OCR Text |
Show THE SUN, PRICE, PAGE FOUR American betTgruwer and sugar producer and also for the benefit of the American icople by assuring them the development of their domestic Issued Every Friday By Sun PuldUh-In- g sugar industry which will make them Co. (Inc.) it. W. Crockett. Mgr independent of foreign supplies. 2.0) the tear, office Subacription, Thou No. 9: Itesid.iu-e- , So. 113312. CRIME WAVE MAY HIT HERE AT ANY TIME. Entered aa Mall Second-Claa- a Mat- 115, at Poetofflce at Price, Utah, Under the Act of March , 1371. ADYEH1TS1NU R1TIA Display Matter Per Inch per Month, 1. tu; Single laeue, ton. Special 25 Per Cent Additional. Ceuta the Line Each InUftlr-Te- n ter, June 1, n, sertion. Count Six Words to the Line. , 12.50; Water Application, 15.00; Final Proof. llo.OO. Keadare Ten Ceuta the Line. Count Blackface Six Worda to the Lina Type Fifteen Centa ilia Lilia. Obituaries, Carda of Tninkt, K evolution. Etc., at Half local Beading Notice Bates. Count Six Worda to the Lina. Adlets. For Sale, For Rent, Found, Cents per Word Lost, Etc.. Each lasue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO, Sumini-tia- To Price. Utah. I went mourning without llw But; I stood up and cried In the confrrp (llNLoaJub, SO-t- K, - sm For the iast several weeks an alarming crime wave reaching from coast to coast has been sweeping the rountry, and about all one finds on the front juige of a inetroimlitan these days is a recital of bank robberies, holdup, housebreaking and Nieket ticking. No one apieara to lie in Kisitiou to account lor it. It seems to lie a sort of contagion that is fast spreading to many who have Leretutviie been tieyond the isle of Quite a few of the smalsuspicion. ler towns of the country re Mir t robberies arid holdups, too, so it would not be amis for citizens of Eastern Utah towns to lie on their guard. Not that we have any of that kind of talent," but in Ibis day of fast trains and thousands of speedy autos the chance of escajie afforded a baud of robber is far greater than ever before. It is an easy matter now for a gang to travel overland by automobile, robbing small towns where the a-j- er THE WAGES OF THE Nipulace lias heroine unsuspicious RAILROAD MEN. through long years of tranquility and neighborly understanding. They can We ran understand why it is neces- make their escaio quickly and liefore sary for many Lip industrial plants their work is discovered they arc to reduce wages, and with their pro- eiiher sal'ely hidden in some nearby duct hack to where they were large city or have uissed on into anthe war we ran ace wherein it is other section of the state. It doesnt absolutely necessary for the fanners reflect ukiii those living near you to throughout Eastern Utah to refuse to Wk your doors at night. And neithpay help the faney salaries they sere er does it show bad judgment to keep forced to when two millions of our the automobile and spare tires under young men were in uniform. Hut we lock and key. This unusual crime eant understand where the railroads wave is just aa apt to strike this comof this rountry get the nerve to an- munity us any other. The old stitch nounce a rut in wages and we don't in time" proverb still holds good. believe the United States government if it has any way of preventLord pity us the legislature in ing it should stand for such high- session was photographed by a movie The railroads nrr concern and t he handed methods. picture will be shown now getting almost four cents a mile the stale. Judging by throughout for rarrying iaaacngrrs and almost wluit they have accomplished, they twice as much aa formerly for haul- must have acted to show any ing freight and express. They fixed movement for the occasion. their own highfare schedules and aaid they could operate without loss. Now, in face of tliis, they come forTWENTY YEARS ICO THIS WEEK ward with a statement that wage reductions are necessary. That muy be true. Hut if wages for railroad emK. Rantschl, Hr., of Castle date was standployes go Imek to the in Trice on business. ard, then the railroad fares should be Miss Carrie Thomas of Helper had redhead to two and three rents a gone to California on a visit. Broeker of Helper wss able mile, the latter prevailing in only a to W. le at his store after a seise of the few states when the government took grippe thst kept him In tied a couple them over. The public has been goug- of weeks. Matt Warner and J. M. Whitmore ed to the breaking mint. It is s on business. at Sunny-sidwtient sufferer. Itut with thousands were Mr. and Mr a Ed. C. Lee of Nine of men idle this threat to reduce still Mile and the children visited at Zion, more of them without bringing Sprlngville and lsysnn. M. P. Hraffet was practicing law at down farea and freight rates is apt Scofield. to start something in this country Miss Jeanet Crawford and W. H. that may be hard to head off. We are Letter of Runnyslde were married at not frying for government ownership the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur J. in Trice. of the railroads. But if we hove to LeeCraner A Marble broke for be robbed we prefer to know thst it the Cottage Hotel at Colton,ground now conis the whole wnple doing it and not duct ad by Orrln Elmer. Experts from the East were making a select group or rail magnates. examinations of the mines of ths Pleasant Valley Coal company, supAfter the new administration gets posedly In the interest of the owners down to work, the state legislatures of the Denver and Rio Grande. A. W. Horsley was putting in his adjourn, the farmers get their crops spare time to manipulate a in and the merchants display their new Smith learning Premier typewriter. About fifteen thousand dollars was spring stocks industries and payrolls the monthly payroll over at Hunnvstde, will become normal. Carbon county's newest and smallest coal camp. Work was progressing nicely on NEW FIELDS OPEN FOR THE Trice's first brick building. It UTAH FARMER. stood north of the tabernacle on the public school site. Utah's canning industry means preeent Lars Frandsen of Trice was at Colmillions of dollars to the state, but ton, where about five inches of snow the average citizen does not think of fell. The folks there were building a with one prothis. Neither does he know that out wagon road to connect Trice River Canyon. posed through through the Middle West where Utah Jim Rheva was anon to start a goods eunijiete with other canned steam laundry at Helper. ike Glaser of Helper lought the frnits and vegetables that the buyer Grames up Gordon Creek and will pay a higher price for the Utah proposed ranch to Improve it.' Colton people were anxious to lie product on ueeount of its superior to Carlton county that is. to quality. The mint is that Utah is annexed off from Utah. not fully awake to the KMsibilities cutThere was some talk of a Carnegie before it in the matter of intensive library for Price. Trice nalootimen were ordered to farming and the raising of crop that close their places at midniaht week be canned sent or and preserved 'may Also to keep their backdoor over the world in this form. Utah's days. locked Ruud ays. population ia small, but results seem Emery county had numerous cases to show that scientific fanning will of smallpox. baseball team was practicproduce more per acre than almost ingllelper'a to taka a fall out of the Price state in the union. Henre with nine. sny The Denver and Rio Grande anonly a limited number of people to a conference rate of five doleat its farm crops, Utah must eon' nounced lars to Salt Lake from Trice, centrste on growing and parking its Scofield, Castle GatsCity and Helper. foods for outside consumption. Thus was club Helpers gunshooters figuring to ths at Price. may its lands he developed and the challenge Work was begun on the Rio Grande agricultural resources of the state Annex Hotel up at Helper, since advertised far and wide.1 Sugar proby fire. Reven thouKsnd dollars was distribduction has pioneered the way and uted among ths widows and orphans the canning industry is now opening of the Winter Quarters mine disaster fields for the farmer. np nw by the Knights of Tythins grand lodge of Utah after the explosion of May 1st. Four thousnnd still remainIt has about gotten so in Zion thnt ed in the fund. the taxicab nun will rob you if you Alxut everybody was rusting the ride and the holdup will get you if state legislature for what hud not CUTTING lie-fo- re ire-w- ar e dcr-trny- ed you walk. ' been accomplished PROTECTING THIS COUNTRYS ALL SUGAR INDUSTRY. by that LIVE STOCK liody. PRICES Government M)WiBm08888ilM8a IIU PU. Waat.ru Kiwiirr I'muii Constance sat at the window waiting for Philip, but the happy expectancy in his coming was pone. Sadly the young wife wondered how long this life of strained indifference must go on. For surely Philip hud grown indifferent In marriage, after liis unabated devotion before, looked back on the years before Jher marriage with a sigh. Philip, 'esniing his way In her fathers employ. hail been a difficult lover, even now site was not sure that he would tiAve asked his own heurt'a desire hud she not tremnionsly prompted him. And might she uot, after all, she thought with a catching of the breuth. have read his heart aright? Could Jt tie that Philip had married her for pity? Truly, she had shown her heart to him, with all its love. The fact of her fathers wealth, and Philip's humble posltlou had seemed such a foolish harrier between, hut Philip In his stublmrn pride had been unable to brook that barrier. So she had dime It for him. She remembered the night, with the starlight on the snuw, and Philip's dear arm through her', steadying tier against tbe breeze, and when she looked up into his face to see there the ieut up love of years, that love which 'Philips brusque manner hfld denied, Constanre half resolutely litugliing, half crying, had challenged him to deny hia love as she told of her own. Now In the calm of her sitting room the nuidness of that hour came buck to her with the memory of hia euger surrender. Their walk together had been but an accident ; Conatnnre hud slopiefl at her father's office aud her father himself had put her Into the forbidden Philips cure. The night was dangerously stormy, she would have to tuke the street car home, her father expected to be detained at the office and would need his own car thrre. Ko Thllip was Installed her escort. latter Constance had married tdin against hia own unselfish protestations. Stoutly site proclaimed her for the luxuries of life as comwith the gift of love end Philip pared accepted the gift. Her father had not yet forgiven tbe inlsalllanee; Philip was obliged to seek work elsewhere, and to begin at a lower rung of the business ladder. Rut Fhlllp would rise, and Constance waa happy until that indefinable something came to fill her with strange apprehension. She Brand Fhlllp looking at her as time went on in a detached, specula tlve way, and ail her merriment could not bring an answering nolle. When luter he took to working evenings at the office, Constance determinedly discouraged the ambition with the assure ance that they could manuge on his daily salary, and that she preferred his companionship to extra dollars. So, though Philip desisted, he was ill at ease during their evenings together, und Constance In her discouraging attempts to entertsln on the rattling old hired piano, subsided after a while before his absorbed despondence. Then Ibillp rising abruptly one evening, announced hia intention of departing for the club. Constance had not heard of this rlnh before, and was Then as grieved by hia desertion. night after night passed in loneliness, she too cultivated an apparent indifference to match his own. Hut ns the street lights flared out and she watched from her window. It seemed no longer she could bear this suieee. If she liad been mistaken in her rending of Philip's heart and he find married her through pity, site must know at once, and no longer Imimse herself upon him. Her eyes were wet Hith tears, as she started upon the walk to her husbands place of business. The air would calm her, site hoped, she knew that she would find Philip there, and alone. An office girl who responded to her telephone message told her that her husband wonld he delayed at least an hour. It was more than an hour later when Constance stejiped from the elevator in the deserted corridor of the building, and as she entered an outer office she heard voices in the room within. One vok was Philip's, nervously imiMitient. the other was her fathers. It was little enough to do," Philip was saying, giving up a few weeks of "omfort in order that I might buy a piano for Constance. And quite as fine a one as that yon provided. If I iinnot yet give to my wife all those things to which she wna ucciisrinned, some day in my great love for her I OFF SLIGHTLY Concluded From Page Three.) it is necessary to reduce wastes. A decrease of eight cent an hour in hourly raic.i mid u decrease of rM tit in pin was announcmt ed. The notice er. tried with it a sc w.-r- 11 Seeds Free to SPECIALS Sen Readers The Sun is in receipt of a communication from Senator Keed Smoot in which he advises that the government has changed its policy to some extent in f lie manner of distributing Instead of sending garden seeds. out sejiarate packages to individuals throughout the nation, many of which have been returned at a tremendous expense to the government, the senator advises that he is sending out a certain number of packages to each of the Utah newspajmrs, and he asks them among the that they residents of their respective localities throughout the state. Tu this end Senator Smoot advises The Sun that he bus asked the department of agriculture to send it seventeeu larkages of flower seeds and a hundred aud seventy packages of garden seeds. He states that he will appreciate it greatly if thia taper will kindly see that these Reed are distributed where, in its judgment, they will be of the greatest value. The seeds should reach Price some time during March or the early art of April. Any person desiring to avail them-- ; selves of this opMrt unity to secure, a portion of these seeds free of charge will kindly communicate with The' Sun, which will try to distribute them as equally as may be done while they last. The first will lie the first served, and those desiring to an allotment of these seeds will make known their wants at as early a date as possible. WEEK MARCH 12-1- 8 j t.'ou-Sluu- Regular Regular Regular Regular Flavo Flour, cwt., $450 . 4.50 cwt.,. Flour, Top Tip 60c, 10 lb. Quaker Corn Meal .45 65c, 10 lb. Oat Meal jo $5.00 $5.00 apj-ortui- n ; TUESDAY ONLY Sugar, 10 lbs One Sale to a Customer. Price Trading $ .90 Co. Phone 6 The Busy Store Next to Postoffice Price, Utah NOTICE FOU PUBLICATION DE- partment of the Interior, United 8tatea lAnd Office at Suit Lake City, Ptah. March , 121. Notice la hereby given that Peter Anderson, of Price, Utah, who, on February I, 1916, made Homestead Entry No. 016835, for 8 Vi NEV4 SWVi, Sec. IS, KEfc 8V4, See. 24, Twp. 14 South, Range MV(i, 11 East Suit Lake meridian, has filed notice of intention to make three year proof to establish claim to the land fclKive described, before the clerk of the district court at Irlee, Utah, on the 23rd day of April, 1921. Claimant names as witnesses Dave Anderson and George Rnow of Trice, Utah, and Earl Rich and George Tlia.vn, of Wellington. Utah. GOULD B. BLAKE, LEY, Register. First pul. Mar. 11; last Apr. 15, 1921. se-ru- re Do Your Easter Baking OF DISSOLUTION 0? Partnership The partnership hat tofore existing between II. P. lie. Cardie asd H. Y. Leonard Is dlteoir. ed by mutual consent. H. p. McCu. die has acquired ownership of the S teresta heretofor held by II. V. and assumes all obligation! r the partnership. H. P. MeCARDU and H. V. LEONARD. Price. Util NOTICE Lm-ar- March 1, 1921. Hands and feet of motorcycle riran be kept warm with new g. i tuchnients for their tk convey warm exhaust gases from & engines to metal cowls. sers mm-hiiu- Are i consumed willi l detint travel, oi re l auf Then stirt rigk: California raises nearly half of all by systenintieully beating n put the beans produced in the United from your home to your pluceof The rest will come eusv. States. con-tom- pt With Tip Top flour. That will go a long way toward insuring the sac- -' cess of your efforts. Tip Top flour has inch fine baking qualities that its use is almost invariably accom-- 1 panied by batter biscuits, bread, cake and pie. We are eure it will be so in your case. A trial will not cost yon any more money any way. . i:.it 1. I ; Ill'll'. I m:)' s,..' ,1 "P I,- - !l (I.'l.... fur nos,' e CEDAR MESA FARM CO. 272 Wall Street, Salt Lake City, Utah ' ; OR- -F. 0. STORES, National, Utah (Via Helper) Phone Cedar Mesa Finn . ?? ? f? f? Wise coal buying in springtime embraces two things taking note of the fact that coal bins should not bo allowed to run low while than ia yet so much chance of unseasonable weather, and f? more than twenty-fiv- e years these two coals have served faithfully in all seasons providing the right kind of heat at the minimum expense. t ? ?t? Y ? iA I I Address, Be Coal Wise f ; i'i ed. tillable dry some irrigat- Jf 1 1 Sheya Ranch t? i (!)?). Old as 4 formerly was up to thirty, looks like twenty-three- " for the profiteers. We hare also noticed that the small-- . er a Carbon eounty woman's pocket-boo- k the ofteper her husband is called ujsm to fill it. C' e I .el; joy !iy. ;ni hr.d I v :h i:,-- . lp-- you t jt.rr e(d lit r. bi:h f you. r nn ; i ei rt. l.ov 's a i.'ie r t; y !..!;. I'M I't iK.t i:. ih.ng. B Known acres of 5ome thousand some South Nintfi Street, Price, Utah. Seven rents a grand for sugar in many parts of tbe country, when it h-- Ca.ily p?lird. j cold. Yes." her father answered, Vmp-laafter you have worked yourself o death liendlng over a desk until midnight, when yon have left her alone with that lie about your evenings rt the club, hen ymi may lie tilde to restore to Coiivinnce those things whieh she discarded for youvs-I- f. It was a lucky elm nee th:t hd me t.i dr:n down with my old Teniers tiMlay Travers who jiens I leiie sold you (hat pi::r.'i. And now, (r On Gordon Creek j One of tbe biggest liars in this county is the fellow who saye he can work just as well when he has a spring will. ' ForLease Price Commission Co. y. In criticising the proposed tariff on sugar opponents of the measure say it will increase the price to the consumer some two cents a jmund and that the ones who will reap the benefit will be tbe speculator- ami not the producers. Without such a tariff the American heel sugar ;inlutrv aniint exist against competition of foreign FRIDAY, MARCH FRIDAY UTAH-EVE- BY The Specifying of Castle Gate or Clear Creek when you buy your fuel. ASK YOUR DEALER UTAH FUEL CO. Miners ami Shippers of Castle Cate and Clear Creek Coals Exclusively. |