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Show rri FRIDAY, MARci PAGE EIGHT TWO VERY IMPORTANT GROUPS IN OUR PROPERTT III UNDERGARMENT STYLES MUCH SICI AROUND Of HINES HIM ICE C01JNTY Price Scholars Who Have Merit Marks In Foetal Contest YAER AGO Assessment report on the property around the Goldcoal companies of Carbon county has ben completed by S. W. Turned in on Sun. The of readers to are given ing, and the figures lists these blanks furnished to them by Golding for the purpose, assessors the from someone of are then verified by a personal trip office with such additions or reductions as are found necessary from the investigation, and as here reported are turned over to the state board of equalization to be added to that body s figures for the real estate of the various companies. The total by the corporations is $4,5(9,29o, and Goldings an increase of $215,665. In no figures bring this up to $4,776,575, for this year. Last year decrease a make assessor instance did the to which Golding added and in $4,344,444 turned the companies to take $532o. This $202,720 and from which he found it necessary on the assessment personal property of the mining leaves his final 1922. In detail the figures this for more than companies $133,000 show: year i cC Name of Corporation. By JULIA BOTTOMLEY If tbe replenishing of undergarments, which ia stressed io the shops with the beginning of the year, ia not yet completed Lent gives 'an opportunity to needlewomen to finish up the work. Styles are important and are established. Buying has shown that radium and crepe da chine are the preferred silks, batiste and triple voile favored cottons and pastel colors as much in demaud as white. One may choose what are called tailored styles as distinguished from lace trimmed garments, the former employing drawn work, stitcher)', piutucks, French knots and a little embroidery for their ment adorn- Some very handsome garments are made entirely of small squares of UTAH KIIS X H 9a 3 9 $887,1160 455,587 182,110 17,625 205,387 490,855 247.645 135,320 354.645 355,735 317,390 86,360 11,400 114,478 120,800 287,605 103,685 42,325 57,200 6,967 120 4J200 $939,305 460,787 193,175 19,325 212,537 8,780 498.605 255,945 135,920 357,445 364,675 319,190 121,845 11,400 114,478 126,420 297.605 119,905 50,750 57,200 13,107 420 4,200 1J)00 37,911 1,225 37,435 200 2,300 125 2,460 $ 52,305 5,200 11,065 2.300 7,150 8,780 7,750 8.300 600 2,800 8,940 1,800 35,485 5,620 10,000 16,220 8,425 6,140 300 crepe de chine or radiunLsilk set to3.900 gether with narrow handmade luce. 5,000 32,911 Fine crochet insertions may be used in 250 975 this way, but good val laee continues 4,450 32,985 to hold first place in the esteem of 200 women os a trimming for lingerie and 2,300 is shown in the pretty envelope chem125 ise pictured, link, orchid, china blue 2,460 and Kile green appear, just now, to be the colors that rival white in the esteem of womankind, but in this matter Grand Total $215,665 $4,579,295 $4,700,575 of color they have a wayward fancy that ia apt to wander to any of the astel tones. MASSACRE TRIMS REOPENED MONDAY Fine cotton as well as silks are also shown in colon and riblmns play an important part in beautifying They are made up into pretty MARION, Ills., March 19. After a recess of eleven days, causornaments, liows, rosettes or flowers ed by the illness of the wife of one of the jurors, the prosecution to-- .. and provided with fasteners so thut day resumed the introduction of evidence against Hugh Willis, they ran he mapjied on. state executive board memler of the United Mine Workers of Some little time ago a test waa made in the public schools of Price in which the pupils were required to address a inletter, put on a return address and All dicate the affixing of a stamp. those so prepared were turned over to the local postoffice for grading, and this work has just been completed. The object of the test was to give practical instruction to the pupils, apd was with the belief that it would furnish a little more reality than does the ordinary school work along the same lines. Fourth, fifth and aixth grade scholars were included in the work. The best of the addressed envelopes were returned to Prof. C. H. Madsen, principal of the local grade schools, and will form an exhibit, legibility, position and penmanship were considered as factors in the grading. In the fourth grade two of the pu pils reached 94 per cent. Eight were graded at 68 ana seventeen at 50per rent The two highest are Bernice Iid dell and Heber ONeil. In the fifth four scholars are graded 96, twenty-fiv- e are given 72 and twenty are marke ed 58 per rent. Those having are Alice Bean, Lora Hadley, Melva Critchlow and William Jacobs. In grade five, second division, eleven of the pupils are given 96, twenty-fiv- e 72 and twenty marked 68 per cent. The eleven highest are William Stoker, Cora Pace, Vera Morgan, Evelyn King, Oman Bunnel, Louise Kiekey Peacock, Fred Bonomo, Louise Welden Mathis, Alden Downard and Mildred Prichard. Sixth pupils to reach a grade of 97 number Katherine aretwenty-thre'n- n Eaquinta, Angelina Nick, Annie Florence Christensen, lues Noel, Elizabeth Migliarcio, May Pace, Lncia Gonzerla, Allen McDonald, Bill Thomas Shields, Alton Leonard, Josephine Reese, Anna Wendell, WaU nor Piacetelli, Leland Young, William Anderson, Flora Fausett, Bernice Violette Francis, James Miller, Violet Richens and Ruth Lee. Envelopes selected as the best and which are to form the exhibit are eon-duct- high-grad- under-thing- Zu-pa- n, Hold-awa- Me-Intir- raoDucnoN for HICK (Continued From Pace Six.) there was a steady gale to home and continental buyers at rates unchanged from the previous suction. There was little demand from the American FURTHER FEDERAL CONTROL IN UTAH IS FEARED non-uni- on ht Green River town has sion of the publie to establish a sliding seal fTl 'M service from its municipal puf which consumers, larger nj effect of decreasing rates. ent rate of three eents a kilorl ia to be continued for all up to five hundred hours pjj For the next thousand the m be two and a half cents pe hour and for all in exceta hundred kilowat hours ier cents. utitainiifxS?d There are many rungs to tfc y-of life, but they are easy of the young man who starts hi with a determination to ean" own efforts the approval of ployer. : J; ' y- Some people never get thw: ing about the good deeds thera ( . V: $?' through mistakes. The wise man meets an headon and butts a little it doen lICL- - Not all of the wisdom of abides under hats. Some bare. Aa a class lawyers are not unless somebody talkative bill. Nf rkrf?' ntrxm Dont borrow The Sun. e, SHEEP AND LAMBS ARE WITH HIGHER, ETC. gj (Continued From Paw Twt) parts were saved were repanttf' lAl1 throe lions were killed by 8. R. V. ham in the Dixiq forest reseniEp en of the bobcats and the badgm a killed by Seth Shumway. The ii tion ia given out by the Utah ment of rgriculture Caught by a eavein shortly ifa blast had been Tired in the n the Utah Fuel company at last Sunday, Ben Yalaqusi stantly killed. Coal and Independent Cokeeao!gK shares were offered at Zion yettmgy' at sixty-eigcents with lixfycLsj bid. United States Fuel (7 pg bid ana preferred) eighty-on- e six dollars asked. Standard Coil m enty-fiv- e bid. oo ht J DISTRICTS EUMI5& BEING CHECKED CARBON rii Check ia being made by the ment on surveys of various Ini! Carbon county which are estimhAF yield, if leased for their eoal eutiE $2000 to $25000 an acre, aceordirr a recent issue of the Land 8urvs letin, a publication of the of the interior. Field examideputy it says, for the purpose of ing the extent of obliteration deuce of original surveys in TT South, Ranges 9 and 10 East, inUvLgf 13 South, Ranges 8 and 9 Kut, jLuke meridian, were made in aeuaon, the lamia involved situated in the heart of one est and beat coal bearing areai state. jV Since congress passed theic-a- ct of February 15, 1920, nearly! the available government Ism these townships have been coven! DR. CHARLES F. BARKER coal leasing applications. Mostd With the intention of providing the lands under the present royalty people of this community with the best will net the government api in beneficial lectures the Price Kotaiy ly $2000 to $2500 per sere or club has arranged for the international per square foot, and it ia highly speaker of the organization to give portant therefore that an area d three talks on April 5th. At 11 oclock great a value be clearly and eoova in the forenoon at the high school Dr. ously marked by the official peg Charles F. Barker will speak on How land so that the surface R surveys to Make the Most Out of Life. For may be duly Insthe women, at the Methodist chureh at pected by allrights in interest jr; parties 2 in the afternoon he will tell of A The field work under the earY.' Mothera Relation to.ner Daughter. a tion has been completed and tlxy In the evening, for the men at the taband recommesMk. gineers report ernacle, he will speak on A Fathers now in course of preparation Responsibility to Ilia Son. All these at an date so that dee&! are free no admission and no collec- action will early be taken in the matte1 tion, tbe Rotary club having financed without delay. the proposition snd'are ofefring these resnrvey The lands are in the region of I to the people without charge. ter Quarters and Helper. . Utili-.-jpas- Payment of bounties with a 50 per cent with the biological survey in predatory animal control of meat and meat Exports products from the United States last year total- work will be continued during the next ed 1,758,000,000 pounds as compared biennium. This was assured last Tueswhen Gov. Charles K. Mabey vewith 1,946,000,000 in 1921. The aver- day toed the Jorgensen bill, which sought age price paid by the foreign purchaser last year was fourteen cents a jxiund to increase the tax on live stock, eliminate the payment of bounties entirely compared with fifteen in 1921, repre- and provide for turning over the ena decrease in the total senting export tire sum to the biological survey in the value of $41,000,000. animal control work. In efJohn Skirl, administrator of tbe es- predatory fect the act of the on this tate of John Krebs, deceased, has been matter ia set aside legislature by the executive's a of twenty-eigveto and in ita stead the old Siven judgment and fifty dollars in Third District law enacted by the fourteenth bounty legislacourt at Salt Lake City against Utah ture will stand for two This has years. Fuel company. Krebs was killed in one proven inadequate to meet demands as of the companys mines several years made and bounties may be mid only ago. Originally twenty thousand was for a portion of the year due to limitasked for. The matter dates bark to ed funds. The predatory animal con1897. trol work, however, will be kept up ou Utah's treasury was last week made tbe same scale it has been conducted beneficiary in the sum of $998.46 as a for the past two years. ex- that a license issued in one county result of the death of Joe Patricco, In his veto message the governor and choice vcalers $10.00 to $10.50; would lie good in another. Should tbe March 7, 1922, while employed by the IHiinted out he was opjxised to the treme top $11.00; bulls were steadyto Denver and Rio Grande Western dedesirable $4.75; bulk bolognas Utah Fuel company under the award growing teudeney of the federal gov- strong; sire to sell on trains running of compensation made by the state in-- ernment to usurp and encroach uimn other classes around steady with very on the maincigarefs line from on Ogden to Denweakness steers; top early dust rial commission. The award is giv- state rights and functions, lie heliev-e- d slight would be it should the ver, 5 cows bulk necessary held $9 A0; en hv reason of the failure of any dethe measure would delegate to the $9.40; some sales be continuous over the route to heifers few few $6.50 to $6.25; up; of to file for any parent government a concession which adjustment pendents have a jiermit from the eight counties has heretofore lieon operated by the $7.50 to $8.00; bulk eanners $2.00 to of claims within the year time limit Welier, Davis, Salt Lake, Utah, Wato $1.25. $3.75 The federal trade commission is on state and further the bill would trans- $3.25; cutters mostly fair-l- y satch, Carbon, Emery and Grand. The bend 8000 and Receipts Hops fer funds to lie cxiended under the the trail of the Salt Lake fee a yearly jiermit in each of active; pucker lop $8.10; shipper thesefor Woolen Mills. Wasatch Woolen mills sole supervision of the federal agency. would lie twenty-fiv- e dollars. All to $7.95 of sales bulk $8.10; $8.15; and Western Woolen Mills company The governor declared further that lie top 170 this is develojied in an opinion given to $7.85 $8.05; 130 to of Salt Lake City, and the Jenkins believed the act would not fulfill the the state treasurer by Harvey II. $8.05 to $8.10; to Knitting company of lrovo,' and has desires of the stockman and woulgrow-e- r sows fifteen eents lower; hulkparking" $7.25;:CluLf, attorney general. The inquiry most directly affected. made to clarify the situation. Of given those concerns thirty days in to hulk $7.00. $6.50 On the other hand the present sys- stock pigs weak; which to answer diargcs that they are nsing corporate names designed to tem of bounties results in rsous who fool the public" into believing that actually destroy the predatory animal n cents nutr iuiiv t would then they are purchasing from manufactur- reding the reward and 95 jier cent of mlHvinc P,vetn cent of run unsold; top $14.75; others If" those to are bona fide case. tbe is such when not residents, direct paid ers to to the holder decide whether P e Lead twenty-threthus resulting in the money being re- $13.90 to $14.00; he would sell in only the one county Mans chief beast of burden the funded lambs $16.00. spring to the men from whom it is or in all without further permits. horse has decreased in nundiers in LOCAL RAILROAD UP AGAINST the world at large about 11 jier cent in collected. In any event he believes tbe of bounties afAPRIL CONFERENCE HEAVY LICENSES the last ten years. Figures made pub-li- e results from paj'ment more effective not fords an if The ninety-thir- d annual general conequally last Wednesday by the department ference of the (hurch of Jesus Christ means of extermination than the predwhile the two the in past off a During showed years of agriculture falling loitter-da- y Saints will convene in Southwiek eigaret law has been oper- of countries atory animal control campaigns. the total head in eighty-fiv- e the tslernae.le at Salt Lake City on informed the The attorney general ating in Utah the sale of these smokes Friday, April C. 1923, at 10 o'clock of from 116,500,000 to 102,550.000. The technical and le- has been prohibited on trains passing the forenoon, with sessions on Saturdecrease occurred largely in Russia, governor there were the act which might through the state. With the new to-- day and Sunday, April 7th and Nth. A where the decline was nearly 50 per gal fallacies in to the application of ita bacco law which will pn into effect $n$nl pneRtnood meeting will nt h$ld7 jn the tabernacle Friday evening at cent, and the United States, where the prove fatalin tbe event it was provisions early in May and which provides for o'clock, and a special priesthood meettotal dropped from 23,145,000 in 1914 IH'rni'ts for the sale of cigarets, it is ing in Assembly Hall on Monday at 10 to 20,559,000. of the morning. It Is requested doubtful whether these will appear in o'clock that in arranging missionary reunions liLondon Wool Auction. stocks Yesterdays Markets. of train venders. the no conflictand soforth there shall County KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 22 cences for such sale appear to be the ing dates or hours with any of the foreLONDON, March 20. At yester-dayappointments. (Sinned I. Heber E.i wool auction 13,342 bales were Cattle Receipts 4800 head. Calves best that could be taken out in such going J. Grant. Anthony W. Ivins and Charles offered.' It was of fair selection and steady to fifty cents higher; bulk good eases and no provision was made so W. Penrose, First Presidency. ht y, Noted Speaker Coming a. America, and five others charged with murder in connection with the Herrin riots. Willis, according to the testimony of Dr. O. F. Shipman, formerly a resident of llerrin, drove up to the miners' hall in Herrin in an automobile toward midnight on June 21st. Earlier the same day the hardware stores of Herrin and Marion workers had been looted of arms and ammunition, the in the mine of the Southern Illinois Coal company had been attacked $nd three union miners killed. Dr. Shipman asserted there was a crowd before the hall when Willis arrived and that he heard him say: "Weve got the mine well guarded and nobody can get away. We cant do anything more before daylight when we can see. What I am most interested in is prevailing upon the sheriff not to get the troops there until we get the men. The sheriff is our friend and he told me: -- a them, they ought to have know better than to come down here, but now that they are here, let them take what is coming to them. The sheriff is a good fellow, boys. He is loyal to us and we ought to take care of him at the fall election Melvin Thaxton, recently elected county treasurer, was sheriff at the time of the outbreak, but Dr. Shipman testified that he did not know to whom Willis was referring. The next morning, defenders of the according to previous witnesses, the forty-eigmine laid down their arms and surrendered after being assured of their safety. They were marched two miles, lined up before a barbed wire fence and shot down as they fled. Dr. Shipman said that he had seen six of the prisoners who had been recaptured marched bleeding and pleading through the streets of Herrin by a jeering mob to a cemetery outside the town, where they were phot down in the road. The crowd at one point made them get down and crawl along on their hands and knees, he testified. Then they were all tied together with a piece of rope about their necks. I heard a boy shout: Nearer, My God, to Thee, and a man told them that if they had ever prayed in their lives to pray then. After the prisoners had been shot down the crowd continued firing bullets into their bodies until all movement stopped. ONeiL ' NEW SCALE Dus-serr- e, MIMS THE FIRST WEEK OF hydro-carburet- 11 S Sunnyside L'tali Fuel cuuqiuny Castle Gate Utah Fuel company Clear Creek Utah Fuel company Utah Mine Utah Fuel company. Utah Fuel conqiany Winter Quarters Ketchum Coal company United States Fuel Co...Black llawk Hiawatha United States Fuel Co Panther United States Fuel Co. Cu.. Storrs Coal Canyon Spring Ind. Coal and Coke Co. Kenilworth .Watt is Lion Coal Co. Rains Carbon Fuel Co. Scofield Union lacifie Coal Co. Peerless Peerless Coal Co. Rolapp Royal Coal Co. Standard Standard Coal Co. .Latuda Liberty Coal Co. Morton Morton Coal Co Mutual Mutual Coal Co Blue Seal Coal Co. Wyuming-Uta- h Suimybruok Coal and Coke Co Columbia Steel Corjxiration .... Helper Coal Co Seoiield Coal Cu. Fireside Coal and Cuke Co Seofield Kinney Coal Co. Utah Coal and Coke Co. Peoples Coal and Coke Co New Life. Mine Utah Central Mine DROP DOWN III fuck The contrivance generates gas continuously and is railed the Crawford is a former resident of Castle Gate. Shearing ia to begin out at Antelope about the 10th of April. George II. Tingley'got back to his home at Myton a few days ago after an extended trip to Zion, lie predicts that wool is due for a slum). l 3 39 ? 9 : o those addressed bv Ruth Stoker, ItbriiwuiutaSr; TESTS ARE COMPLETED t f sub-surfa- ce ' (v WE ARE AS CLOSE TO YOU AS YOUR TELEPHONE $4.-7- rs 320-poun- d ! off 47-iou- . s , - Why for Sugar when can get it for Why pay more you $9 .90 per hundred pounds sack at The Garden Store PRICE, UTAH FOR SATURDAY ONLY 'll ME ARE AS CLOSE TO YOU AS YOUR TELEPHONE IlS |