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Show COT PAPER -- orT." ncK RIVER. Wyo.. April 30. .1 electric power cut off by the Sons Advertising Rates -- the light plant. Royal A. cot out today's edition of the Review by Jacking up an JKver and SmoWle rigging up a belt over wheel to the cylinder prvaa. was run off at the rate of ? editionhundred an hour. of The Sun's display advertising rates rs forty (40) cents an limb per or 1. (0 per inch by the month-f- our (!) liwuee to local advertisers. Transient fifty tie) cants an inch per Issua. Position IS per cent additional. Is-s- us fellow who speaks of the bet-- Jiys he has seen generally forget Volnnia 6, Number 49. AN fcgntion the nights. II pnb.ie as well as the industry and the got eminent. lie nuaed that Secretary Hoover and Fall, the chairmen or senate aul house committees concerned and representative of the operator and miners coin. and together, I hainnau Frclinivuvten agreed to tike the irth tlic other jmm.it .v luids. OUTPUT OF SOFT COAL As Seen Locally. HOWEVER, LOWEST FOR I UL V.iue National bank at Salt SEVEN YEARS. lake 1 ity in it May letter ssv: coal production for the coal year totaled the hundred and twenty-tw- o In the Be shire million tons compared with four jjttb Change Noted hundred aud n the Country Over Coke Situation million tons for the coal previous In year. Protent Act Indictments Brought duction for the calendar year to April fideral Court In Indiana Are 9th was only nineteen million tons Considerable Attention. compared with a hundred aud forty-nin-e UJIX, ,,Ui-timino- eighty-seve- At-icti- ng The Bun. WASHINGTON, D. C., May 2. fiodnetion of soft coal during the tttk ended April 23d continued the nearer? begun during the preceding The total output, including all jgita and coal eoked, is estimated it QgtUO ondenca tfl9J)00 net tons. When compared the preceding week this was an gretse of two hundred ninety-fou- r ith tkmnd tons. In spite of the the production is still at the touched since the depres-eo- a rate brat of 1914, except of course, for the period of the great strike of 1914. Tbs number of ears loaded daily for l; the week are Monday, April 18th, in-ra- w 23,-E- million tons for the same jieriod a year ago. Nearly all large bituminous coal consumers are heavily stocked snd it can be said there is no market. The price of bituminous coal at many jioiuts is what the consumer will pay aud very little coal is moving out from the mines. Thousands of retailers are still asking practically war prices for soft coal, while the price at the mines is frequently below the cost of production. Lower retail rates will lie quoted later in the season, but by early fall the demand will probably again exceed the supply as fully one hundred thousand miners are now idle. Beehive eoko production for the calendar year to April 9th totaled three million tons compared with six million tons for the same period of Tuesday, 19th, 21,070; Wednes-fc-y, but year. 20th, 24,269; Thursday, 21st, Friday, 22d, 21,323, and Satur-fc23d, 14,601. Loadings on Mon-A- y AROUND THE LOCAL CAMPS; and Tuesday of last week, April PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE Eth to 30th, were 46,781 cars, an inraw of 2360 ears over the first two Kenilworth is working but one and two days a week mostly one. Ays of the preceding week. This a further recovery. ProductBlue Seal Coal conqmny is about ion for the first ninety-si- x working ready to resume operations at its ScoAn of the present year totaled field holdings. tons. J. L. former editor of the Production of beehive coke during Richfield Ewing, Keajier, is selling stock for Ac week ended April 23d was mark-i- d the Mutual Coal company in Southern by very little change, the total outUtah. thousand net put being seventy-thre- e Dawson, N. M.; the coal mining tom u against seventy-fou- r thousand of the Phelps-Dodg- e syndicate, camp tbe week preceding. The decrease n a Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Vir-(in- is claims the distinction of having the more than offset the gains made highest golf course in the country with the altitude of the putting green of B other region. Production of Pennsylvania, inelud-jo- g the first hole at 6774 feet. Some of the mine fuel and aalea to local trade, course is higher than that. Senator King of Utah has introa wtimated at 1,903,000 net tons. duced a bill creating a branch of the Loadings by the nine. anthracite carrinterior deartment west of the Misier were reported as 36,335 cars. sissippi river and transfer ug from Washington, D. C., thereto the bureau PLAN TO SHUT ALL COAL of mines, geological survey, general IMPORTS OUT OF BRITAIN land office, reclamation sendee, nasendee. LONDON, May 2. With the min-- i tional park sewice and Indian strike now in its second month, C. F. Rainey of Butte, Mont, unonneement was made today of a the North Butte Mining ove by the labor interests to keep company, has been in Carbon county oal mined on the rontinnent out of several days lately looking into the fast Britain. A statement issued by coal situation as affecting the plans of Robert Williams, general secretary of his corporation. It is said he is here tbi transport workers, The to buy a developed projnsrty or to acsays: novement to prevent the British govquire lands and bring in still another ernment utilizing foreigil coal for producer. He was shown about by W. tinkering purposes is being strength-w- d W. Jones, local mining engineer. by the of the men The Alaska Anthracite Coal Railnployed at ports where the workers of the m affiliated with the transport work- - road company asked authority commission last commerce interstate federation. Any attempt to intissue $15,000,000 6 per cent roduce foreign coal will lead to stop-Pf- a Friday to bonds to finish up its twenty-vea- r of work in those ports, and the R. Davis, general manaCharles line. national Union: of Railwaymen will ger, said the business and climatic ntinue to operate by refusing to in Alaska required that the idle any coal brought from over conditions road be completed during the present working season. 22,-SB- 8; y, in-det- tn 122,-107,0- 00 Wagei Not to Bo Cut. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 5. "ages of organized mine workers will J t reduced, John L. Lewis, presi-- it of ihe United Mine Workers of America, declared in a statement to-refuting reports of such action. pointed out that the miners now working under a scale of wages fa by the United States bitumin-f- a coal commission and that the does not terminate until wh 31, 1922. He said coal huuld not delay purchase upon theory or with the hope that any roduction of wages will be accepted 2 the miners. The United Mine Jjorkws will resist any attempt to the equanimity of its present fatractural relations," the state-ewiid, The present acute depres-l- n the mining industry, with the facquent widespread unemployment ress among the mine workers, r disi t in any way attributable to the schedule now in effect. Produc- tion fot t the time arc such to enable coalpresent to be produced and fa'ibpd the consuming public at a relatively lower than any other faro r essential commodity. 7, Proit con-faro- re nt Conference Suggested. D. C., May 4. aAMiixgT0X, toursided conference to relating to coal prnduc-u- ? suggested by ojierators today ftMore a senate interstate commerce suttee. J. D. A. Morrow, the vice of the National Coal assokat the operators desir-ji0'- 1 rt !?. legislative and executive ae- which would be helpful to the jjTOgisilation Waa J. E. Pettit, mine superintendent at Heiner for the United States Fuel Price last comjiany, hsd business at Saturday. The property there has been working but two days a week for some time and from present indications will not exceed this during the summer months. Men are leaving the at other camp to seek employment hundred to a Close elsewhere. things when Heiner at men are employed work in normal. Alexander Howatt, the head of the Kansas Miners union, has rejected unthe demand of the international strikion that he put back at work the Coal and ing employes ot the Dean Kan. at Pittsburg, company Mining Howatt to delivered was The demand bv the committee of the international board sent there by John L. Lewis, international president of the Imted Mine Workers of America, to investigate the strike. of the Hearing on the complaint commission service Nevada public and against alleged discriminatory from Wycoal on rates unjust freight in Nevada oming and Utah to pointsReno before at began a few days ago Examiner Pattison of the interstate was commerce commission. Testimony costs five offered to show that coal The dollars per ton at point of origin. railroads receive I7.121, f(!T ixirtation and the retailer sell is sixteen dollars. The commissionwith rommensurate rate askine for a the same that obtaining between in destinations and punts of origin and Eastern Oregon Idaho Montana, for and Washington or an equivalent distance. greater J?' INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Week Ending May 6. 1921. When writing a letter in hopes that there will be no reply just give it to vour husband to mail. Let s Take the Ice Out of Price They want a road into the oil fields. Let Pries wake op to just what this portant link appears to bo what action can bo gotten from tho Salt Laks City I means. We are on the verge of a movement that will in all probability result people. Mayor L. A. McGee snd George M. Miller were appointed as a comin making this city a place of thirty to forty thousand people within the next mittee to look into this matter, and by Thursday noon both were up there on five yean. Tbs operations of tbe Carter Oil company just shaping up in the the job. Whatever is dons must be dons quickly, as ths material for tho CarSan Rafael may be looked upon as the opening of the oil boom. If then's oil ter people will be moved one way or another. If the road is not fixed a hsavy then, these an among the people who will open it up. To bo sun the activi- tractor will bo pnt on to fores tho way over tho sands, and this would prob ty of the Ohio company near Huntington has been looked upon as one index ably leave ths road in a worse condition even than at present. Once ln posof affairs, but now comet the first movement involving real extensive opera- session of tho tractor outfit with capability of going through anyway tho tions in the field to the south. Within a couple of weeks as announced by O. Carter company would lose interest in tho road work. It has become quite C. Chamberlain, who is the active repreaentative of the Carter interests here, popular here in Price to speak of tho oil interests of Balt Lake City then will he unloaded at Price a large quantity of heavy drilling and working meaning thereby a horde of locator who are supposed to have gobbled np the apparatus for transportation overland to the Swell At present the road for ground in tho field, and who make their home or headquarters at the state capabout seven miles just this sids of the San Rafael river bridge ia ao deep with ital Perusal of a list giving names and addresses of the four thousand lodry aand that ordinary tracking traffic is out of the question. Tbo Carter peo- cators of oil prospects ia Utah discloses such a widely scattered army that' ple must get thia material out, and the question of how they do it depends on then is no such thing as counting them a unity, and only perhaps fifty or sixwhat action is taken quickly to work on this stretch of road. Tbs propo- ty of them are Zionitea. Help from these parties on this road work is a resition now up has been put before the commercial organisations of Hunting-to- n mote possibility. The commerce bodies and business interests of Balt Laks and Price by the Carter people through Chamberlain, and is that Emery City will ho ths source of any fund applicable to tho causa county, Price snd such interests in 8alt Laks City as can he made to see thd It is pointed out that many benefits would come to Price from tho establight join in raising a fund to which the Carter people will make a substantial lishment of a good passable road down to tho SwelL Much tourist travel addition, and pnt a shale road down the canyon. It is estimated that the to--1 would come through if a trip into the field could be counted os without th tal expense will be ten thousand dollars and of which Emery people have al- hardship of difficult roads. And tho money left here by this traffic would soon ready pledged fifteen hundred and Price shows a ready disposition to raise a repay the expense of construction, and wo would still have tho road. But let's like amount . not place too much dependence on outside help in this matter. Quite likely The Price Chamber of Commerce sponsored a man meeting at the court- the greater proportion of this expense will eventually be borne by this city, house last Wednesday evening which went into the subject from many an- and ths question is almost np to Price as to whether the wants to farther ths gles, and the raising of this city's part of the money seems to be the least of! oil boom with money and. real live effort. Heretofore there Beams to hsvd the trouble. The placing of tho Salt Laks City share at fivo thousand dollars been a (Reposition to contribute more or leas liberally and 1st it go at that. include a thousand promised from tho stats by Gov. Charles R. Mabey. The Tbo Sun believe that the time has come for real energetic action ln varCuter Oil company will take care of twenty-fiv- e miles of road south of tho ious ways and that thia is tho opportunity for nuking a first showing, and it Ban Rafael bridge, and promises fifteen hundred dollars for the fund for shal-in- g is more than likely that soma real hustling and good management will be needthe road in the canyon. It was the unanimous opinion of tho meeting that ed quickly, especially in the event that our committee should find tho Belt the road must be built, and that the present is the time to act, but the im Laks City people slow to act or entirely indifferent. 1 u ALL THAT WAK LACKING WAS T1IK MOVIE CAMERA. MADSEN IN THE GAME PRICE AND HIAWATHA PUT ON OPENING GAME 4444444444444444 Doc Fink In his highpower ma- - 4 Right according to the announced chine deemed himself perfectly V schedule under a bright, warm aun-n- y 4- cafe ln front of the Price poet- 4 4- - office the other ky the ojiening of 'the Eastern evening. Come 4Utah Baseball league came off Sunday out," eav Chris Jensen, liut the 4- doc don't come out. In one door 4 with Hiawatha here for the first game. goes Chrle and out of the other Headed by the Price band, with the 4goee the doc. A Dougina Fair- - 4 4 hanks chase around the back of 4 ball teams, dignatariea and quite a 4 the car. a quick entry and a alam- -- 4 procession of automobiles, a parade 4 med door, a step on the acceler- - 4 of Main street preceded actual play4 ator, and Chrla ia left alone gas- 4 ing. Tbe game waa all that could be 4 Ing at the flying machine taking 4 4 the pill purveyor to eafety. All 4 asked for, and up to the eighth inn4 that wae lacking was a movie 4 ing was close enough that any little 4 camera. 4 flurry would have thrown the scale 4 either way. Tom Averill waa at his 4 beat in the box for Price, getting a food hold on things in the first innSATE AT HELPER TAKEN ing, when he struck out Hiawatha a OUT OF CAFE AND BLOWN three leading halters with thirteen balls, to be encouraged iu the pitched 'mornlast Sunday Yeggmpn early second half of the inning with a couple ing visited the City Cafe at Helper. of runs by his teammates. Hiawatha The safe was removed from the buildmanaged to get over a couple a little ing and rarried a block or more away later, and the greater part of the was So much blown. and explosive went along with the score at used that roost of the sound sleepers game for the home team and two for three from their awakened town were of the the visitors. Along in the eighth Avdreams. The loss is around nine hun- erill to bat first and smashcame dred dollars. Something like seven- ed out hie up hit of the game, the first ty dollars has since been found scat- next man getting another hit and robbelieved the is tered nearby. It Brown following with a home run. bers became seared, grabbed what From then on there was nothing to it automobile. eould and left by get they describAside from the rune Some three or four other places were ed The Sun was unablealready to aee that any entered Saturday night, but nothing score should hove resulted except for is missing from these. more or less juggling by both aides. Some of the features of the gams STATE INSURANCE REFUND were as for instance TO TWO COAL COMPANIES where quite ainuaing, Averill had struck out a HiaThe Utah state industrial commis- watha batter, the third strike escapsion yeaterday returned to various ing Pace, who threw to atop the runner at first. Somehow or other the corporations in the coal class prem- base was not where he threw the iums amounting to 25 ;ier rent on the secfirst year aid the state insurance ball and the man landed safely on efThis fellows ond in the mixup. 40 of makes total a which per fund, cent that will be given back to con- forts to advance to third required cerns in thia class under the orignial more of Averill consideration than the rest of tly; game. Although the rate charged, the return being an ov- all final score is announced as seven for returnfund The insurance ercharge. ed the first year 5 per cent aa a divi- Price and three for Hiawatha, the dend on the coal class and anticipates home team came over with more scorthe refund of an additional 10 per ing along in the seventh, but it waa cent in July next as a reserve distrib- claimed that one of tbe runnera hat ution which, with the 25 per eent dis- interfered with a batted ball on the tributed yesterday, makes the 40 per third base line. The aide waa retiree cent return. The Spring Canyon Coal without a counter, as two men were previously out. A sensational comjiany was the greatest beneficiary catch of a hot liner which beita return under the distribution, seemed entirely beyond reach by HiaStandard the and Qoal ing $9107.62, wathas second baseman got a hearty company the second, receiving The grand total under the round of applause from the speeta ton. A crowd of about five hundret 7. distribution of today aggregated people enjoyed the game. The Suns correspondent at Sun nvside sends in a report of the ojicn-in- g RYAN MEETS TEACHERS of the league season at that camp The teachers, principals and the delast Sunday with the Stom-Peerleof the Logan partment sujiervisors team the visitors. The home team was the lxiard with schools, together city of education, held an outing last Wed- slow getting started, allowing their to pile up eight unearned nesday in Logan Canyon. The party, opponents runs on three hits. During the the only numbering over a hundred, spent afternoon at DeWitt Springs, where later innings Sunnyside put over runs refershments were served and hiking enough to win four being earned and games also formed part of the and the deciding tally coming over in the ninth with two men out. Final program. TheVe was no school in the score observance of Arlxir Sunnyside nine, Rtorrs-Pecr-lethe it being city, which was eight Petty pitched for the cokpostponed April 15th, Day, due to bad weather. Prof. Orson Ry- ing camp, while the visitor used two an, the new city superintendent of hurlera, Lamph and Burton. The game schools, was the special guest of the was pronounced fine for a starter. Price team goes to Sunnyside Suncanyon party. He was introduced to the teachers by Prof. Henry Peter day. The next game on the home lot will be a week later, when the boys son, whom he succeeds. Utah Oil Fields to Bs Exported By Now Company. Articles of inaorMration of the Utah Oil Intelligence coiuwny of Salt Lake City were filed today with the county clerk, aaya yesterdays Deseret News. Having for ita puriae the acquisition of reliable, confidential and cx;iert information concerning the oil industry in Utah and the furnishy ing of the asms to clients, the ia organized with a capital stock of $10,000 in shares of ten dollar Tbe incorjioratora are W. II. Swan-ao- - com-an- 44444444444444444 one-hnnd- ed $5,-946.- $19,-252.3- ss ss n, Neil M. Madsen, Arthur Kuhn, Ijeidie Frazer and M. E. Onelh. Swanson ia president; Madsen, vice president, and Kuhn, secretary and treasurer. The officers form the directorate. The com;ny, which will have its offices at 030 Judge building, will be under the direct management of Kuhn, who for four years past has been secretary of the state board of land commissioner. With the reorganization of the board aa provided by a law jiasaed at tbe last session of the legislature, his term aa such will expire Monday. Swanaon ia the principal owner of the theater in the circuit bearing his name and is interested locally in eoal and oil Madsen ia well known in banking circles, being connected aa a director with the Price Commercial and Saving! bank and the Mt. Pleasant Commercial and Savings bank. Ha has extensive cattle, ranch and eoal land interests in Carbon county. In pursuance of its operations the company will employ expert oil scouts and geologists and soforth to obtain accurate information regarding the oil situation in the state. Several experts are now on the ground, officers of ths company announce, and have already begun active operations. STILL ANOTHKU ONK THAT MUST COMIC DOWN. 444444444444444444 4 Quickly absorbing the salient 4 4 points of the little article In the 4 4 last Impression of The Sun In 4 4 which was pointed out the neg- - 4 4 lertful treatment accorded the 4 4 national emblem that floated over 4 4 the poatoffice block, the owner 4 4 of that flag took It down and 4 4 placed it in the possession of thia 4 4 newspaper within a few hours 4 4 after publication. A promlm ia 4 4 made that shortly a new flag will 4 4 take iu place on the staff. Mark- - 4 4 el as Exhihit 1" ln a collection 4 4 which it seems necessary to start, 4 4 the weatherworn specimen of 4 4 Old Glory reposes awaiting a 4 4 companion, and without men- - 4 4 tioning any names The Bun aaka 4 , WiUtN the moving of the Thomas 4 that either the mayor, some 4 4 member of the city council, the 4 Fitzgerald dwelling from the south 4 marhsal or the city electrician 4 j side of Main street just east of the 4 take down and tnrn in the poor 4 old shredded, half masted, dllap- - 4 jxtoflice the forepart of this week, 4 id a ted specimen that floats ovsr 4 John U. Kedd began excavating for a 4 4 City If all. Come ti think of It, 4 , new business block on this choice piece The structure is to be feet in width by a hundred forty-eigfeet in depth, two and twenty-fiv- e n ories and full basementThe gTound floor and basement will be occupied by tho J. C. Penney ieople, while the second will be used for offices. I R. Fullmer is the contractor. of ground, ht i 4 why not "let George do it, as 4 4 he slU under it every day dur- - 4 4 ing hie working hours Aa The 4 4 Run said last week, no possible 4 4 excuse is to be given where a fine 4 4 large flag has for months been 4 4 left out in wind and weather un- - 4 4 til it has become but a dirty piece 4 4 of cloth." 4 4 4 |