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Show THE SUH. PRICE, PAGE EIGHT BOARD RECEIVES AUDIT OF EXPERTS FROM jtrvii.se. The total coat of the work buudred dolwas around thirty-eiglars. The commissioners decided that as long as the present board holds an audit will be made annually, the first new one to come August 1, 1922. The county wants an immediate setht tlement with Price Pity. A the city wants demands an immediate Settlement with the county, there should be no trouble exjierienced on this CAPITAL ONE EACH YEAR PROMISED FOR THE FUTURE. I Closely Scrutinised By Commissioner With Possibility of Numerous Ones Being Cut Off the Poor Fund list Carbon and Emery Each DoWith Pest Inspectors. Away ing The regular monthly session of the Carlton county coniuiiiMiuiien on lattt Monday devoted considerable time to diaruxtiion on the highway work about to lie started, and which ia covered in another column in this impression of The Sun. Other road matters included the acquiescence with an order from the state road commission that all work of any nature whatever must started only after a jiermit has This makes it necesto sary telephone in to Salt Lake City before doing even' the most uninqmrt-an- t rejiaira, and the county asks the state commission to pay the phone charges and to confirm all such iiy letter. Edwin C. Lee, as the agent on road work, was notified to bseik-this regulation. After the right of way ia secured for the highway the county engineer will do all accessary engineering for the county en such construction. That Seven Year Audit The rejiort of the sM)cial audit of eouuty affairs covering hack to 1914 was turned in to the meeting. It makes quite a bulky volume, and furnishes an insight into many interesting matters connected with Carlton's finances. It haa been claimed that the audit uncovered amounts due to the county from various sources which would put fifteen thousand dollars or more into the treasury. Quite a little of this over three thousand dol-b- ir are moneys in the hands of various officer collected during the current month and nut yet turned over when the reiairt waa summarized. Other itema included in the amount listed as discovered recoverable items are funds which have hcen overpaid to the elate on elate, state echisil, bounty, road and juror and witness accounts, the total of these lienig hundred dollars. One seventy-fiv- e single item listed is sixteen hundred odd dollars due from Price City, hut the counter amount to be mid to the muniriiality and which would leave the city six hundred to the good is not listed in this connection, nor is it n figured off in placing the total at thousand. VariousVmall amounts due to errors in addition are listed as due from former officials, and while these are all small they will undoubtedly he )aid in all cases where the parties owing them are still in the county, although the accounts were audited out as correct on retirement. Ignoring the current funds and amount held by the state, one points out that the audit actually uncovered a total of 1124.10 which the county ean collect, and also existed that on other overpayments the county must refund $118.64. These statements of course are put forth hy proponents or opponents of the audit as to whether it "paid or not, without taking any account of whether the audit waa actually worth its cost oth- lie been obtained. per-aii- ts e al-isi- sl fif-tm- anti-enthusi- score. Small Itema Cleared. Emery county desires no crops end pests ina ector. Neither does Carbon. They will join on a county agent. His salary will lie (iaid by the college and Orson P. Madsen will fill this maition. The counties pay his ex (tense hills. E. E. Adams, commissioner from Emery, was present at the meeting, and concurred in this arrangement. The (Hair fund is being closely scrutinized and all cases will lie investigated, each commissioner assuming resfiuiisibility for a third of the list. John C. Staley will drag the road from Scofield to Colton, and Utah county will lie hilled for its part of this work. The couut.v clerk will ascertain whether or not the deputy sheriffs are insured with the state insurance fund. J. II. Rowley must fence hia own road up ou (hirdon Creek if he wants the work done, as the county will not help. k J. W. Harper and Warren S. are now deputy sheriffs acting without pay. In anawer to a petition from Scofield, Ruliert S. Menzies waa apMinted as constable, providing no one else is serving there now. A deputy sheriff will be sent to Provo to bring John Brasso and John Magan to Carlton county, where they will enter the county infirmary. It ia figured this will effect a saving of nineteen dollars monthly. Two hundred copies of the new auugli-cultur- al view with interstate commerce needed. lteporta from county of firm accepted included the assessor, sheriff, clerk and agricultural agent. The witness room iqmtsir at the courthouse is now officially designated as the "ami iking room." STATE BOARD HAS FEW KICKERS ON COAL VALUES (Concluded From Fags Three) NORTHRUP, KING & CO. OF MINNEAPOLIS has been active in buying Western Alfalfa and Clover Seed for many years. Utah and Idaho have become more important as produc- ing centers of seed during the past few seasons, and for this reason we established an office, warehouse and cleaning plant at Salt Lake City four years ago. i We have built up our organization here in the West of experienced men in assembling, cleaning and marketing Western Seed to all parts of the United States and some foreign countries. This past season Northrup, King & Co. has handled nearly one-ha- lf of the total crops of Alfalfa, Red Clover, Sweet Clover and Alsike Clover produced in Utah and Idaho. AH brokers and dealers who are in RATES DECLINING SOON any way engaged in the Bale of securities, whether the companies have have no information that leads before the commission or not, me to lielieve then will be any reduc- must file a proper bond in the sum of tion of coal ntea this season," Her-lie-rt $5001) and (ay an annual license fee C. Hosier, secretary of com- of twenty-fiv- e dollars in accordance merce, last Wednesday telegraphed with the atate law, Ilelier C. Hicks, the Cameron Coal company, aeting as secretary of the atate acruritiea comsiokeaman for the coal o(ierator of mission, announces. About a hundred Utah. J. T. Dye, sales manager, had ronqmuies in the state are said to he telegraphed Secretary Hoover asking affected hy the new law. Application that the situation regarding freight blanks have been prepared hy the rates on coal lie clarified. Dyes tele- commission and have already been NO LIKELIHOOD OF GOAL ed "I y sO AAAWVVAAAMAAAAAWWVVVSAMAWVSAAAAVVVVVNAMAmVVWVU shortage of roul also produced a famine of ice as it liandirapied the artiMUST BE LICENSED ficial ice plants. To obviate this trawlcn were sent to Holland to bring eoal which they exchanged here All Dealers In Securities Come Under New Utah Law. for ice. carried to any point where you desire to connect it will cook an entire meal electri radiant grill cally, which means that it will cook household need it perfectly. It meets the every-dand ia an unequalled convenience for special occa dess It k da moit efficient method of prvparinf food becjuiaa da heal pm kite the conking. af OF UTAH Utah-Idah- disseminate the needful information hi driven of can in Carbon. They are IN fact, it is a whole kitchen range pecked into so smaQ a apace and sq light in weight that it can be i eed Growers Petition was filed with the publie utilities commission yesterday by the Peerless, Spring Canyon and Standard Coal ronqmuies against the Bamberger Electric, the Bingham and Garfield, Los Angeles and Salt Lake, Oregon Short Line, Salt Lake and Utah, Southern Pacific, Tooele Valley, Uno ion Pacifie, Central, the Utah railway and the Utah Terminal Railroad companies, to have the rates fixed from the Utah Terminal road in Spring Canyon connecting with the other lines. The complaint sets forth that it is expected the Utah Terminal Railroad comiany will romplete its new road up Spring Canyon in the heart of the coal district hy June 15th, next Wednesday, and that there are no through carload rates in effect for the transportation of eoal from complainant mines beyond tLe junction (mint of the Utah Terminal railway and the Utnh Railway eonqtany. The complaint declares the three plaintiffs are cquipjied and prejiared to extract coal at the rate of more than five thousand tons ier eight hour working day and that ratea should be established on the Utah Terminal with other roads named in the complaint. sent out to a large number of brokers and dealers. Others may receive them upon application. Announcement of the rigid enforcement of the law was made last Wednesday hy Hicks, following the completion of an opinion hy Attorney General fluff to the effect that all brokers or dealers in stocks and bonds come within the meaning of the statute. An investment ronqmnv is defined liv statute to mean "every person, firm, foreign and domestic corporation, excepting those s)iecifically exempted under Sec. 2 of this act, that shall engage in the business of negotiating for the sale of any stocks, bonds, investments, contracts ir other securities herein called securities, issued hy said person, firm, doniretic or foreign corporation." Denier is held to mean "every person, firm, domestic or foreign eorjvor-atio- ii that shall sell or offer for sale within this state, any of the stocks, lwmds. investment contracts or other securities issued hy any investment company ss herein defined, and Icept such as are sjiecifically exempt-e- d ns provided in Sec. 2 hereof, or tlint shall, hy advertisement or otlier-- i wise, engage in, or profess to engage in the lmsiness of selling, bartering or offering for sale or exchange. j ofwratioa of tbs Radiant GriB b a TO THE TERMINAL RATE FIXED , 11a pvfact : COAL COMPANIES WANT tomobile law will lie Imught from a Salt Lake City printery, and used to UnslittleSfovedoesalldiesedim Hot-poi- at ELECTRIC APPLIANCES' Eastern Utah Electric Company W. C. BROEKER, Manager PRICE, UTAH Depot and Main Streets 10, 1921 un-ike- ly Pea-roc- gram stated: "Government departments recently advised public that unless roal waa freely stored during the summer months a panic would ensue during the coming winter and the congressional committee reporting on Senate Bill No. 1806 expressed a similar view. This correct statement of the sitnstion was accepted and ac- in by the consuming publie. auiesced telegraphic announcement of President Haying's recent inter FRIDAY, JURE FRIDAY. XX"XXXX"XX"X"X"X"X"XX:'XXnXn com- mission has unfortunately resulted in seriously checking eoal storage in of freight reductions. "In Utah such reduction is very because the state publie utilities commission refused to (icruiit the last freight increase to apply on moving wholly within the state. Coal mines in this field are working only 20 to 25 ier cent time and further reduction would be completely demoralizing. If not inconsistent with the policy of your department would very much appreciate an expression from you as to whether or not you have information regarding an immediate coal freight decrease in the Western States, as well as your views concerning summer storage. In fact, (wnnit us to suggest that an official expression to Associated Press and others from Washington, D. C., as to whether or not auy pnqiosed freight reduction would apply to coal could result in clarifying present uncertainty which is causing stagnation in coal business. Continued disposition on the part of tlie consuming publie to delay storing roal will unquestionably bring about a serious condition this winter." UTAH-EVE- RY j VISIT THE SAN JUAN MOAB, June 5. Dr. L. R. Ellis of San Francisco, Andrew MeCornick of Stockton, fala., C. M. Dclameter, George Sheldon and II. R. Ellis, the last three of Salt Lake City, arrived in Moab tonight en route to the San Juan county oil fields, near Bluff, in which all are interested. Dr. Ellis is president of the San Francisco and San Juan Oil company with headquarter in San Francisco. The late Col. A. C. Ellis was his father, and they, in association with the late E. L. (tiHidridge, were active in the development of the San Juan oil field in 1907, bringing in one of the best at that time. The Mexican at oil field will claim the major attention of the party now going down to the southern county. RULING RECEIVED Under a new ruling of the postof-fic-e department the maximum weight limit for parcel post packages sent from the United States to Denmark is increased from eleven to twenty-tw- o pounds. The parcels may be insured up to fifty francs ($9.65). Wedding announcements. The Sun. To market this volume of seed successfully and economically requires the services of men with many years of experience with knowledge of worldwide seed marketing conditions and customs. It requires capital and an international reputation for fair dealing. We have not forgotten that growers interests and our interests are mutual. You may exin helping to better the pect our full quality of Western Seed and in striving for a more economical handling and distribution of f$ t t t? V I I Y v t Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y fY Y v Y Y Y Y fY Y Y ? t Y Y Y Y Y Y v t X X Y ?Y Y co-operat- ion ? your product. T I We sincerely hope that the coming season will be more satisfactory than the past. Also, we think it well for the Western seedgrowers to remember that in order to get higher market prices, BETTER QUALITY SEED MUST BE PRODUCED FREE FROM NOXIOUS WEED SEEDS. WVWWWWWWVWWWWWWWVWWWWWWWWWWM N orthrup, &Co. 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