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Show mm PAGE THE BUN, PRICE. four ' ' -- ' .1 .r f;.J I j - jfj fnrr PRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY V .'safea ' FRIDAY, FEBRUARY & -1 ; .ViMHirWi V 18, 195 FRI - fratssa: TUESDAY TUESDAY 20 I x? ? gk i fX? .V V --- - - 4 x4 U HADLEY A. D. PHONE 235 PHONE 235 PRICE, UTAH EIGHTH AND MAIN EIGHTH AND MAIN 22 Jaauad Every Friday By Sun Fubliahinx Co. (Inc.) It. W. Crockett, Manager. Subscription, 92.00 the Year. Office Phone No. dence, Noa. lSlmt and lSImS. I. Real- - Mail Matter, June 4, 1915, at Entered aa Sncond-Clna- a Poet office at Price, Utah, Under the Art ol March S, 1179. SUft ADVERTISING RATES. nujpi NATIONWIDE STRIKE OF MINERS NOT TO COME T(IE PRESENT YEAR. 8. ur Mat-Lai- , si 31 xm TRADE IN SHEEP AND LAHES WEAK j.-- 240-poun- d, About the best word The Sun can carry to the people of Eastern Utah this week is a report from Zsga1s Ten Cents the Une Each Insertion. Count Six Washington, D. C., that coal operators and miners Words to the Line. Summons, 911.10; Water Applicahave finished their conference and there is to be tion, lt.OO; Final Proof, 910.00. Reader Ten Cents the Line Each Insertion. Count Six no nationwide strike in April, next. For that matWords to the Lina Blackface Type Fifteen Cents the ter there will be no coal strike this year, as the Line Each Insertion. wage agreement covers an entire twelve months. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc. Half Lo- When we recall the disastrous one of last year cal Reading Notice Rates. Count Six Words to Line. For Bala For Rent, Found, Lost, Eta Two Cents per when for five months thousands of men were idle Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. and business of all kinds suffered it is cause for Address All Communications to rejoicing to know that we are not to again be SUN PUBLISHING CO PRICE, UTAH hampered by a similar vent. Coal is expected to take a tumble now, find some operators predict I went mourning without The Sun; I stood up that during the summer it will be lower than at and cried in the congregation Job, 30-2any time since 1914. We are also hoping that this is true, because with it plentiful and at oldtime SHORTER HOURS AND HETTER PAY IS BE- prices factories can operate fulltime. And when the factories of this country are operating we feel ING MUCH DISCUSSED. it even into the nooks and corners of the farms. and hours shorter for Countrywide agitation better pay for teachers is just now being much TWENTY YEARS AGO THIS WEEK discussed at the national capital. Superintendent of Schools Frank Ballou has just sent out an orG. Callaway of Price wa figuring on engaging in der putting all the teachers under him on a five-ho- the J.million liusiucaa at Tucker. a day basis, although as it is explained from Colunilnw Barracks, (., arrived in recruits Forty these refer to attendance at and work in schools Price anil later left for Fort Duchesne. and by no means limit the activities of teachers Frank X. Ciuneron and family of Castle Gate moved to those hours. Attendance at meetings, prepara- to Salt Lake City, where they were to reside. tion and examination of papers naturally take up There were throe more cases of smallpox at Colton, it several hours more per day. Washington, D. C., been brought in there bv a sheepherder from Nine haring teachers are hereafter to have one free day per Mile. week for catching up on paper examinations, Diptheria made its appearance in Price, the little child preparation of woik to be done and more especi- of Mrs. teacher in the public schools Andrew ally for visiting other schools, to get in touch with having it. the problems of other teachers and their methods Price Trading company sold its telephone line from of handling them. No possibility of raising teach- Price to Ferrnn to Levi X. Harmon, A. E. Wall, Oliver J. years. ers pay exists in the hands of the superintendent Harmon and Albert Ilryucr. of the school board or the district commissioners, floekinnsters wore exjcetiug to get fifCarlum such action being only possible by congress, sit- teen cents county it jmund for their wool. Some sheepmen had ting as a city council for Washington. Mrs. Mari- lieen offered fourteen, hut refused to accept it. etta Johnson, educator and founder of the proMrs. Andrew' resigned her position aa a gressive schools of Alabama and Connecticut, teacher in the lrice achools and left for Sunnysitle to states that the District of Columbia teachers are join her husband, who had a position with the eonl comso far underpaid that their salaries should be pany there. doubled to enable them to make a fair living wage. Sunnvsidc residents were circulating a petition asking With such a material increase in salary, Mrs. the legislature to appropriate three thousand dollars for Johnson declares, "the energy now devoted to building a wagonroad across the mountain to Lee's ranch anxiety over making both ends meet could be put in Nine Mile. George G. Frandsen of Price had recovered a huninto constructive study of the child and its needs. dred and on the desert which he had Per Inch per Month, 91.10; Single Issue, Special Position, It Per Cent Additional. x;-- .:t jW'4yvJB to $0.00; hulk others, $8.25 to $9.00; calves steady up to fifty eents higher; best vealers to packers', $11.50; other ' (Continued From Page Two.) classes mostly steady to strong; better V to improve the quality of domestic an- grades bologna bulla, $4.25 to $450; s imals. Koch of these persons has filed bulk canners, $2.50 to $2.75; cutter V , with the department a written agree- generally $3.25 to $400. Hugs Receipts 0000 head. Active i" ment to use purebred sires of good and twenty-fiv- e to thirty-fiv- e cents of live stock all classes for quality higher; spots early to shippers, twenty ; , animals number The of breeding kept. relcompilation of figures showing the ex- cents higher; packer top, $8.25; 100 to 1 ative costs of insurance under the owned by the iiersons enrolled now im$8.20 to $8.35; 250 to 300--; and marked stock companies and the state fund. ceed 1,100,000 head und, $8.10 to $8.25; bulk of sales, ij from to is time provement reported The hitter is writing about 25 per ijent .00 to packing sows, fifteen of the eomjiensatory insurance, he de- time. Department records show clear- to twenty-fiv-$8.30; e cents higher; mostly at stimusires' use of the that purebred ly clares. Why is it that more employ$7.15 to $7.25; stock pigs, fifteen to ers do not insure with the state f Sev- lates also the use of purebred female cents lower; mostly $7.00 im- twenty-fiv- e and about stock brings gradual ineral coal companies, he said, had to $7.50. each with generation. sured with the state at one time, but provement Receipts, 3000 head, tambs had changed ty stock companies. I Several clips of Vernal wool sold the tenSheep to fifteen cents higher; on load st i he past week at as high as forty-fiv- e asked some of these companies, and $14.75; other desirable lambe, $1435 j said, why they changed. They said a quarter cents. None has gone under to $14.60; sheep ewes, $7.75; steady; it was because they could obtain better forty-fou- r. shorn wethers, $6.85 to $7.00. from stock the companies. protection West waters shearing plant will be The insurance fund law is only funcfor business the first of ready Worst In History. tioning partly. The foundation of the Both machine and handshearing April. will law is faulty. Pettit cited compari- care for about three thousand head OMAHA, Neb., Feb. 15. The fire is a sons between the insurance system aa Armour & Cos, plant here has this The Mounds at are pens day. expected maintained in Wyoming and the Utah to receive sheep by the 15th of April. morning developed into the wont ii V The former state, he said, plan. the history of the American paekiig had no industrial commission's comindustry, veteran packingmen declar- U Yesterdays Markets. pensation which he thought is more ed, following new unofficial estimates KAXSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 15. Cat- placing simple, beneficial and more satisfacthe loss thus far at $2,000,000. tle Receipts 4300 head. Beef steers Hammond, Ind., boasts the tory than the Utah method. next worst mostly ten to fifteen cents higher; top, It occurred twenty-thre- e ago and years CALLED PIONEER IS $9.50; other sales, $7.00 to $9.35; bulk, caused a loss of $1,500,000. John R. Winder, aged 75 years and $8.00 and up; she stock steady to fifthe sou of President Winder, died at teen cefhs higher; choice cows, $3.50 Wedding announcements. The Son his home at Salt take City last Monday. lie was born in Liverpool, Eng., and came to Utah with his jiarents when hut 4 years of age. He arrived in 1953 in what is known as the Joseph W. Young company. Deceased was tlie brother of Mrs. Reuben G. Miller, fur a long time a resident of Price, and an uncle of J. Rex Miller of this city. Funeral services were held from his late residence at the Capital City on Wednesday last. He was one of the survivors of John R. Winder and Ellen Walters Winder, and had a residence in this state of approximately seventy much of this clique spirit dying out Folks still CARBON MINING MAN AGAINST THE PRESENT LAW have their septate church and society interests. But they have seen more of the world and of life Opisinents of the state insurance kill and are inclined to laugh at petty jealousies. They continued their arguments in the lower feel, in progressive places at least, that the com- house of the Utah legislature on Tuesmunity should be one big family in which all work day last. J. K. Pettit, republican repheartily together for town progress and to orga- resentative from Carbon county, aaid he thought the industrial commission nize pleasant activities and diversions. should be abolished. He submitted a -- 10 c. 'Ait-v- : SIS'? Mat-tai- RECENT YEARS SEE MUCH OF THE CLIQUE SPIRIT DISAPPEARING. Many people in past years have formed a certain prejudice against country life because they had the misfortune to live in towns that were dominated by petty cliques. If there were three or four churches in such a place each might have its own distinct section of people. In each group there would be the older folks, the middleaged and young married people and the young set. Frequently these groups did not mix. Then there might be the card playing crowd, the dancing set, the literary folks and so on. Some considered themselves better than others and held aloof. The town would be cut up into many divisions and subdivisions. The various factions were often jealous of each other. People did not know each other well and did not form many friendships outside their own crowd. This spirit paralyzed progressive community movements. Each set was so small that it could not organize any general effort for pleasant social life. Recent years have seen sixty sheep supposed However, he was still a hundred short since the late storms. The stage station to the north of Price; which had been at Charley Hall's place, was moved bnck to Mrs. A. Q. Doan's in Soldier Canyon, where meals were served to passengers and others. Charles C. Clauson of Price met a bobcat on his way to a coal mine north of town. Afraid to shout for fear his team wouldn 't stand, he got out of the wagon and slew the varmint with rocks and sticks. Peter C. Tryon, living between Price and Helier, and ta vina McComb of the latter place, took out a marriage license with County Clerk Donaldson and' were later married by Justice Millard in I rice. Rush orders for coal were such that the e Gate mines put in a Sunday shift. There was considerable damage at the then four camps of Carbon county liecanse of frozen pijies. The weather was the coldest in many years. David Crow, superintendent of the Castle Gate mines, was sent to Somerset, Colo., while Robert Howard, mine laws, was promoted to Crow's position and Michael Beveridge became mine foreman by the change. W. D. chief clerk at that camp, went to Salt take City to become secretary to II. G. Williams, general manager, with offices in the Dooly block. THE SELZ SIX been lost. Ca-tl- Mac-tai- n, MORE MILEAGE FOR LESS The co digs right in when the manger or tnb is filled with our extra feed. Try it on yours and see the milk pail filL Try our calf feed on the calf. It is cheaper than milk and nukes growth faster. If yon want the best results in the co wbam youve got to do your share. Our feed will do the biggest part of it for yon. sSix shoe gives more mileage lower at coet because its first cost and its upkeep are lower. The-Sef- Such quality and economy can not be found in any other shoe, as its sales show. The Sclz Six outsells any other shoe of its kind. It is a wonderful bar gain in a high quality shoe. Try it. Price Commission Co. South Ninth Sweet. Price, Utah. Mr. and Mrs. Seymour V. Prows left lrovo today for Southern Utah, where they will sppnd the ensuing week. He will attend to business at Manti, while Mrs. Prows and children will visit with friends snd relatives at Salina. Provo Post, 10th. c M THAN THIRTY TEARS OF SQURE DEALING PHONES PRICE, UTAH PHONE 6 |