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Show UTAH NEWS REVIEW David II. Madson, state fish and tame commissioner for Utah, has call-el call-el a convention of the fish and game rommistioncrs of the states of New rfexlco, Colorado, Wyoming, Id-iho, tlontana and Nevada, to be held in fait Iako. At tills convention an ag-cresslvo ag-cresslvo program for the preservation ind propagation of fish and game in lie Western states will be formulaled ind adopted and the necessary steps aken to eliminate the duck malady vhich threatens to destroy tlie birds hat are hatched in all the lntermoun-ain lntermoun-ain states. Representatives of the Greek colony n Salt Lake held a conference with ate state school authorities for the purpose pur-pose of ascertaining ways and means, tither by the formation of a Greek Uiierieanization society or through a rommittee to formulate means and me-hods me-hods whereby Americanization of the fokmy may be brought about The Utah State Game Department md the Bureau of Fisheries obtained SjOOO.OOO eastern brook eggs last fall from Fish Lake on the Flshlako For-wt. For-wt. This Is double the amount tako-i my other season and eggs were still iv-alkAile when the work dosed. Close to two million dollars will be tlstrihuted among the school districts rf Utah early m the present iiiouth. Che Is a larger amount ttmn ovtir before be-fore hoe been distributed by ttoo state D the district schools at any oo-o trine, md amounts to epproxhwM-oly ttfte-en tollare per capita of school ppiiaton. It Is large because of the conis-t-Rti-tou-U amendment passed by the peo-e In vfovemoer, 1920, and ratified by the fcrarteerrth legita tares which provides that tire state old to schools shall be twenty-five dollars per capita of school Kpultkm. George Thomas Peay, 37 years of igo, died at his homo, S87 West Center Cen-ter street, Provo, a few days ago. Se was one of Utah's early pioneers, irrlrin In 1S52, in Captain Feramorz Little's eompany. Ho settled in Provo ind after moving to Riverdale, return-Dd return-Dd to Provo, where ha had since resided. re-sided. A total of 2S5 aliens in Salt Lake Jeceived cirlzenstMp papers during the pear 1921, according to the records of the federal naturalization agent. The applications hoard and granted In the local courts are representative of seventeen nationalities. This ui the largest number of foreign residents to he naturalized in one year since the outbreak of the war, when action sn the petitions of natives of enemy countries was discontinued. Reduction of at Veat throe-tenths of irfiil wlH be made this year In the x levy for municipal purposes, mem-sera mem-sera of the city oom-miselon announce. Arena in Utah where ground water may be developed in sufficient quantity quanti-ty for Irrigation is detailed hi a report made at the request of Governor Charles R. Mabey, through the state engineer's office, by L. M. Wlnsor, irrigation ir-rigation engineer ot the bureau of public pub-lic road-s of the department of agriculture, agri-culture, who Is stationed at Logan. The tax committee of the One-he county farm bureau met and AeBhona-ted AeBhona-ted on various questton-s In ocmn'ection (vith taxes, which are too high, In Mie opHnlon of the bureau. R. T. Lsirsen and Orson Ryan, iperteea(rens of the Oache eo-rmfcy and Lagan 0M7 tvioors, rospectivey, gave ropurts regarding the school expenses of the county, where a large hato of the tax raono? 1 spent. Carnrtorizlng 8K Dftioe and tftah as rtie center of scorrk! Amerlcn, M. H. Bohnfr, pfist presldoo tn Awcri-oan Awcri-oan Association of TfveMa? Fswwt-ger Fswwt-ger Agents, has the sw s7 after their conventhm l 3t I ! ".Ul of -os we serwtoff l"" t this ip-ont omintoT- We m' sccnertr tiitero, but ato n&4rHxA mui mlneml lcrs. I that not ho nmim h sportrtfts of. Ten havs tk d&r, b rtranoet bn1UHnB, a-" tot and the -rtemert hoteta I vvr fcrrmd hi 1119 etty teiTflte." OtmitrrrHtr srf tV) cTrpign to e owwrrige -?irrmCTiMC koe hi(1-ia8 (md trrmifr (o-pii-snl"" rornller tti t raws-t,irr(T wr rreiwd w tr yuAhrf fwr tWS the) Wtah Mumrfni-Hiifw' which bold Its sfTrtfii twl -WTe-itloo nt rhr C-BrTrwr-Tl clsrh a fW frays ago. l(fiiifarturtrjc tnteretn in H Itarts of the rtate tt- weH rptrvwrt-ad. rptrvwrt-ad. The icevtrnteeBt annnnl oonrtstiou sf the t?taVi MaNnfnctnrers' -voclation opened at a joint luncheon of the association as-sociation and the Ooirmierleal dub, in Salt Lake City a which James Brenuan of Ogden was the principal princi-pal speaker. Mr. Bronnan did ao( mince words in blaming much of the business deprosslon of past months upon the high cott of production and the nonproducers permitted to exl-st la manufacturing plants by the manfac-nrpr manfac-nrpr tbeinselvesf. |