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Show THE SUN, PRICE, UTAH EVERT FRIDAY. PAGE FOUR silted laauod Every Friday By Sun Publishing Co. (Inc.) It. W. Crockett, Manager 8.00 the Year. Office No. 0. Jteeldeuce, No, 183m8, Subscription, Phone Mall MatEntered ae Second-Clas- s ter, June 4, 1010, at Poetofflce at Price, Utah, Under the Act of March , 1070. ADYKHTIMNG know. Havent heard of her for ysHrs. ask my wife. She'll know. Come up to dinner tomorrow night." You ninny," said Mrs. Mervyn; PRUNE when her husband told her of his meeting with John Martin and of Ills asking after ClHra Thompson. "Don't that they were enIt Is said that whoever throws a you remember once and for some reason I gaged penny Into the Fountain of Trevl will have wliut the engageforgotten return again to Koine; that whoever ment wus called off? "(tiara abandrinks of the waters of the Chagres doned society and went In for settlewill aguln visit Panama. To this ment work soon after. Was that should tie added that whoever eats fifteen years ago? Dear me. how prunes for breukfHst will again visit time does fly. I'll try und get Clara New York John Martin bad eaten of to dinner tomorrow night to meet the famous breakfast prune of Man- up her old flaiue. Is he married?" aban hattan, and therefore, after I forgot to ask," confessed Mer sence of fifteen years, Little Old New vyn. , York saw him again, lie bad left The dinner at the Mervyns was a the city vowing that never again plensant affair. Clurn and John would he look upon the piers ofHrook-ly- n very met like two old friends. After dinbridge or the Statue of Liberty ner Mrs. Mervyn managed to leave For New the two alone enlightening the world. for quite a together Ills tils money, Yogk bad taken youth little time, and alone their together and his reputation, and In the city hearts siioke. In one all of the skyscrapers the girl So you never got my letter, John?" the world had refused to marry him. said Clara at Jast. I sent It to the he left address He had been thirty when me given by your lawyer at now. New York; he was forty-fiv- e Town sent It a week after you Cape Time and experience had given him had sailed. more sense than he had ever pos"Ah," John, I did not go sessed In those days when, is young direct toreplied Cape Town as I had inwork hard It all" and he knew ; man, It was nearly two years beand luck as a mining engineer In tended. South Africa hud given him a fortune fore 1 reached the Cupe. What was equal, at least, to the one he had so In that letter, Clara?" Oil, I offered to tuke you with When he recklessly squandered. I fouml, John cleaned up and left Cape Town to all your fuults. return to Godu own country, he re- after you had gone that you had membered his vow never again to become u part of my life. 'Ah, well, tread the streets of New York, and that was lung ago. We are middle-age- d people now und must forget thought of London as a pleasant place for a wealthy bachelor to live. He our curly drenuis. Fate seems to have But the breakfast decided our lota for iis." tried London. Fate has inYes," cried John. prune had cast Its spell upon him, decided. deed Fnte has back and here he was, hrovlr again, hunting to New York; to u city wlm- -i for familiar resorts and finding moat streets 1 hod sworn never to tiv;: I of them gone out of business. Back to New York and i could on John again. It hack now, Looking see tlist Clara Thompson had been you, Clara. John," said she, "It Is too liie." quite right In refusing him. He had It never h? too lute," replied John. walked the primrose path at a rapid In this case he wns right. And more than name once, hia had, pace; been In the papers In connection with rather disreputable alfnlrs and one Trout by the Handful shady stock transaction Into which in the Yellowstone he hud been lured by evil companions. A chorus girl merely as an adverThat wan a wonderful pocket of tisement for herself had sued him trout which Mr. Iewls 11. Freeman saw In the Yellowstone river Just befor breach of promise. Yes, Clara had been quite right, low Yellowstone lake. In his book Down the Yellowstone" lie describes he thought, and yet she might have taken the chance. She would have It tliua: ' taken It If she hud reully loved him. At the first rapid an abrupt fall of after-dinncoffrom three to six feet formed by a Meditating over his fer one evening he heard the old ledge of bedrock thnt extended all the familiar sounds of the rlty; the old wny urmsg die river I found countfuiiilllar smells of the streets came less millions of trout bunched where In at the open window for It was the obstacles blocked their upward July when the spell of the breakfast movement to the lake. I hnd seen ldni hack. salmon Jumping falls on many occaprune hud finally-brough- t A nuiB who had Just finished his sions, hut had never before seen trout. dinner and wns going out glanced at They seemed to he getting In one anthe meditative mHn, pnused, looked others wny n good deal, lint even so Well, they were clearing the barrier like a ngaln, and enme up, saying, well, John Mnrtln, eh? Haven't seen flight of so many grasshoppers. Many you for a long time. Been out of made a clean Jump of It. Others striktown?" ing near the top of the fall, still had Been Hwny fifteen years," said enough kick left In their tails to drive John. "Sit down, Mervyn, and tell on up through the hottle-greewater. me all the news. Mervyn RHld there But those that struck the middle were wns not much news going, hut John rsrrleil bnck. threw questions at him In a perfect Immediately under the fall the fish fusillade. One thing which Immedi- were so thick that thrutlng your hand ately struck John whs that his dead Into a pool near the hank was like hurled its reaching Into the bumper haul of a past" lind apparently to have en- freshly drawn seine. Closing a list on dead." Mervyn tirely forgotten the details of that the slippery creatures wns quite anmeteoric career which hail culminat- other mutter, however; I was all of ed in John's departure from the city twenty minutes throwing half a dozen s In disgrace. and out "Whatever became of Clara Thomi-sonupon the hunk. Youths Companion. asked John nt last. It lind been the first question he had wanted Future of the Hone to ask, hut he had hesitated, eager Another scientist says thnt the horse for and yet dreading the answer. Is to he extinct, und he sets the date a Clara Thompson?" replied Mervyn. hence. The extinction process Old Silas Thompson's daughter? Oh, century W nt work, any a the Washington ! mny she let me see. Oh, I remeinlier. I Star, hot whether the horse will go to man a named she married Siuythe and the vanishing point In thnt time one went West years ago." John heaved a s'gh, deep and long. does not know. If . hurst's would decrease In the Were you What?" cried Mervyn. ratio ns in the Inst ten or twenty smite In smitten thnt quarter?" And to think that the whole town hnd talked yenrs, It might he easy to toll when the of Clara's refusal of John only lifiecn last horse would give up his stall to Now 1 come to tlcnk of nn iiiitomiiblle :inl puss on to thnt years ago! It." went on Mervyn, "didn't old malm whore good horses should go, Thompson huve two daughters? Come . nnd ierhnps where old IVgusus still to think of it. It was the other one, rears nnd canters through the clouds. Rut the dee raise In horse population Maud, who married the Smylhe felor in hlpimlatlon" mny ,not delow. What becumc of Clara I don't crease In arithmetical progression, and we may still find a horse on a fnnn nenr Washington as we now find a white turkey, a hand churn, a iniiley cow, a hearth broom of sedge, or something else quaint and rare. LONG KATES Diapl&y Matter Per Inch per month, n, fl.OU; tiingle Issue, 6uc. Special 80 Per Cent Additional Leaals Ten Centa the Line Each InPo-altlo- sertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Summons, 118.00; Water AppUca-tlo- n, I10.UO; Pinal Proof, 110.00. Readers Ten Centa the Line Each rt ion. Count Six Worda to the Line. Hiackface Type Fifteen Cents the In-Be- Line Each Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Heading Notice Hates. Count Six Words to the Line. For Sale, For Kent, Found, Lost, Etc., Two Cents per Word Each Issue. No Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to sux ri'UMsnixu oo. lrkxs, Utah UTAH MINES TURN OUT BUT LITTLE MORE THAN HALF (Continued From Page One.) tity of bituminous forwarded and of 25 in anthracite shipments into that territory. There was appreciable improvement in tridewater business at Hampton Roads in the week ended October 25th. The total quantity of soft handled over the piers was 381,511 net tons, an increase of 58,G68 or 18 er cent. The (fain was due to sharp increases in cargoes consigned to New England and the other coastwise trude. Exports increased somewhat and foreign bunker dropjied considerably. The lake movement of bituminous was marked by a sudden spurt in the week ended October 2(ith. The total quantity dumped over Lake Erie piers was 881,470 net tonB. This was a gain of 89,574 or II er cent. In the week last year dumpings totaled 007,549 tons. The cumulative dumpings of cargo now stand at tons, a decrease from those of during the corresponding 1923 of 28 per rent. Compared with the average for the three preceding seasons there was a decrease of 5 (ter 33 ix-rio- cent The movement of anthracite up the lakes remained praetirnlly unchanged in the week eiulwl October 2Gth. from Iluft'ulo, N. Y., and Erie, Ia., totaled 55,429 net tons, as against 58,757 tons in the week before. The record of dumpings for 1924 to date stands at 2,745,597 bins, a decrease of 88,302 from that at the eorresismding date last year. Ship-men- ts FAMOUS FIELD MUSEUM USES FORECASTS TO SAVE Carefnl and ronstnnt oliservation of outdoor conditions by means of using the forecasts of the weather bureau of the United States department of agriculture is given as nil inqiortant factor in the saving of ten thousand dollars a year in fuel costs accomplished by the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. The amount of eoal consumed has been reduced two thousand tons below minimum enlled for by the firm Hint originally installed the heating Apparatus. The good results obtained suggest the possibility of utilizing information furnished by the bnreau and regulating the heating of business and industrial buildings and consequently effecting a tremendous annual saving in coal. The Field Mu- seum is bicntcd in an eximsed, windswept Msition. Its 1 ,250, tint) feet of exhibition floor space is kept at a n temperature between sixty and degrees during visiting hours by some four hundred radiators. When the outside weather raises the inside n the tenqiernture above heating plant is shut down. To make sure of maintaining an even temperature the engineering department follows the weather forecasts. Prediction of a raise in temperature indicates that the heat muy be reduced and vice versa. Special attention is given to the direction and velocity of the wind. Twenty-thre- e thermometers are hung inside of the building and one outside. One or more heating units can be shut off whenever a thermometer indicates a rising temperature in any particular part of the building. The night watchman makes sure that the building does not get too rold when the plant is shut down after visiting hours. When a rise in temperature is predicted for the next day it is safe to allow the night temperature of the museum to drop farther than if a lower temperature is predicted. Daily cheeks on the amount of coal consumed during changes in temperature further contribute to the economical use of it. sixty-seve- sixly-seve- UFE TO THE DEAR Ill 01D er n rs Real St oritM About Real Girls By MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN h-- I H--- 1 1 m i i- -i- h4 1 INSURANCE SELLING AS AN INCOME SOURCE HTMIE girl who lias been successful since childhood in persuading people to do things" has the faculties which she run capitalize In selling Insurance. For the power of persuasion, plus the art of attention, comprises the science of salesmanship. So a small-tow- n girl who succeeded In selling me an accident policy gave me to understand, in a conversation subsequent to the transaction. It's the girl who'a always been able to talk people around'; who always got the best of It when she 'swapped clothes' with her sisters that's the girl who should sell Insurance," she No girl should take up the declared. work unless she likes to sell; unless, In minor, everyday ways, she hus always been successful In selling." In other words, the Insurance agent must, paradoxically, be successful before she even starts work! Now, for the girl who believes she Is already successful In selling Insurance is an lurltatinn and an opportunity. She does not need to maintain an office; she does not need to keep regiflar hours; she may devote her full time, or only part of It, to the business ; she may easily be successful with only a common school education; and she has at her disposal any one of a number of kinds of Insurance which she may choose life, accident, fire, hall, tornado or lightning. The prospective agent should decide her special line of business with consideration for the type of community la which site lives, as well as her personal Inclinations In the matter. She should cultivate a "line of talk" suitable to the type of Insurance. While It Is a business proposition, it has a great deal of sentiment connected with it for most people think of It protection to those dear to them. The first actual step for the prospective Insurance saleswoman to take, after preliminaries are settled, la to select a company nnd get the appointment aa agent. She should consider the local styles in eniiqwnles, and connect with a concern thnt la already favorably known In the locality. Since the Insurance saleswoman's Income Is almost always on a commission basis, It deiH-nd- s on her own ability and Industry. Then, too, the business tends to build Itself up, since each policy holder also has a friend who has a friend." Then, the renewal. Many of them are almost automatic, anil will give to the saleswoman a truly "effortless Income. (C, 1SJ4. Wutern K.w.pPr Colon.) ui The seed of discontent never raise a profitable crop. , Legal blanks of all kinds. The Sun. E NEAT PART OF EACH DAYS MENU During the world war people were asked to use meat sparingly so that the boys who were fighting for our common country might be well fed. This step by the government in establishing meatless days was recognition of the value of meat as food. Those days have gone forever we hope. There is no one to say you shall not eat meat. It is as essential to a well regulated diet as any article of food and its nutritious values are recognized. Try some of our appetizing cuts. Everything in good groceries and bakers goods. o: H. WILSON SELLING CO. West of Postoffice. Phone 21 PRICE, UTAH inn FACTS! Dress better and you feel better. Look better and yon feel better. Feel better and yon work better. Work better and you will be better rewarded and better regarded. Dress well and succeed. Complete satisfaction may be found in our made to measure clothes. Suits to order 926.00 and up. Overcoats $25.00 and higher. Cleaning, altering, pressing. - Kinney Coal Co. Mines and ships from the famous Union Pacific bituminous veins of Pleasant Valley in the Carbon district None better for stove, range, grate, furnace or manufacturing plant The equal of any and superior to many for storage. Once tried always insisted upon. Get prices from the general offices hnd sales agency, Walker Bank Building. Salt Lake City, Utah F. L. BUCKIO North Ninth St, Jnst off Main PRICE, UTAH Dont borrow The Snn. Subscribe. throe-oiinder- (he movement has not Wen so brisk, to thirty thousand only twenty-fiv- e fleeces being contracted by a Boston, Mass., house nt forty-tw- o and forty-thre- e and a half. In Idaho more than a hundred thousand fleeces lmve been contracted. s. Legal blanks of all kinds. The Sun. MAKING GOOD IN A SMALL TOWN V XOTICK VNITKI) STATUS LAND Office, Salt al,ke City t'tnh. Oct. 31. 1S24. Serial No. 034791. To Whom It Mny Concern: Notice is hereby given thnt the state of Ctuh ha filed In thl office liste of land detected by the snld stele under Sec. ( of the act of congress, npproved July IS, 1894. ns Indemnity school lends, vis: Ixtt 8, Sec. 18, Twp. IS Booth, Range 14 Bast. Visiting Properties. Halt Lake merldlnn. Copies of snld 1. transNov. The RICHFIELD, lists, so fur ns they relate to snld tracts have been portation committee of the local com- by descriptive mercial club has perfected arrange- conspicuously posted in this office for by any person Interested ments to transport it membership to Inspection nnd by the public generally. During the properties of the Sevier Valley the period of puldicntion of this noCoal company in Satina Canyon to- tice or any time thereafter nnd before under morrow. C. J. Sumner, president of final approval und certification, of April 2!i, departmental regulations exthe company, promises the club an 1907, protests or contests against the cellent dinner to be served to the claim of the state to nny of the tracts hereinbefore describmembers and their wives. The concern or ed on the ground thnt the Is has recently installed the necessary machinery at the mine and everything is in readiness to begin operations. The mining of coal is destined to be one of the leading industries of this valley, and citizens will be interested to observe the developments made along this line. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1924 washer history fr It has been made by thousands and thousands of women. they found amazed them. What They didnt realize there could be such a difference between washers. Less than 600 days after this discovery was first made, the Maytag Gyrafoam Washer leaped into undisputed world leadership. There, it stands today unchallenged. This is the test: wash with the Maytag then do the same with any or all other washers. After that no doubt will remain as to which is the washer for you. The Maytag will be brought to your home any day you say. No obligation. Phone without delay. 9 Outstanding Maytag Features faster. The Gyrafbara Principle creates a man highly energized, turbulent continuously effective water action, SndIdle water. cleaner. The Gyrafoam PrincL pb mixes the soap evenly through the water, and fame the superdesnang, soapier washing solution through the meshes of the clothe. No idle suds. uhea hourly capacity in world -- 50 mest lb, ordinary family wuh per hour. 4 Moat compact washer made floor space only 25 inches square. S-- aluminum tub Cit ro When the Flour Is Right Price Commission takes cant wzrpt nat, swell, split nor conode. 6 Easily actuated to height of tnbfc 7 -- Clothe can be put while washer is running. 8-cleans itself b 30 b The baking will be good. A bag or two of our Turkey Red, Tip Top or Seminole flour the best flour we have ever offered, at an economy price. You get splendid results in your cakes, bread, biscuits, pics, etc. Try it on our sayso. Lowest prices more vnhinble for mineral thnn for on Hay, Grain and Millstuffs. Fhone agricultural purpoees will be received 183 and we will be tickled to deliver and noted for report to ths general bind office nt Washington. IX C. Fail- it ure eo to protest or contest within the lime specified will he considered sufficient evidence of character of the trneta and the selertlona Co. thereof. Wing otherwise free from obBonth Ninth Street. Price. Utah. be will to the atate. jection. approved KLI F. TAYLOR, Regleter. Flrat pub. Nov. 7; laat Dec. I, 1984. Legal blanks of all kinds. The Sun. non-miner- al has written fcdghtt end or taken out Tub bam Washer WITH CAST ALUMINUM St TUB, automat. lly for handkerchief or blanket!. Auto. Stic drain board. Instant tenaion-releas- o All parti enclosed. ,9 Reasons for World Leadership MAYTAG SHOP Phone 27w PRICE, UTAH With G. & G. Cleaners |