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Show ITIPAY. 5 JANUARY 87. 1922 THE SUV, PRICE, MOST TRIG TINES, THESE, FOR SC10IS PAGE THREE FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- RY sc? . OF ivsv a SEME, SMS OR. TEHSEH ti H .j. 1 j A u you like, youll not Look as lone able to find anythin to criticise in ur laundry work. On the contrary the orer yon Look the more youll admire he perfect cleanliaeia of your linen ad its exquisite finish. Give it a trial ct ns do up' your shirts and collars ,ext week and m are pretty confident e'll add yours to our list of places at hich we are to call regularly. PRICE STEAM LAUNDRY Phone 218 Boards of education throughout Utah are being to by the state superintendent of public instruction, Dr. C.appealed N. Jensen, to economize in every way in the makeup of their budgets for the ensuing year. A very trying time for school boards is upon us, says he in a letter sent out last Friday over his own signature. . You are soon to face the problem of the school budget for the coming year under the situation of a temporary financial depression. While this task is before you people from every walk of life will approach you with advice. Some will encourage you to stand solidly for the efficient education of the children at whatever cost. Others will urge that the closing of schools is the panacea for all ills of taxation. Every gradation of advice from the one extreme to the other will await you at every turn of the road. As public servants we should give proper respect and consideration to the opinions of all who want in any way to contribute to Spring Canyon Coal Co. end Shipper Celebrated Spring Canyon Coal . Mines at STORKS, UTAIL General Offices. SIT Newhouae Building. Balt Lake City, Utah. M rf ORRIN ELMER COLTON, UTAH General Merchandise and Stock men'a Supplies i Hotel, Dipping Tata and Food Lota In Connection Where Youre Treated Right Baoeeaaor to CRANER OhURBUI Flavo Flour cnlnij irbhef rtaln- - GRINDING PLENTY Whole Wheat Flour, Graham Flour and Germade. Beat when fresh Get them right at the mill. Prices are right. lieni-- ! would Iroad Farmers Mill and Elevator Co. J. WILBUR BURNHAM, Phone tt W Manager. We Deliver Price, Utah. be somewhat lessened. "There should be no attempt to evade the necessary levy to pay interest on bonds and to provide for sinking fund. To do so may seriously interefere with school work in years to come. The people are willing to pay their obligations when they understand the situation. "The above suggestions must be understood to apply to a general statewide situation. Each school district has problems which pertain solely to itself, yet it must be appreciated that a problem common to all the districts exists. May I urge yon to study carefully the report of the committee selected by the school board section of the Utah Educational association that you may know how yon stand in these matters in relation to other districts. A concerted attempt to solve-th- e financial problems of the schools will result in something tangible. If we rise to the occasion and meet the situation as the rest of mankind is meeting it, better and brighter days are in store for our schools." S2&. ABERDEEN COAL fe5 to the solution of our problems. We must keep our balance and equilibri urn, however, in the maze of bewildering situations. After listening to advice it then becomes our solemn duty to arrive at eouelusions that we fee are true and just and abide firmly by our decisions. "Our school population is approximately 131,000. The number of children enrolled in the schools is about 122,000, Of tbia uuiuber probably not more than 115,000 are in daily attendance during the most crowded season, And with apiroximately four hundred teachers in the state you will readily Bee that the average number of pupils per teacher ia in the neighborhood of thirty. Should we raise the average number of pupils in the Btate per teacher to thirty-si- x during these trying times f We could by that means elimi nate no small item in the budget. "The salary schedules which have increased the teachers pay and have made for more uniformity have resulted in immeasurable good throughout the state. It occurs to me that in some instances teachers of lower rating are receiving salaries that are somewhat unfair to the teachers of higher rating. These conditions should be corrected and aa far as adjustments can be made they should be settled at this time, The compulsory attendance of children to 18 years requires great care in the organization of high school work. Classes could be enlarged considerably in many of these and subjects eliminated in which the enrollment ia small. "There is room for improvement in the expenditures for school supplies and for equipment. Our school building program can very well for a few years HIGHEST EFFICIENCY. Government equivalent 1104 lb a Unequalled for storage Will not alack. The beat of steaming and heating qualities. Mines at Kenilworth, Utah General Offices In the Walker Bank Building. Balt Lake City. KUSANO Mcrrliandiae of Beat Japanese Every Description Catering to the trade of the real dents of the local coal camps and surrounding territory. GET OUR QUOTATIONS Concrete Building, South Ninth Street, Price. Utah. CENTRAL Mother of Ten Children and Respected Pioneer Passes. POOL HALL Basement Silvagnl Building PRICE, UTAH Soft Drinks, Cigars, Tobacco M. ZUPAN. Mgr. continually struggling with the Indi ans and the hardships incident to the minute men during the Blark Hawk troubles. Mrs. Pierce wag the mother or ten grandchilchildren and had fffty-fiv- e dren and forty-eigFive children survive her, twin h; girls and twin boys, and her oldest n the jng daughter, all but one of One near or at Wellington. living of the twin girls lives at Lavecn, Anz i'Lil-dre- to 11 to oMork T Luncheon 9 o'clock SPECIALS ALL DAY. Evening and Afternoon Parties By Arrangement. Home Cookbig and Surroundings. Eighth and Slain Streets, the Miilburn Homo, lrix, Utah. Sundays 9 a. m. to 7 p. m. Some tlieni-t!v- e nv-- Ti. r uro always dirt rinsing the shortrniiiiiijr of Jl.iVi M Whos check would you cash that of a man whose hon- esty you knew through years of association or a strangers? If you had an important executive position to fill would you give it to the man who had( demonstrated his ability to make good or to the boy just out of college? Experimenting is costly the tried and true is always the SAFE choice. An- W. D. Sutton, manager of the state air association, on Monday last at the request of the executive committee of the association addressed letters to the directors, inviting each to submit a revised premium list for the department of which he or she is supervisor. The action is taken in the hope and belief, according to Sutton, that there is no necessity of failing to hold a state fair next fall, even though at present there is no balance in the legislative appropriation for that purpose. It is the intention of some of the directors who have been talking the matter over to prepare a plan whereby all the expenses of the next state fair may be kept within the average receipts of previous Fairs. Either with the consent of the state board of examiners, or through raising of funds outside, it is believed that .with the plant in ita present good shape the fair may be properly financed by setting up a sort of revolving fund. If expectations are fulfilled, there will be no deficit to be presented to the next legislature in this matter. J. H. Manderfield, director and supervisor in one of the live stock detriments, has already prepared a revised premium list to fit the proposed conditions, and this has met with the approval of W. C. Winder, president of the association, and other members of the executive committee. Now the other supervisor are to be asked to do like- Utahs two famous fuels , Castle Gate and Clear Creek , have proved their worth more than twenty-fyears as the leading fuels of Utah and they are gaining in popularity every year. ive ASK YOUR DEALER UTAH FUEL CO. Miners and Shippers of Castle Gate and Clear Creek Coal. OUR AUTO LICENSE FEES TOTAL VERY LARGE SUM wise. "We have asked that the revised premium lists be submitted by Febru ary 4lb," says Sutton, "for the reason that an early decision is essential as to whether the fair is to proceed or not. It is to go ahead, exhibitors will be anxious to start their preparations at onee. We find that the state fair association will be able to meet most of the obligations incurred by last years fair, though in a few instanres the claims may have to await action by the next legislature. There was, for example, a contract with the University of Utah, whereby that institution was to receive eight hundred dollars conditioned largely, as I understand it, on the fair being a success. This claim will probably have to await payment until the next legislature meets, and there will be a few more like it However, the bulk of the claims incurred to date ean be paid now or as soon as final collections are made. "With the money received from the insurance companies the state will be able to alter some of the buildings and perhaps erect more permanent structures in the places of those destroyed. Plans for this work, as well as for the 1922 fair, will be laid at the next meeting of the directory. " Collections made from the regiat ration of motor vehicles by the secretary of state will have to he 8737.500 in 1025 if this fund ie to meet the sinking fund and intercut on road lmnda issued by the state amounting to seven million dollars. Compilations made in the office of State Auditor Mark Tuttle show that $425,000 will be required this veer, $075,000 in 1923 and 1921 and $737,560 in 1925 and thereafter. Last year the collections from the licensing and registration of motor was $441,349.88. This year, however, there will lie an increase due to the larger fees which have lieeoms amounting to about 00 per cent on an average. Thus, it ie expected, ea WISE MEN Are not the only ones that insure their property against destruction or damage by fire. Even foolish ones know! better than to run the risk of having everything swept away in an hour. The cost is too small to consider. The benefits are too great to miss. Our companies are the big American ones that pay their losses without quibbling We always have bargains in city and ranch property. Abstracts, notary work and conveyancing. ve that almut $640,000 will be collected this year from the issuing of license plates alone. In addition the state makes a collection of two dollars for the filing of bills of sale and affidavits of ownership and fees for making inspections which will add somewhat to the fund. Yet even with there additions it ia possible that the fund will not be sufficiently large under the present system to meet the inteiest and sinking fund in 1925 and there- after. When a man ean truthfully Siy he ia not interested in his wifes gowns it ia a eineh he doesn't pay for them. There are times when it is better to keep posted than tv be posted. WELLINGTON, Jan. 23 Mrs. Em- EMERY COUNTY WANTS ROAD TO CONNELLS VILLE ma Hart Pierce died it Wellington January 17th. She suffered a pettily OGDEN, Jan. 23. Federal tie stroke October 24, 1906, but after in tha construction of a road o: recovered use the months about two Connor-villher limbs so that she enjoyed good from Huntington Canyon to ia now distance of miles, s Her life. thirty of her remainder health the northern the residents in by sought Emma last illness was very short. part of Emery county. County ComPierce, whose maiden name was Hart missioner D. lleber Leonard and E. E. blcssw was was born at Kirtland, ()., Adams of Emery and State Road and Smith giv, the Joseph Prophet by Neilson conferred with en the name of Emma forthe pro- Agent Peter forest service engineerthe of officials at phet's wife. She lived in Nauvoo in this city yesterday, ing She department 'rousthe of time the expulsion. a and petition signed by a presented 14 ed the plains when years of age e resients rewith an ox team consisting of two ox hundred and forty-ninbe constructed road the that dai cows questing the en and two cows, milking and offering to suscrihe twenty thousWhen subsistfincc. their of for port ly sister and dollars in labor toward the propart way across they burir.d her also whs ject, which would he a third of the esand two days later her mother cost. The highway will make buried on the plains, dying of cholera. timated two hundred million feet of available livnd she in After arriving in Utah Manti forest that is now Salt Lake county until she marriei timber in the due to the lack of a road Nathan Pierce in the endowment house, inaccessible, The prohanled. be which can over it mov April 4, 1857, after which they would also connect with roadway posed first different at places, south, living that between Fairview and the mine at Fillmore, Deseret, Levan, Harmony over which the residents of Sanpete Glen wood, Loa and Huntington, their haul their coal for the winter blazcounty almost entirely time being sjient months. ing the way in frontier settlements, ht SUNSHINE TEA ROOM Breakfast T ried and T rue 99 Equitable Real Estate & Investment Co. Second Floor Silvagnl Bldg., Price, Utah Carbon Pool Hall The place to visit when you want congenial surroundings. Good Rooms North of Tavern tad Cafe ia Connection. PRICE, UTAH Near Depot e, Independent Coal & Coke Co. S. BLESSED BY PROPHET GiveeK Goal UTAH STATE FAIR Officials Behind Exhibition Plan nul Attraction. SB" i I4- - I MATHESON IS GOING At the illiteracy conference of the National Education association to be hold in San Francisco. February 3d and 4th, Dr. C. N. Jensen, state superintendent. is on the program for a paper on "Illiteracy a National Problem. ITo will ho vuahc I11 attend, but I r f. A. C. Mathe-'i- u office. pMll't .l wiil th- - '!' Spring Styles yond Compare Hats for February. Flower trimmed to wear with the early spring suit or dress. Close fitting to feel snug on a windy day. Durable material to stand a sudden change in the weather. Moderately priced to help save for the many other things that you shall want for your spring outfit. FATHER OF TWO LOCAL PEOPLE PASSES ON MT. PLEASANT, Jan. 20. James F. Monroe, the last civil war veteran in this city, died at his home here on Thursday last, after an illness of aev en weeks of cancer of the stomach. ITe was born in England in 1847. Hia parents joined the church in their native land and came to Utah, crossing the plains with Captain Allred's company in 1855. The family lived in Spanish Fork for a time, and later went to Fairview, his mother being the first white woman to live at the latter place, lie lived at Chester a number of years, and came here about sixteen years ago. Tin is survived by a daughter, Mrs, Pearl Dunce of Latuda. and one son Mu'livien Monroe of Stnndiirdvilb. Monroe of Lanio!.., Ia. brother. ai a Mr. Ivlin Mi.ntg n:. ry ; of :! i I Bessie Kennedy , Millinery PRICE, UTAH sli-V'- (Vf.-ruia- . Be- KEWUS3 |