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Show Intermountain News Briefly told for Huny Readers WILL NOT ICI l.l II I) WILL JOIN Tin: NWV W ATI K SUTI.Y W ANKS KICK OF IIOICSi: IS FATAL KXI'LAIN A( KLALK PLAN liOLSM, JIA. C. C. C work Is proving Hiiffi'icnlly popular ho that u large ijiiijorlly of the boys are anxious to enroll for another six months. Recent questionnaires sent to members of the vmiIoiih Idaho camps elicited that ( per cent desire de-sire to enrol! again without qualification; quali-fication; '2i it cent are willing to enroll again if they can have the Christinas holidays at home, and the remainder are iiou-eomirilttal or hostile. SALT LAKE (,'ITV, I T. Forty-two Forty-two young men of the Inter-moun-taln region will be enlisted III Salt Lake as apprentice t-eamen In the Lulled Slates navy 011 August 18, according ac-cording to an announcement made at the local recruiting office. OGIiKN, I T Li e Wayne Lemon, 9, died in the hospital from Injuries received when kicked by u horse at his home in ('orrlnne. OGIiEN, FT. I lojies of rebuilding rebuild-ing powder magazines at the Ogden arsenal which were destroyed by a storm two years ago were dampened damp-ened by a telegram from Senator William H. King to the Ogden Chamber of Commerce, saying that rciJorts that part of a SO.ODo.rxx) federal fed-eral building fund would be used for this purpose are unfounded. PRO VI), FT. The federal wheat acreage reduction plan will be explained ex-plained and application blanks distributed dis-tributed to I.'t:ih county farmers at a series of meetings scheduled during dur-ing August, according to County Agent Lyman II. Rich. PKOVO, L'T. A street carnival dance will feature the evening pro- I gram of the second day of the Utah State Firemen's association convention conven-tion held here, August 10, 17 and IS. IIYRUM, UT Three men were named as the local committee here to list the wheat averages for the past four years. MO RAX. Wi'O Due to extreme ex-treme hot weather and very little rain, use of water from the Jackson dam reservoir has been Increased to approximately three times that of last year at this time. The daily use of about 11. 000 acre-feet has lowered the reservoir six and one-half feet from its maximum capacity, ca-pacity, which is four feet lower than last year. SALT LAKE CITY. UT. Hundreds Hun-dreds of corporations will be barred from carrying on business unless they immediately comply to the law. This announcement was made by Secretary of State M. II. Welling after the list of delinquent corporations corpor-ations had been compiled showing a total of 1.142 either had not paid their tax or filed a claim for exemption ex-emption for 1931. MT. PLEASANT, UT. A construction con-struction program entailing the expenditure ex-penditure of approximately S70.000 will be undertaken by Mt Pleasant, if the necessary funds can be borrowed from the public works fund. SALT LAKE CITr, UT Farm bureau officials from all parts of the west are planning to attend the regional farm bureau conference confer-ence in Salt Lake August 9, 10 and 11. The agricultural adjustment act, farm credit legislation and other phases of the national situation situa-tion will be discussed. All Utah county and local farm bureau officials of-ficials will meet with directors of the state farm bureau in Salt Lake on August S. BOISE, IDA. Oiling the Eagle-Meridian Eagle-Meridian highway will be among the first jobs to be let by the department de-partment of public works under the emergency highway program. BUHL IDA. Farmers of southwestern south-western Idaho have been warned by the assistant entomologist with the university extension division at Moscow, to be on guard against the potato beetle which first appeared ap-peared in Idaho in 1930 and sometimes some-times does considerable damage to the crop during the hot weather. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Approximately Ap-proximately 40 per cent of the clip of wool of the 1933 season has been delivered into the hands of the manufacturers, and the entire industry in-dustry is voicing confidence in a return to prosperous price levels, ' J. A. Hooper, secretary of the Utah State Woolgrowers association recently re-cently announced. OGDEN, UT. Two hundred men were recruited here and rushed to Carey creek to fight a fire which broke out in the Idaho national forest PAROWAN, UT. Parowan city officials are planning to ask for a loan of approximately $45,000 under the national Industrial act for the making of improvements on the municipal water and lighting systems. sys-tems. BUHL, IDA. The annual grain harvest has started in the farming area around Twin Falls, Filer, Bnhi, Castleford, Hagerman, Gooding Good-ing and Wendell, with threshing outfits under way. All barley is ripe and wheat has ripened fast. |