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Show tuxiAa. ASLgij.,.;- FRIDAY, APRIL THE SUH. PRICE, PAGE EIGHT rnpain STBIKE CUTS COAL PRODHCnON TO LOW POINT ' She Knows a Domestic Science Graduate and a chemical student from the Normal School. After making I am baking powders never use any Mrs. J. P. except the RoyaL" The total production of all coal anthracite and bituminous the first week of the ttr'ke wa tin; lowet--t in modern coal history. The output of bituminous coal dropjie! to approximately 3,500,000 tons, and in the anthracite region work ceased entirely During the 1010 strike the anthracite mines operated at eajaeity. Thu reports so far received roiinint of the d: vs!on uuiuImt of ears loaded on of 130 of the principal coal e irrying railroads. They show that from GO to 64 jwr rent of the bituminous touuage of the country has been rinsed by the strike. Of the remaining tonnage a significant tort ion had not lieeu operating recently for lark of demand. In the first week of the 1019 strike 71 per cent of the tonnage waa closed. The smaller portion closed during the present strike is partly explained by YAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure Leaves No Bitter Taste Send for Neuf Royal Cook Boo A Its FREE St, New York the fact that certain organized districts whose contracts did not expire on April 1st hsve continued to Aa April 1st ia a union holiday, loadings on Saturday did not reveal the extent of the strike. The first test came on Monday, April 3d. On that day 11,445 ears were loaded, against 38,056 ears on the preceding Monday. Keturns so far received up to Friday, and Commission April 7th, indicate little change, and the total output for the week will be 30 in the neighborhood of 3,500,000 tons, 923 , In the first week of the 1919 strike 3,582,0)0 tons were produced. The week a output falls short of what the ni nes not affected by the strike ran ' produce if the demand is active. From districts remines in many no ordull and of market, ports ders have been received, and there Caps Have is a large number of loaded ears unbilled on the idlings, some of which are in fields closed by the strike. Increase Before Strike. Production of soft coal continued to Be This increase during the last five days before the strike, because of the decline on Saturday the total outjwt for the week ended April 1st was less than their honey. A little good organisation the week before. Including lignite and BEES WINTER WELL on the part of Utah's beeiuen would eoal coked, the production is estimatequalise and stabilise prices. At pres- ed at 10,453,000 net tons. The record ent the variations in selling prices on of production during March removed Gives Out D. H. Hillman Xnspsctor honey right within the state are great- all reasonable doubt that the 52,500,-(MSoma Cheering Words. er than can possibly be justified by net tons in the hands of consumm conditions. Borne little is be- on March 31st had increased to producing During a pleasant rail at The Sun ing done along this line through the tons, or more, by the opening office last Monday 1). 11. Hillman, the farm bureau organisations through the day of the strike. The quantity on state bee inspector, sit'd that the bees state. hand on April 1st was therefore equal throughout Emery, Carbon and the llillman has been down in Emery to the maximum stock at the end of wintered in very 'Uintah districts had county where he gathered the tieekeep-er- s the war. At the rate of consumption good shaie. In some other parts retogether at Castle Dale. He ia re- prevailing in January and February ports are not so favurable, uotieeahly turning this week to that county, ac- the reserve in the hands of ronsunifrs, around Salt Luke City aud in Tooele companied by Thomas Chantry from April 1st, was sufficient to last fifty-tw- o eounty. Cache county is still winter Wellington, who is a member of the days, if evenly divided. Hut the bound. The liee colonies throughout the state board of These gen- stocks are never evenly divided. There agriculture. state are on the increase. The honey tlemen will conduct a scries of meet- are some consumers who store virtualsurplus left over from 1920 has uow ings through Emery for the lawmen, ly no eoal, and in some entire states all been marketed, as has also most of looking to the advancement of their the average stock is much lower than the emit of the season of 1921. About welfare in all branches of production in others. Further, a certain minimum in remains still a couple of rarloada and marketing. is necessary for steady ojiera-tio- n reserve the Uintah country. Ibices at present of utilities and industrial plants. are around eight to eight and a half Back of this stock of 63.000,000 tons lets have is to said Siam of The king ents, which is considered a very good in the hands of consumers, April 1st, market. The product from Eastern thousand wives. Think bow tired he there was a further reserve of over Utah ia white honey much in demand must be after wiping the dishes for all four million tons on the Upper Lake them. of by big honey handlers for use in blendstored smaller s and Docks, quantity ing with the Eastern, Bout hern or the on the ground at the mines or intermeocall for colored Fresh flowers every day jSouthweatern amber output diate storage yards. These figures take This makes for conditions where the casions. Order your Easier Lillies no account of the eoal on wheels, inlocal growers 'Should be able to.com-- a Carbon Floral company. Phono 1M a heavy tonnage of unbilled cluding our flowers are fine. premium of a cent or so on loads on hand at the mines when work stopped in the union districts on Saturday. Anthracite Also Heavy. Heavy production marked the last five working days before the strike in the anthracite region. The carriers loading 36,255 cars from which it is estimated that the total output, ine. ,rk cluding mine fuel and local sales, was 1 ,890.000 net tons. The decrease, when J compared with the 2,005,000 tons of .' 'It' the week preceding, was entirely due to the stoppage on April 1st. KejHirts if so far received indicate that the strike in the anthracite region was 100 er vent effective, and that production during the present week (April 3d to Slh) will be practically zero. Anthracite is stored Commercially in throe places in retail foul vavii, mi the l'pHr Lake Dock, and in the storage yards of the producers, lietail eon dealers stocks on March Is were about the same as a year ago, but much larger than in 1010 and 1920. Oil & of Storks on the Like Dock-- , wcie 821,000 tons on the same date. Xo st.it i ties anthracite m producers stoiaga of Only. (10) Cents are available for March 1st. On XV vcinlter 1st last there were 4J0'l.iHHI Crm, Iran in the vr.K cif nllieli er-at- e. COLABELLA & De ANGEUS Merchants Importers Main Street Price Utah Phone $ ; j I . ANNOUNCING non-uni- and Now Added a Line of Shirts. Dress Shirts. Work Shirts, Investigate. Stock You'll Pleased -- 25,000 SHARES rVS.-,- re-j- rt - North Farnham Treasury Stock Refining company now Offered For Sale Per Share At Ten Our company has government permit for twenty-fou- r hundred (2400) acres most favorably located on the north and east portions of the Farnham anticline, bounded on the south and west by the Utah Oil Refining company. We cannot guarantee production, but from showings already made on this structure, there are the best of reasons to believe you will make no mistake in purchasing this stock and making it big. Production on this structure will mean, of course, withdrawal of all stock in this company from further sale at the price offered. Join with us and share in the profits of oil production on the Farnham dome. Money will be used only for drilling purposes. Mail checks to the NORTH FARNHAM OIL & REPINING CO. 424 Judge Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah WEEK WASHINGTON, D. C., April 12. Both Utah and Colorado mines made an increase in their rate of output for the week ending strike, tian March 25th, just ahead of the announced nation-wid- e tne oy week reaching cent over the 10 about previous gained per the previ68 cent, to per per cent mark, while Colorado jumped up ous Wteeks record being 61 per cent. 1 Royal Baiting Powder Co 130 William MOHS The Sun Special Service. the experiment testing various Contains No Alum AFTER SPURT FOB 14. PEIPA1. PTAH-EVEE- T is a tire which yields an honest, generous Ineasure of service at a low ears of anthracite lorwarJed lareprestnted a si ght increase overbituweek preceding, but the cars of minous eoal forwarded oils w.re fewer than before. These totals cover the gateways of Harlem Rivtr, Rotterdam, Mechanics v die, Al bany and Troy. Shipments through - May-hrou- House a loiont to northern New England, not included above, were a hundred and twenty ears of bituminous and ten ears of anthracite. The last m week of March sauted an coal in decrease a but cargo exjHirts, destined for New England. The total dumped over the three piers lit llanije tou Roads was 372,432 net tons, s light decrease when compared with the preceding week. March Makes Record. Under the stimulus of heavy demand due to the approaching miniTs' strike, production in March assed the fifty million ton mark. Estimates based on statements of cirs loaded place the t tal at 50, 193,000 net tons, against tons in February. This was the highest record for any March during the tiast ten years, the jieriod over which the geological surveys records of monthly production extend. In round numbers, this was an increase over March, 1921, of 19,800,000 tons, or 64 cent, and it even exceeded the corresponding month in the wir i years 1917 and 1918 by more than million tons. The total production during the eoal year 1921-2- 2 is estimated at 434,279,000 tons, the lowest in any of the years shown. im-rea- IS a S J4 Si tsIfm-PI- r list a Clunk rr Ctrl . Noa-Sk- "Sii-Pl- Bid II Olf . ItaS-Tc- 1?JS Ptnirkt i . 1TJJ S11U hin-Ski- S ftwotf- -' Me, --CyrS NwAMriri, Nes-Bk- iS Jk NM-Ski- -- S r . CoN , . Kpt tkei . . . See this tire and compare with any at a competing purprice. It is your best low-prica chase if you want ed tire. It is a FiskTire.and is Fisk character clear through. JOOHTT Theres a Fisk Tire of extra value In every size, for ear. truck or speed wagon Tima to Re-tire- tnttanF HiaAk ? Buy t'lsk) iflst Hi prtingt HtleGati nek, .ftrincc ad wen eutract, shietual bbl.r wil they we lag :he tyjw jework, equip! the Utah line in Colorado and withia a mile and a half of the celebrated Urado Oil tunnel, on the Utah tide, Oil Properties to Eastward An Now will ahont May lit resume drilling opera! ions suspended during the winter Being Boosted. and after well No. 1 had been drilled The story of the Hill Creek dis- to a depth of 587 feet, with casing all trict will be told within the next week the way. or two. This statement was containThat good printing. The Sun. ed in a letter from the Midwest Oil company, received in Balt Lake City a few days ago, making a report on the ELEGANT BLACK FROCKS progress of the drilling operations on holdings of the Hyland Oil and Refining company, with headquarters up at Zion. The well had reached a depth last Sunday of 1275 feet, with the drill practically on top of the Wasatch formation, in which lie the detected big producing sands. The letter states that hole had been drilled to a fifteen-inc- h the depth stated without the use of casing and without having struck a flow of water. The letter confirms the rcort previously published that some oil had been encountered in the upiier sands, and in which the Castle Dale euniiany encountered both oil and gas in the well that it has been drilling on holdings of the llill Creek Oil and Refining comjiany, about a mile and a trated si litter sy ACTIVITY IN BASIN quality that andean them ts women and they are found In all displays. One of them shown hen k is straight-lin- e model, and la bloused tt the waist, where rosea made of tM crepe are set on a girdle also mads of it. The sleeves of georgette an alasM from arm's-ey- e to cuff and the ediw are finished with green end whits ollk nul ikitse' nidia o Mn, art hod juunof DROP IN COAL PRICES IN APRIL Jnstiee IL Cline, who will be recallIS PREDICTED ed aa having been formerly connected with the Matador Oil company and Both operators and retail dealers up at Balt Lake City are predicting there who ia the locator of the Cline antinear Duchesne, has been in will be a drop of a dollar a ton in the cline, Priee a part of this week. He ia on his price of lump coal before the last of way out to Myton, where he expects to April. Information received at the city start operations for a test well. offices of operating companies from Carbon eounty coal fields waa to the TRAIL CREEK TO RESUME effect that there is no disorder but Announcement waa made last Satur-yjj- y that there is still a large number of Officials in Salt Lake City that men out. The larger companies are the Trail Creek Oil end Refining running with enough help to fill their which has holdings just across orders. Foreign agitators are being taken in hand by local authorities and notified to leave the camps. Locally employed men who engage in agitation are immediately discharged. The mine managers contend that as soon as the trouble in the east is over, matters in this state will assume normal form. The supply of eoal in the Salt Lake City yards is now estimated at twelve thousand tons. com-poo- J. y, i. entii thsl time, an die we i twice jfmuslr for the i: i pieces Eut,bu t, before radcrs Mt rtixuing fteting ( non! to of ated on :3t ? iArUbu for unit nthei date's p Coke Also Increases. Production of lnrchive coke continued to increase during (be last week in March. The total output is estimated at 191,000 net tons, au increase f sixteen million tons over the revised figure for the week preceding, all of the increase occurred in ob i emtn be uwd, lnic-tieall- y Conuellsville region where, according to the Conuellsville Courier, the output rose from 134.410 to 119,960 ton. The approaching miners strike affected but little the demand fur rcke, and the output was miy 40 kt rent .f that in the eorresHnding week of J!20. By Rail and Tidewater. The last week before tin strike witnessed no material ebange in the m m- lucid of coal through the llnd-n- n gate- - 't Heai aonldinj iichinc mL m-.:- r It is probably tie brand of of iiMiee nb-e- i n, ju!ot ti.beit c.me r ;v i 1 i.f t'.e a- -, Fii tput 01 braid. hot, wl Phone or telegraph yonr wants ft r flowers. Piece your orden for EiMT Lillies early. Carbon Floral compssft Eko building. Price, Utah. Phone W our flowen are fine. Received from ftmed medio bowatc inter dally. builder "i Our Wedding announcements. The Sa cet up 'Cityyj beloadi letter, be on t today C. WEETER LUMBER CO. Hot J labor ' of tbn eounty npluxii fshn THE WINCHESTER J0f t) of 111. nner, i euics. necs ti of the f eunn STORE of thi thcEi, Orav zrfcr.w X'nthing makes the an rag- - i any madder than In wait in i no t tl.e postoffice and then tb.it t lx letter marked due is m.tv a circular from a s.'ilin (li; stock. tru ton TIME BEFORE THE PAVING WILL START Lying in a planter cast at St Marks hospital at Salt Lake City, R. W. Crockett, manager of The Sun is getting along nicely. Mrs. Crockett is with him, and is doing secretarial duties so faithfully that Bob keeps the force down here mi the jump atto matters be tbii.ks up for tending them to do. the lean by Short ct i public, 1 - the -- stocratic Starting in just a few days imw um-- ! I terial will come in fur tlu- - pavinsr up eraliiins mi the Price to Castle dale project. Gray anil Murdock are get-- ! ting their organization together, ami' in a couple of weeks or Ipss will he on the ground to make things fly. Work will be pushed vigorously when once started, ami . all . Carlmn'. eounty wj n',l('r nelanl . after waiting hi' inception. lion there is a surplus of a million tons coke MUST BE of coke on hand at COMING ALL RIGHT works, much of which may be considAND THIS IS WHY. ered a substitute fur anthracite. or I oent't Coal production of Utah mines connected with the railroads in March of this year totaled 434,022 tons, according to statistics gathered from the liy C. A. Allen, state insjiector of mines, and also mining engineer for the United Btates bureau of mines. This compares with 402,573 tons in February of this year, and 284,573 tons in March, 1921, and 527,606 tons in March 1920. The slight increase for March of this year is ossihly attributable in some measure to the threatened mine strike situation in the East, and fear of its extension west. The production as a rule shows some falling off at the beginning of the aring season, but March was the highest month of the present year, January having run a total of 421.G31 tons. In January, 1921, production was 356,200 tons, and Februarys the same year was 322,688 tons. In 1920 the January iroduction was 589,668 tons, the record month in Utahs coal min:ng history, though that capacity is somewhat increased now by reason of the openhalf from the Midwests Ilyland well. ing of several additional eoal properties since. In February, 1920, 515,214 Those simple, elegant black frocks of ACTION LOOKING TO TESTING tons were produced. silk crepe, for afternoon, have an ariMYT0N STRUCTURE ONLY It i Kind tr UTAH COAL PRODUCED SHOWS INCREASE IN MARCH Iasi Nm-EW- CarS SI x 4 X FvswW TnaS tlJ Siv-P- lj j MlDt-bb-- Hi M price. wavs to New Ei. gland- - The number jr THE Fisk Premier P JH Msalk-Sm-tifciShi- fcnc fas'1 i Hing WILL CARRY Tpecte letter !r mad Tights AFTER APRIL and 15th no bgned 1 at K erl, u the ? S11 pOs ts Full Line Winchester Ammunition, aissi.,i Guns, Sporting Goods, Fishing Tackle, All Kinds 'tnoiirn of Tools, Cutlery 'k 4 f ,,1.:r t i' t |