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Show PAGE FOTJS im Issued Every Friday Hy Sun Publishing Co. lino.) K. W. Crockett. Mr. Sul'iuTiifliirn, $2.00 the Year. Office Phone, No. 8. Residence, No. 13SM2 Entered as Second Class Mail Matter, June 4, Is to, at I "ort office at I'rii e, Utah, ruder tlie Act of March 3, UIK. -- AllYLKTlMMi KYTLS. Display Matter Per Inch er Mouth, $1.U: Ningl 3 MMue, sue. special Position, 2i Per Cent Additional. Ten Cent the Lin Each Legal Count Sis Words to the Line. Summons, 112. SO; Water ApplicaProof, flU.uO. tion. $15.00; Ten Cent the Line Hath Reader Count Sis Words to the Line. Klackface Type Fifteen Cent the Line Each insertion Obituaries. Card .it Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half laical Heading Notice Late. Count Six Words to Line. For Sale. For Rent. Found, Lout, Etc., Two Cent per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO, Prica. Utah. Ier cent of them are out of work and are not drawing a cent. At a reduced wage they might be working and nuking a living. Let 'a trim our wages, boys, and we'll all eat. The uniou served by Artery unanimously voted to accept tbe wage cut. High routs are killing the building Materials are too high, with the exception of lumber. Labor is too high in relation to the cost of living. All tlione engaged in the building industry producers of material, employer and workers should to that end. Lumlier and a few sane lalior leaders have pointed the way. Kevivul of a great industry like that of 'building will have a good effect, ramifying throughout all our economic structures. Michael Artery of Chicago said a mouthful to his THREADED Twenty Years Ago This Week RUBBER BATTERY The wool clip at Price was figured at a million and a half pound. t'ol. 8. U. Milnor with a Colorado expert finished testing coal in several canyons to the north and east of Price. Sample were sent to New York to try out coke test. A. J. Davis of Balt Lake City v. is in the Ban itufael section locating oil land. He announced hie intention of takhig a rig in there by way of Price. J. G. Callaway was in lriee from Sunni rule to swup haircut wiin J. A. Young. There was but one brl.r at either place. J. C. Weetar was in Fries Iron. le catelio, Ida., loosing after hi Thi hull mV 1 branded k iet en the ad of the Willard Threaded Rubber wxh ' nie:c-n-ti- r interest. J. Tom Fu-- of Helper had business at Frice. mates. Mrs. J. A. Young and chlldrtn of Price visited with relative at HuntCuriam is Kvery county taxpayer ington. about ready to swear that the war Robert McKune was employed at wus not fought in France, but in the the 1 enver and Rio Grande statioii at assessor's oitice. Frlye. Attorney Mark P. Eraffet of Scofield wu in thrive on legal buainei-s- . RESTORE MUST THE INDUSTRIMiss Winnie Wilson and Scott WestAL BALANCE. fall were married at Wellington. Seventy thousand acre of oil land I went mourning without Tin Sun; At the present moment the metals were located around Green River by I stood up and cried In Uie congrega- mining judustry ia in tbe doldrums, Suit Luke City parties. tion. Joii, and as a result hundred of thousands There was much talk of the estabof men have been thrown out of work. lishment of a creamery at Price. Mia Iella Burgess purchased the IS JUSTLY SUBJECT TO SEVERE Lead and copjier are low in price and stock of Mrs. D. W. liulda-wa- y there is little demand. The govern- millineryPrice. CRITICISM. at ment holds many million pounds of Sharp, general manager, and If the fairness of a rate fur public eopier and cheap foreign lead is be- If.W.U. Q.Williams, general superintenddetermined be to service were utility ing dumped ujsm the Auieriean mar- ent of the Utah Fuel company, made by spular expression it would be an ket which is glutted in consequence. an inspection of the Bunnyside coal unfair one because the people would Ju the case of copper there is no hope properties. Foundations for twenty new huusea determine as fair what they wanted unless a demand comes from abroad, Sunnyslde were completed. to ay and not the value of tbe ser- and in the cane of lead an embargo at Mian Lauretta Anderson and J. P. vice first, for tbe reason they would must he placed the foreign prod- Dorlus constituted the teaching staff and sec- uct. One mightujam be actuated by folkiw-ing at Sunnyslde. imagine that ond, because they would nut be in a ileal's the demand from Eurojie to Attend the Pythian Sinters dance at position through jKipular action to replace the great loss iif copjier in the City Hall, May 7. 1831. AdvL intelligently determine from the facts mme and factory and in trolley wires what would be fair. These facts, as due to the war would keep American PERany thoughtful jieraou knows, must be tmplier properties going. And so it DECISION ON OIL LAND MITS LATELY ISSUED determined by a careful investiga- would if the financial bridge between tion and a fair determination made America and Kurujie could be restor(Concluded From Page Two.) by those who exercise impartial judg- ed. But so lung aa there is such a gulf ment and are charged with the duty letween mark, kronen, lire and frane number of such locations which might of doing what ia right by the mblie and the American dollar and so lung be surrendered and made the basis of end the public utility. Any proposi- aa no agreement for the future peace prospecting permits. tion to submit a matter intimately af- of the world has been reached, the The opinion then holds that for defecting two parties to one of tho in- American mines must remain closed. terested jiarties for opinion or deter- The great undertaking for the present velopment purjxisea, assignments of mination is justly subject to severe administration ia to restore the in- prosjiecting permit aeeured under criticism and should not lie allowed ternal ional bridge in the interest of See. 19 of the act, to a qualified into go unchallenged. The deliberate American labor, and indusry. We dividual, corporation or association outside producing oil and gas fields attempt in several states to discredit must all work to help bring back the and in localities without transportathe decisions of their utility eommis-sion- s world's industrial balance in order to tion facilities pipelines or nearby in allowing rate increases to save our own industries. sources of supply, for not exeeeding public utility companies is as dangerfive such jiermits in a state and near disto as a an ous proceeding attempt Soundness of our banking system credit the decisions of the courts. is indicated by the fact that last year enough te each other for common deThe confidence of the investing pub-li- e there were only five insolvent nation- velopment, whether contiguous or nonfor the contiguous may be in that state will lie shaken to the al hanks out of eight thousand and consideration of thepresented of the secretary state. whole With of detriment the nineteen. Percentage of failures was hundred of millions of dollars of sav- 0.017 per cent. Earnings have increas- interior, and his approval if he ahall find the same to his in the public ings of people in all walks of life in- ed from $69,981,810 in 1900 to $282,- vested in public utility securities it ia 083.000 fur 1920 an increase of about almost a crime for agitation to be 400 per rent. Capitalization has instarted, which, if carried to a success- creased from $603,39(1,550 to $1,220,- - BROTHER OF PRICE LADY PASSES AT MT. PLEASANT ful conclusion, would wreck the prop- 781.000 or about 100 per cent. Averties which represent the savings of erage dividend on raiital for 1900 Mr. and Mrs. George G. Frandsen these investors. waa 7.9 ier rent and for 1920, 12.10 of lriee were railed to Mt. Pleasant ier cent. Average dividend fur five funeral of Neila It is rcjsirted from various portions yean 9.74 per rent. Promoters are Sunday to attend the who her passed away brother, Kolfson, of Carbon county that housewives in not allowed to make a profit in organtheir spring cleaning didn't turn up ization of national banka and the there last Friday after but a few days illness from bronchial pneumonia. Dea many flasks aa they formerly did. comptroller of the currency must be ceased was born in Norway, May 13, satisfied that additional facilities are but had lived at the Sanjiete COUNTRY'S TIRE LOSSES ARE needed in a community before a char- 1859, town for a very long time. He county SIMPLY ASTOUNDING. ter will be granted. These two fac- ia survived by a widow and by three ton undoubtedly contribute to the inAfter many months of complicated herent soundness of our national bank- daughters, Mn. Elmer Jensen and Misses Ruth and Gertrude Kolfson. labor, the National Board of Fire Un- ing system. Also three sisters, one of whom is derwriters presents a record of lossMrs. Frandsen of this city. His two es 'covering fijve years from 1915 to Thia countrys beet sugar industry brothers are Bent and Jacob Rolf-soasia loss The inclusive. total 1919, has gone through the readjustment of Idaho. Bent Kolfson for both tounding $1,416,375,845. The analy- period and has come out in a most was a resident of Scofield. years many sis covers three million five hundred manner. It is to the last- Funeral services were held on Monthousand fires and the work involved satisfactory ing rredit of the sugur companies that were very largely atmaking a tabulated report waa enor- they were able to carry out tlicir con- day last and in deceased a home was Burial tended. mous. It took the constant time of tracts for the highest beet prices on Jacobs presided at the serBishop a hundred and eight employes with record when augur dropjied from war vices, which were at the North Ward 11 the lalior saving machinery avail- to pre-walmost overnight. chattel. The rhoiF prices sang Shall We able, aa well as other assistance, to It was the and business man- Meet stability The invoBeyond the River f compile the results. This is one of agement of these concerns that encation was by Henry P. Olson, after the world's largest statistical activi- abled them to keep. their contracts which the choir sang Rest, Rest For ties and bears testimony to the al- and thus ruin for thousands the prevent The seakers inmost incredible extent of American of Weaiy Soul. farmer. from the man- cluded Judging President Adolph Merz, Bishcarelessness in the matter of fire haz- ner in which growers in Utah have op C. R. Dorius of Ephraim, Thomas ard. Think of the hole thia burned signed up new beet contracts they rec- West and Bishop Jacobs. Miss Marup $1,416,375,845 would have made in the value of a guaranteed price Winters sang O Dry Those jorie our national debt or think of the con- ognizebacked by a solid industrial Tears with violin and piano accomstructive work, it would have done in crop deshomes by Mrs. E. F. Gardemann or paniment our building irrigating and Miss Muriel Simpson. A male ert land. The National Board of Fire There is cumulative evidence to in- quartet rompriang Evan Madsen, LorUnderwriters ia doing a great work dicate that President Harding is de- ain Beck, Theodore Christensen and in bringing to tbe attention of the termined that our disabled soldiers in tremenform concrete the people dous losses suffered from fire each and sailors shall receive pnicr rare, ' It Such Fine i: consideration and encouragement. year. The people must Light the loss is to be lessened. The chib iswell. Late is belter than not at alL must be taught that the preventable We may have another war some day, fire ia as serious an offense as throw- end if we do we will want other young men to do the fighting. It is nut coning bread into the sea, sava Frank- ducive to patriotism to look aronnd lin II. Wentworth of Boston. Mass., him and sre the broken and battered of ProtecNational the Fire eecretary wrecks of a former war neglected and tion association. forgotten. By this time the fellows elected last fall hnve learned just how many poor One reason most editors dont print relations they really have. exactly what they think is because they don't wish to spend most of their HIGH WAGES EXIST BUT WITH time in a hospital. LITTLE WORK. NEW NAME GIVEN Michael Artery but recently issuci! The war dcjmrtmcnt of the United one of the clearest and most logics State in its latest military' ninis calls bits of common sense on a matter of the Grand river the Colorado, and importance to the nation's reconstruc- this indicates that the federal governWith its golden brown crust ia postion program that ha been heard in ment has recognized the promised sible only with such fine floor aa ours. this land for weeks. Speaking on the change in names and will so desig- Such certainty as to results, too. Our contractors prujxisal to cut wages nate it in future and documents floor bakes perfectly every time. Yon maps 12Vi per cent to a Chicago building to lie published. Mesa coun- have only to try a sack and your reptrade union of which he ia secretary. ty, Colo., officials Recently received plats of the utation as a fine baker will have begun. summed the situation as Artery up county which had been prepared by follows: war (he and the change Whats the use of making a do- in names rlppanimnt of the river was given. llar and fwonty-ffv- o cents an hour if Co. Some people are so contrary you cant get work! The cost of livthey 8onth Ninth at. Sire ing has dropped 29 per cent in tlie last are always looking for the worst anil Fries, Utah. year. We are asked to make a rut in getting the best. our wages to correspond to this deCarbon county last week sent In to Aim out every Chines city border crease. The carpenters union has re- State Treasurer Button 13830.15 as an ing on a river has many boat dwellThe the 80 result is proposal. advance credit on the state road fund. ers who rarely set foot jected on land. Separators or Insulators Ordinary separators are a natural product and therefore, are never strictly uniform. They are made of thin sheets of chemically-treate- d wood. Threaded Rubber Insiilatora are a manufactured product and therefore, abaohitriy uniform. They give uniform protection to tbe battery plate and uniform satisfaction to the user. Threaded Rubber Insulators do not warp, crack, check, carbonise or puncture. They put an end to Iota of time, temper, battery rental and money that are inevitable when 30-2- 8. . The manufacturers of the cars listed below have selected Threaded Rubber for tbeirlcan because: 3. Xxpaimce has proved .that Thraadwf L Rubbra b by far tbs brat innbtkis no- fteciNl kumL ijiwfafmn mtfl- -n th brtfy co S. Thraadad RAbra hradstkra is the mart P? ad ratirfactony Cm of prana rubber batoy kaukrtian aauit ba ponna te alkar bra paraaes of tbe aohsiaa. i . self-intere- n, MFTC Price Commission stcaMtr.r. Btuts Tiffin Moray Nets (Hqpra) Raruaht Raufar Renault Titaa Too Motor Tmaprat Traylor TmaOty Eastern Utah Electric Co. W. C. BROEKER, Manager PRICE, UTAH Depot and Main Streets Baddley Plumbing and Heating company of Salt Lake City has opened a jiermanent branch in Price. We would like to estimate your work. All work is guaranteed. We want to meet you. a promising market for American coal NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION COAL Entry. Land Office at Balt UM in view of the prevalent aversion to Utah, April 1. 1931. Notjcs City, H. ftR purchasing the English product. hereby given that William Deiuel James B. Quinn, Lottie It. To guide boy and girl members aa Ruth A. Quinn, all of Balt lake well aa their elders in producing r county of Balt Lake, atate of CSJ on the Sd day of February. potato yields the United States who in this office coal declarsttjf filed department of agriculture has re- statement Serial No. 035333 for tss cently published Farmers Bulletin weat half (Wfc) of Sec. 11. Twp. H No. 1190, llow to Grow An Acre of South, Hang 14 East. Balt lake of have this day filed in this Potatoes. It is prepared especially to purchase Serial application for club work, and every step from 035333, said land, under the the selection of the potato soil to the of Bees. 3348 to 2353. tnU Any tna harvesting, grading and storing of the States Revised Statutes. adversely the sw claiming persons is discussed. crop described or deelrlng to objert for reason to the entry threof by ofapple prThat promised middle-clas- s union cant should file their affidavits the tmnp apjiean to he making wur headway otest in thisofoffice during lmniedlie publication day period in this country. No one with spirit the first printed tow wants to admit that he is neither the following this notice. GOULD li. BLAKEI' top nor the bottom crust. Register. First pub., Apr. 38; last May 37. It's no trouble at all to vindicate is finding a profitable yourself when you can convince other ketFinland In Europe for dairy machinery that are people vindicated. you I building up a heavy trade. big-ge- mx-Idia- n, s prjm-Ion- Baddley Plumbing and Heating Co. Corner Eighth and Main Sts. Phone ar Bread ordinary aeparatora are used. Threaded Rubber Insulators are found only ia the WlHard Threaded Rubber Battery. So thoroughly haa it been established through mote than five years experience that tbe Willard Threaded Rubber Battery gives mote miles of uninterrupted sendee per dollar, that it baa been selected as standard equipment for 173 cars. Bane dry the only battery that can be shipped and stocked without a drop of moisture in It. 290. The Vacant Kay Jorgensen sang Chair, and a mixed quartet, Mrs. Ohed Nelson, Miss Elda Hafen, W. F. Hafen and Emil Hafen, Jesus Is as the closing number. JoCalling, seph Seely pronounced the benedic- lb tion. An unusually large gathering of relatives and friends attended the services and followed the body to its last resting place, where the grave waa dedicated by W. C. A Bryan of White Georgette Ne-pl- ii. Hats The floral offerings were most profuse and beautiful, completely cov- ering the casket. QUASH MOTIONS FILED INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., May 3. Foundation for a legal battle over the indictment in the soft coal conspiracy case, in which two hundred and twenty-si- x ojierators, miners, retailers and coqiorationa in six states are accused of criminal partnereship to, increase prices, was laid today in the ' federal court by defense counsel filing motions to quash the indictment. No date for the argument was set by For Graduation : Judge Ferdinand (ieiper of' Milwaukee, Wis., presiding. Counsel for the government, as well as the defense, however, exacted no further action until fall. Outstanding among a raised liv the motions to quash was the contention that the nnti-tract was suspended by the Lever fuel in 1917. control act Who can resist the charms of a dainty white Georgette Hatf They are graceful in cutline and daintily trimmed in flower and ribbon. Some have streamers and seme are trimmed in handmade Lowers. Both wide and droop brim ahapes are included in theee styles and they are very moderately priced. qno-tion- ' ut Below German Prices. BERLIN, April 30. A rejiort from Halle states that American coal is being offered for industrial plants in that section at a price twenty marks a ton beluw the present German fig- -, ure. German industry is said to lie suffering from a coal shortage, owing to the enormous monthly deliveries to the entente. The dispatch adds that ' Germany is gradually developing into . For the athletic girl we have White Milan in a great variety of shapes. Also Sport Hats in ribbon. The prices for these pop" lar hats are 33.75, $5.00 and $7,50. Bessie Kennedy , Milliners MAIN . STREET, PRICE, UTAH Next to Eko Theater |