OCR Text |
Show DISTRICT COURT IV AXD Carbon County, State of Utah he Matter of the Estate of Kl:zaDeceaaed. Nutiiw to ; SSitore: Creditor will present their with voucher to the under-a- t the Fries Commercial and be-1bank, Price, Utah. on or CAKL K. MA11-JerAdministrator. gffpub.. May i lat May 27. HOW IH CHK Supreme Court Rules Against Advene Possession in Carbon County. OF Zui-eKU- 5V mi FIVE OLD COMMISSIONERS apt, OUT OP OFFICE ESTATE ncE TO CREDITORS known also as Glrot. af Giuseppe Glrot. Deceased. Creditor will client claims with voucher to the John T. Oldroyd Assumes ResponsiPyursicned at Cameron, Carbon cuun--ttabilities of Important Duties Which on or before the SSd day of CATTER1NA VA-- P-- . im- Induds Lessing State Lands, InIST Administratrix of the Estate of vestment of Largs Funds Some of Glrot Also Known As Deceased. Board's Former Accomplishments. pub., Apr. 21; lat May 80, lUl, h. TZncE TO CREDITORS ESTATE Li--af Donato Llmune And Annette peceaaed. Creditor will present STinTa with voucher to the under-lime- d at Helper, Utah, on or before day of June, A. D. 1921. J08-tfLlMONE, Executor of the Estate 2 Donato Lmone and Annette Ll-aDeceased. ; last May 20. 1921. Uni pub., Apr. COAL XtfflCE FOR Entry. Land Office at Salt Laka Notice la Oty Utah, April 1, 1921. fcfie'by flven that William H. Kelso, i.m B. Quinn, Lottie It. Denael and Suth A Quinn, all of Balt Lake City, gggnty of Balt Lake, state of Utah, ph on the Id day of February, 1920, Oil in this office coal declaratory Mtsment Serial No. 02SSSS for the of Bee. 11. Twp. 19 ml half (Wtt) loath. Rang 14 East, Balt Lake mer-tfw- n. have this day filed In this office application to purchase Serial No. 125)11, said land, under the provisos of Secs. 2241 to 23S2, United Revised Btatutea. Any and all put parsons claiming adversely the lands ascribed or desiring to object for any nason to the entry threof by applicant should file their affidavits of pro-ta- g In this office during the thirty-fa- y period of publication Immediately Mowing the first printed Issue of this notice. GOULD B. BLAKELEY, dfth B M PTIU-ICATIO- Bsgister. first pub., Apr, 29; last May 27, 1921. And other rectal disease are cured efthout surgery. No time lost from tatinesa. Writs for my book on rectal diseases. SENT FREE. -- h t'-- f m commissioners. eomjKised of It, E. Davis of Roxelder, president; Arthur Kuhn of Welter, secretary, and It. Jones of Wasatch, X. P. Ipsnn of Beaver and M. K. Steaart of Salt Lake, members, ceased to function. The board hag charge not only of the ale or leasing of state lands, granted by the enabling act for the benefit various state institutions or enterprises, but also of the investment of funds accruing from the sale of such lands. The total investments of the board at the present time are in round round numbers, $5,750,000, and Oldroyd ia given charge of this sum and the collection of interest on these investments, or the reinvestment of the funds when paid, as well as the leasing or sale of the large amounts of land remaining in the land grants. Records of the state land board indicate that loans completed in the past four years, during practically all of which time the present members of the land board, with the exception of Rtewart, were in office, totaled $3,056.5)05 in farm loans. There were 1200 loans made during that time, many of them, of course, representing renewal of former loans, terms of which had expired. This ia far in excess, according to the records as by X. P. Anderson, who had charge of the detail work of the after the loans were approved, of any preceding biennium. Cither important events in connection with the administration of state lands in the last four-yeperiod are: The script ' system was abolished, and what were known as lieu rights, in the efort to put all citizens on the same footing with respect to the purchase of land that had not been sold. The land hoard placed on the market and sold some 100,000 acres of the state lands. The suspense fnnd of the land board, representing pre-jmr- I.R. PARSONS, M. D. Ill Continental Bank Building, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH ed ar ed FRANDSEN BRICK YARD Yards adjoining the Denver and Bio Grande Railroad company tracks on the south, three blocks east of depot. Office at the yard. Estimates given and pricea Quoted on application. Fostofflco Box 93. Telephone 72U. Manufacturer of fnnds held by the secretary in trust for persons having completed busi- ness before the hoard, was deposited in hanks and returned interest to the state general fund at the rate of 2 per cent or 2 per cent. Some of this was loaned to state institutions at 5 per cent interest, benefiting the general fund by that amount of interest, .while permitting the state institutions, notably the University of Utah, to obtain money for current expenses at about 3 per cent under the market. The land board drafted and obtained the passage by the 191U legislature of a law reserving all mineral rights in state lands to the state. The Hatchtown project situation was also cleared up by the payment of losses to the settlers under the project. By the Milner purchase of coal lands the price was raised from $1.25 an acre, as gracing lands to $100 an acre, as coal lands, and $557,000 will be returned to the state on the completion of this sale. The Piute project was completed and the dam considerably strengthened. A long series of negotiations looking to the sale of use was underproject to the water users taken, and ia just now being completed and the During the last legislature the land lionrd supported the bill to extend the payments on purchases of all the lands from a ten year term to a twenty year term. The retiring land board consisted of two Republican and three . Brick of All Kinds PRICE, UTAH ORRIN ELMER COLTON, UTAH General Merchandise nnd Stockmen's Supplies Hotel, Dipping Vats and Fred Lota In Connection Where You're Treated Right Hnoeessor to CRAXER A MARBLE S. of the important change in tste overn 1, i Uow in eiltH't give4; ovir f.'lministra-tnof the Btate land affairs to a tate land commissioner, the present board of five succeeding members. John T. Oldroyd of Fountain (Ireeft became state land commissioner Tuesday. The preseut state Wd of land the KUSANO Merchandise of Rest Japanese Every Description members. They will turn to the management of their private interests, which are, in the maArjority of instances, agricultural. thur Kuhn, secretary of the board, will take over the active management Oil Inof the newly organised Utah he is which of telligence corporation to be secretary-treasure- r. Democratic Catering to the trade of residents of the coal camps and surrounding territory. OUR QUOTATIONS Concrete Building South Ninth Street. Price. Utah on TROY LAUNDRY Everybody Knows tlie Troy nnd JtM Good Work. W. E. WEIST. Agent. Call for lnd Delivers Packages. Fhonc 260, Price, Utah. lengthy aud unanimous deci sion, uriiicu bv Justice S. R. Thurman and handed down Monday, the supreme court of Utah upholds the conient ion that, where state land grauts are concerned, title by adverse iKissessiou cannot be obtained against the state. The decision affirms the judgmeut of Judge George Christensen of the Seventh district in the ease of A. D. Van Wagoner against J. W. Whitmore, administrator of the estate of George C. Whitmore, deceased, and Peter Jones. The state of I tub, by its state board of land commissioners, apiwared in the ease as intervenor. Since 1SS7, long before statehood, W hi: more Lad (tossession of the land, which now is irrigated and in alfalfa, fenced and otherwise improved. The tract contained 56.68 acres, in a section to a hich title passed to the state at statehood, as a part of the state school land grant. Van Wagoner purchased the tract from the state in 1912, and later liroiight suit of ejectment against Whitmore, claiming damages. The death of Whitmore caused the ease to drag through the courts for a considerable period. Judge Christensen upheld the theory of the state and awarded $2280 damages against the defendant The ease was appealed on the ground that the statutes provide that adverse possession may run against the state. Justice Thurman points to the constitutional provisions and the enabling act in connection with the state land grants, and holds them to act forth the trust nature of the grants in such language that there ean be no doubt that the legislature did nqj intend any sulwequeut statute to apply to state school lands. The esse is said to involve many others where improvements have been placed on such lands and title has been elaimed by the possessors. A pipes a pal packed with P. A.! Seven days out of every week youll get real smoke joy and real smoke contentment if you'll get close-u- p to a jimmy pipe! Buy one and know that for yourself 1 Priaca Albert It ttU la fapp red Saaa. tidy rid time, btmdsmmt ttmmd mmd butt fund Urn kmmudtrt tmdimtkt mtmud rrymttl glttt Packed with cool, delightful, fragrant Prince Albert, a pipe's the greatest treat, the happiest and most appetizing smokeslant you ever had handed out I You can chum it with a pipe and you will once .you know, that Prince Albert is free from bite and parch I (Cut out by our exclusive patented process 1) Why every puff of P. A. makes you want two more; every puff hits the bullseye harder and truer than the last I You can't resist such delight I Say, you go on and stock up with a pipe and some Prince Albert and get to talking turkey in real and true smoke language btmldtr tilth 1 ,v pr; CIMUT.vf I HQ, X l4 BUM Casrriht 121 fcr K. J. Rayaalda Tabacca ZIONITES INSURE CASH Green River Irrigation Project la Very Strongly Backed. The Salt Lake City Commercial club's plan to underwrite a fifteen thousand dollar fund needed to make a survey of the Green River reclamation project waa approved a few days go at a meeting of the board of governors of that oragnisation. Plana for raising the amount among the business interests of the state will he in charge of a committee to lie appointed by President Hawley. Gov. Charles It, Mabey has announced that he would write a personal letter to Ttah state senators and representatives, explain' ing the proposition, and asking their support at the next session of the legislature in an appropriation measure to reimburse thoM who contribute to the fund. The money raised is to be turned over to the department of the interior which has already appropriated fifteen thousand dollars as half of the amount needed for the survey. It was announced at the meeting that Ogden, Green River, Price and other cities are behind the movement. The commercial organisations in those cities have notified the Salt Lake City Commercial club that they will furnish their share. President George M. Miller of the Price Commercial club attended the meeting. A communication from William Spry, United States land commissioner, stating that the federal government is anxious to begin the work on the survey, was read to the board. Market gardeners smetimes use as much as two thousand pounds of commercial fertiliser on an acre of ground. This would he at the rate of about four or five pounds to a plot of ground ten feet in each direction or a hundred feet square. Under most conditions fifty pounds of highgrade fertilizer is the maximum amount that should be used on a garden thirty feet by sixty feet in size. Germany continues to fill the allied eye, but not the allied jiooket. Cm. WlatitmStltm N.C. the national joy smoke LOCAL EGGLOSSES BIG Close to Million Annually the Esti- mate In Utah. Utah poultryra isers and merchants have sustained loaaea in eggs which amount to more than a million dollars annually during the MUit few years, according to an estimate prepared by John A. Iaraelaon, state dairy and food commissioner. With the new law taking effect on May 10th, however, a large part of these losses will be avoided in the future. The estimate is made on the completion of a rejiort of J. A. Taylor, Bjiecial investigator, who was assigned to determine the condition of the egg industry in the state, under Walter M. fonner state dairy and food corn miasioner. The investigation took in wholesale houses as well as the retail dealera and resulted in the determination of the provisions of the new egg law. The inspector found that fully 25 per cent of all the eggs sold by retailers in one county were unfit for human consumption. It was determined that the losses were largely due to the failure of the producer to gather the eggs before they became soiled or fermentation had aet in. The shippere and merchants were also responsible in a de-- j gree as some have been careless in allowing the eggs to stand for hours in warm places where incubation can act in. Enforcement of the new law, however, will largely eliminate the waste once the producers and dealers are educated to its provisions, in the opinion of Israelson. It will require the candling of the eggs in the stores and by providing the proper marketing facilities will permit of the eggs unfit for human consumption to be used for other purposes, thus avoiding to a large extent the losses. Boy-de- OUR NEW DRINK, AND DANDY, TOO. ALSO, THESE: CIlKltltY I1LOSSOM COCO-COK- A I1IOX IIKKII FICIIIT.IIJ (ilCAlK XKCTO n, The Newest Near East Geography re- All mads right here In Price at our own Plant The pricea right Deliveries at your home or place of business. PRICE BOTTLING WORKS Phono 84 PRICE, UTAH DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Strictly sanitary and where the service is of the best . Clean, wholesome and appetizing foods at small cost . Many families find it both convenient and pleasant to have their Sunday dinners with us. NEW QUEEN CITY CAFE TURNER BLOCK PHONE 169 PRICE, CARBON MAN PASSES Successful candidates at the tests the ausrecently administered under board of agriculture state the of pices s for county crops and pests mpec-torwere announced last Saturdayby The A A. Hinckley, commissioner. Imrlul Mtf examinations were inducted under na-gait. the personal supervision of 1L and of state imqiector of crops C. are nests. Candidates qualifying W. Fox Cooler of Castle Dale, J. Sandy, of Salt Lake, James Glover ofIsaacson C .T. Hansen of Price, Carl Sam Q of of Brigham City, R. D. Johnson of Salt Lake City, IL P Matthews Grove IL V. Swenson of Pleasant The accompanying map aims to show the extent of the operations of Xear J. Webb of Provo. II. East Relief and also by contrast how comparatively limited is the Armenian and the rumor area in the1 Xear East controlled by the bolsheviki. Wherever in the Xear Xo, we ean hardly credit East there are destitute Armenians. Syrians, Greeks, Jews, Assyrians or are men that our young young others needy and oppressed regardless of race or creed, there Xear East mafor a decline in the price of mere- Relief follows. From Constantinople to Bagdad, from Port Said to Baku, even are rries licenses. Possibly they into Persia, the protecting arms of Xear East' Relief have reached until towill be wiped out ly hoping they day its work is far more extensive outside the country of Armenia than within. UTAH i n. AUTOMOBILE TRANSFER AND DRAY LINE, u Tour of freight and "nt work and hauling It will rereive prompt Mention. No job too large or too J11 for us to handle. Freight Is attention. Welter jnven r,ur Phone 96W2, Price, Utah, v Japan may entertain peaceful toward us, but her military would indicate that she is ready to make naughty faces s lomeone. pie nickel cigar is beginning to j?4 its appearance again. Some day may be worth a nickel. Lo-ea- n, i CARBON COUNTY E. W. McINTYRE BING COMPANY F. D. BRYNER and Welding, Catting and Brazing Workmanship Guaranteed Welders of All Metals Oiy-Acetyle- ne Corner North of D. A B. O. Warehouse. Phono 120-- Price, Utah |