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Show THE BUN, PRICE, UTAH PAGE FOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS HOW TO CONTINUE AS ONE OF THE BEST ANYWHERE bailed Every Friday Iiy Run I'uldieliinc Co. (Inc.) It. IV. Ciuckeit, Manager. gnburriptiun, 92.00 a Year In Advance. Office Plume No. 9. Itoiiideiice, N'o. 133ni2. Mail Matter, Jane 4, 1015, at the 1ontoffica at Price, Utah, Under the Act of March 3, 1&7U. Entered aa Second-Clan- a ADVEKTISING KATES Display Matter Per Inch Per Month, LAO; Single Inaue, 4lK. Transient, BOe. Ipeeial l'usition, 23 Per Cent Additional. Legale Ten Centa the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Worde to the Idne. giunmoiiH, $12.50; Water Application, $13.00; Final Proof, $10.00, Beadcre Ten Cents the Line Each Count Six Words to the Line. Itlaekface Type Twenty Ceuta the Line Each Insertion, Obituariea, Carde of Thanks, llcsulutions. Etc., At Reading Notice Kate. Count Six Worde to the Line. For Bale, For Itcnt, Found, Isist, Etc., Two Centa Per Word Each laaue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO. PRICE, UTAH I went mourning without The Sun; stood up and cried in the congregation. Job, 30:28. X SUCH CANNOT BE OTHER THAN MOST MISCHIEVIOUS Tbo pulpit line pluyed a great part jn the solution of many problems of government in the United Stales in which moral questions were an issue. In slavery days, for instance, it had tremendous influence in arousing and solidifying public sentiment against that evil institution. Again, when the saloon became intolerable the pulpits of the land were largely resxmsi-Li- e for putting it out of existance. While prohibition is far from popular, there is no demand for the revival of the saloon, however insistent the rail for a legal right of the individual to own and consume liquors may be. Now another issue looms, one of the most dangreous with which a republic may be confronted because religious in character. The Ku Klux Klan inaugurated it, and it was born of intolerance. Explicitly forbidden by tho constitution fur all time the making of any law respecting an establish ment of religion or prohibitIt is ing the free exercise thereof. seriously promised by a bishop of the Methodist Episcopul church to begin in this country a "holy fight against a man who aspires to the presidency because he hopjiena not to lie a protest ant in his religion. This, lie says, is a nation built around the Bible and the open Kchuol. Wight. But it guarantees to every citizen the right to worship (1ml, or n:i idol, or a pagan deity, a) his conscience dictates, and it forbids the teaching of any particular religion it, its public schools. It inny be that the people will not 'taro to clert for president a Methodist, a Baptist or a Catholic. But to make any candidate's religion the issue of a campaign c iiin.it lc other than mischievous. Price in one of the foremost cities in Utah unit also one of the best ol the smaller ones in the entire United Slates. Her merchants ure aggressive, honorable men whonc promise cun be accepted at pur. Their stocks of merchandise arc well assorted and ntnple to meet the requirements here and from surrounding communities. The Sun ventures the assertion thnl prarticully every article needed in tin home, in mining camps or on the farm can he found right here in local establishments and may lie bought as low l'riee dealas it is priced elsewhere, ers are without exception always ready with their time and money t j do anything that will make this i bell or community in which to live and raie a family. All of which brings us to this point the country is now flooded with peddler, selling everything from patent collarliulton.: and newfangled sleeve KiipjMirteis to iMin ranges and traction engines. Sonii of it is standard mrechundise. Mut of it is not. But whether it is or not the fact remains that the most expensive articles in the long run are the ones sold from door to door. T!.e i'lieaicst and most satisfactory is that we get through regular channels and with tee guarantee of a dealer we know. The automobile has brought several things that are not for the best interest of our smaller towns, regardless of the blessings that have come with it. One of the things it lias given us that isn't going to be of any benefit to us is the And still another is auto Imho. the house to houae peddler. It ( fllNTV ( I.KICK Tin Run is iiutlinrizcil to announce It. (!. Kaiilli, iirewiit incumbent, us ii fur clerk nml auditor ni Curiam uiiniy, subject lu I lie action of tiniiinvciiiiun. The Sun is iiiiiliorixcd H. Milner of Killing side clerk and uudimr of subject In the action of iniiiiiiiuliiig convention. to aiiiwmiuy A. as a iiiiididiili-foI'urlaiu minty, the r SHERIFF The Him is niilbnrlxed to iiiiuounce George IVilliiiKliuin of l'riee as a candidate fur aheriif of Curiam county, subject lo the ucllon of the republican conven- tion. The Kiiu is util hurl?. ml to announce Mike iireiinun of Helper as a cniididutc for sheriff of Curtain 01111(7, subject to the action of (be democratic convention. The Kiiii is miihorixcd to iiiiuounce ThuiiiuK I'. Keller of Ilcincr us u cuiuli-dulfor shcrilf of Curiam cumiiy, subject lo the ad inn of the ilemncruli': convention. The Sun i miiliorued lo announce Lee ISryiicr of Price us u cuiididnle for sheriff of of Carbon coinily, subject to (he the republican iiiuiiinuting convention. c lioiu-inuliu- COMMISSION!-:!- WHAT : to announce Frank T. Keniieti from Spring Cuiiyun t Storm) as a cuudidulc fur four yeuru commissioner, subject 10 the action of the democratic county muniimliiig cuuvenlioii. The Bull ia uulliorized to announce V. E. Knox of Columbi a u candidate fur a two yeeura couiiuissionersliip in Carbon cuuniy, subject to the action of the democratic nominating convention. Tlie Huu ASSESSOR to announce S. The Sun ia uuthorizi-V. Golding of Price, present incumbent, to the office as a candidate for of assessor of Carbon county, aubject to the action of the democratic nominating convention. Folks around Price who hnve frequently wondered if thyre is danger in using radio sets while lightning and thunderstorms are in progress will be interested in a statement just issued by the engineers of the United States Underwriters laboratory. "Lightning is hard to check, they declare, but more jicople arc struck out under trees than any other way. One might, indeed, be a target at the end of a properly insulated radio set, but no more so than at the keybinrd of a piano or with knife and fork in hand at the dinnertable or patting the keys of a tyHwriter. These men have given out their statement only after long and careful tests and experiments, ami it will probably bring a satisfactory sigh of relief to many a person this big country over. Mar-rnse- It a pi icara that about the hardest thing the United States government has to do is to please the railroad companies. They are continuously clamoring for permission to raise the freight rates, despite the fact that right at this minute they are hauling more than ever before in the history of the nation. Their Intest alibi is that automobile trucks are cutting their business to such a point that they must get a higher charge or lose money. But the fnrmers and manufae-urerour heaviest liipcr, are preparing to fight an iuerease on these grounds, and will have figures to lmek up their argument if the matter is taken up by officials at Washington, D. C. Few persons, of rmirse, want to see them lose money. Hut at the aamc time there is no one anxious to have them given a free reign to raise charges as they chuoso. We need our railroads. We muM hnve them. But ao long as they ore overwhelmed with freight, as they now are, and at the highest figures in lystory it's pretty hard to convince the general public that they've got anything coining. s, Methodist missionaries over ill Tok-iwant Asiatics admitted to citizenship in this coiiniry, under projicr re-- 6 trie lion- -, and in which desire they are as far apart from the labor unions as they could Mihly get on this o earth. Shaves and haircuts are to be thirty-fiv- e and sixty-fir- e cents, respectively, In Carbon district beginning on September 1st, next. And the trouble is one cant lay in a supply before the price go up. Ivi there-alioiit- s, one-thir- RINSGLATINO LUMBE- J J. C. WKKTKU church. Soma day yon any want money on your home. And k will m bird to nm. fell or mottgilt houM five yemnfrom now. Build wbh Ctlotcm to pm value of tact tho foot horns. heu-leaVl- IiUMRER COMPANY North Side West Main Street Price, Utah, WESTERN LAMBS SELLING AT ten 1 1 -j r RIVER ' AT 114.35 AND BETTER (Continued From Page Three) not indicate any serious question as to the present and future demand for wool, says he. An organization has been perfected in the East recently having for its principal object the promotion and encouragement of the use of wool, showing it is greater economy to purchase woolen goods than cheaper produets. This society will undoubtedly accomplish much to give the facts concerning wool to the public. Department of agriculture figures are referred to by Marshall to the effect that 1926 shows a material increase in the production of both wool and lambs, and there ia no danger of a shortage of the former. W. A. LOWRY SELLS HIS LAMBS FOR A BIG PRICE price for this territory for this seasons feeder lambs was made at the Salt Lake City union stockyards yesterday when W. A. Lowry, banker and atockinan of Price, sold twelve cars of feeders to Dan Thomas of Ashton, Ida., for $12.-1- 0 per hundredweight, say today's A new high market Tribune. The lambs were from the Nevada ranges and nveraged sixty-fou- r iHiiinds for the lot. Indications are that the demand for feeder lambs will continue strong during the remainder of the fall. The eastern market for feeders has been rising the last week and whenever feeder lamb consignments have been made they have found immediate purchasers. Utah, $14.85; other westerns, $14.75; native quality improved; best, $14.25; bulk, $13.75 to $14.00; odd lots sheep, steady. WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF EASTERN UTAH Try Ordering Flour F. E. Hagenburg, administrator, ia advertising for sale in the Salt Lake City newspapers the big land holdings and live stock interests of George T. (Ted) Olsen in Emery county. There are four hundred and eighty acres, several hundred head of cattle, horses and hogs and farm implements aud the like. Bids are to be received up to August 30th. By Phone The convenience of ordering floor by phone ia an economy every housewife should learn to use. If you do your own baking, and most women do, It MRS. BERTHA HOFMA PASSES will pay you to try a sack of our TurAT CITY HOSPITAL key Red flour. Use the phone and we will deliver. Hay, grain, flour and Mrs. Bertha L. llofma, aged 42 general forwarding. years, wife of Elwood B. Hofma Qf Helper, died at Price city hospital Wednesday afternoon at 4 oclock from an Operation performed Monday. Mrs. llofma was born at Butlerville, Halt Lake county and was the daughtSouth Ninth Street, Price, Utah er of E. T. and Anna S. Junes, early settlers of Carbon county, in fact she Worm the size of hair threaten was one of the first girls eoinnig to the county with her parents who five hundred acres of hemlock near settled at Spring Glen. Besides her Sturgeon Bay, Wis. Six million feet hushand she is survived bv onn son of lumber have already been destroyErnest Lee, of Han Marcel, Calif., and ed and airplanes are eambating the Beulla, five years of age, and her pests by scattering calcium arsenate powder. mother Mrs. Sophia Ann a brother Clarence, Mrs. Leland Davis Pirturesquenc&s is to be sacrificed and Mr. Barney MarNlielln of Helper and Mrs. E. M Davis of Kenilworth. to efficiency in Italy by a new order The body was prepnred for bnrial by bnnishing donkeys and dog and the Wallace & Harmon and the funeral oxendrawn vehicles from the streets. services will be held in the Price tabernacle Sunday at noon, burial taking place at Spring Glen. ' Jones-Davi- s, Yesterday's Markets. KANSAS (TTY, Aug. 26. Cattle Receipts, 500 head.. Calves, 1000. All prices killing steers steady to ANNUAL BASIN RODEO strong: best mixed yearlings, $10 25; MYTON, Aug. 23. The annual ro-- ; strictly choice heavy ulcers, $0.73; one deo for will lie held this year, Myton well wintered liad Kansans, 8.00; and Monday Tuesday, September fith she stock, bulls and veals Mend; the 7lli. These person have been se- and few practical veal top, $14.00; up to lecled to formulate plans and arrange $11.50: stackers and feeders, ruiniii-all- v the program. S. A. Well, chairman; steady. II. J. Tucker, George E. Pliillijw, Ar-- i Unling-- 1 Receipts, 5000 head. nnld Reef, J. B. Whilininre, A. K. ' even, mostly sternly with WednesDraper, A. C. Mnrohnnt. Ralph Mur- -' day's average: top, $18.00 on D. Bearers and B. L, Dart, duck, average; hulk of sales, $11.50 Under J.the supervision of V. T. ltiee 170 desirable to to $13.50; a brass band will furnish music each $13.10 to $13.50; TightlighU..jip to day. $13.60; good to ehoiee 230 to butchers, $11.50 to $13.00; all Your average citizen is in favor of to fifpacking sows dull, twenty-fiv- e huge expenditures for good roads ty cents lower, mostly $9.00 to $9.75; until they start improving the one in stock pigs steady, $12.50 to $13.50. front of hi& place. Sheep Receipts, 4000 head. Lambs strong to fifteen cents higher; top of' Complete Ha legal Masks. The Bus. Denver and Rio : Grande Western d i 225-iKhtn- d, LABOR DAY EXCURSION ; j ! LOOK AHEAD! MAR B WARE s; What made Salt Taike City beaut fill from the first was its wide street.-:-, broad sidewalks and lawns interven-iin- g between the sidewalk and home One of the fir-- t municipal law pro-- I v ided for the proper planting of shade trees. The private gardens and lawns Rice almost doubled in price recent- of the old homes contributed much to and in the layly in China. The women, tradition- the beauty of the city, were provided out public ing parks ally subdued, have created a new and used these for recreawere for, problem hy raiding tional renters. Halt Lake City today is one of Some of the men who married only last month are carrying umbrellas al- hours, where there ore many varieties of trees and gardens of beautiful ready. shrubs and flowers. It is truly the Wedding announcements. The 8un. City Beautiful. tdu. . r ( I UNDER PLASTER, Celotex replaces lath for inside walls and ceilings. Plaster is applied directly to its surface. Here, Celotex costs but little more than lath and plaster, and gives stronger, , insulated walls, free, from lath marks. all winter Results: a house that is snug and warm d less to heat, is refresh long, costs about in cod summer, quieter, less expensive to ingly keep up, stronger, and a better investment. IN HOUSES ALREADY BUILT Celotex is being used to line attics and basements. That helps a lot and costs but little. Let us give you all the facts before you build or buy. house-buildin- g l'ar-lye- s, I g al cost. A mare (Today it is easy to prevent made lumber has been produced that is stronger than wood lumber in wall sections and has three times its power. ,This material is Celotex Insulating Lumber. Over thousand modern hones have been eighty-onbuilt with To go into me of these houses is a revelation to g house so much so the owner of a that the building authorities agree that a big standards is change in modem hand. rigjht at -- market-house- addi-tion- heat-leakin- Suit Luke City and Utaj for that matter was seventy-nin- e years old this last Sunday. The Mormon pioneers under Brigham Young made (icrmanent ramp on City Creek near what is now the City and County building on July 24, 1847. On August 2d Orson Pratt and M. A. and Robert Sherwood began the surveying and on August 2Uth the laying out of the city was completed. One hundred and blocks of ten acres each thirty-fiv- e were included in the origionnl platting. At a meeting of the people, that wrs designated as a sjieeial conference, belli Sumlav, August 22d, ii was moved and carried that the new city be called Great Salt Lake City of the Urent Basin of North America. The motion was made by President Brigham Young, who also moved that the postoffice hq designated "the Great l'asjn sistof f ice. This wus the last meeting that the president attended for some time, as he left in cnuiaiiy with some of his brelheru for Winter Quarters on the Missouri river a day or two after. A great deal of business was attended to at this meeting, most uf which pertained to the temporal affairs of the church and of which he was head. It was decided to give names to the streams that flow into the vullcy. The river that roiinerts Utah Lake with the Great Halt Lake was to be calliul "the West Jordan river, and City Creek, Canyon Creek, now Red Butte Creek and Mill Creek were named. The people began the planting gf shade trees during the summer, but meanwhile the Old Fort was begun on August 10ik and within a few weeks it was completed. Here the pioneers lived during the winter of The meeting which transacted the business of naming the city was a typical New England town assembly. These were characteristic of all the carlyday roiunuinitiea of Utah. Halt Lake City was chartered by the territorial legislature in 1851. It provided for a mayor, four aldermen and nine cnuiieilmt. The city bail the (power to establish and supiort common school; to make regulations f r the prevention of contagious diseases, to establish hospitals; to provide the city with water; to establish to license, tax and regulate theatricals and other amusements, and to tax, restrain, prohibit and suppress disorderly resorts. The first mayor was .ledciliah M. Grant, father of the Saints present head of the Luticr-dn- y a farewell at Odd Fellows' Hall there before leaving. Mrs. J. W. Whitmore returned to N'ephi from Hunnyside, where she had spent some two months with he husband on their rnneh. X. S. Xeilsen was going to ship close to eight thousand hend of lambs from Scofield to the Chicago market the first of Sentcmher. Oliver J. l(iiuion and Carl K. n were doing missionary work at Spring (Hen, while Keren Olsen and B. laee visited Cleveland. Friends of Miss Josie Fitzgerald of tho clerk's office were mentioning her name in connection with the republican nomination for county recorder. Frank X. Cook, W. A. Face and F,. J. Cook of Oreen River were in l'riee arranging for an excursion to that place from Helper, lriee and intermediate points. O. J. Hannon was jn lriee from lie Baid a large acreHuntington, age of wheat had been planted hut feared there was not enough to keep the locnl mill going. Rainstorms did considerable damage to the trucks of the Denver and ltio Grande above and below Colton and to the Sroficlil branch. A mixed train from the upier coal ramps was caught by the flood up on FUli Creek about four miles out of Scofield nml was abandoned there. The scenic limited of the Denver and Rio Grande broke the record for punctuality during July. Out of thirty-one runs made twenty-seve- n were 011 time at their destinations. The four days in which the limited wus off schedule the delays were caused hy cat's derailed ahead of the trains or from other causes over which the crews had no control. AS SHEATHING, Celotex replaces the rough boards that cover the outside of a house. It makes building paper unnecessary. This construction gives you a stronger, insulated house at no it Twenty Years Ago This Present Week (Sate went to Denver, Colo., for a few weeks visit. Joseph II. Huff of Heofield let'; for a mission to England. He was given RAIL LINES OF THE COUNTRY SELDOM SATISFIED. Yet houses that leak heat will be all buildings of ordinary construction do leak heat. g simply means that the usual building i 'materials, alone, do not hold the furnace heat inside the house in winter and do not keep the suns heat out in summer. e Seventy Nine Years Old Sunday Last Mrs. William Forrester and Mrs. J. C. Best and daughters from Castle How Cdotex is used out-of-dat- e. heat-stoppin- What has become of the original flapper who rubbed calico on her cheeks to get that ruddy complexion? uncommon. te out-of-dat- I Hume l'riee girls look as though TREASURER The Hun ia authorized to announce they had stumbled into an open flour of Price aa a candidate sack, though many of them never get Earl X. Kudi-lif- f for treasurer of Carbon county, subject that close to the kitchen. to the action of the republican nominating eon vent ion. Fish lies are at this time being The Sun ia authorized to nnnounee A. crowded out of the country news- M. llaugn of Kenilworth aa a candidate for treuaiiror of Carbon county, subject paper to muke room for the tallest to the action of the democratic nominacornstalk story. ting convention. Hunnyside were Price visitors. V. C. Brueker decided to dime out his mercantile business at Colton and quit there. Miss Josie Fitzgerald of the rounty clerk 'a nffipe was confined to her home by illness. John C. Forrester bought the interest of his partner, Marshall I'uett, in the Senate saloon at l'riee. Price, and surrounding towns had been infested with trumps for two weeks. Begging and stealing was not g systems, were Five years from now, there will be another standard 1 to stay Celotex is manufactured from tough cane fibre. It is 4 ft. wide; 8 to ia ft. long; 716 in. thick; and weighs about 60 pounds per 100 sq. ft were not piped had no neat-in- heat-leakin- recorder of Carbon county, subject to the action of the republican nominating convention. This question of the ownership of The Bun is autborized to announce the north pole isnt worrying the Mrs. Lottie Gibson Btorrs of Gibson Mine l'riee man who is trying to acquire aa a candidate for recorder of Carbon miunty, subject to the action of the repubownership of a house and lot lican nominating convention. HOUSE? OUT-OF'DAT- E Heat-leakin- d to the hairdresser. Mr. Fred J. Thomas from AN years ago, houses that FIVEwater; wired for electricity; is estimated tbnt Mr. and IS A new American Building Standard has come is authorized it costs $5701 RECORDER to rear a girl until she is IS years of Bun ia authorized to announce JesThe age and $0801 to bring np a boy. The sie F. Buiiford, present incumbent, aa a difference represents about four trips candidate for to the office of . FRIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1926 EVERY FRIDAY Railroad Roundtrip Fares Salt Lake City, $2.75 Ogden $3.50 325-pou- Tickets on sals September 4th only. Good for return not later than September 7th. Good ia coaches only. No stopovers. |