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Show THE BUN, PRICE, PAGE SIX U TA VER H- -E T FRIDAY. raAiinsg PLEASED WITH UNITED MINE WORKERS Yards adjoining tlte Dm Rio GTande Railrui tbe south, three depot Office at il timates given and nriZ on application. Pooifvl ,7 BUNKER COAL RATE FROM UTAH MINES SOON ON. Reduction in the rate on coal for bunkering purposes to Sau Francisco and Oakland, Cala., recently announced, will become effective from Wyoming mines on December 9th, Southern Pacific freight dejifertmeut officials announced hut Friday. From Utah mines the effective dates of the new rate will be December 8th or 9th, deluding on location of the mines. The Itresent rate is $7.25. The new rate is six dollars a ton. A Tight for the Utah rate has been in progress by the Carbon county ojierators fur several weeks lust. Ten or more of them nude the ajiilicatuin originally. M. Telephone ISM. tnrer of Brick of Buy a pipe -and some P. A. Get the joy thats due you! 1 ( DR. R. M JONES Physician and Surgeon 1 Obstetrics snd Diseases Chna Offlcs Sllvsgnl Block. PrlcJ DR. J. A. JUST Physician snd Hurgooa Telephone 1MW Office Price Commercial sad 8m. Bank Bldg.. Pries. Vtsk Crlnt A I kart la aaU in low kf Mr fmd (i kamaaaaaa mamma . kmmtUara mmd in tha mamma cryatal glaaa mmmtiamr COAL MINE DEATH RATE NOW SHOWING DECREASE witk am mmgm mtmiatamar L S. EVANS Dentist Office, Room 10, Bilvsgnt PRICE, UTAH DR. H. B. GOETZMAH Dentist Work and Extraction, Commercial Bank Bldg., Pries, DR. SANFORD BALUNOa Dentist Work and Extraction Office, the New ltcilit Itulldlae. PRICE, UTAH . X-R- ay RTEWART. ALEXANDER Attorneys At Ia Office Bjildine GEORGE CHRISTENBEJ Attorney At Law the national joy smoke m carbon cm com com organ- e. bed, ta E9IIMI CALLED THE Is A. McGEE Attorney At Us - COAL COMPANY All plans have been perfected for the opening up of another big coal mine in Carbon county. It is located on Willow Creek, northeast of Castle Gate and north of Kenilworth. The company taking over the proposition is the Equitable Coal company, organized under the laws of the state of Utah, and capitalized for $500,000.00, divided into fifty thousand shares at ten dollars each. The officers of the company are Edward D. Dunn, president; John Arronco, vice president; H. A. Smith, attorney and director; H. A. Smith, Jr., secretary and treasurer, and James A. Foley, director. The company has purchased three hundred and twefity acres of patented coal lands, also eighty acres of surface rights, and evenhundred and tually expects to obtain an additional twenty-fiv- e sixty acres under the new coal leasing law. The property has been examined by a well known coal mining engineer and pronounced to be excellently located, containing a first-cla- ss bituminous coal, and that it can be developed into one of the best coal mines in Car bon county with a reasonable expenditure of time and money. Work will be started to develop this property early in the spring, or sooner if weather permits, and wifi be pushed as fast as possible so as to provide for early production and shipment of coal It is expected to conduct this company as much as possible on a mutual plan, and the company's officers are desirous of interesting as many as possible in the company who will take an interest in its development and progress. It is therefore, hoped that coal miners and others having business in and around coal mines will become stockholders, as it shall be the policy of the company to at all times give a preference to its stockholders in employment in and in connection with said mine. This, company believes it to be a good plan, as it will not only . give employ men t to those interested in the welfare of the property and its dividends, but will also result in more satisfied employes, as Ww:i?a41uze that the, companys interest is their interest as zNlth jhlfjmpany 8 Pl8n of allowing stockholders in Salt Lake Gty Ogden a special reduction in coal the f the year-t- wo tons of coal or fourprices slafk to the share, it is confidently expected that continuoustons of work wiU mak wnteSSSd Sfo hoped employes will all be stock holders?8 x e 5,-J- ' or y. Srrdl SSKiri obtain-nectio- I snd I. Sllvsgnl BMz PRICE, UTAH FERDINAND ERICKSEI Rooms , TIT Judas Biiftdlng SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law Off! Room I, Sllvsgnl PRICE. UTAH. BulldtH HENRY RUOOEBI Attorney At low Offlcs at tbs County CnurthoHS PRICE, UTAH. OUVER C. DALBT Attorney At Low Office, tbs New Redd Building: PRICE. UTAH. B. W. DALTON Attorney At low Off! oe Eko Theater Butldlm. PRICE, UTAH J. E. FLYNN Dimmed Undertaker aad Embalmer I. Telephone PRICE, UTAH. DR. J. B. HENDERSON Chiropractor. At Price, First Door West of Thjg II to II noon -- I till 4 p. m. At per. over Helper State Bank. p. m., except Sundays Otlwr at home. Call by appoint BEN BEAN General Painting Contractor First-Cla- ss Work. All EHmt Phone 1M. PRICE, UTAH. A. KOPF'S STUMP High Grade Portraits end moots. Iw Second Floor Price Commercial and Saving PRICE, UTAH. Equitable Coal Co., 424--5 Judge Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. , 1921. Gentlemen: Herewith pines find my remit'aiirc iiiiionnting to $ Hie same lieing Imiymint in full) IV j;Ts l,.vmua of ii jVr ceii on shares of the cniiiinl of the Equitable Coal 111.0(1 at share. I hereinjniny to rnnit Ihe Inlance chase ot slock as fellows: 25 mV due on this ch, "ays and tlm reiniiinde r as knewle.-lgii.eii- l of ihie order and remit I an. " ' I'rn-- to Jn mmry 1, ()22. ,""1 eerlifieatej whi the hle pmeli.M. pri,-., are to lie mailed tn me dr.'-shelow. at the ad- Name jr - . s a-- ree ,.i Al-'r-- , Tlie French adiiiii tn ; . i.Mi. more than twelve Undi.d roads in Morin (1jji.,.,., , canal drawn rollers. i.j - r. ! JH J . i Vr. ""t MnrJiiel..!, 0. JACOBSEN Carpenter and General Contrefl Co. At J. C. Weeter Lumber PRICE. UTAH KNIGHTS OF PYTHUS, Pries Lodge No. IS. Meet evejj ond. third and fourth Tumw , sonlo Hall Visiting mamtyr welcome. P. E. Trim. C.C--, 1Tn Wheat. K. R. R I No. 52 PRICE. UTAH PRICE LODGE 0-- Meets each Wedncxd.ir W. F. Myera. V Hampton, V. G.: L. A. Hill j oclock. s ! iiro.M-pl.v- Office, the Sllvsgnl Building, Form ly Occupied by Judge F. E. Was Telephone ISO, Price, Utah. Attorney At Law fifty-- it-s A RUg j Second Floor Sllnral PRICE. UTAH esali-liah- cd ; ft X-R- ay a, tnl-nn- I Office, the New ltedd BuUdin PRICE, UTAH Bor-deria- Wlaataa-Sala- til DR-O- W. GREEN Physician and Surgeon g! mill-er- a' ft roauW INCUR for LAVING MACHIM not now. l",ii,:S running ..a ter, '"'der and hadi full has years. mifCK J. K. Jamemn c.ire t.,;. cllfl ami gas l.eng used your machine la token nor Fifth and J street Thon j . AD Kinds PROFESSIONAL We print it right here that if you dont know the feel and the friendship of a joyus jimmy pipe GO GET ONE ! And get some Prince Albert and You bet smoke-gonbang a howdy-d- o on the big with P. A.1 youll smoke a pipe if you play the game For Prince Alberts quality flavor coolness tasted fragrance is in a class of its own! You never such tobacco 1 You never dreamed such smoke joy could be yours! Why figure out what it alone means to your .tongue and temper when we tell you that Prince Albert cant bite, cant parch! Our exclusive patented process fixes that! And, say oh, go on and get a pipe and some Prince Alberti Do it right now! According to reports received by the United States bureau of mines from the varioua state mine iiuqmctors, a men were kill hundred and fifty-tar- o ed during last September in aud about the coal mines of the country as com jtared with a hundred aud ninety-seve- n in the oorresjxmding month in 1920. The 1921 figures show a decrease of forty-fiv- e fatalities or about 23 jht cent from the record of the same month of last year. Based upon an estimated output of 42,221), 000 short tons in September, 1921, the fatality rate is 3.60 jier million tons prod need. The Capyrlght 121 rorres ion ding rate for September last kr R. j. , ya Ida and 3.66 of was the TakaccaCa. production year coal waa 53,810,000. . The production S. G. of coal during Scjitcmbcr; 1921, represents a decrease of 22 per rent. The average number of livea lost during September of earh year from 1913 to applied for aa coal land by Lewis A. 1920 has been a hundred and eighty-ninThe application is being held The production of coal has av- Lawyer. while the claim is being contested up eraged 51,886,000 tons, showing a faby the stats of Utah and Pleasant Val3.64 million as tons rate of tality jier The case has been ley Coal representative of the month of Sep- heard by comjiany. Examiner Carrier during the tember fur the past eight years. week and by stipulation he is During the first nine months of the past a personal inspection of the making present year fourteen hundred and five men have been killed by acci- projierty. dents at coal mines, against sixteen Com Just Aa Cheap. hundred and cighty-siduring the months of 1920, a decrease WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 6. fatali- Com at thirty-tw- o rents a bushel is of two hundred and thirty-onties or 14 jier cent. The output of coal equal in value to coal at $16 a ton, for the same mouths was 362,800,000 Secretary Wallace said today. At twenshort tons in 1921 and 473,100,000 Ions ty cents a bushel, he said, com would Lewis la Gratified. in 1920, a decrease during the present he equivalent to fuel coal at ten dolIn districts whure corn is year of 110,300,000 tons or 23 per eent. lars a ton. SPRINGFIELD, Ills., Nov. ohn L. Lewis, the international jiresident These figures represent a fatality rate cheap now the coal is of rather poor of the United Mine Workers, had not of 4.01 jier million tons mined in 1921 grade and is Belling at high prices, heard of tha decision of The United and 3.56 per million torn mined in he continued. Under such conditions it will pay States court of ajijtesls in Chicago yes- 1920. tha total of a hundred and fifty-tw- o both farmers and people in eountry terday, stuqmnding that part of Judge Offatalities during September, thir- towns to use corn instead of coal. UnAndersons injunction referring to the occurred at the bituminous coal doubtedly large quantities of corn will ty reached until he rheckoff system in Pennsylvania, a decrease of be burned on Western farms this winSpringfield this morning from Indian- mines ter, unless prices should materially ad apolis, Ind., and was informed of the fifteen from September a year ago; devance. e West in a twenty-fivLewVirginia, Asked decision. for a statement, Wallace said the use of surplus grain is said: "I am deejily gratified with crease of six; fourteen in Illinois, a the courts action and think it will go reduction of three; six in Kentucky, as fuel in times of low marketability a long way toward allaying the pres- a reduction of eight; five in Ohio, a was not an uncommon occurrence in ent disturbed condition in the mining reduction of thirteen; five in Ala- other cereal raising countries. bama, a reduction of four; three in In, industry. diana, a reduction of twelve. Kansas Mine Wrecked. At the anthracite mines in PennsylNEW COKINO PROCESS NOW Nov. 7. The PITTSBURG, men were killed, as small mine of theKan., WORKING TO SPLENDID END vania, forty-on-e Coal comBurgess against twenty during Scjitember of pany, about a mile eouth of Mulberry, last coke . year. Obtaining of a good grade of was completely wrecked by two explofrom coals which seemed devoid of sions early today. The tipple waa ch any coking projierty has been accom- COMPANY nr POSITION and the mouth of the slojm cav TO DO AS IT PLEASES ed in hv plished by investigators at the Unitip explosions. Motors and versity of Illinois, working in electrical other machinery were ruinColDENVER, Colo., Nov. 5. The with the United States bureau The mine has lieen to- ed by cxjilosiona. orado commission industrial state of mines, by the employment of a spefor several weeks in spite of ojwrated terminated it order temporary cially devised low temjierature coking day the wage scale in effect jiri-- the strike. Eight men comprise the process. As a result of the process, restoring to September 1st in Huerfano and comiwny, all of them miners, and they valuable byjnmdurts in the way of amLas Animas counties in mines operat- have done all the work at the proper-tmonia, gas and tar are derived. ' The Six of them have been working ed by the Colorado Fuel and Iron comn city mains. The tar oils also at the mine. regularly comThis action the permits with an investigation by the pany. into into scales effect wage put bureau of mines of the smoke problem pany AROUND THE LOCAL CAMPS; at Salt Lake City. It was found that augurated September 1st, in which rePERSONAL AND OTHERWISE ductions 30 were per coke was regularly obtained from onajiproximately cent. The eomjnission announced it coals to Salt few a the ly tributary Sujierintendent Ledger of the CamLake City district, and, if the use of found that the eomjmny had an agree- eron Coal company was in Price last ment to with reduce its wagemployes coke, a smokeless fuel, was to he inHis projierty, he states, is Saturday. creased in that city, it would be nec- es, but the commission in its findings working six days a week practically did not into unfairfairness or the go essary to demonstrate the pnasiliilitics with about a thousand tons daily ness of the wage. ' of coking coals not regularly used for The wage reduction on Sejitemher that purpose. Six coals from various U. It. Thompson is opening a new !Jat. last, resulted in aten days strike Utah districts were tested. .in a numlier of the mines. The strike coal mine in Thomjmoiis Canyon, lie standso as far Although, present ards of eoking indications are concern- 'was ended by a temporary order of is jiutting his coal on the Moah mared, the coals tested seemed quite non- the commission. Members of the com- ket for the jiresent, but as developmission stated that the miners would ment progresses exjiects to ship out liv coking, treatment by the methods devised by Prof. S. W. Purr of the Uni- -' not he violating the state industrial railroad. law in the event they strike as a result Coal over Soldier Summit versify of Illinois resulted in a yield .of reductions in wage, should such re- fell offshijiments docoke of good last week to about two hunadapted to use as a mestic fuel and for metallurgical pur-- j ductions follow todays sessions. dred and ears a day as conijiared Fred Fsrrsr, general counsel for the with a fifty rush the loses. In seine reflect the eokc seems week previous special Colorado Fuel and Iron rompunv, said iof three hundred and superior to anthracite for use in dofifty to four mestic furnaces. Slightly more thmi today he was not in a position to say hundred and ten ears of fifty tons ca-- ; lie would at this time exactly what twenty jkiuikIs of ammonium sulphate, done as a result of the state industrial parity. valuable as a fertilizer, were recoverFrom the Twenty Yanra (g., The commii'n commission's sward. ed Jier ton of coal coked. of last Mond.ivs Ilisetet News: The gas recovered as a byproduct is has sustained every cotitention we The local smoke prolilciii vn dinnconditions lint Farrar iniHde, said, esjiecinllv suitable for utilization in ed solved. In the lit the ed should lend themselves readily to jhave changed some since we jiut into rear of the Atlas block a will and it bp reduction a effect wiige themselves should lend readily to for us to read and discuss furnace was given e try.mt snd was cracking processes, thereby furnishing necessary standthe award in our offices before we can der'ared a succ.mm from for suitable fuel motor a product purThe inv"iitoi W. S. Woolliy, will take. we point. action announce what poses, and may also jimve a source of iuviUd a ronunit'ei' of engineers sinu creosote oil and other wood jirescrring jmiminent citizens to witness his Carbon. In These on account tar Sunday materials. oils, smokeless heating device in ojicration. ' deof their marked drying projierties, may J. B. Carrier, examiner in the It was said the furnace consumed a also be available for taint and varnish partment of the interior, and Gould grade of eo.il and burned the (heap Unitthemlocal B. uses suggest manufacture. Other Blakeley, register of the End without producing smoke to nn selves, such as direct combustion, in ed States land office, left today, says appreciable extent. It was rerommem engines of certain tyjws, as fuel for Saturday's Deseret News, for Castle ed to city officials ami to industrial tract of steam generation, aa a source of heat Gate to inspect a forty-acr- e (Continued on Page Eight) for metallurgical purposes, the carbu- - land in that vicinity which Las been asenw-men- m..-- ? PRICE, UTAH retting of water gas, and k the source of pitch as a binder for the briquetting of breeze, lignite fuels and aoforth. Results of the investigation are of twofold imjiortanre, indicating the jNissiliilitv of coking many coals not generally considered to have any coking qualities, and also constituting a factor in the solution of the smoke problem in communities not favorably situated for the obtaining of smokeless fuel. the labor situation in the mining industry, and will also help to hold in line miners who hsd been quitting work without authority. Ojwrators, on the other hand, declare they aee in the ae- lion of the court of apiieals only a delay of tlie,final issue. It would be bet ter to have the issue of the rheckoff system decided at nnee rather than delay the deeision until cold weather if there is to be a cessation of work over the action. The writ of injunction issued by Judge Anderson forbids the oierators in withholding from the pay union dues and asaessments as had agreed with unions the ojteratora ' to do. Union officials assert that compliance by the ojierators with the decision of the court will precipitate a strike and in states where the ojiera-tor- s have decided to follow the court's decree there have always Wn walkouts and miners in other states have had ejwradie walkouts. The origin of the controversy began in the filing of a bill by the Coal conijiany, ojierating in Kentucky but ahljijiin iuto the other states, against the union, its officers and several coal companies and officials, charging that union wages in the central eonitietitive districts were to be sjiread into West Virginia, tending to create a monopoly of labor by the union and in restraint of trade. The union wage agreement included the rheckoff system by which union dues and were to be collected from the miner and paid to the union by the ojierators. Attorney Glasgow, in outlining the litigation, told the court that the bill rharged that this rheckoff system was a part of the conspiracy to unionize West Virginia. The union counsel asked sufficient time of Judge Andenon to prepare a reply to the charges. . ( COMPANY COURT RULING AT CHICAGO Action of the United States court of apjteals at Chicago a week ago today, an forecasted tv The Sun (November 4th), iu auri tending that art of the injunction issued by Judge Anderson of Indianapolis, luL, as applying to the checkoff system until further order of the court, is acclaimed by officials of the United Mine Workers of America as a decided victory. The nullifying of that part of the writ ol' injunction applying to the checkoff allows this plan of holding out union dues and assessments ffom the coal miners pay to lie continued by the orators temporarily. Au apeul hearing was granted the union for Wednesday, Novem-le- r 16th. Iniou leaders profess to see in the actum a reopening of the entire case and attorneys for the mine workers say they will present all the testimony given at the late hearing before Judge Anderson to prove that the rase had not Iteen handled thoroughly.. The action of last Friday, the union leaders say, will do much to clear up JjAl FRIDAY, NOVemebo FINE MONUMENTS At Reasonable Prices. Send For Designs and Prices. Beesley Marble and Granite Works Provo, Utah ' J. W. 1 & w HAMMOND, STRACTKRGI TITW t Abstracts of titles Ijj'rnfc. piece or tract In Eaajern gecenl insurance written In nlea Real esUta, rUk floor Sllvsgnl Bldg.. 8nJ AUTOMOBILE TRANSF1 dray Lltfrtigw hauling r pro Give us your or F other work and It will attention. No Job yrejrt Waftr small for us to handle. given our apodal Prlrr-- M , Christensen, Phone - . V |