OCR Text |
Show TIE tour PAGE BUN, PRIOR, UTAH EVERY F E X FRIDAY, JUNE D A T. li SHOULD HOT BE COHSXDEBES AS AN Issued Every Friday By Bub Co. (Inc.) Publlsh-In- ARGUMENT." We heard a Carbon, county man ada mighty good argument a few days ago when he declared f'nt. anything that is worth owning is worth Almost every week we read insuring. in our exchanges where a farmer 1 ist his hoiiae or burn, and that it was not covered by insurance We should never lor a moment forget the fact that fire protection is not as efficient in the Miiallcr towns as it is in the citu a a here they have modern apparrUs firemen. And protect! n and well-pai- d from fire in rural districts is even less than it is iu the small tour,. In fuel, hardly once in a hundred times is t to save a farm house or ham, om e the flame have gained headway. The firmer can't maintain a properly equipissi farm and a fire iL partmeut, too. tKven in town the danger is far Tht k great to he overlooked. was right when he declared that anything that is worth owning i.s worth insuring, mi far right that the statement docs m t admit of Isnng referred to ii an argument. K. W. Crockett, Tear. Office the Subscription, l.tt Phone Ka 9. Residence, No. U3MI Mail MatEnured aa Second-Clas- s ter. June . I1S, at Poeteffice at Price, Utah, Under the Art of March I, 17. ADVLKT1SIXU 11U1X Display Matter Per Inch per Month, 1.&9; Single iaeue. Sue. special PoPer Cent Additional. sition, Legale Ten Cents the Line Each Insertion. Count BIX Words to the Lina Summuns, 912. 5U; Water Application. SU.OO; Final Proof, lltt.uO. Headers Ten Cenu the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Blackface Tips Filteen Ceuta the insertion Line Eai-Ohitusries, Cards at Thanks, ResoluHeailit.g tions, Etc., at 1 la if Iak-sbiotic Kates. Cuuut Bis Words lo ti I Lina For Bale. For Kent, Found, I nut. Etc., Tao Ceuta per Word Each Issue No' Charge AcoouuU. Address All Communications to SUN PUBLISHING CO, Price. Utah. -- By JANE OSBORN u. le once-jaipu-l- nr se SNOWING HE SPEAKS TRULY TOO, TOO TBULY. WRONG BRAND. When you hoar a man talking about watch him. Straight, honest men, do not need to advert o the fact. If a mail ha conducted hi so that tliera is no reason to !oil, him, be does not have to remind you of the fact. Whj brag about being honest? If von have to boast til sun it mint be a different kind of li i y from what most iienple have. A true-blu- e man never yet had to tell his friends of his loyally, for evidence i stronger than words, and time tells I history. Never a For your baking a bag or two of our ye' v'n did not try first to convince his victim that he wa honest. Nat- fine cake, pie, biscuit and bread flour urally he provide some alleged ppiof j the best flour we have ever offered, that spciii aliove niapieioiir-f- or I'.e crook always knows that he nmt fir-- l at an economy price. Yon will get gain confidence before he can plav hi results in your cakes, bread, game. So, keep an eye on the fellow who has to advertise li:s honesty- - it biscuits, pies, etc. Try it on our sayso. usually isn't the brand of hnefy that you are best acquainted with, or Jl.e kind that will help you any after yon have become acquainted with it. how good he is I : FOR BAKING ilim-flninnu- -r pm-pose- d Price Commission Co. 't improve a Ford machine by trying to cross it with a locomotive. You enn South Ninth Sweat. Prica, Utah. m BA TTER Y I Is now being sold in UTAH, IDAHO, WYOMING AND COLORADO. d SI-2- IN CASE LIKE THIS WATCH FOR spare room" tied In the leiiby furuihouse lay the tilnk chiflou frock that Uertliu huil bought for the great event. Silver slippers unit htuckirigw lay beside It and the turn! of pink rosebuds that were to ImM her fair curls low on lu-- r forehead. The whole house was In aa elr nl unit even the row uml chickens lu the barnyard uml pasture must have susiieeteil that somethin? was In the air from tlie happy, preoo-ruideair of I '.111 Deuby. gruff and usually Indifferent, as be went about his dally chorea. Bill Dcuby was Bertha's brother, her elder by ten years, who, though lie avoided society himself, never seemed more couteut than when hia pretty si iter was Included In the festivities at nearby Tilton college. Then George Fulton come with the news that changed all this air of pleasurable expectation to one of gloom and dejection, George found Berths In the kltrhcn of the farmhouse mixing a cake hatter. He sat down morosely on a stool beside her and kept his eyes upon the mixing spoon rather, than on Berthas face. Ive done the thing that seems moat It menna honorable, he announced. that I cant take you to the hall. And with much faltering and many hesitations he proceeded. Last summer I met a girl who lives out In Wyoming. 8he was a little older and I didnt even care for her except as a good paL We played tennis together and went swimming and sailing and a ill, --before wo parted I asked her to go to my Junior hall with me. That was before I had met you. I Just said It that way Ton must go to my Junior hall with me, and she said, All right' Well, we wrote Mice or twice and nothing more was said about the hall, and then we didnt write any more. I had met you and she didn't seem to rare whether I wrote or not. This morning I had a letter ffom her you mny read It If yon will. It Just says: Tin coming for the hnll. Will arrive at live Friday. Arrange somewhere for me to stay for two or three dnya and meet me at the station. I know you haven't forgotten your Invitation. lta too late to prevent her coming she Is almost here. I didn't know what to do. Of course, I want to take you more than anything else. Ilut I made up my mind that the right thing fur a fellow to do In the rireunistsneea was to go to the girl he really eared for. the one who well, the one who trusted him and understood him and There will lie a lot more tell her. dances for ns to go to. and as I'm rbalrman of the ball committee we ronldn't have a very good time anyway Fll be so busy thlnklag about the musicians and caterers and everything." Berths had not quite come up to the part George had given her to play so well as he (expected her to da 'She hud assured him that he had done the right thing and that she didnt care bout the dance. lint there was an air of defiance In her tone, and when she Knapped her Ungers to show him how little she did rare George raw only the Are that lighted In her eyes and not the tears that were ready to burst forth Iwlilnd the tire. It was not till George had gone and Bertha hutl gone to nurse her grief In sight of the pink frock laid out no neatly thst she really did permit those tears to flow. Bill rtenhy, who had looked In vain for Ills sister downstairs. fun nil her there In the spare room. IVrflm explained. Its lucky I wasn't there," raid Bill. Id have hroken Ills geek fur hllti. The coward, (lie dog' " Bvrihn clnpis-- her hand over Bill's mouth and would hear no inure. I dont Core so much 'alsiut going with him.' she fibbed. hilt I wanted to wear the dress. I never had such a Slip raised the pretty rtresd filet of pink ruaphnds to her hair. Aren't they pretty T" she asked. And then Bill was ready to shed tears himself. (to with someone else." he said. "There were other fellows that would have taken you." "Yes, hut they ull have girls of their own now. There Isn't a junior or a senior who hasn't got snjne sort of girl, and the liiiderclnsrincn aren't allowed in go." (iiu outsiders go 7" asked Bill. Not unless they are grudUHles cF Tilton. They don't mind outsiders, only there isn't room enough for everybody hut I dont know any one to go with, anyway. Men are so scarce nowadays. I'm a man." announced Bill, and It was all Bertha could do not to express her dismay at the thought that this big. heavily booted, brother of hers, who had never gone to college and who avoided all society, should think of hlmst-l- as a possible dance escort Til take you," be said firmly. But they wont let you In you're an outsider." See here." raid Bill, shaking a defiant finger In her face, "you said this George la the boss of the dnnee. I'll show him Fin no outsider this time. I'm going and he's going to let me In. That's the lesst he can do." In the thirty hours that were to gUpra before the dance Bill found exiH-ctaiic- y The meanest man in Carbon county I went mourning without Tiie Bun; is the one a ho blames it on the prinI aloud nt and cried in the cuugrega-lioter because he cant raise vegetables Jub, N. as pretty as the pictures in the eecd catalogue. ALL GOOD CITIZENS SHOULD EE WILLING TO SERVE. ONLY CONSTANT REMINDERS KEEP UP MEMORY. duJury service is one of the first ties of citizenship. It is one of the Very quickly we forget the thiuga last duties the average citizen is will- that are not before us daily; we forget ing to iierfonn. Men of character and what we don 't see or hear alxiut all the' ability who are possessed of the quali- time. The aipular writer, the artist, fications necessary to the rendering of the movie star, the business man all fair and intelligent verdicts will go to are forgotten very aiKin unless tin v great lengths in order to evade service keep themselves constantly before :he on a jury. At the same time they will puhlie. For instance, the giggling mocriticise the verdicts of those who ar; vie world has dime without Fatty willing to serve. The average mm now for several months and it feels that he can not afford to iieghtt looks like they're going to gc'. along his business interests in order to swnd without him. Hut don't you know that two or three days or a week in a jury every day serves to get the box at amall pay. The financial sacr-fi- re comedian farther and fnrtner away auch service entaila ia a harrier be- from the puhlie mind and heart f it tween him and hia duty to hia commu- makes mighty little difference to the nity. He forsakes duty in his efforts world what becomes of an individual, to evade the sacrifice. In too many no matter how murh they may idolize ease this attitude fills the juries with him under a given circumstance. And men who are not fitted morally or in- it the same way with a store with a tellectually to perform their duties business concern of any kind. The lonwithout fear or favor. The result is ger they stay out of print and don't spread broadcast over the country in keep reminding the people that thev the form of criminality that apjiea are still here, the farther they .get to lie utichekahle and constantly on the away, the sooner they are forgotten. increase And even then, it might be We see where a New York couple figured out that the mail who avoided jury duty and attended to his business were married in an airplane. That's thereby making just at the time not new. Lota of married couples here some greater financial sacrifice, or have their iiiu and downs. preventing a correxHiuding loss had not, in the long run, been winner, RESERVE YOUR SYMPATHY FOR of the umlesi reside conditions THE POOR DEVIL I made more prevalent by h!s own ami Little Mathilda McCormick, 17 and his similarly situated compatriots' actions. The law of nature requires that self willed, wants to marry a Swiss we reap as we sow, and even now the riding master old enough to he her hum of the readier is deafening in our grandfather. Ifer father ard her mother and even John 1). w'th all his bilears. lions ran not prevent her. She i 'es Our ideu of the stingiest man in rough shod over them r.ll and is deterCarbon eounty ia the one who knows mined to have her" way and her ridbow to make something worth while ing master. Bully for Mathiljle! We' out of dandelions and won't give his hoie she gets him, for we do admire a neighbor the reeijie. game sport. But, 0, the poor devil ! ! We sometimes wonder if there i one man in all Cinln county who can hold up hit hand and swear that he ever got results from knocking the weather. is why I lie n Every time we meet a Carlton county man who wants to get even with si leone we wonder why he doesn't pend In speaking before a convention of the same amount of time in try:ig lo newspaper men nut long ago Hon A. get ahead of him. 1. Sandies, for years head of the Ohio State Fair association, said "The After reading the daily Miers one country editor has never made a mil- concludes that if some man had nil lion dollars. Aa a rule he makes more the brains they think they hare their donations to the community than any legs wouldn't sustain their weight. folks. A town is alother half-doze- n ways on the map if it has a real, live What hAs lieeome of the weekly paper to make a noise, .ldver-tis- e Carbon county boy who used to its merchants, ami make pe pie do moat of his courting on the way to think. The rural paier is a power that and front ehurrhf ia recognized by the politral I kiss more than it is recognized hy the home folks If there is a man in Carbon enmity or even the home merchant. The clubs, who thinks he has too much money the lodges and soe:al events all want our advice is try running a newspaper space in the home paper whether riic for awhile. subscription price is paid up or not. The profit in n eonntrv n;ior is ifb'ii At the rate Germany and Russia the money that is credited on the lemlcs are printing mmey (he lies! thing a of the editor and never polluted. The fellow could own over there is a iter good editor is so busy g'tt'ng out his 'mill. paper and doiucr his work that he does not have to collect. F.verybo.ly The w'se cmulidiite is the one who ought to take the home paper, so tlcy nines out on a pint form of more than will have a plan for their f; ieral notie spring Imumi a season. tice and s. they will Is si:rp f tyflin? one their folks won't lie ashamed r f. It hiw been (lie exeriei'ce of a good Go around and eiilwcrilie now an 1 many pimple tlml Hie wages of in never skip a (uiy-dapay for it in advene. i It sEfficiency AThatfterA Ik lilt, br MiiCiiin Kiiapr iymlicaie It was the day before the junior ball at Tilton collcyc. On His-'ib- 1 I Bertha Goes to the Dance f Mgr. vance . eallnus-fln-gere- f d It is the end of endless troubles. EASTERN IITIUI ELECTRIC CO. PRICE, UTAH 1 guosa that's right," raid the girl. "And besides," Charlie laughed, "think bow romantic this la I" "Did yon ray Theuniatk'T queried the girl, with a laugh In her vole. "Tou know what 1 raid," declared Charlie, and be laughed, too. Before Charlie rang off that evening they'd had quite a conversation. And during the following evenings they became so well acquainted over the teleidumo that It waa only natural they should want to see each other. So at last they made an arrangement. Charlie waa to cwuie to the T. V. C. A. the following evening at 7:30 o'clock and look for a girl near the entrance with a red hat and wearing a white carnation, lie, too, was to wear a white carnation. "But be ready for a surprise and eautlmied Mary. a dlxupiKiIntniont, "I know I'll not be dlsupiKiInted, raid Churlle, "but you may lie." But Churlle had little fear of Mary being dlmpiKMiited fur lie knew that he waa a good looking, upstanding fellow of the type that please most girls. Promptly at the appointed time Charlie entered the building, hia At once heart actually fluttering. lie looked around for a girl with a red hat and wearing a white carnation. But no such was visible. So Charlie, now thinking gliMimlly of the lie had been cautioned gainst, found a seat and looked around him glumly. Juat opposite him, la a chair near the door, was a beautiful girl with rosy cheeks, bright eyes and a general look of loveliness that caught hia atteuHou at once. Xow If only Mary could he this girt. But tlda girl had on a black bat and won no carnation. Then, aa Charlie waa weaving a romance around the glri opposite him, he received a shock. Coming toward the door was a girl wearing a red hat and a white carnation. But augh a girl! Pour thing, alie couldn't help It. But at the sight of this girl who waa so ungainly, so homely, so altogether displeasing, he felt aa though all the world had suddenly gone dark and all the joy of life had left him. At first he wanted to turn and run. But then his lnstlncllve good breeding asserted itself. It would uever do to pluy the girl such a trick a that So Churlle rose and stopped the girl. Tartlon me." he raid, "you're Miss Mary ltivls, arent your Tlie girl baiked at him In surprise. Then a look of understanding came Into her eyes. No, I'm not!" she answered emphatically. And mice more life seemed worth living to Churlle. I know how you made the mistake." raid the glri. Mary lent me her hat fur ttiia evening and guv me tliis caniatiou. She raid the carI know she nation nas Important. wun ted you to think that I am her. But I'm not. There she Is!" The girt turned and pointed directly at the beautiful girl seated near the dor who had so fascinated Charlie and whose cheeks were now blushing rosily. In some way Charlie thanked the girl with the red hat and then rushed j Mary. This I wonderful this I the best luck In the world I" he cried. Mary looked up lit him shyly. she You're not disappointed?" queried. 1 was a moment ago," sabl Charlie. "But now oh. but I'm glad to meet you !" For a moment there was silence ns he gazed delightedly down at her. But how about you?" he queried Are you disappointed? You finally. fixed It up nicely to give yourself s elianee to look me over before meeting me. Are you satisfied? Mary looked np at him with friendly, honest eves. If I wasnt," she mid frankly, Td never have stayed here. I'd hare gone up to my room and youd never bare met me I" ASK I'OR Independent Superior IGO IGO OILS GASOLINE I Wholesale plants Price and Helper JOHN P. EGAN, Mgr. PI TOU Twenty Years Ago This Week George Brandon of Castla Dale waa the saloon business in Saline. Balt Lake City plumbers had gone on a strike for shorter hours and more pay. The brick walls of the Price Trading company building were about half completed. Residents of the Nine Mile begun haying Also the farmers down In Emery county. Deputy Bherirf Harry World waa In Bunnyelde subpoenaing witnesses in the Dilley murder case. The county commissioners of Ban-pecounty were offering a bounty of one dollar per buahel for grasshoppers. Fred Gunnareon sold hie restaurant Intereata to hia partner, Len McCarty, the latter railing to Matt Warner. Judge Peter I. Olsen waa home from Balt Isike City where he had n for a month for the Injury of an eye. Thomas Fitzgerald had liegun the erection of a residence on the lot where the J. C. Penney store now stands Mrs. J. A Young was recovering from the smallpox. Mrs. Harvey Mangum was the latest victim of the disease. C. It. Bnowden. the somewhat noted dentist, was remurried to his former wife of Alidne, Mich., a( Evanston, In rec-llo- n the early settlers here, having to Prica in 1879. Judge Holds way, A. Ballinger. Stewart, Ben Stein and Charles G i berg composed the first fishing i of the eeason out of Price. They to the reservation country. Castla Dale eporta had notified JL Lea that seventy-fiv- e dollars had 1 deposited there to guarantee nim expenses for taking hia mare. Pi over there for the Fourth of July r i It useless to put your beat foot ward unless you make the other keen up. f Never tell another man he is a The truth ia often offensive. te . The fellow who runs into debt finds it difficult even to crawl oat Dnnt borrow The Sun. Subarr Ix-e- 10c VARIETY 15t Block NorfL Store First National Bank. One-IIa- lf Glass Tumblers, 3 for 25 : Wyo. Chris Peterson who was home from a mission of two years In lienmark, wan given a reception at the Town Hall. The secretary of the Interior l:ad submitted to congress an estimate for the survey snd allotment of the Pints h reservation. Bishop E. S. Horsley had called a meeting of citizens to gather at Town Hall to arrange fur tht celebration of the Fourth of July. Tom Dilley, charged with killing Bteve thipman. was taken to Provo for safe keeping and thus to save ihe i oiuity a big expn'i. George lnwnnnl. Hn olil end lupliiy respected citizen of Price, died it his home of paralysis. Downnrd was one of Porcelain Cups and Saucer-- . 221c Thousands of Household At tides Things Yon Need and Want Every Day. 10c VARIETY 15d No. 62 North Ninth Slree That is the way people look after we have cleaned anJ pressed their garments. The most delicate fabrics in our hands. We never use injurious cleaning materials. ACME CLEANERS & TAILORS EAST MAIN PHONE 237 |