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Show I plnR shee from one Btatc to nnother, tLc enforcement of sanitary liventock, I atid the administration of bounty lftWB an? complicated and impeded liy the difference in the statutes re-latlnp re-latlnp thereto In the different states; therefore, be It I "Resolved, That we request the Na-; Na-; tlonal Woolgrowers' association to use ! Its best efforts to secure uniformity of legislation In the several states in this reapeet, "Resohed, That we Indorse tho present sanitary laws of tbe state of Wyoming, but we request the stale board f sheep commissioners to se-: se-: cure such legislation at tbe coming I session of the state legislature, as will grant to it in some discretion- nry power in regard to the handling i of sheep grazed along the btatc lines ' and owned by flockmasters whose I property Us adjacent thereto." oo- I ' UNIFORM LAWS j REGARDING SHEEP 1 Wool Growers From the MounUj'n i States Will Urge National Con-j Con-j vention to Act. ! ' C. B. Stewart, secretary of the Utah Woolgrowers ass-oclailou, Is receiving notices from commission men of the cast signifying their intention of at tending the state coneution to be held December U0 and 31. The commission com-mission men will go from h6ie to Fortland to attend the national convention con-vention of woolgrowers. At the convention of the Wyoming Woolgrowers association, held at Cheyenne, December 5, certain action was taken on the demand for uniform uni-form theep laws that will benefit sheepmen, especially in Utah, Wyoming Wyom-ing and Idaho. Resolutions setting forth the needs of the sheepmen were passed Mr. Stewart attended that convention and gae an address on the Importance of securing the laws. The i Wyoming convention resolutions, I which woolgrowers from the mountain moun-tain states will Indorse, follow: Here Are Resolutions: "Whereas. The difficulty of ship- |