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Show FRIDAY, MARCH 81. THE SUE, PRICE. UTAH EVERT FRIDAY, PAGE SIX POWER DEVELOPMENT i FRANDSEN TOE GREEN RIVER IS DISCUSSED BV COMPANY COMPANY OffKMS Tarda adjoining the Denver Bio Grand Railroad tracks on the south, three blocks cm ( depot. Office at the yard. timatea given and prices qaotel on application. Poetofflce Bog 3. Telephone 72X. Presenting a summary of the niwer Hirtauce in Utah, except as the buildtoof gether with the needs and intentions ing of reservoirs aid in the storage ot the Utah Power arid Light eonijainy, water for irrigation and power develofficials of that eorNiration, lieloir opment. Every reservoir which ia built oil this river and its tributaries rethe sensiou of the Colorado river duces the flood control problem on the last Lake at Salt City witting Monday, gave a graphic outline of the lower river. Filings have been made situation. Dei-l- ration ia made that with the federal lower commission on the development along a river system the Green river and its tributaries, and assumes iuiportanre in three particu- wliirh represent approximately seven lars, first, flood protection; second, in hundred and fifty thousand horsepowirrigation, and third, in fsiwer promo- er of continuous tower when the river tion. Lveii so, the eontentioii is made flow is adequately equalized by the construction of the necessary dams. thut nmssary oist ruction in tiie n for power development would This tower will be within easy distance Utah of all of flood Isitb for first a as parts act requisite control and irrigation developments. and the major industrial centers of Refuting the statements which have the state can be reached much more been mudt that the develouneut of readily from tower plauts built on the siwer sites should be delayed j lending Green river tliau from those now on the (Viloradu. The Green the completion entire irr;gation plans, K. It. Inch, the power rompanya vice river lends itself to a program of ecopresident, claims that tower develoji-uie- nomical development. Instead of the along the Oreeii river is the first construction of one enormous developessential Combating the idea that the ment requiring, us would ihut, the ingovernment should ausiend for any vestment of a very large sum of monlength of time the erinits for lower ey long before it could by any possidevelopment work along this water- bility become remunerative, this river way, Inch said that his company s in- not only (lermita, but requires, a develvestigations indicate that in many opment by what might be termed the dam and Hind method, whereby ita places lower development must precede irrigation, and thia ia especially power possibilities can be developed in true on the Green rivert ukw which response to growing power demands. relatively few opportunities for the At the same time, so far as prelimiconstruction of gravity irrigation sys- nary investigations show, each inditems exists. A considerable part of vidual development will be of sufficithe lands susceptible of irrigation will ent use to permit of construction on have to be irrigated by pumping sys- reasonable coat basis. The amount of tower mentioned tems. Ko far as this ia true, the product ion of elect rie power will have to looks like a large figure and of course precede the irrigation, and to this ex- it will taka a number of yeara before the local market requires such a large tent, even if it is assumed that irriga" amount. However, it ia of interest to tion ia a superior use, nevertheless 1 note that the Utah Power and Light ion to have would product power prior development if irrigation ia to be company haa found it necessary to inaueeeiwfully attempted. No investiga- stall power plant facilities within the tion has yet been undertaken to indi- last eight years amounting to about cate the commercial feaaability of irri a houndred thousand horsepower. As gation by pumped water, but in the soon as the present industrial depresmain it may lie said that if irrigation sion ia passed present facilities will lie ia to lie undertaken at all, power de fully loaded and additional developvelopment will have to he the first ment will be absolutely necessory, step in the program. The pwr puss' Utah is one of the rieheat states in the bilitiea of the Green river and of ita Union as to raw materials, and those princial tributaries will be needed ir. familiar with ita resources and ita posthe development of the state of Utah, sibilities believe that ita development in which this river ia almost entirely will lie much faster in the future than located. A substantial part of these it lias keen in the past. This means facilities will need to be devcloied in that the rate at which lower developthe relatively near future, if the best ment must be undertaken will be ininterests of the state are not to be re creasingly greater and that the record tarded, and some definite and consist- of the past eight years ia likely to be ent policy of power development must only a small part of what the future lie arrived at both for the purpose of will demand. It is certainly only fair preventing the creation of idle invest- to the state of Utah and to the tower ment on the one hand, and no that there industry here, that the development of nmy lie adequate lower available for the tower resources of the Green river the states deevlopment, on the other. and its tributaries he permitted, provided all other interests are also propAids Other Development erly protected. Such a program of deExpounding the idea that dams and velopment will not only be of great asother works needed in Kiwer develop- sistance to the industrial renters of ment would act as aids to the other ob- the state, but will 1m one of tho greatjects of a general eontrol scheme es- est factor in the development of tit pecially applied to the Green river, almost untouched area in the northInch mints out that flood control in eastern part of Utah kuown as the itself is not of the most serious iin- - Uintah section. Kaih!htie along the Green Uiver, rum-misbio- BRICK Hirer of n Bride of All Kinds a To Particular PROFESSIONAL Businessmen riv-erw- trana-luissio- CTAH PRIOR, DR. K M. JONES Physician and Surgeon Obstetric and Diseanen of ChlMrw, Office Sllvagnl Block, Price, Utah, ed DR, J, A. JUDY Physician and Surgeon When you get printing get the best. The Sun is prepared to do that kind nt Telephone 1S8W Office Price Commercial and Barium Bank Bldg., Price. Utah. SB. L SEVAS Dentist at very moderate prices. New Redd Bldg. PRICE, UTAH Office, Rooms Bring your next job in or phone and a representative will call. Everything In office and school mer- 7-- 8 DR. H. B. GOETZMAN Dentist Work and Extraction. ay Prici Commercial Bank Bldg., Price, Utah DR. SANFORD BALLINGER Dentist Service. Office,' the New Redd Building, PRICE, UTAH X-R- ay chandise. STEWART. ALEXANDER A PRATT Attorneys At Lav Office Second Floor Sllvagnl Building PRICE, UTAH GEORGE CHRISTENSEN Attorney At Law PRICE, UTAH Office, the Sllvagnl Building, Forman ly Occupied by Judge F. E. Woods Telephone 180, Prion, Utah. L. A. McGEE Attorney At Law Rooms I and I. Sllvagnl Bldg. PRICE, UTAH FERDINAND ERICK8EN Attorney At Law TIT Judge Building SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. OLIVER K. CLAY Attorney At Law Room Off! c projects planned for the Island of Sardinia will tennit ita zinc and oilier mineral products to he refined and manufactured at home instead of Wing exported in a raw state. FOR THE TEENS t. Sllvagnl Building. PRICE, UTAH. HENRY RUGGER! Attorney At Law Hydro-electri- Office FEDERAL POWER at the County Courthoum PRICE, UTAH. B. W. DALTON MISSION Attorney At Law In compliance with the federal waOffice Eko Theater Building. (41 Slat., 10631 notice la hereliy given that the Utah Power and PRICE, UTAH Light company, care M. O. Leighton, National Savings and Trust building, A. KOPF8 STUDIO Washington. V. C., has filed applica- nigh Grade Portraits and Enlarge4 tion covering proposed power developments. ments on Green and Yampa Rivers apa from In d proximately unaurvey-epoint Second Floor Maintenance In ClionpcHt Twp. 14 South, Range 17 Eust, to Price Commercial and Savings Bask Easing Riding Small Car 1 In points Twp. North, Range 21 East, National Gas Average 25 Miles PRICE, UTAH. Salt Lake meridian, and about six mile M. 1. UctnpliUl, Agent. Helper, I'lah below Craig, Colo., respectively. Any J. E. FLYNN objection to such application or reLicensed Undertaker and quest for a hearing thereon, together Embalmer PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP with any briefs, reports or other data Notice Consult County Clerk Or for which consideration Is desired Telephone 89. should be submitted to the Executive Respective Signers For Further PRICE, UTAH. Secretary, Federal Power Commission, Washington, D. C. DR. J. B. HENDERSON IN THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL District Court In the Matter of the EsChiropractor. tate of Domenlck Valerio, a Mental InAt Price, First Door West of Tho Si competent. Creditors will present all 19 to 19 noon 9 till 4 p. m. At Hi claims with vouchers to the undersignThere were about nine thousand mur- per. over ed at Price, Utah, on or before May IT, Helper State Bank. 9 tin 121. NEIL M. MADSEN, Guardian, ders in the United States in 1020. P. m., axcept Bundaya. Othar hoi Or Oliver K. Clay, Attorney. at noma. Calls by appointment First pub.. Mar. 17; last April 7, 1122. Don't borrow The Sun. Subscribe. Coupon books of several denominations. Kept in stock. The Bun. ter power act OVERLAND FORD MOTOR WORKS - 10 CUT WORKING HOURS AND INCREASE ARMY OF EMPLOYES week as Adoption of the forty-hou- r a permanent policy in all plants of the Ford Motor company was announced at Detroit, Mich., last Saturday by Ed-sB. Ford, president of the company. Under the new plan the factories will be closed on Saturday and Sunday, and about three thousand men will be added to the force. The change will effect approximately fifty thousand employes, who will rontinue to rereive the minimum six dollars a day wage, but will work five eight-hou- r days jier week. The new employes, however, will receive a minimum of five dollars ter day, the prewar seale. In making the announcement, Ford said he had now reached the conclusion that the forty-howeek was practical, that the additional day of rest would irove a great benefit to the workers and that the production rchedules of the Ford industries could be so arranged ns to maintain the iresent outpnt on the curtailed working week. The action was in line with the companys desire to afford its workers with every oportuiiity to develop tlcir home life and profit by steady work with ample leisure, as well as to provide work for more of the city's unemployed. "Every man,' Fords announcement said, needs more than one day a week for rest and recreation. The Ford company always has ought tn promote ideal home life for its employes. We believe that in order to live properly, every man should have more time to spend with Lis family; more time for building up the place railed home. Hot Curtailing Production. Ford states that market demands warrant the operation of the plants six days weekly, but that the five-da- y week is practical and it has no been adopted as a permanent Kiliey of the not to the Detroit, Toledo & ronton railroad, owned by the Ford interests. Sunday work, however, has been all but eliminated on the railroad. Ford said he believed a greater demand for motor vehicles, larticularlv commercial, was an indication of improvement in business generally, and discussing the industrial outlook, lie said (wssenger ear production considerably exceeded the output a year ago, but that the greatest increase jn demand was for commercial vehicles, and this indicated business improvement Tractor business also, is encouraging, notwithstanding business depivstuen, and somewhat greater than at this time last year. The Ford conqigny's new employment policy follows a recent announcement that a material increase in w takers would lie made, the new n.cn drawn, as far as possible, from the now out of ranks of former sold'i-remployment. These additional men arc being employed at the rate of several hundred a day. The new employes arc to lie taaken on at the wage scale established in 1014 by Henry Ford, 'hen president of the ronqmnv, who set a minimum daily wage of five dollars a day for all workers, regardless of heir tasks. During the war period the minimum was raised to six dollars to enable cm doves to coe with higher living costs. Along ith the Ford announcement that more men wouM lie requited in the various plants canto a statement from the Employers Association of Detroit that a marked decrease had been noted in the supply of skilled automotive workers and that in some occupations. most of them highly penalized there are hardly enough inen to supply the demand. Should the demand for skilled men continue, an actual shortage will be faced unless faccompany. Adjustments naturally are tories are successful in tLeir necessary. In equipment and in man- own men in these lines. training This does not to darbe will have the plnnts power mean there is a shortage of unskilled ed on a basis where they can take cure for there still ire a great numof production in five days weekly. The labor, of men out of work who have no ber goal cannot be fully realized at once, special training. but. as Boon as possible, it is the aim of the company to adjust its business Gray hair is fashionable, but that ia so that it can lie carried on without poor consolation to the fellow who has work on Saturday and Sunday. The none at all. new schedule will first bze put into operation at the Highland Park plant j Some physicians say whistling and extended later to all factories, but the body. el ur s js BEN BEAN General Painting Contractor First Class Work. All Esttmatoa Fnt. One muat look twice at many a spring wrap to determine whether It la a cape, pure and simple, or a more complex wrap. The more like a cape it looks the better its chances of winnlnt approval from the fashionables. The cape hits always stood women In good stead, nevertheleya it will not hold her allegl-ane- e season after season without modifications. and we have them In the cape-wraPor general wear the spring offers, among others, the graceful wrap shown here. It la made of trlcottne and haa a large collar trimmed with applied loops of silk braid. At the back, loose, pendant panels of the cloth lire finished with slid cords ending In slender tassels. Something between a sleeve and a silt at each bide ot the front allows freedom fo.' the hands and arms. Altngefht-- this is a smart and practical for general wear and la developed in sever. tl coatings and colon. -- Fordson Tractors p. PRICE LODGE No. 52 L 0. 0. F. PRICE, UTAn Meets each Wednesday evening at 8 oclock. L. A. Hills, N. G.; Howard Meyer, V. G.; J. G. Whltford. Secy. for beat results and SINGER MACHINES mean not now, but many yeara. J. E. Jameson will see thst your machine la taken care of. Coe ner Fifth and J streets. Phono 110-- Any Place A Team Will Go aMIIS r special Oliver No. 283 orchard will run Just a close to A tree, oi vines a. a walkmg plow. plow The Fordson tractor will go under any branches high enough to allow a horse to pass. So there you have a combination that gives you all the g advantages enjoyed by the tractor grain farmer, without any danger of injuring or bushes. vines tree, The plow hitch is adjustable so that you can drive the tractor in betweenthe rows and stiU plow close to the treea The bottoms finish up the work in a hurry.uP With the sueed of the Fordson end the sturdy construction of this O live special low .11 your plowing v become a pleasure and an economy. Over 200,000 Fordson Farmers Use Oliver Tillage Implement time-savin- J. W. IT AM MOM), LICENSED I STRACTER OF TITLES Abstracts of titlea furnished to piers or tract In Eastern Utah. I insurance written in the best com nies. Real estate, bonds, etc. Beci floor Sllvagnl Bldg., Price, Utah. T" GIRLS HEEDS EACH YEAR IN CLOTHING WORKING F.M POIll A, Kan., March 10. Phono 188M. PRICE, UTAH. rc Kadi working girl cannot dress reiqiertably and comfortably on less than $141.08 a year, Eniimria women testified this morning in the final minimum wage! hearing before the Kansas industrial rourt here. Part of the sum $13.07 is for upkeep of clothing. Members of the Business and Professional Womens club testified that the employers' budget given as $93 was inadequate.; The women itemized room rent, food and clothing and declared costs of the necessities of life have not been reduced enough to permit much, if mv, reduction in the minimum wage r working girls. These gills and students at the state normal Bchnol here, who reeently made a hunger test to. determine a fair allowance for fo'elj also were to testify. S. ' : SUNSHINE TEA ROOM f-i- j With a capacity of twenty-fiv- e pn- sengers an allsteel moturbus has Leon designed having window that enn lie swung out of sight tn leave the aides KUSANO Beat Japanese Merchandise of Every Description Catering to the trade of tho resident of the local coal camps and surrounding territory. GET OUR QUOTATIONS Concrete Building. South Ninth Street, Price, Utah. P"Mast Luncheon T to is to o 8 o SPECIALS ALL DAY. Evening and Afternoon P By Arrangement. Home Cc and Surroundings. uml Main Streets, SBSlb Mlllbnrn Home. Price, U Sundays 9 a. m. to 7 p. ALGER AUTO COMPANY j i Phone 153 Authorized Sales and Service Below Savoy Hotel Price, Utah open in warm weather. I Natives of Borneo are the bend lovers in the world. gi |