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Show 3 J t 'l t Tf ADVERTISING KATES display advertising rates cents an Inch per issue (it)inch by the month tour per m to local advertisers. Tran-f- c ((0) cents an inch per issue, No t is Si per cent additional. Advertising accepted for the nt) page. First page readers (Si) cents per line an SAW THE SHOW THEN PINCHED THE WHOLE BUNCH iHi CHICAGO, Ills., March 15. when eight women danced while die mbiug, said it was time to net. They arrested the crowd of a hundred ana ninety-nin- e men aloug with dancers. ve of BW DRAWS a mob of 14th of last year jie hundred strikers shot up a yn he Itah railway as it emerg-- j kinnel in Spring ft $mile above Helper. Canyon Deputy P. Webb, riding on the entitled by a rifle shot Some July sixteen men were among a bunch .which rounded up by the county p rgud the state militia which into the field after g brought page and brought to Price to JaL During the closing months year two of these men were d Pete Kukia was given a life while Mike Zulakis was Defending attorneys rep-th-e e sixteen men have trials for each. Claim p that a jury of Carbon be so prejudiced that used men could not have a L This waa combatted, but rtions of the defense to allow- employe from the coal eampa (f a on the jury, and the increaa-f- l acuity of filling the panels be-- I the examination of large citizens were given as why Distriet Attorney Dalton jd to a change of venue for jrd trial to Emery county. Op-- j I February 27th at Castle Dal of Mike Pagialakia has been for almost three weeks. T ye defnse resting at noon today f. t) the ease is nearing its end. expected that rebuttal will time, and arguments for begin this afternoon. That of E. J. Neves from the wit-n- d as told by The Sun last Jfcwhich he testified that Sam A. fit torn ey for the defense had JL Y to pay transportation out of X if the witness would depart $att$ve nettled him, as King went b'Hfitand in the final moments of m to deny this, lie had brought at&ature into the case himself when f'O&Stpted to show that some of the itaaaae for the state had been in a ttW (Bauble over some shakey check befc,: Along those same lines it is told iat a 'Certain paper drawn to repre- wt Inosey by King himself is being pld as is aftermath to a little session irU4 fte table but recently held in . rin giv-iar- s. insist-israt- eoun-wou- ld num-loc- al Si iOC-iitri- ni Turns In Testimony, of the evidence as put Ufefte defense are that witnesses it supposed to establish an ali- A iM aifrialakia by testifying that he gMijrtge striker a camp at Sunnyaide hilyNme the train waa shot up on MCV$3th, had never heard that he "(ler arrest until three weeks le bearer to them of the bad " 'kma to have been Kick Karalis. ited the coke camp and picked 1; bunch, and they acknowledge ' told them what to say. Karalis Wjfc&ed to stand up in court, and gtfHlentified by the witnesses and IMUby the jury. Immediately after intfca beat it. Accompanying the ef-la prove an alibi for Pagialakia, in ifanse attempted to establish the half a dozen of the other Brtaaj defendants who have not yet am toought to trial, being held in 21 at Price. Some of these fellows Its been taken over to Castle Dale as itnaiaes in the present trial. the defense has all along refused y try these men jointly, District Dalton now resists the effort get spraething on the records which W extraneous to the case in hand hut ight apply to future trials. The alibi off iayery similar to what was used ong tae same lines in the trials of a other defendants at Price last fall a the, same remarkable memory for happened on a certain day at a rtain hour and a failure to be able reeall anything at all that happened other nearby dates or at any hour, also in evidence. Mnch vindictive-s-s baa been injected into the present ."Jfthe defense. Having brought Hitiou of a murder case from Helper to the proceedings, Sam A. King was ate sarcastic when Attorney Dalton (Tan further inquiry to establish that litia had been convicted of first a murder, and imnressed the jury at that waa the first case Dalton id ever won over this defending firm attorneys. ; f Trial Close to End. WHS on e stand dur-Thursday afternoon and most of aday morning. It develops that he me to America from Greece in 1910. b is not naturalized, and ean not or 11 -speak any English at all. wut the same may be said of nil the er deefmliints and most of the wit-P,.n by the and they wnt all acknowledgedefense, to having been Carbon county all through the war mod without taking any interest in rating, hut wishing to make od money digging conionly at very high igcs. Pagialakia himself put in time coa!,famP n West Virginia for ie month on his first arrival. Then jumped to Tacoma, Wash., for at logging camp work. From r wnt to Rock Springs, Wyo., acre ae absorbed the notions of the do p. NEWSPAPER Paetirities St - At-tae- de-e- g tt elev-mont- h, TO VOIEBS IIS Dffl WWW 1116 10 Next Tuesday, March 20th. the voters of Carlton County School district will render a decision as to whether or not there shall he isued two hundred and trenty-fiv- e thousand dollars of bonds additional to the indebtedness already carried by this district. That the money to be raised from the sale of these bonds is needed to put tbe capacity of the school buildings of the eounty up to the requirements of the situation is beyond argument. That the school iwpulation is increasing faster in the district than is the assessable valuation of property, is also easily to be seen. That the schools are at present working under extremely difficult housing conditions in many precincts has been told with eonvinaiug directness. That the plain duty of a community is to give its children prot-e- r educational advantages none will gainsay. A review of the actual conditions now eiwfronting the ople of thia eounty on the school question may not be amiss at this time. A summary showing the need of new buildings or additions and improvements to those already existing, was put out early in the year by the board of education in a letter which was addressed to the various coal mining conqtanies operat ing in the county as being representative of the heavy tsxaycrs, with the idea of getting a lineup on what the !4 Late thia afternoon word cornea to The Sun from Castle Dale that but one witness was put on in re- - 4 buttal. L. A. Pike testified that men 4 Pagialakia was one of the who really participated in atop- on May 8th 4 ping the stage line last, when a decoy car loaded with 4 road. down was tha aent officers Pagialakia had denied that he par- - 4 action. ticipated in this particular After Pike's testimony both aides- 4 announced the finish of their evl- dence, and District Attorney Dal- 4 ton started his opening argument 4 4 4 4 444444446M 44444M United Mine Workers, remaining there sixteen months. Over to Bingham in Utah, he stayed about half a year, then came to Kenilworth. He stayed ten months, and got over to Sunnyside in 1916. After seven months he went to Winter Quarters to remain a year. To Chicago and to a nearby iron foundry and then bark to Sunnyside for ten months, was followed by a period as owner of a herd of goats ranging on the hills about the coking camp. Then he went back to work at Sunnyside where he remained until he went out on strike in April of last year. Late in May Pagialakia was arrested by Sheriff Kelter for participation in the holdup of the stages entering Sunnyside, he being at that time a member of the tent rolony on the outskirts of the town. Punished for this he was again arrested and was out on bail at the time of the shooting up Spring Canyon. Emery county people have taken a great interest in this trial and a considerable bunch of spectator is on hand at all times. It is expected that many will turn out to hear the arguments of the attorneys. It is not unlikely that the rase will be given to the jury by Saturday night. two-ye- ar Dear Harp af my couatry I ia dark Dear Harp af my cava try! faro wall sentiment would be toward increasing the taz burden in this direction. bmi I faaad tkaa, ta thy aamhare, Tha cold ckaia of silaaca had ku Thia awaat wraath af saag is tha Showing What Is Needed. oer tkaa leaf, last wa shall twiaai Published in The Sun it that time it Wkaa praadly, my awa I aid Harp, Ga sloop with tha aaashlaa of fame Unbodied a general outline of the many I aahauad tkaa cm thy slamhars, needs of the various districts, aud it Aad gava all tky chord ta light, TUI tonchod by soma head loss may well be again epitomized that the fraadam aad saag. thaa miaa. Tha warm lay af lava aad tha light If tha paisa af tha patriot, soldier er public may be shown the congested conditions in the schools generally ovaota af gladaaM lover Hava wakaa'd thy foadait, thy Has throbbed at ear lay, tia thy er the county. In this article it was cited that although a new school buildlivalimt thrill glory aleaai Bat sa aft haat tkaa achood tha deep I was but as tha wlad passiag head ing of four rooms was just put in service at Price lost fall, the seventh and sigh af sadaaM, losaly aver That a'aa ia thy mirth it will steal Aad aU the wild swaataass I waked eighth grades are being housed in the from tkaa (till. was thiae awa. high school building in rooms which are really needed to care for the rapMacro, idly increasing enrollment of the classes. For these hundred and seventy pupils five rooms should Ite NEW TOBACCO IAW AllOWS SALE provided. Housed in the basement of the Carnegie library is a class of thirty pupils. This is not at all a suitable Mush more voluminous than the place, hut must Ite used for lack of a Southwick act ia the new cigaret law penalties the law seems to pmvido no better room. Three classes of first and which the Utah legislature formulated specific punishment fur its violation one of second grade are limited to sessions that the rooms may and passed in the closing hours of the other than may apply in general to the half-dasession just ended. While the five sec- commission ot a misdemeanor. But a give similar privilege to other classes. tions of the previons ban on the little fine up to a thousand dollars and im- In answer to the countys need of the smokelets filled only a half column of prisonment up to three years is desig- rooms in the courthouse the board of fine print in a newspajier, it requires nated should anyone counterfeit the education was compelled to vacate almost two columns to give the tezt of tax stamjw provid'd for the collection their office quarters here early in the the six sections of the new statute. of the excise assessment. year, and the dining room at the high This is of course largely owing to the NOTED SPEAKER TO BE HERE school building is being used as a tern' porary' location for this purpose. An fact that much regulation is described EARLY IN MAY office in a downtown hication and in the more recent law. The old measwhich will provide storage for a conure aimed to absolutely stop not only Promise of listening to three prof siderable amount of school supplies is the gale and furnishing, but the mantalks is held out in the announcea within the of well paramount requirement for the use ufacture as cigaret ment that Dr. Charles E. Barker, the confines of the state. The new law international speaker for Rotary, will of the board. Sunnyside schools are so makes no specific mention of the man- be a guest of the local organization on crowded that a number of classes hold half-da- y sessions, while one class ufacturing process, so presumably May 5th. lie is scheduled to address only these smokers delights may be formu- the students at the high school in the is using the church for its schoolroom. lated without hindrance, as the section forenoon, the title of the talk being A basement room adjoining the boiler-rooin the school building is occuDo You Feel Capable of Advising covering this in the old law is definitewhile SaW now pied, of yet another class finds itcigarets may Your Children When They Seejc Your ly repealed. be conducted lawfully after the mer- Confidence f The ladies will be giv- self in a similar location in one of the chant has secured a permit, which is en a special address during the after- teachers cottages. These crowdings to be issued by the cities, towns or noon on A Mothers Relation to Her eut out all chaneea for instruction in eounties through their duly constitut- Daughter, and in the evening his manual training and domestic science. ed governing officials. Both may subject will be A Fathers ResponsiSeveral New Buildings. and shall are used in telling about bility to His Son. These talks are all of Columbia, the new steel Ojiening the powers of the grantors of these complimentary by the Price Rotary camp for production of eorporations permits, so it is somewhat indefinite club no admission fees. will develop a community coal, coking as to whether a city board could rewhich will need a new building of at Silence is golden when a fellow does least two rooms. At West fuse to grant these selling privileges. Hiawatha In Price, this being a city of the third not know what more to say. another new structure is much needed be will the cost of permit elase, the AS to replace one which was rather poorthe vendor RKLOMAH TO KAMK (Tll'Itl'II fifty dollars. In addition SUN TIIK OF ly put together originally and which UlITOR puts up a surety bond in the sum of has from the excessive vibration of five hundred dollars to insure faithful heavy mining operations in the vicin adherence to the provisions of the law. use EL PA HO, Tex.. March .This ity become so hazardous that-it4 city boasts of a minister who has 4 'must be discontinued. Ileiner needs a Both City and State Profit. memorised the New Testament and 4 Martin and Storrs The city gets the feef or the permit. a large part of the old. He is Itev. 4 must have building. new structures or additions To be paid to the state treasurer there W. It. Hogg of the Trinity Metho- to the present ones. Peerless scholars will be a tax collected on the sale of 4 dist Episcopal church. South. Kev. Hogg developed his memory when pile into the Sturrs classrooms. One Cfcch package of cigarets which varies his eyesight failed, but when his grade occupies the church. Wattis with the size of the smoke. One mill sight was restored he continued needs a schoolhouse, there in his development of his mem- 4 for each cigaret if a thousand of them now he Is considered re- - 4 being no facilities there at present. At weigh less than three pounds. Two 4 ory until 4 marks Me. His congregation ten- -- 4 Winter Quarters the byilding is old mills if the weight is above that limit. 4 tlfiea to his quoting verses and of- 4 oldest in the eounty and should be Papers for rolling your own nlno come 4 ten whole chapters of the hible at 4 in for a tax graduated according to 4 the beginning of his sermons, all 4 replaced, being beyond repair. memory. .For a while a num- - 4 Additions and Repairs. the number of slips in a package, a 44 from her of members of congrega- - 4 half cent for each bundle of not over 4 tlon checked up on his his, but in no 4 Helper needs heating and toilet fadid they find a mistake. 4 cilities, and here again tbe buildings fifty, with an advance for larger quan- 4 instance tities. These taxes will be handled via 4 One of his most remarkable 4 are badly overcrowded. These folks feats of memory is noted when he 4 the stamp route. Selling or giving any- 4 4 quotes a chapter from one part of 4 have put up a big call for a high school, thing that is or contributes to the mak- 4 the Bible, then another from a dif- - 4 but have had only little assurance of ing of a smoke or chew to a minor is a 4 ferent part, then another and still 4 any additions to their rooming capaciviolation of the new law. All other 4 another to carry out and connect 4 ty. Rolapps scholars have so increashis theme, but never once opening 4 forms of tobacco may be advertised 4 the Holy Book. He states that he 4 ed in numbers that two unfinished 4 even except cigarets. These may not 4 believes that few men in the world 4 moms in the basement of the building use their brains more than 50 per 4 must be fixed up for use, and a heatle displayed by a licensed vendor. 4 cent of their rapacity. "Daniel 4 4 Makes Boom. plant should be installed. Welling4 Webster probably didn't use more 4 ing Sign Smoking 60 cent of his brain ca- - 4 ton needs toilets and s heating plant. than 4 per held enclosed in is places Smoking liev. Hogg declares. 4 Glen also must hnve heating 4 to about the same restrictions as un- 4 parity," "I read a page as quickly as I 4 Spring At Kenilworth the town has facilities. der tbe old law, except that barber 4 used to read a sentence. I read 4 since any addi1 4 grown considerably or books a four week three 4 and Fhops are not included in tbe list, and 4 remember what I read. I am stu- been made to the school. tions have 4 that dining rooms may be placed in 4 dying law now for five minutes a 4 With a hundred new houses in the the open by a sign tellin? that smok- 4 day and in these five do the av- - 4 up there must of about four hours study. 4 camp and more coming ing is allowed. Bootlegging jf the cig- 4 erage added. rooms more 1 be four Intend never practice law, but 4 arets or makings is made an of- 44 intend to learntolaw for education 4 How tha District Stands. fense under which the offending ol.ice 4 and diversion. When I have fin- - 4 of sale may be abated or closed up as 4 ished with law I will study medi- - 4 With the bonded indebtedness now 4 cine, but I will never leave the 4 standing at six hundred thousand, the a nuisance. Stocks held by violators 4 4 new issue will put the total up to a litof the law shall be seized and confis- 4 ministry. 4 tle above eight hundred thousand. The cated to the state. Other than these 1 aa-wort- hy er RAIDING OF GAMBLING GAMES BRINGS IN REAL MONET Reopened under new management the Helper Athletic club is still furnishing the sheriff 'a. forces with considerable excitement. Located in an upstairs room the club maintained a lookout at the door closing the entering stairway. Sheriff Deming mad a call on the place recently, but was prevented from finding anything very much wrong in the main room because the lookout called out a warning. Doming told the proprietor that a pretty good salary had better be paid to the man at the door, because the next time a call was made this man would be confronted by a gun in the hands of an officer and should he call out he would be perforated. Hunting for some parties on whom to serve papers a few days later, the sheriffs forces made a call up into the rlub room, finding no lookout on guard. Money and dire being used in a gambling session were confiscated. One of the proprietors Gust Zeese and a customer John Strarkamakis were arrested. They will be tried tomorrow (Saturday). Four gamblers taken up in a raid made at Standard ville on last Friday night put np a total of three hundred dollars to guarantee their appearance for trial. At the appointed time they failed to be present. The three hundred, together with about half as much more cash seized at the time of the raid, lias been tarred in to the county treasurer. UPHEAVEL OF TRACKS DELAYS RAILWAY TRAFFIC Trains from Salt Lake City to the were delayed some seventeen hours last Friday night by an npheav-e- l in the ground under a two hundred section of track on the and fifty-foo- t Denver and Rio Grande Western about "East a half mile west of Soldier Summit. The tracks was pushed ten feet np in the air by the swelling of the waters in underground springs which line the track in that vicinity, according to officials of the company. The trains affected by the mishap were Nos. 2, 4 Most of the passenand the stub. gers remained in the ears for the night rather than walk to Soldier Summit ROTARY CLUB IN BIG DRIVE FOR LEGION AND SCOUTS Plans for raising money to help along the American Legion convention to be held in this rity during the coming summer were discussed at the meeting of Price Rotary club last Tuesday evening. Funds are also to be raised for camthe Boy Scouts. A paign will he carried out, with a chairman having charge for each thirty days. J. Perry Egan will head the' movement in April. During May Harry Keene will be in charge, and for June the chairman will be Dr. IL B. Goetzman. The whole program will culminate in a grand ball at City Hall three-mont- on July 4th. Complete line of blank books of every description. The Sum Of anS y le m s four-roo- m four-roo- WW4W44444W4494 m eas- DECIDE PROCEtAH EOD SCHOOLS III BOO EIECTIOK DALTON HAS BHil'V ARGUMENT IS LATH KEFOltT 4 4 4 4 Why make an enemy when it is ier to make a friend f Week Ending March 16, 1923 num mum shooting cke over III -- AN INDEPENDENT Volume 9, Number 42 books of several denomlna pt In stock. The Sun. Police, after seeing all there as to be seen NEXT TUESDAY lawful limit is something over a mil lion dollars. This program of building is rather a to the board in one way, because an extensive building campaign has continued over the past few years. But when the big growth of the eounty 's Npulatiou is considered and esjiecially when further is certainly in view with new roal projierties oieniug up and the big irrigation pmject near to fulfillment the pressure indicates ouly a real necessity. There is one point which must not lie overlooked. Taxing levy for schools ia limited to seven mills. Thera is a bare possibility that thia might not cover any too adequately the amounts needed to keep np the school term expenses along with the interest and tha sinking fuuds for bonds, and that even though the schools would be better under the new program there might be a shortening of the school year. But there is likelihood again that the mat ter of increases in property will ad juat themselves to this condition with the growth of the nchool needs. Taken all in all the election for next Tuesday will give the voters of Carbon county an opportunity to say whether or net the school facilities shall be made adequate for the demands of educating the children who are growing np in tha sui-pri- x community. Official notice of the election will be found on another page of thia issue of The Sun, in which is given a full list of the polling places and the judges who will serve in the various precincts. Post yourself on the place, remember the date, and lie sure to east your vote that you may be able to say that you did your iart in making the choice aa to the procedure to he made by your board of education in raring for your schools. WOULD G1VEFEDERAL AID Local Irrigation Project Cornea Under Approval of District Agent. Assurance is not needed to convince anyone in thia locality that the pending irrigation scheme of the Price River Water Conservation district for building the big reservoir up in Pleasant Valley is a sound economic proposal, and a jierfectly practical engineering project. But it is nevertheless gratifying to know that the federal government is willing to get liehind the promotion of this construction. It will be remembered that a few years ago a United Btatrs survey was made with the idea of replacing the Mammoth dam on the Gooseberry Creek, and that the report was favorable. The big war coming on put a stop to all that proceeding, and the growth of the idea into the much larger scheme of making Pleasant Valley the reservoir site so changed condition! that the new irrigation district was formed independent of federal action. Now it is announced that the governments representative for such matters in this district who is W. L. Whittemoro up at Provo is about to make a trip to Carbon county. Hie communication to representatives of the irrigation distriet recites that the steps already taken in the perfection of the local organisation are just such as is desired by the federal authorities in backing up these irrigation projects. With as favorable a scheme for the landowners as has already been figured out to be completed with funds from the sale of bonds already voted, it is a little difficult to see just where the government assumption of the project would help matters. To be sure there is a certain fraternal interest behind government activities which remove these schemes from the cold business world, but it ia also an undoubted truth that the works required can be put in running order quicker and at a less total cost than under government handling. But there may be some interesting developments when the federal agent makes his call and goes over the grotfnd with the local officials of the district. LOCAL POSTAL CLERKS PASS TEST WITH CREDIT Examination of the clerks in the lo- cal jMistoffice as conducted yesterday Daws, chief clerk appointed by the deiartment and coming here for snch purpose. The average of the whole force was 99.15 per cent in a close test. The points are for accuracy and sliced. Each man must place three hundred and eighty-tw- o small cards in separations representing dispatch to postal terminals and points of distribution within this district, including proper handling for the railway mstj service. This test is conducted once each year, and should any of the clerks fall lielow 95 per cent it might be a cause for dismissal. Those taking part in the present examination andpass-ing with grades which brought out high compliments from the examining officer, were Bavwood Cash, Harold Wilson, I. H. Rnead, George E. Jon gensen and Reid Pace. |