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Show u K iuirs 7 ADVERTISING RATES TH AT hi IOWS WHERE - 5s"s display advertlBinc rates P (0 inchataby thelnch month-t- our JVll.5 per Tran-- Z FI l iMuee to local advertiser. (55) mbu an inch per teeue. 1 Ytion le 25 per cent additional. No J Suy advertising accepted for the 1 Itfnmt) pace Finn PW reader j twenty-fiv- e (25) cents per line an UtVb Bum's ii jt of several denomlna-- ? iH fleapoa booksstock. The Bun. i Xi e lit lie maid from Siam, jid to lier lover. KUm, Wh-- i You mav kin me. of course. Hut you'll have to use force, r. 11. t hr. nk Heaven, youre stronger than Volume 9, Number 37 AH XHDEPEHDEHT NEWSPAPER 1 am. We agree with you, dear reader there's only one eron in thia uiunity who is entirely perfect. Per Week Ending February 9. 1923 has - icept in I AM you know who it is. MHOI0ITAIN STATES M 50 EXPLOSION PERCENT IN NEW MEXICO HAY Violent enough to wreck the heavy concrete work at the mouth of the tunnel, and indicating that its force must have been tremendous in the depths of the workings an explosion in Mine No. 1 at Dawson, N. M., entombed a hundred and twenty-tw- o miners yesterday. At a late hour last night two bodies had been recovered, and a statement wras issued which declared that it was not knowm whether or not the men still in the mine were alive. The fan and machinery were not wrecked and ventilating operations were soon Communication from the scene of the disaster was hampered because the telephone lines were torn down. Many men from the Carbon county fields are known to be working in the district. Several of these have already communicated with relatives here giving assurance of their safety. oh lowebed ouput For Short Tims Year Away of 'Lock Maykst An-Rituminon For Hormal palow $Rradta Shipment! Show Increase Ooka Mora Thu Year Ao. dummy Cansea gf syf Bun Special Service. B. C, Feb. 5. WASHINGTON, uetion of soft coal has been at about eleven million net sta-una- iy tSua each seven days during the past First estimates for the with January 27th place ending total including mine fuel, that 'tje lked at the mines and loeal sales in IJdition to shipments at 11,160,000 is a small increase as jt tons, which estimate the with "1pared tons forrevised the week preced-V- . 925,000 Preliminary reports of cars load-- I last week show 42,650 on Monday hd a decline to 29,218 on Thursday. )ma the indicated output for last 3ek is between 1 and 2 per eent less An for the week preceding and will about 10,900,000 to 11,000,000 tons, hr the week ending on January 20th 'A properties in Utah had an output 45.3 per eent of fulltime capacity. Aal loasea from all cansea amounted 64.7; transportation disability, 13; 'hie disability, 0.7, and no market 12 per eent. During the same time weeks. tgyr HI FORKES CARBON COUNTY MEN 'at. PRODUCTION steady ? HI jrtk V f Colorado mines worked 52.1, New ilexico 49.8, and Wyamii srtit of fulltime eaj fcf anthracite in the Sry 27th is estimated at 2,119,000 net including mine fuel, local sales, and dredge output The nine shezy ' neipal carriers reported a total of a 513 ears loaded during the week, compared with the week preeed-thi- a was an increase of about 5 per The eumulative production of Blnt j for the present coal year I fr$thracite M I (beginning April 1, 1922, to January SXh 1923), Btands at 38,675,000 net tons, 4 against 73,067,000 for the same periled in the preceding coal year. Thus Au present year is 24392,000 net tons per cent behind last year. Pre-- l wff.47 r liminary reports for the first half of Mb week show a alight decline as eom-fared with the previous one and that 1 ski total production will probably be and 2,100,000 net 2,000,000 Vtgweon "yns, f fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this LIBERTY CONTINENT A NEW NATION, CONCEIVED IN AND DEDICATED TO THE PROPOSITION THAT ALL MEN ARE CREATED EQUAL NOW WE ARE ENGAGED IN A GREAT CIVIL WAR, TESTING WHETHER THAT NATION, OR ANY NATION SO AND SO DEDICATED CAN LONG ENDURE. WE ARE MET ON A GREAT BATTLEFIELD OF THAT WAR. WE HAVE COME TO DEDICATE A PORTION OF THAT FIELD AS A FINAL RESTING PLACE OF THOSE WHO HERE GAVE THEIR LIVES THAT THAT NATION MIGHT LIVE. IT IS ALTOGETHER FITTING AND PROPER THAT WE SHOULD DO THIS. BUT IN A LARGER SENSE, WE CANNOT DEDICATE, WE CANNOT CONSECRATE, WE CANNOT HALLOW, THIS GROUND. THE BRAVE MEN, LIVING AND DEAD, WHO STRUGGLEb HERE, HAVE CONSECRATED IT, FAR ABOVE OUR POOR POWER TO ADD OR DETRACT. THE WORLD WILL LITTLE NOTE, NOR LONG REMEMBER WHAT WE SAY HERE, BUT IT CAN NEVER FORGET WHAT THEY DID HERE. IT IS FOR US THE LIVING, RATHER, TO BE DEDICATED HERE TO THE UNFINISHED WORK WHICH THEY WHO FOUGHT HERE HAVE THUS FAR SO NOBLY ADVANCED. IT IS RATHER FOR US TO BE HERE DEDICATED TO THE GREAT TASK REMAINING BEFORE US THAT FROM THESE HONORED DEAD WE TAKE INCREASED DEVOTION TO THAT CAUSE FOR WHICH THEY GAVE THE LAST FULL MEASURE OF DEVOTION. THAT WE HERE HIGHLY RESOLVE THAT THESE DEAD SHALL NOT HAVE DIED IN VAIN THAT THIS NATION, UNDER GOD, SHALL HAVE A NEW BIRTH OF FREEDOM AND THAT GOVERNMENT OF THE PEOPLE, BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE PEOPLE, SHALL NOT PERISH FROM THE EARTH A. LINCOLN. CON-CEIVE- D Car sll0rtB 1 East. Udt .According to mine reports for the lik' Mack ended January 20th traffic eon-- d K Aons were some better in West Vir-itl- jl and Indiana. The improvement iba in those states, however, was more liog' Chan offset by increased transporta-ue- e difficulties in Pennsylvania, Ken-- i da tacky, Maryland and Virginia, and the . Jftdnction declined to 10,925,000 torn. iB jCtknsportation disability, reported by erfths mine operators aa car shortage, n td otinues overwhelmingly the domi-ra- jt Maat factor limiting mine output, caus- losses of more than half of full capacity in many districts. It s d be remembered, however, that s. 1 til lt Chare are other elements in the present mik fcansportation crisis than a simple , gj shortage of equipment What the 0 p eorresponding period of 1922 of tons or 187 per cent. report as car shortage may be f 25 V part to the congestion of The allrail movement of coal to New ; Sight at junction points and import-i- t England and Eastern New York for . f vf gateways, to the condition of roll-c- h the week ended January 27th included stock or various other censes. The 4095 can of anthracite and 2890 of bituminous forwarded through the prinidsjmisent acute ear shortage may be Wted to the extra burden imposed cipal gateways over the Hudson and Irowla by the miners and through Rouse Point Comparison with yB wBhopmena strikes during the past sum-F- the week preceding shows increases of B .cprts of lack of orders were six hundred and seventy-nin- e can of Qr'PrBctically confined to the districts anthracite and four hundred and sevppf west of the Mississippi. ln that terri-lic- enty of bituminous. The nte of movetarJ uc reports were received from ment to New England of bituminous in 18S'VI7 Mate, and in all hnt Kansas no reecnt weeks has been about the same jgjjtuarket t was the chief cause of losses as in 1922, but anthracite is being forwarded in far larger volume. The numTunning time. A few scattering y tfi of no market were received ber of can forwarded. last week was E?8tern districts, but only morethan double that in the Indiana and the New River rtifl one a year ago. Dumpings of soft coal over the pien !ri fi field was that cause responsible for .aa ?8 a, arge as 1 per eent. Losses at Hampton Roads showed a small degr. attributable to labor were reported by crease in the week ended January 27th. of operators in a majority of the pro--d The total quantity handled was 7 1 U j uong fields, hut on the net tons as against 293,322 tons in whole they .'wwe mall. Small local strikes occnr-.It-? t,.e1weFk preceding.. There was a in Ilhnois, Indiana, Southern Ohio, slight increase in the tonnages of very car.eLogan county (W. Va.) and Kansas! go and bunker coal for New England, rough the strike in Cumher-- . but other coastwise shipments and for-- . decreased to 153 per 8 cargo and bunker coal decreased. enL 582,-00- op-ip- t at-ee- tii oi fr 1, y re-of- ?t. corres-pondi- ng 287,-73- u1 land-Piedmo- nt 4 An Increase In Coke. ARTICLES FILED The Utah Poultry Producers, organised to engage in the marketing of all lasses of poultry and similar in January wit-- 6 !Telnotiher 1DfreM' the produc-f- S keL Estimates based products, has filed articles of incorporation with Bded place the to- the secretary of state. The Bt MA) tons as is against capitalized for $300,000 andcompany the offi-7- 7 A gain bZr5S2?!?n ,re Benjamin Brown, president; Jen?v,vania nd Vir-th- f Pn!a- podnction m the Connelhville Abertus W illardson, first vice present region increased from ''U fioii i,. oiik' dent : Oeonre A. Brown, second vie Ja 6!0 tons. The vi e furr:u!ative output 0f:Ire',l.1ent llarr beehive eoke C. see- Edmunds, the during present vear rotary and treasurer. S .f0Ufih 'SST! le 5k - d net tons on "th. ' This was m. increase January over the Rubber stamp of all kinds. The Sun. CASTLE DALES ORDINANCES ON SHAKY FOOTING Decision was rendered by the sucause the council saw fit to try to save preme court of Utah yesterday in the a little money by not having the revicase wherein the city of Castle Dale sion of its laws printed. It appears sought to have an action for violation that the students of the academy were of its ordinances reinstated after the employed to make a typed copy of the justice had discharged the accused aa ordinances as revised, and this was denot guilty. The facts are that after an upon as sufficient. The state arrest had been made in a liquor case, pended lawa are clearly intended to provide the defendant secured his liberty as the publicity for the city regulations a result of the contention of his attor- that is given by a printed book. If ney that the ordinance nnder which it the pnblie is to be governed by these was sought to prosecute was invalid ordinances, it surely is not asking too because of failure on the part of the much that they he printed and discity to make proper publication when tributed as the law of the state dithe ordinance was passed. The docu- rects. Even now it seems that Castle ment was a part of the revised ordi- Dale must publish in order to have nances of Castle Dale, and the only any city laws in effect. Otherwise ev- publication made was to post up a ery violation can be defended by copy. Attorney L. A. Me- - tuning the integrity of the section un-Gof Price contended that this was not in compliance with the requirements of the state laws, and secured a discharge of his client as not gnil-t- y. Appeal was made by the city to the Seventh District court, but Judge Woolley dismissed such action as not being within his jurisdiction, the state laws not giving s city the right to aphas showing the extent and distribution of peal in a criminal action which ... been decided adversely. It was on t1B the various soils by types. The rest has same ground that the ease came be- been covered. .by reconnaissance maps fore the supreme court, and the deci- showing the soils in larger groups. In sion upholds the lower courts action, some of the Western States there are and the rase is dismissed. large areas of mountainous lands and While neither the district court nor where there is no immediate an actual the supreme trihunnl made of irrigation or of grazing qnes-- : and for which there will as to thc puWirat.eii likely be no lion, the at lair leae. trie city 1 (.is- survi-vs- . jiiJ lie Dale square-up aguin the proposition of having ail its ordinance as of iuo.it questionable valid. ty, all be- - TWO PRICE MEN TALK TO PEOPLE AT HUNTINGTON BELL GETSNEW TRIAL Carl R. Marvuaen of Price, republican state chairman, and Orson P. Madsen, Carbon and Emery county farm demonstrator, talked to memliera of the Huntington Commercial club and others at a social given over there on Thursday evening of last week. The affair was in honor of the retiring board and at which U. C. Bowen, president, presided. Marcusen spoks gen. orally on the progressive jirinoipsU Price Man Back Home Awaiting Still Another Haaring. i month. Appropos of the smallpox scare which seems to have taken possession of Salt Lake City, the board of eounty commissioners in session this week discussed the subject, along with contagious diseases in general Recognizing that prevention is better than cure, and that vaccination ia the beat known prevention of the disease; it is strongly urged that all persons who have not been successfully immunized within the past two years go either to their own family doctor or the eounty physician and be vaccinated. Service will be furnished those who feel that they cannot afford the expense. The commissioners disclaim any intention to eause any fright or panic, bet nevertheless feel that it ia their duty to warn everyone that smallpox ia serious disease and that in other sections of Utah there is at present numerous eases of black smallpox, from which a death rate ia reported aa high as 40 per eent The state board of health ia now urging legislation that will exclude from the schools all who are not vaccinated. Such lawa are in effect in HIAWATHA RESORT IS RAIDED BY THE SHERIFF Proceeding upper part forces last ni and the resi tors, maki: liq-to- of wine were .uncovered. The resort was found to be operating in full swing as a gambling honse, end about a hundred dollars in money which was in play was seized. A captured slot machine yielded thirty dollars more. Another machine produced only fifteen cents. Five dealers were then brought to Price and given a midnight trial before Justice J. W. Ilammond. Paying fifty dollars fine eaeh they were turned loose. Mike Drakas, proprietor of the coffee house will be tried tomorrow on e gambling charge. The other partner, whose house was the scene of the raid, is ill and will receive the attentions of the eounty officers later. Sheriff Ray Deming took along hia entire foree of deputies, including C. M. Anderson, S. E. Garrett, W. A. Engle, L. A. Pike, W. E. Christensen and Mack Olson. No advance information had reached the victims. Another place was also visited, but without disclosing anything wrong. HOME PRODUCTS WEEK IS SAID TO BE COMING nearly every state already, and the health authorities claim that the result has been to practically stamp out smallpox. The commissioners believe that in view of the drastic lawa proposed the people of this community should give real serious consideration to the subject, and aid by complying with the request that all be vaccinated. UEKEARCII CHIEF DECLARES THE FLC VERM ISOLATED !(lci-isi"- 4 4 SCHENECTADY. N. Y Feb. 3. Hopes of thousands of sufferers from epidemic Influenza for a our or prevention of the disease were raised today by the announcement of the discovery of the cause and and the isolation of the germ. It is msde by Dr. Simon W. Klexner, disector of the Rockefeller lnsti- tute of Medical Research, who at- tributes the discovery to Dr. Peter K. Olitsky and Dr. Frederick T. Oates, also of the institute. TheIsolation will permit experimentstion with antidotes and antitoxins, So small is the germ that It must he magnified a thousand times he- fore it is seen distinctly under the mlrrosrope. It lodges in the nose and throat during the first thirty- six hours of influenza infectirn, then attacks the lungs in such a way ns to make them sc. cjitiMe to other germs ln the n(,M mid throat, notably those of nia and hronihitis. Town in th the sheriff ed a coffee house . of the proprie-hau- L At the cof-1- 1 fee house on! quantity of nor was faun of one and the residence of one of the prdprie-tan- k Just what is to be exjiected of the Home Products Week as it is to be observed in Price is hard to determine. ee drts, "I and the fraternal spirit that characterizes such clubs and commended the new official board for thus honoring the retiring officers. Madsen tallred on agricultural matters and referred to the farming projects which he hoped to work out through the medium of the club. He also mentioned the proposed railroad through Northern Emery county which would open np the vast coal deposits in Huntington Can-on and incidentally he k Vig factor in 5eveluping the agricultural resources of the county. Other features on the program were a reading by Miss Anna Leonard, selection by the high school hand and several song numbers by the miens glee club. After the program th4 doniestie science girls, under the supervision of Miss McKee, served a banquet to the new and retiring offi- dollars. Louie Bell of Price, convicted of g cers and specially invited guests. A. L Leonard was taskmaster. Other prom- violation of the Volstead law some inent men will hB engaged to aadresa three weeks ago end who was to have the club at similar affairs frequently been senten cod by Judge Morris last SatunUy, was at that tima granted a during the year. new trial. I n the meantime Bell ia back SMALLPOX WARNING IS ISSUED in this eity under bonds. He likely BY COUNTY BOARD will have another bearing the coming ques-tvpewritt- en , Men who operate soft drink parlor and under that guise sell intoxicating liquor were roundly scored-- by Judge Tage Morris in federal court nt Salt Lake City last Saturday. lie eaid: have no sympathy with men who open e soft drink parlor and then try to bring baek The saloon the worst and most vicious thing that this country was ever euraed with. Thf brevrerie and saloons brought about prohibition and yet ww meq VWd (XY to get them back.' Prohibition agents also rams la for a scoring by Jiudge Morris. If they cannot find a way to get evidence without inducing people to violate Hit law, he uid, they had better leave people alone and auit their jobe and go home. The.remark was brought forth in the cfoae of Chick Welsh, who entered a plea of guilty to the charge of telling intoxicating liquor. It ia said a prohibition agent induced him to purchase a bottle of whisky. 'Welsh was sentenced to pay a fine of a hundred 4 4 All the intermonntain manufacturers seem to be trying to keep it as a deep 4 dark secret. Not a line of advertising 4 .has been put out locally by single One of the interested concerns, and any real information as to the objects of t f the celebration and the intentions of its promoters cannot he found on tap. It is announced that an exhibit will be put on at City Hall next week -- Saturday, February 17th. Local mn. ufacturing concerns are expected to put up demonstrations. It is likely thnt-thFarmers Mill and Elevator will pass out biscuits made their flour. Local shops of various kinds will exhibit work. In order that ihe rush will not he too great to ;.! this an admission of ten cents will be charged. sv-- ' |