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Show THURSDAY, OOTOBEJi EVERY THPB8DAY. THE 8UH, PRICE, UTAH PAGE TWO 1 T ME CATTLE ARE LOWER The Bun Special Service. KANSAS Mo, Oct. CITY. $13.00 to $13.25;; natives $12.00 to $12.75; yearlings $9.50 to $10.25, and ewes $6.00 to $6.75. Feeding lambs an quoted at $12.00 to bringing 15. Following last weeks advance eattle priees eased off fifteen to twenty-fiv- e cents today. Receipts were liberal with the bulk of the run lockers and feeders. .However, there was a fair sprinkling of.' fat eattle here, and they were weak in sympathy .with the heavy run and lower prieea in Chicago. Ilojr prices started steady but ruled stronger before; the close. All interest bought freely.. Indications are that the market will rally before the week end. Sheep and lamb prices were fully steady. Receipts today wen 32,000 eattle, 0000 hogs and 13,- -. 000 pheep compared with 22,000 eattle, 000Q hog and 14.000 sheep a week hogs and aigo,'ana 34,809 cattle, 7100 'DyWH-sheea year ago; ' - A few loads of yearlings,, light, medium and heavyweight steers sold at $15.75 to $17.00. . They, made up the antin'. supply of. eattls.thatr showed ! any matenal' amount of dry feed. Short fed' brought (13.50 : to .(15 A0 and warmed up olasses $12.50 to $13.-.6- .iPriees. were, quoted .fifteen to lower, than last ..week s twenty-fiv- $12.75. SHEEP KILLING DOGS CAUSING LOSSES AT VERNAL . Then has been an epidemic of sheep killing by dogs in the neighborhood lately that has assumed serious proportions. ; In the past it has been' so common that owners have failed to report their- losses. But within the Ias ten days reports have come to the county svricultunl agents office of renewed ravages on the part of - dogs in hte community-One night last week dogs destroyed sixteen head of sheep in Ed .Colton a pasture in Maeser. The peeulie thing about it was that the dogs' apparenlty wen pot hungry but killed .for .tna ' sport of it None of the sheep were devoured and all evidences showbd that1 this dofes Wert 'Tint driveil to the 1 ' killing beckufo of hunger. Tke ohteMiight Countv Agent Pet-- ; ernen was aroused at 2:00 by: th bart(ing jpf dngs. ..Herchpsed four dogs from hif..place Autoqlyiafter they had killed two --of his son Clin-iV gjgbf jo'thr .which an expected to: era, severs! d ie.: l 1?lis fesivAs Vd rfrtunber of th Boys club and had won Tint place' ;n the county .fair. witji ouq of) the cwe,'that .was killed...' . ' . . . - ' e' ekse.'i Gramfat steers brought : $80 to $12A0i .Those-.- , below $0.50 had neither; quality: or. condition roeom- -. will.de-.crean- ;.iyalter nMCoy has.-alyeportd y, similar Josses, and .Sunday. jugl)t Cprmll had several, sheep killed by dpgs, ..Mr. Cqltojv stated. definitely that hiij lps? pf sbeepjhrouglj, being close to killed by dogs ,wonl4:-rq- i Le-Ro- week end. Today 180 . Pr,:Ve,JVLffkill; .kill - ,1 ''! ; -- m . to ! j by the Tpe roundup is, conducted, ' association Huntington 'Cattlemens fear ,thp i purpose' pf collecting into a ceptrally, located pen all cattle be-- ' longing tp members of the'aMOciation for. the purpose of branding calves . IL1 ! SOUKCE OF v fact that you can drive THE simple new Erskine Six 40 miles an 'V ie. M i r steer, and stop, and polka llieErskineSixisjustwhat Studebiikar deliberately planned it to est, fastest car under $1000 --and an ' hour, behlnd .the .wheel will prove it.'; Come, drive an Erskine today! Stude bakers 76 years of manufacturing ex--; perience stand back of it; hour the very first day-an- d at speed later on is proof positive of the 62-m-ile sion manufacture. Studebaker's Erskine Six luts Out- performed all stock cars under $1000 by 1000 mileri in 964 consecutive minutes. This lowest priced of al Stu- debaker can now hoMi 11 official speed .nd drfurmc. record, in Could be--the- fin- c then be any better eridence of unmatched performance? A nunble, brilliant car in traffic. Smart as a whip. Roomy. Easy to ride J .... ........ .......... '. The Counts wrier . The Dictator . . ; . . . . . n,t Frskins Attpricmaf. o. b. factory . : ; IUMi-O- UI lulls llSSto IMS' 139S sutsl Pricej Utah ;t iB - . ' J V Jast .Off Main; ' " VOUR NEW LINES . i . . Ave. North Carbon r ; . . M iu 1 fah-euj- .io .Enkines finer engineering and pred-l l , 'f BE--r l 'I. I. ..- V.--.' iuntlnjgtou haa .started jt annual roundup.of eattlprpm .the'mopntaina for .this, year, haying approximately 52JT00 serps ofjqnd to.seouy.in searph of ,pattj. . . hV worV.M Sorted Iasi i . .,;i, ' r .is. " ' A . - e v.- j -- " ' CATTLEMEN HUNTINGTON GIN ANNUAL ROUNDUP GAT1LE SHIPMENTS TO b- . - ; t , . if-i- Y.,.'! ..I 'Iia v,'-- is eertsin would-b- -- i . . '; ''I, r i tbt tqe total amount appalling, t could be a majority qf It, is strange .that, innot Instances, Jibe dogs are hungry but; it 0; r, .I:--.- ij the loss, i.. that,. is incurred by, the other stock , owners q!$he.. valley but hogs brought $9.00 to $IQ,-0140 to 175 flbiindd $9.00 to $9.05;; packing bows $8.00 to $8.75,' and stork' $8.75 .to (OAO.1 nogt and ' Sheep.'and lanib 'prieea an holding week "last wifh'tatt! ftrohg compared and twen ty five cents ' h igh rt- than, .a 'Beist'' western. Iambs week kgo. an . .. l v 310-pou- y- L- ' 'n -- i- befon the 'f'.ll', .!' f. . i I ismitnown' justwRat ,$500.00. ..d!; . - :f . 1 dowe-brongh- 1 fi f'.l.- - - t H i e. Fullfed .kinds. Will be scarce. Butcher eattle were, quoted fifteen to lower. .Cnner and eutter twenty-fiv- e The bulk of the elamei liclditeady t $8.00 to'$9.00 and bulk of grata heifers$9.00 to $10.50. Culyci wen ateady to fifty eents lower with the best bringing 14JH) to". $14.50. Country buyers fonnd.a liberal supply of atoeken and feeden 'today and wen able to torch prieea off fifteen .'.Aa. soon W the' deto twenty-fiv- e. cline was - established the . trade became active." Stock calve' wen off ferid more ' freely than' at any previous time thii yearj-i- ' ' Hog prices ruled ateady to ten cents higher than last weeks close; mostly 'strong; Demand improved- as the session' advanced and; the high' point came., the on the close) Early last-we- ek 'market had undergone a sharp' slurpp, but 'strength developed oh Thursday, and Friday. Indieatirfhs, are 'that the market will develop a further advance -- . meudation. Indications' are.tbat the shortfod 'eattle .will be! offend, more' freely and that the graasen : i'' : . i . ; M and cutting, out those eattle to be marketed before placing the remainder on the winter feeding grounds. The association has a permit on the Manti National forest for over 50,000 acres of gracing land for summer range, on the. north side of Hunting-to- n Canyon, and it ia this section that is now being eleared by riders, under the direction of the local forest ranger Bert Thomas. . Miller Black, president of the association, is in charge of affars at the central eorral, where the eattle are brought in each night by detailed riders. Other officers are: William Cook, vice president; Albert Ouynian, r. seerotary-trossureThe purpose of the association is for ' 'marketing. . prairie provinces.' South of the main line of the Canadian Paeifie ralway alone there are more than 5,000,000 acres of leased range land, where giant herds of horses, cattle and sheep roam the prairies. Thera is another million acres or so of leased land along the railway belt of British Columbia. But vast regions of suitable 8AN JUAN CATTLE AND SHEEP GOING TO MARKETS ranching land still remain in the interior of British Columbia and in Alberta and it is here that new leases The fall clearance of eattle and are being taken up. sheep from San Juan county rangrs Canada exported 289,021 head of ha been giing on for a weoic jmst, cattle valued at $13,877,405 Inst year, several herd, of cattle and the annual the report shows, it might have ex- lamb crop being trailed to the railported more but the. Dominion uses road, says the Monticello Record. 85 per rent of its marketable rattle. Among those recorded a delivering In this connection it is minted out, eattle were Kumcn Jones, 410 head, if Cansdiaiis ate ounce more which will be xbipiwd from Thompof beef rattle per capita, they would sons; Ferkirs Brother, 400 head, to have used up more than the present be delivered at Dolores, and the Inthe exportable surplus of the country. dian Croek Cattle company, who are Western Canadas status ss a ranching rountry ha assumed vastly added importance recently as the result of an unprecedented demand for (nnadinn beef, a peopling to a report of the Department of Colonisation and Devleopment of the Canadian Pacific railway, made public recently. Cattle are moving to the United States at prices whirh are returning Dominion producers the greatest profits in history, the report states, and the prospect is for the continuance of this demand.' As and aid to production by ranchers, the Canadian denartini nt of agriculture has jnst established a new range experimental station in the vicinity of Manyber-risproAlberta, where forty-tw- o jects covering the problems of ranchers are being started as quickly as - , . , . . . TESTING OF HERDS ENDS IN THE UINTAH BASIN ... . . s, possible. Raneh land is still plentiful in making deliveries at Thompsons of something like 1000 head. It ia bn- -' dentood that the eattle are bringing around $50.00 for. everything tha. walks through the stockyard gates, big and little. Among the sheepmen, who are delivering their lambs are noted: George A. Adams, 850 head; Redd and Boyles, 7000 head; Adams and Harden, 1000 head, and the Adama and Christensen flocks of old stock.. It. is understood that the lambs are bringing around I1V4 eents at Dolores. one-ha- lf Testing of dairy herds in the Uintah Basin has just been concluded, according to Dr.' W. II. Hendricks, week delivering . their lambs to buyers at Thompsons-- and .Cisco, says the f R. Lee Kirk and the Indian Creek Cattle company turned over their Iambi last. week,, and other woolgrowers wilL deliver this and next week... In the negihborhood of 25,000 lambs will be delivered to buyers,, and will bring, the growers around $8.00 per head.: , H.-- F. Arnot of Moab ia this week baying about 1500 head of ewe Iambs from the Indian Creek Cattle company and Boyd J3. Hammond. The contract price is $9.00 per head. Times-Independe- nt . - " Yeaterdajra Quotations. KANSAS CITY, Mo.; Oct. 7000 head. Calves, 500; market' killing classes steady to twenty-fiv- e eenui ver; stuckera and feeders slow, steady to. weak; beef steers, $9.00 to $15.00; light yearling steers and heifers, $8.00 to $14.25; beef cow, $7.25 to $9.00; low cutter rows, $.40 to $0.75; vealers, $8.00 to $14.00; heavy reives, $8.00 to $11.25; bulk stockers and feeders, $9.50 to state veterinarian, but the figure have not been tabulated. On Monday the work of testing the herds in Ssnpete eounty began. There will lie two state veterinarians anil two from the bureau of animal industry make the tests. When the work is completed in Sanpete the verterinarian will go in- $12.00. to Sevier county. This will be the nogs Receipts, 9000 head. Market fourth test made of the herds in that uneven, steady to ten eents lower than county. Tuesdays average; top, $9.80, on the ehoiee 200 to 270 pounds; 250 to 350 Sheepmen Delivering Lambs. pounds, $9.25 to $9.80; 200 to 250 Grand oounty sheepmen are this pounds, $9.35 to $9.80; 160 to 200 pounds, pounds, pounds, $8.00 to $8.90 to $9.80; L0 fc $8.25 to. $9A0; 90 h $8.25 to $9.25; packin $9.00. Sheep Receipts, 13,000 head1 ket slow and generally qtead fat lambs $13 A0; bulk rull $13.00 to $13.50; $9.00 to $3 ' - f Do-yo' recall the days wh! doctor said .Youll have to smoking. he was talking to her of the male aexf 1 mg... m ' . Don9 Wail The approaching 'winter MW with it the extra fire hrt$. canned by the furnace or ha Don't wait nntQ you have a W but protect yourself now . I a policy with, , nun agokv o GEORGE I. NELMS . ' Fbona Silvagal Bnildiaf PRICE, UTAH j |