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Show Page Two THE Sun - Advocate 'The ONI NEWRRARCR. , I 3. ONE COET' General Excellence Awara, Utah Press Association, 1946 and 1947 Issued Every Thursday By The CARBON COUNTY PUBLISHING COMPANY Entered at the postoffice at Price, Utah, as second class matter under act of March 3, 1879. Subscription rate $3.00 yearly in Utah; $3.00 yearly outside state Hal G. MacKnicht, Publisher Alex Bene, Jr., News Editor j n ; ONE COVERAGE, i Mrs. Helen Smith, Society Editor CORRESPONDENTS Josephine Houghton.. Merlene Southworth Castle Gall Standardville Jeffs Flora Ricketts Minnie G. Clark Agnes S. Sunnyside-Sunnyda- Hiawatha Spring Canyon Dragerton Bessie Roberts Ionnie Lewis Amanda Petersen Rains Wellington WEMBUL UTAH SIAIE le P&S j TKt ASSOCIATION OI NATIONAL CDITORIA! " Heres started ASSOCIATION ABOUT DEPRESSIONS one about how depressions get A man started a hotdog stand.' He decided he would give the public a little more than they were used to by adding an inch to the length of his frankfurters and a comfortable increase in business resulted, he refused to serve a hotdog to a customer unless it was perfectly cooked. Word of the bargain he spread and his business prospered. of-fer- ed He built additions to his stand which had started as one room. He placed an attractive sign in front of his place. He advertised the extra something his hotdogs had in the i? -- TAXES N AANT, ANISE AND CUMMN. SEES PAID ELA P-- DRA CONING, FA SHI ON A BLEIN TUDOR ENGLAND, , VIEA NT PUTTING A M ' V flrH FLAMING SUBSTANCEy&Sf ON A DRINK AND iff Swallowing A GULP. AT it iifI fLM J<fl TO A Change is in Order S DISPENSE tradicted the faith healer thinks hes sick. he oniy thinks hes IN IPSO, SCAVENGER PGS YORK NEW STREETS, HOUSE WVES HUNTED THEM FOR FREE MEAT. WHENjfi AN ORDINANCE OUT-L- A WED PGS, HOUSE-WVE- S FOUGHT ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS. OVER-RA- CopyrejL. ble. j -S-- The farmers daughter returned from college for her summer vacation and her father eyed her critically and said. You've last some IN CHARITY. The man took his sons suggestions. Business did as a matter of fact fall off some and at the sons further suggestions the man cut down his overhead by with the sign in front of his shopdispensing and cancelling his advertising. Business continued to drop and the man boarded off the additions which he had made during the years of prosperity. e was own to the one room with uhich he had started and business was terri- on chop. assist ELIZABETHAN HOUSEWIVES ALWAYS KEPT " SMALL BEER ' else. on pnta s- he said, the experts at school tell us that theres going to be a depression and that nows the time to retrench and get ready for it. Nows the time to save against the day when the money' wont be coming in as fast. How do you mean? asked the man. The boy suggested that a real saving could be made if the free serving of potato were dropped from the hotdog order. chips a saving could be effected if the manAgain sold standard size hotdogs and rolls like everyone mills necessary, offsetting any other little reductions and bringthe total levy up to twenty-tw- o ing Price gave Mohrland a close bucking. In the rub Sunday, being defeated by the fights will hold the evening, the and a half mills, just a half above spotlight. last year. Emerites by a score of only 7 to 5. Price citizens may now have Definitely and positively it may Colton water will be used by pipelines, pipe dreams, of any now be asserted that the contract Miss Margaret Horsley of Price, other thing requiring the use of for the work of Scowhen she christens the ship pipe for the council last Tuesday field branch of moving the the big dam to at Alamenda, California, evening traded the innards of the form the Pleasant Valley reservoir on July 31. The only objectors old light to the Western is all parties and signed up to the use of Colton water are Machinery plant for $600 cash that work will bybe started as soon the m otion picture operators, who and $4,400 company worth of iron pipe of as tools and declare it will make no impression varying sizes. equipment can be moved to the scene of operations. on their firm. The name, Lieut. Henry Ruggeri arrived in was suggested by Mrs. Matters of considerable imporPrice this week after a long ser- tance C. H. Stevenson after the Council to the people of the comvice of defense had been notified that ied overseas. He was accompan- munity were handed at the reguCarbon county led the entire Parkby his wife and had been in lar meeting of the Price city counCity and Salt Lake, several cil last Twelfth federal reserve district Thursday evening. It has before coming to Carbon been talked days in the Fourth Leber ty loan. about town that with county. will resume the Main street paved, it would Henry Gus Platis and Steve Bombas, not be have begun the erection of a brick' practice of law, but has not de- long before others were also indecided finitely whether building on the lot just west of have an office in Price he will cluded in such improvement. Last or Helper. year a their confectionery on Main street. petition was filed asking It will be but one story with a that eighth street between Main full basement for the present. Twenty-Fiv- e Years Ago and J street be created as a paved district. Now another request is It is hard to predict which event will be most exciting on July 24, Something always comes up to that the same street south from when the big rodeo and boxing put an effort to comply with a Main as far as G street be paved. exhibition are staged in Price. A popular demand to the bad. PerCarbon county valuation of probig bunch of young bucks is com- haps no public clamor is more uni- perty for the purposes of taxation ing over from the reservation and versally voiced than the cry for is $358,412 less this year than it they claim that their ponies can a reduction of taxes. Meeting to was last, the total for the current go backwards and beat anything fix the levy for the current year being $27,099,939. Carbon or Emery county can pro- -, Carbon County commissioners year, toDr. and Mrs. H. B. Goetzman duce a race stock. There will day were confronted by a situation Mr. and Mrs. Rhead got back .and also be bucking and the catching which made any reduction to Price this week after a most imposof the greased pig will give some1 sible, the needs of the schools outing up in Yellowstone relief from the tenseness of the make a raise of one and a half enjoyable Park. Uta-carb- IN BIBLICALTIMEE, THA T THE PHA Rl the word. Father, The depression, just as the experts had predicted, had come. Mt. Pleasant Pyramid. firs.. Yknow, i woman drink an countered lj with v'oman eat alone." A group of Communist execumattress ... , r115 tioners were bragging to each Say, what do a.. ?l the cold weahereil0W5,i; other while killing time. WeV( First executioner: Is that so? having? s-Well last week I cut off more A faith healer heads than youll cut off in your ran friend Max and aster" b whole life. executioner: Listen were going. Second h,,j comrade, I've brought that old so good sheer down on eleven reactionary My brother capitalists from five countries. Your brother isnt Third executioner: Come, come, comrades let us not talk 0 SPICES WERE SO VALUABLE became prosperous. He sent his son to college to study business administration with the instruction to bring back the latest business methods so that the hotdog stand could be made even more profitable. Eventually the son graduated. He returned to the hotdog stand to give his father Z9-4-- N months later again and the faith hi?, weight havent you? The girl replied Yes father, weigh 112 pounds stripped gym. The father leaped out of his chair and grabbed the shotgun from the wall and said, who the; devil is Jim? and what are his ons? J.S.CterAe. Hiawathas new Community tation with the grain crop. church building is to cost around Mr. Hopkin points out that ten thousand dollars and will be farmers faced with the necessity of stucco. It is to be near the of adjusting acerage of grain, United States Fuel Hospital and crops to avoid surpluses and prices will consist of a chapel, two Sun- that go along with them or to day school rooms and a study. comply with acreage allotments The bobbed hair craze has given to obtain price supports, may well the silk industry in Switzerland a consider building up nitrogen rehard blow. The. American girl serves through grass and legume now wears fewer hair ribbons. rotations. Since in many dryland areas it may take several years ss o I The Mayor f Price says, Lib- eralism may be coming into the churches, but it hasnt reached the collection boxes yet. j S-- thinks hes S-- Soils : . . engine wear by Stay ahead of Oil-Platin- g with Conoco N" Motor Oil. The exclusive additive in Conoco N( holds an extra shield of lubricant right to the moving parts them against wear. Oil-Plat- Gentle Starting! . . . Even after standing all night, is still up there on the cylinders. It cant all drain down No grinding starts with Oil-Plati- es 1 dry-fricti- Oil-Platin- g! Lasting Power! . . . Another additive in Conoco NfA protects your engine against sludge and carbon. Preserve that new-ca- r power with Conoco NfA. Longer Life ! . . . An Oil-Plate-d engine means more miles between repairs peak performance year after year. So, for protection for power for performance your best buy is Conoco NA Motor Oil. OilPlate today at your Conoco Mileage Merchants Copyriglit IS49, CoatiDeota! Oil Company ! Colonel, he pointed J kh; American Army is battling fend American womanhood?" Thats true, admitted the b to fc onel. Well then, the replied, why in hell these guys fighting for? COCA-COL- A COCA-COI- youle as they trh . THE what al! Ask for it either way . . . both mean the same thing. OR press agtt wont S-- S- trade-mar- AUTHORITY see Cat Price City Fannie says, ft trouble with a husband works like a horse is that I wants to do at night u hit 4 hay. Tliirst , Too. Seeks Q Dt C ingeniousThd:fePnr.g re correct the second difficulty, he suggests the application of nitrogen. Admitting that all the answers aren t in from experiments being carried on, he says that there is strong evidence that the application of nitrogen fertilizer will help to overcome the reduced yields that appear to follow the use of good soil and water conservation practices. The weed problem may be partly overcome by the use of some .mpiement that stirs up the surface soil behind the subtiller. The State Agricultural Experiment Stations and the U. S. Department of Agriculture are making detailed experimental studies of these problems, particularly in connection with nitrogen deficiencies. Four methods of applying nitrogen are being studied to determine the conditions under which each method can be used most effectively. These four methods are; (1) Apply directly to the stubble after the crop has been harvested; (2) apply to the land when the crop is sown; (3) Where stands of legumes peas, vetch or clover can be obtained to use a nitrogen-restorin- g legume in rotation with the grain crop; (4) Apply nitrogen to an adapted grass which can be grown in ro S When the commanding of an American in heard that there wT tease show on the S to get a good stand of grass such as crested wheatgrass, the rotation would naturally be a long one. By building up the nitrogen in the soil it will be possible to conIn tinue to carry out conservation practices which protest the soil he exclaimed to a sym One of the serious problems from washing and blowing and at nervous Poetic young interne standing confronting dryland wheat farm- the same time maintain per-acThis is my first opera- nearby. ers in Utah is finding a way to yields. tion. m protect land from blowing and So am I, said the young washing away without reducing The first bicycle was made inman. per-ac- re My husband is the doctor yields. Trashy fallow Scotland in 1840. and its his first too. protects the land but often there is not enough available nitrogen for both plant growth and for stubble decomposition. According to J. Vern Hopkin, chairman of the State Production and Marketing Administration committee, experience of a number of farmers indicates that lower per-acyields follow the car rying out of the trashy fallow, or crop residue management practices approved under the Agricultural Conservation Program. The crop residue practice, where most of the stubble is worked into the topsoil instead of being turned under, has proven very effective in checking wind and water erosion, but something needs to be done to overcome the problem of lower yields where there is not enough nitrogen. Mr. Hopkin said that if the reasons for lower yields are determined, they no doubt will point the way to a solution. He gave three probable reasons for lower yields: (1) where the stub ble is heavy, it is possible that conditions are not favorable to sprout the seed and sustain the young plant; (2) the nitrogen required to rot the stubble leaves too little available for the growing crop; and (3) the increase of weeds, especially grassy type. To meet the first problem, Mr. Hopkin suggests the use of a drill that puts the seed down through the loose soil and stubble into the firmer soil. re deaTnow"' The patient was lying on the stretcher waiting to be pushed into the operating room, Im sc Dryland Farmers Face Lack of Nitrogen sick Two To A Winner! l4 A liquor salesman man and a mattre sitting around in i 1 mt - . i 'thwvjh'the ayes... newspapers. As the volume of his business grew, he was able to add a serving of delicious potato chips to each hotdog order. lie was overwhelmed with business. He Thirty Years Ago Uta-carb- Jhursdqyjuiy SUN-ADVOCA- , .. COMPANY BOTTLING COMPANY - l |