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Show thb PAGE EIGHT UGLtai SI 6.50 WRAPPER RULING of season approaches arc i to lr. mem, ui drieks. the state veicrinar. i':! Won in various euunf.e- - t'" 11 Don't Forget the Drawing At Our Showrooms Evening, March Slat. to Those Engaged Opinion of Interest In Euttennaking. 1 ern part of the stale h.:! SlU,"" number ot instances (t !1' A1 THE RIVER rSIPAT. nftg-EVI- BT bun, PRIOR Butler Wing tie wrapi-- name. but not company or a t.f tii-that company or per B.tat',iir "1- vear bought large n'im!- - rs ei uk --h Ln is t!., n.unuiaciurer or distr-bfrom eight to eleven The Kan Rinrisl fsrrrice. tt i durmoved e ration of Idaho sheep thirty-ninmeeting the requirei They have kept them on W t KANSAS (TTY, Mo., March 22. - t(,r Vtail ' with th and t!lls '! of week 1920, ti compared e h. xtatou; all winter, in many Traili in fat steer develil a most ing o. t- - nuet last Monday sixty-on- e and forty-eigh- t a o nd:i:.ii i.n ..pinion in year mi ag, animals are active turn today at strung to twenty-fiv- e In same week of 1924. Of the ordeal ahead of t!- - i v il. tlulf. attorney general. li cents higher price. The upturn cars during flip replying week twenty-twf'.ulf, the moved thoxe natter, caiuf as the resut of continued uiudrr-at- e went ea.-- i and seventeen west. The the that are liiilications ma receipts. movement fn-January l'loi' run will remain light. Cow and heif- total Idaho 13th was six hunMarch to 1, 1920, fulwere feeders ers and stockera and s1 dred ami fifty-nin- e ears, four hundred at Tlitnnj ly steady, llog prices were unchanged and ninety-tw- o label should show going east and one being West water. Flocks eouquired with la- -t week's close, hut Last n west. sixty-sevehundred and the name ap earing in splendid sharply lower on heavy ones than the twenty-sevehundred and three feed! there is the manufacturer or middle of last week. Heavies continue year mild w. liter wi,h eleven east hundred and two moved, li.is Rtill the statute doc not specificamount .! to predominate and the lightweight west and just the right as this and sixteen hundred and one lally lvquiie that, and inasmuch bm'i'dcal for sheep. L classes are scarce. The first spring the res and same a the year period, ami the herds laliel has the name and the lambs of the season sold at $16.00 the during practirally eighty-uiu- e assume some company, we have to hundred pounds today. The fed broke previous six hundred and an- fat. sixiy-fiv- e and or hundred five dictributur from the i Idaho, either it cents and sheep were tweuty-fiv- e While dipping rattle at lai H.d hist that that and one hundred and east that question if going and were 13,000 the talc manufacturer stcudy. Receipts today week J. T. Neal, inxjiecter r west. were taken into court it is very probE cattle, HlMMi hogs and 11006 sheep, twenty-fouand of agrieulturr. depaartmeiit would ay this is with 13,(HHI able that the cattle, H.,1 Lite compared a foreman of the Iji MARKETING IS COMING JOINT and week sufficient compliance with the law. ago hogs and 10,000 sheep a Stock euinpaiiy, Wcaiae iiiticlrd willi a reGROWERS THE WITH 3000 and 10,003 In hogs opinion rendered at the 10,825 cattle, cattle scab, says the S..uthwick the attorney genshii'p a year ago. of last Friday. So tar a i quest of marketing for that any iiersmi placing on With total receipts of'cattle about held eral record co.-e on of tLu state will be considered known thi i the first cent the week containing mure same as a the per ago at a meeting of representative heej-me- n of a human being contracting the dis- the market vinegar of aeetie acid is 51 cent of fat steers showed a moderate derailed for March 29th up at Salt ease. The condition of the two men is than j under the crease and the loss was made up in Lake Discussion of a marketing not serious and.i yielding to treat- guilty of a misdemeanor City. feedand butcher cattle and stockers was taken up at a meeting of the ment. The incident show the con- Utah law. ers. Killers were in lie coiuietition plan executive committee of the Utah State tagious character of the form of scab early for steers and bought freely at Woolgrowers asoeiation last week. with whieh the La Sal cattle are inhigher prices. The strong to twenty-fir- e present depressed price of wool fected. Some fifty head were dipjied Associations Most sales were Up ten to fifteen. No is furring growers to seek some kind recently and every possible step is be- Joint Meeting of Game ones dome steers arrived, good prime In "Kingdom of Emery. of protection for themselves, it was ing taken by the state department to sold at $0.75 to $10.15 and the bulk of confrom the 1L of W. out further Harvey spread by pointed prevent any the fed ones brought $8.50 to $0.50. llcher HUNTINGTON. March 23. A joint City, president of the associa- tagion. Thomas Redmond, chief state The prime kinds would have brought of the Eastern Utah and the meeting , tion. inspi-ctorwas at La Sal the other day $10.50 or better had they been availFish and Game assoCarbon County into stock. slow been have the of getting suMrvisiiig the dipping able. Cows and heifers were in active theBuyers this held was here Saturday night, ciations field year, but the association Approximately l'ivs thousand lambs officers of the two club discussing demand at steady prices. They are has to wait for more of Uintah warned countys this years spring still relatively higher than steers. favorable growers methods of stocking the Through organisaprices. have Wen contracted for fall decrop Good to choice and mixed yearlings section with fish and this streams of tion it is liojM-- to get financial backThe wethers brought lR'i cents livery. will find un increased outlet as the of federal financing in order pnqwgating game on the Genry A year ago and the ewe lanilw . weather warms up. Veal calves were ing through Mountain store preserve and other district that individuals can afford to than twelve steady to slightly lower, the t sell- wool in centrul jsx-l- and selling only ewes sold a shade better H. B. Goetzraau, president Dr. here. cents jut pound. The movement in of the Carbon ing up to $10.50. Though receipts of when assoThe favorable. County Game club; are prices contracting in that territory Js slow stockers and feeders were larger than vice president, and would handle the cliM from this Huggeri, ciation Ilenry spring, only a few buyers having a week ago demand was fully equal to mmi1k conducted at Suit Walters, secretary, attended the City, made offers. The average annual crop Ray tbs supply and the prices ruled firm. The Hiawatha members of other available or meeting. Mass., llostou, any of Uintah county is approximately Fleshy feeders in some rases were Utah assoeiation were alEastern the the net would turn and proceeds plare eighty thousand head. slightly higher. The advancing season of such over to the grower. The Brice men and the so present. fceei the demand strong. local organization have W. officials of the to President In addition Harvey, Yesterdays Markets. Steady prices compared with last D. Candlaml of Mt. Pleasant, the vice the desire to expresod frequently KANSAS CITY, Mo., March week's close were quoted in the bog in matter of increasing the and Janies A. Ilooier, sechead. president, 20(H) Calves, Receipts, tlivision. However, the general market the associa- 200. of this the treasurer of and supplies territory and weak game retary steers and yearlings, Light is lower than the middle of last week the was the this purpose. held were for at meeting. meeting to fifteen cents lower; weighty steers, and heavy swine show a material de- tion, Both clubs will Concentrate game fifteen to twenty-fiv- e lower; bulk fed cline. Lightweights are very scarce BATH OF OIL MUST BE TAKEN in their effort mixed stocking Huntington yearofferings, $8.25 to $9.50; and probably will continue so for some BY INFECTED ONES d steer, $9.10; Creek with trout, this stream being lings, $9.75; time. The lightweights are selling at fat she stuck dull; hull and vcal$ the most accessible one of this section, $13.25 to $13.50, the 105 to 210 iound MONTI CELLO, March 21. Dr. It. classes at $12.75 to $14.25, 210 to 250' steady; top veals, $12.00; stockers and benefiting sportsmen (if Carbon and W. McGinnis of the bureau of animal the member towns of the Eastern 325-- ; feeders very slow. 250 to to $12.10 $12.80, pounds T. J. Neal of live industry, Inspector Hogs Receipts were 4000 head and Utah association. A million fish have pounds $11.25 to $12.00, jweking sows stock and Thomas Itedmond from the :$9.25 to $9.75, stags $9.00 to $9.50 and steady to fifteen cents higher; med- been applied for and the number restate board of agriculture yesterday ium and heavyweights showing the ad- ceived will be distributed throughout to $13.25 $14.25. .pigs suaver- this section, mostly in Huntington vance ; top, $13.35 on Fed lambs were quoted down twenty-- returned from Illuff, where they the of the Hunt pervised dialing five cents and sheep were steady. ages; hulk of sales, $10.85 to $12.35; Canyon, where it is planned to estabMost of the former sold at $12.25 to sheep herd. They are on their way to 170 to $12.00 to $13.00; lish a fish reservoir the coming sumLa Hal for the second dipping of the mer. 220 to to Kwes went at $8.75, wethers $13.15. $13.35; La Hal coniMiny cattle. It is under- lightlights up '$9.00 and yearlings at $10.50. Home averages, $10.75 to $11.75; the shorn brought $10.25 to $10.75. A few stood that these will be given a third parking sows, $9.50; top, $10.(HI; stock head of sjirings, the first of the seas- dipping to exterminate all trace of pigs steady to $12.35 to $13.25. A very unusual thing bapjiciicd on, sold at $10.00. Sheep Receipts, 8000 head with all Street Blocking Partially Solved By while the cattle were being dipped the classes generally xteady; top Offerings of good horses and mules first killing City Conncilmen, time, almiit ten days ago. Inspi-c-to- r wool lajnbs to shippers, $13.35; others remain lilcow the requirements at firm Neal and Fennin Lojicz, the La to Brice Citys council nut in adjournprices. Plain and ordinary kinds are Sal j ackers mostly $12.25 to $13.00; foreman, both became companys slow sale. Arizona springers wen $14.75 ed M'sion lust Tuesday evening and infected with senbmites (snrcucapic straight; a few natives upward, $15.-6- at uliirh lime it was ordered that EXPERT EMPLOYED TO HANDLE communis). Whether the men will he Eleventh street be opened shorn Arizona ewes, $7.50. lip from the treated the same as the rattle and ALL BOUNTY CLAIM3 'iiutli over the tracks of tin Denver compelled to swim through an oily and liiu Grande lYestern to a connecNotice that no hides or fur of ani- hath has not been Results of tion B'ith the paved highway west. An mals which have been killed fur more milder treatment are Wing very closly More For the Days Bamberger ord;iance to this end is lieing drawn than sixty days Itcfore the bounty on watehed. Officials say they will not Sixty to Present Case. Its by ( ity Attorney Harm-ui- . The Ameriallow tile spread of the disease hy them is rlaimed will In can at Price was given the use is being sent from tile ot 'ice of man or beast. Two months exten-in- n of time and of the city hall for six Saturday eveJohn E. Holden, state auditor, to the in which to submit exceptions to the ning for dances. The only exjieiiKe in Discussions Coining Up. dirks of the various count cs. Such adverse finding of the interstate com- connect inn is the of an officer. pay furs and pelts, if sent to the beard of (Questions of vital inqsirtanee to all merce commission examiner has Wen All departments are to he centralized agriculture for lmunt.i1 collection pur- stockmen of the state arc to W dis- granted to the Halt laikc and Denver at the now occupied by the building poses, will be returned to tin senders. cussed at the animal convention of the (Bamberger)' railroad. Word of the water service crew near the depot, exAbout two hundred mid filly hides of Utah Cuttle and Hursegrowers assogrant from April 1st to June 1st, next, cepting the clerk and the fire laddies. bnlx-atand uiiuiilain lions ciation, which will lie held at Halt was received in Salt Like fcoyotrs, City Iasi E. Walstrum was awarded the conreceived recently from the various sec- Luke City on April 2d ami 3d, it was Monday by Julian M. Bamberger, vice tract for building a concrete addition tions of the state are. to lie expressed announced last Monday by .1. M. president of the company. Solicita- down there to house the street Gusher bark from whence they . This t Among these will lie the hill tion for the extension was taken up at a cost of $1069. He is with the the senders. now in congress relative to grazing on in order to different business Weeter Lumber permit comiany. Residents This was the decisi.u reached the the public domain and the national and civic organization in tiie area south of the railroad tracks are to be other day at a eont'civn letveen forests. Marketing problems are to affected to send in resolution back- consulted about the ojuming of Ninth Harden Bcntm-ii- , of ag- lie talked over also. At this convention ing the application of the line to build street and closed the railroad some hy II. the state board of agriculture experts a road through the Uintah Basin to time riculture; Harvey Clutf, attorney Later i likely to lie on this ago. general, and I). K. Mid fat, chief dep- to take up the matter of testing range connect with the Moffat out at Craig. done ordinance also. hy Macfarlane Colo. Granting of the uty auditor. Home question arose re- -' cattle for tuberculosis. permit would cently regarding the power of the declares it i important that all parts insure a favorable art of the Basin COUNTY CLERKS BEING TOLD board of agriculture to go back of the of Utah be represented at the con- trade going to Halt Lake City and REGARDING PELTS affidavits accompanying the fur, stat- vention in order to give them a voice would ojien up a new transcontinental ing that they hud lioen presented in national legislation. There will be line. This is the second extension the County clerks were requested to ex within the sixty days period allowed a discussion of preparations for the has received following the ereise discretionary comjiany powers in issuing by law. The auditor lias taken fie- meeting of the American National recommendation of the examiner that certificates for of bounties payment sta ml that, as guanlian of the public ive Stock association, to be held in the permit lie denied. Since denial of on predatory wild animals in letters funds, he should not allow bounties to Halt Lake City next January. 31 ac fir-l- a of it the Denver (Colo.) Chandler of sent out last Tuesday by J. E. Holden, be collected on s which have been iu declares this will be a good op- Commerce has come out in of the state aaditor. Wherever there is support taken from uninuils more than sixty portunity for local men to get ac- the new route. doubt as to wether the elt was taken days. quainted with the growers of the nawithin sixty days from date it was All hides received by the board of tion. UTAHS GROWING ALONG WITH presented for payment the clerks THE REST OF THEM agriculture from now on will la- - in- - WITH THE duty is to refuse to issue his certifiLIVE STOCKMEN OF BjKctcd by a fur expert selected by cate and demand uudisputahlc EASTERN UTAH - the a adit proof or before they are certified WASHINGTON. D. ('., March 19.-- The hs to the time and of killing, the ' for bounties. Those which the of the United States auditor deelares. place expert population Contracts for this season's wool will W -By having them and decides have been killed 'mm than the 17.135,000 by next July 1st, the the state department of agriculture allotted time will be returned to the clip will not W made until after shear- census bureau estimate. This is an both on guard the fund against paying time, whi.-l- i takes place the first increase of eleven and a senders and prosecutions for half millions ment on old bides and of April, next, according to J. A. since the jadts the audicount of 1920. Utah is 518,-71- tor is may follow. hoping to exercise a double Kearns, agent for a Boston. Mass., For 1920 it was 89G. check to prevent against Nina Fewer Cara. buying concern, at Salt Lake City. Last any aissible fraudulent payments. Ilarvey II. Nine fewer' cars of Idaho sheep year contracts were Wing made in Wichita, Kan., a city of about 0 were moved dnring the week ending January and in 1924 they were drawn people in 1920, has built a million Cluff, attorney general, gave ComMarch 13, 1926, than for the corres- tip as early as October, lie attributes dollar high school upon a campus of missioner Harden Bcnniun of the deacres. The grounds include partment of agriculture an 0nnion ponding period of 1925, according to the holding over of the contracts for sixty-eigthe report of the burean of agrieul-'tur-e this years clip to business depression. exjierimental agricultural plots and an last Tuesday holding that the deputy game warden are entitled to collect by F. It. Sawyer, it wpmen-'tativ- e, Sheepmen who fail to give their athletie field. bounties on the ewes Lake at Salt a grain ration a the lambing predatory anim1g killCity. There were Total blanks of all kinds. The Sun. ed by them. iun, .me u SERVICE AS HENRY Wi F(' I WANTS IT , ..Wg . ot o is-n- n s s 1 tr, b-- en uit urn-thc- r M--a- wool-growe- rs Here are just a few of the many reaaona'why Ford best service by patronizing Ford dealers: 1 U:ixk em, R mm interested ia giviae Ford owner satisfactory service than anyone else caa The authorized Ford dealer ia MM I II 1 wl be. A satisfied Ford owner, operating a car in good scwl condition, is the Ford dealers best advertisement. 3 When served hy the Ford dealer the Ford owner is iam genuine Ford parts, which means safety in driving and W life for the car. 4 Ford dealers use special shop equipment, which service at minimum cost. 5 The Ford dealer has studied Fori care, knows how made and how they should be repaired. And he pus knowledge on to the men who work for him. 6 Work that the Ford dealer does for the Ford owner honestly done, for complaints would soon cause the Fori faJ to lose his agency. Next time the Ford needs fixing let a man who knows Fori! look after the job. Bet- 2 uu-a- If jo l REDD MOTOR COMPANY SPORTSMEN MEET South Side West Main Street Price, Utah Dont Forget the Drawing At Our Showrooms Wsdnadif w Evening, March 31st. d lO-tj- la-s- s 25.--C- uttle 1275-poun- 160-poun- d 220-poun- d, 325-pou- AS TO ELEVENTH tin-sca- 5; EXTENSION GIVEN sul--ab- le s Mar-farlan- e. -- JH-It- 1. 72,-00- ht . a .k h VOTE IS TEN TO ONE FOR a NEW YORK, March 20.-hundred four of total nearly grand thousand votes cast on the question of "are you for or against the return of wine and beerf in the twenty-on- e district polled by nineteen associated newspaper from coast to coast, the final results tabulated tonight show nearly ten votes east in favor of the suggested modification to each one cast in opposition. This proportion ia the average and not general. Boston, Atlanta, Manchester, N. II., and Lancaster, Pa., for example, showed ratios of only three or four to one in favor of a change. Han Francisco seven to one, while Halt Lake City was about average. New Orleans, however, returned a vote of n to one for approximately the change, and New York and New Jersey, with one of each ten of its million subscribers voting, declared above fifty to one for beer and wine. There were numerous other interesting angles in these newspajicrs sounding of sentiment on the issue. In New York City and Davenport, Ia., for instance, nearly 20 per emit of the total vote was east by women in the Middle Western city, the newly lran- ehised sex going down a little lietter Ilian ten one in favor of modification of the prohibition law, whereas in the Eastern metropolis they balloted lietter than thirty to one for a Cincinnati and Columbus change. ed lietter than thirty to one lor eliHiige. Cincinnati and Columbus, ()., voted almut thirty to one and four to one, rcsiiectively, for the modification. The final votes. Wilh forty-seve- 1 District A nucnmla-Hiitl- e Atlanta Bust on Kriilgiqinrt, Cincinnati Conn. " 15t Paul, Minn Total LM 3.V4 71IS K.17T hi .... 352tf Ih Drya Discount Vote. WASHINGTON, D. C, The newspaper polls on pmttf were discounted tonight iniC ment by the board of tempcni prohibition and public monktii Methodist Episcopal drank, held that the dry are not ing in them. The index of tidrsp.;T as allowing public sentiment n the stntement said, in that recorded represent a small fnA. ': the adult population of tory. Terming the congrmioa tions 'for many yean on prohibition, the board nil "the drys have won themvid otonons regularity and by ing majorities. - Ia ; i - - 1',v--. A DETAILS FROM PIONEER! BEING ASKED FOE Since the Deseret News some two weeks ago that historian's office will plete list of all Utah ini the make r; tfv ..V, migrants coming here lietwen and 1S( that office lias been with letters from the early But there lias been a woeful & details. Pioneer who earn state by any means during sV ?(, mentioned are requested to the cliurrh historian their Mthe place and date of their bii name of the ship on which they "5- ed the sea, if from foreign lands. which raptain of the enmpany in the and came over the plains their departure from the frontier.. arrival at Halt Lake City. ! - i-- CnlninliiiN, O. Ihireniiort. I Knnxfis ('ity. Mu. ... Iji muster, Pn Munehcstrr.' N. II. . New Jersey New Oilesns New York I curia . Ills. IittshnrK. Nl. HALT IAKK CITY Siiii Praneisen Kouix City, la. T Houth Bend, Ind Washington, L. C, . , Howard Standi-di- , ninth generation in direct front Capt. Miles Standish David V- |