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Show j News Notes j j From All Parts of UTAH Suit J.ake City. Kumes from the exhause of tin automobile they were running in a closed parage nearlj brught death by asphyxiation to Grant Miles and Richard Buttery Tuesday. Tues-day. They were both found unconscious uncon-scious and received by the shrdlu up scious and revived by pulmotors. Brigham City. Fire broke out in one of the large piles of sacked sugar at the local sugar factory Monday, destroying des-troying in the neighborhood of one thousand hags of sugar. The cause of the fire is supposed to be due to cigarette cigar-ette stumps thrown upon the sugar sacks. Salt Lake City. Nearly ?50j000 in taxes was collected by the state board of equalization Monday on railroads in Utah. The sum will be distributed among the counties by the state board. Salt Lake City. Governor Charles R. Mabey has designated Sunday November No-vember 12, as Red Cross Sunday. Cisco Sheepmen of southern Utah have been compelled to hold their lambs several days in feeding pens due to failure to receive cars for shipping Price. Heavy snowfall has blocked the passage of mail in Willow Creel; canyon, according to Joseph Tullis, superintendent of the mail route. Salt Lake City Because Utah and the entire Pacific coast are importers of pork, bogs are now selling on the local market at a higher price than in Omaha, Kansas City or any middle western market, according to F. W. Merrill, secretary of the dairy products prod-ucts campaign for the state. Logan. County Agent Wrigley and the Farm Bureau have started a campaign cam-paign to rid this section of hog cholera, the presence of which has been detected detect-ed in several parts of the county. In Providence, Lewiston, Trenton and Smithfield the disease has been noted and in several places it is thought to exist. Salt Lake City. The state road commission com-mission recently signed the contract with the Western Engineering & Construction Con-struction company for the construction of about eight miles of gravel surfaced road from Morgan to Peterson, in Morgan Mor-gan county, bids for which were received re-ceived a few days ago. North Salt Lake Sale of 4000 head of cattle, the heaviest run of strictly prime beef cattle, and a sharp demand for feeder and fat sheep, were salient features of the banner month's ac-tivies ac-tivies at the North Salt Lake stock-vards. stock-vards. October, 1922, marks the most successful period since the establishment establish-ment of the local yards. Moab Discovery of oil near Ship-rock, Ship-rock, N. M., has stimulated interest in the possibilities for production from the Cretaceous horizons In the mountain moun-tain states south of Wyoming and to some degree has offset the gloom occasioned oc-casioned by the barrenness of the test of rocks of that age last year near Huntington. Lynndyl The state board of health issued an order, and called on the county commissioners of Millard county coun-ty in enoforclng it, requiring the muzzling muz-zling for the confinement of all dogs in that portion of the county bounded on the north and east by the county boudaries and on the south west by lines running five miles from the town of Lynndyl, and including that municipality muni-cipality within the area. Surveying parties working in Sanpete San-pete county on the pending adjudication adjudica-tion suit of the Sevier river have been stopped at least temporarily by the heavy storms recently. - Ogden. An inspection of the new ralway until terminal at the Union 6 station has been made by Second Asst. 8 Postmaster General Paul Henderson, Salt Lake City, and W. E. Trim, sup- L. erintendent of railway adjustments. e t Duchesne. citizens of Duchesne and the populace of the entire Uintah , basin did not received their mau for several days on account of snow. The Castle Oate-Summlt-Duchesne road, that was accepted by the government, with the understanding that the state maintain the highways, is the chief source of trouble. State authorities have promised to do what they could in the matter. Salt Lake City. The champion big red tipple of the year- so far brought here. The specimen, of the Rome Bauty variety, weighs 20 ounces. It is l.r inches in circumference on Its longest diameter, which is fii inches long. Standing on the blossom end ; the apple rises above the table to a i height of 4 Inches. I Buttons and Buckles From Paper. Buttons, buckles, ornaments used ir ' trimming hats, etc., have been niad ' tn Austria from hard paper or card I bos ril by a new process, recently de ' ve'.oped to a commercial state. Tb articles tire first made from the pnpet and then impregnated with gelatin oi a solution of varnish or lacquer anc then treated In a bath of formalde hyde, which hardens the gelatin. An other method Is to treat the papet first and then stamp tbe various ar tides from U by a special procesa. Exchange |