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Show . effect that sttemjU are being made to introduce into this country an Oriental vegetable known as the rival of the Irish variety. The South has to imiort the bulk of its from the North and sinee the dash ecu is said to grow fine in soil down there many will welcome its appearance and will find a place for it in their gardens. It will be favorably received by other sections, sinee people are always anxious to greet a new kind of food. But when it eomes to replacing the potato in the hearts of American citizens theres nothing THE BUN. PRICE. REPUBLICANS MEET n, tailed Every Friday By Bun Publish-In- y Co. (Inc.) K. W. Crockett. Manager 1.M the Tear. Office Fhone No. I. Residence, No. ISSmt. Mall MatEntered ae Becond-Claa- e ter. June 4, 1111, at Foetoffice at Price. of March Under Act the S, 1111. Utah, lubwriptloB, ADVERTISING RATES Display Matter Per Inch per month, l.lt; Single laeue. ite. Special Foal tlon, 11 Per Cent Additional. Legale Ten Centa the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Lina. Summons, ll.il; Water Application, flt.ee; Final Proof, flS-SO- . Bead ere Ten Centa the tine Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Una Blackface Type Fifteen Cents the line Each Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Reading Notice Rates. Count Six Words to the Lina For Sale, Fen- Rent, Found. Lost, Etc., Two Cents per Word Each issue. No Charge Accounts Address All Communications to Sl'N PUBLISHING OO. , X X - Frk, Itah ffl. CHARLES COUNTY LINE WITH BRASS (Continued From Fas Three.) R. HW AT Do Not HD REQUIREMENTS tober 23d, and will leave Reno, Nev, the next day and arrive in Salt Lake dll City the following afternoon. d Requirements for resist ration T transeontinen- for voting at the general are that The Coolidge-Dawe- e on November 4 th, next, tal Lincoln tour was welcomed to Halt the person so doing must he a Lake City last Monday afternoon afdoing. cltisen of the United States and ter stops at Ogden and towns en route have been one for ninetyordajs ehe J election. He prior to the The Suas idea of a freak election to the etate capitaL Tuesday the carmust be 1 years of axe or more bet would be one where the loser avan left Zion and is to make several or tne v and have been a resident would have to read his own partys stupe before reaching Ely, Nev., and d etate of Utah for one year and J thence to the coast. Bo far its schedof the county for at least four platform. d months. ule has been maintained. J The person also must have re- The Sun doesnt know how others he which In aided in the precinct Democrats Coming. feel about it, but France acts like she register for at least sixty daysand must be In other way quailhad licked Germany without any relp Carbon county democrats are to fied as a voter under the laws or from the outside. have their first rally of the present the state. Persons who have left campaign at Amusement Hall over the state and county temporarily As a general rule the best thing to at Hiawatha (Black Hawk) next Suneven to visit in a foreign country do for that rundown feeling is to day afternoon. Among the speakers do not forfeit their residents. Persons who have lived In a sue the owner of the auto. wiU be lion. George 1L Dern, candifor several years and precinct date for governor; J. William Robhave registered and voted there at election will not be required inson of Provo, attorney general; J. SECURITY IN SHALES to register this year, although It W. Funk of Cache county, secretary u urged that everyone make sure of state, and Judge George Christenthat his or her name is corwt Congress Very Apt to Provide For sen of Price, one of the nominees for and is still carried on the books. a judgeship in the Seventh district. Experiments Locally. Others are to make talks if time will d Development of the vast oil shale liermit deNisita in the West are absolutely The professor who said there would essential to the future seeurity and LIN be standing room in the Inited not TRAMP CHINESE LEE, safety of the American nation, J. F. States in ten thousand years appar(ialbrealh, secretary of the American ently failed to take into account the Mining congress, declared at Salt T IN first appeared at the Sanford number of automobile and airplane Lake City last Friday before departhomestead ragged and thin and seders. vent mourning without The Sun; 30-2- 8. THRIFT AMONG THE CHILDREN RAPIDLY GROWING. F. W. Strauss, one of New York Citys greatest bankers, says thrill among children is growing. And, to prove it, he cites that there are eight school banks thousand in these United States now with mure than three millions of youngsters making deposits. It is The Sun 's opinion that those of the present age were never more extravagant, never mure thoughtless of the value of a duller, never had more desire fur money for every purpose and never knew as little about thrift. But the tiothamite declares they are learning fast and that nothing will make ior future prosperity like teaching savings in our public schools. The Sun believes that is true and it has in the so expressed itself to teachers. If children are taught during the school age to put a pruiier value on money they are more apt to keep that idea Constantly in mind as they grow older. It is easy to instill lessons of thrift in young folks right along with their regular studies. Teachers who do this are more valuable to the districts that enipluy them than are those and others who do nut. REASONS She may have good ingredients, but she does have an $8000.00 jnoderaequipinnt. Very few realize that right here in this city this shop is one of?K. very best equipped bakeries ia Utah all modern electri cal devices needed to produce bakery goods of high nnu ity. Good ingredients cut very little ice if you are am properly equipped to get results from the raw material No kitchen regardless of how modern the house may b has such equipment. Also no Bakery in Eastern Utah has such equipment and that is why we have no com pet i tors as far as quality is concerned. I ist tion and the metal producers for a national emergency. One of the most intelligent steps for safety in the future was taken by the navy deiwrtuieut in seeking to erect an experimental station in the West for the development of oil The approshale, (lalhreath said. priation for that purpose was defeated by a filibuster in the last session of congress, but 1 am reasonably certain that it will lie fiassed in the coming congress. Such a move will be a ltoon for Utah, Wyoming and Colorado as most of the shale deixwsiU are tied up iu the laud of these three states. Commenting uisin the relationship as of (he American Mining congress and the silver producers exjKirt association, the latter which was organized in Utah last July, (lalhreath said that the closest harmony prevailed between the two organizations. At the time of the latter there was some doubt as to the that would exist betweeu the two. The convention was highly successful and was attended by the most promising mining men in the nation. -- Oldtime Price duck hunters used to boast about what they brought back. Mow they brag of what they take long. EVEN WHEN MOST OF US LOOK INTO THE MIRROR. Most human beings seeiu just naturally to enjoy misery. We dont refer to those who reully have bad luck, but to everybody in general, e Incky nr unlucky, rich or poor. we see somebody in trouble-e- ven if we look in the mirror. We envy our ncighltors and that distresses us. We uuiy lie foolish in our love and our hearts ache. We worry bout debts, the ijtate of our health, the shortcomings of our neighbor, about the eros, the weather or our jolts, alxiut clothes, bobbed hair, polities or religion. And nothing worries us more than lo have some otherwise well meaning (arbon county citizen top ua on the street and tell us that one reason he doesn't show his advancing age any more plainly is that he has always made it a rule not to worry. It is hard to keep from railing that kind of a man a liar, because we know too well that the people Vhu never have anything of the kind are ao few and far betweeu they rould hold a convention in a garbage can and still not crowd each oilier. Kvery-wher- It was a Scotchman who declared he didnt care who wrote a countrys laws if he could write its songs. Over here there is suspicion from time to time that the same persona are responsible for both. af-fai- rs They say using the radio for their speeches costs the candidates lots of money. But think what they save on punk eauqiaign cigars. GREATEST IDEA OUT OF THE CAPITAL LATELY. The United States treasury detriment has started a movement to encourage the wider emulation oi silver dollars. The Sun ie heartily in sym- with it. shouldn't they Cthycirculation! Why What's more essential to the life of a silver dollar than circulation f They lend weight to a man. They give him standing that ia if he has too many in his pocket he can't get up, once he sits down, and therefore he has to stand. They arc works of art when carefully polished with quality silver polish. They are o much easier to throw to the birds than paier money. One ran always take a nice collection with him and pend them with easier conscience because of relief that comes from being freed of heavy load. By all means give ns silver dollars. Thats about the brightest idea that has come out of Washington, D. C., since congress adjourned. Your man who declares that something ia as cheap as dirt evidently hasnt priced Carbon county real estate lately. THERE IS NOTHING DOING IN THE DASHEEN LINE. Your wife may bake good things to eat. Perhaps she has taken a domestic science course which is good. Bu has she taken a scientific one in one of the big Easten Bakery Schools in the most np to date modern methods under scientific conditions? Is there a baker in Eastern Utah who has? ..Our baker has. His certificate can be seen in our window a graduate from the Siebel Tech, recognized authority the world over in the bakery indu $W4 ing for Washington, D. C. lie arrived at Zion Thursday night from Sacramento, Cala., where he had been' at lending the national convention of the congress. He asserts that one of the main subjects discussed before the convention was the seeurity of the na- OFFERINGS QF SHEEP SELLING SLOWLY AND SOFORTH (Continued On Face Two.) being taken to Colorado for winter feeding and will lie disced of on the spring markets. Boise, Ida., is bidding for the next years convention of the National Woolgrowers association and invitations imve been sent out to members of the committee that will select the place. San Francisco has withdrawn, which leaves the Idaho eit.v and Butte, Montv the only contenders. The gathering will likely be the first week in January, next Glen N. Nelson, cashier of the First National at frier, and Alma Warren of the Nine Mile section shipped fifty head of rattle out of Price last They had intended sending them to the Kansas City market, but being advised that prices there were off unloaded and sold at Grand Junction, Colo. They got 2 V4 for rows and for steers. The reason for the low market, says Warren, is that about everybody dreads feeding through the winter months. Sat-urda- y. Yesterday's Markets. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 16. Cattle receipts 5500 head and calves, l(XKl. Active and fully steady; fed offerings $8.50 to $10.25; grassers to killers $5.00 to $6.50 and steady; butcher cows and heifers $3.25 to calves steady to weak, $8.00 to medium and heavyweights $3.00 to $5.75; stockers and feeder steers steady, $5.00 to $7.00; stock eows and heifers dull and weak to fifteen cents lower, $2.75 to $4.50; stock calves steady, $5.(K) to $7.25. Ilogs Receipts 7000 head and fifteen to twenty-fiv- e rents lower; bulk of sales $9.85 to $10.50; 225 to averages $10.40 to $10.55; 180 to $10.10 to $10.40; packing sows $9.50 to $9.65; stock pigs steady, $7.50 to $8.25.' Sheep Receipts 4000 head. Lambs steady; westerns around $13.00; $12.50; odd lots of sheep about steady. , War clouds are again hovering over the Balkans, but they cannot herald a storm like that which broke over Sarajevo ten years ago. $6.-(X- I; $9.-(X- I; 300-pou- 220-ponn- d, na-tiyp- s, If theres a single soul in Carbon county or for many thousands of miles round who doesn't like potatoes in What has liecomc of the old fashionsome form or another let him now ed man who thought no campaign was apeak or forever hold his peace. The complete without a torchlight parade f fact that the lowly spud has so many There are two sides to every family friends makes an item in a Southern newspaper of interest, it being to the question the male and the female. A Chinese hungry and tramp, something unheard-o- f In the annals of the (Vest. He cante up to the kitchen door and stood with hand crossed ' over his stomach. No one could mistake the meaning of that attitude. Give him a meal," commanded Mrs, Sanford of the Jap cook. Lin stayed. The Jap cook was leaving and Lin took his pluce. He cooked to perfection. The Saiifords found Lin Indispensable. Three months went by. Lin 'grew tout and complacent Everybody trusted him' The children loved liliu. Lin was a find, a treasure Sanford kept the money to pay his laborers in an iron safe in his study. It was a good safe, and on Saturday It held a greul quantity of money. Mrs. Sanford had often been afraid. There were bad men In the hills, rustlers who, If they learned of It. would nut hesitate to try to get the contents. San ford laughed at her. lie had his shotgun and he wasn't afraid of had men. He took Mrs. Sanford and the children out to see the new Irrigation ditch one Saturday morning. When they returned the safe stood wide ojien, picked by an expert. The money two thousand dollars and a little more was gone. So was Lin. So was Sanford's favorite horse. There was a telephone on the ranch. Within an hour the sheriff and a xwse had foregathered, ready to ride down the thief, lmhitory Chinamen must be uiude an example of. Rut who would Imre thought It of Liu! Mrs. Sanford and the children cried. They watched the posse, headed by Sanford, rhle off. "lWt hurt him!" Mrs. Sanford begged her husband. Sanford's lips were set grimly, ne whs a man who was slow to give his trust. He had given It to Lin and It had been betrayed. He was not feeling merciful. The trail led towvrd the hills. Into a barren district. Lin was a fool to hava taken that route, the sheriff agreed with Sanford. They would trap him at if they rode fast. They the water-hol- e did not spare their horses. The water-hol- e came Into sight Sanford uttered a shout The horse that IJn had stolen waa browsing on the scant herbage. And there, at the water-hole, apparently drinking, was Lin. 8anford deliberately aimed and fired. It was half a mile away, there was little chance of hitting Lin. They galloped furiously forward. Lin arose t three hundred yards they could die tlnguish Mm easily In the thin atmosphere. Apparently he bad been bit; he came stumbling forward, his palms outstretched. Sanford, boiling with chsgrln, was about to fire again, but the sheriff struck up his rifle. "Well aim to take him alive, he said. Lin collapsed upon the ground at Sanford's feet. He waa shot through the body. He waa upon the point of death. He turned his eyes ly upon his master's. "You yellow thief! shouted Sanford, trying to fight down the feeling of pity that rose up in him. No thief 1 said Lin and died. They looked at one another, they looked at the body. The sheriff utThere's three tered an exclamation. bullet holes la him! lie said. It waa true three bullets had passed through the Chlnamsn's body, each one of which would in itself have proved mortal. 1 Who the the sheriff began One of the posae, who bad ridden oo ahead, came galloping back. Come byar! Come hyarl be shouted. They spurred their horses. As they neared tbs water-bol- e they saw another form crouched down. It was that of a Mexican. He waa quite dead, with the top of bis head blown off. There were signs of a desperuto The struggle around the water-hole- . bills that had been taken from Sanford's safe lay scattered everywhere "He follered him, I reckon, said the sheriff, swallowing hard. Sanford made no reply. He was thinking of the day Lin had coma np to the ranch house door, and ha had taken him In. try. Our policy is to give our customers something better (quality) our whole thought. That is why we spen money for the best equipment that could be bought ant that is why we put our baker thrpugh the best known bakery school. wild-lookin- The older generation get a lot of credit for the days when they had to get up at 5 oclock to do the chores, but the modern youth rolls out that early for a game of tennis. SCIENCE IN BAKING Ingredients which go into our finished products are the very best. The best flour to be bought. We use nothing but the very best eggs, best butter to be bought an compounds and oils of high quality. Pure extracts, emu sions and spices. Electric mixers, steamproof boxes, electric ovens, plates and frying kettles. The eye deceives. The taste is the naked truth. There are imitations, but be sure you get Wilson' when you want the best bakery goods of quality. Democratic Ticket Presidential M-ai- j O. H. WILSON SELLING CO Electors M. MADSEN of Price Mil. J. 1. SIIOWALTER of Pangultrh Wifi Bread As Good As Wilsons J J ( Cross Your Because She Cannot Mak f stood up and cried in the congrega- tion. Job, FRIDAY. PTAH-EVE- RT West of Postoffice. Phone 21 PRICE, UTAH 1 INEZ K MG JIT ALLEN of Provo MILS. II. J. HAYWARD of Salt Lake City Governor GEOIU.K 1L DEUX of Salt Lake City Justice Supreme Court A. J. WKHKll of Salt Lake City Secretary of State JAMES W. FUNK, of Cache County Attorney General J. WILLIAM ROBINSON of Provo State Treasurer JOSEPH HI HIE of Ogden State Auditor DANIEL O. LARSEN of Salt Lake City Supt. Public Instruction IUGII M. WOODWARD of Provo Congrexa, Flret District FRANK FRANCIS of Ogden You Are Again Promised a Reduction of Taxes Every taxpayer who has had his taxes reduced under the Republican administration of the past four years Judges, Seventh Judicial I Ustrtct GEORGE CHRISTENSEN of Price J. A. 1IOUGAARD of Manti T'intrli-- t Attorney FRED W. KELLER of Montlcello CARBON BRING YOUR TAX RECEIPTS TO THE POLLS COUNTY TICKET Representatives Tn Legislature V. II. BISHOP of Helper SAMUEL NAYLOR of Bunnyslde Commissioner, Four Years Have You Had Prosperity THOMAS A. KTKOUP Under the Republican administration? of Clear Creek Commlmloner, Two Years FKANK T. BENNETT of Btorra County Attorney O. K. CLAY of Price Under the DEMOCRATIC ADMINISTRATION you WORKED EVERY DAYl (Political Advertisement) HON. GEORGE H. DERN Democratic nominee for Governor, Drafted, Introduced and Worked for the Passage of the WORKMENS COMPENSATION LAW THE CORRUPT PRACTICE LAW THE ABSENT VOTERS LAW THE STATE MINERAL LAND LEASING LAW and THE INITIATIVE and REFERENDUM Cream of the Crop The cream of the crop goes into the making of Turkey Red. Tip Top and Seminole flour. Only the very finest wheat is used in its preparation, and used only by the most modern and scientific methods of flourmaking Get our prices on Mfflztuff, Hay and Grain. Phono your orders and we will deliver it Price Commission Co. South Ninth Street. Price. Utah. The American people l eleven years each week at the movies. And that's not all they get rid of there. DEEDS NOT PROMISES ! VOTE the democratic ticket (Political AdvertiFement) |