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Show THE SUE, PRICE, UTAH EVERT PRIDAT. PASS SIX FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER United States bureau of mines, and also for the state industrial commission. The greatest number of fatalities was in copper properties, the number killed being four aud the greatest number TO HUNDRED PER CENT injured being in the golikm nes, where nine hundred and seventy-si- x Here hurt. to take undue Tiie Sun Special Service. it wants ito Prof. William Peterson, director of risks. Ju closing lJalrvuiple saiJ: We the WASHINGTON', D. C, Aug. 2S. STEADY experiment station and professor needed much ami Twenty-fou- r Utah miue with a week- rau uiuke a mulled of geology at the Utah Agricultural we exertmatter it this in of a hundred and fifteen progress ly output For constant jiersevereuee j college, was last Saturday at Henry-vill- a thousand tone worked 91.7 per cent great paliem-eto a in coal fire a g investigate e are 'f fulltime capacity during the seven and make up our minds that mine at that place. He is doing this to succeed. days ending with August 12th. Losses work for the United States geological from all causes totaled 8.3 per eeut. To Take the Place of Strikers authorities. survey FILL TO ARE Labor .hort&ge was 5.1 and no market BRITISH MINERS mines ORDERS of a STATES Bingham UNITED shortage 2.5 Sixty-twcent. rejiort los per properties WAGES WITH SENIORITY RIGHTS DATING labor, skilled and unskilled. It may be STANDARD in Colorado with a capacity of a hunTIME OF EMPLOYMENT AS PRESCRIBED BY THE FROM 8. A question of disconsome at them LONDON, Aug. of to necessary dred and eighty thousand tuna weekly in raised tinue the night shift entirely. Scores worked better than 81 per vent with .immediate practical interest, demand for of men are leaving for the coal mines, total losses of time from all causes Knglund by the American . 1S.2, most of which was transxtrtation. British coal, is that of the caiarity of where they expect steady employment BOARD 'the mining industry to meet during the winter. The Utah Copper Wyoming mines for the time were sll the English demands with the least injury to company needs common labor badly, practically idle. New Mexico is going As Follows: . Will Be 100 per cent. Shipments from mines the requirements of other customers. and the condition will become still continues to increase, inure acute when school opens as many The 70 cents per hour opening under the Cleveland wage and itpressure Machinists, is estimated that the American boys of school age are employed. agreement have already materially in70 cents per hour Blacksmiths, a soon will approximate action against participants in creased production of bituminous. An requirement Legal rents per hour 70 tonBoiler Makers, hundred thousand tons a duy. The the Cleveland coal iieace conference output of at least six million tons for cents per hour 70 does taken however, up, Pipe Fitters, already has been decided upon by powerful the week of August 21st to 26th is al- nage not justify the estimate for the fix- coal interests of cents per hour 70 Tinners, and additional and assured Pittsburg, Pa., tonnage tures ready boom since the cents per hour begun 70 reported West Metal showSheet Workers, from other districts that are known to Virginia. Plana for action of cents 63 ing that the agreement is a violation have signed the agreement may raise represents a dead weight capacity Car per hour Repairers, six aud seven hundred thous- of the Shenuun law were 59 cents per hour 51 to the total to 6,250,000 tons. Even with between Machinists Helpers, and tons only. A circumstance to be made at a conference between an output of 6,250, (MM) tons of bitumi- reckoned Round House Service Men, 35 to 38 cents per hour with is the advent of Cana- representative! of the Kanawha legal Valnous a week, present production is wt 34 to 37 cents per hour Coach Cleaners, ley Coal Operators association and the helow normal. In the corresponding dian business. to 51 cents per hour 27 shortindications There of are Apprentices, many ) week of 1921 the country raised Pittsburg Coal Operators' association and of bituminous in the supply last Friday. tons. Of th's 1,890,01)0 tons was an- age Differentials of three cents per hour over the foregoing rates authracite coal from the United States Prof. thracite and 1,750,000 bituminous. The on school Schneider of the Hyrum are paid to mechanical craftsmen on night shifts, and differentials w:liich Canada, under normal conyear before that the total raised was ditions, dejtends exclusively, and in of mines of the University of Utah of five cents to ten cents per hour in excess of the foregoing rates and four students are doing some geo13,250,000 tons. In comparison with the event of a continuance of the coal are paid to highly skilled positions in the mechanical crafts. these figures, the present weekly out- and d faculties in the United logical research work in the mountains railway bitumiand of ell anthracite Mt. near Pleasant. has been Schneider coal, put One-Ha- lf States n strong demand for large supnous, is from four to six million short coal from Canada will employed by a party of Sanpete men of plies English of normal. doubt lea soon have to lie reckoned who believe coal in paying quantities should is to he found there and will make an Reports from the operators for the with. Coincident with the inquiries effort to start week ended August 12th reveal no from if the mining operations deMotive Power, SupAmerica there is a growing marked change in operating conditions mand from Germany and the Scandi- survey proves encouraging. They reno mines. was There Mechanic coal the soft do not at port indications Shop point to big navian countries for Northumberland, iiodies return to work of miners in the strongat places where they hare been. Yorkshire coal. and British Durham, Salida, Pueblo, ly organised union districts, lroduc. Airplane photographs have been taThere are markets in which South tion in those districts was ronfined to Wales eoiiiietes ken by the military department in ColRidgway, to an insignifionly the output from strip pita. Increased cant orado of every important coal mining the northern more the but extent, Lake City, Chama, production in nmny of the Middle cool fields exMirt Fto the eontinent of pnqierty in the southern iart of the Alamosa, fields was made poAihle by disin state use for the of event strike Local Agent. Europe the' leas they will have for improvement in transportation. In the shipment to America, and the more turbances. The views, which number trafGulf however, district, Winding acute will become the demands from more than twenty-tw- o H. YOUNG, hundred, have fic congestion grew worse and 77.2 per the United lieen indexed and numbered for immeW'elsh for This roaL Statea Receiver cent of the fulltime rapacity was lost gives rise to the question as to wlist diate reference. Views also have been thereby. Ae previously explained the the W'esh eonl fields ran nell to Amer- taken of the important industrial cenThe Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad System like extent of the atrike in districts ters of the state, including railroad ica under existing conditions. Westmoreland and Somerset counties, The for the coal exporting points, showing factories, shops, of Sec. 20, and beginning at the XE Ja., where the present caiwrity of the districtsmargin and strategic military locations. SHERIFF'S S A li K I X T II E Dis- corner six hundred and eighis alsmt of Sec. 20 in Twp. 15 8outh, Court of th Seventh Judicial trict many mines now are operating short ty thousand tons a week. No x Ford Motor company plants at High- District In and For th County of Car- Kange 10 Eaat and thence south arbitrary handed, has been greatly reduced. minutes west degrees, thirty-fou- r limit ran be placed to the quantity land Park, Dearborn and River Rouge, bon. State of Utah. J. It. Peaaetto, Doshut mines remain 6002.2 feet to the south boundary of The anthracite which it ia possible for the collieries suburbs of Detroit, Midu, will dose ing Bustnea Under the Firm Nam and aald north one mile down on account of the miners strike, to Style of Bunnyaid Mercantile com- to section, thence due of down because lack r in a but 16th, produce September day, north boundary of aald section, pany, Plaintiff, vs. Dan Seamount. Alia and production it but insignificant in the circumstances under which lf mils to place of trade of coal. The suspension will affect up- Daniel Seamountaln, Defendant No- thence east quantity. The total output in the week has been carried on during the past wards of fifty thousand workers in the tice of Sato. To lie wild at aherlff aale beginning. Also beginning at the north-wecorner of Sec. 31 In Twp. 15 South, ended August 19th was approximately twelve months on the ICth day of September, 1922, at go to show that it ia three plants and several hundred thous- 1 o'clock m., at the front ate pa of Kange 10 East. Salt Lake meridian, thousand net tons, princi- not thirty-nin- e p. Asto and others throughout the country. mile, south forty-fiv- e improve to any apprepossible the courthouse In Price. Carbon coun- thence east e pally steam sixes, recovered by river ciative extent on that quantity. mlnues west be will also degrees described real the bringty, dosed, Utah, following sembly plants mile 2071 feet; thence north dredgea. In the corresponding week a name now of in the the estate emMending Ford of number the ing strictly all In Twp. 15 being aubject to to place of beginning, year ago 1,529,000 were produced. The BUND COAL MINER LEARNS RUG ployes affected by the suspension to ap- defendant, aald aala now recorded in the South, ltang 15 Eaat. Salt Lake mericertain cumulative production during 1922 to thousand. Oth- office ofmortgages WEAVING ART the eounty recorder of Carbon dian. Dated this 24th day of August, proximately eighty-fiv- e date stands at about 22,900,000 tons ers affected are employee of the con- county. Utah, pror to October 5, 110, 1222. T. F. KELTEK, County Sheriff, Carbon County, Utah. 8. E. Oarrott, against 58,129.000 during the corres27. Gustav Elmer, a cerns dependent upon orders. Explain- aald land tieing described as follows, OGDEN, Aug. of NWI4 of Sec. 21; the NEIt of Deputy. ponding period of 1921. Shipments coal miner who lost hia night in a mine ing the order to elose the plants, Ford Sec. BE of Sec. 21; the NE14 First pub., Aug. 25; last Sept. 15, 1222. 22; tha anthracite from storage vards during explosion at Megrath, Wyo., last says that by September 16th the eom- - of the 8WK of Sec. 23; tha NWI4 or early de19th again the week ended August Man-h- , See. 24; tha SH of Sec. 24; tha NEK of was in Ogden yesterday and toThe law recognize man aa the head Sec. 25; the EM of the NWK of Sec. greased in volume, and were composed day meeting with friends made during ( Continued on Pag Eight) 2S; the NK of tha 8EK and tha 8KK of the family, but often the neighboors chiefly of pea coal and smaller sixes. the time he was in the hospital. Ebner of the 8K)t of Sec. 26; and the NEK t said that he ia now a rug weaver in When a bathing girl wants flesh col- of tha BWI4 of Sec. 25. all in Twp. 15 have different story to telL IONS ACCIDENTS MOST ALWAYS Salt Lake City, a lmsition secured for ored stockings she gets. tan. 8outh, flange 16 East, Balt Lake meriThe hardest thing on earth to lose ia dian. Also tha 8)5 of the 8WK and the ARE PREVENTABLE him through the efforts of Murray Alof the 8WK of Sec. 10; the NWK a bad reputation. NEK Sun. Subscribe. The borrow Don't len. Ehner declared he was pleased The hardest man' to control in the with the trogresa he is making in his hia place of working timbering matter new occupation. He said that he was who prcierly is the exierienced miner, also learning to operate a typewriter. kei not believe in systematic timber- The marvelous part was to think that James Mine Inspector ing, says State a coal miner should learn to weave ruga Regardless and Dslrymple of Colorado. operate a typewriter. of the state mining law and other supa such plementary safety regulations, An Amicable Adjustment. miner too often plaeea timbers only Moroni Ileiner, vice president of the where he thinks it necessary' In re- United Fuel comiwny, has returnStatea discustable cently leading a round ed to Salt Lake City after having been well a read preafter very having sion, out of Utah for more than two weeks. pared paper on accident preventionDis- Ileiner, who ia one of the directors of Walsen the Trinidad and the the National Fuel association, attendtrict Suierintendent and Foremens ed the meeting of the board in New these jiointe clubs, Dslrymple develojied York August 14th, and then City, among others : two days in Washington, D. C., First Employes at our mines merit spent attending to some government busia more thorough acquaintance with the ness. From the national capital Ilein-e- r state mining law and the companys went to Montreal, thence over the men The rules. supplementary safety Canadian Pacific to Vancouver, B. should be given every jiosBible chance returning home by way of Spokane to know them. and Rutte. He says that he haa been be somehow must Second Employes too busy to keep in close touch with made to more fully realise how neces- the coal and railroad atrike situations, in constant is their sary but is inclined to believe that all existaccident prevention. troubles will be amicably adjusted. Third Make sure that they fully ing understand how serious is the loss of Emery Lands Leased. life, injury and money every year from Leases covering approximately two are universally equipping with Firethe past two months Firestone accidents. preventable Fourth When once the men do un- thousand acres held by the state land more stone Cords. tires and marketed built derstand then rigidly enforce the state office in trust were granted last Tuesin similar its in than T. history. period any Oldrovd, land commisday by John There are many reasons for the high mining law and the company a safety sioner. Van B. Dellxer of Salt Lake rules whenever violated. Too great This of Firestone tires ' but chief prefincreasing waa public quality steadily lease a on approxiCity granted encourages carelessness. erence is proof of the recognition by among the special manufacturing procThat the 1rimero mine' with an ex- mately six hundred and forty acres of coal land in Emery county embraced in esses are double of the greater values ofowners car thus tremely bad- - roof has produced over See. 32, Twp. 16 South, Range 7 East. four hundred thousand tons of coal in is tribute a to fered It Firestone. internal Insulatfriction eliminating by by accident The lease covers a period of five years a year without a single-fata- l which a rental of a dollar an acre Firestone men aH stockholders in the g ing each cord strand, and cure, is a miracle, but s'mpl.v illustrates the for is to lie paid as well as ten cents ier lie the a can actuated Dalrvniple all it that done," and fact operatinsuring company by perfectly said. Practical ways and means for ton of unscreened coal taken from the shaped product ing principle of Most Miles per Dollar. still more largely securing the above proerty. The discussed. were unhurriedly results Dont speculate in tires you will The high average performance of AROUND THE CAMPS OF THE romiwlling need for a larger CARBON DISTRICT in is the find without Cords the right combination of price and Firestone clear-fiequal rst, among all concerned is reflected without and is of tire annals because of supervision making Texas coal miners went hnek to work quality in Firestone. Come in and let of all the employes is last Monday nnder union conditions, the Us to tell you about the service these specify by the general tendency prohibitive and, second, because of the except in pnqert!es which have been service. Cords are giving other Firestone for hard Tflcsb declared qien shop. years heavy losses. said whom you know. the tires and bus lines, buying by During 1921, in Colorado, Coal miners and operator of Westfathere were fifty-tw- o Dslrymple, ern Canada have signed au agreement were forty-eigtal accidents. Of these hv which the men will return to work underground and four on the aurfare. ut a 15 iht cent wage reduet ion from x twenty-sifatalit'es. the Of underground last years rates. The oierators had and were from falls of roof, face asked for a 29 jier rent decrease. pillar l and eight from mine rarsj Zion brokers are quoting Mutual Coal same this motors. period end During at nine dollars asked. Independthere were a thousand five hundred stock bid and fifty-siaccidents, of; ent Coal fifty-twand twenty asked. Coal fifty-tw- o Standard and were! sixty-eigwhich four hundred United States Fuel 7 per from falls of the roof, face and pillar cent bid and preferred seventy-fiv- e coal, and three hundred aud forty-si- x eigbtv-fiv- e asked. locomotives. from mine ears and Ten men were killed and eleven hunMoat accidents are preventable. In dred and is one some case injured in the person nearly every of Utah outside of the coal mines at. fault either because of negligence mines according to figures compiled or a leek of information. No company in 1921, UTAfcJ needs either coal or money so bad that by C. A. Allen, chief inspector of the Mir CAM COAL HINES WOHK CLOSE The Denver and Rio Grande FRANDSEN BRICK Western Railroad System Varda adjoining tbe Denver and lllo Grande Railroad tracks on JOBS tlia south, three blocks eaat of depot. Office at tlie yard. given and prices quoted . trs - , on QUALIFIED RAILROAD MECHANICS gv-jin- UNITED STATES RAILROAD LABOR Paid anti-tru- st Telephone 72m. Brick of An Kinds PRICE. UTAH PROFESSIONAL DR. R. 11 JONES Physician and Surgeon Oletetrics and Disease of Children. Office, Sllvagni Block, Price, Utah. DR. J. A. JUDY Physician and Surgeon Telephone ISSw Office Price Commercial and Savings . Bank Bldg., Price, Utah. DR. I. S. EVANS Dcntlat 111 Office, Rooms New Redd Bldg. PRICE, UTAH 9,640,-OiM- Overtime At Time and apply at the office of Applicants for work the Superintendent of Shop Foremen or erintendent, Master Minturn, at Denver, Burnham, Gunnison, Grand Junction, Montrose, Salt Ogden or any i JOSEPH bunk-hous- DR. SANFORD BALLINGER Dent let Service. Office, the New Redd Building. PRICE, UTAH X-R- PRATT STEWART, ALEXANDER Attorneys At Law Office, Second Floor Sllvagni Building PRICE, UTAH GEORGE CHRISTENSEN Attorney At Law Office, Sllvagni Building, Formerly Occupied by Judge F. E. Woods. Telephone Its, Price, Utah, L. A. McGEE Attorney At Law Rooms 5 and S, Sllvagni Bldg. PRICE, UTAH OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law Room Office, I, Sllvagni Building PRICE. UTAH one-ha- HENRY RUGGER! one-ha- lf Attorney At Law fifty-nin- one-ha- lf Office Office gum-dippin- g, air-ba- well-balanc- ed car-owne- rs PRICE, UTAH at the County Courthouse. PRICE, UTAH FERDINAND ERICKSEN Attorney At Law 717 Judge Building SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. I ' at the County Courthouse. B. W. DALTON Attorney At Law , IN Pries Commercial Bank Bldg., Price, Utah. seven-hou- jH Triumbh for Value 1 Dentist Work and Extraction. X-R- twen-ty-al- (, 7-- DR. H. B. GOETZMAN es lie-fo- re Manufac- turer of i j Pwiodkv Box applk-atiun- S3. o j 1, 1922 A. High-Gra- KOPFS STUDIO Portraits and de Second Floor Price Commercial and Savings Bank PRICE, UTAH J. E. FLYNN Lice need Undertaker and Embalmer Telephone 29. PRICE, UTAH DR. J. B. HENDERSON Chiropractor. At Price. First Door West of The Bun, IS to 12 noon 2 till 4 p. m. At Helper. over Helper State Bank, I till I p. m., except Sundays. Other bourn at home. Calls by appointment. BEN BEAN General Painting Contractor FIrat --Clam Work. All Estimates Free. Phone 188m. PRICE, UTAH PRICE LODGE No. 52, L 0. 0. F. PRICE, UTAH Meets each Wednesday evening at o'clock. L. A. Hill, N. O.; Howard Meyer, V. Q.; J. O. Whltford. Bec'y. 8 SINGER for beet results and MACHINES mean not now, but for many years. J. E. Jameson will see that your machine ia taken care of. Corner Fifth and J streets. Phone HOw. J. W. HAMMOND, LICENSED AB- OF TITLES Abstracts of title furnished to any piece or tract in Eastern Utah. Fir insurance written in the beet companies Ileal estate, bond, etc. Second UT RATER fldor Sllvagni Bldg., Price, Utah. S. KUSANO Rent Japanese Merchandise of Every Description Catering to the trade of the resident of the local coal camps and surrounding territory. GET orR QUOTATIONS Concrete Building. South Ninth Street, Price, Utah. ht C'-a- j j o non-fat- x al ht fifty-eigh- t. forty-seve- n GUAlJPFEBJLORBS 1ML3IIEHI GAKAGE, NoHli Mnlh Sired, IMIICE, ROGERS-HES- S WHOLESALE CO SHINER I1ROS., Mgra. Dry Climate, Plancoa, Por-- t Cigar uondos Jobber. Candy Assortment of Penny Stuff, Bulk and Five and Ten Cent Ram. Hoc tiers Chocolates, Bathing Girt Racks. Successor to Rummy. Now Closed. Phone IK. Speed. Service. Sllvagni Bldg., Price. Utah |