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Show THE 8UH. PRICE. PAGE EIGHT NEW OFFICERS HU IN; NEW ANOTHER BIG CAMP SHIMS Development. with the laws a to the (iceted. Ho many electric machines canvas of the vote in the municipal and various conveniences are now in election held on Xoveuilier 8th, Price use that the old days of small electric passing, the extra city countil sat in aeial session last bills are rapidly in this line falling off on some- Monday evening. The tally lists as turned in by the judges from the three thing else fuel consumers, oil burnto the discard. In voting districts of the city were found ers and such going where a reliate is to be as already printed in The Hun another instance and the new officers were declared du- asked covering a whole year the cus ly elected. The city recorder will is- turner has been charged a flat rate sue certificates to the successful can- for part of the lights which are not on didates in due course. Italher surpris- his meter. The claim is presented that not desired, but ing after auch a close and somewhat these lights were sockets and the in the are lanii that fact election is the contested kept hotly e sectators showed up to witness switch is turned on nightly. The de;artnieiit is rapidly rounding this official canvas. Not a single one of the candidates defeated or other- up to believe that a customer is enwise was present except one who was titled to iay for what he gets. Parkdale People Placated. there as a council member and not for The old matter of extending a credany ot her reason. Only one lone aside from tbe city officials it on the citys books for the Park-dal- e witnessed tbe count. Lake E. Young townsite owners a as finally arsays he would have Itceu there only lie ranged. This is in line with the eswas afraid he rouldn't see over the tablished practice under which elecbends of the exiected crowd. This al- tric, water and sewer extensions may ibi cannot )sissillv extend to some of lie made when customers will advance the new solons. The voters are declar-e- d the costs of these improvements, the to have placed these men in office: amount to be refunded "in lights and coun- water. Mayor, W. W. Jones; four-yeUp in Parkdale some extensive construction was done by the cilman, A. I). Hadley; Lake K. Young, Albert E. owners before this arrangement had Horsley and C. II. Madsen; recorder, become a regular thing, and their reOeorge E. Ockey; treasurer, Claude J. imbursement for these public works Empey. After making the eanvas of was a matter held in abeyance. Part the voting the rounril authorised the of the cost had already been arranged, building committee to construct a con- and now the balance ia to be placied to crete approach from the street to the their credit to lie drawn in publie curb in front of City Hall so that the service lights and water. The amount fire truck will have eaay going to to extend is about fifteen hundred reach its room in the building. dollars, which will nay the monthly hills up that way for quite awhile. Electric Equities Examined. The formal of transfer of Asaembling in regular session Tues- two seres of approval adjoining the city day evening the ruuncil listened to a cemetery to ground the Masonic order was few visitors who had requests or com- carried This out. will virtually be an Roplaints to make. Acting for the addition to the cemetery. The sideelub lien J. asked the Stein that tary up on North Sixth Btreet is finold city reservoir lie designated as a walk ished. Cement paths now extend up public skating rink this winter. To from Main street at make the place available will necess- this thoroughfare to eanal. This is one of Hull the City itate the running of an electric line so to the and the main Park, City ways that the skating surface may be illu- walk extension was much needed. Payminated. About nine hundred feet of ment for this improvement by abutting wire will be needed. Pules and wire taken down in reconstruction work property owners will lie extended over a period of five years. Considerable through the city are at hand for this "red tape is necessary in a case of use, and various agencies will be call- this kind. An ordinance must be pasted on to help with the labor for this formal levies and assessments made and other needed work, so that the ac- ed, and one of the "joke proKisitions tual expenditure of money will be will require the council to ait as an nominal. This project was approved board for an hour each of equalizing by the council, and auiiervision aiid five sueeesaive days to listen to possirontrol of the rink will lie divided be- ble protests aa to the equality of the tween the llolary club and the counThe first payment will he due cil's water committee. Quite a few of levies. time in the spring. The total Price's citizens seem to have no un- some cost to the lot owners will be e little derstanding of the results of running over a dollar for each foot of walk. many little electric appliances which ' Should Soon Scintillate. are on the market when these are at- ' Now that tbe new transformers have tached to the lighting wires in their places. With a rate specially designed been placed by the Utah Power and to rare for heating service all stoves, Light company to feed the distribution heaters, percolators end similar con- system of the city, end capacity is veniences should be on wiring separ- available for any likely requirements, ate from the lights which take a much a new rate for sign lighting will be higher rate. A separate meter is re- put into effect. With a minimum of quired to get the benefit of the heat- three dollars a month and a meter rate ing rets. With your lighting bill run- of three cents per kilowatt hour the ning along some three dollars each streets of Pries will undoubtedly take month dont be surprised if the thirty-- on a much brighter illumination. There day period after you start naing a has been quite a demand for this serv"little stove from your light socket ice, and ,t he new arrangement ie much brings you s bill for "juice that to- jore favorable than a customer could tals up around thirteen dollars. Just secure heretofore. The matter .of furbecause of the difficulties in getting nishing lights for the Pries Chamber ' the technicalities of this condition be- of Commerce office wee brought up, and it was decided to supply this serv fore the consumers understanding the council has on numerous occasions ice free in future. They have been us made rebates in bills under such cir- ing less than ten kilowatt hours each cumstances. It is found, however, that thirty days and have paid the minithis practice is developing a scattering mum of one dollar. Relief from this of customers who ere prone to declare is now given. when any question of the kind is Safety Supply Secured. mentioned that the meter at their Roth the Olson reservoir above Perk-dal- e .house also "ran away onee and they and the enlarged city reservoir had to get an adjustment made on the are now well filled. It is the intention bill With all the troubles that may of the water department to keep this happen to an electric meter, there are supply well up as a protection against nine hundred chances that any irreg- any possible interruptions in the opularities will lie a slowing down to one eration of the pipeline from Colton rhanre that the meter will speed up. Springs. With the quantity of water Neglect to turn out a cellar light might now a break in the line inatornge run a light bill up several dollars in which would require many days to thirty days. The inclination of the remedy could pass unnoticed by the council constantly bean toward standpeople of Prire. The continued steady ing pat on the readings of the meters, service now given by the twenty-fou- r and if this electric energy is not miles of pijw from Colton is evidence fully or economically applied in the of the effective work accomplished by homes it will be np to the customer to (he water committee under Gomer P. remedy the wiring or methods of draw- Peacock, who ie its head end of the ing power. Andrew Oman and Eben real insight into the changes required Snow were among the complainants in and the methods of remedying defects this line, and a satisfactory settlement that should lie by J. W. Ilant, adopted was msde with each. In one instance the water superintendent, where a mercantile establishment oe-- 1 Some more complaints came in iTn-- I business block and the cerning improper ditching by plumb- lighting bill lias seemed far in excess ers in laying pipe thronghout the city. of what it should lie, it is found that Tn some specific instances a little Ihe original wiring of the building is will lie done to "find out sleuthing such that a number of fans in the place who dng certain ditches, and the guilnert door are running on the first ty iartv be very gently will customer's meter. One of the big ho- Mapped on theprobably wrist. tels challenge the correct ness of tlm rhaTges for electricity. Claims thnt SCOFIELD CELEBRATES the wiring of the place is such ns to 1' SCOFIELD, Nov. 12. Armistice foroe up the resiling sro met by the w 0i)Hcrred here yesterdav with j,,,,. . lnstalrng electricians with Dip Mate-!a varied program. The business house . ment that a calculation of ,dosed from 10 o'clock in the forenoon installed and in use shows the .""fiee asJ mii 2 o'clock in the afternoon. An rendered to lie less than might he ex- held in the ;n,erMinr ,(rorraiI1 high School building at 11 o'clock and in which the students participated, It ram well Z. Cox, an man, delivered the oration. Bishop George 4 Ruff and Frank Hicks also spoke. In nil" the afternoon the high school defeat- 1 a a needle cult to ordinarily cd inter Quarters in a baseball game exUnless are a in haystack. you and a ball was given in the evening. tremeiy fortunate you are likely ' to be much disappointed by ee- lectins from the limited few who Resembling a watering cart is a ve-on streets to fThi only Efficient method of sprinkles relieve their slippenness or to mix par- seeking the properly qualified with oil to enable it to be flushed off ty la through the wantad column of The Sun. We find the needle with wnter. in the haystack. We take your message and dePortuguese interests will establish a liver It Into the hands not only of one, but of dozens of people who paicr mill on the border of the Transvaal tlmt will utilize a native grass in are competent In the particular line of work you desire done. the manufacture of paper, board and Cim)lilyiii sc elec-tri- uews-pu)erm- ar two-ye- ar eoun-ciline- n, , -- ! , - i ; . : cellulose. H l9a was not harvested. A low little demand at that, made harvest ap;ear unprofitable. decline in eon-- : "Sugar beets show a iu the ditiun of thirteen flints de- month. The decline is due to the no were which fields of terioration v" ; irrigated the lat lew because o j which, and season, growing too the lack of ex;erted wins, brrame drv 1919 and ' "Digging experiences in i 1920 had made it difficult to realize that a leet lield could become too dry iu the fall. price! with Plans Going Ahead For Hons Creek FINISHED; NEW LIGHT RATE FRIDAY, HOYEMBEB PEIPAT. PTAH-EVEB- T lat , Bains got hack to Zion yesterday (Thursday) from ths Coast and confirm his previous announcement of the big steel and coal merger. Announcement the first of the week Han Francisco by L. F. Raius, president of the 1'urhun Fuel eouqiany with proierties in this district and of fires at Salt Lake City, of a big merger of Utah coal and iron interests and coast steel interests is premature, according to press disiutrlies from that city and which quote Washington E. Creed, president of the Pacific Gas and Elect ric rouqiany and the Columbia Steel eouqwny of Pittsburg, Cala., who is named as bead of the merger. The Associated Press disjiatch from San Francisco says: "Creed, after information as to the deal had become current through early editions of local news;iaiere, declared that announcement had lieen made prematurely, lie said the project was in a preliminary stage and might even fall through entirely. Rains announcement was that a corporation- - would be formed at once to merge the Utah Coal and Coke company property south of in Carbon county, and iron de- at $25,-000,0- Sun-nysi- posits near Iron Springs in Iron county with three steel plants on the roast Rains is quoted as stating that the value of the pro;ierties drawn into the merger a;ijiroximatea $10,000,000. The remaining $15,000,000, he ia quoted as saying, represented capital investment to be spent in development work. Duncan HaeVichie, associated with Rains, was in San Francisco all of last week working on the deal, lie said the new company would build a blast furnace plant on Utah Lake and that construe tion work would start probably in the spring, but there was still considerable collecting of details to be done. Asked as to the location of the site for the plant, MacYichie said it was not yet determined. Negotiations are as yet pending. The Associated Press dispatch from Han Francisco says some of the plans contemplate erection of a byproduct coke plant at Halt Lake City, fuller development of the Utah Coal and Coke properties, building of a railroad from the Denver and Rio Grande Sunnvside branch to the new plants, development of some iron deposits near Iron Springs in Iron county, conmiles branch struction of a twenty-fiv- e railroad from Lund, on the Halt Lake Route to the iron mines, the taking over of limestone dejiosits near Halt Lake City and the erection of a steel plant for finished steel product man- ufacturing in the Utah capital Rains declared all details of the merger, including contracts for several phases of the work have been signed, and that only certain legal and technical phases of the project remained to be finished. It had nut been decided, he said, whether the new o ganization would be incur; Mirated under California or Utah law;, mid so far the merger is nameless. Associated in the merger are A. C. Ellis, Jr., president of the Utah Cuke and Coal eomjiany; W. W. Armstrong president of the National Copper bank of Halt Lake City; Duncan MaeVichie, capitalist; Capt. E. J. Raddatz, president of the Tintie Standard Mining company, and L. B. McCormick, all of Salt Lake City. The Californians include A C. Denman, Jr., president of the Southern California Iron and Steel rom;iany; William R. Sleets, Russell McD. Tay- lor, S. K. Rindge, A W. Grier, E. G. Pratt, C. G. llenderberger, all from Southern California, and Joseph Sloes, J. D. Grant, D. IL Blutchford, A E. Boynton, W. C. llaminon and Herbert Fleischhacker of San Francisco. POTATO CROP IS LESS Late Statistics Show Crop Under of Last Year. . TWO OF LARGEST COMPANIES CUT PRICES, ETC. tCoutinued From Fage Bin.) the delegates, requesting them to take lto hafcty atfiiiif but thut vuaUtT I heir decision he would abide by it. Coal is selling today at Price alniut 20 ;ier cent cheajier than lust week Idconealise of reduct ioife by two big mines. their at cerns of Judges of the I nited States court untook apesls at Chicago yesterday ot the leder advisement the question colgality of the ehcckulf system of unfrom assessments and lecting dues irginia ion coal miners iu the West fields. An early decision is ex jaw ted. inPending the decision the teniarar.v at Anderson issued Judge by junction Indianapolis, Ind., is in effect. ' Eat Your Next Thanksgiving Dinner In Your Own Home ; Youll have some thing to be really thankful for next Thanksgiving Day if you can eat your Thanksgiving dinner in your own home with your friends and loved ones around you. Theres one way to make sure of it. And thata to plan it right now. Youll enjoy the planning, too; youll revel in days of happy anticipation, if you use our MARTIAL LAW EFFECTIVE AT BIG COLORADO MINES FREE HOME PUNNING SERVICE Martial law is in effect in Huerfano eouuty today. State rangers, acting under instruction from CoL Patrick J. Ilam-rocadjutant general, took charge of law enforcement just a few hours prior to the time set by union leaders for a trike in thirteen of the Colorado Fuel and Iron eompany mines employing hundred men. Reduction of thirty-fiv- e 30 ;ier cent in wages announced yesterday and effective today, was to be the signal for closing the mines by a walkout, John P. McLennan, president of District 15, United Miue Workers of America, announced yesterday. The strike order was to lie effective mines in thirteen of the twenty-si- x owned by the conqiany. McLennan, in a statement, declared that the other thirteen would he closed by a sympathetic strike within a few day. He declared that the mines are 90 per cent union. The martial law proclamation wai issued by Governor Hhoup after an ap;ieal had lieen received from Sheriff Harry Capis at Walsenburg, saying the situation was beyond his control and after a tour of the district by Colonel Hamrock. No diaturbance was nqiorted as result of yesterdays action, although it was payday for the miners. Prohi-bibtio- n of the sale of arms and ammunition at Walsenburg yesterday revealed that merchants had already old out their entire stuck of arms and ammunition. DENVER, Colo., Noy. 17. to take the guesswork out of it. Our service will help you build economically and yet architecturally correct Your own ideas will be embodied in any of our designs without extra expense. Come in and well gladly explain how you can have a comfortable, inexpensive home of your owd by the next k, Thanksgiving. Smoot-Nixo- Lumber Company PRICE, UTAH IGH WAGES FOR H THE RIGHT MEN WANTED-MTIIE ALTO; Track and Tractor business; alio as carpenters, bricklayers, plumb-era, etc. We train you to hold on of these Jobs, and help you ears while you learn. Don't lie sntiafM where you are. Oo after blgctr wages. Write for FREE Informs. MEN 1 HEMPHILLJSS&I 1 cGver GMrtore NOT TO BE CONSIDERED Mr. Sapps: Yaa, think every-on- a should marry. Takt mo, for Inotanco Mias Swootacr: You! Why, I The price of African wives has increased from five to six dollars. An extra classy one costs six and a half. f Paris girls are refusing to abide by dictates of fashion, which has decreed that skirts shall be longer. A DAUGHTER "Wort you up with tho sun as usual I" "IPs a daughter this time, you Nowadays the son who follows his fathers footsteps is likely to wind up in the cellar. Two Cents Fee Word Each Insertion No Charge Accounts. WANT A FARM WILL PAY CASH rent. P. O. Uox Its. ft&AisrioClIflf tumbledums Legal blanks of all kinds. The ONE Sft TO!!SrpritrpT) power boiler. hori7..t;-,- l tM". 1 at Grand Junction. Allr George Fle'chrr Grind Jure dresses with all material complete ready to work. For baby we have drawee and dolls. Other articles are Pillow Blips, Card Table Covers Bed Spreads, Towels and Aprons. If yon want any special clam of embroidery call on na, as we can fill special orders in a very abort time. m. cotHose, both silk and to shade desired all in ton, match the stamped piece. butterfly TUMBLEDUM Na. .v, C.ir.!, Rack, LaunIn All Color. Tie For Children wo have r I OR SALE We now have our complete lino of ROYAL SOCIETY package goods ready to el) for the holiday eeaeoii. dry Bag m Klintenrnah-G..w- Soft Drinks, Cigars, Tobacco Scarf, BALE trirt Court In and For Basement SllvagnI Building PRICE, UTAH M. SUPAN, Mgr. WANTED TO RENT OARAGE FOR one car. Phone Z1CW3. tv. HAH Royal Society WAHTED.fFC. IN TIIE SEVENTH POOL CENTRAL Hulmcrihe. OLD NEWSPAPERS IN half million bushels smaller than last bundles of a hundred, twenty-fiv- e year to be exact, five hundred and cents. The Sun. ten thousand bushels, savs M. M. FOR BALE UNCALLED FOR DYED Justin, statistician at Halt Lake City and remodlcd army civilfor the bureau of crop estimates for ian style. Phone 216W3.overcoat; Mornings. in November his the government, crop FOR RALE M O E R N I) RAKERY, report issued last Saturday and a copy and fixture at Prire. Cenof which is sent The Hun. Continuing: terbuilding of the city, Addrees, Hog 3s, Price, "The yield of potatoes per acre ia on- Utah. bushels, WANTED TO ly a hundred and sixty-fou- r RENT FOUR OR five-roocompared with a hundred and ninety-fou- r fitrniHheil ur unfurnished bushels last year. The reduction house.' Q. A. Whitlock. Hadley store in yield ia not due to heavy loss in anv Price. one section, but to a widexpread lack FOR SATE-FO-t-Tr ACRE LAND of condition in the crop. Possibly the half mile from Price ity limits on most inqiortant adverse factor wns the county road went. Dargain. Frank! July frost, which injured potatoes over Grosso, Price, Utah. n wide area. The crop this year is es- KEGS AND RARRELS timated as 2,788,000 bushels, Five. ten. fifteen nnd f.fveq ull"on "Corn is estimated as yielding twenty-- barrels and kem f..r Sieve IL Landsrls. .cr five bushels an which makes acre, a larger production than last year despite reduced acreage. A slightly larger percentage of the crop, 20 ;st rcut this year, is rcjsirted as cut for silos. This ;iart of it is producing ten tons of forage per acre. "Apples made 83 ;ier cent of a crop. This indicatcc a production of 928,000 bnshels or aliout eleven thousand more than last year. Utah county with 88 per cent of a crop and 23 per cent of the trees is a great factor in raising the state average. The quality of the crop is placed at 88 fwr rent, compared with an average of 84. "Clover seed, mostly sweet clover, is making an average yield of aix bushels per sere. However, the indications are that only about four hundred acres was harvested, compared with thirteen hundred, last year. Reporters comments show that a ronsiderable acre-- 4 M. P. Hemplilll, Agent, Helper, I'lah know." Blank hooka, loose leaf ledgers. Journals. cash books, day books, etc. Com. Dont expect a girl to share your lot plete stock. The Sun. if it is mortgaged for a ear. "Utah's ;iotato crop is more than a FOR Ptah wouldn't tako you for ono Instant .the SUf, dir, Clieaimit Iu Maintenance Easiest Hiding Small far National Gaa Average 35 Mike g. FOR II E 1st Ho.. Salt Lake OVERLAND The rest of the world is so supreme-indiffereone wonders why the and the Greeks keep on scrap-pin- Don't borrow The Bun. 448-J- Silk Floes, per ekein Cotton Floss, doz Ua ... 7e j :,li ris. lointiff. vs. iVM-n- r, Curia Defendant. Knmim-nx- . Tin, to tbe said Defendant. Y- -.i i.,ViUr .'iVv ' summoned to eiM,...,r ,.,i,in dsva after the ,.f .hi upon you it serf-- d r, , , within "Hiciwixe thirty il.iy after fend the alfove entitle. t servic e and tie- case of your failure so t.bVilVmelt will lie rendered strains! has lieen filed with court, Th:s ai.o you to dissolve the liords of Tin'm "''-- v heretofore existing the plaintiff. HENRY RC( itjiVr aV MHintiff. f;r the Vmh :,V a,. dress. Price. First pub., Nov. J 1; i.,. Iv , ' i'.:,! j lm I tlon TODAY. nt I n CLOWN "TUMBLEOUN Ha. s' 447$. M Bessie Kennedy, Millinery PRICE, UTAH id. |