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Show IS COAL, THE WORLDS GREATEST DEPENDENCE, 1 1 1 1 1 IE OE WONDERFUL the fundamental of vur na-- 1 tional i.rosiwrilv. Indeed, our modern civilization could not exist without it. Our descendants may learn bow to harness the moon or utilize the energy of the sun, but in the meantime mankind coal for must deeiid mainly power. For the present we have no need to worrv about the exhaustion of our coal supply. At the start. were alaiut 31(H) billion tons in United States available for n 1 1 BIM Of this quantity, up to date, only twelve billion tous have been taken out of the of earth that is to say, four-tent1 per rent. We have, available for mining, more than half of the worlds total enal supply. Last year we dug Coul i "Wt uiu ! per cent of the total number. Fifty jkt cent are attributable to the fulling of material from the roofs of the mine tunnels. Electricity From Coal Fields. No projeet of publie interest today can be said to rival in imiortanre the "super-power- " scheme, that contemplates the electrification of all the great industrial region from Washington to New England by burning eoal at the mine mouths and generating eurrent for distribution over wires. Electricity is energy without substance, and all it needs for its trsnsiwrtation is a copper wire. Half the freight carried by the railniads of this country is coal, and a third of the eoal is required for driving their own locomotives. If the roads were electrified as some of them already are, and all of them anon will he there would lie twice as many ears available fur the transportation of other things. Furthermore, it ie to be considered that at the mines the poorest grades of eoal, unprofitable to hip, eould he burned for generating electricity. Here alone would be a tre15 t"0f 1 tons a quantity snf fieient to build a wall as huge as the Great Wall of China around all the boumla-rie- e of the United States, from Maine to Vancouver, down the Pacific Coast to San Diego, thenee eastward along the Mexican border, and by way of Florida to the northern corner of 7tM), 000,000 they-carr- Maine again. Bituminous Our Orest Be source. of Already we have dug our available anthraeite, which today mendous saving. furnishes nearly a fifth of all the coal When the plan is carried out, the consumed in this country. It is a wonseaboard cities will be electrified derful smokeless fuel, and before long big Current from the anthracite first. o will be so eiienive that only the mines of eastern Pennsylvania will the But ran afford to burn it. run all the factory machinery in New total of our anthracite ie a mere trifle York, Philadelphia, Boston and Balcompared to the total of our bitumi- timore; it will light those centers of nous eoal. Our supply of the latter, of oppropel the street-earwhich we have mined and used much population, elevated and subway trains, erate the lie as yet, must less than tall ..lifta.. iper cent, iu dewndenee for fucL1.u ... our real ultimate derived All of our anthracite (mainly Almost Untouched. Vast one-fourt- h well-to-d- s, inV Deposit Electricity from the coal mines is soon to lift us upon a new plane of civilization. The scheme has unlimited posibilities of development, thanks to our enormous stores of the fuel u.i- derground. The western half of 1enn-til- c sylvania is underlaid by beds of liitu-th- e ininous eoal, and the same coal forme-tain- s tion extends far into Ohio and south-o- f ward to northern Alabama. Another vast eoal field nnderliee a great part of Illinois and passes over into Indiana and Kentucky. It ie strange to consider the fart that our modern civilization depends upon fossil-zewood which was produced by trees that to do, is a criminal waste. Benzol is 'grew three million years or more ago. s light oil suitable for motor fuel; the There were not at that time any mam-ta- r would yield dyes, drugs, and a mala on the earth; there were as yet no birds. The highest forms of animal great variety of chemicals. The time is soon coming when slate! life wese represented by monstrous and federal laws will forbid the burn-- ! reptiles. But conditions for plant life ing of "raw cohI as fuel. It seems were extraordinarily favorable. The not unlikely that within the lifetime' sun was bigger and mneb hotter than of our grandchildren the entire coal it ia now, and temperatures all over supply of each city and town will be the world were higher than in the at h central municipal plant, rid rone at the present time. The which will attend to the buxines wf moist and vaporons atmosphere was !a-idistribution. All of it will lie put j den with earhonic acid gas, which ia to through n process by which the find- - plants wh.it oxygen is to animals, stuff it cont ains will be separated out . plantl Thllt Mode the Coal, for delivery to householders and other are Pennsylvania was then a flat reg'on; eonsiiiners, while the the Aptalachiana were not yet uplift- saved. wl- - Swn,,1l covered most of the land- Out the Getting find in the vepeta-Th- e fonaiiicunuft lucape, pnM'eMc will be one of uistillu- ere gigAntie mouses th si m of otl tion, the ros! huing boated m waled tfont (rm, with trunks sometimes 1ft retorts, and the gases and vnpors thick. They contributed to the (which hold the piped jpoa beds more material than anv off. Left behind will he a solid smoke- - jotlior kind of plant. Huge reedlike leas fuel, an artificial anthracite. From ;n,orset with stems 20 feet high the gas, tar, and ammonia formed impenetrable thickets, and here will lie obtained, by laboratory proe-;atree-ferthere ere tall palm-lik- e osaes, essentials for agriculture, tex-(l- n the Puttsville region of Fennsvlva-til- e manufacturing, paint ing, l paving, nja the average total thieknesa of the was orfrom Pennsylvania iginally bituminous eoal. Heat and pressure drove neurly all the volatile mattei' out of it, in effect "coking it, end that is why it is almost smokeless. The mokeiiiesa of bituminous coal is due to the 98 per cent of vols- matter which it contains. We find smoke objectionable; yet it eon-- 1 most of the valuable ingredients the eoal, which pasa off and are lost A short ton of bituminous eoal ( tor-dumi'-ed ts I ft nj n, waterproofing, refrigeration, dminfee-jenMn(11R j, 120 feet. This represent tion, and the making of exploaives. an original vegetable deposit at least The tar will yield medicines and all, 1200 feet thick. It is a fact which by colors of the rainbow. In short, thf . itself will serve to convey to the distillates will be source of inex- - inntion a notion of the luxuriance of haustible riches. Carboniferous vegetation, and of the Until recently we have not known enormous length of time whirh the how to utilize the eoal dust or "slack," making of the eoal beds must have rewhich commonly represents nearly a quired. Rene Back in Deseret News. third of the output of a mine. The was INSURANCE BATES REDUCED ON stuff, in unavoidable COAL MINERS formerly so much refuse, and the problem was how to get rid of it. It was Base rates for compensation insurpiled up in enormous heaps, one of which, at Scranton, (Pa.) contained ance for Utah eoal operators have been fifteen million tons. Other coal moun- reduced from $4.30 to $3.90 per $100 tains were much larger, and hundreds of pay roll, it is announced by the of them were watered over the hard state industrial commission. The reeoal district. Factory and residence duction in the insurance rate, it is esquarters in many big towns grew up timated will save the eoal operators several thousand dollere annually. The around the eoal piles. resolution adopted by the commission Profitable Uses For Waste. mnkes the reduction effective a of Now. however, these eoal mountains 1, 1922, and is applicable to are being drawn upon for material February tlie atock compan.es earning found is in tJlp compensation field. Coal aya. aide as fuel .Much of it is made briquets, !,.h wM'I-- j companies earning their own insur-ta- r a nrc' for which "binder, pitch The state ins,, r-arp not liurned by railroad locomotives and will earn' insurance at low- fud hmL Jhe A)lM. ,8!er rate than that required of stock and factories, oomnanie. 0. F. McKhane. largely urad m member producing, when blown into furnace.. ftf thp wniniillsloil (hp 0iin,Ire with an an into., so heat n rx(crH;ve inv,;. of t,ip due;,, to instantaneous combustion. In ear- mHlle to ermine the risk in lier days, when anthracite was cheap. it,ip Illinin in Ufah. A, a rnneh lump coal was thrown away vutli r,.,nlt of 1Wa investigation l,e said it t the the dust iHinintaum ind ivn conclusively shown that the are attacked wP. ib.wMhrownstro.il, ar, to0 hi h. ITp fleelarcl that of water to wash out lie lumps. Even the cmplction of the investipa-th- e rivers m the hard real reg on areti(in info the coal fit.ds the dredged for eoal carried away in pnrt commission would undertake a similar floods or lost from wrecked investigation info the metal mines t years by badges, and by thia means a hundred determine if some reduction in the thousand tons hare already been re-- rompenstinn rate might not be from the Sus.1uel.ann1 m a 'ed here. The investigation now year. . . .plotod rtablisbed a pure premium" Needless to say, coal mining is a; te of 2.50. rejnesenting only actual dangerous occupation, though the an- - ,st 0f the insurance without eonsid-nunumber of casuahties haa been enng overhead. The difference be-mueb reduced by the efforts of the tween the $2J0 representing artnal government bureau of mines, which an,i the $3.90 rate covers over-e- n forces safety methods and forbids head CnSt. Some variation is allowed the use of unreliable explosives. Care- - jus the companies may install or fail to Jpss use of explosives end improper. install safety devirps end take pmpr "temping" of blasting chaises are re-- : steps to protect employes. sponsible for very many mining ae-- ( eidenfa. Casualties due to explosions Some people ure not led ,irav by of gss and coal dust represent only - r. f. al insnr-whic- h air-blas- t, W cual-slns- w-,- 1 obtain-iwver- ed com-sing- le al 't I 1121, I, aud Marjorie became they agreed, vtlili true lovers' couUdeuce, that tlisyr would have uo secrets from each other. This was easy ao far as Marjorie waa concerned, hut pour, bashful Bill, thluklug of bis desk aud the Incriminating evidence It concealed, felt quite uncomfortable. However, he waa too blissfully happy to stop at any promise on such an occasion as this. He bad captured the oue girl that waa all that mattered. Bill's mother, Juatlflably pleased with her suns choice. Invited Marjorie to setid a week in town with them. This suited bis sister Dora. It meant a chance to Inspect Marjories pretty dresses at dose range and perhaps copy some of the Ideas; besides, there would be matinees, parties and the com paulunship of a girl of her own age. Her umtber would be especially lenient, she knew. How does it fed to be engaged?" he asked Marjorie when they were alone, talking rather too Intimately of their personal affairs, as young girls have a way of doing. And Marjorie mpondlng to Dora's Mger questloua, confided, among other things. "And we're to have no secrets from each other." "Oh, then," exclaimed Dora Joyfully, "you know whst'a In Bill's desk, and he won't let any of ua open It." "No," Mid Marjorie slowly, Just a germ of doubt beginning to trouble her, "but," she continued, brightening, "I'll ask him tonight I know he'll tell me." But Bill would not tril her. "Darn that kid," he muttered. "She'a forever prying Into someone's affaire." Marjorie coaxed at first, but Bill waa obdurate, with a stubbornness that silenced her. But It hurt, nevertheless, and the hurt finally grew out of all proportion to the cause. In fact, Marjorie herself never realized how near she came to breaking the engagement during the daya that followed. Alone together, they both maintained a sullen aloofness. Bill was In despair. Hs had left her for the night and was about to open ths desk that had caused so much trouble In his young life, when he suddenly thought, "And she'll he going home after tomorrow. He gave the desk a vicious kick and, flinging the key across the room, be dropped hie head Into hie arms and did what very little boya do sometimes when their punishment seems ton hard to bear. Tears, like laughter, must end some time, however, but It was a dejected young man who left Bill's room the next morning. Perhaps thnt was why he forgot all ahont the key. Dora found It when he went to make up Ills bed, and Joyfully culled to Mnrjorle. she giggled. "Shall I open "It la Immaterial to me," Marjorie answered with a coolness thnt made Iora look up sharply and gave her an Inkling of the. true state of affairs. It was this, iierhnps, that decided her, for with a quick turn she unlocked the desk and rolled back the cover. The first thing that canglit her eye was some pamphlets piled neatly at the left. She picked one up, looked It over with a puzzled frown, then fairly screamed with laughter. "Oh, dear, oh, dear!" alia rocked bark and forth, unable to control her mirth, "Just listen, Marjorie. Let me How to Win read you these title tier, by John Denton Grey, professor of psychology at Michigan university. When and How to Propose, How to Hold Your Wifes Affection,' The Successful Marriage.'" "Oh, dMr, oh, dear I This Is too Just funny! Won't I tease him! wait." Marjorie waa conscious of a great relief end also of a surge of tenderIn its underness, almost mother-lik- e standing. "You muat never tell anyone of this," she warned Dora firmly, at the glri locked the desk and placed the key where she had found It And Dora never did. Bill wondered at the sudden change In Marjorie, but took hie good luck without questioning. He wondered atlll more at the mischievous twinkle In her eye when, a little later, be Mid Impulsively, "Just the snme, Marjle, I think If one has an understanding of psychology, he ran get anything he Wlieu Bill Itf wants" Red Heads Read. 0 person Ims about out of the scalp. Speaker siiys this ut ennvention of New England bnlrdn--ior- -. The figure seems large. o Yet It Is low. average Uf'.iMi. hairs. Scientist, c1iiiiuii prehistoric man was as hairy a a l.."ir.ey, say that thinness of hair r alduess Is a sign of superior mentality. Future men all bald ms eggs ia the prediction. If the scientists are right, the redheads muT lie a 90,-00- d liHlrs growing y 110,-Oo- l--. 88. POWDER Mann! Brick of All finds PRICE; UTAH YOU SAVE PROFESSIONAL you when you use KC use less than of higher priced brands. Satisfaction guar- DR. B. 1L JOKES Physician and Surgeon Obstetrics end Diseases of Chll Office Bllvagnl Block, Price, Otak DR. J. A. JUDY Physician and Burgeon anteed or your money refunded. Telephone 18 IW Office Price Commercial and Barton Bonk Bldg Price. Utah. HIGHEST QUALITY DR. L S. EVANS MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT Dentist Office, Rooms 7 --I Now Redd Bitty PRICE, UTAH DK. H. B. GOETZMAN Twp II Bouth, Dentist II East Kangs Amount. 1(1(.8(. Clarence E. Millner, W H of NE14. E S of KWli of 8m 21. Twp II Bouth, 114(5.70, lUnge 12 East.240Amount, ft W of BE cor of Alice Davis. Beg 8W14 uf Sec, th W 1080 ft, N ((4 ft, E 1820 ft, 8 7)4 ft. th BW to beg. Sec For 1(17. 7, Twp 14 South, ltange 10 East. Whereas, Amount, $44.70. Carbon county haa received treasurer's certificates of sale end auditors deed Wurakeehl Ohshlto. Lot 12, Block 4, Price Kiverview Add. Amount, 12.1 ( for the following described real ee- -j tate, which haa been sold for dellnqunt Eurriuque Golcoichla. Lot (, Block I, timal Price Klver View Add. Amount, IS.(( tasee for the year 1(17, and tha for redeeming said real eetate, aa pro. T. Nakamura. Lot I, Block I, Price Klver View Add. Amount, I8.CS. vlded by law, haa expired. Now, therefore. notice le hereby given that In pur- John Zanol. Lot 1, Block II, Price Klver View Add. Amount, (I. IS. suance of Section 105$ of the Compiled Lawa or Utah, 1117, the undersigned, Edgar Thayne. Beg 8E cor of 80c, th W 1120 ft, K lift ft. E 1120 ft, B the county commlaeionera of Carbon county, Utah, will offer for sale at pubKq ft to beg. Bee 25, Twp 14 8outh, lic auction to the highest bidder for Range 10 East. Amount, (1.35. caah at Ithe North door of the court Price Klver Irrigation Co. KWq of house at Price City, Carbon county. N'Ell, Beo 20, Twp 14 South, Range 10 Eaat. Amount, 1(5.71. State of Utah, all the right, title and Interest and estate of the state of Utah, Price River Irrigation Co. IWq of tha county of Carbon, and each school, BWK, See 54, Twp 14 South, Range 10 East. Amount, (IS. 31. town and other taxing diatrict Interestmened therein, and to tho real estate Arthur A. Sweet. All of Sec 22, Twp commence Bald will 15 South, Range 3 East. Amount, sale tioned below. at 18 o'clock a. m., the 27th day of (874.(4. May. 1(22, and will contlnua from day Frank E. Smith. 8EU of NEK. Sec 15 South, Range 8 East to day at the aforesaid time and place 85, Tw-until the whole of the following Amount, 141.81. real estate has been offered for Utah Banking Co. Beg NW cor of ale. Dated at Price City. Utah, thia BW'K Of NEK of Sec. th B (SO ft. E 1320 ft, N ($0 ft. W 1120 ft to beg. (th day of April, A. D.. 1(22. A. E. GIBSON. Sec 15, Twp IS South, Range 10 EUGENE SANTSCHI, Knot. Amount. $82.83. WILLIAM RDM AN. Attest: Utah Banking Co. NWK of NEK of H. C. SMITH, Clerk of the Board. RKi of Sec 15, Twp 15 South, Range 10 Eaat. Amount, $57.23 Price River Irrigation Co. BEK of 11 Louis M. Cannon, et al. Lots and SEK Sec 17, Twp 15 South, Range 10 Eat. Amount, 143.54 12. Block 2, New Helper Townnlte. J oh neon. SEK nr SEK Sec 22, Emille $57.78. it. I. Arnold. Lota 6. 8. 7, 8. Block 3, Twp 15 South, Range 10 Emit New Helper Townxite. Valuation, Amount, $111.88. W. J. Rosier. NEK $84.79. 5 and 8. Block Twn 15 Smith, Tjoiiin M. Cannon. 8, New Helper Tow unite, amount, Amount, 830.18. Mar 120.53, Ford. NWK "7 NWK See 25. 2,8 and 38, Blk. Loula M. Cannon. Two 15 South, Ringe 10 East. Am. Hint. $82.21. 8, New Helper Townalte. Amount, John S. Foster. NWK of SWK Sec 25, (20.21. Rowirlo Zaffcranoill Ingot I. Tit 22, Blk Two 15 South, Range 10 East 8. New Helper Townxite. Amount. $52.85. J. ir Knnkln. H4 of SEK of NWK. (10.(0. S 130 Sec 27. Twp 15 South. P.ange 10 of NW George A. Storm. Beg. cor. of NEK 7 NEK of Sec. thence Amount. $31.75. S 400 feet E 180 ft N 400 ft W 180 Jow-uIt. Tidwell. Ileg 307 ft W of SE cor nf NWK Of Sec, th W 853 ft, ft to lieg. Sec 24, Twp 13 South, N 1320 ft, E 353 ft. 8 1320 ft to beg. Range S East. Amount, (35.14. C. K. Jensen. Lot 4, Blk 10. Scofield Sec 7, Twp 15 South. Rsnge 11 East Townalte Survey. Amount (15.45. Amount. $9.e3. Carbon County Land Co. All of Sec George W. DuRoxe. NEK of NWK 30. Twp 12 South, Range 10 Eaat. See 0, Twp 15 South, Range 11 East. Amount. 1848.88. Amount, $11.79. Carbon County Land Charles 8. Hill. EK of SWK. WU of 28. Twp 12 Routh, SEK. Sec IS. Twp 15 Smith, Rsnge Amount. $1818.77. HEsst. Amount, 8234.78. Cerlxin County Iaind E. W. Miller. NH of NWK, SWK of 82, Twp 12 South, NWK, See 20, Twp 15 South, Rsnge Amount, 8255.80. 11 East. Amount. 8128.03. Carbon County Land Co. WH of Sec E- - W. Miller. NEK of NWK, Bee 33. 85. Twp 12 Bouth, Range 11 East. Twp IS South, Range 11 East. Amount, $1(12.30. Amount, (25.71. Luce A. Hill. Beg 813 ft E of SW cor of SEK 7 Sec. th North SS ft. W 287 ft. B (S ft. E 287 ft to beg. Sec 1. ! "f lTuh- - County of Carbon so. Township 15 Routh. Range 10 East. I. H. C. Smith, county clerk and auditor in and for Carlion coun- Amount, 137.81. tah- A L. D. Hamblin. Beg 4SK ft N and 281 hereby certify the above and foregoing is a full ft W of SB cor of Lot 7. th W 178 K that and true, correct N 177 K E S ft. description of the ft. 178K ft. 177K ft property offered for sale at this time, to beg. Sec 6. Twp 15 South, Range as per the order of the board of cou 11 East. Amount, $55.10. of Carbon county, J. R. Tidwell. Beg 488.83 ft N and 82 K tytatacommissioners of Ltah. In witness whereof, I ft W of SB cor of Tint 7. th W 857 ft. 7 hand and N 364.88 ft E $57 ft. 8 354.88 ft to LTt?rhnZ untJr- - Utah, at my beg. Sec 8. Twp IS South Range 11 Hrfi Jjs thlS 17thCarbon county. State Eaat Amount, $68.28. day of Al,rll. A D Joseph R. Tidwell, et si. Beg SW cor 19lVh' of NEK of NWK of Sec. th E 101) 11 (1 r nf w. th NW ft, th N to D long r of w to pt 850 ft N of beg, th S 850 ft to beg. Sec 7. Twp 15 South. Rsnge 11 East. Amount. $133.41. John Pettltl. 8K of NEK of Sec 21, SD. ofCounty Clerk, and Twp 1 3 South, Rsnge East. Amount. Auditor Carbon ounty. Utah, $81.02. T. H. Auphand. Beg at NE cor of SW K first pul.. April 21; lust May 1(, 1(22. of NEK of Sec. th W m rdx. 8 4n E 18 rds. N 40 rds to nlxo rd. SB cor of SWK of SB'l of Sec beg th E 522 rt. to D & R G r of w. th NW along r of w t- - a pt 795 ft N r beg, th S 795 ft to beg, also beg BK cor of SWK of NEK of Se- - ih X 860 ft. W 800.30 ft. S S8il ft. E ft to lcg. alxo beg SE cor or SWK of NEK f See, th W 00.211 fi p J21 "VlRf!" 'I'm to know ft. E son ft. ft jci ft f, v mi rtie best gas obtainable 485 ft. W 528 ft to l eg less 18 ft T when you go out on w b Utah Rower & T.itrbt buxines or Sec v"" k;i-25. Twp 13 South. R ir.ge t Amount. 598.04. rr,7wLr,,h.tav H. Rowley. F.S of NEK. EK of SEK "7 Sec. ScC 31, Twp u p.itnh Range 8 Eaat. Amount. $183.53. Carhnn County Ijind Co. All r f Sec 2 Twp 13 South. Range 14 East Amount, 81759.02. Carhnn County Land C . Ki of SE; of See 10. Twp 13 South, Range 10 East. Amount, $521.?n. Carbon County Ijind Co. NWK of! NEK, NEK of NWK. Si, r.f Nvv Sec 14. Twp 13 South, Range 10 C0F East. Amount. $1271 11. j Rest Vlhnd.M,n of Oils For All Purposes. Carbon County I .and Co. I,.,? 1. 2. 3 4. 5, . 7. X. Sec 2. Twp 1 3 South Range 11 Eaxt. Amount. $87.41. '1 Carbon County Co. Tx-- t 7 Sec 3 Twp 1 3 South. Range 1 1 East. Amt.' Work and Extraction. Prte, Commercial Bonk Bldg., Price, UtU X-R- ay DR. SANFORD BALXJNGER Dentist Service. Office, the New Redd Building. PRICE, UTAH X-R- ay i STEWART. ALEXANDER A rRAT? Attorneys At Lew' Office Second Floor Building PRICE; UTAH Office, tha Bllvagnl Building. Foma ly Occupied by Judge F. K. Wood Telephone ISO, Price, Utah. L. AlfcGEE Attorney At Lew Rooms I and I. Bllvagnl Bldg. PRICE. UTAH FERDINAND ERICKS EK Attorney At Law p TIT Judge Building BALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law Office Room 8, Bllvagnl Building. PRICE, UTAH. - HENRY RUGGERI Attorney At Law Office at ths County Courthouse. PRICE, UTAIL B. W. DALTON Attorney At Law 11 E.-H- Bllvagnl GEORGE CHRISTENSEN Attorney At Law dee-(Tll- Office Eko Theater Building. PRICE. UTAH A. KOPF'S STUDIO lllgh Grade Portraits and rnlorfs-ntent- s. h -- STEP ON ER he ('. sssa M J'-h- j Purity Service Station Tha Desired Information. Unpopular Actress (taking leading pert In tragedy) Oh where can my mother be? Gallery Voice She' peddling apples $755.57. 'j' on Fifth avenue. Cnrhon County Land Co. of sfk of NEK. SWK NEK. of NWK. See 9. Twp It's,,.,,?.! "Har Infinite Variety." 11 K.iyL Arwirt Kange Old Bach All woman are the same. Carlton County Lur.d Co. tVK 'f NF. Benedict Thnfa all you know. Why NWK of SE,. SWK of NWK. xW K of NWK. Sc 19. T ; 13 even one woman isn't tlie same for . E.i--11 Ranee . ci any length f time. t a'!! . $j;,tjjt' C;ir!.o:i Ctf.:n.j l.f-f S- -i 1,! i I 1 Telephone TIM. of Ounces for 2 i A Yards adjoining the Denver and Rio Gfrande Railroad trackZ the eonth. three blocks Hg depot. Office at the yard. tlmatee given and prkw qnote on application. PuataffU Baa BAKING d, BRICK COMPANY 30 years for more than Kniiapu SailKi. llcUlw FRANDSEN SAME PRICE BILLS SECRET L-in- i CORD TIRES xi Ei . t n,-:- 1 fnmu real rer-.r- ddres. 0,,pn,1fi 1 P r'!1 U1, new "d" bus- - "fi lf,,! shove Second Floor Price Commercial and Savings PRICE, UTAH. Bank J. E. FLYNN Licensed Undertaker and Embalmer Telephone It. PRICE, UTAH. At 11 p. DR. J. B. HENDERSON Chiropractor. Price, First Door West of Ths Boa, to 18 noon S till 4 p. m. At ovsr Helper State Bank. I till I m., except Bundaya. Other hoot at home. Calls hr appointment. HM-po- r. BEN BEAN General Painting Contractor First Class Work. A11 Estimates FIM -- Phono 188M. PRICE, UTAH. a F. PRICE LODGE No. B2 L 0. UTAn PRICE, Meets Mch Wednesday evening oclock. L. A Hills. N. O.; Howarl Mayer, V. O.; J, G. Whltford. Secy. for beat results and SINGER MACHINES mean not now, but many years. J. E. Jameson will res tnst your mnchlna la token cars of.li(-w- ner Fifth and J ntreeta. Phone J. W. HAMMOND, LICENM I A BTKACTEIl OF TfTUS Abstracts of titles furnished to FOT Mj place or tract in Eaatern Utah. insurance written In tha beat nlea. Real estate, bonds, etc. cecoss floor Bllvagnl Bldg., Price. Utah. S. KUSANO Beat Japanese Mcrcbanillxc of Every Description Catering to the trade of tho residents of the local coal ramps and surrounding territory. GET OVR QUOTATIONS Concrete Building. Bouth Nintn Street. Price. Utah. ROGERS-HES- S WHOLESALE CO SHIVER BROS., Mgr. Cigars Dry Climate, rianros. P" uondoo Jobbers. Gandy Assortment of Penny Stojb Rulk and Five and Ten Cent IW t" Hocflcr's (lionolatce. Bathing Racks. SiNviMwr to Rummy, Now t'lo Phone 1.V Scf-d- , Service. Silrsf1 lUdg, Irbe, Utah |