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Show ""DAT,rma?Tl OTAH Tt COPlfTT PPOQMSfl. CA8TLB PAIR More SUver Kings Needed j fUUM ftiM ntauuvi tvwti reported 43.4 Inches of snow in. Castle Dale on February 1, 1916. Established. 19M Jease D. Jewkes came down Official Newspaper of Emery County, Utah from Salt Lake City on business, 2, 1916, and reported Foreign. $2.75 Per Year February Subscription, $2.00 Per Year that on account of the big snow A. C. SAUNDERS and JESS EL SAUNDERS, Publishers It had taken him 15 hours to make the trip from Price to Castle Dale. Published Every Friday Morning at Castle Dale, Utah head of elk arTwenty-thre- e Publication of notice of meetings where admission is charg- rived from the Jeckson Hole ed or collection taken will be charged for at our regular adver- country in January 1916, and were placed In Dell Peacock's tising rates. All commanications and Items for publication must be sign- corral above Orangeville. ed by the writer, whose name need not appear in print. Write on made to An effort was one side of the paper only. Use no abbreviations. All communica- consolidate the being various pione' tions subject to acceptance as the judgment of the publishers systems of the valley In January determine. may of 1916. The Castle Dale tithing barn A First Class Publication Entered In the Postofflce in Castle Dale, Utah, as second class mail matter, under the Act of March went down under the heavy 3, 1879. weight of snow on the night of February 3, 1916. By a vote of 391 to 293, the $65,000 bond issue was carried by the voters of Emery county in February, 1916, for the erection of three new school buildings in the county. The Peacock Cash store openOn request of Henry Thomp- ihouses at Huntington, Ferron ed for' business In Orangeville son, district game warden, the and Elmo. In February, 1916. Adolph Axelsen, of Elmo, was board of Emery County commisMiss Lola Hansen, of Ferron, sioners appropriated $300 for called to Sanpete county early and Floyd S. Payne, of Salt the placing of a carload of elk in January, 1916, by the death Lake were married in the Salt on East Mountain, in Jan., 1910. of his father. temple in February, 1916. Wa T. Litster, of Cleveland, Lake Henry Oviatt Joined the new Miss Mabel Seely, daughter of Ford owners in Cleveland In circulated a petition in January, Mr. and Mrs. Orange Seely, Jr., 1916, which was signed by the January, 1916. of Castle Dale, was married on Dow Young, of Huntington, majority of residents, to have February 1, 1916, to James A. and Miss Alvlra Christensen of tee town of Cleveland incorpor- Hayward, a railroad man of Redmond, were married at the ated. Cumberland, Wyoming. used a Carl Wilberg purchased Mantl temple on Dec. 28, 1915. Two deaths occurred in Hunt6eth Allen of Castle Dale was car in January, 1916, to exper ington during the week of Febcalled to O o s h e n, Jan. 5, 1916, iment in driving. After he had ruary 21, 1916. They were Eraccomplished the feat success nest E. Dodge and W. B. Ma this. by the death of his father. Two large real estate deals fully, he expected to buy a new The people of Castle Dale in were effected in Emery county car. one day subscribed the sum of N. S. Nielsen moved to Castle the first of the year in 1916. The in cash and labor to be $1343.50 Jeffs' ranch on Huntington Dale from the Reservation in used in constructing the Orcreek, comprising 960 acres, was January, 1916, and expected to angeville - Ephraim road, the sold to Tony Nelson, of Draper. open a shoe repair shop. Mr. work which was to start in the The Paradise ranch property Nielsen learned Ihls trade in spring of 1916. became Che property of Neal Denmark. The Castle Dale district school Elder Delos Jewkes, who was was McMlllian and son, of Murray. forced to postpone its openAfMcMilllan was a wholesale and serving a mission in South on March 1916, on acing retail meat dealer of Salt Lake rica, had written an interesting count of lack of 5,coal with which county and expected to use the account of his experience in to fire up. that country, which was pubranch for feeding purposes. of a note for the The At the meeetlng of the state lished in the Emery County Pro- Castle signers Dale church organ, after road cornmissioni, the Straight gress, January 29, 1916. been filed by a Salt had suit Robertson route was designated for Jasper canyon were saved from the Castle Valley - Ephraim died in Orangeville, January 17, Lake firm,being entered against judgement a illness. 1916, after highway, after a long, and them, when members of the drawn out controversy, which He was born in Green County, Priesthood borrowed money in 1847. enlisted He 8, bitsource been a Illinois, May had of much 1916, from the local March, ter contention ini both counties with the Northern army in the bank and paid off the note. A bond election was called for Civil war, and arrived in Utah In cofcnnilssioners county Emery Jan. 29, 1916. by Emery county. 1862. He served as Minute Kan D. O. Morgan as conappointed for the purpose of issuing bonds In he Black Hawk war In San- stable of MWhx land In March, to the amount of $65,000, for the pete county. Mr. Robertson act- 1916. purpose of erecting school ed as teamster on the frontier Work was started in March, to bring the Saints to Utah un1916, by the Utah Power & Light der Captain Abner Lowry, travUne3 Co., 1600 witihi ox miles teams. from on extendingto their eling Wallace Mortuary Price and Springville He married Rhoda Guymon on hence to Castle Dale. 1871. He wife his New Location: South of 17, and April With a stroke of the pen In and four children moved to March-Huntington Store in 1916, Franklin K. Lane, Castle Dale In October, 1880, Castle Dale of the Interior, tersecretary built a log house in Orange I have established my home and the famous controver minated ville on land he bought from over title to 4160 acres of in Castle Dale, and am presy Joseph (L. Boulden, where the coal land near to serve Huntington, de the people of steel bridge crosses the stream pared most vlauable be to clared the morIn my in Orangville. He was made the bituminous Emery county, in the west, deposit tuary business. bishop on August 13, 1882, and ini favor of the estate of C. M. filled that position for 23 years. A. N. WALLACE, Prop., He was a member of the consti Freed. 30-E. Davis was erecting Phone Castle Dale tutional convention when Utah a Thomas on the lots he had new home was made a state. purchased of Mrs. Clara Adams, on the bench in Cleveland. Friends of Mr. and Mrs. Frank In Castle Dale and Orangeville received word in March of 1916, that their little i f daughter had fallen backward SALT LAKE'S into a tub of scalding hot water POPULAR PRICED and little hope was held for her MODERN HOTEL recovery. Practically all the older grade Broadway and West Temple school children, of Castle Dale and Orangeville made a trip to RATES: $1.50 to $3.M the Peacock ranch on Saturday, March 11, 1916, to see the FREE GARAGE Beautifully Furnished Rooms EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS i two-ye- ar -- Y, PEERY HOTEL in mi The ladies Relief Society met Tuesday afteroon at the homeg of Mrs. Travis Olsen, all enjoy-lna pleasant afternoon. q. g. Crawford spent a week on his ranch and left last SatCity. urday for Salt Lake hurried trip Mr. Moore made a to Salt Lake City and returned Sunday morning. M4ss Maxine Olsen, Mr. Mr. Harris and Mr. Mortensen were dinner guests at the George Funk home last Fred-rickso- Visitors When tbs Sliver King Coalition Mines Company wa forced to close Its property early tn 193S and remain closed throughout the remain-de- . of the year, it was keenly felt throughout business and Industrial channels In Utah. The mine, pictured above Is one c mines of the great of the world and a mighty contributor to the business, industrial and community life of the state. Up until last year the mine and Us predecessors had been under constant development and produc tion since 18S2. a reord equalled by only a few mines. In a sense, this record was not broken as development was continued In the western end of the property where the company is sinking a new shaft at a cost of more than a halt milsilver-lead-zin- lion taxes, freight, treatment and other charges. r It Is Interesting to note a results, of Silver King's period from 1923 to 1927: Dry tons shipped (crude and concentrates) 286,443; gross yield from mine, $19,459,539. Freight, smelting and treatment charges. $2,864,430. Taxes (County, state, federal), five-yea- $1,401,933. dollars. Since 1882, Silver King Coalition and Its predecessors have produced upward of $90,000,000 In gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc. Channels of Industry have received approximately S60.000.000 of this In the form of wages, supplies, materials, Payrolls. 14,936.434. Materials and supplies purchased, S2.678.992. 'Total dividends paid. $5,595,364. Of the dividends paid, 66 per ceat went to Utah stockholders. Normally Silver King Coalition employs 650 men, which means that approximately 2500 persons are dependent directly upon the mine's operations. This is an Impressive array of tacts, and It Is evident that the state needs more such producers. There are other mines like the Silver King yet to be developed as the state's resources have only been scratched. at the mT1 this week wer K Bruce Cox of Price uT S1 Ottestram of Bills and Mr. jnE?? Mr and Mrs. QrJ ounaay at 1W opcun im. ' Mrs. Earl Mrs. Austin Olsen ed the ladies of clety last week, a afternoon was smnt n!, Clarence Funk .... . ttn hit WQo turned home thejrtCgf Sunday. fichoes of the Past op Rochester Department I when the committees are appointed, as well as those now In committees, will be considered by the sifters' and those deemed worthy of considration reported out for action. o RADIO CITY'S CONTROL ROOM USED AS SCENE Barclay's Bettv ayrshire 890 pounds and year-ol- d cam cnJ er, N. Y., has establish cumulative milk record J Ayrshire breed bv 15 177.207 Bounds r.t '..""S ui "Mil pounds of butterfat. t!S has produced more mlliZ - J m pounds liveweight than i!? The National Broadcasting Company's auditorium at Its studio in Radio City, New York, was brought to the screen for the first time when a replica of the original was built on a film studio sound stage for a broad cast sequence of "Sweathearts," in which Jeanette MacDonald orsings with an eighty-piec- e chestra. This film appears at the Price Theatre Sunday, Mon day and Tuesday. Copied in detail, even to the control room, the film set was constructed so that broadcasting procedure could be followed to the letter. Several hundred extras formed the audience. Miss MacDonald's number was "Summer Serenade," Herbert dam of 15 calves, li d uavc miia ior 57440. R descendants, 916 in jT third generation are 106 breeders in 15 stutt. CASTLE DALE, There are enough ues vlvoui iracung without guessing at nl unes in tfai BE ON THE BAR Demand an Abstract if Our Abstracts fell It Stothart's arrangement of Victor Herbert's "Badinage," originally a piano selection, but with modern lyrics written by Chet Forrest and Bob Wright. A inlX' ed chorus of forty also sang the O. SORENSON. Jt NEW HOI SEHLOH Hdrn. chorus. Paul Kirby, former internationally known symphony or(I chestra conductor, now a memmusic deber of the partment, led the studio orchestra augmented by solo instruments from the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Coyne Whitman, known to radio audiences for Salt Lake City, m his "Chandu, the Magician," COUPON entltta THIS B Measures killed include: S. session of The twenty-thir- d played the role of the commen1-tato- r. holder to 25c reductka rev85 cent of 40, per allocating the Utah state legislature pass Dalles any room at the rates e Concert mark last week enues derived from the tax on Frantz played thepianist ed the half-wa- y one coupon to used piano with practically all of the more gas used in aviation to cities room. o important measures proposed owning and operating the air NEW beds, springs, msttf by the lawmakers still awaiting ports where it is sold, and 15 We're beginning to suspect es, carpets, throughon percent to the state aeronautcal that a large part of the unem actio n favorable or house. commission:; H. B. 51, refunding work even when RATES $1 JO to $3 JO. didn't ployed tax on gasoline used in tractors, times were Senate and house Journals good. We Now FeatirrFw! the daily records of legislative stationary engines, and for otho Garage er activities showed on Saturday purposes; If you can do it, the best way COUPS of more S. B. 70 of out bills 25, THIS USE employes bringing that night to handle Is to than 460 had been acted upon. the state and its political sub- pay em. your obligations Five of these had become laws divisions under provisions of through joint approval of both the state labor relations law; S. legislative branches and Govern- B. 2, setting up a state departor Henry H. Blood. Nine had ment of Justice; H. B. 26, plac o been killed and 15 withdrawn. ing the state chemist under the senate and house department of agriculture; H. B. Twenty-fiv- e approved measures are ready 33, making county treasurers' G for gubernatorial consideration, certificates of tax sales redempo this number having been passed tions conclusive instead of pri by both legislative branches in ma facie evidence of such readdition to the five already ap- demptions; S. B. 23, requiring proved by the chief executive. claimants for illness or injury Awaiting action on them by the damages to undergo medical lower house are 15 passed by the examinations; S. B. 24, requir senate. The upper house !has lng physicians to testify con FLOOR LAMPS nine house - passed measures cerning priviliged communicaSilver, ivory, brense er awaiting consideration. Three tions in contests over wills; S, gold base. Parchment t measures are on the house B. 93, making of nrileh. had. table, probably to remain there motor vehicles prima facie evid bulb. with Complete in status quo. ence that registered owner was None of the five bills signed responsible; S. B. 3, rqulrlng TABLE LAMPS elk which ihad been shipped in by the governor and now on state appointees subject to con state statutes the be Utah to firmation senate come the may by from Wyoming. The animals C Parchment shade. 1 r iiijiin 73 Bronse er ivory base. were to be released on East said to be of major import to up for such confirmation every the people as a whole unless it two years, and H. B. 8, prohibit Complete with bulb. Mountain the following day. J. J. Larsen and Holyer NeLsen be H. B. 11. This provides that a ing legislators from accepting appointive and salaried state of Cleveland traded farms in six per cent markup on merchshall be included in de- positions during legislative ses lighting cost less today than ths spring of 1916, after which andise "cost" QOOD as in used state two slons the for fining and there years Mr. Larsen sold to Joe and John fair trade practices act. It may after. before. Two facta are) responsible, fiflt E. Jensen. to affect be on varBills of prices paid major Importance yet Edw. P. Cox, who had taken items of merchandise. to be passed upon by either the civil service examination for ious electric current rates are the lowest in history . S. B. 15, signed by the governbranch include: H. B. 139, in forest range, was appointed to provides for flying the Amer- creasing Individual income tax the Ferron section in April, 1916. or, in this territory. 20 below the nationcd averag ican flag over school buildings es, lowering exemptions, and Mrs. Elizabeth Lewis, wife of during school hours and on extending levies to cover nonJohn Lewis of Lawrence, died state and national holidays. Better residents; S. B. 149, bringing ocSecond, the new scientifically-designe- d April 4, 1916, aged 83 years. The Bills approved by both legis- cupational diseases under the deceased was survived by her lative Ihouses and now awaiting workmen's compensation act; husband and two daughters, action by Governor Blood inSight lamps give more and H. B. 30, establishing wages and Mrs. Wm. Arnold and Mrs. n clude: S. B. 32, bringing all small hours standards for intrastate Staker. She was born in loan agencies under models. Yet tbey supervision labor; H. B. 13, exempting light than South Wales and came to Utah of the state homes up to $2000 In value and banking departin 1889. ment; H. B. 44, extending regist- personal property up to $300 but little cs you note by th two lamps illustrate Ernest Jensen of Castle Dale, ration of plumbers to entire from H. B. 15, authortaxation; and Miss Neva Ralphs hied state; H. B. 12, every izing sale of liquor by the drink at themselves to Salt Lake City fchool district ofassuring at least one in hotels, restaurants and clubs; here. And there early in, April, 1916, where thev normal scholarship every three H. B. 84, granting counties, citwere united in marriage in the years; H. B. 14, permitting ies and towns n local option in many other temple. county mutual insurance com- liquor sales; S. B. 66 and 67 and The only way you can know Guy Oviatt and Miss Belle panies to extend their opera- H. B. 96 and 97, authorizing whether you have euiiident and tyl oil M eccom-panlme- nt. mm wo WHOSO two-year-o- ld I 6'5 over-parki- ng 3 Light-Bett- 1 l 1 ft; W5 js& P g I 18.95 to $139.95 c er Hela-man- J EASTERN UTAH ELECTRIC GO, PRICE, UTAH Tucker of Elmo were married in tions in additional fields; H. B. the Salt Lake temple In April, 3ienabling second, third and 1916. first class cities to abate unMirl Ralph and Miss Blanche sightly objects; H. B. 25, requirCook of Ferron, were married by ing that traveling farm machinbe cleaned of noxious weed P;?. L. P. Oveson, April 12, '16. ery etc. before moved from seeds, Stricken with a fit of despon- weed infested areas; S. B. 5, fixdency on the eve of undergoing ing fees for justices of the peace an operation, John W. Guymon, in criminal cases; H. B. 39, to 55, of Huntington, jumped from the opening date of the a window on the 4th floor of a change deer hunting season to the third Salt Lake City hoici and was Saturday in October; H. B. 50, instantly killed, in April, 1916. 55 and 56, including auto and Dorian Christiansen and Miss aircrait entry for purpose of Elva Neilson, wThose marriage stealing in first, second and occurred in the Manti temple in third degree burglary classes, April, 1916, had returned to and S. B. 45 to 52 inclusive, Emery to make their home. simplifying court procedures. I counties and cities to undertake housing projects for groups; several bills providing for state, county and city civil service; several measures amending the direct primary law; several seeking to add revenue to the uniform school law, and a bill permitting the organization of health cooperatives. The fate of a great of the measures still majority pending will rest with sifting committees to be appointed by President Ira R. Huggins of the senate and Speaker Heber Bennion Jr. of the house. All bills on both senate and house calendars low-co- st low-inco- light is to have it measured with a Sight Meter an ... instrument which measures light as easily as a thermometer measures temperature. Without cost or obligation, we will gladly measure the light in your home or oiiice. Simply telephone for a Lighting Advisor to call at your convenience. models at equally barga prices. Come to' themondispta' SEE YOUR DEALER OR n ffJWA |