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Show THE SUN. PRICE, PAGE EIGHT FORTY-SI- X December, next. John K. Hurt was named a deputy p sheriff and motorcycle officer at and Harry It. Marsh,. a deputy Ito-lap- Kach is to serve without pay. The latter succeeds George ltieliards, sheriff. FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1928 IN ALL Equal Number of Girls and Boya Each Soon to Graduate. Carlton county a roiiimissioncrs all three of them being present met in regular session lanl Monday ami worked through most of the day Tuesday. A committee from the Price ( handier wailed on them and askof ed for an appropriation to advertise this section of the conn try in the Denver and lliu Grande Western's employ magazine, mure particularly the land for colonization under the local irrigation district. Five hundred dollars was given, hut this will not be nid until taxes begin to come along FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY Hurrah! Hurrah! One of the largest in the TELEGRAMS ARE OUT TO DEAD MANS RELATIVES history of the Curbon high school will be graduated from the institution May William Heed, belter known to his 20th next. Forty-si- x students, friends ami his close acquaintances as thirteen town and camps Bill, passed away at the county in- of the county, will receive diplomas. firmary at Price last Monday evening Price leads with the highest number, after being there. about two weeks, twenty-onwhile Sunnyside is second from a general breaking down of his with six and Helper ami Scofield next health, lie was a Missourian and was with four HHch. The program fur the about 07 years of age. I(e was born exercises will be aiiiiouneed soon lv near Fayette in Howard county of Prof. G. J. Peeves. There rirc twenty-thre- e that state, hut left there as a young hoys and a like number of girl. man and came to Pueblo, Colo., work- The latter are lamella Allertnand, ing in and about the smelters of that Krmn Anderson, Lucille Durtlctt, Marcity for several years. Later he drift- garet Draper, Hazel Gunderson, Besed to Montana and afterwards located sie Gibson, Jennie Holden, Leah at Murray. lie followed the same u Aliee loe, Johanna Madsen, put ion there. Deceased came to this Mareusen and Mae White from city almut fifteen months ago. Little Price; Martha Boren and Lola War-ntis known of him here as he did not Standurdville; Clara Clement and talk of himself and his affairs. He is Susan Mnulshy, Helper; Bessie Ilixon, lielievcd to have a brother (James) Sunnyside; Glenda Pickup and Ilea living at Fayette and a daughter, Mrs. Thorne, Spring Canyon; Agnes SnyKatie Smith, at Denver, Colo, The der, Altonah; Margaret West, Hiabody is at Flynn Funeral Home and is watha; Margaret Whittinghain, llains, awaiting word from these two rela- and Marie Iieddoes, Castle Gate. tives if they can he located. Telegrams The lioys include Pete Collombatto, have been sent them. Robert W. Croekett, Jr., Charles Fitzgerald, Craddock Gilinour, Willard DAIRYING EXPANDS Hannon, Claude Lee, Cecil Hills, Dean HUNTINGTON, March 9. While Keilaon and Ben lledd, Price; Joe on a business trip to Price Monday J. Bonacri and Lloyd Bryner, Helper; M. Kill puck and Grover Killpack visLawrence Crawford, John Deinman, ited a dairy herd there in prospect of Harold Fuller, Byron Hixon and purchasing cows for milk production Charles Kirkpatrick from Sunnyside; here, as this enterprise has increased Frank Kraynz, Eero Ilauhala, George substantially the past year. A local Pizza and Glen Davidson, Scofield; cream testing and buying station has Klvin Haycock, Spring Glen; William proved to be a great stimulant and Kenilworth, and Verlon Morgan, many families are getting into the Huff, Canyon. Spring business, the volume of which is very steadily increasing. Mayor P. E. John- NO FEES MAY BE CHARGED IS son aecoiii(ianied the Killpack brothTHE OPINION GIVEN ng e, Kill-pui-- oc-e- resigned. Joe Luuioni and Charles Carrera complained of a disease among live Block at and around Helper. Orson P. Madsen, county agent, was instructed to impure into the same and to en force the projier remedy. Clerk Smith was instructed to take up with A. E. Gibson at Gibson Mine the matter of renting a steainshovel from the county at fifteen dollars month. It is figured to improve the roads of the Gordon Creek seAion. Bonds front Fred C. Kimlier, constable at Winter Quarters, and O. E. Umber, justice at Kenilworth, approved. Also cigarette dealers at Columbia and at Mutual. It is to cost $575 for the countys audit this year. The contract was let to a firm at Salt Lake City. Clerk Smith was directed to advise K. J. Turner thnt the county is not as yet ready to give oil leases on lands it owns. The commissioners desire ers. more time in which to look into and consider the matter. Dont borrow The Sun. Subscribe. The clerk was directed to make up a list of the present indigent poor. 7-- A Application for aid of five dollars a month was made by FtP. Sweet; Mrs. The Hoard of County Commissioner of John Colzani, $10.04)? II. C. Wood, Count y of Carbon, State of Ctah, A Follows, towit : An Ordinance $10.00; Mr. Fannie 'Tlarper, $20.00, Providing For License For the Privilege and M. llelsten, $15.00. All of these of Engaging In Or Carrying On Any IliiNinesH Not Prohibited Hy Law. were granted. Licenses; Sunnyside town was allowed forty $HXUX) stock to $1500.04), $2.50 per dollars a month towards maintaining quarter year. $15tM).4X) stock to $54XX).flO, $5.00 per the county road from the corporate year. limits there on to Grassy Trail Creek. qusrter $5(KX).(K) stock and over, $7.50 per This may lie rescinded at any time. quarter year. itestaiirants, $.1(10 per quarter year. Two hundred and seventy-fiv- e dollinker, $2.50 per quarter year. lars was allowed Sheriff Dcming for Hotel, $3.00 per qunrter year. Butchers, $5.00 per quarter year. the purchase of a motorcycle. He Picture show, $7.50 tier quarter year. cut to down his oil and gas agrees Traveling shows, $2.00 each perform' ance. budget to this extent Cirrus, $25.00 each performance. There was a letter before the board PiMiltubles, one table $5.(X), each from F. N. Cameron, general manager table, $2.50 per quarter year. of the Utah Fuel company, and the Peddlers. $15.00 per quarter year. Soft drinks, $2.50 per quarter year. town officials of Castle Gato urging Dug tqx, male, $2.(K, and females, $5.00 that aome road money left over from ier year. Flour mill, $5.(X) per quarter year. the state highway paving ho ajicnt on Lumber yard. $7.50 per quarter year. an extension for the road where it Garage, $5.00 per qunrter year. Service station. $5.00 per quurter year. now terminates on through that town. Dance bull, $7.50 per quarter year. The matter is being considered.. General amusement hall, $7.50 per County Treasurer Rubinett was re- quarter year. Skating rick, $5.00 per quarter year. lieved of delinquent taxes for the past Solicitors or venders of medicine or venyear in the amounts of $3587.07 and ders of extracts, $5.00 per quarter year. This ordinance shall take effect on the $33G3.G8, resiwrtively. The nqsirts for 2!lh of March, A. D., 1020, said date February from the clerk, treasurer, being day not less than fifteen from the sheriff and recorder were approved date of its wssnge. PukAsI days by the board of county eomtnixsinncm of Carbon counand ordered filed. this i)ih day of Miireh, A. I).. 1020. Levies of the Price River Wnter ty JOHN A. MATHIS, Conservation district were received. A Clinirnmn of the Hoard of County Commissioners. copy was ordered sent to Emery counJohn A. Mulhis, Sam Aye doling ty. isHliicad. K. T. Hen nett. An ordinance was passed fixing the Voting Nay None. Attest: II. C. SMITH, charges against merchants, peddlers County Clerk. and others doing business in the county outside of the incnriornted cities State of Utah, County of Carbon so. and towns. It npears elsewhere in I. H. C. Smith, in and for Carbon this impression of The Sun. comity, Ctah, ilo hereby certify that the above and is a full, true and Following the allowance of nunier-ou- s correct copyforegoing of an ordinance entitled: bills and the rejection of several Au Ordinance Providing For License others adjournment was taken to in- For the Privilege of Engaging In Or On Any Husiness Not Prohibited spect t wo or three pieces of road. by I aw." passed by the hoard of county commissioners of Carbon county, Ctah, March I), A. D., 19214, as apjiears of recCarbon County Cook Book (revis- ord in my office. ed) and off the presses of The Sun In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto thia week is now being delivered to set my hnnd and affix the corporate seal of said county this 10th day of March, A. those who have placed their orders for 1)., copies. It is for sale at a dollar one thousand of them. See Mrs. George A. (Seal) Fausett at Price nr any one of the local swarm of Beehive Girls. Advt. County Clerk. ORDINANCE NO. 111 H Mer-elinn- ls nl t'ap-ryin- g -- Lu-eil- k, le z, The best time of the year SPRING. Nature calls those who indulge in out door SPORTS. We are distributors for the world famous line SPALDINGS Our Stock Is Complete Balls, Bats, Tennis Out- Discharge of all chattel mortgages y the county recorder should be done without pay, according to an opinion given on Tuesday last by Harvey II. iTluff, attorney general of the state. An inquiry on the matter was made by Ferdinand Erickson, attorney for Sevier, at Richfield, duffs reply: Chattel mortgages are not to be recorded, and Sec. 2522 to which you call my attention provides a fee of cents for releasing any intwenty-fiv- e strument on the margin of the record. Since there is no record of a chattel mortgage, the instrumnt being only filed and indexed, I do not believe there is any conflict between the provisions of said Sec. 2522 and Sec. 473, which latter specifically provides that a chattel mortgage shall be discharged by an entry by the mortgagee, his agent, assigns or legal representative on the margin of the index, which shall be attested by the recorder without fee. fits, Masks, Sweaters, Golf Outfits, Footballs, Suits and everything in the sporting line. For One Week Longer We are jjiving wholesale prices ll high school students on all SPALDING Sporting Gotids. In : to-a- STANDARD AND MIDWEST NOW HAVE CONFIDENCE Both the standard and the Midwest Oil coniany officials have great confidence in Utah as one of the coming oil producing regions of the country, CoL Rollers W. Stewart, chairman of the board of directors of the Standard of Indiana, told a gathering of representative Salt Lake City business men at a luncheon last Monday. Colonel Stewart and several others of his couqiany were ia Utah on a trip of and conference, and the luncheon wag given in their honor. He said that the purjmse of the trip was not in connection with the development of the Southeastern Utah oil field, but was principally to look, over the properties of the Utah Oil Refining. They left that night for Denver, Colo., together with John C. Howard, president of the Utah Oil Refining. The Standard officials also plan a tour of the Wyoming fields before returning to Indiana. vestlgate our PLAN. EASTERN UTAH Phones PRICE, in UTAH 55-5- 4. . ex-ir- es i Jer-ma- CO. STILL ANOTHER DECREASE the supreme court for permission to TAKES OVER BRANCH RECORDED, ETC. join the Indiqtcndent Coaj and Coke At Washington, D. C., yesterday company and the Carbon County Land (Thursday) the interstate commerce (Continued From Pan On in a review of the de- serves have thus been increased by 25 to 30 per cent Considering the newness of the enterprise and the fact that your company pioneered in the development and the utilization of the Jtah raw materials, It seems appropriate and pertinent to say that the operations of 1925 have served uncondi-ionall- y to confirm the conclusions sed in the 1924 report as to the value of coal and iron properties, both rWkn the point of view of coat and of NUMEROUS C0MFLAINT8 TO BE quality. GONE INTO SOON Assistant State Engineer Reid went back to Salt Lake City from Price the first of this week after inquiring into complaints from numerous ones affected as to the allotments under the Price River Water Conservation district which had come in since Brice McBride, water commissioner, checked up on thirty-thre- e some two weeks ago. Since that time more have been registertwenty-eiged and about twenty of these investigated by Jertimin, preparatory to adjustment hy the state engineer. Most of them were found legitimate. The adjustments will be made at a public meeting here of the state engineer, the liomi buyers, irrigation district officials and the individuals concerned. Each will be heard verbally. Study of these will be resumed as soon as a definate final date for acceptance of kicks has been set. ELECTRIC UNCLE SAM TO OFFER LEASES IN NEAR FUTURE Twp. 22 South, Range 3 East, a large tract of coal laud in Carbon county, ia to be offered for lease in the very near future on application of the Boston Acme Mines Development company and W. R. Hutchinson of Salt Lake (Sty. A prospecting permit on this area was recently disallowed on tho ground that it is a known bearing structure. Several small leases mve been granted to local residents of Emery county for wagon haul. The ileiartment has refused, however, to permit individuals to tie up large in thia manner. The school sections in Twps. 30 South, 1 West, all, and 29 South, 1 West, in part, and Twj. 43 South, 7 West, all, are acknowledged to be not of known mineral character and the title to the land is certified to the state in a communicaF. R. Diaz, 25 years of age, and tion received this week by Register Riehardo Areheleta, 27, are under ar- Eli F. Taylor of the land office. rest here, charged with nibbing the To Secure Validation. miners' bnthhouso up at StamUrdville last Tuesday morning. They were laAn Associated Press dispatch from ter caught by Deputy Sheriff Beebe Washington, D. C., under the date of and were tunied over to Sheriff Dom- March 8th says: Utah today asked ing. The men are alleged to have gone through the rlothing of the miners, se- have a hearing before Justice Hamcuring such articles as watches, knives mond here at Prire and a small amount of money. Theyll ht de-pos- its company urging 'commission authorized the Utah Railcision of the lower federal body holdway to acquire control of the National ing that lands which had been sold to Coal Railway company, which, is a them by the state had been illegally branch off the formers line at a point granted by the federal government near Wildcat Siding to the Gordon and were known tnineral lands at the Creek district It serves five propertime of their selection Utah legal ties. One of these is now shipping officials say that this action is simply the Consumers Mutual while the four the effort of the state to secure the others soon will be. validation of sales made many yean Carbon County Cook Book (revisago by the state to the mining company and its predecessors. ed) and off the presses of The Sun this week is now being delivered to Fifteen Men Perish. those wlio have placed their orders for ECCLES, W. Vs., March 11. The copies. It is for sale at a dollar one death toll of the Crab Orchard mine thousand of them. See Mrs. George A. explosion last Monday mounted to fif- Fausett at Price or any one of the loteen today with the recovery of an- cal swapn of Beehive Girls. Advt other body. Rescuers continued their search for four miners listed as missing. The one found this morning was revealed after pumps hpd lowered the level of water in a pit at the bottom Twe Oats Per Word Kac-- Insertion of the shaft. It is believed that two No Charge A re untt. additional will be discovered in the FOR SALE NEW ELECTRIC! HLAN. pit. ket complete. Inquire Maytag Shop. mm. Perplexing Problem. DENVER, Colo., March 9. The state supreme court today was asked to decide whether the commonwealth ran compel a man against his own wishes to properly safeguard his own life. The question came up in an from a Colorado Springs, Colo., district court, where James Dalrym-plstate coal mining inspector, lost his fight to ronqicl Fred Scvcik to install the projter safety measures in a small mine which the latter owns and oierates by himself. District Judge Cornforth ruled that in this instance the state law requiring coal mines to have certified foremen and ventilation fans was unreasonable and unconstitutional, and issued an order preventing Dalrymple from further interference in Scvcik s work. ap-jw- al etc. FOIt SALE-FA- RM WAGON. IIAR- 5 yer Old, weight "'bon I np!V.!L'! 100. Hionc 219. mi KENT FURNISHED APART-mrnt- a. Wafer and lights furnished. Reasonable rent. Phone 741. FARM WANTED OWNER HAVING good Utah farm for sale t reasonable Bloomington, Ind e, Bublr .hap. to order. The gm WANTKD-- A FIR8T-CLA8- 8 BALES-Ijidj- r (o take order. Good end no deliveries to make. Write Wildpay Rose com-pan-y, 823 Regent building, Balt Lake City. WANTED-M- AN WITH CAR AND some ability as salesman in Carbon ennntjr. Good rommisHions paid daily. Must hare at least $50.(X) to start. For further details apply to J. W. Jorgensen, Clawson, Utah. YOUR OPPORTUNITY FOR A HOME In good land with mi abundance of water in a beautiful with a mild good etc write to L. A. climate, MhI. Wilson, Cul-le- n Hotel. Salt Uke City, for full details Tu "I .,fcountry tVk;VuJdXnroiJVV,(& |