OCR Text |
Show THE SUNS RATES NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING DID ITS PART, HOWEVER Bun's display advertising rate are m inch per issue or 11-6- 0 an inch by the month four (4) in-to local advert inert. Transient, fifty (BO) cents an inch per issue. Position la 2S per cent additional. No display advertising accepted ter the first (front) readers are twenty tiro ?! cents per line an Issue. TOie The Sludchakcr curMirut ions sales for the first quarter of this year totaled $35,205,221 with net earnings of For the corrpsjKoqJing $4,13(),29). eriiHl of the previous year they were 35,003,40!) with net earnings of $3 958,733. The eoniunya profit and -- Onions would be a drug on the market If the people who eat them could smell their own breaths. AN Volume 12, Number 5 Sebring A. Golding, Pioneer, Dies INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER loss surplus is $111,790,383. Birth announcement cards. The Sun. Week Ending June 26, 1925 The Old Swimmin Hole At Home of His Son Another pioneer of Curbnn county passed to his final red when Sebring A. Golding died at the home of his son, Lnrin B., on North Seventh street last (Thursday) evening at 10 o'clock. The old gentleman had keen in good health and active in his merchandising business down at Wellington up to a few days ago, being brought to Price last Friday. He failed considerably during the next few daya and since last Tuesday had been too ill to leave his bed. His attending physician, Dr. R. S. Smylie, called Dr. C. E. McDermid of Castle Gate and Dr. A. W. Dowd of Sunnyaide into consultation, but the old gentleman waa beyond human aid. Funeral services will be at Wellington next Sunday afternoon at 3 oclock in the meetinghouse and he will be buried there. Having lived at Wellington since 1905, deceased and hia family are among the best known people of Carbon county. Ilis sons ;mve peen connected for years with various business activities and have held pub-li- e positions, the oldest one, 8. W. Golding, now being assessor. Of eight surviving children all are now in the county. Besides S. W. there are now living in Price Joe R. and Lorin with their families. At Kenilworth is S. A., a twin brother of the assessor, and Marion Q. is another brother at Price. Three daughters, all married, live at Wellington. They are Mrs. Ada Shim-miMrs. Florence. Rich and Mrs. Lassie Lockes. Two other children died in infancy. The dead man had been in Utah for forty-si- x years. He. came to the terrifrom Arkansas, where he spent tory his early manhood. He was bom in Flovd county, Ga., on July 31, 1847. Served two yean from the age of 17 to 19 in the civil war. He was married fifty-fou- r yean ago to Miss Nannie E. MeNeef, the mother of the family, she being a native of Tennessee and who is. still living, the family home being at Wellington. He and his wife joined the Latter-da-y Saints church, while at Desark, Ark., and they eame to Utah, spending one winter in Arizona en route.' They lived, before eoming to Wellington in 1905, for fourteen yean in Sevier county, and it was there that four of the children were bora, all. the others except one daughter who was broil jilt in on their migration being born in other parts of this state. Six years in Wayne county, two in Kane and two in Emery are among their ruidencea. Fanner and merchant, he waa still engaged in these same activities right up to the very end. He was by trade a carpenter. Hia church record and activities are of the best. He had always taken an active part in Sunday school work, having been superintendent at Moroni for eleven years. With his wife he served a mission for two yean at tlie Manti temple. Some other members of the family have also performed missions for their church. For a number of years deceased had been listed as a patriarch of the church foe Carbon stake. Counting up the family as now constituted with the husbands and wives of the sons and daughters with their children the total is fouud to be and all of these claim Carninety-sibon county as their home. Naturally he had a wide acquaintance throughout this part of the state, and was held in high esteem by all, he being of a most cheerful disposition and meeting lifes difficulties without a complaint. Hi" family life is described as ideal, the utmost affection existing between himself and all members. n, ' x, IN CONFERENCE Quarterly Gathering of the Saints Saturday and Sunday, d Saturday and Sunday last quarterly conference of the Carbon stake of the Saints of Jesus Cliureh of Lutter-da- v Christ was held at Price, President Arthur W. Ilorsley presided. In. addition to the stake presidency there was present a majority of the high council, thirteen bishop and presiding elders of wards and branches, a number of eounselon and presidents of stake and ward auxiliary organizations, Elder Ernest S. Horsley, clerk, tells The Sun. Members were ere from Green River, the extreme point of the stake on the east, and from Winter Quarters to the a distance of over one hundred miles. The fint presidency was represented by Apostle George 11. Richards in one of the sessions Saturday, lie gave some splendid instructions, but was deterred from remaining longer by reason of sickness in his immediate family at Salt Lake City. He left here Sunday morning. Additional speakers during the sessions were Bishop William B. S tap-leWalter X. Drajier, Bishop Eugene E. Branch, Arnold S. Milner, Edward A, Jones, Presidents Arthur W. Horsley, Henry G. Mathis, John E. Pettit, Estella Dalton, Vivian Ereckson, Byron Carter, Wallace Curtis, Carl Carlson, Rulon Lundquist, Ellis W. Mower, Clyde Oman, James W. Nixon, William P. Olson, Ivan J. Mathis, Bishop Taliesin T. Evans, Seymour Oliphant, Bishop George Ruff and Erhart M. Nubert, all giving splendid reports of the stake, wards, branches and laboren in the mission fields. The musical numben wen rendered under the dirertion of Stake Chorister Ashlev Bartlett. Thehymn, solos anthems 'and 'quartets' were splendidly rendered and very much enjoyed. The closing session Sunday evening was under the direction of the Mutual Improvement associations with their usual programs. west--coveri- ng HEART FAILURE Carpenter For Local Railroad Drops Dead Last Tuesday. 59 Alex Adams, a bridge carpenter and yean of age, dropped dead down at Mounds on Tuesday afternoon last just after 2 oclock. He had been with the Denver and Rio Grande Western line for a number of yew. Adams, who was bom at American Fork in 1896, is said to have been a resident of Lchi all his life. He was at work with several other men, unloading a car of supplies, when he sudden-l- v toppled over and expired. It is thought that death was due io heart trouble. The body was brought on to .Price and from here sent to Lehi last Wednesday morning. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Xinn Murdock Adams, whom he married in 1SS8 at American Fork; by a daughter, Mrs. Gordon MacXitt of Salt Lake City, and two grandsons. One brother and three sisten also survive him. These are Dan Adams of Pleasant Grove, Mrs. Coma Anderson and Mrs. William Robinson, the two of American Fork, and Mn. Hyrom Mulliner of Iona, Ida. Funeral services will be held this (Friday) afternoon with interment in the Lehi City cemetery. Rivenide Park put out a very classy bunch of advertising during the week for the big three days celebration to be held on Jnly 2d, 3d and 4th. Dancing is given prominence, but there is plenty to remind one that this park is Carbons Coming Coney Island. Of course the work is from presses of The Sun. In From Akron, O., news came on last Monday of the drowning then a few Mich-olo- g days ago of Mr. and Mn. John of Helper. The word came from the chief of police of that city, but no further particulara w ere given beyond the statement that the bodies wen at the time still missing. The dead man had for some time. been in partnership in the sheep and hotel business with his brother, Tony. They conducted the Carbon there. Besides the one brother he is survived by his mother and three sisters. Mrs. Michclog was the daughter of Nick Xenakis, restaurant man m at Helper. The couple was married four years ago. They left that town about six weeks ago on a vacation and business trip to the East. They first visited San Francisco. The death of Michclog recalls that he about five yenr ago ran an automobile out of Price for hire. He fell in love with a local girl and spirited her away with the intention of marrying her. They went out of Price toto catch a wards Sunny side, cxci-tin- nt y, COUPLE DROWNED Helper Man and Wife Lose lives the Buckeye State. Curium county folks are wondering batched with George Gray before just wlmt it is expected to accomplish the shooting of Burns. through the arrest of eleven men who Evidence and Witnesses. tire held in juil at Price licensed of beJust what evidei..e nnd who are the ing inrticipimls in the murder of Jinhcrt Marshall, the negro w'm was witucsxcs who have lunii.-Jtethe inof course, not dishanged by the roadside a couple of formation is, miles out of hero mi Tlmy-da- y of la it eased. Further proceedings uro most week after he had foully shot, to death likely to be through preliminary ex--n .lames Milton Burns, the city marshal initiation, jircMiuinhly judging by at (astir (laic. If these eleven men an opinion express j'by the county are in any danger of severe punish- attorney of eneh man separment this community is not awake to ately. Just when or just who will be such a condition. And there is fast the first to he heard has not as yet growing a feeling that it is about lime been settled. Naturally the proceedthat the matter was doted up. Word ings will be oiieninl before J. W. Hamfrom the surrounding counties indi- mond, the justice of the peace for cates that this same scul intent is prev-slc- Price precinct. Calling of a grand elsewhere as well as here. Even jury does not seem a likely procedure, the governors approbation nf the it being explained by Oliver Iv. Clay, prompt action in making these ar- county attorney, that it wonld require rests includes a statement that stej almost a months time to get such mashould be taken to dear up the af- chinery under way. Much wild talk fair. There is mum talk abroad which has fhiated about which tells of fricshows the sentiment of the commun- tion lietwcen the prosecuting atity and very little of it if aiiv st nil torney's office and the sheriffs force is for prosecution of those prisoners it being told that an attempt waa on a charge of murder. The whole made to establish a squud of constaiden of the majority acorns to he that bles to make the arrests and thus igfolks here are not for lynching nore the regular officers, and that these eonstaldes wanted the sheriff's parties, but neither are they for these men eleven or to protection, having neither stan nor sending prison the executioner for the unfortunate guns. It apjicani, however, that the affair of last week. To be sure, a few warrants have lieen aerved regularly people are to be met who take the and there are no records to show any jierfectly safe path of shaking a head appointments, nor have any such cerand uttering an expression thdt the tificates lieen Issued from the county law must be upheld, and the constitu- clerk a office. Very secret, hermetiction obeyed and some of these ally sealed have lieen sessions at which wouldnt know that same constitution the commissioners and the prosecutors were they to meet it face to face. have conferred. The district attorney, Editorial comment in the eitv dailies Fred W. Keller, was at hia home in has not been very radical. Yet there San Juan county when the news of has been mention of that the matter first reached him and hi All the rights necessary to insure ade- certainly blot on the escutcheon and the arrived in Priee Friday aftenmon a quate water for the big reservoir have Deseret News went so far as to week ago. The inquest, whieh had been secured. The valley will lie a the matter to be regretable and been conducted by County Attorney pleasure resort comparable with any to hojie that it would be a long time O. K. Clay earlier in the day, developother in the state, declared Horsley. before again ealled upon to ed. only that the negro was dead. ExThe first stage of getting the wa- ehroniclebeing in a similar occurrence for some members of the .sheter atored has been completed, said this state. The Park City Record, in cept riff's force there were no witnessed Carl R. Mareusen, but then remains a three-inc- h editorial, hits bulla-ey- e The line of questioning waa sueh that two others. First to get the water on when it declares that because of direct yea or no anawen left the all the land; and, second to make the penistent and ridiculous camouflag- whole affair right where it was in tha proper nse of it. To do this, he raid, ing of the law the feeling of con- fint place with no recorded informait will be necessary to bring in a groat demnation is not intense when awift tion as to how or at whose hands many new farmers. Also to consoli- justice is meted nut to a coldblooded, Manhall came to his death. Among date all of the present existing inde- malicious murderer. And the Record the big assembly at the arene of tho pendent water ani canal companies further states that the lynching was hanging were a few folks who seem under the Price River district, and to the result of a favorable, sudden de- anxious to make witnesses of themjnrrease the rajiacily of all canals and termination, which eonies pretty selves, possibly to avoid being graded ditrhes throughout the district. As a to ty'ing another center shot. as imrticijmnta.' It is hinted about means of putting the water to use, nearly that one of these who is rejmrted at The Eleven Arrested. Mareusen suggested that every busiactive in the chatter, and who has ness man present purchase a sms 11 Among the arrested citizens are to maintained that lie was fur getting be found chief clerk tract of land and get it under cultiJoseph Parmlcy, to the a nlaee where he could be negro vation. Then, he said, wnen new farm- for the Utah Fuel comiaiiy at Caalle back to life, railed out inbrought Gate. has He the ers come in these improved tracts cun grown up in to stead string him up again Nehe leased nr sold reasonably to them ramps. The family name is known various of gros parts of the state are the coal through mining in history of and a real colonization begun. Suit the Lake City jiapen A. J. Lee stressed the need of keep- Carbon county for over thirty years. rejmrted by as calls upon the almost making daily ing the price of land down to a figure Henry East, a sierial officer and a governor. No activity on particular from the same sheriff mnk-where a farmer can i a living on place. the mrt of the colored deputy in population it after purchase. President Gonier P. Formerly from Utah county, wltero he Carlmn lias been observed locally. has similar served he in Peacock of the Price Chamber of capacities, There are jierlias a couple of hunCommerce pointed out that twice tb. lieen in Carbon )ieriinps ten years. dred of these folks in the towns and electrician of lriee present business would be handled in Morgan King, eity never has been any there and this city with the completion of the City, King bus been on this same job cainjis, difficulties which attracted atracial more He of than six years. is one project. tention. Nor there acein at this does the best known figures aliout town. ALLEGED FRAUDULENT MINING He is connected with the oldtimc fam- time a disposition on the part of anySALE IS CHARGED ilies here and has always been fore- one to start such. Attorneys to defend the prisonen most with help to anyone in trouble. M. L. Leonard from Ilupntington in Atwood, a Imrber, worked the second in any further proceedings will be W. Emery county, was last week bound chair at Leu Lowrys shop. He was W. Ray and Sam A. King of Salt over to the district court at Salt Lake recently married to a daughter in an Lake City and Henry Kuggeri of Price, City on the charge of selling stock of oldtime and prominent family. George according to the latest information the Silver Hill Mining company with- 0 'Neill, also a barber, working at the The Sun has secured. It will be sevout a license or applying to the state shop in Averill a poolhall, has been ic eral days before any court action of securities commission for a permit to Price for some time, has a family here. any kind is under way. The district sell. According to the evidence atjjw His father a few years ago served a attorney, after a hurried trip to Salt hearing, Leonard sold sixteen thous- term as a member of the state legisla- Lake City, where he was to consult and shares of preorganization stock to ture from Uintah county. J. It. Gold- with Gov. George II. Dem and otliez authorities, has left for San Juan H. B. Worthen for eight hundred n ing, who with a brother operates an county, where a in cash. The alleged offense was auto service shop, grand jury will asmeinlien they being semble to investigate some trouble committed in October, 1922, before of the well known family at there. His the new statute clearly defined pre- Wellington, brothersGolding of the county as- been dated. return to Carbon has not organization stock. Judge Pratt held, sessor. Warren S. Peacock, the city however, that the then existing stat- marshal of Price, who is in reality the Clay la Quite Willing. ute was broad enough to apply. Wor- rhiuf of police, lie is a brother of the County Attorney Oliver K. Clay says then testified at the recent hearing manager of the Priee Trading comthat he and Mrs. Worthen turned over pany, these boya being of the old es- that he is more than willing to talk any feature of the case at all practically all their lifes savings to tablished family from the Emery oyer Also he stand ready to start times. Leonard for the Btock. The latter, it county towns. E. E. Jones, mine supthe preliminary examinations at any was testified, told them that the only erintendent at Castle Gate, an time. to conduct the That he worry they would have after six in the eamps and prominent in same kind of a exjiects that would prosecution months would be paying inrome taxes the county. John Daskalakis, the night be done in criminal rase. That any to the government The mans bond watchman at the mines in Castle Gate, it is a matter of utter indifference to waa continued at the previous amount always counted as a perfectly reliable him what action any jury might take of five hundred dollars. member of the community. Levi P. after he has completed hia That Davis, manager of the Wasatch store he, as county attorney, must endeavor Then's plenty of room at the top, at Castle Gate, who, aside from the to convince the that lawa but that isnt the place to begin. esteem in which he is held by his ac- are made to be community and that ha obeyed, quaintances, must be of some solidity has high hojies that the final outcome OUR COMMON LABORERS GOING to hold such a position. And Joseph of this whole matter will lie i step Caldwell, also of Castle Gate, a ton toward the education of this communELSEWHERE NOW of Joseph E. Culdwcll, who at present ity that such obedience is the preferlives in Priee, he being an cldtinid able course. He declined to attic how Emery comity resident, and once Wa- many witnesses have furnished inforNEW YORK, June 21. Mure satch store manager at Clear Croik. mation, but common laborers left these United says that he is ,.ing dp These Castle Gate pcopbj among the all he can from States than were admitted during source. promising any the first ten months of ipern'oii of East, Parndey, Daskalakis, prisoners, this F. Postmaster J. the new 2 rent quota linmisra- Jones, (til dwell mid Davis, arc of the week received n Idler from Mrs. Pearl lion law, Htatistiiui puhlidnd Imluy widposse which captured Iho t.egro on Marshall, who signes her-e- lf liy the national industrial winter- em-that fateful Thursday morning, they ow ami written from Van Buren, Istard show. From July. 1!21, to the end of April this rear 27,- being the persons rendily available at Ark., in which she requests that he ImW were admitted and I 1,730 of the office and tore when word the have someone who knew the same left the country. was received that Marshall was inP ''kindly (Continued On Page Eight) hiding at the cuhiu where lie had morning train for Salt Lake City and where the ceremony was to be performed. The guardian of the young lady, mining her at the hour of the evening she should have retired for the night, gave an alarm. Searchers scoured the city. Next morning the pair was found. Their plans had gone wrong. The girl was sent home and Michelog jailed. George Collingham was sheriff at the time and through his determination to protect a prisoner the man x lynching was prevented. Later he was released with no prosecution. He always contended that his intentions were of the best The girl a family was so convinced also. She is now happily married and is living in the Northwest. Word was received in this city on Wednesday lust that the body of Mrs. was j Michelog had been recovered and jon its way to Price for interment, However, tlint of her husband had not at that time been recovered. No de-- I tails are as yet obtainable. i I IIow best to advertise one of Carbon countys very greatest assets, the $750,000 Price River Water Conservation district project, the methods of from other secsecuring tions in the work and how the successful completion of.tbe.projcct ia.to.he attained were discussed last Tuesday at noon at the chamber of commerce luncheon by numerous prominent citizens of Price and Carbon county. The from the Salt need of Lake City chamber and other outside influential bodies was taken np by E. B. Jorgensen, Utah representative of the Sutherlin-Barr- y Bonding company of New Orleans, the buyers of the districts issue. It is a great project and will require all advertising, support and promotion available, he declared. A great celebration similar lo that to be held up at American Falls, Ida., was suggested by the speaker as a way of acquainting people of the state with the imjmrtance of the work. You men cant afford to fail in this big irrigation nroject. Your future depend upon it and your reputation is at stake, inserted C. F. Fernstrnm, of the Salt Lake chamber.. As the district is limited as to funds available for advertising Fernstroni advised that stress be laid on the local end of advertising for the present. Adoji-tio- n of a suitable slogan, painting of numerous window cards, taking the matter up in schools among teachers and the children for study, with farm bureaus and other organizations in getting a farmers mailing list and advertising in local and national mediums were all discussed in You people need one thousdetail. and real dirt farmers here and should follow up every prosjieet until he is here or lost entirely, he said. Most competent men should be engaged to handle national advertising or the money is wasted, declared Fernstroni. Make every ad carry a single idea and make every one productive. Follow up every inquiry to the end, each time giving another point of interest regarding the project. Get a popular slogan on the tongues of everyone in the section. These were some of the special points made. Neil M. Madsen of Price, in giving a report of the status of construction work, said that a hundred and fifty men were employed at present. The new railroad grade has been laid out for five and a tenth miles and work on the rock outlet tunnel through the mountain has been started. A steam-shovis working on each end of the railrodd grade. A visit of local and Salt Lake City men to the damsite Tuesday morning impressed them favorably with Carbon county's prosccts of becoming a rich farming district , Arthur W. Horsley, as president of the district, gave a brief history of the struggles to put over the proposition and told of the final successful sale of the bond issue and beginning of construction. The site, according to Horsley, is a natural basin, eliminating all the danger of the lain ctcr brooking. It will iinimund t of water and thousand will be two and a half by five inilca in sire. An additional ten fvel ein be makadded to the da in conveni wide. and six miles three it long ing el sixty-seve- n acre-fee- de-el- , dol-la- (Id-tim- er cn. t Mm-Knigh- t -- el.-iN- |