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Show THE SUN, PRICE, PAGE TWO who ordinarily have to supplement GREAT ECONOMIC POINT their winter supply at BROUGHT about this season have enough coal to curry them through. The busines slump has caused an enurinus decrease in the and industrial use of coal, and this situation has reacted on the railroads in a lessened demand for OUT BY cotn-iiierri- al EXPERT THIS COUNTRY NOW IS x ? CAPITAL v. CHIEE EXPORTER OF FRIDAY, APRIL FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY 22, 1921 SURPLUS, $10jW0.00 , $100jD00.00 A COAL There consuming train has undoubtedly been a large decrease in the production of coal, hut there also liven a large decrease in its bus PULVERIZED COAL INTERESTS RECENT INCREASES PUTS US so that it is evident that consumption, THE COUNTRY. FAR AHEAD OF BRITAIN. the shortage that would appear from alone the production contemplating cannot a p tear to lie so great wheu the Save to the Lowgrade decrease in consumption is taken into Value Passing Oat of United State Proposition Is Fuels of the North American Continen- consideration. Por the Present Fiscal Year Is t-North Dakota and Other Ligrive Hundred Millions H. FOSTER BAIN, ACTING nites Receiving Mach Attention Ninety-TwBat of Dollar Against DIRECTOR, FAVORS THEM Fields of Iron Comity Large. Time Short Ago. Very If. Foster Bain, tie acting director of the United States bureau of mines, Need fur ri insert'll tiun of foul re- in giving his reasons for favoring the The growing iuqiortaure of the Unitsources and the development of sub- use of crinissille explosives in coal ed Stales us the world's principal stitute fuels make the increasing use mining calls attention to the notable coal producer and distributor ia made of the pulverized product one of great reduction in the rate of futalitiesdue esjiecially apareiitf say a statement economic importance, according to a to the use of these ia rollieries. In Xationul the by City Bank of Xew surrey by the Xationul Bank of Com- 1903 there were a hundred and thirty-eig- York City by the momentary suaien-aio- n such fatalitiea in the United merce of New York City, which says of coal activities in Brest Brita death rate of 0.339 yier thouStutes, use show the that that exieriineiits by which leaves us the worlds prin-ciain, of this fuel a saving of 20 jier cent in sand men employed. Since that year coal exporter. Prior to the war heating efficiency and from 20 to 3l) there has been a steady decrease in both Great Britain and Germany far 1919 the in and there were but rote, per cent in consumpt ion ia jxissible. coal n deaths from this cause, exceeded the United States as The fundamental economie advantage the fact that we exNirten despite 3.41 of cent the nr number total in liurning pulverized coal lies in the only have over half the world's eoal complete stage to which coinbustiun of fatalitiea. While permissible exwhile in 192U-2- 1 the United States so are that they has taken designed is csrricd in the furnace, says Ik plosives first rsnk aa roal exporter, bank a exert. The contact surface may lie relatively aafe for use in gas- and with the temporary su8emiion coal and inmines, nays Bain, sy dusty between coal and air is greatly bein Great of production creased by splitting the coal into nu- their strength charset eristic make comes the worlds chief Britain, reliance for merous jiarticlea of small size, while them suitable fur other kinds of min- eoal for export or for bunker puranother advantage in the pulverisa- ing, for railway and ronstruetiou work The radical change in the eoal poses. and a wide of other tion of eolid fuel ia the fact that it blasting variety situation, even liefore. the floats in air, spreads and is rarried nitrations. From the standpoint of exporting events in Great Britain, is ilremit this of off by even small air currents. This general safety explosive tyie adds the bank's statement, makes the intimate mixture of coal has lieen found to lie virtually insen- lustrated, the that United States exfaet by sitive to detonation the and air very easy. It simplifies the produced by in the eight months ending with ports const ruction of burners and guaran- liercussion, friction or flame. were in round terms 1921, February, In test to order tees economical combust ion. Ami, the permissible explo- twice as much as those of Great Britfiner the coal jtowder the more nearly sives the bureau haa constructed and now our only important rival in ideal conditions for complete combus- maintains a completely equijqied test- ain, coal for international markets, while where the ing plant at Bruceton, tion are approached. in the jieriod immediately preceding cheminot only tested proper apimrutus and meth- explosives are the war England was supplying to ods are in use, however, other more cally and physically in the lalxiratory, foreign markets three times as murh tangible economies are effected by the but also elaborately in an exjieriment-a- l eoal as was the United States. British mine or artificial gallery. They are use of powdered fuel. The labor coat of eoal in the eight months of firing is materially lowered and fired into a number of explosive mix- exjiorts with February, 1921, were losses during short jwriods when steam tures, gas and air, air and fine coal ending 14,000,000 tons, and those of the only ia such aa present in dangerous United States were pressure is not required are reduced dust, aproxiinately to the minimum. No air ia allowed to mines, and the results are observed. while in the calendar year The strength of the ex)iiisive is also furnace the when firing through jrnaa 1913 British coal exjmrta aggregated ojierat ions stop, so' that the radiant determined and the results published 73,000,000 tuna against 22,000,000 exfrom in time time to order to keep heat of the furnace ia absorbed by the from the United States. boiler, avoiding the kisses which oc- the user informed. The gases evoked ported in our coal exxirta-tiu- n The increase on exdetonation the of a permissible cur with grates or stokers through the last year has been the during constant churning up of fuel or the in- plosive are very carefully determined The exjxirted in great. very quantity and the a set limit bureau on the by complete combustion of the gases the eight months ending with Febof isiisonoua the that fires. time from banked The quantity gases generated 1921, aggregates in round necessary to get up steam is reduced explosive may evolve on detonation. ruary, terms, 30,000,000 tons against slightllefore the establishment test of the subwhen ia half coal by pulverized less than 17,000,000 in the same stituted for the same fuel in lump requirements by the United States ly months of last year, while the value is form. Kecent exjieriments also show government there were used in the aa great. The quanan economy in fuel consumption which coal mines of the country in the year nearly three times in the eight months 1902, 11,300 pounds of explosives, tity exjxirted is said to be as high as 30 r cent. ending with Felirnary, 1921, aggrewhich were then called ahortflame, Growing Recognition. while in 1910, after the installation of gated 30,000,000 tons, valued at Pulverized coal baa obtained grow- the Pittsburg testing station of the $290,000,000, and in the correspondmonths of the preceding year ing recognition aa the moat satisfac- geological survey, the nucleus out of ing less than 17,000,000 tons, slightly which bureau of mines, grew the tory fuel for reverberatory furnaces valued at only $93,000,000, the quanused. were loss reason nuisances of the The and greatjxmnds by having thus nearly arising from flue dust in blast fur- est quantity of jierraiiisilile explosives tity exported doubled, and the value more than nace smelting, as well as the better used in roal mines was in fuel ration and tonnage obtained with pounds. There was a falling trebled. The average export price the new tyjie of fuel. Although the off in 1919, due to the decreased pro- of the bituminous coal exported in the months of 1920 was ten dolpractice date hark only to the last duction of coal, 32.840,196 pouuda be- closing lars per ton, against an average of fifteen years, it is now estimated that ing used. but five dollars in the corresponding a saving of 100, 000 tons of coal ier months of the preceding year, while 1,000,000 tons of charge smelted is DEPOSIT OF CANNEL COAL RUNS INTO THE MILLIONS the 1913 exxirt price averaged only made annually in the United States. $2.52. The average valuation of the lulverized coal in the mass ia not exThe eoal exjHirtcd from Great Britain in States United surgeological nor plosive highly combustible. Fort time fuel oil seemed destined to re- vey haa estimated the available coal the eight months ending with Februfrom the field bordering on Cedar City ary, 1921, waa nineteen dollars xr place coal in many industrial uses in Iron county at two billion tons. ton against $3.33 in the curres smiland it has done so to a considerable extent. But the great increase in the This is a ranuel coal of coking qual- ing months of 1913. This increase in output of fuel in recent years lias ity, anil is said by the government ex- American coal exports in the eight been through the discovery of new perts to contain gallons of months ending with Felirnary, 1921, oil occurs in the trade with practically supply. Many of the early discovered fieldto the tun. The Now Harmony coal all rts of the world. To the half is of like extent, hut tlie roal is fields have liegun to exhibit a divided burning without any dozen countries of Eurojx, for which decrease in production, due to the exhaustion of the available supply, and smoke and having the commercial details are available, the quantity of the increased cost of fuel oil in the value of coal. This latter field has bituminous eoal eximrted in the seven districts supplied from these fields had very little development. The first months ending with January, 1921, has in some rases made it necessary named coal measure, with outcro)-ping- s wa, in round terms, 6,5M)toixi tuna, almost within the limits of Ce- against a little over 3,000,000 in the for industrial consumers to turn again dar City and known to the govern- same months of last year, and the to coal. ment geologist as the Kolob coal, is value $82,000,000, against $20,000,000 Conserves the Supply. the continuation of the great coal in the corresponding months of last The economie importance, there- measures of Carhoq and Grand coun- year. To Canada the quantity of bitumfore, of conserving the present work- ties. This coal has been mined in a small inous exjxirted is nearly double that able supplies of highgrade coal and of making available the vast and al- way for more than thirty-fiv- e years, of the corresponding months of the most untouched reserves of lowgrade but aa yet none of the tunnels have preceding year, the total for the fnel which are known to exist near the gone far enough into the mountains seven months ending with January surface in many parts of the globe to get back of the water jiercolations (detailed February figures are not makes the progress in the use of pul- which deiKMtit lime and silt in the yet available) having been 11,271,000 verized or jiowdered coal daring the cosl to its detriment. However, the tons against 6.540.000 tons in the last decade of special significance. rosl now mined has an ash content of same months of last year, and the value $74,151,000 against $24,526,000 During the calendar year 1019 it is only alKMit 7 per cent. Only locnl ion is provided for at present, in the cnrresKinding months of the estimated that between ten and twelve million tons of roal were pulverized but with railroad faeilities this coni preceding year. Cuba took, in the for industrial consumption. Of this could he mined and shipxd to I.os seven months ending with January, amount six million were consumed in Angeles, Cula., and to South Ameri- over $S.(WM).000 worth against 1.000,-00- 0 worth in the same month of the the mnking of Portland cement ; two can jxrts and compete successfully million tons were used in the iron and with any other available supply. Per- preceding year; Argentina $16,161,. steel industry: ropjier refining con- haps its greatest mtenti;il value, too, 000 worth against tfll.SNi.Oiki nrfh in the same month of hist year: t! e sumed 1,500.000 tons, while at least lies in its proximity to vrt The vein hns a thickness varying quantity tor the 1921 ieriod being two hundred ami fifty thousand tons from six to thirteen feet, mid is so 1.192.000 tmi against 4I5,ooo in the were used in powerplanfs. month of !'20. and The remaining consumption of pul- placed that mining it is a tunnel pro verized fuel was divided among a. oailinn with no expulsive In,;! requir- only 95.000 in the same month i f ed. Outcroppings of ti e samp vein oc- 1919. To Brazil the tntal for the 1921 large variety of industrial uos." cur at Glendale, iirderville and Bald period is in value S,4Ioimi jigiiin-Knull in Kane NATIONAL SITUATION AS Another out- $1,359,000 in the same nichlli of the l.5:!ii.uiH is that preceding year: to Chile APPLIED TO COAL TRADE cropping if this e.'inic mca-uof the fann-uSmoky Mountains in aga in- only li2,000 ami to Uruguay Ueviewinr the national situation the partly section of $2.77S.0"O agant 55n.i'!Hi in the i from it renter of observation the In-- . Kane county near the C'dfradn river. months of the preceding year. diana)lis (I ml. News expresses the Smoky Mountain is on tire and view that the null business is imduuht- been burning ever sim-I.ct we grow alarmed at the the earliest dull. sib'lilv of cxhiill-lit.- g idle miners are oar coal sunplv white when Many the man first earne cdly very days who arc willing to work and many; into Southern Utah, mi tie Indians by this heavy cjnir!:il ion, it is to add that t! e quantity of roal projsT freight cars stand still that should lie' snv. out of the mine of the United Sfn'es Miles of eoa! liau burned away n rid traveling full of coal. Whatever may lie below the surface, there are three an still burning, nrrunling to the in the luit hundred years, i. aci'ord-in- g to expert author-- :i,- -, pretty evident reasons for this state story of cattlcineii who have been In shout tty 2 per cent of our of affairs the mihl winter, the slum) view it. iiml the in business and the price of coal. The same authorities our total mild winter has enabled domestic users The time is njeirtune both for gar- coal supply at more than half that of who buy from time to timp to sprend dening and fishing. The wise man the entire globe. The value of coal these times further apart, and those will do both. passing out of the country in the fis- coal START AN ACCOUNT ?V o hf al fifty-seve- suj-pl- Wl-er- 1., e H-- 1918-37,-2- 2,915 -- sixty-eig- ht con-sum- p! -- re j -t s ' ea-te- rn I h-- -' PRICE, UTAH Let Us Help You to Real Banking Service t ff f tt ? ???re- i. W. A. LOWRY President $500,-090,00- i e There is health where These three words interpret the slogan. there is cleanliness there is happiness in the brightened home there is true economy where the home is kept dean." For freshness and Luting newness there is nothing like paint. It heals the cars where woodwork has met ill lock it changes, as if by magic, the sombre to the gey. ar Austria-Hunga- Q PAINT UP, CLEAN UP AND KEEP IT UP 0, Upper Silesia, scene of the plebiscite between Poland and Germany and the must inqmrtant vote that haa followed the world war, ia the subject of a bulletin issued from the Washington, D. C.f headquarters of the National Geographical society. The boundary line of Germany in the East sketched out the open mouth of a gigantic hipxiputamus, its teeth seemingly planted in the westward bulge of Russian Poland. The lower jaw was Silesia, and the lowest part of it, jiaradoxically, Upier Silesia. But the paradox is more apparent than real, for Uier Silesia obtains its name not because of its relative latitude, but because of its mountainous character. In the auutheasternmost part of the old German empire, tucked in between and Russia, was the part of Upper Silesia which gives the country its great value and makes it a territory worthy of the strenuous efforts that have been put forth to possess it coal fields covering over a thousand square miles and constituting the most extensive deposit of high grade coal in Europe. The tptal available supply is estimated at sixty-tw- o billion tons, which ia slightly greater than that in the mure familiar Ruhr Valiev field of Western Germany. The bare tonnages do not tell the whole story, for while the Ruhr coal is partly of inferior quality that in Upxr Silesia is practically all of highgrade. Germany, not unnaturally therefore, hxiked on the retention of Ui-jiSilesia aa a necessity if she was to win her way bark to world imxirt-anc- e industrially. Its value had been amply demonstrated, for the tossea-sio- n of this district made it possible for Germany to carry on the war as long as she did, even though most of the world was arrayed against her. Similarly Poland felt that an independent economie existence and a strength capable of withstanding military aggression from both East and West could not be achieved by her without Upper Silesias eoal. Important deposits of zinc and lead ores increase the value of the region. The presence of great quantities of coal has brought a large number of Cashier VMMhftWWWMWyWWVWWWWWWWMWWtf UPPER SILESIA RICH IN VAST DEPOSITS OF COAL pre-w- Vice President Vic President cal year 1921 will (if we include the bunker roal supplied to vessels in the foreign trade), approximate against $92,200,000 in 14113. E. BUTTERWORTH D. BERGERA R. M. MAGRAW, There is economy in paint in first cost end in the Bering protection it givee where it is epplied. In jhis high eltitnde end dry climate the life end durability of wood msy bo indefinitely prolonged by seeling the pores with good point. Our points ere especially compounded to meet the requirements of this climate pure oils, pure pigments end pure lead give it its covering end lasting qualities. Ask ns about the paint for yonr needs. Onr advice ia expert end courteously given. ry er (Continued on Tan Four) Youll Get Them Here riirn-spniidin- ; ; y, ? From the cheapest thats good to the best to be had is what you'll find here in Candies, Luscious Fresh Fruits. Ice Cream. Nats and the like. Onr candies are made right here at home by an artist at the game recently from Salt Lake City and emBest cigars ployed in our factory. and tobaccos and the daily newspaper. J. C. WEETER LUMBER CO. West Main Street, the North Side, Feeing Booth. PRICE UTAH WWWftWWWfiWftMMWWMWflMWMMMWWWWNA NOTICE IX TIIE MATTER OF THE Proposed Organization of the Price River Irrigation Iilntrli-- t To Whom It May Concern: Notice is hereby given that on the 7th day of February, 1821, there wua filed with the board of county commiftKioner of Carbon county, state of Utah, a petition signed by fifty landowner, pursuant to the provlRlon of Chapter 68, Session Law of Utah, 1919, relating to the organization of Irrigation district, proposing and petitioning for the organization of an Irrigation district In Carbon and Emery counties. state of Utah, to include the land shown on the map or plat attached to said petition, and now on file with said board of county commlalonera of Carbon county, Utah, and which said land are particularly described a follow, towlt: In Carbon county: WH BWH Sec. 12. WH and SEH Sec. IS, EH, NH of NW H and BEH of BWH 8ec. 24, EH and the NEH of NWiH of Bee. 2B. EH and BEH of 8WH Bee. 3S. Twp. 13 South, Range 9 East. Balt Lake bane and meridian; SWH of BWH Bee. 18. WH of WH Sec. 19. SWV of BWH Sec. 29. SH. SH of XWH. and NWH of NWH Sec. 30, Bee. 31. and WH of NWH Bee. 33. Twp. 13 South, Range 10 East, Balt Lake base and meridian: KH and XKH of NWH Sec. 1, EH Bee. 12. Twp. 14 South, Range 9 Kant. Balt base and meridian; SH and NWH Sec. S. Bee. 7, WH of SWH. SEH "f SWH, and SWH of BEH Bee. K. BWH Bee. 15. SH, NEH and EH of NWH Pec. lit. SH. NWH. WH of NEH and SEH of NEH Pec. 17 Sec. IS. NWH of NEH Sec. 19. Sec 20. 21. 22. SWH and W, of NWH Sec. 21, KH. SH of NWH and NWH of NW1, Sit. 25, Ben. 2. 27 EH NWH. EH of SWH and NWH of SWH Sec. 29. NEH. nr,. sfA of . Sl-:Sec. 52. 23, 54, 85 and T a p. 14 Small, R::nce 10 Eu-- t. Sal; I,:ikn base end tucrH.an : WH of WH S' 27. See. 2. 2:i, SH S- -, ?. . Sec. 31. 32. 33. WH 84. Tup. 14 South. Range 11 East, Salt Lake bus, S.-e- 10 Eat, Balt Lake bane and meridian; Sec. 6, 7. SWH Sec. It, BH Pet- 18, XH Bee. 19, NH Bee. 20. Mfc Bee. 21, and NH Sec. 23. all in Twp. 16 South, Range 11 Eat, Balt Lake bane and meridian. That pursuant to the request of nald loard of county comminnioner made upon the of ald petition, the state engineer of the state of Utah ha had made t water survey of all land within ald proposed district, and an allotment of the maximum amount of wter which could be beneficially used on uch lands, and ha filed with th aid hoard of county commissioner of Carbon county, Utah, hi return of urh survey and report of allotment And notice la hereby further give that aald board of county commissioners of Carbon county, Utah, ha set Tuesday, the 17th day of Mf, 1921, commencing at 10 o'clock .m. of said day, aa the date for the hearw ing of applications for exclusion in lands from, and Inclusion of land albald district, and revision of water lotments. Bald hearing will be neia at the uiiual meeting place of o CJ board of county commissioner county courthouse In Price. Carbon county, Utah. Wherefore, all person Interested therein will take notice Cj cordingly, and may appear st time and place and take such action a they may lie advised In accordance with the foregoing notice. nCAKO OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS Or CARBON COUNTY, UTAH. R i County Clerk of Carbon 0unO-anClerk of Said Hoard of Couno Cnmmlsslnnera. rated this Sth wi (Seal) of April. A. !., 1921. First pub., April 22; last M.ty llFi ' Punch-Proof- - T"1? Auto Wwk North Meclilinlo. Conqxient Ninth Sirrrt, Former "V Mignr C. .crc-r- t your buxiiH-s- . anil Supplies. First-Chin- mi-- 21. at-.i- sr.n l 6. r seh s,--- . 2fl. 27, 31. 35 Rutin- - 1" E.I-U- . Meridbin: W 1 S-- j- -' 8t, Uiidsfl, Twp. Vs s.-c- . e. s.vi 3. Tires a Ry , Main Street. Just West of Postoffice PRICE, UTAH TP. I use 15 Smith. Rar.go ll Sut bHse mid meridian. In Km,.rv couniv: Sec. 1. 2. 3. N.;t Any man can acquire the habit of NH saving if he has anything to save. Li- - W1- - N!a 10 S.,ut!i, R:ib PALMEIRI & CO. North Ninth Street. rmci:. it a if. |