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Show jpyx tfSSik1 19. i25 THE BPS, PRICE. UTAH EVERY FRIDAY. T Coals For the Ran August 12th and 14th, inclusive, the people of the Uintah Basin are to liul 1 their third annual industrial and al convention at the former military lost of Fort Duchesne. In view of the recent interest in the Basin the celebration this year is expected n assume greater importance than before and the folks of the northeast counties are doubling their energies. Cooperating in the celebration will be Utah Agricultural college, the University of Utah, Brighaui Young University, state officials and private enterprises, all interested in developing the backlaud of Utah. The Busin industrial convention is unique. First, because it is voluntary. It is self and has had little money left in tlie treasury after the first and second conventions. Second, it has just growed up naturally because there was a big demand for it. Where else does such a large uumlier of peo-pie do anything of such importance and ay for it literally themselves and yet charge no tuition, no admission f It is estimated that about twenty-two thousand whites and a thousand Indians will gather for the three daya. Fully thirty trained specialists will conduct classes in many different subjects j attaining to the' home and farm, including live stock and mineral wealth. Foremost Utahns and men from other states will make short talks to the assembly. The slogan of the convention is Know the Problem asri-eultur- sup-wrti- Make it a point to keep an ample supply of AXll it is economical and saves a lot of trouble and time. Short Shrift Before Our Higher Court WASHINGTON, D. C, June 15. The ever increasing army of violators of the federal laws who apied to the United States supreme court, contesting the proprieties of lower court procedure aud the validity of the Volstead act, the customs laws, 1 lie statute and the laws prohibiting trausHrtatiou of women for immoral purposes, stolen automobiles and pruerty iu interstate c unnerve get short shrift iu tbe high tribunal Hundreds of men apiieal to the court at every annual term, and the result, with a very few exceptions, is merely a series of affirmations of the constitutionality of the laws. The n.cn, after a respite of a few months, find they must serve their terms in prison, These federal laws, which, incident ally, have been one of the principal causes of the tremendous cron ding of the euurt's docket, were so well constructed that practically no damage has been done to them by th- Itarrage of the Basin Better. NEW POLICY, THIS Ask Your Dealer Manager Bates Telia of Latest Ideas of Stndebaker People. UTAH FUEL CO. Salt Lake City Judge Building An announcement is made this week rom South Bend, I ml. through the Western Auto company of Price that Studebaker is discontinuing the custom of presenting a new line of each year. Instead of bringing cars dramatically up to date once in twelve mouths, this company to keep them so all the time, idding improvements and refinements from time to time as the merit of such betterments is proved to the satisfaction of its engineering department, which the corporation points out is maintained at a cost of a half mil-io- n dollars annually, says Manager lates of the Price agency. Studebaker believes that this policy icnefits present owners. It ia also the elief of this concern that the policy of no yearly models enablea purchasers of new ears to obtain those that are alwaya modern without the necessity of waiting for the annual changes and also the danger of their new cars becoming obsolete. The dramatic success of the present ine ia one reason for this important change. During the first five months of 1925, dealers delivered 40 per cent more ears to buyers than during the same period in 1924. On May 31st the .end of the period referred to Studebaker dealers hsd only half as many ears in stock as on the same date last year. auto-mjobil- pro-Mis- Your Or Sell ! who on March 18. 1920, made liumestrad No. U190U1 for 8Vfc. Sec. 25: 8EV. Sec. 2U; EH. See. 35, Tap. 13 South, Uance 7 East, Salt Lake meridian, ha filed notice of intention to make three-yea- r proof to establish claim to the land above described before the clerk of the district court at Price, Utah, on the 15th dey of July, 1925. Claimant narnee as witnesses Carlos Gunderson of Price, Utah, Gust Nicolodeinos of Csstlo Gate, Utah, llarry Mehleres of Price. Utah, and Gust Bools of Castle Gate, Utah. ELI F. TAYLOB, Register. First pub., June 5; last July A 1925 Au- - Entry taurine season at hand many antur cars arc nuking plan in aril their auto. In either caaa tied columns offer n market unis this .ret ion. If yon have ht hum line and drain on of s a Mnall elamiified adver--I Iks Sun will nut you in touch he PKOBATB ANI) GUARDIANSHIP Notices Consult County Clerk Or Signers For Further Information, d hasten Utah. You eaa sell drench its columns for only a Our cisnaifird ads hava scored NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE of De metrics Q. Karosis, Also Known Hrly not you? As James Karosis, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 125 South Main street. Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 22d day of July, A. D., 192A COLUMIhoae BIA TRUST COMPANY, Administrator PRICE, UTAH of the Estate of Demetrioo G. Karosis, Also Knows At James Karosis, Deceasuncommon for a man to tell ed. D. B. Hempstead, Attorney For Said would wait a million yean Estate. First pub May 22; last June 19, 1296. but he never does. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE uhe gets better looking of Antonio Peretti, Also Known As m you see her and she will Tony Peretti, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the unMet you often. dersigned at Price, Utah, on or before the 17th day of August. A. I)., 1925. JOHN tike notick OIAOOLETTO, Administrator of the Estah, April 27. 1925. To tho tate of Antonio Peretti, Also Known As Mcutsrs, Administrators and Tony Peretti, Deceased. Henry Ruggeri, Heber f Richards, Deceased, Attorney For Administrator. : You an First Tylur, Deceased pub.. June 12; lust July 3, 1925. itified that 1 ha vs dur-m- r with hundred of propertive The Sun is road everywhere rljr t I halt lake SCOUTS ACTIVE Helper Lada and Legion to Celebrate the Glorious Fourth. es ea The American Legion, with the Helper Chamber of Commerce, ia completing arrangements for the Fourth of July celebration at that town. Necessary funds have been raised and it ia expected that the program will be completed with the next few days. Preliminary arrangements were recently diseuMed at a meeting of the Boy Kcouts, who will also conduct a program. As fifteen new ones were recently -- ranted membership it is hoped to hare eighteen uniformed at the celebration. Those issued Scout membership cards are Victor Bonaeci, z, Fred Bosone, Allen Carter, Paul Bruce Moffitt, Vernon Hunter, Carroll Gease, William Guaranti, Edward Litizzette, Robert Ossana, John Despite the faet that the factories Redd, Joe Riley, William Kos, John in South Bend, Detroit end Wnlker-vill- e end Ontario are operating at caVieta and Alfred Rich In addition to granting the awards a Flag Day pacity, orders for Stndebaker ears are program was carried out at a meeting, far in exeees of production. including the giving of the history of INCOME' TAX QUOTA IS the flag and a talk by Scoutmaster UTAHS RUNNING HIGH HOW Emil Nyman on better citizenship. Income tax collections for the district of Utah on the second installEXPERTS ON TROUBLE ment payable last Monday amounted to slightly over five hundred thouWin look up and repair your tlectri sand dollars. AU payments delinquent cal difficulties at our shop. The re- now will be subject to the prescribed cently installed testing board helps us penalties. The collections for the secand saves your time, and fives you ond quarter this year are below those moat efficient service at reasonable of the corresponding period last year. rates. This is accounted for by the reduced rates in effect and the fact that more taxes were paid in full on the first installment this year than last. Blanks for the capital stock blank returns, due from all corporations on June 2d, were mailed Monday last by the internal revenue office up at Salt Lake City. Del-pia- ut 12,3,4 ? serr-uoiu- -e apm-firutioii- H 'urcr,w.bich J"r. I auti-nan-ort- ic Jk of attacks UHn their The attitude if the high court the engrossing subject of the prohih tion act was expressed the ot her uay bv Chief Justice Taft to an attorney for a man convicted under the national prohibition law. This rase involves a new question of the Volstead law, upon which this court has not ruled, the attorney declared in asking that the case be ad vanred fur argument at the earliest The rhief justice jsissihle moment. smiled broadly and told the young attorney ; It will be a novel ease indeed if it does wliut yon say. In the term of court starting lrst November and ended this week more than a hundred liquor law violators apjM'aled unsuccessfully for reviews n sucof their rases. A bare ceeded in convincing the eourt theirs Considerwere worth an argument. able attention was attracted to the court's refusal to grant reviews to more than a dozen of the fifty-fiv- e men convicted in the Gary, Ind., liquor conspiracy case, in which the mayor and other prominent officials are now serving terms in Atlanta federal prison. Every angle of prohibition enforcement is attacked in the suits. Decisions affecting policy of prohibition enforcement made bv the eourt this term included : First Approved the stopping and searching of automobiles for liquor upon reasonable belief without warrants. Two Approved a Hew Jersey law requiring procurement of a license to sell liquor, over the argument that the Volstead act rendered void all licensing acts. Third Commended the tacties of zzy Einstein and Moe Smith, famous STew York liquor sleuths, in conducting raids, in the course of an opinion validating a conviction and seizure of iquor made by them. Fourth Denied a review of the conviction of a man whose person was iquor. half-doze- -- than- Georgia state prohibition enforcement code which forbids even the possession of liquor in the home. Sixth Denied two former prohibi-to- n agents of their eonviction for extortion of money from an illicit liquor seller. Seventh Upheld a eonviction made under the 1922 tariff act for attempting to smuggle liquor into a country. In addition to these there were many cases charging that the men convicted had keen deprived of their constitutional rights, either by allegedly. illegal search and seizure, improper indictments, defects in court procedure, but every one failed. The older federal criminal laws, including those involving the uses of the mail to defraud or sending obscene matter, also are involved in a few eases, but these appeals mostly are based on alleged defects in the indirtinent or the eourt procedure. Evidence that the court views the Harrison law prohibiting sale or importation of drags for illegal uses as elastic was given in a scries of decisions. In one it was held that the possession of opium is sufficient evidence for conviction, but in another a physician was granted a review of a conviction on the plea that his administration of cocaine to a dnn addict in good faith. was made Volstead l FLOUR Iths th.VT of the prouf to establish described before t Price, ot July, 1925. 8ilM 1ow Stowell of f Helper, ,Un 71k,J,rl nsm., dL fij .ton Jtsh? fjL,: Inin iTL I :Aj;u'ft&torEwdl uuh U-!!.12; fjt u"t June For t-- of 'tLe V,S at I? iftm 10, 192A 'Tlb H year animals. Both Wo deliver. cost. Farmers Mill and Elevator Company DK- - torior. United States Oity, Utah, .'"tli Joufl For your family Pride Fries Valley made right her Feed for andas good aa the best. these at low e Is hereby given f Helper, Utah, J. W ILBUR M RNTIAM Manager. sity at Baltimore, Md., when the new Bines Page school of international relations, a pioneer in its line, begins its formal existance at the opening of the next fall term. Preparations now under way are concerned mostly with the rohlems of faculty and curriculum. The physical requirements sre of secondary importance, as the establishment of the school will involve no plant additions in the shane of new buildings for the immediate future at least Motor Car Service Company Walter Astons Jensen, Mgr. Fhtme No, 836 Price; Utah BIDS ARE ASKED Letters are being sent out by tho Utah State Fair association to parties interested, informing them Uiat bids for concessions will be recciyet st any time. Additional information regarding these can he had by calling or writing the association at the capi- British posts xe stamps have been printed by four different private firms since announcement cards. Tho Sun. 1839. tal building. Birth Properties At Standardvtlle, Utah No Dust , No Ashes, No Clinkers . Is Unexcelled For Storage Purposes . ir SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH General Offices Ninth Floor Kearna Bldg. - expanded Hiding July L 1924, 12 NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE endian, one hundred dollars ia of Marghertt Guarienti, Deceased. mpror.menu upon each of the Creditors will present claims with vouchMwd placer mining claims ers to the undersigned at lleliier. Utah, the Tidwell-RideoMining dny of August, A. larbon county, slate of Utah, on or before the 17th GUARIENTI. Ad'rode Nos. 4, 5, ti, 7, Asphalt D., 1925. EUGENE of the Estate of Marghertt ministrator 9, Carbon No. 1, 2, 3, Henry Ruggeri, AtIt U, I'stwou No. A Mabel Noa. GuHrienti, Iieceased. Administrator. For KiiIkc Noa. and Oil torney First pub., June 12: Ust July 3. 192o. mining claims. Said placer ins are of record in the office SEAL-E TO CONTRACTORS W recorder of Carbon county NOTIC will be received and bid rd proposals Said wen office of the city recorder of Price, rer to bold expenditure! said claims under at tbe until 5 oclock p. in., July 2, A. Dm Ulsh, Sec. 2321 of the Revised construction of u cement the for 1925, States and the concrete curb and gutter in Unrb and ,?. o' V"-r"J. approved January Gutter District No. 2. in and uOT the HOPPERS DOING MUCH DAMAGE M August 24, 1921, concerning st reels of Price. TO THE SOUTHEAST w upon mining claims, being following described miles bulb on 1 curb and reguired to hold Mid placer A cement street from gutter north the proierty Certain sections of Grand and San the year ending July 1, of Ninth the south line of Main or "I street to north counties are being attacked by nf'J n,ridi- - And if within line line Juan the from of "J" street, and tnm seventeen hundred acres personal 709 feet north of line a to j street grasshoppers, of J" or from expiration of in the first and six hundred in the line of K street, all according north the 'uulr? l,ublintion hereof you to 111? ilan?, profile?, fir? win?? and latter being in possession of the pests. ontribul your portion f the city on filu in lli uffn a Commissioner of Agriculture Harden to . Instructions Irii-eUtah. of ' in the recorder stiecifunlion. ana r.ii ? Bennion has sent J. E. Palmer, forplans, profiles ibe proiierty of the bidders, with form "f ,,,,ntr5t; mer agricultural insjieetor for Carlton together drawings, who has made obtained at the office of be may ttu?. i"Vd,lur by county, to the region. He will aid in terms of upon deposit ofUvetbjllars.Hy lnenl,nent thereto. recorder l wiping out the 7 tests. He has an ample BEEMEN ARE GRANTED TIME Ioiin.-iT if.1! HARDS. Edward D. Order of the CitySMITH. City ri.VJItob. TO PROCURE LICENSES supply of poison with which to eradi ARTHUR N. lUh. Hk Msv SERVICE Haled June 4. 1!- -.. BATTERY cate hem. The two points where they (Heal) I!1- -. 29. July 81, 1925. June Inst done away with the First pub.. June 5: Beekeepers delinquent in payment Of our asm old high standard which have practically tfJ?S 1 UltLI CATION DK- crops arc the worst afflicted in the of license fees have been granted an zs be superior to come recognized has nor. United States extension of time to July 1st in which A canoe is something you paildle 'iw history Af the countv. other in this locality. irrw"11: Uty, Uuh, alone, and when you dont, it gener- to any to make aymeuts to the state board Storil0, inf.1. herrb7 thot little outward change will be of agriculture. The law requires the Wo Save You Trouble Very upsets. ally l'cST riier, Luh. who on Wo Save You Honey. in evidence at Johns Hopkins Univer- annual registration with the stile i In Carbon County and Mined Shipped Everywhere CLEAR CREEK and CASTLE GATE coals are fine for the range. They are clean, give a hot, quick flame, cause little smoke and leave but little ash. on hand always PAGE SEVEN board of agriculture on or before April 1st and levies a fee of a dollar for each colony registered. Failure to comply renders the responsible party to a misdemeanor charge. Notices s!t?t out by Harden Bennion, state commissioner of agriculture, advise beekeepers to comply with the requirements of the law to avoid unnecessary expense and unpleasnniners. See Europe This Summer zn i 8160.00 Now York to XJverpool and excursion. return, third-claTicket good one year. 8160.00 New York to Liverpool and ss third class excursion ticket Good returnable one year return, -- from date of zale. 8160.00 New York to XJverpool and Ticket good return, third-clasone year. s. c 3 H. C. SMITH, Agent County Clerk's Office, Price, Utah Largest Producers of Domestic Coal Xn Utah." Producing tho Famous KING BLACK HAWK HIAWATHA and PANTHER COALS Handled Xn Pries By C,H.Steten$oii Lumber Co. E Seven per cent first mortgage bonds second by business and other Income producing property in Utah. Denominations 8100.00 to 81000.00. All kinds of insurance. Real estate come real bargains in farms near Duchesne. G. E. NELMS, Mgr. 321 Electric Bldg. Phone 354 PRICE, UTAH Mines and ahips from the famous Union Psdfie bituminous veins of Pleasant Valley la the Carbon district Nous hotter for stove, range, grate; furnace or manufacturing plant Tho equal of any and superior to many for storage. Ones tried always insisted upon. Get prices from tho general offices and sales agency, Walker Bank Building. Salt Lake City, Utah The recent sharp rise in crude ber has resulted in the announcement of increases ranging from 5 to 10 per He first rubber road was laid ia cent in prices of auto tires by a num- don, Eng., in 1913 and ia still in manufacturers. of ber leading condition. rub- Lon- good |