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Show THE PAGE FOURTEEN i TWENTY YEARS AGO (Taken from the files of The Sun of August 10, 1917). J. H. Leautaud, Puces member of the board of directors of Price River Irrigation company, yesterday had a letter from George A. Smith and others of the company, who last Tuesday had a conference with the state land board relative to borrowing forty thousand dollars for building a tunnel west of Price, and the latter appear willing. ' A D V O 0 A T E , PRICE. UTAH THURSDAY, ernor Henry H. Blood being scheduled to deliver the address. The meeting is to be open to the public. A luncheon will be held at 12:30 at the tabernacle and this will be followed by the business session which will be held at the tabernacle, startmothers ing at 2 oclock. Gold Star are to be honored at a tea at the home of Mrs. C. R. Fergusson, starting at 4 oclock and continuing until six. Sightseeing trips to the dry ice plant at Wellington and the rock asphalt listed. quarries at Sunnyside are also n state of the Past presidents will hold their annual breakfast at the hall of the Notre Dame church as the opening number on the busiSaturday program, the general ness session scheduled to start at 9:00 a. m. Highlights of the Saturday FOR AUXILIARYS CONVENTION HERE Saturday collision in Indian canA head-o- n yon Saturday night caused the death of John Clare Johnson ,17, of Boulder, Colorado. John was on his way from Boulder to Delta. With him in the car were Mrs. Mary Brown, Miss, and Alvin and Wallace Brown. Alvin was driving as they came around the outside of a curve and smashed into a -- PLANS COMPLETE Boy Killed In Auto Smash-U- p 8 C N Members of the executive board of the American Legion Auxiliary of Utah will meet at the L. D. S. tabernacle at 8:30 oclock next Thursday morning as the initial step in opening the Utah department convention for 1937, accoording to Mrs. Earl Jones, president of the Price unit. organ-iatio- The convention will be held in conjunction with the state American LeH. S. Robinett was named manager C. C. C. truck. gion and Forty and Eight conclaves, Motor company Suffering a celebral hemorrhage, all three organizations to hold forth of the Utah-Idahere Wednesday evening, succeeding skull fracture, fractured right jaw in Price on August 5, 6 and 7 in what morning session will include election and left leg, the boy lived for two is expected to be the largest session of the officers for 1938 and choosing W. O. Horner. hours, finally succumbing just as their of veterans and their wives in Utah of the national committeewoman. The at 7:45 this year, present indications pointing officers are to be installed at Price is likely soon to have two car reached Price city limits inwas one No else m. all-tisession p. record this meeting, too. to a possible Saturday. more garage buildings, larger and of seriously. attendance. jured from Nethe now At the Carbon Country Club a standpoint here. better than anything The body was shipped Sunday of the Auxiliary program bridge luncheon will be served startlot for Milburn in the Outlining are gotiations in for the three days was completed at ing at 1 oclock Saturday afternoon, on Main street, and the Weeter and night by the Wallace Mortuary to Denver. Price a recent meeting of state officers and under direction of the local unit. Loofbourow ground, across frm the The deceased, a carpenters appren- three members of the Price unit, Mrs. Sun office. tice, is the son of John C. and Alta Jones, Mrs. Ted Thomas, publicity chairman, and Mrs. Arthur Craven, The faculty for the Emery Stake Schultz of Boulder. recently elected district president of academy has been appointed. It inthe organization. cludes B. W. Dalton, commercial law; basis Mrs. Estella Dalton, dressmaking; ArRegistration on an all-dThe growth of the federal savings at hotel the will be M. Savoy opened education, thur psycholoBeeleey, loan associations in Utah and the and initial the general Thursday morning, gy, advertising, salesmanship, social Coal production in Utah totaled business session to start at 9:30 a. m. continued expansion of home building Victor Anderson, science; general rescience and arithmetic; B. Y. Baird, 39,000 net tons for the week ending in the tabernacle. This will also be in that state are emphasized by Federal the to released received 17, today by according figures the scene of a joint meeting with Le- ports Elmarion July woodwork; agriculture, this week by the United States de- gion delegates at 2 p. m. Under the Home Loan bank board. Nichols, music, physical education; In six months ending July 1, assets direction of Mrs. George B. Harding Mrs. Glenn Johnson Beeley, domestic partment of interior. This is tons increased from $4,751,202 to $5,066,-14- 7, 3,000 figure higher contests be under will music started science, English; Miss Sarah Oveson, than for the week previous, and far way at 4 oclock. A joint banquet or $314,945 in assets. elocution. above the same week in 1936 when with Direct reduction mortgage loans Legionnaires will be held in the dining room of the Community for construction, purchase, refinancCarlos Dalpiaz, former city mar- only 24,000 net tons were produced. During the week ending July 17 the church that evening, followed by the ing and reconditioning of homes in shall at Helper, has been appointed dance as a windup affair Utah rose from $3,079,128 to $3,673,-- 1 as deputy sheriff at the railroad town, nations total bituminous coal output was net as 7,132,000 tons, compared for the day at the Silver Moon hall. 169 in the same period, an increase of succeeding M. H. Leute. with 6,420,000 tons for the week preOnly Legionnaires, Auxiliary mem- $594,041. A direct reduction loan is one in Wilford Ruff and Miss Viola Whit- vious. bers and their invited friends will be Production of anthracite coal for which the face value of the mortgage to dance. that attend taker were licensed to marry in Salt the week ending July 17 was 575,000 permitted A business session at the tabernacle is continually decreased by easy Lake City Monday. net tons, as compared with 819,000 at 9:30 a. m. will start the Friday con- monthly payments like rent until the tons for the similar period a year ago. of vention activities of the ladies or- borrower owns his home free of debt. Helper has been Henry Ruggeri Federal associations in Utah are ganization. At 11 oclock a memorappointed as assistant county attorney. He will move to Price from plus and undivided profits account ial service will be held at the Star located in Logan, Ogden, Price and was increased to $21,00- 0theatre with Legion delegates, Gov- - Salt Lake City. Helper. ho Cattle Innoculated To Prevent Spread Of Eye Contagion Savings And Loan Associations Increase ?F . UnA Ch Sunday school at m for every age, C. E iieven?, ermtendent. Morning worship at ii f . at-t- - iw - I L. D. S. TRAINING PAYS Once there was a farmer Who didnt plant any OF COURSE, crop for fear of a drouth THERE WAS NO HARVEST! He was like the youth who made no special preparation for because News-Advoca- THE WORK OF THE WORLD MUST GO ND WILL BE OPPORTUNITIES FOR THOSE QUALIFIED. ON-A- THEEJ WHO PLANT NOW FOR YOUR HARVEST. A post card you the free booklet, Planning Your Future. L 70 will AEE bring D. S. BUSINESS COLLEGE North Main Salt Lake te of August 9, 1917). Five hundred pairs of shoes will be .shipped out tomorrow by the for the refugees in France. Most were gathered up by the Boy News-Advoc- ate Scouts, while residents all over the county contributed. Seven trains a day of 50 cars each, every car containing 40 tons of coal will be moving from county mines to consumers within the next few days. The railroad is expecting 500 new cars this month. THURSDAY Similar accidents within a few days of each other caused two deaths at Hiawatha last week. Dick Garr, son of Richard Garr, master mecharfic, tricd to crawl under some cars Frihim. day and four trucks passed overbrake-maOn Saturday, T. E. Coffman, was also run over. FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY n, AUG. 5, 6, 7, 8 per cent of Carbon county were drafted were disqualified, Tuesday, and 13 yesterday, .showing fine physical specimens. Only 14 "boys who Guy A. Curtis, principal at Scofield, and Stephen A. Olsen, one of the newly elected teachers, were granted grammar grade life diplomas by the! educational authorities of the state. D. G. Simmons, was granted a and Henry Pace school certificate. AND WHILE HERE ENJOY THE THRILLS OF Hiawatha principal certificate, received a high five-ye- ar Thirty Years Ago (Take from the files of The East-- j ern Utah Advocate of August 8, 1907).; J. J. Thomas, secretary of the state board of equalization, has forwarded; the tax levy list to each county. A levy of eight mills for state and state school purposes has been resolved,! $800,000 having been the set sum to( be raised for those needs. for prairie chickens, grouse, doves and pheas-- l Tuesday. A single hunt-rmittto shoot more than during one day. SUPPLYING HAPPINESS & ed Miss Bessie Kennedy left last night for her home in Brunswick, Missouri, after a visit of tw-- months with her sisters, Mrs. R. W. and Mrs. J. A. Crockett, in Price. A son was bom to Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. World Monday morning. Joseph Bonacci has just completed two neat dwellings in Helper, costing about three thousand dollars. A. W. McKinnon was made assist- ant cashier to A. McGovney, in the First National bank .yesterday. A dividend of 5 per cent was declared on the capital stock of fifty thousand dollars, while the sur- semi-annu- al JOY jq all tows ;on AE.S'ffY YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY1 SOMETHING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY YOUNG AND OLD 'YYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYl a Efe there might be no jobs available. maybe he could not hold a job if he got one. there might be another depression or a war or SOMETHING. one-ha- (Taken from the files of The ! wV T f it I . e, ay on have county commissioners fixed the tax levy for this year at 24.35 mills. One eighth is for genlf for the poor fund; thirty-eral, five one hundredth for bond interest; five and seventenths for schools and roads; two for state and high school; five for range horses; four for sheep and goats; Prices levy is Un mills; Helper, 8, Scofield, 6; Sunnyside, 3; Wellington, 4; Hiawatha, IV4. Community and fifty head of cat tie in the Beaver creek district have ,he ch acbeen vaccinated against pink-eycording to J. B. Jewkes, district agEpworth league at 7 30 ricultural inspector. er Margaret Larson, Seventy-fiv- e head, already suffer- That Are Stranger Than Fkti ing from the infectious disease, have Choir practice every atrest Thur in an the been isolated from 8:00 p. m. , to further prevent contagion. tempt Scouts Boy Thursday Mr. Jewkes explained that pink-ey- e Start a Good Week in a foil may result in blindness and even in a cancerous condition in the more se by going to church. T- Hvere cases. EVANS, One-hundr- ed ' Figures Released On Coal Output In Utah Al'CCSTs CLEAN ORGANIZATION THROUGHOUT BRING Till KIDDIES Also Free Attractions Youll Really Enjoy!! City u |