OCR Text |
Show inutnl Every Thursday I iy the Carbon County lishing ConijHiny. Pub- Manager. the War In Advance. Phone No. 9. Entered A Second Class Mail .Matter At the Postoffice At Price, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. ADVERTISING RATES Matter Per Inch Per Issue, 40c, Transient, 50c. Display Special Position, 25 Per Cent Additional. Legal Ten Cents the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to Line. Summons, $12.50; Water Application, $15.00; Final Proof, $10.00. Readers Fifteen Cents the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Blackface Type Twenty-Fiv- e Cents Additional Each Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., At Reading Notice Rates. Count Six Words to the Line. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Loot, Etc., Two Cents Per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communication to CARBON COUNTY PUBLISHING CO. PRICE, UTAH FRIENDS PATRONIZE our advertisers, says a throwaway publication, they are your friends. They bring their message to you each week without cost to you. Have you ever stopped to think how much service a newspaper gives you for a small subscription cost? Our advertisers, of course, are responsible. We would soon be out of business trying to maintain our news gathering machinery, buy newsprint and deliver our newspapers with the money coming from our readers. Not only do our advertisers give their message to you without cost to you in their advertisements, but they also contribute a large share of the money necessary to supply you with news and features. Patronize OUR advertisers. They are your best friends. TIME TO STUDY LIQUOR QUESTION THE state Senate of Ohio, at the suggestion of Governor George White, is sending a committee to study liquor control in Canada. The need for such information is great, and the time for getting it is short. There is little doubt that the Eighteenth Amendment will come out of the Constitution with a few months at most. Unless the states take action, repeal will put matters where they were before the amendment was adopted and no one even pretends saloon was a thing of beauty. that the e Two central principles seem to guide the Canadian provinces in their management of the liquor traffic. First, they take private profit out of the retail liquor trade by selling through govold-tim- ernment stores. Next, Canada discourages the erpendieu-la- r e Amdrinking which marked the erican saloon. One buys liquor at a government store in Canada, but must take it elsewhere to drink it. The partial exeeptions made of beer and wine do not nullify the general rule. In Canada, these measures seem to work well. Certainly, they are worthy of our study. old-tim- Clemency Granted 3 Carbon Convicts muted to 30 all f, r public and those who serve them, the worst. The small town business man is the loser in the long run when the consumer has leti filehet in order that the purses of others in the background may be unjustly filled. That is the reason the government is so greatly Interested in holding down profiteering, u policy which had it been invoked earlier might have eliminated much of the trying conditions through which we have passed. There must be no repitition of the wartime profiteering practices simply because opportunities are similarly Dr' J; C- - Hubbard Officers Selected jo- By Four Classes int- it" unit l. .'hen t.ii l"-- ,.f Utah, a !l county will COCillli""' to are lining cnij'loymei they blue eagleAriifuneeme mule ' ' lit At Dr. R. F. Prwier, - ll A or.. N McLauohUfT I Hoang 10 , m cur-Of fir ' officer; to serve during the (Vunmrrr the fa elected by been term have Carbon the high at C. Cease, leader are us follows: At Unify Sclilols President, Don Snow; vice Offtr q secretary, I president. Maud Caw ford; Genevieve Gieo Shepherd; treasurer, L. A. McGee, Maloney; debating George das; athletic Attorney .4, p,. Tk Ang. les. B Room and B, junior s President, Jack Jones, U Uh. Phone. Offic sec- -' vice president. Ear lene Durrant; Tom Corey; athletic B. V. Dalton, manager. Mont Jewkes. Bun-- f Juvrnll Jody, President, Kay Sophomores g. At tonify At L.T Wallace Lloyd; Vice president. nel, de Louis Tczak; Phone 33(1, i'i n ILi, Wat-i- puting manager, Anna Laura H. J. kins; athletic manager, Harry M-- t Air&jf Walter ,s . O j. ni l;1it d S aVsi UnUU Carbon High School ' fi.' IK Eton. re tnry ft the county o'1 aiii.atioii, who to com- the afforded. m interested information nuuneale with hm a U la!e the BLOCKING RECOVERY ... , ,, t inir-- 1 Concerning H E Mayor r, hearing THE greatest enemies to national, state and man of the rnmmit'.ee. district recovery are the various political According to Mr . MM" squanderbunds that seem unable to realize that dividual or group inter." ttend r.g the privilege have in limit codes people general have about reached the for of ability to pay taxes, be such levies on prop- the healing and making requests if provis Ken-rm- k. elimination or alteration erty or purse. mg additional pro or prop, ions, Many of our legislative officeholders do not President, Doon Freshmen understand the temper of the people, that temin r visions h, rd must! Those wishing Luther Lowry; vice president. so being strongly opposed to any more taxation Having require-macomply with the treasurer, Claire; for secretary, Lloyd far as the general public is concerned. The legA written er teU graphi r, m manager, Bob debating Walsh; Juck islators who appropriate and levy additional an opportunity to Gunderson; athletic manager, Ross unnecessar- iilbK 1 niary-treasure- 8t limy-treasur- Binch, rz-qu- POLITICIANS and their newspaper friends are o about the failure making a great of the public works programs failure to function every time an officeholder, especially one who seeks shouts out an order. Secretary of the Interior Ickes, charged by President Roosevelt with directing the public works program, is the target for the lambastings being meted out by those who seek political advantage-througuse of public funds. Ickes has refused to be moved by the pleas of those who would spend the public moneys regardless of its proper disposition, those in favor of such action being for the most part moved by the urge to retain some office which they hold, or to secure such favor. It is their belief that a nice slice of the public works program fund for their respective states will, for instance cover up a bad senatorial record or otherwise overshadow some similar misstep of the past. As an example, some workingmen might forget a senatorial vote for Yellow Dog Legislation Parker for a supreme court judgeship because of public works pork ; an announcement in favor of the sales tax might be overlooked through a similar program; a vote against the tax exempt securities amendment during the recent special session of Congress might be shifted from the scene by grabbing of some of public works program how-de-d- jtemur several Minigfr, C M Flynn Funeral Home Lkeutrd Lmbelnwi Quality Service, Retnn,b: C imhuUn- - Srrrict Phon Mu:, weeks, during which he was engaged in mining in the Henry mountains, he returned to his home September 12. and was told bv his wife that she did not wish to live with him any longer. Mr. Pleasants asks custody of two minor children. Ji.li priming "Use. n.l.Tar 1916- - l. Kmh)att d A- - Fred H. Pleasants entered suit in district court this week for a divorce from Ruby Pica: ants, to whom he was married at Green River on Scp- -- Uuh Wallace Mortuary, Urenv-- i CRYING AI50UT FRIENDS Judge Building. H.q Irii. taxes should realize that every dollar mints: admin- - O.m to. ily spent means a dollar less for legitimate busi- filed with Gus P. Hackman, ness. The tax dollar is a dead dollar; every dol- istiator, at the chamber ofoncommerce, FOR DIVORCE; the day HUSBAND SUES lar added to taxes is a stumbling block on the Salt I.ake. In fore noon OF CHILDREN CUSTODY ASKS prev i us to the hearing. road to recovery. a Such a request shall contain statement setting forth without arThe gument the proposed change. snail also contain the name- of the per .on seeking to appear a t the hearing and a designation of the perwhom ht r I rvsuit S(ms or grinq-All npix anng are regarded witnesses and shall present (.rally Writ- only facts and not arguments. ten briefs or arguments may tie filed. No legal arguments will be heard. Persons not appearing may fje written statements concerning proposals. These statements should be condensed as much as possible. Public hearings are solely for the purpose of obtaining facts useful to the administrator, and no arguments will be heard or considered. Representation by attorneys or specialists is pernnssable, but it is not to be regarded as necessary, since industry, the workers and the public will all be represented by special advisors employed by the government. p,. Attorney MB n: Eyes Tested and GLASSES Any Lense Duplicated la or LEWIS Star Theater Tin FITTH) Less. OPTICAL Bldg. CO. t: C! PHONE CAMPBELL'S TRANSFER , HOVE-iit- ' STORAGE VAN MOYING'PAG KING SHIPPING 309 S. CAECUNAVE. The wise person is one who trains himself to do more than one thing well, thus providing additional outlets tor his abilities. t Te P - bacon. Secretary Ickes has declared that every proposal that could be defended in law or morals" has received his O. K. lie refuses to be stampeded by politicians and is determined to keep out graft, a splendid attitude. President Roosevelts selection of Ickes recently to engineer the oil code indicates the nations faith in Ickes in the face of politicians tirades. years. Koulizas was convicted of slaying of Tony Gegonakis, bridegroom-elec- t his goddaughter, on December 2, 1921, in Helper on the eve of the couple's marriage. Conviction was gained upon the state's contention that the murder was premeditated, although Koulizas claimed he fired the fatal shot in Pardons board members gave some weight to Koulizas excellent prison record in shortening the life term. Warden R. E. Davis reported him to be a trustworthy prisoner and stated he would be able to enter business and earn a livelihood when finally released. To date he has served 11 years 3 months and 15 days, and under the board action, will be freed in approximately three and a half Three of the four Carbon county prisoners applying to the state board of pardons for termination of sentences were granted clemency Monday, although one was allowed only commutation of sentence. The board terminated the sentence of Vance Ingram and Joe Long, both of whom were convicted on grand larceny. Ingram served 3 months and 29 days, and has been on parole for 1 year and 15 days. Long was incarcerated 1 year and day, being released to go to Irontown, Ohio. The sentence of Andros Koulizas, who served 11 years, 3 months and 15 days for first degree murder, was commuted to 15 years. The applica- years. tion of Elroy Anderson for termination was denied. Anderson has served 3 months and 24 days on a robbery sentence. The commutation was the second granted Koulizas. He was originally The opening session of the Price sentenced to life imprisonment, but Ward Mutual was held Tuesday evetwo years ago, the term was com ning at which time the year's work self-defen- 1 PROPuss PLANNED AFTER SURVEY With the roll cull of Mates thus far -- 'i to nothing COUNTY N.R.A- in favor of ivp.-altie problem demands ail HEARINGS ARE COMPLETED action. Exchange. STATE CODE PROFITEERING always hits the consuming VAL II. COWLES, lldltor and AdvertUJn YOUR REST rn'i .MUST JIE HELD DOWN JOSEPH I.. ASniRV, XAL II. COWI.1.M, HAL (1. MacKNIGHT, FuMUhrr. 12 00 t r rnirr. o ca , mt-Aiuuir- atr Subscription, S U N - A D THE fAGE TVU) Price Ward Mutual Opens Years Work I was outlined by the various class teachers and activity leaders. A new class, known as the senior department, has been added. The teacher will be Mrs. Oscar Hansen. This class is for men and women between the ages of twenty-fou- r and thirty-fiv- e. and the topic for discussion this winter will be Problems of Today and Tomorrow. The activities for the first ten weeks will include music, speech, ld and story. There will be sons on appreciation in each course beside the actual practice in each subject. The music department will be in charge of Nina Halliday and Clara Thompson. C. H. Madsen will teach the classes in speech and Ab-bForsyth the classes in story. Special classes for boys and girls of 15 and 16 years of age are the vanguards and junior girls. A special invitation is issued to young people of that age to join these classes. No extra cost to public for invention! new life-savi- ng ' s re-to- " 'v ut 'V-'&fc' ts &hM ie re-to- ld Pens, ink, pencils, school supplies The carbon paper, have been using some otief PERHAPS you of tire. If it has given you goo d service you naturally feel loyal to it. But loyalty to your family and friends comes first Investigation shows that the chances are better some day. Ana than even youll have a blow-oevery year thousands are killed or injured whes Mow-outhrow cars out of control. . A c New Invention Prevents Cause of Blow-Ou- ts i ,A vV A As, ould you knowingly take this terrible risk with no precious lives, when it can now be avoided at W & extra cost? ', AX r-- te. f ? is ,' Millerton Milk Is ALWAYS Pure 5? ., fj '4 y life-savin- I a, I 5 4 n - ' V w , v stf 'V X M' 7 . i ;v ' v t J, v ' A , V y ' f. r - WISH! ' To prevent just such tragedies Goodrich has built into every new Siivertown Tire the anianuf Golden Ply. This invention resists g terrific heat INSIDE THE TIRE that esustf i i blow-out- s. Rubber and fabric dont Thus blisters dont form. Blow-out- s vented by overcoming their CAUSE. Yet this new 3 times safer tire costs not a penny more than any other standard tire! Can you afford to be without them, when your life and others might any day DEPEND on this extra protection? Come in and let us show you this new kind of tire take advantage of todays still low prices. ... RV Millerton Dairy brings you fresh, pure, health-buildinmilk, produced under the most sanitary conditions. Safeguard and build the health of your family by using Millerton Milk the Milk of Highest Quality. g MILLERTON DAIRY United States Fuel Company Goodrich Siivertown Red Star Service Station r Price. Utah separ re Pre h y 1 t |