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Show 1 V V mAh 'r- V'. - ' . ; s, . T?f ' V. rN' TTT - ' 4'- FRIDAY, THE SUV, PRICE, PAGE EIGHT Eva shook TO RECEDE (Continued From The Fairest Wind El Ftp KIl) Fuel (preferred) are bid. Standard Coal ed and seventy-twis bonds (sixes of 1924) ninety-thre- e nak- o asked. The Utah Coal and Coke company having holdings of 2774.18 acres of land in Carbon county over south of Sunnyside places its total valuation at $381,634.73 in a rejairt just male to the state board of equalization. 4 Miners of Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas Kansas and Missouri met yesterday with officers of the Southwestern Interstate Coal Operators associatijii for an informal discussion of wage not too late, even with a week in March gone, to store coal agaiust the needs of April and May. The larger the tonnage of coal in storage on Ajc-ri-l 1st the more certain the continuous ojieration of all industries, regardless of the rate of mine output, and. indeed the mure probable the quick return to normal condition. The consumer himself can do much t keep the market a buyers market, i ml he should realize that what has host the country both coal miner and emil user in late years has been the orgy of high prices for cuql and the consequent inflation of mine labor and o mine cajwcity which has characterized er.ch period when sellers of roal, rather than buyers, dominated the market. That kind of prosperity hnrta ev-- By KATE EDMONDS. , 1M1. hr McClure Kcwmapcr Sy atcu. really forbid our mardemanded Ronald, swelling riage?" his broad chest Indignantly. and Evas charming Positively, face waa woifful enough to soften the heart of the fondest aunt and uncle, but Eva was very young aud Ronald had yet to prove that he could do more thau spend the money be had Inherited from a rich father. He was studying law, and gave promise of becoming a brilliant lawyer, but his matters. love for Eva had Interfered with bis Stockholders of the Indeendent Coal studies, and then his hobby for flying machines had completed his abstracand Coke company are to meet at tion. Even now his newest little bielecMarch the for 14th, Wyo., cryone. tion of directors for the ensuing year plane was resting on the green meadand to transact such other business as SOME CHANCE OF AVERTING ows of the Grey estate. What did the judge say? asked may projierly come before them. MINERS STRIKE Ronald as he glanced aggressively toJohn Crawford, state mine inajiee-to- r, ward the big house half hidden among was at Staudardville Monday last WASHINGTON, D. C., March to make inquiry into the death there of Illinois miners today guard the ouly tall maples. He said, said Eva very dclllierate-ly-, Anton Caesar. The man was instantly loophole through which settlement of that when yon won your first killed last Friday by a fall of lop roal. the threatened nationwide strike may Deceased was about 40 years old and be effected, according to the general case we might speak of being marbelief of government officials here. ried. leaves a widow and four children. Won my first case good nlglitl M. John League, a Christian Science Secretary of Lalicr Davis believes, it uttered the affronted young man. Ilinner of the is learned authoritatively, that the iiractit Coal aud former manager What did your Aunt Ann say? company, died Wednes- linois district agreement will he made She asked how old you were. cither will follow that and districts in day at his home in Denver, Colo, Phydoes It matter? What reaching aearate conclusions with sicians said death waa due to a Eva I told her twenty-two- . shrugged. e ia estimated It by resjiou-sihlof diseases. League was born ojierator. authorities that at least 75 per in Hannibel, Mo., July 25, 1856, and And then she said V for tha just thirty-si- x years had been cent of the workers would be willing A mere boy I to sign separate district agreements if a resident of the Colorado capitaL Boyr Six Colorado rangers were ordered the Illinois experiment is proven Isnt It dreadful labor-itelaat Wednesday to duty at the Clayton sueeessfuL A certain jiortion of Ronald looked reflectively across however, believe auch agreements and State Shaft mines of the Clayton the waving green toward his biplane. would work detriment fur the of the Coal company at Krie, Colo. Col. PatIve a good Idea Ill run away or rick J. Hamrock, head of the rangers, national organization and result in the fly away with you, Eva. overthrow L. of John Lewis, presiwaa advised by eompany officials thut Dare you do that?" most of the employes at the two mines dent of the United Mine Workers, who Not unless you really want to state aettlementa. opposes staunchly wanted to return to work, but were decome, Eva. Its pretty serious, you terred from doing so by threats of the know I" Split Is Averted. striking radicals. I know and I wont be really 8. March INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., until we are married and sethappy RIEL SITUATION INQUIRY IS No split of union forces over the tled la our own home." coal 1st on exwaa strike April NOW FAVORED His hand caught hers and held It pected tonight by officials of the UnitThey were very young and tightly. Mine ed to Workers America of result 8. D. March WASHINGTON, C., were they madly in love; perhaps that from Secretaries Hoover and Davis, who any negotiations that may be As have represented the government in held in Illinois toward effecting a mightflewcondone their elopement. enEva house by a side Into the atate for that alone. which efforts President Harding has wage agreement authorised to avoid a coal strike, wen. A message from Frank Farrington, Il- trance and emerged a few minutes visited today by Worth M. Tiptey, ex- linois district president and leader of later with a tiny mysterious bundle faction within hidden under her leather coat, she ecutive secretary of the Federal Coun- the was consrlence stricken, for the good cil of Churches of Christ of America, the union, was declared by the officiand his wife had been as par- judge to mean here als would that Farrington and a delegation representing that body, who urged that a government be governed by the decision on single commission or tribunal to lie set up in agreements that will be made by the the industry. They urged that the en- union a policy conunittee.on which the tire issue as between the miners and administration officials will have a the mine operators be thrown open and majority following. Thia announcethat an inquiry be instituted as to la- ment by the union leaders here was rebor coats, mining, wholesale and retail garded as increasing the likelihood of profits and other factors influencing m walkout of miners on April 1st and conditions. They announced that the also as removing a possible entering suggestion would be taken to senate wedge in the nationwide strike threat and house committees must he con- by single state agreements keeping some miners at work. The Farrington cerned. At the labor department, aetivitiea message sent from St. Louis,Mo., where surrounding the government 's efforts Tllionis officials met to consider the to get the mine operators in the cen- single state agreement proposal, astral competitive field to meet the scale j serted that negotiations would be encommittees of the United Mine Work- tered into by the miners unless an iners before April 1st, when all wage terstate conference were arranged, but contracts expire, were said still to he it was regarded as adding, in effect, in progress. Secretary Davis, howev- that Illinois would in the end he gover, as well as officials and agents as- erned by the policy committees decisociated with him, maintained silence sion. as to results. New Scale Proposed. It is understood that coal mine opKANSAS CITY, Mo, March 9. A erators who have been communicated with upon the negotiations are at ill wage scale to replace evincing unwillingness to enter any dis- that of the central competitive field suasion with the union looking to the was promsed at tlie brief meeting here construction of a new national wage this morning of the miners and operacontract and are insisting upon their tors of the southwestern field, it was intention to make state and district stated by James Cooley, vice president contracts or oerate without any un- of District 25 of the mine workers union. The proposition was made by Harion status. ry N. Taylor, vice president of the Married? He Wanted to Know, "CONSUMERS ARE URGED TO PUT Central Coal and Coke company. It Sternly. was not discussed in detail IN THEIR COAL enta to her Air many years. She owed PUBLIC CONTRACTORS AND THE her education and her social position WASHINGTON, D. C., March 8. INCOME TAX to their tender rare. Hut she was Director George Otis Smith of the dazzled by loves first glamor and the United States geological survey todsy The questioiv having arisen as to the romance of flying away with her lover and sinali, consumers, upon urged great the necessity of storing coal as ngsinst taxability of the income received from apiienled to her romantic spirit or with counI am she said a little 'tha contingency of a mine strike on contracts with the state or school districts, ties, municipalities 1st. At the breathlessly, as she joined him at the April present moment, whether for sjiecial services, construcwhen most forecasts agree to the posable of the airplane. tion of build:ngs, roads and soforth or serious and rather lie was sibility, if not, indeed, the pruliahilitv, other special work ami all for services ashamed suddenly of a very low flow of coal from the not of his liypetuous wooing. coming under the classification of Tld mines within the next month or two, you leave a message for them ? and employes not giving conis not the storage of coal demanded hv officers to know. wanted he tinuous service. Collector of Internal She noddl'd. every premise of business logic, asks Itevenue James II. Anderson calls atThe customary note To put it in plain lanDr. Smith. to the fact that such income pinned on my pincushion I" tention guage. there is far too little real assur- must be Their getting awuy was very proreported, and where in excess ance of a regular eontinunus movement Ronald .was for waiting to see saic. of deductions and allowed exemptions of coal from the mines to the boiler-hous- e whether there wus really going to be law is taxable. by after April 1st. Coal can be a wind squall, for the hlack clouds Don't borrow The Sun. Sulwrlbe were piling in the northwest. bought now in a buyers market. It is We will go south, urged Eva, and we cun land on the flying field If necWORLD'S PROttUCIION ON DECUNEi essary, and as it was growing late Ik followed her suggestion. They got sway fairly well but the Decrease of more than two hundred million tons in the world's wind suddenly veered and the plant bucked viciously. production of coal last year compared with the output in 1920 is re- Shall we land? demanded ltunald in a statement on mining activities issued by the United Sorted I am afraid for you. From geological survey. reports so far received the total 1 I am all right, she shouted. world output of coal last year was 1,100,000.000 metric tons with like this." France and Germany the only nations showing an increased proThey ascended and seemed to strike duction. The chief factors in the lessened output in other countries a quiet lane of air and traveled were the strike by British miners and a worldwide industrial de- swiftly. Where are we going?" screamed Progress in restoring the ruined mines of France was pression. seen in the steady increase in output of the last three years. In Eva. "Danver." million tons were produced, 1919, the statement shows twenty-tw- o How far? and that figure was increased gradually until it reached twenty-nin- e miles I know a PvvsGhei A million last year. further increase of twelve million tons a thereFifty ; good friend of mine. year will be necessary to bring production up to the level of 1913. I had always planned a gorgeom German production of bituminous coal also was still far below the wedding with eight bridesmaids and pre-w- ar level, although an increase was effected in 1921 as against eveiythlng." 1920. German production of lignite in 1921 reached the highest Whats that?" bellowed the pros point ever attained, with an estimated output of a hundred and pecllve bridegroom. Eva repeated It In a staccato voice million tons over twenty million tons, an increase of thirty-thre- e "So bridesmalda at this affair, hi the last year before the war. yelled back. u, Do they . com-ldicati- o, pros-imcti- trans-Mississip- pi com IKE rr u t Jt.s'1" 7: ve r MARCH FRIDAY. PTAH-flTIE- T her belmeted bead- - She was rather disappointed. Somehow, quite an airplane elojment was uot No least. the to say sporting, mawould pursue them In a flying been chine A motorcar would have have different then the Judge might bade climbed Into bis great car and dickthe like drive to chauffeur the a ens" aye, that would have keen Eva sighed romantic. and race great and the wind lore the sigh sway from her. It was growing black again, and she could see that Ronald was fighting ji to keep ooutrul of the plane. The wlud was veering around, and the human thing. plane fought back like a We are going home !" she shrieked above the wind. "I can't help It." he roared deeperately. Eva subbed. Sever had elopers had such a dismal time, slie thought to rise Fancy screaming all the time, above the noise of the engine! She find the hoped Aunt Lucy would uot note it would upset them so, and they had been so kind, and Aunt Lucy would have loved to make a wedding for her! I want to go home! she shrieked at her love. I'm taking you there, aint IT" he bellowed Inelegantly. There was a terrible moment of suspense as they neared the old house. The engine died suddenly and the plane teetered, wavered In the topmost branches of the tallest, widest-sprea- d maple near the house, and one .wing of the big plane scraped a window shutter off, and brought the whole family to the guest dumber where the Judge tossed up the sash and looked out at them two very young; conscience-stricke- n birds In a lofty nest! he wanted to know, "Married? sternly. They explained sheepishly. We found your not a" he said, transfixing his niece with a Judldal You are both guilty and this .eye. mare served you right ; but young man you took s long chance in this wind and youve shown that you have a great deal to learn. I'll talk to you .both about tha moral side of It and the Ingratitude there there " for Eva was dying, and Aunt Lucy was holding out her hands to the glrL Ronald, I sentence you to one year at hard labor and Eva the seme sentence-making your own wedding clothes and then we shell see about )v Morey Backand a tyouh Shoes new mu fbe Pair of finis PAPES in iHe Heels Jnsoies.Ouf soles To I he Nearer Wko 5ck or Counters of a Pair of 1 jpl? twee' r ; SOLID LEATHCH, STJfO.VGLY PUT TOGETHER Coup? I Mutual Toggery i Sun WASH Price , Utah j Men s Shoes and Furnishings The New Mens and Boys Store Look For the Big Red Sign FORMER 60VERHOR SPRY BELIEVES SHAlfS BONG GROSSLY If the people of Utah, who have keen subscribing to a more or less extent for oil stock had put their funds into the development of the shale industry of the state they would now be reaping much greater returns, said Former Governor William Spry, commissioner of the general land office, at Zion yesterday. The statement was made after Comqiissioner Spry had declared that since the passage of the oil and gas leasing bill, enacted into law February 25, 1920, the government lias realized in the neighborhood of $14,500,000 in royalties under the provisions of this bill. Of this amount 5Va jier cent is turned into the reclamation fund, 37 per cent goes to the state in which the oil is produced to be used for the roads and schools and the remaining 10 per cent is retained by the federal government. What I want to see Utah do, continued the former governor, ia to discover oil on some school sections, so that it ran retain all the money, aa in the instance of Wyoming, where from a single section located in the Salt Creek field the state liaa already realized approximately $1,750,000 in royalties and leases. There are billions of tons of oil shale in this state, the products from which would be of inestimable value. I have seen these and know that the oil shale industry could be made one of the greatest if not the greatest in the state. From all I can learn $250,000 would provide a plant of a hundred tons capaeity. Counting a barrel of oil to the ton, this plant alone would produce a hundred barrels of oil a day, whirh under present circumstances would be a bonanza. The plan, however, rould he executed on a large scale just as well as a small one if necessary capital were supplied and the ehale taken out with steamshovels. Since coming to Salt Lake City this time I have been informed by a rertain broker that in the neighborhood of $1,000,000 has passed through his office for oil stocks alone within the past eighteen months. If this had bfeen diverted into developing the oil shale industry four plants of a hundred tons capacity could have been put in and from which the stockholders would now lie reaping rich re- - . the wedding. A real one In the house, protested Aunt Lucy. And seven or eight bridesmaids, added Ronald anxiously. Thanks, your honor, smiled Eva through her happy tear. NELL GWYN AND CHARLES II Sidelight on History Dealing With the Marry Monarch and Hit Frail Friend. Now Nell Uwyn was a mock wife ol Charles the twice; or aa called at home, Charles the Second. Nell waa the daughter of a poor but proud family, had ambitions to go on the stags, once saw a show from an orchestra seat and worked ia the poor, quarter of Loudon aa a girl observes a writer In the Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. , Nell waa an expert on the quality of lemons, waa very, very fond ol lemons, so took a fancy to King Charles. Later she toured on him, but until then she and the king did a lot of fancy atepplng around the Soho dis- ; ; trict. Nell seemed to Ukt Charles for him- self and often told him shed like him Just as well If he were a chambermaid In a garage. Charles loved Nell alee, ,and often claimed that she, of all his .feminine acquaintances, was the utoel constant, but that ahe was awfully .cranky too frank and hurt hla king-ly feelings, often treated him like a deuce. King Charles died before Nell which In those days waa unusual for kings had a habit of disposing of their ; queens vis the poison Ivy route when a new queen loomed on the horizon, That Charles 'was fond of Xell was shown by his last speech, when In said: Don't let Nell starve. Bui he tonjj. good care not to bequeath her anything but a questionable past .After Charles' death Nell went back to lemon peddling and often when cuddling a citron her mind would wander hack to "Charles," the biggest lemon site ever handled. - r turns1H Commissioner Spry, who for msny years has been greatly interested in the reclamation of the West, declared ' PIONEER OF EMERY COUNTY IS LAID TO HER REST I.W SON, Mareh 4. Tributes to the faithful work and sterling character of Mrs. Lliza Mimmer Loveless were paid by the speakers at her funeral Thursday afternoon in the First Ward chaia-here with Ilishop Willium D. Dixon conductin'. Invocation was ofIt Is the Indian Summer. It Is the Indian rumiiu-r- . The ri fered liv George Kfahell. The sneakers lug sun hluzes tlivough tlie misty all were 1). C. Woodruff, a neighbor for like a (imilNgrailou. a yellowlst t wonty-iivyears nt Huntington, .Teg-?- ! k- Taylor, J. A. Loveless and Pressmoky haze fills the atmosphere, and a filmy mist lies like a diver llnlns ident Charles White. The benediction on the sky. The wind Is soft and low j Pro'?(nin'ed by William Clavson. j,s 10 "'Wring was It wafts to us the odor of the ton-si;- , by the clmir with so- .leaves that hang wilted on the drip by Miss Blanche McBeth and Arping branches, or drop Into the stream thur Jones. Mrs. Eliza Wimmcr Loveless Their gorgeous tints arc p.me, as 11 the autumnal rains bad washed then TIope, Ills!, on JmnarT ' IBll 4he daughter i.j Robert out. Orange, yellow aid aL' and arc changed to one melancholy russei Wilkins Wimnier. She came , 1,1 hoe- - The birds, too. have her parents in 1825, first taken wing Va" and have left iliolr rooik-sCreek. After her mar-Ndwellings jsVt,llnP " the whistle of a robin, not tb j II. Hill she moved to twitter of an eavesdropping swallow I where she resided n,npon up un-nthe of one sweet familial 1,1 ,"e eight years which she has voice. All gne. only the dlsma sj?nt here and at Salt Lake City with cawing of a crow, or the chit-chm her chddren. After the death of her an Idle squlrrvl, the noisy denizens ol tirst husband she was married to .a hollow tree, the mendicant friar ol gentleman named Dimick, who was large parish, :he absolute munpret billed in the Black Hawk war. Later ; of a dozen she married H. S. who also LongM w. preceded her m death. Mrs. Loveless .s sury.ved hy five children, Robert ritiC!in0 Compliment. Tour St. Anthony, Ida., Mrs. j yy that yorj n the man of the Dtveless, Iayson, and II. S. Lnve-les- s, Mrs. Mylis Johnson and Mrs. Is too long. re piled IJrigham Nielson of Salt Lake Citv A state ;man wlm really understands the sub also forty-nin- e grandchildren, seventv grandchildren and three great can say all hi to has say h fifteen m!r.'::i." irvndchiMrcn. 1 e r' s ot ot ! at La-vi- , lg-ir.- , "'ted ""f W NEGIfUD SPRING GARDEN SASS By BOB ADAMS 41 Where now the winds of March 4 1 Mowing the garden saw will 4 eoon be growing. My muse shall 4 ring man's yearly need for onion 44 seta and spinach need, shall sing likewise that gay deceiver, the 4 subtle eeedmana catalogue whose 4 charms our better judgment fog. 4 Its pictured beets and peas and 4 chard were never grown In my 4 backyard. My radishes are not so 4 red, my pumpkins not so widely 4 spread, my lettuces refuse to head. 4 The seedsman la an optimist and 41 loves the brighter side, I wist. Ha 41 does nut show in colored plats 4 the wooly worms that He In wait 4 No dark brown spots like mine art 4 seen on hla prolific greenpod bean. 4 And yet for planting all agog. I 4 love that yearly catalogue. 1 hall 4 with Joy each harm lew fable and 4 plant new squashes for my table. 4 For though my cukes be bitter 4 things, my cabbage full of worms, 4 by lings, and all my snapbeans fall 4 of stringM, still to my heart the 4 brown earth calls, and all heraum- - 4 mere springs and falls shall find 4 my legs In overalls shall find me 4 spading loam and sand with seven 4 4 blisters on my hands. 4 are 1 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 1 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 4 4444 44444$ 1 44114 4444 that from the best information he could get before leaving Washington, D. C., the Smith-McNahill providing three hundred and fifty million dollin for reclamation work will be enacted into law during the present session d congress. The former governor is hat principally on personal business sad expects to remain only a few days. Hi said, however, that it was his intention within a month or six weeks to return and spend several weeks viuting land offices of the different Wes ten ry States. M BETTER SHOWING NOW Faxnhxm Operators Mach Enconmrf By Late Developments. Resumption of drilling at the Utah Oil Refining companys well out on the Fgrnham dome about twelve miles of Price has been followed by somewhat slow progress lately owing to thi hardness of the formation and the difficulties of transportation due to the impassable conditions of the rox& The Hun is informed that a more showing has developed in the g and oil indications, the boys on the job getting much worked up about it Watson, the companys geologist, esj that he is controlling liimsclf, as the development is just what was expected, and is fulfilling predictions veij nicely. DUCHESNES DEBT MORE TWICE ITS TAXES THAW 501 The public debt over in Duehesue year will aggregate more than twice the taxes collected for all other posps. Gov. Charles R. Maliey out to the county commission in W ter sent out Saturday last. There i total Minded indebtedness in the cooj ty and its of $317,077 of which the school district carri $161,40(1 in bonds and $24,082.89 indebtedness, lload bonds is the sum of $80,000 have, been City has issued $29,000 is bonds and $3400 in temporary I01 Myton has $18,000 outstanding bon and Roosevelt $27,500 in bonds an $3995 in temporary loana. Tlie count? paid C.l per cent of the taxes rais toward the ojieration of slate in 1921. The school district, however, $25,680 to the slate scho fund jys and receives in return $08.27 thi po-1- 1 ns iwued-Duchesn- guver-me- No, we are not writing any editorial on the subject of modest men. Ltf too short to exjintir.t' rn dead iswn Illinois has the longest river fronts of all the states. Hint good j'rintinj. The Sun. X WC it Ms ton Oiu In m Of S! not too 4 It, ;0, ti |