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Show lf APRIL 1921 THE SUN. PRICE, IbriTfor tHe RED IINEround tKejf op mm 00 FRIDAY. CIM HiSUNDERSTANDINGS xhs Sun. WASHINGTON', 1. C, March 2d. a purchase price for the benefit of To clear up the misunderstandings the Iuduns, in addition which seem to W prevalent among the dence and cultivation one-eigh- th an Tbs B.F. GOODRICH RUBBER COMPANY Akron, OHIO men r7nnrcc RUBBER FOOTWEAR ill JONES Pbjmklan and Surgeon. accessor to Dr. E. F. Chambelaln. Office Sllvagnl Block, Price Utah. DR. R. M. DR CHARLES T. BOSE Physician and Burgeon At the Mlllburn Residence, Corner Main and Eighth 8 tree to. Office PRICE, UTAH DR J. A. JUDY Physician and Surgeon itoffh Telephone 1CSW Price Commercial and Bank, Price, Utah. BEN BEAN General Iaintlng Contractor of portion of the 200,000,000 First-ClaWork. Estimates Free. unreserved publie lands that remained on July 1, 1020, is either rough, Phone 1RSM. PRICE, UTAH foothill and mountainous lands or level lands in Arizona, New Mexico, A. HOFFS STUDIO Nevada or Southern California, which and Grade Portraits nigh are too dry to mature crojwi by any dry farming method yet discovered. Second Floor should not be concluded, however, It Price Commercial and Savings Bank that there is no says the article, PRICE, UTAH ss J. W. METCALF Notary Public and Conveyancing Deeds, Bills of Sale and Legal Papers of All Kinds Drawn SCOFIELD, UTAH lOfflcs Over Savings KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS Price Lodge No. St. Meets evepr second, third and fourth Tuesday In Masonle Hall. Visiting members C. Work and Extraction. Price welcome. P E. Trim, C. Cseunerclal Bank Bldg., Price, Utah Fred E.' Wheaton, K. R. 8. DR H. B. GOETZMAN Dentist ys y DR SANFORD BALLINGER Dentist JS gie rosi r fr r, D ! 5S 10 IS THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL Carbon DM-trl- ct CounCourt in and for and A. Mary Lewis Lawyer Utah ty, H. Lawyer, Plaintiffs; vs. A. T. Miller, Miles Building; Price, Utah Defendant. 8ummona The State of Utah to the Said Defendant: You are within DR T. J. ANTON hereby summoned to appear sumDentist twenty days after service of this the if served within mons you upon Boom end 10, Sllvagnl Building, county in which thia action la brought; PRICE, UTAH otherwise within thirty days after seracvice and defend the above entitled ITEWART. ALEXANDER ft tion, and in case of your failure so to CANNON do Judgment will be rendered against of the you according to the demand Attorneys At Law filed with complaint, which has beenThis action KTntb Floor the Deseret National the clerk of said court. uk Building, Salt Juke City, Utah. la brought against you to compel you more Uvagnl Building, Price, Utah. to convey those certain lands said comparticularly describedto in the trustees of L. A. HcGEE plaint on file herein and also Coal company, Buckeye the Law At Attorney to specifically enforce the performRooms i and 0, Sllvsgnl Bldg. ance on your part of other provisions of a certain contract eat out In said PRICE, UTAH alternative for complaint or In the in the sum of FERDINAND ERICK8EN you damages again dollars, ana to thousand twenty-fiv- e Law At Attorney dehave said judgment for damages clared to be a lien on said land as re-of 717 Judge Building other BALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. May It, 115, and for such proper lief as may be equitable andMACKAY A, CALDER and for OLIVER K. CLAY A and STEWART. ALEXANDER Attorney At Law Atorneys for Plaintiffs. CANNON, Office -- Room 0, Price, Utah. Sllvagnl Building. Postoffice address, First pub.. Mar. 1; last Apr. Is, PRICE UTAH NOTICE TO WATER USEHS--STAT- E HENRY RUGGERI City, Engineer's Office, Salt Lake hereAttorney At Law Utah, March , 191. Notice ofis Pries, Office at the County Courthouse. by given that II. W. Crockett accordUtah, hss made application In of the PRICE UTAH ance with the requirements Utah. 117. as Complied Laws of Sciwlon OLIVER 0. DALBY Lr w. of .mended by the to Attorney At Law 1515, appropriate Utah, of water from an second-fe(2-Office, Eko Theater Building, unnamed spring in Cerium county. Ground Floor. Said water issues at 4 a point 1IKJ wit PRICE UTAH. feet north and 462S feet Sec. 11. ltl. two-thir- et S) B. W. DALTON Attorney At Law Offlre Eko Theater Building. J. E. FLYNN Lleeiwed Undertaker and Embalmcr Telephone ID. PRICE UTAH Civil E. M. FULLER and Mining Engineer Attention Given Irrigation Work. Office, Ground Floor, West of The Sun. PRICE UTAH HR J. B. HENDERSON Chiropractor. At Price. First Door Weet of The Sun, iLto IS. noon I tIU 4 p. m. At Hel- till L0Vor Hlpw State bank, Sundays. Other hours j;J home.except Calls by appointment. !an1 lease blanks and options Kept In stock. Those the big Panies use, The Bun. of twp the southeast corner East. 8mI II South. Range and conveyed 5000 base and meridian, feet tn a ditch and there used from to December list, InFebruary 1st clusive, of each year to In the arres of land embraced and range NEli Sec. 14. township b' d This application aforesaid. In the state engineers office as 690. All protests against the Vrt slating granting of this application be made the reasons therefor, must act,mP"le by affidavit in duplicate with a fee of $.50, and filed In this office within thirty (80) of completion of the publication dreig-nate- -- thfs notice El3te G. F. McGONAGLE, State 1511-Datof first pub., March II, of completion of publication April 15, Distinctive Millinet'y th Buying these things in boots is simple. Just look for the Red Line 'round the top that means Goodrich. 60,000 dealers sell them. PROFESSIONAL to the resirequirements j , general public as evidenced by the of the homestead law. hundreds of inquiries received at the Requirements of Law. luited Stales laud offices each mouth In to residence aud cultivaregard with reaped to laud tilings, the last requirements, the original homesenii-bulletin issued under the ad- tion ministration of Former Commission- stead law required residence aud culer ('lav Talluian of the general laud tivation fur a jieriod of five years. an amendment of the homestead office, is devoted principally to an By law in 1912, the period of residence explanation of the present laud laws. was reduced to three years with five It is noted that during the past few months absence during each year on years there has been great activity the giving of proper notice to the loiu taking up publie lands. In 1009 office. The law also requires land cal the enlarged homestead law was the eniryman must have a habithat passed, allowing an entry of three table house on the land before he is hundred and twenty acres of soalled a patent. These requirements land. This law was granted dry farm are practically the same fur all houie-stea- d passed for the reason that it was reallaws. ized by congress that the publie lauds With to cultivation under rcsjHH-- t which were suitable for ordinary the hundred aud sixty-acr- e or the farming puqioses. such as existed three hundred and sixty-acr- e entry, forty years ago in Iowa, Nebraska the entry-mamust cultivate at least and the Dakotas, had been diiqtosed of the laud during the of and were in private ownership seeond year of the entry, and and that of the lands remaining a during the third year. Under larger area was needed to nuke a the grazing law no cultivation is resuccessful farm. Since July 1, 1913, but iu lieu thereof the the general land office has patented quired, shall be required to make more than 195,000,000 acres of land, improvements ujain the the greater iart of which has been permanent and entered before final proof is taken under this enlarged homestead tending to increase the set. During thia same eriod the or- submitted, of the same for stockraising value iginal entries and selections of aH purposes, of the value of not less kinds, whirh were allowed, amounted than fl.25 )ier acre, and at least une-la- lf ' to over 120,000,000 acres. of such improvements shall be The significance of these figures, uMin the land within three should not be placed says the bulletin, date of entry thereof. after years overlooked, for the reason that it The eutryiuan on the reclamation means that the Western States from must cultivate at least half Kansas to the Paeifie ltange have project of his entry before he ran get patent been literally combed for years for a and must nave jmid aU reclamation good piece of level land situated the due at time, the governwhere there was sufficient rainfall to charges ment returning a lien on his land for make a suitaliie homestead. the payment of the balance of such charges extending over a jieriod of Crop Lands Taken. The first fact therefore, which wenty years. should be made clear to the landseek-eALL NURSERY STOCK MUST is that, for the most part, the NOW UNDERGO INSPECTION areas of publie land available on subwhich he can make an entry are To prevent further spread of the stantially and essentially a grazing white pine blister rust toward the proposition, and nut a crop land in oreats of the West the United States the ordinary sense. The greater inreau of plant industry, in acres FIRST, you want a boot that won't separate at the seams and leak. All right; there's just where the Goodrich ONE PIECE construction protects you. SECOND, it must wear long. We've been making rubber goods FIFTY YEARS we know how to make everlastingly tough soles and uppers. THIRD, comfort. Slip on a Goodrich Boot and feel how pliable and comfortable it is. SOI PAGE THREE FROM THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE DESIGNED TO CnriMpondenv. H E VERY UTA e 151. Heres an honest confession. We are firmly convinced that prices in general should be reduced, dobut, first. it we prefer to let you no Oeorge. We ain t need Too frequently the friend in be to one paid. last ia the can-didl- v, opimrtunity in the West fur the young man of ambition and energy to get a homestead and make a success of it, for the live stock business, though just at present in an unsatisfactory condition, in the long run is bound to continue to be one of the great industries of the country. Con gress has recognized this situation by enacting the grazing homestead law of 1916, under which an entry of six hundred and forty acres may tie made of land chiefly for grazing, hut with a reservation of the minerals in the land to the government. Within six months after the passage of this law there had been gross filings to the number of sixty thousand, embracing an area of some acres. Under the law before an entry of this class may be made the land must be designated by the secretary of the interior. This necessitates a field examination. Up to July 1, 1920, more than 74,000,000 acres had been examined and entries had been allowed for an aggregate o' m Every hat is an extraordinary value. Many were selected from showroom samples in New York. Hats of every description for Spring wear. New and wanted shapes, drop turbans, saucer or straight sailors dozens of odd new styles in an array of spring colors to please most any woman and miss. Trimmings consist of flowers, streamers, ribbons, drapes. Shades that are foremost are pearl, gray, henna, sand, navy, delft blue and suit shades. Priced right. Bessie Kennedy, Millinery MAIN Hinds of Homesteads. Speaking of the laws under which the pnblio lands may be acquired the article says: Principally there are two laws, the homestead and the desert land laws. There are severs kinds of homestead. First, the dl( am original homestead of a hundred1802 in enacted first sixty acres, second, the enlarged homestead, above referred to, applies to surveyed publie lands which do not rontain merchantable timber; third, the grazing homestead, valuable fur' o grazing purposes and the raising charforage crops and are of such a acter that six hundred and forty acres are reasonably required for the support of a family. These are the three principal homesteads, but besides these there is the reclamation homestead, which is homestead entry of irrigible lands on reclamation projects, government not exceeding a hundred and sixty acres, or sueh an area as the secreas tary of the interior may designate In this case the en a farm unit 'tryman must pay the cost of construe tion and operation and maintenance o: charges for the irrigation works of modification Another the project. the hundred and sixty acre homestead is known as the forest homestead. This is the homestead that is allowed in the national forests of lands designated by the forest service, department of agriculture, as being more valuable for agricultural than for forestry purposes. The land is listed to the department of tho interior, after which the homestead eniy is handled much the same as any other homestead, except that they may be made on nnsurveyed lands and segregated and defined by irregular metes and bounds survey. In addition to the above lands there are various Indian land homesteads, which usually require the payment of "MILK HIGH" acaa on a monay back taasaaiaa. Writ tar our from casaJuf today It tails ahont oar gusnuiHM. W spsctaltaa ia Alfalfa. Radiy Mouniaia HaS (Invar. Saart (luaar. Rraasa Grass, Rad Tna. Tlmrthjr, Bartay. Wbaat, Rya and all Cara, Oafs. oihar aaad for tba ftardaa, (laid aadOoararyafd. Scad far samplM and special prlcas oa year raqulraoiaata. &KAND JUNCTION, COME HERE ANY TIME Early morning, late at night, noon, after the dance, before you catch an early train anytime we are ready to serve you. And we serve you right best quality foods, skillfully cooked, placed before you in an acceptable manner in pleasant surroundings. NEW QUEEN CITY CAFE 169 TURNER BLOCKp-PIIOPRICE, UTAH NE Carbon Pool. Hall The place to visit when you want congenial surroundings. Good Rooms, Cafe and Barber Shop In Connection. QUARTERLY Price, Utah North of Tavern i Near Depot ORRIN ELMER COLTON, UTATT Merehmullso and Stockmen's Supplies General notch Dipping Vats and Feed Lots In Connection selections. Every man is entitle! to his just deserts, but very few care to collect on them. COLO. TC last Saturday at a meeting in the state eapitol when the commission instructed Harold R. Hagen, inspee-to- r and secretary to the board, to turn over all work to the state agricultural board. He wee asked topre-par- e a summary of the plana now under way eo that the work in progress might be completed. O. D. Merrill of Richmond, one of the newly appointed members of the board of agriculture, met with the commission. He expressed appreciation of what had been accomplished by the retiring board and declared the new board will feel at liberty at any time to call on them for aid. The retiring members said they will continue to be interested in the state crops and pests world and would be glsd to aid in any way possible. Hagan will retire from the service after April 1st. He will continue his work at the University of Utah in the department of zoology with the rank rtf associate inspector. as a humane man, we are nipiutsin-in- g a discreet silence on the subject of liberty bonds. ' JAeCxand Junction Seed (2. wae officially completed In order to sustain our reputation MAIKEA CIOVER. awa Work of the state crop and peats CONFERENCE At the quarterly conference of the Carbon stake held at Price last Saturday and .Sunday it was announced hy A. W. norsley, president, that hut eight thousand dollars indebtedness now is outstanding against the tabernacle building and its furnishings. This includes the balance due on the organ, one of the very best anywhere in the West. Stake officers and bishops made reports. The completion of the building and matters in connection with its furnishings were considered and will be carried out in due conrse. There were no qieakers from the outside. The choir under the direction of Prof. Alva Woodward rendered a number of STREET, TRICE, UTAH Next to Eko Theater QuitKicMneSgiH f.rior in4 whan vaa caa Say WORK OF COMMISSION OFFICIALLY COMPLETED commission All the Zest and Color of Spring . Very A ttractive Selections. with the state board of agriculture, has established a transfer point or iinqiection of nursery stock at )gden. The new service was put into effect last Saturday with the result that two violations of the federal and state quarantine against the white line blister rust were reiorted before night to II. R. Hagan, state crops and jests insiector. Both the shipments were composed of gooseberries and currants, one consigned to Cache eounty, and the other to Weber county. The shipment of such plants is forbidden under the law and it is not even necessary to show that they are infected with the disease before they ran be Iniiflseatpd. O. A. Root has been assigned to represent the federal government at Ogden. The state will be represented by County Inspector Pettigrew. The forme has power to examine the shipments but not to confiscate them in this state, this power being vested in the latter. 13,900,000 acres. non-irrigab- With Where Youre Treated Right RnoecMor CRANKK a to MARBLE Buying Hogs X want all the bogs in Carbon and Emery counties for shipment Highest prices paid. Will give yours the once over any time. Write or phono D. Heber Leonard, HUNTINGTON, UTAH |