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Show If THE SUNS RATES iM'awg -- liwdm As LICENSED TO WED s Transient rata, fifty '(80) cent aa inch par iuua. FMdtwn t addkJonaL Mo diaplaj ad- ccpitad for tha firat or front ; rrtiy" - ;SS5u.1"!!2 iafKwS'oa! Volume 17, Number IB AN INDEFBNrsPVEWSFAFBR. Week Ending November 80, 1980 FOOTBALL SPECIAL Annual Red Cross Roll . flftdal Train to Ba Boa; Now Completed . to Ba Sant By Commerce Body. Annual roll call of the American The apeeial train that will take the Bed Cross closed in Price last SaturCarbon football zooteri to Salt IjW day night, with the quota of $350 sub.. City will leave Price Saturday morn-in- g scribed and Mrs. A. W. Clvdes team at 7 oclock, according to an- - of workers showing the greatest' numnouneement received from William H. ber of membership sold, according to Toy, secretary of the Price Chamber announcement received from Mrs. B. M. Bice, chairman of the roll call of Commerce. drive. the actual .contest is The chamber and the Carbon high now Although over, some memberships are still school in guaranteeing to sought and persons wishing to the Denver and Bio Grande Western being'the Bed Cross are privileged to .that there will be two hundred per- join do so until Thanksgiving. sons taking the trip. Through efforts A banquet is to be given the winof the Chamber of' Commerce, money team ning night. The three is being solicited to send Carbons other teams Saturday that competed in the .cone band to the game and it test will act as hostesses. Mrs. Clydes look as if the musicians can be sure team was composed of Mrs. of the trip. The team will leave Fri- winning E. O. Anderson, Mrs: Wilford Jensen, day but will be counted in the two Mrs. P. K. Neilsen and Lunile Holda-wahundred tickets that have to be sold. About seventy persons in. the ooun- Mrs. G. B. Wests team placed sechave signified their willingness to ond, Mrs. J. T. ty Kellys third, and Mrs. ' attend the game and it is expected C.' T. Axelgards fourth. that nearly one hundred of the stuThe contest this year was purposedents at the high school will avail ly shortened, Mrs. Bice said, because themselves of the low round-tri-p rate of the failure registered last year of three dollars. when the drive was held from ArmisThe train will stop at Helper and tice Day until Thanksgiving.' Castle Gate for passengers on the Of the money subscribed in the antrip to the city and will discharge nual roll call drive, only fifty cents passengers there on the return tnp. from eaeh membership is sent to the The apeeial will leave Salt Lake City national organization, the remainder at 10 oclock the same night of the money remaining here for local work. This applies no matter what BBBX0U8 BLAZE IB NARROWLY the size of membership. Thus fifty AVERTED BY QUICK WORK cents of each dollar membership goes A match thrown into the gutter m to the national organization. Of the front of the Bedd Motor company five dollar memberships, $150 stays here Saturday afternoon, nearly caused a tional and fifty cents goes to the naheadquarters. serious blase when it ignited gasoline that had leaked out of an oU truck Advisory committee of this years whieh was filling the tank that feeds drive were: Bishop George Jorgensen, Rev. H. M. Merkel, Father William A ' . the pumps in front of. the garage. thrown the match was into Ruel and Harry Mahleres. When the gutter, flames shot several feet Preliminary returns from the camps into the air and endangered pumps, indicate that they will go over tue the oil tryick and several ears that top. Standardville has turned in $65; were parked nearby. A small fire ex- Bolapp, $55 A0; Spring Canyon, $100, and Hnner, $20. . tinguisher was used to keep the flames from the tank until flu fire departFUNERAL FOR MUTER, NTTJ.wn ment could get to tiie scene. ? AT KENILWORTH Two ears parked close to the blase " .. ; I', . toaw blackened slightly but no other Funeral services for Angelo Zervas, damage was reported. Greek miner of Kenilwho died following ah injury worth, Of M. I, in the aune there'were held Sunday from the Orthodox, Greek ehureh in r Carbon Price. Interment was in the Priee City The Latter-daSaints was cemetery. Deceased, who had been in reorganised this last week with John Kenilworth but three weeks, suffered frmetured skull' in a fall of rock E. Bent sustained as president He 1 sizty-piee- y. . . . . , 'Reorganization 'A Stake . ILLi y . -- succeeds EL H Gardner who resigned. while working Wednesday. He leaves W. W. Christensen and Wallace Way-ma-n several relatives in Greece. received the position of first and second counselor in plaee1 of Cleon NO RETRENCHMENT IS POUOY Wileox and Belmont Biehards, respecL OF COLUMBIA STEEL tively. Bay Wimar was retained 'as The present business depression has secretary. In the young ladies division Mrs. been characterized by A T. DeForest, Wallace Wayman was chosen to suc- president of the Columbia Steel corceed Mrs. Vernon Merrill 'as presi- -. poration, just one of those things, dent for the coming year. according to an Associated Press disA reception and Tnankagiving ball patch from Los Angeles. DeForest is in honor of the new officers of the visiting in that city at the present association will be given Friday even- time. He added that his company ing, November 21 at the tabernacle. would continue leading the back to There will be a program eonsistingof normalcy movement by expenditure of musical and dramatic numbers. Re- large sums, in development and exfreshments will be served. pansions. DeForest declared: It is the aim associated of the corporation to keep its four clubs MEET AT MT. PLEASANT thousand employes supplied with work and if we havent got the work, well The Associated Civic clubs of South- make some.' ern Utah will convene at Mt PleasDeForest, who arrived in Los AnDecember of on invitation 13, ant, geles from Ironton, Utah, with three ike Mt Pleasant Lions clubs, ex- other company officials, said the cortended by Dr. P, L. Holman, repre- poration proposes to open additional sentative of the organisation. territory in Utah for mining of its officials, on a vis. THREE LOADS OF LARGE FISH raw materials. The Torrance Steel the of of it inspection PLANTED AT BOOnELD mill, will visit the mill in Pittsburg, fish were Calif., this week-en- d. Three loads of large-size- d Scofield the last reservoir in planted week by Fred Larsen of Castle Dale, MASS BAND, COURT OF HONOR HERE CHRISTMAS DAY game warden of this district One load eaeh day was planted Monday, TuesOn December 25, the Boy Scout day and Wednesday. The fish were obtained from the state fish hatch- mass band unit, comprising more than ille. Through the ef- a hundred musicians, will meet in this ery at Springy Carbon-Emery Fish and city with troop units under the direcforts of the' Game association, a total of twenty-seve- n tion of Glen D. Beene. George A Bow. loads have been planted this ley and W. W. Christensen are in charge of the training elements of the year in the streams of this sector. occasion. They will be assisted by REORGANIZATION OF HELPERS Grant Richens. A A Anderson, scout executive of this district, will also be CHAMBER OF COMMERCE to A movement has been launched by Helper business men to reorganise the Chamber of Commerce of that city which formerly played an active part in civic undertakings bnt whieh full into inactivity several years ago. A meeting of the business men of Helreper will be called soon to consider for- organization of the body and to mulate definite organisation plans. Christmas, vacation for school of Carbon county will begin thui year on Tuesday, December 23 and will last until . Monday, January' 5 when classes will be resumed. Action to the effect was taken by the boaro of education in. regular session Wednesday afternoon at Harding school. The school calendar originally called for a vacation from December 19 until December 29. In order that the. correct number of school days may be included in the semester, students will be required to attend classes on throe Saturdays. These Saturdays will not all come consecutively, it was announced at the board office Thursday morning. The question' of .installing automatic stokers in all. the school buildup in the eounty was brought 'before the board, but because of the present financial condition of tha school district, thq subject was. dropped temporarily. George Miller am Mr. Bead, representative, of the Iron Fireman company, met with the board and made a proposition on installation. Two of the stokers are now in use and it was proposed to put eleven more in operation, the payments to start January 1, 1932, and extend over a period of three years. It was also proposed to put stokers in the Harding, 8pring Glen and Helper schools on a part cash and time payment plan. E: M. Williams, director of musk at Carbon high school, met with the board and declared that the band is short on instrumentation. It was proposed that the board authorise the ex. penditure of $400 for the purchase of a timpano, bassoon and two oboeeG&. Williams declared that the band: by giving concerts, ought to be 4bm to earn naif the expenditure by spring. The nutter was referred to the. superintendent with instructions to wotk out some plan that would involve only chil-A-dre- n - . , the high, sehool. fund. A lease wusfteeived from tional Coal company for the ground in National upon which the Gordon Creek school is to-b-e built, but, after careful consideration, the lease was returned to the coal company with, a request for a few minor changes.' A report was received from the school architect to the effect' that the present building projects of the school district should be completed by December 8. The board also authorised the of $60 balance due an a Syment type of typewriter that has been, purchased, by the Helper er . ately- immedi- ... Several complaints were received concerning the crowded conditions of school buses. While the board recognizes that such a condition exists, no action was taken on the .matter because of the belief that the matter will right itself after Christmas. It has been found that a number of students from outlying districts usu ally drop school after the holidays and it is believed that this may help matters some. A bus from the Bains school to Mutual and some of the outlying districts will be run as soon as the winter weather sets in. County, As Usual, Will Back Football Team By Phil McLesss, Salt Lake Tribune. If Granite wins from Carbon here Saturday in the state semi-fin- al high school football game, it is going to have to overcome two big obstacles the Carbon eleven and approximately five hundred Carbon eounty rooters. Ever since Coach Vernon Merrills youngsters subdued Provo, 6 to 0, in a quarter-finbattle, it has been an accepted fact that the Fanners wonld meet a great deal of opposition in the Priee high school. However, it was not known until Wednesday that sneh a large rooting section would be in Salt Lake City to offset any advantage whieh the Farmer boosters might give their team in the way of encouragement. . Special Train Chartered. ' Arrangements have been completed for a special train to carry almost three hundred fans from all parts of Carbon eounty. The train will leave Price at 7 o clock Saturday morning and arrive in Salt Lake City at 11:30 a. m. I Many others are expecting to eomcjto the scene of the game by autoand rsisethe total number oJ! Carbon fans to close o the five hundred mark. Arrangements for the excursion are being made with the Denver and Bio Grande Western, Price Chamber of Commerce, Professor Norman Hamilton of the' Carbon high. Thus Priee may cany on the precedent of adequately supporting its high school football, team. In 1924, when the eleven played to a scoreless tie with L D. S. in the finals here, large numbers of fans made tbs trip to Salt Lake City in a special train. When the Carbon eleven played Brigham City, there was also a special train arranged for.. Band to Make Trip. The Price high school band also will puke the trip, according to the high school authorities. The special will leave Salt Lake City for Price late Saturday evening. The big thing the Price fans are worrying about now is the loss of Grant Hutchinson, who was so injury ed in the Provo game that he will be unable to play here Saturday. He is one of the shiftiest open field runners in the state and Coach Merrill has no reserves who can do as well as Hutchinson. Nevertheless, tbe Carbon county eleven is still a powerful team. There is no doubt about that. Their margin of victory over Provo was larger than the 6 to 0 score indicates, and any team which can win from the Bulldogs is good. . al ar 28 Shopping . Days Funeral services for Giovanni Pascuzzi, who died in Helper, on pi November 14, were held from the DOUBLES GATE CASTLE QUOTA Catholic ehureh in Helper November 17, 'with Rev. Father William A RuFOR RED CROSS el officiating. Interment was in the According to B. B. Kirkpatrick, Helper cemetery. Pascuzzi was born chairman of the Bed Gross in Carbon June 8, 1928 in Helper, the son of eounty, Castle Gate not only came up of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Pascuzzi. to its quota in the membership drive Cause of death was given as lobar but more then doubled it. The quota pneumonia. was $80, but they collected $172.80. This is a fine response from that com. Funeral services for Peter Bianco, resident of Kenilworth, mnnity especially during dull. times and more than demonstrates the feel- were held from the Catholic church in ing of coal mining people toward the Helper last Wednesday, with the Bev. Father Camp officiating. organisation. i the condition will be started Centenary celebration of the Mine, ulous Medal is to be held at the Notre Dame de Lourdes church in Priee on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday of next week, according to annuoneement received from Bev. Father William A Ruel, pastor of the church. Tbe celebration will begin Sunday morning with masses in Price and Helper at which the Rev Father Russell L. Kitscbenhauter of the St Thomas seminary staff of Denver, Colo., will deliver the sermons. Presentation of the apparitions will be portrayed in a pageant given by the Notre Dame school children in the evening. There is no admission charge. Rev. Father Kitschenbsuter will deliver an address in connection with the pageant This celebration marks tbe opening of a Tridunm of prayer in honor of the miraculous medal during which there will be three masses daily and evening prayer services at 7:45 oclock. The evening services will consist of prayers before the shrine, sermon, congregational singing and benediction. Enrollment in the confraternity of the miraculous medal will take place after every evening service. The will close on Thanksgiving morning with a solemn high mass, Bev. Father Kitschenbsuter, celebrant; the Bev. Father C. M. Camp, deaeon and Bev. Father Ruel, The grand tridnnm of honor and gratitude is held in all tbe Catholic churches throughout the world on this occasion in honor of the appearance of the Blessed Virgin of the miraculous medal to an hnmble Sister of Charity, Sister Catharine Labours in 1830 at the motherhouse of the Sisters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul, 140 Rue dn Bsc, Paris. Sister Catharine was favored with three apparitions, during which she was commanded to have a medal made according to the model given her by the Blessed Virgin. school.' A request was received from' the Parent-Teachassociation at .Latu-d-a relative to the clearing of ground in front of the school preparatory to establishment of a public playground with tennis and basketball cofcrts. The estimated cost of clearing and leveling the ground would be $600 and the Latuda citizens asked that the school board 'authorize the . expenditure of a hundred dollars of this amount. The board was in favor of the project but, because of the present state of the treasury, decided to table the matter until soring. A petition was received from the Harper district relative to establishment of a School in that section. There are six children of school age in that district who live in Carbon county and three who live in Duchesne county. Residents there were informed that the superintendent will attempt to arrange some consolidation district with officials of Duchesne eounty. A complaint was received from Kiz ELECTED concerning the drinking water. At this ONE DIRECTOR TO BE BY WATER DISTRICT time the water must be transported several miles and does not seem to Election of one director for a three-yebe satisfactory. An investigation into term for the Priee River Water Conservation district will be held December 2, according to Mrs. Viola O -Berto, secretary. Candidates are John H. Bedd and Lincoln Marshall. Present director A Thayne. Polling places are Division 1, Spring Glen school house; Division 2, Latter-da- y present Saints chapel at Wellington, and Divhonor of court is It likely that a ision 3, home of E. C. Pierce. The polls will be held at that time under the will be open from 7 a. m. until 7, p. G. of P. Peacock. supervision m. of that day. LAST RITES HELD FOR HELPER COUNTY GETS FIRST SNOW OF CHILD THERE MONDAY YEAB LAST FRIDAY Gui-scp- The old-tiboy who had a good head for figures now has a son who has a good eye for them. ' Centenary Celebration More Money Needed to At Notre Dame Make Inspections . omo Charles A. Anderson, Kenilworth. Adele Smith, Kenilworth. W. JI. B. Thode, Salt Lake City. Melvina Craig, Salt Lake City. Samuel Charles Clegg, Elmo. Caroline Jane Mills, Price. Until Xmas . Winter came to eastern Utah just about one month ahead of schedule this year when a low pressure area to tbs south caused rapidly falling temperatures and snow last Friday. Flurries of snow eame intermittently Saturday and Sunday with more intense storms in the mountains. The road over Indian summit was because of closed over the week-en- d the heavy drifts and traffic had difficulty at times in negotiating the road. south of Soldier Summit However, the farmers win benefit to a groat extend, winter wheat and ranges are much improved after the moisture. r Tri-duu- m sub-deaeo- n. WELLINGTON MAN CANDIDATE FOB SCHOOL ELECTION The need of better inspection of mines and factories makes it imperative that the state industrial commission be granted an increased appropriation for the next biennium, W. M. Knerr, chairman of the commission and O. F. MeShane, member, informed Governor George II. Dern by letter Monday. The commission is asking for $128,000 in comparison ' with the $100,500 awarded last year. Tbe letter explained that one coal mine inspector cannot properly inspect the eight hundred miles of coal mines in the state and that one metal mine inspector cannot take care of the fifteen hundred miles of metal mines in the state. The increase in appropriation is mostly taken up by the hiring of a building inspector and increasing the salary of the assistant coal mine inspector from $1300 to $2700 a year. In connection with the latter item, Mr. Knerr declared that the commission has had the right to hire a deputy inspector at $150 a month bnt that experience had shown that a man available at that priee was of no value. Knerr presented figures to show that Utah produces more coal per dollar of inspection than one of the eight states listed. Colorado produces 285 tons of coal for every dollar spent in inspection; Wyoming 355; North Dakota 388; Pennsylvania 588, and Utah 733. The letter to Governor Dern said, in part: There are approximately 4000 coal miners working in the state of Utah producing annually 5,000,000 tons of coal. These men work under the most hazardous conditions of any coal miners in the United States. Some of these hazards are the extreme friability of our coal; the highly inflamable quality of the coal dust; the pressure of the highly explosive gases; the steep slopes; the high seams, the great and other hazards which we will not go to the trouble to enumerate. This eounty has foreeably felt the need., of closer inspection. .Within tha past-feyean hundreds of miners have lost their lives through faulty inspection. Outstanding among the instances are the Castle Gate disaster, the explosions at Standardville and tfew Peerless. over-burde- Albert Barnes of Wellington has as a ' candidate for the school board election which will be held De; cember 3, for three of the five districts of the eounty. C. J. Roberts of Columbia and B. 6. Eggertsen of Sun. nyside are other candidates from that district. William H. Woodhead from Kenilworth and George Ruff will be PETITION IN FAVOR OF HELPER unopposed in their respective disFEDERAL BUILDING tricts filed- - A petition for aid in obtaining a FUNERAL SERVICES HELD FOB federal building for Helper is being EARLY PRICE PIONEER circulated among the citizens of tha Funeral services for Casper Her- community this week, and aa soon aa man Bryner, pioneer of Priee and Car- possible copies will be forwarded to bon county, were held November 16 the United States treasury departSaints tabernacle in ment, the postmaster general, Senaat the Latter-da- y Price. Speakers were President E. S. tor Reed Smoot and Congressman Don Horsley, Bishop George Jorgensen, H. B. Colton. The 'possibility of getting a federal G. Mathis and John A Mathis. Two numbers were sung by the church building for Helper looks favorable and efforts to secure definite action choir, Through Deepening Trials, are being pushed by city and postal and We Shall Meet authorities. A letter received by City W. Elder offered A was by Prayer Shiner and benediction was asked .by Attorney J. Armol Gleason from Senator Reed Smoot relative to the matter Elton Taylor. Deceased was horn at St. George, and in answer to Gleasons letter confor Helper February 8, 1864 and came to Price cerning a federal building in 1883. He was one of the earliest says in part: Helper is entitled to a settlers of this part of Castle Valley. federal building and I shall do everyHe died November 13 at Salt Lake thing in my power to see that the same is allocated to you. When tbs City following a lingering illness. petition to which you refer is preDIVORCE SOUGHT BY HELPER pared, send the same to me and I DOCTOR IN DISTRICT COURT shall immediately take it to the trees, department. Dr. Clifford L. Kline of Helper has uryThe lists the increase in potion nt court in district divorce filed suit for the Helper office receipts postal and is seeking separation from his for the past five years; calls attenwife, Marguerite McGinnis Kline. He tion to the hazards of the present loalleges that his wifes jealous disposi- cation, firej makes notation and false accusations frequently tion of particularly the increase, and population made him bo nervous he could not comments the timely relief to upon The were his practice. couple cany on the unemployment situation of such married in Omaha, Neh., June 2, 1927, a building project and have no children. Plaintiff has month dollars a agreed to pay fifty SURVEY OF ROAD SOUTH BEING alimony and will concede her all the MADE BY COMMISSION joint property acquired during marriage. Fred Woolley of the state road commission is in Price this week working FOB BEADY PRICE RULES NOW on the plats of the recently completed SCHOOL BAND CONTEST road work near Monticello. Work of The Committee appointed by the surveying the new line for the road Price Chamber of Commerce to formu to Cat Canyon is progressing satislate rules for the school hand con- factorily, although it has been slowtest, to be staged here April 10 and il, ed somewhat by the snow and cold has eompleted its work and will an- weather. Lee Wendelboe, engineer in charge nounce the complete list of regulations next week. The problem of houa. of the survey, is in the field at the ing the thousand hand members who present time. The new survey is being are expected to be here for the event made for the purpose of comparison. is in charge of the Business and Pro- If the new line proves to be more inexpensive than the present one, the fessional Womens club. Thus far eight bands have formally road will be built along that survey. presented their application. They are as follows: Logan, Uintah, Garland, THE SUN CORRECTS ERROR OF LAST WEEK ON INITIATION Fountain Green, Helper junior high, Duchesne, Ferron and ML Emmons. The Sun was in error last week Others who have given definite assurance that they will compete are when it reported that Charles Craft Central high of Castle Dale, Carbon, of Price was initiated into Priee OrHarding junior high and the West Lodge Benevolent and Protective der of Elks. The name should have high of Salt Lake City. been Charles Propp of Spring Glen. The former am was the one given A soft answer may turn away wrath hut it will not drive a book agent this newspaper by officials or the from tha door. lodge. . ' |