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Show THE PAGE 8XX SUIT, PRICE, UTAH-EVE- ET FRIDAY, FRIDAY, OCTOBER NOTICE OF INTENTION TO OOX-siru- ct Sewer Nolle ia hereby given by the city council of Price, n municipal corporation of Carbon county, Utah, of the Intention of auch council to make the following deaeribed Improvements, towit: A newer line on J atreat from weat of Tenth atreet to the went boundary of the city limita and defray n part of the coats thereof, estimated at 97B.-9- 0 for the city's portion and at 12979.90 for the portion to be neeeeeed upon private property by n local assessment upon the lota or pieces of ground within the following described district, being the district to be affected or benefited by said improvement, namely: Beginning at n point that la tli.iO feet north of the aouthwsst corner of Sec. II, Ta p. 14 South, Range II East of the Salt Lake meridian, thence east to tha east Une of Lot 1, Block I of tha local survey of Sec. II, thenoe south twenty-eigminutes west along degrees twenty-thre- e the east line of Lot I. n distance of i4t.R0 feet to the south Une of Bee. II. thence east twenty-on- e feet, thence south feet, thence weet to south line of the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad company's right of way, thence northwest along said south line of said right of way to n point that is 214.10 feet south of the north line of Bee. 20. Twp. 14 South, Range 10 East of the Salt Lake meridian, thence west to the weat Une of tha northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of Sec. 20, thence north 478 feet, thence east 1120 feet to the point of beginning, being n portion of Sera II, 17. 20 and 21 of aid township and range. All protests and objections to the carrying out of auch intcntlnna must be presented in writing to tha city recorder on or before the 27th day of October, A. D., 1122, being the time set by said council when It alii hear and consider such objections and consider the proposed levy. By order of the city council of Price, Utah. Dated. Price. Utah. October i, 1222. GEORGE E. OCKEY, City Recorder. First pub., OcL I; last Oct. 27, 1122. WESIDtN LAMBS NOW GOING TO KH1BIS EAST AT AROUND IHD-Fi- m The Sun Special Service. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct. 9. A of Western woulgrowers were given a rattier sharp decrease in receipts today cordial reception and an opportunity address by Wil'brought more activity to the cattle to seak following an liam Goldman, manufacturer, clothing classes to trade. The plain fairly good vhirh have been showing the greatest said to be the chief opfxment of the weakness were stronger, and the better wool tariff and author of the propaganda that this tariff would increase kiini. which have heretofore lawn the price of a suit of clothes between will remained It steady. strong and five dollars and make an ovfour the wbetber to few take a develop daya d decrease in receipts means an actual ercoat cost seven dollars more. have demonstrated to to claims due to is or movement in the csation the shortage of stock and ears, lings the convention the fallacy of these were in active demand with prices ten statements. He also told retailers that to fifteen cents higher than last week a the market for goods on which their rlose. Sheep and lambs sold readily at business depends was good or bad accents higher pri- cording to the money in the hands of strong to twenty-fiv- e were J9,WM1 cattle, the general public in America and not ces. Receipts tday to the wealth of New York 11,0m) hogs and 10, 000 sheep. Trade in according no matter how much manufacturers, for suitable cattle purposes killing the from cheap foreign made money they showed considerable activity at steady rices. Prime grades were scarce. Some wool. prices. Prime grades were scarce. Some STOCKMEN OF yearlings sold up to $11.75 a new high WITH THE LIVE UTAH EASTERN in for the lightweight record price year teen. No prime heavy steers arrived Elmer Adley left Price last Sunday and the good to choice fed ones sold at with a carload of hi own sheep which bunches of Several to 50 I11A0. $10 Kansas on were the City market this sbortfed brought $9.50 to $10.25 and wintered steers $8.5(1 to $9.75. Straight week. Lamb prices continue to go up, says grassfats sold up to $9.00. Plain to me- Mt. Pleasant a Pyramid of last Friday. dium at $5.50 to $0.75 and strong to here are close to the Latest and heifers Cows quotations cents ten higher. were up ten to fifteen cents with trade twelve cents mark. Most of the sheep are now off the active. Yea! and butcher calves were stronger. Demand for stockere and Manti forest, due to the premature dryfeeders was active. Early buyers were ing up of the range. Feed this year has after quality. A sixteen carload bunch gone much faster than usual. of New Mexico stockere brought $8.00. Manti forest service had an exhibit Fleshy feeders sold up to $7.00. Stock at the Emery county fair of a few days calves were stronger. ago. It was located in the educational Packers were in the pens early and section and aroused considerable interpaid ten to fifteen rents higher prices est. for hogs. The top was $9.05 with bulk 8. S. Stewart, graxiug examiner of of sales $9.25 to $9.60. Pigs sold at the district office, will soon spend two were the larg$$0 to $9.00. Receipt weeks on the Manti reserve inspecting and time some est of any Monday for timlier sales. There are now a hundred the improvement in prices is due en- and forty-eigcommercial and twenty-The demand. better general a tirely to two in operation. timber to market, however, ia not expected G. G. Anderson, assistant in personshow a much further advance. It will nel with headquarters at Washington, this of week the last decline probablv D. C., spent two days recently on the month. Stock hogs and pigs are in libManti forest. His visit was to acquaint eral supply. . Last weeks decline in prices brought himself more fullyinwith the methodsoffi-of supervisor conducting work lighter receipts today and lambs were ces. cents e twenty-fivto up. quoted strong A good many westerns sold to killers Veterinary surgeons of the state beld at $13 A0 to (13.75. The feeding lambs a conference at Salt Lake City on last Friday. Dr. W. A. Stephenson, the state brought $12A0 to $13.00. veterinarian, presided. Matters perWORK AGAINST HOG CHOLERA taining to the eradication of disease among animals were discussed at the Qf OTHER STATES round table talk. The United States department of agJoseph M. Titus baa disposed of his riculture this year extended its coop- interest in the Indian Creek Cattle pool erative hog cholera control work into to J. A. Scorup. Titus has just eloaed South Dakota, Washington, New Mex- a deal for the purchase of Mrs. Evelyn and West Virginia, making a total Standifirds ranch at Richardson, toico ' states iq which it is be- -. gether with her rattle numbering near of thirty-fou- r a hundred head. Titua takes immediate ing done with state authorities. among the different agencies ia possession of the property. now at ita best and is therefore more Manti flnckmaatara are taking their effective than ever. The object of the sheep herds from the summer range work with the various states ia to pre- preparatory to placing them on the vent and control outbreaks of cholera desert for the winter. Sheepmen reand to prevent the spread of the infec- port that the summer feed has been extion and to reduce losses. During the cellent thia year. A great number of yesr cholera has been kept well under farmers are making preparations for control, but special rare must be taken feeding lambs during the winter. In October, November and December, Cattle feeders in the virinity of Rawhen usually there is an increase in its ima are offering four and a half eenta prevalence. Farmers will. save more for cows and six for steers. They plan losses if on bogs end prevent disastrous taking all stock that will he ready they do not delay reporting immedi- for market after sixty daya feeding. the to state the veterinarian, ately to In other words they will take beef anieonnty agricultural agent, the repre- mals that re not in shape to go on the sentative of the bureau of animal in- market at once in order to utilize the dustry or local veterinary practitioner excellent fall pasturage down there. anv suspicious esses of sickness among The national forests of Utah will not cholera serum is their hogs. Anti-bolack for rangers during the coming treatnot a cure, but a preventative ment and should lie applied as soon as year if half those who have filed application for examination pass. Despite possible when the disease appears in the herd or in the neighborhood. The the fart that the position calls for the hardest kind of work amid many danpreventative treatment is a good insurthe number of applications filed gers cholera. ance against losses from with the forest offices up to Saturday last exceeded that of any former year. THIS COUNTRYS WOOL 8TOCKS The examinations will be held on Tuesrela-tive- lv Ellen-woo- g ARE COMPARED Stocks of wool in and afloat in the United States on June 30, 1922, totaled 479.151.184 pounds grease equivalent acwrd'ng to the quarterly joint stork report released by the bureau of the rensns and the bureau of agricultural economics. United States department of agriculture. This is the first Issued under a joint arrangement be- tween the t wo government dejiartments. Stocks by condition consisted of Munds of grease wool, 35,346,-63- 2 of scoured, 16,629,680 of pulled, 23,346,363 of top and of 3,328.283 of noils. Dealers held 176.857,999 pounds and manufacturers 197.652,634. Of the total quantity reported 54.8 per cent - was foreign wiki! and 45.2 was of domestic production. The supply of half-bloo- d and fne wool is sa!d to comrare favorably with that of quarter and the blond. The distribution by sections of stocks bold bv manufacturers was in New England, 116,664.493 pounds: Middle Atlantic. 87,099.512: Pacific Coast. 2,773,443; all other see-- " tinna, 18,544.333 pounds. Holdings of ' dealers according to markets were Bon-tn108,167,907 pounds; Chicago. New York. 6.854.977; Phila-delplr24,039,626; Portland, 2.849,-85St. Louis. 12,416,061; San Francisco. 1,849.948, and other cities, 322,-332,9- five-eiglit- n, a. 4; 33 Kiunds. REPORT COMES IN FROM WOOL DELEGATION - Report wss received last Monday at the off ire of the Nat'onal Woolgrow-er- s association of the work of Dr. W. d S. McClure of Idaho and F. A. of Redwood, Cala., who were sent to New York to defend the Fordney tariff on wool In; fore the National Re- day, Or toiler 24th. Complaint to foreclose a mortgage was filed last Monday in the office of the United Statre district court by J. If. Ryan of Pasadena, Cals., against O. M. Runyon, Charles Zlemer and Acton Lund, assignees for the Hansen Live Stock and Feed company. The mortgage which ia held by the plaintiff thousand dollars and is for thirty-thre- e is secured lv certain projierty of the ronqiany in Utah. Of interest to Eastern Utah sheepmen is a letter recently received by Ed Herbert down at Mnab from Thomas Redmond, state stock inspector, stating that there ia no compulsory dipping law thia year, but that the board will aid in any way possible those who wiah to guard against ticks. Sheep entering Utah from Colorado must get a certificate of inspection not more than ten daya previous to date of entry. Forage crops introduced into Forto Rico by the federal exieriment station have given great impetus to eattlerais-in- g on the island. The station has found the velvet bean and the Crotolaria successful crops to furnish concentrated feeds as well as valuable for soil improvement. Napier, or elephant grass, has proved the best of the introduced ones for roughage, although Guatemala grass does well on dry land and a pasture grass from Java has been found excellent. Rome of the Finest dairy stock that ever came to Southeastern Utah were received Saturday last by Prof. F. M. Young, who purchased them at Provo, of the says Moaba 6th. The shipment consisted of a row. a heifer and' a bull calf, all registered Jerseys from one of the very best dairy Utah county. The calf has a tail Clothiers association. The retail- farms of of merit and but very recent- ers themselves are not extreme in their pedigree views they reported. Representatives (Contlnued on Page Eight) IS, 1922 ht tlf.il Everybody Eats IX THE RKYEXTH JUDICIAL District Court In and For tha County of Carbon, State of Utah Continental Life Insurance Company, a Corporation, Plaintiff, va. Loren B. Golding, Olive Golding, Marion Q. Golding, Lola Golding, Joaephus R. Golding, Adell Golding. E. E. Draper, Grace J. Draper, J. Blackburn and Alice Blackburn, Defendants. Sheriffs Bala. To be sold at eheriffa sals on tha Ith day of November, 1922, at the front door of the courthouse in Price, Carbon county, Utah, at tha hour of 2:10 o'clock p. m., tha following described property situated In the county of Carbon, atata of Utah, towtt: Beginning at the southeast corner of the northeast quarter (NEH) of the southeast quarter (BEK ) of See. 7, Twp. IB South, Range 11 East of the Balt Lake meridian; thence north 2210 feet to the aouth line of the right of way of the Denver and Rio Grande railroad; thence north seventy-tw- o' deg. west forty-tw- o rods, more or lem, along tha aouth Une of said right of way to a rods, point a hundred and forty-fiv- e more or lees, north of a point forty weat rods of tha place of beginning; thence aouth a hundred and forty-fiv- e rods to a point forty rods want of the place of beginning; thence east forty rods to the place of beginning, containing thirty-fou- r (14) acres of land, more or lean, together with two hundred and twenty (220) aharea of secondary and one hundred (100) aharea of common stock In the Wellington Canal company. T. F. KELTER, Sheriff, Carbon Coun- But some eat better than others. Perhaps you are one of the some. You can get good kinds of meats fresh and salted at this sanitary market without paying an aristocratic price. Treat your stomach to a treat. Delicious steaks, toothsome roasts, dressed chickens, our own specially made sausage, fresh eggs and the best butter. Try us out on something for the Sunday dinner. First pub., OcL I: last OcL 27, 1022. IX THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL District Court In and For tha County of Carbon, State of Utah Continental Life Insurance Company, a Corporation, Plaintiff, va Loren B. Golding, Olive Golding, Charlea Hamblin. Vents Hamblin and Carbon-Emer- y Oil and Gaa company, a Corporation, Defendants. Sheriff's Sale. To he sold at aheriff'a ale on the Ith day of November, 1122, at the front door of tha courthouse In Price, Carbon county, Utah, at the hour of 2:10 oclock p. m., the following described property situated in the county of Carbon, ntate of Utah, towit: The east half (EH ) of the southwest quarter (8WM) and the west half (WH) PALMEIRI OARAGE, PRICE, UTAH Democratic Ticket Vnlted States Senator. WILLIAM H. KINO Rcpceaeniatlve In Congress. MILTON H. WELL! NO Judge of Supreme Court. E. E. CORFMAN State Superintendent of Nrlwota. D1L D. C. JENSEN Senator Twelfth District. O. W. McCONKIE .. Judge, Seventh Judicial District. GEORGE CHRISTENSEN ItcprcMpnlatlres. T. A. STROUP Clear Creek SAMUEL NAYLOR Sunnyslde Commissioner, Four Ycura WIILAM EDMAN Castle Oate Commissioner. Two Years. NEIL M. MADSEN Price Clerk IL C. SMITH Price Recorder. VIOLA OIJSEN OBERTO Helper Treasurer. IL & KOB1NETT Price Assessor. & W. QOLDINO Wellington Attorney. The Mathis Heat Market Phone 259 JOHN A. MATIIIS, Prop. Price, Utah YOUR O. K. CLAY Price Sheriff. RAY DEMINQ Kenilworth Surveyor. CARL NYMAN Helper (Political Advertisement.) Has now reached subscribers. Dont lay it aside, but keep it in a location convenient to your phone and it will be a great aid in daily calls. ARE NOW DUE And payable at the conn-t- y treasurer office. This years (1922) taxes become delinquent November 1922, 30, after which date a penalty of Sper cent will he added. So many numbers have been changed since the previous book was put out and so many new listings have been added that it is imperative to use the new list as a guide in placing calls. Much time, assiduous care and a considerable expense is involved in getting oat the directory. The service rendered by employes of the Eastern Utah Telephone company will be in direct proportion to the correctness with which calls are placed. Attentiveness in answering promptly when the telephone rings is requested. Help us to make your phone a help to you. Use the directory. ty, -- Utah. the southeast quarter (SEH ) of Sec. II, Twp. IS South. Range 11 East of the Salt Lake meridian, containing a hundred' and sixty (110) acres of land, together with one hundred and fifty (110) ''area of tha rapltal atock of the Rot ,,le Irrigation company and all other t .hti to the use of water for Irrigating said premises and for domestic purposes to which tha said defendants or the premises herein described or now or may hereafter become entitled or which now are or may hereafter of he used on said premises. T. F. KELTER, Sheriff, Carbon County, Utah. First pub.. OcL I; last Oct. 27, 1122. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS KF.AL-e- d bids will be received by the undersigned up to 2 o'clock p. m., of October 1922. for the following: A four-rooIS, addition to the school at Helper, Utah. This will be let In two parts general contract and heating and ventilating (no plumbing). Plana and spe- cifications for tha above have been prepared by Cannon A Fetxer, architects, and are available to bidders at their office and at the office of the undersigned. Each bid must be accompanied by a certified check for at least B per cent of the amount thereof, made payable to the undersigned, this amount to be forfeited to the district if the accompanying bid la accepted and tha bidder then fella to enter Into the contract or to furnlah the bond required. Contract and bond forma may be seen at the office of the architects. A deposit of 7.50 will be required for each set of plana and specifications given ouL this to ha returned on the return of the set In good order provided the one securing it has submitted a bid in proper form. The right la reserved to reject any or all bids. Price. Utah, September 28, 1922. BOARD OF EDUCATION OF CARBON COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT. By Carl R. Marcuaen, President and Ida R. Tanner. Clerk. First pub.. SepL 28; last OcL IS, 1822. m PROBATE AND GUARDIANSHIP Notice Consult County Clerk Or Respective Signers For Further NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE of Joseph F. Morelll. Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Helper, Utah, on or before the 17th dny of December, A. D.. 1922. FRANK MORELLI, Administrator of the Estate of Joseph F. Morelll. Deceased. Henry Ruggeri. Attorney For Administrator. Price, Utah. First pub., OcL IS; last Nov. 8, 1122. High-Gra- de A. KOPF'S STUDIO Portraits and Second Floor Price Commercial and Savings Bank TRICE, UTAH Times-Independe- nt Ellen-woo- H. S. ROBINETT TREASURER Carbon Comity, Utah EASTERN UTAH TELEPHONE CO. J. E. FLYNN Licensed Undertaker and PRICE, UTAH Telephone 29. PRICE, UTAH Emhalmer Don't borrow The Sun. Subscribe. |