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Show FRIDAY, JULY THE SUN, FRIGE. UTAH EVERY FRIDAY. PAGE SIX which may be punished bv a fine of dollars or imjirisonuient in the rouiit.v jail for six mouths. Certainly no physician of this state would In care to undergo such humiliation. his request Dr. Beatty suggests that in the future it is the iutentiou of the hoard to Tile complaints with the stale LABOR CONVENTION AT three hundred PRICE TO TALK BIG THINGS director of registration requesting that NATIVE IK OF LATE DR. R. M. JONES Physician and Surgeon Obstetric and Disease of Child,. AMD Office Silvagni Block, Price, UtakT' ' DR. J. A. JUDY Physician and burgeon 59.75 Telephone 1IIW Office Price Commercial and Bank Bldg Price, Utah! DR. G. W. GREEN Physician and Surgeon Room 4, Golden Rule Hotel PRICE, UTAlh DR. prnj-oaitio- n conditions. Another item of interest is the high price of coal, thinks Sullivan. While there was siuue excuse during the war, he contends that this has now been largely eliminated and there should be a drop in prices commensurate with those in the price of other commodities. It ia also contended by the union leader that prices of admission to motion picture houses are too high and that a decrease should be effected there. Plans will be discussed to conserve union labor and much of the time of the convention is exerted to be taken up with the question of the open shop. Officials of various uuion organizations declare the coming convention will be one of the most inqiortant and interesting of any held in this state for many years. Sessions of the convention will be at Xotre Dame Hall on North Eighth street. ar-e- d, in-e- moths. Each moth lays thousands of eggs snd there are several brood! each year, Fox declares. Heretofore the only way apples could, lie successfully grown was for orchardists to spray their trees, Dentist Work and Extraction. Pri Commerclal Bank Bldg., Price, Utah. The Sun Specie! Bervlca. KANSAS CITY, Mo, July 25. Hog recipta fell short of early estimates, but prices failed to advauce. Top today 610.35 and bulk 0.80 to 610.30. lower. CatMarket steady to ten tle prices were strong to twenty-fiv- e cents higher fur fed cattle and steady, cents lower on winterto twenty-fiv- e ed and straight grassera. Stockers and feeders generally stronger. Sheep were rents higher. steady to twenty-fiv- e Receipts today were 16, INK! cattle, 6500 hogs and 501)0 sheep. Fed rattle re- twice for early apples, and three times for late apples, in order to kill the worms before they Isired into the young fruit. Orchardists are now of the opinion that it is possible to trap all the moths by this method and eventually do away with the costly spraying system now used. In addition to using the moth trap growers are nrged to protect the late apple crop by applying the third spray as soon aa possible. Early applet are so fat along, the insiector said, that 65.50. The horse and mule receipts were another spraying is inadvisable. small and made up of range and the common kind and sold slow. ONLY GOLD MONEY CAN BE MAILED TO MEXICO 600D RESULTS ACHIEVED Government notes, hank notes and IN PREDATORY CAMPAIGN all money or currency, excepting only campaigns between the gold, is barred from transmission ii letters to Mexico. This adds another states board of agriculture and the item to a long list of articles excluded United States biological survey for the from the mails to tha reimblic on the killing of predatory animals in Utah, south. According to xtal officials brought about the destruction of four Mexico ia taking only such atejis as thousand (wo hundred and twenty-si- x liave lieen taken by Enriqiean coun- amiuals during the iaat six months, re;iort of tries. While some countries jieruiit of according to the gold being sent by registered mail, George E. Holman, predatory animal there are others that lmr the trans- iniqiertor, to the state board of The activities of the camjiaign mission through the mails of money in were carried on in Utah at a cost of any form. 653,315 of which the state ia to liear 635,220.37 and the federal government HAS NARROW ESCAPE As Dr. J. K. AN. Bracken of Bingham $18,004.63. An average of sixty-eigin the field was driving west on Sixth avenue at 7 hunters was kept working o'clock last Friday evening np at Salt during the iieriod. Predatory animals sevLake City a bullet crashed through trapied and found imisoned are and twe.itv-eigthe windshield of his automobile, nar- en liear, three hundred bolicat, three thousand and twenty-rowly missing his head. Detective Les- one lion. nne wolter F. AA'irc and J. A. Egliert investi- verine coyote, thirteenwolf. and thirty-siOther clue where no as hut found to gated, a hunwere animals caught the shot had come from. It ia thought dred and ninety-thre- e badger, fif'.en to have keen a stray liullct that had forty-nin- e skunk, one marten and come a considerable distance and hit fox, sixty-on- e and hundred fire porcun'r.. the machine accidentally. Dr. Bracken The cauqiaigii fur the most pirt, is well known throughout all Eastern Holman reports, was a continuation of Utah, being at one time a partner of the poisoning ojierations of the fall of E. C. Led in large holdings in the Nine 1920 until March 1st, when the hi i -Mile. era started trapping. Unusually wit lt Arizona leads the states in produc- weather, however, made trapping until late in June. Artivi m tion of asbestos, followed by Georgia were confined largely to spring and and California. summer grazing areas. Two hunters were kept hunting lions in the Kaibnb WILL forest until May, but the weather conditions there also hindered the work For quick turnover will sacrifice considerably. Because of heavy snows price. Player in oar possession near in the' forest the hunters were comPrice and most bo moved at once. pelled, to cover some areas that were Ealy payment. Write quick for par- gone over during the early part of the ticulars to the Denver Music Co, Den- winter. An insjiection made over the ver, Colo. range in March revealed the presence of several old deer earcasses, lint no fresh lion tracks. The general conditions as reported PURE DISTILLED WATER among live stockmen show a decided decrease in the losses from predatory animals, the re)mrt declares. In connection with the rabies ramiaign Holman reports that jieriodie outbreaks of rabies have, occurred among dogs in Salt Lake, Davis. AAclier and Box Elder counties during which several people were bitten, but there were no fatalities nor were any serious losses suffered to live stock of the region. al '.gri-eultur- e. ht ht NEW CHURCH SUM x Ladles of Carbon County Asked to Aid In Unique Affair. . Next Friday evening, August 5th, a benefit box social, musical and literary entertainment will be given at City llall in Price under the auspices of the Methodist church. Every lady in the eounty will lie asked to prepare a nicely decorated box containing a good dinner for two," says Kev. Ralph CL Jones. These boxes will be sold at auction to the men for the highest hid. Tebles and seats will be erected on the east side of the hall grounds and on the vacant church lot to lie used by the purchasers of the nixes in serving the lunch. The lady who prepares the box and whose name ana numlier will be announced at the time of the sale is to lie the guest of the purchaser. There will be music, singing, recitations and readings by the best available talent. The entire proceeds of this social affair will be used by the Price church in carrying ont her nrt in a religious world program and local needs. This ia the first moneymaking affair launched by the local church, and as it ia for such a worthy eanse, it is espectwl that every lady solicits will cheerfully prepare a box and everybody will purchase a ticket, thereby contributing to a worthy struggling 1 church that is doing a noble, helpful work in our country. Rev. Ralph C. Jones will convas the county soliciting boxes and selling tickets. Mayor Leroy A. McGee, J. V. Hamnion, I)r. R. M. Jones and L. H. Anunennan, executive committee. r (Continual! On Para Eight) SAIHniNO 9 and 10. Silvagni Bulldlnc Professor Einstein, returning from Room PRICE, UTAH this country to his native land, exGEORGE CHRISTENSEN pressed himself as intensely amused at the vociferous reception accorded Attorney At Law him in the United States. No doubt the Silvagni Building, Formerthe clown in the rircus exiierienees Office, ly Occupied by Judge F. E. Wood. much the same feeling. Telephone 190, Price, Utah. ALEXANDER IX THE DISTRICT COURT OP OAR-bo- n STEWART,CANNON County, 8tate of Utah Nellie Attorneys At Law Beveridge West, Plaintiff, vs. Phillip West. Defendant. Summons. The State of Utah to the Said Defendant: You Eleventh Floor Deseret National Bank Salt Lake City, Utah. are hereby summoned to appear withSilvagni Bldg., Price, Utah. in twenty days after the service of this summons upon you If served within L. A. McGEE the eounty In which this action is Attorney At law brought, otherwise within thirty days after service and defend the above enRooms E and I. Bilvagnl Bldg. titled action, and In ease of your failure ao to do Judgment will be renderPRICE, UTAH ed against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has FERDINAND ERICK8EN heen filed with the clerk of said court. Attorney At Law Thia action la brought to recover a 717 Judge Building judgment dissolving the bond of matSALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. rimony heretofore and now existing between you and the plaintiff and for such Incidental relief as Is prayed for. OLIVER K. CLAY in said complaint. STEWART, ALEXAttorney At law ANDER A CANNON, Plaintiffs Attorney. Postoffice Address. Bilvagnl Office Room 9. Bilvagnl Building. Building, Price. Utah. PRICE, UTAH. First pub., July 1; last July 29, 1921. HENRY RUGGERI PRORATE A X D GUARDIANSHIP Attorney At Law Notice Consult County Clerk Or InforFor Further Respective Signers Office at the County Courthouse. mation. PRICE, UTAH. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IX THE OLIVER 0. DALBY Seventh Judicial District Court In Attorney At Law and For Carbon County. Utah. In the a. Matter of the Estate of Manolea Office, Eko Theater. Ground Floor. Deceased. Creditors will pres, PRICE, UTAH. ent claims with vouchers to the undersigned or to Oliver K. Clay, their atB. W. DALTON torney, at Price, Utah, on or before the Attorney At Law Tth day of September. A. D., 1921. John Salevurakis and Sophia SalevuOffice Eko Theater Building. rakis. Administrators of Estate of MaPRICE, UTAH nolea Salevurakis, Deceased. First pub., July 9; last July 29. 1921. . J. B. FLYNN Licensed Undertaker and v Sale-vuraki- Emhalmcr Telephone 29. PRICE, UTAH. STANDARD E. WOOLMEN WILL RESENT ARGUMENTS AT HEARING RESIDENCE DELIVERY IS MADE REGULARLY Buy a coupon look and save money Price Ice and Cold ! j I Storage Co. C. R. FERGUSON, Mgr. Modern and Enlarged Flint Phone 136 PRICE. UTAH 1 Hearings on the Fordnev tariff bill licgan last Monday before the senate committee on finance, to continue on through thi week. and. as I. It. Marshall. secretary of the National Wool-growassociation, says, likely for several week, ns the first schedule relates to the dye industry on which a prolonged fight is promised. As the wool schedule is No. 11, with the dye and nine other schedules ahpad of it, Marshall thinks it enn hardly be stated at present when the question as to wool will eonic up. Pnt when it does, he says. President Ilagcnbarth of the National association. S. AA. McClure, funner secretary, and very likely other woolnipn in addition to himself, will nppear before the committee for hearwill lie the absoing. Their rnnti-nliolute elimination of flip 33 jut cent nd valorem from the schedule, with nil of twenty-fiv- e cent to (terlmps M. FULLER Civil and Mining Engineer Special Attention Given to Irrigation Work. Office, Ground Floor, Weat of The Sun. PRICE, UTAH. COAL Mined In Carbon County and Shipped Everywhere. DR. H. B. HENDERSON Chiropractor. At Price, First Door West of The Bun. 10 to 12 noon 2 till 4 p. m. At Heltill 9 per. over Helper State Bank. Other hour p. m., except Bundaya at home. Call hy appointment. Properties At Standardville, Utah BEN BEAN General Palming Contractor a Work. All Estimate Free. Phone 1MM. PRICE, UTAH. No Dust , No Ashes, No Clinkers. A. Second Floor Price Commercial and Savings Bank PRICE, UTAH. J. W. METCALF Notary Public and Conveyancing Deads, Bills of Bala and Legal Papers Storage Purposes. high-das- prices. PRICE STEAM LAUNDRY Phone 218 HOFFS STUDIO ment. nigh Grade Portraits and Enlarge- Unexcelled For Bright as tha atari on hia starry flag is tha linen we lannder for yon and hundreds of other good American citizens. Unde Sam ia no slouch when it come to deanlinese and careful laundering. Our laqndry turns out good a American work at fair of All Kind Drawn SCOFIELD, UTAH KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Price Lodge No. IS. Meets every second, third and fourth Tuesday In Minnie HalL Visiting member always welcome. P. E. Trim. C. C.; Fred E. STANDARD COAL CO. Wheat. K. R. 8. PRICE LODGE No. 52 L O. 0. F. PRICE, UTAH . Meet each Wednesday at I oclock. W. F. Myers. N. evening O.: W. E. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH General Office! Ninth Floor Kearns Bldg. Hampton. V. G.; L A. Hill. Secy. O SWING MACHINES mean ERVICE, not now, but mai yearp. J. E. Jameson will see th your machine la taken cere of. Co ner Fifth and J streets. Phone 110-- 1 CUT YOUR WEEDS All persons owning or occupying property within the limits of Price City are notified and requested to at once destroy or cut any weeds growing o J premises. Uolesa such action ia taken the city marshal will have the work done and a bill for the same will have to be paid for the work. A alight effort at thie time will save much work and trouble later. Advt. J..W. HAM MOV II. LICENSED AB- STRACTER OF TITLES Abstract of title furnished to any piers nr tract In Eastern Utah! Fire Insurance written In the lieat companies. Real estate, bond, etc. Second floor Silvagni Bldg.. Price. Utah. An Insistant Demand the er AA'ooJ-cniwe- rs 7 ft Flrat-Claa- rum ICE Building, Price, Utah DR. T. J. ANTON Dentist l'f-ficu- ATTORNEY GENERAL INSISTS PHYSICIANS SHALL REPORT In an opinion by Attorney Gen.-rn- l Cluff given to the state health Dr. T. B. Keattv, in reply to a request regarding the notion essary to be taken againat certain physicians who are repeatedly viola ling the law regarding the reports of the births, deaths and contagious diseases, It is a the attorney general says: great surpnse to me to learn that there is any praeticing physician in the slate who would not willingly eutn- ply with the proviuioii of the law in this regard. The lnw makes it mandatory on the jiart of every physician iv. this state, or other eron caring for the sick, to make report 4o the local board of health immediately, ami fail-- j ure to !u so is declared a liiisdcumi-.iio- fur-heari- John J. Baker of Grand Junction, Colo., who last fall shot and killed Japies Kelley, a sheepman, at Montrose, Colo., and at the same time also wounded Kelleys father and brother, has lieen eonvicted of murder in tfle first degree and sentenced to life imprisonment in the Colorado penitentiary. The Kelleys formerly ran sheep in Grand county and are well known throughout Eastern Utah. The trial of Baker took place at Montrose. Five ier rent of all horses on Utah farms are purebred, while purebred rattle represented ia 2.7, the purebred sheep 1.8, and the purebred awino 2.5 per rent, according to figures compiled by the bureau of census during the fourteenth census. The total number of horses on Utah farms on January 1, 1020, was 125,471; cattle, 505.578; slieej), 1,691705, and of swine, 00,261. Iurebred live stock of every kind in the state amounts to 4370. Utah sheepmen are interested in the interstate commerce commission hearing August 4th, up at Salt Lake City, when a jietition will lie presented by the railroads asking that the rates en Mile J. 1 DR. SANFORD RAUJNGER DeaUat AN EXCEPTION TO EVERY RULE Johnnie, what do you mean by putting a tack on AAillie Browns seatf Ah, teacher, didnt you jea tell us that all our feelin was in our brain f How was I to know that AVillie Brown was the exception to the rule! thirty cents duty on the class content. Marshall calls attention to the contention that an ad valorem with a speAa cific duty will cause confusion. the time for the hearing on Schedule 11 relating to duty on wool may not he taken from the thicket for two weeks ceipts are getting lighter and prices or more, Marshall says the national for fat cattle were strong to twenty-fiv- e association and jvoul interests generrents higher again today, heavy ally will hare ample time to prepare steers reaching 69.IHI, yearlings up to their program for defense. 60.25, cakefed up to 67.60 and puljien Mora Sales of Wool. up to 63.65. AAintered and grassfed WASHINGTON. D. C, July 21. I ireilmu united and sold alow to twenty-frents lower from 66.50 to Notwithstanding the recent order of ive 67.90. Fed cows were steady, grassera Director of the Budget Dawes, holding lower and calves and hulls were about up all sales of the surplus government steady. Demand for storkers and feed- pmjierty, the war department announcers is sufficient to create a steady to ed today that it would sell another strong market and selling from 64.50 norm million munds of wool at aucto 67.00. tion at Boston, Maas., on August 4th. With light receipts the hog market The new offering consists of a million failed to advance today. Steady to imunda of pulled wool, two million of ten cents lower. Top 610.35. Hogs South American combing wool, twenty-thousand of West Coast wool weighing up to two hundred and sixty five INiunda Bold up to 610.00 and medium and nine hundred and twenty-fir- e lightweights to 610.35. Pigs are Bel- thousand pounds of scoured wool. These sales are progressing despite ling from 60.00 to 60.65. The sheep market was stronger with protests of Western senators. native lambs selling up to 69.75, which rents higher. WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN were called twenty-fiv- e Idaho lambs 610.50 and Idaho ewes at OF THIS SECTION OF UTAH semi-annu- H B. GOETZMAN X-R- ay e. Industrial rehabilitation, rent profiteering, vocational training, American plan' and the high price of coal sill be some of the questions considered at the annual convention of the Utah State Federation of Labor which meets in Price on September 112th to 14th, inclusive, says J. J. Sullivan, secretary and treasurer of that organisation. One of the most important matters to be considered, Sullivan declares, will be that of obtaining legislation amending the state compensation law so that workmen suffering from hernia will come under the compensation act. Many men engaged in heatvy work suffer from this form of complaint which has lieen brought on by their employment, it is argued, and for that reason they should receive compensation under the state law. Men who have been disabled for one occupation should be trained for another, Sullivan thinks, and this will be considered under the head of industrial rehabilitation and vocational training. To this end, conferences will be held with government officials having charge of rehabilitation work. One of the questions of most interest to the average workingman is that of high rents, Sullivan declares, and efforts will be made to conceive some plan by which a reduction may be obtained. The cost of living has gone down iii nearly every particular, but rents are still going np. Inquiry as to the cause of such increases is to he made and plans devised to bring about a change in these Ha PROFESSIONAL SELLING the lieense of offending physicians lie revoked as provided by law. This sugthe attorney general says, is SHEEP GENERALLY LITTLE BIT gestion, MEETS IN THIS CITY MIDDLE OF a good one, and he eonrludes by saySTRONGER. SEPTEMBER. ing that his department will give all assistance necessary, as the iniport-ane- e of living up to the law in matters Demand For Stockers and Feeders SufIndustrial Rehabilitation, Vocational like these is beyond question. ficient to Croat Steady to Healthy Training, tbs American Flan, Rent Market With light Receipts Hogs NEW OUTDOOR SPORT Profiteering and the High Price of Fail to Tako Any Advance Pigs Coal to the Consumer Matters to Be Sell Up to Nino Sixty-FivThreshed Out, Says Sullivan. Trapping of tha Coddling Moth With Vinegar and Soforth. Aa the result of actual teats made under the aujiervisiim of crop iest inspectors it has lieen demonstrated that the destructive eoddlingmoth, the of the apple worm, may be trap-ieaccording to J. AV. Fox, crop jcst iiuqiertnr for Salt Lake county. The trai, Fox says, ia both simple and x tensive. All that ia necessary is fur the orchardist to tie a pint or quart fruit jar in each apple tree with a piece of strong twine or wire. Half the jar is partly filled with a mixture of one mrt eider vinegar to nine parts of wster. In some unaccountable manner the uuitha are attracted to the liquid. They fly into the jar and drown themselves in the mixture. One fruitgrower found it necessary to empty the jar and renew the liquid several times because it had filled with dead 29, Country Over There is an insistant demand thronghont the country for airsble farms and town property. Inquiries are constantly haing made of real estate men. If you are in the market to sell list your property with us. The party who want it may be along any day. If you want to buy look over our offerings before yon take any definite action. We have eome good ones. In the handling of property we spare no pains to please both the bnyer and the seller. Strongest insurance agency in Eastern Utah fire, life, accident, plate glass, bonds. FRANDSEN BRICK COMPANY i Yard Rio adjoining the Denver and Railroad track on (he south, three blocks cast of dcMt. Offk-- at tlie yard. Ea-- i tlmatcs given and prim quoted o j on 93. Equitable Real Estate & Investment Co. i Second Floor Silvagni Bldg., Price, Utah j . PoHtofrice Bo Telephone 72M. Manufacturer of applk-atlnn- Brick of All Kinds PRICE, UTAH 5 i 1 |