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Show AUGUST t. 1923 THE 8Py' PRICE, UIAH-EVE- THURSDAY. RY PACE THREE Edwin Halsey LOTS OF FEEDING LAMBS AT SELL AT J11.50 TO M $13.00 l Benrk-e- . The Run KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 6 The Delicious campaign being carried on good to choice quality eattle, whether in the East, and to take an active fat or feeder flesh, today ruled strong. part in the formation of (he gigantic Spots higher than last week's close. wool hhi1 promised by President F. J. Feeders bought freely and in many Hagenbarth as a step to bolster up instances came in competition with onee and fur all prices by domination killers on the fleshy kinds. Fat steers of the American market. a, that showed any material amount of . Texas, areording to government raises about au eighth of Ameri- dry feed were in too limited n supply to meet the demand, llog prices were eas total wool crop, and their eonnee- advanced fifteen to twenty-fiv- e cents tion with the national organization ia and came within five of the extreme great stride toward nationwide high point of the season. Sheep and unity, being sought as protection and lambs sold readily at strong to twenty-f- a priee stabilizing means. That atate ive higher prices. Buyers are as a jwwer in wool circles ia shown by making inquiry for thin jambs suit- the fact that its 4,600,000 head of able for feeding. Receipts today were aheep raise 35,591,000 pounds of the 17.000 cattle, 7000 hogs and 7000 sheep nations total of 296,000,000 of wool. as compared with 16,000 eattle, 7000 The recent convention was held unhogs and 8000 sheep a week ago and der direction of the Texu Sheep and 10,250 cattle, 6040 hogs and 5720 sheep Goat raisers association. a year ago. The aupidy of fat ateen that show- MARKETING FLANS SOON TO BE D180US8ED nr DETAIL , ed any material amount of dry feed waa smaller today than on any prevThe wool pooling plan advocated by ious Monday thia year, and while toPresident Frank J. Hagenbarth of the tal receipts of eattle were larger than association b in ainee the National Woolgrowen Monday any early year the difference was made up In grass-er- a to be inaugurated by next year, it was and range stuff. Fed grades ruled announced last Saturday by F. R. strong to slightly higher. Choice year- Marshall. More- complete details of ling classes brought $16.00 to $16.25 organization are to be gone into at a and choiee steers $15 AO to $15.75. special meeting of the marketing comNothing with outstanding finish waa mittee of the national association at shown in any class. Onaafat and the annual ram sale to be conducted shortfed kinds were steady and when August 27th to 30th, inclusive, at the quality was high they brought strong union stoekyards in North Salt Lake. Wintered steers prices as feeders. Hagenbarth a plan, Marshall says, sold at $13 A0 to $15.00 and graasera is mainly to consolidate the rolling of ' 10.00 to $13.65 mostly $10.75 to $12 fleeces now handled by various pools, 50. Buteher cattle were steady. No and atate marketing asheifers arrived that showed any ma- sociations. President Hagenbarth he- - . terial amount of dry feed. Grass heif- lieves that if the growers can have n ers sold at $9-0to $13.M; grass eowa more direct representation at Boston, $S.M to $10.M and eannen and eut-te- Mas., they esu get a larger portion $5 A0 to $7.75. Calves were steady of what the mills pay for fleeces from at $9.M to $1450. Demand for atoek-er- a the buyers and that neither the mills and feeders remains active. Thou nor consumers will be forced to give that made any showing of quality more. were strong. The common ana ordiIt seems certain that capable rollruled but kind uneven, ing averaged ageney at the market, working for nary elose to steady. The excellent condi- the producers, would benefit growers tion of the corn crop ia increasing the and stabilise prices, he said. The comdemand. mittee expects to come to some definite agreement nt thie meeting, me- - , fifteen were quoted up Hog prices ad-ic- e e cents today. This eording to Marshall, who says organito twenty-fivtook the market thirty to thirty-iv- e sation of such a gigantic pool will above a week ago ana to within mean the handling of more than pounds of fleeces annually. ive cents of the highest point of the season. Shippers and order buyers set the pace in the trade and packers RAM SAIM IS GREATEST EVER, SAYS MANDERFXELD . were finally forced to meet part of to the advance. The 1M J. H. (Jim) Manderfield, the general hogs uld at $11.00 to $11.25; 250 to the North Balt Lake City 325 pounds $10AO to $1110; 140 to manager of waa visitor in thia lecstockyards, 190 pounds $10.25 to $11.M; packing tion of the atate last Friday and Satowe $6A0 to $10.25 and stock hogs urday. He waa accompanied by Dr. and pigs $0.75 to $10A0. R. M. Mead. The two wen ealbn on cents The Snn. Their minion to tins loLamb prices ruled twenty-fiv- e ligher than hut week dou and fif- cality was to work np interest in the ty above a week ago Sheep remain- big ram rob at Zion, August 27th to ed firm. Western lambs uld at $1475; 30th, inclusive, nod nt which lima yearlings $10.75 to $11.25, and ewes three thousand or more fine animab $5A0 to $7A0. Odd lota of feeding are to be sold. These from some of ambs brought $11A0 to $13.M. the best herds in the whole country. They interested a number of sheepTEXANS ARE TO JOIN OYH1ES men of tins seat ion who have promised OF THE GROWERS to be there on the dates mentioned. The are at thie time being placWoolgrowers in Texas, the largest ed inyards xeadineaa and the exhibit and leeee producing state in the union, to he the largest roles are expected decided affiliate to lave permanently in Details are given in an ' history. with the National Woolgrowers' aselsewhere in this imadvertisement sociation, according to word brought of The Snn. 8p-ia- fig-ure- Edwin Halsey, sergeant at anna of the democratic convention at Houston, Tex. Halsey is assistant doorkeeper of the United States senate. Cabovehthe driver Simpson Confers With Uintah Folks THE ERSKINK VEBNAI Aug. 1 R. Simpson, the state highway engineer for District No. 4 with headquarters in Price, con- -' ferred with the board of commissioners of Uintah eounty recently on road matters.' The improvement of the Victory highway from the eenter of Vernal to Naples, a distance of four mike, was discussed without any action biting taken. The eounty under its budget for this year has no funds available for this construction work to match state aid funds. The estimated cost of the improvement is approxi- WITH HIS MOUNT. (LEFT) SIX BLAZING ITS OWN TRAIL OVER UNSETTLED GROUNIX (RIGHT) CROSSING BRIDGELESS STREAMS WITH WATER OFTEN SUBMERGING THE RUNNING-BOARD- S ONE OF THE DIFFICULTIES THE ERSX1NE SIX HAD TO OVERCOME IN A TRIP FROM RANGOON TO TRAIL-BLAZIN- mately five thousand dollars. The matter of changing the route of a entry of the Vietory into Vernal waa discussed by members of the Icons club with Simpson. The highway now enters from the south, and some residents advocate a change ao that it will come in from the east. The entire discussion is at present only tentative. Two routes are mentioned, involving construction of new roads for a of a mile in four hours. This gave of from three to fifteen miles. way to thorn covered open country, It is a matter to be finally settled by which eould be traversed at better the state legislature and the state road peed, though its roughness was a ae-- 1 commission. The county commission- vero tax on the sturdiness of axles, 'era attended the meeting, and it has frame and body construction. jbeen decided to appoint a committee On their arival in Mandalay the to confer with the state highway and its driver were welcomed pie in the near future.. The state road with a demonstration by members of commission this year is expending the National club, and the feat praia- - ( $21500 in betterment work in Uintah d throughout Burma and Indin as one eounty, and nil of these funds are over of the most outstanding accomplish--! and above the regular maintenance menU in Indian motoring. bndget of the commission for Uintah The new Erskine Six is handled by eounty. the Western Anto eompuny on North I Of the total $10,000 is being avenue at Price, ami is on dis- -, pended in resurfacing the graveled play in its showrooms. A pleasure to highway from the Twelve Mile bridge show it and a free demonstration if , to Vernal; $0000 was expended for desired. Drop in and ace it whether placing a complete new floor and new a buyer or not stringers on the Green river bridge nt Jensen; $2500 is allotted for improvement of the highway lending from the gity through Steinaker Draw to a conhe' "Vernal to Manila nection' wit forest highway on Brash Creek, n distance of approximately fifteen miles. ( , : I ; G . . y - ; dia-tan- ce bqh "The Road to Mandalay," utilised by Kiplings baited, is Mutat as far es the. motorist seemed, word bee just been reel tj the Studebaker eorporetion tastoek Emkine Six tourer reeent-u-li its own road on e gruelling fra Rangoon to Mandalay und inlymeeeeded in making it, but I it in the reeord breaking t hours. There are nlfy so roads between Rangoon and Usy- -t distanc of approximate-Abandied and eight-fir- e miles. ICE Perry, a Rangoon motorist, iU that the trip eould be made. satire guide and another eom- gletei tf forty-eigh- m Ei ks set d with forth from Rangoon emergency road making HIMIDENT OF EMERY HAS FAMED TO REWARD . .. Funeral ICELAND, Aug. 3. vere held in the ward chapel for William West Brinley, and who died at his resi-(- k on last Tuesday. Interment Cleveland City eemetery. ' Do-ii born in Springville, Pa., 'mar John B. and Barbara Ellen He bad been n farm- Oereland fourteen years. , He wed by his widow, Mrs. Marie Bnnley, and four sons and Ww, Mrs. Dan Bilboa, John E. and El- 'fcaley, Cleveland. Kenil-"ontbaEll- tools, and supremely confident of the power and endurance of the Erskine. The trip was a eross country ran in Oeeassion-all- y ... every sense of there were narrow cart tracks to follow, but more often the Erskine biased its own trail through the jungle. For five hours, at one stage of the trip, the ear ploughed through oft, paddy fields under a tropical sun that tested to the limit the power and cooling of the motor. In other places the caravan made very slow progress through deep sand. There were streams to ford with water well np over the running hoards. One of the most trying sections of the trip took the intrepid motorists through a region of elephant gnus, where progress was made at the rate the-word- ' Air mail planes, because of the' mileage being flown, are be- peo-Emki- ' coming large consumers of gasoline and oil and their consumption ic indicative of supplies to be required by this rapidly growing'industry, according to figures gathered by the American Air Transport association. In fly'thousand milea a day ing twenty-thre- e e routes with an avertwenty-onover age of three tons of mail each twenty-fou- r hours, exclusive of express and passengers, the companies an using oil. 60,260 gallons a day and 3330 of Recent testing showed that the avera conage requirement of planes is to Cedar Plateau out in Duchesne and of .262 gas gallons sumption of the grading of 7A miles beand for .014 of oil per mile. tween Lake Point and Mills Junction The gravel surfacing of in Tooele. the latter will not be undertaken until nest year. This work will eonanme all of the balances remaining unexpended in this year'B budget and will absorb all federal aid available until July 1, 1929, according to Kerr. Work is now progressing on the paring from the crossroads north of Logan to the Idaho state line; the tograding on the road from Strevell Elder eounty; Box in Snowville ward i the Nolan to Rolapp project in Price River Canyon; the road from the Shivwitz station to the Arizona state line in Washington eounty; the project from Orton to Circleville Canyon amp in Garfield county; that from Zion to Cor-dedalMt .Carmel in Washington and Kane , counties; thst from Duehesne to the Uintah river bridge in Duchesne and also on the Valley City bridge near Moab. These projects are in various have been 27, 28, 29, 30, 1928 stages of construction, but largely included in this years pro- Your Pick of Americas Finest Flocks Three Thousand Head Americas choicest RamboulUets, H thlres, Suff oiks, Lincolns, Panamas es and Crossbreds AT AUCTION August Thirteenth Annual National Ram Sale . 8 ALT LAKE UNION STOCK YARDS NORTE SALT LAKE, UTAH Tot until next January 1st can the begin to anticipate the appropriation of federal aid which will become available the following an be-iJnlv, Knrr says. Preparations outlining in made now, however, construction ) a "budget of needed m getting that there will be no delay once the the contracts under way the anfrom available money becomes nual federal bout $8M,0W. ah, re of thi- will to road commission n' Under management of F.R. Marshall, 0t National Woolgrowers Assoda-un- ; Col, Dwight Lincoln, A uctloneer. Sec-felar- g -- bmHnn will tw mmarated 1 tki of "dwted stock. All classes will be ,,lf for assembled n other time or yur . place can you find You flocks. 1 T0" representation of America's finest B tfford to miss it. is forming est a the world; larg- ht Oodles Right Here For AH Who Come With the object of aiding and at the same time speeding the development of the fanning sections of the state the Salt Lake home-seeke- rs Chamber of Commerce will soon start an exhaustive survey of all irrigation corporations in Utah. Such was thorized last Thursday when the cham- ber's board of governors concurred in the reeommendation'of its irrigation and drainage committee that questionnaires seeking detailed information ronccming the different district be sent to all irrigation companies. "We will ask data on surplus waexters each company has stored plained Lee Charles Miller, chairman of the committee. "The amount of acreage in the different districts not now cultivated, but for whieh water is available will be ascertained. The companies will be naked whether their storage capacity is sufficient to mature crops in the average year and what percentage of cut they make in available water in midsummer. Sueh data ia not now available from any source, Miller explained, and as soon as it is compiled will be of great benefit to homeseeken and in advertisstates advantages. Then ing-the are more than five hundred irrigation companies in Utah. au-Fl- at - It is not too early to think of thie important subject. Our new samples are now ready for inspection. Selection now means that you choose from an unbroken line of the choicest design the market affords. Your printing or engraving may then be done without hurry, assuring that perfection of workmanship which you desire and which it is The Snna constant aim to produce. Foresight now is a positive protection against disappointment little later in the season. Order npw. . The old open type of street ear, effort to prev obsolete, elsewhere, ia still in diffieultiea nearly a repetition of last year one on Broadway in New York. .t. in of collecting n, .it. k nd mb i back from hinL "." ; . 0 rs 250-pou- nd uek to Utah last Friday from the pression Lone Star convention by James A. Hooper. He, as secretary of the Utah liody, represented hia organization and the national one at the conference held at San Angelo, Tex., July 24th to 26th. The growers down there, he reports, an coming to realise the urgent necessity for scientific marketing of wool and the desirability of increasing the national consumption of lamb. Thus the Texu producers have signified their intentions of backing the national association in its "Lamb Is TWO UTAH MEN ARB FAVORED FOR BIOLOGY POST DENVER, Colo., Aug. 1 The United States department of the biological survey announced today that thb eity will become the headquarters for the entire West Three new investigators and an organic chemist will be appointed to serve in the department here and three new districts will be (Continued On Page Year) the BUDWEISER spells is satisfaction to millions ANHEUSER-BUSC- H ST. LOUIS adds nutriment to food. Bodweiacr Malt NOT TOO EARLY TO PLACE YOUR ORDERS FOR CARDS Sin wraUiinf nd dutnbutmg sSion - Merritt B. Chichester, probably the last survivor of Custers army, dirt in Peabody, Main, last week. Budweiser Malt Syrup HOP FLAVORED OR PLAIN W. H. BINTZ CO. Diatributora Salt Lako City, Utah |