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Show PAGE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY THE SUN, PRICE, UTAH EVEEY FRIDAY, four t FRIDAY, FI IN PLACE OF OUR NOTHING IS OFFERED FREE INSTITUTIONS. Issued Every Friday By Bun Publishing Co. Crockett, Manager. (Inc.) R. Subscription, 11.10 the Tear. Office Phone No. dence, Not Him! and ISImS. t. W. Resi- Mall Matter, June 4. llli, at Entered ae Second-Clas- s Fostofflce at Price, Utah, Under the Actf March S, 1171. SUN ADVERTISING RATES. Display Matter Per Inch per Month, $1.50; Single Issue, 5 0c. Special Position, II Per Cent Additional. Legala Ten Cents the Une Each Insertion. Count Bis Words to the Line. Summons. $11.10; Water Application. $11.00; Pinal Proof, $10.00, Readers Ten Cents the Une Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Une. Blackface Type Fifteen Cents the Une Each Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc. Half Local Reading Notice Kates. Count Six Words to Une, For Sale, For Rent, Found, Lost, Etc. Two Cents per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING 00, PRICE, UTAH I went mourning without The Sun; I stood up and cried in the congregation Job, 30-2- 8. OUGHT TO BE GIVEN A TRYOUT EVERYWHERE IN THIS COUNTRY. They have discovered in New York City courts that speedy trials lessen crime a thing most Carbon county citizens have believed for years. It has been found that if trials of criminals are not be so apt to look upVH the speeded up they law as a farce. It is undeniably true thdt Xnuch of the influence of our courts has been lost because cases are allowed to drag along carried from one court to another until they are wornout. The prisoner is turned loose. Others are IpQ to believe they can violate the law and get off &s easily maybe more so. The man who understands the weakness of the law never wants a hurried trial. He seeks to postpone it as long as possible, knowing that each day it is delayed is that much in his favor. Lawyers are clever enough to know this is true. That is why they seek to drag their cases as far as possible and as long. If violators know or those who contemplate violating the law knew that they were going to get a speedy trial without fear or favor or unnecessary continuance crime would lessen in this country over night. It has worked in New York City. It ought to be given a trial in every section of our land. will AFTER ALL The Sun is not posing as an alarmist. It believes there is 'enough backbone and good common sense in toe American people to prevent a revoluBy CORONA REMINGTON tion or such conditions as exist in Russia. But from the amount of rotten, lawdefying literature It, ISM. tf llaClwe Kniftpit inttaw) being distributed in this country and some of it It waa Saturday. In the garden befinds its way to Carbon county it is inclined to hind the house an old man waa slowly believe Uncle Sam is making a mistake if he does up dead stalks and piling them not take immediate steps to stamp out part of it pulling In little heaps along the rows, and Thousands of honest laboring men are being fed across the railing of the porch gaudy up on I. W. W. circulars and newspapers which ad- quilts and blankets were sunning vocate the overthrow of the government unfor- themselves. tunately many college professors are teaching Down the front steps came a youth, radicalism wherever they can get away with it slender with the lankness of recent They offer nothing in place of our present free in- growth. He sauntered toward a battered, stitutions, but are poisoning the minds of thouslittle red car that waa ands of men who havent been here long enough In standing front yard under a the as to learn our ways and to value our institutions tree. and gaa levers, spark Adjusting too do. are Americans There nativeborn many he cranked it, then got In and went soonand the out poison, printing presses turning rattling off down the road. er this government realizes it and puts them out rambling, Aa he con tinned on his way an Idea of business the better it is going to be for Amer- came to him, and he hurried, now drivica in all the years to come. ing with a purpose. N I . f'l-- Five or elx miles farther' along he COMMON SENSE RULES AND WORKING IN left the road, and finally stopped In HARMONY WILL HELP. front of a rather big white honse and cast a glance over the surroundEvery section of this broad land of ours seems ings. quick and he came to Idea An to be undergoing an epidemic of lagrippe and in- pnt a gentle finger on thehlm, button that fluenza in a mil4 form. Price and surrounding blows the horn. After a moment he communities are not an exception. Conditions in waa rewarded by the sight of Elsie the doorway, many places are reported to be worse than at any Armstrong standing -time since 1918, when thousands fell like flies bemo, nkrry !" she called. fore a disease that baffled even the wisest of "IIlo! Want to take a ride?" Americas medical men. The present epidemic Walt till I get my hat which is in a milder form is said to be due to a and tell mamma." constantly fluctuating temperature. There is no lie had never before asked Elsie for reason for any feeling of panic, but there is need a ride, nor any other girl for that matter. for common Bense health rules and the Elsie came down the path swinging of the public with physicians and health officials. Homes and public buildings should be prop- her hat In her hand and, unaided by Jumped lightly Into the erly ventilated. Colds should be looked after and her friend. ear. As she sat therg betide him open treated the minute they start. They are but the die waa near nearer than she very to come worse are if they warning of something bad ever been, and somehow he felt neglected. The danger point is not passed. We strangely thrilled. Ho looked with have more changeable weather in February and wonder at her little abort nose all March than at any other season. So be on guard. covered with freckles, and decided for the first time that It was a Lists of men and women are made up and sold beautiful note; and there waareally someas persons who are easily gullible in the matter thing about her curly hair as It blew of selling worthless stocks, bonds and soforth. around her face that made him think Promoters and brokers of. shady reputation and of the poetry that he studied In Eng- and Around Price DE- CLARES FORMER SECRETARY. A: , : 4 At Sunnyside a lodge of Eagles was organized with members. abont cightv-fiv- e Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war; reGov. Heber M. Wells commissioned It. W. Crockett a cently said that there ought to be a course in our notary public for Carbon rounty. Utah Fuel company shipped its first whole trainload Sublic schools on How to Read the Newspaper. the ordinary education nowadays is of coal out of Carbon rounty. It went from Sunny-sidto e 'i j i ! i . i )' 1 , . 1 as much a newspaper one as that of the public Butte, Mont. school, and he presents his argument in these Thomas T. Lampli completed his assessment of the words: A good newspaper is toe most valuable several precincts of Carbon eounty. lie began at Winter information agency of our time. It is teacher, Quarters and wound up at Price. friend and counselor if it is read intelligently. Hermann 8. Horsley of Price reported that bees had Books are limited. They reveal knowledge as it gone through the winter in fine shape. He predicted a is gathered from day to day and week to week. big crop of honey for all Eastern Utah. Each issue of any good newspaper is a new book Fraternal societies at Castle Gate were flourishing. new members in itself new thoughts, new ideas, new informa- The Odd Fellows there took in twenty-tw- o and the Knights of Pythias atwut half that number. tion right from the fountain of all knowledge Peter Anderson was moving the old log meetinghouse the living, thinking brain. Read your newspaper the corner where the Carbon Stake tabernarfe now faithfully. It covers the field of human life and from endeavor so well that it is bound to add to your stands to a piece of ground in the northeast portion of Price. education. DESERTS ARE TO BECOME PRODUCTIVE AND BLOSSOM WITH ROSES. Kansi You will receive a call fKansi from the Seagull Girls Kansi and your donations large or small will be much appreciated. prefe vest 1, Mills there 2 and 3 Uh-hu- h. unreliable performance use these to unload all ENLARGED SCOPE AND STRENGTH OF SIL-VE- kinds of easy money propositions paying fabulous dividends. Even holders of government bonds are MEASURE PREDICTED. in the sucker list if as occasionally Relative to the Pittman proposal to add a rider catalogued occurs their names are obtainable. The moneto the Nicholson resolution calling for a silver help bestowed by the lists is that to the ficommission the Nevada senator will offer a sul tary nancial pirates and sharks they show who have stitute measure which it is expected will enlarge funds or are investors. These form' the the scope and strength of the Nicholson bill. It is on which financial fakers intend to fattenpasture themalso said that Senator Pittman has the support of selves. The person of will conprudence ordinary the agricultural bloc. Senator Smoot's measure sult a trustworthy banker before investing in any authorizing the expenditure by the treasyry of security. twenty-fiv- e thousand dollars to pay transportation charges on dollars delivered to the Western Any section with a beet sugar factory has an banks has been passed and is now a law. Gold improved condition of handling the live stock inhoarding in Mexico due, chiefly to the recent dustry. It means intensive farming and a larger failure of many banks there has created an awk- turnoff of cattle food than from any other kind ward currency situation. That country will pro- of crop. Beet sugar districts double and treble ceed to resume the coinage of silver pesos. Silver the production of dairying, fat swine and sheep stocks at Shanghai are now about at a nominal and starvation of stock is at an end. With work low andtmy attempt at London to reduce prices is well along on the reservoir in Pleasant Valley the bound to create large demands from China. To- coming year there is nothing in toe way of a factal silver purchases of this government for the tory for this vicinity. Propositions will be nufirst twenty-seve- n days of January amounted to merous. Colorado interests should be encouraged 2,565,000 ounces compared with 7,496,500 in De- to come in here. cember and 2,532,000 a year ago. . Despite the strike of the put year, an increase SOCIALISTIC EXPERIENCES ARE COSTLY in the production of coal in Utah over that of the TO TAXPAYERS OF COUNTRY. preceding twelve months is Bhown in a report issued the United States bureau of mines just Losses sustained by the government from the at Salt Lakeby City. In 1922 it is Recorded as wartime operation of railways and its aftermath while in 1921 it was' 4,060,395; in tons, of earnings, guaranteed and damage settlements 1920 it was 6,004,788 and in 1919, 4,613,323. For will total approximately $1,800,000,000, accord- the first nine months of 1922 wras production ing to data just made available for the first time in October, 421,172; in November, 439,-59in a report by James C. Davis, director general, and in December 494,197 fully 95 par cent and sent to congress by President Harding. And of it from Carbon county. so ends the story of government control and operation during the war. The taxpayers will setUncle Sam has ruled that Europe must pay tle the bill the same as they will foot other debts. what she borrowed from us during the war. Now But with such a costly object lesson to go by will maybe some of them over there will go to vrork. they sanction further experiments in government France wanted to pay the German coal miners ownership and operation in this nation ? Already are make to in the Little wonder they went on strike. marks. politicians trying Srominent that government ownership of railroads is a sure cure for all transportation problems. Let Twenty Years Ago This Week At the people think. FRIEND. TEACHER AND COUNSELOR, k . 1st the 1 8, 3 oust mud-spatter- R f HELP THE L.D.S. Primary 'ks Representative Don B. Colton of Uintah county, in company with E. C. Lee from Carbon, spent several days in Price. Later they returned to their labors at the state lish at high school. "Got your lessons for Monday?" he asked after n while. "All lint my hlst'ry and math. Got yours?" Mighty near." The conversation lagged again. ITe had so much to say, yet couldnt say a word, ao they traveled along In silence past another farm or two. "Oh, look, Harry, at the edge of the meadow over there," she exclaimed suddenly. "Whatr; "Dogwood. The first I've seen. Let's top and get some to take home. He drove to the side of the road, then stopped the car and they Jumped out "Left ran, he suggested, catching her hand. "Its pretty here, isnt girl after a pause. ltr said the "Uh-huh- ." More silence blissful, comprehensive silence. "Well, I guess wed better get our blossoms," from Elsie after a while. , They Jumped to their feet and started toward the nearest dogwood trie Harry broke the branches and handed them to her until her arms were full "That enough he asked at last "Uh-huArent they pretty I" r "Ch-huh.- " They started back toward the car again. Back another way. As ha helped her across a little ditch he kissed her. h !" she said breathlessly. "Oh, what Elsie?" he asked anxiously, fearful least he had offended. only my hand's cramped holding the dogwood. Believed, he took the flowers and also the cramped little hand and they went on their way, two rather sober hut wonderfully happy children. As they rode homeward- they said little, but after all, what was there to say? "rve had a good time, she told him as she Jumped out of the car In her earn front yard. "Er, say, Elsie, yon going to tell your mother?" "Tell her what? she asked Innocently. "Tell her we're engaged to bo married. No-nI guess not She'd only say we're too young to know anything about love. "Im not going to tell dad, either, cause hed Just cun and say the thing; but we aren't Elate are we?" Elsie shook her heed and stared at the ground. No-nwe know more about It than they do because we're In Just because were in love, and after a while when you're older you'll get in love and get married. "Well, dont yon think Td make yon good husband?" Harry asked SHEEP AND LAMBS ARE ING STEADY, ETC. HOLD- 1921, but throughout the ytv there has been a general adva (Continued From Pago Two.) their prices. In spite of this iaanlU, cost of raw materials the demujC $45.00 for threes. Two deliveries are lower prices for goods has beenst. to be made in May and in June at Thompsons. Bowna Live Stock company, through A. M. Myrap, reecntly sold its wool and clip at Vernal for from forty-on- e and a half eenta. a half to forty-thre- e Others in that section of the Basin received about the same figure. Mytons Free Fresi figures that this lamb crop in the Uintah Basin is worth $210,000; wool, $800,000; seed, $500,000; turkeys, $100,000; dairying, $10,000; honey, $150,000; miscellaneous, such as hogs, chltle, eggs, hides, pelts, hydro-carliontourists, $200,000. Indian money $2,OGO,OOl. Announcement was made last Saturday by Dr. R. X. Mead, director of the Sixth Annual Intermountain Live Stock show to be held at the North Salt Lake years s, yarda in April, of the giving of many sjwcial prizes and trophies in various exhibition, classes. Live stock commission and stockyards companies, breed ers associations and Zion business concerns are the doners of the special awards and trophies. Most of these are prizes reaching as high aa two hundred dollars in cash to be awarded in the several shorthorn breeding breeding classes. It is expected that additional ones will be announced very shortly. The special swards are in addition to the regular premium awards amounting to $7900. ent. At the beginning of the yanfe, was a relatively greater demaai-woolens than for worsteds. Thai-..- ' , tinued, but the rate of increui it I. demand was much greater. Wednesdays Markets KANSAS CITY, Ma, Feb. tie Receipts JO,000 head. Beef dull; steady to fifteen cents In i early sales, $6.75 to $8.85; better bid $9.25; some held above $9.50; prices steady to strong, best vtsIeT $12.00 ; bologna bulls strong to tvs five cents higher; mostly $4.25 tot 50; beef bulls steady; all other dm steady; bulk cows, $4.50 to & strictly good kinds, $6.00; manylef era, $6 A0 to $7.75; cannera largeiyi $2.50 to $2.75; good cutters, 2L-&- V., . f L LI $4.00. Hogs Receipts 14,000 head at fin to ten cents higher; shipper top. top, $8.10; desirable 160 tiR pounders at $8.05 to $8.15; 240 talk pounders, $7.00 to $8.05 ; bulk sf ak $7.85 to $8.10 ; packing bows north!1 ten eenta lower; bulk, $7.00; fer $7.10 ; stork pigs steady; bulk, f7A! ' Mi-pac- ker . W B -4 . $7 .75. Sheep Receipts 700 head. law very slow; few sales light lots stat bulk of ran unsold with bids ta top, $14.65; shorn lambs, $1165; At' and feeding Iambs steady; wethmi. WOOL IS ABOUT BACK TO FIVE $9.00; early ewe top, $7.75; somelt YEARS AGO CONDITIONS higher; feeding lambs, $1125 to $145 BOSTON, Mass., Feb. 21. The conAppropriation Increased. sumption of wool and the stocks in hand are now near pre-wconditions, WASHINGTON, D. CL, Feb. A; ; the National Association of Wool Manr The appropriation bill for the de"',: ufactnrera was told at its annual meet- ment of agriculture when it left! ing here today in the report of Secre- house of representatives carried u um tary Walter Humphries. While the propriation of $502,240 to be aniaii total wool consumption is normal, as the destruction of predatory compared with 1918, he said, that The senate amended the paragnp' of domestic is distinctly higher. The providing that of the sum ao appro? usual uncertainties concerning the ad- ated $150,000 may be used in the its ministration of a new tariff have aris- of California. When the bill es sms en. The regulations concerning the im- ed by the senate went to conferw portation of carpet wools provoked ad- Congressmen Leatherwood and Cok vene criticism. The ruling making the appeared and urged that the aa rate of duty on carbonized the same amendment be stricken out. This ' aa that for tops has been justly pro- agreed to and the paragraph as orif tested by those using these wools, and nelly passed in the house was enact.; the more recent ruling relating to the into law. It as finally passed will p1 .T importations from Iceland is challeng- vide more money to protect the itoi ' ed, particularly aa it ia based bn the men of Utah against the ravage!?. . classification by usage rather than by predatory animals. blood or that accepted by the trade. Educational Meeting. Apart from thipse specific cases of ' uncertainty, with the main question MT. PLEASANT, Feb. 21. Unde of the tariff settled and because of un- the direction of the local farm bunt' derproduction during the last two and and the extension division of Utah if a half years, there is a spirit of hope- riculturnl college a wool demonstrate fulness for a successful .year to come. was held here yesterday. C. J. Fawect Regardless of the tariff, prices of raw of the National Wool Warehouse aal . wool have risen in foreign as well as Storage company and J. A. Hooper, i domestic markets. Tops and worsted former president of the Utah Wool-- : weaving yarns were fairly stable growers association, conducted dem onstrations on grading and carding ?. described the process of the wool i. through the various stages until tlw production of the finished article. The?, spoke on the most profitable kind k; . produce and in the evening lectured the organization of growers and bett1. prices to be obtained through -' ative marketing. Your man who attends to his oT business ia doing all that others exped him to do. I & ar d;--- .' . co-op- The greatness of a moral victory pends upon the effort it requires. de-i- ! NEW OIL CONCERN OOMTNG 1ST . Oh, yes, but then youre TIIE LOCAL HELD capital. The cow digs right in when the msn-ge- r Winter Quarters was given a post off ice in the WaLegislatures of five great Western States as "Well, good-bor tub is 1 1 be filled with our dear," extra feed. large as all Europe are ratifying the Colorado satch Store romiwny building at that camp. Until then blushing furiously, as he threw Insaid, on yours and see the milk pail it Try the The Mountain States Petroleum v river agreement. Irrigation programs covering mail went to the office halfway between that town and gears and went rattling out of the fill Try onr calf feed on the calf . It company, capitalized for JB0.- as large a territory as all France in acres are to Scofield. is yard. cheaper then milk and makes growth Matt H arner was called to Manti from Price on acbe carried into operation. Six million units of And after all I wonder. faster. If yon want the best results in of the serious illness of his little daughter, now the cow barn you've got to do your waterpower and irrigated homes for three mil- count A Clever Cook. chare. Our feed will do the biggest lions of farmers are to be provided by this plan. Mrs. John C. Causer. She was making her home with her A woman, teaching In a part of it for yon. Water, light, heat, power, enormous production grandmother there. Sergeant Hinckley, in charge of the government tele- college for girls near Boston, vouches from the soil and countless industries are among Price, was ordered to Denver Colo. It was for the truth of this story. She predirect results. The nations wildest river is to be graph line at M. Will thought Peyton with the Denver and Rio Grande sides over one of the college dining tamed utilized and harnessed and the greatest as an Commission Co. would tables at which alt a dozen students. succeed him. ojierator deserts reclaimed. Certainly orderly government, South Ninth Ssreet. One some day Shriff Hynun Wilcox received instructions from Dr. curly lettuce was science and engineering are to make a reality of T. B. Pries. Utah Beatty, state health officer, to strictlv enforce the brought on. A frcshnmn looked at It the Bible prophecies that the arid regions shall and m uiuier. are directors, as are J. H. exclaimed: regulations in the Nine Mile section. become productive and toe deserts shall blossom smallpoxoutquarantine And still, it isn't to be wondered st 7 Bennett. Stephen U. L. How clever of the that were cook People to indifferent to conditions said to way crimp that the fellow who is J. Greenwood and W. H. Loves)'. J with roses. It that way. How does she do be prevailing. looking for easy J money turns out to be an easy mark. y, t ; I well-know- v Price 4 A ? tf n t Kk-hards-. ltr WWIHWHIHIIIHIW j I Sr |