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Show flESUiVS RATES ' aiM'Uy advertising n inch per n (Lk hr tlx nmnik-t- on PR rJ-STi- rates iM iue. timu-aii- d county agents a lmvi ing hi'ld iu Chicago on lUvenihiT 2d, This work a- - first be- j gun lilieci; years ago in the South by a man named Seaman iu or-th r in belli r I'il:ibal hc bol'wceiil in enituii. The jibm at adopted by eon-gie- ss w lieu it psused the Sum h Lever ad. No other work has reached euelt proportions as this as it now Week Eliding December 25, 1925 tom-ln-a vc:y la i go iiuml-- r of counties in every state m the uuion. ad-?X- r the auto. Give me the girL the rest to the undertaker. Volume 12, Number 31 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Idrt T bf ?f t Service. ja. Special ?? ? T ?T t $T tf car. BYPRODUCT COKE ON THE INCREASE. Production of byproduct coke during the month of November amounted to 3,557,000 net tons, reported by the operators of 155,000 or 4.6 per cent, compared with the preced-xmtNovember being a thirty days month the daily output ised to 118,576 tons, a gain of 8828 or 8 per cent, compared the October rate. The coke plants operated at about 88 per if capacity. With the inclusion of the new one at Troy, N. id the rebuilt plant at Chester, Pa., the total number of by-i-ct plants now in existence is eighty and of which seventy-wer-e active during the month. The current rate is the high-- i record for any month. Output of coke pigiron for the thirty in November was 3,015,482 gross tons or 100,516 per day, as ired with 3,023,370 tons or 97,528 for the thirty-on- e days in ter. This is the first time the daily rate has exceeded a fed thousand tons per day since last April. A year ago the nber production was 2,509,673. Beehive coke production con-- i to increase during November, the total being estimated at 000 net tons, an increase of 207,000 or 20.6 per cent, compar-t- h October. Production of all coke amounted to 4,770,000 the byproduct plants contributing 75 per cent and the beehive h. l A:i'an. V or ending with December 12th the production of (estimated) in Utah and Washington is given as wisand tons. For the calendar year to date 185,000. Colo-NeMexico, respectively, six thousand and 230,000. w ton gets busy Measure For Public Build-I- n Here At Price. TSGTOnTd. tali a, Dee. 21. Don B. Colton today bill authorizing an ap-jj- 0 of $750,000 for the pur- - Mutable lite and erection federal building at Ogden mmodation oftfhe postof-;'- f public road and other offices in Ogden. He also f tilli toS.Si authorizing a site to a Ephraim, and another of 350,000 for a build- -' The indications i i public building ,rPissedReneral this aeaaion will be a imilar to that which the selection receve buildinga will U tte secretary of the treas-I- n sion, and that lle introduced at ,17 tcompliah nothing, and eongNaamen will have to Kkt for recognition be--a JL embers. vln.et The hem? edopted with a ujlding bill out of daag 5ce p tt yf fear nnnyde Post SXPaLISio.n for the "nnani' I f; Sfifr stS ken" 0f legislation. E" JnS Elm ; (re- - to" Hnemeyer, eeeond vice; 52J5T,'ng, sergeant T.k historian, and iSssrv ting earit remain- - the neit January. edtt MARRIAGE OF POPULAR YOUNG COUPLE LAST EVENING pn-pert- i ) 1 f t!.e Ih 1111.1, l!:i e..1;i ds iiu r (V i' ;i - .ivrnin- -i ilu- I'n,, :,m jtaiill ,j nl;:im-i!101'. i;tt n jiart tif a plan to fnvi-kh "ii! mill I,, turn tin fml i s over to the "niitiv Miimri it was Not because it is an honored custom, but because of the sincerity of our appreciation, we take this opportunity to thank our patrons for the part they have played in our business prosperity for the past twelve months and we wish every one a good old Merry Christmas and a Happy New r iliai-gc- Year. Monday. When about six miles from their home the neckyoke of the wagon broke, letting the tongue of the vehicle fall and strike against the hones legs. The animals, becoming frightened, immediately dashed down the road at a wild gallop. Shaw, who was driving, attempted to stop the team, but could not. After continuing for nearly a mile, Mrs. Housekeeper attempted to go to the young mans assistance. Then it was that a sudden turn in the road overturned the wagon and threw the occupants heavily to the ground. The two girls and Shaw, although dazed, made their way to Mrs. Housekeeper, who was unconsious from a blow on the head in the fall, and died soon afterwards. Besides the two young ladies who were with her at the time of her death, Mrs. Housekeeper is survived by her husband, who is working up at Gibson mine, and three children, Fred, aged 14, Lucille, aged 10, and Jack, aged 7 years. Funeral services were held yesterday (Thursday) from the Carbon Stake tabernacle. Burial was at City cemetery under the direction of Wal lace & Harmon. areiuiiitiu- - ln-,- s li'ilax ill Mipn-iTin n was inade hi (iu.liivu lingers, rniui-m-- I for iniimritv st.xkltolili'rs nf tin M Denver uml liiu (iminle, wIium $12110,01 Ml.l 100 Imie hi'i'i. -- rn'iil-ng many llitiii-and.'!l;:r li. i:t !i ill Mpi'lviug rO-i- ir i':.i wet tiuid, ,1, 'tiling anil fhelt.'c, lint tin- Inirdi'l! I., is too i f,,r The cry !. licvoud the Unitfir i l a rr:i, ed M Workers. The uiiivVntiiig ill tit u.li of the Niilliiui-iiosi'utni-- lnwiii-i- l their nnd llu-i- r indifference to the public welfare and to public necessity, fail to amuse the generous of organized piril .if the luciiihrr.-diilabor. 'Il seems t lie the purpose of the iNratnrs to crush slid destroy the pirit of organization mimug the mine workirs, to ruthlessly starve them into KuhiuisMoii, a ml to tyrannically dictate the terms and conditions under which their eimdoyes shall live. Kvcry iistiniiul and international union, state, city coni ml body, the thirty-fiv- e thousand locul unions and the rank and file should give generous! v. I ! The marriage of Miss Mary Virginia MacKnight, daughter of Postmaster and Mrs. J. F. MacKnight, and Frederick Winkenwerder, son of Mr. am Mrs. C. F. Winkenwerder, representative of the George A Lowe company, was solemn.id at the home of the groom a parents on North Sixth stree at 9 oclock Christmas eve. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. Free-le-n Johnson of the Price Community ehurcli, only the immediate families being presents The bride was beauti-fullgowned and carried brides roses and violets, and was given away by her father. Arthur N. Smith and Ha MacKnight were best men for the groom and Mrs. Helen W. Smith was best lady. A delicious luncheon was served after the wedding by Mrs. Winkenwerder, and a wedding dinner LOCAL MAN WINS THE FOURTH later by Mrs. J. F. MacKnight at the PLACE IN CONTEST latter home for the couple on Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs. Winken Floyd Kelly, manager of the Maywerder will be at home after January tag Shop at Price, has received word from the home office of the company 1st it 366 North Ninth street that he is one of the winners of Benjamin Franklin Caffey, postmas- sales contest recently held between the ter at Snnnyside, sends The Sun this managers of the twenty retail stores one via Uncle Bert Martin: It is operated in this territory. He holds reported that one of the fastidious fourth position in the list of winners, newly married ladies of Denver, Colo., having sold 130 per eent of the quota kneads bread with her gloves on. This set for him. This winning entitles incident may be somewhat peculiar Kelly to a trip to the national sales but there are others. The editor o; ' convention at the factory in Newton, this paper needs bread with his shoes la., with all expenses paid. This will on; he needs bread with his shirt on. be held December 28th, 29th and 30th. he needs bread with bis pants on, and, It is expected there will be over five unless some of the delinquent sub- hundred in attendance from all secscribers pony up before long he wil tions of the country. The local managneed bread without a darn thing on er baa been highly complimented on and thia is no Garden of Eden in the the very credible showing he has made winter time. here. ; the l!i, l Cl';lliilt rmieei-n MRS. HOUSEKEEPER IS KILLED IN TEAM RUNAWAY the week Oil oi.i-- 'lil,-v- jNgMgMjMS coke Sale of 1 ! ?? total is within six thousand tons last It. i Mrs. Clarira Housekeeper, aged 46 years and the wife of Theodore B. Housekeeper of Nine Mile, was almost instantly killed last Sunday afternoon while on her way to Price with a party driving in a wagon. The accident miles out occurred about twenty-fiv- e of here on the road to Myton. Mrs. Houwkeper and two of her daughters, its associated with iron furnaces, and 604,000 tons or 17 per Fern 18, Jennie 16, and Lee Shaw, all we made at merchant or other plants. The total amount of Nine Mile, were on their way to consumed in both beehive and byproduct plants amounted this city, where young Shaw and the 1000 tons, 5,111,000 being by the byproduct and 1,913,000 older girl were to hare been married Kehives. This November monthly average for 1923. Vlli !v. XI-.- capital siocl, ,.f I'.,. l t.,h t ty CONFINED TO TWO EASTERN STATES, of put beehive during the week ended December 12th is esti at 291,000 net tons, a decrease of seven thousand or 2.3 per sompared with the preceding week. This was confined to tfvania and West Virginia. Compared with the correspond-- k of 1924 the week of December 12th shows an increase of HMfiJhousand tons or 51.6 per cent. Total output during hudalar td'date is now 9,946,000, 9.8 per cent more than the corresponding time of 1924. Of the total output of by--ct during November, 2,953,000 tons or 83 per cent were made coiimn :! ?? ?y ?y mainder. l & v tv f? tt ? t tt tty ? tt? Production of bituminous WASHINGTON, December 12th the country with seven days ending during the mines is estimated coked at the and that lignite deludingnet thousand over the re- -i tons, a gain of thirty-on- e 298,000 week. The average daily rate of figures for the preceding two weeks in December has first the maintained during & November this the with 2,148,000. Compared ipproximately Ljents a gain of five thousand tons a day. Total output during qfrndar year to December 12th is 493,676,000 net tons. This nroximately 38,833,000 or 8.5 per cent more than during the 'period of last year. For the week ended December 5th the igTdaily output of bituminous in Utah was 18,000 tons as ured with 19,500 for the same time last year. Total produced bituminous during November last totaled 50,780,000 net i figure within two millions of that recorded for November, a year of great activity. During November, 1925, there were t holidays which were partially observed at the soft mines, number of normal working days totaling approximately 23.7 in October. The average output per work-K- y pinst twenty-seve- n amounted to 2,143,000 tons. Compared with the daily rate tober and September this shows increases of 8.8 and 16.3 per It is estimated that during the month of No-ie- r respectively. 151,000 net tons of anthracite were produced. Output of racite for the week of December 12th based on reports re--d is estimated at sixty-fou- r from the principal carriers and tons, an increase of two thousand over the preceding Total during.the calendar year to date is now 62,009,000 27.8 per cent less than during the corresponding period of D. C., Dec. 21. crease aiii-iMt-i- I Fmution inch per d additional. No display for the first (front) i reader bn twnty-fi- N per line an ieeue. n Hvrr twu I bn or iiii agai'.-- t tin former ilireetnr 1 the road lias been under way mure thau a week. lingers made his assert inn after Dt-t11. Kahn of the hanking firm of Knlin, Loch 4 Co. bad testified that the stock of the Ctuli Fuel cmn)iaiiv was a vital factor in the plans, sent out in 10Jll anil 10'J4 liv his hnuking-musfor the financial reorganization of the railroad. These plans or reorganization had actually lteen carried out, Kahn Raid, and the Denver and liio Grande Western is now being operated in nreonlmire with the provis- GIFTS FOR WIDOWS AND THE ions of those plans. The earnings of CHILDREN PLANNED Hie fuel eoiiiianv over the eight years WILKKSKAKKE, Ia., Dee. 20. Itcriod from 191.1 to 19'J1 had liccn Riieh that the average annual dividend Santa Claus is nut to o verbs ik the had been in excess of $70,11110, Kalin thousands of children in the anthracite coal fields nf Pennsylvania, whose testified. He denied emphatically that his fathers are on strike. No earnings have hankinghouse had taken over any of come into the Imnies of thousands of the Gould holdings in the Missuvri la miners since Septenilier 1st, last, when thousand eifie when it began to dominate the a hundred ami fifty-eigh- t financial policy of the road in 1915, men and lmy slop;Md wink. Plans are and denied that he knew t!i-i- l all of being made by those in more fortunate the Gould holdings in the mad had circumstances, however, to make the been sold before the ten stockholders Yiilclide season as happy aa possible, exist. Throughmeeting iu 1915, when a proxy com where suffering may five hundred square miles of out the direct a new elected of lmard mjttee the hard coal fields eoinniiinity Christ ors. I know nothing at all about the tnas trees and decorated trees in many sale of the Gould stock at that time," homes will shine. In Scranton, Mayor John T. Durkan Kalin said, "and 1 know nothing alsiut it now excel it what I hear at has arranged with cliHritahle organithis trial. In 1914, although we were zations to have community trees in no longer for the road, the financial Reetioua nf the city wjicre children of situation came to aueh a slate that we the miners may gather and make merrealized that under the ambitious fi- ry. These will lie placed at central nancial program outlined by Gould points and sacial services will tie held disaster was coming to the holders of around them Christ man and during the following week. Hazellon, the renter the road a securities. We were unable to convince him nf the eoal fields, and Wilkesliarre that his method waa unsound, and we also, will have illuminated trees. Keimrts from Lansford in Panther felt that it waa time to place the mad under the rontml of men of more con- Creek Valley indieate that the Lehirh Mrs. Lizzie McGowan and her fam- servative tendencies. Valley Coal and Navagation conijMiny, ily moved from Famham to Helper. through its field officials, will join J. W. Loofbourow of Price spent MISTRIAL COMES ABOUT AS TO with civie organizations in bringing cheer into the homes of many of its THE CORONANDO CASE the holidays with his family in Rale workers who are on strike. In the Lake City. FORT SMITH, Ark., Dee. 21. A llazelton ngion, Mrs. Sophia G. Coze, Miss Anna Leiter of Price went to mistrial resulted in the third trial of widow of Ecklcy B. Coxc, pioneer eoal Dragon for a visit with her sister, the Coronando Coal company a ofierator, will distribute Christmas Mrs. Arthur J. Lee. anti-truconsecutive suit against District gifts for the forty-eight- h Bob Fitzsimmons was knocked out 21, United Mine Workers of America, year among forty thousand children Phila- local unions and individuals, when the and hundreds of adults. in the thirteenth round by delphia Jack O'Brien at Ban Fran jury failed to reach an agreement toResidents of Drifton, Ecklcy, Beacisco. hours of de- ver Meadow, Stockton, Old Buck day. After seventy-tw- o Arthur E. Gibson returned to Dra- liberation the jury reported that it Mountain, Tomhtoken, Derringer, Ongon after a visit with his family at was still in a deadlock and was dis- eida and Gowen will be remembered. Bunnyside. He was working as a tele- charged. Judge Frank A. Yuumans Each guest at the middle coal field graph operator and a clerk for the probably will reset the case. Affcr house will receive a gift and Uintah railway. eleven years and three months in the hills go to four hundred niincn William Shields of Bunnyside and federal courts the rase is again on the widows in the district Miss Sarah Ann Wilcox were married docket for trial before a jury. Three at the home of the bride s mother, juries have heard the testimony. The SON Or GOULD TELLS ABOUT Mrs. Elizalietli Wilcox, in Price. Bish- first, in 1917, brought in a verdict for FATHER'S LOSS the plaintiffs for $20,000 actual damop E. S. Horsley officiated. NEW YORK, Doc. 21. The late ages. Train auditors were being broken in The judgment was reversed by the George J. Oould lost $4,500,090 in the on the Rio Grande Western. Their supreme court of the United States on sale of railroad securities belonging to work was the collecting of tickets, the grounds that a conspiracy to re- himself and the Gould estate in handlwhieh gave the conductors all their strain interstate commerce had not ing the affairs of the Denver and Rio time for looking out for orders. been proved. The second jury, in 1921, Grande and Missouri Pacific, his son, The Utah Fuel company was storing was given no opportunity to decide Kingdon Gould, revealed when he teswas instructed to return tified in superior court today in the large quantities of coke at Sunnyside, the ease, hut for the defendants. That, suit brought by minority stockholders verdict it being the intention to have a big reversed so far as it concern- of the Denver and Kin Grande for an was too, At use. for stock in reserve future local unions and indi- accounting. ed the 'district, that time there were thirty thousand ease has been Coronado The viduals. Borne 150,000 shares of Missouri Parailthe of end south tons along the 1914. since September, cific stock were unloaded, Kingdon pending road yards over there. The receiver of the Coronado and Gould said, by his father before the E. L. Carpenter and Frank N. Cam- companies commonly known as the Gould board of directors was deposeron, formerly with the Utah Fuel Marhe-Denma- n brought the ed in 1915. syndicate company, went to New Mexico. The suit against the international, district Do you know where the stock was former was to become general mana- locals and aliout two hundml individ- soldi Abraham Benedict, counsel for ger of a big coni and coke company uals, charging that proTertits in the the minority stockholder , asked. and the latter general superintendent Hartford Valley belonging to the Yes, I do. It was sold to Wall labor in of the properties. been had destroyed street. I helped father in executing plaintiffh summer of 1914, snd some of the orders. the in troubles who was working Smith, Wesley from a Subsequently he testified that the with a surveying party extending the that the destruction resulted anti- shares bad been disposed of in small the of violation in Grande Rio conspiracy the of branch Bingham com- lots to avoid upsetting the market. Western to the new plant of the Am- trust act t n prevent interstate coal. in merce erican Smelting and Refining company, spent Christmas with his aunt, FEDERATION HEAD STANDS BY OPERATORS REFUSE THE FLAN OP MAYOR DURKAN Mrs. Sarah V. Crockett in Price. o e, Twenty Years Ago This Present Week st five-dol-l- ar non-unio- David of some J. Sharp was working a force fifteen men np near Helper in opening up several coal properties. Among these was the Sheya mine. The develonment was under the direction of James A. Harrison, a former employe of the Utah Fuel company. Comilaints were coming to this ab(The Sun) office concerning the ominable mail service by way of the Uintah railroad and the star routes from the end of that line since the abandonment of the Price etage and the mail contract which went with it Strong aa we are for the feminine equality we hate to tee a woman spit STRIKING MINERS WASHINGTON, D. C., Dee. 20. Declaring the attitude of the anthraa cite coal operators constitutes challenge to the membership of the American Federation of Labor, President William F. Green today apto all organized labor in Ampealed to the aid of the anthracome erica to Immedcite miners now on strike. committees of by all iate appointment central labor bodies to take eharge of the campaign to raise funds for relief work in the anthracite fields was urged by Green. "The United Mine Workers of Am the labor leader explained. erica, SCRANTON, Pa., Dee. 21. Mayor John T. Durkan, chairman of the committee of executives endeavoring to arrange a conference here tomorrow between anthracite operators and tho miners officials, tonight temporarily abandoned hope of such a meeting: The mayor in a telegram to John la Lewis, interactional president of the union, said the operators hare to meet under the provisions outlined in todays call for a conference. It would be useless, therefore, to make the trip.' In announcing hia telegram to Iwm do-clin- ed (Continued Oa Pace Eifkt) a |