly at $14.25 to $14.75, and Colorado lambs $15.00 to $15.25. Some Arisons lambs sold at $1150. Some Colorado ewes sold at $7.25 wer the only fat sheep offered. Feeding lambs are qnoted at $13.00 to $1450. m an active turn at the decline. e All Trade among - cn Street PRODl'CT CO. Price, Utah or GENERAL MOTORS fJ SERVICEis the thing'-FRIEN- DLY into communities power that draws people together like this, tfhere every tody can enjoy the many benefits of neighborly And cooperation. FRIENDLY SERVICE is the sentimental reason Judge Jacob Johnson, lawyer, former district judge of the Seventh judicial district and congressman from Jtah, died at his home, 1775 South linth East street, Salt Lake City, laat Saturday. Judge Johnson suffered cerebral hemorrage last Tuesday afternoon and Tnesday night leaped into unconsciousness and peacefully slept away, surrounded by the mem-ic- n of hia family. Speaking of Judge Johnsons death, the Salt Lake Tri-mn- e of Sunday contained the follow- why you find it very much to your advantage to trade with our advertiser? to buy where you fed at home, where friends will see that you are well satisfied. jour Read the Ads in this Paper end mvc yourself money by trading at home All of the incorporator are directors, and the officer an W. E. Roberson, president, W. A. Roberson, vice president, and Elmer L Smith, secretary-treasureThe Westwater ranch recently purchased by W. E. Roberson, and formerly owned by Tom Larsen, become the property of the company. company ia Weatwater. r. CATTLE LEAVING HILLS is estimated that sheep and lambs available for movement from the range state to feed lota and markets for the last four months of this five year will total 7,671,000, or about per cent leu than a year ago, according to western regional livestock office of the United States department of agriculture, division of crop ant livestock estimates. From this years supply of sheep and lamb for market, it appears that about 2,145,000 will move to markets after January 1, 1025, which ia about 300,000 less than last year. The basis of these estimate are past shipment records, market receipt, sanitary board inspections and current report from stockmen. Generally the range feed condition have been excellent with a few loea exceptions, and the hay and other feed crops in the Western statu are excellent. There has already been some cattle replaced by sheep , this shift is rather marked this fall in some Western states and it is from sneh a shift that most of the possible expansion in sheep can be expected. It Wool Clip. The Jerieho wool clip of 960,00 cents pounds was sold at forty-tw-o e ponnd Saturdav last to Henri of Wonnsocket, R. I, and is to be consigned to the Lafayette Woolen mills at Wonnsocket The sale was the largest since the shearing season. The price is considered high for this time of the year, despite contracts o: as high as fifty cents made earlier in nt Wat-tinn- ! the season. INCORPORATION PAPERS FILED BY SHEEP COMPANY Incorporation papers of the West-watSheep company were filed this week with Countj Clerk IL W. Bals-lesay the Moab of the 14th. The incorporator are W. E. Roberson, W. A. Roberson, Elmer L. Smith, G. L. Miller and Ray I McBeth, each of whom owns a one fifth interest in the company. The business of the corporation is to own and operate sheep and ranches. The capital stock is $100,000, divided into shares of a par value of a dollar each. The principal plaee of bnslness of the er y, Times-Independ-e- nt SIX LINDSEY MOTOR 932 Main Jr folks tfho serve you are alvfays friendly and helpful. Just that very SHEEP SHIPMENTS DECREASE; . Prices At Factory OAKLAND You like to trade at a certain stores not because its counters are arranged in a scientific wav, hut because 250-pou- Forty-Two-Ce- HI WINNING AND HOLDING GOOD Will matter what some all die cleverness and argument in the world. the ; General Motors Time Payment Rates. Heretofore the Lowest In the Industry, Have Been Made Still Lower. folks say to the contrary, there Friendcertainly is a lot of sentiment in business. sales than ship, for instance, makes more satisfactory 200-poun- . I el ed to the stockmen and lectures on grazing problems given at general meetings, according to E C. Shepard, Carbon School District la Found To supervisor of the Wasatch forest, who Bo In Good Shape. attended. BOOKS AUDITED Carbon countys school district is Myton Wool Clip Sold. in an excellent condition following an MYTOX, Aug. 14 On Wednesday audit of the books made recently by A commission Sons, George Tingiey Goddard-Abbe- y the Accounting firm men of Myton, sold 55,000 pounds of Salt Lake City. The records of the LARGE SUM WILL BE EXPEND- wool to Thomas Woolsenwolme A of Sons company of Philadelphia, Pa., at district were found to be in good ED SHOWING HERDS to the following. $1.15, clean basis. Trucks are hauling shape according Figures show that the average per OGDEN, Aug. 17. Fifteen hundred it from Myton to Price for shipment dollar will be necessary to send a This represents the greater portion capita expenses for the grade schools carload of Utah Holstein cattle to the of the wool crop they have purchased of Carbon county were decreased during the year 1924-2- 5 more than $8.00 various state fain of the West this during the year. over those of the previous period. fall, C. 8. Potter informed director of the Ogden chamber of commerce FINAL TRIBUTE PAH) PIONEER bounty grade school jier capita cost were $01.42 for 1924-2$09.62 during WOMAN OF RANDOLPH today. 1923-2- 4 and $62.07 for 1922-2d Costs This nm is to be by the for the high school were $147.09 tier Chambers of Commerce of Salt Lake RANDOLPH, Aug. 17. Fune-- al 1024-2$153.03 for 1923-24- , City, Ogden and Logan. Salt Lake services were held in the ward taber- capita for and $141.11 be to contribute nacle Mrs. will asked during 1922-2$1000. August 7th, for City Mary of Reduction was made in the deficit 88, who died at the h.-mOgden portion will be $350 and Loit $20,006.78 existing in the ojxrat-n- g R. ia her asked McKinnon son to donate S. $150. 4th. August gan fund of the school district last The prise Holstein will bring mnch Services were conducted by Bishop to $3836.91, despite the substanwest year Larson. and The Oluf state the and to were shakers advertising it ia expected that the three chambers President John M. Baxter, William tial cutting of per capita costs, as indicated above. Grade schools of Price of commerce will approve the plan Rex and Bishop Olnf Larson. asked. Mrs. and donate the sum McKinnon was bom at Glas- "e hwet, with an average o Thi money will cover the entin ex- gow, Scotland, November 16, 1S38. $wU6 fOT each student enrolled. The pense of sending cattle to and from The daughter of Robert MeKinnon highest per capita cost for pupils was d where Hie figure reachec and Gladys Shields. She embraced the the various ahowa. $88.94. in her when land native a girl gospel The expenses of the Price dormiTAR USED IN BRANDING SAID and emigrated to America. SLe was tory, eotton TO INJURE WOOL in mills operated in eonneetion with the the in the employed Eastern States. She and her lister Carbon county high school, were $10, Some woolgrowen in the West have Agnes, crossed the plains with one of 52 per student. Such a cost to the been using tar and other objection- the handcart companies. chool district corresponds to the able paints for branding their sheep. She was married to Archibald Mc- transportation payments made for Tar softens during the aeonring pro- Kinnon August 9, 1861 in the Endowthe hiK school cess and spreads among the wool fi- ment house at Salt Lake district-operate- d trucks. The City. She here in ber instead of being absorbed by the was among the first to settle in net operating expense of the h dormi wahing liquor. This injury to the coming in the spring of 1871 tones for the year was $3078.40. ia wool causing manufacturers im with her hnaband and four small chilJ th ad,t the total valua measurable difficulty. It reduce the dren. She was n member of the first of the twenty-tw- o pwt school building in value of the wool and the prejudice ward Relief Society in Randolph in tfbon county, together with to,, of wooldealers and manufacturers will 1874, later became one of the presi- cottages and two dormitory building; lower in in result priees Jo growers dency in which she labored faithful- w given at $972509.00. the locality or region where eneh ly for many years. branding is practiced. There are Her husband, Archibald McKinnon, sheep branding fluid on the market died in 1915. She was the mother of that dissolve readily in the scouring ten son and one daughter. The folprocess and it will be to the advantage lowing survive: Archibald, Jr., R. g. STANDING OF CLUBS of woolgrowen as well as wool manu- Peter and Don McKinnon, Randolph ; (Second Ilalt) facturer to use such preparations. Lemuel and Malcolm MeKinnon, Salt Wo" Lost Pet a Lake City; Samuel McKinnon and Helper 0 1.000 LARGE ATTENDANCE OF STOCK-ME- N Mrs. Mary Reese, Ogden; John Me- Htandsrdvillf 0. 2 .778 Inc AT FOREST MEETING .non 4 Kinnon, Evanston, Wvo. Fifty-onSuanjrside o 6 .000 thirty-eigand grandchildren great Mure than 125 stockmen attended . 8muly, Rena It. children. the annual field demonstration at the grand 7 FricfrRti ndirdvill 7 PpIm p Mrs. MeKinnon was the grand Great Banin Experiment station which mother of A. W. McKinnon of Price Next Sunday's Schedule. concluded Saturday. The station, lo- and Robert MeKinnon of Hiawatha. cated on the Manti forest at the head S"nyMe. At iI,r.VIri,T Helper vs. Bundardville of Ephraim canyon, is the only ore of After all, there are only four steps its kind. It is used to eonduct experi- one need to learn up, down, in am You are a good as ments connected with utilization of out. anybody unti the forests for grazing. The meeting worteMUme t0 b! better The am was conducted by C. L. Freshing, diThe main things about' driving an rector. Results of experiment in automobile is to turn when the roa ut 11 i one needs to numerous fenced plants were explain tarns. do it to act erazy. I 5, 3. pro-rate- 5, 3. n, Itan-doup- LOCAL BASEBALL ht ' was, aside from practitioner at the bar, figure in the material the state. H wsa interests der the law. He In October, at ey iSTinaiT? i cr ict to na passed tknq period popular with ths pNfh they never afterwards fhibdb! nize hie virtues whenenr positions in the state were tika oclock. The body may be viewed at the home Monday from 10 to 12 and at the Masonic temple from 12 :30 to 130. Judge Johnson was born Novem-I-nt 1, 1847, in Aalborg, Denmark, non of Jens C. and Mary Johnson. Itis father died while Jacob was an infant and he came with his mother to Utah in 1854 Mrs. Johnson made her home at Ogden. In 1863 they moved to Sacramento, Cals., and to Carson Citv, Nev., in 1869; lived in White Pine rounty, Nev., for two years and then iii 1872 he located in Spring City, Sanpete county, Utah. During the stay Nevada he studied law and waa prepared when he came to Utah in 1872 to practice his He profession. ojiened a law office in Spring City and entered upon his chosen lifers work. W hile in Nevada he was dep uty sheriff of Elko county for of part one term. i In 1880 he was appointed by President Grover Cleveland United States comuiimioner for Sanpete eounty and again by President Benjamin Harri-- r. c.ted M aaaiatant United der Hon. ,ttorny Plull,p T. Van Zile and also under Hon. Charles S. Varian. December, 1888, he waa ap pointed probate judge of Sanpete county, wh position he held until 1894 when he became a member of the temtonai legislature, been having elected November 7, 1893. For eeveral 1894 he of Sanpete county. eounty He has the distinction of never having been f',r ny political office for hich he had been nominated, notwithstanding the faet that he was alasy a Republican and during much ns 1. lit, cal life lived in a democratic district. VIn 18!,5 he was elected dstrict judge of the Seventh judicial district, Carbon, rand and San Juan counties. Emery, He and be Jy.' A. C-- Nolsun, superintendent instruction, were the only iicpnl.licHiis elected. He was vear lal and in 1905 again tcred uix.a the practice of UwT In congress from Hat. and t wjth dUtinftion in that capacity. At the hia re-ele- I and mercantile institution ui great pride in the devdopoai rienlture. Hia qualities rap larly put to the test vkib k United States eoinmiMioew, the ten heetie yean foDoviq when he was called upoatti the law against neighbor aril within his district, His Mbs be reeognxed as just; at tb time he waa scrupukraily the protection of the rights i against whom charges wnt 1 'f ft lie ing: In his passing the state loses one of its foremose citizens. He waa a imminent lawyer and jnrist for near ;v half a century and always prominent in Masonic circle. Hia life waa a conspicuous part of the history of Sanpete county prior to 1916 when upon the expiration of his term as congressman he made hia home in Salt Lake City. He waa a charter member of Damascus lode No. 10, A. F .and A. M. of Mt. Pleasant. This lodge will eonduct the funeral services, which will be held in the iSslt Lake Masonie temple Monday NT where he that time. 1873, he 111 to Margaret Anderson; the thi marriage being Maps of Long Beech, CIw, Johnson of Manti, Utah. wards died, pnd on be married Miss Matilda Spring City, Utah. Shi atm From thi Utter union wwfF following children : Xrx Nielson, Salt Lake City; Thorpe, Salt Lake City;W Dr. & son. Salt Lake City; R son, Washington, D. C.; Kanaler, Ephraim. Utah; I1 U?" M. Condon, New Yoik Otp eel Johnson, Salt were all present at Us W death came except Dr. waj who ia in the aervice o' could not get here in ti father in life. PRICE CITY COUNCtt 9 Crossings, BidewlU (Continued froia City this (Friday) plete the formalitiee round xiaty thousand cash into the city . ments which must he funds come in for the 71 this fall. This finsneing Wn ed through the low xr"' money actually comes dealer in Zion. how willingly aome fowba ? money to the city municipal knowe that the k. ed. ss N. Recorder Arthur tw found, in looking of . . that over a hundred are Cemetery City the formality of same having hecn mao conditions no deeds a 8 ed, and it i often lots when further n thw aary. Tie toUl of to runf city runs up dollars. Statements ju, hoped ont and it tne may be added t? coffers. ... ,uctrH Moig King, limping around 1 legbyabig Hp'kc leged switches substation is ed and knocked doi of timber holding the The older a g county m Salt Lake City, gets lb faster it run v r S in |