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Show UlAli fcW5 RLViiv Utah factories produced 10,000 tons of potash in 1920. BounU'.ul, Utah, proposes to install forty new street lights. In the course of the next few days there will be distributed to the school districts of Utah something like 00 per cent of the amount due them from the state district school fund. City recorder of Salt Lake Is to receive bids for constructing curb and gutter and storm sewers, Including necessary grading in extension number num-ber 24. Cache county water conservation district dis-trict No. 1 proposes to issue and sell the bonds of said district In the sura of $375,000, dated Jan. 1, 1022, with Interest at 6 per cent per annum, p Mrs. J. A. McCourt, of Antelope, is doing quite well with her eight cows. During the year she sold 1CG5 pounds of butter and had plenty left for the family use. Five hundred gallons of butter milk helped to fatten pigs. Each cow had a calf. U'.ider the new revenue bill the trans poriation taxes provided for in the Act of 1918 will be abolished Jan. 1, 1522. These are the 3 per cent tax o'a freight, the 1 per cent tax on each 20 cents paid on express shipments, and the 8 per cent tax on passenger pud pullman tickets. Proprietors of four bakeries at Price md Helper pleaded guilty to charges preferred by the dairy and food division divis-ion of the state board of agricultural tf selling bread without labeling it in accordance with the state law, and were each fined $25. Proprietors of Eve bakeries at Ogden have been arrested ar-rested on similar charges. Triplets, all toys were born to Mr. and Mrs. Jensen, of Huntsville on New Tear's -day, 1920. Twins, a boy and a girl, were born on New Year's eve, 1021. The five are reported to be healthy and all doing as well as they could have been expected to had they arrived singly. The printing course started at the West high school at Salt Lake last September is proving one of the most (ueoessful and popular offered In the mechanic arts department. Forty-five students are taking the Instruction at (his time and many have been denied admission because of the insufficiency )f the plant A party of rabbit hunters In Cedar Valley broke the oil pan off their nu-:omohlle nu-:omohlle and found themselves stalled .n a dense fog ten miles from any village vil-lage or ranch. Three of the party tnrted off for Fairfield and became lost in the fog, and were compelled to spend the entire night wandering nbout ,m the hills of Cedar valley. The next .lay they stumbled Into Fairfield nearly frozen from the night's exposure. Preparatory to besrlnnlng the assessment as-sessment for 1022. the deputy asses-Mrs asses-Mrs have been Instructed to use every ?ITort to place on the books personal proierty in the form of money, stocks, notes, etc. These Instructions have teen sent out following a meeting of the farm bureau and the county commissioners, com-missioners, at which It was stated that xmslderable property of this kind Is elng missed, thus placing an unnecessary unneces-sary burden on real estate and 1m. provements. The firsit bunch of dairy cattle ddppod Into Utah under the new regulation regu-lation of the state hoard of arrlculture, Jiaklng audi shipments subject to pmrantlne und requiring them to take the tuberculin test after the animals tmve been under observation In tM'. Sate for sixty days, tends, In the opln-on opln-on of state agriculture department of .Icials. to prove the necessity for such i regulation. Of a number of animals ihlpped In, one was found to be Infected In-fected with tuberculosis. " The state board of examiners of rtnh diM-ldod to follow the evident In tent of the state legislature In connection con-nection with the B'ate engineer's re-rolvlng re-rolvlng fund, and held that an unexpended unex-pended balance exists of nearly $0000, Tot expended by the former state engineer. en-gineer. A strict Interpretation ef the letter of the law might have caused this unexpended balance to "lapse." making It unavailable. The board, however, after consukallon with varl-ius varl-ius stale otT'.ces, decided that the known purpose of tho legislature mould prevail, r.nd that a revolving 'und might be allowed to continue to evolve. Warren Stoutnour, member of the state public utilities commission, was fleeted commander of Salt Lake jtost No. 2 of the American I.oglon to succeed suc-ceed Henry D. Moylo at tho annual iecllun held In the legion clubrooms U the Hotel Utah. Rcpri"Hntatlves of all the locals of tho I'tah county farm bureau will meet In Prove, January 1(1. O. E. Wolcott, national organizer of the farm bureau, ivlll spirit on the methods of soliciting ' nieiubershlp. |