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Show !AT.J?5 lewed Every Friday By 8ua Pcbtuhlng Co. (lac.). Largest Producers of Domea Coal In Utah . R. W. CrucketL Manager. BokacriptioD, $2.00 a Tear I Advance. Office Phene Na. 8. Heaideace, No. 133m2. Affiliated With the United States Badth Refining and Mining Company Seraad-Claa- a Mail Matter, June 4. U1S. At tke Foakiffice At Price. Utah, Under tke Act of March S, 1K Batered Aa Bfii I"!! odrrn"0 ' ilioa ADVERTISING RATES (go re FOUR GOOD- X ingle laaoa, Per laek Per Month, Traaaicat. GOe. Special Position, 25 Per Ceal Ad ditioaaL Tea Ceata tke Line Each Inamioa. Count Biz Word Legato' to tke Una Summon, flZSO; Water Applies tioa, XMaplay 40c. Hitter $1-3- - COALS! Backed By Service 0: $15.00; Kiaa. Proof. $10.00. Bender Tea Ceata tke I.iae Eark laaertioa. Coast 81 Words to the Llaai Blackface Type Twenty Ceota tke to jgdern lodrra lores KING BLACK HAWK Ltae Eack laaertioa. OMtaariea, Cards of Thank, Rmolutiona Etc- - At Beading Notice Ua tea. Coaat His Word to tke Line. Per Bale, For Kent. Found. Loot, Etc, Taro Cents Per Word Eack Inaue. No Ckarge Accounts. I dil rasa All Coiaaiunicatioaa to to, jloin sir1 tlr Mot. udrvn Mo7xSl4M HIAWATHA PANTHER Modern HJ: SUN PUBLISHING CO. Price, Utah i These four, mined exclusively by UN. STATES FUEL COMPANY, will meet coal demand, being hard, firm and cleaa. fuel supervisor, technically trained and $ perienced, is at your service at any time talk over your heating problems. I went mourning without The Sun; I stood and cried in the congregationJob, 30-2- 8. AN AUTHORITY OF NOTE DECLARES THE TARIFF AIDS FARMERS. er today. THE HOME OF GOOD PRINTING Newhouse Building, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH RICE C.E. Stile Se badness Twenty Years Ago This Present Week J. M. Whitmore wu a business vis- itor to Sait take City. Mrs. Thomas Fouts entertained the ladis of the Union elnb at Priee. Miss Bessie Kennedy of Brunswick, Mo., was visiting with relatives in Priee. A nev baby girl arried at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Gunderson at, Priee. Mrs. L. L. Loftus of Castle Gate was visiting with some Salt take City friends. Mrs. E. S. Horsley returned from a eon fere nee of the Mutuals at Salt take City. Mr. E. II. Cotter and children were expected bark in Helper from a viit in Iowa with relatives. An effort was being made to organize a Masonie lodge at Helper. The nroiosition was before the state grand lodge officers. Charles II. Burns of Chicago, a brother of Mn. Thomas Fouts, wss in Priee. He was thinking of locating here and engaging in business. J. W. Lnofboumw was home at Priee from Zion, where he attended the graduating exercises of the high school. His son, John C., graduated there that year. There was an increasing demand for residence and business property for rent in Priee. Fifty new four and five-roocottages could have been easily rented at good figures. ' Mrs. Ben Moss, Mrs. J. C. Richmond, Mr. V. M. Grimes and Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Chase of Helper went to Salt take City to be present at the institution of a temple of the Pythian ' m Sisters at that city. ' The Rio Grande Western depot at Green River; burned, and was a total loss. A. L. Wehlh, the station agent, living in the second story, jumped from a window and sustained a broken bone in bis left foot. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Santschi, Sr., of Salt take City,' but former residents of Castle Gate, announred the marriage of their daughter, Miss Helen, to Freeman Bassett, the wedding to take place early in July at the home of the bride. Town President A. W. Horsley called a mass meeting of the citizens of Priee to be held at Town Hall, for th a committee ,m arpurse of naming rangements for the celebration of the Fourth of July. Everrone wu LAMB MARKET SHOWING SUBSTANTIAL INCREASE, ETC. (Continued From Page Three more efficient the inspections of the state. MaeFarlane is visiting the varions stockyards and slaughterhouses of the state, investigating conditions, conferring with the operators and becoming conversant with conditions that they obtain. He later will meet with the various etockgrowers for the purpose of ascertaining their suggestions and wishes as to the appointment of inspectors in their several districts, their problems affecting brand inspection, losses of livestock and soforth, and for the purpose of advising them of the newly adopted requirements. It is pointed out by Bennion that brand inspection in the past hu consisted in general of the inspection of cattle at railroad shipping points in carload lots or more, and that little attention hu been paid to the delivery at slanghterhouxes or other killing points, of animals delivered by truck in small numbers. It is or oth-wi- se now rnpu.-eto deputize the meat inspectors, and they will be eharged especially with the careful examination of this latter class of animals sold or delivered, and will collect the usual fee of ten cents jer head for the department. Careful reeord will be made also of the deliveries of veal ealves, so that they may be trqeed to the sources of supply. day s convention, if not the only subject. Discussion of this topic will be precipitated by a report from J. A. Hooper, secretary of the Utah association and member of the national wool marketing committee, on proceedings at the committees meeting in Chicago June 29th. Woolmen all throughout the country are expected at the Chicago meeting, whieh will bring together six marketing authorities selected by producers organizations, to recommend some desirable practice that can be adopted by the industry. If the Chicago session makes such a recommendation, whieh is now considered likely, the Utah association will be the first state organization to consider it from the standpoint of benefit to the individual grower. The Cedar City program ealls for two sessions, one opening at 10 oclock in the morning, the second at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, and a banquet in the evening. Members of the Cedar City Woolgrowers association and other local organizations in Southern Utah are planning scenie tours and other items of entertainment for the state association member. Secretary Hooper indicated last Saturday that Frank J. Hagenbarth, president, and F. R. Marshall, secretary of the National Woolgrowers association, would attend the meeting. Matt Staff, president of the National Wool exchange of Boston, Mass., and J. IL Manderfield, general manager of the Salt take UnWOOL GROWERS FLAN SESSION ion stockyards, also have been invited to attend the meeting. AT CEDAR CITY For the first time in its history the Utah State Woolgrowers association will hold a membership meeting this year. The session will be at Cedar City on July 12th, it was announred last Saturday by officers of the association. If the venture proves successful this year it will be adopted as an annual praetiee and the midsummer gatherings will be held at various centers in the industry other than Salt take City and l)gden. Outlook now is that wool marketing will be the principal subject before the mid-summ- er ut re- semi-annu- lambing About Over. Lambing is practically completed in Uah and nearby states, exeept in the higher regions. Opinion is that the 1927 erop will not be as large as that of 1926. Losses from unfavorable weather, snow and storms, whieh in manv regions came when the lambing season was at its height, have not been aa great as was feared. Last years crop averaged 90 per cent for this state. This year the average is expected to be between 80 and 85 per eent, whieh is about nonnal. The 1926 average was exceptions!. Some localities in the state report lamb rrope running from 100 to as high as IS) per cent. These percentages were boosted by large numbers of twins. Florkmasters general!' look for a favorable eeeson. Range conditions are pond tnd this means the lambs will lie heavier than usual when sent to the markets. I Ibto R fistts week. 1 bourn coll itTuest Xn.Ri NEW SUMMER - HA TS - COMMITTEES ARE NAMED FOR THE COMING TEAR IMeMS J ApjMiintment of new standing committees for the Rotary club of Price for the ensuing year was announred this week, following their approval by the club directors. The club is engaged in a series of vocational talks the last of which were by C. K. Feigusson and J. II. Redd, on The Manufacture of lee and Operation of a Cold How Henry Ton and Storage Plant, want the tastiest as well the Ford Conducts His Business and Why moat nourishing. These are qualities He Succeeds,' respectively. that are ever present in bread nnde TO ENTER STATE MEET with Tip Top or Turkey Red flours, ROOSEVELT, June 6. Next Fri- because they are uniformity pure and day Miles Burgess will contest in the good. Give on sack a trial and see state oratorical Mutual contest in the tabernacle at Salt take City. He won if you are not satisfied. the Roosevelt stake, Uintah Buin tri stake and the Eastern Utah meets snd is expected to make an impressive showing at the state meet. Burgess Co. will then leave for Germany on a mission for the tatter-da- v Saints church, lie is the son of Attorney and Mrs. South Ninth Street, Pries, Utah E. II. Burgess of this city. WHEN YOU Price Commission BIBLE THOUGHT AND PRAYER If pamtfi Kill Asm thtb children maw. till a BAlt tcltction each Keck, U Kill proof m pitdiu heritage to them in afla psora. LOVE DEFRAUDS NOT: Owe no men any thing, but to love one another. Thou shalt not steal. Thou shall not covet. Thou shalt love thy neigh hor as thyself. Romans 13 : 8, 9. . PRAYER: O love Divine, how sweet Tbos art t When shall 1 find my willing heart All taken up with TheeT Ithirnt and fnint and die to prove The (rent net of redeeming love The love of (Ariat to me. tr hosbi It's hard to say which is the lead er, the large and graceful wide brimmed hat or the ever-popul- ar models . But the odds are quite even , we think, in favor of both types. All have the severe simplicity that Paris now adores and there are straws, silks, combinations of these two aru felt. Job close-fittin- g We also carry the popular " CAT ALINA Sport Hats. Mis endin lome icitii The orthi ton dwr Xr. IW kjt lSccon On Bessie Kennedy, Millinery, Inc. Price, Utah liattal 1 Then tion Xi iEiai I Sits vba J. Wq HONEST WEIGHT kit d ton: two nj Fair dealing has been the ideal which has kept all our customers pleased and satisfied through many years. Our patrons are enthusiastic supporters because we sell only the best grades at most reasonable prices, with courteous service always. Everything to eat, wear and use. Maybe France could pay her debts if she didnt send over so many iPrk Xn. crmit na quested to be present. . Let Us Execute That Particular Job For You . Neat and Prompt . str trip t u - fons hroe ptow lofe It eve GENERAL OFFICES: MAKE BREAD I";'-- . 4-- n fa Dr. William J. Hale, chairman of the division of chemistry and chemical technology of the Na- tional Research council and an acknowledged authority on matters relating to industrial chemistry, declares that the tariff is not only aiding the American fanner, but is enabling chemists to convert raw products from the cornfields and truck farms into useful articles of manufacture. In explaining this, in the May issue of Tariff Beview, Dr. Hale says, in part: "Of all the criticisms that have been heaped upon protection none is more unsound than the assertion that the preparedness argument underlying high protection for chemical plants is uncalled for. The fact is, that it would cost millions of dollars annually to keep the minimum of such plants in fit condition, and then, too, every five years these would have to be scrapped, thus necessitating the expenditure of a billion dollars for their restoration. We should have competition in everything, but under a protective tariff this is all the more necessary. By way of illustration, indigos, of which about ten billion pounds is consumed in this country annually, was offered in New York in 1914 duty paid as low as 15.1 cents per pound. The first American producer brought this dye on the American market in January, 1917, at $1.25 a pound. By the fail of 1922 three plants manufacturing this dye were in operation cents Qd indigo was selling at about thirty-fiv- e a pound. By the fall of 1925 it was being laid down, freight paid, at the door of textile mills at from eleven to twelve cents. It is certainly clear that a protective tariff does not contribute to higher prices when once efficient manufacture is under way and competition reigns. Dr. Hale illustrates how the Fordney-McCumbtariff act has enabled the American chemical industry, established during the war, to make use of farm products in industiy. He explain the manufacture ofartificial silk from wool, points out the many chemical uses of corn in industry and describes in detail how the chemist is proceeding to discover new methods of utilizing practically all of the surplus farm products and wastage. The hope that a system of price fixing;" concludes Dr. Hale, will help the fanner should be dismissed from mind. Competition tends ever to hold prices at lower levels. Thus if cotton is made to advance in price, more wool will enter the industries and if the prices rise too much cornstalk is sure to banish cotton. If corn is advanced in pride more potatoes and starch containing tubers will be grown to give us our starch dextrose and alcohols. The sad part of this is that, when once new things are brought into manufacture with new operations developed for the efficient use of every byproduct, it is apt to prove disastrous for the manufacturers to return to the old raw material and to incur additional expense in the reconstruction of their plants. Those who cry out against the tariff have no balm to offer the agriculturist They know, and we all know, that a general lowering of our tariff rates such as would permit goods of foreign manufacture to undersell in the American market those of our own manufacture would bring on a panic the like of which we have never before known. None of these critics can explain how agriculture would profit by such a calamity. Our congressmen need only approach the agriculture problem with the same commendable spirit of 1922. In that year the protection granted organic chemicals in general brought this country into the highest prominence. It is only necessary to extend this on refined organic chemicals to some of those as represented by agricultural staples. Sugars constitute a class that needs this encouragement in order to give the farmer a security against imports. Vegetable oils rank second. If we fail to act for relief of this chemical disparity in farm production then there can be no relief for the farming situation (idritt ex- pensive delegations to try and talk ns out of them. WASATCH STORE CO. Why is is that the man who goes round with a big chunk of tobacco buried near his jaw always gets nervous when his wife chews gum, Winter Quarters, Clear Creek, Castle Gate dhd Sunny-side- . |