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Show FBIDAY, AUGUST THE SUE, PRICE, UT A H E V E BT, P B I D AT. PAGE SIX PROFESSIONAL ALBERT JOHNSON DE R. H. JONES Iliyekiau and Surgeon SERVICE KEN IS Obstetrics and Disease of Chlldiea. Office Silvagni Block, Price, Utah. DR. Bureau of War Risk Insurance Will Search Out All Who Hay Haro Claim Against the Government, and "Flying Squadron" Will Visit This City In September For Their Aid. Uom-bin- TO BU1LDFLAX MILL Definite Move 'To Establish New dustry In Utah. it Establishment of linen products mill next year is a possibility if farmers will turu their attention to the growing of flax, and market conditions now are such as to make it a profitable crop, according to a statement issued Wednesday by llelier K. Cutler, general manager of the Utah Flax Iroducta tiuimny. "If sufficient flax eau be planted for a yeara run, I have assurance that capital will lie available for the construction of a green tow mill," says Cutler. "Such a mill would produce the material for crash, low grade unbleached linen and similar products, for which there is a ready market. It would lie the stepping atone for the ultimate development of the linen dustry in Utah, anl once the given tow mill was in operation I believe the future of the industry would lie secure. If Utah farmers could lie induced to plant a total of 5000 aerei of flax that would keep the mill going for a year. It is now the aim of the Utah Products eoniany to obtain contracts for this acreage." For several years Cutler and his associate! have been attempting to interest Utah farmers in the growing of flax, but heretofore the high prices obtainable for produce crojm have made them more tempting than flax and little progress has been made. This year only about sixty acres of flax, in small tracts in Davis and Salt fake counties, is being grown in Utah. Conditions are different now, however. and figures prove that flax is a more desirable crop than wheat or alfalfa, for many Utah lands. Flax seed is now bringing $2.05 a bushel and bushels can from twenty to twenty-twlie grown to the acre. If the requisite five thousand seres is planted the flax grower will then have a local murket for his straw, which will bring him fifteen dollars a ton. Alsiut three tons of straw is produced to the acre with a good cmp. Culler therefore estimates that the farmers can count on a gross income upward of eighty dollars an acre if a sufficient acreage ia assured to justify the building of the green tow in Utah jua-ftie- o railL "As prices non are everything is in favor of the flax grower," says Cutler. "It should lie remembered, too, that flax can lie grown with little water and ia adapted to many Utah soils whieh will not produce some other crops profitably. Flax is an espeeial- - PURE DISTILLED WATER PRICE SEEKING REMOVAL OF LITIGATION CXTY OF In a jietition filed in the Third trict court at Salt fake City last ICE Dis- Fri- day the city of Price seeks the removal f the ease of Richard B. Lyman and Mosher F. Park against the municipal ty of Price to the district court of Carlsm county. The jietition, as signed L. A. McGee as mayor, sets forth ty several reasons to warrant the reinov-- ! sf. It is stated that a large number f witnesses in the ruse reside in the vicinity of Price and would be put to great expense and inconvenience in going fo Salt fake City. Another rea-- : vi u given is that the ease will involve die e of many records w!i;r!i :i the present time are at Price. ! ( . RESIDENCE DELIVERY IS MADE REGULARLY u.-- j CELEBRATE OPENING Completion of the Ephraim to Orange highway, whieh means much to Emery and Sanjiete counties, is near, ami the intention is to hold a relehra-- . on the day that it is completed. which is set for Augunt loth or l'ilh at Cnl!e Dale. The celebration will, include a varied program, including a truck and field meet between the two Buy coupon hook and money lira Price Ice and Cold ' Low Cost Mileage For the Big Car Storage Co. Det ruction nf field rodents during t fill jjt C. R. FERGUSON. Mgr. of mure lease blanks nu1 ojiiion in sioi k tiie kind the ,.j rrns, use. Order from The Pun. empanfes i Unemployment of a hundred and coal miners daily, with many thousand others idle much of the time, ia reported by officers of the United Mine Workers of Amerira from IndiansiNilis, Ind who assert the idleness is due to the lack of a market for roaL State officials there in touch with the eoal trade and the operators also maintain there is no market, adding that a famine is threatened unless the household consumers lay in their winter supply now. Indiana mines, which produce approximately twenty-fiv- e million tons unnually, are estimated by officials to have turiied out about ten million tons for the first half of the year with the average monthly production falling lielow a million and a half tons the last three months. More thau half of the time lost this year ia rated by the operators to have been due to "no market." For the country as a whole the soft coal production is million tons besaid to be sixty-fiv- e hind the average of the last four years. Hard eoal production is believed to be slightly higher Jin in the last sev- e Every FiskTire is a that you will get mileage at a low cost. Modern and Enlarged Plant Phone , non-unio- ," nd es 1922. The belief is expressed that other firms of the district will follow suit und reduce the price of domestic by $1.50 a ton.r Officials of the Pacific , jllr'i! STEWART. ALEXANDER Eleventh Floor Deseret National Balt fake City. Utah. Bilvagnl Bldg., Price, Utah. Bank L. A. MeGEE Attorney At Law Rooms 8 and 8. Bilvagnl Bldg. PRICE, UTAH FERDINAND ERICK8EN Attorney At Law T17 Judge Building CITY, UTAH, OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law Office Room 8. Bilvagnl Building. PRICE, UTAH. HENRY RUGGER! Attorney At Law Office at the County Courthouse. PRICE. UTAH. OLIVER 0. DALBY Attorney At Law Office, Eko Theater, Ground Floor. PRICE, UTAH. E W. DALTON Attorney At Law Office Eko Theater Building. PRICE, UTAH J. B. FLYNN Licensed Undertaker and Embaliner tions. This story proves that the mule, like the fabled eat, "cornea back." A mule born on a farm near Piedmont, O., ten yean ago, was shipjied to Wheeling, W. Va. It later waa sent by train to Cadis and assigned to work in a eoal mine. Recently it made an unauthorTelephone 88. ized trip to its birthplare. The aniPRICE, UTAH. mal, acocmjianied by a collie dog, left E M. FULLER its pasture near the mine at night, arCivil and Mining Engineer feedbox fifteen native its at riving miles distant at daybreak. Special Attention Given to Irrigation Work. Office. Ground Floor, West nf Ths Bun. DEERFLY FEVER IS NOW PRICE, UTAH. REPORTED ON INCREASE DE H. B. HENDERSON ' Outbreak of the deerfly fever, a disChiropractor. ease jieruliar to Utah and thought to lie confined to Box Elder, Millard and At Price, First Door West of The Bun. 18 noon I till 4 p. m. At HelUintah counties, has lieen rejNirted to 10 toover Helper Btate Bank. 8 till 8 Dr. T. B. Beatty, state health commis- per.m., p. except Bunds). Other houra sioner. The fever is said to he occurat home. Calls by appointment. ring with even greater frequency than BEN BEAN for some time jiast, which is said to be General Painting Contractor due largely to the increase in the number of rabbits from which the fly con- First-ClaWork. All Estimates Free. Phone 1MM. tracts the disease. The bacteria is PRICE, UTAH. found among jaekrabbits, yet when the deerfly attacks the animal the fly beA. KOPF'S STUDIO comes infested later, transferring the Grade Portraits and Enlargenigh fever to the object of attack. The lat ments. est increase in the eases rejmrted is Second Floor largely due to the increasing number Price Commercial and Savings Bank of jaekrabbits due to the destruction PRICE, UTAH. of coyotes. The sickness lasts about J. W. METCALF six weeks and in some eases is fatal. Notary Public and Conveyancing Legal blanks of all kinds. The Bun. Deeds, Blits of Bala and Legal Papers of All Kinds Drawn SCOFIELD, UTAH ss KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Pries Lodge No. 88. Meets every ond, third and fourth Tuesday In Ha puts sanitation into your home. Boms people mag cuss us on general principles Because they know nothing about us because It Is a habit with some people to cuss the plumber. Others are our friends because they have dealt with us and know the quality of our work. We strive to answer your call promptly, do your work properly and to charge you economically. BADDLEY PLUMBING AND HEATING CO. Corner Eighth and Matq sta. Phone 290. secMa- sonic Hall. Visiting members always welcome. P. E. Trim. C. C.; Fred E. Wheat. K. R. 8. PRICE LODGE No. 52 L 0. 0. F. PRICE. rTAII Meets each Wednesday evening at o'clock. W. F. Myers. N. O.: W. E. Hampton, V. G.; L. A. Hill a. Bery. 8 SINGER for fast results and MACHINES mean not now, but many years. J. E. Jameson will see that your machine Is taken rare of. Cor. ner Fifth and J streets. Phone 110-W- J. W. HAMMONIl, LICENSED AB- STRACTER OF TITLES Afatracts of titles furnished to any piece or tract in Eastern Utah. Fire insurance written in the best companies. Real estate, bonds, etc. Second floor Bilvagnl Bldg., Price, Utah. Yanis adjoining tlm Denver and Hl (.ramie Railroad tracks on I bo south, three blocks esst of ill lx. Office at llie yard. ! Ilmatea given ami prices quoted on application. l'ostoffloe Box Equitable Real Estate & Investment Co. Brick of All Ki m long. ' ft CANNON Attorneys At Law nations in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Nebraska, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Missouri were found last Friday by the interstate ro unnerve commission to lie unduly prejudicial in many cases when compared to ratea from other jiointa of origin to the same destina- 1 :(. 10. Silvagni Building late, the guard ia hers. late, I've married George. late, rhes crossed the switch. late, the eighteenth amendments passed. late, the hangman's sprung the trap. sum of human tragedy can be summed in the words TOO IATE. And the same thing applies to firs and automobile insurance. Before this tragedy happens to you see ns. We can safeguard your investment by insurance that protects. We have a snap in a bungalow all furnished. Nice garage on the lot, and $1000 will handle the proposition. Balance in payments to suit the purchaser. This will not be on our hands very four-roo- re 1 lit1 (Xpln.'YH (if gtfVniillP, Tui !:i!i-u;ih a aiid "mpre-i- d. i Inii; liin-i- i LTcaN-than I and Office, the Bilvagnl Building, Former, ly Occupied by Judge F. E. Woods. Telephone 180, Price, Utah. Too Too Tco Too Too The secured so that tlm mill will Is- built. Tl.e company will have m- -d available this fall Jur th -- e who ii--to plant liax. 1 he crop is -- hkh in the spring, usually iu Mav. a PRICE, UTAH GEORGE CHRISTENSEN Attorney At Law TOO LATE lv good crop for new land just being put under cultivation ami should receive careful consideration from the owners of aereiige that is being put under cultivation at this tbe.e." The I tali Flax 1rod sicts rninpnny is planning to iniiiinne its c.inipaign for flax growing ami Cutler is now confident that tin required neroage il bo i Dentin Sold only by Dealers Coal company discussing the matteer declared that "there has been a general reduction in varioua other commodities, and we felt there should lie a reduction in eoal prices." The reduction brings the retail price of Utah and Wyoming coal to fifteen dollars a ton. BAXJJNGER l)cntiat BALT LAKE Production About Half. According to latest reports on the production of coal, the output of the Mountain States and Northwest for the six months ending June 30, 1921, tons as mmjwred with was 27,372,000 tons for the same jieriod of 1920. Throughout the country production of bituminous eoal is said to show a gradual decline. The labor situation continues to occupy the limelight. Iu conueeitnetaoinshrdlututhe n fields wages have light. In been rut to a jHiint where competition by union operators is becoming difficult and has given rise to the advisability of Miring down the wage scales of the latter. However, union offiIs Hotly Protested. cials are opiNisiug KWsille moves in WASHINGTON, D. C., Aug. 6. this direction and refuse to consider Referring to Henry Ford, the owner of anv discussion of the matter. the Detroit, Toledo und 1 ronton railroad, as an "overzealous enterpre-ncurwho should not lie permitted AROUND THE LOCAL CAMPS; PERSONAL AND OTHERWISE "for pursues of his own to break down freight rates" upon which a C. Larimer Collburn, representing number of railroads principally both the United States hureau of mines for their livelihood, the Northern West Virginia Coal aasocistion pro- and the national safety council, has tested today to the interstate com- been visiting the mines here in Utah merce commission against eoal rate re- the past week ur ten days. The safety council is an orgnization made up of ductions proposed by Ford's line. The association was joined in ita pro- many industrial enterprises and insurtest by other coal operators organiza- ance companies the country over. The United States Mine Workers of tions in the coal districts of Kentucky and West Virginia. The protest de- the central bituminous coal fields last clared that the reductions proposed on Friday notified the operator that the eoal shipjied from river points by the request for a joint conference o disDetroit, Toledo and Irontnn, as well cuss a wage reduction would not be as ratea on coal originating at other granted. The notification stated any points on the road, would break down modification of the wage ecale would the entire rate structure in the Ohio lie a violation of the present agreement fixed ly the federal bituminous territory. The rate which it is proposed to re- coal commission which ia effective unduce is fundamentally based upon the til next March. The strike of approximately eight Hocking rate, which is the key tariff fur the district. thousand mine workers of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation company in PanUTAH AND WYOMING COAL ther Creek Valley, which liegan the PRICE CUT IN COAST CITY previous Monday, ended last Friday with the understanding that the griev-anrPORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 6. The Pawhich caused the suRiension cific Const Coal company of Portland shall lie taken up by the anthracite has announced a reduction of $1.50 a conciliation board. The strike was due tun on Utah and Wyoming coals, say- to a dispute over rates to lie paid for ing that the cut is made to stimulate certain kinds of work. winthe filling of deferred orders for Freight rates on the bituminous coel ter storage. The romny has not on- from Illionois mines and from the cut its retail hut offers to ly prices, inner grouw of mines to desti guarantee purchasers against any further eut tut ween now and March 1. I SANFORD DE T. J. ANTON Rooms For satisfaction, safety and economy you buy a sure thing" when you buy Fisk Tires. You are safe when you buy a known and reputable product at a low price Thousands of miners have not worked enough to tie listed in the membership of the union, but the exact number has not been announced, although in Indiana it is known that the union loss in memliership at present exceeds The present total twelve thousand. memliership is between seventeen and eighteen thousand as compared with thousand at the more than twenty-nin- e oiening of the year. Uuion official? say the only strike or lockout situations are in Mingo county, W. Va., and the state of Washington. Cairy Littlejohn, Indiana state mine inspector, declares the three hundred mines in Indiana are working less than half time, and he says a fuel famine ia not to be unoxjieeted unless the domeatie consumers begin storing their winter supply of eoal now. Improvement in the soft coal fields ia expected with the apiroach of fall. Several operators are planning to sink new shafta, either to open new mines or make more profitable the operation of'old mines. Announcement by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul that it would draw on the Indiana fields for practically all fuel for its system east of Aberdeen, K. D.and the Missouri river also is expected to he a boon for the coal industry in several Indiana counties. de-e- I Miles Building, Price, Utah eral years. 136 PRICE UTAH DE guar-ante- - counties. Oil In- v DR. H. B. GOETZMAN DenUet X-R- ay usand ed I-- Work and Extraction. Price Commercial Bank Bldg., Price, Utah. fifty-tho- Albert Johnson, congressman from Washington, la chairman cf the house committee on Immigration and the bill to prohibit Immigration for a period beam hla name. Fabrics Cords MAY COME TO INDIANANS ce and Surgeon DE G. W. GREEN Physician and Surgeon Room 4. Golden Rule Hotel PRICE. UTAH WINTER FAMINE IN COAL' Information milling from the state headquarters of the bureau in Salt Lake City as the mult of a drive now under wav to canvass the state from end to end in an effort to lorate every HMsible claimont w that regardless of the nuuilierof claims that may develop or the amount of money necessary t adjust those claims, the United States bureau of war risk insurance has undertaken the task of searching out man in Utah who ia every entitled to compensation, medical attention or rehabilitation for any degree of disability suffered as a result of world war military service. with the services of ail advance reiresentntive, every American Ijegion post, the Boy Knouts, representatives pit will lie enlisted in the war risk army to help the former soldier, who may lie entitled to assistance, "Is man residing in there an "Does he feel that he this house! bus a just elaim against the govern-SKttThese fur military service f and similar question! will he put by investigators in every town am! county in the campaign to aid the former soldier and sailor. More than twenty-thre- e thousand jieraoiia, giving their addresses in Utah, served Uncle Kaiu in the recent world war. The few in emnparison to the total that have filed elaim or are receiving aid from the government under the war risk insurance plan ia a matter which concerns the bureau officials. "There are two important reasons why the bureau is making this drive to get in eoutart with every man, who has a just elaim on account of disability from military service," says It. C. Olaasmann, state representative of the bureau in discussing the campaign. "First, the government is e impelled by a motive of right and to see that these men are accorded very concession due them under the war risk insurance act; second, under the present provisions of the adt, elaiina against the government for disability arising for military service in the world war will expire in 1922. In this connection, it is apparent that a elaim filed now ia far more easily adjusted than one presented in twelve months from now or even one month. Every day delay in n matter involv-- ; tng physical conditions adds to the difficult iea of adjustment." Elimi sating in every possible way the prosed ure involving settlement of claims, the bureau will act with exjicdieiicy iu passing on every ease disclosed by the drive. As soon as a town or district men bas been canvassed for entitled to file claims, a "flying squadron," consisting of a representative of the war risk hureau, a medical examiner and a third man representing the federal hoard for vocational training will arrive in that town or district to man. The assist the man will not lie required to go to any other town, for the "flying squadron" will be stationed at some central point in each town. lie will tie assisted in filing hia claim, there will he a medical examination, and every necessary fact will be assembled. If the former soldier is in immediate need of medieal treatment, arrangements will be made on the spot for such effre. If Hie ease involves hospital rare, that, do, will be arranged for and every careful attention will be shown in consideration of the claimants. It is expected that hundreds of eases will be found by the drive, which has been ntlined and is already under way in several sections of the state. f Telephone 18SW Office Price Commercial and Savlnn Bank Bldg., Price, Utah. the mines fur $9.5(1 while iu Utah it is $5.00. This fact, it is suggested, indicates an upward trend. One couqiany has issued a circular suggesting a raise of fifty cents a ton on August 15th, but most of the retailers are reluctant and say that unless the producers increase at the mines the price of eoal here will remain as it ia for an indefinite time ten dollars fur lump, $9.50 for nut and other grades in projiortion. DRIVE THROUGHOUT UTAH TO FIND THE BOVS. r-- J. A. JUDY Physk-U- (Concluded From Page One.) fiisl yenr resulted in a saving Shan fcl'i.nb'i.iioq at a cost of 12, 1921 Second Floor Silvagni Bldg., Price, Utah FRANDSEN BRICK COMPANY 3. - Telephone 72M. Manufacturer of PRICE, ITTAII |