OCR Text |
Show ate . 1927 THE SUN'S RATES II EH G A RULE CUT OUT DK1U11AM rates tit Bu'l jiyltr linrtiui tack par iu ar Ivty an40)tackmui aa wiwk-toir tUb (4) fif-kr the 1 ta-- 1 adrarcuen. Transient, aa iMk par issue. Poaittaa addirieaal. Ne disjilay ad vertising aeosirted pick Put 1 raa aaua par uaa aa ia their actual cireumstan-eewed quit envying people we do. t If we knew i e CITY, Feb. 2. Sun- day's always a dull day, exclaimed Miss Mary Smith, school teacher visiting here, early lat Sabbath mornand made ing. Suddenly she frantic gent urea to member of the household. They discovered aha had dinloeatisi her jaw. A surgeon was hurried to her rescue and, though in a weakened condition, she ia reported to lie making a good recovery. gai-pe- Volume IS, Number S7 AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Week Ending February A 1927 DISARMAMENT SHOULD BEGIN AT HOME HOW DOES THIS IMPRESS THE SIX MONTHS 10 THREE MMMMIMMMIS BUSINESS MEN S'i O-- YEARS FOR ALVIN HERE? SOLUS ;iJTEW YORK, Jan. 31. Heavy fxrease in advertising volume is f bdicated throughout the coming yaar. This frend is especially forked among national adver-Oer- s, although local buyers of jfckwspaper space in the principal Jties promise to purchase more News-rtp: tSan at any time in years. has gained by advertising and bounds and promises tlP8account for a larger percent- -' t$ of the total sums expended tjenational advertisers than ev-- ; tar f before. Most conservative ezti-- ; I er for a hundred and thirty in thirty major 3e newspapers now promise to exceed 115,000,000 agate lines this year. Spates Advertising agency representatives agree that the men who know most about what national advertisers are going to do this who jrfar are the manufacturers com-ted ry this. A canvass just of the more important al ones disclosed that 53.5 per cent plan to increase their expenditures above the figures of last year, while only 2.2 per cent figured on decreasing their activities and 0.8 per cent were still undecided. ' The officials of the American Newspaper Publishers' associa-- ; tion agree that advertisers who are talking down instead of talking up are out of step with the procession. The organization Bakes it an unvarying policy to confine its official figures to the Bnount done and the money ap , propriated for the past year, in-- K Stead of estimating future com--1 paigns. Officials of the association, however, asserted confidently today that evidence was ; Bot lacking to show that the ad- yertising volume placed with the 'Newspapers this year would sure equal or exceed that of the past twelve months. National users Of space in many instances have J' determined to increase material- ly their appropriations for the newspapers. The trend is equally apparent in Canada. A canvass of three hundred national Advertisers in the dominion indicated 76 per cent would spend more than in 1926, according to : na-jn- Theyre Coming In Cars A.1 v in Si 11 is, alia Eddie Kelley, drew a sentence of nix nnmt lit to three years in the date penitentiary from on Satur.lodge George I'hrii-li-iitt-day lu- -t after a jury the day before brought in a enlict agaiu.-- t him of burglary in the third degree. He it 24 eh i n of age and u aa charged with the ruldierv of the Toggery, a e lathing store at lleer, last August lUth, and at which time he made away with From Texas Boring fur tween lrice south side of just as soon the ground, oil close to halfway beand Wellington on the the river is to commence as a rig can be put on It. J, Turner, local and agent for the McGee and ilolmes crowd, tells The Sun. Cellars are being dug this week, says he, and Ora lluey, the man in charge of the drilling work for the Texas operators, has visited the ground and will hare his crews here in a few days The reservoir at the wellsite is full of water and this will be sufficient for months to come. Huey and his men, are driving through from the South They are to use their own ears to go to and from work at Iriee. They will be on in twelve hour shifts. Huey has a most enviable record for doing He just recently put down things. a well thirty-on- e hundred feet in twenty-on- e days. He expects to make a similar record here At the bore of the Price River Petroleum company the hole ia this week down nineteen hundred and thirty odd feet with underreaming still being done with six and easing at about eighteen hundred. The formation at this depth ia moat troublesome, says Driller Walsh, in charge of the work out there. five-eight- oy suits of among other things fifty-on- e I'lothing. Some of three were placed with a fence at Salt Lake City and later recovered. Snllia whs traced to Englewood a auberb of Chicago by Ray Doming, the then sheriff, and waa brought hack here to face the chargee uon hs Folks on tha Other Bids of tbs Bangs Seek Still Effort of XL . I , its trade commissioner, L. W. ;1feekins of Ottawa. Y This compared with a state-snethat 62 per cent would in-: crease appropriations made at i this time in 1926. Twenty-fou- r '.per cent of these firms will , spend as much as in 1926 and none will spend less. The recog-nitio- n of the value of the news-- paper as an advertising medium among national advertisers has Y been very remarkable in the past twelve months. Firms which formerly alloted but 60 to 70 per cent to magazines and periodi-cal- s now are giving 75 of their business to the papen, according to leading advertising agencies here. The advertising men ex- plain this is due to the daily and weekly mediums. Advertisers do Not have to wait thirty days before their announcements are printed, but can commence to feel its sales effects in two or three days or weeks." Moreover, they are able to concentrate ef-- : forts in most needed territories. Distribution has. come to be a major factor in manufacture and Industry and producers are very strongly attracted by the oppor-Y. national advertisers have tunity ' of spurring distribution in some districts which are not respond- - nt . - Ing. . ? Progressive newspaper are already beginning to refuse advertising that does not v serve the best interests of the readers. The more business that is refused the more essential the newspaper becomes, because it is the only one for advertisers to 'use who make their offerings real news announcements. . pub-Ushe- Angus E. Johnson jjE. L, (Ted) Peacock Duchesne Garage out .Jg and are to hereafter j rs of this eity and have bought the at Duchesne City conduct the bus-ine- ss under the name of the Duchesne Auto company. A Orangeville. The Peacock comes from deal waa made last week. F:s M Birth announcement cards. The Sun. president of the water board over there, stated that bids for the work are to be opened next Monday, Feb; ruary 7th. It ia the plan of the farmers and others serosa the mountain to take on the old Mammoth reservoir proportion. Going with it for a consideration of a hundred and twenty-fiv- e thousand dollars is the site and the surplus water not required by tha Price Biver Conservation district The money received, The Sun is told, will help retire the bonds of the Latter (6750,000), meet interest coupons and create a fund for general purposes. The state of Utah, through its land board, ia agreeable to the sale. It ia interested because of the fact that it has holdings under the Carbon Water company (in this district) and has loaned this concern a substantial anm in the past. The Gooseberry project is to eost the Sanpetera sixty dollars an acre. Here in Carbon it is twenty an acre-foot DEATH CLAIMS AN ESTIMABLE LADY, WEDNESDAY Mrs. Margaret A, wife of William Bnff of Spring Canyon, died last Wednesday forenoon following an operation for appendicitis. The deceased waa 44 years of age and ia survived by her husband and five children. The latter are Mra. Alice Crawford (of Storrs) and William, Yerlin, Margaret and Elva. Services an to be held then next Sunday, Bishop Carlson officiating, with burial at Spring Glen at 2 oclock of the afternoon. Mn. Ruff was a daughter of Mr. and Mn. Richard Keifer of Ogden. She hat resided in Spring Canyon for the past twelve years. Before then she was a resident of Scofield for a long time and when she was an active worker in the relief society of the Latter-da- y Saints church. She was kind and pleasant and charitable to all and will be greatly missed by a large einle of friends and numerous relatives throughout this section of the state. Wallace & Harmon of this eity an in charge of the funeral arrangements. E. HE WILL PLEAD GUILTY SOON AND GO TO PRISON George G. Hnghett was arrested up Spring Canyon by the sheriffs forces last Wednesday on the eharge of robbing bnnkhonsea at Latuda and other ramps close by. He was brought here and appeared befon Justice Hammond. Later. he waived hearing and will go befon Judge Christensen in district court as soon aa then ia "an opening for his ease and plead guilty to burglary i if the third degree, which means a penitentiary sentence, lie filched thirty-fiv- e dollars in cash, a ring and other articles from, the places visited. Hnghett is shout 25 vearsof age. The robberies occurred the night of February 1st Un- in the past participated in several fistic entertainments at llanly Downing t elub at Zion, lie has a prison record and it waa through the picture of him here reproduced from circulars printed by The Sun several months ago that he waa apprehended in tha Illinois town. At the time of the rubbery many fingerprints were discovered on tha glass which was broken to obtain an entrance to the store. These were and studied by CapL George EL Chase of the Salt Lake City police department and Deputy K. IL Woottoa of the Utah state prison. Both men were ealled as expert witnesses in the ease, which started Wednesday noon of last week. Each testified that tha prints on tha glass and those made at their order by Sollis were identical. They also said that these never change from birth to death, and that they are reliable evidenee of identity. The ease was one of the hardest fought which has been tried here for a long time. Fred W. Keller, represented the state as diatriet attorney, and George EL Marshal the defendant. Tha jury waa out more than aix hours before it returned with a verdict. The ease baa attracted considerable attention because of the fact it is the second criminal one tried in the eourta of Utah wherein such identification waa relied upin by the prosecution. Marve Sollis and Morris, the latter colored, were taken to state's prison last Monday by Sheriff Bliaa. Morris, who is blind, was last week sentenced to serve not more than five years when he was found guilty of an assault with a deadly weapon on n man named Thomas np at Helper a few weeks ago At the time of bis trial he was also under a similar one against his wife, who has but one leg. and whom he ie alleged to have attacked with a knife last Christmas at Price. The jury in its verdict recommended leniency. Previous to these troubles Morris was in the local justice courts on bootlegging charges. About all the time of the court has been taken np sinee Monday last in hearing the ease of the state against Mike Deangelia and Kick Galanis, rhaiged with the burning of the Star Style Shop in this city about a year ago. It is being hard fought by Fred W. Keller, district attorney, with W. Glenn Harmon helping. Henry Rug-ge- ri and B. W. Dalton are defending. John (Orange) Deangelia, proprietor of the burned ont place, is to have hia trial on an anon charge when this one now before Judge Christensen ia conpro-nerv- PLANS FOR WATER Saturday evening last a meeting of the Sanpete water board was heli Ephrim. E. B. Jorgensen, repreaent-nd-Barr- y ing the Sutherla company of New Orleans, La, told those assembled that his house vyaa ready to fin ance the Gooseberry project. John T. Oldroyd, secretary of the Utah land board, waa also present and represented the state. M. Q. Stringbam, as which he is now convicted. der the name of Eddie Kelly he has JAP PUTS SIX BULLETS IN HELPER, Feb. 3. After shooting to death Y. Segawa in a Japanese clubhouse hen today shortly after the noun hour Sekishi Kashiwagi started serosa the street in the direction of City Hall to give himself np to the offieen. Before he got there, however, he was arrested by. City Marshal Knobbs. According to K. I to, only witness and the third occupant of the place at the time uf the slaying, Kashiwagi walked into the placo about 12:40 oclock and in a few minutes was engaged in an argument with Segawa, proprietor and part owner of the Dashi elub. Ito did not hear the conversation that ensued, but othen who were near at the time said Segawa called the other J spa new into the house to reprimand him for alleged unfairness in gambling. Kashiwagi fired six shots into his vietim. When the first went off Ito grabbed his countryman, but waa unable to stop the stream of deadly bullets which poured into Segawa. One pierced his right arm, another his abdomen, two the chest another the Adam a apple, while the last entered his right upper lip. He lived only a few minutes. Most unusual was the course of one bullet which, after passing through the victim, struck five objects in different parts of the room before lodging in a showcase. Deputy Sheriffs George Collingham and Warren 8. Peacock investigated the case with Marshal Knobbs, and returned to Price this evening with the prisoner. Kashiwagi said he had been at Helper only eleven months, and when asked why he killed his countryman said: He talk too much about me. This shooting recalls a similar killing of just two years ago, when M. Karumai slew Y. Ishusaki in the same room. Kashiwagi is 43 years of age, while his victim waa 45. ANOTHER ALMOST MURDER Miner At Castle Gate Slogged Coarse of Robbery. In the William Vigor and his son, Joseph, got into serious trouble up at Castle Gate a few days ago. They are now eharged with assault with a deadly weapon as the result uf attacking Jacob Prgacar, an Austrian miner there. Arcurdiug to the officers the two had heard that the assaulted man carried a large sum of money in a belt about his waist. They cut a hole in his tent, rrawled in and laid in wait for their victim. They are said to have first struck him with a piece of hose filled with shot, but when the man did not fall and ahouted for help they seiaed pickhandies, beating him to the earth. One of them is eharged with having taken hia watch and a sum of Austrian money. The cries of the vietim, however, attracted men from residence! nearby and the Vigors took to their heels. They were captured by the sheriffs foreee and jailed at Price. A bearing was to have come np before Justice Hammond at Price last Monday, but has been postponed. The older man ia 49 years of ago and the younger 21. They are out on bonds. A eharge of third degree buTglary also would stand against them if the one of assault should not stick. Prgar.ar is reported to be recovering from his injuries. PURCHASES PIANO COLUMBIA, Feb. 1. The Columbia school with the aid of the county board of education has just complete! a project in which the children have purchased a fine piano. Pupils of the Wattis school are working on a sim- ilar project Another striking fashion in shoes of glass heels for dancing. They patch and reflect the light. UnThe Denver and Rio Grande West- like Cinderellas slippers they have ern and the Los Angeles and Salt a foundation of wood and are, thereLake were ordered last Wednesday by fore, serviceable as well as pretty. the pnblic utilities commission to pay the state of Utah $3099.40 with legal interest for the excess freight charges CHILD IS RUN DOWN declared collected by the railroads in hanling of sand and gravel between Mount and Castle Gate and Mount Little Thelma, 12 years old daughand Kenilworth Junction during the ter of Mr. and Mrs. V. W. Fansett, months of July, August, September was run down and killed by an autoand October, 1922. The materials were aftermobile last at Sunday Helper shipped to the points during construction of roads by the state department, noon. The parents had stopped their when three hundred and thirty-eigcar in front of City Hall that the litcarloads were earned at a eost of tle one might go to a nearby place and $31,300.06. The rate per ton is said purchase some candy. In returning by the eomplaint to have been fifteen and while crossing the street she step-ne- d and a half rents higher than charged in front of the machine that killother shippers. for the same service ed her, in trying to avoid another car. under similar conditions. The parents saw the childs peril and ealled to her, but it was too late. She Usually when a man ia old enough was taken to a physicians office, bnt to fall heir to a fortune and has sense did not regain consciousness and soon enough tq manage it he doesn't need it died of her injuries. Mike Kasimieas, LOCAL LINE NOW ORDERED TO is the use .EVEN THINGS UF ht VERY SLIGHT HOPE Emery Resident la Hovering Between Life and Death Today. James A. Alger may be fatally hurt from a fall of coal last Monday in the property of the Consumers Mutual up Gordon Creek. He suffered a partial fracture of the skull, a broken right leg, aix shattered riba and other injuries. He was working with a companion on the face of the scam in the mine when the accident occurred very shortly after noon. The other man escaped serious injury, but it was 3.30 oclock the next morning before Alger was brought to Price City Hospital, a distance of aliout nineteen miles, and was expected to die at any time. The accident victim has a wife and seven children, who reside at Cleveland. The Algera have lived there for years and are quite well known ail throughout Emery county. Word from the hospital this (Friday) morning ia not very encouraging for the man's recovery. ed cluded. Judge Dilworth Woolley is today sitting in civil matters. Yesterday the suit of Olive Millbum against Price Trading company, which involvea the right to use an alleyway in this eity, came on and waa reset for next Friday. His honor is today hearing the litigation of Kanakia Ganalakis vs. J. It. Sharp. This has to do with water rights of Grassy Trail Greek in the vicinity of Sunnyside. ONE MAN KILLED Isaac Lyman Sorensen from Sandy and Mary E. Batchelor of Castle Gate Five Othera Hava (Rom Call At the were licensed to wed at Salt Lake City Spring Canyon Property. last Mondav. There was a bounce in the mine of the Spring Canyon Coal company on AND KILLED BY CAR Wednesday last in which aix miner! were caught. Five of them were rescued, but the other soon afterwards died after being brought out by rea-edriver of the auto that struck her, is workers. He is Andrew Shoask, exonerated of all blame by the par- an Austrian and 40 years of age. The ents. Mr. and Mrs. Fancett but re- body was later brought to Flynn Funcently went to Helper, where he fol- eral Home at Price and is awaiting lows his trade a carpenter. They word as to disposition from a brother had been at Price in the forenoon to np at Devils Slide. Shifts of twelve attend Sunday school and services at men were employed to reach Shoask. the Community church and had not It appears a greater lot of debria had reached their home when the accident struck him than the others. None of occurred. A coroners jury exonerat- the latter were seriously injured it ed Kasimieas. Funeral services were was found when they were taken to at the ehapel at Helper Tuesday with the company hospital. burial in this eity. The Faueetts lived here about a year ago, where he was If the mosquitoes could read, and contracting with a gentleman by the get hold of n summer fashion mags-name of Wilson. zine, wouldnt they chuckle with glee f ue |