OCR Text |
Show S' ' Shop Early! Buy at Home ip SAUNA, TvelMIs Pin; ' Company Coal Coal Activities at the Twelve-Mil- e 12 .located miles companys property, up Salina canyon, is to be speeded up,' and to this end additional working forces are to be added..and in a' short time a Big tonnage of the high grade coal will be finding its way to the local markets. Dr. C. N. Ray and George Wilson, among. the principal' owners of the property, were here the first of the week and were in conference with Ralph Mason, .yho.is leasing a portion of the property, Mr. Mason stated .that considerable of the coal was being taken out at the present time and was finding a ready. market. Under the new arrangements, however, the production is to be increased and the. product will be shipped fo various points in Sevier and Sanpete counties for sale. Dr. Ray, in an interview, stated that the development carried on during the past several months, had proved highly encouraging. The highly encouraging. The mine has been, worked for three years, but not much of an effort had been made to produce on a large commercial basis until this ye'ar. The tunnel has been driven for a distance of more than a thousand feet and in driving thp a vast amount of coal has been blocked out. In addition to the long tunnel, 250 feet of work has been done in air courses and six rooms have been cut in. Ralph Mason, who is leasing a portion of the ground, stated that he would soon employ ten or twelve men and that the production would be " materially increased. Later the management intends driving to a greater depth and tap the nine-fovein which has been proven by government reports. The vein, according to surveys, is about eighty feet below the present coal strata. The owners of the Twelve-Mil- e are highly optomistic as to- The vision of the founders of the legs, confined always sotil, composed and Am A I Little Christmas Seal, to help in the Christmas Seal Sale. AM A LITTLE CHRISTMAS SEAL I am a little Christmas Seal, . Oh please, sir, wont you buy me) For 1 have'a missioa.that is real, And no one should .deny me.' A penny, 'Sir, will pay for me, Im sure youll jiever.rue it is tp Tight T - B, mission. My And. .you. must help me do it. I . . Its t . . . . more than a one hand stunt To slay this thing of terror, So Im the army at the front, And. youre the stretcher-bearer- ; For where we come or where we go. In foul or fairest weatherU Tuberculosis is our foe, And we must stand together. Both life and he'alth we may prolong. . you will pay a penny; Let's help the kiddies to be strong. For unfed tots are many; And house to house and town to town, Lets work to save the babies Oh please, sir,- do not turn me doivn, With promises and mabies. If , er e ) . - Just kindly kiss me on the back And stlckTme to a letter. And for a penny and a smack I'm' just a little Christmas Seal, Oh please, sir, wont you buy me? . ' ' Dit-levs- on Modem Woodmen of America, No. of Salina, at the meeting held .Wednesday evening, elected the fol lowing officers to serve the lodge for the year 1926: Advisor,. Edwin F. Peterson; clerk, John R, Ewles; escort, D. V. Freece; watchman, Carl Nielson; secretary, Delbert Larson; three-yemanager, Frank Herbert. Installation of the new officers will be some time in January." Before the meeting adjourned a big social was planned and a committee was named to. make arrangements for the affair. The exact date of the social has not as yet been announced but it will be held during the coming week and it is proposed tp have the lodge members and a number of friends present. ar con-duct- EXHIBITS BUFFALO ROBE Rex Barnard, manager for the Salina Meat and Supply, is exhibiting a splendid specimen of a buffalo robe and announces that he will present it to some .ono of his customers. The robe, which is rare for the reason that not many are found on the market, measures five by six feet and the colorings ar most beautiful, a brown blending into the real black. The hide was taken from the animal purchased from the government range last winter and it is exceptionally rare, due to the artistic method of mounting. (fe in view fowl lai And oh, how glad we both shall feel If youll but trust and try me; . Ro Stopping M last Thursday to take up her immediately. work and-flood- s , nt -- Brito "To Span Sevier River Inhuman nature were not what it Tine awkward curve which breaks is, the Christmas season might not ulc road after leaving the cement Salina Leiioo Elect - New Postal Rates be one of rush and worry ove what ,)iiving just west of town, is to be to buy, and sales forces in stores abandoned and the highway will be would not be rushed .to exhaustion in a straight shoot to the bridge, which the two or. three weeks before .the is among the new improvements-o- n event. If people did their shopping . 1926- - At a mctin when it could be done under the least the PrBam held last commissioner Ie county extend conditions, congested jt. might over months 'instead oi weeks, and Monday that body decided that a new American Legion Post No. 26, Sal- Mailers of Christmas cards and it would be not less seasonable. biidge was necessary to meet the none but the exceptional ina, elected a new set of officers, greetings should not detract dignity uirenH,nts anil to have it in shape thinks-ountil person doing shopping for activities 1926, planned greater it cannot be put off longer. Then it made arrangements for the installabecomes an ordeal and is so strenuous tion of the new officers, lunched &t to the proper postage that is requir- - that it 3 rob the 8eason of the the Main Cafe and later enjoyed a state road commission, Arthur ed. for transportation. Mail early and cheer and good will that attach to smoker at" the Legion pool hall, c- Griffin, with tlw Waller a,ul adThe will it sentimentally. heed to the new rate is the good Wednesday evening of this week. pay spent the O. Anderson, KinejTiiig oepartment might actually pervade the shoppers More than the usual interest was vice of Postmaster J. Ule of re making rst wcck It is pointed out that many cards, were they not overworked trying to shown in the meeting and the local e curve is ie neiessaiy suireys. now find. what they want and struggling vets were very much in evidence. inclosed in unseale8 envelopes, be is to ta new a obliterated and dyke R cent and a half infitead to get it. Yet it would not be ChristIn the selection of officers the follow- and fc is planned to have built it otherma for a M of people were mg men were successful m being wise. They have become so accustom- - everything ,n readiness by the time mailed are insufident named: ' ed to waiting and then making a w'0lk 1S stai.'t'!. on tho. biding of mailpostage. If Christmas cards are Post Commander Eldon Petty, a 10 ia ina . ed withoutenougfi job of it that they would postage, it will be burry-u- p I. Rex. were it done betimes. ' Tbe ncw bridge, vdiich is to set just feel not the,' right to obtain deficiency Miles necessary Adjutant and Treasurer Human nature is a peculiar thing south of thudd one, will have a from the adressess, and, as the post- Curfew. cret anJ W1'1 lar?or than said, when we haive to make despite the fact that all of us have, lie E'pan Historian John W. Bird. thus one, present adding Human nature it if be J; up- a deficit in postage 6a Christmas it. It wouldnt Chaplin Ralph McAllister. . wasnt odd. If we did everything in aCience to ihu thousands of trave.grs the all to lose us we yvill Service Officer Dr. C. Leo Merrill. tbat-usit yearly, spirit of good wifi toward the sender, reasonable and sane way we wquldl Action Publicity Officer John W. Bird. for seeming the right-of-- . which the card is intended, to convey. not be human beings. We would e Americanism Officer Jarvis Mar.-tistate highway is to be the to wy and that is too much Christmas and Now Years greet- and to this end court started soon, of human writ- - expect. It is the prerogative The new officers will .assume ings sent as postcards, wibether bo to started in the condem-- 1 action is and of do as they please ten or printed, require 2 cents post- beings to' Janof the on various charge . nation proceedings. Only n few par- posts age each, when sent in mraale.d en- - codre most of us please to delay as 19 fvand ,7ref t,h.an ke,y velopes, a cent and a half each, and long as we can the doing of what we cds of land will come under the event will turn and with tins cleared it is bel.ev- with, a when gent Jn fea,ed enyelopes 2'Cents cannot avoid. There may be those p ogramant anque ed that matters will be hastened to..as formerly. As this is the first who are forehanded in Christmas wards so starting the building of the and Christmas since the new postage rates shopping but they are Tare state let ween Salina and RichW. H. Brown, accompanied by his went into road mass that they effect, some trouble is ex- different from, the field. daughter, Miss Lois Brown, will leave pocted, but efforts are being made to are odd, too. the early part of next week for South- - head off any misunderstanding on the do Joseph rcterson, chairman, and shopping your Incidentally California. Mr. Brown will spend part of the; publij as effectively as day help in the mad rush and in Carl Tuft and Abe Ilansen will go to will Christmas with Ais, family and will possible. doing so you meet no disappointment. Ogden next Monday and they ofForest with the conference have a return to Salina after the first of the . Mrs. Clarence Mills visited with ficials and matters pertaining to year. Miss Lois expects to spend the Mrs. Mary Hall was at Lehi last winter with her mother, who is now week the guest of her daughter Mrs. friends at Ogden for a few dais last building the highway through Salina at Los Angeles. canyon will be taken up. Less Harmon. ... f - (,a-v- s - . . 1 con-mast- er conven-cards-se- nt - e fr n. super-huma- n -- ae-t- - to-e- m Leora Dastrup, popular music teacher of Salina has accepted a position at .the Delta." high school as 'music instructor. Miss Dastrup left for Delta and only adds about three miles for the southern county travel going that way. The Glenwood road would only benefit Richfield and those in the south end of the county and the expenditure of this amount of money at this time, will prove a burden. In the northern part of the conn ty some of the roads are in very bad condition and it would be more wise to carry out a general repairing cam- paign than to inaugurate a new one that will prove valuless in time. Every effort is being made to have the main highway between Salina and Richfield covered with concrete. If this is accomplished, and there is every chance that it will be, then travelers to Fishlake and points east from Richfic,(b wou1(1 undoubtedly travel the concrete in preference to the heavy and dangerous climb over Glenwood hill. If the county commissioners havent any place to spend road money to a more beneficial use than to spend it on the Glenwood Hill road, then they bad better reserve their money and apply if for something that would be more beneficial to the county. W. R. Johnson, of Aurora, and who supported the movement against building the Glenwood Hill road, pleaded for improvements at his town, The county road leading north from . Aurora, he slated, was in a deplorable condition. The culverts are rotten, the main thoroughfare rutted by . and in many places rans dangerous to travel. It is a disgrace he continued, to think of building a rad that will be used but very little when other places where the farmers and travelers find difficulty in ting along. No definite action was taken at Mondays meeting by the commission-ar- e ers, the members agreeing to take the matter under advisement and for fur-er-s ther consideration. The members of the board, however, together with the representatives of the Richfield Com-o- f mereial club, got a full understanding in tjie matter as to how North Sevier stood in the Matter. Hew Concrete Early : Mai Rose. , 10368, movement. the fact that the Kings Meadow 'canyon road, runs parallel. The Kings Meadow road, too, is a state highway . Well make the whole world better; - Dr. and Mrs. C. E. West, Miss Beulah West, Messrs, and Mesdames R. B. Evans, J. R. Ewles, G. A. Gates, Carl "Nielson, Hyrum Gates, Claud Burgess, Mrs. A. S. Gates, Mrs. J. B. Stark, Mrs. Jennie Okerlund, Mrs. J.. T. Crane, Mrs. Matilda Nielson, of Salina, and Mrs. Esther Kinney of Salt Lake, Misses Zena Bird, Lucile and Lena Peterson. Strong opposition and logical ar- guments were advanced by & delega- tion from Salina and Aurora against the building of a new road over the Glenwood hill road at the regular meeting of the Sevier County commissioners at Richfield last Monday afternoon. The protest against the plan of expending county money for the new improvement was forcibly put, several of the North Sevier del- egation taking a dig against the wood iroad is ai Beoepiii - North Sevier Taxpayers Protest Glenwood Road . S. M. Jorgenson, O. G. Nielson, and Frank Herbert of Salina, and as epnesentatives of the Salina (Lions club, together with W. R. Johnson of Aurora, were those .attending the meeting from North Sevier, and each representative voiced a word in op- position. The plan, as fostered by the Richfield .Commercial club, was that the county commissioners aid in building a new road over the Glenwood hill, east of Richfield. The Richfield Commercial club, it is said, pledged $1,500 and the county was asked to stand the balance.. S. M. Jorgenson, the main spokesman for the North Sevier delegation, did not mince his words when he en- tered his protest, and when he had finished, the commissioners, as well as representatives from the Richfield Commercial club, knew why North Sevier was opposed to the project. It ' was stated at the meeting that the total cost of the road would not ex- cced $5,000. A careful study of this of wok from past exper- character . . lenees in road building, conservatives easily place the cost at $10,000. If we are to .expend money for the of roads, let it be done where most needed, said Mr. Jorgen- son of the Satina delegation. There many of the county roads that are used the year round and the farm; find it difficult transporting the crops to market. And then, the Glen- - . Neighbors Isis dedicated .the following poem, gg ed the-futur- his ous of mind and indomitable of ot - to wheel chair, Mai Rose, vigor- one-four- th tun-nB- T NO. 25 Paralyzed in both arms and Utah Poultry Producers cooperative, a marketing organization just com- pleting its third season of activity, that the egg1 and poultry' industry in Utah some day would be a $10,000,000 industry is this year just realized. It is estimated that 'the industry this year has meant $2,500, 000 to the state of Utah: This .includes, of course, revenue from turkeys and also labor paid at the and poultry handling stations of the producers cooperative and other agencies handling these . products. Prior to the season of 1922 tlje state of Utah was importing eggs and dressed poultry. This year, four seasons later, the state is exporting in the neighborhood of 370 carloads. In the summer of 1922 the Central Utah Poultry exchange was formed in San?., pete Co. by Benjamin Brown, whV is now president of the greater state Mr. Brown organized what proved to be the nucleus of the present producers cooperative to find a market for the eggs of Gunnison Val-el- y farmers. At the time Mr! Brown saw the need for such a unit, the farmers valley were selling their eggs for eight and ten cents per dozen. The need for a marketing association that would remove the surplus and stabilize the market nearer a point where the producer could be assured a fair return on his product became apparent, for it was realized that at eight to ten cents he could not meet expenses. That first year, though on a small scale, the marketing group found it could express Utah eggs to Los Angeles and return to the producer approximately ten cents a dozen more than they could anticipate otherwise. News of this spread rapidly and soon Sev-icounty and other nearby producand apef confident that with ing sections asked to be allied with the program carried out they will add the movement. That first year 17 cars another Jpig coal producer for Salina of eggs were exported, but late in the fall the operators found they had canyon. overdone the exporting and it was necessary to bring back 7 carloads. Thus the first year on an export bas1 is Utah supplied 10 carloads of produce. In the spring of 1923 the Utah State Farm bureau saw an opportunity to make the poultry cooperative stateswide in its scope and in March final expansion was effected. The exMr.- and Mrs. Albert Coray, who port movement in 1923 was 225 car. were married at Nephi November-25th- loads, In 1924 it increased to 356 carwere paid a high tribute last loads, and this year's movement is Saturday evening when the Royal about the same as that of last year. Neighbors, of which Mrs. Coray is a In normal years Utah ships out from . member gave the newlyweds a splen- 10 to 15 carloads of turkeys and from did reception. The reception was held 15 to 20 carloads of live and dressed at the lodge rooms and the hand of poultry. . the artist had been shown in the beauThis year has not brought tangitiful decorations that had been carried ble evidence 6f an increase over last out. The color scheme wras purple and year, but the poultrymen added this white and chrysanthemums were used spring approximately 1,000,000 baby in profusion. The committee in charge c.hicks to their flocks. These additions left nothing undone and the affair will be felt in production records . proved the social feature of last week. next year. The opinion of President 'Benjamin Progressive 500 proved an, interesting diversion and honorsi were won Brown of the cooperative is that the 'by Mrs. A. S. Gates and Claud Burg- egg industry in Utah has every opess. In behalf of the members of the portunity to expand to a point where lodge Mrs. Ella Gates presented Mr. it will mean an annual turnover of and Mrs. Coray with a beautiful pair $10,000,000 to the farmers of the of wooelen blankets. Besides the state. guests of honor, Mr. and Mrs. Coray,-thfollowing guests were present: . WOODMEN ELECT OFFICERS prop-prov- UTAH,. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1925. The Christmas Seal Speaks Is Do It Now! Mail Early!!! avA V VOL 8 - TKVAO S . he |