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Show MONKEY FRIDAY JANUARY 26, 1921 THE SUN, PRICE, UTAH EVERT FRIDAY. PAGE TWO WRDH INTO WHEEL OF TERMIAAL RAILWAY D. C., last Satur- At AA'anliinguui, comday the interstate commerce mission denied the application of the Utah Terminal railway for a certificate of convenience under which it had prujtoscd building a branch to Htamlardville in Spring Canyon. The necessity for this new construct ion was not sufficiently established, according to the findings of the commission. L. R. Martineau, Jr., attorney for the ruilroad, has since stated that the decision will in no way ef- AROUND TEE LOCAL CAMPS; PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE Some of the Carbon county mints have been working but two days a week lately. No market. Miners numbering four hundred at the (lifTnerk collieries near Glasgow have struck as a protest against the governments Irish policy. Government ownership and operation of coal mines was indorsed by the Nebraska house of representatives last Tuesday by a vote of forty-thre- e Nebraska sento ators and congressmen are asked by tlie resolution to aid the securing of thirty-seve- n. such legislation. Continuous buiiervisiun of the engines, articulurly switch engines, of the various railroads having stations In Salt Lake City with a view to aiding in smoke abatement, waa planned a few days ago at a meeting of the smoke executive committee of the council with railroad representatives. An American syndicate is negotiating for an opening for investments in Upper Silesian coal mines, and, to the German owners, according have ottered 75.000,000 marks for one mine at present in operation and for concessions looking to the developIn answer to ment of two others. the proposals of the syndicate the Germans have agreed to accept on condition that the mines revert to the principality of Ilrss after ten years. The negotiations still are pending. Hie syndicates oiler was made through a colonel attached to the American mission in Vienna- - fect the continuance of building o orations now under way on the pruioscd line. The state utilities commission, after a hearing hold last fall, granted the road a certificate of necessity to build the railroad to handle interstate traffic. The line in question runs from Standardville, to coiineet with a mint on the Utah railway, and will lie 167 miles in length. At the hearings before the state commission the granting of a certiorate was opposed by the Denver end Itio Grande, which baa a branch iwrallel to that of the new line. It waa argued by the Utah Terminal interests that the Denver and Rio Grande did nut provide adequate service for the mines tributary IMPRINTS HAVE HIGH VALUE to Stundurdville and fur that reason the construction waa necessary. Those That Can Ba Traced to the The Utah Terminal railway is Ephrata Prase Are Much Prised Canby tlie Standard, Spring by Collectors yon and Pecrlesa Coal couqNinios. One of the first printing presses ever nsed tn Pennsylvania was erected at C ALDERS COAL MEASURE M08T VIGOROUSLY FOUGHT Ephrata by the followers of Conrad IlcisKel. In 1724, when Belssel left nut-troll- WASHINGTON, 1. CL, Jan. 22.-Dest- ruetion of the exjiort coal trade of the United States, absolute and would result from enactcomplete, ment of the Calder coal regulation bill, Ralph Crews, counsel for the Consolidate Coal couquiny, one of the larger producers of bituminous, asserted today st hesrings ou the measure before the senate manufacturers committee. The American producers, Crews said, could not guarantee deliveries in competition with British mines if, as the bill pruXMes, authority were given the president and the federal trade commission to deolare an emergency in the imlustriu titties of peace and divert jwmjI shipments tn meet it. lLrr..X a eont raet for Mft'u hundred and fifty thousand tons of euul to lie delivered abroad which hia eomjwny, he said, lmd held tip pending a decision on the hill. George II. Cushing, managing director of the American Wholesale Coal asmeiation, asked the committee for three weeks delay in consideration of the bill, in order that its pnioula might lie digested by I he trade he represented. That would mean no chance, of enactment at this session," Senator Kenyon, republican of Iowa, remarked. Chairman La FoUctle announced that it was probably the purixme of the committee to allow some add'iiumit days for the apiearanee of interested but that the committee would proceed to a decision immediately thereafter. Crews elslNirated hia statements as to esjairt trade by declaring that uhiii the export trade in coni depend the general extension of American trade, and without its continuance our merchant marine will go Great Hritaiu, he said, as ti c lint. principal competitor in intermit l coal sales, was headed toward the release of every imsuililc rest rie ion while the (alder UHm etud exiNirt, bill, in its present form, would require American sellers to insert certain clauses in delivery contracts allowing them to stop supplies in ease a domestic emergency, arose which caused use of the government powers the measure would confer. juir-iie- s, ion-a- the German Baptist church over his Inability to continue to keep the first Instead of the seventh day of the week aa a Sabbath, this section of the country where he sought a solitary retreat waa wild and wooded. He was Joined by two men who lielleved In hia religious views, and later Anua and Marie Eleher Joined them and founded tlie Ephrata Sisterhood. No vows of celibacy were taken, and the colony grew In ruuiliers and wealth 'A? one time It nomhered 300. kluny choice farina were cultivate? and mills rose on tlie linqkt (ft the CocbIIco river that were Worth thousands of dollars tlie Joint property of the colony. While these mills have vanished, Imprints turned out by the Ephrata presses are among tlie most valuable of all publications These are mostly of a religious nature, many being the peculiar mystic writing of Helssel. -- HAPPINESS AS AN OBSESSION Frenchman Deprecates Its Pursuit as Being the Bole Aim of American Girls. I should advise American mothers to the pursuit of happiness out of tlielr daughters constitution if they cannot keep it out of their country Veep A girl who Is given to understand every minute that she has a right to good time Is sure to declare liefore long that she wonders when the good time Is coming, even Is she has It at every hour. Ik not make fastidious artists In happiness. Keep on the safe Puritan side; It does not alwnys mean thin lips mid sieetacled eyes shooting reproneh nmimd at random. I am Hfruhl the him of hnpplners Is made on obsession by a grenf deni of apparently moral literature. There la certainly a relation between the mushy ndvlee dully doled out to g girl questioners In iloxens of Aunt Margaret a" or "Cheery Mabels" In the provincial ncwspnptrs, and the stuff we read last March In the pitiful diary of lluth SomclxHly who killed herself In Chicago because, she said, hupplness was only a wont. Ernest IMninet, In Harpers Magazine. Iiulr-splittln- STEVENSGN HAPPY MOOD IN KAN HAD TO SLEEP IN X1 A t f rt flug-eolc- ; f V i START AN ACCOUNT T It was six months ago that Tan-la- e set me straight and added fifteen pounds to my weight, and ever since then I have been enjoying aa fine health as I ever did in my life, was the statement made recently by O. AY. Axelson of 244 Cook ajvenue, Portland, Ore. Seven years ago I had an awful attack of rheumatism, he continued, and it kept pulling me down until during tLe past yeur I wasn't able to work more than half the time. My whole left side became affected and it pained me so I could hardly touch it. My leg was drawn aud rmoked and if I tried to straigh-e- n it out I simply suffered agonies. 1 was in pain all the time, eonld never sleep to do any good and was often unable to lie down and wonld often have to sit in a chair all night My apjietite went down to long. nearly nothing and I also fell off in weight. 1 had no idea Taulae, could do me so much good after all the many treatments aud medicines I had tried had failed, hut it proved to be a winner. In a short time the pains commenced to let up and I could straighten out my leg without its hurting me. And in a little more than a month I could not feel a trace of the rheumatism and had actually gained fifteen pounds in weight. This was six months ago and I have not Iteen troubled in any way whatever since. I am in the very pink of condition, eating fine, sleeping fine and working hard every day. Tanlac has meant health to me and I give it my heartiest endorsement. Ta nlae is sold in Price by the Price Drug eomiMtuy, at Standardville by Standard Drug company, at Wattis by the AYattis Coal company and by the leading druggists in every town. Advt. J? AYITH THE ? ? V rff V PRICE, UTAH ' Let Us Help You to Real Banking Service ? fT ? V t? ? tJ t W. A. LOWRY President D. BERGERA Vice President R. M. MAGRAW, Vice President NOTICE FOK PUBLICATION of the Interior, United State Land Office at Salt Lake City, Utah, Jan. 17, 1S2I. Notice la hereby given that Tony Oiwrto of Helper, Utah, !dw-- on- - December 1, 1916, made Homeetead .Entry No. 01S451 ,r 6E1-- 4, BE 4 ; for NE 4 Sec. 8W1-4- , N BW Sec. 10, Twp. 14 South, Range 9 East, Salt Lake absolute necessity. Any merldlHgL, hae Candy is filed notice of intenhour of any day of uy week of any tion to make three-yea- r proof to claim to the land atiove month it is the most delicious conbefore the clerk of the dla-trlfection that can bo had. Ours is alcourt at Price, Utah, on the ways fresh snd pure much of it 2Cth da of February, 1921. Claimhome made. Fruits, nuts, cigars, cig- ant namee aa wltneeeea lleber J. Stowell, Joseph Edwarda and Joseph arettes snd all fountain drinks. Olierto of Helper, Utah, and B. F. McJntlre, of Price. Utah. GOULD B. BLAKELEY, Register. First pub., Jan. 21; laat Feb. 18, 1921. DE-partm- Most Delicious of. Then1 All . 1-- 1- -1 NOW PREFER I'JttuL GIFTS 4, u eh of Women Bald Younger Generation to Look for Utility When Presents Are In Question. ct One must mingle with tho younger generation to comprehend the changing standards of domestic life. Those things once the heart's desire of worn en have not lost their charm, we are told. While the proverblul route to a man's heart has nottianged Its road bed, and good cooking Is atilt the trade-mar- k of a desirable wife, yet anniversary expressions of a husbands love are said to bo changing In form. The new note Is utility. This Is exemplified by story that cornea to us from one whoTecently visited a young couple while they discussed their "I think I anniversary. shall get Ruth a necklace," the young hustuind said. Roth demurred. What then did she wish, was his query, with the suggestion of a diamond or a piece of mahogany furniture, or some other embellishment for the home. If you really Insist on a present," she sabl, "I have always wanted an electric washer and a vacuum clean- Busy Bee Candy Co. North Side Main Street, Just West of Eko PRICE, UTAH That good printing. The Suil E. BUTTERWORTH Cashier FOll PUBLICATION of the Interior, United Staten Land Office at Salt Lake City,. Utah, Jan. 16, 1921. Notice is hereby given that Suaan J. .Van Wagoner of Hunnyelde, Utah, who on January 16, 1916, made Desert Land Entry No. 014200 for X 2 6W1-- 4, Sec. 14; NE 4 SE Sec. 16. Twp. 16 South, Range 13 East, Salt Lake meridian, han filed notice of intention to make final proof to extahlisn claim to the land above described before the clerk of the district court at Price, Utah, on the 4th day of March, 1921. Claimant namee as witnesses J. W. Gentry of Price Utah, and A. D. Van Wagoner, Wlllllam Robertson-an- d Marie Robertson, all of Sunnystde, Utah. GOULD B. BLAKELEY, Register. First pub., Jan. 21, laat Feb. 18, 1921. 1-- 4, The attainment of success is easy. Doctors continue to tell ns mortals .It only requires knowledge, energy, that kissing is dangerous, but many perseverance, good judgment and an a man finds it productive of exceiron determination to surmount 'all llent results after he has been marobstacles. Go after it. ried a few years. t waned, brought home heuvlly mirrored dressing table nnd a washtuh, "Now, Maudy, he said, "you can In front of this and watch yo'self starve to dentil, or you can use this tub snd earn yo' livin'." Omaha Bee. n IDEAL SERVANTS IN MEXICO One May Get a Descendant of the Incas and a FriemMor Life, for $15 a Month. Mexico Is Utopia for American housewives, for there Is no servant problem there, according to Mrs. S. CL Duulop, wife of the chief, engineer of Clu Transcontinental do Ietralco, the Mexican branch of the Standard Oil couqtany. "Ten years ago I eonld hire any servant for $2 a month," she said, "and now I hare to pay only from $10 to $15. Often In my kitchen I have a descendant of the Incas making my bread, and when a Mexican Indlnn who mnst not be confused with a peon really attaches himself nr herself to yen, you have not only a servant, hut a friend for life, one who really looks after your Interests. (if course, In Mexico, as well as anywhere else, the servants stand on their rights.' The cook only cooks and docs not wash dishes; the chambermaid will have nothing to do with the kitchen ; hut after ad, the wages of the five or six servants do not equal those of one servant In New York. "I henr my New York frlenda groaning because the food of the servants costs more than their own table. Now, If you give your Mexican Indian her tortlllns (cakes) and her beans with plenty of chill, she Is perfectly satisfied and scorns a more elaborate diet." iX NOTICE er." This suggests the story of the negro bridegroom who, when the honeymoon Once Again Scored Writer Had Periods of Enjoyment During His WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 22. Sojourn in His Beloved Hawaii. The Calder bill for federal regulation of the coal industry wns today Robert Loulrf Stevenson in those far-of- f attacked by roalmen, but indorsed iu happy dnys in Hawaii had many a pert by one congressman and a government official during senate hear- queer adventure, and some of the People up in iny home eity things he did himself were not erartly ing. of Buffalo have to get a doctors pre- customary, an exchange says. One of scription liefore they eon buy anthra- them was his huhlt of lying In bed and t. cite coal, Congressman J. M. Meade, playing quaint little tunes on his a sort of primitive clarinet, while democrat, asserted, pleading for rega little gray moase sat upon Its hind ulation of the industry. with Its head cooked to one side legs Maine cominformed the Curtis of mittee he was a coalman now, hot and apparently enjoying every note. Stevensons best friend on the wonI don't know whst I'll be under this bill. George II. Cmdiing, manag- derful Islands was King David Kala. ing director of the American Whole- knun. He and his royal chum spent sale Coal association, expressed the ninny hours playing cnnls with other opinion that the hill would destroy white men nt the Stevenson cottage, or present systems of merchandising in nt the king's Iwinl house, games In which the king frequently went broke nnd coal. bad to give his I. O. IV for various amount After the ptme the contestSpsnding Big Money The railroads coal lull for the first ants, with (lower wreaths alumt their nine months of IP2 was $,.7,O20.(i24 necks and dressed In the thinnest of more than during the corresjunding ducks, would loll buck In great cane chairs and to the gentle voice period the previous year. During the of Stevensonlisten ns he told them some rofirst nine months of 1920 the roads mance nr uncovered for a native sjient $320,923.(542 for coal, as against legend be bad ran acrossthem Tables Turned. In bis $229.897, (US. The cost of coal was Sir. Rnnhnroe WeD I surely can in New the greatest England district, envy the tramps these days. the cost lieing $7.72 jier net ton as Sirs. Knohome And only a few If you want to keep a friend never a ton in 1919. Cen$5.07 The against weeks ago you chased several from him to lend you a dollar. It tral Western district had the lowest embarrasses him to refuse you so the front yard. coal cost railroads, paring only $3.33 Sir. Knohome I know, but Just small an amount. 1919 a ton. In they paid $2.97 a ton. think, they can live In box cars and The total consumption by the mads The wise huslmiid never detect-we can't even get a home to live in. in the nine months was Sl.752.82l his wife go;ng through his tons as against 71,619,009 tons in He feigns Flcep until she jmckcls. There arp less than fifty Japanese gets hack 1919. into lied. women in New Aork City." Too-Sho- SURPLUS, $10jQ0QjQ0 CAPITAL, $100JD00.00 - When you buy hats here you expect quality and -- get it. Unusual banded Sailors in Rough Straw and Milan. Novelty Sport Hats and the lovely little close that are so becoming and popular. . fitting Turbans are for wear right now. Veils are very stylish I They and popular. We carry a full line. Royal Society Crochet Cotton now fifteen cents the spooL Bessie Kennedy, Millinery MAIN STREET, PRICE, UTAH Next to Eko Theater |