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Show t i DB. B. M. JONES n and Burgeon. pbygk-U- figTSaw i E. F. Chambelaio. Block. Price Utah. pB. CHABLES T. BOSE rtiytficlaa aud Surgeon the Mlllburn Residence, Cor. j,Vain and Eighth Btreeta PRICE, UTAH SHEEP MORE !lo STUDY - HOG PRICES AVERAGE ABOUT TEN CENTS HIGHER. DB. J. A. JUDY rhyddiaand Telephone 1ISW Better Tom Prevail! Tor Tat Cattle Over Price Commercial and With Quotations Stronger Since gvingu Bank, Price. Utah. Last Weeka Decline Was Wiped GOETZMAN DB. H. B. Out Market Appeara Now to Be Dead In Better Condition At Biver. Work and Extraction. Price Utah Prloe. Bank Bldg.. gffLrcial SB SANFOBD Correspondence The Sun. KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 1 Though cattle receipts were fairly libKUea eral for the last Monday in Aprii, the DB. T. J. ANTON demand was active with price strong Dentist to twenty-fiv-e cents higher than last week's close. The advance late last and 10. Bilvagnl Building, week and today PRICE. UTAH gain wiped out the break rejairted Monday and Tuesday h ALEXANDEB IXSWABT, last week, llog prices were irreguCANNON lar but mostly steady to ten cents Atunuejra At Law higher than Friday with the demand eleventh Floor the Deaeret National quiet. Sheep were about steady, hut Building, Balt Bake Citr, Uuh. lambs were weak. art Receipts todav jJJVeani Building. Prise. Utah. were 12,000 cattle, 12,000 hogs and L. A. McGEE 10,000 sheep. A better tone prevailed in the demand for cattle and with AttonuT At prices strung to higher last weeks I and 0, Bilvagnl Bldg. decline yaa wiped out. The marearly UTAH PRICE, ket appears in a fair position. The ebicksen best steers here, not prime, sold up to Ferdinand At Law Attorney $9.25, and moat of the natives at $8.25 to $9.00. Colorado steers brought TIT Judge Building $8 A0 to $9.15. Cows and heifers were BALT LAKE CITT, UTAH. eents higher. strong to twenty-fiv- e OLIVES K. OLAY Prime eowa sold up to $7.50 and Attorney At Lew heifers up to $8.75. Veal calves were Office Room I, Bilvagnl Building. strong to fifty cents higher. A larger PRICE, UTAH. per cent of the offerings wbb thin eat tie today than a week ago, and counHENRY RUGGEBI try demand had a chance to expand. Attorney At Lew Trade was active at strong prices. A Office at the County Courthouse. good many southwest stockers were PRICE, UTAH offered. Demand was mostly on grazing accounts. Some fleshy feeders OLIVES 0. DALBY brought $9.00. At Lew Attorney Ilog prices averaged steady to ten eents higher than last weeks close, Office, Eko Theater Building, Ground Floor. though there were some spots that PRICE, UTAH. looked lower on rough heavy grades. The top price was $0.60. Bulk of the B. W. DALTON offerings sold at $8A0 to $9.50. Very Attorney At Law few choice lightweight hogs were ofOffice Eko Theater Building. fered. Stock pigs sold at $10.00 to lea J. E. FLYNN Lioenaed Undertaker and Telephone II. PRICE. UTAH E. U. FULLEB and Mining Engineer Given Irrigation Attention Ipadal Work. Office, Ground Floor, West of The Sun. PRICE, UTAH DB. J. B. HENDEBSON Chiropractor. At Price, Flint Door Weat of The Bun, U to 11. noon I till 4 p. m. At Hel-over Helper State bank, till I Othar houra g bl, except Bundaya at home. Calls by appointment. BEN BEAN General Palnling Contractor Work. Eatlmatee Free Phone 188M. PRICE, UTAH Civil P. a A. HOPE'S STUDIO Bgh Grade Portrait! and Enlarge menta. Beoond Floor Plica Comm orelal and Saviugi Bank PRICES, UTAH J. W. METCALF PabUo and Oonveranatng of Sale and Legal Papers of All Kinds Drawn SCOFIELD, UTAH Desdq Bills HNXOHTS OP PYTHIAS PHee Lodge Na U. Meets every Bd, third and fcAirth Tuesday aoionlo XIaU. Visiting members welcoma P. E. Trim. CL E. Wheaton, K. R. 8. nd ORRIN ELMER COLTON, UTAH General ltartiandleo and Stockmen's Supplies 8W,Lots Dipping Vats and Feed In Connection Where When you put electricity in your home you put joy in the family heart There is about as much difference between electricity and the oil lamp as there is between the lamp and darkness . Every woman should visit our electrical department and see the many usages found for electricity in the modern home. Our appliances for the kitchen are wonderful. Summer soon Youre Treated Right Successor to CRAXER A MtuniiE in the manufactured article is yet to be reflected iu raw wool. Mill are now buying sparingly and only such wools a are needed for filling in pur-- 1 tones to cover current orders. There i almost m speculative buying. Stocks held by manufacturers are believed to be very small and better buying seems assured if the demand for goods bold up. k ? ? ? J here. f? Arizona Wool Selling. Conflicting reiiorts concerning the offerings of Eastern wool buyers for this years clip that is now beginning to come on the market from some forward sections are puzzling the grow ere. F. B. Marshall, secretary of the National Woolgrowers' association, had word last Friday that aonte buy era are offering to advance fifteen cents a pound iu that Btate. On the other hand, buyer have been attempting to contract for Utah wool, declining even to pay the freight rate from the shearing corral to the storage loint. Foreign wool continue to pour into the Eastern centers by the millions of tounda and unless sll signs fail will continue to flood the American market until a tari is erected. F. J. Hngenbarth dent of the National Woolgi association, was in Chicago lai day conferring with trafiicrepr tives of Western railroad with to obtaining rate concewiona both on sheep going to market and the wool. SCHOOLS OF THE STATE GET ADDITIONAL MONEY Hagenharth is understood to take the position that present transiortation Dr. Ocnrge Thomas, state sujieriii-tendecharges are an insurmountable obof public instruction, lma been stacle to the sheepmen and that they notified hy Auditor Tuttle that there both lowered must he sake for the of $11.00. i now in the state treasury a total of Lambs were quoted weak and sheep the industry and to permit the $492,684.38 available for apjiortion-mereceive the to riera tonnage. steady. Declines elsewhere tended to to the school district, of the restrict trade here. Fat lambs sol state. When $10,000 of this amount Cluff Gives Opinion. at $7.75 to $9.10, ewes $5.00 to $5.75 is deducted for the maintenance of stock live transient In and wether $0.00 to $6.50. Clippec prorating taxes under the act passed by the the dcjiartnieiit the remainder will he lambs brought $7 A0 to $8A0. fourteenth legislature county attor- distributed among the districts on the ratio of $3.69 per capita of the school GOWERS ADOPT BUREAU neys must first exempt that portion population. state collected the for tbe for SYSTEM WOOL SELLING state, This will complete the aportionment schools and the state bounty fund, acUnanimous approval was given the cording to an opinion handed down of the district school fund for the wool marketing plan o:! hy Attorney General Harvey II. Cluff. present school year, and with a prethe committee named by the Utah The opinion is made in resiKinse to an vious payment of $10.47 brings the State Farm bureau and the Utah inquiry from the Tooele county at- total distributed to the schools to $14.16. In 1920 the total was $14.35. Woolgrowers association at a meet- torney in which it is asked if the porbelt these state to stale funds The decrease is accounted for lty the tions payable ing of sheepmen of the slower collection of taxes of 1920. If Tuesday last at Salt Lake City and should not be deducted ltefore the these had been collected at normal Rome instructconfusion was taxes are prorated. the committee of seven would ed to proceed at once to the execution was caused hy the wording of the act rale, the amount ter capita I teen clone to fifteen dollars. have rethe of will relative to the apportionment of the plan which probably Aa back taxes are collected in the sult in the pooling of upwards of five taxes among the counties in which the ensuing years, the difference will lie 192! the apmillion pounds of the states live stock was grazed. It says made up to the schools. The June such proclip. President D. D. McKay, presi- portionment must be in distribution of the state high school durchairas and time the tax dent of the farm bureau portions of the the only money refunds constitutes man of the wool marketing commit- ing which such live stock ranged in to he paid maining by the state to the whole to would so the bear that far said county tee, stated at the meeting districts. school The lew reads, howas can be determined at the present of the year. Next year the schools will, under a it seems probable that almost half o: ever, "provided, that for state, state law by the last legislature, rethe wool produced in the state wil school or state bounty purposes shall ceivepassed dollars per capita twenty-fiv- e connection. in considered total this The be be placed in the pool clip difference being from the the state, is estimated at from twelve to fifteen made up by an increase in the state Consumption Figures. million pounds. tax levy of 2.1 mills. WASHINGTON, D. C., April 2. W. W. Armstrong, president of the this in wool member of and a bank National Copper Although consumption NEW MIDLAND TBAIL LINK of the marketing committee, outline! country during January and FebruNOW UNDER CONSTBUCTION in detail tbe plan to be followed. This, ary wu 6 per cent less than for the MOAB, April 2. A new route for briefly, provides that the growers same period last year, actual imports o: were heavy, largely in anticipation of tbe Midland trail across Eastern Utah give the committee of seven power whjch will eliminate desert travel and attorney to collect, weigh, store, grade the enactment of an emergency tariff, and sell the clip, the committee un- the bureau of markets announced to-- 1 avoid the bad washes that impede day. More than 63,000,000 pounds traffic aa well m shorten hy ten miles dertaking to perform this work absolute cost and a mimimum advance were received or within approximate--1 the distance between Mack, Colo., and to be paid the growers of ten eents a ly 3,000,000 pounds of the.total in the Westwater in Grand county of Utah last year. More than half jg proposed. Grand is now at work pound on the wool upon delivery or two months as quickly as possible thereafter, ulti- of Argentinas wool exports alone on ita part of the new road to the Colorado line. The commissioners of mate settlement to be made with a were sent to the United States and and Mesa county, Colo., and the commiseconomy. February. January expedition possible sioners of Grand are in conference, Indorsement of the plan was corded by sheepmen from many parts WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN looking toward the completion of the OF THIS SECTION OF UTAH Colorado end of the road with a view of the state, by bankers present, by toward speeding up the work and per- L. & Marshall, secretary of the NaShearing is to start next Monday mitting early tourist travel to take tional Woolgrowers association, and thou. at Mounds. About seventy-fiv- e others who addresed the gathering. alvantage of the route. The prosand head are to go through the I08 potted route follows the Midland trail ere SITUATION IN THE WOOL beyond Mack to Bitter Creek, then INDUSTRY IS IMPROVING Thomas Redmond, secretary of tbe I turns down Bitter Creek Canyon, fol-listock board during the last sd-- 1 0wing it the entire distance to BOSTON, Mass., April 2. Prom has been named as chief water, inent members of the local wool trade sheep commissioner. are optimistic for the future in spite NEW SCHOOL BUILDING Dr. R. W. Hoggan, state veterinof the fact that sales for the mo- arian under Former Governor BamSOLDIER SUMMIT, April 4.- -Of ment have fallen off rather than imEastdollars in bonds the thousand has with an a taken forty job continues berger, proved, and that buying voted remedies concern. for school Wasatch stock ern county by at the spasmodic and in some cases thirty-thre- e thousand has purposes, around for Prices Rupert, shearing This is optimism expense of values. this year to ten iteen set aside for a naw school buildbased on the belief that the Fordney Ida., have dropped Plans and cents a head. The quality of the clip ing at Soldier Summit. bill will be passed very shortly mid it drawn are specifications being but is little there to is normal, up tbe new congress convenes. While wool is expected that actual work will beso far. sold or whether to as dealers are divided within the next thirty days. It Comparative reports from the Og- gin not this will le the signal for an adwill be a y brick and approx- subshow are all Union a den practistockyards vance in wool prices, and fifty hundred a by imately fifty stabilize the stantial increase in the number of cally agreed that it will feet in dimensions. There are to be unthe in received and wool situation by clearing up sheep eattle, hogs rooms, four at either end and up that city. During March, 1920, eattle eight certainty which baa been bolding these are to be connected by a long months. numbered two 3454; hogs, 6245; sheep, progress for tbe past are com 9282. For March, 1921, the figures hallway flanked on both sides by lock- j Very encouraging reports era. located be will of the foot at It j connection with are eattle, 5867; hogs, 14,586; sheep, ing from New York in Center street It that in city. 31,113. iall openings the are seems certain that manufacturers Shearing with a crew of twenty-fou- r SNAP FOB YOU orders the all they men began at Bonanza last Wedbooking practically Stndabaker car, overhauled and iu of nesday. The care to take at this time. Many pay is ten cents a head fine mechanical condition. Newly those received are for unusually large with the men boarding themselves. Good buy at a bargain. Call On the Sunshine ranch of Reeder & painted. lots of goods and are. to some went, at Viglia store and have a tryout dealWool very largely speculative. Advt (ConUnued on Page Four) out that this improvement ers And, for the boys and sportsmen, the most complete line of baseball goods ever brought to Eastern Utah. Shoes, bats, balls, masks, in tact, everything for the diamond. Prices right . t f t? i? t Eastern Utah Electric Co. nt nt Embalmer Votary An-cilia- ry BAUJNQEB llentlat Building. Price. Utah Hnt-Claa- the Electrical DENVER. April S. action stockholder to set aside thebysale of the lenver and Rio Grande to the Western 1'aciflc was dismissed by Judge Robert E. Lewis in federal district court her today. Permission, however, grunted James L. Deers, representing stockholders, to bring an amended complsint in ancil'.ar action to annul the sale on allegations of fraud and conspiracy on the part of officials to defraud the atockholdera Counsel for the Equitable Trust company of New York, against which it was said the amended complaint would b filed, announced they would resist action. No date was set fur the hearing. The sale or the road for a consideration of SlB.OuO,-00- 0 was confirmed last Monday. ve West-ministrati- Just Received New Selection of Smart Trimmed Hats In fanciful variations splendid assortment of various straw and fabric combinations in the most wanted color ings. Hats of various Straws and Fancy R raids. Trim mings of Flowers, Foliage, Fruits, Ribbons and Novelty Ornaments. Bessie Kennedy , Millinery MAIN STREET, PRICE, UTAH Next to Eko Theater IT MAY SEEM UNUSUAL iter Buying Bogs one-stor- j , ! Z want all the hogs in Carbon Emery counties for Highest price, paid. givs yours the once over V tints. Write or phono ship-5Si- t,, D. Heber Leonard, HUNTINGTON, UTAH . j point An eating bouse which grow, in popularity until at times the spue at their command i. too small, does not alwajr. keep up the quality of the service. With us the increase in our btuinesa has only stimulated us to fresh efforts to please our patrons, and. our reward is in the compliments our patrons constantly pau to us. Come hen for your regular meals. Your Sunday dinner or your supper after a dance. We are open all hours. NEW QUEEN CITY CAFE TURNER BLOCK-PHO- NE PRICE, UTAH 169 |