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Show THE 8PN, PRICE. PAGE TWO UTAH COAIS it SHI FAB WMIR TO DECLARES OGDEN ADIHOBIFY j J Man- coin wrappers and soforth for years and for a good reason. They were not handled at home. Now they are. The Sun can supply you with anything your business calls for in manifolding. We have added to our stock this new line and will fill your order with alacrity. fr e; J rt ce non-unio- rt 66 f, (1913-1021- ), e six-ty-t- I-- Bessif The price is as low as anywhere in the East or West. We invite you to patronize home people and leave your order here. Telephone No. 9 and a representative will call with a complete line of samples. Just call. Well call. r. vio-len- - - You have been sending out of town for your counter sales pads, deposit slips, ar I J ; i re-Hi- 19, 1 lie salvaged a United States submaSpangler, Pa., and resulted in the death rine. Karbe est imates that Davy Jones of men. Seven men were seventy-seve- n has in his locker more than a hundred killed blast in a coal times the wealth that John D. ltocke-felle- r mine atby a premature Pa. Olyphant, Kssessea. He says that more than $liK, 000,000, 000 in sunken treasMutual People Elect ure lies in the ocean near the surface, two With exceptions the old direcnot including icarls, coral and sjxjnges Coal company opMutual tors the of alhe peacefully rejiosing there. But of Carbon in Canyon Bpring erating so adds: at the annual What is the use of going all over county were Frithe world diviiig when nuggets of coal meeting of the stockholders last 8. and Mutual of Aronco John are hearted up in our ocean graveyard. day. M. Worthington of Boise, Ida., were More than a quarter of the worlds in place of Fred J. Leonard of diately surrounding i'rice. lie spoke dipping is at the bottom of the water. chosen of the saving in fuel by the installation Is it a wonder that we look upon this Salt Lake City and J. E. Shepherd of of aulomutie stokers, lie declared that as sound business and not as a fiction Jerome, Ida. The board now comprises Utah coal was superior to that from writers dream. Anyone fired by ro- W. 11. llomer, Jr, Pleasant Grove, W. A. Coughanor of Payette, Wyoming becuuse the Utuh ignited mance and the urge to recover gold Utah; II. Xeithel of Boise, Ida, all flume. Ida.; a more quickly and gave longer from the occau may go after it. There elected Ittwo for reduction in the the years; Dr. P. M. Paulshowing in dollars v thousand Figures is eight gold cons uuipt ion of coal since the installa- aboard the hulk of the Lexington, sunk sen of Logan; V an H. DeMyer of Salt Lake City and John Aroneo of Mutual, tion of the stokers were offered by in Martha a Vineyard in 1830. M. Worthington of Boise, Ida, the speaker, lie said that in 1918 it But our immediate objective is coal, and S. required about a hundred and seventy of which ther4 is sufficient, easily re to serve a term of one year. Following the meeting of stockholders the new pounds of coal for every hundred of , ,.uvralile from the bottom of Long produced. In 1UJ9 the amount anj Sound, to keep fifty companies hoard of directors met and selected officers for the ensuing year, W. II. ' Of coal was reduced by a hundred audlik(S oure i,UKV fifty years. n 1920 in llomer, a Jr., ia president and general hundred jiounds in 1821, a hundred SOME TWO HUNDRED TESTIFY manager; W. A. Coughanor, vice presand thirty-threand in 1922, ninety-thre- e ident, and J. Edward Taylor of Salt iKiunds. The IN THE HERRIN GASES Lake City, secretary and treasurer. cost of fuel represented a reduction of fifteen cents on each bag of sugar proMARION, Ills., Jan. 14. A jury of The only change in officers was the duced. To iireveut sjiontaneous com- Williamson county fanners will de- elevation of llomer from the xisition bustion and the waste of roal when liver its judgment next week on the i f general manager to the presidency, dumped on the earth, Itowlands said Herrin riots. .Counsel for the defense succeeding Fred J. Leonard. The to stockholders presented at the the company bad erected silos. Al- today expressed great confidence in the though the initial cost was heavy a big sjieedy acquittal of the five defendants meeting showed that the company was saving had eventually lieeu effected. charged with the murder of Howard clear of all except current indebtedmen ness with a substantial amount of cash Hoffman, one of the twenty-thre- e MORE CARBON COAL SOON TO slain the outbreak. Attorneys on hand. Some new property was addduring BE SENT OUT in charge of the prosecution refused to l'd to the holdings during the year and the ground diamond drilled to dequoted. The story of the tragedy, all Contract for constructing the blast be unfolded more than a hundred termine the extent of tlie deposits. as by furnaces for Columbia Steel curiwra-tio- n for the defense, was one of One of the features of the meeting was at a jHiint between Springville and witnesses commercial trickery and greed culmi- a moving picture showing the Mutual Provo was awarded at San Francisco, in a sadden outbseak of inub mine in ojieration. Cala., last Friday to Julin Mohr & nating none Sons of Chicago, which firm siecial-ize- s violence, for which, it is claimed, First One Succumbs. lie held accountcan of defendants Ihe in this tyjie of work. Such is the able. 1ms outside a sun Even CHICAGO, Ills., Jan. 14. Sidney blazing announcement that comes from Wellin the little Morrison, first man wounded in the to failed the disiel gloom ington E. Creed, president, and L. F. courtnsiin where a few dim electrics mine war at llerrin, Ilia., last June, Bains, vice president of the former and died today in a local liosjiital, bringthe could whut filter through light concern. Tlmt work on the funmees and byproduct coke ovens, which will dust covered window nines rust fitful ing the death toll in the mine trouble shadows over the tense faces of the to twenly-fouMorrison, who was 23 five the Pacific Coust a steel industry homespun spectators. his nurse, Miss of married years age, independent of Fast cm control, will it has liern an orderly crowd that Uosella Lawson of Joliet,' Ills, last commence immediately was intimated lias listened while witnesses pictured Monday after physicians haij told him by Creed. At a meeting several days the miners and farmers of Williamson he might not live twenty-fou- r hours. ago March 1st was fixed sa the His last unsuccessful followed death three awaiting early county peacefully tivs date for construction to begin and for the crisis resulting from the ojierations. lie had been shot in the it il understood that there will lie no June coal strike to mss. This spine and wbb paralyzed. Morrison was nationwide At the a of board of delay. meeting calm waa it was declared, the sales manager of a Chicago real essliatteml, directors of the steel ieople one day lest week final details were worked by the imjmrtation of some forty non- tate firm when he quit lost June to go out and approval given to engineers union workmen, thirty guards and in search of adventure. He joined a three hundred thousand dollars worth local detective agency and waa sent to reports and plans. The Utah plant of the corporation of firearms and ammunition to the Herrin as captain of the mine guards. will produce pigiron from Utah eoal mine owned by the Southern Illinois Two days later he was shot. and iron, which product will be ship-pe- d Coal company. A wave of indignation Pleas of Not Guilty. to fabricating plants of the Co- followed the discharge of the union Coal operators and lumber dealers lumbia corporation at Pittsburg, Cala., men and the imjxirtation of armed and Portland, Ore., for the manufac- guards, but the initial acts of the against whom a grand jury returned came from the guards, arrording indictments several weeks ago entered ture of steel. That the organizers and owners of the Columbia are making to testimony introduced by the de- pleas of not guilty last Saturday before Judge G. A. Iverson of the Third every effort to speed up completion of fense. State and county officials were de- District court at Salt Lake City. The their plans has been evident for some time. Details of these plans are not clared to have warned C. K. McDowell, defendants, both individuals and coravailable for publication, according to auierintendent of the mine, that the porations, pleaded through counsel. The Creed, who explains that the ieuple of acts of the guards were a menace to case is set for trial tomorrow (Saturof Utah appear over anxious to get the peace of the community and to day). Two indictments were returned tarted on the new development, but liave pleaded with him in vain to dis- against eoal oiierators and a like number against lumber dealers. Each one that such business cannot lie transact miss them. Then a delegation of union miners went to the mine in an ef- charges that the defendants unlawfuled through the newspajicrs. The work of ojiening up the deposit fort to effect a peaceful settlement, but ly agreed to fix and maintain the price of eoking eoal in Horse Canyon here were met with a rain of bullets from a at which coal and lumber should be in Carbon county is progressing in a concealed rapid fire gun and three of sojd. About ten days ago Judge Ephhighly satisfactory manner. The grad- them killed, defense witnesses testi- raim Hanson overruled demurrers and denied millions to strike the indicting for the tramway from the mine to fied. The result was a spontaneous the tipple has been completed and that outbreak of indignation and mob vio- ment a for the Carbon County railroad, a Co- lence, according to the defense, partici- Shipments Decreasing. lumbia subsidiary, is alwut half fin- Iwted in by several thousand persona, the mobs fury had sent itSAl'LT RTE. MARIE, Mich, Jan. ished. The work of owning up the n workers lay dead 14. Coal shipments to the Northwest eoal itsrff also is well under way. The self twenty iron the desolate, red clay this year were mure than five million and of the among company's dying development tods lower than during 1121, despite holdings in the vicinity of Cellar City hills of Williamson county. The prosecution, on the other hand, the fart that four thousand five hun has not been begun, but probably will introduced testimony designed to show deed and thirty-si- x mure boats passed be ntarted in the spring. The activity in the iron fields, how- that the men in the pit had been at- - through the American and Canadian ever, will be governed to a consider- - tacked first and then brutally murder- - canals than in 1921, according to a of officials in charge of oc raable extent by the action of the Los ed after they hud surrendered and had construcin Counsel the tions. Coal locked through here this Lake been of assured their Salt snd safety. Angeles tion of the branch line from I.uud to for both aides expressed the luiie to- venr was 9,461,018 tons, against for 1921. The hard roal totaled serve the field. night that the case would reach the jurv by Thursday night. The rebuttal 670,447 tons against 8,256,128 last seaEA8TERN COMPANY PROPOSES ani cloning arguments were expected son. Tutsi freight shipments were tuns higher than in 192L ToSALVAGING OF COAL to lie brief, occupying .not more than two days. tal freight traffic this year was NEW YORK, Jan. 14. Others may tons. salvage doubloons, sjiecie, rusted cof- ACCIDENT RATE AT COAL MINES AROUND THE COAL CAMPS OF MAKES INCREASE fers, bullion, diamond crosses sml anCARBON DISTRICT pithe in lost coins by deep tiquated Jan. 13. rates, buccaneers and freelwoters of ye WASHINGTON, D. Coal is high and scarce' in the New olden days, but a Brooklyn company is Accidents at coal mines in November section. Recent heavy snows sea England the of and bottom hundred of death three caused the the to scrsie jing the difficulties of the increased have Jsixtv-five the eonsiders greatest men, according to reports or what it treasure of all eoal. This was an- reived bv the federal bureau of mines railroads making deliveries. Most of the properties of the Carbon nounced today by the International from slate mine insjiectors. This numDeep Sea Salvage company, the offi- ber indicates s hundred sml eighty-on- e district are this week working five deaths in four major disasters that days. This has been the average for cials of which prefer the profits of their commercial undertaking to the occurred linring the month. The fa- some time. The railroad ear shortage romance of searching for the more tality rate for November was 6.80 per is not hindering so much lately. There is much roal in the Uintah Bagaudy treasures once carried on bv million tons of eoal produced as comthose who oierated under the black pared with 3.60 per million tons for sin of Utah, varying from lignite, to a flag. The company has been organized November a yeur ago. The average fa- highgrade bituminous. On the eastern for the express jiuqiose of recovering tality rate for November during the slope are the famous Routt county deas deter- posits, many of the reins Wing more from the water around New York the past nine years mined by the bureau of mines, is 3.79 than forty feet in thickness. On the precious black ingots. The ronqmny has a chart of Long per million tons, linsed upon an aver- western slope within Duchesne county-arfaveins of fair grade coal fifty-si- x Island Sound, showing a little circle age of a hundred and eighty-thre- e feet in depth. for each of the seven hundred sunken talities . Many of these are heavy Neil M. Madsen of Price was in Zion During the year 1922, to the end of galleons. laden with coal. An oceangoing schoon- November, seventeen hundred and this week on matters connected with men were killed by acridents at the Utah Central mine Wtween Scoer, four miles off, has been selected as the first objective. It is in shallow wa- eoal mines, as compnred with eighteen field and Clear Creek and which is fatalities soon to have its roal on the market. ter with fifteen hundred tons of an- hundred and twenty-thre- e thracite aboard. John W. Karbe, the during the first eleven months of 1921. The electric powerlines are now serv. president of the International, says the The smaller numlier of lives lost dur- ing the projierty. R. Y. Gibson, forprecious cargo can he Salvaged at a ing 1922 was due to the five months' merly sufierintendcnt at Rolnpp, is the cost of $1.50 a ton and sold on the spot closing down of all mines afferted by general manager. for ten dollars. Among the divers who the miners strike, which lasted from Associated Press telegrams out from will seek the riches is a woman Grace April until August. In relation to the Pittsburg, Pa., this week state that Johnson who has achieved fame as quantity of coal produced the eleven sjxit coal ia not so plentiful as it has months dealthrate in 1922 was 4.34 ;ier Wen and quotations are more stable an underwater treasure hunter. Another is J. Neilson, who has at- million tons as against 3.89 for the with run of mine steam at $3.00 to tuned a depth of fonr hundred feet, same period in 1921.$3.75 a ton and gas eoal running up to The largest disaster of the month five dollars at mine. The city of Pittspractically capturing the world rec ord for depth. He hais often worked at waa at Dolomite, Ala., where a dust burg has rereived bids ranging from three hnnared and eighty-fiv-e feet, as explosion on November 22d caused the $4.25 to $4.64 for its years supply of ha did off the Hawaiian Island when death of ninety mem Aeeording to the ran of mine. sixty-seve- FRIDAY, JANUARY PRIDAY. state inspector of Alabama the explo sion waa due to a trip of cars running back down the shqie, and striking a very high voltage cable, the arc caused thereby setting fire to the coal dust in susjiension from the wreckage of the cars. On November 6th a gas explosion, due to an ojen light, occurred back at H. A. Itn lands, an engineer of national reputation and for some time past in the employ of the Amalgamated Sugar company, was the principal speaker before the Ogden Chapter of the American Association of Engineers at its weekly meeting at the Junction City last Friday evening, lie discussed and the subject of Combustion, paid high tribute to Carbon district eoals when he sjMike of those produced jn the Beehive State, since some iA5 per cent of the output of this commonwealth conies from the territory imme- FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY re A Win i No 'Four ci Joy su aywniHt fed. 8 PRICE, UTAH NOTICE OF SALE THE CARBON Water. Land and Power Company, a Corporation. Location of Principal Place of Buaineea, Price, Carbon County, Utah. Notice: There la delinquent upon the following described stock on account of assessment levied on the 2d day of December, If!!, the several amount set opposite the names of the respective shareholders as follows: No. Certificate Amt Name. Cameron Coal company 22 $ 1B.00 Peoples Bank of( 414.00 Leht ... SI (0.00 Samuel Broell 80.00 II Lucy C. Burton J. Burton Utah Bond and Share company T. Ed Uosa . C. S. Harris Eva Wherry ... ... C. A Wherry Henry M. Hayes James H. Park ... I. M. Askren E. P. Mills Aramakl 8. Kuaano-A- . Oomer Peacock W. Prince John Klcimrd Jones Charles 8. Burton . Nick Schnleder ...... A. K. Bherlnan 48 88.88 ..47 48 610.10 8 (7.60 106.00 W. 880-8- Kenneth A. Wilson Mrs. Sarah A. Mathis A. 8. Olson Hhekery Sheya Loren H Goldina 87 88 61 (1 (8 66 .68 .71 74 77 86 -- J. 120 184 185 W. T. Taylor C. K. Persona C. N. Reynolds H. G. Mathis 18( 187 184 144 161 168 Joseph Hansen M. C. Wilson Thomas Greaves Jones Hanna C. B. Waterman Hugh Fullerton Sanford Ballinger John Y. Smith Helper 8tate bank G. B. Marion Q Golding 08.86 88.60 68.60 11 L Thompson - John John 99 118 118 114 118 C Eves 1(2-80- 4 154 1(1 1(8 .. 200 ..201-20- 5 106.00 80.00 10C Cotton Zelma Mclntlre Mrs. Emma C. Eves 888.00 60.00 61.00 7.60 80.00 88.60 60.00 80.00 468 76 9.00 98 ...104 Ur. W. A. C. II 69.86 160.00 16.00 80.00 7.60 80.00 80.00 88 60 0.00 7.60 80.00 16.00 87.60 80.00 886.60 80.00 45.00 15.00 18.75 80.00 8(6.50 88.60 45.00 11.85 206 J C, Berglund J. C. Jensen (State of 1 Utah pledge) 214 Pester D&mbroeio 218 Irvin Olson 228 Federal Land benk 284 State of Utah And In acocrdanre with law and an order of the hoard of directors made on the Sd day of December, 1122, so many shares of each parrel of such stock as may tie necessary will he sold at the Price Commercial end Savings bank. Price, Carhon county, Utah, on the 27th day of January, 1188, at the hour of 4 o'clock p. m.. to pay delinquent assessments thereon, together with the costa of advertising snd ex 148-19- penee of sale. CARL R. MARCU8EX, Secretary, Price Commercial and Savinas bank. Price, Utah. First pub., Jan. 12; last Feb. 2. 1923. One way to catch coyotes is to place Silage odora are abaorWd largely through the body of the cow rather than from the air, aeeording to teats made by the United States department of agriculture. However, these odora may be practically or entirely removed by the aeration of the milk while it ia still warm. Rather heavy feed of silage may be given to cows one hour u ust after milking without any undesirable flavors or odors passing into the milL When green alfalfa waa fed in reb tiyely large quantities one hour befon milking marked flavors and odors wen noticed in the milk, but when as mud as thirty pounds per cow was fed after milking there was no effect on the milk from the next milking. fPnrit i Corns m Ml Kind Tarda IUo .the t a j depot tlmati sou ai When you build anything you want lumber of just the right kind for the work. We have it. A fine residence from top to bottom or a fence or chicken coop must have a selection of the proper materials. Quality and price as embodied in our stock always bring you satisfaction and which is the third of our rules for doing business with you. 198. Brii OR Hoi TOOLS Single or In Sets For the Vhi Farmer, the Boa City Dweller i Or the Handy Man Anywhere. j S Cate den a Con: traia for them on sheep driveways just after the flocks are started down from .the summer ranges. Almost immedi- ately the rovotes that follow them are caught. One of the inspectors of the biological snrvcy,United States department of agriculture, recently made a catch of ten coyotes in seven days in this way. The fellow who boasts of his ignorance unwittingly tells the truth. i One Piece Or a Carload Phones 111 or 26, Price, Utah. years, machli and J EvA l.ekno 01 4o j Don lave x peat tl |