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Show THE SUN, PRICE, UTAH PAGE TWO THEY CALL ON US UBS QUID 'S. ACM SEE4 UJ TW RVE VMCSE AfcJS BOPV FUJOIM SOWETWIUS I iy'A fxl M, BUT SHEEP DEMAND EVERY FRIDAY FRIDAY, FEBRUARY IE IN LATELY could Bfiiu3 rr hj mere W WOULD ADVERTISE FEZ. 7'4 OWtJES WELL, I FOUUO THIS HERE POi The Bus Special Service. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 31. J to choice steers oli'ercd swlil readily today at steady prices. The plain to fairly good kinds were weak to slightly lower. Butcher cattle and s locker and feeders uneven, hut svi rafreil to steady. quoted a ileehtie in medium to gooi steers. Hug prices were ten to fifteen rents off, lightweight classes shown g the larger. liiweer, trade maintained an arlie tone and early cleanuues were reMrted. laimlis were weak, but wre twenty-livhigher. T!i den. and wa- - equal to the supply. toilay w re In.lHip eallle, 14.0HO and .hhmi slurp, rompared with MHI swine Hi.iMill ca'lle, and W)t.l The Sun Together With Others Thanked The lew go Just a Reminder... The value of the newspapers of the state waa recognized and appreciated by the executive committee of the Utah Public Health association at 0 meeting held Wednesday of last week at Salt Lake City and presided over bv Ir. John A. Widlsoe. This resolution introduced by Mayor O. K. Hansen of Provo and seconded by Mrs. Levi Edgar Young, was unanimously adopted : liesoluti. 'JiiHl the thunks and uiqire-- 1 Chii-ag- el-t- e ' The best coals you can buy for your fur nace, stove, kitchen range or fireplace are CLEAR CREEK and CASTLE GATE. Theyve been Utahs leading ones for more than thirty-eigyears, and they are preferred because they give better and more comfortable heat. They are clean, free from waste and economical to use. luh Pnliiie Jleuilh usm tended m Uic new ure 1,,..f iif I'luii Inr llie lui iiiblr anil ill liie rivt-ii-l ;ii lierp a week ago, ami lll.S'MI eat'.ic. still sale, ami l"r the auodniii Id.mhi hog ami sheep one year ('lirwiiius ami helpful uiliiuile they have displayed wln-llu-ago. on every orra-uhave been ailed upon In aid ill the pmleeliuli nf the li-The ehoice to prime fat steer by the disstuiiuuiiuii of necoffered today were fully steady. Sev- public iiil'iiruiiiliou. essary eral bunches brought tfllhTi to 11.59. The meeting was attended by Dr. While they had liccu full fed they all lacked the finish of those sold last John A. Widtsoe, Mis Kate Willied-quie- t, week at $11.50 to $12.20. The plain to liams, Hr. O. K. Hausen, Alex Edward 1L Snow, Mrs. Levi ChiI via loll nl I I lie I - gsn-cio- ht ii-'- m A YOUTHFUL BELIEVER. UJ PRIUTER5 1U PROFESSIONAL good were weak to slightly lower. cago quoted a sharp decline in medium to good and that accounted for L, J. STOOKEY the weak neart here. Killers are inore Fkrtklu and Suifwa anxious for 1 hushed ones in all the weights than at any previous time Offin Phone 163 v; Residence 881 Price Commercial and Hirinia Bank this winter. The Southern meal and Buildingf, Price, Utah. hull feds sold at $7.50 to $0.00 and the medium to good native feds $8.59 to HR. J. 0. HUBBARD Cows and heifers were weak $10.50. Phrakiaa and Burge to fifteen lower. The medium kinds showed the decline. Choice grades Office Iloura 8 to 5 p. as. Phone 246m were steady. Ilulfc were off lift ten Residence Phone 284. Eastern 1tah Electric Building, to twenty-fivCalves were about PRICE, UTAH steady with lightweights selling up to 13.00. Demand for stoekers and feedQHARLES RUGOERI, JR, M. D. ers continues to show fairly good volPhysician and Surgeon ume for this season of the year. The Office Phone 81 ; Residence 177. prices toilay were rather uneven, but the offerings cleared readily. Inquiry fSilvagni Bldg, Price, Utah. tof fleshy feeder of good quality is )R. R. M. JONES active. rhjrslrian and Surgean Lightweight hogs were quoted off fifteen cents and the medium and the Otwtetrire and DImm. of Children. heavyweights were down ten comparOffice, Bllragni Building, Price, Utith. ed with last weeks close. Eastern H. B. GOETZMAN markets had very heavy runs, but lien tint elsewhere receipts were moderate. an that those for the rent of Work and Extraction. Price the week will be muderate. Today 140 Commercial Bank Bldg., Price, Utah wold at $11.90 to $12.-1to 170 to 250 jximids $11.80 to $11.9(1, D& GLENN WILLIAM RICHARDS 250 to 300 pound $11.(5 to $11.80, llentiat parking hows $10.60 to $11.10, and Office Phone 209. Residence 802w. Mock hugs and pig $11.75 to $12.50. PRICE, UTAH Istnibs were quoted weak, but shep were in active demand at strong to SANFORD BALLINGER rent higher prices. Tii1 twenty-fiv- e Dentist bulk of the lpt lambs sold at $12.25 Rerrice. to $12.60 and feeding $12.00 to $12.25. Office, Second Floor Silvagnl Building. Ewes were up to $7.60, the highest PRICE, UTAH price of the season. Some yearlings brought $10.50.'. I)R. 8. EVANS Dentist Their Plea Is Denied. Office, Electric Building, WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 28. It PRICE, UTAH is not neressary at present to require D e. ns. X-Ii- a; 0, D jr ! K. CLAY Q LIVER Attorney At Law Office la County Courthouse PRICE, UTAH I j. A. McGEE Attorney At Law Rooms 8 and 6, Silrsgnl Building, PRICE, UTAH 3- - W. DALTON Attorney At Lew Office In the Siivagni Building, PRICE, UTAH FREDERICK E. WOODS Attorney At Law Office, Electric Building, Several pERDXNAND ERICKSEN Utah breeders are cooperating with the bureau of animal industry, department of agriculture, in the better sires and better stock campaign, according to the annual report of the bureau chief, Hr. II. J. Muhler. This state has listed forty-on- e hundred and head of cattle and twenty-twhundred and nine of poultry in the campaign. Supplementing this, though achieving the same result in purebred breeding, i considerable work along lines such as boys and girls dob work, cow and similar activities designed to engender quality. Forty-seve- n Attorney At Law 717 Judge Building, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH GLENN HARMON Attorney and Counselor At Law Office; forty-seve- tht Electric Building. n o PRICE, UTAH f. railroads and Hteamiihipa to in making joint rates on wool from the lJar i fie Coast to Boston, Mass., and from Kooky Mountain ter ritory to the coast the interstate commerce commission deeided today. A petition of Western shipiers and the Boston Wool Trade asoeiation for the establishment of through rate which would enable such shipments to travel ou a single bill of lading over the rail and water journeys was denied. Steamship companies were the principal objectors to the through rating. They alleged that the Panama ranal trade enlisted large numliers of tramp veasels and that rates fluctuated too much on the ocean to rombine with railroads in fixing any definite charges. PRICE, UTAH VCT. . FLYNN Undertaker and Ambnlanco 8errico Tslephono 29. PRICE, UTAH ALLACE ft HARMON Big Bunch la Sold. RIVERTON, Jan. 29. Twenty-fou- r loads of lambs, averaging two hunOne Block South of L. D. S. Tabernacle. dred and thirty-fou- r to the car, were Office Phono 158. Roe. 115m. shipped from Riverton last week to PRICE, UTAH the markets at Kansas City and St. Mo. The Utah lambs, it is bean Joseph, QEN Gsasral Palattag Cea trader reported, sold on a fair market, bringing from 12 to 12 cents. Riverton Phene 188m. feeders state that the selling price, PRICE, UTAH while not yielding a very large profit, provides a fair return for the hay fed AUTO PAINTING and for the time expended in feeding. EL Bertefa Paiat Shop Other shipments will eontinne to be made from tbe district until February 651 Main Street. Fhone 288, 15th. PRICE, UTAH Undertakers and Licensed nuoo HAMMOND J. W.Licensed Abstracter Northern Wool Sold. GREEN RIVER, Wyo.. Jan. 31. Abstracts af title furnished to any Three contracts have lately been made piece er tract in Eastern Utnh. Fire in- for the sale of this years wool ebp surance written in the best companies. by local sheep owners. Have Rasmu-se- n Beal estate, bonds, etc. Second floor of Green River and Abner Luman Building. Price. Utah. and Joseph Thompson. Jr., both from Rock Springs, have contracted their ONWARD CONSOLIDATED fleeces. The price is tbirtv-tw- o cents. LODGE NO. 15 KNIGHTS OF PTTHIA8 Cattlemen Are to Meet. Meet Every Thursday Evening At HUNTINGTON, Jan. 29. Hunt1 M, At Castle Ha1!, Hstper ington Cattlemens association is to J. B. Alley, Price, C. A. K. Hear. Kenilworth. K. ef R. A B. hold its annual meeting next Saturr. BettUu, Helper, M. at W. day, Febrnary 5th, in Seminary HalL af Titles 8ii-vng- ni a FEZ 4, a Edgar Young and James II. Wallis. Arthur J. Strawson of New York City, field secretary of the National Tuberculosis association, was presetted and discussed the future activities of the association, submitting a tentative progrein. This was referred to a special committee consisting of Dr. John A. Widtsoe, Hr. H. U. Merrill,' Hr. C. X. Jensen, Miss Kate Williams and Mrs. Levi Edgar Young. Secretary Wallis made a statement on the recent sale of seals which he said was very gratifying. Inasmuch as all parts (if the state had not reported, he said it would be imosible to make a complete estimate until the next meeting of the committee. Suitable resolutions of respect were passed for Senator IjcRuy Dixon, whose recent death took from the committee one of its oldest and most Your dealer can supply you if he sells good coal. - AND SHIPPERS OF UTAH FUEL CO. CASTLEMINERS GATE 'AND CLEAR CREEK COAL ! valued members. The audit made by a firm of certified public accountants of the funds and expenditures of the association for the pat two years was submitted to the meeting. This showed the records to be in good condition and without error. Most of the students of the schools I)r. Widtsoe, in a brief talk, staled of the county especially Carbon high the work of the association should go have recently undergone physieul on, even though its funds would be examinations, which have proven very limited this vear. successful a the means of ascertainminor ailments that retard them in ing Violators of traffic regulations in their studies. Of two hundred and Shanghai have requested to re- fifty youths in the high school here at port to the American consular rowt Price examined for any troubles of after being arrested or they will get the eye, ear, throat, teeth and heart, a into trouble. According to a Shanghai hundred and forty or 68 per cent had newspaiier tlie action of the com- some defect or other, while quite a missioner i the outgrowth of pro- few were from more than crastination on the part of violators one ailment.suffering In most of the cases ic which ha berome a considerable an- which the heart was affected it was noyance to the court over a iteriod of found that the student had the last few month. If the practice and diseased tonsil and also enlarged deeayed continue the courtesie extended to condition was due the teeth, indicating violator will lie cancelled. The re- to these sources. The report ha just quest wa due dirertly to the finding been made available and corrective that two who were arrested ha.l not steps are now being taken in most of appeared for trial for previous the cases. Seventy-twr- o boys or 23.8 per cent were found to hare tonsils When the franrhise i granted to that should he removed. Illness that women equally with men it will put was raused by this was found to eanse the government in the hands of wo- a large part of the absence from the school. Fifty or 20 per cent had at men, declared Viscountess Elverson, who presided at a meeting of sixteen least one tooth that needed extracting or 23.6 per eeut hundred delegates of the Conserva- or filling. Forty-nin- e tive Women a conference held in Lon- were found defective in their eyesight. don recently. She urged that they at In a survey for the girls of the high once begin to lie prepared for greater school the results were practically the same as in the ease of the boys. Of responsibility. the two hundred and seventy-fiv- e or 27 per cent We are glad to hear politician ta'k pone over seventy-fou- r bout honesty. It shows that they needed their tonsils removed, fifty-fiv- e or 20 per cent require their teeth are at least thinking about it. attended to and sixty-nin- e or 24 per cent attention to their eves. Only ten The object i to hear the secretary and treasurer'a rcjtort, elect new of- of the girls examined had ailments of ficer and transact any other business the heart. that may come before the meeting. Newest of all the scarfs is the kind If the girls of the present day don't made from a piece of stiff silk like a ratch husbands and make good nub mans tie. This is passed straight rimonial bargains it isn t because they around the neck and knotted in the dont put all their stock, in the show back. The new mode is now being seen window. on Piccadilly and the Strand in Birth announcement card. The Bui. Work For the Doctor In Local Schools WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF EASTERN UTAH Aimimomnracemeinit F) Three From Carbon In Attendance x (Ceatlaasd On Page Eight) We are pleased to announce that we have been appointed the INDIA tire dealers for this locality. If you could take the time and would carefully compare the merits of the several leading makes of tires, you would understand why we have selected the INDIA tire as the one which would best serve and satisfy our customers. They have beauty that will add to the appearance of any car. They have a tread that holds the road in any going and wears without cupping. But most important, they have certain outstanding features of design like the INDIA Gum-WeCushion which makes them show up so well in mileage records that more than 60 per cent of INDIA production ia taken by bus and commercial car users. Now, with the TRUE-BLU- E (HEAT-PROOinner tube for all sizes, INDIA tires are making even greater records for uninterrupted service. Our stock of INDIA tires is now complete. Come in and look them over. ld mSMA TIRES . Gov. George II. Dem delivered the Live stork receipts for the month address of welcome opening the annuof Jannary at the North Salt Lake al convention of the Utah Association show City stockyards a substantial increase over the same month a year of Clerks, Auditors, Treasurers and Assessors at Salt Lake City, which ago. Cattle 8879 head, hog 41,572 and met yesterday and will be in session sheep 36,164. Russell Purchase of fifty thousand Wayne county wool fleeces, comprising the big Rabbit Valley clip, by a Boston, Mass., concern, was announced on last Sunday. The deal is the first Utah contract to have been executed this year. The price was twenty-eicents a pound. The Blackfoot, Ida., wool pool disposed of it clip last Saturday for 3U4 cent the jxiund to a St. Louis, Mo., house. This is reported the best id this season and is half a price cent more than a recent sale at Idaho Falls. There were at least thirty-tw- o thousand fleeces in the deal and which means $90,000 or better to be distributed among sheepmen np there. L. (. Brite from Marfa, Tex., was chosen president of the American National Live Stock association, and FI Paso, Tex., for next year's convention city at the closing of the thirtieth annual convention up at Salt Lake City last week. Brite was formerly vice president and conducted the entire convention in Salt Lake Citv due to the illness of C. M. O'Donnel of Rcll Ranrh, X. M., retiring president. The latter wa elected an honorary vice president. Report of the nomination committee was unanimously adopted. William Pollman of Baker,' Ore., was named first vice president; IL G. Boise of Arizona, Hubbard Russell of ' 1 f t Radios today, Friday. P. Wright, its president, responded. Other speakers and their subjects : Public Service Its Ideals, A. B. Irvine, president of the Utah state senate; General Property Tax, Classified Tax and Income Tax, Prof. T. A. Beal, dean of the school of commerce, University of Practical Operation of the Utah; Budget Law With Suggestive Am- RED STAR SERVICE Expert Lubrication On tbe Rotary Lift TJEXICO PRODUCTS It begins to look as though a good J. Percy Goddard, certi- many family skeletons are kept in the endments, fied puhlie accountant; The Publie daily papers instead of the closet. Funds, Security and Interest, John Walker, state treasurer; Payment of Taxes George T. Judd, treasurer of Salt Lake count v; The Association and Its Possibilities From the Viewpoint of the Taxpayer, A. G. Mackenzie, secretary of the Salt Lake chapter of the American Mining congress; report of committee on legislation, R. E. Hammond, aecrctray of the state board of equalization. Among other feature of the convention will be the adoption of resolutions and the election of offi-- i cers. The sesions will elose with a bonquet in the evening. The officer of the organization are P. Russell j Wright, president; L. E. Oveson, Em- - j ery county, vice president; Clifford L. Wright, Pleasant Grove, is secret ary and treasurer. Attending from n county are Mrs. Elizabeth T. Hadley, clerk and auditor; Rehring W. Golding, assessor, and E. N. f, treasurer. They left here yesC terday afternoon for Zion.' Semi-Annuall- Price 1 Spring Canyon Coal Co. y, ; ! ; Car-ho- Rad-clif- CASTLE GATE FUEL CO. Delivers by track at Price and vicinity at $62)0 the ton. Prom the same vein in Willow Creek that has been burned in Utah for close to thirty years. Only the best lamp. Orders, large or mull, promptly cared for. FAMOUS PEACOCK COAL Phone 95w HELPER, UTAH Miners and Shippers ef the Celebrated Spring Canyon Coal Mloee at SPRING CANYON, UTAH General Offices, 817 Newhowe Bonding. Brit Lake City, Utah If |