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Show I pj.-ri(r rr y - j jrap- . : -r-r T ar " News Notes From All Parts of UTAH ogden. Klevnn miles of gravul Bur-faeo Bur-faeo rond on tho Lincoln hi. h way went (if lliitlhi .Montain. inov., ban t jf : : u completed, com-pleted, according to tho contractor, Krofl & liuiiily of );:di-u. In tho completion com-pletion of this work on tins Lincoln highway In Nevada lias been eliminated. .Sallna. A flru on the premlnes of 1 1 'mi llanmiiica-n cami'-d the. destruction destruc-tion of a barn, primery, chicken coop and arioiin other miiall biilldlnvH. The fire tilarted from an unknown cauii'i. 'I he damages went estimated at about '..iiJU, with no insurance. Moub. Traveling an average of 10 miles n day, ::()!) hogs driven from .Mon-tlcelio .Mon-tlcelio to Thom uson for shipment w market. The hogij are In first class condition despite the fact that they uro being herded the entire distance to the railroad. Salt Lake t.ity. A new feature ot the sixth annual Intermountaln Livestock Live-stock .Show, which will be held at the North Salt Lake stockyards in April will he the special awards to boys and girls between the ages of 10 and LS who enter stock tor exhibit. Moab. W. K. Gordon is taking lou head of hogs to the Salt Lake market the hogs being shipped by K. 11. Street, deputy examiner In charge ol the stock Is being made In the course of liquidating this bank, which failed nearly two years ago. Coalville. The last chapter In the air mail records in connections with the wreck of I'ilot Henry G. Hoon-stra's Hoon-stra's plane atop Porcupine ridge and the four days' search for the missing pilot was written, when the mail trom the Bhat'.ired ship was packed into Keming'B ranch en route to Coalville to be placed aboard a Union Pacific train. Ogden. Mrs. Margaret Miller Hopo, ;'S years, 11 months and L.'! days of age, the oldest woman In Ogden, died at the home of her grand-daughter, Mrs. r'rank L. Lrownlng. Salt I-ake City. Suggestions lor modification of the marks and brands law whereby shippers of pare bred stock would be merely required to Ivc a record of hi3 name and the number num-ber of stock shipped were made to h'd. T. Jones, secretary of the department of agriculture by C. G. Adney of Corta- 0.9. Salt Lake City. 1'arment ot bounty j claims on predatory animals and rabbits rab-bits will In all probability be stopped within the next few days by Mark Tuttle, state auditor due to the exhaustion exhaus-tion of funds. The payment of the claims was re-opened after a lapse of several months on L'ec. "0, when tha incoming tax receipts made It possible to meet some of the bounties provided tor in the statutd. At the time of reopening re-opening of funds only ijlo.QJO were available and if the claims continue et the present rate the btUanea will soon be exhausted. Moan. Shortage of stock cars on the Colorada & Southern railway at Dolores, Colo., has proved expensive to San Juan county shippers ot lambs. Five weeks ago several sheepmen of the southe-i connty gathered in excess ex-cess of 3000 lambs and trailed them seventy miles to l'olores for shipment ship-ment to the market. No cars were available and the owners of the lambs were compeled to purchase nay at 51 a ton to feed them. Salt Lake City Sale of coyoto hides netted to the department of agriculture agricul-ture and the local office of the bureau of biological survey 57.20 per pelt. Secretary Ed. T. Jones of the department depart-ment of agriculture was informed Some 242 hides were taken in Sep tembev and October from coyotes kill ed in the co-operative campaign for the destruction of predatory animals and the sale of these netted $1,742.40. There were 44 bobcats furs sold at SL-40 SL-40 each and 6 foxes sold at $1.3o each. The total receipts of $1,S12 U to bo di.ided $ooS.P0 to the state and the balance to the federal government. Salt Lake City. Tho hody of the aged man which was found in a dugout dug-out in the lime kilns west of the city was identified as that of 1'red Miller, a cook, 74 years of age. The identification identi-fication was m?.de by L. T. W illiams of 121) Lincoln avenue, who worked with Miller at Young's cafe several years ago. Springrllle. The season's run of the Springville-Mapleton sugar factory has been completed, with un output of 65,000 bags in a fifty-five-day campaign. cam-paign. Twenty-three thousand five hundred tons of beets were sliced, showing a high sugar contest. One hunared and twenty-five men were employed. The mill is now being prepared pre-pared to retina molasses under tho Cutler process, which will continue until the next regular beet slicing cam-paigu. |