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Show FRIDAY, DECEMBER Ixraad Every Friday By Bun Publishing Ce. (Inc.) K. W. Crockett, Mgr. We OLD FOLKS Subscription, (2.00 the Tear. Office Phone No. I. Keeidence, No. Mall HatEntered as Second-Clas- s ter, June 4, 1915. at Postoffice at Price, Utah. Under the Act of March t, 1979. lilltl ADVERTISING KATES. Display Matter Per Inch per Month, 11.50; Single ltsaue, 5Uc. Special Position, 25 Per Cent Additional. Legala Ten Cents the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Summons. 912.50; Water Application, 915.00; Final Proof, 910.00. Readers Ten Cents the Lins Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Blackface Type Fifteen Cents the Line Each insertion Obituaries, Cards jf Thanki, Resolutions, Etc., at. Half Local Resiling Notice Kates. Count Six Words to Line. For Bale, For Rent. Found, Lost, Etc., Two Cents per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO, Pries. Utah. DodgeErdthers ,& Prank L. $aniorv . y .V BU5INE55 CAR ' Old folks, too, like Christmas; Grandfather, . . sitting there, Feds ad " J v'" his hes forgotten cause if chimney-chai- he1 s Leading firms in every community testify to its uninterrupted service and its low cost of in n He says hes thinkin of the days that he no more will see, When he was just a little boy a Christmas I went mourning without Tlie Bun; I stood up and cried la tbs congregation Job, boy SU-Z- II. like me. You will find that they are He listens to the fire Stats Board Takss Action Retarding its always talkin' so, And then it is he calls to mind his good times long ago When the Christmas wind was whistlin through the cold and frosty nights And children dreamed of Christmas bells and watched for Christinas lights. Outaids Companies. Although permitted to do so by the low creating it, the Utah securities sommisaion has just derided that it would approve no stock manuals whatever, Further, it was decided that all corporation!, firms or individuals come under the one general ruling if they desire to sell their securities in Utah. Moreover, in every ease where foreign building and loan securities organizations come into Utah, selling savings eertificates and profitsharing they will lie required to invest those savings within the state, either in properly secured bonds or in loans wxi homes sud improved real estate. for JS&t a, rou-pon- This decision was reached on recom mendation of Ileber 'C. llicks, secretary of the commission, who made a long report dealing with his studies on the subjects involved. The report was made last Saturday, that the matter might lie definitely settled by the commission by next January 1st. With reference to the sale of profitsharing eoums llicks says: The unfairness of taking this money out of the state is no doubt apar-rn- t to all, for the investing publie signs up on lung time eoutracts, and as a result these comianiea are constantly draining the smaller states of savings that are invested for the development of large centers." Concerning manuals as guides to the investing public, the secretary says, in part "For the numt part the rejiorta in these manuals are furnished by the eonimnies themselves nud are not necessarily certified statements of assets and liabilities. Absolute accuracy of the statements is not guaranteed. And these manuals are also p rejig red annually and companies given one rating at the time the information is furnish ed may have an actual rating entirely different before the manual baa been delivered from the publishing house. In Utah the approval of sueh manuals would work to the disadvantage of our Utah corporations, inasmuch as the foreign corjxiratioiM listed in such manuals would send their securities into the state to he sold immediately, while the Utah corporations must comply with every requirement of the law and submit detailed accounts of the p V S. J ) He doesnt seem to hear at all the noise the children make, For when he sits the stillest there hes dreamin' wide awake! mother then she tells us to all run 8! (C ' ' t 8 out and play, For old folks hear sweet music when theyre dreamin' day by day. . Wftfl vvj&J WmJtilX'--, then Grandmother SHE comes in and sits beside him there, And puts her hand in his, and says sweet words he loves to hear, But what they are shed never tell to mother or to you; She knows that he is dreamin', for she dreams the same dreams, too. So Christmas comes to old folks, and it's then they love to know The children dont forget em, though they lived so long ago! i they say the sweetest present of all business conducted before being jer-mittto sell their securities. The entire proceeds from the sale of Eastern tionds go elsewhere, and in many rasa Utah bonds with far greater assets are left to go begging on the market and Utah development is larded just to that extent Some six or eight states have exempted the stocks listed on the New York, Boston and Chicago stock exchanges, but the most of the states have drawn the line upon even these securities; for, although the governing boards of these exchanges use the utmost care in listing securities, it is not unusual for the eorjKirations to get into financial difficulties and to resort to the sale of bonds or preferred stocks after their assets hare diminished to a point where each investments are unsafe, but they continue to lie sold to the investors throughout the country, not as relative issues, but as certain divi-- 1 pajicrs, so they could not be plac ed in the same class as investments in mining and oil stocks, which jieople know are hazardous." Taxpayers of Carbon County: Your selection of CONCRETE Price to Castle Gate Highway Will Automatically Create a Big Market For the Consumption of Several Important Utah Products As Follows: For the Paving of the ed e Two Hundred and Fifty-SiTons of Coal, Alone, Are Required In the Manufacture of Sufficient Cement to Build One Mile of Concrete Road 7 3 Inches Thick and 18 Feet Wide, or a Total of 2560 Tons For the Entire Project of Ten Miles. x 1-- That CONCRETE is being used far more extensively for the paving of the nation's highways than any other one material is sufficiently indicated by these two facts: 1. Concrete is being used to the extent of from 70 to 95 per cent of the total highway work of permanent nature by such states as Iowa, PennsyL j How the government has employed federal fnuds for roadbuilding through the bureau of public roads, United States dejiartnient of agriculture, among the various tyjies of toads, is shown in n summary just prejiared by the department The tabulation covers the expenditure of 6211.135.276.31 aWatwaS -- ; of federal aid funds from the beginning of the work when it was authorized by congress up to November 1, 1921, a period of four years and four $24,721,020.92 were applied during the .roads, of which 444.6 miles were built months. The sum was applied toward jicriod of the construction of (804 .federal aid was available, and toward the construction of 28,135 miles of miles of graded and drained roads at the cost of 2095.5 miles of sand clay roads. The total cost was $496,151,-683.4- a total cost of $55,704,253.78. e roads the federal government eontrib-ute- d 0 The average cost was bituminous macadam roads, of The total cost of $10,495,172.10. which 1323.2 miles were constructed, sand clay roads was $22,220,362.66. per mile. Nearly 36 Tier cent of the federal aid at a total cost of $41,412,557.22, claimFlans to organize automobile clubs funds, or $75,600, 270.30, went into the ed federal aid funds to the extent of construction of 4653.6 utiles of $18,646,006.17. For another high type in small and intermediate cities 2 throughout the country were discussed concrete roads. Next in size of road bituminous concrete 1 was made available through at the annual meeting of the American were total appropriations of That sum went toward Automobile association, recently held federal aid funds applied to the federal aid. building of 10,043.5 miles of gravel the construction of n2.5 miles of road- at Detroit, Mich. road, at a total coat of $104,614,066.71. way at a total cost- of $23,445,374.88. That good printing. The Sun. Toward the construction of brick Federal aid funds to the extent of 3. Ten-Mil- Rock, Clay and Marl Gypsum Electric Power Coal BOW GOVEKMENT MONEYS SPENT FOR ROADBUILDING High-grad- $17,-63- I de $9,299,-864.3- $47,192,-895.4- un- usually progressive merchants with a name for careful STOCK MANUEL RULES high-gra- 16, 1921 vania, Maryland, llllinois, Wisconsin, Washington, California, Minneso- ta, Indiana and Arizona. 2. Up to January 1, 1921, concrete had been approved by federal aid authorities to the extent of 74 per cent of the total "hightype highway work throughout the country receiving government financial support. That CONCRETE is regarded as the highest possible type of highway construction to the engineering world is indicated by not alone the two known yet preceding facts, but by the following: .No by the Lincoln Highway association for the paving of its Ideal Section of highway pavement. The decision to use concrete for the exacting requirments of this project was reached only upon the recommendations of the foremost highway engineers in the country. stron8er evidence of the fitness of concrete as a paving material could.be Portland Cement Association A National Organization the Uses of Concrete To Improve and Extend 407 McCornick Building Salt Lake City Offices in Twenty-On- e Other Cities |