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Show Mm APRIL 29, jjJAYi 19a THE BUN, PRICE, PROFESSIONAL ia -- -- DR. R. ptijfck'Un U. JOKES aud Burgeon. to Pr. E. F. Chambelaln. Silvaifni Block, Price Utah. ,.frtor CHARLES T. ROSE ltiyiciaa and Surgeon SR Residence, it the MilUiurn Streets and mrm Cor-Mai- n Eighth PRICE. UTAH DR- ptiysk-la- IS JUDY j. A. and Surgeon Telephone 16SW Price Commercial and Bank. Price, Utah. Over Savings S. B. GOETZMAN Doubt DR. ... and Extraction. Wi.rk Prlie jffnwdai Bank Bldg., Price, Utah "liSANTORD BALLINGER Building, rilce, DR. T. J. ANTON Dentist end 10. Silvagnl Building, PRICE, UTAH GEORGE CHRISTENSEN Attorney At Law PRICE, UTAH Offlrs, the Silvagnl Building, Former-Occupied By Judge F. E. Woods Telephone 180, nty ity. k. 11. This Country Is to Get Firmly On Ite Feet Again Economically We've Got to Find Our Way Out cf the Woods With Transportation Problem Around the Local Camps. C, April eui by following the Harding administration, the railroads, is that ul' .mil. In the opinion of many of the president ' advisers, including Herbert ( 1U,. vir. secretary of commerce, the 8 terip, tu to be la.kled Utah coal problem is second only to that of the railmuds and is a direct a barrier to a healthful eoudtion of industry. Necessity for early action with resiact to coal is emphasized by the strike of liriiisk miners. A strike in the British coal industry, one memlwr of the IISWART, ALEXANDER A cabinet declared today, means an CANNON immediate stimulated market in this Attorneys At Law country, due to jianicky buyers, who fear both higher prices and shortage in gleventh Floor th Deeeret National uk Building, Balt Lake City, Utah, supply. These two influences are cerglfagnl Building, Price. Utah. tain to send prices up and ojicn the door to a resumption of profiteering L. A. McGEE and of shortages, either real or manAttorney At Law ipulated, unless the projier precaulooms 8 and 0, Silvagnl Bldg. tions are taken. PRICE. UTAH One proposal to be urged energetically on the administration from withFERDINAND ERICE8EN in the official family will lie the alAttorney At Law lowance of digerentials, either in the TIT Judge Building mine prices or in railroad rates, to ALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. large users of coal who arrange to acOLIVER K. CLAY cept and store eoal during the periods when the demand on the mines is the Attorney At Law One of the rhief difficulties lowest. Office Room 0, Silvagnl Building. of the coal problem, this official says, PRICE, UTAH. is the seasonal character of producHENRY RUGGER! tion. The average miner works, norAttorney At Law mally, only about two hundred days a year. The mines produce only as Office at tha County Courthouse. UTAH they have orders or can get cars. If PRICE, production could be spread out equalOLIVER 0. DALBY ly throughout the year, by the storage Attorney At Law of coal in seasons of slack demand, both the coal production and transOffice, Eko Theater Building, portation difficulties would be immedGround Floor. PRICE, UTAH. iately relieved. Bituminous coal deteriorates rapidly above ground, but B. W. DALTON may be kept in perfect condition if Law Attorney At stored under water. Office Eko Theater Building. It would not be an expensive proposition for many of the largest users J. E. FLYNN of coal, particularly the' metallurgiLionised Undertaker and cal industries, to provide water storEmhaliner age for large aomunts of coal That or some similar solution must lie Telephone 88. PRICE. UTAH. adopted to further stabilize production throughout the year and equalize E. M. FULLER the load on the railroads. Some proCivil and Mining Engineer vision must be made, of course, to iTtclal Attention Given Irrigation equalize the coat of rijal to the indusWork. Office, Ground Floor, try that stores it with one that reWest of The Bun. ceives it only os it ran be used. That, PRICE,. UTAH I lielieve, might properly be token care DR. J. B. HENDERSON of by a differential in the freight rate Chiropractor. coal going into storage moving at At Price, First Door West of The Bun, a rate sufficiently lower than shipII to 11. noon 8 till 4 p. m. At Hei- ments for current use to offset the ne. over Helper State bank, I till I involved by storage. 8 s. except Sundays Other hours Our coal problem toiday is second t horns Calls by appointment. only to that of transportation with BEN BEAN which it is complicated and virtually General Painting Contractor a part. If this country is to get firmEstimates Free. ly on its feet again economically, if Work. Phono 188M. industry is not to be strangled, we PRICE, UTAH have gut to find our way out of the woods with both of them and that g se the 'el- - ive XT ftnt-Cla- A KOPFS STUDIO h Grade ed t quickly. Portraits and Enlargements Second Floor Commercial and Savings Bank PRICE, UTAH NORTH DAKOTA LIGNITE ATTRACTING ATTENTION With the view of determining the jmssibilities of developing the lignite notary Public and Conveyancing fields of North Dakota, South Dakoand other nearby states Bills of Sale and Legal Papers ta, Minnesota where this tyjie of eoal is found, the of All Kinds Drawn United States bureau of mines has enSCOFIELD, UTAH gaged Dr. Erich W. Zimmerman, a James L. A. BENCH professor of commerce of the Itealdent Agent Ills., to Decatur, Millikin University, Qltshle Life Insurance Co. and the make a thorough investigation of the national Casualty Co., health and accident, Box 88. fuel situation in those states and the Phone 191. PRICE, UTAH feasibility of suplying the consumers with a fuel produced in the region itKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Dr. Zimmerman will make a self. toe Lodge No. 88. Meets every Sond. third and fourth Tuesday i careful study of the fuel supplies available in the North Middle At eat, JJJonlc HalL Visiting memoers welcome. C.; the characteristics of these fuels and P. E. Trim, Wheaton. K. R. & the prices obtained therefor. The sixty-fift- h congress appropriated a g hundred thousand dollars for increased the of ths possibility utilization of the Northwestern lig- J. W. METCALF , a al-5- H investi-gatin- other rectal diseases are cured surgery. .No time lost from Write for my. book on SENT FREE. f?. R. a. PARSONS, Mi D. 411 Continental Bank Building, BALT LAKE CITY. UTAH troy laundry ErWbody W. onB itYOSic Knows the Troy and Its Good Work. Ii WEIST, Agent. For and Delivers Packages. I rite, Utah. 2. AND us your hauling of freight and 'jr and It will receive prompt IS ntlon. Nr job too large or too Kv! for u" to handle. Freight U CwV ur special attention. Walter Henacn. Phone 8SW2, Price, Utah. FRIDAY. PAGE THREE nite can Cumjiete with the highgrade the I'eural Mississippi and t'...o alleys, w Lich are now being by long freight hauls into the .'unlisnt. According to the bureaus fiiruivs, ihe nation's coal resources of all rank total 3A.t3.037.KHl.iHHl tons or nearly a third beiug lignite. Of this lignite !hix.4lM,tHH),iiou tons is iu Nuitb and South Dakota and Northeastern Montana, approximately SECOND ONLY TO THAT OF in Texas, O FEW OTHERS. in Alaska and relatively smaller quantities in several of the other WASHINGTON-- , D. Dcntiat Mile If UTAE-EVE- RY nites. Recently W. t . Odell, fuel was engineer of the bureau of mines, the for Ottawa and sent to Montreal an exchange of jiurpoae of effecting information with the Canadian government relative to the technical in the carboniza problems involved tion of lignite. Tor The dominion government has the on probbeen working some years the vast lem of the utilization of western provthe in stores of lignite hundred inces and has spent several dollars in these investigations. The visit of Odell resulted in valuable inthe obtaining of much of mines is formation. The bureau of the the lignites that assured now conrt-e- d be can Northwestern States fuel, into a highgrade, smokeless P- the process yielding quantities as valuable tars and oils ammonia, the practicability byproducts. With process carbonization of the consider be econto only remains it and to deomic Bide of the situation carbonized lig termine whether the V ecrii 7,404,-3i.Ht.iai- and Southern States. It is au iaiiHiru.it economic consid- eration that these lignites are found in i hose iirtsof the country thut hare no other solid fuel. of the large content of moisture iu lignite, ils tiiidcncv to disintegrate and its liability to siHnttmeous Combustion when stored, it is not a desirable fuel as mined and millions of tons of bituminous aud anthracite coals are ship-le- d annually into the lignite hearing regions. The results are high j trices for both industrial and domestic fuel, lha iuiHsition of a great handicap on the industrial development of those ii regions, the tying up of much equipment needed for other service and other economic lost moHci-uus- e trans-Hirtatio- tion. The territory naturally tributary to the Dakota lignite deposit embraces North Dakota, South Dakota and also Western Minnesota. Upward of two billion tons of bituminous eoal and 1.500, 00(1 tons of antharcite are ahip-e-d annually into that territory from Illinois, Indiana, West Virginia, Kentucky and Pennsylvania. The average haul of this coal is a thousand miles. If the Dakota lignite were put into stable and serviceable condition, by means of carbonizing and briquetting, this fuel demand could be supplied with an average haul of less than four hundred miles. The bureau of mines thinks that the immediate problem in the utilization of the lignites is the eolation of the economic questions involved, but there are no present plans for the construction of an experimental plant ny for treating the product. It is probable that investigative work on lignites will lie conducted in the future at some of the bureaus experiment stations. Stock Sales Approved. After a complete investigation con durted in person by Heber C. llicks of Provo, its secretary, the state se- curities commission last week granted the Mutual Coal company permission to sell off twenty-fiv- e thousand shares of its stock at a price ranging from ten dollars a share for the first ten thousand to fifteen dollars a share for the last ten thousand. The remaining five thousand shares are to sell at $12.50. Commission of 15 per rent is allowed. The application of this company has been before the commission for some time and met with considerable opposition, though written protest was filed. The NOTICE TO THE BEEKEEPERS OF in which ease they could not oierate WIDOW ASKS DAMAGES CARBON COUNTY. on the roads of Utah but also to Daiuagea in the sum of four thouprosecution on the criminal charge of sand and twenty-tw- o dollars are askBlanks for complying with the Allworthless checks. Coal company uttering ed the against Kinney owing may be obtained from the unfor the accidental death of William dersigned bee iiuqiectrtr fur Carbon Among the novel automobiles man- II. Anderson in a suit filed in the county : ufactured in this country is a folding Third District court his his wife. AnBee. Cx. IJiinw For Beekeeper car weighing less than two hundred derson, an employe of the coal rom-jwFeee Penalty Every perwin In the at Nwfield, waa killed January tale of Utah who shall te poascased pounds. It is of knockdown construcof or own therein one or more colon- tion, ao that is can be fitted into a 31, 1021, while using a eoaleutting ies of here, or one or more hives conlarge trunk. The machine will run inaehine weighing several tons. The taining combe, but no beee whether from seventy-fiv- e to eighty miles on a plaintiff alleges that the defendant with or without honey or brood, shall on or liefore the let day of April of gallon of gasoline. eonqiany was negligent in ordering each year, or thereafter, forthwith him to ojterate it for the reason that word Yonr teleused in please upon coming Into poesemiion or ownwas unfamiliar with its mechanism. he ership of such colony or colonies, grams alone rusts the United States hive or hivea or forthwith upon chang$3,000,000 yearly. Coupon books In stock. The Bun. ing the location thereof, register the same In the office of the commissioner of agriculture and obtain a license to own, control, have, possess or cultivate the same fur the then current calendar year or remainder thereof at their then location or locations, which license shall not lie transferable to any other person. Application for such registration shall be made to the commissioner of agriculture upon blanks prepared by him for such purpose, which shall be distributed by him generally to those requiring the same throughout the state. Such' blanks shall contain a statement of the name, ilare of residence and business OUR NEW DRINK, AND DANDY, TOO. of the owner and applicant, together with the numlier of colonise or ALSO, THESE: Mvee to lie registered and their then location or .locatlona In the state, defining such location or locatlona by lot, block, plat and survey If within COCO-COL- A the corporate limits of a city or town, otherwise by sectional township and range, elating also the name of the owner or occupant of the land whereupon such colonies or hivea are located. The annual fee for the registration of such colony or colonies, hive nr hives, shall tie the sum of All mads right here In Price at oar own Flint one (81.00) dollar for each separate The prices right Deliveries at yonr home or location and ahall attach to and be collected for each new or additional place of business. location from time to time established therefor. Bald fee shall accompany the application and It shall be the duty of the commissioner of agriculture to keep In his office for public Inspection an accurate up to date record of said registrations wherein shall he elated the numlier of colonies or hives registered and the location or locations Phone 24 from time to time occupied thereby. All fees received and collected under UTAH PRICE, the provisions of this section shall be paid Into the state treasury, but shall constitute a fund that may be drawn upon from time to time upon the order of the atate hoard of agriculture to drefray the expenses incident to the enforcement of the lawa of the state relating to apiculture. Any person, firm or corporation violating any of tha provisions of this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. no rom-missio- investigation extended to every one of the arguments advanced, and Hicks report covers each point in considerable detail. With a Belling cost allowed of 15 ier cent, Hicks estimates that the main portion of the projierty, known as the Fred J. Leonard lease, can be put into fair condition and ran produce coal in accord with the selling plan of the comiany. Most Be Given Aid. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., April 23. ad-re- sa CIIKHKY IILOSSOM IKON IIKttll n, FKU1TJU C1CA1I: XHCTO The situation in the Alabama coal fields, where thousands of strikers and their families are now destitute, was characterized as most alarming by Brigadier Simonson of the Salvation Army here today. Announcing that the army will continue to aid the strikers to the best of its ability even without The sitBtate aid, Simonson said: uation is alarming. It is snch conditions as this that create anarchy. We cannot afford to permit such to exist. HERMAN 8. HORSLEY, We cannot refuse to throw our reInspector For Carbon County. sources into the fight for humanity, regardless of whether Governor Kilby Repreis willing to help or not. BUM CHECKS ARE GIVEN sentatives of half a dozen local unions of the United Mine Workers were canvassing for food and money in Birm- Secretary of State Imposed Upon By Owners of Cara. ingham today. Joseph Smith, representing the union at Republic, Ala., Assistant Secretary of State Ilei-nappealed to wholesale houses for food. is just now turning his attention have must and need We are in bad to collection work, lie has found that food today, he said. about fifteen checks turned in by alleged automobile owners for license Two Yean Needed. the banks be fees were returned PARIS, April 24. Discussing the cause of insufficientbyfunds or no in devastated regions budget for the account. He does not intend for the the chamber of deputies, Louis Louch-eulose to state any money by such erro liberated the minister for regions, or on the worse part of the owners, today said if Germany furnished labor the secretary of representative devastate! of for the reconstruction aic the reason no saw he why regions of the Germans Bhould not lie employed in the coal mines of Northern France. The minister said that, out o;' lie got the money. the hundred and forty mines in the re- monev. an deshad been number gion a great hundred ner, may mean that next year auto-troyed, and that twenty-eigruinbeen had of kilometers tunneling ed. The output of the mines, which was eighteen million tons annually be- censes. This will be an meonvenu fore the war would reach four million Iwth to them and to their bank tons in 1921, he said, adding that com- but snch methods of fraud on atate cannot be countenanced, an plete restoration of production woul may be that all will have to suffer for ten years. occupy' the carelessness or worse of a few. The state will not lose any money Fireside Going Ahead. in the long run. We can, if we hare N. G. Stringham, vice president am to, cancel the licenses of those who general manager of the Peoples Sugar obtained them by fraud. At the Baine elected been has president time we would have to company, notify the offand trustee of the Fireside Coal am icers that the licenses had been cancelOil association, which is developing and ask in them all of the ed, parts hundred and a tract of twenty-fiv- e atate to look for the automobiles in Ross near Creek. Gear acres up sixty Winterowd, a railroad man of Dea question. Such action would render the Moines, Is., has been chosen vice pres- - owners liable not only to haring their license plates taken from them, (Contlnued on Page Eight) cr PRICE BOTTLING WORKS b DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Strictly sanitary and where the service is of the best. Clean , wholesome and appetizing foods at small cost. Many families find it both convenient and pleasant to have their Sunday dinners with us. NEW QUEEN CITY CAFE 169 TURNER RLOCK-PIION- E PiyCE, UTAH r, ht mm CARBON e. w. McIntyre WELDING COMPANY and f. d. bryner WeMir g, Celling and Brazing" Workmanship Guaranteed Welders of All Metals Ciy-Afy!(- te Corner North of D. & R. G. Warehouse. Phone 120-- Price, Utah |