OCR Text |
Show 'T'- 1 1 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4. THE SUN, PRICE, UTAH 1827 Public It is acknowledgment of worthy produfts, pains- - takingly made of Anest materials and craftsmanship; honeftly sold and backed by 74 years of unfailing business integrity. In 191s , sales totaled 134,664 cars, valued at $161,361,944. With $100,000,000 of adual net assets, including $60,000,000 of plant facilities, and an organization of able, experienced men, Studebaker ftands unsurpassed in resources and ability to manufacture economically and give maximum intrinsic value for a given price. Studebaker sets its own unsurpassed Standards. Through complete manufacture, we are enabled to adhere to those standards rigidly and with unyieldThrough complete manufacture, too, parts makers profits are eliminated and comparatively lower prices made possible. Every consideration of business acumen and sentiment requires that this leadership be maintained and strengthened and that the principles of unfailing integrity which made leadership possible continue to be scrupulously followed. , Studebaker popularity is our incentive to Still finer accomplishments and is the beSt of all guarantees to the man who buys. Studebaker CvStom Girt are a revelation in pera, the comthe transfer of the control of pany. Dated thie 19th day of January, PRICK TRANSPORTATION 1927. COMPANY, By B. V. Mein tire, Another tender of Utahs revolving fund of $100,000 to be expended in public land surveys ia to be made by Gov. George H. Dern to William Spry, commissioner of the general land office. The governor last Saturday notified Spry that this state desired to have the funds put to use to survey the public domain, inasmuch as under the federal law this commonwealth cannot claim title to its share until surveyed. He I Date 18. 1927. ' completion Id "I am not anch a big fool be." "I thought you looked NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS CAR-t bon Water company. The annual meeting of the stockholder of the Carbon Water company will be held et Price City Hill, Monday, February 21. 1927, at 4 o'clock p. m. Officer will make their annual report. Director for the ensuing e year will be elected ind such other hnri-neetransacted a may properly come before die meeting. CARL R. mARCUSEN, Secretary. Price, Utah, January 22. 1927. First pub., Jan. 28 ; hist Feb. 18, 1927. PROBATE AND GUARDI AN8HTP ticca Consult County Clerk Or R epertiva Signers For Farther Information. NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE of Vincent Tamil. Deceased. Creditor will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at Price, Utah, on or before th 21at day of March. A. D., 1927. CHARLES BAKER. Administrator of the Estate of Vincent Tamil, Deceased. 1. K. Clay, Attorney For Administrator. First pub., Jan. 21 ; last Feb. 11. 1927. TO CREDITORS ESTATE of Emily Grume, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with Touchers to the undersigned at my residence in Price, Utah, on or before the 10th day of April, A. D.. 1927. E. 8. IIQR8LEY. Administrator of (he Estate of Emily Grimes, B. W. Dalton, Attorney For Deceased. Administrator. First pub., Feb. 4 ; last Feb. 25, 1927. NOTTCE ' ' ' NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE of Alfred Gramm, Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at ray residence in Price, Utah, on or before the 19th day of April, A. D.. 1927. E. 8. HORSLEY. Administrator of the Estate of Alfred Grames. Deceased. B. W. Dalton, Attorney For Administrator. First pub., Feb. 4; last Feb. 25, 1927.' at Conoco Ethyl Guso-course, H3k-Tstart. It is re gives you a super-quicflood for that very purpose but that isnt alL It foDoan through with smooth, sustained power. In fact it makes the carbon deposits oa your cylinders a source of power and it keep the engine purring on those grades where you used to get a "knock. High-Te- st Conoco Ethyl costs just 4c more than regular Conoco Gasoline. Get at at tha kt k ; Cnnimn CONTINENTAL OIL COMPANY Producer, Btfaero and Marketer cf high grade patanlsiiin pioducli la Arkansas Cnfarado, Idaho. Xn,UirarHiri, Montana. -- Data New Marine Oklahoma. Oregon. Sooth Txn, Utah. Washington and Wyomk y SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH General Officea Ninth Floor Kearns Bldg the union asking fifteen million dol-lin damages. Six thousand individual eviction suits in West Virginia, Western Kentucky ind in Tennessee were defended, and in addition th union waa made defendant in thirtv-tbre- e hundred injunction cases. No judgments for damages now are outstanding against the mine workers. ar non-onio- Thirty Hours Planned. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 29. week The day and five-da-y elinie for and a joint operator-mine- r the ilia of the bituminous industry probably will be proposed by the United Mine Workers of America at th conference with the eoal operators at Miami, Fla., on February 14th. These demands were expeeted to grow out of tho deliberations of the mine w wage scale committee, William Green, president of tho American Federation of Labor and former Mina Workers secretary and treasurer, said today. Describing the bituminoua industry n fields as West Virsuch ginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Maryland and others ae "utterly demoralised" because of by some and "eut throat undermining" between rival operator, Green said that the remedy lay in a reorganisation of the industry which would equalise the production. ABOUT THE CAMPS OF THE RIG CARBON DISTRICT aix-ho- ur non-uni- on over-producti- on d. aa used to She 21, publication, Feb. Lcwis-Rroph- Storage Purposes. Dis-poi- nt STATE ENGINEERS OFFICE, SALT Lake City, Utah, Jan. 13. 1927. Notice The boy who graduates this year that J. B. Prasetto, whose k hereby given Instead of complaining every time will do well to remember that the felpostoffice sddress is Sunnyside, Utah, ha made application in accordance with the it rains we ought to do as they do in low who is afraid of a fall will never requirements of the Compiled leva of Borneo. Let it rain. get to the top of the ladder. Utah, 1917, ae amended by the Session Laws of Utah. 1919 and 1923, to appropriate one c. f. a. of water from Mud Springe in Carbon county, Utah, Said water ie to he diverted at a point which bears north 13 deg. 30 min. west 2290 feet from the southeast corner See. 14, Salt Lake Twp. 15 South. Range 12 East of meridian, and distributed by mennsNovemand used from April 1st to mli80th of each year for the irrigation of ber of eighty arret of land embraced14.in part 15 Twp. the southeast quarter Sec. South. Range 12 East Balt Lake meridian. This application is designated in the atate engineers office ae File No. 10093. All protests sxainst the creating of said application stating the reasons therefor, neat he hr affidavit in dnpiicnto accom-In panied with a fee of $1.00. and filed this office within thirtr 30) days after the completion of the publication of this notice. GEORGE M. BACON, State En- - first publication, Jan. pate of of of Is Unexcelled For lev-e- d 9 Observing a young lady standing alone the young man stepped op to her and said: "Pardon me. But you look like Helen Black." "Yes," she reknow I do, but look plied, worse in white." "I No Dust, No Ashes, No Clinkers. wad-wor- STUDEBAKER TO WHOM IT MAT CONCERN firm or corporation having Any ny claim against the lrie Transportation company of Price, Utah, will kindly Transpresent the aama to tha said Price or before March 1. portation company on La 1927. This notice given by reaaon of - non-uni- on STUDEBAKER DEALERS North Carbon Ave.f Just Off Main, Facing the East. PRICE, UTAH V Standardville, Utah " WESTERN AUTO CO. ov Properbee At INDIANAPOLIS, hid., Jati 27. Stubborn opHition to a constitutional amendment giving the executive committee authority to levy special asesments without a referendum relarded the progress of the I'uited 51i" Workers convention yesterdav amendment, an administration proxMtion, finally was approved after the opHiMliou failed by three votes to obtaiu a rolleull. Opoiieuts sdled four hundred and forty-fou- r votes, three less than the necessary 'h; )er cent. The constitution previously provided that assessments may be for tw.i liy the administration moutlis uud alter which a referendum should be taken. feud again i lamThe ated when the sergeant-alartempted to scut l'owers Tapgood, 27 years old Harvard graduate, who claimed to represent a miners local at Cresson, l'a. .luhii L. Lewis, president, had denied him the rigid U in favor of a resolution eou- sK-aurkers Journal, Idenming the Mine Lewi declare i official publication. Haigood wa not a delegate and later in threatening to rjeet him said lie was not even a member of the union. Hapgood wa a xupjxirter of Johu Brophy of I'learbield, Pa., in the latter a reeent unuceesful effort to win the presidency of the miners. Lewis, in a supplement to his an torn. 1,830,000 The total production of beehive nual rejKirt, assailed the interstate eoke in the week ended January 22d I fouinieree commission for what he is estimated at 180,000 net tons, a de-- rharged was "favoritism to tha rtil- n field of crease of five thousand from that in read and the 1 Virginia, Tennessee and Ken-o- f the preceding week. The accumulated I beehive since January let amount! tucky in freight rates." Governinon- in to 505,000 tona-l- eea by 427,000 or 43 tal officials are participating special privdege per cent than in the corresponding movement to secure sections of these for the leriod in 1926. states, Lewis asserted. 11a further GREEN AND HOWAT APPEAR AT declared this "unjustified conduct will strangle the eoal industry uni MINERS CONVENTION "all other branehea of manufacture INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Jan. 28. land commerce dependent upon it." ' lie American Federation of Labor is I The convention took up the task of k pledged to the advocacy of the five emending the eonetitntion after daye week and increasing wage ing through a mats of resolutions. In in industry, William Green, president I all those of policy the Lewie fonee of the federation declared in apeak-wo- n over the insurgent element, chief ing at tha United Mina Workers eon of which is tha Brophy group and tLa vention today. "Wa hava reached a leader of which ia president of in industrial development where triet No. 2, Pennsylvania. Contrary furthsr reduction in working hours I to past conventions, not n voice was ean tsks place without any slump in raised in snpport of the soviet said be. Commenting sian government when a resolution upon wages, the federation president condemning the reds was offered, asserted : "You cannot have prosper-- 1 J. IL Morris, Albie, Ia., president ity and low wages. Show me the pay-- 1 I of District 13, expressed the senti-ro- ll of a community and Ill measure ment of proponents of the eonstitu-th- e amendment governing fee prosperity of that section," heltional President Green, a member of I lections when ha said: "It ia time the miners onion, and its secretary I for ns to voice complete approval of and treasurer before he became the I our national officers. gWe wouldn't American Federation of Labor presi-- 1 send our generals to war with cannon I dent, condemned the repudiation of and no powder, and we cant expect n the Jacksonville, Fla., agreement by I to conduct a war on oper-th- e operators of West Virginia, Ken-- 1 store unless we give our officers com financial support," Morris said, tucky and Pennsylvania. "There cr was a greater example of perfidy . . than that ahown by certain soft eoal . T. ,"a,H1 operators," Green declared. "TheirM tU" cushioned .live safety of Masting a- shot in which and suffering to thousands of men anil I a revolution in euBom values Sunnyside bee been working seven days a week for the past Uo weeks-Moof the product there ie going into eoke. United States Fuel stock is offered by Salt Lake City brokers at fifty-tw- o eents the share. Mutual Coal up Spring Canyon in the Carbon district st non-unio- nev-pe- .t MINERS NEAR TO BLOWS LAST WEEK AT CONVENTION J3.4-tS,tHK- ing fidelity. WJ PAGE THREE t, preference. iat , EVERY FRIDAY The Sun Siwial Service. Jan. 31. WASHINGTON, I). Fur the atvt-- Jay. ending with January lt'th the output of bituminous coal in I'tah totaled lUo.tHH) ton, that of New Mexico t4,000, Colorado 244,-IKand Wyoming 170.000. The total production for the last fiscal year the country over is estimated at STS.lIOO,- IHH) toils or a daily average of l.KMl-- 1 000. The stales of l lah and Wash-IT1- 1 ington eombiued are credited with four thousand tons of eoke during the week elided January -- 3d. Total output of bituminous fur the ncveii day ending with January 22d the euuirv over is estimated at net tons. The figures an- - subject to slight revision. A it now stands, howevr, a decrease of approximately 0.5 edit Inuu prod uelion in the preeed-in- g week is indicated. However, l!ie present rate of milt production is well above that in any other recent year. Total output of bituminous during the present eoal year to January 22d two hundred and fiftc working days amounts to 472, 84.-00- 0 net tons. The sharp iucn'ase in antliracile during the week ended January 15th apnears to have been temjiorary. The total production during the seven days ended January 22 d declined to ,488,000 tons. This is, however, Rome ligher than in the week of January 8th. Output during the week of January 22d in 1924, a normal year, was is the expression of STUDEBAKER popularity and nil - Mined In Carbon County and Shipped Everywhere Preference cuBom beauty - te ... I $2.50, The winter meeting of the Rocky Mountain Coal Mining Institute ie to hole while explosive chargee are be- be held at Denver, Colo., beginning ing loaded are a source of danger. February 23d. It will run three days. Practically all electric detonators now Usually there is a good attendance used in the United States are of the from the Carbon district. Some gelatin dynamites become inlow tension type, according to the sensitive with age and in consequence plofiive ing to its contracts, declaring "under the moat trying period in industry, when your contract was repudiated, when sabotage was practiced, your great leader, John L. Lewis, stood like a Rock of Gibraltar. He placed greater stress on honor than those who For a short walked in high plcea. W0RKESS time today Alexander II. Howat, de- LEAJ)Ea op XN SPEAKING PLAIN mine Kansas leader, occupied posed the stage in convention affairs. lie, The chief cause of the bituminoua once a power in miners deliberations is the "superfluindustrys and the center of several turbulent ous horde suffering and irreof incompetent scenes at conventions, received only whose principal sponsible operators, dele' When a passing consideration. for remaining in the too justification the gate asked why Howat. liJuM their were seat in the convention d ovvHrdravn bank as- ignored Lewis said he wa. not a eounT John Lewi Mont o the union, nowat attempted to pro-th-(j UB'itad Mine Workeof Amerjea, test, but Lewis, gavel sent a wrgeant niwition at ita biennial ,d at arms to the fteiy Kansan convention at Indianapolis, Ind., last and he was not permitted to The weds improved of Hie day also saw the ij!ati,)n and mJre efficient is d. of u t ThK fe atrat.on other opponent the part of nethodi ! Patrick Tuohy of Wilkeabarrc, P ne The bituminoua from as a delegate sought approval the Hame malignant ills W.lkesbarre and Duryea, Pa. Both th t it for eharacterid claims were turned down by theerc-,- , Each pnK,;cin? Ijewis ,aid. dcntials committee Ilowat s rejection & in a ruthles com- leaves onJy John Brophy from Clear-- 1 tiive,warfare with all others with leading foes, ir tjje reKUk that a large percentage of the convention. the output is sold at prices less than The constitutional committee This CMt 0f production th "boulders of tnrdcn from $8000 to $12, MO a year, and the heavyen,pi0yej in be mines, as the av- a"d Ur age operator i. unable to expend Reading emew ouffirient to equip and operate orandnm on special levies made by mini pror4rty in a manner that hi, the national organisation onalnn- KivVom5nai protection to tLe lons for strike relief funds, BresMcnt jjypg and jimbu 0f men employed. ' --rr- s -- occasionally a part of a charge fails to explode and remains in the bottom of a drillhole( state the United States bureau of mines in Technical Paper No. 400, recently issued. When thie happens the unexploded part of the charge ia detected only by a close in-speetion of the fact, for its presenee is not indicated by a eount of the ax ploding charges of the round or by the fuse sticking from the hole. In hard ground where the rounds do not always break bottom a stick or two of explosive left in the bottom of a hole may he overlooked. Although drilling (Osatiaued On Page Four) PROTECT THEM Insure 1 78 Ss.Tara.1' BUREAU BACK EA8T STUDYING wr I I J aeksonville, Fla., agreement of years ago, the miners president declared: Many operators who signed the An investigation to determine by I agreement did so in bad faith. The photographic methods the effect of ink scarcely had dried when operat-th- e physical and chemical properties ors in Central Pennsylvania, Ohio and of explosives on the flames produced, the Southwestern mining districts and the influence of different meth- - publicly denounced the contract and ods of loading and different kinds of predicted its later dissolution. Within demand-flam- e stemming on the character of the a few months operators were The modification." a operators together with the relation of ing flame properties to the limit charge I spent $35,000,000, aside from their as determined in a testing gallery, is profit loss in 1925 and 1920, in an conducted by the United States fort to crush the miners union, Lewis bureau of mines at Pittsburg, Pa. An asserted, dwelling upon the anthracitd de-investigation for the purpose of 1 strike. The past three years have been conecn-1 characteristic gas tennining and limit charge eurves for I multous one for the union because of different types of permissible explo-- J litigation. Saits were filed against ef-bei- on Protect your loved once against want he Insured yourself and carry sufficient on your home your business your automobile. We issue policies in reliable companies, fully safeguarding your interests. Upon request a representative will gladly call, explaining any problem in which you may he PRICE AGENCY G. CO. E. NELMS, Manager Second Floor Sflvagni Building PRICE, UTAH . |