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Show FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1924 THE SUIT, PRICE, UTAH EVEBT FRIDAY. PAGE fOUB BUCKHORN FLAT LANDS TO BE THROWN OPEN SOON Si laaued Every Friday l)y Sun Publishing (Jo. (Inc.) It. W. Crockett. Mummer Ofriee Subscription, 12.00 the Year. Phone No. 0. Residence, No. lllRil. Mail MatEntered a Becoiid-CIas- s ter, June 4, 101&, at ioelolllcu at Trice, Utah, Under the Act of March 2, 1070. HUM An order restoring close to thirty thousand acres of land in Emery county, which had been segregated for the Buckliurn Iluts Irrigation company under the Carey act fourteen years ago, was received from the commissioner of tlie generul land office at Washington, D. C., last Monday by Eli F. Taylor, register at Salt Lake City. Under the provisions of the act the company was allowed time to perform certain development which, Taylor says, has not been done in the allotted time. The director of the geological survey reported designation was not longer justified. Restoration is effective January 14th. Former soldiers in the war against Germany have a preference right from that date until April 14th. The lands may be entered under the homestead or desert Po-eillo- n, Line. The man who built the eleetrie chair For Bale, For Rent, Found, Loot, Etc., Two Cents per Word Each Issue. No in the Ohio state penitentiary wai exThis might be used as a ecuted in Charge Accounts. Address All Communications to current events lesson. SUN PUBLISHING CO. Dont borrow The Sun. Subscribe. Pricey Utah forty-seve- it - COHNS AHEAD (Continued From Tags Twa) GENERAL ADVANCE COME3 FOR classroom instruction as well as to ALL LIVE STOCK cover the bare walls of the agriculThe Sun Special Service. tural room. KANSAS CITY, Mo., l)ce. 22. Texas ranges are strewn with dead rattle as a result of the euld wave that There was a general advance in live stuck prices today. Cuttle were up hit the Lone Star State last week. eents, hogs ten The Xeilson brothers of Ulnmling fifteen to twenty-fiv- e lambs to twenty-liv- e and twenty-fir- e sold bunch a mixed of range recently to These advances brought the fifty. ewes to George M. Mathis of Price for season the lor lambs of highest prices head. $12.25 a best Sidling up to $10.35. The $10.00 conLee Kirk of Moab last week ajqieared lute last week and totracted his next springs clip of wool hog more than half the offerings sold day x cents. This is one eent st forty-sithis price and better with the tup at higher than any previous sale this $10.20. Demand for cattle took on new fall or winter. life under the advance and offerings Woolgrowers up around American were cleaned up closely. Receipts toFork are declining offers of forty-thre-e day were 7500 cattle, 10, 0(H) hogs and n to eents for their 40(H) sheep, comared with 23,000 catnext years clips. A few growers tle, 25,000 hogs and 7000 slieep a week thereabouts have contracted at forty-tw- o and 2025 cattle, 5550 hogs and Those holding api and forty-fou6300 sheep a year ago. back at this time expeet to get fifty. Though trade in cattle was slow to Several San Juan county sheepmen get under way because of late trains, last week contracted their next years the general market finally ruled accents. It will tive at Btrong to twenty-fiv- e h1o1 clip at forty-fiv- e cents lxi delivered to the buyers at Thomphigher prices. Most of the offerings adsons. No deduction is to be made for Showed a fifteen to twenty-fiv- e luge. A dollar a fleece is advanced. vance. The quality as a rule was only Some sixteen thousand were sold. No medium, but killers showed considersales of lambs have been made at ten able eagerness for that kind. The stecrogold as readily as the eents, the highest offer as yet. better. Receipts were much lighter wool a week Richfield this Over at ;han on preceding Mondays, but about pool was formed by the growers of normal for this period of the year. were Sevier county. Two agreements The Christmas holiday Thursday will drawn up, one to govern the price to cut down animals later this week. The be obtained from the range slieep and steers sold at the bulk of the other for farm wool Thesales $7.50 to $8.50shqrtfed few of the better a committee to handle and market the kinds at $9.00 to $9.90. Cows and crop consists of F. II. Gunn, Abe Han- heifers were strong to twenty-fiv- e sen and C. W. Powell, Jr. Negotiaand in active demand. Medium tions are being entered into with the higher which were neglected last veek, cows, different buyers to obtain bids. found a ready outlet Veal calves were eents higher. Preliminary to the issuance of strong to twenty-fir- e permits, which wilj go into effect Receipts of stock and feeding cuttle on all national forests next year, cat-tl- e were light even for this season of the and sheepmen who use the north year and the trade lacked volume. division of the La Sal met at Moab s Prices were fully steady and the offorest office a few days ago to dis- - ferings were cleaned up closely. The hog market is on the upgrade ngnin and indications are for a furulations all permittees must ther advance this week. Late List he owners of ranch property, and the week the $10.00 quotation was returnmeetiugs were held to arrive at a ed after nn absence of more than two months. Todays prices were up anworking basis. eents An increase in the world supply of other iifteen to' twenty-fiv- e wool fur 1924-2was indicated hist with the top $10.20 and bulk of sales Monday in reports to the department $9.75 to $10.15. Packing sows sold at of agriculture at Washington, D. C. $9.25 to $9.65 and stock hogs and pigs Although there are more sheep in the $5.50 to $6.00. There will probably United States this year than lost, be a short iioriod of liberal receipts however, the American clip is expect- eurly in January, but after that the ed to show a decrease because of poor run will lighten again. The crest of feeding conditions. Australias crop the heavy marketing, however, is over. Lambs were sharply higher and in is expected to be increased 220,000 new high position for the season. scoured of bales or 53,000,000 pounds Since early this month prices have adwool over the preceding year. An $1.50. The bulk of them topcctrd increase of 2,000,000 also was vanced sold at $16.00 to $16.35. Clipped day Zealand. from New reported No to $13.00 and ewes $8.75. Mediocre cattle, swine, sheep, up wethers or yearlings arrived. horses, mules, chickens and soforth do not pay. They can all be transformed ADVKIiriSIMi RATES Ter Inch per month, fl.fio; Single Issue, 60c. Special 25 Ter Cent Additional. Legale Ten Cent the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line. Summons. 12.60; Water Application, 115.00; Final Proof, $10.00. Readers Ten Cents the Line Each Insertion. Count Six Words to the Line, blackface Type Fifteen Cents the Line Each Insertion. Obituaries, Cards of Thanks, Resolutions, Etc., at Half Local Reading laws. Notice ltatea Count Six Words to the Display Matter HUD SEES BETTER r. Happy New Year Weve oteii wondered what this old world would degenerate into if there was no such thing as Hope? Weve often tried to picture just how much misery we would be forced to go through if we were not gifted with the happy faculty of looking into the future and believing that tomorrow will be brighter than today. And, as we come to the birth of a New Year such reflections pour in upon us thick and fast. We reach the season of New Hope, the day when we can close up the book of the year, open up a new one and hope that every page of it will still be bright and clean when it, too, is ready to lay away with the others. Insofar as Price is concerned, we believe the most of our citizens can lay away the record of the departing twelve months without regrets. Our people have prospered to the point where they have no reason for discontent There have been shadows along with the sunshine, it is true, but they only serve to make us richer in experience and stronger . ten-ye- j ten-ye- ! ar ar 5 co-oper- j j I j PURELY PERSONAL Mrs. L. J. Uoyd of Price is this week entertaining Miss Eva Kirkton, a teacher in the state normal school at Albion, Ida. W. W. Jones and A. G. Gibson, both of this city, were registered at the New Grand in Salt Lake City during the week. Mrs. J. A. Judy got back to Price last Friday after being called to St Louis, Mo., by the death of her father some three weeks ago. Emil ty'inan, former principal of Myton schools, was recently elected a member of the Carbon board of education. Myton Free Press, 19th. Attorney Knox Patterson is back at Price after attending district court mations issued effectually lift all bans last week at Moab and. at Montieello. against interstate commerce between Also George J. Constantine, district these two states anil Utah except in attorney. Miss Gladys Nelms is here this so far ns the further restrictions are deemed as necessary by the United week from Zion visiting with her parStates bureau of animal industry. ents, Mr. and Mrs. George E. Nelms. EUT BURNS COULD HAVE dec their provisions the state gives the She is teaching in the Midvale school bureau full control to prescribe reg- - just out of the state capital. WRITTEN THIS ulations and enforce rules to prevent . . Mrs. F. E. Wand of this city this . , ,,oor the spread of the epizootic with a week had a stopover visit from a siswith the ter, Mrs. C.' J. Stewart, of Snn Fran With humble gift nud kindly word. minimum of interference God pity them, i suy. comity of interstate relations. The cisco. She was returning to the const fur urn ny a man who clasped my outbreaks of the disease in both states after an extended trip in the East hand with pledges oer tlie bowl When the win,, bub. paxs-- .i wnv nre believed to be so thoroughly un H. Enrll.nnd two chil Mr. Holly der control or stamped out to an ex' proved but u niggard soul. dren ranch recently from ' Dig Spring - : tent where the state is no longer with visited her mother, Mr. C. S. In with the chemical threatened. The modifications go in Harris, and other relatives at Price. welfare service work is being carried to effect Janurnrv 1, 1925. They returned the first of the week. on by the bureau of entomology of the Mark P. Braffct of this city left United States department of agriculWednesday's Markets. last Sunday for Chicago, where he is ture with the socalled war gasses and KANSAS CITY. Mo., Dec. 21. other materials devcloHd at the Edge-- : Cuttle Receipts 4000 head. Calves a witness in the Forbes case in federal court. He will go to New York City wool (Md.) arsenal. Many of these 800. Must killing classes strong to and C., before returnWashington, substances have been tested for the twenty-fivsteera fed cents higher; to Price. purpose of determining their avail- - most I v ten to twenty-fiv- e higher; top ing Miss Mnry Vic MacLcan, daughability in insect control work nnd for yearlings, $11.00; liest heavies, $9.75; other practical uses. A few have been 'hulk fed steers, $7.23 to $0.50; d ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. (Billy) which give promise of value. AUT cows and heifers $3.50 to $6.(H); MacLean, is expected from the Houghsmoke candle for use in greenhouses enuners and cutters, $2.25 to $3.25; ton school in Washington, D. C., to has been developed and is being test- - luilognn hulls, $3.50 to $4.00; top veals spend the holidays with her parents. ed on a commercial scale. It seems $10.0(1; hulk medium and heavies 0 Salt Lake Tribune, 23d. to have a distinct place in greeuhouse to $7.50; stockers and feeders were Robert J. Thompson, Jr., left this insect control work. steady. morning for Irice, where he will atHops Receipts 10,000 head and un- tend the basketball officials meet to Some folks exploit their own purity even ; shipper market fifteen to twen- be conducted by the Utah High School by arguing that it is sin only vhen ty cents lower than early Tuesday, Athletic association. Principal J. D. found out. pHcker market steady to strong with Thompson of the local high, and who 's late trade; shipper top had expected to attend, was nnable to Your talkative person is heard by yesterday $10.10; packer top $10.00; hulk sales get out on account of illness. Moab many people and remembered by none. $9.60 to $10.00; bulk desirable 180 to 19 th. to $10.00; averages, $9.70 Mrs. J. C. llubbnrd, wife of Dr. $9.50 to $9.60; stock Ilnlibard of Slandardville nnd who Many a man who thinks he ought to packing sows, to fifty higher; bulk has been a be the fullback on the team would on- pigs twenty-fiv- e Washington eisitor for the to $6.U0 $7.00. ly be a drawback. past week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Sheep Receipts, 1000 head. Lambs Mark L. Ixwis, has left for New York eents higher; City and Boston, where she will make All too often it happens that a man fifty to seventy-fiv- e is not known by the company be keeps top $17.50; others $16.75 to $17.35; a short visit. She was accompanied odd lots sheep strong. until be drojw out of sight by her sister. Miss Era Lewi of Spanish Fork, who has spent the last two announcements. Sun. Sun. blanks kinds. The all The Legal Wedding years in New York. They will both , Published By Request. The last oeni of Robert Burns, written a few days before he died to the girl who nursed him on his deathbed, has been found in New Zealand. It is addressed to Miss Jessie Dewars," who attended Iiurns whie his wife, Jenny, was ill. She was a neighbor of the poet in Dumfries (Scotland) and later married n man named Thomson, who apparently carried the poem to New Zealand. TIioiiimui thought it had been published. Hums wrote : "Oh. did tlie pour not help the poor, r.i' h in l liiMr simple way. With h'Otiide gift mid kindly word, God ply them, 1 say. For many a man who clasped my hHnd with pieilgi's o'er tlie howl When the wine luilo passed awuy proved but a niggard soul. "Oh, wilt thou gang o' nlchts, Jessie, to mjr forsaken hearth And tie, ns thou has been to mo, the truest friend on earth? Fae sweetly In your linnet voles youll sing my weans to rest While Je.irinle leans her weary head upon Ihy loving breast." satisfied. Some folks refuse to believe that George Washington never told a lie. But they should remember George didnt live in the twentieth rentury. Wash- ington, D. C., Correspondence Salt Lake Tribune, 21st. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. (Binx) Ballinger of this city are visiting this week with her mother aud other relatives at Ogden. Miss Jane McGee arrived' home last Wednesday from Halt Lake City for a visit over the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. McGee, of this city. Alias Ardene Flynn i hack home during the holidays from St. Marys academy at Salt Like City for a visit with her parents, Air. and Airs. J. E. Flynn, of Price. Misses Florence and Lucille Moss, who are attending St. Alarys academy at Zion, are at home this week on a visit to their parents, Air. nnd Airs. K. E. Aloss, of this city. Harold E. Christensen is at home fur the holidays for a visit with his parents, Judge and Mrs. George Christensen, of this city. lie is in his Inst year at the University of Utah. Aliss Betty,, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Dowd, of Sunnyside recently underwent an operation at Holy Cross Hospital at Salt Lake City for appendicitis. She is home for the holidays. Air. and Mrs. Amasa Bullock and son, Daivid, and daughter, Geniel, of Raymond, Cana., are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. David Shand, Sr., the father and mother of Mrs. Kate Shand Bullock. Manti Messenger, 19th. Aliss Bessie Kennedy of this city left Saturday evening for Brunswick, Mo., to be with her mother for an indefinite period. Some nine weeks ago she suffered a stroke of paralysis. Mrs. R. W. Crockett of Price, who has been there during this time, is expected home by New Years. F. O. Lundherg of the Uintah Farm bureau and Ute Dairy association went to Price this week' to look after the shipment of a earload of turkey to Swift & co., at Los Angeles, The net price to growers f. o. li. Price cents a pound. Not was thirty-on- e nearly so many were raised in the -- Basin this year as last perhaps fifty thousand. The average price was eent and weight around twenty-thre- e ten pounds. Myton Free Press, 19th. Aliss Ariel Gunderson is at home in Price for a viit over the holidays with her parents. She is a nurse at Holy Cross Hospital up at Halt Lake City. Attorney Oliver K. Clay is back at Price after about u months absence in Halt Like City, the greater jHirtion of which time he spent in a hospital there, lie may have to go back again iu alwut two week. home Trotting arouml dumb belles is the only kind of exercise Some men ever seek. Its Now Over Two Centuries Old This year marks the two hundred h and anniversary of the birth of fire insurance. Orignat-e- d by Dr. Nieholar Barbon following the tremendous conflagration that devastated London, Eng., in 1666, it has since become interwoven with the whole fabric of society. The public seldom stops to realize that without insurance against fire commerce in its modern proportions could never have become a fact, since it is based on credit that insurance safeguards against disaster. Nor could our enormous cities have been built because no one would lend money on real estate unless the security for his loan were adequately protected. Fire insurance constitutes a method whereby ;be contributions of the ninny indemnify the comparatively few wiio suffer loss, and in safeguarding enterprise and thrift insurance creates a peace of mind that has a psycological yet fundamental effect on public welfare and progress. Everything in insurance fire and other kinds. fifty-eight- Equitable Real Estate and j For Your New Year Investment Co. BAKING Second Floor Silvagni Bldg. PRICE, UTAH NOTICE IS IIEKKRY Given tiy the undersigned board of equalisation and review of Price, I'tah, that the assessment lists of the property affected in Improvement District No. 1, otherwise designated as Paving District No. 1, In Price, Utah, have been completed anil that said board will sit as such beginning on Friday, January 2, 1925, at the office of tho city recorder of Price In Price, Utah, between tlie hours of 10 o'clock a. ni. and 5 oclock p. m.. and continue to sit as such board on the 3d and 5th days of January, 1925, at the same place and during the same hours, at wjii.'h times said assessment lists will be open to public inspection, and any unit nil persons feeling aggrieved may, during said time, have a hearing before said board. Dated. December 24, NOTICE I ; j . ! . -- ; l. e j hutch-foun- I ! j $4.-5- Times-Indepcnde- 300-pou- If friend husband ever has the last word it runs nl.mg these lines: "All right. Huy it if you think you'll bo return to Utah for Christmas. Un-NO- LONDON, Nov. 29. How often in tlie dreary night I clasp my liurniuK hand Vpon ilio.ie tiirnMiing, sleepless lids, o'er eyes like glowing bi'ulitls. And wider in my weary bruin if. haply. m liiu I'm deail, My old I'lioti I nr mis for love of me Mill give my biiimics bread? Burns wYear low-pric- ed in our ability to sacrifice when it must be done. We have lived wcll as a community, growing stronger in each others friendship and happier :.s the days rolled into weeks and weeks passed into months. V.'j have come to know each other better, and that added knowledge has served to make us more appreciative of our town and the communities about it. There have been needed improvements postponed, but that same hope which fills our hearts at the beginning of a New Year leads us to believe they will receive attention in 1025. There have been some things left undone, but these can be disposed of along with our coming tasks if we will only determine now that next year shall see more actual good for the entire community accomplished than in any previous one in our history. The outlook was never brighter for a happy and a prosperous year and we believe the feeling here is generally to that effect. We. think, also, our people realize, as a rule, that we must in the fullest if we keep pace with other communities, and if we get all of the benefits to which our city is entitled. The old spirit of being content to let well enough alone is fast dying out today folks want a better town with better streets and better schools and better highways into the outside world than they have JnalK.WithUtMs i all desire is for of the text agricultural leaden in Panama ever had in the past. It the spirit progress, we endeavoring to bring about the these and with each and every citizen putting his shoulder to the wheel there is no reason why the year 1925 should not see us pos- bThe sessed of all the things we wish for. We want to renew the pledge United States department of ngrieul-o- f The Sun, as a community institution, to aid in every way all lure contains a chart ndnpted from a movements that come up for the betterment of Price and Mh IhS advance the interests of Knglish nml Spanish text that the use people, as well as those things which will our county and our state. All that we ask in return is that to of n purebred bull for six generations l11 t0 Bufh n ?xtont n.iprovc which every honestly conducted newspaper is entitled the sup-- 1 that they resemble purebreds m ap- of the people hereabouts. We desire to do IH,arnn(.e 0IU utility. Educational nr- port and all in our power to make the hope of every citizen for a still more tides discuss the chart and give help- fuI "URRedions on cattle breeding. prosperous and a happier community come true. Here is our New Year wish that all of yours will materialize in 1925. Also, that it . Foot '1 juth disease quarantines Tesn aild Cnllfor' 1,1 cifett will bring you a greater measure of health and happiness, pros- - nia were affamst modified lost Tuesday by Gov. Charles R. Mabey. Two proclaperity and contentment than you have ever known before. Last Poem of Bobby We are most appreciative of the very splendid business given us during the year just closing and herewith extend our sin cere thanks and appreciation to those who everyone of them that have helped us along the road of prosperity. SCHRAMM-JOHNSO- N DRUG Co. (Vj . Price, Utah j 1924. HOARD OF EQUALIZATION A bag or two of our fine cake, pie, AND REVIEW. biscuit and bread flour the best First puli., Dec. 26, 1924; last Jan. 2, flour we have ever offered, at an econ- 1925. omy price. You will get splendid reNOTICE IS HEREBY Givsults in your cakes, bread, biscuits, XtlTICE en by the undersigned board of pies, etc. Try it on our sayso. equalisation and review of Price, Utah, that the assessment lists of the property affected In Improvement Dis2, otherwise designated m Co. trict No.District No. 2, in Price, Utah, Paving South Ninth Street, Fries. Utah. have been completed and thnt said board will sit ns such beginning on Friday, January 2, 1925. at the office One of the old Holland type wind- of the city recorder of Price in Price, Utah, between the hours of 10 oclock mills that dotted the coastline of a. m. and 5 o'clock m and continue in the earlier days has been to sit as such board p.on the 3d and 5th put to work on the farm at Round days of Jenusr', 1925. at the same 1 Tills owned during the same hours, at by Col. E. II. II. Green. place anil times said assessment lists will Two bushels of corn were ground in which be open to public Inspection, and any the old hopper by the creaking ma- snd all persons feeling aggrieved may, said time, have a hearing bechinery that must lie at least a cen- during fore board. Dated, December 24, tury or more old. The meal will be 1924.saidHOARD OF EQUALIZATION in on old a an AND REVIEW. preserved glass jar whaling vessel, also a relic of old day First pub., Dec. 26, 1924; last Jan. 2. 1925. in that section. Price Commission Mas-saehuse- tts IMrth announcement cards. The Bun. Dont borrow The Sun. Subscribe. |