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Show hi ; SUNS RATES NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING DID ITS PART, HOWEVER fifsSffiSffe iMiTranwPosition iddiiionaL No rnt SSptJ tor or " rader 1 "fltr lino aa dd be - diplmy (" twtntjr-fiv- a a drug os tka UTAJ BifcM cot them could pU ifho mil Cr1 Volume 12, Number 5 breoth. ring A. Golding, Pioneer, Dies! AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER le om Swmmm Hole Week Ending June 26, 1925 The StuJebaker corporation's sale for the first quarter of this year totaled with net earnings of 64.130.29U. For the corresqioudiiuf period of the previous year they were $35,(03,409 with net earnings of $3 958,732. The eoniaiiy a profit and loss surplus is 631.7sK5.3S3. Birth announcement cards. The ins SOM. OF CAMS BEST CHS ARE At Home of His Son .r pioneer of Carbon county hi final rest when Sebriug home of his son, ,,g died at the on North Seventh street last !v) evening at 111 o Yloek. The ,mau had been in pun! health bui-- n te in his merchandising at Wellington up to a few . being brought to Priee last lie failed considerably dur-nefew days and einee last had been too ill to leave his attending physician, Dr. P. .. called Dr. C. E. MeDermid Gate and Dr. A. W. Dowd of xt consultation, but the into i was beyond human aid. erviees will in j.day afternoon at Wellington at 3 oclock and he will be e Having lived at 1905, dee eased and hia n re among the beat known county. Ilia Mina have nccted for years with various activities and have heli .the oldest one, 8. W. now being assessor. Of eight : children all are now in the Besides 8. W. there are now Iriee Joe R. and Lorin with idlies. At Kenilworth ia S. A., brother of the assessor, and I ia another brother at Priee. lighten, all married, live at . They are Mrs. Ada Shim-- . Florence Rich and Mrs. Liars. Two other children died in Meetinghouse AVell-iue- icra. pen-srbo- pnb-inn- a, nd man had been in Utah for yean. He came to the terri-i- n Arkansas, where he spent manhood, lie waa born in lunty, Ga., on July 31, 1847. wv years from the age of 17 the civil war. lie was mar-r-foyears ago to Miss Nan- i ur the mother of the native of Tennes-wh- o living, the family ing at Wellington. He and Saints joined the Latter-da- y while at Deaark, Ark., and le to Utah, spending one en route. They lived, iiaing to Wellington in 1905, teen years in Sevier county, iss there that four of the were born, all the others II eNeef, ihe being a is still win-riio- na who wks rir migration broujot being born in rts of this state. Six years in nunty, two in Kane and two are among their residences, ind merchant, he waa still en- these same activities right very end. He was by trade a IN CONFERENCE Quarterly Gathering of the Saints Saturday and Sunday. j Satunlav and Sunday la. t of !i,. ('aii,,u Chureh of Laiirr-daSiiit.t- of .lev; (hrLt was held at lVre. Arthur . Ifoivley l. In addition to the stake ilirr.f was present a majority of i !. l ioj, council, thirteen aad i i eonfen-ne- v t piv-iilr- I'li'-fili'i- lii.-lm-os elders if wards and lmimln-s- , a number of counselors and proidcuN of stake and wa rd auxiliary iirgani'j-tiouElder Ernest S. Ihnvli y, clerk, tells Tlie Sun. MenilH-r.-- , acre here from Green River, the extreme point of the stake on the eat, and fmm Winter Quarters to the a distance of over one hundred miles. The first presidency a It. Richby Aplle ards in one of the sessions Saturday, lie gave some pL'i'di.l instructions, but was deterred from remaining longer by reason of sirkness in his immediate family at Salt Lata t'ity. Jle left here Sunday mori.ing. Additional s makers during the sessions were Bishop William Ik Slap-leWalter X. Draier, Bishop Eugene E. Branch, Arnold S. Milner, Edward A. Jones, Presidents Arthur W. Horsley, Henry G. Mathis, John E. Pettit, Estella Dalton, Vivian Ereeksou, Byron Carter, Wallace Curtis, Carl Carlson, Rulon Lundqnist, Ellis W. Mower, Clyde Oman, James W. Nixon, William P. Olson, Ivan J. Mathis, Bishop Taliesin T. Evans, Seymour Oliphant, Bishop George Ruff and Erhart all giving splendid reports of the Htake, wards, branches and laborers in the mission fields. The musical numbers wen rendered nnder the direction of Stake Chorister Ashlev Bartlett The hymns, solus anthems and quartets were splendidly rendered and very much enjoyed. The closing session Sunday evening was under the direction of the Mutual Improvement associations with their usual programs. j s, ng nqi-rcseut-ed ge HEART FAILURE Carpenter For Local Railroad Drops Dead Last Tuesday. 59 nui'i-deceas- ed family the utmost affer.tion Riverside Park put out a very classy himself and all mero- bunch of advertising during the week to for the big three days celebration Danc- be held on July 2d, 3d and 4lh. but there is ing is given prominouce, this park that one remind plenty to Island. ud Wife Lom Lives Za is Carbon a Coming isConey from presses work to Buckeye State. Of course the of The Sun. new rlune on CUy and of the drowning there a few morning train for Salt Ike of Mr. and Mrs. John Mich-lelpe- r. where the erreimmy oung The word came from formed. The guardian of f hour the at of police of that city, bat no lady, missing her 'articular were given beyond evening she should have n',red Searchers the bodies were at the night, gave an alarm. m!,t still missing. The dead man scoured the city. ome time been in Next morning the partnership 'ePlnd hotel business witn Their plans had K,,,.,c 'r, Tony. They conducted the was sent home and M.cliclogJa wss sheriff at tne ,.lerej Brides the one brother detemmatmn timeTnd his through to ther and three the man s Lvnrbinff Micbelog was the b protect a prisoner PLE DROWNED ta lst to tot J jir to daugh-- lie wax waa prevented. Later He at J J"'r" with no prosecution. ed iuple waa married lulentionsworeo his Thpy left that town contended that tr on a vacation and ih. b- -t jW'; now PI J 5 East. They first vinced also, Jon Francisco. ried and is living in tom' l T. on Vi Word was received Micl,"W recalls that b" the f , M iiParw f ran n Wednesday lust that for hire. He fell Michi'lf irl and "Pitted on its way to riPC Jin not husband intention of marry- - However, that of her wed. ipi., out of Price to-- at that time been ide, ex I Hating to catch a tails are as yet obtainable. Tuakl mtsurant man Vt! ih. to Jf i1 to z. &'j batrlu'd" with George Gray before the AhiH'tin; of Burns. Evidence and Witnesses. Juit what evilei..e and who are the witmsses who have lunii.-iie- il the information is, of mirse." uot Further proceeding.! are moat I auto-r,v0f.1,- n" N dia-b'se- likelv to be tlirougl: prvlimir.ury d. ex- amination, presumably judging by an opinion expreMl by ihe eounty man Ciar attorney of eiu-ately. Just when .ir just who will be the first to heard has not as yet been settled. Naturally the proceedings will be oMned before J. W. Hammond, the justice of the peace fqg rice precinct. Calling of a grand jury does not seem a likely procedure, it being explained by Oliver K. Clay, county attorney, that it wonld require almost a mouth 'a time to get such mall i nr ry under way. Much arild talk las floated about which tells of friction lietweeu the prosecuting attorney's office and the sheriff's force it lieing told that an attempt waa made to establish a squad of constables to make the arrests and thus ignore the regular officers, and that these eonstaliles wanted the sheriffs protection, having neither stars nor 1 it--- , the executioner for the unfortunate guns." It however, that the affair of last week. To be sure, a few warrants have been served regularly Iieople are to be met who take the and there are no records to show any perfectly safe path of shaking a head apnoinlments, nor have any suih cerand uttering an expression that the tificates been issued from the eounty aw must be upheld, and the constitu- clerks offiee. Verv secret, hermetiction obeyed" and some of these ally sealed have been sessions at which wouldnt know that aama constitution the commissioners and the prosecutors were they to meet it face to face. have conferred. The district attornev, Editorial comment in the city dailies Fred W. Keller, was at his home in iai not been very radical. Vet there San Juan eounty when the newe of certainly has been mention of that the matter first reached him and he blot on the escutcheon" end' the arrived in Priee Friday afternoon a Deseret News went so far as to de- week ago. The inquest, which had clare the matter to be regretable and leen conducted by County Attorney to hope thet it would be e long time O. K. Clay earlier in the day, developicfore being again called upon to ed only that the negro was dead. ExapM-are- y, Alex Adams, a bridge carpenter and yean of age, dropped dead down at Mounds m Tuesday aftern.sn last had Iwra just after 2 o'clock. He with the Denver and Rio Grande nreh record and aetivit ies are Western line for a nuiulier of yens. 't. He bad always taken en Adams, who was 1mm at American urt in Sunday school work, Fork in 18'ili. is said to have bera a vn gujierintciident at Monmi resident n yours. With his wife he Wi mission for two years at the ing lople. Some other members Iv toppled over and expired. It is was due to heart ainily have also performed thought I hut death was brought on to The trouble. for their church. For a body sent. I" Lehi lat here and from Priee had been listed riarch of the church for Oar- - Wednesday morning. He is survived i'. liv bin widow, Mr. Xini Mnnlm'k in'ISSS at n? np the family ih now oon-vit- h Adams, whom lie married Mrs. the husbands and wives American Fork; by a daughter, Luke Salt City, of MacNilt Gordon 'w and daughters with their and One bmtk-.the total is found to lie and two grandsons. also sisters Xind all of these claim Car-ll- J three q"' Adams of s their home. Naturally are Dan wilMrs. and Anderson i wide Curna Mrs. acquaintance through-Pt- rt American of the state, and was liam Iloliinson, the two ofMullmer of ugh esteem by all, he being Fork, and Mrs. Hyruin Funeral services will be Jit cheerful disposition ami Iona, Ida. life's difficulties without a held this (Friday) afternoon with int. His life ia les- - terment in the Lcbi City cemetery. ideal, wtween Carlkii! county folks are wondering! what it is exiecteil to accomplish through the arrest of eleven men who are he'd in jail at Price accused of be-iiparticipants in the murder" f Robert Marshall, the negro wm was hanged bv the roadside a coiiph of miles out of lic.re on Thursday of la d week after he had foully shot to dcai'i James Millmi Bums, the city marshal at Castle Gate. If these eleven men are in any danger of severe punishment this community U not awake to such a condition. Ami lire is fast growing a feeling that it is about time that the matter was clo aj up. Word from the surrounding f ount ies indicates that this same sentiment is prevalent elsewhere as well as here. Even the governor 'a approbation" of the prompt action in making these arrests includes a stetenieut that steie should be taken to clear up the affair. There is nmen talk abroad which shows the sentiment if the community and very little of if anv at all is for prosecution of fhese prisoners on a charge of murder. The whole idea of the majority ueeins to lie that oiks here are not for" lynching for" imrties, but neither are they sending these eleven men to pris-i- or ju- -t GETTING BEHIND SCOFIELD RESERVOIR PROJECT How best to advertise one of Carbon countys very greatest assets, the All the rights necessary to insure adequate water for the big reservoir have 6750,000 Priee River Water Conservabeen secured. The valley will be a tion district project, the methods of pleasure resort comparable with any from other sec- other in the state, declared Horsley. securing tions' in the woik and how the successThe first stage of getting the waful completion of the project is to be ter stored has, been completed,", said attained wen' discussed mst Tuesday Carl R. Mareusen, but there remains t noon at the chamber of commerce two others. First to get the water on luncheon by numerous prominent citi-se- all the land; and, attend to make the of Price and Carbon county. The proper use of To do this, he said, from the Salt it will be necessary to bring in a great need of Lake City chamber and other outside many new farmers. Also to consoliinfluential bodies was taken np by K. date all of the present existing indeB. Jorgensen, Utah representative of pendent water anl cifnal companies the Kutherlin-Barr- y Bonding eompany under the Price River district, and to of New Orleans, the buyers of the dis- increase the rapacity of all canals and It is a gnat project ditches throughout the district. As a tricts issue. and will require all advertising, sup- means of putting t.h water .o use, port and promotion available," he de Mareusen suggested that every busieland. A great celebration similar to ness man present purchase a small that to be held up at American Falls, tract of land and get it under cultiIda., was suggested by the s waker as vation. Then, he said, wnen new farm' a way of acquainting people of the era come in these improved tracts cun stale with the importance of the work. Ih leased or sold reasorably to hem You men can't afford to fail in this and a real colonization liegiin. A. J. las stressed the need of keep- big irrigation nrojert. Your future de- in cept for some members of the sheraeCurrenee this state." The Park City Record, in iff force there were no witnesses. " a editorial, hita a bulls-ey- e The line of questioning wss such that when it declares thet because of direct yes or no" answers left the persistent and ridiculous camouflag- whole affair right where it was in the the feeling of eon firat place with no rreorded informaing of the lew demnation is not intense when ewift tion as to 'Row" or at whose handi justice is meted out to a coldblooded, Marshall eame to hia death. Among malicious murderer." And the Record the big assembly at the scene of the further states that the lynching was hanpng were a 'few folks who seem the result of a favorable, sudden de- anxious to nuke witnesses of themtermination," which comes pretty selves, possibly to avoid being graded participants. It is hinted about nearly to being another center shot. that one of these who is refiorted ie The Eleven Arrested. active in the chatter, and who has Among the arrested citizens are to maintained that he was for getting clerk lie found Joseph Parmley, chief he could be for the Ufuh Fuel eompany at Castle the negro to a nlaee where back to' life," called ont inGate. He has grown up" in the brought stead to string him up again." Necam . The family name is known gros of various jurts of the state are coal in the of through mining history Salt Lake City papers Carbon county for over thirty years. reported by the as making almost daily rails upon the officer and a East, special Henry No particular activity on governor. deputy sheriff from the same place. the the colored imputation in of part Formerly from Utah county, where be Carbon has tieen observed locally. lias he served in similar capacities, There are perhaps a couple of hunten in been Carbon years. perhaps twice Commerce jKiinted out that tbj in the towns and electrician of Price dred of these folks has been any present business would lie handled in Morgan King, city never there and camis, this city with the completion of iLe City. King haa been on thia aama job racial difficulties which attracted atmore than six years. He is one ol! project. tention. Nor does there seem at this the best known figures about town. time a on the iart of anyALLEGED FRAUDULENT MINING He is connected with the oldtiine fam- one to disposition such. Btart forehere been ilies and has always SALE IS CHARGED to defend the prisoners most with help to anyone in trouble. in Attorneys any further proceedings will be W. M. L Leonard from Hupntington in Atwood, a barber, worked the seconc AV. and Bam A. King of Salt Emery county, wag last week lioun.1 chair at Leo Lowrys shop. He waa LakeRay and City Henry Ruggeri of Priee, over io the district court at Salt Lake recently married to a daughter in an to the iatest information arcording of stock on of the charge oldtime and prominent family. George selling City The Sun baa secured. It will be sevthe Silver Hill Mining comjmny with- ONeill, also a barber, working at the out a license or applying to the state shop in Averill's poolh&ll, has been in eral days before any court action of sceuritiea commission for a permit to Price for some time, hae a family here. any kind is under way. The district selL According to the evidence at the His father a few years ago served a attorney, after a hurried trip to Salt Lake City, where he was to consult hearing, Leonard sold sixteen thons term as a member of the state legisla with Gov. George H. Dera and other and shares of preorganization stock to ture from Uintah county. J. R. Gold IL B. Worthen for eight hundred dol- ing, who with a brother operates an authorities, has left for San Juan where a grand jury will aslars in cash. The alleged offense was auto service shop, they being members eounty, rommitted in October, 1922, before of the well known Golding family at semble to investigate some trouble the new statute clearly defined pre- Wellington, brothers of the county as- there. Ilis return to Carbon has not been dated. organization stock. Judge Pratt held, sessor. Warren S. Peacock, the city statmarshal of Price, who is in reality the however, that the then existing Clay Is Quito Willing. ute was broad enough to apply. Wor- rhief of police. He is a brother of the County Attorney Oliver K. Clay says then testified at the recent hearing manager of the Price Trading com- that he ia more than willing to talk that he and Mrs. Worthen turned over pany, these boys being of the "Id es- over feature of the case at all t their all lifes savings tablished family from tbe Emery times. any practically Also he stands ready to start Leonard for the stock. The latter, it county towns. E. E. Jones, mine sup- the preliminary examinations at any waa testified, told them that the only erintendent at Castle Gate, an i time. That he expects to conduct this six in the eamps and prominent in same kind of a prosecution that would worry they would have after months would be paying income taxes the eounty. John Daskslakis, the night be done in criminal ease. That to the government. The mans bond watchman at the mines in Castle Gate, it is a matterany of ntter indifference to waa continued at the previous amount always counted as a perfectly reliable him what action any jury might take dollars. member of the community. Levi P. after he has of five hundred completed his ease. That Davis, manager of the Wasatch store he, as eounty attorney, must endeavor Theres plenty of room at the top, at Castle Gate, who, aside from the to convince the community that laws but that isnt the place to begin. esteem in which he is held by his ac- are made to be obeyed, and that ho quaintances, most be of some solidity has high hopes that the final outcome to hold such a position. And Joseph of this whole matter will lie 4 step OUR COMMON LABORERS GOING Caldwell, also of Castle Gate, a son toward the education of this communELSEWHERE NOW of Joseph E. Caldwell, who at present ity that such oliedience is the preferlives in Price,, he being an cldtinie 446 I He declined to state how 4 Emery county resident, and onee Wa- able course. NEW YORK. June 21. More 4 satch store manager at Clear Creek. many witnesses have furnished information, but says that he is oicxing up common laborers left these United 4 Htates than were admitted during 4 These Castle Gate people among the all he can from any promising source. the first ten months of nicraou of- 4 prisoners, East, Parmley, Caskulakis, Postmaster J. if'. MacKnight thia tlie new 2 per cent quota immiirra- 4 Jones, Caldwell and Davis, are of tlie week received a letter from Mrs. Pearl tiim law, statistics published today 4 posse which raptured the icgro on Marshall, who signes herself widby tlie national industrial confer- 4 that fateful Thursday morning, they ow" and written from Van Burra, en re hoard show. From July. .11124, 4 to tbe end of April this year 27,- - 4 being the persons readily available at Ark., in which she requests that he N)S were admitted and 44,750 of the 4 the mine office and store when word 4 was received that Marshall wss in kindly have someone who knew the same class left the country. (Continued On Pass Eight) ! 1 1 1 MMf 444444 biding at the cabin where he had 441 1 1 I chronicle a similar three-inch- it" for advertising Fernet mm advised that Mress be laid on the local end of advertising for the present. Adop-tio- n of a suitable slogan, painting of numerous window cards, taking the matter up ill acbmils among teachers and the children for study, with farm bureaus and other organizations in getting a farmers in list nd advertising in local and national mediums were all discussed in detail. "You jieople need one thousand real dirt farmers here and should follow np every prospect until he is here or lost entirely, he said. Most comfietrnt men should lie engaged to handle national advertising or the monev is wasted, declared Fernstrom. Make every ad carry a single idea and make every one productive. Follow up every inquiry to the end, each time giving another point of interest regarding the project. Get a popular in slogan on the tongues of everyone the some of were These the section." siieeial jioints made. Neil M. Madsen of Price, in giving e rejiort of the status of construction work, said that a hundred and fifty men were employed at present. The new railroad grade has been laid out for five and a tenth miles and work on the rock outlet tunnel through the mountain has been started. A steam-shovis working on each end of the railroad grade. A visit of local and Salt Lake City men to the damaito favTuesday moraine impressed them Carbon prospects eountya with orably of becoming a rich farming district. Arthur W. Horsley, as president of the district, gave a brief history of the struggles to put oyer the preposition and told of the final successful sale of the bond issue and beginning Tbe site, acoording of construction. to Hondev, is a natural basin, eliminof the lam ccr ating all the danger sixty-seve- n will impound breaking. It of 'water and thousand acre-fefive mile in half a and by will be two can be size. An additional ton feet makconvenir.tiy, dam the added to wide. three and ing it six niiloa long el et -- er |