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Show IVERTISING RATES TONSORIAL ARTISTS FINALLY RECOGNIZE WOMEN Let th month Tour iftcnl advertisers. Tran-"71cent an inch par locus. additional. No SL accepted for-tJfive liS) cenU per line an itf 1 ?) & INDIANAPOLIS, ImL, Sept 11 vu victor today in another for equity with man. The Journeyman liar bent International union ended a dispute that has eome up at every convention for the past fifteen yean by voting to admit barben to membership. Woman lone battle he Vdhrnis 11, Number 17 wo-m- en an independent newspaper janouncement. Tho Bun. Week Eli dine September 19, 1921 The Bun. jslhan Forty-Fiv-e Per Cent of HE succeeds ca verly Fulltime Here In Utah - Service. p Special D. C, Sept 11-- Lrf UTAHS COAL PRODUCTION NOW HLT.TON, SHOWING INCREASE the Labor Day holiday the eoun-JXliiicoal the soft of portion Utahs coal production for August sharply in the week exceeded the total for the same month Total fitfe. output Wenibcr . 8 well as the tonnage ago net a tone, . at 7,941,000 mined in July of this year, according of seven hundred and seven-- a to a rejKirt issued last Fridav hv the thousand or 9 per cent The Salt Lake City office of the United ij trend in the rate of outpu States bureau of mines. The producav-Tend the however, niatsined, tion for last month was 386.192. For ct 1.510,000 against August, 1923. it was 259,527 and for tons in the preceding sev-l1924, 364,948 tons. July, to iany mines eontinned and it the holiday appears ten little more than a there was a decrease of more than 18 in counted normal Monday. Reports per cent It is shown that 21.752.-45- 2 a ref tons were dumped during the first r loadings show an appreciable two of the first months of 1924, the lowest figon days eight TMr nA tnd for the first time a ure recorded for such period in recent loadings in s single day pass years, excepting only 1922 when the tree thousand ears mark. For tidewater movement was curtailed by ,4 ending with August 30th the the miners strike. Compared with the din in Utah had an output of average of the four preceding years ireent of fulltime capacity. The there was a decrease of 18 per rent. hr to all causes totaled 65.3, Labor Day Interferes. . Bsahility 1.9 and no market 52.4 The occurrence of the Labor Day nt During the same period Colorado went 51.4, New holiday interfered with the lake movement of bituminous in the week ended , M and Wyoming 65.6 per 7th and dumpings declined f fulltime. Production of an-- K September to 768,024 net tons.. This was a deerased completely on Labor crease of 165,844 or nearly 18 per d ia eonseqnenee the total out-rth- e cent. Of the total dumpings 729,721 week ended September 6th were cargo coal and 38,303 vessel d to 1.431.000 net tons, a de--i tong In the corresponding week last of 386,000 or nearly 21 per fuel. season 806,153 tons were dumped. Iks corresponding week a year Cumulative dumpings of cargo to Sepa usiked by thp beginning of nl strike in the anthracite re- - tember 7th stood at 13,772,503 tons, decreases of 30 and 17 per cent, reas compared with the corspectively, Killion More Tons, periods of 1923 and 192L responding work-e wpany with production The movement of coal into allrail at the soft coal mines con-- ti New York and New England Eastern in the final week'of declined improve during the week of Labor Reports from the operators to reports of the Day. According of the fields Jority producing American Railway association, 2452 vpreeiahle gains in the per-o- f of bituminous and 2306 of anfulltime capacity produced cars were forwarded through the thracite miponding decreases in losses rail gateways over the Hudson, ded to lark of demand. Despite tthat the mines are now order- - rmises, respectively, of tiro hundred sixty-nin- e and two hundred and to transport a miUion more and x ears. In the correspondnek than they were a month seventy-siweek of last year 4576 cars of bir railroads have had but little ing tuminous and 2235 of anthracite were lit filling the demand. Indeed, shipped. pet loss ascribed to transportShipment of anthracite up the lakes 8.8 that cent of ability per remained nrartieally unchanged in the Huird district was not due wrsl shortage of ears, but to first week of September snd totaled 117.962 net tons and of whieh 84 per nee of the particular type 16 consumers had specified cent was dumped at Buffalo and ar orders should be delivered at Erie. The dumpings during 1924 to hiss, which were not available, date total 2,309.363 tons, against tons at the corresponding date though hoppers could have niched, the mines had to close last season. t type of csr would not have Minimum For Cars. , npted by the purchasers. . to increase the mini-mn- m Application Ms Recovers Some, weights for loading coal ears rfow months of steady decline was filed with the public utilities diction of commission the other dav hv the Denbyproduct coke in August. The to-- ver and Rio Grande Western, the it estimated at 2,425,000 Bingham and Garfield, the Utah railkin increase over the revised way. the Utah Terminal company and 'hr July of fifty-eigh- t thous-- " the Cnrhon County railway. The miniper cent. The improvement mum weight is now fortv thonssnd to have been due to increaaed pounds, hnt this is obsolete for the rO the iron and steel plants, resson that there is now no standard operations had been great-J- gunge equipment ued for the transduring the four preced-Th- e portation of coal with a capacity so small as forty thousand ponnds, the present rate of coke is now 22 per petition sets ont. The petitioner state thin the average monthly in that if thev are granted permission to djhont 5 per cent less than make the desired changes, uniformity The August output rep-to- il will be obtained in eoal traffics and per rent of rapacity and the minimnm weight rule will Tie the daily production of 78.237 same locally as is applicable from ew plant reported in Aug-"SB- Utah mines to interstate points in the total number of Nevada, California and other Western and of Staten. It is suggested that for cars 9J to seventy-fou- r were active and six of the marked rapacity of fifty thousOf the total output 79.3 and ponnds the minimum to he forty-eigwu produced at these af-t- h thousand: for cars of sixty thousand companies engaged also thousand ponnds fifty-eigtssfscfure of iron and steel. pounds; for ears of eighty thousand, improvement at the bee-'n- d sixtv thousand pounds, and for ears production declined to of the marked rapacity of a hundred , decrease of 7 per cent. thousand, eighty thousand pounds. jSt monthly rate of output is isn the average of 1921, Bond Ia Now Filed. y1? quarter more than the BOISE. Ida., Sept. 12. H. F. Snm-ne- ls ly rate last year. To ob- and his colleagues operating the produced in August re- - Brown Bear eosl mine in Teton conn-t- v "miration of 4,170,000 yesterday filed with the public 01 bituminous, an increase utilities commission a copy of a perMy requirements of thirty- - sonal bond furnished to the Oregon the total qnsntity Short line in the amonnt of $27,166 to WO tons were charged in guarantee to the railroad the cost of and 685,000 in a wye at the mine. The ad- coal requirements building fdonflnued On Page ElirhO jtiTtheare now about n third beginning of 1924, vino? wn he monthly av- - GOODBYE BOSSY. OLD DOBBIN 39 TVT wnt ,CM AND THE IRON HORSE ed as Vt i Judge Jacob H. Hopkins of Chicago, who ia replacing Judge John R. Caverly aa chief justice of the criminal court of the Windy City. The latter, who presided in the Leopold and case, haa boon assigned to the chancery division of the circuit court. THIRTY-EIGH- T IS THE TOTAL DEATH TOLL AT SUBLET, WYO., TUESDAY The Sun had a bulletin of the accident last Tuesday in less than a half hour after the explosion, stating that aixty-on- e had lost their lives out of eighty-on- e workers reported as being in the mine. Rescue workers from Utah and several officials of local properties went to the scene from Salt Lake City. L KEMMERER, Wyo., Sept. 18. The death toll in the blast that wrecked Mine No. 5 of the Kemmrrer Coal company at Sublet was definitely placed at thirty-eigh- t tonight by P. j. Quealey, president of the company. A close checknp showed fifty men were in the workings when the explosion oecnrred. Of these twelve made their bodies, way to safety. Twenty-seve- n the majority showing signs of having been burned, have been brought to the surface. Seven others have been located and are expected to be removed early during the night, while the remaining four will he searched for. Reports yesterday that all bodies except one had been recovered were based on a misunderstanding as to the number in the mine at the time of the explosion. This was corrected by a recheck with the company reports. Good progress is being made in removing the debris from the twisted beams, sing and rock caveins. Quealey declared the company bad been unable to determine the pause of the explosion. He said only electric safety lamps were used, that safety powder was alwavs furnished tlipm and every precaution taken. This statement led to the belief that an early report that a spark from a tool bad caused the blast was correct. Most of the victims were foreigners and the condition of many bodies mpke identification slow. While stricken survivors milled around the two undertaking establishments, eity officials and rivic leaders of Kemmerer planned to hold or-Bor- W out-jpmd- ng ht one large funeral. Public services will probably tie held in the little triangle iwrk in the center of Kemmerer. and ike bodies interred in the cemetery near the Frontier mine where nearly a hundred miners lost their lives in a similar explosion a year ago. No arrangements have been made for an inquest COMPANY IS DIRECTED TO PAY SMALL SUM WEEKLY The Utah Fuel comjuiny has been directed by the state industrial commission to pay to Enninia Patella, widow of Pete Patella, for herself and four minor children the sum of eight dollars er week for three hundred and twelve weeks, dating from March The wife and children reside 8, 1924. in Maione, province of Di Ooscusa, Italy. All accrued payments are to lie made in lump sum and the olhen to lie direct to the beneficiaries every three months. Patella was killed in the mine explosion in Castle Gate on March 8, 1924. Tlie funeral expenses have been paid by the fuel company. TAKES THE PENNANT FOR EASTERN UTAH STORES MOHR LAND, Sept. 16. Stores invaded hostile territory Sunday and won from Mohrland five to one. This makes five straight games that Rtorrs has won and gives it the pennant for the Eastern Utah league. Skinny Miller pitched his usual good game and would have had a shutout had it not been for Steadmans boot of Massinger s fast grounder. Both teams played fast ball with a record numlier of strikouts for Draper and Cooper, while the Storrs boys got all their runs in the sixth inning. The Storrs team would like to meet any baseball club in the state for one or more games. ! Tidewater Change. Th a tjvaftiaally no change in tidewater business in jnnHpal Atlantic coal Reports show that n?nt,,T t)aTdled was 2.745,-,3- n increase of 46.364 or wr cent. The improvement t "n increase of ',V7oes consigned to 'b. however was , n.. decreases in dnmp- - nlTTP1 iji . and in twise" tonnage. in juiyf 1923, Com-dumr-m- WESTERN MINE DISASTERS Catastrophes in Western coal mines taken from the records of the United States bureau of mines. The last column gives the number killed. 4tnt chemist Milk right from-t- be and meat fromrthe factory are a prospect oT the rowless and the horseless age which Henry Ford believes Is about due to arrive. Tke rhemlet la a better nnd more efficient milkmaker Iban the I cow In the opinion of Ford nndVthe horse ranks In inefflc lenrwwlth the present day farm- He predicts also that the steam locomotiveTS iw Ita way to oh- llvlnn and that, all the railroads of the country must eventually he electrified. , ! - Frlmero. Cola Hanna. Wyo. Prlmero. Colo. Biack Diamond, Wash. Peiasrua. Cola Trinidad. Cola Dawson. V. M. Newraatle. Cola Ilavcndale. Colo. Hastings. Colo. Aqullar, Cola Ti vela, Cola Knurls. Colo Kemmerer, Wyo. Castle Gate. Utah 4 .January Terda Cola ... . . 28 1824 60 ....1804 .. 12 January 12 ...11 8880.................... 9 8 ......... ...... . .. 24 ....January 10 - 20 ..1895 March 20 .. 40 Februsry IS -- 189S .. 21 . 1899 December .201 .1900.. May 1 28 February2S25 . ...1901 22 ... ...1 9 01 Octolrer 180 June 20 .... ...1903 ! October 28 ... ...1904 17 December 17 ..1904..... December 1 ...1 9 0 R ...... ........ ........ 1 8 14 February 1 ...1908 18 ...1908.... .April 22 24 3 ...1907 March 28 ..... ...1908 .................. 50 75 January 21 6 ... 191 0 18 ...1910 November 79 .November 8 ...1 91 0............. 17 .1911... February 283 3 a.1 91 ............I October 22 .. 87 December 18 .1913 ...... 1 December IS ..1913 .......121 ...1917 April 27 13 Mnrrh 21 .... .1919., 18 ..1919 August 18 17 Mnrrh 24 .... .1922 . 99 August 14 .... ..1 923...... 171 ..1924 March 8 ..March Almy Wyo. Crested Butte, Cola Almy, Wyo. Klnx, Colo. Red Canyon. Wya Newcastle. Cola Carbonado. Colo. ..... Scofield. Utah Plamondvllle, Wya Plamondvllle, Wya Hanna. Wya Terelo. Cola Miirett. Waah Plamondvllle, Wyo. . Walaenbenr. Cola ly n2f5,sa OFFICER CITY COUNCIL PMKD IASI FOB BY THE HEM Price eity council in regular session last (Thursday) evening reviewed the HARMONYPREVAILS matters connected with the paving ou Main street and also the new work started a few days ago on Eighth. Republicans Name Ticket and TransSome method of bridging the green act Other Business. concrete on the intersections, which is Republicans of Carlmn county just now lieing laid, will be figured e out that the interruption to traffic through delegates from the le not too serious. The eity marshal various precinct assembled in conwas authorised to place a traffic of- vention at lriie last Wednesday evficer at the service station at tlie cor- ening, nominated two commissioners, ner of Main and Eighth. The track- a county attorney and two represenage through thia place ia used as a tatives, to the state legislature. But detour and it whizxes along at a speed little rivalry was noted except in the dangerous to iwdestriaiui on the side- instance of commissioner, particularly walk as well as objectionable to the centering around the long term, and station attendants. Only a few days with its consequent effect upon the more will see the street itself oiened aspirations of a short term man. Both and it is figured that it will W bet- B. W. Dalton, the rounty chairman, ter to pnt an officer in control than and J. Perry Egan, the aerretary, were out of town. Judge F. E. Woods to chance a serious accident. The formality of declaring the in- found himself in the ehair to rail the terest rate for the warrants to W is- meeting to order and the gathering sued in payment for the work on Pav- liked his officiating so well that he ing District No. 2 that on Eighth was ' declared in turn the temporary street was carried out. The ordi- and later made regular chairman. Dud nances provide that the Santschi took a prominent interim warrants the little payments made part in getting things started until as the work progresses shall carry 6 the ehair offered to appoint him on n Tier cent interest. But the deferred committee to form permanent organiones which are to be made from year sation, when it developed that he was to year with the money rained by the not a delegate. Reports from the comspeeial paving tax must have the in- mittee on credentials 'showed a full terest rate fixed by action of the delegation. Platform and resolutions council. Another formality to be com- as read showed a disposition to tie np plied with is that the contractors are to the administration, national, state to lie notified today (Friday) to be- and all the way down. The commitgin work. Aa the street is already tee on order of business iminted out torn up through oiierationa of the that an attorney should be named grading crew this might seem a joke. first. Gonier P. Peacock, in a feeling But in order to make smooth sailing little speech, nominated Henry i. for the contractor when he comes to Although it had been figured sell the deferred payment paper this that there would be a contest for this is a necessary action. And the con- place on the ticket no other nominatract provides that the limit allowed tions were forthcoming and Ruggeri for finishing the paving shall be sev- was by acclamation declared the parenty days from such notice. ty candidate. Ruhm Bryner was present to tell Coming to the eommissionenhip for the council of sewer troubles over a the long term of four yean there period of two or three years, nis res- was a little flurry of excitement when idence on Seventh street ia connected Eugene (Dad) Santschi was put np to a line which, starting just Wlow by A. W. Horsley and Sam Woodhead was placed in nomination by Oscar Main, connects to the lateral on H street Stoppages in the feeder have Ilanaon. These two have served at various times backed the sewage Santaehl for four yean and Wood-hea- d for two in the commissioner-shiup in his basement much to his anboth with perfect satisfaction The courthouse and an noyance. apartment building are the only other to most everyone. There was a disposervices on the line. It will be up to sition to play fair as outlined by the water and sewer committee to find R. R. Kirkpatrick in seconding Wood-heaont just what ia the matter and to figclaims for the long term, and a ballot diHclosed thirty-si- x , ure out a remedy. for Wood-hea- d to thirty-thre- e Provisions in the citys ordinances for Santschi. The two years term brought ont relative to the construction of cesspools are in conflict, ('hap. VIII gives Joe Pannley of Castle Gate as a candifferent specifications than outlined didate, while Dads friends still in tlie general plumbing chapter. The wanted him strongly enough that affirst will be repealed as soon as the ter the single ballot the count showed for him to twenty-thre- e for eity attorney can draft an ordinance forty-si- x to do this. Parmley. So, in ease of a republican victory at the jxilla this fall there will Bell Signal Complaint. Once more the folks down in the he no change in the personnel of the board for the next two years. neighlmrhnod of the depot are asking J. E. Pettit was nominated without bell railrowd that the signal at the for firet place for the two opposition crossing on Eighth street be silenced. candidates. For the seclegislature to communication out in a They point ond W. E. Anderson was position the council that it rings only for e votes, while C. II. trains on one of the several tracks. given forty-ninThat while it annoys everybody it Stevenson, Sr., counted nineteen. The candidates, together with the furnishes very little warning m com-- I wired to the swinging bracket of precinct chairmen from over the counwhieh it is a part, this last carrying ty, remained after adjournment toe-lea county chairman and secretary, a light at night. Just what the com- Homer P. Peacock was selected. for pany thinks of this and what can be the first position, and he is to name done for relief will he looked into. At the secretary. the time this signal was placed the Peacock went in to Salt Lake City eity took much trouble to secure it. Several small violations of the new this (Friday) afternoon, where he will railed for all county attend a building ordinance were discussed and chairmen meeting over the state. lie says the the building inspector was notified that a strict enforcement of the pro- campaign in Carbon will be vigorousvisions of this measure vy wanted. ly pushed. It is likely that several structures re- CARBON COUNTY MAN NAMED cently put up will have to be rebuilt FOR AN ELECTOR to come up to requirements. line Expert information about Fred C. Bobo of Seofield, Dr. John drop is uncovered in m complaint W. Aird from Provo and Mrs. Yina from the high school that a motor reIloldaway of Salt Lake City were cently installed in the mechanic arts named three La Follette presidential department receives inadequate en- electors for Utah the other day by the ergy liecanse the feeder line runs state executive committee of the infrom the head of Seventh street in a dependent progressive or La Follette-Wheelwondronsly ronndahout way before group. The committee, after reaching the service switch. It is a preliminary survey, decided to leave asked that the route be ahortened the nomination of the fourth elector about half a mile or so. on account of the candidacies of The acting eity engineer W. W. open several men and women recommended Jones reported that he had laid out from Provo with the understanding the route, established the grade and that W. M. Piggolt, state chairman, set the stakes so that the folks on the would mrfke a personal investigation west Ninth from little street rtjnning and the fourth with tho adat K can at any time build the vice designate of the Welier delegation. Bobo sidewalk for whieh they aked a per- is a Denver and Rio Grande Western mit recently. engineer. Dr. Aird is a physician and Gives Personal Pledge. surgeon of Provo and Mrs. Iloldaway Althongh the soft drink parlor that is chairman of the Womans La club of Salt Lake City. State has been operating in the basement of the Paternoster building at the cor- headquarters were opened Tuesday in ner of Eighth and Main streets fell Salt Lake City and bv the wavside. Lnn Alger still thinks for the northern part of the state at there might be money in such a prop- Ogden. County headquarters will he osition and was before the council in Salt Lake, Welier, Utah, Juab, Carwith an application for a license, and bon, Emery, Beaver, Iron and, in all was required to personally pledge that probability, Sanpete counties. he would comply with the regulations as to not employing anyone who has Judge Dilworth Woolley is expectbeen convicted of a liquor offense. In ed in Price next Monday to hear sevfact, notice is served on all applicants eral rases in district eourt in which that the license will automatically be Judge George Christensen is disquali-at revoked in ease this provision is not fied. The latter has his calendar Price pretty well denned up. adlierd to. Rug-ger- ht bee-jath- MIC sixt.v-uiu- 1,-la- Nns REAL 24 . Catastrophes in which less than thirteen lives were omitted. lostare p, ds ' et er Fol-let- te |