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Show r THE SUV. PUCE, PAGE EIGHT STEEL TMESIS TAKE OVER HUM FRIDAY. UTAH-EVE- BT ntIDAT. SEPTEMBER 1. 1922 THE WATERS FINE LANDS By BOB ADAMS TO NORTH AND EAST OF PRICE Organization of the second gigantic steel producing corporation to tqicrale in Utah. using iron from Iron county and coal from Carbon county and similar to the recently announced Columbia Steel company is told of by T. C. C. Gregory, the San Francisco counsel of tbe latest big new industry for Utah, in dispatches from the Coast, Tbe coal properties involved are the familiar Milner interests, these lands extending from Kenilworth well along toward Sunnveide, and totaling something like eight thousand acres, all in Carbon county and close to Friee. The general plan only is given out, Gregory telling that iron is to be reduced front the ores and earned through all processes to finished articles. As nearly as can be told from bis brief outline the real finishing mills are to be on the Pacific Coast. The deal makes a big consolidation of a number of California, Oregon and Washington steel7 eomimnies and takes in the Milner properties in Utah. Iron ore will lie : 4 4 4 4 procured from big holdings in Southwestern Utah, located by the late S. B. Milner, the original holder of the coal 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 C. projicrtie, and whose sous Archie E. Milner, J. S. Milner and Clarence Milner have since their father's de- mise carried out the old gentleman a dream by entering this deal. Many offers for the projierties have been turned down by the family and numerous hardship and vissiotmles passed by in the bolding process, but a final reward appears to be in sight. Carbon county will lie probably as much benefited by the extensive exploitation of the Milner coal lands as by the oieration of the Columbia just about to oMn up over to the south of Sunnyside. Utah has hulked forward to a big jump in the state development from the first steel eor- Miration. All that has been exiected from that can now lie doubled, and if the realization is half the expectation there will lie plenty to keep Utah in the public eye for the next few years. 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 This bard, though bald, is fair- - 4 ' ly allra; hia years are not yet hurt- - 4! ing him. but youth recede! from 4 day to day and boyhood at enes 4; aeem fa, away. Already dimmer 4 through the haae shine memories 4 of ths good old days, and other 4 kids both plump and slim possess 4 ths creek he used to swim. By 4 their free maaonary the boys e'en 4 at their books, foretaste its joya 4 Two fingers raised (or is it three?) 4. mean: After school corns swim 4' with ms. la frantic haste their 4 shirts they shuck, their britches 4 from their legs they pluck, yet 4 pause awhile before they duck; 4 for one and all the little scamps, 4 perform the rite that wards off 4 cramps. O bars brown limbs sun- - 4 health Imbibing! O lioyhood joys 4 beyond describing! Come, com- - 4 radea of the good old times, and 4 all ths old boys who read these 4 rhymes; shuck off the cares that 4 vex the soul, let middle age from 4 off you roll and join me at the 4 swimming hole. Why should we 4 pause liecauae we're bigger, Last 4 one in's a redhead nigger. For- - 4 get your years e'en though you've 4 1 gut 'em: Bet you can bring up 4 laittom." Gosh, old Fatty, you 4 So deep, Skinny. 4 look queer. lookahere. 4 -- ; Notci Values For Man and His Son ' Saving is as important as making. If we make but do not save, we will never get ahead. A dollar saved is a dollar earned. You can save many dollars by buying your clothing, shirts, underwear, neckwear, shoes and other wearables in our mens and boys departments. Our to buy from manufacturers gives yon a to from us. buy top-abili- ty top-abili- Young Mens Mackinaws High Top Shoes For Mea for All Outdoor Occasions For warmth, comfort, need. ns BOOZE MID Driving along the paved highway last Monday between Price and Helper Brigham Bird hailing from Salina in attempting to pass by a wagon traveling in the same direction with him failed to find room to cut in ahead of the team in time to avoid a machine foming ifrom the oppoaite way. This d ear was driven by a man named from one of the Emery county towns. The result was a general mix-u- p in which the horses were knocked down and the two autos piled up An Investigation of the spill was made by Deputy Sheriff Pike, who brought tlie parties in to IViee. As Bird was driving with a last year's license plate on hia ear, be was arraigned before Justice Hammond, who after taking into consideration that Bird had an inspector 's card and a license application in his possession fined him an amount which with the costa totaled up $4.70. Deputy Pikes investigation failed to disclose whether thesedrivers are used to extra wide roads when at home or whether the onrush of traffic over in this busy district was responsible for the accident. While Pike waa looking up the case out on the highway a truck driven by John Diumenti came along. The anxiety of the driver to watch some small boys who were being given a ride on bia truck to see that no tampering waa done with hia load caused him to run off the pavement into the ditch. Deriding to investigate the contents pf an egg case in the track, Pike uncovered two gallon jugs of booze. The 's booze is now locked up in Sheriff keeping, the track is held as forfeited to the state and Diumenti is temporarily at liberty, a fins of $209 baring been assessed against him by Justice Hammhnd. Fifty dollars of this amount has bn paid and Dinmen-t- i is to have thirty days to rustle the balsnce. Unless the whole snm is liquidised he will he required to serve on a rx months jail sentence. An attempt to recover the truck on Col-lar- Kcl-ter- BOOST ON HELPER HIGHWAY Enginemen and Piremen Object to the Presence of Deputy Sheriffs. Diu-ment- ia MBS. OLSON GIVES SEASONS FOB WITHDRAWING SUIT all-wo- model with cuff. Cut 84 Inches long. In assorted plain and fancy patterna, A genuinely good Men's 10 Inch toft brown blncber, aswtd sols, box mackinaw at only $4.98 10-In- ch - $5.69 . $6.90, ' incorporated DEPARTMENT STORES ltol $3.49 $3.98 conform to the rules heretofore laid Estimates made of the receipts of down by the commission in the vehicle department of Utah motor the of its lines and in rendering by Serretary of State Crockett for the the service. year 1922 places the amount at $730,-00the figures being made on the fint Don't give up a good thing just you have found another. Make of the year. That this amount will be exceeded ia now believed by the offiuse of both. cials in charge of the department as the receipts up to September 1st approximate $704,000, which would leave hut $20,000 to be paid by the cud of the year. On last Friday and Saturday the receipts amounted to more than $4000, the payments for the lent half of the year going in and a rush ha been on ao that there ia little doubt hut whet the estimate of Secretary Crockett will be exceeded. From the number of license platea issued the state is more than holding up to the average of an automobile for every ten people in the United States and the peak has not yet been reached. Statistics of motor vehicles now show that in the United Statce there are now nipe and million, almost twenty times the number in 1910 and the amount invested is $8,322,000,-00while there has been involved in road construction during the jieriod of Get Your Horn ! 1910 to 1921 the sum of $2.528, 000, 000 The average value of a truck is figured at $1500 and of an automobile at Nobby Shop, and business in $750. on 0, lie-cau-se er 0, Quit Your Kicking and We are boosting for the general of Carbon county. We are pleased to announce that our opening week has shown that our efforts in plac ing before the public a quality grade of merchandise has been appreciated. Watch our window for our shirt display this week. There you will see exceptional values in a variety of patterns and weaves that cannot fail to please you. Look them over and make your choice. Each sale is a boost. We know you will come again. ; A8SE8SOBSHIP SOUGHT BY REV, RALPH C. JONES "Plans are completed by the Price Chamber of Commerce, Rotary and Ki- wanis committees for the entertainment of the Salt Lake City trade excursion visitors, who are to be here next Thursday, September 14th," gays Secretary Baker of the local chamber. "A delegation of Price cars will meet the Salt Lakera up about Castle Gate and come to this city with them. A short stop may be made in Helper, after which a Price man will be placed on the runningboard of each of the visitors' cars and point out the different establishments with appropriate information during a acenic trip about this city. A. E. Horsley and W. E. Weist will be responsible for the effectiveness of their entrance into the city. "The tabernacle banquet committee will give its annual dinner on that date and the eommittee has decided to cooperate with it. The ladies will begin serving at 6 oclock to the public, hut reservations for the three dubs and excursionists will be made for 7 :30. A program of music and short, snanny talks will accompany the banquet. Dr. H. B. Goetxman will have charge of the arrangements and J. Rex Miller and Mace Nicholson have promised a fine program. The Ariel quartet of Salt Lake City will be among the visitors and render some selections. "After the banquet a dance for the visitors and Price citizens will be put on at City nail by the Price band. Father Giovannoni will see that our visitors hare a good time at the dance. Ben Stein that they are properly housed for the night." Mayor Jones tells The Sun his radio outfit is working nicely. He will have a listening in program for the visitors if evervthing goes well. Announcing hia candidary for the office of assessor for Carbon county, Rev. Ralph C. Jones cif Price subjects himself to the will of the republican convention to be beld soon. He pledges himself to a faithful discharge of the duties of the position. He says he will to administer the required endeavor ' TO YOUNG services with fairness and justice to all THREE PLACES OPEN HEREABOUTS MEN residents and taxpayers of this county. Three vacancies in the United States Naval academy at Annapolis, Md., are to be filled from Utah by appointment of Sera or moot for entrance next Within the next fifteen days exclu- vear. Select n v.,:ll be subject to a sive territories throughout Carbon, Du examination to be given Satchesne, Emery and in Uintah counties urday. October 2Sth, next, by the fedwill he assigned to applicants quail eral eivil service commission at Salt fving as district managers. Contracts Lake, Ogden and Provo. For each vacovering the various towns and cities cancy Senator Smoot will name one will he allowed aeeording to the best and three alternates, and the interests of the parties concerned. We principal nominees will he notified when and are introducing a patented system in- -j where to appear for entrance. All candispensable to owners and operators didates arc required to be citizens of of motor vehicles. Substantial profits tbe United States and also residents of with unlimited possibilities assured. Utah. Thev must lie not less thsn 16 Satisfactory references as to general nor more thsn 20 years of age on Apcharacter and financial responsibility ril 1. 1923. Further information will required. Interview by appointment lie furnished upon application to Senonly. All cotnmmnnications held in ator Reed Smoot. United States senate, istrict confidence. Address C4. The Sun, at Washington, D. C. Price, Utah. Duplicating and triplicating sales Don't borrow The Bun. Subscribe. books. Eastern prices. The Sun. Territorial Rights ore-liinina- rv Always Remember i : Quality Supreme ! j I The Nobby Shop Eko Theater Bldg. 80-w- double-breaste- d shawl collar and a lift round belt with wide loops Two large pockets with flaps to button and one breast pocket to button. Roomy sleeves wtlh Mrs. F.dith Olson, wife of Emmett K. Olson, informs The Sun she has delivered to her attorneys the letter print- William Bonner. ed below. The Sun publishes the same These are to lie replaced by men un, Men's top hssvy as an advertisement. der the supervision of either United Texas oak I brown blueher, IS SI. Price States Marshal J. Ray Ward or Sheriff Price, Utah. Kept. (, jsolft nailed and sewed Fouls, Attorneys, City. Gentleman: I manned the desire to have my complaint and action Durnell. The enginemen went through for divorce against my husband with- two (isssenger trains that drawn. Also, I desire that you prepare during the short strike, but refused to and fils an application for withdrawal take out the freights. The trouble was Mens 14 Inch toft and that Ihla application give ths fol- caused by an assault on Neil Lund, a lowing reasons for my withdrawing ths .brown blncber heevy a Herbert was Scott, guard. fireman, That the complaint by double sewed sola, ben complaint: prepared and filed within a few hours Ferhng waa accentuated by the set of Itoft 2 buckles on top- after a quarrel and at a time when I Deputy Sheriff Bonner, who ia charged was angry and revengeful, and I now realise that 1 acted too hastily. That with taking the guard to the outskirts many meaningless things that have of town and releasing him. been said and done in jeet and arguLund was thought to be critically ments for temporary effects during our iBoy High Top Shoes and a special train took him married life have been put Into the injured Rises from where Blses to Lake Salt City, reports where magnithey appear complaint, 8ft to 6 fied with an aspect of intensity and se- the hospital are to the effect that he riousness. Respectfully1 (Signed), Mrs. will probably recover. Scott ia alleged Edith Olson. to have struck Lund over the head with a revolver without irovoeation. LIGHTS FOB SUMMIT He was arrested night by Finding that public convenience and Marshal Donelson andTuesday waa taken to the necessity require the construction and maintenance and operation of electric county jail at Heber by Sheriff transmission and distribution lines up at Soldier Summit the public utilities EVERYTHING NOW SET commission last Wednesday authorized ABOUT EVERYBODY RIDES the Utah Power and Isght company to exercise the rights and privileges con- Some Tims Planned For Zion Visitors At Big Automobils Figures Given Big ferred under franchise granted by the Pries Next Thursday. Out By Secretary town authorities. The romany is to three-quart- , Mads ot A After holding up all freight trains at the Soldier Summit terminal of the Denver and Kio Grande Western from noon to 6 o'clock of last Monday evenito a strike of enginemen and ng-due firemen settlement satisfactory to tbe eonqiany and tbe aggrieved ones was brought about. However, all the details were not reached between officials and the men until around midnight. Terms of the settlement are the discharge of all present guards by September 7th. Also the removal of Deputy Sheriff the grounds that it belongs to wife is to lie made. The license uumber is in his name, which of course means that Diumenti made affidavit that he was its, owner when he applied for the permit. so Tice. Extremely popular. As TROUBLE AT SOLDIER AUTO HOT ty T. C. HARVEY, Prop. j j j ! Price, Utah i m WAGE SCALE IS CHEN HDHRS OF (Continued From Face Six.) The exploaion occurred a mile and a half within the workings of the Haig colliery, which runs under the sea. All hopes of saving any of the entomberd men diminished as the afternoon wore on. All Montana coal mines have resumed operations except where local differences between miners and operators remain to be ironed out. More than a thousand have returned to work since settlement of the strike and production will lie sufficient to meet all demands in the state. Continuous operation of the mines would give a production of five million tons a year. Congressional leaders expert to get coal strike legislation disposed of this week. The Cummins bill gives the interstate commerce comission added powers with respect to priority of shipments and the curbing of profiteering. The Borah bill creates a national coal commission. Discussion of the Daugherty injunction may feature the discussion of the strike situation. Representative Huddleston of Alabama ia expected to introduce his bill, which would brand as malfeasance in office the use by officials of the injunction in an attempt to curtail the righto of free speech or ' tree assembly. on in the interest of efficient work tbe county extension agent in Catron county, N. M., equipped hia automobile with Ibwgear shifts to overcome a rise of two thousand felt in two miles on one of the two main roads across the county and other obstacles to travel, ac- cording to a report of the United States department of agriculture. Until he did this he could only reach certain sections of the county by horseback or by detouring from a hundred to a hundred and fifty miles. The county seat of Catron county ia a hundred and of the difficulties of ear-te-n miles from the railroad, which gives ing on efficient extension work in this sev-id- ea region. The natives of Guam are learning that there is a better way of keeping their pigs at home than the common practice of tying them to a tree or to a stake by a short rope fastened about the foreleg, according to the department of agriculture. A pen of bamboo, which will accommodate one sow and litter of three or four growing pigs and which may be moved frequently, has been introduced by the local federal ex)ieriment station and is gradually supplanting the tying method on the island. Every person who springs a new inOne very unusual type of return for a vention ia regarded as a nut until the banded bird waa recently sent to the other nuta set? the wisdom of it. United States department of agriculture from Corning. 0, On June 29th a hand was taken from the stomach of a FORSALE, WANTED, ETC. hlrcksnnke which had been placed on a fledgling catbird five days before by Two Ceuta Per Word Bach IaaetUop the same person who found it. No Charge Aaoounu. The first use of radio to transmit in- WANTED WOMEN FOR LAUNDRY formation regarding nutrition, reportwork. Inquire at Savoy Hotel. ed to the United States department of ALBERTA PEACHES AT 1.75 FINE agriculture, was a talk on food for very best. Phone J14w. Jim 8heya. bora and girls sent out in July by the LOST A BLACK SUITCASE WITH M'rhignn extension specialist in letters addressed to Jesse Taylor. Dillon, Mont. Reward If left at Sun office. Aeeording to reports received by the FOR RENT DWELLING WITH SIX rooms on South Ninth street at Price. the United States department of agriculture there have been 143,212 musk- Call Sanitary Meat Market, Phone (0, rat sk:ns shipped from Alaska since Helper, Utah. December 1, 1921. This is almost as FOR RENT USED FURNACE COM-ple- te with everythin furnished. Apmany as were shipped during the enply at soft drinks parlor corner Eighth tire vear of 1919. and H streets. When fruit is served at the begin- LOST PLUSH COAT SOMEWHERE between Spring Glen and Price, Satning of a meal it acts as an aid to diReward if left at Sun ofgestion. For this purpose fresh fruit urday A.last. O. Staker, Huntington, Utah. or that simply cooked should be used. fice. Do not have them too sweet or they FOR SALE NINETY FEET FRONT -will dull the appetite. age by thirteen and a half rods in depth. Adjoins the Sllvagni building at on the south and faces on South Price City girls are kicking against having Eighth street. Will dispose of as a to wear long skirts again. Of course whole or cut up to lot or lots. Part cash kicking is easier when they are short. and terms. R. W. Crockett. Prise. Utah. ' |