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Show , THE SUN. PRICE, UTAH PAGE TWO Utah Shows Some Increase Over Previous Weeks' Output in California. Mr. and Mrs. Harold V. Leonard qf Pric'espent Monday night in Mnnh.' 16th. Miss Lurna Moffit of Helper is the guest of her friend, Miss Ilortha Reid, at Orangeville. J. B. Denn of Provo is visiting in thin eity at the home of Mrs. Henry C. Olson, his daughter. -Mr. and Mrs. I. M. Gauehet of Price visited at the L C, Moore ranch at Rochester last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mclutire of Price are visitors this week at Cedar City with relatives and friends.' Mrs. Mary Cuburn and Miss Kath-ery- n Bonoma of this eity visited last week with friends up at Rock Springs, Wyo. Mr, and Mrs. M. J. Wright of Price left Sunday for Ogilen to visit with friepds and relatves for about 1 trio weeks Mrs. A. B. Forsythe of Provo is visiting in Price at the home of Her daughter and son, Mrs. Silas Allred, and J. A. Forsythe. Mrs L. X. Kendig, who has been the guest of Mrs. G. R. West at Price for several days, returned to her home in Chicago yesterday. Mias Margaret Bullew from San Francisco is again in Price this week in connection with her Red Cross work in the Eastern Utah area. Mrs. J. Howard Thompson of New York and Mrs. Martin Kennedy of Provo are visiting at the home of Mr. and'Mrs. Henry C. Olson at Prie. Mrs. Charles Ruggeri, Jr., of this city is visiting with her mother and other relatives in Xew York City. Her little daughter is to return with her. Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Winters and daughter, Miss . Louise, returned to Price last Tuesday from Mt. Pleasant, where they had visited for several days. Mrs. Carlos Gunderson and her daughter, Miss Leona, got back to this eity a few daya ago after attending the Black Hawk reunion over at Spanish Fork. Mrs.' Edna Callaway Woods from Los Angeles,' Cala., is spending her two weeks vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Callaway, and at Priee. Miss Tirana Gunderson' of this eity left last Saturday for Colorado, Kansas and Xebraska. She will visit for several days during her absence with a sister in Denver. Judge George Christensen returned to Priee last Tuesday after a trip of more than a week to Monticcllo and Moab, where he held short sessions ,of district court . Mri and Mrs. A. W. Clyde of this eity arc at home from the state capital. They went there last week to attend tha marriage of their daughter, Miss Virginia, in the temple. William H. Toy, local mnsieian, and Theron Johnson of the Schramm-Johnso- n store at Priee, are spending their vacations at Jerome, Ariz. The formers mother lives there. J. E. Flynn got bark to Priee last Sunday from' Zion,' where he accompanied Mr.' and Mrs. L. A. Hall from San Frarieisco after their visit with the Flynn family here last week. . Mrs. J. E. Flynn and daughters, Misses Ardene, Helen and Peggy, motored to Cedar City last Monday and where they are tb visit Mr. and Mrs. William Gordon for a few days. Mr. and Mis. Leo Lowry are expected back in Priee from Rochester, Minn., during the next few days. lie went, there for treatment at the Mayo Bros, clinie some two weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tasker from Green River were in Price last Tuesday advertising Melon Dav, September 3d, in that eity. They also visited the surrounding camps. They are expecting the largest erowd ever. Mrs. H. S. Robinett and daughter. Miss Marguerite, of this eity went to Zion on Saturday last. The .former is to visit there for awhile. The latter will continue on to Los Angeles. She is to spend the winter there. ' Mrs. William Seamount and her daughter of Salt Lake City are viiit-i- r. at the home of Mrs. Belle (Waddell) nickman at Green River. Mrs. Seamount and Mrs. Hickman are sisTimes-Jodepende- Hit Sun Hpreiul ServM-.- . at thousand net tons as against sixty thousand tons in the pre- WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 20. The total soft coal production for the country over in the week ending with August 11th, including lignite and that coked at the urine, i estimated at net ton. Compared with the in the preceding seven days output this show an increase of 249,000 ton or 2.8 per rent. Production during the same time last year corresponding was 9,003,(100. The total bituminous output during the present calendar year to August 11th approximately a hundred and eighty-nin- e working days amounts to 285,098,000 net tons. For the week ending with August 11th Utah, Colorado'and Washington states (combined) produced four thousand tons of benhive coke, a falling off of three thousand from the same time last year, Total production of beehive coke for the country as a whole during the week f ndod August 11th is estimated fifty-eig- ht ceding seven days. The cumulative production of bhehive coke during this year to August 11th amounts to 2,- 640.000 net tona, a decrease of approximately 48.0 per eent from the record for the corresponding period in 1927. Total output of soft coal during the month, of July totaled 36,276,000 net tons as against 35,963,000 last June. The average daify rate in July wa sixty-- thousand higher than that for the month of June; an increase of 4.9 per rent The production of anthracite decreased from 5,301,000 tons in June to 4,475,000 tons in July, and the' average daily rate' was 12 A per eent lower in July than in June. The total of anthracite during the week ended August 11th is estimated at 1,387,000 net tons, an increase of 223.000 or 19.2 per eent over that of the preceding week. eight ESTIMATED WEEKLY PRODUCTION OP COAL BY STATER (Xet Tons) I SUte August 1928 290.000 38.000 170.000 794.000 238.000 47.000 23.000 Alabama Arkansas Colorado ' Illinois -Indiana Iowa ......... ...... ....i Kansas Kentucky: "Eastern...;.: 090.000 232.000 48.000 10.000 60,000 46.000 51.000 12,000 280,000 50.000 2,167,000 97.000 16.000 70.000 228,000 32.000 Western , Maryland ; . , Miohigan Missouri Montana' New Mexico.-- .. North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Pennsylvania Tennesse Texas .. J1 4, UTAH Virginia" Waahi: 1 Jul7 Week. Ended 7, 6, Average 28, August August July 1928 1927 1923 a 1926 331.000 39.000 169.000 140.000 234.000 9,000 29.000 292.000 30.000 161.000 757.000 240.000 45.000 21.000 1,008,000 232,000 49.000 10.000 58.000 46.000 52.000 9,000 290.000 48.000 2596,000 102.000 18.000 66,000 243,000 33,000 ' 397.000 '379,000 . 24,000 157,000 1,064,000 26,000 173.000 1,363,000 440,000 356,000 63.000 66.000 1,008,000 948.000 448.000 55.000 16.000 36.000 42,000 44.000 9,000 130.000 48.000 2,174,000 92.000 23.000 87.000 248.000 47.000 268.000 57.000 6,000 47.000 40.000 43.000 15.000 414.000 43.000 2,723,000 111.000 . 19.000 76.000 ' 285,000 34.000 100,000 . 84,000 765.000 217.000 44.000 21100 . 61,000 50.000 49, (KM) 20.000 871.000 55100 3,734,000 118.000 24.000 83.000 248,000 47,000 West Virginia : ! . ! rel-atvi- es tiw on theN. and Wi.C. and 0.; Virginian and Charleston division of the B, and O.' (e)Rest of state, including Panhandle. (d) This group is not ' strietly comparable in the' several years. Miners JKANRAS ate and assistant engineer in the bureau of mines of tbe department of Commerce at Washington, D. C., and Pittsburg, Pa., at $3800 a year for fuel engineer, $2600 for the assistant grads and $3200 for associate grade'. 'United States iFnei Shares are quoted it seventy-on- e eenta bid and seveaskCd up at BaltLake City. nty-two Sweet Coal bonds are the same: 'Great Western preferred $2.00 and- Carbon Fuel eighty cents.' Great Westerns Parley Openi.; CITY, Mo., .Aug. 21. Negotiations for a new wage scale to replace the old, Jacksonville Fla., agreement In mines of the Soiithwes-- : ern Interstate Coal Opera tors associa-tiii- n . in Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Arkansas will be resumed here tomorrow.' 'Members of the association late today voted to aecept the invitation of mine union leaders for a new conference. Moat of the erties of members of the association! employing about eight thousand man in the four states, have been idle since last April 1st after expiration of tha temporary extension of the Jackson: ville agreement .' - bonds (common)' hineteen eenta. Salt Lake Citys commissioners have been-atketq hold in abeyaneC, the franchise for natural gss there for three months, while 'the feasibility of piping the' Waste product from' Iron-to- n is beibjg investigated. The Columns Steel corpora tio p is- the petitioner. Another eonununiestion in the form of a' 'eavtoon 'showing the Utah coal producer as 'the ,dog in the manger, and asking the commission not to let the selfish interests of the few interfere-witnational success, was received last Tuesday. . From the first of April to the middle of June stock of railroad fuel declined steadily. Between this period there was a net decrease of - QUEBEC, A tig. 20. Twelve hun- dred British miners who are seeking relief, from unemployment - in Great Britain passed through Quebec over the weekend en route to the harvest fields of Wes tenj Canada. Most of them were war veterans.- - They came here under the British government scheme to supply unemployed miners with work in the wheat fields of Cana- Qnebee on the second stage of -- : ST. jSS? thousand were however, sixty-threadded to the reserves and the total on hand July 1st was 11,765,000-e- journey. . Baldwin Makes Appeal LOND0X, Ang. 21. Premier Baldwin has decided to appeal personally . - . An Finding Work. Utah Cokoal company has filed articles 'of incorporation with the secreto a hundred and fifty thousand em- tary ot state at Balt Lake City. It ployers of Great Britain to provide has 250100 shares at a par1 value of work for jobless miners. The ministry a dollar each. J. D. Jensen is presiof labor announced today that at the dent; R. L. Prater, vire; Irma Jensen, premier 'a behest it was soliciting each secretary and treasurer. Other directemployer to take at least one or two ors are Golden J. Gnlver and J. F. mon or mine boys into some sort of a Heath.C. J. Roberts, the chief clerk for job. The appeal takes the form of a the Columbia Steel corporation, was a personal letter from Baldwin. business visitor in Priee on last Saturn ABOUT THE CAMPS OF THE BIG day. Tbe property over to the south of Sunnyside is working every day CARBON DISTRICT land sometimes Sundays. Tho output Salt Lake Citv brokers are offering i still around twelve hundred tons Peerless Coni shares st sixteen cents daily, all of which goes up to Ironton and Great Western rommon at three for coke. and a quarter. total quantity of all bituminous Frank T. Bennett, chief clerk for minrd in the United States during the tbe Spring Canyon Coal company, was week ended August 11th, according to in Price last Saturday. Ilis camp and tho estimate of the National Coal he n.vs, are working jwriatinn, was 9,050.090 net tons. All bout four days a week at this time, the output as reported bv the United With the of its new State bureau of mines for the week property above Rdnnp, whirh it will ended July 28th was 8,994,000 net tons take about a year to make a producer, ami for the seven day ending August the Peerltvt mine in Spring Canyon 4th 8.748,000. will no longer be worked by the com-Purchase of the Adsville or the Con-panIt may be leased to some small rnv mines at Keinmerer, Wya, of the operator. Wyona Coal company has been made Competitive examinations for sev- - by the United States Development eral xaitina in the various branches eorporaton, headed by K. J. Kaddats of tho United States government are of Salt Lake City, president and treas-t-o bo given in the near future C. A. urer. .This announcement was made Croekwell, secretary of the civil scrv- - recently by Charles Peter, managing ke board at Salt Lake CSyt, annonneea. director of tho United States Dtvelop-Amon- g them a fuel engineer, assOci- - ment corporation, owning tbs rights . 1 derel-ipmen- t y. . eS&HSH.4 UR WES OFF 1EN TO l. injiSIIEEP'ffll SIEAOYi PURELY PERSONAL Mrs. L R. Bills and her two sons of Price are" spending their' vacation ' EVERY THURSDAY A. Wilfln"of Thr "Wilson Art Cala., arriveouiimny of Los Angeles, looking ed in Price last week and tor a suitable location' for a studio. He arid bis family are quartered in the Ufyner apartments for the time The 8un Special Berries. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aug. 21. being. John Mrs. and Cattle receipts today reached the thirjuvenile Judge time Grace Miss ty thousand mark for the firstof one Potter, accompanied by those exceeded and got Jennie Potter, Miss this and Gibbs year thouback to Priee this week after a visit week ago by more than eight of instead and relatives This with aupply, sand. large several of days it broadened Utah Xorthern demand, the decreasing friends in two or three from all angles by bringing in a full eities. order buyMrs. Carl Saxey, Mrs. George S. line of feeder, shipper and in addition to the large killing Miss and ers W. Cluff C. Mrs. Harding, best grassers and Bess Lundquist returned to Priee last outlet. Fed steers, ruled steady. Hog feeders anil at stockers attendance in after Sat unlay bring ten eent from off were quoted the state convention at Ogden. They prices Lambs were are the Republican Ladies quartet of the high time of Friday. and sheep lower e to twenty-fivfifty this city. were 30,000 today Receipts steady. W. S. Golding County Assessor 9000 hugs and 15,000 sheep, got back home at Price last evening cattle, with 21,500 rattle, 9000 hogs where compared from the Carlsin county ranges, 7000 and sheep a week ago and 28,-7stock lie had been looking after live cattle, 5900 hogs and 12,995 sheep for taxation purposes. lie goes todemoa year ago. morrow as a delegate to the tocratic state convention at Logan. Only a small per rent of the run were These class. fed the Miss Catherine Broyles of this day was in made up of yearlings and fair to good city is spending a couple of weeks at shortfed steer. Several lots of yearher with visiting Cala., Beach, Long Scoof lings sold at $15.75 to $16.00; steers fathpr, J. F. Broyles, formerly field. His home is now at Atlanta, and heifers mixed, topped at $16.00; steer $15.75, and heavy Ga.( but he has since visiting in Car- mediumweight bon eounty recently been making s stem $15.25 to $15.65. Some of those fed grain on grass brought $1450 to stay out there. wintered ones $13.-5- 0 Mr. and Mrs. C. II. Stevenson, $1550, and Kansas The to $14.75. grass steers straight evenSr., returned to Priee Monday Those that to $1350. $8.75 ing from an automobile trip of some brought were not and down sold from $11.50 as two weeks to the Northwest, going attractive of enough quality for feedfar as British Columbia. Returning to twenty-fiv- e fifteen were ers quoted Idaho of came Montana, by way they found an all kinds lower. However, deand Wyoming, reporting a most outlet and largo receipts caused no best the of highwith lightful trip congestion. Butcher eattle were made ways. cows at $8.00 of Price up principally of grass Mr. and Mrs. Leo Lowry, heifers to $9.00 to $13.-0$10.00; grass are still st. Rochester, Minn., Where he cows $550 cutter and and canner is taking treatment for kidney trouble calves Veal $9.00 to $750. brought at the Mayo clinic. One of the toes and heifen were of the right foot has been giving him to $1350. Fed cows A large number of considerable trouble for month. Zion in limited supply! and doctors bad failed to give his relief country buyers showed up today eviin were orders addition in many up to the time, of his leaving here dence. The better grades were fully some three weeks ago. steady and some of the medium plain Mr. and Mrs. James E. Alley and kinds were slightly easier, but there children and' Miss Edna Cook left hero was a good clearance. Sales of feedlast Sunday morning on a trip to er steers ranged from $9.00 to $14.25. Drexell, Mo., the former home of Mr. Stockers sold up to $13.60. Alley, where they are to visit a week Hog prices' were only ten cents unwith Mrs. Alleys father! J. B. Ver-de-n. der the extreme high point last week, He recently suffered a stroke whirh was the highest since February, of paralysis as also did a brother in 1927. The decline was due entirely the state of Washington on the same to the break in prices east of the Misday. It will take the party close to . local demand cona week going and the same time re- sissippi river, as tinued to show large volume. Shippers turning. and order buyers freely. InDr. and Mrs. Otto !L Apderson dications are that operated prices will continue motored to Priee the latter part of the The 170 .to hogs week to take Mrs. Joseph Meldron of brought $1L75 to $12.10; 140 to Provo and Mrs. Sherman Howard of grades, $11.40 to $12.00 ; 250 to Xebraska, mother and sister of Mrs. 325 pounds, $11.25 .to $11.90 ; packAnderson, who have been visiting here, ing sows, $10.00 to $10.75, and stock to visit relatives there. During their and feeding pigs, $10.75 to $1150.. stay here the visitors, accompanied by Lamb prices were quoted off twenty-fMrs. Anderson and Mrs. Gertrude ive to fifty eenta and sheep were Thomas of Salt Lake City, enjoyed a Native lambs sold at $1350 steady. trip to Bryee Canyon and the Cedar to $14.00 and westerns $14.00 to $14.-2Breaks. Richfield Reaper, 16th. Ewes are quoted at $550 to $7.00, Mr. and'Mrs.' W. F. Olson, who and yearlings $10.25 to $10.75. Feedreturned q few days ago from their ing lambs $1250 to $1350. honeymoon trip through Yellowstone Park, the Northwest os far os Seattle, Entries For Big Sola. Wash., and down the Pacific Coast Entries of John K. Madsen, have gone to housekeeping at 64 North of the Mt Pleasant Rambouil-le- t Seeond East at Priee, are cosily sitwill be the first. to go on farm, uated and it home to their friends. the- block at the opening of the naMrs. Olson (formerly Miss Daphne tional ram sale on Monday afternoon, Dalton) at the time of her wedding August 27th, at the Union stockyards resigned from the superintendeney of at Balt Lake rams City. Sixty-on- e Price City Hospital and is snreeeded and three yearling ewes will .be offerin this position by Miss Louise Fettis, ed by this eoneem. .The program was who has been at the institution for announced last Monday by F. R Marabout a year past, as a nurse. She is most competent for the place she has shall, secretary of the National association, and sheep will assumed. be offered Angust 27th, 28th, 29th F. G. Smth, secretary and man- and 30th, inclusive. Rambouillets will ager of the Waukegan (Ilia.) Daily be sold during the first two dsys and Sun for a number of yean up to lost after which Hampshire and Suffolk month when he sold out for seventy-fiv- e breeds will More than three appear. thousand dollara and retired from thousand rkms from fourteen states business, was a caller on this news- and Canada are expected to he in the paper last Friday. Himself and wife pens. Shipments from J. J. and G. and two children were going east after A- - Parkinson of Canada already have a trip to the Northwest and the Pa- arrived and two other firms cific Coast He was much impressed hive notified officials that np there their stock with Price and spoke of it as being see on the way. Railroads entering one of the best appearing towns he Salt lake have established spechad seen in a long ways 'of traveling. ial reducedCityrates to accommodate The Volstead act, sq far as he sees it, those who plan to attend. is more or leu of a joke all through the West as well as in the Mississippi BETTER CONDITIONS FOR THE Valley States. MEAT TRADE COMING 00 0, - . 250-pou- nd 170-pou- nd 5. . r-- proprietor - Wool-growe- Wm ters. Averyl Overholser, after ImuedEYery Thursday By Sun Publishing spending the summer in I Vice, left on Ck(Ine.) K. W. Crockett, Manager. Sunday last for her home in Chicago. 8ubstcriptioa, 82.00 a Year In Advance. She is a niece of Mrs. Grace A. Cooper of this eity. This was her second Miss visit West Mill Matter, Entered; Second-ClaA. D. Sutton of this eity is home h Pstofflce at Price ?15 ?,nf from attending the American Drug- Utah, Under the Act of March 8. 1870. gists convention in Boston, Mass., last ADVERTISING RATES month. lie left Priee on July 12th for San Francisco, where he joined a big Display ; Matter ler Inch Per Month. $150 Single Issue, 40r. Transient 50c. delegation and accompanied it to SeatSpecial Position, 25 Ter Cent Addi tionni. tle, Wash. There they took a special Ten Cent the Line Each Insertrain for the East. Later on he visited Legal tion. Count Six Words to the Line. several rities in Old Xew England and Summon. Wuter n $12.50; Application $15.00; Final Proof. $10.1X1. Ten Cent the Line Each Into the Lnrgi patented processes for Reader sertion. Count Kix Word to the Line. the manufacture of smokeless fuel and Iliackfare Type Twenty Cent the Line the recovery of byproducts. The propr.ai-Insertion. twenty-Obituaries. acquired comprise Csrd of Thank. Resolutions, erty recently two hundred and eighty-tw- o acre Reading Notire Rates. Count Six ortls to the Line. of patented coal bearing lands, to- For 8nle, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc. insurface with improvements, gether Two Cents Per Word Each Issue. No cluding a large boardinghouse, family tiiarse Accounts. home buildings, office structures, a Address All Communication to SUN PUBLISHES CO. power plant, steel tipple with shakers, scales and screens, cutting machines, boise, mine ears and ventilating an other equipment. ' Printing that good kind ena is set ashamed oT --Ths Sun, Pries, Utah. PRICE, UTAH X went mourning without Tho Bun; I itood np and cried in tho Job, 30:88. oongroga-Uo- m ra Uintah Baiun stockraisere as well as those of adjoining territory have been warned thattheir meat may no' longer be sold in Carbon eounty unless alaugntered here. Thin word was ffiv-c- n out at the big convention held at Roosevelt and whichrecently many people of Eastern Utah attended. liar-de- n Bennion, commissioner of agriculture, has said it is only a matter of tune until all stock, including dairy and hoof cattle, will he regularly inspected. Animal brought into Carbon to be sold at meat markets must be killed in this county at a regularly inspoctod slaughterhouse. Such has been annnunred by Edward South-wicfood and dairy commissioner, iiu will lie here within the next few day to establish the killing place, and after that everything nint h broiHit in alive and killed, lriee" capital" i ready to erect the slaughterhouse Walt plotion. It is .especially large timbers and should W J2 ' itely. Most all of this year opraent projects have hem and due to the low fi,v and streams are proving ot aable benefit (o the Bloekmta Manti forest.- - - Cattlemen report losses fn pur on tbe Manti reserve u much heavier than last yr. somewhat unusual since it u tl, a-th- e rainy weather that each fro plant usually oeeur. W. H. Hendricks, state ian, returned from a trip he arranged to begin August Z7th. it will from six to seven week to taZ the work, which will he underth reetion of Dr. R. C. Swilling foi state and Dr. C. L. Jones for tfc . T.G ernment After the work is eossia in Uintah county test will ben of the herds in Duchesne Dr. V. L. Nebeker will be inllj ' Sheep' and eattle have done vdi all the forest range this yeu tek intcr-distri- rit $1 , district eourt, at Salt TjV, the Federal Intermediate Credit h of Spokane, iyah., against AIL rup, sheepraiser of Uintah mmtj.l the collection of more than $35,08 two promissory note. Aewrdi the complaint $27,745.71 is doe note for $30,000 and the full prim; and interest on ono for $7500. Bi were, assigned to the bank by. Western .Agricultural eorpontisa in alleged tbat.Myaip has sold toO ft Sons and to Karras, Vaoi ft F e hundred and forty-iof sheep which he mortgaged i eurity for the two notes. An increase of more than tni lion pounds in the Idaho wool .efip shown in the report of J. E Jm son, federal agricultural st'"" . I fifty-thre- ii This years was 17,352.000 c with 15,120,000 for 1927. This due both to tn increased number heep and to a heavier weight fleece, this seasons averaging pounds compared with 8.4 lut The clip pots Idaho seventh m rank of wool 'producing state, taking .first and i Wyoming Eight yean ago Idaho was fink tha United State as a whab was also a marked increase, the showing 296,114,000 pounds with 278,437,000 last year. Washburn S. Chjpmsn of Fork has been appointtd by Martin M..Larson of the Fourth triet eourt to take charge of ths i and property .in question in tbift ores ease ..of .Peari Nicholas 0 , against Georg LeGrtude CU consists of .four thousand Mil sheep, grazing land leases sod outfits, together with a house im in American Fork and will be e Chipman and the mortgages ( property paid off. The balance money, following the paying will be placed in the hands . t court and will he kept unt voice ease and the one reeentlTM by Clark against Milton Pr American Fork for $10,000 diMp for the alienation of hi WlfllP feetiona are settled. ; -- Yesterdays Quotation! J KANSAS' CITY, Mo., AngCattle Receipts, 6000 held. 1500. All kill ins- classes slow, dssnj grades, fed steers and yearlings steady, plainer grades and gTJfJ dull; choice mixed yearliiufti K Dnt medium ' wwjflW) $15,75; ci&tf: bulk fed offerings, $14.00 to Ij? fed western grassers, $13.00- to 6 straight grassers, $10.00 to - - . ... -- Ia !Btos wli itTi Hz ties nli Hr. tjoi A en itni Fill nrk ns it Bn tyh - 12 lit no, hs Ki Si 1 ns i 210-pon- 230-pon- ''PT It. ' Fes' There i a pmuiibility, however, fl forage will all be gone and nw the sheep will have to leave rill the next three or four weeb, tbe July and August rains hnt far failed , to materialize. iPM Dr$.t Marsh and Clawson of tW line experiment Station were vi at the supervisor's office of the ti forest reserve on August 8th. have been feeding a number of that were suspected of killing These, however, were found to be poisonous, They are now mV studv of Ue lupine or wild beta Suit has been filed in United St replain Oklahomas down ter grades of she etock and tnailw in kill tni non irrailcS tSBOW . veskrt. fivo to fifty cents higher; top, $13.50; few $14.00 stocks ' feeders alow steady; early 00 to $12.60. Hog active, fifteen to ji;J W! higher, mostly twenty-five- ! on weights. Buis lights and hntchei to $12.30; bulk, ers. $11.85 to $12.15; weights, $1150 to $12.W; sow, mostly $1050 to veil ,loW"Wi,S1t i it Vi'll he under slate supervision and will ? filV ernge rout Tuesday, sii rereive official 241 pounds. i f head- - fj . WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF Sheep Receipts, 9000 twenty-fiv- e to fifty EASTERN UTAH and weak. Oregon sinu $13.50. Choice Colorado bcW'a rrico flockmasters are at $13.75; . natives mostly $1 thw tune contracting generally their lambs for 00, few $134Q; range ewe do" fall delivery at eleven cents. from $650.. - .. , fencing on the Manti forest is nearing com- - i ct Dont borrow .The Sun. 3 Bi Ke n Y. IrJ Fit |