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Show THE SUH. FBIOE, UTAH- - PAGE EIGHT 11 BALDWIN BUK U1SEIF Week E. Roy Gibson, chief clerk for the Utah Fuel at Sunnyside, was in Price on business for his eoniiany. tradietory of the statement issued by Governor Morgan of West Virginia that there is no starvation among the miners families. "The majority, or practically all of these men who number about two hundred, are in a destitute condition, some not even having a meal ahead nor the means of obtaining such," said a letter to the president from the Marfork, W. Va., local union, which said the miners had worked only three mouths last year, that mines still were idle and money must be had. A similar letter from the Mascot t, W. Va., union was received. PLATES ARE READY II. E. Crockett, secretary of state, is advised that a carload of license plates were ready last Tuesday to care for applicants for motor vehicle with the exception of dealers plates. These will not be received un til next week. The arrangements for handling the applirants fur license has been completed, so that there will be but little delay in earing fur the pub-li- had made it xtssible for water home foreign cuuls to rejiluce tbe coal from Utah mines at the Pacific Coast consuming centers. Sales have leeu made of these foreign coals at approximately the price that I'tuh coal pay in freight charges to the Coast. George A. Stum, president and general manager of the (Treat Western Coal company and allied interests, is on the Pacific Coast this week in connection with the promotion matters at the new camp up on (Jordon Creek. II. G. Williams, consulting engineer for the Utah Fuel roniiany, is in Salt Lake City this week from the Coast going over matters with others there as to improvements and other things for the present year at the Carbon county and Colorado properties. Four miners were killed and a like number injured in an exploaion last Saturday in the Dueena mine of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad roniiany near Birmingham, Ala. The explosion is said to have been caused by the ignition of a pocket of gas. The state public utilities commission will today (Friday) begin the hearing of the rase of the Ramlierger Electric railway against the Utah railway and the Salt Lake and Utah, in which the Bamberger seeks to obtain a through rate on coal from the mines on the Utah railway to Ogden. L. F. Rains, general manager and the president of the Carbon Fuel and other local romimuies, has been in San Francisco for alwut ten days. lie is there on matters having to do with the merger of several eoal concern in Utah and Wyoming and proposed at eel works at Provo or elsewhere in this e. AN APPRECIATION Our hearts are filled with gratitude to our many friends for their kindly acts and words of sympathy during the Estime of our recent bereavement. pecially do we feel deeply grateful to the many who accompanied us on the long, hard trip on our sad mission to lay the body of our son away. (Signed), Mr. and Mrs. George E. Mclier-maiHiawatha, Utah. d, POSTAL WARNING Due to the frequent rifling of the maila sent front the United States to Siberia, the postoft'ice department has state. just sent out a warning to the public Thomas C. Ilarvey, auieriiiteiideiit against enclosing currency iu letters of mines at Sunnyside, and li. R. Kirk- sent to that country. The senders are to rash remittances by check or patrick, holding a like position with urged or poatal money order. the coking plant there, were in Trice drait last Tuesday. That camp, eacb said, is I ropertv quiet at this time compared with what Price to the south of the Deuvcr and it should be. Better working condi- Rio Grande Western will apiwar betions everywhere is looked for in tho fore the new council at its next meet near future by both gentlemen. iiig in protest against the closing by A. R. Baldwin, general manager of ordinance by the outgoing council of the Utah Fuel company, left Zion last South Tenth strteF, where it crosses Monday for New York City. He will the tracks. If the ordinance becomes lie absent until the middle of the cow- effective these folks are completely ing week. C. B. Hotchkiss is in charge fenced off from South Eighth street until his return. Up to this date there to the IL 0. Smith orchard on the west have been no changes among the offialxiut three blocks. Failing to get cials of the rniiany or employes at relief, the matter will go to the courts. the mines in Carbon connty or iii Colorado. Occupying the west half of the Miles Prof. Robert S. Lew is, who has been building the front of which is being on leave of alwcnee from the Univer- remodeled will be a gents furnishsity of Utah for a year, took up his ing establishment under the active duties in the United States bureau of management of W. E. Stoker. Associmines on the university campus with ated in the business will lie George A. n the start of the winter quarter on last Wootton. Stoker has resigned his with the Seoweruft establishalhas been lie Tuesday. spending most the entire year studying the eoal ment locally to engage in the new enmining industry and will be preiared terprise. It ia reHrted that Carl Sax-e- y will succeed Stoker at Seoweruft 'a. to teach several new courses in eoal mining at the school this quarter. Wednesday evening last the local Kiwanis club ierferted its organizaVERY VALUABLE PAMPHLET MERELY FOR THE ASKING tion. L. K. Whitmore is president; It. M. Mugraw, vice president; II. L. The strip of land extending from Pratt, secretary; A. W. McKinnon Boston, Mass., to Washington, I). C., treasurer, and Rev. A. F. Giovannnnni and from the sea a hundred and fifty chaplain. These with J. R. Sham. Wilmiles inland is the most densely set- liam Littlejohn, 0. K. Clay, T. 0. Hartled, and highly industrialized section vey, Dr. Sanford Ballinger and Dr. R of the United States. It comprises a M. Junes form the directorate. The fourth of the fiopulation and consumes club lias about forty members, 22 per rent of all the eoal produced J. R. Sharp has liecn made president in 1919, for example, sixty-seve- n million tons of bituminous eoal and sixty-fiv- e of the Carlipn County Fann bureau million of anthraeite. At its ports for the ensuing year. A. W. Shiner, is supplied most of the bunker eoal for vice president; 0. T. Harmon, secreand Clark Eves and J. O. Robertseagoing vessels, and through them tary, son Enoch Bryner, additional diand of the off- rectors. The annual passes an iiuMirtant t meeting was held shore exports. last afternoon at Price. OrMonday The superpower reairt is an intensive engineering study of the power son P. Madsen addressed the bureau and fuel requirements of this zone. It on timely subjects. outlines a plan for the George M. Miller has issued a call of all sources of electric energy for the annual molding of Price Chamboth steam and waterpower into a ber of Commerce to be held at the common reservoir of power available rourlliouse tbe evening of Thursday, to meet the constantly inereisin;' deJanuary 12th. All business and prt mands of the zone. It projects the de- fessional men are requested to be presvelopment of that system ten years in- ent. All are welcome and invited to the future, and recommends the whether meinlier or ii't. const ruction of great central ower stations at designated points Having been in HMr health for some As the rejxirt is likely to influence time Dany Ryan was found dead last the location and development of elec- Tuesday morning. He was alxiut GO tric utilities in this zone, it slumM lie years old. Funeral arrangements are of interest to every .eonl producer and held in abeyance tending a search for distributor whose eoal is mark ;ted in his relatives. Although long a resi the zone. Copies of the sup nwer dent of Price very little is known here report mav be had free upon applies of his fpraily connect ions. tion to Director, United States Geo M. P. Smih, the oilman, got back to logical Survey, Washington, D. C." Price from Colorado and several points in the Texas fields this week. Meeting Called Off. he is returning to the Line Star Today IXDI A N APOLI S, I nd., Jan. 4. The State to s(iend the winter. Ilis health ceneoal of of the meeting operators tral eometitive field with offirera of at this time is not the best. the United Mine Workers of America, Mr. and Mrs. Abner Powell of Price called at Pittsburg for Friday, was are tlie of a new son that rame declared off today by John L Lewis, to theirparents home last evening. Dr. W. I. president of the union. The Pittsburg IN inters of Carbon Hospital this mornmeeting was for the purpose of fixing ing said mother and balie are doing a date for holding negotiations on a nicely. wage agreement to heroine effective next A)ril 1st, and Lewis in a formal Parents and teachers of Price are to statement, declared the meeting was have a meeting next Thursday, Janudiscarded because of operators refus- ary 12th. It should have been held It is essen- yesterday, but it was thought best to ing to meet the minors. tial from the standioint of public in- wait a few dav after New Years. terest." Lewis said, "that a joint Mrs. N. C. Christensen from Castle meeting of operators and miners be held. In no other way ran the prob- Gate is at a Salt Lake City hospital lems of tbe eoal industry lie solved nnd for an operation. She was accomna-- 1 in due time circumstances will compel nied in this week by her sister, llrs. II. C. Smith, of Price. such a- - meeting. jio-sitio- . p-ir- inter-eonnee-ti- , Pleading For Aid. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jnn. 5. West Virginia coal miners, who say their families are starving, have applied directly to President Harding for government aid. Letters the miners have sent to the president are ron- - lfr f Twenty Years Ago This INTO COAL SANE LOCALLY, AS IT WERE (Continued From Page Six.) FEIDAY, JAHUAHT I, VEKT PHXD AT. The American Legion dance at City Hull New Years eve was a f inn iiri.il success. The at tend mice was more than exTaiTations. Prices fire department is to give a dance at City Hull on the evening of Washington's birthday, February 22d. Mr. and Mrs. ed to lriee Lake City. L after Lowenstein returna week's visit at Salt G. T. Olsen of the town of Emery sold a fine bunch of cows at twenty-tw- o dollars a head. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. Gibson entertained a number of friends at their home at Sunnyside. John C. Lee of Mapleton visited with his brothers, Arthur J. Lee of Price, and Edwin C. Lee of the Nine Mile. Mrs. Y ?t? ?Y Typewriters! Y Y Y Y Y Rebuilt Remingtons, Smiths, Foxes and Other Makes. Thoroughly Overhauled and Guaranteed. All prices and time payments. Y Y Y Y J. F. Broyles put in bathrooms at the Scofield House up at Scofield and advertised sample rooms fur commercial men. Waste Baskets Vul-C- ot Y Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Dowd returned to Sunnyside by way of Price after upending the holidays with relatives and friends at Zion. Denver and Rio Grande engineers were about through with their survey in Salina Canyon and were working towards Green River town. Eastern Utah weather was delightfully balmy. (Quoting the Prire news-paof the week: "It ia difficult to tell whether it is spring or falL" er E. C. Lee of the Nine Mile section was in Price. Two of hie sons accompanying him were on their way to Pay-so- n to enter the Presbyterian school there. The Price Oil company, owning some fourteen thousand acres of land in Carbon, Emery and Grand counties, refused forty thousand dollars for its holdings. ?Y - Castle Gate school trustees decided to postpone building a new sehoolhouse in that district until the coming summer. There were no bids submitted as called for. Dr. J. M. Tanner of Salt Lake City sxike Snnday to one of the largest audiences ever assembled in Price, lie was suierintendent of the Latter-da- y Saints Sunday school. Price's new town Ixiard met, but after allowing a few bills adjourned to the first Monday evening in February. At that time appointments were to be made for town officers. James A. Sewall, late of Castle Dale, was made second counselor to John Putter, bishop, over at Sunnyside. He succeeded B. M. V. Gould. His first counselor was Samuel Naylor. Don C. Robbins of Huntington told it in Price that one of the oil eompa-nihe was identified with was to begin drilling the coming week down near the town of Green River. es Word came to Prire that the San Rafael Oil company, drilling in the had atrurk a second flow of oil. A. J. Davis, now manager of the American theater at Zion, was behind tbe Sin-ha- proposition. IY is actually a better waste basket after five years use. Take a Vul-Cand any other basket. Your experience will tell you what would have happened to the other waste basket in five years in three tough and strong in the years. The Vul-Co- t, beginning, will be a better basket and good for ten or fifteen years more service.. The Vul-Chas solid sides and bottom nothing can sift out over the floor. Yet the Vul-Cis extremely light about half as heavy as it would be if made of aluminum. Youll like their handsome appearance. Regular finishes are rich maroon brown and olive green.. The Y Y Vul-C- ot ot Y Y Y ot t ot Y Y Y Y yY Complete line of Loose Leaf Ledgers, Legal Blanks, Deeds, Bound Ledgers and Journals, Day Books, Pen: ells. Inks, Library Paste and Office Supplies of Every Description . Typewriter Ribbons, Check Protectors. Merchants Duplicating Sales Books, Etc. Mail orders promptly filled. Y Y yX Y Y Y Y Y yY Y Y Y PRICE, UTAH x MMOMAAMnMMMMAAMIMWMaMMWMMMM child to see the dead lying in their casBOND JUMPER FOUND kets. Judge Mclntire was a counselor to George Frandsen, first bishop of Sheriff Kelter Locates Mach Wanted Price ward. Man From Helper. Scofield and Winter Quarters Utah pie had organized the Sheriff Thomas F; Kelter is in DenOil company with holdings near Green ver, Colo., where he went the first of River. President, A. II. Earll; vice this week to pick up Gust Taeharapo-laand X. Mellen F. ; secretary president, who it will be remembered jumped treasurer, J. M. Loveridge. Directors, a two thousand dollars bond last fall J. Gamage, A. II. Earll, J. M. Lover-edgT. J. Parmley and F. X. Mellen. Having been tried once on a charge of pandering and escaping conviction because of a disagreement by the jury CARBON TO GET MONEY Zacharopolas was again before the court at the October term, hut waited to get a look at the Close to Thirty-Seve- n Thousand Dol- only long enough completely impaneled jury and to hear lars From State School Fund. the district attorneys opening statement to the twelve good men and true. Close to two million dollare will be Next morning when court opened there distributed among the school districts was no sign of the accused Gust. His of Utah evly in the present month bond was declared forfeited and no JenDr. N. C. the of office through real information as to his exact whereinsen, state superintendent of public, abouts was forthcoming until late in struction. The monthly report of W. when Sheriff Kelter got D. Sutton, state treasurer, issued last December, word that he was in the Colorado city. Saturday showed a balance in the A message to the chief of police there state district school fund of ensnared the wiley Gust, and as he deto which should be added 9 clared he would return to Utah within the interest fund of the lands out extradition, Kelter hied to the Colgrant, in tbe offire of John T. orado metropolis to fetch him back land commissioner. These two to Price. On the arrival of tbe officer, items are to be distributed among the made a fight however, Zacharopolas districts according to lauf early this the trip here, and it became month, and total $1,946,881.87. It ia against to prepare extradition panecessary possible that there will be some addi- pers in the case. Then Attorneys llenry tions before it ia so distributed. Ruggeri and B. W. Dalton got a hustle This ia a larger amount than ever on themselves working through the before has been distributed by the New Year holidays and the necessary state to the district schools at any one documents were forwarded from Price time, and amounts to approximately in time that with the governor 'a sigfifteen dollars per eapita of school nature added they probably will reach population. It is large because of the Denver this (Friday) morning. Kelconstitutional amendment passed by ter will have his man hack in Carbon the people in November, 1920, and rat- county early next week unless some ified by the fourteenth legislature, unforseen difficulty arises. which provides that the state aid to Gust has certainly given the local dollars officers and courts schools shall be twenty-fiv- e considerable action per capita of school population. in the recent past. Convicted of one Last year the entire amount distrib- Ixxitlcgging offense and fined for that, uted from this fund was less than fif- there is another similar ease pending teen dollars and only during the year against him in addition to the panderwhen an occupation tax collected on charge. In his former trial for mines was the total distributed by the ing this last mentioned offense he testistate more than fifteen dollars for the fied that other courts had handled him entire year. Carbon countys school previously, declaring that he had servcensus was taken last October and it ed a life term imposed on him of part shows a total of forty-fou- r hundred for a woman supixised to be and sixty-sian inrreiye over the pre- his murdering wife. The Utah board of pardons vious year (1920) of six hundred and had released him after five years imforty-threFifteen dollars for each one gives the district $21,990. Twenty-- prisonment. Just what action be taken to five dollars per pupil brings the to- collect the amount will of the forfeited tal to $36,650. bonds from two of Gusts local friends remains to be seen. BRAXEMAN KILLED peo-Easte- rn s, different makes of are listed for exhibition at the Twenty-Secon- d National Automobile show in New York City January 7th to 14th. Nearly four hundred ears will be on display. Ninety-fou- r jam-seng- er automobiles Japanese have invented a hand operated vibrator that does' nearly the same work as the electric one. e, Carbon county was to get forty-si- x hundred and sixty dollars as its apportionment of school funds by the state. There were all told fourteen hundred and twenty-on- e children of school age. The ier capita was $3.28. Licenses to wed were issued by W. IL Donaldson, county clerk and recorder, to Harley C. Lee from Clear Creek and Katherine Eunice Harknera of Scofield and to Joseph Sorensen and Sarah Jane Leyshon, both of Scofield. There were two hunlred and twenty-scholars present when school "took up" in lrice8 first brick building immediately north and adjoining the iresent Carbon Stake tabernacle. There were five teachers, including the prinriial, Enoch Jorgensen. five Miss Lucy Liddell of Wellington and Arthur I)ny of Lawrence were married at the latter town, January 2d. A wedding dinner at the scliixilhouse and a donee followed the nuptials and to which everyone of the community over 14 years of age was invited. A. J. Lee, forwarding agent for the Gilson Asphaltum company at Price, was out on the Strip looking after a big shipment of gilsonite- - That concern had secured the contract for paving in ronneetion with the big world's fair exposition at the Missouri metropolis. W. (I. Sharp left Salt lake City, where he had been for a number of years general manager of the Pleasant Valley and the Utah Fuel companies, to go with the Fairmount Coal company in New York City. His salary was said to ho twenty thousand a year. $1,752,-168.5- 8, You Eat You feel the beneficial effects of eating a good meal Good meals are at your command daily at this cafe. They are good became they are properly prepared from ths best grades of foodstuffs. Try one and well see you again. Short orders and bakery lunches at all hours. $194,-713.2- Old-roy- SAMS PLACE d, x, W. G. Sharp, who had resigned as e. general manager of the Pleasant Valley Coal company, was tendered a reception at Castle Gate. Mark P. Braf-fe- t, attorney for the company, presented the retiring manager with a gold watch in behalf of the employes. E. S. Kimbcr, a brskeman at Helper A watch was also given Mrs. harp. for the Denver and Rio Grande Western, was killed in the yards at that Judge Erast us W. Mclntire, one of town last Wednesday morning. He the pioneers of forty-ninfiassed was coupling a freight engine tu a caaway at his home in Price of cancer of boose in the yards, when be was caught the stomach. His parents were at Nnu-vx- i. , between the two and crushed. No one Ills., at the time of the martyr-dui-n saw the aeeident as the tender of tbe of Joseph and Hvrura Smith. De- engine obscured the view of the fireceased remembered quite vividly his man and engineer, while the others of j father lifting him up when a mere the train rrew were otherwise engaged. e, You Are As Special Rates to Denver Account of the Stock Show, Denver, Colo., reduced rates will lie available January 14th to 17th, inclusive. See railroad agent fur further information. East Room Eko Theater Building PRICE, UTAH FOR SAtf, WANTtD.ETC. Two Cents Per Word Each Insertion No Charge Accounts. FOU RENT NICE front room. Phone 3 IS, Price Utah. I WANT A FARM WILL PAT CASH rent. P. O. Box 14S. FOR SALE OLD NEWSPAPERS IN bundles of a hundred, twenty-fiv- e cents. The Sun. FOR SALE EXTRA LARGE HEAT-ln- g stove. Also smell range. Will go cheap. See Walt Christensen, Price, Utah. FOR SALE MODERN BAKERT, building and fixtures at Price. Center of the city. Address, Box Its, Price. Utah. LOST RED LEATHER SUITCASE. near Huntington, night of December 13th. Reward If left at, y Price-Emer- Stage Co., Price. FOR SALE CHEAP THREE wtck-Balpooltables in first-clacondition. Inquire of Harry Fox. dier Summit, Utah. ke ss Sol- FOR SALE FORTY ACRES LAND half mile from Price city limits on county road west. Bargain. Frank Oroaso, Price, Utah. KEGS AND BARRELS FOR 8ALE Five, ten, fifteen end gallon barrels and kegs for s ilo fifty cheap. See Steve Landaris, Helper. FOR SALE ONE 10 HORSEPOWER bolter, horlsontal type. Is The retort courteous is not always st power Grand Junction. Address courteous after it has been dissected,! Fletcher, Grand Junction. Colo.Oeorgs s |