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Show nas FOUR THE PRICE. UTAH BUN, Work of Locksmith It Was the Last IwMd Every Friday By Baa Publishing Co. (Inc.). Crockett, Manager. B. W. r abeeription, $2.00 a Tear In Advance. Office Phone No. 9. Residence, No. 133m2. Batered Ae Mail Matter, June 4, 1915, At the Poetotfico At Price, Utah, Under the Act of March S, 1879 Berond-Clae- 1 e ADVERTISING RATES Dtaplay Matter Per Inch Per Month, $1.00; Single Iaane, 40c. Trauient, 60c. Special Poaitlon, 25 Per Cent Legal Ten Cent the Lino Each Insertion. Count Six Word to the Line. Sununona, $12JS0; Water Application, 115.00; Final Proof, $10.00. Bender Ten Cent the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Word to the Line. Blackface Type Twenty Cents the Lino Each Insertion. Obituaries, Card of Thanks, Resolutions Etc.. At Beading Notice Kates. Count Mia Word to the Line. For Bale, For Rent, Found. Ijost, Etc., Two Cent Per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO. Price, Utah I went mourning without The Sun; I stood up and cried in the congregation. Job, 30-2- 8. WILLIAM SPRY IS OUT FOR TIIE SENATORIAL TOGA. EX-GO- During the last few days close political and personal friends at Price and throughout Eastern Utah have received personally signed letters from William Spry, now commissioner of the general land office at Washington, D. C., announcing his candidacy for the nomination of United States senator before the republican state convention on June 12th, next He has very many friends among the voters of this section of the commonwealth and undoubtedly will have a strong backing. However, there are other aspirants for him to contend with, notably Hon. of Salt Lake City and numer, Ernest Bamberger ous others, including Congressman Don B. Colton. The latter has a large following hereabouts as also has Bamberger Says Spry: The reasons I keek this honor are because of my experience in administrative and legislative affairs during a long period of time, and I consider 1 am peculiarly fitted to discharge the duties of this high office. I think the time has come for Utah to send a capable colieage who will work with Senator Smoot in everything that pertains to our state, more especially as those interests relate to the protection of the raw materials from our mines, farms and ranges and the increase and enlargement of our reclammation projects. We have labored under disadvantages too long .while our neighboring states particularly Idaho have increased in population and crop production to an extent far greater than we have. In conclusion it might not be out of place for The Sun to observe that this is not any game. Ex-Go- v. one-man- s Fathers of Price boys wouldnt mind school days so much if they were sure they wouldnt be asked to help with the arithmetic lesson of evenings. WHERES ALL THIS MONEY AND HOW MAY WE GET TO IT? I l . Encouraged by King Stitch r There never was such abundant credit in the history of the world as has been shown by the figures used to forecast the financial outlook for this year. The United States has overflowing . gold reserves, increasing accumulation of capital and accompanying it an unmistakable public confidence. In consequence trade prosperity is The American peo, shown in all of the reviews. ple have evidenced a tremendous consuming power, Mid the desire for good things is apparently increasing instead of diminishing. Higher wages, efficiency in labor, marvels in inventions, cost saving devices and wonders such as the old world never heard about, except wheq Aladdin rubbed his lamp, are. being enjoyed today by millions of people who have had these benefits thrust upon them so gradually that they never saw them coming their way. The automobile is said to be conquering the deserts of the earth. But with no trees in sight what do fool drivers wreck their cars against?. REPUBLICAN' LEADERS MAY NOW WAIT - UNTIL AFTER MARCH. This administration does not relish being controlled by the coalition in the house of .representatives w'hich Recently sent a tax bill to the senate with a reduction of $290,000,000. President Coolidge, Secretary Mellon and Chairman Smoot, the latter of the senate finance committee, have made plans to sidetrack the measure until after March 15th, when the first tax returns of the year are due. The leaders insist that after such date it win be possible to show by figures just how far tax reduction should go. There is a great struggle among the republicans and democrats, and Senator Smoot says hes got the votes, and he does not propose to let the democrats dictate this important legislation. Hardly with this a presidential election year. Price of bread in the United States averages eight and a half cents for a pound loaf. The federal trade commission has investigated tye subject for three years and its report shows who gets the different parts. The farmer receives 1.15 cents; the miller, 0.41; baker, 5.11; grocer, 1.28, and the railroad or other handlers 0.6. Total per pound 8.55 cents. Thus it is shown that the farmer who sows the wheat and reaps and threshes the grain passes on a very small amount of business to the miller who grinds it into grist, and both of them as well as the small grocer and the large railroads, or the trucks, seem aU to be within the clutches of the whitecapped baker, who clips off more than five cents out of the total amount which the housewife pays for her pound of bread. An old philosopher once' said that man should know himself, but somOJFolks would be in bad company if they carried out the idea. By ROSE MEREDITH iCoBvriakLi DOSE CLEMENS sounds Ilk tlia pretty young girt. And when. Rom wu a llttla younger, aha waa prettier than moat of them. Today, Uoae Clemens, nut ao young and pretty, aat and sewed all day long. Ska only slopped for a cup of tea and a bit to eat, or to Bt some customer of the village who wanted a new pattern, for Uoae was tha only dressmaker In the village and busy from morning until night She lived ail alone In the cottage because all her family bad either married or moved to other houses, or, as In the case of her parents, had died. Bo Rosa Clemen lived all alone in the small white bouse, no longer young, and yet not old. This afternoon she was sewing, as usual making a new silk dress fur Mrs. Cheesemun, who lived up jn the bill in the (urge white liouae. Mrs. Cheeeeman was very gracloue and always moat considerate of Rose ClemYou know we are expecting ens. the new minister tonight," she said, Just before she left "My hushund haa invited him to stay a few days with us, until the munse la quite ready. Lie aeema to be such a splendid man I am hoping that he will fall In love with ona of our glrla and marry, A wife la such a great help to a minister, I Jielleve." And Kira. Cheese man hnd hurried out to her cur and the very smart chauffeur had driven away with a greut nlr, and Rose Clemens hud settled down to her sewing again. She wondered rather oaaually about the new minister, whom she had not as yet seen. He had preached twice at the church, hut , It waa during the month she hnd been in the city sewing for Mrs. Cheese-man- , so all she knew about him wai that he was evidently very popular with everybody, and. that hla name was John Hurry Jones. ' As that happened to be the name of the only man Rose Clemen had ever wanted to marry, and had refused because he bad been so wild and reckless, she wu rather curious .to see him. Of course her Harry Jones had gone to the dogs long age least, people who claimed to know the Jones family after they bad removed from tha village always ' nld so. The very Brat Sunday that the new minister preached, Rom Clemens, lo a eoft bine dress and hat, with a lovely pink rose at her breast, cams softly up the aisle to her pew, het new little patent leather slippers shining bravely under her abort skirt. Perhaps Row had keen thinking about tha pour Mack sheep Harry Jones, whom she had loved so long ago, and when site sat there with dosed eyes, while the organ, softly pUyed the prelude, aim wa. praying for that poor lost Jones boy who had, flung away ao recklessly when she told him that aha did not love blml Then the organ boomed out triune phantly nn-- "Me lifted her head tc tee a tall i wading the steps tc, m rtiMd there for the pnlplt. mfent. look...,, li them with such a warmth of feeling In his fine face, b fore he spoke a word. ' It waa a long service a glorious service and, when It was over. Rose Clemens hastened down the alale and, out of the door and Into her small house a little way down 'the etreetj When she got there, she went upstulre to her own room, end took off bet blue bat and knelt down and prayed s thanksgiving for Urn ufo return ol Harry Jones! Then she went downstairs and made her preparations for dinner. Suddenly sbe noticed a group ol women and girls pausing before hei gate, while the tall minister broke away from them, with some pleasant wori and came around to her side door I Not to the front door that would he too formal for her old! friend. - Harry June AV Uie of Indeed . . .at i The evolution of the lock In Prance may be traced In great part to the direct encouragement given to the craft by ber kings. It was Charles VIII who In 1411 made It compulaory for every locksmith apprentice who aimed at becoming a master to produce a "chef doeuvre" Iocs of such degree that It would entail anything from one year to two In the making. The delicate and Intricate examples that are treasured In museums are mostly drawn from the test pieces, none of which, however, bears the name of the smith, though the majority are sufficiently Interesting to merit n signature. The forge had little connection with such locks and none was cast In the rough. Great la the Ingenuity brought to hear on them in order to display some hitherto unexplolted device or to break For Borne fresh gniiiml In ornament. Strong boxes there were contrived locks that are a miracle of Intricacy. Under KrnncoN I. nn enthusiastic pnfron of the locksmith, the cruft reached Its summit, whence It wns then to decline. If not In reaperl of elaboration, at least In reiect of true beauty and feeling. Under Louis XIII. who was so keen a lover of flue Ironwork that he himself toiled at the forge and In the workshop, the lock excelled In point of laerhnnlsm and Ingenuity, but rnylilly deteriorated from the esthetic standMilrt. It had reached the point where the production of pux-al- e and lette- - locks began to tnke precedence of locks that represented compositions of real artistic quality. Grasshopper Vane Not Original With Faneuil It is generally conceded that when Peter Faneuil caused a large gras hopper to be plnced on top of Fnneull hull In Roston aa a wenlhervane. he did It In emulation of Tlionnia f! resham, who 170 year before hnd given hla home city, London, a handsome bourse for merchants, dedicated by Queen Elizabeth as the Royal Exchange and crowned by the Gresham family crest, a glided grasshopper. The grasshopper had been adopted for a crest by the Greshams obviously because the name Gresham Is regarded as a corruption of the German word for grasshopper, "granhelm." Faneuil undoubtedly had seen the London grasshopper and liked It, so he chose It for the building be gave to Boston. TheFaneuil hall grasshopper has fallen to the street three times In Its 185 years existence, once In the famous 1755 earthquake, again In 1761 when the bnlldlng wu burned, and finally In 1889, aa a result of getting entangled with the flagpole halliards. After the 1755 tumble demolished leg had to be replaced, and In 1889 new glau eyes, aa well aa horns and feet were required. Detroit News. - Nomad Weavers Twenty Years Ago This Present Week The ice harvest was begun in Price iml a great many were putting up the firt cutting. Pistriee Attorney P. E. Woods ol Castle Dale was in Price on his way to Manti to attend court Sheriff T. P. Kelter had five board, era at the eounty jail who were being looked after by Deputy James C. Ferguson. Several miners from the upper ramps came to Priee seeking employment, having been thrown out of work up there. K. McKenzie, an organizer of the Western Federation, was at Scofield, Imt found very little encouragement oliltim-ew- among the business men and The ladies of the Union club, now the Ladies Aid, at Irice pledged a liuinlrrd dollars otwaril the furnishing of the Methodist mission chappcl Hu n being built here. The stone dwelling belonging to JoHelseph Grosso, about a mile above Castle rood to the (late, was per on by fire. Tt was used as s bakery and dwelling. Joe Sullivan was captured at Portland, Ore., and returned to Salt Lake City on the charge of complicity in the murder of Policeman Charles S. Ford on December 14th of that year. Dr. I. S. Kirkwood of Priee was sporting an automobile of the runabout pattern, sliuut the first one to be seen here and which he picked up at a bargain counter sale in Salt Lake City. Snow ft Waterman, contractor for the big canal of the Irrigated lands company south of Price, came to town and grading outfit-l- ike with their ato-a big circus. A apcrial tnn of the stops and two eleven ears roaches for th? men made up ihe train. They were :mm SpringvJtj. The stockholders of the First National bank at Priee met and elected J. M. Whitmore, L. O. Hoffmann, George C. Whitmore, R. G.Miller and A. W. Horsley as a board of directors for the year. It' was tartly understood that A. McGovncy was to remain as cashier and A W. McKinnon as assistant, the latter at an, increase of salary. Helper Lodge Na 1$, Knights of Pythias, installed raw officers to serve until July. Dr F. R. Slopan-skeC. C.; Amos Miller, V. C.; W. P. Richmond, prelate; Hilton Gould, M. W.; T. Eliu Jackson, K of R. S.; M. A. Ward, IL F.; Joseph Wahl, M. E.; Robert Bunnell, I. G.; Baptiste Flaim, O. G., and Henry VauNatta, M. A. ed ca-rie- d , c, UNITED STATE FU1 20, 19 CO. Largest Producers of Domestir Coal In Utah. Affiliated With th United Statu Befining and Mining Company FOUR GOOD COALS Backed By Service - KING BLACK HAWK - v. HIAWATHA PANTHER These four, mined exclusively by UNITED STATES FUEL COMPANY, will meet mre coal demand, being hard, firm and clean. Our fuel supervisor,, technically. trained and experienced, is at yottr service at any time to talk over your heating problems. GENERAL OFFICES l: Newhouse Building, SALT-LAKCITY, UTAH t - Felt and Velvet Hats y, To shoot a projectile to the moon it would be necessary for it to have a velocity of uven miles a second. The average big gun ean give The Inhabitant of cistern Asia are, generally speaking, a very Ignorant class, 'education being almost un- kmiwn Krom hIll 0M ;,de Itf MIM uok down on 20 mile In width and observe a do en or more black tents woven of goats' hair which are the homes of nomad weavers. .These people, whose veh(HMl depend. .m01t entirely on are forced, and have been tiep flix-kforwt for untold generations to move abouI pines to place In search 0f piturage, which la over meager In this land of scanty rainfall. As wouI,, Kpectf thll of UtI1 h niade these people a virile race, but entirely devoid of strong n culture. , FRIDAY, JANUARY EVEBY FRIDAY. a speed of only abont a hundredth- of that rate.' - The Japanese have forbidden the ancient Korean custom of carving a design on the neck of a girl who has julted her lover. Michigan is the only one of the Great Lakes lying wholly within the boundary of the United States. J. Fenimore Coopers decision to write came after he had read a very poorly written novel. Mid winter clearance on all Felt and Velvet hats. All hats priced at $3.00. See our window showing styles. LOCAL WEATHER REPORT FOB THE PAST WEEK Henry Flack, Observer Vinegar in History Vinegar wut first msde from wine, as Its name Indicates, at a remote period. Rlhllcal writers mentioned It, and Hlpixirrates nsed It aa a medicine. By the Sixteenth century vinegar from grapes was being produced In France for home consumption and for export In Englnnd vinegar was first ade ,from 'l""- - a method of f snd heer which bad Pjn WM kn,,wn ,ou!?d FoI as "alegar." Although this name haa long since aecome obsolete, malt vinegar Is still the standurd In the Rrltlsh Islet. It Is not known Just when vinegar was first made In the United home rl7 eager look In his eyes as she gave! product him both her hands. "Ilarry Jones," ahe said with tears d In her lovely eyes, "you Enough Herrings for All have nude me so happy to come That great sen bird, the gnnnet or ' solan goose, requires s back to us this way!" large amount "I am glad. Rose," he said simply. of fish. There are not many breeding 1 "Am too later he asked. haunts In there Islands, but the few "No dinner will be ready In five tbat we have are wonderful bird forminutes, and" tresses, for the birds congregate In "Dinner!" Interrupted the minister, their thousands, occupying every availplacing his bat on a small table able ledge on the giant cliffs they "Rom Clemens, there la an Important chimes for their home. The gannets of question Gut must be settled before Great Britain alone consume not leu either one of us eats today." than OO.OOn.ixtO herrings a year, yet there appears to lie plenty In the sea "Year trembled Rose "I told In my sermon Just how I for them and ua. If every ganuet In the went away, a reckless, foolish young world were exterminated. I doubt If man, but I did nut tell them, of course It would make tha slightest difference that It was the contempt of the only to the amount of herrings captured girl I had ever loved that sent nw by our fishermen. London Mali. awtyl I went to the city and got a real Job, and when my people came Ho Throw a Turnip later on, I lived with them, went to A society woman called on a famous to then school, and, college, night when necessity arose, finally, to divinity school This la my painter who, first parish. And the very first thing could expreu himself with emphasis Her ceaseless chatter did nut permit that I do, now that my first day here In a word edgewise. la passing, la to corns to tho only him to get At length a imuu to take breath al In loved world all ever I tho that girl end esk her If she can learn to love lowed lilm to uy, "We had boiled mutton and turnips for lunrh todny." me now I" "Whut a strange observation I" the "Oh, Ilarry Harry, "she whispered, woman exclaimed. coming to him and grasping hla coat -Well." he said. "It la aa good knew the "If dny you only lapels. anything yen- have lieen saying for tha the yeura when I missed y htsl two Ilmira." London I longed for goaf 3 HI 3 .s t? p Character bf day Bessie Kmfy, Hey, Irc. Price, Utah . ..(lear ..(near ..Clear ..Cloudy ..Cloudy ..Cloudy ..Clear long-lashe- Bread Like Mother Going Home With Arms Used to Bake 4 The housewife knows the paramount importance of buying highgrado qual-iQ- r floor. It's such women that find pleasure in buying Tip Top and Turkey Bed from na. Tho delectable tastes and richnau of bread mado of these flour are the reuons why they taste lu mother used to make. Hay grain, millstuffs and general forward-la- g is our business, too. When you leave our stores 'you just cannot help going home with your arms' full of the good things we have for the table. And, the satisfaction of knowing, that each article u fresh and of the choicest quality adds to the pleasure of buying from us. Everything to eat, use and wear. WASATCH STORE CG. u Tlt-UIU- L South First West Street, Price, Utah Clear Creek, Castle Gate and Sunnyside. |