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Show 4XJ1TS ADVERTISING KATES TEN TEARS ARE NECESSARY TRYING OUT LAW Sub's display advertising rat Inch per Issus forty (40) cents an four 11.60 per Inch by the month Tran-aiTlMues to local advertisers. t Inch cents an per Issue, fifty (60) No cent additional. stlon Is 26 per advertising accepted for the First ?lay page readers page. ; twenty-fiv- e (26) cent per line an , denomina-gp- a 'Coupon books of several Kept in stock. The Sun. OP in FOB SAN FRANCISCO, Cala, Jan. 21. Neither the federal prohibitiota lav nor the Harrison nareutie set can be (riven a fair teat inside of ten yean, R. A. commie-aione- r, Haynes, fetlerul prohibition asserted here today upon hie IK arrival from the East to make an Volume 9, Number 35 WON GROWTH OF OF l AN INDEPENDENT MUM CAUS SCHOOLS JThat Prieeis growing that Carbon cjnnty is increasing rapidly in population that in spite of the rather building program that has keen carried oat by the board of education there must be further increases In housing facilities to care for the y et lit nsr at lie et im ml te ex-pl- 1 i S S 1 -- U H M M H H k k MST BROKEN r NEWSPAPER WOMAN KILLSMERCHANT More iliau thirtvNcsrs rejHtring of the remains of onof tbs pioneer women of Price was jJturheji when on lost Monday the crew taking gravid from a hilltop nt The nonhwet edge of the city exhumed ie coffin. The grave was that of Mrhy Charles Marsh, and was loeated at that oint because of the desire of the bidy to he buried on the old family homestead. She was first laid awav at a point closer to the town, living luter removed to the site where now found when changes in ownership of iart of the old home ground were made. The remains were cared for, being taken to the J. E. Flynn mortuary parlors to be later interred in the-- city cemetery. Ernest S. Horsley furnishes the story of Mrs. Marsh for The Suns readers. He writes that; Mpb. .Charles March one of the settlers of Price in lS8!i came here with her hualwnd from Ins'er Crossing on the Price river, where they had a small ranch, and Joined with their non, Clarence Marsh, on his homestead in the northwest corner of the riiy. Ths Winters Hospital and Cottage Hotel are lo. rated on part of the entry. A short distance west of the hospital, ahout where the stone rutter is now located, was the Marsh residence. Jn Hcptemtier or October of 18S7 Mrs. Marsh died and was buried just north of the house. liy special request of her husband the services were held at ths hume under the direction of Krsstus W. Mclntlre, then bishops counselor. Two years later In the summer of 18R6 some changes were being made in the homestead and it was deemed necessary to remove the remains to the top of the hill which lies west of the old reservoir site, and which was a part of the entry. The old Indy had expressed a wish during her sickness to lie buried on the home land. The exhuming was done by Eras-tn- s W. Mclntlre. Ernest 8. Horsley, Rsmuel Cox and another person whose identity has been forgotten. On account of neglect and there being no monument to mark the grave It soon became olillterated and almost forgotten until the gang now graveling some of the thoroughfares In Price came across the remains in their excavations. The skelton was gathered up by some of the workmen, together with E. 8. Horsley and Allert I. Ornmes, and taken over to the Flynn undertaking parlor, later to tie disposed of by the county or city authorities. Mrs. Marsh Is known to have two sons, ltoliert and Clarence. The Istter wrb agent nnd telegrapher for the Denver and Rio Grande Western narrow gauge railway in 1884-- 5 here at Trice. Her years were close to three score and ten at the time of her demise. She was a devout Christian and became endeared to many of the settlers here, among them 1elng Mrs. Tsaliell Ttirch Bryner, Mrs. Josephine Bryner Fausett. Mrs. P. I. and Mrs. Beren Olsen, the Horsleys. and others. It Is hoped now that her final resting place will not le disturbed until the trumpet shall sound and when the dead shall come forth nut of the dust of the earth to receive their reward. Four additional rooms are needed at Kenilworth and this cost is figured at twenty thousand dollars. Work For Board Members. Present bonded indebtedness ofjhe scliool district is six hundred thousand dollars. The extreme limit to which aebfiars who bob up in ever accuinulat- -' it could be put is a little over a million, ipg masses is made apparent through The total program as outlined would L a perusal of the contents of a letter two hundred and seven thousa require which has been addressed to the is and. It quite a surprise to the board mining companies operating in this to find itself confronted by such an ; district. Under date of last Saturday extensive building necessity. Urged on the board of education puts out an p by the ever increasing schools for sevnation to these heavy taxjwyera, eral to add to the housing past years 'showing the needs of the situation and facilities, board had rather figthe tasking for views as to the probability ured that a resting period in such acof approval of a program which would was at hand. On the contrary :add to bond issues already placed for tivities find the demands entirely unsatthey fwehool buildings and conduct. Citing a new viewpoint must be and isfied, jlil detail the difficulties of taking care taken. It is not that the older popu pgf the scholars, it is shown that the lation is to be railed upon entirely to Mgngestion is not at any one particular shoulder all this new expense, but the .'gpint, but is extended to almost every new people who are coming in as indiSchoolroom in the county. Beginning in the increases cated the big by g$ Price where a new building of schools must be eared for and extreme ,'Hsur rooms is being used for the first in the educational facilities iffcie in the present term it is told crowding avoided. At a salary that fails to be l&Bt the seventh and eighth grades are be for the time and recompense build-foany r Idling housed in the high school school board must the effort expended, These of other lark spare. handle a business which turns over glides must be taken out of their pres- fund yearly many times the amount reincreas-to allow for the wift quarters enrollment of tUe upper high quired to do all of Carbon county caliber ool classes. 'It will require five civil business. That men of the and all of incumbents of the present and hundred seventy whom live a life full of yfnms for the withactivity ptpils in the two grades. Something out shouldering these added responsiaver thirty pupils are being schooled An one of the basement rooms at the bilities are willing to serve the people in this capacity is cause for thankOfmegie library building not at all fulness the public. And the propI a suitable place. Three classes of first osition tofrom make further issues of bonds scholars second are one of grade ud be"limited to half day sessions to allow is simply a call to the people to get the hind Should own affairs. their ers the same privilege. The board education has had office rooms in sentiment seem favorable for such action the board will call an election to county courthouse several years. determine whether or not these bonds to for rooms vacate these Compelled shall issue which is another way of jfke increasing county needs, the dinsaying that Carbon county people will ging room at the high school building he an opportunity or asserting as them as if serving temporary quarters. to given whether or not their schools shall be IJTjtis office should be down town, eon-- : cement of access by the public, and made adequate for the demands of ed LUfc quarters should include a roomy ucating the children among us. d proper storeroom for school sup- HOME PRODUCTS WEEK IS COMthousand dol-- f ines. That thirty-tw- o ING FOR NEXT MONTH lgys is needed to build the twelve new t fttmts required in Price alone is the Home Products Week is to lie obof the board. served in Price during the second week of February, according to plans under Much Congestion Cited, I ;$Sunnyside schools suffer such con- -' way supplemental to the work of the sessions only can Intermountain Development league. H. gestion that half-da- y classes to I BW given four for lack of L. Pratt is central chairman for the room. 'One class holds forth in the leaguf fur Carbon county, and with W, meetinghouse; another finds itself be- - E. Weist as chairman of the local ininf housed in a basement room in one dustries commission it is hoped to pull efSthe teachers cottages, while yet an-- t off something that will put more of other occupies a place in the basement the spirit of using home products into buying and consuming public. Up fronting the boiler room in the school-hjus- the Ibis crowded condition cute out to the present time the details of su:h BERTOLINAJS MAYOR as observance will be made "at Price all facilities for instruction in manual t(fcining or domestic science. Eight are not well formulated. The program Intends, He Says, to Make Helper Betw rooms are badly needed, and here will include, however, an effort to get ter In Every Way. thousand dollars most essays from the school students of vagain thirty-tw- o rious on such to as bo provided cover the cost of the "The F. C. Bcrtolina, a long time and seagrades subjects Opening of Columbia, the new Advantages of Living In Price, "De- soned resident of Helper, last WedLsteel corporations coking coal camp, velopment of Community Influences, nesday evening was made mayor of twill make it necessary to start them "Needed Industries In Carbon Coun- that town by appointment following f with a building. Ten ty and kindred matters. Cash prizes the recent shakeup in that eitys govthousand dollars is the estimate for are to be awarded for the best efforts. ernment. George A. Ilarmer and John this construction. Helper, overcrowd- A move to put in a series of demon- Geraadas were at the same time desiged and not at all well equipped with strations at City Hall is under way. nated as eouneilmen to succeed W. B. heating and toilet facilities, most have Local merchants are expected to stage Wise snd C. A. Knobbs, A. Labori now ten thousand dollars put into improve- this part of the program with Utah takes the place of Bertolina as a counments. Rolanps school population has products that are sold at their stores cilman. The change in officials was eo increased that the two unfinished the result of investigations of vice and rooms- in the basement of the school HELPER LEGION FIRST OF NINE by prohibition law violators in the cityBeTO MAKE REPOI building must be fixed np, and a heat-jRugger i, county attorney. Henry plant is badly needed. About five Nine and twO' former posts of the American Legion sides thethe town mayor ? thousand dollars will do this work, and justice marshal in Utah to are citareceive the special without school facilities. The new mayor The j "wettis of the resigned. peace school population is such that a four-- tion offered those having 50 per cent of Helper since resident a been has j or more of dethis does into room building must be furnished. The years 1909. He is a' large property owner estimate for this is sixteen thousand partment headquarters on Decemlier and has long been identified with vadollars. Stores holds one class in the 31, 1922. Carbon Post No. 21 at Hel- rious movements to improve the town. ehUreh. Every schoolroom is filled to per was the fimt one to report with all old members in and a gain of over 18 He announced his policy when he took 'the limit. Peerless pupils are piled saying: I intend to follow Storn schools. To care for these per cent in new ones. Lewiston No. 50 office, yet conservative policy. progressive, and Provo No. 13 followed closely with ; two camps will to handle the probrequire fifteen thnus-- : substantial intends council The gain over last year. At dollars put into new construction. make lietter our to and of lems today where the 1923 convention of vvellington school lacks a heating Price, and comextend to intend We legion of Utah will be held in Janet city. plant and has no inside toilets. To in-- the our waour system, relay power plete the post reports all members renewed, stall these needed facilities will take and street Main on our line pave ter .'five thousand dollars. Winter Quarters and according to R. K. Storey, the ad- the sidewalks. We intend to remaining will have about twenty new ejnsses are housed in the oldest school jutant, on Heljier high? before the end of this month. add to the pavement Main building in the county. With the foun-- ; members street fulso as to have our PoRts way awarded the kbout gone the floor decaying special citation by business district. I am the in ly paved department headquarters are Carbon f;bemg poorly lighted, unsanitary and No. 21 at Helper; Provo No. 13, Provo; anxious for the people to know that is it inadequate stands for law toilets, proposed Spanish Fork 'yith No. 68, Spanish Fork; the new administration fio. abandon the structure entirely and and order." I new one to cost about twentv-'fiv- e Price No. 3, Price; Lehi No. 19, Lehi; Moroni Kleinman No. 103, Toquerville; thousand dollars. TROUBLES PILING UP FOR Salem No. 8, Salem; Lewiston No. 50, MORE More New Buildings. HELPER RESIDENT M t Lewiston, and Frank E. Peterson No. Hiawatha needs build-a new . i.5 l 14, Park City. With a multiplicity of charges pil.The present one was rather poor-- f np against him, Joe Halversonsin ing ly constructed in the first place, and HE HAD TWO WIVES have finally landed him troubles ?f,.e8,v vibration encountered in Following the application of Mrs. jaiL Convicted a eouple of weeks ago C,Dlly Jo" made the structure so Ada I, Berkeley up at Standardville for of permitting gambling in his place" 1 must be workmens compensation to henfrlf Lhat,it8 the Helper Athletic duK he was t6 Te!ve dollars is and a minot-Liifor injuries to her lave been sentenced for this last W ?Jeine,r needs husband, Gfirge Jj Berkeley, alleged to but his attorney Sam A. King i dollar, will have beenykeeivea .t,81"1atthousand there and which lasecured a postponement until had thl Place- - Martin ter resulted in hi the state in- February 3d. Pending against him are t0 C0St fW dustrial rfetunistjon death, "S I? was informed last seven bther charges connect pd with 4 Tuesday ByJWT. Gunter, a Salt Lake gambling operations. Awaiting trial f a heating plant which will cost five City attorney, that Berkeley has an- on these he wan at liberty on a bond fcnni,d d,0 la,r'newAllb,JUKh something other wife in JugnSlovakia, and from for three thousand dollars. Other trouhouses have been whom he has never', been divorced, who bles brought about his arrest again, pot up at Kenilworth during the past is entitled to compensation. The com- and no bond for the new charges could tno $ ears, the Independent Coal and will be e i'-- upon to decide lie secured. And the sureties on the ,Coke company now plans for twenty-mor- mission the point at ir a hearing to be heavy bond also desired to be released, and its policy is to give em- conducted so lialverson was turned over to the fv ployment to the men having families, villa. sheriff and now reposes in durance. vari-ron- so PIONEERS e. - Rf eoun-cilme- V in-t- he 1 -- eived by I, IS?"? KJ dis-MS- thond fmir-roo- m e, A i HAFHGER OF HOTEL AND POOLHAIL AT PRK Struck by a shot from a revolver ed liy Mrs. Hazel Furry, Frank Felice met death in bis wn store just outside the west limit of IIeljer yesterday (Thursday) aternoon. Mrs. Curry entered 'the place alsint 4 oclock. According to thq stow told by Felices aged father Vikf was present-th- eij woman was behind the counter and reaching up took the weapon from shelf, Minted it at Feliee who was in front of the counter and fired. The bullet struck the man in the forehead, pausing almost instant death. Word of the killing quickly reached the slier iff a office, and in company with Deputies Anderson and Engle, Denting was on the ground in less than an hour after the happening. Mrs. Curry has made no statement to the officers. There is a rumor about that she will claim that the shooting was accidental. She was brought to Price and lodged e in jail. Crowded eonditiiwis at the made it necessary to put her in with the colored woman from Helper that killed her own husband a couple of weeks ago. Arraigned before Justice Hammond this morning Mrs. Curry entered a plea of not guilty. Her preliminary examination will probably lie held tomorrow (Saturday). It was expressed by her attorney he hoped to have the charge of first degree murder which was entered against her reduced to a bailabl? offense so that the woman may be sent home. She has two children, the youngest less than 2 years old. She is the wife of Tom Carry, a switchman employed at Helper. The Currys have been in that town for a number of years, residing but a short distance from the store wlyre the hom- n, (in fir- baa-til- icide occurred, ADJUSTERS TO SETTLE WEETEK LOSS NEXT MONDAY Cleaning np of the wreckage after the fire of last week has occupied the employes of the Weeter Lumber company throughout the last few days. The jumbled stock is almost a hojieless imposition. Insurance men who have ooked over the ground deferred making an estimate of the los until the giiods should have lieen sorted out and put in a position to lie given a good going over. The floor having burned through precipitated the entire stock and fixtures into the basement, and the resulting tangle waa too much even for the experts Using the adjoining building which waa formerly occupied by a creamery, the hardware stock as removed from the destruction is being housed and eared for. An adjustment of the insurance is set for next Monday. In the meantime the lumber yard having been untouched by the fire, business in that line has proceeded as usual. Hardware stocks will be replaced as soon as possible, and all customers will be taken rare of. It is likely that salvaged goods will be disposed of in a big "fire sale." LOCAL ROTARIANS AND KIWAN-IAN- S HAVE MEETINGS two-roo- m Prof. G. J. Reeves of the Carbon high spoke before the Kiwanians last Monday evening. He directed atten- chiltion to the fart that twenty-seve- n dren from Helper this year are attending Wasatch academy at Mt. Pleasant with but thirteen coming to Price. Calling of a special election to authorize a bond issue was declared the only way out of the situation of sufficient school strucfacilities. Although a ture was elected here last year, he said, the building was so crowded another unit would have to be added before September 1st to take care of local students. Announcement was made that the annual banquet and ladies night of the club will be held Saturday night, February 3d. At the Rotary meeting Tuesday night Joy n. Johnson and Dr. A. C. Wherry of Salt Lake City spoke of the spirit of Rotary. An ovation was given L. A. McGee, local Rotarian, who was elected grand master of the Utah Masons last week. J. Rex Miller, newly elected president of the Price Chamber of Commerce, told of wbat that organization is planning for the four-roo- inti- mate study of conditions on theiFaeifie Week Ending January 26, 1923 Coast. Both laws, he said, are proving effective. March of Progress Disturbs the Burial 'Mora Or Less Mystery Surrounds the Place of Mrs. Marsh. Homicide At Railroad Town. ? ; IN m coming year. FIREBUGS ,THEY SAY Residents up at Helper together with peace officers there believe firebugs are working in that town. Two blazes of unknown origin broke out Tuesday. The first was discovered at the rear of Yes, summer will feel mighty good , when it gets here and darned uncom- 1 fortable before it leaves. CUT "The constitution of the United IHIM'KlBI'll AM T1IK JCDGE States should be respected in every de- UK'S LANDIS OK Tilt: NORTH tail." With this admonition Judge Page Morris last Tuesday began his instructions to the jury in the ease of the United States against Louie Bell of City for nfjr ft alleged violation of the olstend art. Judge Morris is silling for Judge Tilhnnu 1). Joliiistni. Bell has been conducting the Carlton Hotel at Price for a considerable time with a NNilliall and soft drink dace in connection. Don't let any man weun you away from it, his honor eontinued. Its all that stands between us and anarchy and barbarism. It looks like the rest of the world was going to he coni rolled liv anarrhy and barbarism and we wiil find ourselves in the same eondition unless we pay pnqier rewect to our constitution. Home jieople in Washington, D. today think they know more 'Jfe ahout the constitution than our forefathers who framed it. They are mere pygmies. It is unfortunate that they do not realize it. George Washington was one of the two greatest men that ever lived, but not the wisest ntan that was in the congress which framed the constitution. It is imperative that the eighteenth amendment be enforced and resiected, the same as any other clause in that great document. There ia another law not upon the statute books that is equally as important as the constitution. That law says a man should not lie punished merely to enforce any law when there is a doubt as to his 4 An article published in a recent of the Kanaus City Star as criles tu Judge 1nge Morris, now sit ting on the Inited States dls- trict court liench up at Salt Lake tlty in the temporary absence of liwue 4 4 4 4 4 Judge Tillman D. Johnson, char-- 4 4 acteriMtliH that have won for him 4 4 the title of the Landis of tho 4 ' North." The article states that 4 ho U regularly 4 tphe.Vt'Vhe district 4 of the federal court, haa Inapifed 4 4 fear In the hearts of all bootleg-- 4 4 gers and Volstead act violators of 4 4 thut state. He has scarcely ever 4 4 deviated from a set principle of 4 4 giving Jail sentences to violators 4 4 of the act and has been especially 4 4 hard on proprietors and bartend-- 4 4 ers of alleged soft drink parlors 4 Tel-4 4 Says Wednesdays Salt Lake 4 eg ram: 'Judge Morris has sustained his 4 Balt 4 reputation since coming to liake City and his witticisms and 4 remarks from the bench, together 4 with hia kindly mannerisms and 4succinct charges, have already es- 4 tablished him as a not a tile figure 4 in local court annals. He haa al- 4 ready won a reputation for apeed-- 4 4 ' 4 . Ing up trials and eliminating all 4 unnecessary court delaya. He of-- 4 ten himself In 4 4 4 4 4 questions witnesses order to clear up haay situations and la never loath to take matters In hla own hands to tiring about common sense solutions of Quea-- 4 tlona arising In trials. : 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 444W46444 JURORS ARE DRAWN guilt" In reviewing the witnesses called by the government, Judge Morris said: "Here is a man who claims that he ia a mechanic in a garage at lViee. lie also admits that he has bought drinks from the defendant. Any man in the automobile repair business who drinks ought to do one of two things either get out of the garage business or quit drinking. It is unfair to the public that any man who uses liquor should be entrusted with the rejiair of a ear and thus endanger the lives of those who must later on use the machine." Another witness, a mail who had gnne blind, according to his own testimony through the use of alcoholic beverages, made the statement that he had conic from Price to Salt Lake City and had been cured of his blindness. He said that uiHin ibis return to Price he had purchased more liquor from Bell and that he nearly went blind again from tha effects of it. "I can but say," commented the judge, "that the gentleman is either not telling the truth or else he has used mighty pMr discretion." Judge Morris final words of instruction to the jury were these: Someone has lied. It is up to you to tell who it was." After deliberating on Bell's rase for thirty-thre- e hours the jury found him be sentenced tomorrow will He guilty. (Saturday). Several other liquor violation matters from this section of the state have been heard and disposed of during the past ten days. Monday last something was said before Judge Morris concerning federal prohibition officers using undue influence in obtaining evidence upon which to make arrests . Ilia honor thus expressed himbe a lot easier for the self: proverbial camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for anyone to secure a sentence snd conviction in this court where I have proof that federal officers used unfair methods in obtaining evidence against violators of the liquor law." MUCH MONEY STILL DUE STATE FROM BACK TAXES "It-woul- Forty Citizens Selected For Duty At February Court. Drawing of petit jurors to serve on ' esses during the coming February term of the district court was accomplished last Tuesday. The processes ahead of the actual serving of summons on the jurors have been many and carefully attended to. During the month of December Judge F. E. Woods appointed a "jury commission" of two members J. W. Loofbourow and George E. Orkey. By this commission a selection was made of two hundred and twenty-eignames, being a certain established proKirtion of the ballots cast for representative in the last general election in this case the vote of last November. These names are selected from the voting taxpyem, the ides being so far as Kuuiible to avoid putting in any names of larties who may be ineligible for jury duty for various legal reasons. Then, just recently a calendar of the cases to eonte before the court was prepared by the clerk, and being submitted to Judge George Christensen, his honor made estimate that forty jurors would lie required. This report is returned to the clerk. It then devolves upon the county attorney, tha treasurer snd the clerk to "draw" these forty jurors from the list as had been submitted by the commission. Slips holding all this names are placed in "the box" and are drawn one at a time, after "shuffling" and tabulated. This list is certified by the Henry Roggeri, IL 8. ing Robinett and II. CL Smith prepared the it, and a copy was then turned over to Sheriff Ray Denting. It is likely that by this time the last named official has placed summons in the hamU of most of the jurors, who are required to present themselves in court on February 19th at 2 o dock. The list as drawn follows, grouped by preeincts: Price Tony Mlgliaccio, W. M. Taylor. Bert Jacobs, W. E. Anderson, Harht . draw-officia- ls. old V. Leonard, H. A. Maxfield, C. M. Strlngham, P. I. Olsen. Archls Davis. W. P. Olson and L. D. Nutter. .Wellington Levi Branch and James Liddell. Helper John Crawford. T. D. Enoch Bryner, C. P. Johnson andRiggs, O. T. Coleman. Clear Creek T. E. Vance and J. A. Mease. Sunnyside Dan Stevenson, William Memmett and J. M. Naylor. Kenilworth John Baas snd C. IL Claire. Almost half a million dollars in taxes are delinquent in the various counties of the state for 1921 and previous years, according to figures compiled this week by W. D. Sutton, state treasurer. The total amount due for the year 1922 is given at $1,784,403.08. It ia the intention of tlie treasurer to Cameron J. A. Ingram. . take the matter up with the state audiJ. F. Corey, L. Check-ets- s Oat tor and the board of equalization and Castle and Ed Holliman. see if a method can be devised so that M. Rains L. Burdick and Hyrum these can be collected. In Carbon the Tidwell. Winter Quarters W. J. Craig, Leroy ' total is given ns $14,355.70 ; Emery', A. Snow and James Wallace. in and $14,980.23, Uintah, $19,635.31; Wattle Dave Thomas and Arthur Duchesne, $22,566.47. t rXTY-FIV- the Flaim Hotel about 3 oclock of the nFbming on the back porch with a loss damage to the building of five hnndred dollars. Two horses were burned to death in the second which destroyed a barn and contents belonging to James Martdlo about 8 oclock of the morning. Ten tons of hay, a wagon, harness and other articles were included in the loss. Buildings near the barn caught fire, but the boys soon had these under control. The loss approximates two thousand with five hundred dollars insurance. IN FEDERAL IS lOT.T..BS NOW F, BUYS CKHMAN CASTLE COBLENZ. Jan. 21. A fine fit- castle on the Hhine op- posit Coblenz, together with the furnishinwi and fifteen acres of vineyards, was advertised for sale fora" thousand dollars. F. Mochau of Chicago, an army official who will depart with the American sixtytroops has Just bought for five dollars for his wifes father a farewell present of an apartment house at Mayence. consisting of six three-rooapartments and a4 plot of land. There were two pre-war mortgages on the house for forty-thre- e thousand marks, or thousand the old equivalent of dollars. Mochau paid off the mort-- 4 gages for two dollars, the present equivalent cf forty three thousand marks. m 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4v Bailey. m Standardville Dean Iloldaway and Charles P. Moore. Scofield M. Clifford Newren. SUIT NOW SETTLED Gust Triantsfilion was given judgment against the Denver and Rio' Grande Western at Salt Lake City on Tuesday last in the amount of two thousand dollars for yiersonal injuries suffered November 22, 1922, while he was employed as a machinists helper. The accident occurred while Trianta-ftlio- u was repairing an engine at Helper. He suffered an injury to his head which has impaired hia hearing, hia jaw was fractured and several of his teeth were broken off. Suit was instituted for five thousand dollars. However, he agreed to settle for two thousand nnd judgment for that amount was entered by Judge L. B. Wight of the Third District court. |