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Show -- i 'i? &8KQ ki pvtRTisnra jjp sates display advertisin DOING) ADAM nbU an Inch par laaua ?.a.) Mnch by the menth four LONDON, March 2d. Theres one place in the world where the eternal triangle is iuqiossihle the Island of llolui in the Orkney group. Its only inhabitants are a man and his wife, the latest cenxus reveals. local advertisers. Tran-I- ) cent an Inch per Issue. per cent additional. No fcf Xet. I ftlainf accepted for the Ware. First papa readers a (SB) cents per line an kiWl M ka of several denomlna-stoc- k. Volums 9, AN INDEPENDENT Number 41 The Sun. as-- - ,?'' - off m Campaign to Make Price zup & Real Spotless Town '- T- throq jjcfcd the regular spring cleanup of the city with the state-tajf crnaign along this line, the local clubs and the council have in which about every organization religious, todefi$jrogram l rYfolitical --will have a part. The local cleanup week will from April 16th to 21st. Jhe work has been sub-ic-h 7 organization being given a certain definite part and results should be had toward making Price a real spot tsral' Opening on Monday with a big parade, the closing on not wf-- y viight ought to find a if weary bunch of dy Mr. a mha will be able to look upon the old town for once as iciV The various branches of the work have been doled out i rrjays self-complac- : l e will be under charge of the American Legion to move at noon of the specified week and a representative one it is at all good citizens will be up of homes and residence f necessity be left to the of the premises. Boy Scouts the city authorities as spe-L-y policemen will make a Jjb&ouse patrol to urge the this work. jf after the adoption and use HFjgarbaRe cans and sewer flytipht receptacles for at 2:30 oclock, will have for a speaker Dr. II. B. Goetzman. The Altar society (Catholie) will get from O. P. Madsen the points of the idea at the meeting at the home of Mrs. I. S. Evans on April 12th, at 2:30 oelock. Scoring of residence premises will he done according to the rules as laid out by the state committee. of each of the points for consideration are rather voluminous, but any good job of cleaning up will get a high mark. Without good work on individual premises the whole community will be unable to be well up in the scoring. The divisions for marking are given aa: 0 Appearance ....... 10 Water supply and disposal IB Waste disposal Nesidencs .. ... ....... .......... ...... ... .... ... . . Z 0 IB Other building 10 Front yard 10 Rack yard fi Sidewalk and street B Fences and cates city AVOID CHILLING EGGS IN GATHERING FOB HATCHING "Tnijjr. propriately rigged out. up and freshening np ae-- o the business district will after by the American Le-i-s organization later in the VtllponBor a 8tate convention of good appearance of the of special interest to it tails are left entirely to Wfit! ra$i 7tah jaithe fi. workers. 7$ per-JTtjij- pf 11 m will likely include ment of a regular eontin--e for hauling garbage from sin districts in the eity. nd alley cleaning, both in si . residence districts, has ea to the Notary and Ki-Divided into north and feins, these organizations will to determine the part each jpIJtptlle. Yards back of the busi- s. S' 0 and! Kut, ,,,u organizations. The on has announced in-oa tree memorial taken into the gen- g plan. flowers the Woman s Club Jas been designated as spon-L- is likely a prize competition rked up. n planting haz been given Sorosig. Encouragement of ble effort will include one ut k t the parking strips along ts t "Wfc -- ju, nc f K on April 5th, Sub-divisio- ns .......Hw.w.i.t Eggs saved during late winter or the early spring for hatching should be gathered often enough through the day to prevent any possibility of the germs being killed from becoming chilled, says the United States department of agriculture, and for best results they should be stored in a moderately eool place where the temperature is between fifty and seventy-fiv- e degrees, Fahrenheit. It is not advisable to hold hatching eggs longer than ten days or two weeks before being incubated, and the fresher they are when act the better the chances of a good hatch and strong chicks. It is harmful to wash the eggs intended for hatching as the pores become filled and the air is shut off from the living emblyo. It is also advisable to test the eggs in each sitting for the removal of the infertile ones, which will give a better chance to those that are left This should be done about the sixth or seventh day. A simple tester can be made in s few minutes from a wooden or pasteboard box of such size that a common hand lamp, a lantern or a candle can be placed in it. A hole could be cut in the top directly over the flame and another a little smaller than an egg in one side opposite the flame. The testing should be done in a dark Yelks be put out to grass. ml estate men of the city have Jgned to look out that vacant Jpleered. If possible the own be located and gotten into Otherwise some scheme will I out to accomplish this. Fire Girls will undertake room. . ' In testing the light shining through the egg held against the hole in the side of the box shows the condition of after themselves. Item of the is flies Static egg. An infertile egg is elear, while to , expected the fertile one will show a spiderlike Y'Jfamount object of every individual not only formation, a center with long, crooked the designated week, hut for threads, leading outward and this formation will float as the egg is turned. Mason. Prevention of an will be of vital pests THINGS DOING BIGHT ALONG IN ce. BOY SCOUT WORK e special urge that home peo-u- p their premises speakers Several Price Boy Scouts of Troop short talks before all clubs, C. hes and other organizations, No. 4 under the direction of Prof. II. Madsen, scoutmaster, and Parley to this duty, as to place and H. Rbead, county field commissioner, list includes : Hiawatha last Saturday and on Saints Sunday school, on visited evening went to Wellington. Sunday t 10 oclock, Mat Gilmour. were accompanied by two patrols They ,MfTpffular church meeting at 2 of first-clascouts, who demonstrated lx A. McGee. of the work, including some features Neftpdist Sunday school, on April Scoutmaster and aid first signaling. o'clock, Dr. R. M. Jones. For at Hiawatha to a large Madsen sjioke church at 11 lock W. E. Stoker, meeting gathering of representative citizens and Scout Commissioner Rhead adjotra Dame Catholic church at 11 dressed the Mutual Improvement astodfi on April 8th, C. E. Baker. sociation' at Wellington. Dr. H. B. WMk Orthodox church, on April Goetzman of the stake Mntual board oclock, Gumer P. Peacock. school on Tuesday, April 10th, also sjHike at the Wellington meeting and outlined the advantages of belongUiilock, H. L. Pratt. to an organization of such magniing 'al public school, on Tuesday at tude as the Boy Scouts of America. A ck, IL W. Cooper and Oliver will be organized in Wellington . Southside school, at same troop under the leadership of John G. Jones. F. Olson. One at Hiawatha is already affiliated Improvement association, on with the national organization. evening. April 8th, at 7 o dock, eoige Christensen, PAT, WHO IS IIE socicy, Tuesday, April 10th, IF IT WUSXT HELPING TO LOSE? lock of the evening, Mrs. proper results around publie ..Ik. i, ezeept that the schools are - hk com-fcfrA- nd in-the- se ss u J.pl 1 k. y club will 44 listen to Kiwanian uggeri at the luncheon ou evening, April 10th, while the 111 hear Rotarian A. D. . function on the 9th. ill be told of the matter by at the home of Mrs. J. F. peiaight on April 10th at 3:30 ' ,' Had-WJj.li- ke ip1 FIiHer oman s club at the regular Dame Hall on Saturday, J.a will hear Rev. J. Freelen JjMb, 1 Jes Aid society, AND EVE STUNT ON LONELY ISLAND ratM 1 1 1 Isn't it funny asks Impression that a fellow who thinks he is the a business man will get up inmatmorning from an advertised an advertised with tress, shave razor, don his advertised underwear, advertised hose, shirt, collar, tie and shoes, seat himself at the table and then eat advertised breakfast food, drink advertised coffee, put on an advertised hat. light an advertised cigar, go to his and turn down place of buslners advertising on the grounds that advertising doesn't pay? at the parsonnge 4 4 4 1 1 4 1 44M4 NEWSPAPER Week Ending POSTAL GUIDE TALKS OF PRICE JUST ONE DARN THING AFTER TO BASIN HIGHWAY ANOTHER TO HINDER The I nited States official piwtal For the first time in about nine guide for March contains an article mouths there seems to be a reasonable relative to the routes out of rice doubt that the Utah Oil Refining comparticularly to the Uintah Basin in pany is out of the woods, says Oliwhich it is stated that although there ver J. Grimes, special writer for Salt are two hundred aud thirt.v-tlire-e mil- Lakes Tribune, in Sundays issue. He lion miles, of railroad in the country, is in close touch with the head offices not a rail of it enters within miles and at Zion aud in position to ascertain miles of this smiling country. With firsthand what is going on at the bore thirty communities and four of them some fourteen miles north aud east of large enough to have presidential IVice. Continuing: The new hole finpostoffice these iieople like all other ally has attained the same depth as modern Americans demand not only the old twenty-nin- e hundred and feet and the rasing ia being food, clothing and the other necessi- five ties of life to come over the postal carried to the bottom before further route, hut must have their daily news- drilling ia attempted. Little difficulpapers, magazines, medical supplies ty ia anticiated in getting the pie and the regular letter communication down and when it is accomplished, so necessary to the fulfillment of our which it should be withiq a day or two, twentieth century civilization. Failure there is reason to believe there will be of private capital to continue the re- no further trouble from lost pie in quired service demands that the gov- the old hole. The iron in the new one ernment should establish what is the haa been drilled up, or practically so. largest star route mail service in and no further grief ia anticipated the world. High peaks and steep bluffs from it. Life at the Farnham camp has been serving as an almost impenetrable barrier have been conquered and the mail just one darn thing after another since and parcel post are now being carried the quarter of a mile of pipe was dropregularly even over the snows which ped about the same distance early last summer. Checking of the well log pile up in the winter months in drifts and depth. Passing over against the stratigraphic section taken a summit which ia nine thousand feet at the north end of San Rafael Swell high this route has been kept open indicates that the objective sand in the should be encounduring the winter just closed through the aid of caterpillar tractors. When tered at Farnham within another two the five-to- n trucks could not negotiate hundred and fifty or three hundred the drifts they were pulled through by feet. There is a possibility of an upper these tractors. For the first time the service was kept close to its regular saud within another seventy-fiv- e that schedule when the big storms came offers production possibilities. and the Price to Vernal route over a mile was SILVAGNI DIVORCE TROUBLES hundred and twenty-fiv- e covered daily with an average of ten BEING AIRED IN COURT tons of mail without many serious int Hearing of the marital troubles of terruption!. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Silvagni of lrice YOUNG MURDER CHARGE CASE has been occupying the time of Judge CONTINUED TO JUNE Woolley,' court for the past three Although it has developed that days. While serving in the capacity of dep- the of this couple is beyond requarrel duruty sheriff up in Spring Canyon conciliation no divorce has as yet keen ing the strike troubles last May, Lo- granted, his honor holding his decision renzo IL Young in an encounter along until some recent financail transacthe highway with John Tenas, was shot tions can be cleared up. For some time through the leg by the latter and in Silvagni haa been furnishing funds to the continuation of the battle a bullet supijprt hia wife and child in acimrate from Youngs revolver ended Tens maimenance. This condition ia conlife. A charge of murder which was tinued on the same basia aa practically lodged against Young was given a pre- heretofore. At 4 o'clock this (Friday) liminary hearing and he was bound afternoon an effort will be made to get over to answer to another of man- to the bottom of deals involving the alslaughter. Trial of this action which leged dissipation of several thousand had been act for April 11th haa been dollars of funds which it is claimed by continued to the June terra of the dis- the wifes has been scattered trict court. Tenas came from behind a in defianceattorney of a court order that the house, according to Youngs story, and property should be held intact. fired his rifle at the officer. The latter then returned the fire, wounding SENTENCE COMING TO THIS ONE his assailant. Seeing that Tenas was FOREPART OF WEEK about to make a second shot, Young then sent another into the man, killGiven to the jury late yesterday afing him. Frienda of Tenas claim that ternoon the case in which George the officer shot without any provoca- Georgelas was tried ou a charge of astion and that the wound in hia leg was sault with a deadly weapon came to an to provide a defense. end after occupying the court for two LOCAL MASONS ARE GIVEN THE days. Returning a verdict a couple of hours later in which Georgelas was deDEGREES AT EL KALAH clared guilty of simple assault, the Membership in El Kalah temple No- jury evidently took the view aa was bles of the Mystic Shrine was last Fri- develoed in the evidence that the rucMoche-lo- s day evening at Salt Lake City increas- tion was a fight in which Gust The second out trouble came best ed by fifty-si- x following the spring ceremoniaL Shriners of Utah also cel- came up at Latuda about the middle of ebrated the anniversary of a third of January. Georgelas will be sentenced a centuryof the playground of Ma- next Monday by Judge Christensen. fine or jailing or sonry in this state. Members here- The penalty may betoa two hundred and abouts to receieve credentials are Ira both anything up dollars and six months. R. Browning of Castle Dale, Judge ninety-nin- e James William Cherry of Mt. Pleasant RAFTES PASSES ON and now a member of the supreme HelL. Raptes, who has been in Rhoades James of court, William Elmer per, John Milo Slapp (formerly from Carbon county for about fifteen years, Sunnyside), Richard John Vaughn of died at Salt Lake City last Tuesday. Hiawatha and George A. McDermaid He had some pains at the back of his of that camp, Dr. William Henry Bush head and on the advice of local physiof Winter Quarters, Richard Warren cians went up there for treatment An Senger of Heiner and William George operation to remove the trouble was Perry. Dr. Ivey Ralph Parsons of Salt unsuccessful Raptes had been a Lake City and Arthur Davis Sutton of previous to a couple of years ago Provo, both former residents of Price, when he engaged in business at the were also initiated along with Alfred Sun poolhsll here. Just recently he left D. Pierson, now with the United States that establishment and has since been Fuel company at Zion, but until re- derating at Helper. He was married cently in charge of the general sales a couple of months ago to a young lady from Salt Lake City. agency of the Utah Fuel. fifty-- fenno-carbonifero- us . self-inflict- ed sheep-own- er UNITED STATES FUEL IS TO PUT IN BIG DAIRY Another step looking to the better- - used in cooling a steam sterilizing out- ment of living conditions in the coal fit for cleaning the receptacles and all be of benefit in caring for camps is just getting under way ovpr that can at Hiawatha. Owning the Miller Creek and getting the supply to the users ranch just below that town, the United without contamination will be done. States Fuel company will make this About thirty highgrade Holstein into a big modern dairy establishment: milkers with a pedigreed sire will con-s- o that a constant and dependable sup- - stitute the starting herd. Handling the will be Robert McKinnon, ply of pure and healthful milk may be proposition in this line and who has a miner of the specialist furnished the families in the camps of Hiawatha, Mohrland recently been operating a similar prop-an- d West Hiawatha. Heretofore trou- - osition over in Wyoming. He is a ble has at various times been expenenc- - brother of A. H . McKinnon of Price, ed which has been suspected to arise Officials of the fuel company recently from the haphazard milk supply for inspected a number of the states best the children of the places named and; dairies up around Salt Lake City to e in order to remedy this and to make! pick up ideas on the matter. R. M. supenntendent; gives camps even more attractive to graw, general the Miller folks of the liettcr class this formation to milk farm close at hand and wicn Creek plant will be the equal or superput in. ior of any of them. tifically conducted is to be hundred Work is to be started at once. In five The ranch of nearly the preliminaries are already un acres has close to three hundred at the ranch. The dairy will der feed way other and hav able for growing be full in be will opertion early this summer. built.; crops. A big modern barn other buildings for the proper housing 'The scheme will include the building of necessary operations in handling! of a hig reservoir to furnish storage the milk, a refrigerator plant to be for water to he used ou the ranch. j I Ma-th- suit-.fa- ct i . llarch Your man who discharges the duties of today never has to worry over what is to be done tomorrow. ' SO, 1923 CASTLE (ATE PEOPLE 7 CM HIE BEST HUE PRICE'S -- ROOMS OF 1HEIR LIVES Invited to Castle Gate Inst Saturday evening, Price ltotarians were gue!-t- b at a banquet nerved in the dining room of the hig new hotel which has just gone into service there and which is under charge of Mrs. L. Nolan. Dr. O. E. McDermid of the coal town and wlm ia a member of the Price dub, was one of the hosts. The rinciiul address of the evening was given by General Superintendent William Littlejohn of the Utah Fuel rouiany, and was an expression of the sentiment in which the gathering was conceived and carried out, hia subject being Goodwill As An Asset. lu the course of his remarks the sjieaker told how goodwill sometimes sells for more thin stock in trade. He gave emphasis to the capitalization of goodwill as a community asset not only from a business stanii-imin- t, but in its relations to all neighborhood interests, aud urged a united front to meet the problems dealing with the greater growth and develo-meof Carbon county. He stated that the company he represents wauta one Carbon county to mintain a ROYALTIES IN THIS STATE ARE NOT VERY LARGE WASHINGTON, D. C., March 28. The state of Utah will get approximately two thousand two hundred aud fif-t- y dollars iu royalty on the coal mined from government land iu the state under federal leases during the year 1922, according to figures just lubiuitted to the seertary of the interior. Last year CO, 709 tons of coal were mined bv leasees on government land in Utah, and the total royalties collected byihe government on this was, in round numbers, sis thousand dollars. Of thia the state will receive 37 Vj )ier cent for school puriMwea. Utah ia the third largest producer of royalty coal, Wyoming leading and Colorado being second. The Wyoiuiug production of last year waa 394,000 tons, and thia paid royalties segregating $37,000. Colorado produced 150,000 tons of royalty coal last year. The department exiects royalties in all these Western States to greatly infur betterment and to crease during the present year. On thircommuni- March 1st there were outstanding 1 nt strong unit aid in the upbuilding of the ty and the cementing of good fellowship, both inside and outside of Price. Rev. J. Freelen Johnson carried out the same spirit, urging that ' we must cultivate good cheer, both in business and publie affairs and to close he read The House By the Way. In speaking to the subject Our Motto, Arthur J. Lee cited that the slogan is Service Above Self and outlined the scheme of Rotary. Dr. C. E. happily entertained the assembly with a collection of witty stories to illustrate his claim that optimism and a solid phalanx of business men make the right kind of a trade cara van, and urged an extensive adver tising ranqiaign to blazon forth the advantages of Cartmn county. Mat Oilmour, Rotary president, was in ehaige of the meeting. A. D. Hadley introduced the dub members. Castle Gate hosts were William Littlejohn, Zcph Thomas, L. E. Durrant, Lafe Davis, Archie Wright, W. J. id Bowns and Dr. C. E. McDermid. Music was discoursed througout the eve ning by the Castle Gate orchestra. Entering the town on its arrival from Price,. the procession of automobiles followed by displayed Old Glory, ty proajMjctiug permits and " twenty-on- a coal lease in Utah, aud in Wyoming there were seventy-nin- e jiermita aud eight leases. During the year moat of (ermits will be converted into leases, as coal development begins. LOSES FIFTEEN POUNDS AFTER STRENUOUS TRIP This press disiatch was sent out from Ogdon under recent date: Trav--, cling eighteen miles in twenty-fou- r hours was the record made by Charles W. Crosa, chief locater for the bureau of highways, in going over part of the ' route of the promised Soldier Summit to Duchesne road iu a snowstorm recently, according to his announcement upon returning to Ogden. Crosa said that he started on the snowshoe trip with F. C. Ferron, Duchesne county commissioner, and E. C. Knowlton, the state highway engineer, and they to make the distance in about three hours. After they started a blizzard came up and they had to keep on the move for fear of freezing. Crosa said the exicricnce cost him fifteen ixiunda in weight. SIX SCHOOLS ELIGIBLE TO GET INTO THE CONTEST ed flags of other nations to indicate the international extension of Rotary. March 20. Soma HUNTINGTON, interclasa competition waa furlively EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD OFFICER nished in (he first local track meet of the season by the llunington high last DEAD FROM WOUNDS Sergt. Nephi P. Pierce, who waa shot by two bandits while walking his beat at Salt Lake City shortly after midnight the morning of Novmber 27th, last, died of his wounds at a hospital there early Monday morning. He was 54 yen of age. Prior to going on the force at the state capital he worked for Utah Fuel company at Sunnyside. er He married a Ferron young of Mrs. Andrew Neilson who has been an invalid for a considerable time. Deceased was a Mason and also belonged (b the Modern Woodmen. His church was the Episcopalian. Funeral service were held from the Masonic temple there on Wednesday last. Deceased was appointed a sergeant by S. M. Barlow, chief of police, and was later demoted to a patrolman under B. F. Grant C. W. (Doc) Shores reappointed him to a sergeancy and he held that position until the time of his lady-sist- ' NEW SAFE WILL CARE FOR ALL OF CITY'S RECORD8 When City Hall at Price was remodeled close t otwo years ago the big safe which had always held the municipal records was placed on the floor of the coo soil room which also serves as the recorders office lief ore the enclosing walls were put up. The en- trance to this will not jiermit an exchange of so large an article of furniture. So, when the big new fireproof cabinet arrived last Wednesday it was necssaiy to take out the window at the front of the room and put the new safe in and the old one out through that aperture. Built to special order as to size and interior arrangement, the one arriving is practically a vault for protecting all papers and books. The old one will likely be sold. SUIT FOR FORTY THOUSAND IN ZION FEDERAL COURT Friday afternoon. In the division of points scored the seniors won with 24; juniors second, 8 Vi; freshmen third, 7V&, and sophomores 2. The highest individual scorers, all seniors, were M. Furlong 7, A. Furlong 6, Guymon 6 and Young 5. Coach Dewey has been putting the boys through intensive aq; joj uoi;wvdajd ui saooud annual divisional track meet on the local eampus April 21st.' Six schools art eligible to enter the contests Huntington Central, Ferron, Carbon, Uintah and Grand eonnty high. A preliminary meet between the three Emery choola will be held here next Friday. ip STRAIGHTENED OUT There will be no attempt on the part of the Mexican government to confiscate the lands owned by the Mormon colonists and known as the Dublan tract. Such is the official information coming to church authorities at Salt Lake City IsbI Wednesday: According to President Ivins the Mexican government wished the' two million seres of what is known as the Palomas tract on the international boundary for colonization purposes, and for some reason the Duidan acreage, which is a hundred miles from Palomas was included in the decree of confiscation. The con-fiision is now straightened out. ROTARY MAKES GIFT Free lectures by Rotarys international seaker are to be given here on April 5th. In the forenoon at the high school he will tWl How to Make the For women, at the Most Out of Life. Methodist church in the afternoon, he will tnlk on A Mothers Relation to Her Daughter and in the evening for. men at the tabernacle will be given A Fathers Responsibility to Ilia Son. Price Rotary club finances this and gives the lectures (ree. IS LOCATED in Automobile salesroom a Opening Row on the west side of Ninth street Judgment for forty thousand dollars north from Main, Lake El Young is asked in a suit recently filed in the just is to have the handling of Nash and W. H. United States district court by Davis of Topeka, Kan., against A. M. Murdock, Ivy L. Murdock and Monte Young of the Basin country', and J. Tom Fitch of Helper. Plaintiff alleges that the amount ia due on a bond given to the Duchesne Farm Mortgage company and afterward acquired by him. lie asks a decree establishing a first lien upon real estate located in Duchesne county for the amount of the judgment and for an order of foreclosure of the lien and sale of the property involved. YOUNG r Chevrolet cars in Price. The establishment is a branch of Helper Garage for which he has been operating through the past few months. The bnilding has been newly fitted np and will be on next Monday thrown open to the If you want to be remembered by a woman just ignore her when next yon meet. Even a billionaire cannot buy a turn ticket when he goes to hell re- A |