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Show bwiad Oo. ubm-riptin- hi tut Present Week authorized by the city council. or Water was turned into the new resa tend Aa Recond Ckuw Mai! Matter, ervoir above the high echool, it being Juno 4. 1015. At the Poetoffico At pumped in a little at a time for a test. March 133-- J. Price, Utah, Under the Art of . ADVERTISING RATES 40c, Display Matter lfrr Inch Per laaoe, Tcaatdent, 50c. Mpedal PoeUloa, 23 per Cent Additional. Lnala Ten Ceuta the Line Bach laeer-tioCount Six Words to Line. Sum 12.50; Water Application, Proof, 910. Reader Fifteen Ceata the Lino Each Ineerthm. Vaunt Six Worda to the Line. Ulackfaco Type Twey-Kiv- e (25) Centa Each Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thank. Resolutions, Etc., At Heading Notice Rates. Count Six Worda to the Line, Per Sale, For Kent, Pound, Loot, Etc, Two Centa Per Word Each Iaaue. No Charge Accounts. to He All Communirationa SUN PUBLISHING COMPANY Trice, Utah n. I 10:28. This Is the Month watha. N. 8. Neilson was down from Salt Lake City during the week attending meeting of the Priee Commercial and Savings bank. G. N. Etchebarne, the sheepman, in the past week, purchased the Van Tramp property in the east part of Itice. lie was to make hia home here. Oliver J. Harmon wag building a cottage on his property to the aouth of his residence. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Forrester were to occufour-roq- py m it when completed. County Assessor George Coilingham and D. 1L Parson, assistant, were busy with the tax roll for 1012. Colling-hafound it necessary to increase the valuation in Price. J. M. Miller was here during the week from Colton, taking an option on the J. W. Warf tract of land in the west part of the eity which was to bo utilised for business purposes. The rooms of Mrs. Robert Forrester, Pauline apartments in Salt Lake City, were entered during tiio week by a burglar and a watch and several small, articles of jewelry were taken. At a regular meeting of the eity council of Priee, it was decided to plat the ground above the ditch owned by the city into lots and sell same off. It was to be known as Highland Park addition. A dispatch from New York City was to the effect that Elder A. S. Horsley of Priee afid Eldei A. J. Newman of Murray were arrested in Plainfield, N. J., for distributing religious tracts for the Mormon church. Vaughn Paul of Salt Lake City closed a deal during the week for a five-yelease on the Lowenstein hotel property, now the Savoy. Fred Woods, formerly with the Wilson in Salt Lake City, was to be the manager. II. M. Cushing, traveling passenger agent for the Denver and Rio Qrande was accompanying the agricultural train in its tour through eastern Utah. While here Cushing paid his respeets to this office by making a fraternal Talking to a Price man who has done a lot of painting in his life he tells us that those who follow the trade of houso painting always prefer to do it in the early spring. The reason is that insects are not flying around Had alighting on the paint aa it it being put on, or sticking.to.it before it has a chanco to 'dry. "It makes a cleaner job and it saves a lot of annoyance to get at it early," he says. We pass the tipialong for what it is worth and it certainly ought to be of value to someone who has been postponing that paint job. Get at it now the ideal season of the year. By doing it now you also get additional protection from spring rains. The same also goes for whitewash. Apply it now before the insects get start ed, and they won't be so plentiful during the later and warmer months. March and early April is the ideal time for cleaning and painting. It will not only improve the looks of our town but ealL put it in better shape to ward H. W. Millburn the week off disease epidemics than it has old to R. W. and J.during A. Crockett thirty-ever been before. two and a half feet 'of his Main , ar About Opportunity We quite often hear some citi- deploring what he calls kh lade of opportunity." They argue that the time is past when a young man can begin at the bottom and rise to a position ef leadership in great corporations. Stories of telegraphers who live to occupy the presidents chair of some great railroad arc connected with a age, rather than the present. Only recently two comparatively young who began as office boys k over the reins of a hundred lion dollar Chicago utilities corporation. And this is but one example of what ia happening daily in smaller organizations. Hie significant thing behind all these "success stories is that the subject made an early connection and kept it. The fable of the tortoise and the hare still has its moral and it still holds toe good. But modern often find the slow pace uninteresting. The fate of the "floater" is just about the same today aa it was yesterday. by-go- ne go-gette- rs ed family. . The government spends some $500,000 each year to guard the mails, thus insuring the safe arrival of monthly bills. a; wc to mi oi tl STORE AT HUNTINGTON ROBBED TWICE IN TWO WEEKS The Geary Mercantile company of Huntington for the second time in two weeks was broken into Sunday night The safe was forced open and $53.30 in cash taken. The burglars gained entrance, by an upstair door and after going down stairs bored a row of holes near the bottom of the partition and another row at the top, allowing the boards to be removed so they could enter the tore. The dial of the safe was knocked off, and the safe opened. No cheeks was was and was On Piice to Spanisti Fort Hghway The state road commission eontem- plates the expending of 9310,01)0 on U. 6. Highway No. 50, between Spanish Fork and a point eaat of Pries in 1932, according to the tentative budget announced by the eo omission. The total expenditure far the entire state is $1,959,500, according to the budget, says the Grand Junction Sentinel. to be made n Higii-- v Expenditure av No. 50 include v .v' rui tr n and Cv.ifig projects da fo'Vv: Construe-lio- n of new overhead at vnear Larilla) at a cost nf F.'IhKi; coin-. tire, uelweea p i lion of a Meark and Castilla at a cost of $112,-006- ; revision at Colton including s new overhead, to eoat $100,000 ; oiling of 8.6 miles of road between Ceao-ti- e Gate and the Utah eounty line at a cost of $40,000; and oiling of read from Priee to .Sunnyside jnnetion at a cost of 934JXW. Any further development east of Carbon oonnty will depend largely on or be greatly assisted by passage of the Oddie-AImo- n bill now before congress. This provides $3,000,000 a year for 100 per cent construction by the federal government of transcontinental highways across public domain lands. The expenditure on Highvay M for 1932 is much smaller than in 1931 when $1,082,125 was spent on this road. However, the lesser appropriation for this route is proportionate sinee the 1932 budget for the entire state i approximately $2,000,000 and M-ar- k n The Redd Motor company of Prino ftiis week closed its Helper- Vaneh and ia the future will operate from the local Chevrolet agency. The salesmen from the Helper agency will work from this office, with Ben D. Itedd, former manager of the Helper office, as sales manager. The Ilelpcf building and equipment will be rented te 8. P. for merly of the Priee agency, lie mil lave the Chevrolet sales agency in Helper, handling sales through the Price company. A new sale program is bring through the Iocs! dealeioliip. There are. six talesmen in the Price agency in addition to. thfr sales manager. Much interest ha been shown in the new model Chevrolet, according to Redd, who yays that proieci for the coming year are good. 5.2-mil- - C.-lio- ed 'Let me tell you our ancestors didn't that way siftin' hack and tolkiri about their predecessor! last year it PIRIN beware of imitations Look lor the name Bayer and the word genuine on the package as pictured below when you nuy Aspirin. Thea you will know that you are getting the genuine Bayer product thousands cl physicians prescribe. Bayer Aspirin k SAFE, as motions oi users have proved. It does not depress the Heart, and no narm ' lollow its tut after-effects- Bayer Aspirin k the universal antidote Mr pains of all kindb. Headaches Colds Sore Throat Rheumatism Neuritis Tootnache Crime cost the United States more than seven billion dollars last year, and we had quite a bit of crime VI show for iU Asoirin ia the trademark ot Bayer manufacture ot monoocetic-acides- 0(24 and KXX o( salicylieacid. wa $3,650,000. Ur Eastern Utah Area Rich In Lore For Study of Primitive Man . Utah is recognized as one of the riohest areas on the American con- inetft for the study of primitive man, according to Dr, Julian H. Steward, University of Utah anthropologist. In the region near Vernal have been discovered pefroglyphs or pictures engraved on stone which rival those of ancient Aztecs in master craftsmanship. One rare specimen in the Venial region is of an aneieul pueblo Indians god and is unique in that it is engraved in that is, the picture stands out and the background bas-relie- f, ia chipped away. Dr. Steward sets the time of this aneient Utah culture as existing about one thousand to fifteen hundred yean ago. He states that these people grew eorn at this early date and that they fashioned clay fetishes or images a an appeal to the gods to make the soil fertile. What is probably the earliest domestic dqg yet discovered in America was fonnd by Dr. Steward in a burial cave north of Great Salt Lake. Some notable discoveries of petro- i. glyphs have been made in tin yons and hills near Beaver, Filin Priee, Magna, Moab and Wayne t ty. One interesting feature which Steward points out in regard to pefroglyphs is that the aneient graven subjects, such as sheep, men, concentric circles and other urer are greatly similar to fiou covered many hundreds' of miles fns Utah, a feature which seems to i civilization as eate a ly as two thousand yean ago. wide-sprea- d Unfortunately a quiet home vd ding doesn't insure quiet home bft Wind, rain, fire, tornado, anion bile and life insurance Equitabis b surance Agency, J. Bracken Lea, ager, Price, Utah. FOR SALE, WANTED.I Par Ward Kadi Is Na Cham AeesuaU. Two Cants NllUE EXPERIENCED riUCBI cal maternity nurse. Good I Mrs. Jean Cox, Hiawatha, Utah. WANTED THE USE OF A TKAN( horneo in return for feed for the awl 1 Write Box 617, Price. FOR RENT TWO-ROO- ed house. Phone WJ. FUBNK6I MAN WANTED- -A WATKINS ROW! is now open in nearby locality for eet, reliable man with car. No cspitsl J experience ncccTury. Must be sstwh . with earning of $30.00 per week at WJ Permanent connection with real foil for right man. Write. The J. R. Wat! Company Rural Dept, 122 Liberty I Winona, Winn. w The total investment on Highway 50 to date is $3,119,600, making it the second largest road investment in the state. The state has expended nearly $200,000 more ou Highway 40, .which runs on through the Uintah Basin, and expenditures are much smaller. . U. S. 50 almost up to last year and particularly that portion rase of Priee was part of a transcontinental highway which was little more than a dirt trail, extremely hazardous in wet weather. In little more than a year it was transformed to a safe route in all weather and for the most part of a high type gravel road standard. Numerous main line railroad grade crossing were eliminated and the route straightened so thnt it now has less percentage of curvature han the Denver and Rio Grande Western rail road line. In addition to measurements and finger prints of criminals, photographic records of their voiees ean be taken without their knowledge. Neuralgia Genuine Bayer Aspirin is sold at all druggists in boxes ot 12 and in bottles old-fashio- el ihi ng We heard a man say the other day that one trouble with the sea of matrimony is that hia wife is always sailing into him. Another reason why we are opposed to a return of the saloon is bccuuse if they di dcome back the signs probably would read: "Ye Olae Dainte Rum Shoppe." Sri with a production of 7,905,000 tons during tne week in 1931 corresponding with that of February 20, there is a decrease of 16.1 per cent. Production of anthracite in the state of Pennsylvania showed practically no change in the week ended February 20. The total output, ineluding colliery fuel and washery coal ia estimated at 865,000 net tons as com- -, pared with 860,000 tons in the pre-ediweek. Compared with the week in 1931 corresponding with that of February 20, when 1,209,000 toils was there is a decrease of 2Sf produce cent. per The total production of soft coal for the eonptry as a whole during the week ended February 13, the latest week for whirh detailed figures are available, is estimated at 6,626 net tons. Compared with the output in the preceding week this shows a decrease of 624,000 tons, or 8.6 per cent. Compared with the week in 1931 corresponding with that of February 13, there is a deerease of 19.3 per eenl. During ths week of February 6, Utah produced 118,000 tons of coal and in the week of February 13, produced 98,000 tons. The total production of beehive coke during the week ended February 13 is estimated at 22,200 net tons, an increase of 3800 tons, or 20.0 per eent over the output in the preceding seven days. The increase in the Pennsylvania region alone was 3400 tons. The cumulative production during 1932 through February 13 ia still well below that for the corresponding neriod in 1931128,000 tons in 1932, against 239,900 tons in 193L Redd Motor Centralizes taken. Sales Force At Price Smilin' Charlie Says If the movement of the hand were not faster than the eye, then youd never see a black eye. ed D. C., Feb. 27. WASHINGTON, Production of bituminous enal showed little change during the week ended February 20. The total output, including lignite and coal coked at the street property faring the south and were taken. A new cold chisel just to the east of the present Lyric left near the safe. theater. The consideration was sevTwo weeks ago the same store broken into from a rear window enty dollars a front foot. randy, tobacco and chewing gum The time is not far away when the politician, like the pedestrian should know which way to jump. The buyer of worthless stocks may be' consoled by the thought that his investment is at least permanent:' The family doctor is said to be disappearing. But for that matter, so is the s Mr. and Mr. David J. Thomas were mines, is estimated at 6,630,000 net a chaise of the Kenilworth Inn, hav- tons, in comparison with 626,000 ing given np the hotel at East Hia- tons in the preceding week. Compared m mourn Iny without The Saa; ap aad cried in the ceagregatie. I weat Penoo-gram- MARCH J, Past Week Publiithlsj Eren Thursday By R. J. Turner wax making an of(Inc). It. W. iWteU, Mhuager. ficial aurvey of Trice, the woik being 92.00 tlw Ycor la Advance. 133-- A 1870. Little Remains Steady For Office l'liono No. 9, Residence, M. THUR8DAY, PRICE, UTA H EVERY THURSDAY Twenty Years Ago This! Production of Soft Coal THE SUH. PAGE FOUR New blue-prin- t paper invented in Germany produces enpies of mgs in black lines on whito back-th- e grounds instead of present ro- versed results. A method ha been developed for training pilots by attaching an airplane to an automobile and requiring a student to maintain balance without danger of crashing to the ground. The average motorist isn 't as much interested these days in why a hen crosses .the road as he is in why she always changes her mind and starts back just whim she reaches the middle of it. ti S. A e aY of 0So A aofn ' GALVESTON where the seashore folns In hire tolha hmury of Hotel Galvez and The Buccaneer. HOUSTON where hospitable hotels and a beautiful winter climate unite to make ona of tha finest winter re sorts of the Southwest IAN ANTONIO where the atmosphere of old Spain till hovers over an Interesting modem city. El PASO thegateway city Ojd Mexico lsust across the Rio Grand boundary line sunshine and roses all winter. J. J. DEVEREUX, G. A Phone Wasatch 2740, 508 Ollft Building, Salt Lake City, Utah |