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Show FRIDAY, NOVEMBER THE SUN, FRIGE, PAGE FOU& fold. New York City almost half a million majority democratic. Syracuse, N. Y., and Cleveland, O, also go democratic. Madsen saya he will carry Issusd Every Friday By Bun Publish- Carbon county fur the democrats next W. Crockett. Mgr. ing Co. (Inc.) K. year, and also keep Wellington in line. Office Subscription, 12.00 the Tear. Phone No. I. Resident--, No. 1IS11I Each American citizen is said to Mail Mat- consume two hundred egg a year. The Entered as Second-Clas- s at Postoffice at Price, per capita has been lowered in Price, ter, June 4. Utah, Under the Act of March S. 171. however, since they outlawed Tom and Jerry. AI VKltTISI XG KATES. Display Matter Per Inch per Month, Some womeu are entirely too quick ll.td; Single Issue, &Vc. Special po- muttered. Theres oue ia New York sition, 25 Per Cent Additional. Legs 1s Ten Cents the Line Each In- City asking for a divorce because her sertion. Count Sis Words te the Una. husband slapied her seveu years ago. Summons. $12.50; Water Application, $15.00; Pinal Proof, $10.00. Some Carlmn county men are so unReaders Ten Cents the Line Each In- lucky that it opKrtunity ever puya sertion. Count Sis Words to the Unc. them visit a the doorbell will lie out of llluckface Type Fifteen Cents the order. Line Eat h 1 it Otdtuarie", Cards Thanks, Itesolu-tlon- s, Etc., at Half lan-a- l Reading Eevery now and then some fellow Notice Kates. Count Sis Words to blows into lrice who impresses us as Lino. ticing too iu'ellccftial to lie useful. For Sale, For Kent. Found, Lost, Etc,, Two Cents per Word Each lasue. FAIR QUALITY OF EWES ARE No Charge Accounts. SELLING, ETC. Address All Communications to BUN PUBLISHING CO, (Continued From Pa fa Four.) Price. Utah. lili, -t Flour and sacks generation. I went mourning wldiout The Sun; have been found excellent sugar interlinfor I stood up anti cried In the congregaing. tion. Job, e thousand sheep are now NEW CITY OFFICERS TIPPED TO on the move from Culoiadu summer ranges into I'tah, according to reports GOOD SCHEME. made thus- far to Thomas Redmond, Not for a moment is it to be sukm-c- d chief state sheep iusjieetnr of the of agriculture. Redmond esthat any of the newly elected members of Price Citys council aspired to timates that there will be some sixty-fiv- e thousand more route into Utah that jKiaition or accepted the obligations involved fur the sake of the sal- during the fall on whirh reports of have not lieen made aa yet. ary of ten dollars per month. Still further away must lie any opinion that A. A. Hinckley, commissioner of agof any of these (gentlemen can it be riculture, and David F. Smith and C. Mid that there ia any graft in sight D. Merrill, members of the agriculturfor them and still more distant must al commission of the state, were liefore be any idea that these new city anions the state board of examiners last Monere oien to such temptation. There re- day regarding the payments of indemmains then only the cold hard projmsi-tio- n nities for tulierrulosw rattle. Several that these nieu are getting ready memliers of the eutiiniiiuiou lavor a to serve this community in a manner maximum, while othera on the commiswhirh assumes form as a patriotic du- sion are willing to settle each case upty and which will be found a hard and on its merits following apprcisul. The thankless job. That the waterworks question which was preseplfd was system will occupy a large part of whether the state board of agriculture their activities is too well known to re- in recommending the amount to be iaid for the slaughtering of tuhcrcu-lu- r quire (minting out. That much misstock shall lie paid on the liasis of information is prevalent regarding the ritys pipeline must lie apparent to appraisal and each individual ease lie everybody. That intelligent handling settled on its merits or whether a defof matters (tertainiiig thereto ran be inite maximum shall lie fixed beyond managed only by those having first- which no recommendation shall lie hand knowledge of renditions along made. The board has taken the questhat line from end to eud is (stent. tion under advisement. That this California weather will not last much longer is too bad. That Large Acreage This. ifa a hard trip is certain that these MOAIl, Nov. 6. M. L. Burdick and new hoys are soft is likely that his eons of Thompsons have aiquired sore feet and sunburned fares will lie title to the reservoir proValley a certain sequence to the action alsmt ject, including the City laud and improveto be suggested is without argument ments. The former owners of the probut The Sun suggests that this aggre- ject were a corn winy of Moabite men. gation of new city duds take a trip The new owners will cultivate a conover thnt pipeline right away. Get siderable and will raise forage to it on foot at least over the eleven thereon. acreage A large herd of cattle will miles of tile piping. Take a good view lie ranged in the vicinity of the reserof the rest of it from the seat of an voir and feeding sheds built fur winautomobile if you must, hut go over it. ter use. Mayor W. W. Jones will see many things to refresh his memory and quite VERY SMALL STORAGE a few surprises in 1h changing that OF STOCKS OF MEATS SO-5- Sixty-thre- - a has been dome. C. 11. Madsen, after all hia hiking exierienre as a leader of hoy scout exieditioim, will consider the trip a real pleasure. A. D. Hadley will get some good exercise and probably a emit of tan. Lake Young would likely lead by at least two milea by the time Cameron was reached. Alliert Horsley ought to lie reasonably well seasoned to stand the trip, and there in no doubt but what after the trip their minds wpuld he able to visualise the exact spots where troubles on the line come before them for eounrilmnnie action in the future. A few photographs of the bunch hitting the high smts would go far to convince Price' citizens that the boys knew the ins and outs, of the line. That this outing is not suggested as a joke or without knowledge of what it means will be understood when it is told that a representative of The Sun went over the ground mentioned a couple of weeks ago for the express purpose of getting the desired information in actuality so as not to be obliged to deiiend on hearsay in giving out information on the subject in this newspaper. Total stocks of meats in cold storage warehouses and larkinghnuse plants on Oct olier 1st were far lielow normal holdings and amounted to fi04,(KKI,IKi0 (siunds, compared with 784,000, 000 isiunds on Octolier 1, 1020. and the five-yeaverage nf 827,000,000 odd pounds. Stocks of frozen beef, sniuunt-m- g to 44,120, (HK) isiunds, were the smallest ever recorded by the bureau of markets and crop estimates. On October 1, 1920, frozen beef stocks amounted to 58,401,000 pounds, and ar the five-ye-ar IMiunda. average ia 120,943,000 Frozen pork holdings drop-lie- d UTAH-BVE- RY 19.554.000 pounds on October 1st last r average of 27,- year and the five-yea- 707.000 pounds. Price Commission Co. n, NO. 2 LI OIL SHIFTS Dick FIDS 0. FOOT-FITTE- RS t'.MM-llllt- ar of V 83A22.0O0. African Wool Crop. The wool clip of the Union of South Africa fur the year August 1, 1920, to July 31, 1921, is estimated at approxd imately four hundred and ) tales. Of this quantity, about three hundred aud eighty thousand bales were exported up to July 31st, leaving a hundred and ten thousand unsold in South Africa at the eud of July last. These figures refer to the 1920-2clip only and do nut include carryover stocks from ?cvious seasons. The remainder of the old clip was purchased by the British governthouxaud havment, about ninety-fiv- e ing been registered under the purchase scheme of the inqwrial government. A significant factor in the wool trade of South Africa is the fact that Germany ia returning aa a purchaser. In days Germany alone took a third of the South African exports. ninety-thousan- 1 (ire-w- ar POISON BAITING EFFECTIVE FOR THE OLD WISE WOLVES Even the edd wise wolf will fall for the temptation of poison if the bait is properly prepared and ilaced. Such is the conclusion proved, in the face of long standing belief to the contrary! by predatory animal iiuqiectora employed by the biological survey, United States detriment of agriculture. We arrived on the range oue evening, reads a recent Arizona report, and killed a yearling cult to be used as a drag. That night we scattered a hundred and fifty baits. fnfcapa day we made another drag with an automobile, and along this put out almut three hundred baits. That night the wolves rame in and killed a fine colt, but they eontinued over their regular route of travel until they crossed the dragline, where each picked up a poison bait. The iair, both old animals, were found almut a half mile from where they (licked up the bait. One of them had a front foot in a trap, (ierhaKi two o three years previously. Stockmen of thnt range are now thoroughly convinced that (Kiison will do the work. When we first arrived there and (inqsised to (Niisou the wolves, the stockmen were skeptical In fact, I afterwards heard that one man advised to let the tenderfoot try it out and then he'll lie convinced that wolves can not lie (suKoned. In addition to the two instances cited aliove, two more wolves were killed by put son recently on the range south of Nelson, Ariz., and similar rases have occurred in other atates where governmental oierations against wolves are in process. VERY MANY BREEDERS WANT TO HAVE HERDS ACCREDITED The work of ridding the country of liovine tuberculosis through the accredited herd system, which is based ukui federal snjiervision aud the issuance of reriitieate by the United States department of agriculture, is making steady progress throughout the country. The state of Minnesota has lieen leading for some time in the number of fully accredited herds and the number of eat tie certified free of the disease, hut the report for shows that the lead has gone to Wisconsin. The latter state now has thirteen hundred and nine accredited herds containing eleven hundred an seventy-on- e accredited herds with twenty-eigthousand and eighty-n!n- e Sep-temli- er ht ly MflBI Lard stocks during September showed the largest monthly decrease since ABOUT TO HEWER the bureau of markets and erop estimates began its records. The net decrease amounted to 66,063,000 pounds. This amount added to the 88357,000 pounds produced during the month made a total trade output of 154,420,-00The stocks in storage on October MUCH ACTION ALL OVER THE1 1st amounted to 83,823.000 ( siunds, as ENTIRE STATE. compared with the five-veaverage from 103,480, 000 pounds on September 1st to 64,188,000 iwiuuds on last October 1st. However, frozen jiork stocks were still about ten million (wiunds aliove the five-yeaverage. Holdings of frozen lamb and mutton during September showed an in- eattle. The total number of herds accredit crease for the first time sinee last in the United States ia ninety-nin- e February. Despite this increase, how- ed The number ever, the stocks as of Octolier 1st were hundred and sixty-thre- e. of cattle in the country certified free the smallest sinee Octolier 1, 1918. most of the foreign lamb and of the disease is 230,704. There are mutton has lieen disposed of and con- 71,999 herds and 843,244 bead of catditions are again ap(irnarhing normal. tle that have been tested once and, Cured beef stocks on October 1st were presumably, will subsequently be on the lowest ever reported to the bureau the accredited list. There are 1,540,. Kotewoithy among recent industrial fur that date. Total holdings amount- 814 cattle in 103,046 herds now under news items has been the strengthening The demand for IKK) (xmds, compared with federal uspervision. ed to 15,485, in the conditions of three of this couand tests under this tu inspections ntrys basic industries iron and steel berculosis cleanup plan is so great that and copper and petroleum. In the ease the inspectors cannot keep np. of the copper industry inrrensctl deAt present there are 15,071 herds on mand will ultimately lead to an exthe waiting list. These contain nearly minin of Western pansion operations a quarter of a million rattle. During ing districts after present surplus Sejrtemlier 103,742 eattle were tested stocks are reduced. This will mean the in the various states. Of these 0093 or of tens of thousands of 37 per cent reacted. workmen. The coming of 1 his day can be hastened if all of us would buy Demand Protection. some useful household article made of D. C., Nov. 8. WASHINGTON, copper. As a (rniple we have our own The senate finance committee, considwithin our control. prosperity largely ering permanent tariff revision, was Will we use our collective intelligence told today by sheepraisers that uuless to help ourselvesf The situation in congress granted adequate protection the ropiier industry today offers an for their industry it would lie folly to opportunity. Utah is a copjier state. LET US UNLOAD A SACK OF OUR authorize further federal exienditnrea for development of irrigation in the ELECTION DIGEST OF RETURNS FLOUR arid lands of the west. Witnesses deKEEPS EM BUSY. Let ns load a sack of onr floor on clared that it was useless to provide onr wagon and send it to yon. Rest as- grazing lands for sheep and cattle election an comes after the Always sured yon will mark its receipt as the which cannot lie sold. Dr. S. W. Mcanalysis of the returns hy the repreim- Clure of Nanqia, Ida., of the Idaho sentatives of the big political pnrt.es. day yonr baking commenced to and the crumbs of comfort are rnre-full- y prove so greatly. Wo will not ask yon Woolgrowers association, Hugh Camp-ihfl- l, president of the Arizona associa-- , sorted out by all sides. Neil M. again if we may send tome flour. Yon will order it without onr asking. Wo tion, and C. J. Fawcett for the AmerMadsen, chairman of the democratic know onr floor. So will yon after try- ican Farm Bureau Federation, agreed central committee for Carbon county it. 'n stating thnt congress would do bet-- jt points out that the election results all ing r to give the industry no firotection about the country are encouraging to tlii-- i only enough to keep it struggling the democrats. Right in lrice with and suiiiraing along in the hoe that two tickets thoroughly mixed as to South Ninth Sweet itiic shcepim-might some time make democrats and republicans, look bow Price, Utah. money. the voters picked em from bn'h tickets and the demos bob up elected. At HelAs a laid resort a conference for Swedish arm)- - tests hnve shown a per the democrats won for the first the limitation of conferences might saving of tractive power of 30 (ier cent time in the history of that city. Sco- turn the trick. by the introduction of ball bearings in field's mixture of new officers is heavy horse drawn vehicles. Another wsv to force Japan to strongly democratic. Maryland and is to give her our wooden ships. Don't borrow The Bun. Subscribe. Kentucky return to the democratic ar FRIDAY Actual Entry of the Midwest For erations In Utah Is Considered of Op- Ohio 1$ AbanMuch Importance Umtah B-- 1 Wells Test Two doning tin Country Very Much Elated. I l 1? y" - With the definite Biiiuiuiiivitieii! rimt the Midwest Oil and Refining inipuny is to begin drilling oKralions mediately on the 11.11 I reek structure miething like fifty odd mi leu to the east from Brice local interest in the search for oil takes on a new phase. It is pruiwM-- to pul down lour Imres on pnqierty which the Midwest has acquired from the Hyland Oil and company. Only a (artol the 6-big holdings of the last named concern Busy Store Next to Postoffice passes to the Midwest. The first rig and field promptly, will come into the PRICE, UTAH a well will be started as quickly as the drilling set can be put up. Ihe arrangement for this is that the Midwest binds itself to do the pros ec ting and to give a royalty on any production been put through the cement and is aud Gao, Cisco, 200 feet ; Crescent-EaglCrescent, 500 feet; Big Six Oil ensuing, whiie the Hyland is free to now at a depth of about twenty-eigSan Juan, now spudding in; its hundred of company, three some (Mirtions the feet hundred remaining develop Oil sell to hound h Virgin company, Purgatorv flit. is it string. the end of the ground. However, h casing is lieing carried down 2210 feet. any production to the Midwest. The contract has the sanction of the state lieliind the drill there. A little water Actions before itln register and reg land board. Sixty days is the limit trouble still exists, but as the new of the Salt Lake Ctiy United ceiver off dint to i in which the work must start. The Hydown it hojwd gnea land ia already engaged in drilling this flow. At this (mint it is expected Statee laud offiee, involving protests in the field, and has arranged to find oil in the Shinarump forma- by the state to applications for perfor a second rig to further its expira- tion which is figured to be within mits to prospect for oil and gas in Saa tions. It will hold several thousand about two or three hundred feet addi- Juan county, have again been continued until Novemtier 23d. It is underacres of ground. The nrea secured by tional depth. stood that the federal land office will the Midwest covers almut thirty-on- e Summary of Operations. hundred acres. A group of Boise, Ida., require that every effort lie made it oierators has acquired an interest in Actually under way in Utah are twenty-f- that time to bring the raaes to a .hear-nthe Hill Creek locality, also, and is our projierties with rigs at work, now shipping a rig in there. I'tah oil- and the approximate depth of these Operated by electricity and conqires-semen generally express the opinion that workings is Ohio Oil company, Hunta air, a floating dry dock at Amthe entry of the Midwest into ington, 3IKHJ feet, to lie abandoned; here marks the most imMirt.i.U Ohio Oil company, Circle Cliffs, 3000 sterdam will have a lifting cajuicity of thousand tons. twenty-fiv- e step in the oil search that has formu- feet, to lie abandoned; Ohio Oil lated since the beginning of Caineville, 2800 feet; San RaOil land lease blanks and option uearly a year ago by the Ohio. fael Oil romHiny, San Rafael, depth forms. Kept In stock the klmls the big not given; Curler Oil coniKiny, San companies use. Order from The 8un. Other Local Operations. 16(H) feet; Miller & Lux, Park The latest report from the Midwest Rafael, 640 feet ; Leonora and Utah IX TUB SKVKXTH JUDICIAL DisValley, well in McElmo Canyon is Unit the trict Court In jnd For Coriion CounCompanies, Rozcl, north shore ; -. FIT ALL FEET : I Price Trading Co. lie-fini- Phone The e, ht lie-lo- w eight-inc- Six-inc- eas-in- g. d ojiera-tion- eom-ian- y, irra-tion- w hunhole is down almut twenty-eigh- t dred feet without further indications of oil. The opinion among the men on the ground seems o lie, however, that the drill now is in the Benosyl-vani- n formation and that the (fund-ridg- e sand, if it exists in that region, may lie exi-teany day. Xu mint information concerning the gasscr of the Midwest near Farmington, X. M., is at hand other than that the gas flow is estimated at from five to ten million cuhic-fedaily. Down in the San liafael country the Carter w II ia making headway, it lieing now at about sixteen hundred feet, and at b present is pnguged in starting a casing at that depth. Out at Fa minim dome the Utah Oil Refining company's well ia around the twelve hundred foot mark and going n'eely. Away off at Caineville the Ohio is still plugging away, hut the prospects at Circle Cliffs and closer to Brice over at the Huntington well seem to have flattened out. Opera limn at these imints are to be filiniidomM. The wells have each reached a depth approximating three thousand feet, and seem to lie what are known as 'dusters. Just what steps will he necessary for the oieratirs to take in closing up work is now being considered by state and federal land authorities. The fact that these wells failed to find oil is said to mean nothing as to other localities, it being pointed out that in such fields as the phenomenal Texas districts only about wr cent of the bores are actual prodmera. The uppliei and equipment from the Huntington well will all he brought into Brice and are to be shipped to Wyoming for nitrations there. Aside from these points the principal news from the various drilling nitrations in progress throughout Utah is the fact that there is no real news. With about twenty-fiv- e active proierties driving wells there is little chance to report. Others Starting Soon. Quite a few new drills will be started soon, according to arrangements iV.p have jueflNH-- completed. MM f these will lie in the Uintah or San .Finm districts. In spite of the lack of strikes in any of the wells si unc of are now to a depth beyond which their promoters confidently cxpoi-tn- i to reach prodtirng sands mm-optimism prevails that Utah will vet he n big faetor in the world's oil Inkiness. Encouraged by various gndgi.-t- reports the Roosevelt Standard expresses the view prevailing out 1h:, This Uintah Ruin by saying: of the cxfernnl evidence of nil than has any other part of the Unif. d States. Great outcrops ,f suturaL-sands, extremely rich in m. siVrMi-ineasterly r.nd wcstcrlv tir a hundred miles and diiuci: uniform dip to the mirth, where, der proper euiulifiom-- . thoe sands' i . ;lie reached wi'li a drill , ,,;. jhe obtained. Again see the trc-l- vc of g:!onite reh in oil eui.tent, is also the other great ilcii-.-iti.f v,l- ,'... carbons, all of which 'is than residue of oil. Add t all tiis the thousands of acres of rich flj ie and yon will readily see Unit Wl. )nv,', reason for the hope that is within Ohio At Caineville. At Caineville, after cementing ie Nittnm of the eight-inc- h easing somea like mouth thing ago, the hole has ct ten-ine- Asphalt Great Salt Lake; Midwest Oil and Gas, fourteen miles north from Salt Lake City, 750; Western Petroleum, Coalville, 2H); tiustavcKou Oil couquuiy, Diamond Fork, just spmlding in; Uintah Oil and Exploration, Moffat, 13(H) feet; Itc Petroleum (Utah Southern), Duchesne, spudding in; Ilill Creek Oil and Refining, Uintah Basin, almut 200 feet ; the Producers' Oil compuny, Ephraim, 50(1 feet; Utah Petroleum (Utah Oil Refining), almut 1000 feet; Old Emery, San Rafael, 4iMI feet ; Leonard Petroleum, Fern in, HIM) tact; Utnh Oil Development company in the vicinity of Fcrron, 600 feet; ChsIIh Dale Oil Get Ready For I'tah Giovanni lUitmta PlHintlff, vs. Costancia Curia, Defendant. Summons. The Suite of Utah to the said Defendant. You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty summons days after the service of this upon you If serted within the-- county la which this action la brought, ntherwis within thirty days after service and deand la fend the above entitled a case of your failure so to do judgment will le rendered against you Id the demand of the complaint, which has lieen filed with the clerk of said c ourt. This action is brought iigalnit vou to dissolve the bonds of matrimony heretofore existing lietween you and the plaintiff. HENITY K1V.C.KITI, Attorney for the Plaintiff. PostofClce Ad- -I dress. Price. Utah. First pub., Nov. 11; last Dec. $, 1121. ty, State of Co-rl- a, li'-n- . I 1 the Big Movie Making Day Saturday Is the Day When he MovJV Camera Will Make Pictures In Price. He There. 2-- re g TONIGHT Friday Wolves of the North, featuring Eva Novak. This is a Lig special feature for Armistice Day. Cans, featuring Brownie, the wonder dog. .Tin PROGRAM For the Week Commencing Saturday, November 12th. Don t Forget the Children's Matinee Every Saturday Afternoon At 2:30 o'clock . ,KMa.iie(ls!?)rne IheKajah. in Tfce Sawdust DolL Harold Lloyd Saturday Evening IIaa,m Pathe Singers, Dancers and M feature. Burton Holmes T uuKui. Screen Magazine. Admission 25c and 55c. ciiinV 2 !ie SUNDAY First Show At 6 o'clock pe?richLfc !Urr g Kat!j,crine MacDonald. tg.nerville comedy. MONDAY Matinee and The Night Mary MiIw Minter t s TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ,'"d,KS M""NWy Wife, comedy. - u-- ." THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Mothers f M,.- n- -- Serob Lady, comedy. P - |